The Pontiac Pratt Thursday, May 15, 1969 R — Rerun C — Color ; THURSDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C — On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C — Sunrise Semester 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C - TV High School 6:45 (7) C - Batfink 7:00 (4) C — Today (7) C — Morning Show 7:30(2) C - News, Weather, Sports 7:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo (9) C — Bozo (56) Efficient Reading 8:30 (7) R C — Movie: isco, Hello” (1943) Alice Faye, John Payne 8:50 ( 56) R — Americans From Africa 9:00 (2) R C — Lucy Show (4) C — Ludden’s Gallery . — Guests are Jackie De-Shannon, Sue Lyon, Gypsy Rose L'ee, George Lindsey and the Back Porch Majority*’ (9) Canadian Schools 9:20 ( 56) Singing, Listening, Doing 9:30 (2) R C - Beverly Hillbillies (9) Ontario Schools 9:40 (56) R — Art Lesson 9:55 (56) Sets and Symbols 10:00 (2) R C-Andy Griffith (4) C — Personality 10:10 (56) R — American History 10:30 (2) C - Merv Griffin (4) C — Hollywood . Squares (7) C — Galloping Gourmet UHF and VHF FM STEREO COLOR and BLACK & WHITE ROTO ANTENNA IxcolUnt For Fringe Areas 95 COMPLETE INSTALLATION (9) Friendly Giant 10:35 (56) Science Is Everywhere 10:45 (9) Chez Helene 10:50 (56) Geography 11:00 (4) C - It Takes Two (7) R i— Bewitched (9) Mr. DreSsup •> (50) C — Jack LaLanne 11:20 ( 56) R — Americans From Africa ^ 11:25 (4) C Carol Duvall (9) C —r Morgan’s Merry Go Round 11:30 (4) C — Concentration (7) C — Funny You Should Ask (9) Take Thirty (50) C - Kimba 11:50 (56) Friendly Giant 11:55 (7) C — Children’s Doctor THURSDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C - News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) C — Dating Game (9) C — Bonnie Prudden (50) C- Alvin SAVE MORE-BUY DIRECT FROM FACTOR Spectoculor * , u M*n> from more cabinet styles, finishes UtMICA colors thon ever before1 [Call 624-4515 Now Open Daily 8-5 MIDWEST KITCHENS FREE PLANS, ESTIMATES and IN-HOME SHOPPING SERVICE Sunday 11-3 NO MONEY DOWN IMS W. Miple M. WdMlaM WE MJUWMCTUK, INSTALL. SERVICE 12:05 (56) Misterogers 12:25 (2) C ^Fashions 12:30 (2) C - As the World Turns (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal (9) R — Real McCoys (50) R — Movie: “In Old Chicago” (1938) Tyrone Power, Alice Faye, Don Ameche, Brian Donlevy f 12:50 (56) R—Singing, Listening, Doing 1:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — Days of' Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game (9)R — Movie: ltAdven-ture in Baltimore” (1948) Robert Young, Shirley Temple 1:10 (56) Children’s Hour 1:25 (56) R - All Aboard for Reading 1:30 (2) C — Guiding Light (A) C — Doctors __ 1:45 R — (56) Science Is . Everywhere 2:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital (56) R — Sets and Symbols 2:15 (56) R — Of Cabbages and Kings 2:30 (2) C - Edge of Night . (4) C — You Don’t Say (7) C — One Life to Live (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 2:40 (56) R — Geography 3:00 (2) C — Linkletter Show (4) C — Match Game (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) R — Dennis the Menace (50) R — Topper __ (56) Efficient Reading 3:25 (4) C - News 3:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — Hidden Faces (7) C — Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) R—"Management by Objectives 4:00 (2) C — Love of Life (4) C — Steve Allen (7) R — Movie: “Key to the City” (1950) Clark Gable, Loretta Young (9) C — Bozo (56) Faces of Business — John H. Johnson, president of Johnson Publishing Co. — the na-tion’s only Negro magazine empire — is— interviewed. 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas (50) R — Little Rascals (56) TV Kindergarten (62) R - Star Performance 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Canadian Rockies to Alaska” (9) R C — Batman (50) R — Munsters (56) Misterogers (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:30 (9) R C - F Troop (50) R — Superman (56), Friendly Giant U 15 (62) R — I^eave It To Beaver 5:45 (56) Muffinland THURSDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R C — I Spy — An unmanned plane, carrying an atom bomb, goes down in Italy. (50) R C — Flintstones (56) What’s New (62) R Sea Hunt 6:30 (2) C — News -Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (7) C — News Reynolds (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) TV High School (62) R — Highway Patrol 7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: “Fanfare for a Death Scene’’ (1963) Secret agent searches for American physicist who has vanished. Richard Egan, V i >v e c a Lindfors, A1 Hirt, Tina Louise (50) R — I Love Lucy — Lucy thinks Ricky is trying to murder her. (56) C — NET Playhouse — "The Star Wagon,” Maxwell Anderson’s comedy-fantasy about a time machine that gives people a chance to see if their lives would really be different if they could relive them. Orson Bean, Dustin Hoffman (62) R — I Led Three Lives 7:30 (2) C — Animal World — The comeback of the almost-extinct American bison is examined. (4) R C — Daniel Boone — Trapper (Jimmy Dean) is imprisoned by an eccentric Englishman in a cave filled with Indian treasures. (7) R C — Flying Nun — New police captain suspects the nuns o f bookmaking. (50) R - Hazel (62) R — Ann Sothem 8:00 (2) R C — Jonathan Winters — Special guest Tho Pontiac Pratt Thurtday, May 1 5, 1969 is Soupy Sales, with Shani Wallis, Bobby Van, Alice Ghostley and the King Cousins. (7) R C - That Girl -Ann zealously prepares to vote in her f i r s t presidential election. (50) C — Pay Cards . (62) Ozzie and Harriet''-- 8:30 (4) R C — Ironside — An unpopular TV com- , mentator (Milton Berle) gets police protection after his life is threatened. (7) R C — Bewitched — An unfriendly witch zaps Samantha to the New Orleans of 1868. (9) C — Telescope — “Daughter of Israel” profiles Wael Dayan, daughter of the famous Israeli general. (50) C — Password (62) R—Movie: “Innocent Meeting” (1957) Girl helps ■ juvenile delinquent prove he’s not a hardened criminal. Sean Lynch, Beth Ro-gan. 9:00 (2) R C - Movie: “A Distant Trumpet” ■ (1964) Young cavalry officer falls in love with the wife of the fort’s commanding-officer. Troy Donahue, Suzanne Pleshette, Diane McBain. (7) C — Tom Jones — Guests are flamenco quitarist Manitas de Plata, songstress Mireille Mathieu, comic Pat Paulsen and the Who. (9) C — (Special) Showtime — Godfrey Cambridge is host. (50) R — Perry Mason (56T Ivory Tower Drama critic Larry Devine reviews “You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown.” 9:30 (4) R C — Dragnet — Friday and Gannon- help prepare for the president’s visit. . (56) R — Faces of Business — John H. Johnson of Johnson Publications 9:55 (62 ) GreateSt Headlines 10:00 (4) R C — Dean Martin — Guests are Abbe Lane, Paul Lynde, Gordon MacRae am Newhart. (7) R — (Untouchables (9) (50) News, Weather, Sports (56) Live From Earth (62) R — Movie: “Now and Forever" (1955) Young couple decides to elope. Janette Scott, Vernon Gray 10:30 (9) C - What’s My Line (50) R—Alfred Hitchcock — Pep drugs used on race horses are used to rejuvenate a punchy, has-been boxer. 11:00 (2) (4)1 (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: “Man in the Dark” (English, 1965) Blind composer thwarts his wife’s plot to murder him. William- Sylvester, Barbara Shelley, Mark Eden (504 R — Movie: “Behind the Iron Curtain” (1948) A Russian Embassy employe in Canada is involved in espionage. Dana Andrews, Gene Tierney, June Havoc THURSDAY 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson — Bob Newhart is substitute host. Heywood Hale Broun is guest. (7) C — Joey Bishop 11:35 (2) R - Movie: “As the. Sea Rages” (1960) Cliff Robertson, Maria Schell 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe — “The Police Museum” 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R — Texan u. 1:30 (2) R — Movie: “The Wedding Night” (1935) Cosmopolitan gentleman falls in love with a farm girl. Gary Cooper, Anna Sten, Ralph Bellamy (4) (7) C — News, Weather 2:45 (2) C Weather f 2:50 (2) TV Chapel News, LeFs Talk $ A V I H S $ | '^a^ee Pledge End Painting Forovr! My Pledge To You ... WNI call on you yortonolly 0 Bool prioo ontf ouolHy o Will troal you on* pour Homo wMk roonoot to I wool* wont ay own • WNI ooouro lowoot Honk ftnonolufi Ho annoy town - I yoort to yoy o Proo ootiantoo nan por-tonol Nailya oorvleo o loot! - Toon of oiportonOo no ton trust o All work yao roots oN In wrttlay - Froo Quisle. “*Y” 121 North Porry MARCELL Pontiac CONSTRUCTION COMPANY FE 8-9281 WASHINGTON Vfi — President Nixon and his advisers went over details of his eight-point Vietnam "offer today and prepared to send if to the Paris talks despite an initial cold shoulder from enemy negotiators, there. Jr V. i ★ \ie : *' 'jP The President outlined the offer, including a plan for a mutual pullout of major forces over a 12-month span, in a nationwide address last night. In the follow-up the chief of the U.S. mission tothe Paris parley, Henry Cabot Lodge, conferred with the. administration leadership at a special joint meeting of the Cabinet and the-National Security Council at the White House before heading back to the French capital later in •the day. The speech drew a generally favorable response from U.S. political figures, but what U.S, officials said was a not unexpected negative response initially from representatives of the Vietcong’s National Liberation Front in Paris. The NLF statement said the United States “still clings to its old formula of a mutual withdrawal of troops, a formula which we have repeatedly reject ed.” 11' Related Stories, Pages A-13, B-13 But from Hanoi, the Communist-aligned Japanese news agency Nihon Denpa News quoted “observers” in the North Vietnamese capital as predicting Hanoi will “make some kind of favorable-reaction to the American proposal after thoroughly Examining it.” ★ ★ ★ U.S. diplomats anticipate that Hanoi and Vietcong negotiators will be using some tough language as they examine the latest Washington proposal. What the final enemy posture on it will be remains to be seen, they said. White House sources said Nixon timed his offer which had been ready for some weeks, for delivery now because this seems to be the best moment for a U.S. move to thaw the Paris deadlock. Elements of virtually all of Nixon’s eight points appeared in proposals made from time to time during the Johnson administration, but White House sources portrayed the package over-all as fresh in its impact in revisions coming from the new administration. Reactions in the U.S. were quick in coming. In Texas, an aide Said former President Johnson “wholeheartedly supports President Nixon in his efforts at bridging peace io Southeast Asia.” In Washington, Sen. J. W. Fulbrigftt, D-Ark., the antiwar Senate Foreign Relations Committee chairman, termed Nixon’s offer reasonable while making plain he still thinks the United States should get out of South Vietnam. House Republican leader Gerald It. Ford of Michigan said the President made plain he seeks an honorable peace and Hanoi has nothing to gain by delay. 8m a . . > ,v , j &* Fortas Quits Supreme Court From Our News Wires . WASHINGTON— Justice Abe Fortas, under mounting pressure and the threat of impeachment proceedings, announced today his resignation from the Supreme Court and President Nixon accepted it, effective immediately. Reaction from Congress, the center of often severe criticism, generally was favorable although some members continued to call for an investigation of Fortas’s relationship With now-jailed financier Louis E. Wolfson. k k k In resigning, Fortas denied any “default” in performance of his judicial duties.- -— 4, t ' £) k k k White House press secretary Ronald L. Ziegler said Fortas’s letter of resignation was received about 5:30 p.m. yesterday, a short time after Chief Justice Earl Warren telephoned “to advise the President that a letter of resignation was forthcoming . . . ” . and returned after the financier was indicted. ★ ★ ★ Sen. Robert P. Griffin, R-Mich., who led the fight that blocked Fortas’s nomi- ‘ nation last year as chief justice, said in a statement today: “Again, the infinite Milliken and Griffin friends and confidants. are long-time PROBE CALLED FOR WARREN LETTER Fortas also sent Warren—the man he once was nominated by Lyndon Johnson to succeed—a letter of explanation of his actions in accepting and then returning 11 months later a 20,000 fee from the Wolfson family foundation. Related Stories, Page A-3 Wolfson, a former Fortas law client, now is serving a prison sentence for violating federal securities laws. The fee was given Fortas while Wolfson’s activities were under government investigation wisdom and foresight of our founding fathers in establishing a system of jehecks and balances has been confirmed.” The levy is 0.12 ipill less than this year, and 0.63 mUl less than that requested. It still raises $2 million more than that raised on property taxes this year, due to a substantial increase in county equalized valuation. Daniel T. Murphy, a member of the allocation board and county auditor chairman, warned members, “One day you’re going to have to take from the schools to finance the county.” slder a fixed millage, permissible under the constitution and requiring a vote of the people. He said such action would “do away with the gymnastics of financing when we haven’t {jot enough funds to go around anyway.” k k k He received support from new board member Louis Schimmel and Chairman Henry Schiffer. Setting a fixed millage rate for each government unit would do away with the "function of the allocation board and it would also do away with the need for preparing tentative budgets. All allocations recommended by the board, which met yesterday as a committee of the whole, are within the 15-mill limit. WASHINGTON (AP) - The White House reportedly is studying a plan to revamp the supersonic transport program to open new means of financing and ease fears about sonic booms. k' k k The proposal would put the program directly . under the secretary o f transportation. The project to develop a 300-passenger, 1,800-mile-an-hour jetliner has been run since Its inception by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), an independent regulatory agency administered by the Transportation Department. ★ k k Support has developed for establishment of a business-government agency under which funding would come from sale to the public of government-guaranteed shares. Such an agency could not conveniently be a part of the FAA. WASHINGTON - President Nixon’s proposed extension of the income surtax, a key part of the administration’s fiscal plaiis, is facing problems both in and out of Congress. . Rep. Charles A. Vanik, D-Ohio, a member of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, said Nixon’s turban policy had alienated some congressmen who might have supported the surtax extension past the June 30 expiration date. Nixon has asked for an extension until Jan. 1, at 10 per cent, and a 5 per cent' rate between Jan. 1 and June 30, 1970, when it would expire. New threats came yesterday when two powerful groups declared any such bill must be coupled with sweeping reforms of the entire federal tax structure. The AFL-CIO Executive Council said it will not support the extension unless it is combined with “immediate, substantial and equitable reform.” Fifty-four House members of the liberal Democratic Study Group signed a letter calling on the committee to act on tax reforms first, even if it delays the surcharge extension past the Juno 30 deadline. BIGGEST INCREASE By MART SUNDSTROM Eight Pontiac tenure teachers ware discharged by the board of education last night because of their failure to comply with a “financial responsibility” clause in their contract with the school district The teachers had refused to pay $85 dues to the Pontiac Education Association, in an agency shop agreement specified in this year’s contract between the school board and the PEA, and were given a hearing April 29 to discuss the case. they would remain on their present jobs in Pontiac until the appeal is settled, according to the contractual agreement between the school board and the PEA. Further appeals may also be made beyond the tenure commission to circuit court, appellate court and "finally the supreme court. The unit getting the biggest Increase from within the 15-mill limit was Oakland Intermediate Schools — allotted 0.21 mills. Last year the Intermediate School District was financed almost entirely from nonvoted taxes outside the limit, but an attorney general’s opinion has held that financing illegal. Murphy also asked the board to con- TO BE SET MONDAY The preliminary allocation will not be officially set until Monday and the final rate will not be set until June 2. Action yesterday followed two days of budget presentations by s c H o o 1 s , townships and the county. k k k 2 Stars 'to Wed Soon' While township allocations remain substantially the same as last year, schools learned they probably will be pared to help finance the intermediate school district. The millage allotted to them and townships was downgraded (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) CORFU, Greece (AP) — British actor Albert Finney and French star Anouk Aimee left for Italy today, saying they would be back in two months to get married. k k k ’ Sun's Warm Smile Lifts Temperature The couple arrived in Corfu a week ago and have been staying at a rented three-room villa at Ipsos, on the island’s picturesque northwest coast facing Albania. . ■ Prosecutor Bill Stalls Related Stories, Page B-7 During negotiations for the teachers’ contract last July, PEA. obtained the agency shop agreement which provides that all teachers must pay dues or be discharged. The Michigan Tenure Law provides that no teacher may be fired except for just cause, and whether nonpayment of dues is included in the provision is a matter Michigan courts have not clearly decided, fi •* * SUIT POSSIBILITY CITED Board President . William Anderson Saidy that although be did not like / dismissing the teachers, he felt that not Sard to dismiss them would leave the boa open to charges of unfair labor practice. Chris Brown, the only boardmember who voted against the dismissals, said he could not condone the action, since it has npt been upheld' ih the Michigan Supreme Court. Board member Monroe Osmun was absent, and Dr. Robert R.-Turpin had not yet arrived at the meeting. • ' *», k . .★ k J* The vote was 4-1 oil the resolution to rftamiiM the teachers at the close of the startpl year on JunelS... Should, the teachers appeal their cattl| to the Michigan Tenure Commiation, LANSING (AP) — The Senate yesterday debated, then put off action, on a controversial bill that would mandate counties to pay prosecutors as much as probate or circuit court judges. In 11 countes last year, no one filed for the office, of..prosecuting attorney, said Sen. Jamesj Fleming-, R-Jackson, sponsor of the bill. Today’s brilliant sunshine is expected to send temperatures soaring into the mid-70s by late afternoon. Tonight will continue fair and warm, with a low of 50 to 55. Increasing cloudiness and warm with a chance of showers or thundershowers by evening is the forecast for tomorrow. Tomorrow’s expected’ high is 75 to 82. There’s a chance of showers Saturday. The low prior to 8 a m. in downtown Pontiac was 44. The reading at 2 p.m. was 70. p^jjpiwpiy^ t ^ftToday'l ufllHSi Army Tank Tempest § Township * * * t racirianfc tn WASHINGTON (AP) - Hitherto confidential government report says the Army pushed its problem-ridden Sheridan tank into production to, a void criticism and possible budget cutbacks, then repeated the mistake with a refitted version of the M60 tank. ■wepMl? to J a result of rushipjg production s the 'bugs were ironed out, the k k k As before the 'bugs v^ere ] General Accpuntjhg Office, says, many of the tanks have been stored to await modifications before they can become operational. Canada Sex Bills Gain LITTLE NIP'LL'DO IT—A little antelope gets a midday mt f " snack In the special care section of the Columbus, Ohio, Zoo. Georgia Bolin. The antelope is of the 1—>* dm ■ -» ■*— II— «—u1. 1- ■*»--! T 11- JU t J, V Jj" v v I V? , ,v. i\: VW»W Bawwiu IUW WWHWUB, VSHV| SWVl OUi The antelope was born April 19. Holding the bottle is Mrs. from fadia, AP Wirtplwls black buck variety OTTAWA (AP) ■ - Criminal code amendments to legalize therapeutic abortions'and homosexual adts in private between consenting adults cleared, the House of Commons Wednesday night. The vote was 149-55. The Up was sent to the Senate for priority consideration. ‘ / mM;i il v V ivti.! ■m Ml: L V *■ 'i * si .........: From Our New* Wires LANSING — Final House action was expected today on the state public school aid appropriation bill, along with a token bid to revive the defeated parochiaid amendment. Howevef, a little-known constitutional provision requiring the word-by-word reading of legislative bills on'the floor when a lawmaker submits such a request threatened to slow action on the school aid measure. * ★ * r Some legislators also feared it could nullify the Hdhse decision Tuesday to reject the hotly* contested parochiaid amendment. The House was scheduled to begin debate on the bill at) 9 a.m. today. $1.25 MILLION ADDED The lower chamber yesterday added $1.25 miilion to the $845.4 million allocated earlier by the Senate. The extra sum would go to western Wayne County school districts which absorbed the now-defunct Sumpter and Nankin-Mills district several years ago. ★ # it » Speaker William A. Ryan, D-Detroit, said parochiaid backers would offer a revised amendment advocating state aid for private schools, but added, "I'm doubtful if we’re going to attach it (parochiaid)” to the school bill. “We’ll be looking for an opportunity someplace and certainly it’ll be a big item in the fall.” . Gov. William G. Milliken, however, said the explosive fssue is "not over by any means” in the 1969 Legislature. SENATE ATTEMPT SEEN The governor said an attempt would be made in the Senate to enact a parochiaid plan if the House declines .to reconsider its rejection of the proposal. Milliken, whotatd not been* considered a stolid parochiaid supportert said defeat would mean a continuation of the financial problems confronting Michigan’s 1,000 parochial and private schools. ★ W ★ ( The proviso that threatens to delay action Olathe school bill was brought to light by Atty. Gen. Frank J< Kelley in an opinion for Rep. John P. Smeekens, R-Sherwood. Smeekens objected to waiving the full reading of the 150-page school aid package. Speaker Ryan and other House leaders sought to determine the impact , of the ruling, and whether it.would, in fact, require reading the bulky bill to Hs ®n-* tirety. : . % '■ Kelley pointed to section 26 of Article IV Of the 1963 Michigan Constitution, which states that "Every bill shall be read three times in each House before the final passage thereof.” " * * *• The attorney general said the normal procedure of waiving the, lengthy reading process was valid only so long as no legislator raised .pn objection. I Meetings Set to n School Issues Welfare Rights Group OKs Budget and Hiring of Staff By ED BLUNDEN More than 300 persons gathered for a statewide meeting of the Michigan Welfare Rights Organization (WRO) at the Hayes Jones Center in Pontiac yesterday. For the past two years, the group has been organizing a campaign t o coordinate efforts to improve the lot of welfare recipients. h it it the WRO. A proposed budget of $54,000 for the 1969-70 fiscal year was adopted with, $33,000 to go for salaries of two organizers, a public relations director and a secretary. it it it Funds for the proposed budgets are to be asked from the Archdiocese of Detroit and the Metropolitan Fund, WRO officials said. Yesterday’s all-day session w a s devoted to proposals to hire a professional staff to carry out functions of STATE CHAPTERS U.S. Is Begging for End--S. Viet SAIGON (UPI) - . He who begs for peace is in the weak position.... . it is not a good way to fight.” The man who points to his 354 days as South Vietnam’s prime minister to illustrate the government’s stability criticized the United States yesterday for begging for an end to the war. ★ ★ ★ "To Americans, this may seem very chivalrous, but to us, in the Far East, he wj»o begs for peace is in the weak position ... it is not a good way to fight,” the 66-year-old Tran Van Huong said. “The Americans have a tendency to yield at the first difficulty they encounter,” he said. The WRO reportedly has chapters in Ann Arbor, Flint, Albion, Battle Creek, Benton Harbor, Kalrimazoo, Ypsilanti, Jackson and Detroit as well as Pontiac. Other chapters are said to be forming in Adrian, Grand Rapids, Muskegon and Munising. ★ ★ ★ The national WRO is to meet in Detroit Aug. 20-24. ★ ★ h Mrs. Cathrina Simms of 360 Auburn, Pontiac WRO cochairman, is a delegate to both the state and national groups. it it it The state WRO yesterday discussed a possible boycott of Sears stores. Mrs. Simms said the main desire of the WRO. is to have credit accounts with Sears and other large department stores. LARGE EXPENDITURES ‘EXPLOITING THIS’ "The Communists are exploiting this to the hilt. They are hitting at the weak point of the Americans, which is their desire to see a hasty solution to the Vietnam problem," Huong said. Huong mentioned a possible pullout of 30,000 Americans by the end of the year and said that if the North Vietnamese troops left the battlefield, South Vietnam could handle the Viet Cong alone. k k k On another matter, Huong said: “My longevity in office is proof of our government's stability. I honestly never thought I would last that long because of all the difficulties we faced.” She said because of the nature of welfare payments, it was not often possible for recipients to come up with large expenditures needed at school-year commencement or for winter. Mrs. Simms said the Pontiac store had been extremely cooperative but that ones, in Detroit and in other cities were not 4 ★ ★ ★ w. 'IV, 'tjl? Mrs. Simms said efforts of the WRO would be toward eliminating t h e "second-hand existence” of welfare recipients. “The children grow up in this atmosphere and when they get 18 or 19 they want to reach out and grab all the things they didn’t have,” she said, “They are bitter kids.” ★ ★ ★ The WRO has been making ap- pearances before the State Legislature and county boards of Supervisors. ★ it it “We have been telling them (government todies) all we want is justice . . . iTs their problem,” she said. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Today sunny and warmer, high 70 to 75. Tonight fair and warmer, low 50 to 55. Friday increasing cloudiness and warm, chance of showers or thundershowers in afternoon or evening, high 75 to 82. Outlook for Saturday: Chance of showers and cooler. Winds southeast -at seven to 15 miles per hour, becoming southeast to south 15 to 25 miles per hour Friday. Probabilities of precipitation: 10 per cent today, 20 per cent tonight, 30 per cent tomorrow. Today In Pontiac Lowest temperature preceding 8 a.m.: 44 At 8 a.m.: Wind Velocity 7 m.p.h. Direction: Southeast Sun sets Thursday at 7:47 p.rfl. Sun rises Friday at 5:12 a.m. Moon sots Thursday at 7:34 p.m. Moon rises Friday at 4:54 a.m. Highest temperature . ............'68 Lowest temperature ........*.**,.— . . 44 Mean temperature ..............T.VV '56 Weather: Sunny Downtown Temperatures .. .*...44 11 a.m, ... ....., 50 12 m. .. 53 * 12:30 p.m. Wednesday's Temperatures 6 a.m. ......44 7 a.m. .... 50 8 a.m. .. .*m. 53 9 a.m. '......59 10 a.m.........63 1 P.m. One Year Ago In Pontiac Highest temperature Lowest temperaturjl Mean temperature 7 Weather: Sunny day. rain .5 inch night 86 60 Highest and Lowest Temperatures This Date in 97 Years 92 In 1962 33 in 1895 Alpena Escanaba Flint G. Rapids Houghton« Houghton Lk. Jackson Lansing. Marquette „ Muskegon Oscoda Pellston Traverse C. Albuquerque Atlanta Bismarck Boston Chicago 56 36 53* 47 64 40. 66 43 58 48 66'40 71 42 68 45 65 50 69 46 53 34 65 '37 64 42 80 53 72 58 49 Cleveland Denver Detroit Duluth Fort Worth Kansas City Los Angeles Miami Beach Milwaukee New York Phoehix Plttsburgb St. Louis S. Lake City S. Francisco S. Ste. Marie Seattle Washington 64 39 78 51 65 41 62 47 78 62 73 57 73 57 82 71 65 43 70 49 95 66 67 36 71 ,52 83 50> 62 52 62 37 60 43 77 56 AP Wirephot© NATIONAL WEATHER-4$bowers are forecast for tonight- from north Florida through the Garolinas into TwMsfee. More showers are due front Texas north to Nebraska and/west to Wyoming, aswpll as in the middle Mississippi JValley. If will Ka ninumAM im ilfiMlJAVtalohltafliArA •. fW"1' ... /■ .. • t ' '<• ■ . ? */' ■ ‘V nenraska andwest to Wyoming, as wen i .be? Warmer in the Eaat, colder elsewhere f ■•.is®* UfgHgi^k MwbiwfA Yanks Continue Big Assault on Red Stronghold SAIGON . (AP) - While President Nixon was announcing his formula for ending the Vietnam war, thousands of U.S. troops battled the Vietcong and North Vietnamese today In two widely separated sections of South Vietnam. Paratroopers of ‘the 101st Airborne Division fought for a hill called Don Ap Via along the rugged Laotian frontier and just to the west of the A Shau Valley. it it it After six days of heavy fighting, the Americans J^pd not been able to drive the North Vietnamese from their bunkers honeycombing the 3,000-foot peak. The hill is believed to be either a regimental, headquarters or a major supply base. A series of fights in the border area during the past week has cost the Norjh Vietnamese 125 killed, according to U.S. military spokesmen. They said - 37 Americans have been killed and 187 wounded. BIRMINGHAM - A serleS of five public informational meetings throughout the school district has been scheduled by the board of education. ' . The sessions have been arranged to give the board an opportunity to explain and promote the need for passage of the 7.5 jnillage renewal and $3.7-million bond issue proposal for additions to Groves and Seabolm high schools at the June 9th school election. ’ i... The meetings are designed to clarify and help the community understand the problems the school district will be facing in the fall, a board spokesman said. Citizens will have the opportunity to. submit questions concerning the ballot proposals. The meeting schedule is West Maple, 6275 Inkster, West Bloomfield Township, May 27; Barnum, Frank and purdy Streets, May 28; Berkshire, 21767 W. 16 Mile, Bloomfield TownsMp.June 2; Derby, 1300 Derby, Troy, June 4; and Covington, Quarton and Covington streets, June 5. All meetings will begin at 8 p.m. ALLIED DRIVE The fighting is part of a new allied drive — Operation Apache Snow — to choke off North Vietnamese infiltration corridors from Laos into South Vietnam. It is the sixth assault within a year on the A Shau Valley, the biggest enemy supply base and staging area in South Vietnam. The objective is to prevent a buildup in the valley from! which the Communist command could support offensives against Hue, 30 miles to the northeast, or Da Nang, South Vietnam’s second largest cit/ 80 miles to the south. Far to the south, 4S miles northwest of Saigon, U.S. Infantrymen of the 25th Division rode armored cars through the jungle trying to root out troops of the North Vietnamese 1st Division entrenched in deep bunkers. Spokesmen said more than 100 North Vietnamese had been killed in the area during the past three days, while U.S. casualties were four killed and a dozen wounded. '! Pontiac Pr«i Photo by Edward R. Noblo END OF THE LINE — Grand Trunk Railroad engineer Menard Ray of Inkster examines the spot where his freight train ran but of tracks after a saboteur threw a track switch and lent the train crashing into the closed Gee Coal and Oil Co. yard on Lake Street this morning. The train crashed through the company’s gate, ran off the end of the tracks, sideswiped an old truck abandoned in the yard and neairly went through another fence on to Lake Street. No one was hurt. _______________________________ The multimedia generation (youngsters who cannot refhember life without television) will show their movies and slide sequences to a conference for English teachers at Birmingham’s Seaholm High School tonight. Fifteen motion pictures, produced by both elementary and secondary students from Oakland County as a ptn^; of their English class assignments, will be shown by youngsters who did the work during two sessions of an earlier communication media and English conference. Other sessions will consider the film as literature, use of the overhead projector by children, incorporation of commercial TV into the curriculum, and use of tape and slides in the spelling program. Media services available from Oakland schools will be on exhibit at 3 p.m. The program begins at 4 p.m. . UAW Local Upsets Incumbents Apo"° ^fh^r h°K » CAPE KENNEDY. Fla. (AP) A coalition of union men known as the “Blue Slate” dominated the elections completed yesterday at UAW Local 653 at Pontiac Motor Division. Almost all incumbent officers were either defeated or face a runoff election as minority vote-getters. it ★ ‘ W A similar upset -of Incumbent officers occurred last week in Local 594 at GMC Truck and Coach Division. The posts of president and chairman of the shop committee will have to be voted on again next Tuesday and Wednesday. More than two candidates ran for these positions, and the top vote-getter did not receive a majority. 1-Kenne4h Karns Jr.; Merman Davidson; 3-Raymond Butler; 4-Charles Winstead; 5-Max Brown; 6-Terry Douglas; -7-Edwin Thrashef* Sr.; 8-Edward Loba; 9-F. W. Bray; 10-Billy McGowen. CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) Weathermen today predicted favorable conditions for a Sunday launch of the three Apollo 10 astronauts, as the spacemen began a relaxed schedule to rest, up for their around-the-inoon voyage. County Cut Down on Tax Claims DERRYBERRY AHEAD (Continued From Page One) from 9.7 mills to 9.63 mills. Action taken by the board yesterday was obviously a compromise. An initial motion by Dr. William Emerson, superintendent of Qakland Intermediate Schools and a member of the board, would have cut the county levy to an even 5 mills. It was defeated by a vote of 4-2 with only Emerson and Schimmel in favor. A second motion by Murphy to retain the . present county allocation of 5.28 mills occasioned ,a two-hour recess by the board. The eventual vote also failed before the compromise 5.16 mills was passed with Murphy and County Treasurer Hugh Dolianjr dissenting. Schiffer, Emerson, Schimmel and Robert McKenney voted in favor... For president, incumbent Wayne Anable got 2,593 while his Blue Slate opponent, Paul Derryberry, polled 2,834. John Fowler got 341, sufficient to deny Derryberry the majority; For shop committee chairman the vote was: Hollis Wilmoth-(Blue Slate), 2,503; incumbent Ben Gales, 2,398; and Stanley Ejzak, 176. it it it For vice president, Mere) Crooks beat incumbent Joseph Murphy, 2,859 to 2,454. Third-party candidate James Helton got 320. * Other top posts also were won. by Blue Slate challengers: Bert Henkon, financial secretary; Ernest Adams, recording secretary; Irma Norlund, "guide; and Joe Woods Jr., sergeant-at-arms; The three trustee posts also saw defeat of incumbents and the election of three new members, Elizabeth Maye, Cliff Dickson and Robert Kinkade. For the 10 shop committeemen positions all incumbents, who ran (two did not) were defeated. New committeemen are: \ County Survey Forecasts Fast Growth West of City A close relationship between roads and urban development hjfs been indicated in an Oakland County Planning Commission survey relative, to westerly M59 Improvement. The' survey was reported at a county Planning Commission meeting yesterday. 1 /• J ’ ' A V 'day mm I* ★ >,/ Undertaken bn request of the county public works committee, the survey, prepared by Thomas Fitzpatrick, deputy planning director* predicts faster-than-normal growth in areas west of Pontiac. ■ ¥ it : it it Fitzpatrick noted development of SCO business and industrial concerns now on the county’s major, east-west corridor and reported jjnorte zoning activity,, particularly In Waterford Township, than in arty other township of-the county. , “The Implication of future growth is clear," Fitzpatrick said.' Fitzpatrick’s report recommends immediate widening to five lanes of that' stretch of M59 between Airport Road *nd South Williams Lake Road, widening within the next two years to the ebunty . line, and the start of planning for a freeway facility that would connect with 1-96 to Lansing. * / The implications of /the recent Transportation and Land Use Study (TALUS) on future highway /planning were noted / by R. J. Alexander, planning commissibn' member. An M59 freeway is a part of that $tudy. ‘' k it it Robert Swanson,- another member said it surprised him thst M59 west hasn’t got a state highway route designation yet. “We have a freeway to the east and nothing even planned to the west Where, there is more traffic,” he noted. Sol Lomerson, chairman of the County Road Commission,' supported the need v for an improved M59 to the west, but he laid die over-all needs of the county must ' be considered. 4 *• ' f . . so good. 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LOS ANGELES (AP) - The Times says evidence is held by the U.S. Justice Department that Abe Fortas agreed after be .coming a Supreme Court justice to receive $20,000 a year for life from the Wolfson family founds tion. The newspaper said in Hmts-day’s edition documents said to be to toe possession of the government, plus Louis E. Wolf-son’s statement to government investigators last week, are being interpreted by Justice Department officials to mean that Fortas appeared to be willing to assist Wolfson to a Securities and Exchange Commission investigation of the financier. The Times said Federal Bureau of Investigation agents were told by Wolfson in prison, where he is serving a one-year sentence for selling unregistered stock, that a written agreement with Fortas provided that the justice’s wife would receive the annual payments if Fortas should die. Wolfson attempted to strike a bargain with the government before talking with the agents last Thursday, the Times said But it said the Justice Depart ment has obtained from Wolfson and other sources documents understood to support his statement to the FBI agents. SUBPOENA USED The documents were obtained by Subpoena, toe Times said. Wolfson, who also has been sentenced to serve 18 months to prison for perjury and for obstructing an SEC investigation, “presumably hopes his cooperation could result to a reduction of toe second sentence,” the newspaper asserted. In Washington, toe Justice Department said it had no comment on the Times story. They also list Paul Laxalt as the company’s agent—the official representative. Laxalt, now governor^ of Nevada, -re signed from toe job on Dec. 31,, 1966, before taking office.' Yearly reports filed in Carson City show Fortas remained an officer of Greatamerica Until sonietime between July 1965 and June 1966. Records for the following year indicate that after Fortas resigned Dennis Lyons assumed Fortas’ former positions with the company. ★ ★ ★ Lyons, an attorney with Arnold & Porter, Fortas’ former Washington law firm, told AP he became vice president, gen eral counsel and director of Greatamerica in May, 1966. It could not \Jbe determined immediately whether Fortas re tatoed his spot with the compa ny until then or had resigned earlier. Fortas took his seat on the court in October 1965. One of the incorporators of Greatamerica was Clifford A. Jones, Nevada lieutenant governor from 1947-54 and a part owner and then officer of the Thun-derbird Hotel in Las Vegas. The gambling license issued to Jones and a partner to toe hotel was revoked iby toe Nevada Tax Commission in 1955 on grounds that underworld figures had an interest in the hotel. The decision was later overturned by toe Nevada Supreme Court. On Jan. 5,-1966, Jones was indicted for perjury in connection with toe grand jury investigation of Bobby Baker, former secretary to Senate Democrats. Baker was indicted toe same day for conspiracy, tax evasion and fraudulently converting to his own use nearly $100,000 from California savings and loan executives who thought they were making political contributions. Jones was named a coconspirator in that indictment. Baker later was convicted of failing to pay tax on the $100,000 —77: 43 The Browser’s Paradise: /] BLOCK-OPEL easy to get to .. and well worth the trip Lots and lots of brand new Buidks and Opels,right out Wiier* you can see them. Beautiful browsing with no nigh pressure. Just the fairest prices, finest service and quickest delivery in Detroit X A Telegraph jest £ ef 12 KRIe/eeress frea Taj-Twelve IWI/WMM0 cpta 7t» ui. WIM PJL--MML a Tkors. to SiOO Mb \ 1 A Jones’ case has not come to trial. Fortas was Baker’s Attorney until Johnson became president to. 1963. At that time he -withdrew from toe case. The two other incorporators of Greatamerica were Helen Irving and Katherine Waldman, both of Las Vegas, and both also listod as' directors of a. Las Vegas cbncern which got a gambling license to June, 1964 The same three incorporators Jones and toe two women-were listed as incorporators when Greatamerica filed to do business to Texas on Jan. 29, 1963, records in the Texas secretary- of state’s office in Austin showed. ’Die records to Nevada and Texas do not indicate whether toe three served also as officers of the corporation.___ Legal sources say incorporation papers frequently are handled by attorneys who select toe individuals to serve as incorporators. f The chairman of toe board and president of Greatamerica at toe time of its incorporation was Troy V. Post. Hie company’s fiscal 1964 report lists Gustave Levy as a director. Both men held their posts through fiscal 1968 when Greatamerica and its subsidiary, Braniff, were acquired by the conglomerate Ling-Temco-Vought. Paul Porter’s nanie appears as a director of Braniff to 1967 and 1968. Last year, Porter collected $30,000 to fiqance Fortas’ lecture series. Five men contributed to the fund. Two of them were Post and Levy. American University officials told the Senate last year that Fortas got $15,000 of the fund and the university got the other half. Also last year, a CAB examin-’ held extensive hearings on However, when the CAB and Johnson announced toe final awards, Braniff got a route to Hawaii through Mexico (Sty and Acapulco, increasing its air route mileage by about 200 per cent. Post is a partner in toe new $19 million, 21-story Plaza Inter national Hotel to Acapulco and is engaged to construction of a six-mile beach-front golf course and country club in the Mexican resort city. , The chairman of toe CAB when the award was made was John Crooker Jr., a Houston lawyer and a former partner in the firm of Fulbright, Crooker, Freeman, Bates and Jaworski Leon Jaworski has acted as a personal attorney for Johnson. Crooker first was appointed to the CAB in March 1968 to fill an unexpired term. Just a little over a month later, far from the end of the term, Johnson renominated him for a. full six-year terih beginning this year. SEE SIMMS 3 PAGES OF * SPECTACULAR BUYS In Today’s Pontiac Press -Turn to Pages A-5, A-6 andA-7 for This Weekend of SUPER DISCOUNTS i From SUPER SIMMS-Pontiac’s Original Discounter Since 1934 SIMMS!!., 98 NORTH SAGINAW ST. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX the eagerly sought Pacific airline routes. 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OKs Rezoning ; for Lumberyard SPMNGFIELD TOWNSHIP - The Township Board has overruled a zoning board recommendation and approved the rezoning of property at the Ware and Andersonville intersection from agricultural to commercial. The board voted 3 to 2 to authorize the request of Lloyd Miller, 10270 Andersonville, to develop ax wholesale lumberyard operation at the site. ★ ★ ★ Township Treasurer Margaret R. Samuel, Township Clerk David H. Field and Trustee Claude Trim voted to approve the petition. Supervisor N. C. Van Natta and Trustee E. L. Rundell upheld the zoning board's recommendation to deny the rezoning request. The board reported that the decision to enforce the township's junk car ordinance has been carired out. More than 12 warnings for ordinance violations "Have been written during the last four weeks. Violators have 30 days to correct”" the violation before the township takes legal action. TOWNSHP SUED Supervisor Van Natta said a summons was served on him yesterday regarding a suit filed in Probate Court against the township by Kelly Bateman Co., a Pontiac real estate firm. The Bateman firm had filed a rezoning petition for a proposed trailer park development west of Dixie Highway between Holly and Oakhill roads that was rejected by the zoning board, County Planning Board and the Township Board last winter. ★ ★ ,4k # Van Natta said the suit was filed to enjoin the township from carrying out its decision. He said the township would contest Kelly Bateman’s action. Plahs for Operation Cleanup are continuing. All old papers or magazines that are tied in bundles may be brought to the Township Hall, 650 Broadway, Davis-burg. ★ ★ ★ Arrangements have been made with Charles Weaver, 9208 Dixie, to pick up newspapers and magazines anywhere in the township if he is contacted. Cleanup day is set for May 24. Farmington to Air Proposed Budget FARMINGTON — A public hearing on the proposed budget has been set for 8 p.m. tonight at City Hall. The total recommended budget for the general fund is $792,156 while the actual budget for 1968-69 is $747,141. A budget of $308,916 for the water and sewer department in the upcoming year is also set. The water-sewer allocation is $295,726. ★ ★ ★ A public hearing for the rezoning of certain lots in the Tarabusi — Grand River Gardens subdivision from family to multiple dwelling is set for 8 p.m. June 8. Trouble Flares on Picket Line at Novi Plant NOVI — Police reported some trouble this morning with workers driving through the picket line at Paragon Division of Portec Inc. Some 20 piekets from the Paragon Equality Movement (PEM) — primarily inner-city blacks — fired for violation of union grievance procedures paraded before the company gate for the fourth day. . Novi police, reported that State Police gave one. speeding ticket and several verbal warnipg to workers driving through the picket line on their way to the plant. A wapning was also given to one man for throwing rocks at the passing cars. EMPLOYE’S DEMANDS Picketing has continued at the Novi steel firm since Saturday. Hie former employes, who handed the company a list of demands Friday, walked out after learning that the demands would have to be processed through union grievance channels, according to a Paragon spokesman. Personnel Director David K. Waterloo, said the 84 men were dismissed by telegram Saturday. The iron workers are members of Shopmen’s Local 508, Iron Workers Union. The Rev. William H. Colquitt of Inkster, a PEM spokesman, claimed Local 508' has refused to act l on grievances about alleged unsafe working conditions. 1 ' The men claim they stopped work because, of fiir pollution in the plant, unsanitary conditions 'and lack of safety precautions around heavy equipment. IARGES DENIED company spokesman called the arges untrue Die workers, who were hired for job lining under % federal program, were •ked last fall when the company could t find labor to fill job vacancies.-Colquitt contended 150 persons from : program have been fired in the last o weeks. m '/ - , Pontiac Pr*u Photo ky M Vondorworp CITIZEN’S AWARDS — The Pontiac Citizen's Committee on Youth last night honored outstanding teens of the week and four citizens and one organization selected for outstanding work with youth at the committee’s seventh annual award program. Honorees pictured with Mayor Pro Tem T. Warren Fowler Sr. (holding plaque) are (from left) Loren O’Dea, chief THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 A—4 Left With Only 67 Residents Novi Twp. Struggle Continues By LOIS FRf ENDLAND NOVI TOWNSHIP — Not much remains of this township, reduced to 67 residents and one legal township official, since the former village of Novi incorporated into a city. However, there is an effort to carry on. it '• ■ it ★ Acting township officials were told yesterday by Circuit Court Judge William J. Beer that court approval of any expenditures was necessary before any more township funds were disbursed. Judge Beer also adjourned the question of accounting between the township and tiie city for 30 days. their actions since they no longer lived, in the township. The city also requested that the court order the township to make an immediate division of assets from the area incorporated last year. SETTLEMENT NECESSARY A settlement is necessary before the city can assume responsibility for the assets, which they claim the former township officials are using. At the moment, however, there is no governing body in the township that can legally handle the division of assets. The sole remaining member* Luckett, does not constitute a quorum. The meeting June 9 will provide a quorum of a new township board able to handle the division. • it it it The meeting complies with a recent attorney general’s opinion stating that certain laws authorize holding of a special township meeting — including where there is no quorum. ★ ★ ★ Emery Jacques, attorney for the township, noted that the state boundary commission had been asked to determine whether the township could exist by itself or whether the residents should join the city. ELECTIONS SET A meeting of the 67 remaining township residents is to be held June 9 in order to select township officers and a Township Board. ★ ★ ★ In May 1968, Novi voters approved in-. corporation by a margin of about 200 votes out of a total 1,192. A. city charter was approved by voters last February. ★ ★ ★ The incorporation included 98 per cent of the township leaving the remaining residents divided into eight small and separate islands around the new city. it it it Township Trustee Ralph Luckett is the only one of the five elected officials still living in the township and therefore the only legal township official. Detroit Detective Sergeant to Head Public Safety at OU STiy^PERFORMING The other four officials, however, have continued to perform their duties as township officers. They are still dispersing township funds — including their own salaries — and have even notified some taxpayers of review of tax ^assessments of properties now within the city limits. ★ ★ ★ The men include Supervisor Hadley Bachert, Treasurer Duane E. Bell, Clerk Lloyd George, and Trustee Charles Goers. „ ★ ★ ★ The former officials have apparently been acting until recently under the stated belief that the incorporation was invalid. The township has been fighting the incorporation in court for several, years unsuccessfully. Their most recent appeal to the State Supreme Court was denied last week. A veteran Detroit police officer has been named as Oakland University’s new director of public safety. Detective Sgt. Earl Gray, 39, who has been with the'Detroit Police Department for almost 15 years, will begin his duties on May 26. it it it A university spokesman said Gray’s salary has not yet been determined, but that it was university policy not to disclose salaries. Gray will replace) Thomas D. Strong, who resigned his position in March to return to his former position as special agent with the U.S. Secret Service in Newark, N.J. DETECTIVE SERGEANT Gray joined the Detroit force in 1955 and has been assigned to the Citizens Complaint Bureau since 1964. He was promoted to the rank of detective in 1962 and'to detective sergeant last July. Married and the father of two children, Gray is a student at Wayne State University,' majoring in police administration. He was horn in Kentucky and moved with his family to Detroit when he was eight years old. EARL PRAY OKs 8th-Grade Course psychiatric social worker for Pontiac General Hospital’s Health Clinic; James Peterson, past president of the Pontiac Area Junior Chamber of Commerce; Fred Stormer, Pontiac Police Detetdve; Mrs. Neal Smith; community worker for Family Service of Oakland County; and Edward S. Ladd, accepting for the Pontiac Creative Arts Center. WALLED LAKE The school board has endorsed the concept of a new eighth-grade yearlong course offering1 introduction to language, typing, and sociology. The administration has been authorized to prepare details of the three sections, each to last 13 weeks, and present them to the'board It a later date. The mandatory course will be during the hotir when most eighth graders are currently in a study had. A choice of French Or Spanish will be offered to the student during the language portion of the course. The introduction to sociology will offer information rto help students better adjust to their environment and better handle involvement with other people* The board, in other recent action, approved preliminary plans for the Vocational High School. teacher conferences. The card offers detailed notes on how the Child is doing to the skills area and an evaluation of his ability. A page is devoted to personal development and attitudes of the Child and spaces , are left for parental response. '“wHj ” , t Mrs. Scott claimed that the card does not have enough grades to show achievement and that the parent can’t tell how the child is doing torn day to day. REPORT-CARD COMPLAINT Also at the recent board meeting, a parent,- identified as Mrs. James Scott registered objections to the district’s four-year-old experimental report card. She urged continued efforts to improve it. The card, introduced in 1965, is being used in a test program at four elementary schools. The card is a four-page progress repflgt which is supplemented by parent- MORE IMPROVEMENT She indicated that she was not necessarily advocating a return to the traditional five-symbol report system, but that the card needed additional improvement before it was acceptable to hen as a parent. The card offers considerably more information to the parent than did the traditional five-symbol system, according to Hugh Davies, director of elementary education. — _ ----—Ites He contended that the system is less punitive and less corruptive. He pointed out that the report card was *a progress report to parents and that a child’s knowledge of how he is doing in school is received on a daily “If any child has to wait ten weeks before learning how he is doing then we would be failing somewhere.” Sanatorium Future Is Tied to Action of 2 State Units By JEANSAXLE The future of Oakland County Sanatorium may depend on action by two state departments — the Bureau of Social Services and the State Health Department. • / Bernard Houston, director bf the Social Services, said recently that Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement rates at the'sanatorium will be cut in half. : “7 jl - ★ ★ ■ ★ Should that happen, county officials believe the operation would be jeopardized and h&rd-to-care-for chronic cases would have no. place to go. It would cost the county $800,000 a year to. maintain present services, officials estimate. Nursing home officials say, however, that they an willing to accept any and 8U long-term care cases the county has ante going rate for nursing home care — between $13 and $17 a day. problem. The facility must be certified as a hospital in order to care for such patients. PATIENT CARE OVERLOOKED Certification is done on' the basis of physical plant, service and staff by the State Health Department. It does not certify on the basis of the kind of patient care given, according to Dr. Herman Ziel, state director of medical care. Ziel noted, however, that Saginaw County has' faced the probelm by designating a certain number of its couhty beds for tubercular hospital care, CURRENT COSTS It costs the county between $35 and $39 a day for such care. » Meantime, Houston’s announcement has caused a wave of concern in the county, mainly from people who have relatives cared for at the county facility. h it it • ■ The concern has apparently reached the ears of Lansing officials, who are now saying little. Dr. R. Gerald Rice, state health "director, said he has had some correspondence with Houston relative to the setting of county institution rates. others for rehabilitation care and others for long-term ^chronic care. It is reimbursed accordingly. it it it Rice said he did not know When f decision would be reached, t One health department official noted, “A facility may be certified as a hospital, but that does not necessarily mean that every patient in the facility needs hospital care.” Wage Boosts Set in Oxford Budget ASKED /TO SET RATES »A veteran of two years service in the Army Signal Corps, Gray has been assigned to the Detroit police holdup bureau and at the precinct level. His duties with the Citizens Complaint Bureau have been to investigate charges made against police officers. Houston reportedly has asked the health department to assume the function it'recently took in regard to setting . nursing home rates relative to hospitals. . “I don’t know what’s going to happen. The matter has to be worked out,” Rice said. VI* 1 L , * , 7’,7. itr ★ ,ir At presort the social services department netsf reimbursement rates for hospitals. Since the sanatorium now provides bed care for some 40 tubercular patients, another complication is added to the OXFORD — The Village Council has adopted a $215,687 budget as presented by Manager Don Scripter. Hie budget provides for at least a 10 per cent wage boost for all 16 village employes. Scripter said that because of certain retired debts, the new budget is down almost $4,000 from that of last year. The millage rate of 15 mills operating, one mill debt retirement and 2 mills debt recovery remained imchanged. - ★ ★ * The council also released village planners Vilican-Leman from a monthly $150 retainer agreement, opting instead to use the firm’s services on an hourly basis. “We need the planners only a. couple times a year now," explained Scripter, "and the rate on that basis would be $100 per day based on an eight hour day. Wb haven’t saved money yet but we will in the future.” APPEAL DENIED The township had asked for and been denied application for leave to appeal the recent decision made by the Court of Appeals declaring the incorporation valid. ★ ★ ★ Last April, township officials were also denied leave to pursue their claim by Circuit Court Judge Frederick C. Ziem. The case, has been in court at least three times. * * * . * Yesterday, the former township officials went into court to show cause why they should not be forbidden to continue Black Power Gesture Stirs Senate Clash Pact Let for Building at Stony Creek Park LANSING (AP) - The clenched fist of black power raised over the Michigan Senate has prompted one member to renew his call for a “disaster plan” to ward off possible attack on the upper chamber. Sen. Robert Huber, R-Troy, said yesterday (hat some members of the Michigan State University, Black Student Alliance raised their fists in the now-familiar / black power gesture as they were introduced in the Senate Tuesday night.' ... v i. • T* ’.J :S#: A As As they were introduced, reported Negro Sen. Basil Brown, Huber turned to a. colleague and said: ! r'-i "WeH, I guess I’d better get my gun." 'Until Wu Face The Attitudes That Exist As Men, We Are Going To Have Loaded Guns On Botjl Sides../ —Sen. Basil Brown i Sen. Roger Craig, D-Dearbom, admonished Huber “not to be terrified by symbols but by actions.’.’ Huber told Senate colleagues a Yugoslavian refugee friend “had seen toe clenched fist come into his country. It was the beginning of the end for freedom of toe people of Yugoslavia, ” Huber said. The board of commissioners of the Huron-Clinton Metropolitan Authority recently awarded a $71},470 contract to Van Kampen Construction Co., Detroit, for the erection of a building at the boat launching area of v Stony C r e e k Metropolitan Park in Oakland Township. ♦ • it ★ The building is designed for year-round use and will have heated restrooms, a lounge area \ and food service. The building is not expected to be in use until next year. '‘‘l,’ i a). '■-V*' ‘EXEMPLIFIES ATTITUDE’ “That exemplifies his attitude toward black students and students in general,” the Highland Park Democrat charged, pointing out that Huber chairs the special Senate committee probing dam-pus unrest. * ■ it h “Until We face the attitudes that exist as men," Brown said, “we are going to have loaded guns on both sides which (could bring) totrt'destruction.” ‘WEDGE HAS STARTED’ V Now toe friend sees toe clenched fist, in this country, he said, the fist that “means terrorism and revolutionary tactics.” ■ v * * * The Senate must, Huber said, “dd some eareful thinking and planning (because) the opening wedge has now started.” ■ Y v •'•• •*. w>-Huber repealed an earlier plea that toe upper chamber plan defensive tactics against any attempted , take-over. He revealed the call for such a plan last week, citing a take-over of toe Colorado Senate. " ' ■// Negro Sen. Cpleman Young, who had Introduced toe Mack students, raised Ms fist before toe Senate and said: “I replied with clenched fist— as I dd now. It would have been less than polite not to:. Mai Senate to ask legislators “to addrei themselves to their legltimat grievances" regarding discrimination < campuses and other student problems. Hie students had come to hear Brow read a letter from* 11 of the state’s ] black legislators to Gov. Williai Milliken, The lawmakers demanded tt governor call for black history courses i all state colleges and universities and f< open channels of communication betwet administrators and students. INVOLVED IN DEMONSTRATION ‘GOING TOO FAR’ “The senator is going f little far when he teUs black people what their symbols are,’’ Young contended. “The fist is a sign of solidarity, of. black poweT. “But the clenched fist of today that means solidarity might well become the clenched fist of revolution tomorrow,’’ be said. . J j&Utm r & SJa ■ SOD Sffil (O'yv ■I si® < ■ 1 T ■ Bra l,■ \ ■•' $&#;< ';.-gj^fmm $&?$ ' ? ffli.f/W 'i /f ' ; / ■'/ TH& PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1060 \ / | ' ■ li E*i$Rw , i:;,|f| \ " \\\ CHARGE IT, Get It On SIMMS INSTANT CREDIT You can chargo oil purchasot of $10 to $150 on 30-day samo a* cash plan or uto your MIDWEST RANK CARD. \ \ . \ x •V\\ First Quality Water Repellent Poplin Jacket Some Dacron and Cottons Included Comfortable. 100% Cotton Men’s Pullover Shirt Mock turtle nock blue ihlrt li eat off by bands of groan at neck and sleeves. Short raglan sleeves, chest pocket and hemmed bottom. Machine washable. Sizes S-M-L — Basement A lightweight jacket ' you can wear now and all through the tall. It's machine washable cotton poplin with elasticized inserts at waist to make it fit well, two front slash pockets, zipper front, button cuffs and turndown collar. It's water repellent too, for those sudden spring showers. Choose from charcoal, navy or tan in sizes Small, Medium or Large. In tan only. — Basement Plaid Cotton to Solid Color Boys’ Reversible Jacket legula $5.99 Seller For the young men In the family. A light* A weight cotton jacket, colorful plaid on one side that reverses to a coordinated solid color on the other. Slash pocket at each aide, full zipper closing. Elasticized inserts at waist sides. Water repellent finish, and machine washable. Sizes 8 to 18. —Basement Permanent Press Fabrics Men's and Young Men's This “casual Hacks for young men. The chino slacks have 2 front scooped pockets, permanent press 85% cotton and 15% nylon, machine washable. Black or tan in sizes 28 to 34. Ddlliim {bans have wide belt loops, front scooped pockets, back yoke and patch pockets. Permanently presses Wend-of 50% polyester and 50% sizes extra slim 1 -Hour FREE PARKING in Downtown Mall Simms will pay for 1 -hour of parking. Just Hava tickot stamped at tima of purchase. Except on tobacco and beverage purchases. Rugged Cotton Twill Boys’ Camp Shorts Regular $1.98 at Simms Traditionally styled with accessory loops, snap cargo packet, 2 zipper pockets and 2 back pockets. Self belt and belt loops. Sizes 6 to 16. — Basement Famous VAN HEUSEN Permanent Press 1st Quality Men’s Long and Short Sleeve Shirts • Button Down and Spread Collars • Tattersall Checks and Stripes • Tapered Body and Full Cut Reg. $5—$6—$7 each, famous Van Hausen shirts Including a short slsevs '417'® ivy style with Vanopress in blue and gold check pattern, a Hampshire House® with regular spread collar, Vanopress® or a Van Heuson convertible collar white shirt with contoured body and cuffed sleeves. The long sleeve shirts include Van Hausen tattersal checks, stripes and cluster stripes with button down collars, and a white dress shirt with French cuffs, and spread collars. These are all first quality, so stock up now on short and long sleeve shirt* in your favorite designs. —Basement The Long and Short of It Shirt-Pants Sets Delightful Styles for Little Boys and Girls Children’s Summer Wear Machine Washable Water Repellent Jump All Sets • Sun Dresses • Short Sots • Shortalls • Slack Sets • Kneeknockers • Overalls • and others All First Quality and American Values to $4.00 -Your Choice cotton. .MachinP washable,^ olive or whdcrt in 28 to 34. The min'* klress u^ jpans arp extn cuf; Pleatless l>ty utaguo^stylewith set in back pockets, Wickrbeft loops. Permanent press blerfd of 85% cotton oncT T5% rtylon, machine washable. Twill weave. sis , ■ ,» & > ■ XlKMi Simm| -special purchase includes a conglomeration of children's summer play clothes including a 4-pc. shift set with pedal pushers, crop top and bloomers, popovers and parities, -an applique set with pique top and checked panties, a knee knocker set with' a-line top and knee knocker pants, a boys' 4-pc. set of 2 shirts and 2 pairs of pants, a slacks set with striped cotton knit shirt and woven cotton slacks, and many others. Sizes 12 months to sizes 4 but not in all styles. —Main Floor Big Selection of Styles Ladies’ Purses GROUP 1 Regular to $7.99 *• this group include* beaded pouch bag* in 5 tone on tohe color combinations with beaded handle* and a beoded shoulder bag with adjuitobls handle. GROUP ir Choose from a vinyl zipper tap beg which can bo1 pemenattzed with Initials, a vertically pleated envelope style with soft double handle and a swagger bag with snap lock an center section. Black plastic patent. —Mdin floor t lK.t. V\ \ \\ t\t . 98 North : Saginaw St. Nylon or Poplin with Hood Regulars. $4.50 SIMMS5JL Downtown Pontiac Boys’Sizes 3 to 7 Permanent Press and Easy Care Cotton Values to $2.99 This group Includes a knit top shorts set with striped cotton shirt and permanpntly presses short* of 50% polyester and 50% cotton, machine waihable, a three-piece oet with plaid shirt and shorts and white damdiggers. Pants have elasticized waist bands. All are machine washable cotton, and a permanent press slacks set with striped cotton shirt and cotton boxer style slacks. Sizes 3 to 7. — Basement 65% Dacron 35% Cotton Mott’s Gantner Playboy Trunks First Quality Be ready for the swimming season with these Gantner play boy swim trunks. The waist is elasticized in black and there is a full supporter for more comfortable fit. Zipper fly closing. Blue in sizes S-M-L. — Basement Group of Assorted Children’s Playclathes Girls’ Parka The cotton poplin parka Is machine .washable, has drawstring hood and elaslidzod sleeves. Full, length' motal zipper closes front Groan and white polka dots are scatttrad on a pink ground. Tho nylon parka is lightweight and -windproof, drawstring hoipd and zippered front closing. In blue and-white or orange' and yellow block design. Sizes M and L in poplin and 6x in nylon. -AfAIN FLOOR' • Seersucker Shorts • Seersucker Blouses • Knit T-Shirts • First Quality Reg. to $1.49 •aoh Carefree summer playelothee ln> dude striped leeriuehsr blousee a blend of 55% acetate and 45% cotton, sleeveless stylo with button front and Peter Pan* Collars. Alt are 'machine washable. Matching shorts' have elasticized waist and 2'Shaped pockets. They come In. blue, pink or yellow in sizes 3 to 6x. Short sleeve knit shirts with shoulder buttons. In blue, yellow or red pattern in sizes 2-3 and 4. —Main Floor L *£ wi»tr: 2 ^k. - mm z m V'VV A-—fl THE PONTIAC PRESS, THUBSDAY, MAY 15. 1060 CHARGE IT! Get It on SIMMS INSTANT CREDIT ' \ You can chargo all purchases of $10 to $150 on 30-day same as cash or use your MIDWEST BANK CARD. For the Girt Graduate - ‘OSTER’ SI Portable Hair Dryer $35.95 Value at Simms . Professional typ. hair dry.r with 4 settings lor exact heat control. Adjustable drying arm, no ducking. Luggage type storage case. Drugs—Main Floor Invigorating Aid to Healthy Hair Valmor Electra-Brush Regular use of the Valmor Electro-brush promotes stronger and healthier hair, reduces'lolling hair due to tired Oil gland*, massages scalp. Drugs—Main Floor Cordless Hygienic 4-Brnsh Sunbeam Electric Toothbrush with Up and Down Motion $19.95 Value at Simms With FREE 2-BRUSH BONUS Promote healthy gums and teeth with this Sunbeam electric cordless toothbrush with the revolutionary new up and down and around mo- tion. Cleans 42% better than ordinary hand brushing. With 6 personal brushes for each member of the family. Molded top keeps brushes clean. Drugs—Main Floor Professional Type Dual Head Scholl's Foot Massager Soothes Aching Feet At Simms Just You can soothe- both tired-aching feet at once with this' Dr. Scholl's dual head electric foot massager. Just rest your feet on the head and gentle massage does the rest. Drugs—Main Floor Ho More Stained Fingers or Mess G.E. Shoe Polisher $28.95 Value No more mess or stained fingers from polishing shoes, even the children can do H, with this General Electric polisher with power handle that picks up and releases polishing brushes. Handy case features combination handle and footrest. Drugs—Main Floor Recommended by Dentists Water Pik® Oral Rinse Finishes the Job Your toothbrush Begins $29.95 Value Water Pik oral hygiene oppli-ance pumps out a vigorous stream of water to surge and circulate over, under and around your gums and teeth. Washes away loose unseen bits of food from hard to reach places. Leaves your gums feeling alive and tingling. Drugs—Main Floor Scope Antiseptic 119 Summer Blond Shampoo tqc $1.99 voluw, big 32-0*. Size mouthwosh... $1.29 value, 4-o^.tube, by Clairol.............. IW $2.29 value, Gelusil Antacid $1.49 value, 12-ox. liquid antacid. ... Wilkinson Blades $1A5 value, pkg, 10 itainleu steel...... [Vitalis Hair Groom [l $1.79 value, 12-oz. size, grooms without grease iHalof twirsp^i CP **t*l a* Gillette Foamy Shave 44c Right Guard Deodorant lie |229vdu*. 13-oi. cUcorotor can.........; JL , 102 77® J19 Halo Hair Spray 9Qc 79cvalue, 12-ox. regular or ,xtrohold.........W Playtex Living Gloves cqc $1.39volu»,wHh»xiroriglitliondglov».... t/W Fact Tooth Paste 9Qc 79c volve, king tlze 4.5-oz. tube... ' Score Hair Tonic KQc $1.79value, 15-oz.liquidhoirtonic.. VQj Krank’s Super Shave 4Qc $1.10 value, lf-oz* manthol or tegularA zJ Aspirin Tablets Kqc 98c value, 500 reg. 5-groln USP....wu 24° 79® Pepsodent Tooth Paste tqc Pepsodent Tooth Brash 97c 69c value, ttdvb,\hard or medium texture • .Vie ...... ••• • • Nozhin first Aid Cream ) reg. 5-graln Kiwi Paste Polish i 59c value, 3-oz. tlz. black or brown.. Citrisun Cold Medication $l.79volue, pkg. 1<6 hot Union drink................ 75c vo'ue, mod. by Noxzemd „ ' Mli.,.......... ■” *v m 29® Drugs—Main Floor Lady Ellon Klippios and Bows igc Wilhold Bobby Pins I9c 29c value, pkg. of 6, tpzlng grip........................................ JLCF Plastic RainBotmOt fi fK oqc French Spray Perfume ' 999 $7.50 Value, I’A-drom Imported from France. vF' French Toilet Water qqc Bufferin Tablets1 199 $2.95 value, pkg. 225, poin relleven.................. JL $2.95 voluc, pkg. 225, pain rillevera Energine Spot Remover \ 40c Phisohex Skin Cleanser 179 $3.04 value, 15-oz. antibacterial tudjirrg... A Bactine First Aid Spray Kqc $1.05 volue, 4-oz.for cuts and bruises. .... wV Miles Nervine Capsules 129 $1.98 value, 3Q'«, relieves nervoustemion.•••..,o AL ' Weraets Dpntu Creme 4QC 83c value, 4.2-oz. economy size. c MM? ' ' ’Vv raphy for the very young. ★ ★ ★ I agree you cannot teach the technicalities of sex Without morality and expect good results. I also hate to be told that parents don’t know what is best for their child at a given age, and Only parents should make such a decision. For proof of how this teaching can lead to the downfall of a nation, look to Sweden where venereal disease is running rampant. God help us if that is what we want for this country and future generations. MRS. E. HOFFMAN Has Additional Data on Recent Incident All this adds up.to progress of the most impressive sort. The Press joins the cjtizenry in congratulating the Harambee organization on its initiative and the results it has thus far shown. The New Stork Bob Considine Says: The Southfield “youth” referred to in The Press as being shot in the back by Patrolman Hedrick was in fact a 29-year-old felon who is now in Jackson Prison and was being sought after having been sentenced for1 shooting his Wife. Officer Hedrick and three other officers attempted to apprehend the suspect when he attempted to flee and was shot. THOMAS E. LUFKIN 8003 CRESCENT, CLARKSTON 1-696 Given Green Light Saints Go, but Loyalties Remain ‘Commander of Pueblo Deserves a Medal’ The 1-696 freeway route across southern Oakland County moved a step nearer reality when the Michigan Supreme Court upheld the legality of a law passed in 1967 empowering a three-man arbitration panel to determine highway routes within the State. ★ ★ ★ At issue was a 7.4-mile segment of the route which several communities opposed because it cut through or ran adjacent to their boundaries. ★ ★ ★ The court’s decision in effect approves the controversial section of the freeway as drawn by the arbitration panel and ends a 10-year hassle that has deprived the County — the State’s second most populous—of a vitally needed highway facility. When completed, 1-696 will stretch 29 miles from 1-94 on the east to 1-96 on the west. under way has been costly. The original estimate of $75 million for the strip involved in the dispute has risen to $11J? million. w ★ ★ The protracted opposition to part of the 1-696 route points up the immutable fact that progress that benefits the many is not to be nullified by the short-sighted few. But the delay in getting the project ★ ★ As transportation facilities of our great Nation have developed from the days of covered wagons through "the railroad-building decades, into today’s jet travel by air with vast super highway networks for vehicular traffic, no step forward has been made without some slight degree of inconvenience or dislocation being experienced by individuals or com-muities. ★ ★ ★ But such is the price of progress. And the only alternative to • progress is stagnation. CONSIDINE NEW YORK-Once upon a time I was standing in the back of St. Patrick's Cathedral, gassing with ah usher who was a ' friend of mine, when suddenly a disheveled lady plunged in from Fifth i Avenue and I g a s p e d I “there’s the1 altar to St. Jude?” “We don’t have one,’ usher said. Thb lady thought for a moment, then asked, “Who’s -next best?” • . it (xi ^ jit Perhaps a lot of Catholics. will be asking something along those lines, now that the church has cast what amounts to a smirch' on Saint's Chrisopher, Nicholas, Valentine, George, Catherine, Martin (who turns out to have been a girl), Ursula, Susanna, Lucia, Barbara, Anastasia and about 200 others. and deletions from the church calendar the Vatican said, in effect, that it would be all right if those who had a particular devotion to this or that saint — now downgraded or never-existent — continued that reverence. , ■ tit ★ it name had never existed. Nor were dozens of St. Philomena churches razed. the It was a superfluous announcement, of course. Countless thousands of girls named Philomena did not change their names when John XXIII announced that he was sorry but a saint of that USE TO CONTINUE St. Christopher medals will continue to be worn and believed in, and statuettes to his name wilt continue to grace the dashboards of millions of automobiles. . So what? — he didn’t carry the Infant Jesus across a, river on his shoulder. But how about the way he helped when that tire blew out on the Jersey Turnpike? Commander Lloyd Bucher deserves the Congressional Medal tit Honor for going above and beyond the call of duty. Had the Pueblo been sunk by the North Korean defenders, a third world war would haver begun. The Commander saved more than the atonic bombs dropped on Japan. That affair has not put fear into the people of Asia. North Vietnam, North Korea and China could prove a point of goodwill by returning all prisoners, both civilian and military, thereby calling for a new code of honor in international law. , WILLIAM REID , „ Replies to Bachelor’s Comments on ‘Smut’ David Lawrence Says: Regarding the comments of the young bachelor in the May 8 article on smut, no doubt he is a bachelor because he cannot find a lovely young lady that is not “hypocritical, self-righteous, sexually hung-up, with a warped sense of values, lifeless, bitter; tonjgue-clicldng, patronizing, self-assured, or a pompous neurotic.” Young man, look in the mfrror. Chief Hanger, keep up the good work. Pontiac Press, back up the Chief. ' Jl, JUST GEORGE Reds Have No Intention of Making Peace Treaty Question and Answer Are there any organizations that donate American flags and standards to parochial, schools? . MRS. JOHN LUNDY 3134 EASTWOOD REPLY Inflation Trend Reversed In these inflationary times, it is always a pleasure to report an example of “disinflation,” to use the term now favored by economists. A major maker of home power tools has announced the lowest prices for portable drills in its 59-year history. ★ ★ ★ company in 1946,. In terms of | today’s so-called dollars, the ’ price is less than a third. The drills are not only lighter, more compact and more powerful but the price is less than half the cost of the first drill for do-it-yourselfers introduced by the It is also heartening to learn that foreign producers of power tools are not able to compete in the United States because American manufacturers are doing such an effective job of making and marketing these tools. A power drill is a small item, but it bulks large as an example of what our much-vaunted American knowhow can do without benefit of protective tariffs or import quotas. GOP Hopes in Tennessee May Fade By BRUCE BIOSSAT NEA Washington Correspondent NASHVILLE, Tenn. - National Republican strategists who are arguing .seriously that they might add Tennessee to their governorship score-board in 1970 had better come -and take a closer look at a Democrat named John Jay Hooker Jr. * He has had Quayle polls- him with thousands of Tennessee conservatives. Things are different today. Hooker, looking’like an Ivy League professor but sounding like a driving, jivy businessman, has become what he sounds like. two Oliver taken which show vhim BIOSSAT s w e-e ping asidte i)is /potential Democratic rivals; and the man once thdught most likely to be his Repub-lican opponent, Rep. William Brock. The latter now says he will not try for the job. 1 ★ " it it Four years back from the 1970 race, Hooker as an “irregular” got 47 per cent of the Democratic primary vote while losing to GUV. Buford Ellington. .Ellington, seeking 4 second term, laid it on the young man, then a practicing lawyer, tor his jack of “busi- PILING UP MONEY He has stopped practicing law and is piling up business money for himself and others. With his brother, Henry, he is an impresario wafting a wand over one of the most unusual collections of industrial and service enterprises in the United States. It all began with .Ohickens Sround Jupe of 1967 -7. nearly a[ year after his 1966 loss to Ellington. ... ★ - it h Hooker telephoned Minnie Pearl, popular and charming Tennessee country singer, and asked: “Minnie, how would you like to go into the chicken busk ness?” 7 ;: ' , X ■ .■ That was the start for the Minnie Pearl Chicken Systems, a sky-rocketing chain of 1,700 franchised, fast-food outlets (150 built) across the country and in-some foreign places. What began for $650,-000 has zoomed into a $110 million endeavor. '. g i a HUGE GROWTH He tod her he had been looking at figures showing huge growth for the Kentucky fried chicken firm, and did not see Why they — using Her name for a catch — could not & ness axperi^.” That hurt" “got *a piece of the hetion ” ' i > . WONDERING (Copyright, 1M», FuMItharrtMl SyndKato) REPLY , A spokesman from the Health'Department says there are no state or local laws governing the water temperature in public laundromats. Jazz Events Offer P Presidents Johnson and Nixon have endeavored, through peace negotiations at Paris, to achieve a settlement with North Vietnam. But the recent 10-point proposal made by the National Liberation Front, which Is the political arm of the Vietcong in South Vietnam, shows clearly that there is not the slightest intention of making a peace treaty, and that toe most that would be accomplished would—bawl be an armistice, such as take place prevails in Korea. By DICK SAUNDERS Vacationers, A m e r i cans isn’t only Gettysburg, Penn.; Boston*, Mass.; Vicksburg, Miss.; or Williamsburg, Va. History can also be found in American jazz music. Tfhia weekend, a Coon-Sanders Night- The 10-point proposal, fpr instance, demands that the United States and its allies withdraw “all troops, military personnel,. arms and War, material without posing-, any condition whatsoever1.” / Verbal Orchids Mr. arid Mrs. Elias Hiades of 76 S. Genesee; 52nd wedding anniversary, MT. '"irid1 Mrs. 'itoy School ? * of Rochester; „ 3 golden wedding anriivahiiry .' * AlissIlMifc m NO SIGN V Although the do/Qiimeat includes a plan fpr elections and a “provisional coalition government,” there is no sign that any supervisory authority would be permitted to assure that any agreement reached would be carrjed out in good-“faith by the Communists. The only sentence in the 19: , point1 proposal dealing with international participation to a settlement is the following: /“The parties shall reach agteentort on* a0 international supervision abput toe withdrawal from SouflPrfcb in Charleston, W. Va. It will feature jazz SAUNDERS bands tomorrow night, a “tea-dance” Saturday afternoon with soma good folk jazz and more jazz bands at a Saturday night finale. It’s about an eight-hour drive from Pontiac. The, festival gets its name from ft great semihot band of the 1920’s led by Carleton fjooh and Joe Sanders. Jazzfest ’88 in New Orleans, La., is slated for June 1-7, with Monday night off./1 * ■ ft •* The lineup this year includes Sarah Vaughn, the Onward Brass Band,, Clark Trirry, Pete Fountain, Zoot Sims, Dizzy . Gillespie, Jim Robinson, Gerry Mulligan,* Eddie MUto*, Willie “The Lion” Smith, Armand Hug, Count Basie, Tony Parana, Zutty Singleton, Bob Green, arid Roy Eldridge. r- You/will find more detailed coverage of Jazzfest ’69 in The Press special travel and vacation section to be published a week from Saturday. Closer to home, Oakland University will sponsor a jazz concert Friday, June 13, featuring a traditional jazz band from Preservation Hall in New Orleans, with RilU* and Dede Pierce and Jim Robinson, among others. This group made a lot of converts to toe jazz enthusiast ranks with their appearance last year. , * f /'t, . it 4, ■ The- annual St. Louis Ragtime Festival June 20-21 is becoming the greatest display of musical Americana in tie Midwest. It’s' only about 10 hoqn from Pontiac via car and accommodations are numerous. . ') the Ragtime Festival this year will feature some great “local” talent. A fine traditional jazz - band —n The Mother’s Boys; — will be a feature of toe festival. Their members include friustetens from the Oakland County area and their featured vocalist is Krityy Price, who touches vocal music at East ffills Junior Righto the Bloomfield Hills School District. Also featured will bri Mike Montgomery, a fine ragtime pianist from Detroit. . Other ' bends ^ fridude, the Salty Dogs from Chicago, too St. Louis Ragtimers and Singleton Palmer’s Jazz Band, .both from St. Louis; and toe Red Onion Jazz Band from New York. Legendary ragtime pianist, Euble Blake will be thnre along with Bob Wright from Chicago, Trebor Tichenor from St. Louis and Knocky Parker. If toe names are foreign to you, don’t hesitate, They are all ambassadors—of . music Americana. ★ ★ ★ And don’t worry about the kids. They'll love it. The whole thing takes place on the Goldenrod Showboat, a legendary Mississippi paddlewheeler modred in toe shadow of toe St. Louis Arch near Meade’s Bridge. Kids are admitted. They can sit and sip pop while you nurse your bear. The muddy Mississippi Is never happier than that weekend of Mississippi River Valley ragtime to mid-June. Hi* AtMciotftsf PriU !• iz$lwlvtiy to Hi* me for, ity|toiWi-, cation of all, local n*w« pwintod in •file nowpnpoi •• null « till AP new tiiepotekos. . TH* Aonti*c ■ Prow la (tillwmf by «,corri*r f*r 60c o w**fc; wtioro r ■ . Mfingaivn, Macomb, LapCDr and WotManow CaaaWaD » U $24.00 a war, «(•*■ . wham In Michigan and criladiarpIncM In Ihn llnilad Slot.. $3&0O a yW. AH mnll cclntilallanl payObla In od vnnen. talngn hoc baan gMdaMln 2nd elmi rntn at Pentlnc, Michigan. . Member d i»C t m 31mJW L SiVl1 THE PONTIAC PHESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 A—9 Rail Veteran Saves Train From Burning Ammo-Laden Boxcar PALMDALE, Calif. (AP) -Charles M. Hastings edged toward a boxcar of exploding am-, munition and Uncoupled other munitions-laden cars so they could be pulled away by locomotives. p ’ •k k * “I didn't have any time to be afrAid,” said Hastings, 47, a veteran Southern Pacific road fore- man who acted Wednesday night after the freight car car-tying 61 tony of ammunition caught fire and 40 mm shells began blasting off at one-second intervals. \ ★ ★ k \ As the explosions held\ire of Rocky Killed TEGUCIGALPA, Honduras (AP) — Anti-U.S. students holed up in the University of . Honduras Wednesday night after one of their number was killed during a demonstration against New York Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller’s visit. Rockefeller, who left the United States Sunday on the first of four tours south of the border as a special envoy of President Nixon, arrived in Honduras late Tuesday. He conferred Wednesday with President Oswaldo Lopez Arellano, his first encounter on the trip with a Latin-Amerl-can dictator. k k k While the two men were meeting in the presidential palace, about 500 students gathered in a park two blocks away fend began shouting, “Rockefeller, go home!’’ They said his purpose was to “secure the exploitation of our people by the Yankees.” Wielding clubs, police charged the students. Then shots were fired, and a 10-year-old student was hit twice in the head. He was taken to a hospital, where a nurse identified him as Carlos V. Zuniga and said he died from his wounds. k k k An American student from California, Lee Mercer, 22, said he was sitting in the park playing his guitar when the melee broke out. He said that as he watched the demonstration^ a policeman hit him in the stomach with a rifle butt. Dulles'Widow Dies After Brief Illness WASHINGTON (AP) - Mrs. JOhn Foster Dulles, widow of Eisenhower-era Secretary of State John Foster Dulles, died here Wednesday after a brief illness.- Mrs. Dulles was 77. She was taken to Washington Hospital Center Sunday. Three days earlier Mrs. Dulles had attended a dinner honoring two associates of her late husbandi, retired admirals Arleigh Burke and Arthur Radford. ★ ' k k Since her husband died in 1959 Mrs. Dulles had continued to live in the home they purchased after he became secretary of state to President Dwight D. Eisenhower in 1953. SERVES ON BOARDS Dulles died of cancer less than two months after resigning in 1959. Mrs. Dulles often accompanied her husband on foreign missions. The Paris-educated | Mrs. Dulles was fluent in French and Spanish. Mrs. Dulles had served on the Boards of the National Republi- can Women’s Club, the National Society of Colonial Dames and the Bellevue Hospital Nurses Training School in New York. k k k During World War n she piut in long, strenuous hours at Bellevue manning the volunteer nurses’ office and telephone op-erator post. She is survived by three children, John Watson Foster Dulles of Austin, Tex., Mrs. Robert Hinshaw of New York, and the Rev. Avery Dulles, S.J., of Woodstock, Md., and a sister, Mrs. Kenneth M. Seggerman of New York. WitnesS'Chair Is Hemmed In KNOXVILLE, Tenn. (AP) -Judge Joe D. Duncan suggested to the Knox-County Commission and the County Court Finance Committee Wednesday that a box be built around the witness chair in his Knox County Criminal Court. ★ * ★ ■ , Duncan said it wOuld help witnesses feel more relaxed. Also, he said, some jurors an embarrassed by the appearanoh of some witnesses in miniskirts. fighters and military ordnance experts a mile away, Hastings drove his truck to the train which was on a siding. • k k k He Uncoupled bofh ends of the 90-car train to within eight cars of the blazing boxcar so crews with locomotives ,could pull the sections from the scene, u ' -BOXCAR ON FIRE Hastings said “I knew when I’d gotten close enough-” k k k Only the one boxcar caught fire, although those on each side were loaded with liquid sulfur and flammable liquid propane. The fire burned Itself out in four hours, but the steel boxcar still smoldered into the morning, with exploded and live shells strewn over about an acre of the rocky, desert land In the Antelope Valley 40 miles north | Officials said the fire appar-of Los Angeles. ently started in an overheated * * - jaxle. “We know it started under “You could hear whistles like the car,’’ said Hastings, shrapnel flying through the air,” said Sheriff’s Deputy Dan Berrier. “You could hear shells Firemen ordered occupants in exploding all Ovef.” 20 homes within two miles of the ^cene to evacuate when the ex-plosions began. ★ * * The niunitlons cars were en route from the Red River Army Depot at Defense, Tex., to Port Chicago, Calif., the military’s shipping point to Vietnam. • ALUMINUM LAWN CHAIR Sturdy aluminum tubing. Folds flat. Two to a < $2 49 ARVIN 4-SP. AUTO. PHONO . Automatic record changer In portable case. #58- P05. *15 97 AM-FM TRANS. PORT. RADIO AM - FM radio. A.F.C. Wrist strap. 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V HP1 ^ •7 r Sk I \i A—10 Jet Travel a Headach at Bedtime By WATSON SIMS NEW YORK UP) - The magic; of the jetliner may have brought any country of the world within an easy day’s journey, but It can push the Land of Nod clear out of sight. On a quick trip around the world, I found only the Indians claimed ability to keep their •leeping clocks in order as time cones change. But their solutions did not work for me. ★ ★ ' ★ I left New York at noon and In six hours arrived in what London clocks said was mid-i night. Suddenly it was' necessary to rise at what my watch said was 1 a m. and re-1 main awake until 5 p.m. ★ ★ ★ Just when I was beginning to get into step with London, another nine hours by jet took! me to Niew Delhi. All progress! made in London was lost. It was impossible to sleep at what! my system said was noon or rise cheerfully at what seemed midnight. ASKING TOO MUCH Ah Indian with whom I had come to discuss business suggested the trouble was that I was asking too much in our negotiations. ★ ★ * “I can SUMMON sleep whenever I wish," the man said, making it sound as if summon was spelled in capita] letters. ★ ★ a. "I can sleep in a car, In an airplane or even standing up ! Anyone who has a clear conscience can SUMMON sleep.” * * ># I summoned sleep that evening with a clear conscience, but it did not come until I met the same man for more negotiations. I then felt drowsy but still out of step. CONDITIONING More advice came from a reporter who also has a reputation as a Hindu philosopher. "It is all a matter of conditioning the mind," he said. * ■+ * . “You lie down, close your eyes, then, limb by limb, order your body to sleep.” ★ ★ ★ The reporter flopped on a! couch and commanded, “Rightl leg, go to sleep!" Similar commands went out to his left leg, waist, stomach,1 shoulders and head. TOTALLY JtELAXJ§D------------“ /Whenjie-i^acfiedhis head, his, ybodyseemed totally relaxed x and he apparently was asleep. I tried this system after dinner, but it worked no better than the summons. My right leg did not sleep until 4 a.m. ★ *■ ♦ Later I was seated for dinner beside Morarji Desai. Desai, at 72, Is much .admired as an ascetic as well as a tough politician. He is India’s deputy prime minister' and'.also!* minister of finance. He was ai sympathetic listener to my! problem. ★ ★ ★ “Well, it doesn’t really matter! whether you sleep or not,”! Desai said. “The important thing is to lie down, close your eyes and don’t BOTHER." ★ ★ ★ He made bothef sound as if it was spelled with capitals. SAME PROBLEM ' I tried this approach. It was easy to lie down and close my eyes, but I bothered until 5 a.m. ■*. + ’* On a flight which in eight hours moved from 2:30 p.m: in; Tokyo to 6:30 tf.m. in San Francisco, I asked the airline! stewardess how she lived with' the problem. * * * “That’s what I’d like to know,” she said wjth a yawn. **I have been on this run for months and I can never get to sleep at the right time.” \-A ' ★ On the flight from San> Francisco to New York, I remembered advice received! years earlier from the late Prime Minister Nehru of India. \ His formula. was simple: six hours of sleep is necessary, H seven hours a luxury, eight hours a vice. * ■ ★ rf |‘w I' Out of the jetliner and back in my own bed, ,1 found the problem solved itself. Without summons, or bother, I more fulfilled Nehru’s prescrip-1 ttah for \j t !v!i H, ;54 • ^,4 Xv. ,5 • j mi -■ frHE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY lfl, 1969_ - Regular 79.99 mink trimmed cashmere coat sale Men’s reg. 5.99 Waldorf brand perm, press casual slacks Layaway special Fortrel® polyester/cotton slacks havo soil-release fin* Ish. Permanently pressed to stay neat. Just wash and drip dry. navar naed ironing. Choose from brass, olivo or black in tixos 30 to 42. Save! Natural mink - trim* mod cashmoro coats for fall 69 . yours at savings nowl Black, brown or bamboo. In* Mated acetate tin* ing. In sixes 8 to 16. Pur products labeled te •how country of origin of Imported furs. JUST SAY CHARGE IT YffflftVtn Wide, white and washable antique satin draperies Children's aspirin }i44Modess napkins Box of 117 48. I I f: 27C Kleenex boutiques m ifhnton J 5 John ion Nubby-textured, pinch-pleated rayon antiquo satin traverse dra-paries In six extra wide sizes to fit most windows. 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The vintage building in its rustic setting on South Kalamazoo Street started welcoming visitors last Saturday to sample the wines and juices produced by the Michigan Wineries Inc. k k k Greeting guests to “Ye Olde Wine Haus” is Bob Harrison, manager, who for many yeara owned and operated the Chevrolet agency in Paw Paw. The waterworks was built under the administration of Mayor John Free in 1872, according to a stone plaque above the main entrance. ABANDONED The village abandoned it as a waterworks in 1947 and used it as a storage building until 1969 when the site was purchased by the Michigan Wineries. The company’s plants stand on a hill behind the new wine cellar. Mellowed by nearly a century of wind and weather, the square brick structure sits in a small dale next to the 1-94 connector road. In front'of the building, the ’ East Branch of the Paw Paw. River courses along its way, and the old iron and concrete footbridge has a new plank floor to lead visitors to the landscaped area in front of the old building. ★ ★ ★ The walks are now paved with red briqk, and evergreens grace an area that once was a service road. Old willows bend over the site, and the ancient chimney still stands at the rear of the building. The flavor of time on the exterior was retained in the interior renovation. Old bam siding and cypress from old wine casks were utilized for the shelving, cabinets and counter in the retail showroom. In the center of the room Is • large wine cask brought to Paw Paw from the Hummel Winery Co. in Sandusky, Ohio. An oU painting on the top of the cask depicts the original 1871 buildings of that winery. The floor has been covered with terra-cotta tile, aged artificially to blend in with the rest of the building. Two paintings, one of an old bam by Michigan artist Sid Seeley, also add to the bouquet of the Interior. kkk Harrison says visitors will be welcomed to tour the winery and new shop. Plans are to offer samples of wine and juice to guests interested in the film’s many varieties. The Wine Haus, initially, will sell only products of Michigan Wineries Inc., but Harrison says that improted varieties may be offered later. Harrison says many of the Paw Paw townspeople have expressed their thanks for preserving and improving the appearance pf the landmark, and others have shown surprise at its new use. k k Harry Bush, director of public works, told Harrison he has had some calls from a m q.s e d citizens asking him to make a * check of the alcoholic content of 11 the village water supply. Rogers' Son Gets Leave to Visit Folks DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS SAIGON (AP) — Ens. Jeffrey L. Rogers had no trouble getting four days shore leave to visit till folks in Saigon. | ~ « “The-Navy was extremely cooperative,” said the 24-year-old officer, who is a navigator on the hospital ship Repose. “A« a matter of fact, they ordered me to take shore leave." k k k ■; Jeffrey met his mother and father at Tan Son Nhut airport when Secretary of State William P. Rogers and his wife arrived Wednesday. Jeffrey has been in the war zone six months, moat of the time off Viemam, add this is his father’s first visit to the Far East since he became secretary of state. The family dined with Ambassador* Ellsworth Bunker Wednesday nigW and had lunch together today after ^President |Nixon’s speech on Vietnam. V “We talkted a little about pollr tics and the war—I was encour-aged by Nixon’s speech-^but mostly we talked about tha family,” said Jeffrey. a X—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1260 Is Probing Milking of Medicaid By JAMES R. POUC [where the money was coming [caid program while paying for WASHINGTON (AP) — Con-from. And the doctors found |50 to 83 per cent of the cost. The gress is probing whether as themselves suddenly getting states decided what care to of-much as $40 million a year is paid for cases that had beenlfer fit the start, how to make being milked from the Medicaidtcharity in the past. \ \ 'payments and how to guard program through abuses by doc- ' “The heavens burst open,” tors, dentists, druggists and [said a mountain doctor who is nursing homes. now one of the highest paid in Senate hearings are planned Kentucky, shortly as a climax to a staff 'MONEY ROLLS IN' investigation of soaring costs, , ... «... , rich fees and possible fraud inL °*ci“ n the $5-billion, 38-state program South s?,d- Il »lik« h,^ "g the of free health care for the poor. \™aTX l°nf With the Wind when it first came.out. All you have to do is sit in the against abuses. ★ * ★ In most cases, the states have given only lip service to watch dog duties. Top federal officials concede that their policing of the hodgepodge of programs has been flimsy—and only now are they asking states to send in full reports on their surveillance • In Baltimore, nine doctors, a dentist, two pharmacists and an accountant have been indicted on charges of conspiring to defraud Maryland’s Medicaid • ★ ★ a Since many states have no real checks on their Mediaaid payments, the states where scandals have emerged may not be the worst. ★ ★ ★ An Associated Pressexamina-J^^^1;^ & methods: tion of Medicaid operations in a t0 rojj in „ * * * run 1 The lack of restraint on how .John £ Venefman- * • In New York, a dentist run- often tlents ^ ^ j^idaweeretary of healtk* mng a second-floor walkup clin- . ^ f * nfl Jtion and welfare- headed state ic in an East Harlem slum got ™ /act the hearings on California’s abuses more than $400,000 m Medicaid ^ J * govern-while sti11 a le8islator *ere last payments over the past two jJJJ "*• ■JJJJJfall He called the $6-million to years. In a court suit, the city L $8 million estimate of losses in has accused him of false billings California a conservative one. and fraud. [ r. . . . „ , It means too frequent medical care that isn’t necessary. Dr. Lowell E. Beilin, executive director of New York City’s Medicaid program, says, “Any- program. The probe was cen- ^y^0 “"imjts fraud has te--------------- tered on a small, cramped drug-1^ stuP,d- sophisti- FOUND THEM store that was the highest paid|cated Person who wants to take: instead, they are simply the in the state last year at nearly .Y, agf. of. thls P™81!am I states that have .foupd them $250,000. Above its door is a milks it through overutilization, |first not fraud. Chief Deputy Atty. Gen NO INTEREST Charles A. O’Brien said, “The Beilin added prosecutors have no interest in cases like the toenail clipper on the nursing home circuit because he wasn’t charging for services he failed to perform. “He. really clipped those nails,” Beilin said. “But he was clipping the city simultaneous- ‘Health Is Our Only Busi- sign: ness.” WWW • In southern California, investigators tell of dentures ordered in nursing homes for dying cancer patients, special shoes for bedridden invalids, and expensive prescription sunglasses for a blind man. • A nursing home near Sacra program is in bloody bad shape all over the country, and na one wants to admit it.” w , w . w O’Brien said if doctors groups and government agencies don’t start pushing to “straighten out this mess, the public outcry is going to be so large that the good is going to go out with the bad.” w * w w tunately,” he added, “in a program like this, an element of greed prevails.” mento, Calif., has been accused jy ■ In suspension proceedinge- of y‘ + # # ^or PadeP^ a^®’ jjj®y Prosecutors have been reluc- ,T . tv .. died In one cast, records ind.-jtant bring cases where Undersecretary Veneman said cate the daily charge was dou- w h * doctor’s |*e dea of ^lcai? .for judgment on heavy medicalthe P°°r has been Sood Unfor-care was wrong. Instead, the fraud prosecutions have been limited almost entirely to pharmacy cases in Maryland, New York and California where prescription records are available as evidence. w w w With few exceptions, the policing of the Medicaid program is done on a catch-as-catch-can ba- • In New York City, health of- S*S- bled shortly after death, w w w • In Kentucky, a tiny pharmacy in a mountain town of fewer than 800 people was paid nearly $330,000 last year for prescriptions under Medicaid. Investigators found medicine still unopened in some Appalachian shacks. One mountain doctor in the $100,000 bracket said his nurse wrote many prescriptions for him. Fund Drive Exec ficials found one foot specialist touring nursing homes and collecting $2,0(16 a month from Medicaid for his services—clipping toenails. SENATE SCRUTINY The soaring price of both Medicaid and Medicare has prompted plans for the Senate Finance Committee to put both programs under the microscope at special hearings this summer when its staff finishes the probe now underway. Medicaid, the federal-state program paying for private medical care for welfare recipients nad other poor patients, was passed almost unnoticed in 1965 as part of the law creating Medicare for tjie elderly. Its costs have run far beyond predictions, climbing at almost a billion dollars a year. WWW Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La., finance committee chairman, charged there has been waste and extravagance in Medicaid. None of the officials interviewed could pinpoint the exact amount because Watchdog efforts by federal agencies have been both blind and toothless. CALIFORNIA LOSSES However, an extensive investigation by the California attor-j ney general’s staff has placed! losses through abuses at $6 mil-! lion to $8 million a year in that state alone—or 1 per cent of'the California program. I The same 1 per cent ratio applied to Medicaid across the nation would mean losses of more than $40 million annually—a figure some observers think may be conservative. w w. w __One congressional investiga- TO EACH HIS OWN The federal government let each state set up its own Medi- ALMA (AP) — Chrysler Carp. President Virgil Boyd has been named head of the Alma College Trustee Associate program, under which alumni are urg&l to j contribute $1,000 or more annually for operations or scholar-! ships. Boyd is a college Trustee. | BAY! 30% TG 50% ON MANSION UZS REMNANTS Sizo Oaseription Comp. SALE 12x9 Martini. Random 132.00. 69.93 12x10-3 Avocado Twitt 168.00 ,109.93 12x12-2 Groan Carvod 192.00 129.95 12x13-2 Yollow Random •139.00 •9.95 12x10-6 Bronx. 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Williams criticized the rising price of the program—now costing 10 times as much as original estimates for Medicaid three ■yearsago. " ■'.//-* New Mexico became the first casualty of the>program this-month, pulling out when i* ran out* of money to meet its share of tne medical bills, w V k v ■ < :: : I . - W / W I Officials agree the costs of Medicaid have skyrocketed since passage because patients could go to the doctor anytime they wanted without worrying Polyerter/wool wortted/rxyon blood: nf bine* brown* black. Sixes 29-38. $12 Full eaf slacks (14-44),., „gjf Men*! Store <#MMl AY y TUB PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 A—18 Veiled Threat Seen Nixon Statement in WASHINGTON (AP) — Presl-|Nixon administration seem lim- ' Hanoi Favors Military End to the War' U.SV Vietcong Peace Plans Compared dent . Nixon * coupled his new fifaL peace proposals with an implied warning that the United States might turd to increased military action If 'North Vietnam rejects his “generous” terms. “No greater mistake could be made man to confuse flexibility with weakness or being, rea$on- New diplomatic initiatives are conceivable, but the White House sources described the Nixon peace package as- “the most conciliatory wecaifthink of.” Since Nixon pledged not to .......... abandon the South Vietnamese M People, he dismissed the possl-bility that the United States might give up the fight entirely. gble with lack of resolution,” Nixon did reject “attempting Nixon laid in his speech to the }0 imP08p a purely military so- nation Wednesday night. jluuon on the battlefield.” * ; * * * | However, such a standstill “I must make clear, in all1leaves T00m for applying mili-candor, that if the needless suf-tary pressures on the enemy fering continues, this will affectI with ..the aim of making Hanoi other decisions.” jmore tractable at the confer- ence table. ‘MOST CONCILIATORY’ WASHINGTON ( A P) - President Nixon’s report to the nation on Vietnam, including'his own formula for reaching peace, came six days after the WASHINGTON (AP) — Some,Vietcong presented a 10-point top U.S. officials believe a thin'Plan for settlement of the war. ' Here is a summary Com- . Point 8 on the Vietcong list was a\ban against military alliances py North or South and would forbid defense treaties, majority of the North Viet-' ............ . parison of the two proposals nameBe leadership favors a bat-, ^ tlefield decisionv rather than aj point negotiated settlement v of the . LEFT UNSAID The President left unsaid what those other decisions' might be. The Nixon administration canimy’s supply Such steps could involve: • A limited resumption of the bombing of North Vietnam, possibly concentrated on the ene- respect be expected to do its utmost to avoid heating up the war. Its mood is for scaling down the through the panhandle. • Resumption of naval shell-,10 fighting—and the casualties—as ing of North Vietnam’s coast Jsa^-soon as possible, and starting to also focusing on- the supply j bring home the 542,500 U.S.Iroutes; interdiction of south-servicemen from Vietnam.. bound ship traffic. Vietnam; war. - f " a Gen. Vo Nguyen Glap, North Vietnam’s defense minister and victor over the French at Dien Bieft Phu, is said to be the leader of a hard-line group that rejects the idea of peace through the Paris talks. Giap thinks the war can be won by Norih Vietnam on the battlefields of South Vietnam, analysts say. This leads some administration defense officials to be pessimistic about the Paris negotiations. The analysts’ opinion that hard-liners are on ton in Hanoi seems to clash with a statement by President Nixon ’during his Vietnam report to the- nation last night. “Reports from Hand indicate that the enemy has given up routes running I hope for a military victory in lightly-populated South Vietnam but is counting | longer engage ;on a collapse of American will. operations. "decide themselves the political regime of South Vietnam through free and' democratic general elections .. .’’ Including n coalition government. Nixonjbases or trdqps on their soil, said: ‘We are prepared to ac- Nixon’s statement: “We seek no cept any government in South| bases in Vietnam. We seek no Vietnam that results from the military ties” free choice of the South Viet- The ninth Vietcohg proposal * t namese people.” [suggested negotiations for 1 of the Vietcong asked | The fifth point of the Vietcong release of military map captor rights o f in- says political forces represent-ity tog alj social strata and ever; asjshade of political tendency ii South Vietnam would set up an interipi government. Nixon said: “We believe there should be an opportunity for full participation in the political life of South Vietnam by all political elements that are prepared to do so without the use of force or I intimidation." dependence, sovereignty, unit; and ' territorial integrity recognized by the 19p4 Geneva agreements on Vietnam. Nixon said a peace agreement would have all parties agree to observe those accords. Point 2 called for unconditional withdrawal of American troops and bases from South Vietnam. Nixon simultaneous tured in the war and said the United States .“must bear\full responsibility for tire losses (fad deVastations it has causi Nixon said arrangements for prisoner release would be made at the earliest possible time, and noted the United States has been generous to those it has fought. ★ it it The 10th point _ . 1 „ .. 'supervision by agreement of withdrawal hv hnth ciriaa with u 00 ^ietcon8 '^withdrawal from Vietnam of , . Hisantfnffantpnt frnm|W<*Uwi J18'’6 u^1* country tr0ops and* war supplies of the tn^i2 establish a policy of peace and usPand its allies%ixon said y i"!mrali*ty- Nixo"said:‘We are;an international supervisory ■fS. ^ w :.A v. . NWtagto agree o neutrality for body acceptabIe to b0$h wouW In their third point, the Viet-i South Vietnam if that is what!verjfy withdrawals which he cong said it is the right of the South Vietnamese people insisted wouid involve North freely choose . . . ’ | Vietnam as well as the U.S. The Vietcong’s seventh point was a call for reunification of North and South Vietnam;-Nix-would then no^n said, “We have no objection in c o m b a t to reunification, if that turns out to be what the people of North Vietnamese people to continue to fight if they choose for their fatherland. In proposing the 12-month pullout Nixon s a 1 d foreign troops United States,” Nixon j > Point 4 of the Vietcong said j Vietnam and the people I South Vietnamese people would South Vietnam want.” of NEWSPAPERS 50c per 100 tbi. delivered Royal Oak Wista Paper ft Metal Co. .414 I. Hudion, Royal Oak LI 1-4M0 ★ ★ ★ But White House sources left open the possibility of some step-up in the War, saying they dfdn’t want to speculate on what might happen Apart from possible military moves, the options open to the * ★ ★ • Authorization for U. S. commanders to mount major ground operations into file Laotian panhandle and/or Cambodia to try and cut off infiltration along file trails and roads, and to destroy enemy bases. YOU’LL LIKE OUR LOW PRICES! ■, I >„V'' / n «is// < ■ :V: i1 :1. r '■ f \ ' GOLF SALE Your Choice Medium High Compression with white covering —’ good distance! Doug Ford 90+ Balls are tournament quality* For hard hitters! Doug Ford 80x. Balls of medium nigh compression for easy hitters. Shirley Englehom Proette Golf Clubs Save 18fo 26fo Set of 5 Irons, Reg. 868 Numbers 3,- 5, 7,9 and Putter. Proportioned sizes. 49.97 Set of 8 Irons, Reg. 8108 Numbers 2 through 9. Chrome plated heads, shafts.' Proportioned Sizes..... 79.97 Set of 3 Woods, Reg. 853 Numbers 1, 3 and 5. Selected |ier.-iiiiiuon, plus ■ 3 colors.’Proportioned sizes.' */ : 44.97 Grip Saver Golf Bag Rag. $30 Grip-Saver does just that yvith 14 - molded ttibes . . . built-irt. Quality' leather hag has roomy' clothing pocket and accessory pocket. Keystone Style Golf Bag Reg. 12.99 10 9 Econohiv priced bag has 2 dividers, durable Cycolac® plastic bottom. Holds 14 clubs. Ball pocket, glbve pouch, /slit .clothes pocket. Doug Ford Steel-Shuft Clubs 8 Irons — Numbers 2 thru 9 -Chrome plate heads. Reg. $108.79.97 3 Woods —Numbers 1,2,3 Phenolile face inser,t. Reg. $55....44.97 4 Woods — Numbers 1, 3, 4, 5 I.e» turf resist. Reg. $73,\ 59.97 Matched Golf Sets for Men and Women IDEAL FOR THE AVERAGE OR BE6INNING GOLFER Reg. 42.99 X Aluminum Golf CaW Reg. 16.99 Large 12" wheels .for; easy rolling. Rugged, yet- looks .sharp. Push button handle release. . Auto-foldihg . . . rolls . when folded.,' ■ 1.. SPORTS CENTER Set includes steel shaft clubs With rubber grips— number*®, 5,7 and 9 irons; putter; numbers 1' and 3 woods — handsome,drugged vinyl bag, stretch-glove, 3 balls and 10 Arnold Palmer Golf Cart -- tees. Choose men’s right-hand or left hand or women's right band set, y Your Choice Reg.$35 spoke wheels are die cast with double ball .bearings,' “Easy-pull” handle adjusts to 21 positions. Rolls when folded. 7 Putter Sale. Reg. $10 797 (dtoiweYfrom a' great assortment . . : all 'rWgedlv iWiill. ’ \ wit it eli route steel shafts. \ I Sears S^prttCenler A m m Steel Bing Golf Tube* Reg. 18c ea. I 8 for»l , or 14c each Protect vour golf eliilts . , ‘. keep them neat. pud orderly. ,, -Steel top- rings ii. end enisltiny. Sturdy plastic,7 I Hear*, Roebuck nn the now ideas are downtown Bontiac ^hone FE 5-4171 \ ' A ■i _ m... ...;l m fill lii m 100% ACRILIC EXTRA HEAVY PILE, DISCONTINUED PAT* TERN, ONLY FOUR COLORS. Regular $077 $12.98 NOW *O Y0.vH. i OUTDOOR CARPET WROUOHT IRON, MOSAIO AND IRICK PATTERN, i Regular price, $5.95 per »q. yd. Sale Price $377 A 100% NYLON SHAG BRIGHT ft BEAUTIFUL COLOR SELECTIONS Fre«-in-Hom« $088 Estimates O so. yd. j KITCHKH CARPET IN IUNY BEAUTIFUL COLORS Regular $088 p,r 99.95 ’ft ** Value at A—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1909 WASHINGTON IUPI) Water, the most p l e n’t li u 1 chemical on earth, is probably the most priceless. Without water, there could be no life of any kind. In a sense, toafer is more precious than water is more previbus than tnout it. there factor: An Increasing\ world jfall equally on u men population that will fetal \7| geographical location. While Mil I An kio Aka 4AAA - .laaMa TT C ’11441 a oxygen. For without, it, would be no green plants') and green plants supply the oxygen men breathe. " i »---------★ ★ There are 326 million cubic miles of water on earth — each cubic mile is 1.1 trillion gallons — and it covers 71 per cent of the planet's surface. That’s enough water fe "submerge the United States to a depth of 90 miles. Despite Its abundance and despite man’s appreciation that no nation or no man has prospered without enough of it, water is in trouble. billion by the year 2000. OUTRUNNING SUPPLIES “The problem is not whether water supplies are diminishing. Very, little water is ever lost from the So-called hydrological cycle. \but man has n o t discovered any way to add to it appreciably, either. In that hydrological cycle, there are at all times about 95,000 cubic miles of water moving between earth and sky. Up through evaporation. Back down as hail or rain or sleet or snow. ★ ★ ★ each I are literally “burled treasure’* some U.S. areas get as little as an inch of rain a year, floods from too much precipitation annually drive about 75,000 Americans from their homes. About 70 per cent, of any precipitation returns to the am as vapor, but the United States still has some 1.2 trillion gallons of water a day entering the stream flow from surface and underground sources. ULTIMATE RESOURCE This runoff, along with the huge underground reservoirs known as aquifers, at presertt constitute the nation’s ultimate and estimate they hold 96 per cent Of the fresh water available to the United States at any pne time. ★ ★ ★ Hie United States gets an water resource — for homes, average rainfall,of 30 inches a industry, irrigation, recreation, year — or 4.3 trillion gallons a everything, day. But precipitation does notj Experts say these aquifers At present depletion rates, these* underground reserves — trapped in pockets of sand and gravel over millions of years — hold enough water to last 7,900 years. * 9 Despite this overfall optimistic picture, in some areas — particularly in the semiarid Southwest United States — these aquifers are failing, victim of man’s ability to dig deeper wells and build bigger pumps. gradually sinking as more and more ground water is pumped out, Snd as It sinks, more and more of its submerged water resources are destroyed. 'Man, trying to make morp water available where it is needpd, has begun rudimentary weather control experiments, dug big \ diversionary canals from areas of abundant water to those of little, and started learning how to take the 'salt out of the seawater. VALLEY SINKING The central valley o f California, ' for example, is But hydrologist Nace warns that “the history of human effort to control nature is a history of continually .having to combat unwanted consequences of these efforts.” Still, man has begun to understand what he is doing to his environment, and has begun to try to correct some of bis mistakes. S o m e pbssimisti argue it may be too late. But Rep. Jim Wright, D-Tex., in “The Coming Water1 Famine,” \tells why ,it i s necessary to try. however late} to pave our Water. ''Since time began,” Wright wrote.' f'water and life have been synonymous. Water is the cheapest, yet the most priceless of ail commodities. ★ ♦ ■ “Since the dawn of history, it has given respite to the traveler, solace to the sick, succor to the land, reflection to the philosopher — and, to the earth itself, a never-ending renewal. No life can exist without it.” WEAR 'WWONN'S WHERE THE ACTION IS DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Golfer SWEATERS Alpacas, Mohairs 298 * 1498 ALL WEATHER Jackets and fi(ats - PERMA PRESS SHIRTS, KNITS 295 And Up* CASUAL or DRESS FORMAL RENTAL - REASONABLE PRICES CONN'S Man's and Boys'Waar 73 N. Saginaw, Downtown Pontkic CHARACTERISTIC Its plight is characteristic of what man, in his ever increasing numbers and ever more powerful tools, is doing to his environment. Man is despoiling his water. Polluting it with raw sewage,, crankcase oil, chemicals, DDT and other pesticides, silt, even hot water. Where it’s abundant, he’s wasting it and has nbw begun to destroy reserves nature took millions of years to deposit. ♦ ★ ★ While man has been doing all this, his demands for clean, fresh water have been increasing. Usage grew from 3 to 5 gallons a day in Medieval times to 95 gallons in Western nations of the 19th century. Modern society requires even more. In the United States, per capita use of water — for all purposes including industrial and agricultural — is now about 1,600 gallons a day. Although there is lots of water on earth, most of it is salty ocean water. Some 317 million cubic miles of those 326 million cubic miles of water that earth has are in the seas, filled with enough salt to cover all land to a depth of 500 feet. TROZEN ASSETS’ The largest part of the remaining water, about 7.9 million cubic miles, is tied up as “frozen assets’’ in glaciers and the polar icecaps. That means there is a lot less water available to man for most of his needs, cooking, drinking, bathing. Pollution. Waste, Increasing per capita use. Dr. Raymond L. Nace, research hydrologist of the U.S. Geological Survey, adds another ^T>TH°CM"*MICHIGAN—In tha Probata Court far tho County of Oakland, Juvanlla u!*tha' matter of tha petition concerning Harold E. Henkel Jr., minor TO: Harold Henkel, father of eald ^Pefltlon11 having been tiled In this Court alleging that said child comes within the provisions of Chapter 712A of .the 1Compiled Laws of 1948 as amended. In that the present whereabouts of the father of said minor child Is unknown and said " ctiTra hM vlulaled a taw^ofJhOjate. «"d Ak.e ..ia P.KIM thniilH hs nlaCiflljfiOfr Cntlo nas vioTgrwq-»-iaw m sjj that taid child should bo placed^ffidwr the- lurlsdlctlon of this Court. , ln*the Name of tha People of the State m ine name vi mi- < of Michigan, you ara hereby notified that the hearing on-said petition will be held at tha Court House, Oakland County i Service Center, In the City of Pontiac In aald County, on the 23rd day of May A,D. 1989 at nine o'clock In the forenoon, and ITUT 91 IlfilW v www* ■■■ ____i you art hereby commanded to appear personally at aald haarlng, at which tlma temporary or permanent severe nee of all -- »-1 alaMa urlll h* Mfltlfl parental rights will be considered. urmiui riymw wim ww vuii«™««.______ It being Impractical to make per tonal service hereof, this summons and notice ■non urn mm »— -- - one week previous to said hearing ... . — Pontiac Press, a newspaper printed end circulated In said County. . Witness, the Honorable Norman R. Barnard, Judge of said Court, In the City of Pontiac In said County, this 13th day Ot May A.D. 1989. NORMAN R. BARNARD, (Seel) • true copy Judge of Probate HELEN L. HAMILTON, Deputy Probate Register, Juvenile Division May 15, 1989 NOTICE OP PUBLIC HEARING Notice It hereby given thet. the City Council ot the City of Keego Harbor will hold a Public Hearing on May 20, 1989 at 7:30 gun. at tha City Hall, 2025 Baachmont, Keego Harbor, Michigan for the purpose of reviewing the proposed the purpose or reviewing tne proposeo 1989-70 Budget In accordance with Section 1M of the City Charter. SJ I A copy of the proposed budget It on file and avallabla for public Inspection at the office of tha City Clark, 2025 Batch. mont from 9:00 a.m. to J:00 p.m. Monday through Friday for. a period of not less than one week prior to said heerlng. All Interested parties will be heard. JOSEPHINE A. WARD City Clerk; „ Keego Harbor, Michigan May 13, 15, 1989 _ ADVERTISEMENT FOR BIDS Sealed propose is will be received - by, the Oakland County Board of Auditors tor the construction of approximately 6900 square yards of modified bituminous aggregate surface parking lots and roads j to be located on the County Service. Center, Pontiac, Michigan. • Plans and Specifications will be avall- i I n bo able at the oftjee of the Oakland County Facilities Engineering Division, 1200 Telegraph Road, Pontiac, Michigan, and attar May S, 1989. A deposit check , ki ‘ in tha amount of 010.00, made payeble to the Oakland County Board of Auditors, grill be required for each act of Plont and Opacifications desired. Tha depoelt will pa raturnad upon return of the Plans i and Specifications, In good condition, within fan (10) days of notification contract award. Proposale shall bo submitted on forme , provided by the Owher. A bid bond or certified check In the amount of at least I per cent of the bid shall accompany each'-croposal. Checks shall be made, payable (o the Oaklend»Counm Board of Auditors: i I ... The accepted bidder shall be required to furnish a satisfactory Performance Bond and Labor and Material Bond, each recti' The dost of .the.bonds will fetpaW hy the 8cc«S»d bidder. ' j ’*'5, «\ The Oakland County Board of Auditors 1 .wilt receive ths seated bids until 2:00 P.M., B-S.T., Thursday, May 22, 1989 et; Wit offices of ttw Oskland Coonty FacllL ; ties Engineering Division, 1200 N. Tele- j Keph Road, Pontiac, .Michigan, at which j W tha bldo Ohail ha publicly and raad. • CARPET AND APPLIAN /heavy " % by DuPONT 1 SALE PRICED Regular $877 $9.95 y 100% NYLON CARPET | Hi-Low Pattern CHOICE OF TWEEDS OR SOLIDS BIG *377 ‘*yd Sale NEW LOW PRICES Will Save You Money CHECK THESE BIG SAVINGS! GENERAL ELECTRIC FOOD FREEZERS LET YOU---- SAVE ON FOOD COST AND FRAYER’S LETS YOU SAVE ON FREEZER GOST! GENERAL ELECTRIC 40” AUTOMATIC RANGE SELF OVEN Automatic Ovan Timer • 2 Convenient Outlets 1 Timed and Much, Much More ** 295 sq. In. Color TV $398.00 Built-in ovens, hoods, surface unitoy now at builder prices Console stereo-Contemporary stylingy S speakorsy $285.00 v* Stereo Portable taps recorders prices start at only $129.00 Rugged solid state portable radios. Now oftly $9.95 i* 125 sq. in. Portable television. While they last, $99.98 , . Automatically Dlls your glass with ice or chilled water at a touchy 21.1(0. ft No Frost ReMoetilor with new Custom Dispenser —wHhoal agatag fha daoal - • SbMbpgido oonwofaneg— laaa than 89* grid* • Freezer holds 295 Dml, has AntanstSs Icemakar • Tempered glam .helves, Convartibla 7-Day Mast Keeper, Adjustable door shelves • Rolls out on wheels tor easy cleaning! • GE cpton or white ALL FURNITURE MUST GO DURING THESE FINAL WEEKS BEAUTIFUL 2-Pc. LIVING ROOM SUITES I Sale Price WALNUT FINISH 4-Piece BEDROOM 5 Only 5-Pc. WALNUT DINETTES Solid Top Hurry! Large Selection LIVING ROOM SUITES (BD C8ESTS Mar-Proof * WALNUT FINISH SALE PRICE Buy Now! AU PICTURES Reduced Again! HURRY! I \ MONEY DOWN KClS* If? '4HHH 1108 W. HUROH TIL 9:00- SATURI ’.vt,v- v'. •' ''-'f' ai < ■' THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 A—15 OPEN PAILY10-10/SUN. 11 -6 THURS., FRI., SAT., SUN. SAVE ON ALL BUILDING MATERIALS AT Kmart! RUSTIC RAIL FENCING SET _ Kmart MLVT Discount Price Sturdy white cedar. Pleasingly simple; features 2 extra heavy 1 drilled JnnMf 7" Jiamnn1 H 6' HI. STOCKADE FENCING i r7 full round 10' long rails, 1 drilled post, durable 2" diameter If tenons for strength and long life. Come see, come save! |jj 6’ 10” Rails.m• • •••■■■••■■••■■•a 1.97 § 1 Hols Post2.33 s 3 Holo Post • f iti«iiii11• •• it11■ • imh2.57 p 2 Rail CateS’6” ■ * ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ ■ 11.53 1 3 Rail W&MP MiiiniiMMiif him 14.77 Charge It at Kmart Beauty and privacy! Edged for uniformity and- fit. Sections areS 7-ft. long, 6-fc. high. Pickets are peeled to highlight the **Ticb wood grain. Nailed to 3 back rails. Easy to put up. Savings pricejjrf 9’ Post ■ i ■ ■.. ■ m ■ ■ ■. i. i .i i ■, 3.17 $:• Gate ............................. 17.77 I CEDAR PICKET FENCING •V93 Shop and Save at Kmart Rustic fencing in 7*ft. sections provides 'openness' with pro tection. Extremely sturdy 3 V^-ftr. high. Pickets can’t come loose, are uniform edged,4ialf*rounded. 4 | 6’ Post....................... 1.93 Gate’3’6” .......................12.77 V \ W 4 Days Only NEW LOW PRICE ON WOOD-FRAMED SCREEN DOOR 2'8"x6'8" Size or 2'6"x6'8"Size I067 Charge It Ideal for home or cottage. Take, advantage of this low price! Replace worn-out screen doors now. Can be trimmed to fit most doorways.. ALUMINUM SIDING 4-Foot x 7-Foot PRE-FINISHED ALUMINUM SELF-STORING C0MBINA1 Eny-To-Us. xf PLASTIC PANELS CHERRYNUT or BUTTERNUT four Choice 1 • 8 i fliHI Jlilp 1 1 i r, 1 IBMpfl I X 1 1 tfj %i’ || T i l 1 ABON DOORS Reg.f24.44 20«6 Charge It! 4-Ft. x 8^Ft. 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BAULCH Associated Press Newsfeatures WASHINGTON — Some people won’t grab a bargain even when it’s almost free. For instance, 38,000 soldiers who are passing up the $10,000 Serviceman’s Group I4fe Insurance that costs only $2 a month, not a very big bite even in a recruit’s pay. It’s not that they’re neglecting to sign up for it, they have to go out of their way to avoid getting the protection. The insurance is automatic unless service-man or woman puts in writ- BAULCH ing he doesn’t want it at all or wants to take $5,000 and pay $1 a month. Of the 38,000 in the Army, 25,000 have said they want no part 'dr tfie Tnsurance. The other 13,000 went for only half of it. ★ ★ ★ Even if a man doesn’t want to make a wife, mother, brother, girlfriend, cousin or charity the beneficiary there are advantages of having it for later protection. There are no exemptions on military hazards such as civilian policies have. And if a man is seriously Injured or contracts a disease in service he can convert to a civilian policy when he gets out without being required to pass a physical exam. Adore ROTC Officers Conscientious Objector The Army has cut some of the red tape for processing applications for men in service seeking conscientious objector status, whether they want to be discharged or get a'noncombat role in the Army. ★ ★ ★ Now such applications will be sent directly to the Pentagon from military posts or division/level. Previously they had to wend their way through the in-between military channels, which often was time-consuming' and frustrating to the applicant. Despite the shakiness of ROTC, at Harvard and Stanford and rumblings at some other universities, more commissioned’ officers will be coming off college campuses (his Spring than in previous yeaty. ^ \ Tne Army alone expects 16,607 graduates to be commissioned 2nd lieutenants compared with 14,176 a year ago and 10,727 in 1967. Counting the Air Iforce and Navy, the colleges and universities are expected to produce 25,0000 officers this-yeanreofnpared with 18,000 last year. ★ ★ ★ As I noted in a recent column on ROTC, the Air Force has a waiting list of 100 colleges wanting ROTC but it has all the units it needs now. In fact, it plans to end ROTC units at eight schools over the next three years because they aren’t producing enough officers. It’s not linked directly to the protests against ROTC. Next school year, the Army is aiming to stCp up its ROTC pilot training program to meet the growing need for Regular Army aviators. There are 980 students enrolled this school year and the Army expects 1,500 to participate next school year. Recently, I noted that the Air Force plans to experiment next fall with women in ROTC at four colleges. But in a way ieight Temple University coeds have stolen a march. The eight can’t qualify for commissions but they were permitted to march with the men this year shouldering Ml rifles and going to class with the male cadets. Why did they ask permission to do this? ★ ★ ★ Linda Comalli, 19, of Jenkinstown, Pa., “had'ho reason for joining. I guess I thought it would be fun being with a lot of men.” Revenue Ruling Christmas Is Coming The Red Cross notes that even though Christmas is still more than 200 days away, Its volunteers are gearing up for the fourth straight year to get “Operation Shop Early" rolling. The early start is necessary to get the packages to Vietnam in time. community service organizations, religious groups, business firms and local industries to help make the brightly-colored, drawstring gift hags and to provide gifts to fill them. ★ 1 ★ ★ The Red Cross has sent to each of its chapters suggested gift lists, separate ones for men and women. The lists are just about the same as last year jk-The bags will be sewn during the spring and summer while the gifts are collected. The bags will be filled in late summer ready for shipment by Sept. 30. Many firms pay the difference between what a reservist or National Guard gets for two weeks active duty and his civilian pay. But apparently there are some firms that also pay their executives while they are oh up to two years active duty. » The Internal Revenue Service recently reminded these executives that such fringe pay is subject to income tax even if their -it-to-the-exe gift. And the firms have to report the payments if they total more than $600 a year. I Military Hospital Jam Happy Sailors The Navy is managing to assign more enlisted men to shore billets of their choice, a recent survey shows. A Bureau of Naval Personnel report shows that in the six months ending in February at least half got their first-choice U.S. shore assignment. And 38 to 46 per cent got their first-choice city. ★ Sr ★ Jim Parker, the Navy Times expert on this, aays this is because of more personalized attention to requests under the rating control system introduced a couple of years ago. Also, he says, sailors are being made more aware of what openings are available so they won’t try for dead ends. The military hospitals, at least many of them, are having to cut back some of the services offered retired people and dependents of active duty people because of the job of taking care of men wounded or getting diseases in Vietnam. It’s not a bed shortage. There just aren’t enough medical people to handle the increasing load. ★ . ★ ★ But the Army surgeon general says maternity benefits probably won’t be affected. It will vary from hospitalto hospital, but surgical and orthopedic treatment probably will” be the main service confined $6 active duty personnel. Air Force Times noted recently that one of the big problems is the increasing number of retirees and dependents seeking hospital treatment, not only in Air Force hospitals but in all — since retirees can go to a military hospital of any service. . ★ ★ ★ • In the past five years, hospital admissions of Air Forces retirees and their dependents have risen 40 per cent. And the boom continues. ■ FAR AH .FaraPress* Enjoy your leisure time in bold, fashion-accenting White slacks by Farah. They're so great, we think you'll wear them every chance you get. MoMck UBiAB mi $J0oo i ’ is s .V" Si BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MIL \ Richie Sez.. "Shop Richardson's for real SAVINGS on all your DAIRY NEEDS" MILK The Vitality HEALTH FOOD, Drink Plenty for LASTING ENERGY GRADE “A” HOMOGENIZED MILK Vx Gal. Ctn. or Glass GRADE “A” HOMOGENIZED MILK Plastic Jug 0W FAT MILK- SKIM MILK Va-Gal makes energy FOR BREAKFAST, VSERvr Makes Good Coffee Better! 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Sylvan Lake 4100 Baldwin Ave., Pontiac 1109 Joslyrr Ave., Pontiac 954 Pontiac Trail Walled Lake 600 South Lapeer Rd. Lake Orion 11 X | % - r T^EE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY U, 1969 A—It Prime Suspect in King Slaying Hoax Denies Broadcast MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -the prime suspect in a hoax radio broadcast that misled police the night Martin Luther King Jr. was murdered denies he made the broadcast. "I never did it," he said in an exclusive Interview. ' "I can prove it." k if k If he can, authorities will have another riddle to untangle before they can say, beyond a reasonable doubt that the broadcast Was a hoax and that killer James Earl Ray was in no way connected with It. Ray is serving 99 years. His motion for a new trial will be heard May 26. So far as is known, he has never made any comment about the broadcast. OCCUPIED POLICE The spurious call—giving a frantic description of a white Mustang making a high-speed getaway—began about 35 minutes after Dr. King was shot April 4, 1968. It occupied the attention of at least three police squads, turning them toward an area five to six miles east of the shortest, quickest route out of Memphis—the route Ray actually took in a 1966 white Mustang. The suspect now is a college freshman at a school far from his Memphis home. He has been questioned by Memphis police and the FBI. Bat the Federal Communications Commission to the surprise of at least one FCC commissioner—never has made any inquiry. ■ ★★ No charges have been placed against the student. Confronted in foe dormitory of his school, he at first refused to discuss police interest in him. He agreed only after, an exchange of several long-distance telephone calls to his family and a lawyer. He agreed to talk with foe understanding he would not be identified. "I’m very upset about this," he said, nervously shifting about as he spoke. "I don’t like foe FBI or anybody else thinking I had anything to do with this. 1 don’t Uke your1 coming affor "Why have police concentrated on you^" he was diked. \V ★ k it “I don’t know Why, There art other ham radio operators in my area. I don’t know why they came to me. I haven’t been Able to put this out of my mind for $ year," he said. Authorities were able to get • due as to foe probable location of foe transmitter because of details provided by'two junto sources: a 25-year-old steam fitter who was receiving foe broadcast in his red Malibu convertible and a TV-repairman who is a ham operator. CONFLICT IN REPORTS There is some conflict in their reports. The steam fitter, in his version, said: ‘‘I had my two-way citizen’s band radio on. This is a short distance, low-power radio communication. I was monitoring Channel 15. I’m sure I was receiving from a mobile unit because of foe way the strength of foe signal changed." ★ ft it The TV man, whose sobriquet on foe air is "Lily White,” said foe messages came from a fixed base station, and added: “I monitored that from foe beginning to foe sign off. There is more to it, but I won’t tell the full story until foe U.S. Supreme Court has James Earl Ray firmly under lock and key. There is something Unknown, and I’m worried about foe uftknown." He refused to say any more. ★ fir, W Any citizen, 18‘ or older, can get a citizen’s band license by filing an application and paying any need to since no one had any reason to doubt it was val- JAMES EARL RAY foe fee. Amateur, or ham, radio operators must pass examinations in Morse Code, electronics and FCC regulations. it it it Although foe student is frightened and worried, he apparently knows radio communication and the problem of anyone now trying to prove when the fake broadcast began. Location of a transmitter can be determined when there is a signal on which two receivers can make a fix. But foe false broadcast lasted only 12 minutes, , and no opportunity existed at the time t o rtiake such a fix, nor was there I’T was at home that night," foe student said. “I was nqver at my rig, which is down in foe basement. "I was working on a term paper about- 6:30 p.m., give or take 10 minutes, a friend called and said King „$as shot and all hell would break loose. I agreed. I went back to my term paper. I never got on the air at all.” The student’s home is located in foe general area described as foe scene of foe high-speed chase. He said he knows two respected, substantial citizens of Memphis who could testify it wasn’t his voice. ★ * ★ "These two men heard it all, from beginning to end, and they know my rig and my voice. They could testify it wasn’t me. I have never given their names to anyone, not the Memphis , police or foe FBI.” The Associated Press has a slight clue as to their identity but has been unable to locate foe men. CRUCIAL TIME The misleading broadcast began at 6:35 p.m. — about foe time the student said he took a break from his studies. This was a crucial time during which King’s killer made good his es- cape. The easiest way out of foe state was to head for Interstate 85 and either go across foe Memphis - Arkansas Bridge, to Arkansas or go south into Mis slssippi, trips* requiring from 10 to 19 minutes. Ray, it is now known, went to Mississippi The false broadcast was picked up by foe steam fitter, who asked that his name not be published. He has been questioned by police and the FBI *T was eastbound on Jackson The steam fitter foen saw a police car stopped at a traffic light. it it I pulled ui> alongside and hollered, T have a man on foe radio who says he’s chasing foe white Mustang wifo the man who shot King.’ The cop looked at me funny, and the patrolman who was riding shotgun got out and got in with me. We pulled into a parking lot and I turned hoax, agreed that such a hoax would be a violation but said that in this instance it was decided that the incident already was being investigated \by the FBI and local police and there Avenue to my convertible. The top was down. I was alone. It had been about 15 minutes since the radio report that King was shot, and about three or four minutes later there was foe re- up the volume so that the other officer could hear it." The officer, Lt. R. W. Bradshaw, in police car 160, relayed foe informatin coming over foe citizen’s band radio to foe police dispatcher. The dispatcher, in port on commercial radio that (urn, broadcast it over foe po- the suspect might be-.in, a white Mustang. I lice network. A recording of this exists. But there is no known recording of the voice of the person making the original broad- “Then, on my citizen unit,-heard someone saying, ’Can someone give me a land line tojeast. foe police department?’ That’s GUNFIRE DESCRIBED our jargon for a telephone call. A, ^ ,X ^ ca„. „ ‘CHASING MUSTANG’ |and 42, were put into action in a "A base station answered and;hunt for the phantom Mustang said he’d be glad'fo put in a call At one point, the mysterious for the police and\asked: What broadcast also described gun- was the message? \ “The answer was, T am chasing the white Mustang, with the man in it that shot King.’ Then there was some interference and foe base station asked for a repeat and got one:three or tour times but couldn’t read it\l could. I have fine copy all foe way." fire coming from a blue Pontiac whose occupants reportedly were firing at the Mustang. But no one, that night or since, has come forth with any evidence of any real vehicles being at those places. It was a sham, all the way. The FCC, asked to explain its 'failure to investigate the alleged was no necessity for it to become involved. However, one commissioner said that while h« would not initiate an inquiry, he certainly would support a call for one. W# For Your Enjoyment: 'Vacatto/r -UL < at A Family Resort... •.. directly on the ocean • DIRECTLY ON THE OCEAN... 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A lively debate on how to improve teen-age morals sprang up after foe government paper Izvestia reported a court case involving 15-year-old girls’ affairs wifo married mien. A flood of letters from readers suggest^ ways to handle foe problem. . Many urged parents and stale authorities to lie w ' "I would forbid foe showing of all foreign films, as well as some of ours," wrote one reader. He complained about foe recent Soviet movie “Once More About Love,*’ which took a sympathetic Itiok at young people’s problem!- Another reader, apparently an eldArly man, said: "This idiotic fashion of short skirts must be banned. Men cannot travel by streetcar.’’ » One parent caleld for stricter censorship to weed out books about the seamy side of life The writer complained about the novel "What Makes the World Go Round," in which "they glorify a girl born out of wedlock." * —One reader called for reviving such discredited- customs as, beating children with a leather strap or smearing tar on the front gate of a girl’s home as a mark of shame. Children who are whipped "remember this for- a long time," .the reader said. \ At this point a woman writer for Izvestia drew foe line. '< Commenting on foe letters, L Ochakovskaya said beating and other cruel punishments only teach children to be cruel themselves. She called instead for tolerance and understanding of foe new generation. • Cabinet Hardware, Hoods,a y • Sinks and Plumbing Supplier vanities of Fine Un- ‘ d Finished Vanities — Yours at a r Say ngs Now! Choice of Models Hand-Crafted by tl.e Cabinet Makers ” of tk\tt J. 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No trade-in needed. • Extra tough Tufsyn rubber adds strength to the body and miles to the tread • More than 8,000 gripping edges give good traction to start—stop—rain or shine • Modem wrap-around tread provides steering control in the turns SPECIAL OFFER ON BLACKWALL TIRES ONLY! 2nd Tire Price LIQUID PRELL SHAMPOO Reg. 1.11 Be Butterfingers Baby Ruth and CocoanutBars $22.40 BUY TWO AND SAVE-OFFER ENDS SAT. NIGHT! HAVE YOUR NEXT He Reyeals Name and Detects Surprise CHICAGO (AP) - Sherlock Holmes is alive and vrell, and living among people who won’t believe.it. Sherlock, a wiry man of 48, has ways to cope with the incredulity of people to whom his name is presented. ★ ★ ★ “I carried pny birth certificate when I was in grammar school,” he told an interviewer Tuesday. “I learned long ago, when I call up some place for a reservation, to just say ‘S. Holmes.’ ” LAPEL BADGE Holmes wears hi* name on a lapel badge at the International Security Conference. Others attending this meeting of specialists in security work give it a double take. He lives in Lacey, near Olympia, in Washington State. He works as an examiner for the state auditor. ★ ★ Sr, Once, in the line of duty, he went Into a state agency’s office and handed the lady clerk-a formal letter of introduction. - “I don’t believe it,” she said. He solved the problem of tele- phone calls . from fun-loving 1 strangers. He changed his listing in the directory to S.G. Holmes. SOME FUSSING i. There was some fussing about his name right after his birth. “My father said ‘Sherlock,’ ” he related. "My mother wanted Oliver Wendell.’ ” • ★ ★ ★ Holmes has five children none named after A. Conan Doyle’s fictional detective. The real life Holmes studied criminology for a while in his youth. MILITARY POLICE When he got into the Army in World War II, he recalled, “they stuck me in the military police.” 1 1 Once he was a teller in a bank in Olympia, and he traded incredible names at point-blank range. ★ ★ ★ A customer handed him a deposit slip, and said: “That’s my name—Daniel Boone.” “I’m Sherlock Holmes,” Holmes replied. “It kind of shook him,” he said. AP Wlraplwto THIS CHARACTER IS FOR REAL - There is nothing fictitious about this Sherlock Holmes. He works in the Washington State Auditor’s Office, and his name is really Sherlock Holmes. Holmes, 48, is attending the International Security Conference in Chicago and is causing quite a stir with his resemblance to the master detective created by A. Conan Doyle., French Vets' Tomb Called Traffic Peril PARIS (AP) - The tomb of France’s unknown soldier, symbol of the 1.5 million Frenchmen killed in World War I, has. been classified by a police official as a traffic hazard. “It must go/ said Prefect of Police Maurice Grimaud. But the French government said it will not Grimaud is proposing that the tomb and its eternal flame be transferred from the base of the Arch of Triumph, to the Inva lides, a monumental building on the Left Bank where Napoleon’s remains are kept. it- ■■ it it France’s veterans organize tions and old soldiers reacted with rage today and said the is sue was pf such importance that they would bring it .before the presidential candidates. Grimaud let his plan slip at a luncheon. He said wreath-laying ceremonies at the Arch of Triumph were forever fouling traffic. it it it Twelve streets flow into the immense circular area, bringing 200,000 cars a day Into Paris most hair-raising, continuous traffic jam. 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Cleric Seeks Radio Stati in Israel PORTSMOUTH, 7$ (AP) -A Virginia clergyman is seeking to build a radio station in Israel to spread the gospel of Jesus Christ into the Soviet Union and the Arab nations. The Rev. Marion G. Robertson—-he prefers to be called Pat —went to Tel Aviv in March and 'discussed his proposal for such a station with an Israeli official in charge of issuing broadcast licenses. ★ ★ ★ This official, Robertson told an Interviewer, "showed a good deal of interest because he realized such a Station would help Israel economically and Improve its relations with Russia aod the Arabs," but said the final decision would be up to Prime Minister Golda Meir. "I wrote to the prime minister’s chief of staff in April and I am now awaiting his reply," RobertSdn said. "I am planning a trip to Israel in August and I will try then to see Mrs. Meir in person." STARTEb IN 1MQ Robertson, 39, is president of the Christian Broadcasting Network Inc., which he founded in Portsmouth in I960; when he bought a small television station that had gone-off the air. He began broadcasting religious pro-grains in October 1961. “Income during the first year war $7,000 and has virtually doubled every year, since," he said. w w , W Robertson, who stands two inches over six feet, is an ordained Baptist minister. He is the son of Virginia’s former U.S. Sen. A. Willis Robertson. He was graduated from Washington and Lee University, served in Korea as a Marine officer, received a law degree from Yale University, tried big business briefly, entered New York Theological Seminary and received a bachelor of sacred theology degree in 1959. COST $2 MILLION The radio station he' wants to build in Israel would cost about $2 million, Robertson said. "It would be one million watts on AM and a half-million watts on shortwave which would reach Russia, all the Arab nations, Africa and parts.of Eastern Europe. We would broadcast some programs In Russian, some In Arabic and some in English. ' “Assuming a green light from the Israeli government, I believe such a station would capture the imagination of Christians all across America and Europe. It would be one of the easiest fund-raising projects we have ever undertaken. We would start by broadcasting from, our present stations." In Portsmouth,; Robertson said, “we have a 50,000-watt FM radio Station, WXRI, which went on the air in 1902, and the nation’s only religiously oriented television station, WYAH-TV “We have a five-station radio network across New York state —one in the Albany-Schenecta dy area and one each in Syracuse, Rochester, Buffalo and Ithaca—and we have a radio station in Bogota, Colombia. The Bogota station, in response to its'broadcasts!, receives about 2.000 letters a month from people in Ecuador, Peru, Colombia. Venezuela, Panama, El Salvar dor and Costa Rica. ■-Junior Editors Quiz on- SCISSORS in TV’ commercials,” Robertson and a number of religious faiths said., ‘ ‘Our monthly operating budget is between $50,000 and KNkOOO. The Uetw^k staff consist of nboUt 40 full-time and 20 part-time employes." INTERDENOMINATIONAL , The stations are operated on the interdenominational basis, conduct broadcast programs, be explained. Programs include Bible lessons, sermons, music, Christian drama on film and children’s activities. “And strong emphasis is placed on news," he said. Robertson said’“we are feed- ing tapes of children’s programs to * 40 commercial stations in British Columbia and Alberta, Canada." *Q| * * * Robertson’s wife is the former Adelia Elmer of Columbus, Ohio, who holds a master’s degree in nursing from Yale. They have four children. ANNOUNCEMENT NOW A REMINGTON FACTORY AUTHORIZED ELECTRIC SHAVER SERVICE and SALES We Service All CHfher Brands Genuine Factory Parts and Prices WHILE-YOU-WAIT SERVICE THE SHAVIR SHOP 61 W. Huron 6560 Cass Ave. lull* III IUmiH* Hii SJ*. M|. Pontiao, Mich. 334-1411 Detroit, Mich. 818-8226 •, JUL>^ ° Pontiao, Xjulsujlu S_» S O OSSflOOO os 00 00 0089999 ttltt A 91 PERMIT IN ATLANTA “We have a construction per' mil for a television station in Atlanta, Ga., which should be on the air by late fall or early winter.” Robertson said the Christian Broadcasting Network’s income last year totaled $1,159,000, including a gift of the five stations in New York State, valued at $600,000. . ★ ★ ★ 'Much income is received in response to annual telethons over WYAH-TV. Last November a weeklong telethon brought in $393,000 mostly in contributions of $5, $10 and $15. Many contributors pay their pledges in monthly installments. “We receive about $10,000 a month from radio commercials and about $2,500 a month from GREAT INMEHTIOWS I v coulton ARE OFTE»l VERY wau£h SIMPLE “ QUESTION: Why were the first scissors made and when? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: If you will try cutting a piece of cloth with a knife blade, you will woiider how the medieval housewife made out when cutting doth for clothes before the days of scissors. They probably complained, as we have suggested in our top picture. When there is a strong need for something, some smart character will usually come up with an idea. In this case it was that of scissors, an invention supposed to have been made in the late 1200s. At upper right is a pair of scissors used in 1639. Scissor* work because each blade acts like a lever, which makes a small effort to produce a strong result, like the two men prying up weights with crowbars. To do this, the bars rest on a point called a fulcrum. r 'ft;/ Each scissor blade is like a .bar, but where is tho fulcrum? It is the screw which holds them together. In addition, the blades are slightly bent, so thpre is always one point where they grind together and cut the doth. (Yofi can win f10 cash phis AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.) Zoo Hoping for Birth of Golden Eagle TOPEKA, Kan. (AP) - Offi cials at Topeka’s Cage Park Zoo are awaiting the possible hatch' ing of an American golden ea gle. Zoo director Garv K. Clarke said his research has failed to produce any previous report of the breeding of a golden eagle in a zoo. v ★ * * N “This doesn’t mean it has never happened, but it certainly would be very rare,” Clarke said. ~ — ★ ★ ★ ■ “We aren’t sure, of course, if the egg is fertile. If it is, there art a number of factors that could affect it. And of those that hatch, not all of the baby eagles —even in -the wild—reach maturity,” he said. y Clarke said the Incubation period ends next Wednesday. The first military flight was made at Ft-Sam Houston, Tex„ in 1910 in a Wright biplane. P ■ / Your local bar iS a good place to check out Xk just howsoftSoft Whiskey really is.^ * ./ Because one drink stwuld be enough to tell you all yat need to know; O lair You hiskcyjS aone4&)t|itoposi^.J|^^ toj Calvert Extra,The Soft Whiskey M BLINDED WHISKEY • $6 PROOF • 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS #1060 CALVERT DIET. CO* LOUISVILLE, KtyjJ fw|Kt|||g jjgQNM t ”*11 mi juutfiuu THE PONTIAC PRESS,^ THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1960 Xf&snt CHOICE Biff USDA CHOICE BEEF g^OHUCK sn fassnssst IsWSSSTtW uswcHoioE BC OF CHUCK ROAST CHOICE CHUCE MOHTE YELLOW CUHO sliced of Potatoes Fresh Conned Vegetables Cut Green Beans, Spinach French Style Green Beans Whole Kernel Corn Cream Style Corn Stewed Tomatoes Early Garden Peas Cut Wax Beans, Peas and Carrots MIX OR MATCH All Grinds 2-l7b.Tin DELMOHTE Sections AMMAN WAY Regular Pizza CHIQUITA Bananas I 14-Oz. Wt» Btj. USDA HOT HOUSE VAN CAMP’S I Pork ’n Beans1 RANGE JUICE I Y BANQUET SLICED Turkey wtth Gravy Beef with Gravy Chicken Ala Xing Saisbury Steak I Four BB ||t Choice M jlllf AVs-Oz. I 'MS Min. Wt. ' ■ ftX OPEN PIT Bar-B*Q SAUCE IB-Oz. Wt. FRESH HipS 1 *Ztn Si BROS. FEE 17 1 1 fti-t \i w mm ' -:/ \f«-l 1 j.*7. Tipi PONTIAC PRESS, THjLTRSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 mmmmmm >re Like Winner Most Important Race jj^lJ::.# "'«**»«*•*> i.1* wives and mothers. Their greatest problem is adjusting to the -bigotry so pro-dominant in American society. It’s not important what a person has 'been. It’s Wkjat^ person is — and Is becoming that’s important. God’s forgiyeiMps i#just as sure for the prostitute as ‘it is lor the man or woman who has indulged in premarital sex. Your compassion for the “Vietnamese prostitute” was noted and appreciated by this — KOREAN VETERAN By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: An article appeared in the local newspaper stating that girls between the ages of 16 and 24, who have never been married, were eligible to participate in a congest! I applied, was accepted, and after several rehearsals was turned away because I had a year-old son. I am working my way through college. I 'tin a cheer leader, college news reporter, softball pitcher, volley ball captain, band student, basketball player, am' On the debate- team, take ballet tenons, and have a superior rating in 8ihging. V- I work after school, keep my own apartment, and take care of my child. 1 What snore can I do to correct my mistake of having a baby out of wedlock? What must I do to gain a place in society? I do not have a bad reputation. Only a baby. MARION W., LAWTON, OKLA. DEAR MARION: You may not have won this ^‘contest,” but if your impressive list of activities is any index to your determination and ability, you look like a sure winner in the more important contests of life. DEAR ABBY? The letter from the woman who was bitter because her ex-husband was marrying a “Vietnamese prostitute” and bringing her back to the .States prompts this letter., , The expression “war Is IjeJl’^Js an understatement' at best. T won^ . j^w many American women would ~.« ■ i-t PonllM Pr*i> Phot* bv U Vmttorwbrp Funds rdised by the Oakland County Bar As- vices, joins Auxiliary members, Mrs. Robert An-sociation Auxiliary paid for the instrument the girl derson, Silverside Drive, (left) and Mrs. John F. resident of Oakland County Childrens Village is Allen, Gunn Road, Avon Township, in a tour of playing. James W. Hunt, director of Juvenile Ser- the facilities. , Jaycette Unit to Get Charter DEAR ABBY: Yesterday, in a space reserved for a paid “ad” the following item appeared in our local newspaper: “Mr. and Mrs. -— wish to publicly apologize for their belated thank you to all their friends and relatives for the very fipe gifts they received for their wedding of February, 1968.” Would you please give me your interpretation of this item? Thank you. CURIOUS IN N.Y. DEAR CURIOUS: It is plainly a public “thank you” for unacknowledged wedding gifts. Nearly a year and a half late! It could have been placed there by the newlyweds themselves, or even by embarrassed parents. While it is certainly an unconventional thanks, it beats no thanks at all. •* Bar Auxiliary's Yearly Donations Give Childrens Village Extras Greenfield Village Site of Meeting of Questers Unit The newly-organized Auburn Heights Area Jaycee Auxiliary will receive its state charter Saturday at a dinner to be held at Sylvan Glen Country Club. Robert C. Lewis, president of the Auburn Heights Area Jaycees, will welcome the 21 charter members. Mrs. A1 Formicola of Rochester, past president of the state auxiliary, will present the charter and address the new chapter. * * ★ Charter officers will be installed. They are Mesdames: James St. Louis, president; James A. Cavins Jr., vice president; Toip Lawson and David VanderLaan, secretaries and Mrs. Gene King, treasurer. Directors are Mrs. James Weaver and Mrs. Dyane Carr. Clarkstoir Area Jaycettes, the sponsoring auxiliary, will'be guests at the dinner, with Mrs. Robert Tilley acting as mikti’ess of ceremonies. Dinner arrangements are in the hands of Mrs. Robert C. Lewis, v Auxiliary officers for 1969-70 were elected at a recent meeting. Mrs, John O’Brien, Berkley, is "president with Mrs. Robert Parenti, Oxford, as president-elect. Mrs. William Lang, Troy, and Mrs. Donald Miller, Bloomfield Hills, are secretaries; Mrs. Joseph Kosek, Rochester, is treasurer. Others elected are Mesdames: Jerome Mulligan, Thomas Raguso, Ivan Forbes, John Allen and Donald Adams. Delegates to Lawyers Wives of Michigan are Mrs. O’Brien, Mrs. Parenti, Mrs. Leonard Peres and Mrs. Gerald Bartush. Once again, the Oakland County Bar Association Auxiliary has given a donation to Oakland County Childrens Village. Each year, the Auxiliary sponsors a luncheon-fashion show and other benefits to raise money. Officials at Childrens Village are free to use these funds at their discretion, but' particularly for extras and emergencies not covered by public funds. , In the past, the money has been used to: • Buy bedroom furniture for the girls in the honor room which is a room used as a reward for good behavior; • Purchase material for the girls to make clothing; • Buy a party dress for a girl in a junior high school choir so she qqukl participate tn special events; , i • Buy a musical instrument for one of the girls who showed musical talent;. • Purchase a projector; • Assist high school seniors who wish to go on class trips; the students earn half the fee. Dr. Donald Shelley, president of Greenfield Village and Henry Ford Museum, will speak on “Collecting American Pottery”^ in the Village on May 21. His audience will be members pf the Michigan State Quester Organization. Con rod Work Is Topic •’The Heart of Darkness” by Joseph Conrad will be discussed at the Friday meeting of Waterford Great Books. Mrs. Karl B. Kutz will lead the discussion with Thomas Ellingson as author’s advocate. ’The 8 p.m. meeting in the CAI Building is open to any interested person. Everybody has a problem. What’s yours? For a personal reply write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9 Pontiac, Mich. 48056 and enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Hate to write letters? Send $1 to Abby in care of The Pontiad Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056 for Abby’s booklet, “How to Write Letters for All Occasions.” The day-long meeting includes a coffee at 9 a.m. followed by tours of the Museum and the Village. Luncheon will be served in Lovett Hall. Fund-Raiser Friday Jik benefit cup andt' saucer dessert and card party at First Federal Savings of Oakland is scheduled Friday at 7 p.m, by the Pontiac Women’s Club. Proceeds will go to the nurses’ scholarship fund, Girls Town and other projects. Mrs. Earl Hoskins is general chairman. Questers is a national organization of people who,jare Interested in and dedicated to the study" of antiques and the preservation of historical sites. Michigan has 54 chapters and a membership of 1,000. when you look at this Spanish aet by BroyhiU. The. surprise is that you can have the dresser, mirror, chest and panel head-board not for the regular *319 price but for s nice. uly *278. We think that’. The Better Bedroom People on Telttgrirjsh Road house of bedrooms 1711S, Tslagrapk Rd., Bloomfield, Bitwesn Miracle Mill and Orchard laks RESTORE HOURS* MONDAY-SATURDAY 9 TO 9 • CAtZ 334-4593 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 18, 19«9 Will Install New Officers MIRACLE MILE Summer fashions by Alvin’s, will highlight a May 20 luncheon! and meeting of the Chapel' Hills Garden Club at noon in Sylvan Glen Inn. : , Installation , of new officers will also take place. Those involved include: Mrs. William Burgess, president; Mrs. Edward Retke and Mrs. Francis McGuire, first and second vice presidents; Mrs. John Carter, secretary and Mrs. W. Sheridan Hoskin, treasurer. ml.\m FOR YOUR ■Kl mmu WEDDING ... mmm , /M 1 .iMltl QUALITY and QUANTITY! • Free < iounawling • Free I'rddlni Oawi Book ~ • Free Miniaioro Marriaft C+rllflraie • Fro# Largo "JmI Married" Sign • Free Rica to Throw o| (ka Bride anil G Fashion excitehnent, pura and simple.•id shapely new square-round-toed flat.,. butfgrsoft, unllned, featherllght. A fabulous find at this price. C. R. HASKILL STUDIO FE 4-0553 Owe tin here! tv Drive PONTIAC, MICH. The group recently made a $300 donation to Pontiac State Hospital -Children’s Horticultural Therapy Department. Hr. Harry Litohey of the Michigan Osteopathic College will be thd speaker at the 7:30 meeting today of the Oakland County Osteopathic Medical Assistants’ Association. In-! troducing him before the au-| dience in the Pontiac! Osteopathic Hospital, will be thej hospital’s assistant ad-< ministrator, Jack Whitlow. Available Ini • Pastel PlnltS e Pastel Bluu e Navy Blue • Celery Green • Yellow Breakfast for about 100 Pontiac women Wednesday in the Pontiac room of Hudson’s Mall Store introduced two young decorators assigned to the store’s interior decorating staff. Mrs. Ernest W. Diehl of Lakewood Village (left) talks with Linda Collins (center) Pontiac Press Photo and Suzanne Burrell. The interior designers joined three others from Hudson’s downtown store to present home decorating ideas in five different styles. The background here is 18 th Century and Williamsburg. e Block e white e Natural e Red e Brown * Orange Aerbsol Spray Is Soil Repellent MICHIGAN'S LARGEST FLORSHEIM DEALER I PONTIAC MALL SMOPPINO CENTER TEL-TWELVE SHOPPINQ CENTER . I OAKLAND MALL SHOPPING CENTER Homemakers now can cut down on cleaning by using a new easy-to-apply aerosol spray for clothing and household fabrics that locks out soils and stains before they happen. Alcoholics' Counselor Gives I Grim Picture of Deterioration Miracle Mile Center I XtHtMIIMMMIf ••••!•* I I Use. Your j {Security Charge: I or | Michigan . § I Bankard i The manufacturer says the spray creates an invisible soil-repellent barrier on clothes, curtains, and draperies; upholstery but does not affect the color, feel, or porosity of fabrics and will not disturb pleats or creases in apparel. preoccupatipn with liquor by this time preceeds all else. By YOLANDA BENAVIDES | Where does the acute alcoholic go, once he’s struck ‘low bottom’ and body and brain refuse to function? j Six feet under, if he’s lucky, I according to Dr. Frank R. | Hollingsworth, chief counselor at Brighton Hospital for alcoholics, who spoke Wednes-day body make-up, says Hollingsworth. However, where a few beers used to do the trick, the alcoholic must now double his, intake in order to get the same result. By the eighth consecutive year, the Individual is much like the drug addict. LAST CHANCE At this point, the alcoholic is considered at the mid-way stretch, as his last opportunity) WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. In retracing the alcoholic’s path, Hollingsworth noted that one must first of all rid his mind of the stereotyped smalltown drunk or skid row bum. “Only three per cent of the total number of alcoholics (about eight million) fit into this category while some 97 per cent are what we call the ‘peo-ple next door’ or the person, jwho by all outward appear- nnnnc lSiroe a normal lifo ** ha Robert Hall forexciting, clothing rjL values for the entire family! However, in addressing women at the second annual [College Day for WjOmen sponsored by the Cooperative : Extension Service, Hollingsworth did not completely rule oyt recovery as a second alternative. to-choose between total freedom, or imprisonment by the bottle. ances, lives a normal life,’’ he explained. ONE IN 12 As far as tracing the path of potential alcoholics, or one out of every 12 drinkers, Hollingsworth began with the prealcoholic plateau. ★ ★ 'it. At this point, which covers some six months to five years, the potential alcoholic may indulge several nights a week with a before-dinner drink as a means of relaxing after a rough day at the office or perhaps a' spat with the spouse. Soon, however, that gnawing need to relieve one’s self of everyday tensions, that urge to get out from under responsibility’s clutch, can only be quieted with a daily drink. ★ ★ ★ . In the second stage, the Individual shows signs of an increased physical tolerance .to alcohol. This, of course, varies according to individual and Should the individual accept the latter, his preoccupation with alcohol takes on a more serious note, he now indulges on the job, keeps a hidden supply close at hand, can’t face the morning without a little nip. At the same time he starts a drastic withdrawal of all social contact. Nonetheless, by the time an alcoholic has been seriously tipping the bottle for some 15 to 35 years, there isn’t much, left, physically or psychologically, to work with. HE’S ALONE Socially speaking, by the time an individual reaches ‘low bottom,’ the picture is a gloomy one as job, family and friends, are much like scattered puzzle parts. i On the other hand, says Hollingsworth, this is exactly/what the alcoholic wants, because his It is also at the mid-way point that the family begins to dissolve, if it has not done so by now, says Hollingsworth. OPEtf SUNDAY NOON TO 6 P.M, UTICA 51035 Van Dyko just N. of 23 Mi. R ’ CLARKSTON 6460 Dixie Hwy. just N. of Waterford Hill PONTIAC 200 N. Saginaw Fro# Parking Once the children, as well as the spouse-realize there is no room for them in an alcoholic’s life, they react by going their spearate ways. Not to be overlooked is the physiological damage V taking place during this time, which can affect a number of areas, including liver, heart, pancreas or stomach- up, up and a way. ..in th» junior pilot’s Tyke Plane from Ployskool. . a wood plane that maneuvers easily in any direction on special costers end large, husky wheels. Doubles as a pipy and snack !] \ , / /'■ • v . '■' ' , ■ t -ti p jy table, too, br.ydi'a TV seat when noj/soaring on an/ • , , J :v' ‘-3 EJ - /. j y iWagindry'flight. 25"xl3l4"xl5" overall size', ■ , Tufted beauty with a Mediterranean flair ... , a design so versatile it works magic in any ' setting! Enticingly comfortable, too. Meticu-louSly upholstered in rich, luxurious fabrics v with antique fruitwood finishes. And so modestly priced for the superior quality and craftsmanshi{£. hair $154.00 •Ottoman $54.50 Gotfd Furniture Costs You Less at in non-toxic multicolors. For the preschool oge. 1*4.00 '144; Oakland StegteAnH tebnted te akm> atweiyaifagiiteS bn, ® VV,. 4$N.Soglnaw$t. Children'* Shop 275 N. Woodward. Birmingham / i. Convenient Tenor w yo Days Same Cash , ' Open Monday mil Friday Night* ’til 9 P.M. Our Fret Parking l.ot, Ju.t Aruund th. Cornar Along Clark St. cissEoun on VARIOUS MAKES ‘TRADE-IN’ SEWING MACHINES PORTABLES from CONSOLES from ZIG-ZAGS from SINGER TERRIFIC SAVINGS ON FLOOR MODELS & DEMONSTRATORS J SINGER SEWING CENTER f> Qt THt SINGER COMPANY II TELEGRAPH lr"oS"i at EVENINGS! I TIL 9 | SQUARE LAKE RD. [j 338-9700 ij 5 v.*-;Nftsx ' VV'i / ( j c.vnO'' 'Ji U ■; Ivl Art Gallery to Be Jazzy “Jazz for Now,” an evening of jazz from the lively scene of Detroit jazz musicians, will be offered at 5:80 p.jm; Sunday in fee Galleries lecture hall, CranbroOk Academy of Art. ■ The evening of jazz will be Presented by the Detroit] reative Musicians Association Of jazz musicians seeking to Consolidate and bring to a wider audience the creation and improvisation emanating from the Combined experience of all Ipembers of the group. Oakland Community College is cosponsoring the event to which tickets may tie purchased for $1.50 for adults and $1 for students. Advance tickets are recommended since attendance is limited to, 250 persons. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, I960 Peales Tell Formula for Wedded Bliss MILO CROSS 'Boss' Award Given Cross carol Ann Grieb of Durnham Drive and P.hilip C. Smith of Prall Street are planning an Aug. 16 wedding. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Greb of Miamisburg, Ohio and the Cecil E. Smiths of North Canton, Ohio, where the marriage will take place. The bride is a graduate of Bowling Green State University and has . done graduate work at Michigan State University. Her fiance has an MA from Michigan State University. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Schultz of Bogie Lake ‘Road, White Lake Township, announce the engagement of their daughter, Suzanne Annette, to Thomas Lee Burean. He is the son of the Robert L. Bureaus of Royal Oak. The bride elect, awarded a bachelor of music degree Majf 3'at University of Michigan, and her fiance, who attends Eastern Michigan University, are planning to Wed. Aug. 9. Need for Grooming Tips in School By GAY PAULEY UPI Women’s Editor NEW YORK wifl8 ,8*mP® application titled “Finding Summer ..The Secret of a Happy Mar-looking for summer employ-|forms along. With tips about Employment,” which gives theriage,.is ^fog malled to 500,000 By BETTY CANARY NEA Writer ment. Some want to get a head grooming and everyday good how, where when and why of start on a future career and manners. Unfortunately, most; jobs for high school and college some have been pushed by parents*. The main objective remains. They want to make some money. * * * It is common knowledge that having an A-average doesn’t mean instant employment and I of these are available only to students, students taking commercial; * * * courses and other students I The community where I live never hear/ about them. operated a special service last Milo Cross of the Pontiac State Bank was selected “Boss of the Year" by the Land-Or Oaks chapter, A m e r i c an Business Women’s Association. IQs secretary, Mrs. Gertrude Ott made the recommendation. The presentation took place Tuesday at a dinner meeting in the Old Mill. Chairman of the pvent was Marge Spalding with (oastmistress,, Be11y Richardson. James Covert, retired Superintendent of Royal Oak Schools spoke on “Why Are We Here?’’ Norma White and Pam Williams were the club’s scholarship recipients this year. persons around the world, by the Foundation for Christian Living which Mrs. Peale set up nearly 30 years ago to distribute copies of her husband’s sermons. Starting with the observation that “marriage has always had its hazards,” the minister then HU |U__________ outlines some of his guidelines: have asked personnel managers library Is My Friend. There local businessmen and the' Love. “Not the sex-oriented of businesses and employment are books on the subject, with organization was handled by the i0Ve of Hollywood and stage and agencies for tips on what turns chapters devoted to everything Chamber of Commerce. contemporary fiction, but love them off when kids turn up at from “Don’t Cough in the Besides a pool of jobs, the in depth, spiritually conditioned desks and counters. Manager’s Face,” to “Jobs student encountered a really; and mature.” A surprise was that not one Your Mother Never Told you interested director who was Maturity. "Marriage person mentioned long hair.jAbout.” If a teen-ager hasn’t ready with job-hunting ideas,;for the infantile.” LIBRARY I, For those who don’t have this opportunity, then I ask them to believe, as I do, that The Public summer called Youth Employment Service (YES) where businesses listed their employment needs. The cost was borne Only a few brought up fee sub-jyet learned to use the card file!including going home and ject of miniskirts. The big index, a librarian will be galdjwashingfiret and not wearing a Dance Scheduled not to help him There is one nationwide employment agency feat gives free help to students. It lists, The Negro Business and Professional Women’s Young Adult Club will sponsor a Mod Cocktail Dance Sunday in fee Casino Royale Club on Wyoming in Detroit. From 4 to 8 p.m., Earl Van Dyke and his soul brothers will provide entertainment. Tickets are available.at the door. complaint was uncleanliness. Dirty fingernails and soiled clothing headed fee list. A garage mechanic told me he could always find places for a “a couple of boys who want to learn.” He also told me that while he did not expect them to show up wearing a suit and tie when applying for work, he did expect them to appear in a dean tee shirt and blue jeans that wouldn’t stand alone. ★ ★ it I One of the biggest gripes was, as usual, the young person’s difficulty in filling out an application and I was asked if I thought fee employer should spend his time teaching a student to answer? simple questions. One employer sweara a girl asked to borrow a telephone book last summer in order to look up her own address Presoak Pan Aids Cleanup sequined blouse or bathing suit and taking along the Social Security card and driver’s license. The operation was labeled a success by both employers and employes. Appreciation. “William James called ‘the desire to be appreciated’ one of the strongest drives of human nature. Appreciation includes respect and esteem for another, thoughtful courtesy and politeness and a compliment now and then.” Lace Parity Parity Hose The perfect marriage of fit and beauty. Delicate Lace Panty wedded to Agilon legs. So eye-appealing but offer more comfort and longer wear. When hose run, pull thread and you have a helenca nylon lace panty. Available in all proportioned sizes Small, Mediumjand Tall. Tahiti, Pretty Brown, Bambi Jet. 4.00 to 6 p.m. in Cranbrook House. Tea table hostesses include! Mfs. Chapman, Mrs. Wlatar R. Denison, Mrs. Ernest A Jones, Mrs. Frederick A; Knorr 1H, Mrs. William G. Lerchen Jr., Mrs. Roland A. Mewhort, Mrs* L. James Schneider and Mrs. Russell Strickland. w M m •Sacro-Lumbar Belts • Maternity Garments •Surgical Hose • Ankle Wrist and Knee Braces • Sacroliac Betts • Cervical Collars and Cervical Traction etc. “FITTED ACCORDING TO YOUR DOCTORS ORDERS”... MALE AND FEMALE FITTERS, HOME FITTING AVAILABLE. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. Also a complete convalescent aids depart Blent featuring! * Wheel Chairs-Hospital Beds-Crutches-Canes-Over-bed Tables - Walkers - Patient Lifts - Commodes -Shower Chairs — etc. FOR RENT OR SALE Prescriptions FREE DELIVERY 4390 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains 674-0466 or 674-4455 3 DAY SPRING , SPECIALS! Mon., Tues., Wed., Onlvi 20% OFF on Quality Permanents Bring; Thin Ail . Beauty Shop Biker Bldg.. FE 3-7186 Parking in Downtown Moll Hudson's Big Game Preserve Keep your furs safe and comfortable through thO summer months. Bring them to the Fur Salon at your nearest H udson's store.* We'll give them the kindest care in our cpdl, clean vaults. When you're ready t.0 show them off agajn—you can pick them up at the same convenient spot. * ‘you may leave ybur fiilrt for storage, cleaning anc( rWpalrs in thd Fur Salon at|Hudson's \ Northland.'Eastland, Westland, Pontiac, OajilandiviK Fur Storage,, 17t(i,DoWhtown Now in Hudson's Fur Salon ■ 1 \ m i v OUR ENTIRE STOCK of FORMATS! SALE! -M- 20% off Regularly $23-to $45 JUST IN TIME FOR THE PROM! ★ EVERY ELEGANT SILHOUETTE! ★ EVERY ROMANTIC FABRIC! * EVERY DIVINE PASTEL AND WHITE! * WT'ZES FOR JUNIORS & JR. PETITES! special OUR ENTIRE STOCK OF FUN-FUR COVER-UPS! GiTOINE BUNNY FUR CAPELETS AND JACKETS AND MORE! WERE Off to 132 AI 4 Great Fvshior} Centers tn Detroit • Pontiac e Saginaw u FUnt. • Grj w GRkAT IR MIRACLE MILE Visit % , .. UR 2 •and Rapids • Ohio •- Illinois'' ~ T"" ¥\\ Open Bve^y Evening’til ■ o. AKLANILMALL^;.:" aph Rd. at Square Lake Rd« \v 14 Mile Rd. at 1-75 >^.1 >p Every Evening to i Shop Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday - NEW STORES ■ ,;V ) S m ■ .» ■Si hi*"'-' ■ si P Mmmk y ‘i Tl> |g|| ' ! THE PONTIAC FRES^, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 H & s B—5 MRS. MICHAEL GREENE . MRS. KEITH L. DEATON Two Area Couples Speak Wedding Vows Attired in a traditionally fashioned gown of Rochelle lace and taffeta, Rhonda Faye Galloway became the bride of Spec. 4 Michael Dale Greene, USA, Saturday. ★ • ★ ★ Karen Bateman and James E. Greene Jr. attended the daughter of Mrs. Rem a Galloway of Mark Street and Claude Galloway of Greenville, S.C., and the son of the senior James E. Greenes of Lexington • Street. The newlyweds were feted at the Crane Street home of tl bridegroom’s brother, Jamel following the civil ceremony. Spec. 4 Greene and his bride will make their home in Kansas where he is stationed. at Ft. Reilly. Deaton * Hartung A reception Saturday at Malta Temple feted newlyweds, the Keith Lee Deatons (nee Susan Carol Hartung). The daughter of Mrs. Walter Fernald of Sterling Street and Ray I. Hartung of Sashabaw Road and the son of the Dewey Deatons of, West Princeton Avenue were married that evening in St. Paul’s Lutheran church. : ,y yy. ★ ★ ★ Attended by Mrs.. James Emblen, the bride wore a lace and taffeta ensemble. .Her bouquet was comprised of white roses with lily of the valley. Bridesmaids were Edith Hartung, Terrle Lamberson, Mrs. James Crawford and Patricia Deaton with Terrie Naugle as flower girl. Craig Deaton was. best man with Chris Giles, Arthur Green, James Crawford and Joseph Deaton as ushers. Ring bearer was Donald Fernald. The newlyweds are honey-moming at Niagara Falls. Kenneth Blinns Exchange Vows Waterford Trinity Methodist Church was the setting Saturday for vows uniting Patricia I Lou Mattingly and Kenneth! Richard Blinn. , | For the afternoon rite, the; bride chose a gown of peau del soie and Belgium lace. AI Cascading arrangement of white carnations and lily of the valley comprised her bouquet. | Jo Aline Mattingly was maid of’houor for htur sister with Kav F. Brooks and ' Mrs. Diuiiel Moriarty as bridesmaids. Ronald E. Blinn was best man with William L. Blinn and Joseph B. Hought as ushers. ★ ★ e The daughter of the Harold E. Mattinglys of Mae Street and the son of the Stanley Blinns of Rochester, Pa., were feted at First Federal Savings of Oakland. They will make their home in Beaver Falls, Pa. Pontiac Proto Photo by Roll Wintar Mrs. Merritt A. Snyder, of South Shore Drive, points out something of interest in the official scrapbook of Omega Mu Sigma Sorority. Mrs. Russell See of South Rainbow Lane (right) will be welcomed into membership at the 66th annual spring breakfast scheduled Sunday at 10:30 a.m. in the Holiday Inn. Sorority Slates Spring £veht The annual spring breakfast of Omega Mu,Sigma Sorority, to Jje held 'Sunday in Holiday Inn, will mark 66 years of. supporting philantropic actiyities in this area. Authoress Peggy Cameron Kiwf of Birmingham, will be gue^t speaker. . ^ < ' ★ ★ ★ ' Chairman for the dinner Is Mrs. \Meri*|tt Snyder with Mrs. Ray Peterson assisting. New members to be honored are Mesdames: Russell See, John Olsan, James Springer, and Richard Christiansen. Guests will include Mesdames: Ralph E. Peterson, Robbin Strassburg, Michael Cullen, Ruth Larsen, Donald Cole, James Bennett and Vaughn Davis and Misses Kim and Dawn Guenther, Marlene Petrie, Saline Coster and Joy Snyder. Phone 363-8344 ALBERT'S UNION LAKE SALON 71124 Cooley Lake Road in the W. T. Grant Shopping Center 5 f LOOKING for SOMETHING UNUSUAL I ... FOR A SHOWER GIFT SHOWER ITT PRIZE FOR PARTY PRIZES! Come in and browse around our bath shop. We have boutiques, accessories, and wall shelves,, as well as towels, shower curtains and fixtures. ACCESSORIES starting 5’“ 50' A.R. HOUSEKEEPER PLUMBING* 722 W. Huron St. - Phono 332-6061 May Breakfast for Garden Club The annual May breakfast of le Better Home and Garden lub took place today, at 9:30 .m. in Bethany Baptist Church. Wayne Benniston of the lichigan Department of onservation will speak on 'ater pollution. The exibit was woodland wildflowers.” In charger of arrangements Fere Violet Crawford and lesdames: John Armstong, /illiam Maxfield and Alfred iothweiler. Spring Clearance Rain or Shino All Weather Coats Winsome mveraps with shows? twwer. In nndrenehsbl# fabrics . .. many doable for sveninii west. Savel • Weotherbees e Margueite Rubel Velvets 1/3 off Bobette .Shop. 16 N. Saginaw—Downtown Security Chargecard Midwest Bank Card ‘ Michigan Bankard Bobetl^Charge Accounts Students to Play An organ,- piano recital is lated Saturday by students of oreri Meyers. The affair, rhich is open to the public, will e held at the Smiley Brothers scital hall on North Saginaw treet beginning at 1:30 p.m. MONEY SAVE ON OUR SPECIALS WE WILL REPAIR YOUR -SHOES— SANDALS — HANDBAGS — CYCLE BOOTS AND LEATHER COODS ,Ws Hava Moved From Kresge’s 1.. Atl * i > ‘ Walsh Shoe Rtpair Syrian! 88 N. Saginaw next ta Simms RICHARDS Boys' and Girls' Wear Spring y/ear Rochester Pontiac Mall $miley Bros. RENT wtm Fwskua M.fllt* Fran St gar neon New Verticals from $898 Now Grands from $1,889 New Organa from ISIS Frmt Parking, Rear of Stort ■.", AlmaM rt Ona-Hslf C«Mury " ' BALDWIN'S \ iDiitributW 119 N. Saginaw OPEN MON. A FRI. EVENINGS ) FE44721 jft MANAGER ROBERT UUEYMAN \» Sucewaaor ft, :i Calbi Music Col. lafobttahodl In,,1 ‘ Penrioc 30 YUmm; 108 N. Saginaw-Downtown Pontiac-FE 3-7114 SHOP FRI. 9:30 am to 9 pm & SAT. 9:30 am to 5 pm FOR WKCS BUDGET BUYS SALE HOP THESE SPECIALS in WKCs Lower level Furniture Dept. ; 4-Pc. Contemporary Bedroom Set by Bassett Reg. *229” SAVE *30°° • This isn't ordinary furniture at ordinary prices ... ft's by Bassett and it's at WKC's Lower Price. Contemporary* styling with geometric severe and straight lined withl interesting in. the TAVERN WALNUT finish. Set consists of 9-drawer dresser, framed plate glass mirror, 4-drawer chest and open back panel headboard. • *44” NITE STAND is now *39” Wesringhouse AMCARTA* From Bassett's New SABINAS COLLECTION Nine Drawer Triple Dresser. - -Ip \ Framed Mirror, Chest With Four Big Drawers and Queen Size Headboard V , , / >, ' ' tlu* ' i ± . . In Oak veneers and selected hardwoods, elegantly symbolic of its early Span- ish ancestry with carved effects in Emulated wood; This bedroom is as up to date as tomorrow with itsWestinghouse Micarta (R) high pressure laminated plastic tops. Glistening to always delight you is the decorative brass finished ring and pendant hardware. Nite stand available at $49.95. No Money Down — Take 90 Days Same As Cash *r* IJp tp\3 Yedni ' Stot Reg. $269.95 Save $30 PARK FREEdn WKC's Lot in Rear of Y Store or 1-Hr. in Downtown Parking Mall-Have Ticket Stamped at Cashier's Office^ B—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 18, I960 U/WA (FORMERLY DAISY WIG CO.) NATIONALLY ADVERTISED DEBBIE WEARING A PIXIE WIG wie oo. TO PONTIAC, MICHIGAN ALL 100% HUAAAN HAIR WIGS • WIGLETS • FALLS SENSIBLY PRICED DEBBIE WEARING THE FLUFF WIG v DOORS OPEN TOMORROW 9:30 SHARP PARTIAL LISTING Ctmmj WIGLETS Reg.990 DEBBIE WEARING THE SHOWGIRL WIG "Page/oog DEBBIE WEARING A PLAYGIRL FALL REG. 700 WIG CASES 3“ -Asl& fo»t/ Debbie* \\ will ue selected from Applications on a first-come-first-serve basis and bused to Lincoln Elementary, beginning next fall when the new school opens. According to Assistant Supt. William Lacy, Wilson pupils Will south of South Boulevard, and east of Woodward. When the question was raised at an earlier board meeting as to the racial makeup of that area, BOUNDARIES REPORT | Negro administrators were directed to „ , , . , . ..a *" census the area. Proposed boundaries for the f * * * ★ ★ new Lincoln Ejementary School allowing all Negro Wilson School pupils an equal opportunity to attend the new school. A general discussion meeting Tor interested Wilson parents) has been set /for 10 a.m. May 24 at Wilson School. ★ , ★ ★ The original plan for this specified that students to be bused to the new school would be chosen first from the area The study showed that only 44 a^so wer® reported on last night elementary pupils lived in (his area, and only 16 of them .were black. The study also showed that the black pupils in this area attending Wilson School only numbered eight, and so the plan was changed by eliminating priorities and Whitmer, Board Hit on Tests, Report Item All of the proposals concerned the hiring and transferring of teachers in the school district. ★ * ★ those not adopted included a proposal concerning the integration of departments in the secondary schools. The proposal reads that an effort needs to be made to fully integrate all departments, and that as vacancies occurred, this goal should be Pontiac Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer and the board of education found themselves under some fire last night on a number of issues when they reached the last item on the agenda entitled "Communications, Petitions and Delegations." The first issue brought up was the use of standarized achievement and IQ (intelligence quotient) tests to determine a child’s potential, to measure the made on the part of the school causing communication prob- reports be written in board or administrators. ilems. Another issue the audience I Dr. Robert R reacted to with anger ahd in-! felt that the dignation was the most recent “Question and Answers: A Capsule Report to the Community," issued Monday by Whitmer, fifth in a series of what is called a closer communication with the community. The capsule reports are negative attitude, and that this attitude was not helpful in communication with the community. School board member Mrs. Elsie Mihalek said she could see nothing wrong with the at the board meeting, but no action was asked. The outline of the attendance area was described as: Prom the intersection of Kennett and Baldwin; south to Rundell; west on Rundell, taking both sides of it, to Pingree; north on Pingree, taking both sides of it, to Hudson; west on Hudson, taking both sides of it, to Summit; north on Summit, I taking both sides of it to j LeGrande: west on LeGrande, taking both sides of it, to ...... . Euclid, north on Euclid, taking words that they cannot possibly both sldes Qf it to Higl?. be misunderstood, - said Board southwest on High, taking both President William Anderson. | sides of it, to Blaine; northwest Other complaints brought up on Blaine, taking both sides of during the discussion con- it,. to Kinney; northeast on cerned:. hopes for free summer;Kinney, not taking any of it, to school for schoolchildren whose!Stanley; continue on Kinney to parents were on welfare; a I Woodland; north on Woodland, feeling that Whitmer and the {taking both sides, to Dresden, board claimed credit for many east on Dresden, taking both PORTABLE TYPEWRITER Turpin said he be misunderstood, report had a Reg. $49.95 -SAVE $13.07 report, and felt that Whitmer programs and plans adopted, sides to Hollywood; north on issued weekly and are mailed to had explained everything very when perhaps they might have Hollywood, taking both sides to it hfcar~—■ I--------’ — —I------- — about 600 parents in the school well. been passed over had there not Kennett: southeast on Kenneth . .... accomplistiedsuccess of school programs, and district as well as distributed in , UTICA 44ttS UTICA tO. 7} I 1000 .. . Last year Americans bought , 5,800,800 color TV sets and 5,500,000 black and white sets. There are now color sets in one out of every three homes in the - u.8. :^wa {^Awic&l LAPEER itt SAGINAW MO 4<|gi ROMEO 404 i. St. Cl At. AUEN PARK 17 ISO CMAM.AGNt oat. uoo FURNITURE CO. 2135 DIXIE HWY. at TELEGRAPH 334-4934 FREE PARKINS OPEN MON., THURS., FBI. TILL CM; TUES., WEDS., SAT. TILL 6:00 LUMBER & BUILDING SUPPLIES SINCE 1890 gs§ i A's 1 •<* Wm >' I y B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 period of Danger Is Ahead! for . LOS ANGELES (AP) - California, long known as “earth-fuake country,” appears well the way to earning the tag landslide country” as well. ♦ ★ it __.....____________________i m u ! Evidence supporting thls'er is heading into a wet period th* ^.sk so Rreat they no ture 0f the soil. California’s gloomy trend includes: that probably will last into mid- 'Jrrite p0!™®s against crustal wrinkles are frequently . r* • A warning by the U.S. Geo- 1970s and be accompanied by a mua-I,ooas or lanasiides. made up of layers of clay shale, logical Survey that torrential corresponding increase in the HOPE OFFERED which expands when water gets persist well into summer even if no more rain fails. * • A production by Dr. Richard H. Jahns, dean of the Stanford University school of earth sciences, that California weath- ty, were built on peaceful-Iodk-lng slopes and hilltops now known to be .landslides waiting to happen. e Insurance companies have Geologists pay California’s hills and mountains are especially vulnerable to slippage, for several reasons. ★ * * One is the underlying struc- rains which caused spectacular;number of landslides. gnd costly mud-floods early this year have created one of the worst landslide hazards in the But scientists say new build- • Discovery by state survey ing codes, new building tech- teams that hundreds of older: homes, including much of Cali- i niques and greater information about the reasons for slides of slate's history—a peril that will fomia’s expensive view proper- fer hope of better days ahead. into them. An excess of water acts almost like a lubricant, allowing the top layers to slide off the lower ones Another reason is the irregular rain pattern. Deluges follow months or even years of neardrought, In dry seasons the shale contracts, opening cracks through which heavjr rain can seep down many feet, turning once-solid rock into a plastic goo. Mudflows Involve only the upper mantle of surface soil. When saturated with water, the mam tie slides off the underlying layers of rode in patches. Such "skin slides” are seldom more than a few yards across but can create much heartbreak when they wind up in some hill-dweller’s patio or swimming pool, A more devastating form of mud flow is the mud-flood. California’s mud-floods differ from the floods of flat country in that they are literally walls of mud instead of water. They start when mountain streams overflow their banks and undercut the soil mantle on slopes, causing numerous “skin slides.” When several skin slides occur Verdes /Peninsula, carried more than 100 hemes with It as it crept along at the rate of ah inch a day. Subsequent studies showed the ground had slipped before and led to building aides requiring geological surveys prior to construction. The area still is slipping, at a slower rate, and most of the homes have long since been destroyed. The 'danger of landslides doesn’t end when the rain stops. The U.S. Geological Survey issued a warning in March that “although the destruction from floods and mudflows subsides when heavy rains cease, the danger from landslides will persist well into the summer in susceptible hilly and mountainous ADDITIONAL WEIGHT rushing down into foothill resi- Sometimes lust the Sit weight of absorbed' rainwater can make an entire hillside slip. If houses have been built on the hill, thier weight can increase the momentum. And if the base of the potential slide area has along one stream, the result can areas of California. Long after be a wall of fast-flowing mud!the rains stop, water slowly been cut away from a homesite, the owner of that home may wake up to find the hillside in his backyard—or even in his living room. Another factor is the continual trembling of the earth’s crust. California Institute of Technology seismologists register morej than 300 earthquakes per„year of magnitude 3 and above-strong enough to be felt. In some areas of southern California there are hundreds of daily microquakes—too. Weak to be felt but cumulatively enough to trigger rain-jellied shale into avalanching at times. ★ ★ ★ During dry spells, Los Angeles, with an average of 14 inches of rain annually, may go cars and even homes before It. h tc h Landslides start much deeper, in the layers of rock far below the soil mantle, and affect much larger areas of ground. Some are instant avalanches. Others are creepers. One of the latter, 13 years ago in the Portuguese Bend area of Los Angeles’ Palos A Delay Was Bruin in Teacher's Garage FARMINGTON, N.M. (AP) -Mrs. Jerry Wells, an Aztec schoolteacher, called the principal at her school Wednesday morning to tell him She would be late because of the bear in her garage- « Police captured the 2-year-old black bear about noon after it seeps down into the ground and the likelihood of landsliding increases. Additionaf rains or earthquakes could trigger widespread, disastrous slides during this critical period.” WINTER RAINS BLAMED The statement said the winter rains “have created one of the greatest potentials for landsliding in the history of California.” A longer-term view was expressed by geologist Richard H. Jahns of Stanford, writing in Caltech’s Engineering and Science magazine in March. Jahns compared rainfall figures and landslide activity back to 1800 and said: “At present we can anticipate a generally wet period that probably will last at least into the mid-70s. It may well include exceptional storms and ground-moving phenomena.” •k ★ ■1 ★ Harold Weber, member of a California: Division of Mines and Geology team surveying potential slide areas, said in an interview the team has found hun- living In the so-called “Slithering Heights” developments in California, there has been no rush by hillrdwellers to level ground. STRATIFICATION Dr. Thomas Lasswell, University of Southern California sociologist, traces the paradoxical popularity of hillside living to what he calls “an old principle of social stratification: high status and high ground go together.” .. And hillrdwellers have this consolation: Eventually things will get better. ★ A A Staff geologist Charles A. Yel-verton, of the Los Angeles Department of Building and Safety, says new restrictions on grading have reduced landslides in new tracts to zero. The new city and county regulations help protect new construction, but what Aibout the hundreds, perhaps thousands, of homes built in risk areas prior to enactment of the new codes? INJECTION OF LIME Research now under way may eventually provide a way of stabilizing the uneasy land they rest on. Proposals range from injection of lime which will “ce- ment” slipping layers of rock together, to “drying out” whole h'llsides after a rqbt with mas-sive shots of electric current. Another tack bps been taken by Dr. Bernard W. Pipkin, University of Southern. California geologist, who believes the’ best prevention may tie' in early detection. Reasoning that the pore Water there is in a hillside the better it will conduct electricity, Pipkin is testing ways of measuring. conductance across * potential landslide areas. . In the meantime, nature’s self-leveling processes of efo-sion seem certain to continue. (AdvtrttumMt) Fat Overweight Available to you without s doctor's proscription, our product collod Odrlrtox. You must loss ugly tot or your monoy back. Odrlnox Is s tiny tablot and easily swallowed. Got rid of excess fat and llva longer. Odrlnox costs *1.00 and a new, large economy size for $5.00. Both are gold with tills guarantee: If not satisfied tor any reason, lust return the package to your druggist and get your full money back. No questions askad. Odrlnox Is sold with this guarantee by: SIMMS CUT RATI DRUG STORB-Si N. SAGINAW—MAIL. ORDIRS FILLSD CLIFF-HANGERS — Recent torrential rains in California have resulted in a continuing succession of landslides and mud- flows. Hie house in Bel-Air, Calif., shown here indicates .how vulnerable the popular hillside sites can be. was shot with a nicotine tran-for years .without a landslide, qnilizer. I Then comes wet seasons such as * * * dreds of homes on precarious) this past winter, when as much The bear was loaded Onto a perches in Los Angeles, Orange,) as 70 inches fell in five week in trailer and taken to Zuiti Moun-[ Ventura and San Diego coun-some mountainous suburban] tain south of Gallup where itities. areas. The result was a rash of wa® released, I Despite the obvious risks of) mud floods and landslides blamed for more than a dozen deaths and upwards of $15 million damage. California’s earth slippages are of two major types: mudflows and landslides. PICK ANY TWO PAIRS ALWAYS MARKED $2.11 FIRST QUALITY FREE PARKINS |tt i am dHlsJ3fcLj5asJ?555i 108 N. Saginaw - Downtown Pontiac - FE 3-7114 OPEN FRI. 9^30 am to 9 pm — SAT, 9*30 am to 5:30 pm . kk WS^Wii HITACHI STEREO FM-AM RADIO Trim 17 transistor portable with stereo FM-AM radio and two full-range 4-inch I; speakers. SONY FM-AAA With batteries,' earphone, cagd. RADIO NO MONEY DOWN •90DAYS SAME AS CASH COME TO for prescriptions packaged In this now Child-Resistciiil pill bottle IT CUN Hil.FI THE CAP LOCkS ON* so tiny hinds can’t opsn It, yet adults can opsn It with oaso. •The mot bed el teponbw It ICCRIT Iw adults only sod should NOT bo shown to ahlldran. We'll shew yea host when yep hoy yoov Hut preset Iptlen In the Ftla l Tern bottle* Mice your proscription far pills tr copsuUs ie filled of Cuimlnghoe.lt.will be packaged in this now Palm & Tern kettle Wby net "play it soft”. It casts 'n# more. V* moke no extra charge for proscriptions packaged in the Point A Turn battle. We ere anxiogs te kelp In the fight against accidental poisoning; it in ear hope .that neon bottles ^such ns this will be in use ^everywhere. ■ . ■ * jl:1^—“J*----■jgj; FOR SAFETY’S SAKE V. . IT pse wish you uoy buy eMltlonel amply Folu A Turn bottles te replace bottles now In poor how* end fir noe proscription Medicines. The enotpi charge Is enr low roploeooMot coot. Ask At PhSto nweist in paw ntorby Cunningham Drug Store. ACCIDENTAL POISONING IN YOUR % HOME If you hats children or If children ever visit your home you will be glad to knew that you eon now avoid •ns Of the major dangers that afflict the safety af llttla children. Accidental chJM poisoning has Idng bten recognized as a major threat ta childrens lives. 1 The search for a pill bottle that would ba convenient for adults but would deter children from rfbngerous exploring has been under way fer same lima .. . and has now met with succass. sjoi ■ r i* , , 1, , The, Palm & Turn praserfptian bottle now available at all Cunningham Drag Starts has base proven hi controlled tssts to redact accidental poisoning by92JS. ■ Shoudn’t this pill battla ba In your horns? , III Lfi/ififfii/lici in 4 mk / 7\h; tf'Pfll Ip® ■III III m® wm -1%' i**rH '., ;, '.'v .''■■:■■ I" ;" ■ - £ W-'yjfr 'V ' -.ax', gJy > ,/ ■ ' fl. x Jw*v! THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1969 8fg Alaskan Oil Discovery Is Doing Well by Fairbanks FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP) — This former gold-rush town, now a pity of 30,000, is booming again—this time from an oil striker * 4 Atlantic-Richfield Co. . announced in February 1967, that ii and the Hunjble Oil & Refining Co. had struck oil at Prudhoe Bay, an isolated area hundreds of miles from the nearest highway. ★ * * Oil consultants said the find could run to 10 billion barrels of oil—one of the largest known accumulations in the world. < The oil derricks are located on Alaska’s North Slope and m ar the Arctic Ocean, over 300 miler to the north. 14 RIGS DRILLING At last count, at least 14 drilling, rigs were operating on the North Slope, and the logistics problem is staggering. Virtually all freight is airlifted to the sites, although some was trucked to the area for thh first time last winter on a temporary road'the state carved out of the frozen tundra. ★ * ... * Newcomers are overtaxing the city’s hotels and causing a shortage in permanent housing. Stern wheelers no longer paddle up Alaskan rivers to' discharge miners and supplies here. Today, oil company executives whisk in and out in private jets. pected to show a profit this year for the first time. IMPACT AT AIRPORT The biggest impact of the black gold strike is felt at Fairbanks International Airport, where over 100 huge planes leased or owned by oil companies load thousands of tons of supplies for the North Slope drill sites. The state-owned airport is ex- * ★ ★ Airport1 manager John Garland says the number of passengers using the facility this year will total 350,000, a 100,000 increase over last year. He says the amount of freight handled will increase to about 60,000 tons from one-third that amount in 1968. Choice of No. 2 Man Near AFL-CIO Looks to Ex-Sailor WASHINGTON (AP) - Jo-i seph Lane Kirkland, a'former sea captain with a reputation as1 an intellectual, is expected to be the new No. 2 man in the AFL-CIO, good position for eventually succeeding President George Meany. Kirkland, 47, Meany’s quietly powerful executive assistant for ten years, is reportedly the chief’s choice for the 645,000-a-year job of secretary-treasurer of the 13.8 million-member labor federation. ★ ★ ★ “It’s gqjng to be Kirkland. It's already been decided by a straw vote. His election by the AFL-CIO executive council is only a formality,” one source said before today’s meeting of the council. Kirkland would replace William F. Schnitzler, 65, who is retiring and never actively fig- ured in bruising federation in-i fighting. Some informed sources say( the 74-year-old i Meany, only president in the federation’s 14-year history, wants Kirkland to succeed him. Others say Meany, will have little voice in the matter. About Kirkland, an observer says, “I can think of no better guy, but whether he will haye the base of power and tbe strength, I don’t know.” Another labor official puts in that Meany has not even considered stepping down. “I think he thinks of himself as living forever,” he said. e ★ ★ Kirkland is a native of Camden, S.C., and a graduate of the U.S. Merchant Marine Academy. “tie is an intellectual -in the tradition of the sea, when you Use those long voyages for a good purpose, to read,” a source says. A ship captain in Wdrld War; II, he was torpedoed by a German submarine off the- North Carolina coast. As Meany’s executive assistant, Kirkland took up gin rummy because it is one of the boss’s favorite games. He read a book about it. “Boy, is he intense,” says a fellow player. ★ it a Kirkland is not talkative, often confining himself to one or two-word answers in conversation. This masks a nervous energy, a confidant says. “He is like Meany in his singleminded commitment to do whatever he has said he will do.” Kirkland is married and has five daughters, including a set of twins. He keeps his nautical hand in, sailing his sloop off the Maryland shore. NO LULL AT HOTELS Fairbanks’ dozen major hotels and motels, accustomed to a lull during the cold winter months, have been operating at near capacity since last autumn. The room shortage was so acute at times that some businessmen had to go as far as Anchorage to sleep, then commute each day the 350 miles between the state’s two largest cities. A1 Parrish, hotel manager and a vice president of the Fairbanks Chamber of Commerce, says the shortage of permanent housing is critical. ★ ★ * Rep. Howard Pollock, R-Alas-ka, told a group of businessmen recently that up to 16.000 persons may be added to the population in the next two or three years. Part of the lnfluex will be workers needed to build an 800-mile, $900-million pipeline that will carry oil from the North Slope to a Gulf of Alaska port via Fairbanks. It is due to be finished in 1972. ★. t * Adding to the boom was the announcement earlier this month that a refinery producing up to 10.000 barrels a day will be built near here by 1972. For many years. Fairbanks depended on nearby m'litarv installations for its largest single source of revenue. It has little industry. A After 45 years in Downtown Pontiac only 11 more days remain before we must move out on May 29...SO everything on our first floor must go for 0 LESS THAN I Some additional pieces have been added to our first floor inventory to sell for no less than HALF OFF! You'll find furniture for every room in the house — plus selected office furniture pieces. LEWIS FURNITURE CO. DESIGNERS OP RESIDENTIAL AND BUSINESS INTERIORS i\t S. Saginaw St. at Orchard Lak* Av«. — Pontiac, Michigan 335-8174 H Sill AP Wlr.photo NEW BOOM, OLD BOOM - Crowded conditions at Fairbanks International Airport (top) are a result of a large oil discovery north of Fairbanks, Alaska, at Prudhoe Bay. At the turn of the century the town was booming, as indicated by the stern-wheelers which brought in supplies and would-be miners during the gold rush. % 4000 mXKEKEENK SHOT AMAZING VALUE 1st Time Offered In This Area PHIIjCO 0 Big 16 cu. ft. 2-Door With 132-lb. Freezer Brand flew 1969 Model! Enclosed Butter Keeper — Lots of Tall Bottle Storage — Just like having a Super Market in your home. Two Oversize Crisper*. Only NO MONEY DOWN 90 DAYS FOR CASH or Easy Monthly Payments General Electric Electric Dryer FULL FAMILY SIZE Automatic Safety Shut Off With “Air Fluff” Setting-Up to 140 Minute Timer flow On Special $ FREE DELIVERY 11$ No Money Down Free Service Red Tag Savings AIR CONDITIONERS! Whirlpool GIBSON Whirlpool ‘5,000 BTU’ Room Air Conditioner Special, 5,000 BTU v Air Conditioner Deluxe 2-Speed 6,0Q0 BTU Model 98 98 139 Fils windows 20 to'38 inches wide, -//’, -plugs into ) 10-volt outlet | , uses \ only 7.5 amps Includes- Easy Installation Kit ' Plugs 'into77any 110-volt outlet — uses .7.5 amps — fits 22 to 35-inch windows ' Easy, Ihsta-Mount Installation Kit Included. Maintains the degree of coolness you / wish with Automatic Thermostat Has 2-way Air DirecifoYiai'Control, — uses household cu'rt-ent. Installation Kit Included. ,L! 1 of PONTIAC 51 W HURON FE 4-1555 FREE PARKING OPEN MON., THlJRS. & FRI. TILL 8:30 Get It at WKC — Incomparable Cleaning Power! 'EUREKA" K VACUUM CLEANER Park Free in Our Lot at Sear of Store or l-Hr? in Downtown Parking Mail — Hava Ticket Stamped at Cashier's Office. ■eaeeMHHpea ■smamomMam —/--------- NO MONEY DOWN AT WKC • Unmatched performance — hi-power motor creates strong, swift zip flow to draw out deepest dirt • Automatic cordaway to reel cord in and out without tangling • Model 1099 complete with attachments. Budget Ways to Pays No Money‘Down — 90 Day* Same at Cash «• Up to 3 yr». to Pay. fr-DAY SALE AT SIMMS DROP-IN CASSETTE RECORDER $39.95 value — save $10.11 now — easy drop-in cassette load, easy push-button operation and it's completely portable to tape and playback anywhere you want. Outfit comet with mike, battery and earphone, Charge It or $ I held* in free layaway. *You Can Be Sure If It's WESTINGHOUSE* PORTABLE STEREO PHONOS $99.95 Seller SA VE $20 Now $129.95 Seller SAVE $40 Now 79 95 89 95 W North Saginaw Model PS58A17 is a solid state 4 speed automatic changer. Many features. SIMMS™ Model PS63D28 Is a, deluxe pull-down model os shown, 4 speed changer. Two 2 hi-fi speakers. ELECTRONIC DEPT. Simms—Main Floor LONGINES THE WORLDS MOST HONORED WATCH- Custom-Fitted Elegance Longines Innovation watches have custom-fitted bracelets that are sized to a feminine wrist in minutes... perfect fit... no loose, dangling ends.-. .and each is a glittering jewel of solid 14K gold—including the bracelet...and endowed with world-honored Longines precision. Each $160 convenient credit Downtown Kresges 3 Days Only Men’s, Boys’ Shirts Ettnbliihed 1865 JEWELRY CO. 25 North Saginaw Street Telephone 332-2501 OPEN MON., THURS., FRI. to • P.M. FRANCHISED JEWELER FOR LONGINES & WITTNAUER WATCHES Our Reg. $1.17-11.44 96 $ Cotton and Acrylic with' raglan sleeves, knit collar, cuffs, bottom. Solid colors. 10-16. S,M,L, XL. SAVE AT KRESGE* - Downtown Store Only num/jl BIG 15” TV ALL CHAMEL '_*V*—ri-J (dUg.) • „ 1 Delivered! 1 Serviced! < Warranted! EASY TERMS! $5.66 MONTHLY - HERE’S A GREAT VALUE! Big screen at little price. Has deluxe 15,000 Volt Chassis with superpower solid state UHF-VHF tuner, Big 5” Speaker, Handle, Antenna Pole, etc. MB/JU .GIANT 20” Diag. With FREE Walnut Stand , *168 Delivered! Serviced! Warranted! , *10.50 MONTHLY! NO MONEY DOWN! (j 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH NO MONEY DOWN! PAY AS YOU USE ADMIRAL Giant 437-Lb. Freezer • Delivered • Serviced • Warranted for Only $1406° Designed especially for bigger families with limited budgets! Has heavy duty compressor, rust resistant interior, plus double ■eel lid gasket! THE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP OF PONTIAC . OPEN MON., THURS. and FRI. TUASiSO si w. Huron downtown pontiac fe 4.1555 SHaWS *100 DIAMONDS ...matchless beauty at matchless prices. An Insptrlng choic# of bridal sets In UK whit* or yallow gold designed to be worn with love and pride. *200 Michigans Pin* Jeweler* WITTNAUER a rMerer er teeeteie.wiTre^eie The perfect gift , ,. anytime Whatever thaoccasion. * Wittnauer toy* *you"re something special/' Beautiful styling end precision craftsmanship at exciting low prices. MATS 49“ LADY’S 55" Charge-It Note. OPEN MON., THUR. and FRI. TILL 9 24 N. SAGINAW DOWNTOWN PONTIAO BuickRhiera. *3^77 Standard equipment includes d 475 cubic inch V-i, automatic transmission,'Wjable ratio power steer log, self-adjusting power brakes, new front suspension, a loftg list of General ^fotonsafety equipment and much, much more. . BUICK-OPEL, .INC. 210 Orehhrd Lak* Ave.—Pohtiac—NE Ml21 ,, Just Two Bloeke Weet et WWe Track Drive g \ this spring GO TOPLESS with d convertible during THE GREAT BREAK-AWAY SALE Going on Right Now at the PONTtftGRETAIL STORE Satuntay ma Opan All Day Until 5 P.M. Wide Track at University Drive \ Opan Monday and Thursday x 3:30A.M.to9P.M. Tuesday, Wtdntsday, Friday 8130 A.M. to 8 P.M. IV FOCUS YOUR EYES ON SOMETHING DELIGHTFUL THEN MAKE THE v • "DELIGHTFUL DECISION” AT YOUR NUMBER 1 BUICIC DEALER ., .Grimaldi » *- *.........j ' 4 '.;■' '■'■■'■ »//'THE PONTIAC FftgSS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, I960 ..... i ■■ > B—11 Apollo 10 Pathfinders Explain Why Trip Necessary dipped 15 to 30 feet and increased its 4,500-mile-an-hour speed I by about one mile an hour. But other seas which are By HOWAJlD BENEDICT .harder to make the first land-AP Aerospace Writer ing. But I feel strongly about CAPE K^NNfeDY, Fla. -!“• imP°rtance of our mission. Fer eight years, Americans *? a “aJleKnJln* on? a"d 8 def‘l~ r™T have been conditioned to the *n‘ta m.uat before 8 landing can irregular and unnng^ 'had al-ivftf tu„i_ ' be made. imost no effect on the vehicles. dav will set foot on the moon B gaess you coUld say there| In each of the ringed areas’ Now three spacemen are readv are a million reasons why our,scientists report there are large to take the final CenM,n 8dd' Concentr^°nS °f materlal step that could lead to a mo-mentous landing in July. On Sunday the last dress rehearsal will begin when the Apollo 10 crew, blazes away from Cape Kennedy atop a mighty Saturn 5 rocket, streaking toward an orbit around the moon. # ★ ★ Flying the pathfinder mission will be three veterans of earlier space Force Cpl. moon rendezvous, described the Thoma3^P;Atafford,38, whowill fligbt as „a sort 0f ajrborne sur-commandvApdUo 10, and Navy ve^ job... chartinB the Und Cmdrs. John W. Young, 38, and Eugene A. Cernan, 35. in the Sea of Tranquillity near the craters Moltke and Sabine. “We’ll be zipping over the site at nine times the speed of sound and will be busy as one-armed ‘other than the fact that it makes good test pilot sense. When you talk about going some place that is still as far out as toe moon, with a vehicle like the LEM which you’ve only put in space a few short days, then you want to put it in its environment and operate it there.” ★ irp ★ Young, who will fly the command ship alone during the Their Journey is a ^carefully charted stepping stone in toe master plan to land men on the moon—a goal set by President John F. Kennedy in May 1961. Bis an assignment considerably more difficult and dangerous than .the trailblazing Apollo 8 lunar orbit trip last December. TRICKt RENDEZVOUS of called masbons in the lunar crust. The makeup of these lumps is not known, but they could be nickel-iron meteorites which slammed into the moon with such force they are burled as deep as 30 miles. Some mas-cons are believed to be as big as 50 miles in diameter and coUld exert a gravitational-pull on an orbiting ship. ♦ A ★ ‘We/ as pilots aren’t concerned with what causes the perturbations,” Stafford said. We want to know how to compensate for them. We must, be able to predict where the LEM will land two orbits in advance of toe descent, and we don't know that accurately now. We hope to bring back that knowledge, so the Apollo 11 crew won’t have to abort oyce it starts down toward the moon.” separate toe LEM for toe descent to the moon.-• “To better understand toe navigation problem that exists around the moon. By shaping toe Apollo 10 mission to be identical t6 a moon landing down to the point where you start pow into orbit. A second firing will circularize their path 70 miles above toe surface. On toe second day in orbit, Stafford and Cernan will crawl through a tunnel into the LEM, attached to toe command ship nose. After verifying all sys- charting the landing area for Apollo 11 and learning exactly how the paths Of spaceships vary in lunar orbit. Christopher C. Kraft Jr., dl rector of flight operations at the space agency's Manned Spacecraft Center, gave these ,two major reasons for flying Apollo 10 in moon orbit rather 'than skipping directly to a landing, tpapki fss void • “To set time lines on activi- TRACKLESS VOID ^ ties up to and preparing for theF After launching from Cape For toe first time astronauts landing. We K^nfi ^hrniftwardr' across a Trackless will test both Apollo spaceships Apollo » LEM earth orbit flight _ r-million-mile void for 74 in the lunar environment These that activities in space often quarter minion mue vena ior tn the lunar environment, inese . th eXnected We hours before darting behind the S&SA& Sf rierv vehirlp successfully flown the astronauts to do things, to astronauts win tire tneir spac March. ' Halfway through their planned 61%-hour stint in moon orbit, Stafford and Cernan will climb into the LEM, detach it and descend to within 50,000 feet of the miooh’s surface—over the ffjf^tolaidjIdyM*Str0' etod^escenC we’ffbTabte to!terns, they’ll separate the spin-nautshopetol^dJuiiyzo. navigate exactly as we willdly legged vehicle and start Stafford aid Cernan won’t in- when we go for a landing." LEM could, land, butjt s not Kraft said precise knowledge rangg rf earth stations. equipped to get them off the 0f a 8paceship’s altitude is ljn- , . ^ * moon as later LEMS will. In-iportant but that present F • ds afySSSevS:. * the surface.S JtSng America is closing in on themoon showSP the error might be 5»!!!ni2E& moon at a time when Russia ap-iess tban 2 ooO fdet. f We 11 malke a crash-landing at pears to have dropped out of toe Ap0u0 8 drclOd the moon for abo“J BJ s^°"d aS. race in order to concentrate on jM JJws at aB Almost constant Xf^eVe Snfll orbiting the world^ fmst opera- altitude § 70 miieS. J*9?, ta ' ™ tional soace station. W.S. ob- * * , dent we c8n t servers beUeve the linkup of thej .though cr«*ep1>odMd* plain scientific purposes. |ing >* Kraft explained. PLANS LAGGING | He said Apollo 8 supported in- ”U S. space station plans are formation from five unmanned lagging, and the first small test lunar orbiter missions in which laboratories are not platoied un- the satelhtes constantly shifted til lira orbital paths and speeds be- Apollo 10 Will be a voyage oficause cf irregularities in thfe discovery. ' ' moon’s gravitational field. "Apollo 10,” Stafford ex- CHANGES NOTED plained, “is designed to tie to- Each time a satellite passed getoer all the knots, to try to over one 0f fjve ringed marifr, sort out all the unknowns and|or dry seaSi frequency changes ----- i""»- '*nA-in radio signals showed it pictures, testing the lunar radarfean expect little help from toe and reporting what we see in'ground, and therefore it’s going Our own words,” Cernan ex-1 to call for a lot of teamwork be-plained. , ttaeen the command and lunar ana win ue uw>, “We think * from 50,000 feet modules. If they should fail to paperhangers, observing, taking we’ll be able to easily pick out make one of their engine pprns, > any craters or boulders that * could get Apollo 11 in trouble,” Stafford said. He added they should be able to spot ob-'jects 30 feet in diameter and thus find a good parking spot' for the crew toat follows. WWW After the second descent to the low point, they will start a complex rendezvous maneuver, chasing their command ship in exactly the same way the Apollo 11 LEM will do when it leaves toe moon. If something should go wrong with the Apollo 10 LEM, Young will be ready to maneuver the command ship on a rescue mission. TEAMWORK ESSENTIAL “This is toe first time we’ve had these two vehicles separated and operating in the lunar environment,” Young said, “We the historic moon landing mission. Guiding them will be toe maps and photographs and knowledge of the bold explorers Eugene a. cernan JOHN W. YOUNG I or something else is amiss, I’ll go after them.” I The LEM is*built to fly only in airless space and could not reenter earths atmosphere, so , . ..-.. 'Stafford and Cernan must re- AP°U0 1U-turn to Young in order to get home. If all goes right, the two craft will link up aftpr a separation of more tfyan height hours. Stafford and Cernan will reenter toe command cabin and toe LEM will be discarded in space. After several more hours of landmark tracking, studying other potential landing spots and photography, the astronauts will trigger their engine to start toe 53-hour homeward journey, aiming for a splash-down in the Pacific Ocean after an adventure lasting just over eight days. If everyone is satisfied with the results, Apollo 11 will thunder away from Cape Kennedy July 16, propelling Neil A. Armstrong, Air Force Lt. Col. Michael Collins and Air Force Col. Edwin E. Aldrin into space on THOMAS A. STAFFORD 1. Apollo 10 spacecraft 2. Spacecraft 3. Rocket 4. Midcourse and Lunar Module blast off enters earth restarted to correction. from Cape Kennedy atop parking orbit. launch Saturn 5 rocket. spacecraft fe™ • ' ' ‘ ■ LMaM ■ ■ ■' '' toward moon. ■ ^ r5. Spacecraft enters lunar orbit. v. 6. Cernan and Stafford transfer to Lunar Module and detach from Command Module. 7. Lunar Module descends twice to 50,000 feet. Command Module, piloted by Young, remains in orbit. i 8. Lunar Module rejoins Comihand -Module, Cernan and Stafford transfer. 9. Lunar Module abandoned. Command Module rockets are restarted to head back toward earth. 10. Splashdown in the Pacific. 108 N. SAGINAW-DOWNTOWN PONTIAC-FE 3-7114 £ . OPEN FRI. & MON. 9:30 am to 9 pm — SAT. 9:30 am to 5:30 pm FRIGIDAIRE APPLIANCES AT WKC! pave the way for a lunar landing mission—do everything exactly as on the landing mission except the final descent to the lunar surface. ★ * * At one time last year, Stafford, Young and Cernan had a chance to be the first Americans to attempt the landing. Ferris Appoints General Counsel Frost-Proof! You’ll never defrost again. No space lost to frost. i HP 19 HH BIG RAPIDS (UPI) -r The They originally were assigned'Ferris State College Board of the lunar module that now be- Control ha^ appointed attorney longs to toe Apollo 11 crew. Be-j Wendell A. Miles of Grand cause of development problems Rapids as general counsel for with the LEM, the flight sched- the college for the next school ule was juggled and Apollo 10 year> Miles is former U.S wound up as a moon orbit flight. IMPORTANT MISSION “I’d be fooling if I said I wasn’t disappointed at not making a landing/* Cernan said. “If I didn’t think our mission was necessary, I would have fought district attorney for toe Western Michigan district. About $112.4 billion was spent by local, state and toe Federal governments in the U.S. last year for welfare. Sideby-Side convenience! Including a 198-lb. sire vertical freezer! Yet it’s only 32* wide. Flip-Quick Ice Ejector. Flip the lever, cubes zip Into the handy server quickly, eesily. Meat Tender holds up to 23.8 lbs. Keeps meat almost frozen, ready to cook, for up to a week! Door Storage! Butter compartment, remov* able trays for 28 agit, snack ‘ “Tir keeper, deep shelf Tor large items. SIDE-BY-SIDE 15.? CU. FT. FROST PROOF REFRIGERATOR-, FREEZER Rag. $449 Seller - SAVE $54 at WKC • A big side-by-side refrigerator and freezer, yet it's only 32 inches wide to fit in any space! • And you'll >never defrost again because this Frigidaire is FROSTPROOF • Free delivery included at this price. STURDY METAL FOLDING TABLES RECREATION ROOMS • SEWING TABLE DISPLAY TABLES m May be erdem Individually or / in Quantities' QUALITY TABLES, NOT SECbNDS! Commercial strength FOLDING CHAIRS Three sixes e Juvenile • Jr. • Adult AUDIO-VISUAL CENTER Divition of Chrittian Literature Sale• 05 Oakland Ave. ,. ..LAL Model WA2N life ACTION , mi Washer Reg. $199 — SAVE $25 Now • 2 speeds — regular pius1 delicate • Deep action agitator< ♦ 2 Jet-Away Rinses • Gold wafer wash setting too. MODEL DAN i 1 FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC DRYER • Lowest price dryer ’— yet if has Durable Press Care •— hetps_ permanent press clothes keep theitp no-iron promise'• No heat setting for fluffing. FRlSlDAlRE AIR CONDITIONER Reg. $129 - SAVE $15 Now Small, compact and lightweight unit • Small, compact and that you can take home with you • Thermostat for automatic operation, plenty of capacity for most bedrooms. Quiet operation too. Other; (up to 12,000 BTU) To Choose From FE 4*1623 SALE For FRI.-SAT. & MON.\ ‘ v NO MONEY DOWN - 90 DAYS Same as Gash — 3 Yrsi. to ray ■; Park Free in WKC's Lot at Rear of Store Or 1-Hr. in Downtown Parking Mall **r Have Ticket Stamped at Cashier's Office \f?: <■ 3§*asese 4 DAYS 7 7 ONLYl B—12 THE PONTIA.C PRESS, ^THURSDAY, MAY is', 1969 » Basic Civil Defense Program in US* Is in a WASHINGTON (AP) - After 1wo decades of planning and |1.6 billion in spending, the basic U,S. civil defense program is Although one malfunction knocked out power for one-sixth of the nation's population in the northeast blackout of November 1965, civil defense officials In the last major nuclear war scare — the Cuban . missile crisis of 1963 — events developed within hours. The. Office of Civil Defense Although it is an arm of the Defense Department, civil defense in many cases depends on state and local units to carry out its recommendations. program, civil defense work# on such matters as warning systems and protection of emergency broadcast facilities. 11 defense personnel Often against radioactive fallout. 73 studies covering 22,000 man-lmerous revisions but is not. yet They are not designed to protect days of volunteer shelter cop- ready for stocking in shelters, against the blast Itself. finement. Researchers say they have Civil Defense Director Joseph. , ★ * * I been unabte to create in their but a bare-bones string of fall- Romm says the present shelter! Dr. J. 0. Buchanan, Civil De- tests the psychological en- —, —- VIW, w v,y„ ^cub* — —iiiimfTifilVifiit out shelters. (program, although “far from fense’s deputy assistant director vironment that would exist in'claim electrical power would told senators last year that the Nearly half of its current year aid' ip copmg_ win j*“lura' If there were a nuclear'attack complete,” could save “up to 15 for research, gives a flat “yes” time of nuclear attack. remain available in most areas "current emphasis i n eludes budget consists of . financial disasters like B®®ds, altnpugn todays millions of Americans million lives ... that would oth- when asked if the research * * * even in event of all-out nuclear developing systems for the assistance to the states, Buchanan .-laneades, Natural Would react by looking for one erwise be lost if an attack were shows that people could get by “We can’t develop i enough attack. i' ^ . .... (orderly increase of civil defense With the help of federal funds, disasters ara> npt 8®” “j* of these shelters. Finding ,one tq occur today. in a fallout shelter. stress,” says Buchanan. Added ★ * > ★ readiness in periods of many local areas are develop- dicators of what will nappen in might be tough, though, because ;,wntTin noiiRi.irn’ | But llvingyin a shelter .is no research_ project office^ Fred Absence of^electrical power heightened in.ternationa^ing printed instructions to the a nucleiu’ptatat 2 out of every 5 don’t have signs. ★ ★ ★ Those who did find a shelter would face 50-50 odds that it would be bare of civil defense provisions. Half the, shelters have not been stocked with food and water. “If the program approved for simple task. For example, man- Carr: “The volunteer knows no future years is not further delayed or deferred,” he said, “this lifesaving capability would be doubled by 1975.” According to civil defense statistics, 195,000 shelters with 185 million spaces have been located. That’s almost one space for agement of the facilities, most of which hold 3,000 or more persons, is fraught with prqblems. Civil defense’s “Shelter Management Textbook" stresses precrisis training, saying, “should war come, the shelter manager will represent ... the cme is going to put him in a hazarduos situation with government money.” Nonetheless, one government-financed study told of how a man who had evolved into the shelter leader had to be coaxed out of the shelter after six days. tensions and providing guidance populace on specifically what to operations because, one after a dozen gov- the population. Thus, although ernment-financed studies, re- about 92 per cent of the people supposedly would have a shelter space, it would not work out that way. MORE THAN NEEDED In Washington D.C., for example, there are nine times as ported that “community shelter occupants are for the most part capable of self-management, without the benefit of trained management, having but a handbook as an organizational guide.1' you many shelter spaces as* resi-l These researchers have at-dents. There are four times as tempted to develop such a hand- When the ABM system was many in Boston, three times as book. It has gone through nu-contemplated by the Johnson many in Pittsburgh and 10 administration, its role was to times as many in Miami Beach, defend cities. Nixon, however, . Less densely populated areas proposed placing ABMs around don’t fare as well. In Ohio’s offensive missile sites in lightly smaller cities and rural areas,: populated areas. He told the na- for instance, this average is only! tion that the cities could not injone shelter space for every four! any event be defended against (people, nuclear attack. I - * * * To overcome this maldistnbu- LEFT OPEN Mistrial Called; Jury Without Place to Sleep BOSTON- (AP) - Suffolk Su- . tion, the major chain of fallout ---------H ...., ------- Nixon left open the question ot sj,eiters, each designed to ac-perior Court Judge Henry M. what he will do about civil de- commodate 50 or more persons, 'Leen declared a mistrial in a tense. is being augmented slightly by j murder case Wednesday when Opponents contend the Pr®j two other sets of shelter spaces. ) sleeping accommodations could gram is a waste of time andj Qne survey jg hunting fori not be found for jurors after money because nuclear war Spaces jn groups of less than 50. j they had deliberated until 3 won’t come — and if it did. The other is analyzing shelter a.m. without reaching a verdict, would be so devastating that capacities of family homes. ] Officials said hotels and mo-se wouldn t make any _________________________________ 74 PCT. RESPONSE tels Civil defense officials say 74 tell; in the Boston area were and the nearest sleeping civil defense appreciable difference. Supporters argue that civil de- per cent of surveyed home own-; accommodations for the 10 men fense activities should be in- ers responded to their question- *®d tw° w°m en *®re jn FaU creased -now—that the program naire. The survey so far has mver- 49 mlles away, is an inexpensive way of saving,turned up 496,00 houses actives in event of enemy attack, 'ceptable as shelters and 8.1 mil- Civil defense officials say lion more which could be made their program provides a base acceptable with modest im # h "it The defendant, Edward E. Monroe, 35, of Boston, is charged with the shotgun slay- for stepped-up training and shel- provements. However, of the ing Nov. 10 of Jerey Baker, also ter development should world owners of the 8.1 million houses, of Boston. The trial had lasted tensions increase. ' only 153,000 less than 2 per six days. A new trial will now , uirru-iTT cent have written for plans on have to be held. LOWER BUUUEI how t0 upgrade their protection. During the trial the Monroe They point to their budget What would happen inside the jury slept in the courthouse, which, unlike that of most other shelters after an attack has When it retired to deliberate, government agencies, has de- been ‘the subject of research for another murder jury took over dined in recent years. It peaked near]y a deCade, including the the quarters, at $295 million in 1962, then began fa. steady descent to a $60.4 million appropriation for the current year. The 1962 surge in spending*fol-lowed the 1961 Berlin crisis and coincided with the Kennedy administration’s reorganization of the civil defense program. Since that reorganization, the program’s emphasis has been oh establishing the network of fallout shelters. ★ ★ ★ The shelters are not special structures. They are simply areas in existing buildings or other facilities, such as tunnels, which offer some protection USE IT EVERYWHERE! STORE IT ANYWHERE! • Portable & Compact! • Washes , Family Siz^Loads! • Turbo-Action Agitation! • Spins Damp-Dry In Saconds! • Sanitary Space-Age tub! Popular Colors! 'iv'i sliliflj ' . . ,V’ ________________________J....Y...............1 V SAMPLE FLOOR MATT^SSES „ BOX SPWHO* « EVEN 75% cTwp 4A%. 35%-50% SAVI /w/o **t ^ , prites Buy *t «i|ever Before-Never Aga,n ,h, at neve. King *- * piUsiToH »«»»*• WoHon'* l“»“'0!lBE,8 Nation» - _sT SHOP EARi-Y FO — FIRST SERV^Dl -r.r^v, THuits.. w-A 6 FT. wide, 7 FT. long KING SIZE BUTTON-TUFTED MATTRESS and MATCHING BOX SPRING White limy last! 42 *q. ft. of luxurious comfort at a buy-now prlcol Attractivo ext ra-duty cover, air vonfs and turning handles. Giant Size at'Giant Savings. 4 DAYS ONLY! *86 EASY CREDIT TERMS IS ADVERTISED IN LOOK MAGAZINE 11 i Sale af ALL Ortho Stores MOW OPtH 10 AM. SHARP! 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Oppostte|i|tm SheppiegCenter #MS! Bi THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 1 VWl ■; '1 ’ t; '} B—1* • in U.S. Cautiously Optimistic PARIS (AP) — After a fufilrestricted the bombing of North year of Vietnam peace talks, Vietnam. Hanoi then declared it the optimists are disappointed would talk despite continuing but not discouraged. |U.S. attacks on the lower part of; For American negotiators, the going has been tough. If there has been progress , toward peace, it is agonizingly slow and undramatic. What has emerged since the talks began last May 13 is a realization of the enormous difficulty of the problems to be solved. As the talks start their second year,, allied diplomats, in the words of one of them, are “cautiously optimistic.'’ Since the United States and the North. The hope receded with the development of deadlock in Paris. The Hanoi stand, as expressed by its chief delegate, Xuan Thuy, in his opening address was this: “Since the United States unleashed the war of aggression, the United States must stop it. Since the United States has continually escalated the war, the United States must de-escalate it.” North Vietnam was at Paris, Antonio formula, pronounced in| South Vietnamese President September 1967., . iNguyen Van Thieu eventually The stage was set for a new agreed to let Ambassador Pham phase of the talks, enlargement Dang Lam participate, but only to include the Saigon govern- ,f the nlf was denied the traps* 'T“i: ' T11 pings of legitimacy. Then began what one high ment and the National Liberation Front — NLF — the Viet-cong’s political directorate. New optimism faded with Saigon’s refusal to take part in 'productive discussions” on the same basis as the NLF. A split had developed between the United States and the regime the Communists denounced as “U.S. puppet.” North Vietnam began “prelimi-jthe Hanoi delegation stressed, nary conversations” in Paris for the primary purpose of de last spring, about 13,000 Ameri- cans have been killed. That is equal to the number of Ameri- can dead during the twqf years ' the Ro- of talks requited to end rean war in 1953. In the same 12-month period since last May, close to 170,000 Vietnamese of both sides have perished. The Vietnamese talks differ from those at Panmunjom which ended the Korean war. The task of the Paris negotia- termining when the United States would stop all bombing and acts of war against the North. The United States sought some sort of reciprocal gesture from Hanoi in return for a complete bombing halt. Hanoi rejected the idea of reciprocity. And on that snag, the talks came to a dead end. After 28 weekly meetings spread over nearly six months President Johnson ordered a Judgi ie Halves Hunter's Fine U.S. official has called “the choreography of negotiations,” dispute over forms and procedures springing from Saigon's reluctance to cede equal status to the Front. Debate over the shape of the conference table was settled again by a compromise—and a convenient allied fiction that the NLF was only part of “the other side’s delegation.” At last, on Jan. 25, the four delegations sat down at an enormous round table at the International Conference Center, to begin talking. Meantime, Johnson.had been replaced in the U.S. presidency by Richard M. Nixon, and Johnson’s envoy, Ambassador W. Averell Harriman, had yielded AP Wicptioto 'tors is more than just ratifies- complete halt to the bombing as tion of a military cease-fire line.'of Nov. 1. Despite a Hanoi con- LAKE CHARLES, La. (AP) — A federal judge decided the Navy was 50 per cent to blame for the fact that Adolphus L. Crochet came back from a hunting trip with too many dead aUcSohet a former Naw eun-!his seat at the conference table ’Kifh*'» wa? gunning for his third legal! To Xuan Thuy and the NLF s ~ WAITING FOR THE STORK(S) - In Europe the white nftork is believed to be the deliverer of babies; but at Miami’s ^aqdon Park Zoo, this white stork is doing the job herself.’ The expectant mother laid the five eggs in a crude nest on the ground. In about 20 days, the zoo stork family is due for an increase. They must take into consideration Vastly complex political questions. The talks began on a note of hope after President Lyndon B. Johnson, on March 31 last year, tention that the bombing halt was unconditional, the breakthrough was based upon a compromise worked out in secret negotiations. This conformed with President Johnson’s San duck of the day but killed the bag limit with that one shot. U.S. Dist. Court Judge Edwin F. Hunter remitted half of Crochet’s $100 fine Tuesday with the comment: “It’s the Navy’s fault for making you such a good shot.” Tran Buu Kiem, Lodge has repeated during 16 weekly sessions what the United States has made the principal theme of its negotiating position —ah appeal for mutual withdrawal of North Vietnamese and U.S. troops from the South. Israel Knows Value of Aiding Education THIS IS THE MOST IHCRiDIBIE CARPET SALE WE HAVE EVER HELD! 2ND week! I n "turn temtir an w. By WHITNEY M. YOUNG, JR. Executive Director--- National Urban League There is a popular myth in this country that because we have to spend so much on defense, we can’t afford new programs to end poverty and bring about a more equal society. I saw Just how false such a myth is on my re-j cent trip to Israel. ■ _ Her(e is a small country, and a relatively I poor one, that has to spend a far greater portion] of its national wealth on defense. Three wars! in its 21 years and the constant harassment off hostile neighbors make the Israelis place a| top priority on defense. ★ ★ ★ But while some Americans use defense I dosts as an excuse to avoid social expenditures, the Israelis do not. In fact, they spend propor- YOUNG Qjpiately more on education, housing and subsidies to indi-vjjluals than we do. ■* I was tremendously impressed by the deep commitment of C top Israeli officials to develop that country’s human resources. Nowhere is this more evident than in the field of Cfccation. REHOUSE SALE! CHOOSE FROM HUNDREDS OF STYLES PRICED TO SAVE YOU aa- NO MONEY DOWN! TAKE 3 YEARS TO PAY! |>{| fflORE THAN EQUAL' T The Israelis see, as too few Americans do, that good schools and superior education can erase social inequalities. . So they are taking special steps to insure that children from poorer families get special, “more than equal,” schooling to compensate for their less favored backgrounds. The way they are going about this has some lessons for us, too. Too often such compensatory education just becomes a political football here in America, with the real issues'obscured by fights about busing or other schemes. ■ ★ , ★ . ★ - r • 1/ t,v © tti'Pl jtM - Ir %¥ TT i(\ i ii—Rn—•. - CARPET TWO ROOMS FOR THE PRICE OF ONE! What the Israelis are doing is to quietly saturate schools in poor neighborhoods with special services. Students attending such schools start earlier, with compulsory kindergarten, and must stay in school longer, about two years more than children going .to other schools. ■ They are introducing a,longer school day, too, for poor neighborhoods. They are aware that shuttiim the schools at 3 p.m. as we do, only sends children back to homes that lick study facilities. So the kids stay in school and the teachers tutor them. ft* pm*: -rtXofl vV THOUSANDS OF POPULAR DOLORS A STYLES • 000 ROLLS • ROLL-ENDS DISCONTINUED ITEMS • AND IRREGULARS AT SPECTACULAR SAVINGS! OUR GIANT WAREHOUSE and ttor.i am filled fa overflowing with thou •andi of mill of quality aarpoting that must bo cleared out at anee-RE-GARDLESS OF COSTI To make room for hew styles now on order, we have •laihgd prices lor th# groatoit sal# in our prico-cutting history# Th# stylos listed bsJew are only a fraction of the bargains you'll see — and everything is in stock for INSTANT INSTALLATION! Shop today whilo color soloctiens are complete In every stylo group. Pricos will never/be lowor than now — ot CARPET CENTERI slashed prices for tha greatest solo in our price-cutting nisiory. in, oiyiee wwni uni«« [VERY com YOU CAR HAME...EVERY STYLE & TEXTURE TEACHERS APPRECIATE ROLE The teachers are, of course, paid extra for their extra time, ind their union backs the program. Most teachers accept the (act that they play a key role in this developing society, and they Welcome the chance to develop the talents of their students. They ack the’"coihbat” mentality of too many American teachers ilum schools. RANDOM-TEXTURED \/ THICK NYLON \/ HEAVY NYLON NYLON Stunning random-tQxtured offoct loomed from luctroui continuous filament nylon yarns. FIRST OUALITYI LIMITED SUPPLY, 7m \/ COMMERCIAL N/* CANDY-STRIPE \/ LUXURY TWEED mimm CARVED TWEED Rick fluffy nylon pile ♦hofi pen feet for bod rooms. Reedy for •'instant* installation. LIMITED SUPPLY, FIRST QUALITY. txtro-haavy nylon pile In a beautiful embossed pattern. Choose from 18 colon in stack FIRST QUALITYI Cxtromsly durable! Very touahl continuous file 4.973: mely dural JUTI back. 13 MlM. FIRST QUALITYI NYLON Thl» hard-to-flnd Stylo Is perfect for colonial decors. Ideal tar area nipt. Limited supply* FIRST QUALITYI 3.94 Correction far Wed. Ad Due to Incorrect Price COLORS! “K0DEL” HI-PILE SHAQ TEXTURE NYLON Stunning tip-sheared affect In Kodel pdyostor pHo. Roststo dirt, stains and wear. 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Kodol p.lyoitoc pit* FIRST QUALITYI ACRILAN So thick and heavy# youll be astonished that you can buy It at this low, lour Price. 100% ocryttcpifeFlRSTQUAUTin KITCHEN CARPET NYLON NYLON AXMINSTER mnmm x Carpot your ItHchonl Thl» -now typo M RUHER-IACKID nylon ail. mUi all Mate and dirt FIRSTOUAUTfl, uoiyHU, vibrant color. tkilU . fully ioomod into dolighrivl floral pottomc In th. hoavy nylon pie FIRST QUALITYI 7.243 4.683 4Day*Only All Occasion Cards Boxed birthday and get well card«xwith attractive design and appropriate sentiments. Keep on hand ready to send. \ ‘, ' \ t , IH iSl f,1 ''•■'ft /ie iJ ^ il- 1 _. \ • wm THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY lfi, 1969 Offshore Oil Drilling Still Best Bet Despite Problems Among them was Ralph S. O’Connqr, president of Highland Resources Inc., a Houston firm with offshore interests. "They could have pointed out that literally thousands of wells have been drilled offshore without a major pollution problem,” O'Connor said. i storm destroyed 12 large cannot afford to spill it and lose tforms that held 45 pro- it," Barrow once said, sing wells as it churned Some oil men were a bit ir-rard the Louisiana coast. rltated because industry murface tubing valves spokesnien, at the time of the ilted any spill, however, to Santa Barbara spill, did not iy seven wells. emphasize the industry’s record * * * for preventing majors pollution 'Oil is expensive and we problems. But, like offshore, exploring for oil on the Arctic Slope is expensive. The first well cost $3 million. Several task forces now are developing ways, costly though they may be, to get Prudhoe ollUo both New York and California. ■ ^'' and a senior yice president of the Humble Oil & Refining Co. "This is where the potentially, large reserves are to be found,” he said. Most domestic onshore prospects have been pretty thoroughly tested over the past 110 years: A plus production discovery has become' a rarity and strikes with the barest of commercial value have become tougher to find. | \ Total world crude oil proved reserves now approximately 350 billion barrels, but geologists believe that offshore areas alone hold a potential for 700 billion more. (EDITOR'S NOTE — Offshore Oil drilling it expensive, difficult and often dangerous, as recent events off the coasts of California and Louisiana emphasised. Whig, then, does the industry continue to drill offshore despite the problems? Here is a look at the pitfalls and potentials of the offshore oil industry.) | By MAX B. SKELTON AP Oil Writer HOUSTON, Tex. — "To pour oil on troubled waters originally meant to calm the water. Today, pouring oil on water won’t calm anything; it will only cause trouble.” This statement by a special American Petroleum Institute task force recommending clean* up procedures for comparatively minor oil spills took on dramatic meaning recently after disastrous leakages off the coasts of California and Louisiana. These two events were quite different, but they focused national attention on one of the riskiest and most costly phases of the petroleum industry’s search for new reserves to meet the spiraling domestic demand for petroleum products. In 1967 and 1968 alone, the petroleum industry paid the federal government more than $2 billion just for the right to search for oil in unexplored areas off the continental shelf. An over-all investment approaching 810 billion since the 1950s has led to domestic offshore production in excess of one million barrels a day. This output is ejected to increase 15 per cent'annually through 1975. There were only four major offshore producing areas in the work! in 1960. About 25 countries now have offshore production and explorations are under way i in about 20 more. World output I now exceeds four million barrels a day and is expected to 1 reach 20 million a day within a I decade. - **Why such emphasis on off-1 shore where one wildcat can < cost 81,' million or more as op- • posed to 868,000 for the average < onshore well? And where there i Is the risk of a Santa Barbara i Channel oil spill of 250,000 gal-1 ions, a seepage that continued for 12 days and caused millions i of dollars in damage to a 25-^ mile strip along the resort-or-1 iented California coast? Repercussions from Santa Barbara to Washington included damage suits, stiffer drilling regulations, and a temporary shutdown of a hot drilling area ; that had brought the federal 1 government 8602 million on bonus lease payments only a year ■ earlier. Off the Louisiana coast, a barge broke lodse-March 17 and ' knocked off the control valves ] on a well that had just been completed. The well was capped ' within 48 hours, less than 10,000 gallons were spilled and favorable wind and tide carried the oil slick away from land. A day or so later, Secretary of Interior Walter J. Hickei announced that new, hard rules I for offshore drilling had been] put into effect for the entire California coast. “They are - the forerunner of stiffer regulations ' that will come up for the rest of1 the country’s coastline,” he] said. Why, then, the emphasis on, offshore drilling? “Despite the difficulties of ‘ accurate, financial predicting, 't industry continues to go offshore because it must,”, said Thomas D. Barrow, a geologist HEAVY BUT MUFFLER Ends Saturday, May 17 GUARANTEE If mniffer fails dir to dpfrrii in materials ar workmanship. or blowont, runt-out or wrareot, while original purchaser owns the ear* U will be rrplaead upon return* free of charge. If the daferthre muffler was installed by Scars* we will install the new muf* fler, charging only for braekfts and bolts if naedad. Regular Price Fits Molt Cars Listed Below St-CS Ford, Msrcury "This makes the situation quite clear: we are not finding domestic reserves commensurate with the increase in demand.” Barrow said the high bonuses at federal offshore lease sales suggest that many companies see a long-term need to replace dwindling crude reserves even if present conditions indicate low or marginal return on investment. TANTALIZING POSSIBILITY There also is the tantalizing possibility, he said, of finding an offshore field with 100 million barrels of oil or more. “There are very few places in the inland United States where we feel this can be done at any price,” he said. r“ —_ 0Q • Extra inner shell on all oval mufflers kills j L harsh noises 9 9.99 • galvanised ontar shell heavier than most ■ 7“ ... replacement mufflers L_ **"" o Fall-length gas flow reduces muffler rtist m 9 9.99 • Heads up to % heavier than most other j" 91„99 | mufflers ■ I F” liSi"" L°W C08T INSTALLATION AVAILABLE ^ Auto Accmioriu , Sears Carries a Complete Line of Exhaust and Tailpipes to Fit Most Cars Fits most 60-64 Dart* Lancer* Valiant Leather-Grained Black Vinyl Face Auto Air Conditioner The Prudhoe Bay area of Alaska’s Arctic Slope may prove to be an exception. Atlantic Richfield, in a joint venture with Humble, completed two Prudhoe discovery wells last year and some experts say the area’s crude reserves potential may range from 5 to 10 billion barrels. 'AP Photo OIL-TROUBLED WATERS — Oil surges to the surface around a drilling rig off the Santa Barbara coast. The oil, from a “blowout,” was escaping through one of the faults 'which crisscross the area. It menaced the whole California coast in February. wouMi’l it be sice having Msar aluminum suing on your side? Defeat Heat and Humidity As You Drive This Summer Regular 219.95 Heavy Duty Shock Absorbers for a Super Smooth Hide Just set the adjustable thermostat and it automatically maintains the degree of coolness you •elect. Three 4-way adjustable louvers and a powerful 3-speed blower eool fast. 17995 HEAVY-DUTY SHOCK GUARANTEE If HmyM Shock Aboorber fail* do* totally material* juid workmanship or woar-ont while original porehaatr own* the ear* it will bo replaced npon return free of charge* or the pareNaao price will bo refamfed. If tho defective shock absorber was installed by Sears* we will imtall new •hock absorber with no charm for labor. Regular Single Friction Asbestos-Lined Brake Shoes Seam Reg. Low Price 2-wheel set exchange Asbestos lined to resist heat, pressure. Shoes are ground, refined by independent rebuilders for proper fit. Easy to install. Heavy-duty brake shoes 5.99-(2 wheel set; exchange) , Auto Accscoorioo Regular 6.99 New vinyl clad siding* reinforced with aluminum, Is “worth it’s weight in gold” and outword Is “good as gold. Ours is the only siding In this area guaranteed for life... in writing. Now’s the time to see it, before you start to paint and in time to enjoy your summer vacation, (all that plus factory to you prices.) Wouldn’t it be nice having that kind of security on your side. CALL NOW1357-2400 HHf || ; | MhICar* (|F Heavy duty shock absorbers M- reduce jam to . give you extra W smooth rides on back country r roads or expressways. All have r 1 3/16-in. sintered-iron pistons. Chrome-plated piston rod resists rust to give longer life. Cooling fins reduce heat build-up. Guaranteed for as long as you own the car. Low Cost Installs tion Availablr Use Sears Revolving Charge Sean Has Everything to Keep Your Car Running Smoothly... / • . We manufacture... we Install... waguarantee. 1 '' \ Lr, \\ V \ North, east, south or wfcst—putbftown call co^leqt. , v g , v ^ factory and Showroom. 21121 Telegraph Road, North of B Mlio Road. COME TO ALSAR'S BUILDERS SHOW H:00 to 4:00| Inspect Michigan’* oldest and largest manufacturer of aluminum siding. Get 0 trod Open Moariay, Thant. Friday, Satarday 9 l- 1 m»-i-Jil—’ wr • A.A-L'A -IV * o Sears] Downtown PontiacaPhone FE 5-4171 Fits Most Cara Listed Balaw Rsgular Frica Sala Prlca S2-SS Ford, Moreury 11.99 9.99 IS-St Ford, Msrcury 11.99 9.99 S2-SS DodfO, 11 99 9.99 Plymouth, S tyl. SMI trill, Plymouth, S eyl. 11.99 9.99 SS-SS Mastseg 11.99 9.99 SI-64 PentlM 13.99 11.99 SI-MBulok 23.99 19.99 it & m tt'- 'HHi | y iji't ] ■ H^Jfip.' fM THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 B—«ld §S1 ?"ri.r.^.«^. isslE........«... Kflefc-.......«• si^fif.T^.....«,“..“.......- .............m> s*,*.....sare* Sean Paint Deportment a “Cool” Summer Season! 15% Off oil Roofing & Siding Materials SALE! Installed 3-In-l Roofing Be rare your roof can stand up to the weather ahead. Oar deluxe 3-in-l asphalt shingles are made of auperior felt base saturated with 100% pure asphalt. Colorfaat mineral granules. 18 colon to chooee from. SALE! Installed Aluminum Siding; Central Air Conditioning Oondmnr and 24,000 BTU “A” Cell it* TIM As Low As Frau In-The-Home Estimate Give yourself more time to relax thia aummer with Sent Aluminum wood-grain aiding. No more messy painting, jnat spray with a hoae to clean. In white and 8 other colon. Trim extra. IMS Installed insulated Wood-grain « gjfjpg 'On low US .. ■«* .. ■!» ieeee.n. Adda on to your present forced air heating system . . . furnace blower circulates cool, dehumidified air through your'home. Condenser has 2-speed fan that automatically switches to low at night.'Tubing, and thermostat extra. ELECTRIC CENTRAL AIR CONDITIONING COSTS LESS! • Sava on purchase price • Says on operating cost • Sava an installation cost • Save on maintenance e Sava space, top, electric compressors arc — about pns-third the size of the other kind. Installation Available 28.000 BnT’‘A” Coil and Condenser 31.000 BIT “A” CoU and Condenser |nyu»*j $560 36,000 BTlT “A" Coil and Condenser.....I $590 38,000 BTC* “A” Coil and Condenser...... I $61042,000 BTT “A” CoU and Condenser........ .....! ' 52 -gal.' Electric T 20-gnl. Electric Water Heater Water Heater /»W11 £ / 39*T«8 '' Dual elements work srparate- v / .— . ly, Ipper rlrmrai work, only Ideal rise far mobile home* • when needed, eavee power. - °r remne. 23** high. Operate* HeiU up to 70-fal*. per hour. on US V. currant. Automatic ■'w / - " therm onUt. ll.tl, 82-gal. heeter... 411 , Plumbing and Healing Dept. | Combination Door , Crossbuck Door % *69 » IV*” thick it jamb, 2-insulel-ed aluminum kick panels. In-elude* deluxe hardware and Mark hinges, Baked on white enamel finish./ Sturdy extruded aluminum frame;-2 window*. 1 screen. 3 size*: 32x80”, 36x80”, and 36x84”. Mill finish. Building Materials Dept. ontlac o Phone FE 5-4171 ';''' Open p M Friday*' Saturday 9 ' *oi 9, : MBMfet Wednecd^r 9 to 5tSO B—16 THE PONTIAC PRESS* THtTIlSpAY, MAY 15, l96» ffeepgWas in Deep— , Now It's New Agnew WASHINGTON (AP) - Vice President Spiro T. Agnew, who once complained of being painted as “the village idiot" in the 1968 campaign, is parading a new image coast to coast. If he was ever in President Nixon’s doghouse—and aides sap he wasn’t—Agnew appears to be out now. W ★ + As he works to shed the polit leal buffoon label, Agnew has just completed his first extended speaking tour since the inauguration. He has also gotten over a gun-shy period and is granting interviews. “There is no strategy,” insists an Agnew aide. “For the first month or so he did virtually, nothing as far as interviews and things like that because he felt he had nothing to say. He was homing his job. We discussed linage. But he felt all he could do was work like hell and things would work themselves out." NO SHOWBOATING Agnew himself said he saw “no point in my trying to show-boat.’’ He believes, he said in an Interview, that “things have fallen into place" since his campaign which brought such lapses as the reference to “Polacks," calling a friend “a fat Jap," and saying “When you’ve seen one glum you’ve seen them all.” When it was announced Agnew would be given an office in the White House there was Immediate speculation Nixon wanted to keep his vice president on short leash. Never had a vice president been given quarters in the executive mansion. ★ ★ ★ Agnew was given offices also in thw Executive Office BuiM-ing, across the driveway from the White House, and the traditional vice presidential office near the Senate chamber When Nixon and Agnew aides are asked If the vice president has a room in the executive doghouse, too, the denial Is almost orchestrated. NIXON A BOOSTER “The president,” says a Nixon aide, “has been one of his biggest boosters." y “Mr. Nixon," says an Agnew taide, “has been the vice president's strongest ally...” %/ * ★’ ★ / One of the most difficult relationships to work out, as Hubert H. Humphrey learned, is between president and vice presi- concept of the vice presidency from his experience eight years ago. He is giving the vice president every opportunity he can, maybe some opjjortuntiies he didn’t have.” Agnew says he has. participated in all the President’s Cabinet and legislative meeitags; put in time learning his job as presiding officer of the Senate; lobbied (“mildly," adds a Senate source) for the administration’s antiballistic missile program in the Senate. And he expects to spearhead the Republican political campaign in 1970 toughened by the memory "I’ve withstood practically everything anybody could throw." His most visible job, and the only one spelled out for the vice president in the Constitution, is presiding over the Senate. For that performance he has been winning high marks from both Republicans and Democrats. “He’s doing a great job as presiding officer," says a Democrat. “He's aware that he's the first vice president since (Henry), Wallace never to have served in the Senate, and he’s doing a particularly thorough job. LESS NOISE “The thing that impresses me most is the comportment on the floor. There’s been less conversation and noise with him in the chair. That isn’t meant as criticism of Hubert Humphrey. He brought them ig> wort, too, when he was in the chair. But Agnew is there more often." Another observer noted, however, “He isn’t spending as much time in the chair as he did idt the beginning." _____ it it it____________. In his three months as vice president Agnew has made none of tiie campaign gaffs that almost magically transformed him from a rather obscure goy-emor to a household word. His only visible stumble was an embarrassing pratfall on the airport ice during the ceremony welcoming Nixon home from Europe. He ended up welcoming his boss with a bloody nose. But he turned that into a laugh when he joked about it at a newsmen’s banquet: “I don't know how many of you have reviewed troops with the President at an icy airport. But when he slips on the ice and says ’you fall’ — you better fall." Sitting in his airy office in the Executive Office Building, Ag- cause he attends all the Cabinet and legislative meetings. “I’m a generalist in the truest sense of the word,” says Agnew, repeating a favorite Nixon phrase. “So it’s easy for me to sense when the whole machine is not aware of what its component parts are doing, and if that’s dangerous then I feel like my most important function is to move in and try to get the thing running."' it it -it From the beginning vice presidents have chaffed under the built-in frustrations of the office. But not Agnew: “I haven’t had time to be frustrated. I really haven’t. I just hope this thing will settle down into some kind of reasonable time-limit situation that will let me sjep off the treadmill once in a while.” Killers' Names Dropped MIAMI (UPI) — Hie, U.S. Weather Bureau is going to give hurricane historians a break and stop duplicating names of killer storms like Cleo, Betsy and Donna this hurricane season. <, Hurricane specialist Nell Frank at the National Hurricane Center says the idea to set up a new roster of names when the storm season starts June 1 “is partly psychological and partly to eliminate confusion." ★ ★ ★ While the 1969 roster of names is not new, Frank noted none of them ever hat} become storm centers before. The storms of the 1969 season will be named Anna, Blanche, Carol, Debbie, Eve, Francelia, Gerda, Holly, toga, Jenny, Kara, Laurie, Martha, Netty, Orva, Peggy, Rhoda, Sadie, Tanya, Virgy and Wendy. ; OPEN MONDAY ft FRIDAY EVENINGS TIL I P.M. ReatonabU ... Efficient COLOR • BLACK ft WHITE AQUANAUTS HONORED - Vice President Spiro T. Agnew (center) presented Navy and Interior Department awards yesterday in Washington to four aquanauts who recently completed a two-month test' on the ocean floor off the Virgin Islands. From left are John Van Derwatoer, Lynwood, Wash.; Conrad Mahnken, Seattle, Wash.; Agnew; H. E. Clifton, Los Altos, Calif.; and Richard- Waller, Oxon Hill, Md. , , ANTENNA INSTALLATIONS IJHF • VHF COMBINATION • NOTORS ClIfEETfCINC. RADIO & APPLIANCE . OWtC I O 422 West Huron FE 4-5617 I SofrejK^o^ctoS^ech-new talked about the Problem of es with the White House, aides said. But Agnew is, arid Humphrey was, mindful of lightning from Olympus. On anything touchy, Hum-, phrey would discuss his speech W1116 weii^since^i ve^Deen nere with a Johnson adviser, such as Dean Rusk. Agnew, says an image and whether his own had made it more difficult to settle into his job: “I haven’t had any trouble be cause things have worked out “This image thing—over t aide talks it over with Nixoh or||on8 *?riod of the .1““,.. oiH. Hon of. you might say, certain disabilities or impediments, if they are repeated long enough a White House aide ADVANCE DISCUSSION When Agnew disclosed the resumption of Intelligence flights off North Korea, a Nixon aide related, the-vice president discussed it in advance with White House special assistant Henry A. Kissinger. Humphrey found that not having to clear speeches could be a disadvantage. If he ran afoul of the administration line he would that indeed that was not so. they have an erosive effect on the confidence of pebple you deal with—and usually, oddly enough, on those you know best ... People who knew my record in Maryland came up to me and said, ‘What are you doing? Have you really changed all your philosophy?’ And then would have to convince them get the cold shoulder. Instead of being invited in for a private chat with the president after a Cabinet meeting, as the custom when relations were warm, he would be shown the door when relations were cool. ★ ★ ' it - There are few clues to how close Nixon and Agnew are. “They have no regular meeting time, such as 10 a m. every Wednesday,” said a Nixon source. “But the vice president has ready access.” NOT IN FEAR Agnew himself says he / doesn’t live in daily fear of step- • piag oulof line. ——-----------A During a recent mayofs conference, Agnew acknowledged making deliberatepro-vocative statements to stir up debate. He explained: , , ’“They wei^e not the presi-dent’s positions: I have not cleared them with him. But I don’t clear the nuts arid bolts Of 1 the vice presidency with the President every day. If I did, I / might just as well resign and move into some other area." There is no evidence Agnew is operating under any more restraint than Humphrey’ did. Humphrey, says an aide, ap- Slied his restraints and the aide cknowledged he sometimes thought Humphrey was a bit too rigid to following them. .■ NIXON QONCEPT\ a > ^ Tha role Agnew is ftdfilling, lari associate said, “is Nixon's FALLING INTO PLACE “But things have fallen into place. I don’t find there’s any leftover feeling of disability to do the job.” The most important part o f his - job, Agnew said, comes from his “overview of the executive branch" developed be- Whooping Crane Is Determined to Become a Mother SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) -As if determined to. become the mother of the world’s 5tet whooping crane, Rosie is sitting on her fqurth egg laid in dess than three weeks. i /' f The stilt-legged crane laid the egg Monday night, and Zoo Director Louis DiSabatb says hf plans to wait fofl l)er to lay a fifth one before placing her latest contribution/ in the bird house incubator. Rosie and her mate Crip are two of about 12 captive whooping cranes/in various zoos, DiSabato said, adding that \the birds number only 50 In the .world/ ■-' l i , A// ij Rosie laid her first egg April 25/ but it somehow got broken. Her second and third are In Incubators, with the first expected to patch In. about 18 days and the second in.about 25. BR.&k .'r' - - • !§PI n} | ’ 'W1# THE PONTIAC /FKJB$S, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 &m:U . i .q' in ••jm p A 12-year-old Pontiac boy la hospitalized Ip satisfactory condition after being struck by a car while he was riding Us bicycle in the city about 6 p.m. yesterday. Kevin Davis, 22 Stephens, is In -Pontiac General Hospital with leg and face injuries, a hospital spokesman said. ★ ★ ★ The driver, Donald R. Rhue, 17, of 2817 Wisner, Waterford Township, told police the boy darted out in front of his car on East Moncalm at Baldwin. Rhue told police that his car was going through the intersection on a green traffic light at about 10 miles per hour. No charges Have been filed against him. RNA Seeking Black Enclave Inside Detroit Carl C. Hefner Service for Carl C. Hefner, 54, of 1123 Dover will be 10 a.m. Saturday at the. C. J. Godhardt Funeral Hcune, Keego Harbor, with burial in Christian Memorial Estate Cemetery, Avon TownsUp. Mr. Hefner, an employe of the Fisher Body plant, died Tuesday. Mrs. Frances S. Marr Service for Mrs. Frances S. Marr, 58, of A-19 Aracadia Court will bo 3 p.m. tomorrow at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home With burial in Perry Mount Park Cdhietery. Mrs. Marr, an employe of GMC Truck & Coach Division, died yesterday. Surviving are a son, Jack L. Sanders of Pontlad; two daughters, Mrs. Kenneth Tompkins of Pontiac and Mrs. Betty Zumbrunnen of Las Cruces, N.M.; six grandchildren; three sisters; and two brothers. DETROIT (AP) - Plans tor establishing independent governments in sections of Detroit and Cleveland were announced Wednesday by the Republic of New Africa, a black separatist organization. Richard Henry, Midwest vice president tor the group, said the new cities would be separate political enclaves belonging to the republic’s new nation its supporters hope to form from five southern states. ★ * ★ Henry, known as Brother hot art among members of the organization, told newsmen that the secessionist move could start in Detroit within 10 days. The area marked out in the city consists of the 10 legislative districts now represented by Negroes. ----—------k- k- k In Cleveland, he said, a new city would be formed from the Hough, Glenville, Central Mount Pleasant, Gladstone and Garden Valley areas. fhuftstep Henry said the first step would, bo to circulate petitions asking residents to support the calling of a plebiscite on whetfr er to secede from the union. Following such plebiscites, independent cities would be established in all northern urban ghettoes, he added. * ★ ★ Complete self - government would follow Henry explained, with present white policemen and judges to be replaced by blacks. He said: ★ * ★ “In addition, tax money and foreign trade would come under black control, as would industry and building activities. This power would be used to create full employment, rebuild our d-ties with our own skills and labor, and assure a prosperous progressive society for everyone.” in Pontiac, Mrs, Ernest Marioneaux Home Is Looted About $50 in cash and $50 in jewelry was reported stolen from a Pontiac home yesterday. Leola Dorris, 38, of 216 Crystal Lake told police someone entered her residence by breaking a door window and taking the Jewelry from a bedroom and the money from a bag in the kitchen stove. Service for Mrs. Ernes (Arbria) Marioneaux, 52, of 582 Nevada will be 1 p.m. Saturday in Liberty Baptist Church with burial in Henderson, Tex. Her body will be at the1 Davis-Cobb Funeral Home after 3 p.m tomorrow. Mrs. Marioneaux, a member of Liberty Church, died yesterday. Surviving are her husband and three sisters. Luther H. Mitchell Service toe Luther H. Mitchell, 58, of 14 Grant will be p.m. tomorrow at the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Mitchell, employe of the former Baldwin Rubber Co. died Tuesday. Surviving are five children Ronald with the Army and Donald, James, Edward and Sandra, au at home, and a sister. Mri. Kenneth R. Newell Mrs. Kenneth’ R. (Matte) Newell, 55, of 821 N. Perry died this morning: Arrangements are pending at Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Mrs. Newell was a member of the Daughters of the American Revolution. Surviving are her husband; a son, Charles F. with the air Force in South Carolina; a daughter, Mrs. R. P, Madden of Westland; two grandchildren; and two sisters, including Mrs Don Newman of Pontiac. Rev. Hernando William$ Service for the Rev. Hernando D. Williams, 94, of 515 Valencia will be 1 p.m. tomorrow in Providence Missionary Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by the Frank Car-ruthers Funeral Home. The Rev. Mr. Williams came to Pontiac from Mount Clemens to serve as assistant pastor of Providence Missionary Church He was formerly employed at Pontiac Motor Division. Surviving is his wife, Rachel Corners Cemetery by Baird-Newton Funeral Home, Lapeer. Miss Aldrich died yesterday. She was a retired Methodist missionary. Surviving1 are two sisters, Mrs. Charles Vilas and Mrs. Earl Hayes, both of Hadley. Mrs. John A. Anderson WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Mrs. John A (Clara Belle) Anderson, 46, Of 5521 Sunnycrest will be p.m. Saturday at the Price Funeral Home, TYoy, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy Mrs. Anderson died yesterday. Surviving ate her husband; son, Anton F. of Trdy; two sisters; four brothers and three grandchildren. Dr. Harry L. Cotton MILFORD TOWNSHIP -Service for Dr., Harry L. Cotton, 78, of 1321 Wixom will be 1 p.m< Saturday at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford, with burial in Milford Memorial Cemetery. Dr. Cotton died yesterday. He was a vetemarian, a member of the VFW Old Mill Post 9422, the Milford American Legion Post 218 and the Milford Businessmen’s Club. Surviving are his wife Esther, and a son, Robert of Milford. Pfc. John W. Stewart, 19, of 3285 Meimoor will be 11 am Saturday at Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake, with burial in Oakland Hills Mem oral Gardens, Novi. A VFW memorial service will be 8 tonight at the funeral home. Pfc. Stewart died May 5 in Vietnam combat. He attended Walled Lake Public Schools and was employed as a construction worker previous to entering the Army- Surviving are his parents, James Stewart of Detroit and Mrs. Dorothy Stewart of Commerce Township; one sister, Mrs. Judy Ckawfofd of Union Lake; two brothers, James and Jerry, both at home; and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. John Mayer Sr. of Union Lake. Charles W. Sweet oiAd Firm Dies Mrs. Hugh M. (Margaret Lr) Redhead, wife of the president of Campbell-Ewald Co., a Detroit-based national advertising firm, died Wednesday to Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak. She was 50. Memorial service will be p.m. tomorrow at First Baptist Church of Birmingham with cremation to follow. ★; ★ ★ Mrs. Redhead of 3365 Mom-ingview Ter., Bloomfield Township, was the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Davis of Knoxville, Tenn. Surviving are her husband, Hugh; three daughters, Mrs. Mel Applebaum, of Birmingham and Shelly and Margaret, both at home; one brother; and one sister. Memorial tributes may be made to the Michigan Cancer Foundation. 'Dead' Man "Accused of NorTsupport Barbara I. Jankie BIRMINGHAM — Service for Miss Barbara I. Jankie, 22, of 18156 Lochberie will be 10:30 a.m. tomorrow at Our Lady Queen of Martyrs Catholic Church with burial to Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield, by the Vasu-Lynch Funeral Home, Royal Oak. A bible vigil will be tonight at 8 at the Jankie home. Miss Jankie died May 11 to an auto accident. She was a Michigan State University sdriior. 1 Surviving are her mother, Mrs. Z. Irene Jankie; and one Sister. Pfc. John W. Stewart COMMERCE TOWNSHIP — Full military service for Army PONTIAC TOWNSHIP Service for Charles W. Sweet, 86, of 2646 Binghamton will be 2 p.m. Saturday at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights, with burial' to White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, TToy. Mr. Sweet died Wednesday. He was a member of City of Straights Lodge, F&AM Detroit. Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Richard S. Kibler of Pontiac Township; one brother; one sister; two grandchildren; and nine greatgrandchildren. Striking Bakers Return to Jobs Two Men Robbed on Pontiac Street DETROIT (AP) - A strike which had shut the 23 Detroit-area shops of the Jewish Master Bakers’ Association for five days was ended Wednesday night when striking bakers ratified a one - year contract. The bakery shops reopened today. The new pact with Local 78 of the Bakery and Confectionary Workers provides a pay hike of $23.50 a week. DETROIT (AP) —A question of whether an Independence Township man may have played dead for 10 years has become an issue in court hearings on charges he avoided $14,891 in child suppdrt payments to his former wife. The hearings, which began Wednesday, are being held before Judge Victor J. Baum of Wayne County Circuit Court. Emerson Harris, 42, 5995 Pa-ramus, Is accused by his for mer wife, Mrs. Tina Harris Morals, 32, of Taylor, of failing to pay support for their two daughters. Tom Shelley, an attorney with tiie Friend of the Court, said Wednesday - that Harris may have played dead for 10 years to avlid the payments. Harris was divorced from his wife in 1959. His attorney said that Harris had been prohibited by his former wife shortly after their divorce from visiting their daughters and thought an agreement had been reached whereby he would not have to pay support if he did not visit the children. Shelley said that Mrs. Morais who married Pete Morais about eight years ago, was told sev eral months after the divorce that Harris had died. He said she accidentally learned' about two weeks ago that he was living in Clarkston with his second wife. Two men were robbed of $5, their wallets, car keys and shoes by two men to Pontiac Tuesday night, it was reported to city police yesterday afternoon. Thomas Matera, 21, of Fenton and Clarence D. Turner, 21, of 14389 Hess, Holly, said the holdup men held a bolt-action 22-caliber rifle and chrome-plated two-shot derringer on them sonewhere on Judsbn Street. \ , ★ ★ k They told police they found their shoes a short distance away. Poppy Sale Dates '.I . - - l* '* ‘ - •'*' American Legion Chief Pon- r tiac Post 377 will lead post and aiuSfary members to selling poppies May 22-24 instead of today through Saturday as was reported to yesterday’s Pontiac Press. The funds raised from the poppy sales are used for needy servicemen and women, hospitalized veterans and their families. ,-.M‘ Sylvan lake Adopts Fiscal-Year Budget The Sylvan Lake City Council last night adopted a $182,252 budget for fiscal 1969-70 — 10 percent larger than the present budget. However, the council also approved a 10 per cent cut to the millage rate, from 13.8 to 12.4 mills. k k k In addition, an ordinance regulating the placement of foliage near intersections, designed as a safety measure, was passed. * * * The law provides a clear space to a 25-foot area at corners. Waterford School Hopeful Withdraws One of six candidates for the single four-year term at stake. on the Waterford Township Board of Education to the June election officially withdrew late yesterday. John F. Gregor of 3272 Coventry, who filed his petitions on deadline day Monday, said he withdrew yesterday for personal reasons. ■k k k Vying for the job are incumbent Mrs. M. Virginia Ross, 48, of 6101' Adamson; Michael G. Patterson, 32, of 4768 Parview; David L. Fulkerson, 42, of 2945 Onagon; James H. Faxon, 31, of 26 Baycrest; and Mrs. Leland L. Hibbs, 36, of 2624 W. Walton. An estimated $17.4 billion will go into home mortgages and $13.5' into other mortgages. During the 1960s, nonhome mortgages have grown more than twice as fast as long-term home loan-s Sylvia Aldrich HADLEY — Sendee for Miss Sylvia Aldrich, 72, of 3574 W. Lane will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Hadley Community Church with burial to Green’i GOODIyCAR rst=B\/mr= ^.OTORFfl School Bus Driver.. Is Mute on Charge Mrs.' Martha E. Miller, 46, of 47995 Shelby, Shelby Township, stood mute before Judge Richard McClain in Romeo District Court yesterday on a charge of negligent homicide. She was freed on $500 bond. Her examination will be held within 10 days to District Court, according to Shelby police. Mrs. Miller was the operator of a Utica Community School district-owned bus that struck and killed two seven-year-old Shelby Township youngsters Monday. Details of the accident still have not been disclosed. New Law Office The :law firm of Hampton & Hampton, will hold the formal opening of its new office, Suite 410, Pontiac State Bank Building, tomorrow from 5:30 to 7 P-®* M The Office, under construction since last December, recently was completed. RAPID-TRANSIT DISCUSSION — More than 40 members of the Southeastern Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission and other transportation officials visited GMC Truck andCoach Division yesterday for a firsthand inspection of its experimental rapid-transit coach, tiie RTX. The Wisconsin group is Interested to the engineering and design innovations of the gas turbine powered RTX for possible use with an exclusive high-speed busway being considered for1 the Milwaukee area. Discussing the RTX are (from left) Donald Morin toe U.S. Department of Transportation; Martin J. Caserio, 'a vice president of General Motors and GMC Truck and Coach general manager; Edward R.^ Stoke), GMC coach sales, manager; George C. Berteau, chairman of to* Southeastern 'Wisconsin Regional Planning Commission; and John L. Doyne, Milwaukee Counnty executive. / ' TAKE YOUR CAR WHERE THE EXPERTS ARE! (MtUMBTWlCE* GOODfYCAR Spalding Go-Flite Golf Balls 3 f«r$l33 For consistent length & accuracy limit one peck of STwOste a customer at this price. Constructed for long distance end uniform performance. High-oompreeeion liquid center. Letting tough cover finish. A real value et this low-low price l .. p ->.vlra V IS wtoljfc Of 18'Rotomatic Rotary Mower Famous quality-* Budget priced $37n Has dependable S-hp. engine. Adjustable cutting height ft heavy-duty 14 gauge steel deck. Includes roar baffle. mmaavmm SERVICE .♦eesMei 1370 WEST WIDE TRACK DRIVE POMTIAC -335-6167 525 ELIZABETH^LAKE ROAD ACROSS FROM THE MALL - 338-0378 T1IE PONTIAC PltKSS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 indeed. But If the Sumerians could'develop'a new alphabet, who’s to stop us?” If the alphabet were changed to make it more useful in today's world, there would be "more ttym. a squiggle of difference between handwritten a’s and o’s,” and letters would have closer and more iden-tificable relation to sounds. e e ' ★ |J "Ideally,” says Campbell, ‘.‘you would be able simply to dictate into a machine and have it produce accurate typewritten or printed material.” ★ ★ ★ "That," he concedes, "would be quite an accomplishment, because the/ are hard to distinguish from other letters or numbers. (and also the designers of auto license tags) is that a lot of letters are look-likes. Semitic alphabet, alpha and beta of the Greek. alphabet has been tried and found wanting in quality, quantity, shape, and ease of readability^” CIRCA 1500 B.C. Symbolic letter writing began with the Sumerians in Asia Minor around 1500 B.C. The Sumerian script had some 300 signs. Gown the centuries our alphabet derived from the Sumerians by way of the Greekx and Semitic alphabets. The name of our letter system discloses its lineage, says Campbell. Aleph and beth are the first two letters of the WASHINGTON (UPI) - It turns out that computers, like first graders, find it hard to team their ABC’s. It’s the alphabet itself mat’s to blame, according to Ed Campbell of the Radio Corporation of America. What’s wrong with our alphabet? For one thing, its 26 letters have to "do duty for 44 basic sounds affecting t h e meaning of words. Take “a” — there are at least nine ways of pronouncing it: By way of partly illustrating this . fact, Campbell offers thisNsentence: In some respects, of course, our alphabet does a fine job of expressing meaning. Consider these formations: A-frame, C-clamp, I-beam, O-ring, S-curve, T-square, V-neck. RESEARCH UNDER WAY Now, says Campbell, research is being done ini' how to redesign the alphabet to make it “more compatible with electronic machines as well as man.” ■ Grants to EMU YPSILANTI (AP) - Eastern Michigan University, has ^announced receipt of two federal grants totalling over 1150,000. One grant, tor f128,000, will ‘be used to finance continuation of .an early childhood fellowship program and the other, for $27,-700, for study In the school’s chemistry department. How can you expect a computer, trying to learn reading and writing, t o distinguish easily among such letters as i, j, f, 1, or k and h, or o, p, q, especially when 1 and o also look like numerals? Writing in RCA’s magazine, Electronic Age, Campbell says something has to be done about our 26-letter alphabet now that computers are being taught to read and write and set type. “For both the machine and child,” says Campbell,, “the “Imagine a barbarian trying to pronounce ‘barbarian’.” LOOK-AI1KES What gravels the computer Watch the car license tags in your neighborhood. You’ll notice that the designers skip certain letters, and certain numerals, Sky's the Limit for Passenger Pampering By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)—The nation’s tired businessmen never had it so good. They have a J A hard time keep-1 I tag their feet on m the ground be-ff ^"1 cause commer-W J dal airlines, vying to see which can pam- r vV/ per its passen- IAHT/ gars most, ^ jgy make Ufa so BOYLE much more comfortable up among the fleecy douds. “Air travd is turning my husband into a spoiled bum,”' said one embittered wife recently. “He expects me to give him the same attention he gets from a airplane, • Sleeveless top, plus matching shorts. and pedalpushers! £ 100% cottonl Asserted kk colon 13 to 6x. — stewardess on an which means I shouid wait on him hand and foot and cater to his every whim. “I am thinking of installing seat belts on our dining room chairs so he’ll feel more at home.” LUXURY DENS It is true that airlines are turning their craft into flying luxury dens so comfortable aloft that the weary businessman feels he’s in another world. If is so comfortable that he rather hates to land. Most airlines now have hostesses dressed as attractively as geisha girls. They bring the passenger freshly plumped pillows, individual slippers, furlike lap robes. They ply him with appetizers, champagne or hard booze, liqueurs, and freshly broiled steaks of a quality that wives never seem able to get from a butcher. The traveler couldn’t fare better if he had his own magic carpet. He journeys in a style even Nero never knew, and his business trip becomes a minor orgy, a bush league Saturnalia. He reaches his destination slightly sozzled, his stomach stuffed 6HNS’ S to 14 COTTON CULOTTES • Choose from solids, prints, and stripasl • New, split leg culottes In assorted colors! • Choose from a wide assortment! • Golf, fishing, archery, sports outfitsl • Great for the summer fun aheadl • Any one makes a great giftl toy birr. all tiie creature comforts he has received. Sometimes it may take him a day or two to get it all out of his Knit Shirts • Texturized nylon knltl • Permanent press machine wash I • Hl-crew nacksl • Assorted colorsl • Sizes s,m,i* Walk Shorts • 100% cotton plaids, twills and pattomsi • WashaUel • Assorted colorsl e Sixes 29 to 99. system. But all this loving at- • Cleons & r polishes I with long* " lasting protection! • A p p 11 color, tool tention has turned his head, and it’s small wonder that he becomes a bit grumpy when his hausfrau slaps a plate of yesterday’s, hash on the table at dinnertime. TREATED LIKE KING Aloft he is treated like a king; at home he is treated like a mere husband. The pioneers who lumbered westward in covered wagons were born 100 years too soon. And it may turn out that today’s air passengers were born perhaps a decade too soon. For if this passenger-pampering competition continues much more,' we can imagine a trip, aboard the gigantic planes of the future will be as follows: Each passenger will be picked up at his home or office In a private ambulance where he can refresh himself with a short nap before enjoying the pleasures awaiting him. RECLINING COUCHES . The plane will have two “name” bands, a dance floor, a swimming pool, and a ticker giving the latest stock market news. The seats will turn -into reclining couches as soonas the plane Is airborne. Dungarees • 100% cotton denim I • 5 pocket moduli • Sixes 4 to 12. Walk Shorts • 100% cotton twill • 3 pocket styles! Sizes 6 to leT 2-Pe. Short Sets e knit shirtl Permanent press lexer shorts! Sizes 3 to 7. Nylon Shirts • Nylon tricot shirts far summer! • 100% nylon! e 1 pocket style! *SlzM4te12. • aeons easily and quicklyl • Use on boats, e Windows and many other things._______ 100% cotton Some perma* merit press cotton or rayon/acetatesl • Top with coordinating shorts, Jamalcas tool • Solids and prints! • 100% woriioble cottonl a Notched collar, piped, pearibod buttons! • Assorted patterns! Sizes ArRrCD. STEP-INS waunr Jfi • Suedlne uppers/ • For automatic. Irons- missions &_____power VS# steering unitsl '• Type A. m W U» HOOK FAMOUS ■sswrmsmiiwmwww .g mm isnsi atUMMf RSsMMUOW PEANUTS NON-CURE AUTO MIRRORS f Mg round or f rectangular I • Univer* sal bracket! No drifting! - cushion crepe solo! * Mack or Brown *% to It. dm* ported). Each passenger will have his own air-to-ground private telephone, his own moVie screen, and five stewardesses. The first ..will bring him the wines and foods of his choice. The second will give him a man-1 icure and scratch his back on {demand. The third will peel fruit for trim. The. fourth will be Us dancing and gin-rummy -partner. The fifth will read him the love soriftefe of Edna St. Vim coat Millay in a low sweet AUTO SPECIALS! OUR EVERY DAY LOW PRICE ON TOILETRIES! ^r\ GILLETTE MwiSir; Regular-Menthol JC jCC Lemon-lime Xl j 11 oz. net wt. usnsiNr ANTISEPTIC 97. 20fi.ozs. JUSTWONDERFUE HAIR SPRAY 1 tog, M ■ " Hard-to-Hold, M BN Unscented. ?11 Netwt. 13-exs. ®iiiiSKPwfifPK^ P'f--'^;.# ■-. '^^v . WaK- '' >■ '.'■; ' .'■'/■■ ;/;,V'W-: : :n.,!^'x_ ■; ■" ;. ■ v',S•' ' „:7'‘'' |gp !>*• V ¥ “?H1S PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969-/ / : ‘.;." 1 . .' ■ ’ . T- HV ■ ■■■•■••■ ' ,...•**. ' ' >• • . , , ■ /THE PONTIAC PRK83» THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 ., 1 , ■ ,- • _\y . ; - ^ ■; ■ / B-4 Press Suffers in pressure* Cooker of S. Viet Politics SAIGON'(AP) - ‘‘There is na censorship of newspapers in South Vietnam,” a government spokesman repeats each time another newspaper is mulled. In the past year, 19 daily newspapers pave been suspended for various periods and five closed down. Two weeklies also were put out of business. ★ r.ikv- A new press law promised by the constitution has never been passed, and meanwhile the government acts pretty much as it deems fit. Only last month a publisher got a four-month jail term for publishing the text of a senator's letter critical of-the foreign minister. in the pressure cooker of Vietnamese politics, the press always has been subject to arid* trary treatment.. Under the French, Japanese and the French again.mo real free press existed. Later, President Ngo Dinh Diem dealt firmly with the press.' In truth, Vietnam, North and South, has never known a real free press, CYNICS ARGUE ’ Cynics , argue that the sometimes irresponsible and opinionated four-page sheets of Saigon . hardly deserve better treatment Others reply that the country ‘will never have a free press . without starting—and hope for improvements. ’“Most Vietnamese papers are motley, handset operations Trained newsmen are rare. The pay is poor. The government controls the radio and television, however, so the newspapers that do exist assume importance beyond What their standing might be under other circumstances. • ,v ★ ★ ★ There are now about 20 Viet-namese-language papers in Saigon, a city of three million. There are also seven in Chinese and three each in French and English. . ' '■ » — Whan officials say “no cen-sorship,” they mean that no one sits with a blue pencil eliminating stories. Instead newspapers are required to submit proofs of pages before press time. Advice ,against publishing "objections!” material is given by an Information Ministry offi clal.’f f U.S. CONCERNED “ "We do not force them not to print the articles,m says a ministry spokesman. Sometjmes the papers go ahead. Almost as frequently they are suspended or closed down. 1 . jfr ♦ ’ ★ "The united States is con-qgmed about pressure on .the press and restricted civil liberties in South Vietnam. Secretary q{ State William P. Rogers re-qently said, however: "You have to keep In mind ... their Country is at war and they are under more pressures than we are here in this United States.” The newspaper situation ofteq Is obscured by jealousies, power struggles, corruption and the desire for personal promotion beyond any journalistic Idealism in the Western sense. UNDER FIRE For months before he was eased out of office last December, Information Minister Ton That Thien—who was Ngo Dinh Diem’s press chief for years— was under fire from President Nguyen Van Thieu and his associates, from wrangling pub lishers and from would-be publishers. 1 Orders for crackdowns on particular-' newspapers came frequently from Thieu himself, Thien says, thien would comply, often reluctantly, he says and then he would be blasted by people close to Thieu. At the same time, members of Parliament would take him to task accusing Thien—a former publisher himself—of being grossly unfair to his old profession. 6 ft. ★ Thien was an example of how things, work in Vietnam. ; As publisher of the English-language Vietnam Guardian be saw his paper closed by then Premier Nguyen Cao Ky. Thien bpd been bitter shout “Americanization” of the war and personally detested Ky. His door Was open to foreign journalists looking for a Vietnamese viewpoint and he was articulate against the Ky government’s policies. CONVINCING DEFENSE Made information minister by Thieu last May, he began defending the government convincingly—a task he welcomed because Thieu Was then in the "process of reducing Ky’s authority. Thien barred or suspended more than a dozen newspapers ia a few months. irj* ■ November he suspended a for three months for giv- ing more play to a statement by .S. Defense Secretary Clark Clifford than to k government-inspired story giving Thleu’s response. IP?’';* * * Thien suspended another newspaper because of an article on written by a Western news agency, to which Thieu’s wife objected. ARTICLE 12 Newspapers get taken out of circulation for reasons lumped generally undo: Article 12 of the constitution. It says, ‘. Baby Dolls • Loco trimmed baby doltsl • Floral and solid colors, too I • Scoop nock, matching pantsl 0 100% cotton. Sizes ML. uMir tmemn tin. ladies9 Swingin’ New PANT DRESSES & CULOTTES 88 Choose from our wide assortment of newest summer looks! Sundresses, featuring hidden culotto and pant skirts! Prints, stripes, solids and combinations, tool • White cotton pique, print cotton canvas, rayons, acetate lersoysl Sices: 3 to 13. ■MIDRIFF SLACK SETS ^■88 Your Choice! iamb* sens ter. The latest rage in slack setsl Choose from button front tie bottom dossings, V-necks with etastldzed bottom and'elastteized sweetheart! Long sleeve Dacron polyester and cotton voile midriff topsl Matching sash bolts and white duck 20" wide log slacks! Sizes' 8 to 16. tAMir mrtswiar em. GREAT BUYS ! SET snaui LADIES’ NEW FASHION UNG LOUNGER • Crossband with neat new punqh* work qccont. '• Easy- care vinyl, nicely cushioned! • Sizes: 5 to 10. Bouclo FIBERGLAS DRAPES 58 IS* LENGTH I • Solid color drapost . m -TrwUwe* af Owm* Cemlnf Mf • • • • 2*88 rpwoilon. 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R*t£ i«k69c pemheT Pilltbury C th M A 0 Dairy's Swust FLOUR 3* 49* RELISH 4 As Carter's Strained 10e BABY FOOD • Imperial Salad Dressing Armour's Vorl-BasL .' _ PORK STEAK Pitts Grade 1 sliced Bologna or Skinless Franks Choioe Fresh Sliced Calf BIEFLIVIR ,, ■ USD* Choice Boneless - Bast for grilling RANCH STYLESTEAKS 8-oz. Including newt wild cherry wild strawberry wild raspberry Armour's Semi-boneless, Whole or Half choice of flavors yptetelyl Birdseye Frozen 2*/i-lb. Bag U.S. No. 1 New Florida RED POTATOES FRESH, CRISP GRADE "A" - Small Seediest GRAPEFRUIT saP* , U.S. No. I Cooking Onions I * ttigd) ’-ipy , ' ,\v PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 13,'1969 The Beautiful Enclosed PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER Located at the corner of Elizabeth Lake and Telegraph Roads fias two exciting shopping \areas to please you... the North Mall with its fountain and metal sculpture motif and Telegraph Road ei^tranpe, and the South Mall with its imported marble fountain and beautiful marble decor and Elizabeth Lakfr" entrance. Parking for 7,000 cars all around the Center is free and convenient. The Center is open from 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Daily with some stores open on Sunday 12 noon to 5 P.M. Smash shapings of after-five crepes ALL PURE LINE. PURE FLATTERY SfapK Ibid Ira* of rich acatala-rayan crap*, Dm dramatic, approved mptor Sale Priced 4DayaOnly Thur., Fri., Sat., Sun. Great Sport far Open-Air Fun! Javelin Dart Game For'Backyard Play game cento* with tear mefal-tippod dart*, two. oyer-itzod plastic lings and instruction*, just placa the rings and malm a buUs-ayo for points. PONTIAC MALL STORE ONLY* /VtOMTf.OAAEKV % rasa ‘ mm Si B— C—2 ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MAY 13, 1969 Dr. Oaks Says: (EDITOR’S NOTE — This is! is cut out, the inner tube will;For example, 80 per cent of all another in o weekly series of protrude. | hernias are groin hernias. Also, articles issued by the Oakland\ This is the hernia. (The ac-hernias are an ailment more County Medical Society. Dr. tual term comes from a Greek common in the male than the Oaks is the collective voice of jword meaning protrusion.) ifemale (due to the fact that the the society.) While it is essentlaly true that!male in embryonic life un- Three million people in this!8 hernia can occur any place injdergoes different changes than country are walking around the human body, the abdomih^l 0,6 female). \ with an extraordinarily common|cavity is the commonest area Hernias tend to\ run in In the human body. Simply stated, a hernia is a protrusion families. Of the tWo> major causes for a hernia, one is a defect during development. This (condition, a hernia.' " I for most people. A hernia can occur any place The abdominal cavity is lined with a sac called the., . WjP. . ... peritoneum, which encloses all i^P«.ls ^ngemtal and manifests of an organ or part of the body | the intestines, organs, etc. rfJJ*generally from its normal anatomical that cavity. Thus, if there is a beyond the age of 4°. enclosure. weakness in the abdominal wall * * * ★ * * |at any one point, the A person’s occupation — once Perhaps the easiest analogy peritoneum (lining) will pro-the defect is there — has would be to consider a n trude through. Presto, a hernia, nothing to do with the onset of a ordinary automobile tire. There!CONSERVATIVE ESTIMATE hern’a-11 is conmM»ty held that Is an inner tube and an outer j statistics on hernias of one more firm enclosure of rubber, (form or another are scattered Now, as long as that outer;and not entirely accurate. But, coating is firm and intact and the three million walking the rubber is new, the inner wounded is conservative if tube — no matter how much anything, pressure — will not blow out. It; Dwpite a lack of a person who engages in heavy labor — lifting, shoving pushing — are more prone to develop a hernia. This is not true. The office worker can develop a hernia just as easily, ideal CONTRIBUTING CAUSES Is contained in the enclosure. j statistics, however, medical) Often there are secondary or However, if there is any science can show some contributing causes. Actually, defect in the rubber or a piece relatively interesting evidence.! anything that increases the ; pressure in the abdominal cavity, such as obesity or pregnancy, sneezing, coughing lifting, may actually cause the clinical appearance of a hernia, but the defect must be there primarily. All hernias, everything else being equal, should be treated surgically. New procedures are being devised annually. ‘ But, despite the best efforts of surgeons, the recurrence rate following hernia repair is quite high. For instance, in the ordinary groin hernia, a 15 per cent recurrence incidence is probably not too exaggerated. Nevertheless, better techniques are being developed to improve the percentages. (If you have a question for Dr. Oaks, send a card or letter to Oakland County Medical Society, 346 Park, Birmingham 48009.) OFF FOR CHINA — As his mother looks on, Michael Stafford, 22, of Camarillo, Calif.* talks to newsmen prior to leaving on a “goodwill mission” to the Red Chinese mainland. He” is a registered conscientious objector who believes the Vietnamese war “has served no purpose." Mrs. Patricia Stafford told reporters her other son, Army Spec. 4 Philip Stafford, asked to fight in Vietnam and was killed there a month ago. Brother of Gl Killed by Reds Will Visit China B2EEBI MOM IM | Mil .AM WU CAMARILLO, Calif. (AP) -j A month ago Army Spec. 4 Philip Stafford, 23, was killed by| Communist gunfire on a helicopter mission in, Vietnam. Now his brother, MichaeL22,j Is off on a goodwill missTfflfio Red China. ★ ★ ★ “You’re a mother. You can’t help but have mixed feelings,” said their mother, Mrs. Patricia j Stafford. “My other boy, he gave his life trying to fight them.” Michael left by plane Tuesday for Japan. There he plans to join an expedition to Shanghai led by Earle Reynolds, an American pacifist who In 1968 sailed a 50-foot ketch, the Phoe-nix, to North Vietnam with a ton of medical supplies. > ' ★ ★ ★ The Shanghai trip will be made in the Phoenix, and Reynolds already has been joined by seven other Americans. Thej schedule calls for mooring thej ketch in Shanghai harbor' next! month for the observance of thej 20th anniversary of the Communist take-over of mainland China. Mrs. Stafford said Michael! felt that the goodwill mission could “mark a new beginning in U.S.-Chinese relations.” Off to a good start in properly fitted shoes for boyj ond girls. Open Every Evening 'til 9 SHRIMP FRY FAMILY STYLE "ALL YOU WANT" STEAMED SHRIMP, served with Drawn / Butter, DEEP FRIED mm SHRIMP, with homemade Snappy sauce. Huge TOSSED SALAD. P Choice of POTATOES, Hot HOMEMADE Bread. EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT 5 to 10 P.M. Woodward & Square Lake Rd. \ \ . BlyOpMJHHD .HILLS . Wind PONTIAC MALL r t SALE straw and wicker handbags at summer savings 6.97 Through Saturday! Save on our big collection of pouches, envelopes, satchels, attaches. Colors include white, black, coffee, natural. MAY 3.27 to 5.97 Fill your dresser : drawers with May-fresh lingerie You'll find values in so many categories. Pettislips, chemises, slips, gowns dnd gown sets. Delicately trimmed Jjaby dolls, pnd culottes. Fabrics, such as hyloi^ tricot, \ acetate ynd non-cling blends/ are designed to , ^ give yoiXkio trouble at c^ll. The^ selection is big, and \ so ore the tavipgs. Come &righ{\a{id early. mm \l •' ••'A/:,' L I.J / U \- TEL-HURON CENTER shop mondey through Saturday to 9 PONTIAC MALL shop monday, thursday,. triday, Saturday to 9 Eurtka'* upright vacuum gives your carpets triple care. Distufbulator action beats and shakes floor covering. Nylon bristle brash sweeps and combs;/fluffs crushed nap, picks up lint and hair. Suction cleaning whisks dirt away. 4145 Eunka's Princess canister cleaner. Cleans draperies, upholstery, Venetian blinds, rugs and stairs. Glides on easy-roll wheels. Light enough' to cany up and down stairs. Tools store in lift-out tray. Steel construction. 3195 DOWNTOWN DETROIT Woodward Ave. and Grand River NORTHLAND CENTER 8 Mile and Northwestern UD EASTLAND CENTER 8 Mile and Kelly Roads Eunka's lightweight vacuum cleaner is fine all-around toot for quick pick-ups. Streamlined design. Swivel nozzle twists and turns around, tinker/ behind furniture. Brush adjusts for rugs, hard surface floors., 1195 . ( ' Eunka's hand vac is powerful yet easy to handle. Quick cleans wherever you can reach. Draperies, upholstery, clothes. Cleans the car after ttye gang, has returned from a beach party,' vacation trip. Disposable dust bag, 19.95 WESTLAND CENTER Warren and Wayne Roads PONTIAC MALL Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Road OAKLAND MALL 1-75 and 14 Mile Road 0: as* m r /mm} > 'mm rj.-yr- . v'V . . / j mSLkjH '■■■■■'■ .. ■ -- MHBS .1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. MAY 15, 19«9 C—8 UPSTAIRS... Eureka does it! No matter the size of your house or the type of floor covering — Eureka has a vacuum cleaner for every purpose, designed to do a job and do it right! If yours is a “one vacuum cleaner” household, you owe it to yourself to invest in a second one ... save your time and energy. Buy a canister cleaner for the upstairs bedrooms and leave your heavy upright on the main level for cleaning the carpets. A handy lightweight cleaner is great for in-between cleanings and quick touch-ups. Use it anywhere! And what about the auto upholstery, your upholstered furniture and the stairway? A hand-vac is just what you need. Modernize your cleaning methods. See these Eureka Cleaners at Hudson's Vacuums, 10th Floor Downtown; and all branches. O—■-4 mr-n. -V wV ■ 'K; >#> t»' *'«• 1 4U'o , , ', -wSt. !«&■ ■r $ .i-MW !.V/ •A 7A Bp Mi1 ^ T. w j iW'04m jkJ THE PONTIAC PRESS* THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1069 ll\ Student Unrest Is Taking Heavy Toll of College Presidents nltedPreu International By Ui Stow lrr lent unrest is taking a heavy toil of college presidents. ★ ★ it Dr. Buell G. Gallagher, president of City College of New York, announced last week he was quitting after weeks of student disruption that led to QUALITY REPAIRS \ m ON ALL MAKE HEARING AIDS Loaner* Available bloodshed and arson on his 20,000-student carripus. Gallagher was not the first to go. Dr. Ray L. Heffner quit last week at Brown University paying he did not “enjoy being a university president.” RESIGNED IN 1965 PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL i HEARING AID CENTER Phone 682-1113 "Living Sound" HEARING Aio OEALER jQualiCraft white fabric pumps TINTED FREE PONTIAC MALL Mail Ordtn (untinted only) Add S0f£ pottage. Sorry. No C.O.D.’i Chancellor Edward W. Strong of the University of California at, Berkley resigned in 1965 under criticism of his handling of student protests. Two years later, the president of the California University system, Clark Kerr, was fired by the state board of regents in the wake of campus disorders. Columbia University’s Dr Grayson Kirk resigned last year after 1 student disruption. San Fraricisco State College lost two presidents — Drs. John Sum-merskill and Robert Smith — under similar circumstances. Dr. Elvis Starr recently left the presidency of the University of Indiana, and Dr. John Champion quit as president of Florida State, at least partially as a result of student pressures. The president of Swarthmore College in Pennsylvania, Dr. Courtney C. Smith, died of a heart attack while his campus was in the throes of student disorders last year. MARK ERLANDSON Career in Law Is Eyed by Top Waterford Teen A Pierce Junior High School ninth grader who hopes his speech and drama activities will help him to a law career is this week’s Waterford Township teen of the week. Mark Erlandson, 15, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Green of 5521 Fan«ria.^>resident of the school dramatics club and has played leading roles in several productions. ★ ★ ★ In addition, he has competed in several public speaking contests and recently was awarded a trophy for his presentation in the Waterford Jaycees Speak Up for Waterford contest. His hobbies include sports of all kinds. 250 CHANGES In the past year, at least 250 changes have been made in the presidencies of America’s ap* proximately 2,500 colleges and universities. Right now, ac cording to the American Association of Higher Education (AAHE), there are some 200 colleges with vacancies in the president’s office. Seventy are at major universities. Student activism caused some of this turnover, although no precise measurement is possible. ★ ★ ★ A college president’s tenure once could be calculated in decades. Now, according to {t a 1 p h Cheesebrough, the AAHE’s director of special projects, the average U. S. college president has been in office four years. “We’re experiencing a big turnover — much more than usual,” said Russell I. Thackrey, executive director of the National Assocaition of Universities and Land Grant Colleges, an organization of 111 such schools in all 50 states. . “Student unrest Is a factor,” he said, but adds that it is only one of a'variety of pressures that have made univeniity administration infinitely more burdensome than it was lit former years. ★ ★ “Presidents feel the job takes out of them as much In five years as it' used to in 10,” he T, In the opinion of Charles Dobbins, executive director of the American Council on Education, student activism “is a factor in many more resignations than those in which the president publicly says so.” And, he says, “I think the effect of the unrest probably will be even more costly in terms of the willingness of new people to aspire to leadership. We know for a fact there are some very able faculty people who con sidered administration but have changed their minds.” AFFECTS HEALTH I These potential presidents are concerned about the effect of responsibilities cm their health and families as well as their careers. , V x *V * »' vl One result of the pressure and burden is the tendency of academicians to tT,y administration for a while and then return to the ranks of teachers and researchers. Some university presidents, such as Howard Bowen of the University of Iowa, recently have done this. But it is more common among university vice Pueblo Exec Quits Navy ST. LOUIS, Mo. (UPI) - Lt. Edward Murphy Jr., executive officer of the Pueblo, said yesterday he had submitted his resignation from the Navy because of “baseless allegations” about his conduct aboard the ship. Murphy said he mailed a letter to the secretary of the Navy Tuesday night in which he said, “I leave the Navy with regret because I know I am still fit to make a valuable contribution to tija-service.” WWW “I bear no grudges or Wt* temess.” Murphy said in his letter, “I am especially proud of the way the United States government acted in the Pueblo affair, quietly negotiating to secure the release of our crew without of kowtowing to the demands tiie North Koreans.” CONFUTED BY ACTION Murphy added, “But I admit to being confused about the Navy’s action in regard to my career. “I do not Want to harbor a suspicion that this decision had any political overtones, and I hope the Navy will see fit to reassure me along these lines.” • w w w Murphy said he is “self-satisfied with my performance” aboard the Pueblo. A board of inquiry had recommended the letter of admonition to Murphy because he had allegedly failed to organize the Pueblo’s men in destroying the ship’s classified material after it was captured by. North Korea in January 1968/" V deans, says - . & presidents Thackrey. “It is not at all unusual for a mail to go into administration for four or five years and then rei turn to teaching," he said. Other university administrators, such as Douglas Knight at Duke University, Vernon Alden at Ohio University, and Frank Ross of the University; of Alabama, are forsaking N the rigors of 7 president’s office for lucral positions in industry. Still others are finding good paying and potentially less burdening positions in government. DIFFICULT TO FILL Thackrey concedes it is increasingly more difficult to fill presidencies — and these fobs pay 620,000 to $50,000 a year, some more. w w ’w Be it. student agitation or other factors he said, a survey of the colleges in the National Association of State Universities and Land Grant Colleges revealed last year that between 40 and 50 per cent of the presidents that were ip office News Yesterday at State Capital RMMurid sportsmen that hit (tontrp-vtrsiii rscTMtlon bonding program would .'amt. ____ ■ ______Hi ullp Fastlval. Ordered creation of a special commission to develop a alnglo, comprehensive mental health law. MEHTAL HEALTH DIRECTOR Called tor an expanded audit of Iha department In the wake of charge* of mis- 1 SENATE Passed! SCR 41, Levin. Authorise a legislative study of problem* Involved In THE HOUSE Debated, but did not tarn final action on, tha tl4$-mllllon state school aid bill. five' years ago no longer were there. w ■ w w Some concerned educators see the grinding pressure now on administrators leading to whole new concepts of university administration — possibly With a class of professional managers talking tiie place of the traditional scholar-administrator. Or, possibly, the faculty will assume a greater voice in the university and a comensurately greater responsibility for its management. r .A//1 LANE BRYANT t-strap sandal in smooth leather Chic Italian import with block heel, foam cushion inner sole. In white, black of natural. Hard-to find sizes medium (B,C) 7 to 10,11,12, wide (D,E) SVi to 10,11,12 x-wide (EE-EEE) 5 to 10,11,12 Otihr by mall nr phene 6S2-7500. Add 40c foe delivery plug 20c for, CO.D't and 4%ta The Pontiac Mall SPECIAL PURCHASE! <3 RINNELJL^S NEW RECORD DEPARTMENT! DIVISION OP AMERICAN MUSIC STOM« INC HUNDREDS OF POP LP ALBUMS 19 Our record department has a large selection of major label long-playing popular albums. Many top artists are featured in this special sale. • Country & Western • Pop Groups • Jazz • Show Tunes • Vocals 'SSS'^nm H'SERAPHImS "Angab nf Iha h%h*R oadar* "COMMAND PERFORMANCE Reg. 2.49 1 99 LP The most distinguished re-’ cordings in the highly prais-* ed Seraphim classical catalog are available at remarkable savings. Each is truly a command performance. • Toscanini • Callas * Horowitz • Beecham • Stokowski • Gigli SEE! HEAR! PLAY! TURN ON AT OUR HAMMOND PLAY-IN LEVI'S® WESTERN BELLS « Wide-stride-it through summer in western pocketed flairs by Levi Straus that take it wallpapered-tapered from the hips to the knees, then flair to full 20“ bell bottoms.! Cool and carefree no-iron hopsack in navy* or white, sizes 30 to 38 in assorted inseatns, at $9. EMS SPORtSWEAR DEPART^NT - ^ You'll play the ndw Hammond Cadette with Instant Play right away. See for yourself,! Come to our Musical Plav-ln any day this week. Our new Hammond Odettes are set up and re^dy for you. our Pontiac mall store is open Tuesday and , WEDNESDAY TO 5:30; MONDAY. THURSDAY, .FRIDAY AND H SATURDAY TD 9 B‘M TELEGRAPH AND ELIZABETH LAKE kOADS\ Slipgi^ ■»; m. ml • if' iV. The! *ontiac Mall, * ipPP* •?►! Op« m M .< , ...... r Ir 'S3 TEST OUR Instant Play Claim (for Non-Organ Players) 1. Play one ’ popular tune (at least) before the play-in ends. 2. Go on to play 10 popular tunes in 10 days, on your own with a new Hammond Cadette. Receive 6 weeks of free lessons and the famous Hqm-mond Organ Course Introductory Materials with your new, Cadette.' k/ ' . ' Have fun and instant satisfaction from the start on your own! 3. pi T JL-j I,,.-, il, j ** US l.C \* TO N E • INC. ■ :/V\ ■ \VWv \V V Every Evening 'til 9, Phone 682-0422 Use Your Chorgo, 4-PayPlaii (90 day* tame as cosh) or Budgot Tonne t -i V iwi wm.A m «m 3 k tR w 7 r, £ /H^Vi ? f- ^ & 1 it ■ffiW} „'- '!.; ?; ;|fVf/i;,!./i''"y ')> £, if r; wvW'WervmWm§i^^:$ §J 'B1X’.'/ flMI H I il I}' HE I SH BS e'$> ^ ■, .-■-*»1 v t',> i- ; )•; /rv-.:, r-r> :y=v; y £7; , 1- 1 y v i y' IKI i1 -; jT*ri > ' * ■'■■,•«f * t h VwE'); ;, . > * I /(■ Vv;/'V'^-V#i(/: ktfv■ »•:•' ;» P [W3% fif “i'll I ,..., , ■ , I ■« Si*! ) ,• n J^v» .*V^k 'XiT ' 11 * "■ S'1 £Cvi lr \ This program is offered at no c^ge to the parents. All 'of the funds for this project come from the spbci&l education budget, Wright said. A majority of special education funds are allocated by the state and county governments. av The homebound programs cover children in all \grades\ ' frohi first through ftth, and student ' enrolled in Pontiac Schools. up to 25 years ^>ld SPl ECIAL The S TRAINING. School Code of Michigan (1966) specifies that the teacher for such a program must have had special training to teach physically disabled or handicapped children. The Pontiac homebound ^teacher, Mrs. Delores Weinfurther of Livonia, who graduated in January from Eastern Michigan University, has a special education degree to work with orthopedically handicapped children.' She is also certified to teach youngsters in all grades. Her job is to bring each student his books, assignments, and study materials from his teachers and to assist the youngsters with any problems he might have with his schotol work. “I really enjoy this job. I can’t really compare it with regular teaching since this is my first job, but I think it is a wonderful way of teaching — on a one-to-one basis,” Mrs. Weinfurther said. ★ ★ ★ Many of the students may not be actually ill even if they are bed-bound. There are students with broken bones resulting from accidents, some recovering from burns, some with chronic diseases such as asthma or arthritis, and there are some recovering from surgery. Pregnant schoolgirls are sometimes, but rarely, accepted Into the homebound program. Usually they are referred to Oakland County Intermediate School District’s teleclass program. This county program includes a network of students in die county who “attend’’ classes via telephone. m, w, KEEPING UP WITH THE CLASS - Pontiac Schools Homebound Teacher, Mrs. Donald Weinfurther of Livonia, (right) assists Connie Reynolds of 198 Clifford with her school work, Connie, a 10th grader at Central High School, is home recuperating from burns. Physicians Told of Better Birth-Control BOSTON (AP) - A new birth control pill has been found effective and possibly safer than others, physicians at an international symposium at Peter Bent Brigham Hospital have been told. Dr. Somers H. Sturgis of the hospital and Harvard Medical School said Tuesday the new pill may become the future oral contraceptive. He said it appear! to be more effective than an intrauterine device and does not have eome of the side ef- fects associated with present pills. Dr. Gerhard Boost, associate medical director of the Syntex Institute of Clinical Medicine, said the pill, made of chlorma-dinone acetate, has been tested for six years with 4,704 women around file world. Doctors said there were 163 pregnancies in the group, 101 of than resulting from not taking the pills as prescribed, and 62 resulting dispite taking the pill as directed. Doctors said the pills should be taken daily and missing one can result in pregnancy. ★ ★ They said a major advantage of the pill is that it apparently does not act through the pituitary gland and does not affect the master hormone center. ★ it it They said it afro apparently has no effect on blood dotting Speakers said the pill does not contain the sex hormone estrogen but does have small amounts of progesten, an artificial sex hormone. They said It does have some adverse side effects, including irregular bleeding and headaches. it it it The drug Is not licensed in the United States and is available only for investigational use Sdentfrts consider the trial of the pill to be limited and say they do not have significant data yet on its long-term effects. ' \ SQUARE TOES Mansfields by Bostonian boast a bold new toe—a new square toe that I wakes up traditional things and turns on with-the turned on. Here in two buckled monk-strap versions: vying tip in antique brown or plain toe in black, at $21. This year get yourself together from the start by starting from the bottom up. OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY TO 5:30; MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TO 9 P.M. TELEGRAPH AND ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS 1 ^<*5»TB>S.CULO'ntS’ pMire>wre-c'af*" THE whole SPUT-L^/EL SCENE FOR SUMMER— IS READY FOR YOU IN A MARVELOUSLY ' COLORFUL COLLECTION AF r>/\, .__ OF SOLIDS; STRIPES, Pn"'A DOTS AND POLKA Hoiv T' * SHV- 1 iU hMM: PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY TO 5:30;. MONDAY* fPRJRSDAy; P&iD^Y AND SATURDAY T0 9|P. M. mm—mm TELEGRAPH AND ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS it') W/xh \V3 r,\ w ** A ; II If !W Y ^ ^ l i f'l 1, i.?-; w it m Wk r, — . j , •mntvA me ; m *■■ km fa] Jjy V..Vy-' *#« ., .. '«»>v; gg*® |yr> ■ 0—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY; MAY 15. 1969 WASHINGTON (AP)-The pilots who fly President Nixon fate the duty a cut-and-dried mission, and they went to keep it that why. . J$|| g President Nixon can get a helicopter whirring crib the White House South lawn inside of 30 minutes. A big Boeing Jet plane can be ready to speet) him aloft within 90 minutes. ★ h it So far, no emergencies have summoned the presidential aircraft and helicopter commanders, who stand by on 24-hour call. And they rate Nixon more predictable in his travels than forma* President Johnson. Lt. Col. Ralph D. Albertazzie of Morgantown, W. Va., a 45-year-old graying, rugged six-footer with 18,000 flying hours, was picked last December to be Nixon's pilot aboard Air Fffrce One. He’s the most experienced pilot ever to fly a president and is a veteran of 75 combatsup-port and 17 combat missions in Vietnam. COPTER PILOT The President’s helicopter command pilot is 39-year-old Lt. CoL E. J. (Ed) Sample of Witt, HI., a veteran of 21 years in the Marines, who flew gun-ships In Vietnam. A slender, 5 foot 9 Indies tall, with close-cropped thinning hair, Sample went into the Marines at 18, right out of high school and made his career in helicopters, trained at Pensacola, Fla., and Corpus Christi, Tex. Albertazzie has his headquarters and home at Andrews . Force Base, id nearby Meryl* with the 89th Military Airlift Wing, a special unit mat provides air transport for the President, top offidals and visiting foreign dignitaries. ★ Sr ★ There are three additional presidential pilots and a naviga- Prom Called Off in Memorial to Dead Classmate tor under him, hut Albertazzie notes “I do ail the flying." So far, it has included a 7,000-mile mission to Europe for which Albertazzie did' an advance trip, and bops to -Nixon’s vacation spots in Florida and California. Sample commands Marine Helicopter, Squadron One at Quantico, Va., with 22 helicopters and 47 pilots, whose primary mission Is flying the President He is the President’s helicopter pilot, but four other command pilots can fly Nixon in Sample’s absence arid ail have done so. THOREAU, 'N.M. (AP) -Gary English was killed by lightning last weekend, and his classmates at Thoreau High School sought some way to pay their respects. The juniors abandoned plans for their prom this weekend, donated the decoration fund and canceled the annual dance. The Gary English Memorial Fund now stands at $500. It will be given to the family for use as they see fit. A memorial service is planned today in the school gymnasium. LONGEST FLIGHT Sample was at the controls when Nixon took his longest helicopter flight so far—a 120-mile trip to attend the funeral of his uncle, Ernest Nixon, in State College, Pa. When Nixon flies, his plane is known as Air Force One. When he uses a chopper, it's "Number Ope Helicopter.” it it it Hie planes all get what Sample describes as “tender, loving care.” .When it comes to flying, Albertazzie says presidential pilots do a little bit less of it than the average Air Force pilot, but work a little harder at proficiency. They do some practice landings and instrument approaches each week that they’re not flying Nixon. Whenever the first family is out of town, the helicopter pilots try to make practice landings at the White House and the Presl-dent’s.Park on the Ellipse ,be-low.The'pilots have to get a minimum of 20 hours flying a month to maintain proficiency and some of them practice instrument approaches at nearby Dulles, Andrews and National airports. it it it Sample, who flew as helicopter copilot for Presidents John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, had a 13-month tour in Vietnam, half of its flying armed helicopters. He’s qualified to fly jets, but he’s never even ridden in Air Force |One. * ★ ★ When Air Force One flies, Albertazzie is In the left, command Seat of the two-pilot aircraft. Fascinated by planes since he was a youngster back in Ca&ville,.a anall town pear Morgantown, W.Va., Albertazzie has beat in the Air Force since 1918 and was the first of its pilots to qualify to fly the Boeing 707 of the presidential fleet. The plane Nixon is now using! ■No. 86970—was the first Boeing bought for the Air Force and Albertazzie recalls "I brought it home front the fecfo ry in 1959." He was ffytog copi- Takes New Post DOWAGIC (UP!) - Howard! F. Vire, Lee Memorial Hospital administrator, has resigned to become administrator of Mercy Hospital at Monroe. He Is a retired Army colonel. lot for President Dwight p. Eisenhower then as he did later for Kennedy. RAN FLYING SCHOOL Albertazzie won a football scholarship to West Virginia University, ran his own flying school, was a bomber instructor in World War II and returned to duty in the Korean war, ferrying troops and supplies across the Pacific for 314 years. He won the Bronze Star and two Air Medals for his Vietnam service. i Before Nixon’s European trip, Albertazzie flew the entire route to dress rehearsal to check on airports, navigational aides and service facilities to be sure everything went property for the boss. ' i Presidential pilots are on call, too, for separate travels of Nixon’s wife, Pat, and daughters Trida and Julie. Asked why the first lady doesn’t use commercial planes, her press secretary explained recently : "fit tills day and age when planes are being hijacked it’s just not safe for a first lady to travel to a commercial plane;.” the times change, but not/movado’* way of keeping it PRESIDENTIAL PILOT-Lt. Col. Ralph D. Albertazzie sits at the controls of Air Force One, the big jet transport plana assigned to the White House for President Nixon’s use. Albertazzie at 45 is the most experienced pilot to fly a president Soil Scientists Ready Surveys Makeup of Michigan Dirt Will Be Tested EAST LANSING (JD — Soil survey teams will trek through Michigan again this summer, toting all their tools to test the makeup of dirt. The soil scientists — some from the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Soil Conservation Service, others from Michigan State University — will be continuing a survey of the state’s 36.5 million acres of soil. ★ ir.it Their work, carried out since 1901 with the exception of a few war years, is aimed at classifying dirt, identifying each kind and showing its distribution on ■oil maps. The surveys, experts say, help farmers, home and road builders, water users a n d everyone else who uses the soil or a product from it — including the federal.. government. TEAM TRAINER Dr. Eugene Whiteside, an MSU soil scientist who, with Dr. Ivan Schneider, trains members of' the survey teams, spent several months in California during World War II. He was looking for good ground on which to grow rubber plants — the product of which was sorely needed for war-connected equip-ment. . /. # “We knew'the natural rubber plant — guayule — which grows wild to the southwest,"1 White-Side recounts. "It was just a matter of identifying areas of Suitable soil" to areas close to manufacturing plants, he says. Whiteside and colleagues did find such areas, but the guayule was planted inHHmited acreage only because at about the same time an artificial rubber program was developed, tyhiteside "Our work was pretty well nnder way before It Was evident that tfie artificial program " be sufficient,” he says. yW ..JmJ BSP SI , ■■ Your kind of shoe— Perfection is within your reach. This trim shaped pump is designed with a smooth. topline and no-seam side. of PONTIAC THE PONTIAC MALL j , j Classic design and unflinching accuracy: these are the qualities for which Movado is internationally celebrated. It's a reputation Movado perpetuates year after year—but never stodgily. They follow principles of design so classic, so pure, that a recent Movado watch was chosen by the Museum of Modern Art for its permanent collection. And the functioning parts of the > timepiece meet equally classic standards of perfection*. If the watch you're looking for doesn't need to shout to proclaim its stature, look at Movado. Rose is where you’ll find it From $110 to $1500. l'/l )■ / I /! .m ' ■/ • 1 , . m !•'. > / . - /■ i m IM, i . . . jl • i i. WOODWARD & JOHN R • NORTHED • PONflAC MAU. • TEI.-12 MALL • UNIVERSAL CITY MALI • WONDERLAND • WESTB0RN MICHIGAN «. SCHAEFER V SEVEN GRAND • NEW CENTER * GRAND RAPIDS - DOWNTOWN AND WOODLAND MALL (i m' (•> §0» S \J\ ' * I. v*.'1 U' Ali v SRI 7 '■’fap "“r*" ft / ;■ §§£S W, BBBMMmlSWi h L "Mi It- ■* '■ ‘ ■ 7 i v i,.; ■ S , ' ■ • j ' ■**-+*• I ■0 ' *' vj ^ W :r: S f. ."’v , \\ /. '•'vm > v':. S—i ’ >7 1 . '.1 ’ ' •'.* ,•'' 1 < * - j," 1 . ' ’« ‘//-’ v <■ - 1 V ' ■< ’ ii»ff;V, k-, 11 % . '*'-«C ‘ - a,,; V /$'■ V /> (* JB»v’f * . ' > * t ,. I t,t> i< -.m t% ** “VUTtrt'WV ’/tF‘>f‘7viVj ffe'i B 3 wtit< s S!" 5S' jiSHal I 1 f S 2* V1‘-.If,, V ; • 1:1,< //im tAJ' ( f 'Vv. ' # '-. ; ' • /'/ f L JSjJf / v I i J // 4 / \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAT 18, 1080 #> &§ » pSpS §g\ *r if ^1 C—T Ordeal cof Malignancy Treatment ,, / .f H EDITOR’S NOTE - The writer, Jack Hewing, is an Associated Press staffer in Seattle. He has undergone a series of treatment for a skin tumor on his leg that proved malignant. Here he describes one such treatment, which he received at the Swedish Hospital Tumor Institute.) . By JACK HEWINS SEATTLE, Wash. (AP), -Stretched out here In the pres lure tube as the pain slowly eases in my ears, I recall how all this began and curse myself for having been so flippant two years ago when I didn’t know a melanoma from' a muskmelon. Just because of a mole on my leg that stayed too long and grew too large and angry, I am stuffed now in a clear plastic and metal cylinder two feet ih diameter and seven feet long while oxygen hisses at me and the pressure builds. + ★ .* “Some people don’t mind it a hit,” a technician had soothed me before closing the hinged metal cover on me for the first of my 12 “trips.” A few are nauseated,” she added. Well, that could be true, There’s >an airplane burp bag hanging right in front of my nose if I need it, which I don’t. TARGETS MARKED I’m face down in a hyperbaric oxygen chamber with my elbows tucked in, my right toe on a small pillow for comfort and my left leg—where the tumor is —on a big pillow to hold it in position when the shooting starts ★ ★ e The targets are marked with red skin dye, one on the back of the left calf, the other behind the left knee. The lines on the calf mark a healed scar where Dr. Harvey Bingham removed that nasty mole. " ir e ★ It had been with me a long time, that mole. Then it took a notion to grow and get in the way, bumping into desk legs and such. Contact made It angry and the mole got bigger and redder and bled a bit when the bumps or scrapes were vigorous. Harvey was off in Guinea with the hospital ship Hope and I put off treatment for a couple of months until he returned. WITCH DOCTORINfi NY GjEYSER - The Delacorte Geyser is the newest attraction for visitors to New York City, Located in the East River just off the southwestern tip of Welfare Island, the geyser throws a jet of water 400 to 600 feet high and is illuminated at night. 'All I want to know,” I told him on the telephone, “is whether you learned from those witch doctors how to exorcise warts and moles.” ★ • W ★ Harvey, family physician and friend for a sum of years, allowed be would get rid of the evil growth even If he had to dance around a fire. Actually, a focal anesthetic and a scalpel did the trick. Back from the laboratory came the report: malignant. This did not mean any malignancy lingered under the skip. The scar healed nieely and for two years there was no trouble. Then a tiny bump developed beneath the skin'behind Hie left knee, about eight inches above the old scar. It grew to beechnut size with a hard core no bigger than a peanut. GOING DOWN Occasionally it hurt a little, so I took it back to Harvey and that’s why I’m here in the Swedish Hospital Tumor Institute, bolted inside this plastic tube and feeling Uke I’m going down for the last time. Almost literally I’m going down. The pressure will reach the equivalent of II fathoms under water, which sounds more impressive than a mere 66 feet. ★ ★ ★ Through the plastic I can see little Cami Greer, the student technician who locked me in. She adjusts the oxygen flow which is slowly bringing my tube to 30 pounds of inside pressure and she smiles reassuringly as I grimace with the pain of assaulted middle ears. I chew my two sticks of gum madly, swallow, yawn and struggle to get a hand up to rub my throat. I sweat and I ciitse aloud, which may be the reason Cami disconnected the intercom —hut I couldn’t hear her objections, anyway; with these plugged and aching ears. BATTLE STARTS Down there, beneath the painted targets on my hide, the good ion? are starting to fight the bad ions—or they damn well bining with the ions produced by radiation. The oxygen is supposed to get in there and inactivate the melanin. Pressure speeds the process, forcing the gas into the cells. It should be giving the melanin fits right now because we’re at 30 pounds and Cami has disconnected toe oxygen. Rany Burns, chief technician, comes in to help with the clumsy wheeled contraption encasing me. It was built by Vickers, the British airplane people, originally to treat carbon monoxide victims in ambulances. Awkwardly we trundle down a hall to the radiation room, AP Staffer Is Wheeled Into Oxygen Pressure Chamber To Prepare'For Tumor Radiation Treatment better be putting up a battle if this ordeal is going to pay off. Pressurized oxygen is the first wave of attack on toe tumor. Around here they call my bump a malignant melanoma . and have tried to explain that it’s named for melanin, a blade pigment which protects toe body against ultraviolet light by com- FAT CANNON Here is our main artillery, a two-million-volt Van de Graff generator which looks like a fat cannon hanging nose down. The technicians wheel my chamber undo* that nose, maneuver a bit to line up toe target, reconnect toe oxygen, leave me alone and turn mi the juice. In three ' i:o five minutes they’re bade to switch targets and fire the second round at a range of 80 centimeters. On my back, I see none of it; I feel nothing. WWW But according to the script the malignant cells are being destroyed by a bombardment of ions, unimpeded by melanin. If I am among the lucky one-fourth of toe people treated, my tumor will surrender. TTie few minutes seem like forever and my right arm Is going to sleep. But now at last we’re wheeling back along toe hall and Cami, hooking up toe oxygen again, starts the decompression. There is a different tone to toe hissing. My ears pop repeatedly and my nose bleeds a little. Once outside I reach for a paper towel and wipe the sweat from my face and neck. COME ’N’ SEE “What’s it like In there?” a technician asks. ‘If you don’t suffer from claustrophobia,” I tell him, “get yourself a tube on Wednesday and we’ll take the trip together.” . -i 0uitn QJou/t CkM ©n to cjUusic! GRINNELL EXCLUSIVE DELUXE SPINET PIANO Only you can give your child the advantages of a fine piano. This beautiful new spinet is the perfect instrument for your young student. From $695 RENTAL PURCHASE PLAN $ Q per month Pius (mall cartage charge All payments apply if you buy. MAY PIANO SPECIALS Save $146! Kimball-Whitney Spinet. Full 88 note .... .$549 Save $150! Grinhell Deluxe Console. With mellow tone .. .$625 RINNELL’S • ‘ON or MieilON MUSIC If 0(11 INC The Pontine Mell, Open Every Evening 'til 9, 682-0422 Downtown, 27 S. Saginaw, Open Mon. fr Fri. ’til 9, FE 3-7168 Bands' Uninhibited Action for you men-on-the-move! BD Racers Permanent Press Sta cks with Extra-Slim Fit *8 Those "something else” slacks with all these turned-on EXTRAS: EXTRA/ Western fop pockets EXTRA/ Extension waistband EXTRA/ Pre-hemmed lengths EXTRA/, Nb-irqn rayon /acetate/nylon EXTRA/Thrivos-on-action/, / \ durable peeve. Colors includes bhio, earth brawn, black. Wrists 29-38. Lengths 28-29-30-31 Ttii Pontiac Mall, Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rds. ’ Hi Pilyyi AX few * t; ■ HJ m Tp " Wj \ - • * - “ z 1 ! t * t . awd /* *-■■'^1 ""y \ ."V1 IX J ‘ft1 '... young white straps STVLEPRIDE They turn the crowd on! Band your foot in all directions. Very flip in one, two dr more straps. Very hip with minis or pants. So much fashion (see more, too!) costs only 3.99 BURTS 'O&Ul&w, l— The Pontiac Mall Telegraph at Elizabeth Lake Rd. C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 / rm A . CB Bridge From Jacobys Singer Talks Up Schooling Need LOS ANGELES tAP) - Ne; gro singer-actor Lou Rawls told students at Los Angeles High School: “Education is a source NORTH (D) ♦ K96 ♦ J982 ♦ KQJ ♦ K32 WEST 4Q5S ve ♦ 9732 ♦▲QJ65 SOUTH ♦ A10 8 7 2 ♦ AQ107 ♦ 104 ♦ 107 Both vulnerable North East 14 Pass 1N.T. Pass 3 V Pass Pass Pass IS EAST ♦ J4 ♦ K543 ♦ A865 ♦ 984 West Pass Pass So>- b 1A 2W 4 V Opening lead—A 2 By OSWALD and JAMES JACOBY Gordon Keel writes fromspade. Vancouver, British Columbia:! “My partner might well have] dropped the bidding at two! hearts and I should have stopped i at three, but I tried a ttiree-spade call, whereupon he put' me in the spade game. It was a mighty poor contract but with trumps breaking 3-2, j the heart finesse on and the king of clubs in back of the ace I had no trouble making my contract and winning the rubber. < ]★ ★ ★ “The Interesting feature of the hand lies in what might have been. If I had bid four hearts I would have had a chance to make a smother play,, I have never seen one in my 40 years at the table and there it was if only I had bid differently. Of course, I might have failed to make it." The smother {day is the rarest of plays in bridge.' Let’s show this one. East wins the first trick with the ace of diamonds and leads a club to his partners ace. A second club is won in dummy and hearts led and finessed twice. South stops when he finds that trumps are divided 4-1. It does not look as if he has any other play for his contract except to find some very favorable spade situation but the smother play is still there. South must cash the ace and king of spades and ruff the last club. Then he cashes dummy’s two good diamonds and then "throws West in with the last hearts. East the king-small and of ** \ \ \ and man’ 1.. . „ . ? you re just a vegetable.” South the ace of hearts and a * * * spade. West must lead a club or I Rawls, at a special assembly diamond. Dummy ruffs and East’s king 7of trumps is smothered. If be plays it now South overruffs him in turn, if he ruffs low South simply chucks his last spade. Wednesday, urged young people to stay in school and refuse to listen to “outsiders” who cause campus unrest. He said education is the key to communicating with others. ROBIN MALONE By Bob Lubbers ItoAFWM t> X HAVE MO 6USPBHP THCM THE BERRYS Ry Carl G rubert THE BETTER HALF * ★ ★ Dummy holds the jack-nine of1 VACHRDJf/WfM YUMMY/ , ^—-Ffr ”1 ggHgj THE BORN LOSER By Art Sanaom Q—The bidding has been: West North East South IV Pass 1A Pass 3 V Pass 4 V Pass ? You, South, hold: ♦A65 VKQJ1087 4K4 ♦AS What do you do now? A—Pass. Your partner is not showing strength but merely some sort of slight help for the strong hand you have shown. TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of raising to four hearts your partner has bid. four diamonds over your thro# hearts. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow “What a lousy day!.. . The boss banned my after shave lotion—claims it excites the female help too much." BERRY S WORLD—By Jim Barry * ™ c* * V * Astrological Forecast * « ° at ^ >4r. l +\ SV SYDNEY OMARS For Friday gain an dudlenc*. People appreciate whst j you say and do today. You ara aspaclaliy i 1 . T..IAL. anal Mia AMMlta For Friday KSoilr Llth children and the oppoalta Nj**piscES (Fab. )9*.rch »):„ GW?j»-lowing a new moon in Taurui. Call* tontion to basic «*“•*• lncJU?i,JS, lor meat prepared In unique manner — and family affair*, fca apocHle snd combination of solid ToUrua and airy careful with details. Taka time 10 be Cemini. „„ I thorough. Then you can relax tonight. NEW MOON SHERRY BURGERS: 1 + * * ground beef. Add small,..chopped| * * lb oround beef. Add small, cnoppsu ~ -Z. „ I onion, clove of chopped garlic, Vi Up. Of ip FRIDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you, dry mustard, Vi Up. powdered ctovOs, l ,gnd to bo Ihtrospectlvo, to have few, tae. Accent, V4 cup sherry. Combine »nd {rienos, but loyal ones. You ore worm,' shape Into patties. Broil. affectionate, but you do not shower peo- Then you will bo cooking with astrot-l p(e W|,h false (lottery. Now start will CAPTAIN EASY odd hap hi# fault* fur mb wouipht' By Leslie Tumer ogy. ,★ h * SRIES (March 21-April If): Important to bo receptive. Many ore willing to share Ideas. If sociahlw. jD- Otherwise, someone may be offended. Control tendency to act on Impulse. Steady, friendly approach is best. TARUS (April 20-May »>: Look behind tha scenes for answers. Give fullploVJto Intellectual curiosity. If you osk «•*-Tions, answers can be obtained. Money matter is settled In your favor. GEMINI (May 21-June 20). Cycle moves high. You get bre**^rtYou(!1 ,Ht.ke tt,v,SOi;dak.re^?acts^pr«S &Z TcVN*CERba(CJuMU21-py 22)‘; Excellent Pn1^etln90'nc“?rat.rnh.l7c{|evlty: one who'is basically shy approaches you. ! prove successful. (Copyright T-M lf». General Feature Carp.) © 19*9 by NEA. lac. RUNAWAY! TH» PI50RP6R»ME PACKCP, HURRIEDLY,,.P04$ISLY WAf F0RCEP 701/BY WHOM* “If I were you, OUT OUR I'd put it on the table beside him and run! WAY Do receptive. Study ARIES message. LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): Good lunar iwn i j my m-mvu. sot- T .... aspect today coincides with Intensified social activity. A burden appears to be lifted. You can have fun and relax. Some of vour hopes, wishes are fulfilled. VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): be PJJJjH live. All Is not what appears on surface.. Realize this and dig deep (or added information. Go otter What is required.) Don't be stalled by self-doubt. LIBRA (Sent! 23-Oct. 22): Journey may| beLIn offing. Plan ahead. Check budget! and basic goal. CAPRICORN individual can aid. Strengthen Personal philosophy.) Bq awart of requirements. Build on solid, ^*S?ORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21): Finish: what you start. Leave no loose ends. Day, features completion — and recbgnlthm P| efforts. One who works with of for you performs, special service. Be apprecia-| SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21): Accent on marriage, parfnersh p, loint et-forts. Take long-range view. Avoid offending one who has aided you I" P“*-Adhere to principles of golden rele. CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jan. 19). Get fooether with LIBRA associate. If cooperative, there are constructive_ results. Remember resolutions concerning diet/ exercise/ general welfare. You get things ^AQUARIUS '% ALL WARDS STORES OPEN DAILY 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. SUNDAY NOON to S P.M. TOTgTii Sale finds Sunday Historic Home to Be Renovated ' fifei !, * / - * ’ . 1 RICHMOND, Ky. (UPI) rhe Commonwealth' of Kentucky has, purchased historic White Hall, home of 19th Century Kentucky- abolitionist leader Cassius Mareellus Clay, and plans to renovate it., - The Italian Renaissance ^tyle structure has been heavily damaged by' vandals in' recent years. Clay, a fiery editor who engaged in several duels in his long career, was ambassador to Russia under President Abraham Lincoln. p* ■ ".y.. 'X'--' ’ _ CHARGE IT m... jp WARDS CONVENIENT CHARG-ALL CREDIT PLAN kQL JkkjL. *. 55 • Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. si NDAY 12 NOON TO S P.M. * 682,4910 CHOOSE SUMMERS' NEWEST FASHjOfcl SILHOUETTES IN BEAUTIFUL, CAREFREE, DRIP.DRY DOUBLE KNITS! SELECT NOW FROM THIS BREATH-TAKING COLLECTION! 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THE TlAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 Hunger Issue Is U.S., British Paper Feels LONDON (8! — Americans are troubled at home and embarrassed abroad by the existence of hunger in the affluent United States, says thC London Times. In another observation from I abroad this week, a British journalist wrote America “some- times seems to be on4he edge of a national nervous breakdown.” ★ ★ ★ The London Times said in an editorial: “For some time the American social conscience haS been increasingly disturbed over the clear evidence that hunger and malnutrition exist, side by side with American affluence—and not Just in small pockets of exceptional poverty or among the improvident and unemployable. ^ ★ * “This stands as a glaring moral reproach to American ideals, and is a correspondingly irksome embarrassment in American dealings abroad.” the newspaper said. NOT RECONCILED The editorial acknowledged ! that President Nixon has promised a $l-billion program to end hunger “eventually,” but it said higher welfare spending “cary not be reconciled” with the cost of present defense plans. ★ ★ ★ After a visits Norman Mac- Rae, deputy editor of the Economist, described the United States as “the place Where man’s long economic problem is ending, but where his social problems still gape.” a ★ ★ MacRae said Americans are “racked by the stretching to snapping point of too many of their temporary social tensions, So that this society which represents man’s greatest secular achievements sometimes seems to be on the, edge of a national nervous breakdown.” 1 c—10 i *•*'*•••« — ...... THE PONTIAC PRESS, THljRSDAY, MAY 1J.1969 LUXURIOUS "LUCIA" - THE QUILTED BEDSPREAD YOU WASH BUT HEVER IRON Now, you get the look luxurious With the finish that needs no ironing. The pattern's exquisite—lush and lovely floral print blooming on a heavy cotton sailcloth spread that's puff quilted to the floor with Dacron "88" polyester. The bleached white cotton back, rounded corners, blind stitched nems are just some examples of workmanship that rates among the finest. 23.99 full slse . .....19.99 31.99 queen size ..24.99 34.99 duel-king* .....29.99 9.99 draperies 48x63" .....pr. 7.99 YOUR CHOICE solid tones accent unique quilting OF WARDS "RIVIERA" BEDSPREAD Depart from the usual when you choose an antique-satin bedspread for | your rooms. Select the intricate and bewitching pattern that Is''Riviera." ■ uiaA or riviira It's a joy to behold, worked of rayon and acetate backed with durable in Rio. Bi.9t cotton, quilted with polyester ana bound with oversize cording. 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TO 0:00 I’ M ' SATURDAY 0:30 A.M. TO 0:00 T’.M. S10NDA\ 12 NOON TO 5 PAL • 682-1940 a ]w\^ frW1** . • M v t rfW& 1 i® gai h 1 3F« ' v4<=v 'k'* v«8$vJ ■ iV ‘/Ene • ■■“i .it Tokai Village, 75 miles northeast of-Tokyo. But six more power plants are due to come on line in 1973-74. they have capacities of 3 2 2,00 0, 400,000, 425,000, 784,000, 325,000 and 500,000kilo*atts. debase focuses attention on the question of capital punishment. Maryland Gov. Marvin Man-del has had two death Sentence cases come before him during his nearly jour months in office, and he has commuted both sentences to life in prison. Mandel says the commuta- tions should not be considered the start of a pattern. Rather, he spates he will review each case on its own merits. ★ * * His next chanee will come shortly. The next execution is scheduled for the week of June 2. AAONTCO/VIER ARD BEDROOM A MAGNIFICENT SET! BED, DRESSER, CHEST, MIRROR REGULAR m.n Dramatic, authentic beauty is yours in this traditional Spanish set! 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Infanta under ■ 11 months of. age account for 30 per dent of tile deaths. . nA04«. lea, fa*. uJ»aJu, i'd Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. . SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO S P.M. • 682-4940 if aUi I pf/ ( •X 4 * m if ... A. C—12 3rd Party Seeks to Enlist Blacks 'AH' Coloreds Aren't Bad/ Says State Chief; MOUNT CLEMENS (AP)-Ne-gro candidates on the ticket of George Wallace?,Wallace supporters voting' for' Republicans or Democrats? These are courses conceivable to the chairman of the Michigan branch of Wallace’s American Independent party (AIP), James Hall, 61, of Warren. "I want some good black candidates, if you please,” says Hall in the accent of his native region of tobacco and com farms in western Kentucky. “All coloreds are not bad.” Foreseeing possible gaps in the state AIP ticket in various elections of 1970, Hall says: “If for a given office we don’t have a candidate, we should endorse a Republican or a Democrat.” DISSATISFIED But it is dissatisfied Republicans and Democrats, particularly those of organized labor, who Hall hopes will come to the AIP side — both as voters and) candidates. Last November the AIP ticket netted 14 per cent of Michigan’s vote for former Alabama Gov.' Wallace. Hall, a retired Chrysler auto production supervisor, was chosen for the unpaid chairmanship of Michigan’s biggest little party In a Feb. 22 convention at the Sheraton Motor Inn in Emmett Township, Calhoun County. IDs state-of-affairs conversation never strays far from his opinions about Negroes: “I have contempt for some Negroes, for those Negroes who shot the policeman (in Detroit’s Bethel Church incident), and for those who are looters, rap-, ists and burners. Prison’s too; good for them. •HONESTY LACKING’ “Honesty” is lacking between the races, he says. “I don’t think Negroes and whites sit down and let their hair down. I don’t think anybody is an integrationist all the way across the board without i any reservations. I believe you’ve got some liars and hypocrites. ★ * ★ “The average colored person doesn’t want to intermarry and integrate to the extent a lot of liberal-talking people would indicate. I will tell any black man I don’t want my daughter to marry a Negro.” Hall says he’s for equal opportunity for all races and doesn’t want to be thought of as a “racist.” He has known the; sting of prejudice. “I’ll tell ypu; that when I first came to Mich-| igan, when, you went into an| employment office with a south11; em accent you had two strikes against you.” A YEAR AGO Mora than a year ago Hall . Joined the AIP, becoming chair-man for Macomb County. He describes himself as a former “conservative Republican,” disenchanted by the openhousing measure of former Gov. George Romney and disturbed by events of the Johnson administration. ★ ★ ★ “George Romney and Mr, Johnson made a politican out of me,” says Hall, punctuating! with finger wags and karate chops to the blotter of his desk. “I decided I wasn’t going to be one of those silent people that sit back ami let the world go down the drain.” ^ Hall presides over the state party headquarters of three L second floor offices which the ' AIP rents for $75 a month in jjn aging building in Mount Clemensl -across Gratiot Avenue from the! new Macomb County Building. On a wall behind the desk is a picture of Wallace. An American flag hands from a floor staff by Hall’s chair. m 10 MILLION PEOPLE “I donT think we lost th,e presidential election,” gays Hall. He dps from a bottle of Copa Cola and smiles candidly. “How would you like to be in Mr. Nixon’s shoes, 10 million people watching every move you make, breathing down your neck.” • * Hall says the AIP is organized1 in 60 of Michigan’s 83 counties, and will refer to 31,000 nabies signed on . Wallace ballot petitions last year when it comes to building membership. Hi ★ The chairman hopes to have asp coma to Michigan this er far. a fund-raising din- "*■ j.OTK^ft" 'Jj ml® X ftgv,v< ,;^1 $ ' v ; ■ \0V- V'ftYWv V « i vm Bt T1 // ■BBB § |m y:vt ,■ 1 ■ ^ v/ F im V® IP-A yi : iif V.Y ;a\V 5WW HR r'<’ ■"•'•$»,,r •* «8f y^P,w,? THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY l4, 1969 ; • ’ C—18 OCC Career Setup Advisers to Meet ' Leaders In business and industry serving on advisory corqmittees for career pro-grams at Oakland Community College will attend a dinner meeting May 28 at Devon Gables, Bloomfield Hills. ♦ \ ■a * OCC President Dr. Joseph E. Hill will welcome the group which will then discuss existing I ministration, inhalation therapy technical-vocational courses of-1 and urban planning, jfered by the college and the ★ * ★ plans for developing new pro- A $2.7-million technical grams in the areas of aviation building at Auburn Hills cam- mechanics, building con- puus- ,p°ntifc T0 w"?h 1P-,, . , scheduled for completion in istrdction, cosmetology, child September 1970 m houSe ad. care supervision, graphic arts ditional programs in industrial printing, neaith. services ad- j technology. Outsize Boards,, j for Sturdy Doors Bronx Zoo Exiles 7 Alligators to Florida Solid wood boards up to 38 inches wide are-on the market. Several lumber firms make them by , edge-gluing, numerous narrow pieces together. They make sturdy cabinet doors. A clear finish will keep the interesting strip pattern visible. MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - New York’s Bronx Zoo is sending alligators to Florida—where they grow wild and occasionally wander into people's backyards and swimming pools. But Dr. Wayne King, reptile curator in the public zoo in the Bronx, has some logic behind his banishment program. He says his alligators and crocodiles are growing so big—10 feey and more each— that they’re staking out their own areas of domicile. This is unpleasant because they have to share dir-conditioned quarters with other tenants. King Is exiling seven of the thick-skinned reptiles familiar Floridians refer to only as “gators.” ★ ★ ★ The seven alligators were to be flown to Miami and then trucked to Everglades National Park today. BITBLE8S /- It was a bad day for Pennsylvania’s Gov: Raymond Shafer who didn’t get any trout this time out, despite sharp-looking gear. Viet Fighting Takes Lives of 15 Americans WASHINGTON (AP)-Fifteen servicemen killed in action in the Vietnam war have been named by the Defense Department. Killed in action: Polos Heights. Michigan — He. Frederick Ichrtcongest, Grand Rapids. Died of woupds: MARINE CORPS Ohio — Lane* CpI. Richard D. Orlando, Sheffield Lake. Changed from missing to dead —hostile: ARMY Ohio — Spec. 4 Frank W. Flonnov Jr., Shaker Haights. Died not as a result of hostile action: *. ARMY' Kansas — Capt. John W. Sadler, Sallna. MARINE CORPS Indiana — Pfc. Ofalea Parkins, Gary. Ohio — Lance CpI. Frank J. Prokop, Warren; Pfc Edward D. Martin, Springfield. Changed from missing to dead nonhostlle: NAVY Ohio — Seaman Kenneth C. Jenkins, Cleveland. Missing as a result of hostile action: ARMY Capt. David W. Watson, Sot. Ernest C. Jamison, Spec. 4 Thomas G. SI Spec. 4 Samuel A. Bessent. Battles TB Fifty Years RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - For more than half a century, Nora Spencer Hamner has been working to help stamp out tuberculosis, and the Richmond Area Tuberculosis Association recently presented her with a 50-year pin for service to the association. In 1918 she was a field nurse for the Virginia' Tuberculosis Association. Today she is a volunteer for the local and state TB associations.. ■ ★ ' ★ ★ j “We didn’t have the refined X-rays and tuberculin tests that we have today,” she nays, recalling that she visited the counties in her territory in a Model T Ford. She retired as executive director 6f the Richmond Area group in 1962., onge NOTICE OP HEARING ON SPECIAL ASSESSMENT IMPROVEMENTS BY BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP BOARD_______ (West Lochslea, West Loehslea Non inltorv Sewer SAD No. 214). To the owners of the following de-rlbed property: . '■ . . Lot 26. West Lochslee, Section* 7, G, and II. Lots 61 thru 66, West Lortslea . '£ Sections 7 and II, j* omfleld Township, / T2N, ; RlOE, Oak- mninwwi . ------ wl County, Michigan. // . ________. Please take notice, that Township lord of the Township of Bloomfield has natively declared in Intention to make • following Improvwnontj: , 1 ____ lioo foal of 10" sin^ www Beginning at tha sewage lift station In wa-beek Road and axtaftafog parallel to tha north short of Island Lake across Lot 16, West Lochslea Subdivision »nd Lots 60, 61. 62. 63, 64 and « West Loch*lea Subdivision No. 2: An'In "Bloomfield Township, Oakland Countv. Michigan; v a —ly designated the spa- strict against Which the has lenlatfyeiy 'designated 'the spe-assessment district against which thei of said improvements is to be aS- ssed as consisting Of«all the lots and reels of jsnds set r tm Mans and estlmates in. ..ave bean prepared are on Hie with tlta .Township Clark public examination. . - ______ ike further - twtlce ttawt thw_Town»M» ,rd will meet on May 26, 1*6* at l;M. ode SMBsriM ttw Blcomfletd Toejishlp i, 4200 Taiamph Road, In the Town. . wr aioemfiaid M. ftw purpose of -^sinydMiSiorta^ «w :.PwShrjj Improvements wd .B the speddl IIHWIVTGMIR1"* -- -r"- - ■ksmont district therefor, , ; -v > iTE WT Our exclusive 3-door refrigerator-freezer with features that sing of luxury—speak quietly of price!—Now * Third door*—newest convenience end so handy for most-often us^d foods, , * Completely frosfless side-fo-side . . . ),,> ,i ends messy defrosting jobs forever * Space-saying^ foam insulation-—uses less space than other conventional models * The giant-size freezer holds up to 245-lbs. of frozen meats and other foods Butter-cheese compartment, 2 egg racks Meat keeper keeps meat, for days without freezing and there's no waiting to thaw Five adjustable shelves in refrigerator section plus 4 shelves in freezer i section Easy-to-clean, porcelained fruit and vegetable crisper keeps them fresh Choose white, coppertone, avocado, gold • * • # ikQfLs SfcJiJL, (jJlwbehu \ 9 * OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9j00 RjH. , « SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 PjM. * 682-1940 ML h • v.rikYA^n M 1 ,1m I. ■ ■ aM; V, ■; '■ ,., ‘y ^ -i::- 'A>. . • vfv if SI' !SSVv : il Til IS#’ H y} v •; ^ *k,-' , ■ C—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 1ft I960 They're Longer, Milder, Possibly Perilous By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) - Anti-imoking crusaders are urging Congress to require that health warnings be included In cigar-e 11 e commer- cials on radio 1 sn WEST a unique chal- would have more impact than a formal, stilted message. WWW The jingle about the cigarette that you, can’t ta)ce the country oul of likewise could be revised "You can take —- out of the country, but — you can’t take the hazard out of smoking.” In the next commercial, we see a guy with a paper clip clumsily trying to fasten a filter and television If such a measure were enacted, advertising agencies that have tobacco company accounts would be confronted with lenge. ★ - ★ ★ It would be their curious duty to promote a product while at the same time cautioning that use of the product might be harmful. Whether they could do this without developing schizophrenia remains to be seen. But admen being nothing if not ingenious and resourceful, I am satisfied that they would figure out some say to straddle the incongruity. IRRITATING EFFECT Hie simplest approach, I suppose would be to film a commercial in the usual way and then tack on the health warning It the end. This abrupt transition, however, likely would have an irritating effect on the viewers, who are generally in a semicomatose condition fend resent being jolted out of their trances. ★ ★ ★ Aesthetically, it would be better to blend the warning smoothly Into the main body of the commercial. The cigarette that some smokers would walk a mile for offers good possibilities. The commercial could show a man striding purposefully through the woods, coat slung over shoulder, whistling a cheery tune, He arrives at a tobacco stand, buys a pack of his favorite brand, sits down and lights up. WALK A MILE ... ~ *Td walk a mile for a he says. "I figure the fresh air and exercise helps offset the deleterious effect that smoking may be having on my lungs.” Presented in this natural offhand manner, the warning ma ■nin warning ioffoamera voice says: "If yon could fasten a — filter onto the end of another brand, you would have a bettertasting Cigarette. But you wouldn’t change ,the Public Health Service’s report that smoking may be harmful.’’ Remove. Rust Then Paint To remove rust from iron, give it a thorough wire brushing. Then apply two coats of rust inhibitivei primer. Follow that by applying a top coat of aluminum paint or other |rim paint oyer the primer. He Bears Witnessed Court Costs PHILADELPHIA UR - After appearing in court seven , times as a witness, Larry Mazeppa told the judge, "I’m losing more money here than I did in the burglary.” ★ ★ + which $20 in quarters was taken in January. He told the judge that when he hgs to take time out from business to come to court it costs him money. ★ ★ ★ nothing, so far as that goes.” The judge called the situation inexcusable and said he would personally find out why policemen failed to show up the seventh time — thereby making “And I was not at the scene,it necessary to schedule an Mazeppa owns a laupdry from,of the crime so I can say|eighth appearance for,Mazeppa. Children's Author to Speak Here Natalie Savage Carlson, author of 19 children’s books, will be the speaker at the annual Author’s Banquet of the Oakland County Reading Council Wednesday at the Pontiac Elks Lodge. Mrs. Carlson, who lives in Newport, R.I., has traveled widely and has lived in France, the locale of eight of her books. She has used French Canada, Italy, Spain, the southern United States and a Sioux Indian reservation in South Dakota for settings for other stories. ★ ★ ★ Her books have won awards from the American Library Association, the Child Study Association and the Boy’s Club of America. Among her most popular works are "The Empty Schoolhouse,” “Luigi of the Streets” and “Ann Aurelia and Dorothy.” Between 300 and 400 elementary teachers are expected at the Author’s Banquet. Reservations may be made through Philip G. Hilaire, Oakland Schools, Campus Drive, Pontiac. Boy, 2, in Coma Suffers From Rabies SAN DIEGO, Calif, (AP) -Tommy Buchmann, 2, is suffering from rabies, doctors say, Tommy, bitten by a bobcat, lapsed into a coma 16 days, ago With rabieslike symptoms. But doctors said then that nearly everyone stricken with rabies dies within a day or two of die appearance of the symptoms, and so there was a question whether die boy was suffering a reaction to vaccine against it. Confirmation of the disease, through extensive laboratory ■ tests now will permit doctors to proceed' with treatment 'that' was not possible while there pras doubt if he'had rabies, said %■ spokesman foe,' University Hospital. ' 4 Sale End* Sunday AAOIMTGO/l/VER rai ARD Save $ Save‘35 on 8-man tent 129 10x 12-ft. tent sleeps a family of 8 easily! Exterior frame allows you ^ 120-square feet of pole-free room inside! Pius over 7,50Q sq. in. df windows and a big Dutch door to let in breezes. Sewn-in floor keeps moisture end bugs out. Easy to pitch and taka down! 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Ireland Rights Drive Produces Extremism -- BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) — The campaign for civil rights' in Northern Ireland, conceived as a nonviolent move-ment of the center, has produced extreme reactions—and also some results. A fow days ago the new government, under Prime Minister Jatties Chlchestei-Clark, declared an amnesty'for 133 persons charged with offenses arising from the campaign. And the conception of “one man, one vote” Is nearer now than it has ever been. ★ ★ * But moderate leaders fear that renewed manifestations of public protest will bring deaths Extreme agitators operating under the civil fights banner are less concerned about who gets hurt, or how many, “There’s fighting all over town,” ono reported during Derry’s recent troubles, and it looked as if he couldn’t have been happier. CIVIL RIGHTS TAGS “He’s civil rights,” they say Prime Minister Terence O’Neill, seeking to'break the Protestant right wing’s opposition to his campaign for gradual concessions, called a general election, but in the event embraced his own political suicide., k k k Leaders associated with the civil rights campaign, whatever their personal political color, demonstrated they could collect votes. Ivan Cooper and John Hume, mainsprings of the Derry Citizens’ Action Committee, both won through to foe provincial Parliament, ousting more orthodox leaders of the Catholic-based Nationalist opposition, ★ ★ ★ A 21-year-old girl, Bernadette Devlin, collected a sizable vote in South Derry despite her identity with the extreme left of the People’s Democracy campaign. Then in April she won a seat in ■n-------------------------------r" the British Parliament as mem- Behan, brother of the late Bren- layed attempt to reform the vot- smash the action commltteell ber for mid-Ulster, defeating the Protestant widow of the former Unionist member. Miss Devlin’s later appearances in London under the banner of the International Socialist Association, a Trotskyite-an archist group in which Brian dan Behan, has been prominent, have cost her the support of some of the Catholics who backed her election campaign. ★ ★ ★ ing system, the violence may be contained. Now, however, a new organization ' is at work in Derry’s grassroots, calling itself the the new Unionist govern- Derry Civil Rights Association, restraining influence. If they succeed, the situation almost certainly will pass beyond control of the club-wielding riot squads who in January marched Chichester-Clark and divorced from the main h°me singing a song from over- carries through with its long-de- body ‘We Shall Overcome.” of a politician, or “He’s against mil rights.” What is generally ill! known as “the civil rights” is in fact H conglomeration of loose organizations, some elected, some self-appointed, some idealist, some sinister. The movement had its formal origin with a meeting in Belfast in November 1966 to form a Northern Ireland Civil Rights Association. The group’s main attack then was on the government’s Special Powers Act and Its bah on clubs linked with the Republic of Breland, to the south. V\/\ " .k k k The Protestant-based government saw these dubs, as a front for the outlawed Irish Republican Army, ’’Which is sworn to unite file mainly Protestant six counties of Northern Ireland with the Roman Catholic republic. Despite some prosecutions, the ban was not rigidly enforced, and republican clubs continued to meet. PICKED UP STEAM Last June the campaign changed course and picked up steam. Austin Currie, a 30-year-old Nationalist party member of the provincial Parliament, organized a sit-down at a house hi Caledon, which the local government had allotted to a single 19-year-old Protestant girl rather than to one of the area’s Catholic families. * ★ ★ The main issues now became allegations of discrimination against Catholics in housing and government Jobs, and demands for reform of elections. Votes in local elections, not parliamentary elections, are tied to prop1 erty. The result is that several cities in the west of the province have Protestant city governments though most residents are Catholic. k * k k In October the association organized its first mass demonstration, a march in Londonderry, Northern Ireland’s, second city, where by common agreement the inequities of the local government system were at their worst. The city had been seething for years. William Craig, the tough Protestant lawyer who then was home affairs minister, banned the march from the city center, March leaders tried to break the police Cordon. WEEKEND OF RIOT Londonderry had a weekend of riot around the Bogside, the Catholic quarter of dark streets and crumbling houses. It was brought under control by a hastily formed citizens’ action committee, mainly composed of young business and professional men seeking to cut across the old Protestant-Catholic divisions in Derry politics. This committee is now. Uself, under-fire from the leftist militants. k k k In Belfast, another branch of the civil 'rights movement emerged in Queen’s University. “One man, one vote” gave the students something to march about, but their leaders quickly lost control to an organization calling itself the People’s Democracy. ■ ★ k k By Christmas file People’s Democracy leftists were mak Ing themselves increasingly felt inside the original Civil Rights Association to the extent, that Several leaders resigned. In January the People’s Democracy students organized 1 a \ march from Belfast to Londonderry and a major protest in Newrjy, a Nationalist-run town which formerly had good community relations. Both sided in gTREETS TO POLITICS Save *20 l \3lWn# DELUXE 30-GAL. GAS WATER HEATER 59 95 REG. 79.95 Guaranteed "All the hot water you need or your money baclc." 43.5 G,P.H. recovary. REG. 89.95, 40-gal. 59.95 r $20 off! 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Allaluminum roof is finished wifh white, pressure- coated .plastic and has a heavy-duty understructure of hot-dipped galvanized steel. Strong, water-tight and easy to install! 30-lb. snow load capacity for winter protection. 89 99 REG. 159.99, 10x20', PATIO COVER .......,...... 119.99 REGULAR 139.99 48“ White j aluminum canopy 9“ : Baked enamel finish for lasting beauty. . \^x\QSLt fkkjL, (jJcvdU- : 05 * OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. . SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 682-4940 "I ■ H’: ■■ J m I 4 mm /T’'* Ha c—ib THE FONTl!^b ^RESS THURSDAY, MAY 18,1069 ABM Vote in Senate Being Billed as Judgment Day of Sorfi WASHINGTON (DPI - Putting •sidt the rhetoric, the ABM Issue before Congress is not the doomsday decision that both sides have made it out to be. But it is nevertheless vitally significant. S / • • : plexes would be located not near die cities but near die missile silos. ★ ★ ★ Nixon, followed by a parade of pentagon officials testifying at the Capitol, has justified the need for the Safeguard primarily on intelligence estimates of Russian advances in strategic warfare. 8 Opponents of the system have refused to accept the intelligence estimates, contending they were exaggerated to justify construction of an ABM. But even if they were true, a succession of nuclear physicists and chemists have told Congress that the ABM will not do any good to plug the gap. They have contended that the Sovieta could simply exhaust the U.S. supply of Sprints and Spartans by sending in more offensive weapons or using decoys. Several have suggested that the system’s redan and computers could be easily foiled by deceptive devices — like the release of fine metal wire in the atmosphere or even toy balloons shaped l^ke missiles. Worse still, the scientists contend the first interception made by an ABM would produce a radioactive cloud that would blind the system's radars. U that didn’t work, the Soviets could aim their first batch of missiles at tits ABM radars, which are axposed and vulnerable to an explosion of one kiloton, the scientists claim. out of boil* it 'ft it \In the past, Congress has \ln the past, Congress has gone, afonfe generally with strategic nuclear weapons proposals' by the Pentagon. And regardless how the vote goes this time, Congress has served notice it will take a close look in the future at new weapons plans. About $900 million is initially Involved in the ABM controversy. That’s the amount sought by the Nixon administration to go forward with the initial phases of the multibillion-dollar plan to install a “Safeguard” system to protect America’s offensive missile sites. JUDGMENT DAY But the June Senate vote is being built up as a judgment day of sorts by both sides. Opponents say rejection of the ABM would bring an end to the Pentagon’s domination of the nation’s resources, spur talks on the control of arms with the Soviet . Union, and save the taxpayers billions of dollars that would be washMl on an unneeded and unworkable weapon. ALTERNATIVE ACTION Actually its rejection would likely lead to alternative action to keep the nation strong. Most members of Congress had neither the time nor the inclination to devote to detailed studies of strategic weapons proposals. ★ a ★ . The armed services committees, which have the time and the expertise, performed their duties in what is frequently described as “an atmosphere of easy tolerance” to the Pentagon. The ABM issue has changed this, at least to some degree. For the foreseeable future, new and expensive weapons systems proposed by the Pentagon probably will be given the same kind of scrutiny Congress devotes to domestic programs. MAJORITY IN SENATE Opponents of the ABM now eonstttute a shaky majority In the Senate — with 50 members against it or inclined to oppose it, according to a UPI poll, 43 favoring it, and seven undecided. The weapon that haff produced all this ruckus is basically a glorified antiaircraft system. ★ * ★ But destroying an' object traveling through the sky at speeds of two miles n second is not child’s play. Spotting, tracking and Intercepting an incoming missile would require a complex interlock of finely balanced radars, giant banks of computers bossed; by central computers and two different types of missiles, the Sprint and the Spartan. STATE OF READINESS Not knowing when an enemy would choose to strike, each of these components would have to be In a- constant state of readiness — perpetually repaired to function oa cue. Once an enemy missile is spotted by the ABM’s radars, the computers whirl into action to set up a trajectory, auto-" matically aim the defensive missiles and on command fire... them to the intercept point. it - it ★ The Spartans — with a range of several hundred miles — are fired first, intercepting the missiles above the atmosphere. If the 6partans miss any, the Sprints — sort of a drag-strip model able to climb a mile in a few seconds — are put in the air, intercepting the attackers as they fall in the atmosphere between five and 10 miles up. NIXON DECISION Earlier this year, President Nbcon announced" his decision: to deploy an ABM and rename j it Safeguard. Using the same; components in the President! Johnson’s Sentinel system, the' Nixon administration decided to give the ABMs a now mission. z In «*Aitinn to defending the population against a Chinese style attack, the ABM would be used to protect U.S. missile silos end bomber bases from a preemptive Russian strike. To accomplish ibis, the ABM com- NOTICE OF SPECIAL MEETING otlce Is hereby given that the SpKlelj sting, of the members of the First Fed-I Savings and Loan Association ,ot Eland wHI be held at *he Main Office he Association, 741 West Horon Street, if lee, Mlehloan, on Thursday, the • »h of June, iw, it 12;« Noon, E-S^T of June, iw, *t n:aa woon, c.»v , the purpose of considering end voting . 1 thg foiiowln#: • .... Amending-the Charter (N) gtour As-etlon. Section f end Section *." i Find Federal Sayings V ' Laan Association e# Oakland JAMES CLARKSON, May 1I/I MONTGOMERY WARD acrylic latex or oil base house paint / m inC-S Bar m af«TO» yraoo AS STUCCO MASONRY «-S5J Save $3! Supreme dripless latex M49 Gallon REG. 8.49 SIIARANTM TNlpetals guaranteed te sever eey tele, peta-edserfacewMi era reel •due aeplid acteidfcig I. Ud dhediwn at a rale eel Is meed 4J0 Here’s ike best interior latex you eon buy! One* coat coverage drfplHi no odor. deans with lust soapy water. 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S VRRDAY 9:30 AM. TO 9 I’M. ; 1 \j) \\ 12 NOON TO 3 PM. • (1J 2 -11 > to % | K i&j MM \n'hfr | H ra*|MB I/? 1P^ ■'. 1 • I ‘ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1969 SI > ?■ f ■ 1 p #y *1 |imm I #|hHot Pifrt’M t i SI I BP:' -■ I I1 C-ir ,•: p/i m BERLIN (AP) - “Ge*. chlckt,” the art of being skillful or crafty, li a word often used by East Germans to describe the Communist regime’s war on region and the church’s foxy counteroffensives. The government has a policy of hard-line opposition to religion-but with enough indulgence to avert a crisis. The church resists while trying to do the possible. ★ * ★ The result: 90 per cent of East Germany’s 17 million people are at least nominal members of a church, with the old-timers devout Christians and a generation of teen-agers who seemingly believe in God at home but not in public. The latest tactic of government atheists is divide and conquer. It may backfire because of a bit of church-geschlckt. NEW CONSTITUTION In its new constitution promulgated in 1968, the regime proclaimed that state boundaries are church boundaries. This made the all-German Evangelical Union illegal, forcing East Germany’s right regional Pro. tenant churches to sever ties with their West German counterparts. So the East German churches drafted a resolution to set up a separate East German Evangelical Federation. So far five of the right regional churches have voted approval. The irony is that if all eitfit vote for the separate federation, the Evangelical Church inside East Germany will be strengthened, even though all-German contacts technically are weakened. ★ * ★ This the Communists don like, but they can do little about it now. From the beginning of Communist rule the Protestant Church in East Germany has been weak because it was split in eight more or less autonomous regions. The regime would have preferred to keep it this way.---------. The church resolution also uses some clever language to assure continued contact with Western churches. It carefully notes that the East German federation would “recognise the especial community of the entire Evangelical Christian movement in Germany.” FORCES REGIME’S HAND Another Communist ploy is the government’s refusal to help pay for the rebuilding of war-ruined churches unless they have a historic as well as religious value. But often the church forces the regime’s hand by getting outride Western hdp or appealing directly to the East German public with street collections. ★ ★ » Accordingly, such notable -j churches as St. Hedwig’s Cathedral in Berlin and the Hof Kirche in Dresden have been rebuilt, and the St. Thomas church in Leipzig, where Johann Sebastian Bach once played the organ, is being renovated. ★ ★ w • The East German government tries to isolate the 10 per cent Roman Catholic minority, often greeting Catholic protests or requests for concessions with! “Whom do you represent? Nobody.” Here Pope Paul VI may have used some geschickt by naming the bishop of Berlin, Alfred Bengsch, a cardinal. At 47 he is the youngest in the Roman Catholic Church. RISK OFFSET East Berlin sources said the risk of the Communists calling Bengsch “our cardinal” was offset by the knowledge that bis elevation gave him a direct bond with the Vatican and strengthened his position at home. The regime’s major campaign against religion is Waged among East Germany’s youth. The Communists have instituted an atheistic ceremony for 14-year-olds called the Jugendweihe, or youth initiation,1 in which the child swears allegiance to the state and its Marxist-materialist ■ ■ ideriogy.£^-^4^~‘ ★ . -w ★ It happens to be the tradition* *1 church confirmation, age. If the patents let their children go f' to the Communist ceremony, it, compromises their church Alle-i-t giance. If they, don’t* it may. 11 compromise their child’s future The Catholics combat this with private,^schooling for their children, and frequently their grades are too high for the manpower-hungry state to ignore even if a child skips the Jugendweihe. Protestant ministers often close their eyes, let tile chil- dren go to the Communist ritual ancj. take them back into the church as though nothing bad happened. BEND WITH WIND As a result most East German youths seldom become Communists or agnostics. They simply bend with the wind, saying one thing at home and another in public* East Germany’s Communist bosses have planted the seeds of atheism, but they don’t seem to be taking root in the native soil of Martin Luther. f ' ’ • Allegan Appeal | Superego Call Characteristic ALLEGAN (UPI) -‘Allegan’s City Council will ask the Michigan Water Resources Commission for a six-month delay on the commission’s order to. come up with plans for removing 80 per cent of the phosphorus from water discharged from the city’s water plant into local streams. DETROIT UR — Potential killers usually have “overdeveloped superegos,” not police records of mental Illness, according to a Detroit psychiatry professor. Dr. Emanuel Tanay of Wayne State University says he has found that the most likely killers are moderatg-drinking white men, 20 to 40, with middle-income status. He bases his findings on a study of 65 killers. ★ h ★ “An overdeveloped superego — an extra-strict conscience,” ik a characteristic of the killer, he says. “They had a self-image of b e nevolence, cooperativeness and self-sacrificing love.” Tanay says death often follows if a gun is readily available to a person In the heat of anger or during a temporary personality breakdown. Libya has a population of 1.6 million. 3Vi HP 20-INCH ROTARY MOWER REG. 89.99 Powr-Kraft* engine by Briggs & Stratton has automatic throttle control, Pull & Go starter. ■ Model 4089 IMiBpiWIwa Mod Save on Wards handsome 10x10*-foot steel building ALL THE STORAGE ROOM YOU NEED AT A LOW PRICE Save 30.11 4 H.P. RIDING 24-IN. MOWER 19911 .99 Engine by Briggs and Stratton is rear-mounted for better traction and visibility. Floating deck mower doesn't skip or scalp. Rear-axle differential permits sharper turns. Solve your ''clutter" problems with sfyle end economy! Sturdy double-ribbed“construction panels are galvanized, primed and have enamel coat baked on! 613-cu. ft. capacity, wide-opening 51" doors. Less floor. *Approximatt 139 99 NO MONEY DOWN 10.11 off! 6x5’ steel building 59“ Double-ribbed construction; galvanized panels, primed enamel-coated! 155 cu.ft.- Reg. 69.88 8x16-IN. PATIO BLOCKS *585? 4 <» 96° TAKE WITH ONLY Anvil pruner Wards best OpHeael wage* teres Squire let# heeler, let It de the heavy werk. SQUIRE 12-HP TRACTOR To Mako Your Work Easier Save 1.42 on two-wheel lawn edger 97 *769 REG. $869 REG. 6.39 Tool cuts I-in. below walks, keeps your lawn looking neat, trim. Self sharpening blades, 4-foot handle. Wards Garden-Mark® Squire 12 can do more for you than a team’ of horses! Rugged 30.16 cu. in. engine lets you cut grass, plow snow, till gardens with attachments. 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TO SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. * 682-4940 ■ R / wmm LEGS or BREAST 2Vi-OZ. patties in Tempura Style Tempura is a.Japanese method of battering and deep fat fi*ying shrimp and vegetables. Be as adaptable as the Japanese and substitute practical, economical and delicious turkey roast for other protein foods when making tempura. The frozen two and a half pound boneless turkey roast will yield approximately 50 strips which will be sufficient for ten people. ★ ★ ★ Most people think of tempura as being for shrimp only, but the Japanese also use a wide v a r i e t y of vegetable s. Mushrooms, green beans, green onions and carrots all are attractive and tasty when prepared as tempura. Use that lovely fondue pot if you wish and let your guests prepare their own. Or if you prefer, deep fat fry the turkey strips and vegetables as long as two to three weeks ahead of the party and freeze them. Come party time, simply heat the; frozen tempura on a cookie sheet in a 450 degree oven for 6 minutes or untl crisp. How’s that for magic. LACY LOOK Here is a trick that we worked long and hard to figure out. To make the fried batter look lacy, dribble a little batter in; the hot oil first. Dip the turkey or vegetable in batter and place It oh top of the “dribbles." Lastly, dribble a little more batter on top. ★ ★ ir If you can manage i t gracefully, handle the tempura with chopsticks. An occidental gets such a feeling of accomplishment to master chopsticks. It is kind of an acceptable “show-offiness." TURKEY TEMPURA Sauce 2 tablespoons soy sauce 2 tablespoons sherry Vz teaspoon ginger 1 cube chicken bouillon Vi cup water Combine all ingredients. Heat to boiling. Stir in bouillon cube. Simmer 10 minutes. Keep warm .while preparing tempura. Tempura Oil for frying Vi cup and Vi cup sifted flour , Vi cup cornstarch ■ Vi teaspoon monos o d i u m glutamate 1 egg 1 tablespoon sherry Vi cup cold water 2 cups cooked boneless turkey roSst, cut in Vi inch strips Pour oil into skillet to depth of 1 inch. Heat to 375 degrees. Sift together Vi cup flour, cornstarch and mono sodium glutamate. Beat together egg, sherry and water: Blend into dry ingredients. Dredge turkey in Vi cup flour. Dribble batter on hot oil to make lacy network. Dip strips in batter. Lay on lace. Dribble TURKEY TEMPURA—These are tempura, Japanese appetizers that are good enough for a full meal. What are the little curly things? They are strips of boneless turkey roast, dipped in a thin egg and flour batter. Spicy Candies Give Tang to Fruit Cocktail Looking for something to pick 2 teaspoons fresh lemon juice m Dauer. L,ay on lace, tmpuie those every day meajs? Try 2 large bananas more batter over top. - Do not ^ curaat nnrl tnnov 1 linnamnri TSnoifr-iilf n crowd pan. banana into diagonal slices. Set slices upright around edge of saving each serving. Makes about 6 . .. „ Fruit. Easy to do and so syrUp. Combine V4 cup syrup servinss. 3 minutes on each s de or de,.cious from fruit, cinnamon candies1 UHW Siva S wS cinnamon Fruits and lemon juice. Let stand uhtil 1 can a lb; li oz.) fruity U WihKd, nr beat ana nee. *««»• cocktail I gently to dissolve; cool. Add drained fruit cocktail. 2 teaspoons red cinnamon I Spoon fruit and syrup into candies 'serving dishes. Peel and cdt Caramelize Some Popcorn Popcorn enthusiasts come in all shapes and sizes. But big or small, old or young, they have one thing in common: love of tieaping bowlfuls of tender popped corn covered with butter and sprinkled with salt. For your next “popcorn night," try this caramel treat from West Bend. Caramel Popcorn 1V4 cups white sugar Vi cup dark corn syrup IV2 teaspoons vinegar Vi teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons butter 1 teaspoon vanilla 1V& teaspoons soda 4 quarts popped corn (unsalted) Mix together sugar, syrup, vinegar, salt and butter. Cook over medium heat, stirring constantly uhtil mixture boils. Boil gently until a small amount of syrup reaches the “hard crack" stage in cold water (290 degrees F using candy thermometer). Add, vanilla and soda; stir well. Pour foamy mixture over com and stir to coat com thoroughly. Store in tightly covered jar or can to retain | crispness. sauce ana rice, sticks. Note: (1) May be served as an appetizer. (2) Vegetables Vi cup syrup from fruit | such as carrot sticks, green beans and onions may be fried in the similar manner. (3) Tempura may be fried ahead and frozen. Place frozen tempura on cookie sheet. Heat in Ipreheated oven (450 degrees) 8 minutes or until crisp and heated through. ^>jbeeia£ inl- and qourfood budget loo/ f BARGAIN CENTER 74 N. Saginaw > MKT. - Next to Baxley’s U.S. No. 1 MICHIGAN POTATOES 20 Bag 79c CHARCOAL BRIQUETS 2 to 4-bloom GERANIUMS Each HYBRID FLATS PETUNIAS 8 Boxes VEGETABLE flats • TOMATOES • EARLY CABBAGE • BELL PEPPERS • MANY OTHERS A FLAT CERTIFIED POTATOES . . lb. 10* or $6.00 for 100 lbs. DIPPIN’-GOOD DRUMSTICKS — Coat 12 to 15 drumsticks with mixture of Vi cup flour, ,Vi teaspoon salt and Vi teaspoon pepper. Pour Vi cup oil into large shallow baking dish. Arrange chicken in oil, turning to coat all sides, skin side down. Bake 30 minutes at 350 degrees; turn and bake 30 minutes more. Combine 1 can (8 oz.) whole cranberry sauce; 1 can (8 oz.) tomato sauce; 1 tablespoon vinegar; 1 tablespoon brown sugar and 1 clove garlic, crushed. Bring to a boil and simmer briefly to blend flavors. Serve as hot dip for drumsticks. Makes 5-6 servings. FRESH COUNTRY STYLE WONDUt BRIAD 5 u«~ *1” Corner of Clarkston and Sashabaw Roads ® ‘ . V. Milo North of Sashabaw MB Exit Open Daily, Except Monday IQiSO to 7il0 GRADE “A” Large Farm Fresh ' /EGGS 2 d.x 89 Get Extra Fanpy Red or Golden DELICIOUS APPLES Golden Ripe Bananas u>.10 j^rmrrrtmnns 8 b 5 5 nmnr a a'aTfinnr; FRESH PANSIN5 3 *1" FRESH TOMATO PLANTS n79 dftat irt dirt We have a complete,variety of garden flowers and vegetables for sale. Plant now! J-Q-V.9.99.C 0 0 8 a MJLB.9.E » X new; tropicana lo-cal pop 6 pack of 10-oz. Bottles 39* Bargain Center MkT. Hours: 8-6 Daily A Sat., 8-8 Friday the neighboriy Store that (jivesyou 'O-r-lR THE PONTIAC PRESS THIJESDAY. MAY 14, 1969 Consumers Protected by USDA Grading of A shield-shaped mark — bearing words such as U.S. Grade A or USDA Choice — is appearing on an ever-increasing number of foods. f The official U.S. Department of Agriculture grade shield provides assurance of quality based on the judgment of an expert Federal or Federal-State grader, Who applies the grades on the basis of nationally uniform Federal standards of quality. The shopper, then, can rely upon each USDA grade to have exactly' ■ the same meaning regardless of where or when he sees it — the time of year or location of the store. Cook Turkey Strips Well aware of the consumer’s concern with quality, retailers are featuring officially graded foods on their shelves and in their advertising. ★ . ★ ★ In some instances, however, the advertise)’ gets carried away with his enthusiasm in displaying the grade shield, As a result USDA grade marks are used in connection with ungraded products and in some instances with products for which there are presently no USDA grades, such as ham, bologna and frankfurters. REGULATED The use of the official grade mark is regulated under law — the Agricultural Marketing Act of 1946 — to protect the integrity of this governmental symbol. ★ w ★ The law makes It a crime to knowingly advertise or display as officially graded any foods which have not in fact been so graded. Federal officials who watch out for misuse of the grade shield — or tlje official grade'terms such hsU.S. Grade A — generally find a warning sufficient to correct the errant advertiser. Occasionally there is A flagrant or repeated violation — and then the offender is prosecuted through the Federal courts. The law provide* for a fine not to exceed $1,000 or 1 year In prison, or both. Consumers can check for themselves, In most cases, as to whether or not foods advertised as graded have really been officially graded. h * ★ On, fresh cuts of beef, veal, calf, or,lamb, the shield-shaped USDA grade mark is tolled On the length of the carcass by the grader, so that when the carcass is made into retail cuts one or more of the grade marks Will appear on the outer fat covering of .most cuts. ON LABEL On other products, such as butter, eggs, poultry, canned and frozen fruits and vegetables, frozen orange juice concentrate, jams, jellies and nonfat dry milk, the grade shield is printed right on the [libit. Ibis Is permitted only when the product is officially graded and the label has been approved by the Consumer and Marketing Service, the USDA agency responsible for all food grading services. Consumers who would like a handy pocket-steed booklet on USDA grades may obtain ‘‘How to Use USDA Grades In Buying Food” (PA-70B) from the Office of Information, U.S. ttepart-ment of Agriculture, Washington, D.C. 20250. Include your zip code on the postcard request. ; ' [ Jl- favour food List Baxley's Famous Junedale Brand Shank Portion HAM BMt Portion ib.55* GRADE A LARGE Quartered Beef Tasty STEAKS CHUCK Lean Beef SHORT lb. Mich. Grade 1 SKINLESS CHUCK HOT DOGS TASTY • POTATO SALADS S MACARONI fl1. MARKETS 78 North Saginaw DOWNTOWN PONTIAC » OPEN ~ FRIDAY EVENING TIL 7 P.M. 4348 Dixie Highway 4 DRAYTON PLAINS Wednesday 9:00 A.M. to 6:30 P.M. Thun. Thru Saturday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.. Sundays 9 A.M. to 6 P.M. 1 CLOSED MONDAYS ANP.TUESOAYS Quality Meat Since 1931 1220 North Parry AT MADISON OPEN DAILY • MT. to 9 P.M. SUNDAYS JO A.M. to 6 P.M. Wit, J/,r» ... H H-' » ' jw t nag ,*•■ ■/ ’., ... Vl .... ^ 'THE PONTIAC PRESS; THURSDAY,' MAY 15, T969 'f ‘-vUt^, ' ■ .wfi j•'Mv S■' ‘ ij! r ■. ■[ X J ■ v v . .._ irillr*' W .vu* K. i—io Open Season Asparagus: Grass That's Legal Asparagus Is a gourmet preheated 400 degree oven 15-20 and shape a trench lengthwise vegetable but priced within minutes. j through center. Stagger reason for many, many families I Serve with toast triangles, asparagus spears and pimiento to enjoy several times during Makes 4 servings. {strips throughput trench, saving the short season. | Asparagus spears In a a few for garnish. Pour Buy flavorful spears ofimeatloaf are something dif asparagus by selecting them ferent. HAM AND ASPARAGUS ROLL-UPS Cold Soup Is Paired With Sandwich If you feel you have come to wit’s end in meal-planning, borrow tin idea from the pro-vincial kitchens of France, feature a quiche. Not the traditional kind — but a new sandwich that makes a gourmet lunch or supper when served with a chilled soup. the Quickie Quichewich has " “7 _ ... Us roots, of course, in theand PePPer. p°ur nulk mixture ■■■■§ famous dish of France, the ™° r°bs> nllmg to top. Bake in Chill. Garnish individual serv-“Quiche Lorraine”—A rich egg preheated 375 degree oven 30, ings with sour cream dollops, custard baked with onion and V* teaspoon pepper Cut off tops of rolls and hollow out leaving 4-inch thick bottom and sides. Place In shallow baking pan. Sprinkle roll hollows with bacon and cheese. Beat together eggs and flour; stir in milk, soup mix to 35 minutes, or until custard is set. Serve hot. CHILLED ASPARAGUS SOUP 6 Servings 2 cans (104 oz. each) condensed cream of asparagus soup 1 cup sour cream 1 cup milk Blend ingredients ' together. bacon in a crisp pastry shell. ' To make the sandwiches, start with brown and serve french rolls. Hollow out the rolls and fill with cooked bacon bits, shredded Swiss cheese and a canned milk-egg mixture seasoned with onion soup mix. The flavorful custard complements the crusty rolls. QUICKIE QUICHEWICH 6 Sandwiches 6 enriched brown and serve French rolls 6 slices bacon, cooked and crumbled 1 cup (4 oz.) grated Swiss cheese |1 . 3 eggs 2 tablespoons enriched flour 1% cups (13 oz. can) evaporated milk 2 tablespoons dry onion soup ’mix. Asparagus Is Fine in Salad from a refrigerated display and where the cut ends of the stalks are kept moist. Closed tip and all-green stalk indicate a. sweet, flavorful vegetable. Hurry home with t h e asparagus. Wrap a wet towel around the base of the bunch; slip it into a plastic bag and into the refrigerator. ★ ★ ★ Put on a terrific show at your next party with these exciting Ham and Asparagus Roll-ups Starring in a rich golden butter sauce, they take the lead in unique flavor and goodness. HAM AND ASPARAGUS ROLL-UPS 12 asparagus spears 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons lemon juice 2 tablespoons water 4 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons butter 2 tablespoons flour Dash of_cayenne % cup milk V* teaspoon Worcestershire sauce Va cup (3 oz.) shredded Cheddar cheese 8 thin slices cooked ham Pdprika 4-5 slices white breM, toasted In skillet, place asparagus, 2 tablespoons butter, lemon juice, water and salt. Cover and cook 20 minutes or until tender. * * * Meanwhile, in saucepan, melt 2 TUNNELLED ASPARAGUS MEATLOAF 1 pound lean beef, ground a V* pound lean pork, ground V4 pound lean veal, ground Vi tespoon salt 4 teaspoon pepper 4 teaspoon allspice 4 teaspoon onion salt 1 egg 1 clip cooked instant potato 1 buds 2 tablespoons milk 2 tablespoons syrup 1 (2 oz.) can mushrooms' 14 cups cooked asparagus spears 4 lime 1 sliced pimiento, cut in strips 1 package cheese sauce mix Mix ground meats; add spices, lightly beaten egg, potatoes, milk, syrup and mushrooms, including juice. When thoroughly combined, divide into two equal portions. Place one portion in loaf pan squeezed lime juice over' asparagus; top with two-thirds of cheese sauce prepared according to package directions. Cover with other portion of meat, sealing edges well. Bake at 350 degrees for 14 hours. To serve, invert onto meat_____________ platter, top with balance of I cheese sauce and garnish with remaining pimiento and aspara-1 jjC£ TUNNELED MEATLOAF gus. Makes 6 servings. BUY! SELL! TRADE! PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Salt Substitutes Are Other Foods Fresh lemon juice squeezed onto meats, fish, and poultry seems to make the addition of salt unnecessary. Apples lend savor to sweet potatoes; oranges 1 - q u a r tj*0 carrots and beets; cranber-tablespoons, es P°*titry butter; stir in flour and cayen-| Ginger gives a flavor fillip to ne. Remove from h e a tchicken or lamb; a tQuch of gradually stir in milk and curry powder blends well with Worcestershire sauce. Cook alrnost any meat, fish, or shell-over *medium heat, stirring .Fish- Slightly increased use of constantly, until thickened. P e P P e r • particularly when Cook 2 additional minutes. .coarsely ground, seems to com- * * * pensate for lack of salt in egg Remove from heat and stir in and vc*l dishes. 4 cup Cheddar cheese until QUICKIE QUICHEWICH — Create a “souper” sandwich lunch—serve chilled cream of asparagus-sour cream soup with a tasty sandwich version of the famous French quiche. melted. If necessary, return to low heat to finish melting cheese. (Do not' boil), Drain asparagus. Wrap double slices of ham around center of 3 spears; Ar range in 9-inch buttered square baking dish; cover with sauce. Top with remaining cheese; sprinkle with paprika. Bake in ★ ★ Ar Unsalted tomato juice can be combined, to taste, with vinegar or lemon juice, salad herbs, sugar, and onion or chives to make a tasty dressing for salads or a marinade for meats. So, by using natural or manmade chemical flavor builders such as these, foods cooked without salt can be taste-tempt ing treats. Spring Bouquet Salad looks like the spirit of spring. The fresh green of the asparagus tips, the tonic effect of green onion and the golden yolk circled with white, all add up to an eye-tempting silad. SPRING BOUQUET SALAD lib. fresh asparagus tips 1 cup zucchini, thinly sliced circles 3 tomatoes, quartered 2 green onions, thinly sliced 4 teaspoon cracked pepper 2 hard-cooked eggs,'sliced Vi cup Italian dressing 2 cups of bite-sized chunks of Iceberg lettuce -Prepare by washing, asparagus and zucchini. Cut the asparagus stalk into diagonal slices and leave the tip whole. Cut the zucchini into thin circles. Cook each in separate pans so you can control the degree of cooking. The asparagus should be cooked in 4 cup of salted boiling water until just tender, about 5 minutes. ..The thin zucchini slices in the same amount oiE water but blanched about 3 min u t e s. Drain and cool. In a glass salad bowl, put the tomato quarters on the bottom, sprinkle with green oriibn slices, followed by zucchini, cracked pepper, egg slices and asparagus tips on top. Pour the dressing slowly over the top so it can dribble down to the-bottom and coat ehch item. Refrigerate for at least an hour or more. When ready to serve, add the lettuce and toss. Calif* SWEET SUHWST ■_ ORANGES 113 Sit® Dox. GRAPEFRUIT tt? t j for 49c Fresh Strawberries Qt.' 59c LETTUCE c*Eia 2 For 29c ONIONS 3 | Lbs. 29° CABBAGE FRESH LB. 10e U.S. Not BANANAS LB 10° BEEF POT ROAST u.s. No.1 CANADIAN 'll BEST CUTS FR. LEAN PORK ROAST 39 c lb. Us. farm fresh [Graft SAUSAGE SMOKED POLISH ib. 55° PICNIC HICKORY SMOKED A. 39e FRYERS - FR. DRESSED ib. 29c HAMBURGER FR. GR. ib. 59° HOT DOBS GR. 1 SKINLESS l S.... *1 110 BACON PETERS -L-* SLICED/ t ) lbs. 89° 0LE0 MaCO^DALE j 5 Hu . |00 Grade 1 Chunk BOLOGNA -39 SUPER MARKET prices Subject Ope^i Weekly 9-9 - Fri., Sat. 9-9 to Market change 608 W. HURON STREET NEAR WEBSTER SCHOOL vv \ >ii\ v 'v v t&j. |ji *v m A: , i m *°u CAN'T BUY BEtf** Center Cut PORK CHOPS 89 t lb. Loin Cut PORK CHOPS 99 c lb. LOOK WHAT 10C WILL BUY . SPARTAN CAN SALE GREAT NORTHERN BEANS KIDNEY REARS, BUTTER BEANS MIXED VEGETABLES, PORK and BEANS WHOLE or SLICED IRISH POTATOES 10° Ea. 15 oz. Cans CALIFORNIA NAVEL ORANGES 69°, PET RITZ FROZEN APPLE PIE 22° l-lb. 4-oz. Size 88 FRESH TOMATOES 39° SPARTAN FROZEN STRAWBERRIES 1-lb. Pkg. 3/*t . VELVET PEANUT BUTTER \e ARMOUR’S CHILI with BEANS 15V2*oz. Cans 33* ARMOUR’S VIENNA SAUSAGES 5-oz. Cans 5/$l BEL MONTE KETCHUP Family Size — 20-oz. 25‘ i------ -CITY SIDE- - - - i ! KRAFT i Miracle Whip i SALAD DRESSING I Offer Goo I / Qt. nmw? Ha* «■* I Limit 1 with Coupon 73 l Sun. Mrs. 10-9 A Open 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. CITY m.SUPER SIDE mmHhRKET SmgJwlyn 'S/ar 338-0377/ "v'-£ III .f tr SH MB . r, w.-. JUbnM JLM- m A !A: 'C"“"4W THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1009 GIANT SIZE FELICE TREESWEET constantly until thick, not stiff. Fold in Vt cup pared, diced or grated cucumber. Serve over cold fish and vegetables. Makes about 1 cup. CUCUMBER CREAM SAUCE — Whip one cup heavy cream. Add V« teaspoon salt. Gradually add 2 tablespoons vinegar, beating ABSORBS LIKE MAGIC I fruit salads Freezer Aids Entertaining White • Decorated • Assorted Colors Hungry Jack MASHED POTATOES keys to successful freezer-method entertaining as well as; everyday cooking with frozen | foods. Canapes, for example, should be wrapped quickly before the bread dries out, and should be kept away from the interior walls of the freezer (contact makes the bread soggy). They should be thawed in the wrappings allowing 15 minutes to half an hour. Dozens of similar tips for'as the successful freezing of meats, sauce, pastries, even casseroles and has become more familiar to the! main dishes are provided in a American palate, little booklet called “How to! Parmigiano means made with; ll-oz. weight spray ean The first popular Italian vegetable served in America was Eggplant Parmigiano. Only a few years ago it was considered a delicacy. Today, with the convenience of prepared Italian sauces such new thick spaghetti Eggplant Parmigiano1 2 eggs 2 cups seasoned bread crumbs % cup oil 1 jar (1 lb.) spaghetti sauce with mushrooms 3 tablespoons grated parmesan cheese % / tzZarella cheese, Lean, Choice, Boneless Vt pound mo! thinly sliced USDA Choice BLADE CUT During the summer months! wash, store and dry all seeds from melons, squash and pumpkins. Birds will love them next winter when snows are deep and it is hard for them to; find food. Hygrade’s Sweetnized We’re Famous for Our ROASTS! Peters Bologna or Round Bone or English Cut v USDA Choice • ••••• e e••• USDA Choice BONELESS SARA LEE Frozen POUND CAKE SEALTEST Buttermilk or WESTPAC Slieed 10-oz. weight meg. JCEYKO Yellow We BIRDS EYE From Frssh Crisp Genets pkg. Fresh Crisp Radishes pkg. Fnih Crisp Csumhers each Fresh Grass Onions bunch EGGPLANT PARMIGIANO - Eggplant Parmigiano combines the subtle flavor of sauce — thus complimenting .any entree eggplant with a slightly sally, jshprp parme- yab’d serve ‘ — lef it be veal, chicken, or •an dieese and a full bodied spaghetti beef. . ,■ , -• Rights Reserved To Limit Quantities QUALITY MARKET QUALITY MARKET ir 5 Bel Aire Paper Mandarin Vlailo Asst COLD CUPS ORANGES RELISHES a RQc Pkg. R s 51 Gant ■ weightl P 'o FRISKIES Hygrade LaChoy Chleken or Reef. CAT FOOD “ Chicken, Liver or Fish VIENNAS CHOW MEIN s 1 Ac o.. Ill R.s$1 Cans 2-ib. HAft lO’/t-oz. HXV Can «10| .............. :i’.j ;• ' ,'w M | fflHffl /'; ' ' * • * \\ »y'* ?, Jeered by Diioppointdd Tiger Forts Horton Won't Forget It DETROIT (UPI) - Willie Horton will probably remember May 14, 1969, all his life. For the first tipie, he got booed in Detroit. \ Being the type of person he is, Willie understands — he doesn’t like it any the more ■*- but he understands. \ ★ ★ 1 .★ \ He knows that when you fail in the clutch and make an error in tne outfield which contributes to a run by the opposition that the fans are likely to not take it too kindly. And that’s what happened Wednesday night when the Tigers dropped a decision to the Chicago White Sox am the wrath of the 14,140 fans descended \ upon their native born Detroit son. ★ ★ ★ “There’s a first time for everything,” sdid a philosophical Hortpn after the loss, which dropped the Tigers back to six" and one-half games behind the Baltimore Orioles. if it ★ “I don’t know why they booed,” said one of the most popular ball players ever to play left field for Detriot. “It was just one of those things. DOING BEST "I’m doing my best — the Good Lord knows that — and that’s all I can do,” he said. “I figured It was coming,” Horton added about the chorus of uncomplimentary noises the fans made. “It would bother anybody — but as long as I know I’m trying my best..." Willie is 2-for-21 on the recent Detroit home stand, and In the first and third Innings Wednesday night the slugging left, fielder stranded runners on first and third with two out both times. ★ ★ ★ , : * However, in his defense, Buddy Bradford made one of the taest catches he’ll ever make op a 420-foot Horton, drive to , nehrly dead center in the first inning. ,A . W ★ ★ \ “Most centerfielders don’t play Willie that straight-away,” said Jim Northrup after the game. “If Bradford is playing like most of them do, there’s no way he can catch the ball.” \ Anyway, Bradford caught the ball and Gary Peters went on to shut out the Tigers on six hits — recording three strikeouts to put him at exactly 1,000 whiffs for his career. Incidentally', the “K” which Peters set his personal mark with, the third and final one he got in the game, was Horton in the sixth. ★ ★ ★ “I’m not a strikeout pitcher,” com- mented the White Sox’ lefty. “I don’t think about those things during a game. You can’t." it it it Peters was presented with his third win against four losses when rookie Charles May slugged opposite field home run to left — his ninth this season — off John Hiller in the fourth. It was enough to send Hiller down to his first loss against one win. EASY WIN Chicago added four more tallies in the sixth with the same kind of ehse which Detroit was chalking up its victories last season. it it it Luis Aparacio, who later added another single for his 1,999th major league hit, singled to lead off that frame and May walked before Bill Melton , sacrificed both runners along. ★ it it Earl Wilson 1-4 and Tommy John 3-0 meet in the windup of the three-game series tonight. CHICAGO (4) DETROIT (0) a Mr h bl TO 2 0 ab r h bl W. Williams rf Stanley ss 4 0 0 0 Barry cf 10 10 McAullfte 2b 4 0 10 Aparlcio ss 5 12 0 Kallne rf 3 0 0 0 C. May If 3 2 11 Cash 1b 4 0 2 0 Melton 3b 3 0 0 1 W. Horton If 4 0 0 0 Josephson c 4 112 Freehan c 3 0 ? 0 Bradford cf 3 10 0 Northrup cf 4 0 10 Hansen lb 2 0 10 Wert 3b 4 0 0 0 Ward 1b 2 0 11 Hiller p ,2 0 0 0 Morales 2b 4 0 0.0 Lasher p 0 0 0 0 G. Peters p 3 110 McMahon p 0 0 0 0 Woods ph 1000 Radatz p 0 0 0 0 Total 34 6 10 5 Total 33 0 6 8 Chicago Detroit "V .000 104 100—4, 090 000 000—0 -W. Horton, Melton. LOB—Chlcaao 7# Detroit ft. 2B—G. Peters. HR -C. May 9. SB—Apprlclo 2. S— Melton. SF—Melton* G. Peters (W# 3-4) .... 9 6 0 Hiller (L, 1-1) ......Sft 6 4 Lasher ............. a/a 2 2 McMahon ............. 1 0 0 Radatz 2 2 0 HBP...by G. Peters# Freehan. T—2:19. DIVING RETURN — Detroit’s Bill Freehan dives back to first base after almost being doubled off on Jim Northrup’s line drive to third base in the second inning of last night’s AP Wlrtphoto game with the Chicago White Sox. First baseman Ron Hansen reaches for the late throw. The White Sox won, 6-0. Blairs Bat, Glove ¥ i Save Day for Birds ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS OF) -I Baltimore Orioles Manager Earl Weaver I wants Only one man in center field in a | tight situation — Paul Blair. Blair responded to the confidence Wednesday night with a game-saving catch of a would be extra base hit that would have won or tied the game in the ninth inning. Instead, the Orioles held off the Minnesota Twins for a 9-8 victory—five runs driven in off Blair’s hot bat. Blair smashed two home runs and a two-run single, which accounted for the Winning run. LEAP FOR BA|LL But more Important, Blair leaped against the fence in left center field and robbed Rod Carew, the American League's leading hitter, of a possible ■home run with one man on. “Blair is one of the few center fielders that could have caught the ball,” said Weaver. Twins Manager Billy Martin agreed. it it it “Even after they got their runs and our pitching broke down, it took a sensational catch to beat us. A sensa- tional catch," said Martin, whose team had battled back from a 9-2 deficit. “We should have won if he wouldn’t have caught it, and he shouldn’t have caught it if the fence: was. padded. He climbed the fence after it.” BALTIMORE MINNESOTA ab r h bl ab r h bl Belanger as 5 0 1 1 Uhlabndr cf 5 13 0 Blair cf 5 2 3 5 Carew 2b 5 2 10 FRoblnsn rf 5 0 1 0 Oliva rf 4 2 3 2 DMay rf . - 0 0 00 KfHebrew 3b 5 0 1 o Powell 1b 5 0 20 Manuel If 5 112 Rettenmd If 3 2 0 0 Reese 1b 2 110 Htndrcks c 3 2 10 Nettles 3b 2 l 1 l Etchebrn c 2 0 0 0 Cardenas sa 4 0 1 2 BRobinan 3b 5 1 2 2 Roseboro c 3 0 0 1 DJohnaon 2b 4 1 0 0 Tlschnskl c 1 0 1 o Phoebus p 4 12 1 RWoodsn p 0 0 0 0 Richer! p 0 0 0 0 Renlck ph 10 0 0 Hall p 0 0 0 0 Walters p 0 0 0 0 MLopex p 0 0 0 0 BMIIIer p 0 0 0 0 Watt p 0 0 0 0 Allison ph 1 0 0 g Grzenda p 0 0 0 0 Tovar ph 2 0 0 0 - Perrnoski p 0 0 0 0 Total 41 9 12 9 Tolal 40 8 13 0 Baltimore 0 50 1 ) 0 oil-t Minnesota ....... 000 l l 0 0 S 0 — I E—Killebrew 2, Carew, Rettenmund. DP—Minnesota 1. LOB—Baltimore 8, Minnesota 6. 2B-*B.Robinson, Phoebus, Reese# Carew# Nettles. HR—Blair 2 (8), Oliva (6). IP H R ER BB SO Phoebus (W,4-0) 7 2-3 8 7 6 18 Richert .......... 0 1 1 10 0 Hall ............. 1-3 2 0 0 0 o M.Lopez .......... 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 Watt 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 R. Wood son (L#1-l) 3 5 5 2 1 1 Walters .......... 1 1-3 3 4 4 2 1 B.Miller ......... 2-3 2 0 0 0 1 Grzenda .......... 3 2 ,• 0 o 0 i Perranoskl ... 1 0(0 0 t 1 Save-Watt. T—3:04. A—11,494. Three Sites Listed Prep Golfers in Regionals Prep golfers take time out tomorrow to launch their . bids for state championships. Three of the 13 regional tournaments are siatedatarea courses. Lahser Trade men Outrun Andover in First Meeting Lahser’s Knights drew first blood as they initiated track competition with Andover Wednesday in a Bloomfield Hilts neighborhood athletic rivalry. Hie unbeaten Class B power pulled away from the Class A Barons in the final mile relay-to take home a 61V4-56V4 victory. Andover is now 4-3. Hie Barms swept the shot put and took first place in all four field events. Hiey added only the high hurdles and half mile in the racing events. I it it it . Harry Perry doubled in the 190 and 220 for Lahser with : 10.3 and :23.4 timings. Bill Hafted ran a -52.2 quarter-mile for BHL. - Lahser now will try for its first Class B regional track trophy in a showdown Friday at New Baltimore Anchor Bay with rugged Cranbrook, West Bloomfield and Oxford also among the/favorites. Burroughs Farms near Brighton will entertain Classes A, B, and C-D, while Glen Oaks in Farmington will play host to A and B, teams. Romeo Golf Course will stage a ‘B’ tourney. ★ it On the links yesterday, Brighton whipped West Bloomfield at Burroughs Farms, 155-159, while Lake Orion downed Romeo at Bald Mountain, 173-195. Bill Brafford posted a 38 and Louis Meldman a 39 to pace West Bloomfield (11-4), while Darrel Denkhaus carded a 37 for Brighton. Hoyt Frericks checked in with a 38 and Bruce Rupert a 40 to lead Orion. Doug Carl managed, a 43 for Romeo. » 11 Starts Ney/ Streak ClarkSton’s tennis team, after building up a string of 16 wins, now has a streak of another kind going — a losing one. The Wolves suffered their second setback in a row yesterday and their second in 16 outings this season in falling before Livonia Clarenceville in a Wayne-Oakland League duel, 3-2. CLARENCEVILLE 3, CLARKSTON 2 '■ -• ' Singe* Ken Olson (C'vllle) def. Kelly, 4-0, 4-2; Kirk Beattie (Clark) def. 6. Sealock, 4-4, 4-1; Dick Ruelle (Clark) def. Shiftman, 4-1, 4-1. I Double*. Jim Everhart-Jay Haddad (C'yllle) daf. Waterbury-Grlfflths, 44), 4-0; R. Cook-T. Leads (C'villa) def. ■ Bullard-Lawrence, 4-1, 4-0. Pontiac Press Photo GOOD DAY AT PLATE — Infielder Rodger Strader of Waterford Mott produced three runs with a double and single as the Corsairs upended Kettering, 7-0, Wednesday for their first varsity win over WKHS or WTHS, both of whom own one-run decisions over Mott (7-4) previously this spring. San Diego Glad to Leave Banks CHICAGO — The San Diego Padres are glad to leave Chicago and get* away from that old gaffer, Ernie Banks. Everything happened to the Padres in their three-game set with the first-place Cuj)s who now have a four-game winning streak. “I’m happy we don’t have to see Banks again until a couple of weeks when they come to San Diego,” said Manager Preston Gomez. | Monday the Padres were blanked 2-0 on Fergie Jenkin’s five-hitter. The next day they were humiliated with 19-0 smashing as Banks hit two homees and a double and drove in seven runs. Wednesday they bowed 3-2. Banks’ homer —r his seventh of the year — off Johnny Podres led oft the ninth, inning and tied the game 2-2. SAN DIEGO ab r h bl DaVanon 2b 3 0 0 0 RPena ss 4 0 10 Arcia ss 0 0 0 0 Reberger p 0 0 0 0 Gonzalez cf 4 0 2 0 Ferfara If 4 0 0 0 Gaston cf . OB rown rf ADavis 1b Stahl 1b Spiezig 3b 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 110 0 3 0 2 0 CHICAGO ab r h bl Kessinger ss 4 0 1 0 Spangler rf 3 0 0 0 Regan p - 0 0 0 0 Beckert ph 10 0 0 Nottebart p 0 0 0 0 BWillams If 4 0 0 0 Santo 3b 4 12 1 Banks lb | 1 1 1 Hundley c Canhlzzro C 2 111 Sisk p 2 0 0 0 Murrell ph 0 0 0 1 Podres p 0.0 0 0 Phillips cl Hands p----- Abernthy p 3 0 10 3 110 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 11 Total 29 2 6 2 Total 31 3 7 3 One out wherl winning fun scored. $an Diego ..001 000 1 00—2 Chicago..........\o o o l o o o o 2 — 3 DP—Chicago 2. LOB—San Diego 4, Chicago 8. 2B—Santo# Kessinger# Spiezio, N.Oliver. HR—Cannizzaro (2)# Santo (7)# Banks (5). 5—N.Oliver. IP H R ER BB SO Sisk .... Podres ()l#3-3) Reberger Hands .............. Abernathy Regan .............. Nottebart (W,l-0) . T—2:07. A— 9,622. 3 1 1 2 2 2 1-3 3 2 2 1 0 0 0 0 Andretti Gears for Pole Bid THE PONTIAC PRESS Qualifying Runs Start Saturday at Indy Oval THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1909 D—1 WTHS Clips Clarkston AAotfTrips Captains INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. UP) — Mario Andretti raised the year’s top speed at the Indianapolis Motor Speedway to 171.657 miles per hour on a practice lap Wednesday and remained the only driver officially over the 170 m.p.h. mark. it ir it Good weather, after several days o! rain, sent 40 cars onto .the track. The first day of qualifying for the 53rd 500-mile race is Saturday. 3 TIME WINNER Sophomore Bill Poe and junior Rodger Stradpr can be excused today by their Waterford Mott classmates if. their caps are too small for their heads. They were the key performances Wednesday as the Corsairs (7 - 4 ) surprised Kettering, 7-0, for their first varsity decision over either of their Waterford rivals. Earlier this season Mott dropped one-run verdicts to both WKHS and Waterford Township. —★ ★ WTHS, meanwhile yesterday, was ex- tending its run-scoring mastery over /Clarkston (6-9) with a 14-1 romp. The youthful Poe remained undefeated on the'mound by yielding only a first-inning bunt single and a line drive safety in the second. He registered nine Strikeouts and didn’t walk anyone. Strader clouted a two-run double in the second, then ignited a three-run outburst in the fifth with a single. WINNINGEST NINE Ist-Flight Player Surprises Field The county's winningest prep nine, WTHS boosted Its mark to 16-3 with its fourth win in a row this season and fifth straight over Clarkston. it it it A first-flight golfer left .the championship players a little red-faced yesterday as she upset the normal routine by posting the low score in the weekly Women’s Metropolitan Golf Association outing. ■ Mrs. C: E: Luber, a WMQA veteran who has been on the border between championship and first flight for several seasons, turned in a 44-44—88 at Brae Burn in Northville to lead a field of 65.. t Since only the players in the championship flight are eligible for honors in that division, Mrs. Luber did not win the top prifse but she’ll be given a trophy at the end of the season for her efforJ>. Mrs. Luber accomplished her low score with a new set of clubs that she tried out the night before. Setting (he pace in the championship flight was Mrs. David Mortimer of Birmingham With, a 41-49—90. The Skippers rapped 16 hits in yesterday’s win and now have scored 60 runs in the past two years against the Wolves’ pitchers. Earlier this season Waterford was a 16-0 winner. * * *- Jim Smith and Mike Sheldon, each of whom h&d three hits in the game, led off for WTHS with back-to-back singles as it scored three times in the opening inning. Steve Goit drilled a two-run homer in his only trip. ♦ WAT. MOTT 7, KETTERING « Kstttrlnq .. 000 000 0—0 2 3 W«t. Mott .. .120 031 X—7 4 2 SMITH (3-2) and Dryoti POE (3-0) and Zlem. WATERFORD 14, CLARKSTON 1 Clarkston ..........ON BIB 0—1 4 I Waterford ..........340 023 x—14 14 1 __R0Y (0-1) and Keyser; Toylor (2-10) ana cro»y(ord. ._____________ • __ Three-time winner A. J. Foyt had hlf fastest lap of the year, Wednesday, 169.651 mp.h. Only Andretti’s car has gone faster. Both drivers have turbocharged Ford engines in their cars. Roger McCluskey, driving a Foyt-owned car had a lap of 169.5 Wednesday. > ★ ★ ★ Joe Leonard, A1 Unser and Wally Dallenbach all had laps of over 166 m.p.h. | Andretti’s car already had the fastest lap by a piston engine car in Indianapolis history, 171.494 m.p.h. on Tuesday, and he has topped 170 on several other laps. ★ * * Three members of Foyt's crew said they timed him at just over 170 m.p.h. Wednesday, but the official electric timer caught him in 169.651. Bobby Unser, last year’s champion, spun on the first turn in his car when a connection rod broke, but the car made no contact with the wall. * * An Andy Granatelli-owned car with a stock block Plymouth engine made its first appearance on the track, and driver Art Pollard took it for a few shakedown laps. Granatelli has 11 cars entered for the 500 but only six were in the Speedway garages by Wednesday. * ★ ★ Andrettr^ind I960 winner Graham Hill also are driving for Granatelli. Shaughnessy Headed Minors CHAMPIONSHIP PLIGHT Mrs. David Mortimer# Birmingham 41-49.-90 Phyllis Chandler, Hamtramck — 43-48— 91 Mrs. John Hartzell, Grosse Pte. Woods 43-50- 93 Mrs..Max Evans# Southfield 46-49— 95 Mrs. George Schade, Detroit ../. 43-52— 95 Mrs. Midge Cove, Novi .....46-51— 97 Mrs. Nick Panasiuk# Elmstead# On{.......... 45-52— 97 Mrs. Henry Pramlck# Dearborn .............. 49-54—103 Mrs. George Sullivan# Detroit ............. 49-55—104 Low Net: Mrs. Schade 95-12-83. FIRST FLIGHT: Mrs. C. .E. Luber# Gr. P, Woods, 44-44—818; Mrs. Peter McAIpjne, Southfield, 48-48—96; I aiu Mat • Airs AnHrnu; I slchmxn Pat) fiEtralt. Oft- Noted Baseball Figure Dies oe o a o Low He*: Mrs. Andr*w Leishman, East, Detroit, 98-17-81. ... - . ' tr4 SECOND FLIGHT; Mrs. Williams Pate, Detroit, S3-54—109; Mrs. George Georgine, Dearborn, 51-59— 110; Low Net: Mrs. John Ralston, Farmington, 112-24-88. THIRD FLIGHT: Mrs. Floyd Align, Royal Oak, 5041—111; Mrs. King Symington, Si. Clair. Shores, 52-42—114; Low Nett Mrs. James Suddath, Birmingham', tl5-25-HL LAHSER Mila Relay—Lalttor (Shanks, Lewis, Craig; Ovlatt) »*•». ' ISP i1" " BALTIMORE (AP) — Majestic Prince, the unbeaten winner of the Kentucky Derby; Arts and Letters, aqd Top Knight .were among eight 3-year-olds entered today for the Preakness Stakes. it it if Others entered for Saturday’s second leg of the Triple-Crown were Elmen-dorf’s Captain Action, Glenn M. Banker’s and Nick Cofuccio’s Glad’s Flame; Claiborne Farm’s Jay Ray, Pelican Stable’s A1 Hattab, and Michael Phipps’ Greengrass Green. , i— Each will carry 126 pounds when they go to the post at 5:40 p.m., EDT, for the 1 3/16 mile classic at Pimlico. ■v ' " ★ ♦ ★ With eight starter^, the gross purse for the richest of the Triple Crown races Will be $182,000, with $129,500 to the winner. Television of the Event will be handled by 'CBS; from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m.' . - “It just suits me perfectly,” said jtrainer Johnny Lpngden after drawing the No. 5 post position for Frank McMahon’s Majestic Pripce, who Will be bidding for his ninth-victory. Bill Hartack will ride Majestic Prince as lie has in all the powerful chestnut’s-previous races. V, , i > Braulio Baeza will take Arts and Letters,' the Derby runnerup, out of the No. 6 gate. MONTREAL .(AP) - Frank “Shag” Shaughnessy, a famed all-round athlete, football coachi baseball player, coach, manager, owner and league president, and originator of the playoff system in baseball that bears his hame, died this morning in a Montreal hospital. He wais 86. The tall, gray-haired native of Amboy, 111., was stricken Tuesday by a massive aneurismi-an abnormal enlargement of an artery near his heart and was rushed to Montreal General Hospital./. / / • In ,1967 he was stricken by* a circulatory ailment and had to have his right leg amputated above the knee. Shaughnessy, a Notre Dame graduate, was president of baseball’s International League from 1936 until his retirement-in 1960. It wa£ in 1936, when he was business manager of the Montreal club, that he devised the playoff system beCause one of the clubs was running away with the International League pennant and fans were losing interest. - Under the Shaughnessy plan, four teams qualified1 tor the post-season playoffs. FRANK SHAUGHNESSY II llii 1: m Avis4!(I.foii/ ‘Y'i Mi > in f, y- I HH i |i • i / Jt was an immediate success and proved to be jtfie salvation ,of the minor leagues. The plan, with some variations, then was picked up by practically all professional sports leagues. .v ,w Kii: I 4 FULL PLY! ANY SIZE I 6.50x13 - 6.95x14 - 7.35x14 I 7.75x14 - 8.25x14 - 8.55x14 V Plus F.E.T .43 to .73 . ".'I f Wide, White Re- wL ■ ■ ■ • Firen treads. JO | H * a. Shop * No Monty Down Instant Credit i , _ Ev#rywh#r# First! Thon Set Us. Wo Honestly Fool Wo Con Boot Your Bost Tiro Deal 99 Times Out of 1001 UNITED TIRE SERVICE “WHERE PRICES ARE DISCOUNTED - NOT QUALITY" 1007 Baldwin Ave. 3 MINUTES FROM DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Camaros • Chevells • Impalas • Impala Custom Coupe • Caprice Coupes Capriee 4-Door Hard Top * Bel Air Sedans • Estate Wagons •Townsman Wagons PRIX %n Up Now . p‘.\ Got your official gravity GrandPrix jacket patch just by visiting our showroom. Step in and register for the 1969 I 631 Oakland at Cass, Pontiac row ch^rot* o«./er FE 5-4161 fenwS.birre#py wf *,w WANT TO SELL LAWNMOWERS, POWER MOWERS, ROLLER SKATES, WAGONS, BICYCLES? USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, GALL 332-8181. OPEN MON. THRU FRI. 3 to 9 - SAT. 9-8 - CLOSED SUNDAY 10.13 Oallon.' No. 9221 WIDE OVALS 4 Full Ply-Extra Mileage-Tubeless Red or Whitewall Other Sizes: Proportionally Low Priced E70xU H70x14 F70x14 670x15 671x14 H7SX15 18 010x14 Plus $2.24 F.E.T. Wide Track Fiberglas Belted Radial Bias Type Polyester Cord Tires Plus Malty Other New 1969 Chevrolets With Factory Air Conditioning Ready for Immediate Delivery One of America's greatest soiling teams. That's what makes Matthows-Harg reaves • Michigan's largest volume Chevrolet dealer. We also appreciate your business and that has helped to maka our past 15 years such a success. It you ara in the market for a new or used car or truck I invite you to come in as soon as possible and I guarantee you satisfaction. E. C. If You Care For Your Car ... Why Not Buy Oho From The Chevrolet Dealer That Gives You ★ Savings * Sendee ^Satisfaction? New 1969 Chevy Nova 2-Boer With Factory Air Equipment Included: 8 Cylinder 307 Engine/ Exterior Decor group, Power-glide Transmission, Push * Button Radio, Power Steering, Factory Air, Whitewall Tires, Rally Wheefs, Door Guards, Sept Belts, Head Rests, Shoulder Harness, Side View Mirror, Backup Lights. Plus 2.792 Juliui Kessler Company, Lawrenceburg, Indiana. Blended Whiskey. 86 Proof. 72 /2% Grain Neutral Spirits. A single by Chuck Gavette and a double by Rich Lamphere brought Weedon’s a 6-5 win in eight innings ovdr Tru-Bilt in Waterford recreational fastpitch softball last night. In another fastpitch game, Morrrie Lapratt picked up two hits to lead Milbur Industry past Lighthouse Lanes, 3-1. * - A In a blooperball game, the. Whiskers scored seven runs in) the top of the 10th to down! Huntoon’s, 9-2. Bunting Stays Home RALEIGH, N.C.(AP) — The Carolina Cougars of the American Basketball Association announced Wednesday the signing-of Bill Bunting,- 6-8 North Carolina star, who also was sought by the .New York Knieks. Smooth as Silk. We say it over and over again on our labels just to make you get the if you l, taste Kessler. TKen you’ll get the message. You mighteven it around. r'L r', I t RKWlSw , THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 10, I960 * • . . f items Are Foiled in Upset Bid Pontltc Prisi Photo HAPPY EAGLETS — Freshman hurler Walt SakowsVi (right) of Orchprd Lake St. Mary has a giant grin as he receives congratulations from batterymate Rick Strzalkowski after beating Pontiac Catholic, 3-2,ron a two-hitter yesterday at A&ron-Perry Park. Strzalkowski singled home the tying run in the seventh and scored the winner for the Eaglets (5-l). 5 — Pontiac Catholic had a major upset in its grasp but Orchard Lake St. Mary came back to pull out a 3-2 victory Wednesday afternoon at Aaroh-Perry Park in the Northwest Catholic loop. St. Mary, the league runner-up, scored an unearned run in the opening inning but fell BIG SViCARGARAGE 1 Vz & 2 CAR MODELS ALSO ON SALE UP TO 7 TEARS TO PAY Abov# pric# Includes oil of the following: 2 largo aluminum windows • 22-foot sholf or work bench • 2x5 raftors • 16 O.C. studs • siding • Wind braces • StMlov.rh.ad door • 6“ box formica 0 CroM-ti.i o tl.c. conip 235 thinglo. o Doublo h.od.r, o Expansion 0 Alum, insulation o Gatv. nails INCLUDES ALL LADOR AND MATERIAL • DUILT TO ANT CODE, ANY SURURR REMODELING t2,ru/r/;^ WE ,UIL0 W,THI honatiae cc o ocox 75 miles GARAGE BUILDERS III 0“JwO T 5 YEAR UNITED TIRE SERVICE Angels Blank Senators, 1-0 Bases*Loaded Walk Wins for California ANAHEIM (AP) - Jim Mc-Glothlin and Hoyt Wilhelm combined for a I shutout, and a bases-loaded walk to Bubba Morton gave California a 1-0 victory over Washington Wednesday night. Reliever Casey Cox came on with the bases loaded and none out in the sixth. He got one out, but then walked Morton to force in the only run of the game. Starter Jim Hannan, 2-3,j walked Jim Fregosi to open the i inning. Jap Johnstone followed! with a single, only the third off Hannan, and Repoz walked to load the bases. McGlothlin went six innings and had to work with ,men on base in every inning. __ - WASHINGTON ab r h bl 4 0 10 Unser cf Stroud rf Epstein 1b Bertaina p F Howard If BAIIen 2b B.illings pr CUIIen 2b McMulln 3b 4 0 2 0 Brnkman ss 4 0 2 0 Casanova c Alyea ph Hannan p Cox p Holman 1b 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 0 10 3 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 CALIFORNIA ab r h bl Davalillo rf 4 0 0 0 Fregosi ss 2 10 0 Johnstone cf 4 0 1 0 Repoz 1b 2 0 0 0 ARodrgez 3b 4 0 1 0 Morton If 10 11 Wilhelm p 10 0 0 Egan c 3 0 0 0 Amaro 2b 4 0 0 0 MGIothin p 2 0 0 0 Voss If 0 0 0 0 Total 33 0 9 0 Total 27 1 3 1 Washington .. . 0 L0 0 0 0 0 0 0—1 California 000 001 0Qx—r E—Fregosi, Epstein, Amaro. DP Washington 1, California 1. LOB Washington v, C a iTfSFFnir" 10. 2B- McMullen, A.Rodriguez. IP Hannan (L,2-3) Cox ............... 1 Bertaina • McGlothin (W,3-2) . < Wilhelm • 2 Save—Wilhelm. McGlothin. PB—Egan H R ER BB SO 3 114 3 0 0 0 1 1 Extra Innings in Rec Action | behind when Tim Boyer and [Torn Jamnik singled for PCHS’ only two, hits and each advanced on errors to score the Titans’ runs In the fifth and sixth innings. Boyer circled the bases on his smash to center that was misplayed. Jamnik then put the home team in front when Pat Manion’s fly ball drove him home. BOUNCE BACK But a lead-off double and walk in the seventh set up St. Mary’s best scoring opportunity against loser Jeff Solwold. No. 9 Kettering Golfers Topple Waterford in Playoff Dvel Waterford shook off a three-hole playoff defeat by archrival Kettering to hand Rochester its second loss of the spring, 208-210, at Pontiac Country Club as Scott Niederluecke posted a three-over-par 39. Earlier, Kettering gained its first All-Sports Trophy points of the spring and cut the Skippers’ lead to 400-250. The two teams tied earlier this spring and WKHS took a four-stroke win as 10 players dueled for three extra holes. Ron Greenlee of WTHS and the Captains’ Chuck Patrick each had a birdie during the playoff. f J hitter Rick Strazalkowski ripped a liner to left for his second hit of the season to tie the game. ‘ , ★ .★ The St. Mary catcher then moved around the bases and tallied the deciding marker when shortstop Tim Megge bounced a single off reliefer Jeff Fisher’s glove with two out. A two-base error after two outs in the last of the inning gave the Titans (3-6) a final chance but Jamnik filed out to end the game. Walt Sakowsld gained his second win for St. Mary. „ OL IT. MARY t, P. CATHOLIC 1 Orth. Lako It. Mary IN at t-l I I Pontiac catholic ... aa# ail Ml i SAKOWSKI (2-0) and Strzalokow akl, SOLWOLD (Ml, Fl.hor (7th)and Doyar. SUNDAY • JUNE 1 LIVONIA NATIONAL CHAMPIONSHIP KMi ★ RACES a SUNDAY, JUNE 1 America’s top amateur and professional cyclists! Thrills and excitement galore! AMA sanctioned five-mile championship. Track opon lo a.m. Tima Trials at 11 a.t Plrct Raca 2:H p.m., lactam Standard Tima PRE-SALE TICKETS $2 available now at all Livonia fire atatloni. Adult admlaaion, S3 at gate (under.12,31) • General Admlttion Tickets at all Detroit, arta Montgomery Ward Staraa Nat proceed, to Charity. Sponsored by Dttialt Area Aupciahd Motorcycle C/ubi 8 Metropolitan Club of Livonia. DETROIT RACE COURSE SCHOOLCRAFT at MIDDLEBELT • LIVONIA This key costs *129.OT* But this comes with it! TORO. « It’s our ’69 TORO with KEY-LECTRICf Starter. Turn the key and you’re off! No problem atarting for years, cither. The battery recharger gives you up to 80 starts with each charge. And it’s built to last like all TORO features. Trust a TORO. Trouble-free at mowing can be. . lUlgltUd retail price (19* KEY-LECTRIC). 1 f Exciuilve trade name of Toro Manufacturing Corn# niALVERSON Sales & Service 2 LOCATIONS 6466 Telegraph Rd. - 3297 Pontiac Rd. Birmingham Only: Opsn Fri. Ivaningt til t P.M. (Northeast Corner Mapl and Telegraph) Birmingham 647-5506 (Near Squirrel and Walton) Pontiac 332-0001 BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! 469 New 1969 Chevrolets Will fie Sold During Matthews-Hargreaves Chevy-Lands... All Major Credit Cards Accepted —30 Days Same as Cash! Tfct# PONTIAC XfolESS, THtlRSDAY, MAY IS, 1960 Lahser Wins, Cranes Lose Catholic Central tallied three DELUXE 100 Com* in and See These Specials: WHITE WALLS 3.00 EXTRA MOST ANY SIZE PIUS F.E.T. 675 S* Saginaw, Pontiac wheels for Verrry interresting Copper Mug and Liberty Tool extended their unblemished marks Wednesday night in the Walled Lake Industrial Slowpitch Softball circuit and ,the toolmen \ enhanced their performance with a shutout win. liberty's Chuck Lukkari and .Gary M4rsh combined to hold Mobil Temp to four hits and five baserunners in an ft-0 victory. The tool team is now 3-0 and shares the “B" bracket lead with the Penny Electrics. Copper Mug held off Carpentry Engineering, 7-5, to stay ainn tha “A” rano at A-li Retread tires at big savings I 670x15 i UN ♦ MR p|u, pat, All wheel tire designed for traction on Ipng, high speed hauls. Just say 'Charge it'l Save! Get one "very interesting" iced tea glass FREE every time you buy $3.00 worth of gasoline at participating Ashland Dealers. Stop in,;, starts set. MOST ANY SIZE Ashland, PANELING 5-year guaranteed battery...our best STANDARD SHOCKS I T A r m Installation available 1" piston-double action. Original equipment standards. For cars. ouabamtii SATtW* Save $5 off regular everyday selling price. Charge it, at Federal's. Bathroom Vanity 1x2 Firring Strips Ixl Firring Strips Lifetime guaranteed muffler 24 inohes 2-Door All Formica Sink A Rim ine. Masonite 4xlxVb Self od|usttng brakat S4 more Here Is whgt we doi • ln»*all new lining* • Check wheel cylinders • Check matter cylinders . Turn all four drums Check grease seajs Inspect fluid lines Install new fluid, bleed and adjust brakes Test drive automobile INSTALLATION AVAILABLE Double-wrapped, triple-dipped. For most /American cars. Savel ROOF SHINGLES 236 lbs., 4 colors Intorior-Extsrior Latex - White Only READY-MADE WEAVE FENCE n*r TO ERECT PREFABRICATED SECTIONS OF REDWOOD FENCE |j= 6’ high 1=111 FULL FRONT RUBBER CAR MATS COLORS: PLYWOOD SPECIAL 0000 ON ONE SIDE 4x8x’/4 • •... Oil can tapper Chrome plated, Wjj leakproof. Savel M Standard Length Is 0 Ft. Oil Filters Spin-on“ type, quality filtersl 'GFIiri ~Saddle^an Black ‘Turquoise SPECIAL CEILING TILE For Kitchens 4 Baths §§ SPECIAL pC , Pink Marble jk/.j ■ 4x8 Sheets mM: Reg. 9.95 Suspened —' Complete with metal hangers, tile. EACH ;6il filter wrench Now at special low pricel Savel R Johnson kit, 12-ox. Easy to use car 127 Full rear rubber Twin front rubber . Twin rear rqbber . twin front vinyl • • Twin rear vlrtyl • Full front vinyl mat Pre-Assembled RooM Dividers White 12x12.. 9c ea. Acoustical U’Aeea. Regularly 15.19 Spring plunger ceiling and fldor supports. Styrene insert. 26"x96". Colors, patterns. OiSAPPEARING STAIRWAYS J *18” ALUMINUM COMBINATION SCREEN DOORS Save, on majorbrand motor oil, 10W30 Shell XI00 Super mm Fermalube or Mo* ' R bil special. Buy! m Polishing cloth Extra soft. Large 1 size. W -pound. m Air filters Specially priced os low as ;,V-, lld^m LUMBER CO. Lifiphifll \ , \\ Free Delivery ' 7374 Highland Rd. at Williams Lake Rtf, One Mile ITsit pf Pontiac ilfltBM Cl 5272 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains — Open (Ron. thru Fri. 9 to 0r Sat. 9 to 6 — Phone 623-1130 1910 Widetrack Drive, Pontiac — Open Mon. thru Set. 0 to 0 - Phone 334-2515 : * gOR 44316 i, , 1 •; Airport in M4>9 Plcuta AUTO ACCESSORIES Tire also Price j F.E.T. fa 480x13 2 for 838 1 Mi 700x13 2 for 834 l.*2 738x14 2 for $34 2.04 778x14 3 for $34 ! 2.1* 000/838x14 2 for 334 2.38 880/888x14 2for$42 2.84 470/778x18 2 for $34 j 2.21 710/818/828*18 2 for 834 J 2.34 740/848/888x18 2 for 342 3.4 SSS/tOOxIS J 2 for 842 ! SIZE RATING PRICE F.E.T. 670x15 6-ply 19.SR’ 2.76 700x15 6-ply 21.61 3.22 17.17-5 6-ply 54.63 3.31 a.17-5 ••ply 40.08 4.12 1650x16 6-ply 24.34 /2.66 |700x16 | 5-piy 28.66 3.22 ij. |750x16 UMr_ 35,26' j 3.74 ^IZE j PRICE F.E;T. I 650x13 10.88 j 378 1 700x13 10.00 378 1 775x14 10.00 458 1 775x15 10.00 438 1 025x14 10.00 458 1 015x15 10.00 458 1 545x15 10.00 ! 548 1 355x14 10.00 548 1 900x14 12.00 558 J: 900x15 1T5I 558 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 16, 1969 Softball Loop for Teen-Age Players Eyed INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. UP) -No entries for the 53rd 500-mile auto race May 30 are being watched more closely in practice than the four new Eagles built by driver-engineer Dan Gurney. After all the publicity for Lotus turbine cqrs last year, the race ended with Gurney Eagles in three of the first four places: All American Racers built four new Indianapolis cars for this year and there may be seven or eight older Eagles In the field. NEW CARS Two new Eagles will be driven by Gurney and Hulme as a team, with one in reserve. The fourth was sold to smdfcey Yunick of Daytopa Beach, Fla., a noted stock car racing expert, who has Joe Leonard of San Jose, Calif., in the cockpit. Lepnard was leading last year’s 500 in an STB Lotus-Turblrie with only 9 laps to go when a fuel pump shaft broke. V Organization of a summer fast-pitch softball league for WHITEWALLS' FULL 4-PLY Wide Trqcki—Bias Type NOT SE00NDS E10x14 -f players 18 years of age and under is being considered by the Pontiac Parks and Recrea-| tion Department. \, \ Apparently the only thing that stands in the way of such a loop is finding enough teams. He has made a quick adaptation to the new Eagle and got it up to a' resoedtable 164.654 miles , per hour in the first week of practice. He5 holds the track qualifying record of 171.555' In the turbine, now outlawed by new engine restrictions. Gurney is still experimenting with his new cars in the week before the May 17 start of time trials for the Memorial Day classic. SEVERAL NOSES "We’re trying three different tails and several noses,” Gurney said. "There is absolutely no way to test an over-all- car design for the 500 except at the Speedway. "The 1969 Eagles are entirely new,’’ Gurney said. "There Is no one thing that is radically different but the silhouette is lower. Other changes are such things as placement of the fuel tanks and mounting of the engine. We’ll know whether they’re improvements after the race.” N By FLETCHER SPEARS ' Some things can’t be pushed. Mother Nature for one. - * I Which means, among other things, that golfers, unhappy with the patchy greens, will have to be patient while Mother Nature does her thing, that of putting color back into the putting surfaces. Most courses in Michigan are now displaying some unsightly greens. The-owners certainly aren’t happy with the situation, but it’s really not management’s fault. “It’s due entirely to a winter of little rainfall and snow,’’ says noted greens superintendent Clarence Wolfrom, 62, who for the past 36 years has had the responsibility of keeping golfers happy with the greens at Maple Lanes near Warren. “From the first of February to the last of March we had practically no rain at all and this led to what we call desica-tion," said Wolfrom, who’ll be among the eight Michigan personalities to be honored at the Michigan Golf Day Dinner next Tuesday at H i 11 c r e s t Country Club in Mount Clemens. "Desication means drying out,’’ explained Wolfrom. "It’s • drying out of the soil In other words, a plant has to have so much moisture or it will die. When it is exposed so lobg to freezing conditions and winds, the moisture is gone. It’s especially severe on higher areas facing north and west. "What happened was that while dry they (grass roots) froze that way. If We had snow or some rair\ it would have prevented it.” Coming to defense of course owners, Wolfrom said, "You wouldn’t turn your water on because the pipes would freeze. We have some extra help herb (47 holes) so we used hoses and pumped water from the river, from the clubhouse, from bathrooms. It was quite a job with low pressure but it saved a lot of our greens. "We had severe trouble with three of our greens. Some are perfect, some we’ve patched and there are some spots on seven others.’’ What can you do about them? “Well, we have a large nursery so we have sodded the bigger areas, and on those we didn’t sod, we have been spiking, seeding and topdressing. The secret is to get the seed into the spike holes and then get a little soil on top of that. “The'soil has been another Bobby Unser, Albuquerque, N.M., Won with an Eagle powered with, a turbocharged Offenhauser engine. Gurney himself was runnerup in an Eagle with a modified Ford stock Mock engine. DIFFERENT ENGINE Denis Hulme, New Zealander who was 1967 world champion and No. 3 internationally last year, took fourth place for the second straight year, driving an Eagle with a nonsupercharged Ford racing engine. That kind of a performance with three different engines made the Gurney chassis look pretty superior. ★ ★ ★ Carrol Shelby, another noted race driver and designer, and Gurney formed All American Racers of Santa Ana, Calif., in 1966. Gurney since has become sole proprietor of the business. Chisox Deal for KnoOp Pontiac Central teacher Fred Zittel, former basketball coach at PCH, has agreed to work with the formation of the new league. "It would be at no cost to the teams,” says Zittel. "We would IwP Fed. Tax 9349 LARGER ■ ^MOMPM^T :t ‘ SLIGHTLY HIGHER NO TRADE-IN NEEDED f . 70 - W G - 70 -15 FREE MOUNTING • v70 •14 %‘ 7®f15 LIFETIME GUARANTEE-INSTANT CREDIT DETROIT iff) — The Chicago White Sox obtained second baseman Bobby Knoop frond the California Angels Wednesday in a straight player trade for infielder Santos (Sandy) Alomar and pitcher Bob Priddy. Knoop, 30, was regarded as one of the American League’s top fielders. He was hinting at a .179 clip as of yesterday, with 12 hits in 67 appearances. FULL 4-FLY TUBELESS WHITEWALLS 6.59x13-313.95 A $1411 T.09x!3-$1S.95 I 7.75x14-315.95 A $2.20 7.76x16-316.96 1 8.25x14—$16.15 A $2.36 6.16x16-316.66 I 9.56x14—$16.95 A $2.57 345xll-$1l.96 I Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8-8, Sat. 8-6 "If possible, we’d like to start around the middle of June and continue through June or early August. And if we had enough we could engage in a teams, playoff. Zittel said that any organization desiring to enter a team in such a league could contact him at 682-8815, or call the Parks and Recreation office, FE 3-7131. Alomar, 25, was obtained by the White Sox from the New York Mets two years ago. He had seen only limited service Changing Teams ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — The Minnesota North Stars Waded defenseman Wayne Hillman to the Philadelphia Flyers Wednesday for defense-man John Miszuk in a straight player National Hockey League deal. ARE YOU UNDER 30? Set up a *30,000 life insurance estate overniaht • • • f°r *** than VVWlSBBgJII* $13.50 A MONTH For all the facts on this Allstate ”10 year term’ renewable policy, the men to see are at— 4381 Highland Road M-59 At Pontiac Lake Road PHONE 681-0400 Compare the tailoring features of this fait with others selliag for aiach more. Each is tailored to oar specificatfaas by Sattoa Park L ia a lightweight bleed of Decree* ^polyester aad woal that assures crease re-ILteatioa, wriakie resistaace aid sasaawr comfort. Aad the extra ''fFN pair of paats deables ■ A the steer. /instate Allitat. Llf. Insurance Company Northbrook. III. Meticulously tailored by Sutton Park in contemporary 24Mttoq mode) with side.vents and angle flap pockets. All in the newest spring solids and patterns. See our complete ei 28 range including regular .~short -.long... extra long** portly and portly short. ON SALE THURSDAY MAY 15 ■ ,. THill SUNDAY MAY IS Sweetheart Hop in your ‘JeepsterCommando’ Station Wagon .and spread your w^ngs! Hit that 4-wheel drive lever. Claw up hills, over gullies. Churn through mud and sand. It's tough. ‘Jeep’ tough. Then, polish ’er up, » and... pow! It’s a different car. A real sweetheart, ^ Rev up that optional V-6. With those rakish lines, DO bucket seats, all the options...people may think it’s a jazzy sports cart Oeepster Commando ■ l\V ‘ t, Station Wagon, Truly a 2-Car Car. You've got to drive it to believe it. ■ '. See your *Jeep*dealer fora te»fdtive...today» Pontiac \ At Arfm. .Open Nights Until 10 AM.. Open Sundays Until 7 KM. Complete TIRE SERVICE TIRE SERVICE CO 190 W. Walton Blvd. Pontiac DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES ■' i\.\ £ \ , THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 / ’ / F 1— D—6 tS—•"—. • ■■ vv ■— '“7... _■ ■ ; ' , v; Deluxe Pilots to End 6-Game Skid SEATTLE (AP) — To quote the manager, NR^lph Rouk said, We needed it real damn bad’1’ when his New York Yankees rallied "in the late innings Wednesday night to \edge the Seattle Pilots 5-4 and end a six-game losing streak. The Yanks had lost 13 of their last 14 games and they seemed headed for another setback when a home run by Steve Whitaker, plus singles by Tommy Davis and Wayne Comer, got the Pilots off to a 2-0 lead in the first inning. ★ ft Not until the fifth KANSAS CITY (AP) - Jqse Cardenal did it his way Wednesday night, literally stealing a baseball victory for the Cleveland Indians. ★ ★ h “I like to ;run, and I like to win,” was the slender Cuban’s They make decisions rather than compromises. They choose the elegant 8 year old bourbon. $1348 Half Gallon $536 , 4/5 Qt. $338 simple explanation of his daring orle-man show that sank the Kansas City Royals 3-2 in 11 innings. * ft * Lead Bosox Past Oakland West Bloomfield 1 t e n ni s players lost only two sets yesterday while defeating Milford, 5-0, in a Wayne-Oak land League match. „ ■ , , PB I , . , OAKLAND (AP) - Tony Co- Cardenal was instrumental in . .. , , .. „ . all three" Cleveland runs, and nf8|laro drove in both Boston scored the winning tally virtual- j runs and Ray Culp fired a six-1 \ Two Straight ■ > ' \ ’ N at Home hr N. L Champs ST. LOUIS (AP) — Joe Hoerner bailed Nelson Briles out of a seventh-inning jam and the St Louis Cardinals, who managed did the ius^ two. hits, defeated Los An- nui U.HU u.B uu, ulu ““Igdes 2-1 Wednesday night Yanks begin to solve the dehv-6 + + + ery of Mike Marshall, who had started the game with a string of 11 scoreless innings. ly unaided in the 11th ft . ★ ft He singled leading off that framq, stole second and third against Moe Drabowsky and then streaked home with the deciding ; rtin as Tony Horton grounded out. GETS HIT Cardenal might have been out at the plate, but Royals catcher Ellie Rodriguez got hit just as hitter and struck out 11, moving the Red Sox to a 2-1 victory over Oakland Wednesday night. „ ,* * * Conigliaro’s broken-bat single drove in Carl Yastrzemski, who had walked and stolen second in the first inning. w. Bloomfield s, milford o Singles Alen Jahns (WB) del. Malcolm St rubble 4-6, 6-1, 6-3; Tom Phelps (WB) def, Jeff Horton, 6-4, 2-6, 6-3; Steve Stanley (WB) def. Randy Simula, 6-3, 6-1;, Dennis Mon-" ie (WB) def. Dan Troup, 6-3, 6-1, Doubles Alan Musser-Steve Howard (WB) def. John Lee-George Gates, 6-0, 6-0. las vegas, nev. — Clprtano Hernandez, 2, San Diego, outpointed Miguel Hernandez, 149‘,4, San Jose, Calif., 10. In 1954, Lew Worsham shot 74-74-74-74 in the Masters golf tournament. Then with the score tied at 1-1 in the ..eighth, Dalton Jones led off with a double. Mike Andrews NSW YORK IBATTLB abrhbl Clarke 21) 5 110 Harper 2b Kenney 3b 4 11 0 Whitaker Murcer rf 5 0 3 2 TDavIs If White If 5 0 2 1 Mincher lb Cowan pr 0 0 0 0 Comer cf Pepitone lb 5"0 0 0 Gil 3b JMall cf Tresft ss Fernandz c Burbach p Cox ph Michael pr McDaniel p Bahnsen p 4 110 MNertny c 4 2 3 2 Oyler ss 4 0 10 Rollins ph 1 0 0 0 Marshall p 0 0 0 0 ODnghue p 0 0 0 0 Vidal ph 1 0 0 0 Aker p 0 0 0 0 Bouton ab r h bl 4 0 0 0 3 111 4 110 2 110 4 12 1 4 0 12 . The victory iqarked the first time this season the Cardinals, defending National League champions, have won two In a row at home. LOS ANGELES ST. LOUI eb r h bl Crawford If .SOI 1 Brock If . „ „ „ JMIller If 1 0 0 0 Jevler Jb 4 0 J Jistzemore ss 4 0 2 0 Flood cf ? 2 J S.WDavIs Cf 4 0 0 0 Torro c j ® ? ®i Haller c 4 0 10 Pinion rf 1 ° 9 2, Sudanis 3b 4 0 0 0 Hlcki ab r h bl 4 0 0 0 2 10 0 4 110 3 0 11 oooo nal earned the run. he took the throw from first j |jne(j out an(j Yastrzemski was baseman Chuck Harrison, «everjlntentionally walked. But Conig. had control of the'ball, and f>-!jjaro crossed up the strategy nahy let it trickle to the ground „ singleFto left as umpire Don Denkinger wait- 6 ed to see if he could hold it. , ★ ★ ft Had. Rodriguez kept the ball, Cardenal would have been out. Rodriguez was given an error, and the run went down officially as unearned. Few would question, however, whether Carde- BOSTON OAKLAND ab r h bl ab r h bl DJones 1b 4 12 0 Campnrls ss 4 0 1 Andrews 2b 4 0 10 TReynlds If 3 0 1 Ystrmskl If 2 10 0 RJackson rf 3 0 0 AConiglro rf 4 0 2 2 Bando 3b 3 0 1 RSmlth cf 4 0 0 0 Cater 1b 4 0 0 4 0 0 0 Monday cf 3 0 0 2 0 10 DGreen 2b 4 0 2 4 0 0 0 Roof c 3 11 3 0 10 Tartabull ph 1 0 0 Dobson p 2 0 0 Donaldsn ph 1 0 0 AAA A.OVUOIVIG UR ?0 0 olFa,r,V 1bu 0 0 0 S KBoyer ph V V V v r.k.lnlfn rl oooo; 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 10 0 0 Total New York Seattle i Russell rf •mAMNT bourbon whiskey . m pnoop hiram walker a sons inc . pioria. ill. 3 0 10 Gagliano 3b 2 0 0 0 (P 1 0 0 0 Hague 1b 3 0 0 0 Gabrlelsn rf 2'0 0 0 Huntz ss AM„r ' h i A A aIKosco ph 0 0 0 0 Briles p _ Go5°*r ph 1 0 0 0 l.BreweP p 0 0 0 0 Hoerner | 38 5 12 S Total 31 4 6 4 Lefebvre ph 10 0 0 ......... tit 3 2 0-5 5 " ? ? 2 S 200 000 0 0 1—4 £in9,r. OP—New York 2. LOB -Ncw York' 9, Seattle 5. 2B—White, Gil. 3B-J.H«tl "Tr'*h ' ' SB~|lo«'Anselei o o o 0 o 1 0 0 0 -1 Mlnehor. S-BurbecK r r £r bq sq st. LoUi, .0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 ,-1 Burbach (W.2-3) . 4 3 2 2 5 5 McDaniel .. 2 3 2 2 0 1 Bahnsen .. i 0 0 0 0 3 Marshall (L.2-4) ... 4 24 9 3 3 2 3 ODonoghue ....... 1-3 0 0 0 0 0 Aker ............. 1 2 2 2 o 1 Bouton ...1 1 0 0 0 0 WP—Burbach, Marshall. Bouton. PB— Fernandez. T—2:50. A—12,273. ★ ft His two stolen bases-giving him six for the season—were picture-book displays of baserunning. Total 31 2 7 2 Total 31 1 4 Boston ..........100 000 010 — Oakland ......... 000 01 0 000- DP—Oakland 3. LO&—Boston Oakland 8. 2B—D.Jones. SB Yastrzemski, Campaneris. S—Dobson SF—T.Reynolds. TONIBIT HARNESS « WOLVERINE Tha Good t ime Track .• thru May 27 Adm.$150 830PM '.T RACE COURSE I Aokkwlt mi MHiokil tAHWI Introducing VERNE ERNST He has now joined the award-winning sales staff of Mat-thews-Hargreaves Chevrolet. Verne would like to invito hit many friends to come in to tee him and to find put about Chevy Land'e Savings, Service, Satisfaction plan when you buy a new or used car er truck. Total 32 1 5 1 Total 25 2 2 2 Crawford. m........... IP H R ER BB SO Singer (L.5-3) .... 4 2 3 Brewer ............2 0 0 Briles (W.2-3) ....4 2-14 1 Hoerner ........... 21-3 1 0 Save—Hoerner. WP—Brllet. A—14,325. 0 1 2 1 2 1 0 i’ 0 2 T—1:55. |1 ■ The Aristocrat of Woods... HAGGERTY HAS ifT) IHMT'YOIIItSELF IDEA CENTER DOUGH SAWN BEAUTIFY TOUR GARDEN WITH , REDWOOD for LANDSCAPING *1#»... 16* • 2”xg” . . 26* • 3”x8” .. BS'/i* • 4’W . . . 65* |ALL PRICES — PER UN. FT. • l”x6” . . .13' SANDED o 1MX8” ... 18* e 2”*4” . . 16'/i' • 2”x6” . . WA’ DON’T BOTHER WITH MESSY OLD R.R. TIES Use New Redwood e 3”x8”x6-ft. • 4”x6"xfi-ft. • 3”x8”x8-ft. • 4”x6wx8-ft. $440 ■f ea. CASH & CARRY LASTS LONGER, LOOKS BETTER! ORNAMENTAURON FOLDING LEGS A C 5 PIECES 2"xl 0"jt7‘ Genuine North- ^ J ern White -Pine Lumber INCLUDING ALL. HARDWARE FLAG & POLE SET 3’x5' FLAG 100% Cotton Bunting POLE STANDS 18’ HIGH “SHOW YOUR COLORS” HAGGERTY'S OWN 6' WORKBENCH Complete K. D. EASY TO ASSEMBLE CASH & CARRY *9 75 Big 6'xjQ’ RAFT STYROFOAM "FLOATS LIKE FOAM” MADE WITH: Tb/4”x4” WHITE PINE DECKING (Zincel treated far longer life) 12 STYROFOAM BILLETS > 7”x2l"xl’4” PERMANENTLY BUOYANT • WILL NOT RUST It's Always a Happy Landing With the New PIER KIT — 9 FT. DOCK SRCTIOM KIT CONTAINS: e One Sot 4 Ft. GrIt- Steal 'A iR|B and crossbar The Do-H-Younelf Dock assembly. Easy to install A Store Away for Wintor rxl” Stringers All Zincel Traated BUILT UP884.M HAGGERTY LUMBER & SUPPLY CO. 2055 HAGGERTY RD., WALLED LAKE Between W. Maple A Pontiac Trail Phone: MA 4-4551 tab, U ' Opei V- ' I ■ . ' “W p .t;: '$. 41 7:30 m.m. to 64X) p.m. Fn. Nito to 9 p.ro. - Sot. 7:30 o.m. to 5:00 p.m. NO MONEY DOWN-MONTHS TO PAY-DRIVE IN TODAY! Priced «» shewn of Firestone Stores. Competitively prided at Firestone Dealers and at all service stations displaying the Firestone sign. 20-10-5 LAWN FOOD NICKLAUS GOLF BALLS FEEDS 6,000 SQ. FT. $ •6,000 square feet coverage •Feeds grass for months *0-800 ' i' 1 LIMIT 2 Noral I / ' ' 82ie Autograph model by 3-time Masters Champion j 3for 133 Additional baili •1.00 each Open Mon. end Fri. 'til 9 P.M. 'firestone ■ •Ilw 1 iiilsi ! \k -vC f) ' ' H1 j iii IS High Performance Tire Center W. Huron St., tontioc, 333.7917 '■\V m r T^'^Vi fef ! m' i 1 ShH li ,1 U 'M\;: \*v»>:/•• A J % * | wnmu,; D—G SI mm %mm¥w^ M-t£ sss m ?:■*■ •■■.- .... v.: I THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 1«, 19«9 is-msm K « mm ~T 1 • IV) *• /r.t; ;t *-r WM'. Johnson, May Porter Reds H to 4-2 Win PHILADELPHIA (AP)1" -Home runs by Alex Johnson and Lee May powered the Cbu^nnati Reds to a 4-2 victory over Philadelphia Wednesday night, stretching the Phillies' losing streak to six games. MARICHAL WINS PITTSBURGH (AP) - Juan Msrichal limited Pittsburgh to lour hits and stroked A run-scoring single Wednesday night, leading San Francisco to a 3-0 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates. ‘ Amartoaa Laagua East Division Won Lott Fct. 01 laltlmor. 23 12 .6 Sf loston 30 11 .645 1 Vashington ...... If.. 18 .486 6 ietrolt T4 16 .46/ 6W Mew York 13; 21 .382 9W Cl.v.land . i. 6 21 .222 13 West Division \ Minnesota 19 10 .655 Oakland 20 11 .645 Chicago . . 13 12 .520 4 Kansas City 15 16 .484 5 Saattto ... ...... 13 IB .419 7 California . 11 IB .370 9 CINCINNATI ab r h bl fill ?osa ef olan rf AJohnson ! Savage If' Paraz 3b LMay lb Halms 3b Corralas c Chanay ts 1111 S 1 2 1 0 0 0 0 5 0 1 0 112 1 4 0 0 0 4 12 0 4 0 10 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 PHILADBTPHIA ab r h bl TTaylor 3b 4 0 0 0 Money is 4 110 RAIIen lb 3 10 0 DJolmton If 3 0 12 Calllson rf 4 0 2 0 Rolas 2b 4 0 10 Harmon pr GJackson p Joseph, pff JJohnaon p Stone ph 0 0 0 0 3 0 10 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 Total 10 411 4 Total Sill Cincinnati ......1 1 1 000 01 0—4 WsiSiioRip .... loo ooo ooo—t LOS—Cincinnati », piladtlphla 7. 28— Rosa, D Job neon, M.Ryan, Calllson 1 R—AJohnson (7), L.May (7). 58-L.May, Halms. IP H R ER 88 SO Merritt (W.3-2) .... 01-1 4 2 2 2 1 Culver ........... 2-3 0 0 0 1 ( GJackson (L.3-4) .7 9 3 3 1 J J.Johnson ..... 2 2 1 1 1 1 Sava—Culver. PB—M.Ryan. T—2:25. A— 4,512. SAN FRANCISCO ab r h bl Ronds rf 4 0 10 Hunt 2b 3 10 0 Mays cf i 4 0 2 0 Mccoveyj lb 2 0 0 0 Oavenprf 3b 4.1 1 0 Hendersn If 4 0 0 0 Oiett c 4 110 Lanier as 4 0 11 Marlchal p 4-0-11 PITTSBURGH ab r h bl MAlou cf Sangullln c Haoner 3b Stargell If AOIIvar lb Allay ss RDavIs rf Mazroskl 2b 3 0 1 Running p 10 0 4 0 0 4 0 0 4 0 2 3 0 0 3 0 0 3 0 0 3.0 1 Jna p Kalb ph - loo Ramovbp ooo Total S3 1 7 2 Total 29 0 4 I (an FrancIsce ... 0 0 0 0 1 0 01 1 — 1 pmnianMi ......000010000—1 OP—San Francisco 1, Pittsburgh 1. LOB—San Francisco 4, Pittsburgh l. 28— Habnar, Davenport. SB—Dietz. SB— Ronds, Mays. S—Sunning. IP H R ER BB SO Marlchal (W.5-2) .. 9 o Bunnlng (L.2-4) ... 1 5 2 Ramos ........ 1 3 1 HBP—by Bunnlng (Hunt). ... - -— Ji— 8,296. Sangulllen. T—2:01. PB— NEW YORK (AP) - Cleon Janet* grand tlam homer highlighted an eight-run uprising in the eighth Inning as the New York Mets, held hitless by PI Niekro through the six! bounced back to flatten the Atlanta Braves 9-3 Wednesday night. Niekro, gunning for his seventh victory, did not allow a hit until Ken Boswell opened the seventh with a triple. Wa On assay's Rasults Clsvaland 3, Kansas City 1, 11 Inning’s Baltimore 9, Minnesota 0 Chicago 4, Detroit 0 Boston 2, Oakland 1 Naw York i, Seattle 4 California 1, Washington 0 MONTREAL (AP) - Jesus Alou’s two-run homer snapped Clsvaland (Yianl (Hedlundl-1), night Baltimore (McNally 541) at Minnesota Chicago (John M) at Detroit (McLain 5-3), night Only games scheduled.* Friday's Gamas Baltimore at.. Kansas City, night Detroit at Minnesota, night Washington at Chicago,^ night Oakland at Cleveland, night California at Naw York, night Seattle at Boston, night National League Wan Last Pet. GB Chicago 23 11 .474 Pittsburgh 17 15 .531 5 Naw York 15 17 .469 7 14 18 .43* 8 Philadelphia 13 17 .414 (Vk 11 19 J47 10 Wasl Division 91 10 .677 tan Francisco ... 19 13 .594 2Vk Los Angelas 18 13 .581 3 Cincinnati 15 16 .484 6 San Diego 15 21 .417 8Vi Houston 13 23 .361 low Wednesday's Results York Cincinnati 4, Philadelphia 2 San Francisco 3, Pittsburgh 0 New York 9, Atlanta 3 Houston 3. Montreal 1 St. Louis 2, Los Angeles 1 Today's Gamas Atlanta (Jarvis 2-2) at New (Cardwell 1-5) Cincinnati (Clonlnger 1-4) at Phlladel phia (Wise 3-2), night Only games scheduled. Friday's Gamas Atlanta at Montreal, night San Francisco at Philadelphia, night Naw York at Cincinnati, night Chicago at Houston, night st. Louis at San Diego, night Pittsburgh at Los Angeles, night an eighth-inning tie and the Rader reached second on Maury Houston Astro's rode Denny Le-master’s five-hit pitching to a 3-1 victory over the Montreal Expos. Alou' unloaded against Jim “Mudcat” Grant after Doug Rusty Staub trade. Wills' two-out throwing error. It was the first homer of the year for the outfielder ho went to the Astros from Montreal in the controversial Donn Clendenon- ATLANTA NSW YORK ab r h M sb r h bl FAlou cf 5 12 1 Ago# rf 2 112 Mlllan2b 1110 Garrett 3b 3 0 0 0 HAaron rf 4 0 10 Chariae 3b 0 10 0 Canada 1b 4 l 2 0 ioswsll 2b 3 2 .11 Francona If 3 0 0 1 CJonas If 4 115 Lum If 0 0 0 0 Kranpool 1b 3 0 0 0 CBoyer 3b 4 0 2 1 Marlin c 4 110 Oldtar c 4010 Oils cf 4100 R Jack son ss 4 0 2 0 Harrelson ss 4 1 10 PNIekro P 2 0 0 0 Seavar p 2 0 0 0 Stone p 0 0 0 0 Shamsky ph 10 0 0 Carty ph 1 0 0 0 Wtls pr 0 10 0 RTaylor p 0 0 0 0 Total 241II 3 Total 31 f 5 0 Atlanta ......... 100 001 101—1 NOW York ........ 0 0 0 too 1 1 X- 9 E—Martin. RJackson. DP—Naw York 1. LOB—Atlanta 7, Naw York 2. 2B— C.Boyar 2, Agaa. IB—Boswall, Martin. H—F.AIou (31, CJonas (5). SB— Kranapool, Canada. S—P.NIakro. 5F— Francona. F.NIakra (L4-2) Stona Seavar (W.5-2) . R.Taylor ....... IF H R ER BB SO 5 3 (2 7 4 J \1 3 2 Is 3 ‘HOUSTON Morgan 2b ab r h bl irgi NMIllar Wynn cf Blefary 1b Menka ss Rader 3b JAtou If Edwards c Lamsstsr p 4 0 10 Wills ss 4 0 0 0 5 0 10 Mota cf 3 ,0 1 0 4 111 Staub rf 2 0 0 0 4 0 10 Clndenon lb 4 0 10 4 0 10 Laboy 3b 4 0 0 0 4 110 Bateman e 4 111 4 112 MJones If 3 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 Sutharlnd 2b 3 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 Grant p S 0 0 0 Boccablla ph 1 0 0 0 Total Houston Montreal 34 3 7 3 Total 31 1 5 1 ..... 0 01 0 00 010—2 ___■ oio ooo ooo—i E—C landman. Wills. LOB—Houston Montreal a. 2B—MJones, NJiAlllar. HR— Batsman Ml, Wynn (0), J.Alou (1). SB— MJones, Bftfary, The reasons are in Bolens Difference Designed Features ip H R ER BB SO 5 1 f S 7 7 3 13 4 Drive a 1'ittla -save a lot •56* 7 hp compact with standard transmission and recoil starter * Electric starter optional *Two speed ranges for six forward, two reverse speeds $ 34* turning radius * Eight attachments available for year 'round versatility You can't buy a Bulck or a Pontiac at a lawar prick We'll match ar beat any advertised price. And we'll five you a much higher trade an your present car. You cun'! help but save money whan you trade our way. • including 32” MOWER from *560°° ******** ***** * * ********** *,* ******** • *•* * * * * A w-rial-GEr ACQUAINTED' offer. new neetom AT LOW, LONG-TERM RATES Here's o chance for your to leas* the 1969 Ford ef your choice at th* low rafee the long-term leasers en|ay. But contact the Leasing Division of Furmety Ford today. ,. this Is a limited offer. Romania Wins in Soccer LAUSALLE, Switzerland (AP) — Romania defeated Switzerland 1-0 Wednesday and moved to the top of preliminary Group 1 In the battle fur the World Soccer Cup which will be decided In Mexico next year. shelton PONTIAC - BUICK - OPEL Vt MU* South of Downtown Rochester 855 Rochester Rood, Rochester 651-5500 KING BROS, PONTIAO RDa at 0PDYKE PONTIAC, MICHIGAN Phone: FE 4-1682 and FE 4-0734 MiTON I B#OS. tffC. «□. X * . fWMCfio- \h 1 ALL RENTAL CARS EQUIPPED WITH: * V-8 Engine * Cruiso-matic Transmission * Push-Button Radio * Power Steering *' Whitewall Tires * Wheel Covers * Deluxe Side Mouldings. Air Condi Honing eg and Tinted Gkm * • * O per month additional iO esessse esseoesssss eesetesseeVss Model Monthly Rete * Mustangs r . . - * . . * *95 * Torino* . . . * •. . . . r *97 * Gaiaxie 500* a.... v*t09 * LTD* 8 8 8 V 8 8 8 8 8 8' '8* ^18 * Country Squire* . a e *129 (9 passenger) | * Thunderbirds .. • • •*139 DRIVE 1,000 MILES PER MONTH FREE! 5806 DIXIE HIGHWAY Phone 623-0900 WATERFORD *'* ********************************** * YANKEE DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES wm i STARTER SETS FOR THE NEW COIFER, CLOSE-OUT OF FAMOUS MAKES VALUES TO 30.88 •Spalding •Kroyden *Dh now, •Limited quantities. a .hurry! ' / Featuring both wood and cyoolac heads; forged heads on Irons; rubber grips and steel shafts on all. Great values for the new golfer, from Yankee...your sporting equipment center. I: coil tukis At SAVINGS GOES BAIL DISCOUNT To protect your clubs; 'keep, them neat and right at your fingertip*. By Frank Douglas. Solid center for durability and . distance. Ideal for average golfer.. THURSDAY MAT 15 THAU SATURDAY MAY 17 On aele white quamlttes teat? . Open Nights Until 10 P.M. Open Sundays Until 7 P.M. Pontiac 1125 N. Perry At Arlene Corner ofrJoy A Greenfield Corner of 14 Mile and Schbenherr At The Comer of Fort and King IIMi mU‘: KEYSTONE COli BAG 9-club model with club divider, 2 pockets, MOlded bottom^ Vinyl; assorted color*. FOLD INC AIAY COIF CAR1 Tubular con-S"' atmotion. 10H wtiaals open/ close with push . button handle. r’* ******************************* ****************** ****»***»*»»*^ the PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 Slow Pitch Hitters Find tHomer Range The battefs are In a home run Vikings* Delayed match Walled' Lake's tennis squad had a good thing going Tuesday but rain spoiled it. , The Vikings had taken a 3-2 lead over Livonia Stevenson wljenthe rain cpme. The Rochester Mentor S if: % /. . , Seeks Final Crown "I’d sure like to bow out with'Madison Heights to gain at least three champions," • Rochester a share of th,e track laurels, and ffoove in city slowpitch action \ ...... , . .. ----RR-----------------P , I . ■ ■ »n roundtrippers w e r e T Je ^v/ / ilayff" , track coach Wayne Case issued are heavy favorites to win the in five rnniosio iaE* returne 5.10. telegram to NASCAR officalsl Pole Vault—Jack Dunn (PN), Den Sar-P . _ .. ,, ., . tell (PN), Saffron (W) 12-0.- __ _ . __ Wednesday. Petty said his doc-4. Two-Mile - George Pickering (PN), The . Pontiac Press came up tor had advlsed his withdrawal. fi,"^2Uddv (PN)' 8u,ch Sh,',on (PN) with five runs in the last, two) He ^d not specify the reason - Tom Knibbs (pn), Gary *her-Glowaz paced the Press with - ■•• •**- * . y^wood.(PN),.panieiagn M> 4jw.4.. - three hits. Rochester runners swept the two relays, the 100-yard dash and the 440-yard dash, and the Falcons also were one-two-ihree in the pole vault and high Jump. Russ Gill and Mike Hall each won two events. ★ if ★ Lake Orion (3-5) romped past Madison in another O-A clash, 73-45, despite the Eagles (1-6) j Falcons to the basketball crown superiority in the field events, during the winter. Yesterday’s The Dragons won nine of the 10 94-24 win over Utica completed running matches, of the league dual 1 INTER-LAKES In Inter-Lakes League action, Pontiac Northern downed Waterford Township, 80-38, and Walled Lake Central drubbed Southfield Lathrup, 99-19. ★ ★ ★ Walled Lake (9-3) mower" a sweep meets. FAVORED Now 9-11| over-all, Rochester needs a second in the league meet next Wednesday a t Jim Newman andI Dennis Biirrill slammed home- runs to lead Peterson’s victory, and Jim .Pestro unloaded a two-run blast to help Local 653 past Bob A; Kens. lured his ribs May 4 when his! Hlqh Hurdles — Melvin Reeves (PN) ' ■ —. Pearson (W), Teber (W) 15.3. 410—Daley (W). Jerry Seey (PN),.Tom Bernes (PN) 2:04i5. 440—Sandy SaaylPN), Blackburn (W) Shafto (W) 52.1. . . 100 — Rufus Hannah (PN), Jim Kyles (PN), Mitch Felix (PH) lb-4. Low Hurdles *» Melvin Reevee (PN), Taber (W), Pearson (W) IT.S. 220 — Rufus Hannah (PN), Jim Kylee (PN), Mitch FOB* (PN) 21.4. Mile Relay—Waterford (wait, Hamlll, Whetstone, Daley) 1:11.7. car hit a wall during the Fireball 300 race at Weaverville, N.C. . « > The Randleman, N.C. driver is currently the third highest money winner on the NASCAR charts this year with $47,330. ?fVah lies commanded all the points jn the high jump, shot put, miie run 440 dash and 220. Richie Richmond placed first three times! and ran on the winning 880' relay. ROCHBSTRR M, UTICA 24 TWO MILE RUN - Keith Wattles (R),| Griffis (R), Knox (U), time 10:03.4. MILE RUN — Ken Corbin (U). Whims! (R), Arnold (R), 4:42.0. SHOT PUT — John Nugent (R), Denx (R), Harms (U), distance 44-814. LONG JUMP — Russ Gill (R), Marini (U). Blair (R),JMW. POLE VAULT - Ruse Gill (R), Willis « Birmingham tfa, Northwest Sucjjdcs with a tight win Wednesday afternoon but Birmingham Seaholm’s bid for the Southeast Michigan crown was damaged agipfa by Royal Oak Kimball’s Ikxig Barnes. *-Groves topped Li vo ni a Franklin, 3-2, to move within a half game of idle leader Detroit Thurston. The Eagles are 5-1 and meet winless North Farmington this (afternoon in makeup game. Groves climbed to 4-1 with .its win, and Oak Park stayed right in the race at 6-2 with a 4-3 conquest of Westland John Glenn. . v Seaholm slipped into a tie with Hazel Park at 4-2 as Barnes beat the Maples for the second time this spring, adding yesterday’s 3-0 shutout to his earlier 4-1 victory for Kimball. Hazel Park seized the opportunity to outlast Femdale, 7- Groves helped 6, Southfield cast the third-place the Suburban title seventh, but Lee Weiss j (R), Stoops (RL height 12-0. , HIGH JUMP — Qory Minor (R), Hawley (R), Watson (R), heht 5-8. 220 DASH — Mika Hall (R), Harms (U), Millar (R), time :23.5. MO RELAY — Rochester (Millar, Gill, Polrlar, Hall), 1:35.7. 120 HIGH HURDLES — Dave Marina (U). Willis (R), Watson (R), :15.4. IM RUN — Doug Hauk (R), McDaniel (R), Reynolds (U), 2:03.1. 440 DASH — Steve Polrlar (R), Sanderson (R), Powers (R), :52.3. 100 DASH — Mike Hall (R), Blair (R), (tie) G. Miller and Ptllerlto (R), :I0.5. ISO L. HURDLES — Dave Marini (U), (tie) Blair end Watson and Willis (R), :20.5. MILE RELAY — Rochester (Poet. Arnold, Parsons, Powers), 3:43.8. LAKE ORION 71, MADISON 45 berth into a four-way deadlock squeezed home the winning run Jor»s'^A),UKiPg (M^*dIs*«nce*2Ch2^0* *" at 3-4 by thumping skidding!^ the^Redskins half of the in- Berkley, 7-i. MR mm * * " B one TOUGH DEFEAT Royal Oak Dondero fell to 5-4 by suffering a 1-0 loss to Highland Park in "'a' Border Cities League battle. ★ ' - ★ Sr Scott Roller’s opening inning double and Mark Shada’s solo drive over the left field fence left Groves tied with Franklin ning. Oak Park is 11-2 over-all but one of the defeats is awaiting the outcome of a protest. In the SEMA action, Kimball rode Carl Roehling’s strong bat wqrk (he’s hitting .454 in league games) and Barnes’ steady work on the hill. Roehlinf scored the Knights’ first two runs after singling, and Rich SHOT PUT — Dallator (M), GroOl (LO). Lasswell (LO), 42-4. POLE VAULT — Millar (M), Holland Webb and King (M), 5-4. TWO Mile run — Barnowsky, Mika (LO), Saikaly (M), MOffltt (LO), time 10:50. Mo RELA Y— Lake Orion (J. Jonas, W. Jonas, Fields, Luabbert), 1:14.5. • MILE -RUN — Pusco (M), Thompson (LO), Stonqulst (LO), 4:54.5. 120 H. HURDLES — Frod Slegwart (LO) Sunoa (M), Workman (LO), :17.J 880 RUN — Charles Hopper (LO), Lents (M), D. Jones (LO), 2:07. 440 DASH — Loubert, Chuck (LO), Wait (M), L. Jones (M), :55.1. 100 DAS — Wayne Jonas (LO), Luefe bert (LO), J. Jonot (LO), :10.5t. 180 L. HURDLES - Jeff KoOhn (LO), Sunoe (M), Powell (LO), :22.2. -220 DASH — Jerry Jones (LO), Lueb Kitchen Cabinets CONTEMPORARY STYLE DISCOUNT on tha purchase of any quantity Contemporary Cabinets Something beautiful is always cooking in a kitchen styled with Wickes catenets. The fine furniture finish and attractive construction combine to make your kitchen chores a pleasure. Classic, Traditional and Patrician Also Available FRIGIDtIRE Built-In FRIGIDNRE ELECTRIC RANGE Easy cooking with clock controlled oven, lift-off door. *X)ttom °* Runchey drove in the other with *a/wle°reelay l-Lak*7i the fifth. ★ ★ A Then Kevin Burke’s scoring single won it for the Falcons (7-2 over-all) and Don Ward who struck out nine and allowed just one hit and whiffed eight in the last four innings. SQUEEZE PLAY Kerry Webb’s two-out single for John Glenn (4-4) tied the ,a safety. B. GROVES 1, FRANKLIN 2 run. Franklin ..........020 0M O-l *u“ B'ham. Groves .110 010 x-0 WALLED LAKE C. W, $. LATHRUP If LONG JUMP — Richie Richmond (WL), Bowers (WL). Scott (SL), distance _____ JUMP — Gary Davison (W). Orlsklll (WL), Hoathcock (WL), haloht 5- OAK PARK 4, J. GLENN 1 I John Glann ...........020 ON 1-1 I I: SHOT PUT Onk Park .............IM M0 1-4 4 li Warmer (WL), WEBB and Fabor; Wlontr, BLUM-144-0 .... _ . .... . BERG (0-1, 41h) and Sold. POLB VAULT Jorrv Dr skill (WL), _____ Skaglln (SL), Hawks (WL), haloht 11-0. KIMBALL 3, SEAHOLM 0 ,« ..TWO.MILE RUN. — Steva WTImot (SL), Saaholm ..............ON ON 0—4 4 1 Howa WL), Crick (W), tima 10:17.4. Kimball .............000 101 to—I 7 1 M0 RELAY - Walled Lake C (Zaebst, METCALF (0-1) and Probst) BARNES Qroaay, Richmond, Oswalt), 1:35^3. (2-1) and Roahllng. | A^ILE RyN. -~m_ .Bruce Dudley Horse Race Results (WL), VatTer (WL), York (WL), 4:54.f , . , n .. . . i max. rxxx it eaRRuaba a 120 H. HURDLES — Larry Siersma game at Oak Park in the top of HaiatPark -'.^moatO-y IS l(WU, Lurla (S), Vender Roast (WL), Vsheppard, MURPHY***(2nCL M) anf,’*li& RUN - Mike Woinlak (WL), Cllf-Sledleckl ' gH “ Screws. HAZ. PARK la FERNDALB 4 Pommler, TOAAASI (41h) and ford (SL), Welland (WL), 2:05.3. Wolverine Results WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS Isf—51000 Claiming Trot) I Mlloi Tony Tass 5.10 4.20 Esther's Mink 18.40 Squtaky . . 2nd—SI000 Claiming; 1 Mila: Piptann lJ.oo 8.M Pntrlna 5.20 Captain Barry * : ___... DAILY DOUBLE: 4-2 Fold 871.28. 3rd—015M Cond. Tret; 1 Mila: Dam Proud 3.40 2.M Evening Glow 4,01 Jabb Spangle 4th—010M Cond. Ftco; 1 MHO: Tina Knox 13.20 5.M Edlu f.M Chief Red sth—81504 Cond. Face; 1 Milt: Bay Wheelar 4.00 3.20 Lota Scott 11-20 Hils Pride 4tb—S20M Claiming Hdcp. Trot; 1 Milo: Tulwar Hazel Park Results. WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS 2. {EiJgf—02M0 Claiming; 4V4 Furlongs: 7.00jay Step 4.40 2.40 2.20 4. M Colonel Luck 2.40 2.20 . „! Greek Malden 2.40 5-00 2nd—82H0 Allowances: 4 Furl ones: 3-OOistaneman 15.20 f,M 5.20 3. M 'tike Now tJO 4.40 Sir Olden 4.40 . „ I DAILY DOUBLE: S-S Fold S70.M 2.40 3rd—$2704 Claiming; 4 Furlongs: 5. M {Count Classic M.M 15 00 4.40 Master Piece 3.00 . .. Lerrv Light 3.M 4m—SMM Claiming; 0 Furtonnsi 5 40 Relllm's Andy 7.40 2.40 2 00 Ball 2.40 ... Vidor's Boat 2.40 5th—$27M Claiming; 1 Mile: 5.40 Golden See 14.40 7.00 2.00 Ole Hub 8.20 My'Rebel Scott 44.20 Smokey Merlin 17.B0 Unde Art PERFECTA: 1-1 POM 8414.M 7th—S23M Cond. Pace; 1 Mile: Dee Brook 4.40 4.60 Miss wood 3.80 Shadow Sue . % : fth—S15M Claiming Paco; 1, Mile: Little Deems 10.20 5.80 Atrp 7.M KliJMl v . . 18th—$2008 Clalmlna Hdcp. Pace; 1 Mile: jLong Road SoGG Abbe 10.40 4.40 3.M Tony W 440 DASH — Bob Zaobsf (WL), Higgins _____ (WL), Johnston (WL), -.51.2. SOUTHFIELD 7, BERKLEY 1 100 DASH - (tie) John Orosey and Southfield .. . Stl 4W •—7 If 1 Rlchio Richmond (WL); Hamill (SL), Berkley .....:!M 004 O-l 4 4 :10.5. TlMASSEY (2-3) end Friedman; Me- 180 L. . DIVITT (0-2), Drabik (4th) and Parker. (W), Luria (SL), Vender Roest (WL), HIGH. PARK 1, DONDERO T • 220 DASH - Richie Richmond (WL). Highland Park 000 MO 1-1 4 T .k. c Roval oak Dondert 000 000 O-O 2 ’2 MILE RELAY —• Welled Leke C* R BALL and McKenzie; ZlnT NEWMAN (Wozniak. Higgins, Johnston, Oswalt) (4th, 1-3) and Adamski- 1:34.3. fight lawn backaches 8 ways* Notch Pick 5.40 MlShty Knox PERFECTA; 1-1 Paid 843.48 Crowd 5,008 Handle $404^18___ Wolverine Entries THURSDAY'S ENTRIES l8l-41tM Claiming PtjM; I MINI Johnny Kevin Barbara Gay j /dpsadale Jat Arrow Queens Pride 4S3WmKrni----------'Eiwre-Jgnke»> Muffin Johnson Lloyds Will 2nd—S1000 Cond. Pact; 1 Mlloi Justly Wood Kethy Chief Jarvis Hal Frosty Red - Famous Erie Sir Bristol Shadow Gloria Paulas Byrd Srd—$1200 Cond. Pact; 1 Milo: 7.00 6th—(5,008 Claiming; 4'A Furlongs: 14.40 jack's Aloha ■» 4.20 3.M 3.20 5->o Astro Lee 8.oo 4.40 Countess Marleit 3.40 . „ OPT. TWIN 3-3 PaM 845.48 3-fO CONSOLATION OPT. TWIN S-S PaM 3.40 S1I.M '. . ■ . t ■ (•50 7th S1.1M Claiming; 4’/» Furlongs: .»» English Prairie 1.40 5.20 3.M 3-30 Bee's Little Man 3.40 2.M 4.20 insh m 2.M 3.00 sth—83500 Allowances; 1 MHO: 12.M 5.40 3.M 4.M 2.80 3-f! Roaring Thunder 3.00 2.40 ! TWIN DOUBLE 3-2-4-S Paid 84.114.M. . 7th—82*04 Claiming; I Mile: ’ Win Isle 14.M 7.M 4.M Smooth Drifting 7.40 4.10 Fierce Love 4.20 PERFECTA. 4-1 POM 848.40. . Attendance 7,408 Handle *813,432 Just Jill Second Helping Princess JonnlnO Freddie Z 4th—81500 Cond. Torrid G -Tex • Our Nlbbler Duke Duane Ith—>22,258 Dlv. Mile: State Express N > POrenovei Gevliend Jereo < Robert E. Adlos Cheteque 4 th—$2000 cond. Purdy* Shadow Peatti Adlos Brewers Chip Guido Rqyal Erlsno Pace; 1 Milt: Pay Sue Courting Time Chief Midnift Nibbles Storm / Mot. City pact; ■.I | ..HHm Mister Margey Butch Time Shiawassee Saulre Jet Butler Fashion Chief . Stir John Poet; 1 Mile: Queens RenSom Comet Tone Queen of Amboy Chief Heather Chief Osceola KJpARoo / _ Spindletoc Joan 7th—82300 Cond. Poeo; i"*J*ot. O.C.'s Hlghtimo Brown Hdund WOStem Raider Minute Minnie Adlos Pol# Ihiaway Adios swinging Sister Trudy Direct JSnSSA’Yddwl M«. city Pece t 1/14 P.lpmoYourt State Express N ■ Butch Time . , Peranove Shiawassee Saulre GDvilend N JetSnrtlw J y / jino N Fashion Chief Robert E. Adlos Star John Hazel Park Entries THURSDAY'* ENTRIES lsf—S27M Claiming; .4 Furlongs: ' Dr. Rlchsrd Slipper Nipper Hypo's Fury -Malor Line Msck's Pel 2®9e Rtt Tigers Tune Red Bird Warmat Brenda Lee 2nd-$4lM Claiming; 4'fi Furlongs: Mr. Rebild Bobin With Robin Son Bayou Sister Lana ull Lea's Flre Craker Run Easy Fins Affair Frisky Jr; Closed Road Iri—84104 Allowances; 4 Furlongs: I Michigan Lina •m- Dinkla Pink 'Fad Back Monday's Archer All Lino f Count On Foggy. Song MyuUnclo Stelrmark Tailor . 4th—SltM Claiming; 4 Furlong*. Archie Loo Courtsette Preston M. . Squire Shields Taxes Okie Lead the Peck Nocturne Mist Stb—SS3M Allowance! 4 Furlengt: Newborn Diamond Clasp . Mr. Vel Sweet Flavor Twilight Duel lily's Choice Prove It Man Time Wise Provix Meld Crimson Hills Sth—S41M Claiming; 4 Furlongs: Brilliant Dunce Grand William Trot; xl MB#;, Rhythm Vole Kits Truax ■ justly Scottish Egyptten Cn Claiming Nicp. Pjcg; Pill ___ One Night Stand Smooth Seas Bagpioe Me, sunmen Tom Carter 7th—S3SN Allowance; 4 Furengsf Prince** Tamer* Singing Nymph Kid Sister 'Sim- Mi** Qwwrtd Mercury** Whig*. Closing Punch Bod Link fth 838M Clalmtng; 1 Milo: Annotation « . , Time Td Zing s«rkm.,K#;5:i5H ^^.bnln., 1 MB.. Trick Anelr .. Gander song BsmB l*h ■ - . Mi usader Bi___________ l 1 Mlloi Till SMM jHlllylUlv MgCool Routt • Cheleewf B-10 or 12 H.P. e 42” or 3B" rotary mowore • 4 apeadt forward— 1 rovaroe -e Electrie Implement eluteh standard on 10 and 12 H.P. modolt 3116 N. Woodward 2 SUu. $. . THEFT at motor, heat ar trallar H M. UTTENL0CHER Agency,Inc. 1007 W. Huron, Pontiae OVER 35 YEARS OF DISTINGUISHED INSURANCE SERVICE Etta, faundarias, atrandlng FE 4*1551 681-2100 H.W. Huttenlocker Max Kegnic Motra HUSTANGS 69o, «lo# A7o, 66e, 65s All Models In Stock Exampla: '68 Mustang Hardtop Umo gold# radio, koator, whilewelligji lull factory oquIppodX power steering# bol^r once of now ear 1444 Cell Mir, Pori. Ml 4-7500 FULL PRIC! ’65 PmitiM fiTO V-B, fettle, heater, whitewalls, factory 4 .pwd, Slaamlng groan blua finish, matching iatartas. laa.thb hafara you buy any car. i FULL pmei 07 CAPRICE (; Coupe. 327 engine, wutemetlc# eodle, lieaier, whttewolle# power# wire cevept# cencry yellow# block vinyl top. One mower aoaratlv driven 21 months warranty. *1799 FULL PRICE 36 Months Bonk Kates ABSOLUTELY NO HONEY DOWN. GALL UR. PARKS at HI 4-7500 / YOU CAN’T BEAT THE DEAL YOU GET AT Ml 4-7500 ROYAL its OAK Hi 1 Ml. EAST \\ OF WOODWARD, \ i > -umm 1 i r.MAPLE ..TROY' .jt V\ BIRMINGHAM . 1 PONTIAC le w u* MICHIQAN'S w 1 ^LARDEnFORDDEALER.e.l MlelattefWeedwaNIII 4-TIN I ppk' IS ■tiiw®. , / ; . 'jfh x f/i /,t : W 1-.*' i * 1 A- \ • hit': < ' 7 IT ii A, y® ffi , si .....pill . | THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY. 15, 1989 •Kv.'^w jS•'*-*■;-vp|^11pjf& w; --v^ D1".®' Sex Education Suddenly Drawing Fire * (EDITOR’S NOTE - Wizi* the first of two articles on the fight Over sex education.) ’ , By JERRY BUCK J Associated Press Writer * After five years of attracting little .attention, sex education bourses in, public schools have come under attack in'at least 27 states, within the past year. The intensity of the campaign against sex education has increased in recent months, primarily because some conserva- BBSSim Lm MwvIn/TnMra Mifune v plus: 2nd Feature f ROOWUJRCHRISTDPHER PUMMER UJUflUMffl'CAWUASflMW Fdmous for Juicy Steaks and Roasts and Round-Up Dinners CHUCK WAGON 1 5800 Dryden Rd., Dryden ■_ 796-2245 49 N. Telegraph SOUTH OF THE MALL five organizations have Joined wholeheartedly in’ the controversy. h ★ Wj The straggle between the opposing factions is turning into a bitter, emotional wrangle that has leapfrogged from the local school board to state legislatures to Congress. Some opponents see sex education in a conspiratorial light: pornographic, Communist-serving and breaking down the morals of American youth. PARENTS’ REALM Others see it as an intrusion into an area they feel should be left to the parents and view it as one more manifestation of the permissive society. “There’s no question that opposition to ‘sex education is linked to public anxiety over the flood of sex in the movies, books, advertisements and mass media,” said Gerald Sanctuary, international director of the Sex Information and Education Council of the U.S. SIECUS, as it is called, is a principal target of the opponents. if ★ ★ Legislators in Arizona, California, Idaho, Iowa, Nevada, New Jersey, New York, Oklahoma, Tennessee and Washington have considered measures to prohibit, control or investigate sex education. A bill introduced in Congress would withhold federal funds from sex education courses or related teacher training. BIRCH ‘PLOT The addition of the John Birch Society to the campaign brought a new element to a struggle already emotionally charged and packed with an almost religious fervor. The Birch Society, through its Movement to Restore Decency—Motorede, added the suggestion of a Communist plot. The May bulletin of the society speaks of the “pro-Commu- nlst affiliations” of proponents of sex education And of their “Communist tactlci.” ★ ★ ★ Although late-comers, the Birch Society waded enthusiastically into the battle and claims major credit for keeping the issue boiling. “I’d be willing to bet you’ll find a member of the society active in every state where there’s opposition to sex education,” said Wallis W. Wood, coordinator for ad hoc committees of the society. MOST AREN’T But he said, “We assume that 80 to 90 per cent of those who will support Motorede Will not be members of the John pirch Society. In fact, they may completely disagree with our philosophy in other areas.” “I’m getting a little bitter about this, I don’t mind telling you,” said T. Bayard Williams Jr., president of the Baltimore County, Md., School Board. “The critics seem to think we { have no interest in the morals of the children in Baltimore Coun- jty schools. We’re not going to do (anything to hurt the morals of the children.” 1 Dr. Frank Grisham, a member of the Metropolitan Nashville School Board hvTennessee, said, “Sex education is being taught in our schools and I want vto get it out of the rest rooms and into the classrooms where it belongs.” , > , ★ ★ “ “ it In Honolulu, the Concerned Citizens of Hawaii filed suit to block sex education programs in the fifth and sixth grades. The chairman, Juanita Bird, described the courses as “insidious programs” bound to cause “emotional conflicts” in children. In late April a circuit court judge-ruled in favor of the State Board of Education. OPPOSITION RECENT In state after state for the past five years, educators, \yith the backing of the National Education Association, National Congress of Parents and Teachers, American Medical Association and others, had been introducing courses-in sex and fami- ly life. Then, about a year ago,! opposition developed. * i, ★ * ★ Schools where sex education had been a part of the curriculum for years found themselves under attack for t^ie first time. Others, like Orange County, Fla., ran into stiff opposition when they attempted to introduce such courses. Members of the Citizens for Moral Education showed up at the April school board meeting with signs reading: “Don’t turn Orange County into another Sweden.” it it it Frequent references to Sweden as a country turned into an amoral society by sex education is a part of the rhetoric of the opposition. No one is quite certain why opposition developed • after seeming acceptance of sex education in many schools, but Wood of the Birch Society said, “It’s only been recently that parents actually found out what is being taught. I doubt that one parent in a thousand had heard about sex education year ago. <@lb Ml latent Style Show Every Friday During Luncheon 12:30 to ItSO Featuring the LATEST FASHIONS FOR SPRING by PENTHOUSE FASHIONS Entertainment ■ Wednesday thru Saturday RENNE BADER, STEVE ANTOS 1 Plui “JIM GERARDIN DUO” OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Your Ho«t Mr. Ken Wright 5838 Dixie Highway, Walrrfonl, Michigan WED.-SAT.-SUN. HURON 1' MON-.TUES-.THURS-.FRI. lit 0: Now they’ve heard about itxand they don’t like what they hear.” INNOCUOUS OR SENSITIVE A sex education program can be as innocuous as a course in hygiene, draWing little or no disapproval. Or it can delve into such sensitive areas as human reprodQction, premarital sex, veneral disease, homesexuality and family planning. Other touchy areas are' teaching sex education in the elementary grades, coeducationaf classes and not seeking parental consent. Grass-roots organizations have sprung up to combat sex education: MOMS, Mothers Organization for Moral Stability, in Scottsdale, Ariz.; PURE, Parents United for Responsible Education, in Torrance, Calif.; POSE. Parents Opposed to Sex Education, in Hopkins, Minn., and SOS, Sanity on Sex, in Oklahoma City, Okla. Opposition to se.x education reaches a fever pitch in some areas. In Michigan City, Ind., William Hoffman, a school ad-ministratortwho headed a group that recommended a sex education program, reported that threats had been made against the lives of himself and his three children. ★ ★ it The threats were made after Hoffman described the proposed program to a group of about 500 parents at what he described as a “hostile" meeting. Hoffman said the school system has not backed down and a pilot sex education program will begin In the fall. , (Tomorrow) Tho (argot.) Only at MONEY’S GOLF t COUNTRY CLUB YOU WILL SEE LIVE LOBSTERS at Sensible Prices SALAD TABLE INDESCRIBABLE Watch for , Sunday Morning BUFFET Breakfast SEAFOODS You Name It Wo Have It SING-AL0NG PIANO BAR You’ll Sing, You’ll So* MOREY’S Phone 363-4101 GOLF & COUNTRY CLUB 2280 Union Lake Road UNION LAKE mb EVERY FRIDAY — 5 P.M. to 8 P.M. — • W00DWAR0 AVE. at 14Vz Mile Rd. • 15325 W. 8 MILE RD. Just E. of Greenfield • 10001 TELEGRAPH RD. Near Plymouth Rd. ‘SEjX GUINEA PIGS?’ - Ron Mann of Renton, Wash., examines a sex education guide to parents while two of his children, Rodney, 11, and Yvonne, 10, look on. He Af Wiraphoto heads a group he says opposes using children as guinea pigs in a new sex education program. Symposium Eyes Man's Beastly Ways WASHINGTON (UPI) - Man behaves like a beast because his biological heritage i s beastly, according to scientists. There may be, some hope, however, that he can change his ways. Some beasts, at least, have managed to do this. it it it _ !| - need to draw together - for security and to mate and rear young along with a complex variety of stratagems for doing both without seeming to do either. ‘SPACING MECHANISMS* Animal “spacing mechan- ...... , isms” were reported by I. Hans The possibility that warmak- Kummer of Tulane University, ing man can learn to improve J nig paper went deeply into his behavior or, anyway,!territoriality, aggression pat-understand it — by studying | terns, dominance, submission, animals is being discussed at a inhibition (some monkeys three-day international sym-jW0Uidn’t dream of pro-posium sponsored by t h e Smithsonian Institution. Title of j the symposium is “Man and Beast: Comparative^ Social Behavior,” ★ ★ ★ positioning another monkey’s wife), efforts to achieve privacy, and a widespread tendency to take out on strangers grievances kindled by one’s neighbors. Human beings, like monkeys, Kummer suggested, often find it useful to have foreign enemies in order to preserve unity at home. The crucial question i s whether inherited behavioral tendencies can be modified to make man less beastly. Some genetic characteristics manifest themselves' in any kind of environment. Dairi| Queen .® May 15 and 16 Only Thurs. and Fri. Eat, drink and be merry! •Pa«. U. I. Pat. Oft; Aim O. Q. Ca OIMI Am, O. Q. Carp. MEHLBERG DAIRY QUEEN 2886 Orchard Lake Rd., Keego Harbor FORSYTHE DAIRY QUEEN 615 Orchard Laka Rd., Pontiac McMILLM'S DAIRY QUEEN 4710 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plaint KELLER'S DAIRY QUEEN 743 N. Main, Rochester PETER'S DAIRY QUEEN Jotlyn at Firat, Pontiac D—rlO THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1909 on MARKETS VC Rejection Disappoints Shaping Big Stock Mart Continues Lower produce by growers and sold by ' them in wholesale package lots.' \ v\r . , »f Quotations are furnished by the NEW YORK (AP) _ ^ -The market had been ral-ident’s mutual troop withdrawal Detroit Bureau of Markets as ol stock market continued lojyer in lying forward the past two proposal, it apparently pretty Business News IRON RIVER (UPI) ~ For the second time in a week, the residents of this once-proud mining center today reeled under the news that their iron- Tuesday. Produce FRUITS Apples, Jonathan, bu. Apples, Jonathan, C.A., bu. App'eS, McIntosh, bu. Apples, Northern Spy, bu. Apples, Northern Spy, C.A. bu. Apples, Steele Red, bu..... VEGETABLES moderately active trading earlyjdays,” an analyst said, “pn well, dampened peace enthu-jore economy is being cut out this afternoon^ with brokers re-|hopes the President’s speech onjsiasm.” jfrom under them, porting some investors disap-;the Vietnam situation might The Associated Press average! Officials of the Hanna Mining pointed by Vietcong rejection’produce some sign of solid pro-lof 60 stocks at nooon was off .6 Co. announced Tuesday from *1% of President Nixon’s mutualigress toward peace. jat 342.8, with industrials off 1.7, district offices in Hibbing, Iso troop withdrawal proposal. DAMPENED ENTHUSIASM rails up .1, and utilities off .1. jMinn., that the Homer-Waseca m The Dow Jones industrial av-j “There had been hope the Among other active stocks:'Underground mine in Iron River erage at noon was off 2.27 at President would say more than'Continental Oil, up 1 at 387s; j will be ^losed June_27. The ________M................. 2 75 966.58. • ) he did, something that would'American Telephone* & Tele-; closing will throw 325 miners chives* d?"bcti. ..........loo Losses led gains by about 250 lead to a breakthrough. When graph, off % at 57%, and Texas and other employes out of work. '00- the Vietcong rejected the Pres V Gulf Sulphifr, up Vi at 32. Just one week ago, the Inland Steel Co. announced it will close its Bristol Mine in nearby Crystall Falls in late July. When that mine is closed, 125 workers will be out of jobs. Onions, Green, dz. bch.................. Onions, sets, 32-lb. bag ............ 5.00 1SSU0S. Onions, Dry, 50-lb. bag .............. 1.60 _______ Parsnips, v* bu. ........■ 2.25 Parsnips, Cello-Pak, dz..............2.00 Potatoes, 20-lb. bag .......... Potatoes, 50-lb. bag .......... Radishes, Black, Va bu. Rhubarb, Outdoor, dz. bch. . Tomatoes, Hothouse, 8-lb. bskt. Turnips, Topped, bu............ GREENS Mustard, bu.........................12.75; Sorrel, bu. ........................ 2.50! Spinach, bu. ....................... 2.25; turnips, bu. .........................2.75 2.00 2.50 1.25 3.25! 3.00 The New York Stock Exchange Poultry and Eggs DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP>—(USDA) — Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (including U.S.): Grade A iumbo 36-38. extra large 31’ a-34'2; large J0Va-33'*; medium 24-25; •mall T7-19. NEW YORK (AP) - New York S, Exchange selected afternoon prices: A Gen Elec 2.60 —A-w- 1 Gen Fds 2.60 Sales Net; Gen Mills .80 fhiu ) High Low Last Chg..GenMot 3.40a 75*- 7ji , 741. GPubUt T.60 53Ml 52A» 53 Vi - Vi|gTfl|i 1.48 18 171* 18 + SsiQdn Tire lb 80 7834 79®i +13/41 Genesco 1.60 193* I9&H 4- in Ga Pacific lb 115 51 50*® 50*® .— *»|Ga Paclf CHICAGO BUTTER AND EGGS CHICAGO (AP) — (USDA) - Butter: wholesale selling prices unchanged; 93 A||iAW^tr , .n •core AA 67.644; 92 A 67:644 ; 90 B unquot-1 Allis Chaim i Alcoa 1.80 .50 AbbtLab 1.10 ACF Ind 2.40 Ad Millls .20 Address 1.40 Admiral AetnaLi? . 1.40 AirRedtn 1.50 AlcanAiu 1.10 Alleg Cp ,10g AllegLud 2.40 AllegPw 1.28 ; AlledCh 1.20 ' A lli«WC4r 1 41 134 28* 2734 277• Eggs: prices paid dleivered to Chicago I ?lra. Ar in.kanM1 IaiiiA, ■ Oft nor ronl ftr hftt. rhfVsO PAV_ unchanged to 1 lower; 80 per cent or bet ter grade A whits 20-33; medium white extras 25-28; standards unquoted. Livestock Amerada Am Airlin .80 Amfedcst 1.60 Am Can 2.20 ACrySug 1.40 AmCyan 1.25 AmEIPw 1.58 Am Enka 1 A Home 1.40 Am Hosp .22 AmMFdy .90 AMet Cl 1.90 DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)-r- Wednesday's final livestock: Hogs 100. U.S„ 1 anil 3 200-220 lb. bar- Am Motors rows and gilts, 23.75-24.25. U.S. 2 and 3|AmNatGas 2 220-240 lb„ 23-23.75; U.S. 3 and 4 240- AmPhot .09g 270 lb.;’21.75-23. A Smelt 1.90 Cattle 250. Choice 900-1,200 slaughter; Am' Std l steers, 31.50-34; mixed good and choice, | Am T&T 2.40 80.50-31.50; good, 28-30.50. , Am Tobac 2 Vealers SO. High choice and prime, 42- AM KCp .30 44; choice, 38-42; good, 33-38, standard,;AMP Inc ,48 Sheep 300. Choice and prime slaughter Ampex Corp iambs, 90-110 lb., 30-31.50. Cull to goodjAnacond 2.50 •laughter ewes, 7-11. [AnchHoc 1.60 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK AncSr^NSv CHICAGO (AP) — (USDA) — Hogs re- ArchDan 1.60 ceipts Tuesday were 3,500; butchers wereiArmcoSt 3.30 50 to 75 higher; active; 1-2 200-225 IblArmcoStl wi butchers 23.75-24.00; around 300 head at j Armour 1.60 14.00; 1-3 200-240 lbs 23.00-23.50; 2-3 190-250 ArmstCK 1.60 lbs 22.50-23.00; 2-4 250-27.0 ibs 21.75-22.50; j Armst Ck wi 1-4 270-300 Ibs 21.00-21.75; sows 50 higher; ‘ Ashld Oil. 1.20 active; 1-3 350-400 Ibs 19.75-20.25; 1-3 400- Assd DG l.20 500 Ibs 19.25-19.75; 2-3 500-600 Ibs 18.75-j All Rich 1.80 19 50; boars under 400 Ibs 17.50-18.00; over:Allas Ch .80 400 Ibs 18.00-19.00. I Atlas Corp Cattle 900; calves hone; all classes ec- Avco Cp 1.20 live, steers strong to, SO higher; heifers Avnet Inc .40 itrnnq; cows and bulls fully steady. (Avon Pd 1.80 Choice 1,000-1,250 lb slaughter steers i yield grade 2 to 4 33.00-35.00; mixed good; •nd choice 32.00-33.00. ^ w Babck W 1.36 Several loads choice 775-990 lb slauah- BaltGE T.70 ter heifers yield grade 2 to 4 31.50*32.75; Beat Fds l Utility and commercial cows 21.00-22.75;j Beckman .50 high dressing utility 23.00; cannersand Beech Air .75 cutters 19.00-21.75; Utility and commercial; Bell How. .60 bulls 24.50-27.00. . iBendix 1.60 Sheep none; not enough of ahy class for,BPnefFin 1.60 ■ morket test. j Benguet ________________________ Beth Stl 1.80 Boeing 1.20 . • c>m I ^ BoisCas .25b American Stocks ** BristMy 1.20 NEW YORK (AP) • American Stock;Brunswk .05g Exchange selected noon prices: BucyEr 1.20 Sales . . i Budd Co .80 (hds.) High Low Last CM. Bulova .80b .5 24’* 237/a 23% — % gunk Ramo 17Va 174* ** 32’* 32 37 22 211* 22 + 91 55 54 5444 + 1 84 23** 23 23 394 35Vx 3444 35 89 41’* 4044 411 37 303* 301* 30' 38 81 ’* 111* 81’* — 4s» 43 29’* 287a 28% — ’* 185 128 12644 127 —1’* 126 3344 32% 33’* + % 71 73Va 72% 73’* + % 73 56% 55% 56’* + % 45 31% 31’* 31% — % 198 33% 33 33’* ... 117 38% 37% 38’* — ’* 27 31% 30’* 31’* — % 84 6044 60’* 60% — ’* 118 3744 37’* 37’* .... 213 24 2344 23% — ’* 112 54 5244 Gerber 1.10 GettyOil .38g Gillette 1.40 , | Glen Alden ~ % Global Marin Goodrich 1.72 Goodyear .85 -f Vg GraceCo 1.50 - GraniteC Stl GrantW 1.40 Gt A8.P 1.30 Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt West Fin I GtWnUnit .90 GreenGnt .96 Greyhound 1 GrumnAirc 1 Gulf OH* 1.50 GulfStaUt .88 GulfWInd .40 Salas NtV{ Salas Nat (hds.) High Low Last Chg.i (hds.) High Law Last Chg. 107 97% 96’* 96% — %' Pueb Sup .48 *5 50 4V% 49% -t- /a ,38 84 83Va 84 + HLRugSPL 1.68 * ||| M 1 ’ 223 34 33% 34 -f 3/4;Purirnon 2.80 253 83% 82 82’* — 4* I 82 27% 2744 27% i 212 40% 404a 4044 + %; Questor .50 184 26 25’* 25’* -*- %! 51 37% 37’/4 37’* + V 25 1 00% 99’* 100 — ’*[ RalstonP .60 12 51 50% 5P% —’* Ranco Inc .92 125 31% 31’* 31% — % Raytheon .50 Job-Training Pact Set BY JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK-There are, we are told reliably, two sides to every story,(but in tax matters the story looks more like a hexagon, which, is a geometric shape of six sides and just as many angles. At least that many faces may be seen in the current debate over the CUNNIFF 7 per cent investment tax credit, whose suspension has been proposed by the Nixon administration in an effort to curtail inflation. * ★ ★ This tax credit device permits business to deduct from income other goods suddenly will cost somewhere around 7 per cent; more. Now in anything economic there is no limit to the number of theories, most of which appear to make good sense. Somehow, however, theories undergo mutations when put into practice. ★ ★ ★ Should the investment tax credit be left as is and not repealed, the experiment will be an interesting one. Conceivably it could be a dangerous one as well if it doesn’t^ as theorized, work to keep prides under control The complaints %hout the threat to suspend the tax credit don’t end there. DISCRIMINATORY One of the chief arguments is that repeal is discriminatory! giving certain companies competitive advantages merely be consider to be a potentially unfair situation. » * * * By turning the credit on and off to suit short-range economic or political coriditiqns, they argue, a debilitating obstacle is placed in front of planners, who must commit huge sums of money for five or seyen years ahead. joinihg some businessmen hi, their tirticlsm of either repeal or suspension are a number of economists who fear that either move might damage the Competitive position of the United States in world trade. 11V 168 75 90V 18 44 137 434k 43 43'-* — 297 48*» 47% 484k + 38 81 Vs 8044 81 Vi + V, 99 5744 567k 564k -1% 106 14 V. 134. 134k — Vi 75 3*4, 354* 3*4% + 101 454k 45 45 — 4k 403 334k 324k 324k — 44 11* 38i/k 37V. 3744 — V, 49 22i% 214% 221% + V4 25 48’% 479k 479k — Va 1*0 299, 29'% 2944 + 4k 34 524* 514* 514* -+ 4k 203 289k 27% 28% — 4* 146 70'% *91/4 49Vj — Vi 7 3*9, 34% 3*4% — 1% 305 2144 21% 21 Vi — % 137 34'% 33% 33% —1 204 45 44Vi 45 + Vi 23 24% 2* 24% . 110 31% 31'% 31% — % Halliburt 1.05 54 55 393/4 40’* 14 Harris Int 1 44 74’* 13H 143.® + s® HeclaMng .70 22 283® 38’* 39 Here Inc 1 183 46’* 433/4 433* + HeWPack .20 32 887* 57V® 573* Hoff Electrn 413 217® 37'* 37^* Holidylnn .40. 66 81’* 32a* 33’* + HoMySug 1.20 12 297® 43 s* 43%* — 7* Homestkb .40 64 367* 539k 544* 73% 74 + % 27% 28 — '% 80% 81V RCA 1 Reading Co RelchCn .50 RpubStl 2.50 Revlon 1.40 Royn Met .90 Rey.nTob 2.20 Roan Set n Rohr Cp .00 RoyCCola .54 RoyDut 1.03g RyderSy n.SO 135 39% 38 39% + % 235 47% 47 47% 12 22% 22% 22% 34 17% 17 17% +-% 117 47 44% 44% — Vk 25 86% 85% 86% 193 42% 409k 41% — % 144 40% 399, 40% + % 134 0% 79, 1% 44 33% 33% 33% + % 4 22% 22% 22% — % 105 55% 55% 55VJ 733 38 34% tax bills as much as 7 per cent |------------ m WASHINGTON UP) — The of the cost 0f equipment pur-jcause they purchased equip . - 4, ^:Labor Department announced chases designed to increase pro-jment while the credit.was in ef- u^in.p™rn.. , yesterday the largest single job-1 duction. it i3 meant to be a spur feet (training contract pn record, a'^0 modernization and efficiency. J $13.8 million pact with^Chrysler |And quite a spur it hM been. *- ! 1 J Early this year private and government surveys showed that business was planning a Several major Industrial nations, they point out, are investing heavily in capital improvements that should enable them to produce more efficiently. If the United States cuts back on _ such improvements, they fear, l its goods might not be competi- 17 52V, 51% 51% -Q— 13 29% 29 29 —R— 19 3?% M% 3?* + % I Corp. to train 4,450 hard-core unemployed over two years. ♦ ★ ★ “IL- 3kW- Safawav 1.10 StJosLd 1.50 StLSanF 2.40 StRaglsP 1.40 Sandars .30 SaFelnd 1.60 SanFelnt .30 Schenlay 1.30 Scharlng 1.40 Scharing wl Scientlf Data SCM Cp .60b Scott Paper 1 Sbd CstL 2.20 Searl GD 1.30 | SearsR 1,20a 14 39% 39V» 39% 3 57. 563* 563* V* 28 66 Vi 66 66’* 13 33s® 33s* 33s* + ’/• 46 53 V? 53’* 53’* V* 57 81’* 80 80’* 9 41 41 41 + to 144 5234 51’* 517* 254 48** 47’* 48’'4 + 1 529 1253* 124' '4 1247® —1 85 307® 30V? 30’* 270 7’* f 7 7 V* 64 333® 33 33 400 19’* 18'* 19’* +1 66 158 155’* 158 +3 —B— 157 31*% 30*4 31*% 46 357« 35’* 357a 41 38 373* 38 28 57 55** 55*4 24 30 29 29’* 52’ 77»* 76’* 77’* 111 45'* 45 +1 Honeywl 1.10 HoustLP 1.12 Howm*t .70 I V% I IdahoPw 1.60 Ideal Basic 1 III Cent 1.50 Imp Cp Am INA Cp 1.40 IngerRand 2 Inland Stl 2 itnterlkSt 1.80 IBM 3.20 IntHarv 1.80 V%Mnt Miner .50 IntNick 1.20a Int Pap 1.50 Int TBT .95 Iowa Beef lowaPSv 1.32 v- Jewel Co 1.40 I Johns Manv \Ijohnjhn 25 135% 133% 134% + %: Shell OII J.40 23 44 43'* 44 — 50 33*% 33Vt 33’* — —I— 28 33 32'* 32’* — 49 16’* 16'* 16*% 14 59'* 59 149 17 16’* 167a 273 363* 36 36*4 + H 193 48’* 47'* 48’* +1’* 100 297* 29’* 297% + ’* 51 36'* 35 35’*—1%% 11 ,491* 483* 49’* + ’* 40 46’* 46 46'* — 7% 36 45 447% UV* '* 184 32 319% 317% — 9% 28 40'* 409% 40 — 9% 3 329% 32 329% 18 88’* 879% 879% — 9% 4 449% 449% 449% + 9% 120 134’* 132 133’* + ’* 95 439% 4296 43'* — ’* 61 32'* 31’* 32’* + ’* 19 46’* 459% 459% —1’* 102 46 459% 4596 — ’* 155 727% 72’* 727% + 9% 244 7296 72 . 72 —1 10 52 509W 507% —1’* 114 38'* 3296 3796 80’* ' 208 37’* 37 ’* Aerolet .50a Air West Alax Ma .10g Am Petr .40g AO Indust Ark Best .15g ArkLGftS 1.70 Asamera Oil AtlasCorp wt Barnes Eng Brazil LtP‘ la Campbl Chib Cdn Javelin Cinerama Creole 2.60a Data Cont Dixilyn Corp Dynalectrn Equit Cp .05® Fed Resrces Felmont 0*1 Frontier Air Gen Plywood Giant Yel .40 Goldfield Gt Basn Pet HoernerW .82 Husky Oil .30 Hycon Mfp Hydrometi 61 1796 546 27’* 21 327a 24Va —3 327'a + H 27’ a 27’% ; Cal Finanl 3496 3496 CampRL .45a 35^% 3596 -1’* campSp 1.10 49% + ’* 2996 — ’* 24’* + ’* 99% -t: ’* 3 38 3796 3736 3 12'* 12’* 12’a 8 20 193i 199 41 157a 15 1534 1 Imoer Oil IT I Corp Kaiser In McCrory 20 10’* 10 75 329% 317 31 229% 22M „ 9 1396 ?518 23.’* 13 123/4 38 247« 10’* + 32 — 22’* 12’% 12'/ 217/a +1’* Cap. Cities Bd. CaroPLt 1.42 CarrierCp .60 CarterW .40a Case Jl ICastleCke .60 CaterTr 1.20 'CelaneseCp 2 Cenco Ins 30 *9 j Cent SW 1.80 Cerro Cp 1.60 Cert-teed .80 . CessnaAir .80 * CFI Stl .80 Riches Ohio 4 ** ChiMil StP P ,*!ChiPneu 1.80 :*iChl R1 Pac 4iChrisCrft wl ,, i Chris Craft 1 Chrysler 2 CITFin 1.80 Cities Svc 2 ClarkEq 1.40 477% 378 259% 245% 25'* — Va 309 369a, 353/4 36 — ’* 120 453* 45 4594 + ’* 120 7994 78’* 79 +1 159 339% 33 33 45 32’* 32’* 32V% — 9% 121 66’* 65’* 66* + ’* 287 24’* 24*- 24’4 — ’* 114 30’* 29'4 293* + 94 114 24 23’* 24 + 9% 49 51’* 509% 51'* +1Va 133 137a 139% 139% — ’* 627 41 409% 409% — 9* . 63 1329% 129'* 131’* -^ Kroger 1.30 —c— 114 13'/. 12H 12* - Lear Slg .45 35V, 34 + I* I LehPCem .60 Leh Val Ind JonLogan .80 JoneLau 1.35 Jostens .60 Joy Mfg 1.40 Kaiser AI 1 Kan GE 1.36 KanPwL 1.11 Katy Ind KayserRo .60 Kenncott 2.40 Kerr Me 1.50 KimbClk 2.20 Koppers 1.60 Kraftco 1.70 Kresge SS .40 — ’* 76'* 38 5 77 24 389% 35 407a 49 20' % 20 20*% -t- 29 21’* 20'a 20'* — 61 377a 37'% 37’% - 126 543% 52*8 53Va + 26 693* 69’* 69*% + 46 607* 60'* 609% — 54 447s 44'* 443,4 + 211 367a 353* 363/4 +1 19 36’- 36 36 74 281%- 28'* 28^j — 100 263* 257* 26v4 + 17 69'a 69’a 69'* — 11 483a 473-4 4794 — 8 43'% 43’* 43'* T Y* I Lehmn 1.46g 31,T + IfiLibOFrd 2.80 Libb McN * Ligg My 2.50 *| Ling TV 1.33 "Litton 1.89t JjLivlngstn OH " LockhdA 2.20 * LoewsThe .13 " LoneS Cem 1 " LoneSGa 1.12 LonalsLt 1.30 "i Lucky S 1.40b 4! Lukens Stl ] 369% 36’* 36’* + ’* 160 332’* 329 331'* —29i 107 33'* 3294 33’* + 9% 171 18 179% 177* — ’* Xl04 40' % 399% 399k 334 4494 437a 449% — '* 389 54 539% 54 +1 8 57’A 563* 57 — 9% 2 24'* 24’* 24’* + ’/a 8 53'% 529% 52’% —llV 64 40 39 399% — ’* 25 1243* 123’* 124 — ’* 5 57 57 57 — ’* 132 319% 319% 319% + ’/4 41 36’* 36 36 — ’* 12 347a 34'* 34’* — Va —K— 113 .1'/, 405k 40V, + '/k 1 14 26 26 5 23 V, 23%. 23 — Vk 3V 204k 20% 20% + % 54 36% 36% 36% — % 186 51 50% 51 21 105% 102% 102% —3% 31 74 75 74 — % 4 45% 45% 45% + % 232 47% 46% 47V. — % 75 47 46% 46% + % 55 40% 39% 35% — % 52 23% 23% 23% — % 60 21% 21 21% — Vk 93 13% 13% 13% —,% 12 23% 23% 23 Va 86 54 52'/a 54 +1% IS 12% 12% 12% 34 39% 39% 39% — % SherwnWm SignalCo 1.20 , . SingerCo 2,40-' m~tm 09% 00% Smith KF V 43 45% 44% 44% — % SouCalE 1.40 140 30% 30% 38% + % ■ 166 28% 20% 28% 14 43% 42% 42% — % 109 40% 40% 40% — % 61 55% 55 55 84 25% 24% 24% — % 157 53% 53 53% — % 100 21% 21% 21% .. 7 49% 48% 48% — % 30 22% 22 22 — % 277 75 74% 74% — % 299 69% 68 68% —1 ■ 555 85% 14% 84% — % .21 72% 71% 72 — % 43 18% 18% 18% — % 22 48 47% 47% 68 39% 38% 38% — % 18 57 56% 56% — % 87 50 40Va 49% +1% ........67% 68 + % South Co 1.14 ui/a + % SouNGas 1.40 n Su Pac 1.10 Sou Ry 2.80a Spartan Ind' SperryR .22g SquareD .80 St Brand 1.50 Std Kotlsman SOCal 2.80b StQillnd 2.30 StOIINJ 1.80g StdOilOh 2.70 St Packaging StauffCh 1.80 SterlDrug .70 StevensJ 2.40 StudeWorth 1 Sun Oil 1b SurvyFd .720 Swft Co .60 61 7% 7% tremendous increase in spending for capital improvements. This at the very time that government and consumers were being told to cut spending. CURIOUS ARGUMENT Logically, it seemed, business should be discouraged—not encouraged to spend. And that’s where the argument takes on a curious shape “Chrysler Training Corp., the firm’s .training subsidiary, will hire and train the jobless as drill-press operators, spot welders, production-line assemblers, and material coordinators at each of its eight plants,’’ the announcement said. Craig Fast Continues LANDING OP) — Sen. Roger Craig, D-Dearborn, is .carrying Spending for machinery, some on his vow not to eat a bite of j businessmen argue, goL-only is-food until A&P stores in Detroit noninflationary but is in fact the stop selling California grapes, jmost effective means of .reduc- for spying for Israel, the United Craig, a leader of the, i**g inflation. Michigan grape boycott, says ice water has been his only sustenance since Sunday when he began fasting to publicize the demands of some grape pickers in California for recognition as collective bargaining agent for migrant grape workers. The implications of this argu-Some businessmen who critiVnt are large, for the United cize suspension on this scorejStates already has a chronic would rather see the tax credit;balance of payments deficit that repealed altogether, because re- makes the dollar vulnerable to peal would eliminate what they!speculative attacks, .. 10 Executed by Iraq on Spying Charges DAMASCUS, Syria (AP)—The|Jewish. A howl of protest went Iraqi government executed 10(up abroad, and no Jews have Arabs before daybreak today (been reported executed since. The way .to cut down prices, they argue, is to make the capacity of America’s industrial plant larger and more efficient. More efficient plants mean lower priced goods. And lower prices are the opposite of inflated prices. Stocks of Local Interest By repealing the investment Fiourts »ft»r dKimai point* sr, eighth* tax credit, these businessmen States and Iran, the official Iraqi news agency reported. The 10 included nine Iraqis and one Saudi Arabian. Their names indicated they were all Moslems. There was no immediate word on how the executions were carried out or whether the bodies were exhibited in Baghdad's main square as they have been 1679 30% —T- 29% 30% Tampa El .72 Tektronix Teledyne Tenneco 1.21 Texaco 3.20 TexETrn 1.40 TexGSul .60 Texaslnst .80 TexP Ld .45g Textron .80 Thiokol .40 TlmesMlr .50 TimkRB 1.80 ToddShp 1.20 TrantWAIr 1 Transmr .50b Transitron TrlCont ?.68g TRW Inc 1 Twen Cent 1 47 52 51V 51V 262 55’* 547* 547* —1 369 12’* 1191b 12 — ’* 362 337* 339* 33s* — Va 47’* 489* +1 27’A 27’* * 22’* 223* + H 55»* 55’* .10 MidwFinr .20' Mohwk Data Molybden Neisner Bros Newldria Mn NewPark Mn Ortnand Ind RIC Group Saxon Indust Scurry Rain Statham Inst Syntex Cp ;40 Technico . 249® 249* — 9*lcievEIIII 2.04 id .80 'Cololntst 1.60 CBS CbluGas 1.60 ComISolv .40 ComwEd 2.20 Con Foods 1 ConNatG J.76 ConsPwr 1.90 ContAirL .50 Cdht Can 2.20 Cont Cp 1.80 83® 83/® 83® ,• ; 14 14 14 + ’*•!, 79 78’* 793/4.. — A* « 37’* 36’* 367* + 14 14 14 6’* 6®* 63® + ’* , 103/4 10’* 10s® + Mi 8s® 8’* 8s* + ’* IT* IT* IT* —' to , 76’* 753-4 757® + 1*l- 37’ 'a 367* 367'® ,+ V? , 343* 34 34s* + .’*j 56 ' 553* 55’* + to \ ; — 49’* + 146 237* 229® 23’* - ; 24 17V® 163* 1694 *- CopyRghtedr by Thp Associated Press 1969 : coritMot .idp . ■ , ... I Cont. Oil 1.50 Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP) i- Th» cash iSosl-tlon of the Treasury May .12, 1969 com-pared td May 10/ 1968 (In dollars): Balance 11,945,340,934.54 7,849/98^897.69 Deposits fiscal year July 1 . Cont. * Cont Tel {Control Data j Cooper In 1.40 CorGW 2 50a Cowles .50 CoxBdcas .50 CPC Inti 1.70 CrouseHIn 1b CrowCol 1.511 CfOwn Cork CrownZe 2.20 . . Cudahy Co 168,945,028,588.06 136,850,538,013.27 co^tlss Wrt 1 .Withdrawals tiscal ye • j |, ! D#posit*^s^®l^J^8J06VlM,850,538,013.271 Dan Rlv 1.20 # Wi,h4rT6!Sl[:i&&% 160,069.632.843.04; DaycoCp Total debt iDaytnPL 1,60 361,820,258,527.64 349,246,264,625.81 I Deere Co 2 Gold assets Del Mnte 1.10 10,367,058,748.61 10,484,041,584.26 DeltaAir .40 X-Inc'ludes 636,759,542.60 debt not sub- DenRGr 1.10 lecl to statutory limit. DetEdis 1.40 ________ ;______________ De' Steel .60 DlsSham 1-40, Disney 30b DomeMin .80 27 437/4 43% 381 53v. 52% 42 40% 40", 223 68% 67% 27* 39% 39 46 39% 38% 27 72% 72% 30 52% 52% 52% 41 54% 527/a 54% + 73 62% 61% 41% — 111 58 57 58% + 78 29 287* 14 22% 22'* 34. 47% 467* 23 49 % 48% 125 33V, 33 96 46Vs 45% 96 29% 29% 462 43% 427* 86 177* 17% 50 71% 70V) 71 t 20 52% 52J 52% + % 4 20'* 197* 19% — V. 1000' 39 377* 3B7* +1 89 25% 25% 25% + % 88 158 156% 157% — % 53 35 34 34% — % 20 281 277% 277% —5 18 16. 157* 15% - % i 11 45% 45'* .45% + % 96 38V. 373/. 37% - % ' 5 29% 29% 29% + % 37 397k 393/, 393/ ! Macke Co .30 iMacy RH 1 MadFd 3.41g iMagnvox 1.20 Marathn 1.60 I Marcor Inc 1 I Mar Mid'1.60 , , MartinM 1.10 393k + % MayDStr 1.60 %' Maytag 1 McDonnD .40 Mead Corp 2 Mead Cp wi MelvSho 1.30 Merck 1 -80a MGM 1.20 Microdot ,20g MidSoUtil .88 MinnMM 1.60 MlnnPLt 1.20 T iilMobllOil 2.20 43% + % Mohasco 1.10 17% — % Monsrn 1.80 MontDUt 1.68 Mont Pw 1.56 or-Nor .80 Motorola 1 Mt St 268 483* 50 27’* 63 223* 30 28'* 72 36 15 311* 31 31'* + —M— 3 203 k 20’* 20’* — 99 39'* 387® 387* — 35 297* 29'* 29% — 201 54’* S33* S33* - 78 56 55’* 56 80 58’* 57’* 58'* 23 403* 40’* 403* 329 26’* 253* 25?* — 192 363* 36V® 36’* .. 48 303* 30 30 — 508 33' 27 66V 65 Va 180 53'* 93 927* 27 37 *25 27’* 84’* + to .. 693* 693* — ’* 46 21s* 21’* Vto 220- 70 63 .23 —D- 10 31V 590 4634 “27 2934 112 383/ 20 21’/ • 37 2571 22% — 1 21% ... 50% — ' 44% —V 37% — % 20 Rallt Net change -V.l Noon Thurs 62.9 Prev, Day 02.8 Week Ago . 62.8 Month Ago 63.1 Year Ago 64.2 1969 High 64.3 1969 Low 62.5 1968 High 68.3 1968 LovV 63.8 BOND AVBRAGES 10 10 10 10 Ind. -.1 Util. r— .1 Fgn. L. Yd. —\ 85 9 78.5 89.8 78.0 86.0 78.6 89.8 78.1 86.7 78.8 90.0 78.0 85.6 78.8 89.9 78.1 87.4 78.5 88.6 80.3 87.0 79.3 90.7 79.6 83.1 77.3 89.1 76.8 91.0 81.4 90.2 82.3 SS-p 78.3 88.0 '78.4 Net change Noon • Thura Prev. Day Weak Ago Month Ago Year Ago 1969 High 1969 Low 1968 High 1968 .Low dow-joNes avtrages STOCKS 30 Industrials 20 Rails .. 15 Utllitin •' 65 Stocks ............... BONDS 40 Bonds .... 10 Higher grade rails DukePw 1.40 duPont 1,25g Duq Lt 1.66 Dyna Am .40 East^Ali- -50 E Kodak .88a EatonYa 1.40 Ebasco Ind 2 EG8.G .10 Elect Spec EIPasoNG 1 EltraCp 1.20 Emer Elec 1. EndJOhn .12p Essexlnt 1.20 , . Ethyl Cp .72 182.8 153.4 340.8 EvansP .60b-181.3 1 49.0 332.51 Eversharp 192.1 142.7 328.8; 513.5 217.7 159.1 360.91 83.0 .179.2 146.6 329.4 j FalrchC .50e 531.1 217.4 160.4 368.8 Falrch Hiller, 435.6.-165.'6 135.1 299.1 Fansteel Inc Fedders .60 Fedders wi FedDStr, .95 Flltrol STOCK AVERAGES Compiled |$y /The Associated^risi^ ‘ 1 ind. Rails Util. Stocks —1.7 1 —.6 509.4 1 84.9 154,6- 342.8 511.1 184.8 154.7 / 343.4 508.2 492.2 473.1 966.58—2.27 Firestne V.60 . 241.23—0k351 FstChrt 1.68t 132.41—u*04 Flintkote 1 329.94—0,58 Fla Pow 1.52 FlaPwLt 1.88 FMC Cp ‘ 73.90—0.03 60.58 +0.21 73.87—0.03 79.70-0.21 •1.45-0.10 Thursday's 1ft pivld«idspj^cjfrjd p, C 5 Rato riod Record ) R1GULAR " pods v-: .l0 5,30 ^ f FoodFair ,90 FordMot 2.40 ForMcK .75 FreepSul 1.60 FrinhCp l./o GAC Cp 1.50 GAF Corp .45 Gamsko 1.30 Gannett ,65 GenDyhim 1 NatAIrlin .30 NatBisc 2.20 Nat Can .80 NatCash 1.20 Nat-Di'stll .,90 Nat Fuel 1.68 Nat Genl .20 Nat Gyps 2 Nat Gyps wl Natlnd .461 NatLead 3.40 Nat Lead wl Nat Steel 2.50 Nat Tea .80 Nev Pow 1.08 Newberry 1 NEngEI 1.48 Newmnt, 2.60 Newmont wi - - Nia9 1-'® 25% 257/e NorfolkWsi 6 M 19% 18% • NorAmPhll 1 63 28% 28V. 28% — % NoAmRock 2 • 20 80% 80 80 — %!noNG»s 2.60 14 78 76% 77% + %, nor Pac 2.60 143 75% 74% 74% —%|NotaPW '.6Q 33 36',, 35% 35% — % Northrop 1 5 38V. 377/e 38% - < NwtlAlrl .90 119 146% 145% 146% + % NwtBanc 1.20 35 ’29% 28% 28% — % 88 20% 20% 20% — % —E— 1 180 23% 23% 23% + %] 118 79% 78% 78%-% 17 37% 37 37% — % ' 72 83% 82% 83% +1/ 45 39 38% 38% — % 25 T8% 17% 17% — % 77 /23% 23 23% — % - 14 735% 35%. '35% + % 13 S3% S3 j M%-Vi 3 35'/. 351* 35%/.. ■ 150 , 35% 35% 35% -r % 66 34% 34% 34% -- % 145 58% 583/4 58% + % 73 18% 11% 18% + % —F— 178 87% 86% *7% — % 85 18 17% 18 f % 16 22'/a 22 22% — % 46 60% 60% 60% . . 40 31 3(P/i 30% +■ %, „ . „ ,, 168 37% 37 37% + %|PennCen 2,40 8 42% 41% 42% + V,, PennDIx .60 48 64V? >63% 64 — %|Penney JC 1 q23 44% 43% 44% — % 114 31, 30%, 30% — % . 25 48% 48 48% + % 138 72% 71% 72%, + ;% 172' 31% 31% 31% + % 91 25 2454 24% + % 142 '52%, 52% 38% . - 41 id 33% 33% — % 203 34 3334 33% ..... 69 40% 40%, 40% _____ —G— , *97 64% 63% . 63% — % / 1.40 28% 27% l"ZB;;'./ —:AMt 4; 31 30% 30% — % 34 41% 41 417% +1% ■ 502 . 31'% 31% >17% — % 32'% 53 53'% + 92'k 92%,— 36% 36% - 26'% 26'% _ t% 24% 24% + % 94 111% 110 110% 15 23% 23% 23% + % 4B8 693/4 68% 693% + V? 29 42% 42'%' 42% + 209 517% J1% 517% _ 19 34'% 33% 34 + 15 32% 32% 32% — 12 3B’% 38% 387% + 29 12534 125 125% + 1.24 t, 31 24% 24 24 — —N— sn 24 39 38% 38'% — 22 547% 54% 54% — 24 68V? 68% 68'% . / 29 135% 135% 135% — 48 20% 20% 20’% — 19 28% 28 28 + % 404 44% 41% 41% —2 46 65% 63% 64% —1% 8 33 32% 32'% — % 138 15% 14% 14’% — % 73 V? 73% 73% UMC Ind .72 Un Carbide 2 Un Elec 1.20 UnOilCal 1.40 UnionPadf 2 Uniroyal .70 UnitAlrLin 1 unit Aire. 1.80 Unit Cp .7Cg Un Fruit 1.40 Unit MM 1.20 USGypsm 3a US Indus! .45 USPipe 1.20 USPIyCh 1.50 US Smelt lb US Steel 2.40 UnivO Pd .80 Upjohn 1.60 Varlen Asso Vendo Co .60 VaEIPw 1.00 20 26 25% 25% — % 3 58V? SB 58—7% 109 42% 40% 41 —1% 409 29% 28’% 291/4 + 6k 124 88'% 87% 17% — % 86 277% 27% 27% + % 1289 34 30% 33V? +2 129 124% 122'% 123% — ’% 4 23 22% 22»% _ % 47 36% 36% 36% — % 142 19% 18% 19 + % . 44 467% 45% 45% — % 12 37% 37% 37% + % 8 34% 34% 34% + % 144 »'% 38 38% + % 124 37% 36% 36’% — % 37 12% 12 12 — % 19 34% 33’% 337% — % 56 40 39% 39% — 190 <35% 13% 35% + % —U— 21 18% 18% 339 45% 45% 81 21% 21% 21V4 ■ 693 62 58 59% 378 51% 507% 51% 128 719% 29% 29% 45 V? 11 13'/? 13V 58V 33'% 12 58% 37 33V 18 86’/ 155 297% '29% 29’ ? 73 40V? 40'% 40'% + % 17 747% 74% 74V? — % 26 52 51% 52 + '% 250 47% 46’% 473% 72 36% 357% 36 — % 134 50% 49% 49% —17/6 —V— 95 31% 30% 31 — % 21- 22% 22% 22% — % 293 31% 30% 307% — % W—X—Y—Z— WarLam 1.10 Was Wat 1.28 Westn AlrL 1 Wn Banc 1.20 WnUTel 1.40 WestgEI 1.80 Weyerhr 1.60 Weyerhsr wl Whirl Cp 1.60-Whlte Mot 2 Whittaker WinnDix 1.56 Woolwth 1.20 XeroxCp 1.80 Occident ,80b OhioEdis 1.50 Okla GE 1.08 OklaNGf M2 OlInMath .11 Omark l.Olt Otis Elev 2 Outbd Mar 1 OwensCg 1.40 OwentllT 1.3S PacGEI 1.50 PacLtg 1.60 Pac Pet .25e PacPwL 1.20 PacT8.T 1.20 PanASul 1.50 Pan Am .40 panh EP 1.60 ParkeDavls 1 PaPwLt 1.60 PenozUn .80 PepsiCo li Parfact 'Film PfiierC 1.40a PhelpsD 1.90 Phlla El 1,64 PhilMorr 1.80 phltl Pat 2.60 WilllipPet wt pjtnayB 1.20 FitnayBw wl. Polaroid J2 . PPG Ind 1.40 ProctGa 2.60 PubSCol 1.06 publklnd .751 6 36’% 36% 36’% 109 55% 54% 55 — % 43 14V? 14% 14% 55 46% 46% 46% + % 4 36 35V? 36 + % 13 27 26% 26% '15 86% 85V? 86 +1 23 347k 34% 34% + % 108 20’% 20 20 22 9774 97 97% — % 22 , 427% 42% 42% — % , 72 36% 35% 36 7- % 54 52’% 52% 52% +■ % 7 53% 53% 53% + % •55 28% 28V, 28%,+ % 49 42% 41’% 42% + '% 278 67% 66% 67 + % 14' 35% 35 35 — % 8 40’% 40% 40% —I 10 50% 50% 50% .... ■+O— 723 43% 42% 42% — % 50 27% 27 27% — % 148 24% 23%! 23% - % , 13 22% 22% 22% + % 231 31% 31 31% — % 3/29’% 29% 29% .— % 132 49% 47% 49 +1% 44 42% 41% 41% - V* 5 89% 88% 88% — % 70 75% 78% 75% — % —P-+ 214 39% 38% 39 + 7% 39 28 27% 27% - j/* 175 37%. 36% 36% — % 37 22% 22% 22% — % 32 22 21% 22 + % 70 22 21% 21% — % 375 2!’/e 21% 21% + 97 35% 35% ' 35% 13 43% 43% 43% — % 279 52 50% 51% . .. 89 65% 64’% 64% — % 34 87’/k 87% 87% 12 46% 43% 437/k — % S3 57% 57% 57% + ,% 25 45 44% 44% —-% 76 29 28% 28% — % 42 34% 34% 34% — % 161 36% 36% 36% — % 67 275 273% 274% — % ■M 49 47% 46% 46% — % Zale Corp .64 23 52% 58% 52% - % ZenlthR 1.40 106 49% 49% 49% — % Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1969 Sales figures are unofficial. Unless qthorwis* noted, rates of dividends in the foregoing table are annual disbursements based bn the last quarterly or semi-annuel declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments not designated as regular ere Identified In the following footnotes. a—Also extra or extras; b—Annual rate plus stock dividend, c—Liquidating dividend. d—Declared or paid in 1969 plus stock dividend, e—Pbid last year, f—Payable In stock during 1969, asttmated cash value on ex-dividend or ex-distribution date, g—Declared or paid so fa rthis year, n—Declared or paid after stock dividend or split up. k—Declared or paid this year, an accumulative Issue dividends In arreari. ri—New Issue Paid this year, dividend omitted, deferred or no action token at lest dividend meeting. r—Declared or paid In 1968 Plus stock dividend, t—Paid in stock during 1968, estimated cash value on ex-dividend or ex-distrlbutTon date. 1—Seles in full. _ , cld—Called. x-Ex dividend y—Ex dividend end seles In full, x-dls—Ex distribution. xr—Ex rights, xw—Without warrants. Ww—With warrants, wd—When die trlbuted. wi-When issued, nd—Next d8y delivery. ,, Wl—In bankruptcy or rocolvershlp or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such companies. fn—Foreign ielue lubtact to In forest equalization tax.. . • Business Notes Richard £. WilrijOt, son ol Mr, and Mrs. E. M. Wilmot, 74 E. Iroqqois, has been named the new assistant regional OVER-THE-COUNTER STOCKS of the charges. year on spying contend, the administration ac ..crisis tua,,y win insure inflation. ^ 33 persons haVe been put to markets change throughout the day. ability of the nation s factories | death in Iraq since the begin* Prices do not Include retail markup, m ..i «,uu Jornanfl . n markdown or commission. | will not keep pace Wlul demand plug amt corp......!.............**2 & and prices will be bid up. Associated Truck ............13.2 ^3.61 _ m_ nAoctDi p Citizens Utilities (A) ... 27.4 28.2! PRESSURE POSSIBLE Cltlztns Utilities (B) ... 24.0 24.4: .... . , Detrex chemical..............i3.o i4.41 jjj fact, they contend, an1 kI/IIv°s.rvic*s *■3j!o 39.0 i immediate upward pressure on slfPi^kpftn?i^r C0‘...' M.o K:o|prices‘might result from the SK&t. Ch.mi«i fact that equipment to make There has been little condemnation abroad of tl|e subsequent executions. , The Baghdad press Indicated the government picked today for the executions because it is the 21st annviersary of the founding- of Israel. ★ ★ w The news agency said nine of those executed today were members of three spy rings recently smashed by the govern- on previous occasions. A total ofjment. The tenth was a 70-year-old lawyer sentenced to death in the first trial but spared until today so the government could extract more information from Nine of the first group were'him. Mutual Stock Quotations * Successful ^Investing INVESTING COMPANIES NEW YORK (AP) —The following quotations, supplied by the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc., are the prices at which these securities could have been sold (bid) or bought (asked) Wednesday. Bid Ask 2.77 3.03 8.73 9.52 9.34 10.11 13.11 13.11 1.20 1.31 13.60 14.86 6.52 7.13 3.62 3.92 Fed Grth 15.48 16.92 Fid Cap 13.31 14.55 Fid Fund 18.4419.94 Fid Tmd 28.52 31.17 Financial Progrm: Dynm 8.03 8.79 Indust 5.47 5.99 Incom 8.20 8.97 Fit InGth 10.8511.89 Fst InStk 9.86 10.81 Fst Multi 11.22 11.40 Fst, Nat, 8.62 9.42 NEA Mut 12)52 12.78 NatWSec 11.5412.48 Nat Ind 12.92 12.92 Nat Invest 8.46 9.15 Nat Sec Ser: BaMn 11.58 12.66 ministration. Recently, a 0 f Servomation Aberdeen Advisers Affiliated Afutre All Amer Alpha „ Amcap Am Bus — Am Divln 12.1313.26 Am Grth 7.83 8.51 Am Inv 10.65 10.65 Am Mut 10.68 11.67 Am NGw 3.69 4.03 Am Pac 8.09 8.09 Anchor Group: Cap 10.3011.29 Grwth 14.6416.04 Inv 9.9710.93 Fd Inv 11.3012.33 Associate! 1.551 1.70 Axe Houghton: ; Fund A 8.27 8.99 Fund B 10.3311.23 Stock 8.15 8.91 Scl Cp 6.72 7.30Ba-bson 9.40 9.40 Bondstk .7*97.8.71’ Fst Va Flet Cap Flat Fd Fla Gth Fnd Gth Founders Foursq 12.35 13,50 10.25 18.24-8.87 9.69 6.06 6.62 9.48 10.36 1-3.68 14.95 Franklin Group: Com Stk 7.54 8.26 DNTC 14.1815.54 Util 7.64 8.37 Incom 2.59 2.84 Freedm 9.5410.43 Fund Am 11.1712.21 Gen Sec 12.9512.95 Gibraltar 16.3016.00 Group Sec: Aero Sc 9.73 10.64- Bost Stk Boston Broad St Bullock CG Fd Canadian Capit Inc Capit Shr Cent Shr 11.12 12.15 9.2010.05 15.8517.14 16.7318.32 10.9711.86 19.84 21.45 9.43 10.33 8.09 8.87 12.29 13.43 Channing Funds: Balan 13.61 14.87 Com Stk 2.04 2;23 v Grwth 7.89 l.6\ NpCpm 8.84 9.66 Special 3.55 3.88 Chase Group: ‘ Fund 13.6814.95 111.90116,81 14.00 15.30 Front Shrhld Chemical Colonial: (pqyity Fuhd • Grwth Vent 19,35 21.16 337 35 34% 34% -% manager on th Newark, N.J.,, 481 59% 57% 58% ■ 734 28V? • 77%: 78% +1 no 56% 5% 56% + 16 31%. 31%' 31% — 309 46% 45 4574 • 38 53% 52 ‘ 52 —1% 7 37 ; 37 37 — % 147 li 11% 14 +2% 90 47% 46% 46% — % 36 29% 2(7/1 29% + % 70 57 56% 57 + V4 285 75% 74 74% — % 16 31% >37% 37% 21 74 73% 73% + % 5 37% 37% 371% + % 298 108 106 ' 1«% -2% 388 40% 391% 40’/? + % 127 93 92 WjpflHw 40/ 23% 23 23% ..... 80 ;12% , 12% 12% ..... ^ region of the >GM public relations staff. . Wilmot will assist the regional manager in public relations activities in Connecticut, Mis s achusetts , N«"w Hampshire, New JerSey« southeastern New York, tine Philadelphia area, Rhode Island and Vermont. He joined GM in 1953. , 5.69 6.22 13.56 14.82 7.53 8.23 ____ 8.27 9.04 Commerc 13.37 14,61 ComSt Bd 5.64' 6.13 Commnwlth Fds: Cap Fd 11.46 12.52 Incom 11.1512.19 Invest 10.79 11.69 Stock 11.0612.09 Cwlth A&B 1.76 1.91 Cwlth CAD 1.97 2.13 Comp As 18.64 20.37 Compet 10.3411.30 Comp Bd 10.4711.38 Comp Fd 11.4212.41 Comstk 6.19 6.77 Concord 20.91 20.91 . Cons »nvy 13.2513.62 ] Consm; Inv 6.11 6.60 Corp Ld T7.26 18.89 entry Cap 15:7016.97 f Crown W 8.46 9.26 Crn Win 14.09 15.41 devegh M 76:53 76.53 Decat Inc 14.0515.36 Delaware 15.9717.45 Delta Tr • 9.8010.71 Dlvld Shr 4.18 4-58 . DowTh |n 7.69 8.40 Drexel 18.02 18,02 X Dreyfus 1/4.4315.81 Eaton&Howdrd-: B*lan 11.97 15.02 16.42 9.82 10.74 23.72 24.43 20.28 22.16 29.24 29.24 16.07 17.37 10.41 11.38 5.66 6.18 1.50 1.64 10.71 11.70 18.99 20.75 15.61 16.95 3.94 4.31 16.64 17.33 10.7310.73 6.42 7.02 5.26 5.75 11.6212.63 9.00 9.78 13.45 14.70 8.04 8.81 12.89 14*09 Ind ’Trend 15.63 17.08 indstry 6.83 7.46 InsBk Stk 6.83 7.47 Inv CoAm 15.26 16.68 Inv Guld 10.61 10.61 Inv Indie 17.8417.84 inves Bos 14.03" 15.33 Invest Group: IDS ndi 5.64 6.13 Mut 11.29 12.27 Prog 5.28 5.73 Stock 22.24 24.17 Select 9.28 9.98 var Payt 8.94 9.62 Inv Resh 5.05. 5.52 Com St Ful Ad Grth Ind Gryphon -Guardn H&C Lev Ham Gth Ham hda Hanover Harbor Hartwell Hedge Heritage H Mann Hubsmn ISI Gth (SI Inc Imp Cap Imp Gth Inc Fnd' Inc FdB Indepnd Bond Divid Pf Stk Incom Stock Grwth Nat West NeuWrth New Eng New Hor New Wld Newton , Noreast Ocngph Omega 100 101 One R O'Neil Oppenhm Penn Sq Pa Mut Ph i la Pilgrim Pilot Pjna St Pioneer Plan Inv Price TR Pro Provldnt Puritan 6.43 5.05 5.52 7.72 8.44 6.09 6.66 9.87 10.79 10.45 11.42 7.06 7.74 28,18 28.18 10.95 11.84 30.39 30.39 15.35 16.78 16.99 18.57 17.38 17.38 9.48 10.36 9.33 9.45 17.35 18.96 18.69 19.88 9.07 9.91 9.49 9.49 11.1011.10 16.0517.59 10.78 11.78 9.19 10.04 12.65 12.65 15.1016.50 14.37 15.70 25.90 25.90 11.36 11.36 5.60 6.12 11.96 12.93 By ROGER E. SPEAR Q — You have, in past col-!Subsidiary unins mentioned several com-j granted the first pf a series of panies that are in the fran-{franchise to a black com-cbising business. I would like tolmunity-owned economic group, know more about franchising In the last several years, and the prospects for this kind the number of publicly owned of company.—N. F. Franchising is not new Georg Grth Incom Invest Vlsts Voyeg Rep Tech Revere Rosenthl Schuster Istel I vest Ivy 25.82 26.62 17.2118.81 11.0211.02 9.66 10.50 22.99 22.99 20.49 21.38 Cus B2 21.55 23.52 Ous B4 10.31 11.25 Cus K1 9.09 9.92 CUI K2 f 6.31.6.97 Cus SI" 23.23 25.34 ‘ 12.41 p,54 9.35 10.21 4*85 4*40 'i’ll Techno! 9,04 9.87 M I«,/ I1 Temp Gti 23S8 45.55 ■or .7*97 / -r_...r. n S » ft C7 Cus S2 Cus S3 Cus S4 , Polaris knlckb 15.52 16.96 12.78 13.97 9.39 10.26 7.81 (.54 13.01 14.22 10.S711.SS 6.15 6.72 15.72 17.18 10.1211.07 ______ 1S.1I 19.79 Scudder Funds: _ yyX hb 14 Specl 42.37 42.37 Bll 16.6716.67 Com St 12.0012.00 Sec Dlv 14.01 15.14 Sec Equit 4.57 4.99 Sec Inv 8.87 9.69 Selec Am 11.34 12.27 Set Specs 11.85 20.61 Side 11.63 12.71 Sigma Slg Inv 13.27 14.50 Smith B 10.69 10.69 Sw Invest 10.55 11.41 Sover Inv 16.30 7.S4 StFrm Gth 6,21 6.21 Stele St 55.12 35.50 Steadman Fds: Am Ind .13.64 14.93 FidUC 1.47 9.26 Sclen 6.44 7.04 Stein Roe Funds: Bel 23.11 22.11 Cap Op 17.3317.23 Stock 15.5615.56 Sup InGth 0,13 f.00 ; §yner: Gift 14.1315.50 TMR Ap 27.50 30.06 Teachrt 11.9912.49 Tachvst 9.56 Tachncl 7.41 8.10 . 13,94 13.23 k 7.01 7.66 14.77 15.90 16.77 18.33 15.21 16.63 15,5216.87 .15.82,15.82 >9.5510.44 1031131 , ■ 10.99 12,01"' Equit GUI 20.02 21.94 Essex - 17.41 ■. Eva-..... , tit Ilf 17.2518.65 Explor 28.94 30.79 Falrfd 1433 15.88 Frm BMu 12.53 12.53 Grwth Incom: Special Stock Eberst Egret Energy Energ S«. Entpr Isa Equity Kniclc Gth 12.12 14,04 Laxlngt 11.4812.55 Leit Rsch 17.51 19.14 UbatW 7.27 7.95 Lite «t 5.57 4.09 Life Mv 7.98 0.72 Ling 8.63 9.43 Loomis Sepias Fds: Canad 41.45 41.45 ■ Capit 13.6413.64 Mut 16.24 16.24 .. Manhtn 8.32 9.09 Mass Fnd 12.36 13.51 Mast Gth 12.9414.14 * Mass Tr 14.91 18.48 Matas 8.21 8.21 . Mathers 14,0314.03 MCDdn 11.0012.05 MidA Mut 7.34 8.02 Moody Cp 17.51 19.14. Moody's 153214.52 Mortons Fundi: Grwth 12,«14.19 incom ' 4.77 5.23 Insur . 8.71 9.55 MIF Fd 20.61 22.21 MIF Gth 633 .7.06 Mu QmGth 5.94 6.46, Mu Omln ll.5512.55 MutIShra 22.23 22.23 ' Mut T/us W9 2.95 I tower MR’ 8.76 9J7 Tran Cap 10.0510J|; TrSv Eq 10.8711.|7 twnC Gth 5.33 5.83 TwenC Inc/ 5.53 6.04 Unlf Muf 12.3813.53 Unif d United Accm Incom . Sclen UnFd Can Value Line 11.6512.73, Funds; 8.34 9.11 15.79 17.76 9/3 9,98 8.36 9M Funds: A Coca-Cola, Howard Johnson) Mobil Oil and others have been setting up franchise outlets- for decades. But it has certainty taken a new lease on life in the last two years. Entertainment and sports celebrities have flocked into the business, adding glamor and excitement as well as their names. In fact* franchising,opportunities are so numerous there are several magazines, books and directories published to help the potential entrepreneur find his way through the maze. * * ★ Several large, NYSE com* panies — General Foods, Avnet and Pillsbury to name a few — have acquired a stake in the field, additional confirmation of franchising success as a method of merchandising. Opportunities offered to interested businessmen vary from fast-food restaurants, dry-cleaning shops, motels and car washes to water treatment services and personnel agencies. These require capital investments ranging from $3,000 to $100,000. AboiifS7 per cent of the 600,000 franchise businesses now operating are In Jhp aiitomotive area, primarily as gas stations: While the number qf gasoline outlets has declined over the years, sales volume has mount- franchise companies has increased rapidly. Some newcomers which have reported improving sales and earnings are Gino’s (formerly A&R Foods), Performance Systems (formerly Minnie Pearl’s) Kentucky Fried Chicken, Lum's Inc., Nationwide Industries and Tastee Freeze, v (Copyright, I960) News in Brief Joyce A. Braun of 740 .Cottage told Pontiac police yesterday that someone stole a combination stereo tape player-radio valued at (140 from her car while it was pinked in a lot at East Pike and Wide Track. Rummage Sale, Saturday, 8-12, St. Vincent de Paul Hall, Wid,e Track Drive. Adv. Oakland Beach. Civic Assoc. Annual Rummage, Bake Sale, Saturday, May 17, 9 a m. 3800 Dill in Drayton. —Adv. O. M. S. Sorority Rummage Sale, Friday, May 16, 9>-r p.m., C. A. I. Building, Williams Lake Road, Waterford. —Adv. St. Hugo of .the* Hills Auction, Rummage Sale, Sat., May 17, 9 a.m. in gym, Opdyfce, East Hickory Grove, Bloomfield Hills. " ■ A I j -r-Adv. f Val Ltn 9.36 1.0.26 Incom 6.22 4.82 Snl Sit 9.6010.52 Vances ipl 9.00 9.92 Vandrbf 9il610.78 Vangd 4fl4 6.71 Var Ind PI 5.95 6.47 Vlklna 1.34 9.07 WlllSt III 13.0014.21 W*dh MU 14.30 15.63 WMIgton 13.20 14.35 Waif Ind 9.40 10.27 Wbltlhtl 15.61 17.04 WtndiOr Ipl 11.49 Winfield 7.33 «.m wRicon WL AMrg >0JfftlUP Worth F 4J4 Ol Rummage Sale Benefit,, ot Michigan Animlil Rescue ed. Considering, the explosive League of Pontiac, Saturday growth in fast-food outlets —'and Sunday, 17th and 18th of both take-out and restaurant May, ■ 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. at service — it is probable. that Dewey’s Dairy Cream, 4708 thi; same pattern will hold true Elizabeth' Lake Rd. —Adv. for tiiem- One important potential of the franchising field — encouraging minority groups to become capitalists — is being, actively investigaged by both the Federal Trade Commission end the Small Bus in e s I Ad- MOMS Rummage: Aub. Hgts. Fire Hall, Fri., Sat. 16-17,8 a.m. —Adv. Rummage, 4 Towns United Methodist, Comer Cooley-Loc- haven, ■ May 17,.Sat. 9 to ■ .u1/ noon." —Adv. For Want Ads Dial 334-4981 Housing Lack May Shorten Students'Stay Two students at Oakland Community College from Belize, formerly British Honduras, are experiencing their first visit to the United States — but that may be cut short. ' Floyd Jones, 18, and Austin Flores, 26, are' studying at THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY,. MAY 15, I960 FLORES JONES OOC’s Highland Lakes campus, Waterford Township, under the Partners of the Alliance Program. it it it ; Hiey arrived In January Jones to study architecture and Flores electricity. They were temporarily housed In a private home until a permanent residence could be found. None has been found yet. JDeath^Notices derson, Texas. Mrs, Marioneaux will lie in state at the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home after 3:30 p.m. Friday. MARR, FRANCES S.; May 14,r 1969: A-19 Arcadia Court; age 58; until December. It is urgent that housing be found for the students as soon as possible, according to Ned Brodbeck, dean of students, at Highland Lakes. Anyone Interested in donating room and board for. the young men may contact Brodbeck at Highland Lakes. It is not necessary that they be housed together, Brodbeck said. Death Notices COTTON, DR. HARRY L.; May 14, 1969; 1321 Wixom. Road Milford; age 78; beloved husband of Esther Cotton; dear father of Robert H. Cotton Funeral service will be held Saturday, May 17, at 1 p.m at the Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Interment in Milford Memorial Cemetery. Dr. Cotton will lie in state at the funeral home. age 55; beloved wife of Kenneth R. Newell; dear mother of Mrs. R. P. (Lucy) Madden and Charles F. Newell; dear sister of Mrs. Fred (Lila) Humes and Mrs. Don (Delma) Newman; also survived by two grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. HEFNER, CARL C.; May 13 1969;1123 Dover; age 54; beloved husband of Enda E Hefner; beloved son of Goldia Horvath; dear father of Mrs. Dale 0. (Karen N.) Crisp, Nancy C. and Lance V. Hefner; dear brother of PquI E. Hefner; dear grandfather of Steven C. Crisp. Funeral service will be held Saturday, May 17th at 10 a.m. at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Interment in Christian Memorial Estates Cemetery Mr. Hefner will lie RISNER, OTHEL; May 13,1969; 20 East Newport; age 40; beloved daughter of Mrs. Ethel Caudell; dear mother of Vicky; Lyn and Pamela Sue. Risner; I dear sister of Mrs. Loren, (Rudell) Dunigan, Mrs. Bernice Caudell, Mrs. Maxine Kelly, and Mrs. Frank (Doris) j Watts. Funeral service will be held Friday, May 16, at II a m. at the Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home with Rev. Cleon Abbott officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Risner will lie in state at the funeral home (Suggested visiting hours 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.) SWEET, CHARLES W.; May 14, 1969 ; 2646 Binghanton Pontiac Township; age 86; - dear father of Mrs. Richard S. Kibler; dear brother of Mrs. John Geddes and Archie Sweet; a]ao survived by two grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Aubtirn Heights. 7 u iSTEWART, PFC. JOHN W. in state at the funeral home. ,00c ««-i___- May 5, 1969 ; 3285 Melmoor, Commerce Township; age 19; (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) HUDGINS, RAY B.; May 13, I960;—1058 H 01 brook, Waterford Township; age 63; beloved husband of Florence Hudgins; dear father of Mrs. Cecil Strother, Virginia VanDevelder and Arnold Matthrews; dear brother of Mr. Wilburn Hudgins; also survived by five grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, May 16, at 1:30 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in beloved son. of Mrs. Dorothy Stewart and Mr- James Stewart; beloved grandson of Mr. and Mrs. John Mayer Sr.; dear brother of Judy Crawford, James and Jerry Stewart. VFW Memorial service will be tonight, at 8:30 at the Elton Black Funeral Home. Full military service will be Saturday, May 17, at 11 a.m. at the funeral home. Interment in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens. Pfc. Stewart will' lie in state at the funeral home. Dial 334-4981 (Mon. thru fri. 1-5) (Sat, S to 2:30) or 332-8181 (Mon. thru Fri.) From I A.M. TO 5 P M. (Sat. I to 5) Pontiac Press Want Ads t FAS' NOTI ADVERTISERS ADS RECEIVED BY 5 P.M. WILL BE PUBLISHED THE FOLLOWING DAY. ill error* should b* reported Immediately) or no later than the day (allowing publication. If ne notification ef *uch error it made by that time, 'it will be auumed the ad it correct. The Prett assume* no re* t(Sensibility for errors other than to cancel the charges^for foot portion of the first insertion of the advertisement which hat been rendered valueless through the error. The deadline for cancellation ef transient Want Ads is 9 a.m. the day of publication after .the first insertion. When cancellations are mode be sure to get your "KILL NUMBER." Ne adiustments will be given without it. ^ Closing time far advertisements containing type sites larger than regolor agate type is 12 o'clock neon the day p/eviout to publication. CASH WANT AD RATES (when cash accompanies ardor) Lines 1-Day 3-Day* 6-Day* 2 $2.00 $2.57 $ 3.99 3 2.00 3.76 s.ii 4 2.51 4.90 7.52 5 r .. 2.02 5.70 9.12 6 3.76 . 6 84 10.94 7 4.39 7.9$ 12.77 ’ • 5.02 9.1.2 14.59 9 564 10.26, 16.42 10 6.27 11.40 10.24 An additional charge, ef 60 cents, will be made far use ef Pontiac Press Bor numbers. The Pontiac Pro** Classified Department FROM « A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Ptrsonal* 4-f ON AND AFTER THIS date, May lit, 1969, l will n»t ba responsible for debts contracted by any other than myselt. J. W. Beasley, 4024 Athena, Drayton Plaint, Mich, 44020.______________ ON AND after this data; May if, lf69, I will not ba rasponslible for any debts contracted by any other than mytalf. Larry E. Smith, 310 Fernbarry Dr. Pontiac. Michigan 46034. BOX REPLIES At, 10 a.m. today ther* wer* replies at Th* Pres* Office in th* following box**: C-3, C-4, C-6, C-14, C-15, 023, 026, 031, 043, 058, 069, 065. In M*m*riam " 2 IN LOVING MEMORY of our father, John N. Johnson, who passed away a year ago today. May 15, 1968: We miss you, Father, every hour. IN LOVING memory of our son, Dennis Brooks, who passed away May IS, 1964. Treasured thoughts of one so dear Often bring a silent tear; Thoughts return to scenes long pest. Time rolls on, but memories list. There's, a sad but sweet remembrance, There Is a memory fond and true, And a token of affection Denny And a heartache still for you. Sadly missed by Mom end Dad, Kay end Kyle. _______________ Announcement* 3 "AVON CALLING" FOR SERVICE IN YOUR HOME. FE 4-0439. CONFERENCE ROOM, lurt remodeled. Savoy Motel. FE 5-9224. CATEUNG, WEDDING*, PARTIES! etc., rut. rates. Call FE 2-553S or FE 5-4645.___________________ HALL FOR RENT. RECEPTIONS, meetings, parties. FE 6.-0116 alter 6 p.m. HALL FOR RENT. RECEPTIONS, lodges, church. OR 3-5202. FE > lodge Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Hud f,i,nprlf hnmpln fijfj ppqtJrf WILLIAMS, REV. HERNANDO funeral home. (Suggested p n 1969 515 Valen- visitlng hours 3 to 5 and ’ ’____u-i IF YOU-ARE HAVING financial difficulty — Ge to 10 W. Huron — Pontiac, Mich. We ere professional Counselors. It will cost you nothing to mi what we can do. Home calls by Appointment DEBT-AID, Inc. 10 W. Huron FE 2-0101 Licensed 1, Bonded Serving Oakland County LESSONS IN STRIPPING Old paint from furniture. Applications now being .taken for class beg. May 24th. It per person for complete course. 363-9361. Custom Antique Reflnlshlng,_____________ LOSE WEIGHT Mfely with Dex-A> Diet Tablets. Only 96 cents. Slmm's Bros. Drugs.________ Yamaha Music Course Pre-schoolers, open house May 32, at 7:30 p.m. See special classroom and film on Japanese teachings. For Information Call Mr. UlTyman at: SMILEY BROS., MUSIC 119 N. SAGINAW FE 6-4721 Funeral Directors 4 C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOM( Keego Harbor, PH. 662-0200. COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS_______6?4-64tl DONELSON-JOHNS FUNERAL HOME Huntoon FUNERAL HOME ' Serving Pontiac for SO veers >9 Oakland Ave. ■ FE 2-0169 SPARKS-GRIFFIN. FUNERAL HOME ‘ "Thoughtful Service" FE 6-9266 VoorheeG§iple visiting 7 to 9.) MARIONEAUX, MRS. ARBRIA; May 14, 1969; 582 Nevada; age 52; beloved wife of Ernest Marioneaux; dear sister of Mattie Newman, Pearly Stone and Rosie L. Jones. Funeral service will be held Saturday, May 17, at 1 p.m. at the Liberty Baptist Church. Interment in Hen- cia Street; age 94; beloved husband of Rachael Jane Williams. Funeral service will be held Friday, May 16, at ,1 p.m. at the Providence Missionary Baptist Church with Rev. Claude Goodwin officiating. Interment in Oak .Hill Cemetery. Rev. Williams will lie in state at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home after 7 tonight. Cemetery Lots 4-A / 7 OUTSTANDING PROFESSIONAL OFFICE FOR LEASE Located In , I t TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER Adjoining Cunningham’s (400 Sq. Ft Four Private Offices Hi|S a A.; 600 Ft Executive Office. Ram paneled, plash carpeting, the finest in appointments MAY BE INSPECTED f g MONDAY thru FRIDAY ^H~f 3 to 4 P.M. Wigs by Caldaron. Wig partibs. 1 FE 2-7992. WILL THE LADY, WHO talked to thb lady or th* lady who found half toy famalt pood la, at Glanwood't Kmart phont 661-17.31. _________ Lost and Found 5 .ANYONE FINDING A SET of. 1963 Ford car kaya with 16(1 penny, please contact The Pontiac Press. 332-6161, ext. 241. REWARD. LOST: BEIGE PURSE, containing Impor 4429._____________________________ LOST: RE'DDISH brown hound, vicinity of Oxford, Granger and Coats Rd. 623-0865. ________ LOST: COLLIE, gray, black, brown and white, vicinity of Scott Lake. Children's Pat. 673-0357. _ LOST: BROWN PURSE wl Fh “■’Ira Columbia passport. Harwood. 15 Moreland. 4 GRAVE SITES at White Chapel Cemetery In the Garden of Messiah, Call OR 3-4563. FOR SALE: Two Cemetery spaces (1 lot), Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, to settle estate. To view this site contact Manager, Oakland Hills Memorial Gardena.-_ LIVING AWAY — / will Mcriflee graves at White Chapel Cemetery Royal Oak 544-0973. OAKLAND HILLS, 6 choice lots, al or part 8150 each, 1-565-7143. Personals 4-B AARON: IN NEED OF N. 6. Harding, Jefferson, Msdison, Monroe or Vsn Buran. Find I have extras.” Mary, Rt. 4, Box 260; Cadillac, Mich; 49601._.________ IBLEMSI — CALL DEBT CONSULTANTS 338-0333 DO YOU NEED ADVICE? Dial your family Bible. 334-2094, 24 hrs. day HOLIDAY HEALTH SPA mam-bershlp for sale. 6744)022 call between 1 and 7 p.m. ui.w.', Happy », ' I'm glad It's yours and not yet mini, I'd land a card an this your day, But, dear friend, It's more fun THIS way. ______ Mr. & Mrs. Homeowner Do you need financial advice oe repairs, remodeling, paying rea estate taxes, grouping bills, .ate? I you do, call .Mr, Von at 334-3247, • 9-5 dally axcbptSal., :/ 9 U-.r -A.-.-. -r i 'g/: ■-';./ / / ■ . , ; f; * ^Wj * Pontiac Press Wfint Ads ARE FAMOUS FOR | "ACTION"* j&- Phone 334-4981 ji LOST: POODLE, gray top notch and mixture of black, answers to "Missy," raward, 602-6699, 4156 Elii. Laks Rd., vie. M-59 and Airport Rd.______________• __ LOST: YELLOW MALE lull grown cat, has bun missing approx. 2 wks. Vic. of Mark or Dwight St., Pontiac. FE 5-7644 before 9:30 a.m. or attar 9:30 p.m._______________ LOST: TRI-COLORED Coll i a' Answers to Laddla, Raward. 330- 0011, __________________________ LOST: WHEELBARROW, east of Intersection of Commerce and Union Lake Roads. Phone EM 3- 3307. ,__________________ LOST: LARGE BLOND black faced mala Pekingese, vicinity of Judah Lake Sub. Has asthma, must taka medicine. Childs pat. 391-1752. COST: CONTACTS and white case, 611-1671._________________. LOST: 1 sandy colored V4 toy poodle, 6 months, femalt, shaggy dog, vicinity of K-Mart parking lot. Reward. 681-1738. __ SHEPHERD FOUND on Cess-El Iza-beth Lake Rd. 662-4303.___________ Help Wanted Male 6 5 MEN $600-$750 MONTH havt openings for hard workers. Call OR 4-0520 9 a.m.-12 noon Friday on- x 5 Men $600-$750 MONTH Due to expansion and promotions wa have openings for hard workers. Call OR 4-0520 9 a.m. — 12 noon Friday only. 0600 MONTHLY 4 man, 19 or, older to work In recently opened branch. No slack AMBITIOUS YOUNG .. MAN With soma accounting training or expe-rlence to train tor office managers job with local manufacturer. Excellent working conditions and pay scale. Reply Pontiac Press Box C- 54. ~ ___.______' AMBITIOUS YOUNG MAN who wants to work and learn machinery building. Jay Bird Automation. 45360 West Rd., Walled Lake, Mich. ARC WELDERS, 63.53 hr. aheet metal fabricators, 13.36 hr. and esumblers, 83.33 hr. Good working condition! and fringes. Su Gena, at Allen Cooler and Ventilator Inc. 704 Woodward, Rochester, Mich. ACCOUNTANT Experienced Junior and Senior - accountant for expandlnfl North suburban local CPA firm. Diversified practice, educational program, fringe benefits, permanent positions, with. • advancement for flelxble Individuals. Able to assume responsibility. Reply to Pontiac Press Box C-12. Auio PARTS CLERK, must be ex perlenced In selling new and rebuilt auto parts. Full time or weekends. Apply at 271 Baldwin Ave., call 336-4054. A RETIRED MAN. living on social security check, who would Ilka to earn extra money doing part time gardening, handyman, 2 to 3 days a weak, 1-5 p.m. Location .In Bloomfield Twp. Must have own tranop. Call Tl 6-6400, Mr. Marx. AUTOMATIC - CHUCKER operators. All 3 shifts, flood wage, working conditions and fringa benefits. Apply Auburn Heights Mtg. Co., 2481 Leach Rd., Avon Twp., E. of Adams Rd., N. of Auburn Rd. ARE YOU INTERESTED In Personnel Interviewing and tatting? Hava desire and ability to work with people? Wa will train you. Unusual earning potential. Call FE S-9227 Of 447-1110. ________ ASSEMBLERS Electrical wiring and panel experience desirable/ shop working 45 hours, all benefits. THORESON-> McCOSH, 689-4510. AUTO MECHANIC experienced with tools. Fringe benefits, 5 day week, above .average hourly guarantee to right man. Excellent opportunity ‘ for ambitious man. Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth-Rambler - Jeep 425-2435. Ask for Mr. Norton. Auto Clean Up Man With Some Experience to dun angina, exteriors, and interiors, top wagu paid. 4734511________________OL 1-6653 ACCOUNTANT Expanding medium sized C.P.A. firm, with diversified Clientele. The Partners Invitt applicants presently in Industrial or other private Accounting to discuss ’with us. or any member 6f our staff, ., the opportunities In Public. Accounting and specifically In’ our firm. Sand resume to Jant 6, Knight, C.P.A.'s, 1100 N. Woodward, Birmingham, Mich. 48011. Replies will be held In absolute confidence._____' ' ■ BARBER, GOOD Study lob, OR 4- 1191, Aft. 6. _____ BOAT RIGGER, full time work, age It or-older. 335-5660. ____ BUSBOYS for private club, full or part tirrte, good wages and working conditions. Coll any day except Monday, JO 6-7199. BOY SCOUT CAMP needs summer staff men. 1. Waterfront Dlractor, must ba 21 and have current W.S.I, rating. 2. Field Sports Director, mint ba- 21 with N..R.A. Instructor gating and Capable of archary Instruction. 2. Cook's assistant to work under direction of head , cook. Call 334-3300, 9 a.m. te 5 p.m:_________■ business! READER Wa need a man who has the ability to progress and taka on additional responsibility test. To the men who can, we otter 69700 starting salary1 plus Incentive, g r b u p Insurance and retirement. If you fft this description send - a brief resume to personnel Manaagr, Pehtlte Press Box, C-4, Pontiac, j Our employ su know ef this ad. Help Wanted Male * 6 College Men High School, over 18 Ing lor temporary summer work? REGISTER NOW Many openings for unskilled man WE PAY DAILY Apply 4 a.m. to 4 p.m. EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. FERNDALE 2320 Hilton Rd. REDFORD 26617 Grand River CLAWSON 65 S. Main CENTER LINE 1561 E. 10 Mila An Equal Opportunity Employer Not an employment agency_ \ CHIEF SHOP FOREMAN . ’ Setup, train and Instruct on automatic screw machines ! end-related turning end drilling equipment, liberal fringe benefits. Sand resumt with salary requirements Jo Pontlec Press, Box C-20. >n- Equal Opportunity Employer DOORMAN FOR VIC tanny health olub. Birmingham. 447-5800. Ask for Mr. Flru.____________ DRUMMER WANTED — age 18 to 25, experienced In heavy and psychedelic, full time, able to travel. Call Fenton, 629-7140._ DESIGNERS Part • time machine design a n d product development, very interesting work, on exciting new invention. Top pay for top men. Phone MR. HAUPTMAN, 332-0279 or LI 6-7234. DIE MAKER Die repair on small progressive dies, day shift, full or part time. Automatic Prus Products, 165 Elizabeth, Lake Orion. Help Wanted Mala MACHINE OPERATORS Modern factory - and equipment, immediate openings on lathes, grinders, automatic screw machine and production shapers. Will train min with soma experience. Day and afternoon shifts available with p.m. lor appt.__________’___ MECHANIC EXPERIENCED I n outboard motora. Call FE 5-5660. MACHINE SHOP HELPERS — ne experience necessary.-338-9631._ MAN OR WOMAN offset press operator. Watarlord area, good pay and opportunity- to run shop. Phone Bloch, 366-0905. MECHANICS if truckiJ 4l8o In DESIGNERS MALE HELP 6 SPECIAL MACHINE-AUTOMATION Opportunity to become protect Itader. Fringe benefits, overtime, steady year round work. CLYDE CORPORATION 1100 W. Maple Troy __An Equal Opportunity Employer_ . DESIGNERS' DETAILERS—CHECKERS DRAFTING TRAINEES T ools—Dies—Machines Body Fixtures OVERTIME . BENEFITS ' Parliament Design, Inc. 1945 Htldt, Troy_ 6194630 with opportunity for advancement. Apply 175 5. SAGINAW,___ ELDERLY MAN wanted for night guard work. 335-6141. _____ EXPERIENCED oro welders nud-«d, good pay with fringa benefits. Apply McDaniel Tank, 714 N. Saginaw, Holly, Mich._____ EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY for young man with tome drafting training to work In mechanical enginurlng department of North Woodward Corp. In reply please - give resume of education and ex-parlenci. Reply to Box C-.10, Pontiac Press.____ ___ ' __ EXPERIENCED SEMI drivers. Steady local work. Mr. Baltic. 273- 5000. ______ ___________ ENERGETIC MAN T6 SELL water softeners end electric eppl.encet, must ba over 25, havt car, rat., work tvanlngi, salary and commission. Call for appt, FE 4-3574. v FULL TIME SERVICE STATION mechanics and attendants with experience. Good pay. Northwast Suburb. 424-0525.__________ FACTORY HELP RMftetf fo presses, heat traat, and weldar Company pay hospital and doctor Insurance. Apply Camy Corp. 2175 W, Maple, Waited Laka.______ FACTORY WORKERS Needed ' Many lobs requiring No previous exarplence Factory workers, landscapers. Warehousemen, common leborers. REPORT READY FOR WORK. Apply'Oi tfm. to 4 p.m. DAILY PAY EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. FERNDALE 2320 Hilton Rd. REDFORD 24617 Grand River CLAWSON ^ . ■ 45 S. Mein CENTER LINE 0541 E. 10 Mile An Equal Opportunity Employer Not an employment agency FULL TIME DAY COUNTER Control clerk, must be personable, dependable and bondable. Apply In person alter 2 p.m. Walker's Cue Club. 1662 S. Telegraph.___ GRINDER HANDS, experienced In form tool grinding, (toady 58 hour week, ell fringes. 334-4523._ GENERAL HELP I or metals processing plant. No experience necessary. Mature men preferred. Systematlon Inc. 25464 Novi Rd. 349-5230. ________________ GAS STATION'. 11 e n d • n t, experienced. mechanically Inclined, local references, full or part time. Gulf Telegraph & Maple. GRILL MEN For full or part tlmo employment. Good wages, hospitalization, vacation with p*y and other benefits. Apply at: ELIAS BROS. BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph 6, Huron_____ GUARDS FULL AND PART TIM« LOCAL OPENINGS TOP UNION SCALES , CALL COLLECT. 1-56S-4150 INSPECTOR Experienced preferred. Machined parts. Good wages, overtime, 1 fringa benefits, precision Automat-is Parts, 366 S. Blvd; East, Pon-flec. . _ ... I : JEWELRY SALESMEN—RETAIL Creative selling ability required. Permanent position. Cell for Interview, Mr. Nixon, LI 1-8241. MYER'S JEWELRY SHOP ROYAL OAK _________ Cars Ond trucks.1 also helpers. Apply KEEGO SALES 8, SERVICE \30S0 Orchard Lake Rd., Kugo \ 'Harbor, 682-3400. \__ MEN FOR LANDSCAPE ymrta Jacobsens Garden Town, Lk. Orion, Bruco Jacobson. _ MEN FOR LAWN CUTTING business, 473-0797._ MAN~TO LEARN sheot motel trade. Apply 4162 W. Walton, Drayton Plains, r MILL OPERATORS, radial drill operators, table layout man, apply at Personnel Office, Sutter Products. Co., 407 Hodlay St., Holly, Mich. MAN FOR WAREHOUSE ' Must ba good worker, ambitious and steady, Union wages and benefits. This Is a permanent iob for the right man. Apply Mr. Kurzmann, Harold Paper Co., 2737 Adorns Rd., Auburn Haights.__ * MODERN PLASTIC pldnt needs shipping and receiving clerk. Experience helpful. Apply In person American Plastic Products Co., 2701 Maple. Welled Lk. ._______ MACHINIST Small build shop needs all around machine Operator. Good opportunity for advancement. Must have own tools. Coll 336-9631._ Needed at Once I Young, Aggressive Experienced Auto Salesmen! To fill our new car salts stofft who intends to earn top waaas* hospitalization, profit sharing, fringe benefits Including Demo and Bonus I Apply in person only, to Mr. Burmoistor, GRIMALDI BUICK-OPEL, Pontiac, 210 Orchard Lakt. , YOUNG Man drivar routes. Help Wanted Male f. BODY SHOP FOREMAN ' Now ear Dulership Oakland ■ CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakltnd _________FE S-9436 CEMENT FINISHER and , loborOr - wantiad. Col) btt. 6 p.tnT 739-2809. ■ CHECKERS DETAILERS SPECIAL MACHINE-AUTOMATION Opportunity for advancement, fringe benefits, overtime, steady year round work. CLYDE CORPORATION ' 1600 W. Maple . Troy An Equal Opportunity Employer <-CLEAN-UP AAAN needed. Good pay tar dependable Mrson. Apply In pereen, Blue Sky Drlve-ln Theater. CREDIT INVESTIGATOR, must be high’school graduate,' must have. . own ear, JO t-1514. -W, C A AFENt#**, ' EXPERIENCES only, 6MM4D4, bat. »-S p.m. 1 \ co6ks wanted, afternoon shift. Apply 114 Orchard Lake Ave. tap wages, paid Blu* Cross, lit* ' tneuranca, tick time and .vacation P*y. ■- ' y : CARPENTERS AND HELPERS 473-1501 LATHE OPERATORS VERTICLE MILL HANDS JOURNEYMAN TOOLMAKERS WELDERS Excellent rates and benefits. APPLY TO -ARTCO INC. 1020 Indlanwood Rd. Lokt Orion LAWN MAINTENANCE MAN, 11-30 years old to .run Locke mower, . must be dependable. 662-0191. LICENSED REAL ESTATf , SALESMEN WITH PURCHASING EXPERIENCE Call Mr. Gurga at Ray Real Estate_________476-1131 MAN WANTEO TO operatt auto wash. Hours — 7:30 o.m. to S p.m. 6 days a wuk. Starting pav fi60 par wk. Paid vacation plua bonus. Apply, In person only—Big Barney Auto Wash, Keeao Harbor, MANAGER AND MANAGER trainee, full and pert time Attendants. for Koyo Service (Stations, rapid promotions for right men. Contact: Mr. Gardner at 425 Orchard Lake Rd., er call 131-7709 or 33jHhUM or contact Mr. Mura 'management TRAINEE ~ 7 $600-$750 MONTH No experience necessary. If you qualify we will train. Excellent benefits. Cat! Mr. Taylor, 474-0520. ? a,.mt.-12 noon Friday only._ ’ . MANAGEMENT TRAINEE Mechanically Inclined, personable, Individual- needed tar fast growing ’ middle sized company. 2 yrs. college or equivalent, salary com--mtnsurate With txperlenco end ability. Call Mr. Nlcbolls at 349-. 1 or apply In barton, Ryles fustries Inc., 26990 Wixom Rd., tom, Mich. An equal opportunity ployer. \ v ______ v MANAGEMENT TRAINEE $600-$750 MONTH Nb experience nocOttiry.. If you qualify we will train. Excellent benefits. Coll Mr. Taylor 674-0520 9 o.m. — 12 noon Friday only. NEAT APPEARING between 19-25 years salesman, on established _ Salary plus commission. Call attar 5, >87-4463 or 363-5729. NATIONAL CORPORATION It liow accepting applications for full summer employment In PONTIAC OFFICE- Prefer men who art athletic or politically minded. Must ’ be Intelligent, sharp, have neat appearance, and be over 16 yurt old. Salary 63.60 por hour For personal Interview In Detroit Call Mr. Backer at 963-0086 _____From 9-1 p.m. NEEDED AT ONCE for permanent position, 2 men, 1 heating and air conditioning man and 1 plumber, would consider 1 apprentice, good Pay, paid vacations, ale: Must ba honest and have good driving record, cell 7-9 p.m.. 693-6567, NIGHT MANAGER Must be experienced In fry cooking, top wages, fringe benefits. Blue Cross, apply In person. Steak and Egg, 539S Dixie Hwy., Waterford._____ ______ OPENINGS FOR COLLEGE'students for light manufacturing plant. Apply Birmingham Hydraulics, 1671 E. Maple, Troy, Mich.__ 6PPORTUNITY. NATURE center near Pontiac needs caretaker. Salary plus residence. Write Box 292, Drayton Plains 46020. Give personal rets, end quelltlcatlons. “OFFICE BOYS. ADVERTISING AGENCY North Woodward area. Immediate openings fpr full time, permanent office boys. Fine opportunities tor advancement. A good driving - record required. C6II Ml 4-1000. personnel. ’ AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER __ PARTS DRIVER 18 to 40 yrs. old. Must have good driving record, neat, honest, end willing t6 learn parts business’. 6V, days. Contact Bill Spain, 684-1025, Van Camp Chevrolet, Milford. PLANNING AID i ' CITY OF TROY 84,500-87,300 Work In all phasti of city planning. Excellent opportunity tor on the |ob training. No previous planning experience required. Must be a nigh school graduate and have drafting axperlanct. Apply to Personnel department, 500 w. Big Beaver Rd., Troy. 689-4900. Produce help wanted, fun time. Apply - Food Town. 7400 Highland Rd. (M-59) Plaza. ___ PRODUCTION WORKERS You can make e good living hare. Bonus, ovartlmt, company paid banafits. Variety of lobs. Shifts from 1-4. 4-12, 12-8. Cast layoff ovtr 10 yrs. ago. MICHIGAN SEAMLESS TUBE CO. 400 Wm.'Jt. McMunn St. South Lyon, Michigan _ An equal opportunity employer POSITION WITH A FUTURE If .. . you are 20-30 years old ond you are Interested in a secure future with rapidly expending national organization ... If ... you ore mechanically Inclined end Interested In clean diversified mechanical work ... If ... you have a high school diploma and you art willing to apply your salt to secure , your future . . If .| „ you havt thou qualifications and yw are interested In discussing your future with us ... CALL MR. HOUSE PITNEY BOWES INC. SERVICE MANAGER 335-6134 An Equal Opportunity Employer AN FOR REAL ESTATE EXPERIENCED MEN ^ BUSY, BUSY OFFICfS. GUARANTEED DRAW MEMBERS OF MLS BUILDING PROGRAM PAID INSURANCE AND OTHER BENEFITS FOR CONFIDENTIAL INTERVIEW CALL Mr. Cross at 674-3107 SERVICE STATION MANA- GER, $8,000 PER YEAR PLUS COMMISSION. MARRIED. SHOULD BE EXPERIENCED AND WILLING TO TAKE RESPONSIBILITY, ALSO MECHANICAL AND TIRE SELLING EXPERIENCE. HOWARD'S SOUTH SHELL, LONG LAKE AND TELEGRAPH ROADS, BLOOMFIELD HILLS.___________ STUDENTS Need a part lima lob? With houra to suit your schedule. Cell Mr. Roedel, 335-6444, bet. 9 end 11 a.m. end 2 to 5 p.m.___________ SALESMEN TO COVER Oakland Cojinty railing a business asrvlct. Excellent pay, ■! Age no barrier. Neatness required. 474-2312._ SECURITY GUARDS Pinkerton's INC. needs men both full and part-time for work as guards In the Pontiac aru. Good fringes, uniform! furnished. To qualify, 21 yrs. or older, clear background, mult htvt outo and telephone. A representative will Interview Friday May 16th at M.E.S.C. office, 242 Oakland, Pontiac. 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. An equal opportunity employer, SERVICE STATION mechanic. Birmingham area, experienced young man with own tools preferred. Will earn $175 per wk. Blue Cross, bonus, paid vacations. Contact Mr. Beardsley, Mon.-Frl. 647- 2124. '___________________ SERVICE STATION attendant, third shift. Apply In person, Jim's Tel-Square, corner of Square Lake end Telegraph. _ Salesmen Wa hava caraar opportunists for man axparlancad In tha following • departments: Building Materials Tires Shoes TV - Stereo Theta are well paying positions with opportunities for advancement. Excellent company benefits Including profit sharing. Apply PERSONNEL DEPT. 2ND FLOOR Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL An equal opportunity employer_ SERVICE STATION attendant — lull er part time, morning, experienced. Welled Lake area 624-3664,____________ - \ Southwestern oaklan6 county school district needs custodians. For Information call personnel ot-lice 685-1531 Ext. 55. SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT, full time, 82.25 per hr. Experienced. Pert time $2.15 per hr. Telegraph end Long Lk. Rd.___ Service Technician In alectronlc field, 3 ta 5 yrs. experience on TV or commarclal equipment repair, soma solid state txp. desired. TRAINEES k burglar alarm repair and Installers, basic electrical er electronic background must be bondable, good starting rate. Mechanical-Technical 3 to S yrs. practical axp., mutt ba , diversified In all phases of mechamcai work, soma electrical axp. desired. Equal opportunity employer. Reply Pontiac Press Box C-30.____________________ SECURITY GUARDS FULL AND PART TIME 5 p.m. to 1 a.m. Mon.-Frl. Set. and Sun., 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. All Inside work. Pontiac area. Cell collect, 443-7180._ Truck DRIVER, LOCAL, experienced In furniture,' House efr Bedrooms. 334-4593._________ TURRET LATHE OPERATOR - STEEL SAW OPERATOR A DRILL PRESS OPERATOR Needed for fast growing middle sized company. Top rates, all fringes, steady notueasonel employment. Contact Mr. Nlchells between 8 a.m. and S p.m.. at: PYJ.ES INDUSTRIES 28990 Wixom Rd. ' Wixom, Michigan 48098 Wa art an aqual opportunity ____________employer_________ PARTS TRUCK DR IVER and parti helper. , Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oekklend ________ FE 5-9434 ~ PUBLIC SAFETY OFFICER Oqkland University has several excellent openings far experienced men In the field public safety end security. Liberal fringe benefits end an excellent opportunity for advancement are available. Apply, to Personnel Office. Squirrel end Walton Rds. Rochester. Mlgh. or Phone 330-7211. Ext. 2024. EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Help Wantid MbIb WE ARJI LOOKING FOR AM Experienced Uttd Car -V Salesman > ' Who Intends to make 115,000 or .better a yurt An experienced salesman who n willing ta work, and daalrao . to Incrura his ggrnlngt, can quality for this position, selling used cart In a 1 modern, progressiva Q M dealership. Many fringa bonatlts, including hospitalization, profit sharing plan. Damo and vacation, su Tommy Thompson. Used Car Dapt. at Shelton Pontlac-Buick-Opel, 655 S. Rochastor Rd., Rochtttorl ____________ WANTED: MEN 45 to SS vaara eld (or porter work. Day and evening shifts. Apply after 4 p.m. Big Boy Restaurant. 2490 Dixie Hwy. ■ WALL CLEANING HELPER, Dalton Carpet Cleaners, 471 Orchard Lk. Rd. FE 5-6111. \ » WANTED CUSTODIAN W nigh) shift — Rochester aru, good day and working conditions, paid Blue Cross Ins., Must be dependable. Call 1-821-9280. Weekdays, 9.5 p.m. YOUNG BARBER WANTED, full . time or part time, Rochtstar-UHca area. Call UL 2-4929, aft.i6:30. YOUNGER MAN for furniture store, sales axperlanca helpful, steady, good salary- Little Joe's. FE 2-4842.____________ Htlp Wantid F*mol« 7 1 WAITRESS,' DAYS, Lunch er full time, axparlancad. Apply Ricky'a 819 Woodward._________________ A BAR IN LAKE ORION nudl waitress, nights, full time, also part time. MY 3-1701. ARE YOU BETWEEN tha ago of 2* end 35, can type accurately, make a nice appearance, and wouldn't obiect to soma evening work? If so, a wonderful future awalta you as an optical assistant. 682-Hlli APPLICATIONS NOW being taken for counter girls. Apply De-Nut Center, 29 N. Saginaw St. ARE YOU INTERESTED In Person-ntl Interviewing and testing? Hava desire and ability to work with people? We will train you. Unusual taming potential. Call FE 5-9227 or 447-8880.____ , A WOMAN FOR general office work, pleasant surroundings with congenial people. Typing required. Write Post Office Box 65, Pontiac giving complete Information. A LADY, 25 or over, switchboard. we train, 2nd shift available. Must . be high school graduate and able to speel, write lleglbly and rapidly. Fringe benefits, rotate Sunday and holidays. Call between ,9 a.m. and 3 p.m. Mon. through Frl. FE 4-2541.______;____________ 1 BELINE STYLIST tarns profit plus wardrobe. 474-0727, Alteration Fitter Experltnced woman, Interesting work, plaasant working conditions, Insurance and employe# discount and other benefits. Arthur's 40 N. Saginaw St. TRUCK DRIVER EXPERIENCED. MUST KNOW DETROIT AND SUBURBS, STEADY JOB WITH UNION WAGES AND BENEFITS. APPLY. MR. KURZMANN, HAR-OLD PAPER CO., 2737 ADAMS RD., AUBURN HEIGHTS._________ / PARTS CLERK . Must -be able te Work any ahlft, axparlancad / preferred but not necessary. KEEGO SALES I, SERVICE, soso Orchard Lakp, Kaage Harbor, rat-3400. RESTAURANT M A N A G ER , wanted, wages eptn. Reply to Bex C-3/ Pontiac, Michigan. REAL ESTATE SALES MANAGER, Capable ef managing 15 or morb salesman. In Lake Orlen of Lapeer office, good position. Cell Charles 'Mills et Mint Reel Estate. 693-8371 er Lapeer [ 664-9418. ___ REAL ESTATE SALESMEN • Commercial, Investment end business opportunities. We ere in need of a , high caliber sales representative, preferably licensed now In rul estate but not necesurv. We have our own training program. Also, over Two Hundred Million Dollars m\' listings \\ throughout state; Members of Wthe onlvv residential multiple __________ MBM i Publishers of -the \Mlchloan Business, Guide. Mi Inqlriet strictly' p$&\ fideqtial. Aik ta? Ward E, Partridge . or Archie Giles, ION) W. Huron- St., Phono 681-2111. x . RETIRED TOOL MAKERS, die makers, machinists. Pert or full tlmo. 10 W; Huron. ; WANTED cars with Grimaldi _____ Orchard Lk, Rd. (Apply In person only) See Mr. Henry Schleefer. experience, Buick-Opel, 210 ACCOUNTING CLERK ADVERTISING AGENCY North Woodward area. Light billing desirable but will train for an interesting and diversified position with International firm. Cali Ml 6-tooo, parsonnal. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY __________EMPLOYER'________ “ ALVIN'S OF PONTIAC Has positions available for ax-parlencad salu ladles, department haads and maid. 192 W. Huron, Pontiac Michigan. BABY SITTING for 2W yr. old boy. Days. From 1-4:30. Call FE 4-6925 between 4:40-8 p.m. BABY SITTER WANTED, Welled Lake area, own transportation, rets. 424-5961 alt. 4 O.m. BABY SITTING end 11B h» housokuping, 9 year old boy, S days, 7:15-5:15, own transportation, Btelby St., rat. required, S25. OR 3-2388.____________ BABY SITTER. 4Va days. Otter Lake area, after 5 p.m. call 611-0725. BABY SITTER wanted at my home from 8-4:30' p.m. 3 pre-school children. Own transportation mad- ad. Call 334-5546, aft, p.m.______ BABYSITTER, Must live In. ___________Call 601-2720 BEAUTY OPERATOR, full working conditions. tlmo. Lake BARMAID, steady or part time, will train, Moray's Golf l» Country Club, 2280 Union Lika Rd. TRUCK DRIVER and Operator, 893-2801 between 9 t.m.-4 p.Try USED AUTO PARTS Experienced yard man and cutters wanted. Full or part tlmo Work. Top wages. Benefits. Good working conditions. 6730 16 Milo Rd., between Van Dyke and Mound Rd. ____________ WATER MAINTENANCE operator for. tha Southeastern Oakland Co. Water Authority. High school graduate with aptitude tor mechanical and electrical. work. Salary range S3.45 to $136 par hour. Full benefits Including paid vacation and holidays, tick time and Insurance. Apply Authority Offlca, 3910 W. Wobstor,. Royal Oak. _ [__ ' •QRTER for used WAREHOUSE MAN For building supply company. Good working conditions. Opportunity for advancement. Apply 563 N. Saginaw, Pontiac. WANTED: Tha best collector in the Pontiac arts. Call Mr. Hertzfeld at 363-6311. BARMAID, DAYS, tall and part-time, call 623-0236 for appointment. BEAUTICIAN. EXPERIENCED, pari time and full time. 691S2S4. -Seauty operator want ad, Juanita's Beauty Shop talon, FE 2-2836.______________________ beautician wanted part time. Experience preferred. 661-0551. BEAUTICIAN NEEDED,, tall or part time, excellent opportunlttu, with or without clientele. Beauto Bouti-gue, Drayton Plains, 676-0226._ BOOKKEEPER, EXPERIENtib preferred, will consider trainee or part time: 6129 Highland Rd. BEAUTY OPERATOR. Full time. Bloomfield area. Guaranteed and commission. 626-2270. BOOKKEEPER — EXPERIENCED Junior High School, needed Immediately. CPU 674-0444, Mr Fuller. Waterford Twp. Schools. BEAUTY OPERATOR, Albert's Beauty Salon, 662-7326, also new Albert's Union Lako Salon._ BAKERY SALESWOMAN, FULL time, no evenings or Sun. Good pay. Anderson Bakery, 124 W. 14 Mlit. Birmingham. Ml 6-7114. BAGGER FOR DRY cleaning plant. No experience necessary Birmingham Cleaners. 1253 S. Wood-ward. Ml 6J6ML ______ /- . ‘ COOK DAY OR NIGHT SHIFT IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Willing to train, top rata of pay during training period. 5 day work week with overtime available. Free Blue Cross, Ufa Insurance^ tick pay, pension, vacation and holiday pay. Apply in parson. TED'S i BLOOMFIELD HILLS CLERK-TYPIST For general office work, booking and stenographic a x p a r Ian c a_ helpful, salary experience and ability, liberal fringe benefit^. Call Mr. Nlcholia 349-55C0 or apply In person: PYLES INDUSTRIES ' 26990 Wixom Rd. wixom, Michigan 48096 . Na era an equal opportunity . ■ employer________ ^CLERIC TYPIST . . GENERAL CLERICAL SECRETARY Call Mrs: Bishop Ml Gleaner Life Insurance Society, 1600 N. woodward. Birmingham. H*lp Wantid Mai* H*lp Wanted Mala Of \the. onlyV non? listing service. Machine Operators And Train*** For ^ I -LATHES.,'|r !f| MILLS :;V GRINDERS Lynd Gear Inc.-„ Subsidiary of Condec Corporation Pbom 6514377 V V v 361 SOUTH STRBEtv ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN Aa equal opportunity employer V’ D—12 tHE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 13, 1069 For Want AdSi Dial,334-4981 Mp Wanted Famala MilNO LAD til. ALSO jwrmlngham, car fMiLb ^flfiT VibUsEklttPiNO live hk other >et In the houte^to^weoee, niutf have good Cocktail waitresses, Morey/s Golf and Country Club. 2200 Union Lake M. ir COUNTER GIRL for dry cleenlm plant. Experience preferred but nol essential. Will train If neceaaary. Full time only. Paid holldaya and vacatlona. Apply Oouglea Cleaners, 900 N. Woodward, Birmingham. CASHIER Full time work. Night ahlft. Company benefits. Apply In person. ELIAS BROS. Telegraph A Huron CLERK-TYPIST RAblO-TV ADVERTISING AGENCY North Woodward area; Will train for ...Interesting, and challenging position In radlo-TV. Call Ml 6-1000, Personnel. An Equal Op-portunlty Employer. DRY CLEANERS counter girl, of our present get married, even though sha loves her |ob, phone FE 5-1668. Doctor's assistant, experienced. Walled Lake area: 40 hr. wk. 2 evenings. Good salary. Ph. *24-45-11 bOCTOR'S OFFICE In Pontiac needs TIN, LPN or medical assistant, <82-5513. Hslp Wanted Famala MEDICAL ASSISTANT, full time Beaumont area, mutt be ex. perienced, Type and have good knowledge of all Insurance form*. Call before * p7m. S52-3271. NEED EXTRA INCOME? Work days, evenings or taka order where you work. Sat your1 hours; Help Wantod Famala WAITRESS WANTED TO work restaurant and , lounge, evenings. Hourly rale plus tips, for further nuuny ni* pun nm* rar Information call UL 2-3410. WHOLESALE COMPANY WANTS CLERICAL POSITION. ABILITY TO WORK WITH FIGURES AND TAKE PHONE ORDERS . ESSENTIAL. AVERAGE TYPING ACCEPTABLE. THIS IS A PERMANENT POSITION PLEASANT SURROUNDINGS ______ OPPORTUNITY FOR AD- be reliable.1V A N C E M E N T APPLY MR. NURSES AIDESJ Must_______________UGHH _ _ ---. .... P.M. shift. Experienced preferred KURZMANN, HAROLD PAPER CO., but not necessary. Evergreen 2737 ADAMS RD„ A U’BURN Convalescent Home. 334-3224. i HEIGHTS. NURSES RNs end LPNs ALL SHIFTS \ Modern well-equipped nursing center. Above average salary and fringe benefits. Contact Director of Nursing, Bloomfield Nursing Center, 338-0345._______________ NURSE FOR DOCTORS office near Pontiac General, non-smoker, state age etc. Apply to Pont(pc Box C- 13. NATIONAL CORPORATION Is now accepting applications for full time summer employment In Its PONTIAC OFFICE. Must be neat appearing, be able to converse Intelligently end be over II years old. Salary $3.40 per hour For personal Interview In Detroit Call Mr. Becker at 9*3-0068 9-1 p.m. bfPARTMENT HEAD and waitress. OFFICE NURSE FOR physician, *1.45 per nr. to start, tull time, yr. old min., no experience! necessary. Blua Cross, Life Insurance, paid vacation, profit; sharing, many other benefits. S. S. Kresge, PontlSc Mall, contact Mrs. Kee. replies to Include person data, efs., and experiences. Reply td Box C-59, Pontiac, Michigan. 0. R. TECHNICIANS DOMESTIC LIVE IN, age 18 to 25, references required, care of 4 and „_ 2 year old, salary negotiable. Call Joan Moore at *74-223* before p.m. Experienced typist, *o wpm, mature woman preferred for law firm at Troy-Birmlngham area. 37VS hour week, *89-2300. __. Experienced waitress nights, full time, Mitch's Bar and Restaurant, 682-1616.___ Experienced shirt finisher; automatic equipment. Modern dry cleaning plant. Top wages. 626-0004. Experienced waitress for weekend work, call *51-1500, ask for Club House._______________ Experienced bookkeeper, up to trial balance, full or part time. Call 481-2500. ___________ ______ FILLER FOR wall established retail office supplier, Interesting work 40 hrs. per week. Some overtime possible, several fringe benefits. Call 335-92*1. OAKLAND UNIVERSITY. Immediate openings are now available for experienced clerical personnel. Typing Is required, shorthand is desired. There opportunities offer a tine working atmosphere with a growing university. Apply to the Personnel Office, Squirrel and Walton Rds., Rochester, Mich, or phone 338-7211 Ext. 2024. An Equal Opportunity Employer Help Wanted M. or F. I LARGE CORPORATION NOW HIRING Young Man and Woman For position! In the advertising field. Must be personable, neat appearing, ambitious, and 10-26 yrs. of age. Full tlma in summer employment. P o s I t\l o n s flow available. Call Mr. Wetars, for a.m.* personal Intatvlaw. 9:30 p.m. 335-4S44. NIGHT Work Wantad Malt 11 HOU$E FAINTING In or out. Call Solomon Pittman, 33S-0S2*. housE painting, light hauling odd lobs. 335-1833 or 332-53*4. LAWN WORK 335-982* or 333*05*. and painting. LIGHT HAULING or delivery by hour or |ob. call attar 4 p.m. 332-' Wat. I 4800. Anhut, Botsford Inn. GR WOMAN TO LIVE In with elderly couple, light housework, good plain waimASl 7442 r00m an? oood 15 YOUR INCOME-Adoquata? Cap _waget. *5'-7»«7.__________________ Mr. Foley, YORK REAL ESTATE. WOMEN NEEDED FOR full time OR 44)3*3. _______ rKkr.£!!E.,X. an**! PEOPLE WHO WANT to got Into . Auditor. Must b.v. mont available on grounds. Contact Wantad Raal Estate Wantad Raal Estata 36 BEHIND IN PAYMENTS? today, Aeotit7*7is-4io 1 dAy CASH FOR YOUR HOUSE OR LOT NO COST TO SELL FAST FRIENDLY SERVICE Aaron Mtg. & Invest'. Co. __________ 3351U4 CASHI H BBiriF—K65T«-iBS FOR Y0UR PROPERTY 4- SMALL JOBS, ®RICK, Wocks end Rs,dy to move, retire, or lose your stone, S5 per hour. Speclellies In property. "Coll us tor feat cash. |i chimneys, and porches. *25-2751. HAVING HOMES TO SHOW Is , W qualification of the raal rnfata firm Wu deal with when listing your home. As one of the F«w*C srs*s most active raal •atata firths, O'Nall Realty Is - capable of eftaring It'a many huyors many different homed from which to ehooseet any given tlma, An "O'Nall Sold Mint" algn, can Dry Cteaners 540 S. Telegraph. WAITRESSES FOR day and1 night shifts. Apply In person Blue Star business for themselves, on a\Mit time basis' Call 338-1229. 4 ,gJg™?L»"9_.»”8lSCH66L BUS DRIVERS wonted, full opdyka and Pontiac 0r part time, Bloomfield HIKS ___________ ■ Public Schools, coll Mr. Thomas, WANTED: LADY FOR AFTER-NOON CAFETERIA WORK. $1.40 AN HOUR, PAID VACATIONS AND HOLIDAYS, 2:30-11:00 P.M. IF INTERESTED CALL FE 2-2*3*. WOMAN FOR general office work for General Ambulance. Apply In WOMEN WITH AMBITION and enthusiasm who won't oblect to •ernlng a largo Income and art willing to work tor It. Contact tha Sore Coventry manager at *23-0429 WE need A mature saleslady that ortloys selling fine clothes and gift Items. Please call for appt. Flora Mae Shop, FE 2-3220. WOMEN WORK automatic Sailboats. Inc. 1*49 E. Hamlin Rd Rochester. FOR PRODUCTION days, good pay with raise. Apply A v o n 332-0*82, bet. 9 a.m. and S p.m. WE NEEO 10 PEOPLE In this area now, to call on homos and businesses. You can make 82.00 Pjroflt on a fast S4.00 sale, wa show you how. Mr. Karas, 1701 Delaware, Flint 4850*. Phone CE 5-2050. 8-A Salas Help Male-Female APPRAISERS SALESMEN TRAINEES. STUDENTS TO do house painting Interior and exterior. Call Bob 331 1421 or Ron *73-41 IS ott. 5 p.m. Work Wantad 'Famala 12 Building Servicei*SuppNet,13 M. A BENSON COMPANY Lumber and Builders Supplies 549 N. Saginaw PHONE: 334-2521 OPEN I to 5 — Saturdays to 12 LOW OVERHEAD cash and Carry prices PERSONALIZED SERVICE FOR OVER 47 YEARS ALWAYS MORE FOR 'LESS SKILL SAWS, 4VV* ..... 133.95 WE WANT experienced women to sell real estato. For more Information contact Mr. George at 674-1131. WOM^N WITH BOOKKEEPING background and experience with accounting machine. Immediate position. Call FE 2-9251 ond ask tor Don. V - WAITRESSES PART TIME—full time weekends —you nemo It—we need YOU I Company benefits. Feld vacation. Apply In person— ELIAS BROS. BIG BOY RESTAURANT ______Telegraph & Huron____ EXPERIENCED SHORT order cook, apply In person, C I a1 Restaurant, 1300 N. Perry OFFICE GIRL 30 to 45, single, some bookkeeping, neat, competent, fair typing, good: spelling, and steady. Cooley Soft Water Co. 214 W. Walton Blvd.j Apply in pdrson. WOMEN 18-30 Again, duo to expansion Roy Real Estate needs qualified help. No! experience^ Is necessary, all you skill SABRE SAW need to be Is aggressive personable and want to ba professional. Here Is what we offer to our people 1. Profit Shoring’ 2. Paid Hospitalization 3. Paid Lift Insurance 4. Paid Vocations 5. Free Training 4 .Bonus Plans 7. Guaranteed Salary I. Monthly Contest Prlits 9. Free Supplies 10. Potential of $12,000 120,000 your first year II. 11 Offices to work from 12. Advancement 829.95 . 13.75 W x 8 rtd wood, Dallyvardon Siding, par 100' ........... Railroad cross tla, at yard Cedar post 7'xl" top, only Cadar post I'x4" top, only-. ... 95c ..$1.35 Cedar post 8*x*"gtop, only .82.30 Business Service 15 All you. need Is desire and em-i-bltlon. It yeu ere looking for a 5-day PORTABLE Full time work, our office, 5W week, this Isn't itl Success Is days, telephone experience measured by e*fort. Think you necessary, salary and commission qualify?- Call Mr. George for con- InnHernnitin end initiative for a good worker ifidentlal interview today. *74-1131. Phono Shirley Yater, *25-5000.---------------------- X-RAY TECHNICIAN, private POSITION AVAILABLE IN payroll I orthopedic office. Details 338-7115. DOG runs and fence repairs, Ron's Fencing Servlet, *81-1847. Ask tor owner. WM.” MILLER, REALTY 332-0242 Divorce—Foreclosure? Don't lost your homo \ - ‘ ralsal. —Coll us for free appro____ *74-0319 ' \ Laulnear , <73-21*1 Is i \0< ELDERLY COUPLE NEEDS homo mar Mall. Cash. Agent, 338-495% *74-1*49. , HAVE A CASH BUYER for o small homa In Pontiac North of Wilton. Will pay up to $13,000. Ask for Eorl Howard at O'Nall Realty. *76 2222 or 3*3-0531. HANDYMAN WILL BUY house* that need malor or minor repairs. Will pay cash. Call my agant, *11-07**. HOME..in oaklaWd COUNTY. CALL AGENT, *74-1*98 or 3364952._____J COUPLE WITH S5/000 down doslrts 3-bedroom home' In Waterford area. Agent OR 4-1*49. 338-4943. Wanted Real Estate 36 INVESTOR - BUYING HOAb IN Oakland County to rant. Oat more cash. Call my agant, *81-074* I Will - YOUR HOUSE ANYWHERE, ANY CONOITON,' NO POINTS, NO COMMISSION ' CASH NOW MOVE LATER ' Cash Investment Company 333-7824' LOVELAND Factory Built Homes , Are Coming! SELL YOUR HOME NOW WHILE TrlE MARKET IS STILL HIGH, LAUJNGER <74-8319 *73-21*1 LES BROWN REALTY 681-1144 Ranted Baal lift* , 16 LOTS WANTED Z BUILDING LOTS WITH iOWBR AND WATBRIN IK)NTIAC.5^LL DICK VALUET — FE 4-3531. PAYS - LISTING WANTED We nood listings In the Kesgo Harbor area. For quick service op selling your homo please call Leona Loveland, Realtor 2100 Cass Lak* Rd. *82-1255 LOTS WANTED 50 ft. or longer, any location. Cash buyars ... ff YORK 674-0363 LOTS - WANTED IN PONTIAC Immediate closing. REAL VALUR REALY, <42-4220._____________m PRIVATE PARTY HAS caslf for equity tor older home In Auburn Heights, Keago Harbor o if Rochester areas. 334-0742. FOR •: HOMES ALL CASH IN 48 HOURS WE ACCEPT 30 DAY LISTINGS GUARANTEED SALE 674-4101 4512 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON Aluminum Bldg. Items ALUMINUM SIDING, STORMS screens, gutters, shutters, Mont- ogomery & Sons, 674-3171. EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES and hostesses , wanted. Excellent tips, good working conditions. Blue Cross. Apply in person. Harvoy's Colonial Housa, 589* Dixie Hwy., Waterford. FULL TIME, QUICK, mature woman tor shop work. Apply General Lock, 244 W, Sheffield, bet. 9 i.m. and 10 a.m. only, FULL TIME KITCHEN help, eves, and days, Rocco's, 5171 Dixit Hwy. Drayton Plains. 6RILL COOK, DRAYTON A&W, 4355 Dixit Hwy.______________ GRILL COOK Good hours and pay. Experience not necessary. Ail benefits, closed Sunday. Pied Piper Restaurant. 4370 Highland Rd., General office requiring machine. Liberal salary and fringe benefits. For Southwestern Oakland county school district. For Information call personnel office MS-1531 Ext. 55. PRIVATE SECRETARY, shorthand, typing required, exc. fringe benefits, Apply at Artco Inc., 3020 Indlanwood Rd., Lake Orion,_ PIZZA COOK Afternoons, no Sunday, all benefits, Pied Piper, 4370 Highland Rd. PUNCH PRESS OPERATORS ARE YOU READY for the future? Call Mr. Folty, YORK REAL ESTATE, OR 4-03*3. ASSISTANT MANAGER, John R. Lumber Co., 7940 Cooley Lake Rd., ARE YOU REALLY LIVING? Or lust existing? _ Call_____Mr. Foley, -YORK REAL ESTATE *74-03*3. ATTENTION COLLEGE STUDENTS $140 weak—Afternoon hours Ceil Mr. Long, 332-3826, before 1 p.m ARE Can You Sell? If so, wo hove Immediate opening for two real estate sales peoplo. Interested In making money. Ex-parlance helpful, but not necessary Will train, plenty of leads and floor time and attractive commission schedule. For Interview, call Mr. Taylor, OR 4-030* Eves. EM 3-754*. 18-A SOD, SHRUBS AND trees, planting, spraying, fertilizing, trimming, repair removal. 728-7047 collect 343-7295-Milford Garden PJowiag 18-B GARDEN PLOWING and yard grading,’ ready for sod or ttad. Reas. OR 3-8048. • TRACTOR WORK, vicinity of S. Blvd. and Westwoy, Troy. 879-90M. "A REAL ESTATE EXPLOSION" We hava a future for you In tho Real Estato field that will yield you earnlhgs unlimited. We will consider lull dr part time men provided you meet our qualifications. Wo will HAULING, MOVING or rental. 2 ton teach you gw— ** - - ........ Moving and Trucking 22 Typist, good phone voice essential. Mrs. Zetye, Ml 7-1300. Chudik's of Birm. WOMEN NEEDED FOR ’ AFTERNOON SHIFT Previous experience needed. Apply * a.m. to * p.m. YOU IN A Rut1? Call Mr. ^oley. YORK REAL ESTATE, OR £363.______________ AID- GENERAL OFFICE, EXPERIENCE, mature, must have drivers license. 642-7900. _____ EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. ACCOUNTANT, EXPANDING ; counting firm needs person capable of handling all phases of accounting, from trial balance to financial statements. 673-6911. this exciting field necessary. Bonus arrangement. WARREN STOUT, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 1 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. ____FE 5-0145 SIDING ALUM. VINYL AND ASBESTOS AWNING-PATIOS SCREENED-IN or GLASS ENCLOSED EAVES TR0UGHING Continued Seamless eavestroughlng. We Bring Factory to You. FAST SERVICE — QUALITY WORK — TERMS CALL NOW — DAY O R NIGHT—*11-2500—TERMS DEALER-ASK FOR BOB OR RED Atauiiaooi Siding SAVOIE INSULATION Frqo Estimates _____ <25-2*01 Antenna Service BIRCHETT ANTENNA SERVICE Also repolr. 338-3274.__________________ Asphalt Paving Cement Work CEMENT WORK All typos: drlvas, walks, floors, patios, brick and block work, guoranteed. No lob too largo or small. 427-3047. . CEMENT WORK, drives, patios, porches, etc. Licensed and bonded. Phone Pontiac, 391-351*. CEMENT OR STONE seawalls rein-forced with Iron rod.. 3*3*004. COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL and rosldontlal brick and coment work, cement Work. GUINN'S CONST. CO. 334-7*77 or 391-2*71 walls, CONCRETE FOOTINGS, walls, flat work and masonry, 851*19*4 or *24-3587. GENERAL OFFICE, retail iewelry store. Immediate opening. Experience helpful to handle functions cashier, credit duties, "~1-* *5 5. Mein Clawson An Equal Opportunity Employer Not an employment agency. typing and bookkeeping Permanent position. 5 day week. Ilaht1 PAYROLL CLERK, danaruian) r* 2-2501. >IRL WANTED, neat appearing, no experience necessary, must ba aggressive. Bargain Center Markets, Apply Wed. and Frl. 74 N. Saginaw. experienced, salary dependent on experience, exc. fringe benefits. Apply at Artco, Inc., 3020 Indlanwood Rd., Lake Orion, Michigan. S7.50 S12 PART TIME, 11-4; McDonald's window lady. Must b* matured, good appearance and able to bandit cash. Apply 810 N. Perry. factors A-neg., B-neg„ AB-nsg. O-neg. MICHIGAN COMMUNITY — BLOOD CENTER, In Pontiac FE 4-9947 1342 Wide Track Dr., w. Mon., Frl. 9-4 Tuts., wad., Thurs. 10-5 HOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE in and care tor elderly lady, call afternoons. (93-487*. houSEKEEPER part time, full time Summer, 1 child, 9 years- old, 338-2018 oft. 7 p.m. Housekeeper to live in. 5 day week, private room, both, and TV. Must Ilka country living. Will consider lady with a child. Call 394-0345 after 5:30 p.m. or weekends. Housekeeper PHYSICIAN'S SECRETARY, paid vacations, and no week-ends, salary good. FE 8-0700. RESPONSIBLE, DEPENDABLE, gal Friday, general office, Tues.,' Sat, Must type. FE 2-8323, Mr. B. RELIABLE WOMAN FOR general house cleaning, 4 to * hours per day, must have own transportation. 852-5033. RECEPTIONIST, telephone answering typing end mlsc. office work. Reply to Box C-41, Pontiac, f u | II Michigan.___________ BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED All RH Positive Painting and Decorating 23 1-A, Auburn Heights Paving Tennis courts* parking -lots# Experienced ' to Cwo?k’Eon'Efarms, INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR dec- %i''«w.y«. Guaranteed. FE *4983, Oakland and Macomb Counties, orating, reasonable rotes and tree _OR. 3-032*^.............. Salary Or drawing account: •J'1™'85- 335-5010. After 2:30 » jay ACPUAIT available. Commensurate on eblil- 332-2053.___ ' "■ ty. PENN, LI 8-1900.________ LADIES DESIRE INTERIOR paint- FREB EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE NJ. Waterford area: Free Industrial Sewing Roofing MILLS ROOFING CO. INDUSTRIAL SEWING. Save! money) Boat seats, covers, car, 6 . _ .. _ seats. FE 5-0754. Free estimates. _ Siding, Roofing, Storms, Eaves.., Days, 543-2111 Aft, 5 p.m. 3*3-2511 Jantiorial Services WALLS, WINDOWS WASHED, base. Ui„ i*i:H klw* ment cleaned, free eat. 338-3827. We Will Not, Be Undersold Landscaping IX ... WILL REPAIR LEAKS, re-shlngle M!Ri°JS Bl-UB SODjpIckup or roofs. Inexpensively, aft. 8:30 p,m„ dal. 4*43 Sherwood. *28-2000. | 325*093. A-l COMPLETE LANDSCAPING,!" WOMACK ROOFING CO.* ' specializing In retaining walls.! Free estimates • FE 8-4545 H. Waltman batter AAA LANDSCAPING, for quality and prices. *82-0208 AAA SPRING CLEANUP, powal raking, cut weekly. Schoensee's Landscaping. 852-2387. Al'S LAWN AAAINTENANCE, Spring and fall clean ups.___Cutting, fertilizing and spraying. 47S-3992. CLARKST0N GREENS Sand—Gravel—Dirt CHOICE SHREDDED Mack dirt tqp> soli. Form topsoil,-* yds. SIS dot. FE 4*588. SCREENED BLACK DIRT, Met taps COMPLETE LANDSCAPING QUALITY MASONRY* BRICK* block and stone*, veneers* basements* Sodding* seeding* shrubs. fireplaces* etc. 673-0967. Licensed Nursery Man. 682-7850. DETKOWSKt BROS. Merion Blue sod* pick up and del.* sod depot open 6 a.m. 7 days wk. 674t3727. Ceramic Tile DAN'S CERAMIC TILE, slot* floors, pyrefTcMT~oiiai itInn BlI.i VIBRATED PROCESS, mwM, .III. In.,.11 In hnm.. .u EXCELLENT QUALITY Morion Blue #n() peafi Aytjum S7.50 CHEF Experienced, hours f e I x I b I • Chemung Hills Country Club. Cell area 517-544-4230 for appt. CAMERA SALES HOUSEKEEPER, cooking, - charge, live in or out, prefer ex- RECEPTIONIST perienced middle-aged woman, call evenings. 424-53*8. ’HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE lN private room, bath, TV. Wed. ond Thurs. oft, SS5 week to start. Woodward, - 7Vj ml. area. Other help employed. Housekeeper In full charge. Cell 9 a.m. to . 5 p.m. 342-2844, otter S p.m. and weekends 3*8-3875.____________________________________ Housekeeper, live in, own room, bath, TV. Social Security, 2 days off. References. $40. Roches-*51-1150. *51-9733. FOR beauty salon. 4*2-7578. Birmingham REGIONAL OFFICE GF large Eastern life insurance Co. seeks experienced and qualified secretary for work In modern Southfield building location. Excellent fringe benefits and 37V4 hr. week. 353-0404 for appt. RECEPTIONIST: Attractive outgoing Miss tor 'large center city Personnel Office. If you art congenial and able to meet with and handle the public — we will train. Light typing. Salary open. Call Mr. Scott, 334-2471 fr appt. Snelling and Snelling-____________ In HOLLY — Want exceptionally dependable lady to take full charge of doctor and working RN wife, highly Intelligent, 2 year old,SECRETARY — Must type, operate daughter, must start Immediate, office machines, be good with Stair at S45 per week. Cell Holly figures end responsible. Contact K. *34-404*. ____I R. Belon, Breech Enterprises. *47- 'Our Camera department has an interesting full time position, for the person who knows cameras, film and equipment and Is oblo to sell. Pay commensurate with background and'experience. Excellent employee benefits Include: Purchase discount. Blue Cross-Blue Shield. Life Insurance. Retirement program. Paid holidays. Paid vacation. APPLY IN PERSON FROM 10 A.M. TO 4 P.M. EMPLOYMENT OFFICE klTCHEN HELP, 3*3-4121. I NION Lake area, I 1212. Hudson's MAN. Clarkston area* lucrative 400 acre lake and townsita development* good Incentive* reply P.O. Box 98* Lathrup Village.____________ How Much Do You Want to Earn During 1969? Wantad Household Goods 29 WE HAVE a ground floor portunity for tho man who knows people and likes to talk to them New Life Insurance Co. |ust sotting up their Michlan operation needs people who Ilka to sell. We hsva a unique program featuring o special Investment type contract. Advancement to manage- 1 GOOD ELECTRIC stove and refrigerator wantod for church, will pick up, *73*1*2 or *23-044*. HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR good furniture and appliances. Or what have you? B & B AUCTION OR 3-2717 AAA ASPHALT PAVING Sealing. PE 5-5328* free ast. AADC0 ASPHALT 332-4*31 ASPHALT PARKING LOTS and roadways, same location since 1920, also sellnlg asphalt and ■ iai.,. —u.Dii.ciiicn, iv maiiawB- nl.i, ment possible within * mos. Wo alwv ol)(-.. w’ offer a complete. training plan, ^sameo Miscellaneous 30 This can be part tlma to start.! __1 FE 4-9812* find out how you ASPHALT PAVING Residential and commercial No lob too small Work guaranteed. Free estimates PONTIAC ASPHALT CO. FE 4-0224 ____ v... RH „„„ ................... DOMINO CONST. CO. can share in the excitement of|COI*PEn» BR:A5 S. .J^P’^I^JJ'lDrlveweys, parking lots. License building a new giant._____| 0^3*5849°^ ®enera*ors* Dixson* contractors. Free est. 674-3955. Draperies Dressmaking, Tailoring Drhrsr's Training ACADEMY OF DRIVER TRAINING Free home pickup.___FES-944* DRIVER'S TRAINING structlons. Rees, rates. FE 8-1200. * a.m. to 1 p.m. ____________________ per yd. _______p.m. MERION SOD, undergr o u n sprinkler, del, or la.d. 807-9*75. Lawn Maintunanc* B. Q. LAWN SERVICE. Complete lawn malntonanct. Spring cleanups. Fertilizing. Free estimates, 3*3-4*71. We take price In our work LAWN CUTTING and sharpening. FE 2-SS41.______ mower LAWN SPRAYING, fertilizers, crab grass killor, and weed killers. Call for tree estimate. *25-4019, *74-3945, *74-4449, one, roc. C 6 H spraying. Drywoll REAL ESTATE LOCAL HISTORIAN wishes to buy| Salesman take 30 minutes of yourj German WWII souvenirs; medals* Buach Service Lawnmowtr Service uniforms, etc. 334-9105. ’WANTED: Single maple bed and BEACHES CLEANED HAROLD R., FRANKS, REALTY has openings for full time experienced salesperson. Replies confidential. 2583 Union Lake Rd. EM 3-3200. RECREATIONAL SALES One of tho Nations I o r g • s developers. Seeking qualified men for career opportunity. Immodloto commission, company financing all sales, no turn down. Phono Mr Willey, vacation site to work. 335 7840. between 9 a.m. and 1? noon. SALES EMPLOYMENT counselor: We are expanding. If you have the ability end desire to work with people ond have had sales or public contact experience, we will train you. We are the na dresser or rollaway bed good condition. *02-217*. Wanted to Rent reel SANDED DOCKS INSTALLED >STEEL SEA WALLS Cutler Contracting________(81-0300 DRY WALL SERVICE complete old1 ' and new. (27-3239. MOWER REPAIR — Sharpening. R E M O D E L I nTF. * Pickup-deliver In Pontiac, 332-2102. Lumber dressing deliver ad. UL M SOD, BLOWING INSULATION, dozing, haul grovel, topsoil arid field dirt. 402-7197. ^ TOP SOIL, BEACH and fill sand, all graval products, reason able. Prompt delivery. OR 3*497. .. ^ TOP SOIL, THE very best, ( yards, SIS delivered, also sand and driveway gravel, fast delivery, *73-0049 or 338-0514. black dirt t Opdyka, loading dally, ■ 7-7 p.m. 391-2501, 391-2*18. Septic Tank Installation Sod GOOD SOD OELIVERKD, 50e yard. Ley It yourself. 332*210. ■Spraying Servitu ANY SIZE,' any type, planting removal and fartlllzlng. 3*3-7295. DALBY 6 SONS TREE SERVICE Steam Cleaning Eavostroughing 32 2 BEDROOM APARTMENT or small house, by engineer and wife. Within IS miles of Rochester, East of Pontiac. Occupancy June 15. Writ* F. L. Scollon, 1903 C. wood-mar, Houghton, Mich. *9931. 2-BEDROOM HOME, north of Pontiac, 482-4150. 2 QR 3 BEDROOM homo, 2 boys, ages 10 and 7 yrs. 052-1547. OR MORE BEDROOM homo In Orion School district, need by Juno 15, 547-1187. _________________ lion's iargestwIthZtO off Icoscoast 1 OR4 BEDROOM HOME. Coll OR to coast. Exceptionally high earn-1 4-2052. KEY PUNCH OPERATORS EXPERIENCED ONLY, steady year round work, day and njght shifts open, 55 or more girls needed right now, Paid Blue Cross, paid life Insurance end paid vacation. Apply to: Dempsey Key Punch Service 6*434 so. Dort Hwy.. Grand Blanc 1 *94-71 Efl—*94-5131 An Equal Opportunity Employer KITCHEN HELP Good working conditions* Drive-In* FE 4-7882. Key Punch We Need EXPERIENCED OPERATORS For Immediate Temporary. Assignments Pontiac, Bloomfield, Rochester Area Cell Now! Manpower | Pontiac Mcill j Employment Agencies SILK AND WOOL FINISHER, excellent working conditions. Bright I end airy modern plant. Year around employment.______________________________________________________ _ „„Le5l'e;'i“s,om clean8^* I COUPLE TcTmANAGE private lodge |j MANAGERS tor largo eoncorn, Franklin Vllldgo_____________*757707 Indian River. For Information I exc. potential, $4,500, call Kathy SALAD GIRL for private club, 3 coll 4S1-051* or 334*300.___________________ King, 332-9157, Associates Person- p.m. to 11 p.m., good wages and CASHIERS, USHERS and concession! naf. Ings first year. Shelling and SnelMADC MOTHER with 2 Well behaved Ing. Cell Bob Scott, 334-2471, fori children would Ilka to find a home, appointment. ____________ Would Ilka to move by May 30th. Please call 332-511*. Q1 APARTMENT OR SMALL home; 7 responsible adult with on* child, working conditions. Call any day except Monday, JO 4-7199._____________ SECRETARY Typing, filing and general office procedures. Shorthand or speedwriting required. Applicant to report to Personnel Director, Cell D. C. Fletcher at McPherson Community Health Center, Howell, Mich, for additional information 517-544-1410 Ext. 295. ’_____ 332-8384 SECRETARIAL HELP New and expanding plastic fabricator In Lake ‘Orion Twp. Needs secretarial and general, office personnel. Typing essential. Apply T. D. Shea Mfg. Inc.* 4800 Lapeer Rd.* Lake Orion Twp. KITCHEN HELP Grill Cooks and Bus Girls Day and evening shifts. Good wages. Hospitalization . and other benefits. Apply: ’ ELIAS BROS. BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph 6 Huron Light ASSEMBLY and packaging work. Full time day. shift. work. Full time day shut, ex-celient working conditions. Apply In person 9:00 a.m.-12.00 a.m. <,No phone calls. Aqueduct* 404 N. Cass. Light LPN CHARGE nurse. Midnights, Glen Acres* 1255 W. Sllberbell. SEWER — MUST have experience In fine sewing of bridal wear. Full time position. Ml 7-1300* Mrs. Zetye* Chudik's of Blrm. __________ SALES EMPLOYMENT COUNSELOR: We j,are expanding. If you hava tna ability and desire to work with people and have had sales**- or public contact experience* we will train you. ,vye are. tha NatloiYs largest with 440 offices coast to coast. Exceptionally high earnings first year. Snelling and Snelling. Call Bob Scott* 334-2471 for appointment.__ SALESLADY MUST LIKE children and have friendly personality* over 25. Kendal's. FE 5-0322. L.P.N. $3.50 Per Hour For afternoon- shift. * O v transportation, many TELEPHONE INTERVIEWERS, work from home for credit card program. Write Box C*6» Pontiac Press* and include telephone. Union Lake area. EM 3-| number. [taking APPLICATIONS for.clerical WgK A0fncS.TAttT rTntl ,y Sem 3»76M,WAN WaU"^? preferably experienced In -&Sy TORTUNITY jEMPLOY&. -------------------- end EKG. 338-9480. TYPIST x/atiide i anv Mr i-„bnter, willing Temporary Work help needed. Apply Miracle Mil* Drive In Theater eft. 7 p.m. _____________ CABINET SHOP wints experienced men and women for part time work, 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Apply 1015 W. Maple, at Pontiac Trail, Walled Lake. person,!] GENERAL OFFICE positions, will f you type, $310. Call Pat 332-9157, Associates Person- COOK, SHORT ORDER and experience helpful but will Eves., and weekends. Call 3*3-0*11 aft. 11 a.m. tSS: Caretaker train if Cary* nal. ADD A *P.S. TO YOUR reasonable, p.m. call 807**25 after * BUSINESSMAN NEEDS efficiency apartment. Unfurnished, wltn rang* and refrigerator. In Lake Orion, Rochester, Pontiac or Troy area. Call Mr. Lldan at 334*771 between 9 a.m. ond 5 p.m. * wants KRESGE MANAGER bedroom housa notr Plains. OR 3-3813. Drayton MIDDLE AGED COUPLE wants 1 or 2 bedroom homo, unfurn. Aft. 3:30 p.m. Ask (or Mrs. Hayes, 335 0027. Couple preferred. Experience ■«-:7o4 M p-rrv qulred. New i* unit building ih the l%j^..r8r.iy. JOB HUNTING Pontiac And Troy Area Shop Trainees.......,.$3,00 per hr. Male Clerk ...............6100 wk. Production Control ..........1575 _________________ ^„--------1 Scheduler ...................*<50 MEDIUM SIZE FAMILY needs a 3 Personnel Sec'y .............$600 bedroom home, desperately. 335 *Pickens-Smith Service ....... md NEEDS 2-3 bedroom nouse to 334-058*^ rent near General HospJtal_. Pontiac area. Apartment utlllty/AIRLINES Gal Friday,1 W. Cali Send rotumt to Pontloc Prose Box Lynn, 352-3000, Choate & Choate. C-20. I ____________{CLERK TYPIST — $340. Cell Sue, DISHWASHERS ' 3S2-3000, Choate & Choate, Inc. Night shift, company benefits. Paid vacation. Apply in person— ELIAS BROS BIG BOY RESTAURANT « Telegraph 6 Huron EMPLOYMENT AVAILABLE—apply at Seminole Hills Nursing Homs, 532 Orchard Lk. Ave. FREE MOVIES Age 18-80* full or part tlma* concessions* cashier* day help* ushers. See your favorite movies. FREE With your family on your night off. Apply in person only after 3 p.m Blue Sky Drive In Theatre, Opdyke. Pontiac. 21 So FREE CLASSES Men or women wanted. Earn while dfeou learn.’ We have 8 offices* 200 salespeople who can't be wrong. Call today. , MILLER, BROS. REALTY FRONT DESK — $400. Call ,Pat Hall,. 352-3000, Choate 6 Choate, Inc. GAL FRIDAY —"Nice office, call Mrs. Fox. 352-3000, Choate & Choate. MANAGER TRAINEES UP . $500 Wonderful. opportunities for om--bltious young men, sducstlonal assistance plans, tee paid. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 S. Woodward, B'hem *42*243 MEDICAL MISS — Type. Call Jill, 352-3000, Choao 6 Choate Inc. PUBLIC RELATIONS $600 UP Do you like to meet the public? We have- many Interesting and varied positions available. Fee paid. ■ ^ References. Reply Gluesenkamp, MD, to: uiuntiM.ni*, . ,vilx, 1010 North Main, Fallbrook, Cal It. 92028. RESPONSIBLE COUPLE desires to rent modest 1 or 2 bedroom house in Auburn Heights area. Phono 335-3871 after 4 p.m. _______-4, YOUNG COUPLE THAT fights only on Saturday nights, and houSebrokan 2-year-old dosl ro Single house rental. Call Larry Adcock at Tha Press, FE 2-I1S1, ext. 203 before 11 a.m. Share living Quarters 33 WIDOW WOAAAN WILL share her home with same. S52-5|77, aft. 3:30. . Wanted Real Estate 36 STENOSl 333-7156 INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1800 S. Woodward B'ham *42-82*1 APPRAISALS FREE GUARANTEED SALE* 30 DAY LISTING Beats and Accessories BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Starcraft, I.M.P. S I I v a r 11 n t Flberglas 6 Aluminum Merc, outboard & stern Dr. 12*5 S. Woodward at Adams Boats. Building Modernization A-l GARAGES, 20x20, S975 Cement work, modernization. 'Springfield Building Co. *25-2128. ALUMINUM SIDING, masonry work, foundations, storm windows aluminum gutters; roofing, pre-cast stone, additions, attics. Roc M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSEO-BONDED Free est. *73*04*. Electrical Services McCORMICK ELECTRIC Residential Wiring-Service 157 Baldwin FE 69191 RESIDENTIAL WIRING, reasonable Call aft. 4 p.m., weekends. OR 3-2712. TALBOTT LUMBER * Glass service, wood dr aluminum. Building and Hardware supplies. 1025 Oakland *•_________FE 64595 Moving, Storage SMITH MOVING CO. Your moving specialists. FE 4*844. __________ SNYDER BROS. MOVING CO. Local and long distance moving Modern storage. Piano moving 852-2410. _________ Piano Tuning Exterior house or commtrciai professional ttaam cleaning Newest equipment, experienced, careful workmen. All ward guaranteed. Free estimates. Phone 332*210 tor prompt attention. Sweeping Service PARKING LOTS, sldowelks and driveways, Commercial .and Residential, year round service, 338*427 or *82-8511. Tree Trimming Service A-l CAVANAUGH'S TREE S*rv|co> stumps removed free if wo taka down tree. Free estimate. 3359049 or 335-5253. BILL'S TREE TRIMMING AND Removal. Very low rate. *82-3043, Excavating Painting and Decorating A-l BULLDOZING, Finish Grading, GARDNER'S TREE SERVICE 335-4744 rooms* violations corrected, j»m'-| BocLhoe, Basomonts. *759(39. '"•.’^Siftor^FrS 2t!»JS&.,n,lirl^',TRiiS TRI«MED and removed. mercial remodel in 8337* call day or ni IQ. 33 light. 3321704?; FE i -m BULLDOZING — TRUCKING CONVERT YOUR recreation room,I R8,?*“185i*^d £ fui ■ b 1 • • Fre* basement, offico, factory with estimates. OR 3-11*5. Armstrong Suspended celling, labor and material SI sq. ft,. 338-9430. MASTER CRAFTSMAN ENGLISH BLDR. Specializing In all typaa of Aistom homos, additions. Convsrt your rac. room to English Tudor Pub. Before you decide, look at my work end price. 3359430. _____________ MODERNIZATION - Additions of all typos. Cement work, *25-5515. SUSPENDED CEILINGS remodeling work, 4753007, BULLDOZING, BACKHOE WORK. basomonts, grading. <62-30*2. DOZING, BACKHOE, basements. trucking and septic tanks. *25*735, USED « YARD HOUGH LOADER BURTON EQUIPMENT CO. and 377* e. Auburn Rd. Carpentry A-l INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR -Family rooms, rough or finished dormers, porches, r e c r fa 110 n rooms, kitchens,, bathrooms. Stats licensed. Reas. Call altar 5 p.m., *82-0*48. Fencing A-l CHAIN LINK FENCE, Installed or repaired. 1 Wk- serv., free est. 338-0297 or *7639*1. ADDITIONS AND alterations, porch ’ repair. FE 5-1331._____________. CARPENTRY INTERIOR FINISH, kitchens pantl-- 1, 40 year experience, FE 2-1235. JnjL Carpet Cleaning Carpet! cleaned and mothpreofad. FE 2-3857. __________■ CARPETS AND UPHOLSTERY claanad. For low ratal, 338*70*. MAKE YOUR OLD CARPET look like now — have It doanod by Arthur Atklnsons Carpet Cleaning Service. Fine quality work, raas. rates, free estimates. 33683*1. ■ Carpeting ACKERS A-l fences, 25 years Pontiac area, guaranteed satisfaction, pay cash and save, repairs, phont *82-5482._______ CEDAR SPLIT RAIL FENCING for sale. Will Install and deliver. 627* 3915. CHAIN LINK FENCING Installs* repaired. Quality work, fas service, ask far Ron. *82*9*9. Fireplaces FIREPLACES, CHIMNEYS, washing, *93-1855.______ Floor Sanding FLOOR SANDING and laying, ole floors raflnlshod, *27-3775. Mature lady for u to accept responsnpility. Good salary and insurance program. Birmingham Cleaners* 1253 S. Woodward. Blrm. Ml 6-4620. 642-3055 MATURE WOAAAN for light office) work* 4 evenings per week. See! kkrmJ '■* ' ' “ M Mrs. H eg wood at Simms Bros. N, Saginaw St. T \ j' MAIDS > V Full tlma day shift' Crlttenton v Hospital, Rochester. See Mrs. Theakston; Housekeeping Dept. MATURE, LIVE IN baby sitter. *82-0307. ' MACHINE OPERATORS TED'S Pontiac Mall Immediate opening for a cook, excellent working hours, no Suim man ’ F Hospitalization/ days or Holidays, life Insurance and sick pay benefits. Apply In person only. Immediate openings, days and afternoons, will train reliable women With some previous shop experience. Excellent year around ‘working conditions and overtime.! 2921 Industrial Row, Troy, between] 1615; Mile Rds., off COolige Hwy. Telephone Sales Girls No experience needed, highest earnings, full time salary and commission, part lime salary. Out office. Phone *25*000. __■_ IRGENT! ' DEPENDABLE mature bafey sitter. QWn transportation. MATURE LADY TO live in, care for 4'/j yr. old, more for home than wages. Writ* P. O. Box '185, Lapeer, Mich. 48444; stating age.’ retlfllon, rats., etc. . -. Mature .lady ■ to fwe ISj permanent place, nlee\ horns, good ' • $82-3050. , \ \ 8TURE WOMAN to live In and - 1 ' end for 1-5991, ' attar. < p.m children. 4'/i days week. Further Information 331-9432 after 7 p.m. WAITRESS. FULL ^TImE evening work. Rotco/s. si?] Dixie Hwf. iPreyfon Wajhs^ Apply 5-8 p.m. . ■JWMTREvMORNING~WlFT\ 8:50; until 2. P.m., experienced necessary, /apply, in person, > /Park care for S children, ages 3, * < 7, also light housework, more homo ■ than wages, call 33555 Inn Restaurant,V975 Orchard Lake fit Till Rd. Corner of Te'legraph. V WAITRESS Good hours and pay. IAII benefits, cIdled 1 Sunday. '' Pled Piper' mm m R#staur«W. 4370 highland.Rd) l; K% SECRETARY — Pontiac area, $500. Call Carol. 352-3000, .Choate l| passing you! Choate. CARPET INSTALLATION. ALSO good buys on carpets. *23-1215. Floor Tiling FEEL LIKE LIFE _ _ . . _______________________ ^ ST' REAL|SE35R2^. Choate ^ChoatsSnc. ESTATE, OR/603o3. GRILL COOK, Morey's Golf and Country (pub, 2280 Unlhn Lake Rd. HIRING MEN/ and woman for wood work and formica, Immediate and ' ' /iv 1 HI Maple at Lake. steady amployment. Apply 1015 W. ‘ Pontiac i Trail, Walled HELP WANTED. In tha meat department. Sen's, Market, , 12*9 Baldwin. Apply In person only. IMMEDIATE OPENING Natloiiial Bank Of Detroit has opening for an experienced full time teller at our Orchard Lake, Pontldfc Trail office. Orchard Lake Michigan. Salary commensurate with experience. Please apply at 4150 Orchard Lake Rd. Hours between: 10 a.m. to 3 p.mr Shop All Foes Feld S3.1* to $3.2$ per hour. Must bo steady worker, IS to 45. Good lob ,for veterans on soma light shop experience. All frlngtS, Pickens-Smith Servics . 334-058* 739 n. Parry VETS Assistant, $300. Call Ann, 352 3000. Choate 6 Choate Inc. instnictioni-Sdiools ID RIDING - LESSONS. Call Bryant, *27-3745. JOB WITH A future. Call Mr. Foley YORK REAL ESTATE, OR 503*3. KEY SllOP OPERATOR No experience necessary. We, will train. Sales experience helpful, Full time and part ,time openings! Retirees welcome. -Attractive com party .benefits, v ■ ■■ X6NTACT:v Nm*. ALLARDv 8^7^ ¥354; MR, PbISCHL* 542-4214, KITCHEN HELP CAR HOPS FULL TIME ONLY; DAYS-EVES i APPLY IN PERSON. ■' _ ROCHESTER BIO BOY t ■727 N. Mam „ Rochester REGISTER NOW! ' - * Week course SHORTHAND AND TYPING Day and evening, classes MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS 16 E. Huron St. 332-5891 Licensed by Mich. State icensed by Mich, star Board of Education Work Wantad Male 41 i*A carpenter -WORK, additions, siding, roofing, cement. Bill Dow, ys Stats LkSnsa. FE S-219S or FE J-'3529. '. T. ■ ‘ v' A-l CARPENTER, LARGE IM tilt, paneling recreation rooms a speciality. *83 fobs. roera 5137. CtlllA LAUINGER _____________.c,*tlrt Work - 473-21*8! A-l HOUSE RAISING, under-plrmlnp APARTMENT BUILDING CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING, linoleum, formica, tile. Carpeting. 7*1 N. Perry. 338*120.____________ Wantod Income property up to TOO units call, 1-342-0*7. HOMES, LOTS, 1 to 50 I acr4A ofe PROPERTIES, AND LAND CON-, TRACT. 1 . WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyka ■ FE M145 Urgantly need for Immediate salal Pontiac Daily 'til S MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE A BETTER CASH DEAL All cash Jdr homes, Pontiac and Dri -ravton Plains area. Cash In hours. Call homa purchasing department. YORK REAL and basements under old homes our specialty. *28-1*73: or 493-191*. *28-1’ AAA /pMlNT WORK Patios, basemsfits, drlvas, walks footings, ate. 3355*6* or CS-2122 ALL BRICK . REPAIRS, chlmnojt. porches, violations corfactad pointing; roof leaks stopped onoblo. 3353433. /^aii ILL TYI ALL TYPES OP MAS ■ mont spaclalltlas. 331 ALL KINDS OP CEMENT Work; • patio, Jbasoment, driveways, <23-0287. 'V-i.i.i » i Garden Plowing GARDEN PLOWING Atjb IM 'n, grading, ready for tod for seed, sn^tocatlon, reasonabla. Clarkiton StOTO TILLING AND lawn mowing, M1-8S71, n ' ' I Home, Mdldtauaiica all Rinds op home repair Free estimates, call OR 3-2135. BASEMENTS AND BRICK WORK, fireplaces, commercial and In-1 dustrlal repair. <82-1143, 673-3451. ' Mich. Steam Cleaning Residential, commercial. Wa mobile steam clean trailer homea, 1 homes, awnings, I ft d u s t r I machinery. 4I5-3S14. •' 5 YEAR ’ OLD university student, will paint. Top quality work at In-i expensive price. 335*893,.aft. 7:30 p.m. _______________________________ I Free estimates. Call Bob, 3*3*042. Tracking A-l PAINTING GUARANTEED. Free *02*420. i A-l PAINTING AND 1 PAPER HANGING THOMPSON . PE 683*4 HUSBAND-WIFE TEAM Painting, wall washing, 20 yrs. axparlanca. *25-3514. _______ INSIDE-OUTSIDE PAINTING, own work. Free pit, 731*405. INTERIOR AND exterior . and staining, free estimates, no |ol A-l LIGHT MOVING, TRASH haulid reasonable. FE 61353. A1 LIGHT HAULING Md Odd labs. AAA-l LIGHT HAULING and cam atruction cleanup. 338*4*5, *I2*0*L 332-5024. BASEMENTS, ATTICS, g s rig as cleaned. OR 3*417. anB^ HAULING AND SUBBISH. Nam* your price. Anytime. FE »*09S. HAULING RUBBISH, construction, clean-up, reps. <82-3043.__________ too big or too small, quality work,!LIGHT HAULING AND moving, cs|l any time, 332-9S3S. I Reasonable. *82-751*. QUALITY WORK ASSURED; Paint-j LIGHT HAULING, basomant and Washing; I garage cleaned. OR 3*047. Photography PORTRAITS: Wedding, baby plo tures, your homo, our' studio, prompt service, reas.' Vorvllles studios, 3353802. ' ■ Plastering Service Accoustical Ceiling PLASTERING, NEW WORK 0 patching, free estimates. 3*3-5*07. Plumbing 6 Heating LIGHT HAULING. BSsement clean* Ing. ____Call anytime. 338-0094 REASONABLE LIGHT HAULING. BASEMENTS garages claanad. *761242. LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING rubbish, fill dirt, grading and graval and front-end loading. PR > Track Rental Trucks to Rent CONOR A PLUMBING S> HEATING Sqwir, water lines — FE 1-0*43. I G 8> L PLUMBING & HEATING. Lsf George Do It. *73*377.___| Restaurants BIG' BOY DRIVE-IN OIXIE Sllvtr Lake — Telegraph at Huron Vj-Ton Pickups IW-Ton Staka rTRUCKS - TRACTORS AND'EQU IPMENT . Semi Trailers ■* Pontiac Farm and industrial Tractor. Co. , j; 82S S: WOODWARD —'! FE 504*1 , FE 61441 AT; Open dally Including Sunday Roofing A-l ROOFING. Tar aha Robert Prlco Roofing Free Eatlmati* 04 ■ I ’94 24 hr. aarvlca A-Z CONTRACTING ■■ AND REPAIR LICENSED ROOFER, 'factary guarantee. Fr— eat. 3*3*127. AA ROOFS' INSTALLED. Hbt tar and ahlngta*. Call L. J. Prlc* and this prlc* la right. 332-103*. Upholstering UPHOLSTERING BY Richard -Quality fabrics and work, pick up and dollvary. «t2-417S. ■ I flip Cloaoen ! BLOOMFIELD WALL CU|ANRR% Wall* claanad. Rea*; Satisfaction gusirwi — gusrentood. Insured. FE Mill. WALL WASHING and alum, aldine cfoanad. FE 2*015. ,' • WALL WASHINO cleaning. 3350095. AND window Wen Drinag BROWN ROOFING Co. WO Speclillzo Insj^ffll- Freo_0*L 33557g>. ,y. WELL DRILLING, wall root | changed and pump aarvlc*. DAVE'S—ROOFING SHINGLE work only. FE 5-7180. J* * - mm m4 SB •VV m fVjiU' For tWant Adi Dial 334-4981 ■f THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1069 ' L • ‘li'i iff# '"‘‘■■V PM \r?. ' WS5*} Real Estate 36 SCHOOL TEACHBfc NEEDS • 1 bedroom horn* with boMmont end «# In tlw Clerksfon iru. will T» to *25,000. Cell hit agent ... Burges* at O'Neil Realty Co. '4-2222 or 6744493. CASH r— 0OR VOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA, SUN twi/r Bwwii it rrw» R OTHER, FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR. OR 44)350 or EVE-NINOS Ft ATOM. GENTLEMANS APARTMENT in downtown Rochester, 005 par mo., plus util., 2 bedrooms, ample PorWjyi. 324-2070, leave menage, Aportmants, Fumishsd 37 1 ROOM APARTMENT for 1 adlilt, newly decorated, efficiency unit, util. <|mi„ no jjets, $22.50 week, 1 tec, dap, red. FE 24212. 1 LARGE ROOM and private bath, let floor, prlv. entrance, 020 wk„ heat and utl|. provided, $20 dep. req., call aft. 5:30 p.m. The Erb Apts.,.11» State. 5 AND 3. .ROOM APAI Quire Mi N. Johnson. APARTMENTS, ’in- t ROOMS AND BATH, small child welcome, *25 per week with 075 dep. Inquire af 273 Baldwin Ave., Call 330-4054. f ROOMS AND PRIVATE BATH Clean. AdBItf. 221 N. Case Ave. * ROOMS, ADULTS only, security deposit, ref^ FE 5-3591. * ROOMS, BACHELOR, 90 E Howard Street, * ROOMS AND BATH, SO Stout, utilities incl., dep. ref. req. 482-3204. ■ __________ , * ROOMS AND BATH, I or 2 adults. FE-M935. i ROOMS AND bath, clean. Upper, nrluata. adults only. 330-3352. I ROOMS AND BATH, no children or pete, *90 Robinwood, FE *-2754. 2 AND 3 ROOMS, Adults only F E 2-4991 ROOMS AND BATH, decorafff, private bath, entrance. hallway, ..I a und ry Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Rent Roams COUNTRY LIVING Deluxe 2 bedroom apartment Includes soft water, heat, sundeck, adults, references. 428-2961 SLEEPING ROOM, (entlemen, days, 04 Poplar. , , , Rooms with Board ' \43 Great Oaks Apartments I end 2 bedroom apartments end bedroom townhouses, from *150 per month, carpeting and drapes Rout Stereo furnished. Hotpolnt ■ appliances tn- eluding dishwasher, swimming pool andclub house. Located at Walton 20 X 50 PARTY STORE. Excellent location. Perry pt Glenwood. Ample parking. Amply equipped. 335-2195. , \ Blvd. and Great Oaks Blvd. one naif mile east of Llvernols. *51-2450. Rent Office Space .NOW LEASING 2ND FLOOR OFFICE In Lake Orion. M-24 frontage (25,000 core per day). Lake privileges. Could combine for living space. Will remodel to suit. Idaal tar doctor, attorney engineer, architect. 593-2821. BRAND NEW-WATERF0RD Crescent Manor Apts. 23011 DIXIE NEAR courthouse. 1 —' 400 tq. ft. office. Immediate possesilon. 3 — 800 tq. ft. offices 1744 Crescent Lk. Rd. 1 BLOCK N. Ot M-59 lltlss, private perking, utilities Krnloligd-j From S3S wk., from SOO deposit, 335-2135. Spacious 2-bedroom units featuring Individually controlled heat and air cond., luxurious carpeting throughout, prlvatt balconies, plenty of closet apace, ground floor laundry facilities In every building, beautiful grounds oberlooklng the Clinton River. Rental Includes ell facilities except electricity. No pete allowed. CUSTOM CRAFTED APPLIANCES By "HOTPOINT" SEE MANAGER APT. No. 107 12-5 P.M. Only, dally by appt. or CALL 673-5050 i oak floora, full basement, formica cabinets gut-tar$. Thermo-pane windows, storm dobrs, wallpaper, no extra cost. Connection fpr future sewers already out to toad., Elizabeth Lake Rd. 1 block west of Crescent Lake to Plnegrove, right to model on cornor of Brunswick.' $20,950, NELSON BLDG. CO., OR 3-819L___ OPEN 9 A.M. TO I P.M. 2294 Williams Lake Rd: Directions: Drive West on M-59 turn norlh on Williams Lake Rd, bedroom ranch, large family room (Ull basement, $14,900. Beauty Craft Homes 474-4221 POOL TABLE In basement of this Rvely 3-bedroom hbme. Has IVi baths, finished basement, 2Vi car garage. For quick possession, call 451-8555 for Inspection. SHEPARD'S REAL ESTATE. ______________ PLENTY OF POSSIBILITIES with this three bedroom atbostos ranch on Morrlmac In Pontiac. Just $15,000 end a little redecorating and Its yours. , ■ . P-14 Call Ray Today I 474-4101 couple. Call us tor price and terms. P43. CALL. RAY TODAY! ; 574-4101 WOLVERINE LAKE \ Beautiful 3 bedroom brick and aluminum ranch. Full finished basement.. Comar tot plus lake privileges. *1300 down. 121,900 full price. PONTIAC LAKE ear old aluminum ranch with basement, 1V$ baths, bedrooms, 115x270. fenced lot plus lake privileges. FHA approved tor $23,500. $1700 down y* ill Sola Houses , idf Alql . WW0 * I SCHRAM OFF BALDWIN bedrooms, 12x15 living room, 10x15 kitchen end dining tree,'go* forced air heat, IVi cor garage. Priced at *13,900, dosing costs only on FHA term*. List With SCHRAM and Calf the Van LET'S TRADE B. HALL REALTY, REALTORS 7150 Dixie Hwy. 425-4114 Open Dally 9-9 Set. 9-4 OPEN EVES. AND SUN. til Joslyn Ave. ' FE 5-9471 REALTOR \ MLB Serving Pontiac Area tor 20 years AVON Aluminum Rancher Spacious 6 room rancher, s extra larga bedrooms, living room, formal dining room, large kitchen with bullt-lns, lust (31,000. S FHA LAUINGER 4744319 GLORIOUS VIEW Ideal family I home. 4 bedrooms, family room with fireplace, living room, den, 2vs baths. In older 2-story term house, on 2 acres. Horse, barn, wood fenced corral. Rochester. PONTIAC field school dlstrct. 4 yrs. old. Rec.is Bedroom ranch, basement, family room, IVi baths, gas heat, paved tt„ city water end sewer. This will go et $24,900. NICE- BUILDING for offices er light R 10545 Dixie. 525-2545 mfjj. STORE AT 21 E. Lawrence St., 20* x 55', heat furnished, lust redecorated, 2 lavatories, rear, err trance to stare, call J. J. Lee, FE 84421 1 bedroom apartment, 8140 per mo., Security required, no children or pets, couple preferred; 1 bedroom apartment, carpeted, $145 per mo., security required. No children or pets, couple preferred. 2 bedroom apartment, carpeted, $145 per mo., security-required, no children or pets. Couple preferred. I garage FOB BUMP men or " -* mechanic, PE 2-1779. ___________ SHERRY'S BEAUTY SHOP,' 7549 Highland Rd. Waterford. Call 574-1733. ______________________<_ Rent Miscellaneous 48 ATTRACTIVE 3 ROOMS and privets belli, 1st floor, near General, Hospital. FE 5-9474. SMALLEY REALTORS 852-1700 CLARKSTON AREA - Near U.S. 10 T dnd 1-75. 3 room upper, clean end bright, heat only Incl. $30 weekly, edulte — no pets. 525-3125. Rochester Michigan Rochester Manor GARAGE FOR RENT for storage. I FE 2-4935. . Sale House* 49 RAY BEAUTIFUL BRICK RANCH In Pontiac hat three bedrooms, big living room and kitchen, full basement with rec. room, and priced lust right at 819,500 FHA or *10,500 Conv. P-45. CALL RAY TODAY! 574-4101 BEAUTIFUL SETTING overlooking a lake. Thla frame ranch has two bedrooms, 14x9 tun room, fully fenced yard with fruit trees, and of course, lake privileges. All for only $12,500 VA or 511,500 assumption. P- 50 Call Ray Todeyl 474-4101 BRICK COLONIAL EFFICIENCY and 1 bedroom units In large building, util. turn, from **> witty. Sec, dep. 338-4380. LOWER 2 ROOMS and bath, private entrants. 24 Taylor. f LARGE LOVELY 3 and bath, near Airport, utilities turn. No peti or children. OR 3-1943. MAIN FLOOR, 4 mem* and bath. rlmieeijdSw child. 42 Cleric St. One room,. eawwL Kitchen privilege*. 775 Scott Lk. Rd._ SHARP, WEST SIDE, parking end utilities. working' girls or. young morrleds. . ___________’ 1 - County giving within minutes ,of the ‘ ca^tatad.O0|ncludes0Ageragen on* 391-2000 acre, near factories, $15,000 with $3000 down, OR 3-2411. room with fireplace, dining room, nice kitchen, glasaed-ln porch. Excellent condition. All this tar $25,000, terms. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE 353-3402 City. These. quality apartments feature swimming pool. Include carpeting and heat, stove and refrigerator plus numerous other features. 1 child under 3 yrs. ^.welcome, 1 bedroom $140, no pets. Take Rochester road to Romeo Rd., Parkdals to (12 Plata Rd. Inquire at Manager's office, 551-7772 from 10 e.m. to 7 P.m. STOVE, REFRIGERATOR and all utilities, 734 W. Huron St._ VALLEY PLACE APTS. In tho Center of Rochester 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, $108 OPEN EVERY DAY CALL* 6514200 3 BEDROOM, RANCH, In MOunt Clemens area, full basement. FE 5-7526. _____________ * 2 LOTS WITH LAKE PRIVILEGES AT ELIZABETH LAKE You should see this neat, clean home with lovely, large living room. Nice kitchen with plenty of cupboards. Garage, etc. Very convenient to lake. Beeutlful beach. A reil steal. ONLY $17,100 EASY FHA TERMS C. SCHUETT EM 3-7188 8800 Commerce Rd. Union Lake BACKUS Be your own landlord downstairs and rent the upttalra of this alum, sided home, situated on 2 lots completely fenced. FHA terms. NORTH END 3 bedrooms with new roof and alum, siding. This horns has (ull basement and fenced lot. $10,500. FHA terms. LAKE FRONT Beautifully maintained brick and alum, sided ranch with full finished basement. Many extras. $45,000. 2167 ORCHARD LK. RD. Bet. Mlddlebelt and Telegrahh 334-3593 HURON WOODS subdivision, Union Lake, brick ranch 3 bedrooms 2 baths, large living room with dining ell, family room, kitchen bullt-lns, breakfast nook, large laundry, owner. 363-3305. HOUSE OF BEAUTY FOR YOUNG ‘ SOPHISTICATES Over 3,000 sq. ft. of space end beauty describes thla 4 year old modern 0 room brick ranch located on 5 acres of beautiful sloping land andi, offering 3 or 4 spacious bedrooms, m baths, work easy kitchen with dining area, living 1 room, family room with Inviting fireplace, complete summer built-in kitchen In lower level with modern kitchen, custom cabinets, choice of colors, paved street and | sidewalks, $500 plus costs. Deal direct with builder.- Model open! daily and Sunday from i to 7,1 closed Friday. Parsonson| Builders, Inc. 330-8500. SNYDER, KINNEY & BENNETT, In Rochester 134 W. University (2nd floor) 651-6100 OR 334-3100 RANCH WITH FULL basement on your lot, $15,995. Mortgage available. Frank Marotta & Assoc. 3195 Union Lk.- Rd. 353-7001. ROCHESTER SUBURBAN — New,4 bedroom ranch. Family kitchen. 2 baths. Carpeting. Vi acre, $25,900. Open dally. Nix Realty. *52-5375. RANCH HOME, Clarkiton area. 3 bedrooms, family room. Hi baths, completely carpeted, 100 x iso fenced yard. Close to Elementary, Jr. High and shopping area. Priced et >16.900. Cell 623-G854. By owner. RHODES A REAL BUY, 2 bedroom home, full basement, gas hsat, large shaded corner lot, water, sewer and gas. Low FHA terms. Only $12,000. FE 0-230(1 250 W. Walton FE 5-6712 ALBERT J. RHODES, Realtor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE bar. Conveniently located, 2 car ‘SAM WARWICK HAS IN SYLVAN garage, modern barn with stall I LAKE —_ 3 bedroom frame, good and tack room, equipped with water and electricity. The pasture Is fenced to retain your lovely horses. YORK kitchen, basement, 1 car garage, private tot, lake privileged, 1762 Lakeland. $23,000 or close offer. IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY. SHOW ANY TIME. 582-2820. ’ SEMINOLE HILLS SUB OR 4-0353 FE i-7174! This Is a custom, brick ranch home, with an attached garage on e corner lot, lull walk out base-ment on a beautifully landscaped yard all. fenced. Selling for $23,900 FHA terms available, call YORK ROYER HOLLY OFFICE 4 BEDROOM BRICK 4 bedroom older home In Holly. Large country kltchon. Living rdom. Dining room and .full base-ment. House hat been rewired. Has new furnace and new new hot water heater. Needs decorating $15,900. 40 ACRE PARADISE 4 bedroom home setting a beautiful rolling 40 otres lust outside of Holly. 2 fireplaces. 2 full baths, 2 car attached garage plut a 24x40 shop with studio and It's own heating, well, and septic. Beautiful setting for a large family. $87,500 on 6 per cent Land Contract. 3 bedroom trl-level, 4 rooms, family room with fireplace, 2 car attached garage. $3,000 moves you in, fast possession! EXCLUSIVE SALES OP WEINBERGER HOMES 1530 CROOKS RD. OL 1-0222 474-0474 JOHNSON NEW LISTING Beautiful 3 bedroom brick ranch modern to the minute, fireplace, carpeting, large recreation room in basement, 2 car parage, large lot, fenced in yard. Yov mutt ta* this home to appreciate It. SMITH EARLY AMERICAN Farm house In Clarkston within walking \ distance to school. Slfuated bit a scenic 4 acre parcel. This 4 bedroom home features a fireplace In the living ream, aluminum elding end en enclosed porch where many pleasant sum- mer evenings may be enloysd by your family. All thjs plus a 3 car garage end blacktop driveway makes this home on* which you should consider for your -own. By appointment at $42,RIO. The Rolfe H. Smith Co. Sheldon B. Smith, Realtor.-244 E. Telegraph 333-7848 JOHN K. IRWIN INCOME: NEW RANCH HOME Now Is the time to purchase that new home you . have always wanted. We have lust completed our model homes, consisting ot 3 our model homes, consisting of 3 bedrooms, family style kitchen, JOHNSON 1704 S. Telegraph ARRO Ideally located 2 apts. — Roomy 1 Br. Apt. up that will make payment — Lara* 2 Br. Apt. down that offers comfortable living — $2,000. will handle on F.H.A. 4 BEDROOMi Give the kids a break — large in quiet Sylvan Village with lake privileges — This home la designed tar family living and * Pleasure to show. BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN 8. SONS 313 West Huron—Since 1925 4 FE 5-9445 attar 5 p.m. FE 5-4545 If NICE WOODED LOT With cozy 2 bedroom home, car. -petlng In spacious living room, largo glassed In porch could be third bedroom, 1 car garage. Can be purchased on land contract- or Gl terms. , II PHONE: 634-8204 NEW 3 BEDROOM 'BRICK RANCH, near Clarkston, includes: beautiful carpeting, larga dining room, built-in ment, 1 car attached garage, 44 acre lot. All this can be yours, tar <25,500. 1 ROOM APARTMENT, rentable FREE RENTAL SERVICE to S?I2Jtn,0n hooded lotlOo'x'aS! June 1. Rochester area. 739-20H. j landlords.^, relied!* J{"5h*,« By owner. 674-1437; Near Airport. » ROOMS AND BATH,_private en-, ' 3-5 BEDROOMS, front room, fern S'nlc W PoX!*27.50 - ...osueuffri-.— BACKUS REALTY week, for appointment call 425-2*54. SMALL FURNISHED 5 room house. ROOM* ANO bath, Ideel tar I adult, near St. Benedict'*. Includes heat, stave and refrigerator, $60. Cell Mr. He**. 55*9333, » ROOMS, STOVE, refrigerator jin Mill Pond, Clarkston. Available June 1st. 525-4054, 2 BEDROOM DWELLING. Apply at Morey's Golf A Country Club, 2210 Union Lake Rd. _______■ t ROOMS AND BATH. Heet. stoye, refrigerator, carpeted, and alr-condltloned. No pots or chUdren. 2 blocks from downtown Clarketon. Clefkttan Manor 5234)711. 4 BEDROOM BRICK FARMHOUSE, 16 miles from Pontiac near Romeo. 1st and last months rent plus sac. dep. Avail. June 15, 428-1548. _________l_____ *109 MONTHLY-,MM DOWN bws Townhouses. 1337 Cherrylawn, 335-*171. Agent, American Heritage Apartments *400 DOWN — *109 UP. Includes heel, water, melntenencb. Town-houses, 1337 Cherrylawn, 335-5171. Agent. I, bedroom apartments, n * w building. Completely carpeted, air. conditioning, lots of closet space. ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED IN RENT. ‘ 'CUSTOM CRAFTED" APPLIANCES. B Y HOTPOINT ..Adults only, no pets, 673-5158. BLOOMFIELD MANOR WEST Newly completed luxury apartment*, Helpplnt electric appliances .featured. Carpeting and drapes Indyjlad, Model open dally 10 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Orchard Lake A Mlddlebelt Road 2300 Woodrow Wilton—482-3552 Enjoy A HAWAIIAN WEEKEND Ivnry Weekend Year-Round POOLSIDE at Colonial Village East Condominium Apartments Enlby heated Swimming abet and Seunat Rent for $190 Monthly Buy for $171 Monthly 1800 SCOTT LAKE ROAD between Dixie Highway and Welkins Lake Road Embassy west Spacious' 1- and 2-bedroom, 8155 and $175, no pot* or children.,^Mrs. Schultz, 6744559. 1 to * p.m. ortly. fenced yard, gas heat, nr. Mali end Tel-Huron. *125 per mo. Call efler 4 p.m., 502-4052.___________ Rent Houses, Unfurnished 40 room, fireplace, kitchen, lVa baths, dining room, 2'A-car garage, large bi-level home. Call 624-5389. *16,000 down, St»,000 mortgage. _______________ 3 BEDROOM BRICK Ranch In top Clarkston location. This home has all the extras, including brick fireplace, family room, 1W ceramic bathe, zoned hotwater heat, attached 2 car garage and cylcone fenced rear yard, the well groomed lawn and the expertly pieced shrubs and plantings surrounding this suburban home will give you yean of enloymont. Cell now tar appointment — $30,950 — about 58,000 down. BIRMINGHAM. Like new, small house, area Woodward and 14 Ml. 1257 Davis. ____________[ MENZIES 625-5485 BRICKS DON'T NEED PAINT Bloomfield Orchards. 5 year old ranch, 3 bedrooms, full basement, hardwood tlopre, family room with natural fireplace, bullt-lns, minutes from 1-75. Agent tor owner. OR 4-1649, FE 8-4993. HAMPTON HILLS New delightful subdivision located lust south of S, Blvd. and west off Squirrel Road. RANCHES — THIS - QUADS — COLONIALS. PfflCES^RANGE FROM $45,000 GREATER BLOOMFIELD 4190 TbioorolV*™16 445-4580 SYLVAN LAKE HOUSE FOR SALT North*ldi,| SAM WARWICK — Hal 4-hedroom $17,500. 335-4975. custom built brick and ttona trl- 338-1695 „—„ , —5—;— level, 1'h baths, insulated windows, WATERFORD Beautiful starter home, carpeted available on easy 814,600 with $1700. DON'T DELAY — CALL TODAYI On this homo. Wall to wall carpeting In living room. 3 bedrooms. Full bath plus half bath off master bedroom. Covered screened patio. Fenced $16,950. Can bs purchased on 61 or conventional mortgage. Cash for your equity or land contract EAST SIDE 5-famlly rental unit In tin* eon-d 111 e n . Completely furnished, brings In good returns on Investments, plut oxtra lot. 019,500. MARGARET MCCULLOUGH, Realtor; 5143 Cass-Ellzabeth.Road 682-2211 OPEN 9-9 MLS Sun. 2-S EAST SIDE 3-bedroom hdme. Aluminum sided, carpeting, full basement, gat heat, aluminum storm* end Screens. 2-car garage. —6— nothing down, lust dosing eosts on F.H.A. terms. NICH0LIE-HUDS0N Associates, Inc. 1141 w. Huron 681-1770, after 6 p.m. FE 4-8773 ^ Sale House* 49 Sale Houses 49 I OR 44353 FE 8-7176 Now Is the time ta buy or build, vacant tots available In B rindon, independence, Waterford. Commerce, W. Bloomfield and Avon Twpt. HAROLD B. FRANKS, Realty | all9 conditioning, all city services, 7nucr\ eei|| Tim r lake privileges. 1815 Stratford Rd.» ZONED MULTIPLE \ $42,750.00. open Sunday 2-5 City of Walled Lake. Lovely extra P.M. SHOWN ANY TIME. CALL CROSS CALL KELLER Representing SELLER URGENLY NEEDED 100 HOMES KELLER REAL ESTATE * 681-1833 large home. 8 rooms and bath, carpeted, immaculate and in tiptop shape. Hardwood floors and plastered walls. 3 bedrooms and bath on second floor, living room, fireplace, library, sunroom, large Irltrhon ' full heeamant ' nanna kitchen.! full basement, ' garage. Plus separate rental unit In rear at $150 per month. Home sets on 70x100 ft. lot. Adjoining vacant 90 ft. multiple included in full price. $7500 down, $175 mo. on land contract Everett Cummings, Realtor CAPE COD Full basement, gat heat, bedrooms, full dining room, lots of HOLLY RECREATION AREA, 3'/? year old 3 bedroom ranch, possible to assume 54$ per cent mortgage, 2 car attached garage, lift bath., fireplace, dining room, full base-! ment, skiing, swimming and golf 552-2828. _____ Realty & Investment Co. SAM WARWICK HAS AT 4858 CASS-I We pay cash for used homes KMTO -L-A_K.E -SP .^1674-3105 X MLS bedyoom trams, nice kitchen, basement, 185' wooded lot. Elizabeth Lk. privileges. $19,980. Land contract — $4000 down — Ihow anytime. Call 582-2820 or 682-1714. ____________________________ STARTER HOME North of Baldwin & Joslyn 5 room bungalow with attached garage on 1 acre of black toll end nlcoly landscaped. —O— down, only $608 closing costs moves you In, YORK ■9SJW5S AA.EA£u,‘L!rEVES. AND SUN._____________42«#L» BEDROOMS—2 BATHS room, FHA approved, only $300: at your back door. Owner, 1-634- or 4-0343 down. Agent for owner, OR 4-1649, 9920. FE 8-7176 room, bath, screened porch, lake privileges, stove and refrigerator. Occupancy June 1st. Write Pontiac Prass Box C 16.____________ 1 338-6952. IF YOU'RE A qualified veteran, you SMALL HOUSE FOR elderly couple or middle-aged working couple, would permlf 1 small boy, 1M2 ‘yrs. old, no dogs. Call aft. 5 PM, UL 2-4353, ________;_______ RANCH Rent Lake Cottages 41 LAKE FRONT 2 BEDROOM. Reasonable tor the aeason. 427-3732 TORCH LAKE tottag* 8203. after * p.m. Rent Rooms 42 CLEAN ROOMS, FOR man. Si2 per week, Pontiac area, OR 3-5539 or EM 3-2546 COMFORTABLE ROOM end beth, mlddleaged er older man, no drinkers, 157 W, Howard. CRAWFORD STREET, 2 bedroom, can't pass up this deal. In Drayton, living and dining rooms, It's a two bedroom-ranch with wall circulating heater, stool In base-1 to wall carpeting in living room, ment, storms and screen*, well j dining room and one bedroom. Has JeDi ijowo oo lo"d ..con- liVft cor attachod garage, olumlnum —tract. Will consider cash otters, cover on porch end awnings, and th, Anderson & Associates x price-is only *15,000, - 0 - down. Tirepiace, MJIJBIIIIU,. dUUlimiWW See it today. P-50. | ev°.5X. FE 2-4353 or 6^534!C^.y_ P^Es.ale Corner Lorena and Watkins Lake Rd., Watkins Hills. With lull beth off Master Bedroom. Family room, kitchen with fireplace, carpeting, appliances,! $31,900 ROSS HOMES FE 44591 or 423-0570 Lakeland- Estates, privet# beach, golf, tennis, and Boating. Dixie Hwy. West of Walton Blvd. Models dolly. Sunday 14 pjn, open i , BEDROOM BRICK -- 2 cor attached garage, lift both, fireplace, exc. condition, Waterford location. $32.900. Colt owner, OR >4191. , 'ROOM LAKE FRONT, *19,900. 2 bedrooms. OR 3-2309. . ROOM SHELL HOUSE, Needs repair. Near Cass Lake, S5500. 682-4706 before 9 p.m MEN. KITCHEN PRIVILEGES. 59 «.ROOM OLDER HOME in the North Eastwoy. NICE ROOM FOR RENT With kltchon prlvlloges, single girl from IS to 26, location near Northern High School. COll 412-7484. NICE, CLEAN room tar working gentleman. 335-5893. ROOM FOR RENT with kltchon privileges. 353-8053 offer 5, Room And board at urn Oakland Avo. *105 per mo. or S25 ■ week. 3304537. ROOMS FOR MEN, noor Pontiac Motor. Fisher Body. Fi 5-3051 sis SAGAMORE MOTEL, Yv carpeted, telephone, air eondltlonoo, *40 o week. 789 5. Woodward. Pontiac Press Want Ads p1 or Action Apartment*, Unfurnished 38Apartmenti, Unfurnished 3S NEW APARTMENTS They are pll townhouses, one, two, and three bedrooms. Furnished gas heat, air-conditioned, refrigerator and gas stove are included. Carpeted dnd draped, Coin-operated laundry facilities, swimming pool, ample parking,, storqge lookers. We have them from $165 per month with a one year (ease, children are welcome. No pets, the only utility you pay is electricity. Th* rent ag«iit is on KRidgemonf Apgrtoenfs ■ f-Sf 957 N. PERRY -v ‘%;M!332r3322 Village of Oxford, lot 91'xl34', 517,500, S3,50o down, balance on land contract. 582-9524. CUTE AND COZY 3 bedrooms, gas heat, paved street location. Only $8100 on FHA tormi. TOM REAGAN REAL estate 2251 N. Opdyko__ RAY THE TREES ARE In bloom ond the house Is completely carpeted. Kitchen has built-in range, tho living room Is largo with space for full dining. All brick construction with carport and concrote drive. In exc. Waterford area. Waterford Rlty. 673-1273 THE LAWN is IN And manicured, tho fence Is up end the house Is almost completely carpeted, 1400 sq. ff. of gracious living Includes 3 bedrooms, lift coramlc baths, util, rom and carport. Watorford Really, 673-1273.___ CITY LOCALE N. ANDERSON SL Sharp V/i story* 2 bedrooms down* room for large bedroom up, full IDEAL City location for Papsl Colo or Consumers Power employees. Lovsly two bedroom homo, fully carpeted, custom-built. Has new aluminum siding and roof, paneled family room with door wall exit onto 25x10 covered patio. Large, beautifully landscaped lot, fireplace, garage, etc. . . Won't last at 519,900 FHA. P-61. CALL RAY TODAYI 674-4101 TUCKER REALTY CO. basement, 2'ear garage, paved: Investors Special drive. A bargain at $15,950, *558 4 bedroom Cape^Cod. lull basement down on FHA. ■ RAY OPEN COME VISIT SCENIC. COLONY HEIGHTS 2 MODELS ARE OPEN FOR YOUR INSPECTION FROM 2-7 DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY , Choose from ranch, colonial or trl-level designs with 3-4-5 bedrooms. Priced from S32,700 Including lot. DIRECTIONS: Toko Elizabeth Lake Rd. ’ft mile west from Williams Lake Rd. to Colony Heights. WE ALSO BUILD TrMeval, ranch* colonial homas on your lot priced from $17,100 to $38,900. Exc. Financing Available HAYDEN REALTY Listing — Selling — Appraising — Building IMMEDIATE POSSESSION On this new brick front ranch. 3 bedrooms both ond o half, bullt-lns, sealed glass windows, marble sills, full basiment and 2 cor garage. Only 127,500, Why not let one of our competent solo* staff show you how essy It Is to own this new home? W* arrange your financing. *> UNION LAKE Three bedrooms, belh end a half home enhanced with a specious living room, ssparet* dining room and also a breakfast room. Inclosed porch, 2 fireplaces, many more extras. Why not trade In your present homo? Priced at $43,500. WACKY SHACKY Yup — It will taka paint—plaster—and olbow grease to make this horns your little nast. This horns was lust listed so hurry and coll, 'the best part — It has 3 acres and priced ot lust 113,900, TERM*. NOW OPEN ... NEW MODEL . . . OPEN NOW Open Daily Except Friday from 2 to 5 p.m. Open Sunday from 1 to 6 p.m. 5900 WELLINGTON. A super olumlnum rancher with all aluminum trim, ceramic master bathroom plus half both, formica cupboards, wall to wall carpeting throughout and attachod garago. On your tot, $20,500. DIRECTIONS: Take Dixie Highway to vs-mlle north of An-dersonvilto Jtd.f-turn right on Rockcroft to Wellington. 674-2245 FRUSH0UR REALTY REALTORS - MLS 5730 Williams Lake Rd. 674-4161 Sale House* 49Sale Houses 49 Sale House* 49 10 RpOM BRICK, LARGE LOT, 2400 sq. ft. lake prlvlloges, mortgage unnecessary, $6,000 down, *295 OR 4-1918. S. ANDERSON ST. mo' Well built 2-famjly. 5 rooms and bath on each floor, full basement, 26x40 J, V. rancher, full basement, aluminum siding, Alumo-Vlew windows, on your lot *15,900. Wo also hove 2 lots avallabol In Clarfcston area. Paved street, Clarkston schools and phonos, *3500. Hava modal to show. Model Is for sal* With Immediate occupancy. Open Monday through Friday 8-5 p.m.. Sat. 10 to 4 p.m. ond Sunday 1 to 4- p.m. 625-2674 John Voorheis Builder* Inc__ 112 PRALL ST. Close to Control High School. Larga 2 story brick with extra largo bedrooms and plenty of closet space. Dining room, living room, full basement, gat hoot with power humidifier. Storm windows and screens, price reduced to $15,900 for fast deal. Low down payment available on FHA terms with good credit. S. JESSIE ST. 5-bedroom 2-story home with dining room, full basement, auto, host. Full price, only 113,950, 1500 down On FHA. j j. A. Taylor Agency, Inc. 7732 Highland Rd. (M-59) Dolly OR 44305 Eves. EM 3-7544 THE MECHANICALLY Minded men would love this three bedroom ranch In Waterford. The two-car garage Is finished, heated with upirt t a furnace, wired for. 110 & 220, and has a tllt-a-door. For each access, ' there's 2 driveways, one -circle. ?-5rOther features Include • 15x12 breezeway which could be family KING-PHIPPS CLARKSTON — Sharp brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, plut den, carpeted living room, patio off from dining area, gat hoot. Only *22,580. VILLAGE OF OXFORD 4- Larga 8 room older, 2 story colonial, new modern kitchen with bullt-lns, hot water hoof, excellent location. Priced at 818,500. . KING-PHIPPS AGENCY 1097 S. Lapeer Rd. 628-2555 CLARKSTON AREA I bedrooms, lift baths, full basement, family type kitchen, large lot, or will duplicate on your lot. Don McDonald LICENSED BUILDER ■ OR 3-2837 SISL0CK & KENT, INC. 1309 Pontiac Stele Bank Bldg. 331-9294 330-9294 $400 DOWN AND $109 MONTHLY Moves you In — town house. ) Includes heat,’ water, maintenance, 1337 Cherrylawn, 335-4171. enent. 713 DESOTO -living roam, 2 story brick with dining _rqem and ii v liifl iuuiii* wining • wwii win* kitchen on first floor, 2 bedrooms and bath ,ue, full basement, paneled recreation room, gas hot air furnace. *12,900. 1100 down. Closing leoste estimated at *300. We win procast FHA mortgage for qualified fxwer. qualified txiytr. Kenneth G. Hempstead ---- CLINTON ------------ 3344204 5725 'CLINTON RIVER DR, near A|rport Off Bill. Lake Rd. 2 story brick, attached garage, fireplace In living room, dining room, kitchen, sun parch down, 2 bedrooms and Clarkston School Area 9201 Thendara Blvd. Located 5 blacks N. of Clarkston. Orion Rd*., 4 blocks West of N. Eston Rd., enter from Algonquin, Walter's Lake privileges, new et-' bedrooms, ' n area. 1,-..^ _ „flnSh#* recreation room, an fully carpeted, en T acre parcel — Immediate Occupancy. A new 1950 model Idea Home. Lots of plane or lota tar your selection ta build Jn this fun Jo "live, area." — Open Dally. 573448* ' SYLVAN 582-2300 ......COD ' ^ | wairer-t Lane privileges, n tractive trl-l*v*l7 S large bed Inviting llvIng-dlnlng-Mtchen large f car garage, warm, f CAPE ■) Full basement, gas heat, . bedrooms,! full dining rodm,. tots ot room, FHA approved, only 5300 down. Agent tor owner, 33S-i 474-1691 1-5993. bath up. Full basement, ass heat, targe fenced In beck yard, plenty; of shade tram. 523,500- ;$13,990 THE BIG RANCHER — 3 bedrm., family size kitchen, fully Insulated, Cash for Your Equity HACKETT 1 . 363-6703’ M Land Contract Terms 2761 VENDOME, Avon Twp. NIC* 5 bedroom brick, separate garage, gas heat. QUICK OCCUPANCY. $14,500<00 3340 ROCKHAVEN, near. Auburn Ond , Crooks. Neat 2 bedroom ranch* lust redecorated. VACANT NOWI $12,900.00 114 SCRIPPS ROAD, Orion Twp., near M-24, and new high school. 5 BEDROOM, I'ft story, LARGE LOT. ' $19,990.00 1500 LOCHAVEN, off Cooley Laka, naar S. Oakland Community College. 3 Bedroom Capa,Cod en beeutlful on* aero tot. Breezeway, garage, basement. 50 DAY POSSESSION. 127,500.00. LADD'S OF PONTIAC 391-3300 LAKE OAKLAND HEIGHTS j bedroom brick ranch. Many ex-tras Including family room, fireplace ana In-ground pool, $24,500. 473-1375. ________ room end lake privileges. There's more too, and for only 124,900 fHa or 523,900 Conv. You must see' It now I P-68. CALL RAY TODAYI 674-4101 UNDER $5000 STARTER HOME REGULAR PRINT .ON YOUR LOT P. J, Mason Construction 579S HIGHLAND RD.__ 473-1291 VACANT CAPE COD. 4 bedrooms, basement needs finishing, $2,000 to $2500 balance. Owner's agent, OR 4. 1698. 338-6993. WITH A LITTLE BIT "0" CASH , JUST $1000 DOWN W \ L L PURCHASE .this 3 bedroom Basic-Built alum, tided ranch in Drayton area. Exterior it complete* you finish Interloc;* walkout basement* 70'x220' site. $14*150 on land eotntract.- Will furnish material to finish and add to contract. HAGSTROM, REALTOR 4900 W. HURON OR 4-0358 MLS After 4 p.m. FE 4-7005 WOLVERINE LAKE FRONT A prestige 4 bedroom laka front with a vista view of. the laka. Good area of comparable homas, paved street and drive, attractive landscaping, 2 patios, brick grill, natural fireplace. carpeting, large kltchend basement, attached garage. A good buy at $39,500 with land contract terms. WEST BLOOMFIELD A • delightful rambling brick ranch lust off Mlddlebelt. Features formal living room, private * den,... 3 Idrgo secluded bedrooms, Cabinets galore In kitchen, outstanding family room with fireplace, 2 car garage, —..... j— ------- w it? NORTH END . .... . Real cut# ehd clean 3-bedroom1 beautifully landscaped lawn • ranch, carpeting, paneling, nice paved drive. Way below 'replacement dining area lisro" down on FHA cost at S35.908 with terms ‘ terms, large utility room. On your lot. * YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER iM-T ! . , Russell Yeung, Bldg. *344838—531% W. Huran «t. ATTRACTIVE 5 bedroom red brick Capa jCOd, Jtalf ’ Manor tree, agents, 363-5227. EAST SIDE SPECIAL Real nice 2-bedroom bungalow with .ramie full basement and. enclosed sun; porch;^ zero down; lug mo. SS.foo ‘LAUINGER 74-0319 ' • 47*4141 lauinger1 I WARDEN 673-2155 j 3434 w. Huron, Pontiac NEW MODEL HOME Open dotty \9 to 4 v\ E. J. DUNLAP v / J:A x! ra WM m Custom Builder 27)7 Sllversfone Corner Walton Mi-tits or ntjon ’mm For Action - TED'S McCullough realty, inc. VAL-U-VISION SHOW OF HOMES GRANDILOQUENT Meaning "what a house." This' 1 features an ornate ledgerock patio, walkout basement, 2 tall baths,, 2 car garage, formal dining room, large family room, fireplace, paved drive, and lovely landscaping. LET'S TRADE. BE THE FIRST family to move Into this brand new Capa Cod overlooking a scenic golf course. Thla home was built for family living with a larga klfchtn-dlnlng area. 3 bad-roams, 1V% bathe, full basement, and all aluminum and t)r)ac exterior. FULL PRICE 123.900, EASY. EASY TERMSI , SIX MONTHS iOld, yes, this ranch Is Ilk* brand spanking new featuring carpeting, 3 bedrooms, aluminum siding, hardwood floors, gas hot water heat, full basement, and paved drive for only $21,980. LET'S TRADE. MY IDEA of real living. Is this extra sharp home on 327' of river 'frontage leading out to a beautiful lake wlttv ever 2 acres of land. The home features lovely paneling, fireplace, ceramic tiled both, 2 car garage and 2 dog run*; PULL PRICE $24,900f let's trad*. 4 BEDRM CAPE COD Just en the market I* this lovely 4 bedroom home featuring a formal dining room, 1V% batne, large living room with fireplace, full end paved drive for only TRADE IN YOUR PRESENT HOME. GRAB ON * ' To this real cut# 2-bedroom bungalow with completely fenced back yard* aluminufn storms end screens* paved drive* dining L« hardwood floors and paved street. Pontiac Northern area. ONLY $13*50 ON FHA OR Gl TERMS. 674-2236 MCCULLOUGH Realty, Inc S450 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) *74423* . „ML* \ REALTOR m .V mm.,/ ‘f*. , • / ■ t\ .( ;,*wV ‘ mm D—1 THtE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 "A 'i' I/, V. ; '■Wr'lv, %‘J-S'n . . t f fiffl For Wont Ads Diol 334-498) Mi Nwpsm 49 Sab Howm A&G COLONIAL |.» — DIXIE MWY. LOCATION 49 Sal* Houses HIITER OVERLOOKING DOLE COURSE -excellent 5 room brick randier, family mom with glait-ellding doors, attached garage. *33,700, terms. CITY OF Raved streets, high, dry sand loam, bedrooms, _______I......I lot, new. 4 bedroom, 1430 sq. ft.) S13.SOO, land contract terms, home Including toil basement and 3 car attached garage. ,NORTHSIDE — 3 bedrooms and 025,900 i bath, nice lot. $11,300, terms. 49 Salt Housts $15,900 1 bedroom ranch homa, aluminum siding, oak floors, family kitchen and full basament. Built on your Site In 90 days. Your old house down? How about that? 49 Salt Htaits IRWIN LAKE PRIVILEGES You must see this beautiful bedroom ranch type homa to an Located In the heart of lakelands with ivy baths, and large carpeted 49iSalt Housas MILLS REALTOR 604 S. LAPEER RD. LAKE ORION, MICH. .. PHONE 693-8371 We specialise In small farms and acreage. 10 acres Curtis Rd. flowing stream and trou*-- “ -- **-- Hummer Lake 49 Salt Hamas MILLER AARON BAUGHEY Realtor LAND CONTRACT. 3 bedroom brick ranch. Large living room, dlnlAg gas mat, Large numrner Lane no. iv acres on Im,, Davison Lake Rd. 44 acres on M-24. iJv’' w,,h *3,000 down room, tiled bath, ,____ fenced yard, carport plus lots more, 90 DAY OCCUPANCY ANDERSON & GILFORD Building & Realty 1081 Highland Rd. (M-59) 682-9000 WE BUILD — 3 bedroom ranchers . with oak floors, full basements, alum, siding. On your lot. To see -the model call B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3793 Ells. Laka Rd. <03-8000, attar 0 p.m. <83-8427. ANDERSON & GILFORD Building & Realty 3801 Highland Rd. (M-59) tathitf room on ground iWt ‘tfWTW fireplace plus . „ ____________PWOPI -------- „ __ — I________ ■ room In the basement with built-in Orion 2-bedroom, alum,, sldln bar. Also pool table and piano In- basement, 80 ft, front. Clear Laka, • NORTH SIDE RANCH, n FHA. Just the.clOS ...... ..... ut you. In this doll house. 3 nice 49 Lake Property TIMES Whipple Lakefront i Older home In exeellent condition on a large shady lot. Featuring 2 large bedroooma; possible 4, family i room with fireplace, range, refrigerator, washer, dryer, and attached garage. Offered at only SI Lot*—Acreage $ LAKE INEZ • Atlanta, Mich, on M-32 Pre-Season Special Large wooded laka front, kits on beautiful private, spring fad laka, sandy beaches, from 83,400 Lake , access lots, 2 and S acre parcels available. Excellent fishing. Writ# Laka Inec, 2548 Elisabeth Lake Rd,, Pontiac, Mich, 48054, ph. <74-0858, evenings 4 to 9, 54 10-25 ACRBS, ROLLING, doored. $1,000 on scro, Oxford (too, <28* 3015, 1000' frontage, 8800 per, aero. 363-8813 or 41S-W4. 30 ACRES OUT ON White LOkO Rd., MM oer aero. 363-5131. Fowler. 827,950 — to coll now tor vour LAGOON LOT, 50 X 185, Wilk-out i basement site, Pvt. Lk. OR- 3-3275 CRANBERRY 'I AVON TOWNSHIP, 321 woodad lots and smoil house. Crooks, s, Blvd. ' area, best offer. Ml 4-4994. personal appointment. A FE 5-8183 NORTH END Three bedroom ranch located on o comer lot. Fonced. Tile bath, gas FA heat, excellent condition. Immediate possession. PONTIAC KNOLLS Throe bedroom ranch with hardwood floors, tile bath, full basement with paneled recreation room. Decorated Inside and out. Gas FA heat, fenced rear yard. 81000 down plus closing costs. Vacant. FARRELL A home to be proud of This 3 bedroom brick ranch built by Weinberger lust 4 years ago will make you pop your buttons with pride. A beautiful kitchen with o largo dining area. Family room with fireplace. Full basament. IV* baths. 2 car attached garage. Make living most en-lovable. All this setting on a large well landscaped lot. Silver Lake Estates. Can be seen by appointment. Priced at $42,500. SOUTH SIDE One Btory bungalow with two, bedrooms. Recently decorated, Gas boat# vacant and only $500 down. N. Pontiac Location * Real sharp 3 bedroom ranch. Large 2Vi car garage. Paved drive. 10x12 aluminum sunroom. Carpeting and drapes Included. Low down payment of $450. FHA to qualified buyer. KINZLER Dor, AISO pOOl TBDI0 flnO pinnu in*,Hawilienif uU Ti. iiuni. vIOOi LaKVt 4- ■.ya. tn bltrhAn I irna ntlllSv/ vnAm eluded. Call us In a hurry so you bedroom, alum, siding, 141 ft. front. 9 .............. 7 ■ -Orion ^bedroom, 00 ft. front, .ftf, "•/l%Srtlq329Sgu^^,«« »l Lake 3-bedroom brick, large °t}|”r SSlmtS^ Sei lt to 482-0000 won* mis5 out on this ono. INDEPENDENCE twp. A wall .maintained older 7 room homa with bruzeway and 2 car garage. Extra large rooms and all carpeted. Fireplace and gas heat. On nearly on# acre — all fenced and beautifully landscaped. Prompt possession. NEW WATERFRONT RANCH With boating privileges to 8 good connecting lakes. All aluminum exterior and 8 well planned rooms with attached 2 car garage, 2 lots and nice shade. Prompt possession. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 423-0335 Open 9-9 CUTE Is the word tor i Lake j Brandel ! wooded lot. (drooms.large living room, eating DroytOII Plains cottage. Shaded H 1 | - lot With lake privileges. $9,900. Nix bedroom bungalow wtlh full base-mant, gas haat, large fenced yard, located In town. $11,800 FHA or Gl terms. ' ■ \ 1 \\ ♦his 2-1 Also tor sale, 2-bedroom, 2-story, GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 398 W. Wilton FB 3-7183 BRIAN ivM. Call Mr. CattalL FE 2-7273 . if • Nicnolie-Harger Co. FE 5-8183 FARRELL REALTY LET'S TRADE $100 WILL MOVE YOU IN basement, In Oxford, $500' down plus' dosing cost. Lake Orion 2-bedroom 00900, terms. Nprth Pontiac new 4- bedroom trl-lewl, see and .make offer. 2-bwlroom Lake Orion 00 ft. commercial on M-24. Many others Jo choose from. Call us If Vou want help In tailing your homa. The difficult we do Immediately. The impossible takaa little longer. CHARLES MILLS BROKER HERRINGTON HILLS, 2 bedroom brick ranch In vary nice repair. Featuring built In oven and range, tiled bath, carport,. Anchor fenced lieu uoiiii (.arpufif, Bncnui Tenvvu yard with, nice landscaping. Just 818500 on FHA terms. 4 BEDROOMS WEST of city. A-l family homo. Formal dining room, full basamant, goo hoot, large porch. Garage & 2 lots. Close to schools A stores. 818,950 full price. 332-0262 OPEN 9 TQ 9 <18 W. Huron St. LEACH WILL BlilLD 'GAYLORD OFFERS Union Lakey one of the few nice 3 bedroom brick homes with lake privileges, 2 fireplaces, 2 baths, sewing room, family room and 216 car garage, many extras, unbelievably priced at $30,950. CITY CONVENIENCE out of the City, A very neat 3 bedroom, full basement, on the north end of Pontiac. This homa Is only 2 years old. Marble sills, double-view windows, hardwood and carpeted floors. Call today, 493-8333, FE 8-9493. SUBURBAN 3 bedroom ranch on 100* X ISO* lot, part basement, gas haat, alum, siding, only 12 miles to Flint, priced at 8)8,500. NEAR CLARKST0N 8 bedroom colonial on 10 acrot, basement, garage, small barn, almost new, priced to soil. GOOD STARTER HOME tor tome-one willing to tlx It up a IBtle. Two bedroom asbestos ranch, close to schools and shopping at Mirada Mila. Onjy $10,000 FHA or VA. P-64. HEY VETERANSI Immediate possession and a low price * of 87,600 (or this asbestos ranch in Pontiac. Need to know more? Give us a cell. P-03. IT'S A PLEASURE tor us to show you these terraces on E. Blvd. for $0,000. Both have two bedrooms, llv- EASTHAM VON DRAYTON WOODS room Beautiful yard In excellent neighborhood. Price $23,500, call today. COUNTRY LIVING fi 1 bedroom homa located on wooded lot, booutlfui kitchen with tollt-lni, large convenient utility room, gaa hoot, beautiful hardwood floors end door-wall. The boat part STARTER HOME Wllion Street, It's unusual .for us to have such a nice 3 bedroom; rancher with . basement and garage to sell at $4,000 on land contract, but wa hava It. RETIREMENT HOMES In the village’of Lake Orion. Live in one and let the other help with the finances. For more information, call 493-8333, FE 8-9693. BRIAN REALTY Ing room, dining room, kitchen, full Living room, dining room, kitchen, We Sold Your Neighbor's Home | basement, apd very clean Inside, j knotty pine interior, lake privileges Multiple Listing Service Call us to see them. P-58 8. 59. on Big Lake, large patio, nice lot Weekdays 'til-9 Sunday 10-4 - with fr “ *--j — — 5280 Pixie Hwy. ______________623-0702 A Gl SPECIAL In Union Lake! Only NO CLOSING COSTS bedroom ranch. 6 years old. Gas heat. Aluminum storms and screens. Sewer and water. FHA OR Gl 5 room bungalow, .Largo 13x15 llv* Enclosed front porch. City Ing room. ......... ..... Full basement. Got hut. water and sewer. 2 car garage. Large 100x150 ft. comer lot. Walking distance to GMC. WE BUILD 1,100 square toot. Thru bedroom rancher. Family room. Full basement, oak floors, ceramic bath, large family kitchen with formica counter tops and marble window sills. Built-In range, gas furnace, gas hot water, only 2)5,990 on RUttor. 052-5375. Sharp ranch on a largo corner lot featuring 3 bedrooms, gas heat, ___________________________ carpet, drapes, fenced back- yard j LAKE FRONT HOMES, and 2 car garage. Only $14,950 and Hew and Used, we can arrange financing tof you.! J. L. Dally Co. EM 3-7118 » A GOOD WAY TO LIVE Call right away to loo Cass Lakefront vyith t beautifully remodeled older home and brand now 2 bedroom apartment tor gouts or 'rental. Features Include: kitchen bullt-lns, 4 bedrooms, largo screened porch overlooking the lake. 2 separate must tu to appreciate — to call today for ' your personal appointment. WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" LAKE FRONTS, COMMERCE, Fox, Tyrone, Coder island. Fowler. 383-8322. ■' ,! - ■ • ■.____ MODERN 2 BEDROOM, kltchen-llv- Ing room, both,, utility, largo -----___________ i... i .i,. Hillman. Completely .......... 89,500. Coll 742-4558 or write: ■William Grun, Hillman, Ml 4-9748, ORION SCHOOLS, SO* frontage on Cedar Lake overlooking Indlen-wood Lake and Marl Laka, 81000 down. Times Realty Indian Laka, 65* x 270* lot on bay, $3,900. GREEN ACRES 1489 8. Lapur Rd;_________MY 3-82*2 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY 523-0800 ' REALTOR Open 9-9 I DAILY OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? UNUSUAL HOME If you ore looking for a lovely family homo as well ao Inveetmont property you won't wont to mist this opportunity! Near 1-75 and Dixie In-terchango this tour bedroom, 31* bath home Is Idul tor toe large family or for one expecting many guests. Entertaining will be perfect with a completely finished walk-out lower level, two fireplaces, family SYLVAN VILLAGE 3 bedroom brick ranch, IV* baths, family room, Florida room, largo living room, natural fireplace, all rooms j carpeted, buBt-lns In kitch- COUNTRY ACRES 29* ACRES, complatolv wooded, 84,995, 15 per font down. l ACRES with O Pleasant countryside view, 83,950, terms. ; acres, flat, to slightly rolling, Wall, 84,995, tonm. • *0* N 10 ACRES, Lapeer ima. wlde roed frontage tnd all food lend. Many parcels to choose from, 85,150, 8900 down. 23 ACRES on blacktop rood, S12,S5 bath. Full basement, elevator, extra lot tor perking. $59,500, terms. WILL TRADE "SYLVAN MANOR" bl-l*vtl 4 bedroom ranch with full basamant, 2V living room, spacious formal dining room, kitchen and 3 nice bedrooms on first floor, plus an extra bedroom and recreation room In basement, 2 car garage, city sewers and water, large landscaped let with lots of fruit and (hade trus, good location, excel lent neighborhood and schools, mortgage terms available. 28 E. Huron St. and range, tile bath, large utility! REALTOR room. Vacant, I m m ed I a t e ' „ , „ . . . „ . possession. Move In fpr about $550 Off Ice Openi Evening* 8, Sunday 1-4 closing costs. Hurry On this one. 338-0466 CLARK REAL ESTATE 1352 W. HURON ST. 582-1850 OPEN 9-9 MLS In association with Howard J, Fried A HOME- FOR THE GROWING FAMILY Cowboys and Indians never hed It so 3 BEDROOM-BASEMENT Sale Houses 49Sale Houses 49 mrnwm BUZZ BATEMAN SAYS "BUSINESS IS TERRIFIC" FHATERMS #3 NORTH END bungalow, it* baths, basement, and large fenced .yard. Minimum down. CALL NOWII ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE PROGRAMI I JUST LIKE #44 NEWII 3 bedroom quad-level on the water: 2 baths, bullt-lns, family room fireplace, and attached garbge. CALL TODAYII ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE PROGRAMII PRICED BELOW DUPLICATION: 3 bedroom trl-level with fireplace, IV* baths, family room and attached garage. Needs a little "flxln." $25,950. SEE IT TODAYII ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE PROGRAMI I , LAKE FRONT UNDER $30,000. Three bedroom brick rancher, firepiece, garage, dock and wooded lot. .CALL TODAY 11 ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE PROGRAMI! ■ EXECUTIVE LAKE FRONT CLARKSTON AREA 4 bedroom colonial. 2Vfe baths, dream kitchen, family room fireplace,, ettached garage, on a wooded lot. ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE.PROGRAMI! SWIMMING POOL #82 ON OVER AN ACRE of lend, plus 4 bedroom rancher with rac room, 2V* baths, and an attached.garage. CALL NOWII ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE PROGRAM)! CLARKSTON AREA .#86 "LIKE NEW" 3 bedroom ■ rancher with basement: family ’ room flraplaca, attached gafege. SEE IT TODAYII ASK' ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE PROGRAMII INFLATION STOPPER 11 #88 BRICK RANCHER With 3 bedrooms, l1/^ baths, finished basement, «nd garage, for lust $25,500. CALL TODAYII ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE PROGRAM!! CONVENIENCE J, ‘ V #94 NEAR EVERYTHING!! Spotless 3 bedroom aluminum rancher with basamant, garage, and a fenced yard. CALL TODAY!) ASK ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE PROGRAM!! SIX NEW models RANCHERS, COLONIALS, SPLIT-LEVELS. QUALITY-BUILT WITH QUALITY MATERIALS. ONE TO MEET YOUR NEEDS AND Mckitgook. CLARKSTON rtViT a r*- 0RI0N/0XF0RD' 625.2441 rUTsI i iAU 6284211 1 ROCHESTER 651-8518 338-71611 6284211 UNtON LAKE S634171 i MG sss If'; ■, y i % yr m good, with 5 acre to romp on, plenty of room inside to, with 3 bedrooms, plus a den and rac. room In the basement, both paneled, kitchen ap-pliancu already In thla spacious 15x18 kitchen, carpeting throughout the home, gas heat,-1 and V* car garage, located on Hospital road with buses to school. Give us ■ cell and we will tell you more. SOUTH END Take your pick from one of these beautiful brick front ranchers now under construction. Over 1JM0 sq. ft. of living aru. Featuring a 12x19 tt. kitchen and dining araa, hardwood floors, gps hut. Priced at 818,500, 8800 down plus dosing costs. EAST SIDE Clean. 2 bedroom bungalow, with I basement and gas hear, close to Super sharp 2, possibly 3, bedroom home. Featuring alum, siding, full basement, gas haat, wall to wall carpeting and a I1/* car garage. Bargain priced at 315,500. Move In for about 1500. Murphy Park on corner lot on paved; stredt you could walk to GM plant,! priced at only *5900. Call today. LAZENBY LAKE PRIVILEGES On one of the best lake* In the C o u nt y . 3 bedrooms, fireplace, attached garage. Only 197,900. NORTH SIDE Corner lot, alum, aiding, basement and garage. Only *15,500. FHA terms. Claude McGruder Realtor 3710 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 528-0730 Val-U-Way Realty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 $0 D0WW Gl L Suburban ranch, newly I decorated, large lot. A steal at $13,950. . INCOME j 2 houses on one lot. 1 rented. Multiple Listing Service OPEN Wi 345 Oakland Ave. 5 MUU9C3 VII VIIW IVI. I IVIIICU, 1 furnished and nOw vacant for immediate possession. Sale Houses 49 Sale Heutei wmm 49 LOTS ---- 100x300 Waterford Hill. 00,500. 1 10x300 , Lake front, Lakewood Village. 180 tt: watef front. Duck Lake. *8,500. IT'S TRADING TIME" Mission Impossible is a mission accomplished when you see this custom built throe bedroom home. In a setting of tall shade trees,, winding paved streets and velvety green lawns. Inside you'll find spacious rooms, two fireplaces, carpeting and drapes. Two ceramic baths, formal dining room ahd beautiful kitchen, Including bullt-ln oven, range, dishwasher and garbage disposal. *Gas hot watar heat, city wafer, full finished basement and two. Plebsont take Highlands A dreamy brick ranch biillt the way you want Jt. Extra large living room with carpeting and featuring wood-burning fireplace. Thru generous bedrooms, IV* baths, attached garage. All this on a nicely landscapped lot. Priced at *23,500 with as little as 105* down plus mortgage cost*. Call , for an appointment today 1 OUR GUARANTEED TRADE-IN FLAN IS DESIGNED FOR YOU, MR. HOMEOWNER — WITHOUT IT — YOU MUST SELL BE-FORE YOU BUY: — OR BUY BEFORE YOU SELL.— CALL RIGHT Now TO TRADE THE HOME YOU OWN FOR THE HOME Y.OU WANT I y Ask f WAN’ I tor hi ny of our w qualified saltsbeppl*' — Leon* Hunt, Elaine Smith: Pete Groenenatl, Leo Bogert, Dev* Bradley, emary Butter, Dohna Goodin, Olata Howard, Dick Bryan, Blleen Moyer, *r Norm 1071 W: Huron St. MLS 681-1000 R0YCE LAZENBY, Realtor STOUTS Best Buys Today BASEMENT A MUST? Act fast Immaculate 3 bedroom ranch in top location with carpeting, ceramic tile bath, tiled kitchen with axtra ample uting aru, full basamant, 2V* car attached garage. On a lovely landscaped lot with beautiful blue spruce. Priced I tor Immediate' ult it $23,900. No. 9-13 j LOG, 2 BEDROOM, 28’x28', $2995. ! Brick 2 bedroom, 28' X 28' $3995; Chalet 4 bedroom, S 7 9 9 S. Completely roughed in on your lot. Bill Daw, FE 8-2198 or FE 8-3529. IS YOURS A LITTLE FAMILY? If so, don't fall to Inspect this extra nut two bedroom home located in Waterford area, with lake privileges, large lot, garden aru, IV* car garage. Living room carpeted, automatic dishwasher. Priced at $17,200. «S-.C No.12-15 Resort Property 52 BARNES LAKE 10 mile* north of Lapur, 2-bad room year round cottage, with full basement, 50x150' wooded lake front lot. 1145 Lake Shore Dr. Ken Mlnto, Gallager Really Co„ Flint. ,CE 9-8591. MILLER LAKE, North of Lapur 10x50 mobile home with 10x45 addition on 1 acre with lake access, shown by appointment. 793-4540. Tom Glesenkamp. NEED A 4 BEDROOM HOME But don't want to mova out of the city? Here's a clean *blder home lust five minutes walk from downtown. Large lot, partially fenedd. Can be bought on FHA terms. Just $14,000. No. 20>33 NEW COTTAGE AND WOODED LOT — As low as $329 down, low monthly payments. Private sand A VIEW THAT CAN'T BE HIDDEN I- Of beautiful Upper LONG LAKE In Blootnfleld Township. Futures 4 bedrooms, 2V* baths, separate dining room, 14x15 family room with . raised hearth fireplace, basement, attached 2V* car garage with blacktop drive. Lake privliegea. Custom tout for present owner, a delight to au and priced *t $49,500. THINKING BRICK?— contemporary 3 bedroom brick ranch home In Herrington Hills In excellent condition throughout, 1’/* baths and carport. Basement and loaded with extras. Su this! Can ba handled with only S3OO0 down and aisuma mortgage. 4 BEDROOMS- Clty location off Oakland Avanua this elder 4 bedroom home Is Ideal for the large family. It Includes a living room, dining room, sawing room end kitchen on the main floor with 4 bedroom* up. Full basement with gas hut. Very nut end clean throughout. Warren Stout, Realtor 1456 N. opdyke Rd. FE 5-0155 Dally 'll! 8 Multiple Listing Sale Houses 49 Sale Houses 49 NEW MODELS OPEN DAILY 1-5 P.M. at Lake Angelus Lakevlew Estates. West dn Walton, to Clintonvlll* Road to Lake Angelus Road. beach on large lake. Fishing and boating. Dur and partridge hunting. Northern Development CO., Harrison. Office on Bus. US-27, (I- „___ 75) across from Wilson State Park. Sola Farms Open 7 days a wuk. (Member rB,n" Chamber of- Commerce.) SPRING Brings . apple blossoms end we have several 3 acre parcels located In Apple Lane. Estates on Oakhlll Rd. and Hadley Rd. Yet, you can have a horse. Priced at 35,950 with 1-3 down. BOB WHITE REAL ESTATE 525-5821 RHODES EXCELLENT HOMESITES. Orion Twp., 82500 <0 $5000. C*U today tor details. ALBERT J. RHODES, Realtor FE 8-2305 250 W. Walton Fl 8-5712 5712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE SCHOOL HOUSE LAKE, axcallanl Waterford building alta on Shawne# Lane, sacrifice at $7,900 tor quick sale. Waterford Rulty, 573-1273. * TRAILER LIVING, don't rent, buy. Holly aru, near 1-75.55x120', Mack top, gas. 24495. EZ forms. SHELDON 625-5557 56 RAY O'NEIL REALTY Income Property 50 GOOD INCOME PROPERTY. Must sacrifice, health problems. 8 furnished apt*, plus madam living quartan. No realtors. 593-1097. HALLMARK Suburban Property r.i ACRE PARCELS, WOODED, roll-53 Ing, live stream. Horses allowed, terms, Fowler, 353-8322, 303-5511. DIXIE HWY. nur Holly, 17 mile* from Flint ot Pontiac. 3 bedroom brick ranch. Birch kitchen with built In oven and rang*. Full tiled bath. Fulh basement with - nice recreation room. Attached 3 car 000 cash to new mortgage. McNamara Realty Holly 534-8552 Fenton L; 529-7422 LAPEER) LINCOLNSHIRE Lake Estates, 5 bedroom brick tome, over 3,800 tquara feet of living araa, 22x38 garage, many special features, 845,000. Edward G. Hutchings, Broker, 444 N. Court St„ Lapeer 654-4081. 10 ACRES, UNIMPROVED house, small pond. $10,200 - $4,300 down. 3 WATTS REALTY 827-3547 1958 M-15 at Bald Bogle Lake 80 TO 800 ACRfcS In Lower Michigan. Dairy, grain, hogsl Nam* your farm but .. ...... HMU _________________, needs, w* have It at Dean’s "Michigan's Farm Rul Estate 279-9748. Lots—Acreage APARTMENTS 3700 — will make you landlord ot 1 ACRE OF your awn 2 or 3 family apartment. Redecorated: hat new gat furnace, all city conveniences. *330 Income per mb., good location. 54 574-4133 4121 Highland R4 (M-59) Next to Airway Lanes Lake Property 51 2 WATERFRONT LOTS edlecent to Sylvan and Otter Laku. aim In-cludet 20'x20' boathouse. $7,950. Terms. Or make cash offer. 474-1132. • . •. .______ OXFORD OFFICE METAM0RA IN THE HILLS Early American farm home In the middle of thla sleepy community, doss'to everything. Gingerbread trim accent* the toeuty of this older home, new carpeting In the master bedroom, living'room and formal dining room, partly remodeled, $ large room. Gas F/A hut, 2 car garage, double lot, only S14,9W with $4,000 down Land cod-/ tract: ask for; 250-E. ' * BEATS RENTING Nothing down FHA,. SlM/per month Including texu end Insurance, owner says ull It fast, located In area of home* selling tor much more. 12x16 living room, combination kitchen, dinette. Full basement, gat heat, water and sewer, convenient aru with bus service, only 312,500, aik for 288-E. 11 ROOM FARM HOME On 2/5 acres located on blacktopped road In Orton-dru, 4 bedrooms, huge dining roam, extra large living room, excellent home for renovating with early American lines, additional house on property that could become rental unit, 350' of road frontage, 522,900 with land contract terms, ask for»278-E. , « LAKE PRIVILEGES HEAR 0RT0NVILLE Shqrb 2 bedroom bungalow with family room, new drapu thruout, plastered ‘ walls with jeoved ceilings, $18,000 full MIC*, VA forme available, ask for 271-E. c TV . “ 823 S. Lapeer Road ,. PHONE.*! 628-2548 Oxford 4-H REAL ESTATE LAKE FRONT — Twin Lakes. Hot days, warm nlghta won't frazzle you in this lovely 3 bedroom brick with walk-out basament, family room, 2 car garage. Superbly, landscaped. s Sandy buch. Just must be sun I Price — 199,500: terms available. 5844 Dixie Hwy. 623-1400 After 5 p.m. OR 3-0455 OR 3-2391 LAND In restricted! subdivision, 2 miles north of' Clarkston. Quick access to - 1-75. 625-2250. -____________. 157 ACRE FARM In Mlstauku County with • room modern bouts and garage attached, hat water heated, fru gas, new barn, 110x32, basement, 50x32, another building, 75x20. Very good land, all llrhed. Must see to appreciate. Write: Gen* Gibbs, Rout* No. 1, McBain, Mich. 48057. 1, 5, 10 ACRE PARCELS, wooded rolling. Fowler Rlty., 353-0322. 20 Acrat, 31,000 an acre, with strum and 2500 ft. road-frontage. FLATTLEY REALTY 620 COMMERCE RD. 143-4911 2 LOTS, 50'Xl32' Oft JulyiL 1 mil* from Pentlec Motors. »1,500 each. 21* ACRE HOMESITE with lake privileges. 501-0071. 21* ACRES HIGHLAND AREA, naar Milford, M-S9, 33(7x330', private road, cleared lend. 8700 down. SHELDON 625-5557 80 FOOT FRONTAGE ON PONTIAC LAKE Beautiful residential lot On Tackles Dr. Perfect location fpr summer or year around home on clear inland fake located lust mlnutu from Pontiac an# only 20 tiilnutu from Detroit are*. Lend contract term*. Only 41,000 dawn. Cell Jerry Dreaner, Dl 2-9393. ARTHUR N. KING, REALTY COMPANY 3 TO 5 ACRE PARCELS, zoned so you can keep a horse. Rolling* port woodland. $5,800.-15 pdr cent down. , v AL PAULY <73-3800 Eves. ■ 873-9272 COUNTRY ESTATE Large remodeled farm hem* with huge family room that Includes stone fireplace, country kitchen with built-in oven, rang* and dishwasher, 4 large bedrooms. Living room. Family room, 11* beths. Nice hip-roofed barn suitable tor horsu plus ether outbuildings. All this set* on S rolling ecru with lots of shed* true. Shown by appointment only. ROYER REALTY, INC. GOODRICH 636-2211 DAVISBURG 4 BEDROOM elder' house, small torn with Tt acres it 8800 ur acre, Holloway Rulty, Call Holly *34-9935 or Fenton 829-4371. HADLEY AREA 40 acres, 30 tillable, good buildings, : including 3 bedroom brick Cep* Cod home on paved reed. BEAUTIFUL 3V* ACRE ISLAND -r wlth 4-bdrm. home. Everything fum. In Irish Hills. « ml. t* Ml speedway *524100 cub or 40 per cent down 827-2548. COMMERCE LAKE cottage with lake privileges Low texu veer l«K* privileges low texu veer •rouho. 873M cash. By owner. 3*3-3052 or 474-1427 r CEDAR ISLAND LAKE 100 ft, on Bey. 1700 aq. ft. Cuatom, c vnilD Birt, quality, brick. Mbit condition. ,3 { TAKE YOUR PICK- 3 FAMILY INCOME On Oakland Ave. Modem 3 rooms and bath, shewing approximately 3350 per month Income. Can be purchased on land contract. WRIGHT REALTY 3tt Oakland Ave. FE *71*1 4 ACRE* HOAR Clarkston, 1-75, excellent building ell* In restricted aru of new homes. $10,500. 874-2732, " 4Vi ACRES. CORNER Squirrel and ShlmmOM Rds., Pontlec Twp« nr. Oakland University. Hat home. Potential apartment alt*. $34,000. 547-1159. Mrs. Germain*. . ACREAGE FOR SALE- 0AKLAND county 121 acres. Includes almost privet* II acre ’laka, frontaqa on 2 reeds, remodeled farm torn*. Call tor details. 48 ACRES Neer Davisburg, strum thru prop-arty with peulEl* lake, $11000 down on lend, centred. BATEMAN INVESTMENT «. COMMERCIAL CO, Specializing • ln_ Invsstmsnt Reel . jMif' . 177 S. Telegraph Rd. 2 338-9641 Weekdays, after 5. Set. S. Sun. — Cell 1344109 bedrooms, 2V* baths, large living room, family.: room, aa. with fireplace. Overlooking lake and 35 ft. patio. 4 ear -wttached garage. Carpeting, , drapes, melor appliances Inch Exc. value. *42,500. GORDON. WILLIAMSON Ml 4-1400 OOT^pie B. B'ham. Of ■ thru, four, teh, twenty one or forty two acre parcel that lays perfect/ Close to Dryden and the right spot tor that smell WebsteiNCurtis OXFORD-ORION LAKE' FRONT LOT With dock, bosthoud* and Mtlo, beautiful view of woodnuii Lake. ALSO t _MMi ham* on quint Igymouf* Ump career!, gaa heat, full price 017,990, Brian# IpZ, 423- torm . location you are . looking | Horu term 73 acres. 50x100 Indoor for., Only *5 pof cont4 down on ring. 23 box itiiii. tiov , him# land contract, nothing Ilk* It. romM.ito tom. £to' itPtfm, uly $49,500, ti6,ooo down, * *r ly possession. 6*34343 . . . \ , ; . \ ;\ OA 4 BUILDING SITES Located, en P*Wd read wtthvj mltouRHeHy onSMaektop read. Each alto 140x200: Only 6495 dawn with eaey terms. Warron Stout, Rualtor 1450. N. Opdyke JM. Ft <4163 Open Dally RUU 1 Sale Businun Property *1 Wr 'H?1 M mji 11 •w:1’ & A, < >>1® m SIF alslee H 2 B Sfff) mm: ffl TOs m Kfi d 3- «&v S ■ 7 * !!!i Iffiv For Wont Ads^Dlal 334-4981 Sals Busintis Proptrty 57 II ACRES - DIXia HIWAY Ha>r. TotapfAph, aenad multiple, possibly rezoned to manung- HURON IT. ... L_, B ft. corner, water and ■ fewer. CM ba divided. 3195,000. ACROSS PROM HUDSON'S »■ Entranca to Pontiac Mall, 102x230 ft. frontaga on I atraota, WH£ A aawar, f lana hlway. „ 01,171 Rant ft., total 1237,300. Other eomm'l proporltlai. WE ’ WILL . TRADE -Annett Inc., Realtors 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 ■ OffloO Opon Evenings A Sunday 1-4 1200 SQ. Vi. on great, 3200 aq. ft. basement, 2 nlca offices. Ideal tor atoraga, small manutachirlng or .. any aarvlca type business, immediate occupancy. O u I n n Construction Co., 334-7477. ■ DRAYTON . ... - PLAINS—400' on paved road, 125' deep, zoned light Industry. C-3 use permitted. Easy dustrv. ' m use permitted. Easy access to US-10, MS and Airport, will split 0125 per front foot. AL PAULY OR 3-3*00 Evas, 47X212 HIGHLAND - J401 ON Milford Rd. Corner lot 140’ deep. 3200 sq. ft. Vito Victorian double brick noma hi Exc. repair. NOW block garage. in NA»a iRimns naif uivm.il ueiauv> 24 x 21 31 x 14 out building. Zoned Industrial. 850,080. Owner. 017-4422. Multiple and Commercial Near Milford, zoned for 140 units or would ba suitable for shopping cantor. Sowar and water avail. Owner will consider trades or participating In tnist. BRIAN REALTY Wo Sold Your Neighbor's Homel Multiple Listing Service ’'Weekdays 'til I Sunday 10-4 5210 Dixie HWy. _______________423-0702 SELL OR LEASE PONTIAC — manufacturing' plant, 1,300 aq. ft. block construction, rallread aiding, 2 truck walls, tank storage, air conditioned offices, parking area. Contact J. Alf, Vulcan Laboratories, 334-4747, Zoned ro-i Dixie Highway frontage, 100 feet of frontage on the . busiest highway Tn Oakland County. Large colonial styled home with 2-car garage and a large lot which can be adapted to a variety of business ventures. Trade your present equity In an this desirable site. $49,900. FRUSH0UR REALTY 5730 WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD 474-2245 ________474-4151 ButiiWM Opportunities 59 1-QUESTIONS ’ POR I. INVESTORS e — to Washington getting too fnuch jjf your money! Tax money, that t — Having trouble disposing of your Investment properties without paying a heavy capital Mins taxi N so, contsct Bob Sartlabaugh, Commercial Exchange Dept. McCullough realty II UNIT TRAILER PARK also laundromat — sporting goods store and miniature race trade — room for 2 extra businesses all under Also 100* on lake. 1139,000. Includes Inventory and equipment. Retiring couple, will stay on 3o days to orient now owners. 4 par cent contract. Terms. UNDERWOOD ._______425-2415 / Are You Searching For The American Dream ? >' well, schlsve It with a PURE SERVICE STATION DEALERSHIP travel the road to success, your own business, and cell all me shots, a PURE aarvlca station dealership Is your answer, wa for tho right man. If you qualify, some financing available p.m. at 402-3344 or after 5 p.m, ‘ coll Mr. ProudfOot of 473-3773. BA R• R■ STAURANT, Beach. Building and aqulpment. Vary good condition. Call 517-479, mi - __________ party. Call attar 4 p.m. 334-4959. Investment property — cant, larot or 101011, good otloc-tlon. Saveral rantals on 10 acres, rural, MOO par month Incoma. UNDERWOOD 425-2415 ________ Inflation Levaragt area. Ill ft. X 213 ft. Zoned C3. Well pqulppad Beauty Shop and rental unit can ba leased out, $17,500 will handle. Elwood Realty 402-2411 PRINT SHOP Offset and letlterpress shop In A-l location near Pontiac. Your golden opportunity to Obtain this exciting and fast growing business for lust, 00,000 down, owner will agree to stay for breaklng-ln period If required. -Call today for fur particulars. __ - * WARDEN REALTY 1434 W: Huron, Pontiac 482-3920 Partridge MS THE BIRD TO SEE" —r. L; I Businsis OpportunitiBS 59 Salt Clothing 64 AAARATHON SERVICE (teflon Pon- hoists, high potential. Will hWp finance. Haply confidential. Write Pontiac Prew Box C41. FULL LnNOTH WHITE toe* and organza; wadding dross, with chapel train. Stz* IS. CalinS4B35. NEED S couples to buy IHihlt Co-Op apt. on lakafront. Adults entyiCash IVORY WEDDING DRESl, *lz* 10. 473-1147 aft. 6. Box C-5. MISSES, LADIES dress**, formal*, coats. Slz* *-10. 151-3327. RESTAURANT, VEffV good lecaiton, *5,000 down and taka q.y#r payments, 3434724. ^ Salt Household Gauds 65 SOFT WATER Business doing vary large volume. Old time Independent company having th* following: ..exchange tank dept. — doing very well. Auto, softener rental dept. Salts eftBute. units. Salt delivery. Each section ef this business Is making very high aamlngt, with the expanding papulation with , new suburban development and hard country water. \ t ■ YOU CAN'T LOSE' ILL HEALTH FORCES SALE -HOLLY, MB 44494 AFTER 5 PAL W WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO FAY 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE ; $297 1 *2.50 par weak LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1441 Ealdwln at Walton. FE 2-4342 Aoca of Free Parking Evas. *tll 8; sat. 911 4. EZ terms SOFT FREEZE ICE cream and sandwich shop combination. All carry out. Fur teas*. 674-2112. i, 10 x 12 WOOL RUG and pfd; 1, 12x1M wool rug and pad; 1, 4x20 Rat an woven ran; tplac* porch furniture. TO M155. WANT TO SELL YOUR BUSIN&it Definitely, Realtor Partridge 1* tha bird to sat. 1050 Huron, Pentlac, 334-3511. 2 HORSE SLEIGH OVER 150 years eld, useable condition, heat offer ovar 8150, private party. 4934341. Sale Land Contracts 60 3-ROOM — (Brand new furniture) $239. Cash. farm*, lay-away. Pearson's Furniture, 440 Auburn — PE 4-7SS1. 1 TO 50 . LAND CONTRACTS ’ 3 PIECE SPANISH style bedroom outfit. Used 1 Week. Cost *200 will sell for $125. 448 Phillips, 338-9411. deal. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyk* Rd. FE 5-114! Open Evas, 'til 0 p.m. 4-PIECE BEDROOMS, brand new, 099. Little Jea't Bargain House, 1441 Baldwin, FE 2-4842. 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $4.95 Solid Vinyl Til* 7c a*. Vinyl Asbestos til* ....7c *a Inlaid Tito, 8x9 7c on. Floor Shop—2253 Elizabeth Lake "Across From ths Mall" BY OWNER ^ Dude La It* privileges#. good discount. FB 2-6245. CASH FOR LAND CONTRACTS H. J. Van wait 4540 DlxIa Hwy. OR 3-1355 CHOICE CONTRACT— Secured by 1 room and hath horn* an Willed Lake frank proparty sold tor 312,000 araoanr balance $10,500. Can b* handled for 08,350.00. All due In 12 years. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke FB 5BI45 I*1 KELVINATOR refrlgarator. good condition, call 4114711 aft. 1 p.m. T7 CUBIC P06t ffefrlgerator-Preeztr. white, duobi* vertical doors. 1200. 3324124 day*, 473-1735 night*. 1967 UPRIGHT freezer, cheap. 731-2502. 194$ COPPERTONE Tappan alactrie rang#, aya-laval oven, and largar on# balow. Ilka naw $175, call 625-2382. SOLD FOR $7,650, *2,000 down, 7 per cent Interest, $45 monthly payments. Will discount $1,053. Other land contracts available at good discounts. Cell and ask for Charles Pangus. ' c. PANGUS, REALTORS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 430 M-l5 - Ortonvlll* CALL COLLECT 427-3815 1968 USED SINGER TOUCH AND SEW contrail tor buttonholes, zig-zag, fancy designs, ate. Smooth steady state features for easy touch button operations. Deluxe model comes complete with cabinet end fra* lessons tool Full price, $44.33. Call Midwatt Ap-pllance, 9-9 dally. 3344312. Wonted Contracts-Mtg. 60-A 1969 TOUCH-A-MATIC Naw pawing machines, does fancy stitching, maktt buttonholes, etc. Sold tor |124i0, balsnc* only 129.50 er pay fl.10 per week. Call day or night, 338-2544, tmptrlal. LARGE OR SMALL land contracts, quick dosing. Reasonable discount Earl GSrrals, MA 45400 or avaa, EM 34004. 1 . -MILLION Dollars has bean mad* available to us to purchase and assume land contracts, mortgages or pity homes, lots er acreage outright. W* will give you cash for your equity. Our appraiser is awaiting your call at: 674-2236 McCullough realty 5440 Highland Rd. (M-59) MLS Open 9-9 6742234 1968 SINGER Used zlg zag sawing machine; overcasts, monograms. Blind hams, makes buttonholes without attachments. 4 year part* and service guarantee. Complat* prlc* $46.20 or 34.62 a month. For fra* home' demonstration, call Capital Sewing Credit Manager til 9' p.m. 5434200. MICHIGAN BANKARD ACCEPTED 17400 YARDS OF CARPET — Must sell! Kitchen, commercial, 501's, Kodals, nylons,' and carpat from $1.69 par yd. and up. Cash or credit. 1 ' of Rochester's largest carpet warehouses. 1650 E. Auburn Rd. (M-59) Rochester, bat. John R A Dequlndre. 852-2444 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us before yod deal. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. opdyk* Rd. FE 54141 Open Evas, 'til 1 p.m. 50.000 BTU Oil furnace, $50; shallow wall pump arid tank, 860; ga* space heater 850; $169 sewing machlna, *50; large refrig., atova, 835 aa. 3216 Union Lk. Rd. - A WAREHOUSE SALE. Open to puMIc, entire Inventory of naw refrigerators, washers, ranges ate. mutt ba sold. Every item discounted; many below coat, scratched Items prlcad accordingly. No reasonaMt after refused, tale today end tomorrow 104. Hllf Appliance. 2413 14 Mlto between Cool Ido* and Crook*. CASH Far your land contract ar equity. QUICK SERVICE. Lowest possible discounts. Cail 432-1020. Ask for Margaret McCullough. ARRO REALTY 3141 Cass-Ellzabeth Road Attention Housewives Highest prices for used furniture and appliances. Ask for Mr Grant Mooey to Leon 61 (Licensed Money Lender) LOANS 325 td $1,000 Insured Payment Plan BAXTER — LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 401 Pentlac Stats Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 at Wyman's Furniture. FE 5-1501. A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN 1 pc. living rm. group (seta, chairs, S beautiful tables, 2 lamps); S pc. bedroom (double dresser, chest, bad, mattress, springs, lampa); 4 piece bunk bed — 5 piece dinette. Any Itom Sold Separately All for 3398 — 310 monthly KAY FURNITURE Next to K Mart In Glanwood Canter LOANS *250 TO 11,000 COMMUNITY. LOAN CO. 30 E. LAWRENCE FE 0-0421 ANTIQUE 44 BED, maple table, power mower. 37: Changing tabla, S3; high chair, 447-4016. / STOP YOUR HOUSE FORECLOSURE Stop th* bill collector — atop all your credit problems — wa have millions of dollars for mortgages — widows, divorcees, end people with bad credit are O.K. with us. Any-Rlsk Mortgage Co. 1-398-7904 (Call now — for a confidant!® personal interview). ASSORTED HOUSEHOLD / Item* dryer, furniture, also Hl-Rfs*r bed 624-1344 or 424-7292. / BLONDE DINETTE seT wltt) extra leaf, larga alee, rotlsserles, 4 pretty good tires, 215x15. 3344195. BEAT THE HEATI Now selling name brand air-con-dltloners. Whirlpool, Chrysler Air-Temp, Kelylnator, etc.- $98, $2 down $2 per weak. .. 1 ABC WAREHOUSE & STORAGE 48825 Van Dyke 3541 E. 10 Mil* Dally 104 Tues *111 4 739-1010 7554090 Mb.igage Loans 62 FOR THE PAST 42 YEARS Voss & Buckner, Inc. 1408 pentlac State Bank Bldg. Hava been loaning $1088 to S5868 to homeowners on 1st and 2nd mortgagat tor rapairing, additions, consolidating bills, etc. Into on* small monthly payment. Before you borrow on your home see or phone us at: 334-3267 BUNKBEDS, ABOUT Vk price. Little Joe's, 1441 Baldwin, FE 2-4842. BUNK BEDS Choice ef 15 stylet, trundle bads, triple trundle-beds and bunk beds complete, $49.50 and Op. Pearson's Furniture, 440 Auburn, FE 4-7811. A — PLENTY OF USED washers, stove*, refrigerators, and trada-ln furniture ~ bargains. Ltttla Jo*'* Trade-In stor*. Baldwin at Walton. Blvd: FE 2-4442. Swaps 63 12 GAUGE PUMP shotgun lor 12 aluminum boat, or 16 ga. auto shotgun for 12' aluminum boat and trailer. OR 3-1979, AUTOMATIC WASHER and gas dryer. Ilk* naw, only usad 3 months, * $250. 473-5349, 4 343 Hlllcrest. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE tale, BRAND NEW. Large and small slz* (round, drop-leaf, rectangular) tablet In 3-, 5- and 7-pc. ddtfr'Mm itoi;.. , , PEARSON'S FURNITURE 440 Auburn FE 4-7811 14' FIBERGLAS BOAT, good con-dltlon, .45 hp Mercury motor and trailer for sal* or will trad* Mr Jeep Universal. 428-1093. 1927 STAR, 3350 oc swap tor beat of equal value. 451-7412. THE PQNTJAC PRESS, THURSDAY/, MAY 15, 1969 I y nj,!,.>;} ■ [■ .}>»* rp*’V,:,;.'. /: ’ ' i«aa freezer, condition, $35. 143-2034. R ITS IDAIRE REFRIGERATOR, double door. Imperial model. FI 2-4912. OUTDOOR FLEA MARKET — Michigan State Fairgrounds teth axe. condition, $173 4329, aft. 4-p.ro. good condition, 39", 320. 33^3007, RAILROAD BAGGAGE CARTS. Spoke and solid wheels. Real nostalgia. 325. 451-1271. SALE, FRIDAY, Saturday and Sun- cedar chest, raas.. Ml 4-2992. HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL FURNITURE - Consists of: living ream suite, 2 step MUM, 1 cocktail table, 2 tibia lampa and (1) tW rug Included. Hi-Fi, TV and Radios 66 dresser,, chief, fult-etxe bad ...... bmtrsprlng mattraaa and matching box spring and 2 vnnT"--------- ___ ____ ____ ^__ 4 chroma chairs and table, Alt tor $390. Your credit Is good ot Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON FE 5-15M IOUSE SOLD — -Complits furnishings, rasl reasonable. 1212 Clearwater, laka front on Round Lake, near Cooley Laka Rd. Open Sun. 11 to 4 p.m. Woakdays af- ternoons. ITALIAN PROVINCIAL dining tabla, pecan wood. Open stock at Thomas Furniture. OR S-5472, Wad. and Fri, aft. 4. Sat, all day._ Venetian Minds. Maks altar, 473- KENMORR GAS STOVE and Gibson refrigerator. Coppartona, axe. condition. $321 forboth. FE 3-5171 alt. 5.______________________‘ , KIRBY SWEEPER Excellent condition—tst FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service & Supply Co. 2417 DIXIE HWY.______ 574-1234 LINOLEUM PUGS. Mo4T SIZES, 3349 up. Pearson's Furniture, 440 Auburn Ave, FE 4-7331. 65-A For Sola Miscellaneous 67 BARN BEAMS and bam wood. Call 425-2240 or 425-1912. BEE . CLUB RUMMAGE sale, • family outgrows, even so ms now Infants wear, childrens, magazines NO and others, Thure.-Sat. 10-4, 3599 Silver sands Dr. off Watkins Lk. Rd., Drayton Plains. BOY'S TOY RUMMAGE. — drums, tsIescopM, road racing sot, models and games. Saxophone and large Curtis pusher. 442-4304. Detroit, Mich. Starting May 17th, ISth and continuing every Sat. and Sun. until August. Free Admission, to a.m, to 4 p.m. Dealer Informs-tlon, VE 7-1049,; Detroit. BRIDES — BUY YOUR WEDDING announcements at discount from, Cnrlua 4IIIA rtlule nn a day. May 14, 17, It, 12-4 p.m. 20 par cant ON all marchandlsa. Early AtNc Antique!, 2140 S. Telegraph (across from Miracle Milo Shop. plnj Confer), Pontiac, Mich. 333- CROQUET SET, shuffle boon), ladles golf clubs, bog and cert, little used; exercise bike; portable typewriter, Hoover Dlal-A-Matlc portable sowing machine, electronic spot reducer, Argosy 3 Comoro; film ipllcor; Roberts slero tape recorder, power mower. 474-2517, 423-0925. \ CUSTOM MADE BRIDAL ring oat, 47 point center diamond, 13 smaller stones, 3100, original price 0440. 420-1951. 21" USED TV .............. .. 129.95 Wilton TV, FE 3-2257 Open 94 515 E. Walton, corner of Joolyn * 23" MAGNAvriK portable TV, dark maple, UFH, VHP, good condition. 573-0524, aft. 4 p.m. COUNTRY SALE — nice antiques, glass, china, furniture and Mlsc. Ross. N. Rochester Rd. to Buell Rd. 2900 Hlxon Rd. 752-9/40. COLORED T.V- Portable T.V. with stand, Hide* bod and living .room chairs, Incl. redlnar. Dinette sat, Calvlnator washer, tape recorder, all good condition. 332-3322 oft. 5. duT FIELDSTONE. Call 421-3431 or BLACK AND WHITE Admiral TV consol* 23", 375. 3354)083. CB RADIO EQUIPMENT for sale, tran, Titan-2, 44' aluminum tower with rotor, a 4 element beam, high powered lenlar, new currier m plus, 5934195, CONCORD MODEL 174 auto-reverse tape recorder, Aiwa portable 3 spaed tape recorder, cartridge tap# Player tor '40 OTO. 473-9217. COLOR TV BARGAINS, LITTLE Joe's Bargain House. FE 1-4342. COLOR TV SERVICE Johnson's TV. PE 94549 45 E. Walton noar Baldwin TW LIKE NEW REBUILT Color guaranteed. Mack and white T.V.e, 320 and up. ObM T.V. 3507 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 4S24320. LIVING ROOMS, BRAND new, about V4 price Llttlo Joe's, 1441 Baldwin, FE 2-4342. MAYTAG AUTOMATIC washer and dryer, $100. 4734344. MANUFACTURER'S CLOSB-OUT STEREO WALNUT OR MAPLE CONSOLE Diamond Noodlos BSR 4-speed changer $89 Or 35 per month UNIVERSAL 2415 Olxlo Hwy, FE 4-0905 Dolly 10:154 Tuts.. Sat. 10:154 furniture plus washer. NEW STEREOS up to 30 per cent oft. Obel T.V., 3507 Elizabeth Lk, Rd. 402-0820. MATTRESS AND BOX SPRINGS for solo; good condition, 320, 3324541 MEADOW LAKE FARMS, Sun* May 18, 12-5,- Household Itoma tram 120 homes and garages, held at Anchor Island, on Meadow Lake. Follow) signs from entrance on Maple T1S Mila Rd.) lift milts West at Telegraph, hint law on Whyaall SONY CASSETTE PORTABLE recorder with all accssaorlts, Ilka new. >70. 334-5237, NEW IN CARTONS. Early American couch, chair, Beaton rocker, tabla, lamps, dinette sat, 2 bads with headboard, 1300. Double-door 14* Frost-free refrigerator $173. 353-3444. ' 6ffice Buy warehouse direct ovorshlpmont Of '49 color TVs. Zenith, RCA, Phlleo, Motorola, Admiral, GE, Westlnghouss, etc. Largo cholcol 1249, 32 down, 32 pot week. ABC WAREHOUSE & STORAGE COCKTAIL LOUNGE Banquet rooms, food, liquor, dancing. Showing a high grots. Finest lounge In the Northwest area — a (.business and real estate to ba proud to own. And tho cash register will ba ringing Ilka balls at Christmas. Ask tor No. 144017-BR. , . PARTY ITORB TROY AREA 3100,000 gross. Area potential will double this business In the near future. Boar and wine store and property tor 334,900 with 04,500 down ?lut approximately 35,000 In stock, aka a good look at this one — you won't sat another opportunity Ilka this one agalnl No. 14-54I9G. ASK FOR FREE CATALOG PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 West Huron St., Pontiac 11-2111 WO 54759 Open nltee TH 9 DESKS, see Money's tor your nteds. 103 N. Case. PINE TWIN HEADBOARDS, custom made gold velvet chair, never 4ised, 3)00. 474-2517, 423-0925. PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS NOW MOVED TO 440 AUBURN, PONTIAC, FR 4-7081. REFRIGERATOR, Maid, 335.4514258 after i p.m. RETIRING, E N T I R B household, furniture, appliances, tools, 1471 Rosedale. Sylvan Village. Prt and Set. Mey 14, end 17. 9-1 Repossessed 3 Electric Ranges k5 Color TVs v~ 1 dishwasher Take over payments Free delivery Guaranteed Goodyear Service Store 1370 wide Track Pontiac, Mich. PHONE 3354149_____ 1 each. 474- REFRIGERATORS, DISHWASHERS, dryers, washers, ranges, crate damaged and Scratched medals, Fully guaranteed. Terrific savings. Terms. CURT'S APPLIANCE 4434 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. 574-1101 1#44 JEEP RUNS good, for boat and motor. OR 3-3843. 1951 CADILLAC, GOOD 2nd car for 7, 343-0011, dealer. _______, 194$ CAMBER TOP. Trade for- a motorcycle. (Occ-zSOcc. .42 E. Princeton. ________________________ ELECTRIC BASS guitar In excellent condition, will swap tor aid van or Car. 3324710. KEEP THIS AD FOR tha future, brick or camont work, fireplaces built or repaired In trade for 7! or ». Aft. S pjn. 4SMI50. MONEY FOR HOUSES CASH IN 24 HOURS _ Brian Inc. 413-0701 NEW SNAP on motor tune up electric scope. Cost $1450. want boat, snowmobile or pickup. 401-0444, SMALL RIDING tractor. AIM walk-Ino tractor, mlnl-blko, motorcycle, riding mower, reel and rotary mower, roiotIHor. All for cash or ? 052-1494, .IvsiiMSi 0"pportwiiiti#s 59 Business Oppartunities 59 WOULD YOU LIKE TO EARN $25,000 A YEAR? You con now own your own store and bs your1 own boss for1 as lift It as a $5,000 down payment. * k ‘ , Quik Pile Food StOrss, Inc., has ni# locations available throughout Metropolitan Detroit, Pontiac. Complete training program .and financing available. / CONTACT WILLIAM P. BENNETT^ AT QUIK PIK FOOD STORES, INC., 5255 TILLMAN AVE., DETROIT, MICH. 48208 PHONE 264-0150 OR 896-6180. Repossessed. Pay $38 CASH or Payments of $5 Per Mo. 5 year guarantee UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2515 Dixie Hwy. FB 44905 FURNITURE LEFT IN LAY-A-WAY “ ^ Sofa, Mr. and Mrs. chairs, reversible cushions, arm .. caps, self-decked. Sold tor, $279. balance due $192 cash or tio monthly. Walnut bedroom suite, double dresser, mirror, 4 drawer chest and bookcase bad. Said for 1149, balance duo 197 cash or SIC monthly. Hollywood Twin bod, complete with headboard, frame, mattresses and boxspring, only 349 cash or $10 monthly. Bunkbed, complete With- rails, slats, ladder, guardrail and mattresses, only 095 cash or $10 monthly. French Provincial sofa and matching chair, zlpparad reversible cushions. Sold for $239, balance duo 3174 cash or $10 monthly. Mediterranean bedroom suite, triple drearer, mirror, chest and panel bad. Said (or 3299, balance due 3134 cash or 310 monthly. Spanish sofa and matching chair, zlpparad reversible cushions, self, decked. Sold far 3299, balance duo 3195 cash or 310 monthly. Hide a-bad, tub 4" poly mattress. Sold for 3219, balance due $192 caih or 310 monthly: California modern sofa and chair, zlpparad relrerSIble cushions. Sold for $299, gilanee duo 3227 cash or $12 monthly.. Colonial sofa and matching Chair, zlppered reversible cushions. Sold for $279,. balance duo $197 cosh or $10 mopthly. 1 Modern sofa and matching chair, zippered reversible cushions. Sold for S1GP, balance duo $107 cash or 010 monthly. YOUNG MARRIEDS, WE MAY BE ABLE TO GET YOUR CREDIT WITHOUT A CO-SIGNER. HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE DISCOUNT FURNITURE 401 EflZ. Lk. Rd. 401-2303 Nopr Tatoeragh Rd. (104 pm, dally) CHROME DINETTEES, low SS IK Little Jar!, 1451 Baldwin, PE 3-4142. ____I COLDSPOT 14 cu. 1 ft, refrigerator with largo freezer across topi Hptpotnt elec, range, axe. working condition, clem. OR 34540. Cw, SECTIONAL, eofto# table, mlsc., older choirs and table*, moving. OR 3-7417 oft. 1:30. SINGER DELUXE MODEL-PORTABLE SPARKLING .CLEAN, Ilka new 5-place bedroom suite — doubts bed, nls and har dresser with (Oil mirror. nlgMatand, 4-drawtr chost, plate glass toga, 34'' Tappan gas range. 32"x54'' slngle pedestal pine desk. 15" x 33" Bdrawar pins chest. 4244794,............ SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG Sawing machine — Sows alagla ar double needle, designs, bvarcasts, buttonholes, ate. — modern cabinet. Taka over payments at: $7 per month for 8 mos. or $56 Cash Balanct Still Under GuarmtM. UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2415 Dixie Hwy, _____FB 44905 SAVE $224» HOUSEFULL OP FURNITURE Sofa and matching chair, zlppered reversible cushions, 2 atop tables, 1 coffee tables and 2 lamps, 5 plica dinette and bedroom autta complete with mattress and box spring our tow ovary day prices, only $295 or SIS momnty. _____ HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE, 431-23*3 USED COLOR TV SETS, S199.95 SWEET'S RADIO AND AFFIANCE, INC. 422 W. Huron 334-5477 SAVE PLENTY TODAY On all 1941 floor samples ranges, refcjgaratora, washers and TVs. Lima Jos's Bargain House Baldwin at Walton Blyd, FE 24542 USED 1949 SINGER Golden Touch and Sew Automatic boftonhoto maker, push button bobbin, fancy designs, monograms. Comas with console. WAREHOUSE SALE! Tue* *til 7554090 Water-Softeners 66-A ROYAL WATER softener, full automaticr larga sizar $125. 87$ $123# Troy. For Sal# Miscellaneous 6? to INCH COPPER watar pipe, 28 cents ■ ft. and to Inch copper watar pip*, 39 cents a ft. G.. A Thompson A San, 7005 M-59 W. 1 ALLEN SCOPE, 1 POP MACHINE _________FE 44424 2 WHEEL BANTOM traitor, power lawn roller, 21" real Jacobean mower;, oil dtopansar; watar softener, portable grill; yard cart; TV, 2to h.p. angina; Ito h.p. motor; water proofing; traitor mirrors; gas battle; mlsc. 473-7924, 4435 Dixie Hwy, 4284297. CHIPPED BATHROOM fixture* for sals, G. A. Thompson A Son, 7005 M-59 W. DOG AND MARTIN HOUSES. AH sizes, 74$ Orchard Lk. Rd. DUNE BUGGY with hardtop, Bridgeport mill, Hendey Lathe, 16‘ Glastron boat with 75 Johnson motor, Austln-Haalay. 4734732. ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER over tha bathtub with a. beautiful glass tub enclosure, aluminum frame, with G. A. Thompson, 7005 M-i ENCLOSED 2 WHEEL TRAILER, 5x12, >100. 14344S0.________ ELECTRIC RANGE, Dow sottenar, watar heater. Ilk* new. FB 8-1431. ELECTRONICS and Radio materials, meters and alsctrla equipment. *32-0899. FALL AND WIGLET, dark brown, 623-0381. For Sale Miscellaneous 67 Hand Tools—Micfclnory 68 LAWN SPRINKLING systems, to Inch elastic pips, *3.65 par 100, t" plastic pipe, S.S1 par ISA ito plastic Plpp, *0.51 par 100, Ito Mastic pipe, *1041 per 100. G, A. Thompton A Son, 7005 AMO W. LAWNMOWER Tuno-up. Reels and rotartos sharpanad. Drive shaft* shortened. Oaorga's Welding Shop, 052.5534. LAWN BOY, protosalanal, real typo, 21" cut, self propel tod. Ilk* new, 085. Also, plow and disc (or wheel, *35 for plow, *30 tor dlljc. 693-4594. LARGE DRAFTING tab!*; 5 speed sting ray bike. 451-3419.____________T LAKEWOOD VILLAGE Woman's Club-rummag* sal*. May 16, 9 a.m. at Old White Laka Town Hall. LAWN SPRINKLING pumps, 1 hp. to 2 h.p„ priced from 192.50. G. A. Thompson and Sen, 7005 M-59 W. MOWERS, TRACTORS Bolens, Simplicity, L a w n b o y Comat, Jacobson,- McCulloch chain saws. Wa are giving big discounts, right nowl Step In,ana fast drive our units add check our prices. HOUGHTEN POWER CENTER, INC. 112 W. University Dr. 451-7010 DOWNTOWN ROCHESTER MUST SELL, house plants. Quean at the night blooming, lam Wax Hoys and ethara. PE 2-7820. PLASTIC LAMINATING machlna, Medal 100-B. 444-1272.____ PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS NOW OVED TO 440 AUBURN, PONTIAC, FE 4-7801. PICNIC TABLE — Park typ*. adult lawn swings, .and children' swings. Mad* at cadar logs Beautiful clear finish. Moon Valley Rustic Furn. Co. 4445 DlxIa Hwy Clsrksten. 625-3322. PICNIC TABLES — Gifts, gags, lakes, novelties. Liberal Bill's Outpost, 3245 DlxIa Hwy. OR 9474. ____________________________ PLUMBING BARGAINS, FREE standing toilet, *29.95; 30-gallon heater, S49.95; 3-placa bath sate, *59.95; laundry tray, trim, 019.95; shower aialto with trim, 039.95; 2 bowl sink, 02.95; lavs., $2.95; tubs, *20 and up. Pipe cut and threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO. S41 Baldwin. FB 4-1516. FOLDING CAMP traitor and some aqulpment, call aft. 4 p.m. 391 3059. ROOSEVELT MOTHER'S CI u t Rummage Sale, May 15, 16, 17. 1531 Kessler, Kaage, 9:10 a.m. te T UNIT BACKHOB, 30' dragline boom, to vd. 20 ton lowboy, truck and traitor, 4024233. • USED JOHN DEERE Track Loader BURTON EQUIPMENT CO. ,_____ Phone MMS* 'ERO TO 3" BROWNlkQ-Sharpe Micrometers, diamond, Kannody s drawer tool chest with som* mechanics tools, *130. FE A4333. Cameras • Service 70 DE JUR SUPER 8 movie camera, used <9 times, aR automatic. 674- 3, YEAR OLD DRINNELL Brothers French Provincial consola, 10 yr, warranty, *400, <51-1159. BASS DRUM WANTED, reasonable, 23" or less. Appearance unlm- portent. 3384104! _________) COMPETE SET OP Roger* Blua PENDER 1940 BASEMAN with covert, axe. condition. *300. 482-9245. FOR RENT New console plonot. It par month plus csrtago. SMILEY BROS., MUSIC 119 N. SAGINAW FE 4-4721 FARFISA GALAXY OROAN Like new condition with bench, *500 firm. 682-4140 aftor 4 p.m. Pati-HunffHa Dous ■ ■■-: It * ADORABLE LONG HAIR black and white marked kit- an WEBKS OLD ENGLISH SattajTan^ WEEKS, PART________ all black, >10 or trade. WEEK OLD part O qrjn a i shepherd puppies, 47344m, 4734110 at 91 AKC DACHSHUNDS Von Lade Konnelt 335-5741 akc darkTrown Bo6bLi hups, 5 weeks,-*40. 343-4410. AKC REGISTERED Slborlon Husky Puppies, *50 oschT 007-5372. AKC TOY POODLE Slud twvIcB " FE 5-3431 A-l AKC POODLE STUD sorvfa* ail puppies, grooming. 4*3- AKC poodlb PUPPIES, US and up. Alto Poodle clippers. 3325610. AKC DACHSHUND PUPPIES. Mala* and tamales. 332-1441. AKC GERMAN SHBPHE9t6 Malto I years old, loves klda. 3434950. akc poodle puppies, swap tor or soil. FE 5-4095. FENDER ORGAN, SUNN Amplifier, 2 Atlas Banshee P.A. horns, . 1 bogan 100 watt P. A, amplifier 2 microphones, with stand. 333-7000. AKC PEDIGREED Toy Poodles, 1 year old black mala, silver ferns l*. Pregnant, must soil. 651-6256. AKC- BABY Poodle pupplas, tlny whlto., toys, oxcollont pedigrees. *75. Also AKC foy Stud Service. Reasonable. 5854543. ORGAN CLEARANCE Akc 7 month old Gorman Shepherd alt shots. >125. 4*14134. Such famous makes as Low ray, Hammond, Baldwin and Esto, many others. Prices from *395. ALASKAN MALAMUTE, tomato, 1 year* old, «how stock. 33*-6C72. GALUGHER MUSIC CO. APRICOT MALE POODLE. Papori, Trained with child. 1710 Telegraph FE 4-0544 PONTIAC OPEN EVENINGS ‘TIL 9 P.M. SAT. 5:30 P.M. RCA HI-FI, AM-FM radio, phonograph consol*. Rtat. 2 wheel utility traitor. 451-3110.________ FRESH PERCH, lie par pound. In 50 pound tots. Scaling 3c a pound aktra. Open Sundays. Bayport Fish Co. Phone, Bayport, (S17) 455-1121 RUMMAGE: Amarlcan Legion Hall, Auburn Av*., Sat., May 17, from 7 a.m.-12 noon. Sigma Bata Sorority FORMICA REMNANTS, 30c * sq. ft. You pick up special discount prlc* on discontinued patterns. 20c a sq. ft. Waterford Cabinets, Inc. 5720 Williams Lk. Rd. Drayton Plains, 4 days 7-5. FUEL OIL TANK. 05 4023405 FURNANCES, gas or , . , ,— _____________ .. off, Fast Installation, Term*. 3344944. Oarage sale: io a.m. to i p.m, OARAGE SALE, THURS. Frl., Sat., Including 2 electric stem and refrigerator. 2799 Hickory Lawn, N. of Auburn, and W. or Rochester Rd, GARAGE SALE: SAT. May 17, 9 a.m. to S p.m. 477 Hamtot, Bloomfield Orchard! Sub. Opdyke GARAGE SALE. WATER pump, snow tiros, many now and used articles. 41 E. Ypsllantl Baldwin. GARAGE SALE — 410 Sharen off M-59 across from Control Methodist Church. After 4 p.m., all day Sat, 481-0420. OARAGE SALE: Kitchen tat, portable bar, couches, bedroom furniture, TV tots, clothing tor ovoryono, Thurs., and Frl., 9-3, 1436 Rotadale. Syivan Village, GARAGE SALE: Moving overseas, ;, Sit., Sun., 17- tools, toys, clothing, “ ot 030 Sattarl**, hoar Long Lake and Adams. GARAGE SALE, MAY 14 and 17, 10 a.m. to 9 p.m., 1365 Shenandoah, Rochester. Phono: 451*1934,. Adam* Rd. Ito miles N. of Walton right on Mohawk to Shenandoah. Antiques, dishes, vases, ski equip* elec, appliances, Misses clothing size 10-14, furniture. Ito INCH PLASTIC drain pip* and fittings, no need to thread pip* anymore. It soot together with glue, all you nood Is a hack-saw and a paint brush. Sat G. A. Thompton A Sen. 7005 M-59 W. DAY GARAGE sals, antiques, radios, TVs, and mlsc. 10-4. Tuts-Frl. 70 S. Tasmania. FT. REC. ROOM BAR, custom built, panolad front and stoat, Formica top, shalvet In back. Ilk* new, ISO. 632-7P20. __________ YR. CRIB, MATTRESS, Playpen. mlsc. baby Hama. Reasonable. 1490 Marylastena, S. of Cooley Lk. Rd. S'xl4' WOODEN BUILDING, 045. 334-4491. 9'xl2' LINOLEUM RUGS, 11.95 EA. Plastic wall til* .......- ,lc a*. Calling til* — wall paneling, cheap. BAG Tilt, FE 4-9957, 1075 W. Huron. 10 HORSEPOWER I960 Bolens tractor. Snowblower blade mower at-tachmanf tire chains and weights. Pull behind trailer. 0950. 330-0688 before 5 p.m. and 335-9171 am. 10 FEBT L-SHAPED counter top with cast Iron sink and Dlshmastar, wringer w a a h a r, cabinet sewing machlna. Call OR 34030. ! X 14 SWIMMING POOL and filter. *95. 402-2051. LINE Aquarium, 15 GALLON FIRST setup, raas- 493-17H. SOI GIVEAWAY TIME at Avon-Troy Carpet Warehouse. Carpet, rubber pad and deluxe Installation 14.44 sq. yd. Hurry, this la a onco-trva-llfstlma aftor wtiDa marchandlsa It avallaWal 1450 E. Auburn Rd. (M59) Rochastor bat. John R A Dequlndre. 1 of Rochaatar's largest carpet warehoutat, ever 17,000 sq. yds. In stock, 052-2444. 1947 JEEP WITH BLADE, V4 Chtvy angina, many extra*. 0800. Also som* copper pipes, fittings and plumbing tool*. 473-2049, A-l RUMMAGE SALE, May 13, through 17, S p.m. to 1 p.m. 25c to 50c plus 1941 pickup (nick, 390 Ford fracing angina, and tow traitor, 946 Myrtle off Telegraph ART SHOWING Want something new and different for yaur' wall. Wall hangt and things, homemade carved pictures on wood, oil paints an black valval., Com* ever and brews*. Heritage Apartments No. 2, 2375 3. Commerce Rd. Walled Laka, Michigan. Sat. and Sun. May 17 and tl, from neon 'til 4 p.m. each day.'______________________ AUTOMATIC COPIERS *99.50, Exhaust systems_ $50>_ Adding machines $39.50, P • r t a b typewriters 329.50, Desks 324.50, IBM's 049.50, Calculators 099.50, Chockwrltors 019.50, Comptometers 339.50, Flies S19.99, Typewriter tables 37.99, Registers $39. Steno chair* $12.50, 3r Wooden shelving 315, Postage maters and assorted office furniture below/Cost. All-4404 Business Equipment/ AIR COMPRESSOR 1 h.p., and paint spraying gun $150; Sherman transmission for Ford tractor; spring tooth drag, 2 ton chqln hoist; blacksmith forga; wet grinding stone; tractor tlra 10x23; lawn roilar; heavy pulleys;- cablet, g*~J *“■— aha ** 49- HlUliWJI Sif 19# VAX I TVs Willi lAftlaUIB; full price, $155Jto or maw Calf Midwatt APPffoftMr 94 dally. 334-3312._____________________’ Ilka WALNUT ROOM DIVIDER, new, 1175. 33213M, aft. 1 p.m. WANTED: SINGLE MAPLE bad and ar or rollawsy bad to real condition, 432-2)76. WROUGHT IRON breakfast sat, tool design, glass tabto top, 4 matching cnalra, glass toaster stand, 33A 7229, 114 N. Sanford., ~ YOUNG MARRIEDS Naad fumttureT Under 219 Wa caa pat you credit without co-signera. Household Appllsncs, Rl-Bj3, Antiques 6Si ANTIQUE PUMP OROAN with stool, good condition; carnival glass, OR 3-2772. CUSTOM ........-ANTIQUE REFINISHING, SpaclalSing In fumlture raflnlshlng and repairs of AH types. 3434141, Mon-Sat. S1 . fLEA. MARICET.iBfBl-wABilBPP', BtoS I t axi ip I p m. fuijday. Bqr M* H i Pafnt' .-sak Aatlquas ahd Gift*. 4430 Orion ltd,, Rochastor. Deaton Welcome. Ceil 491-7294 through Sat. garden tools; coke machine. LI 942, Madison Heights. ALLIS CHALMERS WD-14 tractor, bottom plows, anew plow. Hawthorn* camper, sleeps 4. 434-4990, A MYERS UNIT TO taka care ef rust In water. Call 797-0944, eves ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN / FE 5-7471 BATHTUB AND TOILET, packet and Cyclone typ* 'tone*, steel pests, bottle gat stay* and hot watar heater. #79-6972. ; BIRCH CUPBOARDS, complat* with 'Sink and faucet, formica top, IP long, SUB 6329146. BARBIE DOLL CLOTHES, homemade, all kinds, 423-1438. BASEMENT SALE: Clothing and Mlsc. Golfvtow Apartments, behind Howe's, 5394 Parvtow, Frl. only ' 44. BASEMENT SALE: Clothing and mlsc. 104 Thurs. and Frl. E. Blvd. Haights, 411 Vatoncla St. BASEMENT SALE. Thuradayt-Sun-days 10 a JIM p.m. 9240 Sandlton, Union Lk. behind St. Pet's. BASEMENT SALE: Clothing, miscellaneous, Thurs., Msy^ Frl., May 14, (ram 9 a.m. to 12 noon; 3 p.m.-4 p.m. 774 Ken* nffworth. ~ -".i .i T- BASEMENT j RUMMAGE: 99 Falrvlew, eft Kennett. Mon.-Tue). Wed., 9-5; Mlsc. PIANO CLEARANCE Spring daan-up time. Clearance of floor models, trade-ins, close-outs. „ Buy now—save 150 to 3300. RUAAAAAGE SALE: C I o t h I n g , dishwasher, Ironrlto, sofa, chairs, tables. 7299 Verona, off 14 Mile, west of Farmington Rd. Friday-Sat., 14-17. _____________ RUMMAGE SALE, SOME girls llz* low dresses, other clothing, toys, few antiques, Frl,, Sat., 10 a.m. 'til 4 p.m. 490S Whlto Lake Rd* 1 Ml. oft DlxIa Hwy. _________________________ rummage SALE, 2 forma It. Thursday and Friday, 10 to 4, 4741 Ecktos off Maybe*. USED THOMAS ORGAN 25 pedals, French provincial, Ilka naw, $1000.00. MORRIS MUSIC 34 S. Telegraph Rd* across from Tal-Huron. FE 20547. , - RUMMAGE SALE, Thursday, Frl-day. May 11-14,8:30 a.m. to 6 p.m. 4420 Eastlpwn, Clarksten, RAILROAD TIES, NEW and used. 4721972. REFRIGERATOR, ELECTRIC ttova, baby furniture. Mite. Item*. 481 0434.____________ RUMMAGE SALE; 1254 Vtnawood, Sat.-Sun. 17th and 18th. Navy uniforms, clothing, tumltur*. RUMMAGE SALE Benefit, Michigan Annual Rescue League-of Pontiac Saturday and Sunday, 17th and 18th of May. 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Deway's Dairy Cream, 4706 Elizabeth Lake Rd.________________ RUMMAGE SALE: Thurtday-Sstur-day, 470 Omar corner of Gaga, larger sizes. --------------------------------it. RUMMAGE SALE I 4351 Letting May 14-17-18, Teolt and antiques. RUMMAGE SALE: Thursday-Prlday-Saturday at 192 Clayburn, Crescent Laka bra*._____ ________ RUMMAGE SALE: Like new and used things. Wad* Thurs. and Frl. 9 s.m. te 4 p.m, 444 Fourth. Sump pumps sold, ranted and repaired. Cone**. PE 24442.___________ GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. 1716 Telegraph FE 4-0546 PONTIAC OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 9 P.M. SAT. 5:30 P.M. USED ORGANS Choose from Hammonds and other wall-known brands, prices at low as $289. GRINNELL'S Downtown Store _____ 27 $■ Saginaw _______FE 27141 UPRIGHT PIANO *40. H. R. Smith, 1# S. Jostle, FE 4-4844. Music lassons 71- ACCORDION GUITAR, LESSONS, saitt-servlc*. Also piano tuning. Pulaneckl, OR 25596.________________ CLASSICAL GUITAR lessons, Pon Pentlac Music and Sound. 482-3350. ORGAN AND PIANO LESSONS In your home. 335-0844 Office Equipment ALL PET SHOP, 55 Williams, FI 4-4433- White mica, eirbiis. BEAGLE AKC tomato, 4 years okL moving, make offer. 05-1971, &EAGLE, MALE, 5 months, theta. wormed, trained. $15. 335-4345. BROWN SEAL POINT 2 year eiff female Siamese, 4540 Joslyn Rd. BlG BONED 6ERMAN ShapharB puppies. Pure bred. 4924432. COCKER SPANIELS, AKC. 852-3084 CHIHUAHUA PUPPIES, SlTfe registered, 6 wks. Also Chihuahua stud service. Chihuahua and YUfkto mixed pups, cheep. 625- ENGLISH POINTERS Seme of the best bred Hi the country, all slrad by champions. Ch. Paladin Royal Flush, Ch. Tooth Acres Hawk, savaral litters, 4 wks. to 3 mot* all mutt go by ft* time w. go to the Canadian Pralrl*. All at reduced ericas. Bud Brown, 44480 Romeo Plank, 711- FOR SALE, calm Tamar, can before 2:30. 338-4724. FREE, MURPHY, SchufflL Imitfy and Miss. Alice, 4 weeks era, fur ceverpd mouse trap looking tor a fra* room, board and rftoetton, part Abyssinian. 4920841, FEMALE CHIHUAHUA. Call 12 neon. FE 8-8843. FEMALE SIAMESE, SIS. : 335-315)_______■ GERMAN SHEPHERD and delll* puppies, 310. 4220181. GOLDEN RETRIEVERS, 2 tomaln, 8 weeks, AKC, shots, raas, 482 72 OOLDEN RETRIEVERS *XC*llant bleed line, for aal* or lease, vary AB DICK 82 electric mimeograph, ream (sad with cabinet, $90. 1 spirit duplicator, heavy duty atoc. with stand, 835. 1 Underwood Royal else, typewriter, wide carriage, J75. i Addreaa-ograph*, spirit duplicator type, 315 and $10. 681-0212 or FE 2-4154.___________ GARAGE SALE: Clothing, lamps, formica tabla, chairs, TV, dishes. Neighborhood Co-Op. Fri* Sat., Sun. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. 179 S. Johnson between Orchard Lake 2 Huron. 3322745 or 334-8239. GARAGE SALE: Baby clothes, furniture, maternity uniforms, mlsc. Frl.-Sat* 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. 3705 Percy King.________________ GARAGE SALE, day, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. Dr. eft Crescent famines. iv a -5157 Rldgatop Lk. Rd. 4 GARAGE SALE: GE Stove, *70; Admiral star**, consola, 045; RCA stereo consol*, 3300; portable TV, 365. 43 Washington St., Apt. C. after 4:30 p.m* any day._________ STALL SHOWERS COMPLETE With faucets and curtains. *49.50 value, 334.50 Lavatories cemptato wltt faucets, 314.95 TOllatS, *11.95 Michigan Fluorescent, S93 Orchard Lk. FE 23442,-37. ROYAL WIDE CARRIAGE typewriter, 374. 451-4440, bttwetn • and ,4 p.m, ________ VICTOR ADDING machine and cast) STORMS AND SCREENS. FB 22447. SUNPORCH RUMMAGE aal*. Everything good condition. 3332 Sashabaw. Frl. and Sat, May 14 and 17._________________________ SURPLUS OFFICE CHAIRS AND Other mlsc. office furniture, priced to aell. Hundreds of Renewable-type fuses. Fraction ef Original cost. BOULEVARD SUPPLY 500 >■ Blvd. E._________>127151 SAVE S1.000 On a world famous Admiral swimming pool. Far Intormatlo call 451-0345.___________________ GARAGE SALE. 2 GE electric ranges, furniture, baby Itams, clothing, etc. 2442 Colonial Tr., Woodward Square Lk. area. Thurt-Sat. 9 a.m.-4 p.m. 132-9451. GARAGE SALE. 5544 s. Aylesbury off Ellzabettu Lk. Rd. Furniture, clothes, mlsc~May 16 and 17. GARAGE SALE: Clothing, household Items, Msy 16 & 17, all day. 2272 Oklahoma, Rochester 451-0845. GARAGE SALE. Lots of odds and andt. Also refrigerator, kitchen ait and Ironar, baby furniture, ate. 3223 Hickory Lawn near Rochastor and Auburn Rd* all day Sat* May 17. GARAGE TV, RADIO, ovtrttuffed chairs, tables, lamp*, electric tan, atoctrie pump motor, 3322744. TRAILERS, RUBBER TIRES, 4x1(7, with sides. Tractor hitch clearance, $50. 451-1271 SALE. Clothing, toy* and dishes. Bat* Stoma Phi, 1423 Christian Hill* Dr* Rechastar, Saturday May 17 9 a.m.-5 p.m. IARAGB SALE — clothing, dishes, mlsc. Frl.-Sat. 9 to 7 1932 Ward Rd. OARAGE SALE: Thursday and Frl-day 9 a.m. Ip S p.m., 5171 Frankwlll off Maybe*, clarksten, OARAGE SALE. Dishes. Bedding. Teen girls clothas size 9, 10, 12 — Ladies 16. Thurs* Frl., Sat. 9 to 5. 147 S. Avery, Ellz, Lk.. Estates, Pontiac. GARAGE SALE: FRIDAY 2 Satur-day May l2M*y 17. Clothing, snow tires, many mlsc. Itams. 544 East Plk* St. _______________________ GARAGE SALE, FRIDAY and Sat. 14 and 17.10to4 PJn.177 W. Y*l* GARAGE SALE: Thursday - Friday, May 15 & 16th, from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. 1024 Charast off Cait-Elizabath. GARAGE SALE — THURS* Frl., Sat. 9:30 to "S. 223 Romeo St* Rochastor. Everything prlcad to go. GARAGE SALE: Thursday and Frl day, S457 Drayton Rd. oft Maybat Rd. naar Sashabaw. GARAGE SALE — MAY 15, 14, Thurs. and Frl* 9:30 'til 4 p.m. 3777 Farcy King, Drayton Plaint. All proceeds to Drayton Plaint Nature Cantor. Big variety of artlclai. GARAGE SALE, mltcallansout, Wad* May 14 thru Frl. 9-4, 1749 Orchid St., off Watkins Laka Road. GARAGE SALE: Toys, clothes, furniture and mlic. 321 Okamah, Cheroke* Hills, Wad.-Sat. 9-5. GARAGE SALE, ovar 500 Itams, Thurs. till gone. 2335 B. Hammond Lk. Dr. 332-4064. GARBAGE _ DISPOSAL, W horsepower, 327.08ft Stainless Steal Sinks, 32x21, $29.50 PF Sabi* Laune Plywood, 4x0x14, 04.95 par shaat.’ TALBOTT LUMBER 1025 Oakland FE 4-4595 GRAVELY SUPfeR convertible 30' rotary mowar, electric starter, roiory mower, electric etener, governor, mulchar, riding sulky & year* eld, used llttlo, good con-dltlon. *450. 447-7233. GO CART, Ilk* now, MC-*1, iwln angina. 451-1727. GO-CART, 2 YEARS old, condition, >125; 4234X04. excellent si azs-uau*. ■ 1 GOOD RAILROAD ties, all tltSS free dsltvbry. FE 52120. SAS-OIL FURNACES and boflars. Will /Install. Used« gat hollars, A 2 H Salas, 422I5W. 474-4341 ■ HOT WATER HEATERS, 30 gallon, gas Contumars approved. , 389.50 value, 339.95 and 349.95, nrtarrad, Alto slactrlc and buton* heaters Terrific values, Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lake—16. JEWELRY, ODD LOTS for prizes, resale, etc. 31.20 doz. up, 544-4429. JOHN BEAN 5 gallon power garden and free sprayer. FE 5-0072. JOHN DEERE M> TRACTOR hydraulic, electric start, 2 bottom plows, doubia disc harrow, cultivator, 514' snow blade, axe. condition, also- 7x9 steal ’ garage door, .wringer wathar, rollawsy bed. MY 2-0003. " KEEPt YOUR carpets baautlful daspft* constant tootstaps of a tuay Tamffy. Gat Blue Lustra. Rant \ electric ftiampooar ’ 31. Hudson's < Hardware, 41 E. Wplton. \ WZxm. x - SPRED-SATIN PAINTS, WARWICK Supply, 2471 Orchard Lake. 432-2320._________ ' I' POOL TABLE. 045. _______________6734)705_________ 9x11 NATIONAL TENT, estollstlc. TRAILER AWNING, approximately 6x12' vinyl, alto drop netting. Ilk* new 0100 both. FB 2-1734 or FE 2-5122. ■ -_________________ TRAILER HITCH. Rasa* bar laval, 345. 493-0013.____________________________ TWO LAMP, . 4 foot tluorascant lights. Ideal for work benches, shop*, 019.95 valu* *12.90. Call at factory showroom. Michigan Fluorescent, 193 Orchard Lk. FB 4-0462. — 10.________ ,_____________ TENT, DELUXE larga umbrella, 2-whaal trailer with camping box-top. Bat* guitar with flttad ass*. 482-9019. ____________________________ THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 111 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to matt yaur naad* thing. Furniture, Appliances Clothlr Used Office Furniture Warehouse Clearance BUILDING A NEW STORAGE WAREHOUSE: 100 office desks $25 up, office chairs, blue print fllas, typewriters, adding machines, memdgraphs, eft -set- -printing presses, on* 6' Hamilton drafting table, 7 and r drafting beards (no stands) 6 (II* cablnats, chock writers .FORBES PRINTING I OFFICE SUPPLIES, 4500 DIXIE DRAYTON PLAINS, OR 34767 or BIRMINGHAM AREA Ml 7-2444 USED GLASS JALOUSIE with screens, approx. 27 llnaal toot. Including laloual* doer, 72" high; Used steel kitchen cablnats and formica counter top; 2 used 30" wld* and 1 42" wide exterior doors. Call 0754400, • a.m. to 4 p.m* Monday thru Friday after 4 p.m. and wteksrtds. Ml 4-7 WATERFORD CABINETS INC. 5720 Williams Lake Rd; Drayton Plaint Clot* out ot bathroom vanities -wood or plastic. Sal* prlc* te sell. WANTED TO BUY Leaded glass lamp* ar laadad glass shades. 482-4421, WANTED: Tor trains, any ag*. gauge preferred. 357-5537, WOMEN OF THE Maos* rummage silt to ba held May 14, 17 tram 10 a.m. ta 4 p.m., 2214 Walnut Rd„ located between Walton and Pontiac Rd.______ •____________ Hand Tools-Machinery 68 1 YEAR OLD, Ilk* new tnspen Valve grindar and refacer, asst 01100 — sell tor 0450. KAR'S BOATS 3, MOTORS 491-1400 - ________■_______ 2 power Concrete buggies, J exc. eondltton, 15't" flberglas HR and 1 motor,' trailer, 42 W. Mont- and ' mote cajm. 1 4~ DRILL PRESSES, Boulevard, Troy. 379-4435. rtolsftr comb* llko now# $50. 191 2$79 Stor* Equipment 73 2 MEAT SCALES, 325 each. Wooden meat block, SIM; Coca Cola cooler, 350. PE 3-3971.____ COMMERCIAL Kalvlnator freezer, 1 IRISH SETTER PUPS, father cur, rent winner most Blue Ribbons, mother also a* good bloodline. 447- LABRADOR RETRIEVER pupplaa. * w«Hu old. Excellent ^oodltofo AKC reglatored. 753-2237. LONGHAIRED^KITraiNfc 2 month* old, trained. FE ,___________ MIXED COLLIE-SHEPHERD pup- MIXED TOY "colLie, tl weeks, Shota, no, 3344700. aaale, black and tan Coon do» running and traalnp. 075. 40349797 MIXED PUPPY. Fra* to goeil Housabrokan. Loves children. 47> 7575. year eld, 25.4 cu. In. upright, axe. far lea cream atoraga, 451-4545. NORWEGIAN ELKHOUND,' pupplas. AKC, OHO *0. 3534095. ICE CREAM AND restaurant agulp-mant, call attar 6 p.m. FB 54734. PIGEONS. WHITE. It aadh H t 2442. NATIONAL CASH ' REGISTER tor gas station, *300. 444 Betas, Birmingham. ; - ■ PART LABRADOR, part' Female, 0)0. 474-1924. US BERKEL Automatic tlldng and Stacker machine. South Bend Sporting Goods 74 REGISTERED MALE English Pointer, little over t yr. FB 44853, SIAMESE KITTENS. 4 W**k» had trained. 3344049, haator, bandzamatlc, cook stay*, used 1 wk. >140. 402-7015 aft. 6. 1940 REMINGTON, MODEL 1100, 12 gauge shotgun. Used one*. $125. 1943 Winchester. Modal 94, 30-30 Carbine, 175. 102 Summit, Pontiac, attar 5.____________________________ SHAGGY PULI months, show or pel AMMUNITIONS, guns, buy or trad*. Opdyke Hardware FE >4484 ARNOLD PALMER golf dubs, full SCHNAUZER MINIATURE pupa AKC, Health guaranteed. FB I 1590. ' - VARIETY OF CUTE kitten*. Fra* t* good home. 5444443.__________________ set and bag, vary daan 340. Pro-2-5405, dealer.__________________________ golf 542-! . AMPHICAT I 6-WHEEL DRIVE . Takti you Whoro tho action l$t Through swamps# sand# snow# lea and evan Water. Coma on In and sat It In action. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-59) 4024440 BOWS AND ARROWS, 334-4349 WHITE GERMAN SHEPHERD pup, pies for sal*. Will give the father and mother to good bom* In the country, 3354920. HIGHLAND TIE RIEJI WEST papers. 425-2S33. Gena's Archery, 714 W. Huron ENJOY YOUR HOME liTs summer. ;lm Put In an Anthony swimming pool, on* of the nation's large al manufacturers. Bank financing. Call today for details. RHODES POOLS PE 0-2304 _____ 250 W, Walton HAIG-ULTRA used golf set, 13 clubs, 20 GALLON AQUARIUM With W<»d paneled cabinet and access. 47>> 9514. good condition, $45. Pro-golf. LI 2-4973, dealer. ___________ LADY'S ENGLISH RIDING boots, LIONEL TRAIN SET, 0-27 gauga; slat car race track, 4 lanes. 481 0437. MACGREGOfe GQLP clubs, 0 Irons, 3 wood*, 1 yr. old, hag, cart, also. 330494* aft. 4, M-l GARAND, $125. M-l Carbine, 18 Spadil, 340. 25 Auto* 330. PE 0-1165 after 6 p.m. Dealer. SAVE 114)00 , On a- world famous Admiral swimming pool. Far Information call 651-3345. Sand-Gravel-Dirt 76 t SERIES throughout Bloomfield, Waterford OF EXCAVATIONS Whlto Lake, Independence and Twpt., haa yielded savaral thousand yds. of fill dirt and day. If you ar* In naad of such, w* shall deliver this to you for the cast of hauling. OR 3-0935, 6 a.m. to tl p.m* Sun. Incl. ATTENTION CONTRACTORS 30,000 sq, yds.. State tested road gravel, 21-A and S4A. Call MA f. BLACK DIRT, top soil, sand, fill and gravel, 4934127._______ DIRT, GRAVEL, SAND, all kind*. Delivered. PE 3-1415. FREE FILL DIRf, all sand and gravel located at Lapaar Rd. and Graanthlald Rd. 4934231 ar 493- 4501, ■ MARION BLUB SOD, 45e dallvarad 60c laid. 343-0018 or 405-3778. Fra* estimates., / ' SCREENED BLACk dirt, P*4» tap 300 AMP LINCOLN Portable weiderT $450. 335-7534, AIR COMPRESSORS, lubrication equipment, hydraulic tacks, steam cleaners, welding aaulpmant, etc. Pontiac Motor Parts, 10 14 University Drive. FE-24104. antique TOOL chest « full of tools. Rta sons bit. 335-7934. CATERPILLAR A DOZER Hydraulic blade, 344100. HD 4 Allis Chat-mar 12,500. 10-12 yard pull scraper, 0900. 910 Low Boy, S1000. MA *- 2141,______________________ PUNCH PRESS Bliss 220 ton straight aid* single crank, double Nek gear, 26x26 bed, 13" shut height, air dutch, safety controls, can ba saan In operation. Auto. Press. Product, 135 ; Elizabeth, Lake Orion. STEEL WORKBENCH. 1W ton chain taw, after 4:30 p.m. 335-1720. drawing delivered. UL 24442. S.A.W. SAND AND GRAVEL All gravel products, flit sand and dirt, crushed limestone, A-1 top soil Mack dirt. Phons 3940042. AU areas dallwardd. Pets-Hunting Dogs 79 1 AKC MINIATURE SjCHNAUZER, mala, 9 weak*. 67344*1. 1-A AKC POODLE Pupplts, service, greemtog. 3344434. ' MIXED PUPPIES wanted, wa M complete llttsrs. 051-1 setter. PUPPIES, FREE 4734019 EGISTERED +OY POODL#' Pufo pies, white and apricot. FB 2-1497, SILVER PERSIAN, PBAAALiT PE 5479* SIAMESE KITTENS, *15, FE 5-1045: rlSF" Pet Supplies-ServIcB 79-A 1-A GROOMING Mr. Edwards' High Fashion Poodle. Salon, open 7 days. 335-5259 DO MARS Poodle Salon, 332 W. Huron Days 335-9635______Eves. 4034467 PROFESSIONAL POODLE frltomlng table, cage and dlppera. 0534791. Auction Soles 80 1 Storage Marchandisu Auction, Sat. 7;30 pjn. Bar sat, 4 stools, Formica tap; hlde-a-bad; power m**Sr| refrlgarator; 2 TV's;, wringer washer: gas rang*; cnHtoreba. Lets ef good marchandlsa. DOORS OPEN 7 P.M. AUCTI0NLAND 1300 Crescent Lake Rd. AUCTION SALE — 6 mil** ft, wi 1 mil* S. of Romeo at 21400 31 Mil* Rd., cor. of Hartway Rd, an Sit, May 17 at 12:30 pjit. Complete tin* of farm. Implements and soma household goods, Wm. Klahlon, prep. National Bank of Richmond, Clerk. Paul Hlllmaiu auctioneer. >■ FARM AUCTION Locereo i'n muet norm or naaiey, then 1 mil* west, Vk mil* north at 2004 S. Elba Road. Farmall "300" gas tractor; Farmall H tractor; Farmall "C" tractor with 7V4 ft. anew Mad*; Allis Chalmers “Wl P.T.O,,Cem- bin*; Ford F4.U4 ton stake track; Allis Chalmers Jl row P.T.O. chop- per; Allis Chemar* round paMr; Allis Chalmers blewar and gnai.l flat dadc wagons; John Deera No, too 2 row corn planter; Jahn Darra 13 disc Grab) drill; MM) Idea No. 30 7' P.T.O. mower; Oliver I bet-tom 14" trailer pwar plus many mar* good farm fcote e " Wagon. 1st . National I Umar, Clerk. Orrtn G. taytor, Prop. Bud. Hicmett, GaMra) Aue-tlenaar, Oxford. 42*4159. ^ PRAM HOUSEHOLD auctl*n ' 1 day. May 17, it I p.nv £ furniture, paintings SM spinning whaal. Liras qua antique dishes. 4 mil** at 4% ml. north el Marlatto Germania Rd. FURNITURE AUCTIOH JALU — IIt miles X. ef Almont on tha ivi”mlia*’w.‘'to~«44 ,Drytoh IS Friday "night, M»y M, „«i>in. Complete wme .of. torn _____________ _ tomlturo , eluding tom# enflguas. Jeen Haft; rls, prop. First NattonPt Bank m Lapaar, Drydiin Branehjgirfc. Paul Hiiiirtan. sucflenaar, 7»442*» 2 AKC JET BLACK mala Poodle puppies, prlcad for quick sal*, 350 and 945, 2532440. 2 AKC GERMAH Shepherds, 1 mala ---------- - ‘facluallvar famata, whit# SUM. 1 Mack-all JuMwis Y E AR OLD GERM A N shepherd, tomala, ISO; FE 4-7829. Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action -n D—16 v£ ' ;a' ' //. W THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 :L, for Wont Adi Diul 334-4961 , B & B AUCTION {VlkY FRIDAY .........7:** PM. VERY SATURDAY ..... 7:00 P.M. VERY SUNDAY ......1*:** P.M. WE BUY--SELL-TRADE J Retell 7 Davi Weekly CONSjONMENTS WELCOME CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION sow pixie Hwy. .or s-wir Aiiss ottelia s d u n e k homestead estate AUCTION SAT.. WAY 17, 10 A.M. 36070 Grand River Rd., 9 blocks East d« the Traffic light In New Hudson. ] mile off 1-9* at New Hudson Interchange. ANTIQUE FURNISHINGS CurVad glass china cabinet. Round oak pedestal table and ' chairs, bedstead, Victorian walnut. Bedroom suite, Boston rocker with original ttencli. Wicker rockers, side chair, planter and lamp, ladles secretary and chair, easel, whatnot, foMIng sewing table, music cabinet, bookcase. Plank arrow CIOinVTi DOuRLOST/ « i a up. ativw bade chair, dresser with mirror and Bentwood front, drop leaf table, trunks. Icebox, ehllds chair, oak rockers. Maple, side Chair, gold leaf, maple leaf, OG and- Oval frames, parlor lamp HP, coal Oil finger and bracket lamps, dresser lamp w 11 h prisms, light globes, rad, light fixtures with satlnlzed globes, carnival vase, 9 honeycomb goblets, amber candle sticks, brown Cruet and water Pitcher, Anethyst Jack In the Pulpit, aldaboard, footstools, blanket rack, dock shelves, library table, stands, fainting couch, commode, spool stand, clothes racks, gold leaf mirror, brass floor lamp, lantern globe, lamp parts, fan plate, art and pattern glass, black and white milk glass, crystals, green glassware. Staffordshire Vase, spooners. salts, egg cups, kitchen u t a n s 1 Is, Ironstone pitchers, dresser set, Norltake, old lewelry, lace, old fashioned clothing tapestry, white pattern bedspreads, pillows, bedding, parts of the old house Including cupboard doors. Milk, safe, crocks, lugs, Anchor wringer, wash boards, steelyards, plana, copper boiler, maple sugar mold, granlteware, cast figurines Amish, pumps, tubs, glass globe for gas pump, album dated 1353, old post cards', mathematics by Hutton, leather bound 1895, Essay by Francs Bacon, 180, Christian Family Almanac — 1858, Medical and Religious books, Jackson High School Year books from 1907, County, tooted ' candy dishes, buttar pats, nut picks., bottles, hat pins, button and bead col- nflT pins, oviiun lections, shaving mirror, quilting frames, old hardware, ..butter bowl, canning iars, old tin, baskets, cream can, caster set frame, chamber pot, apple parer, war tokens, set of German 'books, Schillers works, 4 vol., other relics and primitives yet to be uncovered. Form Rruduce 86 Travel- Traitors 88 4 DOZEN SMALL ESDI. 8.09, 3 doz., med. egos, *.99, C. A C. Egg Faetoiy, 1794 So. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion. Camping Private Lake Safe beach, flush toilets and showers; 1140 M-15, Ortonvllla. Ortonvllla. McFeelev, Resort. *27-•3820 week-ends or 9 <5 - 59 5 8 weekdays 9 to 3 p.m. 412 Empire Bldg., Detroit, Michigan. 48226. 1 t 1 Form iquipuwiit 87 1 CULTIVATOR AND l back blade for Ford 3 point hitch. OR 3-3370. Call after 4 p.m. f-N FORD TRACTOR. Excellent , condition" UL 9-5564 1967 CASE TRACTOR, No. 430 with loader. Only 36 hrs. Eke. condition OL 1-0737. 4090 JOHN DEERE diesel, oversized tires. Ilka new, 34,750. Plows If desired. 530 case backhoe and loader tractor Ilka new. 310 dozer 3 point hitch. Mrs. Van Camp, Linden, Mich. 735-7537. Big Discounts new Massey-Ferguson 7 h.p. with mower, Massey-Ferguson 10 h.p. with mower, 0975. > Massey-Ferguson 12 hp. with mower, 01145. New Massey-Ferguson dozers loaders — big discount prices. and Ford and Ferguson tractors and loaders. O.C. 4 Oliver dozer, 01950. Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 095 S. WOODWARD FE 4-0461 FE 4-1449 Open dally Including Sunday BUY YOUR WHEEL Horse tractor early and receive free a rotary mower attachment. Limited time only. Wa take trade-ins. TOM'S HARDWARE, 905 Orchard Lk. Ava. Dally 9-6 Sun. 9-3. FE 5-9494. CUB TRACTORS WITH equipment, Davis Machinery Co., Ortonvltle. NA 7-3999. Your "Homelite" Chain saw dealer, John Deere “New Idea" parts galore. _________________ FOR RENT, 550 Adams grader with finished grade operator, road building, subdivision and blacktop, 605-1913. FORD DISC AND* dirt blade, reasonable. 603-5930 after 6 p.m. . D. SEMI-MOUNTED mower, 3 section harrow, disc and corn picker. 391-1897. _______ Check our deal on SWISS COLONY' LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC Mobile Hemet By Dick Turner 1966 PONTIAC CHIEF 19'xSO!, be left on lot. 330-9945, 1967 CHAMPION SUBURBAN. 3 bedrooms, no children, Cranberry Lake Park on M-S9, 674-9593, aft. 1967 PARKWOOD, 13x56', MOO and assume mortgage, 332-9651 1967 DETROITER. 45x19, Includes skirting, 4 x a roofed porch and ,4 X8 storage shad. $9800. 685-9340. 1968 RITZCRAFT, Ilka new, 89995. Can be toft on lot. 335-1685. TRAILERS AND TRUCK 1969 ACADEMY . jibed room, brand newl Only $4995 with >687.80 down CAMPERS. SKAMPER FOLO-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 28 on display at — Jacobson Trailer Sales 5690 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-5981 CENTURY YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS QUALITY AT ANYBU OGET STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC, 3771 Highland (M-S9)_ 683-9440 Frankllna-Creaa Fans-Streamllne Skamper-Pleasure Matas Truck Campers 4 used travel trailers and campers MUST GO — at Yaar-end Prices. Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 15910 Holly, Holly______ME 4-6771 FOR RENT 1966 Star Craft hardtop trailer, sleeps 8, good condition 626-9978. GO FIRST CLASS In en Islander motor home, special price on stock units. 638-3631. HAVE YOU SEEN THE ALL NEW OMEGA Motorhome with the Chevy Chassis 3500 angina, power steering, brakes, spaad transmission, d u a I • r a a wheals, completely self-contained. Only at Holly Travel Coach, Inc. Open McClellan Travel Trailers, Inc. , I LIKE NEW MASSEY Ferguson Diesel back hoe loader, only 475 $5,800. Inquire* 393 Emerson after 4820 Highland Road (M-59) ------------------_-----------—I Phone 674-3163 874.71 mo. Incl. 4 yrs. ins. I This Is a quality home with raised front kitchen and heavy Insulation. Countryside Living, 334-1509, 1084 Oakland, v SPRING IS HERE SO ENJOY A NEW 1969 Active MOBILE HOME Park Space On Lake No Entry Fat 5 Min. From Pontiac TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. Talagraph at Dixie Mwy. 334-6694 Dally 'til 8 Sat. & sun. FOR SALE: Mobile unit — 37* Dodge mobile home chassis, built 1965, 34,000 miles, self contained with air conditioning, heat, generator, i **water, lava to generaTor,i-*waTer, lavatory, mahogany-1 paneling; May be used for mobile office, display unit/ mobile home. For Information call ! 548-8411 Monday thru Friday, a.m. to 5 p.m. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES Your authorized dealer for Holly Park, Oxford, Parkwood and Danish King. 30 - models In stock. Free Delivery within 300 miles. Will trade tor most anything of value. Open 9-9 p.m. 9957 Dixie Hwy. ________________338-0779 1951 VW CHASSIS, partial angina, >50. 693-8210 qr 693-1 Auto Accessories 91 WIDE OVALS, AND poly gl as, cheaters, mags, discount prices. Dynamic Tire Seles, North. 333 Main St., Rochester, 651-3280. Tires-Auto-Truck 92 5 TIRES MOUNTED on split rims, for Vi ton Pickup. 2 8-ply 700x15. 3 e-ply 700x15. Like new, $150. Call aft. 3:30. 363-6863. C-!5 • 1H8 », MM, InTJ*. «•* ui. to aai “I’m a little confused . . . was that the last payment on the first car, or the first payment on the last car?’* Boots-Accessories 97 DRAG BOAT, SPICO, 437 Ford, plush saats, tunad, spaghetti' headers, trailer, 83800 or $3400 with water exhaust, OR 3-9838. 3' HYDROPLANE, MERCURY Hur rlcene 10 h.p. motor, 628-1671. Bosts*Accessories 97 SEE THIS Junk Can-Truck* 101-A 1-9-3 JUNK CABS - TRUCKS tow anytlma. FE 9-9666. i_ til JUNK tARS.-PAY FOR SOME. fraa tow. 689-7010. ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS scrap, W* ww. FE FE jew,_________ FREE PICKllP, Scrap cars,..ate. Phona OR 3-13>3. COPPER - BRASS, RADIATORS -starters and generators, C. Dlxson. OR 3-5849. Used Auto-Truck Parts 102 1959 CHEVY WAGON, GOOD 983, CORVETTE CHRoAlE —....side pipes, 1956-1961 Black convertible top flta 1958-1961 331-3549. Motors ■ 1961 Cadillac, mi Falcon, '61 Chevy 4, '58 VW tor parte-Only, good motor, tires and wheals. Laa 197 S. Johnson FE 3-9666 ‘64 Plymouth porta, *44 Ferd parts. '63 Falcon wagon parts. Tempest parts, • New End Ustd Trucks 103 FORD 1969 Pickup 4 wheal drive, VI, 4 apaad. With anew plow and adfwtafla, driven only 4,000 milts. Now car warranty. ■'iKMflCr.JtaY BILL FOX CHEVROLET 755 S. Rochester Rd. 451-7000 S30 CHEVY TON WRECKER, V-l, A 8, w hoist, 1945. 8.000 actual ml. Lika new, 81100. 338-7983. Before noon. SHARP 1942 CHEVY PICKUP, Vary pood condition, 8550. 693-6131. Foreign Cars 105 New and Usud Cars 106 1957. CHEVY, A-l mechanically, MM otter, 411-1074. .1' »**< 1957 CHEVY, riittt COM. ',<* lava Auto. 1950 CHEVY WAGON. 845. .. f " ' Sava Auto ' _______. 1959 CHEVROLET, 875. runs 1 goad FE 5-3371 859-3294, aft. 4 p.m. 1959 CHEVY EL~CAM I NO, needs work, 8100. FE 5-6900. I960 CHEVY IMPALA Hardtop, *150, good condition. 601-1960. 1961 VW, EXCELLENT condition, >495. 636-3925, 1961 AUSTIN HEALY SPRITE, Ox- cellant condition, 8495. Buy htrt, Pay hare. Marvel Motors, 251 Ookland, FE 0-4079. 1962 VW CONVERTIBLE. Excellent condition. Roci end'tiros. *545, i 1963 VW If the "bug" Is your Mg, Mro It Is I at a rtotonablo price. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Ava. FE 5-9421 9-PASSENGER. Private owner. IfA Chevy V-0, 095. 674-7304.____ PARTS FOR SALE M Pot . 1945 VW, NEW ENGINE and brakes, 1-63 . Fairiane -unn ml., sees bf utu 1944 KARMANN GHIA, Convertible. Black, goad tlras~875Q. t51-Q743fT> parti. '43-GMC B4-.ngin.rc^-^tjolly ME 4-4771 FOR SALE: 171V 'fiberglass canoe, good condition, Nlkx Acctt. Included. 624-4643. X , i* CENTURY INBOARD andi trailer. 8975 complete. 625,35)5. 16' GLASTRON INBOARD- OUT- SUN AND SKI MARINA CENTURY RUNABOUT—INBOARD I O—O B TAHITI 1963 CHEVY IMPALA SS. V-* 1958 FORD PICKUP, runs good, 196* CONVERTIBLE SPORTS CAR. jujomallc, double power. Only « . _________i Radio, 4-spood, radial tiros, dual * Ilrl.n mnr Sovo- Auto _______________FE 5-327* corbs. 100 h.p. S140Q. 363-3779. j ECONOMY USED CARS 1940 FORD TRUCK, 1 ton, 4-spead,; 1967 OPEL yellow faatback, sun root, 2335 Dixie Hwy. 334-2131 dual wheels, utility box,.-8345. Buvi performance package, *985. 493- [943 chevy IMPALA, 4 door hardtop, double power, 8650, FE 3- 1368. 401 1961 CHEVY PICKUP. 8150. 6*2-3406. 1962 FORD 44 TON PICKUP, 8500 Opdyke Hardware FE 8-6686. 1963 FORD V-l Vi TON pickup, *550. 338-6581 after 4 p.m 1963 GMC Vi TON PICKUP 683-4104 oft. ». 1963 INTERNATIONAL Tandem dump truck, 473-1610. 1964 Chevrolet v-t, pickup with small camper. 333-7560.________ 1964 CHEVY Vi TON pickup, >600. 474-2005, anytime. 1965 4 CYLINDER JEEP wilt) enow blade, best otter over *1*00. 474-3243.r’ • HARRY R. PETHICK USED TRUCK SALES 1967 OPEL 7228. 1963 CHEVY - Convertible. This one to a real steal Rally Kadatta, rad with black racing stripes. You mutt ta* this on* to appreciate It. , GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Av*. FE 54421 at onyl S395. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Av*. FE 5-9421 1964 CHEVROLET, 1 owner, 4-door, 53,000 actual miles. 673-9236. 1967 VOLVO 122-S, automatic, radio, bucket seats, sharp 100 par cent, warranty, 81695. Autobahn 1765 S. Telegraph FE 5-9436 1964 CHEVY MALIBU, 4 spaad, 211, *550. FE 5-9373. 19*4 CORVAIR Monza in good shape. No rust* Rad with whit* interior and convortlblo top. See at 2605 E. Walton between 9 and 3. 335-0883. 1964 IMPALA STATION WMon, powor, 21* engine, aft. X FE A 3836. 1967 FIAT 850 Spider convertible, a nasi fin* car with mors miles to ths , gallon., r . GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Av*. FE 5-9421 1965 CHEVY BISCAYNE 4 door sedan, radio and. heater, auto, transmission, whitewalls, good condition, 8693. 673-3303. CHEVELLE 1965, V-l, lots of extras. BOARD, 60 h.p. Morcury Cruiser, A-l condition. S16S0, 674-2512 otter 4 p.m._________________________________ CALIF..SKI BOAT—JET—I/O, O/B |19M DODGE 'h TON pick-up, 6 ply 1966 NORTON ATLAS 730CC. Good condition. Just tuned. Best offer over $700. Also Boll Magnum helmet, size 7V4. *30. 642-76(1. 1966 305 HONDA Scrambler. 1000 mil., like now. 6*2-9663. After 5:3* p.m., adult owned. 6' ALUMINUM BOAT, 1* HP Johnson outboard and traitor, Exc. condition, 8595. OR 3-680*.____________ 16' LARSON FIBERGLAS, convertible top, aldo and alt curtains, 75 HP Evlnrude, else, start, both axe. condition, tl,0W. 425-177*. . 6' FIBERGLAS BOAT, good condition, 45 h.p. Mercury motor and traitor, for aoto or will trade tor Cheap Universal. 425-1093. Wh FT. CHRIS CRAFT Rlvarla, rebuilt 60 h.p. Make otter; 693-8203 or 693-1205. ________________________________20' THOMPSON Inboard-outbpard, 1967 SCRAMBLER. Road or woods.l. full canvass, radio, tandem trailer. 90 mph, 21 h.p.. Ilka new, only like now. 82990. OR 3-7003. 1,000 mi. Adult owned. 8425. 624- 22' THOMPSON, TWIN 3269. __________________ [ Evlnrude, • trailer and all 1967 75 STEURY I/O, O/B 224' Johnson boats and outboards, canoes and pontoon boots, on Cass Lakt W. of Pontloc. 3981 Cass-Eliz. Rd. 682-4700. TONY'S MARINE FOR JOHNSON'S MOTORS 33 Yeari Repair Experience Want a flbreglaa pontoon? No rust, no rot. It plonos. It's fast, It pulls skllers. BEFORE YOU BUY r- sea this: I-O, ft's vary fast, safety glass windshield, 80" beam, very deep, -------------------------295. 120 HP. Yours lor only 83295. 1968 AEROCRAFT alum, boats and canoes, at a terrific discount. Also Geneva and Aerocralt, run-abouts. CALL '682-3660 nnadl ment. UL 2-2789. 125 HP SCOTT, WITH controls, S75. 338-6655. _________________ |35 EVINRUDE ELECTRIC START. 2 $400 i tanks _ and controls, good shape. $275. OR 3-0810. 1960 HONDA 350 Scrambler, I960 Suzuki, 120 cc, both in oxc. condition. OR 4-1063. 1968 TRIUMPH TR6C. Excellent condition, extra chroma. 81050. Call 682-5005 or 602-8242, ALSO MASCOT TRUCK CAMPERS SEVERAL USED TRAILERS FOR SALE _______ EVAN'S EQUIPMENT I HORSE ["TRAILER. 8500. Haulsl «25-.1711 Clarkston 425-2516 625-4400 1968 TRIUMPH. BONNEVILLE, low T 1 TTI T-K TT-11-. it ,-jX I '""WO8’ Immaculate. 335-8236. WINNEBAGO i’Sw* 3500 m,,M'l,ke good. 420-3015, Oxford. , YEAR OLD BLACK GELDING gentle broke, *105. 7 year old black geidinp, all around {food horse Call anytime. 332-0995. 6 YEAR OLD MARE Bred to Appaloosa. 623-9662 4 YEAR OLD GELDING, small, Well mannered, exc. for children or lady, saddle and bridle Incl.10275. 752-9064. 7-YEAR-OLD registered quarter horse. Horse buggy also. UL 2-1405. 1* Hand boy gelding. 9 years old, top ten In 4-H English pleasure In , State of Michigan, axe. disposition, started at lumping. Owner leaving tor college. 8650. 732-2337. AT STUD: 51 6507 Dixie Hwy Open 9 a.m,-8 P.m. APACHE TENT TRAILER, sleeps 6, completely self-contained. OR 3-9183. _____________ P.O.A., 2 Arabs, to sell meres, 44" — 52". Gelding 627-3792. AT STUD REGISTERED P.O.A Dony, black, blanket 2 withers with large black sports. Want spotted bottom? You got thorn when you breed your more to Waush-eo. Call 627-3062: 161 Granger Rd., Ortonvllla. ARABIANS FOR SALE, Gay-Rein No. 44547 at atud. Double D. C. Arabian Farm. 625-3550. BLACK HACKNEY PONY with carl and.harness, sacrifice, need stall space. <93-0918. feuCKSKIN AND PARADE OR CONTEST HORSE. FREE KEEP FOR 1 MONTH. OL 1-0763. PoR SALE: 4 fresh .dairy cows, Holstein and 2 Guernsey. 427-3380. GENTLE TRAIL HORSES, traitor end saddl*. 634-4118, Davlsburg.- .y MUST SELL, 8 year old gelding par* quarter, saddle, bridle, $250, also pony and harness, Antlqus buggy, *150. 627-3380. Apache Camp Trailers Pickup Truck Campers Buy brand new. 1968 Apache Camp traitors at used trailer prices. 10 models of new Apache traitors on display In heated showrooms. Over 30 different models of pickup truck campers and covers to choost from. Sovo up to 3500 on new 1968 campers while they last. New 8' cabover pickup truck campers $595 uo. Opan Sundays, Apache Factory Home Town Dealer, "Bit!....Cotter "camping headquarteri Vt Milt East of Lapeer City Limits on M-21. Motor Homes—Traitors 1969 SUZUKI ON display 50CC to 500 Camper Coaches CC. Oil injection, 12 month or Reese and Draw-Tile. Hitches sold 12,000 mile warranty. Rupp end end installed I Wild Cat minl-blkes, cycle ac- F E HOWLAND SERVICE cessories. r. c. nuwLMNU jckviic Ta)(e M.59 t8 w Highland, right to 3255 Dixie Hwy.___________ OR 3-1456 Hickory Ridge Rd. ot Demode Rd., left and follow signs to DAWSON'S 215 HORSEPOWER Ford Interceptor engine and transmission. 1 year old. *450. 674-3537. _________________ 194* — 10 FT. Sea Star trl-hull Inboard, outdrive with 120 h.p. Marc cruiser angina, heavy duty traitor, Ilka new, vary reasonable. FE 5-5660. _______________ 15 and 1969 SILVER LINE Mercury 650 HP i complete ready to go. S2695. KAR'S BOATS l< MOTORS 1600 _____________________ BOAT, MOTOR, AND TRAILER, $175, can bo aeon 114 Oakland after 5 p.m. 1____- •'______ BUY EARLY AIRSTREAM FOR 1969 18 Ft. to 31 Ft. ALSO ■ WARNER Amerigo — Schooner TRUCK CAMPERS^ Silvereagle — Vocational TRAVEL TRAILERS Nimrod CAMPING TRAILERS WE'VE SCALPED COMANCHE "ROAD-READY" PKG. INCL. ON ALL MODELS ON LOT. 14' thru 23' Heap Big Savings at— Village Trailer Sales OAKLAND COUNTY'S NEWEST 6670 Dixie Hwy. Clarkston 625-2217 SALES-SERVICE-RENTALS YELLOWSTONE 21', USED ONCE completely self-contained and furnished, Reese Hitch, 83000 or best offer. OR 4-1972, otter 4 p.m, Mobiie Homes 1-A MODERN DECOR 89 Early American, Mediterranean, Richardson Liberty Monarch Delta Park space — Immediately available Colonial Mobile Homes FE 2-1657 623-1310 250 Opdyke Rd. ' 5430 Dixie Auburn Heights So. ot Waterford DAMAGED BRAND NEW 1969 12x60 Star, at Is without furniture, only 84,4951- 8300 will handle. Countryside Living. 334-1509, 1084 Oakland. LAKE, phona 1969 B7 GUZZI WITH factory shield, bags and turn signals. Lass than 500 mli. (till under warranty. 626-1143 attar 4 p.m. All day Sat. and Sun. Johnson Motors, Star Craft Boats, G w . Invader Boats, Glastron Boats, Crest Pontoons, Terra Cat Trail Bikes, Scramblers. Sea Doos. . JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT Vs Mila E. of Lapeer City Limits On M-21 Open 10 to 9 Mon.-Frl. 9 TO 5 SAT. ti SU' TROJAN CRUISERS CHRIS-CRAFT AND SLICRAFT 30 BOATS ON DISPLAY LAKE & SEA MARINE S. Blvd. at Saginaw _FE 4-950? WE ARE PROUD tO ANNOUNCE WE NOW CARRY THE “THOMPSON BOAT LINE" 16' to 24' THOMPSON Set the 20* Canvas Back Camper sleeps 5, complete Galley, 160 Msrcrulsar. 13 CHRYSLER MODELS Now In stock 14' to 23' "Once In a lifetime doalsl" Glass end Alum. See IP* Polara Outboard af unbelievable prices. FULL LINE OP MERCURYS-CHRYSLERS OUTBOARD MOTORS Oakland and Genesee Counties only CORRECT CRAFT DEALER y,/ma ARE YOU STUCK IN A RUT? WANT EXCITEMENT? Suzuki will excita you with once in a lifetime savings 1969 X-6 Scrambler 250 cc . ’ $565.90 del. MG SUZUKI SALES 4667 Dixie Hwy. 673-6450 ______Drayton Plains 1-BEDROOM 1968 Baron custom, 12x60, roes., 334-1509, dir. 8X37 PONTIAC CHIEF, 195 7 house trailer. 685-2218. Sun. 12-4! 10x35 NEW MOON HOUSETRAIL- A-l Motorcycle Insurance FARMERS INSURANCE Agency Pontiac across from Andarson's Honda. Phone 334-4597. Bodily In* fury, property damage for 4 months: 0-125CC 126-200CC 201-360CC 361-500CC 501-750CC $11.00 $14.00 $19.00 $24.00 $30.00 KAWASAKI Big Bike Buy P«nIEMiirt°5ii 130 *ndiDAILTDCAMOB'C Tdaiicdc' “1 awning "and" shad,”«2.7i347 i While they last, 650cc road er_ TT ..S’-” --* _,* *. 1°2°'.... .... | IKtANUK b IKAILtKj invtri.........v-iAi - models. Don't miss this onel Road PINTO AAARE, AND FOAL, good 6*2-8945 2012 Pontiac Drive ’°tornace dir 8 !™«els *1150 00, TT *1195.00. This is JffiS1*' w,al ,or 4-H proH ONE BLOCK NORTHWEST OF ----Icompfete delivered price. Come out act, <25-3550. TELEGRAPH AND ORCHARD 1* X 55 NEW MOON 2 bedroom.jfor a test ride, 12 month or 12,000 RALOAAINO FARAAS. 1085 Hill Rd Horses boarded, bought, rented sold and traded. Hay rides. RIDING.HORSE, I yrs. old. Gelding LAKE RD. 8200. Saddle end. bridle, , 850. Call 797-4508. / • . ____/ Fit ARAB GELDING, _Color, is hands, soma acttoollng, coming 5 yrs. <42-0358. IheYland PONY, PALOMINO, bridto and saddle, OR 4-1946, aft. p.m WESTERN. SADDLE, In good eon-dltlon, >40,1161 iN. Opdyko. Welch and hackney «nd a jumper, boat offer accepted, AAA 5- Meots 83-A A-’ MEAT CUTTING,-Freezer wrapped. Wo cure and smoke mciSrcgn FE 2-6155. ROMEO MEAT CENTER Hoi BEFORE OU BUY — Chock the facts and prices on the 1949 show hit: / PLEASURE MATE / , Deluxe Hardtop Camper mm , KAMPR VILLAGE 630 East Walton naar Joslyn 580-0681 Open Sun. 588-0811 air carpeting with 83.200. Call Milford 5:30 p.m. conditioning, imlle warranty. No money down end 685-3429 otterino'poymonts until Juno. BOOTH CAMPER Pickup Covers and campart, custom built, C. J, Booth, 4267 LoForost, Waterford, 674-3513. CAMPER SHELL, 6 months'7 old, $200. Cell 338-4876. 4, 8500. , COLEMAN CAMPERS Sun and. Ski marina on Cass Lake 3981 Cass Eliz. Open Sundays, 682 Crossed mCatt. A side or a sll?e tor your table or freezer. Cut, wrapped before you. Give us a call! for prtco, quality and appointment: TUT DTIUBl HUUHIT OIIU UUHVIIIliricni to cut. Romoo. PL 2-2941. Open 7[ days » w*Mt767|40 Von Dyke. / COOL IT MAN! In a Travel Trailer from BOB WESTC0TT SALES 340 N.iLapeer Rd., Oxlpfid ' H9y*frflib-fDD4 84 1*01 BALES ALFALFA brume hey. Cartes Low, 680-2ZI*. ■ 86 BEEB POTATOES, ) Silver pi Bring pilfinar*. Out Parry. 0mm Drive Out, end save ssi on • Woodlske 7J' self contained traitor. ALSO! Mlrrow-craft Aluminum boats Alloy Boat Trallars SAILBOATS 12X60 STATESMAN, Early Amorlcan, Newl Furnished and carpatad. Only 84,995. Sat-up INCL*I Countryflda Living, 334-1509, 10*4 OOklafid., I 196* TRAVEUWASTER Iratlai', excellent condition, tandem wheels center bath, carpatad. 6*5-2602, Milford. 1966 DETROITER, 12*x56*, carpeted, skirted, on lot. Reaionabto,' 332-6066. ’ DETROITER AMERICAN SUNRISE PARK i KR0PF Doubla Wides, Expando's Custom built to your order Fret Delivery and Setups Within 300 AAilai AT Clayt'i Cycle Canter, on M-21, one milt east ot Lopotr, 664-9261.. MINI-BIKE to solo, good condition. UL 2-2576. - MUST SELL. 1969 Honda SSOee. Super Sport, Only 1,000 ml. Extras. JOOltlB , I •>625. 693-1110. Motorcycle Sale special prices on all MODELS Anderson Soles & Service 1645 S. TELEGRAPH FE 3-7102 MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE LOW RATES S. K. JOHNSON AGENCY FE 4-2533 CHRIS CRAFT 1*' utility,/mahogany, 95 h.p. Excellent. Ml 4-4340. DO IT YOURSELF BOAT DOCK _ ALUMINUM AND WOOD. LARSON BOAT YOUR EVINRUDE DEALER Harrington Boat Works 1*99 S. Talagraph ' 332*033 Glasspar & Dub Boats Grumman Canoes * fiberglas Canoes- -Pontoons, SWim Rafts Alum. Fishing Boats Scorpion Sailboats Little Dude and trail Qar trailers Skin Diving Equip. Johnson & Chrysler Motors Dockage Available OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK M.W.F. 'til 9; Sun. 10 to 4 YOUNG'S MARINA 4*30 Dixie Hwy. an Loon Lako Drayton Plains ________ OR 4-0411 GLASSPAR TRI - HULLS on.display 15', 16', and II'. Complete with top, sld* and aft curtains, tonna cover, II gallon tank, gauge, mechanical steering, lifeguard construction, 5 year warranty. Take M-59 to W. Highland, right to Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd., toft and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES, TIPISCO LAKE; phone 629-2179. NEW 1968 MQDELS USED BOATS A1)ID MOTORS Drastic Reductions CRUISE OUT, INC, 63 E. Walion FE M40T Daily 9-6, Closed Sundays REMEMBER IT'S BOB HUTGHINSONjfS MOBILE HOME SALES 4301 DIXIE HWY.' 673-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS . J YAMAHA—KAWASAKI ' Open Dally/til » p.m. Saturday and Sunday /Ml f All 1969 Endure models In stdek, excellent selection of street machines including the all new Kav/atakl 5*0 Easy _ terms. Clayt's Cycle ’ M-21 one mile tail of Lapeer 664-9261. 1, ____ 'S Bicycles 96 For Pontoons, aluminum and steal. Low as 8500. Water bikes, rafts, piers. 1370 Opdyk* 9-6 Sat. f-6 (1-75 at University Exit) Want Ads Fof Adtion CLIFF DREYER'S MARINE DIVISION 15210 Holly Rd. Holly tires, 8**0. 363-6615._______ 1967 CHEVY (4 ton Pick-Up Dealer 1968 OPEL Rally Kadette, yellow finish with racing stripqs. A real sharp mini-brute. . GRIMALDI CAR CO. $1350 900 Oakland Ava.____FE 5-9421 VW CORVAIR MONZA, 1965, 2 door hardtop, whitewalls, radio, low mileage, very good condition, $700. 335-0721. 1967 CHEVY V8 TON Pickup. Black exterior with custdin cab. New tires, heavy duty springs. V-t automatic, cab high camper, 16,000 actual mllaa with warranty book, call 442-3219. Audattu Pontiac 1*50 W. Maple Rd. Troy 1967 CHEVY M ton pickup, need something nice for the money, this Is t real work horttl Must sea to appreciate, low down payment! SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 855 S. Rochester Rd. 651-5500 1961 IH SCOUT. 4-wheel drive, large engine, 7900 orig. Ml., Radio. 412-5675. with extras. I960 OPEL LS, 00 hp., radio. 7,400 miles, under warranty. *1100 firm, Coll 625-3905, after 6 p.m. DUNE BUGGY, VERY good shape, reasonable 6826981. ___________ DUNE BUGGY very sharp, bugg^T OCELOT DUNE license^ lights* wipers* convertible top, A-1 condition. OA $-3143. SAND SHARK 19*9 GMC Vi ION PICKUPS, new, immedtote delivery. Save. KEEGO,yw 1M$ SUNROOF, radio, *1,380. PONTIAC, 602-3400. I RED EL CAMINO, 1969. 5375 Cooley Lake Rd. ATTENTION TRUCKERS NEW 1969 CHEVY <0 series with Hall 4-6 yard dump body. Ready to ge to work. VAN CAMP <04-1025 BEFORE YOU BUY, SEE BILL GOLUNG VW From Pontiac to Birmingham (Woodward Avd.) turn toff on Maple Rd. approx, t miles, than toft on Mapjslawn. 442-4900. Airplanes PRIVATE TUTORING for all ratings at group course prices. Private 84.00 hr./ commercial 04.50 hr.; Instr. 85.00 hr. 3304019. Wanted Cars-Trucks 101 EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car DUMPS! 54 Ford ......l’/2x3 yd. 63 Ford........3x5 yds. me *W69 Ford T-800 .. .8x10 yds. With olegrenning air lift axle. All trucks ready to got $495 up! Terms Arrahgsdl John McAuliffe Ford 99 VW VAN, overhauled engine, new tires, new exhaust system, 8200. FE 5-7164, aft. 5 p.m._____________ New and Used Cart 106 STANDARD AUTO SALES WATERFORD 3400 Elizabeth Lk. 681-0004 1950 BUICK SEDAN. 055. Rune good. 135 Woahlngton. ____________________ 1964 BUICK RIVIERA. Exceptional condition. Low mileage. 620-1093. 1965 BUICK Wildcat 4 doqr sedan, graan finish, power steering, brakes, radio, whitewalls, $1295 TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS . ,, 1965 CHEVY Wagon with emerald1 green finish, with VI,. radio, neater, whltowalls, mechanically perfect. Very clean body, vocation sola priced at only 81095. Over 75 other cart to select from. On US 10 ot M15, Clarkston, AAA 5-5071. 1965 CHEVEROLET Corvette convertible, 327, 350 h.p., axe. condition, 82700. 674-26*0. , ,_.. , 1965 CORVAIR Convortlblo, radio, hooter, low mileage, 4-spead, very dean, 8750. 363-7905. 1965 CHEVROLET SS HARDTOP. 4 speed, radio and haatar. No I, down, weekly paymonte 85.15, full * price 8699. Cell Mr. Park* credit manager at Ml 4-7500. Now location of Turner Ford 2600 Maple (15 Mila Rd.) Troy Mall 1 mile oast of Woodward excel lent 1966 CHEVY CAPRICE, condition, 8200 down and take over payments. 673-7427. __________ TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1966 CHEVELLE Wagon with VI, automatic, power steering, vary low mileage. Boautlful finish. Ideal family car. Summer said priced at only $1495. Ovar 75 other cart to acted from. On US 10 et Mlf, Clarkston. AAA 5-5071. _______ 1966 CORVAIR FOR SALE 335-9026.______________________ TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1966 CHEVY Wagon, with tool blue finish, matching Interior, VI, radio, heater, whitewalls, super savings at only 81195. Over 75 other cars.., to select from. On U$ 10 at M15, Clarkston. AAA 5-5071. ■ I 1966 CHEVY BISCAYNE 6 cylinder, automatic, 11100. FE 5-3552. After- Especially Chtvtllts, Camaroe, Corvettes, OTO's, • Firebirds and 442'*. Averill's FE 2-9070 2020 Dixie <*E 4-6*9* Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 Sharp Cadillacs, Pqntlae, Olds and Bulcks tor out-of-ltat* market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES STOP HERE LAST M&U MOTOR SALES Now at our new location W* pay more for sharp, tote modi-. . Cora. Corvettes needed, liso Oakland at Viaduct / 3389261 f5P DOLLARS _FOR SHARP, LOW HMj'.L^EWAEULTT0M0,,LEI)8 S-1355 “TOP, DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS OH W. Huron $f. 611-2771 ' trucks. Economy1*ctn, nSS DM*. CARS OR Me would tiks to buy lot# model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today.' 277 Wait Montcalm (Nr, Oakland) FE 5-4101________ LI 3-203* FORD TRUCK, 196* l-ton. Very good ■ condition. With utility boxes. 4-speed transmission, radio, haatar. *1200. Kan Hunt. 424-2563. GMG TRUCK CENTER - - 1:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Frl. 1:00 to 12:00 Saturday 701 Oakland Avenue 335-9731 JEEP 1965 WITH plow blodo. Good shape. "Think ahead — now Is ths time to buy It." Super doal. 8950. Call Northslde Auto Supply. 334-0948. _______________' ■ rnuiiim n * i a i 1966 CHEVY IMPALA SS,. 3f( V*[ GRIMALDI Buick-Oppl I Auto, air, like new. 1 owner, 31,000 210 Orchard LK. Rd. FE 2-91651 ml. 81350. FE S-0013, If<< CHEVROLET, 6 CYLINDER, 1965 BUICK Electro 225 sedan, blue finish, automatic, power steering, brakes, radio, whltewolls, roof nice driving carl Only'- $1495 GRIMALDI Buick-Opel 210 Orchard Lk Rd. FE 2-9KJ IMG BUICK Wildcat custom 4 door hardtop, with beautiful tu-tone finish, all th* goodies, nothing like that Bulck rid*. Low monthly payments. SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 055 S. Rochester Rd. , 451-5508 Matthews Hargreaves "OK" Truck Specials! 1966 CHEVY Custom Camper with VI, radio, hotter, ready for vacation, gold finish. Only $1595 |966 CHEVY One Ton Stoke With Vi, radio, sharp rad, finish, now only $1595 1962 CHEVY FISCHER BUICK 544 WOODWARD 647-5600 ! V% Ton Pickup •xtra $995-., Matthews Hargreaves; CHEW 1966 BUICK ELECTRA 225 Hardtop: Power. 839 down, woekly payments 812.88. Full price *1495. Call Mr. Parks credit manager it Ml 4-7500. NOw location of ( Turner Ford 2(00 Maple (15 Milo Rd.) Troy Moll ..____1 mile post of Woodward 1946 BUICK L0SABRE ......*1350 Opdyko Hordwaro , FE 8-6686 1967 BUICK LaSAERE, daub I* power, must salt by Friday- 644-0632. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH .1967 Bulck, Skylark, 2 door, hardtop, V(j, automatic, power steering, power brakes, with vinyl Interior, vinyl roof, 0150 down, payments of 0M per month. 477 M-24, Lake Orion, 493-1341. 5 ________>• • .__________ I960 BUICK RIVIERA, perfect con-dltloib private, >51-1521 or 626-9578. I960 BUICK LeSABRES, 4-door sedans, can b* purchased with 1100 down. CONVERTIBLE, 1966 C 0 r V a I r , 3-spead, 8550. 335-51*5.___ 1966 CHEVY 2-door with bluo finish, hat years of trouble-free driving toft In It. Aak for Jack Brannon. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Avo. FE $9421 1 OWNER, 1966 Chtvy Impola 2-doer hardtop. Powor steering, and brakes.-radio, low mileage. 602-9191 after 5 p.m, 81,500, ______ —AL HANOUTI , , ' thevrolat Buldc On M24 in. Lake Orion MY 2-2411 1967 CAMARO 2 door hardtop with 327 VI, many other goodloa, most economy and sporty l Want, payments you can make? SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 055. 5. Rochester Rd. 651-550* 1967 CHEVELLE 2 door hardtop, with factory air conditioning, all power, yes folks it's loododl Just drive and buy I SHELtON Pontiac-Buick 055 5. Rochester Rd. 651-5500 1967 CHEVELLE SS 396. Excellent condition. *1650. Phone 332-6207. LUCKY AUTO 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU 312 W. Montcalm FE 4-5004 1940 W, Wide Track FE 3-7*54 or FE 4-1006 I960 BUICK, SKYLARK, custom, coupe, automatic, with powor, ntw tlroa, lip par cant warranty, 8qyo. Autobahn 17*5 S. Talagraph________FE M43* CADI LLAC 6 L D O 1961 CADILLAC ELDORADO CohvarHM*. Baaullful matalllc coral with white leather budtat seat*, whin top. Full power and foctorV air conditioned. Spring Special, only 811*a full price. Just BIN down. P.S. Wo'ra moving to our now location: and all U.sad Cars must b* , soldi JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland,Ava.____FE 5-6101 TOM RADEMACHER , CHEVY-OLD* 1967 CHEVELLE Wagon, with VO, automatic, powor stoerlpg, brakes, radio, whltawajlk, extra clean throughout! If you're shopping for a wagon you must see this one. Sale priced ot only,tl|95. Over 75 other cars-to select from. On U.S. 10 at Mil. Clarkston, MA 5-5071. 19*7 CHEVELLE. CONVERtlBLB, 5 cylinder, yollow, claan, power MA 6-5756. 1967 CORVETTE, 327. Extras. Convertible. Sharp. Maks otter. <93-8960. 1968 Impola 4 door, vinyl top, VI, power steering, showroom now condition, light Hue finish. $2495 Sport steering, condition. 1968 Chevy Caprice , coupe, VI, poworglldw pl_ ~~ vinyl top, above average $2495 1966 Ford CADILLAC It64, 4 door saden, all powor, air conditioned, now tiros, clean, axacutivs, 1 owner, Ml 6-2339,:- ; : •/ 1966 CADILLAC 4-DOOR, very good Delmont 2 door/ beautiful, dark groan finish, above average condition. ‘ $875, • 1966 Olds condition. 338-9639 'til 9:30 p.m. 1967 CADILLAC, air, fun pow storoo, vinyl top, 03900. 651-7602. nmw ni xll umca JEROME mmm Mm m • v CADILLAC CO. IMS Wide Track Pr. Fi O-JW 4 doer, hardtop, hydromatlc, power stearlng, power brakes, radio, above average con- dition. $.1495 TXYLOR v. is ' "V • ■-v. -VA i v i ' ■ «* mm 'X i/iK V ' , \ }jt 7, for Want Ails Dial 334-4981 i\,\ 7 v' fifj? .)/ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, ,1969 . M ■ . V.y tie* ‘ ■■■ r;). Now and Used Cars 106 vlmil toe, I17M. MY 3-6*50. bl«ek l,g,cctm?. Au™»tie- ««■<• IW CAMARO 327 Automatic. But offer. OHIO otter Ji3Q p.m. —.......... $Vlk ' ‘ 1000 USED CARS AT : TROY MOTOR MALL < Meple Read (IS Mila) batwaan ■ Coolldge and Crooks. ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audefti Pontiac " Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth : Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Miko Savoio Chevrolet Cara 106 New and Used Cara 1061TIZZY if« CHEVY impala Custom Coupe, V.a automatic, power •tearing vinyl top, radio Ilka new, 12130. 772-7450, 0-5 dally 0514000 ova, Sat, and Sun 1841 CHEVY 2, S$ 1M, loadad with axtraa. 505-4720 CHEVY 1968 Wagon 0 paaaengar, vo, automatic, full power, extra sharp, old car or email down payment. Eaay GMAC term,. BILL FOX CHEVROLET 755 S. Rochester Rd. 451-7000 1*41 CHEVELLE 2 DOOR, Economy engine, *400 mllaa, power, 111*5 or beet otter. PE 54*00. 1968 Chevrolet 4 door. Dark blue with matching nylon Interior, vo automatic, radio, heater, powar eteerlng and brakes. Munlc Title. $1295 BIRMINGHAM 1967 Plymouth Fury III 2100 Maple Rd. Troy 642-7000 New and Used Can 1Q6New and Used Can 106 IT'S OFFICIAL! PLYMOUTH CUTS VALIANT PRICE $193.00 Valiant, Same Car, New O Price / W CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland FE 5-9436 . D-w,; • in* Chevy impao 2 door hardtop. Automatic. V0 with power, Only S2I*5. 1 ECONOMY USED CARS 2225 Dixie Hwy. 024-2151 TO 2 DOOR CHEVY, dark blue, cuetom Impala, 0 cyl., awl*-' transmission, radio, naatar, whitewalls, under 10400 mllaa. 02200.252-5411, leeva manage. CHEVY 1968 Impala 4 door. Lest call, official cars. Fully equipped and factory air conditioning, now car warranty. Low GMAC forme. BILL FOX CHEVROLET 755 S. Rochester Rd. 451-7000 1*4* CAMARO. 2-speed, excellent condition. $2450, Call attar 4 p.m, 42S4170.________ l 1 ■ 1*64 CHRYSLER HARDTOP. No t down, weakly payments 14.22. Full price *7*5. Call Mr. Parke,'credit manager, at Ml 4-7500: New loca> tlon of Turner Ford 2400 Mapl* (15 Mila Rd.) Troy Mall 1 mile eaat of woodward TO S3* down, weakly paymsnta 215.*2, Full price *1**5. Call Mr. Parke credit manager at Ml 4-7500. Haw location of Turner Ford A-l CHRYSLER NEWPORT Custom, 1*67, 4 door vinyl hardtop, doubfe power, antenna, radio with rovorb, clean, call 6474194. 1*45 DODGE CORONET, 2 door, VS, automatic transmission, ra d I o. heater, power stoorine and brakee. Mint condition. EMUtlful metallic §reen with matching Interior, prlng Special, only 0721 full price. Just *88 down. P.S. We're moving to our new location and aU Used Care mutt bo soldi JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakland Ave. FE 54101 1*67 DODGE CORONET it at Ion Wagon. Power equipped. (3* down, WSakly payments *13.*2. Pull price 0169*. Call, Mr. Parks credit manager at Ml 4-7500. New loci tlon of Turner Ford 2400 Maple (15 Mila Rd.) Troy Mall -'11 Mila East of Woodward New and Usad Cars Cars 106 MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH f*42 DODGE, PICKUP, V* ton, VI, custom cob, standard transmission, 235 down, (66 per month. 477 M24 Lake Orion. 6*3-2341._____________ By Kate OsannJNow and UgedCari 106 New and Usad Cara 106 New and Used Cara 106Ngw and Usad Cart 1M 1*67, FORD 10 Passenger Country Squire. Power and automatic. 239 down, weekly payments 215.92. Pull price 21*9*. Call Mr. Parks Credit manager at Ml 4-7500. New location ol Turner Ford 2400 Maple (15 Milo Rd.) Troy Mali 1 mile oast of Woodward t*6* MUSTANG FASTBACK, 251-2*0, many extras. Sharp. Make offer. 4934940. 1*54 CONTINENTAL Thunderblrd, lood condition, from California. 1204321. - 1*62 LINCOLN CptlTINitl+AL, nsw staarlng, 3*0 Thunderblrd V4, Crulsa-O-MatlC, bucket seats, 22,000 miles, 21250. 4220044.____________ 1*67 FORD MUSTANG, 20* V4, powar steering, bucket seats, 6 tlras, Ilka new. 400 Fourth St. FE 44712. 1*47 LTD HARDTOP. Vinyl roof. Power and automatic. 23* down, weekly payments *14.44. Full price *1899. Cell Mr. Parke credit manager at Ml 4-7500. New location of Turner Ford "Talk • wiUMkswo,*,,* about wasteful youth! All Roger spent was the evening!” New end Used Cars 106 New end Ussd Cars 106 1N5 FORD COUNTRY sedan station wagon. V4, automatic trans-mlsslon, radio, heater, powar ataarlng, powar brakes, luggage rack. Baautiful silver blue with matching all vinyl Interior. Spring apeclal only SI,110 full price. Just *118 down. P.S. We're moving to our new location end all usad cars must be soldi John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ava. FE 54101 Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1*50 W. Maple__________Ml 4-2200 MUSTANGS 1*44 FORD FAIRLANE GT Convertible, 3*0 4-sptad, call 451-2575, aft. 5:30. ______________________ 1968 DODGE Polara 4 door, fully equipped, beautiful condition throughout! Full price only — $1995 TOWN & COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER loot N. Main St.__ 4514220 STOCK NO. 2000 NEW '4* Charger, 2 door, hordtop, VS, powor, vinyl top, buckot •oats, whitewalls, wheel covers. $2895 STOCK NO. 3009 '4* Polara, 2 door, hardtop, V2, automatic, power, vinyl top, radio, whltowelle, wheel covers, beautiful burgundy. $2795 STOCK NO. 2025 '4* Coronet 440, 2 door, hordtop, V0, automatic, power, vinyl top, radio, whitewalls, wheel covert, red with black Interior. $2600 STOCK NO. 1009 '0* Dart, 2 door, hardtop, blf A automatic, powar, vinyl Interior, powder blue. $2195 HURRY PRE-SUMMER DEMO SALE AND EXECUTIVE CARS-CHECK THESE DEPENDABLE USED CARS '66 Plymouth ....................... .......$1395 Fury III, 2 door, hardtop, V3, powar, vinyl top, radio, automatic, wide ovals and many more. '65 Cbevelle 300 ..................- - -1 . - - - $1095 Station Wagon, VI, automatic, power, radio, whitewalls, a real beauty. '66 Ford LTD .>...........................,..$1495 4 door hardtop, VI, automatic, air, power, radio, whltoWalts, vinyl top, vacation apodal. '67-Coronet 440 .. $1695 I door, hardtop, V0, automatic, air, vinyl top, power, radio, wheal covers, white walls, bucket eaate, a true value, copper in color with black top. WE WON'T DODGE ANY DEAL SPARTAN DODGE SELLS FOR LESS (TELL US IF WE'RE WRONG) -855 OAKLAND FE 8-9222 1968 Dodge Charger . Power. Air cOndltlonad. Tape. Blue with, black vinyl roof. A1 real beauty. $2695 Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1*50 W. Maple Ml 6-2200 KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCK* Salat and Servlet __ Oxford_________ OA S-1400 1*40 F6RD COUPE, noade work — 2225 Rich wood, 3244434. 1*55 FORD T-BIRD, 427 Ford racing New and Used Cans 106 New and Used Cara 106 motor. 400 h.p. immaculate. Beit offer. 1*54742. C4 Trans. Extra Parts. 1*5* 4 DOOR FAIRLANE Ford, excellent running condition 0150. 0*1- 1*40 FORD OR 1942 TEMPEST eta-tlon wegone, $143 ot» 3434001, dir. 1*41 FALCON 0 cylinder, . body good, now tires, heater, radio. Good got mileage. $250. must tell, call 4444723 aft. 4 p.m., Mon.-Frl. door 1*41 FORD GALAXIE, rune good. 2100. Save Auto ___FE 5-327* 1*42 FORD, COUNTRY SQUIRE, station wagon, vt, automatic, good condition, 2225. Buy her*. Pay hire, Marvel Motors, 251 Oakland. FE 4-107*. ___________________,_________ 1*43 FORD FALCON Convertible, axe. condition, radio, heater, whitewall tlras, <3*5. 343-123*. V 1*43 FORD RED CONVERTIBLE, 252 angina, powar etaarlng. (4*5 EM 2-7532. _________ 1*43 FORD GALAXIE 500 Vt, 2 dr, hard top, Auto. Power steering, power brakes. Radio, hooter, now tiros. *3*5. 624-5007. _________ You Want 'Em? We Got 'Em I 1965 Thru 1969 25 in Stock For Immediate delivery i Fastbacks, Coupes, Convertibles. All engines. Big ones or small 1*44 FORD GALAXIE 500 convertible, with V8, automatic, radio heater, power steering, beautiful spring yellow with black top, and Interior, spodally prlcad tor a fast sale only (1422 full price. Just 31(3 down, P.5. We're moving to our now location and all used cart must be soldi John McAuliffe Ford 420 Oakland Ava. FE <4181 TURN TO TURNER For the bast selection toe this ont before you buy ony car. $$$ SAVE $$$ Absolutely no 2 money down. Example: 1*40 Mustang Full price $1399 Call Mr. Parks Turner Ford 1*45 -FORD GALAXIE, 2-door, cylinder, radio, haater, auto, baautiful low mileage economy Ml 7-0*52 fSKd Birmingham IMS FORD oonvortlblo, beautiful candy apple rad with black all vinyl Interior. VI angina automatic,. radio, heater, power ataarlng, power braktt. Sprint •pedal only *18*1 full price. Just 212 down. P.S. We're moving - to our now location and all used care must be soldi John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland AVQ. FE 4-4101 1*45 FORD GALAXIE <00, Moor hardtop, radio, hoator, auto with powar, turquoise with white top, vary Immaculate throughout. HUNTER DODGE 4*9 South Hunter Ml 7-0952 Birmingham OVER 1Q00 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Maple Road (13 Milo) between Coolldge and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac A-l condition oil WMfMMB iM- 1968 88 Convertible Sharpl $2495 1966 Cutlass Convertible $1595 1966 98 Hardtop --Air Conditioned ............... $1995 1968 F85 2 door $1995 1968 Torino GT Convertiblo 1 $2295 1967 Toronado. Air Conditioned *.. $2995 1966 .Toronado Full Powor .... ....v $2195" 1965 Mtrcury Broezeway 4 door $1095 1966 Buick Electro 225 * Hardtop. Air $1795 1968 Olds Dslmont . . 4 door hardtop ....... . V $2395 • 1967 Olds 98 4door.Air $2295 1969 98 Hardtop, i * 2 door. Loaded . . . .. • •.. ■ • $ave 1969 Cutlass Hardtops, Air Cond., Vinyl Top, 4 to choose from .... ! $3195 smmm 860 S. Woodward B'ham MI 7-5111 -■ ■ ■;L 1, *64 FORD STATION WAGON; 2375. 473-5744 1964 FALtoN convertible, power steering, auto., snow tiros and rims. *525. Call 232-4157.______________ best offer. 332-0715. 1*44 FALCON, W HIGH performance, 2-door hardtop, lust pointed, loadad with extras, 0*50. FE 'M**». .__________ 1964 T-BIRD Convertible With red finish, block top, automatic, all powar, you will Ilka ithls one. Only— $1195 GRIMALDI Buick-Opel Orchard Lk. Rd. FE 2-flil 1*44 COUNTRY SEDAN. * passenger. Powar and automatic. No 2 down, weakly payments 05.75. Full price 86*5. Ceil Mr. Parka credit manager at Ml 4-7500. New location of Turner Ford 1 mile oast of Woodward and transmission, V-t, (40. also 1*5* Ford, 6 cyl. motor and transmission, stick, *33, 3334227. 964 rUKU LUUn IRI eounni oie* tlon Wagon. V-l engine, r.adlo, hoator, automatic transmlstlon. Powar steering and brakes. Absolutely Mint Condition. Spring Special, only 2722 full price. Juat til down. P.S., We're moving to our now location and all Usad Cars must ba 'aoldl ■ • '_ JOHN McAULlFFE FORD 30 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 Motor builds. V-0 engine, radio, hoator, automatic transmission, power steering and brakes. Baautiful forest groen with black vinyl top. Spring special, only *1220 full price, lust tin down. P.S. Wa'ra moving to our new location and all Uitd Car* mutt ba aoldl JOHN McAULlFFE FORD 0 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 1*45 MUSTANG 2 PLUS 2, 4-epood, *450. 332-9572.__________________________ 1000 USED CARS AT TROy MOTOR MALL Mopte Road (15 Milo) Between Coolldge and Crook*. ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury * Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet J*6t MUSTANG, hardtop. Btautlful * twilight blue with matching buckot seats. 6 cylinder. Standard transmission, radio, heater. Spring Special, only *128* full price. Just *1*8 down. F.S. We're moving to our new location end all Usad cars must ba soldi JOHN McAULlFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ava.________FE 5-4101 1965 T Bird 1 to ehoosa from. All In axctlltnl condition. $1395 Bob Borst 1*44 FORD FAIRLANE, good tiros, V-0 stick, 4-door, 26,000 miles, oxc. condition. M*5. FE 1-7271, » o.m. to 4 p.m.. Dr. Sober, 1*44 FAIRLANE HARDTOP. Automatic, radio, hoator, and whitewall fir a*. No S down, weakly paymants *2.92. Full prlca 2*9*. Call Mr. Parke, credit manager at Ml 4-7502. Naw location of ‘Turner Ford 2402 Maple (15 Mile Rd.) Troy Mall 1 mlla east of Woodward 1*44 FORD GALAXIE 500, hardtop, VI, automatic tranimleelon. Radio, heater, power steering and brakes. Beautiful Candy Applo Rod, with EXECUTIVE CARS, INC. GM FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS ALSO FACTORY CARS 21—2 DOOR HARDTOPS TO SELECT FROM With VI, automatic full power, power door locks, vinyl roof, air conditioning, AM-FM stereo, buckot Mats, concealed headlights, light monitor system, bumper guards, erulso-control, tilt wheel, custom «toaring wheel, decor group, wire wheel covers, UP TO 43,000 MILES LEFT ON FACTORY WARRANTY. 137 S. Main, Romeo_________752*4*1 1*44 passenger, auto., < *9*5. *52-4407, Jey'e. 1*67 FORD GALAXIE 500, 2-door hardtop, * automatic, with power, maroon with black Intorlor, whitewall tiro*. Priced for quick salol HUNTER DODGE 49* South Huntar Ml 7-0*51_____________Birmingham 1*47 FALCON, 4 door, * cylinder engine, $1000. 628-3002. 1*48 FORD COUNTRY sedan station wagon, 10 pasMnger, V* automatic, radio, heater, powor steering, power brakes. Beautiful candy appla rad with all vinyl Interior and luggage rock. Spring ipeclal .... — fust tin only tl58*' full price, down. P.S. Wo're moving to our now location ond ill used cart must ba aoldl John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oiklsnd Ava._________FE 5-4181 bast otter. 412 1*44 CONTINENTAL LOADED With luxury Items, brakes, front and, air condltlonar, and axhaust pipes, recently overhauled. 4t2-1071 after A P.m. ___________ '_____________ 1*60 MERCURY SEDAN, V-si automatic. Radio, hoator. Southern cor. No rust. Runs like a watch! Spring special. Only S1SS full price. No money down. P.S. We're moving to our npw location end all Used can muet be soldi JOHN McAULlFFE FORD 430 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 1*43 MERCURY 2-door hardtop, powor steering, AM-FM radio, 332- 2422. ___________________ 1*Sl COMET 404, automatic, 424-3735. 1945 MERCURY 4-DOOR hfrdtop, lust like new, no money down. LUCKY AUTO 2 locations to servo you I 312 W; Montcalm FE 4-5004 1*40 W. Wide Track FE 4-1004 or__________FE 3-7054 1*45 MERCURY Colony Park H pasiangar, station wagon with Vs, automatic, radio, hooter, power steering, brakes, luggage rack, spring special at only (12*0 full price. P.S. Wo're moving to our naw location and all u*ad care mud be soldi John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ava. FE 5-4101 1*44 COMET CALIENTE Convertible, Power and automatic. No ( down, wMkly paymants M.*2. Full price *9*9. Cell Mr. Parks, Credit Manager et Ml 4^7500. New location of Turner Ford 2400 Maple (15 Mlla Rd.) Troy Mall 1 mlla east of Woodward IF WE SELL IT -•YOU CAN DEPEND ON IT! H 1966 CHEVY NOVA 2-door hardtop, allvarblua with matching Interior,'automatic, powor steering, radio, hooter, whitewalls, low mileage, 1 owner. $ 1295 1966 MERCURY MONTCLAIR Marauder 2-door with radio and hoator, V-t and automatic, power brakes, power steering, whitewall time, really fine. $1395 1965 MERCURY MONTCLAIR BrMzeway sedan with blue finish, matching Interior, block. vinyl top, automatic, radio, hooter, double powor, whitewall tiros, gor-, oeous. v $1195 1967 FORD GALAXIE 500 2-door hardtop with 3*0 V-t engine, automatic transmission, powor brakes and steering, radio, hsotor, whitewall tiros, you must sae '*• $1695 1966 FORD LTD HARDTOP This ont hos V-0 engine, automatic transmission, powor brakee and power steering, radio and haater and It Is almost Ilka now with whitewall tires. $1495 1966 TEMPEST CUSTOM Sport Coup# with thrifty stick shift transmission, radio and hoator, whitewall tires. Hero Is your chance to really save, so act fait. $1195 1967 T-BIRD 2-D00R Hardtop, automatic transmission, powor brakee and powor steering, power windows, tilt wheel, radio and haater, whitewall tlras. Sava here today. HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 OAKLAND (at Dixie & Telegraph) 333-7863 New and Used Cara 106 New and Used Cara 106 New and Used Cars 106 1*4* MUSTANG, Mach-1. 7,000 actual miles, 427 angina, Cobr»Jet, 4 spaad. Radio, tape, wide ovals .plus many more goodies. Spring special. Only 13210, full price. Just *188 down. Now car warranty. P.S. Wa'ra moving to our new location and all Used cor* mutt bo soldi JOHN McAULlFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave.______FE 5-4101 OVER Spring Special only 81388 full price. Just Sill down. P. S. Wa'ra moving to our new location ond all Used Cars must ba soldi JOHN McAULlFFE FORD 430 Oakland Ava._____FE 5-4101 1*44 FORD CUSTOM 400 2 door VI engine, automatic transmission, radio, hooter, beautiful arctic white with blue Interior. Spring __ down. P.S. Wa'ra 'moving to our new location and ell usad care must ba soldi John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Avt._____ FE 5-4101 Landau, 1*44 THUNDERBIRD hardtop, beautiful arctic white with black vinyl top. Full powar and factory air conditioned. Spring Special, only $198* full prlca. Just $188 down. P.S. We're moving to our naw location and oil Usad Cars must bo soldi JOHN McAULlFFE FORD 430 Ooklond Avo._____FE 5-4101 1000 • USED CARS AJ TROY MOTOR MALL 1969 Demo Sale ! 12 Models to Choose from 1969 9 Passenger Sport Wagon enolne, power steering ____cat. Air conditioned, H. glass, luggage rack, powar tailgate window. gate v LIST PRICE ...........*443*7* lAVCT...................* *7*7* SALE PRICE .............*3770.00 1968 Buick Electro Full power, factory air condition. One owner. Low mileage. Burnished brown finish. Factory warranty. AM-FM ateno radio. * te choose from. $$ Save $$ Easy Terms Arranged Maple Read (15 Mlla) batwaan Coolldge and Crooks. One stop shopping at Audette Pohtiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth. Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet 1969 Skylark Convertible Custom. Power (leering end brakes. V-8, radio, ana rear speaker. Chroma wheels. Lass than 4,000 mllaa. LIST PRICE ...............*3711.16 SAVE ......................* 714.1* SALE PRICE ...............*29*5.00 1966 Skylark Custom 2-door hardtop. V-g, automatic transmission, power steering and brakes. Radio, hoator and factory air conditioning. -Bucket toots. Extra claan. One owner. $1795 EaSy Terms Arranged 1969 LeSabre 4-door hardtop custom. 400 on- \ glne, powor etoerlng and brakte. Radio, air condition, tlntad glass. custom top. 7,000 milts. LIST PRICB .*442275 *Ave .(108275 SALS PRICE I... .*3548.88 1968 Opel Rally Kadette Big engine. Radio* 4 spaed. Sharp one owner, with factory warranty. $1695 Easy Terms Arranged 544 S. Woodward, Birmingham 647-5600 J New and .Used Cars 106New and Used Cara 106New and Used Cara 1Q6New and Used Can 106 Hordtoi 1966 MUSTANG , VI engine, automatic, ___a, console, bucket teats, one you can ho proud of. GRIMALDI CAR CO. *80 Ooklond AVe.______FE 5-9421 1*67 MUSTANG 2 plus 2 Fostbock. Rad paint. Powar ataarlng and brakas. Automatic. Custom trim. New liras. A lady's car. Call 442-121*. Audette Pontiac 1150 W. Maple Rd. Trey 1*47. FORD XL Fallback, IN V-l engine, radio, heater, power steering and broket. Buckot soots. Beautiful lima gold with natural toathar Interior. Spring tpeclal. Only S188I full price, lust (IN down. P.S. Wo'rt moving to our now location and all used car* mutt be soldi JOHN McAULlFFE FORD 430 Ooklond Avo. FE 54101 New and Usod Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 MAY DAY ; 'SPECIALS Boat the hot season by gettihg in on thesa sharp cars equipped with AIR CONDITIONING' ~ ~ Act Now ......... .... $2295 1967 Plymouth VIP 1493 196* PONTIAC EXECUTIVE 1965 Bulck Wildcat ......A...*1095 1945 Fury Wagon ...........—**?5 1943 Olds 4-door hardtop ....--..*395 9 1959 Chevy ...................... W KEEG0. PONTIAC SALES KEEGO HARBOR _____________402-3400 1941 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 door sedan, cream with black Interior. Automatic, power steering and brake*. Full decor group. Now tiro*. Excellent condition. Cell 442-32*9. Audette Pontiac 1*50 W. Maplo Rd. Troy 1949 GRAND FRIX, uoublo power, elr conditioning, vinyl roof, *3400. 334-4843._______________________________ I KNOW I'M IN Pontiac Country, but please help mo find a new home. I'm lonesome. 1944 Rambler Classic, automatic, radio, boater, showroom condition, must sw to appreciate. 334-1509. New and Used Cor* - 106 SAVE MONET AT MJKB .SAVOliy1 CHEVY. 19*0 wT Meple, MI 4-2733. TOM RADEMACHER . CHEVY-OLDS . 1944 RAMBLER Wagon, with excellent condition, economy 6 cyl. engine, luggage reek, and Is priced for a family on * budget of only *995. Over 73 other ears to select from. On US 10 at Mil. Clerkston, MA 5-5071. ___ 1966 AMERICAN Ambassador 990, 4- door sedan, Indlvjduwyrent **»!*, separately edlustebie/full reclining and head rests. Reverb, radio, AM-FM, posl-tr*cHon, p o w * r brakes end itwrinj, Wf .wheel. seat balls. S^rejjular and 2 snow tires. *1,200. 196? AMX . 390, post-traction, dlse 120-4513, -________ EXECUTIVE CARS, JNC. GM-FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS ALSO FACTORY CARS 23 COMPACTS TO SELECT FROM. CTO's, LaMan*. Skylarks, Cheveile* 396s, Camaras, Novae, Mustange, Cutlass 442a with VI, automatic < __________and 4-epeeds, vinyl roof, full power, air conditioning, console, bumper guard*. AM-FM stereo, custom Interior, rally wheels, red lines, tilt wheel, wood steering whwl, UP Yo 48,000 MILES FACTORY WARRANTY LEFT. 137 S. Main, Romeo 752-9411 New aad Used Car* 106N*w and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 1965 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, auto, transmission, full powor, radio, good condition. 01325. MA 4-3942. 1965 CATALINA 2 DOOR hardtop. Burgundy with matching Interior. Power steering and brakes ' Automatic transmission. Fendar skirts. 40,000 actual miles and exceptionally dean. Call 642-32*?. Audette Pontiac 1*50 W. Maplo Rd. Troy 1961 FIREBIRDS. 3 to chooso from. Automatic, power steering. On* has 4 speed. Convertible end hardtop. Low miles. Factory warranty. EXCELLENT CONDITION. Cell 442-32*9. Audette Pontiac 1*50 W. Maple Rd. Troy OVER 1000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL 1965 TEMPEST STANDARD transmission, good condition. Call aftar 4:30, 693-6642. Maple Road (15 Mile) between Coolldge and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT TOM RADEMACHER I CHEVY-OLDS 1964 PONTIAC Tempest Wagon, with VI, automatic, power steering, brakes, whitewalls, stay cool during summer vacation, with factory air condition, on sale now, and Is only — *1795. Over 75 other cars to select from. On US 10 at M15, Clerkston. MA 5-5071. 1944 PONTIAC hardtop, Radio, heater, power steering and brakes. Beautiful metallic turquoise, with metalling Interior. Spring Special only *1488, full price, lust *11* down,-. P.S. We're moving to our new! _ Audette Pontiac Birmingham .1 Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet & O TODAY'S SPECIAL 1965 CADILLAC Coupe DeVille . . $2395 2 door, with full power, including seats, windows, factory air conditioning. Low mileage, wonderful condition. 1964 OLDS 88 $1495 4 door, with V8, double power,. low mileage, beige with a matching Interior. 1967 PLYMOUTH Satellite .....$1795 Convertible, V8, automatic, power altering, bright yellow and black Interior, 1962 PONTIAC Catalina $295 4 door, Ideal transportation must sea to appreciate. . \ 1968 PLYMOUTH Roadrunner ..$2395 With 4 speed, vinyl roof, bijrgundy finish, black Interior, new car condition. . 1966 TEMPEST 2 door $995 Automatic, vary clean, . Ideal car for tha young lady! 1968 CHRYSLER Newport $2895 2 door hardtop/ with factory air. condition, silver with black vinyl roof, matching roof, new car warranty. Must hurry on this ona. 1966 FORD Fairlane $1095 2 door hardtop, very clean, V8, automatic, must see this on* today. 10- 1968 RAMBLER Official Cars Starting at only $1795 All Carry Naw Car Warranties Chrysler-Plymouth--Rambler-Ieep Clarkston 6673 Dixie Hwy. ,MA 5-2635 New and Used Cars ‘ 106 New ond- Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106Neiq and Used Cars- 106 MILOSCH 1 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH, 1944 pontiac ceteiin* wagon, with 1949 GTX 2 door, hardtop, track- P°w»r. automatic,, beautiful gojd pack, automatic, console, bucket saats, tlntdd , glass, rear seat speaker, air grabber, 41,000 miles of factory warranty, $200 down, payments of $97 per month. 477 M24, Lake Orton, 4934341.__________■ 1931 PONTIAC, 2 door, new chrome end part*. *700. 4*1-234*.________________ 1960 PONTIAC Sport Coup*. This onp-ls a nice. Her is a raal budget rida for only $129.95. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Ava. FE 5-9421 low monthly finish,* ona owner, payments. SHELTON Pontiac-Buick | 155 S. Rochester 651-5500 Tyrol blue with matching vinyl, Interior. VI, automatic, power) Steering end brakes. Full decor group. VERY GOOD CONDITION! Call 442-3289. Audette Pontiac 1(50 W. Maple Rd. Troy Exc. transportation. $100; 673-1 1966 PONTIAC Catalina 4 door sedan, power, automatic, and guaranteed actual miles, beautiful Beige with matching trim. SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 855 S. Rochester Rd. * 651-5500 1969 PONTIAC 1941 CATALINA, 1961 Star Chiefjl*** BONNEVILLE, hardtop, double 1950 Chevy pickup truck. Best ot- power, auto. 4*2-4292._____ tors. FE 5-3167.______________119»6 CATALINA, must sell, *1080. 2004 Klnmount Dr. off Joslyn. 1962 PONTIAC SEDAN, automatic, real good. 482-9223 Riggins, dealer. 1943 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-door, good running thape. *225. FE I- 1943 PONTIAC SPORT CATALINA Coupe, good condition, *500 tor quick eels. 335-7715._____________. 1943 GRAND PRIX, doubla power, good condition. *475. 493-1203 or 693-1205. 1944 PONTIAC CATALINA Convertible, double power, new tires, 1450. OR 4-0444 or OR 4-1191 aft. 6. 1944 CATALINA 2 door hardtop, doubla power, auto., axe. FE 2-4034. 1964 TEMPEST LeMANS COUPE, automatic, radio, heater, good condition, wife's car. $550. 624-8633. VILLAGE RAMBLER TRADES 1964 Impala Hardtop * eyllndtr„aulom«tlc power, "PERFECT", AO. Ope Owner. Rust tree beauty. White with rad Interior. $899 1966 Ford Bronco Jeep $1299 1968 Fofd Ranchero SPORT PICKUP A rad beauty with black vinyl Interior. Radio, heater, wide oval tires, map wheels. I cylinder automatic. Sharp ana snappy. $2099 1967 Rambler Rebel Wagon 6 cylinder, automatic. Radio, heater, white welibte. One owner trade. Cordovan brown*-Special price. $1499 1963 Rambler American. 2 door. Clean, sturdy, top economy .......... ..............................—$399 1962 Chevrolet Impala. 8 automatic. Radio, heater. Wide ovals .. ........................................... $544 1965 Mercury Comet. 2 door, 6 cylinder Stoddard shift/Spotless body and interior ... ................ .$545 1965 Ford 8 cylinder automatiic. Radio, heater, whitewall tires. SHARP! .................................................S :$699 1963 Ford 8 cylinder automatic. Rodio, heater, brand new whitewall tires .....^ V.....-. .......................,....)......., ,1964 Ford 2 door. Stick, 8 cylinder, Radio, heater- , ' /: V,ery c|ean.......}',\.... .//j.f...\K,.. •.... - ■. •>/..$388 1965 GT0 Convertible. 4 speed. Radio. V * New tires. A-1 runner .... ............ ,T,;................ $899 196$ Rambler Classic Wagon. .6 cylinder automatic. Radio, heater, ......! new tires. A real spotless little car .. ■ ‘ ■ • • • • • $799, 1962 Bonneville Convertible. Rusty but a ^ood runner. Only ...... ...... .$144 OVER 50 LOW PRICED TRADES! 666 S. Woodward, Birmingham MI 6-3900 1 OWNER, 1964 Catalina, power steering and brakes, $695. Phonfc 682-8117s ______________ 1964 LeMANS COUPE, automatic, V8, naw premium tires, red buckets. $895. Autobahn 1765 5. Telegraph FE 54434 1964 PONTIAC Wagon with 6 cyl engine, stick shift, ‘* real economy wagon, only— $695 GRIMALDI Buick-Opel 210 Orchard Lk. Rd, BE 24145 1966 PONTIAC Catalina, 389, 2-door hardtop, vinyl top, vary clean, call aft. 6 p.m., 363-0992.________________ 1947 CATALINA station wagon. P'ower steering, brake hydramatlc. Luggage carrier, low mileage, clean, *2,000. 330-1838. 1967 BONNEVILLE 9 passenger station wagon. Burgundy with black Interior. Power steering and brakes. Tinted windshield, chrome luggage reck. -Air shocks, well maintained. Call 442-3289. Audette Pontiac 1150 W. Maple Rd. Troy 1947 PONTIAC CATALINA can-vertlble, doubla power, blue with a white top. Only $2195 In your drivel SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 155 S. Rochester Rd. 451-5500 1967 CATALINA 4 door sedan, doubla power, air conditioned, I o w mileage, *1850. 673-4904. 1967 PONTIAC CATALINA Hardtop. Vinyl roof. Power and automatic. $39 down, weakly payments *14.99 Full price *1895. Call Mr. Parks Credit manager at Ml 4-7500. New location of • Turner Ford 2*00 Maple (15 Mile Rd.) Troy Mall 1 mile east of Woodward 1967 PONTIAC CATALINA hardtop 2 door, loaded! Three to choose from, starting at *1595. SHELtON Pontiac-Buick *55 S. Rochester Rd. 451-550* 1967 PONTIAC Tempest rad station wagon, power steering, VS, stick, 22,000 miles, 451-372*._________________ 1967 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE con-venibie, exc. cendtt. power, stereo, __like new, tires, priv. 481-0164. 1945 GTO Convertible, 4 speed. Radio 19&7 firebird 400 coup*. Red with and heater. -No.' ■* down, weekly, black bucket seats end console.) payments *9.88. Full price $1095. | power steering, 3 speed floor shift. I Call Mr. Parks Credit Manager at: 4.. new tires. 27.000 actual mllas. Ml 4-7500. Naw location of ' NICE! Call 442-3289. Turner Ford Audette Pontiac 2600 Maple (15 Mile Rd.) Troy Mall ii50 W. Maple Rd. Troy 1 mile east of Woodward 1 SAVE MONEY AT MIKE SAVOIE CHjyY. 1900 W. Maple. Ml 4-2735. BUS FOR SALE Imlay City Board of Education are accepting bids on e 1954 Dodge Bus. Minimum bid accepted will be *525.00. High bid will be accepted. Full gash C.O.D. Bus Is 54 passenger, V4, 2-speed axle; good condition. 43,000 actual miles. Direct all questions to Gordon. Smith, Bus Garage, 111 Main Street, Imlay City, Michigan. Phone 724-4005. Bld4 must be In writing end sealed and dallvered to bus garage by 4:00 p.m. May 26. . 1969. r NEW FINANCE PLAN working? Need a c*r?r We arrange tor alrnost anybody with good, bad or no credit. 75 cars to choose from. Cell credit mgr. Mr. Ifv — Dealer, FE 4-1004 or FE 3-7154. EXECUTIVE CARS, INC. GM FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS ALSO FACTORY CARS 22 — 4-Door Herdtops ELECTRA 225* LeSabres, Bonneyllle. Catalina, Caprices, Impale end *' embbr biles with V+8, automatic, full power, air conditioning, vinyl roof; vinyl Interior, AM-FM stereo, tilt wheel; door locks, cruise control, power antenna, remote trunk raises*, concealed light*, light monitor eyinem, floor mate, bumper guards, whitewalls, rally wheels. IIP TO 454)00 [MILES FACTORY WARRANTY LEFT, 137 S. Main, ROmeo 752-9481 NEED A CAR? Naw In tha Brea? — Repossessed?■"i-- Garnisheed? Bean Bankrupt? V- Divorced? — Got e problem? Call. King Auto 681-0802 -GO! HAUPT PONTIAC And Sovs $ $ $ Clarkston__________ 425-5500 1968 TEMPEST CUSTOM/ Station Wagon. Turquoise with /matching vinyl Interior. Chrome luggage rack. New tires. Power steering and brakes.- V-l automatic.' One owner and In excellent condition Audette Pontioc Mini* RH 1*50 W. Maplo Rd/ Troy condition. 1*4* LEMANS Ih good „ . door hardtop/muit sell. FE 4-6205 from 2 p.m, to o p.m. OVER 1000 / USED CARS AT A TROY MOTOR MALL Maple Road (15 Mile) between COolldg* and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT SAVjE MONEY AT . MjKE. SAVOIE CHEVY, 1900 W. Maple, Ml 4-2735. TRANSPORTATION CARS. Can be purchased with no money down. Can Bob-Hart. LUCKY AUTO SAVE MONEY AT MIKE SAVOli CHEVY, 1900 W. Nlaple, /At 4-2735. Audette Pontiac . Birmingham Oirysler-Plymouth Bob Borst / , Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet Custom Sport Coupe with decor group, push button radio, 6 cyl. economy engine. 3 speed, retractable seat belts, head rests, .outside rear mirror, heater, all vinyl interior, door to door carpeting. „ And all 1969 Safety equipment. $2388 It IMS-40 1-969 CUSTOM S HARDTOP.COUPE 1969 PONTIAC GTO Hardtop- 2-Door with heavy duty safety track/diff., push button radio, heavy duty 3-speed floor shift, Ralley Wheels, ride and handling springs and shocks. Mirror outside, heater, all vinyl interior, bucket seats, door to door carpeting, and all safety equip-meht for 1969. — BRAND NEW- 1969 PONTIAC CATALINA 4-Door Sedan with decor group, hydramatic, push button radio, visor mirror, remote mirror, power steering, power disc brakes, tinted glass, 8555x15 whitewalls and all the'69 Spfety Features. Champagne finish, AIR CONDITIONING — 1 1967 PONTIAC Bonneville, Station Wagon, with hydramatlc, power steering, brakes, radio, heater, white-walls, luggage rack, factory air conditioning, tinted glass. Only — $2995 1966 PONTIAC Catalina 2-Door Hardtop, with doubla power, hydre-. malic, radio, boater, whitewall*, extra sharp throughout! $1595 1968 PONTIAC Catalina 4-door sodan, power steering, heavy duty power brakes. Oakland County care, turbo-hydramatlc, brand new Whitewalls, vinyl top. Only — $1795 y 1963 PONTIAC Wagon With poweri steering, brakes, redlo, hydramatlc, heater and ready for that vacation at, Only— ) -1# i', '1 1 ’'$995 We Guarantee in Writing every one of our Quality Used Cars has actual miles I (As Traded) WE DO NOT RESET ANY SPEEDOMETER FOR YOUR SAFETY AND SATISFACTION. Deal with people you can Trustl Where ' honesty is our Policy! At Russ Johnsons 1966 PONTIAC Bonneville with Cordove top, double power, hydramatlc, radio, hoator, whitewalls, excellent throughout! Only— $1895 1967 Pontiac Grand PrIX 2-door hardtop, with lull power, elr conditioning, many other extra*. Only— $2595. 1967 PONTIAC Catalina 2-Door. Hardtop, with double power, hydramatlc, radio, hoator, whitewalls, ready to go at only— $1995 1967 PONTIAC 4-door Catalina, with power steering, brakes, automatic, whitewalls, beautiful midnight Wim wily — , .'.//i'""'/ .7,!/,; sms a PONTIAC-TEMPEST On Mr24-Lake Orion MY 3-6266 rMbv’’ ,,,!.* . v'V,-/ WivVt.v /.vi mu ■■M CTSv; a . & , • m* - , . .... „ !■ ’V - "... f '■ ' -• • ' • V# 'X - X. IbSL * oi I Ml ■& fev 3|rV ‘#V#5 #£<■ "v\ : alA'i, fir ■61 ¥ ii ■ | u '■' , * ~ /‘~k \,'£ * u w r\ lv ’Vv /| ■., W , ?; THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. MAY 15, 1969 SmH *Jjffy,v •y'* wmmm " 1L, ii -Television Programs- ■ * ■ * V \ U;„S' . ’t; _ ’ ‘ ■ i ; - ;' , . < Ci* ?| Program* furnished by station* listed in this column are subject to change without noticel Channels; 2—WJBfc-TV. 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WxYZ-TV. 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS-TV, 62-WXON-TV THURSDAY NIGHT ,1:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R C — I Spy — An unmanned plane, carrying an atom bomb, goes down in Italy. ", (50) R C — Flintstones (56) What’s New - (62) R — Sea Hunt 6:30 (2) C — News — Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (7) C — News — Reynolds (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) TV High School (62) R — Highway Patrol 7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) (7) C — News, Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: “Fanfare for a Death Scene” (1963) Secret agent searches for American physicist who has vanished. Richard Egan, Viveca Llndfors, A1 Hirt, Tina Louise (50) R — I Love Lucy — Lucy thinks Ricky is trying to murder her. (56) C — NET Playhouse — “The Star Wagon,” Maxwell Anderson’s comedy-fantasy about a time machine that gives people a chance to see. If their lives would really be' different if they could relive them, Orson Bean, Dustin Hoffman (62) R — I Led Three Lives 7:30 (2) C — Animal World — The comeback of the almost-extlnct American bison is examined. (4) R C — Daniel Boone — Trapper (Jimmy Dean) is imprisoned by an eccentric Ehglishman in a cave filled with Indian treasures. (7) R C — Flying flun — New police captain I tV Featur| 1 'NET PLAYHOUSE, 7 p.m. I I (56) v ANIMAL WORLD, 7:30 I p.m. (2) 1 TELESCOPE, 8:30 p.m. 1 .(9) 1 TOM JONES, 9 p.m (7) SHOWTIME, 9 p.m. (9) IVORY TOWER, 9 p.m. (56) FACES OF BUSINESS, 9:30 p.m. (56) P suspects the nuns of bookmaking. (50) R — Hazel (62) R — Ann Sothem 8:00 (2) R C — Jonathan Winters — Special guest is Soupy Sales, with Shani Wallis, Bobby Van, Alice Ghostiey and the King Cousins. ' (7) R C — That Girl -Ann zealously prepares to i vote in her first '■ presidential election. (50) C — Pay Cards ‘ (62) Ozzie and Harriet 8:30. (4) RC - Ironside — An unpopular TV commentator (Milton Berle) gets police protection after his life is threatened. (7) R C — Bewitched — An unfriendly witch zaps Samdntha to the New Qrleans of 1068. (9) C Telescope — “Daughter of Israel” profiles Wael Dayan, daughter of the famous Israeli general. (50) C — Password A London Girl Can't Cope With the New York Clamor By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—There’s a new girl in town from London who says that when she came to New York, “I thought! could cope WILSON “But I can’t cope,” Frencesca Annis admitted. “I went to a supermarket where they were playing the most terrible piusic. I bought all theM wrong products. I thought I’d go home and restf| from the noise. I got a taxi driver who insisted || on singing and also insisted on me singing with || him.” Francesca, 23, who plays Ophelia to Nicolp Williamson’s Hamlet,” and is also in MGM’s|| ' “The Walking Stick,” claimed that the furore got** worse. “I tried to sleep but I could feel my landlady’s TV roaring under me. Tips was in the daytime,” she said, astonished. “Don’t they have TV in the daytime in London?” “Just cricket and Wimbliedon,” she said. w ★ ★ “You can’t say ’urn’ and ’ah’ here trying to decide what yon want to buy. I wanted some shoes and the salesclerk asked what I wanted. I said ‘Um,’ and die disappeared to wait on somebody else. I was left without any purchases. ★ ★ ★ J . 1 ■■ “Another thing, I noticed that a lot of people on the streets here are talking' to themselves. I decided they can’t think because of the noise. For myself, I can’t hear myself think but I can hear myself talk. One day somebody came up to me shrieking with laughter. I didn’t think I looked funny. “I think people conning here for the first time should go out into the streets for one hour the first day then go to the hotel for a rest and go out two hours the "next day. Why, I’ve been walking around hallucinating, afraid these big buildings are going to fall down on me.” ? , ★ ★ ★ “Add what ate you doing about New York people’s attitude?" "'I ■ "I’m getting as rude as they are.” -★ * ★ REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Women are the sort of problem that men like to wrestle with.” EARL’S PEARLS: Of all the remedies that absolutely will not cure a cold, whiskey is by far the most popular. Florence Henderson, in Scandinavia filming “Song of Norway,” wrote, about the bitter cold: “Every bedroom is equipped with an electric blanket and a blowtorch. The blowtorch is to thaw out (he electric blanket.” .. . That’s earl, brother. (Publliharo—Hall Syndicate) (62) R—Movie: “Innocent Meeting” (1957) Girl1 helps Mle delinquent prove ot a hardened criminal. Sean Lynch, Beth Ro-gan. . 9:00 (2) R C - Movie: “A, Distant Trumpet” (1964) Young cavalry.officer falls in love with the wife of the fort’s commanding ' officer. Troy Donahue, Suzanpe Pleshette, Diane McBain. (7) C« — Tom Jones — Guests are flamenco quitarist Manitas de Plata, songstress Mireille Mathieu, comic Pat Paulsen and the Who. (9) C — (Special) Showtime — Godfrey Cambridge is host. Guests include; Allan Sherman and songstress Millicent Martin. / (50) R — Perry Mason ,(56) Ivory Tower — Drama critic Larry Devine reviews “You’re a Good Man, Charlie Brown.v 9:30 (4) R C — Dragnet — Friday and Gannon help prepare for the president’s visit. (56) R Faces of Business — John H. Johnson of Johnson Publications 9 : 55 (62) Greatest Headlines 10:00 (A) R C — Dean Martin. — Guests are Abbe Lane, Paul Lynde, Gordon MacRae and Bob Newhart. (7) R — Untouchables (9) (50) News, Weather, — 'Sports (56) Live From Earth (62) R — Movie: “Now and Forever” (1955) Young couple decides to elope. Janette Scott, Vernon Gray 10:30 (9) C — What’s My Line * (50) R—Alfred Hitchcock — Pep drugs used bn race horses are used to rejuvenate a punchy, has-been boxer. 11:00 (2) (4) (7) C - NeWs, Weather^ Sports (9) R — Movie: “Man in the Dark” (English, 1965) Blind composer thwarts his wife’s plot to murder him. William Sylvester, Barbara Shelley, Mark Eden (50) R — Movie: “Behind the Iron Curtain” (1948) A Russian Embassy employe in Canada is involved in espionage. Dana Andrews, Gene Tierney, June Havoc 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson —. Bob Newhart i s substitute host. Heywood Hale Broun is guest. (7) C — Joey Bishop 11:35 (2) R - Movie: “As the Sea Rages” (1960) Cliff Robertson, Maria Schell 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe — “The PolieeMuseum” FRIDAY MORNING ' 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:00(2) C — Sunrise Semester 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) c- TV High School 6:45 (7) C - Batfink 7:00 (4) C-Today (7) C — Morning Show 7:30(2) C - News, Weather, Sports 7:50 (9) Warm-Up 6:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo (9) C — Bozo (56) Americana From Africa * 8:30 (7) R C - Movie: “* Julia Misbehaves” (1948) Greer Garson; Walter Pidgeon, Elizabeth Taylor 9:00 (2) R C - Lucy Show „ (4)- C — Ludden’s Gallery P —Radioj Programs— WJX760) WXYZD270) CKLW(800) WWJ(950) WCARU180) WPONQ 460) WJBKC1500) WHPI-SM(94.7I xf TONI0HT / «>S*-WJI«, N*w» - ' WWJ, Now*. Sport* WXYZ, NOWSCOP* wjbk, Noun, bonk O'Ntll CKLW, Stow Hunter WCAR, Now*, Ron Rom • 1 WPON, New* ‘VWHFI, Don SOMO «:IS-WJR, Sport* *:3*—wwj, Today In Ravlaw, Emphasl* WPON. Phono Opinion WJR, Sutlnm Barometer 0:40—WXYZ. Dial Dav* Oil** WJR, itm* Traveler *:4S—WJR, Lowell Thomaa, _ Autoicopo . 7:00-WWJ, Now*, SportaUn* WJBK, Naw*. Tom Dean WCAR, Now*, Rick Stewart wjr, World Tonight TitS-WJR, Butlneaa, Sport* WWJ, RaeotTack Report, life SPortaLino 7:30—WXYZ, New*, Dav* WJR,R*a*K*r Report, Showcate 7:43—WJR, Tiger Boat, Ba*o-ball Stio-WPON, Now*, Larry Dixon a CKLW, Scott Rogon *:•*—whfi, Tom Coiempn 10:30—WJR, score* 10t4S—WJR, SltowcOM . n*oo—wjr, Naw* CKLW, Mark Richard* 11:11—WJR, Sport* Final 11:30—WJR, Mu*le Till Dawn wwj. Overnight 13:00—WXYZ, New*, Jim D:v- I* uiiips WJBK, Nlghttimo . FR IDAY MORN INC 4:00—WJR, MllOIC Hall WWJ. NOW* CKLW, Charll* Van Dyk* WJBK, Now*. More A vary WCAR. New*, BltrDotzoll WPON, Now*, Arizona Woa* /Ion «:!B-WWJ, Morrl* Carlton , 7:00—WHFI, MualC WPON. Now*. Chuck Worron 0:00—CKLW, Frank Bredl* Oils—WJR, Sunnyaido, Mualc Hall 1:30—WJR, MuilC Hall 0:00—WJR, Naw* WWJ, New* WHFI, undo Jay WCAR, New*. Jim bavl* WWJ, New* »t1S-WWJ, Ask Your1 Neigh- bor WJR, Open House 10:00—WPON, News, Gary Puree*. WCAR, NOwa, Red Miller WJBK, Now*, Conrad Patrick WXYZ, News, Johnny Rand- ell lltSB—WJR, Naw*. Kaleldo-WHFI, Jim Zinur CKLW, Jim EdwayA Friday' afternoon I (4) C — Donald O’Connor (9) Ontario Schools . 9 i,19 ( 56 ) American Geography f:30 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies . 9:35 (56) Sounds to Say 9:50 (56) Spanish H 10:90 (2) R C — Andy Griffith (4) C — Personality (9) Ontario Schools 10:19 (56) Children’s Hour 10:25 (4) C - News (9) Preview Promotion (56) Art Lesson 1Q:30 (2) C — Merv. Griffin '(4) C — Hollywood Squares (7) C — Galloping Gourmet (9) Friendly Giant ^(50) C — Herald of Truth 10:40 (56) Interlude. 10:45 (9) Chez Helyje 10:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 11:00 (4) C — It Takes Two (7) R — Bewitched (9) Mr. Dressup (50) C — Jack La Lanne 11:20 (56) Misterogers 11:25 (4) C — Carol Duvall (9) C — Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 11:30 (4) C — Concentration (7) C — Funny You Should Ask (9) Take Thirty (50) C —Kimba 11:50 (56) Memo to Teachers 11:0B^WJR, Naw*, Farm WWJ, New* WCAR, Naw*, Rod Millar WPON, Naw*, Music 13>l$-WJR Focus WWJ, Marty McNaalay 1 :**—WJR, News, At Horn* 1:15—'WJR, Arthur Godfrey 1:43—WJR, SunnVsIda 3:00—WPON, News, Dan. Mllham CKLW, Ed Mitchell WHFI, BUI Lynch WXYZ, News, Mlk* Sherman WJR, Navy*, Dimension t:II—WJR, Music Hall 3:M—WCAR,* News, Ron Rom WJBK, Newa, Hank O'Nall iiia—Wwj. Nawstim* CKLW, Slav* Hunttr 3:13—WPON, Lum 'n' Abnar 1:30—WPON, Dan Mllharrf m ” 4 i FRIDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C — News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) C,—Dream House (9) C — Bonnie Prudden (50) C-Alvin 12:20 (56) Friendly Giant ** 12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) C — As the World Turns (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — Let’s Make A Deal (9) R — Real McCoys (50) R —' Movie: “The Importance of Being Earnest” (British, 1953) Michael Redgrave, Joan Greenwood;' Dame Edith Evans 12:45 (56) R — Spanish Lesson 12:55 (4) C-News 1:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — The Days of Our Lives (7) C — The Newlywed Game (9) R — Movie: “Mission to Paradise” ( 19 67) ' Kieron Moore, Alexander Knox 1:05 (56) Rhyme Time 1:29 (56) U.S. Geography 1:25 (4) C— Carol Duvall 1:30 (2) C — Guilding Light (4) C — The Doctors (7) C — The Dating Game 1:45 ( 56) R — Sounds to Say 2:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital 2:25 (56) R — Interlude 2:3Q (2) C — Edge of Night (4) C — You Dop’t Say , (7) C — One Life to Live (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 2:40 (56) R — Spanish II 3:00 (2) C — Linkletter show (4) — C — Match Game (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) R — Dennis the Menace (50) R —Topper (56) R — Chicago Roundtable 3:25 (4) C*— News 2:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow Male or Female A array I* PravtoM Panda ACROSS 1 Comedienne -Arden 4 Bronte heroine, — Eyre 6 Movie costume ' designer, ' Edi th----- 12 Prince---- 13 Native metals' 14 Otiose 15 Inventor Whitney 16 First appearance of a newspaper ad 15 Repartitions, as in city planning 20 Group of eight singers 21 Qualified 22 Western stats 24 Infant 26 Former Russian ruler 27 Little (Scot) 30 Reluctant 32 Middle point 34 Keep 35 Fancy 36 Hardwood tree 37 Misplaced 39 Individuals 40 Simple 41 Tod 42 Untarnished 45 Military expedition of ' a sort 49 Paused irresolutely < 51 Disencumber 52 First male 53 French author 54 Father (familiar) 55 Greek letter (pL) 56 Allowance for waste 57 Crafty DOWN 1 At all times 2 Valley (poet.) 3 Queen of England 4 Knee, for instance 5 English. composer f 28 A^portiDil 6 Centaur 29 Greek god 7 Compass point t of war 8 Join in 31 Speechless wedlock 33 Gaseous (slang) element (pL) 9 Redact 38 Quarter 10 Tropical plant 40 Disables 11 Slight 41 Examination depression of accounts 17 Bellowed 42 Small talk 19 Musical drama 43 Tyndareus’ 23 Wordless wife (myth.) 24 Silent screen 44 Son of Isaac star, Theda (Bib.) i--- 46 Anatomical 25 Class of plexus vertebrates 47 Clock face 26 Singing voice 48 Whirlpool 27 Criterion 50 Altitude (ab.) 1 2 3. 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 ■ 17 'T 19 2tjl 21 ■ 22 23 1 24' 25 ■ 26 _ 1 27 28 29 30 31 ■ 1 32 33 34 36 36 ■ 3, 38 ■ 39 | .40 ■ 41 42 43 44 1 50 r 46 47 48 49 51 62 53 54 56 56 57 16 (4) C — Hidden Faces (7) C — Anniversary Game (9) C— Magic Shoppe (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Weaving 4:00 (2) C — Love of Live (4) C — Steve Allen ' (7) R — Movie: “Summer Holiday” (British. 1962) Giff Richard, Lauri Peters (9) C — Bozo (56) Continental Comment 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas (50) R — Little Rascals : (56) TV Kindergarten (62) R - Star Performance-" 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Equatorial Africa” (9) R C — Batman (50) R — Ministers i USED PLUMBING m DISCOUNTS • 3-Piece BATH SET ~ 59“ White or From Colored “B» S TOILETS 19M S I FIREPLACE Gas Logs SUMP PUMPS VANITIES CABINET SINKS TUB Enelosuras I EXTRA SPECIALS! S Lavndiy Tray md THw..$19.05 I SWMmMmISM*..... $32.95 Batk Tub*. In*a..430.00m ■ Sh—, SfB well Trtm.533.93 I - M-M, IMaar 3 I «aa Hat Water NaaMr $49,95 V 1 Sfifltve PLUMBINGS I 841 Baldwin g I FE 4-1811 or FE 6-210G f ■ Opaa Mob* Sat. IiM F.M. 2 tWa4.an4FH.IVM, Til 1RM. 3 nnnnnmnhBin PALACE AUTO WASH 12” Philco *19” It” RCA *24” 21” Zenith *29” 21” Emerson *299S $1.00 Wash • Wax • Air-Dried 92 BALDWIN v TENUTA^ RESTAURANT Tendefr* Golden Fried Fjsti Djnners ALL Also CARRY-OUT 1 FE 8-9639 CORNER OF HURON and JOHNSON (Across From Pontiac General Hospital) V 14” RCA $299S 17” Portable *34” 21” RCA *3995 21” Motorola *39” 24” GE *39” tB”PoHAbla *49” A Look at TV 'Music Hall' Is Smooth By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK—“Music Hall’s” series: of summer programs taped' in London moved off to a smooth and easy start Wednesday night and undoubtedly will be one of the bright spots in the hot weather schedule of NBC. The team of Tony Sandler and Ralph Young is an attractive one, their singing is excellent and their taste good. They also try for some comedy touches and, although these sequences were the rough spots in the hour, they should be smoothed out before many of their dozen programs are finished. ★ * * Judy Came, the gamine of “Laugh-In,” is a regular on the summer shows. She was handled as a guest star and was given one handsome aind lively song-and-danice production. She also appeared in a few of the quick comedy bits. Lena Horne and Terry-Thom-as contributed their special talents, too. Miss Horne had a pair of effective singing numbers and showed she could bold her I own in the comedy sketches. Terry-Thomas—whose efforts were greeted w'ith loud laughs by the British studio audience— was frequently so terribly British that it was difficult to understand him. The production values were high, the sets colorful'. Now, if they can just do something to' spark the comedy sequential... President Nixon’s report to the nation on negotiations to settle the Vietnam war was a marked contrast to his recent news conferences. The President sjtood^ behind a lectern bearing the great seal of the president of the United States. He read his carefully prepared remarks. His mood and mien were serioUs. His presentation was business like, and appeared more relaxed. The President’s address occupied most of a half hour, caus-pied most of a half hour, CBS and NBC is their custom in such situations filled the rest of the hour with discussion and analysis by their staff men. PIANO? Phone ' 335-8227 I DAVID A*. SCULL PIAtfO TECHNICIAN TUNING and REPAIRING 2S9 State St., Pontiae (56) Misterogers (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends . 5:39 (9) R — F Troop (50) R — Superman (56) C — Friendly Giant (62) R — Leave It to Beaver 5:45 (56) C — Davey and Goliath OTiff new 1969 rjEM/TH 23" giant-screen DIAG. ■ 295 iq. In. plctur* compact console with AFC plus Zenith’s new IRAN SO handcrafted chassis Tht BERGHOLM • Z4516WO Superb Danish Modem styled compact consol* in genuine oil finished Walnut veneer* and select hardwood solids. CaMnat features Scandia styled Base. S“ * 3” Twin-Cone Speaker. Unbeatable Value! for full Zenith handcrafted quality 30-DAY EXCHANGE 7v PRIVILEGE FE 2-2257 WALTON TV 515 E. Walton BlVd. Cornar Joslyn .. Open 9 to 9 Now the famous Zenith handcrafted chassis made even better The new Zenith Titan SO.assuros longer TV life with significant new Zenith engineering advances in . solid-state technology combined with proven vacuum tube circuit design. AFC 1 i ON AFC Zenith Automatic Fine-tuning Control electronically fine tunes color TV instantly—even perfects j- < your UHF fine-tuning automatically. • Advanced’Zenith Super a New Advanced Zenith GYRO* Video Range Tuning Syitem DRIVE UHF Channel Selector Zenith 2-Year Color Picture Tube Warranty Zenith Radio Corporation warrants the color picture lube In the Zenith Color TV receivers shown berc to be free from defects In material arising from normal usag^ for two year* from date of original consumer purchase. Warranty covers repair of color picture tube, or replacement vrilh rebuilt color picture tube, through any authorized Zdnith dealer anywhere owner may live or move; transportation, labor and^service charges are the obligation of the owner. Zenith replacement tube if also warranted for the full unaxpirad term of th« original two-year warranty. & STEFANSKI INC. DISCOUNT PRICES 681-1515 SALES & SERVICE ON: Color and RAW TV Stereos-Radios Tap* Recorders Home & Auto Tape Players TV Antennas eAsY TERMS “Our Year i ofexperlenct ■ is your iittiirtince of Mfithfnction'’ , - ' j Since 1932 '; • \ Open Friday Til 9 1157 W. Huron El 1/1 I CHOICE Automatic thermostat control . maintain! dm comfort level you. select. Circulate* 3,600 CFM. Move* eatily on rubber I'wheel.. Fan height ad-juits 30 to 51 inebea JShz*L ■■ %.■ j : w S o' j| THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY ll, 1969 CRRFTSMRN _ Y o J Garden and Lawn Care Sale Ends Saturday .. . Most Items at Reduced Prices Suburban 12 Heavy-Duty Tractor with Solid-State Ignition CRAFTSMAN 12-HP ENGINE AND AUTO-TYPE STEERING Year ’round versatility,. . . stand* up to the hardest use. All-gear, 8-speed transmission (6 forward speeds, 2 reverse), delivers the correct speed for every job. Reg. 759.99 669 a” Cutting Unit.. .179.91,42” Cutting Unit 1IMI Doztr CiaJa, Reg. 14.411..................................................................... M.N Tractor Only Save- *40! “Kingswood” 7x5’ Lawn Building Reg. 139.99 Steel building has wood-grained finish. 216 cu. ft. storage area. Assures a safe, weather-tight enclosure for lawn and sports equipment, bicycles, etc. Features built-in gutters, full access sliding doors. Quick and easy to assemble. Floor is extra. a. Craftsman 6-HP Rider Mower e.799.99 26” cut at S height*. 3 forward speeds, on* reverse.'Foot pedal clutch/brake- Recoil super (tart. Rugged steel housing. Over-sis* lawn protector tires. Rog. 359.99 319" 439.99 Electric Start, 6 H.P. Rider.......................399.99 b. Self-Propelled Rotary Mower Has Craftsman 4-cycle engine with pull-up recoil super start. “Cut ’n Clean” blade* give 4 22” cut at 7 adjustable heights. Reg. 159.99 129" $19 Qrese Catcher for Power Mower*.......... ........ 7.99 c. Our Finest Craftsman Mower 10-HP engine with electrie start and hydrostatic drive... infinite speeds up td 6 mph forward, 3 mph reverse. 36” cut at 5 adjustable heights. Deluxe features including tail and headlights. Reg. 999.99 i99 799 Craftsman Electric Grinder Comb. Has Vi-HP motor (3450- Reg. Sop. RPM), two 6xY«-inch. Pfie* 92.37 wheels, felxible 15-inch m aa gooseneck lamp. Fully Craftsman 7-Piece Propane Torch Kit Includes torch and cylinder with 4 popular accessories to solder, cut and heat metals. Complete with eerrying ease. Reg. Sop. Price 19.11 [99 Sears Carries a Complete Line of Lawn and Garden Care Equipment Including Mowers, Edgers, Sweepers, Tractors and Garden Tools. Save *10! Craftsman Dual-action Sander Reg. Sep. Price 33.58 3%7W-in. pad changes from fast-working orbital sander to lino finish aaqq straight-line sander. 12 - sanding sheets included. 6-HP Roto Spader with Power Reverse Reg. 199.99 174" Og%: mtk yV, Powdr reverse and adjnst- able drag stake for more maneuverability. Hardened eteel slasher tinea cut a 28” swath ... adjusts to 26” width. Dirt shield protect* engine. Craftsman 6-Pc. Router Bit Set Reg. 14.84 W diameter shank. Include* 1 etch: Vk, Vfc, %, Vk-in. straight • faes bitst 3/16-in. veining hits Vk-in. hit for V • grooving or chamfering. YOUR CHOICE i99 each Craftsman Reversible Heavy-Duty Drill Excellent for continuous duty and deep drilling in steel and concrete. If bit ever gets stuck, just flip reverse switch, Reg. 52.99. Craftsman Power Roiiter Kit with Carrying Case Perfect for do-it-yourself projects. Cuts up to I Vi-in. deep . . • graduated in 32nds inch. With edge guide, trammel point ijnd case. Reg. Sep. Price 59.96. open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, 9 to St30 Tool Assortment YOUR CHOICE 77 © each 99c Screwdriver Attachment for Drill 1.16 Package of 4 Magnetic Catches 1.29 Craftsman Ignition Pliera 1.09 Scare 8” Slip Joint Pliera 1.09 9tt” Steel Utility PHert 98cGlaaeand Ceramic Adhesive 89c #3 “T” Handle Tap Wrench 99c Craftsman Scratch Awl f 1 Craftsman Utility Knife 89c Aluminum Hose Hangar fJB 89c Brass Hose Nozzle 1.19 Craftsman 14-Pc. Hex Key Set 1.38 Garnet Cabinet Paper Assortment' v YOUR 7” Circular Hand Saw Develops 1V« HP. 0 to 2li" cut at 90*; 0 to 1 13/16" at. 45*. Reg. 32.99. . ) Vi” Heavy-Duty Drill Made to bora thru eteel . plate, cement, other tough materials. Reg. 39.99. / Dual Motion Sander Flijif ^sver , . . shifts ^ from orbital to straight ■line sanding. Reg. 45.99. . - ’ v ' ' Compact Power Plant Lightweight, easy to handle. Fences for square cut* and beveling. Reg. 36.99., Economical Cooling.. • Kenmore 14” 2-Speed Slim Portable Fan Lightweight for easy moving for cooling small areas. Motor has 2 speed rotary switch. Safety • grill, bumper guards on stand., Reg. 21.99 13" Automatic 3-Speed 20-In. Portable Fan Automatically turns on and off to maintain the “comfort level” yon select. Efficient 1/12 HP motor circulates 5,000 cubic ft. per minute. Made of high impaet plastic. Lightweight. Reg. 29.55 25" 20” Window Fan with Automatic Thermostat Our most powerful window fan •.. circulates 9,000 cubic fiet of ait; per minute. Electrically reversible . . . 2 speeds Iri' and 2 speeds out. Belt driven . •. 1/6 HP mo- J^eg. 64.99 57" Kenmore 3-Speed, 20” Rollabout Fan Reg. 39.99 Smoll Bsctrtcol Appliances Downtown AND 90. ■ > l Risi HW■■ ■ ><' V/ ' • 'I ' .■»' x':'7 ;,;'V ' Soon Hardware Department yWfisKs mm ■Zffy/ A. ■bmh wmmmm ■■■■ Ippiglji IMp ■■ ■1111 ■S Spllli ||$ra gj!&ss«\ SAV* NOW- poll 6824940 SUN. 12 NOON TO 5 Mil. M THRU hcl. 10 /V\0 NTG 0/1/1 E R V] ¥ , ,: ■.. .. mEma and operated In MM# once with our MtMlMI If ithe air conditioner Mf fall, ,Wai* mHI repair any defecjleo part froo «f charge, Mwlng labor, at any Ward* Auto Center. Thi* guarantee dees not apply to ok con-dMoners le«taB>d In BOM im FAST INSTALLATION AVAILABLE AT LOW 1XTBA COST /\AO(VTGO/WERY| r TIIDCC | imTEm —mb mifiM'i mill mm Kara V^v 5. -- | • Adds tsii Town & Counfry—3 ways better than other %eavy duty’/ shocks 1 /Shock absorber efficiency Is increased Jo peak level of peiformbnoe fer the life bf the shocks by an anti-foaming baffle coil. 9|| Fluid loss, the numb#: one eause of shock H absorber failure, b virtually eliminated by MP1- multl-Hp rod seal with 8 piping edges. iri0% Passengemdhd vital car parts (steering, lUK call springs) are: protected from sudden Wfir. bounces by prOgresdye valving action. HERR'S WHAT WE DO: e Install Riverside* shoes e Check master cylinder an all four wheels e Bleed Eneiy add brake, e Rebuild wheel cylinders fluid e Turn brake drums e Check seals, repack e Arc brake shoes wheels e Check bearings, fluid lines, return springs Riverside wwmM Ward* will repair fr.a of chare* any part of 0 Riverside* re-manufactured angin* told .with overhead valv* cylinder head* attached which foil* within twelve month* gr 12.000 miles of original installation, whichever occurs flrsR This guarantee it valid only far engines In non-commercial in# whan kwtallod, used, and 'maintained in accordance with the manufacturer's recommendations. Repairs duo to damage caused by auto accidents ara excluded from this guarantee. MCli IN PAIRS PAIR Fmas iangos yeuoyjha Supreme brake shoe* were originally Installed, end prodded they remain op that car. If n brake die* Wt for any reason return It la any Wards branth. and we wM replace it free or tnstall a newohe, drarg-ing only normal installation. This.' guarantee does not apply to brake die** In. staled on commercial vehicles or to brake dioes dam-aged In an aria accident, REG. 4.99 DELUXE SHOCKS Deluxe shocks give you jpra AC constant'eor control. 73 Dampen excgsiivw move* iacu ment of car’s springs. Buy a pair today I .■» / . COUPON WORTH $25 Clip thb coupon, bring it to Wards automotive center. Save $25 on any rebuilt engine! Limited time only. ||||® INSTALLATION JWAtLABLE ME SHOCKS GUARANTEE FRONT AND REAR LEVELERS IMPROVE CAR ROADABILITY Frontlpyeieri reduce bout end and tire y^ear. Rear :|pijpert end annoying taK-plpeand bumperscraping. Give hill ride control. nentsgomto REG.29.99 PAIR /VK)MT( iO/VYERY AAONTCiO/VYERYl 1/2 PRICE SALE mm T JIM mm Bj|s^Kw~"' MeemsspcgiMy V -■ -v'' M 'JL'^Ct Api|oHkM of ractaf fomm, dsdgnedjtMtod and endorsed ' r«i/j[iiii ■H ., ilB fMdvn> Jding I black H od stool hHHh brakes, Motor* MjMr IWWw# is| ra||j§ rant rear suspension, C ojp/' Adders dwl' Ifcftfh « THIS HOLE SAN KlllYQUMlSTER! Just« pinpoint look In your present muff* Replace with Doubt-life-the muffler guaranteed for the life of your car Ofd yod ever stop to realize how dangerous a lerb needed, buy a Riverside® today, You'll never have to buy anotiier muffler for your present ear! , INSTALLATION AVAILABLE /V\Q IVTG 0/V\ E R Y fe»%' ifflI jmm mV: ! CAR NYLON AMT SOI M>e|ess bladcwcilT fitted +1.34 to 1.89 FJEJ. ANY SIZE tubeless blackwaH listed + 2.07 to 2.57 F.E.T. 6.50-13 7.50-14 3.00-14 6.70-15 The perfecttire for all moderate driving needs! 4-ply nylon cord body. Multi-row tread with angled traction slots, 18-month treadwear guarantee. wSiTiirjt ** 1§| 5.20-13 5.90-13 5.60-14 S.O-15 5.5-15 5.60-15 5.90-15 6.00-15 feeds pawsl Continental rolled and slped tread edge for po$itivooorocring and eoilnr steering. 4-ply nylon coni body. Lifetime quality guarantee and 3Qooi6 tread wear guarantee. 7.35-14 7.75-14 7.75-15 8.25-14 8.15-15 8.55^4 8.45-15 4-ply nylon cord. Full 24-month tread wear guarantee. 1 rufiM- ii._eJ.--. *•_ ■ nu rerruci itrn for Small Tracks ^'■VV . \vv wayTraction me. MR MCM 2$& r uai MRS ML not.. 1 450-14 Ml 99.99 1 2.19 1 - 470-15 M2 97.99 2.40 | fcSO-16 SIS 9S.99 2*2 ill 7.00-15 MS >99.99 2.95 * lmi« MS 99.99 iJOO 1 am' . 4 me. < ones mm IMS mCs 1 470-15 " $29 94.99 245 740*15 MS 90.99 955 440-14 $29 90.99 JfcSO 450-14 • $20 99.99 £$2 f I ■1 WARDS RIVERSIDE 4-SQUARE PASSENGER TIRE GUARANTEE on*, charging only that portion of the current price (plus Federal Excite Tax) equivalent to the percent of tread SmARANTEED AGAINST TRIAD' WEAROUT foe months specified Of for miles specified. In, cote, treOd* wears out, Words wltt exchange tiro for o new one, charging only the difference between the current price., (plus Federal Excise Tax) and a spa* cific dollar allowance. (Tread wear guarantee does not apply Jq tfres used commercially.) NATIONWIDE SERVICE. Guarantee honored at any Wards Retail or Cota-: log store. MI« v SACK jf sA* s • ■ raws ■ each l ;■ M.V. . ' SACK ; 1 4.50*13 J ■ 15.00* 1.54 'im 4?«*'. I8.7R* tfHM . Ilf ».25*U ; $27* * *. jj j 2Q.2»* 21.75* jtffSS- ‘"5 REPLACES SIZES PRICE EACH PLUS F.E.T. EACX 075-U .6.95-14 IM* ** . 170*14 7.35-14 ■ ’06*.?. 2.31 F70-14 7.7544 $38* 2.44 670-14 8.25-14 940* 4* - F70-15 7.7515 *3K "«» 670-15 S.15-1S *40* H70-15 8.45-15 *0* »w m J 1 |.'3 (J ■| IB V :■ V ■ ■ M /,' mwm A jjfl III y i umwsbayQmDje WASHINGTON (jB — President Nixon’s' President’s nationwide address, attend a a Vowed to keep h|p campaign pledge eight-point Vietnam peace offer, special combined national security “to end this war ina way that would in- including a plan for a mutual pullout of Council-Cabinet session this morning and crease our chagpes to. win true and major forces over, a 12-month span, goes then speed bflbk to Paris in an Air Force ' to Paris today amid a generally jet. favorable response from U.S. politicians. , Nixon’s half-hour telecast — his first What enemy negotiators think of it will full-scale White House speech on Viet-start unfolding when the chief U.S. envoy nam ifon applause frip his spp-at the peace talks, Henry Cabot Lodge, porters and subdued initial comment presents it at the weekly parley tomor- from war critics as the President also: row in Paris. * • Hinted anew at forthcoming U.S. Lodge hurried to Washington yesterday troop withdrawals regardless of what to confer with Nixon, hear the- happens at Paris. goal .. of self-determination for South seems to be the best moment for a U.S. Vietnam. .- - , ; move to thaw the Paris deadlock.. . . • Delivered a veiled warning to Hanoi Elements of virtually *ail of Nixon’s against military offensives, sayirqj,. ”1 eight points appeared in proposals made must .make clear In all candor that if the from time Jo time during the Johnson, needless suffering ' continues, this will administration, but'White House sources affect'other decisions.” portrayed the package over-all as fresh • Appealed to the American people in its impact in'revisions coming from “whatever our1 differences,” to back .ids the‘new administration. peace offer. *. f White House sources skid Nixon timed Reactions were <)uick ini coming. his offer which had been ready for some ' In Texas, an aide said former Presi-weeks, for delivery now because this dent Johnson “wholeheartedly supports President Nixon in his efforts at bringing peace to Southeast Asia u|»af In. Wshington, Sen. J» W. Fulbright, D-Ark.', the antiwar Set)a{e Foreign Relations Committee cbAjrmao, termed Nixon’s offer reasonable, while making plaih he still thinks die United States should get out of South Vietnam.' House Republican Leader GCrald R. Ford Of Michigan said the President made phdn he seeks an honorable peace and Hanbi lira nothing tp gain tty delay. Related Stories, Pages A-13; B-13 lasting peace” and' declared that “If I fail to do so, I expect tile American people to hold me accountable for that failure.” • Promised -U.S. firmness in the basic Wolfson is now serving a one-year possible impeachment of the eight-rank-prison sentence in Florida, ed of the nine justices. - ? r There has been only one impeachment *★ ★ * trial of a justice— Samuel Chase in the Rep. Clark MacGregor, R-Mirni., asked early 19th century. He was acquitted of the House Judiciary Committee yester-charges that he violated legal ethics in day to begin a preliminary inquiry h)to -----the Fortas-Wolfsah relationship ■ The resignation of a justice under Warren —. the man he once was pressure is unprecedented. nominated by .Lyndon Johson to succeed — a letter of explanation about the fee from the foundation. The announcement of Fortas’ actions Was made by a court spokesman. 11 DAYS APfaSR ARTICLE The Fortas resignation came 11 days aftdr life magazine made public for-the first time Fortas’ receipt Uf a $20,000 foe from the family foundation of Louis Wolfson, wealthy financier, after Fortas became a member of the Court in 1966. Fortas issued a statement the same -day, May 4, acknowledging that he did receive a fee — he did not say how much — from the foundation. He said he later returned it. Life said he did not return it until 11 months later ~ afte WolfSdn had been indicted on federal charges of stock manipulation. . Front Our News Wires WASHINGTON — Justice Abe Fortas, once nominated as chief justice, announced today his resignation from the Supreme Court under mounting pressure and the threat of impeachment proceedings. President Nixon this morning accepted Fortas’, resignation,, effective immediately. Fortas, target of severe criticism for accepting and not returning until 11 months later a $20,600 fee from the family foundation of financier Louis E. Wolfson, sent President Nixon his letter of resignation last night., Fortas also sent Chief Justice Earl , -** nnitirf> :. LODGE ARRIVES FOR TALKS— Ambassador Henry., Cabot Lodge, who htfacfe the U.S.' delegation pf negotiators at {be Paris peqce talks, leases his plane after arriving yesterday af AntJrews Alr Force Bam near Washington, D.C., for conferences- with ,President Nixon. Related Stories, Page A-3 While MacGregor did not characterize tills as the beginning of impeachment proceedings, some lawmakers viewed it that way. Rep. Emanuel Cellar, D-N. Y-. chairman of the judiciary committee, had indicated he would go along with the MacQregor request conducting trials while sitting on a circuit court, as Supreme Court justices did in those days. V " FORTAS KEPT SILENT . ’ J FortajS had remained silent about the Wolfson incident after issuing his May 4 statement Rep. H. R. Gross, R-Iowa, had served The resignation came as the-first notice days ago that he was prepaigd to moves were afoot on Capitql Hill — amid begin impeachment proceedings. He was strong criticism of his ' alleged bn- holding this in abeyance pending possible propriety in taking the fee -**• toward judiciary committee inquiry. Trouble Ahead for Nixon Surtax . From Our News IHras WASHINGTON —• President Nixon’s proposed extension of the Income surtax, a key part of the administration’s fiscal plans, ib facing problems both In and -oiit of Congress. Rep. Charles A. Vanik, D-Ohio, a member of the tax-writing House Ways and Means Committee, said Nixon’s ur-ban policy hadalienated some congressmen wife might have supported the surtax extension past the June $0 expiration date f , n . v ^ wvw r ■ Nixonhqs asked for an extension Until Jan. 1, at 19 per cent, and bfS per cent rate between Jan: 1 and June 30, 1970, when it woiikL expire, t fee »»’ n New threats came yesterday when two powerful' groups declared tiny- such bill must be c6up|ed with sweeping reforms of the ebtife federal to* structure. The AFL-CIO Executive Coubcfl said it will not support the extension unless i{ is coipbmed' with “immediate, substantial aqd equitable reform.” Fifty-four Hopse members of the liberal Democratic StudyGroup signed a letter calling on the committee to act on tax reforms fir’s!, even if it delays the surcharge, extension past the June 30 deadline. County Government Claim WASHINGTON (AP) The White House reportedly is studying S pilan to revamp the supersonic transport program to open new means of financing abd ease tears about sonic booms. sider. a fixed miliage,-permissible under the constitution and requiring a vote of the people, He said such action, would “do away yvith the gymnastics of financing when. We haven’t got enough funds to go around anyway.” ' i ■ - it ■ 11■ He received support from new board member Louis Sctdmmel and Chairman Henry Schieffer. Setting a fixed miliage rate for reach governmental unit would do away with the function of the allocation board and it would also do away with tiie need for preparing tentative Support has developed for establish-budgets. / j.. J u|nUQ, : ment °* a business-government agency All allocations recommeijped by the under which funding would come from board, winch met yesterday as a com- sale to the public of government-mittee of the whole, are withu the ',15- guaranteed shares. Such an agency could mill limit. / , not conveniently be a part of the FAA. TO BET SET MONDAY: ’ • ' The preliminary allocation will not be 2 Stars 'to Wed Soon' officially set until Monday and the final rate will not be set until June 2. CORFU, Greece (AP) — British actor Action yesterday followed two days of Albert Finney and French star Anouk budget presentations by schools, ' Aimee left for Italy today, saying they townships and the county. would. be back in two months to get married. . The couple arrived in Corfu a week ago and have been staying at a rented three-room villa at Ipsos, on the island’s picturesque northwest coast fa c i n g Albania. , . By JEAN SAILE k Despite the prediction that their ac-I tions might come back to haunt them, I members of the Oakland County Alloca-3 tion Board yesterday downgraded county : | government claims on the 15-mill tax | allocation. b By setting an unofficial levy rate of . 5.16 mills for the county, the board, in 1 effect, would lop $3.5 million off the I county’s record $31.1-million tentative I budget for next year. The levy is 0<12 mill less than this year, and 0.63 mill less than that re-- quested. It still raises $2 million more than that raised on property taxes this year, due to a substantial increase in county equalized valuation, k Daniel T. Murphy, a member of the * allocation board and county auditor chairman,' warned members, “One day you’re going to have to take from the m schools to finance the county.” Ik BIGGEST INCREASE The unit getting the biggest increase from within the J 15-mill ‘ limit was Oakland Intermediate Schools — allotted 0.21 mills. Last year the Intermediate School District was financed almost entirely from nonvoted taxes outside the limit, but an attorney general’s opinion has held that financing illegal. Murphy also asked the board to con- The proposal would put the program directly under the secretary o f transportation. Hie project to develop a 300-passenger, 1,860-mile-an-hoiir jetliner has been run since its inception by the Federal Aviation Administration (FAA), an independent regulatory agency administered by the Transportation Department. Resignation Breaks Silence Abe Fortas 8 Pontiac Sun's Warm Smile Lifts Temperature Today’s brilliant sudshine ip expected to send temperatures soaring into the mid-70s by late afternoon. Tonight -will continue fair and warm;, with-a low of 50 to 55 j a #1 - -• ■ they would remain on their present jobs in Pontiac until the appeal is settled, according to-the contractual agreement between the school board and the PEA. Further Appeals may also be made -beyond the tenure commission to circuit court, appellate court and finally the supreme court. By MARY LUNDSTROM Eight Pontiac tenure teachers were discharged by the board of education last night because of their failure to comply with a “financial responsibility” clause in their contract with the school district. The teachers had refused to pay $85 dues to the Pontiac Education Association, in an agency shop agreement specified in this year’s contract between the school, board and the PEA, and were given a hearing April 29 to discuss the case. ■' . .. . ;• While township allocations remain substantially the same as last year, schools learned they probably will be pared to help finance tiie intermediate school district. The miliage allotted to them and townships was downgraded (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) Increasing cloudiness and warm with a chance of showers or thundershowers by evening is the forecast for tefouvrow. Tomorrow’s expected high is 75 to 82. There’s a chance of showers. Saturday. LANSING (AP) — The Senate yester- Hie low prior to 8 a m.’ in downtown day debated, then put off action, on a Pontiac was 44. The reading at 12:30 controversial bill that would mandate p.m. was 70. counties to pay prosecutors as much as probate or circuit court judges. In 11 counties last .year, no one filed for the countes last year, no one filed for the j ■ 1 “ *'' office of prosecuting attorney, said Sen. ! - 'S^ James Fleming, R-Jackson, sponsor of ^ Prosecutor Bill Stalls Related Stories, Page B-7 During negotiations for the teachers’ 1ga contract, last July, PEA obtained the agency shop agreement which provides that all teachers must pay dues or be discharged. The Michigan Tenure' Law provides 9H that no teacher may be fired except for just cause, and whether nonpayment of |i|||l dues is included in the provision is a I ; .1 matter Michigan courts have not cleatrlv' ■/ decided. ' - , ').•/, SUIT POSSIBILITY CITED '-,v. ■ Board President William Anderson said that although lie did not like H dismissing the teachers, he felt that not to dismiss them would, leave the board I ppeh to a suit for unfair labor practice. H Cfurfs Brown, the only board member I who voted against the dismissals; %aid be could not condone the action, arnce- it has not ‘been upheld In the Michigan^ 9H Supreme Court. Board member Monroe aH Osmun was absent, and Dr. Robert R. Turpin had< not yet arrived at the ''flt&jj meeting. y 'II1 . , .**. ,0 Hie vote was14-1. on the resolution to jaPM dismiss the teorepnjat the.dose of the o* ’ '.Tl igchodyoaron Juoel>. \ 1 Ihoifol the,teachers appeal their (tesev. Shack ii Jf tbeF Michigan SilS e ' Crlrurni»tfm The vii Tempest on Army Tanks WASHINGTON fAF) - Hitherto confidential government ^ report says the Army ptpiid Tts {Hd)lem-rid(fon. Sheri-dan tank mto production to avoid Bpi cism and possible budget cutbqdks,'then repeatril . the mistake with a briitted version of the M60 tank. Jr® As- a*result of rushing production before the bugs were irbnril out,, the" General Accountihg. C^ of, the tanks have. been stored to hwait modifications before they can beepme operattoim^^. , .f* J Canada Sex Bills Gain . ' OTTAWA (AP).- Criminal code »•*. an^endments to legalize therapeutic VoS abortions and homoi^usi acertn pitcste betweeii consenting adults cleared the 'i " ™ House of Commons WcdnesdSjB,ai^it^ is of the' Mack buck variety . The bill WWt to titB- floMfe kf mmm ■Wm THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 19, 1969 WASHINGTON (AP) Prior tb taking a seat on the Supreme. Court, which he resigned ioddy,Ab4 Fortas was an officer of a company incorporated by. individuals linked: with Las Vegas gambling operations. One of the individuals later was indictee^ for perjury in the Bobby Baker case. Other officers of the company, Greatamerica Corp., contributed to tiie 130,000 fund set up to finance a series, of lectures by Fortas at American University here last summer. Fortas got half the money. Greatamerica, a holding company for insurance firms, was -the parent company of Texas-based Braniff Airways. In addition to being an officer of Great-amerlca, Fortas was, during 1965, a director of Braniff. After he left the company, a spot on the board of directors went to Paul A. Porter, Fortas’ former law partner. Porter still held that position last year. It was last year that the Civil Aeronautics Board and President Johnson granted a lucrative trans-Pacific route to Braniff despite the recommendation of a CAB examiner that Braniff not get any such award. The CAB chairman who concurred in the Braniff award is a former member of a Houston law firm with ties to Johnson. Jones’, case has not come to trial. Fbrtas was Baker’s attorney until Johnson became president in 1063. At that time he withdrew from the case. The two other incorporators of However, when thdtCAB and They also list Paul Laxalt as the ^company's agent--the official representative. Laxalt, now governor of Nevada, -re signed<; from the job on Bee. 31, 1966, before taking office. Yearly reports filed & Carson City show Fortas remained an officer of Greatamerica until sometime between July 1965 and June 1966. Records* for the following year indicate that after Fortas resigned Dennis Lyons assumed Fortas* ■ former positions with the company. Johnson announced the final awards, Braniff got a route to Hawaii through Mexico City and Acapulco, Increasing its air route mileage by about 200 per cent. Post is a partner in the new $19 million, 24-story Plaza International Hotel in Acapulco and is engaged in construction Of a six-mile beach-front golf course and country club in the Mexican resort city. * 7 The chairman of the CAB when the award was made was John Crooker Jr., a Houston lawyer and a former partner in the firm of Fulbright, Crooker, Freeman, Bates and Jaworski. Leon Jaworski has acted as a personal attorney for Johnson. Crooker first was appointed to the CAB in March 1968 to fill an Just a little Greatamerica were'Helen Irving and Katherine Waldman, both of LAs Vegas, and both also convicted stock manipulator Louis Wolfson. This week, Atty. Gen. John Mitchell said he turned over “certain information’’ in the case to Chief Justice Earl Warren. Fortas’ involvement in the companies can be traced to 1962 when Greatamerica was incorporated in Nevada. The incorporation papers, dated April; 27| 1962, list Fortas as the company’s vice president, general counsel and a director. listerias directors of a Las Vegas concern which got a gambling license in June, 1964. The same three incorporators —Jones and the two women— were listed as incorporators when Greatamerica filed to do business in Texas on. Jan. 29, 1963, records in the Texas secretary of state’s office in Austin showed. The records in Nevada and Texas do not indicate whether tiie three served also as officers of the corporation. Legal sources say incorporation papers frequently are handled by attorneys who select the individuals to serye as incorporators. ' The chairman of the board and president of Greatamerica at the time of its incorporation was Troy V. Post. The compa-iort lists Gus-lirector. Both unexpired term, over a month later, far from the end of the term, Johnson renominated him „for a full six-year term beginning this year. 'Life Income From Wo Fund Taken' T UttHBBSUyUH OPEN T0NITE ’til 9 p.m.-FRI. 9 a.m. * to 9:30 p.m.-SAT. 9 a.m. to 9 p.nr. -the B(66E£ the SAVINGS,-the BETTER the DISCOUNT...and they're at SIMMS Annex tave Levy a^ men held their posts through fiscal 1968 when Greatamerica and its subsidiary, Braniff, were acquired by the conglomerate Ltog-Temco-Vought. Paul Porter’s name appears as a director of Braniff to 1967 and 1968. Porter collected Last year, $30,000 to finance Fortas’ lecture .series. Five men contributed to the fund. Two of them were Post and Levy; American University officials told the Senate last year that Fortas got $15,000 of the fund and the university got the other half. ■ < Also last year, a CAB examiner held extensive hearings on the eagerly sought Pacific airline routes. When he recommended the awards, Braniff had ho share of the plum. compare the features and price, front handbrake on bow Charge It at Simms Model 42 bicycle with front handbrakes, safety coaster * brake. Chrome fenders, white sidewall tires, chrome rims, chrome chainguard, hi-rise handlebar and saddle plus kickstand. * WELCOME HERE European MR. WES LYON, BELL & HOWELL District Sales Representative, Will Be In SIMMS TON1TE, 6 pm to 9 pm to Help You With Any Question Concerning the BELL & HOWELL HOME MOVIE SOUND SYSTEM. Shampoo-in hair color Twelve beautiful, natural hair colors copied from life ... foryowl The rich browns of France and Italys the cool, * clear blondes of Scandinar Via, the enchanting reds of Ireland and haunting black of Spain* Yoyrs in 20 min-' uteS with European Naturals. Twelve shades you couldn't have before -. unless you were born' with thdm! 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K96 from Ufttiflf and west | i --M3 d gS ; 1 Tel-T«relve ■ Milt A Comenieet w/eV 1 , from eipressway SNrc *MP it Tdeenpb Road Nmm aittir directiam /’ LOBfiE EXP. 8498 ■ .from Detroit' ^E^NI art east JW1W rmgtfcldTwp. HHBI QJCsJRezo ning for Lumberyard SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP — The Township Board lias overruled a zoning board recommendation and approved die rezoning of property at die Ware and Andersonvdle intersection from agricultural to commercial. Hie board voted S toll to authorize the request of Lloyd Miller, 10270 An-dersonville, to develop a wholesale » lumberyard operation at the site. • * ★ 4t" to Township Treasurer Margaret R. Samuel, Township Cleric David H. Field, and Trustee Claude Trim voted to approve the petition. Supervisor N. C. Van Natta and Trustee E. L. Rundell upheld the zoning board’s recommendation to deny the rezoning request. The board reported that the decision to enforce the township’s junk car ordinance has been carired out. More than 12 warnings for ordinance violations have been written during the last four weeks. Violators have 30 days to correct the violation before the township takes legal action. ^ TOWNSHP SUED Supervisor Van Natta said a summons was served on him yesterday regarding a suit filed in Probate Court against the township by Kelly Bateman Co., a Pontiac real estate firm. The Bateman firm had filed a rezoning petition for. a proposed trailer park development west of Dixie Highway between Holly and Oakhill roads that was rejected by the zoning board, County Planning Board and the Township Board last winter. -&r ★ ★ Van Natta said the suit was filed to enjoin the township from carrying out its decision. He said the township would contest Kelly Bateman’s action. Hans for Operation Cleanup are continuing. All old papers or magazines that are tied in bundles may be brought toX the Township Hall, 650 Broadway, Davis-buig. ' 3 : V v ★ - ★ ★ Arrangements have been made with Charles Weaver, 9208 Dixie, to pick up newspapers and magazines anywhere in die township if he is contacted. Cleanup day is set for May 24. Walled Lake OKs ‘ w*'1 H] ' 'M ' II jH®!4! -11^ / x 'V ’’ 8 -Grade Cburse CITIZEN’S AWARDS — The Pontiac Citizen’s Committee on Youth last night honored outstanding teens of the week and four citizens and one organization selected for outstanding work with youth at the committee’s seventh annual award program. Honorees pictured with Mayor . Pro Tem T. Warren Fowler Sr. (holding plaque) are (from left) Loren O’Dea, chief ftnMc Pim PMiW H VwdinMrp psychiatric social worker for Pontiac General Hospital’s Health Clinic; James. Peterson, president of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce; Fred Stormer, Pontiac Police Detective; Mrs. Neal Smith, community worker for Family Service of Oakland County; and Edward S. Ladd, accepting for the Pontiac Creative^rts Center. Farmington to Air Proposed Budget FARMINGTON — A public hearing on the proposed budget has been set for 8 p.m. tonight at City Hall. The total recommended budget for the general fund is 8792,156 while the actual budget for 1968-69 is $747,141. A budget of $308,916 for the water and sewer department in the upcoming year - is also set. The water-sewer allocation is $295,726. ★ to★ A public hearing for they rezoning of certain lots in the Tarabtisi — Grand River Gardens subdivision from family to multiple dwelling is set for 8 p.m. June 8. Trouble Flares on Picket Line at Novi Plant NOVI — Police reported some trouble this morning with workers driving through the picket line at Paragon Division of Portec Inc. • Some 20 pickets from the Paragon Equality Movement (PEM) — primarily inner-city blacks — fired for violation of union grievance procedures paraded before the company gate for the fourth day. . Novi police reported that State Police gave one speeding ticket and several verbal warning to workers driving through the picket line on their way ,to the plant. ; A warning was also given to one man for throwing rocks at the passing cars. EMPLOYE’S DEMANDS . .' Picketing has continued at the Novi steel firm since Saturday. The former employes, who handed the company a list of demands Frjday, walked out after learning that the demands would have to be processed through union grievance channels, according to a y Paragon spokesman. % Personnel Director David K. Waterloo, said the 84 men were dismissed by telegram Saturday. The iron workers qre members of Shopmen’s Local 508, Iron /Workers Union. The / Rev. . William H. Colquitt of Inkster, a PEM spokesman, claimed Local 508 has refused to act on grievances about alleged unsafe working conditions. I 1 % The' men claim they stopped work because of air pollution in the plant, unsanitary conditions and lack of safety .^precautions around heavy equipment. CHARGES DENIED A company spokesman called the charges untruq. , \ . v *,. v | The workers, who were hired for job training under a,federal program, were picked last fall when the company could not find labor to fill job vacancies. • Colquitt contended 150 persons from A- THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1909 ' A—4 WALLED LAlCJS — The school board has endbrsed the concept of a new eighth-grade yearlong course offering introduction to language, typing, and. sociology. ’ The administration libs been authorized to prepare details of the three sections, each to last 1$ weeks, and present them to the board at a later date. The' mandatory course will be during the hour when lhost eighth graders are currently in a study hall. v t A choice of French or Spanish will be. offered to the student during the language portion of the course. The introduction to sociology will offer information to help students better adjust to their environment and better handle involvement with other people. a The. board, in other recent action approved preliminary plans for the Vocational High School. # S > REPORT-CARD COMPLAINT Also at the recent board meeting, a parent, identified as Mrs. James Scott registered objections to the district’s four-year-old experimental report card teacher conferences. The card offers detailed, notes on now1 the child is doing in the Skills area and an evaluation of ' his ability. A, page is devoted to personal development.and attitudes.of the child and spaces are left kms parental response. Mrs. Scett claimed that the card does not have enough grades to show achievement and that the parent can’t tell how the child is doing from day to day. MORE IMPROVEMENT She Indicated that she was not necessarily advocating a return to the traditional five-symbol report System, but that the card needed additional! improvementbefore it was acceptable to her as a parent. The card offers considerably more information to the parent than did the traditional five-symbol system, according to Hugh Davies, director of elementary education, {le contended that the system is less punitive and less corruptive. He pointed out that the report card She urged eontinued efforts to improve was a^progress report to parents and it. that a child’s knowledge of how he is doing in school is received on a daily basis. ' ‘ , “If any child has to wait ten weeks before learning how fie is doing then we would be failing somewhere.” The card, introduced in 1965, is being used in a test program at four elementary schools. - The card is a four-page progress report which is supplemented by parent- Left With Only 67 Residents " Novi Twp. Struggle By LOISFRIENDLAND NOVI TQWNSHIP - Not much remains of this township, reduced to 67 residents and one legal township official, since the former village of Novi in-corporated into a city. However, there is an effort to carry on. ★ * * Acting township officials were told yesterday by Circuit Court Judge William J. Beer that court approval of any expenditures was necessary before any more township funds were disbursed. Judge Beer also adjourned the ques- -tion of accounting between the township and the city for 30 days, ELECTIONS SET ! A meeting of the 67 remaining township residents is to be held June 9 in order to select township officers and a Township Board. to- f ★ ★ In May 1968, Novi voters approved incorporation by a margin of about 200 votes out of a total 1,192. A city charter was approved by voters last February. to ★ ★ * The incorporation included 98 per cent of the township leaving the remaining residents divided into eight small and separate islands wound the new city. ★ to ' to Township Trustee, Ralph Luckett is the only one of the five elected officials' still livingTn the township and therefore the only legal township official. STILL PERFORMING The other four officials, however, have . continued to perform their duties as township officers. They are still dispersing township funds — including their own salaries — and have even notified some taxpayers of review of tax assessments of properties now within the city limits. ★ ★ ;f The men include Supervisor Radley Bachert, Treasurer Duane E. Bell, Clerk Lloyd George, and Trustee Charles Goers. •' , ★ . '★:! 'to The farmer officials have apparently been acting until recently under the stated belief that the incorporation was invalid. f - The township has been fighting the incorporation in court for several years unsuccessfully. Their most recent appeal to the State Supreme Court was denied ^ last week. ,.j ' APPEAL DENIED The township had asked for and been denied application for leave to appeal the recent decision made by the Court of Appeals declaring the incorporation valid.... - I ■ %■< ' ! ★ ★ ★ Last April, township officials were also denied leave to pursue their claim by Circuit Court Judge Frederick C. Ziem. ■ I ★ The case has been in court at least three times. ' ' • jk to . Yesterday, the former township , officials went into coqrt to show cause Why: they should not ,be forbidden to continue their actions since they no longer lived in the township. The city also requested that the court order the township to make an immediate division of assets from the area incorporated last year: SETTLEMENT NECESSARY A settlement is necessary before the city can assume responsibility for the assets, which they claim the former township officials are using. At the; moment, however, there is no governing body in the township that can legally handle the division of assets. The sole remaining member, Luckett, does not constitute a quorum. The meeting June 9 will provide a quorum of a new township board able to handle the division. ★, ★ ★ The meeting complies with a recent Sanatorium Future Is Tied to Action of 2 State Units certain laws authorize holding of a. special township meeting —. including where there is no quotum. ★ • to ★ Emery Jacques, attorney for the township, noted that the state boundary commission had been asked to determine whether the township could exist by itself or whether the residents should join the city. Detroit Detective Sergeant to A veteran Detroit police officer has been named as Oakland University’s new director of public safety. | Detective $gt. Earl Gray, 39, who has been with the Detroit Police Department for almost 15 years, will begin bis duties on May 26. to ', ★ ★ A university spokesman said Gray’s salary has not yet been determined, but that it was university policy not to disclose salaries. Gray will replace Thomas D. Strong, ,.who resigned his position in March to return to his former position as special agent with the U.S. Secret Service in Newark, N.J. DETECTIVE SERGEANT Gray joined the Detroit force in 1955 and has been assigned tQ the Citizens Complaint Bureau since 1964. He was promoted to the rank of detective in 1962 and to detective sergeant last July. Married and the father of two children, Gray is a student at Wayne State University, inajoring in police administration. He was bom in Kentucky and moved with his family! to Detroit when he was eight years old. V By JEAN SAILE The future of Oakland County attomev aeneral’s oninioh statine that _ Sanatorium ™ay depend on action by attorney ^general a opum^ statmg tnat - two state departments - the Bureau of Social' Services and the State Health Department. , Bernard Houston, director of the Social Services, said recently that Medicare and Medicaid reimbursement rates at the sanatorium will be cut in half, y ' * * * Should that happen, county officials believe the operation would ' b e jeopardized and hard-to-care-for chronic cases would have no place to go. It would cost the county $809,000 a year to maintain present services, o f f i c i a 1 s estimate. .Nursing home officials say, however, that they are willing to accept any and all long-term care cases the county has at the going rate for nursing home care — between $13 and $17 a day. CURRENT COSTS It costs the county between $35 and $39 a day for such care.. Meantime, Houston’s announcement has caused a wave of concern in the county, mainly from people who have relatives cared for at the county facility, to to to The concern has apparently reached the ears of Lansing officials, wjio are now saying little. Dr. " R. ’Gerald Rice, state health director, said he has had some correspondence with Houston relative to the setting of county institution rates. ASKED TO SET RATES Houston reportedly ha$- asked the healto department to assume the function it recently took in-regard to setting nursing home rates relative to hospitals. “I don’t know what’s going to happen. The matter has to be worked out,” Rice said. ★ ..★ to At present the social services department sets reimbursement rates for hospitals. Since the sanatorium now provides bed care for some 40 tubercular patients, another complication is added to the -problem. Hie facility must be certified as a hospital in order to care for such patients. PATIENT CARE OVERLOOKED Certification is done on the basis of physical plant, service and staff by the State Health Department. It does not certify ton the bads of the kind of patient care given, according to Dr. Herman Ziel, state director of medical care. Ziel noted, however* that Saginaw County has faced the probehn by designating a certain number of its county beds for tubercular hospital care, others for rehabilitation care and others for long-term chronic care. It Is. reimbursed accordingly. ★ , ★ to a//- Rice said he did hot know when a decision would be reached. One health department official noted, “A facility, may be certified as a hospital, but that dqes not necessarily mean that every patient in the facility, needs hospital care.” ■ > EARL GRAY ' ? ' V : \ A veteran of two years service ip the Army Signal Corps, Gray has been assigned to the Detroit police holdup bureau and at the precinct level. His duties with the. Citizens Complaint Bureau have been to investigate charges made against police officers. Wage Boosts Set in Oxford Budget OXFORD — The Village Council has » adopted a $215,687 budget as presented by Manager Don Richter. The budget provides for at least a 10 per cent wage boost for all 16 village employes. Richter said that , because of certain retired debts, the new budget is down almost $4,000 from that of last year. The millage rate of 15 mills operating, one mill debt retirement and 2 mills debt recovery remained unchanged. ’ ★ .. . to, to| *i The council also released village plan-. ners Vilican-Leman from.a monthly $150 retainer agreement, opting instead to use . the firm’s services on an hourly basis. “We need-the' planners tonly a couple times a year now,’’ explained .Richter, . “and the rate on that basis would be $100 per day based on an eight hour day. We haven’t saved money yet but we will in the future.” Black Power Gesture Stirs Senate Clash Pact Let for Building at Stbny The board of commissioners of the Huron-C^nton Metropolitan Authority LANSING (AP) - The clenched fist ,of bla^k power raised over the Michigan Senate has prompted one member to renew his call for a “disaster plan” to ward off possible attack on the upper chamber. » Sen. Robert Huber, R-TrOy, said yesterday that some members of the Michigan State University Black Student .Alliance raised their fists in the now-familiar black power gesture, as they were introduced in the Senate Tuesday night. • to - ■ to - to " As they ‘ were introduced, reported Negro Sen. Basil Brown, Huber turned to a colleague and said: > | r | “Well, I guess I’d better get my gun.” ‘EXEMPLIFIES ATTITUDE’ “That exemplifies, hi^ attitude toward /Until We Face The Attitudes That Exist As. Men, We Are Going To Have Loaded Guns On Both Sides .. / T-Sen. Basil Brown new awarded a $78,470 contract to students and students m general,” Van Kampen Construction ..Co., Detroit, for the erection of a buiktiitg at the boat launching area of Stony Creek MetropolitahPark in Oakland Township. ^ * The building is desi&ied for .year-round use and wiH have heated , restrooms, a lounge”atea and”food' service. .The the Highland Park. Democrat charged, pointihg- out that Huber . chairs the. special Senate ’ comidittee probing cam- X pus unrest. " • ( * ‘t - *-•*: “Until we .face the attitudes that exist as. men,” Bbown said, tlyre are going to Sen. Roger Craig, D-Dearborn, admonished, Huber “not to be terrified by. symbols but by actions.’’' v ’/*?♦': ,} Huber told Senate colleagues a Yugoslavian refugee friend “had, seen the clenched fist come into his country. It was the beginning of the end for freedom of the people of Yugoslavia,” Huber ;said. [t ' ’ ; . fto ‘WEDGE HAS STARTED’ « How the friend sees the clenched fist in/ this country, he said, the fist that. the upper chamber plan defensive tactics against any attempted take-over. He revealed the call for, such .a plan lqst week, citing a take-over of the Cblorado, Senate. « Negro Sen. Goleman'Hfoung, who had introduced the black studoits, raised his fist before the Sqnate and said: “I . replied with Clenched fist— as I do now. It would have been less than polite not to. . * file program have been fired, jmtfe. list building is not expected to b^n upturn load,ed gims on both sides uhidi'/ ‘‘means /terrorism and revolutionary tactics,”™'> ,,i \ 'V-. i l - " to 1 to m The i Senate must, Huber said, “do some. careful thtoking and plan-. ning • (becausd) ■ the opening wedge has now started.” two weeks} mext year. |;w ‘GOING TOO FAR’ A “ "“Ihe setiator is going a little far wben he tefis black people what their symbols, are,” Young contended. “Thq fist is a if .Ipgn of solidarity*^* black power. •< '/ • “But toe clenched fist of'today that means solidari^ might well become toe ' clenched. fist of revolution tomorrow,” be said. m ^cotfld bring) total desthictidn.” repeated an’ eari^ pleq-. tbkt,,, r Young said the Students had visited .the Senate to ask le^slators “to address themselves to their legitimate grievances” regarding discrimination on campuses and other student problems. The students bad come to hear Brown read a letter from 11 of toe state’s 13 black legislators to Gov. William MilUken. Hie lawmakers demanded the governor call tor black history courses in all state colleges and universities and for open channels of communication between tors mid students. Involved in demonstration Hie MSU1 black students recently were involved in a campus: demonstration which ended with the administration', granting them concessions. - If the Senate, were really concerned, Young said, members would - address themselves to guaranteeing stodent freedoms. all Hi1 ■’ ‘W-v c * '★/, * i - Seq. Arthur Cartwri^it, Dtroit* also a \ Negro, Urged that people “stop playing Bcs on both sides of the lanitoff/ iere is extreme militancy pn both -sides,” he. said*, “But the foAMferof-thi-- road pdople — I mean toe good people — are going to have to say fids thing hat** gone too ■tfaifeMr i. 'g; ^ , W THE PONTJAC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 rmmmsi I WOCOHEKK CHARGE IT. Get It On SIMMS INSTANT .CREDIT You con charge all purchases of $10 to $150 on 30-day sa as cash plan or use your MIDWEST BANK CARD. 1 -Hour FREE PARKING in Downtown Mall Simms will pay for 1-hour of parking..Just have ticket stamped at time of purchase. Except on tobacco and ,beverage purchases. \ First Quality Water Repellent ComfertaMe 100% Cotton Men’s Pullover Shirt Rugged Cotton Twill Boys’Camp Shorts At Simms Just Some Dacron and Cottons Included Boys’ Sizes 3 to 7 Permanent Press and Easy Care Cotton at Simms Mock turtle neck blue shirt is set-off by bonds of green at negk and sleeves.• Short raglan sleeves, chest pocket and hemmed bottopi. Machine washable. Sizes S-M-L. — Basement Traditionally styled with accessory loops, snap cargo pocket, 2 zipper pockets and 2 back pockets. Self belt and belt loops. Sizes 6 fa 16. . —Basement Regular $3.98 Famous VAN HEUSEN Permanent Press 1st Duality Men’s Long and Short Sleeve Shirts Verities Button Down and Spread Collars Tattersall Checks and Stripes . Tapered Body and Full Cut This group includes'a knit top shorts set with striped cotton shirt and permanently presses shorts of 50% polyester and 50% cotton, machine washable, a three-piece set with plaid shirt and shorts and white clamdiggers. Pants have elasticized waist bands. All are machine washable cotton, and a. permanent press slacks set with, striped cotton shirt and cotton boxer style slacks. Sizes 3 to 7. ”» — Basement I i \ * d A lightweight jacket * ] . i * you can, wear now and all • through the fall. It's machine washable cotton poplin with elasticized inserts at,waist to make it fit well, two front slash pockets, zipper front, button cuffs and turndown collar. It's water repellent too, for those sudden spring showers. Choose from charcoal, navy or tan in sizes Small, Medium or Large. In tan only. — Basement Reg. $5—$6—$7 each, famous Van Heusen shirts including 0 short sleeve '417'® Ivy style with Vanopress in blue and gold check pattern, a Hampshire House® with regular spread-collar, Vanopress® or a Van Heusen convertible collar white shirt with contoured body and cuffed sleeves. The long sleeve shirts include Van Heusen tattersal checks, stripes and cluster stripes with button down collars, and q white dress shirt with French cuffs, and spread collars. These are all first quality, so stock up now on short and long sleeve shirts in your favorite designs. —Basement Plaid Cotton to Solid Color Boys’ Reversible Jacket •V, * ■n . Machine Washable Water Repellent Delightful Styles for Little Boys and Girls Children’s Summer Wear • Jump All Sets ’ -Sun Dresses • Short Sets fy • Shortens / All First Quality and American Slack Sets Kneeknockers Overalls and others . Seller , jMMf For the young men in the family. A light- ' weight cotton jacket, colorful plaid on one side that reverses to a coordinated solid color on the other. Slash pocket at each side, full zipper closing. Elasticized inserts dt. waist sides. Water repellent finish; and machine washable. Sizes 8 Jo 18. -Basement Values Permanent Press Fabrics Men's and. Young Men's V Jeans h Men’s Dress Jeans a Young Men’s Chinos 15 Denim Jeans s,im Tapered Cut Group of Assorted Simm^ special purchase includes a conglomeration of children's summer play clothes including a 4-pc. shift set with pedal pushers, crop top, arid bloomers, popovers ,and panties, ah applique set with pique top and checked 1 panties, a knee knocker set with a-line top and knee knocker pants, a boys' 4-pc. set of 2 shirts and 2 pairs of pants, a slacks set with striped cotton knit shirt and woven cotton slacks, and many others. Sizes*12 months to sizes 4 but not in ail styles. ——Mail* Floor • Seersucker Shorts *- > e Seersucker Blomii • Knit T-Shirts • •* • First Qualify Nylon or Poplin { Girls' Parka with Hood Values to $6.99 Big Selection of Styles Ladies’ Purses ipl ■ This is d group of W*' Wmli 3- casual slacks M | for young men. •Si:—.lljUfeV Th« Chino slaclw I « , *«• * *?« IP scooped pockets, tip ■ permanent press 1. . ' 85%. cotton- and f|fl 1 / 15% riylon, ma- 'Mlm chine washable. ■ ii|§i Black or tan in .. *'zes 38 to, 34. ~y Denim jeans have \yl . wide belt loops, front scooped pockets, back yoke andpatch pockets. ^Permanently presses blend of 50% polyester and 50% cotton. Machinevwashable, olive oi\ Wieat ^ 28 to 34. The men's.dnpss up jeans are extra slim cut. PtecrtJess Ivy-League style with set in bock pockets, 'Wider belt loops. Permanent press blend of 85% cotton ond* T5% riylon, machine washable. TyfiH weave, \ fc&»«s28«3£ ^^;;lil^^BASEM€NT Regular to $7.9? — this group' includes, beaded pouch bogs ip 5 tone on tone color combinations with beaded, handles and a beaded shoulder bag with adjustable handle. Regulars The cotton poplin parka is machine .Washable, has drawstring hood and elasticized sleeves. Full length metal zipper closes front. Green and white polka d&ts are scattered on O pink ground. The nylon parka is lightweight and windproof, draw-string hood apd zippered front dosing. In blue and white or orange and yellow black design. Sizes M and L in poplin/ and 6x in nylon. -AAA1N FiOOR Choose from a vinyl zipper top bag which can be personalized With initials, a vertically pleated envelope style with soft double handle and a swagger bag With snap lock' on Center. section. Black plastic patent. ' —Main Fleer Carefree summer ^layclothes include striped seersucker blouses, a blend of 55% acetate and 45% cotton, sleeveless style with button front and Peter Pen" Collars. AN are/machine washable. Matching shorts' have elasticized waiSt and 2 shaped pockets, they come in. blue, pink or yellow in sizes 3 to 5x. Short sleeve knit shirts with .shoulder buttons, in blue, -yellow or red pattern in *1^;2-5:ah4'4i | 1 1 MS' -AAain Floor Downtown Pontiac BROTHERS THE PONTIAC PRES ^THURSDAY, MAY lfl, 1969 1-Hour FREE PARKING in Dokntown Mull, Wm Simms witt pay for 1 hour of parking. Just have ticket stamped at time of purchase, except on tobacco and beverage purchase*. , CHARGE m Get It on SIMMS INSTANT CREDIT You can charge all purchases of $10 to $150 on 30-day same as cash or use your MIDWEST BANK CARb. For MOVIES or SUDES-50x50 Inch —I Lenticular Screens Photo Album Holds 60 Photographs Invigorating Aid to Healthy Hair Valmor Electra-Brush For the Gill Graduate - ‘OSTER’ S Portable Hair Diver $35.95 Value at Simms $31.95 Value— Now $9.95 Value at Simms Model TV-33 As shown—holds 60’photos any size to 3Vix3'/z. Ideal for color or black 'n white snaps. Wood grain finished'cover. CAMERAS-Main Fleer . Professional type huir dryer with 4 settings for exact heat control. Adjustable drying arm, no, docking. Luggage type storage case. Regular use' of the Valmor Electro* brush promotes stronger and healthier hair, reduces falling hair due fb tired oil ^glands, massages scalp. Drugs—Main Floor ' v Get extra brilliant projections with LENTICULAR SCREENS... Large 50x50 inch on tripod base. Folds for Morose and carrying. $1 holds In Free Layaway. I Cameras—Main Floor Battery Operated Portable Professional Type Deal Head Cordless Hygienic 4-Brush Sunbeam Electric Toothbrush with Up and Down Motion $29.9Stalue $19.95 Value at Simms $20.95 Value— Now At Simms Just' With FREE 2-BRUSH BONDS As shown—famous ARGUS ELECTROMATIC slide viewers for 126 and 35mm slides. Holds up to 30 slides and electric drive makes it fast and easy for your viewing of slides. Get it on Instant Credit or*$l holds in layaway. CAMERAS—Main Floor nm v | Promote healthy gums and teeth MI_L, .8aiwr I y with this Sunbeam electric cordless "" ill1"1111 / . toothbrush with the revolutionary new tip and down and around motion. Cleans 42% better than ordinary hand brushing. With 6 personal brushes for each member of the family. Molded top keeps brushes clean. You can soothe both tired ciching feet at once" with this Dr. Scholl's dual head electric foot massager. Just rest your feet on the head and gentle massag© does the rest* Drugs—Main Floor , 11 1 _ Mayfair # 1607 \—''■'"“’"reel-to-reel recorder is battery operated, comes complete with batteries, earphone, mike and sampler tape. As shown—hours of recording .fun with this compact unit—goes where you. go for recording or playback. Charge it on Instant Credit or $1 holds irvfree layaway. 6-Transistor Solid State PORTABLE CARTRIDGE with Telescopic Antenna Finishes the Job Your Toothbrush Begins $28.95 Value $29.95 Vhlue $15.95 Value ZJjStJd’29" HIPSTER 11VJ ■ TAPE PLAYER'|1^ Model 1442 J.J. *39.95 Tape Player and Radio UJjM Model #1443—Save, $15.60 . . . . . , . . . . .PRE-RECORDED TAPES 169 Model B617 with oh-off. volume control, push-to-talk switch, speaker thfcro-phone . crystal controlled circuit, 100MW... many uses at work or play. ' $1 holds or get it on Instant V Credit here at .Simms. ■ -/ CAMERAS—Main Floor '—Water Pik oral hygiene appli--' * ance pumps out a 'vigorous Stream of water to surge and . circulate aver, under and around your gums and teeth. Washes^ away loose unseen bits of food from hard to reach places. Leaves your gums feeling alive and tingling. f _> Drugs—Main Flbor No more mess or stained fingers .from polishing shoes, even the .Children can do it, with this General Electric polisher with power handle that picks jup and releases polishing brushes. Handy case features combination handle and footrest. S&flSk Drugs—Main Floor Tape Player—selections CAMERAS-Main Fluor BAIA120 Motorized IHSTAVIEW Ideal lor the Youngsters $ 1.29 value, 4-oz. tube, by Clairol $1.98 value, big 32-oz. size mouthwash Gillette Foamy Shave lie 79cvolue,6:IA-oz.ilze,3type»....................... A A Right Guard Deodorant 119 $2.29 value, 13-oz. decorator can....... A Gelusil Antacid 102 39c value, Hippies for little girls; $39.95 . Value Vahie 25c value, in pill box container $1.49 volue, 12-oz^uld antacid French Spray Perfume $7.50 Value, 1 Vi-dram imported! from France. ..,, French Toilet Water Wilkinsonslades 77c Vitalis Hair Groom Ii9 I $1.79 value, 12-oz.size, grooms without grease......... A Halo Hair Spray 90c 79c volue, 12-oz. regular or extra hold • •••••••••«••••* -WW Playtex Living Gloves fine $1 .$9 value. With extra right liShd glove.•• • • ••.*.* • ••• U Fact Tooth Paste 9QC Electrically powered editor-spjicer for rfe^titaf 8mm or Super 8 film. Takes up 16 ”400 feet reef capacity. Get it on Instant Credit or $1 holds fn free layaway. CAMERAS—Main Floor AC electrld/plug-in phonograph takes and plays all records — 4-speed motor. Comes in its own self-contained case. $2.0Q value, Vi-oz. imported from France. Repeat Sale-SMITH-CORONA 12-Transistor Solid State $2.95 value, pkg. 225, pain relievefs Energine Spot Remoyer 89c valu., l4-oz.‘cloamng fluid.... Phisohex Skin Cleanser $3.04 valuer 16-oz. antibocterial sudsing 79c value, king size 4.5-oz. tube f99.50 Value - Reg. $117.50 gBL Value—Now: Bactine First Aid Spray $1.08 valiw. 4-oz, for cuts and brulws..............«« Miles Nervine Capsules $1.98 valu., 30‘s, rellev.1 nervous tension... Wernets Dpntu Creme 83c valu*, 4.2-oz.eeonomy size.....’.»........ Fixodent Denture Holder $1.19 vakie, 2'A-oz. holds dentures Snugly.. $1.79 value, 15-oz. liquid hair tonic $1.10 value, 14-oz. menthol or regular. 98c value, 500 reg. 5-grain USP CHARGE % Itm BKfig • 'Crowncorder' cassette . tape recarder with built-in- FM-AM radio for complete sound enjoyment . .. tape on it,, play cassette tapes on it or enjoV FM and Am radio broadcasts. Full- 12-transistor solid statev un^t model CRC9100F. Charge it or use our free layaway. * j v ^ " > , EmBShH CAMERAS-Main Floor 59c valve, 3-oz. size black or brown Citilsun Cold Medication 7Qc $1.79volue, pkg,16hot lemon drink.... ® W ’ Pepsodent Tooth Paste lOc Me value, ..»V IV •’ Pppsodent Tooth Brush 97c ndvlt, hqtd or mednim texture A......i W S Nozain First Aid Cream 90e pPS*11S® $ 1.55 value; medicated makeup from'Nqxzema The 'Sterling' port-||1 || able by ‘ Smith-Cor- ;V* > ^ . v’ ona- 9ives y°u taofe features for less d&llatt here at SimmF. Full 12-inch carriage1,makes ^ 6ih ideal portable for home ana office use. Contp, son* oil this Sterling portable at Nnxzema Skin Cream $l^5volM,4Mt 4eo«e«Wtd •oftene. S,'V Drug*—Main Floor DOWNTOWN PONTIAC, ‘ „**.*•: THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, jVIA% 15, 1989 By JERY T. BAULCH • Associated Press Newafeaturfes WASHINGTON -r. Somei people won’t grab a bargain even when it’s almost free. For instance* 38,000 soldiers who are passing up the 910,000 Serviceman’s fmjjnBMfm| Group Life Insurance that HHHHK costs p|p $2 a month, not pjaWB a very big bite even in a re- MgMBiB cruit’s pay, ' Wmm_ It’s not that they’re ne> glecting to sign up for it, they have to go out of their ||Bj way to avoid getting the |j protection, The insurance is ■HhBhH automatic unless' service-. man or woman puts iti writ-ing he doesn’t want it at all or wants to take 15,000 and pay $1 a month. Of the ?8,000 In the Army, 25,000. have said they want no part of the insurance. The other 13,000 went for only half of it, More ROTC Officers Despite the shakiness of ROTC at. Harvard and Stanford and rumblings at some other universities, more commissioned officers will be coming off college campuses this spring than in previous years. The Army alone expects 16,607 graduates to be commissioned 2nd lieutenants compared with 14,176 a year ago and 10,727 in 1967. Counting the Air Force and Navy, the colleges and universities are expected to produce 25,0000 officers this year compared with 18,000 last year. As L noted in a recent column on ROTC, the Air Force has a waiting list of 100 colleges wanting ROTC but it has all the units it needs now. In fact, it plans to end ROTC units at eight schools over the next three years because they aren’t producing enough officers. It’s not linked directly to the pro-* tests against ROTC-. i Next school year, the Army is aiming to step up its ROTC pilot training program to meet the growing need for Regular Army aviators. There are 980'students enrolled this school year ahd the Army expects 1,500 ,to participate next school year. * Recently, I noted that the Air Force plans to experiment next fall with women in ROTC at four colleges. But in a way eight Temple University coeds have stolen a march. The eight Can’t qualify for Commissions but they were permitted to march with the men this year shouldering Ml rifles and going to class with the male cadets. Why did they ask permission to do this? Even if a man doesn’t want to'make a wife, mother, brother, girlfriend, cousin or charity the beneficiary thejre are advantages of having it for later protection. There .are no, exemptions on military hazards such as civilian policies have. And , if a man is serious injured or contracts a • disease in service he can convert* to a civilian policy when he gets out without being required to pass a physical exam. Conscientious Objector The Army has cut some of the red tape 1 for processing applications for men in service seeking conscientious objector status, whether they want to be discharged or get a noncombat role in the Army. -★ ■ ★ | a Now such applications will be sent directly to the Pentagon from military posts , or division level. Previously they bad to wend their way through the in-between military channels, which often was time-consuming and frustrating to the applicant. S Christmas!s Coming The Red Cross notes that even though Christmas is still more than 200 days away, its volunteer are geraing up for the fourth straight year to get “Operation Shop Early” rolling. The early start is necessary to get the packages to Vietnam in time- The volunteers are enlisting the help of community service organizations, religious groups, business firms and local industries to help make the brightly-colored, drawstring gift bags and to provide gifts to fill them. Richie Sez. "Shop Richardson's for real SAVINGS on all your DAIRY NEEDS" The Vitality HEALTH FOOD, Drink Plenty for LASTING ENERGY GRADE "A” HOMOGENIZED Linda Comalli, 19, of Jekinstown, Pa., “had no reason for joining. I guess I thought it would be fun being with a lot of men.” Mk ' ' V Revenue Ruling Many firms pay the difference between what a reservist or National Guard gets for two.weeks active duty aqd his civilian pay. But apparently there are, some firms that also pay their executives while they are on up to two years active duty. mifcit. Vi Gal. Ctn. or Glass GRADE "A” HOMOGENIZED MILK Plastic Jug The Internal Revenue Service recently reminded these executives, that such fringe pay is subject to income tax even if their firms sent it to. the executives’ wives as a gift. And the firms have to report the payments if they total more than.$600 a year. Military Hospital Jam The military hospitals, at least many of them, are having to cut back some of the services offered retired people and dependents of active duty people because of the job of taking .care of men wounded or getting diseases in Vietnam. ■ It’s not a bed shortage. There just aren’t enough medical people to handle the increasing load. m dices en ergy The Red Cross, has sent to leach of its chapters suggested gift lists, separate ones for men ind women. The lists are just about the same as last year. . The bags will be sewn during the spring and summer while the gifts are collected. The bags will be filled in late summer ready for shipment by Sept. 30. Happy Sailors The Navy is managing to assign more enlisted men tos hore billets of their choice, a recent survey shows. A Bureau of Naval Personnel report shows that in the six months aiding in February at least half got their'first-choice U.S. shore assignment. And 38 to 46 per cent got their first-choice city. . ★. ★ ★ y Jim Parker, the Navy Times expert on this, says this is because of & more personalized attention to requests under the rating control system introduced a couple of yearsago. ' Also he says, sailors are being made more aware of what openings are available so they won’t try for dead ends. 'OR BREAKFAST, i^iSERVE. - v But the Army surgeon general says maternity benefits probably won’t be affected. It will vary, from hospital to hospital, but sbrgical and orthopedic treatment probably will be the main service confined to active duty personnel. Air Force Times noted recently that oneof the big problems is the increasing number bf retirees and dependents seeking hopsital treatment, not only in Air Force hospitals but in all —-i since retirees can go to a military hospital of any service. ★ ★ ★ In the past five years, hospital admissions of Air-Forces retirees and their dependents have risen 40 per cent, And the boom continues. STRAWBERRY RICHARDSON'S FARM DAIRY BREAD farahI 2a Enjoy your leisure time in bold*, fashiort-afccenting White slacks by Farah. They're So great, we think youfll Wear them every chance you get. fiMjwoo MAY: . *' foamy Custard Peach Parfaits Combine Vt cue sugar, 2 Tbsp. flour, Vt tsp. each salt and mace. Slowly stir in t1/* cups milk./Cook over medium heat, stir constantly until thickened. Bland a small amount of hot mixture into 2 egg yolks; return alt to pan. Cook 1 minute; stir in 1 tsp. vanilla.; Cover and cool thoroughly. Beat 2 egg whites until soft peaks form; beat in 2 tbsp., sugar. Fold whites into milk, mixture; then fold in »/z cup whipping cream, whipped. ChiH. Alternate custard and sliced ding peaches in serving dm:% BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MILE §r'. SHOPPING CENTER-' ||| servings. FARM DAIRY STORES 5838 M-15 Clarkston 535* Commerce Road 7350 Highland M-59 Plaza 3414 Huron at Eliz. Lake Rd. 4342 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains 2466 Orchard Lk Rd. Sylvan Lake 4100 Baldwin Ave., Pontiac 1109 Joslyn Ave., Pontiac 954 Pontiac Trail Walled Lake 600 South Lapeer Rd. FONTT AC PRESS, THURSDAY, MAY 15v Loser More Like Winner By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY; An article appeared in the local newspaper stating that girls between the ages of 16 and 24, who have never 'been married, were eligible to participate in a contest! I applied, was accepted, and after several rehearsals was turned away because ! had a year-old son. { am working my way through college, t ||uji A. eheer leader, college news reffort^, ifJoftball pitcher,, - volley ball captain, band student, basketball player, am on the debate team, take' ballet Masons, and have a superior rating in longing.1 JR , I work after school, keep my own apartment, and, take care of my child. What more can I do to correct my mistake of having a baby out, of wedlock? What must.I do to gain a place in society? I do not Have a bad reputation. Only a baby. MARION W., LAWTON, OKLA DEAR MARION: You may not have won this “contest,” but if your impressive list of activities is any index to your determination and ability, you look Wee a sure winner in the more important contests of life. DEAR ABBY? The letter from the wives and mothers. Their greatest probe lem is adjusting to the bigotry so predominate in American society. It’s not important, what a person has been, It's what a» person is — and is becomtog-that's important. God’s forgiveness is just as sure for the prostitute as it is for the man or woman who has indulged in premarital hex. Your Compassion for the “Vietnamese' prostitute”; was- noted and' ap- = predated by this—= . „ ■ KOREAN VETERAN K. PontlM Prau Photo by Ed Vandtrvwrp vices, j$ins Auxiliary members, Mrs: Hobert Anderson, (Silver side Drive, (left) and Mrs: John F. Allen, goats'. Ttiumektof,'SB a tour of the %y-; • i> H <• . h ' Funds raised by the Oakland County Bar Association Auxiliary paid for the instrument the girl resident of Oakland County Children’s Village is playing. James. W. Hunt, director of Juvenile Ser- Jaycette Unit to Get Charter DEAjR ABBY: Yesterday, in a space reserve^ fpr a paid “ad” the following item appeared in our local newspaper: “Mr. and Mrs, —v wish to publicly apologize for their belated thank you to all their friends and relatives for the very fine gifts they received for their wedding of February, 1968.” Would you please give me your interpretation of this-item? Thank you. .. CURIOUS IN N.Y.’ DEAR CURIOUS: It is plainly a public “thank you” for unacknowledged wedding gifts. Nearly a year and a half late! It could have been placed there by. the newlweds themselves, or even by embarrassed parents. While if. is certainly an unconventional thanks, it beats no Charter officers will be installed. They thanks at all. are Mesdames: James St. Louis,', presi- * * * dent; James A. Cavins, Jr.,1 vice Everybody has a problem. Whaf’s president; TOm Lawson and David yours? For a personal reply write to VanderLaan, secretaries and Mrs. Gene Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, King, treasurer. Directors are Mrs. Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9 Pontiac, Mich. James Weaver and Mrs. Duane Carr. 48056 and enclose a stamped,/self-ad-Clarkston Area Jaycettes, the dressed envelope. 7, sponsoring auxiliary, will be guests at Hate to Write letters? Send $1 to Abby the dinner, with Mrs: Robert Tilley act- in care ot The Pontiac Preiss, Dept. E-ing as mistress of ceremonies. 600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056 for Dinner arrangements are in the hands Abby’s booklet, “How to Write Letters of Mrs. Robert C. Lewis. for All Occasions.” Greenfield Village '3or" Site of Meeting Qjve Children's Village Extras The newly-organized Auburn Heights Area Jaycee Auxiliary will receive its at a dinner to be state charter Sati held at Sylvan GjSi Country Club. Robert C. Lewis, president of the Auburn Heights Area Jaycees, will .welcome the 21 charter members. Mrs. A1 Formicola Of Rochester; past president of the state auxiliary, will present the charter and address the new chapter. Once again, the Oakland County Bar Association Auxiliary has given a donation to Oakland County Chi 1 drens Village. Each year, the Auxiliary sponsors a luncheon-fashion show and other benefits to raise money. Officials at Childrens Village are free to use these funds at their discretion; but particularly for extras and emergencies not covered by public funds. In the past, the money has been used Auxiliary officers for 1969-70 were elected at a recent meeting. i Mrs. John O’Brien, Berkley, is president with Mrs' Robert Parenti, Oxford, as president-elect. Mrs. William Lang, Troy, and Mrs. Donald Miller, Bloomfield Hills, are secretaries; Mrs. Joseph Kosek, Rochester, is treasurer. Others elected are Mesdames: Jerome Mulligan^ Thomas Raguso, Ivan Forbes, John AUen and Donald Adams. Delegates to Lawyers Wives of Michigan are Mrs- O’Brien, Mm- Parenti, Mrs. Leonard Peres and Mrs. Gerald/Bartush. Dr. Donald JShelley, president of Greenfield Village and Henry Ford Museum, will speak on “Collecting American Pottery” in the Village on May-21: His audience will be members of the^Michigan State Quester Organization. Conrad Work Is Topic “The Heart of Darkness” by Joseph Conrad will be dismissed at the Friday meeting of Waterford Great Books. Mrs. Earl B. - Katz will lead the discussion with Thomas Ellingscui as author’s ad-yyate.. j v.y y The 8 p.m. meeting in the CAI Building is open to any interested person. The day-long meeting includes a coffee at 9 a m. followed by' tours of the Museum and the: Village. Luncheon Will . , f.- !< be served in Lovett Hall. • Buy bedroom furniture for the girls in the hqpor room which is a room used as a reward for good behavior; '?■' • Purchase -material for the girls, to make clothing; W.iBuyya party dreSs for a girl in a junior high school choir so she could, participate in special events; t Buy a musical instrument for one of thegirlgwho showed musical talent; V i • Purchase a projector; • Assist high school seniors who wish to go on class trips; the students earn half the fee. - Fund-Raiser Friday A benefit cup and saucer dessertarid card party at First Federal Savings of Oakland is Scheduled Friday at 7 p.m. by the Pontiac Women’s Club. Proceeds WiH go to the nurses’ scholarship' fund, GiflsTown and other projects. Mrs. Earl Hoskins is general chairman. Questers is a national organization .of people wbo are interested in: and dedicated to the study of antiques and the preservation of . historical sites. Michigan has 64 chapters and a membership of 1,000. f ' when you look at thin Spanish set by Broyhill. The surprise is that you can have the dresser, mirror, chestfand panel head-board not for the regular *319 price but for mdy aifefe. ja ’ p T7; :u ^ I r MSS - M ; | | ■BK Jem* Swilw ■X"- SeemftiQ quite at ease .infair\'’T:), are Auburn .freight? Area.Jwtee Aimlw^}^^h ‘ tered Saturday.' Mrs; deity E. Powell HeftfWf the bfrs (center) Mtsi Janies St. i&Mpi Callege Jab- sponsoring ClarMston chapterlends a hand, td t he nu$i and (right^ M^.Jam&s. A. Cavins JjTs of intrepid presfddnt of the Auburn Heights Area Jay-Havens Lam, • Kober^:-jLe»ms: of Sommvi^l Street, I CLARENCEVILLE 1/ CLARKSTON 2 SPORTS—TENNIS—KNAUS Singes Kan Olson (C'vllla) def. Kelly, <4, 6-2; Kirk Boettie (Clark) del. G. Sea lock, 6-4, *•]; Dick Roalle (Clark) daf.. Shlffman, 6*1, 6-1, 4 DeuMes Jim Everhert-Jay Haddad (C'ville) def. Waterbury-Grlfftths, 6-0, 6-0; R. Cook-T. Leeds (C'ville) def. Sutter^Lawrence, LAHSER 61H, ANDOVER 56(6 (L^SST^""* w* Uwl, ..W.iJ.mp-Norm Spooner (A), West (L), Bowers (A) height 5-10. ,,,-aril-'i-awifirt-jAi M" F® Ryan 1 0 0. 0 1 0 Radatz ............, .. . i .2 2 o 0 o 3 HBP—by G. Peters, Freehan. T—2:19. A—14,140. Blairs Bat, Glove Ij&yj is Vi$ V ’ V | | 1 wmt Save Day for Birds ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS UFI — Baltimore Orioles Manager Earl Weaver wants only one man in cento:; field in a fight situation —Paul Blair. 1 Blair responded to the confidence Wednesday night with e game-saving catch of a would be extra base hit that Would have won or tied the game in the ninth inning. | Instead, thd Orioles held,off the Minnesota Twins for a 9-8 victory—five raw driven in off Blair’s hot bat. ; Blair smashed two home runs and a two-run Single, which accounted for the winning run. $ tional catch,” said Martin, whose team had battled back from a 9-2 deficit. “We should have won if he wouldn’t have caught it, and he shouldn’t have caught it if the fence was padded. He climbed the fence after it.” BALTIMORE MINNESOTA abrh bt abrhbl Belanger ss 5 0 11 Uhlaendr cf 5 1 3 0 Blair cf 5 2 3 5 Caraw 2b 5 2 10 FRoblnan rt SOI 0 Oliva rf 62 32 DMay rf - 0 0 O 0, Klllebrtw 3b 5 0 1 o i Powell lb 5 0 2 0 Mandat; if; *, ill 2 Rettenmd If 3 2 0 0 Reese tb { 2 11 0 Hendrcks c 3 2 10 Naftfat 3b 2 111 Etchebrn c 2 O 6 0 Cardenas ss 4 0 12 BRablnon 3b 5 12 2 Rosaboro c 3 0 0 1', DJohnson 2b 4 1 0 0 Tlschnskl c 10 1 o Phoebus p 4 12 1 RWeMHn p 0 0 0 0 Richer! p oooo Ronlck-ph , l o o o Hall p 0 0 0 0 Walters p 0 0 0 0 MLopez p 0 0 0 0 BMIIIar p *. 0 0 0 0 Watt p 0 0 0 0 Alllaon ph lots Grzendap 00 0 0 Tovar pH 2 0 0 0 Perrnoskl p 0 00 0. Total 419 129 Total 40013 0 . Batttmare ....... oio 130 000—9 Mwaaaeta ......000210050—0 ■ E—Klllebrew 2, Carew, Rettenmund, DP—Minnesota 1. LOB—Baltimore 0, Minnesota 6. 2B—B.Robinson, Phoebus, Reese,' Carew) Nettles. HR—Blair 2 (f), Oliva (41. - IP H R ER BB SO . Phoebus (W,4-0) ... 7 2-3 8 7 6 1 I Richer) ......... 0 1 110 0 Hall ............ 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 M.Lopez .......... 1-3 2 0 0 0 0 Watt ............. 2-3 0 0 0 0 0 R.Woodson (L.1-1) .3 5 5 2 1 1 Walters, ..........114 3 4 4 2 1 B.Miller ......... 2-3 2 0 0 0 1 Grzanda _______...3 2 0 0 0 1 Perranoskl ....... 1 0 0 0 0-0 Save—Watt.- T-3:04. A—17,696. Andretti Gears for Pole Bid THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, MAY 15, 1969 D-—1 Qualifying Runs Start Saturday for Indy '500' WTHS Clips Clarkston Mott Trips Captains INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. UP) — Mario Andretti raised the year’s top speed at the Indianapolis Motor Spfeedway to ,171.657 miles per hour oh a practice lap Wednesday and remained the only driver officially over the 170 imp h. mark. k k k Good weather, after several days of rain, sent 40 cars onto the track. The first day of qualifying for the 53rd 500-mile race is Saturday. 3 TIME WINNER GOOD DAY AT PLATE — Infielder Rodger Strader of Waterford Mott produced three runs with a double and single as the Corsairs upended Kettering, 7-0, Wednesday for their first varsity win over WKHS or WTHS, both of whom own one-run decisions over Mott (7-4) previously this spring. Three Sites Listed San Diego Gjad to Leave Banks Sophomore Bill Poe and junior Rodger Strader can be excused today by their Waterford Mott classmates if their caps are too sinall for their heads. They were the key performances Wednesday as the Corsairs (7-4) surprised Kettering, 7-0, for their first varsity decision over either of their Waterford rivals. Earlier this season Mott dropped one-run verdicts to both WKHS and Waterford Township. ★ ★ ★ WTHS, meanwhile yesterday, was ex- Prep golfers take time out tomorrow to launch their bids for state championships. Three of the 13 regional tournaments are slated at area courses. Lahser Trackmen I® pf 51>;•■■■ ■ gf |M vp! || Outrun Andover in First Meeting Lahser^ Knights drew first blood as they initiated track coinpetition with Andover Wednesday in a Bloomfield Hills neighborhood athletic rivalry. The unbeaten Class B power pulled away from the Class A Barons in the final mile relay to take home a 61%-56% victory. Andover is now 4-3. The Barons swept the shot put and took first place in all four field events. They added only the high hurdles and half mile in the racing events. 1 * k k : • _ ■ ! Harry Perry doubled in the 100 and 220 for Lahser with :10.3 and :23.4 timings. Bill Halted ran a : 52.2 quarter-mile for j)HL. Lahser now will try for its first Class B regional trade trophy in a showdown Friday at New Baltimore Anchor Bay" Fith rugged Cranbrook, West Bioomfield and Oxford also among tte favorites. Burroughs Farms near Brighton will entertain Classes A, B, and C-D, while Glen Oaks in Farmington will play host to A and B teams. Romeo Golf Course will stage a ‘B’ tourney. ★ : # ★ On the links yesterday,, Brighton whipped West Bloomfield at Burroughs Farms, 155-159, while Lake Orion downed Romeo at Bald Mountain, 173-195. , Bill Brafford posted a 38 and Louis Meldman a 39 to pace West Bloomfield .(11-4), whfie Darrel Denkhaus carded a 37 for, Brighton. Hoyt Frericks^checked in with a 38 and Bruce Rupert a 40 to lend Orion. Doug Carl managed a 43 for Romeo. ' 1 ‘ Clarkston Net Team Clarkston’s tennis team, after building up a string of 16 wins, now has a streak of another kind going — a losing one. The Wolves suffered their second • setback in.a row yesterday mid their sec-jond in 16 outings this season in falling before Livonia Clarenceville in a Wayne-Oakland League duel, 3-2. h. The Joss left Clarkston with a 9-1 record in league competition and in a tie. with .Bloomfield Hills Andover for file lead. Those two were slated to meet this afternoon and tangle again tomorrow in theleague meet at Andover. CHICAGO (J) — The San Diego Padres are glad to leave jChicago and get away from that old gaffer, Ernie Banks. Everything happened to the Padres in their three-game set with the first-place Cubs who now have a four-game Winning streak. / “I’m happy we don’t have to see Banks again until a couple of weeks When they come to San Diego,” said Manager Preston Gomez. k, # ★ Monday the Padres Were'blanked 2-0 on Fergie Jenkin’s five-hitter., The next day they were humiliated With 19-0 smashing as Banks hit two homers and a double, and drove in seven runs. Wednesday they bowed 3-2. Banks’ hopier— his seventh of the year — off Johnny Podres led off the ninth inning and tied the game 2-2. SAN DIEGO CHICAGO ab r h bl ab r h bl -1 DaVanon 2b 3 0 0 0 KMSinger it 4 0 1 ( w RPena ss 4 0 1 0 Spangler rf 3 0 0 0 Arcla ss oooo Regan p oooo Rebarger p 0 0 0 0 Beckart ph 10 0 0 Gonzalez cf 4 0 2 0 Nottebart p 0 0 0 0 Ferrara If 4 0 0 0 BWIIIams If 4 0 0 0 Gaston cf 0 0 0 0 Santo 3b 4 12 1 OBrown rf 4 0 0 0 Banks 1b 4 111 AOavIs.lb 2 0.0 0 Hundley c 3 0 10-Stahl 1b lioo NOIlvar ib 3110 Spiezio 3b 3 0 2 0 Phillips cf 2 0 0 0 Cannizzro c 2 1 1 1 Hands p 2 0 0 0 Sisk p 2 0 0 0 Abernthy p 0 0 0 0 Morrell ph 00 0 1 Htekman if- oooo Padres p 0 0 0 0 WSmfth ph .1011' Total , 29 2 6 2 Tdlal 31 3 7 3 One out when winning run scored. San Diego ....... «01 0 00 1 0 9—2 Chicago ...........000 100 #02—3 DP—Chicago 2. LOB—San Diego 4, Chicago 8. 2B—Santo, Kessinger, Spiezio, N.OIIver. HR—Cannizzaro (2i, Santo (7), Banks (5). S—N.OIIver. J - , IP H R ER BB SO . Slek - t 3 1 1 2 2 Podres 111,3-3) . . . 2 1-3 3 2 2 2 O Reberger ......... 0 1 O 0 0 0 Hands ............. 4 2-3 6 2 2 2 6 Abernathy,/) ...... 1-3 0 0 0 2 0 .Ragan .............,1i .0,0-0 • 0 / /NStSierf (w,i-o) ;# I o o o o o —(USDA) — Egg prices paid per dozen by first receivers (Including U.S.): Grade A jumbo 36-30, extra largo 31 to-34to; largo 80to-33to; medium 24-25; 17-C amen DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT A 79'4 +1% 19 ?9to lfto 19% — to 21 51 50% sm — to 26 Mto 2»to 20% + to 3* 32% 32to 32to ... 14 21% 21 to 21 to + to 21 54to 54 54 + >7 23 21)4 23to — ft 35 I4to 34to — to <9 41 40to 41 It 30to 30to 30to 10 SI to Itto 51 to — to 7 29U 29to 29to -f to 70121 121 12* -f- to 54 33 32to 33 AbbtLab 1.10 ACF Ind 2.40 Ad Mlllis .20 Address 1.40 Admiral AetnaLIf 1.40 AlrRedtn 1.50 AlcanAlu l.io Aiiogcp .nig AllagLud 2.40 AHagPw t.2( AllledCh i.2o AHMStr 1.4* Allis Chaim Alcoa 14* AMBAC .50 Amerada 3 Am Alrlin .00 ArhBdcst 1.50 Am Can 2.20 11 73 .73 73 ACfySug 14 AmCyan 1.2. AmEIPw 1.50 1.25 Am Enka Hem* 1.40 Am Hasp .22 DETROIT LIVESTOCK OETROIT (API—(USDA)— Wednesday's final livestock: Hogs too. U.S. 1 and 3 200-220 lb. borrows and gilts, tt.75-2i.25. U.S. Tend 3 220-240 lb., 23-21.75; U.S. S and f tp 270 lb., 21.7523. Cattle 250. Choice 900-1.200 slaughter steers, 31 JO-34; mixed good and choice 3bJ0-31.50; good, 2530.50. _____tt JL.„ _ Vealers 50. High choice and prim*, 42-44; choice, 3542; good, 3530, standard, Sheep 300. Choice* and prime slaughter lambs, 90-110 lb., 30-31.50. Cull to good slaughter ewes, 7-11. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (API — (USDA) — Hogs receipts Tuesday were 3,500; butchers ware 50 to 75 higher; active; 1-2 200-225 1b butchers 23.7524.00; around 300 head at 24.00; 1-3 205240 lbs 23.0523JO; 2-3 195250 lbs 22J523.00; 2-4 255270 lbs 21.7522.50 54 275300 lbs 21.0521.75; sows 50 higher activo; 14 355400 lbs 19.7520.25; 1-3 405 500 lbs 194519.75; 2-3 505600 lbs 11.75 If JO; boors under 400 lbs 17.5511.00; over 400 lbs 11.051940. Cattle 900; calves none; oil classes active, steers strong to 50 higher; heifers strong; cows and bulls fully steady. Choice 1,0051,250 lb slaughter steers yield gride 2 to 4 334535.00; mixed good and choice 32.053340. _ Am Motors AmNatGas 2 AmPhot ,09g A Smelt 1.90 Am Std 1 . Am TOT 2.40 Am Tobac 2 AM* Cp .30 AMP Inc .4* Ampex Corp Anacond 2.50 AnchHoc 140 AnchHock wl AncorpNSv 1 ArmcoSt 3.20 Armco Stl wl AshldOil 1.20 ArmstCk 1.60 Assd DG 1.20 Atl Rich 1.10 Atlas CK .10 Atlas Corp Avco Cp 1.20 5< 55to 5* + to 7 3!to 31 to 31 to + to IDS 33to 33to 33% + to 29 30to 3lto 304S 2 am 3ito 31 — to 23 AIM 60to 60to 4 37to 374S 37to + to 33 24 ttto 24 72 54 534S 5344 + to 44 llto llto ltto + to 3 40V* 40to 40to — to 13 134S 13 to 13to 30 39to 39VS 39to 14 434a 43to 4344 + to 210 57to 57VS 574S — to 34 37to 374* 374S 30 3244 32V* 32V* — to 12 44 44 44 — to 55 434S 43to 43VS — to 47to 47% + to 5 if 1 45 45 45 tor halters yield grade 2, to 4 3'J532. utility and commercial cows 21.0522.75i high dressing utility 23.00; cannartana cutters tf JO-21.75; utility and commorctel bulls 24J527.D0. Shorn nan*; not. onougl) of -any clan for feat tost. • morl 39to 3fto 3fto ..... f 664S 664s 6644 _ VS 1 334S 334S 334s + to 25 5244 52to 524S + to * 10 SO *0 — to 66 7to 47to 47V* + VS 112 12544 12444 125 —1 16 30to 30V* 30VS ... 155 Tto Tto 7VS ... 21 33to 33 33 70 llto llto ltto -I- to 22 15544 15544 15544 + 44 Salts Gian Aldon . Global Marin Goodrich ,1.72 Goodyear .15 GrocfeCo 1.50 Granltac stl Grantw 1.40 Gt ABP 1.30 Gt Not Ry 3 Gt wost Pint GtWnUnit .90 GratnGnt .94 GrumnAlrc I Gulf Qll 1.50 GulfStaUt .00 GulfWInd .40 HaHIburt 1.05 Harris Int 1 HOCIOMng .70 Hare Inc I -HawFack JO Hof Etectrn Hoildylnn Holldyln HollySug 1.20 Hdmaafk* IdahoPw 1.40 Ideal Basic 1 Imp Cp Am INA Cp .1.40 Ing ■■■ Stl 2 InterlkSt 1.00 IBM 3JO int Harv 1 jo -int Minor JO IMNIck 1 JOa Int Pap 1.50 Iht TAT .95 Iowa Boot lewaPSv 1.32 33 1*0 ■■■ 7 3*to 3*44 347/a + to 3f 4544 45to 4514 — VS 129 334S 32% 33VS — to 11 37to 37to 37)4 14 21% 21to 21% 7 43 43 41 - to 17 294S 29% 294S .. 3 52 to 52 Va 52VS — 47 33to 23VS 2IVS —lto 41 70 49% 70 3 34% 3*7/, MVS 31 2144 »to 21% — % 19 34Va 33to 33to — to 53 44to 44% 44V* ... 4 2* 2* 24 —, VS 3ito iito iito + vs • 55 5444 547/3.4-to * 74 73to 74 4 to 9 ttto 23 Mto 4 to 10 4*to- 44to 4*to 4 to 12 tlto Hto ttto 4 to 154 21 2) 21 4 to 20 ttto ttto MM — to 4 ttto ttto ttto — to 12 ltto 3*4* 3*44 - » 7 13414 134 134 — to f 44 4344 fits 25 ttto ttto ttto —I— 10 3244 ttto ttto 13 Kto ltto 1443 29 17 1*44 1*44 — to 59 364* ttto ttto 4 to 34 4IVS 4714 4744 4 44 54 37to 37 37 a- to 2 ttto 3*44 36 4 to 4 332% 331 331 —3 tt ttto 3»4 tt 4 to 46 II 17% II x!3 397/, 397'a 397* 4 v, S3 4444 4 Blink Romo Bur) Ind 1.40 Burroughs 77% 76V* 77% 41 6 45to 45to 45to — > 14 40 47VS 47V* — 4* 101 2544 25 25 — 81 U- 3544 35V* — 4* 20 45VS 45V* 45to 49 7944 7fto' Tfto 41to lit ttto 33 tt 21 ttto ttto 32% — to 1* 65V* 6544 fim ..... 43 24to 24 2444 — to 4 29to 29to 29to 4 to 17 23VS ttto 2394 ..... 3 5044 50V* 5094 4 to 39 1354 1344 13V4 4 to 30 41 40V* 407/4 — to ......130to 130% —3 9 W94 l: American Stocks NEW YOR K(AP) - American Stock Exchange selected noon prices: Seles . Net c, 14 1744 17to 17to —to 30 33 3244 32% 4 to 140 10 944 9V4 4 to 4 2794 27to 27to - to 17 3594 359* 35to — to 521 3544 1794 30 4 94 19 494 4to 4to ... 1 109* 3094 3044 4 to 512 23V4 ttto 23V* 4 44 1271 19% 10 1914 41to 32 944 944 944-3-14 111 19 1144 1544 — to 254 14 llto 15to 10 ttto 3744 31 1 1244 1244 1244 4 to 2 2044 2044 2044 ... 40 15% 15% 154* — Vi 17 7tor 4% 7 .... 43 944 914 994 4 44 7 1944 19% lfto — '/« 11% 1144 11% 4 V4 Aerolft .500 Air West Am Petr ,40g AO Indust Ark Best ,15g ArkLGas 1.70 Asamera Oil AtlasCorp wt Bernes Eng Brazil LIP la Brit Pet ,20a Cempbl Chll Cdn Javelin Cinerama Creole 2.40a Data Cent Dlxilyn Corp Dynalectrn Eqult Cp .05e Fed Resrces Felmont Oil Frontier Air Gn Plywood Giant Yel .40 Goldfield GT Basn Pet HoernerW .02 Husky Oil .30 Hycon Mtg Hydrometl Imper OH .50 I T I Corp Kaiser In .401 McCrory wt Cat Flnanl ICtmpRL .45s Cep/Cities Bd. I CiroPLt 1.42 CarrlerCp .60 CsrterW .40a Case Jl CastleCke .60 aterTr 1.20 JltnaseCp 2 Cenco Ins .30 Cent SW 1.00 CorroCp 1.60 Cert-teed .10 CttsnaAIr .00 CPI Stl .10 Ches Ohio A ChlMH StP P ChPneu 1.00 Chi Rl Pec Chris Crft wl Chris Craft l . Chrysler 2 CITFin 1.00 Cities Svc 2 ClarkEq 1.40 ClevEIIII 2.04 CocaCol 1.32 34 13)4 129S 1244 — *4 3 35% 35% 35% 4 to 4 77 741.584.26 x-lncludts 634,759,542.40 debt [hot subject to statutory limit. Wednesday'* 1st Dividends Bsctered Po- tlk. of Pay-MM -ROM rtod Rod INITIAL ContOH * Madison Fund .-,15/.. STOCK.'-, Gen Development 2pc .. :7*7iK REGULAR CitlZMOU NBk.Ge .30 Q GuardamnCh Ctg .125 Q Hershey PoOds . . .275 Q Leonard Ref inerts ,15 <3 McGraw-Tdison .35 Q NorRiNat Gas O 5-29 •C. v , J STOCK AVERAGES ' Cemailed fey The Aetecleted Press Ijp "jo ST If. !»■'-'*-Ind. ROMs iftil. fecks Net chenge (to come). Thurs. (to Conte) _. • a NRfl Day .....511.1 114.0 154.7 343.4 500.2 II2J 153.4 U0J 492.2 151.J 149 J 132.5 Khtt23 l*£7 ttlj 513 J 217.7 159.1 140.9 4ttJ 179j 144J 329.4 tt.l 217.4 140.4 MJ 435J 165J 134.1 299,1 mm Wafefc /Ago' Month Ago Ygnr.Aoe I960 High 1949 Low : ' 1940 .High, T9M /lOW 1 . DOW-JONEJ AVERAGES 5 wlw* a Stocks 94t.65-l-5.6S .. 241.3B+1.59 .. 1».4I+0.7I . ttM04-1.99 (fiogg «us ...... Mfe Mil* ■M ■ industrials M ■%. > . tt.95+0.01 . 48t.2M.tt ill JEw-l-o.., . ..0. > 50:01-0.05 .._.. . at 4a 71 71 . 52to 52V* 5lto + to 114 31V* 37V* IS’/* + % 22 25to 25% 25% + to IS 158 157% 157% — V* 11 35 ttto 34to — to I 211 280to MOV* ‘ 3 16 16 14 Dan Riv 1.20 Dart Ind .30b DaycoCp 1.60 DaytnPL 1.60 Deere Co 2 Del Mnte 1.10 DeltfAlr~J0 DenRGr 1.10 DetEdle 1.40 Det Steel .*8 DteSham 1.40 Disney .30b DomeMIlt JO DowChm 2.40 45% 45to 45 V* — to 15 31 37% 37% — % 2 29% 29V4 29% 1 39to 39V4 39% 4 13% 53% 0394 47 69V4 49% 49% — to II 2ito 2lto 21% + to 1 23V* 23% —D— .4 22 22 22 + to 113 50% 50to 50V* ’ 2 45% 45% 45% 1 318% 31V* 31% 225 44m 44% 44% I 29% 29% 29% -.71 38% 37% 3T/4 + % 3 21% 21V* 21% ... 14 25% 25% 25% ... 4 19% 19% 19% + II 21% 20to ttto -10% ttto 80V* to 1 Nat Alrlin .30 Nat Bisc 2.20 Nat Can .10 NatCash 1.20 Nat Distil .90 Nat .Fuel 1.40 Nat Gent .20 Nat Gyps 2 Nat Gyps wl Nstind ,46f NttLeed 3.40 Nst Lead wl Net Steel 2.50 Nat Tea .10 Nev Pow Newberry NEngEI 1. Newmnt 2.40 Newmont wl T >77 77 77 + DukePw 1.40 duPopt 1,250 DuqLt 1.44 Dyne Am .40 61 75V4 74% 74% 12 34% ttto . 34to + V* 1 37% 37% 37% — % 24 146to 146 146 7 29 29 East Air .50 E Kodak .tto fotonYo 1.40 bosco Ind 2 EGAG .10 EIPasoNG 1 Eltre Cp 1.20 Emer Elec 1 Endjohn .12P1 Essexlnt 1.20 Ethyl Cp EvehsP ,40b Eversharp FalrchC .500 Folreh Hiller Fansteoi Inc Feddert ,40 Fodders Wl FedDStr .91 Flltrol, 2 FstChrt 1.4I» Flintkote 1 Fla: Pow 1^ 15 20 ttto 20V4 — to ' 41 23% 23% 23% + % 31 79to ,79 79 , — % 2 37to 17% 37tt ... 7 12% 82% 12% — to 11 ttto ttto ttto — % 34 ttto 23 23V4 — to 10 ttto 35V* ttto — to I ttto 53 SSto 1 15 % tt% 35% 17 ttto 35% ttto — to 8 34% 34% 14% 112 51% ttto llto 5 11% )•% 10% + % —F— SI I7W: ttto 04% 11 17% ms mi -P^s 5 22% 22 22 — % 20 <0to *0% 40% .,. 14 11 11 11 + to I 37% 17to 17% 4- to 1 42 41to 42 14 44to 44 «4 25 lit 30to 30to — to FtePWLt 1 41 41 « —1 FoodFolr .90 PofdMot 2.40 FerMcK .75 PniopSul IJO FruehCp 1.70 12 72 Tito 72 132 llto 11% 11% 24 24% 2*to 24'/* 4- % 44 S2to 52% S2% 20 14 34 14. 41. 14 ttto. 33% 22. .40% 40% 40% 4-to GAC Cp 1.50 OAF Corp .40, gam Sko IJO mMOH’, J5 GehDynam 1 Gen Elec 2.60 x5 *4to *4% *4% tt. 2( 27*4- 27% —’to ‘ t IIP/*' 30% "tt*4 — tt 41 to C 41% +1 GflO Mills JO GenMof 3.40a GCtobUI 1j« G/TelEI 1.40 Sen. Tiro lb Genesco 1.40 G* Pacific lb GEttyOR:!*), OHifelM .1.40 W 14 ' 14 /: 1*' :<)+ to! 19 Mto ttto llto + to SI1' ttto ttto -ttto ... 11 17% ttto tlto —to tt 40% 4094 4 25% 25% 25% V'7 17% '1714 ttto + % ,90%. .it HZ'Hi, v* IS .3)7* llto" ftto — % tO'/jTW MM fTJt — Vi NorfolkWat 4 NorAmPhll 1 NoAmRock 2 NoNGas 2.40 Nor Pac 2.60 NoStoPw 1.40 Northrop 1 NwStAIrl .90 NwtBanc 1.20 Horten 1.50 Nortsim 1.229 _ SSto 55% 55% — to. Itt 11% 12 12 — 93 31% ttto tt% — 43 47% ttto 47% + to 10 27to 27% 27% ..... 19 2294 ttto 2294 I ttto M tt + to 1 llto 31% llto + to —M— 1 39%, 39% 39% + to 3 .29% 29% 29% 21 54to 54% 54% — 9* 12 55% 55% tfto — % 21 5» 57% ttto — to 4 40 ttto.''*014 - 70 24% 24 W — to 43 1494 ttto 3494 + 44 2 30V* 30 30 ~ to 47 ttto 11% 33% ..... 4 4594 45V* 45% — to 1 53V* ttto ttto + to; 16 92% 9294 92% + to 10 37 37 37 + to xS 27tol 27% 2fA + to I 2494 2494 2494 22 111% 110% IWto 11 Mto Mto 23% + % 207 4944 49 4944 4- % 12 ttto 4244 ttto ... 05 51% SIV* 5144 — 44 15 24% ttto 34% + to I 3244 3244 3294 — to -2 3844 3144 3844 ..... . 16 125% 125% 125% ...... II 24% 24V* 24V4 ..... —N— ' 7 39 3844 39 ..... 3 54V* 54% 54V* - to I 61V* 41V* ttto + % 24 lttto 135)4 115% — to 33 Mto 20% 20V* — 94 3 ttto 28 ttto + to 144 4444 43% 4344 + to . 33 65% 64 64% —lto I tt 33 tt IB 51. 1594 15 15% 23 ttto 73V4 ttto — to 4 36%' 36V* 36V* 10 55 5444 5444 4 14V* 14V* 1444 + to 554694 4694 46% + to I 36 . 35% 36 + to 10 27 2144 2644 + to 0 ttto ltto ttto +1V4 II 3444 34to 3444 + % 57 20V4 20 20 9 97% 97V* 97% + 4* 11 42% 4244 4244 — to 24 36% 3544—3044 — 44 11 52V4' 5244 5244 . 1 53% »V* 'ttto . 27 ’ttto ttto ttto — to 26 42V* 41% 42 +44 6 44% 441* ttto .. , 1 35 35 35 — % 4 40V* 40V4 4014 40 SOto SOU 5044 + to unHAIrUn 1 UnitAlrc T.oo Unit Cp ,78g Un Fruit IJO Unit MM IJO USGypam 3a . US Indust .45 USPIpa. 1.20 USPIvCIt IJO _ US Smolt ID 7. US, Wool 2.40 29 ttto 2446 25 36 ttto 5314 ttV4 —% 60 2144 21 to "21 to 3 4094 49 > '-49: » llto 22 22 — VI 49 75 ttto ttto— 94 117 4914 tt ttto -tto 292 ttto 14% ttto II 72% 72% ttto 21 llto, llto- Wr 4 48 4794 41 + % If lfto 90 # ,fi - 3 57 5444 tt44 — 94 41 4194 ttto ttto 4 4714 <7to lfto —to 27 794 Tto Tto 17 JOto lfto 29% -u4p 1 "‘7 17 26 25% 25% — to 2 tlto ttto ttto-94 21 ttto 4114 41% —lto 2914 ttto 29% + % ttto .ttto 87V4 — to 2714 27% ttto 199 1194 .||to 30% — 9* tt lttto lttto 121% — % 2 33, a a + % 25 ttto ttto ttto + V* 99 lfto. 1094 lfto + 94 27 44% 46 46to ... 11 m4 2714 1794 + 94 A 3494 ttto ttto — to 40 31% llto llto + to 72 3714 3494 34%.— % 12-llto 1214 ltto ... f 34 tt M — % 49 0 ttto ttto —to tt 3494 32% 33% — 94 —U— ■ ' 5 1194 1194 1194 —to 106 45% 45% 4594 — to 21 21% 21% 21% 122 52 51 40 +2% +14 5194 50% 51% + % 112 20% ttto ttto + to 125 2714 ttto ttto-to 32 75 7494 74% + to 1 13% lfto llto..... 2 ttto ttto ttto 5 33. Sl4 33% + % 4 ttto tt M9M)to 01 29% 29 V* 2994 -Fto 11 4M4 40% 40% -Pto 7414 74% ttV4 WASHINGTON (A - .The Labor Departmeiit announced yesterday the largest sfngiejob-, training contract on record, a $13.8 million pact with ChrySfor Corp. to tram 4,ISO hard-core unemployed over two years. “Chrysler Training Corp., the form's training subsidiary, will hire and train the jobless as drill-press operators, spot welders, production-line assemblers, told material rdinators at each of its eight plants,” the announcement said Craig Fast Continues LANSING ») — Sen. Roger Craig, D-Dearbom, Is carrying on his vow not to eat. a bite of food until A&P stores fai Detroit stop selling California grapes. Craig, a leader of the Michigan gram boycott, sayK ice water has been his only sustenance since Sunday, when he began fasting to publicize the demands of some grape pickers in California for recognition as collective bargaining agent for migrant grape workers. Work Cut at Wixom Ford Vorten AsSo Vendo to JO VailPw 1.00 Itt- 47% 46% 11 1494" 15% 34% + to 05 ttto 49% 4794 —1% 40 llto 11 31 - to 10 3294 2214 1214 .. 211 llto 10% 30% — 1* W—X—Y—Z— WirLsm 1,10 Was Wot l Jl WOstn AlrL 1 Wn BaRc 1.20 WnUTfei 1.40 wiolgCi uo Wfyorhr 1J0 Wdyorhsr wl Whirl Cp 1,60 Whmoktr WinnDIx 1.56 Woolwth 1.20 XOrexCp 1.40 YMitSh .ltd ZaleCorp .64 Zenith R 1.40 Sales figures' ore unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rote* of dividends in the foregoing table are annual dlsfeursomOnts based on the test quarterly or semi-annual doclorotlon. Special or extra dividends or Payments not designated .as roduter or* Identified In the _ .____extra or extras. b-Annual rote plus tiock divldsnd. e—Uquldotlno dlvl-dtnd. d—Dsclored or paid to 19tt Plus stock dividend. o-Pold lost ynr. f-Psy-ablo to stock during T949, estimated cosh value fen ex-divldsnd or ox-dlstrlbutton dote, g—Declared ar paid sfe fo rthis ear. ^-Declared or bald, after stock Jivldsnd or split up. k-Daeiarod or paid this year,- an aecumulatlva Issue with Occident JOB OhtoEdis 1J0 OkteGE 1.0| OklaNGs 1.12 OlInMath .11 Omork I Jit Otis Slav 2 Outbd Mar 1 OwensCg 1.. Owenslll 1.: .35 109 '*194 42V* 43 15 27% 27% 2794 tt 24 24 24 .Mt 5 2294 22% 22% + 126 Slto llto Mto,— 2 29% 1994 2994 — 14 4IV4 4794 4494 +1 * 42% *21* ., 8494 4894 — 7594 75 75 — PacGEI 1.50 PsCLtg 1.60 P*C_P*t .250 PacPwL 1.20 P0CTAT 1.20 PanASul 1.50 Pan Am .40 Panh Et 1.60 Perkeplvls 1 PennCtn 2.60 PoniiOIx .60 Pannoy. JC 1 PePwLf 1J0 Pennzun „ .10 2) N 41% 41% 41%—'to 14 24% 2694 2694 — to 5 3114 lfto llto 7 *194 4314 4394 + to 121 5194 50% 5014 —IV* tt 45% U AS - to 10 tt% 1714 .17% ... 12 44% ttto —to 2 ttto ttto ttto + to 1 44% 4414 MM ... '51 28 ttto ttto —, 94 35 ttto 3*14 34V* 49 3414, 3414 3(14 — to 13 27414 271% 27414 — 94 2* 4794 4494 4494 — % 5 5294 52% 5244 — to 44 49% 49% 4994 DETROIT UPI — Ford said workers at its assembly plant at Wixom will be put on a four-day work schedule- Workers will be laid off Monday and return to normal w«rk Tuesday. The work reductions apparently were to bring production in line with currently high inventories of autos. Copyrighted by The Associated Prsss 1967 dividends'In arrears, n—Nsw Usut. Paid this, year, dividend omitted, deferred In stock during uo on ox-dividond A, BY JOHN cunnifp AP Budaess Analyst NEW YORK-There are, we are told reliably, two sides to every atory, but in tax matters the story looks more like' a hexagon, whidi is a geometric shape of six sides and just; as many angles. At least that ; miny faces may be sew» in the current debate over foe 7 per cent investment tax credit, whose suspension has beta) proposed by foe Nixon adminia tration in an effort to curtail inflation. ★ ★ w This tax credit device permits business to deduct from income tax bills as much as 7 per cent of the cost of equipment purchases designed to increase production. It u meant to be a apir to modernization and efficiency And quite a spur it has been Eariy this year private and government surveys showed tifot business was planning a tremendous increase in spending for capital improvements this at foe very font that government and consumers were being told to cut spending-CURIOUS ARGUMENT Logically, it seemed, business should be discouraged—not encouraged to spend. And that’s where foe argument takes on a curious shape. Spending for machinery, some businessmen ligue, not only is noninflationary but is in fact foe most effective means of reducing inflation. :iS Die way to cut’ down prices, they argue, is to make the capacity of America’s industrial plant larger and more efficient. More efficient plants mean lower priced goods. And tower prices are the opposite of inflated prices . . By repealing the investment tax credit, these businessmen contend, foe administration actually will insure inflation. The ability of foe nation’s factories will not keep pace with demand and prices will be bid up. PRESSURE POSSIBLE la fact, they contend, immediate upward pressure on prices might result from the fact that equipment to make Mutual Stock Quotations other goods suddenly will cost somewhere around 7 per cent more. Now in anything economic there is no limit to'foe number qf theories, most of which appear to make good sense. Somehow, however, theories undergo mutations when put into prac-. tfoe. * ★ y ★ Should foe investment tax credit be left as is and not repealed, the experiment will be an interesting one. Conceivably it could be a dangerous one as weil if it doesn't, as theorized, work to keep prices under control , , The complaints about the threat to suspend the tax credit don’t end thmre. DISCRIMINATORY, One of the chief arguments is that repeal is discriminatory, giving certain companies competitive advantages merely because they purchased equipment while foe credit was in effect. Some businessmen who criticize ; suspension on this score would rather see foe tax credit repealed altogether, because repeal would eliminate what they consider to, he a potentially Ufo' fair situation. • .' ,, ] By turning foa credit on and off to suit ahort-range economic conditions, ,foey argue, a debilitating Obstacle W placed in front of phmMrs who must commit huge auma .cf money for flye or seven yejfoS ihifo,.,, ■ j : y &&L Jeifong Some thefr cirticiam of either rwSsi or IMi srei, nutifoer^ of economists who fear that other move udght damage foe competitive position of foe United States in world trade. "‘ rt ., ; Several major industrial nations, they point out, are investing heavily in cqdtal Improvements that should enable them to produce more efficiently. If the United States cuts back on such improvements, they fear, its goods foight not be competitive in pries. The bnpUcatkms of this Argument are large, forthe Ufoted States already 1ms g clinic balance of paymetda deficit test makes the dollar vulnerable to speculative attacks. , v mmm : /■„ ||| | a';' ^ 10 Executed by Iraq DAMASCUS, Syria (AP)-The Iraqi government executed fo Arabs before daybreak today for spying for Israel, the United News in Brief Joyce A: Braun ef 740 Cottage told Pontiac police yesterday that someone stole a combination Stereo tape player-radio valued at $140 from her car while It was parked in a lot at East Pike and Wide Track. Oakland Beach" Civie Assoc Annual Rummage,- Bake Sxle, Saturday, May 17, 9 a.m. 3805 Dill in Drayton. ‘ —Adv. 0. M. S. Sorority. Rummage Sale, Friday, M*y 16, 9-1 p.m., C. A. I, Building) Williams Lake Road, Waterford. —Adv. St. Hug oof foe Hills AacHen* Rummage Sale, Sat., May 17, 9 a.m. in gym, Opdyke, East Hickory Grove, Bloomfield Hills —Adv COMMMtSS _, NEW YORK (AF)' —Tlto following qua-tatlons. supplied by Hi* NOIIMW Association of Securities Dealars, Inc., are fha prices or- which these securities could have been said (bid) ar bought tasked) Wednesday. EM Ask Fad Grlh 5W . . Fund 11.4419.94 F)d Trnd _MJ2.3l.17 NEA MUt 12J212’7t NstWSec " ‘ Financial l*i?L. . _ Dynm l.tal.79 Indus! 5.47 5.99 Incam UO 0.97 Fit InGth 10.1511.19 Fsl injtk 9.84 11.81 Fat Mum 11.2211.40 Fat Nqt 8.62 9.42 Nil Invest . Nat sac jfer; Balan 11 Jl 12.44 AbtrdOan Advisers AlflllGtOMI Afutre All Amar Alpha Ameap Am Bus or no action taken at test dividendi maat Ing. r-Dscterad ar paid In 1968 plus stock dividend, t—Fold. Ii 1908, estimated cash value or ex-distribution date, x—Sates in full. JJML... _ ... dd—Called. x-Bx dividend jV—Ex dlvl-dend and salts In full, x-dls—Ex distribution. xr—Ex rights, xw—Without warrants. ww—With warrants, wb-Whtn distributed. wl—Whan Issued. nd—Noxt day dellvOry. • . -— v|—In bankruptcy ar receivership ” .......• --—7— Bankrui being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, ar securities assumed fey,such companies. hi—Foreign issue subject to Interest equalization tax. Stocks of Local Interest Figure* altar decimal/points are eighths OVER-THR-COUNTBR 5TOCK5 Quotation* from the NASD erg rspre tentative Interdtaler prices. Intardsaier market* changa throughout lh| day. Fries* fee not Include retail markup, markdown ar commission, PflzerC 1.40a FhalplD 1.9* Phils El 1J4 PhiillpFet wl Polaroid .32 PPG Ind IJO Preetfio 2.40 RubSCfel 1.06 Pubiklnd -75t Pusb lup JO Punman 2 JO 100 39 ttto 39 + 31 28 27% 28 37% 37 ttto — 229* 22% 2»4— r-15 -tt 2194 2194 — T» 23 ,' 21% 22 212 fm iito iito + 13 ttto 35% 35%— 203 35 Nttto 34.14 a* *44 27to mF CT* + % tt 5614 5594 56 3 M9i M14 3194 .... 219 ttto 45 *5% tt ttto tt fi —ft 22 32 M to 12 + to 11 tt ttto ttto -t % jl 29% 29 ttto + to 2 ttto ttto Mto — to 181 ,7594 7S 75 51 ttto »% 37% + 94 / 44 |R IWto 10744 —1% 243 S%/9% 4014 + to tt nwn §%+ ft 7 • Mto 33 » -to 47,-13% 12% ttto-to ■ 17 ttft 4994 + 94 4 304 3414 3414 + to TO ttto 51% 51% + to AMT Corp. ........... Associate* Truck .... Cltlzans Utilities (A) Citlnns uniltlM (B) . Detrex Chemical ..... Diamond Crystal ..... Kallv iervlcat .. ,... Mohawk Rubber Ce. . Safran Printing ..... Scrlpla Wyandotte Chemical . •Id Asfeed .... *J ...13.2 13J ___27J MJ ___24.0 24J ___13.0 14.4 ___30.0 30.4 ... MJ 39j J..2M MJ ... .20 J 31J ; k .27.4 MJ ....'MJ 23.2 Quitter' JO RalswnP KJ Renco lnc ,tt' Raytheon Jo RCA 1... Reading Co RelchCh SO ReeubSII 2.5b R*vion,ijo_ Reyn Met .90 ReVUTob UO. Roan Sol n S :ohr i oyDu Rydorby nj " 7 " 2914 29 ' —H—' ' 12 26%-369* I itt ft, . I 31 ' 3314 IT*- j|% 97 ttto M . W+l 1 -"tlto '-ttto ttlb — to 33 17to 17 17to +. 94 It 469* 4694 4g4 —to 9 1694 1514 3514 —. % 103 43% 41% *1% + % itt ww pKapL-fetiw 74 * ■* tt . . 41 ttto ttto 3314 + to Sanders ,30 SM%lnd/iJ»' Frttt 'JO, 41 2996 ttto 2994 + to ■ -a ttto !fP J'llvWr-ift - Stt-r tt •wt- OOND AVERAGES _ Cempited by Tbe Assecioted Press . —eg || ■ : 10 If ' 10 , i Rails Ind. Dill, Fgn. L. Yd. Not cltenoo .. . Jl Ji +j Noon Wife. 62.9 14.0 703 •» * ww 66.3 KM1 ■Its 90.2 Il3 Business Notes Richard E. Wilmot, ami of Mr1- ahd Mrs. E. M. WifanM, 74’ E. Iroquois, has' been nfemed foe new antstant- r e-f j e.n a 1 manager on fo Newark, N.J. region qf foe GM public relations staff. ‘ Wilmot will assist theregfonal manager in public relations activities in Connecticut; Massachusetts, New Hampshire, New Jersey, southeastern NSW York, foe Philadelphia area, Rhode Island and Vermont. He joined GM Iff |fo58. - — " Hi 2.77 3.08 0.73 9.52 9J4 10.11 13J113.11 1.20 1.31 13.6014.16 6.52 7.13 3.62 3.9* Am Dlvln 12.1313.26 Am Grlh 7J3 Jl Am Inv 10.6510.45 Am Myf 10.6011.67 Am NOW 3JJ 4.J3 Am Pac 1.01 I.0» 11.29 Fd Inv 11.3012.33 Assdciatd 1.55 1.76 1.99 Fund 0 12.3311.31— stack 1.15 3.91 Fsl Vf Flat Cap Flat Fd Fla Gib Fnd Glh founders eursq FranT 12.3513.58 10.25 .... 18.24 .. 8.17 9.49 4.06 4.42 9.3 10.36 13.68 14.95 Grow;. Bond Dlvld Pf Stic ineom Slock Sriii Nst west Neuwrth New Eng Nsw Her N«w-Wife Newton Ndroatf Ocngph Util Ineom MdUm Fund Am Gan Sec ''fPinifc) 7.64 1.37 2.59 2.84 11.17 12 Jl 12,9512.95 16J014.30 Ocngph Omega 100 Fd 101 Fund 5.88 Itt - 5.05 Itt 7.72 .0.44 4.09 6.66 9.1710.79 lOjSlltt 7.06 7.74 25/li 28,11 10.9511.14 30.39 30.39 16.9913.57 17.U 17.30 9 JO 10.36 ♦.tt 9.45 Rummage Sale Benefit, ef Michigan Animal Rescue League of Pontiac, Saturday and Sunday, 17th and 18th of May, 8 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Dewey’s Dairy Cream, 4706 Elizabeth Lake Rd. —Adv, Group Sec: Aero Sc 9.7310.64 Com St 15.02 WJ2 Ful Ad 9tt 10.74 Orth Ind 23.72 24.43 Gryphon 20jl 8.14 Guardn 29.2429.24 HLC Lev 14.0717.37 -Hem 5m 10.4111.38 Him lute 5ji i!Ti oppenhm Penn Sq pp.Mut Phi to Pilgrim pilot Fin* abroad, and no Jews have been reported executed since. There has been little condemnation abroad of foe subsequent executions. The Baghdad press Indicated the government picked today for foe; executions because % is the girt annviersary of foe founding of Israel. fr;. - ★ '. * ijljji The news agency said nine of those executed today were members of throe spy rfogi recently smashed by foa gCiim-ment. The tenth was a 70-year-old lawyer sentenced to dedth in the first trial but spared ufrtil today so foe government edidd extract more information from Mm. ' Rummage, 4 Town* United Methodist, corner Cooley-Loc-haven, Stoy ^ Sat. |;^to 12 Retail a peiMfaig on recreational boating has. tooro than noon. Adv.ltriplad tat foa last IS years. Ry ROGER E. SPEAR Q — You have to pest columns toeatiosed several companies that are tat foe frau-chising business. I would like to kpow mate about, franchising aitil the prospects for this Mag of company.—N. F. | 1 A — Franchising is not new. Coca-Cola, Howard Johnson, Mobil Oil.and others have been setting up franchise outlets lor decades. But it has certainly taken a. B lease on life in the last two years. Entertainment and sports celebrities have flocked Into foe business,; adding glamor and excitement as weU as their naptm. ID fact, numerous^ tterb arc several magazines, books and dfrec-tories published to help foe potential eotraprenettf find Ids way through the maze. < several large NYSE'com — General Foods, Aypri and ^UDMiuty to-name' s fowM-have acquired, ^ sfoke in the fim, additional confirmation ef franchising succeetr at'• fffotoof Of merchandising. Opportunities offered to interested businessmen vary from fast-food restaurants, quire capital investments ranging from 83,OW to IrtO.OOO. About $7 per cent of foe 800,000 franchise bu sine sees now operating are in foe automotive area, primarily ^ gas stations. While tite number of gasdine outlets baa declined bverlthh years, tales votaafoebas twitnt-ed. Considering the explosive growth-tat fast-food outlets — both take-out mid restaurant service — it to probable that fob sub pattern Will hold true tj^rtMUW. '• } »1T y TwjH-i ' lOne important potentiri of the francbiring field — encouraging minority^ gtyiffia to beempe cipitaiisb s is being actively investigaged by bofo the Federal Trade Commisrion mid foe Small Business Administration. Recently, a subsidiary of Servomation granted tbe fityt of a aeries of fraiidiiae to a Mack copa* m unity-owned economic group. In the last several years, the muniber of puMlcly owned franchise companies has 3h-creased i«Mly^. Seme comers which have reported improving arias and earnings ted Gtabfs (formerly AfrR Foodi), Performance gystenb (formerly Ifiaafo Pearl’s) Kentucky PMeCCSiicMn, Lum’s water treatment sennoes and personnel agendcs These > re- shops, motels and cir washes to Inc., Nationwide Industries |j|d |RjM)ftFrees|.