Dual Space Success Gives Moon-Race Lead to U.S. From Our Wire Services CAPE KENNEDY-The United States, with amazing rocketry, has placed the moon within the grasp of man and shown the world that it has a longer reach than Russia. America y^ed ahead of the Soviet Union in the race to the moon yesterday with a spectacularly successful test of its Saturn 5 rocket and its Apollo spacecraft, and climaxed the day by soft-land- ing Surveyor 6 on the moon photo- graph potentiai landing sites. The 3(i-story Saturn pulled pff a perfect first lest — one that rocket chief i^'ehnher Von Braun said marked the most significant step the nation has yet taken in space. His “bird,” the biggest thing, to fly, climbed to 117-miles orbit with, a world record satellite of 140 tons. From there, an Apollo spacecraft went out a lonely 11«386 miles and sizzled home into a rainy Pacific in' a tough test of its heat shield. From dream countdown to on-the-but-ton lift-off to splash-down only 10 miles off target, it took just eight houfs and 37 minutes to prove the United States owner of a clear, wide lead in the space race. The long shot worked like a dream, evaporating glomn haunting the space program since three astronauts burned to death in their craft at Cape Kennedy on Jan. 27. ' \ President Johnson and Vice President Humphrey sent congratulations, ■ the President saying the flight showed America capable of sending astronauts to the moon and bringing them home safely. Space officials hastened to say the moon is several flights away, but Dr. Robert C. Seamans, associate administrator of NASA, called the success “clear indication that our team is not found wanting.” Last night, the television scout Surveyor 6 dropped gently to a . spot in the middle 6t the. moon’s visible face and began sending the space agency snapshots of Sinus Medii, the cratered plain which is the last of four potential as- tronaut landing sites to be checked out. One showed a cliff-like prominence on the horizon a mile away. Others pictured narrow depressions nearby which scientists said they could not immediately explain. As the moon rode over the cape last nighty champagne sold faster than the dealeVs could chill it — “six cases in two hours,” reported one. The Weather Showers (Dalalls Paga ]) VOL. 125 NO. 2:i8 THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, NOVEMBERilO. 19(i7 —48 PAGES Home Edition ★ ★ ★ ★ ASSOCIATED PRESS UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL 'FJghfing' LBJ Visiting Troops LUNCHEON GUESTS - Attending yesterday’s luncheon progra^ featuring Martin J. Caserio, general manager of GMC Truck and Coach Division as a speaker, were (from left) Carleton Patterson Jr., cochairman of the program; Rev. R. Craig Bell, associate rector of All Saint^ Episcopal Church; Robert Lahiff, production Caserio Tells GM Truck Expansion Plans WASHINGTON SUNDAY-^artly cloudy with not much temperature change. ^ Precipitation probabilities in per cent are:'today 20, tonight aiyi tornorrow 60. A brisk 37 was the low teWperature in downtown Pontiac preceding 8 a m. The 2 p.m. reading was' 55. > Johnson’s fast - paced travels were keyed to the observance tomorrow of Veterans Day. Without advance White House announcement, he flew last night to New York City to speak before* some 1,000 patrons of a dinner sponsored by an arm of the Jewish Labor Committee. AFI.rCIO President George Meany was the honored guest. Johnson, long noted for his nonbellig' erant “come let us reason together” phrases, tried out a new, fighting style — to the obvious .delight of an audience that interrupted with such cries as, “Give ’em heil.” ★ ★ * It’s' been apparent for several'weeks that Johnson has' been deeply concerned about public opinion polls depicting him as the underdog in the 1968 election if he decides to seek another term. His tougher language .seems a direct new bid to generate voter backing for his policies. Strengthening the language of his prepared text as he went along, the President asserted "it is just pure biiok” to claim progress in Vietnam must come . at the sacrifice of progress at home. Decrying what he termed “the old Pay JV Delay Eyed WASHINGTON (IP) - The House Committee appears likely to approve a resolution urging a one-year delay in. Fed-eral Communications Commission auth-orization of nationwide pay television. WANT AD SELLS two-car garage' "Sold in .less than an hour after paper came out. Wonderful action from our Press Want Ad.” Mrs. W. G. 2-CAR WOODEN GARAGE Phone FE 0-0000 PRESS WANT ADS provide instant communication between people who want to do business at once. They are easy to use, low cost and resultful. Dial — 332-8ia^ or 534^981 CHARLES BICKFORD Charefeter Actor Dies in Hollywood HOLLYWOOD !/P) - Actor Charles Bickford, who played rugged he-man roles on the stage, screen and television, died last night at 78. One of Hollywood's top character actors, Bickford succumbed in the University of California at Los Angeles Medical Center. After suffering an attack of emphysema, he was hospitalized last July. The illness later was complicated by an infection of the bloodstream and pneumonia. A friend said Bickford was “still hard, strong and gruff” until the end. Survivors include his widow, actress Beatrice LoTing, whoip he married in 1919, and a married son, Rex, 42, and daughter, Doris. No funeral plans have been made. The red-haired Bickford, after more than IQO film credits, was enjoying success in television ^ the hmd-fisted ranch owner on “The Virginian.” Recently actor Jdhn Meintire — who moved into “Wagon Train” when Ward Bond died — filled in for Bickford. A multimillionaire, Bickford often played a captain of-industry or a dominating father or politician. He w(hi an Academy Award nomination for “Johnny Belmda,” but once described Oscars as “a little bit loathsome.'* * Builder Filling Housing Void By BOB WISLER The lack of good housing is labeled . nne„oi Ponti,ac's most acute problems, but developer Charles L. Langs seems to be one of the few who is stepping into the void. * * * Langs oT 3631 Dorothy Lane, Waterford Township, this week received a federal commitment for the construction of the first 200 of a plapned 700-unit rent Supplement project in the northwest section of the city. He also announced this week that the first of the Auburn Hills Townhouse Apartments on Auburn just west of Opdyke wiU begin taking tenants next week. This is all good pews to Pontiac city officials who are more aware than most of the pressing housing needs for all levels of income. “There is a^ great need for moderate and low income hou^jng in the city,” Planning and Urban Renewal Director James Bates says. SIGNIFICANT STRIDE Bates said-that..dey.elopnient of the Auburn Hills hopsing and |lie expected developmoit of the rent supplement project on Kennett adjacent to the Alcott Elementary School will make a significant stride toward meeting this need. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) coalition' of stand-patters and nay-say-ers,” Johnson said: “They never wanted to do anything, but this year they; say they can't do it because of Vietnam. “That is just pure bunk. They were against progress before Vietnam. They are agaipst progress now. And they’ll be against progress when the war in Vietnam is a dim memory.” NEW HOUSING. — Takingji look at the first of some' 250 rental units which Will soon open is isfeyor WiUiam H. Taylor Jr. (left) and Charles L. Lanp, developer of the project. Langs said-he will start renting the units next week. The project, known as Auburn Hills Townhbuse Apartnfents, is located on Auburn west of Opdyke. „ Social Security Battle Is Vowed WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Republicans vow a floor fight against a proposed record boost in Social Security benefits they contend has a financing feature pegged to help Democrats in the 1968 elections. The $3.6-biIlion measure to provide 15 per cent benefit hikes cleared the Senate Finance Committee on a party-line, 11-6 vote yesterday. Chairman Russell B. Long, D-La., predicted quick approval for the measure When the Senate takes it up. The bill would boost benefits beginning next April — before November’s I presidential race — but wouldn’t increase Social Security taxes until January 1969. ★ ★ ★ That financing schedule was called ii’-responsibie and politically motivated by Sen. John J. Williams of Delaware, senior Republican on the Finance Committee. He predicted stiff GOP opposition. Firms, Offices Closed, Stores Open Tomorrow Community National Bank, Pontiac State Bank, Capitol Savings and Loan Association and First P'ederal Savines of Oakland will all be closed tomouoA'. Stores will be open. All city* county,and Waterford Township offices will also be closed in observance of^ Veterans Day. ■ Pontiac's maitt^post office lobby will be open for mail deposit, access to locked boxes and purchase of stamps from machines., Mail will be picked up frbm deposit points on normal holiday schedules and processed from outgoing dispatch, but there will be no regular window or delivery services. In Today's Press Addison Township Resignations, apathy plague fire department — P.\GE A-4. Open Housing Draft of the city's proposed ordinance is printed — PAGE C-10. Court Bill Supporters seen bowing to counties on revenues — PAGE C-7. > Area News .... .......... A4 Astrology C"* Bridge Crossword Puzzle Comics C-8 Editorials ' High Sfchool D-1, D-‘2, Markets' : D-3 Obituaries Sports TTigaters C-l-C-5 c-io, C-U TV and Radio Programs Wilson, Earl Women’s Pages B-1 A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1967 GIs, Marines Clash With N. Viet Troops; 14 Americans Killed SAIGON (AP) - U.S. Marines and Army infantrymen clashed with dug-in North Vietnamese troops in separate fierce battles within five miles of each other yesterday south of Pa Nang. The two battles, one a marathon of 26 hpurs along the coastal lowlands in the northernmost 1st Corps area, left' 14 Americans dead and 106 wounded, U.S. headquarters reported. Thirty-five North Vietnamese; were reported slain, many of them by massive bombardment Operation Opportunity, the from U.S. artillery, tactical new employment program be-fighter-bombers and helicopter GM to Expand [ Job Program gun at Pontiac Motor Division two months ago, will be expanded to a General Motors Corp. plant in the Detroit inner-city area, it was announced yesterday. GM will introduce an Otera-tion Opportunity plan at Chevrolet’s Gear and Axle Plant in Detroit, said James M. Roche, chairman and chief executive officer of General Motors Corp. At the same time, Roche said %that GM, under new liberalized employment procedures other U.S. pilots flew a otal o 153 than Operation Opportunity, has missions against the North Mred more than 12,000 hourly I Thursday, their Iwgest number rated employes in its Detroit li" weeks, but the northeast area plants during the past m°psoons three months. More than 5,000 !«/*Phong heartland area. Most of them are Negroes.' ^ gunships armed with rockets. * ★ * The IJ.S. Command also disclosed in Its weekly summary of aircraft losses that three njore American warplanes have downed in combat over North Vietnam but were not nounped at the. time, bringing to 735 the total of U.S. combat planes officially reported lost in the air war against North Viet- of the U.S. raids were against targets west and south of the North Vietnamese capital. Purpose of the Operation Opportunity program is to locate individuals previously considered unhirable and to hire them. This program required a re-evaluation of traditional employment criteria, including a review of education, arrest and prior work records. During the experience here. where the Pontiac Area Urban Pursuing its established pol-League is a partner and the re- icy of maintaining a slowly ro-ferral service, approximately tating and slightly increasing 250 hard-core Unemployed have board, the Oakland University been hired. Of these 182 remain i Foundation announces 23 re- REPORTED IMPROVING—Oscar-winning actress Jennifer Jones lies on a stretcher at Malibu Emergency Hospital last night after being found unconscious from an apparent overdose of* sleeping pills in the Pacific Ocean surf northwest of Los, Angeles. Her car was parked at the top of an adjacent 440-foot cliff. Police said her physician had reported "her missing a few hours earlier. Overdose of Sleeping Pills Star Found Near Death in Surf LOS ANGELES (UPD - Actress Jennifer Jones was foimd sprawled on surf-washed .rocks at the base of a 400-^t cliff overlooking Malibu Beach last night, apparently liMess and b,,*w,hr=t"« of sleeping pills. She was revived by mouth-to-mouth resuscitation and was reported improving ioday. Deputy sheriffs found the 48-year-old Academy Award winner moments from death at the bottom of the Pacific Coast cliff. Miss Jones’ brush with death ' came less than one hour after ishe learned that Charles Bickford, lead actor in her greatest OU Foundation Adds Members) ‘‘The Song' of Ber-had died of a emphy- movie, nadette, sema. She immediately telephoned her physician and told him she had gulped the pills, and was going to take more. He, notified police. PRODUCER’S WIDOW Deputies said Miss Jones, widow of producer David 0. Selz-nick, apparently parked her car, walked down a narrow, winding path toward the sea and collapsed on the rocks at the edge of the Pacific. Miss Jones, hospitalized under intensive care, won an Oscar for her protrayal of a French peasant girl form Lourdes who professed to have visions and conversation with the blessed Virgin Mary. Bickford was the priest in the film who fiercely struggled against the girl’s beliefs, tten was won over by her intense but simple piety. on the payroll, 90 per cent of whom are described by supervision as “competent” while the others need additional training. Of special significance in this effort is an 11-man follow-iip ; committee from within the Ne- ‘ gro community — almost all of ! them GM employes—who work placements for some of the original members. ♦ Newcomers are Mrs. Robert Anderson, Mrs. Virgil E. Boyd, Martin J. Caserio, Robert M. Critchfield, Milo J. Cross, Howard H. Fitzgerald II, John A. Ford, Mrs. West H. Gallogly, with the new employes away Charles I^ Gehni^er Edwip O. from the job in developing an^e, H^old Goldberg, l^s. Increased sense of respoLbilityiM^gh G Harness, George Hig- a» it pertains to holding a job J t ’ Mrs. John S, Judd, Mrs. Concerning approximately 450'otis M^inley, Mrs. William L. unskilled job openings which j MitchelC Charles H. Patterson, exist currently in GM’s Detroit-Frederick J. I^oole, John B. area plants, Roche emphasized ipoole, Alan E. Schwartz, Har-no tests are required nor is a I old G, Warner, and Harry Wiet-high school diploma, in keeping ling Jr. with employment practicesl * * ★ which have been h '’ ed byj Oakland University was host GM for the past five ars. |at a dinner for the new mem-' bers last night on the campus. Harold A. Fitzgerald, chairman of the foundation, presided, and Chancellor D. B. Varner outlined plans for the young university. He envisions a student body of 15,000 within another decade.' reported back in full operation today following a 24-hour strike that closed the two plants. Some 20,000 workers were off one day because of a strike called at Pontiac Division by UAW Local 653. Besides the 16;000 at the di. vision, 4,000 were idled at the body plant because assemblies had ceased. Roche also said that for some time GM plants ti|ave been using a “rule of reason” with reference to applicants with prior police records and previous work records which were unsatisfactory. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - MosUy cloudy and warmer today. High In the ‘'50s. Showers likely and a. little warmer tonight. Low 44 to 52. Saturday showers likely and turning a little cooler. Winds light and variable, becoming south to southeast 10 to 25 miles this afternoon and south to southwest 12 to 25 miles tenight. Sunday outlook: Partly cloudy with not much temperature change. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: Today 20, toniglft and tomorrow 60. 24-HourStrike Ends; Plants in Operation Developer Langs Filling . Pontiac's Housing Void Grizzly Mauls Hunter at Park Incident Near Where Bears Killed 2 Girls COLUMBIA FALLS, Mont. (UPD—A California hunter was miraculously saved by riflecarrying companion^ yesterday after being clawed and bitten about the head and face by a large grizzly bear near the entrance to Glacier National Park. The mauling occurred on a logging road in Flathead National Forest, about 50 miles from where two 19-year-old girls were killed by grizzlies in separate incidents in the park last summer. Robert Gilmore, 47, Torrance, Calif., was in satisfactory condition at a Whitefish Hospital. He underwent three hours of surgery to close massive puncture wounds. Dr. R. D. Buchanan said eacb wound’had to be “cleaned out” to prevent possible tetanus. Two hunting companions shot and killed the bear. * ★ * Members of the Montana! Fish and Game Department removed the bear’s head and; claws for laboratory tests tO' determine if the animal was rabid. Birmingham Area News 'Dope Use Is Increasing Among T ownship T ^ns' BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — we can do Is talk to a kid or There is evidence of increasing his parents if he admits using use of narcotics in Bloomfield drugs,** he said. Catchl^ng Township, especially a m o n g somebody in the act is rare, high school students, said Rob- PENALTIES REDUCED ert Bloom, township detective. the last few weeks His statement comes on the Michigan passed a law reduc-heels of one by Oakland County ing the penalties for the use Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson and sale of barbltuates and am-who said that marijuana smok- phetimlnes, (footballs, yellowing, especially, was widespread jackets, bennies) to a 9(klay in Oakland County schools and maximum misdemeanor. Mari-was more acute in South Oak- juana, however, is still a felony land County. with penalties up to 10 years in “Last year there were hardly jail, said the deteefive. Fortu-any reports at all about students nately, the state did i"cre^e usL Mrcotics, but this year, he penalty for the use of LSD especially since late summer, to five years maximum. BIRMINGHAM - The Bir. said Bloom. mingham Conservatory of Mu- Bloom conjectured mat tne yy2 E. Maple, will hold two reason for increased use is re- recitals in December for cent publicity both from federal youngsters, and local sources that appeared w w ★ to make some drugs appear rel- recital of classical atively harmless. Marijuima, be Dec. 3 at 4 p.m. (pot or grass) fw ex^ple,isn t jbe second will be Dec. 10 technically habit forming, he gj 4 _ jjj-| 53}^ Director Clifton said, but it leads to the use of j^grris. more dangerous drugs. ★ ★ * * Piano instructor Ray Koos will “Enforcing drug laws are dif- also perform at each of the per-ficult - like drinking. About alliformances.’______ Press Re^lrd Results in Tips (Continued From Page One) Langs at present is the only person who is making any significant dent in the housing void. In addition to the two developments mentioned he has anoth-Both Pontiac Motor Diyision|g|. qu jbe launching ■ pad, a and the Fisher Body plant were I planned housing project of 228 units for the elderly. * * * To be constructed next to the Auburn Hills site, the project would include a 12-story high-rise building 1 containing ll^ units with the rest being one-story apartments. FEDERAL PROGRAMS Langs is taking advantage of a variety of federal programs The local called the strike at jg undertake the developments'. 12:01 a.m. yesterday to protest I _ alleged failure by the company! federal committment for to resolve some 700 grievances^"® *'.®"* project is and failure to “bargain in good^**® ***® Michigan area, faith. " " Union officials claimed the strike was not related to current protests against overtime or a tactic in contract bargaining. Hare Marries Former Secretary LANSING (AP) - Secretary of State James M. Hare married his former secretary, Mrs. Catherine Haughton, in a ceremony before a Lansing Township justice of the peace Thursday. Records filed with the Eaton County clerk listed the mar-the third for Hare, 57, and the second for Mrs. Haughton, 43. the largest planned in the country. Despite some reservations b> city officials about the rent supplement program, they agree that this type of housing is needed. Although the first phase of the project will be for only 250 units, one city commissioner said, “If a thousand could be built, they would be grabbed up.” $106 TO $150 RENTALS Known as North Hill Farms, the units one and two bedroom units,, will rent for $106 to $150 per month including utilities. ’The project is for low-income families. The federal gpvern-under the program, subsidizes part of the rent. Tenants are required to pay 25 per cent of their income for rent. The difference between the rental price and income would be paid by the government. ★ w “The purpose of rent supple-'ments, a vpry muth misunderstood program, is to permit private construction of modest but decent living quarters for thousands of low-income families which public housing can not now reach,” Eddie McGloin, director of the Detroit office of the Federal Housing Administration, said in announcing Approval of the federal commitment. ' HELPS MANY “It i|5 a help for the landlord, builder and mortgagor — as well as for the renter,” McGloin said. Langs said he hopes to begin construction as soom as possible and will have the 200 units up by next spring. This might seem like a bold statement, but anyone who has seen his Auburn Hills project spring up have no doubts. ★ ★ ★ The rental units are built un-, der the government’s 221d3 program, which accepts occupants on a sliding scale of income keyed to the number of persons in the family. This ranges from $5,750 annual for one person to $9,450 for five or six. Rents go ffom $107.50 per month for one bed-room_ to $145 per month for three bedrooms. NATIONAL WEATHER - Rain as forecast tonight in a broad area stretching from the upper Great Lakes down to / the Gulf Coast, bringing milder temperatures to the region. ^ Most of the Pacific Northwest will have rain, with snow in the higher elevations. It will be colder In northern New Englahd.' ,1 New Marianne Shop At Pontiac Mall Fashion Shop to Open With Special Sales The new Marianne Fashion Mall Shop will hold a grand opening with special sales Monday. w ★ ★ Tl^shop, which opens today in the fashion corridor of the Pontiac Mall, is under the same management as the original Marianne Shop in the. Mall’s main corridor. The original shop is now, called Marianne’s Caisnals. 'The pew store has coats, suits and dresses while the original store offers more Manager of file new shop is Mrs. Donald Gemmette Trew-ISO STORES I There are more than I50i I Marianne shops in this national chain. Most of the stores are in Michigan, Illinois and Ohio. The $1,000 reward offer by The Pontiac Press for information leading to the arrest and conviction of the person responsible for the hit-and-run traffic death of 11-year-old Dar-elle J. Desotell Jr. has resulted, in nqmerous tips from citizens, according to Waterford Township police. ' * * * However, there are no suspects at present, said investigating detectives who are continuing their intensified search for the hit-and-run motorist. The identity of the person earning the reward will not be disclosed to avoid possible har- The victim was struck by the car Oct. 28 as he walked hlong Scott Lake Road near his home with a friend. He died the next day. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Darelle J. Desotell of 739 Scott Lake, Waterford Township. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Tobacco & Candy Discounts at SIMMS This Weekend Carton Popular Cigarettes Regular, Kings, Filters Choose your favorite brand 'from our fresh slocks of regular, king or filter cigarettes. No 100 or lOImm at this, price. Limit 2 Ziama Butane Gas ‘Caddy’ Cigarette Lighter Former $4.95 Zima 'Codd/ cigarette lighter that uses clean butorio gas. Handsome gold tone Ideal for gifts or your personal use. ,C UglIlCi |95 ,98c Ronson Butane Fuel ’ 2-11/16-Oz. for gas lighters........... 59c Ronson Fluid - 12-oz., for all wick lighters........... Florida Perfecto Cigars $2.25 volue, box of 50, tax included.... 1-lb.‘Brachs’Candies Choice of chocolate peanuts, stars, bridge mix, chocolate raisins or peanut clusters ............. 59' 29' 149 47' Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Hs ELECTRrryrNB SIMMS Sale of and ELECTRIC GUITARS Com* in and s** our big display of musical instruments including guitars, drums, tom-bourin*s, harmonicas, *tc. All discount priced to save you more. Layaway for Christmas gift« now. _________ ■»/ mam Floor sundry depts. Electric and Regular Guitars 1044 159$ 28“ 36»* 14-Pick-Up Electric Guitar 4750 2/3 Sia Begimers’ Electric Guitar 18*^ 2/3 Size Beginners’ Regular Guitar This 2/3 size guitar has a steel reinforced neck, metal strings and natural finish. With FREE pick and book. Full Size Regular Guitar Tulio guitar with steel reinforced neck, pietol strings, shaded mahogany color. 2-Pick-Up Electric Guitar Cut away style electric guitar with volpme, and tone con-I trol, flat solid body. Free pick and book.,^^,,^ f 3-Pick-Up Electric Guitar ' - 1 With tremole bar, metal pick guard, rhythm control, book L pnd pick. Electric Amplifiers Battery operated portable amplifier with 6-inch speaker. 44 Can be used os PA system or microphone....... # . Luggage Type amplifier with 6-inch speaker, 15xl2x5Vi size. Tone ond volume control........;....... B eW- Norma Base amplifier with 2 input, tone, volume control, 10-inch speaker, off/on indicator lite, solid state, >4 /dj 95 8 watts ........ ......... ■ • ____ _________ 14-Inch Snare Dram Set With Floor Stand. .. ■ ■ ■ ■ 24'“ -Genuii)o ‘HOHNBl’ Harmonicas............. 1” t. 5*“ 10” Headless Tamhourine,. 8" Reg.Tamhdurine,. 3“ . Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac J: THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 A—3 GM Truck Expansion Plans Told (Continued From Page One) | lively engaged in planning such 1 electronic equipment into “open He said growth and continued!® system along an east-west!warehouses” and stored, prosperity of a manufacturing'I * ★ ★ enterprise “requires the right He also saw use of these road-L | « .f c,.™.e - I .a„ by * * * [during nonrush hours. [nesses and commercial estab- "It must have the warmth of Caserio also foresees a change lishments, he said, understanding froftn the people in truck transportation with! * * * in the form of willing and able utilization of weather sealed continued support of the leargo c„ be “SmSa" 'NEW FRONTIERS easily switched from a truck and greater accomplishments in body to terminals, moved by! the years ahead.” “Fortunately we have both in Pontiac and I would like to pay tribute to everyone in this room for creating that kind of climate that has’ helped us forge into new frontiers and chalk up important industry gains," he laid. ■ It was the first major public ^ speech by Caserio since he took over the management of CMC Truck and Coach Division and was accepted as a vehicle to introduce him to a large part of the business community. A 30-year employe of GM, ^ Caserio spoke of impressive gains in truck transportation over the past 50 years and for'e-told of new concepts in 'the movement of freight and pas-•engers. ★ ★ ★ “Trucks handle more than 75 per cent of all the nation’s needs. This is three times greater than all other'carriers combined,” he said. INTERCITY BUSES He said intercity buses, mostly made in Pontiac, now carry nearly 500 million passengers more than 23 billion miles. City buses carry about eight billion passengers a year. In New York City alone, he said^ GMC buses transported more[ than 800 million persons last ^ year. Caserio said a trend in the coach industry may be use of ^ roadways for exclusive use by ” bu.ses which bring passengers from suburbs to the central: business district. ♦ ★ ★ Ho said this type of road could W utilized by 60,000 pas-'^ sengers per hour in a single linep of coaches. The route could also^ be qtilized easily b^ emergency! vehicles, he said. MH.WAUKEE CITED ^ “The City of Milwaukee is ae- Simms, 98 N. Saginaw Si You Should Be In Our Boots-Your Foot Will Be Warm ft Dry Simmt imports th« best m waterproof and insulatod boots to k««p Come in and see for yourself. SIMMS DISCOUNT BASEMENT Anti Freeze Fleece Lined Felt INSUUTED Pow-Wow '67 i for Cub Adults^. Adult loaders in the Cubj^ Scout program of the Clinton: Valley Council of the Boy Scouts of America may attend Pow-i , Wow '67 from 1 to 8 p.m. to- ^ morrow. ‘ The Pow-Wow, to be held at, Kennedy Junior High School, , 1700 Baldwin, is for exchange of ideas and information to bet-i ter cub pack and den activities. ★ ★ ★ A Blue and Gold Banquet,wiJI be at 6 p.m. with a “midway” of units displaying exhibitsij, showing their favorite activities. | ’ Registration fee is $2.50 per| person. Contact the Council! Service Center at 132 Franklin I • Blvd. for additional information.: 'Greenland' Felt insulates with fleece lining for double warmth. Waterproof rubber in green color. Full lace, calendar sole and reinforced double toes. Sizes 6 to 12. ‘Field & Trail' FttHy InSUlatod Outdoor Boots Fully insulated Aniline antique finished rubber looks, like leather. Welted Moc vamp-full lace-foam and fleece insuloted throughout. 10-inch height with cleated sole. Sizes 6 to 12. 12-IN. BOOT............. 10-Inch Fleece Lined Felt Insulated Boots Full Lace Insulated Boys' Rubber Boots ^ ond rugged soles. SIMMSil. U.S. No. 1 Hoiicf Picked APPLES Johnnys Snows 99( NOW AVAILABLE Codur Roping - Rravo Bkinkots Dry Firopkico Wood Squash - Wintor Potatoes Walnuts Pecans - Raw Peanuts Big Sale Fall Close-Out EVERGREENS or Less Ideal Weather to Riant $us I up 667B Dixie Hwy. Dfarkston 625-4740 RITTERS FoAnt Huron St. Store Open Till Midnight 3225 W. Huron St. 338-3911 Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Holds Hcrtijn. SIMMS Catnealm ’til Christmas/ Electronics - TRANSISTOR 0,: Priced Like Toys Here At SIMMS A But They^re For Real! Sale of Walkie-Talkies 3-TRANS. KIDS UNIT Genuine 'Claricon' unit- for around the home and block use. With battery. Limit 4. 6-TR/UIS. Up to 1 Mile Range 'Command' wolkie-talkie is a 6-transistor unit for I I VO XX up to I mile range. Limit 4. $1-holds. AF tf Ea. 9-TRANS. Up to 3-Mile Range 181* 'St. Moritz' with plug-in e and battery. $1 holds. Solid State Mobile Unit 5-Watt CB Transceiver $99.50 value —. complete with all mounting equipment. #9 crystal, 8 channels, 1 furnished. With squelch control, meter and push-to-talk microphone. Only $1 holds or get it on instant credit with a major credit card. REALTDNE 12-TRS. Pocket Radio 'REALTONE' FM-AM Radio As shown — personal port^le for FM and AM broadcasting. Telescopic antenna for better reception. With batteries. Jade 2215. $1 holds in free layaway. sTed Phono & Radio Outfit AC & Battery as shown — 2 speed record player with built in AM radio. Play on AC plug-in 6r batteries. Portable. $ I holds. ‘REALTONE’ Tape Recorder Portable 5-Tr. Simms Bros.~98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Ponti IPEN TONITE ’til 9 SA1WMY NWRS P.M. 9Ui.lo9PJi. Vlfin a TURKEY FREEatSIMMS NO PURCHASE REQUIRED EITHER- just come in and ask for FREE TURKEY Tickets t in any department. Everyone except Simms fand members of their families are eligible, ---- Hurry—drawings start Monday, Nov. 13th. All specials below lor today and Saturday. CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCDUNTS POL/KROID ___COLORStafS >Du9>bur^mity Today 6 pjn. to 9 p.m.-Satarday 9:30 a.m. to 3:30 p.m. ... and you don't .have to. buy a thing. Just come in and ask the Polaroid Camera Girl to take your picture: And you'll see it in full color in just 60 seconds. Sorry—limit 1 picture per person or group. The Polaroid Camera Girl will also.answer any questions concerning POLAROID comeros ond Polaroid Picture taking. , ., eTrSne-e-e-ee-enre'eee-wee-w’e-yeeeeere-eeeeeeeeeeee ~ POLAROID Color Pack Camera Sale Good 210 Automatic Color Pack $49.50 value, — .the camera that sets itself far perfect color snaps and you see the finished snap in just 60 seconds. $ 1 holds in free layaway. Best 250 Deluxe Color Camera $149.50 value - oil metal body camera with electric-eye and finest range finder. Perfect-, color snaps in 60 seconds. 39«« ColorCamera 114»« 8DLARDID Dolor Film PerPack 379 Polaroid 103 Color Pock film gives you 8 color snaps per roll.’ Linrit 10 rolls. SYLVANIA Flashcubes 12 Shots f'^Pack of 3 Cubes gives you 12 shots — 4 shots per cube without changing bulbs. For Instoniatic cameras. Limit 10 pocks. . KODAK'aiid SAWYER Projector Roto-Irays |98 Simpiiisthi.Mti... -Choice of Sawyers 100 or Kodak ' 80 slide roto-frays. For fast easy slide projections. Limit 5_per person. $2.95 \alues. I8»« Model 7599 as shown — regular $29.95 value. Portable recorder with remote mike, tape, batteries, earphone. SI holds in layaway. 3-Speed 4-Track STEREO Solid State Tape Reorder Compare to $200 units — os shown — features 3 speeds, I capstan drive, two oval 6“ speakers, full 8-waft music power, I 2 pencil type dynamic- microphones, easy lever control, pause control, pro meter- counter, sound-on-sourid 4-track stereo record and playback. Optional,stero speakers available. Get I it on^instant credit with, a major credit card. I 88 North SIMMS..?*. PDLARDID Portrait Lens. Fits Most Models '^98 Fits all too Pblorold . models plus the 220, P|^ 230 and 240 models. SALE POLAROID ACCESSORIES t Seff-Tirnor • Dewlopmmt 7i&»r • Tefapbolo nd Wkf«-An0;«. KODAK Color Processing Mailed to Your Homo Pre-paid mail-_ ers for 20-exp. '35mm film, 8nim roll or Super 8 roll and 127 or 126 slides. Limit 10 mailers. SAWYER' 5DD W. Slide Projectors $69.50 Value-Model 6228 cludprJ) and cornel/ w regular tray. $1 holds v'wrvv'w'irw 33»* Automatic Exposures and Film Advance KODAK 404 Instamatic Flashcube Color Camera Set 4288 $59.95 value — electric-eye camera sets, correct exposure and automatically advances ifm offer every shot. Flashcube permits 4 flash shots without changing bulb. Set comes complete with color film, batteries, flashcube. $I holds or you con • get it on Instant Credit with d mdjor credit card. • e • e e e • e e •■•••evrirwe ire e-rwr* KODAK Beluxe Model Super 8 Movie Projector Automatic Threading Feature $ 149.50 value — deluxe model M85 projector with automatic threading feature . . . plus reverse and still' ■ projections. Newest Instamatic projector for the new Supeh 8 film. $1 holds in free layaway or' charge it with a major credit cord. Drder Now In Time^for Dhristmas"'^ Photo-Greeting Cards Choice of Color or Black ’n’. Whites ing irt your favorite negative and hove personalized Photon Greeting cards made from it. Lowest prices on color or block 'n' white cords. With envelopes. 88 North Saginaw SIMMS.?* Resignations, Apathy Plague Addison Twp. Fire Department THE PONTIAC PRESS By JEAN SAILE ADDISON TOWNSHIP - Beset by resignations and now down to half-force, this township’s Volunteer Fire Department has been forced to take an introspective look. Since the department was once a thriving, well-equipped unit of 28 men with a full training program, the present condition is a sore point with old-timers. The latest development is the resignation of Chief John Hock, who claims the pressure of new business duties has forced his abandonment of the job. However, he said he intends to stay a member of the department. Earlier in the year Robert McCallum, a former chief then serving as assistant chief, resigned. He left the department. ★ • ★ * Hock said, “I asked him to maintain his position as assistant chief. Some\ things took place that Bob was dis- \ appointed about, and he resigned.” RUMORS OF DISPUTE While nobody is making statements \ for publication, there are rumors that a faction dispute was the reason. That, plus the reluctance of younger men of the community to tie themselves up with weekly training sessions, receives the Uon’s share of the blame fc-r the department’s present understaffed condition, according to several firemen. McCallum was replaced as assistant chief by Leroy H. Marburger. ‘Once Hock’s resignation is officially accepted by the Township Board, the department will be Marburger’s responsibility until it can elect a new chief. There are only 10 men left to elect. ONE MAN IN CITY Worse than that, Marburger confirms that there is just one member of the force who remains in Leonard for any part of the day. When Milward Strong, tf department captain, leaves for work about 1:30 or 2 p.m. there’s no member left in Leonard to pnnch the fire siren or to take a truck out of the fire hall to a fire. The town is withont official protection until members begin returning from their regular jobs about 6 p.m. There are members available during the day in Lakeville three miles to the south. "There are people in town who would do It,” Strong said. He referred to Me-' Callum, who runs a gas station in the small northeasterly Oakland Copty community, and to other locally employed residents. “Trouble is, most of them aren’t trained,” he said, To Strong the answer seems to be the Northeast Oakland County Firefighters Association, a reciprocal aireement for mutual help among several departments. “That’s the best thing that ever happened in this part of the county,” Strong said of the association. “We could have three departments on the scene of a big fire in 20 minutes,” he Hock, in reviewing the situation, said, “There are a lot of people in the com- munity who say, ‘If you need help, call me’ and it’s appreciated. The drawback is that they’ve had no training with the equipment.” It’s the weekly training sessions required by the department and the apparent reluctance of enough young men in the community to attend that, is blamed extensively for the fall-off in membership. ARMY-TRAINED MEN “I know there are a lot of young men in Addison who received fire-fighting training in the Army,” said Marburger. He added, “They don’t want any part of the Fire Department.” A man who misses three Monday night training sessions in a row is out of the IMPORTANT BUTTON - Addison Fire Captain Milward Strong points out the fire button locatpd in his home in l^eonard. That and another button located in the Township Hall are unattended by officials during a portion of each day, due to membership problems besetting the department. Chief of Police Is Relieved of Duties By BETTY ANN SCHULTZ ■WOLVERINE LAKE-Donald Vickery, the police chief here, has been reliev^ of his duties. No one has been named to take his place. Vickery, 36, who has served as chief one and a half years, was asked for his resignation Monday night by Village President Clyde Johanson and Village Manager Clifford Cottrell. Vickery said he was relieved of his duties Tues-son’s Cpuntry InUj^Highland Tovmship. Cocktail hour v® begin at 6:30 p.m., and dinner at 7:30 p.m. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 A—.5 Corner Saginaw and Huron Downtown Pontiac — FE 4-2511 Shop Mon., Thur. and Fri. 9:30-9:00 •Tues. and Wed. 9:30-5:30 WAITE S DAYS Check Page A-9 for more Waite's Days Ads ^ Last Chance TONITE and SATURDAY 1 and 2-Pc. Styles DRESS SALE Reg. :3“ lo 26" $7 $9 $12 One and two piece styles in acetate, knits, double wool knits, double jrotton knits, nylon jerseys, wools and crepes. Sizes lO to 20 and 121/2 to 241/2. Dresses... Third Floor 'Suburbia COATS *18’° Reg. 25.00 to 30.00 Bulky Orion IMPORTED GARDIGANSv Reg.\oO $699 Corduroy, wool, and vinyl suedes in pile and plaid lined coots. Self trim and pile trim. Belted or not. Blues, brown, greens, ond novys. Sizes 8 lo 18. Coots... Third Floor ' Choose from cable and novelty knits in white, pink, bronze,' mint green, blue, dark green, and beige. Sizes 36 to 42. Sweaters . . . Third Floor Girls' Nylon S-T-R-E-T-C-H PANTS Reg. 5.00 Size 7-14 2 to,*5 Girls' Weor... Second Floor Girls' Winter GOAT SALE! Reg. 18.00 $1088 to 22.00 I vJ Now is the time tor you to save on girls' winter coots. Choose from solids or plaids in cpmfy worm wools and wool blends. Fake fur collars, scarf collars or hoods. Warm pile or quilt linings. Sizes 7 to 14. GIrli'W ..; Second Floor Women's SHIFT GOWNS Machine washable 80% acetate, 20% nylon gown with satin trims or overlay shift gowns. Choose from many colors in % or sleeveless styles. Sizes S-M-L LIDO REDUCE-EASE GIRDLES $399 Reg. 5.00 ' Magic inserts control with -hips, waistline, diophrom. I Instantly inches seem to disappear oft hips, waistline, diophrom. I Power eiostic gives as you sit, bend, or stretch. Four-Inch waistband ■ with stoy-up stays that cannot roll. Notions...'Stretch Floor Pur Entire Stock TIMEX WATCHES 20% Off Choose from white or yellow gold in assorted styles of men's or women's watches. Jewelry... Street Floor BOXED STATIONERY Hi count vellum stationery in many designs^ and colors. Stationery... Street Floor Children's GLOVES and MITTENS TWr 88= Choose from knits, vinyls, borgs, in children's worm winter gloves and mittens. Solids and fqncies. Sizes S-M-L. Children's Wear... Second Floor - , Never Needs Ironing Permanent Press BOYS'JEANS Reg. 3.29 $277 SAVE $1.50 on this set. Com-pieteiy washable cotton flannel sport shirt with corduroy boxer ' pants. Sizes 3-4-6-8. Charge It. Boys' Wear... Second Floor Boys' rugged twill jeans in 100% cotton. Choice of olive, block, or wheat in - sizes 8 to 16, regular and r slim. Charge Yours at Waite's. Boys' Wear.., Second Floor ..............j WAITE'S DAYS SPECTACULARS ^-, ------ - ® Notions ... Street Floor GARMENT RACKS $288 Eosy to ossemble oil steel garment rock. Adjusts fro'm 48 tp 60 inches. Chrome plated!, and comes complete with shoe and hot rocks. Garment Bags, Reg. 3.93.........2 for $S All Sale? Final... HonesMo-Goodness DOOR BUSTER SPECIALS ... Limited Quantities FASHION ACCESSORIES—Street Floor ■ DRESSES, SPORTSWEAR—Third Floor HCHILDREN'S VALUES—Second Floor ■ RUGS, TOYS, ETC.—Fifth Floo Boxed Christmas Cards, Reg. 2.00 ..............25c Women's Fashion Hosiery, Reg. 3/2.50 . . . 3/1.66 Women's Hosiery, Reg. 4/2.00 ...-------^ ... 4) 1.50 Cantrece Hosiery, Reg. 4/3.15 ....-----------4/2.77 Women's Necklaces, Reg. 2.00 ............... 79c Womens Necklaces, Reg. 1.00 .......... ?/1^0 Women's Better-Bracelets, Reg. 14.00 ..... 7.00 Women's Fashion Bracelets, Reg. 10.00 ..... 7.00 ' Women's Bracelets, Pins, Earrings Reg. 2.00-4.00 ......................... WOOL SKIRTS ?6 $2^8 Reg. •9.00 Women's Pins and Earrings, Reg. 1.00 .;..79c . . . 33c BLOUSES $]44 Reg. 4/00 to 6.00 3-6x SHORTS Reg. 1.25-3.00....... KNfT SHIRTS Reg. 3.00--*...... KNIT SHIRTS " Reg. 1.50-4.00....... 3-6X SLACKS SETS Reg. 4.29-5.50--- - 3-6X SLACKS ^ Reg. 1.50-4.00....... KID'S HATS ' Reg. 2.00-3.00...... ] OC LAZY SUSAN Reg. $099 7.98 0 TO'- RUG NO-SLtP Z 39' Z EGG BEATER 99= 69' RECIPE BOX ^ "S 98' _ SCATTER RUG I S RUG NO-SLIP Reg. 7Qc J.98 /y 39= 12= TEFLON' ROAST PAN Reg. '$129 ’ 3.29 I THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 Pontiac, Michigan 48056 ■ A. Chalrm»n ol th» Board r W. rmoCTAia utiva Vica Preildent d Editor OlraotOr Richaad M. riTiorBAi Treasurer and Final Olflcer . America Salutes Its Fighting Men Throught recorded history, it has been a tragic fact that the best of the young men have had to carry the burden of fighting the wars in which their countries have been involved. In the United States today, every \ person, every family *and most especially f those with children I know well that civilization has not yet progressed far enough to lift this burden from its young people who now fight on an Asian battlefield in defense of the ideals and principles for which America stands. W,^ar I, as our older citizens will remember, was thought to be the war to emJ all wars. November 11 was originally designated by presidential proclamation to commemorate the armistice that terminated that war. In 1926, “Armistice Day” was established as "fe national holiday. But the armistice did not last. Since that time many millions of American servicemen have fought this Nation’s battles on every continent of the earth. In recogn'rtion of this fact, the meaning of Armistice Day was broadened in May of 1954 when Congress decreed that it should be known as Veterans Day in recognition of all those who have served America in time of need.' During tomorrow’s observance of Veterans Day, the Nation will pause to honor\ those yeterans, living and dead, who hav6 served in the U.S. armed forces in time of war. > It 48 particularly fitting at this ' time that they be so honored. World The Nation will remember them and carry the hop^e that time^ will bring thd dayyiren the worl^ will see the Mgnihg of the final armistice soyyoubg wen may give their enemies rather than their lives for the bUildwg of a better future. Negro Colleges Seek Well-Earned Support A relatively unheralded, but nonetheless meritorious, fund-raising campaign by mail is under way that will continue until the end of the year. It is the United Negro College Fund (UNCF) that supports 33 Negro educational institutions. One of every six Negro college students in the Nation attends these schools in the South, despite gains elsewhere. They are located close to those who need them, their programs are geared to what’s needed by their students, their costs are, by heroic efforts, kept at a level students. of modest means can afford. has observed: “To the extent that the great majority of America’s 22 million Negroes live in peace and are law abiding, education has succeeded—enabling them to hold .good jobs, to obtain decent housing, to shar^ in the riches and promise of America.” As a thoughtful sociologist The UNCF quota for the Pontiac area has been set at a modest $3,500. Uncler chairmanship of Monroe M. OsMUN, some $1,120-shas already been raised. , \ This is a worthy appeal for fuhds to be channeled into educational advantages for Negroes. Russia Looks Back on 50 Convulsive Years ' Americans in 1967 have one more reason to be glad they don’t live in the Soviet Union. They have been spared the rising flood of official propaganda, pomp and pronouncements glorifying the 50th anniversary of the Russian Revolution. A smaller torrent of newspaper and magazine articles, books analy-, ses, and assessments dealing with the past half century of convtpunism in Russia has appeared in the U.S., however. ★ . ★ ★ shchev. For them, the challenge of American power remains the unfinished business of the revolution. In this regard, philosopher Sidney Hook brings us back full circle to 1917. The challenge which democracy poses to Soviet communism is not a challenge to catch , up with Western affluence or military power or technological efficiency, he says. The current Kremlin leaders can be expected to deliver themselves of grandiose predictions as to when they w ill “catch up with the United States” — although they may be a bit more cautious in announcing their timetable than was Mr. Khru- “It is a challenge to live up to its own claliis, and treat human beings as autonomous creatures with the inherent right to choose their own destiny.” It will be interesting to see how that challenge is met in the next 50 years. Voice of the People: ‘LeVs Stop Criticism ’ ^ of President’s Family’ It is time someone stood up in defense of the Johnson family. They have been getting a tongue lashing ever since Patrick Nugent Warned Luci. Why don’t people mind their own business? They even complained about the day Luci picked to be married. President Johnson’s son-in-law and future son-ia-law aren’t hiding from the war. If they had to go, they would. Servicemen don’t particularly treasure being in Vietnam but they don’t complain half as inuch as their parents do. ★ ★ ★ The Johnsons can’t seem to please everyone but they really please me. I hope President Johnson wins the election. He fits the bill. I am proud to be part of this nation. DORALIE CROSS 4049 W. WALTON, DRAYTON PLAINS . ‘Parents Want More Economy in Schools’ When the Waterford school millage Is defeated, as I’m sure it will be, it will not be because parents aren’t concerned \ for their ^children’s education or because they thipk. good, dedi-\ cated'teaehers. ^e being overp^d. I-believe a person should \ be able to', work Vt his choice oK employment'without having \to work,a \ecodd\job to get alonV Parents' are fW up with — \lhe loose'spOTding when it comes tAthe school buildings. When \e make mohey SeWe it will be sWnt more wisely.\ \ CONCEkNED PaVeNT AND TA«PAYE;R \ ^ €ongTess Adjournment Far Off Reader Explains Services of OEO Program’ WASHINGTON - Hopes for an early adjournment of Congress seem to have been dispelled as both houses are c 0 n f ronted with a large number of measures which will require a lot of work between now and the] Christmas re- solve the problerh, but now some of the leaders of Negro some white families. All this is bound to be re- you' .0 .«b.d .h, Y.W.dA. and- V.M.C.A. funCions, Tbc„ areas to s c h o ol sTn^ members of me House and workers are dedicated people who help people willing to help one-third of the Senate are up themselves. ' Many people don’t understand that the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) is a Federal service which helps senior citizens, A.D.C. mothers and low income families who need advice and counseling.- O.E.O. does not give out money but works in advisory capacity only, referring individuals to agencies of the County, helping place you on jobs and encouraging neighborhoods in the cities and even to the suburbs. This has caused uneasiness among MRS. ROBERT FOLSTER 2745 DAVISTA, HIGHLAND LAWRENCE Many members would like' to spend a few weeks at home to get a line on public opinion because the session which begins in January is likely to be a long one. It is generally agreed that the mail from constituents is full of protests. Senators and representatives are faced with Voting on legislation which they may feel is necessary but which is unpopular. Generally speaking, the discontent throughout the country is manifesting itself in many ways. Bob Considine Says: Two Reply to Complaint About Ambulaiiee Alarming Instructions f or Passengers to Saigon It’s How You Talk on Viet That Counts One of' the most disturbing elements is the growth of racial friction. SOMETHING HF A CHANGE There was a time when the question of civil rights could be discussed objectively and when there” was widespread sympathy for the Negro as a victim of discrimination.*^ Something of a change has been apparent in recent months as the misguided leaders of a few of the Negro organizations have emphasized “black power’’ and have not hesitated to express themselves in militant language-much of which has, indeed, contained direct threats. EN ROUTE SAIGON-Fun-ny thing happened >to passengers aboard t h e Boeing 707 which accompanied Vice President Humphrey and Air Force 2 from Andrews Air Force Base, Md., to Saigon. Riders on the 0 f f i c ia 1 White House CONSIDINE plane received somewhat alarming instructions. To wit: “Do not lock your luggage. “Inspect your baggage at every stop to make certain that nothing was placed in it without your knowledge. ing the veep. Mrs. Humphrey is the baby’s godmother. Fritzy didn’t cry. Other than that, itmadeanice election year picture. The Republicans will have to come up with something real nifty to close the gap Humphrey has opened. To the one who wrote about “excessive speed’’ of an ambulance, you wouldn't complain about the speed if one of your close relatives was in the ambulance enroute to the hospital. By calling in by radio we can have the doctor standing by to give immediate service to the injured person. This has proven successful. The company I work for will not allo.w drivers to go over 70 m.p.h. Each car is equipped with a gauge to check our speed. ^ AMBULANCE DRIVER IN PONTIAC « Almanac In reply to “Wondering,” the ambulance speed was probably overestimated. I have been actively engaged in the ambulance business for seven years and have found that the flashing red lights and sirens usually cause the average person to be very inaccurate with speed estimation. True, the majority of calls will not require high speed, transportation. Can “Wondering” prove that this call was hot one of the infrequent (but not rare) emergencies calling for a race against time?-* HAROLD PRINCE 49 W. BURDICK, OXFORD “Every hotel (or stop) will have a baggage collection room, which will be a secured area. No baggage will be ac-ceptqd, unless it is personally accompanied to the baggage room. WATCH BELLBOYS MARLOW By JAMES MARLOW AP News Analyst WASHINGTON - Here’s a new twist in American politics: One way to win public confidence is to keep your mouth completely shut, or a 1 m 0 s t| completely Another is to keep talking. But that can turn out badly. Maybe the answer is in just how you do or don’t keep quiet. These are conclusions to be drawn frpm the latest Gallup public opinion, poll on handling the war in Vietnam. It was taken for the National Broadcast-lri|.Co. ' President Johnson didn’t come out looking well among,, those questioned about his conduct of the war. But his hve would-be, or possible. Republican rivals for the presidency In 1968 came out looking a lot worse. Among the five Republicans, New York’s Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller and former- Vice President Richard M. Nixpn did best. Ten per tent of those questioned said they had a “lot of confidence” in both men’s ability to han-» die the war. Only 9 per cent said that about California’s Gov. Ronald Reagan, 4 per cent about Illinois’ Sen. Charles A. Percy, and just 3 per cent about Michigan’s Gov. George W. Romney. IMPRESSIVE FIGURES These figures are impressive if only because none of these five Republicans ^ in whom those polled expressed confidence in their war-handling ability — have had anything to do with handling the those questioned, has been a steady talker. HAWK VIEW He takes the hawk view. Unlike Rockefeller, who has been willing to go along with the way Johnson is running t h i n g s in Vietnam, Nixon wants a lot tougher war, a stepped-up war. He wants “massive pressuie’’ on North Vietnam. As the elections this week have indicated, too much talk of “black power” tends to increase racihl antagonisms and cause persons of the opposite color to use their ballots to “If you have local personnel (bellboys, etc.) carry your baggage, please accompany them, “l^ate baggage will not be' accepted at the ramp of Air Force 2. By United Press International Today is Friday, Nov. 10, the 314th day of 1967 with 51 to follow. The moon Is between i t s first quarter and full phase. The morning stars are Venus, Jupiter and Mercury. The evening stars are Mars and Saturn. On this day in history: In 1871, newspaperman Henry Stanley found explorer David Livingston in a small settlement of Africa. • In 1953, Ramon Magsaysay was elected president of the Philippines. In 1965, the aluminum industry bowed to administration Question ami Answer I say hypertension is high blood pressure. My friend say* it is tension an^^ fatigue. Can you settle it? BEATRICE BURT CLARKSTON REPLY Hypertension is t\ie term generally applied to high blood pressure. Howe,ver, for questions about medical matters, we suggest you consult your physician. f Do you hove a question about something? ..j "Question and Answer," Voice pressure and rescinded price of the People, The Pontiac Press, P. O. Box 9, hikes. Pontiac. express their emotions. “If you find that your baggage has been tampered with, Reviewing Other Editorial Pages or if you find an object that Vyou do not recognize, notify Perhaps the most perplex- t h e U.S. Secret Service in-Ing question of all for federal mediately.” and local governments is how _S/ow Down ... Sacramento Union terways, landscape and urban centers. Of the five, Rockefeller is the only one who has said nothing, or almost nothing about the war. It’s the others who did the talking. Rockefeller limited himself .^to expressing confidence in 'Johnson’s policy and suggesting that judgments on the war should be made only by those who, like Johnson, have access to classified ininformation. , Oddly enough, Nixon, the only other Republican to match the practically speech-, les^ Rockefeller in winning' even 10 per cent of confidence on war-handling among Reagan, also a hawk, takes the same view as Nixon. It’s hard to tell what Percy wants. He has been critical of the war but unclear on solutions. Romney, lowest man in this public opinion poll, is in a class byiiimseif. Talking about the war for a couple of years now, he has been increasingly critical of Johnson, but he has done so much scrambling" around for something to say that the result is exasperation. JOHNSON ABILITY The Gallup survey reported that 48 per cent of those questioned said they had “little or no” confidence in Johnson’s ability to handle the war. Only 20 per cent said they had a “lot of confidence” in the way he’s doing it. Another 20 per cent expressed “some confidence.” to deal with the school-integration problem. NOT UNIFORMLY APPLIED The Su p r e m e Court’s opinion in 1954, which advised that “equal educational opportunities” require that Negroes and vyJu.Le-8''^gle ip the schools, has not Keen uniformly applied, largely because of segregation due td residential factors. 'The 1968 Democratic campaign opened without warning just before the vice president went aboard B*s plane. A reporter said, ‘With all the dissension and difficulties stirred up by the war in Vietnam the Republicans now say that, President Johnson can’t be reelected, and . . Humphrey cut him off. “They’re «ad wrong,” he .The Negro population In the snapped, and you can’t get North is concentrated primari- wronger than that.” ly in the ^ cities. Many white families have movedi to the suburbs. Revelation that 'California has 200,000 fewer people than was expected last year is no cause for alarm. For one thing the state is still growing but at a slower rate than previously estimated. According to revised figures by Walter P. Hollman, who heads the population studies conducted for the State Finance Department, California is likely to reach the 20 million mark in mid-1968, instead of this year as previously estimated. California has been stretching its environment to t h e breaking point. Healthy Drink Jackson (Miss.) Daily News Sweden, Great Britain and the United States, hw says ailments of a’ge like heart disease and bonespftetiing are “significantly more prevalent” where the drinking water is soft than in areas where it is hard. The politicians at first thought this would probably Verbal Orchids “Stop beating around the bush,” Bill Jlearst told him. KISSES BABY As if that wasn’t a sufficient launching of the campaign, Hubert clinched it by kissing a baby. There just happened to be one handy A breather jin the . pace of growth might enhance the state’s opportunity to pay more heed (o the rapid consumption of natui'al resources. There may be some dispute about the benefits of hard liquor, hut to one medical expert, there is no question that hard water is the thing to drink. . “To drink hard yypter is good. To drink soft, water is bad,” says Dr. Arthur G. Shock of the Southwestern Medical Foundation in Dallas, Texa^ According to studies done in The trouble is, our water supplies are geared to industry, whose use of water is tremendous while the amount of water we drink is infinitesimal in comparison. Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Harmes steps of the jet. of 1038 LaSalle; 64th wedding anniversary. Mrs. E. C. Rockefeller of Milford; ' 83rd birthday. The baby turned out to be Fritey Gartner, infant son of oiie of the vice president’s ad-minisb-ative aides, David Gartaer, who is accompany- Currently 375 acres a day are" b e i n g bulldozed from farms and'‘open space for pavement and other construction. The state is registering losses steadily in its prime soil, in its)butchered forests, in the pollution of its air, wa- earHer for 50 centa a week; where mailed in Oakland. Genesee, Livingston. Macomb, Lapeer and Washtenaw Counties It Is Sia.OO s all other places Member of ABC. Municipal authorities often “purify” water by softening it, thus removing essential minerals, charges the doctor. The reason is that soft wa-. ter requires less soap (saving money for commerical laundries) and that boiler pipes do not form scale (saving money for other industries). To bolster his case for natural wpter, he cites records of Hernado de Soto’s explorations of the New World. Thh Spanish explorer “found Indians of many tribes, at peace, sharing the recuperative waters” at what later was called Mountain Valley, Ark. mi THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1 A—7 Detroit Police Pontiac Mall Optical & Hearing Aid Center Our Services Include. taring Nathan Lips Ploying Roles to Curb Thefts DETROIT (UPI) An undis-closed number of out-of-uniform Detroit policemen are walking $jthe streets and driving cabs in tligh-crime areas of the city today, acting as potential victims for would-be thieves. ' Police Commissioner Ray :i: Girardio ordered the under-cover activity after Mayor Je-rome Cavanagh ordered him to get at least 400 more police of-V ficers on the streets to protect S the citizens,of the city. The plainclothes policemen and policewomeh are posing as' S store clerks, cabdrivers, bus I drivers and even shoppers to foil thieves. Girardin said all the officers will be heavily armed* “to give the community the protection ' ;;; promised by the mayor.” I| * * * x This latest move in the-city’s battle against crime followed a :;i; riine-week test by the depart-ment in which officers were as-signed' to drive taxicabs. Gir-ardin said robberies of taxicab dri\^ers dropped 66 per cent ::: durite the trial. Along with Convenience at All RICHARDSON’S DAIRIES-8 Area Locations HALF 'N HALF 39- BLACK WALNUT ICE CREAM 99‘ »/2 Gair / EVERYDAY LOW PRICES CHIP DIP I.L39 SOURCREAM ■'‘^<29 Whipping CREAM' r9READ 5 lmvm 1® HOMO MILK 1^r43^^ RICHARDSONS. 5838 M-15 Clarkston 4342 Dixie Hwy. ' 535 Commerce Road 7350 Highland 2466 Orchard Lk. Rd. M-59 Plaza Sylvan Lake 3414 Huron at 4100 Baldwin Ave, Pontiac Eliz. Lake Rd. H09 Joslyn Ave. Pontiac FRIDAY and SATURDAY ONLY! SPECIALS On ula Friday at 6 ar^ all day Saturday, while they last! Save! Women’s regular 3.99 warm brushed rayon/nylon gowns, now 2.66 Delightfully ityled shift gowns are so comfortable, “'warm and lightweight. 80% rayon/20% nylon brushed fabric with satin trim. Pretty pastels. S-M-t. Infants’ 2.29 cotton corduroy crawlers, only Men^s regular 2.25 famous brand long sleeve cotton sweatshirts ^ Lady Caroline 89c if pert, seamless mesh, sheer nylons special savings on sll^t irregulars that would sell for 89c if perfect. Tiny flows will not impair look's or wear. Run-stop top and 1.74 Comfort-fit. Ladder back shoulder straps, bib, elastic waist, snap crotch. Sizes M to XL. 1.44 Nationally advertised brandl Heavy cotton twMff-shirts have crew neck, raglan tieevet, knit evff% waistbond. White, grey, navy, black, green. S-XL Soft and plush fur-look 20x36” decorator rugs Washable acrylic/mod-acrylic throw rugs with non-skid knit backing. Choice of cblori. Savel Juvenile boys’ reg. 2.69 cotton corduroy jeans 1.77 Snap tab closing with boxer back or Ivy style with belt loops. Loden, brown, navy. 4 to 7. Regularly 3.29 rayon/acrylic Lo Chic blankets Deep nap for extra warmth, _ rayon satin binding. Washes like a dream. Solids. 72x90". Special! Values up to $4 costume jewelry bonanza . Plastic coated playing cards, now 24* Reg. 3 for $1. Choose re^lar or pinochle. Sold in gift dept. 3.99 dart board with six darts 2.99 18" dart board reverses to baseball game. 99 Glittering array of fashion right, famous name jewelry accents including pins, earrings, and bracelets, Hurry in and buy for • yourself and for Christmas gifts, (J.w.lry Not .1 Drayton Plains) 3.88 Favorite solid ' colors, print. With zipper. OPEN NIGHTS UNTIL 9:30 2 wfiting surfaces. With chalk, eraser. 50x35". DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS 'A—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 SPECIAL HOUDAY intFOdHCtoty offer! WEEKEND FREEDOM MACHINE by JOHN DEERE Buy now.* 15 per cent down. No interest until April 1; No payments until May 1, 1968. Terms up to 30 months. See dealer for details. *Offer expires December 31, 1967 Anti poverty Program Laxity Seen by Senator WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. John L. McClellan, heading a Senate panel probing big-city riots, says hearings Indicate laxity in the federal antipoverty program. ' * ★ ★ The Arkansas Democrat, chairman of the Senate permanent investigations subcommittee, said he hopes its probe will lead to reform within the Office; of Economic Opportunity. Sen. Jacob K. Javits, R-N.Y., for policy changes within the said in an interview he feels the agency, investigation may be turning MAJOR TOPIC into a trial of the federal anti-j ^j,en the inqfuiry resumes in poverty agency. “Tips is not the about a week the operation of place to try the OEO,” said Jav-'poverty-fighting programs in again ex- “I’m not out to get the OEO,” McClellan said in a separate interview, but added he felt the probe might point up the need Riot Trials Set for Spring ^ Nashville, Tenn. pected to be a major topic. So far, the investigation of Negro disorders in Nashville and in Houston has been marked by charges of ties between poverty orkers and racial militants. McClellan said he does not know whether^this will be a pattern as the subcommittee moves on to other cities in a riot investigation expected to continue well into next year. * ★ ★ He said the inquiry will continue until it determines the pattern of cause and possible cure in city race riots. "But when that point will be, I don’t know,” he said. DIFFERENT^ PROGRAM The OEO faces a deferent kind of problem in the House—a Republican effort to reduce its funds by $600 million. His Last Term? DALLAS, Tex. (AP) — The Dallas Mornipg News reported today that Texas Gov. John Connally will not seek re-election again next year. Rep. Charles E. Goodell R-N.Y., proposed Thursday reducing from $2.06 billion to $1.4 billion President Johnson’s money request for the OEO in fisc^ 1968. Ninety per cent of driving decisions are based on sight. The House isn’t exp^d tO| vote on the proposal i^til next week. But in preli^ary de-| bate. Rep. Carl ,p. Perkins,' D-Ky.,' called Gopdell’s plan a reckless attemppio kill the antipoverty progr^hi. Sick-Cafi ‘Strike' Hits Sftafe District FLIN’T gw — About 50 food service employes in the Car-1 ma^ School District called in ^k Thursday. The district's /two high schools and four junior highs were left without cafeteria service. All of the em-I ployes are members of the American Federation of State, County and Municipal Employes Union, AFL-Cia The union has ibefen negotiating with the district for a new contract since last September. They have I been working without' a contract. DETROIT (API - Trials of (he,i,200 persons charged with felonies in last July’s riot will be held next spring, a Detroit judge said Thursday. ,. In addition,, arrest warrantsj have been issued for an' additional 400 free on bond who failed to attend prfeliminaryj court hearings. | Judge Vincent J. Brennan,! executive judge of the Recorder’s Court of Detroit, said about 4,200,.persons were jailed and: charged with misdemeanors or, felonies during the six-day riots in which 43 died and . 657 were' injured. The local court disposed of: the misdemeanor cases within two to three weeks of the riots when* more than 1,000 defendants pleaded guilty to charges ranging from drunkenness to disorderly conduct and gambling. JAIL TERMS The defendants generally were given jail terms ranging from five to seven days. They also were credited for time served. \ Half of the 3,200 felony c^ses were disposed of when^ sc defendants who had no prior criminal record were allowed W .plead guilty to reduced charge^ and other persons were exoner-^ed at preliminary hearings. * Timt to consider selecting thot lovely new dining room furniture you'll need for y'our holiday enterlolning! * SEE OUR MARVELOUS ARRAY PRICED TO PLEASE NOW! ■ 42" WALNUT ROUND TABLE with extension leaf and plastic top, 4 padded chairs. J.ltl Charming Colonial DINING ROOM SET 1195 * $11995 42" round maple table with extension leaf and plastic top, 4 captain chairs. and largo linen drawer. COUNTRY PINE STYLING SHIAQ” Informal dining room group. 42 in. round table with plastic 11133 fop and 2 extension leaves. Hw 54-in. buffet with hutch, plastic top, $239.95. Matching Mates chairs $34.95 each. GLOBE TERMS AVAILABLE Furniture 334-4934 2135 Dixie*' at Telegraph nnru Mon., Thuri.. Frl- #-• Urtn Tuti., Wed., $at.'til • JACOBSON’S NEW MEN’S STORE BECOMES AN EVEN MORE WONDERFUL WORLD OF FASHION FOR MEN AND STUDENTS men's shop is complete . .. virtually doubled in size and dedicated to the man of any age whose taste d refined styling and assured quality In all his furnishings and apparel ne,eds. There Is also a new custom shop where you may choose the finest domestic and imported fabrics to be made into suits, sportcoats and topcoats, according to your exact measurements. The QUAD SHOP is devoted to the young prep size clothing. We look forward to serving you in our you will enjoy the personalized attention their ability to serve and advise you in Jacobsons man on his way up ... featuring student and handsome new surroundings and know that of our experienced staff — noted for the choice of a wardrobe. MEN’S STORE 325 NORTH WOODWARD - BIRMINGHAM FQR YOUR CONVENIENCE . . . USE THE MUNICH*AL PARKING LOT AND STRUCTURE ADJACENT TO J|ACOBSON’S BUILDING " \ ' ,, - ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10. 1967 A—9 Corner Saginaw and Huron Downtown Pontiac — fE 4-2511 Shop Mon., ThurS. & Fri. 9:30-9:00 • Tues. and Wed. 9:30-9:00 WMTE'S UYS Check Page A-5 for More Waite's Days Ads Last Chance TONITE and SATURDAY Men's Kentfield Wool Blend -SPORT SHIRTS Reg. 9.00 $6^4 Washable 95% wool, 5% nylon blend shirt in assorted plaids. Regular collars. Single needle stifching. Sizes S-M-L-XL Men's Wear... Street Floor Leather Palm MEN'S DRIVING GLOVES Reg. 3.29 $2 88 One size fits all in this warm wool raccoon nylon blend stretch glove with leather palm. Camel black or grey. Men's Wear... Street Flooi' Men's Kentfield THERMAL KNIT UNDERWEAR Reg. 3.00 2 for *450 or 2.29 Warmth without weight in this 100% thermal knit under-, wear. Completely washable. Choice of long or short sleeves in the shirt and ankle length drawers. Sizes • S-M-L-LX. Fannous Brand SPORT SHIRTS Reg: 6.00 $029 to 7.00 O Choose from Ivy or regular collars in solids, plaids and checks made by America's foremost maker of men's shirts. ■ Most ore permanent press. Sizes S-M-L. Men's Wear ... Street Floor Men's Kentfield UNDERWEAR ?'?o Fine cotton T-shirts with rein-, forced neck band. Sizes S-M-L-XL. Double seat, heat resistant briefs in sizes 30 fo 44. Fine broadcloth boxer shorts in sizes 30 to 44. Men's Wear,.. Street Floor FRAMED MINIATURES by Famous Masters Only $125 Choose from 36 designs All pictures under glass with oval or square opfenings. Wide selection of subjects. Excellent reproductions of the , • most popular works of the masters. Beautiful frame designs in your choice of gold with white or antique overtones. Charge Yours. See the Special Display Right by Our Front Door Purchase ■ ■“of Slight ‘ Ifregular Floral Print Sheared Towels Both 99c- Hand 72= W. Cloth 26= Jacquard Towels Bath Hand 79^ W. Cloth 39*^ Towels ... Fourth Floor Special Selling! Scatter Rugs Reg. 8.00 /-OO 24x36 or ^ l-KVy 30" Rd. kJ Jeg. n.OO $“799 27x48 ^ / Washable, pre-shrunk, assorted colors. Non-^kid backing. Rugs . . . Fifth Floor 100% .Acetate Satin BEDSPREAD $p99 Permanent Press Tablecloth $088 Reg. 12.99 Reg. 2.99 $]44 Reg. 6.99 ■ 52x52 60x90 Reg. 4.99 52x70 $288 Reg. 5.99 68" rd. Reg. 7.00 60x108 $488 e shiny, silky Sotin-Glo bedspread. Assorted colprs. Spreads . . . Fourth Floor Choose from many solid Colors in permanent press tablecloths that never need ironing. Slight irregulars. A Very Special Purchase of Famous Make SHEETS COMFORT NAP THERMAL BLANKET $099 Value 7.00 Keeps you warm in winter and cool in summer. A blend of 94% rayon and 6% acrylic. Nylon binding. 72x90 fits twin or full. Blankets ... ■Fourth, Floor Shop and Compare These Terrific Values 'l^ulj Flat ,1 $044 or Fitted . Durable Press - NO-IRON 180 count white percale. Very famous tnake. Slight irregulars will not impair the wear. Ut Sheets ... Fourth Floor Only 4 of These Sheds Left! LARGE lO'xS' PERMA-PLATE STORAGE SHED With the only Rust-Proof Finish guaranteed 3 , years. x V/ Sheds .. . Fifth Floor t^o Money Down A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 FALSETEETH Chewing Efficiency Increased up to 35% average up to 35% mt you eprlnlcle a little v'AR'nmfT 35% more effective—If PASTEKTH on your platM. PASTEffTH holds uppers and lowers more firmly so they fe-’ imfortable. PASTEETH Is n Marijuana Use Said Tough to Cope With !ld—doesn’t sour. No gummy, pesty Ualna rhork “rlent\irA OdOT . taste. Helps check "dentui Dentures that WASHINGTON (AP) — The marijuana is. growing so fast head of the Food and Drug Ad- that government and the medi-ministration says the use of cal and legal professions have been unable to effectively coun-| tqr the problem. Dr. James L. Goddard told a; Senate Small Business subcommittee there is a widespread need to alert young people to the dangers of using dangerous drugs, especially marijuana. He said the federal government, cooperating with private groups and schools, has launched such an educational campaign. Goddard estimated Thursday that up to three million Americans a year use marijuana or it at least once. He said’ he couldn’t explain the prevalance of marijuana smoking. FLAUNTING SOCIETY? It may be because this has become the thing to do-a way to flaunt society,” he said. Then again, he said, hippies maintain that some drugs aid one to understand himself better. 'And maybe because the drugs h?ve become more widely available,” he added. Two Schools Stoy Closec} After Fracas DETROIT (UPI) — Two suburban Dearborn Heights schools remained shut today following a disturbance at dhe of them Wednesday which resulted in the arrests of 39 Negroes. AP Wirtphoto GUILTY OF MANSLAUGHTER — Dorothy Sheridan, 30, of Harwich, Mass., is shown after she was convicted by a Cape Cod jury on a manslaughter charge in the death of her 5-year-o|d daughter, Lisa. The state contended that the child’s death was due to her mother’s failure to provide medical aid-for her. The mother, a Christian Scientist, said she relied on her faith to heal the child. LBJ Foe McCarthy Flies to State Today ANN ARBOR (UPI) President Johnson didn’t have enough trouble in Michigan with maverick Democrats, Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy, D-Minn., flies here today to fan the lames of the anti-Johnson movement. McCarthy, being boomed by anti-Johnson Democrats to challenge the President for the party’s presidential nomination next year, will be in Michigan to sample sentiment against johnson. He’ll speak officially at p 2nd Congressional District fund-raising dinner at' the University of Michigan Union. But a McCarthy-for-President rally was scheduled for Detroit’s Metropolitan Airport first when the senator arrives from another speaking engagement in Minnesota. Zolton Ferency, who has been critical of President Johnson’s Vietnam war policies, planned to greet McCarthy. Many of the airport rally participants will be members of the newly formed Michigan Conference of Concerned Democrats who have been waging a campaign against the President’s Vietnam policies. Yesterday the organization asked Democrats opposed to Johnson’s handling of the war to submit a $1 donation for a newspaper advertisement which would state the group’s casein an open letter to President Johnson and the Democratic party:” ICY The Taste of Canada cool, clean, crisp. It’s in a bottle ofMcMaster’s* McMASTER'S IMPORTED CANADIAN WHISKY At 100,'Tired' $4.47 (he fi((h Retail Tax Incljuded DENVER, Colo. (AP) - Fred D. Gill was 100 years old today.' * * * I Asked how it feels, he replied: I Democratic State Chairman “Tired.” Officials at Robichaud High School and Roosevelt Junior High School decided to keep the schools closed yesterday and today to allow tempers to cool off. The disturbance outside Robichaud began Wednesday after a white teacher tried to discipline a Negro student, according to school officials. Teachers at Robichaud, which lies just inside the Dearborn Heights city limits adjacent to Inkster, met yesterday with school officials. About 35 per cent of the students at the school are Negroes from Inkster. We Design • We Manufmtore • We Instoll.yWe Guorontee After their meeting, the teachers issued a statement blaming “inconsistency in discipline, Hack of rules and regulations, lack of communications with the community, lack of meaningful I curriculum and teacher problems” for the racial troubles iat the two schools. LEE'S SSmpiSciit/ LAWN & GARDEN CENTER ' ]Pe Service What We Sell! 923 |MT. CLEMENS PONTIAC FE 2-3412 OPEN DAILY 8:30 A.M. TO 6 P.M. — CLbSID SUj^lDAY ^nnQt§9 iriOCT miAllTV “ ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY No matter how lively* a girl may be her Celanese* nylon slacks will never run Because they’re run-proof Celanese* nylon tricot with two-way stretch for super smooth fit, and an elasticized waist for easy step in dressing. Plus neat stitched down creases that last through months of machine washings and hours of playtime kneeling.i/Vhat’s more, because they're sturdy nylon even the most active youngster outgrows ’em before she can outwear ’em!.Pick Penney’s two-way stretcfrpants of Celanese® nylon in fall flavored navy, mum gold, red, black, stadium green, dr rally rust. In little girls’ stretch size 4/5 and 6/6x, 2.98, bigger girls’ stretch sizes 7 to 16, 3.98. •A registered trademvk pf Celanese Corporation of America. PENNEYS MIRACLE MILE CHARGE m ) the PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVE]V|BER 10, 1967 A—11 Rah! Rah! Fashionpace savings! Famous sports separates! Sale 6.66/ Imagine, this is just a sampling from a wide selection of beautiful separates you can have for just 6.66 each. We’ve color coordinated A-line and slim skirts, rayon lined pants, pullovers and cardigans—each made to sell for much more. Choose from exciting novelty knits as well as patterns and solids. Select wool pants and skirts in sizes 5 to 13; wool or Orion® acrylic sweaters, sizes 36 to 40. The sale starts when the doors open Friday, so come in early. Hudson’s Fashionpace Sports- ^ wear, Pontiac 1st; also Downtown Detroit, Northland, Eastland and Westland. If you can’t come in, call us at CA 3-5100 or your toll-free suburban number. -HOLIO-AS' SAk-I-iES Save now at Hudson's Pontiac: Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Road Open Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday till 9 P.M. A—12 the PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 Save on , warm, washable winter robes at Hudsons sale 5.90-13.90 A. Cotton batiste qxiilt in a feminine floral print; comfortable A-line stylirtg, handyside pockets, prettily piped. Fluffy polyester fill, acetate lining. Blue or gold; in sizes P-S-M-L.....7.90 B. Cotton quilt long peignoiz; in a feminine little .floral print. Self-lined, polyester fill. Pink, blue; 10-18.. .8.90 C. Cotton gingham quilt zips to stand- up collar—undoubtabjy young looking. Light, warm polyester fill; acetate lining. Pink or blue; sizes S-M-L... 6.90 D. Sheer nylon quilt—lovely and luscious with lightweight polyester fiber fill. Assorted prints, colors. 10-18.10.90 ,E. Cotton terry duster, after-bath favorite that's comfortable all the tiipe. Pink, . blue or yellow floral prints' In sizes S-M-L, 5.90; in XL size....6.90 F. Fluffy fleece long robe.^truly elegant with satin applique, binding, and rope belt. Arnel® triacetate/nylon. Blue, melon, moss. P-S-M-L. 13.90; also available in short style. 10.90 G. Cotton cheiiille in all these colors: white, blue, coral, aqua. Soft and cuddly as can be. Convertible Sleeve, optional belt. In sizes S-M-L-XL......... 6,20 Hudson's Loungewear—Pontiac, 1st Floor; also Downtown Detroit, Northland, Eastland, Westland. V _ _ ^____________ ___ _______ _____ .TTl S.A.XjIES aMM* eiiilfcMi y^gg0Kmmmmmm nAwa ediMm ... iiiiiiwiMiwiiyWHMRnAn ltes*sr;eeiw nwlMteaMMniMiaBMeaei^ Extra hours to shop: Hudsons Pontiac open till 9 Mon.,Thurs., Fri., Sat. A cup of coffee or “spot” of tea is always part of the Needlework Guild Ingathering. Mrs. Charles S. Wixom, Sylvan Lake, does serving duty for Mrs. P. L. Francis, Kingsmere Circle, Avon Township; treasurer of the organization. Calendar SATURDAY Cook Nelson Pdst No. 20, American Legion and Auxiliary, 8:30 a.m.. Post Home on Auburn Road. Veteran’s Day Breakfast. William Coyle will speak. MONDAY Green Lake Women’s Club, noon, Green Lake Community House. Luncheon meeting with LI. Donald Kratt, Oakland County Sheriff's Office with film “Every Hour, Every D%.“ Stiles branch. Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association, noon, Rochester home of Mrs. Thad Johnson. Following bazaar plans, the group will tour Antique Village in Lake Orion. PEO Sisterhood, chapter CL, 1:30 p.m., C. D. Matson Jr. home on West Shoreline Boulevard. “For the Beauty of the Earth” by artist, Kate McLean. The senior Mrs. Matson wilt assist hostess. Whof's Your Problem? s^esA'She KnoWs Mrs. John Gemmell, Pingree Street (left) and Guild of America, Inc. This group, all of whom Mrs. Alec Joss, Lakeview Street, check some of were born in Great Britain, now numbers only a the 236 garments contributed to the animal In- dozen members. Over 4,300 garments were do-gathering by the Queen Mary Section, Needlework noted. 'Come Fly With Me' Is Offer of the USAF Did you know that if you are a woman college graduate under 30 and are either single or are married with no dependents, the Air Force has an intense need for you? With the shaky world situation, you are not simply “useful”; you are essential! Are you aware that you will have a place as an Air Force officer, no matter what your college major is—and that in the Air Force you can work within your own field? The Air Force needs women with majors in social science, language, education, the arts, journalism and business administration as much as it needs women whose field is science, math, or engineering. * * * Not only is a woman who joins the Air Force providing an essential service, but also as an Air Force officer, she can fulfill many of her own needs and ambitions: Here Is an ideal opportunity fora woman college graduate to beAsomebddy. Her position will be responsible, stable, and supervisory. As an Air Force member she will meet many more fascinating people than she normally does in civilian life. In addition, she can travel, both in the United States and abroad. TRAVEL If she is not stationed overseas, she can travel, abroad during-her annual paid leave at a much lower cost than she would pay as a civilian. She can also continue her education and, if she wishes, can work toward an advanced degree at only one-fourth the normal cost. Besides, she will find all medical and dental facilities available to her ab.solutely free. , And to »op all of these advantages, she will be better paid as an Air Force officer than she often is in a similar position as*'a civilian. You may not realize It. but w'hen a young woman appi' -s she will dis( -iver that the Air Force '\ill ool just accept anyone. First an applicant must take both a written test and a physical examination to ascertain that she is mentally and physically stable. Then, "because any woman entering the Air Force must be a moral, ethical, and exemplary individual, she must provide several personal references, n o t only from fri^}ds but also from professional people with whom she has .associated at work, at school, and in business. CHECK-UP And to insure that she is a law-abiding, upright, citizen, the ."Air Force will do a police check in each town where she has lived or worked. After all, bke any other branch o^ the government, the Air Force expects its people to have high standards before they enter and to maintain these standards as long as they are Air Force members. P'lirther < Information may be had by contacting the Air Force Recruiting Office at 35 E. Huron. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEIAR ABBY: I arti 13 and people tell me I am very mature for itly age. Abby, I know more about thp facts of life and .the course of nature than most kids, and I got it straight from my mother. She 10 Id me everytljing starting from the age of eight. I don’t know how I got the reputation, but girls from 10 to 16 come to me for information about the pill and that sort. Even boys come to me with questions. Should I answer their questions, or tell them to ask their mothers or what? “LITTLE ABBY” DEAR “LITTLE ABBY”: I don’t know how you got the reputation of knowing so much, but it’s not because you’ve kept it a secret. If a girl (between 10 and 16) asks a 13-year-old for information about “the pill'and that sort,” perhaps her mother should know she is seeking such information, so the best thing for you to do is to tell her to ask her mother. Your own mother appears to have pretty good sense, sO ask her how much she thinks you should be telling the other kids. ★ * DEAR ABBY: We are a family of five, plus one. The new addition is a basset hound. We got him when he was three we^s old. He was real cute then and everybody loved him. Today he is eight months old and a regular pain-in-the-neck. When he eats, he slops all over. And when he drinks water, his ears get sopping wet. He drools and climbs up on the furniture and slobbers all over everybody and everything. And he’s still not house-broken. ..My husband can’t stand him. He says he makes him sick. I put up "with the dog because the children love him. My husband wants to get rid of him, but it would break the children’s hearts. The hound’s name is “Snoopy,” but we should have named him “Smelly.” But that’s another problem. What should we do? DOG TIRED DEAR DOG TIRED: It’s not the poor dog’s fault that he wasn’t properly trained to be a lovable, obedient, attractive pet. Dogs (not like children) can’t be expected to "know what they haven’t been taught. It piay be too late to train “Snoopy,” but give it a try. Otherwise, I’m with dad. ' -k * * DEAR ABBY: This is for Cindy, whose husband asks her out with only an hour’s notice: God bless him for asking you and not one of the girls from the office. Let me tell you from experience, it’s smart always to be ready. Have a long list of sitters* you can call at the last minute. And some good “friends” in reserve in case you can’t get a sitter. Do something with your hair during the daytime just in case that’s the flight your husband wants to take yoii out. - And always....have--something ready to wear. Me? I take no chances. All I need is five minutes notice'and I can get ready for an audience with the Pope. PREPARED CONFIDENTIAL TO Hurt Wife; Tell your loving husband that a married man has no business wearing an I.D. bracelet given to him by an old flame, and if it doesn’t “mean anything” he shouldn’t, mind putting it away. And until he does he shouldn’t expect you to function properly as a loving wife. * ★ How has the world been treating you? Unload your problems on Dear Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600 P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. For a personal unpublished reply, inclose a self-addressed, stamped envelope. ir Hr ir For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1.00 to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. 'Welcomers' Show Sports Styles Mother of Three Handles Man-Size Job With Ease Proceeds from today’s “-Fall Sports Show” being sponsored by Bloomfield Welcome Wagon Club, will be used for funding the Occupational Therapy Department of Pontiac State Hospital. Chairmen of the luncheon event. In Strike and Spare Bowling Lantes, are Mesdames: John Harley, Irving Ritchie, Kenneth Crumb, William Walton and Robert Peter. Mrs. Audrie Wilson, fashion coordina- guest. tor for the Sporthaus, wilt narrate. Models from the club include Mesdames: Jack Buckholder, Dan Grilley, Thomas fDaniels, Fred Dreyspring, Joseph Falls, Victor Hickey, Jack Kozma. More are Mesdames: James McCaffrey, Claudia Pfeister, Lloyd Prestgard, C. Gordon Smith and Miss Sandra Crumb. Dave Prince, disc jockey, will be a By JEANNE NELSON complishes It with the ease of a ma- Servlng the business needs of 10 high gician. As co-owqer and managing di-powered executives and the everyday rector of Executive Suites, Inc., Nancy problems of three offspring Is a man- is at once, private secretary, bookkeeper si^ed job few women handll with and receptionist for each. Most of the aplomb. men are in unrelated fields, adding Mks. Nancy Keogh of Birmingham ac- further confusion to the overall picture. From nine to five each day Nancy changes “hats” with thfe dexterity of the ex-model she Is. One man, who retains offices in several different countries, provides the “international number” she dons frequently. In the few short minutes from office to home, she switches from poised career gal to doting mother. The metamorphosis is complete by the time dinner js on the table. It could be the firm journalistic upbringing Nancy was raised in that has led to her own successes. Her late grandfather William H. Petti-bone was general manager of the Detroit Free Press for some 50 years and hired noted Writer; the late Edgar E. Guest, as copy boy. Her father, Donald Kotts, managed the rotogravure section of that paper for a pumber of years before he became a Pontiac Motor Division executive. 1 U1IUC14, muiui i^ividiua cAecunve. a Two junior high school daughters, Shelley, 12 and Linda, 14, keep life for "^. ' • Shelley, 12 and Linda, 14, keep life for'' their mother somewhere between chaotic and angelic. Allan Jr. is a private in the army stationed at Ft. Wainwright, Fairbanks,^Alaska. '* The girls love to have their pretty clothes made by Nancy who also tailors many of her own chic ensembles. “Evenings and weekends belong to the girls,” Mrs. Keogh says, “and we all make the most of it.” When time allows, Mrs. Keogh follows her volunteer interests which revolve around the United Fund, her church choir and the study of ‘“Inner City Problems.” An active worker in the Oakland County Republican Club, she also maintains membership in PTA. Sports take her fancy too; she’s alireless swimmer and loves to ice skate. ^ef Film for Alumnae A film entitled “Parent to Child About Sex” will be featured at a luncheon Tuesday for members of the Bloomfield Alumnae Club of Pi Beta Phi. A discussion, led by Mrs. Marshall Potter, will follow. Photo by Edward R> NoDI* Home routines take on' a special meaning for relaxSs with daughters, Shelley (left) and Linda. Mrs. Nancy Keogh of Birmingham after a trying That’s Sir Walter Scott basking in the attention of day as “boss” qf a secretarial service. Here she all “his wornen.” , ' '■ “Horsey set” member or not, Mrs. Thomas Darnels of Birrnina-Mrs. Leslie Flemming of-Avontlale ham looks the part in a riding outfit from The Sporthaus. Modeling -Street is hostess for the affair which another sports-minded -ensemble is Mrs. Lloyd Prestgard of Aspen *SosteTsL^‘are Mesdames Eueene Lane. . Both are members of Bloomfield Welcome Wagon Club span-Quackenbush, Walter Wikol,and BerLrd coring the “Fall SpoHs Show”Joday at Strike and Spare Bowling Miller. ' Lanes. " -T ' - , B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY> NOVEMBER 10. 1967 By MURIEL LAWRENCE Tied and still likes to horselcan’t, not with the kids apd tired Up in the backwoods of Yan- around. I’d like to. too. but lias I get on my job. Wejust kee mountain country, people Fall Styling T and Conditioning PEftMAim designed with simplicity and the contours of your face in mind. , CALL NOW for APPOINTMENT RANDALL’S SHOPPE 88 Wayne Street FE 2-1424 Ustad All Akbar Khan, master of the sarod, will play in concert this evening under the sponsorship of Oakland Community College. Khan may be heard at Berkley High School at 8 p.m. The sarod is a comparative newcomer to Indian music, first developed in Afghanistan. Cruelty to Child Bride Is More Like If seem to get married awfully early. Mind you, I haven’t checked the statistics on the ages of V e r m 0 n t adolescents who apply for marriage licenses but I’ve got an impression of their rush into matrimony. And its consequences. Those chrome chairs will not mark the floor or linoleum If you apoly strips of adhesive tape to Ihe bottom of the chair legs. ’The table may also be Two of those consequences are a couple of babies whose 18-year-old mother recently gave me a glass of water to quench a thirst I’d acquired on a long walk up a mountain path. | She was waiting for her mother to come in from the bean patch so that she could leave for her pantry-girl job in a tourist motel 10 miles away. One of her front teeth was missing. Trying to detach her infant’s clutch from a lock of hair, she said “I guess I’ll have to get a divorce sometime. I keep trying to make things up with him but he don’t come around enough to give me a chance. He was 19 when we got mar- Ann-Chain, each .... TO-SO Side Chain, each....65.00 Round Pedutal Ext Table........... 279.50 (Tebk v^WindiofTop) Buffet 299.50 Introducing Our Greatest Collection! apport by Drexeb the moat trusted tiame in furniture Excitement begins the instant you open your front door! First showing of a rare collection. Unique, uncommon and positively individual. Rapport by Drexel is a calculated mating of many designti, many periods. A French secretary, a Flemish chair. A Mediterranean hall cabinet, an Italian buffet. That’s the secret of Rapport... each piece different, yet all at home together. Woods of wonderful variety and combinations. Wood and custom-painted finishes — ten in all! A seemingly endless selection of magnificent pieces for living, dining and bedrooms.. FREE DELIVERY INTERIOR DECORATING SERVICE Bunchinp Tabic.....139.50 ^ BUDGET TERMS OF COURSE OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS RUFUMITURE ■.' ' A bent for originality, combined with patience and nimble fingers, resulted in this attractive yearbook\ of the Sylvan Manor branch of'Roman’s Natioml Farm and Garden Association. It was designed and duplicated 30 times by Mrs. Edward Schutzler of Ward Road, second vice president and program chairman of the group. - don’t see things the same way. Not since the kids and ...” Then, interrupting herself, still wrestling with her squirming infant, she said hastily, “There’s ma on the back porch. Don’t let on, please, that I said anything about how him and me are separated.” I didn’t get a chance to let on anything. For ma, a tall, guant, mountain woman, a bushel basket of beans in her arms, saw me,turned to her daughter and said, “What’s that fancy woman doing in my house?” And the child who had been made a mother at 15, said, “Just a lady who asked for a glass I of water.” ' In cities, of course, it’s slightly different tor the married j children. The beer and the horsing around are more accessible to the teen-age fJithers. But they’re not for the teen-age mothers. Just try to accompany your 19-year-old husband to the beer parlor down the street and in no time flat, your next-door neighbor has reported your “neglect” of your baby to the Society for the Prevention ot Cruelty to Children. Ah well, there are many kinds of cruelty to children. One kind traditional good food Snnday Breakfast BUFFET Every Sunday 9 A.M. ’til Noon in Bloomfield Hills WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE RD. IS premature matrimony. No, I can’t see much difference in teen-age motherhood In the cou,ntry or the city. In the country you wash baby’s diapers in the backyard’s galvanized tub. In the city, there’s the corner coin laundry. But the loneliness of the present, like, the bleakness of the future, is pretty mpch the same. “Cruelty to children” — Hah! PRINTED PATTERN WITH JUST 30 SHOPPING DAYS UNTIL CHRISTMAS YOUR ENGGASS SANTA SAYS: You don’t have more than a minute to lose. Or gain. Well give you that guarantee when you buy an Accutron* timepiece. It’ll be accurate to within a minute a month.* An average of two seconds a day. Qther watchea have their own notions about how long a day should last. Sometimes they shorten it to 23 hours and 66 minutes. Or make it last longer than the usual 24 hours. Accutron doesn't believe in making time. Or losing it. Just keeping it. ACCUTBON “«1S-•th>w. lOK sold ailed cum. weler-rooft nreep Mcond bend, eholled larkert, alllseter strep. $1(0.00 EASY TERMS—INSTANT CREDIT JEWELRY CO. 25 North Saginow Street IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Open Mon. - Thurt. and Fri. until 9 p.m. Dr. B. Sarskln, Optomelrltl fdkeny Mini pants are the very maxl-most, marvelous fashion to underline a jumper. Practical too, ’cause blouse, shorts go out together to play. Printed Pattern 4654: Chll- ■en’s Sizes 2, 4, 6, 8. Size 8 jumper 1 yd. 45-in.; blouse 1 yd. 35-in.; pants ''/g yard. FIFTY CENTS in coins for each pattern — add l5 cents for each pattern for first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, 137 Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York, N.Y. 10011. Print name, address with Zip, size and style number. FALL’S NEW FASHIONS -see the best of the new styles for all sizes in our new Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog. Get one pattern free — just clip coupon in Catalog. Hurry, send 50 cents right now. One cup of vinegar added to one gallon of warm water cleans varnished wood beauti-fuTly. The gloss of the varnish is hot impaired in the least by this treatment. WIGS BY C^LDEROIVE WIGLET SALE Mini-Falls ^32 Both 100% Human Hair 12 W. Huron, 332-7992 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. ^0^'E.MHEP 10. 10(57 -iT=:? Talks to Pontioak Chapter Spells Out Rules of Mental Health The engagement is announced of Barbara Jean Mortz to Donald Walter Kobrak by iher parents, the Lewis Car-rolls of Clarkston. He is the son of Mrs. Heinz Kobrak, also of Clarkston and the late Mr. Kobrak. Lucia A. Piekarz Becomes a Bride in Receipt Rite Our Lady of ^Salette Catholic Church was the recent setting for vows spoken by Lucia Ann Piekarz and John Patrick McNamara Jr. , The bride, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Piekarz, of Berk-tey wa^ Mend^ by her sister, Joan, and bridesmaids Sandi Taylor, Joyce Williams and Ruth ^elon. * * ★ The bridegroom’s brother, Michael, was best man. They are the sons of the senior McNamaras of Pioneer Drive. The newlyweds who are tesid-Ing In Detroit, were honored a( a reception in LaSalette Hall following the ceremony, f The Ten Commandments of I Mental Health were outlined byj Dr. Leon Hall in a talk “Howl to Get Long With You.” Speaking before the Pontiac chapter of National Secretaries Association, International Wednesday evening in Rotunda Inn, the psychologist listed the ten rules: A ★ ★ • Recognize and accept situations which insure some measure of success. , ★ * ★ ! • Learn to respect and likei others and expect others to like and trust you. i • Remember that personalities vary in many ways. • Learn to accept responsibility for problems as they arise. • Shape your environment whenever possible and adjust to it whenever necessary. ★ * ★ • Learn to be tolerant towards self as well as towards others. • Seek some degree of satisfaction from the simple, everyday pleasures of life. • Develop meaningful personal relationships which are satisfying $nd lasting. • Plan ahead without- fear of the future. • Maturity and security ar^ evolutionary processes which go from dependence to indepOn-l dence and back to dependence.^ Hostesses for this event were Juanita Garner and Mary Ellen Kyte. Guests were Mrs. Robert Richmond, Ida Marks, Ruth Brown, .Phyllis Brown and Grace Aranda. To clean a dust mop, tie a paper bag around it and shake! hard. This is better than shak-! ing it out a window. ; Many a good pattern is ruined by the careless way it Is stuffed In the envelope. If you take a few extra moments to press the pattern carefully with a lukew,srm Iron and then fold It neatly, it will fit into the envelope without crowding. Year End Clearance Sale! Mobile Maid* Portable Dishwasher With Maple Top Easy Loading, 3-Cycle Washing! . No more hand rinsing or scraping! 3-Level Thoro-Wash with Built-in Soft Food Waste Disposer... just tilt-off large or hard food scraps— dishes coipe out spotlessly clean! Lift-Top Back! Load, unload dishes quickly, easily! a^ycle BushbulloiL ____ Daily loads, pots and pans, china -—crystal! Binse-GIo Dispenser! * . Textolite® Countertop! Handles-up Silverware Basket! Automatic Detergent Dispenser! Your Glioire , ^ hilp. Dark Gopprr, Sale Prired.it Clarkston Appliance & Furniture Co. (Next to Jack Haupt) Open Daily 9:30 to 6:30 — Friday 'til 9 7183 N. Main St., Clarkston 625-3500 Pas de Deux orBoodaloo. The ridht rhythm is Evans-Black carpets ofCreslan.* tndcmtrk for Acrylic fibir Grand Entry' First prize for your home. Winning hi-lo loop cobblestone design with extravagant moresque colors tightly tufted to give Icsngcr lasting wear and beauty. Made of 100% Creslan® acrylic fiber with Tuf-Weve Jute backing. This is blue-ribbon carpet for parties or for evenings by a fireplace—stays lovely year after year. Available in 12’ width. >4^ m ms Last 2 Days 14'^ Anniversary AT BOTH PONTIAC and ROCHESTER Fur Trimmed Winter Goats Regular to ^260 %9.C$219 Winter Coats Regular to ^120 Casual and Dressy M4J99 SPORTSWEAR Slacks, Skirts, Sweaters, Tops ’/3 off Regular to ^110 Designer Knit Suits and Dresses $29 o $69 ---------Skoft ^— \ Regular to ^22°° DeLiso Debs Regular to ^20°° .Adores Regular to $18°° Capezio Regular to$16°° (Dress) Town & Country Regular to $12°° Penobscot Loafers Regular to $12°° (Casuals) Town Country $]490 $1290 $^90 $990 $J90 $690 PONTIAC HltMON nt mXGllAFH ROCHESTi a03 MAIM St. 1»AKiAMD MAU B—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 KINNEY'S SHOES For the Whol* Familr PONTIAC MALL miracle mile Thailand's Shops Attract Jackie The MOIIERX WAY to HIGH PAY SpeedwrUing Want to quickly step into a glamorous, well-paid secretarial position? Only at our school can you learn Speedwriling - \he natural, easy shorthand that uses the familiar abc's, not strange symbols. Day or evening classes. Nationwide FREE Lifetime Placement Service. Visit, phone or write - POfTIAO tiismiess institiite law. Lawrence FE 3-7028 BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! BANGKOK (AP) - Mrs. John F. Kennedy got up early today after dinner with Thailand’S| king and queen and took in two [of Bangkok’s chief tourist at-| tractions—the picturesque floating market and the silk and an-[ tique shops. | * ■*■ * ! A scheduled visit to the Grand Palace and the Temple of the Ends Saturday, Nov. 11 — One Full Color 5”x7” Color Portrait. . 99c SEARS PONTIAC F Emerald Buddha whs canceled because King Bhumibol showed Mrs. Kennedy around Ahem jThursday night after dinner. Mrs. Kennedy and her companions boardetTa launch at a landing on the Chao Phaya River and made their way through a maze of canals— called klongs in. Thailand—to photograph the busy floating I market and teeming life. | WOMEN WAVE Old women, their mouths stained red from cHewing betel nut, waved to the President’s widow as they paddled past ini tiny dugout canoes loaded withi bananas, papaya, pineapples j and coconuts. [ Hundreds of children swim-| ming in the muddy water waved i and smiled as the launches chugged past. I After a two-hour boat tour,| I Mrs. Kennedy went ashore toi ishop in the silk and \antique' shops of Bangkok. V r \l00 raests Pontiac Proof Photo PRE-HOLIDAY DISCOUNT SALE! 20% DISCOUNTS On: ic Lamps ★ China ★ Costume Jewelry ★ Colored Glass ★ Figurines HMD CMFT HOUSE 5775 Dixie Hwy. - Wciterford (Oir«ctly Acrott From^o^t Office) MS WIP 3MWSS 2478 Orchard Lake Rd. Sylvan LakeJ Phone 682-6122 Decorative Accte»»orieii—Gifts—Hand Crafts 10 A.M. to 5:30 P.M.-CLOSED MONDAY , Between Middlebelt and Cass Lake Rd. DEPT. HOURS: Mon., Thurs. and Sat; STORE 9:30-8:S0 UNION Fri. 9:80-9 LAKE 363-71T4 VILLAGE Mrs. Glen Rawlins, Lincoln Avenue, brings in freshly ■ baked bread^ from the' kitchen at the Church of Jesus Christ of Lattet Day Saints, Bloomfield Hills. The sixth annual Mormon Pioneer ba- \ The dinner for which King Bhun\ibol 'a^nd Quteen Sirikit gave for Mrs. Kermedy was the first in honW| of'a private visitor ever held iV the ortiate Chakri Thrqne Room of the Grand Palace. One of the gusets said It was "great fun." Mrs. Kennedy sat with the ARXA/AMrtLF king ahdTqueen at a table for 20 TV wI I tl and dined from a gold table service that has been used by four Thai monarchis. The menu included- soup, roast turkey and ice cream selved in carved coconut shells. zaar started at 10 a.m. today a^d wiirbe open until 8 p.m.; Saturday hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. All the women who participate in this * event wear pioneer outfits. The bazaar is open to the public. Adopts New Official Name . FASHIONABLE The newest area chapter of The evening was something of the American) Business Women j a fashion occasion since both Association officially adopted a ' j Mrs. Kennedy and Queen Sirikit | new name Wednesday evening I have headecLthe U.S. fashion in-j and will be known as the Water-jdustry’s list of the world’s best ford Charter chapter. Dr. Donald C. Overy was guest speaker at . the dinher meeting in the Old Mill. His topic was ‘Your Heart and Let’s Keep It Going.” He outlined the causes of coronary failure and a new approach to coronary care. The vocational talk was given by Phyllis Addison recommending the career of medical li- Tas a Thai-style dinner tonight „ n'w i v, I given by Foreign Minister Than-1 President Mrs. Carroll Welch lat Khoman. Afterward she was reported on her attendance at to leave for Rome, en route to National Convention in Las the United States. Vegas, where the theme of Ed- _________________ ucate in 68 was adopted in keeping with the aims and purposes of the organization, i The chapter will be represent-jed with a ‘‘white elephant’’ I booth at the Pontiac Area Fed-leration of Women’s Clubs Ba-NORMAN, Okla. m - Exactly, zaar at the YWCA Tuesday, 50 years after she received her[ Guests were Mrs. G e o r g Cj bachelor of arts degree from Slaughter, Mrs. O. Coxen the University of Oklahoma, aruHArs. Raymond E. Freebury ; Mrs. Audrey iFlitch Shultz was' A buffet dinner and exchange: awarded the juris doctor degree of gifts is planned for Decern-! bv the same school — at the her in the Beach am Road I age of 70. home of Mrs. Roland Zilka. | Mrs. Shultz, a g r e a t-grand- dressed women. The queen had decreed that all the 'hiai women should wear native dress, and hers was of yellow and gold Thai silk with a hi^h collar and long sleeves. Mrs. Kennedy’s full-length gown was white and gold. The final event on Mrs. Ken- fjdy’s Far Eastern program' as Woman Earns Doctorate at 70 ROMANCE IN BLUE 16-Pc. Set *8” OPENSTOfK DIXIE POHERY 5281 Dixie Hwy., 623-0911 Lachasse favors a genteel, well-bred look for ladies clothes. Below one button closing the mother, entered the University’s! Autumn is the time to plant: neck are snaps to fasten ^e law sthool in 1964 and in her pots of parsley and chives and front and s^e waist. Side p^-senior year was elected class set them in a sunny %hen|els of the bo^ce eidend to secretary in addition to recelv- window. They will add zesi and ! the underarm portion of the ing the Student Bar Assocationi color to winter salads, and they sleeves, award. ' ’ " 'are easy to grow. 1 Sash it separately with the BARN SALE! We call it that because it is in a new building but it is an an old lasbioned barn. Before we move our new ideas into “The Barn,” we offer to you ... Upholstered chairs. Tables, Lamps, Gift Items, etc., at true 50% off. S^me slightly marked or scratched. Bargains for Christmas giving or for your home. Sale only at our building on the hill at the rear of'our main btore at 828 Main Street. Terms of sale final Cash and carry 828 MAIN ST., ROCHESTER 651-8166 NS-207 same^ fabric. FabeJes to choose; lightweight woolens, crepe, shantung, linen, cotton, j Spadea’s exclusive ready-to-| wear sizes produce a better fit. Spe chart for size best for you. M$ Bust W.lfl Hipt *L«nftp 0 34 , J4 35 WV 1 35 25 34 14«i“ 4 341/5 241/5 37'-5 17" 6 38 2B 39 1714" B 40 30 41 17V5" •From Nap* of Neck to Waist Misses’ Size 12 requires 2% yards of 54” fabric for Dress. To order Pattern NS-207 state size; send $1.85 plus 10 cents for sales tax and postage. Pattern Books No. 28, No. 29, No. 30, No. 31 and Booklets 1 and 2, Sewing Tips by World Famou&_J3«signers, are available for 50 cents each plus 10 cents postage per book. Duchess of Windsor Pattern Book available for $1.00. Include your name, address and zip code and mail to SPADEA, Box 323, Dept. PX-6, Milford, New Jersey 18848. Here's ColorTV that Swivels for Better Viewing Easy to Tune too! ^ |M| h RCA VICTOR ifstd COLOR TV AUTOMATIC FINE TUNING lAFT) When you’re first in Color TV, there’s got to be i reason. Like Automatic Fine Tuning that locks in the picture signal. And new ffCA tube with Zl% brighter*highlights this year. You get Ihese-and more-from RCA Victor. i , 01 THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN ELECTRONICS We Service What We Sell STEFANSKI ELECTRONICS 1157 W. HURON FE 2-6967 IMPROVE YOUR OWN HEARING AID NOW-for most Hearing Aid makes and models! - NEW LOW-COST- . ACOUSTIC MODIFIER* with exclusive sound channfl, SHARPENS YOUR w6rd-unoerstanding MIchigan’e pin# sables* D I O * a lU o s Perfect diamond Perfect styling Perfect choice The brilliance and beauty of a perfect Keepsake center diamond .. . deli-cofely poised in a fash- , ionable setting'. . . your perfect symbol of love. With Keepsake we guarantee lifetime trade-in value, protection against loss of diamonds, permanent registration - all yours at no extra cost. Charge it! OPEN AN ACCOUNT JERMS ARRANGED SKTi^24 . Ill iillil III! . i MICI--- I PontHlie Mall Optical A I I Hearing Aid Cantar I __ I Th« Pontiac Mall |l \ Phone 682-1113 NORTH j: SAGINAW ;i _ STREET i MICHIGAN'S FINE JEWELERS Tn DOWNTOWN PONTIAC BUY!SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS.1 THE PONTIAC PllESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1907 B-5 Polly's Pointers Open Fireplace Is Cozy DEAR POLLY -r- I think Mrs. j home than any other luxury. If K. A. R. should ignore the opin- the damper in the chimney is ions of friends who worried her “^ed correctly there is no rea-,,, ... . , son for smoke in the house. As of the r e s u 111 n g dirt and go g^^es can be re- ahead with her ideas for an moved easily and without open fireplace. J had never been spreading all over the room, without one until we moved from Sleep sofas have taken on new glamour and give no hint of their dual role. At the left is a handsome tailored traditional model covered in masculine corduroy velvet — just the style for a bachelor’s one-rodm apartment. Cushions are reversilke. At the right is a contemporary style with loose pillows on a single weltless revers-. ible molded rubber seat cushion. Both made by Flexsteel. Line available locally. America Exposes Its Real Heart ByBETTY CANARY Philosopher Eric Hoffer said (turing a recent television ap> pearance that, in describing America, if one did not mention the kindness of the people one could not give,«a true picture of cruised down the Mississippi often enough? What I saw only River from Quincy, 111., to r e a f f i r m e d my belief that Hannibal, Mo. And I saw the i warmth and goodness are in-real heart of America! [herent traits of Americans. Nqw I know it is considered | I was in Quincy the day before just too “corny” to talk about:the big event and the entire the hospitality and generoistyltown was turned out to get Organ Group Tells Theme of Concert New England to Florida, to enjoy our September years, and bought a crackeh-box farmhouse^ in this glorious Southland. ■ ★ ★ ★ Since it had no fireplace, lost no time in designing and having one b.u i 11. To use it means companionship, warmth and it is a maker of dreams as I use a large grocery bag, sprinkle the inside yvith water, then use a short-handled shov-, el to put the ashes in the bag.| Set the bag as close under the, Unit Chooses Ifs Charity This year’s holiday donation of Zeta Eta chapter of Beta Sigma Phi will be given to the Waterford Organization for Retarded Children, Dav Care Center. This was announced at a recent meeting in the home of Mrs, Raymond Bellehumer of South Avery Street. Mrs. Ferdinand Strohmeyer assisted the hostess. The group discussed plans for a rummage sale in the near fu- Mr and Mrs Carl F mi. una mu. ouri r. i, r;*., 'Vv^on o, Clarks,on an jjgy ® I nounce the-engagement * * * of their daughter, Linda Of Course, the pappr bag is' Kay, to William P. Bar- we look into it and see the there are no; raco. He is the son of we 10OK into it ana see tne j remove the ashes: thp WilHnm Rnrrnmv nf things wc want to see. It spells jv.„ oOon 11,0 «,« wuiiam. tsarracos of in the morning after the tire ist * nnf Ihon nnt HnHlino Kofller Street. the Bay Pointe Country Club Dec. 16. The next meeting will be a ritual of jewels dinner Nov. 21 at Morey’s Country Club. family love. 'Fes, Mrs. K.A.R., ^ ^g^e kindling and^ have the fireplace, enjoy it and ^ j^ey are ready ' think of us transplanted New tg ,j j^e evening when Englanders who, befwe had it so good. — MILDRED ' When lemons have been kept too long they become dry and hardened. You can soften and If you fold your tablecloths restore them by covering with at home. There is nothing more and napkins a different way boiling water and letting them DEAR POLLY — In my opin- homey and beautiful than an each time they won’t wear and stand over low heat for 30 minion a fireplace adds more to a open fire. —MRS. M A C. fade along the fold lines. utes. this country. I thjnk,he is right.jof Americans. Haven’t we alljiteady for Mr^ Johnson’s visit. I was aboard the towboat J. heard ourselves described asjGifl Scouts and Boy Scouts em-W. Hershey when the First Lady,loud and vul|hr and grasping barked on a delitter campaign; businessmen strung bunting at \a‘ Save ^8°^ 17-JEWEL WATCHES, MAN'S Guoronfeed Woterprooi* Chrome cose with stainless steel back. Luminaus honds with sweep second. Shockproof movement, unbreok-oble mainspring. Adjustable expansion bond.. LADIES' 17 jewels Tailored case in yel low or white gold Full figure dial. Ex pension bracelet Dainty but durable The 12th annual liturgical | gathering of the Pontiac Area Harrtmond Organ Society will; take place Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. in the downtown Grinriell au-' ditorium. j Mrs. Arnold Hashman will be mistress of ceremonies for the: program which is open to the public. She will also play the organ. Rev. Arnold Hashman will present musical readings and Othdrs on the program are St. George Greek Orthodox Church choir, directed by Mrs. Nicolas S a m 0 u r i s; Sarah McKinney, southern revival organist, and the girls’ trio from Midwestern Baptist College. Rabbi Israel Goodman of Congregational B’nai Israel will speak on “Our Thanksgiving” DUETS : Mrs. Beryl Heinz, organist; and Mrs. Pearl McCreedy, pia-; nist, both of Waterford, will play: selections together. Daniel Van Eck of Royal Oak is to Sing with Loren Meyer .ucky Rochester Lady! the \airport; the, Republican mayoV was everywhere. The trip down the river Mark Twain’s birthplace waa aboard an American Commer-jcial Lines working towboat and lit cost the’taxpayers no dollars. I Mr. and Mrs. Hershey (he is !president of the line) came up ifroffi Houston, Tex., to act as I hosts for the Johnson party and the barge business picked up ithetab. ^ I Mrs. Johnson remarked of the cruise that now she had experienced “the symphony of romance and commerce of the river combined.” A modern towboat on the inland waterways is essentially a giant machine room, but quarters for a crew of nin^or 10 are just this side of luxurious. Huge barges are pushed before them, ^.sometimes as many as 30, an^ the tonnage carried on the rivers is increasing daily. 1 Companies point to traditional gccompanying him on the or-freeclom on the rivers and are gan. concerned about a possible fed- Another organist, James Jef-eral tax on diesel fuel on ves- fgrson of Mt. Clemens, will play sels drawing less than 15 feet Negro spirituals. i of water. They say this would: * i, * j exempt foreign vessels and only! ^^e Dominican Sisters of Ox-| America n, or shallow-draft'ford are sending three mu- boats, would pay. cians to participate: Sister But such things as increased johnienne and Sister DeaneJ taxation were pushed to t h e Eii2abeth, organists, and Sister background as townspeople got Helen Ann, violinist. ready to welcome their First: ___________ Lady. Politics were put aside for an afternoon and the high school bands and the flags were out. It is good to remember there are many fnore teen-agers play-; ing in bands than out stealing' hubcaps and that conscientious Borsvold were accepted as new citizens trying to reach honest members of the Pontiac Busi-j solutions to tough proljlems out- ness and Professional Women’s] number the rioters and aglta- club at a dinner meeting Tues-tors who are more often in the'jay in Devon Gables. [news. • ★ * * I ' i Hostesses tor this event were: Violet McCoy, Ethlynn Peterson, Lulah McCully and Jewell Burch well. Guests included Mrs. Frances! Crosby atid Ethel Bassett. j SPEjlTACULAR CARPEX ROLL BALAIES ^ Up to 30 Feel Loiij? f/2 OFF Choice of Colors aiul Fahric • • • Selection ol‘Armstrong; Inlaid VINYL 1/2 OFF Cash & Carp^ New Members of Business Club Barbara Graves and Mrs. John mur $' Ren.$10.9S 7D5 m sq. yd. Blue - (inld - Peacock. W LEE’S Random Sheered ACRILAN See Our Display of VIKING KIM CARPET All Colors In Stock Open Mon. and Fri. Nighls ’lil 9 P.M. —Sat, ’til 5:30 was presented with KELVINATOR DISHWASHER, the October Free Gift! LUCKY MRS. DAVEY . . DON'T MISS THE . . . Ice and Furniture Show .SEE Trif "GIRL FROZEN ALIVE"! You May Win a New KELVINATOR FREEZER . Just G^ss the Number of Ice Cubes in the Freezer" 3 Days, Mor>, Tues., Wed., Nov. 13th, 14th, 15th Coleman’s Furniture Mart ■ 536 N. PERRY STREET, PONTIAC Across Glenwood from Kmart — FE 4-9615 A handy place to keep rubbers and overshoes is under the bottom step of the stairs. Remove the top board and put hinges on it so it can be raised. FLOOR COVFRI^O 511 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE 4-7775 See One of the .Largest Selections of DRAPERIES in This Area! Find the Largest Selection of Magnovox Stereo at Grinnell's ... at Factory-Direct Prices l>/log na'vox. ’ Stereo FM-AM Radio-Phono Stereo sound was never better than on these magnificent consoles! You can enjoy glorious music on the exclusive Micromatic Record Player with diamond stylus and the stereo FM-AM ' radio with Automatic Frequency Con-^ trol to prevent FM station drift. Housed in authentically-crafVed'fine furniture cabinets you'll be proud to own. YOUR CHOICE of 3 on'QSO 298^ styles - . "The Ltncolnwood" Con- -''yhe temporary .in wplnut. in me GRINNELL'S, Pontiac Moll, 682-0422 "The Raoallo'' I talian Provincial in distressed walnut, 45" long. Dpwntown Pontiac, 27 S. SoginoW St-., FE 3-7168 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days some,os cash) or Budget Terms ^ B—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 196T Hannah, A/lSUl ||q VP Say Probe Is Welcome MONEY DOUTN ON WARD'S CONVENIENT 'fCHA^O-ALL" CREDIT PLAN Sale Ends Sunday, November 12, 5 PM, EAST LANSING (APwTwo; Michigan Slate University officials said Thursday they would welcome an' attorney general's opinion on alleged conflict of interest coiicerning their private Investments. Rep. Jack Faxen, Ef-Detroit, requested the opinion Wednesday in the cases of MSU President John A. Hannah and Philip May, vice president for business and finance and treasurer, and finance and treasurer. “I shall be happy to supply any information the attorney general may require to make a just determination in this matter," Hannah said in a prepared statement. ‘‘Indeed, I would welcome an opportunity to place all the revelant facts before any impartial adjudicator to put an end, once and for all, to published rumor, inference and innuendo which reflect on me personnally and on the good name of Michigan State University," ★ ★ ★ May said he too would cooph erate by providing “any information the attorney, general may require to determine whether my private business affairs represent a conflict of interest with my responsibility as an offi9er of Michigan State University. “I know they do not," May continued,: “and am confident that a review of all the facts will support me in my beliefs.' Other nations now owe the United States more than $41 billion — about half in principal and interest from World War I debt. M ONTGOAAERY WARD Decorate NOW*** ■ It’s true! When you switch to Superheat, you get more heat, better heat, and lower heating bills for the season. That's because Superheat is "electrofined” to give you more heat per gallon, more heat per dollar. Make the switch now — and save money all next winter. Call us today ... and let us tell you about our Superheat service. You’ll be glad you did! ; ASK AIOUT: 1 * • BUDGET PLAN : • AUTOMATIC FILL ■ PROGRAM : • CERTIFIED DELIVERY I Hua>U^kustt9-4t Vinyl Surface Flooring Buy! Budgjst Priced Flooring, Reg* 1*49 - Now only 99« Fiv* distinctive patterns are protected by a sturdy layer of vinyl. Makes floors easy to care for. Resists stains . . . spills vyipe up easily. Extends the life of your home! Lies flat, resists dents and scratches. Style Housed Easy-Care Vinyl Tough Foam-Core Vinyl, Reg. 2*49 - Now Only |99 SQUARE YARD EnhancO your floors with this last word in luxury yinyl! Its foam core cushions every footstep, absorbs noises, insulates tool NJne-foot width in a wide range of colors and patterns. For floors above ground. SQUARE YARD WATERFORD FUEL & SUPPLY 3943 AIRPORT RD. At Waterford Depot 623-0222 Hik/U COmJU. Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P,.\l. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. 10 9 P.VI. SI NHAY 12 NOON I'O 3 P.Al. • 082.1940 'A- THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1967 B—7 CARPETING LIVING ROOMS BEDDING DINING ROOMS SPECIAL! NYLON TWEED CARPET Long-w*aring DuPont continuous file. ^99 mont nylon pile. 4 tweed blends. Res. I4S SAVE 2.50J NYLON 501® Cara-free continuous filament nylon, IZ99 amazing durability. 3 patterns. w SAVE $4! WOOL CARPETING Our finest 501 ® carpet—so dense it ex- C99 ceeds DuPont 501: standards. 6 colors. w % SAVE $4! 9x9-IN. VINYL TILE "•*' Patterrl^olcs like Italian marble. Reg. 1 ^ C 2.99 6-ft. inlaid vinyl 1.88 sq. yd. I ^ SAVE 12.31! OVAL RUNNER Rsf.4T.77 Reversible. Available in 5 subtle color 0^88 blends. Long-wearing. : - V,- '' ^ V - if" •“ ■» vfl M t ■' , V' V . , V- SAVE 2.50! NYLON 501® Extra-dense nylon pile in sculptured design. 6 solid, 4 tweed colors. Rtf. 1.99 BEDROOMS SAVE 50.11! SALEM SQUARE® BEDROOM Reg. 239.99 Solid maple with spindle bed four-drawer chest, triple drasser/mirror. 189" SAVE 145.11! CHERRY BEDROOM SUITE Chairback bed, triple dresser, chest-on-chest. Cherry finish, limited quantities. Hww SAVE 4.11! TWIN-SIZE HEADBOARD "«t- 9.99 Modern white vinyl wipes clean R88 > bed. V quickly, easily. For twin s SAVE 40.11! MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING SET Restful, healthy sleep with this Ward-foam® mattress-box spring set! SAVE 100.11! MODERN BEDROOM Triple dresser, mirror, chest and pan- ^^DwO .el bed. Hand-rubbed walnut finish. bIiww SAVE 20.11! MODERN NITE STAND To match bedroom above. Handsome modern style with rich walnut finish. Mw SAVE 90.11! MAPLE BEDROOM "n- *39.99 Triple dresser with mirror, chest and 249»“ full or twin poster bedj SAVE HALF! MATCHING NITE STAND Rsf. 39.99 Colonial styling td match bedroom above. Warm maple finished wood. SAVE 15.99! SIX YEAR CRIB Choose either maple or walnut finishes. Buy now and really save. 2-39®* Sf. 89.91 44^ iVE 5.11! CHILDREN’S TOY CHEST "•M9.49 gged construction with ivory plastic g Keeps children's room neat. i "W SAVE 69.99! COLONIAL SOFA Authentic Colonial styles in rich, rugged tweed. Full-pleated skirt. I I W SAVE 40.99! EARLY AMERICAN SOFA Solid maple wings, buttan-back style. Rtf. 179.99 Reversible foam ' cusMons. tvyeed *139 SAVE 100.99! CONTEMPORARY SOFA »9.99 "Image 70" design in solid elm with $1 Ofl plaid-solid combination upholstery. I VW ^7 SAVE 28.99! T-PIECE DINETTE "•H19.H Table top is 36x48-in. Resists stains and bums. 6 sturdy chairs. SAVE 30.11! 9-PIECE DINETTE With service for 8 included. BeautI- 1 1 ful walnut finish table, 8 vinyl chairs. I I W SAVE 22.11! 7-PIECE DINETTE Hi-prassura plastic top rasists heat^ stains. Patterned plastic seats, backs. ■ SAVE 30.00! MODERN SOFA Slim, trim styling. Comfortable foam *1 D cushions are reversible. Walnut legs. I I V SAVE 22.99! COMFORTABLE 1,032-COIL OR SIX-INCH LATEX MATTRESS "x ”** Our besti Ric|i Belgian damask cov-er. Full or twin. Box spring to match. SAVE 22.99! COIL OR FOAM MAHRESS Ref. 69.99 510-coil innerspring or 6-inch foam. Full or twin, box spring. '^Hl36B. SAVE 22.99! MATTRESS, BOX SPRING, 312-coil innerspring with heavy woven cover Box Spring. Full or twin sizes. SAVE 22.99! 6-INCH FOAM MAHRESS ^«M9^ Wards lab-tested urethane foam with non-sag edge. Box spring to match. HCf. na.s ®49e IG Reg. 59.99 *37 Reg. 69.99 *37 99 You Can Save Sale Ends y\/VoNTGOMERY WARD Sunday Manufactureiis eiiHoor Sample SALE! LIMITED QUANTITIES - WHILE THEY LAST! SAVE 50.99! EXTRA LONG SOFA Ree-199.99 Handsome modem sofa it 90-inches *149 ^ long. Loose pillow back, 2 cushion. II noStd 19*99 *199 SAVE 80.99! FOUR-PIECE SECTI0NAL^"«i- Four-piece sofa for versatile corner settings. Reversible foam cushions. SAVE 50.99! BISCUIT-BACK SOFA ,33 „ Comfortable spring construction. Gold or olive upholstery. Zippered 9 | kU cushions. Reg. 189.99. I W V SAVE 17.11! MODERN OTTOMAN . Reg. 29.99 Nubby^textured fabric in gold or afl ADO olive. Solid walnut legs. Modern | ^DD style. Reg. 29.99. | A SAVE 15.11! MAPLE DESK CHEST „ 99 Drop-lid desk with plenty of drawer ii A88 space. Maple finish. Limited quan- titles. TTl# SAVE 60.99! TRADITIONAL SOFA Reg. 229.99 Classic traditional lines in rich tex- tured fabric. Zippered foam cush- ^ | loU SAVE 50.99! TWO-CUSHION SOFA R«e. 199.99 Distinctive traditional style with rich $ 1 A,0 floral damask upholstery. 1431 SAVE 20.11! COMFY COLONIAL MAPL€ ROCKER R^g. 69.99 Authentic styling with padded back, seat, pleated skirt, flat maple arms. SAVE 20.11! HANDSOME MODERN ARM CHAIR Reg. 59.99 nogs D3i9S 49' 15% to 60% SAVE 12.11! 5-PIECE DINETTE "68.49.99 Plastic top table with 4 matching ^ f padded chairs upholstered in plastic. W ■ SAVE 12.11! BOOK BRUM TABLE Mediterranean styir nch cherry fin- '*i4 »88 ish hardwoad book driL table. ' \ V SAVE ON OCCASIONAL TABLES Italian occasional tables in fruitwood ' finish. From our"Classic" collection. Cocktail table.................. Ree. 54.99 34.88 End table.......................Reg. 54.99 34.88 Door drum..................... Reg. 14.99 49.88 Bunching table.................. Reg. 34.99'^ 24.88 Commode table................ Reg. 54.99 39.88 MISCELLANEOUS SAVE 40.11! SPINDLE STYLED SOFA BED ^egJ619^ Elegant turned spindle arm rests ... Roomy sofa converts to double bed. 129“ SAVE 40.99! THREE PIECE CORNER ENSEMBLE Reg. 32949 2 lounges have tufted foam seats. *189 ultra-modem style. Plastic-top table. SAVE 2(f.11! SPACE-SAVING DUPLEX ^BED,^ ^ Use it as a sofa by day . . twin jmoo Y beds or a double bed at night! Save KDDO SAVE 50.99! COLONIAL TWEED SLEEP^SOFA Rolled arms, diamond tufted back . . . opens to double bed! Latex Du cushions. | VW SAVE 8.11! MODERN COCKTAIL OR END TABLE Modem walnut-finish tables will m qq grace your home—cocktail or end 1 ^fiO typel Your choice | *8 . SAVE 15.1 f! OCCASIONAL OAK TABLETS Choose coffee or end table in,beau- j|QQ tiful oak finish-rugged, decorativel VA®® SAVE 10.11! CUSHION BACK CRICKET ROCKER Comfort and good looks! Maple fin- ^ WoD ish on hardwood, cotton print cush- | Q88 ions. I ^0 SAVE 7.11! Chrome Plated SWIVEL STROLLER Chrome-plated tubular frame, bucket- ■VllgR type padded seat, adjustable back- 1 fOO rest. I I SAVE 9.11! DELUXE STROLLER WITH CANOPY . Reg. 26.89 Every feature youd want: heavy ifl mDDD duty materials, reclining seat, foot- % rest! If SAVE 25.11! MAPLE-FINISHED PATCH ROCKER Reg. 79.99 Features box pleated skirt. Ward- Ril88 foam® cushion, wood spindle trim. SAVE 20.11! EARLY AMERICAN SWIVEL ROCKER. Reg. 59.99 A classic style with tufted bock, 0088 pleated skirt and podded arms. SAVE 20.11! NAUGAHYLE® RECLINING CHAIR , , Reg. 69.99 Elegant diamond-tufted design ■in easy-care fabric. 4 decorator colors. SAVE 5.11! FOLDING VINYL HIGH CHAIR Folds for easy storage! Chrome- ^ J|DD plated legs, tray, wipe-clean vinyl | A80 seat. I "I* • DANISH MODERN CHAIR 1988 Contemporary geometrical design 39* with square-tufted bock, foam seat. Reg. 69.93 49“ SAVE 20.11! BEHER QUALITY RECLJNER^^ Diamond-tufted epaulet back in axmaii ' Naugdhyde® for beauty, easy care. ImR[|vO 4 colors. WV SAVE 30.11! 3-WAY TRADITIONAL RECLIRER Reg. 119.99 Adjusts to 3 positions. Deluxe con- 0088 struction, vinyl-coated fabric. Cushioned With three inches of soft Ward foam. LANE CEDAR CHEST 498B REG. 59.99 Cdonial Styling in Warm Salem Maple. Save Now. B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1967 1968 Models Now In Stock no other tractor moves snow like The Horse The biggest selection of home snow removal equipment. Eight great tractors from 6 to 12 hp. Snow dozers and snow throwers with capacity up to 42". Choose from 3>speed, 6-spced and automatic models. New automatic traction feature lessens chance of wiieel spinning. Safety headlights and taillights let you do ^ the job long after the short winter day ends. Before you decide on any snow -removal equipment—let us give you swfW our deal. TOM’S HARDWARE 905 Orehaiil Lake Open Daily il Lake to. iiy 9-6, Fri\9-9, FE 5-2424 Sun. 9-2 Officials Mark Death of 6-Counfy Unit By ED BLUNDEN ,About 120 area officials gathered in Farmington Township yesterday to attend a wake — for the death of a six-county j committee. I Known as the Supervisors Inter-County Committee, it came into existence early in 1954 and was responsible for areawide planning that resulted in among other things, Detroit water and sewer facilities servicing the entire metropolitan area. However, the old committee’s function of planning and coordinating community effots is now being taken over by the Southeastern Michigan Council of Governments (COG). It was an “Irish-type” wake|council-of-governments concept and speakers used such phrasesjas a major issue. passing the mantle of lea- His victory was hailed by of-j u - o a ficials at the luncheon meeting f mr wm at Botsford Inn as an indication ball to denote how COG ^OG assume duties of the older.-------------------------- „„„ group. In-Skii hit Slips Check These Features for a Step in^Beauty • One Piece Construction O FHA Specification • Permanent Beiiioty • Strong Reinforced Casting • Rugged Dependobility • Avoid Messy Installation FREE ESTIMATES Sofeiy Tread Reduces Slipping We Deliver Anywhere • Manufactured and Sold By: CONCRETE STEP CO. 6497 Highland Road (M59) 673-0775 Add Beouty to Your Home With Concrete Steps pnd Railings Open 8 ’til 12 Saturdays voters in the metropolitan area. Tribute was paid to the late Judge Ed Conner of Detroit whose early efforts contributed much to the metropolitan area concept of government. His son, Michael, was present to accept Slate Hearing Set on Teacher Permits Guest speaker was Joseph L. Hudson Jr., store executive and chairman of the Metroplitan Fund Inc. The funds was responsible for several studies that resulted in formation of a plaque in his honor. COG, Hudson noted. ------------- NEW COUNCTL’S DUTIES He pointed out the new council has a duty toward some 4.5 million persons in Wayne, Oakland, St. Clair, Macomb, Washtenaw and Monroe counties, ■ , ' some 4,000 square miles. lANSING (iP) - A public He urged the members of COG hearing on a proposed change to make it an “effective me-|in the tfeacher certification code chanism. He warned against the tq allow an extension of 90-day danger of becoming unrespon- teacher permits has been set sive to individual citizens and 27 by the State Board racial minorities. of Education. He-sqid the concept of region-i 'The Rearing will be held at al govehmenrt for the Detroit the Michigan School for the metropolijtan area was pioneered Blind in Lansing at 10 a.m. here and said he hoped COG A resolution before the Legis-would beqome “the most effec- lature urges a change in the tive governing body of its kind board’s new certification code in the nationxj^ to allow permit extensions this The new group encompasses year for school districts that 350 local governing bodies in- cannot find fuHy qualified teach-cluding municipalities, counties, g,., „ school districts, planning agen- -p^g proposed change would cies, etc. D. Curtis Potter, aj|g^ teachers with 9(Wav per-mayor of Royal Oak, is tempo-l^jj jgggnd rary chairman. ■ jg^ school year if the POTTER REELECTED j employing official certified he is ' Potter won reelection Tues- unable, to find fully qualified day in a vote-battle that had the teachers. \ Custom Auto Loams With all the different modeTs and options available these days, you can practi-‘ cally design your own car. - ' At Community National, that goes for auto loans too. You get individual attention, low bank rates, a^d a payment plan tailored to your budget. And you can arrange your loan at your dealer’s or at any of CNB’s 20 offices. Custom auto loans—another reason why you should bank at Community National ... Most people do! Experimental Pontiac—The Banshee National i Bank Offices in Oakland qnd Macomb Counties 'Bank at Community.. .’Most people do! Member FDIC jm MEMBERS OF Hardware WHOLESAlERSi Fonmrly Big 4 RABPWABE STORES KEEGO Keegp Hardware No. 1 3041 Orchard Lake Road 682-2660____________ PONTIAC Tom»$ Hardware 905 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 5-2424 RENT’EM! e Floor Sandors o Floor Edgort e Hand Sandors 0 Floor Rolishort OPEN SUNDAY 9 to 2 BOYS’ and MEN’S INSUUTED BOOTS • All Rubber • Cleated Sole • Steel Shank • Full Lace Prices Start At Skap^ay, INSULATED CLOTHINQ THE SENSATIONAL lEW WASH’df WEAR ATER REPELLENT INSULATED With DACRON 88 Red Coveralls $1 HOLDS IK UY-A-WAY SUPER DELUXE INSULATED RED COVERALLS Above features flUM'lhesel Rolldown Hood Undar Collar Corduroy Collar Drop Seat with Velcro Fostaner Outer Shell — 100% Water Repellent Reg. $34.95 Cotton Gabardine lnsulotion,-100% Virgin Bonded Docron"88" Inner Shell-100% 70x70 Denier Nylon $2088 — ■ , , NO TIMI LIMIT ?||rEE REPLACEMENT ® GUARANTEE! You can install-for more comfoit lower hoot bills, healthier indoor climatel Big enough to comfortobly humidify an average 2,000, sq. ft. house. Uses no electricity.Runs on air power supplied by your furnace blower. Distributes humidity when your furnace distributes heat. Automatic. Self adjusting. Easy to install. PRES-T0-L06S *1" M"a Case of 6 THE FQNTIAQ^FRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1967 B—9 News of Area Service Personnel Pvt. Jessie Vasquez Jr, has reported for duty in Vietnam after being home on leave with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jessie Vasquez Sr. of 153 S. Johnson. He took his basic training at Fort Knox, Ky., and spent twdj months in advanced infantry training at Ft. McClellan, Ala. He is a Pontiac Central High' School gradu^ite and spent a year at Oakland Community College. T. Sgt. Charles M. Wright is the new official Air Force recruiter at the Pontiac office, 35 E. Huron. Wright was previously assigned to Ton San Nhut Air Base Vietnam. He received a Bronze Star ; medal for meritorious service with the 19th Air Commando Squadron. He displayed exemplary leadership, personal endeavor and devotion to duty while in Vietnam. ^ Hospital Corpsman 3 C. Dennis .J. Bayma, son of Benjamin Bayma Sr. of 1018 Premont, Wa-' terford Township, recently received a Bronze Star for heroic actions in Vietnam. Bayma enlisted in the Navy in . 1965. He spent 13 months with the Marine Corps in Vietnma, re- BAYMA turning stateside in September. He is c u r r e n 11 y stationed in Great Lakes, 111, He is a graduate of Waterford Township High School. VASQUEZ HUTTULA . Dr. Charles S. Huttula, a lieutenant commander with the Navy has been invited to read a paper on root canal surgery at a meeting of the Far East Chapter of Military Surgeons, In Tokyo. The son of Mr. and Mrs. C. O. | Huttula of 4656 Irwindale, Wa-' terford Township, the dentist is stationed on the U.SS Repose anchored just off Dong Hau, Vietnam. j Spec. 4 William Warren Jr. isj \ currently stationed in the ^irl Vorce hMital at Cam Raljih^ Bay. He fif recovcriqg from m i jufies received when he w a\ th^wn out of a jeep, whichi thei\^ rolled on top of him. r Warren, the son of Mr. andj Mrs. William Warren Sr. of 12751 Edison, has been in Vietnam! since last July. > 501 Minooas Filament Nylon Now Only ■ ^Sq. Yd. (iimibjm 334-0981 5390 Dixie Highway 623-002S THE CHRISTIAN BROTHERS .. BRANDY SPORTSQUIZ -------------^----^ KENNERLY WRIGHT Marine Pfc. jMichael C, Ken-nerly is home on leave before-leaving for Vietnam. He is the son of William A. Kennerly of , 30 Salmer and Mrs. Ruth C., I.*wis of Honolulu, Hawaii. , He recently completed 121 weeks of recruit and advanced training at Camp Pendleton, Calif. I Kennerly is a 1966 graduate! of Waterford Township High! School. \____ Q: Whaarc^ the only two mehto have played in both a Rose Bowl and a baseball World Series? Yankees and Chuck Essegian of Stanford and the Los Angeles Dodgers. SPECIAL OFFER Send 25t for your copy of The Christian Brothers Official Sports Yearbook; 96 pages of the latest information on all the major sports. A 50f value. Writei Brandy Sportsquiz, Box 15213, San Francisco, California 94115. The Christian Brothers took a masterfu I stand when they created a brandy of quality without comlpromise. You'll enjoy its lightness and the round mellow taste. It’s clearly America's favorite; THE MASTERFUL BRANDY. cars&stars Coming to Cobo! America’s Auto ^unv... all the *68 cars plus exdtii^ stars. Starting Saturday, November 18-Advance tickets only $1. --- ilS^ood! .... ■■ ■ I. Della R Is^Jhe Tidi GRAND ItE-OPENINe OF FREHER APPLIANCE’S PONTIAC STORE! OPEN DAILY 10<9 SUNDAY 10-7 A thousands t'®*" J- and 'n •riVc""- '"‘Id FANTASTIC RE-OPENING SALE NOW! HUGE BRAND NEW M50,000 INVENTORY OF APPLIANCES, TV’s AND STEREOS HAS BEEN SPECIALLY PRICED TO SAVE YOU 5-PIECE PEN SET Free to everyone just for stop-pin9 in and checking my deal on price and service 1 Pen Set Per Family 15 Transistor AC-DC Port. FM/AM Radio Operatee on house current or batteries. Self-storing cord, complete with batteries and earphone, gift boxed. $19 i88 7-PINCE EFKO WARE KITCHEN TOOL SET $9.95 Value, in Bright , Stainless Steel, Gift Boxed “ NOBODY SELLS COLOR TV tor PHILCO GIANT 367 SQ. IN. COLOR TV 26,000 volts of picture power. Solid-stote signal system. Auto. Color lock degaussing big 6 inch oval speaker. Walnut finish. UHF-VHF. ZENITH 20" DIAGONAL MtASURI COLOR TV L brand new. Zenith high perform speaker. 25,000 volts of picture power, full 82 channel UHf/VHF tuner. "Push-pull" On-Off switch. Aulomotic color clarifier, legs opt. b»i$^^^88 ADMIRAL WOOD, WALNUT "LO-BOY" COLOR TV GIANT RECTANGULAR SCREEN Big 270 sq. in. picture lube, rectangular screen, 26,000 volts, UHF-VHF. Wood walnut lo-boy. $425 LESS THAN FRETTER RCA VICTOR Giant Screen, Wood Walnut COLOR TV COLOR TV A Frelter Firsll Top Quality RCA Victor Color TV it wood, wolnul colot low, low price, full 82 channel reception, lighted tuning panels, volt chassis' stay ; and q ich, n I 227 s Wood Walnut lo-Boy Console. The -■ nore with 25,000 volts of pic power, with full 82 Chonnel UHF/VHF tuner, auto, color mi idelity control and picture slobil-ler. Push-pull, on-off volume con-rol and complete 2-year warranty. $449 $489 \ WESTINGHOUSE ALL SOLID STATE CONSOLE STEREO COMBINATION lolM-stiti thre.iliMt n, tales te lire ■■I er re >l»e. FM. AM FM/steri RCA VICTOR SOLID-STATE Stereo Combination •75 Watts •Stx Matched *-eakcri with FM AMe FM. Sterec Radic tic Nerd ®m'I Init. Fill 60”’ Itaa 1 Westinghouse * $229 $289 Over 1300 portable TV's hove been epecfafly price cut this week for quick act I on I Choere from the top brands tool Zenith, RCA, Admiral, Westinghouse, imorcon, more. Cobo Hall lives! S^AVbody Herman. Bobby Vinton. Della Reese. The Detroit Wheelv^Jhe Tidal Waves. The Debutantes. Along with all the exciting '68 cars. Domestic cars. Imports. Experimental cars. Motor homes. Recreational vehicles for outdoor living. And a fashion show. cars&^tars Detroit • ■llll Aidiii every night by Saks Fifth Avenue. Buy your ticket before November 18 at advance-gate price of $Iv00 (save ' 50f). Can you afford fb stay home? Tickets available at all Grinnell’s, J. L. Hudson, Sears,,B.F. Goodrich, General Tire. Uniroyal stores, Cobo, , and all Shell Oil Co. stations. Adtmtr€U PERSONAL PORTABLE TELEVISION 1967 mod.1 with UHF-VHF big let quality In -a super compact size. Limited Supply. 42 sq. in. NEE kitchen TOOL SET $69” J i. \r^ 1 INSTALLED 1 4+oHb|imni: TOP-LOADING PORTABLE DISHWASHER Large fomily capacity, single setting controls wash, rinse and dry cycles Hhfotpxmii: Automatic Washer with special sellings for permanent rn7id. 'td’'oS!l'‘ |!’u?ly"'Tutomo^c washer, 3 fountain filtered wash cycles, 2 to 16 pound loads without KELVINATOR 30" ELEORIC RANGE Automatic oven timer, clock, minute reminder, throw away foil oven lin- with silverware bosket, shuts self off outomoticolly. selections, 3 wash jemperotur# selec- ings, fosi oven pre-heot, deluxe. $99 Ns M.nsy Does. Netsvm.ets’tll'68 ^ I W 3 Ytirt te tsy. M ,“,:r!.w$174’® WESTINGHOUSE NO FROST 14 FT. 2-Dr. Refrigerator Frosl-fre. olwoys. Big 12 Mb. freezer, full width vegetable eri per. Built-in egg storage. $229 "S-. FRETTER APPLIANCE L COMPANY ^ s. FULL SATISFACTION GUARANTEED ■ INSTANT CREDIT 3 YEARS TO PAY FRETTER’S PONTMG 1650 SOUTH TELEGRAPH SALE HOURS DAILY-9:30-9 P.M.-SUNs TILL T P.M. 1 BIk. S. Of Orchard Lk. Rd. FE 3-7051 B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1967 Ends Saturday, Nov. 11 — One Full Color 5”x7” Color Portrait.. 99c ISEARSI SEARS PONTIAC STORE Dope Cache Is Intercepted PARIS (AP) - French police announced today they have arrested two brothers from New York wearing women’s corsets in which about $2 million worth [of heroin was hidden. ' Police said the two men were Ned Gordon, 3?^ and Andrew Gordon, 23. They'clakped they were students and said they were en route from Nice to New York. Police said they had about 22 pounds of pure heroin hidden in their corsets. REGAL WILD BIRD PEED With 20% Sunflower seed 25-lb. BAG $239 Attractive to all birds - a nutritious mixture of milomaze, millet, wheat, buokwhaat and plump sunflowor seed. 5-lb. bag ... . 59c 10-lb. bag ... $1.10 Sunflower Seed-full and plump - 25c lb. 3 lbs.-72c 10 lbs.-$2.35 • Mixture of Cx. Corn, Wheat and Milo 25lb.Bag-$1^60 \ • \ 25 lb. Bag-$1.40 |StrawJJ|»r_b«Wiii^^ NOW HALF PRICE WE DELIVER - Phone OR 3-2441 REGAL Feed and Lawn Supply Co. 4266 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains, Michigan 3 Miles North of Pontiac -Junior Editors Quiz on- Doves Sfadium Support Sought LANSING (UPI) - A Detroit real estate developer today planned to ask the State Senate Appropriations Committee for $75,000 to study whether domed stadium should be built on the State Fairgrounds in Detroit. ★ ★ ★ Detroit r e a i 10 r Alfred R. Glancy last July sought com- munity support in. Detroit for the proposed $35 million structure. Glancy said he would ask for help from the state to help pay some of the costs of the project. The proposed new stadium would take the place of the 55-year-old Tiger Stadium in Detroit. • aootOAi QUESTION: Why was the dove chosen as the symbol of peace? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: The Bible tells us in Genesis 6 that God was angry at man’s wickedness and decided to destroy mankind, except for righteous Noah and his family. God directed Noah to build an ark, which floated while it rained for forty days and forty nights. (1) Finally the ark came to rest on Mount Ararat and P^loah sent out a raven and then a dove to locate dry land. The birds returned with no clues. After seven days, Noah sent out the dove again; she returned (2) bearing an olive leaf so Noah knew the deluge was over. \ ; 2548 Elizabetb Lake Rd. 682-7440 ; • ' — Behind The Mall — SPECIAL : FACTORY CLEARANCE “ We have purchased a large quantity of prefin-^ ished plywood panels at close-^out pricqs. We make a profit. You get the savings. BIRCH-OAK-ELM Several Colors of Each ^ As a result of this touching story, the dove became kiipvim as the bearer of good tidings. Peace, is considered by ^dpt of mankind as the greatest of good tidings; therefore it\Was natural that the dove came to symbolize peace. \ The gentleness and beauty of this bird, really a small pigeon, have added to the symboITsm over the years. (Sir artist has drawn a dove of peace based on the center of a new U.S. stamp. 1 st Quality $595 2nd Quality $525 DOORS - CEILING TILE - FORMICA - TRIM - Etc. ! Pontiac Plywood Co. o 1488 BALDI^IN AVE. FE 2-2543 % %XJLSLSULJLXUJtJUJUUUAJLt.i 91» 2 JLU.mX«JUUJLmj ' GALLAGHER'S PRE-CHRISTAAAS SALE PIANO - ORGANS BUY NOW SAVE NOW! PAY LATER! ^ ™ New Easy Terms! r^r SENSATIONAL SAVINGS ON CLOSE-OUTS, DEMONSTRATORS AND TRADE-INS AND A LIMITED NUMBER OF SPECIAL PURCHASE PIANO AND ORGANS. SAVINGS FROM $S0-$300 Here’s just a few samples of these tremendous values: LewrvySlirtvtDelui* HvgularSTSI.............................. NOW WWW Lowrty HoMdt, Otiui* $7fiA M|ular$l,MS............................... NOW IWW Hammond Lite . $000 Ragular $1,140............................ NOW WWW 0a11a|harCon>a1a Piano ..miu 4RDD RacularSm................................. NOW WWW Kimball ConioU Sfiftfi Lowery Hilton Organ $7QO Regular $SSS...................................... lOO All Prices Include Bench and Delivery NO MONEY DOWN FIRST PAYMENT JAN. 'IS You Will Enjoy Shopping at Open Mon. through Fri. ’til 9 - Sat. ’til 5 1710 S. Telegraph Road Vi Mile South of Orchard Lake Ave. ♦ FE 4-0566 OPEN THIS SUNDAY 1 to 5 P.M. Flint Soldier Killed in Viet WASHINGTON (AP) - AjMr. and Mrs. Lester B. Avery Mfchigan man was one of 33 of Flint, killed in action in Vietnam in Dead from wounds suffered in the latest casualty list. previous action is Army Spec. The victim is Army 2nd Lieut-15 Gaty L. Hensley, son of Mrs. tenant Ralph L. Avery, son ofiFlorabelle Leach of Cassopolis. PUNCH SET OFFER! PUNCH CUP pne free with every 7 gallons of Ashland Gasoline X PUNCH BOWL 97t kMi an oil change or lubrication at ragular prlcat Here’s another special offer from your Good Neighbor Ashland Oil pealer. Get one sparkling. Early American punch cup'with every seven gallons of Ashland Vitalized Gasoline you buy. Collect a complete set in time for your holiday entertaining. And get the companion e’/a-qUart punch bowl for only 970 with an 6il change or lubrication at regular prices. Start your Early American punch cup and bowl set rightnow. Drive in at your nearby Ashland Dealer displaying the "Free Punch Cup" sign Ashland ASHLAND OIL & REFINING COMPANY today’s most advanced COLOR TV CHOOSE FROM OVER 100 COLOR TV SETS ON OUR FLOOR Why pay more.. .when the best now costs you so little? Space-saving, COMPACT Detachable legs make it ideal fpr tables, shelves—even in bookcases I Optional Cart gives wonderful room-to-room mobility! Versatile model 516 with: Brilliant Color Tube, 176 sq. in. rectangular screen,' Automatic Color Purifier, telescoping dipole antenna, plus many other extra-quality features. JnK'-1. '-'.h' Only @V34|N MAGNAVOX COMPACT Solid-State STEREO FM/AM Radio-Phonograph Dependable MAGNAVOX COLOR TV with vivid color pictures OPEN EVERY NIGHT HL 9-3 YEARS TO PAY-NO OOWN PAYMENT COME IN — select from over 40 beautiful furniture styles TEL-NORON SHOPPING CENTER-P0NI1AC FE 3-7879 1550 UMOH LAKE RD.-UII0N LAKE 303-6286 / - 1 ^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 1^. 1967 B-11 WANTEDI Highest Prices Paid' %e Pick Up” I FE 2-0200 JUNK GARS Gsed Auto Parts Available Pontiac Scrap '135 Branch 23 Amer/consl Are Listed os | Killed in Viet WASHINGTON (AP) - The names of 23 men killed in action are included in the latest casualty list from the war in Vietnam. Killed in action: ARMY ARKANSAS — Pfc. Jerry D. Everett, 'lllar. CALIFORNIA — Spec. 4 Keith RCAVICTOR ,.i*S(Hita''ciara; CplVGregory G. ard, Baldwin Park. COh------------- I save mon^a time,too :ONNECTICUT Miller, East Hartfoi GEORGIA - Pfc —Bishop. Direct dial Long Distance instead of calling Person-to-Person. Save 40 per cent on a daytime three minute call between Detroit and Kalamazoo. It's faster, too. Michigan Bell - CpI. Robert W. Larlson, . Stephen P, Jones, 4 Michael G. Phll-"’'MtCHidAN — Pic. Chahee D. Cliap-—in, Onaway. VIISSPURI-CpI. John H. Welch, Knob "“new HAMPSHifee - So). John C. N°EW ySrk"'- Spec. 4 Ralph J, Dl Pace, Albany. NORTH CAROLINA - Sflt. l.C. Ferdinand J. Quatrone, Fayetteville. NORTH DAKOTA - Pfc. Gerald A. Iverson, Oakos. OKLAHOMA - Capt. Riley L. Pitts, ■•(lahoma City. OREGON - Sot. l.C. John D. Ml- laells, Por“—' ^ SOUTH_^CAROLINA — Spec. 4 Devid NAVY CALIFORNIA — Etc---------- ■-‘in T. Nelson, Walnut Greek., ------ -----------_ C . Rock Mat# ........................ MINNESOTA - Hospital Corpsmer ------ „ -------- .-.y Spring nneth C. Stommes, Cold but Yot/GBr Tm gifts /a/ thb fo!^ of sav/mss PURm OUR PiRIfiDAY SALB// Don Racine\ A-1 CARPET SALES 4990 Dixie Highway Phone 673-1297 ONE BLOCK NORTH OF WALTON Carpet your kitchen! ILLINOIS — Lance §k»l. Merrick R. lerce, Moline. P^NNSYLVANI^A — Ljnce ^Cpl^Larry ___ Allentc. Died of wounds: , MARINE CORPS -------IN - Lanca CpI. Mauston. Missing to dead—hostile; . AIR FORCE ARIZONA - LI. Col. Van H, Newvi COLORADO - Airman l.C. Waller '^'^cSnNECt'cu't'’’ - Capt. Arthur Coughlin, Strf FLORIDA - ...... ^WUCHIGAN - Airman t.C. Scovllle, Clarklaka. OKLAHOMA - M. Sgt. Char Roglers, Midwest CIW. TENNESSEE - T. Sgt. Jan Krause, Lenoir City. Missing as a result of hostile action: ____________ NAVY Lt. (I.g.) Richard C. Clark. MARINE CORPS Capt. Stephen J. Kott. Missing to captured or m-terned: NAVY axitB Town ’n’ Terrace Carpeting Ozite introduces the soft, warm, quiet tile that never needs waxing or polishing . . . because it's carpet! 16 colors. Simple to install. WE STOCK A COMPLETE LINE OF SUSPENDED DEILING TILE As Low As ‘ includes Metal VINYL ASBESTOS _ 9x9x1/18 TILE S. Plastic Wall 4c TILE If and UP PAINT SPECIAL MAC-O-LACA *5oal. MAC-O-LAC LATEX •482i. ^OYAL BOND To*al. Baked Enamel WALLBOARD for Kitchens or Bathrooms in 5 colors 4x8» Panels $y95 dEILING TILE 12x12 plain . . . lOta. 12x12 acoustical 13°.,. 12x12 styrofoam . 15°,,. OWENS CORNING FIB6RGLAS CEIUNG TILE (pebNe white) 15 TUB ENCLOSURE $2495 Alum. Frame Frosted Glass All Formica ^ m Mi 24” VANITY Includes'Sink and Rim ■ ■■ 95 The GLENDALE Contemporary lowboy cabinet design. 22* diagonal, 282 square Inch rectangular picture. New Vista VHF tuner and Solid State UHF tuner. One-set VHF fine tuning. The TOWNSMAN AJ-097 "Deluxe Sportabout TV with big picture-pulling powerl Has large 18* diagonal, 172 square Inch rectangular picture. Built-In antennas. 6-speaker sound system — two 15" oval duo-cones, two e)tpo-nential horns, two ZVz" tweeters. 75-watt peak power stereo amplifier. Studiomatic changer with diamond stylus. Sensitive FM-AM and FM Stereo Radio. The WANDERLUST VJP34 New value-priced portable stereo. Playa Indoors on AC house current, outdoors on batteries or from auto or boat cigarette lighter with optional 12-volt plufl-ln attachment. Has two 4" speakers in detachable enclosures. Precision Studiorhetic change'!. * Prices are heat distributor's, prices, terms and offers are option^ with dealers. Service not 7995* Compact 3* real model operates on house current or batteries. Mike, batteries, AC cord, Feel of tape, empty ' reel and splicing taps included. ' 21,995* PCA VICTOR DIST. CORP. - DETROIT H You Don't Buy From U$, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! Look for many Other big values at your authorized RCA Victor dealer. See what his Gold^a&Specials arel .. .................. B—12 '1 HE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEAIBER 10, 1967 “Girl Frozen Alive” "! State Senate Dems Hit 1-Man, 1-Vote Curb T, LANSING (AP>-A Republl-ruled In 1964 that the present jean-sponsored Senate resolution I hacking a proposed amendment to the U.S. Constitution allow-ihg nonpopulation apportion-iment ran into a Democratief; ihornets’ nest Thursday. I Majority Flq(fr Leader Robert IVander Laan, R-Grand Rapids, Constitution calls for apportionment on a population basis. SUSPENSION SOUGHT Vander Laan, who also is chairman of the Senate Business Committee, sought to suspend' Senate rules to allow the resolution to be sent to the Judiciary introduced the resolution, which j.on,imttee for consideration, asks the U. S. Congress to call Traditionally, ali resolutions a convention to propose the j,j.g |jyg. amendment to the Constitution. iness committee except for pro-’ '■ ■" finance, which go to appropriations. preme Court," charged Sen. Sander Levin, D-Berkley. GOES BEYOND POUTICS’ "It means that if every time a resolution is sent to a committee and is not reported out another will be introduced and sent to another committee,” Levin said. “This matter goes beyond all politics,” said Sen. George Fitzgerald, I>Grosse Pointe Park. ‘‘Regardless of party we should not allow this piece of leglsla- ¥ tion to be bandied about. ’ i >;' * ★ ★ ' S “It may sound like a political ploy,” he added, "but believe: me, if we do this we 11 regret it.” “We’ve apparently aroused a ; bees’ nest and should put it off to think about it over the week-end,” Vander Laan proposed. I The Senate agreed to his sug ' gestion. The motion comes up i again Tuesday. j /L The amendment, backed by U. S. Sen. Everett pirksen, R-j 111., would allow states with two-j The move brought a storm of house legislatures to elect one protest from Democrats who' house on a basis of factors other argued that a similar resolution than population. already is before Vander Laan’s 'The U. S. Supreme Court business committee. i --------------------------- Democrats charged that Van- 1 der Laan was introducing a new i ^ _ resolution and attempting to T\A/0 GCfS s®"** to a different committee ' because he lat;ked enough votes in his own to report the measure out to the floor. SIM^AR PROPOSmON . Vander Laan agreed that a similar resolution, Leaks Found NEW HAVEN Michi- gan Consolated Gas Co. officials found two new gas leaks nedr the last regular session, is be-here Thursday, bringing the fore his committee and that number of places where gas members had turned down a bid Ice and Furniture Show! 3 Days - Mon., Tues., Wed. Hov. 13-14-15, Eveiylioily Welcome Coleman’s Furniture Marty 536 N. PERRY STREET, PONTIAl^ Acrost Glenujood from Kmart been found bubbling to the sur-■face to seven. ! New Haven is just southwest ijof the area where 100 families were evacuated from their 11 homes Monday when they fir§t discovered the leaks. ★ ★ Well drillers, there have tapped underground shale beds to release the natural gas allowing all but a dozen or so families to return home. Gas company officials said the leaks in New Hayen present no threats to residents of the farmland area. BUY!SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Sfofe Man Slain | FLINT (ff! — Ira Leroy Kneil, 26, was driving his girl-friend home Thursday when a car began following them. When Kneil stopped to see who was in the car, he was shot to death, police said. The shooting occurred in nearby Mundy Township. The other^car sp^ off. Pohee sought the assailant. to report it out. However, he said, since resolutions introduced in regular session carry over to the next regular session, but are not properly before the Senate in a special ^essjon, he was justified in introducing a new one and seeking to send it to a new committee. Democrats sought a ruling from the. presiding officer. Senate President Pro Temiwre Thomas Schweigert, R-Petoskey who upheld Vander Laan. “It’s clearly an effort to under-' mine the one-man, one-vote principle adopted by the Su- For freezer owners 'Fresh Food 15' Refrigerator Big Fresh Food Storage I I4.7cu.fy Model TAC-15B • Adjnsta-Shelvea. $11 88 • Cbvered meat pan. | | *G-EColors or White. MONTH HAMPTON 825 W, Huron COMPANY FE 4-2525 Our 47'^ Birthday Ladies' Loafers PENNY or ITAUAN STYLE iO/\ Our 47^ Our 47 th Birthday^^^^ Ladles' Fur Trim Coats The ideal dress coat, a variety of all wool sfabrlcs topped with lux-^ urious mink, fitch, squirrel Or wolf. Regular to $115 M4 *“ ^39 Ladies' Winter Coats All wool solids, tweeds, novelties. Each one yrarmly interlined. Some ore olpoco lined. All ore marvelous values. 3 to 11 petite, 14’A TO 24’/2. Regular to $60,00 $39 to $49 Ladies' Famous Brand Dress Shoes Regular to $17.00 10»" Men's 2-Pant Suits Our fine quality "Executive” suits. Jo all-wool sharkskins, worsteds or twists. Ohoose ■from 2 or 3 button models. Regular $90.00 $76 Ladies' Leather Snow Boots Fleece lined. Forest green only. Regular to $15.00. 6 90 Entire Stock Men’s Suits Choose from Embassy Row, Executive, Hammonton Park ond Kuppenheimer. Regular to $150.00 *68-*128 Use a Lion Charge Plan With Option Terms Men's Porto-Peds SLIP-ONS and OXFORDS Discontinued Styles Regular to $25.00 Men's Executive Oxfords Waterford Plays Kettering Tonight Prestige Tilts Mark Last Big Grid Weekend The final big weekend of prep football opens this evening \yith several prestigious games on tap, whilg another is on tomorrow afternoon’s slate. Four key games on the local scene find Waterford Township entertaining Waterford Kettering, Rochester playing host to Clprkston, Oxford visiting Lake Orion and Birmingham Seaholm in the role of host to city rival Brother Rice. The big game tomorrow finds North Farmington visiting Farmington in the sixth game in their series which opened ba^k in 1962. Pontiac Central has a Saginaw Valley Conference date at Saginaw Arthur Hill this evening, while Pontiac Northern is idle. Northern and Central close the season next Saturday afternoon at Wisner Stadium. At Waterford, the Skippers are favored to crack Kettering’s four-game winning streak in'their series which is only six games old. The Captains lead, 5-1. POTENT OFFENSE The Skippers have a potent offensive unit that should roll past the Captains if the weatherman cooperates. If rain or snow intervene, it could slow Uie Water-fbrd backs and give Kettering a break. Waterford goes into the game with a 4-3-1 record, while the Captains will take the (ield with a 3-5 mark. The only victory for the Skippers in the series was a 19-13 verdict in 1962. The game also brings together a couple of coaching friends—Kettering’s Jim Larkin and the Skippers’ John Moffat. Moffat is in his third year with the? Skippers. Before joining Waterford, he worked as an assistant to Larkin at Kettering. BOTH SUCCESSFUL Rochester and Clarkston recorded high finishes in their respective leagues and a victory for either this evening would cap a successful season. Red Wing Goalie Hands Penguins 'Rejection Slip Edwards Helps Defroif Down His Ex-Mates DETROIT Ml - Roy Edwards made his Nationai Hockey League debut a winning one Thursday night, beating the team that rejected him while backstojp-ping a 5-1 Detroit Red Wing victory over the Pittsburgh Penguins. The littie goaiie making his first appearance with the Wings iet Biil Speer’s screened slap shot through with little more than five minutes gone in the game. * ★ * * But then Edwards shut out the ex-t>ansion club for the rest of the night, turning away 19 shots. A point-blank shot off the stick of Doug Roberts tied it five minuted later. It was the fourth goal of the season for the native Detroiter and former Michigan State star. The Wings added two more in the second and another pair in the final period. The second period scores by Floyd Smith and Red Hampson came within less than a minute of each other. Then in the third period, Dean Prentice went the length of the ice to score at 3:46 and Norm Ullman used Paul Henderson as a decoy to score on a two-on-one play at 13:04. A ★ ★ Gordie Howe assisted on Roberts’ goal to give him the league scoring lead with 18 points, one better than Chicago’s Bobby Hull. The victory put the Wings in a two^ay tie with New York for second place in NHL’s Eastern Division, two points behind Toronto. The Wings are back in action Sunday night against Montreal at Olympia. Los Angeles beat Toronto’s East Division front-runners 4-1 in the only other game on the schedule, snapping the Maple Leafs’ unbeaten string of five. Edwards’ victory over the Penguins was doubly sweet for the 30-year-old journeyman, rescued from the minors by Detroit this week to replace shook-up Roger Crozier. Edwards was selected by Pittsburgh In the expansion draft last spring, only to be cut loose before the start of the season. The Red Wings got hinfi in a trade for goalie Hank Bassen, then' farmed him out to Fort Worth of the Central League, where he registered four shutouts, a 1.33 goals-against average and an 8-0-1 record in nine games. ' ......■Wl.piilll.il .Mi SPRAWLING IN VAIN — Rookie Goalie Roy Edwards (left) and defenseman Gary Bergman sprawl on the ice in an unsuccessful attempt to flag down a screen League game at Olympia. Ab McDonald of the Penguins waits in shot by Pittsburgh's Bill Speer (not in picture) in last night’s National Hockey . only goal yielded by Edwards in his debut as the Wings won, 5-1. THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1907 Free Throw Miss Saves Piston Win NEW YORK (AP)-Tlve Detroit Pistons won their fourth in a row Thursday night, but again it wasn’t easy. In their last two wins, the Pistons have had a total surplus of three points. Detrbit had to overcome a 15-point deficit Thursday to finally nip the Seattle Supersonics 119-118. ' With five seconds left in the game, the Pistons had to _ watch' helplessly as Seattle’s Bob Weiss took a foul ^ot with what could have tied it up. He missed though, and Dave Debusschere grabbed the rebound. Only last Wednesday, when they topped the New York Knicks 110-108, an offensive foul in the final seven seconds Ex-Spartan Against Lions MINNEAPOLIS - ST. PAUL - Gene Washington, the former All American end from Michigan State, will be In the Minnesota Vikings starting lineup at split end Sunday against the Detroit Lions. Washington, whose key pass reception helped set up Fred Cox’s game-winning field goal against the New York Giants last week, is starting because Red Phillips has a sprained ankle and Paul Flat-ley has switched from split epd to flanker to replace him. Washington’s average'*of 33 yeards for his nine catches is tops among Viking receivers and inclndes an 85 yard dash for a» touchdown. Ex-Spartan Clinton Jones, another No. 1 Minnesota draft choice, took a New ^York kickoff 96 yards for a touchdown and may see more action against Detroit. He has been used sparingly as^ a running back with the Vikings. Here are Sunday’s NFL favorites: MINNESOTA 17, DETROIT 7 Upset for the rebounding Vikings, 2-5-1, over the Lions, 34-1, at Minnesota. The Vikings’ fine rookies are coming along fast. (GREEN BAY 17, CLEVELAND 14 The Packers, leaders in the Central Division with 5-2-1, will have Donny Anderson pnd Ben Wilson as their run- ill Start Suntday DOMINATE PLAY Seattle, an expansion club, dominated play for the first three quarters before the Pistons pulled out their seventh victory in 11 starts. ★ ★ ★ The Supersonics led 33-27 after the first period and 63-52 at the half. * ★ ★ The shooting of Dave Bing, Terry Dischinger and Debusschere trimmed Seattle’s lead to 89-85 at the end of three. With eight secoftds remaining and Detroit ahead 119-115, Seattle’s Walt Haz-zard pumped in a jumper, Weiss intercepted the throw-in and wa^ fouled by Bing. Weiss made the first free-throw but missed the second. leschy « 3-3 15 fling backs in place of injured regulars Elijah Pitts and Jim Grabowski. ^BALTIMORE 35, ATLANTA 7 The Colts, 6-0-2, the only unbeaten team in the NFL and just a game in front of Los Angeles in the Coastal Division, beat the Falcons, 1-6-1, 38-31, in their opener. DALLAS 28, NEW ORLEANS 14 The Cowboys, 6-2, leaders of the Capitol Division, should break the Saints’ one-game winning streak at New Orleans. ST. LOUIS 31, PITTSBURjGH 7 The Cardinals, 5-3; have Jim Bakken, the league’s top scorer, to throw a fright into the Steelers, 2-6, at St. Louis. LOS ANGELES 35, PHn.AnRI.PHTA 7 The erratic Eagles, upset 31-24 by New Orleans last week, are hurting badly -with tackle Bob Brown, tight end Mike Pflieon 0 0-0 0 Olsen Toms 45 2H I out—Detroit. Tresvant. Seattle, Total Fouls - Detroit 32, C1 a r k s 10 n wound up third In the Wayne-Oakland at 4-2-1, while Rochester shared second in the Oakland A with two other squads at 52. Milford of the W-0 emerged with a 31-20 victory over Avondale in the only meeting of the season between teams of the two leagues. Seaholm’s players will walk a little taller of they manage to knock off Broth-, er iRice this evening. ★ ★ A The Maples of Seaholm already own a decision over city-rival Groves, and a "triumph this evening would give them the unofficial city championship. Among the other games on tonight’s schedule. Walled Lake plays host to Ann Arbor, Milford is at Swartz Creek, Marysville is at Avondale, Romeo at Utica Stevenson, Royal Oak Dondero at Royal Oak Kimball and Waterford Our Lady of Lakes at Richmond. ★ ★ ★ Farmington, with one victory in five tries against township rival North Farmington, will be trying to make it two ip a row against the Raiders toniorrow. The Falcons of Farmington ^on last year, 20-7, to end the Raiders’ dorriinance in the series. North Farmington has won three times and the other game ended in an P-0 deadlock. e O'Connor I. Pos. WiMrford 6-4 230 T G., BraS: . 5-9 ISO Dennis Wilson _ . _____ . „. _____ Don Postle . 4-0 190 T MiKe Vidor 4-2 200 Tim McParflin 5-10 200 G James Main . 5-8 178 L. Thompson 5-8 175 G Brian Gray 4-0 200 L-ee Ryden.....5-10 175 C B. Carlson 4-2 200 Bob Earls . 5-l0 140' MB Mike Sheldon 5-8 14^ " Harry Booker 5-10 145 HB Steve Goil 5-10 175 Gene Pankner 4-3 210 FB B. Saffron . 5-11 175 Dennis Wooster 44) 185 QB Brad Potter 5-7 145 AP WIrepholo front. It was the Slow Playing Bothers Arnie in Cup Golf MEXICO CITY (UPI) - Arnold Palmer’s hopes for his first international trophy were higher than the use _ its “prostyle” defense, with four front men and three linebackers. ONLY ONE VICTORY The Wolverines have a ofie-game “winning streak” going after five straight losses while the Spartans have dropi^ their last three wins over Wisconsin and Michigan. (Daugherty might have tipped his hand Thursday concerning his plans for Indiana. He used fullback Bob Apisa with the first team during workouts for the first time in more than a week. ★ A .. * • Apisa has carried the ball little this season, gaining only 158 yards. He spent most of the Ohio State game on the bench. Other Big Ten games Saturday find Ohio State a 13-point choice over Wisconsin at Columbus and lowa a 7-point underdog at Northwesterm. Next week is phase two of the schedule maker’s work. Indiana plays at Minnesota, and Michigan State appears at Purdue. The final portion of the schedule finds Indiana and Purdue tangling. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1967 SNO-CAPS 4 FULL PLY College Grid Giant Receives Good News optimistic because they’re doctors. I have never yet heard of a doctor being fired.” * ★ * . Also on the West Coast, fourth-ranked UCLA tuned up for Washington as Gary Beban completed 15 of 17 passes in a scrimmage Thursday. The Bruins are 6-0-1 while the Huskies are 5-3. Second-ranked Tennessee, 5-1, meets Tulane, 3-4, and third’s absence last week and ranked North Carolina State, 8- By the Associated Press The Giants meet the giant killer Saturday and the Giant’s doctor says he will be at top strength for the test. Top-ranked Southern California received the good news ’Thursday that running back O.J. Simpson, out of action last week with an injured foot, wiU be able to start against Oregon Stale.^ The Trojans survived Simp- Knds Saturday, Nov. 11 — One Full Color 5”x7” Color Portrait.. 99c SEARS PONTlAt. STORE ]Son beat California, but Oregon State is another matter entirely. The Beavers beat Purdue earlier In the season when the Boilermakers were ranked second in th^ country and last and tied UCLA also No. 2 at the time. COACH HAPPY Simpson’s return makes (Southern Cal Coach John McKay about the happiest man in Los Angeles. Already this season 0. J. has ^gained 1,050 yards on 203 carries. “I was very pessimistic when I heard of the itnury,” McKay said Thursday, “Because I’m a football coacp. The\joctbrs were 0, has a tough opponent in Penn State, which is 5-2 and is riding a four-game winning streak. Purdue, No. 5 with a (5-1 mark, is another team with a battle on its hands. The Boilermakers meet Minnesota, which is 6-1 and unbeaten in Big Ten play. The Gophers have won five straight. BOWL BARRIER Indiana, ranked sixth and |^-beaten in seven games, faces another potential barrier to its Rose Bowl dreams, meeting Michigan State, which is dangerous despite its 2-5 mark. Wyoming, No. 7 and 8-0, plays New Mexico, which has lost sev- en in a row after its opening-game victory. Oklahoma, No. 8 and 5-1, ipeets Iowa State, 2-6, in a Big Eight game. Ninth-ranked Notre Dame, 5-2, travels to Pittsburgh, 1-6, iand 10-ranked Houston plays Memphis State, 5-2, at night. Other games include: Army-Utah, Auburn-hCssissippi State, Boston College-VMI, Brigham Young-Arizona, Califomia-San Jose, Clemson-Maryland, COl-gate-Bucknell, Colorado-Kansas, Columbia-Dartmouth, Cornell-Brown, Duke-Navy, Florida State:yirginia Tech and Florida-Georgia. Also, Harvard-Princeton, lUi-nois-Michigan, LSU-Alabama, Missouri-Kansas State, Nebras-ka-(Mdahoma State, Northwest-em-Iowa, Ohio Stat^-Wisconsin, Rice-Arkansas, Stanford-Oregon, Syracuse-Holy Cross, Texas A&M-SMU and TCU-Texas Tech. And, Tulsa-Wake Forest, Utah State-Montana, University of Texas, El Paso-Colorado State, Vanderbilt-Kentucky, Villanbva-Buffalo,' Virginia-North Carolina, Washington State-ldaho and Yale-Pennsylvania. By DUFF DAUGHTERTY Head Football Coach Michigsn State University At times the average football in may be in the dark when he hears football coaches or commentators talk about field position. To those of us in the profession the term “field position” is the determining factor in the outcome of most football games. Your author this season is in position to know. Just’what is field position' Field position is the point on the field where ypu take over the ball on offense and also where you give up the ball and your defense takes over. The ideal position for the defense to give up the ball is in your opponents end zone as the result of having returned a punt, or by intercepting a pass for touchdown, or by picking up a blocked punt and returning it for a TD, or by recovering a fumble in midair and going all the way. It is also frustrating to B. F. GOODRICH FLOOR MODEL CLEARANCE STEREOS-AM & FM CONSOLES ^199” WERE NOW $61995........$519.95 $599.95 ....... $499.95 $499.95.......$899.95 WERE NOW $59.95.........$49.95 $54.95.........$44.95 $42.95.........$31.95 BLOCK BUSTER BUYS! FLASHUGHT PLUS 4 BATTERIES.... *1 GARBAGE CANS..M 3WASTEJASKETS.........i.... ICEMAKEBSET............ *1 SERVICE SPECIALS SHOCKS 2 for WHEELS PassangorCara FREE CAMERA Uli^ TOSS twif MESS e DRAWING NO PURCHASK NECESSARY With Any Major Appliance WhilaThayLatt B. F. GOODRICH 60 S. TILEGRAPH Storo Hours 8:30 to 5:80 v FRIDAY NIGHT *T1L 9 P.My. " Coll FE 2-0121 Field Position Leaves Some Fans Wondering Small College Total Yardage Mark Threatened NEW YORK (AP) - Bob Toledo, San Francisco State’s sensational passing wizard, has moved to within 227 yares bf breaking the email-college foot-baU record for total yardage gained. This was disclosed Thursday with the release of the latest statistics which showed that Toledo has accumulated 2,719 passing - rushing yards. The record is 2,945 set by George Bork of Northern Illinois in 1963. With two games remaining, Toledo also has a shot at tire all-time record of 3,343 yards established by Bill Anderson of Tulsa in 1965. The SF state ace, who completed 33 of 50 aerials for 501 yards in the victory over Humboldt State last Saturday, has set a new standard for touchdown passes with 39. the offense when the defense tackles one of your backs in the end zone for a safety, GOODPOSmON The next best position for the defense to turn over the ball to its offensive unit is in what we call , “fourth ^wn territory,” which is insid^your opponent’s 40-yard line. •k -k -k This gives your offensive team four downs in which to make a first down and retain the ball rather than the three downs and a punt necessary when you are in your own territory. * * ★ Over the years we havp determined through statistics that there are very few successful touchdown drives of over 50 yards in length. This is because the defense, when deep in your own territory, invariably will force you into some mistake or you will stop yourself through a missed assignment or a fumble. It’s tough to move 70 or 80 yafds over that last alumni stripe. 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Track Clarkston at Rochaster Holly at Fenton MIKord at Swartz Craak- MarysvIlla at Avondala Oxford at Laka Orion Fitzgerald at Madison Romeo at Utica Stevtnion | Utica at South Laka Barkley at Oak Park Brothtr Rice at Birmingham Saaholm Ferndale at Port Huron Rosavllla at Hazel Park Royal Oak Dondero at Royal Oak Kimball Birmingham Grove, at Southfield Lutheran East at Lutheran Wait Carluin at Wayne John Glenn East Detroit at YpellantI Imlay City at A---- '• ■—jifine at I. AuguDlna at Armada aterlord Our Lady at R Lapeer at Saginaw MacArthur SATURDAY Cranbrook at Gilmour Academy North Farmington at Farroingto- raaland at Birch Run Peck at Harbor Btach There’s a new generation of Head Skis... for a new generation of skien. You who have never skied. You who have never skied on Heads. which amounts to the same thing. You whose Head Skis are a few seasons old. See all the exciting *68 models... and let our experts fit you to the perfect pair. mt #oUien 3Bain /„baoi 139 S. Main St. ROCHESTER 651-8523 Belter Buys-By Burke Beautiful... Colorful. a. Do-it-yourself K-LUX TUB ENCLOSURES Dramatic beauty, safety, convenience and economy blended in architectural plastic to enhance any decor or, color scheme. Anodizeci aluminum frames and rails. Three doors for wider opening. Fits standard 5' tub. Quick and easy to install. No drilling' or anchoring. See them .jjowl $4^95 KNOTTY PINE PANELING $1490 IN Sq. FI.-T or 8’ lengths WOOD CUPOLAS For HOMES, GARAGES This cupola can be used as a roof decoration to make your home look more attractive, and, at a minamal cost. It can also be used as a highly efficient attic venti- . ^ ^1^ E A lator that cools the attic and ^ lowers the temperature of the ^ ^ I entire home. BURKE'S BEST BUYS Pine Combiiulion DOORS 5/4" Thick, in 2’.6» and 2’-8" Wide $1490 BURKE Lumber 4495 Dixie Hwy. HOURS-----OR 3-1211— OPIN WEEKDAYS MON. Thru FRf. S A.M. ts ItIO P.M. SATURDAYS from I A.M. te 4 9M. I J ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOYFAfPER 10, 1007 C—3 See The New Chain Saws at Saw Service 134S Baldwin - 332-6382 Carvers Sharpen Attack Holland 1st Tomahawk Foe one for’68 with the easiest ‘buy now pay later plan’ Order your Ski-Doo dealer soon! PRICES STARTING at »695'"' KING BROS. PONTIAC RD. ot OPDYKE Rl^ FE 4-1662 or Ft^0734 The Holland Carvers await the visit of the Pontiac Tomahawks Saturday night in the North American Basketball opener for both teams fresh from one of the bigger trades in league history. The Carvers, looking for help up front and aware that they are in an underdog position within their division, last week acquired the services of perennial maker Charlie Bowerman to the Battle Creek Braves, Both Acton (who was a scoring star at both Hillsdale and Alma) and Comley are 6-6, while Jackson stands 6-3 and Boer-man is 6-1. The Carvers then exchanged Comley for Grand Rapids’ Bill (The Hill) McGill, 6-10 hook shooting ex-Utah star. They are NABL All-Star Larry Comley!trying to sign Jackson in time and promising backliner Ron for Saturday’s 8 p.m. meeting Jackson. at the Civic Center. In exchange, the Holland quin-l Regardless, the veteran Hol-tet sent former Troy High land unit will enter the contest [School star Bud Acton and play- a solid favorite against Pontiac’s BUY, SF;LL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! STORM DOOR SAtE!^ Pre-Hung Combination ALUMINlili DOORS FOU 1’A” Thick $2495 Perma-White Colonial ALUMINUM COMBINATIONS Only $3995 ANY SIZE YOU’LL NEED Take Advantage of These Savings DICKIE LUMBER 2495 Orchard Lake Rd., 682-1600 Hours: 8 A.M. to 5:00 P.M., Saturday 8 A.M. to 1 P.M. less experienced, untested Tomahawks. LEADER Expected to spark the Holland hoopsters is versatile 6-4 Willie Merriweather, who won Most Valuable Player honors on Pontiac’s now defunct entry in the old'Midwest League. ★ Another popular player from that team is also with the Carvers, 6-5 forward Henry Hughes. They, along with 6-7 center Doug Sims from Ohio University, comprise the Carvers forward line in addition to the high--scoring McGill. Merriweather will likely see a lot of duty in the backcourt, too, especially if Jackson doesn’t agree in time. Exciting 6-3 Bobby James and former LaSalle College ace Hubie Marshall, 6-2, are the other guard hopefuls. Ability Praised Grange Defentds Halos MACOMB, 111. M —Red plied: ‘What a way to go, ini Grange, football’s famed Galloping Ghost, defended his old Chicago Bear coach, 72-year-old George Hallas, in a Quarterback Club appearance Thursday. “Halas knows as much about football as anyone and has all the coaching ability in the world,” said Grange, 64, who lives in Indian Lake Estates, Fla. * * * Grange, a legendary player atj the University of Illinois, was signed by Hallas in 1926 as the' National Football League’s first big name performer. j NEVER QUIT | Asked from the floor whether, Halas should retire. Grange re-' plied: “Halas has quit before^ and has always come back. I don’t think George will ever get out of coaching again. It’s his life. front of ail, those viewers on television.’ ’’ i Asked about reported squab-j bles involving Halas and sorne of his playdrs in recent seasons, | Grange said: “As far as having! trouble with his players. I don’t ! know anything about that. J But hny coach is going to' have some trouble with some-1 body on a squad of 40 profes-| sional football players.” „ ... J •. u “I tried to get him to quit a The^ Carvers.-paihed withjj^^ j Grand Rapids, us egon ai^ ^ I Chicago in the NABL’s Western -Division — probably wil) be one of the highest scoring. units in the entire eight-t^am league. Their defense, fiowever, isn’ expected to keep pace with t)ieir offensive punch. The Tomahawks, meanwhile, are confident of their rebounding strength but uncertain of their 1 scoring^ and-defensfi,._ Coach Bob Duffy plans to start 6-7 Jim Patterson and 6-8 Sonny Dove at the forwards, 6-5 Joe if he didn’t take it easy. He re- Amateur Fei Accord Sought BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (AP)i —An arbitration board trying I to settle a long dispute between „ddery at the pivot, plus the National Collegiate Athletic guards Paul Long and Lou Hy-| Association and the National att, both 6-2. AAU met Thursday, but de-. The Tomahawks wi ll open dined to disclose whether prog-their home season Nov. 18 r^ss was made.^ ^ i against Grand Rapids at North-| ern High School. Record Score in Aussie Golf Theodore H. Kheel, New York I attorney who is chairman of the: j board, said there will be an-I other session today. ' Vice President Hubert H. I Humphrey named the board two ! years ago to try to settle the MELBOURNE, Australia ((P> - Peter Thomson, Australian‘‘^e rival j Open Champion, shot a rec-' ^^® -long-standihg feud be-i ord 68 on the 6,999-vard par 74 two groups concerns Metropolitan course Thursdayover amateur ath- for the first round lead in the _____________^_____________ Australian Pro Golfers Association championship. • In second place is Peter Townsend of England, with a 70. •See. OuA. 'R.ecciitt^ "V" SHOPPI5G for SKI GIFTS 1; or CHRISTMi^? 0 OFF HOW! SHOP EARLY and SAVE! LUMBER^ AVE., PONTIAC • FE4‘*1S94 SfUGMM OISTIlltRS COMPHNY, N.Y.C., BIENOEO WHISKEY. 86 PHOOf. 65% ORMN KtUTBIll SPIRITS. WiMinPTO WITHGITGO! Get that pioneer spirit! Win $1, $3, $30, $300.. up to $3,000 at participating stations! It’s fun. It’s easy. Just match the free stamps Jo your CITGO Money Map. That’s all! Complete any area...collect your prize. Get a move on... SniRT ''TREASURE DRIVBMG TO CETGO TOBAT! Nothing to buy. Void YYhere prohibited. Full details at CtTSO. Look for the Citgo Emblem « . . There's a Station Near You! You are looking at abottleof better whiskey. (What ma|ces it better?) You can sum it up in one word ^nd you can call it “qualitY”. To you'this means “value”'. Value you have a right to demand wben you buy • bottle of whiskey. Value you always get when you say Seagram’s 7 Crown. Seagram’s 7 Crown—The Sure One THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, !iyOVEMBER 10, 1967 Aerial Assault Sparks Victory Door Swings Open in Scoring Race Quarterback Bob Hughes completed 14 of 19 passes for 170 yesterday to lead North Farm- u u u i * ington’s junior varsity to a 34-7! An injury to the leader in Hayes, who holds a six-point victory over Farmington's re- the Oakland County football lead over runner-up Bob Mc-serves, scoring race has opWed the pgriand of Milford, suffei'ed Kevin McConeghay scored door to a handful of other p ay-twice for the iunior Raiders ers who are bidaing for the title who won theirSoth straight and the Pontiac Press trophy; week *n practice and he 11 truss game over the last thi'ee that goes to the winner. tonight’s game against Fenton. i Holly’s speedy halfback Tom With Hayes out of action, McFarland, along with at least two other players, will have a golden opportunity to hag the scoring crown. McFarland and his teammates, fresh from' their win over Clarkston that gave them the Wayne-Oakland League SHADE TREE SPECIAL THIS WEEK ONLY REDMAPLE-ACERRUBRUM 5’to 7’Tall Blia-Only*!®®... 7’to 9’Tall .n Only *2®®... 7'to8’Tall.r.y.d0niy^5”... A Good Selection of SHADES ORNAMENTAL TREES • Norway Maple a Sumniershade Maple a Sohwelder Maple a Ciiniion Kint Maple -a Sunburst iooust • Chinese Elm • Silver Maple • Weeping Willow • Flowering Crabs • and Many Others TOWN & OOUNTRY GARDEN CENTER . 5812 Highland Rd., (M-59) 0R 3>T147 Just East of the Airport OPEN SUNDAY runs of the 165-pound McFar- game against Brighton .. land. I points behind McFarland, but Hayes makes his exit from he scored five touchdowns and the race with 95 points on 14 touchdowns and 11 PAT’s. HURT IN PRACTICE He was injured in practice Tuesday afternoon, when he tried to spin away front a defender. In making the turn, cleats caught in the turf and tore the ligaments in his ankle. Holly officials indicated he would probably be on crutches for three weeks and perhaps , _ miss about four weeks of the championship, journey to basketball season. Swartz Creek and it’s unlikely * ★ the hosts can stop the slashing I Hayes went into last week’s Brand New 1967 TRAILER added a pair of extra points, while McFarland added a single six-pointer and two PAT’s against Clarkston. There are at least a couple other players who ci ' counted out of the race. Gar Thomas of Birmingham Seaholm aiid Gene Pankner of Kettering share third place with 78. markers but both would need big productions this evening to overtake Hayes and McFarland. ★ Bill Wallace apparently has the Saginaw Valley Conference scoring crown locked up. *' ★ * In only seven games, Wallace has picked up 74 points and he ' 'ss lo Pl®y- His closesT^Sl Sfc^Bob Berry of Bay City Cel points and he win All-Sfafe Cross-Counfry Team Lists 45 Preps Pontiac Press Photo CHIEF HONORED - Jon Costello of Pontiac Central has beep named the All-State Class A -high school crosscountry team. JACKSON (AP)-The Michigan Interscholastic Track Association has named 45 Michigan high school runners to its three All-State cross country teams. Classes A and B runners were picked by best times run in the state meet. The top 15 finishers in Classes C and D also earned spots. Bob Carpenter of Jackson Parkside posted the fastest individual run, 10 minutes, six seconds for the two miles. East Lansing High, winner of the state Class A title, had only two in the top 15. Class A—1. Bob Caroenler, Jackson Parkside; 7. Warren Krueger, Hasel Park; 3. Richard Gross. Grosse Polrite; 4. Greg Parrett, St. Joseph; 5. Larry Boat Safely funds Sought 24«Ft* Travel Master SALE PRICER- »4,295 ai-n. Travel Master SALE PRICED- »3y595 See These Bargains Now At JACOBSON TRAILER SALES 5690 Williams Lake Rd., Drayton Plains 673-5981 ^eidr Ferndale . e^aialaa Clawson .......... TarczVa Country Day ... Brzazinski/ RO Shrin* . Glllesplep Troy . ........ foQ\9, V'-"--* ■ -‘'- Cartera ------------- Rossa Country Day Cymana OL St. Mary .. Wooda Birm. Groves .. McCauley, Avondale .. SAGINAW VALLBY CONFERENCE O TD PAT TP Wallacea Flint Northern 7 .... .Berry, Bay City Cer‘--‘ “ iRumbaugh, Midlanc •ry. Bay City Central 8 ...wmbaugha Midland . 8 o Jbnesa Pontiac Central . 6 6 Markey, Saginaw . . . 8 6 List, Bay City Handy S 6 ’Matthew, Bay City Cen. 8 6 White, Arthur HIM I 5 AREA LEADERS G TO :ker, Armada .8 U HAGGERTY HAS IT! WEEK END HOME MODERNIZATION ..Mih^no(QujoIUy„ We're offering paneling with the finish of *23 paneling for only *11.98. And we've got some. If you get down here right away, we can offer you genuine Weldwood* paneling, in warm Autumn pecan,for only $11.98 per.4'x8' panel. It has the some rich finish the U.S, Plywood people putontheirWeldwoodCraftsman panels which sell for up to $23. But the offer is only gpod until Dec. I, or until they run out of Autumn Pecan FOR PERFECT Flott, Rosevill* ....• 4 Griffin, Anchor Bay ... 8 5 Rusk, Armada ..... 8 5 “icholzky, Almonf 8 5 'Total Includas 7 FItId Goals. *24« PERFORATED BOARD I WELDWOOD' IRANCHERO ...is today’s most exciting wall paneling ■LUC UIEL iUCFWOUB Practical, dec-orativa, prifin-Ishtd taiturad fitly of . hand-soma colon with exclusivt Wtidwood 20 slap finish. •LUC UIEL CIIAFTSMhH PaNtLINO RtO LABEL HCmHSIPE P«NELIH6 MOORE’S DRIPLESS PAQUA’ Easy-to-Use • Interior Latex Flat a For vyollt and ct a On* cool covari . Driat in on tjour ONLY $495 ■ Vibrant colors: tawny gold, rich brown, silvery while ■ Carefree finish that won’t spot or stain and it's guaranteed for life by U.S. Plfwood! ISPECBl $7“ 1 nUER I ‘Urrin P.r4'x8'pan,l DECORATIVE SHUTTERS Provincial open- %.v.r *12?. Louver style, low as Fruni 69c Up Limited Stock Available On Order WINDOW SCALLOPING Available in two patterns, scallop or ball anddart—8'fenghts. ■ Prices per lin. ft. 6-FT. WORKBENCH Only 5975 WELDWOOD® BACKBOARD SET Folding Stairway 6nly *18” Cash & Carry 25H”x54”—8’ HAGGERTY LUMBER & SUPPLY CO. 2055 HAGGERTY HWY. Walled Lake - MA 4-4551 BetWe^ii W. Maple and Pontiac Trail "MICHIGAN'S MOST MODERN LUMBER AAART" Open 7:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. — Fri. Kite, to 9 p.m. — Sat. -7:3Q a.m. to 5 p.m. Lift Fishing Ban on Coho Platte, Big Huron Rivers Reopened LANSING (AP) - Fishermen will get one more chance this season at the Coho salmoif that provided such spectacular catches during their first major spawning run in MicHigan. * * ★ The State Conservation Department reopened the hook and line season for salmon on sections of the Plhtte River, Benzie County, and the Big Huron River, Baraga and Marquette counties, as of 8 a.m. today. ★ * ★ Rainbow, steelhead and brown trout also will be legal catches in the rivers. The fishing ban had been in effect since Oct. 9 on the Platte and since Oct. 18. on the Big Huron to protect the salmon during spawning. ★ ★ * The Platte will be open from Cass Bridge downstream to the river’s mouth and the Big Huron downstream from the department weir. LANSING (AP) - A betteri warning system, more ^ad.niore men i^Ee needed to pr^Wk a duplication next salmon season df this year’s fishernwn drownihgs, the\ Con-5,, serwation, Commission was told I MlThur^day\ ' ... > | Seven fishermen drowned « Sept. 23 near Frankfort when a 49 i sudden gale whipped up Lake 4jl Michigan. * ★ ★ “We must prepare for stepped-up marine enforcement and safety activities,’’ said James Hadley, head of the Conservation Department Boat and Water Safety section. “recreational boating h a s I been increasing steadily with salmon fishing just another part 43 of the whole growth picture.” I MATCHING FUND Hadley said a federal match-, ” ing fund program may be one solution to the money problem 66 facing his department, he said 54 he is asking $21,700 from the, “ Legislature next year for a two-| ^ man boating safety team. * * ★ ■ Counties are Increasing their t water safety budgets, he said.! Examples cited were Benzie, up| from $1,350 this year to $11,100 next year; Manistee, from $7,-675, and Grand Traverse from $12,000 to $24,500. Hadley said he plans to meet with the Coast Guard to try and; improve what he termed, “the present inadequate small craft warning system.” ................ Dan Hague, Ecorsej Rich Freeland, Jackion; 9. Mika " Jackion Parktida; ID. John __________ Portaga Central; II. Steve Gorsallti, Clio; 13. Ray Eddy, Adrian; 14. Eric Bates, East Laming; 15. John Cottello, PonNac Central. ___jing Eastern; 7 ^o^RIch ---------- Bambacht, ’ Class B-1. ! ______ _________Frtaw, Three divert; 2. Robin Cool, Grand Rapidi Northvlaw; ~ Ronald Cool. Grand Rapidt North-4. Terry Fur«t, Niles Brandywine; 5. Paul Baldwin,^ Rlnt Ba^,la; «. L^la Cooka, . .. _________ Curt OrIF 10. MIkt Rldgn, VIckiburg; Chanoweth, Charlotte; 8. Paul Dearborn Haights RIvarsIdai 9. Cl Sturgis; 10. Mike RIdga, Vic--- Bart Cook, Marshall; 12. Tom Sparta 14. Ron Ascenzo, Badgtrow. letrolt St. troll Luth- Classes C-B—.1. Clara Kragar, 6 Frank Ousett, New Haven; 7, Stevens, Bellevue; 8, Manuel iviagei, Reese; 9, Mark Sackrider, Bellevue; 10. Steve Haney, Centerville; II. Al Adannt, Napoleon; 12. Ed FIshtlar, New Haven; '1. Jon Browertn. Napoleon; 14. Bob uoden. May villa; 15. Gary Millar, New ABA SCORES The Coast Guard put up small lasiam oivuion craft warnings on many good; won i^i weather days; he said and fish-|MinnKota 6 4 nen were iWlined to ignoreJN'JlJ“’ji??ey 5 s \ ' \ vvestarit OlvMon ‘^ne ofXtheXfWmeH don’t|g£ | ’ know\what V “^^^^’’ IhouSIw’ i 7 he said, “and at night the red] „ ^ j A A* i OaKiana 99, Houston 98 light on Coa^t Guard stations Pittsburgh 9t Minnesota M can be confused with .tavern Houston at lights and other signs •” I DaM»r^t* Kentucky'**'**'' 2 12 .143 1 1 11 .083 I Thursday's Rtsults Waslam Division St. Louis 13 1 San Francisco .9 5 , .4 Los Angelas 6 4 .6 San Diago Seattle . Chicago Detroit 119,'s'e-.... ... New York 123, Cincinnati 104 Boston 107, Chicago 93 Today's Gamas . Baltimore at Boston St. Louis at Detroit Philadelphia at San Francisco fiaturdav't GanMS Seattle "York"" San Diago at Cincinnati Philadelphia at_________ San Francisco at St. Lo Sunday's Gan Chcago at Los Angalts San Diego at St^ouls Ivy Game Aired Locally The^^ opening game of the traditional “Big Three” round-robin; Princeton at Harvard, will be broadcast play-by-play Saturday over radio station WPON. *V Air time is 1:25 p.m. 1968 GMC Pick Up Truck Only *1968'«' Powered by a GMC 250 cu. in. 6-cylinder engine, Hydraulic brakes front and rear, rear wheel hand brake with pistol grip, shock absorbers front and rear, coil front springs, rated 1250 lbs. each at ground level, 8 leaf rear springs rated 1250 lbs. each at ground level seat, full width with seat belts and retractors, 2 spoke steering wheel of IbVs-inch diameter, dual outside mirrors, heater and defroster, 2 speed wipers and washers. MERRY OLDSMOBILE- ^ GMC Truck, Inc 528 N. Main St., Rochasfer 651-9761 Get up and go —along wooded trails, over mountains — across frozen Iake8^7/>e A/ouet(s roams about in safety and reliability. Exceptional speed — positive steering — definite braidng — all the extras - TAa A/ouetfe. YAMAIU 7615 Highland |d.-1941 Telegraph Rd. Both Storea Open 9 ^o 9 Dailyt Saturday 9 to S , The Telegraph Store Only Open Sun., 12.6 toie sAvims IN cash ; Conztniclioii and Batter Fir V 8’ 18* 14' 16' 18' 120'' 2x4 .84 .8T .80 1.02 1.18 1.35 1.52 1.69 2x6 .86 1.11. 144 1.74' 2.00 2.30 :2,18 2x8 144 1.73 2.12 246 241 2.24 3.80 2X10 1.8T .2.33 2.80 3.21 3.13 4.20 5.00 2x12 2.24 .2.88. 3.36 3.82 4.48 5.14 5.60 >4 1.48 1.81 2.24 2.61 ;2.98 ;3.36 13.13 HUTHKandCOOUlieMVISIDN SMiS loriiiliiH SERVICE LICENSED CONTRACTORS. ALL MAKI$ OF FURNACES,. BOILERS AND CONVERSION UNITS INSTALLED AND .SERVICED. 24-hour SERVICE North Saginaw FE 3-T1T^ CAmr PRICit ONLYI Zonolite Insulation, per bag........1.08 Roeklath, per bundle.............. 1.23 Shestroek, W 4x8, each...............1.88 Shestroek, 4x18, saoh............. 2.08 Prs-finishsd Bireh, Ve" 4x8, saoh.... 848 Prs-finishsd Mah., 3/16” 4x3, saoh..3.28 Prs4inishsd Mab., 3/18" 4xT, saoh ..24f CaleiuHiChloridt {Thawing).... 2.18 par 180 |bs. Thawing Sait (ica Control) . i:... 2.00 par 100 lbs. FURNACE FILTERS One inch: 20x20,20x2^, 10x20... 30e ea. TWO Inch: 20x25,20x20, 16x25... 40e aa. BENSOH LUMBER m Building and Remodeling Supplies arid Materials 549 North Saginaw Straat Cpsn Mon.-Fri; IrlHHIiOO KC J.9B91 ‘ ----- 8t88-12Noon' FE THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10. 1967 C—5 “Action at Jatkstu" NIGHT RACING JO Races Nightly Rain or Shine (except Sundaysl ' Dine in our new Sulky Lounge October 9 thru December 9 JACKSON HARNESS RACEWAy iACKSON, MICHIGAN 1st Qualifying Sites Ready soM/m Joe Morys had the high game and ^eries Monday night in the West Side Lanes Classic but he could only claim one turkey. Morys posted 257—669 totals to lead all the scoring, but since the gift turkeys were limited one to a customer, Bud Mul-holland (242—658) received one AUTOBAHNI MOTORS 1765 S.T«l«craph 338-4531 Next Door to the Holiday Inn Special COCKTAIL toWpai. Lit/e Entertainment With Kenny Davis I On The Organ . and Piano 300 Oowl LOIMGE 100 S. Cass Lk. Rd. 682-6300, Ted Sutton earned- the third bird for being the most pins above his average. Berks Auto Supply was an eight-poinnt winner with 1068— 3030 team scores and improved ts second place standing. That same ni|ht in the Wonderland Lanes’ Masters, Tim White sizzled with a» 262-220—684 ;ffort. Merle Taulbee had 223-244—672 and John Lorang a 257 (655). , Y The Wohlfeil Dcri, Engineering day in the Collier Lanes’ House League. Bayliss registered 237-236—675. * * * Churchill Cleaners’ J^ B. McQueen had a 243 (639) and Steve Travis rolled 242-223-657 for Jarrett Electric. Gene Kehres had 237 and Milt Brittain a 235. LAKEWOOD LANES unit had an 1148 gi^e. ^ coy] foi;-table first-place \cushVn ’dppiOT by Sportsl|ian’s \ Bar (eh. Bridges’ Pizza ^op. Led by Wallace Bayliss Jr., Karen’s Carpets swamped Por-•itt Dairy for eight points Mon- OPEN Bowling Every Nite Fairgrounds Lanes Milford, Mich. 223-629; Margaret Gri|fentrog, 213; Helen Fry, 532; Cumi Maryland, 524; Phyllis Auten, 513. ^ Sunday St. Btnedict^s Mixed HIGH GAMES - Shtylcy Gerzanics. 205; George Danic, 207; Mck Servoss, 203. AIRWAY LANES Tuesday Nite Owls HIGH GAME AND SERIES -Prudy, 239—617; Gerry Haynes, -Tuesday Morning Sunbeams SPLIT conversion - Doris Hi Monday Evening Jets HIGH GAMES AND SERIES -ence Jackson, 202-233-605^ 538; Barbara Troxetl. 510. .. 'd Board) 211. MONTCALM CENTER Monday Northside Community HIGH SERIES - Jerr^, 632; Jerry Williams, ...l,.. GAMES — Rich Manning, 254; Nick Gon-228; Gino 247- ihy, 216. •22^40. mGH 247; ATlen''R] MconnI, 223; Whitne. ..... 3M BOWL Monday Mixed Keggli WOMEN'S HIGH SERIEJ Armstrong, 505; Alice Gru HIGH GAME - Bill Spalding Sunday Mix-Ups HIGH SERIES - Jim Anderson, 215-205-622; Linda McCIlntock, 501. HIGH Biwmaster, ,256. SPLIT yentt Th Ux-Ups . - Ai P-ir- Saturday In ^ GAMES *• ____ 237-625; _____ Saturday Guys and ^lls HIGH SERIES - Perry Allagreen, 205-203-611. HIGH GAMES - Ed Schupbach Sr, 238; Jerry Mlrovsky, 225; E ‘ Payne. 221. . SPLIT CONVERSIONS Dnrnthy Schupbach. 3-7; Betty Richer ...........All Star Phyllis I, 543; Helen F , 217- SAVOY’S MOONLITE DOUBLES Saturday Nights Bowling-Prizes-Food For More Information Call Savoy • • • Wide Selection of Balls-Bags>Shoes In Our Pro Shop & i SAVOY LANES 130 S. Telegraph Rd. 333-7121 Namath Counters Charges in Suit ! NF:W YORK (UPI) - Joe Na-rnath, the New York Jets’ ; quarterback, Thursday filed pa-pers in Manhattan Supreme Court accusing Charles Parmi-ter of Time Magazine of “telling a lie” in claiming that Namath attacked him in a bar last August. * * ★ i Parmiter previously filed suit against Namath, caliming the quarterback and two of hi: [friends attacked him. Namath asked the court to question Parmiter about the allegations. The motion is returnable next Tuesday. I Field Trip Nov, 18 I .The Pontiac Audubon Club's field trip to the Holly recreation area will be Saturday, Nov. 18, not tomorrow as previously reported. All other plans pertaining to the excursion will be the sa\me. Three Houses Open Tourney Target Score Is Goal of Local Keglers The first deadline for qualifying entries in the Pontiac Open Bowling Chainpionship is less than a week away for those who wish to do their qualifying at Howe’s Lanes, 300 Bowl and Cooley Lanes. Open to women bowlers for the first time since 1959, the qualifying target score for men or women is “600” and this is inclusive of the handicap. * ★ * The “600” total will move all bewlers into the semi.finals to be held Sunday December 10th at 30ft Bowl. * Bqwlers wha ^ish to qftalil at the\hree opening weekjen sites sh^ld have their entries into any \f)f the houses in the Pontiac ^ea association hy Thursday evening. Qualifying squads will be set up by the respective houses for Saturday and Sunday next week. Among .the other features of this year’s tournament are the Mix ‘N Match doubles, in which men and women can total their scores for a doubles total; the Team ‘N Match score in which five bowlers can total their singles scores for a ’ total; the annual Actual’s invitational and prizes for high game, high series and triplicates. Bowlers must submit their entries for the “doubles” or team” features together, have them clipped and marked on the reverse side with their partners names. There is an added $S0 firize in each of these two fea-ures of the tournament. The top five guaranteed prizes start at $800 to the winner and $500 for runnerup. HOCKEY RESULTS IN MEN’S SINGLES — The entire Stroh’s Beer team will bowl tomorrow in the qualifying 12 games of the State Men’s Invitational Singles at Huron Bowl. The members — including two Pontiac area residents — will vie against each other as well as the other 60-plus hopefuls. The team includes (top, left-right) Bob Crawford, Dale (Skip) Seavoy, Mike Totsky, and (bottom, 1-r) Mike Samardzija Jr.. Al Thompson and John Ruggiero Jr. Samardzija live^ in Pontiac and Seavoy is! from Bloomfield Hills. State's Leading Bowlers at hyrdn Bowl^omtDrrow e \ MoW\ ;han 70 of th\ state’s'awards cerertioniesy is tentative-leading male bowlers Vll in-ily set for 6:30 p:|n. Sunday, vade Huron Bowl tomorrow Shirley the 12-game qualifying round of. the third annual State Invitation^ al Singles ChampiOhship. .Tointer has announced. Now's the Time for Gift Certificates and Loy-Awoys for the Bowlersi Get Them dt: II, roirtfM, MieMtn lulml M., tubiirn HdgMx, UL 1-mt 111 I. Lapnr N., Mart, MWMtm AIRWAY LANES AUBURN LANES COLLIER LANES COOLEY LANES FAIRGROUNDS BOWLING HOWE’S LANES HURON BOWL iga- LAKEWOOD LANES 'ftTlMI MAVIS LANES M MONTCALM BOWLING CENTRE NORTH HILL LANES ORCHARD UNES SAVOY LANES SYLVAN LANES 300 BOWL WESTSIDE LANES WONDERLAND UNES Bowling Proprietors \ of Oakland County House of the North Oakland County Champs S. Opdykt R—i, Ftiitlte, UO S. Ttinraph Bd.. Mntiao, MlehiKaii SI3-TI21 2IW Orakard Uka BlvdH FonHae, Miahifan-M14YM III S. C>M t-aln lull lonMae, 117 Orakirl Lik* M, inNas, MipkitaR-lM-llll Two six-game blocks will bei rolled in a twin-squads format. T^e opening one will go at lo! a.m. and the last one at 5:30 Pipers Break Losing Streak m- j By The Associated Press Included among the individ-| Some deadeye shooting by uals vying for the guaranteed Connie Hawkins and Chico $500 first prize, plus trophy and Vaughn snapped a three-game paid entry to the National All losing streOk for the Pittsburgh Star.Tournament, will be the P'Pers in the American Basket-entire Stroh’s Beer teaip. I Association. The Stroh’s unit is a profes- ^7 points, and sional team whose spectator 22, combined for peal is amon^ the best m bovj^ ^ mg. However this weekend the ^ *"^.33333^3 Mukies at Pitts-members will be competing as Join Our Every-Other-Saturday-Night NORTH HILL LANES ROCHESTER 651-8544 burgh Thursday night. The loiviauais^ * * ' Muskies took a 12-point lead in _ , , ... the third period, but couldn’t Following tomorrows qualify-;hold u when Hawkins and mg, the 6 leading scorers ^11^33^3 ,3333 vie head-to-head Sunday for the ★ * * ize winnings. ^ ^ j Oakland Oaks snapped a , , ' , , 'five-game losing streak by edg- Numerouslocal men are slat-,^,^,3 Mavericks i to compete. No admission gg«g will be* charged spectators, ^he uiej game ■ ■ ■ • 10 to 10 - SUNDAY 1 i to 6 COAT and PANTS-COVERALLS }L% BRIGHT RED INSULATED COAT Slip-off hood, wator ropollonf, imoll, modium, largo and (AAQ and oxtra largo. 9Q90 MATCHING PANTS-$8.95 ^ 9 \ DACRON INSULATED COAT $1l|98 . g . Zip-off hood, wafor lopolliynl. ... IV V MATCHING PANTS ... .$12.98 RED/BLACK PLAID WOOL $0198 i 9* Rubborizod gann* pockot, water ropollant ■■ I * MATCHING PLAID PANTS...$14.98 LADIES'rr-JIACRON INSULATED COAT $1C98 Bright rod-rd«tachabl« hood... IV MATCHING PANTS.......$12.98 HUNTERS' COVERALLS I BRIGHT^EDCOTTON^SIZESSStoSO ^1.98 ^ DACRON INSULATED-COnON SHELL $1J 00 Rod or groon, S-M-L-XL.......... 1wO SKAOWAY-DACRON INSUUTEU $1A AE Sizoi. S-M-L-XL. Rod or grotn.. I9i«l0 S1Z.XXL.........^.... ’28.M LONCS-For tha fall man, M-L-XL.. ^24.98 NYLON SHELL-DACRON INSULATED $91 AO Rod or groon,.S-M-L-XL...... fcliUO BRIOHT ORANGE-NYLON-DACRON $97 00 Iniuloted, S-M-L-XL ■ .-..... ■ A 118O BJOI'Sr SURPLUS B 19 N. SAGINAW-DOWNTOWN PONTIAC FE 2-0022 ^ 7mn MILITARY RIFLE 5 Shot-bolt action OW Regular 19.97......... ■■■•W S9.K 30-06 Maustr 98 Oil Sportarizad............ ......... Soft Point Ammo............ ...... 2*99 2.00 Universal aw Oun Claaning Kit.................. .Aasp# TrailMazer ■ M sm Lantern................................ ■•O# LINED GUN CASE HAS FULL LENGTH > BRASS ZIPPER / Regular 4.96 Z.27 Full brass zipper permits easy access. Heavy tubber butt protects sights, barrel. Holds 38’*. to 52” guns. "ECLIPSE"'"^” ............ CLAY TARGETS Our Reg. 2.4f d,% 187 p ®"'y Eclipse clay targets are easier breaking, truer flying. 135 per case. Limit 1 case per customer. 3.73 BROWN BUCK GAME BAO e%ja with shell holder................ . dAow"! 7.07 HODOMAN AIR MATTRESS xr with foot pump................. OaVi The essential •‘extras’* you have to add to the price of nearly any other compact tractor are stand--ard equipment on a Bolens Husky One price includes all-gear transmission, and differential, six forward speeds, power-take-off drive, fenders, seat cushion and many others. When you buy a Bolens Husky, you buy a fully-equipped unit One price includes everything. A Bolens Husky is built from the ground up to give you a complete and convenient system for year ’round yard care. A Husky powers over twenty-five different lawn and garden attachments, offers greater aU-around performance, rhore time-saving convenience features than any other compact tractor you can buy. Let us prove it! Before you buy. try a Bolens Husky first. Then oomparef KING BROS. Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke Pontiac, Michigan Phone: FE 4-1662 and FE 4-0734 imri w K/N6 8/KS. lyC. 1 porrrMCM. RED FLANNEL SHIRT Our Reg. 3.87 3 Days Only Red flannel sanforized shirts. TaUored for correct size and longer wear. Washable. Sizes med. and >•«*■ . 99e Rad Hunting RR^RC Socks..,....... Red thermo lined zipper AaOW hooded sweat-shirt..._...... ' While Qunntitiet LaS3 GLENWOOD PLAZA Horth Perry Street Corner Glenwood C—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 Hospitals Report Permitting Illegal Abortionsl fjiFfy P(H0^ 0STAHB On* test drire and you’ll be conyinced Mustang is the finest snowmobile made. From sleek new hood design, to the posture fitted backrest, Mustang is designed for the ultimate in snowmobiling. Electric starting available. One year warranty (includes dutch, belt and track). Compare and you’ll see the Polaris warranty covers more! It’s Bot only lively, but reliable. PERRY'S LAWN& GARDEN 766S Highland Rd. (MS9) Poltris... bttitt m'tb confidence, sold with pride! j ANN ARBOR (AP) - A vast number of North .Alherican teaching hospitals permit abortions, many of them in violation of state laws, a University of Michigan survey shows. Of 231 hospitals with residency training programs, in obstetrics and gynecology which replied to a 15-page questionnaire, 194 said they permitted abortions. ★ ★ ★ The only 35 Roman Catholic hospitals replying said they permitted no abortions, and two non-Catholic hospitals also said they did not allow the operation, even for medical reasons. Five hundred questionnaires were mailed by Dr. Johan W. Eliot of the U-M Center for Population Planning to hospitals in the United States and Canada. The details were confirmed by an associate of Eliot at the U-M papulation planning center. The names of the hospitals and the number of apparently illegal abortions they permitted, although reportedly to be listed in the final study, were not revealed. Of the non-Catholic hospitals responding, 175 reported they allowed abortions for psychiatric reasons; 149 for obr stetric and gynecologic reasons; 155 in cases iri which moth- ers have German measles during the first three months of pregnancy; .125 when genetic defects in the infant seem likely; 6|5 in pregnancies resulting from rape or incest. Twelve of the responding hospitals reported allowing abortions in causes of “socioeconomic stress,” the report said. “It will be noted,” Eliot wrote, “that the first thriee indications — medical, psychiatric and obstetric — are possibly legal if the physician believes that the woman's life in threatened if the operation is not performed. ‘NOT LEGAL’ “The last three Indications are clearly not legal.” An American Bar Association proposal for liberalized abortion law follo\ys a model bill suggested by the American Law Association. Similar laws have been approved in three states; Colorado, North Carolina and California. ★ * ★ The laws allow abortions to preserve the physical or mental health of the mother, in cases of rape or incest and when there is a significant chance of birth defect. Most other states allow abortions only in cases in which the mother’s life is in danger. Four states — Louisiana, Mas- sachusetts, New Jersey and Pennsylvania — have laws on the books prohibiting abortion in any case. But state supreme courts in two of them — New Jersey and Massachusetts — have found loopholes in the abortion laws in those states. STATE HOSPITALS In Michigan, 13 non-Catholic hospitals all said they allow abortions to be performed. Twelve of the 13 listed medical reasons; 11, psychiatric reasons; 10, obstetric and gyneco-logicai reasons; 11, German measles; 10, genetic defects likely, and six reported they have allowed abortions in cases of rape or incest. Current Michigan law allows abortion only when the life of the mother is in danger. Three Catholic-affiliated hospitals in Michigan all replied they permitted no abortions. The state ban proposal comes under legislative scrutiny in January, when the Legislature starts to consider a revised penal code. Public hearings are expected to be held by the’^Senate and House judiciary committee in February. Car Wash with GAS 6 Gals. 10 Gals. 15 Gals. 17 Gals. 18 Gals. 99' 69' 19' 19' 1' Kuhn Auto Wash 149 W. Huron St. 'BUY. SELL. TRADE----USE TONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE, PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS I liner's Last Trip Has a Stowaway I LONG BEACH, Calif. (AP) iThe Queen Mary, on her final i voyage, had at least one stow-■ away\ ; Ship Officials said Stacey Dar-jrel Miller,. 21, boarded the ocean liner in Lisbon, Portugal, last Friday, and was discovered Thursday. I The former Joliet, 111., rt road switchman hid under grating and slept at least once I in an empty cabin before being I discovered by Alfred Ernest : Durston, chief master at arms. Miller left Lockport, 111., In late September for a tour of Europe and Africa. The Queen Mary arrives Dec. 9 at Long Beach where she will be retired and used as a floating museum, restaurant and tourist attraction. MONDAY, NOV. 6 THRU SATURDAY, NOV. 11 DAYS ONLY BIG BEAUTIFUL ^PHOTOGRAPHIC PORTRAIT OF YOUR CHILD 8" X 10" OIL COLORED (BUST VIGNEnq handling chatga Group pictures — just 99# per child WHAT MAKES THIS OFFER SO EXTRA SPECIAL? You receive a genuine Jack B. N/mb/e* Portrait of your child—made by America's most Experienced child photo specialists—finished in genuine oil tint! by professional artists—delicately applied oils so pleasing for children's portraits, to match your child's hair, eyes and complexion. (Clothing not included). A portrait of such quality it is backed by the famed Good Housokooping Guaranfyl YOU'LL SEE THE DIFFERENCE when you choose from a complete selection of finished photographs ■—not proofs. Limit] one per child, 5 w^ks to 12 years aid. No appointment neceisdry. MfifMfM feereatNif er your meney baekl WARDJ HOURS: MON.-FRI. 10 A.M, to 9 P.M. SATRUPAY 9:30 to 9 P.M.-SUN. 12 NOON to 5 P.M. Pontiac Mall at Elizabeth Lake Road THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 C—7 Extra Nationally Known COLOR ¥V Bi{ 295-sq. in. Picture >39995 Little Joe’s BARGAIN HOUSE Cemer Baldwin at Walton gTalaplione 332<6B42 Open Dpily to 9 P.M. Saturdays 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. Court Bill Backers CHARGE-IT LsiZm- FRANK'S NURSERY SALES< OPEN 9 TO 9 to Bow to Counties LANSING (AP)—House backers of the court reorganization bill were expected to bow pressure from Michigan’s counties today and agree increase the revenue counties would get from the proposed hew district Courts. Several Counties — including populous Wayne County with its 38 House members—have warned lawmakers that in its present form the bill would hand them a crushing financial burden. The House Thursday completed a week of floor work on the complicated 41-page measure. But still pending are 45 amendments and three substitute bills, making a final vote on the bill unlikely before next week. Legislators hope to wrap up the session nex’t week recess for two or three weeks. It was not known whether the I Senate could finish with the I court bill next week even if the | House approved it. COURT REORGANIZATIO?»JN The Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman' Sen. Robert I Richardson, R-Saginaw, said I Thursday the Senate will start I work on court reorganization [ next week—on the House bill if I the House passes it, and on a I Senate measure if the House | fails to act. Lawmakers could return in I December, or could take up the I bill again in the regular 1968 I legislative session which begins I in January. dial! abat^gain Direct dialing Long Distance Instead of calling Person-to-Person saves money. 40 per cent on a daytime three minute call between Lansing and Detroit. It's faster, too. Michigan Bell Glowing Fall Color! The best all-round tree foR beauty, shape and cooling shade. SUGAR MAPLES Special Michigan grownup to 15 it. tall, g;oou heads, straight trunks. ' 100% guaranteed to grow. Mtany other varieties of shade trees .now on display in pur Av. sales yard. Hursevf and Landscape 3820 W. Auburn Rd., 2 Blocks East of Adams Pontiac 852-2310 MEMBER MICHIGAN BANKARD House Judiciary Committee Chairman Donald Holbrook, R-Clare, planned to introduce today an amendment to the court bill which would increase the counties’ share of epurt revenues at the expense of cities and the state. The measure now provides that counties—which would bear most of the costs of the proposed new district court system —would receive 85 per cent of all costs levied by district judges in cases of local-ordinance violations, but none of the fines. The cities get most of the fine money. CHANGE PLANNED Holbrook tentatively planned to change the system, giving counties 60 per cent of both fines aind costs. Cities would get 30 per cent and the state general fund 10 per cent. “L think this would come reasonably close to satisfying the needs of outcounty Wayne County,” he said, Wayne County Auditor Richard Austin earlier this week estimated the bill in its present form would cost his county abbut $3 million a year—money he said the county could not spare.' i SAVINGS LEWS iilPf'Sff VALUES TO He The House Thursday moved the court bill into position for final passage and removed an amendment which had been tentatively adopted earlier. The amendment would have made five years of legal pratticc itn eligibility requirement for district judges. The court bill would abolish Michigan’s justices of the peace, circuit court commissioners and municipal courts, replacing them with 178 district judge- of .Colow hf’. Top. ?}?• CROCUS IRIS lEA. Judges have to be attorneys and, as the bill now stands, would be paid $20,000 annually by the state. ALL LONG HANDLED TOOLS including FAN & LEAF RAKES... VxOFF .Ernmay |||E||||0|l|ALS STYLED MUSTANG WINNER! Freshly Made Evergreen Decorated Memorial BLANKETS *6.95 up Prict InelEdit prt-pild ctmi-t«ry disposal fag Mid* of fraihly euf avtr-grtant and waathsr rasisfanf tiowan and feliagai, thti. blankaft ara baaulitui ma-moritls. Fresh Evergreen Blanhets, Undeceroted .... $4.49 up Weather Resistant Flowers & Foliage Priaa inaludat disposal tag BLANKETS Weather resistant materials tastefully arranged Into blankets 4 to 5 ft. long. *3.99 I"«»nVSiCi deeply lobed U SILWRMAPIE G10 Sift 12 ti 14 ft till, 2" ciltpar IniNk. I W • W SUGAR & NORWAY MAPLES, IMPERIAL LOCUST $4A f|e 12 to 14 ft till, 2” caliper trunk. W70 WEATHERPROOF YOUR HOME WITH FILM OavG McSkuli9i off Pontiac Accepts the Keys to His New Ford Mvstang C. J. Cuppett, Detroit District Manager for the Standard Oil ^Division of American Oil Company presents David McS|culin of 110 W. Tennyson with the keys to his sporty new Mustang. Jim Joyce, of Jim's Standard Service and Bill Paulson, New Car Sloles Manager of John McAuliffO Ford, participated in the presentation. DaluxeMUMVASf *3.95 A l«rg* beuquat of wtafb-•r rtiistanf mum bloomi in a tpiktd vasa fiad with a larga ribbon bow. ROSE and PEONY VASES ^ ^2.95. MEMORIAL 1 CROSSES ^ ... ONE OF THE 1,000 MUSTANGS OR PART OF THE $1,000,000 IN CASH BY PLAYING SUPER PRO AT YOUR PARTICIPATING STANDARD OIL DEALER. Chooia from aavaral colon and variatiai of waafhar raiistaht blooms on crosses. *2.95 *2.99 *3.99 *4.99 Medium heavy plastic, film you can use to weatherproof a porch or make covers for anything stored outside. Pkg. of 10 2-part stick-on button snaps for Visqueen................t 70 Styrofoam ROSE PROTECTOR Ji" Trim back roses, put pro- “** tector over tho top and weight down. Use year aft^year. 40" Wide Burlap, Natural, 39c... Green, 49c Co-Co Bean Mulch, 25 lbs........... $1.77 Buckwheat Hulls Mulch, 50 lbs.... $2.99 PRANK'S NURSERY 5919 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) at AIRPORT RD. 6575 Telegraph at Maple 1590 Grond River, Farmington 14 Mile of Crooks Rd. A C—8 THE P0NTI.4 FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10. 1967 Jacoby on Bridge Sorry, Chief, Wrong Alarm By Bob I. NORTH (D) ♦ Void V AQ85 ♦ AJ7 ♦ A96432 WEST EAST |kQ10 8S42 AAJTe If9 ¥KJ 10 7643 ♦ Q1085 SOUTH ♦ K93 ♦ KQ 10 8632 ♦ K7 ' Both vulnerable West North East South !♦ 2 V 3 Pass 3 V Pass 4 Pass 6 ♦ Pass 7< Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—V 9 By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY Westpoft t|Wge teacher Sally Johnson won^e mixed pairs St Grossinger’s in New York this S A n t ft m hftr. ’ , , « . j DALLAS, Tex. (AP) - A, po- appointing. I had hoped for bet- the last two, nitfed a spade, nce^an ^is patrol car stopped ter clubs and, of course, the discarded my last two spades ^ gaUg^ jig. I queen of hearts was worth noth-on the good club's and was pgjg|.,gj. fgg ’j,g|p Thursday ing to me. I just didn’t know home.” „ight. how to go about playing the; rp^e key to* her whole play| Minutes later a fire truck hand. Of course. If clubs would ^jjg risked nothing in roared yp, break a friendly 3-2, I would Qjujjg 3.2 but gave have no worries. herself one slight extra chance, Back on the radio, the police- ‘T also would have a cihch and the one slight extra chance'man was heard to say: if I could ruff out my three;was there for her. , .‘‘No sir. I said tire truck! spades in dummy. The problem there was that I would have to get to my hand three times for the ruffs and a fourth time to draw trumps, and I would wind up losing a trick to tjie nine of trumps. “Finally I decided to try for the 3-2 club break but to give myself an extra chance in case East would hold singletons in both minor suits. I played one trump to my king and then led out king and another club. East couldn’t follow, but he couldn’t ruff and was stone cold dead. LOS ANGELES (AP) - Brian Latasa, 17, is alive because four city firemen risked death by electrocution to lift him from a 230,(X)0-volt poUfer line Thursday. •k * Brian and two buddies were hiking through Griffith Park, when he decided to climb an 80-foot utility pole. In doing so, he touched a live wire, was jolted into the air and landed across the line. I The firemen carefully lowered Latpsa to the ground" with a safety belt. ^ ITie boy was taken to IjOS Angeles County Ceneral Hospital with burns over 40 per cent of his body. His entire body, with the exception of his eyelids, was paralyzed. Conventioneer Spending: $155 By the Associated Press DE’tROIT iffi — The average delegate to a convention in Detroit spends about $153 during a normal 3‘/.!-day stay, a national sui*vey, showed Thursday. For a state'or regional convention, the average spending per delegate is $108.76 and length of stay is slightly more than 2‘i days. The Internitional Association of Cpnventi(m Bureaus said - in Kansas City Thursday ■ that the convention business added more than $32 million to De- ^ troit’s economy in 1966. i by Tom Ryan I JUST GOTTA HAVE A GOOP SNEAKl EVERT FIBER IN MY BEING CRIES OUT, FOR ONE, healthy LEGITIMATE SNEAKl EVEN A LIHLE LURK, OR A FEW, tiny slinks will POi PLEASE! THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1967 C-~-9 I SPARTAN has the low price! MATTErS"^ vum un usin' FREE PARKING MONEY REFUNDED IF YOU’RE NOT SATISFIED! C—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10. 1967 HIMIT! IHNWir! Last 5 Bqn! WINNER 0F6 ACADEMY AWARDS! Because of a wide interest in stitution, advertiser, or agent of the fair housing ordinance now any of the foregoing shall dis-discussed by the City criminate against any other per-Commission, The Pontiac Press son in regard to the sale, rental is printing the draft of the or- of, or dealings concerning real dinance. j property located in the City of MEiro-GOiDwyN-im m«m acarlo ponii mooucnoN DAVID LEAN'S FILM OF BORIS RiSTERNAKS DOCTOR ZH miDlNEOmiNVIUUECHRISnE-TC AlECGUMESS'SCMmNA-flALffl OMAR SHARIFiaszhwagoi r^D • RITATUSBiNGHAM SCftCEN PIAVSY DiACCTEOSY ROBERT BOLT- DAVID LEAN in panavision- and metw PRICES-THIS ENGAGEMENT ONLY ..$1.25 Here's Open Occupancy Draftl larnii ~ The cowboy who Rights Commission or before the. Section 8. Any person violat-i Courts of this State on an in-ijng any of the provisions of this I Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. has requested that any suggestions for changes or improvement be addressed to the mayor at City Hall. He asked that these be submitted in writing no later than Dec. 1, Taylor said the suggestions ,will be taken under advisement, and changes may be made in the draft before the commission reaches a final decision. * * * This decision could be a vote to adopt the ordinance as drafted. The draft is as follows: An ordinance to prohibit discrimination by reason of religion, race, color or national origin in the sale, rental or dealings, concerning real property located in the City of Pontiac; to prohibit the inducement to sell real property by representationHhat the religious, Pontiac. Section 2. The provisions of this ordinance shall not apply to the rental of a room or rooms in a single dwelling unit, the remainder of which dwelling unit is occupied by (1) the owner or members of his immediate family or (2) a lessee of entire dwelling unit or real property to any person because of such person’s religion, race, coior or national origin, members of his immediate family- Section 3. Nothing in this ordinance shall require anyone owning or possessing an interest in reai property to offer the property to the public at large before selling or renting such interest: nor shall this ordinance be deemed to prohibit owners or possfessors of an interest in real property of their . change with respect to the religion, race,, color or national origin composition of the block, neighborhood or area for the purpose of discouraging the pur-| chase of property in a particular: area. agents from giving preference Section 7. No person, firm, to prospective tenants or pur-partnership, association or cor* racial, color orXnational origin'chasers for any reason other .poration, by threat,' intimida-i composition of th^eighborhood than religion, race, color or na-jtion. qpercion, extortion or con-has changed; tp prohibit the use tional origin. jspiraVy shall induce or attempt of threats, intimidation, codr:] Section 4. Nothing in this or-|to induce any person owning an cion, extortion, or conspiracy to finance shall be construed as'interest or leasing an interest induce any person owning an'a limitation to the right of ac- in real property in the City of dividual basis, or to prohibit the cooperation between the City of Pontiac and the Michigan Civil Rights Commission. iction 6. No person, firm, partnership, association or corporation shall induce directly or indirectly, or attempt to induce directly or indirectly, the sale, rental or listing for sale or rental of real property by representing that a change has occurred or will or may occur with respect to the religion, racial, color or national origin composition of the block, neighborhood or area in which the property located: nor shall any representations be made to any prospective purchaser or tenant that any block, neighborho^ or area has, will or ‘ ordinance shall, upon convic-j tion thereof, be punished by a fine not to exceed $100 or im-i prisonment in Oakiand County; Jail, not to exceed f both such fine and imprison-1 ment at the discretion of the! court. Section 9. The sections of this; ordinance are declared to bej severable; and, if any section therefore is declared illegal or| void for any reason, it shall noti effect the remainder of the or-i dinance. Section 10. This ordinance shali take effect 10 days from I and after the date of its passage I by the City Commission of the I City of Pontiac. SATURDAY 10:45 A.M. to 1:00 P.M. ALL SEATS 25* mm ITBRIAN WED. “BAREFDDT IN THE PARK’' UKE THEATRE 624-3980 WALLED LAKE - 402 N. Pontiac Trail MATINEES; SAT, and SUN. 2 P.M. Continuous ’ NOW thru SUNDAY "ST. VALENTINE'S DAY MASSACRE" ''RACE'' Jason Glenn ROBARDS FORD ^ George Segal Stella Stevens > interest or leasing an interest in i real property to convey such interest to any person because of jhis religion, race, color or national origin; and to provide [penalties for violation thereof. [The City of Pontiac Ordains:, I ★ -A i Section 1. No owner of real property, lessee, sublessee, real estate broker or salesman, builder or supplier of building materials, lender, financial in- NOTIC6 OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT ! ----- -------1 /-.oiumbia Avenue ' ick, Elvan Sn-nterested. take ___ .... ___ the Special Assess- herelofore made by the City Assessor for the purpose of defraying that part of the cost which the Commission decided should be paid and borne by special assessment for the construction of grade and grave' — - ' from West Tine „U4 West to Belt tile in my oflict Notice is also ------- ----- Commission and the Assessor of • “ ---- will meet In the Cor.......... said City, on the 21st day of ■ ~ 1967, at S o'clock PM- e roll ol ft gravel on Columbia Avenui BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! rr»TmTr5 a as'aBTrTnm brarrmVr Tender, Young, Freth, Plump CHICKENS ... Deep Fried in Freth Pure Vegetable Oil for the Mott Delightful Chicken Dinner Ever . . . Buy It By the BOX ... the BUCKET ... the BARREL! ! is also hereby given' that the .....jsion and the Assessor of the City It Pontiac, will meet In the Comr :hamber in said City, on the 21st . fovember, A.D. 1967, at 8 o'clock 0 review said assessment, at w,.,w ime and place opportunity will be give III persons Interested to be heard. 3ated: November 8, 1967 u O 8306 OLGA BARKELEY, City Cler , Nov. 10, 19< cess by an individual to reme- Pontiac to sell, rent or lease, or dies before the Michigan Civil I not to sell, rent or lease such Alarm Clock's 'Incense' Has Smell of Success What young people think are the top records of the week s compiled by Gilbert Youth Research, Inc. I Incense and Peppermints ........ Strawberry Alarm Clock ! Soul Man ................... Sam and Dave I How Can I Be Sure Young Rascals I It Must Be Him ................... Vikki Carr » To Sir With Love ...................................Lulu I Your Precious Love .......Marvin Gaye and Tammi Terrell ' Please Love Me Forever ............ Bobby Vinton I Expressway to Your Heart-............... Soul Survivors I Holiday .......................... Bee Gees I The Rain, the Park and Other Things mna box Back by Popular Demand Prophonics Recording Stars • • • The New Breed CA.I. 5640 Williams Lake Rd. Waterford, Mich. EVERY SUNDAY 6 P.M. to 9:30 P.M. -Adm. $1.50 WE SPECIALIZE IN URGE QUANTITY ORDERS! ; For Your Convonionco, Plooio Coll In Quantity Ordori In Advonca! ThU Week Only! The Letter Hey, Baby I’m Wondering ............ Love Is Strange .• Watch the Flowers Grow Little Ole Man ........... People Are Strange ....... I Can See for Miles Kentucky Woman I Say a Little Prayer Cowsills Box Tops .... Buckinghams Stevie Wonder Peaches and Herb Four Seasons ....... Bill Cosby ............ Doors ...............Who .... Neil Diamond Dionne Warwick Hospital Germ Control A Divition of Dawn Donutt ONE DOZEN DONUTS Plain, Sugared Or Cinnamon With Purchase CHICK-N-JOY BUCKET or BARRELL Open 7 Days — <5 A.M. to 12 Midnight J 93 NORTH TELEGRAPH : BETWEEN TEL-HURON AND THE PONTIAC MALL • 335-2444 PHONE 335-0101 • DONT ^ WOLF IT DOWN. NEW YORK (UPI) - With-j out there being anything per-| sonal in it, Dr. Peter Dineen interested , himself in the hands of hospital nurses. He concentrated on the fingertips, looking for colonies of bacteria. These he found, in abundance. I Hospital personnel can be the carriers of microorganism from one patient to another. They’re constantly present on the skin of all persons. Dineen chost recovery room nurses because tbeir hands are in pootact with surgical patients. He fingerprinted 150 of them repeatedly in a nutrient jell in which bacteria would propagate. The first fingerprinting revealed over half the nurses harbored bacteria on their fingertips despite hand-washing routines. Fifty nurses then scrubbed their hands for one minute with a germicidal soluticm. Another 50 applied antiseptic foam. A llllllll 2935 DIXIE HIGHWAY (U. i .- S. 101 I f£ 5 4500J 810CX KJElEOtAPH «D. third group u s e d a chemically inert foam. * * * , All were fingerprinted again. The jells developed 47 and 71 per cent fewer colonies fromi fingertips of the 100 nurses who used germicides and 54.2 per cent more colonies from the 50 who used inert foam. ANOTHER COUNT After the nurses worked in the recovery room for half an hour or so, they were fingerprinted again. Bacterial counts of the first two groups increased, which meant their fingertips had picked up bacteria from patients. The count of the third was far down. It was assumed they had lost bacteria, depositing them on patients. ★ ★ * The answer, he said, is for nurses and doctors, too, to scrub their hands with a germicide after each contact with a patient. AAiiliCDfIkC DRIVE-IN THEATER If UMMCnuC Union Lake at Haggerty Rd. FREE ELECTRIC HEATERS! EM 3-0661 - Show Starts at Dusk-Adults $1.25 NOW SHOWING thru SUN. EARLYOIBD SHOW SUN. 6:30 P.M. A STORY Of THE REVOtUTKIN IlfeCAWPUS MORAtS IpiFSA- MugOBnYT^TOs • mSWr' Beam's Choice is a very good Bourbon. (We should know—we've been making Bourbon since 1795.) We age it for eight years, /(^d charcoal filter it after aging. The result is about as close to perfect as anybody’s going to get So sip it. And savor it. But whatever you do dpn't guzzle it down. PLUS and Feature I SUlWORIHNOCEWrYOU^^ and diSJ paa®' It r«comnMnd«d for thow undT 10 *5“ 1% OrW^AEO mo BOTTUD BY T»«C AAMCS t. SCAM D(SIIUM|B CLERMON^L KAM. KEMSUOm PLUS 3nl Feature “Every Mother and Daughter Should SEE .. UNDER AGE" 1 i- '1. THE ' TRUTH ABOUT THOSE WHO HAVE DISCOVERED HOW AND WHERE TO EXERCISE THEIR PLEASURES WITHOUT FEAR ’ !!1» EmilUllllllliniUllP ^IN-CAR HEATERS mm Ultmunitll'lii DRIVE-IN SO. TEIECIAPH AT SO. LAKE 10. FE 2-1000 I MILE W. WOODWAIO ' iBOX OFFICE OPEHS 7:00 P.M (iiiiiii There are two kinds of people in his up-Ught world: his victims and his women. And sometimes you can’t tell them apart 1 LEE MARVIN “POINT BLANK' li ACADEMY AWARD WINNER BestSupportingActress—SHELLEY WINTERS • Sneypoitier-w _ _ ......ELIZABETH HARTMAN I iiifimimm elecYric i^)-car heaters jyimm ^mesr, S /eujv' 'Posmi/cL.'i I l,awMnaiL~ S'VIRGINIA WOOLF looking like a sSunday go-to-meetin7 —.. I DRIVE IN OPDYKE »D. AT WALTON BIVO. | 332-3200 take 175 TO MT. CLEMENS RD. J Rlllfll||| BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:00 P.M. \ A VARIETY OF BEAUTIES AS DALLYING LADIESr -OeityN... amnnmmfiiiinmi' IN-CAR heaters / .-’K- with JANE FONDA ’ as the "Wife" “ r THE PONTIAC PRl^SS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10. 196T C-11 it^otuis! N you reach a wrong number when direct dialing long distance, there's no charge. Just call the operator. 1 Michigan Bell |iorlmo fm Footia omI Licf/um Chriitma* Parly Reservations Now Being Taken "Makt Your Boteling Banquet Besenaliont Nou” FRIDAY & SATURDAY S Cwplete Freii Seafood To Chops/J ALL YOU CAIN CAT SMORGASBORD SATURDAY 6 TO 10 P.M. R050 . Children Under 12 — >2.50 gip Wide Track at West Huron FE 2-1170 j Trim and Carmen’s 48 CLUB Now Serving With Your Favorite Cocktails . . . Steaks, Shrimp, Tacos, Burrittos, Chicken plus many other delicious foods. . Tml mL Comm MS WOODWARD (NEXT TO ST. JOSEPH HOSPiAl) 10 A.M. - 1 A.M. FE 8-9911 $5.1 -Million Contract Approved a Work on Building Project Neon A portion of a planned $22-million construction project at Oakland Community College’s Auburn Hills campus in Pontiac Township is expected to I opened in less than two years. A contract for $5.1 million was awarded by the College Board of Trustees last night for the building of science, general assembly, and boiler buildingsi A. Z. Shmlna & Sons Co. of Dearborn was the low bidder among six general contractors. The company is expected to start work next week, reports Bruce King, director of new facilities. Official ground-breaking ceremonies will be held at 10 a.m. next Thursday. * * ★ Architect Gino Rossetti of Detroit explained to the board‘that the bids were above the estimated cost of $4.A million for the three buildings because of $156,700 from original esti- higher labor costs. Early In 1968 bids are. scheduled to be let for a technical center, which is also to be ready in late Fow other buUdings — learning resource center, business, mathematics and commons and gymnasium — are also planned to replace temporary buildings on the former Army Nike headquarters in the future. In other business, a revised 1967-68 operating budget of million was presented, down mates. Revenuse are expected to exceed expenditures by $27,-815. Large cuts were made in revenues from state aid and tuition and fees because enrollments did not reach the expected level. STATE RESIDENTS Tuition for Michigan residents from outside the college district .will be reduced from $20 to $12 per credit hour starting in January, the board decided. President Dr. John Tirrell said I this reduction would help make I the college available to particu-| larly students in Wayne County. A controversial implied consent athletic policy to start football at OCC was tabled by the board because one of the six trustees was absent. ★ ★ ★ Two students — one of them a campus editor who criticized the gas lamps at the Orchard Ridge campus — were denied the right to speak at the meeting. The college administration ruled that they had not specifically stated questions to be-raised in their letter for permission to speak. Problems they openly wanted to present coUld be discussed with administrators, the trustees said. »^:^KEEGO COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents SIDNEY POITIER ‘TOSIR.1flflTHLOVE’' , ■ TECHNICOLOR' ’'V; ondL________—4------- HAPPENING” TECHNICOLOR* 8:40 ONLY FREE COFFEE FOR OUR PATRONS. ^ IN DOWNTOWN PONTW^ FE 4-4436 Fmatinees daily OPEN 11:45 A.M. I 12 NORTH SAGINAW - . IHOW starts 12:00 NOOM 1^ nunm COHTIMUOUS NOW SHOWING forMATOBEAOOLTS '-V. Airlines Trip Over Hippies' Shoe Policy WASHINGTON (AP) - It all boils down to shoes and socks. At stake: Can you get on a commercial airliner barefoot? Hippies, those self-styled flower children who often plane-hop from demonstration to demonstration, show up at airline ticket counters with guitars, long hair—and often no shoes. ★ ★ * Airlines have rules about passengers. They won’t accept babies under 7 days old, the mentally deranged, anyone with a contagious disease or drunks. But someone without shoes? Or someone who needs a bath? NOW RECEIVE SHOES We don’t want to dictate fashion,” said an Eastern Airlines spokesman, ‘‘but we now require shoes.” So does the Public Health Service. ‘‘Shoes are a question of poll-y,” said American Airlines in New York. “We’re meeting this week with other airlines to discuss such a policy.” * ★ ★ An industry journal. Aviation Daily, says “Airlines should exercise their right to refuse passage to those not meeting cleanliness standards.” The American Civil Liberties Union says airlines have no authority to dqcide cleanliness. No right at all,” said a spokesman. “To do so is the same kind of reasoning that kept Negroes , ,,, in the back of the bus.” !, “ ‘.‘equality of jobs, Jow-cost housing and good police FAA STATEMENT j protection” as the things these New at The Airways GEORGE MARf IN and The Cruisers Dancing and Listening Entertainment 6 Nights a Week 4iJU0ay Loungi 4852 W. Huron (M59) 674-0425 No Entertainment Sunday m^andhoJi Appearing Every Thurs., Fri., & Sat. RONNIE WOLFE and His RUNAWAYS M-59 and Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 338-7879 Senate OKs Tax Break for I Auto Maker * WASHINGTON (UPI) - The! Senate yesterday approved a I bill which would provide Amer-1 lean Motors, the nation’s fourth | largest car maker, with an es-■ timated $20-million tax break, j! ‘The measure was an HERO HONORED — Capt. William S. Carpenter, 29, receives the Distinguished Service Cross from Lt. Gen. Edgar C. Doleman, deputy commander of Army forces in the Pacific, in ceremonies yesterday at Schofield Barracks in Hawaii. Carpenter was honored for his heroism in Vietnam, but after the ceremony said it was his company that earned the award and not himself. 'Open Housing Rated 4th as Detroit Negro Need' DETROIT (AP)—Open hous-jtlon of open occupancy oi ing, which is proposed in an | quality low-cost housing. It’i ordinance awaiting action be-1 both.” fore the Common Council, is not| one of the three things the city’s 1 inner-city Negroes want most, a Negro leader said Thursday. amend-1 ment to the House-passed bill I dealing with tax treatment of | certain holding company stock. I Sponsored by Sen. Gaylord I Nelson, D-WiS., the tax break I proposal would permit AMC to | apply the 7 per cent investment I tax credit back to years when |! it was in the red. Usually, a company cannot take advantage of the tax credit I; when it has-an operating loss. '| American Motors has suffered > from slupiping car sales in re-’l cent years. 1^ * *, ★ According to Senate Finance Committee officials, the Nelson i proposal would mean a $14-mil-j| lion tax break for the firm thel first year and about $6 million in the second year after the billi became law. ■ The measure now goes to a: House-Senate conference committee where differences be-j t w e e n the two bills will bel ironed out in negotiations. The Federal Aviation Agency says shoes, are out of its jurisdiction. “Congress.” ' said ^ a ■spokesman, “has not given us statutory authority to make passengers bathe before boarding an airliner, unless it can be proven their presence has aq adverse effect on aviation safety.” The FAA did deal indirectly with guitar-playing jiippies last week by ruling that a passenger can take aboard only one piece of.hand luggage, and it must fit under his seat. Guitars don’t fit. Negroes believe they need, said the Rev. Ray Shoulders, a Negro who is coordinator of the Michigan Human Rights Council. Which does away with inflight entertaining,” noted United Airlines. Collegians Seek Shower Recor^ f 5^ 4195 Dixie Hwy. Jayson s Drayton Plai„s «/ ^ » V 673-7900 Wednesday thra “Saturday The JERRY LIBBY TRIO Enjoy Your Thanksgiving Day Dinner Here COCKTAIL.S • LUNCHES • DINNER • DANCING DeJUUdliui ' I Corner Elizabeth Lake u ■1 And Cass Lake Roads liHl 11 1 1 BLOCK WEST OF HURON Shoulders said his remarks were based on a council survey of 3,000 inner-city Negroes, 80 per cent of whom ranked job equality, low-cost housing and police protection ahead of open ho.using on their list of needs. ■k * * This open housing angle is a political thing,” said Shoulders. The Negro really wants low-cpst quality housing in his own area. Most-Negroes don’t want to live in the suburbs or in a predominantly white neighborhood. ‘They fe-el much more' comfortable livipg among them-^Ives.” - . PENDING IN LEGISLATURE An open housing measure also is pending in the Michigan Legislature. Shoulders, wh6 said the council has about 10,000 members FRIDAY, Nov. 10th "THE BOTTLES of GOODNESS” “THE INVENTION” SATURDAY, Nov. 11th H. P. and THE GRASS ROOTS MOVEMENT” “THE UP” ‘Sunday Special' Matinee t:30-5:0Q J^aluring •THE BOTTLES of GOODNESS” "THE TRtBE” "THE FANATICAL MOVEMENT” "THE REBEL KIND” scene EVERYONE WELCOME! 6696 DIXIE HWY.-Admission $1.50 CORVALLIS, Ore. (AP) Fifty Oregon State University students are taking part in a' . ^ .. .. shower marathon, aiming said the break'the 205-hour record held P*'efe''ence for low-cost housing,' by University of Oregon stu-gather than open housing, -jgnts I indicative of the altitude I Newrfti Init i| BUSIHESSHEN’S NOON SPECIAL (125 The marathon started Tuesday at 8 p.m. on the third floor of'Wilson Hall, a men’s dorrhito-ry. It will have to continue until next Thursday to break the record. One person Jnust be in the shower at all times. Negroes throughout-the nation.; k * k ' I James Rose, housing director of the Michigan Civil Rights Commission, was asked about the survey results, and said, “It’s not an either-or ques- WANt TO SELL ICE SKATES, SLEDS, SKIS, TOBOGGANS', USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFjffiD AD.------TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 33M181. * -0ANCING- THE DYNAMIC DAVISSON DUO Monday, Friday and Saturday • ORGAN • PIANO • DRUMS Plan to nnjoy 4n aynninc of •ntartainmant with Randy and Waynninthn NOW APPEARING IN The Famous French Cellar HOWE'S LANES Tuesday, Thursday, Sunday Bud Berg —on the Organ Doug^Joy —on Drums The French Cellar Presents Live Entertainment for Your Dancing and Listening Pleasure Every Night! (Except Mondays) *• The Royal Lounge ^THE PACESEHERS" Exciting, New, Swinging Group Wednesday, Friday, Saturday tU The Royal Recreation DOWNTOWN LAKE ORION 29 E. Front St. 698-54TT Come, Enjoy Yourself! ,6691 Dixie Hwy., 625-5011. fOiKS mn Bie APKTim muYeoroRm Mouw-mTme VimtS AT BOHAHai com BY AH» SAMfg m£ m Younm. ' J™ HOSS’ FAVORITE BONANZA JUMBO STEAK 14 Oz. Select Strip Steak t2N Baked Potato Giant Slab Texas Size Toast * Mixed Green Salad BONANZA SIRLOIN 'pit. KMART Glenwood Plaza North Perry Street, Corner Glenwood Carry-Gut Available ^ 138-9411 Open 7 Day. o Week U A.M. - ?, Frl.^iwl Sot. nil 0 OPEN SUNDAYS TILL 9 P.M.y ^ C—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER >10, 1967 SATURDAY ONLY! ILJji J.U i. ¥iniiiiniiiiniiiir j« m-i .. -------------------^ _ m Veterans^ Day 12 Hour Discount Sale MEN'S INGUSH WALKERS Our R,e.n.94 \ Saturday Only ■ ' Imporled from Kitgland . . English walkers hi quality grain leather. Wing tip, five eyelets, slupd heel- Leather sole, leather lining. Black and brown. Siaes 7 to 121). Charge It. PISTACHIOS OR CASHEWS, lour QQC Mb. Choice (JO Bag Saturday Only ■ \ Pistachios are regularly 98c; lev^milsare regularly 1.^ CHOCOLATE-COVER CHERRY CANDIES \ 3d‘ \ Oar Reg. 4s\ Sat. «^ii BAG KMART POTATO CHIPS 44^:. \ Discount Price, Charge It One-pniincl bag of fresh and cnispy chips at special\savingg. NEW MESH NYLONS IN WINTER SHADES 2 48^ Our Keg. 2\,rt. 7A7. Si Choose from\nist-loTie, and ciniiaiiion;^ Mr.cS;,U SERVICEMEN’S SPECIAL MEDAL J96 \ Our Reg. 2.47, Sat. Only 14 KARAT GOLD WEDDING BANDS 20% B« ' Saturday Only Plain or ornate wedding bands III while or yellow 14 Karat gold. TWIRL-A-BIN CANISTERS Our iteg. 2.96^ Saturday Only Charge It! 0 Five extra-large-capacity see-through bina in transparent colors ride on a free-wbeeling stainless steel ball bearing turntable. Choose from clear, amber or blue. Shop now ... THERMAL BEAUTY BEDSPREAD 4.88 Our Reg. 5.96 Saturday Only Chai-ge'It. Thermal-weave cotton spread in double (94x110”) and twin, (76x110”) sizes. Bullion fringe. Cboose from white, gold, pink, avocado and aqua. For your shopping convenience, Tremendous Selection of MEN’S CALIFORNIA-STYLED CARDIGANS Values from jm ^ I 9.95.14.95 £M. - Saturday Only < ^mT W A; X; ■S Well-mannered cardigan sweaters ... in a host of knits including all wools, all Orion ii; acrylics and wool/nioliair blends. In newest ii; styles and colors. Sizes .T6-K). Charge It. >:• n DuPonl Corp : r.u t.m. ^ HEAVY-DUTY PLASTIC HOUSEWARES Your Choice 2 >■ 97* Large assortment of items. Colorful and sturdy. Laundry baskets, dish pans, pails, wastebaskets, bowl tels. Charge It. New Stylesj No-lron Fabrics GIRLS' COnON SCHOOL DRESSES SAVE ON FURNACE FILTERS 3 Discount Price Our Reg. 44c, Sat. Only Furnace filters are liexachlorophene treated. Coated with viscasine adhesive. Sizes to fit most all furnaces. *16x25x1”..........................................37c *20x25x1”................................ 2 for 88c Workman’s Poly-Plastic Lunch Kit t^ith V/2 Pt. Bottle Our Re^. 3.87 2.97 Saturday Only Kit is jpolypropylene plastic, bolds • 1 */2 pt.-size vacuum bottle with leak-proof stopper. For convenience, *Limtt«d quantity, non* told to doolort STURDY WOOD TOILET SEAT Our Reg. 2.88 ^ 9 Saturday Only gfl^ 0 t4Bll Save on easy to clean toilet seat with sparkling enamel fiiiisli. Standard size, quality construction. In your choice of white or colors. Shop Kmart and just say “Charge It”. ^ Bom* ImprQvareant D*pt. vGDDD-LDDKING EASY-TD-READ BATH SCALES Our Reg. 2.97 1.96 Sat. Only Smartly designed bathroom scales has magnified, easy-to-read dial and vinyl mat. Choose white, black, pink enamel. Charge It. 2.22 Our Reg. 2.97 Saturday Only No-irnn dresses feature: zip fronts; tabs; zipper hacks; biitloii fronts and some with. sailor accents! In colors of red, blue, hot pink, hot pink, green, maize. .'l-6x. :jj Fanitastik Spray Cleaner Cleans SEE-THRU CLEAR FUSTIC SHK BOX 3 Our Hpf(. 48c, Sai. Oniy ProlPcU nhoe*. keeps cl6set neat. 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Bring the whole family • • we’re open till 10 GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD Are Your School's Activities Now Appearing in The Press? THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC. MICHIGAN. FRIDAY, NOVEMB*il TO, 1967 Turn to This Page Tuesdays, Fridays' for Senior High School Nows D—1 As Walled Lake Project Pontiac Proji Photo /lose something? — Donna Noble hunts frantically through her drawer tor the symbol (her junior class ring) that marks her as aiJominican Academy upperclassman. Absorbed in admiring her own new ring, Georgina Pietrzak doesn’t notice her fellow classman’s plight. _ Junior Students Groves Council at Dominican Get Their Class Rings By ANDI BARNES Dominican Academy* juniors officially beMme upperclassmen Wednesday as they received their class rings. TTie ceremony was held during Mass at the Dominican Sister’s Motherhouse Chapel. The rings were given to _^the* - girls by the Rev. Mr. Casey. ★ * * Following the Mass, refreshments were served to the juniors, their parents and seniors by members of the sophomore class. Monday, Mrs. A. A. Daubenspeck, a nurse and mother of one of the seniors, visited the school. She, along with Sister Stephen Patrick, gave the girls an Snsight on nursing as a pareer. They explained the differences between practical and professional nursing. Pontiac Catholic Press Club to Publish Paper By DEBBIE ROCHON Pontiac Catholic High School Press Club students have begun work on the school’s first quarterly newspaper. Under the direction of Sister Mary Louise, the club will publish a paper that will report the latest school activities and publish students’ articles on class projects. Seniors have started making plans concerning their senior pictures. Photographs of the June graduates are scheduled to be takein,^ within the next two weeks. The yearbook drive began this week at Pontiac Catholic. The publication will be larger than either St. Frederick’s or St. Michael’s High Schools had in previous years. A larger student body and more avail- , able funds have made possible the expanded issue. FIRST YEARBOOK A spokesman for the yearbook expressed the staff’s hope that all the students will purchase a yearbook, since it will be a Pontiac Catholic first as well as a keepsake for the seniors. St. Michael’s Teen Club recently had as it , guest speakers a group of local hippies. They spoke to the group on their opinions of peace and -the war In Vietnam. Following the hippies’ talk, a meeting was held to discuss plans for a coffee house to be established in Pontiac for the benefit of teen-agers. ★ ★ ★ The proposed coffee house, to be called the “Open Door,” will be under the sponsorship of Father James Wysocki, assistant at St. Michael’s church. MEETINGI PLACE The “Open Door” will offer teen-agers a place to talk with people their own age and provide them an opportunity to discuss their problems with, understanding adults, such as counselors and social workers. A definite location for the coffee house has not yet been decided upon. ★ - Pontiac Catholic students received their first report cards this week. A new -system was introduced whereby every teacher gives each individual student not only a grade in the class, but also character grades, such as citizenship and industry. This method will be used until Pwitiac Catholic can inaugurate the use of a coniputer system of grading. Pompons on Sale By DEV UNICK This is National Distributive Education Clubs of America (DECA) Week. Walled Lake Senior High co-op members have displays in the halls and at local businesses. DECA is the national club for students in retailing. DECA is selling pompons as a fund- I Surges Forward By KIM SEROTA “The Student Council Lives” proclaims a sign in the Groves-High School cafeteria. Elsewhere posters stating the “Student Council Is on the Move” may be found. Graffitj it isn’t. In earlier years Groves students might have thought of the signs as just that, but this year’s council has made visible advancements in serving the school. During the campaign for the ’67-’68 council officers last spring, candidates made their usual promises of improvements. And now the Student Council is showing signs of meeting their vows. In an open letter to the student body, Kyle Andeer, president of the Student Council, stated, “We are working this year to build a strong base for this effectiveness. We need your support and your enthusiasm. We want you to forget about failures in the past and to look forward with us to a Student Council that can solve your problems.” ★ ★ ★ In October the council made its first move toward being more effective. A questionnaire was issued so that the council could find out exactly where it stood. POLLEp ATTITUDES The questionnaire asked about feelings toward the council and its achievements. It invited suggestions on what the Student Council could do to better serve the school. ' Since that time many projects have been undertaken. Included in these are several fund-raising activities. >. « Earlier this week a juke box was installed in the cafeteria. This is the second Student Council lunchtime operation. ★ ★ ★ Previously, the council operated a milk shake machine^ to support Its activities. The additional money raised by the juke box will help to expand the council’s programs. ADOPTED One of the things the juke box will ' support is Groves’ adopted boy Wu Chen-Fong. Nine-year old Wu lives with his widowed mother in Tainan, Taiwan.’-★ -A- ■* • The school is supporting Wu through the Taiwan Family-Helper Project, part of the Christian Children’s Fund\ Inc. The project provides education, food, milk,'clothing and medicine; Avondale Aflame for Football Finale By JAN MALANE A bonfire will rage tonight at Avondale High School before the game with Marysville. The Spirit Risers have organized the bonfire in recognition of the last game of the football season. * ★ * ■;,. Formal recognition has been given to the senior football players for their hard work and ability as the Spirit Risers have presented them a plaque. The newest club at AHS is the Drama Club. Members already have set to work In preparation for the all-school production in the spring. A committee is reading various, plays to select a suitable one for Ae , production. ★ * ★ To adquaint members with acting before a live audience, the clubs hopes to present a serious of skits and one-act plays previous to the all-school production. Northern Plans for Grid Clash By BETTY ATWELL Spirit is high at Pontiac Northern as students prepare for the big football game of the year against Pontiac Central next Friday. Northern students have made plans for “Spirit Week,” which will be held Wednesday through Friday. .a. Monday will be Letter Sweater Day, when the Huskies will wear their PNH letter sweaters to school. Dress-up Day will highlight Tuesday. Dressy, somewhat casual attire will be appropriate. Wednesday the dress code reverses, when Clash Day is celebrated. Clashing colors, plaids and prints will be the or- ^ der of the day. DAY OF Mourning The Northern Huskies will join together Thursday for a day of mourning for the Central Chiefs. The Huskies will be respectful of the Chiefs and will wear black or dark clothing. Beginning at 8 a.m. Friday, a pep rally will be held. Students will not be allowed to enter the 50-minute session without Huskie badges, which axe sold by the Pep Club. The Student Council will buy a cotton candy machine in the near future. * * * pe cost of the machine Is $500. The candy will be sold at varsity games. PROJECT CHAIRMAN Robin Mclllroy, a junior, is the chair-1 man of the cotton candy project. * * * The Future Teacher’s Club elected Terry Karen president; Blair Miller, vice president; AthaUa Holmes, secretary; and Lupe.Gayton, treasurer. Parents, Teachers to Confer at Troy By LINDA SWEET Parent-teacher conferences will be held at Troy High School Monday through Friday next week. Classes will be recessed Thursday and Friday marking the end of the first quarterly marking period. Report cards will be distributed to parenfs at the conferences. There is some disagreement as to how five days lost during the teacher strike should be made up, The Board of Education favors an additional week in June and allowance of a six-day, spring vacation. The Troy Education Association, which contends that only four days have been lost (not, including Labor Day), favors shortening Christmas vacation by one day and reinstating the former three-day spring vacation this year. ★ ■ ★ ★ This action 'would enable teachers to enroll in summer courses and avoid hot, summer school days for high school students. QUESTIONNAIRES TO PARENTS Questionnaires have been sent to parents of students and the decision will be made shortly. As teachers are not able to act as sponsors for student activities, since budget cuts have eliminated paid teacher sponsorship, there have been limited clubs and activities this year. To counteract this situation, Mrs. J. B. Gardner, president of Troy High PaXent-Teacher-Student Association, has announced that some parents are willing to act as sponsors. The Board has approved this. Several parents have al-ready^olunteered to chaperone the senior tri^ project. Proceeds will finance trips for students participating in the State and National D£X?A Contests. Sales demonstration, advertising layout, and job interview are some of the divisions in the contests. DECA at WLHS is sponsored by Janet Johnson of the faculty. ★ ★ ★ Officers are Mary Schulte, president; Jackie Congleton, vice president; Sherrie Walker, secretary; and Elmer Bartlett, treasurer. 40 IN TRADE CLUB Trade and Industrial Co-op Club is sponsored by faculty member John Xenos.’About 40 boys are employed in local drafting, auto mechanics dnd machine operating jobs. Officers are Bob Long, Doug Jenkinson, Bill Palmer, and Tom Hughes. The Nurses Aide Club, with its 20 girls, is sponsored by teacher Jean Ashby. The girls are working in foul nursing homes throughout the area. Patty Bergman, Linda Cuddington, Bernadette Generous, and Cindy Wikoff are the new officers. PontlK PrOTi Photo REHEA^AL? — Perhaps, but not for a play. Waterford Township High Schpol students (fi^left) Ethel Stowe, Vicki Schultz and Beth Griffin are learning how to spot trouble before it develops. The girls are all enrolled in the WTHS industrial Office Co-op is responsible for pro- education program. Ethel is a junior, Vicki a sophomore and Beth a senior, grams for PTA, music festivals, and athletic contests. Forty girls under the direction of teacher Jody Newcomer, will soon join the Office Education Association. Officers are Doreen Judson, Debbie Beagle, Donna Welke, and Suzette Giroux. ★ ★ ★ Every co-op student is given a rating by his employe/ which is transferred as a grade. A related class period is required of the 125 students in the program. Working toward a vocation certificate, the students are getting ready to accept positions after graduation. A banquet will be given in May by the students, honoring their employers and Lester G. Carlson, director of vocational education. Coed Tno Invades WTHS Shop Area -By MARY JERGOVICH Twenty-five to one is the approximate i)oy-girl ratio in three industrial education classes at Waterford Township High School. Senior Beth Griffin, junior Ethel StoWje and sophomore Viclsi Schultz are the Into N^w Stevenson High Students Awaiting Move By PENNY McMILLEN On a barren stretch of niud in Sterling Township, blueprints have been transformed into the brick and mortar building that will house 1,282 Adlai E, Stevenson High School students. Smith and Smith, architects and designers for SHS, are optimistic that students will be able to start the second semester in the new building. But along with this assurance, there are a few problems that must be ironed oiit. The prime difficulty is the draining of the parking areas. If all goes well, the delivery and in-stallaion of equipment should not pose a problem. Previously ordered, necessities should arrive in December. ■ ★ ★ * Philip Runkel, superintendent of t h e Utica Community Schools, emphasized the importance of having all departments of the school fully equipped and ready to operate when SHS opens. CLASS SCHEDULES Another question concerns class scheduling. For the remainder of the ’67-’68 term there will still be five classes, although after the transfer the existing 50-minute periods will be lengthened to one hour. No specific time has been set to accommodate these five hours, but it is expected that school will begin earlier and dismiss in mid-afternoon. At present SHS students are on the 12:10 to 4:45 'p.m. shift at Utica High School. The scheduling and construction are only a prologue to the substantial organization of a school. FIRST RINGS Juniors this year will have the distinction of wearing the first .cla.ss rings with the Titan emblem. Sophomore Val Schmidt’s entry in the Student Council’s “Draw the Titan” contest was selected to he the emblem which all SHS rings will bear from this year forward. A 1968 yearbook, $10 and an activity ticket were awarded Val. ★ ★ ★ Senior Bob Jilek will be remembered in Stevenson’s history as its first Student Council-President. Jim Beck, also a senior, will mark his chapter as the first editor-in-chief of Stevenson’s newspaper, the Vanguard. Collectively, since the seniors at SHS are in Utica’s graduating class and sporting events, the SHS juniors can proclaim themselves the first graduates of SHS as well as the first to don the blue and white Titan uniforms. only females to be found In the shop area of WTHS. “I plan to do a lot of traveling after I graduate this summer and I thought it might be a good idea to know something about my car if it should happen to break down,” Beth said when asked why she enrolled in auto mechanics. Ethel gives aP ever growing fascination of cars as her reason for taking auto shop. ★ ★ ★ Vicki Schultz is eyeing a ham t^ra-tor license: and one of the requirements for obtaining the license is knowing how to measure amps, one of the many things taught in her electronics class. SHOP CATEGORIES Industrial education at WTHS is composed of 12 different shop categories which include; auto mechanics, elementary wood, power mechanics, electronics, and architectqral “drawing and tool and die design. Others are: elementary drawing, machine drawing, machine shop, elementary metals, shop math, machine woodworking, house carpentry and mechanics. The department is headed by Don Ben- 'fhe journalism department has compiled a 16-page souvenir program to be sold at the Township-Kettering football game tonight. Additional Scho.ol News I on Page D-2 Oxford Ski Officers By aARA CALLAHAN With winter on its way, the Oxford High School Ski Club elected Randy Shepard, president; Hal Johnson, vice president; Holly Thatcher, secretary; Vicki Barrett, treasurer; Linda Hohl, Student Council representative. ★ ★ ★ The National Honor Society will have . its induction of new ‘members Wednesday. This day has also been designated as dress-up day by the Student Coimcil. Tlie junior candy sale started this week and will continue through Dec. 1. Orion Is Fired Up By DIANE CHAMBERLIN “Burn, kitty, bum” will be the theme for tonight’s pregame bonfire at Lake Orion High School.before the LOHS Dragons tackle their archrival—the Oxford Wildcats. Tl^e bonfire will take place at 7:30 p.m. in the parking lot near the concession stand. At this time the “wildcat,” which has been caged in the student lounge for all to observe, will be tossed onto the leaping flames. A pep assembly during school hours helped boost spirits^ There will be a dance tonight in the cafeteria following the gome. Doors will J)e open to Oxford students as well as LOHS students. The senior girls and faculty of LOHS have chosen Mary Sue Knight as their Daughters of the American Revolution representative. CADET TEACHING telch Ke B^SSrSiSfScCl ^^e ANXIOUS - Seniors (from left) Bob Lisey Bob Jilek and Jim ^eck hope^ teachine will be done after school from presence will spur workmen on to complete Utica s Adlai Stevenson High ^hrol Srio^5 p m “d cStoue in- by thb beginning of the second semester. The boys are presently attendmg half-day definitely. sessions at the Utica High School. ^ • 1 ' ■ ' ■ - ■ * ■■ ■ • ■ ■ ■ ;■■■ ' ' . D-2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10, 1967 —a SCHOOL NEWS i»iS«j^ROUNDUP West Bloomfield By BOB BROWNE “What do you think?” was a question asked of West Bloomfield students, Tuesday, during Wayne State University’s “Debate Days in Detroit.” Visiting teams from Ohio State University and Northern Illinois University debated the subject, RESOLVED: That the Federal Government Should Guarantee a Minimum Annual Cash Income to All Citizens. . The debate featured cross-examination during which each team is given a chance to ask questions of the other team and use their statements against them. Another feature of this debate was a dual judging system that allows the audience to decide the outcome of the debate, as well as the regular judge. ★ ★ ★ This was accomplished through a “shift of. opinion” ballot which tested the effectiveness of the speakers’ audience appeal. Winners at the seccmd annual School cross-country meet, Monday were Joe Arnold tor the boys and Pam Pshias for the girls. The class results were: sophomores, first; Juniors, second; freshmen; third and seniors, fourth. ’The annual Awards Banquet Wednesday will honor boys who« participated in either football or cross-country, with the varsity winners receiving their awards. The Anchor, WBHS newspaper, published its fourth issue today. Novi By THOM HOLMES Gerald Hartman^ Novi High School principal, has given students his approval for a refreshment vending machine. Student Gouncil members will now seek a company willing to deliver and stock the machine. Patty Erwin, head of.the Student Council activities committee, proposed at the last council meeting that the school acquire a stuffed animal mascot and present it to the most activ^ class each 'month. She feels that this would increase student participation in high school activities. Patty also submitted a request for a cooperative dinner dance to be held next Friday. The dinner would be from 7-8 p.m. and the dance from 8-11 p.m'. The second aiinual Band Variety Show will be held Thursday. Each girl was required to buy a tag when shS arrived this morning and each time'’ she spoke to a hoy, she was required to buy another tag. The boy who got the most tags from the girls was named “Mr. Irresistible,” and the girl who lost the most tags was named “Miss Gab.” Each received a gift. ★ ★ ★' Proceeds from this venture Will help clieerleadej-s buy their uniforms. CLUB IS FORMED French II studdqts have formed a French Club under the direction of Mrs. Ralph Wingate. Assisting her wilj be John McMillan, president; Todd Vanaman, vice president; and Sandra., Adams, secretary-treasurer. In addition to having meetings each month, they will publish a newspaper for French students. Martha Clybum will edit the paper. i: * * Bidding has begun on the cheerleaders and Pep Club members, who will serve as slaves during “Slave Day” next Friday. Proceeds from the auction will be used for Pep Club projects. Andover Holly By GAYLE WHXENBERG “Neither rain, nor sleet nor dark of night” hindered the success of the Bioomfield Hills Andover High School Homecoming last weekend. Senior Mary Hunt, was elected queen. Bruce Evans,'Student Council treasurer, was the queen’s escort. Seniors chalked up another victory as they won the competitive cheer contest ■t the prehomecoming pep assembly. Mike Pettibone, class president, accepted “Bariiey,” the mascot, anch a plaque on behalf of his class. ★ ★ ★ Juniors won the float competition with a “Cook Their Goose” theme. Tickets are on sale for the 5 one-act plays to be presented by the Protagonists on Nov. 17 and 18 at 8 p.m. The plays are “The Lottery,” “Sorry, Wrong Number,” “Still Alarm,” “The Red Carnation” and “A Psychedelic Experience.” Mt. Holly will be the sl^ home of the BHAHS Ski Team. James Wolfe, Spanish teacher, will coach the boys. Wolfe’s wife Mrs. Py Wolfe, will coach the <^1S’team. f- By MARCTA CLARK Holly High School this weekend will be the stage of the Junior Miss Pageant sponsored by the Holly-Davisburg Jaycees. Vying for the title are Judy Diehl, Helen House, Gail Lucas, Kathryn Sue MacKenzie, Nancy Perry, Linda .Wol-verton and Connie Jo Carrick. The prize for this competition - is a $200 scholarship and the right to be in the state Junior Miss Pageant later in the year. 'The trophy f o r the winner of the Holly-Fenton football game has been on display all week in the general office of the high school It was donated by the H^ady Brother’s Food stores. The company also donated a trophy for the most valuable player of the game. ' This week’several juniors accompanied Davisburg elementary sixth grade classes to a 'camp near Brighton. Emmanuel By MARTHA CLYBURN Silence was the byword for girls at Emmanuel Christian High School today. The Pep Club sponsored the second annual “Sound of Silenge” day. Mott By JOAN EDGINTON A new, module schedule was introduced to students attending afternoon classes at Mott High School. This schedule is divided into 15 minute hnits, allowing the students to attend class for different times each day They may attend a class for a period of 30, 40, 60, or 90 minutes a day. This flexible schedule gives the students the opportunity to work on' class projects or on group or individual study. It also helps break up the typical rou-„ tine of a school week and provide time for school assemblies and activities. ★ ★ ★ This past week has been proclaimeci as “Spirit Week” in tribute to the Corsairs’ football team. DIFFERENT ACTIVITIES Each day the students have participated in different activities, ranging from saluting the football players and coaches to saying “Beat Hazel Park” at the beginning of each sentence. Spirit week came to an end on Thursday in the morning and the final football game that evening. This week the first Mott parents’ Meeting ;was held in Mason Junior High’s cafetorium. Parents were welcomed by Daniel Hogan, Mott’s principal N^teTvc INSUM', VA\\V\SS\ ROW TW Stwy H(w VG(vi«;nV.mW«sSpy , tm tHv V .S. \mencau \ *^)p’m«ni.VoVicv.sndUws ' ANDREW TUUX It starts exclusively in Sunday's Free Press Heres another book you shouldn't miss. Here, for the first time, is the book lhat tells the secrets of * Embassy Row. In that highly readable fashion that has made his books best sellers, veteran Washington reporter Andrew TuUy tells bow foreign diplomats spy on the United States and influence American opinion, policy and legislation. V Among other, fascinating inside stories, “White Tie and Dagger” Tcveals: • Why the Russians keep a file on every American military officer, starting with Army colonels and Navy captains. • What Kosygin and Johnson said to each other over the hot line during the Middle East crisis. • Why Iron Curtain diplomats are so interested in the President’s hat size. • How a Polish agent fficked up information vital to American security by simply visiting the U.S. Government Printing Office. • How the Russians enlistd^e help of for^gq^-bom Americans in their espionage activities. There is much more. Says Russell Baker of The New York Times: “All the righf people, from the White House down to the bottom drawer at CIA, will denounce this book. It has to he good.” Says Warren Rogers of Look Magazine; “. . . informative, detailed and wel] documented . . . makes you feel you are there, seeing these things for, yourself’ So make sure you’re there when “White Tie and Dagger" starts in Sunday’s Free Press. For Detroit-area home delivery, call 222-6500. Outstate, contact your local Free Press distributor. JDetroit Jftee Dvens Our Lady Has a New Report Card System By DIANNA REED A new report card system has been introduced at Our Lady of the Lakes this year. Each student will receive an individual report card for each class he is taking. ject but on his behavior' in each of his classes, too. The 1967 Lochmara yearbook received an honorable-mention Ignation Commander Award. Not more than 15 schools in the Mid- This is the second year im n row the Lochmara, under the supervision of Sister Therese Marie, has received this award. Students got a quarter break at Our Lady last ’Thursday and Friday. There was no school because of teacher con- He will be graded not only on his sub- west received awards in the competition, ferences at the public schools. NO DOWN SPECIAL LOW • RADIOS • PAYMENT 600DWILL PRICES STEREOS • HI-FI’S AU MEW 1968 POBTABLES • Model X4202 Outstanding value in big-screen compact table model color television. Two-speed UHF vernier fine tuning. Telescoping Dipole Antenna. Special $JB25 Only new 1968^ rectangulat 29S M|. In. vimBlns in* comiv HANDCRAFTED for greater reliability The BRAQUE • Y4514 Beiutiful Contemporaiy styled compact console in grained Walnut color (Y4514W), or in grained Mahogany color (Y4514R). Cabinet features turned legs with brass ferruliis. Super Video Range Tuning $12^0 PER MONTH Jeatoies the best in Color performance OPEN 9 to 9 AUTHORIZED ZENITH SERVICINQ DEALER LARGE DISPLAY ON HAND ALL-CITV TELEVISION CHECK OUR PRICES BEFORE YOU BUY 2363 Orchard Lake Rd. NOW, 2 GREAT STORES 4350 N. 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UL Approved. / SHOP YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD TRUSTWORTHY HARDWARE STORE BROWNIES HARDWARE 952 Joslyn, Pontiac DAWSON HARDWARE 3550 Soshabaw, Drayton Pinint J&J HARDWARE 2015 Auburn, Utica CUMMINGS HARDWARE 47 L Flint, Loko Orion ORTONVILLE LUMBER 910 Highway Ml 5, Ortonvillo THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRfIDAV. NOVEMRER 10, 1067_ D—3 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday. Produce Apples, Cortland, bu. .......... Apples, Greening, bu............ Apples, Jonathon, bu. ......... Apples, Cider, 4-gal. case Apples, McIntosh Apples, Northern Spy, bu........ Apples, Red Delicious, bu. . Apples, Golden Delicious, bu. Kohlrabi, dz. bch. Stock Market Roily Continues NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market rally continued early this afternoon, weathering some profit taking. Trading was fairly active. Gains outnumbered losses by 3.001a comfortable ratio of 2 to 1 — s Mibut not quite as wide as an ear-J'5|ily 3-to-l margin. 5 “I The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was up 5.32 at 2,50 862.29. ,’.75! Strength in blue chips which [l^i boosted the Dow Industrials 7.40 J«!points Thursda, even though iiso'ohly four more stocks rose than 2:°o fell, continued a feature of trad-ing. Solid backing was given the rise by strength in oils, the biggest single group on the New York Stock Exchange, based on capital value. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .19 at 310.6 with industrials up 2.8, rails up 1.6 and utilities off .1. Prices advanced in moderately active trading on the American Stock Exchange. Cubic Corp. was among the active issues and climbed about 2 points. Simmonds Precision was up around ll-i and Struthers Wells rose a couple of points. Dynalectron dropped a point and Astrodata was fractionally lower. Federal Resources paced the list flon activity and rose nearly a point. Auto Insurance Probe Is Urged House Panel Calls for Full Study by FTC News in Brief Rummage Sale: Friday, 9 to 5, Sat., 9 to 12, St. Michaels Hall, corner Lewis and Edison. —Adv. Rummage Sale, Friday and Sat,, Nov. 10 and 11, 9 a.m. to WASHINGTON (IPI — A House OVERFLOW CROWD - At least 450 Judiciary subcommittee called persons, including top business, social and yesterday for a full investiga-| leaders, attended a luncheon program tion of the automobile insur-| yesterday at the Elks Temple. Martin J. ance industry by the Federal Casexio. a General Motors vice president and Trade Commission. The recommendation, which will be presented to the full Judiciary Committee, endorsed: the findings of a committee [ staff study that such an investi- general manager of GMC TVuck and Coach Division, the featured speaker, announced expansion plans which would run into millions of dollars. Abng With Pay for Skilled .' 2.001 Peas, Blackey«z t Squash, Buttercup, bu. Squash,- Butternut, bu/ ;|auash, ^ Tomatoes^ bl Turnips, dz. bcl Turnips, topped The New York Stock Exchange \ 5»le« -Net \ (hds.) High Low Lost Chg. FordMof 2V0 5® P'-"!’'''' ' ' ForMcK .l£ 42 27 26V, 26V*-'-. Pa PwLt FreepSul 12? 106 66 64 U 65''i -FIV, Pa RR 5 3. The Apostolic Faith Taber-was in order. Slin’" The ,6.11 ...dy, .Id,- • ________^____________________spread complaints about the rates and practices of auto in-suraJice companies, said the present system is costly, slow and incomplete. U raised the question of whether the industry Joblessness on Rise By JOHN CUNNIFF , AP Business Analyst NEW YORK IJnemitloymenl in October reached 8.8 per cent. The white le Labor Depnrtmenl an- rate was only 3.8 per cent, s nounced, rose for the second Thj,s disparity between the I.) High Low. Loot Chg (hits.) Hgh Low Lost Chg.'Fc —A— the Federal Trade Commission .. ,, conduct the investigation. Reps. | Peter W. Rodina, D-N.J., andji-hem repre-j William T. Cahill, R-N.J., who] sents a bitter I originally pressed for an invest!-' human tragedy | gation, said it should be con-iandan jnexcus-l ducted by the Judiciary Com-! able economic| mjttee. waste.” * * * The tragedy!^,™ Cahill said he thought the jyjg \5.astpP:»i^ committee could do a quicker, under-1. more effective job, and Rodino j j. "'(-unnifF shou d be brought under federal message to Congress straight month to a surprising skilled and unskilled is. bad regulation. president Johnson high 4.3 per 'cent of the labor enough, but it is likely to persist ,. . ------- , The subcommittee divided eoexistence of job force, the highest percentage and even grow as the economy M 55?t to 2 on the recommendation that ^g^ggpips ggj jtiie workers un- in two years. \ continues to mechanize and au- ........ . ■ ■ ■ " ■ SIGNIFICANCE OF hVcRES thus \ , nate much of hand labor. Compared with some other postwar years this percentage CYBERNATION still.might be viewed as rpla-i If you need a reminder, try tively healthy, but like the shiny to recall the hundreds of pick, red apple, the outer layers may .shovel and rake men needed to have to be peeled to reveal the build a road in the 1930s. Corn-core. pare that picture with 1967, Probing into this 4.3 per cent when a few men clustered figure reveals that joblessness around a few machines can do - .-,6.,.,:,. ...... ....... 'among wliitc collar workers re-the .same work. said it would also be le.'jS ex- pcpggt unem- mained at 2.5 per cent, but that 'n,g fact is that unskilled la- , pensive. . ipioyment statistics. At the very for every other category of fjor. no matter how willing and FAVORED PLAN iffme skilled workers were de-worker unemployment was adaptable, is just about the i A study by the FTC was fa-manding and getting higher greater than the over all aver-most difficult commodity to sell ivored by Chairman Emanuel wages, the unskilled found it age. in'the marketplace. It is utterly jCeller, DiNiY., and Reps. Wil-1 harder even to find jobs. * * * defenseless in a recession. And lliam M. McCulloch. R-Ohio andi * * * Among blue collar workers ft jg sinking relatively lower on' I Jack B. Brooks, D-Tex. j situation has produced a , the percentage rose to 4.9 from fhe social and economic scale as „ ...... ..! Paul Rand Dixon, chairman ^ p^gp 45 service workers to 5.5 from more people develop, skills. ’4 slv! s!'1 5i'?!T ’‘jot the Federal Trade CommisM gj^’g ^j,g most'5.1, and nonfarm laborers to 9.2 ★ ★ * 312 683/4 li'' 67V, estimated in the s^»ipgaterially comfortable workersifrom 8.1 Negro unemplo.vment- Month after ihonth the unem- "" the world has seen. 1 skilled and unskilled combined—pigy-ment statistics give im- mutable evidence that the best intentions of government and corporate officials to provide jobs are doomed to frustration unless abilities are developed Tell Decision | Week's Auto Production 20 52V4 51’/, 51’/. -'. study that such an mvestigation^^ 4‘i,2l.’t.2l & t!;;’lby his agency would cost $i.s! the world has seen. .S'* .t??'i i-i million and take two yqars. | Romney Will j Chrysler Wolkouts Lov/et i Business, no matter what is said, cannot long tolerate arty make -work projects without profits being damaged and stockholders howling. Its obliga- of Detroit Site hittROIT lAPk-walkouts at in loee. November product 'Chrysler Corp. forced auto pro- rose to 219,842. LANSING (AP)-'Gnv. George duction down this week, despite-i All but two of Ford's a.ssem- tion is to upgrade the skills of Romney will return to a famil- the resumption of production at bly plants were scheduled to re- its workers in the name of prod-iar .site Nov. 18 to announce'Ford after the end of its 60-day sumc operations tliis week, uclion, rather than to down-whether he will seek the 1968 strike by the United Auto Work-'while at Chrysler, walkouts had grade its requirements, for the Republican presidential nomina- ers, said Automotive News, the closed six of the firm's .seven sake of charity, tion.' trade publication, Thur.sday, assembly plants by Thursday, His office confirmed Thurs-‘ ft said the industry .scheduled. day reports that Romney will iqq oyQ ggps (his week, com announce his presidential in- pared with 14.3,129 la.st week-tentions at the Veterans Me- gg^ 194 379 m the same week a morial Building in Detroit, yggp ggg where he announced his first ★ ♦ * candidacy ter g^overn^or in 1962. „ . u J 1 1- I J tion rose to 6,155,686, compared » S; + Z”n™re.'nLnee at «3.3.34 ,n the same .span 68 557-. 551/4 553/4 T 3/a building on Nov. 18. ' , - 44 444. 45 I governor told a news /' .........'A I conference last Friday that he 1 *1 t’s-lwould hold a tneeting in Michi- New Hearings on Rail Merger! gan on Nov. 18, to “announce whether or not I will run.” The announcement is expected to cap a-midmorning meeting to which some 600 key Republicans reportedly haw been invited. Stocks of Local Interest REHABILITATION ATTEMPTS These, then, are some of the •onsiderations behind the Job ps and behind .various attempts to rehabilitate the ghettoes. They are the motivations behind concepts such as the guaranteed income and the reverse income tax, which WASHINGTON lUPli — The would assure every citizen a Supreme Court ordered new rni'nimal income,’ hearings Dec. 4 on the pro-i These statistics also are evi- posed merger of the Pennsyl- dence that despite the good in- vania and New York Central .tentions of government and pri- • Railroad^ yesterday after;vate enterprise, the concentra-blocking a lower court decision tion of unemployment among allowing the immediate merger the lowest income groups re-of the two lines. ' mains one of the nation’s most The high court, in an un- frustrating and explosive social .signed order,, stayed the effect problems. Chop sue.v got away from, a of '4 34V4 3,4 27% 27% 27’/a 1 19 19 19 -F- 38 85V4 8.S 85V4 27 20% 20% 20Va n 5OV4 49% 50 , 16 36 35% 35% ) 70% 70 70% I 31% 31% 31% I 34% 34 34 I 29% 29% 29% I 47 46% 47 I 22% 22% 22%-.J 20% 20Va 20% ‘ 75 39% 39V4 39% .64 104 66% 66% 66% f79 34% 33% 33% .60 30 29% 29'/4 29% I 30 34% 34 3434 ,70 130 96% 953/h 96's Oa 1 49Va 49Va 49’'a 0 9 39% 39% 39% irate pius s-wurv dividend, c—Liquidating j ! dividend. d-^Declared °p yg^r^ i j?*'^ Payahle'^in^stock i ■di^hbufion date, g—Declared^ stock dividend or s I—Declared,« woman's car, consequmtly, got arRiimmts on the largest, pro-far has succeeded among the awav from her causing an ac- posed merger in corporate his- thousands, whereas the problem cidcnl nn Dixie Highway-at Sil- lory. is one involving millions, ver Lake Road in W'alorford irkdown or Townshikp. ^ Bid Asked Thelma 1.. Lynch, 85. of 208 * ' Granf told town.ship police that j, 19 4 ' 20 4 a pan of chop sucy nn the * 26 2 IV scat of her car began to .spill !+< and. as she grabbed it, her ’ 30 J 3+2 auto struck a car driven by By ROGER E. SPEAR of the broker and the broker ” 7 ” r Dianne H. Mortimer, 2.8, of Q — I have $1,500 which my sends his check to me, some-' '7* ’T] 6481 W a 1 d 0 n, Independence fiance suggests I invest in times after considerable delay. 3) 32 jownship. ' strong growth stocks such as. —E. L. ?2'’i *Tb8 * * * Utton Industries, Xerox Corp. ^ q-pp^e are onlv two rea- ls h 20 26 Mrs. Mortimer was stopped and Control Data. I have ^.ggj, g broker should put '902 'IM ® light at the in-; never bought stock and won- ygg,. jg ,f,jg ggg^g q-bg 7 76 8 48 tersection, police said. .She was der if you recommend these fj^gi required, the second is \Im 1m2 not injured. stocks ter investment.—R. M. opponal with u.se. If you have 1034 The Lynch woman is listed j $1,500 rep- a margin account, all slocks, in fair ^conditioh at Pontiac p^g^g^g yggp (g(g| savings, part must be held in the broker’s ' , at least belongs where it is. name. Only in this way can he Xerox is an excellent stock, utilize the shares on which he .selling at a vepy high' multiple, is tending you money. At your > 'The same can be said of Con- option, the broker may — pnly trol Data, one of the fastest if in.structed by you — hold growing companies in the elec- your stocks in his name for General Hospital. Treasury Position Business Notes iwith div '^Ip-Paid •, dividend omitted.- ( Occident ,80b 689 1163 ^ OhioEdis 1............. • Z C»&E - ?? OklaNGs 1 • OlinMat 1.8 Pac G El 1 40 '/• Pac Llg 1.50 'A Pac Pet I5g 'A PaePwL 1.20 stock dividend, t $ 6.527,194,357.68 • ts Fiscal Year Jul 49,435,529.036.77 63,639,417,204.96 5,468,132,556. 47,501,436,531,96 58,798,759,549.76 » 16% 16% . PacTAT ^ PanA^ul 1.3U % Pan Am .40 % Panh EP 1.60 V4,ParkeOav la p|nnDlx'".6o” I2,90i 490,704.54 Eludes $260,995,967.97 ) statutory limit. be^ng reorganized i^der the Bankri Act, or securities assumed by such panies. fn-Foreign Issue suMect t( terest equalization tax. 26 22’/4 22% 22V4 Accidents injured about 50 million Americans in 1966 and cost, the nation about $20 billion. .... 67 0 87 8 Day 67 0 87,7 Ago 67.1 88.3 ______I Ago 68.2 90.4 ■Year Ago 71.2 91.0 1967 High 73.0 95.6 196> Low "* Mortenson of 33900 ^ Braebnry, Ridge, r.irn data-processing field, convenience in trading. If you I nomoH ^ Kach of the.se stocks I regard have no margin account and as good, but they are volatile have not instructed your broker and 1 would not chase them at to pul your shares in his name, current high, levels. Litton has he is in error. Tell him you a line record, seems more rca- want ytjiir certificates delivered .sonably priced than the others to you in yonr name and J’rn and y/Hi might please your fi- sure he will do so at once, ance by putting $1,009 into'this (To order Roger Spear’s 48-issue. page Investment Guide semi r-. * ★ ★ $1.00 to Roger E. Spear, care ............. Q—Under what conditions are of The Pontiac Press, Box 1618, October 1965 stocks bought by me placed in Grand Central Station, New has been named vice 'president of the Vickers 341,071,828,312 27 127,172,128,081.80 Q j y j ,; | O 11 of .....’ .................Sperry Rand (Tirp. Mortenson has %'”*^o'’"'”o served as gen-utii. Fgn. L.Yd ^gg] giariager of 90 0 ' ’Is ??,?■ the-Vickers Mo-800 9^1 82 5 Hydraulics MORTENSON 8+2 9+3 85 6 Division since 79 5 10+4 88.9 79,2 90 4 83,7 'iVHe joined the firm in 19.56. ’ 1956. the name of the broker? DivL York, N Y. 10017.) dends are issued in the name * (Copyright, 1967) D—4 THE PONTIAC PljESS, FRIDAV. NOVEMBER 10, 1967 Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Ar^s Armed-Theft Exam Is Slated William Birkhahn William Galpin I was a life member of Milford Lodge No. 165, F & am. Service for former Pontiac HOLLY - William Galpin, 79,j Surviving is a daughter, Mrs. resident William Birkhahn. 81, of 313 Sherwood, died this morn-Freeda Loehr of Milford: four of Royal Oak will be 1 p.m. ing. grandchildren; and 10 great- Monday at tfie Kinsey-Garret His body is at the Dryer Fu-grandchildren. ^ Funeral Home, Royal Oak, with neral Home, burial in Perry Mount Park County's School Unit Votes to Join COG Area Man Charged in! Oakland Schools. Interme-1son announced that the interme-j Waterford Shooting diate District Board of Educa- diate district will get a $1035 tion yesterday unanimously vot- million federal vocation educa- Cemetery, Pontiac. John N. Guest at the fonner Hudson Motor Co I ^ gg g^^ Detroit died Wednesday. A „ g member of Metroiwhtan Meth-igpgj.^,g_(j|.jjfjjj puneral Home, odist Church in Detroit he wasjp^jjjjjg^. a life member of Trinity Lodge, cemetery. | 502. F&AM, and the Rice Bible ^ i ^ I An Avon Township man has Mrs. John J. Patterson arrested in connection with , IMLAY CITY - Service for Mrs. John J. (Ethel) Patterson, 68, of 729 N. Fairground will be 2:30 p.m. Sunday at St. Paul’s Lutheran Church. Burial will be in Imlay Township Cemetery. Mrs. Patterson, a former Class of his church. Motor Division employe, d i e d Surviving are his wife, Grace the armed robbery of a Waterford Township gasoline station last month in which the attendant was shot with a revolver. Charged with the armed robbery of Don’s Gulf Service, Pontiac Lake at Watkins Lake Road, Oct. 12 is David H. Gall- schoolteacher, died Wednesday. Surviving besides her husband asKster; and a brother. - are his wife Eva"''" « May meyer, 21. of 580 Utah. surviving are nu wite iLva, ^.,y, * ♦ * Leonard G. Gracey Fdward ofBrooks, of Avon Town- xhe suspect will appear be- ,or U-o»rd C. Gra|a£:"„rcha^^ ,- " ’ Ernest Priestley ccy 26, of 285 S. Marshall wilWjilt and Harold of Pontiac; two be if) a.m. tomorrow at Trinity [daughters, Mrs. Genevieve Baptist Church with burial in [Sleeper of Toledo, Ohio, and Oak Hill Cemetery bv the Davis- Mrs. Joyce Townsend at home: Cobb Funeral Home. Mr. Gracey, an employe of Pontiac Motor Division died Wednesday. He. was a member of Trinity Church. Surviving are his wife, Brenda; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Coley Gracey II: two sisters. a brother: a - sister; 21 grandchildren; and a great-grandchild. Mrs. Aurel Murg WIXOM - Mrs. Aurel (Eda) Murg, 73, of 3015 Maganser HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP -Service for Ernest Priestley, 78, of 1085 Garden will be 1 p.m. Monday at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial wiU be in Grand Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. Priestley, a s u p e r i h-tendent of cemeteries, died yesterday. tice Kenneth Hempstead for his [ preliminary examination Dec. 7. He stood mute at his arraign-!■ ment. Bond was set a $1,000. Township police said $116 was taken in the holdup. SHOT IN SHOULDER Ex-VP Garner Laid to Rest UVALDE, Tex. (AP) - John Humphrey joined several hmi-Nance Gamer, former vice dred other mourners as they president and speaker of the stood in the sticky, cold mud U.S. House of Representatives, and repeated the Lord s Pray-was buried Thursday beneath a er for the man who twice tried big mimosa tree on the outskirts to be the first U.S. president of his home town. from Texas. Vice President Hubert H. Garner died Tuesday, 'ed 'to join the controversi- tion matching-fund construction al Southeast Michigan Council of Governments (COG). Joining this voluntary organization of governmental and school units within a six-county area for coordinated planning will cost the board $2,400 year. Board members said they believe COG will particularly help school bodies, and they ex-pre^ssed concern that other bodies have refused to join. In other business, the board amended salary schedules for teachers with master and bachelor degrees to remain competitive with new schedules in local districts. Teachers of homebound, train-able and physically handicapped children and speech and hearing consultants will be paid j according to the following The attendant, Rundin Borge,[schedule: 68, of 131 Oneida was shot in ★ * .the shoulder by a lone bandit. | Master’s degree range - $7,-of Pontiac and Franklin K. He was not seriously injured. [000 to $11,300 in 11 steps in-Home, Walled Lake. of Clyde; a daughter, Mrs. Eliz-j * * ★ stea^ of $6,700 to $11,200. adopt- Surviving besides hOr husband abeth Lynch of Highland; eight Borge told police the bandit by the board in August, are two sons, Earl of Detroit grandchildren; four great-grand took him to the station, hit him Efachelor’s degree range— and Fred of Santa Ana, Calif.; children; and a brother. on the head with the revolverj$6,300 to $10,200 in ITsteps in- one daughter, Mrs. George and ordered him to lie on the i stead of $6,200 to $9,600. Giblin of Belleville; one sister; Mrs. Carl A. Thorsberg[ floor, and six grandchildren. grant. The funds will be used for construction of four vocational education centers in Oakland County. Site locations of the centers are being studied by an eight-member committee of school superintendents. * * ★ Oakland Sphools received a $675,000 federal grant under 'K-tle 3 of the Elementary Secondary Education Act to set up a pilot mathematics course for noncollege aspiring students. PANEL ROLE Board members George W. Coombe urged that the board’s Citizens Advisory Committee on Special Education take a more active role in overseeing cial education programs. r * =.nH Mr. rTvc Iv yesterday. Her body is at surviving are two sons, Allen brothers, t:oley Gracey III, Thomas, Jakies L.. Donald’, Michael and Ro^er, all of Pontiac. William L. Wogensen Service for William L. Wogensen, 74, of 94 Norton will be Monday from the Koyen Funeral Home in Metuchen, N.J. His body will be taken there tomorrow night by the Sparks-Griffih Funeral Home. Mr.. Wogensen died Tuesday. Surviving is his wife. Hazel. Stephen A. ,. ^cColl MILFORD — Service for Stephen A. McColl, 89, of 314 S. Main ttiill be 1 p.m. Sunday WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Mrs. Carl A. (Mary E.) Thorsberg, 68, of 7230 Walnut Lake will be 1 p.m. Monday at C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor, Burial will be in Oakland Hills at Richardson-Bird F u n e r a 1 Memorial Cemetery, Novi. -------- , Home. Burial will be in Oak-j Mrs. Thorsberg died yester- Mr. Wogensen was a member|grovg Cemetery. A Masonic|day. she was a member of the of the Presbyterian Church in f^g^pg^ial service will be 8 p.m.' Walled Lake Woman’s .Society Perth Amboy. N_J., and Ma- fg^^g^row at,the funeral home, 'of Christian Service, the Walled .sonic Lodge and Shrine in New McColl, a self-employed Lake Civic Club and the Inter-' Jersgy. ........... I Administration of the hallu-| cinogenic drug LSD to pregnant! rats in a recent experiment resulted in a high percentage' of stillborn, stunted young and doctors believe this may also be an effect of LSD taken byj , Supt. Dr. 'william J. Emer-' pregnant women.____________ town Detroit, tiuee hack al mght. Guaranteod work and home time arrivals. Longest time: 1 hour from Poidiac, leus from intor- i mediiifo points. (Boat that by rar!) Comniutimj Grand Trunk -'o;l . less than drum quicker, no strain! V'hy diivo'-’ Call Grand ' Trunk Western'* Pa .sti gcr Sales Olt.ce, 9e.-- PphO. GRAND TRUNK WESTERN James H. Ghapman Police Action MILFORD TOWNSHIP-Serv-Ice for James H. Chapman, 69,' of 359 Granda Vista will be 101 a m. Saturday at the Highland, Methodist Church, Highland. ™ Pontiac police officers Burial will be in Grand Lawn - Oakland County sher-Cemetery, Detroit, by Richard- deputies investigated son-Bird Funeral Home, M 11-ford. Mr. Chapman, a timekeeper for Packard Motor Co., died Wednesday. He was a life member of the Wolverine Encamp-[ ment No. 163,1.O.O.F., and Milford Rebekah Lodge No. 511. Surviving besides his wife, Lillie B., are three sisters. plumber, died Wednesday. He igkes Garden Club. 1 Surviving besides her husband J are four daughters, Mrs. Har-" :!ley H. Chamberlain of Orchard 'Lake, Mrs. John Martuziewicz of ! Waterford Township, Mrs. Jean I Thorsberg of Birmingham and ' Mrs. William H. Glover of Con- Mrs. Ben J. Chase i ROCHESTER - Mrs. Ben J.| (Ava) Chase, 77 6f.,Grand Rapids died today. Her body; will be donated to the University of Michigan Medical School. Mrs. Chase, a masseuse, was a member of the YMCA Red Cross team serving in France during World War I. She was the owner of a nursing home in Rochester from 1947 to 1957. Surviving is a sister. | North County Cancer Group ^ ■ ... *) ' ' ■ Picks Officers ■ John Madole of 2970 Lacota, Waterford Township, has beeal elected president of the North' County Unit of the Michigan ^ Cancer Foundation at an annual meeting of the board of trUvStees" recently. | Also elected were Dr. G. S. Buchanan of 15318 Riviera Shores, Holly, vice president; Mrs. Thomas Seavey Sr. of 1821 Rattalee Lake Road, Holly, second vice president; and Mrs. ^ol Newhouse of 44 ' Mohawk, i secretary., Others elected include Mrs. Philip L, Francis Sr. of 1663 Kingsmere Circle, Rochester, treasurer; and Dr. John J. Mar-, ra of 1430 Nakomis, Orion! Township, unit representative to the foundation board. New. board members are Mrs. | Newhouse and Dr. Peter Duha-j mel of 444 W: University, Roch-j ester. | Certificates of appreciation [ were awarded to seven persons J who worked, with the foundation. PRESIDENT’S ADDRESS Br. Michael J. Brennan, pres-/ident of the Michigan Cancer Ebundation, spoke on “The Challenge and Change in the Foundation” reminding the unit volunteers that the Detroit area is destined to become one of the four great metropolitan areas on the North American Continent and it is our duty to develop one of the finest cancer rese^ch centers in the U.S. 63 reported incidents the past 24 hours. A breakdown of causes for police action: Arrests—7 Vandalisms—6 Burglaries—4 Larcenies—14 Auto thefts—1 Bicycle thefts—1 Disorderly persons—5 Assaults—9 Obscene phone calls—1 •Property damage accidents—8 Injury accidents—5 Attempted armed robbery-1 Armed robbery—1 cord, Calif.; two sons, Carl A. Jr. of Milford and A. Delbert of Germantown, Tenn.; a sis-[ ter; three brothers, including: Harry Cox of Birmingham; and 12 grandchildren. Charles Travis | LAPEER — Service for! 'Charles Travis, 93, of 2200 W. I Oregon will be 1:30 p.m. Sunday at Muir Brothers Funeral I Home. Burial will be in Memphis Cemetery, Memphis. Mr. Travis, a retired gas station operator, died yesterday, j I Surviving are two sons, GrantI I of Clifford and Eldon of Romeo; ‘ two stepsons, Altamont Ellis of Northville and Austin Ellis of; Kalamazoo; three grandchil-| children; and three great-grandchildren. Find the Largest Selection of Magnavox Stereo at WKC ... at Factory-Direct Prices Stereo FM-AM Radio-Phono Stereo sound was never better than on these magnificent consoles! You can enjoy glorious music on the exclusive Micromatic Record Player with diamond stylus and the stereo FM-AM radio with Automatic Frequency Control to prevent FM station drift. Housed In authentically-crafted fine furniture cabinets you'll be proud to own. YOUR CHOICE of 3 00050 styles 29850 No Money Down 3 Years to Pay "The Rapallo" Italian Provincial in distressed walnut, 45" long. PARK FREE In WKCs Lot at Rear of Store - OPEN FRIIMY and MONDAY NIGHTS ’til 9 ...especially when you buy your new '68 car It's great to own a '681 The new models incorporate more safety features than ever before. And when you finance your car through a credit union, you not only get safety in the car but safety for yoUr fomily. ' Qu^fied credit union members receive life insurance at no extfa cost. You also save money bn low C.U. rotes. You see, credit union rates\>re clear cut. A credit union is in business to help its members, It is owned by its m.embers and there's no point in Copyright 1967, Michige charging yourself high Interest rates. That's why a credit union offers advantages you find nowhere else. Go aheod. Buy that new '68 you've set your heart on. And for low-cost financing, see yoUr credit union. It's the smortest mbve a car buyer can make. If you are not a member and would like more iriforma-tion, contact the Credit Union where you work or the One in your porish or call 332-9193 It pays to save or borrow at your credit union THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 D—5 Ruling Tuesday in Murder Case Trial of Woman in Stepson's Death Ends Two Armed Robberies Are Probed Pontiac Div. Hit on Statements Wayne Anable, president of UAW LOCAL 653, today charged ^ontiac Motor officials with making misleading statements concerning the union’s 24-hour strike. “Pontiac Motor very well knows that the strike was legal and authorized by the international union executive board,” said Anable. The 12-compIalnts number that management refers to is “These ,12 complaints were a summary of what management knows contains approximately grievances and 500 demands, plus false information relayed to the international union by management which was later retracted.” * ★ ♦ Anable said that, as of this date, approximately six de- Pontiac police are investigating two armed robberies com-The guilt or Innocence of a mitted last night and early this Bloomfield Township woman ac- morning, cused of fatally beating her 3-j * ★ * year-old stepson will be decided! a lone bandit reportedly Tuesday by Oakland County Cir- armed with an automatic pistol cuit Judge Frederick C. Ziem. [held up a service station at-Ziem set the date for return- jendant about 3:24 a.m. today Ing the verdict at the conclusion and escaped with between $200 yesterday of the second-degree and $300, police said. murder trial of Mrs. William . , ,.j - ............ (Irene) Lukes 23 of 1147 Dor- another incident, a bandit misleading to the public,” he Chester. robbed the owner of the Ameri- added. ■ . . can Lodging House, 461 S. Sag- Charged with the Jan 31 death ,75 about 7:15 of her stepson, William, Mrs. yesterday. Lukes had waived a jury trial. . ,. , Walter Crick, 19, told police During the three-day trial, on- ^gs working in the Clark ly circumstantial evidence was gtgygn_ 157 Auburn, when otferdd by Asst. Prosecutor g ^g^ the gtgUgn John Davey that Mrs. Lukes gg^j asked to use the phone, was responsible for the boy’s, ★ * * I He th^n drew the weapon ana * * !demanded money, police wer. No witnesses were introduced told. Crick said the bandit made mands have been settled satis-who saw the alleged beating. “ j him walk to the corner of Park-factorily to both parties. ^ MFDICALTESTIMONY hurst and Chandler where Onion officials, he said met Davey said, however that ^nck turned over the money, with management about 60 medical testimony revealed; DESCRIPTIONS , times ?ince July 7, said Anable. that the skull fracture which| The bandit was described as .. caused the boy’s death was not Negro, about 25 years old, and ^g^ member- the type that might occur in a between 145 and 150 pounds and ^ ^ demands and the un- fall during a child's normal ac-was wearing a black hat tivities. black trench coat. The car g^^gj^ ggg_ gg^ Defense attorney William ^^^i^^hed as being a 1965 to g^^ in.advised.” I,ang said that the presecu- 1967 dark blue Chevrolet with tion had faUed to prove its case a dented left front fender. The beyond a reasonable doubt. left headlight was not working, ■ . . Crick said. "The case is here in court but It shouldn’t be, Lang told I" ‘he other robbery, police Ziem “It didn’t even justify the are seeking a Negro male be* Issuance of a warrant. ‘ween 26 and 30 years old, about, -k -k * 5 feet 4 and 125 pounds. He was “There is nothing substantial,wearing a blue wool jacket and or concrete about the case,”, a dark hat, witnesses said. said Lang. ’'‘The death has not| The woman owner of the WASHINGTON!^— been coupled with any crirni-: lodging house and another worn-announc^ today its nality. !an attendant said he came to •■It appears that the prosecu- the house asking for a room, better pro tor may have flipped a coin, * * ★ tection against blowouts at high to decide who it was going -to^ speed. 2 Standards for Tire Safety Announced rharcp - the husband or the ^ When told there was room ‘one standard will require that charge ine nusoana 01 ^ , available, he left “to get some-next Ian 1 laboratorv wife” he said, “since both were j^jgg ^g^„« after next Jan. 1 laboratory in the house within the 24-hour , tests be conducted tor lire nnrinH that doctors sav the jj,! ^ . Strength, endurance and load «n automatic pistol ,, m, ^______________•----------1'demanded money from the own:, manufacturers must provide er. She gave him about $75, she tread-wear indicators which rhanl*'^ith*S»ibr«iih, rtntiac Sta i, Harold E. SInkler. Richard Ballei Boarsma, Herbert Hirsth, Jami Pointer, William Cox, Dons Robot and to all persons Interested, :e: That the roll of the Special A ment heretofore made by the Ci (ssor for the purpose of defrayif PSH Walkout Is Averted as I Talks Okayed will show when the tire has been worn to a thickness of one-sikteenth of an inch. Death Notices BIRKHAHN, WILLIAM; November B, 1967; 2907 Crooks Road, Royal Oak; (formerly of Pontiac); age 81; beloved husband of Grace Birk-hahn; dbar brother Mr«. Pii* Schnellbecher and ^gperal servlet _______ November 13. a. . . at the Kinsey-Garrett F u n e i . Mr, Blrkhahn w husbai^ of Lillie B, Chapman; also survived by three sisters. Funeral service vyill be held Satur-daVf November 11, at 10 a.m. at the Highland Methodist Church, Highland. Interment In Grand Lawn Cemetery, Datroit. Mr. Chapman will If- GRACEY, LEONARD GERALD; November 8, 1967; 385 South Marshall; age 26; beloved husband of Brenda Ruth Gracey; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Colev Gracey II; dear Mother of Mrs. Beverly Ells-Lar^y, Donald, Michael, Roger and Coley Gracey.^HL Funeral service will be held Saturday. November 11, at 10 a. m. at the Trinity Baptist Church. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Gracey will He In state at the Davis-Cobb Funeral GUEStTToTiN NETCTl^^ember 9, 1967; 344 Newton Drive, Lake Orion; age 63; .. " - ‘.ock; di husband of Townsend, cnaries a., m a r o i a. Staff Sgt. John W„ and Tech Sgt. PHwj^rd Guest; dear brother Dora Nichols and Charles jest; also sur,vlved by 21 grand-lildren and one great-grandchild, jneral service will be held Sat- chi Fur.._. urday, Novi______ ... - the SparksGriffin Fur iber 11. iffin F_______ ______ Eastlawn Cemetery, LOWTHER, BUSTER G.; Novel 8, 1967; 910 Williams Lake h state at the tuner; 1967; 3265 Or Horse Assdcla- S ; November 8, 3rd Lake Road, age 66; belied u ur iiieiriid L. Mdson; dear of Mrs. Jerred W. (Carol immel, Mrs. James A. (Jo-) Johnson and Mrs, Robert srlene) Lynch; dear brother isel L., Arthur und Waller Sr.; also survived by nine rvice d Saturday, November m. at the C. J. God-ral Home, Keego Her-ment In Pine Lake McCOLL, STEPHEN A.; November 8, 1967; 314 South M6in, Mlltord; age 89; dear father of Mrs. Freeda Loehr; also survived by four grandchildren and 10 great-grand- the Rlchardson-Birc Milford. Fun$ held Sunday, in Oakgrove Milford. ..Funer* vemtS- U. at neral home. Inti_________ Cemetery, Milford. Mr. McColl ownshlp); age 68; beloved v City; (torn- ....-hip); age 6* f John J. Patters of William Patterson; dear sister of Mrs. Gladys Brooks. Mrs. Mabel Shaw, Bryan and William Sells. Funeral service will be held Sunday. November 12, at 2:30 p.m. at the St. Paul's Lutheran Church, imiay City. Intel*;"*"* imiai/ mship Cemetery ......... ,,.c ie, 225 Main n state a , Imlay City, i Manufacturers will also have jto provide labeling information I [on size, maximum permissible j pressure, maximum load rating ! I and number of plies., i 1 The other standard requires ' that cars made after next ------------- , A possible employes’ strike at ^1 have a permanent l Pontiac State Hospital and 16 glove compartment - ° OLOA BARKEL.EV. lother stat^ mental hospitals was j'’! adverted yesterday when state ""^^nded tire size, inflation ------------------------------ H . J- u pressure for maximum load and NOTICE OF HEARING ON NECESSITY Otfiaals agreed to discuss prob- Rpatinp ranacitv AND INTENTION TO CONSTRUCT „-,u ■ • designation Seating Capacity. s\^n‘?tary SEWER m DEARBORN lems with complaining em- requires that when a ihi'''a.mmfsUon\’ D c. . . .. tire loses ptessure rapidly, such ih.Vitv oi Pontiac, Pontiac state employes have g^ jg g blowout, the rim be ca- of employe short- p^bie of retaining the tire to a fn“ D«rK RoaTiromSafrview 3 petition sciit )o State gjgp gg Hiiles an hour. m«*o.oo,**«nS'‘ma*\re p*a'??%*rofnr8nd,^^^ and Other mental The standards were the first for tires under the National itrloroveTOnr in'%ccordan« Robert Grosvenor, director of Traffic and Motor Vehicle Sa^ cos?’thereof ***?*'Local 658 of the State Employes ‘y Act of 1966. .rror ,nn n ron BO sgjj problcms of work lend Tow 5, High-ir fath- thal IJ9.70e.00 ot .’IsiM^orThe I pressing at state hospitals in _____ ______ aVd'*co?t Snd | PoDtiac, CaTo, Lapeer, Howell sewag?*DHposaV’lm^ Fund, j and Mount Pleasant. "NOTieE IS HEREtfY'GWBN;... PoT,tia'c.’AAVhirn?wiii Vit Union members had planned rt'eo"io?kT,m.%SVa?TgMst& Walk out Of the Caro Hospi-“n'tertsted !** tal for Eplleptlcs and were con- NoV.'*To,'i9«7 NOTICE OF HEARING ON NECESSITY AND INTENTION TO CONSTRUCT SANITARY SEWER.IN KENNETT ROAD You are hereby notified that at a regular meeting of the Commission of the City of Pontiac, Michigan held ‘ dared to b , 1967, by the Dowagiac Daily Wins 3 Awards GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - The Dowagiac Daily News took ... -, , three of a possible five awards sidering strikes at other state g^ ^he annual awards banquet of hospitals, Grosvenor s^aid. Michigan League of Home n U711- u * .1 J- Uailies Thursday night. Dr. William H. Anderson, di- ★ * ★ rector of the Mental Health! Dowagiac Publisher David Department, said his depart-! Hayhow accepted the top ment is trying to do everything awards for general excellence, ,nstmcrsa itarv sewe? relieve the Situation, t y p o g r a,p h y and advertis- work loads cannot be | ing among newspapers with cir- Rssessmer that all t fronting i from Dea red cost of $4,560.l», and that iroflle and estimate of said Irr is on file for public Inspectlor Iher intended fo construct sal ■nt In accordance with th ie and estimate, and that th »f shall be defrayed by sped; according to frontage an the tots and parcels of tan )on south side of Kennett Roa born Road to Hbllywood Avi t district cut immediately. eulations under 6,000. NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT na,ova wwit and expenses thereof — expenses^thereo? shall'^bc''pald llIfnT *he sewage^ ms^psallrnpr^^^^^^^^^ That Ihe Commission of the Olty ot Pontiac, MIchiaan, will meet In the Commission Chamber on November 21, 1967 at 8 o'clock p.m. to bear suggestions and oblections that may be made by partie interested. W.O. 8317 Deted- November 8. 1967 OLGA BARKELEY, City Cler Nov. 10, 196 “You must realize our (financial) means are limited,” An- . . . . „ ,,,,, Little, Gdorge Helzer. Mrs. Ira S. Hul- derson wrote Grosvenor. “We slander, James C.^ Langford, joe Wayne aro fanarl u/ith trs.incr in /in a I tal^''no?i’ce^^Thal Assessment detrayim) that J,„.c V/F HEARING ON NECESSITY AND INTENTION'TO CONSTRUCT SIDEWALK ON BENNETT COURT You are hereby notified that at a regular meeting ot the Commission of the City of Pontiac, Michigan held November 7, 1967 by resolution it was declared to b# the Intention ot the City Commission to construct sidewalk on the south side of Bennett Court from Baldwin Avenue to 119 feet west at an estimated cost ot tmoo, and that the plan, profile and estimate ot said Improvement Is on are faced with trying to do ajalT 'iTerions’interesTed, take big job with less workers than i!S?e'made'S5 Ihl'c'wTssessor t^^ we had last year.” ' ?osT“whfch ‘'Vhe'’'' vember 11 at 1 pspn. at the St. Matthew's Lutheran C'h u r c h. Walled Lake with Pastor Law- in"'Glen"’Eden 'cemetVv" Zacha^ will lie in slate at Ihe 56-year-old Madison! Heights woman was injured yesterday morning in a car accident on Weymouth near Cooley Lake in West Bloomfield Township. ★ * * Listed in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital is 'Katherine G. Wilson. ★ * ★ Pontiac State Police said the Wilson woman’s car veered off the road" and struck a tree after she lost control of the vehicle while making a left turn. NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMtNT Sanitary Sewer on Bay Street TO: Alonzo J. Halmbaugh Jr., Roy L lailey, Hazen S. Reynolds, Mr. Thomas toward C. Tolbert, R. Grittin and D _atlin, Manley E. Young, Daniel Wilson John W. DImon, Myrtle M. Snyder, Johi ■■ Snyder, Mr. Mattingly, Herman am Milk prodetion improves during thp summer when bams are fully air conditioned, agr' cultural engineers have found, Ike notice: That the roll ot the . .ssessment heretofore made by Inc ciy Assessor for the purpose of defrayinq .....---. which the Commis- Should be paid and borne by ______ —..ssment for the construction of Sanitary Sewer on Bay Street from North end of Street to Locke Street Is now on file In my office for public Inspection. Notice Is also hereby given mat , the Commission and the Assessor ot the City of Pontiac, will meet In the Commission Chamber In said City, on the 21st day of November, A.D. 1967,'' at 8 o'clock P.M.-to review said assessment, at which time and place opportunity will be giveb all persons interested to be beard. Dated: November », 1967 W.O. 8307 OLGA BARKELEY, City Clerk Nov. 18, 1J67 To Buy, Rent, Sell or Trade Use Pontiac Press WANT ADS 'office. Hours: 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. Cancellation Deadline 9 d.m. Day Following First Insertion ' BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there > were replies at The Press j I Office in the following ^ ; boxes: k BRIDE TO BE? WEDDING photography by Professional Free brochure. 338-9079, anytli 'AVON CALLING'I-FOR SERVICE ■N YOUR HOME. FE 6-0439. GUINN'S BANQUET HALL - Business meeting, parties end reception facilities. Accommodating 225. Call 334-7677 -...... JSTI LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY WITH Dex-A-Dlet Tablets. Only 98 cents Bt Simms Bros. Drugs. ROBERTS INTERNATIONAL DEM- lowest possible price. Call FE 2-16B4._____________________ TELEPHONE WAKE-UP SERVICE. 332-1572._________^__________ Funeral Directors 4 COATS FUNfeRAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS_________67F0461 DONELSON-JOHNS "Designed for Funeral Huntoon SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtful Service" FE 8-9288 Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME. 332-8378 Cme^ry Lots ^ * WHITE CHAPEL Persono|s made bread, gilts, toys and Chrisl- GET out 6f“DEBT“DITa ' PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM .YOU CAN AFFORD , TAUrtRED TO YOUR INCOME SEE MICfjIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bldg, FE 8-M56 2-5122 before 5 p.m UPLAND HILLS FARM jrse-drawn hey rides, pony -ellcious food from farm kl____ Admission and tour, 25c. Rides and food extra. FAMILY VISITS Sl'“ DAYS ONLY 11-6 'TIL NOV. Take Walton E. to A>lams, N. end, follow signs to farm.___ DO YOU HAVE A DEBT PROBLEM? We can help you with a plan you can afford. DEBT CONSULTANTS 2 MALE BEAGLES LOST IN AL-len Rd.-OakIhill Rd. area. 778-7223 or 892-6J85. Detroit. Reward.__ FOUND: SIBERIAN HUSKIE, Help Wonted Mole BOILER OPERATOR fringe ben paid Blue surance. C 54nt°a\'!'FE 8-9H'l','i _ BUMPER-COLLISION^ WORK. EAST Town Collision. SS5 1 Saginaw. » Woodward Avenw CAB DRIVERS, FULL OR PART time. FE 2-020S. CAN YOU SPARE 15 TO 20 HOURS per week? If so, you can earn an average of U per hour. Must have use of car. Call 332-4627, 3- Neil, 391-2557^^______________ CARPENTERS AND E X P E R I-enced apprentices. 625-2928 after 6 p.m.___________________________ CARPENTERS WANTED. GOOD work. Residential and commercial. Sebold and Cage. 642-3333._______ CARPENTERS Over scale to good men. Residential only. C a. B Construction. ' 682-1465 alter 7 P.M. __________ CARPET WAREHOUSE CHRISTMAS HELP WANTED We are accepting applications lor additional day time slock person, el to work part lime from now until Christmas, apply In person, to Century Housewares, 398 Au- COMBTNTrTOtOUM'p'^ND PAINT man, or experienced helper, Pontiac dealership. MY 2-2891. COMBINATION B UM P E R AND CONSTRUCTION ESTIMATING lU may qi 50PERT> LOST: LARGE BLACK CAT BE-tween North Cass Lk. Rd.e and Mark Rd. Child's pet. 681-0260.__ LOST: LEMON AND WHITE EN<5-llsh Pointer, vie, of Pontiac and Crescent Lk. Rd. Reward. 682- 9155.____________________________ LOST SUNDAY, LARGE DARK . 338-9205 or 623- WHITE, ^orange; lair. Bushed tail. Re^ . Orchard Lk. 626-5548. , VICINITY OF MIL-:kory Ridge Rds. Small Mich., 887-5569, Help Wanted Male per week part time. 334-2771, 4 to 8 p.m. today._______________ $40'0-$600“FEE.PArD MANAGEMENT TRAINEES In office, finance, retail, sales Age 21-32, some college INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron___________334-4971 A PART-TIME JOB married man, 21-34, to, wo irs per evening. Call 674-.m. to 8 p.m. tonight. $200 PER MONTH Dwled^ of wood lured with pay based upon previous experience' and ability to progress. Paid holidays, vacation, and hospitalization. 338-7111. ACCOUNTING UNUSUAL OPPOR-tunity to advance in prominent firm. $8900. Call Helen Adams, 334-2471. Snelling 8. Snelling. ^ ADJUSTER-INVESTIGATOR . No experience necessary. Wilt train to become branch manager. ParsiH advancement, outstanding opportunities and employe “ high . school 363-4193. benefits. Must AUTO MECHANIC, EARN OVER $250 per week, benefits, contact Dick. Ferris, Taylor's Chevrolet-OldsmoblJe, Walled Lake, 624-4501 AUTO salesmen SALES MANAGER SPARTAN DODGE » 855 OAKLAND "Auto Porter reliable man wanted, good pay, benefits, excellenh working conditions, Drivers license and ba able to start Immediately. Contact General Manager, SPARTAN DODGE. J55 OaklandAve._______ BRAKE AND FBONT END MECHANIC —Immediate Opening— - —For Qualified Man— . -Good starting Wage- (Efteclive Jan. 1, 1968) Excellent fringe benefits In addition to salary, 5 years experi-•nca in Construction Estimating, jsr Real Property Appraising 6r Assessing Is essential. Some college training may ba substituted dor experience. For .more details or to make applications: Contact: PERSONNEL DIVISION AKLAND COUNTY COURT HOUSE 1200 KL Telegra.h Pontiac BCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ CUTTER-GRINDER •xperienced on HSS and Carbide tools. Top fringes, over time? day shift only. Old Una company, new plant. 689-4793.______________ DESIGNERS & DETAILERS Interested In learning Plastic Inlec-lion Mold 8, Die Design Service, Inc. 2790 Auburn Rd. Pontiac Mlch- gan, 652-3547.___________^___ 3IE MAKER, DIE REPAIR OS small progressive lobs, day shift. A...—..I, Press Products, 185 DISHWASHERS KITCHEN UTILITY holidays. 646-4333.__________ DISHWASHER, MACHINE OPERA-tion, nights, steady work, closed Sundays and Holidays, apply In DOZER-LOADER OPERATOR, EX- DRIVER APPLY 214 W. WALTON. EAR'n $500 AND UP PER MONTH. Standard .Oil "®®'j'^ days!*°Phone *Ma ' 6-2080 or W- 47^3.________ _ _____ ENGINEERING DRAFTSMAN. LAY-out-detailer, Suffer Produefs Co, 4^ Hadley St. Holly 634-8251, Mon.^Fri. 8 a£^to 5 pjn. experienc'd SAND ^ BLASTER EXPERIENCED REA|T~ ESTATE opening Inquire Warren Stout, realtor. 1450 N. Opdyke Rd., PonUac^ FE 5-8165 for interv.ew. experienced AUTO CLEANUP EXPERIENCED GROCERY: MAN working conditions. Must have ref. Also man for light delivery. No Sun. .or eve. work. Apply In per-son Birmingham Community Market. 130 W. 14 Mi., Rd., Birmlng- , assemblers, machine .op 5, material handler, comi >orers, etc. Daily pay. Rei ytime after 6 a.m. EMPLOYERS TEMPORARY SERVICE n tips and cjTe''9es scale Paid and holi-s collect, es - 441 DETROIT Help Wanftd Mole Call FE 3-7968. c Janitor Service, 3915* Au- shine. Brushing of coats, etq. Keep and garden, receiving and related departments for modern checkout store. Excellent working condl-tipns, with growing progressive retail chain. Apply In person, Mr. Traskos or Mr. Blanchard at Waterford Plaza, 5070 Highland Rd., Waterford. OVER 40 TO , 210 South Woodward. MECHANIC - LAWN MOWER Repairs ~ steady employment --top position for good man. Apply 50 or an hourly guarantee. 515 S. Woodward, Birmingham. Ask for Mr. Carl GrJ_ffin. 64^-9100. MECHANICS FOR SMALL Business. Gravely or Koehler experi-_ ence helpful. 358-1669, MEN "TO WORK IN SERVICE-”STA-non - Mechanics and^ wrecker agq with local references. Full time only, excellent wages, vacation with pay. Shell Station -Woodwdrd and Long Lake Rd., Bloomfield HillS;___ With expanding plant. Must have experience with 2 of the following products: Metal stampings, die ' castings, roll form sections or assemblies. Fully paid insurance and INSURANCE AGENT No experience necessary, will train right- man. $8,0^10,000 possible first year. Vacation, pension plan, group Insurance. Car necessary. Call Mr. Scherschun, 338-4650. Mon. Tues., Wed., Fri. 8:30 a.m.-10:30 J ANrn^“?UrL~OR~'PA R T~T I ME. Interviews being taken between 3 and 5 at Pontiac State Bank Bldg., room 909, 7% N.-^aginaw St. J A' N iTd R I A L WORK AFTER I Powell Rd., Ro- tor dispatcher, trucking experience preferred but not required. Salary open. Equal opportunity employer. Call 1-8W-9505 or write 6408 West Vernor> Detroit, 48209.__________ NATIONAL FOOD CO. WILL train sharp career minded man, car and expenses $6,000 call Helen •Adams, 334-2471, Snelling ft. Snelh bTENM''' FIRTST class MECHANIC, very active new car dealership. This Is a steady position, excellent working conditions, good pay. Fringe benefits. Please Apply In person to Evert Ernst, Seles Manager Homer HIghI Motors Inc., Oxford, IIN PERSON ONLY)_________________ ORGANIST, ROC I................... position. Good pay. FE 8-6179. _ OUTSIDE SALESMAN, TO S e'l L office supplies, furniture and prinl-Ing. Sonia selling experience necessary. We Offer a 60 day training period with $100 per week salary guarantee. After ompleting your training period, you will lake over an established territory. In Oakland County. With ^ a weekly benefits. This is an excellent opportunity to learn the office supply business. 335-9261. '____ PARTTIME $80 PER WEEIC Guarantee FULL TIME $150 PER WEEK Guarantee Must haye car — be over 18 end free to work evenings. CALL 674-2210 Top wages and overtime. Benefits Include life insurance, Blue Cross, advancement'.^"’ ^ ^ McGREGOR MANUFACTURING CORP. 2785 W. Maple Rd., Troy an, 21 0 Clark, 334-2471, ‘ taurant. Telegrat Real Estate Salesmen .all aeal estate at Ihe Mall. One ,1 the hottest locations in Oakland ■o. Lots ot leads ~ lots ol lontacts --lots of business. Will rain. Call Von RwItVj^68^M00._ Real Estate Trainees CROSS REALTY AND INVESTMENT CO. 3487 Sashaf REtlREb Lakeland Laundry, 2530 Lake Rd. Apply bet: 12 n Help Wanted Mole SERVICE STATION. LARGE VOL- 7-0700^ ____ __ _______ STOCK BOYS OR, MEN, 18 OR over, start almost immediately. Apply in person, Mr. Traskos or Mr. Blanchard ar Waterford Plaza, 5070 Hlghlai^ Rd., Waterford.___ SURVEYORS ASSIStANT FOR Ciy-II engineering and surveying. Steady outsid^ work. 651-4330. TRAINEE FOR MANAGER. SHARP, will train.- good future, $6,000 call Kathy King, 334-2471, Snelling ft Snelling. A n't E D TO “ROOFING MECHANICS ROOFING HELPER ^ 751_4_after 6 _MAN, HIGH SCHOd work’ In established wiih good benefits $5200 Can /vuKe Clark. 334-2471, Snelling ft, Snelling. __________ ___________________ salesman, eager MAN NEED-ed for this spot, Exc. benefits, $6,000 call Kathy King, 334-2471. Snelling ft. Snelling._ _ SALESMAN TO CALL ON RETAIL SALT BATH 'HEAT TREAT -EX-V10""Vr laMer,' Royat° Oar^aJL; 549-3366_ _ SERVICE - STATION ATTENDANT, starting salary $120 wk., oart time help, $1.85 hr., experience required. Howard South Shell, Long Lake-Tei^rai^ __ SER^TCE S T ATfO N SE'RVtcfE Manager, tor the right profession- to 10 p.m. Paid nee. uniforms, ex-itartlng pay, $700 y\l 7-0700. Peit Control Company. Reference necessary. TO 5-7900 or in persoi 2285 (ndiandale, Detroit. ___ shTppiDig clerk RECEIVING CLERK Immediate opening for a young mar liberal ^fringe bendtits with a grow AUDIO-VISUAL Dept., of Oakland University has a ftopnlna i for^^an^ experienced man - workIon union Lf. WANTED' 25 MEN SATURDAY, 6:30 A.M. SHARP Report to 125 N. Saginaw St. REAR ENTRANCE! WE PAY DAM.Y KELLY LABOR DIVISION Equal Opportunity Employer WANTED SALESMAN We are looking for a salesman who intends to make $15,000 a year An exper need '® sharing plan, demo See Mr. Joe Galar-)mmy Thompson at : Buick. 855 S. Roch- WINpOW CLEANER, EXPERI- ' f»ct'”’ss^'l^ay *B^DaV“co.?'*Oxtord, M|chlgatc__________^__________ ABLE TO DO Help WantBd Female Bene'fiis "$400 "caif Ruth"Glbb», 334-2471, SnelllfiB *■ Snalllna. ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE — PAY- «d. 685!2848 S. Hickori BABY SITTER \IVE I APPLY IN PERSON: OAKLAND UNIVERSITY PERSONNEL DEPT., ROCHESTER, MICH An Equal Opportunity Employer SHOE ' SALESMEN Imm*dl«t6 opening for experienced able clerk, high school grpduate with bookkeeping machine experl- advancement 1347 call Joy Long, 334-2£71, Siwlling B Snelfmg. ^ ■■TssTstant'' DIRECTOR OF NURSING or technicians. Salary range — $791.39 - $949.67 per month. Con-sideration given for experience. Fringe benefits; 7 paid hoildays, 10 vacation days, 12 sick days per year. Blue Cross paid after 1 year, Iffe ’ insurance, -----------* fund and other exce benefits. Apply — Per! ar^Hu^" ---------------- BABY SIT 1 Y HOME- 5 DAYS, ^BEELINE FASHIONS—NEEDS YOU' FOR HOSTESS OR STYLIST- 334-4129 or 335-1091 __ BOOK A PLAYHOUSE TOY PAR'-ty. Free toys and gifts. EM 3-7271. •BdOKKEEPING KNOWLE O'G E, cashier lusewita, Mon. through FHday. CHAMP'S / Self-Service Drl/e-ln e. Excellent working Ith growing progret-)aln. Apply In person 8 or Mr. Blanchard at laza, 5070 Highland COUNTER G'ir'l'fOR DRY CLEAN-ing plant. Apply Flash Cleaners. , •339 W. Huron. ___________ CURB GTRLS^ « WAITRESSES TELE-TRAY OPERATORS Apply In person BIG BOY RESTAURANT 20 S. Telegraph . Tel-Huron Shopping Center_ curb^gTrl F0R“T)AY shift. Apply in person only. Blue Star Drive-in. Pontiac and Opdykf Rds. _______________:______ CURfiTEfeiRL, TO WORK DAYS 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., full time, good pay. Pled Piper Restaurant, 4370 Highland Rd. ,_ ■ DENTAt ASSTsTA-NTr NEW OF- Square Lak^Wooddward. l)RrCLEANERS . “ NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY ------fulltime GOOD working CONDITIONS. , PAID HOLIDAYS PAID VACATIONS TRANSPORTATION NECESSARY JANET DAVIS DRY CLEANERS D—6 ^ Wanted Female EXPERT SECRETARY Oman lorroundinO* E*- OUSEKEEPER, children. 5 days. Ow.. . .. tion. Exc. working conditk pav. Ref required. 646-2126. Thousewives - MOTHERS on% 2 fd* 3 hours dally? Pi d?rs“"near' home. Earn' S2.50 THE rOXTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, ]. S BEING TAK-!aSSEMBLE, YOUR PRODUCT, i Belly Slack, 334-3471, Snelling I. SneMIng. ' _ . MATURE WOMEN^rO 334-6401 Able ‘io'5tay‘'^niBlils“'ior -HOUSEWIVES ''and°Tl“gr"pH ■ Turn youF spare time ^CHARGE BOOKKEEPER, extra money by applying for 0FFice“AssisTANT"^ for physi-'MM^a^AX’''A5am^, CHRISTMAS EMPLOYMENT! S'*,;- K'*^nctude oen NOW! Part time and on call Long, .334-2471 Snelling ' REGISTERED NURSES ' LICENSED PRACTICAL ^ NURSES Registered nurses S600-t720 per •mo., ^shift differential; 50. cents per hr., licensed practical nurses; $425-5510 per mo., shift differential; 25 cents per hr. Actual beginning salary based on training and experience. $2.50 bonus for ______Chris. OR 3^1171,_____ CARPENTRY AND PAINTiNG. 332-' BLOOD BANK l_£UL»'!5t .‘-PV!?.. r.mrnw.cVvn .. ELECTRICAL AND PLUMBING. SUPERVISOR I 332-4136, alter 6 p.m... tS^kTuwr^isoo ^ NEED LABORERS Starting salary commensu- Call , A/(anpower . _332-8j86 .8997. 674e2887 ( h qualification ings,'^J375. Call) Ruth Gibbs, 3; 2471, Snelling & SVielling, GENERAL b'FFfCE, TYPING, I ■entflocalbn $30o"call Kathy Kir .'134-247I, Shfllinng & Sneilmg, GEnTeRAL ‘housework, SOM GENERAL HOUSEWORK, Hudson's PONTIAC MALL ' cook' experienced, 334 2^ SALAD WOMEN >300. Call Betty OLDER^ WOMAN'tO LlVE^m AND more**Vor^°homT than wages, own | transportation.-OR 3-8817. ' Our ■ I New, , Delicatessen ' Will Open Soon We have openings for Assistant Manager Sales-Clerks 338-0338 Full Time & Part Time' pital. 338-4711. We accept cc calls._____ _ _______________ ■registered nurse ' FOR I ■ DORRIS Business Is So Good 2-1»83.^, ... servLcl [ruck and tooli Apartments, Unfurnished 38|Rent Heuses, Fornished 39 furnished, $160 n plus dep., lease to May 1st. itoo, 673-5034. -BEWiiMr^lOEAyM^^^ ■ Hawaiian Gardens Park. Holly. 628-1818.__ HIGHLAND AREA -^ADORABLE 4--- - —nal. Fireplace, gas preferred, *30 per 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS—HOMES v«,r^.vw, ______ "WRIGHT soun"RAkTN^^ X''fo'mar7re~ ®rw'a“n^s“m^ak^"'V'’up’’ *^35oi ?Pol,”«V'Tall^o'y''’ronB,'^'3'l!'- open abput 1 Dec. Call 682-879ol who to take step 2471. Snelling 8* Snelling. tor information Utween 9 a.m. and call F . ® waitress. 6ays FULL TIME. month.' ...IV- -------- apply, e p t. Pontiac General, ~bvER ’Ta, ^"R ' AVOID GARNISHMENTS, REPOS-' SESSIONS, BAD CREDIT, ■* ^ RASSMENT, BANKRUPTCY > LOSS 'O'* - ■" thousand ROOM, 37 PRIVATE ENTRANCE, Credit Advisors 16-A - AM . utilities except looked in Bloomfield i located on South 6t Rd.), between Opdyk« pressway. Open daily housands oTpMp'le" wilh'credrioi\^B~^ bRO“bM ; ~ APARTMENT,I 'i’03113’ % >rohiems by proving a plahhedAnfulfsrfti RaeBurn, ^ 'I 0,^7^ * '' Js"cS"nSo‘l?DATe'^ ?o3r"'oE^ ';^f/m''rn° A'dult?'^RSere^n^5l'''« GLEAN FLAfTS-ROOM'AND BATH, yjT.H ONE. LOW PAwE.NT.iWSir ' m"cl. ^uti'mies'*'*s'.c"u"? ........................ RoUSEKE'EPER. live II rork? Call between iREClPtrONisf I 887-4118, or 363-09 i WAITRESS. 6aYS FULL TIME. IN LO- *^*cky'- ufck Reference AN» 'tatlon and ____J. benefits, rlientel. Apply and fme customer cl »n person, Howard Jo----- _ V ' I graph and Maple Rd.. Birminghar *■ (WAITRESS WANTED. EXPERI enced. good pay. good tips. 107 W Hu^on, China;^Clty Restaura^ ” WAITRESSES CAN AFFORD. NOLlmil 1. For those w Security glean FLAT, S-ROOM A rity de Included: working , deposit, FE 2-9369. BEDROOM HOUSE. LEASE WITH option. Lake Orion. Rets, required. *135. Call Eves, t-731-7827. sun oecK 4 roOM,""cLEa“n. COZY HOUSE, ctric. No retirees only, 5483 Elijabelh Laka 10 8 p.m.'4747'“^PLE^Jiw ^^CASS LAKE 335-5670, j -’B bd^pT= LD~0‘RHC A R DS “ ‘- ' ’ e’,'^.^^r"%ar« . throL » \childrer ^ S135.\651J742.__ _ feoM CABINS, MODERNT dEP:, CLARKST^ ^ 682-2468 before 5 p.m. 682-i ".V/c® ^ Rochester STOVE . Blvfi days per month, flexit sneed only. 682-^730._ RCA ir Obligation U ROOMS, PRIVATE BATh!' HOURS 9b P.M.-SAT. V-'s p.m! I ^"'’saghiaw'."' DEBT AID I2 AND 3 R^MSTTrLEANTADULtS 718 RIker Bldg. ' FE 2-018l| only. 285 wnittemore. . ........ciVding-Tortipany Veid Maving and Trucking 2212 “ b -------------- ' " 1 w' Huron St "^'deS FE 2-SS16: For persoJIaij'-'R^L.^^OLING AND 0D.0 JOBS.jj rqoMS. MIDDLEAGED LADY. benefits. - Itall _____leal ____________ plus 8 paid holldi Interview, visit o ____________________________ . 'm.m.'-'o' p“m. “or'caii''335-eoinfing and Decorating 23'?mom RCA SERVICE CO. ^ lady interior decorator, 12' 4895 Higniand Rd. | Papering. FE . 8-6214. Opdyke and : ^ ’'mi‘’4“42T"o^''m. 62^ for rent with OPTION TO BUY I 3 bedroom ranch home. Call manager, 627-3640 or mam oflice, 444-4464. ■..........■■ - 3-bed- .... front, *175 681-0675. INTERIOR SERVICES aperies, carpets- furrtitur#. per, reupholster woman or couple. OR • ROOM APARTMENT NEATLY Ind"iSquIet “''^ngPe^'^^^rsononly* e, wall-' ter 3 p.m., 338-8974.__, fabrics.|2 ROOMS. PRIVATE BA'th AND ihed. 3440 Sash* n Btvd. Call 674-3m^ _ EMBASSY EAST APARTMENTS |g,»VIC£.r suntm ~ iquipment ■ Aluminum Bldg. Items Exenvoting aluminum siding, roofing in backhoe, LOAop work, dry-big BOY driver Coffee Shop, Telegraph 115 Mile). WAITRESS' MSple: ^accepted. . :___________________ BACK hoe/ LARGE’ FRONT END _ . L CONSTRUCTION. SPECIAL , loader on rubber, septic n vinyl siding, gutters or roof-! basements, etc^334-2879. te Slaybaugh Apply li , WAITERSS. ”; DAYI BOB'S RES- _ LEND LOADING AND DOZER WORK, — , - ' septic fields, dry wells. J^E 5 108) Rental Equipment I ’'SEPTIC fields; DRY WELL. h TRENCHING. ,WATER lines BROWNIES HARDWARE ____ S. Lucas Waterford Sewer Const. FLOOR SANDERS-POLISHERS timate. 674-0722. ______! 673 0240 ! WALLPAPER STEAMERS ! ASPHALfyolSCOUNT PAVING CO. Fenciug Blue Lustre snampooers Lommerda^^^ iob ^ DRlVEiS^“~S>ECTALISTSrFREE PONTIAC FENCE CO. iRENTyLOOR cleaning AND Estimatet. FE 5-4980._____ .5932 Dixie Hwy._______^ WP | 62 W ®A Ing. OR 3-0179. Asphalt Paving ASPHALT - PAVING - FREE ES-i _ timate. — ASPHALT D. Residential Boats and Accessories BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Firewood ’ CONSTRUCTION, BEAUTI-U 1265 S. Woodwarc |d^«| Floor Sending _______!cARL L, BILLS SR. ontcalm. 332-9271. Jack- Roofing 1 NEW, REROOF,- REPAIRS — X 334-2471, Snell- e required. Call 338-4081 for _ ointment for Interview. ____ WANTED: A GIRL TO BE FROZ- NOW IS THE TIME! Michigan Bell 1365 Cass * - : .393-28)5 Want A Better Job? S Is the largest pe . In this area and ___ _______ you. Many Ttif'ERNAfrONAL PERSONNEL e' PATRICIA L. MAHAN. "■ Interiors Is Ml 6-6402 • LI 3-1401 able, near Pon PAINTING, papering 4-4625.. ............ Tupper, OR 3-7061 __ 2 ROOMS AND BATH, ADULTS, lPAINtlNG“ AND''“P A P E R I N G.l “'1!'''“' ''*•'’ decorated. FE j You're next. Orvel Gidcumb, 673-'. J "*”’- _ 2 ROOMS, PRIVATE, BLEAN AAAN, DECORATING! *20 hep, F,q *-« ' A N D ^DECbR/WNG, TN“G^At5l!rDECOj!AflNG! «l> weekly, HO'Ci;?.' p'd S-OOiy’ • " - - LARGE ROOMS ”4»ID BATH, inable. Free“est 623-MIS. ' ' Uphelstering AGED FURNITURE Brick & Block Service ___ ___ NEW AND mdin^FE 2-5789^ SNYDER, FLOOR" laying] 338-6115, ^IAlT-TY "RpOFWgT" NEW"“^D .^82-7514._ WOMACK ROOF ING, RE ROOF BRICK, BLOCK, STONE, CEMENT Floor Tiling work, llreplaces specialty. 335-4470. ® fireplaces, written GUARAN CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. n 5,000 It tor 4« nrs. Must loox gooo in ai-bikini swim suit. No' experience -necessary. Apply In person. Coleman Furniture Mart. 536 N. Per-, WOMXrg^TO^HbsfESTTN b“su PE R t^uJe woman'^'^Sth'o has”the abilir'y! to supervise, good wages plus bene-j fits. Big Bov Restaurant, Tele-, graph and -Huron Street, Inter-! WOMAN^TO LIVE-1n~AND" CARE for three school-age children. More for home than wagesi 391-2447, af- and“ do ------ tor you “*■ Fe6 pai A-r.^A.Aj HtKiUI,,,ww 642 8268 Sales Help Male-Female 8-A “7W0";' SALES PERSON, FURNITURE EX-1 - i perlence preferred. 334-4934._j Insurance CAN Y-eU SECL? ested ii r^eTp^Si ir^p-|_2072, _E ves. E M 3;7546. . Taylor, ORi 1-4724-185 Elizabeth ' > I Deer Processing DEER PROCESSED, SKI I COMPLETE REMdDELING Service Quality work since 1945 FARMERS INSURANCE GROUP, _ acle Mile/334-4597. Jontiorial Services BULLDOZING. F I N I S H^ D , Fj 4-9200^ 338”82oV'fE ISAND. GRAVEL ALL KINDS. TOP |ng"''raauiraT"' Box 232, P : G&M FE 2-1211 or 67H797. Londscoping I COMPLETE LANDSCAPING -estimates. J. teping. Call i To” bd~ALL fice work, typ-i e Post Office 3 ROOMS LOWER, BATH. GARAGE. ____ __ ^ 27 3 ROOMS AND BATH, UTILITIES < furnished, adults, $25 weekly, $50 p qI dep. 682-7654. _ _ * 5zer. 3 ROOMi PRIVATE. BATH. e’N- 2 Bed'i __________________________ 1 Jfance^^ 5-8466, 118 University. R.tw rt-iM Hiah as 35 deer PROCESS: ALSO BEAR. 3 ROOMS AND BATH ' PR'IVATE Countr per «nt for Kg 35 per cent, AAoose. Elk. Cut to your specif!- _Mirance._FE 5-0494. _ _ and s for salts. YOU SHARE PROFITS.! 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE’ ENTRANCE, 5446^Coole?Lk.Td'’'^9¥303l : ^^utllitles, coupla, gul- R EAL ■ EST'af E E X P E R"! E NC ED | I CLOSE ‘in. 1 BEDROOM. 64 SPO- DA^fN/“COUR'^""APARTMENfl/oR REN^ SALE - - N«w, mc^ern.J^^y •P^t^nnents.; requirdd. 681-06 'icludes: central air-conditioning -I HOUSE FOR RENT. 682-3694 BE-imblnatlon washer-dryer - dlsh-j twwn 3:80 and_9 p.nrv_______j____ ,"n'g'’e"--re.r'!^;?,"fo*r ^Ta'r'piitlngI HOMES^FOR RJNT ------- Furnished or bn-j pQR ^ ^ 8’“'a'.m' young EXECUTIVES "pXct---------° .prestige neighbor- hood. Beautiful view over-i3o'looking lake, with lake Apar.m'"mi,"'‘Y36"7' ^HrgnTanS'privileges. Immediate oc- wateriord Twp^_______ _____cupancy. New large 4 bed- Hilltop Apartment room Colonial, 2' 2 baths, irma'n'Lli';, Lak”'’Td.'ftSidrMm,""u "''bills'dining room, family room, 7iei. 5835_oi'xie WB^eriord. '''|,3iy''’'^,oom''''^priva'te built-in opplionces, large 2- * Ti'oninT'^patio cal' 9 Q ^ ° 9 6' ^450 per •,ontn/264 5673 month, $1,500 security deities, clean and decorated. FE in SYLVAN, 3 ROOMS AND BATH, posit, minimum 2 yeors lease porch, no Children or pet,. 6B2-,(-r,,| 674-3136. LAKE VISTA APARTMENTS ' i HOUSE FOR "GNT. WATE'RFORD 3 rooms »nd bath, carpeted. Stove, area, unforn|shed 674-1339 ____ relrigerator, utilities. Adults only, lake FRONT EXECUTIVE HOME 5366 Cooley Lake Rd. _ 3 bedrooms, I' r baths, recreation ROCHESTER MANOR '' ;„TL.^.'*.^e"."**'IM t2r*rSo. em APARTMENTS L3'»42._. ^ 3’ 2, 4- 2 ROOM APTS.^ fully'''carpele'd,''^^itn'''ind'ivfd'ually rent WITH OPTION TO BUY dilloning, Holpolnl kitchen, swim lafted garage. Sylvan Shorts — ming pool, many extras. In a quiet! (Ze 2-8919. .... park-like °gdej?„T,*^ prjl'. o« prrkrtxL iSlo ■ PP-’-'r turn, 682-5551.__ PJate^P^arkdale. 65I-3M , thREETbEDROOM RANCH WITH Rochester ' Ludlow utTc/ 3 BEDROOMS, I'l BATHS, Apartments ^ I?o'!;y''sec“av dl^ »op**'t ui*i: SOV«. *'^^5^.0353 Royg | Q Sk, 66- 41-A Ivatc baths, 335-1261 .,f' 3 ROOMS AND BATH,' ADULTS 33? 334-3843. i our 3 ROOMS/nO CHILDREN OR PETS I______ f E_4-0122_ ' A# 3 ROOM aVar'TMENT. ADULTS. >5 AO^^CI^rk.________________ 1 ROOMS A^ND BATH, NICELYi nished, baby v 837 LUDLOW, ROCHESTER ! ----- $140 and $145 - -.............----- $160 and $165 Hunting Accom. n^tVi”°away *f'?om CABIN, GLADW'N AREA. Wttnted Children to Board 28 COTTAGE..SLE.EPS * , 363-2514 b IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY -A SNOW PLOWING. BY JOB OR — 4993_or 852 -- -OWING. E 1 673-9590 Tree Trimming Service j 1 TREE SERVICE BY BAl! H. Waltman. 3M;83R _ itatus, lob and pay WOMAN FOR ^^^J^^-’aU^FFICe! sltlon 5*dVy"'wre'k. Salary Open. I Apply In Person — 55 S. Tele-1 lelp Wanted M. or F. 8 BLOOD DONORS I URGENTLY NEEDED ! RH Positive *7.50; ATTEND FREE CLASSES „ork at our Dixie Hwy. or Uni< Lk. offices PHONE MR. WURL / FE 3-7088 or MA 3-0288. C.. SCHUETT FOR REAL ESTATE Established siri 42 Corpentry , ..,-rpp7..p\a.„s evTEDino I ME R’iOn"^BLU E SOD." PICK"^U p“ OR j. -------- ,,-----.. delivered. 4643 Sherwood, 628-2000.!AAA TREE SERVICE BY POR-!A-^eS» » B-neg., AB- i.__4643 Sherwood, 628-2000.! A discingT and yard ,n, plowing; D'I'__ la' ..3-1589. town Sprinklers Dp IT-YOURSELFERS, I ; kTtchENS I tern A PAIL OF CEMENT NEEDED? HARDWOOD LUMBER - RAIL-Call Chuck tor minor 'repalri. FE; ♦*“*• *WIrm nanollnn Koame 5-5238. OR 3-8797. - B 8. B TREE service', INSURED. Trimming, removal. Free esti-1 mates. 674-1281 or 724-2695. ►LAN C&B TREE SERVICE,’ TRIMMING to in- • and removal, free Est. 391-1186 J lawn _Oj^334-7376. rengV "DALBY & SONS" ” I Design STUMP, TREE, REMOVAL , FE 5-M05 Fireplace Wood FE 5-3025 TREE CUTTING AND REMOVAL. Ted. Elwood Enterprises^ 682-3373. tree' TRIMMING AND REMO>/- .L TYPES OF CEME'NT WORK ^ OR 4-3267 ^ OR 4-3267 X^dbY FOR PATIOS, ■ D R slabs, pe-----“ •“ " ' ____ siding, paneling, t icing 626-7653. TALBOTT LUMBER" '‘ ,1025 Oakland____________FE 4-4595 ‘LOCK AND "CEMENT WORK. Movino and Storage PonHac 391-1173. j____,1" - • — ^!i^F^7.ir'°an^ ^/nieV^^rL'^w AA MOVING COMPANY I 9 yea ____ _ e. 391-1666. Trucking LIGHT MOVING, TRASH 2-Some Special delive yrs. Exp.’ 623-1372._• ___ CEMENT WORK OF ALTRiNDS. __ UL 2-4751. Cement and Block Work Guinn's Construction Cou FE 4-7677 Eve'S. -391^-2621 Dressmaking, Tailoring ALTERATIONS, 338-3570. ________ HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME your price. Any " Piano light hauling. Painting and Decorating J-You aclallst to handia these d n p full or part-time basi an engage a perjqnnel sp H5I to spend part ot his tin Idling these tunctions. L inty years jtslanding iuven IS In addition to salary, edueVtIon iporlunity with luitlon reimburse-lent program. Requires bachelor tgree with a major In sociology, sychology, social work or police -.ii. i '"■= odministrallon or a combination of minors In these fields. For addl-_ BASEMENTS, tibnal Information or to make ap-'911. J I garages cleaned. 674-1242. plication apply to: F^°5^7S4? oakland'^coun't^y^'courthouse ; ol»ny kind reasonable, Ft 5-/64J, ^ TELEGRAPH, PONTIAC LIGHI and HEAVY TRUCKING, 338-4571 • .irMfironl-end'loadfrlg^ Want Ads FoF QUick ! ^PAP^JANGrN'tP Cosh. Ph. .332-8181 THOMPSON _______ FE 4-8364 ' ° : ■ ------- ------------------------------- ------ TYPES, KNIT AI PAjNTiNG vvoRK GUARAN , TrucK Rental , Help Wanted M. dr F. 8 Help Wanted Mir or F. MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER \ Pontiac FE 4-9947 1342 Wide Track Dr., W. Mon. thru Fri., 9 a.m.-4 p.m. ___ _Wed.J_p.m^p.m. _ 1 COLLEGE GlfADUlTES IN PSYCHOLOGY SOCIAL WORK INSTRATION- $7200-$10,000, effective 1-1-6 The County of Oah'““- “ - Real Estate Trainees We are looking for young m desiring to enter the Real Esti Profession. We offer a 6 w« I training proj^ram, liberal comm Sion, bonu^s' and other trip benefits, For further Informqti call Mr. Bashore: io CROSS REALTY AND INVESTMENT CO. IJ 3487 Sashabaw Rd._OR 4-3105 TEACHERS • Part Time Sales, Now Until Christmas, 1 PIECE OR HOUSEHOLD. M, C. LIPPARD FE 5-7932. CASH FOR FURNITURE AND AP-pliances, 1 piece or houseful. Pear-—FE 4-7B81. CASH FOR GOOD USED HOUSE-hold goods. Hall's Auction Sr*“ MY 3-1871._______________________ HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR 2-0663._______ 3 ROOMS. $25 4 _poiit._CaM_887j4f _ 3 LARGE ROOMS AND BATH, 5089 Dixie Hwy. entrance and 1 ROOM, CLEAN, > I, adults pnl^. _ 338-611 ij •LrARGE"SLEEPING ROOMS, NO >y — ec '►-5337. ' _ fELOR ST( looking, 234 M child welcome. $35 week, $50 dep. J3^41M._____________________ _| 3 AND 4 ROOM APARTMENTS, Sir d'xs.,;. " Pontiac Motor, Vj block stop. Contact owner at 37 erly, Pontiac. APARTMENTS,! Ic. FE 5-3585. ______ ____ _ ____» Orion. 693-2626.'rpauTIFUL ROOM FOR PROFES- w'EST SIDE, NEAR STATE HOS-; si -------------- e of Fisher Body and' 563 W. f 'n»n"th.^LEAN ROOMS, FOR SIN^^LE PER- S Only,|^Q_ y-t.*. It HaROOM TERRACE, UTIUTIES, bi- no dripkers. UL 2-3115. «Trtb-i?TMr—r.r«i—GAe"u7%I«=—TA POSit. FE 5-9571. 12 BEDROOM, UN40N LAKE AREA, - ^e Sith saL. FE 4 9M7. b^iADULTS ONLY. "3 ROOMS AND SLEEPING ROOM H * Dec. 1 P - preferred. Orchi Mil. _ SLEEPING ROOMS, NEAR MALL, J.. . 17 Roshlre Ct. 338-8924. __ SLEEPING ROOM FOR MAN >rklng. Day shift. Call after or near Oakland Cc tarty in Pontiac. Bloomfield or Troy. travel. For additiond...... please contact Pontiac Pt ^?iSn in WORKING GIRL TO SHA^I^NEW JJ?*!,- )I APARTMENT IN Milford, Call 647-6200 Ext. 0 — — Until June 19^6, adults. Sec. de- __pOSit. EM 3-4665.____ li's BEDROOM HOUSE, ALL FURN- _______________?'5^Ask ..... „.,yOUNG BACHELOR SHARE HOME iform8llon,| ^vvim.samejJiMJS/.______ I Wanted Real Estate 36 i employed d^s. "335-3590. BE^ WEST SIDE LOCATION. )OM/ ROCHESTER . 2-4983, after 6:30 ' DcUKU'Jnn nuuoc, t-utemonew,! _ oa«,» adults only. FE 4-7577 after 4 mo. 674-3892. SPACIOUS ROOM IN PRIVATE home overlooking lake, 1 or 2 people. 673-1091. I'bie. STUDIO APARTMENT, CARPETED, - - --------------^4 bath, garage. preferred, $70 682 9533. "BETTY JO'S DRESSMAKING ______ Wed^gs._allerallons._674-3704_ , able. 628-4623. RESSMAKING AND ALTERA CHARLES" PAINTING - DECORA hons. FE 4-8139. _ ATING. Be?................... Drivers Training ex>erT^................. ....... ' ' ' 'i get ecguslnled prices. FE 2-7732., APPROVED AUTO DRIVING, EXPERT PAINTING AND’ PAPER' school. FE 8-9444, Free home henging. Call Herbie, 673^790. | ^.PAINTING, PAPERING, WALLi cleaning, paper removal. B. T. Sandusky. FE 4-854r UL 2-3190.__ QUALITY WORK ASSURED. PAINT-! ing: papering, wall washing, 673- melerlal a specia'l: Eavestroughing 673-6866. Llcen; Electrical Contracting I RING OF HOMES, GARAGES,iOSCAp''sCHMiDT' Pinno Tuning ■ PIANO TUNING - REPAIRING >r old. OR 3-9529 or OR : Exenvoting Plastering Service 'plastering, free ESTIMATES, i ' _p._^Meyers^^^ 363-9»5^^__________ j Plumbing & Heating' ! ---------- - FE 8-2555; ALL CAST IRON SEWERS, WA-i CONDRA PLUMBING & HEATING Trucks to Rent l-T-Jon Pickups IVj-Ton St« TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Seml-Trallert Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD 4-046T FE 4-1442 Op*n pally Including Sunday Water Softeners SALES AND RENTALS Iteed. Insured. FJE ^1631. Well Drilling ntm 'aaiidLJlmti^ DO YOU HAVE A NEED FOR EXTRA MONEY NOW, THAT , CHRISTMAS TIME IS ' NEAR? WHY NOT WORK PART-TIME FOR US AS A SALESPERSON, CATALOG CLERK, v CAFETERIA HELP OR IN.THE STOCK ROOM. MOST OF OUR OPENINGS REQUIRE-i EVENING OR WEEKEND HOURS OF EMPLOYMENT IMMEDIATE EMPLOYEE DISCOUNT APPLY NOW PERSONNEL DEPT. MONTGOMERY WARD THE PONTIAC MALL \r TO 50 i ROOMS AND BATH, - Rooms with Board 43 * HOMES. LOTS, ACREAGE PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND'XONTRACTS WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8165 Urgently need for Immediate Sale! corns, first floor, everything fur- 4 f- ---- , llihed, *110. CoupiBtonly. 363-2505. ence^l-«l-4528._- 1 OR 2 GENTLEMEN, EXCEL- CLEAN LARGE 1 B^ROOM. UTIL- 5 ROOMS, BASEMENT. 9000 BUCK- |«nl meals, lunches packed. FE ................ Fjj. ^-5261 ingham Dr„ Pontiac Lake. ; e-3255. Unfurnished 38Aportments, Unfurnished 38 come. 11.5 .Stout «. ' ^------■ ' --- ------------------------ ----- -------------------- r equity. Cair^ telTs McCullough realty 674-2356- appraiser will be’right out \ $100 MORE ^ion, a.., Miw«a, UTMI a/wr ■*«.! II back op ‘t>ayments or condemned. Handyrnan — fnvestor needs itouses real fast. For personal service •• •■ “ ‘ • , 398-7902. ALL CASH 10 MINUTES even If behind In payments or ur dcr forclo^re. Agwt. 527-6400. ALL CASH For homes any place In County, money in 24 Hours. come, 115 Stout «_______ DARLING COURT^PARTMEWTS. New, modern, luxury apartments. 1 and 2 bedrooms. Each unit Includes: central air-condiflonlng — combination- washer-dryer — dishwasher — 'garbage disposal — range — refrigerator — carpeting - electric heat. Furnished or unfurnished. 3440 Seshabew. South of Walton Blvd. Call bet. 8 A.M. ind 6 P.M., 674-}136. FOR LADY, SMALL, UTILITIES LAKE ORION colleges, r" 'per week, MY 3-9958. True A 6'u r YORK .CE APARTMENTS. only. *35 a wk. FJ 4-OU.._ ONE-ROOM APAJS^ENT, FURN. Lake Orion. 693-28267 ______ Oakland SUITABLE FOR 1, CLOSE 1N, 1 i Jedroom^BE 8:2343._____^ , WARM, CLEAN, BABY WELCOME, 3 rooms, *30. FE 4-7253. WELL FORNISHED 1-BEDROOM apartment, Vvlng room and full family kitchen. Vicinity ot Sylvan Lake. Adults only. *125 mo. Security deposit end references required, shown after office appolnt- WE TfIaDE OR 4-0363 Drayton Plalnr R A LISTINGS NEEDED Ferms-Homes-Acreage Ridgeway, Realtor Sisiock & Kent,'Inc. 1309 Pontiac Stae Bank Bldg. 1 9294 *38-92 ■ QUICK' . -OCCUPANCY YDU'LL ENJDY LIFE MDRE IN A BEAUTIFUL NEW APARTMENr BETWEEN 2 LDVELY LAKES. CDME DUT TDDAY. '> • 1- AND 2-BEDROOMs' , c PRIVATE BALCONY or PATIO • FULLY CARP6JED • ALL APPLIANCES INCLUDED • EXTRA STORAGE SPACE • PRIVATE RaRKINO . • PRIVATE BEACH AND BOATIJ4G FACILITIES • 7 MINUTES TO'PONTIAC, 35 MINUTES TO DETROIT • RENTALS FROM *152.TO *177 MONTHLY • OPEN FOR INSPECTION: SAT. and sluN.! NOON-6 P.M. MON.-FRI., 4-7 p.M. PHONE 682-4480 or 357-4300. right on Cass'Laiie Rd. SYLVAN ON THE ,LAKES on Cass Lake Rd., between Cass ,and Sylvqp Lokes ; From Pontiac, take Elliabeth Lake Rd. Rd. and turn left, or fake Orchard Leki lake Rd. and turn right. FrBm Detroit Belt to Orchard ^aka Rd. and turn li Rooms virith Board e ;-7<30. Sale Houteij, ^.590 BRAND 1>IEW. 3-bedrm. r»nch, ----- ----- >ement t|ully your lot, full bas{ SULATED, family money down. MOC ,.!gaylord >DEL. T&e.?'\- REaIy^Ss \ettE^^^^ hoaro. wrs. Keeves, v» t'opuiar. Russell Young. 334-3830 53'/i W. Huron St.___ AT ROdHESTER Rent Office Space ATTORNEY OR INSURANCE M BUILr^-$50 monthly o Walton MR. “ MA3-0?88.__________________ NEW COMMERCIAL OFFICE CEN* ter spaces from 400' to 8,000 so ft. Ideal for Barber, Beauty Sale NEW OFFICE BUILDJNG, 2901 Auburn Rd. Auburn Height^, 2800' up 2400' down, central heat and air conditioning, carpeting par-' THIRTEEN ACRES ........ lake. Six-room log cabin, highway near Orion. See day. Can MY 2-2821. FE 8- feet condition. See this a... ... for yourself. Call MY 2-2821, 8-9693. GAYLORD INC. J'l2 W. Flint St., and sewer. Plus new 2-room addition added to home, needs interior completion. $21,500, terms. MILTON WEAVER, INC., Realtors ■aejj______________________ GOLF MANOR SUBDIVISION MUST SACRIFICE 4 BEDROOM colonial In exc. condition. 2 baths. Living room and formal dining room. Carpeted kitchen with all built Ins. Parquet family room with beautiful brick fireplace. Draoes and caroAts all Included. 2 car garage. ROCHESTER NEW OFFICE 8, COMM'L. TER Excellent -• 1 decorated to your specific . I TOM REAGAN L REAL ESTATE to 2251 N, Opdyke_____ I 2-car garage, paved drl\ $800 down plus closing cost. WRIGHT REALTY 382 Oakland Ave, FE 2-81 651-4576 Rent Business Property 47-A 10,000 SQ. FT. BUILDING WITH 25,200 SQ. FT. Two adlacent bldgs, acri Osteopathic Hospital. Will to suit tenant or will pro building with parking on 140. Contact Bruce Annelt pvi.unai Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron SI. 338 04 Olfice Open Evenings 8. Sundays I IuTLbTNG~F6R’TrEMEr^2To Woodward. Bloomfield Hills. C. FE 8-0345, Mondays 9-5. 120x-' Beauty Rite Homes new Beauty-Rite Home from' $15,990 "Buy direct from Beauty- THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBERJO, 1967_ 49|Sala Houses D^7 gas heat, walk to shopping. $8,500. GREEN ACRES 1449 S. Lapeer Rd., Lakt GOING TO RETIRE?^ so, would recommend looking “•'* —n year around lake “ Pontiac I nniaoe up. siiv--’” to"sult. HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL 2 houses located on 1 acre of land each. Only 7 settle tor less. Our capable Home j now i Consultant cen design lust what! „. „ XSr I^^Jin'.V^wiu'toToV^tiBANK APPROVED through to your complete s~“‘ Prices ai existing homes nable on srint^'se and vour‘‘ family. Les Brown, Realtor 509 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. (Across from the Mall) FE 4-3564 or FE 2^10 -'“•«:KAMPSEN Sion In a low tax area. Priced at $17,500 to S6LL this WEEKI NO. 97 CASS LAKE dd.i/ilegES with your own private with this spacious brick ranch-... Beautifully tlnished basement complete with fireplace, full kitch-. dock w ROSS HOMES PH: 623-0670 HALL For lease, new building, ».■ _Fetl« ol}(iMty 48 HEATED WINTER STORAGE, boats, campers end etc. 13,000 sq. ft. Rochester. Lake Orion. OL H4341_________________________ rNSIDE BOAT AND TRAVEL trailer storage still, evaljable. Clarkston area, 425-2899.___^ Trailer, camper and boat space ------- --- Ike priv. on Square Laki only\$M,900, $2,900 dowi 'I |ntg. "----------" MUST BE SEEN — 4 bedrooms, large living room, dining room \i/p RUY wp tradf! *nd kitchen, full basement 3-carl _____Drayton j-lalnsi To'p^r cram down "l T^i^oLE''o^cl$L''c^Y''y OFFICE OPEN 9-9 SUN ..5 i Lake prMlege. Aim?____________________aTMISe; Dlt TENNESSEE' family room C( SMALL FARM — w garage. Selling _ _ _ ........;»uaran.ee‘.he sale" o.! &*on:l IMMEDIATE POSSESSION 3-^droom- ranch B Jt'r/taiJ™ ' t'er^tarn'e^d^ g“.rage*!TutlKclnr^nd ! ^n, g't.'Tas. a, this price^ ^ ------ ot., men,, also IV, bath,. buHt-m oven -„r^LerynBrSuR^““MO.^*L PEACE AND OUIET 1^' "IT'S TRADING TIME" ^erag. E BRIEF look at our new listing in this north Pontiac location. Close to Northern High. Three bedrooms, | basement and garage. Priced Io^no. 53 , ---------1 plus . "builder's honne y extras and custom ... West Bloomfield Town-cely landscaped site. Priced . with as little as $3,000. us costs. Make your ap-t NOWl YORK Sale Houses 1 PUBLIC NOTICE 673- WE BUY OR 4-0363 ... 4713 Dixie h 49 WE TRADE OR 4-036: Drayton Plaint ewiy decorated room, dining room, heat, enclosed port m. 2 large corner dentlal area. $15,900. $1500 Lower Straits -- 'arge 3-ireplace, utility lots, good rn good responsible buyfer. Everett Ciwnmings, Realtor 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD .. -----' EM 3-3208 __________^36^181 HERRINGTON HILLS 3-BEDROOM ton PieinK, ^ecrektlon room, fenced carpeting, gas ' • - ■ >y on weekend. _ HIITER LAZENBY WAGINE 3-bedroom spotless ranch, has family size kitchen with built-tns, nice size living room, bath and utility, oak floors throughout, stone and alum, exterior, nicely landscaped fenced yard. Northwest Pontiac. , 33S-5328, _______ I 6 D.m.. all dav on v------ $950 MOVES YOU IN. _ 335-2808 _ OWNER, 3 'BEDROOM. w'E§'* nm^r nff Dr in Carpeting, drapes,- panelei Pontiac Full basement a a s heat ■ screen^ PRICE REDUCED - etc Very sharp' First^'time os' Porch. Car^t patio, ^hip^wa Rd. possession on this 6 i fered to Wtle estate $2,000 down 517,950, ian^contract. FE 2-1082. i } fuu bath. 2~v‘2 baths. ------- immediate possession. Only $8500 BY OWNER, IMMEDIATE' POSSES- en with builMns. finished , full price Look it over If in-i sion, 3 bedroom brick veneered ment and garage. AH for $15,500,' terested, call AUCTIQNLAND, OR! home on Pontiac Lk„ big cedar; termi J tached 2-car garagt 4-3567, panelled living room, carpefpd dm- • I irnm-" -*- -------- 2 BEDROOM, WILLIAMS LAKE room. ^ and^ beauti^t Four ROYCE LAZENBY, Realtor upen Dally from 9 a m. to 8:30 p.m.i [4626 W._Walton_________OR 4-0301 (mound Y4”mILE ROAD. BRICK, i ranch, 3 bedrooms, dining ' 11 living room, flreplf- ' kitchen WANTED I .....lat* buyer. BeautHul 2,- 200 square foot 5-bedroom ho""* ' On secluded 10 acres. 2 1 private lake, stream, room horses. Better hurry 1 $1,500 TOTAL Moves you Into this , roomy, -bedroom bl-level on large fenced lot. Large dining area. Carpeting living room and hallway. IROYER 628-2548 3 S. Lapeer Rd. (M24) Oxford Office Hours. 9 to 9 except Sun. VAN REAL EStATE “ ltor\ I. CLARKSTON AREA — beauty.' TODAY. , h W2ool jack FRUSHOUR, Realtor 15630 Williams Lake Rd. MLS 674-2245 price. 673-8738. BE'OROOM’hOME' I Lake Area, large 'fence< privileges. $10,500. Lam UWON 2 BEDROOM RANCH Ing room, and beautiful kitchen NEAR COMMERCE with walnut cabinets arid built-ins remodeled. This 4 r______ , . glassed In porch facing lake, hard- gas heat, large lot. $9,500 v wood floors. $22,500. 673-3232. 1 $1,000 down, land contract terms BY OWNER, LOT 100'" X 200' WITH 2 car garage, full basement, 344 ,.k'' "I ' Newport Ave. FE 4-1792. \ rdnchdr with oak floors, BY OWNER: BLOOMFIELD” OR- chards (South Blvd. and Opdyke Rd area). 756 Provincetown Rd. FLATTLEY REALTY •20 Commerce Rd. 363-6981, 2, "'3 “ AND ” 4 BEDROOMS," 1’:| $7,000. OA 8-2013. > 3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Drive out M59 |ust west of C I Mp« be see^to be appreciated. BY OWNER diate possession — 3-bed-,1 room brick, carpe^ng and CEDAR ISLAND ■LAKEYRONT | I 2-bedroom, larjj* kitchtn, ^recrja-l 'I room,'°8''"x 7B'' enclosed'porch bn BrTaN°“"' 623-0702 _____^5904 Olxle Hwy., Walerlord_ fv’ CLEAR LAKE'AREA basamenf; 344 512,200 WE BUILD ranchdr with oak nvoi,a, *m... In bath, full basement, gas hea On your lot. -To see the mod. CALL B. C. HIITER, REALTOR. 3792 Ellz. Lk. Rd. 682-8080, after - - - 628-1469. HIGHLAND AREA Country home, 3-bedroom _____ Excellent condition. decorated, finished base-, 2-c<^r garage, $18,900. CO rpet and drapes, at- ----- landscaped. lare occupancy. 33241 De-:ongress_ 4-034^ $26,900. NEAR SCHOOLS 3-bedroom home, large living room and dining room, full basement, 2-car garage, mortgage terms, $13,- 3 BEDROOM WUh^B possible tourth.^on a large area. Price has been reduced ' quick sale. The Rolfe H. Smith Co. SHELDON B. SMITH, R( . HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. Highland Branch Office PHONE: 313-685-1585 333-7B, 6217 — 9 to 5 p.m, Village Home conveniences for the 'My. Easy walking i 3-bedroorn I garage. •nt, 2'r2- 230' 3 Bedrooms LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS MODEL OPEN 579 COLORADO 1 30 to 5 p.m. - 6-dav week | WESTOWN REALTY | PE 8 2763 days 1 After 7:30 P.m. - LI 2-4677 ; 3 BEDROOM BRICK, FULL BASE-( ment, Rochester, land contract ; 651-1403. _ _ I i-BEDROOM R"aNC'H NEAR OR-| School ^ ing $18,900. RAY REAL ESTATE I Utica 731-0500 268-1990 I ^ CLARKSTON VILLAGE^ t' ?-bedroom ranch, garage, basement i I large ccyner lot, close to schools' ' and shopping at 77 Buffalo-corner ' of Waldon, ^,000. Terms. 625-2871. I CLARKSTON. 2 BEOROOM. FULLY 4^ places, attractive split • colonial front, carpeted, 1 __ site, Clarkston schools. SYLVAN-673-3488 OR 334 8222,________ INSTANf HOUSE NEED A HOME NOW? HERE IS 244 S. TELEGRAPH s, Bullt-ln^Range, Marble sills, imlc tile Phone 363-5801 or Kitchen and f6tnily r Living room, dining or fifth , bedro bath up, shaded village lot. $19,500. Tern 4 bedrooms ,and f NO DOWN PAYMENT. 1 $11,770 on your Ic. ART DANIELS ReaitydSK ......... *:e 7-72: KE 7-7500, KE 7-7220 NO STAIRS TO CLIMB NARY A STEP UP - ‘ lorth of Woodhuli Lake. HAGSTROM REALTOR D W. HURON . MLS 4,0351 EVE. FE 4-7005 ___CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815_ WTtERFOR'D TWP. ZERO DOWN Will move you into this sharp bedroom ranch. Ideal tor sm YORK VE BUY WE TRADE )R 4-0363 OR 4-036! 713 Dix.e Hwy._Drayton Plaim Waterford the nicer subdivisions. 3-bedroom all brick ranch, 22 tf. family room with fireplace, all on one floor plus ^2'/3-car a^ttached ga- TIMES baths, carpeted living room. Priced to sell. Call for your appointment. 4 FAMILY INCOME - with all 5 ROOM ' with full basement, gas heat. brick exterior. In good location. Each apt. features 2 bedrooms, IV, baths, range and refrigerator In kitchen, hot water heat, carpeted living room with fireplace, building completely air • conditioned. Priced to sell. Call for more Information. 3 large bedrooms, nice lot, close 1 to shopping, and school bus line. Ready to move Into. This Is a brand new home, with bright decor and sparkling floors, so why not start but right in ■ your own home that Is new? Call lor your personal appoint- B. HALL REALTY 6569 Dixie Hwy. 9-9 daily 625-4116 iJOHNSON! DO YOU Want the opportunity to purchase a 120x150 lot with a block basement on it with top decking completed? Has well, septic and wiring in. Also breeze- i WILLIAMS LAKE | PRIVILEGES 1 I 2-bedroom l-story aluminum sided I ranch home full basement and way attached. IVj-car garage , and lake privileges. Only $4,950 Call early. This won't last. fireplace' — extra large rooms IV, baths — screened-ln porch, possibility of 3rd bedroom — 2-car garage. This home Is being sold to settle an estate, 30 day possession. Well landscaped lot with BUNGALOW Near Cass Lake, nlca clean 2-bedroom with^lots^of trees^ and children to ploy and privileges large trees. After 6 call, Carroll 1 Braid FE 4.2286. ICASS LAKE FRONTAGE 8-room 2-story frame — ,4 bed-1 rooms, completely furnished — 1' , I baths — gas heat — fireplace — I enclosed 10x35 ft. front porch. ■starter home and value of prop-irjy is continuing to rise. A larger home could be built In the same spot later. Just $7,250 with only closing costs tor the guall-fled G.l. ’ Leased for $175 per month until June 15, 1968. 40 ft. frontage on sewer. No mortgage cost, may be 1 bought on land contract. Call (or A. JOHNSON Si SONS Realtor 1704 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-2533 WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty 5690 DIXIE HIGHWAY 623-0600 REALTOR Open 9-9 dally 'FE 5-8183 DORRIS BRICK Two bedroom brick bungalow. Just west of town. Living room & dining L. Kitchen. Full basement. Summer porch. Two car ^arage.^Gas^fired automatic heat. WISHES - DO C0M6 true, but first, you'll have to call us and| Inspect this long, low and ram-j bling, brick and frame ranch! home. Homes In the price category of $20,600 are hard to find ' NORTH’SIDE galow. Carpeted living 8. dining 3 bedrooms. Oak floors. Carpeted living room. Full basement. Gas' heat. 2-car attached garage. Solid paved drive, liv,xt7 covered Off Auburn Ave. We' are ottering thia riitA two bedroom home Inspection. Featuring —* ------ fenced aluminum siding, p ' $7,950 per nf HINKII OR TRADING HOMES - EFFICIENT SERV-on St. MLS FE 4 0921 _____,__.. M-24. brick , land aluminum, ilull basement,. 2-...oion and priceijj, gdrage and take privileges on -....s aprawling ranch carpenter Lake. S bedrooms, 1Vi home overlooking beautiful Wal- baths, lots \ot extras and custom --- .... .... » fsaturei, and nicely landscaped. Budget-priced at $19,750 with as little as $2,000 down plus costs. "Don't Walt" as this ihould sail this weak. MODEL HOMES LAKE OAKLAND SHORES! Colonial, trl-level and ------ ' EVES. FE 4-7005 T'TT..,. age. Cell 625-4659. COUNTRY ESTATE OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5 8661 HIGHLAND RD. M-59 IRWIN MENZIES REAL ESTATE 625-5485 9230_Dixi 625-5015' $35, a* * nent, 2 baths, 2’/,. ‘3 BEDROOM'RANCH HOME BRIAN 623-0702 Nearly new, on blacktopped road'_5904 Dixie Hwy^^ateffor^ near Lake Orion, 2036 sq. ft.! /-'« ,i i \ krhen^sVh *roT$''^of^Tp'boerr! OrestbrooK large carpeted N. PADDOCK 2-bWroom bungalow with full basement with IVj-car garage. Carpel- NO WAITING, $2700 DOWN ---- •' ' ts. New larage,, 'NOT ONE PENNY DOWN AND FREE CLOSING COSTS IN THE CITY Mattingly Seeing is Believing ^ ROMAN BRICK RANCH Here Is a home with 3 bedrooms, large bath, 2 fireplaces, r- cu9tom*'^faaturas. Beautifully furnished a nd deluxe lallty all the way. Dupllcatlon-•Iced on your lot as Tow as $19,--.0. OPEN SAT. S. SUN. 1-5 p.m. DIxl# Hviry. to Sashf^w, right to Walton, right to Blg^ateman algn, new” model RANCHER: 3 bed--ims, I'T baths, beautiful custom-It kitchen, full basement wood scaled-glass windows with screens. 2-car garage ami gleamIng-whIte carefree aluminum sidng. Priced at ust $17,750 plus Inside decorating and building site. OPEN SAT. £ 1-5 p.m. Corner «t Scott Rd. and Watkins Lakt Rd. BATEMAN REALTOR-MLS Pontiac Orlon-Oxford Br. 3rner lot. Garage. FHA f ,aro FOUR BEDROOMS . Turn left oft 0 DOWN VA Only 4 yrs. old. 3-bedro' Total $12,900. 1 dining rooms. Kitch Gas HA heat. Atli SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS Terms, WATERFORD REALTY I SOUTH EAST-SIDE 4540 Dixie Hwy. «73-1273 '_____Multiple Listing Service _ _ WATERFORD TOWNSHIP acant, Cape Cod, alum, sidii nat. fireplaces, full baseme baths, gar dishwasher, c-...— .. 250 ft. on Woodhuli ROOM FOR LAUGHTER — I( I working man'^ familv home. 1 peted living large dining arge bedroc rage. Nestled In the trees w> privileges on 7 large lakes. Rea to go. PIERCE-KETTERING AREA rancher! "Featur*ing ^ large”” kitchi wall to wall carpet, 1-car tached garage, fenced yard. Ji $23,800, trade or terms arranged. VACANT IMMEDIATE POSSESSION 3 BEDROOM, family room. $21,900. 4 BEDROOM, 2-Story, Rochester. N. CASS LAKE RD. bedrooms, full basement, rec lion room, 2 car garage, breeze ,, „„y, lot 100x200. Very deslrabli . home and location. Priced to tell Will trade. • I DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY :■ 502.9000 - OR 4-3568 - OL 1 022: ARRO TED McCullough, Realtor CASH FOR YOUR LAND CONTRACT OR EQUITY stainless stagl sink, Dlshmaitar Ir handy kitchan, full basamant, gai ..... a—ii„ fir^laca garaga, :ad at $18, IDEAL FOR RETIRED OR YOUNO COUPLE. Cozy bungalow, nicaly paneled walla, carpeting In living room, full basement gaa heat, gle»iad-in front porch large lot. Approximately $2,200 down on land contract. OPEN DAILY 9-t Redwood fenced It porch. Gl or FHA ^"HSCMODEL 'OPEN>. ■ull pric* $1 EAST SIDE ’ C. A. WEBSTER, Realty I 692^2291 _ 6M-2515, 3"^BEDROOMS, “T’ j 'BATHS. 22x2^1*'’ ft. garager house 1120 sq. ft. plus Paved dfive plus many other extras. In Pontiac Township. $20,800. _ FE 2-3259. _ , _ ^ . 4" BEDROOM COLONIAL, W E S"T Irapes. Mid-30's. By owner. 1917._______ ______________________ _^-H'REAL ESTATE DAILY 12-8 aom, family room and 2-car !. priced at only $16,400 plus icnied in in>w sub with paved „ curb, gutter, sidewalks and city water. Drive out M59 to Crescent Lake Road, turn right to CresfbrooK Street and model. DON GIROUX REAL ESTATE 4511 Highland Road iNjSn 673-7837 DO YOU WANT "A FULL BASEMENT? condition. FHA. TERMS. GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE listing SERVICE 298 W.-Walton_______________FE 3-78B $844 DIXIE'HWY. 623-1400, tine horr AFTER 5 P M, ' new viny OR 3-0455 EM 3-0148 OR 3-2391; chased w j Upbm. BIG LOt; iN NEED'OF LAKE FRONT - YEAR ROUND collage — Welled Lake — Only SI 1,500 — Laiid contract terms - EM 3-7700. 70' LAKE FRONT — 3 bedrooms — large ledgestone 'fireplace — $16,000 — full pric# - EM 3-6703. X 150' - I - $2800 -s. EM 3-5477. OPEN BUILDERS MODEL 4-BEDROOM — 2-story arkston area. Hat full leat, hard-tVa baths. _____ ^____ilon. Only down or trade. 01* kcuTIONS: Baldwin Road North to Clarkston Orion Rd. turn left to Eston Rd., follow open signs. and dishw ”Tl'U“,or quic today. :arpeted through- zero down to qualified Gl. low. Living! Chen. Base-|TREAT YOURSELF - to a $750 down pleasurable experience by e> In excellent east side ni Id. Carpeted livino rc 17. Oak llooi II Yorl YORK CROSS REALTY ..... AND INVESTMENT CO. Ei'.'1j^.€1«'3ROOMS brand NEW FURNITURE $277 water_oij heater $20.‘ 626-0720. _ L O O R'MODEl'^ A T H ' TUI Carry with, $25. G. A. Thompso' BOULEVARD SUPPLY 500 S._^v(L E. \ F\E 3-7081 ^ Ulfb LUMBER ; Oakland County. E For Th^ Fifiest In \|w"NT.'-ulfb-LUMB-ER->L-Es,'; Top^Quqlit^ \ kjndjing^w^d,^u^ha_u^ \ )ShoB.At\ waldoii Rdl391-3420. \ V_ \ MW&mXy Ward I \ Pontiac Walk ‘■T " • \ \\\ _ 'CW-i$tmas Trees 67-A \ \ ’Sniith-Wesson' pisto'l?, icopes, s. We do our oi^n reppli work. !pas \ot archery\ equtpmei wNiNG BOOTS—All sizes SKI-D00'S\ FRIGIOAIR^ ELECTRIC STOVE, \ 500__Gal. oN tank, $30 each. MY gvERGREEN ROPING, WREATHS, ' inWieces, grava blankets, 30937._____________________ GARAgE SALE. CLOTHING, FUR-nilurS, dishes. Fri, and Sat., 9-6 o.m. 38^W. Newport, GARAGE SALE:"RIDING'"MbWER,!"''| ' rototiller, "UNCLAIMED FREIGHT' 1967 Sewing machine, zig-zag cabinet model. Sell for bair— -$56.60 or $6.90 per mont Northern Sewing, 673-9746. USED TVs, $19.95 I Village Tavern ATTRACTIVE 4,000 sq. ft. b Ing. Could easily be a nite < Very reasonable v lease terms i^le at $44,000 and only Si; dbwn.^ Call for an appoinir a’WO^'N OMAN'S CLASS "C“ highway jpeation with a LITTLE JOE'S Borgain House Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-6842 Acres of Free Parking ;^9;__SaL Til 6. EZ Tfrrm-UPHOLSTERE I. FE 5-1705 if DREXEL DISTRESSED MAPLE ________________________________ -lining table and |hutch. 2 match-' MICHIGAN APPLIANCE CO. Ing wing chairs, 2 matching ta- 3282 Dixie Hwy. _ 673-8011 twin '^"trundle bun*k' S^ds* SPRING AND MAT- 363^941,1.''^ * 4 _’j man'ress‘^«;"®white^^^ DUNCAN PYFE TABLE AND 5 headboard, $5. 646-3667. chairs, $35. Refrigerator, $20., Desk------------------- $15. Chir- Cliff Dreyer's ____ .... ______ Gun and Sports Center 681-0672.__________15210 Holly Rd. Holly,' MB 4-6771 PICK "your" TREE ON THE STUMP, Open Dally ond Sundoyi ow® cu"f lotel" $2'".% 17 »i"i HEADQUARTERS Old - s-ewlng. mochln^riV.rnl4 SVVo^^cl^T mile’' | for Rupp StlO-SpOrt ^ turo, electrical appliances, stove,| ot 1-75 IntetsecHon. Cedar Lane, , PolariS, SCOrpiOD refrigerator, washer and dryer,; Christmas Tree Farm, 8970 Dixie' --- TV^27 S. Berkshire. FE 5-7288_Highway. 625-1922._____________ GARAGE SALE SAT. " NOV. H, WHOLESALE SCOTCH PINE ange, tugs^^ FoVnali, corner- 33lV,’Hale. ys, Bloomfield Hills. -------------- °R*?hmoK®^or^^^^^ CHristmos Gifts 67-B Township, 9-nr 10 h ■ GA¥A(3ETALE ig oower, men. _ women, Chll- _____ 103' ^"''MonlcBl'm ' ""’ponMai clothing, 1-A BARBIE, FRANCIE OR SKIP per doll clothes, complete set, $■ JTroy^ 879-6413. _ _ _ _______ 7' POOL tzlBLE, $25. SNOWMOBILE I Buy early and save I $0 DOWN, EASY BANK TERMS I MG SALES & SERVICE I All inowmobllt accaiiorloi Drayton Plaint Sal. 12-5 p ________________334-9280 _____ SLOT CAR SETS, REVELL scale. Cost $100, sell $50. E> cars. EM 3-0690.' , ' 4667 pixie Hwy. 1CE'bo"aT^"-'“Pn CLASS, COM- 65-A h- 3-Rooms Furniture ______________________ ......... ......... BRAND NEW ' ' size refrigerator, $29. TV set,-i ’t $288 $2.50 WeekI g- narr^i^ FE s-2766. . __________ ' PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 e. Pike FE 4-7881 ETHAN-ALLEN ROUND TABLE, ....— Paddock end City Hall captains chairs, ai;o up,roister ____ .. Kitchen 'stove! $5. TV, Antiques $15. 174 S. Shirley._______ ELEC. STOVE," $25,- GAS STOVE, 3 WALL CLOCKS, $75: 2 SHELF $35; Relr;igerator with top freezer, cjTCks, ^^FE J-7923.__ " BUG"g""iES, SLEIGHS, WHEELS, wash bowl --- —...,—. r 1965 CASE 450 DIESEL CAT WITH GARAGE SALE "- Good condition. 4 S175 0 R3-M16. __ ® MODEL 94 WINCHESTER, WITH scope, case, shells. 682-4B-- ^$125r"673-675li SN()WMOBrLES"^ Quality, priced right tor you. —r—-r—-"s p5wer center , 852-J HOUGHTEN'S P ...............„.............. SKI-DOO ski-daddler ‘51.1936^ -s ' ^ mir, EVc.'’''pomiac"^'’&^ RnDwtrinhilfi Richardson, 363-9361. Mon.-Fri, _ clothing. Antiques. estate'. JENNIE' NILES. OLD! ''J Troy family Saturday, Nov; 11,i Satu^ay. lo to 4 10 to 4. Nye Dairy Building,' ©on Trail. Cheroke 585 Oakland Ave. Pontiac. North GIBSON GUITAR, 3 School. / ............. ’ “ p.m. 2765 Ona-Hills Sub. ! ViOLtN. COM- Ing c . Call 1-4-751B STARTING SOON New luxury t8 unit apartmei buildings for sale. Required cas $28,900, bal. mortgage. For fu details call 674-3136. Mode --------- .4 o.ya rea;r ir $300 price $24,900, $11,000 close to start of Walton Btvd. ffORE BUILOrNG, 40x90, yard fenced. Leased C^IhX 673-1198_________ Lake Property^ 51 cent dc DEER LAKE Beautiful targe lake lot, 127 ft. : 300 ft. 12 ft. above lake leve Will take beautiful hillside horn $22,500 . 674-3136. EXCEPTIONAL Every detail from design fo completion wos dono under the watchful eyes ol the owner builder. Exposed basement ColonlOl pillars l'/2 baths 2 car garage—elec, opener 3 carpeted bedrooms Bullt-lns Plowing well 116' lake frontage Marble Sills Double Insulated windows Carpeted living room Near M-24 and north, ol Oxford. $32,000. f C. PANGUS INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK ^ 630 M-1S , Ortonville _____CALL COlLECT NA 7-2B1>5 WALTERS LAKE AREA ^ 'ling site $2400. 120' $2500. Clarkston School ler 673-3488.____________ I NEAR many zc $3950 - $1500 d< COMMERCE LAKE 50X200' IDEAL FOR WALKOUT BASEMENT. $5500. FLATTLEY REALTY LAKE LIVING. PONTIAC 15 MIN-utes. Lots $995, $10 mo. Private beaches, boat, fish, swim, open Sun. Bloch Bros. 623-1333, FE 4-4509, 5660 Dixie Hwy. Waterford. LAKEFRONT HOMES - NEW Northern Property 51-A 120 ACRES, HUNTING LAND miles north of Sterling. Only $50 per acre. Terms. trailer on 74x300' lot ............ 7 miles west of Elgin, $3,880. ^SmEWIDE REAL ESTATE 1661 S. Lopter Rd., Lake Orh ____________ 391-2000 ____^ •UR an. Mr-Mior Fe'^- loti-Acreage 10 ACRES FOR 'PRIVACY, PLEA^ ------------ . ^mith. IfrSO ACR'ES; V frontage, Mr. perly, plenty ol of beeutilul acre, 12 per C. PANGUS INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 30 M-15 Ortonville __CALL_CqLLECT NA 7-28l5_ TIMBERLINE ESTATES ASK FOR NEW ILLUSTRATED CATALOG PARTRIDGE REALTORS ISO W. HURON ST,. FE 4-3581 _ OPEN WEEK NITES TIL 9:00 _| PRlVAfE'bETECTIVE AGENCY i Partnership available lo right person - male or female. $7,500 _______ to $11,500. Write Pontiac ^Press perty and Box C12.,____________ _ i $7,250, IS small lunch ROOM IN PON-' : tiac, owner retiring. 673-8394. WANtED: JANITORIAL SERVICE i 682-2972 and chair, exc. FREIGHT DAMAGED BEDROOMS >1-0822._____and living rooms. Save almost half: ^‘VrXy foU Tod □ ROOM SET i - LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN I N»«,\ ; HOUSE. Baldwin at Wallon, FE 2- U ‘^TaTURDAYTNOVEMB^E^ 347pwhlt- it wooded,! l5 PIECE SECTIONAL, GOOD CON-1 con^on, Sl^palr.^ 4-9762^ dition, $50. desk $25, FE 4-2643._IfuLL SIZE BED. COMPLEtE. 7 PIECE DIIslING ROOM SUITE,| Youth bed. Antiqu • W. of Theater. Hi-Fi, TV & Radios household Dixie H^.'OR 3-94M. OPApCEY^TRAc^l^ Musical-Goods ' r, like new, $75. Call- 682- 4 PIECE DRUM SET, MINUS 11^363-7571._ _______ ' .nare, $1M.. 623-0639. _ _ METAL DESKS A N D ^ LARGE SELECTION OF USED 5. good condltion,^^reasonable. [;^and instruments, --- Snowmobile BUY NOW AND SAVEI CRUISE OUT INC. E. Walton Dally 9-6 FE 8-4402 SKI-DOO'S 1968 MODELS ON DISPLAY PNLY $695 KING BROS. PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYKE FE 41662 SNOWMOBILES EVINRUDE ON DISPLAY x"l2' wool'RUG. drop' LEAFi LAKE ANp's^eTmARINE' I. Opdyke r ----- $139,62 < . $39.95 and $49.95, i electric and bottled h FE 8- YOUNG BARBERS TAKE NOTE well esiablished shop ------ furnished offered for with full basement. Good i,$r*ti«n In ’Pontiar, Unbelievable' month. $3,400 building Inlaid Tile, ■ REFRIGERATOR AND ELEC- J7" Portable $30. 623-05^ s. t^rajige, good condition. 335-8287. ,21" USED TV *■ GE R'aNGEI good' CONDITION. ..... *• $25. FE 8-0940. ________ ' h'OT p'OINT'WASHER AND DRY-, V - 673-j _ r fixti 5 and t OR 4-0324.____ PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" fieg'ld"* io.r' R“na*bie"'buK:, MOTEL, TRAILER PARK liable. To build your plans HOME “Hwy*" 0 Whit. Lak. (id., 63 A.,. TROUT-POND, CAFE I left I mile^ Branch are^ Six unh mote L. TEMPLETON, realtor 2339 Orchard Lk._Rd. 687-09t TODAY'S BUYS: I. Michigan ArGALLAGHER'3 LOWREY ORANS ALL SIZES AND STYLES with built-in rhythm section, hear this before you buy. ut^ding i with large tarn. Over 2,950 ft hwy. . $79,500 with $35,000 i CLASS sing $55,000f _ FE 5-6303. _ ________ i" kELVIN ATOR E L i C T'R range. Good condition. $30. 6 3188.___________ ■ "19677SINGER home. 3 months’ old, A-1 condition, I luhting set ond sew lor, buttonholes, her —„ ... ... .,. Only $6112 $7.50 month, 335-9283. Uiold Applian«. __ | it''*hlat cdLONIAL c"aBINET, $50, 393 Orel rtable $30. 623-05^^ H0T"^ATER^BASEBOARD "RAD -D TV ^ $29^95 ,10,5 j, 3, p^, npeal ft. G. ) TV, FE 2-2257 Open 9-6 Thompson, 7005 M-59 W. -1. H^E_GARAC^;^E.^^r __ 334-2231 _ ____i lamps, clock. Clothing. T06 Rivier >168._______________ ________, 'aMPEX CASETTE STEREO off Eliz. Lk. Rd. \_ HOUSEHOLb SPECIAL ! now in stocki :or^^-?bi5‘'°°‘’ !0 A MONTH BUYS '3 ROOMS OF PONTIAC MUSIC 8. SOUND s.,TrHFN CABINETS BEAUflFl)L n , ,................ FURNITURE ^ Consists ol: OW W^t Huron __________^ J£,™'^r5|riaer^ator^'staiiuess Sal. 'hl^5 p.m.' ^hocs.,- 673-0570.________ "oo":?; ;X °2“s;Lp"able\ri BlrgarS^uT''FE^^6V4f.! Efrim‘*lilJr7hinetrso"ir'"- W 1867. CAN- five giant feet of" SOLID|^arale.'"M!"4-4«9°'_ ^ LAVATORIES COM(>LEtE ! value, $14.95,'also baffitubs, tc ™Or'dE^'eAr'lY AND SAVI STACHLER TRAILER^ SALES, INC. 6 3771 HIghImd__ (MS9 ) 682-9430 WANTED; I PAIR OF SNOW 9'xl2' rug in ce bedroor-lerspring nr anity la FIVE GIANT FEET - stale stereo, AM-FM . BSR record changer, storage $12.50 i^Appllan, .. ______ $217.51 0. handles. 335-9283.' l^$375 . 682-4268. CABLE-NELSON PIANO BENCH,' chestel io walnut, like new only ., $5751 95 Ste, s Smiley Bros 334-47211 Wincht ..... rllla. $123. V el 1400. 12 gauge $144. 10 double barrel $78.50. .model 190, 22 1 double this poteniT -alues. 1... Orchard LI 335-9283, Household ' WYMAN“" I FURNITURE CO. rH?nllK’''I?ansi1terUed'*u^^^ Wood ' S'l'lH-EY BROS. _N^_N_________________L^^J50I| ' Dlavl(? $200! wTan'S SiTE 42 LONG SuTtS, tOP-jFENDER K*!'!'.'’-':"")?..®' fin model 336 C 35 Caii-, oer. $79,96.-410 Single barrel shot- _____________ - -- I pun. $29.95. Waltejt'i Hdwe. 3900 ECES, COMPLETE | Jos^lyn Rd. 39M23r _ S^^KiSand-Gravel-blrt ' 76 ELECTRIC REED O'RGAN-BENCH.i ^ $125|1-A SAND AND GRAVEU ALL $50,000 ' h 25 p« alt'd In the built- lo BEDROOM SETS, rrounded by two WALNUT,........ — "steal! ir No. 1 AAAwnrii Anniversary Sale .as rai?eyiT!'vInl"oL'r. t delivered. 673-5516, Water- ""im. I cWWn. sandTI^Tavel and i6a ____ UP. 6 IKE NEW, 2 BLOND. Johnson TV-FE ___________ _ _____________ BO to 800 ACRES *"'*1""^ Contracts 1 lower Michigan. Dairy,, grain. chlgan's" Farm Real twater, Michigan. Dale rr> Broker and Au r call 517-278-2377 MAHOGANY, 1 MAPLE. ASK FOR BUSINESS GUIDE ;g r e e]n.^gold, blue, p PARTRIDGE REALTORS St., FE^4-3M1 BROWN Or’*'rFIGe'^ ODD C..r^..>s,. MAPLE Ductless Hoods $24.95 TV STEREO COMBTnATION. EXC. —$200. MA 5-1835. 334-4721 areas ...................... MICRO- U cuaia, «•'•« n^isc.l phone and stand. Like new. $125.XRO\)VN. ____ _________ Garagfe sale, items. Everything ' 332-2592. __ _ ‘ Stone. Phone EM 3-7722._______ goes. 6064 Cramlane, Clarkston. 625- hoyER"GUITAR. COST $100, SAC- DARK RICH FARM CLa'Y ALUMS 1710._ _ _ _____ ,, rifices, $45.00. 60 Matthews. 1 top soil, also black dirt, 5 yards iMATtHING BEDROOM ^URJAINS^ ,p y6u~ WANf"S^LL" 'YOUR i ior $12.50 del. FE 4-6588.____________________ Chest, $25. *626-4397. Buyer. U's-Pontiac Mdll. 682-0422. ViDOZING DRIVEWAY GRAVEL AND 1RONRITE "ir'ONER, AND "HEALTH chair, ''*■ ........... ............ condition, 2 ^ Re«lly''co.!> He»dqut----- ----- er 517-288-6127 - nights. _____ INVE'ST IN LAND CAN BE DIVIDED - 2W^ at only 15 ml. from Flint «n F ley-Rd. (paved). Rolling trees make it Ideal tor •nf — good buildings a 4-bedro"*" - PC. CORAL 3 PC, BEIGE, 2 NEW_______„ _____________ EoS?.!!. ^SETS, $109 IN kenmore w'irPnGER WASHER, BROWN OR BEIGE. OD^^ ruAioc ------------------------- 60 END TABLE SETS, $22 OR WALNUT. i tO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us ___ you deaf. KITCHEN SETS. 3 PC, WARREN STOUT, Realtor «o. 7 pc.--------------- Water Softeners^ 'i HOT WATER HEAT AND WATER! ________338-3472 _______ RTRBY SWEEPER DINING ROOM SETS, $4, UP. $' “ ““ JJS;:SSri%LTD‘:^" v Kirby service >& supply Co. 2617 DIXIE 67i.9Wi k R O H L E »zu, / rw. *aa. REFRIGERATORS, hrnuun nwlnn $29 TO $49. GAS STOVES ~ 42". 6>3%47' 4M. APT SIZE. $27; 26". $45; 30",, —**il*^', — . 'til 8 p. FE 5-8U5 „J, APT. SIZE, $27; 36", $45; 30' . . $55. ELEC. STOVES, 40", $30; 30" i $65. I y CHEST, $12; MIRROR, $3 UP;, Westlnghouse Auto, washer. Vanity. set. 682-5065. Include targe b« at $500 per acre -consider offer on down. 156 ACRES — S. of Lapeer on paved road next to golf course and close to Lake Nepessing pub------------- — -7hlc r«nd , 1 to 50 LAND CONTRACTS M. C. Lipparid 559 N. Perjry I t«fore APARTMENT S I Z E" ______ JLECTRIC you deal. , stove, aiso misc. furniture. 332-7679. WARREN STOUT, Realtor ,APXRtAAENf7yizE" electric Opdyke Rd. ,, ^ F6 5-8165 ” BRASS BEDS, linoleum RUGS. MOST SIZES, ...... $3.49 up. Pearson'S Furnit- E. Pike St.. ^E_J*708JI^ L0"mY SINGER Used slant needle deluxe. Zlg-Zag-| ger for designs, hems, bottonnoles,; etc. Sacrifice $46.00 cash or $5 Vnonth. 33S-9283, Kous ___ MOVING. ANTIQUE kiWaLL CONSOLE"p’ 66.61 f^»’?sser. violm, books, dishes, and bench. Bargain at ** mtsc. FE 2-1436.__________ ________ SMILEY BROS._ 3^r47211 NEW 40 GALLON PRE-HEAT NEW HOHNER ACCORDIA'N, $49 !S , glass lined gas hot n.at.r Condra $40. FE 2-2595 after 6 ^F^(L6588.__ I fill dirt. OR 3- ________ _ jpeclali.,. _______________ Plumbing 8. Jilting. FE 8-0642. I norgE OIL S P A C E ' HEATER, For Sale Miscellaneous 67 OAK DOUBLE BED, H0"LLYW0"6D| W OFF - ON SPECIAL BOXED |,g,j clothing. 334- Chrislmas Cards. Buy *»UlA 6369 Forbes, 4500 Dixie, Drayton. OR! J-9767. organ". rights, teachers SILVERTONE 2 CHANNEL t put amplifier,' has 6-10" spet $110. Kingston Elec. Bass ,g •arly 3,000 yds. of till dirt and excavations of baMjnenti Wood^Cool-Coke Fuel kup, 1965 prtf h jack combination, $2,000, 2130 PAN TOP, FOJ? AN 8' FLARE 1 $35,' ' le box, $200, MA 5-3372. | 3667. PRINTING PRESS. «5. j THOMAS ^ ORGAN ^SIZE Ibody FIREPLACE WOOD. DE- 4J607I model 0, 25 pedals, Rd., ___ 12-4 NEW GAS PUrtNACl, lOO.OdO BTU. ,We or you Install. Pontiac — 674-2611 or 682 SS74._ SPRINGS 1 CLEAN MATTRESl FE 5-9934. 5-bedroom home — 2 large bi and 4 others. A 5 minute di from Lapeer and new freeway 3fi Open Eves, 'til 8 p.____ in I CASH FORELAND CONTRACTS, in ,H. J. Van Welt. 4540 Dixie Hwy. ' OR 3-1355. ’[need LAND CONTRACTS. SMAIL $29. Elec- ____________.c 8' SNOW BLADE, $70, - •' _________190 W. Walton.______ ^|^‘|9'X12' LINOLEUM RUGS, $3.95 EA. MAPLE,b¥DROOM SET Icetllng Hie — wall paneling, cheap.' mpiete. 338-0573. B&G Tile, FE 4-9957. 1075 W. Huron Matching|,o H.P, BOLENS MOWER, SNOW 338-0573. chair. Assorted tables. B-llraiB-COMPLE-T™ OR 3-7720 after 6 " . ... VrU ^artialli BE DIViDEC E LAKE TWP. - _____ _____ Highland Golf Course . and partially Wooded terrain. CAN, BT is.»,ir^^p pric, for all ' 105 ACRES' (>orter Road — beautiful rolling .... . ^ • ! farm land with spring fed stream. 41,4 ACRES, ZONED M-1, 800' ON; Excellent site for sporty golf RAILROAD FOR, SIDING IN course. $1100 AN.ACRE-TERMS. 1 WATERFORD, NEAT 2-BEDROOM HOME. ALL FOR $20,000, 14.45 ACRES ! cash. • Near Airport — 875' on M-59 front- ai DAIII V age, 715^ deep - $200 per front AL rAULY ^ foot. DIVIDE OR BUILD TO SUIT. 45U Dixie, Rear OR 3-3800 ________Eves. OR 3-9272 LOANS $25 TO $1,000'^ COMMUNITY LOAN E. LAWRENCE______ LOANS $25 to $1,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER & LIVlNGSTONt Finance Co. / 401 Pontiac State Bank Buil^Thg ■ FE 4-1538-9___ LOAND TO" $1,000 6T!bEAUTIFUL DOUBLE OVEN ELEC -range, $69. Washer and dryer $125. Stereo nfver used, $79. de doors complete. .$5. each. c.Jterm. G. Harris. FE 5-2766. BEDROOM SET; METAU-^fTlING 1-3511. bed fr!^i TV. LI chains, 623^1338. 105,000 BTU NEW GAS FURNACE, installed with ducts, avg. $595. Also ’oower humidifiers Installed, reas. H Sales, 625-1501, 625-2537. and china champ^ne fi 363-2020. utch, solid birch, j ANCHOR FElfCES NO MONEY DOWN Fll 5-7471 BABY CRIB, HIGHCHAIR, AUTO. ting, 5 other Items. 332-2587. BABY BED, ^ _ er, rockers, chairs. Also antiques. NVlON CARPWiFG,'' OFF-WHITE,' _ConeV^ 8^. ........, $55. «42-3e95. " ,8ARN WOOD, railroad TIES, 8 sizes, F E 5-9120.. plumbi'ng bargains, (= r e e1 Ji?h._^»ih'fi« ^-7«8L_________________ F i"RVp'rA"c"E""""w6bD~$ir“6R! standlng^ tojlel, $14.95;^ ^ganonluSED CONN SPINET ORGAN^ -! Ilverrt. 682-7318. ' mw:' laundry trl|(''Vim,'\l9*95^:i sm'l^^ bRoII *’*'*”'" 33'‘ *”l tWOODyoKiVEREC^^ TimwT 'sfnk'’ S^VS' 'la« *$2 95-' ^Fa'UC), CHOOSE FROM UP-'^ tubs’* $20 and up.' Pipe "cut. and .......... threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO., V FE 4-1516. POWER HUMIDIFIER FACTORY SALE! iged, non-rusting, """''-"'■or, ______ 40 pet. Visit thi ...... . .... -----.iteed. Reg. $100. Factori7 direct price cl $59.95, saves you 40 pet. Visit the Rooto Corp. at 33094 W; 8 Mile (at Farmington Rd.) in Farmington Ph~i. 47k-6111^__________________ IEMEMBERi THE LITTLE REL Schoolhouse?? School desks with bench attached even , a. Ink wall, «. Large Simmoi# "h'.de-a-bed," black and white twee* excellent condition. EM 3-3838 or EM 3-6167. REMINGTON AUTOMATIC 300 SAV. rifle with Alaskan scope, case and shells, $140. 30-40 Krag Rifle with 3x Weaver scope, case and shells, $65. Remington Repeater 22 rifle, . ____ $25. Bowling balls, leather bags Across from Tel-Huron and shoes, -$I2. 38 Neome St. 332- ,, . -----:--- soles. Uprights f iGRINNELL'S WURLITZER AND THOMAS ORGANS and pianos . INSTRUCTIONS AND * INSTRUMENTS. JACK HAGAN MUSIC 469 Elizabeth Lake Rd. , 332-0500 8192 Cooley Lake Rd.___363-5500 YES, WE RENT INSTRUMENTS FOR SCHOOL BAND AND ORCHESTRAS $5 per month $10 tor Saxophones MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd^ livened. 681-0672, WHITE BIRCH "fTrEPLACE :W000. SIS a cord — picked up, $22 delivered. 3085 S. Lapeer Rd., 6 Ml. N. ol Pontiac on M-24. Call 391-_1704^________________ Pets-Hunting Dogs 79 1 MINIATURE SCHNAUZER PUP, _male, 3 mos^o. o» - ~™ 1 BEAUTIFUL BOS puppy. PE_S-3480. 1 YEAR C"__ _____ 2Va pounds,. AKC OR 3-7312;___ lA SCHNAUZERS, POODLES, GER-man Shepherds, tropical fish. Pet supplies and Grooming. 696 W., Huron. 332-8415, UnCIa Charlti Pal Shop. Music -Lessons BRONZE OR CHROME DrNE""TTE sale, BRAND NEW. Large and' tmgular"able™"n' r'Ttnli AN^,' sets, $24.95 up. I PEAliSON'S FURNITURE ! 210 E. Pike FE 4-7881; RUMMAGE SALE: FRIDAY NOV. 10, 9:30 to 3:30. Highland Methodist Church, Highland. Also for sale, Ml*' ■3lo‘Hkkory"'M5»'"!o" P?!*?' -n«iuK3 «1NL. Line®''' , North of 1-75 oH Baldwin._ 8 GRAY METAL I ono j T.ri'n”a7 ‘ 9 AM-7:30 PM Ed Sal Sun 4 10 9:30-5. In basement. Children's, | PRINTING PRESSES^FFSET ',T _.-A DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC, ESTELHEIM KENNELS, 391-1889 1-A POODLE SALON BY "ARLEEN" - FE 8-8569 ^ 2-0567 I-A DACHSHUND- PUPS, AKC, $10 —7i:a' " 8-2538. . JAHEIM'S KENNELS. FE BRAND NEW END AND COFFEE! PontiaC ReSOle Shop |®t|L^?h|.^.,®^o'iotL5''°lawn°mrwer*l'*^“^^'^ GUITAR LESSONS,AKC°°ud'"wrvlc4,®wpp(a$%E'^^ tables, $5.85 ea. Lillie Joe's, FE, Buy'^Sell I St!’.'' ' ™i'.J i Church, Highland. Also lor sale, sales-Service, PulaheckI, OR 3-5S96.! «rv.ce, puppies, t-t 4- buys..jat...and' sun.>ntii.aii,i$^-^i^^^^^^ Office Equinment " 72 STUP 700 SO. FT. .INDUSTRIAL BLOCkI 12,900. .HAGSTROM, Realtor Multiple Listing fervice 4900 W. Huron OR 4-0358 FE 4-7 Building, plus a residential hi Three street frontage, 300'-40', Vj of building presently leased tor $31"------------- - rented lor JP^^^r month. Home, __ ______JO. Contract terms! k Ra«L Estate, FE 3-7888. I FE 2-9206 Is the number to call , OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac Stata Bank Bldg. 9-5 Friday — 9-7 SaL ^ WANT ADS FOR' "ACTION" SACRIFICING EXPENSIVE FURNI- _Draylon Plains. ' __ ' ■ fPoney BASEMENT ^.SALE,_ HOUSEHO^; tre, desperal. all 334-5009. Sewing mo cy disc 1 Items, Including 4 plete. Dining' ■“* chairs, dishes utensils, Fri. RUMMAGE SALE: NOVEMBER KF jiervTce aiid'dTppIngl'BL'Fl' 4^38. GRAY METAL DESKS AND ' chairs, good condition^ reasonable, --------- ------------- ------------------ iC. Items.!543p Dixie, Waterford_l_623-0200| ' *TO«*G Boo* hunt- Sashibaw®'to Sportirtg Coodf 74 ^em s^ em msst^ C«nt.y,‘Dr”yton°j7r^----r.^-Tr!™.!r_:.„ 1* g ''^a*ver . 718 Co: ta.te Sale. Old dishes, jars I, USED 1967 EVINRUDE,SKEETEr! 493-47I6. __________ Es- end 1 used 1967 Polaris 130 Colt. 2 WHITE FEMALE TOY POODLES i.ipVFl '3088 W. Art Wirk««n'^ n wk« i-wuuca, . «"rl) mobile’( Ture, DOOKS, frames, mirrors, etc. -------—---------- ,3475 Whitfield Dr. off Williams i-V GUNS-720 W. HURW. 134-7651. ... Exc. selection of useg guns. THE PONTIAC rilESS, FRIDAV. Xf)VEMRKR 10. 1907_ 0oi»________7» t PART MINIATURE, DAC ______110. FE van. / 4 AKC CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES. I 3-1W4. Evev MY 3-1339 Livasteck CARNIVAL *AAALE COUIE PUPS, AKC. ALSO i vr. oh) tamale. 1874596. AFGHAN hounds, YORKSHI RE Tarrlera. FE 4-8793.__________ AIREDALES. 7 WEEKS OLD AKC RegUtared. 625-3594. YEAR OLD BAY MARE INCLUD-Ing exc. western saddle. 8375. Also Shetland gelding with saddle $75. Moving, must sell Phohe whitt Lake, 887-5385 after 6 p.m. AKC BEAGLES, INTERNATIONAL PINTO, gentle " ‘pony, nice and _________le, 4-wheel cart. -----auctioned Sal. at 9 p.m. at AUCTIONLAND, 1300 Crescent Lk. ----------------------- HORSES:— gelding;-1 ' gentle. Hors To be a ' reeding. W2-BBS2 3~STUDS^SHETLAND POA wELSH XRC SPRINGER spaniels ■ 3344)738. 5, 651-3347. a^kc schnaUzer puppies. TOYS iKc Poodles, io weeks old AKC POODL -pUPS WITH, Ta" A.O>i A 'stailiS;. .. - sacrifice. 11 pups to, Gordie Londo, 5538 Grenge Hall go at s«u ea. 674-1510._________ Rd. Holly, Ph: 637-3194.__________ AKC SHELTIES '(TOY COLLIES) HORSES BOARDED. ROCHEStER ______ (Huskies) puppies. ---------- — --------- $65 and up. Older Shellies also. [ 9633.________________ 394-0378.________________________I PINTO PONY, SA AK"C~^BEAGLE, german SHEP- bridle. $55. 338-0630. I pups. Wormed. Shots. Kkc DOBE'RMAN PINSCHER PUPS,! S5480. _ 3 months old. 673-6338.___| REGISTERED ROMNEY RAM. 3 335.0434 Baldwin AkE BEAGLES. 8 WEEKS., ALSO] years old. 3301 Seymore Lake Rd., ‘ pickQp'ca'mpER, $39' Stud service. Exc. AKC~WINIATURE SCHNAUZERS, win hold till Chr eedirig. 651- Orton\ ______ . I Hoy-^ain-Feed AKC PEKINGESE PUPS 391-1544 pcc 1 TOY POODLE AND PUPS' - ar 363-9551. adorabIe cuddly ______ KITTENS, free to good home. 673»9820. i ALL SHOP, 55 WILLIAMS, I EGGS. FG 4-5433, Parakeets and Finches. | largd AftOWANNA; 2 PIRANHAS LEFT. *4 c' em *Factory" X3S*'wh«l Aouerlum' IsTwii: 1796 S. L.peet Rd., Lak^Orlon^ 'WHlTOlEJErwOR PICK OF CORN FED YOUNG GEESE 394-0333 FRESH DArLY. , 50 cents; large. By Dick Turner | Foreign Cow ___________________ i 1965 VW ! Radio, heater, whitewalls, 16, I trade- 105 Nbw and Used Care 1955 CADILLAC, $195 106jN«w and Uied Cars 106 __W-3793. -MONTH WELSH MARE." 4^c2^G^|^"TOY-c6lLIE, .-YEART^^I^gK::^ t AKC BRITTANY PUPS 8 WEEKS btoke^^^^ CAMPER.^ITS'ANY %Tt6n PICK-i tELEGRaVh AT DIxTe'HIGHWAY end*^l° bun. ^.^n^'bu;’ 1 "'’''a^L , uP truck. $85. FE 54.754 alter 5:30 ; 334-6694 North of Rochester, off Rochester __^------------— I Rd. 635 E. Buell Rd._ F.LL'1a room 1 Rent Trailer SpocB JE 53747'. CUTJER,^^EXCE^^^^ CONDI-1 t'-jr M.n*y®''ixh"'^ 852-?764; s" ' ■ $M. 683-1474.'_________ Vnr«.^o;i4^“SEL-L“leCFORDTMqTOR 'PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 1 !‘5_^niY'tslty Drive FE 579 54 ' J TOM RADEMACHER »J ) VI CHEVY-OLDS n 1 '*** *"*'n''* ith F \ G j IllarpI '$'59s’Von*'ur'lV'®ai MIS, iioTs.'Sler 4, ' automatic, radio, hea WnSTrll ' OaUSe. f1*M547. :_____________________________ 1963 Cadillac Coupe DeVille $f,09'?°S^Tllirs: -----------HARGREAVES^ A31 Oaklenit Ave. _FE 4-4547.___ ___________ 1965 CHEVY II WAGON, 6 CYLTN- " - - *-----'adio, heater, Si,- Iridescent gold, t (6360»570) ,t HAROLD TUR-:‘ NER FORD, _ 196YCAblLLAC HARDTOP Power equipped, money DOWN, (63G032570) NO j automatic. .... „. HAROLD TURNER' FORD, Ml 4 7500. 1965 CORVAIR 2-DOOR HARDTOP, 1964 CADILLAC: 4 DOOR DEVILLE. .... .... ........ $1295 $1b7'5"'0A CHEVROLET, 8-3919. _ . ■*-2735 1965 CADILLAC' DeVILLE ^ FULL 1965 _^C H E_^V Y BILL FOX CHEVROLET 755 S Rochester Rd. OL 1 1967-SUNBEAM ALPINE,' L mileaoe, under warranty tor 1 000_mlle5 $2250._OL l-35y_ 1967 TRIUMPH G.t:-6, LI K; I —- -- Un.e5"gta^:, COJtTINA 1967-68 2 DOOR DELUX^^ j4l3895^65T;3600._ j CAOILLAC T'967 COtjPE DeVILLE - - -Summit Grey. Black vinyl top. Completely equipped Including air n^^w^ s t MIKE SAVOIE 'Irmingham. M I 'DODR.—STICR Hurry, $3095. Hillside LIncoln-Mer cury^J250 .Oakland, 333-7863. 1966 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVILLE, CHEVROLET, il. $1650. 673-0967. HASKINS AUTO, SALES CHEVY Super Sport Coui $1895 . 6695 DUIt VW CENTER 5-3112. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS Chevy Impala 4 door hardtop, automatic, power stee/ing, ra-hrater, whitewalls, one owner, low miledge. $1695. On US 10 *r Rd. 625 E. Buell Rd. 85 To Choose From -All Models-' —All Colors--All Reconditioned- 1. MA 5-5071. MIKE SAVOIE PIONEES CAMPER SALES BARTH TRAILERS 8i CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS merit FIBERGLASS COVERS - •' (8"-27"-35" covers) ALSO OVERLAND 8. COLEMAN H. 625-2686. ■^Fe”'? 39 ' > fcKUP COVE RS7$245 UP• 10'6" cabcovers, $1,295 and up. T «, R CAMPER MFG. CO. Motorcycles Arbuckle came up with an interesting thought this morning! Mayile it would be easier to put the pins where there AREN'T any troubles!" Autobahn CHEVROLET DEALER ipaVb^ air 4-door'sedan, v-b. 1104 S. Woodward . Km Ml 4-2735 I ^Tt"|?EWS -^HjkYG®P''ES, 631 ^’V“CHECY7-3^PpNflAC“ 86 Beautiful part cocker pup- Farm Produce pies. 692-1901._______ _ ^ ' ■ .......... ■' BUNNIES. BLACK AND (WHITE each. 683-8567. fH'RISTMAS DELIGHT, F R E N < ^ OaE Em’ 3-4340. APPLES-^PEARS-CIDER C.om- land Orcharqs, 44u3 c\. v-o»" :e Rd. 1 ml. east of Mlltorc 6 daily. aTd'dLETON ORCHARDS' AF . ________ ______ REA- _____J. 651-4124^ fNC'CtsH s'PRINGdR SPANIEL -3 yeaWxOld - 334-3330. FRE^xPUPS TO GOOD HOME. PIW Cocker. 674-1475 " “■ " je'R'EE'kittens. \ 68T872^. COOKING AND EATING APPL FREE KrTTENS TO GOOD HOME, and pears 84 W Chicago. Sun. FE 2-5319, 1961 Lakewind Mon. and Tne5.,_9 to 6 p m German shepherd male, 4 Oar corn in the field. les. 1510 Prei 'Kn! SALE Fall Inventory Reduction .....Will " \,v inta^M "S \ \ $1,195 .. \$1,795 1964 HONDA 305 CC. es^Aero TRUCK CAMPERS \ rohCj^r£^.' 1966 SUZUKI X-6' HUSTLER. NEW knob and tune $500. 674-2763 HONDA’1965 250 SCRAMBLER. $400. SEE THESE VALUES TODAyi _______ ..-tEPHcrru n\ni.c, . ... -- months. 673-52*. i lie wrighi, Ortonvilie 637 31 _9_ *ERMAN~SHEPHERD PUPPIES, ^^USCOVY [3UCKS |=^OR $10. 338-0598. _ ■ 'egged Bantams. Kenlo. 67/-../y7 GERMAN ”SHEPHERD PUPPIES Equipment 87 , Large boned, Exc. pedigree and T p temparament ' METAL- Wanted Cnrs-Trucks So?',; High Dollar Paid 34-7714 , . „5,.«5s NEW, fE 8-9661 Star Auio " STOP ^ HERE LAST U&M MOTOR SALES 101 New and Used Trucks GLENN'S New and Used Cars ________ 682-4632 Tm CHEVY ■— CLEAN ' 6 CYl. green” anV ivory linNhE onlV $95 Inder, standard transmission, $200. MATTHEWS-HARGREAV(:S' Phone 628-2W8. ■ ___ _i 631 OaklandAve. FE 4-4547. 1960 CHEVY. 4DOOR GOOD CON-;„j^ IMPALA SPORTS SEDAN. AU- BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Con Finance You- 1966 GMC PICKUP TRUCK CAMP- er. JMSt like new. Red. „„ „„„ , L. C. Williams, Salesman fe 5-4ioi : sion. 952 W Huron SI /LAcAulitle 43.000 ''Man More to Choose F^om "" DO YOU NEED A CAR? GOT A CLEAN 1967 dodge 'i'TON PICKUP, 678- PROBLEM? BEEN BANKRUPT? ' '' ."Loro .;_ton pickuft vb, DIVORCED’ K—*6’5. MAT-lEWSHARGREAVES, 631 Oak-id Ave FE 4 4547, PARKWOOD CHEVROLET STA- heater, whitewalls, only $1995. MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547.^ 1966 MALIBU 4eDOOR 8 AUtOMA-tic, power steering, $1795 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birming- CAPRICE CUSTOM COUPE, - ... -—- $195 li. $590. 647-0768.. CHEVY. V-l F E TmiSV . CHEVY BEL AIR Second DOOR, cab. Ra $2,250. 338-9586 after th $5 dc ealthy. Utu “K'?fTEN^^^TT^(^Ob HOME 1-YEAR-OLD 10 HORSEPOWER recoil ! irt Sean rABRADORS -- REGTST $450. 651-9669. 3 PATZ*~SILO' UNCOADERS, 3,000 Show. AM_^4^1. d cha . J505 E { SNOW Jacobson Trailer Sales i ander'sqn sales & Lake Rd. OR 3-5981 1645 S. Telegraph, FE 3-/I02 j «' ;;;6;'ciosVd TuilayT' o A T PI _ Q A T p I i „ ^'RT LITE CAMPING TRAILER, 02-U-,J_J. Oni_.i_4.ITI $225. 26’45 Lakeside Drive, High- aii used motorcycles marked down I _ land. White Lake. b,.v ,nd .eue Fa.v terms. Sportcrdft Manufacturing PICKUP.SLEEPERS^ANpTOPS^^ SUZUKI CYCLES, Cycle a J1968 GMC GARNISHEED? ” REPOSSESSED? NEW IN THE u hAREA? Ca^Mr. White at FE MotC?rS| j . . .NANcV reasonable ' 251 Oakland Ave. l FE 8:407; , 57 CHRY.SLER8 8 $65 .62 BEL AIR STATION WAGON, MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547. 1966 BEL AIR .6 PASSENGER. AU-tomalic, power steering, $99 down, 36 months on balance. MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, 631 Oak- d Av?. B 4 4547. _ I i-Ton Pickup S. ^c°o^nom‘;la,^.ji^ defrosters, backup '59 Plymt '60 Ford and '60 Chev-ECONO/^ CARS____ John McAuliffe Ford 1967 CHEVY 9 'PASSENtSER J " 1962 4NDESSON SALES 8, SERVICE EE- 3-71 . .... SUZUKI CYCLES, W*^;! (Downtown store only) washers, padded dash and oAo'Voiey" Waterford 623-0650 “o'^w'n'lqhia^d''^^^ for oll shotp pontiocs 2 padded visops, emer--■ - TRAILER SUPPLIES '“gn'^sG^'LAwsoNL AND CADILLACS. We are gency flasher lights, direc- 677'"ML4, Lk.Lo'ioL™^^ AND ACCESSORIES sales at tipsico lake. Phone, pi-gp^j-g^j ^gi^g yQu a tionah signals, 2 outside NEW FINANCE PLAN. IF rol'et, bi, better offer!! Ask for reor-view mirrors, full rear PROBLEMS, BANKRUPT, OR coj!va;ir's. m2 to ma, $397 toi TlOP PfiTP) r^-^ i wr M) r-niu tractors, 2-speed wipers. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Small Ad-Big Lot 50 CARS T9 CHOOSE FROM '"''I't pj-yr"'* •*'"’bill fox Chevrolet 1 Rd., AA'aLE TOY /MINIATURE POODLE, Pontiac. 391-1949. 10 wks^ old, AKC, .338-9330. clARK'S'^TRACTORS AND MA- MINTatURE poodle for STUD, chinery. 100 used tractors, load-625-5451 ers, dozers, backhoes and trucks PEKINGESE PUPS, AKC. WHITE Between H 0 I I y and, en on, and black, also stud. 682-6721. ’•’???:_ . „ ' "poodle BEAUTYF salon FARMAtL H 'TRACTOR, PLANT ________________________________________________ 2-3765. FARMALL CUB with $5 down. STANDARD AUTO 755 S. Rochester OF OAKLAND C”. n04 Baldwin PE 8-4521' fvvo to choose from, ^AT- 1962 CHEVY H 9 PASSENGER ^S-jHARGREAVES, 631 Oak- 1967 CHEVY SPORTS SEDANrAU- ' Ing $595 AT JOHNSON'S ^t SupplieS-682-6401 or 682-0927 , P'OODLE-SPiTZ,'7 WEEKS tlLD. $5 I 1100 Berkley. 6~- ' 629 2179. I JoHY" p-g ^ jgjj Boots-Accessories TRAVEL 1RAILERS LAYT(3n’'cORSAIR 97 Bob Burns.. e Evirvude UNABOUT. 18, ROBINHOOD, TALUY HO WILSON . CRISSMAN width window; ty appointment. FE 5-4095. 1 lic lift, WHEEL WTS. LIGHTS PO'o'brES'”-; MAKE SOMEONE! AN’ PTO. A-1 SHAPE happy. AK^ sllvej;jrjy,^FE^0634. ONLY $895 P(3(3bLES,' TINY CREAM. AKC - KING BKUb. reflistered. Hold 'til Christmas, j og. 46, _ FE 4-0734 “ Y 3-2893:_ PonHac NEW SERVICE Ellsworth Trailer Sales ,4 6S77 Djxle Hwy._ 625-4400 boat _ ^ jlO^ykeRd:^ TRO'tWOOD 16' CUB DELUXE,' ►OODLES.'AKC. SHOTS TRAllglED,!joHr”DEERE AN IDEA [f'« "‘eL!hlng.’’7l'oM Serow"ta! ° trimmed, $50 up. 674-3349, 10 a.m. warts galore. Your Homelile chain r.*n hn seen in front ■*' . 'To 8 p.m. only. saw dealer. DAVIS MACHINERY ^ PUPPIES, 6 WEEKS OLD, HUNT- CO., Ortonvilie. NA 7-3292. uuc rADPV THF --AMOUS Ing stock free. 1100 Harding Rd., joHN'DEERE, 40, 3 POINT HITCH WE CARRY THE_ AMOUS Rochester 651-0021. and cultivator with snow blade • f ranklinS-CreeS REOrSTEREO' MINIATURE' P 0 (3- 685-2971, after 6 p.m. _ FanS-MonifOT die pup cocoa, female $65. OR new 10" HAMMERMILL, INTER- 3-2630. _ , _ , national Harvester^ FE M698. ThundecBird, SChFaUZER' miNIA+URE PUPS pace ' GARDEN 'TRACTOR, 12 RitZ-Croft Reg. Stud service available. FE^ f, p. 1947 Model with the fo^w- KHZ Lran 9.1590. / ing impiiments. Mower, plow, disc Travel Troilers TOY FOX TERRIERS harrow, wagon, snow blade, chains FE 2-6141 end wheel wetghfs. $1,295, 6J4 70 A Hoi'v _ Skomper and PleasureMate 'T . ROAD grader, TANDEM, GOOD - _ . . nape, $2,75^ owner. 673-3468. USED EQUIPMENT Sprlngl sprlngheld Electric 6 h.p. mower WOLVERINE ' TRUCK^^ CAMPE CADILLAC "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S 5 GRUMMAN CANOES DEALER ■ Cliff Dreyer's . Gun and 'Sports Center '10 Holly Rd. ME. 4-6771 $1955 including all taxes PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER GMC FE 4-4547.___ 'mTkE SAVOIE c'hEV-|„47^cAMAR6 SS'^398 CONVERTI-■mingham. Ml 4-2735. pu 348 E. Colum^, attar_4. AL HANOUTE FE 8-4071 On M24 in Lake Orion _____MY 2-2411 _ ;i 966" CHRYSLER Newport 2-d< lardtop, showrof 23'’ 1964 CARVER CRUISER. $32SO. Pet Supplies-Service ' DOG HOUSES INSULATED. MOST -s|7r5 '748 Orchard Lake Ave, Auctien Soles 80 Campers-7 & 8 Sleepers Holly Travel Coach BUICK 15210 H 544 S. WOODWARD * 647-5600 VE'LLI MAKE YOU A BETTER ' ,1 $395. 1 DO AND DON'T AUCTION -s Sat., Nov. 11, § p.m. IN'T attend K you eKpecI to p hiq prices DON'T attend it v ^ telescoping^^ bumj^ T368l’.''s'pare'tfre ci ’ Housetroilers 61 00 ^ R DOWNEY OLDS, INC. 101-A action. DO kttenc Iev.° So DIVORCE-ASSETS Rotollller; 2 horses: ' gelding, 1 Welch^ ( ■ saddle; 4-wbeel pony Jtaw case’ he'nd'and garden tools; Mnl^'Frl'96 bedroom set; dinette; sofa; ’ , "Tat 9 5 bed; oil Closed Sun. Travel Trailers ” d?iilsT^MT°^Sl'x;''*'6'o' Buick 2'^dSof $$$$$$ hardtop, runs excellent. . C A 'L/'P DON'T miss thU MSsIpn^ ..............I V J_i OR 3-J707 1968's IN STOCK Glastrons-Mercurys Ski-Doos-Ski-Daddlers SAVE-SAVE-SAVE Fall discounts now 1967 Closeouts Winterize and storage CRUISE OUT INC. Walton Daily 9-6 FE 8-4402 ' -■ NEW 1968 LARSON Junk Cars-Trucks BOATS AND 1968 EVIN-ER- RUDE MOTORS MARRING-,an^TeVup™B™ 3676”T95tON BOAT WORKS. 1899 110X42, 'rTchar'dson, a^ir ,-Con S. Telegraph FE 2-8033. ni j'unk cars, pay'for some ' 29'"m'aRLETTE TRAILER.' EXGFi - MARTNe'^’^ jN YRS, ALwLv BUYING 'jUNK C A RS h P lent condition 1894 Commonweattn, EXPERIENCE. 2695 OR- and scrap, we tow. FE 5 9940. OH Ponriflc Kd. , (-hard lK RD., SYl VAN lAKE COPPER, BRASS: RADIATORS; hp BEST MOBILE HOME boat, i;- UT'Tr SALES TlraL good lor Salmon,' SZ.OC'O. WANTED JUNK CARS OR TRUCKS OPEiN DAILY 693-8187 ■ - . 1 or 100. Call 332 8419. n . X T/v n r> ta ELGIN BOAT, MERCURY MOTOR ■ , S.“’”’U>edA„..Tr„.k Ports 102 West of Williams Lk., Rd. trailers. Take We would like to buy late- Factsry Branch model GM Cars or will ac- Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 no gimmicks^-^no giveaways cept trade-downs. Stop by ^ __right cars at right prices -t9w chevy today. ' FISGHER ' CHEVROLET TRACTOR spries. 900 x 20 tires. Aii Fifth wheel. Saddle tai 2 4558, GARNISHEED WAGES, W E CAN GET YOUR CREDIT REESTABLISHED AGAIN. WE Capitol Auto ' HAVE OVER 80 CARS THAT uu^ East ot Oakland) CAN BE PURCHASED WITH tm c'0RVAiR 4.DdpR'automat- , NO DOWN PAYMENT. COME ^6le” eLmlngham '! ' IN AND SEE C R E D I T i96j^c^tiEjY 2,^Au^^^^ MGR. MR. IRV. !r963 IMPALA, AUTOMATIC AND; ^ 1.940 W Wide Track . nndition. $900. FE '2-4370. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH CORVAIRS, 1 AUTOMATIC RAMBLER-JEEP vtofK bh.lt's. ThPt.e cars are 4473 o;xlt Hwy. now RQNFY'S AUTO,. iJl Clarkston MA 5-26JI ■fyST,,G^r:L:?G’°!nrarr. PAD,0,1 ' 1 966 CHRYSLER mat- Newport 4-door with V-8, eut». ^ . I __xt. -ower steering, brakes, re-itewalls, beautiful condF . only $2095. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH WOULD YOU BELIEVE Deer Hunters ■ Special )965 CHEVY Fleelside DOOR RADIO,! ncairr MU ,,.M..,.y down MAT-' THEWS HARGREAVES, 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4 4547. 1963 CORVAIR 4-DOOR AUTOMATIC e Cpe. 1209$ OAKLAND (HRYSLER-PLYMOUTF BILL FOX CHEVROLET 755 5. Rochester Rd. OL 1 7000 dodge TON 4-WHEEL DRIVE ,-ROM OPDYKE MOTORS .2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke = E 8 9237 EE 8-91 BEEN BANKRUPT? Had A Repossession? Need A Cor? , Call Mr. Wyatt at KE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, I Ingham. Ml 4-2735. IMPALA SPORT COUPE, Al)- 724 Oaki ---- power, sleerinq, radio, ,,4,) UODGE V-8, 4 DOOR AUTI ■ rnalic^good tady^reas. 624-3UT_ '60 do'dge. full price $4 ’ Marvel Motors 3 CHEVY 4-DOOR BEL-AIR V-8, KESSLER'S I MOBILE SERVICE, 10 CARS AND TRUCKS, f EVERYONE 1304 Bald> ONE 4 WHEEL DRIVE JEEPI JEEEEALE°rEsERVICE 1968 Jeeps STANDARD AUTO OF OAKLAND I960 BUICK 2DOOR HARDTOP, 251 Oakland Ave be'^^aucMoJTpd^^Sat'^^'al*^”?^ s'? AUCTIONLAND, Marvel Motors ^ own pric FE 8-4079 ,964 dodge 2 DOOR. 6 CYLINDFR -DOOR, 6 stick, excellent condition, FE _____ $725. OR 3-3372- 2 7002- ‘ _ 1964 CHEVY IMPAlA 300 4 SPEED. 1964 DODGE POLARA, B CYLIN- 1961 BUICK SPECIAL.’ $395. Drayton Transmission. 673-1251 or 673-1083, 1961 'BUlCk LeSABRE CONVERTl-ble, call 332-9735. 1961 BUICK SKY LARK, 'ALSO, .1155 a , 629 7 5 IQ- 1939 ford. P. 1958 FORD bTsCAYNE 2-DOOR sedan. 1959 FORD WAGON,’ 8 CYLINDER, TH 57' 'T-BIRD en-$800. 334-7601'-■ STATION WAGON, e'Rd. I -0 DAWSON'S SALES A FORD, '62 CORVAIR FINANCING arranged— BANK RATES GRIMALDI JEEP 900 OAKLAND AVE. FE 5-9421 4-4909! TANDEM- 10 YARD DUMP TRUCK ,9^3 bUICK SAVOIE CHEVROLF. ham Ml 4-2735 CHEVROLET 'E”4n8T69.'" - B,--‘ — aa7.j I BU ICK SK YLARK, 2 D ° O R,; ^ no"‘'mon; " ilOO Last., 335-2'l53. MAJTHEWS_^ 195’ FORD GALAXIE, $75. greaves! 631 OakU 1964 chevy, IMPALA, DO lake advantage of this largf i 19' 363-5296 363-5600 C(3MPL^E'Cy’^^^ FURNVshED. \2- reas. FE 2-1657 or 623-n'lo!' TIPSl'CO le 629-2179. INSIDE WINTER STORAGE 1942 VOLKSWAGEN PARTS. 121 73-6714 alter 5 P LAMPS, REESE 1456 10 I antique' furniture, Sm ®Blueblr'd‘’A^Jctlon't'16853 olxlj HOWLAn'd'sa'lES a'nD RENTAI Hv,;. CaJI 637-5J93. 3255 Dixie ^ ' AUCT'rON SALE, SATURpAY, NOV. ' $$$5$3> 8' metal PICK-UP CAMPER, good condillon^$l75 , 628-2388 8'"pTcKirF cam'pe'r, '^CABOVER, sleeps 4^ 623jra.______• 8K/"pICK'uP camper $i50 OR DETROITER -KROPF Vacation Homes . wide with large expanding bed- PINTERS HEVY V8 ALUMIN glide. FE 4-9175. JSFD ENGINES, TF I POWFR- . 1775 Willi in Michigan. Also 8 ft., STARCRAFT-THOMPSON MFG JOHNSON MOTORS-SNOMOBil I STORAGE-TUNE-UPS 5 sales. OR 'J-5200. 24 New and Used Trucks 103 TRUCKS ARE OUR Businoss I, $975, ,, Vi being-DRAFTED MUST DISPOSE ■^ W7S' CalT 394 037 ' 900d, needs e . ^ (875. call 394 0371. .on hnr.e. 4 sDeed, 674-1158 COOPER'S Extra Clean Used Cars 1278 Dixie Drayton Plal 17-2378. Open BUICi p'an?6M-3523. BUICK' .... pan, $1700. 3455 DCAT, DOUBLE Honing, vinyl top, WILDCAT. EXTRA IKE SAVOIE CHEV- WINTER STORAGE reclining I offer Table-b 1940 JFEPSTER, good condition, et mg, $75.-634-99 mattresses, i sweaters, glo »od spreads, -..... - BOB HUTCHINSON, INC. 681-0441. _ _ Dixie 8x24' fROTWOOD "1961, GAS HEAT, p^ayton Plains Kaxii^c hath.chnuv^r. Fxce ent. ^ 12 f achines, Bun -.a,, ./xrwi, bath-shower. Excellent and OR 3*1706, after 5 p.. OR 3-7722. 14' CAMPER TRAILER, SLEEPS 22350 T< ih Rd. B & B AUCTION 7:'00 p!m! 852-i'59I 2:00 PM. ' RACE - EVERY FRIDAY EVERY SATURDAY EVERY SUNDAY -retail 7 DAYS VVEElKLY r 1961 Open dally till 8 p.m. ;at. and Sun. till S p.m. _ RAiLER, ALUMi- ' LOST OUR LEASE in Lawn, Rochester jqlEDO, OHIO SALES LOT CHAMPIONTRAirER , OR 3-0314 tRAILER.'SELF-CONTAINED 39222559 •RAVEL TRAILER, ELEC-i gas lights, refrigerator. Airplanes F A.A. APPROVED SCHOOL - 101 M AND USED mobiU ALL AT A I "PP-F T FOR 50'xT2', ....LARGE DISCOUNT FOR EXAMPLE -■■ — - price $5,185 ICE: $3,895 -OUR PRICE ' beards and storage, exc. condi-* lion. 391,2696. ^ _ 1956 DETROITER. VER'Y RE'ASON-i able. 673-8659. _ ______ 1958 COURTNEY'- MANOR lOxS'O' ■ . $1600. Call 673-8659. 1958 VW BUS, MADE INTO SLEEP- stock. display SATURDAY 6 P.M. Good used household Items, toys, sporting goodsr new 2 piece Mvfng ____ ■ room suites, 3 piece bedroom suites i^aMer with hitch,j ooo coffee and end tables, ‘"il street. Ortonvilie. 627-3844.____ Tur''to"’mentlSn. Ja^J ’ffairAuo ifeO^r-C^TURY, PERFECT CON-tloneer, Hal's Auction, 705 W. d^^tlon, best offer over $1200, by Cksrkston Rd,, Lake>*Orlon. MY illOT^h.2j63:679A____________ __ 3-1871._________ _ ^‘9'62 freeway TRAILER, SLEEPS tires, clean, OA 8-3083. BEEMER TRAVEL ■■ -—T,, 368 Church MIDLAND TRAILER SALES Open 9 10 9 7 Days JMeek |o Wanted Cors-Trucks ADKINS AUTO SALES rive In md Ave.,^ V6230. ^ Gale McAnnally's I960 GMC Heavy duty-Dump "“'r 1965 GMC 9 ft. von - '”;*uml\V60, FE^Mm.*1963 GMC'20 ft. van '' 1948 DODGE POWER WAGON, NEW ■) 9^2 Chevy 24 ft. van )4!1 nlw?; p'a'inted, 4" wheel dr“ve'I"wiii 1965 Chevy ton pickup' 00 990T Houf1966 GMC '2 ton pickup i9$i FORD PICKUP, RUNS GOOD, 1966 Oievy 9 ft. stake ^ 1951 FORD, 5 YARD DUMP, WITH 1962 GMC 9 ft. Stake "V. '?" 5'\''’r=b'urn”°Heigm^ *UL U61 GMC 12-ft. plotform 2-4914, ' SPECIAL fopd.dump, $295, ^9^2 Chevrolet Corvan 764 BEL AIR 4 DOORe-AUTO- AUTOMATIC..\fOWER maftc powpr steering, $95 down ,,.-rina Nice body and good run- MATTHEWS HARCRf AVES. - 6.U ^ing condition. .$425. EM 3-0164. Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547. „„ t BIRD CONVERTIBLE! FULL 764 ■ CORVAIR 2-DOOR,. RADIO, -,p,y J295 With weekly pay- ____ ...h,9ei,.,jiiit tAIA nt MIKE -e ei-)i .A/tth SAVOIE CHEVROLET. ling. Only $2195. 6695 uArnN’ STANDARD AUTO ' ur c°m! OF OAKLAND ‘''$44'?1 IJM Baldwin ' FE BUICK PLECTRA, John McAuliffe Ford AIR MONZA 2 DOOR, R 3 I636,' ALAXIE, '2 DOOR ce. offer. OR 3-5898 AUTOMAT- olfer. FE 5-0571. „„„„ ,,45' CORVAIR' MOlIZA CONVERT- I,« FORD fAIRLANE. AUTOA 1966 BUICK ELECTRA 225 4-DOOR * cylinder, whifewallt, ra- ' ic, |ust see to appreciate hardtop, automatic, power equip ^ speed transmission, real. Money Down MATTHEWS ! ment. Factory warranty. Mult see sharp, priced'to sell,. ROSEi g-REAVES'. 631 Oakland Ave. rHEWS-HARGREAVES. GMC 956 CHEVY PICKUP. $165 , 338-3961. 1958 GMC PICKUP,“$100. \ATTHEWS-HARGR EAVES, Factory Branch Oakland at Cass , FE 5-9485 1 Auto Insurance-Marine 104 'GLENNJS L C. Wiliams, Salesman 1965 CHEVY IT/PALA $1400: 6n-9234. ‘ 1965 MONZA CONVERTIBLE. u FALCON, excellent CONr $650. 332-■607. , , ' ,3 FALCON, GOOft BODY. RUNS FRI., SAT., sun: 2257 PI)________________ 'ivTarlettes 50'-63‘ long, 12' 20' w .----.— Tredltlm). I Spi'e'e' 338-0772; .E?T!viii 1961 EtONOLlNE VAN $175 ■p 332-7679 a, 11962 F-600 ”STAKE“tRUCk, TON,,' AUTO INSURANCE Terms Available - CALL TODAY! . ANDERSON S. ASSOC. ____Charge. Also see famous lightweight Winnebago Trader. OXFORD trailer SALES/ OPEN 9-8, CLOSED SUNDAYS ’HELP! _ tgine. 852-3511.____ “1 T’62 CHEVROLET 'PIC'K UP^^.mG; 5; goorcondiliom^6V2l9lLHWIand:!FE,,4 3535’''"''''lM JO's'l'Y'N AVE.' 1964'^hevjI staVe, on'e^^^^^^ Foreign Cars 105 ' HARGREAVES, 63i OakI ‘ * o iica.c. ___________ $1177 a-t ilKE SAVOIE CHEVROL-ET, Bir-. lingham. Ml 4-2735. TOM RADEMACHER- 7',7, FE 4 1797 CHEVY-OLDS Aany More to Choose From 1965 CORVAIR Mpnia conyertible, 5UICK LeSABRE CONVERTI- ^LaToo'n' w'dh'°blac”'ta'p''"P^ 1 condilionvill -- --- *■’— ----- --------- ■■ nrice. $88^dC , 1963 Ford XL 2-Door Hardtop TRUCK LOADS AND USED FURNITURE AND APPLIANCES TRAILERS, TOpLS, AND • ; SOME ANTIQUES. ^ B& B AUCTION • 19 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2717 —81-A Ve nied 300 1965 CHEVY PICK-Ut, 84-TON 2«, MY 2-0721 _ . _ k|C\«i cubic inch engine, '’“loirtrA'RM - MON- 10'/.' travel Ou_«n J_amper^ ^^KE - HOMETTE LIBERTY, "MANY BEAUTIES TO pg j 5,[k| CHOOSE FROM" Colonial Modile Homes E 2*1657 i 623*1-. Oibyke ^ e „,’iJL.^inr' Auburn Heights vuatertnr ROYAL chAp*l, 4-4547. DR5CHE CONVERTIBI E, I John McAuliffe Oakland Ave' RIVIERA ne way; ..uoa coupe, 327 engine, 4 speje, $95 . $996 ,n. $66 86 per down, MATTHEWS HARGREAVE.^, • :,PE 5-4I01; JO MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES ____ MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin ^e. J* 196.5 DODGE DOUBLE CAB OA s. 623-0179. 5E . I. 363 4966. 1963 CHEVY 34 V-8. RADIO,. SPLIT rims, 6 ply f 1964 INTERNAT-lONi PORTA-CABIN eeps 7, like nev $895, OR 3-3986^_ ____________ ~ A’lRStREAM lightweight MODEL, Plontf-Treei-Shrubs TRAVEL TRAILERS > 1932. Guaranteed •nd |efj^a^ j- W. Huron (plan to i VERGR6EN*. Wally “'Byam''r’axcit)njiH»':«vans'). p2«ae'Sdar'Ea™ b''r''a''dT'e'y'~'CAMPE'R, PI«JP, 1967 Custom c mllas'noffh of Puftlac. Cedar Evargra----------- *"''‘* ■«35-1»9. WATERFORD SALES ' ^ 11 pCAVATINt;, REMODELING^^ ' is' Hig'hland Rd. ss Pontiac Airport) • 673-3600 . . If EXTRA iXTRA Dollars Paid . FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "Check the n Averill •TRAC^- cyrind^r, 693-1370 ^ 1964' JEEP WITH NEW SNOW plow, $1550. 628-3406 after 6 p.m. 1965 DO’DGE V4 TON PICKUP, v’-8u 4-speed; Ext. 1 ENGLISH F^RD, RUNS GOOD ,125. Save Auto. FE 5-3278. - p ‘ 1962 VW, $401) g 852-1031 aMrr 5:30 • w 2 SEDAN, RADIO. ^ ’MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES GREEhL-r 6,ij Oakland Ave, FE 4-4547. ?bie''r4^!X- 1965 IMPALA <^ONVE^RJlBLE, $2.595,''626-1033' or'642-957«. 1967 RIVERIA _ ..........DOOR 334-1005 aller 5:30. $3988 , 1965 CHEVELLE ' ^owe^, iteer- >lue, $1,495. MATTHEWS --.REAVES, 631 Oakland ■ A^ 14547 ,6 CHEVROLET BEL plight ' ' 623-0900 963 FAIRLANE 8 AUTOMATIC.;_ 2-door $895 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml_^2735. _ 963' FORD GALAXIE 500, 2-DOOR i965 FORD $1295. 625-STAKE, NEW 963' *VW AuN . RC30F, . RADIQ, F 1 QpVtpr Rulck Lg“ ONLY ’’V'dOWI^ _ r iscnerdui« . $825. HASKINS \ AUTO. SALES^ 1964 OPEL Stafi--* --- ‘ cohdiHoned. $400 optior TURNER $695. 6695 , DixH 1, 625-3112. 363-0812. 965”f6'RD ECO'hlbUNE TRUCIK,! heavy duty, exc. condition, terms.; 1.1 Almont, 798-8283 after 6 p.m. _______________________^---. Suara^Sr^nd IUSoFm’’’! '’?oads^er'!®lo*rd yT,^enJn.-^'’Mi?hT- 5666, after 3 p.m. ^ 1966 S. 6J4-8694. , Miche- lEROME- MOTOR SALES WldaTra^kOr. FE FORD, Inc. 464 S. Woodward <^1 *1^: Birmingham ' •; ''Another One of •Turner's. | 964 ford, 4-DOOR. POWER, " brakes, auto. 12 Ramona Terrace. 332-0503. ' _ _ . 964”c0R’6 TWO'-DOOR/ ALSO 1’63 Studebaker 4-door. Both exceHtnt condition. 682-7868 1964 FALCON,WAGON ....--radio, healer, white- rial No. (4H24T191030) Worlds Finest Trade-Ins" nFmD^Tey "down, ’assume pay- D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER IQ, 1967 BUY, SELL, TRADE . PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS USE mmmMM mm "ONE-STOP TRANSPORTATION CENTER VALU-RATED USED CARS 1967 OLDS Cutlass ..................... $2495 2-door hardtop, red with black vinyl top. Only 12,000 miles. 1964 OLDS 98 ......................... $1395 Luxury sedan, full power. Like new. 1965 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Convertible ..... $1795 Metallic blue with matching Interior, priced to sell at 1965 OLDS Dynamic ............./........ $1695 88 2-door hardtop, power steering.and brakes, automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls. Priced at only 81695. 1966 BUICK Electra ..................... $2595 225 2-door hardtop/ fulf power, factory alr-conditioned. Like 1966 DODGE ..............................$1895 Polara 2-door hardtop, red with a black vinyl top, like 635 S. Woodwarci Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 W' 1965 PONTIAC Catalina MERCURY 2-door with radio, heater, whitewalls, power, V8, stick, solid whjte. 4-door hardtop, power ste brakes, hyramatic, radio, Only — $1695 1963 PONTIAC 4-door star Chief 4-door s ---mstic, power i, radio, hea Clean throug $995 Good conditioni Only - $595 1^»67 PONTIAGS 5. Catalina, Grand rives and B Ip To — $1788 wtimw PONTIAC-RAMBLER , Ask for Chuck Moriorty, Jim Bornowsky, Arnold Denison. (Pat Jorvis, Used Cor Manager) Open Doily 'til 9 P.M. On M-24 in. Orion 693-6266 WHY NOT SHOP &'COMPARE AT PONTIAC'S ONE-STOP TRANSPORTATION CENTER? 1966 OLDS ............................... $2195 Luxury Sedan, has tull power and this one Is all ready to go. 1967 F-85 ............................... $2195 V-8. automatic. Power steering, power brakes, white sidewalls, radio. Factory warranty. Like new. 1962 RAMBLER .............................. $195 Convertible with many tine driving features. Excellent transportation. 1966 ELECTRA "225" ..................... $2495 Convertible, full power, stereo radio. Like newl 1964 OLDS ......................... $ 895 88 Convertible with power brakes artd power steering, automatic, radio and whitewall tires. 1966 PONTIAC Custom Tempest . . ... $1895 2-door hardtop. Power steering, power brakes, automatic. 1963 BUICK Wildcat ....................... $1095 Convertible, power steering, power brakes, radio, bucket seats, coh- 1965 T-BIRD . . . . . . .. ...............$1995 Convertible,with full power. This car Is really sharp. 1966 OLDS Delta Sedan .................... $1095 Power steering. Radio. DOWNEY I OLDSMOBILE, INC. , 1 550 Oakland Ave. 2-8101 New and Used Cert 106 19M FORD FAIRLANE 500, 4-DOOR, New and Used Cart 106 GLENN'S 1944 Ford V-B. Radio, heater, aut custom cab. L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. FE»-4-737k ., FE 4-1797 _MJny More to Choose FrOT | 1964 FORp CUSTOM 2-DOOR, REALi -good bargain. 682-9223, Riggins,! MARMADUKE 1966 FORD FAIRLANE 500 2-DOdR MrdlBB BrJoW Ted ^aMly air-ton-ditloning, radio, heater, cmwer steering like new $1795, Hillside Lincoln Mercury 1250 Oakland, 333-7863._________________^______________ brakes, buckets 71964 FORD CONVERTIBLE Loaded, beautiful turquoise, white top, ONLY $19 DOWN. Call Mr. Parks tor simple. terms. Serial No. (4W65C134895) "You get what we advertise." HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500.____ tires, brakes, mufflers. 1. $900. 444-0422,_______ FE 4-6396, befor __________________;_________ 1945 T-BIRD 2-DOOR, HARDTOP, white with black vinyl top automatic full power — ™aiiinn. 1967T-Bird 2-Door Hardtop black"** V toy, r'oof.'*'Bla^ leather Interior. Balanck of new cor wa“ ranty. Only— $3595 BEATTIE LER Since Waterford e double stop" -■ 623-0900 ____ 1967 MUSTANG OT 2 PLUS 2 WITH full power, stereo type, tilt wheel loaded. $2895. JACK LONG FORD Rochester OL 1-971. 1967 T-BIRD LANDAU 4 pQOR under 5 year or 50,000 miles V car warranty. $3600 full price, 8 down, $25 per week. John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. _____FE 5-4101 LYTIEEP, good CON-1 2-4572 or UL 2-5444. 1965 MUSTANG 2 DOOR HARD- lonth. Needs a •ranty I - BOB BORST . Lincolil-Mercury 479 S. Woodward Ml 6-4538 BIRMINGHAM _______ , 1962 CONTINENTAL ■John McAuliffe Ford U-door narmop^^^wer e^qulp^g,^-,^ 630 Oakland Ave.___DOWN? assume *wyments of S9-BS. 1965 MUSTANG HARDTOP. 289, 4-jcaH Credit Mgr, Mr. Parks at HA^ sD#«d. Calif, car. $1195. Days, 334n]oLD TURNER FORD. Ml 4-7500. ^ —--------"Another One of Turners 9600, e\ n this 0 » $1395, 1 ,1965T-Bird Extra sharp! Only — $2395 BEATTIE. On Dixie in Waterfor'd at the double stoplight 623-0900 Worlds Finest Trade-Ins" CONTINENTAL, 1963. NEW MUF-tiers, tlre^ battery, brakes. Pr -'^^ “•In and out\ Original owner* no cldent. Mus\ sell. Ml 4>9327, 1965 FORD LTDy By Anderson and Leeming Naw and jlwd Cara 106 1947 PONTIAC FIRE BIRD,_ Double power, H.O. engine .4 sod. S.M., buckets, consol*, deluit* trim, full warranty. OR 3-3375. 1942 AUTOMATIC, ■‘-DOOR WHITE Rambler. Snow tires included. Very good contitlon. $400. 682-5077. __ 1962 RAMBLER AMERICAN CON-vertlble, radio and NewjwdJI^nrf^ RAMBLERS We Have 5 In Stock 1940-1961 1962 AND 1964- Transportation Speclalt OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ave. fe 5-1 1965 rambler CLASSIC, WHI l E finish and a 2 door sedan, 6 cylinder engine, standard shift, radio, whitewall tires, priced tr sell. ROSE RAMBLER, ’Unlot Lake. EM 3-4155. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1965 RAMBLER Ambassador, . door sedan, with V-8, automat e, ... S?"ul 23 NEW RAMBLERS READY FOR DELIVERY PETERSON AND SONS JEEP LAPEER 664-4511 1967 Ambassador 990 4-door, loaded • MuIPPieP* $2088 1967 Ambassador ^0 l-door low nileage, new SEE THE ALL NEW JAVELIN Village Rambler , 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 “None of the kennels will take him for the weekend, hut I think I’ve got a nibble from the Friendly Corral Racing Stables!’’ 1967 2-DOOR CATALINA POWER steering, power^irakes. L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron SI. FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 **— **~re to Choose From New and Used Cars New and Used Cars new, $2,588 full price, $188 dowr $80.75 per month. John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Av*. PE 5-4101 1958 PLYMOUTH, NEW n R E S, Lincoln Merci double 1 HASKINS AUTO. SALES 1947 TEAAPEST Deluxe 2 door, automatic, radio, heater. Only $1,-995. 6695 Dixie Hwy., Clarkston. 1961 VALIANT 2 - DOOR AUTO-17,4 -Stic, like new $395. --------- COOPER'S Extra Clean Used Cars 4278 Dixie Drayti Open 9 to 9 da'" 1961 PLYAApUTH Ible. 318-4 bar $450. FE J-0035 _____ 674-2257 IRY C'3nVERT-bucket seals, 12 to 5:30 1963 MERCURY MONTEREY. POW-ar steering. Breeieway window $650« FE 8-0125. ___________^ 1965 MERCURY HARDTOP, AUTO-rnatlc, radio, healer .... ..... .... black nylon top, mint condition, all the way, $1588 lull price, $88 down, $54.19 r" " month. 5 year to 50,000 mile n warranty available. John McAuliffe Ford tires. 1005 Commerce Rd., Cor HASKINS- aut6. sales ^ „ 1965 PLYMOUTH Barracuda V. ■ deluke $1295.. 6'“' Iter $1395. Hillside iry, 1250 Oaklf— 333-7863.____________ 1965 PONTIAC passenger wagoi^^V-8, r's special at only-$1845 OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOl^H 1967 GTO. BEAUTIFUL CAR. MANY 0 mites. FE 4-5709. . whitewalls,! 1967 Firebird _______________________?_5-94^ 1965 BONNEVILLE 6 PASSENGER! 0 sell. 651-7743, a - dtarje* Bering* brakes, only $2795 On M15 at 1-75 Interct 1967 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLES "2". Bosses' demos. You" of bronze or yellow. Sav 1966 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE i iisdb ................KEEGO PONTIAC Xeego Harobr ' cellent condition. Three way powe 4 p.m. FE 5-8493. 19'66 GRAND PRIX, POWER, TILT steering, $2,100. FE 2-5152 after 1966 G.T.O. CONVERTIBLE, $1925, I, auto., double power FE 4-0941^ ance engine, ^DOOR HARD-itellic Ivy green nylon top, , heater, po FMCo7 WhV^ptflR *fd»f le?sY<30 Oakland Ave.________ariD Only $1688 full price $88 down, 1966 MERCURY CONVERTIBLE I o«kMe $f«XI M3 $57.80 per month. 50,000 mile or V-8, automatic, power steering, formula S package simiu. jou- 5-year new car warranty avail- Choose from 3 one owner beau-able. ties from $1695, Hillside Lln-'- John McAuliffe Ford ' ji^rj:^i2jioekiajidj^3j,78M 63^^kland Ave, FE 3^01 TEMPEST 1966 L CATALINA 2 ■ DoisR HARD-Double power. 3,800\ml. $2,300 V-673-P653._________\ TOM RADEMACHER ______overhead cam 6 tyl. -------- shift, radio, heater, whitewalls, cream with black vinyl roof. Onfy $1895. On US 10 at M15, Clarkston. MA 5-5071. 1966 BONNEVILLE, DARK BLUE,; ’mm";er.'**FT2?22t"........ ties from $1695, Hillside Lincoln! ,-947 PLYMOUTH GTX WITH EX-Mercury, 1250 Oakland 333-7863. ; trim, oood deal. 335-6591. “PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, 1966 Comgt 1966 FORD GALAXIE 500 2 door hardtop, 289. V-8, auto- Club coupe, V-8, automa matic, radio, haeter, power steer- steering, radio, heater, -------..... 94, down. S e r I a $1695 OAKLAND . CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ave. FE MUSTANG (6HO1C570B2O). $1,695. Ml 7-5660. , plus 1966 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE STA-tion^ wa^on,^ w’"" ------- brakes, chrome luggage beautiful ivy green with slmuiaieo ^ wood on the side. Why settle for . Only $2388 full price, $8fi n, $18 weekly. 50,000 mile or HAROLD TURNER FORD INC. needs body v 'WL/0'lIiAC._v:8. ^^dtomatic. 1967 FIREBIRD. EXCELLENT CON-..........)W mileage. Call alter I DOOR SEDAN, I67,I*^TI brakes, a tioning. 33 $1,695. MAT-1 power, air, stereo tape. $2950 OR land Ave^FE 4-4547._______________ 1966 RED AND W/HITE GTO CON-good condition. 394- Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547. THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING •oy—Pontiac—Birmln^em ^rt» 194fp0NflAOB66FIpT0VjTjC $476.05 with weekly payments low as $3.91. $5 down. This can be brought even if you ing. MXV.. STANDARD AUTO J, 464 S. Wood^ard^^^^^^^ Ml 4-7500 QF OAKLAND "Another One Of Turners 'i304_Bjidwin_____ Worlds Finest Trade-Ins" ^ Ic $350 . 682j;5725._ 1966 MUSTANG GT FASTBACK, like new $1695 ..... CHEVROLET, t MIKE SAVOIE 1967 MERCURY Monterey, Parklane, ---- - choose from all have power steering power brakes, radio, healer automatic from $2395. Hillsld* Lincoln Mercury, 1250 Oakland, 333- ^ GLENN'S 1966 T-BIrd. Pow 1966 MUSTANG 2 DOOR HARD-top, with V-8, automatic, radio, heater, canary yellow with black nylon top, $1688 full price, $88 down, $53.61 per month. 10 others to choose from, 50.000 mile or, 5 year new car warranty available. ! John McAuliffe Ford ! 630 Oakland Aj/e^________^5-4101 i 1966'■ ford FAIRLANE 500 HARD-top GTA with automatic, radlo,-heater, power steering, beautiful midnight blue, with ell leather Interior, $1688 full price, $88 down, $53.61 per month. 50,000 mile GLENN'S I 1959 OLDS 2-DOOR HARDTOP.1 Real sharp. Exc. condition. Must be seen to be appr'eclated. ] L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. ' = E 4-7371 ■ FE 4-1797 Many More to Choose From TwrOLDS F-85, $297 Call Mr. Dan at: FE 8-4071 Capitol Auto 1963 Catalina r hardtop, with power akes. automatic, radio, .......jwalls, only — $995 Haupt Pontiac on M15 at 1-75 Interchange $1668 fi ____U' - 5-year John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave._______FE 5-4101 No'wl-It's All Over! And Once Again We Offer Yau the Warld's Finest Mustangs Simple Tefms Trade-Ins Yes, make the right turn to Turner Ford That's Harald Turner Fard MERRY OLDS MO DEAL MERRY OLDSMOBILE : 528 N. Main ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN I963~d^LDS 98 HOLiDAY SEDAN, automatic, power, whitewalls, $995. - 11 MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, 631 FE 4-1006 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547. PONTIAC, 9 PASSENGER 1963 GRAND PRIX, BUCKET _ $995. EM 3-3565. 1963"GRAND PRIX, ALL POWER, $995. Call 682-6530.___________ 1963 BONNEVjlLE CONVERTIBLE, JUST RECEIVED 10 1963 PON-tiacs. Formerly belong to Oakland Cty. nurses and executives. These cars are priced to sell quick with LUCKY AUTO ______ 1963 PONTIAC CATALINA ______________________..................... door r963“ CUTLASS SPORT COUPE, V-8 ' hardtop, sparkling red tinjsh. No lUtomatlc, .POwer_^steej^n^,must Money _Down._ MATJ.HEWS-HAJ?^ 1964 OLDSMOBILE CONVERTIBLE. Air conditioning. Power windows, seats, steering and brakes. Loaded KEEGO PONTIAC GREAVES, 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547.» _____________ 1963 PONTIAC 4 DOOR SEDAN. Good condition. New tires. 61 Jack-son St. Pontiac, 1963 BOfiNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, lull power, custom black Interior. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS !I965 OLDS luxury sedan. With full trades $1,895. On US 10 at M15, Clarkston. MA 5-5071.__ 1965 OLDS 4 DOOR, HARDTOP, dynamic " " 1964 PONTIAC CATALINA V-8 tomafic, radio, heater, Scar in town. $1095 Hillside Lifv coin Mercury, 1250 Oakland FE 3-7863._______________________ 1964 TEMPEST 2-DOOR, STICK shift. $775. FE 2-6466, att. 3 1964 PONTIAC TEMPEST OJSTOM V-8, auto., 326 engine, good condition. $995. 3115 Devondale, UL 2-1047, alt. 12jioon;________ 19M^ONtlAC CATALINA WAGON, 1964 BUICK Special' 4-Door, automatic, radio. Needs little „palnt work. Only — $695 1966 PlYMOUTH 2-door with the 1 economy 6-cyl. with stick shift. Dork blue. Only — $1345 1963 FORD Wagon Country Sedan. 6 - pasaenger. Sharp. With V-8, automatic and new tires. Only — ] $1095 1967 CHEVY Hardtop 2-door, V-8, eutomalic, radio, healer, whitewalls. Stock No. 1870A. Only — $2395 1965 DODGE A-100 Sports Wagon, 9-pa'ssenger. Excellent condition. Stock No. 4382, Only - ^ $1>95 1961 CORVETTE Convertible. Red with a white, top. Mao wheels. $995 1964 CADILLAC Real sharp. DeVille with all power. Ready to go. Only — $1795 1964 OLDS "98" 4-IBP:RJ^O. 1967 D—11 3 Colleges to Sue for Repeal of laws —Television Programs— Programs furnithod by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice , DETPOIT (AP), — Waynej, Sta^, Michigan State and the ] University of Michigan, in a joint statement Thursday, an-' chann.li: 2-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, y-Wm-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBD-W, 56-WTVS nounced that they will sue the l| state to have two recent laws! Movie: “Ouo Vadis” ^ '7 state to have two recent laws! that affect them declared un-[ constitutional. The laws under attack are one that provides for prior approval by the Legislature for beginning or expanding programs and another law that requires the state to hire archi- 6:30 (2r News—Cronkite (C) (7) Movie: “Quo Vadis’ (Part 3) (C) (8) Pat Boone — Jacque- ? line Susann and Tommy Leonetti are guests. (C) (50) Flintstones (R) (C) (56) Friendly Giant 6:15 (56) Davy and Goliath TV Features Tonight STAR TREK, 8:30 p.m. tects for new university buildings. The statement said the boards hoped the suit would “clarify’ their responsibilities under the constitution. -^Jorc/^Dr/ve Ends DETROIT (AP)-The Detroit; Torch Drive ended Thursday] with collections totaling a rec-. ord $27,573,109, topping the 23-, day campaign’s goal of $26,360,-1 595. The total was aqnounced' Thursday at a victory dinner attended by some 1,200 volunteers and civic leaders. The money will go to nearly 200 health and community services programs. AVOID GARNISHMENT L«l ui help you . . . Wo can tat you a trash start by can-salidating your debts into ana payment you can attord. No limit to the amount owed or number at creditors. Not a loan. Call or stop in. Debt Consultants of Pontiac, Inc. Talephone 338-0333 114 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Slol* licauM,! ond londad Open Sat. 9 to 12 '(4) News—Huntley, Brinkley (C) (50) McHale’s Navy iR) (56) What’s New 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences 1C) (4) Traffic Court (C) (9) Gilligan’s Island (R) (50) I Love Lucy (R) (56) Continental Comment 7:30 (2) Wild, Wild We.st -West and ^ Artemus must stop a gargantuan cannon that has turned one town into du§t and is now aimed at its next target, Denver. (C) (4) Tarzan — Organized crime involves Tarzan and Jai in a plot to recover stolen money. (C) j (7) Off to See the Wizard; — “Island of the Lost’’ (1967) An anthropologist and his family are ship-1 wrecked on an unchart^j Island in the Pacific^ Richard Greene, Luke Halpin, Mart Hulswit.; First of two parts. (C) j (9) Movie: “The Girl He Left Behind’’ (1956) A spoiled college student gets drafted. Tab Hunter, Natalie Wood. (50) Perry Mason — “The Romantic Rogue” (R) (56) Medically Speaking 8:00 ( 56) Paris: 1900 8:30 (2) Gomer Pyle, USMC-] Lou-Ann's father tries to get her to break up with Gomer. (C) (4) Star 'Trek — An amorphous creature engulfs the Enterprise shuttleShipj in a strange tale of the' love of an alien for a hu-' man being. (C) (7) Hondo — Angie Dow is kidnaped by coman-cheros. (C) (50) Honeymooners (R) PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION REPORT, 10 p m. (4) U. S. S. R. ANNIVERSARY, 10 p.m. (9) Tomororw WISCONSIN VS. OHIO STATE, 1:30 p.m. (7) WASHINGTON INTERNATIONAL, 3:30 p.m. (4) Ports of Coll Anewer to Proviouo PuzzM (7) Understanding Our World ■ 8:00 (2) Woodrow the Woods-I man (C) (7) Wyatt Earp (R) 8:30 (7) Rebel (R) 9:00 (2) Frankenstein Jr. (C' i (4) Super Six (C) l' (7) Casper (C) 9:30 (2) Herculoids (C) (4) Super President (7) Fantastic Folir ' (9) Ontario School^ (50) Jungle Jim 10:00 (2) Shazzan! (C/ (4) Flintstone f\ (7) Spider-M^n (C) ’ ! (9) Canad)^ Schools (50) World'^ of Dogs 10:30 (2) Spac/Ghost (C) (4) Sawlson and Goliath 1 / ^ (7) Journey to the Center I of the Earth (C) (9) (Special) Memorial 6ay Service — The cere-/ mony of laying wreaths / at the Cenotaph by Prime 'Minister Lester Pearson is telecast live. (CY (50) Movie: “Invisible Stripes” (1940) George Raft, William Holden. (R) 11:00 (2) Moby Dick (C) (4) Birdman (C) (7) King Kong (C) (9) William Tell (R) 1 Seaport, Fiji Islands S Alaskan port 9----Diego. California 12 Mouthward 13 Ireland 14 Hail! 15 Continent 16 River port in P WrC niiid 30 Halley^s, lor instance 31 Indefinite article 32 Sheer dress material haif-em 39 Accumulate .. 41 English river 42 Color 43 Irish clan 44 Citrus drink, lor instance 46 Organ of hearing 46 Drub 52 New World 55 Chest rattle 56 Land parcel 57 Site of Havana 58 English school 60 Cheese type 61 Serum (comb. DOWN 1 Fly high 2 ConstellaUoa 3 Prouder 4 Maxim 5 Jules Verne . character 6 Algerian port ___„______r-- -------l’s4oy 7 EgypUan god of 30 Oatmeal, for 8 Terminals S3 Law (Latin) 9 Eastern 36 Main port of salutatione Tahiti 10 Hawaiian 40 Asterisk pepper 42 DeducUon 11 French marshal 45 Ventures 17 Of aircraft 47 Oriental food 19 Martini items 48 Turkish tiUe of 23 Wigwam respect 24 Remain upright 49 Biblical village 25 Yucatan Indians 50 Swan gen - 26 Resin 51 Nevada c 28 Negative prefix 52 Winglike 29 ChUd----- 9:00 (2) M 0 V i e: "Palm Springs Weekend” (1963) Vacationing students descend upon peaceful Palm' Springs during the Ea^er holidays. Troy Donahue, Connie Stevens, TV Hardin. (C) (50) Combat! — A French resistance force offers to aid Hanley if his men will help raid a German sup-! 11:30 (2) Superman-Aquaman ply depot. (R) (C) (56) Legacy | (4) Ant/Squirrel (C) 9:25^(9) News |, (7) George of the Jungle 9:3o‘(4) Accidental Family —; Jerry gets some Gardening (C) ideas about a weekend TOMORROW AFTERNOON alone with Sue. (C) (7) Guns of Will Sonnett— The Sonnetts risk their part 53 Pithy saying 54 Tobacco quid i 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 ■5" 11 12. 13 H i5“ 16 7 18. . ^ 19 20 2l H22 ^3 24 28 26 28 3on 3T 33 r §r H3t 39 41 49 4b 47 50 51 52 53 bb 56“ bl 58 1 59 60 61 10 lives to defend an outlaw from bounty hunters. (C) (91 Tommy Hupter , : (.561 NET Playhouse — ^ j?pLl?p?rtr^aya^o/thl‘2=30 (2) Jgnny Quest (C) Japanese portrayal ot tne , _ 12:00 (4) Top Cat (C) (7) Beatles (C) (9) This Land of Ours (50) Movie: “Castle the jHudson” (1940) John Garfield, Ann Sheridan. (R) life of Prince Genji in a sophisticated but degenerate Imperial Court. First of eight parts. ! (4) (Special) Pre siden-tial Election Race—Hunt- SONV " AMERICA’S FIRST CHOICE IN TAPE RECORDERS ON-THE-GO RECORDING! That’s what you’ve got when you buy the Sonymatic 900-A 5'/2-pound battery/AC tape recorder. The Sonymatic 9(K)-A converts instantly from plug-in power to four flashlight batteries—.or use its* own rechargeable battery power-pack accessory. Sonymatic A.R.C. (Automatic Recording Control) guarantees you perfect recordings without touching a knob, and its solid-state circuitry fills a room with superb Sony sound. $69.50 Kierythinn In Mutic PONTIAC MUSIC & SOUND 3101 West Huron FE 2-4163 OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 9 P.M. _____ (4) Cool McCool (C) (7) American Bandstand (C) (9) Country Calendar 1:00 (2) Lone Ranger (C) (4) Quiz’Em (C) . J r, ■ .. -1- *3) Tennis ley and Brinkley weigh ,^,5 ,7, ^^AA Pregame the issues and report on: ,2) Road Runner (C) the individuals determin-i target (C) ing the course of the ’68 (7| College Football - electicm. Johnson, Rom-. Wisconsin vs. Ohio State, ney, Nixon and Reagan are among the contenders] ,5^, Wrestling (C) Tvr ! 2:00 (2) MovJe: “The Evil (7) Judd for the Defense ^ , - Judds young assistam (Japanese, 1964) Ken defends a farmer accused ^tsui, Junko Ikeuchi. of shooting an abortion- ist. (C) (4) Profile (C) (9) (Special) I^S.S.R. An- 2;3o (4) Beat tLh Champ niVArcarv ___ Tan^n rnv- _ _ Angela Nixes Faf Film Offer to Keep 'Mame‘ Image Live By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — The world may be relaxing its morals and becoming more permissive about the old taboos ... but Angela Lansbury has turned down the role of a lesbian in the movie version of “The Killing of Sister George.” ■ It would pay her more than she’s ever: earned, would make her an international movie! star, could conceivably bring her an Oscar. j “But, corny as it sounds, I don’t want to] destroy the image I’ve created for myself in] ‘Mame,’ ” she says. , j “It was not an easy decision to make,” An-' gela said, at a party Ruth Ford and Rex Reed gave at the Living I^oom for Bobby Short. Miss Lansbury was wearing the shortest WILSON micro skirt in the place. It was a Mini-Mini- Mame, her first day in it (or out of it) and she had trouble sitting down without a draught. She’s still under contract to do' “Mame” on Broadway till April, then will do four months in' San Francisco and Los Angeles, then maybe star in a London “Mame.” “The King of Nepal and a party of 25 are coming in to see ‘Mame,’” Angela Said. “I hope the King leaves a nice little! ruby behind for everybody.” SERVICE OPEN MONDAY & FRIDAY EVENINGS 'TIL 9 P.M. > BLACK & WHITE ANTENNA INSTALLATIONS UHF • VHF COMBINATION • ROTORS SWEET'S RADIO & APPLIANCE 422 West Huriin FE 4-56T1 I Attention TV Owners For Quality Service At Fair Prices Call Any of These TV & Electronics ^ Services Asso. Dealers niversary — Taped cov-■ erage of the celebrations I nf Russia’s 50th anniver-' sary of the 1917 revolu-j tiort. i (501 Movie: “Atragon” (Japane.se, 1964) Tadao Takashima, Yoko Fuijiki. 1 (C) 10:30 (9) Nation’s Business ] 10:45 (9) Provincial Affairs 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News (C) 1 (9) News 11:30 (2) Movies; 1. “Strangers When We Meet” (1960) . Kirk Douglas, Kim Novak. (C) 2. ‘"nie Price of I Silence” (English, 1959) Gordon Jackson, June Thorburn. (4) Johnny Carson — Bob' Newhart is host. (C) : (7) Joey Bishop (C) (9) Movie: “All Quiet on the Western Front” (1930)1 Lew Ayres, Louis W0I-] heim. (R) (50) Joe Piyne (C) 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) lyiofie: “Dead Reckoning” (1947) Humphrey ' Bogart, Carnovsky? (R) i 1:30 (4) News (C) ! 3:09 (7) News ! TOMORROW MORNING i 6:05 (2) TV Chapel 6:10 (2) News (C) 6:15 (2) Farm Scene i MONTGOMERY, Ala. (AP) —Imilitary’ personnel, civilian vol-. 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester (C) ;sue Thornton. 2, is back safely * unteers and law enforcement' ! (7) Rural Report (C) ]with her parents today after an numbering 150 to 200 ! 6:45 (7) Accent eight-hour jaunt into the woods , . u j r *u u-u 6:55 (4) News (C) laccompanied by her dog. f 7:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (C) 1 It was the barking of the dog] The three troopers found the (4) Country Living (C) Thursday night which alerted daughter 6f Mr. and Mrs. Otis (7) Western Way [three state troopers to heriThornton dozing in a thicket jir 7:30 (4) Oopsy! the Clown (C)]whereabouts after a party ofSheavy woods north of Montgo> (9) Let’s Go 3:30 (41 (Special) Washington International — The 16th running of , the $150,000 race. (Ci (91 Wre.stling (.50) Movie: “The Return of Dr. X” (19391 Humphrey Bogart. (R 4:00 (2) Movie:“Back From Dead” (19.57) Peggie Castle, Arthur Franz. “The Austrian Danube” (C) .......... (4) George Pierrot — “Here Is Chile” (C) (56) Sing Hi—Sing Lo 4:19 (56) Muffinland 4:30 (7) World Adventure Series. (C) 4:30 (9) Superheroes (C) (56) Brother Buzz (C) 5:00 (4) Flying Fi.sherman (C) (71 Wide World of Sports — The P§cific Southwest Cross-Country Motorcycle Championship. (C) (9) Shirley Temple (50) Upbeat (C) (56)'What’s New 5:30 (2) Gentle Ben (C) (4) College Bowl (C) (.56) Observing Eye Guests were asked to come to the Living Room as themselves or favorite movie stars. Tallulah Bankhead had a sash across her chest: “BETTE'DAVIS.” .loan Bennett joined her sitting "just in front of a sign from an old picture, “The Forgotten Women.” THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... RosSano Brazzi flew to Argentina to do a film . . . Author Lee Cooley, whose book, “Condition Pink,” spoofs the super-patriotic organizations, says thaL^mebody smeared swastikas over his garage at Laguna Beach, Calif. . . . Comedian Bernie; Allen signed with Joe Scandore and Mel Shayne wlio agent Don Rickies and Pat Henry. Judy Garland attended both Tony Bennett Waldorf shows, danced with him and sang ... Alex Cord’s 18G Ferrari was hashed on Park Av. — and hour later was broken into; he lost a stereo set and clothes . . . Bert Lahr brought Peter Sellers and Britt Eklund into Kipp’s, telling them, “I want you to eat at MY country club” ... A virus kept Betty Grable from flying home to L.A. WISH I’D SAID THAT: Seaman Jacobs described a prominent personality’s, front-page shenanigans: “He raised juvenile[ delinquency to a new age bracket.” RE1V1EMBERED QUOTE: “If criticism could harm, the skunk would be extinct.” EARL’S PEARLS: This is the time of-, year when people get on their best behavior for Christmas — such as little boys and building superintendents.—Enzo Stuarti. Harry Goz, now in “Fiddler oq the Roof,” once toured In stock. “We were in one town so quiet,” he recalls, “they cancelled the, 9 p.m. curfew bell — it was waking everybody up.” . . . That’s earl, brother. (Th« H«ll S/ndlc«U, Inc.) Save add-on room space WITH TEMC0*GAS BASEBOARDS • For installation with jalousies or in large glass wall areas • Fits under windows • Comes ready to install )A(ith pre-engineered vent • Sealed combustion chamber-uses only fresh outside air • Fully automatic—easy to operate. See us today or phone. Kast Heating & Cooling Co. 580 Telegraph Rd. at Orchard Lake Rd. Phone FE 8-9255 MODEHYOURKiTCHiN DEAL DIRECT Member Pontiac Area SAVE; Chamber of Commerce iimmmiLK FE 8-9251 FREE ESTIMATES ■ Bi W (No Obligation) 328 N. Perry, PONTIAC DON'T IMPROVE! Until You Have Talked To Me I GUARANTEE... To Save You $100.00 . . . On Any Job You Plan Over $800.00 Cdst EVERYTHING IN HOME REMODELING • Recreation Rooms • Kitchens • Any Type Siding • Garages • Storm Windows • Awnings • Porch Enclosures • Cement and Patio Door • All Type Window Replacement You Can Be Sure Of The Finest In MATERIAL - WORKMANSHIP - SERVICE TERMS TO SUIT OR 4-0169 OR 4-0661 Evenings UL 2-4522 sw** HOME IMPROVEMENT CO. ISOS’Highland Rd., Pontiac, Mich. Child Found Safein Woods SONY DEALER LISTING: . ke Radio S TV FE 4-5T8I Obal TV FE4-99tlJ IIM W. Huron, Pontiac 34U ^iboHi Lake 8d. Poirtin ~ Johnion Radio-TV FE 8-4569 Walton Radio-TV FE 2-22SI a E. Walton, Pooliae III t Walton, FoiiHiO 'WKB, Ine,,'Strvict 6T4-1Ift Latimfr Radiomr 6r 3-2652 ’ mt Dido Hwy., brayton Plains 3S30 Fasbabaw, Orayton PItins Radio Programs-— WJR(760) WXY2(1270) CKLW(800) WWJ(950) WCAR(1130) WPON(1460) WJBK(1500) WHF1-FM(94.7) FRIDAY EVENING i:M^-WJRa News, Sports CKlw. Newv Musit WJBK, Newi Music. Sporls WCAR, News, Jack Senders WXYZj^^Newscope, Dave WPON. News. Sporls WHF« Uncle Jav Shovk ii:3»-WJBKp News, Toles, iWJR, News. Music ! CKLW. News, Duke M:0C WPON, Arizona WJR. News. Music sAlUkr .»Y’ iv.-yrtNlNG iMakeuo Show CKL\«, News, Bwd Dav WXYZ, Mar*=“ * -------- Show WCAR. Newt, Bill OeizeM t:30-WWJ, News, Borders 7;00 WJR, News. Mus)c WPON. News, Music 8:DA WJR, News Sunnyside .9:00 WWJ, News. Monitor WCAR, News, Jim Davis WJR, News, Musid CKLW. e Van It Howard WJR, N« Sports ' WXYZ, Danny Taylor WJBK, News!'*Music, Sports WXYZ. Danny Tayjor SATURDAY AFTERNOON U:00-VlhMJ, Newsp Music, WPON, News. Music WCAR, Ne\«s, Ron Rose WHFI, Bill & Ken CKLW. News. Dave ,Shafer WJR, News. Farm, Music WXYZ, News 1:00-WJR, News WHFI, Jack Fuller CKLW, News, Dave Shafer 1;30-WJR, MSU/I n d i a n i Hoosiers Football 2:00-WPON, News, Music ' WXYZ. News. Dave Prince 3tQ0—WCAR. News, Jack > Sanders WWJ—U. of M. (football WJBK, News, ^Music, Sperts] Sony “230” Series TAPE RECORDER stereo Control Center! Soyid-State 3-$peeds! Only ’219.50 CUSTOMADE PRODUCTS, INC. 4540 W. Huron St. 613-91Q0 Open Mon. iind Fri.Till S:30 see more_ofJhe picture with -HANDCRAFTED- SWm SiAlEEK IMPORTABLE TV DIAG. 79 sq. in. pictuit ALL NEW 79 SQ. IN. FULL RECTANGULAR SCREEN IY1405 All new compact portable TV features a handsome sculptured multi-colored Theoutlily «binet tashioned in cteen. modern -,n rectangular lines. Colors: Charcoal ffpes m Brown with Light Tan, Beige with before white, or White with Beige. 3-Stage IF the name Ampl'ifier. ■•Perma Set" VHF Fine goes on* Tuning. $gg05 TV-RADlO SERVICE 770 Orchard Lak« Av«. FE 5-6112 WANT TO SEjJ, ICE SKATES. SLEDS, SKIS, TOBOGGANS? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. - - - TO ! PLACE YOURS, CALL ‘332-8181. D—12 THE rOXTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 10, 1967 NOW- DURING THE SEASON WHEN YOU NEED THEM THE MOST - THOMASTFURNIIIIRE BRINGS YOU ELEGANT DINING ROOMS AT SAVINGS! "d) [? [ f[ ilf Lr JU iu 11 V. L -OR THE HOIVIE LOOK FOR THE SPECIAL PRE-HOLIDAY SALE TAGS IN EVERY DEPARTMENT-THEY’RE YOUR TICKET TO SAVINGS! convenient credit , ample free parking PONTIAC 361S. SAGINAW-FE3-7301 OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY TIL 9 DRAYTON 49415 Z)/X/£• 0/7 4-032/ OPEN MONDAY* THURSDAY, FRIDAY Til. 9 Hf i The Weather U. S. WMthtr fturMU r»rtcait Showers (DaUllt Past 2) THE PONTIAC VOL. 125 NO. 238 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHICAN. FRIDAY. J^OVEMBER 10, 1967 -48 PAGES UNITeO^PREM^mTWNlTlONAL Dual Space Success Gives Moon-Race Lead to U.S. From Our Wire Services CAPE KENNEDY-The United States, with amazing rocketry, has placed the nwon within the grasp of man and shown the world that it has a longer reach than Russia. America vaulted ahead of the Soviet Union in the race to the moon yesterday with a spectacularly successful test of its Saturn 5 rocket and its -Apollo spacecraft, and climaxed the day by soft-land- ing Surveyor 6 on the moon to photograph potential landing ^ites. The 36^story Saturn pulled off a perfect first test.—, one that rocket chief Wehnher Von Braun said marked the most significant step the nation has yet taken ill space. His “bird,” the biggest thing to fly, climbed to 117-miles orbit with a world record satellite of 140 tons. From there, dn Apollo spacecraft went out a lonely 11.386 miles and sizzled home into a rainy Pacific in a tough test of its heat shield. From dream countdown , to on-the-but-ton lift-off to splash-down only 10 miles off target, it took* just eight hours and 37 minutes to prove the United States owner of a clear, wide lead in the space race. • The long shot worked like a dream. evaporating gloom -haunting the space program since three astronauts burned to deaih in their craft at tape Kennedy on Jan. 27^ Presidmt Johnson and Vice President Humphrey sent cffligratulations, the President saying the flight showed America capable of sending astronauts to the moon and bringing them home safely. Space officials hastened to say the moon is several flights away, but Dr. Robert C. Seamans, associate administrator of NASA, calliir the success “clear indication that our team is not iound wanting.” Last night, the television scout Surveyor 6 dropped gently to a spot in the middle of the moon's visible face and began sending the space agency snap-* shots oL. Sinus Medii, the cratered plain which is the last of four potential as- tronaut landing sites to be checked out. One showed a cliff-like prominence on the horizon a mile away. Others pictured narrow depressions nearby which scientists said they could not immediately explain. As the moon rode over the cape last night, champagne sold faster than the dealers could chill it — “six casey in two hours,” reported one. Fighting’ LBJ VisitingTroops WASHINGTON ‘ - President Johnson, displaying a new fighting stance in his effort to confound pollisters apd woo voters, set out on a coast-to-coast tour today to visit American fighting men on shore and at sea. The president’s plane lifted off the runaway at Andrews Air Force Base, Md., at 8:26 A.M. EST. Embarking on his first major barn- Social Security Battle Is Vowed WASHINGTON (AP> - Senate Republicans vow a floor fight against a proposed record boost in Social Security benefits they contend has a financing feature pegged to help Democrats in the 1968 elections. The $3.6-billion measure to provide 15 per cent benefit hikes cleared the Senate Finance Comtnittee on a party-line, 11-6 vote yesterday. Chairman RiisseH B. Long, D-La., predicted quick approval for the measure when the Senate takes it up. The bill would boost benefits beginning next April— before November’s presidential race — but wouldn’t increase Social Security taxes until January 1969. , ★ ★ ★ That financing schedule was called irresponsible and politically motivated by Sen. John J. Williams of Delaware, senior Republican on the Finance Committee. He predicted stiff GOP opposition. Firms, Offices Closed, Stores Open Topiorrow Community National Bank, Pontiac Slate Bank, Capitol Savings and Loan Association and First Federal Savings of Oakland will all be closed tomorrow. Stores will be open. All city, county and Waterford Township offices will also be closed in observance of Veterans Day. Pontiac’s main post office lobby will b^ open for mail deposit, access to locked boxes and. purchase of stamps from machines. Mail will be picked up from deposit points on normal holiday schedules and processed from outgoing dispatch, but Ihere will be no regular window or delivery .services. In Today's Press Addison Townshifi Resignations, apathy plague fire department — PAGE A-4. Open Housing Draft the city’s proposed ordinance is printed — PAGE C-10. Court Bill Supporters seen bowing to counties on revenues — PAGE C-7. Area News A-4 Astrology ............. C-8 Bridge ....-V.,..'-.'....C-8 Crossword Puzzle ........D-11 Comics ..................C-8 Editorials ........A-6 High School D-1, D-2 Maricets .............. D-3 . Obitiiaries ......... D-4 Sports ..............C-1—C-5 Theaters ..........C-10, C-11 TV and Radio Programs . D-11 Wilson, Earl D-11 Women’s Pages .., .B-1—B4 storming trip of 1967, Johnson was scheduled before nightfall today to watch Army ranger and- paratroop training in 'Georgia, greet Vietnam combaJ pilots in California and observe operations aboard the nuclear-powered carrier Enterprise somewhere in the Pacific. The two-day journey will take the commander-in-chief to bases of all the, armed services — including the Coast Guard — in four states and on the high seas. Johnson’s fast - paced travels were ^ keyed to the observance tomorrow of Veterans ©ay. LITTLE REST ‘ The President got scant rest before taking off. Without advance White House announcement, he flew last night to New York City to speak before some 1,000 patrons Of, a dinner sponsored by an arm of the Jewish Labor Committee. AFL-CIO President George Meany was the honored guest. Johnson, long noted for his nonbellig-erant “come let us reason together” phrases, tried out a new, fighting style ^ to the obvious delight of an audience that interrupted with such cries as, “Give ’em hell.” It’s -been apparept for several weeks that Johnson has been deeply co^~ cemed about public opinioh polls depifct-ing him as the underdog in the 1968 election if he decides to seek another term. His tougher language seems a direct new bid to generate voter backing for his policies. Strengthening the language of his prepared text as he went along, the President asserted “it is just pure bunk” to claim progress in Vietnam must some at the sacrifice of progress at home. Decrying what he termed “the old coalition of stand-patters and nay-say-ers,” Johnson said: “They never wanted to do anything, Ethis year they say they can’t do it ause of Vietnam. , “That is just pure bunk. They were against progress before Vietnam. They are against progress now. And they’ll be against progress when the war in Vietnam is a dim memory.’’ LUNCHEON GUESTS — Attending yesterday’s luncheon program featuring manager of Fisher Body plant; John Z. DeLorean, a GM vice-president Jnd general Martin J. Caserio, general manager of GMC Truck and Coach Division as a speaker, manager of Pontiac Motor Division; Caserio; Harold A. Fitzgerald, ch^man of the \ were (from left) Carleton Patterson Jr., cochairman of the program; Rev. R. Craig board of The Pontiac Press; and Frederick J. Poole, cochairman of Ihe luncheon. Bell, associate rector of All Saints Episcopal Church; Robert Lahiff, production (Related picture, page D-3.) . Caserio Tells GM Truck Expansion Plpns Optimistic over past performance and future possibilities, Martin J. Caserio, a General Motors vice president and .general manager of GMC Truck and Coach Division, yesterday announced an expansion program at'the Pontiac plant which will ampunt to several million dollars. Caserio, featured speaker at a»lunch-eon aLthe Elks Temple yesterday, spoke "hv-afi overflow crowd of some 425 business, industrial and community leaders. He was introduced to the audience by Harold A. Fitzgerald, chairman of the board of The Pontiac Press, one of the principal organizers of the luncheon program. As part of “a significant modernization program,” Caserio-said, “one of the contemplated iniprovements wilt be construction of a 472,000-square-foot production warehouse in our main manufac-‘turing area off Sojith Boulevard.” ★. * * New buildings and facilities for shipping and delivering truck and coach products by rail and highway carriers will also be constructed, he said. Caserio said another improvement will be an addition to the administration building to be constructed directly behind the present main office building. “These and other projects wifi bring a new look to onr operation. “Results may be evolutionary rather^ than revolutionary, but the outcome will be a modern truck and coach, manufacturing plant that will add even more prosperity and prestige to this area,” he said. Caserio outlined the growth of the Pontiac plant since the turn of the ce(i-tury. 13,000 EMPLOYES ,The plant now employes some 13,0()0j in Pontiac and during the 1967 model year produced mdre than 120,000 trucks and buses, for the fourth consecutive year topping that figure. General manager of the GM plant for about a year, Caserio paid tribute to Pontiac and its ..citizens. (Continued on Page A-3, Col. 1» Showers Looming Over Area There’s a chance showers will dampen thfe Pontiac area tonight and tomorrow, but temperatures will continue mild. The U.S. Weather Bureau reports the following official day by day forecast: TODAY—Mostly cloudy and warmer with the high in the. 50s. Showers likely and a little warmer tonight, low 44 to 52. Winds light and variable, becoming south to southeast 10 to 20 miles this afternoon and south to southwest 12 lo 25 miles tonight. TOMORROW—Showers likely and a little.cjH)ler. SUNDAY-Partly cloudy with not much temperature change. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 20, tonight and tomorrow 60. A brisk .37 was the low temperature in downtown Pontiac precd^ng 8 a.^. The 1 p.m. reading was 49. Builder Housing Void By BOB WISLER The lack of good housing is labeled one of Pdntiac’s most acute problems, but developer Charles L. Langs seems to be one of the few who is stepping into the void. CHARLES BICKFORD character Actor Dies in Hollywood Walkouts Keep Chrysler Idled DETROIT ()Pt — Walkouts over local issues at key plants kept Chrysler Corp. production halted today following tentative Agreement witji the United Auto Workers on a new three-year national contract. The walkouts idled some 50,000 of the firm’s 103,000 UAW members even as talks on at-the-plant contracts to supplement the national pact went ahead at all 32 Chrysler bargaining units wifi), nnre-solved local issues.^ C Subcommittee^ met yesterday, meanwhile, to continue work on provisions in the national pact covering the UAW’s 8,000 salaried worker^t Chrysler. Union officers were not optimistic for an early end to the local walkouts. “You can’t tell when these things start how HOLLYWOOD m L Actor Charles Bickford, who 'played rugged he-man roles on the stage, screen and television, died Ipt night at 78. One of Hollywood’s top character actors, Bickfoi'd succumbed in the University of California at Los Angelas Medical Center, He also announced this week that ^ After suffering an attack of emphy-first of the Auburn HIUs ToWnhotise hospitalized last July. Apartments on Auburn just west of jUness later was complicated by an Opdyke will begin taking tenants next jqfuJHbn of the bloodstream and pneumonia. ^ Langs this week received a federal commitment for the construction of the first 200 of a planned 700-unit rent supplement project in the northwest section of the city. week. This is all good news to Pontiac city officials who are more aware tiian most of the pressing housing needs for all levels of income. and low income housing in t|jc city. Planning and Urban Renewal ©irector James Bates says.= SIGNIFICANT STMDE NEW HOUSING - Taking a look at the lirst of some 250 rental units which, will soon open is Mayor William H. T^lor Jr. Charles L. Langs, de- veloper of ^e prBject. Langs said he will start renting the units next week. The project, known as Auburn Hills .Townhokise Apartments, is locaM on Auburn we*ofOpdyke. f ' ' ■' I, " Bates sai({ that devetopment of the Auburn Hills housing and tire expected development of the rent suplement project on Kennett adjacent to the Alcott long it’s going' to take,” said Douglgs . \ Fraser, head of the union’s Chrysler de-; partment. . In telegrams to local unio^presidents following tentative agreemem on the national pact Wednesday night, Fraser and, UAW President Walter Reuther ordered workers back to their jobs for talks to proceed on the local settlements an^ said a new strike deadline would ber^et, following cancellation of the earlier one for midnight Wednesday. A friend said Bickford was “still hard, strong and gruff” Until the end. SuiNivors include his widow, actreM , Beatrice Loring, whom he married in 1919, and a married son, Rex, 42, and * ^ * daughter, Doris. No funeral plans have There is a great need for moderate been made. The red-haired Bickford, after mote than 100 film credits, was enjoying success in televisifih as the hard-fisted ranch owner on ‘The Virginian.” Recently detor John Meintire — who mpved into “wagon Train” when Ward Bond died — filled in for Bickford. A multimillionaire, Bipkford often played a captain of industry or a dom- on nem^ Mjacem m me Element^ School wtil^ ^ifi* Academy Award nomination cant stride toward meeting this need. for “Johnny Belinda” but once described (^tinued cm-Page A-2,.Col. 4) >^^Oscars as “a littkgbit loathsome.” WANT AD SELLS TWO-CAR GARAGE “Sold in less than an hour after paper came out. Wonderful action from our Press Want Ad.” Mrs. W. G. • 2-CAR WOODEN GARAGE ^ Phone FE 0-0000 _____________- PRESS Want ADS ' provide instant communication tween people who want to do business at (mce. T^ are easy to use, low cost and resultful. Didl — 332-8181 or 334-4981 V...H-,------ c—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. NO\'EMBER 10. ^ Here s Open Occupancy Draft! SATURDAY ......." The cowboy 1 ^ bucking 6ri EAGLE I SUNDAT WINNER OFB academy AWARDS! Because of a wide interest in the fair housing orjjinance now being discussed by fhe City Commission, The Pontiac, Press is printing the draft of the ordinance. Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. has requested that any suggestions for changes or improvement be addressed 40 the mayor at City Hall. stitution,'advertiser, or agent of any of the foregoing shall discriminate against any other person in regard to the sale, rental or dealings concerning real property located in the City of Pontiac. Section 2. The provisions of this ordinance shall not apply to the rental of a room or rooms in a single dwelling unit, the He asked that these be s“b-mitted in writing no later than Dec. 1. Taylor said the suggestions will be taken under advisement7^„, and changes may be made in ^ the draft before the commission ^ reaches a final decision. ★ ★ ★ This decision could be a vote to adopt the ordinance as drafted, The draft is as follows: DOCTOR ZHilAGO GfflALDINECHAPtlN -JULECHRISFIE.-lOMCOURrENAY AEG WSS • Sm MNA ■ ™ IWTO WplFiAszH«ROOSIEI® ROBERT BOLT- DAVID LEAN inpanavision- and MeTHocoioR PRICES-THIS ENGAGEMENT ONLY WED., SAT. MAT..$1.25 WED. “BAREFOOT IN THE PARK" origin composition of the block, neighborhood "or area for the purpose of discouraging the pur-particular LAKE THEATRE em,.. WALLED LAKE - 402 N. Pontiac Trail MATINEES; SAT, and SUN. 2 P.M. Continuous * ^ NOW thru SUNDAY ^ "ST. VALENTINE'S DAY MASSACRE" Jason ROBARDS George Segal "RACE'' Glenn FORD Stella Stevens ,„junit is occupied by (1) the owner or members of his immedi-^ ate’family of (2) a^ lessee of entire dwelling^ unit or real property to any person be-" cause of such person’s religion, race, color or national origin, members of his immediate fam- Section 3. Nothing in this or-'■ dinance shall require anyone owning or possessing an interest An ordinance to prohibit dis-jjf, j.gg| property to, offer the I crimination by reason of reli-|ppQpg^fy jq public at large I gion, race,>*lor or national ori-| before sgiyng renting such JI gin in the sale, r e n t a 1 or pterest; nor shall this ordi- i dealings, concerning real prop- nance be dqpmed to- prohibit .. ._______________ ^ erty located in the City of Pon- owners -or possessors of an in-.chase of property in J tiac; .to prohibit the induce- terest in real property of their area. Sment to sell real property by ggen-jg from giving preference I Section 7. No person, firm, ^ I representation that the religious, to prospective tenants or pur- ;^artnership, association or cor-J racial, color or national origin chasers for any. reason other:poration, by threat,' intimida-i; composition of the ndghborhood than religion, race, color or na- tion, coercion, extortion or eon-ijhas changed; to prohibit the use tional origin, Ispiracy shall induce or-attempt' liof threats, intimidation, coer- Section 4. Nothing in this or- to induce any person owning an I cion, extortion, or conspiracy to dinance shall be construed as interest or -leasing an interest induce any person owning an|a limitation to the right of ac-iin real property in the City of i.interest or leasing an interest in;cess by an individual to reme-:Pontiac to sell, rent or lease, or 1 real property to convey such in-idies before the Michigan Civilmot to sell, rent or lease such Iiterest to any person because of- • his religion, race, color or na-i tional, origin; and to provide penalties for violation thereof, j The City of Pontiac Ordains: | * ★ * Section’1. No owner of real! property, lessee, sublessee, realj ■ estate broker or salesman,': builder or supplier of building j| materials, lender, financial in- NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT Rights Commission or before the, Section 8. Any person ’violat-Courts of this State on an in- mg any of the provisions of this diviri- 'sis, or to prohibit the ^ball, Upon convic- coopi between the City ofl . Ponti: Id the Michigan Civilj ‘^ereol, be punished by a Rights Commission, ^ ^ 'T' Section 6. No person, firm,|P".fOakland County, partnership, association or cor-'J"*'’ not to exceed 90 days or Joration shall induce directly ori‘>«‘h such fine and imprison-indirectly, or attempt to inducei^^^^ ‘^e discretion of the directly or indirectly, the sale, ■ rental"or listing for sale or rent- Section 9. The sections of this al of real property by represent- ordinance are declared to be ing that a change has occurred severable; and, if any section or will or mav occur with re-|therefore is declared illegal or spect to the 'religion,, racial, void for any reason, it shall nol color or national origin compo-| effect the remainder of the or-sition of the block, neighborhood thnance. or area in which the propertyi' Section 10. This ordinance is located; nor shall any repre-|shall take'effect 10 days from sentations be made to any pro-1 and after the date of ifs passage spective purchaser or tenant| by the City t'ommi.ssion of the that any block, neighborhood or'City of Pontiac area has, will or might undergo| -a chapge with respect to the re-j ligion, race,. color or national^ The COwboy who came to tame rone called Africa! HUBH OVRIAN Alarm Clock's 'Incense' Has Smell of Success BUY!SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! :e opportunity will be giv iferested to be heard, tber 8, 1967 . OLGA BARKELE_Y, What young people think are the top records of the week "smith, i as compiled by Gilbert Youth Research, Inc. , 1 Incense and Peppermints ...........Strawberry Alarm Clock Soul Man ............................,.. .. Sam and Dave i How Can I Be Sure ....................... Young Rascals' It Must Be Him ....... Vikki Carr To Sir With Love .................................. Lulu i Your Precious Love .... : Marvin Gaye and Tamrai Terrell Please Love Me Forever ................... Bobby Vinton Expressway, to Your Heart . . - ___ SoUl Survivors Holiday ........................ ........... Bee Gees The Rain, the Park and Other things ............Cowsills ELUIEILm Back by Popular Demand Prophonics Recording Stars • • • ' The New Breed C.A.I. 5640 Williams Lake Rd. Waterford, Mich. EVERY SUNDAY 6 P.M. to 9:30 P.M. -Adm. $1.50 IIIIIIM 12 gmnnnnnnnr * Tender, Young, Freth, Plump , CHICKENS ... Deep Fried in Fre,h J Pure Vegetable Oil for the Mott • Delightful Chicken Dinner Ever , . . . Buy It By the BOX . . . the % BUCKET . . . the BARREL! nnin-brrrniirsmr^^ pi^»Wvijcf WE SPECIALIZE IN LARGE .QUANTITY ORDERS! For Your Convenience, l^leose Coll tn Quantity Ordert In Advance! SPECIAL This Week Only! I FREE ONE DOZEN DONUTS ' Plain, Sugared Or Cinnamon With Purchase | CHHJK-N-JOY BUCKET or BARRELL - 5 A.M. to 12 Midnight * LEGRAPH THE PONTIAC MALL 335*2444 PH0NEx335-0101 juuldBduuuul The Letter Hey, Baby ............... -rm Wondering ............" Love la Strange ......... Watch the Flowers Grow Little Ole Man .......... People. Are Strange I Can See for Miles .... Kentucky Woman I Say a Little Prayer ... Box Tops — Buckinghams j !S Stevie Wonder | S . Peaches and Herb , S . Four Seasons j S ....... Bill Cosby! “ .......... Doors! S .............Who! E ... Neil Diamond ^ • Dionne Warwick ! ^ third group used a chemically j inert foam. Hospital Germ Control | wpno =AiiiuiiMiiiini(iiir PONT WOLF IT DOWN. NEW YORK (UPI) - Without there being anything personal in it. Dr. Peter Dineen interested himself in the hands of hospital nurses . He concern j trat^d on the fingertips, looking^ ior colonies Of bacteria. These! he found, in abundance. Hospital personnel can be the; carriers of microorganism from; one patient to another. They're constantly present on the skin of all per.sons, ! Dineen chose recovery room ; nurses because their hands are, I in contact with surgical patients, i He fingerprinted 150 of them re-: jpeatedly in a nutrient jell in which bacteria would propagate. The first fingerprinting re-I vealed over half the nurses har-! bored bacteria on their finger-jtips despite hand-washing rou-! tines. Fifty nprses then scrubb«l i their hands for one minute with ja germicidal solution. Another ’50 applied antiseptic foam. A All were fingerprinted again.. The, jells developed 47 and 71: per , cent few'er' colonie.s from! fingertips of the 100 nurses who used germicides and 54.2 per_ cent more colonies from the 50 who used inert foam. ANOTHER COUNT After the nurses worked in the recover.v room for half an hour or so, they were fingerprinted again. Bacterial counts of the; first two groups increased,' which meant "their fingertips had picked up bacteria from pa-, tients. The count of the third group was far downji It was'as;| !sumed they had jost bacteria, i !depositing them on patients. ' ★ ★ The answer, he said, is for nurses and-doctors, too. to scrub their hands with a germicide af-^ ter jcach contact with a patient, j IN*CAf^ HEATERS mill ORIVMN SO. TEIECIAPH AT SO. LAKE ,FE 2 1000 1 MUE W. WOOOWAtO ltll|||> jBOX OFFICE OPENS 7:00 P.MJ * his up-tight world: AniiiiCDAC DRIVE-IN THEATER UUEIEICIIbC Union Loke at Haggerty Rd. i £ FREE ELECTRIC HEATERS! EM 3-0661-Show Starts at DusJc-Adults$1.2S SUN. EARLYBIRD SHOW SUN. 6:30 P.M. There are two kinds of peoj his victims and his womdn. And sometimes you can't tell them' apart. LEE MARVIN. gtt, ^ POINT BLANK STORY OF THE REVOLUTION IN:?CAMPUS MPRAtS I 1 J'# ____ PLUS ___:______ - ACADEMY AWARD WINNER .ELIZABETH HAP4N = llllllllinmi ELECTRIC IN-CAR HEATERS “BLwe [iiiiiini .S /7/?rr/ IFoWda • I>0ugi3eny if • WIalley | Beam's Choice is a very (We should know-we' We age it for eight year; The result is about as cL So sip it. And savor it. ;ood Bourbon. 'e been making Bourbr And charcoal filter it so to perfect as anybody’s since 1795.)' *5“ PLUS 2nd Feature I aUlLTY OR INNOCENT YOU BE THE lUDGsl ri____________ _ ________ )t rocommondtd for thoM undtr 38 PLUS 3rd Feature “Every Mother 'pos/T/i/ci.v: l,awoiitaa~ = makes ‘DEAR JOHN’ look like a Sfairy tale. Would you beJieve 5‘VIRGINIA WOOLF looking like a _I_f ■'r.hnryp SSunday go-to-meetin DRIVE IN OPDYKl »D, AT WAITON eiVO. I 332 3200 take 175 TO MT. CIEMENS RD. ' * BOX OFFICE OPENS 7|00^P.^.J[ Should SEE . . ” "UNDER AGE" A VARIETY OFIEAUTIESAS OAllYING UDIESI IN-CAR HEATERS THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. NOVEMBER 10. 1967 HMtDVCTPAGEi ‘‘ Markets, Business > K- Trading Is Active Mart Moves Sharply Higher MARKETS The following are lop prices covering sales of locally grown j produce by growers and sold bvi them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by thei nkw YORK (API — A reviv-. Steels, autos, rubbers and Detroit Bureati of Markets as mg stock market moved sharp-mail order - retails advanced ■■ ■ ■ ilv higher caiTv todav Trading!solidly, although most of their was active igains were fractional. 1" Taking oil from Thursday siHKAVYWEIGHT, STOCKS *<00 advance — the first in nine; The average was boosted by Im* sessions - the market moved! such heavyweight-key stocks as 3 ?o'ahead on a broad front. ;du Pont, Eastman Kodak, Proc- <-m; * ★ ★ ter & Gamble and Westinghouse ^ 00 Qains outnumbered losses by Electric, all of which rose ’S' . a margin of'about 3 to 1. The | point or better. 2.50 Dow Jones, Industrial Average! An upward thrust was given ' 1 h advanced about 5 points. 1 the rails by gains of about 3 by The industrial blue chips con- New York Central and nearly tinned to put on a strong per-|2 by Pennsylvania Railroad. J^M formance. Some rails and se-; Among the higher-priced com-2:°oiiected growth stocks also didiputpr stocks, IBM tacked on 5 ?;?5 well. 'points, Honeywell 2. of Wednesday. Produce________ FRUITS Applesr Cortland, bu....... Apples, Greening, bu..... Apples, Jonathon, bu. Apples, Ciaer, 4-gal. case Apples, McIntosh Apples. Northern Spy, bu. ,, Apples, Red Delicious, bu. Apples, Golden Delicious, bu. Pears, Bose, V4 bu. VEGETABLES Cabbage. Standard V Horseradish, pK. bskt. Kohlrabi, dz. bch. Leeks, dz. bch. . Onions, dry. 50-lb. bag Parsley, Curly, dz. b<^. Parsley, Roof, dz. bch. Parsnips, ’.^-bu. Parsnips, Cello Pak, dz.' Peas, Btackeve, bu. Peppers, Sweet, bu. Dotatoes, 50-lb. bag statoes, 20-ib. bag ........ Amphenol sank nearly 2 points, apparently in disappointment that the planned tender offer for its stock from Solitron Devices has reached an impasse with Amphenol management direct offer to Amphenol stockholders is contemplated. * * * Texas Instruments i^lipped about 1%. Thursday the Associated Press Average of 60 Stocks rose 1.5 to, 308.7. ★ ★ » Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. WASHINGTON (if) - A House Judiciary subcommittee called yesterday for a full investigation of the automobile insur- Along With Pay for Skilled Joblessness on Rise The New York Stock Exchange Squash. Acor Squash, ButteiwM, Squash, Butternut, bu. Squash, Hubbard, bu. Tomatoes, 14-lb. bskt. Tomatoes. V2 bo. Turnips, dz. bchs. . Turnips, top^.......... < GREEN5 Cabbage, bu. Collard, bu............ Kale, pu................ Mustard, bu. K75! NEW YORK (AP) - 20 28U 28'/8 281'0 n 47^4 47^8 47V2 -I- Net i Gen Fds* 2.40 st Chg.j Gen Mills .80 IgenMot 3.8^ GP^ubstf^ .4to V4|GPubUt 1.56 (hds.) High Low Last Chg. 44 69^ 69 69^ + ?b 64 333/4 323.4 33'/a +*• 65 82 81 Vj 82 + 12 68V2 68V2 68V2 + 2 6V4 63/4 63/4 .. 19 273^ 27% 27% .. 77 42% 42Va 42% -f .. ‘ 25^8 25Va 25V2 — Ve 553/4 55% 553/4 Poultry and Eggs V DETROIT POULTRY DETIiOIT (AP) - (USDA) Prlc B 21'/4 + J 33% 4 ’ 4 37 , 37 37 + ';a iGertyQII lOg. 15 88 Gillette 1.20 " IGlen Aid 70 Goodrich 2.4h Goodyr 1.35 1 3OV2 ._ „ _ 88 -t- 43 55T4 55% 55% — I ......... ” 14 + 1 t 65V4 + I nAiflin .80 43 29- Am Can^2.20 AmCrySui 1 AmCyan 1.25 ‘ lEIPw 1.52 .. inka 1.30a AnhFPw 1,16 * “ome 1.20 Hosp SO , 633fl 633b 63% + We 4 73% 73’/2> 73Vj - %|GWSu< 13 48% 483/4 48% -r ' -IGreyh/ 4 23^4 23»» 235«-isiGrur 75 29''b 28% 29 + joulf 62 32% 32 32% loulfSIaUI 4 65V2 103 45% 44% 4 16 39% 39V4 .3y^ -r 2 25% 25%" 25% + - 31% 31% ‘31% . 28% 287^e 28% -I- 53Vb 53V4 + 13% , 13% - 3k 21% -21% 21'/4.-f ............. .. J3ihi . 33' jGulf on 2-60 103’ 7f„^73 .... •'* 13 21%-20%‘-21' -H— 21 58% 58 58' 73r - heavy type 26-27; whites, I8V2-21. DETRC DETROIT (AP) prices per dozen p. (including U.S “'hite Grad« I -- EggAmNGas 1. receivers!Am -News ____ I Am Photocf ..... Grade A (umbo, 33 - 37 cents.'Am Smelt : extra large 31-33; large 29-31; medtor- ''— ‘ I 11% 1 J 11'/4 35% 35% + 26% 26V2 26% %< 10% 10% 10% + 3 62% 62% 62% + . JO 26 ‘ T&T 2.20 3383 50' CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile?^; xchange-Butter steady; wholesale buv- ing prices unchanged; 93 score AA 66;i;^P^"°' ' 92 A 66; 90 B 65; 89 C 63'/;; cars 90 65%;. 89 C 63V2. lArrhn;4n better Grade A whites 29; mixed 20V2;^[!;;;°^r -JJ mediums 23,'/2; standards 24. UshldOil 1 20' CHICAGO POULTRY ^Assd DG ’ CHI^^GO (AP)—(U»^DA)-j-Llve^poultr ......... !^rs° 25-28^; spedal^fe? W^Mte^Rock' fryl 25 10’% 3 62% ... .. 20 26 25% 25^ 3383 50'ii 50 50’/e . . 25 32'/4 32'/b 32'/e - 7 35'/4 35'4 35'/4 + ’-4 117, ,33% 33 33Vb . 110^ 43% 43% 43% -1% 41 45% 45% 45% -|- % 3 11% 11% 11% + >/4 3 53 Holidylrfn .; >t6liySug 1.; Homestk .8^ 10 49 -I- % 1 33'/4 33'/4 - 3 51% 51’'2 51% . tdahoPw 1.50 ■ leal Cem * np CP Ar igerRand . ifand Stl^ 2^ interlkSt IBM 19-20. t-'Atl Rich, 3.10 'S'Atlas Ch .80 (Atlas Corp Lfvesfock DETROIT LIVESTOCK ,Bab Slaughter .00-26.75; 01 d and choice 25. slaughter hettef! )0-25.00; good 2^5 Beckma •—>-r.’Bendlx ... 900-1,200 lbs,Benguet couple lots 27.00; Beth St ----dJoeinq^ 16 5% 5j4 5^/8 - — — , 451/4 45’/4 r, . ’ .52% J3% f^% 37 49 48% 48%, + 9 29'B 29 29 - 6 57J4 57% 57% 4- 5 68'2 AR 68 - 5 41 3 ; 30 6 793/4 793/4 _ I 5% 6 + ' 25.50-26.00; g n 1.20 cows 15.50-16.50. • ” BorgWar 2.20 Vealers: high choice and prime 40.00- BorgWarn wi 43.00; choice 35.00-40.00; good • 30.00-35.00. fBrlggsS 2.40a Sheep 25; choice and prime 90-110 lb BristMyer la wooled slaughter lambs 24.00-25.00. Brunswick Hogs 25; barrows and gilts U.S. 1-2 BucyEr 1.60a 200;230 lb 19.00-19.50; 1-3 220-240 lb 18.50- Bu.dd Co .80 72 83% 83% 83% - ^ 6 39'/2 39Va 39'/2 -f ' 12 31% 31% 31%'+) 4 52% 52% 52% + ' 3 26% 26^/4 26% 1 53% 53% 53% + ^ 50 73’/2 . 72’^2 ' 73''2 - = 214 11% b 17.75-18.50; cows . l-3,Bultai b *13.25- Bulov . 31 >8 31 • 20 19% 11% + CHICAGO (AP) - 8,500; 1-2 190-225 II ...V .w. '17.50-18.00; ^ S 17.00 - 17.50; 1-3 240-260 3 350-300 lb st .._ -- 14.75-15.25. i 15.00 h Choice'S' 1.201* IP Soup I 15.50t 1-3 400-450 I Cattle 6.000; - calves none; high jnSCr.® >.',5I>-'.3S0, lbs slaugnTer steer’s J: 26.50-27.25; mixed good and choice 950-i^ . , ; 1,150 lbs 25.00-25.50; lew loads high ' choice and prime 950-1.000 lbs slaughferlEf”®'^'; ■ heifers yield grade 3 and 4 25.50-25.75; i so yloia, grade 2 to 4 24.5M5.25; mixed good and. Choice 23,75-|'|fcolS".35 Sheep 400; around 50 head choice and r»rL^'(''xah“ Siril.’.“cV^5T'nh'<;fc"e''’’rnVt,rm’en’iiP,!^^^^^ no lb 823.50-24.50; .good and choice 22.00- rhi< ohin^j 23^0^0" ,0 good wooled slaughter ewes ^ « 39V4 39'.i -I- ’/4 2b' 43'? 21 57% Tall. 53 41% I 5?% + % 46 — % I 38’ a • ChrisCraft Chrysler 2 CIT Fin 1. CitiesSvc 1 eocaCola 2. "American Stock Exch. iesrg-| NEW YORK (AP) - American Stock 270 5% 5% 5%'” -+ •' 39 2 7 16 2i»2 7-16 fa^^ilr^O^iis’ 21 36 35% : '^39 5 4 15-16 4 15-16 g Corn Pd UO 10 37% 37';? 37% J 31 31''? + % 3 40^8 40% 40% + % 15 98 97% 98 +Vr 3 38^8 38^8 38% 120 50’8 50 SO- -1 25 24% 24% 24% 5 32% 32' 2 32% -E ' 3 33^'b 33^0 33% + ^ 20 45'8 45'/0 45'8-.' 18 47 47 47 59 32^8 32'8 32’/0 - ' 10 38 37% 37% -E ' 4 S4’/b 54'8 54% ' 33 27% 27''4 27%, 1+ ' 24 38% 38'^? 38% ' 25 27%. 27% 27% 42 22V? 22'r4 22'/? + ' 2 48' ? 48' ? 48'^? ' 5 76' 8 7S% ’ 753/4 -f ' 58 78% 78 78 .. ,31 150'/? 149'/4 149% - ' 5 42'/? 42'/4 42'4 -E ' 49 3B’/4 38 38'/0 - 1 3 357'/4 357 357 - ' McCrory wt MeadJhsn'.4B MichSug log MohwkD Sci , 2 8-4 0'-4 8'4-KV4 17 35% 33% 33% + Vj 30 . 6*% 6'/4 6% - '4 36 168% 165' 8 168% -i-3% ' NewPark Mn 35 Pancoasta! "ia RIC Group Scurry Rain SlgnafoilA la 78 38% 3718 383/0 + 206 35% 34'? 35 f 36 79% 78^0 79% + 'DiamAlk 1. Disney .40b ' Disney' wi IDomeMin .80 ® jDowChm - " 10 14% 14»/4 14% 4- 3 34 33% 333^ 9 27 27 27 4-'16 15% 15%' 32 31'.'4 31'/8 31'/4, STOCK AVERAGES 450:s 180.2 137.^ . . - 43'/? 43'/? ~ 3 82'^? 82% 82'/? ‘ 5 32% 32% 32% ............"aT: 43 i: Sander Scheme, Scherlng ____ Scientif Data SCM Cp -60b Scott Paper i Sbd CstL 2.20 luntFds .Mb n GD 1.30 rs Roe la burg .60 ...„ron StI 1 Shell Oil 2.10 Sinclair 2.60 SingerCo 2.20 SmithK 1.00a SouCalE 1.40 ^ 11 29% 20% 28% - 4 21 17'/? 17'/? 17'/? .. 15 7'/4 7Va 7V4 + -n 'Rand 2 23 41 40% 40% — V. • “ 5 32% 32% 32% 4* ^ • fi 55'/'? 55',/b 55'/? + 4i 1 29 29 29 15 585 504 585 + 5'/ 29 33% 33 • 33'/8 — V( 45 26'/4 25% 26 — '/i 1 93i 93/4 9% . .. . .... 51 25'/? 25'/4 25'/4 + '/ T&T 1,70 35 114'/8 113'/? UA'/a — '/i vaPSv 1,24 I 23'/4 23'/4 4 30% 29% 30% + —J— s 1. - ____ ? 52V? 52'/? > tw/4 83'/8 83'/4 — V 6 52%. 523/4 523/4 + 1 1 56'/8 26'/8 26'/^ - '; 9 30% 30’/4 30% + '. —K— ^ 36 43 42% 43 + ' 15 26% '263/4 26% -f- 3 6 43% 43'/4 43V4 + ' 65 117'/4 116’/4 117'^ — ' 5 54% 54% 54% + » Staley 1.35 StBrand 1.40 Std Kolls .50 StOCal 2.50b StOIIInd 1;90 StdONJ 3.45g “‘OilOh 2.50b Packaging _ juffCh 1.80 Sterl Drug 1 StevensJ 2.25 Studebake Sun Oil lb Sunray ’ -....n 2-14g LOFGIss 2.80 LibbMcN .36f ■ iggett&M 5 ilyCup 1.20b 5 7'/? 7% 7'/? B 37'/4 37'/4 37'/4 6 49% 49'/? 49' .ongIsLt l.li .orilird 2.50 -TV J.33 _ucky Str ,9( Lukens Sfl ' 24% 24’/0 24% -1- 12 18 15 24% 10 25% 25' 2 50'/? 50' 53 123'/? 121' id Fd 2.23g 7 27’'4 27 27'.% Marathn 2,80 S m8 17'/b 17% •+ B 37'/a 37Vb — ' MerckC 1.40a 9 22 22 22 7 1 2 14% - MontWard 1 Morrell '.30g Motorol3 1 MtStTT 1.24 N Lead 2.25g Nat Steel 2.50 Nevada P .92 NErigEI 1.36 NYCent 3.12a NiagMP 1.10 NorfolkWsf 6 NoAmRock 2 4 20'/? 20'/? 20’/? +- 27 43% 43'/? 43'/? -f 3 293/4 293/4 293/4 + 2 27% 27% 273/i — 1^42'/? 223.8 22% >4- 3 41% 41'/4 41% + 14 130''4 130 130 +1 4 22% 22% 223/4 — _N— ■ 13 72'/? 72'/? ' 72'/? + % 1 36'8 36’/4 36’/4 . 8 46% 46% 46% - 6 333/4 333/4 333/4 4 7 127 127 127 - 10 37- 36% 36% - 10 39% 39'% ^03,*, 4 5 28% 28'/4i 18 20% 203/4 2 41% 41% .. . - 22 60% 6OV4 60'/4 - '»'> 46'/4 45'/? 46'/4. 37V? 37'/? 37V? . . 25% 25% 25% 16 24 ■ 23% 24 67 67 653/4 36 20'/b 20 4-1% 3 25%* 2^‘ 25% — ' 16 24 ■ 23% 24 4- ' 67 67 653/4 67 4-3 36 20'/b 20 20 15 93 92% 93 4* ' 33 35% 35% 35% — ’ 2 48% 48% 48% — ' 6 50% 50V? 50'/? ... 26 29’/? 29% 29% - 1 13 34% 34^ 34V4 — 5 116 96% 95% 95% — 1 1 49’/i 49V? 49'./? — ’ 9 39% 39% 39% 4- ' 308.0 ^Erner El 168 307,2, End Johnson' 312.0 ErieLack RR 331.1 ,Ethv|^p .60 isP .60b 493.2 209,6 159.1 .342.6 Evers 413.4 1 59,4. 136.5 292.8 537.9 213,9 170 5 369.7 OOW-JONES AVERAGES STOCKS; 30 Indus ........ ......... 20 Rails .................. 15 Utils .................. 65 Slocks ...... .29 27% 27te 27% -1 19- 19 n 4 -F— 3' 35% 35'.? 35% 4- »■ . 228.99-f0.18 iFIllr -158'FstCht 1.24t 53 22^ : 31%.3l'/0- 29% 4 46% 47 -f 22% 22% - rrisTrSvBk Chi .45 9 27 26% 27 -f-n/^ 9 64% 6454 64% 4- 7% 151 38% 39V? + % 3 128% 20’/fc 28% ^ % 55 19'% 18% 19 + % 1 21'/4 21% 21% 4- ’/4 ■iA 58'/4,57'4i S8'/4 4- % mV2 101% 102 4k'A 73|»V? ■octrG 2.20 . jbSyeColo 1 Pubtkind .46f ’^ugSPL 1.60 ’ufimsn 2.80 7% 17% 17'/Y 4- •' 21% 21% :. ........ 237/b 24 — 108 45% 4^ iS'/2 89 24'8 23Vb 24 4- ,8 33'/4 33 33’/b 4- ](8 27'/4 27'.^ 27’/iB — 4 44% 44'/? 44’/? . . • 19 22'/% 21’/? 22 + 3 63'/? 63'/J 63'/? . •. 9 20% 28% 28% 58 S6'/4 55% 56 4-1% 61 no 105’/? 109’/? 4-4’/^ 24 37 36% 36% — H 3 48 48 48 .... 43 76 75% 75% - ’A 16 65% 64% 65’/? 4- .'A 37 30 29% 29% — ’,%• 6 84'A 83% 84 4- 8 44% 44V? 44% -H 28 56’.6 »% 56’/% .. 3 69% 69% 69% — ' 13 62% 6U/% 62’A 4- ' 38 218% 216% 216% — ' 11 86% 86’/^* 86'/^ 4-1' 10 20% 20’A 20% 4- ' 11 .9% 9% 9% ... 33 32 32 32 - .■ “‘■i “ i leading Co .JelchCh .40b RepubStI 2.50 Revlon 1.30 )sLd 2.80 >..^SanF 2.20 StRegP 1.40b 114 58 57% 57% —I’/i 2 24'/? 24'/? 24'/^ 4- ’/6 8 38% 38’/4 38% 4* ’/% 107 106% 103’/? 106% 4-3'/b 29 17% 17% 17% 4* % 19 17’/4 17 17 4- 'A TO 43 42% 43 4- % 4 72% 72’/? 72’/? .. 21 31% 31 31'A 4- »/4 46 47% '47'/4 47% 4-1 98 40’/i 39% 39% — '/« 76 58'/? 50'/^ 58’/? ... 22 9% 9% 9% 4- % 11 28'/% 27% 27% — 'A 5 30 30 30 50 43'/4 42% 43 . 4- % 48 21% 21% 21% >t... 8 41% 41’/? 41'/? -K'/% 4 51% 51'/? 51’/? 16 28 273A 27V# -/% AN OVERFLOW CROWD ~ At least 450 persons, including top business, social and civic leaders, attended a luncheon program yesterday at the Elks Temple. Martin J. ance industry by the Federal j Caserio, a General Motors vice president and Trade Commission. - ^ The recommendation, which — — ~ will be presented to the full Judiciary Committee, endorsed the findings of a committee staff study that such an investigation was in order. The staff study, noting wide-| spread complathts about the| rates and practices of auto in-f surance companies, said the! present system is costly, slow^ and incomplete: It raised 4he, question of whether the industry j should be brought under federal regulation. The subcommittee divided 3 to 2 on the recommendation that the Federal Trade Commission conduct the investigation. Reps. Peter W. Rodina, D-N.J., and William T. Cahill, R-N.J., who originally pressed for an investigation, said it should be conducted by the Judiciary Committee. ^ 83 68% 67 17 52’A 52 14 62V? 62 28 124’/4 123 124 4-1% 31 45% 45 45'/i 4- ” 52 27’/4 26’/? 27’/4 4- 9 53’/? 52% -53’/k — 39 52% 57 57’/8 4- 33 56’/b 55% 55% • 4- 9 20’/4 20 20 — 5 30% 30'/% 30% 4- ■/• 28 62% 62 62% f 'A 15 68’/? 67% 68’A 4- % 12 65% 64% 65% 4- 5 51% 51% 51% 4- ' 21 32’/% 32 32 4- ' 108 2S’/4 24'/? 2S’/4 4-1 40 42% 41% 42 — % 33 27 ^ 26% 27 9 47’/4 47 47 32 1B'/8 17% 18’/% 273 54 53’/? 53’/? 15 54% 24% 24% 2 35'/? 35’/? 35’/? 14. 34% 34’/? 34'/? 56 26’A 25'/? 25V 184 58 57’/? 58 , 25% — I 53’/? 53’/? 24% 244 35’/? 35’/ ^/B 56 26’, 184 58 - . 42 51% 50% 51 155 65’A 65 65'/# 4- ’ 7 65% 65’/% 65% 4- ’ 17 13% 13'/% 13% 4- = 6 46'/a 44% 46'/% 4-1' 1.20 13% 13*/% 13% 46'/a 44% 46'/% 43% 43'/8 43% 46’/? 46%#'— -n 51% 51% 4- ’A 58'/4 57’A 58’A 4-2’A 61 60% 61 4- ’/4 33% 33', 2 61 64 33k , 27 31% 31% —T— 4 23% 23% 23% 24 56’/8 55 55 o 2.60a ,_^rrn.l.20 Tex G Sul .40 Texasinst .80 Textron .70 TRW 1.40a UMC Ind .60 Un Carbide 2 Un Eleq 1.20 UnOIICal 1.40 un Pac 1.80a On Tank 2.50 ■■ ^AlrLIn 1 tAirc 1.60 t Cp .50g ...Fruit 1.40 UGasCp 170 •'-’tMM 1T20 Borax la Tnd%^ US Lines 2I USPIyCh 1.5 US Smelt 1 21 39% 39'/? 39% 4- 36 55% 55'A 55% 4- 44 45 ....... . 14 15'/? 25 27% 15 91% 91' '• 47% 461. .. .. 23% 23% 23% _u— 17 20% 19% 20’/s 126 45% 45% 45% 28 22% 22’/? 22% 22 SO 49% 50 . -- lV/7 37’/b 37% f |Ht 75’/? 75 . 75’/b 4-1% 42. 58'/e 36 75'/a 9 11 I» II . 19 51% 51'A 51’/? 4- % 40 72’/4 70% 72 4-1% 8 27 27 97 1 28 78 Westn Al WnBanc WnUTel Wesfg El .3 70’/? 70 70 — '/ 21 32’''8 31% 32 4- '/ 6 33% 33 33 - 13 44 43’/? 43% — 23 S7’/4 56% 57 4- ’/ 90 40% 40’A 40% 4- V 3 83% 83'/? 83% 4- 40 52% 51% 52% 4-1 —V— 35 32 31'A 31’/? 4- 15 263/4 26% 26% 4» ^ 131 39'/^ 38% 39 4- ’/ —w— 17 42% 42% 42% .... 39 22’/? 22V4 22'/? .... 19. 39 38% 39 4- ’/ 30 28’A 273A 28 39 32'/8 31% 32 37 71% 70% 70% 7 38'/4 38'/iB 38'/4 7 53’/? 53’/4 53'/? • 8 4534. 45'/? 45% • 39 22’/? 221 19. 39 383- _ 30 28’A 2734 28 39 32'/8 31% 32 37 71% 70% 70% 4-- 38'4 38'' 53’/? 53’ _ 453' 7 28'/ Wprhing 1.50 41 64 61'/4 64 4-2% _X—Y--Z— XeroxCp 1.40 39 279 277V4 278Vx YngstSht 1.80 14 304k 30 30'/. Zenith R 1.20 33 617/. 614% 614% . . Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1967 Sales figures are unoHlciaL mi-annual -v---------- dividends or payments ited as regular are Identified I lowing footnotes, a_Aiso extra or extras, b—Annual . „le plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend, d—Declared or paid In 1967 Plus stock dividend, e—Paid last year. Auto Insurance Probe Is Urged House Panel Calls for Full Study by FTC Pontiac Press Photo general manager of CMC Truck and Coach Division, the featured speaker, announced expansion plans which would run into millions of dollars. « Cahill said he thought the committee could do a quicken more effective job, and Rodino said it would also be* less expensive. FAVORED PLAN A study by the FTC was favored by Chairman Emanuel Celler, D-N.Y., amf Reps. William M. McCulloch, R-Ohio and Jack B. Brooks, D-Tex. Paul Rand Dixon, chairman of the Federal Trade Commis-the staff! By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - In h economic message to Congress , I this year. President Johnson stated: “The coexistence of job vacancies and idle workers unable to filli them repre- sents a bitter human tragedy j and an inexcusable economic I waste. The tragedy! and the waste*, were under-sLS scored this CUNNIFF week by the most recent unemployment statistics. At the very time skilled workers were demanding ahd getting- higher the unskilled found it harder even to find jobs. * ★ ★ This situation has produced a strange contrast, for these poor exist side by side witff the most sion, estimated jn the staffcomfortable workers study that such an investigation: ^as seen, by his agency would cost $1.51 million and take two years. Romney Will' Tell Decision of Detroit Site lANSING (AP)-'Gov. George Romney will return to a familiar site Nov. 18 to announce whether he will seek the 1968 Republican presidential nomination. His office confirmed Thursday reports that Romney will announce his presidential intentions at the Veterans Memorial Building in Detroit, where he announced his first candidacy for governor in 1962. ■k -k -k Romney’s schedule listed an 11 a.m. news conference at the building on Nov. 18. The governor told a news! conference last Friday that he, would hold a meeting in Michigan on Nov. 18, to “announce whether or not I will run.” The announcement is expected to cap a midmorning meeting to which some 600 key Republicans reportedly have been invited. ' ' p—Paid tl ited cash value en ex-divid itrlbutlon date, g—Declared ■ this year, h—Declared or ,----------- ..jck dividend or spilt up. k—Declared or paid this year, an accumulative Issue ."■■'-“ds in arrears, n—New issue, year, dividend oniitted, de-u;, MU action taken at lest dividend g. r—Declared or paid In 1966 plus U.UU.V dividend, t—Paid In stock during 1966, estimated cash value on ex^llvidend r ex-distributlon date, z—Sales in full. cd—Called, x—Ek dividend. y-Ex divl-lend ’and sales in full, xdlls—Ex distribu-Ion, xr—Ex rights, -xw—Without war ants, ww—With warrants, wd—-ributed. wi—When issued, nd—t he Bankruptcy _______ ________I by such com- 1—Foreign issue sublect to in- terest equalization tax. News in Brief Rummage Sfle: Friday, 9 to 5, Sat., 9 to 12, St. Michaels Hall, corner Lewis and Edison. —Adv. Rummage Sale, Friday aod Sat, Nov. 10 and 11, 9 a.m.,Jo 3. The Apostolic Faith Tabernacle. 93 Parkdale. Right off Baldwin. —Adv. Stocks of Local Interest Inter-dealer prices of a mafely 11 a.m. «.lnter-deal change througheutf the day. not include retsi^arkup, rr sr-dealer y. Prices markdown Asked Braun Engineering ..............13.6 14.4 Citizens Utilities Class A ......26.2_ 27 !S Units'.'! Mohawk Rubber ' Monroe Auto Equipme North Central Airlines Safran Printing ..............r SCrIpto .......... .......... Wyandotte Chemical ..........3 MUTUAL FUNDS I Affiliated Fund ............. i Chemical Fund ! h Stogk . Keystone Growth K-2 Mass. Investors Growth Mass. Investors Trust . Putnam Growth Television Electronics .12.48 13.64 I6.SS 18.12 .14.26 16.58 . 9.49 10.34 .13.16 14 JO Treasury Position WASHINGTON (API—The* cash positlo.. I the Treasury compared with corre-Jondlng date a year — Nov. 6, 1967 ^ S 6,527,194,357.68 $ 5,468.132,556.28 Deposits Fiscal Year July 1— 63,639,4177284.96 58,798,759,549.26 ,34lIo7L82e,312.27 327,172,128,081,80 al»,490770i.54 13o257d98B9l64.55 •""'“‘">67.97/debt not- (^Total Debt* .341,07L Gold X*lnciudes i260',^5i9i |ect to statiftory BOND AVERAGES lad by The Atseciatad Prass 26 10 10 10 10 Ralls Ind. Util. Fgn. L. -----Thuts. 66. Prav. Day 66. Ago —.1 87.9 78.9 91.8 80.5 M.y 88.0 79.0 91.8 80.5 67.2 88.7 79.7 92.2 , 80.3 68.3 90.1 79.9 92.1 82.5 71.2 '90.9 81.2 91.2 85.6 73.0 95.6 84.9 - 66.9 88.0 79.0 79.5 1 „.. 93.1 90.7 79.2 90.4 “' Unemployment in October i reached 8.8 per cent. The white the Labor Department an-j rate was only 3,8 per cent. noVinced, rose (.for the second r This disparity between the straight month to a sflrprising skilled and unskilled is had high 4.3 per cent of' the labor [enough, but it is likely to persist force, the highest percentage-and even gfow as the economy in two years. I continues to mechanize and au- SIGNIFICANCE OF FIGURES Iaj"’ [bus nearly elimi-... mate much of hand labor. , Compared with some other postwar years this percentage still might be viewed as rela-| If you need a reminder,'try lively healthy, but like the shiny j to recall the hundreds of pick, red apple, the outer layers may shovel and rake men needed to have to be peeled to reveal the [build a road in the 1930s. Corn-core. ' pare that picture with 1967, Probing into this 4.3 per cent'when a few men clustered figure reveals that joblessness around a few machines can do among white collar workers re- the same work, mained at 2.5 per cent, but that i The fact is that unskilled la-for every other category of bor, no matter how willing and worker unemployment was [adaptable, is just about the greater than the ovg^ll aver-jmost difficult commodity to sell age. jin the marketplace. It is utterly * * ★ I defenseless in a recession. And Among blue collar workers [it is sinking relatively lower on the percentage rose to 4.9 frotn|the social and economic scale as 4.6, service workers to 5.5 from [more people develop skills. 5.1, and nonfarm laborers to 9.2| * * ★ from 8.1 Negro unemployment-1 Month after month the unem-skilled and unskilled combined—iployment statistics give im-- 'mutable evidence that the best intentions of government and (corporate officials to provide jobs are doomed to frustration , unless abilities are. developed ... |. . r\ l • and skills are taught. Week s Auto Proiduction , make - work projects without DETROIT (AP)—Walkouts‘at in 1966 November productionbeing damaged . and rose to 219,842. stockholders howling. Its obliga- All but two of Ford's^ assem-jf*on 's to upgrade the skills of bly plants were scheduled to re-jits workers in the name of prod-sume operations this week. uction, rather than to down-while at Chrysler, walkouts had (grade Jts requirements for the closed Six of the firm’s sevenisake pf charity, assembly plants by Thursday. | REHABILITATION ATTEMPTS TflUCK PRODUCTION These, then, are some of the Truck output this .week was j considerations, behind the Job Corps and behind various attempts to rehabilitate the ghettoes. They are the motivations behind concepts such as the guaranteed income and the reverse income tax, which would assure every citizen a minimal income,'^ These statistics also are evidence that despite the good intentions of government ,£|nd private enterprise, the concentration ot unemployment among the lowest income groups remains one of the nation’s most frustrating, and explosive social problems. , >» Chrysler Walkouts Lowerg Chrysler Corp. forced auto production down this week, despite the resumption of production at Ford after the end of its 60-day strike by the United Auto Workers, said Automotive News, the trade publication, Thursday. It said the industry scheduled 133,070 cars this week, compared with 143,129 last vveek and 194,379 in the same week a year ago. For the year to date, production rose to 6,155,686, compared with 7,383,334 in the same span Crash Caused as Chop Suey. Spills in Cor Chop'.(6yey got away from a Holly woman yesterday and the, woman’s car, consequently, got away from her causing an accident on Dixie Highway at Silver Lake Road, in Waterford Townshikp. L 'Thelma L. Lynch, 65, of 203 ^ Grant told township police that a pan of chop suey on the seat of her car began to spill and, as she grabbed it, her auto struck a car driven by Dianne H., Mortimer, 25, of 6481 W a 1 d 0 n. Independence Township. 27,477, compared with 25,980 last week and 39,055 this week year ago. For that year so far, prpduction was 1,343,287, down from the 1,528,010 in the same period last year. November production was 43,f“' In Canada, car assemblies this week numbered 14,222, up from last week’s 13,588 and the 14,217 in the same week a year ago. Ford’s Canadian operations resumed Thursday after being shut down a month. ■* , k For the week, Canadian truck production was 2,823, compared to 2,558 last week and 4,667 in the same week a year ago. For the year to date, production was 185,436, up from 165,""" the same period last year. The November tally was 4.048. ^ Success in teaching skills so far has succeeded among the thousands, whereas the problem IS one involving millions. Mrs. Mortimer was stopped for a traffic light at the intersection,, police said. She was not injured. The Lynch woman is listed in fair condition at Pontiac General Hospital. Business Notes P. C. Mortenson of 33960 Braebury Ridge, Farmington, has been named vice president S|g||||||||^ ' of the Vickers Division of Sperry Rand Corp. ' Mortenson has served as general manager of the Vickers Mo-___ bile Hydraulics MORTl Itivision since October 1965. He joined the firm in 1956. Successfuhinvesting ^ ' By ROGER E. SPEAR iof the broker and the broker Q - I have $1,500 which my [sends his check to me, some-fiance suggests I invest in [times alter considerable delay, strong growth stocks such as I — " Litton Industries, Xerox Corp) and Control Data, I have never bought stock and wonder if you recommend these stocks for investment.—R. M. A — I feel that if $i,500 represents your total savings, part at least belongs where it is. Xerox is an excellent stock, selling at a very high multiple. iTie same can be said of Control Data, one of the fastest growing companies in the electronic data-processing field. Each of these stocks I regard good, but they are volatile and I would not chase them at current high levels. Litton has a fine record, seems more, reasonably priced than the others and you might please your fiance by putting $1,000 into this Q—Under what conditions are stocks bought by me placed in the name of the broker? Dividends are issued in tl A — There are only two" reasons why a broker should put your stocks in his name. The first is required, the second is optional with use. If you have a margin account, all stocks must be held in thei^jroker’s name. Only in this way can he utilize the shares on which he, is lending you money. At your option, the broker may — only if instructed by you — hold your stocks in his name for convenience in trading. If you have no margin account and have not instructed your broker to put your shares in his name, : he is in error. Tell him you want your certificates delivered to you in your name and I’m sure he will do so at once. (To order Roger Spear’s 46-page. Investment. Guide, send $1.00 to Roger E. Spear, care 0^ The Pontiac Press, Box 1618, Grand. Central, Station,. New York, N. Y. 10017.) (Copyright, 1967)