1'^ > ! ' I i , . ' I / ^ ^ I 1* ■ IP i P r\ r .'i ^ i ^ ^ * I )l ^ 1 I Iv 1| I ' ' i pf A A ^ A tt J > J ^ i^iw i^^ii n '* h] c ^ \ / j: i- ti . c» u i^/\ n ^ '\i^irfi:4 Th« Weather u. f. wiatiwr MreM nrcciM THE PONTIAC PRESS \ Home . Edition VOL. 127 ^ NO. 85 ★ » ★ .PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. PRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 -60 PAGES UNITED^PRiu^PmERN^lQNAk 7\ Hippies Fighf Park Use More Violence in Berkeley Tat roe Resigning Post in Waterfofd BESIKELEY^ Calif, un — National Guardsmen ringed a stretch of University of California park land today in the wake of n battle between police, hippie Aquatters. students and others. Fifty persons were injured. The, hippies, claiming use of the land as a “people’s park,” resisted police ouster attempts yesterday with a barrage of rocks. Police fired into the crowd with tear gas shells and shotgunis loaded with birdshot. An autombbile Was ovCrt^ned and burned. Police were bombarded with miffiUes Oirown from roofs. Thrfee were injured, one with , a knife wound in the chest. , i , , ; Many in the crowd were peppered with the tiny birdshot pellets from police . shbtguns, which drew blood without inflicting-serious wounds. OUTBREAK QUISLED v Police finally quelled the outbreak after cordoning off 18 square blocks and arresting 45 persons: Asserting the park protest was “a phony’issiie,” Gov. Ronald Reagan called out the guardsmen and ordered a ban on loitering in the city or on the uni-' y campus. The number of troops sent to the scene was described only a.s “substantial.” The trouble started earlier, this month after the university announced plans to use its park land for an athletic field and posted no-trespassing signs.* Hippies who had frequented the area grabbed the signs and burned them. FENCING STARTED ^ On Wednesday, police routed 75 persons from the property and workmen sfarted fencing it in the following day. The hippies tried to prevent erection of the eight-foot fence and were joined soon by students and others as the crowd grew to hundreds. Patrols were strengthened in the university area after a declaration by a demonstrator that $5.million of University of California property would be destroyed. ’ ; Stores in the area were closed. The injured included two newsmen, Don Wegars of the San Francisco Chronicle and Daryl Lemke of the Los Angeles Times. They were hit By bird-shot but not seriously wounded. By MEL NEWMAN ■ Dr. Don 0. Tatroe, W a te r f o r d Township’s superintendent of schools since 1963, last night arifiodnced his resignation -- effective-Aug. 1 — from the school district. Tatroe revealed at a regular meeting of the township board of Question that - he has accepted the position of executive director of the Michigan Association of School Boards. - ' * * “I have accepted because of the professional advancement the position represents and because I would not have such an opportunity again in the future,” ' he said. . - Tatroe said the hew job, which vvill locate him jin East Lansing, makes him director of a staff responsible to the elected board of directors of the state associatiiwi. . . LEGISLATIVE PROGRAMS He explained that he will be responsible for organizing and. working with committees within thd association to develop effective programs of legislation and to help educate board members in understanding their job. Tatroe became superintendent i n Waterford Township after .serving as assistant superintendent in the Warren system for nine years. ★ j, * He previously was a graduate assistant in education administration at Michigan State University and a high school principal in Haslett. Along with his duties in East Lansing, DON 0. TATROE where he wiU replace the late Dr. Julius ‘ Barbour, Tatroe will hold a faculty rank at Michigan State and will teach a class in education administration, he said Ihst night. . ■ SOME REGRE’TS Tatroe said he is leaving the Waterford system with some legrets — among them he is leaving behind what he described as “an administrative staff • second to none.” He added that he would “like to be here to, see Waterford’s financial prob lems ‘ through to resolution,” but feat “one is seldom able to schedule all those (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) State Grant to Allow Start on AA59 Widening Project Polite Prepare to Dv|ck Rocks Thrown By Berkeley Rioters Officer Stabbed; Suspect Is Shot Red Negotiators Hit Nixon Proposals Without Rejecting Them as a Whole By JIM LONG A rookie Birmingham poljceman wap stabbed last ijight after stopping a motorist for a traffic violation. Aht ’ aHpjgpH assailant„was shot and wounded . Jhy the patrolman. Under police guard at .William Beau-m(UPI) - Mayors, from Michigan’s big cities will meet in the State Capitol with Gov. William G. Milliken May 27 to discuss state and federal proposals for low-cost housing. The governor told his weekly news. conference yesterday he has been in constant contact with federal housing Secretary George Romney and other governors in planning an attack on the housing shortage. ■A “I don’t want to build false ,h opes and Milliken said, “but I’m giving it the highest primity. Hopefully, I^liken said, some definite steps-to construct low-cost living facilities in Michigan can be taken within 18 to ' months. _In another area, the'governor said he is “moving ahead on all fronts” to investigate charges that Detroit’s Civic General Hospital lured skid r derelicts off the streets for as guinea pigs during foot surgery training for young doctors. He said the State Department of Licensing and Regulation, which has jurisdiction over the Podiatry Board, is handling the case.. . . . * ‘ A letter to Milliken from Sen. asil Brown, D Highland Park, and 10 other Negro legislators demanding - black studies, -programs on Michigan college campuses and a board to handle discrimination' charges “was not taken lightly,” the governor Isaid. “The , governor appealed to „ away of $5, contended. 'It’s not going to bring more ship into Michigan,” he sai4- The money will be, spqnt “Shew can say Mic^an there. Big deal.” Michigan is the very heart of the Great Lakes system,” said Sen. Gilbert'Bursley, R-Ann Arbor. “In order to promote the seaway we have to participate. We stand to gain a great deal with this tiny inypstment.” Proponents pointed out that 11 other states will be participating the celebration. “Michigan 'should.not be a chintzy state, said Sen. Jtdm Toepp, R-Cad dilac. The appropriations bill also includes some $3.7 i^dHqn for dirdet relief welfa^Oayments, fusion said the bulk of the Supplement, some $3 millibn, was needed because the clothing allowance payments promised welfare recipients has depleted department funds. The bill also includes: $90,000 of such argumentative nature for salaries and staffs of three thdt it will delay passage of, new state appeals court jfldges; this bill,” he said, urging Van- $660,600 for district courts; $2.6. derLaan to “find another ve-1 million for senior citizens tax hide—I’ll help you find one” tojexemptions and $2 million for settle the office space question. I social services foster care pay-Tm sick and tired of this musical offices, argued Sen. James Fleming, R-Jackson. “We’re going to find ourselves with no offices. Let’s find out who cut the deal and where.” The amendment was adopted. Defeated was another Amendment, proposed by Sen. Milton R - Grand Rapids, Which would have deleted a $5,-j Alpena College Deem Dies at 60 ALPENA (AP) - Stanley E. Van Lare, dean of Alpena Community College since its establishment in 1952, died Thursday in Alpena. He was 60. Van Lare was a past presi-000 appropriation to pay Michi-|dent of the Michigan Associa-gan’s share of the upcomingjtibn of Colleges and' Universi-celebration marking the 10th an-tigs and of tjie Michigan Asso-niversary of the St. Lawrencelciation of J^ior Colleges. Seaway opening. I Funeral sfervices were set for “It’s pure and simple throw-iSaturday afternoon. The Decorators Choice ... TWEEDS or PLAIN $9995 From to [.Yd. Tweeds Only Wrada Were Polyester® Plain or Tweed Sq.Yd. HEAVY NYION MG Wimda Weve® Tweed Sq.Yd. See Our Large Selection of DRAPERIES ‘Custom Made and Installed By Our Interior Becorators Open Mon. and Fri. Hil 9 P.M., Sat. *til 5 P.M. FI.OOR c o\ 3S11 Elizabeth Lh. Rd. 689:9581 SUMMER VALUE! 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CHARGE IT at Simms. ^ In one compact portabls casg, the nucleus of a complefo I stered system with automatic reversing stereo tape recorder ws the main component. aiT Complete with two f-98 cardioid dynatpic micrqphones. mSIMMSaffi OPEN TONITE'til 8:3( and Sat. 9 a.m.to 9p.Bk - / ' He Told of Beating of Prisoner Detective Quiet'Hero o > By &IS FRIEDLAND FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP -“A hero of honesty” well describes Detective Sgt. Earl Teeples, recently acquitted of 12 counts of violating a departmental police code and still the object of controversy. ' Teeples, who repeatedly insists “I don’t want to bad-mouth anyone, "still ."'refuses to’ outline actual incidents V\leadipg\^o his recent two-^yeek suspension apd yearlong probation', even now after the punishment was dismissed following a hearing by a township police board of appeals. . The charges resulted from his telling an Oakland Coynty assistant prosecutor that he had seen two officers beat a prisoner last June. No action has been taken as a result of this. . Despite the subsequent hassle, TeepLes emphasizes, ‘Tve never regrete'd being honest. I was relieved that it was out because it has to come. The incident still bothers me?' the events following his discussion with the assistant prosecutor-and up to his hearing. ' Teeples never testified. Chief Irving Takes did, however, and admitted that 10 of the 12 charges could be dropped. All were finally dropped. ‘ . A * * ■ Teeples claimed that the strong citizen support 'he received during the hearing^ convinced him that he had never been in such a "warm community.” A.^ratified man, he pointed out that he tried to see as few people as possible during the" hearing, but still received innumerable phone ohlls supporting his stand and offering any help possible. that now he was again b’egiiming' to relaj. He pointed out that all of his defense work has been done during his own time and with his money — although none of the lawyers involved accepted fees — while most of the prosecution’s case was prepared on township time. ' He regrets that he wasn’t allowed to work those two weeks since he is still catching up. - POPULAR MAN RELAXING NOW ‘Tve been a real bear for "Six mon- ths,” the father of four admitted, saying ‘BEST FORGOTTEN’ Now the 46-year-old i,u« ----------- Teeples, a weathered man with sun-bleached hair, says the incident is “nest left to die.” He added that last August he still hoped that the chief would investigate the matter but that matters were just proceeding slowly. He ;still kept quiet; “hoping to knock this off and let it drop” throughout Consolidation Petitions Taken FARMINGTON — Petitions for consolidation of the entirp Farmington area into a home-rule city have been accepted by the State'Boundaries Comnilssion.-'A decision on when to order the election will be made at the next scheduled commission meeting June 11. The petitions frresented in March had been signed by 2 per cqnt of the residents in the affected area — Farmington, Farmington Township and the villages of Wood Grqek and Quakertov^m The commission at its regular meeting earlier this week- asked representatives from two area groups at the meeting to submit in writing the reasons why each feel the election should be held at the time they request. Paul Dietz, attorney for the petitioning group, requested that the election be held In October«or November this year. Announces Promotions BIRMINGHAM New appoihtments were announced this week by Foid Motor Co?s U.-S. Tractor and Implement Operations division based here. Hugh D. Cotcamp of Latham, N.Y., ^as named district-dealer relations mamager. Edwin S. Ha.sel, formerly Northeastern District parts and service merchandising manager, will .succeed Cotcamp. Charles C. Edie of 528 Ludlow, Rochester, will succeed Hasel in, Latham. DeMOLAY HOST—Tom Wiseman, the 8on of Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Wiseman of 365 Newman, Orion Township, will officiate for the May 24 Chevilier Degree, aponspred by Lake, Orion Chapteci Ord^r of .DeMolay. The degree is set fpr 6 p.m‘. at the Lake Orion Masonic Ternple! Tom' is past master .councilor of the ch^ter and was a state representative s for two years. He is a 1969 graduate of l Orion High School. He reported that many of his fellow policemen have come to him’privately-r-and a few openly — since the hearing to say Aat ‘‘They’ve been with me but didn’t have nerve enough to do-it but were glad I did.” A couple of officers are still cool, and A 13-year veteran of the force, Teeples Is a popular man who opens his home and barn for frequent parties add gatherings. Space is always available for youngsters building floats or friends working on their cars. Hp has an extensive police library and appears well-versed in law. He hopes to buy books to start a township police library with some funds which have been sent to him by well-wishers. He declined to reveal the amoun| Teeples likens the incident to a fire. In the beginning it can be put out easily, but then it grows into a holocaust. When it dies, tlse embers remain: and he con-.fesses to enjoying the aftedglow. THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAV, MAV Ki A—4 Pontiac Prtsi Photo Officer Earl Teeples Doesn't Regret Honesty Bloomfield Township Police Chief Robert L. Snell’s office this morning unexpectedly received a telegram from State Highway Commissioner’s office stating the department has fixed a construction date of J973 for the Telegraph widening project. By NED ADAMSON BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -' Telegraph is a death road. In fact, Jhe six-mile - stretch of tWe highway that extends through Bloomfield Township almost defies the motorist to enter its path. numerous and violent accidents, which increase year by year. \ i Driving Telegraph has bpeif described v as a virtual "brush with'death” experience. LIKE RUNNING GAUNTLET Or, as one observer who makes the trip every day puts it, “It’s like running the gauntlet. One bat of an eyelash and you can be under ^ a truck or In someone’s front yard.” turnoffs along the highway in this township. Accident possibilities are constant. Elimination of traffic hazards has long been a struggle for township police and government officials. ‘‘The steady rate of increase in traffic accidents indicates that the six-mile strip of Telegraph in Bloomfield is the most risky and accident-prone stretch of road in the state. BLEAK OUTLOOK’ Telegraph has been the scene of Autos, If they’re not bumper-to-bumper during the rush hours, are constantly dodging, and accelerating to get through hazardous zones — if they are not slowing suddenly to turn into one of the 186 “The day is approaching when Telegraph will be totally unsafe to travel. The current rising acqident rates indicate nothing but a bleak outlook for the highway,” said Chief Snell. The chief cites statistics to support his forecast; • Accidents to date over a year ago, are up 20 per cen| (117 to Iffi). • Persons injured have increased to 126 oyer 70, a nearly 40 per cent increase. ■ • Personal , injury accidents are up 40 per cent to 57 from 41. • Four fatalities have been recorded this year. The record for one year was Six in 1966. -s^ "The very fact that people who travel the highway regularly know its potential danger is the reason why they attempt to speed up and get through the danger' zone as quick as they can. The peosiveness and impatience are the root cause of many of the accidents,” claims Traffic Division Lt. Ri(ihard Reuther. Chief Snell will probably make a de'cision in the near future regarding a recbmmendatioh to the highway department about jnSplementing^the no left-turn proposal. 1. “Certainly we will get a lot of pressure and static from people and, the merchants, but this., is what we peed if anything is to be accomplished toward rectifying the situation,” Snell said. SPRING ’70 VOTE A5KED Farmington City Manager John Dinan, speaking for the F a r m i n g fo n Governmental Organization Study Committee, requested that, the election be held in the spring of 1970. (The study committee is composed of two representatives from each of the four communities L Dinan commented that the study committee wanted enough time to make an in-depth analysis of the recent Michigan State University survey of the Farmington area. In that study, consolidalion of. the area was recommended as the most advantageous course for all involved. The studycommittee also wants time to present its findings to the community at a series'of meetings prior to an election on consolidation. A" technical question concerning vpting procedures revolves around whether the two villages, which still pay township taxes, should be counted independently . or as a part of (he township vote. Staff Is shuffled at Troy Schools Telegraph's Almost Daily Story County Action on Landfills for 2 Townships Postponed TROY —.A top-level administrative realignment was decided upon by the board of education in recent action in lieu pf an available new superintendent of schools to replace resigning Dr. Rex B. Smith. Boyd Larson, the current' assistant superintendent in charge of construction, was named acting superintendent. Larry Hamiltoh, director of elementary cur-riculum and special education, becomes assistant s!uperintendent of curriculum and personnel and John Diefenbaker, acting business manager, was named as acting assistant superintendent of , finance and business. Elementary School Principals David Battie (Wattles and Poppleton schools) and Ron Stevens (Big Beavei- and Hill schools), were designated as special administrative aides for five weeks of the summer to allow the other appointees to take vacation time. Beattie was also named by the board as acting chief negotiator for teacher and staff negotiations to replace Diefen-baker. MAY ABOUSH LEFT TURNS !* The police department'' is currently discussing the idea of abolishing all left turns in both directions between Miracle Mile shopping center and Orchard Lake Road. “We have already discussed this possibility with the 32 merchants involved and to a man they screamed'"it would kill me” if such an ordinance were to be invoked, Lt. Reuther said. He said that expansion of the highway eight lanes for the entire six-mile duration through the township will be the only way the road could ever begin to" handle the traffic it’s going to see in the next several years. -' Bloomfield Township, for example, has grown from 3,000 to 45,000 persons in 18 years. snie It is now estimated that 40,00 vehicles use.Tele^aph every 24 hour period. The upswing in commercial truck traffic has added considerably to the dilemma. INTERSECTION COUNTS Arbitrary counts taken at X key Intersection for full-hour perioM have indicated an averagev of three trucks passing through the particulai* intersection every minute. Lt. Reuther noted that 50 per cent of the accidents oii Telegraph are rear-end collisions, which "indicates the degree Of congestion on the road. Principal accident causes include following too closely; passing without due care and traveling too fast for weather conditions. ByJEANSAILE There will be no county-operated landfills In two area townships, at least not right away anyway. There was an unexpected last-minute postponement ye.sterday of action which would have allowed the County Road Commi.s.sion (d begin operation of landfills on county-owned land in Pontiac and Commerce township . landfill operations were read Before the full board. It had been recommended by the public works committee. Request for postponement came after letters from bdth townships opposing REASON FOR POSTPONEMENT But the postponement apparently came about because of a reoly from Sol Lftmerson, road commission chairman, to Board Chairman Charles B. Edwards Jiv in regard to support of legislation which would allow the county to desighate the public works department as permanent solid waste dispbsaf agent. postponement during the meeting, but be later told reporters, “The road commission is too darned independent. We appoint them, set their salaries and receive their (annual) report, and that’s' all there is to it.” The board has not yet hired a new supertintendent of schools. Dr. Smith has reported that he has not as yet found a new position, although hi? last day as Troy superintendent is May 22. Public Works Committee Chairman Harry Horton gave no reason for the For Copter/ Projector The road commission has recently taken considerable verbal heat from the public works committee as well as from other members of the board o f supervisors on a variety of complaints. There bave been suggestions, That present commission meftibers ) b e removed, and there was also discussion of support for legislation which "Would have abolished road commissions entirely. Summer Program Sign-Up Is-Begun Chief Snell explained that stricter enforcement is not a guaranteed deterrent to increased accidents. Tbe department has issued 634 ticket violations since Jan. 1 bn Telegraph alone, a 30 per.^^ cent crease oVer last year. However, the accident totals have continued to soar. The chief explained that when the highway was termed unsound from all engineering aspects in 1965, preliminary plans were drawn, and Approved for the expansion of the highway to eight lane?;. Cost estimates'Were placed at $30 mil-lionjj Right-of-way rights have been taken on nearly all pRoperty from 12 Mile to 15 Mile, but that is as far as the project -has-reached* Supervisors OK Spending DISAGREEMENT MAY RESULT WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Registration for the early summer program for elementary schooL aged pupils in the township is currently uiider way. The program includes sports, games,' arts and crafts, movies and story telling. A variety of action taken by the County Board ol Superfisois yesterday included appropriation of $5,000 towards purchase of a helicopter for the Sheriff’s Department. Other appropriations included $3,500 for county lobbying activities' and $1,235 for purchase of a 16mm movie-sound projector. In other business, the board: • Named Mrs. Virginia Solberg to the Parks and Recreation Commission, replacing John L. Carey who resigned. • Set Sept. 16 as the date for el«Sctlon bf a new Avon Township charter commi.s.sion. Architects’ fees for the county s pro-po.sed 'mental retardation facility were approved on a sliding scMe. The firm of Tarapata, MacMahon. Paulson As.sbciates of Birmingham will receive 6 percent should costs equal the estimated $2 niillioii. II, Supervisors were ^ designated a s delegates to the 34th annual conference of the National As.sociation of County Organizations July 27-31 in Pobfland, Ore. Members will attend .at county ex- • Approved Installationof a courthouse plaque, at' members’ expense, listing members and districts of this first reapportioned county board • Referred to committee the proposal to change the name of Oakland-Fontiac Airport; formation of. a special com-piittee to study drug abuse: formatibh of a work camp for County, JailHrustees; a propo.sal to remove committee clerk’s staff from the merit system; , and the request Lhat retired county\employea be allowed free Use bf the bounty’s Davisburg golf course. 0 Disagreement between the two bodies may result in elimination of a $400,000 proposed apprpriation to the commission in the 1970 budget. The funds would have aided a matching road building program. Supervisor Carl O’Brien, D-Pontiac, said he anticipated that road money and the .$2 million set aside for the new public servied center to house the Department of Public Works and the Drain Commission would be First cut in the/ county’s reduced budget/ Preliminary Tax Allocation Board action indicates that the county budget will have to be pared $3.5 million. Enrollment is limited to 60 pupils for each of four 2-week sessions, beginning June 23, July 7, July 21 and Aug. 4. Deadline for registration at the school office is May 23. Th» fee is $8.50 per session. Show-O-Ree Set for 1,500 Scouts Rochester School PTA to Install New Officers Supervisors got info a hassle abotit fiscal reform as they passed a resolution opposing legislation to end tax exemption for municipal bonds. Democratic supervisors Dennis Aaron. Hunfington Woods, Philip Mastln, Hazel Park, Niles Olson, Orion Township and Lee Walker, Madison Heights, voted against the msolution, over arguments by other bokd members 'that sUch^ legislation would ultimately increase taxpayers’ costs in bunding projects. ROCHESTER — The Woodward School PTA will meet Monday to install new officers for the 1969-70 school year. Following the 8 p.m. meeting at the school, several classes will present a musical pr(^ram. New officers are Mrs. Frank Richardson, president/ Eruce Dodson arM John Wearner, father vibe presidents; Mrs. Eric K.etelsen, mother vice-president; Mrs. Nicholas Stefan, teacher vice' president: Mrs. Robert Chase, secretary ; and Mrs. Glen Grubbs, treasurer. HOLLY — Nearly 1,500 Cub Scouts. Boy Scouts and Explorers W i 11 participate in the Manito Boy Scout district’s annual Show-O-Ree at Groveland Oaks Recreation Area on Grange Hall Road from 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday. « The Show-O-Ree will feature many* Scouting skills including pioneering, signaling, first bid, crafts, cooking and^^ sailing. Another feature wilTbe a Rama, which will spotlight Cwlf^oUt activities, including Pinew<5d Derby races. . yT ★ ★ X ■' !# Sea Explorers will give .sailboat rides and musiq, will be provided by the Boy Scout band of Troop 1389 of Farmingtop and the Drum and Bugle Corps of Troop 43,Hofly. V • \ About 800 B6y Scouts and Explorers will camp for the entire weekend"arthe— Groveland Oaks site. Webelos Scouts and their falhef's also will camp during the weekend. ' k; j / ,r PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. M4Y 16,-196 A—5 Army Asked to Eye Rifle Checks at GM WTROrr (AP) — Rep. Lu-lhave com? to public attention cien’'N. Nedzi, D-Mieh., baa!thus far. asked the Depiartment of thei " ★ ★ ★ Army to review Inspection pro-j A GM spokesman said the cedures in the manufacture of M-16 rifle at the Hydra-Matic Division of ® General Motors Corp. in Willow Rpn troit. ' > Nedzi said lie had recel^d complaints that “required spection procedures’are n o t being complied with.” In , recent years, a number of aoldiers in Vietnam complained about the iteration o? the M -16 rifle. A congressional . investigation earlier this ye ar blamed malfunctions of the M-16 oit “inadequate inspection procedures” at the Colt Arms Co. plant in Hartford; Conn. Colt also produces the rifle. RANDOM CHECKS A spokesman at CM’s Hydra-Matic plant said that military Inspection specifications were being followed and that only random checks were required on procedures” at the Colt Arms Cq. plant In Hartford, Conn'. Coltlalso produces the rifle. A spokesman at GM’s Hydr-Matic plant said; that military inspection specifications were being followed and that only random checks were required on the weapons. No reports of any problenu Involving Ml6s produced by GM plant has 35 government inspectors supervising production of the rifles. under cfficMion 105D, or . ipfe gauge check is rein ^ffoducing bolt and irrel assemblies'of the rifles^ \ .Jk . NmzlAsaid the complaints agaittst the plant included alleged failure of inspectors lo run full gauge checks m bolt and barrel assemblies after being returned froni chrome plating and that in periods of stepped-up production the barrels were not inspected at all but were stamped as approved. TEST FIRED GM said each rifle is test -fired before being approved. GM has been producing' the rifles since last summer under a $56-millibn contract it received in April 1968. Sonie congressmen criticiKei^ the contract award because GM was not the low bidder and was inexperienced in production of rifles. VALLEJO, Calif. (Af) - A $50 million Navy submarine being repiodeled at Mare Island Naval Shipyard sabk Thursday '™^ghrMto-tbe Napa River. No one was injured. The Navy said the USS Guit-taro was at dock-side for outfitting as a nuclear-powered fast attack submarine when she started to sink bow first in the 34-footrdeep river. A heavy pair of men’s old socks placed over your shoes before you start a painting job will protect them from paint spatters. N-Sub Being /RadToactlvity Not a Hazard'; Norte Hurt VANCOUVER, B.C. (AP) . First-time marijuana offenders in British-Columbia are being sent to wilderness camps in= ■'of prison. The results, officials say, are encouraging. *‘iye use wilderness environment to train them in basic sur-■vival, mountain climbing, canoeing, search and rescue, forest fira fighting,” says Dr. Malcolm Matheson, 37, assistant director of,correcti(^s in British Columbia. There is no danger of radlmic-tivity, the Navy said, since tj^e nuclear core for tfie power lAaht had not yet been installed. Flooding started in a forward compartment. Navy ^icers said, and the crew and Mare Island workmen were qilickly forced from the craft which was launched here in July 1968. No cause for the flooding was given immediately. Workmen and the crew were unable to close hatches quickly since welding lines and aii; hoses had been pulled througli them from the shore. The 3,506-ton sub sank In five minutes, an official said. Since she is on a tUt, the rear sail and the mast remained out of water. Bystanders said electrical In B.C. Wilderness Areas Survival Carhps for Pot Users The average marijuana user, Matheson says, “can’i even look, after his own clothing or his bunk. They’re ohopouts from society and become responslbili-'lies to society, but they are jo< criminals.” The youths are sent to camps like one on Boulder Bay on Al-ouette Lake, near Haney in northern British Columbia, 251 The main goal of the wilderness program, which began last October, is to teach the youto a sense of responsibility to thiem-selves and others—something Matheson says they lack. tions,’.’ Matheson said in an Interview. “The instructor just kicked him out of the ca mp overnight, into the cold! “He was back the next morning and liked his rations. At any time there are just 44 youths in the Roulder Bay camp, ,Biit the turnover, is high '-a.12 in and 12 out every month it handles a large proper- Reynolds Softeners miles east of Vancouver. .tion of all marijuana offenders; The-fonr-month program qul- Matheson. says be feels by the minates in such tests as siirviv- time they have pas^d the wiling several days alone with nojderness survival course, “we ratjons. ‘ - i have changed their personali- ' ■* * ;tie^” and they are ready to re-1 Sometimes drastic measures jlurn to society. , jj are used to- curb irresponsible; I tendencies. ^ , j Mercfiont Honofsl 'One; kid didn!t like his ra-' AUTOMATIC AND ------- -AUTOMATIC /I o SALES, RENTALS SERVICE TRADE IN YOUR PRESENT SOFTENER WATER analysis AND INFORAAATIOH , BASED ON 24 YEARS EXPERIENCE IN THIS AREA RUST FREE SOFT WAJEa Gost-Gutting Panel Urged LANSING (AP) - Concerned over the' rising cost of state government. Republican freshmen in the House of Representatives have creation of a, joint legislative committee to feriret out programs and services that could be cut or trimmed. Committee expenses could not exceed j$50,000, said Rep. John P. Smeekens, R- ____________________ ^.Sherwood, who cosponsored the eiplipmehV appeared heavll#re8olution with nine GOP riamaged. |traabman. The committee would consistiday in Detroit. of six representatives and six -----------—----- senators. It would be DETROIT (AP) - Quintoni Kimble, owner of a Detroit clothing store, receives the , “Small Businessman of the Year” award for Michigan from the Small Business Ad-' ministration at a luncheon to- | pdwered to'subpoena witness's, j XTirmnpTcrimmmnrimnnnnrrinnnnr^^ atnfiinister oaths and examine! C books and records of any; person, partnership, association! or corporation, public pfl' private, under the terms of thei “ resolution, Smeekens said. The committee would make its cost-cutting recom-; ; mendations during the 1970! leglslatlvt MMlon. by o Serta Assodotf BEDDING Choose the bed jtou want at SPECIAL LOW PRICE Buy on the Ward's Way Plan . . . Many Months to Pay! Firm, Smoolh-lop. IIere’,sasounrl value for sound i-sleep. Smooth-top comfort with firm healthful support built in. Come in now and save. Buy the set... Extra Firm, Quilted. For those who like more support, this beautiful q-uilt-top jnattress is the choice. Extra-firm consfcTuction plus luxurious quilted cbmfort makes this a real bargain buy. A good nian is never hard to find. SAVE «20 lOO : 2 PIECES................$79.90 Buy the set... SAVE*20~ 2 PIECES...... $99.90 Reg. $49.95 He’s always ready. With a friefidly welcome. Mresh drink. Or a tip on>where the real ly big onesBrCtoitirff; -HiSBbility and warmth have m^e his place of business more than just a place of business. They’ve made it a place of unique good fellowship. Where strangers become friends. And neighbors become neighborly. This month is National Tavern Month, a great time to toast the "good man" behind your favorite bar. With America’s favorite brand ot whiskey, pf course. Seagram’s 7 Crown. / Say SMgram’s and Be Sure. ■ lv‘ Seagram Distiller* pomp*ny, New York City. Blended Whiskey. 86 Proof, 65% Grain Neutral Spirit*. -I. ■ I Reg. $59.95 I Twin or Full Sif« 17 -19 S. Saginaw St. Downtown Pontiac ^ ' OPEN MON., THUBS., ’til 9i00 P.M. 'T*'“ o*OB*8000»9tttiR-y THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48056 RICH*«I> M. riTW;I«A Treisurer »nd rin» Officer FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 Secretary end Advertliind HAter J. Ren Salut^Miehigan Week Tomorrow ^nersan/ihe 16th annual editipiiym Micl^an Week, the observance/of whicH has done much to showc^e the ^advantages arid resources of the Wolverine State across the Country. This year’s fheme appropriately enough is “Michigan— Land of Hospitality.” Under general chairmanship of Dewey Barish, president of Detroit Institute of Technology, with. Pontiac’s Clyle Haskill serving as Oakland County chairman, the Week gets under way with, Community. Pride Day. Locally, it will be observed by an all-day “Cleanup.” aimed at selected downtown areSs and premises. Organized by thfe Pontiac JayceeSj the activity will be participated in by hundreds of teen-igers enlisted from the City’s Schools. ★ * ★ . ★ Many nearby communities are observing the Day in similar fashiom Sunday is devoted to Spiritual Foundations Day, followed by Our Govei-nment Day on Monday. Highlighting it will be the exchange of mayors between various state municipalities. Pontiac’s Mayor William H. Taylol-I Jr. will journey to East Lansing, while his counterpart. Dr. Gordon L. Thomas, will spend the day here. Birmingham will trade its head of government, Charles F. CliP-PERT, for Dowagiac’s James E. Burke. . Other Days follow: Our Heritage Day, Our Livelihood Day, Education Day, Hospitality Day, with the Week winding tip Saturday with Our Yputh Day. Throughout the area, schools, civic groups and business organizations will join hands in programming ceremonial and educational events reflecting the significance of each of the Days. Winter Seal of Holly is given note-' worthy recognition by the selection of its Thermal Window as the, County’s Product of tire Year.. ★ ★ ★ V, As it has in past years. The Press warmly commends the, concept of Michigan Week with a salute to the volunteer army of men and women who work throughout the year to make it the outstanding statewide proj-' ect it has become. 'But What Can David Lawrence Says: Nixon Puts Viet Policy on Line Fortas Resigns in Disgrace FORTAS Resignation yesterday of Associate Justice Are Fortas from the U.S. Supreme Court spared Congress the clearly-indicated duty of initiating impeachment pro-m ceedings against'*^' him. Although scandal | is no stranger both the executive^’ and legislative tablishritients of the Federal,. G o v e r n-1 mW during the 1801 years of its existence, it has not un-,til now reared its ugly head within the pristine chambers of the U.S. Supreme Court—^th^ third, branch of the national government. But rear its head it did, and For-tas stood revealed as not only a jurist on the bench of the Country’s top tribunal who sold his reputation and that of the Court for personal gain, but in doing so displayed such incredible lack of ethical sensitivity as .should have disqualified him for the high office he held. It was Michigan’s Sen. Robert (iriffin who a year .. ago first raised the question of Fortas’ integrity when he led the Senate rejection of President Johnson’s nomination of the associate justice to succeed Earl Warren as ^ Chief Justice of the United States. Griffin revealed that the appointee had accepted a $15,000 fee from a university for conducting a seminar and that, additionally, his relations with the President had smacked strongly of untenable “crony-ijsm.’/ ★ ★ ★ At that time, the senator had warned that “only the tip of the iceberg’’ (of Fortas’ unethical standards) had been revealed. But the submerged portion surfaced in due course, with the revelation that Fortas had accepted a $20,-000 payment from the. Wolfson Family, Inundation at a time when Wolfson, a stock speculator, was under investigation by the government, and is niow in jail. Other disclosures indicate indiscretion on Fortas’ part in several legal connections priojv tft his appointment to the Supreftie Court. Fortas’ resignation lays to rest but does not atone for what appears to be a most shocking betrayal of public trust. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages The Scrolls WASHINGTON - President Nixon has laid before the w(M-ld in unmistakable terms the American case in the Vietnam war. He has made it plain that the United States is not fighting just a little war in Asia or seek-^ ing territory < other advan-| tages for ___________________ self, but Is try- l^A^fRENCE idg conscientiously to find a . way to deter future agressions and prevent a bigger; war. ^ Mr. Nixon, m o r e o v e r, emphasizes that he wants the Vietnam conflict ended s permanently, so that the \"younger brothers of our soldiers in Vietnam >111 not hjave to fight in the future in another' Vietnam someplace else in the world.” * ★ - ♦ The President obviously Is offering proposals that are not so rigid as to prohibit counters uggestions and modifications. But he does not budge from his fundAnental concept that there must be k peace which is guaranteed under some form of international supervision. Mr. Nixon has indicated clearly that, while the United States is not trying to impose ‘‘k purely riiiiitary solution the battlefieH,” It will not corisent to any “ohe-slded ^withdrawal from Vietnam" or the acceptance of terms that would amount to a "disguis^.. American,defeat!’ RISK OF MASSACRE “ To abandon the people of South Vietnam, he, adds, would “risk a maksacre that would shock and dismay everyone in the world who values human life.” The President goes even further — he predicts that the ‘long-term hopes for peace in the world would be threatened unless a Satisfactory settlement In Vietnam Is assured. participate In arranging countries as if supervised' cease-fires in merely propaganda. Vietnam. The international ' ,Jt remains to be seen commission would also , whether, in the privacy of the supervise the elections to be negotiations at Paris or in the held in South Vietnam and talks through d l.p 1 o m a t i c would insure that fhe peace channels, there \will be a Voice of the People: Campaign Against Smut . Is Discussed by Readers Our family of three adult members is behind Chief Hanger’s campaign against smut. Although we have no children of our own, we are concerned with the right of parents to raise their children to be, clean and decent citizens. Tru?, some experts claim that siput does not harim, but J,_ Edgar Hoover says it does, and it seems that he is in a much better position to see the over-all picture than any other one person. Even if keeping sinutty reading ■ off the stands would prevent one crime, or keep one boy out of jail, wouldn’t it be worth it? LUCILLE. FISHER 2380 ROLANDALE, UNION LAKE I commend the Pontiac police department for the crackdown oh filthy literature on bookstands, but let us take a look - at the sex education in our schools today. This literature is called smut and filth on bookstands, while the same material is called' sex education in our schools. This is surely a. sick society. ANOTHER CONCERNED PARENT In answer to Rodney Dunn’s letter of May 12; why .do you think there are sick-minded people running loose with rapings, murders and other filthy thoughts and actiori in mind? Thank ^ God the police are starting to do something about it. What this country needs *is some old-time religion. . • RICHARD L. HART ‘Cutback in Salafies Would Balance Budget’ Teachers, police, firemen, ciiy officials, county .officials, state officials—everybody got a big raise, all want another this year, and more next year. Looks like a cutback in salaries would balance the budget everywhere. ' . . N.J.F. More Views Expressed on Sex Education A recent letter criticized the challenge to Sex Infor^tion and Education Counefl of the U.S. (SIECUS) sex education iinaterials and urged parents to “learn all sides.” Most oppo-th^ were SIECUS is not against sex education; rather it 1 opposed to the type of sex education without morality that SIECUS leaders stand for. DAVID BRADBURY 4009 HARBOR VISTA, ORCHARD LAKE There are experts who advocate the sex education program and othlers like Dr. James Lieberman of the National Institute of Mental Health who claim “too much information about sex can be as harmful to children as not enough. Even perfectly . accurate information can miss the mark and be disturbing (or be ignored or distorted) if the child' is not ready intellectually or emotionally.”' Dr. William McGrath, a psychiatrist, states, “premature interest in sex is unnatural and will airest or distort the development of a personality. Sex education should not be foisted on children; should not begin in the grade school.” MRS. NORMAN PARMELEE 722 HAMLIN, ROCHESTER I don’t see any need for further sex education as most schools hav^ fine programs but they are not labeled sex education. 1 understand California has recently banned SIECUS from its schools. MRS. H. DAVIDSON 11121 S. VASSAR, HOLLY Commenfp on Incident Involving Attorney Sometime ago Milton Henry was barred from Judge Stett’s courtroom because of a remark he made about not being a citizen of the United States. Mr. Henry has strong beliefs and f • n>r * f 1 feelings about the racial issues and was probably oidy exprdss- fkft i yhinn. /w flllling his views, not actually renouncing his citizenship. I feel IfAUUttUItU, misinterpreted Mr. Henry’s remarks and there- fore acted somewhat hasty in his decision' to bar Mr. Henry terms are carried out. 'The Preadent, in his TV address arguing for a peace settlement,.has opened lots 6i * doors, but much depends upon whether the Hanoi government will be persuaded by the Soviet Union that the time has coine to end the war and take a step toward world peace. « -k '. ■* , As might be expected, the first comments from Hanoi, recognition by t ne-. Communists that ’’they are faced now with a major decision, and that the United ^ates is willing to terniinate^lthe war on an honorable basis. ★ ★ * The real question is whether President Nixon will win widespread support throughout the world for his demand that there must be international supervision if Moscow and P^ihg are any settlement re^ed is to ve. For the Communists pr„ve effective. ^ negative, have a way of dealing with the public statements of other Bob Gonsidi ne, Says; Fhke Priests Are Seen NEJW YORK - China’s only China when Roman Catholic cardinal, dies. ^ Paul Yu-pln, recently elevated to the College of Cardinals, told an audi-enM at the Overseas, Club of America the other day that there are still priests — or, at least, men who look like priests the Coihmunist' mainland. CONSipiNE Cardinal Yu-pin lives on Taiwan, where be is president recently eievat-ege of Cardinals, ’A 11 A Mao Tse-tung from his courtroom. I’ve always thought that ,to give up this -right it must be done in a Federal court. HENRY P. HILL no \7ALL ' ' Warns Parents to Watch Teen-Agers’ Mail The Cardinal thinks Uhe of Fu Jen University, which Chinese Nationalists will be has 3,000 students, about 300 back on the mainland soon. of whom are Catholics. ■k k A A Catholic correspondent friend of mine return^ from China recently,” the big, “I do dot wish to say anything unkind about anybody,^’ said the Cardinal. “I seek a word or twg in English that escapes me. J cannot find the words. But'let .Parents bewarel ,/ group called “White Panthers” Is try-me say that if Lin Piao takes ing to take over the minds^f our junior high and higji school charge after Mao Tse-tung kids. They demand total freedom arid-down with anyone who passes, China will be In the stands in their way—God, patents, police and our entire demo-hands of an even less in- cratic system. 'Hiey feel that by offering what our Wds “dig” telllgent man. It ivlll be a ' —rock arid roll niusic for excitement and dope to take over case of going from bad to their minds—they can destroy America through Its youth, worse.”' ^ j, j, i \ I have been made aware by mail received in our home by our two teen-agers. Be on the lookout for mail from Trans-Love Energies, Anp Arbor, the rock and roll group Is the MC5 whose leader is John Sinclair. We must take an interest in our kids—someone else already has, demanding total freedom without the responsibility it represents. A RE-EDUCATED PARENT come hell, high water, Mao and/or Lin Plao. He still believes that Oiina is basically anti-Communist. There is more to the Baltirnnre Sun The a f (■ h a e.o.I o.g 1 r a 1 discovery of the present century -- a young science's first century ,so far ■ remains the Dead Sea Scrolls, In the early 19,50s. the talk at many a secular dinner table had to.do with Qnmran caves and Bible times; later, an exhibition of actual Unrolled scrolls, circulating among museums, set viewer-count records. , , ' Among a select company of experts, meanwhile, variant wordings for Old Testament passages were" suggested, nonbiblical religious works of the firsl centuries B.C, and A.D. were deciphered and ./analyzed and new insights into long-ago theological fac- The tionalism were formulated by , some scholars and que.stioned b^iothers. The six-dSy , war, a n«d takeover* of th*c-Rock^ifel,lcr Museum in the Jordanian part of '"Jerusalem, happily damaged neitfvr the .patient scholars poring over the ancient texts iTor the fragmented sewings of goatskin they have been fitting together. * * * Throughmil, and as before, nothing in the scrolls shakes established religious f a i fh<. Jesus continues Unmentioned. , The supposition,’ unproved hut ever stronger, is that the monastery owning and writing the scrolls Was Jiome to the jEssene.s, }hat, third sect (alongside Pharisees and Sadducees) mentioned by Roman historians but omitted from the Bible. The Essene? remain entirely, outside Christianity. Fof the hockey nut the comparison fits a game without a penalty. * ★ ★ Many of them subscribe to the view (hat rough play and fighting are an® inescapable part of hockey. Doubtless quite a few think they are desirable to provide t h e perfect spectacle. But hockey doesn't have to be rough to escape boredom. There was plenty of '.excitement as Montreal Cana-tiiens defeated New York Rangers 4-3 and eliminated them from the Stanley Cup playoffs. ★ * , * The teams were y President Ni> Told a loint, legislative session ....... mid .-Michigan community of WillUtmston had won the 1968 Connmunify Achievement Award, given In connection Michigan week which begins Sunday ‘''■•■'““T GENERAL ................................les rHI CIVIL SERVI Said II ............. .. ------ lext month a decision on liscipllnary action against _____ ocals Involved In work stoppaget against dissolve the Nanktn Mills School District In Wayne County. THE SENATE . Met briefly and conducted ru^________ business, giving preliminary approval to a_ nwe Than $ie-mllllon aupplamantal THE HOUSE Hiaro.but look no tinal action on ow SSty -million public education sad HCO 143, Plttenger. Tribute to ____ Francis Cardinal Oeardan, former archbishop of Detroit. Met In loint session with the Senate to hear an address by Gov. 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MAY 16, 196Q, A— Doctors Are Getting kich on Medicare WDTTOR'S note T/jfa'government ask$ us to give ] the lone doctor sees as many as| Last year this ipountaln doc-1 office nurse writes many pres-1 for a single patient whose pov-b of two articles on quality care and we give our pa-' 75 patients a day, sometimes tor was paid>iore than $100,000 criptions for him after he gives erty of life brings poor health, government i^alth programs.) .tients quality care. We aren’t more. un^icr Medicaid in Kentucky. i her the diagnosis. He also said too. —— , doing it for nothing,,” Other doctors, he said, may * + ★ * he sends prescriptions baCk ' * * * , ■ By JAMES R. POLK NO WRONGDOING work only four hours daily jor Another doctor topped him at with relatives occa.sionally for '‘Almo.st every family that WASHINGTON (AP) — Se- ^ t v. a Fox said,,nearly $120,000. One tiny moun-ailing patients in the hills who comes in has to be wormed,” he cret government records list i ®small'a per-can’t get to a doctor. said. plush Medicare payments ranging as high as $285,866 in a year and a half to one Miami, Fla., osteopath. ’Two brothers in New Jersey were paid a combined total of more than $375,000 in the same span for caring for patients in nursing homes they owned. found no wrong-doing by Dr. Fox or Dr. Rivielio. ‘‘They have been goihg through with .a fine-tooth comb,’' said the Miami doctor. “Wi just have a tremendoilsly hfiavy workload of Medicare patients.'* The Florida and New Jersey doctors topped a nahieless, list in a report to Congress disclos- that is five or six times as long, of course you’re going tp be making five of six timesL, as much.” Fox, 42, . trim-looking in mock turtleneck sweater, gold slacks and gray sideburns, operates a modernistic, new methcal fiwcins center in an agtpg neighborhood -------- -- - , , mg 47 phystcians were getting »;,‘he edge of downtown Miami.'Miami Beach and Fort Sawder-$50,000 or more annually from ^ procedures Medicare. Senate Finance Committee investigators are sifting the list as I ISjyjl nhaniroH ” hp part Of a probe Of th^ $6-billion; , , ^ changed, he government program of health! j/j ChuTch; 150 care for the elderly. Fall to Basement son could almost touch both wallk—pulled in nearly $330,000 for prescriptions under Medicaid. ' State Investigators sent into At^alachik found "unsually large quantmes” of drugs, some still uno^nm,' in the mountain shacks. They noted that patients often went to doctors for pres- W.WV.1-. ..V. •• _____________ criptions for the common cbld patients from as far away as | or an upset stomach. The report — — • ■ " -------- “permissive office drugs FREE for contributing to Tbe doctor said his practice,the heavy outlay of drugs. ‘ has always involved a high.‘ASSEMBLY LINE’ 100-BED HOSPITAL Fox (^ned his 100-bed, avocado'stucco hos{Htal on the outskirts of Miami three years ago and added the new downtown clinic last year near his former office. He Said he draws elderly Kentucky is considering steps to place a ceiling on patient visits-to a doctor because of the rising costs of its $48-million federal-state program. HUMAN,NATURE Merritt S. Dietz, the 33-year-old former newsman who heads Kerttucky’s welfare programs, said, “You can’t expect to make something free for a person and not have him get a whole lot of To the mountain doctor, closr er attention,, and more thprough care for some patients would mean turning others away without any place to go. ‘What else can I ^o?” he said. Most of his patients are destitute, he said. The coal has been stripped from the hills, and the people are left behind.' it. That’s just human nature.” The doctor admitted he wrote Dietz said effective controls prescriptions for patients for must be placed oh the govem-simple colds because the drugs ment medical program before Floor Collapses The $100,000-a-year doctor—he were free to them under Medi- costs skyrocket out of sight. MEDICAID ‘FRAUD3’ Hearings planned this sum-ymer also will touch, on possible frqud scandals in Medicaid, the companion program for the poor,' and will examine the soar-' ing costs of both programs. EASLEY, S.C. (AP) - About 150 persons plunged into , the basement of a church when the number hasnt cnangeu, doesn’t want his name, used—, caid.. If they bought pills off the said. ‘‘Now they’re bemg paid: gOO patients a shelf, they would have to pay “There has got to be some sense ‘^hari- jgy go ^any that he descries lout of their pocket. injected into-this program,” he his practice as “assembly-line The doctor gaye examples; said, “or it is going tp be just medicine.” where, he said, six to eight pres-1 another noble experiment that* He said he is so busy that his I criptions might rtot be unusual I fails.” for, arid before they ty cases.” . ‘ y-~* * ★ ' Socim Security officials asked the private insurance firms which handle the government-financed Medicare system to ‘Zell service. ., er the nayments were justified. Talk With Me Before You Do Anything In Home Improvement Promise to Save You Money and Worry on Anything ^in Home Improvement.” INES’ 7655 Highland Road, Pontiac Call for free Estimate! 674-0169 Federal officials have insisted Seventeen sustained minor irit l» keeptai the name, of lii j.Si'15-SSSr.^^ hiohPsf.naiH »f o f^om either Dr. Fox or ur. m- highest-paid Medicare doctors a treated at a hospital. . ,, seefet, even from Congress. ★ * * ^ *' * * The pastor, the Rev. H.L. Sul- There is evidence that pay- Hcever, the Aa»»late|Uv«.,J«ld tke Press has learned those at the top of an official report are: • Dr. M. S. Fox of Miami, Fla., an osteopath who owns a downtown Miami medical clinic and a suburban hospital. He led the nation with the $285,866. Asked why the payments were that high, Dr. Fox responded that he is “probably the hardest-working physician in the couptry.” New Foundation Baptist Church gram for the poor far outrun he i sustained about $10,000 damage Medicare pay checks-but the when the left aide of the floor | Medicaid program w handl^ so gave way without warning. loosely jp Washingtcm that no The funeral rites were contin- Hst of the highest-paid Medicaid I doctors exists. ued at the grave side. |$100,000 A YEAR Tame Goose Chase repotted 85 doctors gnd 11 dentists averaging nearly $100,000 a at N. Dakota Zoo nOme for Medicaid. i In Eastern Kentucky, 11 doc-MINOT, N.D. (AP) - Zoo of- tors have topped $50,000 a year Cheny Hill, N.J., also an osteo-fidals are engaged in a tame from Medicaid, path, second in the nation at goose chase. . * * * $199,992 for a year and a half. * * * Appalachia, medicine dif- • Dr. James J. Rivielio of His brother. Dr. Ben Rivielio Jr., received $176,56$. The amounts represented the combined payments for a medical staff of six serving the nursing homes they operate in nem'by , Pennsauken, Mount Laurel and Maple Shade. \ Dr. Jaibes Rivielio said, *ThA Some 21 tame geese swam^ away from the Roosevelt Park zoo last month during the flooding on the Souris River. The geese have their wings clipped and can’t fly. fers dramatically from the mod- Zoo offtcials are asking Minot Residents to ke^ their eyes ^en for wandering geese now k| f lyll ithat the floodwaters have reced-' New Orleans Kills ed. \ l The baWing, middle-aged doc- tor sits in a sparse, bare office emistic architecture of Fox’s office With Its spurting fountain and deep carpets. One Kentucky doctor’s office sits a mile up^the hollow in a former coal nqinjing settlement. Once there was a small sign, “Clinic,” on the worn wooden building; but it has fallen down! Shoe Shine Ban that is a converted kitchen. Un-| NEW ORLEANS (AP) - The City Council voted unanimously Thursday to repeal a 40-year-old city law prohibiting commercial shoe shines on Sundays. City historians said the law was passed sometime in the l^Os but said there >%as no record of what prompted it. The law wasn’t rigorously enforced. SurVSy of Bootsrsinnate at night, sometimes mid- _ _ night, the pained people keepi LANSING (AP) Tbe I coming. He is the only doctor! Department of Natural Resourc-1 iqj. miles around in this rough, es is sending questionnaires toLygg.„,fjpjjjgjj mountain coun-23,000 Michigan boat owners selected at random. Informa-tion collected will help the de-I^D^ S RICH partrrient determine what type In the past, the poverty of his of dricking, launching and other j patients encircled him, too. Now facilities are need^ to best it has made him rich—and conserve the pleasure boaters. troversiai. PANELING 4x8 Sheet ^5’* Was $7.95 Baked on Meldminlt finish Insists scratching. 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The Bank on *^THEGROJT* 12 Convenient Offices Pontiac State Bank Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation with Deposits Insured to $15,000.00 •i! THE PON'flAC PR<^:SS. FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 Humph^'ey EnioYing"Rolfes as Prof, Cotumnist MINNEAPOLIS,' Minn. (AP) — Hubert H. Humphrey Is enjoying his new twin roles of professor and' columnist so much he Is now a card-carrying menti-ber of both the American Association of University Professors and Ilia American Newspaper Guild. TTie effervescent Democratic presidoitial candidate of 1968 use^ajsareer night with college journalism students Thursday to talk on teaching, writing, campus violence and just about any other subject that occurred to him or to his lirieners.- Mm lot the presidency, and scorn for violence sweeping col lege campuses. ' | Humphrey said he thougq the Vietnam war, urg^d'that W be j^ven time. Huinphrey char-actiferized the President’s speech on the war Wednesday as. “sensible, responsible, thou^^tfulv and hopeful.’’ In foreign policy, lie "said he thought Nixwi has proceeded “cautiously-and wise; ly.’.’ Humphrey reported he had in an effort to Win access to ter'campus for a black couple. 0I4 freshman to tejl me what the courses of study should be. “I fought ROT9 on the University of Minnesota campus before you ever thought" iaf it. I’d have been in a lot more trouble (at Minnesota) except that I “Look, warning to Roscoe Drummond, Los j Angeles Times syndicated {oiiuhnlst who happened by and but “we used the power of* he said in mock peaceful persuasion. We won.’’ He added, "When I see junior storm troopers taking over a campus, I say that it is a dangerous threat to everytMng freedom means. Violence destroys the meaning of words.' Humphrey said he was all for increased control of nonacademic activities by students, “but I do not Intend an 18-year- ^tned the party, “I’m taking over in the columnist business.” Besides writing his own syndicated column, which Humphrey endorsed to any editors who might be listening, the former Minnesota senator is teaching at Macalester College In St. Paul and the University of! Minnesota. j Humphrey professed* himself | fatigued by six hours of lectures: and four hours of student inter-: - . , „ Vi™ ,t Macl^ler Builder Resigns ANN ARBOR (AP)-Frank E. then acted anything but. , ^ i * r, * u u of Metropolitan Detroit, has re-WARM WORDS | signed to become president of He had warm words for Presi-jthe Washtenaw County Associa-dent Nixon, the man who beat tion of Contractors. FBI Turns Film Editor for Iowan's Horrie Movie WASHINGTON "(AP) ■ Leo- nard Donahe’s home movies from Christmas are ready, now —the FBI has finished Siting the film. Donahe and his wife came to Washington lari Christmas to be with their daughter for the holi- reau’s regional office, asked to explain why pictures could not be taken pf objects visible from public roads, said: “Any time! anyone would take a picture of a restricted area it could present a problem of possible security aspects. I just donH dayr and await the birth of theirl want to get.involved in a discus-first grandchild. " jision of all government policies * * ★ ithat have to do with restricteid Donahe, a 30-year resident ofi areas. Fort Dodge, Iowa, used a lot of film in shooting movies of his daughter’s home and the area in and Around Washington. The -movie-making made them the object of a four-month security Investigation. 'The trouble started innocently when the Dohahes and their daughter, Mrs. Larry Handy, went for a drive In the suburban Maryland countryside, hoping the ride on bumpy Route 28 might spAed her labor. FILMED NIKE BASE They stopped on the road three miles west of Rockville i while Donahe shot some home movies of the Army’s Nike mis-^ sile base including the white ra'-i dar dome. i “It looked like a big white golf ball on stilts,” said Mrs, Donahe. was starving. Students today elsewhere and added with a seem to have more time. Humphrey agreed with questioner that news media are over-emj^sizlng violence ahd demonstration on campuses and laugh, “You can see ! running fqr anything.” Humphrey on his fellow teachers: “Too many professors get lazy in the middle of the game. Not me. I’ll die on the job.” Humphrey likening the 1968 campaign to a foMball game: “Some (rf the best'taqkles weren’t made by the opposition.” “Ypu know, when, we took the pictures we saw a car parked along the road and we joked that maybe there Was a-spy in Jt,” she said. “Well it turned out ■omeb^y thought we were epies.” The FBI showed up last Feb-" ruary at their Iowa home after tracing a license number and talking with Donahe’s, fellow COMFORTEaMATE AIR qONOITIONINB Enjoy wdiole-houae comfort It's OMy. It’s inexpensive. Adds v*hM tq your home, pleasun to your living. HEll ilr conditioning units provide-thorough indoor comfort, whether added to an existing warm, air system or as an original all sea-j son COMFORT MATE in- employes at National Gypsum stallation. CALL FOR FREE Co. in Fort Dodge. SURVEY. NO OBLIGA- RETURNS FOR EHJVl TlON. TERMS T6 SUIT “He seemed satisfied and said the whole thing would probably be dropped,” said Mrs. Donahe. But the agent came back several weeks later and a.sked for the film. , “By then we could have sold anything we wanted to the Russians,” Mrs. Donahe said. She told the agent the film had been sent to Mr. and Mrs. I Handy in Maryland. At the endj of April an agent went to the Handy home and look the film. It was returned 10 days later with the Nike scenes edited out, she .said. An FBI spokesman in the bu- WESTCO HEATING & SUPPLY CO. 237 W. Clarkiton Rd. Ljike Orion, Mich. 693.1767 What Avill you beclrinking in 1979? . Tb(iay^ _________ Ccurstairs: if^s ten _ yeais ahead of its time. t STILL GOING ONt jvoirs THE TIME TO TR4^ ' ^ J Tractor or Lownmower., - GardenTrocto _ ^ to save even more o > clearanc® pnces . • • fin hwi tilt wiill Ink mi ii iiir liviii nii.. ffimpliBMi Oil) Sinlicil) lives vii Ni-Scili iiwinl Look of the mower In this pictur*. It's actually following th* ground ond not tha tractor. 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FROM BANK TEaMS FOayoua CONVENIENCE $14400 ,1 '■' * We * Service What We Sell! 921 Univorsity Drivo 8:00 S!M!tQ 6:00 P.M. raSTIMi FE'8-35S3 PHONES 33S-021B THE PONTIAC l^RESS; FRiPAy. MAY 16, 1969 A—11^ MANY FACES-ALL FUNNY-Come-dian Arte Johnson for the last two years has been bringing to life a parade of hilarious . AP Wirtphoto characters in the TV sliow, “Laugh-In.” He hopes .to have his own show eventually. Arte Johnson of 'Lgugh-ln' Ve-r-ry Inf-er-esfingand Funny (EDITOR’S NOTE - That comedian, dressed in a German .uniform, who pops in and out of television’s “Laugh-In” series, is Arte Johnson. He was in the funny business nearly 20 years before his delivery of one line-“ve-r-ry int-er-esting” r- made him one of the most popular , comics in television.) Buzzi’s reticule, and a.s an| He grew up In the Midwest, earnest little Russian. In all,{studied journalism at thc| though, he has appeared in 38jtJniversity of Illinois, and even other characterizations t h a t spent some tinte as a press have been shown a few times, [agent in New York. His Johnson is another of a long strangely spelled first name, By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-jladio Wy ter NEW YORK - Arte Jolinson may not be the tallest man in show business, but the bespec-. tacled elf of the “Laugh-In’ regulars Ms a giant ampng red-blooded he-men: he w^rks string of overnight successes with a long training and waiting period behijHi him. He has been comedian-in-waiting for almost 30 years. When George (producer George Schlatter) called about an idea he had for Rowan and Martin,” said Johnson, “I was doing very well making commercials. I was happy and rich and I didn’t want to give it up. Arte — prMiounced Art-ie came when he found he could not use his real name, Arthur Johnson, professionally because it already belonged to ai production singer in Las Vegas. So he chose Art E. Johnson — and that became Arte by a printer’s, error on a program. Johnson, and his second wife, Gisela, are apartment dwellers Hollywood and pursue needlepoint during airplane flights and he doesn’t care who sees him. “Nobody gets giggly because tailors know how to sew,” I ■ pointed out. “I have to take lot • of commercial flights and flying is a bore. You — or at least I — can’t dig into a book or magazine and I can’t sleep. One day my wife was vdth me and she pulled out her needlepoint and sewed happily all the way to. New York; That’s how I got started and it makes the time fly. “Sure, people look at me, but once they've gotten over tte shock, they — particularly men passengers — are interest^.” Arte, 5 feet 3 and, despite his 40 yeari looking like mischievous teen-ager, burst into the public’s consciousness less than two years ago with the first “Laugh-In,” an NBC special. When it became a weekly series in January 1968 he Was - playing on a regular basis a leering -Nazi soldier with one line: “Ve-r-ry int-er-esting.”. It became a national catch-phrase. Since then-he has appeared on a regular basis as a tottering masher, popularly called “the did letch” who weekly gets bashed on the head by Ruth Laugh-In” jumped immediately to No. 1 positiop in the Nielsens and remains* the inost popuiar weekly show, it has affected the form and substance o| the regular variety hours. They’ve picked up pace, gone in for quick sight gags, orte-liners, blackouts — and the imitators, of course, are around. Johnson^ who like , most comedians is deadly serious about his job, says he ^oes not think the imitations hurt, but rather enhance, the original. “We have the technique; we have developed the timing,” he says. “So we have a bid edge.” Most of Arte’s characters are old friends he has developed during the night club' years. When he first pulled Rosmenko, his little Russian, out of his trunk, he went to the Salvation Army to find that magnificently malfitted pinstriped suit and black-and-white shoes he wears. “Now we’ve had to have a couple of suits made.” he said. “And it cost an awful lot of money to have it copies.” business, he became a widely recognized personality realizing full well that he had»traded his right to prviacy foristar status. T really haVe no complaints qnd no hang-ups,” he said. “I admit "that the amoi^t of recognition you get in restaurant;*, top Instance, sometimes interferes with what you really want to-^o, like eat. But I come into fheir homes and they have a right. But when Gisela and I wanted to take q{ vacation, we found a small private place in Hawaii and not a isoul bugged us for autographs.” What next? “Weil, of course I hope to have my own show,” he said, “During this vacation we've going to make a pilot for a half-hour variety show.” ^ .Incidentally, the nanSI 6f. his production c o m p a Rosmenko Productions, which sort of suggests that the little Russian is his favorite character. KITCHEN and BATHROOM REMODELING FREE ESTIMATES B&tIiROOMS Plumbing, electric, tile, custom vanities, medicine dabinets. KITCHENS Fcrmica cabinets in decorator colors, birch cabinets in all styles, as low as FREE PLANNING FULL SIZE MODELS ON DISPLAY AT Call 682-6800 LIFE BATHROOM & KITCHEN CO. 110 Pontine Mull Office Bldg., Facing Elizabeth Lake Rd. in Daily 10 to S:30 Call 682-^100 ,Dlv. of Ufa Bld(. 7122 W. 7 Mile Rd. - 29460 Ford Rd. 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Ontario’s level is expected to go up about seven inches and Erte approximately two, inches this month before beginning gradual declines in June and. July, respectively. The other lakes are not expected to begin falling before ; August or September. The Army Corps of Engineers said in its six-mmitb forecast this week that Ml the lakes, except Ontario, were above both their average levels for the last 10 years and the 1969-1968 per-tod., SHY OP RECORDS.^ None, however, is expected to E Junior Editors Quiz on- PROFILES mm*. rjcach all-time high levels, although Superior’s forecast l[hdi-cates it will miss its top levels for May, June and October by only a matter of an inch or so. The Superior basin experienced wet winters Shd subsequent large spring runoffs the last two years. Dam gates in the St. Mary’s River at Sault Ste. Marie; which can be manipulated to partially control Superior’s level, have been disgorging a larger than normal flow into the lower' for weeks. At the beginning of May, Su- perior was about 11 inches above its May average for the last 10 years and nine inches higher than at the end of April last year; 20 nVCHES HIGHER Michigan and Huron, joined by the Straits of Mackinac, were reported 20 inches above the 10-year average and nine inches above April 1968. Erie was 17 inches above the 10-year average and five inches above Aprils of last year, while Ontario topped its 10-year average by six inches. 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MAY 16; 1989 Canada, U S, Far Apart in Paying for Culture (EEiITt>R’’S NOTE—America’s northern neighbor is imUing put cash where its cuUur!e With a sense of “publid reap sibility” to the arts, the Canadian government is helping to support botht stage and, screen production. The piogram is administered by the Canada Council.) By WIUJAM GLOVER AP Drama Writer OTTAWA — When it comes to paying for culture, Canada and the United States are far apart. The problem in both is identical for the performing and visubl arts — how to bridge box office income and creative cost. ■if .. -k -k In the United States the solution is majnly provided by private philanthropy and emergency fund drives. Up here, plugging much of the gap Is a government obligation. A few figures show the contrast: During the next year the Canadian government .wiil spend $9.6 ‘million oh painters, dancers, poets, actors and musicians ; about 80 cents out pf ever - $l,0fl0 iti the federal budget. Or 47 cents per capita for a 21-million population. SMALLER U.S. FIGURE In the same period, if present estimates aren’t cut. in Congress, the American government will' post $ 4 million slightly' bigger dollars for comparable purposes. 'Not quitii 3 cents per budgetuy $1,000; a bit over 2 cents each foi a 200-million population. 'We don’t have Vietnam or some of your other obligations, Canadian' executive says. But also you haven’t reached the degree of reco^ition 'of public responsibility that we the pros an^ cons ojf public subsidy — and how to avert e.stabli6hment pressure oh cceativp Treedp'm of expression. Officials at CC .headquarters speak to the point >yith urbane emphasis. Achieving that, “national 'political commitment to the arts’’ is regarded by The Canada Council (CC),' which administers the culture program,! as “perhaps the most significant’’ event since it was set up 13 years ago. The National Council on the Arts in Washington is now edging into its fourth year! Created at just about the time ‘culture explosion’’ fever was spreading across the continent, the Canada Council has expanded its work 'of assistance steadily while some individually geared stateside ventures have flared, faltered or faded utterly: SYMPOSIUM SET To enhance artistic endeavor in both countries, a first-time symposium is being held May 21-24 at Ste. Adele, Que., compare notes and swap ideas. The invitational affair for 250 is being sponsored by the Associated Councils of the Arts and is..also to be attended by U.S. congressmen and members of Parliament A lot of talk should center on “Make this, very clear,’’ says Associate Director Peter Dwyer, “the council doesn’t want to take credit for what’s been done. It’s been done by the artists, and v^e catn.e at a convenient time to help. ‘I don’t think it could have been done as fast without twr help, but it’s not our deal.’’ ‘RESPONDS’ Jean Roberts, supervising aid for theater and dance groups, carefully notes, “This is a body that responds father than activates; there would be a cutoff point only if we felt that something was artistically shoddy.’’ Occasionally a n aesthetic grant has raised ej^ebroWs — such as *^274 for New York demolition artis’ who qj^ed grand piano to bits, or a $6,500 allotment to “the town fool:‘of Vancouver.’’ his intention. But it did cause a furor.” ! ' ’f The “absolute key” of the arts program, says Dwyer, Is the series pf individual grants which this year will total $1.7 million. REWARDS FOR ARTIST’S In the ' Canadian program about 75 established artists annually receive awards up to $7,000 plus travel costs “for sabbaticals or simply to buy time for them to create.” Another iw younger citizens win $3,500 bursaries after an assessment process that is “competitive in the real sense of the About one in four applicants gets such assistance. As a buffer against attack and to enhance p o t e n t i a' service, the council periodically holds sessions call^ “soundings.” Artists in a particular medium are called together for overnight meetings with ficials to get rid of gripes and offer suggestions. Out of such procedure, a program has evolved of short-term grants up to $1,350 f6r|t>ecause we’ve' built up emergency npeds, t r a v e 11 something that now goes flat. . and a fund to buy! * k-, k even oils and canvas for a' “I think you^re -facing the. needy painter. Professional performing organizations and vocational schools receive most other money: $2.6 rpillion divided among 24 theater troupes now serving all 10 provinces; $1.9 million to orchestras; $1 million to dancei (^ials_ estimate that two groups, and $500,000 for opera. miHion same problem in the United States. You have built up organizations and they may now ' ” fiat if no one comes to rescue them, .because private foundations have only limited funds . and there’s a limit to what they can do.” ABOUT 25 PCT. ^lidre Fortier, Irifeasurer, reports that fecieral sdpport of musie, drama and ballet averages about 25 per Canadians buy ^million tickets annually to ^'events performed by council-! counsel! supported groups, a ratio in proportion ,tj^ total population far higher than in the States. cent .of operating budgets. Ti^k ■ fket receipts-account for approximately another .50 per cent. The balance comes from provincial and municipal grants, finally private supporters. Public- money,” asserts Fortier,” is really your element of growth. If we pulled out, we Jean Boucher, director of the 21-member council, finds plenty of room, however, for greater appreciation of culture in Canada. He lists major problems still remaining as development of museums and galleries that “are still in a very primitive stage;” improving • the. income ■ . ' A-^18 ' Just Arrived New 1969 Amand 19- and 22-Cu. Ft, ^ Side-by-Side REFRIGERATORS Tr«d«-int Accaptad HAMPTON ELECTRIC 825 W. Huron FE 4-2525 x:losex)ut fiRICES 1968-1969 Color TV$ Tarmi Avail^bla HAMPTON ELECTRIC 825 W. Huyon FE 4-2525 . ■' saVe money on used . 1 We're Now Buying might as well Sjay we spent all'of all artists; and increasing! that previous money for nothing support by private donors. Scra|> COPPER r BRASS- ALUMINUM (We Also Pick Up Junk CorsI FE 2-0200 Pontiac Scrap 135 Branch “He told funny stories on theij law court steps and tried make people think,”. ' Miss Roberts defends. “We decided that the art of being a foiol is a very ancient one and that this man wps not in any way light in CULTURE’S FOSTER PARENTS—The Canada Council is the embodiment of Canada’s “national political commitment to the arts.” In*down-to-earth terms, this means a proposed expenditure next year of $9.6 million «of public money for painters, danc- ' Wlr«>hofo ers, poets, actors and musicians. The three council administrators shown here are (from left), Andre Fortier, treasurer; Jean Roberts, who supervises aid for theater^and dance groups; and Associate Director Peter Dwyer. 'Most Victims of Cardiacs Able to Return to Work' NEW YORit (UPI) - III revealing the doubtful future of cardiac work evaluation units and in arguing they deserve a future. Dr. George A.'Hellmuth said they 'had provided proof; that most heart attack victims! are capable of returning to productive work. ^ This, he said, “lias tremendous social and economic import in a nation where so many men. and women have manifest cardiovascular disease and so ipany more in the prime middle years of life have latent disease or are at excess risk. journal of the American Heart Association. The units are much-needed when “barriers to employment of cardiac patients exist and are worsening.” LENNOX AIR CONDITIONING SALE He blamed the units for their i “Joss of vigor.” They have fail-l ed to educate the public andi doctors as to rehabilitative possibilites for heart patients and they have neglected research. .“The simple demwistration of capacity for physical work among cardiac patients has had a profound and positive impact on attitudes toward heart disease — in industry, among the medical profession and on the patients themselves.” A unit consists of a heart doctor, a psychiatrist or psychologist, a social worker, and a vocational guidance counselor. It scientifically. sizes -up the potentials of convalescent heart patients and plans ways of returning, them lifers mainstream. 50 irll NATION The first one was formed; In I 1941 and there are now mpre| than 50 scattered around the; country. In general their health! is not good, .said Hellmuth, a Milwaukee cardiologist., Only a few are doing well. Some are “ closing and many haye lost ' “vigor.” He appealed for' a “shoring up” of ^s'rehabilitation setup for hem-t p a ti eai t s' in "Circulation,” the technical CHAHCES ARE... Your valuable household possessions add up to dn amount greater than you think . . . Are they fully covered? It Costs nothing to review your present poUsy. AUSTIN NORVELL InsurancB Ageniiy tow: Lawrence St. nt Wide Track Drive W 332-0241 Summer's HEAT Now!, LENNOX ELECTRIC AIR CONDITIONINQ COSTS LESS. • Save on purchase f!!2’, • Save on operating cost • Save on installation' • Save on maintenance • Save on space, too KAST HEATING and COOLING 580 Telegrtiph Rd. (at Orchard Laka Rd.) 338-9255 COMMUNi TIietotaIL bANkiNq plAN From CoMMUNiTy NatIonaI BANk Evef wished you owned your own bank? 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Stop ’ in today and be one of the original CommpniBankers. ^ t- X ; RENT, SELL, TRADE - - - UvSEl . PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! < r ,\ iVv r \: i A—14 ' 1 "I, -1 i/ ' / ' 'I'v ' THE PONTIAC PBESS, FRIDAY/ MAY. Ifl. 1969 :nr “1- ^ \ ■ imerse^arHUDSons r \ ' 1 '"‘V ■ Wayward wickers— with it on and off the beaten path I*'! ■' i< $9^ It’s in the bag—-—elan that is, woven into every sunny shape in our free wheeling^ '% straw collection. Big, little, in-between we’ve got sizes for every girl on the go, handled many different ways. They’re the bags that follow you everywhere . from beach to boutique. And each strand is plairtic coated for longer wear and ease of care./All in white and natural, ^4 to ^10. Stop by Hudson’s Straw Market, Pontiaq 1st; all branches. |$10 $6 Im 'X v> 31 $7> S6> /$10 V- t ' I, Downtown Northland Eastland ^Westland Pontiac Oalcla'Ad "i „ '$6 ' ■ ■■ :r> Jr 'I . t 'A ' J» a four-»^ week course at the Italian Institute for Foreign Studies in Perguia, Italy. ^long with about 15 other Michigan students they will study Italian culture, history, and li Mott Students Nearing Heyday By GEORGIA ROSE WALL Antique Village will be the scene of activity tonight as Waterford Mott High School students go ott a hayride. 1 Students are to meet at Waterford ■Township High School at 7 and return at* 11. Price is $2 per person and Include! dinner. The event Is sponsored by the sophomore planning committee. Profits will go into the qjasS treasury. Faculty sponsor of the hayride is Mrs, Clayton Roth, English tetiche SUNDAY PK34IC Foreign Exchange Club is having a picnic Sunday from 1-8 p.m. at the home of Ami Edwards. All members are invited, plus foreign exchange students who attend Waterford Township, Pontiac Northern and Troy High Schools. ♦ ★ 'The group will enjoy a picnic lunch and play badminton, volleyball and other outdoor games. Mrs. Qlayton Roth Is Foreign, B change Club sponsor. CHEERLEADING PRAC’HCE Girls trying out for cheerleadln^Vere practicing after school all this we^ The varsity And junior varsity squads will be chosen by Tuesday. • Squdds for next year will consist of six cheerleaders And one alteriuite. * Faculty ciieerleading vsponsors are . Mrs. Laura Bemis and Shelia MdlCee. Student Council is planing a dance to be held after Mott’s Fun Fair, May 24. The daiice will be^om 8-11 p.na. in the Waterford Township High School gym. * / * ■* Refreshment^ and a band will bo featured. , Chairman ^f the dance Is Marl Lynn „ Hutson. Profits from the dance and the Fun Fair will go towards the purchasing of carpet for the Media Center in the new building. By SHARON CARR^ * - ’The final performance of West Bloomfield High School’s production “Bye Bye, Birdie,” directed by Drama Teacher Thomas Smith, will be at 8 tonight in the high school cafeteria. - Tickets are available at the door for $1. ^ ★ * ,« Acting in the play are Hal Cowan as Birdie, Todd Lilje, Albert; Gail Couch, Rosie; Linda Doering, Helen; Patti Buddy, Nancy; Ellen Couch, Margie; Jann Morrison, Alice; Dick Read, Fredie. " ★ * ★ Kym DesJardins, Karl; Bob Shaw, Herbey;, Barb Swart, Penelope; Sue Alkemp, Suzie; Carol Shaw, Kim. * * f Wayne Skromme, tiugo; Lee Pement, Mrs. Markle; Ken Cedar, Randolf; and John Thompson, Mr. Johnson; and Jerry Tiechman and Lydia Moore, Mr. and Mrs. Macafee. ' QTHERS IN CAST Others are Virginia Sieden, Ruth Trunsky, Nancy Goodale, Mike Zerull, I Rick Gross, Joe Carevic, Bob RoWan, Saddy Elbling, Cathy' RuSsel, Greg ;Kjolhede, Dave Burt, George Galayda, Debbie Charlebois and Lynn Hugelet. if it^ if Dancers In the ' play are Anne Richards, Chris Barnard, Sena Westjohn, Julie Burt, Luanne Grosspian, Dee Cutcliff, Jan Kevitch and Anne McGuide>s._. '' ★ * ★ , The chorus consists of Kirk Mahnke, Keith Murphy, Lee Beuthien^ Diane ShotWell, Laurie Smith, Anne Roper, JoAnne Straus and Bill Feilder. ★ ★ ★ Since the band’s first car wash wras so successful members have decided to try it again. Tomorrow from 9 a.m. until 6 p.m. the band members will wash cars, inside and out in the high school parking lot for $1. , STAFFS ANNOUNCEb The jopmalism class has announced its yearbook and 'newspapter staffs for the 1969-70 school year. 1 * * t , Serving on the Exodus yearbook staff will be: Ruth Sommers, editor; Marg Neubacker, assistant editor; Kirk Mahnkq, senior ^ editor; Andi Jahns, underclass editor; Sharon Hamburg, activities editor; Barb Swart, faculty editor; and Lynn Labick, business mahager. On the Anchor News Staff are Barry Grunday, editor; Leslie Parker, news editor; Pat Norgiel, feature editor;. Larry Brower, sports editor; Sharon Hamburg, copy editor; ahd Cathy Garrick, business manager. Serving as photographer for both the Exodus and the Anchor will be Fred Rosenau, who served as such on this year’s staff. Additijanal School Mews . Pogo B-2 Brandon Helping Slake GIs' Thifsf'' By MARJORIE WIDMAN Powdered soft-drink packets for the boys in Vietnam wet*e collected from students at Brandoh High School Tuesday by the Student Council. To further the program, the junior high chorus sang and the high school band played. ^ In all the Student Council collected oyer 100 packages and made $60.05. if it ★ The junior-senior banquet ^vlU b« held Saturday In honor of the senior- start at 6:30 in the cafeteria. ■ Sn,VER ANNIVERSARY — Ibe Oxford High School cholp the i^chool. Practicing before, the concert are Martha Rickette^. Saturdaylnhonor of the seniors and will will dedicate Its annual spring concert to ila director, Mrs. . , ^ n«r.. COLLEGE INN CHICKEN BROTH 133/4 FL ozs. ALCOA ALUM.-HEAVY DUTY FOIL 18»x25* GOLDEN DIPT. CHICKEN MIX BREADING39 SHURFINE-Sliced MUSHROOMS 4 0Z.WT. RICE 16az.WT. SHURFINE Bartlett PEARS 16 OZ. WT. STARKIST ^ .on TUNA PIES Vf 2/39' GORTON'S ^ FISH & CHIPS ’a" 69' PILLSBURY BUTTERMILK ^ BISCUITS 3/29 MARIO'S STUFFED OUVES <«■«■ 57' ROXY CANNED t M DOG FOOD SHURFINE-Wide NOODLES iz OZ. WT. PILLSBURY Country Style ' BISCUITS vf 3/29 SHURFiriE FLOUR ^POUND BALLARD SWEET MILK BISCUITS a" 3/29 POTATO CHIPS DOG FOOD VITA BOY 13-OZ. WT. BAG 69< ROXEY 25-LB. BAG 2.29 BABY FOOD GERBER Junior, Wi Oz. 3/47' Sqft-weue’ Su^Sote! SHURFINE SHORTENING 48 OZ. WT. SCOTTIES SHURFINE PANCAKE & WAFFLE 32 OZ. FL. SUPER SAVINGS ON 2 PIY, 2 E6a PACK SYRUP SHURFINE ^ niA'tt PEASnozwT. IHV SHURFINE Cut Green FACIAL TISSUES 2-PLY, ASSTO. 200 PACK 29' SUPER SAVINGS ON DOMINION HAIR SETTER only $9,95 19' 29' arid 3 Soft-weve wrappers or 3 Super Sale Premium Seals BEANS 15Vz0Z. WT. BANQUET SLICED WITH GRAVY BEEF 4V2 0Z. WT. BANQUET CHICKEN 0\0\m DINNER39' BANQUET TURKEY 0^ 10^0^ m POT PIES2/39' KRAFT SOFT MARGARINE PARKAY... i OZ. Wt. KRAFT NATURAL SWISS-SLICED CHEESE 8 OZ. WT. KRAFT NATURAL SLICED CHEESE MOZZAREUA WT. KRAFT Natural Mello Colby Sliced 8 OZ. WT. KKAN Natural tvt< Cheese COLD'POWER 1.13 AJAX CLEAMSER 2/29° PALMOLIW . Z «p«z 49° AJAX CLEANER . .. 69° AJAX WIHDOW sinf. 29° PRINCE LASAGNA NODDLES 16 OZ. WT. ORLEANS-CANNED DOG FOOD 15 oz. WT. KITTY SALMON 6 oz. WT. SPARTAN ALUM.-REGULAR FOIL 12»x25' SURFINECUT ASPARAGUS 14Va oz. WT. SUNSHINE HYDROX COOKIES 16 oz. WT. NABISCO RITZ-STACK PACK CRACKERS ’’ 12 oz. WT. SHURFINE Sliced \ 2^00 C THIS WEEK'S CARROTS i6ot- wT. KRAFT Natural Frankenmuth Sliced CHEESE 6 oz. WT. MARGARINE-i-OUARTERS IMPERIAL 16 OZ. WT. TABLETS-99c VALUE 6UFFERIN 60’s HAIR SPRAY VO-5 10 Ft. OZ. REG./X-HOLD 1.50 OUc VALUE W At the ’ Store with the SPARtAN \ on thf^ door I ■V ' 7‘ / •Wofnen TrtE PONTIAC PR1^:SS FRIDAY, MAt 16, ^^)69 B-4 Left Handers Need Not Be That Awkward Pontiac Proi) Photoi by Ed Vtndtrworp ; Robert Thom of Birmingham autographs prints . ,oJ his famous “History of Michigan” paintings senior at Oakland University, who is a weekly Thursday after speaking at the aiinual awards pro- volunteer at the Boys’ Club of Pontiac; and Mfs. gram of the Pontiac Area JUViited 'Fund’s Women’s Theodore Karla, Winchcombe Drive, Bloomfield Division. With him are two young recipients of Township, a volunteer at the Kenney-Michigan Re-aivards: Martha. Killiane of Rochester (center), a habilitation Center. ' PAUF Uonors Volunteers for Year's Service Tioo of the volunteers serving PAUF agencies get acquainted after the awards luncheon iii the Old Mill Restaurant. Mrs. Raymond Rapaport of Bloomfield Hills (left) received recognition for her work with the Michigan Children's Aid Society. Mrs. Charles Tucker Jr., Harlmoor Boulevard, represents the Family^ Service ,of Oakland County. , ■ • . . ■' - Whelaris Hopeful Cincinnati's Music and Theater Comparable Over 50 community voluntpers in Pontiac Area United Fui)d agencies received recognition Thursday at the annual awards progradi of the PAUF at the Old Mill Restaurant, Waterford. .* ★ * Twenty-one of these were merit awards, of whfeh two were awarded posthumoilSly. Jesse Holmes of the Auburn Heights Boys’ Club and Ivie Ross of PAUF were po honored. The luncheon, sponsored by the Pontiac State Bank, was arranged by Mrs. Adrian Ish and Mrs. B’rancis McMath. Mrs. James Coyiren, Alger V. Conner and Mr.sT Jack Ross, all active PAUF volunteers themselves, made the awards presentations. ★ ★ ★ William Belaney, of T and C Federal Credit .Union, presided as master of ceremonies. SPECIAL AWARDS The Pontiac Press and radio station WPON received special recognition awards for theii* year-round support of the PAUF programs and campaign. ★ ★ ★ Robert Thom, Birmingham artist, was speaker for the event. Mrs., WUUam. Wright Is chairman of . the Women’s Division. By ELIZABETH L. POST Of the Emily Post Instf tute Dear Mrs. Post:'! am left-handed, and it gets awful hard to act Suave and sophisticated when you have' to .begin each and evei*y mepl by behaving like a contortionist just .to have the right piece of silver in the correct hand at the correct time. What is proper: Pick up all the silver that is to be used and put it on the left, or ree^ch across the plate and get the correct utetisil as is needed? Can I pick up the water glass and put it on my left, which is where I need it? I have come to believe that everyone really expects southpaws to be awkward and clumsy. But 1 am a lost cause. Please help! — Mrs. G. ★ ★ ★ Dear Mrs. G.: T really* do not un-' derstand why it is so difficult for a left-* handed person to lue a standard place setting. After all, rif^Mianded people must reach across to the left to use a butter plate, or to eat salad hrom that side, and it does not seem to be a problem. ” They must also, reach across to pick pp the fork, which is .Qn the natural side for a left-handed diner. If “lefties” prefer to move the water glas& a little toward the left, by all means do so, but would you then put the butter plate over on the right? . Once the silver has been used it is placed on the plate hi any case — on whichever side you wish: If left-handed people are taught to use the utensils,, as they are properly placed, from the time they are children, they will have no more trouble.than a right-handed person. BIRTHDAY DINNER Dear Mrs. Post: My two sisters have invited me out for dinner on my birthday. My friend feels this is in poor taste because we- will nOt have a male escort. What is proper etiquette in this situation?—Cathy Dear Cathy: "Proper etiquette” as you call it should make life simpler and more pleasant — not restrict and complicate it. Myhody who would criticize you for dii^g in a nice restaurant with your two sisters on your birthday is living itfunother world. . Patricia Veal, leader of the United Nurses Association heading a mass march of nurses Carries a brpom and a deternuned look on-^,, arriving at the Royal College of Nursing in London Thursday. The broom was brought because the nurses say “the authorities have been ' sweeping things under the carpet for so long.” Their main complaintr is that they’re paid so little they’re often hungry. I His Ex-Wife's Toctics Put Her in Winner's Cii By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I was a bachelor until the age of 56, and all I can say . is that some men don’t know when they’re well off. “Lena” (I’ll call her) kept asking me for money for the track, so I gave it to her. A hundred here, ai hundred there. I never kept books on how she came out, all I know is she said she “lost” most of the time. Wtell, four years later, Lena sued me for divorce. She didn’t have any grounds, but if she’d have got what was coming to her she could have sued me for assault.' We settled out of coprt. Now it comes out that while we were married, Lena squirreled away about $25,000. My lawyer says the money is HERS. I don’t know how he figures: Don’t you think I’m entitled to that money? OUTFOXED DEAR 0UTFO3CED: So she "outfoxed” you, and “squirreled” away $^,000? Mtybe you should have consulted a zWogist? You paid a lawyer for his legal counsel, so if he says it’s HERS, 100 to one, it’s hers. OU to Host Highland Competitions on Campus Saturday and Sunday The Highland Games at Oakland University Saturday and &mday are expected to draw a crowd of 400 or more during the hours of 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. each day. llighligbting the two-day affair will be the “March Past” of tiie massed pipe bands and competitors on the* University grounds at I p.m. both days. Girls from this area competing in the Highland Dancing are: Zoe Ann and Noreen Keros of Littletell Street; Ann Jones, Kathy, Maureen and Colleen Connor of Utica. These Ganies will be part of the Michigan #eek activities and will be incorporated into Oakland University Cultural and Performing Artis Series. ' DEAR ABBY: If more than one mouse is “mice,” isn’t more than one spouse “spice”? DARRLY DEAR DARRLY: More than one spouse is not spice, it is spouses. The noun is bfgamy , the ad* jective—bigamous. ~ , ★ ★ ★' «« DEAR ABBY: MS’ daughter is 16. SiSl^ “goes with” a boy who’s a freshman college close enough for him to comi! home occasionally for weeken«6. I found a half-finished letter written by my daughter. It was in plain sight on hes desk, and I was not snooping. From it I; learned that she had “tried’’ marijuana and she was writing to say that the next time he came home she Was willing to trji marijuana smokjng with him. From her, letter, I gathered that he has tried it, too. Abby, I am sick over this and don’t know what to do. My daiigl^er is not a wild girl and we’ve never had any trouble with her. I can’t forbid her to see this boy, and I don’t want her to know I read that leter. Should I just let nature take its course? Please help me. NO NAME OR ADDRESS DEAR NO NAME: You must tell you daughter you. read that letter, and urge her to resist “trying” marijuana with her boyfriend. Your plea may be useless, but you .can’t just “let nature take its course” knowing what’s in the air. ■ * ★ 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 For Ahby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely W^ing,” send $1 to Abby, .in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-400,, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. By SHIRLEY Gray ^ ' The Philip G. Whelans of Bloomfield Hills are packing up their 14-year-old daughter, Katie, three Siamese cats, the piano and everything else and moving to Cincinnati after 17 years in this area. The move, dictated «by a new job for the man of the house, will come in late Jilne, after Katie finishes as a fre.shman at East Hills. It's reassuring to hear that Cincinnati is known as a city with an especially lively interest in music. Mrs, Whelan, who has accompanied the Birmingham Plan Arts Council for Farmington Oakland Community College and the Michigan State Council for the Arts are assisting a steering committee which has been formed to develop a Farmington Arts Council. Mrs, Eugene Scho^neich, Farmington branch, American Association of University'Women (AAUWl has announced. ' The steering committee hopes to coordinate the activities of upwards of 100 dubs and organizations in the Farming-ton area’ by establishing a community calendar of activities and encouraging public evonts and services in the arts and I’elated areas. , All Farmington areS persons and of-, ganizatlons interested in such a coordinating group arte invited\ tq^ attend an open meeting at 8 wn., Monday, Vn Room J-4M in the Commons Building, OCC Orchard Ridge Campus. f Musiqgle’s choral ensemble for the last eight years, will no doubt find something ,of interest musically. Let's hope her husband, whose love is amateur theater, especially the Birmingham Village Players, finds the theater scene active there. ' Mr. and Mrs. Phillip R. Flanders of Bloomfield Hills will be at the Village Woman’s Club’s spring formal tomorrow evening, bringing as guests old, old friends from Grosse Pointe, Mr. and Mrs. Lester A. Mackintosh. ACTING IT OUT Mrs. Flanders, another theater buff, is playing the role of prop man'fbnight at • the Theater Arts annual Men’s Night af the Player’s Playhouse on East Jef-fenson. TA, of coqrse, is all female, except for one event each year vyhen husbands, sweethearts, etc, are invited to a performance. Mrs. Flanders’ backstage role will consist of shepherding the refreshments — 60 pounds of meat, 40 loaves of bread; etd. —T^ere safely. More nervewracking than the leadypart., Knight Templars Detroit Cdmmandary No. I’s ladies sewing group is having its spring luncheon next Thursday (May 22) at Plum Holldw Golf qub. The club, which sews and raises mbndy for Booth Memotial Hospital 'and other worthy causes, was a particular faVofite of the late Matilda Wilson. ' , « , ,# • ★ ★A -• Among some of the localites pfannifig ■to attend are Mrs. Frank Ho'wlett, Mrs. Rowe Balmer, Mrs. John Downs, Mrs. Fpedprick Lmne and Mrs.^ Cliffprd Lome, Mrs'. QertrWe Skillman, and the chairman, Mbs. Walter McGoogan of Farmington./ ’ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ Mrs. D C. Connett, Bellarrnine Drive, Avon Township (left) T'artan Drive, also Avon' Township, (right) shows the Cover for the watches t^he thermometer carefully as she coOks the^umpteenth batch candy cookbook that will also be on sale. Club members did the silk of candy for Rochester Jr. Women’s Clp,b msell at their annual Flea screen print under the direction of Mrs. Harold Day, the designer. Market^ May 24. The group is rnaking (^umt 40 pounds of hard candy Over 80 booths will fill the parking iQt of Rochester Senior High and using, 40 pounds, of peanuts in other^pandy. Mrs. Daniel Morris, School, Hours ark .10 a.m. to 5 p.m. \ ' /'■ THE PONTIAC PHKSS, j-llIDAY, MAY 16, 19^9 Teachers (So to Convention in Dearborn XI chapter, Delta Kappa | Gamrna Society, will host the] I Alpha Iota State Convention ^t‘ i Dearborn Inn, May 16-18. Banquet speaker Saturday, Wr this 31st annual affair, is ! Dr. Ola B. Hiller, now of I Laguna Hills, Calif., coordinator of Project Peru for the Society. Miss Hiller taught speech and mathematics in Pontiac during the early days of her career in education and began her career in adm^inistration as assistant principal of Pontiac Central -High^hool. ! B—5 Elinor K. Rose Will Address Annval Affair Pontiac Proj« Photo Mrs, Richard Craig, Birmingham (left), Mrs. Jeri Craig, North Sanfordt Street, and MrS. John Beck, Birmingham are off for the week- to the Alpha lota state convention of Delta Kappa Gamma Society at Dearborn Inn. They are members of Xi chapter of Pontiac. The 37th annual breakfast of the Association Tor Childhood" Education \yill be held Saturday at Ted’s Restaurant o n Woodward Avenue! Elinor K. Rose, area poet, will be the speaker. A writer of light verse, Mrs. Rose will 1 her talk on her e^riences as a free lancer under the title of “Telling Jt Like It Is.” Mrs. Rose’s newest book is “Rhyme and Reason’’. John A: Power Marries in Spokane Ceremony Newlyweds, the’John Aloysius Curran, of Huntington, Conn., Powers^ (nee Patricia Alice Peter Mohaghan,. Geo Page) will'make their hothe Seattle, Wash., following honeymoon trip to Oregon. « Andries of Det'roiti William .Hurley of Norwood, Mass., and John Laridy of Ph/ladelphia, were ushers. MUSICAL PROGRAM The Washington Irving School The daughter of Mr. and Mrs... | Harold A. Page of Spokane, „ . n , u Wash., and the son of Mr. and! Patricia and Peter Monaghan Mrs. Aloysius F- Power of]"'®'"® Bower girl and ring Bloomfield Hills were nyayried!^®^^®'^- ____________________ .. in St. Mary’s Catholic Church,! Veradale, Wash. 71/TDc- ,1 liAtirr-r, Attending the bride for the! MRS. JOHN A. POWER recent nuptials were Jeanj Ellerthorpe of Seattle, Pamielaf ’The Society (for women teachers) aims: ' I • To unite women educators! in efforts to protect their pro-' fessional interests; | Try to Swish and Swallow - chorus, under the direction of ;Mrs. Maurice Pelton, will • To Initiate legislation in! their interest; By DR. HOWARD E. KESSLER Swish and swaliow.’’ This ‘ so important to remember anytime you are unable to brush after eating. Some time ago I attended Nearly every dentist there, as soon as he finished hi;j dessert, picked up his water glass, took a mouthful, unobtrusively swished it thoroughly between his teeth, and swallowed. Most repeated this several times. enamel, it has been shovvn, can take place during the eatin^f^! .They were following their own BRUSH, BRUSH advice of “swish and swallow.” • To endow scholarships for ^aduate study; • To develop a program of teacher welfare designed to a banquet for Improve the economic, social! dentists at a ho-and political status of women; | tel on the west • p To inform the membership of current economic, social,! "®*' , political and educational issues; j I® ^ . followed by a • TO sponsor and ^pport j j, desirable educational legisla-lg celebrity I There was to be no i..nc iv* n , - - .. • To honor women who have “the diners to retire to the wash-citing, given distinctive service in any room before the introduction ofj * ■ *■. * field of education. 'the speaker. | Decalcification of tooth practically every food, This is because of whpt could be termed an “acid bath” of the teeth as a result of the action jof . bacteria op the carbohydrates which the person is eatiilg. Couple Wed, Go to Hawaii Page of Spokane, Mrs. Peter J. Monaghan, Bloomfield .Hills and Mrs: William P. Lage of Mountain Home, Idaho. present a program. Invited guests are Dr. and Mrs. Dana P. Whitmer, the a . William Lacys, the Lewis Crews • ,,On the esquire side, Brian and the Gerald Whites - Fagan of Troy, N;Y , was best; Mrs Elwvn Hodees is Mrs. Julia V. Curry, formerly man, Harold Page, Thomas chSanofTaffX hssi^^^^ Canterbury Drive, and Ray-- - - ------- - SI’ Sin mond A. Elkins were married by Mesdames^ recently in. United Methodist Marvm A n d r e w Evergrace'church bf Lake Orion. Seay, Frederick Holmes and Alyce Hagood. i ★ Mrs. Stuart M. Allan attended her mother as ^natron of honor. Kenneth P. Anthony was best man. Following a honeymoon trip to the Hawaiian Islands, the Xinnnrrir Newcomers Club jJ Installs Officers Dinner at the Elks ~^ m Trail, This is important to do when . you see how important it it is impossible to brush at the to brush teeth thoroughly “■«: home on Abseguamf moment because it tends to afte£. every time you eat, andinstallation of q j , ,#11.1 inffirprs fnr fnp rrwmna vpnr ^ _____ remove particles of food which time fori usually become lodged on. or „„ this. why we dentists are so insistent‘‘’f. ^ wound up activities of the If you cannot brush, this decalcification leading to dfecay can be stymied to some extent by dislodging the offending food particles with water and the swish and swallow niethod. When the need to “swish and swallow” arisjes, do not feel t .. , .- embarrassed or self-conscious f"''25 years. Newcomers Club. Mrs. ^James Wood is the new president. She will be assisted by Mesdames; Gerald Burwell, vice president; Mrs. Ronald Rein, secretary and Mrs. John McKinley, treasurer. Mrs. Donald Milboum was honored as a life member. Social Security Aids Auto Victim about the action. It can be done quietly and politely. PUEBLO, Colo, m — Patricia! Bauer, 20, formerly of Pueblo; and now residing in Glenwood ... tu Springs, Colo., has received her social secumy check under a law which became ef- fective in 1968. Tell Engagement * * * Miss Bauer suffered severe A new little book containing i Mr. and Mrs. Walter Sprenger cpinal injuries last July in an the latest information to help.: of Carroll Lake Road, automobile accident and was V&m 'PlutA’ Tonight and Saturday Only Bobbie Brooks J^ant Skirts P-M.97 you in your fight against tooth decay can be yours free of charge by sending a self-addressed, stamped envelope to Dr. Howard E. Kessler, The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. merce Township announce the engagement of their daughter, Suzanne M., to Richard J. Sulla, son of Mrs. .Mury Sulla of Walled Lake and the late Mr. Sulla. The couple will wed Aug. 1 Polly's Pointers paralyzed from the neck dpwn. She is now able to move her hands and legs and is learning to wMte again. She will receive a Soeilir Security benefit check each month she is unable to work, under the new law which liberalizes requirements for ^ benefits of younger pecsons. L Inside Elizabeth Lake Entrance OOOOimiMMUIIOII Make Easy Feeder Opening tonight at Birmingham Village Playhouse in “The Fantasticks,” are. (from left) Dr. Jack Hassberger, Mrs. Donald E. Worsley, both of Birmingham, and Fran Matousek of Farmington. The three play supporting roles to the boy-girl leads, Steve Pew and Pey Kropshot. Show time is 9 p.m. tonight and Saturday; 7:J0 Sunday and 9 on May 23-24. Bill McCall is directing; Kelly Gustafsson is producer; Joan Schmidt, music director and Liz Boyne, choreographer. DEAR POLL Y- A cute and inexpensive bird feeder can be made by using a large pine cone, stem side down, and the openings filled with peanut butter. Use a bright-colored ribbon to tie it to a tree branch outside the window. — MRS. R. the board cover and has] ,eliminated one of thosa small i irritations of life. — I DOROTHY. ,;w. POLLY’S PROBLEM DEAR POLLY — Is there any Year Draws to End for AAUW Units I 7- ^ " jway to remove oil from bricks? We have tried many things but ail failed to remove four large oil stains frofn the front of oui* secretaries and Mrs. ‘ James I Any Interested d o 1 l»1g e house. — MARY H. Knapp, treasurer. graduate who wishes to Attend | ’ * ★ ★ The Union Lake branch wHl the dinner and-or jdin the' DEAR POLLY - A regular have its annual potluck dinner|j,ranch may, contact Mrs. Malin.jiron stand tends to slip on the Thursday at 6 p.m. in the BuLjpjjp pontiac branch, Mrs. board and never seems to be falo Street home of Mrs. James bewailed. I where one wants it. I bought a Malin. Cohostess is Mrs. Louis ★A * small cake cooler and tied it to L^dry. . I ______the'^*’® large end of my ironing! DEAR POLLY - We did not have an umbrella stand. I took three largesized coffee cans and cut the jjottom out of two oG them. I stacked them with the one with a bottom at the bottom I and held, them together with two-inch-wide tape. Next, a pretty paper was used to cover the cans and I put some clear gloss on as extra protection. A tommy SUMMER PROGRAM ' 2Vz-Hour Classes June 23oAug. 1 Tuition $54.00 Children 2 ^ , \ QuoTaUon^are'furn'iS YORK (AP) The, evident^ an analyst said/‘Some| gavevencouragem'ent ~ - ....... -|! stock rnarket was mixed in investors prefer not to commit as to its underlying strength, moderately active trading early themselves when something I adding that while there was {this afternoon, with analysts {could happen oyer the weekend {some disappointment Thursday noting .preweekend caution and that might affect the market.” [there still seemed to be hope in I some profit-taking. j Brokers said there also was j Wall Street that progress would .7s| The Dow Jones industrial av- some profit taking ‘‘which is to be made in the peace negotia-.75 erage at noon was up (1.46 at be expected after the market’s] tions. loo 96,5.62. extended rise in recent weeks. Jo Gains and lbs.ses were about ENCOURAGEMENT Detroit Bureau of Markets as Thursday. Produce FRUITS Apples, Jonathtip, bu. .. . Apples, Jonathan, C.A., bu. , Apples, McIntosh, bu. Apples, Northern Spy, bu. Apples. McIntosh, C.A., bu. Apples, Northern Spy, C.A. b Apples, Steele Red, bu. , VEGETABLES Society s Paper Use Points to Confusion U.S., World News Briefs By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK — Forma ny years the amount of paper used by a society\ has given a crpde {measure of its industrialization. i^g^om 258, Canada 348, Switz-lessary for industrialization, and erland 283, Soviet Union 52, Isr paper has always been neces-rael 94 and the United Arab Re*! sary for communication. Sec-public‘13. |ond, the more consumer mar- WASHINGTON W - Presi-I' debt Nixon’s Vietnam\peacemore m-proposals, initially praised by dustrialiy ad-| many congressmen, are beingjvancedthe so-j cautiously criticiz^ as notjciety, the more going far enough by Senate|p a p e r it con-Democratic doves, including sumed. The Associated Press average Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. | The figure of 60 Stocks at noon was un-! But most of the senators who no w seems to Beefs?Toppe Snions', G even. , They added that, the market’s changed at 343.1 with industrials say Nixon fell short in his latest be indicating in- *2 75 “Some of the caution which failure to buckle Thursday, al- up .4, fails up .1, and utilities peace move are willing to give dicating some-2 00 usually crops up on Friday is though it did show a moderate off .3.. him more time to negotiate a thing else as 1.00-----— _------ ---------------- ------------------------------------------------------— vsettlement. ’ well: confusion. Two factors piake these figures crude rather than precise indicators of industrializatioh: The availability of pulp for paper ts not the same from nation to nation, and the orientation of markets toward consumers things. Ihe New York Stock Exchange In Russia, for example, the industrialization has proceeded a long way, but until rather recently the fruits of that nation’s enormous production has not gone into consumer goods. • Soon his correspondence has CUNNIFF I Despite these exceptions, grown into an impossible mess, ^naie ^Renublicans for the " Thrertenrd"‘wU^ breakdown there are obvious reasons for And on top of it alj; the boss mSt>rtf?pS iniSid>as a result of too much paper,the correlation, . |wonders why he rehds rather jthe more paper lackaging prod- kets there ari^tl is peeded fpi^i uctS. HYPOTHE’nCAL SETUP Now consider a hypothetical situation: » A middle management man-attempts, o«t of a sense of duty and a desire for completeness, to read all the material available bn management methods. Re consumes^hours on the job. U.S. Labor Department vestigator into the dispute in which 84 employes of Paragon t Division of Portec Inc. were o fired. {supporting Nixon’s proposals. j Rocky's Guard Grows MANAGUA, Nicaragua [work are numerous institutions land individuals, among them Wall Street, the Post Office, department lutives, students, professors, or-'i dinary bill payers. First, commtinicatibn is nec-1 than produces. .'Increased protection was , j . , ,^ a! the view of some critics C^rt TnfunclTon Holts Picketing at Novi Plant Americans are living perilously Rockefe^^^er’s visit to Nicaragua disastrous confusion ,;|today after a second f are-up of 23'J + ‘luring the York ^ governors stay in neigl|boring ^^^y billion. And Picketing by, Detroit inner-act on grievances about alleged banks face similar problems city blacks was halted yester-unsafe working conditions. - * * * with checks. day at a Novi ironworks, after Paragon Personnel Director, 22'A 1 sources said challANGE Oakland County Circuit Judge .David K. Waterloo, said the 84 Nicaraguan ' government;:«^‘^^A'^';'^ - Arthur E; Moore granted a ,».^35ta37 ordered more plaindothesmen The challenge from injuction to the 10 no 30 29411 2»'/b to duty amid reports jhat.one of handling and disposal,! ■........'/« 34V .... one 01 nanaung ana aispusai, ,|and although machines Such as,lJW university students were plan-, - ning protests duringcompacters, optical readers. Rockefeller’s fact-finding visit sorters, collaters and dis^sers are aiding their human brothers, other machines are beleh-jing out paper faster and fastff. . The computer, in fact, punch-CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) — es information onto paper at the men were fired by telegram Saturday after violating wh^t he said was union contract Meanwhile, U.S. Rep. John provision, outlawing‘unauthoriz-Conyers, D-Detroit, has called a ed work stoppages. The strike whsn’t authorized by the union. Waterloo said the 84 failed to Teport to work last Wednesday Thursday and, merely appeared Friday to punch in and out. He deified working con-_ ditions are unsafe and pointed Vout that regular employes continue to work. * strike protesting working con- IOB TRAINEES and most menial jobs in the lunar'landinc traveline com- An inaicaiion or me growing ,plant,” after their training is • ^ ^ problem is provided by the j Most of the workers were complete. ^ American Paper Institute, hired under a federal job , * * * which estimates that United training program for hard-core He also criticized the court o,_. order, saying “in all my years in labor law. I’ve never seen an 11-dj^ Injucttoh granted when one side wasn’t even represented, in court. This Just doesn’t look right to me.” 29’» 2939 »v, » 24'.. 2539, 25^ - Nixon-Thteu Talks Eyed sigigs per capita consumption unemployed. "■ ■ qprretarv of y®*"" 5^® pounds, a jbe Rev. William H. Colquitt, • gain of about 100 pounds in nine 43^ ^f inhster, a spokesman for the picketing group, claims Shopmen’s Local 508 of the Iron the magazine [Workers Union has refused toj ... ^ -1 President Nixon but|Pulp & Paper gives these 1967 m'i2 1134 1134 -'/.did not reach any decision onjestimatesfor other nations: ” ’ 3$^ 3934 + sJltime or place, 1 Japan 194 pounds. United _ SAIGON (/PI . 12339-t-vl State William P. Rogers and 45 36 M'* MW- '/. President Nguyen Van Thieu^ M 44W 4*'^ 44W + w today discussed the possibility jES’TIMATES 13 34'.9 34'* 34'/. + w C^ ^ future meeting between] By contrast, Mutual Stock Quotations INVTSTING COMPANITS NEW YORK (AP (asked) Wednesdey.-Bld Ask 13.07 13.07 1.19 1.30 13^8,14.95 Am NOW 3.48 4.02 Am Pc 8.14 814 Anchor Group: Cep 10.2511.23 Grwth 14.41 14.01 Jnv . 9.93 10.88 Fd Inv 11.28 12.36 Associatd 1.54 1.70 Axe Fund fr 10.32 11.22 Best Stk II 12.14 9.18 10 15.8217 Bullock 14.6918.28 CG Fd 10.9511.84 Canadian 19.96 21.58 Capit Inc 9.42 10.32 Capit Shr 8.08 8.85 Cant Shr 12.2413.38 Channing Funds: R»i>n 13,5714.82 k 2JI3 2.22 Progrm; 8.03 8 Fst InStk —.9.84 10.78 Fst Multi 11.19 11.37 Foursq \13.7114 8 DNTC 14.17 13 Gryphon 20.2012.00 c FdB S.03 8.8Q # ^ 'S" % if ; Neuwrth 28.05 28.05 New Eng 10.94 11.83 New. Hor 30.30 30.30 New WId 15.34 14.77 Newtofi 16.91 18.49 Noreast 17.3417.34 Oengph 9.44 10.34 J> ?J?Td illi’s;}? 101 Fund 10.9711.99 One wms 17.37 17.37 O'NelJ 18.83 1982 Oppenhm , .9.00 9.84 Plan Inv -14.26 15.58 Price TR 25.82 25.82 Pro 11.3011.30 Providnt 5.40 4.12 Puritan 11.9512.92 POtnram Funds: "W 1 t 8.57 Grwth s'JScTal 3.52 V.8! Chase Group: Fund \3.43 14.9( .Front 111.16114.M Shrhid 13.97 15.21 Chemical 19.31 2l,l1 Colonial: Equity 5.64 6.11 Schuster 11.0419.74 Scudder Funds; Int inv 14.9217.17 -f-SpecH 42.33 42.33 48 12.55 1212.26 Invest Stock ........... Cwith 1a9b Unavail tt.11 12.14 ____I Unavall CAD Unavall ■ -1.59 20.37 J.32 11.21 .0.3811.21 11.4012.39 lEftk* Consm'^lnv 4 Corp Ld 17 entry Cap 15 deVegh /yt 76.33 76.33 Decat Inc 13.99 15.29 Delaware 15.91 17.39 Delta Tr 9.79 10.70 DIvId Shr 8.14 3.54 DowTh In 7.68 8.39 Drcx^l 17.94 17.94 Dreyfus 14.4115.79 gnergy ISJOlslso Energ Sc 9.52 10.40 Equity 10.95 11.97 Eguit Gth 19.97 21.88 Ixplor ^'.07 30.93 Fairld 1-. 14.50 15.85 Frm BMu 12.49 12.49 Fed Grth 15.43 16.14 JHncock 9.4210.46 Johnstn 22.93 22.93 Keystone Funds: Cus B1 20.50 21.40 Cus B2 21J7 23.53 Cus B4 -10.3011.25 Cus K1 9.09 9.93 Cus K2 6.47 7.07 Cus SI 23.33 25.45 Cus S2 12.49 13.43 •' Cus S3, 98710.34 Cus S4 7»2 7.44 Polaris 5.80 4.35 Knickb 1.55 9.34 Knick Gth 12.79 14.01 Life Inv 7.94 8.70 Ling 8.59 9,39 Liw^ls Sayles > •caned 41-.41 41.61 Capit T3.58 13.58 Manhln .10.70 10.70 __________ 14M 17.80 StFrm Gth 4.25 4.25 State St i55.12 55.50 Steedman Fds: Cap Op 17.21 17.21 Stock 15.51 15.51' Sup InGth 8.10 8.88 Syncr Gth 14.1515.44 TMR Ap 27.31 29.85 Taachrs 11.95 12.45 Teehvst 9.51 Technel • ■ 7.38 8.07 Technol 9.02 9.83 Temp Gf 33.51 25.49 Tower m'r 8.77 9,58 Tran Cap 10.03 10.90 Trav Eq 10.8211.83 TwehC Gth 5.34 5.M TwenC Inc 5.53 4.04 Uhlf Mut 12.3413.51 Unifd . 11.4512.73 United Funds: Scien . 15.76 17 i l1|4 13.49 1 12.9214,12 14.85 18.42 8.09 8.09 13.99 13.99 _... d Can 8.42 9.20 value Line Funds: . Val Lin 9.31 10.20 Wallil I, Wash Ml Wellgjon spl 9.10 9.95 9.16 10.71 6.l5 4.73 5.94 6.64 ’’■.MllU 14.36 15.51 13.2014,3: 9.40 10,27 15.S2 16.96 • Winfield Wiscon WL Morg 1 By ROGER E. SPEAR {textile operations have not been terS J * ,’’’trim's t'S Jh. p... I. 4 (or. reinvestment of dividends.! . ....... ? . . Should I continue, as in ttlejj] past, banking my dividends at 5; per cent? From time-to time, I could purchase 100 shares with will be solved. More important acquisitions, utilizing more fully the company’s capita] position, are in prospect for I960. These speculative shares can be held but require careful watching. (Roger Spear’s 4 8 • pa g e Investment Guide (recently revised and in its lOdi printing) is available. Send |1 with name and address to Roger E. Spear, (The Pontiac ^ess), Box 1618, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 16617.) (Copyright, 1866) the accumulated dividends, -r E. E. - You would probably be better off financially to reinvest tlifbugh* the Telephone plan. First of all, the commission costs to yoiT wouid be substantially reduced and, second, yqu would be taking advantage of the compounding effect that continual reinvestment generates. However, without knowing the full particulars on any other holdings you might have, I could not venture an opinion on the wisdom of adding to this one issue. In this era of historically high interest rates, this new plan opens f or Telephone a sizable potential reservoir of untapped capital. A ★ A Q — A year ago I bought 800 shares of Lehigh Valley Industries, my first stock purchase. I do not neied the money at present but partial retirement is not far off. Is the company sound and should it be held?-G. H. In 1954, a new management group took control of an old-line company with an annual deficit running at about $1 million. Sale of coal mining properties and purizhase of profitable businesses w e p e u p d e rtaken simultaneously. Beginning with a tax loss of $35 million, management had whittled this to $15 million at the' 1968 year end. Sales fall into! IZ.1/rLSSS' » I^Unnual Rummag., Bake Sale, meal and metalworking, 35. pw vi»„ it h « m tain<; cent;^ Motivational marketing, ^ ® 15 cent; shoe manufac- turing, 35 per cent; and textiles,; Garage Sale, 4690 Irwln^alc, 15 per cent. ‘ 10 to A, Friday and Saturday. A highly profitable division, J; —Adv. & H Int. sells promotional package deals mainly to] Gairage Sale: Saturday, May grocery chains "and petroleuitijlTj 2855 SUverhill, off Walton, coinpanies. Difficultsies in LVIs] —Adv. News in Brief John S. Sulo, 50, of 372 W. Iroquois told Pontiac police yes-day that someone bToke the windshield of his car parked In front of his home. The window is valued at $95. Garage Sale: 1829 Wellington, Wards Orchards, Frl., Sat., Sun. 12-? -Adv. Rummage Sale, Saturday, 8-12, 1. Vincent de Paul Hall, Wide Track Drive. —Adv. Rummage, 4 Towns United Methodist, comer Cooley-Lpc-haven. May 17, Sat. 9 to 12 noon. —Adv. . Rummage Sale Benefit, of Michigan Animal Rescue League^ Qf, Pontiac, Saturday and Sunday, 17th and 18th of May, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. at Dewey’s Dairy .Cream, 4708 Elizabeth Lake Rd. —Adv. Oakland Beach Civic Assoc. .;7: V THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRJDAY; MAY 16, 1&69 B—7 We have tried to help our ''cabin boy," your carrier, pointout to you the advantages of staying on as a regular passenger on The Good Ship Pontiac Press. ■ i The entire crev/ is anxious for your answer .. we are honest pirates who want.to give you both, the finest newspaper for your home and the best of service. ■ If you are not already q subscriber to the Press, tell our cabin boy "Yos" when he calls this weekend, or, if you're not at home when he comes, better call us to have your paper delivered tomorrow. 'VjM For Home Delivery Dial 332-8181 ’ V: B—8 ( THE fk)lifTIAc PRESS, FRIDAY, MA' 'Odd Couple' Due at College in Area “The Odd Couple,” a comedy by Neil Simon, wii; be performed by Michigan Christian College thespihns tonight and Saturday night in the college cafetorium in Avon Tovraship. Curtain rises both nights at 8. Admission Js $1.75 for adults and $1 for students. Children under six are admitted free. ★ ★ ★ Leading roles are played by Norman Seiders of Amherst, Ohio, and Bruce Kilmer of Pontiac. The two women in the play are portrayed by Miss Diane.. Hatcher of Lake Orion and Miss Charlotte Pincombe of Detroit. Poker players are Mitch Brandon of Martinsville, Ind., Garth Pleasant of Flint, Tony Simion of Troy and Bob Woodroof of Rochester. * . *.; * Directors are Larry Jurney and MCC Prof. Donald Bone. Are Hospitalized as Car Hits Tree in Novi Two young men are in different hospitals recovering from injuries received when their car hit a tree about 1:15 a.m. today in Novi. ' A Novi police car on patrol discovered the wrecked auto wrapped around a tree” on the south side’of 10 Mile Road west of Novi, police report. According to police, t PI I fa crrrel on Lawt Enrorcement Gef^ Director School Hopeful Leaves Race Charlie J, Harrison Jr. of 85] ... . ,Carr announced yesterday his, ditch while another was fH Withdrawal as candidate for the I halfway out of.the car and a p^ntiac Board of Education in fourth was pinned between the of incumbent Dr. car^and the tree.-, Robert R. Turpin, vice presi- TOreC of the injured wereidenf of the'board. taken to Botsford Hospital persons had been thrown into i Judge Limits Local Pickets at Consumers Gerald St. Souverf chief investigator with the Oakland County prosecutor’s office, will direct efforts of the county’s recently organized 15-man law enforcement committee. , ★ ★ ★ Organized under the Southeast Michigan Council of Governments, the coriiunittee has until Sept. 1 to come up with plans fyr Improving countywide law programs. ★ ★ * Some $300 million in federal funds are available to the nation for better law enforcement, Su^rvisor Dennis Aaron, D- Huntington Woods, told the committee yesterday. * *' * ’The committee yesterday also named Robert Frye, a Birmingham attorney, head of a special group to study courts and correction and i Royal Oak Police Chief Herpian Potts head of a police study group. * ♦ * ' ^ Aaron suggested, the study might include such items as computerizing county law- en-forcement information, improvement of training programs af the Oakland Police Academy, and aid^ for the county’s two police tactical units. The chairman said the federal funds may be spent on any law enforcement program excepting additional building or additional manpower. .Striking employes at Consumers Power Co. in Pontiac have been prohibited by a court order from mass picketing at the company’s facilities. 7 -kir k Oakland County Circuit Judge Clark J. Adams issued the restraining order yesterday afternoon and set a hearing for •Tuesday on whether the order ehould be made permanent. , •* * ★ •The pickets, members of Local 105 of the Utility Workers Union, have been on strike against Consumers since April 10. In dispute is a new two-year proposedd contract in which the company has’ offered. wage hikes , of 11 per cent the first year, and 6 per cent the second, with an optional third year that includes a 314 per cent increase and additional cost of living benefits. ACCESS ORDERED Judge Adams’ order prohibits the pickets from interfering with access to the company’s service center on Featherstone and its retail store. k k k Two members of the local were accused this week with placing nails in the roadway in front of the service center at 103C Fieatherstone. where the driver, Vernon McCarty, 21, of 1766 Ashstan, WalM Lake, and John Wolfe, 19, of 58250 Pontiac Trail, South Lyon, were treated and released. ■SA-nSFACTORY’ CONDITION The third person taken to Botsford, Martin New, 18, of Hass, South Lyon, is in satisfactory condition with fractured right leg. and ankle and a broken right knee. Patrolman Jack Grubb, and 1 ambulance driver used acetylene tprehes to free Mike White, 20, the fourth occupant of the car. The youth was pinned between the car and tree. White of 9206 Cooley Lake, White Lake Township, is "in University Hospital, Ann Arbor, with a possible skull fracture, a fracture of the left leg, broken left hip and extensive back lacerations. The driver, McCarty, was ticketed for reckless driving, police said. Skid marks indicated that the _jtr had been going around 110 ynph, police said, although the driver told police that someone forced him oK the road at 60 mph. 'Massacre' Is Set MACKINAW CITY (AP) Reenactments of the historical Pontiac's Massacre are scheduled to be presented over the Memorial 'Day weekend at the foot of the Mackinac Bridge. The 18th Century massacre saw Pontiac's Indians wipe out a group of Detroiters. Teachers Pact LUDINGTON (AP) - The Beatle Paul's Wife Pregnant NICE, France (UPD-Beatle Paul McCartney and his bride arrived in Nice for a vacation yesterday and confirmed that she was pregnant. k k k Mrs.. McCartney, the former Linda Eastman of New York City, has a daughter by a prev-marriage. “My Supporters and I believe that it is extremely important not only to pur minority cojn-mui^ty, but to the total school district, that Dr. Turpin be reelected to .the board,” Harrison said. k k k We are faced with many difficult problems ahead. Dr. 'hirpin has the full support of our community, is widely respected throughout the school district, and has demonstrated intelligent, sensitive and dedicated leadership. I urge his reelection,” he said. Service for Ward T. Hart, 71, of 2866 Buick, Wat e r f o rd' Township, will be 1:30 p.fn. Monday at First United Missionary Church with burial in Perry Mouht Park "Cemetery by Sparks-Griffln Funeral Home. His body may be viewed after 7 p.m. tomorrow. Mr. Hart,,a letter carrier at the Pontiac Post Office, died yesterday. He was a member of the First United" Missionary Church. Surviving are his wife, Myra D.; a daughter, Mrs. Howard iMilligan of Pontiac; threelburial in Oak Hill Cemetery, grandchildren; and a sister, Mrs. Newell died yesterday. Mrs. Edith M. Ufwling of Pon-i . ■ . tiac. i Clyde, Chu/xn Mrs. Kenneth R/Newell ^ghland townsiu^ “ I Clyde Church/ 34, of 352 Sehric*e for Mrs. Kenneth R. (MaUe) NewelL 55, of 821 N. Perry will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Voorhees-Siple Chapel with •. Turpin, others contending for the two four-year terms on the board are Mrs. Carole Sweeney, Mrs. Dorothy] Furgerson, incumbent Mrs Lucille Marshall, Dr. Harvey Burdick, Charles . E. Meissner and John K. Irwin Jr. . ’The school district election Is! June 9. Telephone Cable Stolen in Area Michigan Bell Telephone Co. workers reported a 1,709-foot reel of cable missing from a Rose Toymship location yesterday. The reel alone weighs 900 pounds. The workers , told Oakland County Sheriff’s deputies the cable, valued at $1,700, was stolen from Demode Road near ! Hickory Ridge where they had left it a week earlier. Ex-King's Buick Brings $5,520 LONDON (AP) - A bl^ick Buick used 33 years ago by the Duke of Windsor before his abdication as King Edward VIII and his marriage to Wallis War-field Simpson was sold at auction Tbursday for $5,5210. The buyer was kept secret by the auctioneers, Sotheby’s, New Office Open H & R Block tax service has opened a .new office at 28 W. Huron after moving from its old location at 20 E. Huron. Hours are Monday through Friday 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and 9 a.m. to 9..p.m. during the taxfiling season Lakeview died; yesterday His body is at C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, Ortonyille. Stirviving are his i|rife Ellen. Mrs. Lyle Spezia OAKLAND TOWNSHH* -Service for Mrs. Lyle (Dorothy) Spezia, 56, of 1080 Lake George will be 1:30 p.m. Monday at St Philip’s Episcopal Church, Rochester. Burial will be in East Lawn. Cemetery,. Lake Orion, by William R. Potere Funeral Home, Rochester. Mrs. Spezia died yesterday, Surviving besides her husband are two daughters, Mrs. Ray Parker of Oakland Township and Betty of Lake Orion; five brothers. Including Frank and Herbert HMtis, both of Lake Orion; six sisters, including Mrs. Grace Goforth of Bloomfield. mils and Mrs. Helen Walker, Mrs. June Apker and Mrs. Alice Hord, all of Lake Orion; and, three grandchildren. County Curbs Use of Garage fecilities The practice of a 11 o w I n j employes of the county’s, cental garage to service privdlely owned vehicles on their Own time, but with the use of garage facilities, has ended! " , ’The personnel policies committee of the board has recommended that employes at the garage be given a $400 annual salary boost to compensate for the lack of outside income. k .k k County admi nistrators reported all employes of the garage were hired on the basis that they could, do outside work after normal hours, • Heart Association Head Is Named DETROIT (J)-Ur. Edward W. Green, director of the cardiovascular department of Chil-drln’s Hospital in Detroit, has been nam-^ president of the Michigan Heart Association. , He succeeds Dr. Michael^ C. Kozonis of 7120 Falrhill. Bloomfield Township. Dr. Green resides at 28317 Forestbrook, Farmington. Dr. Harold E. DePress of ’The ix)dy may be viewed Kalamazoo has been named as after 2 p.m. tonibrrow. president-elect. ______ Music Course Is Slashed in Waterford The Waterford Townsh Board of Education last nij lopped off a full music course for the 1969-70 school year part of the austerity planning resulting from recent millage defeats. In accordance with super inten dent’s recom-m e n d a t i 0 n, the eliminated the string orchestral programs in elementary, junior and senior high schools. Further reflections fo the general program cutback came when the board approved five staff reappointments while accepting 12 resignations. In addition, 15 administrative reappointments were approved. The board accepted a petition from residents of Wilder Street near Kettering High School calling for the closing of that street’s entrance to the sdhool. ction on the request Is pending board study . School-Aid Bill Faces a Temporary Obstacle LANSING (AP) - Only the ghost of parochiaid remains to haqnt the hall of the Michigan House, but another thi^at has emerged as a temporary stumbling block to passage of the public school aid bill. The House was scheduled to hiring of teachers for Three -year terms is part of, a new contract approved recently by the Ludington District Board of Education. The new salary Arud to Aid Cancer than recommended by Gov.,Wih liam Milliken. Ryan said Thursday he seeking advice from Atty. ^?en. Frank Kelley and other legal experts on whether the bill could be challenged in court if its complete text is not read before a final vote. PAROCHIAID MOVE”* In other developments, Ryan and„his parochiaid lieutenant, J. Robert ’Traxler, D - Bay City, reintroduc^ and promptly withdrew a revised parochiaid amendment that'contained meet today at 9 a.m. Constitutional implications of a heretofore routine parliamentary maneuver have led Speak-^ er William A. Ryan, D-Detroit, scale runs from $7,000 for a to hold up final action on the beginning teacher to $12,160 for!massive public .schpol aid bill, a teacher with a master’s de- now estimated to be worth $849 gree and 12 years experience, million, .some $4.4;nillion ;„o state aid appropriation. „ I Tie purpose of that action ' was twofold: the new draft bell comes a matter of public ijec-ord, printed In the House Jour-s nal, and it could be pulled out I‘and attached to a later bill. "I: kkk 11 For nowi Ryan said, parochi-ilaid backers will try'to interest; I senators in adding a parochiaid] |J amendment when the upper I!chamber reconsiders' house I'changes to the bill II In a daylong session on the bill, the house added $100,000 to $5O,08o approved by the senate I for tuition rebates to districts I which send children elsewhere 'Pots Pushed' for Fun Oakland Community College students at the Apburn Hills campus, Pontiac Township, will be “pushing pots” this weekend for fun and for the Michigan Cancer Society, Oakland County Unit. The event is the second annual-to^pt bowl race, which will begin at noon Sunday on the campus. , it ir it I . ^e race is being sponsored by the Auburn Hills Cry- ahead.” Students representing five organizations will push decorated tojlet bowls in relays from the campus down Adams to Orion Road and back—a 24-mile round trip: COLLECTING MONEY onics. Club and the slogan (his year is ..“pot pushers get 1 to" [lion voted earlier for interme-Idiate school districts.' The additions, however, were than matched by rejected spend-:| mg proposals. Among those were $3 million more for th| During the race, the students wijl collect money for the cancer society. Dr. Joseph E. Hill. OCC president, serves as honorary chairman of the Oakland County Unit s $41.25 million earmarked for 1969 Capeer Crusade! ^ |; .special education of handi- Prizes will be awarded for the best-deiAirated toilet r capped children, $4 million bowl, to the group that finishes the race first and to the mpig than the $26 million now group collecting the most money. . . FREE PARKING CHARGE IT Following the race, a dance will be held for students at the Auburn Hills campus. set (or transportation, and 1 fej million on top of $13 million al-J located for rebate to districts levying giftremely high local] loperatmg taxes. j ' [^S NURSEHY _______ 5919 HIGHLAND R0A6 (M59) at AIRPpRT ROAD 31590 Orand Rivar, iarmington • 6575 Telegraph at Maple Rd. • 14 Mile Rd. at Crooks Rdi, THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1069 B—9 Gaia. Celebration Marks Day That Tornado Hit Iowa Town OELWEIN, Iowa (AP) IMs city of 9,000, wrecked a year ^agp by a tornado, launched a g^la celebration of • ‘covery yesterday and invited the neighbors In. Mayor S|m Mazziottl said thej( thrCe-dhy celebration—dubbed 'Appreciation Days” was a citywide thank you to those in the area who rushed in to help after the twister hit May 15, 1968. even more havoc the same aft-.sue to pay for a new junior I val and a teen-age street dance, ■emoon, the anniver!5ary„ was high»school and an elementa-and free fbi^ and drinks. sombre iry school, replacing buildings I ^ program lists the i towns and municipal officials known to have extended a help- At Charles Cityr 50 miles to the northwest, where a twin of the Oelwein tornado created greetetrmr'a more mood. demolished by the twister. Only an outdoor chprch |efv*';' ice was scheduled, starting ati “Appreciation Days” will be 4:51 p.m.—the time the tornado highlighted Saturday by pa- we . were too busy and too he said, “is to rememllbr/those devastated to keep a runningjwho lostJ^heir lives, to recall the account on the spot,” said Maz-lsense of'awe that so few vrere ziotti. * {taken in so great a disaster, and InCharlesCity, theRef Law-ito express our thanks for the struck that city of 12,000. Oelwein citizeiu observed the anniversary of their tornado by passing a $1.6-million brad la- the crowning of “Miss Tornado,” a style show and tjie showing 1949 PATiO BLOCKS REG. 99< 16"xl«-xlYa- • REG. 99« 14'^1’A"HEXAG0N iREG. 89« KK)TPRIMTS Wirft these cast conocete bkeki and a weekend’s work jem bsa create a patio that youTl be proud of for years to come! Ike the footprints to make an unosual garden walk. ['S NURSERY 5919 HIGHLAND ROAD (M59) at AIRPORT ROAD 31590 Grand River, Farmington • 6575 TeiBgraph at Mapfo Rd. • 14 Mil. Rd.at Rd. .(V,. ,\ ,1.r, i.>, . a B—10 TgE PONTIAC PRESS. i^RIDAY, MAY 10^ 1069 Pentagon Plans to Dispose of Poison Gas Pfbve Ill-Conceived WASHINGTON^ (UPI) -When It was all over, Rep. Dffliald Fraser, D-Minn., dropped the scientific jargon and summarized the day’s findings. “The Pentagon has been caught with its pants down a,pd knows It.’* advice’’ from a federal agencies. Fraser and fellowrmembers of a House Foreign Affairs sul^ conpnittee had just questioneid non^Pentagon witnesses in and but of government about the Army’s plans for disposing**^ of 27,000 tons pf poison gas. The amount Includes 12,322 tons of a nerve gas so potent it reportedly takes only one-fiftieth of a drop on the skin to liquidate a Human being in seconds. After heaVing from some of those agencies, subcommittee Chairman Cornelius Gallagher, D-N.J., told a reporter: “I think the prst time they weje all in one rP8m together was in this hearing room td^ day.” ‘SAFEST WAY’ The subcommittee, which Is officially interested in the international implications o i dumping the gas at sea, was told by the Army earlier this week that the plan is the safest and most efficient way of handling the job, that every precaution has been taken and that the Pentagon had “sought SEARCH FOR WATER ^ Village farmers dig deep into wells at Madras, India, in a desperate search for water. This is a scene in Madras^ which is experiencing one of the^ worst droughts in its history. State Border Hearing in Fall LANSING (AP)-A new target date has been set for possible settlement of a more than 130-year old boundary dispute between Michigan and Ohio involving jurisdiction over waters of western Lake Erie. Rep. Raymond Rehres, D-Monroe, said final testimony in the dispute will be taken at Toledo in September or early Oc-iobef; Kehres said the actual date of the hearing will be set by Judge Albert Maris of Philadelphia, appointed as a special referee by the U.S. Supreme Court. ‘.‘Success would give Michigan jurisdiction over , an additional 2ld square miles,«S^Lake Erie,” Kehres said. “The triangular area in dispute contains many valuable resources including fisheries, bottom lands and minerals in the form of oil and gas,” he noted. The boundary has been disputed between the two states since it was mapped by the Army Corp.-Maiine, asked the secretaries of interior and of health, education and wellare- to do all .they can 'to elidiinate the possibility of lisaster.” He said risk? of leakage “must be eliminated.” “Millions of dollafs have been spent in the development of weapons of chemical-biological warfare,” Muskie said. “But apparently Mthing has been spent to devdmp safe and efec-tive means of neutralizing them.” Wednesday testimony produced these disclosures;. The Interior Departaent, supposedly concerned with the dangers the dumping would pose to marine life, was not ^tacted about the operation until Friday’— two days after Rep. Richard D. McCarthy, D-N.Y., broke the story. GENERAL RE^W Interior’s qualified dorsement of ttie plan (the least i objectionable o f unpleasant alternatives, as one witness put it) was based on telephone calls to some "’experts” and gqncrnl' review of, the Army’s ‘conclusions.” Ihe State Department, which was supposed to decide whether the disposal would violate any interhatiraial treaties, first heard about' it on May &• and has not yet come to any conclusion. The Department of Transportation, charged with the safety aspects of the train movement of . the gas by'train from arsenals around; the cqun-try to Earle, N. J., hoW intends to amend its original permit to clamp a 35-mile-an-hour speed limit on the trains and is thinking of setting aside an exclusive route. A spokesman cited publicity and congressional concern at disclosure of the plan. T* The Arniy said it had “Tentatively” planned to begin the rail phase today, hut earlier this week it was postponed indefinitely pending an “independent review” by the National Academy of Sciences. l^HITE, S.D. (AP) - This town’s 400 residents are girding for an expected invasion of coi-lege students Saturday. Students from South Dakota State University at Brookings, about ,l5 ' miles northjpast of White, have organized a “Whip to White.” ^ 1 for the students said plans are to drink beer, have a bonfire, toast weiners, eat watermelons, play a few games and leave. The affair is not being sponsored or promoted by any official canipus organization. Last weekend students from across the nation and Canada invaded Zap, N.J., and did an estimated $5„000 damage before the Na^tional Guard,' called I hi to clear the tiny toWm. i j , OPEN A HANDY I FRANK’S CHARGE FRANK'S NURSERY SALES- ALWAYS GREATER ^ ^liXii-^VALUE AT FRANK’S 1/2 PRICE S ALi I Fruit, Shade and Fhwering Trees) Flowering Shrubs, Small Fruif A Vines! nOWERING SHRUBS Wem$lS§rn$^ FLOWERING VINES W9n$IS9ugtM 99 99--1.99 99--’1.34 oad, Uacs, Betutifal w»pped«MC afid ^other flowttmg vines tnrlivting wisto^ hooeysudd^ silvec id lace and others. Save! FRUIT TREES Were $2.9943.99 1.49-1.99 Handsome wnq^ped-tooc spedmens ia-doding pes(% mote. Use yoor aedit at wanks, durge No. N-1823 01980, Flank's Nansry Stlm, Inc. lyf HAVE A HUGE SELECTION OF SPRUCE TREES Savings Priced from a Low, Low A A TO ^29.88 One of Amertca’s favorite evergreeoi in a wide variety of sizes, colois and prices! Qxx>se from beaudfd shades -of Moe or green and short or long needled varieties. Frank’s has a spruce for every budget, every landscape! Hare are a tew Examples: 2'NORWAYSPRUa........ $3.99 2'COIORADO SPRUCE.. $3.99 2'WHITE SPRUCE...^. $3.99 2'COIORADO SPikiCE, GREEN AND BUIE SHADINGS. $9.88 3'ENGlEMAirS BLUE SPRUCE. $9.88 3'NORWAY SPRUa.... $6.99 OVER 3'SEUCTED COLORADO BLUE SPRUa.......... $12.95 N^RLYAFOOTMORHEIM BLUE SPRUCE ... $29.88 SPREADING JUNIPER some AKB/ nearly/ 3 fT. ACROSS SAU! VAWES TO»y^V5 $ “ Save now on gtikcefiilly spccadiog, lush green b Their aaiactive wide vase ^pe is an asset to any li_________ and every one at Frank’s is A f^ bushy specimen worth man more thus die 1499 youTl pi^! I'S MURSERT 5919 HIGHLAND ROAD (M59) at AIRPORT ROAD 315190 Grapd River, Farmington • 6575 Telegraph at Maple Rd. • ’"14 Mile Rd. at Crooks Rdw THE PONTIAC PRESS,. FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 / B-t-11 A New Silverless Dollar for U.S.? - Las Vegas Is Game CARSON CITY, Nev. (AP) -Officials and gambling men of the Silver State think a new “silver” dollar Is a fine idea, even if it’s silverless. , “The over-all effect certainly would be beneficial,” said Charles Munson of the Nevada Gaming Industry Association. I think everybody in the gam-ini; business much prefers U.S. coinage to any Kind of a substitute." , ' t * * When silver prices started upt ward five years ago, people be-hoarding silver dollars and the Treasury stopped minting them. Most casinos now use $1 privately minted ^okens for their slot machines. On busy nights, the lines of players wanting to buy or cash in tokens become enormous. ^ The Treasury Department announced Monday it'' will seek ional approval to mint a $1 coin with the heft and feel but none of the silver of the old cartwheels. Gov. Paul liaxalt called the announcement “extremely good news” and said, “it'could mean a great deal to the state in terms of economic development.” The segipeht of Nevada’s economy most likely to benefit i.s the legal gambling industry, which last year reported $386 million in profits. It and tourisih are the state’s biggest moneymakers. “Dollar coins would certainly help our play,” says Hank Simpson, gefteral manager of Carson City’s Nugget Casino. 'They seemed to want to play more when they had *the real dollars,” says Rose Bartley, a casino cashier. Jack Speelman of. the Sahjiira at Las Vegas said he feels the stop.,|at a cashier’s window to buy or cash tokens irritates many gamblers and slows up the action. Nevada became known as the Silver State during the rollicking boom days that began in the 1860s. 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'128 HOHNER HARMONICA World's b^st seller marine band harmotlica. -J88 SPECIAL LOW, EASY fERMS fctr THIS SALE 363 Me rEUeRAPH McAiiliffe s Ear Tuned Only to White Sox Home Run^Pitch DOUBLE ELEVEN—A pair of No. Us hit the dust in the fifth inning of last night’s game between the Detroit Tigers and Chicago White Sox. Catcher Bill Free-han slides safely into second base on a steal as Chicago shortstop Luis Aparicio J AP WIrtpheta (right) dives in a futile tag attempt. Umpire Nestor Chylak stays up to make the call. The Tigers Won, 2-1, in 10 innings. Majestic Prince Is THE PONTIAC PBESS Jet Speed Ready BALTIMORE (AP) - Majestic Prince Is ready-=ijet speed r e a d y — f o r Saturday’s Preakness Stakes, the second leg of the Triple (Sdwn. Fraidc McMahon's winner of the Kentucky Derby zoomed a half mile over the Pimlico track Thursday morning hi 45 seconds, just a fifth of a second off the World record set by Tamrin’s Jet ’ in a race at Sunland Park in> New Mexico earlier this year. The powerful chestnut ripped off the first quarter in 22 4-5 and three-eighths in 33 4-5. He galloped out five-eighths in 58, a fifth of a second lower than the Pimlico record set by Vatiant Bull in a race. AprU 28, 1967. Top Knight, owned by the estate of Steven B. Wilson, winner of the Flam-ingto and Florida Derby but a disappointing fifth in the Kentucky Derby, also was entered after blowing out a half mile in 46 2-5. The field, in order of post position, and the jockey assignments; Top Knight, Manuel Ycaza; Elmen-* dorf’s Caption Action, Kenny Kdapp; Glenn M. Banker’s and Nick CoUucio’s Glad’s Flame, Robert Wilson; Claiborne Farm’s Jay Ray, Earlie Fires; Majestic Prince, Bill Hartack; Arts and Letters, Braulio Baeza; Pelican Stable’s A1 Hat-tab, Ray Broussard, and Michael Phipps’ Greengrass Ureene, George Cusimano. ' Each will carry 126 pounds for the 1 3/16-mile classic. FRIDAY, MAY 16. 1969 PRINCE READY “He is ready as a man can make him,’’ said trainer Johnny Longden, who rode Majestic Prince in the workout and then entered him in the Preakness where he will, meet seven other 3-year-olds, including Ro|ceby Stable’s Arts and Letters, the Derby runner-up. Single in Ninth Spoils McNally's BidforNo-Hitter Post time is 5:40 p.m., EDT, for the richest of the Triple Grown races which, if all eight start, will have a gross purse of $182,000, with $129,506 to the winner. The race will be televised from 5 p.m. -to 6 p.m. by CBS, which also will handle the radio broadcast from 5;30 p.m. until the race ends. Pimlico officials expect a record crowd of 45,000 and there’s no doubt that the magnet is Majestic Prince. Unbeaten in eight previous races, the poprerful son of Raise a Native and E' ion of Native Dancer, could e the ninth Triple Crown winner, e has won the Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stahes since Citation in 1948. ST. PAllC-MINNEAPOLIS (AP) - , Davd McNally, one pitch away from his first major league no-hitter, says Cesor' Tovar ruined the bid on one of his best pitches. ■ “I was just trying to throw it as hard as I could,’’ said McNal^, now 6-0 after a 22-10 season in 1968. “I put everything I had into that pitch” That was the story of a onehitter. Tovar, who said he knew, he was going to gqj. a hit, lined the low inside'fast ball into centerfield for a clean single with one out in the ninth inning. > Classy Detroit Cager Casts Lot With Titans ERASED ON DP Tovar was, erased in a double play and the Baltimore Orioles breezed to a 54) victory Diursday night a.s McNally faced only 29 hatters and threw but 95 pitches. “It was a good pitch,’’ said Orioles catcher Andy Etchebarren, who is McNally’s road trip roomie. “He threw that ball good.’’ DETROIT (UPI) - Tom Marsh, leading scorer in Detroit Northern High School basketball history, has decided to enroll at the University of Detroit. He 1# new Coach Jim Harding’s first recruit. 1 Mar.sh is a 6-foot-l guard who averaged 28 points per game in leading the Eskimos to the Detroit Public League finals, where they were beaten, by Mum-ford. ^ He was on United Prpss International’s second squad Class A All-State team. AP WIrtphaK READY TO ROLL—Wally Dallenbach (left), ,32, of Ea.st Brun.swick, N..I.. Awaits Big Time Debut Etchebarren, despite blooping a two-run triple off Jim Kaat in the second to open the scoring, seemOd to be the most dejected Oriole in the dressing about Tovar spoiling the hohitter. ' “Dave threw exceptional stuff toipght,” he said, ignoring barbs from other Orioles that he had called the wrong pitch. “I wasn’t worried about Rod Carew, Harmon Kinetnrew tfr Tony Oliva, I was worried about -this guy (Tovar).’’ Tiger Pounces on Relief Pifdv^r for Tomrriy John DETROIT (AP) - Nearly everyone was waithig for Tommy John to stick a ' fastball in Dick McAuliffe’s ear. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) - They called him Chargin’ Charlie when he was running the hi^ banks of the South’s big stock car racing tracks at speeds up to 190 miles per hour earlier this year. • But Charlie Glotzbach isn’t exactly charging at Indianapolis. Not yet, that two-year-old car this weekend for the rich Memorial Day 500. PREaOICTS HIT The cocky Tovar, who bdastqd he frequently hits safely against the %-year-old McNally, said he ‘Hold my teem-9 mates pm going to hit it off of.him.’’ McNally, who has a 20-2, record since the 19$8 All-Star break, retired the first 14 batters hp faced until walking Leo Cardenas in the fifth. Oliva alsoNfrew a ba.se on balls in the (Continued on Page C-2, Col, 1) “They won’t let me go as fast as I want to yet,’’ said the 3lyear-old ex-bulldozer operator from Georgetown, Ind, after completing thV first two phases of his Imkie test Thursday at the Speedway. ‘ - - . The solidly built 190-pounder undergoes the third and final phase of his test today, this time under the watchful eye of a corps of veteran Indy drivers. After that, Charlie, hopes to qualify his Under most any other circumstance in racing you wouldn’t count Charlie out, rookie or not. But Glotzbach is wheeling a car mounted with a stock block Chewy engine, and power plants of that make aren’t exactlun,on the IndianOpdlis list of preferred eqBqiment.: “They say you have to have S turbocharged Ford or Offy if you go first class at Indy this year,” said Charlie. “But my Chewy is a good car. So far it has gone ds fast aS USAC|i»fficial8 would let me go, and I really haven’t Iqt it out yet.” Glotzbach,, a product of the rcd '^clay ovals around*Ix)uisville, Ky., is a team- said of Locker’s pitch, me any fastbalis.” “H^ didi But although their now famous feud was not renewed Wednesday night, McAuliffe became the last angry man as he belted a 10th inning homer off reliever Bob Locker to give the Detroit Tigers a 2-1 win over Chicago. “I think it was a sinker,’^ McAuliffe Horton Missing as Tigers Hkid for Minneapolis Before the bla.st, the spunky second baseman faced starter John four times without a hit. It was the first time idac played opposite John since McAuliffe lit after him last year when he thought John was aiming at him. John complained of a shoulder injury after the ensuing fight and McAuliffe was subsequently suspended for five days by American League President Joe Cronin. MORE AGGRESSIVE “I think I charged the ball (at bat) more off him than I usually do off lefthanders,” Mac said. “I felt more ag-gre.ssive against him” “He pitched a hell of a game,*’ he added in praise of John. DETROIT (AP) - Detroit Tiger leftfielder Willie Horton, who left the bench in a huff during the Tigers victory over the Chicago White Sox last night, did not accompany, the team to Minneapolis in its chartered plane today. “I have no idea where he is,” said Jim Campbell, Tiger general manager. Manager Mayo Smith also said at the airport he had no idea of Horton’s whereabouts today. Horton, bothered by a recent hitting slump, a couple ,of fielding lapses and some recent boos from the fans, went to the dressing room during the seventh inning of last flight’s 2-1 Tiger victory over Chicago In 10 innings. ON HIS OWN He said he hadn’t talked to the 6-foot-3 southpaw. McAuliffe was asked if he would liked to have hit the home run off John. .“I would have liked to hit it off anybody,” hfe replied. The home run, his fifth of the year,’ ended. a more than three hour game before 12,868 fans and gave reliever Pat Dobson his first win of the year against' two losses. Earlier, White Sox shortstop Luis Aparicio was cheered when he Idshed a single to right in the third. It was his 2,000 career hit. But Tiger starter Earl Wilson did a magnificent job for nine innings and received an ovation after he walked and left the game for a pinch runner in the ninth. "He took himself out of the game. He came back into the clubhouse on his own,” Manager Smith told ■ newsmen after the game. The Tigers were slated to. open a three-game series wdth the Twins tonight. “Some of the guys cdme in to talk to him but he was just wild ... He’s got friends on the ballclub who couldn’t even talk to him.” Horton led the Tigers in hitting* .285 and home runs 36 last yqar as they won their first pennant and World Serigs in 23 years. But he has slumped, this year at the plate, hitting just .213 with four home runs and 13 runs batted in. He has struck out 34 times. Horton always has had a special closeness with, his fans, particularly children, many of whom show up time and again in the left field stands to cheer their hero. ALLOWED FOUR tors 1 ' Wilson allowed just four hits and one run. The run came in the fourth after he walked Pete Ward and Buddy Bradford, then third-string catcher Ed Herrman singled to the rightfield comer. That’s how the game stood until Jim Northrup unloaded a solo homer off John in the seventh, his fifth round tripper of the year. “No, I didn’t pitch good,” said WiLson, tongue in cheek. “I didn’t win did I?” “I’d rather pitch bad and win.” Wilson, whose record is 1-4, had been bothered by a pulled thigh muscle add his leg was wrapped tightly for the game. Tiger Manager Mayo Smith said he pulled Wilson after the ninth “because he ran out of gas.” Only last Sunday he handed his extra baseball glove to one young fan in left during pregame drills and received a loud ovation as he walked back to the dUgout. ‘Tve never had a guy take his uniform off in a. g^me like that before,” said a stunned Smith. The win gave Detroit two wins in the three-game White Sox series, ite Tigers open a three game series tonight at Min-nespta with Denny McLain (5-3) slated to oppose an as. yet undermined Twin pitcher. - CHICAGO WWIMIgmarl B«rrv cf Aparicio ss 0 1 0 Stanley u 0 00 McAufitfa 2b * ■ 0 Kalina ■ Smith said pitching coach Johnhy Sain told him about Horton’s departure.^ “I didn’t have time to go into-the clubhouse to talk to him and find out what was wrong,” Mayo said. “I had worry about the game. "I can’tTfsad his mind.” ROOED WEDNESDAY On Wednesday night Horton k as he felt and a single to left drent past him for an error. Subsequently he was booed in that game against-the While Sox. .0 0 0 1 00 000 0-1 .0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1-2.. . ». HR - Northrup i, Stanl^. _ __ __ Titans Routed by Irish SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) - Notre Dame banged out 16 hits and capitalized on six errors by Detroit to down the Titans 17-4 Thursday. he’s in a position to hit auto racing's biggest jackpot—victory lane at the Indianapolis 500. Dallenbach, who started in racing'as a 15-year-old car owner, is expected 16 try for a qualifying spflt Saturday or Sunday. The race is Memorial Day. indy Keeping Rein on Rookie mate of the veteran Lloyd Ruby, from whom he gets some salty advice from time to time. Mario Andretti and A. J. Poyt, a pair of former national champions, will be top contenders Saturday for the pole position. ‘ The top speed in Saturday’s 10-mile time trials will win the No. 1 starting slot for the $750,000 cl^sic regardless of performance in the' qualifying sessions Sunday and the following weekend. About $40,000 in special prizes will be paid for qualifying performances. The qualifying record for four laps around the 2%-m\k asphalt course is 171.559 miles per hour, .set last year by Joe Leonard, San Joko, Calif., In a turbinepowered Lotus. Hi.s Pratt & Whether It’s Watkins Glen or Wide Track- DUNLOP GOLD SEAL You’re Ahead with Dunlop For the best prices . on Dunlop total Performance Tires, call Jim or Ev Joe or Dan Dynamic Tire North, Inc. Dynamic Tire Saies, Inc. 651-2280 549-7350 223 Main St. Rochester 3826 N. Woodward Royal Oak t C—2 1:HE PONTIAC PRfeSS. ^ FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 Twins' Tovar Ruins Oriole No-Hit Bid (Continued from Page C-1) seventh — the only two batters ,to get fnore than a two-baU «Mint on McKally. It was JOUva who almost beat , oiit an infi^d single in the ise-cbnd but ■ shortstop Mark Belanger scooped up the dribbler just behind the mound and beat Oliva by an instant. HITS LINER Olive alsd lined out to McNally in the fifth, the pitcher taking the ball off-balance. The Orioles said Belanger could have scooped up the ball and thrown him out anyway. In the same inning, Rick Renick blooped a liner to second baseman Dave Johnson, but the n(Khitter apparently already was showing o n McNally. Home Run Spree in Slowpitch Till Two teams checked* In' with slim victories last night while another went on a rumscoring spree in Pontiac Slowpitch softball. In a pair of Ciass A National League games, Congregational Church rapped out 22 hits in whipping local No. 594, 22-7, while Johnson Sf Anderson held on for an 8-5 decision over Timberlanes. In a C^lfuui American game. The P«it “I ran to third base to back up the throw4n because I thought it was a hit,” he said. “The playirs ignored me in the dugout but the fansXaround there sure let me know I had a no-hitter going. They gave, me an inkling.” AP WIrtpholo COMES CLOSE-Dave McNally of the Baltimore Oriples fires a pitch against the Minnesota Twins last night. The southpaw hurler came within two outs of chalking uff a no-hitter. However, he upped his record to 6-0 with a one-hit Verdict over the Twins. Defending Champ loses in Slowpitch Two batters knocked in sevpn runs between them last night in leading Wixom Athletics to a 9-4 victory ovef defending champion Penny Electric in Walled Lake Industrial S1 o w i t c h Softball. Bill Graigie rapped out three hits and (hovel in three runs while teammati Jerry Taulbee chased home four runs. In a second game, Laskowski ‘ and Bob Peltier clouted two-run homers to lead lAJOR LEAGUE Thursday's Rasulti inings Tuday's' Gamas Only gamis scheduled. City Minnesota 'WMhTngton "(Coleman 2-3) at Chicago Ellis 0-3), nlghl„ , „ , ^ , Oakland (Odom 4-1) at Cleveland (Paul 0)p niaht California (May 1-3) al New York (Pe-'Saltle^(Pat?in' S-l) at Boston (Sleberl 3-3), iPight betrolt. at Minnesota Washington at Chicago Oaklahd at Cleveland Callfofnia at New York Seattle at BoiiKton Baltimore at Kansas City, night Oetfoit at,Wlnn«sota Oakland af Cleveland ■ Seattle at Boston -• Chicago. 2 Thursday's Results Atlanta 4. New York S Philadelphia 7, Cincinnati 0 Only Games scheduled. Atlanla (Pappas 3.2) al Montreal (Sloneman 3-3), night , , , San Francisco (McCormick 1-0) a adelphia (Fryman 3-1), night . New York (McGraw 3-(T) at Cincinnati (Fist V 1-0), n Houston n plego '2-3) al Los Angelas St. Louis (Carlton 2-4) al iSantorInl 1-2). nlglr' Pittsburgh (Ellis (Sutton 4-3), night Saturday - -------- Atlanta at Montreal, night San Francisco at Philadelphia, night New York at Cincinnati; night Chicago al Houston, night St. Louis al San Oiego, rtight Pittsburgh al Los Angeles, night .■aj«w ’vork'at'cHfcInitatl ■ thlcago at Houstoie St. Louis at San Diego Sophomores Help Titan Track Win A pair of sophomores lowered ODUiea IWU-IUU iiumcip wr •vuv. r—-------• ■ Michigan Buildlpg Coipponents | school -rpeords yesterctay for to a 12-6 victory over Lawson ponyag Catholic but the Titans Manufacturing. WALLED LAKE SOFTBALL Industrial Slowpitch "A" Division Bishop Borgass tl, F High Jump — Gifts Barry (B) M. Long ■---- "'pU' jeame out on the losing end of j 98-20 .score in a duel with 4 ‘g Bishop Borgess. jagodilnskriB), GotkTB')’li-3' Shot Put -- Karol. (B), ValantI (B), Carpaniry Enginearing Mich. Bldg. Compont's Wixom Athletic Haggerty Lumbar Lawson MIg. "B" Division 2 il Pat Lenz lowered the stan-0 Ijdard in the mile'^ to 4:48.2 and ^.iLarry Boyer cleared the bar in j f the pole vault at ll-feet-3-incl jolher new mark. The Titan.s with/h 3r2 ' .thel season. J y me poie vaun * Rfor th«i_,, olhe .1 ijloss left'ilhe 'g ’jthiaFk for thg Pontiac Catholic 1» Jump — 3) ,17-»Va. Glffan (B), Dean (P), Philipt (B), Oltlln (B), Larry Boyer (P), Presd edged First Christian markers and than up. Chiirch, 9-7. jwith ^ee in the sixth on. wlo Six home runs along with aihome runs by Joe PhUlips, Ken seven-run first inning werelBuchannon end Conrad,Talbert, enough to send the Con^ega- Dave Wheaton picked up two tional nine on the way to vie- hits for TimberlaneA. tory. Clouting the homers were Dan Donnelly lashed oqt a Chuck Mason, Earl Richardson, home run and two singes and Jack Courtney j Bob Welch, teammate Duane Gallero col Steve Hubs and Roger Williams. leteed a single and homer to ^Axdenm poilied scran flvsils tbs first Imdig. Tiant's Curve on Long Trip Of f Royal Bat ! meet the BIG WHEptS ■ T AT Sales & Service 20S W. Mentealm ih Pontlae COMFLETC MACHINE SHOP FOR Alf« ----------------------‘iIRSl KINDS OF MOTOROYOLE REPAlRSi FREE PARKING FOR OVER 80 CARI^ KANSAS CITY (AP) - Ed Kirkpatrick “doesn’t remember getting many hits off” Oeve-land's Luis Tiant, but then Thursday night, “he managed to put it where I was swinging." And strangely enough, Kirkpatrick obsehred, Tiant “gets roe on that curve ball.” Two me^ were on with one Out when Kirkpatrick came up , in the fifth inning. He drove the first pitch, a curve, into the right field seats to boost the Royals Into a 4-0 lead over, the Indians. Kirkpatrick also batted in the last Kansas City run in the seventh with a sacrifice fly as the Royals beat the Indians 5^2. “A four-RBI night is great, but only when you win," said Kirkpatrick. “You have a good time when you win.” The veteran Tiant along with his teammates was not having a good time. The 29-year-old right-hander’s frustratipletely new fully operational drainage system assures accurate fairway play. Tournament designed greens challenge putting ability. Water hazards remind the wary golfer to be cautious ^ . . sand traps protect the greens. Early bird golfers will find the course open at 7 A.M. on weekdays and 6 A.M. on weekends and holidays. - ' ^ Come out this week-end and join us in our grand opening celebration. Register with our 'secretaries'and become eligible for worth-while prizes. FIRST PRIZEi Matched set of Haig (woods and irons) \ SECOND PRIZE: Golf bag. With many prizes tp follow. You need not be present at the drawing to be eligible to win. Drawing for prizes will begin at 4 P.M. May 18,1969. . f A BEAUTIFUL NEW PLACE TO VISIT The Pro Shop occupies the ground floor to the new communications center. The shop is fully stocked with quality golf merchandise featuring such names as Wilson, Royal, Spaulding, and Hagen, i Clothing by Munsingwear, Haymaker, Spinnaker, and Palm Beach are some of the services that are avaifable. The Pro Shop is under the I able direction of Head Pro-I fessional Todd Btockett who also functions as your host. Private and group lessons available. kampsen buildimo company, GENERAL CONTRACTOR 1071 INfest Huron Stroot, Pontiac, Michigan K 68M000 WILLIAMS BROTHERS PLUMBING & HEATING 1120 Highland Rd., Pontiac, Michigan 818-5388 dAle McIntyre ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Residential & Commercial * 1151 Oregon, Pontiac, Michigan 682-3735 CHURCH’S LUMBER COMPANY, V RoUg| A Finish Lumber A Formics 1015 Squirroll Road, Auburn Heights UL 2-4800 WILLIAM A. LECHNER, Heating & Air Conditioning 105 Tregent Street, Pontiac, Michigan FE 2-1821 SHELL FLOOR COVERING Carpeting & Floor Covering 330 Dixie Highway, Pontiac, Michigan 613-1209 CANTON CHINA S EQUIPMENT COMPANY Food Service Equipment A Supplies 6309 Mack Ave., Detroit, Michigan WA 5-3100 BOICE BUILDERS SUPPLY, Masonry Supplies 545 S. Telegraph Rd., Pontiac, Michigan FE 5-8185 servi6e glass company Mirrors & Doorwalls 120 W. Pike St., Pontiac, Michigan FE 5-9444 AtilMA-YUE WINOOW COMPANY Insulated Glass, Windows A Screens 10325 Highland Road, Pontiac, Michigan EM 3-1111 c^\ ■I THE POJfTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 Appropriate Time for Alarm to Ring ONE-SIDED DISCUSSION—Second baseman Qookie Rojas of the Philadelphia Phillies is under verbal counterattack from upipire Harry WendeLstedt after Cincinnati’s Pete Rose . stole second" in the first, inning of last night’s game. Rojas Atlanta Nips Mets, 6-5 questioned the ump’s ruling. Wendelstedt made hiss decision doubly clear by throwing Rojas out of the game won by the Phillies, 7-0. FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP) If was so appropriate it was almost embarrassing. * . * As Chuck Courtney, an obscure long-shot in a field Of the world’s i^st shot-makers, approached the 18th green a burglar alarm, went off. And the blond Californian promptly stole rff with the first round lead in the $125,000 Colonial National Invitation Golf Trairnament. “If I’d made that putt on 18, .’d really have felt like a thief,’’ Courtney quipped after subduing the reconstructed, 7,175 yard, par 70 Colonial Country Club course in a sparkling 66, just one stroke off the competitive course record. He held a two stroke lead over burly Jack Nicklaus, veteran Billy Maxwell and Dick Crawford, grouped at 68, going into today’s second round. Tied at 69 are Bob Charles of New Zealand, Dave Stockton, Miller Barber and England’s Tony Jack-lin.' ' ' I A group, of nine is at par 70, including South African Gary Player, veteran Art Wall, Australian Bruce Crampton and Deane Beman; winner of last week’s Texas Open. Courtney, 28, winner of the 1964 St. Paul Open and the 1M7 Fhierto Rican Open, had five birdies-three in a string of four holes—and a lone bbgey in Abiishing his lead Thursday. He opened with a seven-foot birdie putt on the first hole and saved par with another seven-footer on the second hole. He birdied the fifth from 15 feet, missed the green on No. 9, but chipped to within six inch* save par. His bogey came on No. 10 where^ he put his second shot over the green. But he got the stroke baick on No.' 12, lacing a seven iron to within ^ix inchqs of the pin, birdied the next from 15 feet and collected still another with a 35-foot putt on the 15th. SATURDAY $15,000 WARREN HDCP. $12,500 added LANSING HDCP. POST PARADE 2:10 Optional Twin Double t-Perfecta Allen's Bat Helps Phillies End Skid DICK Crdwlard . J»ck NIckIsui . -... Makwell .. Bob'charles .. Dav* Stockton .. Tony JackMil ... By tile Associated l^ess and 517th homers of his careeri The s^e combination made!with three more in the sixth, in-It’s no secret that Rich Allenland moved into eighth place injit 2-0 InAhe fifth. Allen singled, eluding an RBI hit by Allen, and wanU to leave Philadelphia, butjeareer total bases, passing Lou Johnson doubled him home and the slugging first baseman ! of his mighty home runs'^ehrig. ^ ^ ^ himself on an er-]waPPed it up with his titanic , Chavy Novo Sport Coup# may beat him to it. Allen, favwlte target of the Philadelphia boo-birds, sent an-' other baseball into orbit Thursday night. His fifth home run of the season sailed against a sign atop the center field roof at Connie Mack Stadium, 410 feet from the plate and 85 feet high. The eighth-inning shot was only the icing on the cake in the Phillies’ 7-0 triumph over Cincinnati but it made manager Bob Skinner’s post-ganie hamburger taste “like sirloin steak” after six consecutive defeats. OTHER GAME In the only other National League action, Atlanta eked out a 6-5 victory over the New York Mets in an afternoon game as Hank Aaron socked the 516th -n, DhUo r'Uni-Bni.lkomer in the eighth off rookie 'The Phillies’ evening ended The P^ils kayoed Cloningerjj^jjj^ Noriega, better than it started. They loaded the bases in the first in-njng with none out and again with one away in the second but Cincinnati’s Tony Cloninger escaped both times. In addition, second baseman Cookie Rojas was ejected for protesting a stolen base call. “This was just what we needed,” Skinner said. “Everybody got loose after the first two innings. It was pretty hard to believe anything worse could happen.” Deron Johnson got the Phils started in the third with a runscoring single after Allen had stroked the first of three singles pr^eding his homer and stolen second. 1969 COUPE <2049 with, AUTOMATIC TUJI9ISMISSION AND FUUL FACTORY EQUIPMENT COMI IN AND RROISTRR TOR THR CAR.A>MONTH GIVI AWAY “PUTTING YOU FIRST-KEEPS US FIRST” MIKE SAVOIE ICHEVROLET, Inc. 1114-2735 1900 W. MAPLE ROAD, (15 MILE RD.) 1 Mile Enst of Woodward Located in the Troy Motor Mall 2:47. A-14.JM. ...is the last^place USED CARS When you want to buy a used Ford, Chevy, Plymouth, etc., the first place to look is a Volkswagen dealer. Naturally. Or didn’t you think of that? Volkswagen dealers are totally committed to honest values in transportation. You get your money’s wprth. 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THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAV 16, MERCURY MOTORS Old Pros Recall Furor Stirred by Title Scrap Athletes ati Iowa Complain KAR'S BOATS and MOTORS , CHICAGp (AP) — A couple of i the former foes, now fast old fight pros sat around a rps- friends, relieved"* momentS‘-<-of j 40S W. Cltrlnton Rd. taurant table Wednesday and looked back 42 years to the .day they fought a^pontrpversial long-count world champicnishiii bout. Jack Dempsey, no^,73, and Gene Tunney, 72, got together in Chicago, scene of their fight in .1927 when Dempsey uhsuccess'^ hilly sou^t to regain his championship title from Tunney. Remi^cences came easily as that great battle of Sept 22, 1927. _ i The get-together was the idea of Tunney, a director of the Chicago-based ' United Insurance Big len Rejects Aid Boost condpany of Ainerica, which is observing its 50tn anniversary. “I was coming t^ Chicago fog and the celebration and decided invite Jack," Tunney said. “I called him at his restaurant in York and he agreed. come along.” Claims are one thing—records are another. Wins at Daytona, World Dragstrip Record at Bri^ok land speed records at Bonneville prove K—noto/ng tops Bridgestone per-Umnancel Dual Twin and Scrambler Models. ^^499^ SPECIAL BONUS Buy your Bridgestone 17S this week and get a customized CHROME LUGQAGE CARRIER and SAFETT BAR SET-$ai.90 value-for only 49.90. SAVE $22jOOI Dempsey, still agile, smoked a ig cigar and lamented the decline of the fight game and the passing of the great fighters of his time. Tunney, waving his big he talked, described Demp-is “a great guy."' 'Ydn know, when we fought, trying to kill each other,” Tuhqey said of the 1927 bout. Still rankled aftW more t tne figlit I 1951 S. Telegraph Rd., Pontiac, Michigan ,Phone:355-5457 Poiflk 6iiufltig(!y OAKLAND COUNTY’S FINEST • SEMIPRIVATE • COCKTAIL LOUNGE • PRO SHOP • DINING • BANQUETS > GOLF OUTINGS ( GOLF reservations Call 682-6333 Announcing FRANK SYRON 54 Hole ■OLF iiBTiiiienm BTWniNTIKIIT MEDAL PlAY TOURNAMEHT JULY 4-5-6 ) 40 years over one figM reporter’s published belief thX Dempsey was carrying Tunney> the former world champion said:, .:p a man is carrying ^ m I’m a pro, maybe not a good Mje—I can j^ll. ^This fellow Dempsey waslrying to kill me in that fight.” Remembering the first time . hlB met Dempsey after their fighting days were over, Tunney said he told^mpsey: "Jack, fighting is your metier. I’m pqrry I nWer seethed to have the quailities for prizefighting that y6u did.” f LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) -^isome contribution to their own "rile Big Ten Thursday' rejected proposal to add a $15 a month allowance for athletes t^eceiving financial aid. The proposal, matching an NCAA maximum, Was made by the University of lowa where strUdng black athletes listed the $15 a month incidental as their demands. Marcus Plant, faculty representative from Michigan and secretary of the faculty group, ^ said the faculty men felt "the! The football players granted student-athletes ought to make another scqson included a pair edaiege upkeep.” DIVIDED VOTE Plant said there was a' divided vote, which he did not disclose, on\tlte prqposal. , The conference faculty representatives, beginning the annual Spring business session, sanctioned another year of competition to the 13 athletes, mainly on /the ba^is of injuries. from Illinois, defensive halfback Dan Franklin and defensive guard Karl Pnazek, and two from Mnnesota, linebacker Tom Simon ^and guard John Walsh. Also given an extra season was a seven- foot basketball player from Wisconsin, Eino Henrickson, who missed six weeks of school because of a I back injury. Other cases approved: - Swimmer Bill Burrell of Indi-, ana; wrestler Phil Henning of! Iowa; wrestler Tom Muir, track man Charles Pollard, gymnast Mark Anthony and soccer play- Gophers Can Clinch Title er Gary Tiemann, all of Michigan State'; wrestler Jim Martin of Minnesota, and shimmer Jeff I tab CfflCAGO (AP) - Unless the roof falls in, Minnetota should nail down its second straight Big Teh baseball pennant this weekend. The powerful Gophers have sends Michigan (5-3) to Purdue (4-6), Indiaha (4-6) to Wisconsin (5-5), Michigan State (44) to R-linois (5-5) at Ohio State (5-5) to Northwestern (J-9). . “ In Saturday twin bilis, Indi- Jackman of Ohio State The main business item, discussion of the conference ban on use of athletic facilities by pro teams, came up at today’s! joint meeting of the faculty] group and the athletic directors. r speed, iximum safety, and the softest ride you’ve ever had ... everything you want in boating is yours with the DUO ‘Rounder*. Luxury equipment is standard on this popular DUO model. The open bow 3V5 was designed especially for people who want .i^^omething special in boating pleasure. Open T Days a Week-Mon., Wed., Fri. Until 9 P.M. Sun. 104 YOUNGS MARINA 4030 DIXIE HWY. on LOON LAKE OR 4-0411 four-game lead over their near-|ana is at Northwestern, Michi-j est pursuer, Michigan, with siXjgan at Illinois, MSU at Purdue games to play before the regular and Ohio State at Wisconsin. closes next week. j Seldom has a Big Ten team MANCRESTER. England (fl- Milan Counting Goals >Minnesota, 11-1, is at Iowa (6-lhad such overpowering batting Milan of Italv weril into the 6) tor a single game Friday and . _ _ a doubleheader there Saturday. Ctoly the first game of the twin bill will count in the Net Deadlock Doubleheader .action today credentials as the Gophers. Their team batting mark is .362 with a staggering .584, in slugging which includes 16 homers, 5 triples and 22 doubles for a whopping 20T total bases. final of the European Cup of Soccer Champions Tournament on a 2-1 goal? aggregate, despite a 1-0 defeat by Manchester United before a sell-out crowd of 63,000 Thursday night. CAMPER TRAILER SALES AND RENTAL PARTHEII oi PONTIAC 2274 TELEGRAPH Rb. PHONE 335-5149 Across From MIRACLE MILE , BUY!.SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! GM in IL Loop Waterford moved into with Walled Lake for second place in the Inter-Lakes League tennis rankings yesterday by downing the Vikings, 4-3. The loss was the third in a 9W for Walled Lake, who ^ad lost the previous day to leagueleading Livonia Stevenson (6-1). Waterford4,Wall«l Lak* 1 Don Crabtree-Cralg Uiko» (Wat) del Glen Yankut-Jim Dalmling, d-1, 5-7, 5-2; Steve White-Robert Hubaker (W) def Jim dalmling (WL) daf Gary Markla-Tony Pouloa, Olen Campbell STEREO TAPE No small car. No small sale. Nova4sale. "By The Time I Get to Phoenix”, "Wichita Lineman”, "Galveston”,”' "Hey, Little One”, "Gentle on My Mind”. 4-TRACK TAPES 8-TRACK TAPES J" itF SACK M9 ^TUf lACH 4&8TRACK , STEREO TAPEPIAYER REG.$79S7 «55 Not M Picturod ^ ^ ^ , , ee** livers a pig 8-watls of 4 & 8 TRACK STEREO TAPE PLAYER RCG. tr4.97 S|Mekar. .a|,ere kulomatic with *: #RR59FT-0 BLENWOOD PLAZA . . . North Perry at Glenwood Nova 4 (i!oupe It makes what you hear about the new little domestic cars sound like small talk. You also get America’s most popular economy car. For a limited time, you can buy a Nova 4 at never-,b^ore savings. Apy Nova 4 coupe or sedan^^ equipped with Torqjue-Drive transmission, pushbutton radio and whitewall tires—all at a sale price. You save money. And you save a lot of left footwork in the bargain. i That’s because Torqq|;)Drive works vvithout cjutching —similar to a fully autorhatic transmission, except that you shift the selector from first to high during acceleration. At the manufacturer’s suggested retail pric^, it only costs about half what you’d pay for a similar trf^nsmission in one of the leading little imports. And now yoii get it at a Bale price. Which isn’t about to let you travel economy class. ' jinY ’ • ^ The coupe seats five in Yankg^-size comfort. The sedan, sfx. You can carry vacation luggage in the trupk, not little odds and ends. , . . , , ■ The Ill-inch wheelbase and solid weight help you drive sure even in gusty highway windsfi So does the wide-tread Stability. , Now we ask you. Doesn’t Nova sound mor,^ like your kind of c^r than those little cats? Even if your Chevrolet dealer wasn’t having his Nova 4 sale? But he is. Putting you first, kt$ipf us first. ■ A, ' J,'/,: A-....: Cr—9 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 16. 1969 Falcons, WINS, Central Win Impressively CCMTROPNiES loeafdAt PHO-SHOP IHtHClMBOWL Babiuk Belfs Romeo; Clawson Nips Orion . DAKL^D f L1A9UI Boat Dragsters at Oxford Lake Boat dragsters will put th'dlr craft in the water for their season i-aqing opener Sunday at Lake Oxford. Some 60 drivers and* boats are expected to be on hand for the event which is sanctioned by Shutouts Help PCH, Skippers, Corsairs UNITED TIRE SERVICE ^i^iShallei* and Ed Cowger singled J I leading off. Joyce then fanned 2 ^|One Dragon, got another on Stan Babiuk clobbered Romeo :P0P “P contest by yesterday with his bat and arm a /Jy to give the Falconj’their eighth last hitter.. He finished with 10 tj,g eastern chapter of thej triumph in a row and a 7-1 log whiffs. , jMichigan Dragboat Association,! pcH swept a doubel-header at atop the Oakland A League ■ * * * ★ * Bay City Central to stay ittl race. ! Lamphere pounded 14 hits off! Qualifications will wind up at „£ tj,g Saginaw Valley pontue c#ofr»i Madison remained second by , two Oxford hurlers and scored noon and eliminations a^ « Conference race and_,drop the ,'**^u'NCE‘^77-a)‘ Wolves out of the runner-up, Pmtiac Centfal, yVaterford Township and WaterfOrd Mott enjoyed shutout vTctbrl yesterday, with the Chiefs and WTHS posting crucial conquests. M(^ entertains Troy today; wTHS invades Farmington iie an J-L contest; and PCH will try to iwenge one of its three defeats In 15 outings against PNH (9-3) tomorrow afternoon at Jaycee Park. dumping Utica. Clawson stayed m every inning. Neal Fatheree,'slated to start, at 1 p.m. The Pontiac pr»5i Phot, alive With a 1-0 arclight con-the winning pitcher, had an lake is located just east of Ox- quest of Lake Orion; and Troy RBI-safety In the f o u r - r u n ford on Lakeville _ FALCON SLUGOER—When he wasn’t confusing the topped Avondale, 8-4, to move opening frame. He had three] Registration in all classes Romeo batters with his pitching deliveries, 6-foot-4 190-pound into fourth place..^ ihits in all. 'opens at 7 a.m. * Stan Babiuk of Rochester was ripping the cover off the ball in the Central Suburban race,! yesterday in the Falcons’ 7-1 Oakland A League victory that once-beaten Madison Heights! extendi their winning streak to eight games. Babiuk had Lamphere blanked Oxford, 12-0, three hits, _blasting his fourth home run of the season and and clashes with pacesetting Chippewa Valley today. upping his RBI count to 21 Groves Trails I The Husky Babiuk limited Romeo’s Bulldogs to three hits but wild-pitched a run home in the third. Teammate Mark McAllister promptly tied with a long home run. LONG BLAST Milford Adds toW-O m m m'm MM ^ ^ ' Babiuk then drilled one well buburban r oes wayni-oakland LiAaui . w I ClarkMon 7 2 Brighter. 4 I W. Bloomfield i 4 Claranctvlllo beyond the right-field fence with KittorW 1 a mate aboard to cap a three-jrun fifth inning, jnd singled - home two more with a sharp , " thirt talng, tonri the in the sixth. He ^ •huritoB 6 1 w.j. Glenn 4 4!tfanie around. laion tnrp thp Romeo secondl county s lop-ranKea prep . t I N.FS*rmmSton 0 ij Kevin Burke pitted t h e bageman’s- glove off with an|"*"® Detroit Thurston, took com- runs in the first, earlier liner to finish With three at 9^ by ,__j _« *u. ivT „ , e 1.... „ e **Don Ward stonned the Patriots u,,. ntimo OaKlana t.eague ai _ »-u __ny ■ mand of the N 0 r t h w e s ti^l” stopped the Patriots ^its in the game. Suburban diamond race yester-1 (2-6) m the last three j /phe home run day afternoon, blanking North(^'2) of the spring and he now has 25 Farmington’s winless Raiders seventh andliadjhe tying run rri’s in a solid bid.to retain his . *"*3^^^ I r fall- whde Birmm^am Grebes W,w;a s 7-5 verdict at Livonia ed. . ba.seman, However, his mound,^^3^3j,gg s 01 e egg c^ille broke a. 1-1 tie! opener. Vic Quince doubled work yesterday produced nine ^^e fourth spot. with three runs in the fourth on home runs in both games and, ..I , hipping second-place Ket- The home run was his fourth l2-l, Thursday. ^ Third-place BlOomfield. Hills spot resoundingly, 9-0. and 124). . Waterford gained a share of the Inter^Lakes Leagpe lead by blanking Walled Lake Central, 6-0. The win is the Skippers’ 17th in 20 starts and knots them at 6-1 with Pontiac Northern. Mott recorded its second: win in two days and climbed to 84 over-all with a 3-0 shutout of Detroit Country Day. CHIEFS’ SPARKPLUG Second-sacker Clyde Duncah terrorized BC Central’s hurling right from the opening pitch, I The PCH lead-off man rammed Craig Turnbull’s run-scoring it for a single and circled the ■ ■ - bases as the Wolves misplayed the ball twice. P. CENTRAL 12, BC CENTRAL Socond Oomo PooHoc Control .. .112 314 »-12 U } Bay City Control . «M OW O- 0 5 11 BASS (5-1) and Crawford; BEALL, Boano (5th), Bond («th) and Hoiking.' WAT. MOTT i COUNTRY DAY 4 Watartoni Mott .. .I«2 UN x-3 7 1 Country Day ......000 000 0-0 I ft CORNELL and Scarpaca; CARTER! (24) and Zlam. WATERFORD 4, WALLED LAKE C. 0 ^ Watorford Twp..... 011 100 3-4 I 1 Wallad Laka C. — - * . . GOIT (3-0) ar EMPRESS (1-2; n'd Crawford, Taylor (7th); !) and Wllllamo. SALES & SERVICE Renken Boats Evinrude Motors . Shell ,Lakft Boat's Jordon's Marino 682-1902 s 5 single in the second and Stan I S Miaoip4AB<’e nlnilf ilT ' fhA r^irider’s circuit clout in the third gave the Mustangs a 2-0 Two errors and a sacrifice fly by Bob Huessner cut it 2-1, but N’ville wrapped it up on two infield singles and a wild pitch in the sixth. ’’ ENTERS WIN COLUMN Clarkston lost its share of the The slender swinger proceeded to , Ipray six more singles around tne Bay J3ty diamond in the twin bill hi 18 at bats, driving in four runs and scoring four times. i Rick Hurst had a two-run; homer in the opener, Terry! VillereaL duplicate with Hurst base in the night cap and he (ioljlng Feature of the Week! CLUBS for JR. GOLFERS OPEN STOefi Jr. Clubs for 5 to 9 and 10 to 14 1 aoidS W00DS,..^6”** 3-5-7-9IR0NS PUTTERS B.... each Per Bag $550 CARL’S GOLFLAND 1976 i Telegraph Rd. FE 5-8095 park past Seaholm. The Maples; Pitcher Fred Billings blasted (5-5) managed only two hits off two singles and a double, scor-the junior who was making his'ing once and batting three fYanklin. I VARSITY DEBUT Thurston thus moved to thej jgck Rubenstien hurled Oak strikeouts, top of the pack i^ith a 6-1 mark. Oak Park, who edged Birmingham Seaholm in nonleaguer, 5-0, moved Into cond place at 6-2 as Groves elipped to 5-2 and third in the standings. Groves and Oak Park are still ■waiting the outcome of a double protest in a game that ended in a .7-0 forfiet win for the Falcons. Also in South Oakland County, Clarkston was upset by g hjt batsman, double and two Andy Trevino also had varsity debut for Oak Park (12- 2). > Jay Cohen’s run-producing double and Bob Krupkin’s home run broke open the game in tjhe fourth. Cohen added another RBI in the fifth. ^ ★ ★ ★ Joe Adamski and Rich Prested each drove in runs with mates across to lead Troy’s attack Jim Kyle hit a\ingle and double for two RBI’s. LONG TALLY Clawson gained the lone run in its duel with Orion on Randy Ross’s seconddnning two-bagger after Bill Miller opened the in- Clarenceville, 4-1, ahd West Bloomfield’s Mickey Elwood blanked Brighton, 5-0. Milford built up an 8-0 lead in the first four innings. The Captains (7-2 in the circuit) couldn’t dent the. servings of Doug Powers or Rick Sharpe until the seventh inning. Kevin Dyer’s one-out single ended the no-hit bid and Paul ning with the first of his two Curry followed with a double to Rich Porritt drew a bases-loaded walk for the Wolves’ (5-5) only RBI. ★ ★ ★ West Bloomfield scored .three quick runs for Elwood on Robin Brennan’s two-run double and Larry Bovjer’s single. run triple. ■I * * 1C Quince scattered five safeties and whiffed eight in the lidlifter to boost his mark to 7-2, and Steve Bass also had a five-hitter in the second gajp# and Is M. Nobody advanced past second base in either game for BC Central. a single and Dave Reid stopped singles. snap the shutout try. . Hazel Park - who shares the ★ DOES DAMAGE Southeast Michigan league lead ilg record to 6-1 In the fifth, the Trojans T()m^ For the winners, with Seaholm — rallied for fourr^ 3^^ g 5.3 standing in the BCL.iJ®y®® ye'ded a double to Jim Giegler was the key man. runs in the last of the seventh - • - - • • iKnann fnr T.nkp Orion s first j.oi.j lu-... « *, to take a 6-5 win over Catholic Central; and Royal 0 a k Donderrt stayed in the Border Cities race witb a 3-1 victory THREE-HITTER Brower also ignited a tw^run ^3^3^ Lajjg outburst in the fourto with “ central (5-9) on three hits—two jsafety. Ron Van Gorder drove. ^ _ g, grk m the two Lakers with a singe.^ rj^^^ gained its fifth vic- - Elwood scattered three hits,! He over Grosse Pointe South. EARLY JAM Steve Kreager,- Thurston iKnapp' for Lake Orion’s first drilled three singles'^nd a triple Ihit. Ron Gegenheimer’s diving J drive in three runs. He also *" jhit. Ron Gegenheimer’s diving lo drive in three runs. He also 07 2 stop of h grounder saved a scored three times, oncii on a "AM, Rieh."d5r(i^f, p«*l ■ 'steal of home, and made iSl’lwbio''''frame, Ron several fine plays at shortstop., CUNNINGHAM, Richardson (3rd), tor (3rd) and Chrltchflald, Raghantl REID (441) and Scobla. THURSTON 4, n7pARMINGTQN 0 4. Farmington 000 000 0-0 5 i, Del. Thurifon . 000 040 x—4 4 0 Rochailar • WEBER and Kulawa; KREAGER and '' sophomore southpaw escaped; eRoves. from a bases-loaded dilemma In b. oroves .. .....210 000 2-5 1 1 the first inning, to blank NIHS j(0.2),* war^*(^d),*schr*ci<, (0-9) on five hits and eightfisher, aa^ (4th)^,.-., _ Etrikpnilts • ana uunnsirom. ___ CLAWSON t, SiriKeHUI.-.. ! OAK PARK 5, B. SEAHOLM 0 Lak# Orion .. "I John Keenan s twn-run single b. seanoim ......000 000 0-0 2 4 ciaw»on “nk Park , MILFORD 12, KETTERING 1 ROCHESTER 7, ROMEO 1 !Bob Clinard thbmped a oases-|—p—, sharps (3rd, o-o) and vick; -J J J loaded triple and Larry Vick a'woosTER (4-2), waidrup (7th), curry OChMiar ........ wi wjj a—7 * 0 •' (7lh) ahd Dyer. ^ BARNABO (7-4) and Lerfhan; BABIUK two-run double. | —^ " Milford stole 10 bases in the TROY 0, AVONDALE 4 3 contest. AAEDLEN ( and Holm«$; BILLINGS' Dame Fortune smiled on the Skippers as they blooped three singles in"the second, third and fourth innings to score their first three runs. Frank Ballard and Terry Crawford each belted triples after two of the pop files dropped in, and Crawford’s' bloop drove in the other run. He! finished with three hits and two RBI’s. I I. BLOOMFIELD 5, BRIGHTON » : Souvrai Groves took a 3-0 lead “I c.iiijt^CAnnar*^ *' Livonia, but wildness and twolHaiai park damaging singles in the second!*nd'si‘EDL'icKL'’ ' GEAAAAEL, Kastellc (2nd) 1 Mike Cotter’s bouncer off the LAKE ORION 0 third bpseman’s glove in the 010 000 4 0 opening inning was the only 5T. 1 Knappj JOYCE (30) approachittg a hit by Andover against Northville’s _— |and two runs batted in featured' Fred Holdsworth who recorded clarencbyillb 4, clarkston 1 iMott's victory. Rodger Strader "•'■'‘•••h................................... •* l*5 *“1 ? ,1 hUo olcn onH ta1ll>a ......... _ ______________________ Bob Carter’s three-hitter and] i.aniriuiiock™* ELW(joD Cerry McNair’s two doubles LAMPHERE 12, OXFORD d GoodVthe first no-hitter of his career . . I 01 had two hits, alsci, and tallied d"R»kin!‘*"itwlce for the Corsairs. Armstrong MEMORIAL DAY SALE VACATION INSURANCE FOR ONLY Mor* than 8,000 gripping •dgat giva good traclion to atari-Hop-rain or ahino. FREE MOUNTING - EASY CREDIT THRIFT CENTER BUILDER'S SUPPUES BUILD A GAMBE-do-it-yourself! All the Material for Building \ Low Price on All Size Garages BIG 20V X 20’ $ 2-CAR GARAGE 487 00 Free estimates on all size garages! 0«urt«6us Dapandabl* Dalivtry Sarvio* ' MATERIALS INCLUDE; All Studi 16"Q.C. • Plotaa - Noili • Ai-pholt Shinglftt • Gorag* Soth G No. 1 Dougloi Fir Studs • FuH 2"xl 2" Hftodftra • No. 106 Ffr Siding or D.V. Siding G 2x6 Raftara O.C. .• All Extftrior Trim ft Gobi* Studt G Roof .Boardft • Gorogo Door Gromo. Above PricGft Do Not Include Cfment or Deer GET OUR PRICE BEFORE YOU BUY! Phone 682-16CK) 2495 Orchard Lake Road KEEQO HARBOR Phone FE 4-1594- 151 Oakland Avenue pontiAc LUMBER Mon. thru Fri„ 8 to 5:00 - Spt. • to 1 P.*L_ THE PONTIAC TIIESS. FgjDAV, MAY 16, 1969 ,Cr-7 Potential State Track Champions in WTHS Regional Tbte Class A iegional track areas top thinclads will be in| Preliminaries start at 10 a.m. I eligible to oompete in the state i spring and possibly c o u 1 d| Cuthrell feels that the two-meet at Waterford Township Clarenceville for a regional in-!and the finals at 1:30 p.m. Imeet. |eclipse Hayes Jones’long jumplmile will be a closely contested Saturday will feature f o u r stead of,at Waterford as they j Pontiac Central has two' The efforts of Costello, Reabe | mark — the second oldest on'race with Keith Wattles of potential individual s t a t e were last year. ^possible state Champions in and Reeves probably, would be the state books. Jones jumped Rochester and Waterford’s champions. ' 1 Pontiac Central is expected to miler Jon Costello and long better if they were-pushed in 23-8’.s in 1956. The 100 mark of [Steve Moffkt the favorites. ' win the WTHS. regional without However, the meet could much difficulty. Pontiac become more of ja runnerup Northern and Port Huron ap- jumger Roily Garcia. Ket- Pontiac Prtsi PI Kevin Reabe, Kettering's Ace Half-Miler Clarksfon's Nef Season ( Suddenly on Sour Note bowl because several of the Orchard Ridge Suffers Defeat in Rematch^ 7-3 Wayne State’s junior varsity diamond squad erupted for five runs in the. eighth inning to Eddi* v«nd«rworp^ggjg^g^ ^ g ^ecision over Oakland Community College^ Orchard Ridge Thursday af-j ternoon. * w ★ Four hits, Including loaded two-bagger, plus two .walks and an error handed Wayhe State the win which avenges an earlier loss to the Raiders (H-6). v ' TWO walks- with the' sacks Suddenly the tennis season two-year period, the Wolves filled handed Orchard Ridge has gone sour for Clarjtstnn’s now are: saddled with a three- (wo runs in the second and the Wolves. match losing streak and the (wo teams battled, 2-2, until the After roaring to a 14-0 mark|unwanted designation of un-eighth. The Raiders will visit and 16 straight victories in «a derdog in Joday’s W a y n e - jaf-kson CC tomorrow! for a •-------------------------—Oakland League chzfimpionships twin bill. at Bloomfield Hills. ■ , . , WAYNE ST. JV 7, ORCH. RIDOE 3 BH Andover, who until Tues- pec orcK. .............. day was the only team to defeat the Wolves in the last three years, dropped Clarkstqn in|o second , place in the W-0 dual matches with a 3-2 win yesterday. South Lyon rebounded frond LOSSES rocky open^g inning to tally | Clarkston was stunned by seven runs In the third inningiCiarenceville, 3-2, Wednesday and coast to a 9-5 Southeastern after suffering its finst loss, a Fa..lkner’c ° V J^er Whitmore Lake erupted in th,e third to .extend that gave the Barons (11-1 )_sole l.nursaay. their league perfect mark to 8- 0. , Dave Perkins began the decisive rally with a single and capped it with his second safety driving in the final run. Tom Amrhein’s bases-loaded triple tied the score and Larry Roper’s squeeze bunt plated him and sent South Lyon ahead Kirk Bea«i» ici twr Bob ousse. 4nr rr/wl i 4-7; Slev» McGrow (A) del. Dave Keiii tor gooa. , i7.,, 4.2, 4.1, Dick Ruella (C) def. Kev * I Koch, 4-0, *-0; SOUTH LYON 7, DUNDEE S DoubiM twlh Lyon .. . 047 110 •—f 11 4 Davt Lau-Bob Dedoes (A) def. Mars nnimHire lww ,Vow SPECIAL SALE Water Skis 20% Off • Starcraft Boats • Silverline Boats • Mercury Motors BOAT CENTER 1265 S. Woodward Kirk Beattie continued undefeated for the Wolves; while the Barons swept the doubles with tw(i teams, that are 9-0. ANDOVER 3, CLARKSTON 3 and triple for the winners (8-2 I to figure in five runs. •k -k -k Phil McMillan posted his se- I cond mound conquest, striking I out 10 and getting the final 10 | Whitmore batters in order. NOVI 10, WHITMORE LAKE 1 iNOvI 305 003 0-10 1 FRED ASTAIRE and ANNE HEYWOOD tell the world about MIDAS Fred*. 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Standard transmission • 1968 DART GTS TorqueFlila or 4-spd. manual 1969 DART SWINGER 340 manual Not available Not available « Na Money bWn • Ua la 4 t M Pay 435 SOUTH SAGINAW 3 Blocks South of Wide Track Drive MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 0:34 A.M., TO 5:30 P. FRIDAY 0:10 A.M. TO 7:00 P.M: Soturday 0 A.M. la 4 P.M. FE 2-1010 »lll«l«-\ AUTHORIZED DODGE DEALERS BUYS b CHRYSLER 7 M0T0R8 CORPORATION 855 Oaklondi— Phone 338-9'222 mFfmS/flPKpHOCK^lBMKiSlTm C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 Pancho Shows Temperl NEW YORK (UPI) - Pancho ‘ Gonzalez has lost his flaming | service hut not his flaming! temper. The 41-year-old tennis master was beaten in his two matches Thursday night in the opening round of the Madison Square Garden Invitation tournament. Any chance of his picking up the record $15,000 first prize money vanished. Gonzalez bowed 8-5 to Roy Emerson and 8-7 to Dennis Ralston as the eight professionals employed a scortng system devis^ to shorten matches. - | After his defeat by Emerson,' Gonzalez raged that he would never again “as long as I live play in an indoor tournament or under lights.” He also let loose For BETTER BOATING BUYS Try ^ MARINA INC. a tirade against the Scoring' method. In his loss to Ralston, the| games were deadlocked at 7-all.; Alternating service, he and Ralston played 12 more points and were again deadlocked. On the second run of 12, l^tstbn won out with seven points to Pancho’s five, and Gonzalez, proceeded to smash the ball far into the Garden seats before stomping dff the court. Tony Roche of Australia and Rod Laver advanced through their round-robin matches with ease. Roche whipped Ralston 8-3 and Laver toyed with Ray Moore, 8-1. Moore also lost to Fr§d Stolle, 8-4. Stolle, in turn was overwhelmed by Marty Riessen, 8-1. The second stage of the round robin "will be played tonight, determining the winners in the two divisions. They will meet Satifrday in a regulation best three of five sets for the top mongy of $15,000. ' fScB Niclilans GOLF LEFT KNEE ON THE BflCKSWING t ns YOUR« HIPS ROTATE TO THE RIGHT ON THE BflCKSWINb i , THE LEFT KNEE SHOULD .RflDOnLLy MOVE BnCK I POSITION BEHINP THE BflLL. fl COMMON FAULT OF THE AVERAGE PLAYER 15 LETTING THE LEFT KNEE FlY STRAIGHT OUT WITH THE WEIGHT REMAINING ON THE BALL OF THE LEFT FOOT. I ML ~Uut for even less money than last year 1 CAMARO $147 LESS than last yrar with IJUPALA $101 LESS than lail >’rar with . omparablr rquipinr.il rsovA $79 LESS ■ hun lad year wilh CHEVELLE $69 LESS than last yrarwilh CONCENTRATING ON ROUING THE LEFT FOOT FROM THE INSIDE WILL HELP BRING THE LEFT KNEE BACK AND KEEP THE ENTIRE LEFT SIDE PROPERLy- TUCKED IN AS THE BODY COILS. Horse Race Results Hazel Pork Results iSth-tl2,2N Motor City Faeot 1 Milt. -Uet Butler 5.M 3.20 2.«ol Gavlland 2.«0 2.211 Robert E. Adlos 3.00 > ittb-tim Cond. Paco; 1 MHo: --------------- 64.00 13.60 5.60 2 S ? S A R00__ Pretty Deo Deo I Foltangf: 14.60 5.-. _____ 3.00 2.Mj Fold $51.00 Vi Furlongs 1 4.00 3.20 . 2.40 5 K 2 Fold $130.00 ’"' 7th—$2300 Cond. Po 0. C.'s HIghtIma Western Raider. Stti-$a2,25e Motor 4 Robert E. Adlos of Amboy ' 3.40 3.20 I haa« fnr Ond $106.11; 4.20 2.00 2.4 3.40 2.00 2.20 15.80 5.80 2.00 10.40 4.60 4.M .... __________frot; Specfol Product Rhythm Volo a.w a.ou Highland Pick 420 t0fli-$2000 Claiming Hdp. Paco; 1 Milo: Way o Banana Royal “—--‘n: (3-7) Paid $121.00 ICO 4,575; total hand 14.40 7.80 5.20 $522,114 Wolverine Entries . .... Hamlet Big Gyro , 'tepInonadrOa... .... opt. Twin: (4-2) Paid $15.40 7th-$3600 Claiming; 1 MHO: Rule Breaker ,13.60 6.00 3.60 BBinav,« BsiTaiac AlhihrtM Sunshine 11.20 7.40 FRIDAY S ENTRIES - ^fck' siM Ist-$I200 Clalmingl Pace; 1 Mila: 1100 clalmino;. 6 Furlongs: : Pace On ^ Vera's Boy Nadir 20.60 0.40 . 4.2Di Tiny s Jet Dominion Kim Cuttle 8.40 4.20 WindVS Gist Captain Song i^D«i“i3o? (4-1.7-4) Paid $t,o»4.20**° 2^^10M‘’cohd. Paee;*T Hazel Pari EntriGs SATUItPAY'S ENTRIES rdoTnng. . . jirtangs: Hip Chack Q-Na»'Lah s Bret ^a^'Night Vesta's Keeper Pohiman Hanpyar Pick's CoMetta Fast & FlightV Shell Cloud s Fairtane Hanover ------ Little Q. 1 Mila 4th-$12M Cond. Paco; 1 Kool Nlta War B Mr. Somebody 3rd—$2900 Opt. Quarter 'Til - . , Pom's Progress I II* r“ ' I a-Twisty T.—' Badgers, Indiana ravoredti£r» Maori Sword a-Sherrv Pride —'Id Walter LAFAYETTE, Ind. (AP) -Indoor champion W,is6onsin and speed-stacked Indiana, both trying to win for retiring coaches, are expected to hook up in a close battle for the Big Ten outdoor track crown today and Sat- champions perform In the opening session with Michigan’s Ira Russell defending _ in the Jilmp and Illinois’Jim Brubaker in the discus. The meet shapes up as a title scrap between Wisconsin and Indiana with a distant battle for third place between defending champion Minnesota, Michigan, Illinois and Ohio State.*, SSVin Spoonful srh-$3300 Van Berg entry Allowance; Vk Fu, 'Land Scott (Jounty ;®6V%*Fo....... Private Barge »I>-$3S10 Cond. Tret; Oak Grove M_____ Randy O. Amy I Baron of Amboy Elder Lady Missile Gay Sam 6th--$23M Cond. Paco; 1 Mila: Royallen Beppi Aerial Doug Gene Tally Keeper's Ann Bueno TIempo Speedy Battle Bitty Boy 7tlK-$2600 Cond. Pace; I Mile: Flying Dutchman Lovergirinik Sunglow , ' Briar Lea Andy Time ClocR^ Brady Adlos Mh^W C^. Voce; 1 Mila: Torion ,, . High Card Boy Dinar Midnight Johnnie 9thl-^000 Claiming Hd" Pace; I Mila: Go's King Z. Lady Sammy Dale Lemuel Cardinal Paul Home Place Larry Mighty McKlyo Plxla Daw mn^tSOO Claiming Pace; I Milo: Worthy Travel Trampfar’ Adloa Armbro Gladiator Meadow Hal Iowa General Reed's IVUchaal ChuckleBqy.. 7th—$5000 AIL. Alhambra Soil Dot'd Dancer Competitibn on Purdue’s rubberized asphalt track began to^ day with the long jump and discus finals and prelims in eight I other events. Finals in 16 events .1 will be Saturday afternoon /S/orfnV/7/e Golf i TImllm Dandy “ —000 Hai Believer Surf's City -Dayfripper Nu uuiii wueen Sandra Primrose Princess Miss Danalee \ Miss Creole RIckI Road Lodey Evenson Cussela Confident Future Lakers Equal WTHS Strokes t. Van V 9th—$15,00 Two of 12- returning indiVidual * J. P. McCarthy Pontiac Catholic continued its title collecting for 1968-69 by wrapping up the East Division crown yesterday in golf at Pontiac Municipal’s links. OVWi BOHUMG Tuesday-Sunday 5 P.M.-Midnight CLOSED MONDAYS There Are Still Some Openings for Our Spring Leagues —Contact Us Now! HURON BOWL 2525 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Titans Colled Title With 10-0 Golf Log Team Ready Northville’s Unksmen sounded warning for the Class B-C entries in. next week’s Pontiac Press Prep Invitational Tournament with a sharp 155 four-player total yesterday at Highland Hills. The Mustangs easily defeated jWayne-Oakland League rival | Wolverine Results THURSDAY'S RESULTS West Bloomfield join^ the parade of ties on Waterford Township’s golfing record this spring when the Laker^ matched WTHS’ 197 strokes at Pontiac Country Club 'Thursday. It was the third tie in 16 i matches for the Skippers this season. They did manage to| play one of them off and lost; that decision and now are 7-7-2; * 3M 1:" tor the season. WBHS is 11-3-1. 2na-$im Cond. Pace; I The Titans this school year also have garnered shares of the Northwest Catholic loop’s football and basketball titles. They will pursue the Detroit Catholic League golf title Monday afternoon at the Ra^am course. Yesterday Herb Larson’s 38 id Roger Novotney’s 39 led the FCHS quartet to a 162-191 conquest of Marine City Holy Cross and a 19-0 dual meet record in the school’s first year of golf. stiy V lally Milford who had 168. The losers c^d. p,e„ now are 1^6. The W-0 League penmna championship wll ,be nextlJus^Ji^ Thursday at the Burroughs Duke Duane —Nibble's storm course. 1- 4.2o‘ 3.20 2.60, Ralph Hayman and Scott, ioo Niederluecke had 38’s and Doug Lindsay a 39 for Waterford. Dave Nuebachei- of West Bloomfield was the medalist | with a par 36 and Tom Huff| posted a 37. I 4.20 3.40 'M' Nelters Take Commanding Legd EAST LANSING, Mich. (AP)lta was second with 74, winninginals to unseeded Djive Brown of —Defending champion Michigan 10 of its 12 matches. Indiana, I™Tiaha, 6-4, 7-5. won all 12 of its matches Thurs- runner-up last year,. scored 70 The No. 2 singles mat^ of the ^ ^ , .. Doints semifinals today pitted top- ,, .. seeded Pete Fishback of Michi. Orchard l,ake'st. Mary trim-quarterfinals of the BIG MATCH against Bill Drake of Min- med Grosse Poinle St. Paul, ^ig Ten, tennis championships| One of-the tourney;s hottest ngg^ta 182-200, at Gowanie wilh Rick at Michigan State University in contoks occurs in tray’s semi- pishback eliminated Chuck Trzcinski and Greg Stralkowski each posting' 43’s Eaglets* (6-3) who will meet MC Holy Cross Monday. East Lansing. The Wolverines garnered 110 points in the opening day of the three-day tournanient; Minneso- CITY WATER HOOKUP SHOWER ROOF BACKER CAS WATER HEATER DUAL CRANK OPERAT* INC JACKS TWIN BEOS - ivpar deck Mayfair 19’ Caaiper - ^3995®® • , ..... S BURNER RANGE AND OVEN CEILING VENTILATOR 4 CU. FT. GAS-ELECTRIC REFRIGERATOR DOUBLE BOWL SINK 24 CAL. WATER TANK SCREEN DOOR. POLY CUSHIONS CLUSTER LIGHTS 2 20-LB. CAS BOTTLES w/ragulalor no VOLT - 12 VOLT 23.000 BTU PURNACI POWER CORD CUSHIONTONE VINYL FLOOR VAHITORY TRUNK AREA STANDARD EQUIPOENT finals when defending singles champioif Don Lutz of Northwestern takes on Dick Dell of Michigan. Lutz beat Rick Bowen of Ohio State, 6-4, 6^, in Thursday's action. Dell defeated Jim Esser of Iowa, 6-2, 6-1. Hiompson of Illinois, the only player who has beaten DeU this year, fell in the quarterfi- Parsons of Indiana; 6-3, 6-2, and John Good of Michigan State, Drake defeated Chuck Callison of Purdue, 6-1, 6:2. Other team scores in the quarterfinals: Illinois 60 (fourth place), Iowa 54, Northwestern 51, Wisconsin 47, Midilgan State 32, Purdue 18 and Ohio State 12. r! Some mowers you start (maybe) with aTIF/ST.a Jerrrrr k. 'f aKlCK ora j^raper ' TORO V This oni you just turn on^ *69 TORO KEY-LEGTRICt.. a great new start The KEY-LECTRIC eterter’e now availably on any model you want. And you can atart at $129-»S* up to the 21' POW-R-DRlVEt KEY-LECTRlC atarter for $199,95*. other TORO^i etart at $99.95 ^ •Manuloctu BRINQ IN YOUR OLD MOWER - WE TAKE ALLTRUE-INS *We Service Whdf We Use Your Convenient. • - TOM’S HARDWARE Sun. 9 - 2 — Daily 9-6 P.M. 905 Orchard Laka Ava. :v. KEEGO KEEGO HARDWARE NO. 1 3041 Orchard lake Road 682-2660 SAVE MEMBERS Hardware WHOLESALERS i RENT 'EM • Floor Sanders • Floor Edgers • Hand Sanders • Floor Polishers PONVIAC TOM'S NARDWARE 905 Orchard Lake Avt. FE 5-2424 SUNPAYS 9-2 ^ 19” ROTARY MOWER $49#5 SALE PRICE \ 22” ROTARY MOWER SALE PRICE ^54” 3 H.P., 4 cycia Briggt & Stratton angina. Floot-loeic safotly handla. Rainfercad haavy ataal dack. Saif lubricating whaal baaringt. Turbojfitblada._________ Come In and Check Our Laige and Complete Selection of WALKING A RIDING LANP MOWERS Bring In Your Old Mower — We Take All Trade-In* LAWN MOWBR A SALE SPECIAL BUY THIS WEEK ONLY 'V^ THESE ARE NRAND NEW STILL IN TNEIR CARTONS! HURRY DOWN WHILE THE SUPPLY LASTS! To wipe out weeds as you fertilize... All you dois spread turf builder plus 2 on your lau^. It knocks out dandelions, and a couple dozen other kinds of weeds as it full-fcrtilizcs your grass. Results are amazing. As weeds curl up add gradually disappear, your la\^ takes on new vigor and beauty. You're bound to be pleased. If you're hot. , . your poncy back. It'i as simple as that. .5.660 iq ft bag 7.95 Finer Seed> THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 C- 9. Bridge tricks From Jacobys ROBIN MALONE By Bob Lubberti 1 ¥/ Pass 14 Pus 3 V I Pass 4 4 Pass ? ' ■ You, South, hold: 4A65 VKCtJlOS? 4K4 4A9 i What 'do yoii do now? /SDSPgNPINe'IHe’PfSSIP^MlS I im Be fiitien, t KjrnTMi6Arpewis^i&_ \ 5‘"lay starting a slam ii . . 1 ' , . I •' V cMiiiAiirA Ar liA mav incf 1ia king. East dropped the deuce nvertrick after . East’s heart and the misdirection had beenjpjay j^ick two. We blame South a trifle for over-thinking ^bht Somehow or other 1ft the g backs of our minds wd wonder j if we might not have been fool-e ed by East’s deceptive play. (Newspaper Enterprise Assn.) / 4KQ87S4 , ¥AK107 ♦ J5 ♦ Q Neither vulnerable Wfst Nortji East South Pass Pass Pass 14 Dble Bdble 2 4 ^2 4 Pass 34 Pass I4 Pass Pass Pass Opening .lead—4 3 South felt that West was like- •1' ly to hold five hearts for bis take-out double and East’s lead d of the five followed by the three ®' spot showed a doubleton and ' made the probability tainty. South still thought he might imake the hand against a 5-2 j heart break. He started proceedings by leading the queen of clubs and overtaking with dummy’s king in order to get rid of his jack of diamonds on the ace. Then he led a trump. Wedt’s ace took the king and West led his last club. TODAYS QUESTION You do bid four hearts and |h* raises to Eve. What do you do now? WHO STAMP \ P6RHAPS i&L05^rA5MAUMtN0Rny ) youwe isfmtiTtepT&dSROpnHe/ wfiHi; gPUCAUCNAL, PROCESS. • imVMiA.be.ma* THE BERRYS By. Carl Gruberl THE BETTER HALF By OSWALD and JAMES JACOBY ^ If South had^ known that trumps were going to break evenly he would have had no South ruffed, led • a heart, ruffed in dummy, ruffed a diamond back to his own hand andi led his last heart to be raffed by dummy’s last trump. East] trouble making his spade game.ioverruffe(Htnd led his last heart | He also would have had no^to Me ruffed by dummy’s last! trouble if East hadn’t found out tramp. East overruffed and led a way to misdirect South’s ibis last club. South had no way thinking ,|to keep West from taking the THE BORN LOSER By Art Sansom “When do we start those secret signals we rehearsed all afternowi?” t won the diamond lead setting trick with the jack of with the ace and carefully returned the five, of hearts. South was on lead with the ace jr tramps. South could have made—the, e band in any number of ways, j BERRY S WORI.D—By Jim Berrv ■y SYDNKY OMARR SAfeITTARIUS (Nov. 22-Dec. 21),: Avoid excess speed — not only in franspor*-*— In arriving at decisions. Peririlt witness ichoo)' contest short Idurney to it IdMi. SAGIT- mlrers. LIBRA Is could bo reached al becoming engaged. I wins nelw ad- ARIES -(March 21-Aprll 1*): Steer ' erguments, especially with relt. d Iwrneys, unless necessary. And If do travel, do to at nno<«rele r-------- ■ Cl___________________ principles. TAURUS (April 2WMay 20): PISCES (Feb. 1»-Merch 20): Chong .JO and could affect residence. .You ar. homo at different times.. Assignment ■ GEMINI (May 21-June 20): Some vigorous opposition Indicated. Your Ideas. Jlem aPPeSr revolutimary. Ofhirs are either frightened ,or «nf ous or both. Hood your own counsel. Bo forthrlijht. . CANCER (Juno 21-Jyly member may . be . do ng ui^ir thi best, ............... jS wins the day. , LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): tr*an“’*tnd?* UndSstan*'’ that stress with flying colors. Ji^STs't.’ThU” Who JSS'y'cVr.-wTli undtrstand. Act accordingly. , Ki's- k«y. I* “taJil'i, It m?i hat you have outartw M will ba on construct ' SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 5 tans taka care or your mir in't fall tor sob sting your --------— xordingly. Daily Almanac \ By United Press International Today is Fridfty, May 16, the 136th day of 1969 with 229 to follow. , able ally. Stress generosiiy withoul ’ g extravagant. Key is balance. . 18): Friends AQUARIUS (Jan. alk much about wnar you snuuio,, ou. Jon't be misguided by wishful thinking. 1 mportant to be aware of details, roles I I affect basic patterns. ...., naodt your attention. But d to duties. • MttWLhlTl^ekMWS pie! WHY YOU SWEET THING! I JUSTAPOREA ) if SYMPATHETIC MAN] y I* ' THE PACIFIC. I JUST WANT TO Ci?UiSe-,t» ONUv) TAKE A CSrOiSE. S4500 Fi:?ST JJSOT BUY THE TU8. STAR ' TRAVEL / ' I WORLE^ -.xTJO 'Wide, I ^^^11 Tiw^ G—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 Pontiac Prtu Photo by Edward R. Nobla Washington was both surprised and delighted witlf the multi-flowo'ad tulip blossoms she recently received as a gift plant. Four to five completely formed tulip heads terminated each Don't Cut Ledves Bulb Care After Flowering A little attention how to spring blooming bi^ will make a world of a difference in next year’s flowering. . df course, an early starter like the crocus is l<»ig gone, but the late-flowering Darwin and breeder tulips have oh 1 y recently ceased blooming in the Northern states, and all can be benefited by care now. Dnn’t braid the daffodil leaves or fold theni over and' put i rubber band around theiA. If treated this way'the leaves ast deprived of sunshine and cannot manufacture food properly. Plants Move With Owners The highly mobile state ' (ft some of the exeucitve| of many large corporations has caused nurserymen to work out practical landscaping plans fcti'! executoves who may move to a new company location every i few years. ■ Executives who move a great; deal desire landscaping which isj beautiflil but they usually do notj wish to install expensive long-range site development! structures desired by more, permanent hoine owners. | An answer to this problem has been worked out by nurserynien solely through the use of plants for beauty. The plants generally are in shrub form, or small trees, iflowering^ roses and other plants, some in containers to ! supply a well-landscaped look wityoyt becomeing Involved in extensive planning and structural work, In this way, it is stated, the| mobile executive can enjoy a Imore permanent ' home, landscape look and comifort at very reasonable cost and he has received full value even though he has enjoyed it for only a few years. , DISCOVER HOW GOOD A GARDENER YGU^£4ZZKARE Team up with Ra-Pi(Wro for a no-fuss, no-eute, i^uets garden. Give%your plants the braek theyVe been waiting for. They’ll dance with Joy die minute Ra-Pid-Gro goes to work. Yet, the secret is finally but! All this “green thumbs” talk is just a smoke screen the experts use to hide their real secrets: So, to discover how good a gardenar.yw REALLY are, just buy a can of Ra-Pid-Qro fthe originaf —no substi-, tutes!), take it Hoths and follow the easy directions. Nature and Ra-Pid-Gro do the rest. Then, all you do is take the bdws, smile, look wise and keep your can of Ra-Pid-Gro out Of sight! aim kvery rule has its exception, and this is one place where it is a mistake to be nver-neat in tidying up your garden, according tff the horticulturists at the Green Thumb Tool Company divislwi of Union Fork knd Hoe Compalny, Columbus, Ohio. Never cut arid remove the leaves of any bulb until they have turned yellow and died. All bulbs need their leaves to produce the food which is then stored in the bulbs for next year’s leaves and flowers. EARLIEST ' Naturally^ tlm earliest blonmers like crocus, snowdrops, blue s c 111 a s , eranthus, chimidoxas and grape hyacinth^ wifl benefit the least, but, even here, something is gained. ^ So long as there are still some green leaves you can loosen the; surface shallowly to 1 inch)! with a greem thumb hand cultivator. Then stir .in 4 pounds of any bulb food sold for root vegetables in your area per. 100 square feet.® LARGER BULBS Larger bulbs like daffodils: and hyacinths will, likewise,! benefit by a feeding now. How-| every with these there is another! point to remember. ! Tulips, on the other hand, do best if not left in the soil after the leaves have yellowed. Dig them up, dry the bulbs in any airy place out of the sun and Store in <^n boxes in a cool cellar until next October. Left in the soil they might rot. Stored in a warm place, as a garage, the flower buds already formed in the bulbs might be damaged by the heat. Protect from mice. LOOK BETTER Finally, to make the bulb areas look better the rest of the growing season either , alt out seedlings or sow seeds of any quickgrowing annual -flowers you happen to like betwieen the bulbs. ^ They will come up, bloom and extend the color. A few are alysum, ageratum, dwarf snapdragms, California pi^pies and portulacas. All are likely to res themselves for next season. To Grow Properly Seeds Need Tilled Soil Before you even think of .petunias, are fine as dust. | have moisture. That comes planting seeds, think of prepar- These little bits of life cannot be from the soil, ,Jthe tiny particles ing the soil/to receive- them, expected to sprout until they'which closely contact the seeds. This invol^s first turning it' ■ , mim'o I over with^a spade or spading fork. Then the clods of soil are broken by hitting them with the back of a rake. . Finally, the smaller chunks that result are reduced in size by, the rake’s tines. Back and forth you rake, as you 'do so, the soil parttole^ Mcome ever more nearly'^^the size of the seeds you are going to sow. That and loosening the soil so the roots can grow are the chief reasons for soil preparatim- A third-is the final leveling, also done with the tines, that means no high spots to dry out, no low ones in which water can settle. . Seeds are not very large, in fact some of them, Me those of Pontiac Prato Photo by Ed Vandarworp CLEVER IDEA - Bill Walters of ‘1145 W. Huron solved the dilemma of what to ; do with old washing machine agitators .. . bolt two together, paint them and use as a planter. He guarantees it’s a surefire conversation piece. TOWN and COUNTRY . . GARDEN CENTER 5812 HIGHLANDJROAD - AA-59 - PONTIAC EVERYTHING FOR THE LAWN ami GARDEN FEATURING: a EVERGREEMS a FLOWERING TREES • SHADE TREES — Large Selection G SEEDS: UWNp FLOWER And VEGETABLE G INSECTICIDES^ FUNGICIDES, ETC. G WEED AND PEST CONTROLS G SPRING and SUMMER FLOWERING BULBS G GARDEN EOUIPMENT and TOOLS G LAWN MAINTENANCE EQUIPMENT • HOME GROWN NURSERY STOCK WE GROW OUR OWN NURSERY STOCK IN OUR OWN NURSERY Assuring You of Fresh, Sura-to-Orow Plants OPIN iVININGS 'til 8 SUNDAYS 'til «tOG n-M. > YARD arid GARDEN BEAUTY at ^salt’s Sariar Town FLOWERING ANNUALS. FLANT NOW! PETUNIAS, AAARIGOLDS and all your garden favorites can be planted NOW for early 37 different variefleR Plus many other varietlet ef annuals to'giva your yard all 8 trays to a flat • only That* mOy b« afsortad. VEGETABLE PLANTS FRUIT TREES RED RASPBERRIES GRAPE VINES scons ROTARY Seed and Fertilizer SPREADER Reg, $49.95 SPECIAL $29’* JACOBSEN’S GARPEN TOWN 545 S. Braadway Lake Orion Dealer Phone 593-I383 HOURS ARE: Sunday 8 a.m. to 2 p.m. PREPARE SOII.r-Rake and rake, back and forth until the tines have done ^their job ot making soil particles fine. A satisfacory seed bed, soil fine and level, is good insurance that seed?, will sprout promptly and seedlings grow sturdy. Spring Special! Lots of muscle and a featheNight touch! SimpUcH^ 7-hp Broadmoor Wide 36-inch rotary mower with Simplicity’s patented No-Scalp mowing action. Smooth . Synchro-balanced 7-hp Briggs & Stratton Engine. Floating Traction tires that pamper both lawn 8nd rider. Up to a dozen optional Quick-Switch attachments that go on in minutes without ■ tools. Year ’round reliability with ignition key electric starting. The Broadmbpt* i§ Simplicity’s biggest seller. Oncearound the yard tells you'why. , / • Mows 1.4 acTM per hour • 3 spends forward jplus reverse • Working speeds iip to 4 mph . • Controlled Traotioh dlHerential • tractor/mower Special Trade-In Allowance We Service What We Sell H ARP^S 1060 Lapeer Rd. (M24) Between Lake Orion and Oxford (628-1521) Now Is the Perfect Time to Prevent Crabgrass TIME IS SNORT - ANOTHER HN DAYS GOULD BE TOO lATE! Scotts Halts-Plus applied now will positivS^ prevent Crabgrass in your lawit this sumnrier — and it will also give desirable grass a full feeding so that it can fill id^the bare spots 7.95 Bag Covers 2500 sq. ft. NOW 6.95 14.95 Bag Covers 5,000 sq. ft. NOW 12.95 If You Want to Kill Dandelion$ and Prevant Crabgrass, too Uso TURF BUILDER Plus 4 Scotts Turf Builder Plus 4 prevents Crabgrass, fertilizes your lawn, destroys grubs, and kills dandelions and 22 ether kind of weeds — all in one single application. 5,0N$q. Ft. BAG, $18.95 TURF BUILDER PLUS2 Gives your lawn a full feeding of long lasting turf builder and kills dandelions and many Other weeds. 5,00D Ft. Bag 7.95 10,009 Ft. Bag 14.96 WE DELIVER - Phone OR 3-2441 REGAL Feed and Lawn Supply Co, 4268 Dixie IRiHWay - Drayton Plains, Mich. 3 Mllmt North of Pontiac USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADSI‘ BUY! SELLI TRADE! For Businesses YrI ___THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 V ^ i; L' \, ' .>#■ ^ ’ r- \ y ' C-11 Beautification Book Published Publication of a . practical!certificates. One business frbm the thre^unners-up recdviiigl guide to landscaping and oth^rieachrcoinmunity will be eligible $500 each. j beautification techniques forjfor the state competitions, inf «xhe purpose of the Business business establishments has which bronze medallions will be for Beauty Idea Book,” ■ ac- OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUN. 11 r6 FRIDAY, SATURDAY presented to the winners. Nationally, six firms will be cording to Mrs. Walter Varney honored at an awards program scheduled for fall of 1969 in Washington, . D.C. Cash “ grants Magee, president of the GFWC, been announced by the General Federation of Women’s Clubs. The Business for Beauty Idea Book, as the unique guide is called, will play a major role in a new GFWC pro^ain which is of $2,000, $1,500 and $1,000 will iheires’tablishmi’te^ being cosponsored by Cities go to the GFWC clubs sponsor-'a real need for a guide to sug-Service oa Company (CITGO), ing the top threfe. entries, with gest improvements which can' a subsidiary of Cities Service------------- e, y Conjpany, New York. 'is to stimulate the thinking of businessmen., and help them to 1 improve the visual standards of The 40-page landscaping book will be distributed to interested businesses by participating GFWC ciubs as phrt of the Business for Beauty program, originally announced last summer. Native Orchids on Monthly Agenda The Michigan Orchid Society . Iwill hold its May meeting Sun- of the cWc’s at. 2:30 p.m.' in the such as the use of screening, of the GFWC s 15,000 clubs will,auditorium at 622 W.. Lafayette, street trees, portable and be encouraging businessmen to Detroit * poiwuic be implemented by both large and small firms. Developed for the program by Cities Service Gil Company, the Idea Book is beiieved to be the only non-technical guide ' to landscaping which is specifically concerned with the' appearance problems' of, businesses. It discusses subjects: Behind -the , Business for! Beauty program is the belief of the GFWC .that business properties .must reflect higher standards of design, upkeep an landscaping if the appearance of American communities is to be maintained and improved in this uge of rapid urban growth. “More than anything else,” j Mrs, .Magee said, “there is a need to reintroduce into our| business areas the values which i only plants ,can provide — shadows, shade** and the| warmth, color and freshness of trees, shrubs and flowers.” A DivUion of fh« S.iS. Krotgo Cempqny with Sforoi throughout tho United Stotot, Canada and PuortoRico Patio and Garden Shop Diaoounts Patio and Garden Shop Open Sat. 9 a.m. to 10 p.m.; Sun. 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Grow Carnation in Perennial Garden Improve tte appearance ot thelrj'Birkiey member. Che e t of I^cedures, with the em-speaker. As part of his presen-.pu . jg , chanter on ph^s on landscaping. > tation, he will show slides of ■ ^ RECOGNITK [ON orphids native to Michigan. GFWC clubs will recognize local businesses which institute improvements through t h presentation of awards .landscape design principles. May 23 a special study group Although it is an entirely new meeting will be held at the!Publication, the Idea Book was horne of Dr. T. A. Henneck of jinspired>,by a service station Windsor, The meeting will beginilandscaping manual CITGO< at 8 p.ih. - ipublished two years ago. One of the easiest annuals to grow is the pink, related to the perennial carnation. ' There are both single and! double-flowered.p^orts, but the most interesting are those with fringed and feathered petals' and all sorts of fancy color ^ patterns, varying from flower to! flower. OPEN DAILY 10-10, SUN. 11-6 FRIDAY, SATURDAY A Diviiion of tha S. S. Krotg* Company with' Storot throughout tho Unitod Statos, Canada and Puortd Rico 70th Anniversary SUNBEAM HAIR CURLER |9«7 SOLID STATE CLOCK RADIO Our Reg. 23.47 2 Day$ Only ■Diacount Price Charge It Fora lovely hairdo in minutes! Lady Sunbeam electric hair-setter has 20 rollers: 6 jumbo, 8 large, 4 regular, 2 small. In* attractive case with mircor and clips., Just charge it. 16" Waking up is a pleasure with the G-E wake-to-music clock radio! Full-feature clock has lighted dial and Snooze-alarm® AM radio can be set to shut off automatically. White. Save at Kmart! MsSslOUIS ELECTRIC CAN 0|!>ENER 6" Our Reg. 7.67 2 Daya Only Convenient Rival can opener for cans of all shapes and sizes feature super-hard cutter, skip-proof feed gear, and removable magnet for rinsing: “Fold-A-Way” table rest, compact styling. UDICO OVEN BROILER 19" Our Reg. 22.68 2 Daya Only Large LOVbklbxlJ” broiler with reversible plug for broil or bake. Tray with 3-step height adjustment; 6-position thermostat control. Chrome finish. Ideal for all cooking needs! MsSsIH-lfS AUTOMATIC PERCOLATOR 5" Our Reg. 6.37 2 Daya Only West Bend 9-cup electric gives you great coffee flavor every time . . ■ adjusts time and teniperalure aiitomalically. Keeps coffee hot ^hile serving until the last cup> With cool plastic trim. , ' SEE-THRU PROCTOR-SILEX 996 Our Reg. 1 J.97 ^2 Daya Only NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD Discount Price Charge It 20-10-5 FERTILIZER 2.37 KMART WEED 'N FEED 1.98 Discount Price Charge It Kmart-brand. 20-10-5, lightweight fertilizer. Long lasting, controned release plant food. Big 22 lb.* bag covers .5.000 sq. ft. Shop Kmart for all your gardening needs. Kmart brand Weed ’N Feed,, 10-6-4, lightweight fertilizer with 2-4-D kills all broadleaf weeds. 20-pound* bag covers .'>.000 sq. ft. Specially priced now at Kmart. r 1 1 5-LB.* ROSE FOOD 5-LB.* PLANT FOOD GARDEN GLOVES 5-lb.* Cow Manure Reg. 2 Daya Reg. 1.07 — 2 Daya Diacount Price Helps produce sturdy growth. #8* For both Azaleas and Evergreens. 86* 58* >0 99* Reg. 73c — 2 Duya, 62* I or iofy vinyl stove. Weed.free. non-burning m FOLDING FENCE Reg. 1.17 — 2 Daya 9T— ed. 18” H. 10' L fence. GRASS SEED Reg. 1.27 - 2 Daya 97 S-Ib. bag. Ideal starter grass. fenliee Stare Only MED. CHUNK BARK Diacount Price 3” 60-lb. Stone Chips 3 cu. ft. decorative fir bark. Diacount Price 60-lb.* bag decorative chips. White.. V 3T •NelWi. 8 KMART BRAND MICHIGAN PEAt 73* Diacount Pfice 50-lb.* bag p,.at. -Fixcellent soil’ conditioner, weed-free. 3-in-1 Lawn Food and Insecticide 3.87 Diacount Price, 2 Daya lightweight lawn food with crabgrass preventer. Charge It. Net Wl. Cevart l,SS0 Sq. FI. HARDY BLOOMING GERANIUM PLANTS 57* Diacount Price ^plants in bud and STURDY 8" PRUNING SHEARS 1.17 Our Reg. 1.33 — 2 Daya Ideal shears for most all your garden'pruning. Save! LONG HANDLED DIRT SHOVEL 1.17 R,«. 1.97- 2 Day. LONG HANDLE GARDEN HOE 1.37 KMART PRICED, 14” BOW RAKE 1.47 Open-back shovel with ash handle. ’T'/^xlO'/s" blade size. Reg. 1.64 — 2 Daya Welded garden hoe with 6> 4" blade. Qiialily conslnu-led. Reg. I.Hi - 2 Day 1 t-loolli, welded bow ri has hardwood handle. ,''a EASY-TO-INSTALL PATIO BLOCKS 4 97* Diacount Price nstgll, Rxlfi" oen Anniversary sale savings! Fully aulomaifc.^eleciric 11-cup percolator with special flavor selector. The clear glass bowl lifts out for easy cleaning. .\n elegant server, loo! “Tfi/i/ife YoM”/or .^ihoppin^ at Kmart NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD .['V* » I'l THE PONTIAC PRES^g, FRIDAY. MAY :X6. 19e» -1- ///■ // SUNDAY SPECIAL! SWISS STEAK $|95 *1650 SUNDAY LIQUOR PHOPE 33441TS North Perry at pontiac Rood By BOB THOMAS I now and then, but I couldn’jt So Hollywood (AP) - “Sup-that sort of thing. i just posing- uh-tiia director said, he said^earaw^^ I tried it once, m‘^e Apartment’ scene; take your clothes off.’ liiecher), SPECIAL SMORGASBORD ON SATURDAY FROM 6 P.M. TO 10 P.M. $395 *H^hUi** at the Organ Every Friday and Satui^ay Night! .CATERING SERVICE^SUNDAY BANQUETS W« Catar to All Typos of Bonquiats . COMPLETE MENU AJ ALL TIMES WIDE TRACK at WEST HURON today’s racy movies, and' why he isn’t, appearing in them. ’Oh, they send me scripts Sinf(-A-LoHg . Peanut Cellar Opm Evry Day 10 AM. IINa.A.LONO IVlilY Ml.. SAT. >nd ■ CiMt Racin* m llw Rani* Al Moywsmi on llw Plans and Orgon VIRGINIA EWEN ^ Where Banjo’s ^ Ring and People Sing ployi Har Own Spaelnl Stand LIQUOR - BEER-WINE - PEANUTS STRAW HATS SONG SHEETS •099 HUTCHINS HD., UNION LAKE Mllai North of Union Lolia Vlllogo 363-9191 Image Important io MacMurray Racy Films Are Not His Bag years when he was playing In tX, A . t a .a. Li ACVf lb UliVaCo ill 1/110 XlMCIi UAlCilL Okaj^ were ready for the ^ J ...w.gg« t T . . . ... V7 THOMAS as far a cerned. ^ was a disaster, following was con- “I woulm’t do it again. I guess I’ve got to preserve the Disney-A^ Three Sons image.’’ romantic comedies with Claudette Colbert. His hairline is high, nut his face is smooth, figure triin. ■ REMAINED CALM When I saw him, the season’s Emmy nominations ha^ just been released, and he jikd been ovediwked again. The 'fi’red MacMurray image remains unchanged. He pited to be a poor interview (hie I’t), wealthy (he is, but not by |)e-Crosby standards) and ’simonious (could, be). At 60 looks little changed from the My wife Jun^(Haver) was upset about it, biit I remained calm,” he sai^with a smile. told her if they gave an award, for aidurabiUfy I might get it some da^ “I’ve never been nominated for an Oscar, either. The onljr award I ever got was the ‘Pepscar,’ Which I keep in my kitchen at home. It’s a golden ear of com, and I got it for being in the movie that sold the mo^t popcorn in theater lobbies during one year. ’That Was for ‘The Shaggy Dog.’ But June says. I shouldn’t mention the Popscar.” The MacMurray television series, “My Three Sons,” won another kind of award. It placed No. 14 in the all-season audience ratings. Hius a lOth sea the series was assured. 1 for ‘And I thought this mi^t have been our last, year," MacMurray commented. “NBC put "The Ghost and Mrs. Muir’ opposite, us, and Uieir ratings were good in the beginning, I thought to myself, ‘Danmait, maybe wf should have quit while we were ahead instead-of going down with a losing season.’ ” ROSE IN RATINGS, But “My Three Sons,” like most^f the veteran CBS shows, in the ratings as viewers became disenchanted with the newer opposition series. “The YbiHI ran out of things to wash before you ran out of hot water. An electric water heater can keep up with the baths,, showers, dishes and laundry that fill up a busy day. We're so sure.that we guarantee it. You get all the hot water you need. Or you get back the full purchase'price plus installation costThe guarantee is good for one full year. Of course, it must be an Edison-approved water heater. What is ali this hot water going to run you? For a family the size of that in the picture, about $5.03 per morith for an 80-gallon >water heater iri I normal use.* And should you need it, Edison gives you No-Charge Repair Service. No charge for eleo-^ trical operating parts or labor. / These are a few of the good reasons to^ll Edison, your licensed pluipber or appliance dealer about owning an eiectricwatef heater.: But another important reason is this: at the end of a long day there*ll be enough hot water for the most refreshing bath or shower of the day. Yours. GUARANIEED 9^»son ifeDISON ny-- Ghost and-^ Mrs. Muir” won a bunch of En^y nominations but lost the rating war. It was canceled by NBC and pick^. up by ABC for next season. earlier seasons of “My Three Sons,” MacMurray had to be coaxed to continue. But now he admits he vnll stick with the series to the end. "The money is good and the series takes so little time that I can’t resist,” he said. He shoots all his scenes during the space of ,a few weeks—he was embarrassed to say how few. ’The rest of the cast completes the series over a period of months. ■k MacMurray figures that the addition of triplets to the cast helped the series’ rating this season. For the new season he’ll be aoquiping.a-?wife and stepdaughter. BOWL YOUR WAY SPAIN Join Oor VACATION LEAGUE at Savoy Lanes YOU can be one of only 48 couples to / JET to SPAIN for 8 days! 8 glorious days in sunny Spain. Live in Luxury: -Lot th* most fabulous vocation you hov* *v« dreamed of become o reality. If you are interested and qualify CALL Dick or Bobbie Scribner FE 3-7121 or Attend Our First Group Meeting May 11, 8 P.M. at SAVOY LANES 130 S. Telegraph Road, Pontiac IN4AR HEATER^ ^ ' DRIVE IN THEATER —r- 332 3200 YKE RD. AT WALTON BLVD CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE ■box OFFICE 1 f OPENS 1 r liw • THK PONTIAC VRESS. FRIDAY, ^^AY 16, 1969 C—18 OPEN 7:15 FRI., SAT. and SUN. 624-3135 Thumb Men Downhearted Women Are Garden the Hose These Days 4^E£«rrv Mcmunitzav EOHNm IrtCffiMPEa. raUL NElWMaN as COOL MawD auiQE By DIGK WEST i regrettably, are only interested WASHINGTON lUPB7*\Accord-Iin 'the commerciaraspects of ing to a survey recently made bylthe jui^ey. firm, hoping were watered by hand, the a gs5-den supply house, women have largely taken over t h e job of watering t h e 1 a w n s of America. Whereas only one lawn in 10 was watered by a woman a dec-a d e a g o, the cash in on the trend, is featpr-ing a 100-foot garden hose as a special for women. The next step obviously will be to give garden hoses more feminine appeal -r pastel colors, floral patterons, lacy tex-etc. spray being controlled by placing a thumb over the end of the Women, having weaker can be preset to regulate the spray pattern. Finding the male thumb out cufrertt natio IS seyen of lO: This is a situation [ that cries out for analysis. The gai'den-suppiy people, thumbs, were definitely inferior jm o d e d , m a n b e c a m e at this ta^k. I downhearted. Instead of water- RARERT0I>AY ing a«er sup^r: he Today, howeyor, trraS.'T It would appear, then, that tho SOCIOLOGICAL IMPORT the rise Of women to ^ To some extept, the But what of the sociological;predominant position (n lawrt breakdown of the family can be import of the survey? Does it watering is connected with the blamed on reflect the new “life style” we developirient of automatic m hik thumb. The tamiiy,tn t CEDAR POINT GIMPMC MARTY'S SUBMARINE SHOP 9<1 UmVERSITV DRIVE TREE Buy one submarine andpetOneFOff 0% Saturday SPECIALIZING ’ IN FAMOUS “FOOT LONG” SUBMARINES hear so much about these days, dr does it represent a further unraveling of the basic fabric of our socie^? And did the change coine about by design or default? Did women demand that they be iMgger role in lawn watering, or did they simply assume a responsibility that had been abdicated by their husbands? sprinklers with controls t hat sprays together stays together. OPENING DAY Saturday, May 24 "^^Highlighting The FEstivitiM Ate: govipf Cpii»-edy and Musical Groups • 4,000 High Schpml Bcfndsman • Now Ridas and Attraefions • CM Western Stage Shows • Giant fireworks Display • frontier Medicine Man. EVERY PAY A FUN BARGMM Schedule for Apollo 10 SPACE CENTER, Houston (UPD - A brief day-by-day Idg of key events planned during the mdon orbit mission of Apollo m, set for launch Sunday iftjclear the way for a Julylunar landing;. Sunday - Launch, begin coast toward moon, television • of earth. All rides, all day - $5.00 per pwsM. fm tMmtm 10;ride ticket book • $4.00 nek, frM aMi^ Or pay $1.50 admission (i^ 3 and i _ free) and enjoy the rides aid attracNons Mr 50c each. Bargain rates in KiddielEML Funway opens 9 a.tiu Rides 10 ael ti 10 p.m. Free Causeway and m " Tieksts araileb/e at SfAMS » A layman lacks the expertise, Monday - Two midcourse corrections, television of earth| and maybe the energy, to and moon, astronauts pass 120,000-mile halfway mark. ^answer these questions^ But Midcourse correction, television of rapidly-ap-| I having raised proaching moon and tiny blue earth- 'obliged to make a stab at it. It » . ” Charlton Heston is against my policy to leave,/ - . * * „ questipns dangling in midair. *| Wednesday — Final course adjustment, drop into lunar orbit. In olden days, most lawns television of moon. J Thursday — Television from moon, lunar landing craft drops down to scout Apollo H landing site from altitudd of 9,5 miles, theii performs rendezvous with command ship in orbit 69 miles high. . DDT Already mmtan Untfl 36 EAST PIKE STREET PONTIAC. MICHIGAN 48058 ■ TEtEPHONB 332.9138 Announcing In The 'Tumpest Room Music for Your Dancing Pleasure by the "Note-A-Bles" Every Friday & Saturday-Storting 9 p.m. Th*. Chest Club meets every Tuetdoy 7 P.M.; |oin usllll Make Us Your One-Stop Food ond Entertoinment Center Excellent Cuisine Plus fylike Oros fir "THE WISEMEN' Jim Franklin, Mike Rbush, - Randy Lobeck PONTIAC LAKE INN 7880 Highlond Rood 673-9988 ^ Friday, May 23-— Navigation tests, two periods of television krommoon., Saturday, May 24 — Astronauts start home, television of earth and moon. By Science Service WASHINGTON - Eyen if V " " DDT were banned all over the Sunday, May 25 - Astronauts pass halfway mark on way world today, it could be too late jiomg, make course adjustment., ! to avert cataclysmic, eff^s. I Monday, May 26 — Television of earth, final course ad- There are already 700 justment, reentry, splashdown near Pago Pago in Pacific Ocean. pounds of the powerful pesticide /_________________.---------------------------------- in the atmosphere — fish float 12 NORTH SAGINAW / IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC OPEN 0:40 A.M^ SHOW AT JOIN A.M.^ The Gourmet Adventures of vJo^40iC4^ RE 18 - PROOF IS REQUIRED OPEN 9:48 A.M. CONTINUOUS ALL DAY HARD AS THEY COME... HE CARVED A PERSONAL EMPIRL FROM A VESTAL VASTNESS... WITH HIS FISTS...HISGUNS...^ HIS MANHOOD! HE WAS... bellx-up in the reeking waters of the Great Lakes, and each person carries within his body a sharfe of the poison. Conservatifinists have long sought action against DDT and other persistent pesticides. Now, Secretary Robert H. Finch of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare, i in the wake of moves to ban DDT in several states and foreign countries, has announced the appointment of a Commission on Pesticides and their Relationship to Environmental Health. BIRMINGHAM BLOOMFIELD Academy Award Winner Cliff Robertson (Best Actor) a$“CHARLY” Academy Awnrd Winner pest Picture of the Fear I <<0LIYER” M0H.-F.RI. 1:11 and 1:20 SAT. SsN, 1:10 and 10:20 Sun. 2:10,4:40 and 0:40 Sunday only, Snaak Prtviaw at 1:00 P.M. MATINEE tiOO P.M. EVENINQ S:1S P.M. Monday thru Saturday Evenings at 8 P.M. , Sunday Evajiings 1 P.M. I MATimE: Wednesdays Saturday and Sunday at 2:00 P.M. ' SINGALPMC FRIDAY and SATURDAY Nights with the STRAW HATS Don't Forget the GREAT FOOD and iOOD BOOZE always %n hand at Charlie Broujn’s SINGALONG 673 W. Kennett, Telegraph at Oakland PhoNie 332-7111 ■y and Sunday, l-l PM THURS. - FRI. - MON. - TUES. at 1:00 & 9:00 SAT. - SUN. - WED. at 1: - 3: - 5: - 7: 4 9: The I COMMERCE Fri.,s«t.,suii. ••tssrjf/sr IN^MNCAmn m.l.1,1.1. ^ j SUPPORT V# YOUR * . LOCAL* ^ SHERIFF .ubdtitute for* a toad breakfast! Many of ui have bad breakfast hebita. We mutt try to break them. If y«u ari eating 50, 60, 70 percent of the day's food at dinnertime, then try thit experiment: Eat a liille more at lunch, a little lest at dinner.' MAY 16, 1Q6^ Forias Letter Explains His Connection With Wolf son WASHINGTON (AP) — Here;Chief Justice Earl Warren ex-land announcing his resignation Is the Text of Supreme Court plaining his connection with from the court: Justice Abe Fortas’ letter tpl jailed financier Louis Wolfson I My dear Chief Justice: , .1 am filing with you this me- morandum. with respect to association with the Wolfspn Family Foundation, and a statement of the reasons which ini my judgment indicate that I should resign in order that th^ Court may not continue to be subjected to extraneous stress which may adversely affect the performance of its important functions. As you know, I have delayed ’issuing a detailed report or ah-nouncing my decision until it could first be communicated to the members of the Court. In my judgment, this was the only proper course open to me as an associate justice of this court, because fif the court’s position as a separate and independent branch of the government under the constitution. Because of/the court’s recess, this report was not possible until yesterday. Later in the summer of 1965, and also before my nomination, my firm was retained in connection with some securities problems of Merritt-Chapman and Scott corporation, of which Mr. Wolfson was chairman of the board. I became acquainted with Mr. Wolfson and he told me about the Wolfson Family Foundation and his hopes and plans for it. He knew that its program—the improvement Of community relations and the proipotion of racial and religious ^©operation— concerned matters tq which I had devoted much time and attention. scope, and we discussed the pos- In the spring or summer of i 1965, before I was nominated as associate jusftice of the Supreme Court, my liw firm represented HIS RESIGNATION—This ’'copy of a four-page letter New York Sjppbuilding Corpora- I Justice Abe Fortas to Chief Justice Earl Warren, listing reasons tor resigning from the High Court, was displayed yesterday in front of the Supreme Cpurt Building. tion, a company controlled by Mr. IjOuis'E: Wolfson, with respect to various civil claims. Contributions Lost in fijolemics His Career Sketched WAS INTERESTED’ Mr. Wolfson stated that he-intended to increase the foundation’s resourcesj and pe hoped that the foundation might expand its work so as to make unique and basic contributions in its field. As we proceeded in oUr discussions, Mr. Wolfson d that he would like me to participate in ind help shape the foundation’s program and activities. I told him I was interested in these objectives and that I hoped we would continue our discussions. I became a member of the court in October 1965. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Wolfson was-in Washington and again conferred with me about the foundation’s work and my possible association with it. I again indicated my interest in the foundation’s program and in expanding its WASHINGTOIJl (AP) - Tbe Intense controversy that swirled about Justice Abe Fortas in the past year overshadowed his •work as a member of the U.S. Supreme Court. Many legal observers pronounced him one of the court’s j most Independent thinkers who, but for his extracurricular activities, was on his way to leaving an indelible mark on the course of the nation’s law. He sat on the court only 43 months after President Lyndon B. Johnson talked Arthur J. Goldberg off the bench to become ambassador to the United Nations and replaced him with his old friend, Fortas. Fortas remained the president’s friend and adviser—one of the facets of his career that helped launch the congressional campaign against his 1968 noml-ndMm to be chief' justice. Frotn that point on,' his outside activities came under close scrutiny that tended to blur his legal creativity. EIXXIUENT SPOKEvSMAN Fortas quickly became one of the court’s most eloquent spokesmen for the rights of minority groups, for the impoverished criminal suspect enmeshed in the coils of law and for the long-ignored juvenile. Observers classified Fortas a true blue and predictable liberal, but this complicated m'nd could not be cast in an easy added interest was his dissent from a ruling clearing Life magazine of privacy violations in its treatment of the family whose experiences were the basis of the play, “’The De.sperate Hours.” It was a later Life article that led to his resignation from the court. Perhaps his most memorable contribution to the court’s history will be recorded as thq 1967 Gault decision, which altered the structure of the nation’s juvenile courts. Fortas’s opinion extended to children some of the major rights adult defendants have enjoyed under the Constitution. For instance, he was at the very conservative end of the court of the Vietnam war, objecting to attempts to have the justices pass on the legality of this country’s heavy involvement in a major conflict without a declaration of war from Congress. In the areas of antitrust and libel law Fortas early parted company frMTi (the old liberal position that corporate bigness at least implied some badness. And, while the court wa.s making important advances in the area of the free press, Fortas | reflected a deep suspicion of the! media. A vote that now takes on these days, and had been fully Demonstrating a gift for a catch-phrase, Fortas declared; "Under our Constitution, the condition Of being a boy does not justify a kangaroo court.” Fortas is only 58, comparatively young as justices go expected to build his early years on the, bench into decade or two of legal service. HORATIO ALGER-LIKE Born on June 19,1910, the last of five children of a Jewish cabinet^ maker who hac emigrated to Memphis, Tenn. from England, Fortas followed the ground walked by Horatio Alger heroes at almost as fast a pace. By the time he was 13 he had begun earning money by playing the violin at social events. His love for music stayed with him, and he is known fo have chart ere airplanes to bring other musicians to his Connecticut summer estate for weekend niusicales. By the age of 32, he was a undersecretary of the interior, had already taught at his Yale law school alma mater. sibility of my participating in the project on a long-term basis. Because of the nature of the work, there iwas no conflict between it and my judicial duties. It was then my opinion that the work of the Court would leave me adequate time for the Foundation assignments. As I recall, with him and his Ihe board of tiie foundation met in December 1965, and approved, by resolution, an agreement under which I was to perform services for the foundation. It was understood between us that t^e program in question was a long-range one and that my association would be meaningful only if it were on a longterm basis. The agreement, therefore, contemplated that I would perform continuing services, and, instead of fixing variable compensation from time to timejor work done, it provided that- I would receive twenty thousand dollars per year for my life with arrangements for payments to Mrs. Fortas in the event of my death. In ‘January 1966 I received a check' for twenty thousand dollars UndeS the agreement, and began my association with the foundation. In June of that year attended and participated in a meeting of the Trustees of the Foundation at Jacksonville, Florida. It is my recolkctidn that Mr. IVolfson did not attend the meeting. 1 went from Jacksonville to his farm at Ocala where I had an overnight visit, family. AGREEMENT TERIiaNATED Later, in June 1966, 1 reached the decision that the continuing role in the foundation’s work which our agreement contemplated should l>h terminated. There were two reaspn^ tor this decision: My work for the court was much heavier thartxj had anticipated and tny idea 61 the amount of time I would have free for nonjUdicial work had been a substantial over-estimate. I had also learned shortly before informing the foundation of my decision to terminate the arrangement, that the SEC had referred Mr. Wolfson’s file to the Department of Justice for consideration as to criminal prosecution. I therefore wrote a letter to the foundation, addressed to Its general counsel, dated June 21, 1966, canceling the agreement we had entered into, subject to completing the projects for the year. I recited as my reason only the burden of Court work. treated as a contribution to the Foundation. Since becoming a member of the court, I have not, at any time, directly or indirectly, re-ceiv^ any compensation from Mr. Wolfson or members of his family or any of his associates for advice, assistance or any reason whatever,- except the foundation fee whidh was returned. RECEIVED MATERIAL Since I became a member of the court, Mr. Wolfaon on occasion would send me material relating to his problems, just as I tliink he did to many other people, and on several occasions he mentioned them to me, but I haye not interceded or taken pan in any legal, administrative or judicial matter affecting Mr. Wolfson or anyone associated with him. It is my opinion, however, that ttie public controversy relating to my association with the foundation is likely to continue and adversely affect the work and position of the court, absent my resignation. In these In September and October of 1966, Mr. Louil E. Wolfson Was indicted on separate charges stemming froin stpek transac-$, ^nd in December 19M, 1 returned to the foundation, in its entirety, the sum of twenty thousand dollars previously paid to me. I ronduded tiiat, because of the developments which had taken place, the services which had performed should be circumstances, it seems clear to me that it is not my duty to remain on the court, but rather to resign in the hope that this will enable the court to proceed with its vijtal work free from extra- There has been no wrongdoing on my part. Ihere has been no defaidt in the performance of my judicial duties in accordance with the high standards of the office I hold. So far as l am __________the welfare and maximuni effectiveness of the Court to pm-form its critical role in our system of government are factors that are paramount to all others. It is this consideration that prompts my resignation which, I hope, by terminating the public controversy, will permit the court to proceed with its work without the harassment of debate concerning one of ijf^ members. I have written a letter asking President Nixon to acceqrt my resignation, effective as of this date. . leave the court with the greatest respect and affection for you and my colleague, and my thanks to all of you and to the staff of the court for your - ... ... ..—J friend- unfailing helpfulness and ft ship. I hope that as I return to private life, I shall find opportunities to continue to serve the nation and the cause of justice which this court so ably represents. Sincerely, Abe Fortas (Advertisement) Wrinkles Remored in 3 Minutet 'scientific ...Y.... V-.- ~ your wrinkles temporerlly In lust 3 minutes and lasts up te I tioiys. Apply REVEAL as directed to y«sf ught a quarter-million dollar tiome in (Georgetown, and painted it mustard yellow. They also own a silver Rolls Royce. Hearing Is Monday on Firemen Firing HOLLAND (AP) -A hearing ha.s been scheduled for Monday In Ottawa County Circuit Court to show cause why 14 Park Township firemen near Holland should not be rehired. The firemen, all paid volunteers and members of Station No. 2, were fired T^tesday. They had been protesting various regulations Imposed by the township Fire Board, Donald Hann of Holland, attorney for the firemen, said a temporary restraining | order was being sought to get the men back on the job until the hear-*"«• Flag Flying Urged MNSING (AP)-Gov. William Millilgen has urged all Mietl Igan citizens to fly the state flag (luring the. annual Michigan week starting .Satupday. PROFESSOR UWN CAUTIOHSi IF YOU DON’T KILL WEEDS ON FIRST SIGHT-THEY’LL SPREAD ALL OVER THE PLACE! NOW'S THE TIME TO L/SE AGR/cti® WEED CONTROL WITH FERTILIZER Kills Dandelion, Plantain—other broadleaf weeds! The Fertilizer helps grass cover bare ‘»Xawi spots—thickens the entire lAwn. 25 lb. bag weeds and feeds sq. (L *4.95 Only I PLUS ONE BOX GARDEN fertilizer AT HALF PRICE! Waterford Fuel & Supply Co. 3943 Airport Rd. ot Woterford Depot "WE SERVICE WHAT WE SELL” - 623-0222 Look at the big Autoconomy May deals waiting for you li^ new! 60 CyOJUONS OFQASOUNE FRB when you buy 4 new Amoco* 12p SS Radial Oval Thee. They jwt 6 plies between you and the road. GHve twice the mileage and have triple the body strength of moat new car tires. M (MUjONS OF QASOUNe PRB When you buy 4 new Atiee Ptycron Tkee. ITt a husky lirs. Safety teated 54 weqm. Meios your own MKlHn deed on the tiree and get aH tiwt American* 8epw Pesmlum PRB BRAKE SHOES One pair of Attes Brahe Shdes free when you buy brake shoes for the other three wheats. You don’t even need cash. You can use your Standard ON Credit Card. So hurry. These specials end May 31. Awrilable at eN partleipeNnt StandeNl ON Oeelem '' AutocoTjiomy it the Standard OH Dealer't Plan that ton-dnuaUy offers motorists Mgheet quality 1ipee. ballsries and aooecsoHes—and saves you money. And that's only Nw bsginning. iWhen it's time to fisve your naur ear wartanly aervtoe performed, be sure to talk to your Standard ON Dealer. Why ie he so aradouc toi save you money? So yeu'N dtoeover he has the perfect "store'' for ell your car, neede. And to youH have enough money left over to buy hie greet **;;>**•*>>•****■"«>*’* Bee«ef’t THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 D^l Briefs in State Gl's t>ischargeSuit\ AeccTC I 0. Taylor, Vleo PrwM^t A ASScTO Cashier, of the above-ntmedl^ bank do I w daclara that this report of cmdl- Hia from banka |tlon IP true and correct to the bast of 3*3,D. TAYLOR »,330,318.0*1 We, ^th^And« ' ' ^ ...............•- Individuals, -------It.... ............ United States of States a ■ ^^-vlsloni . foreign j. official instltu- Its of commercial officers' The suit also asks the. court To'taT Deposttii $2ig,*7B,574.t3 k on acceptances TOTAL ASSETS .. LIABILITIES r,_______ __________ ___ eS,683,3W.»3i Other securities . ■■ 31KOOO^OOL Trading account securities . nom | | [Federal funds sold and s»- • ^ curltles purchased under | SAVANNAH, Ga. (AP) - AlLoVns”'""’* fenteral court judge has directed i fKiJsV' a'hd" attorneys to present briefs in a| “emtses*'’™”"*'"® suit for discharge which an I Rea^^estate o Aciny private has filed against investments his contmanding general. Judge Alexander Lawrence called for briefs by May 26 after hearing arguments from Army attorneys and attorneys ^or. Pvt. Michael T. Healy, a 26-year-old soldier from Houghton, Mich! now stationed at Ft. Stewart, Ga. Healy, assigned to the 547th Medical Co. at the Army post, *says he is a, conscientious objector and that ' the Army violated his legal rights when it denied him a discharge on those grounds earlier this year. The suit also asks the. to enjoin Brig. Gen. George S. («> Total Beaty Jr., commandine officer of the Army Flight iSraining Center, from transferring Healy outside the court’s' jurisdiction. ‘NO TRANSFER PENDING’ ifealy applied for discharge last September while at Ft. Sam Houston, Tex. He alleges his trghsfer to Ft. Stewart shortly followed the Army’s denial of his request. Lawrence refused to issue the restraining order, however, court official said no transfer orders fw Healy are pfending. ★ * ★ The soldier, a graduate of Marqnette University, told the court during the hearing he was classified as a conscientious objector by his local draft board when he entered the Army last June. * He said he was under the Impression he would not be connected with combat troops but that during his first training session at Ft. Sam Houston a medical officer addressed the trainees aS: “soldiers first and doctors second.” He also declared he would be unable to kill an enemy attacking his homeland. Healy said he would consider an attacking enemy as a “brother of Christ.” NOTICa OF PUBLIC AUCTION TTit following Is ■ list of ImpoundM hides which have been declared •! doned and 'are therefore scheduled .— sale et public auction, pursuatlt to Section 2S2 of Acts 300 of Public Bids of. 1349 _____ ...- (C.L., Sec. 257,252) by the Pbntlac Police condition I Dept, at Sam Allen 8> Sons, Inc., 500 -----—i Collier Rd,, Pontiac, Michigan. Sale of [vehicles will be held on Saturday, June 21, 1969 at 1:30 p.m: 1962 Ford—2G 63G 169 857 1960 Mercury—OW 3»P 533)342 1967 Plymouth—P H23 H74 T14 : Oldsmoblle-559 TS 557 Burt's Big Lake Subdivision. CURB, GUTTER, PAVEMENT I ON EASTWAY DRIVE , I TO: Clare and Ann Francis, Walter M. 3,073,364.05! Werner, Detroit Bank 8, Trust Co., Law-, Irenes L. Chambers, C. M. Carrie, Ken-308,127.48 n«th rni*. .Frion C. Turner, Horace .......jrguson, Jesse McCloud, Darrel Shafer, Mr. Upchurch, Leo B. Rickman, Francisco Salazar Jr., Clyde Lotan, Pearl Kipp, Wanda L; Miller, R. Barnard and A. Curry, Wayne D. Her-™ ^ --------------- “r. Teetzel, Foster- a Saderberg, Charles Ellender, I - lertha Wagoner, Emma M, R-... L, Hayes, Milton K. Frick, Vern Garmong, Harold E. McCrae, Mr. Allas-—1, Warren J. Rathbun, Charles Taylor, Scott, Charles Tarry, Henry H. d to all persons Interested,- take tirt*thV Comml«ton*dec&ed should ' —■ borne by special assessment ...............Inclusive end "Weine's Subdivision." “ Vd, except that part lying I's Big Lake Subdivision’’ ■'s Plat No. 7" ------------------ $ 73,056,51 Federal funds purchased and securities sold under agreements to repurchase Liabilities for borrowed money .................... Mortgage Indebtedness ...... ‘cceptances executed by or for account of this bank ■astway Drive .A-59 Expressway ■» nuw uu — — -j--- oflice for public Inspection. i Lb’s ” Notice Is also -orhmlsslon and tne msscmui wi.imw t-t:” of Pontiac, Will meet In the Comrn^lsston of the Ch*mber In said City, on the 27th rs»t<-i- m.v 13. 6f May A.D...........* - ' ” *■ tioTicE OP pueiLic hearing flee Is hereby given that a public hearing will be held by the Pontiac City Commission in the Commission' Chambers, City Hall, 450 Wide Track Drive, East, on Tuesday, June 3, 1969, at 8:00 P.M., Eastern Standard Time, for the purpose of amending the Toning Map of Ordinance No. 944, known a; the Building Zone Ordinance to rezone to Parking r*'-fpl lowing described property Hills Subdl- - DESCRIPTION OP THE LANDS CONTAINED IN THE BIG LAKE LEVEL CONTROL ASSESSMENT DISTRICT All lands are In Springfield Township, akiand County, Michigan. The following are In Section " Lots 1 7 Inclusive of .f'Clinton 82^ Inclusive of "Colonial u 178 Inclusive of "Colonial Sion No. 2." u .47 Inclusive of 9 at 8 o'clock P.M. toi TOTAL LIABILITIES . Mlnorltv Interest In consi dated subsidiaries...... 8225,119,984.50 OLGA BARKELEY, ‘ NOTICE OF PUBLIC SALE Notice Is - ■— "" signed " ?'?Lo7________________________________ thence S 10'59'30" W along W line si Lot a distance of 118 feet, thenCe 32‘>26'03" W 56.54 feet, thence N 0“03' 90.32 feet, thence S.67°10' E 57.23 feet beginning, also except beginning at po distance S 88*46'40" W 607.0T feet fre E '/4 Corner, thence S 88'’44'40" W 480J6 feet, thence-N 4°26' E 120 feet, thence ' 17=17' E 156 feet, thence N 9"55' 134.68 feet, thence N 8BO46'40" E 35: feet, thence S 6”48'50" E 401.52 feet beginning. Pert of SE Vx of NE 'A, beginning .jW corner Lot 1 "Clinton Burt's Uke Subdivision", thence S 10°59'30" along W line said Lot 1, a distance of ... '-et, thence N 32=26'03" W 56.54 feet, lence N 0°03'. E 90.32 feet, thence S '•liy E 57.23 feet to beginning. Part of NE 'A, beginning at point istance S 88=46'40" W 607.01 feet .from 'A Corner, thence S 8a“46'40" W 450.58 set, thence along E line of "Supervisor's lat No. 7", N 4=26' E 120 feet 8, N 7"17' E 156 feet 8. N 9'55' E 134.88 let, thence N 88=46'40" E 352.95 feet, lence S 6°58'40" E 401.52 feet to begln-Ing. feet, froi Part of SW 'A of NE ’A, beginning at;66=43'10'' oipt distance E 630.10 feet from center W 40 ft of Section, thence E 275 feet, thence N 1 ---- -.■ 37.64 feet, tt----- '■ ■ thence $ 1‘ IS feat, thanea t ssnr W T68.U taal,ipolnt nee along curve to right having a i feet ius of 45 feet, distance 20' feet to! from center of 23=04' W 63 feet, V 110.45 feet, thence thence S 7=52' 1A of'NE 'A, beginning a E 683.87 feet 8. N 381.3d! 78<>45'2a" E 122.60 feet t Iter of Section, thence r ~ ' ' ................. s’mt, tt—- '■ ............. Part of V.. _______— point distance E 426.95 1123=04' W 82, f( A, beginning at .... .eet 8. N 688.41 f Section, thence 'N baglnnlng at Mint diatanae no W Section line 790.M fedt from Corner, thanea N '82*21'50" E 1150 It N'ly non, Tnence .. ________________ S 78*45'20" .. I_____feet, thence S 7=05'36" W 40 feet, I thence S UPSar W 43 feet, thence N 79"34' E 167.98 fdbt to beginning. , . .— i Part of SW 'A of NE >A, beginning at ............ along point distance E 503.96 feet 8k N 605.04 radius of 45 feet, feet from center of Section, thence N ------.......... to 88=58' W 221.74 feet td shore of Big 69=34' E 163.05 ............— .. ■ “ feet, thence S, 5l'07'30" w i« .hence along curve to right hav| radius of 45 feet, distance 20 feet to pla *’V*?rf'"ot'"sw 'A of NE 'A, beginning point distance E 674.91 feet B N 399 f ivltfe radi ____..Jt, thence ------------ .. .. .. ___ — .. ------ .. . 1 right having radius of 40 feet, distance 1 Lake, thence N 22=47' E along shore 54.10 feet, thence N 23=04' W 46 feet, feet, thence N 81=14' - •- thence N 58°4'30" E 145.80 feet, thence I thence S 21*18'E 77.91 fe = E 34 feet, thence S 49=24'- E 37| Part of SW 'A of NE- .........-ice S 76=05' E 50 feet, thence Si point distance E 454.03 _______ 51*07'30" W 149.14 feet to -beginning. .feet from center of Section, -------------- Part of SW 'A of NE 'A, beginning ah!50=09' E 10.45 feet, thence along cui polnf distance E 569.8-2 feet 8, N 480.53! left having radius of 87.50 feet, disiance feet frofn center of Section, thence N of 111.81 feet, fhenee N 23=04' W 75.94 23=04' W 46 feet, thence N 62=40'10" E feet, thenie S 89=T8'30" W 210.88 feet, 137.66 feet, thence S 34*19' E 36.10 feet,|thence S 34*47' W 31.45 feet, thence thence S 58*43'30" W 145.80 feet to be-|S 39'34' W 10.45 feet, tt"- .................. ^ ginning. 272.42 feet to beginning. Part of SW 'A of NE 'A, beginning at, Part of SW 'A Pf NE >lnt distance E 551.79 feet 81 N 522.85 point, distance E 366.09 --------- _ .. ------- et from center of Section, thence N feet from center of Section, thence N !'40'10" E 137.66 feet, thence N 170.30'150=09' E 114.55 feet, thence N 58=41' -37 feet, thence S 66=05'50" W 140.88!272.42 feet, thence S 39*34' W 21 f et, thence S 23*04' E 45 feet to begin-! thence S 38»30'20" E 254.05 feet ing. . . beginning. Part of SW Wot NE 'A, beginning ati Part of SW 'A of NE >A, —* —‘----------- E 534.16 feet 8< N 564.26 point distance E 308.51 feet ____________ except begftuitng at most N'ly corner said Lot 38, thanea S .. 82*21'SO" W 67.43 feet, thence : S 23®04'35" w 247.45 teat, thenca I 47*25'25" E 68.23 feet to nftost W'ly corner Lot 37 of said Subdivision, thanea N 23=04'35" E 313 feet to beginning, also part of SW >A beginning at point kflatanca' I E along E & W 'A Llife 330 feet from W 'A Corner, ------- ' ' “■------ " 70*00' r t to beginning. ' I, beginning point dlSlOMW IC, Oi I, .w,.AWj ~ w—.«■ ...... ...... .. ..... feet-from center of Section, thence N feet from center of Section, thence 66*5'50" E 140.88 feet, thence N 34*59' 50*09' E 75 feet, thence H OB'SITSO" W 40 feet, thence S 46=25'10" W 132.60 2S4.05 feet, thence S 64'34' W 40. feet, feet, thence S 23*04' E 40 feet to begin- thence S 39*29' W 22.35 feet, thencf " r- I ,„r.« beginning. I of NE r of Section, thence Nifeel stance E 21 ’«no" El50*09'"i 75 feet, tl 4 35“13'40" thence S 28*01' 2 E-8.- W That part of SE 'A of NW 'A lying SE'ly ' "Supervisor's Plat No; 1", except center of Section, thence N 50 feet, thence N a9=S6'30i' ........... thence S '7B=25'20" W 233.56 “ feet, thence .along shore line of Big Lake S 16"37'30" W 28.67 feet 8. 2i’My4V' E tS 0*4t'40" E 71 feet 8. W S 2*15'30" W 125.10 feet, 137.82 feet to beginning, rt of SE'A of NW 'A, beginning of Section, thence W 40 feet, 125 feet, thence W .190.7,2 feet, ong shore of Big Lake N W 71 feet 8. N 26*10'40" W t 8. 'N 16S37'30" *W 28.67 feOt, ince « 78=25'20" E 233.56 feet, thdnee 18°22'30" E 300.11 feet, thenCa S I3'30" W 150 feet to beginning. ’art of SE 'A of NW 'A, beginning at a Int on E 8, W 'A Line distance* W 40 t from center ot Section 2= **—— *' Wg*J.^ke,^th line, thence feet to beginr Jhat part c 200;33 f a W 202.75 feet tg shore oi nee S S'lySO*' E 125.1 fee’ f Big Lake to E 8. W <4 'Supervisor's Plat No. 1 , also except ’ Barry, County 0. ......... .... County of Oakland, State of Michigan, acting as Agent for the County of Oakland, will, on Thursday, the 29th day of May, 1969, at the office of the Count" Drain Commissioner, 550 South Telegrap Road, Pontiac, Michigan 48053, „,'$ealed bids until 2:00 o'cloc hlohest bidder (Eastern Standard Time) at wh Mid bids Will be opened and pub.,.., -j-- nounced .for the construction d a certajn o'clock P.M. .,) at which tim, d and publicly SW V _____ —Jnce E oju... — ................. 43 feet from center of Section, thence 88*49' E 270, feet, - ........ ^ feet, thenca N 88=41 ' •" 40 feet to ____, .. SW 'A ot point distance 01"11'00" E 83 E 'A, beginning at 630.10 feet and N „ _ .. ____ ..jm center of Se- ____ thence S 80*49' E 275 feet, thence . 19=21'40" W 42.71 feet, thence N 88=49,' W 260 feet, ther- ' ■ ■ beginning. Part of SW distance >11' W . of NE 'A, beginning ! tion, theno RESERVES ON LOANS .. IRS rulings)............. Other reserves on loans .. Reserves on securjlles-.. -eby given by the under-... ..... ... Monday, May 19, )969, at o'clock A.M., at 205 A/feIn Street, hester, Michigan, public sale of a .... Chevrolet,Blscayne.4dr. sedan bearing serial number 154697F121443 will ber— - - cash to the highest bWJer- -thereof may be made at 205 said bids will be St, Rochester, the place of stor- undersigned reserve the riflh’Cont™? tL® bL ®Iom ... established In the Township of pJ^'I'^bistanM 1 630 feet '"The^quantitfes Involved In said consist principally of the following; |88 49 E 250 feet, thence N 12 5 Control structure, —--------- —... xim teet. tnence n i ii t 4u Big feet, thence S 0 from center ot Sec-E 260 feet, thence N ence N 88=49' W 260 ’ W 40 feet to begin- 'VI^o^^Ne" e N 23=04' W 40.50 feet. 66=56' W 130.12 40.50 feet to begir part of SW 'A point distance “ s S 23=04' E I, beginning a Dated: ’ 12, 1969 CAPITAL ACCOUNTS Capital notaa and deben- ' irai .... ......... none % Duo ... none Due ... none Equity capital—fetal .... . Preferred stock — fi total liabilities, cllftAL^ACCOUNTS COMMUNITY NATIONAL BANK I. Revised Statutes. and specifications n -*har documer*- f. In the c------- .. .... ------ immissloner df the County of Id at the office of Pate,, I .ugue, Inc., Engineers, 726* Building, Detroit, JVUchlgan 4 which reference may be h»H partial Interested and bids and received accordingly. •----ade with the lowest .... .. ... . beginning point distance E 630.10 feet 8. N,l=1l' — * from center of Sect" --------- 240 feet, thence performance of the work Ip the sum th — * ‘hera fe be fixed by me, reserving t the right to relect any and and to- adlourn such letting to su end place as I shall publicly i of NE 'A, 630.10 feet . of Section, thenca S hence N 15=13' E ____ .. 88=49' W 250 feet, W 40 feet to beginning. . .. _____V4 ot NE Vt, beginnihg at distance E 630.10 feet 8. N 11=1' E let from center of Section, thenca N E 5.63 feet, thenca on curva to having radius 49.24 feet, distance feet, thence S 88=17- E 221 feet, S 17=29'12'I E 41.77 feet, thenca N IV 250 feet to beginning. . of SW 'A of NE V4, beginning at distance E 652.44 feet 8, N 324.24 from center of Section, thence on curve to right having radius of 49.24 feet, distance 11.41 feet, thence on curve to left having radius of 45 feet distanct lence S 1 joj9' w 21 Part -point I feet fi 5 feet, thence S 22=05' £ -40-feet, 1258.38 feet, thence S 33=29' W 22.35 feet, "Hensel Subdi_______________ . . - C 40.4,, C ,» «.4, u,.™ clth.4.^, s 60=45' W 40.75 feet, thence S beginning at SW corner of Lot ,. ------------------------------ '40" E 260.88 feet to beginning. i Subdivision, thence N 87*33' W 200 feet, ginning. I Part of SW 'A of NE*'A, beginning at thence N 74=36', W 77.10 feet, thence N A of'NE 'A, beginning at, point distance E 193,35 feet 8, N 222.83i15“25' W 286.90 feet to shore ot Big E 471,48 feet & N 711.46 feet from center of Section, thence N Lake, thence E'ly along shore 400 feet , to er ot Section, thence N 50=09' E 75 feet, thence N 32°16'40" W NW comer of Lot 47, thence S 5*53'30" 1.95 feet, thence N ,21=09' 260.88 feet, thence S 60=00' W 60 feet.-W 216 feet to beginning, also except that ■nee N 14*41' W 40 feet, thence S 29=15'30" E 273.52 feet to part platted into "Weine's Subdivision", >4/ i-inis (»> *h.nr. c beginning. Part of SW 'A. beginning at SW corner Part of SW 'A of NE 'A, beginning at Lof 47 "Hensel Subdivision No. 1", thenca point distance N 0*03'30" W 61,40 feet N 87=33' W 40 feet, thence N 3=29'30" E from center ot Section, thence N 50*09'’225 feet to Big Lake, thence E'ly along E 251.95 feet, thence N 29=15'30" W shore 50 feet, thence S 5=53'30" W along 66*56' E 130.12 feet,'273.52 feet, thence S 82=21'30" W 60.68 Lot line 216 feet to beginning. 4—. thence S 0=03'30" E 392 feet to; Part of SW 'A, beginning at point beginning, also part ot SE 'A of NW A ot NE 'A lyingj Part ot SW 'A, beginning at point ---- S 41=00-30" W 97.16 feet, thence under waters of Big Cake. [distance N 87=33' W 80 feet from SW curve to right having radius ot 35 N Vj of NW«'A, except beginning at NE [corner Lot 47 "Hensel Subdivision No. 1", distance of 47.50 feet to beginning, corner Lot 1 "Supervisor's Plat No. 1,', thence N 87*33' W 40 feet, thence 0*13 Part of SW >A of NE 'A, -beginning at thence S 88=30' W 968.88 feet, thence S W 244 feet, thence E'ly along shore 50 , -------------4cr eo thence N feet, * thence S 1=25'30" W 234 feet to "s* 225 *feet\ i *’*part\of SW 'A, beginning at point _ _ _ eginnlhg at N 'A distance , N 87=33' W 12o-feet from SW S 41=00'30" W 97.16 feet, thence corner, thence S 89=01' W 348 feet, corner Lot 47 "Hensel Subdivision No. 1", -urve to left having radius of 35 thence S 25=07' W 555.50 feet, thence Sj,thence N .87=33' W 40 feet, thence- N stance of 30.50 feet to beginning. 4=25' W 248.20 feet, thence E 602.85 feet, 1*26' W 267 feel, thence c''" *•’"*- at thence N 756.41 feet to beginning, also 50 feet, '...................... 80 except beginning at SW corner of N Vi Of beginning. N NW 'A, thence N 225 feet, thence E Part o1 121.58 feet, thence N 76*05' E J315.58 feet, thence S 225 feet, thence 1................ *----- - ..................1315.58 feet, to beginning. Part of NW beginning at N 'A Co begin-1ner, thence S 89*01' W 348 feet, thence 25*07- W 555.50 feet, thence S 4=25' ' of NE 'A, beginning at * '............... ................ ‘ -------- point dist-----■= ■’*"’* *—* * »' »*■> 4' ,-?iri,a rlnhf ra,llii« IS teat rhai-a ^ iwUnt HlcfXnra N 150' feOt feOm NE COtMf lor's Plat No. T", ' ------- ______ .. 1324.42 feef, th-------- .. »24'45" W 75 feet, thence N 88*31'40" .......... ■ ----' ” *“* fe begln- I of NE 'A, beginning at thence S : 400.45 feet 8, N 880.46 88=35; 15" ■r of Section, thence N i*24'45" 355.53 I Section, 0 feet,, thence s'5=46' W i; ----- urve to left having r B 16.31 feet t " MEMORANDA age of total deposits for I 15 calendar days end- I with call date .$223,783 age of total loans tor I IS calendar days end-I with call date ___irned dlicount on Install- mau loans Included in Totarcabltah accounts .... NOTICE OP PUBLIC HEARING Notice. Is hereby given that a public „ hearing will be held by the Pontiac City “ Commission Hn, the Commlsslo* '■■■ - bers, City Hall, 450 Wide Trai “ * on Tuesday, June 3, 1969, ..... Eastern Standard Time, purpose of amending the Zonlnt Ordinance No. 944, known as the Bi/Tldlng Zone Ordinance to rezone to Commercial n Office the following -described property: ■ -5ts 20, 21, 22, Assessor's Plat No. 27, Ity of Pontiac, Oakland County, i as prescribed by la tice Is hereby furth ly, the 13th day of . 1 Commissioner's C X will be required to sra s Drain Commissioner a 88=17 W 2. or cashier's check in the Per Cem (5'^H of |he bid '“’"quirld ee”«'30'' 8B"45'30" f2 feet, tt egmning. NE V4. bee 1.35 feet 8. , thence 863.65 center oi oecrion, tnence along •ight, radius 35 feet, chord N _______ I 21.64 feet, thenca f 22=17-20" W 121.60 feet, thence S 38*1! W 62.06 feet, thence S 41=10-30" E 103.5 feet to beginning. Part of SW >A of NE..U, baglnnlng i point distance E 363.22 feet 8. N 842.5 feet from center of Section, thenca along curve to right having radius of 35 feet, distance 22 feet, thence N 41=10-30" W 103.50 feet, thence S 32*38' W 63 feet, thence S 64=42'40" E 107.50 feet to beginning. imng. Part of SW t/4 of NE 'A, beginning at! Part of N '/! point distance E 370.14 feet 8. N 821.82,NE corner Lot . . r4r,fer of Sectloo, thencB N 1", thence S 88*30' \A feet, thence along curve's 88”35'15" V ■adius of 35 feet, distance 1=24'45" W 75 N 64=42-40" W 107.50 E 1324.42 feet, W 57 feet, thenc# S ning. to beginning. « That part ot *"= ' beginning at of "Supervisor' ' E 244 feet to , beginning at point . ice = 1 w vv 1510 feet 8. N 87*33' 61.50 feet from center of Section, s N 87=33' W 40 feet, thence N 74* 58'20" W 77.10 feet, thence N 15*37'30" W 286.90 feet, thenca E'ly along Shore of Big Lake 200 feet, thence S 1=26' B 267.60 feet to beginning. That part of N 714 feet of W Vs of SW . . —. ...|^ Hillman Subdivision" 88»31'35" 1=24'45" .. .. ............... .. E 1324.42 fact, thenca S 75 feet Ing. Part of N Vk ot NW 'A, beginning . ■ ■' at from NE con _____Jt No. 1324.42 feet, ..................................... 88=31-30" W 1324.42 feet, thence N -*24'45" W 75 feet, thence N 88=31'35" 1324.42 feet, thence S 75 feet to begln- , lying E ot "h and North ot to„------------ NW 22 lying South of Big Lake Road; also the East 17 feet of that part ot Lot 21 lying North of Big Lake Road; also Lots 23, 24 8. 25: Also Lots 32, 33 1, 34: and Lots 37 thru 43 Inclusive of 'Supervisor's Piet No. 1" (of James I. iubbard Unrecorded Plat). The following are In Section,29 fi Vj Of SE 'A. .1 % Vj of NE 'A of SE> 'A. waters of JBIg Lake. ■31'^' begffi- Acting I W'ly Dated Oakland O DANIEL W. BARRY ty Drain Commissioner for the County Of Oakland 23, 1969 ih day of April, 1969 HEADQUARTERS 295 Laniise3|iB Sixa u{ Hardy, Northern Grown EVERGREENS Big Selection BARBERRY Extra Large in Leaf 13.S0 Par Dozen PERENNIALS Giant Selection that Flowers Year After Year Be*t for Rock Garden$ Over 45 Varieties From 59® At Lon^ Last WHITE DIRCH TREES Single Stem . . ^13*** Double Stem .^19^** Three Stem . . *24” Leafed Out and 8 to 10 Feet High TOMATOES F1HYRRIDS Burpee Big Boy Ball extra eqriy. Big, mature plants to give you juicy red fruit weeks earlier than most. Grown in 4-inch pots. 49 c EACH am torn mm! eoamisuism! HUTRO AZALEA-EVERGREEN Food Plus Syottmie Insect Control. High-orcanjc, iron-rich formula with 14 plant foods guaranteed. ProlecU azaleas against attacks oi aphids, Ifafhoppers, thrips, spider mites, lacebugs and whitoflies. Insecticide can’t wash or blow away. Feeds and protects up to four weeksl 2kti-1b.,boi(feedsA m- protocts5plants. . . . 3pl.03 10-ib. box feeds & protoeli 10 plants all^ 20-lb. box feeds & protects 20 plants all $7.95 ■ TRIPLE ACTION ROSE CARE e Faeds roses • Protsets reset against sucking insactf e Prevents weed seedlings from germinating $495 I A. fcox fMcff «nd profMta 30 ro TAKES m WORK OUTOF WEEDING! • Nutro Weed & Feed kills *35 different weeds, including the ones in your yard! e Contains 2,4-D and Banvel D, fast-action v^eed kiilers. , • High ^jitrogen lawn food to green up grass! I6,000iq.ff. $|T.95 (64-lb. bag) Good towns make good neigMiorsI RITTERS FARM MARKETS . 322^ W. Huron St. 681-0144 OPEN T DAYS 6676 Dijeie Hwy. Clarkston 615-4740 D—3 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 Clock Repair 4ntigiie Clock « Speciali$u ISl $. Bair*, BirminKtiam 646-7377 Tribal Council Set I DOWAGIAC (AP) -rk, progress report on the 1795 treaty, I^OS ANGELES (AP) Bus Driver Is Chdrged Less Wheat Seen - Bust^itires on A Look at TV LANSING (AP) - Mit^Wgan’a le bus lacked tread, winter Wheat crop now is fore-bf the Potawatomi Indians of er Leroy Beebe, driver of the j and we^ unfit for driving in I cast at 23.86 million bushels, 25 Indiana and Michigan Inc. is bus in which three Girl Scouts wet wither. iper cent smaller than'the 1968 expected to be one of the high- died when it plunged over aui Beene and 21 others were in-1 crop. The State Crop Reporting | lights of the general council embankment last Saturday, haSjjured. He is free on hl^ own re*fjService said a cut in the acre-i meeting here Sunday. The tribe been charged,with three misde-|cognizance. The charter bus age planted ^nd sleet and ice will also award college scholar- meaner counts of manslaughter.!was owned by Orange Belt Line, -------*•--------------------- ships to several Potawatomi,'. * „ * jof Visalia. high school seniors. , i ’l'*’® district attorney’s office! —---------------j------ accused Beebe of Bakers-1 The average U.S; votdrs in- Reruns Cause Problems By CYNTHIA LOWRY AR Television-Radio Writer Mercerization gives cottbnlfield of failing to properly in-1 come is estimated at $10,000 per 'more luster and strep^th. Ispect his equipment, dlaiming year. damage both reduced the crop^ NEW YORK-Summer reruns potential. n.narnus long-term training offici 10 $10,000 per year to Mills ■ reaFestate ^ SALES MANAGER lie of rn^ar^lng^ 15 or^ , g'ood position. Call Cl at Mills Real Estate. «f ON AND AFTER THIS date. May 16, 1969, I will not be> responsible for any debts contracted by any other than myself. Cecil G. Ramey, 1Q6 Union St., Pontiac, Michigan. , ,_________V :\ WIG -PARTIES. Wigs by Caldcran.! WILL THE LADY WHO talked to the lady or the lady who found half toy female poodle, at Glenwood's Kmart phone 681-1733._____________ Lost and Found 5 ANYONE FINDING A SET Of 1963 Ford car keys with 1880 penny, please contact The Pontiac Press. 332-8181, ext. 241. REWARD. LOST: BEIGE PURSE, containing Aimportent papers. Reward. FE 4- OST: BEAGLE, Answer "MItzl", vicinity of Elizabeth L end Scott Lake Rd. 682r0357. BUSINESS /LEADER , We need asman who hat the ability to ^ogress and ^ take on additional responsibility Manaegr, Pontiac Press Box, C-4, Pontioc. Our employees know of this BODY SHOP FOREMAN " Now car Dealership Oakland CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH talneble In 7 to 10 year*, MANAGEMENT OPPORTUNITIES 'epresentative. Theta U unlimitid management;!1?* J" — earing Po»i>>]l'*l«»lf2[.jhlgh| I&|H‘bIp Wanti^Mnl^ WE ARE LOOKING FOR AN Experienced Used Car ' t I SatSsman Who Intends to make 815,000 or belter a yearl An ex-perleeced salesman , whg:> It hospitallzatian, profit sharing plan. Demo and vacation, sea Tommy Thompson, Used Car Oept. at Shelton Pontlac-Bulck-Opel, iSS S. Rochester Rd„ Rochester!_____________________ 6{Help Wunfad Female ^7iKelp Wanted Ftiiiale 71 [full time kitchen help, eves.'PAYROLL TYPING and general of-i and days, Rocco't, 5171 Dixie Hwy.i flee work, cell 625-5381. | .________________________________RELIABLE WOMAN FOR generall lORILLiCOOK. DRAYTON A&W, 4355. house cleaning, 4 to 6 hours per' I Dixie Mwy. '_________ _________day, must have, own transportation. GENERAL OFFICE?'- TypIsL good _ ?5>50M: _ __ __ phone voice essential, Mrs. Zetyc, REGIONAL OFFICE OF large Ml 7-im Chudik's of Birm. " Eastern tile Insurenee Co. seeks GENERAL OFFICE, retalf lewelry' experienced end qualified •tecretery i : store, immediate opening Ex-, work in modern Southfield i perlence helpful to handle functions' building locetjon. Excellent fringe; I as ceshWFf" credit ^duties, light benefits and 37'/s hr. weak. 353-0404' typing and book---------------- *""* Permanent position. 5 —, ______________ __________________ Call tor appointment. F.E 2-2.501, Miss for large center city Person-i Mr. Arthur, . ' —............ --- ---------■' (.iRKEPTIONJSTj *" **btlc’—'wei wiii train.Tight! Salary ' ap6n. Call Mr. company, as We era expanding Michigan end other states. rrs In business with' $450 million assets, prestige office fecHifiesTL“?;'®' I. .na . (In. Fuuitatinn PUIOe. not necessary., I our own training .program. ' ..........ef Two Hundred Million; , , Dollars in llstlngs^ throughout the i,'state. Methbers ■' — 'e. rnslriantial mull WAITRESS, DAYS, Lunch 0 ___________ ..lultiple listing service.' 'LPubllshers of the Michigan Business Guide, i All Inqirles strictly con-[^“’•L'J^'fidenliall. Ask for Ward E. Partridge men. Call ,^55 ^ ^uron St., Phone 681-2111._________ RETIRED 1 TOOL MAKERS, ile makers, machinists. Part or full 9 Woodward. r Ricky'i MANAGER AND MANAGER trainee, full end part time attendants, for, Kayo Service stations, rapid promoflaps for right men. Contact: .Mr. Gardner at 625 Orchard Lake .Rd„ or call 338-770? Is M. 6234B65.'__________. BROWN PURSE with mbie passport. E I v I r 1 ' d, 15 Moreland. LOST: POODLE, gray top ni mivture of black, ansv ■sy," reward, 612-66? .an Oakland' FE .. ------------ CEMENT FINISHER and laborer I _at_67M3jL__—-- j«,nfeic_ay_eft^aTt^?^ MANAGEMENT TRAINEE CHECKERS / I Mechanically Inclined, DETAILERS ’ ............... SPECIAL AAACHINE-AUTOA6ATION Opportunity —-------- LOST: YELLOW cat, hr- *■— ____ missing — _ , :. of Mark or Dwight St., FE 57644 before ?:30 e.m. ^®]8rC&PORATION '^'E^aF'opportunlty Employer' CLEAN-UP MAN needed. Good pu - dependable person. A^pply In Kxi, Blue Sky Orlve-ln Theater. REAL ESTATE EXPERIENCED MEN FOR BUSY, BUSY OFFICE. GUARANTEED DRAW MEMBERS OF MLS. BUILDING PROGRAM PAID INSURANCE AND OTHER BENEFITS FOR CONFIDENTIAL INTERVIEW CALL Mr. Cross at 674-3107. , 693-6876. HOUSEi^EPER pari 2 HOURS DAILY f lo^Vp.m;'"'’ "inf knosm Co. Car necessary. No can- Must'like country living. Will vassing or party plan. Call before sider lady with a child. Call ____i______.____y# PiFl: Weekene A BAR IN LAKE ORION needs : HOUSEKEEPER ' WANTED, " yvai ressi nl^ts, full time, also transportation, rets, required. part time. MY 3-1701. 5513. A'wOMAN FqR gerjereT office work, housekeE^PE'R, cooking, t pleasant surroundings with con- char"'' ------------ Typing required, perl, U-A Rni, A5. Pontlsr T.__ Iiyu-lng, no r“*Marke*ts/i ■ and Snelllng. _____ ilTjiSHIRT PRESSiA/'guafantead wage, anq vacations,. Elite |- : Cleaners, 1024 N. WoodWardrRoyai irtfe , 33^ SECRETARY — Must, type^ opera' otiice machines, be good wh ; figures -end responsible. Contact I •ind res^s . __ I, Breech Enterpris i'. sTlacTTirl for private club, 3 Write Post Office Box 65, Pontiac giving complete intornriation.__ - ATTRACTIVE MODELING TYPE secretary part 62M267.___ ARE YOU- INTERESTED in pefsoivi SECi^ETARIAL HELP ..jw and expanding classic fabricator in Lake Orion Twp. HOUSEKEEPER, woman, call . Heeds secretarial a... .. flee personneli .Typing IN private Apply T. D. Shea.Mfg. I Wed. and Thurs. 'art. Woodward, help employed. *2^28M?*‘e«er 5 SEWER — MUST have experience In tine sewing of bridal wear. Full time position. Ml 7-1300, Mrs, , Zetye, Chudik's ------- Individual needed for fast growing middle sized company. 2 yrs. col-; lege or equivalent, salary commensurate with experience and ,__________, __________ SSi'’"ir"1'ipirin''’«?l,*Vy^^^ STATldN MANA- Industrles Inc., 28996 Wixom Rd.,|QEp $8 000 PER YEAR PLUS WIxom, Mich. An equal opportunity! f COMMISSION. MARRIED.' ItchbMrd,! days j **®- SALES EMPLOYMENT^ . COUNSELOR: a expanding. It you havi 1-9733. -------------------------------- „ „ .'ENTERS, LOST: TRI-COLORED Collie only, 674-4404. - Answers to Laddie. Reward. 338----------- BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there ware replioi at Tha-Preii ' Office in the following boxes: C-3, C-5( €-6, C-14, C-15, C-23, C-26, C-31, (M3, C-58, C-65. In Momdrinm LOST: CONTACTi a COOKS WANTED, shift, Apply 11,4 Or..,.a, top wages, paid Blu, experienced AFTERNOON MACHINE [SHOULD BE EXPERIENCED " Piurwardr^/s^ OPERATORS and WILLING TO TAKE ®*D®a^s.®l?rIm1.i:30. and equipment. RESPONSIBILITY, ALSO ME- ........... ........ ’ ........ ____lings on lathes, -....-........- ---------- grinders, automatic screw machine 1 LADY, 25 or 0 we train, 2nd shit. _________ _______________________________________________________________ be high school graduate and able;HOUSEKEEPER SITTER, llghtj public contact experience, to speel, wTite llegibly end rapidly. i housework, 2 school-aged children, train you. We are Fringe benefits, rotate Suqday and! live in preferred.’^642-1361 aft. 6! largest with 440 off holidays. Call between 9 a.m. and p.m. . 1 coast.’ Exceptionally - p.tn. Mon. through Fri. FE' jfj^ycHEN"^HELI^ "'‘s’ _Snelllng -------- 363-4121.________ ^ profit - old'boy. ___________PFERATDRS^ 4-2541. Call F LOST: 1. sandy ce ired Vi toy poo lie, shaggy ' ;ert parking College Men Htip Wanted Malt $S0 PER WEEK PART TIME ’ 2 men 21-45 to work 3 haw evening, 674-0520, 57 p.m. I immediate"'openings" *'«*b«s, fuAsjirAi aWD TIRE SPLL^ '“lers, automatic screw machine'-”»5l’lLHL MIVU lll\c ocll children. 5 days per wk. Gi production shapers. Will train ;klQ EXPERIENCE HOWARD'S ...... men with some experience. Dav ^ BABY SITTER in late 20s, live and afternoon shifts available with SOUTH SHELL, LONG LAKE . ,>335-7460. t I^XafpL ’and TELEGRAPy ROADS, oTt’J?*t MAN . WANTED FOR spare tlnrie BLOOMFIELD HILLS. area, after 5 p.m. Call 681-0725. ^ SALESMEN to ' COVER Oakland ® hoi^sekeeDtoa,'year" old boy n County selling a business service.. L"”. t.ic".2c «rtoncMrt»t Excellent ^ Wi^WrCUARDS EXPERIENCED ,i ■r ago todayi r missed by w wife and children. "I CLAWSON ARC WELDERS, $3.53 .... -------- metat fabricators, $3.38 hr. and assemblers, $3.33 hr. Good working 7 conditions and frlngn. See Gene,|F|RHDALE at Allen Cooler end"entilator Inc. l5.EpFOJf° 704 Woodward, Rochester, ^ch. ;.jpa7s.”"Fujr* Ave., call 33B^4054.V^ k RETIRED MAN, living EMPLOYERS Temparary Service, Inc. outboard motors. Call FE 55660. ; ilAN OR WOMAN offset, press operato^ Waterford'------- ----- —• Bietby S , ret. required, I xl op^rtunlty to ri MECHANICS Cars and trucks, also helpers. ... ply KEEGO SALES 8. SERVICE 3080 Orchard Lake Rd„ Keego Harbor. 682-3400. Equal, Opportunity Em-ployer |. tot an employment agency MECHANIC. If ,y ' Farm Visits far the Whale Family Sunday, Only 11 a.m. to .6 p.m. See Baby lambs galore, new piglets, baby chicks being hatched dally. Enloy goats as they walk overhead on their own bridge. Try milking the cows, teed the ducks, geese, chickens, goats Watch —— —— , 2-.30 dinners Burchased. Fat... _______ — tours: Children 25 cents, adultl 75 cents. UPLAND HILLS FARM 401 LK. GEORGE RD. Tkke Walton E. to Adams h end. Fellow signs to term. DOORMAN FOR vfc tan'ny health n ,|^ J Baldwin Birmingham. 647-5800. Ask bOsis" Iri In'sSiai ---------- Warner, I Iik“?3. DIE MAKER machine art time [jle repair on small progressive Itton'' Tn / ™ Automatic Press Produ lY!.-.®*" Elizabeth, Lake Orion. DESIGNERS MEN FOR LANDSCAPE work. Jacobsens Garden Town, Lk. Orion, Bruce Jacobsen._______ MEN FOR. LAWN CUTTING ■ ---- 673B797.___^__________ re a mechanic eek 4|uare-‘--n handle. Pinkerton's INC. n full and part-time BEAUTY OPERATOR, full time, good working conditions. Lake Orion. 693-3071. ■* uniforms furnished. To BARAAAIO, DAYS. 1 Interview Friday May 16th at M.E.SX. office, 242 Oakland, Pontiac. 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. An equal opportunity---------- ‘ SERVICE STATION i I, steady or pert time, will; Morey's Golf 5 Country BEAUTICIAN, EXPERIENCED, part time end full time. 693 8284._ BEAUTY OPERATOR wanted, I, paid vacations. Con-1 Dempsey Key Punch An Equal^Opportimity Employer KITCHEN HELP Key Punch we Need EXPERIENCED OPERATORS For Immediate Temporary Assignments ______ 334-2471 for ap-i pointment. _ i SALESLADY MUST LIKE children and have friendly personality, over 25. Kendal's. FE 50322_ , SHAMPOO GIRL Thursday, Fridays and Sats. License required, 851- .. __ .... equaV op PORTUNITY EMPLOYER. YPIST ' ^ STENOS AMERICAN GIRL ,42-3055 725 S. Adams, B'hjm . TED'S , Ppntiac Mall __Manpower 332-8386 excellent working days or Holidays. Hospitalization, life Insurance end sick pay benetits. Ap0ly In person only. conditions and fringe b---- ply Auburn Heights Mfg. Co., 2481 j Leech Rd., Avon Twp., E. Adams Rd., N. of Auburn Rd._ ARE YOU INffRESTED ----------. ( with p Bfits, overtime, ledy year round work. - . | CLYDE CORPORATION W. Maple , Troy ,n Equal Opportunity Employer ; DESIGNffiS' S“iro*m,TndM:?i"?.st*;JSi detmlers-checkers Theatre Bldg.) MECHAtllCAL engineer Rapidly growing company needs engineer, capable of being m charge o( and responsible for specifying and designing production processes and equipment. Preventive maintenance program and ell related projects. Tremendous opportunity for Individual Ingenuity and responsibility. Compensation commensurate with capability and experience. P. 0. Box 275. walled Lake, Mich, 48088. i Jack SERVICE STATION~attendant7"Mrd Beauty -- - - shift. Apply In person, Jim's Tel- Albert's Unton Lake Salon, "tool corner of Square Lake and bakeRY SALESWOMAN, :kers, P":__ - l™e, ^no evenings^ or Sun. Salesmen' ■ KITCHEN help Grill Caoks and Bus Girls Dey end evening shifts. Good ELIAS BROS. ■ BIG BOY RESTAURANT _ -------- ---------------- Telegraph 8, Huron WAITRESS. FULL TIME evenir,. light " ASSEMBLY Vnd packaging j Rocco's. 5171 Dixie _Hwy, work. Full time day. shlft.^ Ex-| » career opportunities ft Building Materials Tires Shoes TV-Stereo Box C-3S, Pontlec, 383?.”' ‘ DEBT-AID, Inc. tow. Huron FE 2-0181 Licensed & Bonded Serving Oakland County____ LESSONS IN STRIPPING ofd paint from furniture. Applications now being taken for class beg. Mov 24th. 86 per person for complete course. 363-9361. CustonwAntlque Retinishing._ ^ Tose weight 's Bros. Drtigs. . POODLE CLIPPING 8620 Airport Rd. _____ Yamaha Music Courst classroom end t teachinjis. For . A TROY AREA SHOP Needs men over 20, mechanically Inclined, In good health who went steady Jong term employment. 3 Drill Press 3 Stock Men 2 Trainees Co. pays full fringes plus rettre- $3.14 AND UP CALL FOR. INTERVIEW 3440586 ASSEMBLERS Electrical wiring and _ parlance desirable, shop working 45 hours, all ’ benetits McCOSH, 689-4510, operators, table layout man, apply at Personnel Office, Suiter Pro-- ■ Co., 407 Hadley St., Holly, DRAFTING TRAINEES Tools—Dies—Machines [mIll oPERAfoRsI"” radial ' Body Fixtures ' ®?®™'..................— [OVERTIME benefits; I Parliament Design, Inc. I Mien.____________________ '1945 Helde, Troy 689-9630 MODERN PLASTIC plant n « h".lltu?"i',l"p?yto”''pe for advan^^ American Plastic Products CivTs^s sa"gM .- E-Tr^lENclDr"^ftPE“NfER; NEW AAA COMPANY Apply PERSONNEL DEPT. 2ND FLOOR Montgomery Ward Mile, Birmingham. Ml 4-7114. BOOKKEEPER - RECERTIONIS T S in. Physician's otfi|;e, bookkeeping medical experience not necessary. Reply to Pontiac Press, Box C-30. COOK DAY OR NIGHT SHIFT IMMEDIATE OPENINGS TED'S y Fox Dry ...T TEMPORARY ' CALL MANPOWER I WAITRESS WANTED '^evenings. reluming experieNCEO ed, good pay l.. Apply McDaniel ......... .JT . Saginaw, _Holly, JMIch. __ excellent" “opportunity tor young men with some drafting training to work in mechanical engineering department of North Woodward Corp. In reply please give resume of education end experience. Reply to Box C-10, Pon-| guaranteed income, r .clean cut and goo< ■. DeLlsle, 673; benefits. Mon, only, 9 •' PONTIAC MALL S ^ An equaj^opporlunlly employer ' SERVICE STATION attendant, - full or part time, morning, experienced. Walled Lake area 624- we 1 ^ondTlions. Apply WOMAN FOR COUNTER a m -12.00 a.m. No marking department, steady I ■ 404 I*. Cass. ( " - - Midnights. ^len Acresy i4C3o w. Silberbei' ”L.P;N. $3.50 Per Hour ^o’r afternoon shift. ^ ^ O i benelHs. Union ifake area. EM 3- informalion fbil UL '2-3410. 6'2’. WHOLESALE COMPANY WANTS LUNCH WOMEN womAaI' p^os'lVfoN®iBlVfT?U Wanted, full or part time, exceilenL^ORK WIlK FIGURES AND TAKE, opportunity for housewives and phonE ORDERS ESSENTIAL., young marrieds to earn money for /average TYPING 'ACCEPTABLE.; those little extrei., AppUl In this IS A PERAAANENT POSITION-i person; in PLEASANT SURROUNDINGS; COWBOY JACK'S r app7y mr ^ ’Zll_Cr°okL_£d-___7n®y'.JZi®*l!??®|KURZMANN, HAROLD PAPER CO.,'j MEDICAL' ASSISTANT wanted for U737 ADAMS RD., AUBURN' of pay Doctor's office in P 0 n t la c HEIGHTS, ■ ly work P'’®'er»'}ly exp^lenced in X-rey wqman TO "LIVE“ln vVlth eldelly e. Free and EK6. 3359680. _ couple, light housework, good plain e, sIck'MATURE LADY tor counter, willing cooking, nice room and good holiday to accept responsibility. Good wages. 651-7642. i ‘WOMEN NEEDED FOR full time! “■ work. Apply Pontiac Laundry end ----- Dry Cleaners 540 S. Telegraph. BLOOMFIELD HILLS ^"^^4 =?s ^ar CLeTk TYPIST ^ -.-g^nW. ” ’’ , PONTIAC AREA I LLtKK-IT.rDI "AAATURP riv^ ' Must be neat ad attractive? $80 general office wk, booking ' 682-0307 can be made by rijaht girt. Family stenographic experience — .-.-..iTof. ' type restaurant. Apply In person, fuj, salary commensuMite with MACHINE P«fk Inn Restaurant, ?7S Orchard "elirc.*?''Mr: NVcIfoii; rtPFRATnRq : NOW A . DIRECT LINE FOR PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS PYLES INDUSTRIES an equal opportunity For information c ■pie, •lipp woiKing aa a enefits. THORESON- ENERGETIC A (cin ” softeners and cashIer-typist, I ------------mission. Call lor api ....,r -“j*i."p«s;i - ^®»> Ask for Mr. Norton. right for ei------------ Plymoutb-Rembler 4-3574. ! Orchard LekO;________ ' r to “NEAT appearing' YOUNG 'Man welder I between 19-25 years tor drl^r d doctor salesman, on established routes.' ---------' Salary pidt commission. Cell after Auto Cleon Up Man |~ With Soma Experience < to clean engine, exteriors, andj Interiors, lop waget paid. i 673^511 ____^_______OL 1-6853 Funeral Directors COATS DRAYTON ^^LAJNS 6744>46li wa^/7 0)™'^ ACCOUNTANT Expanding medium sized C.P.A. firm, with diversified Clientele. The Partners invite applicants presently In Industrial pr other, private Accounting to discuss with •us, or any member of our staff, the ^opportunities In Knight, C.P.A.'s, ^FACTORY WORKERS Needed Many lobs requiring No previous exerplence Factory workers, landscapers. Varehousemen, common laborers. Needed at Once! Young, Aggressive Experienced Auto Salesmen! tice Ms-'tssi'- _____ . fill our new car sales staff, SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT,; GJeenar *0 Ddrn top wages, full time, $2.25 per hr. Ex- i6w n. \ profit sharing,! perlenced. Part time $2.15 per Including Deipo and Telegraph and^LongjLk. Rd._^___ er" g'r”"m“a1'd* Service Technician Pontiac, .210 In' electronic field, 3 to 5 yrs. ex- Customer TRAINEES T-t 1 !■ a;. b‘ir../c*.* r.£i Relations tronic background must be bon-' deble, good sterling rate, /'~N1 1 Mechanical-Technical ( p-p 3 to 5 yrs. proctlcal exp., must be JX. exp. desired. Equal opportuniiyr personality to •'*-1 '"'♦h ih. nnhiin- ■employer. Reply Pontiac . Press' will likn fhl« v Box C-^8. ___■______ truck" DRIVER, LOCAL, experienced in turnllure. -- ledlate openings, days and ions, will Jrain reliable won ------- previous shop n Rdl!7"^*' : WANTED; . LADY I Pontiac F t¥ R- GENERAL CLERICAL 2921 Industrie 14-15 MHe fids., oft Coolige^Hwy. if'TnTERESTED CAL'l F=E’2-_.- WOMAN' fo'r generai office woi , 4Vi yr. old, mgre tor home than General Ambulance. Apply rbtT er*'' R'uoh"o««lls.'’'"’' " * _ rehgion) r [MATURE' LADY TO I,; WE NEED A mature saleslac 10^ enjoys selling tine clothes a , _____Please . - Mae Shop, FE 2-3m WOMEN FOR 5, 887-4683 or 3655729. 7, also light housework, more lor home then wages, call 334-5991, MEDICAL ' 'assistant, full ' tllTMf D 0 C tTo N od pay wltli PONTIAC Bthietto^br poUtTcaMy minded. Must ... —. -ii.— ujv, nee* 18 yeai OFFICE. Prefer " letic or polltlce.., . Intelligent, sharp. Salary 83.60 p For personal intervi ™ Cell Mr. Becker From 9-1 | needed schedules avatleble. work. Day or evening NURSE FOtf DOCTORS office near “ontlac General, non-smoker, stale le etc. Apply to Pontlec Box C- , BOAT RIGGER, f Huntoon n Oakland Ave. SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtful Service" VoorheeGSiple CtoiBtery Loti 2 LOTS A BRIDGEPORT OPERATORS, Machine Tool BUILDERS Excellent apportunity growing company In - automation, with a lory -rer DAILY PAY EMPLOYERS T«mporary Service, Inc. 266U^Grand°'’ rtn''.'rrp I consider 1 epprenllci paid vacations, etc. A FERNDALE REDFORD CLAWSON CENTER LINE GRINDER HANDS, experienced, ■’1 grinding, steady 58 h~ trinuei. 3364523. _record, cell 7-9 P.m., 6956567,_ OPENINGS FOR COLLEGE studenfl r.n,. u.u.r. tor light manufacturing plant. Ap--P!v Birmingham tjydriiul''* E ^'OM* Si ■i_It.__ miTV KIj OPPORTUNITY. NATURE cenlerj ler Pontlec needs caretaker. 1 ilery plus residence. GENERAL HELP For metals ip . FOR SALE: Two Cemetery spaces sTas util. MABinrial 1 ► li'VING AWAY J. M. SMALL ' CLYDE CORPORATION A subsidiary of Chicago Pnaumatic Tool Co. 10 W. Mapla, Trov 842"3200 Pontiac Press ; Want Ads For Action :ileip WantBd Male 6Help Machine Operator® And Trainees' For LATHES. , MILLS GRINDERS Lynd Gear Inc. Subsidiary of Condec Cqrporatjon phone 651*4377 “ ^ 361 SOUTH STREET ROCHESTER. MICHIGAN An equal opportunity employer GUARDS FULL AND PART TIME LOCAL OPENINGS TOP UNION SCALES CALL^OLLECT. 1-568-4150 hardinge chucker operator, benefits. Apply I; Liberal -fK., petson, oeni Corp. 2870 Industrial ROW, Troy. ' INSPECTOR Experienced prelerred. Mechin ---d wages, overlinr its. Precision Automi 6 5. Blvd. East, Pc JEWELRY SALESMEN^^^^ Creatlva selling ability required. Permanent position. Call tc' ’■ torvlewx'Mr. Nixon, LI 1-8241. MyIr'S JEWELRY SHOI _________ROYAL OAK________ fringe b Is Parts " PARTS DRIVER willing to learn peris business. . -days. Contact Bill Spain, 6851025, Ven.Camp Cheyrolet. Milford. PLANNING AID CITY OF TROY _ Bedrooms. 334-4W3. TURRET LATHE OPERATOR STEEL SAW OPERATOR DRILL PRESS OPERATOR Needed- tor test ^r< employment. Conlecf .. '"'“pnVs'^iNDUSTRiEr 28990 WIxom- Rd. ilddle nonseasonal Audit Gletk (.This Is a position for a woman Who has an aptituda ior figuras and likas accounting work. Apply ^ PERSONNEL DEPT. 2nd FLOOR I Montgomery TIAC OFFICE. J WORK, days, Sailboats, Inc. U - ;hesler. WANT ______ reel estate. I 1 contact Mr. George at W I T H ^BdOK;KE'EPrNG background and experience with ■accounting machine, immediate posIHon. Call FE 2-9251 and ask — “ W PART, TIME—full time weekends -you name it—we need YOU! Company benefits. Paid vecellon. Apply Mn person— ELIAS BROS. BIG BOY RESTAURANT _ Teleg^raph f H^ron ■'t€?:HNIcrAT orthoWlc Wjee. D^alls_33e-71I5. Help Wanted M. or F. 8 OFFICE '"nurse “F^'R~physiclan, *ljl2v replies to include*^ person dele, Call Mr. Foley, refs., and experiences. Reply to °R_4 ®J Salary 83.60 per hi 'or personal interview I. _ II Mr. Becker at 9650088 9- IX C-59, REAL ASSISTANT manager, John Work In alt phases of ning. Excellent opporf"' the lob training. [ glannln^ .xp.H.n« r. have drafting experler av°eTRd?*froyI"689-' opportunity tor on benefits. Apply ix'om,'Michigan 48096 I \hT - e^ual opportunity; VV ara “ PONTIAC MALL equal opportunity empio 0. R. TECHNICIANS ISfL.?..' eek training course. Reply P.O. aRE you REALLY LIVING? Or! 1 526. Pontlec, Mich. lust existing? Call Mr. Foley, order' filler' FOp „Y0RK real EST^E _67«^^ established retail, office supplier, ATTENTION interesting Work 4»-;hrs.-per week. Mliciziiuiz > , Some overtime possible, several; COLLEGE STUDENTS ! ■ ■ Mr. Long, 332-3826, before 1 OAKLAND UNIVEizsifY. Imrnedrete. 8”"Mlto Mila Rd.g e and Operator, _____ ________ Lake Orlon-Oxford irea. Chauffeur license required. 693-2801 between 9 a.m.-4 p.m. USED AUTO PARTS Experienced yard men and cutlers wanted. Full —• . Top wages. PRODUCE time. A| Highland ixu. rir072/Cj)rky Orfwine, - Pointing and Decorating 23 LISTING .WANTED Wa need listings In tha Kaat Harbor area. For quick service i selling your home plaasa call Leona Loveland, Realtor 2100 Cass Lake Rd.. 882-1255 Oakland and Macomb Counties,I INTERIOR AND EXI Salary or drawing acr---------•' , available. Commensurate oi ,ty. PENN, I ‘ l» MONTHLY - 8800 DOWN buys Townhouses. 1337 Cherrylawn, 3» Beat Howoie famMied 3 BEDROOM HOME it Bat near Petoaky. By « NEW APARTMENTS • and 2 badroam apartments, 8183 ■ — - pets allowed. taion. For Information write owner, 8523 Saihabaw Rd., Drayton, Plains. ROOM, NEAR nospltsl. Srova, raftig,, c«rp« ano drapts. 8100 mo. Prafar employed i lady or couple. No children, i RefarcncaS^raquIrad, Pontiac Priss' Ftreplacn carpeting, draparlav air conditioning, itova, refrigerator furnished. Plus sll utlliP-- --------* sleetricity. *CalL aftsr 5 Drayton es^exM^ American Heritage Apartments building. Complattly conditioning, lots of ---- „— ALL UTILITIES INCLUDED IN RENT. " C U S T O.M CRAFTED" APPLIANCES B Y HGTPOINT Adults only, no pets. 873-5188. 'BLOOMFIELD MANOR WEST Newly completed luxury apartments, ' Hotpoint slectrlc appilancas featured. Carpeting and drapes Modal open ....................... Rochester Michigan Rochester Manor County living within mlnutas of tha City. Those ——- ^—-------- feature swln carpeting an rafrlgarator i. _______ features. 1 child under ,s i Walcdiqe, 1 bedroom $1«. nb p« Taka RoChtster road to Ron Rd., Parkdala to 812 Plata Rd. . quire at Manager's office. 851-7772 from ig a.m. to 7 p.m. REFRIGERATOI Ri|irtHaa utilities, 738 W. Huron St. Rent Houeei, fgriiiiiieii 39 BEDROOM TENANT housa ountrv estate. C o m o I e 11 FREE RENTAL _______________ .. landlords, reliable tenants waiting, ART DANIELS REALTY, 1230 N. Milford Rd. MU 5-1587.___ ' INDIANWOOD, LAKE ORION naar, water, mainrenanca. - luwii-housai, 1337 Charrvlawn, 335-8171. Agent, ■ HOUSO^-FOR elderly coupla --------- —king couple, II tboyi 10-12 luW |e^ Lake Cattagee BEAUTIFUL VIEW eq river 3 hours 3 BEDROOMS, no bssamant, stove and refrigerator, children and pats welcome, close to 1-75 and Unlvarsity pr. l yr. lease, sec. da^„ raf. required. Avail. Junt 1st, BEDROOM BRICK FARMHOUSE, Romao-.lst and last .months r ROCHESTER AREA guest housa. child, 185 ir NICE, . CLEAN I -7802. p.m._______' LAKE FRONT 2 _B E^^.RO 0 M , Reasonable I 3^2.___________________ TORCH LAKE cottage - NICE ROOM, FOR RENT .With kitchen privileges, singla girl .from 10 to 28, location. near Nortliarn High Schiol. call 8837884. Oakland Ave. 8105 par mo. or 825 a weak, 338-0837. FOR MEN, near Pontiac Fisher Bodyi FE S-GOSt- 815 Reom^ NICE CLEAN ROW h meals. Call 335-1879. Rent Store* r. Foleys , ,R 4"0363-_______________ 'People ,-who want t business for themselvesr time basis. Call 338-1229. Restaurant manager capable of assuming responsibility. Top salary to qualified person. Sund resume to Pontiac Press Box C-32. ICHOOL BUS DRIVERS wanted, fui or part time, Blooniflald Hlll< Public Schools, call Mr. Thomas. 332-0482, • ----------- ----------- 2 MANAGERS for large con a«c. potential, *4,500. Call I-..., King, 332-9157, Associates . Parson- n this a ^ NEED 10 PEOPLE ................. now, to call on homes and businesses. You can make *2.00 profit en a fast *8.0O sale, we show ' Delaware, Flint 88508. Phona CE 5- 3 GENERAL OFFICE POSITIONS, will train If you type, 1310. Call Pat ■■ Cjary, 332-9157, Associates FREE MOVIES kge 18-80, full or part time, coo-lesslons, cashier, day help, ushers, lea your favorite movies. FREE Vith vour family on 7880. between SALIs EMPLOYMENT counselor; ‘"e are expending. It " lUs people and hava fTubllc contact axper lnga°flrst ye8r.'"sneTllno end Sneii- Employment Agencies have you? B & B AUCTION Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2717 ] allied Misceilaneous n, 352-3000, Choate A Choati WANTED: Singla maple bed and; ser or rollaway bad in real condition. 862-2178.___________________ CLERK TYPIST - *380. Call Sue, 352-3000, Choate 8. Choate, Inc.______ FRONT DESK — *800. Call Pat " I, 352-3IX)0, Choate 8, Choate, Wanlied ta,^nt _________ 3 BECIB.OOM APARTMENT or si GAL FRIDAY -I Mrs. Fc- ' I Choate. Scollon, 1903 C. Vt lar, Houghton, Mich. 89931. our nioht oft iMEDICAL .MISS — Type. Call Jill, after 3 n m .l 352-3000, Choae 8. Choate Inc. -s'SkyDrive in'Theatre, 215o Opdyke, Pontiac. ___________ . 2-BEDROOM HOME, north of Poh- FREE CLASSES Men or women wanted. Ea'rn while ■ you labrn. We have 8 offices, 200 salespeople who can't ba wrong. Call today; MILLER BROS. REALTY 333-7156 R:el LIKE LIFE Is passing you - --------- Foley, YORK REAL PUBLIC RELATIONS $600 UP ^ RAY PAYS CASH FOR HOMES .Colonial Village East ALL CASH IN 48 HOURS WE ACCEPT 30 DAY LISTINGS GUARANTEED SALE 674-4101 Rent for $190 Monthly Buy for $171 Monthly 1800 SCOTT LAKE ROAD between Dixie Highway and ______Watkins t ----- EMBASSY WEST Spacious 1- and 2-bed -and *175, no pets or ch Schultz, 878-0589. 1 to 8 SECRETARY — Pontiac area, JSOO.'ADC MOTHER Call Carol. 352-3000, Choate &; rhiirir.n Choate. *Vl}. Cell ESTATE, Oil _____________ fllRIhfG MEN and women for d formica, Immadlati VETS Assistant, *300. < YORK REAL ESTATE, OR 8-KEY SHOP OPERATOR a necessary. Wa Work Wanted Maie _____ Salas experience ------------ Full tima and part time openings. Retirees welcome. Attractive com- CONTACT: MR. ALLARD, 83) 9358; MR. PEISCHL, 882-8218. , kitchenTielp ; 7 CAR HOPS ^ FULL TIME ONLY, DAYS-EVES ^ APPLY IN PERSON ROCHESTER BIG BOY OFFICE MANAGER knowledge of bookkeeping, notch with references. 624-4515 must be toj^ notch w (^NTED 'EXPERIENCED waiters or 'waltreesses. Apply in person Franklin Hills Country Club. 31675 Sales Help Male-Female 8-4 'appraisers SALESMEN TRAINEES C..: Ot'o" School district, avallsbia. Fee ,5, 587-1187. mTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ;3 OR 8 BEDROOM HOME. Call oTl mn c lA/nnOium-rl B'ham S82-8288 8-2052. ______________ 2 wall behaved _____^^n would Ilka to find a home. Would BEDROOM home,, 2 boys, ' 7 yrs, 652-1587,__ — ' — ---------- T-\ 1—I IT m 4512 DIXIE HWY. DRAYTON (j-RtAT Please call 332-5118. I, 352- Instructions-Schooli BUSINESSAAAN NEEDS efficiency ----*----* Unfurmshed, with ■•iriaerator. In Lake __________ Pontiac or Troy Call Mr. LIdan at 338-8771 between 9-----—- - -- \ CARPENTER WORK, additions, siding, roofing, cement. Bill Dew, State License. FE 8-2198 or FE 8- 1-1 carpenter, large 0 lobs. Celling tile, pane recreation rooms a spaclali KRESGE MANAGER wants 3 m house near Draylon _____OR 3-3813.___________ RETIRING'~SeAviCEMAN desires to lease 3 or 8 bedroom homo with -------- and ^ara^a, preferrably RESPONSIBLE COUPLE - desires I HOUSE PAfNTING, light hauling odd lobs. 335-1833 or 332-5388. LfGHT HAULING, t vlLIGHT MAULING or. delivery by - Ink rail »fl*r A B m. 139. PATOT^LASTERING, all kind*. SMALL JOBS, BRTcK, blocks ar ' le, *5 per hour. Specializes nneys, and porches, 825-;j75l. Work Wanted Female IRONING AND Sewing War > adult V I child. WANT TO SELL your home CASH? Then call John Moss O'Nell Realty, 478-2222 or 383-8089 tor —mpt, quick, professional service. have a buyer for your property. SPOT CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA, OR OTHER, FOR QUICK ------- CALL NOW. HAGS REALTOR, OR 8-0358 i OAKS iiAPARTMEI'iTS From $165 Mo. Apartments, Furnished 37 ROOM APARTMENT for 1 adult, newly decorated, efficiency unit, ... *•— 10 pelf ■—■- FE2-I 2 ROOMS ANO BATH,. small c welcome, $25 per weak with Inquire at 273 Baldwin A . 1- and'2-bedroam apartments SIDING ALUM. VINYL AND ASBESTOS AWNING-PATIOS tCREENED-IN OR GLASS ENCLOSED EAVES TROUGHING Wa Bring ^factory to Yc FAST SERVICE - QUALITY - TERMS CALL NOW - DAY O R < NIGHT-881-2500-TERMS DEALER-ASK FOR BOB OR RED Aiuminum Siding Antenna Service BIRCHETT ANTENNA SERVICE 1-A, Auburn Heights Paving Tennis courts, parking lots, driveways. Guaranteed, FE 5-8983, -R 38I328. ESTIMATES. FE 5- AAA ASPHALT PAVING Call 336-8058. —Living r blinds ^ ^ ^ 2 ROOMS, ADJ JULTS t FE 5-389 —Full ceramic bath —Hotpoint appliances —Eys-level range and I Refrigerator —Disposal ASPHALT PARKING LOTS and I roadways, same location I 1920, -also sellnig asphalt ■. Ann Arbor Construction Co, tiac. 39M173. CEMENT WORK TTioney! Boat seats, covers, car seats. FE 5H)754. Free estimates. All types: -drives, walks, floors, patios, brick and block work, guaranteed. No lob too large or small. 827-3087. Jantiorinl Services WALLS, WINDOWS WASHED, bai» ment cleaned, free ast. 336-3827. Landicnplng CEMENT WORK, drives, patios, porches, ate. Licensed and bonded. Phona Pontiac, 391-3518: CEMENT OR STONE sSawalla raln-foresd with Iron rod. 383-8088. 1-A MERION BLUE SOO, pickup Ot dal. 8843 Sherwood. 828-2000. CEMENT WORK of all kinds. 33S^ 1889. A-1 COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, specializing In retaining walls. Free astimatas. J. H. Waltman Landscaping. 338-8314. AAA LANDSCAPING, for better CEMENT, BLOCK AND REPAIR 873-7278 or UL 2-8751. ! COMMERCIAL. INDUSTRIAL and MILLS ROOFING CO, V and price*. 88281208; GUINN'S CONST. CO. _ 338-7877 or 391-2871 __ CONCREJE FOOTINGS, walls, ,fl ■and masonry! 851-1984 t .... SPRING CLEANUP, ___________ raking, cut weekly. Schoansea'i ■ —------- *52-2387. Work ar 8283587. QUAETtY AAASONRY, BRICK, block and stone, veneers, ----------- fireplaces, etc, 87381987. IAN'S CERAMIC TILE, tiata floors, marble sills. Install In homes, old or new. Free est, 878-8381, 825-1501. ' MERION SOD, undargr,. CUSTOM DRAPERIES meda to sprinkler, dal, or laid. 887-9875. order. Call 828-8857. ___________i Ig — • - IMS LAWN AAAINTENANCE, Spring and fall clean ups. Cutting, fertilizing and spraying. 873-3992. CLARKSTON GREENS Sodding or sod dallvary. 338-5888 COMPLETE LANDSCAPING Sodding, seeding, shrubs. Licensed Nursery Man. 882-7850. DETKOWSKt BROS. Marion B I u . sod, pick up and dal., sod depot > open 8 a.m, 7 days wk, 874-3727. Dellvarad. 882-1908 after 8 LANDSCAPING, fertll k alterations. ! ASPHALT PAVING Residential and commercial dresses, 335-820^ Mrs: Spbaske. alteratjons^all types, knit. Fertilizing. price In our work tr coats. 882-9533. ^NG COUPLE THAT fights only 2 , on Saturday night-housebroken 2-year-old single housa rental. Call I jy Norton! I The Press, FE 2-8181, Share Living Quarters 33 2 ROOMS AND BATH, no Children Wonted Ifem Estate l^to 50 I OTS, ACL FARMS, BUSINESS I. S30 p k plus personable anc tessional.^ Hera Profit Sharlh'g elo Noiwil^CAR^^ foTrchlld In air yoS: 8 hrs. or less par day. 8 TRACT. WARREN STOUT, Realtor i 450 N. Opdyke FE S-8185 Urgently nead lor Immedleta laltl 335-0823. Sanford-PIka ai w. Off.? iServices Suppiies 13 M. A BENSON COMPANY I 2. Paid Hospitalization 3. Paid Life Insuranci 8, Paid Vacations 5. Free Training 8 .Bonus Plans I. Monthly Contest Prizes >. Free Supplies D. Potential of 812,000 820,000 your first yea,' . bllloni-' J°yo measured ^ 549 N. Saginaw PHONE: 334-2521 OPEN 8 to 5 - Saturdays to LOW OVERHEAD ' CASH AND CARRY PRICES PERSONALIZED SERVICE FOR OVEH 47 YEARS ALWAYS MORE FOR' LESS SKILL SAWS, 8W' ..... 833.9 MEDICINE CABINET REG. *88 ANNETT Needs Listings recent booming rogram, we need listings all types of ROOMS AND decorated, private I carpeted hallway, facllltias, private PUikhih, unMuea furnished. From *35 wk., from *00 d«^sJt;J35-213^ _ ROOMS AND BATH. 837.» iw weak, *100 dap. 873-5092. I 3 ROOMS, ALLlltllitlairpaild ! Security dap, required. FE 2-8838. 3 LARGE ROOMS, private, adults. •' Plnegrova. ... '338-247*, -. 851.9I50.___________ _ NOW TAKING APPLICATIONS to ROOMS AND BATH. West Carpeted, vi anytime history. Wa hi property and al qualified speopit .... jonally axparlar 3 ROOMS AND BATh, working c pla, non-smokers, 832, 338-4897: i BOOMS Can You Seir?‘^^^ ........j money. Ex- llpful, but not necessary ' 100 lb. beg Id wood, Dellyvai Annett Inc., Realtors 28 E. Huron St 338-0^6 APPRAISALS FREF GUARANTEED SALE 30 DAY LISTING guarantee tha sale of your ROOMS NEAR Crescent Lake, clean, nicely fumlihad, no children or pets, $35 pen week. *100 dei--- inquire at 273 B 3 ROOMS AND I 0 children or pels. FE 2-S2I2. Siding, p Cedar post 7' Cedar post 6' LAUINGER 3 ROOMS AND BATH, welcome, *35 par week, Sloo oap.. Inquire at 273 Baldwin Ave„ Call 338-8058.________________ 3 room’s, PRIVATE BATH.^cduple, no drinking, raf. *35 dap. *32 wk. t. basement storage iT air conditioning Sorry no pels •ONTIAC ASPHALT ,C DOMINO CONSt. CO. Driveways, parking lots. License Driver's Training DRIVER T ACADEMY Free home pickup, DRIVER'S TRAIN 1 Great Oaks Blvd. MODEL OPEN or INI*bRWlATION CAL 651-2460 BEACHES CLEANED SANDED , DOCKS INSTALLED STEEL SEA WALLS • Contracting __________8*1 -030o ROCHESTER-LUDLOW APARTMENTS 837 Ludlow, Rochaslar ................. away < expraisway, malor hoipltal. 'I -------- conditioned, ' shopping, air conditioned, full carpeted, picnic area on grounds. Immediata Occupancy 851-7270 or (Detroit) 388-1283 ROCHESTER bedroom apartment, *180 p I., Security required, no chlldr pets, couple prafarrad: bedroom apartment. Carpeted, ' - mo„ security required, No children SK5 per la preferred. Baach Sarvica Boots and Accessories BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Starcraft, I.M.P. S I I v .... Flbarglas 8, Aluminum Boats. Marc, outboard 8, stern Dr. 1285 S. Buiiding Mmiwnizntig^^^ ■ ----------20X», »7S modarnlutlon. g Co. 825-«28. . masonry work, windows roofing, pre-cast FE 8- CONVERT YOllR ricreatlon>lro( ---------- ——■ factorii V ! Ali-jt MASTER CRAFTSMAN ENOL1SH BLDR. SpacMIlzIng In all type* of custom ----- Ipub MODERNIZATION ■ structions. Rea! LAWN VACUUMED, reasonable price, tree estimates. 482-8788. FlawN cutting and m ----------- PE 2-5581. LAWN SPRAYING, fartillzars, crab grass killer, and weed killers. Call for free estimate. 825-8019, 878-3985, 674-8889, ans. rec. C.8, H spraying. M'S LAWN MOWING I —'~*9nance. «8-5285. AID AND DELTVEI.-ig Inblaflen. 88Z-7I97. Lawnmowrar Service M & S GUTTER Ca LICENSED-BONDED Complete aavestroughing tervla Free est, 873-8888, 873-5882 Electricol Sarvices Glass strvicay wood o Buir-------- ^— logs ( Moving, Storago SMITH MOVING CO. Your moving RESIDENTIAL WIRING, ri Call aft. 4 p.m„ weeks 3-2712.____________ TRUCKING , r w 11 a.b I a. Free -.........IR 3-1145. BACKHOd WORK, trenching, st^ tict, ffgg dotlm. 8S1-9IB5.___ kLOOZING, BACKHOE WORK 25 YEAR OLD university ______________ will paint. Top quality work at In-axpanslve price. 33S8893, aft. 7:30 !NO LOADING FE 2-0808. . USED 84 YARD HOUGH LOADER_ BURTON EQUIPMENT CO. 3778 E. Auburn Rd. ir houses. 878-1310. Help Wanted M. or F. Production Workers (No Experience Necessary) ALSO ^ .. Qualified Journeyman — Pipe Fitters— All GM Employee Benefit* Program Will Accrue A* You Enjoy Top Wage* With A Winning Team MAY APPLY AT OUR EMPL.OYMENT OFFICE 8 A.M. to 4 P.M. Monday through, Friday FISHER BODY DIV. —Pontiac Plant-900 BALDWIN AVE. —An Equal Opportunity Employer— A BETTER CASH DEAL Drayton Plains i 873-2180 3 ROOMS AND BATH, 852-170(T Mechanic St. S YORK REAL ESTATE MAIN PLOORo 4 Coupla and ona < ______ ONE ~RObMy car^tad. NE KgoMy carpaiaa. n FE 8-7178 OR 8-0343 l-ltU»«l.:_. BEHINDlN PAYMENTS? Avoid additional legal c VALLEY PLACE (in the Center of Rochester) APARTMENTS ALL k CARPENTRY and rooting, fri estimates. 338-2879. JIAA 5-4282. A-1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR ■ Family rooms, rough or finishs t, 878-4108. 1 DAY CASH FOR YOUR HOUSE OR LOT NO COST TO SELL FAST friendly service Aaron Mtg. & Invest. Co. 2 bedrooms __________ ONLY $188 FEATURING Central air condltlohlng Dishwasher, stove, refrigerator 12 cu. ft. Iraazart Apts, with dans Apts, with underground parking Separata baeamants Dlractione Taka Walton Blvd. CUnlvarelty Rd.: A-I CHAIN LINK FENCE, li or repaired, t wk. i'"' -----------674.306;. CARPENTRY AND CEMENT W Carpet Cieoning ■pTlgai^i:_________________ kfJjOL^^^Y CHAIN LINK fencing InetallaG rtpalrad. Quality work, fr~ lea, ask for Ron, 802-0989. 338-3781 i clo«wd. Fe___________________ !mAKE your old CARPET ^ Ilka new — have It claane. -, I Arthur Atkinsons Carpet Cleaning 332-11 . Call ui (or t Divorce—Foreclosure? Don't hue your home —Call ue for free appraleal. 878;03J9 Lauingar______873*2188 ELDERLY COUPLE NEEDS hom't near Mall. Ca«h. Agant, 33MfS2. 674*1649. HANDYMAN WILL BUY hoUMi that need ma|or or minor repalre. Will pay .cash. Call my agent, 8*1-O?**, i' HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND county, CALL AGENT ^bUPLE wrTH’'*58K10_ down desires Factory Built Homes Are Coming I LAUINGER Want Ads For Action Rd, free estimates. 338^381. 1 (Main St.) I Saparale bldga. for (amlllaa With Children OPEN DAILY 10 A.«L TO * P.M. I PHONE 6514200 Apartments, Unfurnished SSAportmants, Unfurnished 38 NEW “ V APARTMENTS They are all townhouses, one, two, and three bedrooms', Furnished gas heat, air-conditioned, refrigerator and gas stove are includecL Carpeted and draped. Coin-operated laundry facilities, swimming pool, ample parking, storage lockers. We have them from $165 per month with a one year lease, children ore welcome. No pets. The only utility you pay is electricity. The rent agint is on the premises. Ridgem’ont Apartments 957 N, PERRY 332-3322^’ A-t House RAISING, undar-pinning ' baaamantf undar old homae apaclaity. 828-i873 or 893-1918. AAA CEMENT WORK ALL BRICK REPAIRS, porchaa, vidlatlonf om^ad hii CI!SS.hinsJ!a[* ALL TYPES Of oamant work. 825- A^r“KINDS OF CEMENT iASEMENTS AND BRICK WORK, --------- commarclal and In- llr..8*2)183, 873-3251. 'JStPr'K Fencing^ FLOOR SANDING AND finishing, , 35 yre. nFlo«rf[|iiig 781 N. parry. 3384120. ’ GARDEN PLOWING, GARDEN PLOWING AND yard grading, raody for sod or —* any location, roaaonabla. Clar ROTb TILLING AND lawn mowinft All KINDS op home repair Fraa astlmates, call OR 3-2833. Mich. Steam Cleaning Residantlal, ----------- TALBOTT LUMBER f"|"1?85. epeclallste, PE 8-8888. SNYDER BROS. MOVING' CO. uocal and long dietanca movin Madam etoraga. Plano -movin Piano, Tuning k RELIABLE PAINTII NTING, In! 3388IW8. HUSBAND-WIFE TEAM Painting wall waehing, 28 yrs; cxperli- 825-3518. INSIDE-OUTSIDE PAINTING. own work. Fraa aet. 731-0805. PAINTING, INTERIOR AND Tarlor. 338-0095.______________ QUALITY WORK ASSURED: Paint Ing; Paparing; Wall Wa"*— SPRAY PAINTING Ken PORTRAITS: Wadding, turai, your homo, —. ---- prompt sarvica, rtai. Vtrvlllae Studlai, 338-3002.________ Piaitering Sarvice PLASTERING, NEW WORK-patching, fraa d»tlmatae. 38^5807. PLASTERING, FRE'I ESTIMATES %.3^959.'- PJnniWi^AJI^ CONDRA PLUMBING I, HEATING Sawar, watar llnae - FE 0-0883. G 0. L PLUMBING 8. HEATING. L< Gaorga Do It. 8738B77.___ ROOFING, epeclallza I fraa estimatas. FE 5-80ou. We Wifi Not Be Undersold shlnglae, repair*, 28 hrs. V FE 8-T725 WILL REPAIR LEAKS, ro-shlngla • roofs. Inexpensively, aft. 8:30 p.m„ 335-8893, ________________________ WOAAACK ROOFING CO. SAND, , GRAVEL, Dirt ssonable, 3*8-1201 or 878-2839. :H0ICE SHREDDED b all gravel products. 882-7197. SCREENED BLACK DIRT, poat top, dressing dellvarad. UL 2-5482. TOP SOIL, BEAt dallvary. OR 38807. Toe SOIL, THE vary bait, 8 yards, 818 delivered, also sand ahd driveway gravel, fast dallvary. 873- 0089 or 3388)518.________________ VIBRATED PROCESS, Mack dlii I dally, 7-7 p.m Septic Tank inetallation irtlllzlng. 383-7295. DALBY & SONS TREE SERVICi INCHWORM SPRAY. Pfe 5- Steam Cienning PARKING LOTS, driveways, Comi Residential, year . 338-0827 or 802«l0. Tree Trimming Service TREE SERVICl Fro’o' oitlmata^TI 5jAo, 878,^1o!~‘ -1 CAVANAUGH'S TREE Sarvica, down tree. Fraa aitimata. 334-9089 G:\RDNER'S TREE SERVICE TREES-TRIMMED and removed: Free estimates. Call Bob. 383-0082, A-1 LIGHT MOVING, TRASH hauled raasonabla. FE 8-1353. Al LIGHT HAULING ai _________Ima. FE (HIWS. HAULING RUBBISH, construction, clean-up, rtai. 888-3043. LIGHT HAULING ._ Reasonable. 802-7518, LIGHT HAULING, ------------ garage cleaned. OR 3-0087.____ LIGHT HAULING. Basanhent clean- LIGHT HAULING. ___________335-5928. LIGHT HAULING. V HAULING. BASEMENTS as claanad. 878-5242to___________ LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING ........ .... Truck RiHtel Trucks to Rent W-Ton Pickups m-Ton Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor 025 5. WOODWARD* * ? ■ A(U6i , fE 4-1441 : y Including Sunday BIG BOY DRIVE-IN DIXIE AT A-1 ROOFING. HOT Tar and thlnglas. Robert Price Roofing FE 8-1028_____________ 28 hV. larvica BLOOMFIELD WAU CLEANERS, Walls claanid. Roif. SaHsfaclM guaranteed. Intund. PV 2-1831. A-Z CONTRACTING AND REPAIR LICENSED ROOFER, (act guarantaa, Fraa ast. 8839827, AA ROOFS INSTALLED. Hot and shinglas. Call L. J. Price the price Is right, 332-1038, BROWN ROOFING Co. Wa spaclellza 338-5720. Quality fabrics and wo and dallvary. 88M170. WASHING . AND window 1. 33*0095 Wen Drilling ,;k I V'l- 'X' Y'\’ f jIf 1 ' 1 ' . ‘f r\ V For Want Ads Dial 3344981 : ‘.fii THE PONTIAC PRESS. I’llIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 D—5 Rant Otfica IND FL6QR OFFICE In, I M-24 (rontast (25.0M day) Lake privllagaa. bins mf' Itwtnn \ privileges. Could com- *«'i o blna ^Kllvlng ipaca. WW remodel , engineer, architect. ■for doctor, i Itect, t93-282T, i71 !!•”»” 49|5alg Hawtl BLOOMFtELD-CHAPBL HILL, bedroom ranch, approximatmy _ 150x15^ fun^ DaremMf, bullt-lns. - . ,. T. «r t700 ______________ .ofirce suites, air conditioned, Dl* parking. Walled "Lake, Pontiac , Troll. Ph. 424,2732. I BY OWNEIJ II Id sere’" irage. Full bat 8,000. 034-5101. . CLARKSTON AREA 3 bedrooms, T/i baths, full b ment, family type kitchen, li lot, or will duplicate on your l< Don l^cDontild LICElit'SED BUILDER J NORTH END I ' ■al cute and clean 3-bedroom! “I-. ranch, carpeting, paneling, nice' " dining area "zero" down on FHA Tauinger 49|Sala Housts WYMAN LEWIS REALTY 1 WOLVERINE LAKE FRONT A prestige 4 bedroom lake front wit 2301 DIXIE near courthouse. I — 400 sq. ft. office, ■ Immediate possession. 3 — 800 sq. ft. offices r-------------■. under construction.-FE 4-4588. ! income house on FOR LEASE 340-900 or 2,900 s^fL, evOs^I^ «73®3«2.'’'^' building,, ample"*pm-'king*,'' next^to 9'^NER, 2 ' .. , Sichen?623?f345 .rr*"*cSditlonedl b^ eml t* 2520 AIrporti ^nd^?rl'n OPEN Sat. 2-6 p.iln. 4 BlDROOMS FemUy roorn plus^2'/j ear ||8r|goi' Wideman 49lalt I t, bet.', NEW OFFICBSi i I. Days,, 334-4794 po„|, Bloomfield Hills tchrels, new pg^L TABLE in basement of t ----------------- elemenlery school In subdivision, 3-bedroom home. Hes bedroonn horne.i Large foyer with eircula rl baths, "finished basement, 2V, , newly decorated' staircase,|,4 bedrooms and den,:2V, g.fage: For quick possession, < ' baths. Wood I parquet floors' In, ?s i . s 5 8 8 f o’r I n,s p e c 11 o family robm and den. carpetingl SHEPARD'S ftEAL ESTATE. , and drapes throughout. By ap------------------------------—--------------- pointment 332-7319. $52,500. AVAILABLE NOW Rochester's finest > ONE OFl fE2- I. 8125 n FRANKLIN V i tinest ana newest ot-1 — —, commercial , centers.'- Medical suites, general —- ’ . suites and commercial si Plenty of free parking. Phon 5553 or 651-4574. ^ rking. 343-3208 or 343-7X53. Rent toiness Property 47*A office. Kx50 BUILDING, FOR parking. FE 3-7948, «x40 CQMMERCIAL .....'in'J^Ke 7,500 with 88,000 5-5145. No agents. 1. Perry St., close tc RAY .-^LEY H------... — - , Tri-level 4 bedrooms. custom drapes. Intercom, fully air conditioned, garage door opener, large fenced In lot, near school, by appoititmeht, open house Sat. 1-5. Phone 424-9445. RAY i WARDEN wilhdenced In yarc — -i Terms available. Your ,t ' Harold Gerow will be on nan point Uer re^ r^m.^and prl^^ 7 p.m. 'P45. CALL RAY TODAY!___________________474-4101 .... jSoseirient," all fdr' lust 812,000 FHA or VA. P-53. CALL RAY TODAYI 474-4101 NEW 5 BEDROOM RANCH, colored tiding, I'/j baths, lots of ..... closets, oak floors, full basement, formica cabinets gutters, Thermo-pane windows, storm LAKE FRONT wallpaper, no . extra cost.' ?ufm''s"^ed “ wl?h Kl^'tinfsb'. S“rea*dy'“out *°to road.'* ElSh 3f Brunswick. 820,950. WILLIS M. - BREWER REAL ESTATE 724 RIker Bldg. 5,000' BUILDING and office. Call 335-8141 or 549-2224. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ' heat and w i|,200SQ.'FT. . ft. rental Includes r OWNER — SAVE commission, ■ bedroom tirick ranch, near Walled HURON WOODS subdivision. Lake, brick ranch ^ baths, large living m, Mtchei la^e li lY OWNER, bedroom. Full siding, brick ATTRACTIVE provide new bldg, w on site. ,120x140. Will ________ separately at low rental. After 4 p.m. Call 482-9072 Annett Inc., Realtor^ , 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 ■ NICE BUILDING for ofUces briight mfg. 10445 Dixie. 425-2544.______ STORE AT 28 E. Lawrence St., 20' x 55', heat furnished, lust redecorated, 2 lavatories, i trance fo itore, call J, ' 8-0421. IS from BEAUTIFUL SETTING overlooking Wll la lake. This --------- -----" —* or will:bedrooms, 1 parking ‘-----■ ----■ ' ___ ,.............jIt trees, and ot —.'Se, lake privilege*. All for only 812,500 VA or 811,500 assumption. -P- HOUSE OF BEAUTY FOR YOUNG SOPHISTICATES )4uty desccf^s this anch*located sloping land 4 spacious NELSON B WOLVERINE LAKE Beautiful 3 bedroom brick aluminum ranch. Full fin basement. Corner lot plus _ privileges. 81300 down. 821,900 full price. PONTIAC LAKE 2 year old aluminum ranch wll full basement, IVj baths, bedrooms, 115x270 fenced lot pli lake privileges. FHA approved fi TauInger - . HALL WATERFORa, AREA — 3 bedroom aluminum ranch with full basement, plus large carpeted living room, ceramic bath, family room garage. Completely fenced lot. Offered at 821,500. Call now for your appointment. . FOR RETIRED COUPLE. 4 BEDROOM’HOME i FHA TERMS PONTIAC GENERAL AREA lltioriz 2 baths, carpeted living and lislsIo.'F^IHA'tlrms' I. 6. WIDEMAN, REALTOR ll, 12 W. HURON ST. 334-4524 550 Acres of EVE. CALL 332-4490 ditlofiai-Cost ---------.----------------------- .. Y UNION LAKE AREA A6cG. r bedroom brick. Full bespit, 2 car garage, paved street, 3 immediatt possession. ANDERSON & GILFORD n! Building Realty Heat. L a.k e 3081 Highland Rd. (M-M 482-90 SchonrLa®rge ' HOWARD T. RENTING WE . ARE NOW PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE ____^681-2111 ^ ARRO™ )r will Dulld bn oi OR DIVORCEES. A OR Gl TERMS LAND CONTRACT LE.T-^S TRADE VLL REALTY, J?EALTORSI PEOPLE \ e Hwy. 1 62i-4Uj^i PROBLEMS A y 9-9____________ Sat. 9-4' ARE OKAY W KEATING !2040 W, 13„MII,a Birmingham ,44-1234 " 544-7959 Thaugh your' needs be, great ar small— we'll try to satisfy them ail! ^ WE OFFER JHE FOLLOWI^IOI ■ Davisburg, little upkeep ii ..jf, 814,90 I Homes IRWIN 474-4221 PONTIAG Bedroom ranch, basement, far...., ' kitchen, custom cabinets, choice of colors, paved street —' sidewalks, 8500 plus costs, direcjl with builder. Model daily and Sunday from '1 closed Friday. Parson Builders, Inc. 338-8588. GLORIOUS VIEW Rent Miscellaneous Sale Houses "49 Colonial Bi-Le 2V2-car attached garage. 4'/4 pci. mortgage. 828,900. 335-2315. _^ mcKus' Be yaur awn landlard We have the Ideal situation for yog to become one. You can live downstairs and-rent the upstair* ot this alum, sided home, slti-**-* 2 lot* completely fence terms. NORTH END kitchen ^ i fireplace, complete"summer built-in" avaMaWe. Fran”Maro11a 8,'assoc. kitchen in lower level with modern; 3)55 unlon Lk. Rd. 343-7001. hiirn“'®w/th^ Stall ROCHESTER SUBURBAN - New 4 ‘’Vd"ulppeJ g®?^f-caree?rng"*r‘i'Ire"''T2lW ' L^%"loieI5 _Cn <«ailT. N?x Realty,:b5I-5375; RANCH HOME, Clarkston area. 3 . LAKE PRIVILEGES You must see this bsautiful bedroom ranch typo homo to predate all the values of ... Located In the heart of lakelanifs with IV2 baths, and large carpeted family room on ground level with fireplace plus a large recreation ----basement with, built-' ■ and piano ' idrooms,. family room With replace, living room, den, >2 baths. In older 2-story orse barn, wo8d fenced jrral. Rocltester. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. Near Baldwin REAL VALUE REALTY For Imediate Action Col! FE 5-3676 -642-4220 ^.'laru' j; SNYDER, IKINNEY &^URbN Cash for your equity or land contract | MARGARET McCULLOUG.H, Reallorj Please do not i lot. 818,500. YORK )0*"with backus REALTY ,3M-_'3M_______________________338-1495 “home--------iTF« l”y BIRMINGHAM, SHARP 3 bedroom %T3,m ’GI™or'"’beL 'Yfm p’iSToT? I”BEDR00M, rFnGh, In Mountj master''bedr<»rn'*'a^ ------- ----- X..U ***--'vs«nf CE ,. nrtn K./. eMAmaf' nq 4*1865 HALLMARK LAKE PRIVILEGES only 8400 moves you Into this neat 2 bedroom alum, sided home. Near Big Lake. Spacious rooms, gas heat. Only 813,SOO. Quick possession. 474-4123 > 4821 Highland Rd. I BEDROOM remodeled, , appraised a. — cash offer. OR 3-8098. 1 BEDROOM RANCH, IVj BATH, car attached garage. FInishe • basement. Carpet and ,.custoi drapery. On wooded lot 100 x 34 i BEDROOM RANCH, 2 year* old, hot water heat, formica cabinets, hardwood floors, B *,b * , Clarkston schools. 110,500 balanco on 4 per cent contract, makt offer tv ooulty. OR 3-*”* »-5 BEDROOMS, front room, room, fireplace, kitchen, IW ---- dining room, 2'/i-car garage,, large bi-level home. Call 424-5389. 114,000 W mortgage. room, 821,000 by- owner. ,PR 4 or Ml 2-1535. 1191 E. Lincoln, nc Adams Rd. Torrey School.____________ BRICKS DON'T NEED PAINT Bloomfield Orchards. 5 year ol ranch, 3 bedrooms, full basemen hardwood floors, family room wjt natural fireplace^ builMns,^ nrnr utes from 1-75. Agent tor ownei OR 4-1649r FE B-6993. “^HAMPTON HILLS • New delightful subdivision located .. lust south ot S. Blvd. and west otf Squirrel Road. RANCHES - TRIS , - QUADS - COLONIALS., PRICES RANGE FROM 845.000 GREATER BLOOMFIELD REAL ESTATE -' . Hwy. west of Walfon Blvd. Model* KELLER Representing & SELLER, URGENLY NEEDED. 100 HOMES KELLER REAL ESTATE 681-1833 Tecneo gereinx, ’V. , exc. condition. Waterford locallon. ' 832,900. Call owner, OR 3-8191. _ IJ200M LAKE FMNT, 819,900. ^bedrooms. OR 3-2309.__________________ uTk;!*^500%-J‘ 9i'xi34',| $17,500, $3,500 down, bal8nct on land«ntract. 682-95V ___ IT-RO^ P:RICK, LARGE LOT, 2-wo full dining room, I rnA approved, only ... Agent for owner, QR 4-1649. =E 8-2304 258 W. Walton FE 5-4712 ALBERT J. RHODES, Realtor MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE CRAWFORD STREET, 2 bedroo living and dining room , circulating haater, stool In ba ment, storms and screens, w kept. 81000 down on land tract. Will eonsidar cash off* Anderson & Associates 44 Joslyn FE 4-i3536 Evenings FE 2-4353 or 482-8039 HAROLD B. FRANKS, Realty 4 BEDROOMS 8 room brick ranch, nice family room, built-in kitchen, 2 ceramic baths, full basement with finished recreation room. 2 • fireplaces, (2) 2-car, garages, 25 x 24 in-ground swimming, pool, outdoor grill and patio, 150' frontage on Huron River 1 leading into Commerce Lake. Can be purchased on land contract with 815,000 down. Owner will oonsider trade tor smalle/ home. EYterett Cummings, Realtor 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD - EM 3-3208 ___________ YOU'RE A qualified veteran, you I't pass up this deal, in Drayton, SEMINOLE HILLS SUB This Is a custom brick ror home, with an attached garage ... a corner lot, full walk out basement on a beautifully landscaped yard all fenced. Selling for 823,900 FHA terms available. »Call YORK I jjjp 2251 N. OPdyke: iaki'privileges, mortgage .......jary, 84,000 down, 8295 mn OR 4-1918. ____ 26x40 J V. rancher, full basement, mlnum aiding, AIgmaA/lew ..... dows, on your lot WMO®. Wo also 2 lots avallabel In Clarkston Paved street, Clarkston CUTE AND COZY edrooms, gas heat, paved i Btlon. Only 88100 on FHA ti TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE .,.,1,. • St Has wall carpeting In living dining room and one bedrooi "" — attached garage, alu I porch and awnings, and only 815,000, — 0 — down. _____ .jjay. P-50. Call Ray Real Estate___________474-4101 SMITH DRAYTON PLAINS 2 bedroom home. Ideal for ydur couple or retirees. Fenced bad yard/ carpeting, drapes, elun siding. A real baths, wall lo wall carpeting Including bedrooms, full basement, alji paneled with recreation room and bar. Fenced In-ground pool and bath house."" On spacious lot. j C. SCHUETT EM 3-7188 i 8800 Commerce Rd^ ___ Investors Special ibEAL city location for Pepsi Cola . Consumers Power employees. Lovely two bedroom home, fully carpeted, custom-built. Has now aluminum siding and roof, paneled family room with door wall exit onto 25x10 covered paflo. Large, beauflfully landscaped lot, fireplace, garage, etc. . . . Won't last at 819,900 FHA. P-41. CALL RAY TODAYI____47^4101 CTTY lOCALE balahce. Vacanf. . OR 4-164 HNG-PHIPPS CCaRKSTON — Sharp brlel Sf ARTER HOME North of.Baldwin & Joslyn YORK r»2:500 OR 44)363 _ _ _ FE 8-7176 ----r the trees are 4n bloom and the Is completely carpeted. _________, thermo windows w'lth screens, hardwood floor*. Only ' ““ -------lo move on to ------- ....... REALTY, REALTORS 7150 Dixie Hwy. 425-4114 ----Dally -- . GAYLORD OFFERS lOHNSON LAKE FRONT beech. Brick ranch with 3 large bedroom;, 3 fdll baths, built In stove, oven, and refrigerator in kitchen. High and dry tusement with lovely recreation room and fireplace." Attached 2-car garage. Lot 75' X 225'. Other Items loo numerous to . mention. Call for full deigns. Full price only 852,500 with WALNUT LAKE 4 room ranch aluminum siding, 2 large bedrooms,' built In oven, stoye, dishwasher, and garbage disposal. Wall to wall carpeting In living room. Breezeway 12' garage, club, house, beach an, landing privileges. 826,500 carpeted living room, patio oH 'gas' heatVonlV VILLAGE OF OXFORO-L^ge 8 “'“*Iihen*with talftf Ins "ho? water heat, excellent location. Priced at 818,500. KING-PHIPPS AGENCY with carport dnd concrete drive, THE LAWN IS IN pletely carpeted, 1400 sq gracious ’"j-'"****. ft. of I bed- 'Watorford MODEL OPEN 2-5 SAT. and sun. 3 bedroom home, 819,450. Come------ --------- the quality workmanship and looki room, fenced at our many building plans.' Directions: North on M-24 to CApE-COP Clarkston, turn left to Fair'— -------------- turn right and follow signs. JOHNSON Telegraph__ F UNION LAKE TRI-LEVEL — 3 bedrooms, , MINI ESTATE, ^ This 160' lot Is completely anchor tT-in&’’'a"r'o''und mrhor. LAKE FRONT: wi|h a nice garden spot. The home, Custom built ' has 2 bedrooms with family room,i with 2 car full dining'room, living room .. ......... natural fireplace, rec. , room b8r, 2-car attached garage a.._ -new }'/2 car garage for garden sider Land Contract. Auburn Heights Area 3 bedroom bl-level with ^sslble 4lh bedroom, over 1,000 sq. “■ IS Curtis Rd. flowing ino Trout pond. 5 or 10, oerts Lake Rd. 10 acres on Lake Rd. 44 acres on M-24. tu like Lake property. Bald • )t 80 feet --------- ' . ,r. front. Cl urn. siding, ' a 3-bedroom brick, large 80900, I PIONEER HIGHLANDSi Custom built 3 Br. bri on 2 choice lots — Natural fireplace — Custom color tor ' kitchen — attached oarage Big finished family room basement. A pleasure to see. ifJtTS/.n'reUeweJ'i'ili' BUYING OR SELLING CALL 5925 Highland Rd. (A 6V4-3I 75"'’ f JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS m 625-«4^ KINZCERT Lake Front—Quad Level On one of Oakland Countys' largest end best lakes.. Have - -- fuTT for fhe whole '—' sliding glass doors fo lake. Gas heat. Automatic water softener. Barbecue grill end many extras. Good beach. A new ptferlng. Better VON le, 2-bedroom, 2-story, Oxford, 8500 down plus Lake Orion 2-bedroom North Pontiac new 4-bedroom tri-levfl, sea and make of, ter. 2;bedroom Lake r-'— ““ “ commercial on A4-24. Ms y others ta US If you want halp In sailing home. The difficult we do litv mediately. The Impossible tekee a little longer. CHARLES MILLS with gas furnace. Private trances. 2 car garage. Completely lurnished. West- side location. lng/819,500. 85,500 down oh NORTH CITY Must be sold! Small bungalow . 3 piece bath and gas furnace. City S».d and attac 80x270' a lie. Delightful ,4 aluminum /subu .ifichen, mny room, basement d 2 car .daraqe. Choice' hor landed lot with e fruit, . berries and ■ " unusual WE BUILD Family room. F STOUTS Best Buys Today LAKE FRONT COLONIAL- Older 4 bedroom brick colonial on largo 40*'mmLis'|*frorn** P^Hae^ will possession. 82^950. SHARP BUNGALOW- Cozy and cute S-room end bath bungalow with ftalrwey to large unfinished 2nd floor. *Baiemant with gas heat, and hot wafer. New roof and septic. Includaa carpeting.. Ideal located In Auburn Heights area close to fho University. Priced to sell at dryer. Many extras too numerou! closet ^ po^r humidrtierY'storm ’windowiI and screens, price reduced to; 815,900 for fast deal. Low down] SISLOCK & KENT, INC. ii, 1309 Pontiac Slate Bank Bldg. yB-9294 jI097 S, ir Rd. 18-2565 basement, 1337“cyerry*awnr33MI71. «B«nt. fo DESOTO - 2 story brick with living room, dining room and kitchan on fir** ^ iwdroomi 2 car garage, aVgaih at 815,950, KEATINGTON SUB, ORiON TWp. low taxes, close to 1-75. Water, sewer, paved streets, underground wiring. Lake privileges. Southern ,950, 8550 Colonial with 3 large bedrooms, I'/li I baths, family room, fireplace. I Protesslonaly decorated. Open S. ANDERSON ST. j SUNDAY 2 to S. By owner. 391- Wel] built 2-famlly. 5 rooms andi_35M.___ bath on each.flooc, full basemr—.....- ■ aaraoe. corner lot. Now rentInQ ^ - “ *• price* $17; ......GREEN ACRES MY 3-4262 in FHA. •.'LAKE HOME, 3 tedropm ston >r home ort Joslyn Rd.r lot 120 390*. frontage on Square Laki S. JESSIE ST. S-bedroom 2-story homi w 1 dln- I up. full basament, panel-td racraatlon room, gas hot air furnace. $12*900. Closina costs estimated et $^. We w^iil frocess FHA mortgage for K.rJth'*l‘’Hymp.t«»d ._3ji^.284 D^II^R _4io| 1967 LARGE 7 ROOM Ranch Clarkston School home, 2 full tlw baths, oasemem, Thendara E ■end*^aro***22x?2'ran-53V> W. Huron St._ ATTRACTIVE 5 bedroom red brick Cape cod. Golf Manor ereo, no eoents. 343-5227.___________ ^~XSALE IS ONLY AS GOOD AS YOUR FINANCING. Sold or selling your home? Let us handle your mortgage. FHA or Gl. ‘'Aa'roT'Mtg. & Invst. Co. 332-1144 by' owner - _ 3 bedroom "Cupancy. your selection t( lo "live area." -473-3488 5YL dining room, lots approved, only 8: lor owner, 338-49 Cash for Your Equity HACKETT ___ 363-6703 _ “RAY'. Land Contract Terms J761 VENDOME, Avon Twp. NIco 3 bedroom brick, separata garag-oas heat. QUICK OCCUPANCY. $14,500.00 3340 ROCKHAVEN, ne« and Crooks. Neel 2 ranch, lusL-rpdecorated. NOWI . $12,900.00 116 5CRIPPS ROAD, Orion Twp.. inowl near M-24, and new high school. 3 CALI BEDROOM. IVj tlory, LARGE $19,990.00. LOCHAVEN, off coolov Lako, S. Oakland Comm unify come on property. Cell for pointment to see. 493-^3, FE 8-9693. GAYLORD INC. W. Flint St.: Lsko Orlo 13-8333 FE 8-949 ^ ___OPEN 9-9 ^_____, ”^~FARRELL“~^ A home to be proud ot This 3 bedroom brick ranch bul by Weinberger lust 4 years ac will make you pop your butter., with pride. A beaulllul kitchen with a large dining area. Family room with fireplace. Full basement. IVi beths. 2 car attached fiarage. Make living most en-oyable. All this setting on a large well landsjcaped lot. Silver L-"-Estates. Can ba seen by pointment. Priced at 842,500. N.'Pontiac Location ■ting and drapes Included, down payment of 8650. FHA la,I If led buyer. RAY (AtCHANICALLY Mind love this three bedroor •erford. The two-car gi d, heated with tap !, wired tor 110 A 2 2 driveways, one - - ler I e a I u r e s include a 15x12 j ■1""'N Brown RANCH — 5 acres, barn, 2 bedroom i4. Fenced, can hav# horses. ZONED INDUSTRIAL _ . with sharp 3 badroom home, I IS cellent location for office. $39,500 ZONED COMMERCIAL - 3-bedroon :h In exc ' ' •doctors k ranch In excellent condition e. 842,500. MAX BROOCK hard Lake Road ohtlae Trail 444-4890 of stale. Better see th home today. iKIs one of JOHN KINZLER, R' counter top^ and marble window IN TOWN FOR ............. s%7on $700 pOWN- ut our closing cos sills. Built-In r Realtor ROYER HOLLY (Office 4 BEDROOM BRICK h.rirnn,T) oWor hom¥ In Holly ountry kitchen. Living gnd fyii base-has been rewired, ice and new new hot : Needs decorating. d fireplace In living I ruoiTi. MISS x-car garage. ! Warren Stout, Realtor' nil450 N. Opdyke Rd. PE 5-1141 Dally til 8 Multiple Listing 1. Dining ri 815,900, 40 ACRE PARADISE 4 bedroom home setting a beautiful roMifra 40 acres just outside of Holly.^'^2 ^replaces. 2 fuH baths, ^2 heatlrig, well,**and**septic. EUsautlful ...........................■ *"7,500 g for a large family. 0 per cent Land Contract. PHONE: 634-8204 ar garage, basen POSSESSION. 82 NEW MODEL HOME Open dally 9 to 4 E. J. DUNLAP ■ Custom Builder 17 Sllverstone Corner W8_Mpn _, C^LL^RAY TODAY! 674-4101 UNDER $5000 STARTER HOME REGULAR PRINT ON YOUR LOT . . J. Mason Conetructlon 5791 HIGHLAND RD.____473-1291 VACANT CAPE COD. 4 bodroomi, basement needs finishing, 82,000 to 82500 balance. Owner'i agent, C” 1698. 330-4991 “RAY _2663._ I.' 605 E finished carpet Ijhj |*’rov9j -...... on'iV 824,900 “pHA " OUR PLAF BLOOMFIELD 0 R G H bedroom, brick, alymin ' car alleched garegi basement, flroolace, f pptio, by owner. 334-419 . " “ BUILDERS YOUR PLANS YOUR LOT ' F. J. Mason Conilfucllon ; 673-1291 __________ fYiss WanfAdTDrthe Job -X 334-4^81 I674-0319 EXTRAS GALORE WEEPING WILLOWS surrour cedar-shake ranch In Walertor '3^:4497 lot too, 120X174. It's immi losKt* • •>'9 ' BEDROOM ranch, full base-.-pH ,3,1, dinette This is Ihi ml, family room 'with tlreplaco.'home In a good location for a ■p'eted Ihrour"-‘ garage. rustic rancher^ 3 bedr baths, fully carpeted, large deck, full basement, I 86,500 down to oxisting 7 1 mortgego. Over an ecre with this lovtiy 3 bedroom quad level, large SO* x 22' family room with natural fireplace. Lovely kitchen with range end dishwasher bOllt hi, 2W car garage $43,500. 1 It takas a lot of (Ingredients) 1 build a house primarily as qualified coniulfant to help yc select a design to meet yoi desirel As custom builders, v 38£190 gerage, linishad _____ ______ _J|" '150x130. Li privilege;. J38i4l83. OPEN tri-level MODELS OPEN 2 P.M.- 'TIL DARK 823,900 Conv (AY TODAYI_ 474-4101 EAST sTdE'‘sPEC1AL - . •--------n bur" lUngalow v mcrosed 1 LAUINGEB CAU. RAY TODAY! ' WITH A LITTLE BIT "0" CASm JUST 81000 DOWN W I PURCHASE this 3.jbedrc Baslc-Bulll. alum; sided ranch Dravlon area. Exterior I; 0 m HIITER 674-4101 OVERLOOKING GOLF COURSE Also ranches, colonials < GIROUX REAL ESTATE *338 Highland 473-7837 473-0200 w urnish melerlal to flqith snO idd lo cohlr\cf. \ HAGSTROM, REALTOR 900 W. HURON OR 44)351 NORTHSIDE - 2 bedroom* bath. nice|lot. 111,300, terms. vE BUILD -- I bedroom ranchorai with oak'floors, full\ basements, alum, siding. On your^lot._ To see the model call B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3792 EIIt Lake Rd. 482-8080, liter • p.m. 482-6427, IKMMIPSm "IT'S TRADING TIME" WEST SIDE STORY- NEAR THE MALL A n«at and clean beauty. Sewer and water already Installed. Nicely landscaped yard with IVa car garage and covered patio,* Lovely living room, country tlyla kitchen, two bedrooms on main floor fwo unfinished uo. Full basement. Priced ah $23,950. WE TO TRADEIIII CASUAL LIVING FOR A URGE FAMILY Your family will love the comfort and elbow room In this nino room five bedroom brick, and aluminum Ilka new fri-level. It has a lovely country kitchen, dishwasher, bullt-lns and a natural fireplece In the dining area, 2Vi baths, 15x32* family room. Stairs lo ■ floored etfic for tlorage — Plus 2Vi car parage. Located lust across the street from the lake privilege lot on Schoolhouse-Lake In an elite neighborhood but cibse to schools and shopping. Priced at an unbelievable 141,900. INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP FOUR BEDROOMS OUR GUARANTEe6 TRADE-IN, PLAN IS DESIGNED F MR, Homeowner without it - you must sell YOU buy OR buy before YOU SELL - CALL RIG TQ TRADE THE HOME YOU OWN FOR THE HOME YOI Ask lor any oh our qualified Sales People! Olets Howi Bryan,' Eileen Moyer, , Norm Davis. Leona Hunt, Elain Pate Groenendal, Leo Bog4rt, Devs Bradley, Emery I Donne\Gooden. 1071 W. Huron St. .MLS 61 "IT PLEASES US TO PLEASE YOU" INDIAN VILLAGE TRADITIONAL 2-slory A^OUT Ou’r GUAR/Th ONCEII ABOUT PROGRAM! SYLVAN VILLAGE BRICK RANCHER wilh lull basement, 2-caj'-pr'ogram'' -WEST BLOOMFIELD THREE BEDROOM aluminum ranch. Save mor fuming the present mortgage with $121 montf-ABOUT OUR GUARANTEE PROGRAMIl BRENDEL LAKE FRONT ras to delight the whole family. PLEASURE In e S^b^room, JVS #50 ' g*uar^nt*e'I ABOUT OUR GUARANTE #67 I large wooded lot. Family rODAYII ASK ABOUT OUR NATIONWIDE FREE SERVICE SIX NEW MODELS OPEN SATURDAY AND SUNDAY j 5 ,P.M. or .by Appoinli COI.ONIAL AND MID-LEVEL WesP' Huron at Vborheis R.d. KEYION RANCHER AND TRI LEVEL Hiller Rd. al Keylon t OXFORD FAMILY RANCHER M 24, lust north ol Drahner R( AVON; RANCHER Avon Rd., lust east ol Crooks Rd. CLARKSTON' 625-2441 ROCHESTER 651-8518 _ ORION/OXFORD PONTIAC 628-4211 338-7161 UNION UKI 863-4171 D—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FfilDAY, MAY 16, 1969 For Wont Ads Ditd 334-4981 fait Houtet 49 ^It Houses AVON UTICA AREA ■rick Weinberger rancher, 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms, carpeted living room, family room with fireplace, full basement,' 2-car attached garage, beautifully and landscaped lot, asS&me mortgage carpetlr S’s per cent, payments of r57, f|> 1» ACRES — With your own private stream, also • 4 bedroom frame home, end e.eomplef* set of ouf-hbuses. Excellent location In area of - fine homes. 1 mile West of Oxford. Asking $59,500. d IV. ml. W. of Waterford’ Hill Cl^ermlng brick tfl-tevel In gn aiba of executive homes. Features Include: 3 .large bedrooms, IV3 baths, gds hot water heat. Family room. Huge well landscaped lot and Mved street. Offered at only $42,500. You can assumb' the present mortgage or we can arrange new financing for you. Make your personal appointment today. A Grand Piano Will fit almost anywhere In the large ranch we have on beautiful Cass Lake. Features Include: 240 ft. of quiet secluded sand beach. 4 bedrooms. i'/2 baths. Separate' apartment for guests. Full walk-out beagment and attached 3 car garage. This home Is partially remodeled and is Id-........... Investment. Offered af ACRESrN-ACRES In beautiful scenic Kalkaska, —, now, build shortly. Reasonable down, reas. monthly peyme— Write: Adami Realty, P.6. 491, Kalkaska Michigan. 29444 call 4l4-250r9449. ___ BY OWNE^YEAd around home and knolV pinc cabin with 4 acres BY OWNER, SACRIFICB, 2 wooded lots, Elliibett SItora. $4M aiid esiume $2000 Balanca. 535-75T7. For investmtnt, deveippment or bidg. sites 45 BEAUflFUL rolling acres, neai '—tgr. Land contract terms. 74 ACRES — north of Rochester, 'A irrSwiTT'e^AREA ll'9S'”aer^ Z'S.rXr.Sf - ''““"■'’'•l'^«r''i™undPfd w!m fl'.fi'“3 bid- ontreck terms. j rempdeM, home, barn, 40x70, it ACRES — between Rochester endl„5vv?i'i E 'AREA — 130^ acres with Leke^Orlon on pavedySem Ifilnen- *’'^^,''^H‘-JLrobm%ome"5te1oS piiS )arh, paved barn yard plus other jidgs. $50,1(00 terms. LAPEER CO. — 275 acres with modern home, some tiling done, 2 barns, small tenam homa, silo and other bldgs. KINGSTON AREA — 40 ecrea with 4 bedroom home, barn, tMl shed, silo, etc. land pertly tllledjebmes with tractor Ond tools. $22,000.00. d\r IfA. ... Rochester MILTON WEAVER INC. Realtors III W. Unlversl.ty__________________4514141 COTTAGE NEAR LAKE HELEN, Includes 1 bedroom, kitchen, Summer Fun Can be yi the pure ________________ and watar haal... Other features include: a brick fireplace, aluminum storms and screens, full basement and .water and sewers. Offered WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE . YOU 'JOIN THE AAARCH TO TIMES' Times Realty SMALL RESORT OVERLOOKING TROUT LAKE In Upper Pehninsula. Includes a bcaOtiful 4 bedroom brick home, and 5 ' self sufficient cabins. Available for $38,850 with $10,000 down. CROSS Realty & Investment Co. 674-3105 MLS 54 Salt Fariin 56 FARREa Independence Twp- Exceltent\buildlng tIttX 150x1^ I with well on property. Lei privileges with private beach fi subdivision. $3200 down. Assun land contract. ~T HOWELL 24 desirable acres, gently, rolling, woods, 1452 feet of road frontage. Close to 144 and Grand River. $4500 down on land contract. BIG OPPORTUNITY FOR SMALL INVESTOR 100 X 200 praantly zoned r NEAR HADLEY — Over 100 acres with farm bulldInOs. $550 per acre. RIverlet flows through, also manmade large trout pond. All stocked. Trade your home on equity, on down. UNDERWOOD 425-2415 GRAYLING AREA, 10x50' trailer on " acres. Adams Realty, P.O. Box ----------------- 29444,'or call 414-, BALOWINl ROAD frontage BATEMAN HEREl 1 ACRE PLUS eke itage on Oi 4' back to bedroom home 4 ____ ____ Oakland Ave., living room with tirepli ■ ' St., room, covered patio. 2Vj . bedro< and. Opportunity unlimited, price $20,000 All this for $19,900 on Gl terms with' 250-9449. ■ _________________INVESTMENT >. COMMERCIAL CO. INTERLOCHEN, 10 acres, large Specializing in Investment Real house and barn. $7,500 with $1,000 ■ . ,^*’*** ^ ' down, also wooded recreational ’***• land $100 per awe. United Farm 338-9641 .A?«2F^^TL»«/»_^y, 947-^^^ Weekdays after 5, Sat. t. Sun. OG, 2 BEOROPM, 24'x24', $2995. CALL 682-2941 Ch^et^ iT^'^'tedroom “ aToTI'. LOTS-acREAGE NEAR ikl area". .... ... ___ ______ , Completely roughed In'on your lot.'I ??n ^ and bath, newly carpeted GOOD'INCOME PROPERTY. Must Bill Dew, FE 8-2198 or FE $-3529. I '-®*' Lodge, — ...u,. . c>n>iiu sgcrlflcg, health problems. 8 furnished apts. plus modern living - "---iltorj. "" . Family Harrietta. partly finished for 4th bedrooi water softener, $100 down 1 FHA terms. TUCKER REALTY CO. 903 PONTIAC STATE BANK 334-1545 EASTHAM REALTY REALTORS 5020 Highland Rd. (M-59) MLS 674-3126 335-7900 ALL BRICK NORTH PONTIAC ir 2 BEDROOM B®Na^OW,^do^se OCCUpAnCVe *»ins «uwr •'IIMT — purchase. Available on FHA or cash to existing m ^ ‘ Payments *'• -Insurance Assume mortgage • on this 3- per mo. bedroom home. Commerce Lake _ WATERFORD 2 BEDROOM BUNGALOW, Walerlord Twp., $12,500 FHA or Gl terms. 343-4703. LAKE ranch. I not exceed $100 LOWER STRAITS PRIVILEGES, 2 bedroor garage, fenced yard, --------- trees. $15,000 terms, 343-7700. 2 POSSIBLY 4 BEOROI Pontiac, full basement, gat Gl terms. Sl5,9C0. 343-54;7. WEST SIDE 9 rooms, 2W baths. Used as 2 unit. Very good rental area. Very good condition. Close to General hospital. $14,500. Cash to -------mortgage. •332-0262 616 W. HURON OPEN 9-9 S. 493-1097. O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? EXECUTIVE HOME Partridge "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" BANKS ONLY PAY 5 per can Buy this Smell Pontiac --------- Apartment Showing 15 per cent of gross equity income. $3,900 F— No. 14-4174-lP. SWAN LAKE f one OF THE Test ot the water front' 44 ft. lake front lots, on godd: lots on SchoolhouSB Lake, $W00, fishing lake. 115 thiles from Poh-I make cash offer, Waterford RIty. tiac. Excellent for retiring, ^nly 4 lots left at $2,950, terms. '473-1273. WHAT A BUYI New 2 bedroom modern, completely furnished within city limits of Harrison. Easy farms on la--" VACATION PARADISE Largea completely furnished c PECIAL In Union L»k/! Only Immaculi or this aluminum raAch with jOQ' «*ot. 1 living rjoom, two/bedroomsr privileges It, electric hot w/ter, utility 816,500 or carpeted gas heat, ........ room. A good deal! •droom home on Lake. Only iCt. ! SILVER LWCE FRONT, tri-level, 2 (Ireplacet^wlth gas log, 2W car garage, with elec., eye door, special garage tor boats, 'plus carpeting, bar and refrigerator, sprinkling system, beeutlful large lot. $51,000, terms. 343-4703. 3 BEDROOM BUNGALOW, ent, garage, gas heat, ----- -nty $11,000, day. 423-14001 miSnthly I beach on ..... ................. ...... OR 3-23911. txiatln^. DMr an^ partridge^ •’“’’•'I i Lake area, only terms. 343-7700. PONTIAC east SIDE, 3 bedroom ranch, gas heat, alum, siding, alum. storms and screens, carpeting In living room. Priced to sell $14,400 Gl or FHA or assume existing mortgage. 343-5477. -WALLED I LAKE,_ LOT A RAMBLING 5844 Dixie .. 3 BEDROOM RANCHER 'or 3-0455 On a picturesque. I'A acres with fruit! bearing orchard of over 70 trees. | ig ACRES NEAR CLARKSTON, new This handsome brick home hasi buyer, could divide Into 4 parcels, spacious family room, lush| total road frontage over 80' han- f- carpeting, attractive' fireplace, 2'/i' gy location. Sashabaw area, $17,500 —-^--- garage, circle blacktop drive. A contract terms. » Suburban Property rtgage terms. EM 3-4703. 3 BEDROOMS, full basement, alum., siding, m car gara^. gas heat, Waterford, $22,000, terms. EM 3-7700. AVON TWP., 3 bedrooms, large living room, fireplace, garage, gas heat, has small house in rear for. Income. $25,000. terms. EM 3-5477. . COMMERCE TW.P., 4 bedrooms, j' 4mII hacAment. 2 «torV. 2 laras e personally to appreciate. Igced to $34,900 for quick tor your appointment to- 4^^H REAL ESTAtE" O' OF BEAUTIFUL LAKE FRONTAGE, sandy Mach, walk-out dock ................. family room fireplace, extras galore, exclusive Price $59JOO.OO, cottage, with full bL----- ------ wooded Jake trOnt lot. 1145 Lake Shore Dr.. Ken MInto, Gallager _R^eaJly_^.^ Flint. CE 9-8491._____. ^ " - Lakcj OVER 3 ACRES j i'm'medrale 'occupancy. ' ISlhaSaw “lld. 'rrot ^r,Vk.to"^!' $5500 full price. Ask tor 287A. , ............... home COTTAGE FOR- SALE, H area. 391-3343. MILLER LAKE, ....... ------ lOxSO mobila homa with 10x44 addition on 1 acra with taf' shown by appolhtmarvt. h**lto«’*ad- sloping V4 ACRE WOODED lot In restricted subdivision. ) Tom'Glesenkamp.'....... . ' ~ ' I SPRING neignoornoDo. rrice wx.jw.uv, —A*ir\ ” ji ixiisvr considtr land contract. (W# trade), j NEW ./moL apple blossoms --- ... i LOT — As low as 8329 down, low} several 3 acre parcels located In Apple Lane. Estates o**'------ ' Development Co. 474-0319 contract terms. _____ $36,500. Excellent llnanclng available. No. 10-28 MENZIES AN EXCELLENT Ottlca: 425-5485_Evas. Sun, 6JS-5015 RIVER FRDNT HDME ‘ Rd. and Hadley Rd. res, you can havg a horse. Priced at 84,950 with' 1-3 down. BOB WHITE REAL ESf ATE 625'5821 DUtE HWY. near Holly, 17 miles ^^om Flint or Pontiac. 3 bedroom RHODES' "360' ON Milford Rd. Corner lot 340' deep. 3200 a- " Vito Victorian d‘ 24 X 22. 31 X LAUINGER 473-2148 Multiple and Commercial Near Milford, lonad tor 140 unlit or would ba lultabla for ahopplng cantar. -Also 23 acres Inside Milford city limit?, could ba zoned to suit. Sewer and water avail. Owner w A Slones' throw from Cass Lake. BEAUTIFUL I'/i ACRE ISLAND , ___________________ ____ - ------------------ home. Everything' garage. WelMar In Irish Hills. Jf ml. to Ml! $3s,000 cash 1o 2Vi car 4-bdrm. home. Everything - - _____ In Irish Hills. * — Florida rooiri overlooking: speedway $52,000 cai ----- exterior,! -• -— 7 Nice'fized ..............rrTvileoes_7Yow''t8xes v_aar j ____ Full basement with ...... ,,.,,11, acreallon room, Attache _3^ RHDDES, ReoltOT FE 8-2304 258 W. Walton FE 5-6712 Price $28,900. I^IRST OFFERING This lovely ranch Is situated Watkins Lake Estates. Featurini spacious bedrooms, ceramic Ilia t and- a halt, practically n carpeting, family room, lull _____, Qversizad two cor garag brick exterior, all this and mor Priced realistically,. Call today tor ____________427-2544.7 COMMERCE LAKI ■ Ike privileges ound. $7380 c4 62 or 474-14;^ CEDAR^SLAND LAKE liay. 1700 sq. ft. Custom, quality, /hrick. Mint condition. 3 ,— ----ii 2v, bgths, Urge living imlly room, ea. with Overlooking lake and 35 landscaped 1 acre ____ to new morlff— McNamara Realty 429-74M multiple LISTING SERVICE SCHOOL HOUSE LAKE, excalll . I Waterford building aita on Shawnee , Lana, sacrifice at $2,900 for qi ■ i"*l sale. Waterford Realty, 473-1273. If'lWAT " I WATERFORD TOWNSHjP Lots—Acrea3«_ 54 Sal* Forms - I BRIAN REALTY Wa Sold Your Neighbor's Hornet Multiple Listing Service Weekdays 'til 9 *“"•‘•2 5280 Dixie Hwy. 43^02 . PONTIAC LAKE - MS9 ISO' trontaga on M59 and W frontage op Pontiac Lake. All, utilities In. Zoned multidwalllno. LAUINGER 474-0319 8W-II08 SELL OR LEASE PONTIaD — manufacturing plant. 9,300 sq. ft. block oonstructlon, railroad tiding, 2 truck walla, tank storage, ' air conditioned officet, parking area. Contact J. Alt, Vulcan Laboratorlea, 334-4747, personal showing. basement, .hes, carps cabinets, larje p-orches. carpe,lhg,‘’Sui:iM?i I^h'lSI lA HUFF AND A ^ 'irge lol, exceptional jCould not blow_ landscaping, $31,MO. 343-1 tcepllon -4703. . . all .brick/ ........ . bedrooms, '- ramie tiled bath, loads ' 49 Sale Houses TED'S TRADING ' McCullough realty, inc. VAL-U-VISION SHOW OFITOMES Gl TERMS - OXFORD AREA a have a 3 bedroom ranch on targe lot with aluminum storms Td screens, hardwood floors and II basement for only $13,900. PDNTIAC NDRTHERN AREA ad roc orth Ing, taslefully ( drive, rlly water and sewer, ful basement. FULL PRICE, $15,25 on. FHA or Gl Terms. king size fireplace, and full -------n FHA JHIS IS ITI the home with a family with Its large kitchen-area, 3 bedrooms, lull basement, new 2'/i car garage, lots o( play area tor the kiddles. FULt‘PRICE, *17.900., ATTENTIDN SHDPPERSI ranch department, . short lime only e bedroom dining 1 We have tor more then loveiy rancher with brick a exterior, carpeting full basemenl, dinir „tache(t garage, "««» other goodies throughput, .. d'n'.nd only $25,500. runs out, LET'S TRADE. 3 BEDRODMS, E-Z TERMS ■ 674-2236 MtCUllOUGH Reolty, In'e. 5440 H'*.....— 474-2234 approx. 145x185';, full basement, -l. It., heat, yard partially’ edt ] overlooking 2 car attached garage, drapes, malor ap-iances Inch Exc. value. $42,500. | GDRDGN I WILLIAMSDN croTf ‘’!«®-- -M7JIAapla E.__B'h8m. , gcRE ON'CASS Lk. Rd. north of -7,54' ' - .A-;.-..., . «-r .. Aa.59. " --------- LAKE FRONT LOT........... .... , . _ boathouse and patio, beautiful view with of Woodhull Lake. " 1 ACRE OF LAND In restricted 5 ACRE PARCELS, WOODED, roll-subdlvislifn, 2 miles north of {"B-J'''* Clarkston. Quick access to 1-75.1 terms. Fowler, 343-8322, 343-4411. 42S-2268. ^________________^ 10 ACRES, UNIMPROVED house, I. 5, 10 ACRE PARCELS, woada4 ’ ------ Fowler RItv 343-8322 acres (200x440') $4,400. -tPy'jL’*”1'' - lA/ATTC realty . . 427-3447 Eegla. Lake 343-7700. LDTS CARROLL LAKE. HEIGHTS, I 48x130'. S1800. 363-4703. LOT 90x170', Park acres. $251 PLEASANT LAKE, canal front, 116x169', $5100. 363-7700. independence twp., 75x100" on Longview, has cement toup-datlon, has pare lest, septic Is ■|n. $2500. EM 3-7700. t. With building |ob. EM PLEASANT LAKE HIGHLANDS, canal Ironl. $3500. Land contract terms, 343-7700. ___________ LaYe ’Oekland'/With orwoodhull Lake. ^ iMl''''1“ige"’'''’M«d''''N?eJ!^"IieH ALSO 2FLATTLEY REALTY ! V,'K. W| W ——z------------------■ -------- from Pontiac Motori. 81,500 each. ^EJ:«04^ / LAKE FRONT 5 room YDU'LL NEVER ^GRET _ J.®-®. «J.t.-i ’ ' where charm badins door, avarythhig It ii«", alum, aiding, fenced yard, ns' 24'x16'■ tedar barn, IVa car garagi concrete drive, lake prlvllegas o Casa Lake. Price $21,100. F.H.A. c — safe beach, garage, part basemenl* c,o m p I a t e I y furnished. Idaat for the couple spending tuRimart In Michigan and winters alsewtre. At White Lake. $25,000, 29 per cent down. Very well Kept. Dock and boat too. Call Underwood. 425-2415. 2W ACRE HOMESITE with lake PTlvIlegea. 4814)871,_______ d’A ACRES, CLARKSTON near.l-7S, Clintonvilfe Rd., 150' x 1290', horiea' allowed $1200 down. SHELDON 625-5557 LAKE INEZ BIGl BIGI BIG! | Atlanta, MicH. on M-32 ... I Seven bedroom home located near Pre-SeOSOn SpeCiaT downpayment. shopping canter end Lincoln Jr, High Lg,ge wooded lake. Ironl lots on WRIGHT REALTY so that you have an the necessary beamitui private, spring led lake, Oakland ave fe 2-9141 conveniences lor E.Z living only a| ,gnay beaches, from $3,400 Laxe ----- five minute walk to the FIsner Bldg.' access lots, 2 end 5 acre parcels 4'/2 ACRES, CORNER Squirrel and Hurry, hurry, hurry on this one. available Excellent fishing, wrile Shimmons Rds., PAntlac Twp., nr. F.H.A lermi avallabla. No, 20-30 Lake Inez, 2548 Elizabeth Lake: Oakland Univarsitk Has home. Rd., Ponllac, Mich. 48054. Ph. 474-1 Potential apartment site. $36,000. 0856, evening^ 4_lo 9. _ ' 5^7-1159. JWrs^Gormalne. _ LAGOON LOT,~50“x ‘l85;“waik-oul 110, ACRES, "C^RKSTO^ ares near i basement site. Pvt. Lk. OR 3-3275. ! I-7S, 330'x1320', $1700 *9wh;._._ Cament wuKi CLARKSTDN'AREA | SHELDON 625-5557 ■ ----^ Green Lake, 3 Bedroom ranct tomalhing. a little ditfarent. Coui try styia kitchen with family aret natural, tireplaca. basement, gaS heat. 2 car garage, corner lot with lake privileges, new and ready to move In. Approximately $7000 down. 7 par cent mortgage. K. L. TEMPLETON, , REALTOR 2339*PRCHARD LK. RD. ---------- Eft) TO 800 ACRES In Lower Michigan. Dairy, ( ,beet or hogs! Name your needs, we have It at D "Michigan's Farm Real E.._ Headquarters," 220 N. Michig, ZONED RO-1 Dixie Highway trontaga, 100 feet of frontage on tha bualaat ■ highway in Oakland County. Large colonial styled home tMith 2-car garage and a larga lot which can be adapted to a variety at business ventures. Trade your present equity In on this desirable site. $49,900. FRUSHOUR REALTY rm 5730 WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD in's 474-2245 ..... 474-4141 517- , 5 ACRES Close to Clarkston — also have MveraLparerts^ near 1-75, In Orion | 157 ACRE FARM in Missaukee County with I room modern house and oarage attached,. hot water healed, free gat, new barn, <110x32, basemant, 40x32, anothai- building, 75x20. Very, good land, all limed. Must see to’ appreciate. Write: Gene Gibbs, Route No. 1, McBaln, per acra, call 343-5477. WHITE LAKE PRIVILEGES, lot 104x198', $4500 larmt. EM 1-6703. To buy, to sell _ List with Hacketf, start to pack It, 7750 Cooley Lake Rd„ Union Lake, Michigan DAVISBURG ______________ _____ heust, small barn>wlth 70 acres at $400 per acre, HglloWay Realty, call Holly 434-9935 or Fenton 629- ^ONED INDUSTRIAL- Cholca Pontiac Township location ' dost to 1-75 8. relocoM M-59. Over 1,000 teat ot blacktop front- W®N STDUT, REALTOR 1450 N. Opdyko FE 5-8145 GREATER able. “ ATTENTIGN-i EX-SERVICEMEN!! Nice 3 bedroom t BLDDMFIELD CD. CDMMERCIAL DIV. Magnlflclant 20 acre, private lake, teeming with 4-4 “■ “■■■ rounded by IS > Bus|aeM 1-QUESTIDNS FOR INVESTDRS 2 — Is Washington getting too much ;ot your money? Tax money, that 3 Having troubi* disposing of your Investment properties without paying a heavy capital gains tax? terms. NEW MDDELS OPEN DAILY 1-5 P.M. At Lake A Lakevlaw Estates. ____ ... Walton to Cllnlonvillo Road To Lake Angelus Road RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3520 Pontiac Lako Road OR 4-2222 mi- 49 Sal* Housai 332-3844 49 Listing - Selling — Appraising — Building LOOK ON THE OUTSIDE, INSIDE AND COST SIDE , llktfnaw this paw 2 large bedrooms, chtory kitcl __r-Bqo and drapes. Lake prlvltagaa a listing today I PEOPLE WILL TALK Wt otter this sharp story ond a hilt home tor youi It hat 3 bedrooms, bath, kitchen, newly carpeted ... large paneled family room, ahd a 'car and a half garage with blacktop drive. This II located off JOalyn on fho north side. Mako this a MUST on your list to set at 117,900, with FHA or Gl tormi. Remombtr, wo tradal NOW OPEN ... NEW MODEL .. . OPEN NOW Open Daily Except Friday from 2 t o 5 p.m. Open Saturday from 1 to 6 p.m. *5900 WELLINGTON. A ■Juper aluminum rancher with all aluminum trim, ctramic mailer baihronm plus half bath, Formica cupboard?, will lo wall carpeting Ihnmighoul. and allachad garage. On'your lot, $20,5001 DIRECTK5NS; 'me Dixie Hl4hWa9 to W-mila north ot AndetATnvIno Rd,, turn right on Rockcroll to WeMIngloh. \ FRUSHOUR REALTY , REALTORS - MLS \ 674-2245 5370 Williams Lake Rd. 6744161 _ 852-5375. _ CaKeTrONT HOMES. New ond Utod. J^U Dolly Co._____ EM 3-7114 LOTUS LAKE FRONT Large shady lot with sand heach, 2-car garage, 3 bedrooms plus dan, large kitchen, living room with heatllalor fireplace. H o I w a 1 e r baseboard ----- 0 ACRES SPRINGFIELD Twp. wooded, lacludad, flowing atraam. 1000' frontage. $400 par acra. 343-4413 or 48S-f404. A CHOICE of 14 loti, •tortlng at $1500. Waterford and Indepandanca Townihlpt. AL PAULY 473-3800_ Eves. 473-9272 AG(X:i!y^ TO LIVE the true beauty country In tho ______ , redwood homo which Is tho one-of-the-kind offarlng, and just 2 hrt. from bftrolt. Terms. Lovely 80 acra farm with early American Farm homa. Property It wooded and .has live stream. Just $79S par acre. Tarmi. lass Cur. " >»> Contact Bob Bartlebaugh, of stslaiyl Commercial Exchange Dept. McCullough i^ealty 5440 Highland Rd. (M-59) 474-2834 ______________MIJ --- Enloy color Of God's year round . UNIT TRAILER PARK olso laundromot — sporting gooda atora and miniature race treat — room for 2 extra builnaatca'tall under one root, 200' on busy main ttreel. Alto 100' on lake. *139,000. Ineludet coubla will atav on 30 days to orient new ownort. 4 par cant contract. Terms. UNDERWOOD 425-2615 _________ COUNTR't5 ACRES 2W LAKE FRONTS, COMMERCE,'" Fox,, Tyrone. Cedar Island. Fowler. 343- OPEN 2-6 P.M. 3 ACRES with a pleasant coun- T®l*9raph Bd^ ' Iryside view. $3,950, terms. i ®' ■ > .AC?«,....Mo_a,lgh.ly rolling, “-j 10 ACRES, Lapoor areal wide road frontage and all good land. Many ------A. ---------— — —- property. 2Vj baths, 2 fireplaces,: 25c CAR WASH new barn. Fenced exercise all maintenance equipment guc. i -x r*ai» y,M. with property.,$59,500. Terms.. Pontiac. Nets $12,000 ' ■ $14,000 cash or $14,000 tat GREATER BLOOMFIELD , p.m. can - REAL ESTATE '~»®'' Annett Inc., Realtors 338-0466 59BusIness Opportuaities 59 parctit to chooto irom, $5,*50, $l down, I, $I2,*sa' 25 acres, bOlutIful rolling ^country I and over 1800' of rood frontage, | $487 par acra. Total price $70,500, terms. < i Williams Lake Fronta|je Full brick, carpeted throughout, 2 fireplacos. New kitchen. New bath. 16x14 family room. Built In washer, and dryer. Separata bar area lor, i.----r;;- tnlarlolnlng. Recraallon room.'__CALL COLLECT 427-2815_____ Complot# with many extras CLARKS’TON. EXCELLENT bulldlnp' throughout. Land contract terms. -,||g or Investment potential. Land Morlgeg# aseg'nqtlon or cash, contract. P.O. Bo* 152, Clarkston, $38,900. , Mich. 48016. West ot US 10, 2',ii miles on - ---- ------- Williams Lika Rd. Lett on Lan-man to 4741. Your host, Randy Royer Realty, Inc. OXFORD OFFICB , . 42I-2S4I__ ___ f0WNSEl4D LAKE 100' lake frontage, 200' datp. 14500. Terms available. SISIOCK & KEf^T, INC. C. PANGUS INC, Realtor , OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 430 M-15 FARRELL 2.7 acres. WaliT ■ In. sewer aVallabId toon. Ideal building alto with room lo go growl Can be* bought on land Contract at 17,500 with lew down paymanl. FARRELL REALTY 2465 N. Opdyko Rd. Pontiac WOULD YOU LIKE TO EARN $25,000 A YEAR? You can now own your own store and b* your own boss for as little as a $5,000 down payment; ^ Quik Pik Food Stores, Inc., has new locations avoilable throughout , Metropolitan Detroit, Poijtiqc. ,: , ; , ; Complete training program^ and financing available. CONTACt WILLIAM >. BENNETT, AT QUIK PIK #00D STORES, INC, 5255 TILLMAl*! AVE., DETROlf, MICH. 48208 PHONE 264-0150 OR 896-6180. • A R - R E ITAURANT, ......... BMCti. Building ind - iqulpmcnt. ---- —i condition. Call. 517.47^. Are You Searching For___ The American Dream , ■ ' Brian inc. ^ «ia.n7m! toBO- <82-a34'5._____________^ NEW SNAP on motor"tunalip elec- F R G I D A I R E ^^STOVE, «0) trio sCooe. Cost SUM. Want boat/ refrigerator, $M-FE 8-6711. * ......I. iFRIGIDARE REFRIGERATOR, good 'waiiT- condition, $35. 363-2034, ■ “ I G IDAIrI REFRIGERA’"^" III for cosfi°or'^? ' ithersnurnfture, ] lor, imperial m^el. FE 2-i .? 7452 Roselawn, Wafledjjl^ WANTED: 592 or 312~eniinertra l__for_For^rally pack. 624-3046. FURNITURE ________FE 5-1705 '________ USED COW^T^^SETS, $199.95 RADIO AND APPIANCE, spraying ^gun hoist? blacfcsmitti ?grge; i , irtg stone; tractoc tire io roller; heaVy pulleys; ... garden tools; cpke machine. 4945, Madlsoii Heights. PURE SERVICE STATION DEALERSHIP If you are ambitious and want travel the road to success, ha rour .own business, apd call Sale Clothing dresser, mirror and 4 “-hest. Sold for $149, bale ;6 ca>h or $10 monthly. 2 FORMALS, peach and green, to J 335-5464 aft. 3:30 p.rr 'e IVORY WEDDING OREliS, .size 10. dealtrshlo is your answer LADIES dresses# foi hSte a brand Vew statiSl, read? coats. Size »10. 851-3327. for the right man. It you qualify, SON GONE TO COLLEGE, size_______________ there Is free paid training, pro-! 16, 18. 1 more than $100, ydurs for fessional business counseling and! $1$. 6140 AndersonviUe, Waterford. finencldn a u a ] I « h 1 • i ~ '-----'...■ ' ---------- l".^r“lS‘’HoYz?y'orth? Household Goods 65 t 482-3344 or after ' " ' ...... ~ call Mr. Proudfoot at 673-3773. 'X0MMERCIAL“|NVESTC>RS'' 340' frontage and 225' on adjoin street# good corner location witi brlc*' ^ ■ partment. buillding ( “"6*‘’?n(5 _____ ________ Elizabeth Lake Road, $21,000 down on land contract, terms. Call Clark Real Estate, 1362 W. Hurdn St. 682-8850 for further Inftrt ' IDEAL BUSINESS for couple. Li down payment. Chicken peiight Pontiac. Good opportunity for rij party. Call after 4 p.m. 334-4959. U'D EXPECT TO P, 3ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $297 LITTLE JOE'S ____________ BARGAIN house Inflation Leverage _ oMfegJ Sofa, Mr. and Mrs. chairs, raversl-.ble cushions, self-decked with arm caps. Sold for 8279, balance $186 cash or 810 monthly. Colonial sofa zippered reSe decked. Sold I 8243 cash or 8 French provincial double bed iss, ' zippered md matchipg chair, ilble cushions. Self >r $359, balance due matching chair, zippered raversibla cushions, sole ‘-•i— $176 cash or Bunk bed complete with mattresses, ladder, guard rail and slats, only $95 cash or $10 monthly. Modern sola and matching chair, zippered cushions. Sold for $189, balance due $118 cash or $10 ttwnthly. . I YOUNG MARPIEOS, WE MAY ABLE TO GET YOUR CREDIT WITHOUT A CO-SIGNER. HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE DISCOUNT FURNITURE * SI Eliz. Lk. Rd. 681-2383 --------- RJ. (iQ.y p.tn, dally) I, 6x2o!gRAY BREAKFAST set $35. GE porch I apartment s’* ___Electric tr 1 and mounted ti rEcV^IC l^fCigeTT 1. Elizabeth Lakp-Rd.l Eves, area, iii n. x 213 ft. Zoned C3.jij—gS Well tquipped Beauty Shop and rental unit can bt leased out. $17,500 will handle. ^ 1.—^ Blvifood Realty_____________682-2418^1. 10 ; "HPRINT SHOP I Rat.; Offset >and letltw^ast anST^ast'orowInT'business 88.000 down. Owner will stay for breakinq-in period SaXlars^*" FEf'zSSi - ------fibljlfroTcr / WARDEN REALTY ’-pJ^ce/wntempor^ 1434/W. Huron, Pontiac 682-39201 __ _ _ ___ ______ ______ ________________________ marathon service'station Pon-1 tangular tabla $229.50. GE 23'-, than 1 yr:_ojd._M2-3m tiac area. Completely remodeled,! color TV with drop door, $539.50. unilCFMDin SPFflAL busy, beautiful location. 2 bays, 2; $100 trade in allowance. Hampton' HUUitnULU irCLIPL hoists, high potentTal, Will help Electric, 25 W. Huron. FE 4'~'~ finance. Reply confidential. Write 4.p,ECE BEDROOMS, bran Pontiac Press Box C-21.'________ j97. Little Joe's Bargain i , lU^ED 19,69 SINGER Gdld^ Toilch and Se\ Automatic botfonhole maker, push button bobbin, fahey designs, monograrns. Comes ""'"i- full price, S155.M gr I Midwest Appliance, 9 334.5477 ALLlS CHALMERS' WD-14 3AS-OIL FURNACES and boilers. >»,m inifall. Used gas boilers. t Sales, 625-lMt. 674-4341. , IK COMPRESSORS, , luonvaiiviii equipment, hydraulic lacks, steam| Mnin?® n*I?i MARION BLUE SOD, umvarsity Drive. FE 2-r'~- ' " Hawthorne camper, slOeps-4. 634, hOTPOINT WASHER . , each or best offer# 1 - $25. 482-3984. ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN FI ANTiqUE BOND board for trade. 62S-5832. waterfall vanity and beni Victorian couth. 674-3271. WANTED: SINGLE MAPLE bed a YOUNG MARRIEDS MMd furniture? Urtder 21? We e i?2383.' BASEMENT RUMMAGE; BARN BEAMS and b4 625-2268 or 625-1912. Antique* 2 HORSE sdEIGH OVER ISO year. ' I, useable condition, best offer tr $150, private party. 693-8841. s FurniMre, 640 A y. green 2 PIECE : FLEA MARKET and Antique Sale: Sunday, May 18, 11 a.m. to S p.m. Paint Creek Antiques and Gifts. 4480 Orion Rd„ Rochester. Dealers Welcome. Call 651-7294 through .Sat. LATE VICTO'RIAN combination desk —" bookcase, $65. Gingerbread Rop™4fed?'’i with 2 I HOT 7 WATER gallon ‘ gas. • prqved. $89.50 value. $39.95 a $47.95, marred, Also electric e butane heaters. Terrific valu Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchi 01 SCRplIib BLACK dirt, , ° dressing deUvered. UL 2-5462. 685-377$. Fl ,*HN BEAN' 5 9«fto^ /LAWN SPRINKLING systems; s BEE CLUB RUMMAGE '—'ly. outgrows, even s-- Its wear, childrens, maga: 1, Rd., Drayton Plains. BOY'S TOY RUMMAGE, telescopes, road Vacing l-..... and games. Saxophone and large Curtis pusher. 682-6386. Phone OR 4-3695 after 6 and cuttert. $90.00. ....W' SAND AND GRAVEL I gravel products, fill sand ___ rl, crushed limestonei A-1 top II black dirt. Phone 384-0042. All 1 Storage Merchandise Auction, Sot. 7i30 p.ni. Bar set, 6 stools. Formica tool hlda-a-bad; power me war:; refrigerator; 2 TV's; wringer washer; gas range; chllfaraM. ......good marchandlsa. 300RS OPEN 7 P.M. AUCTIONUND _______300 Crescent Lake RQ.__ AUCTION SALE — 6 miles E. and I mile S. of Romeo at 21600 31, Mila Rd., cor. qt Hartway Rd. on Sat,, May 17iaf 12:30 p.m. Complete line of farm Implamants and some hdusab.ald goods. Wm. Klehlon. prop. Netlonat Bank of Richmond; Clark. Paul Hillman. CATERPILLAR 8, DOZER Hydrau-. lie blade, $4,000. HD 6 AlHs mer $2,500.' 10-12 yard pull sci $900. 210 Low Boy, OlfOO. N PUNCH PRESS 10 ton straight, side single double back --------- " shut height. Pets-Hunting Dogs shortened. George's Welding lavato'rTk complete YOUR WEDDING 9797. CROQUET SET; shuffle bo ladles golf clubs, bag and , little used; axerCIsa'bike; pbri _ typewriter; Hoover Dial-A-Matlc portable sewing machine; electronic spot reducer; Argosy 3 camera; film splicer; Roberts ilero tape recorder; --------------- 674-2517, 623-0925. CUSTOM MADE BRtDAL ring « point center diamond, lajler stones, $180, original pi USED HOUGH LOADER & Used Terra Trak Dozer. BURTON equipment Cf -A AKC POODLE Pu| bathtubs, toilets, regulars, terrific! Fluorescent, 391 Comerois - Service iproved. 332-2562. LAWN SPRINKLING pumps, to 2 h.p„ priced from $92.50. G. A. Thompson and .Son, 7005 M-59 W. MOVING, Cash register, $2W sawing machine, $20; freezer, $100: FE 2- 2 universal ACCORDIONS. Good condition, $200 each, OR 3-1135. MANUEL LOWREY Electric = joslyn. 1206 VINE- HOOVER VACUUM SWEEPER, I HINGS,;LAMPS ring room; Organ, laoie, i-k * Davisburg, 634-8991. Ml 1 Tblack-sllver female. YEAR OLD GER.............. shepherd, female, $50. FE 4-7829. 2 ADORABLE 1 YEAR OLD GRINNELL Brothers French Provincial console, 10 yr. warranty, $600. 651-1159._____ i BASS DRUM wanted; reasonable*! — less. Appearance unim- ; _________ 338-0108.___^ I cMpete 's'et of Sparkle Drums. BesI $600. 673-0762. > realtors. Pontiac Press, payments, 363-4726. SOFT WATER Shores, 682-9185. IRON Upholstery ound end tables, I, $20. 2655 Sylvan Ing the following; Exchange tank dept. Auio.'soffiener rental dept. Sales of auto, units. Salt delivery. Each section of this bush making verv hiah earnings, » expending 9x12H:ffl6leuiTi Rugs $4.95 Solid Vinyl Tile ----- Vinyl Asbestos t... .... ......... Inlaid Tile, 9x9 ............7c aa. Floor Shop-225S Elizabeth Lake ■'Across From the Mall" „ „ MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OP FURNITURE - Consists of; 8-plece " ---------- —....... living ---- — cocktail table, (1) 9'Xl2' rug Ihciuaea., 7-piecd bedroom suite wit dresser, chest, full-size Innersprlng maffrass and doing '17 CUBIC,, FOOT Refi’lgarator-;17 * i CrAATAr Whifib. Hiinhf* ’vartlcal ic plec« dinette set with chairs and table. All for ! credit Is good at Wyman'i WYMAN FURNITURE CO. chroma MOWERS, TRACTORS BX'I'; jacTler'MccStlSch‘chain______________________ saws we are giving big discounts, FENDER 1968 BASEMAN right nowl Stop in and test drive covers. - -our units and check our prices. 924S. HOUGHTEN POWER CENTER, INC. I----- ' 'Blue' "week old part G a i . shepherd puppies. 67341608, 673-0110. AKC dachshunds! B & B AUCTION SAT. NIGHT, MAY 17 7 P.M. SHARP Truckloads of fresh vegetables and groceries sold in case lots. Railroad salvage and furniture and appliances. MERCHANDISE SOLD BY UNITED AUCTIONEERS ASSOC. y. DOOR PRIZE EACH AUCTlOf^ Dixie Hwy. OR-3-2717 B & B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY ......7:00. P.AA. EVERY SATURDAY ....: 7:00 P.M. EVERY SUNDAY .....V4:00 PM. WE BUY - SELL — TRADE Retail 7 Days Weekly CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME,. CASH PRf’-9 Dixie H $300. 682- UT FIELDSTONE. Cal 628-9297. _______________ CHIPPED bathroom fixtures for -»le, G. A. Thompson 8, Sr- 3MS. ^ Hi-Fi, TV and Radies 66 8200. 32-9124 30" GAS RANGE. Very _^on. $25. 451-1763-36" HOTP’OINT ELECTRl'C'RANGE, $25. Good condition. 644-3641. ^_ l'96r COPPEI^C range, eye-lev#l HU^N__________________FE 5-1501, - _____ dilobia vertical ;jET pCTME $40. Draperies and 21" TV» BLACK AND WHITE, •>- -sys, 473-1735 Venetian blinds.' Make, offer, 673-j condition, $15. 363-3584. __________ 23 CHANNEL Lafayette radid and . YOU CAN'T COSE fe' X'niSi 1968 "USED SINGER ,OFf“FR'^E“'lCE cream and TOUCH AND _SEW cont^rols ’ sandwich shop combination. All carry out. For lease. 674-2312._ WANT TO SELiTyOUR BUSINESS’; Definitely, Realtor Partridge Is-the bird to sat. 1050 Hurdn,- Pontiac, 334- 3581.---------------------—- Sale land Cantracts^_________M ' 1 TO 50 i LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us before yog Warren Stout, Realtor 1450'ill. Opdyka Rd. FE 5416S _______Open Eves. 'HI 8 p.m.___ BY OWNER — Duck La k a privileges, good discount. FE 3-.6245._________________________ ^caSh for lanocontracts H. J. Van welt , 4540 Dixie Hwv. — OR 3-1355 SOLD FOR $7,850, $2,000 down, 7 per cent Interest, 845 m o n f h I V payments. Will Blscounf 81,053. Other land contracte 'Ydlljbl* good discounts. Call and ask lor , Charles Pangui. e. PANGUS, REALTORS ^ DPEN7DAY*AWEEK^_^^„1^ CALL COLLECT 623-2815_____ Wonted Centrucis-jllHg^jA LARGE OR SMALL land cohtractfc |Ulck closing, ^jsopablt discount. EM 3-4M6. tonholes, zig-zag, fancy designs, etc. Smooth steady state features for easy touch button operations. Deluxe model comes complete with cabinet and free- lessons tool Full price, S44.33. Call Midwest Ao-------------dally. 334-3312. KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION-S50 FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service & Supply Co. 2617 DIXIE HWY, 474-2234 LIVING ROOM SOFA anif ordinalwd <^aln. bluai.and i 334-7471. Id condition. 332-3322 alt. 5. | DOWNTOWN ROCHESTER MUST SELL, h GO-CART and ____——. 338-6353. . - STEPS, MANUFACTURER'S Seconds, safety threads. 682-6662 or 678-2238. DUNE BUGGY “idoeport — i$n|n I he,* Fo’ ley Lathe, ____ 75. Jor- motor, Austin-Healey. 6734>732, DON'T MERELY BRIGHTEN your . Blue Lustre then rapid resoillag. lampooer $1. Hi 41 E. Walton. FOR RENT ! Xs“Sr,e.*'*"“' ” *" SMILEY BROS., MUSIC 9 N. SAGINAW _____FE 4-4721 AKC COLLIE PUPPIESr$7S ai 673-31" AKC/ COLLIE PUP! Bloodline. 682-7342. garage salt: 480 Shar intral Methodist ORANGE WALNUT chairs, ....$15, 338-7'" MINATINt 644-1272. PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS NOW OVED TO 440 AUBURN, PONTIAC, FE 4-7881. ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER over Iha, PARKER POWER LAWN I used verv little, 693-1745. PICNIC TABLE - Park Wp lawn *"'*of* cedai bea'uiifui glass tub! ci?,, finish. Moor ilnum frame, with; Rustic Furn. Co. 6465 Dix **" ”■ Clarkstqn. 425-3322. , 7005 M-59 W. PICNIC TABLES - ' iokes, --------- ' Outpost, FARFISA GALAXY ORGAN Like new condition with be FENDER ORGAN, SUNN Amplifier, ' 2 Atlas Banshee P.A. horns, 1 began 100 w6lt P. A. amplifier 2 microphones, with stand. 333-7080. LOWERY ORGAN S P I ORGAN CLEARANCE POODLE, miniature black, lale, well bred from 13" female, mala, hat dittempar shots, 865. AKC BLACK SILVER toy poodle pu^^s, 2 males, I tamale OR 3- Lowrev AKC POODLE PUPPIES. S45 and n' 'a'nd Este, uP- Also Poodle clippers. 332-5M9 from $395. AKC COLLIE PUPPIES. 1T69 TdUCH-A-MATIC New sewing machInOs, does fancy stitching, makes buttonholes, ate. Sold for $124.50, balance only $29.50 or pay $1.10 per weak. Ca" “ night, 338-2544, Imperial. K 4-S;400 0 1 MILLION 1968 SINGER Used zig zag sewing n_. . overcasts, monograms, blind hems, makes buttonholes without *' tachments. 4 year parts Auburn Ava. FE 4-7881, LIVING ROOMS. BRAND new, I Vb prict Little Joe's, 1461 Bak FE 2-6842. _______ turniture plus washer, 673- MATTRESS AND BOX SPRINGS fi ' condition. $20. 332-4561. . MUST SELL, dining y. FE 8- r '68 GTO. 673-9217. FOLDING CAMP t COLOR TV SERVICE Johnson's TV. FE 8-4569 45 E. Walton near Baldwin Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 61 3507 --- ---- . . MOVING TO FLORIDA. Houseful of service guarantee. Complete price furniture and appliances. 689; ISL%fe'‘i£Sber‘m 9*pI!II -82&. 1 18, 12-5. Household items frorn 12o! MANUFACTURER'S CLOSE-OUT STEREO WALNUT OR MAPLE CONSOLE Diamond Needles BSR 4-speed changer $89 > Dixie t plumbing'' bargains, • " - tone* 149.95; dinette set with chain 2 doof refrigerator, Harley Trail bike, bumper po-' ir misc. Itbms. 673-8836. standing toilet, SW.Ki: trim, 819.95; shower stalls wiin rrim, W.95; -bowl sink, 82.95; lavs.. 82.95; tul 820 and up. Pipe cut and throadi SAVE PLUMBING CO. 0 Baldwin. FE 4-1516. lOOSEVELT. MOTHER'S Cli ■,*9% a.r 1531 Kessler# ________ ESH^ERTHTMVc^Mrp^nd, In ■#«»• Cmllna 3t A DOUnd I Auburn AV€.» Sat.# flnaV l/» trOm ropei? Sundays Bimrt Fish noon. Sigma Beta Sj^ty, Phone, Bavport, (517) 656-2121. I RAILROAD TIES, NEW and ustd ;, 275 gallon oil tank. Good _673-1972._____________ REBUILT LAWN MOWERS GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. h -EE 4-05 PONT/IAC OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 9 P.M. SAT^yO P^. PIANO CLEARANCE , It's Sprino claan-up time. Clearance of floor models, trade-Ins, closa-duts. Buy now-sava $50 to 8300. GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. 1710 Telegraph FE ,,4-0566 PONTIAC OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 9 P.M. SAT. 5:30 P.M. _____ r. Days. AKC POODLE PUPPIES, SWap lor FOllMICA REMNANTS, 30c a sq. ,1 You pick .up special discount prn on discontinued patterns. 20c a s It. Waterford Cabinet?, Inc. 57 Willlems Lk. Rd. Drayton Plaint, C DACHSHUND PUPPIES. N nd tamales. 332-1643._____ : SHELTIE P'U'PPIES, AKC PEDIGREED Toy Poodles, year old black mala, sliver temal Pregnant, mutt tell. 651-6256. AKC BABY Poodle puppie................ white toys, axcellant pedigrees. $75. Also AKC Toy St " ------------ Reasonable. 585-6543. 7,000 YARDS OF CARPET - Must sell! Kitchen, ■ commercial, soi's. Kodelt, nylons, and carpa $1.69 " ^ credit. 1 of Rochester's largest carpet warehouses. 1650 E. Auburn Rd. (M-59) Rochesler, bet. John R ' a. Dequindra. 0S^2444 Follow -signs ----- --------- - Maple (15 Mil# Rd.) V/i miles West of Taiegraph, turn left on Whysall. NEW IN CARTONS. Early American rniirh. rhair. Boston l'‘h|^|7, table. 50,000 BTU Oil furnact. $50; shallow A'WAREHOUSE S, 1 Meadow Lake. II"I.°V* “3?o;“ES“zaKlh‘rk! Rd, 682-8820. PINE TWIN HEADBOARDS; ci • made gold velvet SIOO. 674,2517, 62 PEARSON'S FURNITURE I ' Tues., Sal. 10:156 75 FOOT TOWER, rotor, etacked five "beams, $300. Golden Eagle CB, 0104 Mike. Lika new. SJOO. FE 2-1827.’______________________________________ Water $ofteners__________6^ COMMERCIAL WATER SOFTENER _ make otter. FE 4-2592._____ RQYAiTTSATfR I'V automatic. lara« »125. 179- uonars n« available to us to purchase and assume land contracts, mortgages " homes. .................. Attention Housewives an^*'ar“"‘"'** ' I or acreage outright.,* •oulty. Our appraiser le awaitii ''““r “II .^>4.2236 McCullough realty, 8460^Highland Rd. IM-59J ""'“lToT6~” • -land contracts Urgently ntedad. Sea us before y Warren Stout, Realtor ' 1450 N, Opdyka Rd. A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN 8 pc. living rm. group (sola, chain 3 baautifur tables, 2 lampi); 8 pi bedroom (double dresser, chest, tai mattress, springs, lamps); 6 plec bunk bed - 5 piece dinette. Any Item Sold Separately ' All for $398 - $10 monthly KAY FURNITURE Next to K PUBLIC NOTICE | and' discontinued I or year closeouts! now $88 in crates. Also 2 dr. automatic defrost units $136* Soma scratched, priced eccordingly, 82 models . ABC WAREHOUSE & STORAGE 48825 Van .Dyke 856) E. 10 Mile For Sole Miscellaneous i/i INCH COPPER water p cents a ft. and. Inch water pipe, 39 cents a ft. , -Thompson B Son, 7005 M-59 W. i/b INCH PLASTIC drain plpi' fittings, no need to thread anymore. It goes together glue, all you need Is a nac SET OF DRUMS. LIKE 673-7362. Evas. 673-1790. STORY AND CLARK Sf - ^ In excelleiHt condition. OR 3-2663.__ ;H„,n*lros, ivr quarante. r' USED THOMAS'ORGAN " can Bruce Campbell Co. '*5 Pev|ng, make otter, 625-197 female Siamese# 4 DARLING BLACK PUPPIES tale, mother Dachihund$ tin aa 673-0728. ENGLISH POINTERS some of the best, bred In the country, all sired by champions. Ch. Paladin Royal Flush, Ch. Tboth Acres Hawk, several litters, 6 wks. to 3 mas., all must go by the time we go to the Canadian Prairie. All at reduced prices. Bud Brown, 56400 Romeo Plank, 781- NELSON ESTATE BLUEBIRD auction , Auction to be hold Saturday night May 17, 7 p.m. to tell the ottahi el Dr. Nelson. Couch an(f chair, leather top tables, color ^ TV Magnovox TV, french lamps, bahV bed, dentist tools.. Bo(* csss, dinetta set, dining suite with break front. Danish -chairs,, beds, also large quantity ot toclt- Said has Auction ^^■“'^'arnlrqfO.KhlllRd. ''UKrnlXg.’Tnd'y^^^^ Medium size Leonard Batv<^a^ piano, living room suite, nice Wort dinette suite, modern r®“D**J'j*^'’ table and chairs, word .player ■*«ni««- ”* ' ny'pfec«i itiqi ketl RIDING LAWN m bad, RCA TV, Sleepini camping, 8x10 wool rug, • —rlgerator, 674-1297, DAY GARAGE sale, antiques, radios, TVs, and misc. 10-6. Tues-* ' "OS. Tasmania. p SUMP PUMPS SCJLD, rented 4. repaired. Cone's, FE 0-6642.______ )ARAGE SALE; GE stove, S70; Admiral stereo, console, $65; RCA stereo console, $300; portable TV, $85. 68 Washington St., Apt. C, attar 6:30 p.m„ any day.____ SUNPORCH RUMMAGE s.... Everything good condition. 3332 OARAGE SALE. 2 GE alKtrIc ranges, furnitura, baby Itamr clothing, ate, 2842 Colonial Tr., Woodward Square Lk. area. Thurs------ * *.m.-6 p.m, 332-9451. garage SALE. S544 ! off Elizabeth Lk. Rd. clothes, misc. MayJ6 a 6 FT. REC. ROOM BAR, custom gaRAGE SALE: ROYAL WIDE Renewable-type fuses. Fraction of Original cost. BOULEVARD SUPPLY swimming pool. For Informatlo call 651-8365. _ _ _________ SHALCoW WELL JET PUMP; washers# rangat, BUNKBEDS, ABOUT II Joe^s# U61 Baldwin^F e bra'nd new" CURT'S APPLIANCE M5-9090 6484 WILLIAMS LAKE:RD. 674-1101 orice' Little SECTK3NAL, cotfe#^ tabje, 2-6842. ........ . x12' LINOLEUM RUGS, S3.9S EA. Plastic wall tlla --- .. .Ic « —■■ing r- ----"------— ; TM 0 HORSEPOWER 1968 Bolens tor. Snbwblowtr blade mowe lachmant tire chains a FEET L-SHAPEO eountar top Olshmaster, wringer wash# cabinet sewing machine. Call ( ._3-8030. V________________ I Lake. 682- i;l 2820. _ ........ ■liTRAILER AWNING, soproximajely spirit duplicelor, heavy duly eiec.-FEMALE CHOCOLATE P 01 with slandy $35. 1 Underwood! Siamese, 3 months, $20. 651-4375. Royal elec/ FREE.^^MURPHY, ^Schujfzi,^^Smll^ 681-4)212 or FE 2-4154. ^and 4 w rOR ADDING machine ai Store Equipnwnt^ DMA ^aai COMMERCIAL Kelvinator freezer, lear old, 25.6 cu. In. upright, ax< •---------storage, 651-4545. ■ ICE CREAM 4 3 restaurant NATIONAL CASH REGISTEF gas station, $300. 644 Bales, Ingham._____' Sporting Goods I' POOL table! $65. • covered mouse ti ' le room# bo rt Abyssinian IRISH SETTER PUPS# father — rent winner most Blue Ribbons# mother also of good bloodline. 647- ^*36“."" , ..._^oo1,*. ®' woodshed, stereo, outfit, sporting (lortfc ot misc. Items. T4EW W bedroom outfits, — outside Early American lamps, nans Auction, TM .W. Clarkston Rd., Lake Orion. 693- SATURDAY, MAY JTTIO A.M. OTTELIA SOUNEK ESTATE 56078 Grand River, New Hudson Detalls.here on Thursday Perkins Sale Servlet Auctioneers Ph.- .Swartz Creak 635-94M Plants-Trees-Shrubs 81-A GARAGE SALE. Lots ot od< ends. Also refrigerator, I GARAGE SALE. Cfothing, toys i GARAGE SALE. Copper boiler, tlque clocks and tie- "" youth chair, clothing. Set., May 17lh, 1415 N. 'ystal. dory showr E 4-8462. — RAOro, SE 2-8734 or FE 2-''f00t~fiuor#sc*nt overstuffed chain ________473J)«5 9xl2‘CAMPfNG TEt-■JL 2-5146 9x18 NATiONAL TENT, catallstlc! I 682-7815 6. _ MI)(ED PUPPY'. FreeTb good home. mrREMl'NGYdtOiob^^ llOO.Tjj Hous»broken. Loves chridran. 673- gauge shotgun. Used once. 812S.I _______________ 1968 Winchester. Model 94, 30-30|MIXED PUPPIES wantedT Carbine, $75. 182 Sui—" ■ ------- ----- -------- alter 5. M0._ h sides. Tractor hi 51-1271. 24" RIDING MOWER. Lika • Call attar 3_p.m^2-6008^ 75 USED STEEL FENCE posts. GA“RAGE SALE:' I ntw. $70.' a,-,.. n.mnmt Jverything , „. ______ clothes, ' dit— ilscallanaous. Heavy trailer hitch.' j tables, moving.' 3'3^2749^ TRAILER HITCH. Reese bar leva; $45. 69M013.___________________ TWO 9x7 USED BERRY DOORS. Reasonable. OR_3jp52_._ ______ I'lTENT, DELUXE large umbrella, 2--55>2 Pin. $25. 363-0876. I clipped. h bad credit -Any-Rl*'-* 1- complati trUnd stei, 8- r mortgages - dishwasher, $I7S.J73-3U0. _____:.*Xh'’uT*,^..... BUNK BEDS mortgage Co. ; choice o( IS tlylat, 8-7904 ------- - ■ lor a confider . pjrsbnai interview). Mosigag* Loans FOR THE PAST 42 YEARS Voss & Buckner, Inc. 1408 Pontlae State Bank Bldg. Hava been IMnlng $1000 to $500 62 A - PLENTY OF USED washers, stoves, retrlgarators, —' bargains. >rtgagts f»r ^pairing# • asolldallng bills, ate. lall monthly payment, u berrow on your homi *"*“’*334-3267 OR %7617 aft. 3;i_ " SINGiR DELUXE MODEL-PORTABLE Zlg Zagger In sturdy carrying case Repossessed. Pay oft: • $38 CASH or Payments of $5 Per Mo. UNIVERSAL*S^WING CENTER 26IS Dixie Hwy._____FE 4-0S(n ______ . .. Rochastar's largast carpet warthousai, ov— yd#. In stock, 852-2444._________ 1947 JEEP WITiT'BLAOB, V-8 Chavy angina, ‘ " **“ la bed. II mh-V SPARKLING CLEAN, like place bedroom lUlta — dout his art her drattar with f( ror, nightstart, 6-drtwer plate glass tops. 36'> Tappan gas range. 32"x56!'single pedestal pin# 1968 FRIGIDAIRE Swaps 87 14' CHRIS CRAFT boat, elec, •'■rl, SINGER _ _ >EV7iai AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG CHROME OINETTEES, low as_l34. Sewing*machlna - Sews single o Liltla''Joe's. 1461 Baldwin, FE 2- double riartla, dasigns, overcast; xH,7 buttonholes, etc. — m o d e r ■Igeraldr cabinet. Take over payments of: ........ ....... __ ss lop: $7 per month for 8 mos. c(S!Sh,on,X?.n“o"?3.6“o! ® or $56 Cash Balance COMPLETE 7 PIECE Jeep Unj^arsi^. 628-1093. “r Honda 90. Uticaj31-6(193 #■ ll68""C'AM'PER “TOP^ motorcycla. I0cc-250ce, 42 Princeton. ________________ ffLECTRiTBApn^ condl'lo"' ***•’ r.rV 132-6718. ' oRjrEi e lirECTRIC BIRCH'LOG.Tobks reall S!\l $5. Maytag wringer washer, Mill a\ new parts, rebuilt wringer 11(5. | r S111I Under Guarantee ' UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER ■ Dixie Hwv,__ FE 4-090 :SAVE“$224 avalleblel 1650 (M59) Rochester Dequindra. * ' " Knob Rd. off Maybee. GARAGE SALE ----------- 7 clolhlng.^dl.h^, ^ THE SALVATION ARMY , RED SHIELD STORE — V. LAWRENCE ST. - *- -neel vdOr need' a'rNOLD palmer golf'cl^ |?^f*542-5405,'dealer. '* AMPHICAT 6 WHEEL DRIVI Takes you wh« Through iwempi, ,01™, »in,' sat It In action. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 771 Highland (M-59) ' BOWS'AND ARROWS, ! _ Gene's Archery. 714 W.' ENj'OY YOUR HOME this ot the nation's I Pro- Orlon, 628-1108. I . ?-•" ' R t ebe K E R PU PPIE S 623-1137 _ pupp'ie's.'freb Rd. -_______________ (iARAGE SALE: Saturday -1 RUMMAGE SALE, May through 17, 3 o.m. to 7 p.m. 25e 50c plus 194* pickup truck, : Ford Ifecinil engine, and ti trailer, 966 IVyrtle off Taiegraph, “iRT SHOWING Want something new arid djtterentj ...d Yuh- 267'5i05"'S. Everything : SALE May, !> i Clothing, drapes, h,-.. ,—.......- . misc. 9 to 4. 1272 TuM Dr., Pon- ■ flee.________________________ garage SALE: FRIDAY 8< day May ifMav 17. Clothl^ 177 W. Yal# oIr AGE~SAL1''^ THOR 5.', WAREHOUSE: 100 oftlca desks $25 up, olfica chairs, t-' ' "V.r -irinTlrt Hamilton - draltlnp^rt FORBE$“pRINTING"t SUPPLI"* --------- ....._N PLAI BIRMINGHAM A eluding jalousie door, 72" high: ...... ................. SPRINGER SPANIEL PUPPY, AKC* day lor dalalls. male, 9_weeks, $50. 624-1983. RHODES POOLS Isiamese sealpoTnts, Maie' 16 ^ 258 W^altonl FUrLY EQUIPPED SCUBA blv'ngi^, eouloment. Incl. wet suit. 693-8061, 6 weeks. s. Call 8 ., Monday tl i-6400, 8 482-9440 REGIStEREb TOY POODLE Pup-16149 Fies, whita and apricot. Fg 2-1497. uron RfOISTERED MALE E n St SISTEREL )in1er, llille over 1 yr. FE 4-88J3_ silver'persianVfema'le. . YEARS cl* f — one rm..a, gentle and fast, i--- $245, Walter Kastrach. 363-4727, . --- ---------- _ -----J iraner, $250. 625-5368.______ ChORSES „ FOR FE 5 HAND G iTupplas, Ak£> >r pat. 264-6728. SHAGGY , months, show_or pal ________ S'CHNAUZER/' miniature pup.i AKC, Health guaranteed. FE 2 1590. VARlETY_DF“CU^'^^kmeiit. Free lb relve'W'om*." < Herlt.ag« Apartm«nls N( Commerca Rd.. W a I dav.j^ __ A(jfbMAtiC COPIERS HOUSEFUL!. C CTRIC ST I; RYtrlger I; VWinger I, FE 5-27( piece dinette end ; Gei stove, complete top freezer, spring our low every . 840. G. Hsr- only *295 or 815 monthly. , I HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE, ai-33tl furniture ' all. zipperad drbdm^e^a Romeo SI. _____ ______ priced lo go. p!m!'and!weekends __ WATERFORD CABINETS INC, 57 _ - I - - - - . :. 321 Okemah, williams Lake Rd. Drayton Plal; d br4»wse.' Cherokee HMIs, Wed.-Sal. 9-5, close out ol bathroom vanities GAS reel/ MOWER. $20. Water wood or plastic. Sale price to sell. : .y^|p,mlnq pool. F * 6A.« 17 softener, auto., $40. Hamilton WANTED; Toy trains, any age. "0 call 65I-8365, b m each 'i gauge preferred. 357-5537. • scuBBa“DIVINC. OU ■ ' GARBAGE DISPOSAL, ft horse- WOMEN OF THE Moose rummage OR 3-2057 alt. 5. I no■'^w'Sanci-Gravel-Dlrt HmT Tooli^Machinary 68 buckhorn sporting goods. 4377 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. __ . HAiG-ULTRA used goll set, 13 clubs.jWEST HIGHLAND "-O-OOK.I JJaperi. 625-2833. LJ^2-4973, dealer. a!) gYrand, $i2S. f Special $40. M Aul SAVE $1. WHITE SPAYED female CAT, $.5. 674,0842 riYEARO'UDMARS "YEAR OLD GELDTn'G, smeil, v mannered, exc. Joi,. i’’ lady, saddle and bridle Incl. $, '752-98^_ stata of Michigan, axe. /siT STUD: 51" P.O.A. 62". Oaiding. 627-3792.______________________ ;t STUD REGISTERED P.O.A. ---- black, blanket 2 withers largs black sporti. Want , Von . nn» «hem spotted bottomT You Pot Suppitts-Servke 1-A GROOMING -. Edwa Doubit t Arabian Farm. 625-3550.__________T b'laCK HACKNEY PONY with cam .- and harness, aacrltlce, need stall I space. 693-8918.________________^ 79-A BriCK's'kl'N AND 'PARADE '"OR CONTEST HORSE. FREE KEEP FOR I MONTH. OL 1-0763._______^ . , FOR'ValE. Chestnut Gelding, Paint Poodle Geldinf *" —— Checkwriteri 119,50, Comolometeri chairs 112.50,. 32' WoodJh shelving 815, Postage maters and aisortod rial' Ma« ,$4.95 TALBOTT LUMBER 1025 Oakland_____________FE. GARA(5E sSle: '.Starting FHdav, ----■■-If. 5945 Pina Knob Rd. oft ________>■ Clarkston, • GO. CART,^ IH^ new, MCYl, 1 YEAR OLD, like new Snap4)n Vsivt grinder and rafaetr, cot9 $tl00 - seirtor $650. ___ KAR'S BOATS 6, MOTORS 493- 76 335-5259 , 'SERIES OF EXCAVATIONS! DO MARS throughout V While Lake, ,W . \ i poodle Salon, 332 W. Huron Bloornfleld, ' Indepandenca -Ond bays ,$35-9635 ___^ves, M2-566) Waterford Twps., has V eWfO!...........POODLI GROOMING several thoUMhd yds.vof _ 600 Fourth St. FE 4-8712___ such ‘wa'shall''deliver this to vnu! PROF ESsrdNAL POODLE jrimmlng for the cost ol hauling. OR 3-I935, fabla, caga 6 a.m. io II p.m.. Sun. Incl. I , .,e>-■ OCt, «»5,3580.’ " ' U ’ d and tiUdod; Hay n WELCH AND hackney FROLIC TRUCK CAWPER, with Intercoir —‘ extros. $1450. OR k-2194. d'meats. A/side _ ----------- Tor rour table ir freezer. Cut, wrapped before vbu. Give us a call for price, quality and appolr*------* to cut. Romeo, PL 2-2941. C... V days a week. 67140 Van Dyke. 1969 STARCRAFT TRAVEL TRAILERS INSIDE DISPLAY CRUISE-OUT, INC. 43 E. Walton Dally 9-4 FE l-4402[ __ CLOSED SUNDAYS__________^ I BEFORE O'U BUY — Check thell'jjo facts and prices on the 1969 showj "{jVjgted,' PLEASURE MATE Deluxe Hardtop Camper KAMPR VILLAGE „ 630 East Walton hear Joslyr SM-0681 ■ Open Sun. 55 NEW MOON 2 I 5 CARNIVAL By Dick Turner 5:30 p.m ..... „uWslc. 1509, 1084 Oakland. CAMtNG TRAILER, »!eeps 4, $ Form Produce 4 DOZEN lAAALL EGGS, t.SI doz., med. eflfls, $.99, C. I, C.. Egg Factoiy, 1794 So. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion. APPLES-CIDER Delicious, Jonathan. Spy, Steele Red, Bargains, In utility' grades, * $1.95 Bu. up. Oakland Orchards, 2205 E. Commerce Rd. 1 mile east of Milford. $-6 Dally.__^ Farm Equipment Call after 4 p.m. IrtS CASE TRACTOR, No. 430 with loader. Only 36 hrs'. Exc. condition OL 1-$737._____________________________ 4020 JOHN DEERE diesel, oversized tires, like new, M,750. > Plows It desired. 530 Case backhoe and loader tractor like new. 310 dozer 3 Linden, Mich. 735-7537. Mrs. Van Camp, Big Discounts NEW - Massey-Ferfluson 7 h p. -with mower Massey-Ferguson 10 h.p. w 111 mower, $975. Massey-Ferguson 12 hp. with mower $1145. New Massey-Ferguson dozers an< loaders — big discount prices. ■Ford and Ferguson tractors and loaders. O.C. 4 Oliver dozer, $1950. Pontiac, Form and Industrial Tractor Co. $23 S. WOODWARD Check bur deal on SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILER$ FROLIC R A I L E R S^-.AND TRUCK AMPERS. SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 28 on display at - Jacobson Trailer Soles 5690 Williams L*ka Rd. OR 3-5981 CENTURY YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS QUALITY AT ANYBU DGET STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-S9) . , 682-9448 only. Wa fake trade-ins. TOM'S HARDWARE? 905 Orrtiard 1 ■' Ave. Dally 9-6 Sun. 9-2. FE 5-2424. tkampar-P Truck_____ 6 used travel trallei yUST — ------ Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 15210 Holly, Holly_______me 4-6771 NA 7-3292. Your "Homellte" Chair saw .dealer, John Deere "New Idea'' parts galore.______________ FOR RENT, 550 Adams grader with finished grade operator, road building, subdivision and blacktop, 685-1912. GO FIRST. CLASS In an JsL--------- ---nr home, special price on stock EoRD DISC ^D dirt blade, ----------682-5930 after 6 p.m J. D,. SEMI-MOUNTED mower, : section harrow, disc and corr SALE $195 KING BROS. FE 4-1462 ^ FE 4-0734 _______Pontiac Rd. at Opdyka______ NEAR-NEW HARVESTER Silo, 20ELU"XE FROLIC,. Like new. Ph. 363-9663. ____ t968 TENT camper sleeps 4, cellent condition, $275. 693-6074._ aTrEASONAbLE vacation (Price wise that Is). Rent an Aztec that Reserve your camper ’ Reasonable Rates APACHE CAMPERS AND TRAVEL TRAILERS ALSO mascot TRUCK CAMPERS SEVERAL USED TRAILERS FOR SALE EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 425-1711 Clerkston 625-2516 ^07 Dixie Open 9 e.m.-8 p. Apochb Comp Trailers Pickup Truck Campers Buy brand new 1968 Apache Cai trailers at used Ir.ailer prices, models of new Apache trailers display In heated showrooms. Oi 30 different models of pickup tre, campers and covers to chmse from. Save up to $500 on new 1968 campers while they last. New 8' cabover pickup truck campers $595 up. Open Sundays, Apache Factory Home Town Dealer o'" “»-e"er y Limits on M 2I. AIRSTREAM • FOR 1969 18 Ft. to 31 Ft. ON DISPLAY ALSO — USED AIRSTREAM$ WARNER 682-8830 BOOfH CAMPER Pickup covers and campers, custom built, C. J. Booth, 4267 LaForest, Waterford, 674-3513. 1964 DETROITER, 12'x54', carpeted', -"'ted, on ' lot. Reasonable, 332- COLEMAN CAMPERS Sun and Ski marina on Cass Lake 3981 Cass Eliz. Open Sundays, 682- COOL IT MAN I In a Travel Trailer from BOB WESTCOTT SALES 340 N. Lapeer Rd., Oxford ALSO! MIrrow-Cratt Aluminum boatf Alloy Boat Trailers SAILBOATS 10x46 Champion i A-1 Motorcycle Insurance FARMERt,.; INSURANCE Agency of Pontiac across' from Ande'“*'* Honda. Phoha 334-4597. BOdll lury, property damage fi KAWASAKI Big Bike Buy iterhational gas furnace and 1969; „ . , . ^tI „ec. hot water, heater., Good cOn.(WhMe they Jest, 650« road p dijion, $1995. call 333-7855 days $n95.0o"* This is CHAMPION MOBILE^ home, $2' x 44'; furnished, air conditioner, 971-2784, avenIriBS. for a test rlde.^ 12 month \or ' mile warranty. No money dOwr payments until June. lyt's cycle Center, on M-2U one Camping Privatf Lake Safe beach, flush toilets — showers, 1140 M-15, Ortonville. OrtOnVille. McFeeley Resort. 627-3820 week-ends or 945-595$ weekdays 9 to 3 p.m. 412 Empire Bldg., Detroit, Michigan. * DETROITER. AMERICAN SUNRISE PARK "KROPF ' Double Wides, Expando's Custom built to your order Free Delivery and .Setup Within 300 Miles AT BOB HUTCHINSON MOBILE HOME SALES 4301 DIXIE HWY. 673-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS 1966 12 X 60 PARKWOOD, 12 x 22 living room. 2 - bedroom, natural gas. 5 Sparrow HIM, Village Green. r964 PONTIAC CHIEF 12’x50'. Can be let! on lot. 338-2245, . Frankllns-Crees - at Yaar.and Prices. 1949 ACADEMY 2-bedroom, brand new! Only $4295 with $487.80 down. $74.71 mo. Incl. 4 yrs. Ins.! This is a quality home with raised fro kitchen and heavy InsulaJlo Countryside Living, 334-1509, 10 Oakland. _______ ________ sprFng is here SO ENJOY A NEW 1969 Active MOBILE HOME Park Space On Lake No Entry Fee is 5 Min. From Pontiac TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. Telegraph at Dixie Hwy. 334-6694 Dally 'til $ FOR SALE: Mobile i units. 628-3631. HEILITE TENT CAMPER. _____682-3^109 or 334-7674_ HAVE YOU SEEN THE ALL NEW OMEGA Motorhome with the Chevy Chassis 350C engine, power steering, brakes, speed transmission, d u a 1 • r e a wheals, completely self-contained. Only at Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4771 Open Dally and Sunday- Pontlac Mobile Park. McClellan Travel Trailers, Inc. 4820 Highland Road (M-59) Phone 674-3163 NOW FEATURING WHEEL CAMPER The Number 1 fold down camper. 13 Series to choose from. Also see our tine Una of Travel Trailers. BONANZA _WEST WIND — WOOD LAKE. LIFETIME MOTOR HOMES Auto Jlccessorles^^ 91 WIDE OVALS, AND, p 0 I y g I M cheaters, mags, discount.,, prices Dynamic Tire Sales, North., 221 Main St„ Rochester, 651-2288._ Tires-Auto-Tri»k REPAIR, MolUNT, and balance meg ' chroma wheals. Now and used .....jls. Mags-Amarican ET, Crager, AP Ansen. Trade old mags for new. Goodyear Polyglass tires. Cheater slicks. Market Tire Col 2435 Orchard Rd. Keego. 94 Motor Scool^eri CUSTOMIZED RUTT/WAN mlnl-bike, lust Ilka new. 684-0733 attar 6 p.m. FOX doodle-bug. j hjs. Excellent condition. $135. 624-1445. engine, duals, stereo, at deal on stock units. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland Rd. (M-59) 682-9440 OAKLAND CAMPER SALE! tour-a-home, B and '10 ft. campers for V4 Ion pickups. Midwest covers. Baldwin at Colgate _________33WIM4 _ _____ NEW SPORT TRAILER DELUXE hardtop CAMPER Sleeps 8, $1495 Ellsworth Troiler Sales <577 Dixie HIghwav______625-4400 LITTLE DEN - 8 or 10 ft. campers, Hatchery Rd"6m473 Vfter 2 P.mV PIONEER CAMPER SALES Trailers: Jubilee, Globe Star ,, Barth r»mners: Swinger, Mackinaw, el Queen, Caribou, Barth ' Most EVERYTHING the way of parts > and sorlei for the travfl t»/all«r. JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILPS Walton at Joslyn_____ I^SCdT. CAAAPERS AND ^ Goodell 5«i»* FE4 STEEL' FRAME PICKUP slee and fops. Cab to camper I Sportcraft Mlg. J"" ■=- Waterford. 423-0650. WOLVERINE TRUCK campers end sleepers. Factoev outlet, repair and parts, new end used rentals. Jacks, Intercoms, telescoping bumpers,'spare lire carried, auxiliary gasoline tanks, stabllllzlng shocks. Cab to camper-bools. LOWRY CAMPER SALES 1325 S. Hospital Rd. Union Lake EM 3-3681 WE HAVE NOW ADDED . A NEW LINE TO OUR OTHER QUALITY TRAILERS DRIFTWe/OD TRAVEL TRAILERS Ellsworth Trailer Soles M77 Dixie Highway _ 425-4400 WINNEBAGO Motor Homes—Trailers Camper Coaches Reese end Draw-TIte. HItchas sold ind Installed F. E. HOWLAND SERVICE 3255 Hwy. ' ___OR 3-1456 MUST SELL. .... Super Sport. Only 1,00 $625. 693-JI18. "Motorcycle Sale special PRICBsriJN all MODELS^ Anderson Soles &’:Service 1645 S. TELEGRAPH FE 3-7102 MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE LOW RATES • - S. K. JOHNSON AGENCY ;_______ FE 4-2533 _______ YAMAHA-KAWASAKI All 1969 Enduro models In stock, excellent selection of street machines including the all new Kawasr' ' CC. Easy terms. Clayf's Center, pn M-21 one mile a New and Used Trucks 103 1965 FORD VAN. $300. Days «73^r362. 1965 GMC, DPI 7006, 6 cylinder. 1964 CHEVY V8 Vi ton with n ---' tool boxes, $900, 338-40117. HARRY R. PETHICK USED TRUCK SALES Diesel and gas etlglne trucks. •■10 M15 Ortonville 1967 CHEVY Vt ton pick-u'p $13Yo\ gt9in,ii$MiATj».aie.miNton ‘‘What can I suggest to help him get someplace? How about a seeing-eye dog?” Bicycles 96 Boots-Accessories' 971 Wanted Cars-Trucks SPEED MEN'S SCHWINN. Like ..ew. $70. 363-S560. STJNG RAYS, others; deal. 3630 Dixie Hwy., 673- FOR SALE: fiberglass canoe, good condition, $60. Acces. In-eluded. 624-4643. Boots-Accessories 1, DRAG B(3aT, SPICO, 427 Ford, plush seats, tuned, s p a g h e 11 headers, trailer, $3800 or $3400 with water exhaust. OR 3-9838._ 2 OUTBOARD MOTORS, 5 h.p. and GLASSPAR TRI - HULLS on display , 15', 16', and 18'. Complete vylth __1 fop, side and,aft curtains, tonna 971 cover, 18 gallon tank, gauge, mechanical steering, lifeguard 8' hydroplane, MERCURY Hur-rlcane 10 b.p, motor, 628-1671. 27' mobile home chassis, built 1965, 24,000 miles, self contained with air conditlonlHfl, generator, water, I a i mahogany par tor a mobile ___istructlon, 5 year warranty. Take M-59 to W. Highland, right to Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demode Rd., .... .........DAWSON'S 9' SAILING DINGHY. Stable, wide beam, safe, unsinkable,. flberglas, aluminum mast, dacron, tike new. Reas. 1 block off 1-75. LI 4-090^ after 6:30 p.m. 12' ALUMINUM BOATS ..........1115 (Lifetime guarantee) Trailers $120, IS canoes $169 Big Coho boats, 14' $289. 15' $389. Big flberglas runabouts ....... 1000 lb. boat trailers -OIT* Save $$ at Buchanon's _____ 9669 Highland Rd. Pinter Marine STARCRAFT-THOMPSON-MFG. .BOSTON WHALER-SAILBOATS \ JOHNSON BOATS-MOTORS We Trade—We Finance 1370 Opdyka 9-^ Sat. 9-4 (1-75 at University Exit) REMGMBER IT'S PINTER'S office, display unit, 14' , WOLVERINE, moDiie nome. For Information calli plywood, 25 h o. 548-8411 Monday thru Friday, 9:1“ .........* MOLDED to i P-"i elec, start. Alloy traile MIDLAND TRAILER SALES Your authorized dealer lor Holt, Park, Oxford, Parkwood and Dan-Ish King. 30 models In stock. Delivery within 14'' ALUMA CRAFT. )4 FT. STAR CRAFT, 25 h.p. value. Open 9-9 p.m. 338-0772 14' BOAT, WINDSHIELD, steering In —|,p Scott Atwater IS' CENTURY 16' GLASTRON INBOARD- (3UT- 34' LARSON FIBERGLAS, MACIO SPITFIRE 175 14 horsepower. Good condition. 8100. After 6:30 p.m. 625-4614. i^lBERGLAS BOAT, good ditlon, 45 h.p. Mercury motor and trailer, for sale or will trade for Cheap Universal. 628il093. i 16'/s ft. CHRIS CRAFT Rlvej^ rebuilt 60 h.p. Make offer. 693-8203 or 693-1205. - ' Motorcycles ia' THOMPSON inboard-outboard. 250 CC YAMAHA, expansion exhaust chambers, under 5,000 miles, extras Incl. 2 helmets. $400. 674-2600, after 6 p.rh.____________ 1958 HARLEY FLH, LOADED With accessories,-‘exeellent paint, “ " Tenrty$on oft Baldwin. __________ 1960 HARLEY DAVIDS6n”74. W4 - rs 250.ee, Call aft. 4 p.m. 673- .........tralier ment. UL 2-278C_________________ iTEVINRUDE E.LECTRIC START. 2 tanks and controls, $275. OR 3-OeiO. 196?, 250jHONDA, t sell. 10 Newberry. 1966 BSA m top-notch condition, make offer. 651-4545. 1966 SUZUKI X-6 Hustler, 25(» rWlei, -2 Bell helmets, 1 leatlter |a6ket. S350..334-SI5X____________ 1966 BSA 6’So, good condition, $W0. M2-95-'' ^tondltlon. Just tuned.. Best offer over $700. Also Bell Magnum helmet, size Vh. $30. OSO-"'*’ paint lob, lots of chrome, mileage, exc. condition. 681-0225. 1966 • 305 HONDA Scrambler, 1000 mil., like new. 682-9663. After S:30 1967 HONDA i«, helmets, $275. 6^ conditli^, ~Road- or wiiods 1967 HONDA 30S SCRAMBLER, cellent condition, 6S1-2573. ■ ' 1967 HARLEY SPRINT SS, condition, lots of extras. xoi 36M9Sr 1967 HONDA SCRAMBLER, 1968' HARLEY SPRING. Best ofiVF. 673-1486.___________ f968 frTUMPH 650 CC, low mlleegr llke^new. 673-7342. _ ^ 1968 TRIUMP'H. 500CC, dual car'bur etr^Snd exhaust^731-5512. 1968 HONDA 350 Scrambler, 19« Suzuki, 120 CC, both In exc. cor dlUo^n._OR 41043. 1968 JRIUMPH 500, reel sharp. 363-5213. _ i6e~SUZUi(l 120CC. 2,000 miles. $225 with helnirt. 673-7364. 1968 TRIUMPH ■ TR6C. condition, extra chrome. $1050. Call mlleaqe^inmaculate. 335-0236. 1968 T>6^TRj^MPH' 3500 nr flUZUKI ON display 50CC to 1 Oil Inlactlon, 12 month Amerigo — Schooner TRUCK CAMPERS . Silvereogle — Vacotionoire Mobiie Homes TRAVEL trailers Nimrod , CAMPING TRAILERS WE'VE scalped' COMANCHE "ROAD-READY" PKO. INCL. ON ALL MODELS ON LOT. 14' thru 23' Heap' Big Savings at— Village Trailer Sales OAKLAND COUNTY'S NEWEST 6670 Dixie Hwy. Clerkston 625-2217 SALES-SERVICE-RENTALS. TRUCK CAMPERS - trailers - rentals, GoodejLTr^tors^l79^714.________ vpi I rTWSTONE 21'. USED ONCE, 1969 YAMAi... - . ■ rOri^pS selicontalned a n d miles, call 681-2429 after 6 p.' . lurniVhed, Reese Hitch, $3000 or(1949 b7 GU'ZZI WITH factory shield, best otter. OR 4-1972, alter 4 p.m. | ^,^qs and turn signals. Less than Hickory Ridge Rd. ot Demc_ left and follow iiigns to DAWSON'S SALES, TIPISCO LAKE, 429-2W. 1949 HARLEY DAVIDSON XLCH. --- " “ LC. condition. 335-4085. Induro, 4l)o!' nl.' EKC. Cl AMAHA 1 451-3539^_______ 35 horse $495. 473- Wetertord Sport and Marine, 4459 CLIFF DRYER'S MARINE DIVISION 15210 Holly Rd., Holly_ME 4-4771 SAILBOAT 8 Ft, PRAM, usito year, dacron sell, $175, 482-1193. SAJj- boat,............. -............ 4 p.m. OR 3-2360. cruiser engine, heavy duty tr^ler, like new, very reasonable. FE 5- 1949 SILVER LINE 16' DeVIMe, Mercury 650 HP and Iralltr, complata ready to go. $2695. _ KAR'S BOATS 8. MOTORS 693- ______________________________ "boat, MOTOR and trailer for sale. 628-1415 SOAT, MOTOR AND TRAILER, $175. Can be------------ all. 5 p.m. n at 114 Oakland, BUY EARLY TO BE SURE YOU GET THE BOAT YOU REALLY WANT Johnson Motors, Star Cralt Boats, G W Invader Boats, Glasfrori Boats, Crest Pontoons, Terra' Cal Trail Bikes, Scramblers, Sea Does. JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT W Mile E. of Lapeer City Limits On M-21 Open 10 to 9 Morj.-FrI, 9 TO 5 SAT. 81 SUN. CHRIS CRAFT 18' utTjIty, irtahogany, 95 h'.p. Excellent. Ml 4-4340. s.nnaUN BOAT , YOUR EVIJ4RUDE DEALER Harrington Boat Works 1899 S. Telegraph_______*H;5( ■T|BERGLAS Sailboat and trail' Starcrall Sea-Fllte. 6820W._ fTbe”R^LAS RUNABOUT ......... h p. Evlrirude^ $395. 674-38«._ Glasspar & Duo Boots Grumman Cohoes Fiberglos Canoes Pontoons, Swim Rafts Alum. Fishing Boots Scorpion Sailboats Uttle Dude and Trail Cor Trailers Skin Diving Equip. Johnson & Chrysler Motors Dockage Available YOUNG'S MARINA- 4030 DIxIa Hwy. on Looii Lika Drayton Plains__'____OR 4-0411 89 j ' , Bio collecloin and the ' Price Is ,nlcfl. ^hy Walt, no payments > 'til Jutt DAILY IM Sun. U * TREANOR'S TRAILERS M12 Pontiac Drive IRtHWE" I. All day Sat. andi 1-A MODERN DECOR Early American, Medilerrr Liberty ' ' OsUa park Space - Immedialslv iVsIlable Colonial Mob.ile Homes FE 2-1657 6ft-1310 250 Opdyk§ Rd. 5430 Dixie Aubj^ Heights_______So. of WAt^ord DAMAGED bSaND NEW 1969 12x60 Star, as Is without furniture, only $4,4951 $300 will handle. Countryside Living, M4-1W, 1084 Oakland. NEW 1968 MODELS USED BOATS ANDMOTORS Drastic 'ENN^AN 18', CANOPY AND trailer. 363-6265.____________, TOP $ PAID All Cadillacs, Buick Electra 225s, Olds 98s, Pontiqcs and anything sharp with air conditioning. WILSON CRISSMAN !. Area's Largest Selection (85 boats). ). Area's Largest Savings ($$$$) WE ARE PROUD TO ANNOUNCE WE NOW CARRY THE “THOMPSON BOAT LINE" 16' to 24' THOMPSON 13 CHRYSLER MODELS Now in stock 14' to 23' "Once In a llfetima dealsi" Glass and Alum. OUTBOARD MOTORS Afe would like to buy late model GM Cars® or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 Junk Cors-Trucks 101-A SUN AND SKI MARINA CENTURY RUNABOUT-INBOARD I 0-0 B CALIF. SKI BOAT-JET-l/0, 0/B ■ . STEURY I/O, 0/B 224' ^ Johnson boots and oufbo^ds, canoes and pontoon boats, on Cass Lake W. of Pontiac: 3981 Cass-Ellz, Rd, 682-4700. 8 Aqua Cat. Lika ” TONY'S MARINE FOR JOHNSON'S MOTORS 33 Years Repair Experience Want a flbreglas pontoon? No rust, no rot. If planes. It s fast. It pu|i« skllers. ; . before you BUY - see this: O, It's very fast, safely glass windshield, 80" beam, very -•— J20 HP. Yours tor only $329^. 1968 AEROCRAFT alum, boats end canoes, et a terrific discount. Also Geneva and Aerocraft, run-abouts. CALL 682-3660 TROJAN CRUISED Chris-craft and slicraft 30 BOATS ON DISPLAY . LAKE & SEA MARINE S. Blyd. at Saginaw FE ■6-7M] WE ARE PROUD TO ANNOUNCE WE NOW CARRY THE , “THOMPSON BOAT LINE" 16* to 24' THOMPSON See the 20' Canvas Back' Camper sleeps 5, complete Galley, 161 Mercrulser. 13 CHRYSLER MODELS Now Ir •- "Once In , slock 14' to 23' ... a lifetime dealsi" Gla$$ and Alum. ^ See 19' Polara Outboard et un-believable ptices. New and Used Cars TRANSPORTATION CARS. Can be 4 CYLINDER JEEP w 106 New an^Used Cars 106 LUCKY AUTO irranty. $1525 after S wheel drive, real civan «na priced 10 sell at $1995. ROSE IMMBLER-JEEP, Union Lake. EM 3-4IS5. 1967 CHEVY <7i TON Pickup. Black exterior with custom cab. New tires, heavy duty springs. V.8 automatic, pab high campar, 16,000 actual mHe$ with warranty I—u Call 642-3289. Audette Pontiac 1850 W. Mapla Rd. 1965 BUICK Wildcat 4 door with graan finish, and light green Interior, tilt wheel, automatic,, power steering, brakes, radio, whitewalls,., a nice family $1195. GRImAlDI Buick-Opel 210 Orchard Lk. Rd. FE 2-9165 condition, 338-9639 'til 9:30 p.m. CADILLAC 1966 convertible, power brakes, steering, toef, windows and aerial, elr conditioning,. AM-FM radio, light V^lnW' b'ack Interior, new tires. $2600. 642»651l. 1967 CADILLAC, Blr, stereo, vinyl top, Blr, full powar, . $3900. 651-7682. T968 BUICK, SKYLARK, custom, coupe, automatic, with power, new tires, 100 per cent warranty, $ave. Autobahn 1966 BUICK LeSabre hardtop, gold with mated-autoitiatic, pqwer Bs, white" $1495 1968 BUICK Wildcat custom, 4 door hardtop, with beautiful tu-tone finish, nothing like that Buick Ride. Power, automatic, and is PON I lAC, 682-3400. RED EL CAMINO, 1969.- 5375 Coqiey. Lake Rd. _______. ATTENTION TRUCKERS NEW 1969 CHEVY 60 series with Hell 4-6 yard dump body. Ready to go to work. VAN CAMP Chevrolet ..... On N. Milford Rd. Milford 684-1025 Power. $39/down, weekly payments $12.88. Full . price $1495. Call " Parks credit manager at Ml 4-New liiOetlon of Turner Ford AM A^aple (15 Mile Rd.) Troy Mall 1 mile past of Wi»dward 1966 PLUM BUldk Riviera, | condition, best otter. 851-0329. MILOSCH CH8YSLER-PLVM0UTH brakes, with vinyl Interior, “TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S BEFORE YOUS’BUY, SEE BILL GOLLING VW _ _________________ From Pontiac to Birmingham; 1968 BUICK RIVIERA, perfect con-(Woodward Ave.) turn left on' ditlon, private, 851-1521 or 626-9578. I'''?.'’'® '76> buick LcSABrIs, 4-doo'i left on Maplelawn. 642-6900._sedans, can be purchased With $100 '-*""HA«flfL°'ll'M"ll°"\ JEROME CADILLAC CO. . I wide Track Dr. -FE 3-7021 1957 CHEVY. A-1 offer, 681-1074. 1957 CHEVY, funs «ood. M00._ automatic, clean, $225. FE 2-8805. 1958 CHEVY WAGON, runs good save*-Auto FE 3-3271 e at 4861 Pontiac Lk. Rd. aft. 5 1961 CHEVY GREEN Briar bus, no rust, radio and heater, good ^ tires, $100, 335-6337._________________ , 1961 CHEVROLET cellent running 1962 CHEVY VO Polara, clean. wagon; 3634081, '61 Dodge dir. DUMPS! 54 Ford . .....IMixS yd. 63 Ford...... 3x5 yds. 69 Ford T-800 .8x10 yds. Wlth.oleflrannlng airWI axIB. All trucks ready to got ^ $495 up! Terms Arrangedl GMC TRUCK CENTER ' OiOO to 5i00 Mon.-FrI. 8:00 to 12:00 Saturday 701 Oakland Avenue 335^9731 LUCKY-AUTO 2 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU 312 W. Montcalm FE 4-5004 1940 W. Wide Track 1963 CADILLAC ELDORADO Convertible. Beautiful metallic coral with white leather bucket seats, white top. Full power and factory airv conditioned. Spring Special, only $1301 full price. Just $181 down. P.S. We're moving to our new loca- CHEVY 1962 Impale 2 door hardtop, VO, automatic, power steering, power brakes, like new, $495. CORVAIR V965 Corsa, 2 door hradtop, 4 speed, 140 engine, black, $595. FORD 1963 2 door custom, 500, 4 • automatic, $595. B&B TRUCK SALES 3760 Elizabeth Lake Road 681-0473_______^_________682-6351 1962 CHEVY NOVA II, Nesy and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cart 106 FORD 1969 Pickup wheel drive, vs, 4 speed, with low plow and adjustable, driven ily 4,000 miles. New car wer-inty. BILL FOX CHEVROLET i 755 S. Rochester Rd.____651-7000i F-30 CHEVY TON WRECKER, V-O', Foreign Cars^ Want to reestablish your ci No Money Down. Hundreds to choose from. _ Call Mr. Al (dealer). 2 3 JUNK CARS — TRUCKS, fret'1958 VW WITH '45 tow anytime. FE 2-2666. '*■■■'* «nn 111 JUNK CARS, PAY FOR SOME, free tow. 682-7080.-_________ ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS' scrap, we tow. FE 5-0201. COPPER - BRASS, RADIATORS - M WITH '65 engine, gi buggy, $150. 335-5645, al Used Auto-Truck Parts 102 KELLY 4 ply 7.75x14 tires. (Sood condition. Best offer. 682-004$ after 6^______________________________ 15$ VW CH/VSStS, partial angina, ...............93-12115. Pay he Oakland, 1958 VW CHASSIS. S h PONTIAC ....--------- -- transmission, body parts. 394-0138. TON pickup 1962 VW CONVERTIBLE. Excellent condition. Recently replaced engine and tires. $545. 602-5675. __ 1945 VW STATION WAGON With luggage rack. Radio and heater. No. $ down, weakly payments $7.88. Full price $895. Call Mr.' Parks, Credit Manager at Ml 4-7500. New location of Turner Ford (15 Mile Rd.) Troy Malt - east ot Woodward 0' fleet side box trailer. Shock, MOTORS: 1961 Cadillac, 1941 Falcon, '61 Chevy 6, '58 VW tor parts only, good —*" ................•* •••*“■• 1947 CONVERTIBLE SPORTS CAR. Radio, 4-speed, radial tires, du-carbs. 100 h.p. $1,350. 343-3779. V-O, $40. also . „l. motor r—' slick, $35, 335-6337. PARTS FOR SALE '44 Plymouth parti, '64 Ford parts. '43 Falcon wagon parts, Tempest parts. '42-'43 F« parjs. '63 GMC B6 engine, Plate, $125. Englnas and peris also available. H.& H. AUTO SALES OR 3-5200 _________________473^44 REBUILT 283 CHEVY engine, 3 speed transmission In 1957 Chevy. 731-5512. 1947 OPEN RALLY, must sell. $1375. VW CHASSIS, VW 1 OUTBOARD MOTORS Oakland and Genesee Counties only CORRECT CRAFT DEALER CLIFF DREYER'S MARINE DIVISION 15210 Holly Rd. Holly ME 4-6771 New and Used Trucks 103 1251 WILLYS JEEP, I PRIVATE TUTORING for all ratings at group cour“ — $4.00 hr.- — ---- *'l .... ............ Cars-trucks 101 IEXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAI . ■’» EXTRA Sharf) Car FORD PICKUP 1950 84 ton with I ft. custom Van-side body, complete with running lights, body could be -----' used as camper. --------- . -. Tradesman. A-1 condition with ax-cellent tires. $300. 73L7M5. mo FORD pkkOp, rui "Check th# resf.^hen get the bast Averill's FE 2-9878 2020 Dixie rE 4-609$ Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 - Sharp Cadillacs, Pontiac, Olda and Buicks tor out-of-state markaf. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTp SALES Il04 Baldwin Ava. 1959 FORD V8 ’/■ ton pickup, $175. FE 5-5900 FE 1-0825 ARE YOU STUCK IW A RUT? WANT EXCITEMENT? Suzuki will excite you with . once in a lifetime savings.'! W pH i Tr'tlO'nS 1969 X-6 Scrambler 250 cel-*-$565.90 del. MG SUZUKI SALES 4667 Dixie Hwy. Drevlon Plains CRUISE GUT, INC. 63 E, Walton FE 1-4401 673-64511 Dally 9-4, Closed 5i|(iyevB STOP HERE LAST M&M MOTOR SALES Now at our new location a pay more tor sharp, lata modi Cars. Corvaftos naedad. 1150 Oakland at Viaduct 1960 FORD TRUCK, 1 ton, 4 Oakland, FB 8-4079. 1962 CHEVROLET WRECKER ___________62B~I700 _______ 1962 FORD 84 TON PICkuP, $500 •’"ft., ■ 196^ FL FIAT STATION WAGON 601-0956 1964 VW, MUST sElL. _________332-3138.__________ STOCK NO. 2000 NEW '69 Charger, 2 door, hardtop, V8, power, vinyl top, bucket seats, whitewalls, wheel covers. $2895 STOCK NO. 3009 '69 Polara, 2 door, hardtop, V8, automatic, power, vinyl top, radio, whltawalJs.j'Vheel covtrs, beautiful burgundy, $2795 STOCK NO. 2025 ®'49 Coronet 440, 2 door, hardtop, V8, eutomatlc, power, vinyl top, radio, whitewalls, wheel cavers, red with black Interior. $2600 STOCK NO. 1009 '69 Dart, 2 door,,hardtop, big 6, automatic, power, vinyl Interior, Ppwder blue. $2195 HURRY PRE-SUMMER DEMO SALf AND EXECUTIVE CARS-CHECK THESE -DEPENDABLE USED CARS '66 Plymouth ............ ................ .$1395 Fury III, 2'door, hardtop, VO, power, vinyl top, redlo, automatic, wide ovals and many more. '65 Chevelle 300 ............... ............$1095 station Wagon, V8, automatic, power, radio, whitewalls, e real beauty. '66 Ford LTD ......... ......................$1495 4 door hardtop, VO, automatic, elr, power, radio, .whitewalls, vinyl top, vacation special. '67 Coronet 440 ............. ...............$1695 2 door, hardtop, VB, automatic, air, vinyl top, power, radio, wheal covers, white walls, bucket seats, a true valut, cbppar In color with black lop. WE WON'T DODGE ANY DEAL SPARTAN DOIDGE SELLS FOR LESS (TELL US IF WE'RE WRONG) 106 New and Used Cars 106 1967 OPEL stripes. You must see this oni appreciate It. GRIMALDI CAR CO. Tr"imaldi car CO. ) Oakland Avt. warranty# $U95v Autobahn 1968 OPEL , illy Kadatta. yOllow finish i racing strtpoa. A real it mlnl-brufe. GRIMALDI CAR CO. LS, -to hpfi ra ir waranty. $1 5, atftr 6 p.m. >68 OPEL station . condition. 363-9321. DUNE BUG(3Y, VERY good shape reasonable 682-6981. ___ CELDT DUNE BUGGY, a I llcensa, lights, wipers, convertibl top, A-1 condlllon. OA 8-3143. ' SAND SHARK DUNE BUGGY BODIES. Complete___jine_access. 693-6355. VW VAN, 1963 FORD V-8 Vk TON pickup, 338-6581 after 4 p.m.____________ I9«ToRD PICKUP Custom cab. Jet black with virtiite vinyl Intorior, v-8 tires, flower steering and brakes. Balance due $587.16, eteekly --------- .... New and Used Cart Public Auction Salel /Must sell 188 cart. 1960 to 1964 tale starts at 9 a.m. No dealers) Cell Mr. Al (dealer) ____ 482-M STANDARD AUTO SALfS WATERFORD payments $4.83. $ Mr. Al. (Dealer) « jjumpjruck, 473-1418. 1964 CHEVY '6 FleettldeV'good" " dIJIon, $595. Terjns^J43-(ieai, f944 CHEVROLET Y->, pickup' sn«ll camper. JM-7548. 1964 CHEVY W TON pickup, ; ....... anytime. NEED A CAR? Wiht to eslebllsh your credit? 21 years or elder? Hundreds to choose from. ' [Cell Mr. Al (dealer) _ 482-20i STAWaRD AUTO SALlS TOM RADEMACHER' ' CHEVY-OLDS 1965 CHEVY Vk Ton, with 6 Cyl. engine, stick, radio, trash air haator, custom cab, .only $995. Over 75 other oars to 'telacf franj. On US 10 at M15, Clarkston, AAA f- Pontiac 109 E. Blvd. S. FE 84033^ _______tochoosalrBn;.^ , Call Mr. Al tdaaUr) 482-21 1964 BUICir'RTviiRATiSc^ra condition. Low mllMO*. ttl-liltl* 1 , ' mM" 1968 88 Convertible Shbrpl $2495 i 1966 Cutlass Convertible $1595 1966 98 Hardtop Air Conditioned : $1995 i' 1968 F85 ' 2 door $1995 1968TprinoGT ’ Convertible $2295 , 1967 Toranado. u! Air Conditioned $2995 ^ 1966 Toronado Full Power $2195 a 1965 Mercury Breezeway 4 door $1095 . 1966 Buick Electra 225 . Hardtop. Air , $1795. 1968 Olds Delmont '' 4 door hardtop $2395 ' 1967 Olds 98 4 door. Air $2295 1969 98 Hardtop. - 2 door. Loaded ! $ave 1969 Cutlass Hardtops, Air Cond., ^ Vinyl Top, 4 to fbbose from — $3195 860 S. Woodwarci B'ham . MI 7-5111 n 1 . II1 ^ For Wont Adi Dial 334-4981 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 D-0 Now and UwJ Cah t06 IMS CORVAIR MONZA, idoor, '^K>, tMtar, tSM. fi»?iss, t ______/rolOt IMRAIAA i»: Now and Uitd Con CORVAIR MONZA, INS, 3 door hardtop, whitowalls, radio, low ----------vary good condition, $700. liMS CHEVY Bai Air, _________ good condition. $400. FE 3-1779. IHARP IMS CORVAIR.' i~___________ automatic. Ilka naw condition. FE ikSflW, 374 sacond s* — 1963 CHEVY Cenvartlbla.^ldi ona la a real ataal **gKlD1 car CO. FE 5-742I IMS CHEVY IMPALA ‘"eCOnWy used CARS Only 1966 CHEVY 3-doop with blua finish, has,,.... trouble-frea driving laff In It. Ask Jack Brr----------- lM4 CORVAIR ASONZA C_________ 4 spaad, no hp, sliver, 684J)015. , )«4 CORVAIR MONZA, 2 doi IMS chevy wagon, dlttel, «7»3S23. ISM CORVAIR MONZA. blu* With matching vinyl I Automatic. Radio, haatar, ... staaring and brakas. Balanca Vtidnight Interior. $5.00 down. Call A fMs IMPALA STATION 3836. , 236 a wager CHEVELLE 1065, Vd, lots of extras. Beautiful condition. 674-0216. 1H4 CHEVY 2 door hardtop, with, matching Interior. ., automatic, radio, heater, whitewaii tires. Balance due $411.16, weekly payments.,$3.84. $5.00 down. Call Hbw and Und ^ari _m|Naw wd Und Cy» 106 Public Auction Sole! Call Mr. Al (dealer) tOM RADEMACHER ■ 1»64 CHEVY TON, pickup with V8, stick shift, radio, fresh air heater, custom cab, blue and whits finish, only $129$. Over 75 other -----to select fssmi. On.US 10 at M15, Cfark'ston. MA 5-5071. ' for Jack Brennan. , GRIMALDI CAR CO. a Oakland Ave. _____FE S,?421 VqM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1968 CHEVY % ton pickup, cyl. stick ..shift, radio, frc... -.. heater, one owner, new truck trade. $1795.-Over 75 otht: , select from. On US 10 Clarkston, MA 5-5071.. 1968 CORVAIR AUTOAAATU ■ Exc. 398-8666. . TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1966 CHEVY Impala Coupe, with ....-------------- steering, 0 select frorh; On US 1966 CHEVY IMPALA ,J5S, 396 V8. 1966 CHEVY IMPALA, 327, i condition, $999, 681-0531. ___ 1966 CHEVELLE, SS, 427 cubic in. " many $1295 BIRMINGHAM CHEVROLET, 6 CYLINDER, stick, 26,000 miles. Exc. condition. $1,100. FE 5-5372 aft. 5. 1967 Plymouth Fgry III 2100 Maple Rd. Tro 642-7000 ________ convertible. 3-speed, $550. 335-5185. Id condition. 363-3873. 1965 Chevy 1967 CHEVELLE CONVERTIBLE, cylinder, yellow, clean, pow 6-5756. Impala Hprdtop with V8, automatic, power si jng^, ^brakes, factory air , FLANNERY FORD (Formerly Beattie Ford. On Dixie Hwy. Waterford 623-OWO TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1965 CHEVY 2 door, with V8, radio, heater, whitewalls, finish, new car trade. Only Over 75 other cars to select On US 10 at M15, Clarkston, MA 5- 5071. 196S CORVAm Convertible, radio, ■...>» 1^ mileage, x^-"*~i 0, 363-7905. _______J. Call Mr. Parks nanagar at Ml 4-7500. Naw lion of Turner Ford fO AAapla (15 Mila Rd.) Troy Mall 1 mile east of yyoodward OWNER, 1966 Chevy hardtop. ------ * brakes, after 5 ______________ AL HANOUTE Chevrolet steering, low mileage. 682-9195 $1.500. On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 167 CORVETTE, 327. Convertible. Sharp. M 693-8960._________________ 1968 Impala vinyl top, V8, power steering, - - condition, light blue CHEVY 1968 Wagon 9 passenger, V8, automatic, full power, extra, sharp.t old car ,or small down payment. Easy QMAC 1968 Chevrolet xjr. Dark blue with matching n Interior. V8 automatic, er, power steering and b FORD OALAXIE. r COUNTRY squire, n; V8, automatic, good :5, Buy here. Pay here, rs, 251 Oakland. FE 4- FORD 6ALAXIE 500 2 door ____ FALCON Convertible, exc. condition, radio, heater. Whitewall tires, $395. 363-1239. 1963 FORD GALAXIE $100, Sava Auto FE 5-3278 iFOgg^^LAXIE 4 1963 FORD RED ■" aro^a, power mv. w,, 1963 FORD GALAXIE 500 V8, 2 c r$^?*6M around. 602-8601. ____________ 964 FORD STATION WAGON. $375. 673-5746. ___________ 1964 FALCON convertible, i 6 cylinder stick, $375 , 1964 COUNTRY 1968 CHEVY IMPALA 2 i hardtop. Automatic V8 with po' Only $2195. ECONOMY USED CARS 334-2131 1968 2 DOOR CHEVY, dark blue, custom Impala, 8 cyl., auto,, transmission, radio, heater, whitewalls, under 10,000 ,mHe«-$2200. 852-5611, laava. message.____ CHEVY 1968 impala 4 door. Last call, official cars. Fully equipped and factory air condltloniiM, new car warranty. Low GMAC terms. 1969 CAWIARO, 3-speed condition.-$2650. Call a 682-9170. $2495 1968 Chevy Caprice Sport coupe, V$, powergllde, i steering, vinyl top, above average condition. $2495 1964 CHRYSLER HARDTOPi ... . down, weekly payments $6.22. Full price $795. Call Mr. Parks, credit manager at Ml 4-7500. ..... Turner Ford Maple (15 Mila Rd.) Troy 1966 Ford or,-beautiful, dark green f e average condition. $875 iwakes, radio, above a $1495 TAYLOR New andtlsed Cars 106New and Used Cars 106 MAY DAY SPECIALS New and Used Cars 106 ^*C«f?o!ywyMa"£le""MI»« MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE^ ■natic, V-8, —... powar, brakes, ' Phone----- I960 FORD COUNTRY ________ ______ wagon, 10 passangtr, VO automatic, radio, heate - .....■ — Ing, power brakes, epple red with al.....,...... .. and luggage rack. Spring special Full price $695. Call Mr. New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 0 Maple (15 Mila Rd.) y Mall 164 FORD COUNTRY Sedan, Station Wagon. V-B angina, radio, haatar, automatic transmission. Power steering and brakes. Absolutely Mint Condition. Spring Special, only $788 full price. Just $88 down. P.S. We're moving to our new location and all Used Cars must bt (§) ^ ^ “Can you imagine! Father isn’t even aware that.'The Grand Coulee Dam’ is a groovy singing group!” Naw and Used Cars 1965 Mercury 2-dr. Hardtop Parklana, viilth blue finish, blue Interior, automatic, power ataarlpg,' brakes, radio, first ■’coma first servadt Only $895 ’ $2588 1 1969 mustang, Mach-1. 7i000 acfu miles, 427 angina, Cobra-Jet, speed. Radio, tape, wide ovals pit many more goodies. S p r I n special. Only $3288, full price. Ju $188 down. New car warranty. '.S. We'r# moving to our new loc ALSO FACTORY CARS 106 New and Bsod Con 1966 MERCURY S-55, t-doOT IWlEMk radio, heater, auto, with pewfar* blue with Made vkiyl tap, whitewall tlrat. A baautIRit low GRIMALDI Buick-Opel 210 Orchard Lk. Rd., FE 2-9165 MERCURY Colony Park 10 ------ -itafIon Wagon with'V8, ___________ radio, heater, pi--- steering, brakOs,; luggaga i spring special at only 8,1280 Wa'ra moving to opr location and all used cars mu: soldi V ‘John McAuliffe Ford W Oakland Ave. FE 5 1965 MERCURY AAARAUDER 4 hardtop. Sahara gold with brown vinyl top. Matching Vinyl lnttrlol|. V-8 automatic, power —' brakes, radio, heater Balanca due $476.19, baymants $3.62. Cl (dealer). 682-2061. 1966 COMET CALIENTE Convertible. Power and automatic. No 8 down, weekly payments $8.92. Full price ... ........ Parks, - Credit Manager at Ml 4-7500. New loca- V- Turner Ford 30 Maple (15 Mile Rd.) Troy A T mile east of Woodward .8^ 1967—1968 Cougars $dve Bob Borst 1967 COUGAR HARDTOP. Btautlful Ivy green with matching vinyl bucket seati. V-8, automatic transmission. Radio, heater, power -steering and brakes. Spring special, only 81888 full priu, just $188 down. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 10 Oakland Ava._____FE 5-4101 I F-8S 2 door, 8 cylindtr. »xuu. ----- tape deck. $150. 6736165 New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 1965 FORD GALAXIE 2-door, 6 "ider, radio, heater, auto. A itiful low mileage economy Only $795. 1965 MUSTANG, 6 CINDER, ^ Standard transmlsslohe 8^"57y2. 1965 FORD LTD, The Mnest, Ford Motor builds. _ . ...— -------------- heater, automatic / transmission, power steering and brakes. Beautiful forest graen with black vinyl top. SprM special, only $1288 full price, jUst $m down. P.S. Wa'ra living to our new location and all Used Cars Must ba JOHN/McAuliffe ford 10 Oakland Av( 1965'MUSTANG 2 PLUS 2, 4 $450. 33^9572. TOWN 8. COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Rochester 65H220 1967 CHRYSLER HARDTOP, condition, power and automatic, $39 down, weekly payments $15-92. Full price $1995. Call Mr. Perlfs A-1 CHRYSLER er Fo/d Mile ltd.) >t oT^oodv Seat the hot season by getting in on these sharp cars equipped with AIR CONDITIONING ' Act Now m7 Chrysler 1967 Plymouth VIP 1966 Buick Electro 225 4-door, hardt^ .............. 1965 Imperial 44loor, hardtop ............. $2295 /V $1995, // $1995 $1995 $1895 $1495 $1995 $2595 $2195 $1195 $1195 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH n@wpc vinyl har Ip, radio 1965 T-BIRD Hardtop 1 door With light blue finis sutomatic power steering, brake radio, a real good buy at only— $1295 'OUNTRY sedan station ateering, power reck. Beautiful ______ ______ _____ matching all vinyl Interior. Spring S^lal only |t^1$8 full price. J' -‘ P.S. We're moving to our n location and all used cars must .joldl John McAuliffe Ford 630.Oakland Ave.__________FE 5-4101 interior. V-8, steering end oraxes. wniiewan tires. Radio and heater. Balance due $301.14, weekly^ payrnanfs, $2.87. $5.00 down. Call Mr. Al (dealer), 1965 TORO convertible, beautiful candy apple 1967 DODGE CORONET ! Wagon. Power equipped. ----------------Its $13.92, . Weekly payments $13.92, Full price $1699. Call Mr. Parks credit manager at Ml 4-7500. New location of Turner Ford 0 Maple (15 Milo Rd.) Troy N 1 Mile East of Woodward MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1968 DODGE, PICKUP, V custom cab, stane—" " "n9'68 Dodge Charger Power. Air conditioned. Tape. Blue with black vinyl roof. A —' MUSTANGS You Want 'Em? We Got'Em! 1965 Thru 1969 . 25 in Stock - For immediate delivery Fa^tbacks, Coupes, Convertibles All anginas. Big ones or |small ”"*‘tURN to TURNER For the best selection tee tl before you buy any car. $$$ SAVE $$$ Absolutely no $ money down. Example: 1968 Mustang 1J1399* Call Mr. Porks 1967 FORD XL Convertible, seats, 22,000 1967 LTD HARDTOP. Vinyl roof. Power and autor " — ' weekly paynients S' Turner Ford ' $1395 Bob Borst HUNTER DODGE Sale starts at 9 a.m. No dailert Call Mr. Al (dealer) 682-2061 1969 MUSTANG FASTBACK, 351-AO, many extras. Sharp. Make offer. 693-8960. 1956 CONTINENTAL VThunderblrd, good condition, from California. 628-4331._______________ LINCOLN CONTINEN' CONTINENTAL. _____________I, $495. EM 3-7538. 1960 MERCURY SEDAN, miles, $1850. 682JI044. FORD MUSTANG, 289 V-B, HAaww^r steering^ bucket seats, 6 tires, Mka new. 600 Fourth/St. FE ^8712. Parks r at Ml 4-7500. New loca- Turner Ford ^.e (15 Mile Rd.) ml|.e east of Woodward 1967 Mustang FLANNERY FORD ,Formerly BSattie Ford. On DIxle Hwy., Waterford,_623-0900 1968 Ford Torino Fastback door hardtop, with finish, "tllack Interior. FLANNERY FORD JOHN MCAULIFFE FORD 0 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 Want to reestablish h vgurc down. 1965 mercury MONTEREY 2 dooi hardtop. Tan with vinyl Interior. V 8, automatic. Radio, heater, powei 1965 MERCURY 4-DOOR hardtop, LUCKY AUTO 2 .locations to serve yc 312 W. Montcalm 1965 MERCURY, ^ ttearingr brakes. . buy at $2100. 6A7- IF -WE SELL IT -YOU CAN DEPEND ON IT! ■ ii matching Interior, automatic, i $1295 V-8^ and automatic,^ p^r 1966 MERCURY MONTCLAIR Marauder 2-door with radio end he brakes, power steering, whitewell tl 1965 MERCURY MONTCLAIR Breezeway sedan with blue finish, matching Interior, black vinyl top, automatic, 'radio, heater, double power, whitewall tlT*»,. go''- geous. ^ $1195 1967 FORD GALAXIE 500 2-door hardtop with ?60 V-8 angina,. s and steering, i heater,' whitewa $1695 I, *^™*'w* With 1967 T-BIRD 2-DOOR 9ransmlss__ vyheeL radio • HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 (at Dixie & Telegraph) New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cors 106New and Used Cors 106 N*w Used Cars 106 black Interior. Real ____ ____ priced to sell at $99S. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP, Union Lake, heater, power ) moving to our weekly payments S8.92. Full $999. Call Mr. Parks, credit -- ager at Ml 4-7500. Naw location of Turner Ford 2600 Maple (15 Mila Rd. HAUPT PONTIAC 1969 PONTIAC Cptalina 2 door hardtop, with vinyl trirrt, turix-hydramatic, push^buttop radio, foam cushion frqnt Lincoln-Mercury Sales 1950 W. Maple Ml 6-220p $2695 Bob ‘Borst . 855x1.5 whitewalls, DEMOl KESSLER'S DODGE CARS A|4d trucks Sales and Service $2995 1968 GRAND PRIX 2 door hardtop with radio, heoter, hydramatlc, power ateering, brakes, cordova top, two with factory air conditioning, 3 to ---- Interior, specially p sale only $1480 full down. P.S. We're movini To our new John McAuliffe Ford D Oakland Ave._____FE 5-4101 Automatic, radio. _______________________________ 6 FORD GALAXIE 500, hardtop, '8, automatic------- S1388 full P. S. W location I ansmisslon. Radio, ____ ..eering and brakes. Candy Apple Red, with ,1 top, tape deck. Sherp :k. Spring Special only price. Just S’— — s're moving rid all Used Cart must b« JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ava. ___FE 5-4101 1966 Ford Galaxie Hardtop 2 door with VO, automatic, i steering, three to choose fi Starting ef Only— ' $1395 FLANNERY FORD have AM-FM radios, starto tape player, these c Priced To Sell t tires, all I, running coi S. 623-0775. 1968 CATALINA DOOR FAIRLANE Ford, i cellent running condition $150. lO'FALCON, CHEAP 1961 FORD FOR SALE. 2 i 961 .FALCON 6 cylinder, 3-speed, body good, new tires, herter, radio. Good gas mileage. $250, ___.A ..II ..It zAA.klra‘1'aft A n m . THUNDERBIRD, New and Used Care IQlTNew nnd Uted Core 106New and Used Cart 1969 Demo Sale! 12 Models to Choose from 1969 9 Passenger 1968 Buick Electro Sport Wagon Full power, factory elr condition. One owner. Low mileage. Burn- ®Jnn*5itl«'2d"'"tlnl!d ished brwn^lnHh.^acJoiY wa^ brekea. Air conaiTionea, glaat, luggage reck, power tailgate window. list prich BALE PRICE $3776.04 choose from. $$ Save $$ Easy Terms Arranged 19,|59 Skylark Convertible 1966 Skylark Custom 2-door hardtop..V-t, auto- Cuitom. Power ^,eta«rlnj and brakei. V-8, radio, and raar Wiikar. (Ehmma whaalq, Laie than 4,000 milat. LIST PmCE . // 837^^^^^^ SALE PRICE , 82995.00 matic transmission, power slosr-ing and brakas. Radio, hoator, and fact^ air conditioning. Buckat saats. Extra citan. Ona owner. $1795 ' Easy Terms Arranged 1969LeSabre 1968 Opel Rally Kadette 4-door hoVdIop custom, 4M en- Big engine. Radio. 4 speed. Sharp one owner, with factory cuttpm loo. 7,000 miles, ^ LIST PRICE $1695 SS,.,c. :::: - SSS:S Easy Terms Arranged hydramatlc, power s t a e r I n g , brakes, decor, new tires, easy eye and factory air conditioning, only— $2895 1966 FORD FAIRLANE, 500, —power steerino, radio sldpwall tlr«s. $1100 oi 335-07B4, call aft. 7 ' ~ $2495 1968 FIREBIRD Hardtop 2 door with stick, consol., whitewalls, daluxt whtal covers, 12,000 miles, Ohly- 544 S. Woodward, Birfninghc^Ni 647-5600 $2195 „ vvifh .metchlng ^ekel cylinder. Standard Spring t. Just 1966 MUSTANG l-dtopt V8 engine, automatic. rMio, conaole. bucket teats, one GRIMALDI CAR CO. 3 CUSTOM S r VI eutometic tranimlislon,: radio, heater, beautiful arctic; white with blue Interior. Spring Special only $100$ full price. P.S. we're moving to our location and all used cars mu: John McAuliffe Ford 638 Oakland Ave. $1995' 1967 PONTIAC la 2 door hardtop, wit haatar, hydramatlc, powe ----1, decor and ne\ 1 easy aye tinta irp car tor only— $1995 1967 CHEVY- $1895 1966 PONTlAi; Catalina 2 door hardtop wl hydramatlc, power s t e« r’in c , $1695 1965 PURE LUXURY jII power, factory air conditioning, $1895 ' ' 1967 MUSTANG 2 plui 2 Festbeck. —^ paint. Power steerlp-(as. Automatic. Custotr Audeftt Pontiac 1967 MUSTANG BURGUNDY, blet vinyl top, auto. V4 r---- offer. FE ^7174. ,. V4 power steering, r FORD XL Fastback, 390 V HAUPT PONTIAC ’jOHN MCAULIFFE FORd 630 Oakland ^ve. Fg 5-4 1967 FALCON ’ FUtURA Station Wagon. 289. Automatic, ----------- slewing, tl,4^. 334-6003. ■ 1967 FORD iO Pasiarigar Ci Squire. Power and eutometic. $ ' down, weekly paymertts 815.92. Fi price'$1999. Cell Mr, Perkr manager at Ml 4-7500. N< Turner Ford 90 Maple (15 Mile Rd.) Treiy M*H I mile oe- - ...‘ REROSSESSIONS mm 1964 Pontiac Bonneville 2 door hardtop. Silver blue with matching vinyl interior. V8, automatic, power steering and brakes. 41 a d i o, heater, whitewall tires. Balance due $395, weekly'payments $2.86. 1903 Ford i Ton Pickup V8, stick. Blue with matching interior. Radio, heater, whitewall tires. Balance due $295, weekly payments,$2.17. 1963 Pontiac Tempest Convertible. Red with red vinyl interior, white top. Automatic, power steers ing and brakes, radio^ heater, whitewall tires. Balance due $295, weekly payments $2.17, 1963 Chevy Bel Air" ' 2 door. Turquoise with matching interior. V8, au-tomotiej power steering and brakes. Radio, heater, whitewalls. Balance due $395, weekly payments $3.27. 1964 Ford Wagtin 9 passenger. Blue with matching blue vinyl in-t e r i 0 r. V8, automatic, power steering and brakes. Radio, heater, whitewalls. Balance due $295, weekly payments $2.17. 1965 Dodge Polara ■Indoor hardtop. Maroon wth matching yinyl in-terior, V8," automatic, power steering and brakes. Radio, heater, whitewalls. Balance due $595, weekly payments $4.67. ! 1963 Qlds 4-Do6r Hardtop. Lovender with block vinyl interior. V-8 automatic, poWer steering and brakes. Radio, heater, whitewalls. Balance due $395, weekly payments $3.27. 1964 Dodge Poloro Convertible. Jet black with white vinyl interior. Bucket seats. V-8 auto-motic, power steering and brakes. Radio, heater, whitewalls. Balance due $495, weekly payments $3.78. 1962 Ford XL Convertible Jet black with black vinyl interior. Black top. V-8 automatic, power steering Olid brakes. Radio, heater, whitewalls. Bucket seiits and console. Balance due $195, weekly payments, $2.08. • 1962 Olds 98 Convertible Forest green with green vinyl interior, and white top. 8 cylinder automatic, power steering and brakes. Radio, heater, whitewalls. Power windows. Balance due $495, weekly payments $3.78. 1964 Corvair Monza 2 door. Midnight blue with matching yinyl interior. Automatic, power steering. Radio, heater, white-walls. Balance due $395, weekly payments $3.26. 1963 Mercury Monterey , 4 door hardtop. White with beige vinyl interior. V-8 automatic, power steering, brakes and windows. Electric rear window. Factory air condition. Balance due $295, weekly payments $2.17. 1963 pChevy Nova .11 2 door hardtop. Turquoise with matching interior. 6 cylinder, automatic, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Balance due $395, weekly payments $3.27. 1965 Mercury Marauder 4 door hardtop. Saharo gold with brown vinyl top, and matching interior. V-8 automatic, power steering and brakes. Radio, heater, whitewall tires. Balance due $495, weekly payments $3.78. * 1963 Comet Waigon: • Red with red and white vinyl interior. 6 cylinder, automatic. Deluxe chrome luggage rack. Power steering and brakes. Radio, heater, whitewalls. Balance due $195, weekly payments $2.08. TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS 1962 Ford......... $95 1962 Plymouth......$95 1962 Ford Wagon - 9 passenger .. .$95 1963 Mercury ......$95 1961 Pontiac 2 dr. hardtop. .$95 Payments arranged to fit your budget. Immediate delivery. Over ^100 cars to choose from, including many convertibles. We accept trade-ins, handle financing, even if you hove been bankrupt, garnished, |ust turned 21 or divorced. Walk in—Drive Out^Credit Okayed ' ' 3275 WEST HURON Corner M-59 and Elizabeth Lake Road 681-0800 6?l-0800 ;A. 'W; . '( m . .'fV M' ^ -f! ■ ' /; ; . ‘ ' \ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 16. 1969 For Wont Ads Dial 334-4981 106|Nm^nd UMd-Cart^ 1041Now and Uud Car* 1M4 OLDS DELTA hardtop. Maroon i ' •i, ivinyl Interior. \ radio, heater, pow ^ brakes. Whitewall iires. oaiance r due $4«1.14, weekly payments $3:«, * *5.00 down. Call Mr. Al, M2-3061 y (dealer). Naw and Cars NEW FINANCE FLAN WorkiMIt . Need' a car? We arranga Hr > almost anybody with good,*>ad or no credit. 75 cars to chr— *-- Call credit mgr. Mr. Irv _FE_S;1006jor£E 3-70M. _ TOM RADEMACHER . . CHEVY-OLDS 1?M OLDS Dynamic 80 convertible with automatic, power steering, brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls I whitewalls. Balance due *121.3«,< radio and heater, maroon with a black top, very lowi weekly payments *1.47. Call Mr. M: dltion with tinted miles. *1595. Over 75 other cars tOj (dealerl 682-2061. _- I teas, selert frorn On US 10 at M15,|„j, PLYMOUTH FURY, clean, low; OnC Clarkston. AhA 5,5071.________| mileage *225. Call 474-1880. ih oHiJ *tm"’“ PLYMOUTH FURY 2-door, ^ 106IMARMADUKE N*w and U*(id Car*____________IM 1948 PONTIAC FIREBtnO, 190. “ — ......1 black vinyl top, all condition. ^7*04. , *4*5. 674-2K OLDS 1965 4-door Hardtop, fully equipped, with air .conditioning, extra sharp. Just *1195, *1^ or eld car down, low ,r- G/WACWms.. BILL FOX CHEVROLET , 755 S. Rochester Rd. .451-7000 THIS WEEK'S NEW CAR SPECIAL 1969 ' OLDS CUTLASS $2809 ! Best Olds’I Now and U»ad Car* 104 SAVE MONEY AT MIKB. CHEVY, 1900 W. Maple, Ml 4-2735. Public Auction Solol - 11948 OLDS 442 Hardtop7~^ speed. ' Radio and heater. *39 down, weekiv payments $17.4d. Full orlce Call Mr. Parks 1964 PLYMOUTH mailer at Ml ^-rsoo. New L Turner FofcT 24(|o Maple (15 Mile Rd.1 Troy M f____1 mile east of Woodward 1948 CUtLASS S 2-. .... ...... , MERRY OLDSMOBILE 528 N. Main ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN 1964 BARRACUDA Hordtop .2 door with red finish, radio, heater, V8, stick shift, clean — throughout! Exeellanf vo'luo TOWN & COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER I. Main St. LYMOUT....... 1 owner. 45T-2914. f'!C*ll M U (dealer) dcondltlSIi? Cill 432-I want to «est.b^^^^^^ cr I . Hundreds to choi ICsIl Mr. Al (dealerl Troy 11949 TEMPEST 4-dodr _llt47 Cata|ina., New and Used Cart 106 New and Used Cars l06New and Used Cars 106 HAHN TODAY'S SPECIAL , 1967 ChrysleF Town 6c C'try 'Wagon, $2595 with factory air conditioning, double power, 9 passenger; low mileage. , RIAOe 10A7 DIVMnllTU t 1966 OLDS 88 4door, with V-8, double pov beige with « matching Interior. $1495 1965 )eEP Wogoneer .....^.$1995 1966 TEMPEST 2 door Automatic, vary clean. Ideal c .....$995 r for the young 196.6 FORD Foirlone 2 door hardtop, vory claan, see this one today. .......:$1095 I," automatic, must 1967 PLYMOUTH Sotellite ..... $1795 '-B, automatic, 1965 CHEVELLE 2 door . with Ideal transportation, _mus1 $595 1965 CHEVY Convertible ..;.. .$1295 Super Sport with V-8, automatic, buckets and 10 -1968 RAMBLER Official Cars Starting ot only $17^5 ^ » All Carry New Car Warranties Chrysler—Plymouth—Rambler—leep Clarkston 6673 Dixie Hwy. ^ MA 5'^2635 *J0HN McAULIFFE FORD 430 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 M Univtrsity Dr. FE $-7954 1740^^LeMANS Cf^VERTIBLE.^Rcd * 1744 PLYMOUTH 4. Individual front SL-.-. ieparatelv adlustable, full raelining and head rests. Reverb, radio, AM-FM, posi-fractlon, power I Cat:* 104 New and ilied Car* 104 1967 Plymouth Fury 111“ 2 door hardtop. White with black ........ —, matching interior $1095 , BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTh Maple Rd. , Troy 642-7000 factory warranty, payments ot f------ Lake prion, 4 MILOSCH CHRYSIER-PIYMOUTH 1947 Plymouth Fury, 4 door, fact air, radio, heater, V8, power, I... down payment, $41 par month, 477 M-24, Lake Orion, 493-8341 1948 ROADRUNNER, $175 d take over payments, balam axe. condition. OR 3-1S89. i Cart 104New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106 MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1949 GTX- 2 door, hardtop, track-pack, automatic, consols, bucket . i194B FIREBIRD 400. Nassau blue, , with vinyl top. Automatic ■ withi I double power. Factory mags. *2495. | 8000 actual mi. ! ECONOMY USED CARS ! 2335 Pixie Hwy,_______ 334-2131 cellent condition, *200, 481-12 1940 PONTIAC, can ba purchased with *100 down, 2 locations to LUCKY AUTO 112 W. Montcalm , FE 4-5004 1940 W. Wide Track FB 4-1004 or FE l-7»54 PONTIAC VENTURA, V-t, —matle, 4-door, hardtop. condition, snow tires., *275. 94* CATALNIA 1 door hardtop, silver with black vinyl roof. Tinted glass all around. Factory air. 3209. Audette Pontiac W. Maple Rd. »129.95.'^’ !____________' GRIMALDI CAR CO. New and Used Cars 900 Oakland Ave._____FE 5-9421 i_____________________ $444^ 1965 Pontiac Tempest Hardtop. New tires, radio, low mileage. Spotless rust-free body. ■ $744 1965 Bonneville Convertible Check this beauty. Automatic, power steering and brakes, AM-FM radio, air conditTon, full tinted glass. Spotless turquolsa body with white top. HURRYI $1295 VILLAGE ■ RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Birmingham Ml 6-3900 IT'S OFFICIALl. . PLYMOUTH CUTS VALIANT PRICE . $I93.G0 Valiant, Sarhe Car, New 0 Price W CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 106New and Used Cars 106*lsW and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cart d transportation. 332-0378. 1969 PONTIAC Custom Sport Coupe with decor groiip, 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 UMOf-41 1969 CUSTOM knARDTOP.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, oil vinyl ■ interior, bucket seats, door to door carpeting, and oil safety equipment for 1969. $2896 — BRAND NEW — 1969 PONTIAC • .CATALINA 4-Doof Sedan with decor group, hydromotic, push buttoh rpdio, visor itijrror, remote mirror, power steering, power disc brakes, tinted gloss, 8555x15 whitewalls and all the '69 Safety Features. Champagne finish. — AIR CONDITIONING -- $3399 ; r ataaring, brakal, n 9, luggaga rack, facto,, i d glasi. Only — $2995 . 1966 PONTIAC Catalina 7-Door Hardtop, with doubla powar, h\ malic, radlq..,ha througKWif duty powar brakes. Oakland Counh turbo-hydramatic. brand new whi vinyl fop. Only -- $1795 1963 PONTIAC Wagon witti power |taerlng, brakas, radio, hydra-matlc. haatar and ready for that vocation at Ortly-i $995 We Guarantee in Writing every on? of our Quality Used Cars has actual m i I e.s I (As Traded) WB DO NOT RESET ANY SPEEDOMETER FOR YOUR SAFETY AND satisfaction. Deal with people you can Trust I. Where honesty is our l^olicyl At Russ Johnson's I 1966"tDNTIAC Bonneville with Cor^vt top, doubla po radio, hoattr, whlttwalla, a out I Onjv— r, conditioning, many other extra*. Only— $2595 1967 PO^JTIAC Catalina $1995 $1995 POHTIAC-TEMPEST On M-24-Lake Orion MY 3-6266 radio, clean, by owner. 343-0341 ■ 1043 PONTIAC SPORT CATALINA rid condition. *500 for 33S-771S. 1743 GRAND PRIX. doubla power, good condition. *475. 473-im or 1744. CATALINA 2 i OWNER, jteering >i 4*2-8117. 1744 Catalina, d brakas, *475. 1744 LaAAANS COUPE, automatic, V«, new premium tires, rad buckets. *075. Autobahn 1745 GTO Convertible, 4 speed. Radio and heater, .No. * down, week' -paymente *7.8*. Full price *107 Call Mr. Parke Credit Manager i **' 4-7500. Naw location ot Turner Ford 2400 Maple (15 Mila Rd.l'Troy Mall YB3 Dunncvn-i-E air, clean, ay Opdyka Hardware, FE ^4484. 1765 GTO. Low milaaga. V GOOD CONDITION. QAII 442-3 Audette Pontiac 1850 W. Maple itd. Troy ineYiuI^^ 8urgun_, ..... Power itaaring. Autoitiaflc transmission. Fa skirts. 40,000 actual miles and ce^tlonally claan. Call 442-3207. Audette Pontiac aso W. MapI* Rd. Troy PONTIAC TEMPEST 1965? blue-gray -------- 226, sticky private o nvartibla,. i 444-5071,________________- 1745 TEMPEST STAN D A R b . ----------^ -------------- ------- 473-4442. Radio, haatar, power ttaering jAnd brakea. Beautiful maialllc Nur-quolsa, with matching Interior, Spring Special only *1418, full prica, lust 8181 down. P.S. Wa'ra moving to our with matching inionor. vo, automatic, steering and brakes. Fu.. ----- group. VERY GOOD CONDITIONl Call 442-3287. . Audette Pontiac 1850 W. Maple Rd. Troy lW~ GTO,™4 " apeed,“TalTy "^w^ 1744 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, 1744 BONNEVILLE, hardtop, doublo 1744 PONTIAC Catalina, 807, 2K)oor hardtop,^vln^toPj^ vary claan — axe, eonditlon, *1.35(1. OR 8-7M 1747 BONNEVILLE 7 -----n. Burgui-, ... Power , statrlng Audette Pontiac 1*50 W. Maple Rd. Troy 1747 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE! .......»-,r ■■ 1747 CATALINA 4 _______ ____ 473-47061 , _ 1747 PONTIAI: CATALINA Hardtop. ----- automatic. Full price *1875. Call Mr. Parks! Credit managor at Ml 4-7500. ... location of Turner Ford 400 Mapio (IS Mila Rd.) Troy ’ ~"~i *«»♦ o* Woodward 1747 PONTIAC Tampa»f rad station wagon, powar ileoring, V*, atick, 22.000 mH0l. 4S1-3WI. „ 1M7 CATALINA Station w "OK" SPRING, BUYS! 15 th Anniversary Sale 1967 CHEVY Biscayne 2 door with Granada gold finish, black Interior, 4 cyl. 3-apaad,- radio, haatar, whitewalls, vary low mlla-aga, on* owner, axcallant valu*. Only- $1595 1967 . CHEVY Bel Air Wagon 4-passenger, with cameo Ivory finish, gold Interior, V-l, automatic, power staaring, vacation Ti877 1967 CHEVY Va ton Pickup with 4 cyl. angina, 4-tpe*d, #x-callant condition, dark blue finish.* Only— $1695 1968 CORVAIR “ "500" 2 door with 3-spaad,, marine blue flnish, radio, hoattr, marina blue wNli a blu* Interior, lew mllatg*, J1595 1969 FORD Country Squire Wagon 10 passengar, with a V-*,, auto-' matic, power steering, brsksi, luggaga rdek, radio, haator, whitewalls, factory air conditioning, butternut yaltow finish. $3795 1967/ CHEVELLE Malibu SS Coupe with V-'l, 4 spaOd, radio, haator,. black vinyl top, marina blu* finish, Only -7- $1995 1967 CHEVY - Bel Air 4 Door Sedan, with gleaming pole white automatic, radio, hoator. Only — finish, custom blu* Interior, V-8 $1695 1967 CHEVEiLLE Malibu Hardtop 2-door with 327 V-8, 4-b*rr*l carburttor, 4-speed transmission, radio, haatar, with ovals, marina blue, deluxe blue 2-tone Interior. Only- $1977 1968 , chevy: ■ Impola SS Convertible with a bultarnut yellow finish, black ^v^ijl^^to^,^liM*^vnwl ^ sola, 327 V-l, automatic, 'power staaring, brakes, radio, haator, whitawallt. Only— $2567 1967 GTO Hardtop . , with automatic, V-0, powar ttoar^ Ing, brakea, radio, haatar, whitawallt, India Ivory finish. Only - $.1995 ' 1966 CHEVY Impola Coupe with a marina blu* tlnlsh, black Intorter, V-0, S taaad frantmla-tlon, whitawallt. Only — $1495 1968 ' CHEVY Impala Sport Coupe with v-8, automatic,'powar iltarv Ing. radio, whitewalls, and Indie Ivory finish. $2295 1964 CHEVY Impala Hardtop 2-door with tropical turquolio rinlah, * cyl. angina, s^paad trMW mission, radio, haatar,., whltowani, extra nie* car—Only— $995 1969 CHEVELLE Malibu Sport Coup* with V-l, powargltdo, power ttaering radio, hoator, whitawallt, vinyl top, rally whaels, buttertiul yaltow tlnlsh. Only — $2595 1965 PONTIAC Catalina 2 Door sedan with automatic, powar steering, brakes, radio, heater, whhewellt, extra nic* ear and a mitt blu* finish, Only — $995 1965 CHEVY Impala Hardtop 2 door with turouolse finish, 8 cyL^ yn^lne|^3 speM^ansml|dm^ $995 631 Oakland Cass FE 4-4547 V A,.- , 'n, y THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 Restraint Acatoss 39Hodent 42 Craggy hm 45 Compaaii reading 11 Italian islands 46 Monte—- 12 Visigoth ruler (in Europe) MMusieV. 48**---.fidelei dramas 50 Exemplary 15 Holding right types 16 Basque cap 51 Strait--- IT Semester 52 Places of (■b.) Udolf mound 22 Small drums , “OWN ____________ HWedge-shaped lMan,forone (rmtoicting 2Surgical action) lia^isk performance 20Cry loudly substance 8 Nostril (ohs.) 21 Airplane SSCsech 4 Mild expiation guide ' , eg-presidenf 5 Family 23 Man’s name 35 Diminutive of member (coE) 24 Sea inlet _ Chi^tina , 6 Provides food 26 Restricting , 36 Set on fire . for agent .............7 Moslem 27 Lamb (dial) 38 Ga^en flower 40 Mohanunedan deity 41 Hurl -Jelevision Programs- Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice! i Chownels: 2-WJBK-TV. 4-WWJ-TV. 7~WXYZ-TV. 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS-TV, 62-WXON-TV Paula's Now a Dog Watcher Boning Up for 'Fido' Role By EARL WILSON 1 NEW YORK—Paula Prentiss, who plays a dog named Fido in an upcoming show called “Arf," solemnly believes that some dog food TV commercials are specially tuned so that your dogs will enjoy theih and thus influence you into buying that dog biscuit. "(Ml, that’s crazy!” says h?r husband Pick Benjamin who directs her in the play, and Paula ^ says, "Well, I believe it!” But anything’s possible* because just a few liUt anyining 8 possiDic^ Decause ju»i « lew ^ e moments before, the beautiful Paula had got' down on all fours and scampered around the ' floor at the Stage 73 Theater, panting and snorting and acting so muph like a dog—her face up< on my knees like a'poodle—that I was aboutii to pat her on the head md say, "Good doggie.” WILSON Paula agreed to play a dog that turns into a woman (“It’s a very bitchy Tolev) so that she arid her husband could continue working togethc^ as they did in “Catch 22” and on their own TV show. "How do you prepare yourself to play a dog?” was a natural question. "Well, you can watch one for a day. We watched a Wg sheep dog. They have a life of their own. They have no timing. They look at something much longer than we do. And they keep battling inanimate things all afternoon. They have strange breathing from running around all the time. "As I walk along the street now. I’m watching people’s dogs Instead of them. “You know, since I became a dog,” she said, "I’m eating more meat.”. “She didn't eat meat for a couple pf years,” her husband said. “I had a steak tartar (he other day and it was delicious,” Paula said. ^ “No dog food?” we ahked. THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Ann-Margret and Rudolf Nureyev did a frantic frug at the big party for Nureyev and Dame Margot Fonteyn at the Jockey Club; the guests included Ava Gardner, Lauren Bacall, Doris Duke and Pat Lawford. (Ann-Margret returned to L.A., mlrtus a fur coat and jewelry stolen from her hotel room.) Darryl Zanuck’s edict: No preSs screenings or previews of "Che!”; it premieres May 29 . . . Liz Ashley, estranged from George Peppard, returns to Broadway in "Her Bed, His Couch’/ ... Some of the Jet Footballers practiced their fancy footwork at Nepentha discotheque. I^SH I’D SAID THAT: Tallulah Bankhead said it: "It’s the good girls who keep diaries; the bad girls never have time.' EARL’S PEARLS: A safety belt is a device that most motorists use religiously for about 20 minutes after they pass an accident. Jackie Kannon described a bore: "He has to hold your lapels to hold your attention.” . . . That’s earl, brri|her. R-Berun C — Color FRIDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (?) 'C — News, Weather, Sports (9) R C -1 Spy . (60) R C - Flintstpnes * (56) What’s New (62) R —Sea Hunt 6:30 (2) News - Mudd (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 Con-sequencer (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R C - Movie : “Doomsday Flight” (1966) Drama of frantic search for a bomb aboard an airliner. Van Johnson, Jack Lord, Edmond O’Brien, John Saxon (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) Aipericans From Africa — “W.E.B. DuBois and the Niagara Movement.” (62) R — I-'oLed Three Lives 7:30 (2) R C - WUd Wild West — Double-dealing foreign diplomat attempts to implicate U.S. in an international conspiracy. . (4) R C - High Chaparral — Temperance group attempts to prevent Buck from opening his new saloon. (7) C — (Special) Comrade Soldier — Documentary shows life and training of Sovipt army recruit. Program shows the equipment and indoctrination methods of the Soviet army through film taken during two months in the U.S.S.R. Peter Jennings narrates. (50) R C - Hazel (56) R - Free Play (62) R — Ann Sothern 6:00 (50) C - Pay Cards (62) R"— Ozzie and Harriet 8:30 (2) R C — Gomer Pyle, USMC — Gomer’s platoffli forms a chorus and enters a contest to represent the Marine Corps in a Hollywood movie. (4) R C — Name of the Game,— Glenn Howard goes to Rome to get the facts surrounding the death of a playgirl and uncovers an international scandal. (7) e _ Generation Gap — Panelists are columnist Jimmy Breslin and composer Jerry Bock competing against his son, George, 17. (9) C — Don Messer ' (50) e — Password (5 6 ) Clneposium — "Witches: The Gre ' Puritan Injustice” — Cal Lewin, 14-year-old film maker, presents the second film of his career for review. (62) R — MOvie: "One Way Out” (1957) Scotland Yard mystery thriller. Jill Adams, Eddie Byrne. 9:00 (2) R — Movie: "A Global Affair” (1946) Boh Hope, Lil6 Pulver, Michel? Mercier, Yvonne De Carlo, Robert Sterling (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal (9) C —Public Eye (50) R — Perry Mason (56) R — Grandmaster Chess 9:30 (7) R C - Guns of Will Sonnett — Jeff dreams he sees his father, James Sonnett, shot from tower and then he finds .the, tower .that was in his ■ dream. (9) C — 20 Million Questions (56) R — NET Playhouse — '"The Star Wagon” — Radio Prpgrams— WJM760) WXYZd 270) CKLWfBOO) WWJ(950) WCARd 130) WPONQ 460) WJ6K(1500) WHFI-FM(94.71 WXYZ, N«wscop» WPON, N«wt WHFI Don Bnsco 4111-WJR, SBOrll „ 4iJ»_WWJ, Today In, Ravlew WPON, Phono Oplolod WJR, Suilnaao, Tlmo Trav-EmphisH WJR, Lowtll thomaa, Aufo Ji4l.r^jl. Nawj, RICK sldwart ' WJBK, Niwij Tom Daan WWJ, Nawa< jporltLIna > 115—Ww J% aeatrack Raport, SportiLlna . WJR, ■ualnaat. Sp«rt4 Raport, snowcBia _ T!4S—WJR, Tlgar Beat, Baja- liOO-WPON, Nawt, Larry Dixon *r«0-Wh CKLW, Scolt Kaqi 10!»-WJR, Scorat 14:44—WJR, ShowcaM tl:04-WJR, News ItiH-WJR, sports Final 11 x*f| ^*wn lySoSwJ^X.'Nishttlma \A/XYZ News Jim Davis CKLW; Mark Richards WCARaNews, le RhiiMps JATURDAY MORNINO 4i04-WJR^,^Wate-Up CI^W, Charlla Van Dyka WXYZ, Newi, Dick Purtan WJBK, News, A/larc Avery WPON, Newt, A r, 110 n a Weston WCAR. Newt, Bill Daliell 4ilO-WWJ, ,Nawt, Morrle. Carlson 4il$-WJR,' Sunnyllde, Ctval- Gomedy-fantasy MaxTyell Anderson follows adventures of inventor who . creates a time machine. Dustin Hoffman, Orson Bean, Joan Loving star. 9:55 (62) Greatest Headlines 10:00 (A) C — Here Come the Stars—Groucho Marx, Tammy Grimes, Morey Amsterdam, Joe Willis and Stu Gilliam Vipi (7) R C -- Judd^feh- the Defense — When Ben Caldwell, Judd’s associate, is accused of immoral relations with a minor, he refuses Judd’s help and defends himself. (9) (50) C - News, Weather, Sports (62) R - Movie: "Demarcation Line” (Italian-French, 1966) The gripping story of a woman who joins the French underground during World War II. Jean Seberg, Maurice Ronet 10:30 (9) C - What’s My Line? (50) R —Alfred Hitchcock 10:45 (2) C-(Speciall Flight of Apollo 10, -r- Preview Report 11:00 (2) (4) (7) C - Nqjvs, Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: "Dark Intruder” (1^5) Sleuth aids police in solving a series of murders. Leslie Nielsen, Judi Meredith (50) C — Joe Pyne 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson — Bob Newhart is substitute host. (7) Q— Joey Bishop 11:35 (2) R C — Movie; ‘.‘Cowboy” (1958) Hotel clerk and cattleman becorhe partners on rugged cattle drive to Mexico. Glenn Ford, Jack Lemmon 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe (50) C - Big-Time Wrestling 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R — Movie: “Convicts Four” (1963) Story of convict who is rehabilitated through his love for painting. Ben Gazzara, Sammy Davis Jr., Vincent Price, Rod Steiger 1:30 (2) R - Movie: "No Place to Land” (1958) Crop duster’s girlfriend marries another but hopes for his return. John Ireland 3:15 (7) News 3:30 (2) C — News, Weather SATURDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C - News 6:00 (2) C — Across the Fence 6:30 (2)C - Sunrise Semester 6:45 (7) C — Rural Report 6:55 (4) C - News 7:00 (2) C - Mr. Magoo (4) C — Country Living (7) C — Tv College 7:20 (9) Warm-Up 7:30 (2) C — Bugs Bunny-Roadrunner (4) C -^psy (9) A Place of Your Own 8:00 (7) C — New Casper Show " (9) Ontario Schools 8:30 (2) C — Wajiky Races ' (7) C — Gulliver 9:00 (2) C - Archie Show (4) R C — Flintstones (7) C — Spiderman (50) R - Wells Fargo 9:30 (2) C — Batman — Superman (4) C - Children’s Theatre — “The Enormous Egg” (7) C — Fantastic Voyag« (9) French Schools (50) RC —Laramie 10:00 (7) C — Journey to the TV Features Tonight AMERICANS FROM AFRICA, 7 p.m. (56) COMRADE SOLDIER, 7:30 p.m. (7)- . HERE COME TRE STARS, 10 p.m. (4)^/ FLIGHT OF APOLLO 10, 10:45 p.m. (2) Tomorrow- BASEBALL, 1p.m. (4), 1:15 p.m. (2) THE PREAKNESS, 4.15 p.m. (2) Center of the Earth (9) C — D’Iberville 10:30 (2) C — Herculriids (4) C — Underdog ' (7) C — Fantastic Four (50) R - Movie: “The Shanghai Chest” (1948) 11:00 (2) C — Shazzan (4) C—Storybook Squares (7) C — George of the Jungle (9) C — Cross Canada 11:30 (2) RC - Jonny Quest (4) C — Untamed World (7) C — American Bandstand (9) (Country Calendar SATURDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C ^ Moby Dick (4) C — Super 6 (9) C — CBC Sports — Bowling (50) R — Movie: “All Through the Night” (1942) Humphrey Bogart, Peter Lorre, Phil Silvers 12:30 (2) C— Lone Ranger (A) C — Red Jones (7) C — Happening — The Peppermint Rainbow and Three Dog Night are featured. 1:00 (2) C — Tiger Warmup (4) C — Baseball; Washington at Chicago (7) C - (Special) Track — Big 10 Championships at Purdue (9) R — Movie; "Sombra, the Spider Woman” (1947-66) Feature version, of serial. 1:15 (2) C —Baseball: Detroit at Minnesota 2:00 (50) R - Movie: “The Men” (1950) Marlon . Brando, Jeresa Wright, Jack Webb, Everett Sloane 3:00 (7) R Outer Limits (9) Through the Eyes of Tomorrow 3:30 (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) R - Movie ; "Kronos” (1957) Jeff Lawrence 4:00 (4) C — Car and Track (7) c - Wide World of Sports Featured are the Rebel “400” Stock Car Race from Darlington, S.C.; World Gold Skate Roller Skating Classic, Felt Forum, New York City; and the Jim Ryun Mile -Run-Big 8 Outdoor STEREO COMPONENTS • FISHER • ELECTRO-VOICE • KENWOOD • MclNTOSH • TANDBERG • REVOX • GARRARD • DUAL • RECIUNEAR SPKRS. • ACCESSORIES CUSTOMAOE PRODUCTS 4S40 W. HURON 673-9700 Track Championships, Ames, Iowa. (9) CBozo (56) R C — DaVey. and Goliath 4:15 (2) C — The Preakness — Tjie 94th running of the si^nd leg ih the Triple Cwwn of Racing is presented from Pimlico race track, Baltimore. Jack" Whitaker is hosL and Heywood Hale/Brown and, Eddie Arcaro provide color. (56) R — Just Imagine “Listening and Sounds” 4:30 (4) C-At the Zoo (9) C — Skippy (56) R — Muffinland (62). R — MacKenzie’s Raiders 4:45 (56) R - Sing Hi -Sing Lo 5:00 (2) R - Mr. Ed (4) C—Huckleberry Finn (9) R C — Monroes — "()rdeal by Hope” (50)C-HyLit (56) C — Brother Buzz "Down on the Farm’ (62) C' - Big-Tj, Wrestling 5:25 (2) C -Turf Talk 5:30 (2) C'— Gentle Ben (4) C — George Pierrot — “East Africa’s Big Game” (7) R C — Wackiest Ship (56) R — Antiques IperaHen Crystal Controlled • Also Available In Low Band (30-B0nie) ^OVUQJU Hiriand (1S2-1T4 me) M40 -Year Warranty s^eiass ounlrif Phona 674-3161 4664 W. VValtpn Blvd., Drayton Plains ppan 9-9 Mon. & Fri., 9-6 Tue$., Wad., Thun., Sot. 'Chicken Not Meat for Man' LINCOLN, England (AP) Men may be ruining their love life when the get old by eating chicken, says chemist Alan [Long. . Long said an artificial female !x hormone injected into phickens to stufit their sexual growth and make them meatier may have the same effect on men who eat cWckens., 'If small amounts of the drug I are passed on to humans when they eat chicken, it could have An accumulative effect,” said Long. “It may take years to show Itself, but it could turn into eunuchs.” TESAofOAKlANDCOUNTY.SI DEDICATED TO TOP QUALITY TV SERVICE Disks Radio 6 TV 682-6140 1148 W. Horan, Ponliao Condon Radio-TV FE4-9T3C now. Horan, Pontiao CtVTV FE2-3T81 141 Oakland, Ponliao Dalby Radio A TV FE 4-9102 Crogan's Radio-TV 394-0068 41M0larktlonHd.,Clarkilon JoHnaon Radio-TV FE 6-4566 ML Walton, Ponliao Utimor Radio-TV OR 3-2852 8N0 Uahtbiw, Drayton Plaint ObolTV 662-8620 mi Biubath Lk. Rd„ PnnHio FR4-138C AIJoodingTV FE 4-1611 lin W. eiarktlon Rd„ Lako Orion Stofanski Radio A TV 681-1611 ItilW. Huron, PenHao Sylvan Storao A TV 6I2AH0D IIIIOrabardUkoRL Swaat’s Radio A TV FE 446n 422 W. Huron, Ponliao Troy TV-Radio TR 6-006D NIB LIvamoit, Tray ValkO’tTV 166-1161 III H,|laln, Milford Walltd Lib Eloetronios 624-2221 ini L Wilt Mapio R4„ Walind Uka Walton Radlo-TV . FE 2-22IT III W. Walton, Fontlao WKC, Ine, SaiVios 8T4.11II Mil Diala Hwy., Drayton Plnlna Big Cone Stolen (JRAND RAProS (AP) - An Ice cream cbne has been stolen in Grand Rapids, but the police should be able to spot this one. It’s a steel cone, painted yellow and white, and is seven feet high and three feet wide. Mrs. Jay Rode, whose husband operates a dairy store, said the cone was stolen ffom in front of the business establishment between 7:30 and 11 a.m. PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL & HEARING AID CENTER Phone ^ 682-1113 "Living Sound"^ ^ HEARING AID DEALER ^ INTRODUCING The famous Zenith handcrafted chassis now made even better! NEW ZENITH THAN so for super performance year after year 11;00-WJR, N«wi, Sports 11:IS~WJR, Cavalcad* SAIURDAY APTBRNOON 1J:0#-WWJ, Naws lltlS-Wwj, Now, Mart* Naelcy WJR, Farm ll>3»-WJR, CavalcadI, 1;0fr-WJR, Tlgar Baat, BasabaM Mllham WXYZ, Nawt, Mika Shi CKLW, Stavt Huhtar liOd-WCAR, Naws, I:ts-WJR, Soorai 4.W-WJR. Nawt. DImtnslon 4ilS--WJR, Showctaa I S'lLLL RAIN GUTTER ALREADY PAINTED! HOME OWNERS Don’t be misled by softer materials that will not stand up lo winter ice will dent with ladder against it. I’ainlini: Ihii piillrr haa already been done for you — the factory. CHxleninit while enamel is baked on aiut W-Vatr for 10 years. We also rover overliaiik and facial tu-yaa eliminate ro,«llv painlin^i. (>el 2 eslimalea then Iguanntit. rail me. I Cl’ARANTEE I will save you money. For the - mosMrusled name in eavestrouphinii.............. FamOUs\ phone today 673-6866 or 673-5662 MILCOR ^ ' LICENSE BONDED CONTRACTOR Quality / M & S GUTTER CO. ^ 4l 62 Wfit Walton, brayton Plains | ^rhe BRIGHTON • Z4S07WO '.i.int-scrccn ZV Di.ii!, Comp.icl T.ihItvMotIcl Color TV, Vmyi'Cl.itl mclal cabinet in i;r.imcd Kashmir VValmil color. New Zenith TITAN 80 handcrafted chassis AFC FINE-TUNING CONTROL SUPER GOLD VIDEO GUARD TUNING! SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY! fjUUSf SERVICE SPECIALISTS TV • RADIO SERVICE FE5-6112 Open Friday Evenings *til 9 770 Orchard Lake, Pontiac Va Mil* East of Telegraph t fif 'i \ f':,'- r ... . -yK/f -i y“ ' 'VA ’ ^ ‘,- Wf f) /ypiS PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 TAKE YOUR CHOICE-WROUGHT IRON, REDWOOD or ALUMINUM FROM AMERICA'S FINEST AAAKERS-READY for ENJOYMENT NOW! BUY THEM FROM THOMAS FURNITURE'S PATIO SHOP AS COMPLEn GROUPS OR AS INDIVIDUAL PIEEISI mauTman FAMILY DEPARTMENT STORES (piSiik- t ' ;«y 1%''' m rUMCular buys for Summer living!^ :4 niROIASE! JUSY MiMi J»Biinl 1'*' '4-' •Hm« b 4m mort fantml • ColoMn • fcw» d»MM» • • SMfb • llouaam & mom • SImvmms • Pin dot ocotcrto crofMf • Nwwe*' colon • sim* • CoNoniwM** ririntdMon 3 *0 155, JO lo 2ft coid • WhlM wbfflo coNon piqiPM 14** to 2^ idf Siioil otod ^11 tfflp9 cmiPl^wfMy ^ ■Ion or-dnor wowM ■ '-■ -■! THESE CREDIT CARDS ACCEPTEDI SHOP DAILY 9:30 A.M. TO 10P.M SUNDAYS . . . NOON TILL 6 P.M. MIDWEST BANKARp SECURITY CHARGE CARD 1 VjjjjRSjHHR 1 1 CORNER OF DIXIE HGWY. 1 AT TELEGRAPH RD.-PONTIAC Ready for the big splash!, 1 and 2 Piece SWIM SUITS • An ocaan full of iwlmweorl • Suit youiwlf In ilylel • Blouiom, 1 & 2 pc. siyiM in Mid and Pnrmonont Plwried sidrtal • Solid*, prim* and wovwn siripotl • Button trimi, raffle and contrast colorad piping. • Size* 30 to 36. SPOmSWBAR DOT. MIDRIFIS PANTS MIDlin Blouse • Long sleeved • Plunging nedriinesl • Double, button, elastic, raffle cufh. • Poiyester 'n cotton, Avril* rayon, AvriW rayon 'n cotton. • SoRdi* printi^ novehy .fabric*. * WIrile, ,Ptnl^ Blue, Moizel o Size* 30 to 36. WDE LEG PJINIS • New Grammet & Sash wobld o In-sorted pleat and bolton hgri • Hy frants, inside button dowra. • 20 inch iegsl o Mnis • Solid* « Nosy o White o Bhw o Lime • Maize g Brawn Ste* 6 to 1QL ' SPORTSWEAK DOT. SPECIAL PURCHASE! SLEEVELESS SHIFTS • Sleeveless, A-line Svraep "Swinger" shifisl e SunbacksI e Embroidered pockeli e Industrial zipper trim • Nautical pleated! e Border prints! e Sizes 10 to 18 & S-M-L. Uagerie Dept. BIG SAVINGS! COOI^DINATESI FASIttOtt LADIES’ FASHION STYLED eewNs e PAJAMAS 5 NYION OK DACRON® GOWNS e Nylon fricot ... all around overlays! e DacropK polyester 'n cotton e Muhi embroidered yokes! e S^M-L 1^* 1 EVERY I DAY e Sleefvoless top! e Sofid pontd I j e Aoeidle fricot e Sizes 3Q to 40. I——V EACH 2 ^or Summer GIRLS’ 7 TO 14 SWIMSUITS • 1 & 2-pc. modebi • New styles 'n pot- ^ M temsi e 100% nylM. M SWIM SUITS! SASSIE SCTS! ;H0RT SETS! CULOnE SHIFTS! GIRLS’4TO 12 2-PC SASSIE SETS e Shifts with coordinot- 44^ ing Jomaica's or shoitsi 4 O’ Cotton. ' RIh ems' 4 TO 14 2 mi SUSPENDER SHORT Sin e Ruffles, Cuff Shorts, Suspender Shortsl e Coc^noted Shirts 'n Blouses e Cotton. GIRLS’4TO 14 2-PC SHORT SETS e Norfolks 'n Soforiesl e. Cuff shortsl • CoiMn ^ e Pocket trims. MB> GIRLS' 4 TO 14 CULOITE SHinS e SleevelessI Assorted C4t colors, printsi # Wash- 4 J able cotton. M Each ^ ■ v/' ...1^.: I" i ' T i H- ■ ' j P . ■* BABY NEEDS SALE! A qUHNSAN SET O AAotching hoti e Cotton kniti f QO ' e 6 to 12 to 18 months. SHIFT A PAHTT SIT • No4ronl e Cross4i0cfc styM leUO o 100% cotton, e 12 to 24 mps. MTS’COTTOH SHORT SET • Stripe > check topi e Solid ItlMl short! o 12 to 24 months. GHttS' COTTOH SHORT SEW e No-ironl e Assarted prints *li ■•00 colorsl • '12 to 24 months. ZIP-RACR CIHOTTE e No-iron cottoni e Assorted 1.0IP colors. • 12 to 24 months. GRIPPER CMTCH SHORTS e CovoiPd elostici e Stripe 'n 1•0w checki • 100% cotton, o S4M.. GRIS' BUBBLE SUNSUITS ^ o Button shouMeri e Ricktock ■•UV trlml 100% cotton, e AW.-XL GIRLS' IMHRON DRESSES , ^ e SiMirt sleeve; e 100% cotton leOv e A to 12 to 18 months. YINYI^PUIL-ON PANTS AstortRcl coloni • Sizes S-M- L and XL. PRG.0F13 89c r a» L GIRLS’TENNIS DRESSES e Pleated skirt with triml e Coordinoted pantiesi o Solids and printsi e 100% cotton, e 2 to 6X. GIRLS' KNEE KNOCKERS A SHORTS e SHORTS: Fly fronti^e ,4 packelsl • KNEE KNOCKERS: e Turn bock cuffi e Colton denim, e Navy e 7 to 14. GIRLS’COnON SHORT SETS e Crop tops or shirt styles e Coordinated Jomaicas or shorts, e Malchirsa prints 'n solidsi e Sizes 2 to 14. GRES’4 TO 14 SLEEVELESS SHELLS e Washable double kniti e Rayon 'n cotton e 100% ocetolel e Assorted islid colors. GIRLS’ H04RON BABY DOLL PAJAMAS e Permanent pressi e Assorted prints 'n salkkl e Usee trinll e Colton 'n polyester, e 4 to 14. * 1 Each Is on Summer Wear fo f Boys\ BOYS' TAKE YOUR CHOICE •'if. _ . .\ ONLY *1 ... BOYS'4 to 12 DUNCMEES $ * 100% coltpn denim. • 5 jiodwt style with rivelsl e Assorted coloni e Reitiforoed with rivets at points of shnins. 1 o Woven ploiib, stripes and diecfcsl e 100% cotton or 1JD0% Rayon; fuUy cuH e .Button-down coHors, one pod^ Assorted colorsi BOYS'6 to 16 SFOnr SHiirrs *1 BOYS' 6 to 16 SWIM fRUNKS • 100% nylon, or 63% acetate, 25% cotton. , . 12% LaMX* lubberi e Drawstring ties, supporter inserts, o Stripes Olid sottds in assorted S-M-L. BOYS' 3 to n CAMP SHORTS e 100% cotton shorts! • 5 podiet style. 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BOYS’ 6 to 16 PANAMAS BOYS’ SHOmS OR MUSCLE SHIRTS KNIT SHIRTS BERMUDA SHCHnS |79 |99 1e49 “S«'59 IcH BOYS’ PANTS & DUNGAREES 1.99 BOYS* 6 to 16 SWIM TRUNKS EACH 100% nylonl Short siMves, assorted necicsl e Permanent pressl Cotton / polyesteri Woven ploidsi o Short sleeve, shcrtt legl e Dacron polyester and cottonl o Surplice coot modell e Iwlly pipedi Assrwted colorsi e Permonerrt press shorts and shxks, torsi e kner nrorlelsl Cot-ton/polyesterl e Sleeveless cotton shirts with action full shlesi your CHOKB B«M Bfoitu to e Prsms—Permanent press poly-ester'ond cotton, 4 ptscket Ivy morlell • Western polyesler/cot-ton denim rtongorees 4 pod;;^ 1.69 e Loslez* drawstring tie supprsrt-er inserH e 3 styles, tool e SolirJs with crshtrost sltipr^ e Acetate, cotton and lubberi SM4.. SHIRTS 344 • Striped Mock Turtle e V Braid Trim Mock Turdel e Continental Open Neck Collorl e DeOp V D^nl e Acetate 'n ti^on • Sizes SM-L. Men’s Permanent Press PAJAMAS • Cool styUI Long slaavn ■•ngthl * Fully pipedi • Dacron* polyester 'n cotton. * A-B-C-O. Bluel GreenI Gold! and patternsi 2 99 Reg. 3.99 Men’s Better DePent” DACROr 'N COTTON »'^3«-2.33 • Shrink control • Dacron i>oly 9" scollopod valance front, tidesi 13. jointed poles, guy linel ▼ ) By Notional Convosi Salt^ Rawlings BASEBALL GLOVES 77 eaI • OthM- famous brands tool e Hundreds of fielders gloves in a wide variety of ttyletl BK VALUE! KLUU SxWn. FAMILY SIZE CABIN nNT • OUTSIDE FRAMEI • HEAVY DUTY! • COMPLETE, READY TO SET UP! • Now frame design eliminates centerpole from doorwayl • 3 big nylon screen windows, yellow top to reflect the heat! Keeps the interior bright! You're always comfbrtablel Deluxe 4 Player BADRRINTON SET 14 deluxe^ racquets, complete wfth poles, iwt and shuttieracksl aBCO*77 ROD & REEL sn 3” • Thumb control reel, fiberglass rod with 6 pound test mofio line! 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CANNON* TERRY HOSTESS ENSEMBLE • nsH aom------- 22* • POT holder---- 22< • DtSH TOWa------39* • OVEN MITT_57v • APRON 69* • TOASTER COVER 69* ^RBiDImIQ KH^INNi OOORMOWBm OONOVIa VINYL SHOWER CURTAINS 1.00 • Soft, pKobl*, haonnr gouga vinyll • MiMow and atain iwiiifcintl • Wch, dbiom coioni d x 6 ft. • Assorted polleni||| PRINTED VINYL TABLECLOTHS 1.67 o Hsovy QOUQS vinyl w^ms clnonl • Colfon flamwi boddngl • ColoHul dscofcrtof scPRwi printit • ObiinQ fOOM tdbk tin ^ X 72" CHAIR SEAT A BACK REPLACEMENT SETS 4sEn8.88 • ThicMy podded taoh, contour bockd • Extra hcKavy covurinp; thickly fillodi • Imtallt easily and qUcUyl JACQUARD WOVEN BEDSPREADS TWIN AND iUU SIZE 5.44 a Extra fuH cut with dacorathw triml a Nlastingl 8 99 FAMOUS VERSATILE SABRE SAW e 3050 strokes per minulei e U.L and C.SA. approved. 10 99 FAMOUS 7 INCH POWERSAW 9.0 Amp. motor is equal to-1'A H.P. e Overload clutch! • U.L, C.SA. appr. 18 99 DRIVE 11-PC SOCKET SET High Quality Alloy Steel ^99 SET 7-%" drive sockets, s^iecial spark plug ‘ socket, reversible ratchet, extension bar, and metal boxi ^ High quality alloy steel. They fR motl oon psifecltyl ChooBe from on cenftNMMil of colors to highlight'your cIrI TImy'm strong, proledive—save the ft.; otoas got so mu^ abusel Biy both and sovel Rio front nild recHr mots now FAMILY DEPARTMENT STggES___^_______________ SEU-PROKUED ROTARY MOWER «"Pull and Go Instant StartingP' Rncoil : starter-ddn •{•ction chutn, raar whonl fric- ". safely decall 8" automotive type roller bearing live rubber rear ‘ "wheebl New deck wcnhout port—easy ' clemingl Throttle control on handle control platol ?k Inch lube steel chrome handle ^ Reinforced 1" squared mirror finished akimi-num tubing! strucHonl Webbfngl While phnlic wrowl SQUARE TUtED FOIDINC CHAIR SQUAIIE TUBB> DDJIXEAWtt Front dhunond weave webNngl Plastic arsnsl 1" iq, furniture tubingl Sizn: AiiSkS SQUARE TUBB) DEUIXE6WB F0UHN6 CHAISE e dnlS diamond weave wobbingl S posiHon aiaminwn choisel e Rierlinsi eoiRyl Has ploMic aimsl n-HCH PRno rjuiES e Large 19" dkim. metal topi o Bolndan Bthographed patterns! o Tubular steel legs. 3 CU. FT. UmiTY GIANT ADJUSTABU WHEELBARROW BARBECUf GRIU 199 *£Sr*foA099 ^ rirnTfire- e Nuts, bolts: non-rusll e No-wrinkle comersi If/ ■ The Weather U. S. WtatIMr ■urtiu iertciil Warmer (Oitailt Pjg* 1) THE PONTIAC VOL. 127 — NO. 8.5 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, MAY 16, -60 PAGES IOC Hippies Fight Park Use in Tafrop Resigning Post in Waterford BERKELEY, Calif. — National Guardsmen ringed a stretch of University of California park; land today in the wake of a battle between police, hippie squatters, students and others. Fifty persons were injured. The hippies, claiming use of the land as a “people’s park,” resisted police ouster attempts yesterday with a barrage of rocta. Police fired into the crowd with tear gas shells and shotguns loaded with birdshot; ■ The number of troops sent to the scene was described only as “substantial.” The trouble started earlier this month after'the university announced plans to use its park land for an athletic field and posted no-trespassing signs. Hippies who had frequented the area grabbed the signs and burned them. An automobile was overturned and burned. Police were bombarded with missiles thrown from roofs. Three were injured, one with a knife wound in the chest. Many in the crowd were peppered with the tiny birdshot pellets from police shotguns, which drew blood without inflicting serious wounds. FENCING STARTED ■ On Wednesday, police routed 75 persohs from the property and workmen started fencing it in the following day. The hippies tried to prevent erection of the eight-foot fence and were joined soon by students and others as the crowd grew to hundreds. OUTBREAK QUELLED Police finally quelled the outbreak after cordoning off 18 square blocks and arresting 45 persons. Asserting the park protest was “a phony issue,” Gov. Ronald Reagan called out the guardsmen and ordered a ban on loitering in the city or on the university campus. Patrols were strengthened in the university area after a declaration by a demonstrator that $5 million of University of California property would be destroyed. Stores in the area were closed. By MEL NEWMAN Dr. Don 0. Tatroe, Waterford Township’s superintendent of schools since 1963, last night announced his resignation — effective Aug. 1 — from the school district. Tatroe revealed at a regular meeting of the township board of education that he has accepted the position of executive director of the Michigan Association of School Boards. The injured included two, newsmen, Don Wegars of the San Francisco Chronicle and Daryl Lemke of the Los Angeles Times. They were hit by bird-shot but not seriously wounded.. “I have accepted because of the professional advancement the position represents and because I would not have such an opportunity again in-the future,” he said. Tatroe said the new job, which will locate him in East Lansing, makes him director of a staff responsible to the elected board of directors of the state association. DON 0. TATROE LEGISLATIVE PROGRAMS He explained that he will be responsible for organizing and working with committees within the association to develop effective programs of legislation and to help educate board members in understanding their job. Tatroe became supeanten^t i n Waterford Township after serving aM assistant superintendent in the Warren system for nine years. where he will replace the late Dr. Julius Barbour, Tatroe will hold a faculty rank at Michigan. State and will teaqh a class in education administration, Jie said last night. what he Iffstrative staff He previously was a graduate assistant in education administration at Michigan State University und a high school principal in Haslett. Along with his duties in East Lansing, SOME REGRETS Tatroe said he is leaviag the Waterford. , ..system.^ with some regrets — among Ihfm 4 Mitmini teMnd described as “anrofmlnstra second to none.” He added that he would “like to be here to see Waterford’s financial problems through to resolution,” but that “one is seldom able to schedule all those (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) Chrysler Employe Kills 2, Wounds 10 at Ohio Plant Police Prepare To Duck Rocks Thrown By Berkeley Rioters TWINSBURG, Ohio (AP) - An employe at the Chrysler Corp.’s stamping plant shot two fellow workers fatally and wounded 10 others before killing himself. Sheriff Robert Campbell identified the assailant in the shooting rampage just before midnight last night as Robert K. Smith, 31, of Mogadore, an inspector at the plant. “I saw'this guy walking up behind the guy sitting across the table from me,” said Harris, who was wounded in the hand. “He had a gun in his hand. I thought it was a toy or a prank. “He shot the man sitting across from me right through the back. I think the bullet that went through him hit me.” Harris, a stock checker at the plant, said “three or four more shots” were fired as he fell to the floor. Officer Stabbed; Red Negotiators Hit Nixon Proposals Suspect Is Shot Without Rejecting Them as a Whole By JIM LONG A rookie Birmingham policeman was stabbed last night after stopping a motorist for a traffic violation. The alleged assailant was shot and wounded by the patrolman. Under police guard at William Beaumont Hospital, Royal Oak, was Ronald E. Swensson, 23, of 5434 Longmeadow, Bloomfield Township. Listed in serious condition with an abdomen wound, Swensson has been charged with attempted murder. PARIS (ff) — North Vietnam and the Vietcong both denounced President Nixon’s peace plan today, but neither rejected the plan as a whole. In fact. Ambassador Henry Cabot Lodge said after the weekly session of the Vietnam peace talks, that the other side gave every indication it would consider the plan. Nevertheless Hanoi’s chief negotiator in Paris, Xuan Thuy, called the plan an attempt to conceal American intentions of continuing aggression in Vietnam. plan as a formula which “can accommodate the various programs” put forward by the other side. Lodge called for detailed discussions of both the Nixon plan Un(J the 10-point plan submitted a week ago by the NLF. He (Quoted the PS-esidenl as saying the U.S. proposals were not offered on a take-it-or- leave-it basis. His statement was mainly a restatement of the Nixon proposals. Like the President’s speech, it took a moderate tone and the absence of polemics was notable. Binriingham Police Chief Darryl Bruestle said Swensson was shot by Patrolman James S. Henry after the officer was stabbed in the chest with a switchblade knife. Henry, 26, a patrolman for six months, was expected to be relased from Beaumont Hospital today. ‘FLEXIBILITY’ “We have indicated our willingness to consider other proposals” he added. “We are being flexible and reasonable. And Tran Buu Kiem, representative of the National Liberation Front (NLF), n r* said the plan was not a proper response 'Ship Will be NXea to the problem. Thuy asserted that the United States Is bent “on niaintaining its absurd demand and is continuing to intensify the war.” Tlie attack of the North Vietnamese and NLF Representatives, however, made it clear that the two sides still were far apart on major issues — even though the two new initiatives might get the talks off dead center. In opening the session, North Vietnam’s Thuy spoke contemptuously of Nixon’s insistence that the South Vietnamese people should have the right to determine their own destiny. The other two dead were Sam S. Zuc-chero, 57, of Alliance, and Vincent Bell, .39, of Cleveland. Two more of the wounded were in critical condition. Sheriff Campbell said the shifts were changing when Smith arrived at the plant with three guns and started shooting. The firing lasted about 15 minutes. SHOT 2 AT ENTRANCE Williams Schuholz of Akron said he was leaving the plant when the assailant, a gun in each hand, shot two men just outside the main entrance to the plant. “Then he went to a lunchroom about 50 feet from the entrance and started shooting again,” Schuholz added. “I didn’t stick around to see what happened after that.” Charles L. Harris, 64, of Cuyahoga Falls, said he was sitting at a lunch table with five other men when the assailant entered. Area May Get Rain Tonight DRIVING ERRATICALLY Henry was en route to work about 9:30 p.m. in his-own car when he noticed an auto veering erratically, according to Bruestle. Henry stepped the driver at Henrietta and Martin across from the (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) ‘NEOCOLONIALISM’ He said Nixon’s words could not camouflage the essential objectives of the United States — “to achieve neocolonialism in South Vietnam and perpetuate the partition of Vietnam.” Lodge formally presented the Nixon WASHINGTON (AP) - The condition of the guided-missile cruiser USS Boston, about which there have been complaints, will be corrected before the ship leaves May 22 for Vietnam, the secretary of the Navy has assured a protesting congressman. Secretary John H. Chafee told Rep. Richard L. Otitnger, D-N.Y., the 1,200-man chiiser will be ready to sail on schedule. UNDEIb FOOT’ “Thb truth is,” he said,, “that for the past 15 years the government of the United States has never cea.sed to trample under foot the right of the South Vietnamese population to self-determination.” Thuy said the United States .seeks to maintain in power “the warlike and corrupt”' Saigon government despite demands of the South Vietnamese people for a peace cabinet. Orion Home Fire Burns Boy Badly Pontiac area residents may get a soaking tonight. According to the U.S. Weather Bureau, the official forecast looks like this: TODAY — Partly cloudy and warm, chance of thundershowers late afternoon or evening, high 75 to 82. Tonight showers and thundershowers likely, low in the 50s. TOMORROW — Cloudy with showers likely in the forenoon, turning cooler, high 70 to 75. SUNDAY - Fair and cool. Probabilities of precipitation in per cent are 30 today, 60 tonight, 60 tomorrow. Fifty-two was the low temperature in downtown Pontiac before 8 a.m. The mercury recorded 81 at 12:30 p.m. City Charter Drive Launched WITHOUT THE EVILS The proposed system would bring back BvEDBLUNDEN amendment of specific sections of the partisanship were aimed at doing away A-peUtJ to. alMrf «d,Un8d,,rt.r. " new charter n™ L. S wiSon J^or high l?st night. Oliver explained that perhaps » com- and aren’t likely to fall victim to ward Xskir an ellction to plete new charter ^ cf healers and such,” he said, amend^the city charter so commissioners that this require Ka aiApfnH hv district with commission and other procedures that pas, ‘ ★ “This Stop is the best we can do for The petitions also 'could bring about now,” he said. The district represen- ' other minor changes including lowering tation system is mostly a return to the thte age requirement for commissioner to former syst^em used before a charter 25 yebrs and the residency requirement amendment in 1964 called for at-large to one year, election. . * Heading the drive is a young attorney, * * * Patrick Oliver, of 51 Cherokee. His peti- “The objective is to bring back city , - , ^ .■ - , .. .. tion group is the Pontiac Council of government responsive to the people, be defeated by a popular citywide can-Concerned Citizens (PCCC). The peUtlon Oliver said. “The reforms which brought didate. Thi» has happened, and in 1(^64 a is relatively pimple and calls for the about the present system of non- (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) He repeated that the Paris discussions should proceed on the basis of the NLP’s 10-point peace formula. Kiem also stressed that the NLF had repeatedly rejected U.S, proposals for a mutual withdrawal of forces, but his statemei^t was nbticeably more moderate than that of 'Thuy. A 2'/i-year-old Orion Township boy is in critical condition today at University Hospital, Ann Arbor, with third-degree burns over 80 per cent of his body, according to doctors’ reports. Louis Granado Jr., the son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Granado, 56 Mouton, Orion Township, was injured in a home fire la.st night, according to Lake Orion Fire Chief Jack Caylor. Fire broke out in the kitchen of the Granado home at 7:17 p.m. and was confined to that room. Fire crews of t\yo pumpers extinguished the blaze in minutes but the Granado boy already had been trapped by the flames. No other injuries were incurred and there wqs no extensive property damage. In Today's Press Curves Thrown at Motorists a greater share of direct community control of the commission without ..bringing back the evils associated with old-time politics, Oliver asserted. ' Under the prd^ent setup, the two candidates receiving the most votes in each district run in the citywide election. A candidate winning in his own district can COLUMBUS, Ind. (UPD-Motorists along 1-65 near here were greeted by 21 tons of scantily clad brunettes—on paper—today. The girls, 65,000 of them, were spread across the highway when a truck loaded with ce(iterf(^lds from Playboy Magazine wJs rammed by another truck. The .centerfolds featured a skimpily dcessed brunette in a provocative pose. The double page foldouts were scatteredtor three-fourths of a mile. No tickets were issued, but some of the girls were jailed by sheriff’s deputies as pinups. Bloomfield Township Help promised for dangerous Telegraph stretch—PAGE A-4. Humphrey Former vice president enjoying two new roles—PAGE A-10. Doctors Prosper Many g' iting rich on Medicare, iHedicaid-PAGE A-9. Area News < A-1 Astrology ...............C-9 Bridge C-9 Crossword Puzzle D-ll Comics ...C-9 Editorials A-6 Farm and Garden C-10, C-11 High School B-1, B-2 Markets B-6 Obituaries . B-8 Sports , C-1—C-8 Theaters C-12, C-13 TV Radio Programs D-ll Wilson, Eai-l D-U Women’s Pages B-4, B-5 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 Aioy Close Chicago Schools Teachers Vote on Strike CHICAGO (AP) — Union teachers vote today on whether to stage the first public Khool strike in the city’s history. .A yes vote by a majority of the some^ 19,000 members of the Chicago Teachers l?nion woijld mean a walkout in 523 schools next Thursday^ The classroom stoppage could hold up diplomas needed by high school seniors planning to attend college. The public school system has 23,000 teachers including those not members of the union. . The strike vote climaxed a six-month dispute with the Board of Education. The union’s executive group, by a vote of 327 to 3, urged member approval of a strike , call. In January, the union threatened a walkout but held off and agreed to a tentative contract offered by the Board of Education. Implementing the contract, however, require^ a substantial increase in state aid, which has not been forthcoming. Union President John E. Desmond has charged that the board has not worked hard enough with the state legislature to obtain the needed funds. These are the union demands: • A commitments from the board that there will be no teacher layoffs in June. • No cutbacks in 1969 summer school programs. No decrease in education programs or equipment. , salary adjustments and educatioqal imr provements. • Salary increases of $150 a month for, teachers and a 10 per cent increase for school civil service employes) both effective in September. ’ ★ , ★ ★ • Adjustments in salaries for special-' ists such as teachers of retarded children. • Cetrification of full-time substitute teachers with two years of service if they are graduates of an accredited college. • Fulfillment of promises made by the board Jan. 20 concerning class sizes. FDR's Eldest Son Stabbed in Back in 'Family QuarreF From Our News Wires GENEVA - James Roosevelt, oldest son of President Franklin D. Roosevelt, was stabbed in the back in a “family Senate Unit OKs Pick of Varner quarrel” last night, police reported. Police today described the wound as serious, but associates of the 61-year-old former congressman reported his condition was good and that he would be discharged from the hospital in the next few days. Police first reported that Roosevelt was attacked by “a mentally unbalanced woman” as he strolled near his villa in suburban Vesanaz. o Later, his attorney, Georges Borgeaud, told newsmen: “Mr. Roosevelt told us to make jt clear that the person concerned was his wife. ii ‘CLEAR UP THIS FACT’ i Roosevelt telephoned us from the hospital this morning and asked to clear up this fact.” A spokesman for Geneva’s Surete, the criminal police, said no charges had been brought in the case. HUBER VARNER LANSING (UPI) — A senate committee, after 45 minutes of hostile questioning by Sen. Robert J. Huber, yesterday recommended confirmation o f Oakland University Chancellor Durward B. Varner as chairman of the Michigan Arts Council. Huber vowed to try to block Varner’s appointment on the ^nate floor, though he admitted chances of the effort succeeding were bleak. “1116 whole argument involves different philosophies,” said the Troy Republican. “He thinks we should take a permissive attitude, and I think this is intolerable.” Varner, 52, was appointed council chairman by Gov. William G. Milhken last March. He has headed Oakland University since its beginmng in 1959. “At this time, it is a medical case,” he added with the explanation that a decision by the public prosecutor will be based on the medical findings. A spokesman for Roosevelt’s investment firm here declined to comment on the stabbing, saying; “This is a personal matter.” Mrs. Roosevelt, 52, was taken to a rest home. Roosevelt was taken to the cantonal hospital where he underwent emergency surgery. The hospital refused to give any information on his condition . T! 3 police duty officer refused to say who stabbed Roosevelt but said it “was not likely to have serious judicial consequences.” Roosevelt and his third wife, the former Gladys Irene Owens, camo to Geneva to live early in 1967 after he became a director of three mutual funds sponsored by Investors Overseas Service and president of the I.O.S. Management Company. The Weather Thursday In Pontiac (Details Past J) Today in Pontiac It temperaturo precedins < Highest temperature Lowest temperature Mean temperature ... . ....: yyind Velocity 5 Direction: South Sun sets Friday at 7:4» p.ir Sun rises Saturday at 5:11 Moon sets Friday at 8:41 p. Moon rises Saturday at 5:28 Thursday's Temperatures Alpena 72 47 Chicago Detroit A7 48 Cincinnati Escanaba Downtown Tomparaturas Houghton* 6 Houghton Lk. 7 08 49 Des Moines 71 52 Las Vegas 8( 74 00 Los Angeles 7< 70 57 Miami Beach 81 09 40 Milwaukee 71 Lowest temperature . w York 75 53 I S. Francisco t ) Washington I Officer Knifed; Suspect Is Shot Birmingham New Offices for Schools Open Monday BIRMINGHAM, - The, Birmingham public schools’ new adn^istration building at Chester and Maple will open Monday. The offices have been located in the 100-year-old Hill Building on Chester. The Hill building will be razed and the area renovated for playground space for the Baldwin Elementary School. Work on this project is expected to be completed by September. Patrick Oliver Explains Petition Drive (Continued From Page One) Birmingham City Hall, which houses police headquarters. When Henry, who was in uniform, walked up to the car and placed his badge up against the window, the driver backed up and then sped away running several stop signs. Chief Bruestle said. Petition Drive Is Launched for City Election Changes The new administration building, which was authorized by voters in the bonding jiroposal of October 1966 lost $651,000 based upon bids received in October 1967. Construction began in November. The 18,000-square foot building will house all of the central office staff which includes 35 secretaries and clerks. Henry gave chase, stopping the car about 10 blocks away on North Woodward at Harmon. * Bruestie said Hen- ^ ry was stabbed” when the driver' walked up to Henry’s car with the i knife ki his hand HENRY f and the patrolman attempted to take it away. OFFICER SHOOTS (Continued From Page One) write-in can^date defeated boto district election winners. As his assailant turned to run, Henry fired one shot, hitting Swensson in the lower back. Oliver branded the present system “a hybrid.” I’m sure we could defeat it in a lawsuit, but we prefer to take this route (a city election), he said. The city’s seven districts, established in 1921, show a great disparity in registered voters with some districts having twice as many as others. Totals in 1961 were; District 1 — 4,332 ; 2 — 4,190; 3 - 2,801; 4 - 5,838 ; 5 - 7,782; 6 — 2,943 ; 7 - 4,426. REPRESENTED GROUPS Yesterday’s meeting was more sparsely attended than was expected by PCCC members. However, as Oliver Jackson said he did not necessarily feel that his district was “safe,” but pointed out he had already proposed to the City Commission that a charter committee be studied. Other elected officials present included two county supervisors, George Grba, district 20, and James Mathews, district 19; a school board member, Christopher Brown; and a school board candidate, Howard Burdick. Mrs. Harvey J. Disc, 1055 S. Glenhurst, has been elected chairman of the Birmingham Youth Assistance Committee for the coming year. Mrs. Dise has been a member of the committee for four years and has been active in numerous charitable and civic programs in the Birmingham area. She succeeds Robert Kelly who has served as chairman since October 1967. Others in the audience included George Googasion, chairman of the county Democratic party; Don Johnspn, president of UAW Local 596 at Fisher Body; and Elbert Hatchett, president of the BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - The East Hills High School Band Parents Club is sponsoring a car wash tomorrow from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the school parking lot at 2800 Kensington. The wash fee is $1. Proceeds will be used to pruchase nmsic, musical instruments and miscellaneous supplies for the East Hills Police from Bloomfield Hills and Bloomfield Township assisted Birmingham police in looking for the knife at the scene, but it was later discovered that Henrw had picked up the knife and taken it with him to the hospital. noted, almost ail the 30-some present ^AACP (also serving on were representative of large groups such the PCCC). as unions, political parties or women’s groups. Only one city commissioner, Robert F. Jackson of district 5 was present. Tatroe Resigns Post in Waterford Most of them took bundles of petitions to begin the drive. More petition distributors are being sought. The sheets can be obtained by contacting the PCC office, 51 Cherokee. BLOOMFIELE) HILLS - Rollo W. Hunter has been elected a senior Vice president at MacManus, John & Adams Inc.' advertising agency. Hunter will have full responsibility for (Continued From Page One) events which affect his professional • Improvement personnel problems. in resolution of About 8,000 signatures are needed, according to Oliver. This provides 20 per cent of the total eligible voters as of 1967 with a wide margin of safety. the agency’s corporate broadcast department. He joined the agency in 1964 as vice president and director of programming. Hunter will move here from Connecticut. He has been working in the agency’s New York office. future.” He listed achievements of which he is proud in at least eight facets during his tenure. These are: • Upgrading of staff quality. • Improvement of facilities. • Strides in finance reform. • Community-school relations. • Expansion in curriculum and instructional activities. • Student relationships. • Development of successful relationships with Michigan colleges and universities. He said his new position will allow him to continue to serve Waterford in Lansing and to contribute to the direction of all Michigan education. “Meanwhile I’ll continue with the 1969-70 Waterford problems through the next three months,” he said. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Today partly cloudy and warm, chance of thundershowers late afternoon or evening, high 75 to 80. Tonight showers and thundershowers likely, low in the 50s. Saturday cloudy with showers likely in the forenoon, turning cooler, high 70 to 75. Outlook for Sunday: fair and cool. Winds south to southwest 15 to 25 miles per hour becoming west to northwest Saturday. Probabilities of precipitation are 30 per cent today, 60 per cent tonight, 60 per cent Saturday. Crockett: Judges Ignore Constitutional Principles By Ned ADAMSON Judge George W. Crockett Jr., told a Birmingham audience last night that Michigan judges are not practicing in accordance with constitutional principles. He added that unless democratic principles are practiced soon, racial strife and the rising crime rate will continue. The controversial Detroit Recorders Court judge, who has been heavily criticized for alleged leniency in his criminal dispositions, gave the message simple and straight in spelling out the basis for his courtroom philosophy in a packed Holy Name School gymnasium. “The present system of justice has got to be made relevant to the disillusioned poor people—most of whom who happen to be black — who comprise the vast majority of the cases before criminal courts. We are simply not complying with the dictates of the constitution in the administration of justice,” Crockett said. This is Anderson’s biggest USA Seller. •V How come? The 650cc LIGHTNING is loaded with goodies. It*s a 40 cu. in. twin with dual carbs, a new exhaust equalizer tube for improved acceleration, new ignition and oil warning lights, big air-scooped double-leading shoe brakes, rubber-mounted speedometer and tachometer and the raciest looks in town. And Anderson delivers it for $1395., That’s how coine. JUDGE GEORGE W. CROCKETT JR. BORROWS QUOTE Borrowing a quote from Franklin D. Roosevelt, the judge noted “that a lot of Americans are willing to fight for the Constitution but few of them are willing to actually read it.” / Crockett claimed the court’s bonding procedure is in direct violation of the Eighth Amendment which guarantees reasonable bail. am afraid we are guilty of a little racism when it comes to administering justice. “We are a nation of split personalities. You are a product of a tactical society that has imbued in you that the black man is inferior.” NATIONAL WEATHER—Rain is predicted for tonight in the Carplinas, (Jeorgia, Tennessee and Virginia. More rain is expected from Texas, Oklah6ma, Kansas and Nebraska through the western Great Lakes are^. It will be cooler in the northeast •nd south-central portion of the nation. “Nearly 65 per cent of the persons brought before me are indigent. Yet their bond is set so high that they never can possibly expect to pay it,” The Detroit judge explained the right . of independent judicial power is very limited in Michigan' when justice cannot be administered without fear of being reprimanded or removed from the bench. The other side of that split is the conflict between the theory and practice of the democratic principles of the constitution. Crockett said the black man, from day to day, doesn’t know what the law is. He can never be certain how the law will be practiced when he is affected. “A conscious effort has got to be made to overcome these split personalities. Give democracy a chance and you will not have to live in fear of living in fear of racial outbursts,” he added. g 1645 S. TELEGRAPH [n PONTIAC . FE 3-7102 OPEN MONDAY- FRIDAY, 9 'TIL 8; SATURDAY 'TIL 5 ‘GUILTY OP-^RACISM’ « “Why haven’t we done somethfil](g about these courtroom deficiencies? 1 A crowd of about 300 persons heard Crockett speak. Hik ap^arance was sponsored by the BiTOingham-Bloom-ficld Human Relations Council. HONDA • DUCATI • TRIUMPH • MATCHLESS NORTON • MONTESA • BSA • MOTOGUZZI ■V,' I* ■'■■•«•« ■■%IUIMI''' '’ ’’ i ' , ' ■ •>■■••: A ,\ H3A0 ^ e Told of Beating of Prisoner Detective Quiet 'Hero of Honesty' By LOIS FRIEDLAND FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP- “A hero of honesty” well describes Detective Sgt. Earl Teeples, recently, acquitted of 12 counts of violating a departmental police code and stili the object of controversy. Teeples, who repeatedly insists “I dqn’t want to bad-mouth anyone, “still refuses to outline actual incidents leading to his recent two-week suspension and yearlong probation, even now after the punishment was dismissed following a hearing by a township police board of appeals. The charges resulted from his telling an Oakland County assistant prosecutor that he had seen two officers beat a prisoner last June. No action has been taken as a result of this. Despite the subsequent hassle, T e e p 1 e s emphasizes, “I’ve never regreted being honest. I was relieved that it was out because it has to come. The incident still bothers me.” Consolidation Petitions Taken FARMINGTON — Petitions for consolidation of the entire Farmington area into a home-rule city have been accepted by the State Boundaries Commission. A decision on when to order the election will be made at the next scheduled commission meeting June 11. The petitions presented in March had been signed, by 2 per cent of the residents in the affected area — Farmington, Farmington Township and the-villages of Wood Creek and Quakertown. The commisison at its regular meeting earlier this week asked representatives from two area groups at the meeting to submit in writing the reasons why each* feel the election should be held at the time they request. Paul Dietz, attorney for the petitioning group, requested that the election be held in October or Novemiber this year. SPRING ’70 VOTE ASKED BIRMINGHAM — New appointments were announced this week by Ford Motor Co.’s U.S. Tractor and Implement Operations division based here. Hugh D. Cotcamp of Latham, N.Y., was named district-dealer relations mamager. Edwin S. Hasel, formerly Northeastern District parts and service merchandising manager, will succeed Cotcamp. Charles C. Edie of 528 Ludlow, Rochester, will succeed Hasel i n Latham. DeMOLAY HOST-Tom Wiseman, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Wiseman of 365 Newman, Orion Township, will officiate for the May 24 Clicvilier Degree, ^sponsored by Lake Orion Chapter, Order of DeMolay. The degree is set for 8 p.m. at the Lake Orion Masonic Temple. Tom is past master councilor of the chapter and was a state representative for two years. He is a 1969 graduate of Orion High School. the events following his discussion’with the assistant prosecutor and up to his hearing. that no relax. he was again beginning to some are actually ignoring him, he admitted. Teeples never testified. Chjef Irving Yakes did, however, and admitted that 10 of the 12 charges could be dropped. All were finally dropped. * Teeples claimed that the strong citizen support hq received during the hearing convinced him that he had never been in such a “warm community.” A gratified man, he pointed out that he tried to see as few people as possible during the hearing, but still received in^ numerable phone calls supporting his stand pnd offering any help possible. He pointed out that all of his defense work has been done during his own time and with his money — although none of the lawyers involved accepted fees — while moqt'Of the prosecution’s case was prepared bn township time. He regrets that he wasn’t allowed to work those two weeks since he is still catching up. RELAXING NOW “I’vh been a real bear for,, six months,” thelfather of four admitted, saying He reported that many of his fellow policemen have come to him privately — and a few openly — since the hearing to say that. “They’ve been with me but didn’t have nerve enough to do it but were glad I did.” A couple of officers are still cool, and POPULAR man A 13-year veteraiKpf the force, Teef)les is a popular man who opens his home and barn for frequent parties and gatherings. Space is always avilable for youngsters building floats or friends working on their cars. , He has an extensive police library and appears well-versed jp law. He hopes to. buy books to start a township police library with some funds which have been sent to him by well-wishers. He declined to reveal the amount. Teeples likens the incident to a fire. In the beginning it can be put out easily, but then Jt grows into aholocaust. When it dies, the embers remain and he confesses to enjoying the afterglow. ‘BEST FORGOTTEN’ Now the 46-year-old teeples, a weathered man with sun-bleached hair, says the incident is “best left to die.” He added that last August he still hoped that the chief would investigate the mattei* but that matters ; were just proceeding sloWly. He still kept quiet, “hoping to knock this off and let it drop” throughout THE PONTIAC PRESS I RIDAV. MAY IC, 19(55) hff/l/ms officer Earl Teeples Doesn't Regret Honesty Help Promised for Perilous Telegraph Stretch Bloomfield Township Police Chief Robert L. Snell’s office this morning unexpectedly received a telegram from State Highway Commissioner’s office stating (he department has fixed a construction dale of 1973 for the Telegraph widening project. numerous and violent accidents, which increase year by year. Driving Telegraph has been described as a virtual “brush with death” experience. By NED ADAMSON BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Telegraph is a death road. In fact,- the six-mile stretch of the highway that extends through Bloomfield Township almost defies the motorist to enter its path. LIKE RUNNING GAUNTLET Or, as one observer who makes the trip every day puts it, “It’s like running the gauntlet. Oiie bat of an eyelash and you can be under a truck or in someone’s front yard.” turnoffs along the highway in this township. Accident possibilities are constant. Elimination of traffic hazards has long been a struggle for township police and government officials. “The steady rate of increase in traffic accidents indicates that the six-mile strip of Telegraph in Bloomfield is the most . risky and accident-prone stretch of road in the state. ‘BLEAK OUTLOOK’ Telegraph has been the scene of Autos, if they’re not bumper-to-bumper “The day is approaching when during the rush hours, are constantly Telegraph will be totally unsafe to dodging and accelerating to get through travel. The current rising accident rates hazardous zones — if they are not slow- indicate nothing but a bleak outlook for ing suddenly to turn into one of the 186 the highway,” said Chief Snell. The chief cites statistics \o support his forecast: \ • Accidents to date over a\ year ago, are up 20 per cent (117 to 145). \ • Persons injured have increased to 126 over 70, a nearly 40 per cent increase. • Personal injury accidents are up 40 per cent to 57 from 41. • Four fatalities have been recorded this year. The record for one year was six in 1966. “The very fact that people who travel the highway regularly know its potential danger is the reason why they attempt to speed Op and get through the danger zone as' quick as they can. The pensiveness and impatience are the root Chief Snell will probably make a decision in the near future regarding a recommendation to the highway department about implemepting the no left-turn proposal. “Certainly we will get a lot of pressure and static from people and the merchants, but this is what we need if anything is to be accomplished toward rectifying the situation,” Snell said. MAY ABOLISH LEFT TURNS Farmington City Manager John Dinan, speaking for the Farmington Governmental Organization Study Committee, requested that the election be , held in the spring of 1970. (The study committee is composed of two representatives from each of the four communities). Dinan commented that the study committee wanted enough time to make an in-depth analysis of the recent Michigan State University survey of the Farmington area. In that study, consolidation of the area was recommendClf as the most advantageous course for all involved. The study committee also wants time to present its findings to the community at a series of meetings prior to an election on consolidation. A technical question concerning voting procedures revolves around whether the two villages, which stiil pay township taxes, should be counted independently or as a part of the township vote. Staff Is Shuffled at Troy Schools Telegraph's Almost Daily Story County Action on Landfills for 2 Townships Postponed Announces Promotions TROY — A top-Jevel administrative realignment was decided upon by the board of education in recent action in lieu of an available new superintendent of schools to replace resigning Dr. Rex B. Smith. Boyd Larson, the current assistant superintendent in charge of construction, was named acting superintendent. Larry Hamilton, director of elementary curriculum and special education, becomes ' assistant superintendent of curriculum and personnel and John Diefenbaker, acting business manager, was named as acting assistant superintendent o f finance and business. Elementary School Principals David Battie (Wattles and Poppleton schookj and Ron Stevens (Big Beaver and Hill schools) were designated as special administrative aides for five weeks of the summer t'(S allow the other appointees to take vacation time. Beattie was also named by the board as acting chief negotiator for teacher and staff negotiations to replace Diefenbaker. The police department is currently discussing the idea of abolishing all left turns in both directions between Miracle Mile shopping center and Orchard Lake Road. “We have already discussed this possibility w’ith the 32 merchants involved and to a man they screamed “it would kill me” if such an ordinance were to be invoked, Lt. Reuther said. He said that expansion of the highway eight lanes for the entire six-mile duration through the township will be the only way the road could ever begin to handle the traffic it’s going to see in the next years. Bloomfield Township, for example, has grown from 3.000 to 45,000 persons in 18 use Telegraph every 24 hour period. The upswing in commercial truck traffic has added considerably to the dilemma. INTERSECTION COUNTS Arbitrary counts taken at a key intersection for full-hour periods have indicated an average of three trucks passing through the particular intersection every minute. Lt. Reuther noted that 50 per cent of the accidents on Telegraph are rear-end collisions, which indicates the degree of congestion on the road. Principal accident causes include/ following too closely; passing without due care and traveling too fast for weather conditions. By JEAN SAILE There will be no county-operated landfills in two area townships, at least not right away anyway. There was an unexpected last-minute postponement yesterday of action which would have allowed the County Road Commission to begin operation of landfills on county-owned land in Pontiac and Commerce township . landfill operations were read before the full board. REASON FOR POSTPONEMENT It had been recommended by the public works committee. Request for postponemenl^'ame after letters from both townships opposing But the postponement apparently c8me about because of a reply from Sol Lomerson, road commission chairman, to Board Chairman Charles B. Edwards Jr. in regard to support of legislation which would allow the county to designate the public works department as permanent solid waste disposal agent. postponement during the meeting, but he later (old reporters, “The road commission is too darned independent. We appoint them, set their salaries and receive their (annual) report, and that’s all there is to it.” The board has not yet hired a new supertintendent of .schools. Dr. Smith has reported that he has not as yet found a new position, although his last day as Troy superintendent is May 22. Public Works Committee Chairman Harry Horton gave no reason for the For Copter, Projector The road commission has recently taken considerable verbal heat from the public works committee as well as from other members of the board o f supervisors on a variety of complaints. There have been suggestions that present commission members b e removed, and there was also discussion of support for legislation which would have abolished road commissions entirely. Summer Program Sign-Up Is Begun Chief Snell explained that stricter enforcement is not a guaranteed deterrent to increased accidents. The department has issued 634 ticket violations .since Jan. 1 on Telegraph alone, a 30 per cent crease ()ver last yeajr. However, the accident totals have continued to soar. The chief explained that when uasound from all engineering aspects in 1965. preliminary plans were drawn, and approved for the expansion of the highway to eight lanes. Cost estimates were placed at $30 million. Right-of-way rights have been taken on nearly all property from 12 Mile to 15 Mile, but that is as far as the project has reached. DISAGREEMENT MAY RESULT Supervisors OK Spending WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Registration for the early summer program for elementary school aged pupils in the township is currently under way. The program includes sports, games, arts and crafts, movies and story telling. A variety of action taken by the County Board of Supervisors yesterday included appropriation of $5,000 towards purchase of a helicopter for the Sheriff’s Department. Other appropriations included $3,500 for county lobbying activities and $1,235 for purchase of a 16mm movie-sound projector. In other business, the board: • Named Mrs. Virginia Solberg to the Parks and Recreation Commission, replacing John L. Carey who resigned. • Set Sept. 16 as the date for election of a new Avon Township charter commission. Architects’ fees for the county’s proposed mental retardation facility were approved on a sliding scale. The firm of Tarapata, MacMahon, Paulson Associates of Birmingham will receive 6 per cent should costs equal the estimated $2 million. Supervisors were designated a s delegates to the 34th annual conference of the National Association of Coynty Organizations July 27-31 in Portland, Ore. Members will attend at county expense. • Approved installation of a courthouse plaque, at members’ expense, listing members and districts of this first reapportioned c^ypnty b^ard. ^ • Referred to committee the proposal to change the name o^ Oakland-Pontiac Airport: formatiorf'.of a special bom-miltee to study drug abuse; formation of a work camp for County Jail trustees; a proposal to remove committee clerk's staff from the merit system; and the request that retired county employes be allowed fi'ec use of the county’s Dlivisburg golf course. Disagreement between the two bodies may result in elimination of a $400,000 proposed apprpriation to the commi.ssion in the 1970 budget. The funds would have aided a matching road building program. Supervisor Carl O'Brien, D-Pontiac, said he anticipated that road money and . the $2 million set aside for the new -public service center to„ house the Department of Public Works and the Drain Commission would be first cut in the county's reduced budget. Preliminary Tax Allocation Board action indicates that the county budget will have to be pared $3.5 million. Enrollment is limited to 60 pupils for each of four 2-wcek sessions, beginning June ‘23, July 7, July 21 and Aug. 4, , Deadline for registration at the school office is May 23. The fee is $1) 50 per session. Shov/-0-Ree Set for 1,500 Scouts Rochester School PTA to Install New Officers Supervisors got into a hassle about fi.scal reform as they passed a resolution opposing legislation to end tax exemption for municipal bonds were discussed. < Democratic supervisors DenPls Aaro(i, Huntington Woods, Philip Ma.stin, Hazel Park, Niles Olson, Orion 'I'ownship and Lee Walker, Madison Heights, 'voted against the resolution, over arguments by other board members that such legislation would ultimately 'tnerease taxpayers’ costs in bonding projects. ROCHESTER - The Woodward School PTA will meet Monday to install new officers for the 1969-7() school year. Following the 8 p.m. jiieeting at the school, several classes will present a musical program. .New officers are Airs. Frank Richardson, president; Bruce Dodson and John Weamer, father vice presidents; Mrs. Eric Ketelsen, mother vice-president; Mrs. Nicholas Stefan, leachex vice president; Mrs. Robert Chase, .secretary, and Mrs, ('den C.ruhbs, HOLLY Nearly 1.500 Cub Scouts. Boy Scouts and Explorers w i 1 1 partiei|)ate in the Manito Hoy Scout district's annual S h o w - 0 • R e c at Croveland Oaks Recreation Area on Grange Hall Road from 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday. The Show-O-Ree will feature many Scouting skills i;icluding pioneering, signaling, first aid, crafts, cooking and saillrl'^. Another feature will be a Cub-0-Rama, which will spotlight Cub Scout activities, including Pinewood Derby Sea Explorcrs'will give siulboat rides and music will bV-jtfovided by the Boy Scout hand of Troop 389 of Farmington and the Drum and Bugle Corps of 'IVoop 43, Holly. About 800 Boy Scouts and Explorers will camp for the entire weekend at the ('irove)and Oaks site. Webelos Scouts and their fathers also will camp during the weeketid. S'"' I m »iAo im by Ed Vanderwerp Robert Thom of Birmingham autographs prints ’’ of his famous “History of Michigan” paintings senior at Oakland University, who is a weekly Thursday after speaking at the annual awards pro- volunteer at the Boys’ Club of Pontiac; and Mrs. 'gram of the Pontiac Area United Fund’s Women’s Theodore Karla, Winchcombe Drive, Bloomfield '’’Division. With him are two young recipients of Township, a volunteer at the Kenney-Michigan Re-awards: Martha Killiane of Rochester> (center)^ a--.habilitation Center. I PAUF Honors Volunteers for Year's Service Over 50 community volunteers in Pontiac Area United Fund agencies received recognition Thursday at the annual awards program of the PAUF at the Old Mill Restaurant, Waterford. Twenty-one of these were merit awards, of which two were awarded posthumously. Jesse Holmes of the Auburn Heights Boys’ Club and Ivie Ross of PAUF were so honored. The luncheon, sponsored by the Pontiac State Bank, was arranged by Mrs. Adrian Ish and Mrs. Francis McMath. Mrs. James Cowen, Alger V. Conner and Mrs. Jack Ross, all active PAUF volunteers themselves, made thfe awards presentations. Two of the 21 volunteers serving PAUF agencies get acquainted after the awards luncheon in The Old Mill Restaurant. Mrs. Raymond Rapaport of Bloomfield Hills (left) received recognition for her work with the Michigan Children's Aid Society. Mrs. Charles Tucker Jr., Barlmoor Boulevard, represents the Family Service of Oakland County. William Belaney, of T and C Federal Credit Union, presided as master of ceremonies. Whelans Hopeful Cincinnati's Music and Theater Comparable THE PONTIAC PRESS FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 R—4 Left Handers Need Not Be That Awkward By ELIZABETH L. POST Of the Emily Post Institute Dear Mrs. Pogt: I am left-handed, and it gets alvful hard to act suave and sophisticated when you have to' begin each and every meal by behaving like a contortionist just to have the right piece’ of silver in the correct hand at the correct time. What is proper: Pick up all the silver that is to be used and put it on the left, or reach across the plate and get the correct utensil as is needed? Can I puck up the water glass and put it on my left, which is where I need it? I have come to believe that everyone really expecfs southpaws to be awkward and clumsyi But I am a lost cause. Please help! — Mrs. G. AP Wlrtiihoto Patricia Veal, leader of the United Nurses Association heading a mass march of nurses carries a broom and a determined look on arriving at the Royal College of Nursing in London Thursday. The broom was brought because the nurses say “the authorities have been sweeping things under the carpet for so long.” Their main complaint is that they’re paid so little they’re often hungry. Dear Mrs. G.: I really do not understand why it is so difficult for a left-handed person to use a standard place setting. After all, right-handed people must reach across to the left to use a butter plate, or to eat salad from that side, and it does not seem to be a problem. They must also reach across to pick up the fork, which is on the natural side for a left-handed diner. If “lefties” prefer to move the water glass a little toward the left, by all means do so, but would you then put the butter plate over on the right? Once the silver has been used it is placed on the plate in any case — on whichever side you wish. If left-hhhded people are taught to use the utensils as they are properly placed, from the time they are children, they will have no more trouble than a right-handed perscm. BIRTHDAY DINNER His Ex-Wife's Tactics Put Her in Winner's Circle. Dear Mrs. Post: My two sisters have invited me out for dinner on my birthday. My friend feels this is in poor taste because we will not have a male escort. What is proper etiquette in this situation?.—Cathy Dear Cathy: “Proper etiquette” as you call it should make life simpler and more pleasant — not restrict and complicate it. Anybody who would criticize you for dining in a nice restaurant with your two sisters on your birthday is living in another world. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN ,, DEAR ABBY: I was a bachelor until the age of 56, and all I can say is that some men don’t know when they’re well off. “Lena” (I’ll call her) kept asking me for money for the track, so I gave it to her. A hundred here, a hundred there. I never kept books on how she came out, all I know is she said she “lost” most of the time. Well, four years later, Lena sued me for divorce. She didn’t have any grounds, but if she’d have got what was coming to her she could have sued me for assault. We settled out of court. Now it comes out that while we were mhrried Uena squirreled away about $25,000. My lawyer says the money is HERS. I don’t kndw how he figures. Don’t you think I’m entitled to that money? OUTFOXED DEAR OUTFOXED: So she “outfoxed” you, and “squirreled” away $25,000? Maybe you should have consulted a zoologist? You paid a lawyer for his legal counsel, so if he says it’s HERS, 100 to one, it’s hers. DEAR ABBY: If more than one mouse is “mice,” isn’t more than one spouse “spice”? DARRLY DEAR DARRLY: More than one spouse is not spice, it is spouses. The noun i s b i g a m y , the a d-jective—bigamous. DEAR ABBY: My daughter is 16. She “goes with” a boy who’s a freshman in a college close enough for him to come home occasionally for weekends, I found a falf-finished letter written by my daughter. It was in plain sight on her desk, and I was not snobping. From it I learned that she had “tried” marijuana and she was writing to say that the next time he came home she was willing to try marijuana nmoking with him. !mm her leter, I ghthered that he has tried It, too. SPECIAL AWARDS The Pontiac Press and Radio station WPON received special recognition awards for their year-round support of the PAUF programs and campaign. OU to Host Highland Competitions Waterford School Chief Leaving Post Robert Thom, Birmingham artist, was speaker for the event. Mrs. William Wright is chairman of the Women’s Division. The Highland Games at Oakland University Saturday and Sunday are expected to draw a crowd of 400 or more during the hours of 9:30 a.m.-5:30 p.m. each day. Highlighting the two-day affair will be the “March Past” of the mabsed pipe bands and coinpetitars on the University -grounds at 1 p.m. both days. Girls from this area competing in the Highland Dancing are: Zoe Ann and Noreen Keros of Littletell Street; Ann Jones, Kathy, Maureen and Colleen Connor of Utica. These Games will be part of the Michigan Week activities and will be incorporated into Oakland University Cultural and Performing Arts Scries. Abby, I am sick over this and doin' know what to do. My daughter Is not » wild girl mid we’ve never had any trotir ble with her. I can’t forbid her to see this boy, and I don’t want her to know I read that letter. Should I just let nautre take its course? Please help me. NO NAME OR ADDRESS DEAR NO NAME: You must tell you daughter you read that letter, and urge her to resist “trying” marijuana with her boyfriend. Your plea may be useless, but you can’t just “let nature take its course” knowing what’s in the air. ★ ★ ★ 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 For Abby’s booklet “How to. Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1 to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. By SHIRLEY GRAY The Philip G. Whelans of Bloomfield Hills are packing up their 14-year-old daughter, Katie, three Siamese cats, the piano and everything else and moving to Cincinnati after 17 years in this area. The move, dictated by a new job for the man of the house, will come in late June, after Katie finishe,s as a freshman at East Hills. It’s reassuring to hear that Cincinnati is known as a city with an especially lively interest in music. Mrs. Whelan, who has accompanied the Birmingham Musicale’s choral ensemble for the last eight years, will no doubt find something of interest musically. Let’s hope her husband, whose love is amateur theater, especially the Birmingham Village Players, finds the theater scene active there. Mr. and Mrs. Phillip R. Flanders of Bloomfield Hills will be at the Village Woman’s Club’s spring formal tomorrow evening, bringing as guests old, old friends from Grosse Pointe, Mr. and Mrs. Lester A. Mackintosh. Plan Arts Council for Farmington Oakland Community College and the Michigan State Council for the Arts are assisting a steering committee which has been formed to develop a Farmington Arts Council, Mrs. Eugene Schoeneich, Farmington branch, American Association of University Women (AAUW) has announced. The steering committee hopes to coordinate the activities of upwards of 100 clubs and organizations in the Farming-ton area by establishing a community calenfjar of activities and encouraging public events and str,vices in the arts and related areas. ACTING IT OUT Mrs. Flanders, another theater buff, is playing the role of prop man tonight at the Theater Arts annual Men’s Night at the Player’s Playhouse on East Jefferson. TA, of course. Is all female, except for one event each year when husbands, sweethearts, etc. are invited to a performance, Mrs. Flanders’ backstage role will consist of shepherding the refreshments — 60 pounds of meat, 40 loaves of bread, etc. — there safety. Morb nervewrhcking than the lead part. Knight Templars Detroit Commandary No. I’s ladies sewing group is having its spring luncheon next Thursday (May 22) at Plum Hollow Golf Club. The club, which sews and raises money for Booth Memorial Hospital and other worthy causes, was a particular favorite of the late Matilda Wilson. All Farmington area persons and organizations interested in such a coordinating group are invited to attend an open meeting at 8 p.m., Monday, in Room J-408 in the Commons Building, OCC Orchard Ridge Campu?. Among some of the localiles planning to attend are Mrs. Frank Howlett, Mrs. Howe Balmer, Mrs. John Doiwns, Mrs. Frederick Lome and Mrs! Clifford Lome, Mrs, Gertrude Skillma(i, and the chairman, Mrs. Walter McGoogan of Farmington. l\' ^ Ponllie PrtM Phofot Mrs. 1). C. Connett, Bellarmine Drive, Avon Township (left) watches the thermometer carefully as she cooks the umpteenth batch of candy for Rochester Jr. Women’s Club to sell at their annual Flea Market May 24. The group is making about 40 pounds of hard candy and using 40 pounds of peanuts in other candy. Mrs. Daniel Morris,^ Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p. Tartan Drive, also Avon Township, (right) shows the cover for tl\e candy cookbogk that will also be on sale. Club members did the silk screen print under the direction of Mrs. Harold Day, the designer Oder 80 booths will fill the parking lot of Rochester Senior High 'm: ■'I i .'K' \ I I \i\ THE FOyTlAC PRESS, FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 /,v f :yi I Paris Talks Not Encouraging inance Market Mixed in Brisk Trade U.S., World News Briefs followijig are top prices covering sales of lOcally grown produce by growenj and sold by , them in whoiesale package lots. Quotation? are furnished by the nEW YORK (UPI) - The!point program offered last weekl- General Motors gave up V* tO; WASHINGTON (if) - Presi-^troit BureauofMarkets asolj^gj.,^gj theVietcongwas theonehis'82 while Chrysler and Ford I^i^on’s Vietnam peace Thursdsy. ' ^ ^^ ... trading on the New York stock jwere unchanged. C h r y s I e r proposafs7 initially praised by d u s t rially ad- I Exchange today ■ Shortly after the opening the Qpgjjgjj gj 53 Ford at 52%. In many congressmen, are being vanced t h e so- i Traders should find little en- the steels, U.S. Steel gave up cautiously criticized as notciety, the more !co«ragem«,t lr.« Sl“ *• Yopfisto™ Ms«l going tar .enough by Senatepaper ,t con- Produce FRUITS Apples, Jonathen, bu............. Abples, Jonathan, C.A. bu. ... Apples, McIntosh, bu............. Apples, Northern Spy, bu. ..... Apples, McIntosh, C.A., bu. ... Apples, Northern Spy, C.A. bu. . I, Steele R VEOETABLCS ^z. bch. ...... J, bu. ..... .. Asparagus carrots. ------- —..................- - Chives, dz. bcN.....................2.00 Onions, Green, flz. bch. .......... I.OO Onions, Dry, 50-lb. bag ........... 1.50 Onions, sets, 32-ib. bag .......... S.OO Parsnips, Cello-Pz Potatoes, 20-ib. bay ..................a Potatoes, 50-ih. bag . 2.00 Radishes, Red, dz. bch............. 1.50 Rhubarb, Outdoor, dz. bch. ........ 1.25 Tomatoes, Mothoute, B-lb: bskt. ... 3.25 Turnips,^T^ed,^bu.^^ GREENS ^* Lettuce, Bibb, pk. bskt............$3.00 Mustard, bu........................ 2.75 Sorrel, bu......................... 2.50 Spinach, bu........................ 2.25 Turnips, bu.........................2.75 ments at the Vietnam peace conference at Paris. Chief North Vietnam negotiator Xuan Thuy called President Nixon’s peace plan “absurd.” It was the first reaction from the Hanoi delegation since Nixon’s speech Wednesday night, and Thuy insisted that the 10- were 155 advances and an equal number of- declined. The Dow Jones industrial average was in the minus column. AUTOS FIRM Autos were firm, steels eased. Chemicals moved higher. Oils were on the plus side. CUNNIFF Ihe New York Stock Exchange to 46%. Bethlehem was Democratic doves, including sumed. unchanged at 36%. ’ Sen. Edward M. Kennedy. | The f i g u r e Eastman Kodak was a stand- But most of the senators who n o w seems to out in the cheniicals with a say Nixon fell short in his latest.be indicating inpickup of 1% to 78%. Du Pont peace move are willing to givejdicating some-gained Vs to 145%.Down gained him moce,jtime to negotiate a thing else as to 75%. settlement. well: confusion. In the oils, Cities Service rose Senate Republicans, for the % to 67%. !most part, appear unified in -----------------------------------supporting Nixon’s proposals. work are numerous institutions* ______ - and individuals, among them \ ! r' A r' Street, the Post Office, de- Rocky s Guard Grows partment stores, business executives, students, professors, ordinary bill payers. In the view of some critics! Society s Paper Use Points to Confusion By JOHN CUNfpFF 'Kingdom 258, Canada 348, Switz-|essary for industrialization, and AP Business An^st jerland 283, Soviet Union 52, Is-[paper has always been neces*- ^ rael 94 and the United Arab Re-'sary for communication. Sec- NEW YORK — For m a'ny jg j^gj,g consumer mar- years the amount of paper used! Two factors make these fig-jkets there are, the more paper by a society has given a crude lures crude rather than precisdiis needed for packaging prod- measure of its industrialization, indicators of industrialization: jucts. The availability of pulp for Pa-HYPOTHETICAL SETUP per IS not the same from nation ,,, , to nation, and the orientation of . consider a hypothetical !markets toward consumers situation:^ changes things. ^ middle managen^ent man ' ★ * ★ attempts, out of a sense of duty In Russia, for example, the in-[fnd a desire for completeness, iystrialization has proceeded a long way, but until rather re- ® cently the fruits of that nation’s ^ enormous production has not gone into consumer goods. Despite these exceptions, grown intq an impossible mess. Threatened with breakdown t^^re are obvious reasons for And on tdp of it all, the boss result of too much paper the correlation. wonders why he reads rather ’ First, communication is nec- than produces. to read all the material available on management methods. He consumes hours on the job. ★ ★ ★ Soon his, correspondence has Court Injunction Halts r . . ,. . 84 billion piedfes of mail a year,' governors stay in neighboring f^^g Million. And! Honduras. ■ • - • •• - I MANAGUA, Nicaragua (^) -^ Increased p r o t e c t i o n wasj" Picketing at Novi Plant Au + v.ltoday after a second f are-up ol^ ^ violence during the New York gj ^ ygg^,; soon may face 100 billion. And! Picketing by Detroit inner- act on grievances about alleged banks face similar problems city blacks was halted yester-^unsafe working conditions. ,, ' * * * with checks. day at a Noili ironworks after' Paragon Personnel Director, Reliable sources said the phalLANGE Oakland County Circuit Judge David K. Waterloo, said the 84 Nicaraguan government Arthur E. Moore granted a nien were fired bv teleuram ordered „g^7f^anS^^ injuction to the Saturday after violating what » .z.. .z linirrLotPst RTuri^^^ optical readers. Meanwhile. U.S. Rep. John provision outlawing unauthonz- i lU Ifii Is'tiliviockefelfeFrLc™ visit sorters, collaters and disposers Conyers, D-Detroit, has called a ed work stoppages. The strike 51 72'/. 72^. 72;.,_ ^ Ifg" N^xon ^ »i*tioi their human broth- U.S. Labor Department in- wasn’t authorized by the union. vestigator into the dispute in which 84 employes of Paragon Division of Portec Inc. were fired. Waterloo said the 84 failed to report to work last Wednesday Thursday and merely appeared Friday to punch in and out. He deined working conditions are unsafe and pointed _____ ers, other machines are belch- . . ^ n L ling out paper faster and faster. Astronaut's Rehearse p„„gh- CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) — es information onto paper at the Three relaxed and ready Apollo rate of 1,200 lines a minute, 10 astronauts suit up today for a forcing humans to figure out Picketing had continued smee final dress rehearsal" for their how to read the information, uti- Saturday by the d i s s i d e n tput. He denied working H Sunday blast-off on a trip 32 lize it, store it and dispose of it. workers engaged in a wildcat! tinue to work. + ’/'[times around the moon. * ★ * strike protesting working con- *m0ST MENIAL’ TASKS - j'l * ★ ★ So important is control that ditions. Novi police said there Conyers said the Labor Commander Thomas P. Staf-some of the most successful had been no violence. Department investigator also + ,lford, John W. Young and ™de^n adnimistrators ar^^^^ Moore scheduled a hearina .,>( - ’- Eugene A. Cernan were to put^ho have learned how to move (or May 26 for the workers and personnel hired ion their space suits to Practice thia erup ion of paper readingjjheir leaders to show cause why,j„e federal program have jin simulators which duplicateshould not be^^een relegated to the “worst _„;the controls and responses of "'" * brTeff rS^s I*" land most menial jobs in the _„, ithe Apollo .spacecraft and its . ’ j j: ’,jon of the growing I ON-JOB TRAINEES jplant,” after their training is -lunar landing traveling com-!p^An mdication^^^^ were complete. - panion. _______ American Paper Institute, hired under a federal job- * * * t //; Ti • X II r- I which estimates that United [training program for hard-core He also criticized the court + /’| Nixon-Thieu Talks Eyed states per capita consumption;unemployed. ! SAiroN Secreiarv of " The Rev. William H. Colquitt, - ^-'Stafe WUliam P Srs and ^0*" of about 100 pounds in ninej43^ „f Inkster, a spokesman for - ..iSde™ N^/n Vaf Thieu 7“'-- -Uk Pioketinf ,8™P. <-1-1™ -iiitoday discussed the possibilityiESTIMATES (Shopmen’s Local 508 of the Iron „, , . , lof a future meeting betweenj By contrast, the magazine,Workers Union has refused to doesn t look right to me. Thieu and President Nixon but'Pulp & Paper gives these 19671 did not reach any decision on I estimates for other nations: la*:: time or place. ! Japan 194 pounds. United order, saying “in all my years in labor law. I’ve never seen an 11-day injuction granted when one side wasn’t even represented in court. This just Mutual Stock Quotations "Tr.i.78 (asked) Wednesday. 0 ?d 1 1 Fund 1 le WmS 1 Successfuhinvesfing \ By ROGER E. SPEAR I textile operations have not been I „ T _______ Kdj nf fully resolved, particularly in 7 r. ul „h ,L the sales and marketing a?eas. American Telephone and am^ interested in your commen s on he plan offered to shareholders management for reinvestment of Should r continue as in (gnt acquisitions, utilizing [past, banking my dividends at company’s iper cent? position, are in prospect ic^ould purchase 100 shares with, ^ ,ggg speculative the accumulated dividends. hares can be held but require ' i careful watching. A — You would probably be! (Roger Spear’s 4 8-page better off financially to reinvest investment Guide (recently Fund B 1 Sci CP Gryphon 20.20 12.00 Guardn 29.22 29.22 H&C Lev 15.0717.37 Hath Gth 10.37 11.34 Ham hda 5.53 5.15 H^Sag Canadian Capil Inc Capit Shr 10.95 11.84 19.95 21.58 9.42 10.32 8.00 0.85 12.24 13.38 Rosenihl revised and in its 10th printing) is available. Send $1 with name and address to Roger E. Spear, (The Pontiac Press), Box 1618, Grand Centra] Station, New York, N.Y. 10017.) (Copyright, 1969) News in Brief Cus S2 12.49 13 SAULT STE. MARIE (AP) -Lake Superior Statrllpllege, has kicked off its Walker (^sler Col-29'. + '• lege Center fund drive with an-^ inouncement of two $10,000 con-, -.7.% tributions from local businesses. [The $l-million, dri^«e is for cW| struction of a student ynion. ! deVegh M 75.33 75.33 D*caf Inc 13.99 15,29 Delaware 15.91 17,35 Eaton8.Howard Grwih 13.9 eincom 7.0 Special 14.4 Slock 15.5 . 29.07 30 tliiough the Telephone plan. First of all, the commission costs to you would be substantially reduced and, second, you would be taking advantage of the compounding effect that continual reinvestment generates. However, without knowing the full particulars on any other holdings you might: have, I could not venture an opinion on the wisdom of adding | t% this one is.sue. In this era ofi John S. Sulo, 50, of 372 W. .historically high interest rates,jIroquois told Pontiac police yes-this new plan opens forjday that someone broke the (Telephone a sizable potential windshield of his car parked in ' reservoir of untapped capital. front of his home. The window I ★ * w is valued at $95. Q - A year ^3,^. jg29 Wellington, shares of Lehigh Industries, my first stock ,, purchase. I do not need the ’ money at present but partial Rummage Sale, Saturday, 8-12, retirement is not far off. Is the st. Vincent de Paul Hall, Wide company sound and should it be Tjack Drive. —Adv. held?-G. H. . Rummage, 4 Towns United . A - In 1954, a new manage- Methodist, corner Cooley-Loc-nicnl group took control of an ,^3^^^. ggj 9 te, 12 olo-line company with an an- ' —Adv. ,nual deficit running at about 81 I million. Sale of coal mining!' Rummage Sale Benefit, of properties and purchase of Michigan Animal Rescue profitable businesses were|League of Pontiac. Saturday undertaken simultaneously.[and Sunday, 17th and 18th of Beginning with a tax loss of $35'May, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. at million, management had whit- Dewey's Dairy Cream, 4708 Red this to $15 million at the[Elizabeth Lake Rd. —Adv„ 1963 year end. Sales fall into! Oakland Beach Civic Assoc. cent; motivational marketing, S« «rd;fy,^ ,(5 per cent: shoe manufac-D'H Drayton............. -Adv. ituring, 35 per cent; and textiles, (jarage Sale. 4690 Irwindale. ' 15 per cent. • 10 to 4. Friday and Saturday. A highly profitable division, J —Adv. & H Int. sells promotional package deals mainly to Garage Sale: Saturday. May I grocery chains and petroleum 17, 28.55 Silverhill, off Walton. ' companies. Difficultsies in UVls! —Adv, mim McAuliffe's Ear Tuned Only to White Sox Home Run Pitci DOUBLE ELEVEN—A pair of No. 11s hit the dust in the fifth inning of last «"■«"«»« night’s game between the Detroit Tigers and Chicago White Sox. Catcher Bill Free- (right) dives in a futile tag attempt. Umpire Nestor Chylak stays up to make the han slides safely into second base on a steal as Chicago shortstop Luis Aparicio call. The Tigers won, 2-1, in 10 innings^ Majestic Prince Is Jet Speed Ready BALTIMORE (AP) — Majestic Prince is ready—jet speed ready — for Saturday’s Preakness Stakes, the second leg of the Triple Crown. Frank McMahon’s winner of the Kentucky Derby zoomed a half mile over the Pimlico track Thursday morning in 45 seconds, just a fifth of a second off the world record set by Tamrin’s Jet in a race at Sunland Park in New Mexico earlier this year. The powerful chestnut ripped off the first quarter in 22 4-5 arid three-eighths in 33 4-5. He galloped out five-eighths in 58, a fifth of a second lower than the Pimlico record set by Valiant Bull in a race April 28, 1967. Top Knight, owned by the estate of Steven B. Wilson, winner of the Flam-ingto and Florida Derby but a disappointing fifth in the Kentucky Derby, also was entered after blowing out a half mile in 46 2-5. The field, in order of post position, and the jockey assignments: Top Knight, Manuel Ycaza; Elmen-dorf’s Caption Action, Kenny Knapp; Glenn M. Banker’s and Nick Collucio’s Glad’s Flame, Robert Wilson; Claiborne Farm’s Jay Ray, Earlie Fires; Majestic Prince, Bill Hartpck; Arts and Letters, Braulio Baeza; Ifelican Stable’s A1 Hat-’ tab, Ray Broussai'd, and Michael Phipps’ Greengrass Greene, George Cusimano. Each will carry 126 pounds for the 1 3/16-mile classic. THE PONTLLC PBES S f/im FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 c—1 • PRINCE READY “He is ready as a man can make him,” said trainer Johnny Longden, who rode Majestic Prince in the workout and then entered him in the Preakness where he will meet seven other 3-year-olds, including Rokeby Stable’s Arts and Letters, the Derby runner-up. Single in Ninth SpoilsMcNally's BidforNo-Hitter Post time is 5:40 p.m., EDT, for the richest of the Triple Crown races which, if all eight start, will have a gross purse of $182,000, with $129,500 to the winner. The race will be televised from 5 p.m. to 6 p.m. by CBS, which also will handle the radio broadcast from 5:30 p.m. until the race ends. Pimlico officials expect a record crowd of 45,000 and there’s no doubt that the magnet is Majestic Prince. Unbeaten in eight previous races, the powerful son of Raise a Native and grandson of Native Dancer, could become the ninth Triple Crown winner. No one has won the Derby, Preakness and Belmont Stakes since Citation in 1948. ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -Dave McNally, one pitch away from his first major league no-hitter, says Cesor Tovar ruined the bid on one of his best pitches. “I was just trying to throw it as hard as I could,” said McNally, now 6-0 after a 22-10 season in 1968. “I put everything 1 Had into that pitch.” • , Thai was the story of a onehitter. Tovar, who said he knew he was going to get a hit, lined the low inside fast ball into centerfield for a clean single with one out in the ninth inning. Classy Detroit Cager Casts Lot With Titans DETROIT (UPD —Tom Marsh, leading scorer in Detroit Northern High School basketball history, has decided to enroll at the University of Detroit. He is new Coach Jim Harding’s first recruit. ERASED ON DP Tovar was erased in a double play and the Baltimore Orioles breezed to a 5-0 victory Thursday night as McNally faced only 29 batters and threw but 95 pitches. “It was a good pitch,” said Orioles catcher Andy Etchebarrcn, who is McNally’s road trip roomie. “He threw that ball good.” Marsh is a 6-foot-l guard who averaged 28 points per game in leading the Eskimos to the Detroit Public League finals, where they were beaten by Mum-ford. He was on United Press International's second squad Class A All-State team. AP Wiriphoto Awaits Big Time Debut Tiger Pounces on Relief Pitcher for Tommy John DETROIT (AP) — Nearly eve^one was waiting for Tommy John to stick a fastball in Dick McAuliffe’s ear. But although their now famous feud was not renewed Wednesday night, McAuliffe became the last angry man as he belted a 10th inning homer off reliever Bob Locker to give the Detroit Tigers a 2-1 win over Chicago. “I think it was a sinker,” McAuliffe said of Locker’s pitch. “He didn’t throw me any fastballs”’ Horton Leaves Game, Stadium in Angry Mood Before the blast, the spunky second baseman faced starter John four times without a hit. It was the first time Mac played opposite John since McAuliffe lit after him last year when he thought John was aiming at him. John complained of a shoulder injury after the ensuing fight and McAuliffe was subsequently suspended for five days by American League President Joe Cronin. MORE AGGRESSIVE “I think I charged the ball (at bat) more off him than I usually do off lefthanders,” Mac said. “I felt more aggressive against him.” “He pitched a hell of a game,” he added in praise of John. DETROIT (AP) - Left fielder Willie Horton of the Detroit Tigers, barraged with boos during much of Thursday night’s game against Chicago, angrily departed for the dressing room in the seventh inning and left the ballpark. “He’s just emotionally upset or he wouldn’t do that,” said Manager Mayo Smith after the game, won by Detroit 2-1 on Dick McAuliffe’s lOth-inning home run. Few were aware Horton, who grounded out and struck out twice in three at bats, had left the dugout. Rookie Ron Woods replaced him in the top of the eighth in a substitution not planned by Smith. GOES TO CLUBHOUSE He said he hadn’t talked to the 6-foot-3 southpaw. McAuliffe was asked if he would liked to have hit the home run off John. “I would have liked to hit it off anybody,” he replied. The home run, his fifth of the year, ended a more than three hour game before 12,868 fans and gave reliever Pat Dobson his first win of the year,against two losses. Earlier, White Sox shortstop Luis Aparicio was cheered when he lashed a single to right in the third. It was his 2,000 career hit. , . But Tiger starter Earl Wilson did a magnificent job for nine innings and received an ovation after he walked and left the game for a pinch runner in the ninth. “He took himself out of the game,” Smith said. “He came back into the clubhouse. “Some of the guys came in to talk to him but he was just wild ... He’s got friends on the ballclub who couldn’t even talk to him.” • ALLOWED FOUR HITS Horton led the 'Tigers in hitting .285 and home runs 36 last year as they won their first pennant and World Series in 23 years. But he has slumped this year at the plate, hitting just .213 with four home runs and 13 runs batted in. He has struck out 34 times. Horton always has had a special closeness with his fans, particularly children, many of whom show up time and again in the left field stands ttfcheer their hero. Wilson allowed just four hits and one ruti. The run came in the fourth after he walked Pete Ward and Buddy Bradford, then third-string catcher Ed Herrman singled to the rightfield corner. That’s how the game stood until Jim Northrup unloaded a solo homer off John in the seventh, his fifth round tripper of the year. “No, I didn’t pitch good,” said Wilson, tongue in cheek. “I didn’t win did I?” “I’d rather pitch bad and win.” Wilson, whose record is 1-4, had been bothered by a pulled thigh muscle and his leg was wrapped tightly for the game. Tiger Manager Mayo Smith said he pulled Wilson after the ninth “because he ran out of gas.” Only last Sunday he handed his extra baseball glove to one young fan in left during pregame drills and received a loud ovation as he walked back to the dugout. “I’ve never had a guy take his uniform off in a game like that before,” said a stunned Smith. Smith said pitching coach Johnny Sain told him about Horton’s departure. “I didn’t have time to go into the clubhouse to talk to him and find out what was wrong,” Mayo said. “I had to worry about {he game. “I can’t read his mind.” The win gave Detroit two wins in the three-game White Sox series. The Tigers open a three game series tonight at Minnesota with Denny McLain (5-3) slated to oppose an as yet undermined Twin pitcher. W Williams r( Berry cf Aparicio ss C AAav If 0 0 0 0 Dobson p BOOED WEDNESDAY On Wednesday night Horton looked bad No'nJ*out when ”nnmn run ™?ed ” * ' * jjjySo* tl s he fell and a single Jo left went past him for an error. Subsequently he was booed in that game against the White Sox. fer: n i i i! Smith was asked if Any disciplinary action would be taken against the muscular outfielder. “I want a chance to talk to him before Titans Routed by Irish SOUTH BEND, Ind. (UPI) - Notre Dame banged out 16 hits and capitalized on six errors by Detroit to down the Titans 17-4 T READY TO ROLL-Wally Dallenbach (left), 32, of East Brunswick, N.J., thinks he’s in a position to hit auto racing’s biggest jackpot—victory lane at the Indianapolis 500. Dallenbach, who started in racing as a 15-year-old car owner, is expected to try for a qualifying spot Saturday or Sunday. The race is Memorial Day. Whether It’s Watkins Glen or Wide Track- DUNLOP GOLD SEAL Etchebarrcn, despite blooping a two-run triple off Jim Kaat in the second to open the scoring, seemed to be the most dejected Oriole in the dressing about Tovar spoiling the nohitter. “Dave threw exceptional stuff tonight,” he said, ignoring barbs from other Orioles that he had called the wrong pitch. “1 wasn’t worried about Rod Carew, Harmon Killebrew or Tony Oliva. I was worried about this guy (Tovar).” Indy Keeping Rein on Rookie you’re Ahead with Dunlop INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) - They called him Chargin’ Charlie when he was running the high banks of (he South’s big stock car racing tracks at speeds up to 190 miles per hour earlier this year. But Charlie Glotzbach, isn’t exactly charging at Indianapolis. Not yet, that two-year-old car this weekend for the rich Memorial Day‘500. ’REDICTS HIT The cocky Tovar, who boasted he fre-uently hits safely against the 26-year-Id McNally, said he “{old my Icam-lates Pm going to\ hit it off of him.” \ McNally, who hals a 20-i record since be 1968 All-Star break, retired the first 4 batters he faced until walking Leo lardenas in the fifth. Oliva Slso drew a base on balls in the (Continued on Page C-2, Col. 1) \ “They won’t let me go as fast as I want to yet,” said the 31year-old exbulldozer operator from Georgetown, Ind., after completing the first two phases of his rookie test Thursday at the Speedway. The solidly built 190-pounder Undergoes the third and final phase of his test today, this time under the watchful eye of a corps of veteran Indj) drivers. • After that, Charlie hopes to qualify his Under most any other circumstance in racing you wouldn’t count Charlie out, rookie or not. But Glotzbach is wheeling a car mounted with a stock block Chewy engine, and powCr plants of that make aren’t exactly on the Indianapolis list of preferred equipment. “They say ^ you have to have a turbocharged Ford or Offy if you go first class at bidy this year,” said Charlie. “But my Chewy is a goc^ car. So far it has gone as fast as USAC officials would let me go, and I really haven't let it out yet.” Glotzbach, a product of the red clay ovals around Louisville, Ky.; id a team- mate of the veteran Lloyd Ruby, from whom he gets some salty advice frorh time to time. Mario Andretti and A. J. Foyt, a pair of former national champions, will be top contenders Saturday for the pole For the best prices . on Dunlop Total Performance Tires, call The top speed in Saturday’s 10-mile time trials will win the No. 1 starting slot for the $750,000 classic regardless of performance in the qualifying sessions Sunday and the following weekend. y^bout $40,000 in special prizes will be paid for qualifying performances. The qualifying record for four laps around the 2Mi-miIe asphalt course is 171.559 miles per hour, set last year by Joe Leonard, SaA Jose, Calif., in a turbinepowered Lotus. His Pratt .& Jim or Ev at Joe or Dan at Dynamic Tire North, Inc. Dynamic Tire Sales, Inc. 651>2280 549-7350 223 Main St. Rochester 3826 N. Woodward Royal Oak V" ."A aV -'k' ."I". THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1969 Fortas Letter Explains His Connection With Wolf son WASHINGTON (AP) — HerelChief Justice fearl Warren ex-|and announcing his resignation I|S the Text of Suprertie Court plaining his connection with from the court: Justice' Abe Fortas’ letter toljailed financier Louis WolfsonlMy dear Chief Justice: I I am filing with you this me- morandum with respect to my association with the Wolf son Family Foundation, and a statement of the reasons wjjich in X my judgment indicate that I shield resign in order that the Court may nbt continue to be subjected to extraneous stress which may adversely affect the performance of its important functions. As you know, I have delayed issuing a detailed report or announcing my decision until it could first be communicated to the members of the Court. In my judgment, this was the only proper course open to me as an associate justice of this court, because of the court’s position as a separate and independent branch of the government under the constitution. Because of the court’s recess, this report was not possible until yesterday. ’ ★ * ★ In the spring or summer of 1%5, before I was nominated associate justice of the Supreme Court, my law firm represented New York Shipbuilding Corporation, a company controlled by Mr. Louis E. Wolfson, with respect to various civil claims. HIS RESIGNATION—This copy of a four-page letter from Justice Abe Fortas to Chief Justice Earl Warren, listing reasons for resigning from the High Court, was displayed yesterday in front of the Supreme Court Building. Later ip the summer of 1965, and also before my nomination, my firm was retained in connection with some securities problems of Merritt-Chapman and Scott corporation, of which Mr. Wolfson was. chairirfan of the board. becarae.^acquainted with Mr. Wolfson and he told me about the Wolfson Family Foundation and his hopes and plans for it. He knew that' its program—the Improvement of community relations and the promotion of racial and religious cooperation-concerned matters to which I had devoted much time and attention. WAS INTERESTED’ Mr. Wolfson stated that he im tended to increase the foundation’s resources, and he hoped that the foundation might expand its work so as to make unique and basic contributions in its field. As we proceeded in our discussions, Mr. Wolfson suggested that he would like me to participate in and help shape the foundation’s program and activities. I told him I was interested in these objectives and] that I hoped we would continue Contributions Lost in Polemics scope, and we discussed the possibility of my participating in the project on a long-term basis. Because of the nature of the work, there was no conflict between it and my judicial duties, it was then my opinion that thfe work of the Court would leaye adequate time for the Foundation assignments. His Career Sketched I became a member of the court in October 1965. Shortly thereafter, Mr. Wolfson was in Washington and again conferred with me about the foundation’s work and my possible association with it. I again indicated [my interest in the foundation’s program and in expanding its The board of the foundation met in December 1965, and approved, by resolution, an agreement under which I was to perform, services for the foundation. It was understood between us that thf program in question was a long-range one and that my association would be meaningful only if it were on a longterm basis. The agreement, therefore, contemplated that I would perform continuing services, and, instead of fixing variable compensation from time, to time for work done, it provided that I would receive twenty thousand dollars per year for my life with arrangements for payments to Mrs. Fortas in the event of my death. In January 1966 I received a check for twenty thousand dollars under the agreement, and began my association with the foundation. In June of that year I attended and participated in meeting of the Trustees of the Foundation at Jacksonville, Florida. It is my* recollection that Mr. Wolfson did not attend the meeting. I went from Jacksonville to his farm at Ocala where I had an overnight visit. I recall, with him and his family. AGREEMENT TERMINATED Later, in June J966, I reached the decision that the continuing role in the foundation’s work which our agreement contemplated should be terminated. There lyere two reasons for this decision: My work for the court was much heavier than I anticipated and my idea of the amount of time I would have free for nonjudicial work had been a substantial over-estimate. I had also learned shortly before informing the foundation of my decision to terminate the arrangement, that the SEC had referred Mr. Wolfson’s file to the Department of Justice for consideration as to criminal prosecution. I therefore wrote a letter the foundation, addressed to its general counsel, dated June 21, 1966, canceling the agreement we had entered into, subject to completing the projects for the year. I recited as my reason only the burden of Court work. treated as a contribution to the i concerned, the welfare and Foundation; « maximum effectiveness of the Since becoming a member of Court to perform its critical role the court, I have not, at any jin our system of government In September and October of (66, Mr. Louis E. Wolfson was indicted on separate charges stemming from stock transactions, and in December 1966, ‘ returned to the foundation, in its entirety, the sum of twenty thousand dollars previously paid to me. I concluded that, because of the developments which had taken place, the services which I had performed should be time, directly or indirectly, received any ■'‘compensation from Mr. Wolfson or members of his family or any of his associates for advice, assistance or any reason whatever, except foundation fee which was turned. RECEIVED MATERIAL Since I became a member of the court, Mr. Wolfson on occa; sion, would send me material relating to his problems, just as I think he did to many other people, and on several occasions he mentioned' them to me, but I have not interceded or taken part in any legal, administrative or judicial matter affecting Mr. Wolfson or anyone associated with him. my opinion, however, that the public controversy relating to my associatiMi with the foundation is likely to tinue and adversely affect the work and position of the court, absent my resignation. In these are factors that are paramount to all others. It is this consideration that prompts my resignation whic|i, I hope, by terminating the public controversy, will permit the court to proceed with its work without the harassment of debate concerning one of its members. I have written a letter asking President Nixon to accept my resignation, effective as of this date. ★ I leave the court with the greatest respect and affection for you and my colleagues, and my thanks to all of you and to the staff of the court for your unfailing helpfulness and friendship. I hope that as I return to private life, I shall find opportunities to continue to serve the nation and the cause of justice which this court so ably represents. Sincerely, Abe Fortas circumstances, if seems clear to me that it is not my duty to remain on the court, but rather to resign in the hope that this will enable the court to proceed with its vital work free from extraneous stress. There has been no wrongdoing on my part. There has been no default in the performance of my judicial duties in accordance with the high standards of the office I hold. So far as I am Wrinkles Removed in 3 Minutes >Jow, available to you, REVEAL, a new scientific cosmetic which will remove rour wrinkles temporarily In just 3 mUf-jtes and lasts uft to 8 houesc., Apdiy REVEAL as directed-to-voat forehead. DAY AND LOOK YOUNGER TONIGHT. Sold only by: SIMM'S CUT-RATE DRUG STORE-H NORTH SAGINAW - MAIL ORDERS FILLED. WASHINGTON (AP) - ^Hie intense controversy that swirled about Justice Abe Fortas in the past year overshadowed his work as a member of the U.S. . Supreme Court. Many legal observers pro-' nounc^ him one of the court’s most independent thinkers who, but for his extracurricular ac-tivilSe^f, was on his way to leaving* an indelible mark on the course of the nation’s law. * ★ ★ He sat on the court only 43 months after President Lyndon B. Johnson talked Arthur J. ■ Goldberg off the bench to become ambassador to the United Nations and replaced him with his old friend, Fortas, Fortas remained the president’s friend and adviser—one of the facets of his career that helped launch the congressional campaign against his 1968 nomi-ndMim to be chief justice. From that point on, his outside activities came under close scrutiny that tended to blur his legal creativity. ELOQUENT SPOKESMAN Fortas quickly became one of the court’s most eloquent spokesmen for the rights of minority groups^ for the impoverished criminal suspect enmeshed in the coils of law and for the long-ignored juvenile. Observers classified Fortas as a true blue and predictable liberal, but this complicated mind could not be cast in an easy mold. For instance, he was at the very conservative end of the court of the Vietnam war, objecting to attempts to have justices pass on the legality of this country’s heavy involvement in a major conflict without a declaration of war from Congress. In the areas of antitrust and libel law Fortas early parted company from the old liberal position that corporate bigness at least implied some badness. And, while the court was making Impi^ant advances in the area of the |ree press, Fortas reflected a deep suspicion of the media. A vote that now takes on added interest was his dissent from a ruling clearing Life i of privacy violations in its treatment of the family whose .experiences were the ba-of the play, “'The Desperate Hours.” It was a later Life article that led to his resignation from the court. Perhaps his most memorable contribution to the court' history will be recorded as thq 1967 Gault decision, which altered the structure of the nation’s juvenile courts. Fortas’s opinion extended to children some of the major rights adult defendants have enjoyed under the Constitution. Hearing Is Monday on Firemen Firing HOLLAND (AP) -A hearing has been scheduled for Monday in Ottawa County Circuit Court to show cause why 14 Park Township firemen near Holland should not be rehired. The firemen, ail paid volunteers and members of Station No. 2, were fired Tuesday. They had been protesting various regulations inqwsed by the township Fire Board. DonaM Hann of Holland, attorney for the .firemen, said a temporary restraining order was being sought to get the men back on the job until the hearing. Flag Flying Urged LANSING (AP)-Gov. William Millilken has urged all Michigan citizens to fly the state flag during the annual Michigan Week starting Saturday. these days, and had been fully Demonstrating a gift for a catch-phrase, Fortas declared; Under our Constitution, the] condition of being a boy does not justify a kangaroo court.” Fortas is only 58, comparatively young as justices go to build his early years on the bench into a decade or two of legal service. HORATIO ALGER-UKE Born on June 19,1910, t|ie last of five children of a ilewish cabinet maker who had emigrated to Memphis, ’Tenn., from England, Fortas followed the ground walked by Horatio Alger heroes at almost as fast a pace. By the time he was 13 he had begun earning money by playing the violin at social events. His love for music stayed with him, and he is known to have chartered airplanes to bring other musicians to his Connecticut summer estate for weekend musicales. By the age of 32, he was an undersecretary of the interior, had already taught at his Yale law school alma mater. \bur Standard 01 Dealer Announces AinoGon A confiraHigpPDgramof monthly specials lohelp yousaMsoivcar maintenance costs Fortas blended good fortune with his industry. His biggest break was meeting Johnson in the 1930s. They forged a bond that carried all the way to the White House and the court in the 1960s. Before going to the court . Fortas, in partnership with two j other old New Dealers, 'Thurmond Arnold and Paul Porter, formed a highly energetic law firm that became one of the three or four major firms in the capital. $150,000 A YEAR His private income was said to approach $150,000 a year, and his wife, Carolyn Agger, a tax specialist with the firm, was believed to have earn^ more | than half of that annually. They bought a quarter-million dollar home in Georgetown, and painted it mustard yellow. They I also own a silver Rolls Royce. 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