Airlines Expect Traffic Controls to Be Law by
WASHINGTON ( AP) - The nation's major airlines say they expect federal controls aimed at clearing the cluttered "kies of New York, Chicago and Washington to become law by Nov? I.
This was the airlines’ resigned reaction yesterday to the* Transportation Department’s listing of what would be the first-ever federal controls on air traffic.	•	•; ,
But the pilots of small planes vowed a fierce fight.
The'regulations proposed by the Transportation" Department would slash takeoffs and landings goring peak hours at O’Hare Airport in Chicago, the world’s busiest, by 82.
DROP SEEN AT KENNEDY
Stuart G. Tipton, president of the Air Transport Association, representing the nation’s commercial airlines, didn’t object to the proposals, although he said they should be considered only stopgap measures.
our command, while we continue to press for the fair and proper solutions to the air traffic management problems.”
At New York’s Kennedy Airport peak traffic periods Would see a drop by 4# takeoffs and landings per hour. Small planes would be barred from 5 to 8 p.m. daily.
But the Aircraft Owners and Pilots
The .Federal Aviation Administration plans a public, hearing on the proposed limits Sept. 25.
Air traffic controllers attracted attention to the problem by strictly enforcing safety clearances between planes, leading to, delays of as long as five hours at busy East Coast airports:
The airlines meet with the Civil Aeronautics Board today to discuss the voluntary measures.
Association, which counts 145,000 private k^The AC~
pilots as members, said: ^The AOPA intends to forcefully oppose this proposed rule making with every means at
WARNING TO AIRLINES The government warned airlines last month to propose voluntary measures for trimming air congestion.
The airlines came up with plans for a joint airline committee to , act as a schedule coordinator and a scheme of sliding fare rates to encourage travel at slack periods.
The Transportation Department pro* posals set an hourly limit of 80 takeoffs and landings at New York’s Kennedy, where as many as 128 have been recorded in a single hour.
Chicago's double-runway O'Hare has logged ag many, as -21Z, but would be restricted to 135.
The Weather
U. I. WMMmt Ouruv ForKMt
Cooler
(Mails Pag* 1)
THE PONTIAC PRESS
Home
Edition
VOL. 126
NO. 182
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER S, 1968	.
★ A	ASSOCIATED PRESS	__7© Pi fiP.C
W	UNITED Pliass. INTERNATIONAL	—iX r
10*
LBJ Panel to Probe Violence in Chicago
U.S. May Open Door to Czechs Seeking Asylum
, WASHINGTON (AP) - The furor ignited by street demonstrations and police tactics at the Democratic convention has swirled into Congress and prompted an investigation by a presidential advisory panel. '
The investigation, third started in two weeks, was announced yesterday by Dr. Milton Eisenhower, chairman of a violence study task force named by President Johnson after .the assassination of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
countermeasures and news reporting sparked a congressional floor debate yesterday that pitted Ohio’s two . Democratic senators against each other.
The state’s junior -senator, Sen. Stephen M. Young, said, “The security arrangements for the Democratic convention turned out to be a disaster and a disgrace.”
PUcinski accused newsmen of doing “an outrageous, unfair job” Of covering the demonstrations.
WASHINGTON (API - The United States may open the door to Czechs who would rather live i^re than under renewed Soviet domination, authoritative sources said today.
Afty. Gen. Ramsey Clark and Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley started probes earlier.
Eisenhower said his panel will also study July’s gun battle between police and black militants in Cleveland and, possibly, the rioting in a Miami Negro neighborhood during the Republican convention.
“Democracy was clubbed to death by Mayor Daley's police,” he addfed.
But most congressmen sided with Ohio’s Sen. Frank J. Lausche, who said he’s sick and tired of reading that violent demonstrations are the consequence of police brutality.
“I don’t understand what makes the media so squeamish” about showing provocative actions- by the crowd, said Rep. Wayne L. Hays, D-Ohio. “Let the American people know what kind of trash, bums they are.”
This was one of several responses to ~~ the continuing Soviet armored presence in Czechoslovakia discussed at a hush-hush session of the National Security Council last night.
Another possibility, discussed was a joint pledge with NATO allies that no reductions would be made from the present troop levels in Europe.
Mayor Daley asked the three major television networks for time to give his version of what he called a “one-sided portrayal” of the convention.
OHIO DEMS SPLIT The Chicago demonstrations, police
’TROUBLEMAKERS’
Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La., described the demonstrators as a “bunch of troublemakers.” “The mob included some of the most dedicated Communists amfconspirators in America,” he added. Chicago Democratic Rep, Roman C.
NBC offered Daley a guest spot on a special hour-long “Meet the Press” interview show. But the mayor said he wouldn’t appear before the panel of newsmen.
CBS turned down Daley’s request, citing a half hour ipterview of the mayor during the convention.
ABC was considering the request.
It was understood that the council, made up of President Johnson and his top military, diplomatic and intelligence advisers, reached no decisions,. but prepared recommendations for a Cabinet meeting today.
Should the United States issue a statement promising extra-quota refugee status for Czech citizens, it would parallel action taken after the 1956 Hungarian uprising. More than 30,000 refugee cases were handled then.
For the time being, this appears to be a symbolic gesture, few Czechs have asked UK. consuls for asylum.
New Parking Mall Slated for Pontiac
Reds Push U.S. in Missile Race
A second parking mall in downtown Pontiac will begin operating Monday, providing shoppers with an additional 91 parking spaces.
Roy Hetherington, superintendent of the Pontiac Electrical Department which Is in charge of the operation, said the new mall will stretch along a two-block section of Saginaw from Huron to Oakland.
The succesTsrthe existing mall on Saginaw between Huron and Lawrence, in operation since May, prompted the city to go ahead with its plans to extend the
.parking mail north, he said. _______. -y •
Short sections of Warren west of Saginaw and University east of Saginaw will also be used as part of the new mall, added Hetherington.
A total of 12? parking spaces will be provided in, the new mall. Presently there is parking for only 36 cars in the area to be developed for the mall.
Attendant stations will be erected at both ends of the mall, according to Hetherington, where motorists can both enter and exit, while unattended gates will hb placed nn Warren and University for entering the mall only—
WASHINGTON (AP) - Soviet tests of a long-range missile capable of packing “bushels of warheads” may force a sharp reappraisal of the U.S. missile coUnterpunch.
Expansion of the controversial Sentinel defensive system and the nation’s offensive missile arsenal are being discussed in response to reports that the Soviets test-fired a missile hauling four warheads.
Parking rates will be the same as those in the existing mall, five cents for each half hour up to the first hour and a half, 25 cents for two hours and 35 cents for each additional hour.
The mail will be open from 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Monday, Thursday and Friday and from 9 a m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and (Saturday. After businesses close each day the maU will be open tp through traffic.
U.S. experts learned «Lthe Soviet test early this week, even though it took place in late August, a week after similar tests at Cape Kennedy, Fla.
Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., a member of the Joint Committee on Afomlc-'TSnorgy, said ‘~The" Peri-* tagon—Officially mum so far—had not informed him of the test. But military sources confirmed the Soviets apparently had fired a new type ICBM.
Sources indicated they aren’t certain whether the warheads were guided or
A State Department spokesman said yesterday he bad no exact figures available.
American consuls in Europe already have been instructed to handle Czech requests under the clause of the Immigration and, Naturalization Act which authorizes the government to grant residence status to refugees of communism.
, The Security Council meeting is understood to have discussed the whole range of problems, military and political, created by the Soviet invasion Of Czechoslovakia.
The administration is understood to be cool toward congressional suggestions to punish the Soviet aggression by curtailing diplomatic, trade and cultural contacts with Moscow.
Nixon: Chicago Is Democrats' Agony
CHICAGO (AP) — Richard M. Nixon said today the disorders in Chicago last week “could have occurred in any other city.”	•
At an early morning news conference he was asked to elaborate on a statement he made about the violence during an hour-long telecast last night. He said that criticism of either the Chicago police or the demonstrators would not be helpful.
‘HOLD THE COMMENTS’
Nixon added, “What happened in Chicago was not the agony of Chicago. It was the agony of the Democratic party. It was the agony of America.”'
Nixon held the news conference just
In the nuclear age, it is explained, the two superpowers cannot afford to sulk and ignore each other.
UK. officials on the other hand firmly rejected the Soviet con tention, repea ted. -yesterday in the Moscow government newspaper Izvestia, that the Yalta Conference of the big three- created spheres of influence in Europe, in effect permitting the Soviets to handle Eastern Europe as if IT were part of the Soviet Unjon.	,
House Stalls Bill
t6~Allow Debate
This would make a big difference, indicating whether the warheads could be accurate enough to knock* out underground missile silos.
Jackson said a Soviet move Into the multiple-warhead field could threaten U.S. missiles forming the bedrock of the American nuclear deterrent.
The United States barpeakedcon-•' 8truetiorTff~TBgn^~FP^Mbiuteman, . capable of intercontinental rpnges, at LM0 missiles.
Pontiac Sales Set New Aug ust Mark
WASHINGTON (AP) - The odds are against passage of a bill that would open the way for television debates between the- Democratic and Rep u b 1 i ca n presidential candidates, says a backer of the measure.
Rep. Lionel Van Deerlin, D-Calif., a member of Jhe House Commerce Committee, said yesterday, time is working against the bill.
2 TOPICS AVOIDED
Flash
ASales of Pontiacs, Tempests and Firebirds have set divisional records for the month bT AugusT and the Aug! 21-31 period, it was announced today by John Z. DeLorean, a General Motors vice president, and Pontiac general manager.
For the month Pontiac sales totaled 62,615 units, which topped the old record of 59,595 set three years ago. This also marked an 18 per cent increase over the 52,979 new cars sold last August.
The bill, already passed by the Senate, would exempt the television networks from federal laws requiring fKST an; ■ legally qualified candidates for president get equal radio and television time, aside from news reports and commercials.
Van Deerlin sqid public support for the bill from Democratic nominee Hubert H Humphrey and Republican Richard M. Nixon could help free the bill from the commerce committee.
In Today's —Press “
Blocking in Viet Allies launch drive to keep Reds from Saigon—PAGE A-14.
WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Defense Clark M. Clifford, declaring the United States mast negotiate with Russia from strength, today ordered work on the Sentinel antimissile system pressed
DeLorean also reported sales of 22,945 for the last third of the month. This broke the previous record of 19,449 set in 1966. A year ago Pontiac dealers sold 16,748 new cars in the same period.
TIME FOR WALLACE Their support would have to be com-
History Buff Wanted Mansion's due for destruction unless someono*wants to restore it — PAGE A-4.
Rain to End Late
rmntac Pmt *mm or Jtm *•«*
SEWER SHAPES UP — Construction on the giant Clinton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor, designed Jo drain six . townships, gets under way in Rochester. Official ground-breaking ceremonies for the 928.2-million facility will be 10:36 a.m. Oct. 1 , pear thn Oakland County Service Center.	.
Showers and thundershowers are expected to inove out of the Pontiac area kite today, leaving skies partly cldudy and temperatures a little on the cool side. ■
^ Here is the day-by-day official U.S. Weather Bureau report ’;
TODAY Partly cloudy With Showers and thundershowers likely. High 76 to 82. Low .52 to 57. Partly cloudy and cooler
Southerly winds at 10 to 20 miles per hour, briefly higher in thundershowers. TOMORROW — Mostly fair and cool. , SATURDAY — Mostly fair and cool.
bined with promises from the networks of separate time for third-party candidate. George C. Wallace, Van Deeriin said.
TTie divided! House committee is scheduled to meet on the issue next Wednesday.
Rep. John E. Moss of California, fifthranking Democrat on the committee, said fiu opposition to the plan remains firm..
The three nfa j o r ^padio-tele vision networks have offered Humphrey, and Nixon time for face-to-face debates but conditioned this on Congress lifting the equal time requirements.
Dirksen-Fortas I Senator balks at saying he’ll I actively push justice nominee— I PAGE A-12.
m
AP Wlrenhoto
THUNDERING RECEPTION - GOP presidential candidate Richard Nixon and his wife respond to a tumultuous welcome they received yesterday in Chicago’s loop. Nixon called it “the greatest political reception I ever received in my life in Chicago." Estimates of the crowd ranged from 250,000.to 400,000. The Nixons flew to San Francisco this morning.
before carrying his campaign to San Francisco.
During the telecast, Nixon said political figures should not make partisan comments on last week’s violence while federal and local investigations of the disorder are in progress.
He contended that the appointment of Justice Abe Fortas to be chief justice should be postponed uhtil after the election* of President Johnson’s successor.
A panelist, Dr. Karl Ripa, president of the Polish Hungarian World Federation, asked Nixon's views on the situation in Eastern Europe in general and in Czechoslovakia in particular.
“We have to remember "that our choices are limited!” Nixon replied. “I can say here that the U.S! can march gnd help them. But if we were to do that,, it would mean risking a world conflict. I dofnoftMfik anjrof tRr would want that because it would mean the destruction of those countries, too.”
After the telecast, Nixon said he was surprised that no questions were posed about ending the war in Vietnam or about the U.S. intelligence-gathering ship Pueblo captured by North Korea.,
Area News .....________A-14
tonight!
Precipitation probabilities in per cent: today 80, tonight 20.
Sixty-six was the low temperature prior to 8 a.m. in downtown Pontiac. By
ONE IS READY Van Deerlin said he understood one

*■ 2 p.m, foe thermometer reading was 77.
major network is ready to give Wallace 30 minutes free time for each hour given Nixon/and Humphrey.
Astrology .
Bridge ...........
Crossword Puzzle \
Comics ..........J
• Editorials .
Food Section .. ..
Markets .........
Obituaries .......
Sports ...........
Theaters.........
TV and Radio Programs E-15
-Wilson, Earl ............E-15
Women’s Pages ....... B-l—B-7
D-14 D-14 E-15 D-14 A-8 D-U-D-13
....IMS
.. .'...C-f E-l-E-6 D-10


v w
A—2
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
Nearly 64,000 State Students Shut Out
LANSING JAP) — Classroom doors today remained closed to pupils in 11 Michigan school districts, officials said, forcing nearly 64,000 pupils to delay the start of their fall terms.
Officials said that seven tentative agreements have been achieved since classes were scheduled to begin early this week- The latest reported agreement was reached in the River Rouge district In Wayne County.
tlements among critical districts,” said a spokesman for Lt. Gov. William Milliken, who was appointed > by Gov. George Romney to seek accords in teacher contract disputes.
' The spokesman pointed out that across the nation three times as many schools were closed this fall as compared to last year.
LESS THAN HALF
“We’re real pleased that within the last 60 hours we’ve had seven set-
“We’ve got less than half as many as last year,” the spokesman said.
Teachers in 35 Michigan districts ficials said.
agreed to work while contract negotiations continued, officials Said.
Tentative agreements subject . to ratification were reported Wednesday in Bedford, Jefferson, Charlotte, Romulus, Willow Run, Heintzen and River Rouge districts.
1-DAY DELAY
Teachers at Chippewa Valley in Macomb County agreed to work while negotiations continued, delaying the beginning of instruction by one day, of-
I will return to classes tomorrow in Charlotte, where the scheduled opening was delayed for ,two da y s . Negotiators hammered out a tentative agreement yesterday. ,
Officials declined to be optimistic about quick settlements for 11 school districts ^here disputes remain unsettled.
the situations in nearly all closed school districts.	t
Most disputes have progressed beyond the mediation stage, officials said.
Factfinders reportedly are looking into Ecorse and Taylor.
Districts where settlements have, not been achieved include Adams Township, Lincoln Park, Northville, Oscoda, River-view, Trenton, Charlevoix and Gladwin. Teachers in the eight districts are represented by the Michigan Education Association
Thq (AFL-CIO) Michigan Federation of Teachers represents faculty members
Birmingham Area
Irate Parents Force Easing of Bus Cuts
BLOOMFIELD HILLS- Approximately 500 irate parents have convinced the Bloomfield Hills Board of
ieauners represent itfuuny	vuivcu	---------- .	..
three unsettled ^districts — Inkster^ Education to take immediate action to
Aid From Area Asked for Negro College Fund
Two local persons are appealing to Pontiac area residents, businesses and organizations to help educate Negroes by contributing to the United Negro College Fund, Inc.
Arrest Protested by 'M' Students
t ANN ARBOR (AP) - An estimated 400 University of Michigan students marched last night around the Washtenaw County Jail to protest the arrest of a student newspaper managing editor.

Monroe M. Osmun, a Pontiac businessman and school board president
CUSTOM-TAILORED MARAUDER — Numerous comfort and safety options are featured in the 1969 Lincoln-Mercury Marauder and the Marauder X100. Bucket or bench seats, 429-cubic-inch displacement or 390-cubic-inch engines and
various, interior decor are offered. Both members of the Marauder series feature an exterior styling similar to the Lincoln Continental model.
Verdict Is Due Mercury Marauder, X100 on 1-696 Airing offer Big Choice of Options
Student Speakers at a rally exhorted the students to mass at the jail at noon today. The protestors carried signs sayihg ‘‘Harvey Must Go” and chanted the same slogan in reference to Sheriff Douglas J. Harvey.
Nobody was arrested, deputies said. But an estimated 200 law enforcement officers were called to duty and sheriff’s men, backed up by police dogs, lined up in readiness in the jail parking lot during) the two-hour demonstration._______________
amend cutbacks of the schools’ busing schedules.
The parents met with the board at a recent meeting in protest against the change in. busing runs from “door to door pickup” to more distant Stops due to a. cutback to the number of drivers and excessive transportation expenses according to Supt. Eugene L. Johnson.
Following a long session with parents, the board instructed foe assistant superintendent of transportation to implement a program “commencing immediately and finalizing within a few days that would take all elementary school children off primary roads and still use a minimum of pickup stops.” -
The board did not See tit to implement noon hour transportation, according to Johnson.
MAIN CONCERN
He said the main concern of the parents was hot in the distance students ‘ have to walk, but the safety factor toA^ volved.
He cited the area around Long Lake Road — a narrow, heavily traveled highway — as a special problem.
Johnson also noted that transportation for Bloomfield Hills arpa students was $10 to $25 per pupil more than other districts in the county
is chairman of the drive. Mrs. Robert Turpin, 106 franklin Blvd., is cochairman.
Funds from the national drive go to 36 predominantly Negro member colleges and universities for the purpose of:
•	Giving scholarships or aid to students.
•	Adding faculty members to meet growing enrollments and expand the curriculum.
•	Providing competitive faculty salaries.
•	Buying teaching supplies and equipment and providing more research facilities and library services.
•	Maintaining the physical plant.
Gov. George Romney’s three-man arbitration panel is scheduled to resume hearings tomorrow morning on the controversial routing of the 1-696 freeway in south Oakland County. However, a decision on a request for a restraining order, filed last week, may put a damper on the talks.
County Circuit Court Judge Arthur E. 11 Moore was scheduled to make a decision today on a request for a restraining order filed by Lathrup Village, seeking to enjoin a possible decision by the panel.
Lincota-Mercury’s entry to the' 1969 full-size passenger car line is the Mercury Marauder and the Marauder X100. A special feature of the series is the variety of optionals enabling buyers to custom-tailor their Marauder.
There is a choice of twin-comfort lounge seats, bucket seats with center console or leather with vinyl bench seat to the Marauder X100 at no additional cost.
“A college education is the route to an Increasing number of occupations and professions,” Osmun said.
“By donating, people are giving ambitious and highly motivated Negro Americans at colleges to 11 southern states and the state of Ohio a chance to reallze thelr potential and to contribute, to our society as productive and creative individuals.”
The restraining order plea is the second petition filed by Lathrup Village, according to City Attorney Everett Hayes. Two weeks ago, Lathrup Village and Pleasant Ridge filed a joint petition to halt the hearings completely on the grounds that they are unconstitutional. *
Earlier this week Moore denied the initial request, indicating the board could proceed if it did so along constitutional lines.
The judge agreed with the petitioners that it would be unconstitutional for the panel to force a freeway route through a city without the consent of that community, however.
The petition to be considered today contends that a proposed 11-Mile Road route through Lathrup Village is uncon-■Htntinnal because the city opposes it. Hayessald all discussion of such IT route should therefore be halted.
Selection of power trains Includes the 429-cubic-inch displacement 4V engine with select-shift automatic transmission as standard in the Marauder X100 and optional in the Marauder, as is a two-barrel carburetor version. The 290-cubic-inch V-8 with folly synchronized three-speed manual transmission is available at no extra cost in the Marauder,
Oakland, Pontiac; add Bob Burst Sales, 1950 W. Maple, Troy.
Both the Marauder and Marauder X100 share styling Similar to the Marquis line, with a definite resemblance to the Lincoln Continental,
Ford Motor Co. Safety features are available, including a dual hydraulic brake systeto, safety designed door handles and energy-absorbing steering wheel and column.
Characteristic of all Marauder models is floor carpeting; wood-grain applique on door panels and low gloss vinyl covering minimizing glare and reflections.	*
1 The full size 1969 Marauder automobile has a 121-inch wheelbase with an over-all length of 219.1 inches. .
A 14-man contingent of Oakland County sheriff’s deputies was put on standby alert for possible dispersal to supplement police there, but none was-sent.
OTHERS ON STANDBY Capt. Leo Hazep, chief of • sheriff’s
detectives, said deputies from several other nearby counties were also placed on standby.
The demonstrators were protesting the arrest of Stephen H. Wildstrom, 21, managing editor of the Michigan Daily, student paper at the university.
He said that if a way can be found to retain excellent transportation less expensively the board would “be happy to consider it.”
The board also appointed a committee made up of citizens, board members, administrators, and the B1 p o m f i eld Township Police, to further study the transportation problem.
Wildstrom, of Oak Park, was charged yesterday with assault and battery, against a sheriff’s officer..
He was released under $25 bond to appear today before Municipal Judge Samuel Elden.
FRANKLIN — Douglas Ensor of 24447 Bloomington has been awarded a scholarship from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation for study at Albion College.
Ensor is one of 151 male- students selected for Sloan Scholarships by 45 participating institutions. Four -year grants totaling $1.2 million were award-
ed.
The .Sloan program has assisted nearly 1,900 students including some 600 who will be enrolled- during the coming academic year.
AREA DEALERS
Area dealers include: Have r 1 e y Mercury, 420 Main, Rochester; Don Spiker Ford, 130 S. Milford, Milford; Hillside Lincoln-Mercury Inc., .12 5 0
Remap Appeal to High Court

The Wea
MmwrMwmwmwMunMiBt
1 Far	Bureau Report.	....
PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostly cloudy with showers and a few thundershowers likely today. High 76 to 82. Southerly winds 10 to 20 miles per hour briefly higher in thundershowers. Partly cloudy and cooler tonight. Low 52 to 57. Mostly fair and cool Friday and Saturday. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: Today 80, tonight
.rauss.
■wwm
'wnt'Eu
The redistricting plan for the reapportionment of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors will be appealed in the Michigan Supreme Court, according to Joseph R. Famham, county Republican chairman.,
A previous appeal lost to the Court of Appeals,- and subsequently, p reap;; portionment plan was' upheld and the election ordered. Both parties fielded candidates in the primary and on Nov. 5, voters will select 27 members for the new board to take office in January.
The reapportionment plan was drawn up by a five-man committee which had only one Republican; Clr airman Famham. Charging a gerrymander in favor of Democrats the plan was challenged in both the district and state appeals courts, losing in both cases.
G. Rapid*
_____Kansas City	71	52
71	SI	Los Anoalas	7*	S3
S5	41	Miami, iaach	17	74
15	M	Mllwauka*	10	57
U	50	Naw Orlaans	It • 71
II	11	NOW York	13	M
14	17	Omaha	it	41
■HP	17	5t	Phoenix
..jvars* C. 17	11	Plttsburgl
Albuquerque 14 9/It Loull Atlanta	15	11	Tampa	tl	77
Rotten ,,	74,	it	S. Lake City	71	41
Chicago'	71	It	S. Frar-—	"	“
Oscoda
Pallston
100 70
IS 15
77 10
The Supreme Court has now ruled it will consider the case—
Farnham said the new appeal would be aimed at getting a hew plan for 1970. Following 1970, a new federal census would call for lifew districting in the 1972 election to any case, he said.
“The possibility remains the court could rule the 1968 election was illegal, but that is slim,” he .said. “What we’re aiming for is correcting the Democrats’ advantage in 1970,” Famham said.
Car Lines Rolling at Pontiac Plants
,■* J	%	-	' / AP/wmpMW
NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers will extend in a narrow band along the ful) -length of tlie Appalachian region and along the Gulf Coast tonight. It will be warm-er ip the Plateaus and cooler to the upper and middle Mississippi Valley.
1;,.< .,r7TTWf\t. \\rl,/ ‘; 4 \h ,	//
Production is under way on all lines of 1969 model Pontiac cars and GMC trucks and coaches.
Fisher Body plant and Pontiac Motor Division resumed ° complete production operations Aug.. 26.
output also was begun on the new Grand Prix specialty model. The first week’s output for this car was 1,550. It,-is being assembled bra separate line in the local plant.
About 9,000 new Pontiacs were built as of Aug, 31.
/ GMC Truck and Coach Division began iduction of/’69 models Aug. 13.
off the line Aug. 15.
Peek!
Before our Grand Opening we’ve decided to give you another Peek Preview of our fine furniture buys. This
is one:

If you’ve ever wanted a Colonial living room ensemble at a remarkable buy, this is it. The three pieces include an 80” sofa for $299; a 56” Iqve seat for $219; and a swivel rocker for only $159. AD pieces feature posture-right extra hi-back construction. Come early before the Grand Opening crowds and get a living room to be proud Of Ata once-only JdiVjWfaOv
HARVEY FURNITURE
4405 Highltmd Rd. (M59) corner of Pontiac Lake Road Shop tdawd and qir.tonditionecl • Terms ayailoble
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1868
A—8 ■
Soviet Troops Lead Dull Life in Prague
PRAGUE (AP) - Soviet GIs from Siberia and the look at Prague's night spots with envy as they continue their occupation of the Czechoslovak capital. .	,
"We aren’t allowed to drink,1 said a captain in dark weather-stained khaki when foreigners offered him a small bottle of whisky. *
#’ ★
He also refused an invitation to dinner at one of Prague’s excellent restaurants. "Not in this uniform,” he i said. "Unfortunately, we haven’t any civilian clothes.”
It was bis way of being discreet. Probably no Czech would have diown his' bitter anger over the Soviet invasion, but Soviet troops are under strict ordersto do nothing that might lead to an incident with the submissive but still resentful population.
News Yesterday in the Capital
BY THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Tin Governor
Announced the pocket veto of a t governing administrative procedures •fate agencies.
state Republican leaden to —* organization of
dlicmi	B
thejr Nlxon-forpreeldent effort.
The Lieutenant Governor
d teacher contract
The Soviets are especially ensitive about their uniforms. Czechs have told them so often: “We’d be more than glad to-welcome you as Civilians, .without weapons.”
The Russians get such a cold shoulder from, the Czechs that they' welcome any nonhal civility.
....* * *
In recent days there has been a more friendly response from some young Czechs, and some local girls have been seen fraternizing with the Soviet troops, undeterred by those whose heads were shaved by indignant patriots.
One of the chief contact points between Soviet soldiers and the people of Prague is the tank encampment in Vrchisleho Park, between the main railway station and St. Wenceslas Square, the center of the city. WELCOME CONVERSATION Bored with the lack of activity, the Soviet soldiers welcome any opportunity for a friendly chat or even a sharp political argument.
“We were invited here/’ said one brash young sergeant, "and the Czechs have shot at us from the roofs. It’s too bad a 14-year-old boy Was killed. He was an unfortunate victim. People get killed in auto accidents, too.
There are counterrevolutionaries here. Sure the students and intelligentsia are against
qs, but the working class is with
* *,* 'vsyi
Though die soldiers defended themselves stoutly, they ^eemed
Nevada Bars Open, NoVoting Disrupted
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) — For tiie first time in 1M years, since Nevada became a state; bars and liquor stores were open during voting hours.
Sheriff’s , deputies arrested three persons for drunkenness in Clark County and a fourth was jailed in Las Vegas. None of the incidents involved election Tuesday.
There were no reported complaints of unruliness at the polls because of liquor.
impressed when a middle-aged Schoolteacher criticised the occupation because, of its effect on international Communist cooperation.
Ibis is a terrible thing you’ve done to our whole movement,” he kept repeating, terrible thing. I’ve been a party member, an activist, for 10 yarns. In another 10 years you’ll be very sorry for what you’ve It’s terrible, a terrible
thing.”
LIFE UNCOMFORTABLE life isn’t too comfortable in the park, in the heat and the rain, but the soldiers seem resigned.
‘Rain, snow, it makes no difference to us,” one said. “Our tanks are our homes.”
, Not many seemed interested In a military career. One plans to be an engineer when his term of service is up. Another wants teach foreign languages.
though he seemed able to speak Only a few Words of Gentian antf none of English, v, ,3 A ■ w Soviet soldiers get three rubles a month in pay. That’s $3.30 at the Soviet government’s official rate, and "just about covers shoe polish, toothpaste and cigarettes,” one of them explained. They wear heavy, Hack looking boots that come almost to their knees.
More than four-fifths alcholic beverages consumed in Britain are in sales in pubs.

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THE PONTIAC PRESS
Am News
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1908 A—4
on 2 Trailer Parks
AVON TOWNSHIP - The planning ommission has recommended approval f two adjoining trailer parks on the orth side of Auburn Road between toehestep Road andJohnR- -■—-The applicants, Cookingham Trailer bach Park and Aaron Management Co., ropose a coordinated development of ome 130 acres, according to township pokesmen.
The commission has already recommended approval for a shopping center on labd owned by Larry Jerome nearer to the intersection. The new request will await a personal tour of the area by commission members:
The consultant had said that any extension of commercial property in the area would result in strip zoning.
Disagreement with die plans were egistered last night by four people in le audience, one of whom reportedly itimafed he would seek a petition of roperty owners to block the develop-lent.
A commission spokesman pointed out lat plans must still be approved by the nunty coordinating zoning and planning ammittee and by the Township Board self before final approval is made.
The Former David Wright Mansion May Be Wrecked If Someone Doesn't Buy And Move It
Mansion Due for Destruction
. The
SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP former David Wright estate at the northwest comer of Dixie Highway and Holly Road has been purchased by a local developer and may be destined for the wrecker’s ball soon.
Robot J- Rothermel and his wife, , Wanda,,of 10003 Dixie purchased the two-1 story frame mansion and surrounding ; land recently in order to construct a • shopping center.
"I don’t know what I’m going to do with ihe old house,” Rothermel said. ‘‘I’ll probably have to tear It down.
unless I find someone that wants it.”
He said that he was interested in finding someone who would like to buy and move the home for restoration purposes.
Among other valuable or interesting furnishings in the mansion is a melodeon according to Rothermel.
Walton Boulevard Construction
Could Commence This Autumn
Walton Boulevard east of Squirrel Road in Pontiac Township and to the Rochester city limits — the “star” of last year’s Oakland County Road Commission traffic report — may still get some attention yet this year.
William Fognini, road commission director of engineering, said work may commence this fail on a proposed boulevard-typefbur-laneroad 'Between Squirrel and Adams roads.
the Rochester city limits aome^tlihe in 1969.	\
; He said a delay in plans and right-of-- way negotiations had so far held up the ! schedule. Some $600,000 earmarked for
*	the project have already been bonded,
*	Fognini said.
While there are no plans for widening ; between Adams and Livemois, Fognini
•	said that plans. as yet unapproved.-do-.
*	exist to widen ihe road from Livemois to
Traffic withfai the city on Walton (orx West University as it is called there) is currently being detoured during the city's process of widening the main access from the west, . ....-------- ...
Estimated cost of the project in Rochester is $51,016. Some of the expense is being spread over property owners who will pay between $11 and $12 per front foot for the four-lane, construction.
' Fognini said that while the commission 1s quite aware of the increase in traffic on Walton between Adams and Livemois, it still feels that other two-lane, roads in the southern part of the jcountyr-which-^iave-toig-H^^-^eaehed" - capi^,'must-bav»-pifoi%.r-^H.-^^«M
Orion Planners Get New Chief
County 'Detour' Bypassed
State Sticks t
By JEAN SAILE Problems—problems—problems! The Michigan State Highway Department, which has its share of them, has bypassed another detour.
It’s going right aheact with its long-range plans, which in 10 to
changing the state roadway construction priority.
DECIDED AGAINST IT	‘jj
The fact that the interstate system has been proceeding according to a master plan drawn up years ago did not dim the temptation to pick up extra federal favors.
Michigan’s highway department decided against temptation.'
15 years may see the construction of a superhighway between Novi and Clarkston.
A shortcut—maybe an expensive one—has been rejected.
FUNDS NOT ALLOCATED
—Congress in all its largess recently authorized an additional 1,500 miles of interstate highway throughout the country.
However, it neglected to allocate the funds necessary to pay for it, say state officials.
“We fully intend to continue with the present program,” a department spokesman said.
Had the choices been different, Michigan would have planned for two additional strips.
EARLY TESTIMONY The department testified earlier this summer before a congressional committed that Michigan could qualify mi:
•	18-mile stretch from Noyi at, the junction of 1-75 and 1-696 to 1-75 north ol Clarkston. The road would -be known as M275 and provide area motorists with a new route in Oak- * land county.
•	a 117-mile segment extending 1-6$ from Marshall to Lansing,
■ Flint and Port Huron.	i
But no money, no further roads, is the feeling at present
Christian School Sign-Up
PONTIAC TOWNSHIP — Registration w01.be held Sept 10 from 9 am. to 4 p.m, for the new Oakland Christian School at the Five Jfoints Community Church, 3411 E. Walton.
The school will after a full curriculum from kindergarten through foe 12th grade,
Backed by many churches in the area, the school is interdenominational.
Serving on the temporary board are the Rev. Theodore Allebach, Oakland Avenue United Presbyterian Church; fill Rev. Gordon Lindsay, Five Points Community Church; the Rev. Donald Curry, Rochester First Baptist Church; the Rev. Arnold Hashman, Wat erf o r d
Calvary Assembly of Gob; the Rev. Alger T. Lewis, Avondale Baptist
Church; and George Murphy of 4041 W. Walton, Waterford Township.
Doctor's License Safe for
EQUEST CUT
/ Two' proposals tor multiples, one an ahtohbed version of a plan placed before the commission last January, were presented by Slavik Developers of Great Oaks Farm.
The developers cut from 34 to nine acres their request for apartments on the south side of Tienken Road along the New York Central Railroad tracks.
A possible drainage problem and questionable township liability regarding it caused the tabling of a request which seeks rezoning for a shopping center at John R and Avon.
Arthur Pohutsky of Utica seeks a 19-acre supermarket, drug, hardware, beauty and barber shop complex along with a service station.
Engineers had advised that a dam might have to be built to channel water away from the area.
The planning consultant and engineers were asked for reports on arequest for a local business development around a gas station at the southeast corner of John R and Auburn.
David Austin Wright bought the farm, then comprising 80 acres, Jan. 24, 1843 for $4.16. He built the house file followings year.
Wright held various county offices and served in both the State House and Senate.
The site is on an old Saginaw Indian trail. At one time it was an overnight stop for the stage coaches.
Rothermel bought 1214 acres including the 11-room house for an undisclosed amount.
Manager of service and parts, Chrysler Marine and Industrial Products Operation, International, Rothermel is former owner of the Lakeshore Apartments, 10003 Dixie.
LANSING (UPI) - The State.Board of Medicine reported yesterday it will not consider revoking the license. of Dr. Ronald E. Clark of Farmington Township until his manslaughter case clears the courts.
Clark, 57, Was convicted in Oakland County Circuit Court last month of causing the death of Mrs. Grace Neil, 43, Livonia, by administering an overdose of sodium pentothal — the so-called “truth serum.”'
Also proposed was a 55-acre apartment complex on Parkdale adjoining the Scherer Co. property. The proposals were referred to planning consultants.
A consultant report recommending the limiting of commercial development along Auburn between Rochester Road and Hickory Lawn caused a delay in action on the request of four property owners in the area.
Brandon Wallaceites Will Meet on Saturday
ORTONVILLE — The Brandon Township Wallace for P res i d e n t, American Independent party, will meet at 8 p.m. Saturday at party headquarters, 380 Mill.
State Vice Chairman James Hall of Warren will speak, according to Guy Fosfer,16cal chairman. ~
W. Bloomfield Sets Rules
A motion for a new trial was to be heard by Judge William Beer at 2 p.m. today in Mason. If that is turned down, Clark can carry the case to the State Court of Appeals and eventually, the Michigan Supreme Court.
Charles Holton, an investigator for the board of medicine, said the state can take no action with regard to Clark’s medical license until he has exhausted all avenues of appeal.
for Garbage, Trash Pickup
ORION TOWNSHIP - Harold Wrightr 3790 Hi-Villa, a charter member of the township planning commission, has been named chairman following the resignation of Richard Beer.
Beer resigned earlier this summer because \of job and school responsibilities. \
“We must wait .until the conv(ction is final,” Holton said.
Clark is believed the firsl physiciaiT ever convicted of manslaughter in the United States for causing a death by sodium pentothal.
He said he was treating Mrs. Neil; who - had been his office assistant for several years, with the drug for obesity, high blood pressure and emotional problems.
WEST BLOOMFIELD T6WNSHIP — -The future theme song of West Bloomfield garbage collectors may be “Never on Sunday.” Hie township board last night approved an ordinance to regulate the business of garbage and rubbish collection within the township.
The ordinance gives the board power to Issue licenses to private agencies to operate in. the township- after applications have been properly submitted and investigated.
The collection agency will be required to pay a license fee of $25 for each vehi-
U mill um 1m 4La IfMMMokSn T irtoneAB
pickups shall be made between 10 p.m. and 6 a.m.	/
The board also decided to vote on proposed police appeal board procedures at a special meeting next Monday.
Final plat for the proposed Bloomfield Meadows subdivision at Walnut Lake and Farmington Roads, being developed hy Merrill and Bauer Developers, was approved.
The approval is subject to a letter from the Oakland County Road Commission for acceptance of roads and drainage in the subdivision.
In other business tost night the com-Tnisstoir set~t)cr 2P»- theT^ public hearing on the request of Clinton Lippard JrTto build a furniture store at 4653 Baldwin.
A request for a Martin OiLCo. service station at Glanworth Road and M24 was denied by the commission. \
Under terms of the new ordinance, 40,000 square feet are required for a Service station. The proposed site qon-tains only 28,710 square feet.
The plat for Morgan Lake Estates along Rohr Road was approved. The all facing Rohr Road. Individual septic developer will build less than 10 homes tanks and wells were approved.
Carrier JFK Ready
cle it will use in the township. Licenses will be subject to renewal after the annual expiration date of Dec. 31.
WASHINGTGN fUPf) '•“■The widow and lone surviving brother of President John F. Kennedy will head the family delegation at commissioning ceremonies of -an aircraft carrier bearing his name Saturday at Newport News, V* *.
The ordinance provides that the vehicles <an t dFiva > through any street in the township eftv^undays otr official holidays;
Also, barring emergency situations, no
OTHER PLATS
Final plat approval was also granted for Pine Hitt Village No. One south of Lone Pine Road and west of Middlebelt, and Bloomfield Polo Estates subdivision onWlUowweBtofJfiliar.—
The board tabled a proposed amend-ment to the zoning ordinance providing for low-density multiple dwelling construction until itis next regular meeting, Sept. 16.
New Firms Buy Farmington Twp* Sites

Industrial Park Takes Shape
FARMINGTON TOWNSHIP — The Farmington Freeway Industrial Park is beginning to take shape as new firms move into a 250-acre site located near Halstead and 10 Mile. The park is being developed by the Thompson-Brown Co.
The 3M Compnay, a manufacturer eL’ products for business -and home such as Scotch tape and other adhesives, has recently announced the purchase of 8.6 acres in the industrial pkrk.
dustrial sites, an -elaborate service center to house a 24-hour medical clinic, a bank and additional service facilities wfil be built.	• ; ..
He said plans have recently been ap^ proved by the Holiday Inn Inc. to purchase and begin building on a 5-acre site. Plans will be finalized next month ha said. *
The industrial comnumity will contain Detroit water and sewers, paved concrete roads and is expected to <play a
major role in increasing Farmington
Township’s tax base, Bowman said.
A helicopter landing pad has been constructed and will provide direct service to and from airports, he added.
The Rev. Dr. Paul Vanaman, Dixie Baptist Church, is school admin strator.
The company plans to build a 58,005-square-foot sales office and warehouse to serve the Detroit area.	•„
William Bowman, Thompeon-Brown executive vice president, said 38, Industrial sites ranging from one to 10 . acres will be developed in two sections.
106 ACRES SOLD	...■	■:
A 106-acrp section has been completely sold, and the firm is now selling land hi a 124-acre section, Bowman said.
Some of the firms have completed construction and are now in operation including Diamond Automation.; ’ Futurmill Inc.; Moore I n d Os t rl« s ; Boendi Inc.; Omni Spectra; Eaton, Yale and Towne; Gancia Cote; and Jensen foe.
Bowman said, in addition to the 38 in-
OK Recommended
THE PQyTfAC PRESai THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
appr
2 Jailed in Detroit Riot Suing: for Damages
j DETROIT (II-Two brothers, j arrested as suspected snipers * during the early moments of .Mast year’s Detroit riot, have ; filed suit seeking $750,000 from the city of Detroit and twe-pa-! trolmen on charges of false ; arrest.
), O.B. Morrison, 24, and Y.A, ' Morrison, $8, both Of Detroit, ' filed the suit Tuesday in Wayne
County Circuit Court, ,
They were arrested in their automobile near downtown Detroit duly 24, 1067, after shots allegedly had been 'fired at police .officers standing outside the Fifth Precinct police station.
Patrolmen Lee Brown and Steven Wagner chased the Morrison car and fired one shot that
hit the auto. The 'two brothers were ordered out of the car, and the officers said they found a gun lying on the grass a few feet from the vehicle.
The brothers were charged with assault with intern to 'murder.
O.B. Morrison, who has since moved, to Dorchester, Mass, was kept in Jail for nearly nine
months. His brother spent 30 days in jail, Both were jailed after failing to post bond.
ist February . the Wayne County Prosecutor’s Office mpved to have the charges againdt both then dismissed because there were no witnesses, and the gun that was found reportedly belonged to someone else.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS
48 West Huron Street	Pontiac, Michigan 4B056
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
Moni* a.
ohilmiB
*£■»
JES&1

■ m. fmiiiiit
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Need Adequate Security for ‘Accused’
Recently, Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jbrome Bronson issued a report urging that a maximum security ward be established at Pontiac State Hospital for accused criminals undergoing psychiatric treatment.
His report revealed that five of 12 patients admitted to the hospital since January after having been charged with a felony have walked away from the hospital.
Bronson suggested that such patients should not be directed to PontiacState Hospital unless security measures are established immediately.
This suggests, and wisely, that the whole problem is not merely a case of inadequate management of the local State hospital.
It implies, rather, that Pontiac State Hospital is but a link in a vast system which leaves a considerable amount to be desired in regard to public safety.
After all, it is the State which ad* ministers our State hospitals and it ip the State which decides who shall be placed in them.
Which brings us to the logical question: Just what ore accused criminals doing ft an “open” hospital like Pontiac State Hospital?
Are these, perhaps, the forgotten people in our society? We have jails for Criminals and the accused awaiting trial. We have hospitals for treatment of the mentally ill.
What about accused criminals | who are judged to be in need of psychiatric treatment? Their place is neither in a jail; nor an “open” hospital where there Is a general lack of prison-type security as part of a carefully planned environment designed to aid toe treatment of patients.
One logical conclusion is that this state needs more mental health facilities where there is adequate security —without decreasing the facilities already operating for the mentally ill who have no criminal tendencies.
The only other conclusion is that those State officials who decide to commit accused criminals to Pontiac State Hospital are making some bad decisions.
—We cannot take the risk of offering an open door to the mentally ill accused criminal,'At the same time, we cannot put him in a jail cell and expect him to get better.
We suggest toe State “direct” those accused criminals elsewhere, to ta* i 1 i tie s properly equipped to handle them.-----
David Lawrence Says:
Latin Crises Seen in Wake of U.S. Aid Cutback
Returning from a visit to five South American countries, Galo Plaza, secretary general of the Organization of Am e r i c a n States, recently reported a “crisis of confidence” in that continent.
“There are signs,” he warned, “that the people of Latin America who have looked to the Alliance (for Progress) are beginning to despair. Youth is growing restless and impatient at the growing gap between the have and the have-not nations
SSI | Jgpjg
★ .. ★ ★
Even as Plaza spoke, Congress was pairing the fiscal 1969 foreign aid appropriation to a bare-bones figure. Latin America’s share has been cut below the sums originally promised
when the Alliance was created by President Kennedy.
The Alliance for Progress, like all foreign aid programs, is based on the assumption that mOney, wisely spent, will erase the social injustices and industrial backwardness on which the cancer of communism feeds. It is preventive medicine, designed to obviate the necessity for much more costly and dangerous operations in the future.
It is worthy of some kind of comment that at the same time as we are spending $30 billion a year on just such a major, and some say hopeless, operation in little Vietnam, we are prescribing less than $1.5 billion in preventive aid for all of South America.
Don’t Let Grid Entry Die on Vine
Speaking of The Press Annual Football Contest (as almost everyone is) that rewards . the winner with a $500 U.S. Savings Bond, we’d be interested to know how many entries have died unsent because of that common human frailty called procrastination.
Certain it is, however, that if all such abortive entries (perhaps winners) of all the grid contests thus, far run were heaped, - jpiy*d. heap nothing hut coals of remorse "ihrthti heads of the dilatory: — - • r
CARDS WITH ATTACHED ENTRIES) and addressed to: THE PONTIAC PRESS FOOT-BALL CONTEST, P.O. Box 777, Pontiac, Michigan.
4.	The contestant who, starting with the first game, correctly predicts without a miss the outcomes of the most games will be
. awarded a $500 U S. Savings Bond.
5.	If in the final stage of contest the few
the same outcome of a game, this game will be scratched and the contest advanced to the following game.
6.	Contest deadline is Friday noon, Sept. 13, and entries must be on hand at The Press by that time. Those arriving later, even though postmarked prior, will not be considered.
7.	Judges’ decisions on all questions relating to contest will be final.
Well, so much for the moralizing. But if you are as go-go as we think you are^ you’ll lose no further time in picking the results Of the 16-game contest schedule, duly noting your deliberations on the form below ’(or facsimile) and dispatching it posthaste. (You can’t hardly dispatch anything faster than that.)
As Confucius said: “Football contest entry like banting love letter. Both get nowhere If not sent when hot.”
Look over toe rales, however, before letting go of your entry-rjast to see that one of the alert contest Judges doesn’t blow the
□	Tennessee Q Oklahoma
□	Maryland
Sept. 14
• VS.
Sept. 21 vs.
Sept. 28
Oct. 5
n Pontiac Firebirds ’ Qct 12
□ Michigan
And id case you need a bit of sage counsel In making your picks, you couldn’t do better Ilian to pore over the sports pages of The Press for tiie pre-season prospects of the Nation’s grid teams.
VouTl hear from us again on Tuesday.
CONTEST RULES
1. Every wm, woman and child is eligible to enter contest (except Press employes and dose relatives) but are limited to one entry •■ch. All members of families may partici-pate, subject to the same limitation.
X To enter, you simply check your prediction of too winner of each of the 16 games talow (to indicate a tie, leave both boxes blank), sign entry form or facsimile, and dispatch
X Entries may be deposited In He Press’ Hmwn Street draw box or mailed. If mailed, filRtoatt be enclosed in envelopes (THE
powr office will not accept postal
□	Texas 0 Auburn
□	Washington . □ Waterford
□	Princeton
□	Det. Lions
□	'Pont,. Central
□	Colorado
□	UCLA
0 Det. Lions O Army
Name .......
Address ....
city.......ft
Georgia □ Notre Dame Syracuse □ Dayton □ Michigan 8tate Q Arkansas 0 Miami Q California 0 Kettering 0 Harvard 0 Balt Colts 0
Nov. 15
vs. Pont. Northern 0 Nov. 16
—vs.	' Nebraska Q
Nov. 23
vti. ’ Southern CaL.Q Nov, 28
vs. I Phil. Eagles 0
Oct. 19 vs.
Oct 26 vs.
Nov. 2 vs.
Nov. 8 vs.
Nov. 9
W.
Nov. 10
WASHINGTON - Why has President Johnson’s “popularity’ slipped to a low point of 35 per cent? The latest Gallup Poll reveals that, while 13 per cent express no opinion, 52 per cent “disapproved” of his adminis-tration. This, the pollsters say, is closely related to the I war in Viet nam.	. [
Mr.	John- LAWRENCE
son’s decline in the poll is due to the failure of his administration to make crystal clear that the true enemies of the United States in the Vietnam war are the Soviet Union and Red China as well as North Vietnam- Without the aid to North Vietnam of its two Communist allies, America’s forces would long ago have been able to win a decisive victory over the aggressors.
* it *
The Moscow government has supplied billions o f dollars’ worth of. airplanes, arms and munitions, and has also sent officers to train the pilots and ground armies of North Vietnam.
Meanwhile, the United Nations has remained silent, and the American people as a whole have not been given by-their government the facte about Soviet participation in the Vietnam war.
ONE SIDE
They have heard only one side of the story — namely,
getting results and that North Vietnam, though a small country,, has managed to maintain a strong hold on a substantial portion of South Vietnam and to conduct guerrilla warfare effectively throughout that country.
The Vietnam war is, of course, unpopular in the sense that every war has been. But the position of the United States in striving to protect ail the nations of Southeast Asia against aggression has never been convincingly ex-plained to peoples everywhere.
: ★ ★ *
It has been assumed that the holding of “peace talks" in Paris might lead to an armistice agreement. Both Moscow and Peking, however, are instructing the North Vietnamese envoys in Paris to prolong the negotiations,
Abo, the United States, having restricted its bombing
Voice of the People:	.	A
Mayor Daley Is Praised by Publisher in NashviUe
Reproduced herewith is a copy of a letter sent to Mayor Richard J. Daley of Chicago. It was Written by Publisher James G. Stahlman of The NashvUld Banner:	*
“While I am not in agreement with your politics, I admire your guts and commend your forthright action in protecting not only those who attended the Democratic National Convention, but also the fair name of one of the groat cities of the worldT You put your finger very property and forthrightly on the deviltry and the danger of television.	*
★	★ It . t	g|jf-
“My concept of law and order has no relationship with racism. Unless toe people of this country come to respect the law and preserve order* this republic of ours is doomed.
“Again my congratulations for a job courageously and extremely well done.”
— JAMES G. STAHLMAN ,	NASHVILLE, TENNESSEE
Democratic Convention Prompts Opinions
From watching the Democratic convention on television, I’ve discovered wny our country is in the mess it’s in. These grown men who are supposed to represent us in electing a presidential candidate act worse than my four-year-old son. We can’t expect any change in our country until we get some different people up front where it counts.
MRS. M.K.S.
The Michigan Democratic machinery, under the domination of organized labor, claims it can carry the State in November. How do Democrats expect to do this with toe loss of the old and toe annihilation of the new? The convention proved our suspicions" that the reins were in the hands of some power-hungry individuate. We now wonder if they have merged
s-r -	* SttnaKSs
There'll Be A Few Pieces Missing!
LBJ Fails to Indict True Foes
Certainly while the presidential campaign is going on in thin country, it is unlikely that the North Vietnamese will agree to any settlement.
' The Soviets and the Red
here that nothing can possibly be accomplished at the Parte parleys until after our election is over and the presidentelect announces what his policies are to be.
PUbMiMn-HMI Syndic*It)
those we condemn.
A LOST DEMOCRAT FAMILY
Fpr 35 years I’ve voted Democratic, and at toe end of another selection for a presidential leader I feel sick at heart and body. What I saw in front of that downtown Chicago hotel only pats in my mind “what a boom year for either George Wallace or Richard Nixon.
-	ONCE A DEMOCRAT
Recently, “Ghlcago was inundated by countless Socks of birds which apparently congregated to fight out a new pecking order, leaving the city littered with feathers and droppings. It was interesting to note that hawks generally built bfeavy permanent nests utilizing toe acrid remains of their victims;
era	I I TkT I n____________________ however, the doves hastily constructed flimsy platforms which
nhaCiaiL OUt i\Or HUntS lacked organlccement and support. While the entire rookery UUU ?	was busy a lone capitolbyrd sneaked in and laid its pink and
M,uki» ticket white eggs in the nests of the hubirds and the muskbirds, who K£^5?V12 -ill umrittlngly try to hatch <md ^	MerU.
Bob Considine Says:'
Chicag o Demonstrators
CONSIDINE
NE W YORK — It was a shock to return to New York from Chicago and hear the' first person I met say,
“Boy., those cops in Chicago certainly made a mis-take, They should have beaten up those bums much more than they did.”
Hie TV' networks and a lot of us who wrote pieces from there did not think of them as bums. We thought generally of them as poor, innocent blokes honestly interested in furtiiering the peace cause.
Sure, some of them needed a haircut' and a bath, but they didn’t deserve to be pushed around as much as they were by bigger, l^ller, armed cops and National Guardsmen. Nor did the innocent bystanders. _	____
“A bunch of out-of • towners!” Mayor Dick Daley stormed, and a lot of us regarded his estimate a| so much hogwash.
TWO SIDES
Well, there are two sides of every coin. '
' Last Thursday night as I left Chicago, after Hubert Humphrey’s a cce p t a n ee speech, the terminal at O’Hare seemed filled with the . same tattered young |»ople I had seen in Grant Park, outside of the Conrad Hilton Hotel, and on the edges of toe International Amphitheater.
ditional thought?
“This Democratic convention marks the end, or, at least, nearly the end of the whole convention system,” he said. “We just cannot have spectacles of that nature being sent through the country — to be viewed by youngsters just becoming aware of politics — and by the peoples overseas..
1	. it ' it it
“Eventually we must , have a national primary for the Republicans and one for the Democrats, and thus direct-election of the president and his running mate. We’ve got to get rid of. toe Electoral College, too. It’s an insult to the intelligence of this literate natjon.”
Hear! Hear!
fledglings for another eight years. After November, do we pay taxes in birdseed or pesticide?
RONALD H. ROSE 2901 W. 32 MILE, ROMEO
After being at toe Democratic Convention in Chicago, I am proud to be called an American. The people at the Convention were fine Americans, truly interested in America’s future.
MRS. R. G. BISHOP 527 E. PIKE
Question and Answer
How many children do toe Lennon Sisters have?
_______________RWOIILAR READER ___________
REPLY
Peggy ‘Lennon Catheart has'four, Dixamehen-non Gass three, Janet Lennon Bernhardi has- one and is expecting the second, and, Kathy Lennon Clark has none.
triWashtngtonr
Nation’s Economy Heads Agenda
By RAY CROMLEY . The campaign issues are Vietnam, crime and riots. But the next president of the United States, on moving into the White House next ■January, may find his first days in office preempted by I rising unem- ,
They were buying tickets to ploy men t, all points- of the compass.	a
SsiiS'SS asss-s-L?*
New York, and none had any
growing busi- CROMLEY ness sluggishness and i
Navy Cf
No one is certain about the automobile market. But 1968 was an extraordinarily good year. As one economist notes, it’s difficult to see two such good years in a row. -
H it it
Exports appear headed for a downturn. High U.S. prices and growing foreign competition are expected to give the U.S. exporter a murky time. The prospect is for the import of more foreign goods. These trends will bring added pressure on the U.S. balance of payments.
Despite the anticipated business slowdown, r la log costs are expected to keep pushing prices upward. Hite likely will .fores consumers to buy less.
k..'™. wi.	H* omer in me past, are in name	*
said on the plane that be was agreemeni on ^ outloot Some economists now think toe sonof a teadbtaoffidal of The way it looks now J# that the 10 per cent surtax will npk Ex- unemployment wiil rise from bite more deeply into the American Stock Ex- a^J[eat ,7	to	p^er than had
around 4.5 million next year, been predicted. They’re The demand for steel te ex- especially worried because a pected to"Tie down in . toe considerable amount of toe1 months ahead. Steel, users new taxes will likely be built inventories l n an- at the deadline next spring to ticipation of a steel strike make up for taxes not coL which did not come off. Jected by withholding, That HwyTI’now have to work off these surplus stocks: Tito slackness in demand te expected to spread to the rest of the economy.
The forecast tor housing and Other building doesn’t look good. ,
apparent trouble paying for a ticket One boy’s shirt was
rapidly rising living costs.
A number of leading Washington economists, who have not always agreed with each
change,
fo toe north, has relieved toe badly tom, tat hte ^g adversary of most of the hy -»• n*nf,w «■<*** He strain Within its own borders and has permitted the in-
VerbrlCrchids
Mr. aad Mrs. Dayhne Hiker ofChelsea, formerly of Pontiac;
52nd wedding anniversary.
Mr. and Mrs. Jobs Holdort of Rochester;
54th wedding anniversary.
Mi*. Grace Richardson.
[	of Algonac,
formerly of Pontiac;
88th birthday.
Sen. Jacob Javita, R-N.Y., joined the many Republicans Who watchedthe TVaccounts of the Democratic convention. Like the others, from Did; Nixon and Ted Agnew down, he thougit the hue and cry of the conclave , did irreparable harm to the chances of Hubert Humphrey and his running mfte.
They may or may not be right, depending on bow weB
penditures will mean that much less demand in the market — if carried out
But if there’s a consensus on what’s likely to happen to early 1989, there’s * great deal of argument on What should be done, - J
it	/
There te considerable feeling that the next president wtii be forced to drop the budget cuts. But some economists believe the 19 per cent surtax should be renewed at least another year; others favor dropping toe lax rather quickly.
Some would have the Federal ltSSlrve Board lower its rediscount rate significantly to stimulate the building market; others oppose. Some argue tor expanded gov e r n iq* a t programs; others say no.
But bonc’of toe candidates is in a position to influence the situation to advance of taktog office.
could mfaice consumer purchases - further at an already “dqw” period.
Social Security tain will go up appreciably next year, towwtog more , money out of toe economy. The projected ft bOlhn cut to government ex-
THK PONTIAC FRE3& THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1968
Social Science Role Attacked
Government Altianc® Spawns a Key Report
scientists have worked closely with government agencies, and had a strong impact on federal programs.
The war on poverty, for example, was virtually created by sociologists, as were the guidelines fb^ the earlier Social Security programs.
, 1116 latest production of this historic alliance is doe for release in December — a report
blend between- aodn} science and public policy—much to the disgust and dismay of a new breed of young sociologists who are urging their elders to break with the establishment and form again an effective opposition. EFFECT OF ALLIANCE
1?iey argue thajt the alliance |f between sociologists ana offi-i cialdom, once held to be a stimulus for social change, now; impedes soda} change and aids a system that oppresses th£f poor.’
Both the old alliance and thei wrath of young sociologists are much ixr evidence at the American Sociological Association’s
Secretary Wilbur Cohen of the Department of Health, Education and Welfare appeared to
discuss gaps between knowledge and socialpolicy. -He said the nation needs to develop a breed of statistics called social indicators.
The social report how being, drafted for HEW by sociologists! is expected to serve as a trial run for this kind of social ac-| counting, modeled after economic accounting which has helped to guide economic policy over' the past 20 years.
TWO OTNSfiQUENCES
It will pull together whatever | such as race, education, hous-: facts are available in areas ing, family life, morbidity,1 health and political participav tion. The report may have two consequences:.
•	Establishment of a council of Social advisors to guide the President as his council of eco-l nomic advisors now does.
•	Collection of new statistics on U.S. social life; census data now cover only rudimentary facts such as employment and income levels.
find such reasoning distasteful. About SO of them, mostly graduate students, turned up at the Boston sessions to protest Secretary Cohen’s appearance at the "meeting and its suggestion of a continuing coalition between sociologists and government.
Sociologists are taking infor-
-the poor; and ghrteg'frtotfteTttt-f ing class, says Mutin 'Nicolaus,1 who followed Secretary Cohen into the rostrum to present views of the rebel group, called the Sociology liberation Movement.
SPEW*
The ability to play a mutt-cal iiutrument can open a whole new exciting life for
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER S, 1968
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American made bqsketball shoes, hi or low cut style with non-skid soles and arch type support and cushioned inner-sole. And they come in sizes to fit youths 10 to 2, boys' sizes 216 to 6 and men's sizes 6V2 to 12. At this low price you can buy several pairs for each mqn in your family. —Basement
tejjull Denim Jeans
KODEL Polyester & Cotton Permanent Press
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Famous Endicott Johnson quality in bock-to-school styles for boys and girls. Boys' styles include tie oxfords or k>pfers, and girls' styles include straps, oxfords and slip-ons. Sizes 816/to 1316 and 1 to 3.
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clude bias-cut plaid A-line, belted slim line skirt, four-pleat A-line, proportioned A-line and others in solid-colors, tweeds and plaids. Sizes 8 to 18, but not in all styles. — Main Floor
Permanent Pressed, Washable
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Choke of black or brown 3-eyelet point*, moc toe 4-eye-let ties, stitched vamp loafers, or elastic gore loafers In' sizes 316 to 6. —Basement
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Smartly styled dresses for going back to school. Permanent pressed. Mom, to sows you more work. Styles include A-line, popular jumper look with corduroy skirt and contrasting top and many others. —Main Floor
‘Mr. Leggs’ Fast Back Jeans
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
4-flit. ‘MIRRO’ Pressure Cooker
SALE 'GENERAL ELECTRIC'
Electric Alarm Clocks
GE Hoorn Mate’ Aii
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1 WAHL Super 89 1AQQ
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#7223 GE. Hoorn Mate electric alarm with sweep hand, white case and factory guarantee.
WAHL Senior
#7253K GE Little Snooz with lighted dial Snook . alarm for extra 10 minutes sleep, beige case.
Model SSA Sunbeam electric iron ' sprays wrinkle-chasing mist on any setting. Push-butfoh spray, wide range of fabric settings including wash and wear. GorcT interchanges for left or right hand ironing.
WAHL Royal
$32.50 list, taper cut 000-1, powerful smooth, 40 angle blade, adjustable cut.
# 7259K GE Snooz alarm with lighted dial, snooz and view alarm. Whitt case and factory, guarantee.
Teflon Coated PRESTO
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Electric Dog Clipper
GE ‘Decorette’
#72QK GE lighted dial, snooz alarm With view alarm, tells you when alarm is pulled - out. Sandalwood case.
Sundries—Main Floor
_Iha__deep~fryer that doubles as a Dutch oven, now with DuPont TEFLON surface. Cooks with or without fats or oils, Completely submersible for cleaning.
Appliances—2nd Floor
Excedrin Tabs
Listerine Antiseptic
Polident Cleanser Tabs
Congespirin
Cold Decongestant
Ban Deodorant
Moisturizer
$1.00 value 4-•I. Gillette «i#)t Guard i dedorant k forlhefam-
Thermostatic Controlled Room
Toastmaster Electric Heater
Close-Out of 6 Hide-A-Cord
Sunbeam Vacuum Cleaners
• Simms Price Just
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AIR KING Automatic Heater
Beautiful gold grill-front automatic heater. 1320,	;
watts, 120 volts. Model HFS. .	Jttl
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Heavy Duty Model OSTER Massager
Osier scientific junior model with suspended motor action massager
Hardened and tempered
Choice of models #776, #775 or #676 Sunbeam Courier. Hide-a-cord vacuum cleon-en with such feotmei os tnstde tool and Cord" storage. 3-year hose guarantee, super capacity, quick-change bags and 4-pc. tool kit for upholstery, etc, Get it on instant credit.
Appliances—2ndFloor
polished chrome
steel aockets and
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Heavy duty Oster massager.
$5000 list, heavy duty Swedish „type\ massage ffe with suspended motor action. Invigorating and re- ...
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tory guaranteed.
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Famous BLACK S DECKER
3/8-ln. Electric Drill
Simms Price
with Scented Oil
Built-In Tester FEDTR0
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The romantic light of oil In ait Early American style oil lamp
For sportsmen, workmen, etc Alladln's Stanley thermos with stainless steel case and lining. Guaranteed 5 years. .
Housewares — 2nd Floor
Mode! U-124. Double reduction gears allow you to power holes through any material. .Trigger switch, no time limit guarantee. Sure grip handle.
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Receives Color and Black ’n White
Rembrandt Indoor TV Antenna
REMINGTON Selectro 300
NORELCO Triple Header
SUNBEAM
6-Blade
9-Pc. Cookware Sets
Model SM7S 6 blade Sun- Norelco 35T with triple float-be'am electric shaver with 2	Ing head Ond rotary blades,
heads, and sideburh trim-	and sidebum trimmer. Qn/off
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Selectro dial adjusts 3 shaving heads id 5 positions for your skin and beard.. Easy cleaning, too. ;
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Out performs oil antennas.' Ideal for color, black and 'white and OHF ond VHF. T2-position control with silver can- -tacts instantly lacks in clearer snow-ftee picture. Quality construction with precision 4-section all brass dcm» assures longer life. 10-doy money back guarantee.	2nd Floor
Famous Holiday dub Aluminum
New color, new beauty, new sparkle for your kitchen. 9-pc. set Includes a 1- ond 2-qt. covered saucepans; 5-qt. covered dutch oven and 5- and 10-inch skillets. Choice of turquoise, avocado apd antique white.. Charge if with gny major credit card.
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THE PONTllc PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER S, 1068
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
A—li
fnner Cify Shoppers Pay More in Survey
<AP). r- An inner ell*., housewife shopping in a neighborhood chain store pays an average of about five pet cent twin for her groceries than similar shoppers in other areas of Detroit, a consumer surveyreveab.
Results of the survey, conducted A* a group named '"Focus: Summer Hope,” were reported Wednesday by the group’s codirector, the Rev. Wffljfam T. Cunningham.
upper income and suburban stores.
OTHER FINDINGS '
Other findingg reported by
•	The proportion of chain stores to population is far Jess in poor areas, as compared with more affluent areas, and they tend to be much smaller.
•	Drug stores in poor areas charge much more for pres-scriptions than their suburban counterparts.
•	Prescription prices vary within a chain.
•	Drug store commodities and prescriptions may vary in price by more than 100 per cent.
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The survey sought to deter-at 155 dnig 8tores in the city! mine whether poor persons pay and Suburbs, more for various goods, whether Father Cunningham said skin color affects service and recommendations based on the1 whether facilities and products 8Urvey include a massive edu-j are equal far inner city and cation program to inform the suburban shoppers.	poor about the survey’s find-:
TO PRESENT FINDINGS bigs; negotiations with major1 The survey findings were to chains to build new stores in be presented today. wltrfecflrm- certain poor m«as,-4th renovat^ mendations, to New Detroit existing stores and equipment, Inc., formerly known as thehire Negro personnel New Detroit Committee. especially in managerial posi-Tbe committee was organized ^ons? *nd the establishment of after last, year’s riots to aid in pharmacy coops in very poor rebuilding flot torn areas and areas* to prevent future similar occur- ®lso said Focus: Summer rences.	Hope plans to initiate a pro-
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
Dirksen Balks at Saying He'll Push Fortas Bid
f WASHINGTON (AP) - S«n-| * ate Republican Leader Everett { i M. Dirksen has reaffirmed his intention to vote for Abe Fortas,1 but stopped short of saying he! will actively push for Senate ap-l proval M President Johnson's!
nominee to be chief justice.
*' “Are you going to take an active part in fighting for confir-J mation?” Dirksen was asked Wednesday.
Hie Senate Judiciary Commit ) tee, where the Fortas nomination has been bottled bp, had been scheduled to meet on the matter.	,!
But Chairman James 0. East*I 'land, D-Miss., taking the oppor-| tunity to declare his suspected! opposition to Fortas for the first n time, put off the session iridefl-j
appear.
“Well, I’m going to vote fori him,” he said.
Dirksen commented as Con-! gress reconvened after a month-long recess and spent! most of the first day grumbling! over the electoral system, suggesting ways to change it but doing little of substance about anything.
All of the other members, op-j posed to Fortas’ nomination to| succeed Earl Warren "stayed! away as well as a few support-!
Tm aborted Judiciary meet-i ling and lack of significant accomplishments by Congress on its first day back were not] promising for a mid-October adjournment urged by leaders.
Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield said that if Congress didn’t get through the backlog —which includes the Fortas nomination, nncfearnonprollfer-ation treaty, gun controls, major appropriations, and extension of the farm program—it probably will have to recess and come back after the November elections.
House GOP Leader Gerald R.j president, and a re-examination I week in Chicago, Ford Said it Ford of Michigan called for abo- of the way national convention “was a pretty aad display of the lition of the electoral college, di- delegates are selected.	way to act at a convention and
rect popular election of the] Referring to the events lastlthe way to 'run one."
Whether by accident or de-| sign, absence, of the opposition seemed to indicate that its chief weapon—delaying tactics—gathered no rust during the August recess.

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The first day’s doings on Capitol Hill included a lot of criticism of the convention system of selecting national candidates, introduction of one bill to reform the system and promise of more to come.
The Senate debated an $18.5-billion money bill to finance the departments of Health, Education and Welfare, and Labor.
The House passed a bill to let employers contribute to trust funds for scholarships or child care centers for their employes, then talked about the Manpower Development and Training Act. SPECULATION
Dirksen’s comments on the Fortas appointment > followed speculation that the nominatioft of Richard M. Nixon as Republican presidential candidate would blunt some. GOP support for Fortas in the Senate,

REPORTS OPPOSITION — Chairman James Eastland (left), of the Senate Judiciary Committee tells reporters yesterday that he opposes President Johnson’s choice of Associate Justice Abe Fortas to become chief
justice of the Supreme Court. Eastland, D-Miss., reported that a quorum failed to show Up for a scheduled meeting of the Senate Judiciary Committee, where the Fortas nomination has been bottled up.
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Nixon has said the nomination of a chief justice should be left tp. the next President. His position is expected to influence some Republican senators who are interested in party' unity.
The opposition bloc, has threatened a filibuster and Dirksen told newsmen “it wouldn’t be easy” to shut one off.
Besides Eastland, only four members ' of the committee showed up.	*>
HART ABSENT
Eastland said his opposition to Fortas “goes to his general philosophy,” but he declined to elaborate.
Michigan Democrat Philip Hart, a strong Fortas backer, told Eastland he would be about 15 minutes late, but didn’t ar-l rive at all because he had to attend a session of the President’s! commission on violence.
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Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa., reaffirmed his support of Fortas.
Warren has retired frorp the! court contingent upon Senate, approval of a successor. The Judiciary committee has shelved! Johnson's nomination of Homer { Thornberry as an associate justice until Fortas is either confirmed or denied.
The bill reform the electoral system w&f introduced by Sen. Gaylord jvelson, D-Wis. It called for a federal commission to work out a new way of selecting presidential and vice presidential candidates by next Aug.
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LOVELAND, Colo. (AP) - A youth in custody after an auto chase escaped from two patrol-men in a cruiser. Wednesday morning hie showed qp atthrpoe4:' lice station after being free ov-j ernight. He told police it.Wasnltj; his conscience that wds hurting i. but the handcuffs he couldn’ti


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THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
A—18
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A—-14
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
es in Air-Ground Push to Keep Reds From Saigon
THURS., FRI., SAT.
OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUN., It To»
More than 2,000 American and ■ South Vietnamese infantrymen ■ launched a drive early today ■ into the Boi Loi Woods, 30 miles fl northwest of Saigon, where a I former enemy base camp has I beept leveled by bulldozers add I saturation bombing raids. First reports said there was no con- K tact with the enemy.	! p
Elements of two regiments! '* from the Vietcong 5th Division^:; are believed to have pushed into 8 the Boi Loi Woods during thej p past few weeks. The allies aim j J* to keep the enemy from using the woods as a staging area fori || attack on allied installations af and government towns along the p defensive lines leading into Sal- £: gon. These include the head-quarters of the U.S. 25th Infan-|p try Division at Cu Chi, about 10' fe miles to the south.	, !*:
Mil
Meanwhile, U.S. B52 bombers dropped tons of bombs on sus- $ pected positions of two North Vietnamese Tegiments reported g to have moved to within 38 p miles north of Saigon from jun- :£ gled hideouts along the Cambo- ;£ dian border near the district town of Loc Ninh. Earlier, the. {!•: B52s hit suspected stores of am-munition and rice' for these & troops.	p
The U.S. Command an-ip nounced that American combat p casualties last week were the j g: highest in the last three months. I The Command said 408 Ameri-1 » cans were killed in action and g; another 2,513 were wourided in p the second week of heavy fight- || inf after a two-month Ml in the j|: ground war.	p
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BATTLE FOB A HILLTOP - Special Forces commander Ben Ddvan (left) shouts orders during an assault op a^^rth Vietnamese-held hilltop outpost 325 miles north-
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THE PONtlAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
A^-15
OPEN DAILY 10*10; SUN., 11 to 6
THURS., FRI., SAT.
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A—10
■THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
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Mrs. Turner and Daughter Costar
By JANET ODELL ..
Women’s Editor, Hie Pontiac Press
Enthusiasm has always been one of Celia Merrill Turner’s attributes. Ibis enormously talented woman has a drive and verve that leaves some Of her admirers limp.
In town to produce and star in three performances of “Barefoot in the Park," at Will-O-Way Apprentice Theatre, Celia took time out Wednesday to discuss the performing arts in general.
For the past year, Celia and Ken Turner have been at Northwood Institute in West, Baden, Ind. where Celia has headed the college's new performing arts
FIto days a week saw her working with students in Indiana. Weekends she flew back to this area to direct activities In Will-O-Way’s Apprentice Theatre on West long Lake Road.
This coming year, she will add occasional trips to Northwood’s campus in Cedar Bill, Texas where a new performing arts program is being set up.
“The performing arts are needed to let every individual be himself. They train ond’s emotions and an education which includes the performing arts will help overcome life’s boredoms.’’ '
Celia nays that lor years she has believed this and tried to get it across. Now, educators all over the country are
beginning to come around to her point of view.' “From kindergarten through college,” she says. .
TO ADDRESS TEACHERS
She’s delighted that in October she will have an opportunity to address a state teacher’s convention — “for four houral” — and witt have a chance to tell and show them her philosophy.
A graduate Juilliard School of Music, Celia pomes from a family long interested in performing arts. Her mother, Teresa Way Merrill, taught drama students for years and was herself a capable actress. Most of tho Merrill children and a number of the grandchildren jvoriced in the theater and atilldo._____L
Longtime residents of the area will remember with" nostalgia when Will-O-Way Playhouse “pushed the apples out to let the bains in.’’.
. The playhouse on Long Lake Road, recently torn down, was used as an apple barn during the winter. In summer, it was the scene of a new stage play every week. Sonny Eliot often starred in the productions.
...But time has a habit of marching on
and changing things. No longer art there acres of apple trees surrounding the theatre and the stately old Merrill home. Now, it has apartments ami a new elementary school.
The oldest of the Turner children, Robin, who’s 20, has had a couple of years of, college and now works in an area bank. Last spring she attended Oakland University and intends to enroll again for the winter term.
Young Kenny is a senior in high school in West Baden. Candy, 12, is entering junior high; and five-year-old Tiny, who is a minute replica of Robin, will start kindergarten.
* V A
Life, as always, is hectic and exciting and interesting for this family.
They’re chalking up another first, starting tonight. Celia and Robin are starring in three performances of “Barefoot in the Park” by Nell Simon. It is the first time they have appeared on stage together in this area.
Celia brought two of her Northwood students with her to help stage the production. Gary Graham comes * from Converse, Ind., while Jon Tanner lives in Allen Park.
Performances will begin at 8:40 p.m.
Ed Vantfsrworp
"Hamming” ,it up for the cameraman are Robin Turner (left) and her mother, Celia Merrill Turner. The scene is for “Barefoot in the Park” by tfeil Simon to be presented tonight through Saturday in Will'O-Way Apprentice Theatre on West Long Lake Road. The occasion marks the first professional appearance of mother and, and a money-saver. daughter in this.area.
Writer Differs With Answer in This Column
By ELIZABETH L. POST
Dear Mrs. Post: Recently I read yqur column pertaining to visiting In hbmes.
It is difficult to understand the reasoning behind one of your don’tS” — whereby a house guest should not ask her Jiost and hostess out to a meal during the -visit.
I have committed this apparent faux pas many times — however, I must add that our host and hostess always ac-cepted with alacrity and apparently en-joyed an evening of leaving the responsibility of preparing and serving dinner behind them. There must be a reason for not asking them out — won’t you set me straight? — Virginia K.
★	★ dr
Dear Mrs. K.:< I received several letters expressing this opinion and I want to clarify my answer. In stating that a house guest should not, invite his host or hostess out to dinner, I was thinking only of a weekend visit.
In those cases, the hostess usually haV. each meal planned — Often prepared in \ advance, and an invitation to eat out might be embarrassing to her or awkward to refuse. When one is making a more extended 'visit, especially in a servantless home, an invitation to dine at a restaurant would surely be welcomed by the hostess, as both a work-
If There Isn't Any Remedy for It
You'll Just Learn
Sept. 16 Marks Sales Campaign of Meadow	Brook The
Mr. and Mrs. William Mitchell opened their home “Beaubois” in Bloomfield Hills Wednesday afternoon for a press cocktail party heralding the coming
USA Day for ACWW Highlighted by'Talks
BA$T LANSING (UP!) - ’Some MW American women joined with 2.500 delegates from 56 countries today for the Associated Country Women of the Werid’s ACWW U.S.-Bay program-et-Michigan State University.
Hie delegates are meeting for a 19-day conference for the first time at a land grant college and for the second time in the United , States since the association was formed in the 1920s.
■ *
Included in the U..S. Day program were speeches by Dr. John Hannah, MSU president, and Dr. Earl Bute, dean of Purdue University. Hie Great Lakes Navy Band and Koshare Indian dancers from Colorado also performed.
The ACWW, which aims at improving living conditions around tee world, has 6 million members.
season'of Meadow Brook Theatre.
The Mitchells, general chairmen of the theatre’s executive committee this year; have set Sept. 16 as (he official kick-off date for the most intensive volunteer season subscription sales campaign in the theatre’s history.
Since last spring Mrs. Mitchell and members of her committee have been enlisting the aid of community volunteers with an ultimate goal of 100 team , captains and 900 workers.
This year marks the first time that volunteers have been asked to sell season subscriptions for Oakland Univer-"xtty*s Meadow Brook Theatre:
SALES KITS
Team captains and their workers will assemble in the Meadow Brook Theatre at 1:30 p.m. on Sept. 16 to receive their sales kits and instructions from Mrs. Mitchell.
Chancellor D. B. Varner will welcome the volunteers and Mrs. Charles F. Adams will discuss the psychology of direct sales.
Meadow Brook Theatre director-actor for the 1968-69 season, Douglas Seale, will dramatize highlights of tee season’s seven plays and surprise gueri celebrities will be introduced.
By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I have a birthmark on my neck which I can do nothing about.
It used to be a strawberry red, but now ■it’s gotten brownish, but ■it’s just as noticeable, g I have used cosmetics ■to cover it, but powders Band creams come off on Imy clothing, so I finally ■said, “To heck with , Iteatl”
1 have been to all kinds ! doctors and they all ■say, “It cannot be re-ABBY moved,” and a skin graft woidd be too extensive, and % might leave scars which would be even worse.
I know you can’t help me, Abby, but if you print this, perhaps it will stop a few people from staring at me in wonderment, or coming right out and asking me the incredibly rude question, “Is your
BIRTHMARK CURSE~ DEAR BIRTHMARK: A good rule to
Females Protest Pageant Image
remember Is, “If there is no, remedy for it, learn to live with it." You can’t stop rude people from staring. Neither can you prevent teem from asking cruel and thoughtless questions, but you can avoid much embarrassment by coming right out yourself (when people stare) and saying, "No, my neck is not dirty . . . that’s a birthmark.”
*	#	j -
DEAR ABBY: I am a 24-year-old male who is getting married in September. My mother is going to have a baby in October. She is 44 years old, and is heartbroken about her condition because she’s a widow. She couldn’t believe it at first, but tee doctor said she is definitely pregnant.
*	*	*
Abby, I love my mother and I intend to stick by her regardless. My problem
is whether to tell my fiancee and her family about my mother. Is it really any of their business? AH they know is that my mother is a middle-agjed widow. 1 would appreciate your advice on this.
.	INDOUBT
DEAR IN: Your mother’s condition is nobody's business but hers. But a widow who plans to appear at her son’s wed-, ding in her eighth month, had better be prepared to answer a few questions. (Awl so should you.)
CONFIDENTIAL TO “HEADING UP OUR UNITED CRUSADE:” If you want to get a job done, give it to a successful business man. He’s sure to have a competent secretary. He’ll ask HER to do it.
Speaker's Topic Is 'Apple Cart'
Edgar A. Guest, III will be the guest speaker at a meeting of group I, North Woodward- Area Alumnae of Alpha Chi Omega on Sept. 10 at noon. Mrs. Palmer Bollinger of Nantucket Drive will host the event.
.The subject “All About ‘Apple Cart,’ ” revolves, around tee theatre' party planned by the group at Meadow'Brook Theatre in November. ,
Another highlight of this meeting will be national convention Teports by president and delegate, Mrs. Charles Andrews. 1
Mrs. Bernard Koether will be chairman of the day with assistance from Mrs. Margaret Baumgartner.
Group II will meet on Sept,. 11 at 8 p.m. at Matthews et al Boutique In Birmingham. Fall fashions will be modeled by members.
Mrs. Andrews is chairman of the day assisted by Mrs. Robert Agnow, Mrs. Donald Storck, Mrs. Robert Stoner and Mrs. David White.
If there was a round^nopy bed, we would have it!
In fact, no one has more kinds of beds ... specially for young people. Canopies. Trundled. Bunk beds and all the pieces that go with them. We're reasonable about the prices, too:
NEW YORK (AP) - “No more Miss America.”
That’s the rallying cry for a group of femidine activists who plan to picket tin Miss America pageant, in Atlantic City, N.J., Saturday. They say tee contest presents a phony, degrading and ludicrous image • of A m e r i c i n womanhood.	„
e ★	★
A mimeographed sheet put out by the anti-Miss America fortes says, “Miss America is a walking commercial..Wind •her up and she plugs your product.”
- The femmists also See tee beauty ^ queen as a “degrading, mindless girlie . symbol ... forced daily to compete for male approval,' enslaved J>y, lutlicro»x ‘beauty’ standards we ourselves are conditioned to take seriously."
GROOVY BUNCH
The protestors have no formal organization. Robin Morgan, 27, said Wednesday the girls were part of a “growing women’s underground—a women’s liberation movement.” She described tee protestors as “pretty much in their 20’*, * young and groovy bpneh.”
Asked to estimate the number of participants, she said, “It could be as high as 2,000 It could be as low as 100.”
Highlightof the demonstration will ha a “huge, freedom trash can” into which the girls will throw such items as bras, girdles, curlers and false eyelashes.
UNCOMFORTABLE «
-All these things, said Miss Morgan, are symbols of a false beauty standard. And, She added, “they’re bloody uncomfortable.”
Men, whether reactionary or liberal, arp not invited to the demonstration and the women say they won’t talk to male
"But,” the protestors add, “sympathetic men. can donate money.”
.. . money "---
% ;~A charming ssnoritd pom toe to braid* (even with that toothless
tomboy grin), Sonya Trevino, age 6, is admiringly eyed by epusin, §on for Reynoldses * Angela Contreras, 4, They’re modeling costumes for the annual fair	'
Sunday of the Ladies* Auxiliary to the Mexican Mutual Society. As custom, Mrs. Reynaldo Trevino of West Princeton Street will join her daughter in wearing authentic dress for the festivities at the club grounds from noon until 5 p.m. The affair, which is open to the pub-lie, trill conclude with dancing from 6-10 p.m. Angela is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jvdn Contreras of West Longfellow Street.
, Mr. end Mrs. Richard G. Reynolds of Jackson announce the birth $ept 4 of a son, James Alan. Grandparents are tee Gordon Reynoldses of minois Avenue, Mr." said Mrs. William Sasir of Grasse Isle and Mrs. Leon Belknap of East Iroquois Road.
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B—2
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Two Antique Shows Should Please Buffs
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American, English end Con-i The third largest^ antique tinental antiques, including show in the nation, the Detroit Antique Show, will be' held Sept. 11-15 in Detroit Light Guardi Armory. Houra are 1 to 11 p.m. I Wednesday through Saturday qnd 1 to 9 p.m., Sunday.
Food service on the premises I and adjacent free parking* will enable show visitors to "make a ddy of It”
Special features will include' free furniture reflnlshlhg *	*	*	seminars at 3 and 8 p.m: daily;
Sam Yeagleylof Annvflle, Pa., an<> a swap board for those and authority and dealer in an- who wish to list antique* they, tiques, is coordinator of the would like to trade, show again this year, as he has .	■ . *	*	*
been since its' b e g i n n i n g . Included in the exhibits will Several new dealers will be china, pattern glass, silver,j pewter, primitives, books,
TSSit1" dfafcf m,*** “SrSt
be obtained at the Community	Kb from a11 Parts
House during the show.	pf the world.
dolls, old prints, .furniture, china," glassware, silver, pewter and jewelry will be pn display at The Community House, Birmingham, Sept. 11-13 from 1 tb 10 p.m. and Sept 14 from 1 to 6 p.m. .	„
' This is the 18th annual Antique Show and Sale sponsored by Piety Hill Chapter, Daughters I of the American Revolution.
The Michael Myerses
Leave oil Honeymoon
protect your children’s
FOR PROJECTS
Proceeds are used by thel chapter for its educational, historical and patriotic projects, both local and national.
These include conservation; scholarships for school teachers, nursing scholarships for Michigan Indian g i rl s ; American flags for local schools, books for' the public library and others.
★ ★ ★
Committee members for this, year’s show, working under the leadership of Mrs. Frederick R., Seghers, chapter regent and cochairmen Mrs. Joel Watkins and Mrs. John W. Young, are: Mesdames John E. Nohren, Jr.; Paul McConkie, Elizabeth Scott, Robert Simpkins, James H. Hobin, Harry W. Cyphers and John E. Hauser.
Securer Buttbns |
You will And that four-eyed i buttons will stay on children's! clothing longer if the thread .is sewn through two eyes first and then fastened, before sewingj through the other two and, fastening.
Michael Thomas Stuart Myers | and bis bride, the former Janice Cheryl Manning, are honeymooning in northern Michigan following a reception in their honor Saturday at the Metropolitan .Club.
The daughter of Mrs. Ted Kieffer of Mauer Street and Dari Manning of Dixie Highway and the spn of Mr. and Mrs. Vergil J. Myers of Giddings Road, exchanged vows earlier that evening in Drayton Heights Free Methodist Church.
* * ★
Attended by maid of honor,
I Sheila McNutjt, the bride wore I an Empire goWn of peau de soie fashioned with a round funnel collar and bracelet sleeves in Alencori lace accents.
Petals of lace, frosted with seed pearls and crystals, secured her elbow length illusion veil and she held a cascading bouquet of Stephanotis and Phalaenopsis orchids.
I Bridesmaids Geraldine Huey, Debra Myers and Lori Manning] were escorted by ushers James; Myers, Michael Souden and! John Lemanski with Michael Bray performing best man hon-l
to the sh industry.
HACK'S expsrisnesd shot fitters don’t tvor have to substitute titji; they have the correct size available.
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The betrothal of Linda KayN Schmidt to Pvt.
To straighten out a crumpled Terry L. Eichbrecht, limp tape measure, put it USA, is announced by between two sheets of wax her parents Mr. and paper and then iron over the « p hr iiti an P Pciper With a moderately hot	j
iron. Your tape will be like new.] Schmidt of Almona — La fie, Independence Township. Pvt. Eichbrecht, son of. Mr. and Mrs. William Eichbrecht of Athens Street, is stationed in Vietnam. Summer ’69 vows are slated.
How are your bones? Are they showing? Believe it or not, this isn’t a column about overweight or underweight. Today I am really writing about bones, and not skeletons in. the closet, either.
★	*	*	.
Many folks do not realize that our boned begin to thin fairly early in life. Bone tissue is constantly being removed and then replaced with new cells.1 This id a gradual process which usually begins in women around the age of 33 and in men about the age of 45.	> ;
*	dr	♦
If the tissue removal is more rapid than tissue replacement, the resulting condition is called Osteoporosis.' probably more older men and wonien suffer from this than from some of the better-known chronic diseases.
Fragility of the bones can
Alice Kelly, Albert Cottell to I/vein Kalamazoo
lead to pain in the back. The bones break easily and sometimes even spontaneous fracture occurs. While the exact cause is not known, several factors are suspect. Since this condition is so prevalent in older years, it seems that we should adopt any preventative measures at our disposal.
Of course, disease may play a part ahd the lessening of the] sex hormones are suspect. This is one reason why some doctors {describe estrogen for women after rhenopause. Naturally, this is	a	question for	your:
physician to decide.
★	*	★
However,	there	are	some,
other	factors	which	wej
ourselves can control For instance, diet, is thought to have an important influence. Calcium! dificiency may be partly responsible. Do you get enough calcium in your diet? An adequate diet plus two glasses Of | milk daily would provide protection. If you are overweight or have a high* cholesterol blood level, skim milk or <powdered
All aluminum Chippendale chair illustrates' the many properties of the light metal. The chair was sand cast after original wooden chair was broken down into six parts. A mold of these parts was made. Aluminum was poured into the resulting mold and each of the six aluminum duplicates was reassembled. The aluminum was varnished to give the metal a long-lasting lustre.
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HEARING AID DEALER^
Newlyweds, the Albert Craig Cottells (nee Alice Qauye Kelly) will make Lheir home in Kalamazoo where he is a freshman at Western Michigan University, following a honeymoon trip to northern Michigan.
The daugter of Mrs. C. W. Ellis of Graper Drive and the late William A, Kelly and the son of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Cottell of Shawnee Lane were wed
Introducing
|
recently during an evening i ceremony in Our Lady of the] Lakes Catholic Church.
Attended by her sister, Mrs. James M. Elwer as matron of honor, the bride wore a day length ensemble of lace over satin with a ribboned satin bow securing an illusion veil.
She held white and gold orchids for her wedding bouquet.
Lee Ryden was best man with Michael Cottell and Joel Smith as ushers.. 1.
Prior to their honeymoon departure, the newlyweds were feted with a reception at the home of the bride’s mother and stepfather.
exciting sewing machine
4 A Towel Rack \ Is Space Saver	I
A handy place to keep baby's | extra blankets can be made by fastening a large size towel rack on the back of the nursery door.
This will hold the extra blanket? and they are always bandy land within reach. It is also a space savier.
fat-free milk is indicated.
Vitamin D is essential for proper utilization of calcium. Physical inactivity is also thought to contribute to Osteoporosis. This again highlights the importance of exercise.
The following is a good allround motion for fine health,' and it is easy to do.
*	*	*
Stand erect, toes pointing forward, arms hanging at sides.; Raise your left leg forward-j upward with a stiff knee and slap your left knee with yourj left hand. Return leg .and arm] to place. This, time do the, same I with your right leg and arm.-Continue, alternating. Keep the; trunk	errtet.	Do	not	lean
backward. After a while bend each knee"a»7bu‘step it. ~	;
★ -	*	*
If you would like my free] leaflet "combination Exercises” which ''HD
for your stomach and hips, send m p e dself-addressed I envelope with your request.! Address to Josephine Lowmanl in care of The Pontiac Press, I Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056.
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This colorful Oriental figure in beautiful Moistan ware has trOvelad a long distance across the was to coma to tire Detroit Fall Antique Show-Sola at the Light Guard Armory, Sept. 11-15, 1:00 to 11:00 p.m.
Ranked third largest in the nation, the Detroit Fail Antique Show willfeature two floors of exhibits, representing T50 dealers from 22 states. Highlights will be twice-daijy free seminars on furniture refinishing, a camera Contest, and a free '’swap board" as a special customer service- Fre* parking adjacent to armory. Show hours Ore from 1:00 to 11 ;00 p.m. daily, Wednesday through Saturday, September 11-14, and from 1OO . to 9.-00 p.m. the last day, Sunday, September 15.
Just step into our luxurious sheer bra-elip of dainty nykSnr tricot, trimmed laviously ‘ with lace in the cups and hemline. Lycra Spandex Pawernet in back, lace straps with elastic inserts. White,-or Lemon-white. 32* 36, A,B,G	Dft
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TOE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
B—-8
Senator's Wife Speaks for the Indians
WASHINGTON, D.<J. LaDonna Harris is unlgue ■raong U.S. Senate wives. The daughter of a Comanche Indian mother and an Irish father, she was raised by her Indian grimdparents in Oklahoma. As a result is Intensely aware of the factors responsible far poverty and disadvantage among the original native Americans.
Wife of the junior senator from Oklahoma, Fred H. Harris (a cochairman of the United Democrats for Humphrey,) Mrs. Harris is a fervent and dedicated worker on behalf of not only the American Indian but of all minorities and tin underprivileged. ' : #
: ■ * *: *. * h ' 1965, she founded Oklahomans for -Indian Opportunity and served for two years as its president. This unusual organization is successfully helping to draw Oklahoma Inmans more f uljy into the state’s .economy and culture. MANY AIDS
Student counselling, job finding and guidance, material and spiritual assistance t o relocating families, and specialized instruction are just . a few of the programs used in OIO’s efforts to help the sixty-
right tribes of Oklahoma Indians' escape from their prehistoric villages into -the mainstream of the Twentieth Century. *	7
The program has been so successful that OlO has in-stituted a'-new program, Project Peace Pipe, which is helping the Indians of South America and serving as a model other poverty prograins.
Sr Sr A
Her work in this area led to Mrs.. Harris’ appointment by
the President to the newly created National Indian Op: portunity Council on which she ndll serve with Indian representatives and members of the Cabinet bn der the chairmanship of the Vic President.
LA DONNA HARRIS
at SIBLEY'S Miracle Mile
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Also chairman of the Women’s National Advisor y Council on Poverty, Mrs. Harris is the only senator’s wife who has testified b a fo r e Congressional Committee. She has appeared more than once in support of the poverty and related programs.
HELPMATE LaDonna Harris has been her husband’s right-arm throughout his political career and even earlier. H i gjT s c h o o sweethearts, they were married at the end of his freshman year at the University of Oklahoma. * ★ * '
Her full-timi job with the university and his part-time printing job enabled him to
graduate and ultimately to earn V iew degree.
Senator Harria was elected to the Senate" in 1964 to fill the unexpired- term of Senator Robert S. Kerr, and two years later was re-elected to a regular six year term.
■ * * *
The Harrises live In McLean, Virginia, with their three children — Kathryn, 18, freshman at the University of Oklahoma; Byron, 11, and Laura, 7, All throe children are enrolled members of the Comanche Indian Tribe and Laura says, “We’re all Indians but Daddy."
' it *	+ r
Somehow. Mrs. Harris finds time to help cope with the overload In her husband’s office by serving as a worker without pay, to be a consultant to the Joint Commission on Mental Health of Children, and to appear on platforms all over the country as a speaker or panel member in behalf of her many organizational interests.
Thg engagement of their daughter, Deborah Ann, to Pvt. Joseph L. PorbeUi, U$A, is announced by her parents, Mr. and Mrs> David Hickey of Oakjiill Road, Groveland Township. Pvt. Porcelli, son of Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Porcelli of Redford, is stationed at Ft. Gordon,' Ga:
She's Only a Mother, Not a Valet
By BETTY CANARY	thusiasm, “I’ll attend If I have hands earnestly, "Ojh, boy>"
It takes eternal vigflance to to.” keep one’s attitude in line. And, | “It is required,” he said. I believe real enthusiasm isj “Did you get that
a necessary part of right attitude, my endeavors include trying to take an honest interest in what is at hand. Therefore, when I had to accompany my teen-age son to a meeting before his trip teNew Mexico, I really struggled to keep interested.
“All right,” I said with
writing?” I asked heartily.
'It won’t be so bad,” he assured me. “They will explain the map again, read the instructions again and then the parents can ask questions about how many pairs of socks and underwear we should take.” “Wow!” I said, clapping my
At the meeting other mothers made oopious and detailed lists i ni (things to go into overnight toothbrush, . soap, ' etc.) while I did the next week’s grocery list. The woman beside me peeked over my shoulder. ‘Oh, dear!” she said, “I didn’t get that 10 pounds potatoes’ and I wonder If I missed anything else!”
I explained in a whisper that wasn’t making a trip list.
A bright-hued school of fish performs aquatic acrobatics in mifi-air. the fish are felt; gaily embroidered in six-strand floss and padded with cotton. JSach dangles on a 'string from? 2 crisscrossed' dowel 'sticks. Instructionsi for making this marine mobile are free. Just send a self-addressed, stamped envelope to the Needlework' ■Editor, The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056, along with your request for Leaflet PE 4971.
“You must have a fantastic SM| memory,” she-said.
* 1 “No, but I do have a Son with a pen and paper.”
“The poor boy.” she. said, gazing at me, fascinated. “I knew there were parents such as you but I never bumped into1 one.”
'if I can trust him to find his j way to New Mexico,” I ex-| plained, ‘.‘I can trust him toi pack his own-toothbrush.” I R ★	★
Obviously,” she said coldly, 'you. are not interested in your | son’s welfare!”
‘No, no! You misunderstand! It’s the underwear and 1! toothbrush ....•"	• •
^MT~^wrofenmy-s5ainmme~lfrall I his clothing yesterday!” she HI | announced proudly.
“My Rick can write his OWN name,” I said, 'just as proudly.
After the meeting, which ended in a spirited discussion of how the boys should spend their souvenir money, I apologized to my son. “I don’t want to fail jyou, dear, but I just assume | you have some common sense.11 ! “It’s all right,” he said, patting my bowed head with a .comforting hand. “I realized j long ago that I Only had a mother — not a valet.”
Sea snajls move by means of almost invisible waves o f muscular movement which p along the length of the foot and cause it to move forward.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1068
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Haunt Tradition
Saigon Girls Adopt the Mini
By PETER ARNETT Associated' Press Writer SAIGON (AP) - Vietnam’s conservative elders are shocked, intellectual community i uproar.
Pespite the war, the rain and the weight of tradition, the “minijupe”—known most other places as the miniskirt—has ar-
The traditional dr.ess of the South Vietnamese girl is a gown slit at the sides xoith high collar and long sleeves, worn over silk trou-ten and called an “ao dai.“ It is worn by the girl in the center
photo, for more and more Vietnamese girls, however, tradition is fighting a. losing battle against modern fashion, as can be seen in the two accompanying photos.
Saigon has spawned a generation of teenyboppers who cavort on the rain-splashed city streets In mod attire. They add brilliant splashes of color to the drab, war-tinted thoroughfhres.
But most Vietnamese males don’t seem to approve. Expressing an Oriental distaste for exhibitionism, particularly when the AP wir«phot« prying eyes of foreigners
around one writer to a Saigon newspaper said: “These children, these flowers would wilt without their marijuana. They are obscene.” ~
Like many, others, he yearns for the continued use of the
ao dal, Vietnam’s traditional garb that girls strolled hi along the once-graceful French boulevards of Saigon and Hanoi. A long white or flowered silk skirt slit at each side revealed loose white silk trousers and met, at tiny waist, a bodice witl| a high collar and long sleeves.
Nowadays, the young Vietnamese girl may have thongs tied up her celvesrw tiny miniskirt hugged to her thighs with a low-slung leather belt, topped off by a tight sweater.
She will splash through the puddles on Tu Do St, tilting her heels at theOJ.S. military policemen inside wie barbed wire of Americpp billets, or giggling from a motorcycle as sbe roars past in traffic, the flash of a thigh visible.
The ao1 dil is still worn in Vietnam, particularly in the countryside, where even in the midst of' war~The village girls somehow manage to keep a white silk dress clean and
New Ideas Abound in Intriguing Craft of Decoupage
, you haven’t trie d decoupage yet, now’s the timeJ It may sound like a new kind of dance or a fancy dessert, but decoupage is just a big word for simple handicraft that has taken the fancy of millions of I women.
The word itself (phonetically prounced “day-coo-pahge”) is from the French and means the art of decorating surfaces with applied paper cutouts.
However, there’s more to it, than that. The cutout design and the surface to which it is] glued must be covered with!
coats of a special varnish. This ‘gives the item — which might be a decorative box, wall plaque, or piece of furniture — a distinctive finish that resembles lacquer.
‘Several years ago, do-it-yourself versions of this age-old craft sprang up with the “old board’’ school of art. Materials were found by s c a v e n g i n g lumber yards for odd pieces of wood suitable for making into wall plaques. Magazines and art periodicals yielded prints for pasted-on designs.
To make the wood look, even |
more antique and weatherbeaten, devotees burned it, hammered it, even sawed off the edges.
Today, arts and crafts shops offer unfinished wooden items for decoupage purposes.
And now, reports the National Cotton Council, there’s a rich new source for decoupage designs. Motifs cut from printed cotton doth, either decorator or piecegoods fabrics, provide imaginative cutouts. The fabric motifs give finished items a three-dimensional look and are
easier to Work with than paper, shop. Sand down the item and, cutouts. They also enable you to| if you like the weather-beaten coordinate decoupage items look, hammer dents in ij and
pressed. In Saigon, too, a girl in a miniskirt can be seen sometimes walking beside her elder sister wearing the traditional garment.
The teenyboppers sometimes have to bear the ribaldry of-Vietnamese soldiers on leave. ‘CMu choi?" they will shout at the girls. “Are you ready to play?” The girls, with a toss of their sometimes thigh length hair, flounce by.
Saigon newspapers have been taking notice oi the miniskirted girls and attribute the fashion to French fashion magazines available on the local market.
One newspaper said: “They' are our hippies, wearing dog chains, pensive before iheir black coffee cups, wreathed in the sheath of lassitude that mar-■ ijuana smoking brings.’’
A random survey of the miniskirts on an average Saigon street shows, however, that rather than being pot-smoking free lovers, the average Viet-namese teenybopper Is just trying to look like Brigitte Bai^ dot or Catherine Deneuve.
The traditional attitude to romance still survives. Daddy expects her home before curfew, and she is.
with the rest of the. room decor.
For fabric decoupage, choose a closely woven cotton print with large, clearly defined
bum the'edges. Stain with any wood stain you like until you get the shade desired .Or give tt an antique colored finish with spray paint. After paint dries,
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motifs. These could be MgP“te on fabric cutout with
flowers, country landscapes, circus animals, or Early American designs. To coordinate them with room decor, plan to make curtains, a tablecloth, or a bedspread with the same fabric.
Look for unfinished wooden liquid or spray form, items at an arts and crafts I lightly between coats.
white household glue!
When this is dry, give the entire item several Coats of special decoupage varni sh available at hardware and paint stores. You can get flat, semigloss, or high gloss varnish in Sand
Miss Rieth Sets November Date
Mr. and Mrs. Reginald C. Rieth of Duraham Drive announce the betrothal of their daughter, Regan Cheryl, to Robert Lyle Wakeman.
He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lyle Wakeman of Hamilton.
Hie bride elect, a student at * Spring Arbor College, and her fiance, who is a graduate of Hope (College, are planning to wed Nov. 9.
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A three dimensional effect is obr tained by using cotton cutouts for dprnupage item* Her*-n-Colimiat Soldier motif cut from a cotton decorator fabric adds interest to a wastebasket. The same fabric cqflN be used for curtain or bedspreads to coordinate the decor.
. An old school desk bought from a secondhand store comes to life mth cotton decoupage. driven an antique white finish, the desk is decorated with Alice in Wonder- ; land and Humpty-Dumpty charac- ■ ters cut from a cotton decorator print. The same fabric is used for\ draperies.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
B—5
Fete Couple at Reception in Rochester
A reception the Elks Lodge of Rochester followed the morning exchange of vows Saturday In St. Andrews Catholic Church uniting Martha Louise Tessmer and Joseph Henry Griggs.
The bridal gown chosen by the farmer Miss Tessmer was fashioned from silk organza with appliques of Chantilly lace on the skirt and chapel train which'fell from an Empire waist.
Clusters- of seed, pearls secured her three tiered illusion veil and she held a bouquet of lily of die vqlley and pink and white Sweetheart roses.
■ ★ *
Carol. Koch and Arth Griggs,' brother of the bridegroom, assisted the couple as honor attendants with Lynn Tony Archer as flower girl and ring bearer.
The newlyweds will make their home in Whitewater, Wis. where the bridegroom will join the faculty at Wisconsin State University.
Their parents are Mr. andj Mrs. Frank A. Tessmer of; School Road and Mr. and Mrs.J Henry Griggs of West Avon Circle, both in Avon Township.
Marbara L. Navarre was escorted to the altar of BCthany Baptist Church Saturday to become the bride of Gordon Thomas Winfield.
The daughter of the Richard A. Navarres of Lark Street and (he son of the Jack R. Winfields of Sherbourne Street were , feted
n rArtnniinn af thn HalflnnH
et a reception atr the 6akland Mrs. David Rogers and Terri County Sportsmen’s Club follow- ri“	1	•« k.,
ing the candlelight ceremony.
Late spring ’69 vows are planned by Diann Marie Rehbine and Don-aid B. Lewis. Parents of the' betrothed couple are Mr.' and Mrs. Cart F. Rehbine of Lunman Street and Mr. and Mrs, T. H. Lewis of Detroit.
Mr. and Mrs. Bert J. Bexell of Oxley Drive announce the engage-merit of their daughter, Claudette Af., to Lawrence E. Brown. The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard France of $t. Ignace. Late spring vows are slated.
Creams Are Minor Aids
Window Shades for Map Study |
Save storage space and make map studying more interesting for the children by pasting big maps on old window shades. They can be rolled up when not in use, taking up very little space.
.... w	——★------
When needed for homework, they can be unrolled and used.! This keeps them from getting I lost or misplaced, and prolongs: their life by keeping the sedges! from getting tom.	*	!
HILLSBOROUGH, Calif.-(UPI) — A woman searching for theTountaih of youth should stop looking for it in cosmetic jars and instead should take a greater interest in the world around her.
So says Betty Scripps, the beautiful and v i v a c i o u s newspaper columnist.
“Nothing ages a woman, faster than boredom,” says' Mrs. Scripps.
Mrs. Shipps believes a woman will do more toward staying young by involving! herSelf in stimulating or{ worthwhile activities and by1, exercising, eating and sleeping properly than she will be rely-] ing solely on expensive creams.
I “Once a woman passes the; age of 3Q, it’s almost mandatory that she have some interest, outside of the home if she wants to continue to look young,”;
Miss Navarre Is Wed
Her elbow veil of illusion was capped with a jewel-studded petal cluster and she carried bouquet of bridal roses. f	★
Ellen Hayman and. Douglas Winfield were honor attendants.
Bridesmaids Janice Able, Mrs. Donald Haring, Colleen Navarre
For the evening rite, the bride chose a gown of lace over satin with square neckline and wrist-pointed sleeves.
Set Classes for Parents
Deacon were escorted by Thomas Gsrretson, Rolf Haas-seth, Donald Haring and David Roemensky, ushers,
The first of a series of eight classes for expectant parents, offered by the Oakland County Health Department, will begin Monday evening, Sept. 16.
The free classes held Weekly from 7:30 to 9:30 p.m., will be offered at the Oakland County Health Center, on North . . I . Telegraph Road, whe her It’s a job, church ac- 8 £ registration may be
Francisco suburb.
“In the United States, there is too much advertising about creams, makeups and beauty preparations,” she added.
The classes are Taught by public health nurses and are cosponsored by the Oakland County Medical Society and various adult education departments throughout the county.
Topics include the mental health of the family unit, growth and development of the baby before and immediately after birth, labor and delivery and care and feeding of the infant.
' “Basically a woman, if she just uses soap and water and maybe a moisturizer, plus correct diet and sleep, would probably achieve more in the way of beautiful skin'.
‘‘You have to exercise, to be outdoors, eat the right foods; fresh fruits and vegetables and proteins. You have to watch this
[side of your life. You can’t just___________..	,	.1
be completely lax. ■	T Films and other audio-visual
You can’t say four jars of .aids are used to illustrate some cream is going to do it for me- of the topics and each class is You can’t Sit in the house and taken on a tour of a hospital, eat gooey stuff and think you’ll Gasses are limited to twenty-be beautiful.”	[six persons.
MRS. GORDONJT._ WINFIELD

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THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5. 1968
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Elders Grieve but Accept Separations
By MURIEL LAWRENCE DEAR MRS. LAWRENCE: My husband’s firm may soon transfer him away out west
ture when Joy Is removed fram:Virginla to find yourselves morel *«•	• 'profitable homesteads In the!
My . daughter wept, toe. But I|WM W1M West Now you take quit my weeping before she quit	_ i
iransier nun away out west C I mnitfrtarZra iT*	in airplanes in behalf of
where my mother won’t be abtejj*"- 1j,Ba,?sa" more profitable dividends fori to see us or our two small older American than she is. It- F	-	1
children. I have often heard her am aware that when more pro-
businesss corporations. So hip'
i aware inai wnen more pro- .	• ...	,, -.
say that she couldn’t bear such At Is at stake, my country
a separation.	families as efficiently as it am one) cry just so long over
Is there something wrong in split* atomsr	,
my affection for her that I know It’* been doing it for cen-,
I could'bear it? Or is her love turies. Years ago we said bye- m for me and the chtldrenbye to you kids so you couldj H neurotic? Is it clutching and too t®ke off in covered wagons fromi H possessive?	Kentucky, Magfechusetts and H
these traditional rembvals of Jour joy in your
1 Then we quit the crying. We 'quit it in proper reverence, for .the national god of progress.
So you just go right ahead! and Freudianlze your mother's resistance to "that insatiable god. Swing with the doctor, kid,I iwing
ANSWER: Dio mio, what Sigmund Freud (in cahoots with| ithe American god of progress) j has done to the human family! j No, we parents are not: “clutching” or “possessive” be-j cause we enjoy having you around. I, for example, who am neither of these things, wept buckets of tears two years ago when my daughter’s husband i was transferred to a distant city. I wept because I take joy in these two people. Being human like you, I don’t leap with rap-|
Tutors Needed in Area Schools
A genuine Interest in children j is the prime requirement fori jobs now being filled at the Oak-1 land County Volunteer Bureau in Birmingham. Teachers’ assistants are needed in area' schools to work on a one-to-one J basis with individual students, j [Professional training is not, necessary for tutors who will work with youngsters in cultural enrichment programs or in improving the skills necessary for their success.
★ ★ *
The job takes warmth and patience and just a little of your time. If you want to help a child to a better start, call the Oakland County Volunteer Bureau. .
; with him!
* *
1 But please give this column to. yoqr sweet, if antedeluvian,' mother who still lives in the] delusion that the family is an, important social unit. It is important. It has been unimportant for'so long that it’s time she knew it.
• *
Give the god another 50 years and you kids will be taking off for file moon in space ships. You’ll commute from it to visit poor earthlings at Christmas. Maybe.
The engagement is announced of Dawn Marie Kobe and AlanT. Fowler. Their parents are Mr. and, Mrs. William Kobe of Stanley Street and Mr. and Mrs. Don Fowler of Muskegon. Vows are slated for Oct. 12,
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Fall Term Begins September 9th
(Day School and Evoning Diviiiom Approved for Veterans)
Choose Club in England
The Poole, England Business and Professional Women’s Club Was selected by the Pontiac j BPW unit as its sister club for the y e a r' at Tuesday night’s I meeting in the Sylvan. Village home of Mrs. John Buchanan., Some 24 members and one guest, Mrs. George Campbell, j were present. Assisting thej hostess were Violet McCoy, -Ethlynn Peterson, Amy Carlson! and Barbara Wilson.
The popular rock group — Spanky and Our Gang — will appear in concert at Oakland UniJ versity on Friday at 8:30 p.m. in • the Howard C. Baldwin Memorial Pavilion^The student-sponsored concert will be the social, highlight of the orientation and
registration week activities, and will be open to both students pnd the public. Tickets for the con-cert are available at Hudson's, Oakland University Student Activities Office, or at the Meadow Brook Festival grounds gate.
Vera Bassett and Faye' | Donelson Will be delegates to the j Pontiac Area Federation of' Women’s Clubs. '
Two Items on the club’s j agenda are .the anniversary, 'banquet at Devon Gables on! Sept. and the District' 10j meeting on Sept. 30 where an all-day workshop, is planned at Botsford Inn. ,
Work at Marriage
18-24 Wsst Lawrence Street -PONTIAC________|____—RHONE FE 3-7028
Veteran Approved
By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE
CASE G-539: Nita Z., aged 38, presided when I addressed her Women’s Chib.
“Dr. Crane,” she smilingly p rotested,
“don’t you stress sex problems unduly?
J ‘‘Do you really think they cause so much trouble in marriage or are the basis for the DR. CRANE usual divorce?’’ ’	.
So I suggested that during the open forum discussion at the conclusion of my address, she help sort the written questions.
For it is a common practice, to let the memhersl^my auai” ences write their queries on.
sex or marriage problems. 'Oh, Dr. Crane,” thousands of cultured wives have tearfully exclaimed, “I never dfleamed
[Slips of paper, without signing|c their names.
Then they fold these slips andj < pass them to the ushers, whoil, I ! bring them to the platform. [the problems you mention in > [ Either the presiding officer!your column would occur in my 'or some of file other officials home! then quickly screen these ques- j “But now I suddenly find that tions.	j my husband is running around
j And they do so merely to with a girl about half his age. save time, for many people ask “Yet our children love their the same thing.	daddy and I had thought our
Nita agreed to help screen marriage was almost perfect the queries from the audience, j until ! discovered his unfaithful-:■ And out of the first 50 ques-1 ness.
tions she read, 43 dealt with “So what could make a desex or marriage dilemmas! voted husband become so
That was an extra heavy per- fickle?” ’ centage but may be accounted: well, it is you complacent, for on the basis of my lecture sexually indolent wives who topic, which was “Sex Prob- usually drive your formerly de-
lems In Marriage.”
But the letters you readers paramour! Iena~ta merwEcITtotal 1,0001 -• ■ - - -per day, run about 60 per cent
voted mate into the arms of i
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But it is your sins of omission that usually break up your marriages.
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Arum the pun. Picking out a wedding ling, or matching bands, is a serious business. What we’re trying to aey'So that we’re AitGuvod Jewel-are, and because eC that wa have the moat apactaentef collection of wadding bands ; you've over aean. rad yea know that Mace I860, more bride* have choeaaAxtGuvod wedding rings than any other? It you-D ldvifiti you our ArtOuvod collection, you'll ssa why.
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Callins-Rafph Vows Spoken
Mr. and Mrs, Milton Dale Collins, (nee Nancy Jeanne Ralph) have taken up residence in Hesperia, following their recent marriage in Frank 1 in Community Church.
* ★ | * '
Ellen Ralph, the bride’s sister, and Tom Sutton of Morenci, served as honor attendants for the couple, whose parents are Mr. and Mrs. Fred Ralph of Bella Vista Drive, Farmington Township, and the Dale Collinses of Fremont.
THE
PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5,1968
Spend five minute* in our fitting room and tee the difference.
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Shannon Rodger* for
Jerry Silverman
Everyone wants a “neat as a pin” little dress, tailored but still feminine. The tailoring shows up in the corded dart seams down the side front that end at pockets with flaps. The buttons are for show and the small collar and bow are for softness. The dress is semi-fitted and dps up the back.
. # ★ *
Shannon Rodgers originally designed it in silk shantung, we’d like it fat linen or pique or lightweight wool, and it should be lined. Wouldn’t china silk feel good? The design is cut in Misses sizes > through 16. Misses size 12 requires 2% yards of 42” fabric for dress.
SOMETHING NEW: Pattern Books by classification Ensembles, Afternoon and Cocktail Dresses, Duchess of Windsor Patterns. Each $1.M plus 25c postage and handling. Hard Cover Catalogue $10.00 NEW IDEA - First time
designers have published sewing secrets. Booklets 1, 2, 3, and 5 — each 60c plus 15c postage and handling, Hardcover Edition $ 5 postpaid.
★ ★ *
ALSO NEW - Hair Pattern Booklet — do-it-yourself, 60c plus 15c postage and handling. To order Pattern No. NS-229, state size; include name, address and zip code. Send $1.25 plus 25c postage and handling. Send orders for books and patterns to SPADEA, Box 32 Dept. PX-6 Milford, N. J. 00848.
HONCHELL-BROWN Phyllis Jean Brown of South Roselaum Street and Charles Virgil Honchell exchanged vows Saturday evening in. First Baptist Church. The daughter of the late Mr. gnd Mrs. Irving J. Brown was attired in a nylon sheer gown trimmed with (Stantilly lace. A headpiece of silk petals secured her bouffant veil and the carried white roses with ptiik carnations. Mr. and Mr*. Stephen Sheffer were honor attendants. Mrs. Jesse Ayala, bridesmaid, was escorted by John Brown, usher, brother of the bride. Following a reception in the church parlors, the son of the Virpil Hon-chells of Pontiac Lake Road and his bride departed for a honeymoon trip to Miami Beach, Fla.
New Wine Record
A record total of more than 41 million gallons of California wines, the largest shipment of California wines to date, entered the U.S. consumer market during the first three months of this year; the Wine Institute reports.
Suds Aid K'ddies With Penmanship
Penmanship practice takes many forms. Some mothers carry the learning sessions right into thebathtub by lathering their, children thoroughly fore and aft, then letting tub-partners take turn in decorating each other chests. The trick is to use a wet finger as a '‘Inrush” to sketch any desired pattern—in toe soapsuds.
*•' wt,*
Preschoolers can draw funny faces, kindergarteners can do an ABC, first graders can print their names. After that, they can write secret messages in toe suds. Lots of fun — and they’ll get clean while they) learn! ■	i,
Polly's Pointers
Seeks Aid for Sachets
off such jobfh until when the vacuum is out.—LAVONNE ★ ■ # * •'
You will receive a dollar if Polly uses your favorite homemaking idea, Polly’ Problem or, solution to a problem. Wrtite Polly in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept, E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056.
Know-how makes the job easy. There are #dozens of clever timesavers in Polly’ new book. To Ret it, send name, address with zip code and 75 cents (in coins or Check) to POLLY’S HOME MAKING POINTERS, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056.
DEAR POLLY - I have been collecting petals from my many roses. My husband fondly remembers the sachet bags with which our grandmothers so sweetly scented their linens. He believes some sort of spice is added to toon. Can anyone tell me how .to make these rose petal sachets? -I do so want to try.—MRS. W.C.
DEAR POLLY - Recently I bought a long formal and could find a slip long enough to wear under it. I bought a regular slip and a matching half-slip, removed, toe elastic from the top of the half-slip and then stitched the half-slip under toe lace on the bottom of the regular-length slip. This worked wonderfully under my long formal.—BERTHA
DEAR POLLY — I would like to tell Della that a rubber-link door mat solved the problem of
worn spots under swings^ and I Some women boast they neveri the slide at our house. Under ajuse soap because their skin is so ( long tree swing we used four of|deiicate Nonsense! these to cover the spot and. There are many types of; grass grows between the linksjsoapS available, that wouldn’t] to hold the mats in place. A {harm the finest skins — and1 hand lawn mower rides overnothjng but soap can remove! them easily.—CATHERINE	me soot and grime that clog
*	*	*	skin pores every day.
DEAR POLLY—Many people use the crevice attachment of toe vacuum cleaner for cleaning purses and pockets but sometimes the vacuum is not handy for us. This is another great use for these nylon net baljs. They are tops for getting lint and tobacco chaff out of pockets. These net balls brush up velvet and corduroy so they look Eke new again. Don’t put
Dirt Removed Only by Soap
The handle on a market] basket., can be hard on your! hands, raising a' blister every time you carry it any distance. Make it more comfortable by crocheting a strip of ordinary cotton rug yarn. Make it wide enough to completely cover toe handled Then sew to the handle, fastening each of its.ends to the basket.
DISCOUNTS on all DIAMONDS Must Go At Fraction Of Value!! special group $4(1881
*65°° to *89"	|
SPECIAL GROUP $7(188' *125" to H50"	IV J
SPECIAL GROUP $1 AO881 *250“ to *300"	■■fit 1
mm
I PARK JEWELERS

and OPTICIANS 1 N. SAGINAW
• (Corner Pike St,) Fi 4-1009
Dr. Chamay
Authorized Dealer
; of.‘	-
Bigelow and Downs Gai*pets Introductory Offer
5®*
per «q> yd. SAVE $2.00 • yd.
Visit Oar tortm jagg Igt
McCandless Offer* You Quality. Price, and Custom Workmanship; by Our Own Mechanics. The Only Way to Beat This Is to Do Without Carpeting Altogether
Stop In and See For Yourself
ffrf+retee that mace a dozen different ways—and all of them beautiful, all of them in tangy autumn colors, heart-■wanning anbamn woob ymcw i*cttAa~lija^lc: Left: tSter plaid swing-pleat wool skittln nutmeg, ivy, or pimento; sizes 7-13 at 114, teamed with a Shaker crewneck wool pullover in pimento, nutmeg or ivy; sizes 36-40 at $12. Next: solid color Shetland wool Bermudas in pimento, nutmeg or ivy; sizes 7-|5 at $9, with g striped Orion mock turtleneck with long sleeves; ia nutmeg/pimento/navy or ivy/ruby/gold; sizes 36-40 at $10. Next: fly-fiont Glen plaid wool slacks in pimento, nutmeg or ivy;	7-13 at $15, teamed with a long-sleeve mock turtleneck Orion pullover with cable
front and back; in pimento, nutmeg or ivy; sues 36-40 at $13. Right: big block plaid in a wool dirndl skirt, in nutmeg/champagne or iyy/naVy; sizes 7-13 at $12, teamed with a long-sleeve Orion turtleneck withback zipper. in champagne, nutmeg, ivy or pimento; sizes 36-40 at $8. More. Mote.
©s separate steps to
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How To Give Tbe Successful Party
AO It takes Is a little Imagination, a little work, and a lot of help from Hallmark. You’ll find everything you needln our Plans-e-Party 8hop-from colorful centerpieces to eups and plates you can mix or match. Stop In today for the paper party helpers you toss away when the fun Is
John Rondziperis
Virginia Frink
Zaven Molkonian
COSMETICIAN ON DUTY AT ALL TIMES TO DISCUSS YOUR SKIN PROBLEMS. FREEMAKE-UP LESSONS BY APPOINTMENT.
Electra-Curl Now set your hair in minutes. Eliminate nightly pin-ups.
BEAUTY AISLE
WHITE SHOULDERS ELIZABETH ARDEN - CARON LANVIN BONNE BELL CHRISTIANDIOR GUERLAIN CREPE DE CHINE DOROTHY GRAY DuBARRY BLUE GRASS MAX FACTOR
Inside tlie Village Pharmacy
Gome In and Browse
• COUPON •
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Kodak Instamatic 104 Camera Outfit
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Coloring Books
for the
Kiddies 1
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Gifts to 1 ! the Ladies J
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Twstapw r*g. $1.98 now $141
Clinitwst 100 ^ Tablet* A ^ teg. $1.98 A
film
Boardman
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John’* Drug*
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Security Charge Michigan Bankard
Credit Cards Honored
Pay All Utility Bills Here
DISCOUNT PRICES IN EVERY DEPARTMENT
RUBBING ALCOHOL pint ■' 1 13*	BUFFERIN 100’s reg. $1.29 Now SB*	SQUIBBS Theragran im reg. $6.95" now *3”
LISIERINE ANTISEPTIC 14 ft. ex. reg. $1.09 now 79*	EMPERIN Comp. 100’s reg. $1.35 now 99*	VITAMIN C £. reg. $2.96 now 79*
COLGATE • CREST • GLEEM Family Six. reg. 96* NOW 59*	ALKA SELTZER rag. 65* now 39*	GILLETTE S reg. $1.49 NOW 98*
ONE-A-DAY 100’s 30 free reg. 2.91 now M7*	ANACIN reg. $1.39 now 99*	MAALOX UftUID «&? reg. $1.59 now 89*
UPJOHN UHICAPS 100'$ 30 FREE reg. $3.11 NOW *1“	VICKS 44 mV£m rag. $1.69 now *J“	BAYER ASPIRIN im>. reg. 98* now so*
TONI SHAMPOO-IN INNOCENT COLON reg. $2.25 now *1"	10’s CONTAG reg. $1.49 now 89*	MYADEC 100’s ™“™S" reg. 7.95 now *3"
BRECK SHAMPOO	CHOCKS ISO’s	MARKING PENS 5!
Pint Reg. *1" now »1"	reg. $2.98 now *2”	now 8 39*
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THE FINEST HOME FASHIONED
rka/wtctcy
5875 DIXIE HIGHWAY, WATERFORD PHONE 623-0245
IndSpendence Commons Shopping Center Foot of Waterford Hill
MY
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Our pharmacist* era specialist* in the field of medicine — thoy keep right up to tho minute in their knowledge of packaged medicines as well as prescription drugs. Pharmacists "cannot prescribe, but they can give you Oxpert guidance in your selection of medicines. So, buy all your drugs here at Discount Pricesl
	Rack to School Supplies			
	LtMOES	WOOD PENCILS no. 2	SHOELACES	
	MOTE PASTE reg. 29* now 14*	- WWwD f OrelWsOnr 11 “■ ■* 6 for 10*	tl inch 2*	
	REOULU POINT BIG PENS 9°	LOOSE LEAF AMBER Blue 3-Ring reg. 79* n«w39* *	fl COUNT CRAYOLA rsfeZle now ; '15*	
	ELMERS BLOE Reg. 29* now 14*	tW SHEET nun paper 39*	TUCKTAPE reg. 29c NOW 17*	
■			, 'p-	
DELIVERY
Call Or Have Your
Doctor Call
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER A, 1068
Miami Riot Called Planned Activity
"This was not civil disorder, donee of stockpiling,” McClure not dvfl disobedience, not a said.
group of boys being disobe- “We got a call that a police dieiit,” McClure testified. “This car was taking gunfire,” the was mass, planned, criminal ac- lieutenant said. “We drove the tivlty.” '	gauntlet from 12th Avenue to
« McClure said the second day 17th Avenue through the mob, a of violence began about 1 p.m. screaming mob of criminals, and then, “as though op signal, We were being pelted with rocks just after 4 o’clock, our officers and firebombs—each one a fe-reported being shot at six dif- lonious assault. There was loot-ferent localities along 62nd ing, robbery aid felonious as* Street” in tibertyTity.	sault—every	crime to the
• \W *	*	book.*'
“I saw a garbage can of Four policemen testified at 'rocks, and.there was other evi- the hearing they saw Austin
MIAMI, Fla. (AP) — A poUceiquest into the deaths of two lieutenant testified Wedneaday Negroes shot by police during thit rioting in Miami (tyring thejthe violence. The deaths were Rfipdtiican National Convention ruled justifiable homicide.
.wa '“mass, planned, criminal	*	*	*
activity.”	John J. Austin, 29, and Moses
fit. William iP. McClure, a Cannon, 23, were killed Aug. 8. homicide investigator, made the Justice of the Peace Charles ' Snowden ruled they were shot while fleeing “after committing a felony of violence.” Disturbances occurred to three Negro business and residential districts in Miami. The focus was in Liberty City where the violence began Aug. 7.	'
crouched behind a waist-high wall with other men. Officers said the Negro men fired at police, using women and children as a protective screen.
‘SAW DUN TAKEN’
Lt. McClure said he saw other Negroes take a gun from Austin’s body. fell behind an
St. Joseph's Aspirin for Children
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Pur* Orange Flavor
*	A Dryer Ceslfiiod
to Posh Ironing Qof of Your Lite
•	So IrMifif Nm4*S for Parmanant
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where he wee shot.
Snowden’s „ ruling covered Austin and Clnnon. No testimony or evidence was introduced
Police Cited in Panther Clash
nocent bystanders, I fired two shots into the wall. Then the crowd cleared back and a volley of fire opened up from the police officers and the two subjects l Austin and Camion) were hit.”
Patrolman Richard Falum, 23, said he dropped two tear, gas cannisters “that drove the persons back to the walls. Then the
of New York, a militant group of police officers.
Several of the attackers wore the presidential campaign button of George C. Wallace, former Alabama governor.
Mayor Lindsay ordered Police Commissioner Howard R. Leary to have a complete report on the Incident.----
Brooklyn DiSt. Atty. Aaron Koota ordered his chief assistant, Elliot Golden, to investigate. Golden said that if they found “evidence of the commission of a crime, by the police or anyone else *re will take immediate and appropriate action.”
NEW YORK (AP) - Mayor John V. Lindsay has ordered an immediate report on charges that off-duty policemen were among a group of 200 white men who attacked about a dozen Black Panthers and white sympathizers in the Brooklyn Criminal Court building.
The clash took place Wednesday in a sixth floor corridor outside a packed courtroom where three Black Panthers had a hearing on charges of beating three policemen Aug. 20. Three persons including a white girl were injured,
Witnesses sold the group of white men—some known to
newsmen as policemen—who had been unable to get into the courtroom slowly converged on (be smaller group and then suddenly rushed them.
Blackjacks were seen swinging down through the air during the melee which was broken up by uniformed officers assigned to the building. No arrests were made.
MILITANT OFFICERS
David Brothers, leader of the Brooklyn Panthers, and Thomas McCreary, a member of toe militant group, charged that their attackers were members of (be Law Enforcement Group
“Let a gat dryer do your ironing"
Little Joe*»
ject, Austin, had what appeared to be a gun and, ail God almighty, it sounded like one. He started shooting tit me.” ‘HEED TWICE’
Patrolman Billy Riggs testt-fied: “The people behind the wall, I know, fired twice before we fired back.” ’ v f •
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I MAIN office
W. Fort-Griswold Detroit, Michigan
BRANCH OFFICE	IRANCH OFFICE
23 Mile Rd.-Mound Road Woodward-Square Lk. Rd, Shefby, Township	Bloomfield Township
FANTASTIC BARGAIN!
FANTASTIC BARGAIN! I FANTASTIC BARGAIN
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PACKAGE LIQUOR STORE
t CIOONANS
upet DRUG STORES
140 North Saginaw
IhniMpsMi
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far the first time, you can gat short-term flexibility in passbook form, plus the long-term advantages of guaranteed high-return on your money all in tha same package.
* ...................
You can make deposits at any time, irTany Amount of $50 of4 more. You can withdraw qua rterly, without notice, any amount that has been on deposit 90 days or more. And you always have a handy passbook record of your savings.
Highest tamings
Bank of the Commonwealth guarantees to compound 5% interest continuously to give you the highest possible earnings on bank savings programs in Detroit.
Four-year guarantee moans over 5MX tor you
Bank of the Commonwealth guarantees 5% for a fult 48
months which will earn you more than 5Vfc% return.
Choice of three Interest Payment Plans You may elect to have your earned interest credited to your account, arid continue to earn even more. Or, we will credit the interest to another Commonwealth account. Some may want to receive an interest check each Quarter.
Money readily available
During tiie first ten days of any quaMer, you can withdraw without notice any amount of your savings that have been on deposit 90 days or more, Or if ydu need money between quarters, you can get it with just 90 days’ written notice.
And you can withdraw your most recently credited interest at any time.
Low initial deposit
-Ajt it takes is'a $5GO -deposit to start your Golden Passbook ~ account._____
You can add as little as $50 to your Golden Passbook account at anytime.
And to make adding even easier, you can start a systematic savings plan. We can transfer $50 or more every month from your checking account—automatically.
Free checking, too
Once you’re enrolled in Golden Passbook, you qualify for a free checking account. Check Free and Earn.
That means you can write all the checks you want make deposits and get a detailed monthly statement all free. There's more
Your Golden Passbook is what we call “assignable." That means you can always usait as collateral for a loan at any Commonwealth office.
And, of course, Bank of the Commonwealth issues you an annual statement for tax purposes.
To open your Golden Passbook account, just bring your passbook or other funds from any financial institution into your nearest branch office. We’ll make the necessary transfers ; in minutes.
FANTASTIC BARGAIN! ■ FANTASTIC BARGAIN I f
City-Wide Free Prescription Delivery Have Your Doctor Call Your Nearest THRIFTY
for Prompt Free Delivery Service
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FILLED BY OUR EXPERT PHARMACISTS
r ■
MBR&SiTCv fv:r f
THE POXTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1908

filMDfil SHOES FOR
going places
Take the Warrior... defl-nitely a groove I And dell* jPlMk- nitely “In” with the new look in clothes for fall. Slip into a pair—and get set to go places I
Swinger
Whatfs Left Of Our Summer and Transitional Stock From AH 5 RB Shops
Dresses • Bags • Robes Shifts * Lingerie • Bras Girdles
Sportswear • Jewelry t '*• NOW......
Big Swinger
Colorful new bowling shirts from Nat Nast, Service, or Munsingwear. Griswold has a complete selection by those leading manufacturers in a large variety of colors and styles - immediate delivery, expert lettering (flocking and embroidery.)
Model 210
Model 220
Above Prices with Any
6V2 to 13 Widths B to E
ten's and Ladies' Deluxe
No Money Down Charge It
"$T0P INAMD SEE OUR 19(9 CAMERAS END EQUIPMENT
60 Days Same As Cash
Fall lines now in stock
NORTHWOOD ROYAL OAK 3339 WOODWARD LI 9-3844
AND MORE
Colors and sizes necessarily limited. All sales final. No layaways or phone orders. -TEL-IIURON SHOPPING CENTER
PONTIAC 295 TELEGRAPH 334-0239
VARSITY SWEATERS and JACKETS
Tel-Huron Shopping Center
58 S. Telegraph	FE
Pontiac's Distributor for
• CENTRAL • NORTHERN • KETTERING • WATERFORD • WEST BLOOMFIELD • PIERCE • WALLED LAKE We Specialize in Team Orders
SPAGHETTI CON CARNE
/.jfejBh A/ f44’V
to our TRUNK SHOWING
of new Fall and Winter fabrics for luxurious Custom Clothes at
OSMUM’SMto
Monday and Tuesday
September 9 and 10
BOB H AGER
ELIAS BROTHERS BIG BOY
swingy leather shoulder bag
Silver Lake Rd. and Dixie Highway
Hand-Smocked Dresses A
Choose this young, animated bag in brown, fan or black , ’ leather. It's one | ' of the sportiest 9 new looks around.
FABRICS FIT TO SEW WITH A GOLDEN NEEDLE
Thti without quMtion is the most stunning presentation of elegant fabric* we've ever seen . . . fabrics from the matter weavers around the world. Exclusive new models complement the fabric* to bring you the finest clothes you*ve ever worn.
ISMUNPS
• USE YOUR OSMUN'SCHARGE, SECURITY CHARGE or MICHIGAN BANKARD
CHARGE or LAY-AWAY
Tel-Huron Shopping Center
j Open Every Night *M19	_y,/
PONTIAC AAALL
TEL-HURON CENTER
SHIRTsS
-lB—12
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
rifflin'
season
•y&p^heai
Proto** your family with thm Haalthtul Comfort ml
fc■Lnrm#iMfw4n MATING UNITS
Oil or got find, for quiet, clean, uniform ««rmfft oil winter 1 We ll bo happy to give you a com-, pleto colt estimate, A with no obliga-tion on your port.
Zilka Heating
259$ Orcherd Lake_
Pontiac
CALL: 682-1210
Apollo 7	T
Scheduled for Today
CAPE KENNEDY (UPI) — Cautious officials ordered part of a mock launch test rerun oil the Apollo 7-moonship today to guarantee two (prief power losqes.were not symptoms of trouble.
The daylong test, run in its entirety yesterday, was the same one that led to the fire deaths of the first three-man Apollo crew 19 months ago:
t t ★
The new Improved Apollo 7 spacecraft, with astronauts Walter Schirra, Donn Eisele and Walter Cunningham at the controls, passed the critical simulated launch phase of the test without difficulty.
But there were fleeting losses of electric power Just before and after the make-believe launch and this was the cause of concern.
BATTERY-CAUSED
A space agency spokesman said both power failures were associated with ground batteries that were used to replace the spacecraft’s fuel cell unite for the test.
“The purpose of the abbreviated rerun is to assure ourselves there are no problems connected with the power dropouts” the : spokesman said. “We just want to make siire everything is okay."
★ ★ ★
One of the power losses was believed to have been caused by a procedural error, the spokesman said, and the repeat was to check out the ground crew as well as the spacecraft.
The test repeat was interferring with the Apollo 7 work schedules, but officials thought it could be carried out without affecting the ship’s Oct. 11 launch date.
GLADWIN (AP)-Supt. John Bruce said Wednesday Gladwin District’s three schools will remain closed until an agreement is reached between the seven-member school board and the district’s 71 teachers.
* ’ * *
Bruce said the issue whether a community has the right to control its schools." Teachers, among other things, are demanding binding arbitra-
tion as a means of settling! teacher-board disputes.
teachers have rejected what Bruce said was an offer to increase salaries $1,300 a year level ranging from $6,700 to $10,892, the amount depending upon degree and experience.
The district has 1,800 'pupils, teachers are members of the Gladwin Education Association, an affiliate of the Michigan Education Association.
PARK FREE at Rear of Store-
Help Your Children Get a Good Night's Rest for School Work
Your choice of decorator headboards to go _ with the mattress and box spring you need
h t	",	.....'     ila— ■■
matt rest and matching box spring, a dMuxa 4-lag matal frame and your choice of any of the ape-daily designed headboards shown above.
In WKC's Lower Level Furniture Dept.
NO MONEY DOWN-90 DAYS SAME AS CASH
pjaratM
Store Hours: Fri. 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M.
.Sat. 9:30 AM to 5:30 P.M.-FB 3-7114.
MARQUETTE (UPl) - A 29-year-old Champion man was sentenced in the second degree murder conviction of a young pregnant mother.
Marquet|a County Circuit Court Judge Bernard Davidson! ordered Loon DeLongchamp to! the- Marquette State Dept, of. Corrections prison after he was'
AS Wlr.photo
BUCKLING UP — Two of the three astronauts scheduled to fly next month’s Apollo shot adjust communications helmets before yesterday’s major electrical test at
Cape Kennedy. They are Navy Capt. Walter M. Schirra (left) and civilian Walter Cun-ningharp- Not shown is Air Force Maj Donn F. Eisele.
Man Sentenced in Murdeij
found guilty In the February slaying of Mrs. Anne Marie LaCoss. -' .	' ..
• 'it'"''* | f§ DeLongchamp was accused of taking, the woman to a remote part of the .Upper Peninsula, beating her severely and then leaving heir to die lb the frigid wilderness.
School Opening Delayed!
THANK YOU FONTIAC
You've emptied our shelves so we have rushed in more Back-to-Schod styles and filled 'em up again. Thank youl
FOLLOW THI ALL TOUR SCHOOL
LO0K FOR THE BIS YiUOW SUN
740 N. PERRY BO-
AT JOSLYN AVi.
NEXT TO KROGER'S
TO MC-WAT
Pic-Way has all the newest styles tor-
THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1068
.ftrW
Send the young set off in style... with smart new school fashions from Yankee's- savings-priced coUectiWL
Oood Until ••tUNlay Stpt. 7, to PM
™ee
DEPARTMENT STORES
HOME OF DISCOUNT PRICES
special discounts for
the young set
OPEN DAILY 'TIL 10 SUNDAYS ‘TIL 7
j BUILT-IN HOOP
GIRLS’ NEW HOOP DRESS
New fall shoe; shapes for the entire family
DISCOUNT PRICED -.OF COURSE
WOMEN'S AND TEENS’
ALL-OCCASION SKIMMER
The little block round* throated pump Is ideal with
slacks, dresses. 5-10.
2^9
GIRLS'FAVORITE
GROOVY LOAFER
Contemporary strap and buckle accent. Rugged, comfortable. 5-10.
WOMEN’S AND TEENS’
CANVAS OXFORDS
Comfortable cushioned «r«h, insteps Machine wash. White# black.
4-10.
J97
BOYS’ CANVAS '	.
BASKETBALL SHOES
Hi-top design. Cush* ibned arch and instep. Big, iHtfe boys' sizes.
I88
"Italian" leather with sensational square toe. Tosco, cordo, black. 5-10.
497
MEN’S BLACK OR BROWN
TRADITIONAL LOAFERS
“Thr~ penny stylo... always favored. Leather uppers. 6Hi-12.
S88
BOYS’ GROOVY NEW PERFED OXFORD
Get in etep with the newest look this fall.
Black, brown. 8)4-3.
299
MEN’Sv AND BOYS’
BASKETBALL SHOES
Popular low -fcut style.
Cushioned arch, in - . step.
White. Asserted sizes.
2s8
"LEATHER LOOK”
GIRLS’ 2-PC. ENSEMBLE
S97
The liveliest look of the season for school. Leather* look appliqued yes-tee with m a t c h i ng skirt. 7-14.
WOMEN'S AND TEENS’
HAND-WHIPPED LOAFER
GIRLS
bohm
WOOL
KILTIE
SKIRTS
Contemporary inter* pretations of eld favor,!to s;. Wrap* around plaid and kicky striped da* •ignevManyshodesv^ 7-14.
tlRLS' IRION
TURTLE NECK . SWEATERS
Fall fashion's favorite sweater look Qrlon aery lie.It* Long sleeves. Smart* hues. Sized to fit. Sizes 7-14
Copyright Northgato Advertising Got,
tl251. KHY, PONTIAC • FORT *T UK, MIEHIEW • 14II. AT SCHOEMEM • JOT AT MEEK FI EU
B—li
tHE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
Save on Yankee’s fall fashions *
HOME OF DISCOUNT PRICES OPEN DAILY 'TIL 10 SUNDAYS TIL 7
SMART NEW 2-PIECE SKIRT AND VEST SETS
goo
Smart littlo set* that swing into fall with flora and fanfare for schoo(. Sleeveless, button-front, tob*trlm vasts mated with kicky knifa-plaatad or swinging A»llne skirts. Sizes 7-15.
Feminine little pouf and shirtwaist designs in- dainty floral and smart novelty prints. Ait in carefree cotton. S-M-L. '
JUNIOR-SIZE FULL SUPS
Luxurious acetate turned into stylish tailored ond fancy designs. Machine , wash. White, pink, blue. 7 to IS.
CegyrigM Hertfcgsis Jtiieriletag Co.
1125IL PERRY, PMTMC • FORT AT KIIK, RHEKVIEW o 14 M. AT SCMOEDHERR 0 JOY AT GKEEHFIELI
." v ;/■ .:' 2-	' 7 i %.	' t -	■■ * ■ , ,' ; ' • ^
THIS PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY*, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
B—15
;
Save on Yankee’s
Yankee’s fall fashion discount sale offers you the most contemporary styling in men and ^
Until Saturday •apt. 7, lO PM
boys’ clothing at low budget prices. When you sho£ at Yankee you’ll discover why we say, "they’ll never guess how little you paid."
Open Doily 'til TO v Sundays 'til 7
MEN’S HANDSOME HARRIS TWEED SPORT COATS
LOOK DISTINGUISHED IN TRADITIONAL FALL TWEED!
A traditional tweed is always popular no matter where you wear it. Three button front with natural' shoulders and flap pockets. Comes in solids, plaids, Harring Bones and District Checks. Basic colors are whiskey, grey, blue and ((old. Complete size range.
3490
M EN’S COTTON KNIT SPORT SHIRTS
Acrilao Dacron/ cotton blend in col* lor model plaquet style. Assorted colors. S-M-L-XL.
BOYS’ NEW BIB-WEAVE COTTON SPORTSHIRTS
MEN’S CABLE KNIT SWEATERS
100% Virgin Worsted Wool sweaters in turtle-necks and Hi-Cru. Blue, white, tan and green. S-M-X-XL.
These cotton knit sportshirts come in attractive mack-turtle style With V-neck inserts. The new ribbed weave makes the shirt .longer lasting. New fall shades in sizes 6~16.
BOYS’COTTON FLANNEL ROBES
Great selection of colorful plaids. Pull sash with large-shawl cellar; Completely washable. New shades in sizes 6 to 16.
MEN’S ORLON CREW SOCKS
MEN’rPILE-LINED SNAPFRONT JACKET
•Orion acrylic nylon fib crew seeks in asserted shades. -^Qno Size fits 10-13.
m
MO. MO
Made of 100% nylon. Pile-lined, for warmth. Regular cellar, -in loden and na v y. S-M-L-XL,
MEN’S NEW FALL DRESS SLACKS
Lightweight blend of daCron polyester arid webl worsted. Ivy belt loop styteSr Pre-cuffed, crease-
•	retentive, wrinkle-resistant. Blue, olive, black,
/_ brown. 32 to 42.	'sB!
FAST-BACK STYLING
YOUNG MEN’S NO-IRON SLACKS
: A style especially made Tar thd young man. Wide A O O belt loops, tapered trim, and tep'wodtertpaekets. /||0 O Colors include navy,-loden,- whiskey and chocolate A.1
•	brown. Sizes 29-36.
BOYS’ RUBBER RAINCOAT SETS
100% water-proof robbor fabric. Matching helmet Included. Buckle front-and inpide in yellow 6 to 16.
H25 il ran, ramst • fmt at king, iherview • it hi. st scmoehherr •
- -16
THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968 /
Open Dolly 'til 10 Sundays 'til 7
HOME OF DISCOUNT PRICES
GREAT SALE OF PICTURES
FAMOUS REPRODUCTIONS DEEP SET FRAMES
Accent your decor with d reproduction
of a famous painting let in a handsome deep frame. We have an extensive collection to please every mood and comple-
IMtll nnv Ammr 7An ir JR"
ST, MARYS’ MOD PLAID THROW STYLE BEDSPREAD
WALNUT RECORD CABINET
A wild decorator favorite to add bright new dash to bedrooms, dorms and even dens! Convenient throw style. In Blue/green or gold/ brown. Twin and full sizes.
Distinctive walnut
para veneer handsome-
ly Styled with easy sliding doors. A wide variety of other uses. 3314 X 27x1314. Very easy to assemble.
WASHABLE PERMA PRESS TIER CURTAINS
WALNUT
BOOKCASE
Walnut para-veneer. Sliding glan
Bright and lively gingham checks, Osnabergs and embroidered trims to highlight any decor. Cotton or .Avrit rayon. 36" long. Matching valances....................1.44
FOR THE BEST TV RECEPTION
DELUXE OUTDOOR ANTENNA K4T
SCOTCH PLAID STADIUMROBE
Improves reception and sharpens the picture, especially ijti the fringe areas. Excellent reception up to 80 miles. Kit includes alt the installing hardware.
Colorful, bright warmth that’s portable! 45” x 72” rayon and nylon' blanket in it’s own plastic carrying case. Many uses at home, for school and outings.
COLOR KING
INDOOR
ANTENNA
PILLOW AND WEDGE SET
For UHF and VHF. Built with rotary switch and phasing loops. Guaranteed by Good Housekeep-
TV ANTENNA ROTOR&CONTROL
Relax in greater comfort! 21” x 27” bed pillow plus a wedge back-rest. Matched floral ticking. Poly foam pillows. In pink and
Make your TV picture clearer and sharper from the inside. Easy to attach and operate. Will built.
In brown color or clear. Complete with end clips.
112$ N. PEMY, P0KTI»e • FMT AT KIM6, RWERVIEW • 14 ■(. AT SCHOERHERS • JOY AT GREENHELB
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
FASHIONED SMOKED
|U£.D.A.I
CHOICE
SALE DATES:
Thun., S»pt*mb«r 5, Thru Wed., S*pt. 11, Including Sunday, S*pt. 8'
S®F
from grnaticJn Needs no refrigeration!
tin® <°r GriUinS
SPARTAN
SPARTAN
Saltines
Smooth or Crunchy
new! (^nation instant breakfast
makes milk a meal 6-ENVgLOPE BOX
CAMPBELL'S ^
Pork & Beans
POTATOES
MICHIGAN NO. 1
MICHIGAN BEET
awrHi
■ Hf wifSl
iftnl MEAT
SPARTAN
Bleach
Charmin
MTHRMN
Tissue
TREESWEET
Orange Juice
BROADCAST
Luncheon
SPARTAN
Pure Vegetable
Shortening
BREMNER
Jumbo Pies
CHocoJaTe
Spartan Midget
Longhorn Choose
OVEN FRESH
BIO “30”
Loaf
OVEN FRESH
NUt TOP
Rods
14»/2-0z.
CRISCO
Pure Vegetable
OSAGE FREESTONE
Faaelias
¥25*
	
Tidy Mama *	■ wet. 19°
Lunch Bag*			
Naatla’a Chocolate Mortals	tr39c
Thank You Cherry Pie Filling	Mb. 5-oz. OQC^ wt. 09 4
Spartan - Strawberry Preserves	
Lyaol Spray Disinfectant	79®
Concentrated Detergent	a 59®
MICHIGAN LARGE	15c stk.
Pascal Celery	
US. No. 1 Wealthy APPLES	49° 4 lb. Bag
Calif. BARTLETT PEARS	25e lb.
Chieken i JWuf |	6 ss:?	P
turkey		
Troatura lalo Broadad fiflC 1		
For SCHOOL dr CAMPUS
Real Or Not? Oily The Touch Con Toll On These Beautiful Bloowl
Justafew are shown.
Pick Oft armful of lovely vinyl flowers and foliage and make an exciting fall arrangement ■ Rost Buds.,.»49d
These traditional plaids haveatilent for looking great with blazers, sweaters, sport shirts...almost everything you wear. With Farahyou get the finest in style, fabrics and permanent press.
Huge 'Pot' Crop
ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. (AP) — 'An estimated 3,000 marijuana plant*, valued by police at be* .tween *188,and $235,000 if
Bloomfield Miracle Mile
Telegraph at Square Lake Rd. Open iveningl : use your Michigan
r	ft f> 11 . .	lANICARO OR
til V r.m. * SECURITY CHARGE
ymkh. ting

CHARGE IT" AT KRESGE’S H2
Two Waterford Schools
Damaged by Thieves
Two Waterford Township schools had break-ins and theft early yesterday morning, and losses could run more than $300, school officials saitj, today.
Lotus Lake School at 0455 Harper was the scene of broken windows and a theft of a cash -b« "holding-1130, -accordlng-la Principal Thomas Keller.
'—ST". '*	*
Keller also said offices were ransacked Ip ap apparent effort to find other money and items. WINDOWS BROKEN David Freeman, principal at Mason Juplor High School at 3835 W. Walton said his offices were broken, into and broken windows were discovered yesterday morning along with a loss of $10 from a petty cash ..box,....
Freeman said the Wmdals didn’t atop at tfae school offices. Evidence was fouid that indicated several desks had Jbeeo farced'open and ransacked.
Keller noted his building has been broken into at least 17 times in the past two years, Including another time earlier this week.
He said Sunday night windows were also broken, but notWngwMfoyndmisslng.Po-lice are investigating, but have! no suspects.
"ibvattiseMBtr
C-—»
TUB PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas
Cotoq* M. Donley
Private service tot Coiene M.
Donley, 40,' Of 770 m Columbia was to be this Morning at Doo-elson-Johns Funeral Home With burial Ip Perry Mount Park Cemetery,
Miss Donley died Tuesday.
Surviving are a brother, John C. of Pontiac; and three sisterp,
Including Mrs. Claude Carter and Mi's, Thomas Dion, both of Waterford Township.
Charles Gierman
Service for Charles Gierman,
03, tamer Pontiac resident, will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Huntoon Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery.
Mr. Gierman died yesterday.
Surviving are a sister, Grace Ogg of Waterford Township and two brothers including Edward of Pontiac.
Theodore R. Hardiman
Service for Theodore R Hardiman, 66, - of 101 Jackson will be 1 p,m. Saturday „an^hild^ Macedonia Baptist Church with!granacn,ia-
LeRoy Dickie
ROCHESTER — LeRoy Dickie, 90, of 433 Rewold died morning. His body is at Pixley Memorial Chapel.
.Norman L. Duval
TROY — Requim mass for formes' resident ‘ Norman L. Duval, 47, of Centerline, will be 9 a.m. Saturday at the Guardian Angel Catholic Church, Clawson, with burial In Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield.
Rosary service jvitt be 7:301 p,m,
Home.'.
Mr. Duval, who died yesterday, was a Millwright at the Chrysler Cop. stamping plant in Warren.
his srifc. Rhutefejn*®* pr'*k‘ert' **	«.
tery No. l of Detroit and Muslim Shrine, and first vice president of the Watch Makers Guild
OCC President to Be Confirmed
Oakland Community College Board of Trustees will bold a special meeting tonight to con-firm the appointment of the new
A.; his mother, Mrs. Eleanor R. Hollens of Lake Orion; four sons, James G. Lawrence E., Jerel G., and David S. all at home; a brotheg; and a sister.
Mrs. Charlas W. Holden FARMINGTON — Service for Mrs. Charles W. Holden, 93, of 28150 Westbrook will be 10 a.m. today at Bell Chapel of the tomorrow at Price Funeral! William R. Hamilton Co., Birm-ingham, with burial in Wood-lawn Cemetery, Grand Rapids.
Mrs. Holden died Monday; Her husband was a former state representative and Grand
Surviving is his wife, Anna; a R»pWs postmaster.
a_____ xiirvtvinrr ere tu
daughter, Mary Ann, at home: two sons, Roger L. of Detroit and Clement N. of Warren; his mother, Mrs. Rose M. Duvall, of Troy; three brothers eluding Raymond^, and Paul both of Troy; and one
burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by Davis-Cobb Funeral Home.
Mr. Hardiman, a member of Macedonia Church, died Monday. He was custodian at the Oakland County Health Department.
Surviving are his wife Frances; 10 children, Theodore of Grand' Rapids, Lloyd of Mecosta, Mrs. Joan Hunt and Mrs. Loretta Hill', both of Pontiac; and Sharph, Robert:; Leonard, Duane, Perry and Gary, all at home; a bi sister, 15 grandchildren and four great-grandchildren.
Mrs. Charles Thomas
Service for Mrs. Charles (Geraldine O.) Thomas, 39, of 207 ET WilsonwiU be 1 p.mT tomorrow in the Church of Christ, Prospect and Paddock, with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by the Frank Car-ruthers Funeral Home.
Mrs. Thomas died Sjuiday in s traffic accident. She was a member of the Voice Freedom Tabernacle Church and an employe at the Bloomfield Rest Home.
Surviving are her mother,' .Mrs. Charles Crowder; five children, Paul E. , Charles L., Marshall E., Richard L. and Vanesa L., all at home; two brothers, including Paul Crdwder of Pontiac; and two listers, Mrs. Mamie Lee Monroe and Mrs. M a x i e Williams, both of Pontiac.
Mrs. Theron Choir
BIRMINGHAM - Service for Mrs. Theron P. (May M.)
Chase, 80, of 755 N. Woodward will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Bell
Chapel of the William R, .	...	, ,	„	,
Hamilton Co., with burial in Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit. |Tr°y.
Mrs. Chase was a member of
Frank Harroun , TROY' — Service for Frank Harroun, 54, of 43935 Dequindre will be 11:30 a.m. Saturday at the Milliken Funeral Honp burial in St. Lawrence Cemetery.
Mass will be said at noon at St. Lawrence CathoUc Church.
Mr. Harroun died yesterday. He was employed at.American Die Inp., Hazel Park.
Surviving are Ms wife Jeanette; a son, Michael of Troy; Ms mother, Mrs. Kate Harroun bf Pontiac, f O/U brothers; Claude and Frep of Pontiac, Michael of Waterford Township and Leonard of' Men-don; four sisters, including Mrs. E(foaKheckefesbf Rochester.
Murvin C. Hieber WALLED LAKE - Service for Murvin C; Hieber, 76, of 1807 ScMefie will be 11: a.m. tomor-at St. Matthews Lutheran Church with burial in Oakland Hills Memorial Cemetery.
A Lutheran prayer service will be 8 tonight at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home.
Hieber, who died Wednesday, was a hoisting engineer tar the J. A, Utley Construction go. Royal Oak.
Surviving areS^son, Murvin G., and a daughter, Mrs. Roy Coomer, both of Walled Lake, six grandchildren, 14 great-grandchildren and a sister.
Surviving are two sons, W, Sprague of Farmington; Charles F. of New York, N.Y.;
daughter, Mrs. / Arthur A. Thiele of Green/Bay, ,Wia.; seven grandchildren; and U great-grandchildren.
Mrs. John Katsoulos
ADDISON / TOWNSHIP -Private graveside service for Mrs, Johh (Eva J a n e )| Katsoulos, 38, of 945 Lakeville will be /ll' a.m. tomorrow at Lakeville Cemetery by Ashley Funeral Home, Hazel Park.
Mrs. Katsoulos died yesterday/
Surviving besides her husband a^e two sons, William' P. Moroski of Lakeville and James | at home; and a daughter, Eva, at home.
Memorials may be made to the Wayne State University Cancer Research Fund.
* Alvin H. Klinger
HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP — Service for Alvln H. Klinger, 60, of 3773 Orchard Drive will be 10 a.m. Saturday at Richardson-Bird Funeral .Home, Milford, with burial in Forest Lawn Cemetery, Milford.
Mr. Klinger, an employe of the Detroit Street Railway, died Tuesday.
Surviving are two sisters in-
Horace G. Hollens LAKE ORION — Service for Horace Gordon Hollens, 50, of 1250 Bald Mountain will be 1 p.m. Saturday at Allen’s Funeral Home with burial in WMte
First Presbyterian Church Birmingham, Huntington Woods Women’s Club and Detroit Women’s City Club. She died Tuesday. , .	'
Surviving Is a daughter Mrs. Woodrow W. Burgess of El
A Masonic Memorial Service win be said 7:30 p.m. Friday at Allen’s Funeral Home.
Mr. HoUens, a self-employed watch maker and jeweler, died this morning.	. I
He was a member of the UMted Methodist Church of
Houston, Tex.; grandchildren.
and nine
HUI, associate dean for graduate studies at Wayne State University, -takes over arpreaident Oct. 1.
* * * ★
Other business may come before the board. The meeting is scheduled to start at 8 p.m. at the George A. Bee executive office, ,2480 Opdyke, Bloomfield HiUs.
Club Kitchen Is Hit by Fire
A grease fire yesterday at the Bloomfield Hills Country Club, 350 W. Long Lake, Bloomfield Hills, damaged a kitchen wall and ceiling, according to fire department officials.
Fire officials were unavailable to provide further details of the 4 p.m. blaze. However, damage reportedly was minor.
Schoolfo KickOff Sports Sepsdh, Issue Yearbooks
An informal program kicking of the I860 fall sports season aft Waterford TowioaMp H i g h School tonight at the Mgh school stadium wifi be highlighted lay the distribution nf toe 968 school yeaiboook, the Waterlog.
Waterlog student editor Betsy Poole will present the first copy of toe yearbook to school principal Dr. Gene E. Megivercn.
• W	* ,•
Program plans for the 7 p.m. gathering call for the introduction of the, Waterford Skippers’ varsity and reserve football teams, cross country team, marching band and cheerleaders.
Parents also will be allowed to get pictures of their children in uniform. In the event of inclement weather, school officials said the outdoor portion of the program will be canceled.
Man Shoots Self
William A. Bishop, 40, of 850 Stanley died at Ms home about 3 p.m. yesterday of a self-inflicted gunshot wound, according to Pontiac police.
Fake Utility Worker Bilks Area Families
State Police at the Pontiac Post and the Edison law department are working on the base.
A con man posing Detroit Edison Co- worker has bilked at least four Pontiac-area families out of some $500 in the past three weeks, according to the company’s security office.
A spokesman said the man, who represents himself as an inspector, has reportedly struck twice in Lake Orion and once each, in Waterford and Highland Townships,
’The approach was about the same in each case,” said the spokesman.
He said toe man, dressed	ffiRTjna ptoceiii
ADVERTISEMENT DEMOLITION OF BUILDINGS CITY OF PONTIAC URBAN RENEWAL PROJECT
----MICHIGAN R-JO
MICHIGAN R-44
The City of Pontiac U.ttw Local Pul Agency will receive seated Demolition of the**‘
through I located In Olvtelon IX of
“-----^ Project Michigan «-*«,
_____ _*d Structural numbered
tocetad In Division IV ef Urban Prelect Michigan R-44 until 2:00;
, ,.	..	_ H _ P| /either a green or blue uniform
eluding Mrs. Ruth Polzin of d wearing a yeuow hard hat, ut,ca-	gained access to h o m e a
Mr,. Irons E. Thick oMendbly to check for wirta, or'
Buildings and Struchin i 2 located In Division
.....	Michigan R----
r... ,______ Daylight TMiirePUUi
14th day of September, lfU, at the office the City Clerk, 4JO wide Track Drive, nw Pontiac, Michigan 41051, at yeiUr' —T	-T- Ties win be
Contract Documants, Including Drawings and Snacfticatjen, are on rite at the
Office of fheCIty Engineer at SS --------
Street, Pontiac, Michigan;'_
LAPEER — Service for Mrs. Irene E. Thick, 58, of 100 Pope will be 1 p.m. Saturday at Baird Newton Funeral Home with burial in Stiles Cemetery.
Mrs. TMck, a sales clerk in a Lapeer clothing it we, died yesterday.
She was a member of Trinity Methodist Church.
Surviving are three sons, Frauds of Pontiac, Jack and Kenneth Jr., both of Lapeer; five brothers including Lewis DeGroaft of Lake O r i o n Bernard DeGroat of Lapeer, William Vandecar of Pontiac; two "Sisters, Mrs. Mildred Thorsby of Lapeer and Mrs. Myra Ostrander of Pontiac.
fuse safety.	RMRR _	_. _
. x a	i will be rtfwided It the Drawings
"	*	| Contract Documants ere retumed ln geod
After finding some imaginary	•“ «*"■
defect, the man then Either requested a	cash deposit for
future service work or took an opportunity to steal while the householder was busy in another part of the home.
Tbe Edison office said that any bona	fide company
representative will have proper identification, which should be shown at the door.
The con man was described as white, aged 30 to 35, dark complected, Clean shaven, about	....
5-feet-S and	150 pounds, wifo &mlVt.
brown hair. He was reported as!
I well-mannered.
"I certified cttecK or bank draft, eay-"	“ jrder el City of Pontiac,
’	““■** —
I by ttte
■OTL ■_________...______/, In an
amount equal to ten pur cent (10%) .at Pie estimated cost of Demolition and Site Clearance exclusive at any deductions ter eelueR^HJ 11 submitted with each
id ny tor m i Payment ■
eetery Pet-I or Bonds.
then ttie minimum
wages, end overtime eott.,_____________
forth In the Contract Documents mutt ejpetd an this grolect.
The City of Pontiac reserves the lb relect. any er all bids, or to «
-ny Informalities In the bidding.
Bids may be held by the City of * a period not to axe—'1 I .	of (j
lept. 1, 5, Iff
Macprn, Gniif; r ion David of Lake Orion, Orion Lodge num-^
her 46 F and AM, Orion Chapter Number 340 OES, Consis-
Hear the cheers! The smack of the bat! Hear the Tigers WlNona Jp®'
transistor PortableRadio.
Rckt^your fiee BumperSticfcertoo!
1/
Compact Fbrtability Full-Size Sound
BEST YEAR YET TO GET THE BEST
■CBM III AT TEAM.THEM
ALL NEW 1969
re«i!U
quality
portable
radio
•	Separate Ton* Control
•	Slid* Bala DM and Preclaion Vamlor Tuning
•	Powerful, Output
Thu Royal M-The ultimata in $ full- 1 •tea AM portabl* transistor radio comas from Zenith. You get big, beautiful Sound from a Zenith quality speaker ...superb reception from a-built-in" Wavamagnat* AM antanna. And, that's not,all I Separata ton* control'1st* YPU "tailor" tha sound to your own tatts. Earphone jack and provision for AC power tupply. Uses 8 C-call batteries. Two colors. ^^4 95*
Thu gusMy gee* *t buteru thu'num feardn*
Nad's Radio Tsla-Tas Service— All CHy TV /
Bill Patruiha ft Sam
Sweat's Rodio ft Appliance
770 Orchard Lain R 419 Main Street 2363 Orchard Lab 77 S. Telegraph 51 W. Huron 422 W- Huron
Pontiac
Pontiac
•Dist. Suggested Retail Price (Radio Diet. Cd.)
Ever-Fresh Flowers For Fall Color!
THE PQXTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
C—S
Experienced Cowboys Hard to Get Nowadays
FORT WORTH (UPI) — Television and tbs movies are doing plenty to popularize the cowboy, but .apparently little to perpetuate him.
“Not too many young men are studying now1 to be cowboys," says Herschol McCarthy of the Waggoner Ranch management staff,
“I cannot remember when
plod cowboys were easy get," sayi W. S. Eakens of Amarillo, a trustee of Rafter 0. “Cowboys we used to pay $30 a month depression now get $300.
“They also get hospitalization, a house and lots of fringe benefits."
The cowboy’s life is not what it used to be, whed he drove a
trail herd for weeks without « right of civilization or in roundup time dept on the with his saddle for a pillow until the last calf was branded.
A cowboy now can afford a family and, if the ranch is not too big, he travels to and from the roundup atdawh and dusk in his own automobile.
Rarely , nowadays
Hriiriiin for
bmerspring i right under the
There are air conditioned trucks to ride around in and even the horses are not like they used to be.
A caynse is harder to find than a Longhorn steer. Modern Texas ranchers false
There is Oven a-chance for a cowboy to moonlight now and then. Bill Drennan, wagon boss of the Pitchfork brand, was the Marlboro- man" in televisionf commercials.
I ' 'A He said Sixes rai than hed
There are. lonely , jobs the cowboy still has to take.
One Is in the line camp, but it is not as bad as.it used to be. .'Cowboys in the line camps sometimes have their families with them.
Nearly all line camps, are linked with ranch headquarters
Kir rnHiA.tnlnnhfuin anH nvprv
The young pacesetters with grown'Up airs that swing in to fall with fresh young	■
enthusiasm. Bold plaids, checks and	A1
solids, feminine trims and brats hard- to B 99 ware add up to the smartest assemblage	™ 0,88
for girls 7 • 14.
357
to
597
Girls' Wear
Corduroy pants underscore the body shirts for jrs.
Long sleeved body shifts of cotton knit..
Princess shapings in super stripes and lolidi of gold, red and cemno. Small, medium, large. Straight leg cords in PERMA - PREST® polyester/eotton blend; 5-15. Reg. $7........ .5.99
—fame :~
Shirts, Rag. 5.91 - 6.91
4"
and
MS**-
Boys’ Fashions
a.	PERMA-PREST® turtlenecks 6-12
Acrilim knit with ribbed Ret, cuff*, hemmed bottom. Bright j.U blazer at ripe* of (olid*.
b.	Panta in ivy tradition PERMA-PREST" polyealer/-cotton with yoko back, wide Rtf'
c.	Sporty turtlea for students
PERMA • PREST" acrylic ... no? ahirt with ribbed collar. Ions , A* * aleevea. Stripes 32-36.	W
d.	Rally back pants 25-30 l PERMA • PREST™ polyester
—and xotton.yith Soil Releaae____A 97
feature. Yoko back, wide belt loop*.
/	• Boy*' W|gr	^ ; ■ -
Casual
men in
Rugged, lined and reinforced cotton duck Jeepers have cushioned insole and arch. Molded rubber outsole, bumper toe, nonchafe heel guards. High dut and oxfords in white or black. Youths sises 10-3, boys* and men’s sizes 3V4-12. Men’s high cut in white Odly.	Men's Shoos
Reg. 5.99
447
popular trim and tapered look
Trim, tapered styling in the ivy tradition. Assorted patterns and new fell shades. Waist sixes 29 to 36. Regular cut models in dark olive, black, dark blue, tan, brown and bine; 29 - 38. Reg. |6 .....................^i.4.97
Mon's Casual Clothing Deft.
Reg. $7
4?7
Shown: Heather six ballon cardigan in a stretch blend of acrylic and spandex. BlUe or olive. Heather stretch pullover in acrylic and snsndex. The mock turtleneck inset in contrasting hues. Blue, olive, gold or brown. Small to extra large.
SMI
Top priority: Perma*Prest * shirts for misses 10-18
Fashion consciously tailored in W sleeve and roll sleeve styles. The long sleeved shirts in hew fall solids; the • roll sleeve shirts in	*" •
a marvelous PERMA-PREST® blend.
Sizes IQ to 18.	-	,Q.
Sices 38-44, reg. 4.98 .......3,97
Mi*m' Sporttwoor
Oped Monday, Tfcuraday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 *° 5i38—$
Rag. 3.98
2**
Turtleneck tops and stretch pants fo:
Stretch turtlenecks of Dacron® _ nylon in gay stripe combos. S-L. Nylon stretch pants with stitched-down crease, self fabric stirrups. Boys’ Perms -
sen nunc—mn Ii|m.—-
I Prert® tapered casual jeans 1.97. Long sleeve no-iron shirts, ivy or 3-6x. 1,67 .■ -v	.
Men’s sweaters come on in fashion forecast
Sears] Downtown Pontiac I I ___
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO.
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
HI
life
... and September is the time to start making your home ready for the cooler months ahead. You'll find a showroom full of terrific values that will let you remodel within a budget.

HURRY/ SALE ENDS SEPTEMBER
exterior
PAINTED GALVANIZED
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PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SEPTEMBER 11
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
The Beautiful Enclosed
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Located at the corner of Elisabeth Lake and Telegraph Roads has two exciting shopping areas to please you ... the North Mall with its fountain and metal sculpture motif and Telegraph Road entrance, and the South Mall with its imported marble fountain and beautiful marble decor and Elisabeth Lake entrance. Parking for 7,000 cars all around the Center is free and convenient. The Center is open from 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. six days a week.
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THE PONTIAC frfrESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
Metro Fund Benefits 6-County Area |
By ED BLUNDEN
The Metropolitan Fund has been quietly providing an unusual and effective type of leadership, for several years, and the fund’s trustees are looking forward to more active participation in tiie region’s growth.
Hie fund’s 66 trustees are leaders in industry, education, religion and politics from the six neighboring counties — Wayne, Oakland, Macomb, Monroe, St. Clair and Washtenaw.
★ A A
Drawing on their vast experience and ability they have been
directing activities that have been ami will be influential in functions of governments in the metropolitan area.
Ten years ago, the organization began as the Southeast Michigan Metropolitan Community Research Corp. In 1964 this name was changed to Metropolitan Fund.
AREA WIDE PROGRAMS
Its function has been to provide leadership and encourage programs on an areawide basis with attention to those factors that would benefit the entire community.
Its main toed has been re-
search-studies that have Shown conditions as they exist and indicate what is needed. , Delos Hamlin, vice chairman of the fund and chairman of the, Oakland County Board of Supervisors, explained why he feels the Metropolitan Fund has proved so useful and effective.
'For one thing our money is given to us with no strings attached. We can see a project or a problem we feel is important to the region and we can pursue it.
FREEDOM
'If the project works out, fine, but if not we don’t have to
tfs That Time of Year Again
Student Draft Rights Explained
By JERRY BAULCH Associated Press Newsfeatures
WASHINGTON—School days are upon us again, so it’s a good time to look at some of the key questions being asked by students going to college.
Q. What requirements must I meet to qualify for a 2S classification as an undergraduate student?
A. You must file a written request for deferment with your local board.
Also you must provide your board each year with con-vinclng evidence—a student certificate from your college BAULCH —that you are continuing to pursue satisfactorily a full-time course of instruction.
Q. i began graduate study in law school , in September last year and am making satisfactory progress. Will I be entitled to continued deferment in 2S for my second year of )aw starting this September?
A. No. Deferment for graduate students is now limited to those in medicine, dentistry and willed medical specialties, or those who entered the second or subsequent year of graduate study toward a specific degree last fall.
Q. I have been accepted for enrollment in medical school. How do I proceed to get a deferment?
A. Write a letter to your local board requesting such deferment, set out the facts in your case, sign the letter and give your draft number. After you begin your studies have your school send a graduate or professional college student certificate to your local board.
Q. My draft board wouldn't defer me
in 2S because I did not make normal progress toward -my baccalaureate degree, but gave me a conditional Class IS (c) (statutory) student deferment. The board said it is good only for a year. If I make normal , progress during that year, can I get a 2S deferment again?
A. Yes, provided you give your board evidence you are then satisfactorily pursuing a full-time course and are still under age 24.
Q. To qualify lor a 2S student deferment must I enter college in the first class commencing after graduation from high school?
A. No, if you are not drafted before you choose to enter college. Once you enroll you must file a request with your board for a 2S deferment.
Q. Last year I attended college only part-time but will enter full-time during my , junior year which begins this September. -Will I qualify for a student deferment?
A. Ordinarily you would not qualify this year because you did not make satisfactory progress toward a degree in the past year. However, your board might classify you tS if there are mitigating circumstances in your situation.
0. I am a recent law school graduate but have not yet taken my bar exam. Can my induction be postponed to take this exam?	«
A. Yes. You can take the first bar exam held after your graduation in the state where you seek your license. Your board can postpone your induction until the day following that exam.
answer to.anyone but ourselves. This gives a kind of freedom that allows us to tackle problems, that no other agency could perform,’’ Hamlin said.
The Metropolitan Fund got much of its initial momr from the Frail Foundation and continues to have foundation support. <
A A A However, as the scope of its endeavors increases, a broader basis of funding is being sought. It Is hoped that Oakland County businesses and industry, both large and small, will take large part in the financing in the future, according to Hamlin.
He points out that what the Metropolitan Fund accomplishes has proven beneficial tQ all commercial interests and that goals are to provide a sound climate for financial growth in the six-county area, FUNCTIONS DESCRIBED Following is a definition of the Metropolitan Fund functions as described in its recent report: • Financing of research to identify Metropolitan needs and aspirations and to suggest necessary alternative poddies and action programs.
★ ★ . ★
0 Communicating with citizens concerning these research endeavors and resultant findings to UsSure and strengthen the democratic process necessary for action.
Assembling of leadership
support tp implement action programs to attain approved community aspirations. PROJECTS IDENTIFIED Following are some projects the fund has been involved in on a regional basis this year:
•	Participation witirtheon-going Transportation and Land Use Study, County Home Rule Committee and Southeastern Michigan Transportation Authority.
A ★ A
Sponsoring new studies on intergovernmental cooperation in such projects as providing hospitals, roads, prisons, waste disposal, libraries, computers, police protection, etc:'
•	Attempting to bring about more citizen participation in making decisions on regional problems.
A . A	A
Cooperation with the Southeast Michigan Council of Government (COG) and the New Detroit Committee.
Supporting research by Independent scholars.
A	A	A
“Much has been accomplished by the fund, perhaps because its unusual nature,” Hamlin said. “Much of what we have done has been observed and copied in other areas. I look for the fund to play a greater future role as more and more problems arise during the tremendous growth forecast for this area.”
; Not going abroad this year? Content yourself with our foreign-flavor collection, Fashionpace girl
Yearn for Buckingham's pomp, hut circumstances say no? Kelly Arden has captured the mood of many countries' costumes m this -harming dress collection. So catch the fashion and the feeling -—and save your pennies — our internationally inspired collection has it: shape, style, a special way of sending your heart flying and keeping your budget on the ground.
See our lolly .Arden collection modeled at ail Hudson’s stores, Saturday from 11:80 to , 4:30. Formal shows Downtown and Oakland, 12780 and 3 p.m. In Fashionpace Junior^
a.	Spanish plaid poncho, flung over black long-sleeved dress; acrylic/acetate, 5-13, $38.
b.	From Russia, with love, a Natasha shaped
dress with fake leopard collar and cuffs; acrylic/acetate, 5*13, $26.	.
c.	English military, changing of the guards, in red on black skirt, brassy buttons; bonded Orlbn* acrylic, 5-13, $23.
huds o it
iff
m
THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5,
L


HUDSON'S GREAT HOME SALE
OAKLAND MAIL I-75 and 14 Mil* Road
DOWNTOWN DETROIT	/ NORTHLAND CENTER	EASTLAND CENTER	WESTLAND CENTER	PONTIAC MALL
Woodward Aye. and Grand River	8 MH« and Nofthwettem .	8 Mile arid Kelly Roads	Warren and Wayne Roads	Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Road
n open Mon., Wed. till 140 p.m.; Tnaa, Thurs., Fri., tat. till 540 p.m. Hudson'* Northland; Eastland, Westland, Pontiao, Oakland; Mon., thunk, Frf., Sat. till 940 p.
D-4
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
1	large ston*
2	small stones
2 medium stones
1 large stone	1 large stone	1 large stone	1 large stone
4 small stones	-2	1 medium stone	*1 medium stone	2 medium stones
1 Small stone	4 small stones
1	medium stone _	— 1_madium stone	3 medium stones ■■	,	2 medium stones
2 small stones	fsmairstfflrwr----------------- 7"/T"	y	EIsmail stones
1 large stone 1 medium stone 7 smell stones
3 medium stones 2 small stones
1	large stone
2	small stones
1 large stone____^______largsLSloneJ-------------------------_-------------.2 large stones-----	3 large stones	—	2 large stones
4 small stones	8 small stones	2 small stones	-	2 small stones	10 small stones
1	large stone
2	small stones
1 large stone	1 large stone
4 small stones	8 small stone*
1	large stone
2	small stones
1 large stone 4 small stones
1 large stone 3 small stones
2 large stones	2 large stones	3 large stones
4 small stones '	10 small stones
2 large stones 2 small stones
1	large stone
2 medium stones
2	small stones
1 large stone 2 medium stones 10 small stones
1 large ston*	1 large ston*
1 small ston*

1 large ston*	1 large ston*	1 large stone	1 large ston*
2 small stones	4 small stones	6 small stones	$ small stones
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made to fit youf stones precisely. If you have diamonds, or any other fine stones, unmounted or in a mounting you no iongeT :fidr--our diamond experts will be happy to discuss this unique remountirtg service (prices begin at a very modest $37.50), and to give you an obligation-free estimate, in addition, we'll be pleased to check, clean, and polish your stones—naturally, at no charge.J
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• THE PONTIAC MAUL — WOODWARD & JOHN R — UNIVERSITY CITY — WONDERLAND WESTBORN — SEVEN GRAND — MICHIGAN & SCHAEFER — WOODWARD & GRAND BLVD.
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968

Dr. Oaks Says;
Smoking Habit Can Be Licked
(EDITOR’S NOTE — This is
another in a weekly- series is-sued by Oakland County Medical Society on health topics. Dr. Oaks is the collective voice of the Society.)
“Walk a mile?” The hardened smoker has driven five miles at any hour of the night in search dt the packaged “weed.” The habit csin be all-consuming.
Stop smoking? Quit? The dedicated puffer grins sheepishly. “Me?”he asks.“I couldn’t stop . . . just like that. Well, I’d have to taper off or something. After all I’ve been smoking since I was in' my teens. You'just can’t quit.”
person of sound mln<t and tody would become subservient and obedient to a p 1 a n t product . .-. dried, aged and rolled into a slender ’paper: tube, then burned to produce fumes?”
Oh yeah! It can be done. The task is both difficult and simple at the same time.
Essentially, it is a three-phase process. First, and perhaps most important If the entire process is to be a success, there Is the brainwashing; secondly, the actual physical discontinuance of the paper-packaged cylinders; third, and strpngely
Inconceivable that
..The active. prin^le_resultinjg
from this combustion is known as- nicotine — first detected in tobacco leaves some 140 years ago.
When available to the body, nicotine stimulates -the central nervous system (see, it doesn’t help the nerves), it’s effect is also noted on the respiratory process, blood flow and the center that controls vomiting, PARALYSIS SETS IN ;;
Following the initial stimulation, nicotine then tends to paralyze nerve cells.
Nicotine first slows the heart rate, but an increased rate [follows because of the nerve j cell paralysis, which has seen [ skipped beats noted.
through, the subtle process of rationalization to believe whatever it is you want to believe. However, to kick the smoking haUt, the evidence is mounting to make tionalization In favor of smoking semstUy.
More evidence brainwash!
(If you have a question for Dr. Oaks, send your card or letter to:'Oakland County Medical Society, 346 Park, Birmingham, 48009. Specific medical 6d-vice bannot be given.)
Blood pressure is elevated
probably the easiest, is "staying [ because nicotine causes, blood stopped.	vessels to become constricted —
cimpiit inrir	I narrower or of a smaller bore.
SIMPLE LOGIC	^ these are not aU of the
Tbe first phase is the *°un‘| physical changes or products dation for all that comes after. ^uce^ ^ combustion of But, what, if anything, can a ^baccp.
person say to himself to aban-don a thoroughly entrenched habit? For the most part, it is simple logic. Consider the following dialog:
“It was important
SECOND PRODUCT A second product is tar — a sticky, liquid, brownish-colored residue, intensive investigation suggests this material
•moke . . . Made you fee 1 most prominent irritant and the older. Besides, everybody did it, i causative factor in the pro-etc. etc." And so the con-dwdion of respiration disease, versation went ■	Despite all this known in*
★	★	*	formatidn, "people still smoke,
“You remember the famous ^	sr™ke ~
hack then.”	were going to do.
back then.
So you smoked. “It gave youl
Brainwashing is not an easy
“V”y« S gHi - W*
Guh Control Session Gets Too Crowded
ROCKVILLE, Md. (AP) More than 3,000 : persons jammed a junior high school auditorium. and hallways Wednesday night at a hearing on a proved gun control ordinance.
The hearing was postponed because of overcrowding after seven persons had spoken and rescheduled for tonight in the Walt Whitman High School field
Much of the audience cheered speakers against the ordinance —which would require registration of shotguns and rifles! in the county. Some person? wore buttons' saying, “Yes! Qun Control."
No Turning Back
DETROIT UPI — General Motors Corp. announced Wednesday that a foolproof, no-tum-back odometer will be a feature on all of its 1999 . model cars. The. odometer, usually located within the speedopieter, gives total miles driven. Several stateis already have outlawed odometer tum-backs.
nervous. Besides, iLtasted good 1 -Oh, of course sometimes you! would smoke too much, but then! you just cut down,” , i SUBSERVIENT
This is an example of the| logic behind the smoking habit.)
It seems rational, but consider the other logic that should persuade the other Way.
“Remember the 2 a.m. ride searching for an open gas station or store. Ridiculous? Many smokers have done it. Doesn’t it
Fiancees
(ui'HKelw&ny
Th« Pontiac Mall
Great fashion values are an everyday happening at Winkelman's. So are the personal service and attention you-receive.
Each member of our sales staff is trained
to roll out the red carpet every time you shop at Winkelman’s, and to give you the best and most complete service possible.... Gome in soon and see for yourself.
sale
SAVE ON TERRIFIC WOOL KNITS IN JR. AND MISSES’ SIZES
17.97
Through Saturday I The fashion and savings are equally good in this collection. Find skimmetS , and belted silhouettes in a fine selection of colors.
Here: skimmer in red, gray, camel, royal, 10*18.
sale
OUR SWEATERS AND SKIRTS ARE EXTRA SPECIAt VALUES
6.97 and 7.97
sale
ELE6ANT C0A1 AND DRESS COSTUMES
56.90
Through Saturday! Choose sweaters and skirts in
fresh new styles at savings. Cardigan, crew-neck and vest sweaters, 36-40; A-line skirts, in plaids and solid colors, 8*16.
Choose woo! covert solid color $oat with dress to match; or plaid coat in a wool blebd with'solid color dress. The styles are " elegant in fashion colors. Misses* size*.

sale
BUTTER SOFT LEATHER CLOVES
2.99
Through Saturday I Choose our leather gloves ' with rayon tricot linings, Shortie to 4*button lengths, classics and novelty. Black only, sizes S-M-L. A great value.

PONTIAC MALI - shop monday, thursday, friday,- Saturday to 9 TEl-HURON CENTER - shop monday through Saturday to 9
4
j-
W


OU to Start New Building
TOE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
Ground will be broken soon for the new School of Performing A r t, s classroom-office building at Oakland Unver&ity.
Designed by O’Dell, Hewlett and Lcckenbach Inc., Birmingham arc bit ec ts and engineers, the building includes a five-story central structure and a pair of flanking two-level
Total cost of the building, which Is state and federally
funded, is $4,725,000, Including Elevator Co. of Detroit, elevatori The library in the main unit
fees, furnishings, construction and contingencies. Date for completion is the fell <4 1970.
* * ★
Successful low bidders on the project were Spence Brothers oi Saginaw, architectural, $2,993,000; Port City Heating and Plumbing- of Muskegon, mechanical, $867,838; T. L. Jacobson Electrical of Pontiac, electrical, $458,700; and Detroit
work, $58,900.	{will be departmentalized and
Provisions for teaching will be shared by dramatic and dramatic arts, instrumental and; music departments. It will be
-Junior Editors Quiz on
/ocal music, and dance ark incorporated in the building.
The five-story structure, facing north, will have classrooms and library on the second floor and offices and studios on the upper three floors.
The first level and the west wing are planned for dramatic arts in production (experimental theater) and dance. The wing also will include three rehearsal halls and a costume rea.
The east wing will be used for music teaching and will contain a 500-seat recital-lecture hall. The wing is designed with vocal, instrumental, and choral rehearsal halls and with separate areas for organ and percussion Ins trument
QUESTION: How can one find direction without a compass?
ANSWER: If .you have a watch and the sun is shining, use the method shown in the main part of the picture.
Hold a match or thin stick against the edge of the watch. Now move the watch around until the hour hand lies along the same line as the shadow of the stock. Halfway between the shadow and the number 12 will show the direction south.:
Once this has been determined, it is easy to see that north lies just opposite south on the other side of the watch. You can then figure where east and west are.
Without a watch, use the method the two little girls are demonstrating. If the sun isn’t shining, you can often find north by studying moss growing on tree trunks, for this W thickest on the north side of trees.
At night, look for the familiar big group of stars, the Big Dipper, which looks like a large bent handle with a dipper on the end. The/last two stars on the outside of the dipper point toward tnb Pole Star, the one star which stays in place as the others revolve around it. This star always shows the north.
You can win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prize.
equipped for complete filing of scripts and tapes tor audiovisual research.
All windows in the buildings face north or are shaded from the south by the exterior design. Walls are designed for max-Imun acoustical resonance and will be soundproofed for maximum use by all of the performing arts.
The building will be constructed of brick and precast concrete.
O’Dell, Hewlett and Lucken-bach has been the architect fin-other OU buildings, including Matilda R. Wilson Hall, the classroom and theater building, and Dodge Hall of Engineering, presently under construction, which is located west of the new performing arts complex.
SCHOOL OF PERFORMING ARTS—Oakland University’s new $4.7-miUion School of Performing Arts classroom-office building is expected to be ready for fall 1970. The facility
will be used for teaching dramatic arts, instrumental and vocal music, and dance.
long coat *35
shat coat *30
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EIGHT
VARIATIONS ON ONE GREAT THEME:
THE
TURTLENECK
The turtleneck keeps the same context but takes on new directions^rgoing casually, going formally—changing style, changing fabric.
wide assortment of colors, sizes S-M-L-XL. at$1T. (E) A pure cotton dress-up, with side zipper. French cuffs and doth covered links i#jried blue, gold or greBn, sizes S-M-L-XC. at $10. (f) A basket weave wool turtle in great shades of blue, jade, orange or mustard sizes S*#m at 17.95. (G) The dress-up turtle of pure cotton with back zipper and French cuffs: i‘ white pique, in S-lM-L-XL. at 1 2.50. (H) The super-burly fisherman knit of natural wool.-S-M-L-XL. $20;
OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY T0 5:30, MONDAY. THURSDAY, FRIDAY & SATURDAY TO 9 P.M.
TELEGRAPH & ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS .	~ .	/
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WHITEHORSE, Y.T. W ~ This capital of Yukon Territory, the am knowm-inainly for the Klondike gold rush of 70 years age, swings with ten, hope and adventure. ‘It seems as if everyoneknows everyone else In the population of 5,000.
“It’s a place where , you can develop as an individual,” iays Duff Taylor, who works ter a car dealer. “If you. want to get involved in community life, there's plenty to do. If you want to be a loner, fine.”
Whitehorse is no, longer a hush town, although it’s
downtown streets need a'good scrubbing and lndians live in shacks. It’s a growing, progressive city —'tee only major watering hole en the all-weather Alaska Highway between Dawson Creek. B.C., and Fairbanks; Alaska.
year anil likes it, bell probably stay,” gays Flo Whyaird, who has been editing the' twice-weekly Whitehorse'Star for 11
Peter Jensen and - Ms Wife, Shirley, have a big-game outfitting business. They live in a new alpine-type houm in Riverdale subdivision where contractors have left most of the pine trees standing.
—Modernp Welfcstocked shops have taken over from fog trading posts,, and airlines link the city with Alaska, British Columbia and Alberta.
HE’P PROBABLY STAY “If a person lives here for a
“We’ve got homes in Whitehorse teat are as smart
tHIfi y^TlAC>ttjaiSS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
p—r
Capital of Yukon Territory Swings With Fun, Hope, Adventure
and spacious as you’ll find 4 anywhere,” Shirley said. •
. * *
Tallest building in the city is tee government annex, four stories. The main streets are paved and the tourists who , swarm Here in summer often comment on the pleasure of driving on asphalt after days cm tee dusty, gravel-surfaced Alaska' Highway.
ROTTING ON SHORE Three huge stern-wheelers that once steamed the mighty Yukon River lie rotting on
shore. The city hopes one can be turned into a national monument to tee thousands of men who came north during tee gold rush days.
Powerboats now move on the river, and, hi the city, young people whip around in sports
Two men who work for the Canadian Broadcast C o r p. agree that “the most beautiful girls in the world live here — tee climate gives them that peaches-and-cream look.” The
winter la long and . summer short. Parts of the Yukon have recorded temperatures of 80 below aero.
‘ *	★ *	■
Jane Gafftn and her dog drove in from Colorado four years ago.
„. '' ■
“I didn’t plan to stay,” she says. “I meant to. go on to Alkaska. But my car broke down. I wasn’t here two hours before Bob and Rusty Erlam offered me tee job as advertising manager of tee Star. I
took it, and haven’t regretted staying.”
★ ★ . .
Living costa are Ugh- Freak meat, fruit and vegetables come in by truck; Milk costs 40 cento a quart. A dozen beers cost $4.50 at tee government liquor store, compared with $2.65 in Edmonton, Alta.
★ ★ *
“It may cost mare to live up here, but the people have fewer ulcers,” Duff Taylor said. “That must be wprth something.”
25 Great Fashion Centers m Michigan • Ohio • Illinois



THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5,
19$8
Bushwhacked GIs Fight Off N. Vietnamese
TRANG BANG, Vietnam (DPS —Ralph Stevens cringed into the loose dirt of the rice paddy dike, - 'as 12 North Vietnamese fled clumsily through bursts American artillery 500 yards • awiqr.
The Communists were remnants of a battalion that had been faying to kill toe 20-year-old sergeant’s company for
three days and he wished themjglanced warily at the thick was not the only body in the
dead. The dry dust of the rice
paddy was a long way from the left and right.
lush green countryside of his home in Portsmouth, Ohio.
# it ♦	1 t:
“1 hope they kill the S.O.B.s,1 he mumbled. "Kill every last one of them." ,
Stevens was lying at the edge ’ toe field. Occasionally he
scrub brush stretching to the
‘GET READY*
“We are going to start'drawing sniper fire in a few minutes," Stevens said. “There are NVA (North Vietnamese Army soldiers) hi those bushes. I know if.1
Behind him toe body of a North Vietnamese
in the paddy, staring at the bright sun through ' V" eyes. Empty Oration cans and mortar canisters littered the ground around the dead man.
Nearby Pfc. David' Chavez, fired his machine gun at the scurrying Communists. Chavez, a shy little man from Morenci, Ariz., fights like a one-ir army. He turned 20 on Sept.
The Communist in the paddy
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troops turned south at the last moment and walked into the flank of the crack battalion of the 101st NVA regiment instead of its main force.
BULLETS FLEW ‘Machine gun up frontl’l Chavez, an assistant gunner at the time, dashed forward with his leader. The green tracers Chinese-made bullets criss crossed the, air.
“The gunner only got off two bursts before they hit him in chM,” Chavez said. “I rolled him aside and took his place.”
area. More than 100 other dead North Vietnamese were hidden in the bushes of this small scrub forest 24 miles north of Saigon.
BUSHWHACK TRY The Communists tried to bushwhack Alpha company of the 101st Air Cavalry Division’! 506th Infantry.
“They let our point man get within five feet of their machine gun before they opened Stevens said. “I saw him go down and tried to reach him, but the firing was too heavy.
“Three guys got wounded toying to reach him. I told them he was dead and to quit, but they went out anyway, and Harris was screaming for medic. He was hit all over.” That is how the fighting The American para-
al office to pick up the newspaper’s incoming Saigon stories, ft , a ★
The ‘ soldier’s grandfather; Charles Lavezoll,' works as ^ photoengraver for the news and when he (toe grandson) gets' discharged, he hopes to enter the same profession.
Capt. William Burrier, 27, of Uvalde, Tex., shouted into the radio for helicopter gun-ships. They swooped in quickly, stirring the trees with machine guns and rockets. Chaves dropped Ms gun and dragged toe wounded gunner to safety, REDS WITHDREW
The cobra gun-ships, followed by the pounding boom of American artillery, forced toe Communists to withdraw. The outnumbered paratroopers evacuated their wounded and began digging foxholes, as toe sun descended.
The stocky little Arizonian crawled to Ms knees less than 15 feet from the Communists and sprayed their positions with a screaming stream of bullets while the other men found cover. A lieutenant tried to bring up another machine gun, but he was hit. Chavez stood alone,
“They shod Id have got Chavez,” said Sgt. Kyle Jones, ‘He was right in the open and all of them were firing at Mm.”
OLD HAT
Radioman Charles Lavezoll, J, Yorktown Heights, N.Y. crouched beside the captain. The Vietnam War was old hat to him’.
Before joining the Army and coining to Vietnam nine months ago, Lavezoli worked as a copy-boy at toe NeW York Daily News. Nightly he uged to waft to the United Press Intemation-
‘That night we started hearing people talking behind us and everybody said it was Bravo Company, but they were talking Vietnamese and I screamed “gooks,” .Stevens said.
*■ ★ ★
The North Vietnamese attacked from the rear, and Stevens, Chavez and three other men were on the outer edge of toe half-moon perimeter. They were cut off from the compa-
“The NVA almost got into the hole wKh me, so I had to crawl over to Chavez,” Stevens said.
'They were only 15 feet away and he was firing right into them.”
DUG OUT SHRAPNEL Chavez had the Communists in a cross fire. They had to knock kin) out before they could bring in more troops. Rocket grenades began raining into the position, wounding everyone but Stevens, Chavez was hit in the hand- He grabbed a loose bullet and dug toe shrapnel out,
The Commmunfetg must have thought they had killed the little man from Arizona. Five or six of them sat down for a rest right in front of hie position.
;4Scratch five North Vietnamese. “I kept shooting into them until the machine gun jammed, then I threw grenades,” Chaveg said.
With his last grenade, Chavez
booby trapped the machine gun, then took a wounded man’s M16 rifle to cover his comrades while they crawled to the tIJK perimeter.
FINALLY RAN
One mdn, his back punctured by shrapnel, remained behind with Chavez. When the M16 ammo ran out, the Arizonian took toe wounded man’s M79 grenade launcher and continued his eyeball-to-eyeball battle.
“I kept screaming for him to run, and finally he did, “Chavez said.
Moments later the M79 grenades were exhausted. Chavez ran back to the perimeter himself.
The back of the Communist attack was broken. For several minutes, their vague shadows could be seen dragging off dead, but they did not attack again. SILVER STAR
Boy, I felt tired when I got back to toe perimeter,” Chavez said. “I do not know hew they did not get me.”
Chavez, Captain Burrier and five other men were recommended for the Silver Star. Twenty others seem certain to receive bronze stars and several put in for Army commendation medals.
Hospital Reaches Tentative Pact*
BATTLE CREEK (AP) - 'A strike threatened for today was averted Wednesday night when negotiators reached tentative agreement on a contract between Lakeview Hospital and Local 79 of toe Building Services Employes Union.
The union is expected to hold a ratification meeting soon on the proposed contract, which would be its first with the hospital. The union represents licensed practical nurses, orderlies, nurse’s aides and others at toe 82-bed hospital.
The longest highway tunnel in the world is toe Mont Blanc, in Italy; which extends for 7V« miles.
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Mandat* pulls 'em in, flattens tom out and fonts tom up with a wide, firm spandtx elastic band and a nan-roll waist. The boxsr style shown hers is scientifically designed to knock off about two inches; comes in white or blue; in sizes $ (30-32), M ,(34-36), l (42-44), at 6.95. XL (46-48), ‘ in white only, at 7.95.
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Monday, Thursday, Friday and Saturday to 9 P.M. Telegraph and Eliza bath Laka Roads
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USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS!
CATCH YOUR FANCY?
If 8o—catch the collection of boys' and students' Fanci's at HHS. They're wild, they're in, they're permanently-pressed. Set your direction and team 'em with sport shirts, sport coats, sweaters, turtles, V-necks and the like; then take your stand in the Ivy belt loop model in a swinging selection of Glen plaids, checks and windowpanes. Boysf sizes 6-12, in regulars and slims, from $6-$7. Students' sizes 26-30 waist, (available with or without cuffs) from $8-$10.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
Peking Moves to Oust Liberal Influences in
TOKYO HP) - An authoritative Red China* newspaper said yesterday liberalizing “bourgeois" influences are at work in the Chinese press, radio add television «td must be stamped out.
These was no mention of Czechoslovakia but the parallel was obvious. Rad China’s news, papers have assailed Czechoslovak news liberties and Soviet intervention in Czechoslovakia with equal fervor.
.. ^ ,♦ w w “The representatives of the bourgeoisie continue to scheme to sefee press leadership from
the proletariat by every vfle ruse,” said an editorial in thd theoretical journal Red Flag.
* /* Sr, * ■ '
The importance Communist Chairman Mao Tse-tung and Ms followers attach to the editorial was indicated fay the fact Mat It was composed by the editors of Red Flag, the party organ People’s Daily and me army paper, Liberation Army Daily. Hsinhua (New China) news agency distributed it in fulL 'MUST FOLLOW INSTRUCTIONS*
“The newspapers, radio and
other institutions of journalism everywhere must resolutely car-ry out all Instructions of the proletarian headquarters headed by Chairman Mao and with Vice Chairman^ Lin Piao as its
U S. Cash OK'd
WASHINGTON (API — The Health, Education and Welfare Department has approved a $29,068 grant to St. Glair County Goodwill Industries to, assist three new staff members working with the handicapped.
deputy leader, and criticize and repudiate bourgeois liberalism,” it said.
fr- It ’ *
“To avert (heir down, the handful of class enemies are creating rumors and slanders unscrupulously, fabricating grapevine news spreading all kinds of stories and gossip in a vain effort to palm off lies as truth and create confusion so to obstruct the great strategic] plan of Chairman Mao ana ,un-' dermine toe great proletarian cultural revolution.
“There are still Some com-
rades in our ranks, who, with an eye to the selfish interests of their narrow faction, interpret the instructions of the proletarian headquarters out of .context to meet their own needs, and release sensational new? and pictures to create a certain public opinion; or, in disregard of the overall situation and the interests of the proletariat, make public various material and documents at will,- thus resulting serious cases of revealing confidential party and state Information,”
expression of the poisoning influence of the bourgeois journalist line" that must be Corrected.
The editorial dated the liber; alization - drive to 1964, saying
State Gl Killed
WASHINGTON (AP) - Army Cpl. Howard J. Hartman of Harper Woods. Midi., was killed recently in action in Vietnam, the Defense Department reported Wednesday night. *	■* ■*	Hartman’s widow is Mrs. Cathy
It said this was “a vicious A. Hartman of Harper Woods.
that President Uu Shao-chi rial
Mao’s main enemy, had at that time opposed printing ' Mao’s ideas “with a big hullabaloo.” ‘CORRUPT ELEMENTS’
sue
was an
Red Flag itself has been
Noting that there have been a {mce
series of purges in preas ranks the editorial said: “Attention must be paid to the fact that people change, and therefore it necessary constantly ,to clear out tholse elements “who have become corrupt, and not allow them to get hold of the press Or any other organ of. journalism.” ★ * *
Hsinhua noted that the edito-
ty.
said it cation because of p top.
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
HOW! SUNDAY UQUOR
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School Race Balance Gives Problem^
NEW YORK (AP)—a crazy- Heeling and evaluating the prin-| bused to white schools in other 60 per cent of school enrollment j can be found, will ]^h Swa-quilt of problems emerges from cipals of their schools and not districts, but the plaintiffs say is Negro, is offering new oours-|hlli, a trade and gov^rnmema^ a survey of big Northern cities curriculum* — they would not'this arrangeemnt has proved in- es' an Afro-American history lan^age ta^getwr®1 “s® faced with worsening racial im-ihave total community control,;convenient to the children and and culture and, if instructors Africa and tne vongo. ■ balance in school enrollments but would work hand in hand'their families, and teaching staffs.	with the schools.”	Waveriy V. Yates Jr., Negro
j Attempts to end student. TheIndianapolisSchoolBoard chairman of the Norwalk chap-segregation by busing children was cited ih a Justice Depart- ter of the Congress of Racial | back and forth between predom- j ment court action alleging ra- Equality and one of the plain-inantly Negro ami predominant- cial . discrimination in b o t h tiffs, said: “In the white neigh-ly white school districts have i school enrollment and faculty borhood schools,, the white par-run afoul of proteste by parents ] assignments.	ente have a lot to say about how
[of both races, as well as the	*	*	* ,	. •	„
War - —The board denies the sHsgs-, ■'**.***»*** JWMC +	**	Ition but has announced it will be «ids, because their powa
|n some metropolitan areas, j reassign 204 of its 4,700 teschera ^^jamong schools outnumber in an attempt to improve facttl- and because tne scnoois tne
,. | black kids go to are often sev-
Mich., won a court injunction against the compulsory transfer Of students from one high school to another to balance out the races. Said the three-judge pan-“ Discrimination cannot be used either for or against any person.’I^H
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t
At
a
blacks of school ----------- _
their white Counterparts by so ties of selected schools. The an-,	. _
j wide a margin that few if any-nouncementwm followed by the]er^	. . .
.predominantly white schools are [resignation of 149 teachers and.__Wbite parents in Lansing, left to be desegregated. The the threat of a mass walkout.
Washington, D. C., school sys^j in St. Louis, where 70 per cent tem, for example, is 93 per cent 10f grade school students are ;Negro.	'Negroes, School Supt. Dr. Wti-
i Educational authorities seek-jiiam Kottmeyer recently re-jing to improve faculty stand-;marked: “The plain fact is we ards in ghetto schools by arbi-’haven’t got enough white ehil-
trary shifting of teacher assign-i<fren left in St. Louis to make; ; ^	.....
ments are threatened with mass ian integrated school system.” j SOME DENOUNCE :resignation* or work stoppages ] ^ st Louis School Board! A 1280,000 busing plan in ! EMPHASIS SHIFTS	appealed to suburban districts i Gpand Rapids, Mich., intended
Manv Mark loaders h v e to accept Negro students from to integrate all schools from the shifted their emohasis from de- *6 cltY’ but found no takers. third grade up, won the support DBMW*™, Mm Negro ot «« rifW-tai bo, [improving the quality of slum president of toe St. Louis Teach- has been denounced by some (schools	ers’ Union, said that among black activists.
Black activists almost every- blacks “there is now less em- Gerald Brown, spokesman for where are demanding a meas- phasis on integration than on a Black Power group, said inte-i ure of educational home rule upgrading schools In Negro grated schooling Is not ttie an-: for predominantly Negro areas, areas.”	VhLu	aL’b afk
ip which neighborhood commit- ^	*	*	*' „ jjjJ’ ^ ai. Ki f i8 ^ 8'
tees would have a strong voice Disillusionment with the re- tratws, witiv all-black teachers, on how the schools should besults of busing black students coaches and counselors,” he de-run	"to predominantly white schools mands.
I A battle over such a proposal bas cropped up to many areas.1 Los Angeles has created five: [has led to the threat of a strike I" Norwalk, Conn., a group of specml high school instructional bv New York City teachers [Negroes and Puerto Jticans cente* aimed mainly nt up-1 when the schools ooen Sent 9 Iwtent to eburt in an effort to [grading the learning level of The disputed planP authorizedforce the reopening of an ele- students in overcrowded, non-bv the state legislature a n d ">entary school c osed because wh.te schools. Buses are pro-becked bv some nonwhites and enrollment was almost eptirely vlded for travel to the five cen-Mavor John V. Lindsay, would n0,!lwk'*?'	-■
create neighborhood school The stodents have stoce been Newark, N._J., where about boards with power to hire'and	/
f*re teachers.
FTPS ON 2 FRONTS The New York Board of Education is against it and the Untied Federation of Teachers union .says there will be a walkout if the plan goes into effect, I
Of New York’s U million 1 By DICK WEST	comments. Then I realized he
school children, just over half WASHINGTON (UPI) The was referring to the demonstra are Negro or Puerto Rican Democratic National Convention tors who were .creating a dis-Seattle, Wash, is considering has been over and done with for f-rbanre near the1 Conrad ' Hil-the establishment of a sort of about a week now and, incredi- to* Hotel.
0 I don’t know how big the chi'dren are where he comes 'from, b-'t some of the ones I sa,,T '-"■•fftojg with the cops! co 11 have nlaved ^middle line-barker for the Green Bay Packers, including a few of the girl children.
; Nevertheless, I find myself in agreement with charges that the notice mishandled the -'m-ation.
SEPTEMBER SPECIAL
Friday Only-4 F.M. to G P.M.
CHICKEN DINNER
uncle
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IN CONCERT
SPANKY
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FRIDAY, SEPTlEMBER 6
at
OAKLAND UNIVERSITY 8:30 P.M.
at the *'■ MEADOW BROOK FESTIVAL GROUNDS
TICKETS:
02.50	— Lawn
03.50	— Pavilion
Tickets Available at the Door and .Ji lt. Hudson’s
rent, sell* trade---USE,,
PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS!,
Antics of the	(
t- Make Confab Memorable
445
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RDHIA/N THE ADS IN
WRAPPER

auxiliary black school board to ble as it may oversee the operation nf schools seem, people f| in areas where the population is are still talking malnlv Negro.	about it.
★	*	*	I call tfije ItT
School Supt. Forbes Bottomly credible b e * said the plan will receive close cause a politi-study but, “We don’t want to cal conventton fetUOUnd up In pswer plans nfisnot ordinarily adults with political considera- an event that tions.”	lingers to th4
In Philadelphia, the board of niemory. Th e education is setting up what it average time it takes to forget WRONG TAdlTCS palls “community advisory a ^nvention hag never been	M Da]ey>s con8tabulary;
boards ’composed 01 ^ghbor- ca cutoted, hut 12 hours prob-	parpntI„ was „ot aware that
hood citizens,	ably Is a good guess.	h' wa8 dealing with chiIdrent
On be morning .(ter . nomA”?*””1 «**>*«'»* have “some authority over se- vention ends it is not uncommon J d followi the riot
llthTdeSlto an^ ^ S	^ b»ve

vou hannen to recall who it was con8U,ted sPock’s book on yy,haw>” T.'yr1,	tnfettt and child care. That
p™	■- M
tains some vivid, or gofy, recol- , w * w • I
REFERS TO CHIU>REN v	\
’An ow^y^fto^'man-'for ond—Each. time'the demonstrators of the networks had on camera'approached the Conrad Hilton, a delegate who was babbling which was chaotic enough al-rafher hysterically about the ready, the precinct captain way Chicago police were treat-{should have stepped forward ing “the children” downtown, (and said in a kind but firm At first 1 was puzzled by his
voice, “Hiis is a no-no.”
* . w *
The children would then have backed away and, gone, some place else to play. > r Today’s children may not have much respect for law and Order, but they Ml know what a “no-no” is.
The Exclusive
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IIIIII
TOE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
D—11
Marinating Gives Fowl Spicy Flavor
Well-marinated chicken cooked on an outdoor grill spells ■ Summer at its Best"! Barbecuing need not be an expensive weekend affair nor totally restricted to steak?.
Hamburgers are luscious on the grill and barbecuedchicken is really a treat when it has been steeped in flavor 4 to 6 hours.
“Chicken Polynesia” is just that kind of barbecue delight. Marinated In soy, honey and wine with Orange Peel and Garlic to mellow the flavors, it is a refreshing change from the tomato-type sauces.
'• ★'	♦ it
Boiled down to concentrate the flavor, the marinade makes a wonderful sauce to serve over the chicken.
Chicken Polynesia 2 broiling chickens, halved
1	cup white dinner wine to cup honey
to cup jsoy sauce
2	tablespooms sated oil 2 teaspoons orange peel to teaspoon garllcpowder 1 lemon, thinly-sliced
Wipe chicken well. Combine all remaining ingredients in a large glass bowl; mixing until, well-blended. Add chicken;! cover and marinate 4 to 6 hours turning occasionally.
it	■ ★ -
Remove fc h 1 c k e n from marinade; grill bone-side down, about.6 inches from coals for to hour. Baste occasionally. Turn -chicken skin-side down and continite to cook 25
Treat Dad to Gramp's Pretzel Dip
Did1 you know teat back In the^and saute a . minute or two.
days when pretzels and beer and men — went together — teat pretzel manufacturers always ate their pretzels warm, right out of the oven? Of course, hot pretzels are excellent with cold beer.
Alpo, these mfen learned that hot pretzels dipped into bowls of tangy mustard just called for more Of the same.
_ _So why. not dig out your warming tray hud flB 11 wtthall shapes and sizes of pretzels. Turn them now and then to keep hot.
Of course you know that men always appreciate King Size
Don’t brown. Add salt and pepper lightly.
Now add to pound grated cheddar cheese and let it melt over very low heat. Stir in-one small can minced pimientos ydth their juice and mix well. Add 1 tablespoon frozen chives, 2 teaspoons good chili powder, 1 dry mustard and dash of garlic salt.
Serve hot with hot pretzels. If it gets too thick add heated beer! Sounds queef?~No argument, but, it’s delicious and it disappears.
AVOCADO DIP Buy 4 very ripe avocados. Cut
lemon juice, about T tablespoon.
Using silver fork, mash and whip until smooth. Stir in to clove garlic finely minced, Vi teaspoon salt, to teaspoon tabasco with 1 tablespoon more lemon juice. Now add 2 tablespoons mayonnaise and Vi cup tomato juice, heating well.
Top with blurb of sohr cream. Unusual and perfect with pretzels.
For the third dip, use your favorite mild sour cream and onion mix. Nice foil for the hot
DIPS AND DUNKS - Make your appetizer cause different by serving a variety of pretzels with a trio of dips. One is a
dip; the second is made with avocados and the third features sour cream.
always appreciate wng m halves, peel and place in serrings. So make an offering M^howi Cover with of Dips and Dunks in a man size bowl. Three varieties which j men like are:
FIRE ALARM
1-3 cup each, finely chopped i onion and green pepper. Dropj into heavy saucepan in which 2 tablespoons butter is bubbling
Following a recipe in an old-time cookbook that calls for) berry- or-fruitTSttgar?^ Use su-small deep bowl. Cover with perfine granulated sugar.
Ingredients Keep lyiedt Loaf Moist
Sour cream sauce nqjbc and instant mashed potatoes give extra juiciness to Family Meat LOaf.
Into mixing bowl measure to J cujj tomato sauce with cheese; Iron; an 9-ounce can; reserve remaining sauce. Mix in lto, pounds lean ground beef, % cup; instant mashed potato flakes or' granules, 1 envelope (1% ounces) sour cream sauce mix and 1 egg.
Shape into loaf ; place in shallow baking dish. Bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour. Makes 8 servings.
A^ pound of uncooked corn-meal yields about 3 cups.
Delight Guests With Pecan Oak Cakes
Individual Pecan Oat Cakes
—	smaller even than cup cakes
—	make a most delightful dessert for. any of summer’s parties.
Their delicate maple flavor and good oat texture make you hunger for more than one. Cereals are no strangers to cake batters. The good grain flavors of rolled oats and other cereals make teem suitable for combining with many foods.
Add eggs, one at a time, and i degrees FI until done. 20 to 22 saucepan. Bring to a boil. Con-beat' well after each addition.!minutes. Cool. Frost with tinue cooking until syrup
Add sifted d r y ingredients Seafoam Icing I alternately with oat mixture;jdesired, Yield: folpnd well. Spoon into fluted! cakes.
Meanwhile, boil remaining marinade until reduced to one-half. Spoab over chicken to serve. Makes 4 servings.
Treaf Taste Buds to Zesty Spread
Delicious sandwich spread: cheddar cheese (very soft or finely grated) mixed with mayonnaise, chopped pimiento-stuffed green olives and walnuts.
* * *
If you are making a large quantity of this spread, and are using a cheddar cheese that isn’t the very soft variety, you can put the cheese, olives and walnuts through the food chopper and teen ,mix in - the mayonnaise^
i decorate, if dozen cup-
paper baking cups in muffin pans (2toxlto inches).
YIELDS 24 Bake in moderate oven (350
Horseradish Puts Bite in the Sauce
these cakes can be bakedi whenever you have the time. If left unfrosted, they will keep well in the freezer. Shortly before serving, swirl a little This sauce used to be served Seafoam Icing on each. ‘ at a famous restaurant in New' PECAN OAT CAKES ± W« «*h market section. 1 cup boiling water	FTOHMARKETCO C K T AIL
1 cup rolled oats, -quick or	SAUCE
regular, uncooked	, to cup tomato catchup
1% cups sifted all-purpose to cup chili sauce
4 teaspoons sweet pickle relish
Seafoam Icing to cup brown sugar, packed to cup water
to teaspoon cream of tartar 2 egg whites
24 pecan halves or fancy cake decorations
Combine brown sugar, water, and cream of tarter i n
reaches the thread stage (230-degrees F)|
Beat egg whites until they hold soft peaks. Pour hot syrup over beaten egg whites in a fine stream, beating constantly. Continue beating until stiff, peaks will form. Frost cupcakes, swirling icing into peaks.
. * * *
Top each with a pecan half or fancy cake decorations. Yield: Enough for 24 cupcakes.
flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
1	cup finely chopped pecans, to cup butter or margarine
2	cups brown sugar, packed
1	teaspoon vanilla
to teaspoon maple flavoring
2	eggs
Pour boiling water over rolled oats; let stand while mining cake. Sift flour, baking powder, and salt into mixing bowl; stir in pecans. Cream butter or margarine; gradually add brown sugar and flavorings and cream afriL
3 to 4 teaspoons bottled white horseradish
1 teaspoon Worcestershire .sauce
In a small container, mix together the catchup, chili sauce, relish, horseradish and Worcestershire. May be used at once or covered and chilled for a few hours or overnight allow flavors to blend.
Makes about 1 cup — enough for 4 to 6 portions of seafood. (Use the pickle relish and horseradish just as it comes from the jar and bottle.)
ORIENTAL PORK SUEY — In Skillet, brown lto cups cubed cooked pork and 1 cup diagonally sliced celery in to cup butter or margarine until tender. Add 1 can (1 lb.) bean sprouts, drained; 1 can mushroom gravy and 2 teaspoons soy sauce. Heat, stirring occasionally. Serve oyer cooked rice with additional soy sauce. Makes 4 servings.
U.M.1
MICHIGAN
POTATOES
U.S.No.1
COOKING
ONIONS
bag
BANANAS
U.S. NO. 1
,10c

PEPPERS or CUKES
HOME SHOWN
2 ter 15*
FRESH BAR-B-QUE
SPARERIBS
NOT DOGS BOLOGNA SAOSAGE
79
0
Hr
Calif.
Red? Black or Green Seedless
GRAPES
Grade
TOMATOES
HOME
GROWN

25*
FRESH CRISP
CARROTS
2-15
t
FRESH DRESSER
FRYERS

CALIF. SWEET
ORANGES
Doz.
ir
ASSORTED
LUNCH Qrad. MEATS -t”-
55!
GR. ft SKINLESS
ON. 1 CHUNK
QR.1 Polish
FRESH
GROUHD

STOKELY
CATSUP
f 20-oz. .
Jordon’s
BISCUITS
B-oz.
Only
MEADOWDALE
Shortening
3 ib.
V Can
49*
608 W. HURON STREET NEAR WEBSTER SCHOOL
Open Weekly 9-9-Frj., Sat. 9-9
to Market Change
from City Side Super Market
Roman
Fabric Softener Vi Gal. 39*
Joy
Dish Detergent
t pt., 6 fl. ozs. 39°
Bold
Laundry Detergent
3-lb.y 1-oz. Box 59?
Smuckers
Pure Strawberry Preserves 1 lb., 4-oz. Jar 4i0e
Captain Kidd Fruit Kid
Oranges, Grape, Pineapple-Grapefruit
1 qt. 14 oz. Can 19
LOOK HERE
Meat Values
fUSPACHOICE
Round Steak».89s, Cube Steak
Peters
Asst. Sliced Lunch Meats
nb.	59*
Hygrade
Vienna Sausage 5/*1.00
5 Oz; Can
Contadina Tomatoes
1 lb. 12 oz. een
Sunday J
* BOUHTY r PAPER TOWELS
TW(n	V AC
Paek	9 W
U«lt1 WMiCwjM* j
Open 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
ISUPERI MARKET
\ 1716 Jotlyn
3 Blocks North of Walton Blvd.
338-037TX
THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1868
EATIN TIME
APPLESAUCE
WtoL, Sept-1-1
CALIFORNIA ICEBURG
FRESH HOAAE GROWN
QUALITY
MARKET
Giant Siza v
COLDWATER
DEL MONTE
Croom or Wliolo Kernel
Corn or Peas W 1-1 b. 1-01. SI 00
SURF
49*
•mm swan SHORTENING
3-lb.
2-oz.
HYGRADE
PARTY LOAF
12-oz. AQc wt. can ^3
CONTADINA
TOMATOES
1-lb. 12-oz
Can
STOKELY
Fruit Cocktail
£ 22‘
Chef Boy ar Dee <^000001 PIZZA OVEN FRESH tsr "ftsr- JELLY ROLL
Pkf.	pkg.
44*	58* OMMM
SCOTT
JUMBO TOWELS
Ron	*%
VLASIC
KOSHER DILLS qi. QQc Jar U9
for serving Green Grapes with Sour Cream. The slender iced beverage spoon is ideal accompaniment for Blueberry P a r fait presented in a tall parjfait glass.
RED
Hawaiian Punch
28*
FRENCH'S
MUSTARD 1-lb. B- O Q C
oz. Jar ZO
USDA CHOICE
ROUND
STEAK
Fresh. YOUNG,
DELECTABLE DESSERTS Here (from 1ft.), Ginger Peachy Sundae Is accompanied by sterling, teaspoon with Florentine finish, while solid silver place > apoon and cream or sauce ladle are used
/ Cool and Fruity
Eat Desserts With'a Silver Spoon
That shining silver spoon youi Combine heavy cream, con-;nuts. Peel peaches and slice, place so casually on your dining ifectioners’ sugar, nutmeg , Scoop ice cream into B dessert table is not only a small marvel | orange rind and almond ex- j dishes. Arrange peach slices of art, but a masterpiece of in- tract; “whip until cream is stiff, over ice cream and spobn sauce vention as well.	|Spoon alternating layers of over each. Makes 8 servings.
Although wood, bone and clayjwMpped cream and blueberries, k +	+	*
were all used to make primitive ending with the cream, into .
spoons, the earliest ancestor chilled parfait glasses. * i The cream or sauce ladle, waT a natural shell - a shape, Garnish with a d d i t i o n a 1 which, y°u may haV* . uc,ke? that has occurred in silver blueberries and slivers 0 f awfly in yo^ silvef clJfst’*s a 1 spoons during many periods. orange rind. Chill until ready to ha"dy s**Vng sp?°"
Greeks and romans were the Serves 6-8.	,put,to «°J nuse
first to make spoons of silver,; Another quality which haa|^aAr a^^.' with fig-shaped bowls a n d ma(te Sterling the metal Green Grapes w th Sour ^ m-'handles that were often In the preferred above all others for j GREEN GRAPES WITH form of spikes — conceivably dining is its adaptability to;	SOUR CREAM
tor use in eating. The fig shdpe change in temperature. A solid 1 nd Thompson seedless Is still echoed in the familiar siiver spoon, tor instance, ad- —g” sterling bonbon or nut spoon, as j^ts instantly to the tem- y4CUph0ney well as in many tomato or flat persture of the mouth, even i teaspoon lemon juice aervers.	I when ice cream is being eaten. 2 tablespoons brandy
After elliptical spoon bowls j if! you don’t believe it .spoon Fresh mint became popular in the 17th out a helping of Ginger Peachy % cup sour cream century, the round ^ rimost Sundae!	-	Wash and stem grapes. Com-
disappeared. It exists today GINGER PEACHY SUNDAE bine honey, lemon juice and1 primarily in soup spoons -and, ^	preserv- brandy and pour over grapes;;
Of course, in baby’s first spoon. edgPlnge/ ^	Jet stand several hours or!
NECESSITY	cup syrup from ginger	overnight in refrigerator. Spoon
The slender iced beverage % cup chopped walnuts	honeyed grapes intp serving
Spoon goes back to early! 4 fully ripe peaches	j dishes and top each with sprig
Elizabethan days when diners 1 quart ice cream	j of mint. Serve with bowl of sour
wore great starched ruffles Combine ginger, syrup and cream. Makes 4 servings. ,
.around (heir.necks, and	gSC	.
handled spoon was an absolute necessity if the ruffle was to Survive the meal.
Today, happily, we don’t have! this complication to contend j pith, but the .iced beverage|
utilitarian — not only as a stir-1 trer for beverages served In tall
BABY BEEF LIVER
a 49*
Alaska Crab Is King in Meal-in-One Salad
ra ucvc.««ca K1vcui.u All the colors of the rainbow. The snowy while meat eh-| glasses, but Is a spoon for are featured in this pretly-to-leased by a brilliant outside red serving parfaits.	look-at, meal-in-one s a 1 a d . coloring is always completely
; wM ai„„ nno	, h » Tender pieces of colorful Alaska free of tendons and cartilage.
. a*. „	King crab are surrounded by an Use it directly from the can, or
^1,nS.rrly of fresh	i'.te de.ros.ms, from tk.
HYGRADE’S Sweet’Nized	USDA Choice	USDA Choice
SLICED BACON	RUMP ROAST	Rotisserie ROAST
lb. hac-- pkg. (J jj	> 99c	-BY
Peters Hot Dogs or Bologna
sets, and when it graces a array 1 ... .....	, ,
luscious Blueberry Parfait, U and garnished with clusters of freezer.
“““	CRAB AND MELON SALAD
: 2 (7V4 oz.) cans Alaska King ___________I__________crab
BLUEBERRY PARFAITS MDM 2 cups (1 pint; heavy cream ; Vs cup confectioners’ sugar | Vi teaspoon ground nutmeg
adds its own esthetic con-l8raPes-tribution to this appealing! The creamy cocumber dress-dessert.	ling, enchanced With the flavor
of dill, complements the seafood as well as the fresh fruit. Part of the dressing is used to blend with the King crab. The re-1 „ . •	-	, .	mainder is served in a' separate
2 teaspoons grated orange|containefr to go over the melon.
*	. j .	. i Delicately flavored Alaska
Y< teaspoon almond extract	j
•	3 cups fresh blueberries, rinsed
and drained
t Additional blueberries and $ slivered orange rind
King crab is a marvelous companion to ail varieties of fruits and vegetables. It's excellent,)
f CRAB AND MB&ON SALAD — This colorful cool salad * jpjiffr features Alaska King crab with a choice of melons and c grapes, in season now. Dress with a creamy cucumber dress-ing-, flavored with dill.
1 lb. frozen Alaska King crab Wedges of melon : Cantaloupe, Watermelon, Honey) Dew, Persian, Casaba Crenshaw
Clusters of fresh grapes Cucumber Dressing.
Watercress
MiPNPPi	Drain canned crab. Slice and]
too, In soups, appetizers and chl„ defrost, ’drain - hearty rosin dishes.	jslice frozen CTab. Halve melons.I
■ ’Remove seeds; peel, and cut) into hedges.
.★ ★ ★
To serve, combine ft cup Cucumber Dressing with Alaska King crab. Pile crab in center of salad bowl. Surround -with wedges of melon ahd clusters of -grapes . Gar Kish, with watqrcress, Serve remaining dressing on the side. Mckes 4-f servings.
Cucumber Dressing V* cop mayonnaise & cup daily sour cream E: 1 tablespoon lemon juice ’ IV, tablespoons chopped chives y« teaspoon spit Dash white pepper - J % teaspoon dill weed . cup partially peeled, finely chopped cucumber Combine ingredients and chill well. Makes about 2 cups. 1
BANQUET	14-oz. 4 A
CREAM PIES wt.nk|. I S
LUCKY BUY
MARGARINE
1 lb. Print Pkg.
SEALTEST
HALF 9nf HALF
BORDEN'S
CHEESE SLICES
Individually Wrapped
iw a QAc
Birds eye Crinkle Cut
POTATOES
Birds Eys
Onion Rings
8-oz. wt. pkg
12-sz. Wt. pkg
Head Lettuce
24 sizs heed
FRESH CRISP
CUROTS
11b. pkg. *10®
Rights Reterved To Limit Quantitim*
iiliifcwi
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5,1968
D—13 „
Breakfast Need Not Be an Ordinary Meal
By JANET ODELL Food Editor, The Pontiac Press “I had forgotten, Bald a colleague with 'two school age children, “how hectic mornings could he.”
Thousands of mothers are rediscovering the early morning stampede fills week as children return to school. That being the case, extra care Will be needed to insure time for everyone to eat breakfast.
if. 4k-	★	★
Some children can get breakfast at school. But the majority must depend upon mother. And she is right if she insists that everyone eat something.
CHUOhlS-n^----------
Your stomach doesn’t care ^ whether its first meal is fruit, 'cereal with milk' and -toast or a Dagwood-type sandwich. Bui teste have shown over and over that childreh need breakfast. So do adults', for that matter.
★ ★ *
Maybe your reluctant teenage
eaters will eat breakfast steak and waffles; the idea might just hit the sopt.
Breakfast Steak arid Waffles
. Select the required number of package breakfast steaks (there are usually four to six in a package — one for each member of the family) or have file meatman cut boneless beef % to $ inch thick, weighing about 2% to 3V4 ounces each.
Preheat waffle iron to Its highest temperature.
★ ★ *
Prepare all surfaces of file meat, one side it a time,- as follows: moisted the meat with water — either pat the water on from "the faucet with your fingers or draw a wet pastry brush v#cross the surface; sprinkle instant meat tenderizer evenly, like salt, over the entire surface of the meat. tJse no salt.
HAM AND EGG SALAD SANDWICH-Serve ham and eggs, but don’t be ordinary about it Combine them in a Sandwich, dip same in batter and grill in hot fat. This sandwich is great for any meal of the day, including bpeakfast.
To ensure penetration and retain meat juices, pierce through the meat witn a kitchen fork at approximately Vfc-lnch intervals. The meat fa ready for cooking 'immediately.
★	• A...,; itr-Fill half of waffle Iron with
batter. Brush steaks wifi) oil and place in other half. Code 2 to 2Vt minutes.
SERVING Top with melted butter or margarine and serve to a de-lighted family wifii a choice of syrup or preserves and half a grapefruit with a, bright red maraschino cherry garnish.
To vaiy this delicious and nourishing breakfast, mix Vi cup of any of the following with the waffle batter: grated cheese, pecans, corn meal, blueberries or diced apples.
*	W ■ it
On the more conventional side, how about French toast? This is French toast with a differ e n c e. You bake it until browned, then top it with blueberries and a sweet crumb mixture.
Blueberry French Toast
8 Slices bread 2 eggs, well-beaten
1	cup milk
2	cups fresh blueberries, rinsed and drained
1	cup zwieback crumbs
2	tablespoons flour 2 tablespoons sugar
% teaspoon ground cinnamon % cup chopped nuts Vt cup butter or margarine Dip slices of bread into eggs mixed with milk. Put slices on a heavilv buttered cookie sheet. Bake in a preheated hot oven (400 decrees! for 15 to 20 minutes or >mt;l richlv browned.
, Remove from oven and top With blueberries. Combine .maining ifwredients to make topping. Sprinkle crumbs over blueberries.
* Continue baking, for 15 minutes or until lightly browned. Eight servings.
fit the west, we saw a number of standh selling an orange drink that was fizzy and opaque. We asked the attendant in Seattle what it contained. The ingredients are similar to those in the following recipe, except
for the noh-caloric sweetener.
You may prefer to omit that or use sugar with children. But Orange Reveille is a drink high ih protein. It .could be an instant breakfast.
Orange Reveille
: 1 cup chilled orange juice % cup instant nonfat dry milk 1 egg
Non-caloric sweetener, liquid or powdered, to taste Grated nutmeg, optional Combine juice, instant nonfat dry milk, and egg; beat until smooth or whiz in blender. Sweeten to taste with liquid or powdered artificial sweetener. Pour, into glass and sprinkle with nutmeg, if desired. Serve immediately. Yield: 1 serving.
* * ★
If the family doesn’t all carry sandwiches for lunch, they will welcome them - foi\ breakfast. With fruit and beverage, they’ll have an adequae meal.
Ham and Egg Toasted Sandwich
6 hard-cooked eggs, chopped 1 cup chopped cooked ham Vt cup chopped celery
1	tablespoon chopped onion % cup mayonnaise
2	teaspoons prepared mustard % teaspoon salt
14 to Vi teaspoon coarsely ground black pepper 12 dices white bread 14 cup rifted all-purpose flour 1 teaspoon baking powder
1	teaspoon salt
14 cup yellow com meal
2	eggs-.-% cun milk
1 cup solid all-vegetable shortening
★ * *
Combine chopped egg, ham,
Mix Bean Sprouts, Cucumbers in Salad
Ever use bean sprouts in a summer salad?
Bean Sprout and
Cucumber Salad 3 tablespoons peanut oil!
2 tablespoons distilled white ; vinegar	i 1
2 teaspoons sugar 14 teaspoon salt One 8- or 5-inch cucumber, pared and sliced thin (about 1% cups)
i- 1 cau (1 pound) bean sprouts, chilled and drained.
In a shallow container, With a fork, beat together the oil, vinegar, sugar and salt. Mix cucumber slices with this marinade; cover and chill at least an hour.
serving time, arrange cucumber slices in a ring on a plate; mix bean sprouts with the remaining marinade and turn into center of cucumber ring. Makes 4 to 6 servings.
celery, onion, mayonnaise, mustard, 14 teaspoon salt and pepper; mix well. Spread equal amounts of filling on 6 bread slices (to. within 14-inch of edge of bread.) Cover with remaining bread.
★	★ ' fjjfy
In bowl sift together flour, baking powder and 1 teaspoon salt; stir in corn meal, eggs, and milk. Beat with rotary beater until smooth. Pour batter into 9-inch pie plate or shallow dish.
★	*	*
Heat shortening in large, heavy skillet. Dip each Sandwich
Macaroons Add Flavor, Texture
In batter, coating both sides. Brown on both sides in hot shortening oyer mddium heat. Serve immediately.' Makes 6 sandwiches.
Peanut Butter and Bacon Sandwich
1	cup plus 2 tablespoons crunchy peanut butter
12 slices white bread 12 slices crisply cooked bacon
2	eggs
¥« teaspoon salt 14 cup milk
14 cup solid[ all-vegetable Shortening
Honey or red- currant Jelly Spread peanut butter to about y«-inch from edge on all 12 slices pf bread (114 tablespoons per slice.) Place 2 strips of bacon on O breftd slices; cover with regaining bread.
Beat together eggs, salt and lilk ih 9-inch pie plate or shallow dish. Heat shortening in a large, heaVy skillet. Dip each sandwich in egg mixture, coating both sides.
Brown each sandwich on both sides ih hot shortening over medium heat. Serve immediate-
BLUEBERRY FRENCH TOAST-This recipe has everything going for it. It calls for baking French toast instead of frying it. Then you add a sweet crumb topping and fresh blueberries. What a treat!
Dice 3 unpeeled fresh peaches. Whip 1 cup whipping cream in a chilled bowl.
Sweeten with 2 tablespoons powdered sugar. Then crumble 6 macaroons. Fold peaches and macaroon's into whipped cream.
Chill.
Serve in sherbet glasses topped with 2 or 3 fresh peach 'lv with honey or red currant slices. Serves four special peo-jjelly, as desired. Makes I pie.	| sandwiches.
BREAKFAST STEAK AND WAFFLES-Color your September mornings glorious — this tempting duo is cooked together, right at the breakfast table in only minutes! Lean, hearty breakfast steaks are a budget and
nutrition bonus for Thewhole	coo£
faster than bacon and have more protein and less calories, ounce for ounce, than either bacon or sausage!
Flavor Croutons
You can make delicious croutons to add to a toasted green salad by frying the cutup bread in olive oil; use a tabjespoen of oil for each slice of brehd.; Cut the bread .into neat Smail squares.
Count on a half-cup of cooked hominy grits supplying about 60 i calories.
WKC’S SPOTLIGHT SPECIAL!
SAVE $1007! FRI. & SAT
NOT 7, NOT 12, BUT FULL 17-JEWEL SPORTSMAN'S WATCH
Waterproof Tested to 150 Feet Underwater
Regular Price
$2495
PAY ONLY 25c
WEEKLY
JR
108 N. SAGINAW - FE 3-7114
V®/
•	Automatic Calendar/'
•	Exterior Dial to Time Underwater Stay
•	Easy-to-Read Underwater Radium Dial
Plus ’llmm Deluxe Feature*:
e Unbreakable Mainspring
•	Sweep Second Hand
•	Anti-Magnetic
•	Shock Resistant
•	Stainless Steel Back l/M
•	Dust Resistant
Another Famous
BAZLEY BUDGET STRETCHER
A Real Family Favorite!
i SMOKED ^
j picnics!
39
PORK S1ERK
591
Lean
Cured
YOUR CHOICE!
3 lbs. SIK Sliced Bacon 2 IbS. »*2ttF»«T Sausage 2 IbS. SMOKED Polish Sausagef • 10 Chuck Patties
SWISS 1 STIAK
Bazley Famous Lean Tender \S CORN FED STEER BEEF! '
STEAKS I
89
s\ • Round - Rib
1C
Tender, Juicy
CHUCK
STEAK
5*£
m
D—14
THE gONTXAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER J, 1»6»
| Jacoby on Bridge |
NOBTH	5
,	#A"
¥J1084
♦	K 10 78
i'	*KQ63
WEST	BAST
*948	* J 8
¥62	¥ A K Q 9 7 5
*8 632	- ♦ A J 9 4
* J 10 9 7	*2
SOUTH (D)
♦	KQ107 6 5 2 ¥ S
♦	Q
4A894.
Neither vulnerable South Went North East 4 * Pass Pass (See article.)
Opening .lead—See article
By OSWALD and JAMES JACOBY
Take a look at the East hand only. You are playing in a team game with International Match aPoint scoring w h i c h is the I form- of dupll-I cate that comes ■closest to re-Iquiring rubber I bridge strategy. You would have	opened
B with one heart
lAroRV	but*	unfortu-i
JAC0BY	nately,	South
has started proceedings by bidding four spades and you must decide what to do.
You can pass; you can bid five hearts; you can double or you can bid four no-trump. The double would be for business but your partner might dedde to take it out with a singleton spade and some high cards.
■i *	,★	★	■;	^
In that case you would get to
mmmm
[hearts. The four no-trump bid I would ask him to hid a minor 'suit. If he selected diamonds you would be delighted, if .he bid clubs you would go to j hearts.'
I You should decide against the four no-trump call. Your hand just isn’t strong enough for this ibid. You also will probably decide against the pass. Of course, if you look at ail the cards you will see that a pass is best. Your partner has as close to a blank hand as he can hold and you will be In trouble if you take any positive action. * * *
At the table, the first East player decided to double. He wasn’t at all confident of his ability to make five hearts and he hoped to set the four spade contract. Needless to say he didn’t succeed in cashing anything except his two red aces. In fact, if he hadn’t been careful he might have lost one of them.
The second East decided to
Id five hearts. North doubled
when it got back to him and East could only make seven tricks.' ,	-
Five spades doubled at four amounted to 696 points; down foul* at five hearts doubled was 700. A 10-point difference is not scored in IMPs so the teams came out even.
Marriage Licenses
Patricia M. McDald, Blrmlngha . Noryol S. Fortuno 1 Luanna M. Zbudowskl
Bob Lubbers
V+CRRDSe/ueA*
Q—The bidding hawbeen: West North. East Sooth 1*	Pass	2*
Pass	2*	Pass	2*
Pass	3 *	.Pass	7
You, South, hold:
*J4 VK J 9 8 *A2 +KQ1054 What do you do now?
A—This is s real touch one. A pass will yield a sure profit but we favor a try for game by a four diamond bid.
TODAY’S QUESTION Instead of bidding three diamonds, your partner jump* to four hearts over your two hearts. What do you do now?
Astrological Forecast
Or SYONBY OMARS Far Friday "Tho^ wjje man conjrols hl» destiny	■ to bo discouraged. tSIck close to home |b,pfsCEt ^Pob.^ lt-Mor.^JW)^^ Highlight
ARIES (Mar. Jl-Apr. It): Pressure to make dacialon exists. But today play waiting gama. There Is definite latoon to loam. Ba aura and thorough. Otherwise you tUNt atopa at sttop coot. TAURUS (Apr. »May 20): Chack aourcoa. You may bo confuaad by ono who makoa oxtravogant prom Isa.. You	promote got-rlch-oulck achomes. Don't bo token In. Demand tacts. Ask questions. Obtain aniworo. Stick to con-aarvattvo courts. IS FRIDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY your chief aim It to provldo service. Your basic desire la to b# needed. You ora a natural teacher and you would
woukt ba wlaa to work in cOnlunctlOn with dub. group on apodal organization, it cooperative. GEMINI (May tl-Juna 20): Informa-tke forthcoming concornlng Investments. You obtain valid picture. Those who hava boon singing their own prolsoi com# down to oorih. Bo gracious. Don't “&ANCER Uune°Jl-July 22): Glv# at-tontion to homo, basic security. BO aura you arc building on aolld base. Mistake to fako things tar granted. Double chock. Uvo UP to potanTltl. Handle reiponsl-	also moke a fine dlotltan. You ora concerned with health and usually aide, with the underdog. 6ENERALTENDENCIES: Cycle high for LIBRA, SCORPIO, SAGITTARIUS. Special word to TAURUS: It alert you question. (Copyright. ItM, General Features Carp.)
	
/ GUESS ) S'	'\ \ WHAT? J f HJHAT? J	/ MX>R eve TCB7H } [ JUST VUIWKED AT MB’ J V ...BABY! ■ y'
			 -S O ft .
	SS-ugaW,-—-		 ■■ *.*
THE PONTJAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
D—15
MARKETS
The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday^
Produce
Apples, MclMOl Apples, V—•*”
Apples, V
Volume Running High
Stock Market Widens Gains
Peachaa, Amber Gem. % bu.
Puches, Elbert*, % bu. ............SI
Peaches, Hale Haven, % bu..........S.I
PeSSifc 0=1 ----------
NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market widened its gains early today with volume running about a million shares higher than on Wednesday.
* ★ *
Gains outnumbered losses by 2 to l on the New York Stock Exchange and the Dow Jones Industrial Average was ahead ajjsjmore than three points.
I, Kil Haven. % bu. .
HESS Wk'aSv’w'sSr.:::'.".::’. T& Anaconda advanced abouLllt _................................; IS on predictions of a good year in
Pears* Clapp Favorites, bu.'.	4.50 1969.
Pturiuk Burbonto.% bu........3.50 ___________________________________________I
Plums, Damson, % bu...............3.00
PIUS, PrtMWr V4 .bu...............4.35 1
Plums, Stanley, Vi bu. .......
Watermelons, bu. .............
' VEGETABLES
Beans, Green Round, bu. ......
Bens. Kentucky Wonder, bu. ..
Beans, Lima; bU..............
Beans, Roman, bu. ...........
Beans, Wax, bu. ..........
Beets, dz. bch..............
Beets. Topped, bu. p,........]
Broccoli. dzTbch..............
Cabbage, curly, bu............
— curly, bu..............
Advances of around a point, or better were made in active trading by Avnet (new), out-' board Marine and Eastern Air Lines.
SCORE GAINS Gains of a point were scored by Reynolds Metals, Certain-Teed and Gulf & Western.
—--------ik. . ★ .	★
Du Pont advanced about 114, Lorillard about 2, Xerox and Polaroid more titan a point.
,	* it
Most leading steels and mo-
tors posted moderate gains. Ford gained about a point.
★	★	★
American Telephone and Union Carbide, pacemakers of the blue—chip rise on Wednesday , showed little change.
M-G-M and Johns - Manville dropped about a point.
★	*	★
Prices were generally higher on the American Stock Exchange-—
Wednesday the Associated Press Average of 60 stocks rose 1.4 to 335.3.
B§lf mm
3 Men Given
Transplants
Cleveland Operations iHave Woman Donor
CLEVELAND (AP) — Utree men — including a, Detroiter-
Cabbak*
s, bch. .!■■■ Carrot*, Celjo-Pak. 3 d:
Cucumber, slicers, bu__
Dill, dzTbchs.
Eggplant, bu. .......... ...
JadT* rukt-\
Leaks, dz. bch......... .....
Okra, pk. bskt. .........
Onion*, Mas, bag ............
Onions, Giron, d*. bch*.....
Onions, Pickling. 20-lb. bag .
Parsley, curly, dz. bch*.....
Parsley, ROM, dz. bch........
Parsnips, Cello-Pak, dz......
Peas, Blackaya, I
Peppers, C------
Peppers, l.w.|MPVaillPnnS Peppers, Pimento, pk. bskt. Eggplant, long type, pk. bskt. ... Peppers, Red Sweat, pk. b<kt. -..
Peppers, Sweet, bu.	.....
Potatoes, RMp. bag ............
Potatoes, 50-lb. bag
Radishes, Rod, dz. bchs.......
Radishes, Whit*, dz. bch.......
Rhubarbt dz. bchs. . ..........
Squash, Acorn, bu..............
62%	62%.
I	36	36
,	53%	64	....
)	%%	iova	law —	%
r	»0	11%	86% +1%
*2	11%	18%	16% +	%
*6	22%	29%	26% +	%
230 25% 25% 25% rr %
ts ts% is is% + %
AllagLud 2.40	31	46%	46%	66% +	%
Ub	26	21	22%	23	+	%
Abox CP 1.60 ACF Ind 2.20 Ad Mlllls .20 Address 1.40 Admiral AlrRedtn 1.50 AlcanAlum 1 AllagCp .10e
2.50
Squash, -Butternut, bu.
SquaSbi Hubbard, ho. .............! z.u
squash, Italian, % bu ....	..... 1,»
Squash, Sulfimer, % bu. ..........  1.75
Tomajias, 1Mb; bskt.................1.25
Tqmatoes, %-bu....................  2.50
Turpins, dz. ben. ................  1.75
Turnips, tapped, bu................ 2.7S
GREENS
Cabbage, bu. ....................  11.75
ColtonJT bdT........._____________ .2.00 ___________
Kale, Int. .....................   1.75!	Atlas	Corp
Mustard, bu. ...................... 2.00	*-—	Ga
Sorrel, bu................ .......	’ ”
Spinach, bu, .....................
Swiss Chard, bu. .................
Turnips. bu. ...............,-----
LETTUCE-SALAD QUEENS
Celery, Cabbage, dz. ------------  *2.75
Endive, bo.
Endive, bleached, b».
Escarole, |d
The New York Stock Exchange
who received the heart and kidneys of a young woman in a series of transplant operations in Cleveland wereall reported in satisfactory condition today. —The donor also was a former Detroit resident, whose ex-hus-band is a policeman in the Motor City.
A team of four surgeons and 10 assistants headed by Dr. Donald Effler transplanted the
CUNN1FF—
.NEW YORK (AP) - Now York Stock :xcnange selected noon prices:
—-A—
Salts	Ni
(hde.) High Low Last Clu
20 48% 4
Law' Last Chg. Gen Ylec' 2.60	107	51%	03%	04% +	%
Gen Fds 2.40	11	81%	81%	81% —	%
Gan Mills .00	62	36	31%	36	+	%
GenMot 2.00*	103	70%	70%	71% +	%
GPubUt 1.56	41 20% 28V-
G Tel El 1.40	14a 40% ill'
Gen Tire l “nesCo 1.60 Pacific lb ■Vmr.T.IO GettyOII ,72a
AMBAC .60 Amerada 3 Am Alrlln .10 AmBdcet 1.60 Am Can 2.20 AOySub 1.40 ,
I 84% + %
i 26% + %
AFdy M It .Cl l.6(
TAT 2.40 Am Tob 1.60 AMK Corp AMP Inc- .40
Anken Chetn Armco Stl 3
i	p	^	m
24	30	37%	37%
*	46%	46%	46%
21	50%	58%	50%
44	26%	26%	26%
62	21	20%	21
53	43%	43 • 43
60	12%	12	12%	Km
16	3HI	38%	38%	—	%
56	15%	15%	13%	+	ft
32	40%	40%	40%	+
, 10	42%	42%	42%	-
361	34	53%	53%	.
Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt wast Pin) GtWnUn 1.80
Armour 1.60 Arm Ck i..‘ Ashld Oil 1 Assd DG 1 Atchison 1 Atl Rich 1 Atlas Ch . Atlas Corf Avco Cp 1 Avnet In r Avon Pd
Esceral*, bleached, bu. Lettuce, Bibb, pk. .bskt. Lettuce, Boston, doz. ...
Lettuce, Head. bu. ......
Lettuce, Head, dz.........
Lettuce, Leaf, bu........
Lettuce, Remelne, bu.
1.75
Poultry and Eggs
Beech Ah*: .75 Bendlx 1.60 Bell How -60 BenofPln 1.60
12 34%	33%	34%	—	%
55 33	32%	33	+	%
317 45%	44%	43%	+1%
1 ti%	12%	12%	1	ft
51%	51%
43%
75%
<22 43%	43%	43%	+	%
60 40%	40	40V
14 33	32%	33
111 *7	66%	6«
23 21%	21%	2U.	1	PR
32	5%	5%	5% + %
152 46	44%	45%	+	%
810 36%	35%	35%	+1%
16 121% 121 121% + “-
—B—
20 37% 37% 37% +
7 31% 31 Vs 31% — % 16 71% 71% 71% + 1 I 46	45% 45% — ■
4 41% 41% 41% + % 16 41%
26 70%
i 66% —1
DETROIT WOOS DETROIT (API—(USDA)—Egg prices’ Va”™ prices paid per dozen by first reeelv- B"r. .-5 , g ers Including U.S. Grad* A lumbo 47-53) |“„ouohi 1 •x,r» large 45-48%; large 43-44 ;medium Burrouoh, '
per dozep tor No; l live poultry: Heavy,Camp Soup 1 type hens 10-20; heavy type broilers 20- canteen .10 21; heavy type roaster! 25-24%.	ICaroPLt 1.38
CHICAGO BBSS	ICeroTAT .76,
CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile! CarrlerCpl Exchange-Butter steady; wholesale buying CaHerW .40* prices unchanged; 63 score AA 66%; Cese J'
62 A 66%; 20 B 45%;' 06 C 60%; cers’S**’1* Co“‘J
« B 44%; 06 C 42.	-----tCeterTr .UO
Eggs steady to firm; wholesale buying Cwenesecp 2
-......Eg----Id to 2% higher; 00 per efjf,1"1. ”
■ A Whites 45%; mediums sr*i»K70 32, clwck. 20.	. ftSUrto
CHICAGO POULTRY	Cessna? 1.40
CHICAGO (AP) —r (USOA) — UvelcFI Stl .00 kaiillfe isale buying prices 1 lower iches Ohio‘4 roasters 24%-26%; special ChIMil S»P P
214 15% 15% 13% + %
PPG Ind 2.80 ProctrG 2.40 PubSvcColo 1 Publklnd ,75t Pueb Sup
17	43%	43
17	87	861-	.
12	20%	20%	28% —	%
14 106% 106	106% — %
“	54% - 34—54% +||
y	fiM	u% —
142 IS
. 134 56% 55'..	, ..
100 43% 42% 43% + % 50 57%^7	—	'
82 1
150 42% 42	42% .+ %
,t3 7f’/4 7m 791Jk +1 44 4m *1	411/4 ,1. ..
40 3fi^ 34% 35 Vo + Vo
40	43%	43V4	43%	+	%
41	01%	01%	01’A	|	H
^	U	14%	15
40	43%	42%	43
1$	47%	47	47U	.
30 120% 119% .120% i+1%
nousenr 1.10	179	45%	45%	,45\i
HoustLP	1.12	3	45%	45%	45%	+
Howmtt	.70	14	37%	37%	37%	+
IdahoPw	1.60	43	34%	34%	34%—
H	w	10%	18%	]8%	+
(hdt.) High
Uw Lott Chj
sists, should be able to grow 10 tions are used. And with labor per cent a year by planning bet- tight, workers seldom are fired, ter. But some neither plan nor	*	*	*
grow. “Many of them don’t even The aim, so the consultant* know where they’ll be two years say, is not to turn workers into from now,” he states.	I machines, nor is it necessarily
di Awwiwr mkumc	I to make them work harder. The.
PLANNING MISSING	idea is t0 get more work ^ of
The absence of corporate same or even less effort, planning is illustrated by Payne The purpose is mainly to elimi-I
in describing a well-known com4nate waste ---------- r r
------ -	- .	,	- pany with sales of more than $2-i “without precise controls and-
heart of Barbara Smith, 25, to because of management know- billion a year that has publicly individual measures of product Dellett Lawson Sr., 50, of Akron, I how.	announced it expects sales to tjVity,’’ says Payne, “a compa^
Ohio.	v J	*	*	*	rise 10 per cent a year.	ny never will be over the 70s£
Immediately after the hearti Management has been de- After the announcement, to l’ve seen departments attaint operation Wednesday another!scribed as a fundamentally,securities analysts and news- more than 90 per cent efficient team of surgeons transplanted! American skill. Americans have men, the company realized .it cy, but never a company.” * Mrs. Smith’s kidnQis to Robert a reputation for being able tojkad no plan for achieving theL
PuaSPL 1 Pullman 2
Raytheon .50 Reading Co RaichCh .40b
8 07	84% I
24 94% 94	1
23 24% 24	2
21 15% 15% 1 44 44% 43% 4
118	47%	44%	47%	+
15 23% 23%“23% . . . 50	34%	3S%	34%	+
145	39	C0%	30%	+
12	22%	22	22%	rj- i
84	14%	1S%	14	+
03	43%	43%	43%	+ <
4T	05%	84%	05	...
RheemM 1.40	2 55% 45% 55% +
Rohr Cp .00 RoyCCftla .79 Roy Dut .99r RyderSys .80
35	30%	29%	29%	-
5	40%	i%0%	40%.	+
03	5T%	wT	51	»+
5	47%	47%	47%	—
StRegP 1.40b Sanders .30 SanPelnt .30 Schanlay 1.30 Schering 1.40 Scientif Data SCAA CP .45e' Scott Paper 1
SbdCstL RH SearIGD 1.30 fears Ro 1
111 Cent 1.50 Imp Cp Am INA Cp 1.40 IndtrRand 2 Inland Stt 2 Interest 1.00 IfeM 2.40 .mtOtary 1,00 Int Miner 1 Int Nick 1.20 Int Pan 1.35 Int tBT *85
i 66% 66% + V:
58	34%	34%	3
. 15	32	3VV4	aim	v.;;
, 61 361W 339Va 341	+2 1;
75 34<A 33% 36	+ V.
56,21% 21?6 21»rj-V4 104	3BV4	37VS	-38	+ %
230	33ZJ	—	—*
SouCME 1.40	73 34V
JohnMan 2.20
25	366k	38'/.	Mb —
76	72V*	71%	72	—1
3	62V.	62%	62V4 +
«	an.	67	67% r+	--
20%	26% +	%
South Ry 2-BO Spartan ind SperryR .30* SquareD .70a Staley
St Brand 1.40
StdKolle .12p StOIICal 2.70 Staillnd * in SIOIINJ
StOllOh 2.50b St Packaging rriMpSTW. ■StniilJ tsJ 2.2!
I	S5%	55	55%	+
44	33%	33%	33%	+	1
36	46	43%	48%
13	44 ,	43%	44	—	1
13	54%	54	54%	—
13	75%	’4%	75%	+	1
67	T0% 60% —1
63	36%	30%	33%	—
53	21%	28%	21%	+
6	47%	47%	47%	+	’
10	43V.	41	43%	.
34	67%	66%	66%	+
- 162 33	32% 32%
26 42% 43% 42% + 25 40% 60% 66% . .
1 43% 43% 41% -215 35% 35	35% + 1
6 66% 6SV4 66% +
35	76% ta% 76% —
20	71	7W4 77% +
21	46% 40% 46	+
73 34% 34% 34% + 31 27	26% 26% ...
24	53% 53% 53% —
70 35% 35% 35% + 33 55% 53% 55	+1
25	22% 22% ' 22% +
164 47% 47	47%
76 20% 20% 20% + 100 30	30	30	+
< 33 44ft 44% 44% — 24 20% 20>/j . 20Va — 00 65% 65% 65% — 153 53% 53% 53% + 277 78% 78% 78%—
prices. uRHI or better Grai

17 26% 26% 26% —
10	25% 2S% 25% —
11	39% 36% 36% I
12	30% 30% 30% + %j Lear Sleg .60 2 70% 71% 70% + %l LehPCem .60
21	15	14%	14% — %i Leh	Vel	Ind
65	17%	16%	17% + %| Lahmn	1.13*
13	47%	47%	47%,+ %
62	43%	43%	43% — %
50 62	61% 62—+ %
■ u 43% 43	43%
7 42	41% 42	.
07 42% 42% 42% + %
X173 30% 37% 30% +1%
4	53% 53% 53% v %
44 16% 16% 16% + %
6 66% 66% 66% + %
11 55% 54% illi llll'UPSI—
5	40% 40	40	LonglsLt 1.24	10 IgA
■II r.ik aiffSi1'”1.a-* »•
56 44% 44%	- % [ Lukens Stl 1
• -	—K-
Kolser Al l 166 37% 36% 3PA +1%__________
KanGE 1.32	10 25%	Sun Oi
KanPwL 1.12	42 21% 21% 21% — % Sunray 1
Katy Ind	10	22%	21%	21% . SurvyPd
KayserRo .60	13 33% 33% 33% + 'A1 Swift Co
Kennecott 2	253 41% 40% 4»k + %
Kerr Me 1.50	0 126% 126 W —1%
KimbClk 2.20	21	62%	62%	«%
Koppers 1.60	7	36*
KresgeSS .34	70	361
35	W%	57%	57%
26	52%	51%	52	.	-
6	72%	71%	- 71%	—1%
73	48%	48	40%
25	7%	7%	7%
|A TampaEI .72
10 31% 31% 31% + % Tenneco 1.20
Management Lead of U.S.	Onty
!
By JOHN CUNNIFF ,
AP Business Analyst NEW YORK-Good management, we are constantly reminded, is what gives American corporations the edge over foreign competitors. Accordingl dozens of » on the subject e ach| year, we have turned the management art into a science.
The best-selling book in Eu-| rope the year, in fact, was “The American Challenge,” written by a Frenchman ' who described a situation wherein American industry might dominate Europe
these experts maintains, qper$ ate at 65 to 75 per cent efficiency. In other words, they are ‘C” performers.’
★ * *
This is the estimate of Bruce Payne, who runs a consulting firm of the same name with the usual ‘‘and associates” appended. Although the estimate may not be a consensus, it certainly isn’t disputed by all consultants.
Most corporations, Payne in-
basic study is likely to include an examination of the /company’s efficiency.. It is incredibly precise. Even the physical motions of individuals) their arm, leg and -eye movements, are measured.
In the old days this involved time and motion studies and was much feared by employes, for it often led to layoffs. Watches are seldom used now; instead, charts of pretimed mo-
Clapper, 29, of Minerva, Ohio, and Charles Mundy, 21, of Detroit.
The heart transplant was the first in the midwest and the 40th In the world.
★
Officials at the clinic refused > release details of the operations, saying they sought to avoid “the circus atmosphere
identify and analyze problems and then make plans to cope with them, they are said to know how to utilize technology and how to deploy and motivate workers. Americans, according to the popular belief, love to plan ahead.
< And yet, talks' with management experts Who analyze American business produces a which has surrounded s o m e different story. Americans are
,	j	cj BETTER METHODS
sales increase. It had no. more	,	. M
idea of how it would achieve the ,From worker efficiency the goal than the husband who P1®1"? proceeds to broader promises his wife on New P^le™sv ^w,a^ w,th;
Year’s Eve that he was going to get a 10 per cent, raise from the boss.
transplants.”
Guards were posted, at the entrance to the sixth floor cardiac suite where Jhe heart operation was preformed.
Mrs. Smith, a divorcee with a 9-year-old son, died Wednesday,
skillful in management, they say, but only in a relative sense. More to the point, foreign firms are poorly managed. DEAD-ENDS, DEADHEADS
of instituting better work meth-~ ods and attainable goals. Sub-, jectivity is ruled out, unrealistic-ambitions are shelved.
The first question the management consultant asks such a company is: “What business are you in?” and secondly, “What business do you want to be in?” Most companies, the consultants say, don^t know who they are.
After that comes the Job of setting goals, delineating the
DOW-JONEt AVERAGES . STOCKS;
30 Industrials ...... ......
20 Railroads * .............
15 Utilities .	..........
65 Stocks ...... ........
76.99+0.05 64.62+0.01 77.01+0.16 01.63 .... 04.70.....
Thursday's i*t Dividends Daclarsd •£.
Rs- Stli.tr Pay* I
Rata rltd Raeard abla. INITIAL
WTrust, NY n«T 145 f*1l |04 RKOULAR
Amefican corporations, they! _ -	■■■■
<?hp h»H been livine in Walnut say- often are laden with r°ute to the 8oal5 andJ|ef Jji",g'Northern m g.._'4o_ Ch?	dead-ends and deadheads, with the methods to be used.Thisius Piywd-chemp A
fR d^ nn^hmnh » ^riit t^ dupUcate effort and useless mo- m e a n s understandmg the flD?vid Smith, a Detiroit ^ ti0n, with slovenly methods and strengths and weakness of the ce offi e .	ill-defined goals, and sometimes company, the competition, the
She	0; h<", 10 ^
tt!StoltolwhfcMhlto»Matr^TOrlcl>n	«■« ol! AUtoujh meUiods differ,Jhe
passenger overturned in Cleveland.
SISTER GIVES OK	|	.
Permission for the transplant'
T ST ThehM Emott8 Her ^ BeU Electrotyping Co. of Orchard Lake, has been named ter, Mrs. Thetaa	Detroit has purchased t h e market development manager
Business Notes
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willie Lancaster, also gave their permission when they arrived at the clinic from their fanji home near Lake Village, Ark.
it it it
Lawson, a freight checker for a truck firm in Akron until he suffered a heart a^nfna laat business for 65 years. October, had been hoping to have a transplant for several'
purchased engraving operation of the Detroit Gravure Co. Bell will absorb all personnel of the Gravure engraving department.
Bell is at 608 Howard, just in back of the Detroit Gravure Building.'
Bell Electrotyping has been in
for B. F. Goodrich Chemical Co.’s Hycar nitrjle rubber and Hydrin epichlorohydrin rubber in Michigan. He will continue to be primarily responsible for the firm’s contacts with the automotive industry.
McNabb was formerly area marketing representative
Four area men are officers or Michigan. He joined Goodrich in
A new aviation company hai\ begun operations, at Oakland-', Pontiac Airport In Waterford^ Township.
Heading the firm, Monarch Aviation, is a Waterford Township man, Ned Gerndt of 3600 Lotus. Also partners In the' company are Harry Noble of' Detroit and John Plodpleskl ofrp Warren, both formerly-associated with other firms at the airport.
LlbOFrd 2.00
Llvingstn Oil LOCkMA 7.20 LeewsTh ,30h LOneS Cem 1
116 36% 30% 20 60% 68%
25 30% 37% ■	. ..
45 75% 74% 75% +1% 63 44%.- 45% 46% +1
— ■«—’ 41% 62% -1- *
icoiubaa i.n * iComSolv .70*
■eaPRRPWRP^RIRPRP - ------------D comwEd 2.20
pounds 20.2520.75; U.S. 1-2 300-400 pound Comsat sows 17.50-10.50; 2-3 400+00 pounds 1625- Con Edls
icon ElecInd 1 ne ‘con Food 1.50
icSmPwr.
Sheep 300; couple lots choice 60-110 Contain!-pound springe elaughtr" " ■*-*’ “• uak cun to goocrtwugKrar
« 26.5027.50;
5,000; 1-2 210-215 lb butchers 20.7521.% 1-3 330-400 1b sows 1720-18.00; 2-3 500-
600 lbs 2A2S4M1 Calves 1200; Calves none; 1 mixed high choice and pilm* steers 1,150-1,275 lbs yield ora 4 20.5026.00; choice l.ioo-tjoo ... . grad* 2 to 4 27.7520.50; lood mixed high choice end prime 625 lb slaughter heifers 27.00; choice 025650 lbs 25.00-26.50.
Sheep »0; several lots Choice and prime 60-110 lb spring slaughter lambs 24.00-26jo; mlx«d-	“ -
25.50.
ipring s good ai
B 24.00-
ContAIrL .50 Coni Can 2 Conti ns 3.20a
Corn Mot .40 Cont<HI 2.00
Control Date
Cooperln 1.20 Corn Pd 1.70 CorBW 2.50* Cowles .50 CoxBdces .50 CrouseHIn lb Crow Coll Crown Cork CrownZ* 2.20 Cruc Stl 1-20 , CudahyCo Curtiss Wr 1
206 131% 110% 130% —1 2	44%	44%	44%	-
12	41	40%	41,	+ j
7 267% 267%
3-14% 14%. 14% + '
2	55%	55	»
2	30%	30%	X%	+ %
20	37%	37	W%	+ %
18	80	76%	Wh
u	54%	54%	54%
1%	41% * 61%
rD--
American Stock Exch. 'oS?c£p
_ NEW YORK JAP) * Amerlcon Slock Sjjre^co 2~ Dei Mnt* 1 " " DeltaAIr
(Ms.) Hloh Lew Lest Chg. SiLpnJT ;
*8 27% 27% 27% + %	Jsf
13 M% 10% 11% + % S*!Ec{L| 4A
v. 1L. ». s.+’ ig&SJS'i:"
+ il Dressing 1.40
BrezllLIPW 1 Brit Pet .44* CempM Chib Cdn Javelin Clnerem* Creole 260* Data Cont Dlxllyn Corp Dynpwcuyt T ■' EquItvCp .St Fed Rosrcet
Gt B*S Pet - Gy It
HoernerW 42 ■ Husky o .lie
Molybden NawPer* Mn Ormand Ind NIC GradB kexen Induet Scurry Rain
'iDet. Steel
15 23% W* 23% +'% ”	“
23 33% 37% 37%	“
50 4 11-14 4 6-16	6%
72	6%	6%	6%
17	3%	3%' 3%-
S 30	26% 30	+ % nua'Lt
m IL. W* ]!. + ^ | Dyne A
30 14% 14%
25 7 7-14 7 516
215 15% 14% T4% —	Air JO
136	6 J% 6	- %,!* Kodak 86
6 40 . 36% 36%.llatonYa 1.40
41 bTL	2
■H Wma
244 17% 17
13 23% 23% 23% +
1 41% 41% 41%^- J
7	30%	30%	30%	+	'
8	50%	5M6	50%	+	’
10 37%	»%	W*	-
51 30%	30%	mm'	+
6 16	.0%	j»7	+
26 26%	25%	26%	+
32 »% 20% 3®%'+ m 16 S% 31% 20% - % 28 76% 73% 76% +2% 0 - 40	»%	40 — %
63	01	78%	30% +2%
24 36% 34% 36%- .
53 162% 161% 162	+1%
0 30%	30%	38%	—	u
64	20%	20%	20%
—E—
; 88*
57 6	0%	8% .

■ 13% 1
6 -23
.. UH 12% 14 » Mb 10% 63 11% 11	1*%
JCP>"*SS
42% 43%-%
r ,.T v. |T|T 18
36 25% 25% 25%, — % Fentieel Inc 4 1«k 14% 14% + % Fedders 40 17 14% 16% .16% + % FedDStr .65 I 73% 73% 73% + %' Fed Mog 20	8% * ‘	0% |Fillrol 1.40
144 30	16% 16% + % pirestn* 1.50
6 »% irib »0% •	! FstChrt 1.2tH
6	0%	«%	0% — % pHntkoM 1
’S iSS 12m	1$ TV -go «%
26	30% +1%
„	42%	4f% + %
43	36 M% '3Sft —V
nog io% w* a +»
I 31%
27 ml 56% 56% ■
37 sow-sM'. fKM-t*
44	34% 34% 34% — %
Copyrighted by The Staectatod Pro** 1641 Gem Sko 1.30
m at t s
12 22% 22
47	42%	62	«**• -r	- ■■■---■
16	14%	15%	16	+	% Tlmk R
3t—40%t~40%- 40% -+-% TrertsW 36	42	41%	42	+	% Trensai
|16	74%	74	74% +	% JrtConlJ.51!I	™	«
120 34% 34',
—u— -
, .... ...	0-24% 241
28%	28% +	% Un CVWd. J	3W	4TO	«
...	....	56%	60% +2 |Un Elec 1.20	36	22%	«
lin	MiA'	86	06	jUnOHCal 1.40	Jff
06	% jjassMii
—M—	UhltAlrLln 1
I 25% 25% 25% .....umtACD ^
M 34% 34% 34% t^HS'liruft 10
» »* V* t !* umt Sam
I I _________ mun?^ vwor^irf rfmiffhtpr Cvn I directors ofthe Patrlck Gas and|l935 as a chemist in it* home
Ep sa 88 + 8thfw onxswp.. a recently organized!office in Ohio. fh IflfS then?getrmyanew heart
S 66% 60% 66% + % going to go back to work. I!ll|L® or Jacxson.	.
m	53% run in wnrk unH run back.” They are John C. Napley of
q 53% 53% run to work and run back." i They are John C. Napley 37% line + % Lawson’s wife, Leona, 47, and,S026 Kellen Lane, Bloomfield M m ..............a son, John, 22, were at the clin- Township, vice president; and
56 26
30 60% 56% 60% + 266 37% 36% 37% + 40 60% 40	40%	-
16 13% 13% 13% . 20 50% 50	50%	-
54 Mb 34% 34% +
Mrs. Sanch'a Miller and Deborah, 13.	'	>
Paul Mundy, mother-ot-
one of the kidney recipients, said her son had been waiting since January for a transplant.
40 40% 30% 39% —1
6 31% 32%	33	+	% Vartan Asso	56	25%	25%	25%
22 22% 23	23%	+	% vendo Co 40	7	IT/b	27%	20	+
152 106% 106%	106%	+	% VoEIPw 1.06	33	32%	32%	32%	+
4 23% 23	23% + %	sir	Y_____V	7____
74 .54% «% 54 + %	---W----A—I---------tr
1	52	22%	32%,	32% — % wernLsmb
...___ ..40b	171	17%	M%	H% + %,W*S Wat l.
MontDUt 1 JO	.7	«%	31%	«% jljwoetn AlrL
•• Weyeri
WWrlC
Nat Dlst 1.00 Nat Fuel 1.60 -Mat Ganl .20 Nat Gyps 2 < "at indust . .. Lead 2.25* . Nat Steel 2.50 Nat Tea .00
S evade Pm t ewberry .00 NEnoBI 1.41 Newmnt 2.60 Niag MP 1.10 NortotkWst 4
RSrAnKni
NoStaPw 1.60 Northrop 1 NwstAIrl .80
16 120% 120% 120%
7	23	22%	23	..
—N—
62	33%	32%	32%	+ HHRHBI
.	11	66%	46%	46%	^-/Ui i Wool worth
“	“	' "	' % ZenlthR I
36 M%
3 23	32%	23
65, 33%	Mb	»%	+	%
iT 36%	w%	S.	+%
60 37%	37	im
%'winnDlx
ic when the operation was per-|directors John C. Cowe of 2053 formed. The couple have three N- Hammond Lake, West other children, Dellett Jr., i»,	|g
Bloomfield Township; Basil M. Briggs of 900 Brook wood Birmingham; and James Jenkins of «2 Wennnah.
Patrick Petroleum recently began drilling for oil Louisiana.'

Treasury Position
Stocks of Local Interest
OVER THE COUNTER STOCK!
Quotations from the, NASD an* representative Inter-dealer prices of approximately- 11 e. m. Inter-dealer markets change throuohout the day. Price* do
. 36, 1667
- McNABB MacINTOSH A Pontiac man, Richard R Macintosh of 40 Mark, has been rppointed general office
# AuV* ». ’176S •
I 6,114,543,347.25 S 4,630,321101.
‘ " Illy 1—
23,092,267,476.
22,252,461.65 j
Deposit* Fiscal Year J
Township. He was previously advertising manager and salesman.
, ★ * *
He is treasurer of thei Pontiac Area Multiple Listing Service .-and a member of the Pontiac 01 Board of Realtors.
AMT Cora. ..........
Associated Truck ... Braun EMlnMrlng
citizens utinttas ... Detrek Chemical ... Diamond Crystel • - , Kelly Service* ......
AviationFirm Is Organized in Waterford
Gerndt was head pilot of the. Standard Airways line which: offered scheduled passenger^ flights from the airport, but-ceased operations early this', year.
A complete range of aviation services are offered by the new firm including training and. maintenance work. Howeveiy the firm intends to specialize in-used-aircraft sales, according to.‘ Qpmdt.
SALE BROKER The M(march company will also act as a broker and Ust
aircraft far salts. and leek....
5460 Highland, Wat'erf
“The airport needs a firm specializing in used aircraft for those people who do not have 135,000 to 140,000 to spend,” Gerndtsaid.
North Central Airlines Unite.
MUTUAL PUND0

23	47>/ks46	47	+1%
23	32%	32%	32%	-+ %
63	27%	27%	27%	+ %
86 282 - 280 ; . 202 . +3%
59	36%	35%	35%	+ %
....... , vim 54	55%	5*%	55V,	+1%-
_____. .	_	........Copyrighted by The Associated Press 166*
i 3®vi 28Va 28% . -	• I	.	aai.iBn riiminv •
50 46^ 45Va 48	- W,. Sales figurtt art unofficial.	.. . Scripto ..........J
\W «	yij wyandotta Chemical
42	24	23% 23% + % dends In the forejiolno	MlficUAl
16	60%	40%	60%	.1. .	, disbursements bosM on the lest quarterly
43	44%	44%	44%	+ % or semi-annual declaration. Sp«t«i or	Affiliated Fund
34	15%	15%	15%	+ % ektre dividends or payments.,not «*SI8-chemical Fund
5	43	43	43	+%, noted a* tegular ore Identified in *n	commonwealth Stock .
6	30%	30%	30%	— % following footnotes. _____ r.».	Dreyfus ....
4	28%	28%	28%-	%' a—AKa extrs, or extras. .^Annubl	Keystone	Income	K-l
5	63%	63%	43% +	% plus stock dividend. C-Uquldating olvl-	keystone	Growth	K 2
60 S% 20	20% . . idend. d-p*cler*d or twjd	/'illMass. Investors Growt
,37 |5% 66% 96% + % stodc dividend- e^Pecjered jr pald so M investors Trust 60 P 36% 36% + %!far this yeor. f-Pbyebta In stock, during 22	-	-
7	S3	52%	52% —	% 11667, wtlmeted colli, velgo w'. ex-dlvtdend
U	30%	30%	30%......or w3lstrlbutIoh Mtt. fr-PoM tafi Y”/;
6	-	42%	42%	42% —	% h-Oecl»red or pald after stock d wbdnd
------------ ------- "'’^ipllt up. k—Declared or paid fhlt yeef,
, accumulative issue with dividends In •rears, n—New Issue, p—Paid
The firm’s instructors are able to offer training including' multiengine craft and leading to an airline transport rating, he said. The company also ha* planes to rent or lease.
“I feel I’m starting out at a mi He was formerly accounts I {food time at this airport WflagarifflgsrifrTOHttaer^^	| because Gxpanrion-pians will
x—total Debt—  .. ............ A Milford -man. Jay H.
cold aSJ^’”*'57' " ”''5M,w',4,1‘|SanCraint of 648 Canal, has 12* n|x-inciud!i“o&j«!No.6o	been named terminal manager
:;SS 27J l#rt <» statutory iittiit,	|jn piint for the Jones Transfer
' tfi0.+L4J	BOND AVERAGES
Tit KWdWEidi	umii ■ oBieo fj>
*47 •	rmi* 'i*d. um. p’gn. L.’yd.j	* ' *	*	J soon be under way and general
g; »4-llrv«rt»ww4«l tv
”•	”■ B,!&	si	Si	SI	It	V
Year Ago	66.2	60.4	00.7	6i.i	83.3; Wolverine Lake, who has been a
I***	'4U	“*	“*	76.o j dispatcher in Pontiac for the
jSast two years.
Eld Asked
. JK32 10.00
::!iS ?l:2i,i7Htah
lap* 1647 LOW
6.50 10.37
57 72% 71% 72% + % 1 38% 30% — ' m 143 40% 30% —. v 5 42% 42% 42% + %
.40b	135 44
Mmt lib
36 28% 28% 28%
20 24% 24% 24% . .
I 21% 21% 21% — %
100 37%	~	 I	“
ill! 1.1}	16 64
----P-----
7 27% 27% 27 18 33% 33%
Outbd Owens l
.ta, 1J0 . — G El 1.40 Pa*. Pet ,15g POcPwL 1» PeeTAT *1.20. PanASu 1. 1.50 ' Dm Am .40 PemHEP 1.60 PSrtapdvft'r' Penncen 2.40 PennDix JOB . Penney C > PbftaU %M
nr£
Phil* El 144
SferS
lb + % +1%
t—Paid In stock during' 1
I .j action ling, r—Dock dividend. , estimated
Ion date.-z—teles it
Technology Fund . Wellington Fund .. Windsor Fund ■ ■■■'
rldend. y—I ■■■■■■■	x-dls—Ex t
ion. xr—Ex rights. wy-WIthoiL ants, ww—With warrant*, wd—When die-
P:
13%' 22% 23%
______23%	23%	—	%
77	20%	27%	ft	‘	“
156	21%	21%	21%
22	36%	36	%%
64	26%	20%	20%	..
104	47%	67	0%	+	%
31	20%	27%	28
: 14-84%
42 31	3»b.31
3 170	170	170
13 46%	™
70 ^
vs—In bankruptcy of ________________
. being reorganlzad under the Bankruptcy %. Act, or securities sssumed by such com-. I panics. , »n—Foreign Issue tubl % tercet equalization tad.


STOCK AVERAGES Compiled by The Atseclaied Press B il If- 61 Ind. Rails Util. Stacks - fhenee , -r-T+1J i+T-J:-...+.3- +1.5 Le
A Ado .........mJS 164.3 140.0 332.2
.-.Jth j5»	’ KJA IBS. MM 326-61
News in Brief
Lee 8enthwor(k of 1300 Lafayettp told Pontiac police yesterday that someone stole the stereo tape deck valued at $70 from his car while it was parked in the Pontiac General Hospital lot at Seminole and Wesf Huron.
Garage Sale — Sept. 6 an 6637 Williams Lake Rd. -i
1667 Htah :
ODO Rummage, Friday, September 8, CIA Bldg., 5640 W0-_ iams Lk. Rd., 0-1 p.m. —Adv. ,.5G'ion ml; “
. 476.0 203.6 146.7
«4 TiSi 1&1 ^lam-U noon, comer Judson and —Adv.
Monarch’s hangar and office u I is on Highland, between Airport . I Road and the terminal.
NEW AVIATION FIRM - Standing in front of Monarch Aviation office at Oakland-Pontiac is Ned Gerndt, president of the new
firm. The firm’s specialty will be dealing in used aircraft. ■ .	*	^
D—16
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
BOYLE
It's Unlikely	You R
Family Coat of Arms
By HAL BOYLE	wide open to charlatanry in the
NEW YORK (AP) - Doesipast." your neighbor proudly have an! i‘Coats of arms'originated in ornate framed copy of what he!England and the Continent in " HH	I the 11th. century-to distinguish
I knights in battle. Simply bear-1 ing the name of any such knight doesn't entitle you to weal* his coat of arms. You must be a descendant of his through the j male line”
The English merely $iqirk tol-Herantlv at people who boast of, their phony coats of arms. But not-the Scots. In Scotland you ] can be jailed for a misdemeanor if you wear a family crest you “As few as 10 per cent of the j have no right to. people who use coats of arms Brooks, a tall, studious bache-are historically entitled to l°r of 40, is a victim of his own ■ them,” said Brian’ Brooks of/casarch.
London, one of the 45-member| “I discovered my mother’s Association of Genealogists and; family used a coat of arms for Record Agents formed to com-jRenarati°ns they weren’t en-bat fraud in such matters. * titled to,” he remarked. “They “The whole thing has been!were descended from King Ed-
--------------—-—---------'ward III, but not in the direct
male line..
| TRACED TO 1720
"I was able to trace my ancestry on my father’s side back . oiily to 1726. There I ran into .Thomas - Brooks, a" carter. He (chiefly transported manure.”
But if there are thousands of (Americans who are nonarmiger-By Science Service	al—that is, not entitied to armo-
WASHNGTON ~ One way to, rial bearings—Brooks said there avoid at least one virus infec-lare other thousands who are in-tion is to stop eating’your in-deed fully armigeral but don’t laws. At least, that seems true know it. He charges a fee of $50 in New Guinea.	I to $150 or up to backtrack an-
Kuru, the fatal nervous sys- oestors.	>>:«•>:<•»»»»»:.>»
tern disease found in the Fore! “It is estimated that of the g:	,
tribe, is now dying out—as can-1200 most common names in £: CUPOLAS nibalism declines.	! America, 183 are of British ori- 24”x24”
*	*	*	gin,” he said. “Oddly, the com-
Dr. R; W. Hornabrook, direc- monest names, such as Brown,! tor of the institute of Human Smith?Robinson, Thompson, Ed-Biology of New Guinea, told the'wards, or Johnsons are the most Australian Medical Congress in. difficult ., Unusual names are Sydney that he is convinced the:easiest to trace.”	I •:?	„
disease arises from ritual can-: Brooks said that most of the! ygn . nibalism, which has been disap-:snobbery current a generation! g «/q^ pearing since missionaries vis-* ago in the genealogical field has :* w/O ited the highlands of eastern!died out.	I
New Guinea where it was -prac-j SEARCHING FOR ROOTS
When kuru first was found! “Most ,PeoPle today have a among the Fan tribe it was|8enuine Merest in the past.I g thought to be a genetic disorder!™4* are searchmg for rooU. « because of the limited area hi!™4* want to check family leg- n. which it spread. But later re- ends- to, f,nd ?ut uwho ih?
search ShowSutSK it occured&&& lrom wh*re %8-ft.........................76*
occasionally among neighboring f^P^ ^roeJrojm. ^course,I -
THUR., FRI., SAT., SUN.
'Cannibalism Spread Illness’ !
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2.9PATIO PLEASURE
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tribes and i
c.tO among women, ... who married into the Fore tribe, descended from royalty, l some are.
NOT SINCE I960	! Others are afraid to pursue!
Doctors also were* puzzled their origins for fear that in-by the fact that after about 1960 stead of a king, duke or prime virtually no children appeared, minister, they’ll find a sheep to contract the disease, although! thief dangling from a limb of I earlier it had been common their family tree. This rather among them.	amuses Brooks.
Anthropologists traced the	★	*	★
course oi the epidemic and es- “It isn’t very likely,” he ob-tablished that it spread at alserved. “We find that most! constant rate through the tribe.!Americans come from a mixed Although there has’been no air-j bag of ancestors, some of tight evidence to prove it, a .whom, undoubtedly, wouldn’t number of doctors have con- have wanted to sit down to din-cluded that kuru was transmit- ner with the others. This has to ted through the process of ritual he true when you consider that cannibalism that required a'anyone, if you go back only a family to eat any member who!relatively few generations, has died.	| hundreds of ancestors.
some do hope to find they are!
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GLENWOOD PLAZA-NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD

Last season the 27-year-old product of the University of South Carolina caught 28 passes for 178 yards and two touchdowns. His career record shows 88 pass.receptions for 1,439 yards and 11 touchdowns.
DEEP SPEED
—“He and McCulloch will complement each other very well,” Hioinas said, “You've got to have that deep speed for those downfield foot races.”
-^Detroit on. of the top receiverain-the., ieague^wlieiuflanker. Pat Stadstill went to Los Angeles in the trade that brought Munson to Detroit. However, the Lions can now boast of having no less than six flankers and split ends.
WWW
But Detroit, like other NFL teams,
,V*8 engine — Automatic tram-(tearing —Wide oval tire*.
$277622
OAKLAND UR — More than ever, the quality of the bullpen is spelling the critical difference between a winning and losing team.
That’s why the Tigers are leading the American League while the Athletics are in fifthplace—nndwhy Detroit whipped Oakland 4-2 Wednesday night for its third straight win over the Athletics.
Reliefer Pat Dobson, who had won the two previous games with fine fate-inning hurling, blanked Oakland on one hit over the last two innings to preserve the vie-
Horton's Single Sends Detroit Past Oakland
in Work Against Athletics
1mm
THE PONTIAC PRESS
THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968 E-^l
In Coho Search
Small Boat Sailors Score
the
tory for starter John Hiller, 7-5; -'
A’s HURLER WEAKENS
Rut Oakland’s Chuck- Dobson, 11-13, who weakened in the eighth inning with the score tied 2-2, found no relief in the pitchers who followed him to the mound and absorbed the Joss.
* * *
With two outs in the Oakland starter walked Mickey “That upset me,” Dobson said later, know ^shouldn’t let it, but it did.”
He gave up a single to Jim Northrup and Detroit Manager Mayo Smith sent A1 Kaline in to pinch-hit for Norm Cash. Oakland Manager Bob Kennedy brought in Paul Lindblaud. After two wide pitches he intentionally walked Kaline, loading thaliasei.
GREETS PITCHER
That was all for Lindblad who gave way to Jack Aker. Willie Horton bounced a hit off the reliever’s glove to break the tie. A walk to Bill Freehan forced in the final Tiger run.
The three Tiger victoria provided an excellent comparison of their bullpen strength—and Oakland’s lack of it.
...	.W W 1t
Detroit’s relievers gave up only one run in 8 1-3 innings against the Athletics. Oakland’s bullpen men pitched only a bit more, 9 2-3 innings, and allowed five runs.
The Tigers are idle today but return to Detroit FYiday for a night game with Minnesota to open a three-game weekend series.. ’
SMALL CROWD
The Tigers didn’t have much of an audience Wednesday night.
Only 3,338 fans watched and it was the lowest to' see a Detroit game anywhere in tWo years.;
The victory reduced Detroit’s pennantwinning magic number to 14.
Narttirw rf 4 13 1 Catir 11	....
Cuh lb 2 0 0 1 Sonde 3b ‘4120 WaHne lb 0 0 0 0 Hersliber rf 4 l 3 l whoiimi w 4~o~i i suonr -* 3 011— Fr.eti.n c 3 0 11 Monday cf 1 0 0 0 Matdifck ($ 4000 Donald in 2b 4 0 0 0 Debaon a	0	0 0 0 Duncan c	2 0 0 0
Wart 3b	4	0 10 Wobatar ph	10 0 0
Hlllar p	2	0 0 0 Dotaon a	3 on 0
annMMi ah	1	0 0 0 Lindblad 0	0 0 0 0
1 0 0 0 Akar p 0 0 0 0 Ktough ph 0 00 0 ,
IT’S NO BULL, HE’S HIGHEST PAID — A good question for an argument is — “Who is the highest paid person in athletics in the world? The answer would be matador Manuel Benitez, known as El Cordobes, who gets up to (30,000 for a single bull fight. His personal income from the bull ring alone is estimated at (8.5 million.
Speedy Flanker Gambrell New Target for Munson
The latest trade acquisition by the restless Detroit Lions apparently hinges on the theory that " top passing quarterback is of little use without agile receivers.
The lions Wednesday completed their ninth trade since the end of the 1987 schedule by acquiring speedy flanker Billy Gambrell from the St. Louis Cardinals in return for a third-round draft choice.
Gambrell, a 5-foot-lO, 175-pound veteran of six National Football League campaigns, may be remembered by Lions fans for his reception of a scoring toss last season that broke open a game against Detroit.
He is expected to be a target for recently acquired quarterback Bill Munson and to add speed to the Lions corps of receivers that includes rookie flanker Earl McCulloch, often c
Top l....._________________
Joins Pro Ranks
—mu—
. erf______
and rated
golfer, said,6he 1----------
The 23-year-old long hitter said she had given up her teaching position in Livonia schools and would head for California Thursday to join the women’s pro tour.
WWW
She said she notified Joseph Dey Jr., executive director of the U.S. Golf Association of her decision and also filed application to join the Ladies Professional Golf Association.
“It takes one to three weeks for the LPGA to process the application and I expect my -first pro tournament will be Sept. 2ft-22 «t Kingsburg, Calif.T”«aid the Michigan State University graduate. ★ * ★
She will become the third Michigan, woman pro on (he LPGA tour. Others are Sharon Miller of Battle Creek and Sherry Wilder of Grand Rapids.
' ■’ :. \ *
the fastest human around for the first 20 yards.
MANY RECEIVERS
The Lions are loaded down with receivers and It is obvious they must do some trimming here. Among the tight ends are Jim Gibbons, Charley Sanders and Jerry Zawadzakas along with receivers Bill Malinchak, Gail Cogdill, Walt Roberts, Phil Odle, McCulloch and now Gambrell.'
Saturday bight the Lions play the first half of the football doubleheader in Cleveland when they face the New York Jets at 6:30 p.m.
Green Bay and Cleveland meet in thp second game. The twinbill usually draws more than80,000.—
* ★ ★
“We’re happy to'get Gambrell because he gives us some speed to go with Earl McCulloch,” said general manager Russ Thomas. “If St. Louis hadn't been overloaded with wide receivers themselves, we never would have been
B y DON VOGEL Outdoor Editor, Pontiac Press MANISTEE — It was small boat day in the coho salmon fleet here yesterday.
The 16 to 18-foot runabout and small cruisers took the bulk of a large catch of salmon just outside the breakwater that guards the entrance to Manistee harbor.
Larger cruisers and charter boats with their sophisticated electric fish-finding gear didn’t seem to be in the right place
-r-»
Magic Number 141 in AL Countdown
W. L. Pet. GB DETROIT .. 89 52 .631 — Baltimore . ■ 81 60 .574 8
REMAINING GAMES TIGERS September
6, 7, 8—Minnesota; 9, 10, 11—at ! California; 13,14, 15—Oakland; 16,
17, 18—New York; 20 21, 22-at ; Washington; 23, 24’, 25—at Baltimore; 27, 28, 29—Washington.
ORIOLES September »
6, 7, 8—Chicago; 9, 10,11, 12-at Washington; 13, 15, 15—at Cleveland; 16, 17, 18—at Boston; 20, 21, 22—Chicago; 23, 24, 25-Detroit; 26, 1 27—Cleveland.
I
NEW LION - Billy Gambrell, one of the smallest pass receivers in pro football, was obtained by the Detroit UonB from tile St. Louis Cardinals yesterday for a future draft choice. He stands shy of 5-10 and is in his 6th year in the NFL.
L_ . .. .....
Goovert, a second-year man from Michigan State; Randy Winkler, an NFL sophomore from Tarleton State; linebacker Greg Kent of Utah State; comerback Solomon Brannam of Morris Brown; and guard Dwight Little of Kentucky;
Detroit Race Sunday
Hydros Start Trials
Red Wings Slate More Home Dates
DETROIT (UPI) — The Detroit Red -Wings will play more games on home ice this season than ever before.
Sid Abel, general manager of the National Hockey League club, announced today the 1968-69 Wings will play 38 home games, one more than the previous high of 37 last year.
The Toronto Maple Leafs will oppose Coach Bill Cqdsby’s Wings in the home opener on Oct. 13. Thfo Wfll be two days after the Wings begin the new season .against the Bruins to Boston.
DETROIT (APi — Tfro boats from the state of Washington are favored to win Sunday’s (40,000 Gold Cup hydroplane race on the Detroit River, but a pair of Detroit boats is expected to give them a strong run for their money.
Favorites in the race are Miss Bardahl, the season's top point getter with 6,300; and Miss Eagle Electric, runner-up in the point race.
Each has won three of the seven races so far this year. The gold Cup will be the eighth race of the 10-race segson.
CONSISTENCY
My Gypsy aind Miss D.15., both of Detroit, have shown top consistency. Gypsy, driven by Tommy Fults, has failed to finish only odee in 20 heat starts and Miss U.S. failed once hi 18.
Trial* were to begin today and tun through Saturday for the renewal of the powerboat classic. A dozen' boats were expected to participate.
■/’ \ : / : • ★	,★ * W \ .* {pff ’ I
The Gold Cup was originally scheduled for last June but was rescheduled after rough water washed out the race. Plans to have it run over Labor Day weekend were cancelled also after the .Coast Guard said the river could not be cleared for racing then.
*
The consistency index stands at 81 per cent in the Gold Cup. foe index is com-. puted on how many boats start a rate and bow mapy finish. t
There have been 222 starts ao far and -180 finishes. Otter races often have as law as 10 per cent finish.
at the right time and also had difficulty maneuvering gmong the 500 craft trolling near the harbor.
*	*	*
Garcia Corporation Mitchell-I reported that a school of salmon covering three miles from the harbor entrance south triggered the excellent afternoon of fishing. The Mitchell-I has been in Lake Michigan since July cpnducting salmon fishing experiments and is. considered the locaj sounding board.
*	*	*
The school moved soum toward evening and the fishermen either went with it or returned to port.
WARNINGS UP
Small craft warnings flew the last two days and probably will be run out at Coast Guard stations along Lake Michigan today.
*	*, *
Platte Bay, north of Frankfort, has been very good the last couple of days and is sheltered by the south wind which blew yesterday and Tuesday and over 300 boats were on the water both days.
*	★	*
Results were spotty yesterday morning but picked up considerably in the afternoon until a rainstorm and winds shifting to the west .chased the anglers off.the bay,
Frankfort, which had been a hot spot until yesterday, was very poor with only
Ex-Champ Gains JKO
KEY WEST, Fia, (AF') - Former welterweight champion Luis Rodriguez, now fighting at 152 pounds, scored a technical knockout over middleweight Hudy Rodriquez, 158, of Minneapolis in the fourth round of a scheduled 10-rounder Wednesday, night.
five fish being brought in between 23 boats and three of those were caught from one boat which journeyed north to the edge of Platte Bay. Swells up to six feet kept most of the craft in the harbor.
★ ★ ★
No salmon are making spawning runs up the Platte River, but some cohos are in the Manistee.
Conservation department fishery workers reported yesterday that work on the weir in the Manistee at the mouth of Big Bear Creek is complete and some salmon are beginning ,to pile up behind it. .	-
The weir closes the entrance to Bear Creek and will be used to supply a commercial contractor..
It will be open periodically to allow salmon, movement upstream for natural spawning and to provide spoFt fishing.
WON’T CLOSE
. The Bear will not be closed to fishing as it was a; year ago.
★ ★ ★
Some Chinook jacks were reported caught in Lake Manistee, but con-1 servation department fisherymen didI , not see them and suspect they might have been cohd.
BOAT CAPSIZES
- Two fishermen tried to leave Manistee Harbor in a 12-foot boat late yesterday > afternoon. The boat hit the first rollers beyond the lighthouse and capsized. Several boats converged on the men and they were pulled from the water. The Coast Guard recovered the boat.
The conservation department reported about 1,000 boats on the lake in the Manistee area and less than 25 each Arcadia, Portage Lake. Frankfort and Empire.
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E—2
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968	\
Auto
Confers
Tiant Gets Lift to 20-Game Winner's Club
■	.	/• *	h
YastrzemskiGrabs Batting Lead With .291
By The Associated Press la scoreless deadlock with Luis Tiant’s Cleveland bullpen squeeze bunt in the 14th and I buddies gave him a lift to the Luis Aparicio followed with a [ front door of the 20 Game Win- two-run single, enabling the White Sox to push two games ahead of the Senators in their battle for ninth place.
Iners’ Club. Baltimore’s Dave ! McNally got there under his I own power.
’ Four Cleveland relievers combined to preserve Tiant’s 19th victory Wednesday night as the Indians subdued' the California Angels 9-5 after blowing a seven-run lead.
McNally nailed his 19th triumph with a fourth inning home run as the Orioles trimmed the New York Yankees 6-3.
90.000 mile guarantee
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•	Install n*w linings
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Carl Yastrzemski grabbed the
Clarke 3b , Teeth tt Michael if ib
Jelanaer t McNally p
31 6 10
36 3 10 3 Total
..	.001 1 I __________
.... 0 13 10 1 • 0 X-e
- ------filnson. DP—New York
Baltimore 2.	LOB—New York
i 2B-Tr Hendricks.
“"‘-•blnion fji. 1 SB—Ft Robi
HBP—McNally (Tri
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American League batting lead Baltimore 7. 2B-Trash,/ J> Johnson with a four-hit spree in Boston’s I H'ow0»r ’HnR--w^obS 10-2 romp over Minnesota; Wil-i“cNf'i'jf BHl |lie Horton’s tie-breaking single!B,hMen (L,14.10)
In the eighth inning sparked® ® 0 1 |
I first place Detroit to a 4-2 victo- McNeiiy	^ »	•• * * * *'
! ry over Oakland and the Oiica-|p8 Br | go White Sox blanked Washington 3-0 In 14 innings.
Tiant, 19-9, stopped the Angels jjjjjjjjjj1 ,!{ on one hit until-the sixth, when|c»roena^t,	~ -
Roger Repoz’ two-run homemHorton in 5 0 2 0 Reichardt it 3 touched off a four-run rally that am? » *s * #atr£noc c 3 drove him from the mound. Sori-jfCiwV!! ny Siebert, Rob Gardner and H^lrf p Horacio Pina all came out of the {tower p bull-pen before the inning was RomoV
I	over and Vicente Romo got the / last two outs after Pina faltered j in the ninth, preserving Tiant’s i
first victory since Aug, 10.	, Tot„ ' 4„,„ Tot„ ,,,,
DRIVES IN FOUR	fgSfe e e * * e 3 e 31 =
■	. S	. .	, E—Locke. LOB—Cleveland 11
Joe Azue drove m four Cleve-1 tsllfornle U. 2B-T.Horton.	Fuller
land runs with a pair of singles IfiST Snyd#r HR_R,po; s“T,,n' -flES36*.|and Vern Fuller collected three T,int (W()W)	1 s 2.3 5 R4E4 B®s<
hits and scored three runs.	Gardner	°« °i #o °o 0
McNally, who has reeled off Pina	'.'.a 22-3 1 j r 4
II	straight victories since the wHarei««	11-1 1 .4 4 1
i I All-Star break for a 19-8 mark,1
j smacked his third homer of the{^£mi j season after the Yankees had| »yp*»
I closed the gap to 4-3 on consecutive homers by Bill Robinson and Andy Kosco in the top of thelg^^V J $ ? $ fj
fourth.	I Ytlrmikl If 5 2JlCjjgy
Toledo's Lead Cut to 1 Game
The battle tor the International League pennant has been reduced to a two-way scrap between the two Ohio rivals, the Toledo Mud Hens and the Columbus Jets.
Columbus pulled to within a game of the lead Wednesday night with a 4-3 victory over the last-place Richmond Brave* While the Mud Hens and the Buffalo Bisons Were taking the night off. Columbus, however, has one leal loss than Toledo and has played tour less games than the Mu<J Hens.
* it' it
The two teams head Into the season’s final series—Toledo at third-place Rochester for four
NoContender,
Gophers' Warmath
5 2 2 1 Rodflers c 10 0
5 3 3	0	ARodrpez 3b	2 0	0 0
2 10	0	Cottier Pr	0 0	0 0
0	0 0	0	Brgmolor p	0 0	0 0
0‘0 0	0	Llenas ph	10	0 0
1	0 0	0	Bennett ff	O 0	0 0
0 0 0 0 WHarelsn p 0 0.0 0
Wright p	10	0 0
Pattin p	0 0	0 0
Hinton ph	0 0	0 0
Locke j p	0 0	0 0
Davalllfo ph	0 0	0 0
Morton rf	2 *	’ 1
p AP Wirephota
BEATS THROW, STILL OUT — Senators’ Mike Epstein beat the throw to first base but made the turn and was tagged by pitcher Jack Fisher of the White Sox in their game in Washington last night. The throw came from catcher Duane Josephson who was backing up the play at first when the ball got by Fisher. The White Sea won, 3-0 ip 14 innings.
Second of,;* Series MINNEAPOLIS, Minn. (API-Through title seasons and thin' seasons, Minnesota’s Murray Warmath Jias reigned serenely as the Big Ten’s most melancholy football coach.
Ibis fall is no exception as the gravel-voiced, deadly-serious Warmath starts his 15th Gopher campaign.
Murray, who looses a hearty chuckle only when he underscores some sad football fact, insists that it Is a horrible mistake to label his defending cochampion Gophers a Big Ten title threat.
Last season, while everybody was watching Purdue and Indiana hog the conference spotlight, Warmath whipped his behemoth Gophers to" a three-way share of the crown with a. 6-1 record.'
★	. it it
“We lost pine of our most out-in four nights, the Jets atl standing /players from last home against the fourth-place’year,” said Warmath, who hard-! Jacksonville Mets for four ly beams over the fact Minneso-j successive doubleheaders. t*’s opening toe Sept. 21 is de-*	it	it	’! fending	national champion
Rochester nailed down a postj Southern California, in the postseason playoffs with a j gjQ LOSSES i-3 victory over the Syracuse’
Chiefs, but the Louisville Colo-j JJg is no other squadin nets swept a twin bill from,
Jacksonville for the second
crop of able sophomores develop adequately during non-conference openers against Southern California, Nebraska and Wdke Forest. ,
* * *
Minnesota has some advan? tage launching Its season with four successive home contests, including an Oct. 12 Big Ten opener against Illinois. ^
But the Gophers must play cochampions Purdue and Indiana in mid-November and their final two games, against the Hoosiers and arch-rival Wisconsin, are on the road.
{straight night, whipping the Mets 2-1 in 10 Innings and 6-2.
PGA Offers Recommendation
Tourney Sponsors in Golf Huddle
PB—Satrlano. T-3:22. A— 7,34*.
MINNESOTA
xl HOUSTON (AP) — Sponsors|group of the touring Profes-o|of most of the major golf sionals.
11 tournaments met today to The meeting follows a one-day I discuss problems arising out of session Wednesday of the PGA the dispute between the tour-advisory board whose executive
I KHarrlsn rf 5 1
Elrod Hendricks, who singled!Adair home.one of three Baltimore
runs in the second, doubled and!____
[scored an insurance marker inj the sixth.
Yastrzemski boosted his batting average to .291 by swatting three singles and his 18th homer In the Red Sox’" victory Minnesota. Right-hander Gary Bell checked the Twins on six hits and broke a 2-2 tie with a sacrifice fly in the seventh before Boston sewed it up with six unearned runs in the eighth.
oYojing pros and the Professional {committee made recommenda-** ?! Golf Association.	|tions aimed'at settlin
S| During the two-day closed jjSffjSs 0 session some 34 members of the!
the Big Ten which graduated more and better talent than we did. Every team we played in the conference last year will be tougher this season.
“I’m telling you like it is, not like some of the so-called preseason guessers would have you believe about how strong we are. *: > it
'When you lose defensive players like McKinley Boston and Tom Sakai and offensive players like Charley Sanders, John Williams and Curt Wilson, you have lost super perform-
The advisory board, made up
of businessmen, discussed the! ...	.	... .__
issues four hours before goingl Minnesota still will have a into executive session to adopt ^. Warmath concedes, the resolution.	deP«nd “P™ h.ow
^	*	*	well Phil Hagen or Ray
phens replaces Wilson at quar-Curtis Person Sr., of terback.
.. resolution passed by toe|MemPhis’ Tehn > moderated. Um
2X??! International Golf <?Donsorsadvis0ry qommittee recom-If°6ranJ and read the resolu-? S ’ »|lnternaw®nai Golf »P ° n s ° r s , , that the executive tion> which said: “The com-,
.Assocmtmm—will .attempt to	the PGA give I mittee recommends that the
5	—e^e,	TreatioS oflexecurive committee of the
MinMMit	01* ooo •••—3
E—Rollins, Allison. DP—Boston Minnesota J. LOB—Boston t, Mlnnesott
Soccer Crown Still in Doubt
Season Over, Oakland Watching Rival
By The Associated Press The Pacific Division title of the North American Soccer League will he determined Saturday night but aU the first-place Oakland Clippers can do about it is sit back and watch.
The Clipper* wound up the regular season at San Diego Wednesday night by playing a 3-3 tie with the second-place Toros. Die deadlock enabled Oakland to remain eight points ahead of San Diego.
The Toros have one game left at home with third-place Los ' Angeles Saturday. San Diego -could wjn the championship by scoring at least three goals and beating the Wolves.
In other fames, New York took Atlanta 3-1, Kansas City edged Los Angeles 2-1, Cleveland nipped Chicago 2-1 and Houston blanked St. Louis 2-0.
B*M (W,11-10)
H R ER BB SO
DChanct (L, 13-14) 7	7 3 3 1
Poland	2	17 10
WP—Roland. T—2:04. A— 0.069.
WASHINGTON nser Cf 7 0 2"6
Tigers Statistics
CHICAGO
Bradford ef 600
FHov
Locker p G Peters p
4 0 0 0 Alyea rf
0	0 0 0 Epstein lb
1	0 0 0 C Petersn. I<
0 0 0 0 H
0 BAllen 2b * 6 0 1 0 AAcAullffe
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’ Losing, pitcher Dean Chance	rt $ j ii Fr«v^i " i o" c%h
delivered the Twins’ runs with a « J ] J J	» i o 8 o| werthlcl<
bases-loaded single in the sec-» oooo stroud •*.	1000 phc.^
ond, boosting his season RBI to- McCraw 1b 2001 Bertalna p 5000 Tracpwskl a 1 •	‘	j Fisher p 1 0 0 0 Hmphrys p 0 0 0 0 Comer
tal from one to tnree.	Wilhelm p OOOO GMertln ph 1 0 0 0 Oyler
Horton bounced a single. off $J°y% ph i®oo HA®inSPPh j the glove of Oakland reliever MNrtn»y c 1 0 0 0 |^r« ph Jack Aker in theVghth, snap-;	“ Tn)„ BSSS
ping a 2-2 tie, and Aker forced cnicaoa	ooo ooo ooo ooo o»- s Loiich
I across another-run with a
j bases-loaded walk as the Tigers;	■ \\\ * o o out':
maintained , their eight-game wjj^	^	?
| bu|ge over second place Baltl-jRfcarit^
ITIOre..	\ Humphreys '* ,
ms* * ^ m
2 2-3 r
o o i i 4'i~io: their alignment with the PGA or i	. ,	....
........ go along with a newly formed {a	payerS d,V1SW^ M, creation of b to urn am
6	6	....	■	■	Most of the touring pros foft|creation of a toumam
!the PGA Aug. 13 in a dispute!Payers division and that the {over control of the tour and PGA. through its executive ex-|announced Aug. 19 the forma- erci$e control of' the ad-ition of a new orgartiaztionjministrative and opereting called the American Profes-|functi(>ns of all PGA activities, .7 TP. Auji^H^V., pjsional Golfers.	[including toura^tactivittes
......72 n 28 4 it .38* —--------------------------- j and that all field staff personnel
M»i»ji 73 .280	{and other employes operate
> ,. ..... mta IS ?7 so .25? l i /	/ under the jurisdiction of the
*84??J5.'? “ ??‘l MUrpfiy OG&KS executive committee, and to be *	•	[composed of representatives of
TL* J	ithe tournament sponsors, the
/ mro OrraignT players and the PGA.”
Hagen, a junior, could be the torch to touch off a potent Min- Bo*>on nesota attack. Stephens, a sen- clSSSSe-
| PGAgive consideration to the ior'	C^em?r rf
I ■	-	■ emulate his brother and former
WuBln0ton	.	...	15	*	7	54 147	43	52
Allpntp .... .	17	7	i	47 147	4*	32
New York .... 12	8 12	54 144	42	54
laMISliiHHtfI'li-	1	41 121	42	42
8	17	4	48 114	50	6*
5 0 3 0
4 20 4
star Gopher quarterback, Sandy.
Long-time Big Ten observers know any Warmath club should never be underestimated and this one has 26 returning letter-men and a potentially powerful offense.
The Gophers could be in there swinging for the title again if a
Western Conference Gulf Dlvlelon Kensee C!fy .	15	11	5	45 15*	5*	42
Houston ........	14	12	5	44 145	54	3*
St. Louie ...... 12	13	4	40 130	47	54
Uutllr niultlnai
Oakland San Diego Lot Angelas Vancouver
, Kansas City 2, Los Angolts 1 New York 3. Atlanta l Houston 2, St. Louis 0 Cleveland 2, Chicago l Oaklend 3, Sen Diego 1, fit Thursday's Games No games scheduled.
I—ratals V 4787 575 li*5 ISO SSI .23*1
Tour Triumph |ai
if era! WETHERSFIELD,
New Names Heading List in WDGA Medal Tourney
Chicago’s Tom Mcftaw brAeiSSrom
!l;2-»)
5 3	3	0 3
Max Elkin, - PEA president and Secretary Leo Fraser Conn | rePresented ifW® PGA at the ad-WPrsrt, ..r	ss n ivisory board meeting. Angus
l%iAP) „T ^.C°Uld PUU J,? ^ Mairs, president of the k4St,CkL	e lsPonsor?’ group who will
a w Bob Murphy said Wednesday as,preside at today’s meeting, at- A couple of gals who have|second round opened today at , M!he prepared for a try at	tended the advisory boa-rd never made it to the winner’s!Meadowbrook Country Club in
3-^line the first eolfer since 1963 tol——n.i--—	!-«-*- J	- --'the Women’s District Gal f
Association medal play tournament.
Chdbking in with 81s In the
money
f «[ ing the first golfer since 1963 to|meetin-
5 75{ win three consiecutive tourna-j—--------
2.78 ments on the professional golf 7 tour.
Murphy’s magic touch with Ithe putter earned him victories
r an observer.
Icircle shared the lead as the
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.Confident Distance Ace Pressure Break
•j4ft^he~Phiiadetphi« -€laasic and; . the 'ITiuMerbird Tournamient ait Monfolair,' N.J., the past two Weeks.
His current streak makes him ESSEX, Md. (AP) - Except “I could feel the tension and the co-favorite along with 1968’slfor pave Patrick, all of Ameri- pressure. So I wanted to get leading money winner Billy Cas-jca’s best distance runners are horne for four or five days and l*r to the $100,090 Greater Hart-jat .South TjiWp Tahw, rnijf, Hill, just take it easy and relax. Now Ford Open starting today at the gently preparing for the Olym- I'm heading back to Tahoe.” ■' par-71 Wethersfield Country,^.	Next week, the final U.S.
W' U.	,	Patrick stretched out on the 0lympic trials will be held at
Murphy managed only a one-jving-room couch of his home s^h Lake Tahoe. Jim Ryun is under-par 70 in Wednesday s in this Baltimore suburb and ex- favored in the i 5Mt meter run pro-amateur^ warmup wWch plained why he was here was his first look at the 6,568- they were there':	the team too
yard Wethersfield links. Casper “I’m in fantastic shape, my	’
shot a 69 and then went to the best shape evef,” he said. “I putting green to try, put an old was doing great in workouts and putter he resurrected from his [races at Tahoe. But I was get-car trunk.	[ting emotional, toe.
His credentials are Impeccable. Last June, the tall, 21-year-old blond from Villanova won the NCAA 1,500 in 3:39.9 and the first Olympic trials In 3:43.6, eased up.
Last Saturday, at South Lake Tahoe, he ran what he described as the best race of his
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’It was an 800-meter race,” sajd Patric. “I was psyched up because Wade Bell was going to run, and he's so good. But he dropped out.
“I didn’t feel like running after that, and I ran the first quarter as if I didn’t care..
must have been 15 or 18 yards back with 100 yards to go.
But I felt so good that I started to run like mad. I tost to Ron KutscUnski by only four feet.
“His time was 1:46.7 and mine was 1:46.9, my fastest ever. So i was real happy, even thoughlkwt.” -	‘-u
One of Patrick’s mAn rivals at Mexico City will be Bodo ’W**n	“
first round of the 54-hole event
[yesterday, were ^rs. JL. G......
tMaWjuardt -nf ' Gowarie ^and ’ Helen Grinnell of Detroit Golf Club.
SAME SCORE
Both carded 41-41-823,over the 5,968-yard, par-74 Meadowbrook layout.---
★	O* -★
Absent from the event was defending champion Mrs. T. M. Werner of Indianwood, sriw ran into a babysitting problem and had to bypass the tournament. FOUR DEADLOCKED
Four players wfere deadlocked in toe third position.
★	★ , ★
The four at 84 were Mrs. John Hume of Birmingham, Emily Gail of Grosse 116, Mrs. Bruce HUkene of Indianwood and Mrs. W. E. Mosher Jr. of Orchard Lake.
Mrs. Beverly Straus of! Franklin Hills Country Club, a member of the second flight, collected a hole-in-one on too 156-yard $o. 8 hole.
Six-time champion Mrs. Keith Le Clair of Barton Hills was three shots off the pace _at 40-45-85.
6. Marqu.rdt, Gow«fl8 41-41—.2 PBB Orlrm.ll, Detroit GC 41-41—42
Emily Gall, Gross. I la .....43-41—84
Mrs: John Hum, Birmingham 44^0-84 Mrs. Bruce HlikMa. Indianwood 41-43-84 MrsW. E. Mother Jr., CwHSq"-^ ^
Mrs. Johh !'Bi6tki|Mltt> wishte ,
, naw ......T.TT. ..............dHS-IS
Mrs. Keith LaClalr, Barton Hills 4045—15
Mrs- Ant^j^w,jajari^ M-.g ’ Mrs. Frank Campsitu Gross, lie 344-8*
MIS. Donald BratoYi Birmingham 42-44—8* Mrs. VfiwlaHar, Oakland Hltls 41-45-84 Cathy Hanrlckaon, Atla/ Valley 45-43—81
Tuemmler of West Germany. Too weeks ago, Tuemmler ran a mile in 3(53.8. Patrick’s best is 3:56.8.
Mrs. Morton Wohlman. Tam

Brain.nl, Plum thtf-MrsT Phillip O CormalL moor	^	£ -
44-47—tl .43-48—^2
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5,1968
E—8

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Ortrott	M	.Si * _**
Baltlmor* ..... il 60	,f»• f ,
Boston	»	fi	.539	13
fPSSif ........ 7*	68	SM	14V,
Nff( yark.....-SB j$	..Wi
oacWw ........rn	rt	.500	m*
. iMwmgto ...... 47	74*	.47*	a
C« Hornla .......*	41	.430	MW
Chicago ......H... 59	12	.414	30
Washington ...... *4	13	.403	31
W)Mn3 Results DetnBt 4, Oakland 2 Boston 14, Minnesota J Baltimore 6, Now York 1 .
Cleveland 9, California 5 Chicago 3, WatMnglw^O. 14 Inning*
Chicago (Nyman 14) at Washington (Paacual 124), night Only game aeheduled. .	■
' ~ ' Pima»*ii Baiwe*
Minnesota at Detroit, night
Chicago at BeTWmni*. night—^-----
1 waenjngtoa aTNear Yorkr night Cleveland at Oakland, nUtT Boeton at CoWomlo, night
National League V	Wen	Coat	Pet.
ft. Logie ..... 89	a	.431	-
San Francltco ... 75	4$	.334	13V3
Cincinnati .... 73	e*	.52*	15
Chicago ....... 74	44	.517	If
Atlanta ...... 71	74	.504	it
Ptttotiurgh ... 48	73	.414	21
fhlMniMa ...... 45	7*	.444	131*
Houston ....... 44	77	4M	B
New York ..... . 44	74	.440 24
Los Apgat^; ,...ti. n ...434 17V.
Cincinnati 3, St. Louis 3 . Loo Angela* 3. Philadelphia 4 Chicago 74, San Francisco 4-5 Only oama* scheduled.
1 ’ '	Today's game* .
No games scheduled.
Friday's games . Philadelphia at Chicago New York at Pittsburgh, night Houston at Atlanta, mM	.
San Francisco at St. Louis 2. twl-nlght * Los Angelas at Cincinnati 2, Iwl-nlght
H
By The Asseciated Pros
••*--a^S.cTnl«aou.
n	iSA44#,	?*,«	.«!
Sl£E? Min	M	O |	I
Andrews Ban	124 454	47 29	.242
Cater oak	727 424	34 11*	.281
DavallltoCal	131 491	45 134	.241
F.rtwJsrd Wai	134 517	70 145	MO
Carew Min	109 403	43 113	.240
W.Hprton Det	130 441 »1» SO
K.Harrelson Btn_ W 45* 72 127 .277
F.Howard, Washington,K.Harrelson, Boston, 33i W.florton, Detroit, 111 R .Jackson, Oakland, Mi Powell, Baltimore, 21i Freehan, Detroit, tl.
Runs liHR I®
K.Harrelson, Boston, 103; _ F.Howard, Washington, *4,- Northrap, Detroit, 80; Powell'Baltlmor*, 74i W.Horton. Detroit,
**■ '	* Pitching..__________
McLain,' Detro1|t,°^Tn,M4i MeNeily, Baltimore, 1*4, .704; Santiago. Boston, *4,	.4*2; CulP, Boston, 114,	.***;
. Ellsworth, Boston, 1*4, .444.
Mathis, Lincoln Fight Tonight
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LOS ANGELES (UPI) Buster Mathis, a slimmed down version of a fighter who weighed 360 pounds as an amateur four years ago, and veteran Amos “Big Train” Lincoln battle in a 10-round bout at the Olympic Auditorium tonight.
Mathis, 24, said he will weigh 223 pounds for his fight with the 30-year-old Lincoln.
The former Grand Rapids, Mich., fighter goffered an -llth! round technical Knockout against undefeated Joe Frazier at Madison Square Garden last, March 4 in a fight recognized in five states as for t h e heavyweight championship.
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OSUCoach Lauds Soph
COLUMBUS (UPI) - The Ohio State football team held its|
■Jtot.-drais.ia..Tuesday.;
*£]
terooon without adding to the | six already on the injured list,! all minor.
Sophomore halfback John; Broddngton, from Brooklyn, N.Y., was praised by coach Woody Hayes after a couple long runs, saying, “That guy runs with more desire than any back we’ve got.”
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER a, 1968
15 New Features, Flawless Performance — The Extraordinary Sony 355
Compare the Sony Solid-State Model 355... No Finer Stereo Deck at any price!
The first home tape recording instrument to achieve true high fidelity playback at three and three quarter speed! The extraordinary new Sony Model 355 three-head stereo tape deck is priced under $200, yet so brilliantly engineered it delivers the professional quality end performance you'd expect from equipment costing hundreds of dollars more. There are no less than fifteen new features including an exclusive built-in patching switch for sound-on-sound. Also a new Vibration-Free Motor, Tape and Source Monitor-
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Spartans Hold Hard Knocks Class
Michigan's Offense Perks Without Ron Johnson
ANN ARBOR (AP) - Univer, sity of Michigan’s football team, still missing the services of All-America candidate Bob Johnson, went through its second scrimmage of the season Wednesday.
Coach Bump Elliott said the offense, despite the absence of Johnson, the team's captain, "looked real good and gave us indications that we are progressing.”_____
D1SLOGATED THUMB | Johnson suffered a dislocated thumb in the Wolverines’ first scrimmage Saturday and will be out of contact work this week.
•*^7~ifc~ *
Placekicking received the most attention Wednesday, pedally the toework of sophomore Tim Killian of Lincoln
Park. He shared the kicking duties with Frank Titus, a junior from Cleveland and Mike Hankwitz of Scottsville, also a junior.
The offense was given the ball in controlled situations, including near the end zones and in field goal positions.
Lance Scheffler ran in Johnson’s halfback spot and the Trenton sophomore was impressive.
MSU SCHRIMMAGE
EAST LANSING (AP) Michigan State’s Spartans held their first day of classes in the school of hard knocks Wednes-day and came out with no serl-tras injtrries and shining performances from both quarterbacks and receivers.
The scrimmage, which lasted about one hour, pitted the No.
1	offense against the team’s No,
2	defense, and also the No. 2 offense against the No. 1 de-
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Although the running attack was stalemated, all three Spartan quarterbacks were impressive. Bill Feraco, Gordon Long-mire and BUI Triplett continuously connected with A1 Brenner, Frank Foreman, Gordon Bowdell and Charlie Webte-meyer.
Brenner, -MSU captain, is 'a senior playing at split end. Bowdell, a junior, is also a split end, while Foreman is a tight mid. Weidemeyer is a flanker.
Feraco, a senior, is expected to be the No. i quarterback this season. Both Longmire and Triplett are sophomores.
The team will continue to scrimmage Thursday and Friday with a good sized scrimmage scheduled for Saturday. MSU’s first game is Sept, 21 at home against Syracuse.
Big Ten football briefs: ILLINOIS - Offensive guard Jerry Pillath, a Pound, Wls., senior, is sidelined with a broken bone in his hand. Junior Bob Bteszczad of Chicago has replaced him*
NORTHWESTERN, - Fjva players are battling for the two offensive end spots—Mark Pro-skine, Bruce Hubbard, Pat Harrington, Dave Hallstrand and Rick Telander.
INDIANA — Sophomore halfback Gary Brown has been moved to fullback to beef up a position weakened.by letterman Roger drove’s failure to return to school.
PURDUE— Veteran offensive end Marion Griffin became the first injury casualty. The East Chicago senior suffered a pulled leg muscle.
OHIO STATE,— Sophomore quarterbacks Rex Kern and Ron Maciejowski handled the ball In a passing and running drill. Coach Woody Hayes said he.was impressed,with the receiving of another rookie, Bruce Jankowski.
MINNESOTA—The passing of quarterback Phil Hagen and the receiving of. tight ends Leon Trawick and Ray Parson featured -the Gophers’ first full scrimmage.
IOi^A—Junior Rich Stepanek, veteran left tackle, will be sidelined for more than a week With a knee injury. Wingback Barry Crees is nursing a attained knee, and halfback Pat Dunnl-gan a bruised teg.
WISCONSIN — Mike Butter, Big Ten hurdle champion has left the squad. Jim DeLide, a defensive tackle, joined the injury list with a awe shoulder.
Canadian Weekly Golf
A border-crosser continues to hold the hottest hand in the Women’s „ Metropolitan G olf Association.
Birmingham and Mrs. George Todd of Plymouth shared third with 88s.
Mrs. Nick Panasiuk, who has to cross the border each week from her home in Elmhurst,
Warren Orlick, head pro at Tam O’Shanter Country Club, conducted a rules clinic for the
Ont., checked in with her third 69 players on hand following the triumph of the season yesterday j competition, when she took the WMGA outing in overtime at Pontiac Country Club.
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Mrs. Panasiuk, current WMGA medal champion, posted a par-3 on the second hole of the playoff to edge Mrs. James Courtney of -Livonia in the bat-tie for top honors.______j.----
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by Hart Schaffnsr & Marx
HS&M points the right fashion direction for fill and winter with Charts Cloth, a new travel-wise fsbrio woven exclusively for HS&M of the worid'a beet . pure virgin wool. Fall-favored colors—Mercstor dray, Horizon Blue, Compass Bronze, Meridian Green—ere newly discovered in today’s “Navigator Patterns”: plaids, stripes, checka and rninlchaeks. HS&Ms Astra advanced styling keeps you on oourle In the right fashion. For example, this Aatra two-button model with squared shoulders, slightly shaped weiat, double-piped lower pockets and aide vents' $110.00. j
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M

THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
E—5
Pete Bombs Cards*
Reds' Rose a Thorn
■J By the Associated Press
Pete Rose'Is ruining his im-
age..
Determined to become the first $100,000 player who doesn’t
*	pitch or hit home runs for a living, Rose has broken out in an unaccustomed display of power.
The Cincinnati Bpark plug rapped his $econd home run in as many days and 10th of the season Wednesday night helping
*	the Reds halt a six-game losing
*	streak with an 0-3 victory over the St. Louis Cardinals.
It other National League ac-
tion,'Los Angeles shut out Phila-delphia $-0, and Chicago split a doubleheader with San Francisco, winning 7-6 before losing 54.
Rose, led off the game with his home run and then reverted to his normal approach with two singles, raising his league leading battlpg average to .340. SHORT OF GOAL
The three hits gave him 181 for the season—19 shy of his goal of 200. He has 25 games to go and if he hits the target, it will be the third time in the last four yeafs He has done it.
Rose’s 200 target has been made more difficult this season by a broken thumb which cost him 13 games in July.. Nevertheless, he leads Pittsburgh’s Matty Alou by 11 points in the batting race and is one of only four batters in die major leagues hitting more than .300 in this year of the pitcher.
- * * *
Johnny Bench had a two-run homer and Leo Cardenas and Lee May also drove in two runs apiece with key hits for the Reds.
Tho reception by both our i customers and omployoos [ to our Saturday closing . VR has boon most gratifying.
Therefore, wo shall con-, tinuo those store hours throughout tho year ...
OPEN MONDAY 8 A.M. to 8 P.M. Tuesday thru' Friday 8 A.M. to IP-M. Closed all day Saturday
CITY GUSS SERVICE
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Tankesrs find No. 13 Okay
, U. S.'Team Breaks Thirteen Records
LONG BEACH, Calif. (At United States Olympic swimming coaches can't consider 13 an unlucky number.
That’s the number of world records in the Olympic events which fell during the men’s and women’s trials determining the [squads for the Games at Mexico City next month.
The gals started it all with
Don Sutton pitched his first is?vf. ^ords in their four days
j^-MM ,re?“>'ter Debb‘e-
Sutton struck out 12—a career i y high-and never was in real j	ttiS?
trouble, winning his seveirar jwfwpwr	scnoirsndsr
game.
Two-Day Show Slated
Horses Enter Spotlight
Ceptaur Farm Stables will be1 Katie .Monahan of Bloomfield N host to,its third two-day Horse Hills will ride the stables’ top < Show of the season Saturday horses during the show.. .	' / '
and Sunday With h u n t e r ,j She is well oh her way to the; | dressage and jumper events; 1968 state junior equitation; planned for the fall competition, j championship, after riding thej | The activity will commence 8 state’s top junior worki a m. Saturday and lasts until 6 hunter last year, p.m. both dgys.’More than 100, entries are expected f r om Michigan, New York, Ohio.j Rough Rid W; Pennsylvania, Indiana, Illinois:	9
and Wisconsin, plus Canada. I OTTAWA (AP) — The Ottawa Three outdoor rings will Rough Riders took over first I permit simultaneous events place in the Eastern Conference , during the two Jays.	.	with a 24-17 victory over the '
Centaur is located on Drake Winnipeg Blue Bombers in an , Road just north of Maple in interlocking Canadian FootbalL West Bloomfield Township. League game Wednesday night.!
(All Timpi. BDT)
FrM.y .
R.gul.r Staton
Amtricm Lmmim Cincinnati at San Diagd, 1:30 p.n
* marie an laagva
________I -
(NBC-TV).
■antnviont
Minnesota, NFL, vs. New Qrleani, ifl, at Shreveport. La„ «:30 p.m.
St. Louie, NFL. af Chicago. NFL, 0 p.m Los Angeles
and Pick-Up Campers • F. E. Howland Salad
3255 Disit Hwy, <73-1451
Endrof-the-Season Sale of the Elegant 1968 Cadillacs At. . .	,
JEROME Cadillac Sales
1980 WIDE TRACK DR. FE 3-7021
The Dodgers bunehed three singles for a run In the fourth and then added two insurance runs in the eighth and ninth with triples by Willie Davis and Bill Sudakis the key hits. '	| "wSrld’f^'
Don Kessihger and Billy $11- 'a^hTcotw-WA Hams each rapped two-run horn-1 ^
Santa Cl.r», CMW.. I-----■
t.ShO-meter treeityle—Mike Burton, Sacramento. Calif., 16:08.5.
100-meter butterfly—Mark Splti, Santa Clara, SS.6.
200-meter 'Individual madlav—Charles Hlckcox. Bloomington, Ind . 2:10.6.
400-meter Individual medley—Hlckcox. 4:30.0.
400-meter relay—Zack Zorn, 53.0, Steve Rerych, 53.0, Kon Walsh. S3.4, and Schol-lander, 53.1-3:32.5.
(During *
freestyle—Zack
____ H... 51.6.
Women's World records lias:
SMhmatar
-	-	. amenfo, c«— ____
Francisco in the first game of 4,«^m*'«r 'r»*s,v|*, D*bb|«
fheir doubleheader. For Kessin-' 000-meter . freestyle, Debbie Meyer, ger, it was his first home run in< MBrn«t«r individual medley. Claudia, three , seasons. Williams’ Shot | * 4ng.mator Individual medley. Claudia was his 24th of the year.	j^°0O-me$ar^ breast stroke, Catle Ball,]
Ernie Banks tagged a three-	£laVst,:1.1™k., ceti. b.ii,
run shot in the nightcap for the 12:5, 5 Cubs but the Giants rallied with| three runs in the eighth—two on I Willie Mays’ single—and one in the ninth on singles by Jack Hiatt and Bobby Bonds to gain | the split.
First Dame
San Francisco	200 000 040-6 11 0
;Cnfewo	004 030 oox-7 u o
;±£e ill r"
Hundley.
Cemldi, ..
01, Williams (04),
2 Regulars Cut as Rams Place 4 on Waivers
;-ar
10-14. HRs—Chicago, Kessinger
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NEADOllARTERS FOR UNIR0TAL, T10ER RAW MID WIOI OVAL TIKES
LOS ANGELES (AP) - Thej Los Angeles Rams announced
, .	..------ Wednesday that two regulars
?5Icago*nc *ce_	400 oSo ooo—* I -JiandL two rookies have been j
(ii^Regan *o) I placed • on waivers, including 0, !»ii^7B?«;	‘-"•"•"' their erstwhile No, 1 phnter,
lm Angeies .... too tio-3 ,0 , fwir year veteran Jon Kilgore. mShipiib . -	ooo ooo ooo—o 3 o The other regular, running
Sutton and Hallari L.Jackson, Farrell .	1	»• 	04- _	_
(0) and Ryan, w—Sutton, M4. l—l.jack-back	Jim	Stiger	from
!____ -	Washington, was the National
Jigtt.	ISSSEj,’, Football League’s fourth
Bench. W—Malonev. »j». l-bmim. it. Stioar divided 1967 aS^t regular -rre. KRs^CIncInnatl, Rose (10). Bench
<is).	..... and reserve.
j	_____________ j Rookies waived were Jay
____Bachman, a center and guard i
from the University of Cin-[cinnati, and linebacker Dean! Halverson from Washington. j The waivers cut the squad to,
National, World Soil Events Set for State Lake
43.
The National Tempest Class| H0Ck©Y VctCrARS
Bailing Championships—rr e^—j-----lf—. t _
jtototiteLako «. Clair begin-j |nVIT6Cl TO liyOUlS
| Following this weekend’s nationals, theWorld’s Cham-' Boys 18-20 with previous ex-pionships will begin Tuesday on perience in ice hockey are in-a 15-mile course at Lake St. vited to try out for the Oakland Clair.	County Juniors 7:30 p.m. Sun-
, The Grosse Pointe Yacht Club day at the Detroit Skating Club,
, will be the host for the races. 10401 West Seven Mile, rThe top 12 finishers from the Coach Claude McLaughlin i Nationals will advance to the announced .there will be j World’s finals.	• juvenile and a junior squad this
' The 22-foot tempests are in season. Those participating [ their third year of competition the tryout must pay a $1.50 ice and are scheduled for Olympic fee, and bring their own sticks, acceptance in 1973-	! skates, gauntlets and uniform.
The
price will never
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THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1068
'Tired Gonzales Upsets Agssie
FOREST HILLS, N. Y. W -| Rosewall had a tough battle The fabled fighting spirit ol with talented Ron Holmberg of
_7 t	17-11. M V k-<—
Pancho Gonzales is holding up:
In the U. S. Open Tennis
before
Championships', hut what about those 40-year-old legs?
“Muscles don’t respond the way they used to,’’ the fiery, old warrior from Los Angeles said today as he contemplated his quarter-final match with Toni Okker of The Netherlands.
“A man my age can play two and perhaps three, tough matches but then the legs start getting wobbly. I’m very tired.”
greatest hour
Gonzales experienced h i s greatest hour in 19 years on the West Side’s'' center c o u r t Graebner of New York, faces
Highland Falls, N.Y. winning 6-3, 6-3, 2-6, 8-6. UNFINISHED MATCH Rosewall meets the winner ol the unfinished match between left-handed Nicola Pilic Yugoslavia, and Dennis Ralston of Bakersfield, Calif., halted by darkness with Pilic leading 6-2,
2-6, 7-5, 8-8t,
★ * *
The other two quarter-finals, I ] 3th today, test America’s rig Davis Cup aces, both amateurs. 1 Lt. Arthur Ashe plays Cllff| ** Drysdale, the South African; who upset favored Rod Laver. ! His teammate, Clark
Wednesday when he upset second-seeded Tony Roche of Australia witivbrllliant, slashing tennis 8-6, 64, 6-2.
1 e ★
This mad# the seven-time king of the pros the sentimental favorite of the galleries but
Australian Jo h n Newcombe, winner of both the U. S. and Wimbledon titles in 1967.
Ashe, Graebner and Okker are the lone remaining amateurs stacked now against five pros all shooting for the 814,000 first prize. Okker, as a
those adhering to the hard,!registered player, also has ap-realistic line are stringing with plied to go after the big purse, the tough, little^ Australian permissible under relaxed ten-
ON THE MOVE — Pancho Gonzales, 40-year-old veteran pro from Los Angeles, prepares to return a shot against Tony Roche of Australia yesterday during their match at Forest Hills In the U,S. Open Tennis Championship. Gonzales upset Roche, 8-6, 64, 6-2, to advance to the quarter-finals.
stylist, Ktai Rosewall.
We’ll see to it that your claim is handled promptly!
Acting on yonr behalf, wall swiftly expedite the settlement of your less.
H auum 'a iksZ) mrmmc, mma msmmsumt
□AUTO □HOME □BUSINESS j
nis rules.
Two British girls—the veteran Ann Haydon Jobes now a pro, and hard-serving Virginia Wde—clash in one of the women’s semifinals.
Win Prizes in 4 Shows
Ui. Riders Show Strength
The other women's semifinals is scheduled Friday between top-seeded Billie Jean King of Long Beach, Calif., winner over Maryna Godwin of South Africa 6-3, 3-6, 6-3, and Maria Bueno of Brazil, who upset U. S. Amateur champion Margaret .Smith Court of Australia 7-5,2-6, 6-3. j
Pj r	(l"8*	*,* The team came back from its
scheduled Saturday, the men’s most succegsful tosOf Eurofinal Sunday.________	pean shows in-history Wed-
Gonzales' opponent tod a y .jnesday. It won the featured Prize of Nations events in all
NEW YORK (AP) - No doubt about it, Coach Bert de Nemethy conceded today, United States is the favorite to win the Olympic Games.
“But,” Dp Nemethy said, “all kinds of. things can happen between now and the time we go out on the course in Mexico City. The Europeans have installed us as favorites and, on our record in Erirope, I’d have to admit they are right.”
opponei
Okker, is a 24-year-old Dutchman who has become the game’s pro killer. His pro victims include Laver, P i 1 fe t Ralston, Alex Olmedo and Roy Emerson.
Tuesday he won over Britain’s Peter Curtis 84, 24, 6-3, 6-2. Of Gonzales, he said: “If I can carry him to four sets, I’ve got a chance." Pancho agreed.
four shows that, included it on the schedule.
...OVIR 35 YEARS OF DISTINGUISHED INSURANCE V	SERVICE	J
Joins Canada 11
HAMILTON, Ont. (AP) -Dennis Biodrowskl, a five-year veteran of the Kansas City Chiefs of the American Football League, has been-acquired by the Hamilton Tiger-Cats of the Canadian Football League. Biodrowskl, a 6-foot, 258-pounder, is an offensive tackle.
PRATT & LAMBERT Optside House Paint
OUTDOOR
CLOTHESLINE POST

ALUMINUM COMBINATION DOORS
In order to offer a Prize of Nations, a show. must be officially recognized as an international event by the Federation Equestre Internationale, tiie world governing body of equestrian sports.
'Wp couldn’t do much h*>Hpr than-that,” said De Nemethy. |	w«m«d.y'. Fight.
“Now, of course, our problem is' Ey	*
to keep the horses m top shape Miami, Fla.,. .topped Rudy Rodriguez, for the Games. 1_______„__	I. LA$_ VEGAS. N»y;--Ml^eii_Hernandez,
Five of the six riders — Bill'" •
Steinkraus of Noroton, Conn., Frank Chapot and his wife, Mriry, of Wallpack, N.J., Kathy Kusner of Arlington, Vas., and Neal Shapiro of BrOokville, N.Y., returned with De Nemethy aboard a chartered airliner.
Carol Hofmann, the sixth member of the squad, remained in London until the end of the week.
★ ★ ★
Only four of the six, however, will be selected for the Olympics. Steinkraus, the two Chapots and Miss K;u s n e r formed the team in the 1964 Games in Toyko and are favored to be selected again.
The Equestrain Games Committee of the United States Olympic Committee, u ri d e r Whitney Stone of New York, probably will meet next week to decide on the makeup of the squad. The team is scheduled to leave for Mexico City Sept. 22. j
Horse Racing
Hazel Park Results
WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS ... -MM Cand. Tret; 1 Mllti Cetlpflrictst	30.00 li.oo li
Lincoln Land	5.60 i
Empire Gayle	I
Ond-IIOM Cent. Pact; 1 MHti Cottonwood Rlllla	f.M 4.00 ;
Catty Way	11M I.M
Key Knight
Dally OtaMtl (M) Paid 3rd—41.0. Cans. Trot; 1 M AH Mr	—	-■ •11
Rita Rodney Stella's Denise 4th—3IIM Cand. Pace; l M
‘P
no .11.60
Mai (14)
10 4.00
kmo-m
FHty Polly””""””’ _ " t.M LM 3.J0 p. w.'a Hoi '
Nam A.
am—343M AMewsnca; 4 Furlong.:
WMar Road
L. Veda Warthy Emily Prawn Go Boy —-	Claiming P
7.40 140 UP
I 3.30
Perfect!: (4-7) Paid t3N.3t 7th—sum Cand. Pace; 1 Kanny Creed
fifes*
Alio Cand. Pace; 1
5.40 3.40
100 140
_________ PC
Twin DavMei (1-54-1) Paid 3304.31 (100) th—41500 Claiming; I 1/14 Miles:
&&.%
Grand Stand	tM
Perfects: (10-7) PaM 31344.	.
1—-^TCt 0,014; total handle 1747,00
DRC Entries
FRIDAY INTR1BI —eel. | Furtengsi
Wlscondee
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855 Rochester Road, Rochester
(Vi Mil* South of Rochootor) - 651 >5500
Terrific Time	-7.40 3.70
Mighty McKlyo,
teth-snoo claiming PaM; I ML..
Jerry Wayne ............ 51.60 79.00 4.70
Behand Royal	f™' * =
Hazel Park Entries
THURSDAY'S ENTRIES 1st—Tret; 1 mite: mm Crest Linar Jlrtimlet Girl fcy	My Rebel Scott
Doyle	Where. George
. Prince	Raalta Seng
D's Frisco Ruth
__________Tret; 1 N
Egyptian Crusader He Bo's JOssla Hickory Samantha Cod lee
Lander Dancer
ucky Dares .Jiggle Wick The Greatest Gray Painter
Kay Adloa Mr. Lucky Buck FlngoGrey
4th—Cand. Pact; 1 Mllai Mikes Kin	Li
Sunny Honey
*
.. ..by AdlOS	song <
O.K.'s Velvet 7th—Cond. Pace; 1 Mile:
I Rudy Ids Flash
Belles Damon
DRC Results
RMMI Claiming; 6 P Samira Already Broke
Pearl Oyster------
Daily Double: (11-7) Paid I71I.M
3rd—13500 Claiming; <	■-----
Lastdeclare Jan Beau Spring Dancer 4th—53046 Mdn. Claim Mogaahea
Cara Mundo
____	Bronze Equity,
a—Lll's Flyar	Fllat Da fold .
Happy Fantasy
a—Mrs. I R. F. Roberts dntry.
4th—334M Calming; 0 Furlongs:
Moon Dance	Neshmee
Lady Klomcdes	Maid of Gslllss
Nlsouk	Bend Of French
Wtfirl.lng.es	Regal Barr
5Hv—025M Claiming;	1 Mi Mile.:
Almost April	Autumn Medley
Bundy Hill	Cherokat Brook
a—Stalwart Lady	Charoldro
b-Aiur Moon	William Stevens
Maggl* Go	Pummelo
Pill Woman	Ky. Burgoo
a—H. J. Wise-B. H. Wise entry.
0—B. Fogelton entry.
4th—S35M Claiming;	4 Furlong.:
Mother Hubbard	Tu Rich
Edandal	Bull Thistle
Bobbin Around
Carlo Fordo irlasom entry.
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c,°lnf*""lilwv Charges Delay
on Puerto Release' % ■ ,
in Case Rebutted
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
the captive USS Pueblo and her B crewmen by North Korea is
“We’re i^Miy'to try,the caw anytime they’re ready,” said
Rep. William Dickinson, R-Ala., a ranking member of the House Armed Services Committee, said yesterday “reliable sources” he could not name told him the release of the crew possibly would be timed to coincide with the 20th anniversary of the formation at the Communift regime in Pyongyang. That would be Sunday, Washington time.
WASHINGTON «PB *» The
Sta^e Department says it can-	____
not«on&nn a House member’s; Both the Oakland ^County haven’t been able to get to the L^f [proeecutor and the defense at- ~ torney in the Steren Assembly Club trial rebutted a charge of Michigan State Police Commissioner Fredrick E. Davids that there has been undue delay in Ok caw being heard in a higher court.
“I have all the respect in the world for Davids,” said Carlton S. Roeter, Pontiac attorney who is appealing tiie conviction of 20 persons involved in the gambling dub. “But when it comes to this caw he has a blind spot.”
State Department sources said, however, “We have nothing to substantiate this report. We are where we were, I am afraid.”
Kill Suspect Charged in Area Break-In
“This is just a further attempt to try the case in the newspaper and not in the courtroom,” said Roeser.
Davids said Tuesday that an investigation should be into delays in the case which began with a raid on the Madison Heights club in October 1963.
‘GREAT VICTORY’
The conviction of the defendants, said Branson, “was of the greatest people’s victory hi ridding Cowty of the intrusion organized crime. Am} we intend to keep it out by preserving the conviction.”
Roeser said he, too, was sympathetic to Davids’, basic complaint that delays are frustrating to police, but added that the caw is going through the normal appleate procedures.
* -A • *
When the club at 25900 John R was raided, Davids' called it “the biggest operation this side of the legal gambling in Las Vegas.
Man Is Shot
Death Notices 1
Mrs, Joan Hunt, Mrs, Loretta Hill; Theodore R., Lloyd,I Sharon, Robert, Lenord,! Duane, Perry and Gary: Hardlman; dear brother of Mrs. Bertha Lambert ami Fielding *■ Hardlman; a I so survived by IS grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Saturday, Sptember 7, at 1 p.mat the Macedonia Baptist Church. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr, Hard!nan will lie in state at the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home after 3:30 pm. Friday.
NO SENTENCES SERVED |
% noted that addle 20 of 49; •. / a	■ /
«	jarrested in the raid were con-' In APQWfl&flfj
A 22-year-old Flint man, who.victed of gambling (charges;	,	.	.
police say is awaiting trail on three years ago, .none have A n/~iLor UaIJ KATSOULOS, E’ an attempted murder charge, {served their sentences pending AdnUincf *» “lU September 4, Stood inUte yesterday before'the appeal.
Wat^o^ Township Justice of! It is ibis type of delay .that it] A Pontiac man is reported in
the Peace Patrick K. Daly on a charge of breaking and entering.
The man, Loren Jolly, was accused in an attempted burglary Sunday night of the Prudential insurance Co. offices at 1350 W. Huron, Waterford Township.
demoralizing to police, he said.
* A . *
Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson
'frustrating to police, but said that he was ot the opinion that the judges in the appeals court are overworked mid just
satisfactory condition result of a shooting late yesterday during an alleged argument
Grand Juror to Start State Road Probe
Hospital officials said Thomas Terrell, S3, of 496 Raeburn suffered a wound in the lower abdomen.
Tbwnship police said they were called to the scene by a neighbor who reported hearing glass breaking and seeing a suspicious person on the property-At the firm. Jolly was arrested at the scene, and nothing was found missing.
Police said Jolly is also under:testimony was scheduled today!;
Arrested for investigation of attempted murder was Fred Wright, 65, of 40 Bagley, police said.’
Investigators said the incident took place at Wright’s home
—___ about 10 p.m. They said
LAPSING (AP) - Opening w^M®s.‘hat TeiTell •duled tudav!*n" Wnght became involved in
MURVIN c.; .September 4, 1008; 1807 Schiefle, Walled Lake; age 71; dear! father of Mrs. Roy (Beatrice)! Coomer and Murvin G. Hieber; dear brother of Mrs. Bernice Wilbur; also survived by six grandchildren and {4 great-grandchildren. Luthern prayer aerviee Will be held great-grandchildren. Lutheran tonight, at 8 at the Richard-son-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Funeral service trill be held Friday, September 6, at 11 ajn. at the St, Mathews Lutheran Church. Interment in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens. Mr. Hieber will lie In state at the funeral >otop-
jT~ EVA J1ANE 1968]
Lakeville Road. Village of Lakeville; age 38; beloved wife of John Kataoulos; dear mother of William Pau Moroski, James and Eva Katsoulos. Private graveside
indictment for the attempted I before lngham County one-manr"	anfl that Wnght
gangland-style assassination of’Grand Juror Marvin Solomon'81,01 v"ttm *”h a rifle. Charfos Thomas, 50, of Flint in an investigation of the State	*	* ■*
last September in, Pittsburgh, Highway Department.	I A 30-caliber bolt-action rifle
Pa. Thomas was a police in-j The probe was asked by Gov.,wa® impounded at the scene, formant hi a recent counter-George Romney and Atty. GenjP0'*0*8ai<*-feiting case.	Frank Kelley.	Wright probably will be ar-
r * m *	* A A	raigned today, according to to-
JaHp was unable to post, Lansing City Treasurer Je- flcera $10,000 bond and was returned fronte Graves was expected to to th£ Oakland County jail pend- be oneIf today’switnesses. He ingLexamination next Wednes- reportedly called for such day.	probe 19 months ago.
Montana Holds Marble Auction
|Peop/e in thNews|
By the Associated Press
Caroline Kennedy will ptesent a duplicate of a sword worn by George Washington in the American Revolution to the aircraft carrier John F. Kennedy when the sbip is commissioned Saturday in Newport News, Va.
Hie ship’s commanding officer, Capt. Earl P. Yates, also announced yesterday that the ship’s 2,500-man crew Will give a jewelry case and dresser set to Caroline.
The 10-year-old daughter of the late President christened the ship last year.	/
Yates said 10,000 people have been invited to the commissioning ceremony where Caroline will cut the first slice of a cake which will be four feet wide to eight feet long by four feet high.
Museum Gets Nazi Surrender Document
Field Marshal Viscoaat Montgomery has given to [London’*, Imperial War Museum the document marking the surrender or Nazi Germany in World -War-H.-:'
■ --- “The document would have gone to the museum on my
dentil anyway,” he said, “but in view of the danger to its safety I decided that it should go to the museum as stem as possiMe.” ■
The document was signed at Loaebarg, Heath, Germany May 4,1945.
World War II Hero-Actor Is Broke'
Audie Murphy, the mast decorated U.S. soldier in World War n, says he’s broke and unable to pay off 813,280 on a promissory note._• •-
Murphy, 44, said in a Los Angeles court yesterday that he paid part ot the principal of a note signed Nov. 13, 1884, in favor of the First National Bank of Dallas, Tex. A judgment against him was entered Nov. 26, 1966,
Murphy told Superior Court Commissioner Human O. Danoff that lie lost $260,000 in Algerian oil holdings became of the 1967 six-day war between Israel and Arab nations.
_ As an actor, Murphy said be receives television residuals from old films but that the state immediately attaches them to apply on overdue income tax payments.
Grorio Kod/s Brother Sued for Divorce
John B. Kelly Jr., Philadelphia city councilman, builder and sportsman, has heea sued for divorce by Ms wife ot U years, Mary Freeman Kelly.
Kdbr, «, a former fflypapie oarsman, is the totofcsr of former actress Grace Kelly, now Princess Grace af Mon-
service will beheld Friday, September 6, at 11 a.m. at the Lakeville Cemetery. Mrs Katsoulos will lie in state at the Ashley Funeral Home, 329 East Woodruff, Hazel Park. The family suggests memorial Contributions may be made to the Wayne State University Cancer Research Fund.
HELENA, Mont. (AP) -rf There were only two buyers Wednesday at an auction of 10 tons of native marble stored at toe State Capitol after a Works [ress Administration program to toe 1930s.	.T,-fr^
Tony J. Culum, on Behalf of Gov. Tim Babcock, paid $12.50 each for three column support s weighing 2% tons each. But the governor’s plans for the bases were not disclosed. Mrs. Lee Kuchel of Helena bought the fourth for her garden.
Death Notices
MARY N A O M l September 3, 1966; 17 Cooper Street; age 76; dear mother of Frank Joseph Dennis; also survived 1qr two grandchildren. Recitation to the Rosary will be tonight, at 7 p.m, at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Friday, September 6, at 9:$9 a.m. the St. Michael’s Catholic Church. Interment in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mrs. Dennis will Ue in state at the funeral home (Suggested v i s i t i n g hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.'
KLINGER, ALVIN H.; Sep tember 3, 1968 ; 3773 Orchard Drive,—Highland. Township; age 60: dear brother of Mrs. Henrietta O’Rourke and Mrs. Ruth Polzin. Funeral service will be held Saturday, September 7, at TO a.m. at tiie Richardson-Bird F us e r a Home, Milford. Interment in Forest Lawn Cemetery Detroit, Mr. Klinger will Ue in state at tiie funeral homo.
MASTBETH, ADELE E.; Sep tember 3, 1968; 454 AtibUfn; age 54; dear mother of Mrs. Irving Stroch and Miss Patricia Fleming; dear sister of Mrs. CUffbrd Moak, Mrs. Manford Malane, Mrs. Wilford Malane and Max Streeter; also survived by two grandchildren. Funeral service wifi be held Friday, September 6, at 9 a.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Lakeside Cemetery, Port Huron. Mrs. Mastbeth will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.)
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____ Jr 2L 10 ,................ —
'	*y«». Caii 67AOMC 5 p.m..7 p.m.
1 t YOUNG MEN INTCRSiTED In laarnfng trade, to do gas piping 1 Itarn , installation work. Good
Card ef Thanks
1
THE FAMILY OP Edwin Williams wishes to thank all ol friends, relatives, neighbor)
Patter Tha Rev. Lawrence 1_____
'■ of the Pint Christian Church, „ the members of the church am the Pontiac Rotary club. ''” many klndnt^-^-acts Of sym
. ■ flowers and M_____I____■____ ____
to thank The Knlohti Templar, Aram* Chapter Eastern Star, Tha SloomflaM Pint Department, Tha Sylvan LaMi Police and tha . personnel . M the Sparks-Grltftn Funeral Home for thatr aervlcos during our recent bereavement.
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EXPERIENCED TRUCK DRIVER lor local danvary with good driving record. Apply In parson. Gant sea Cut Stone, Q-5374 2. Saginaw,
EXPERIENCED MARINE mechanic.
EXPERIENCES BUFFERS and polishers, die cast and stainless — *wra metal._ Pull and pdrt
time. 335-1 >00.
EXPERIENCED BRUNSWICK pin ' uttar mechanic, top siiary, vaca-*•—1, Blue Crew insurance, tick
tlona, __ ■■■___________
pay. Apply 114 Orchard Lk. Ava. iXPBRIENCED COOK, MANY benefits, apply at 114 orchard Lk.
-tt;
accounting and
raj"!
VOODWARD, BIRMINGHAM MICH. 41011. Rapliaa will ha held : In abaoluta confidence.,	'
APPRENTICE - MACHINE SHOP will train, call 476-3519 or apply . 'tttaaW. t Mila Rd,
ASSEMBLY FOREMAN,' vljiSjlp,
llve» It • lontly • -----sedl® fill
____	_.C# your mamon
That ililrttl fhoro and aft Sadly mlisad ‘ mom, brother ar
Mr bright fa tit naught ca tot shines in
needs experienced foreman, 1 located In Lapeer area, torwan resume to boxi 51. Lapeer, Mich.
Attention
EXPERIENCED
PARTS MAN span. Apply I Service. 5575
EXPERIENCED MILL hand Call 1 476-3510 or apply 31165 W. | Mila
INDIGESTION7 PAINFUL ■*— —	5 labials. Past ss
cants. Simm's
END WORRIES
With A Payday Payment Debt-Aid, protoasional credit to lore provide you with con-riaentiai money man* a a man t aervlca that has helped thousands solve their Mil problems. Getting a Mg lean la not the answer. You can't borrow yOurseif out of doMi Got tha help you've boon looking for by taking all your Bllle and discussing your problems:
DEBT-AID, Inc.
S04 Community NaTL Bnk., Bldg.
FE 24111
Llcansod A Bonded ERRAND BOYS INC. ' if you have an errand to be dona — wa are the ones to run. Ar-rangomonts, odd jobs, deliveries. "You name It — wa do 191" 363-9631., _ ,
HALL FOR R&NT. M 2-0072 FE 54316, attar 6 p.m.
AtoA' Iwt 'RENT, RECEPTION!, htopa, church. OR 3-9191. FE 1
KIDDIE KASTLE, Day Care Center, Opening Sept. 14, located at st. Andrapto - Lutheran Church, Tetograph Rd. N, of Maple Rd,
Catan___to working and, busy
mothers, 5 day sessions, Monday-Frlday, From 7:39 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Pra-raglstration and open house Sat. Stpf. 7, from 7 p.m. to
STRANDELL, GERALD F. Septembers, 1968 ; 59 Williams Street; age 59; beloved husband of Marion G. Strandell beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd E, Strandell; dear father of Mrs. Kenneth Schram, Mrs. Joseph Gouin and Gerald F. Strandell Jr.'; deartotother of Mrs. William Gerber, Mrs. Wiibur Wright, Mrs. John Kirby, Mrs. Harold Jones and Arnold Strandell; also survived by~eigto'grandchiWren Funeral service will be held Friday, September 6, at 11 ato. at toe Donelson - Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Strandell will lie in state at the funeral home. (-Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.)
Kelly met his wife, a former Qlyni
er, at ti
1958 Olympics ia Helsinki, FU*ad. They were married ia iffi in Washington and have five chHdrea ranging frms 7 to tt years aid.
The suit, charging adultery, was filed yesterday la Montgomery Coaaty cowl la Norristowa, Pa.
Singer 'Shook Up' After 3-Cor Crash
Singer Ear tha Kitt escaped serious injury hut said “I MR shook up” after a three-car collision to downtown Lob Angeles.
Her 6-year-«id daughter, fGtt MacDonald, and producer LatooM johnsoii wtf» torivfog to Beverly lOBs when the accident took place yesterday,	%
The singer complained of neck pant and was fie a sedative at Central Receiving Ho«pitol. Johnson, 45, said he suffered braises hut the others involved weren’t reported hurt.
DONLEY, COIENE MAY September 3, 1968 ; 779 East Columbia; age 49; dear sister of Mrs. Claude Carter, Mrs. Thomas Dion, Mrs. Russell Thomas and John C. Donley. Funeral service will be held Thursday, September 5, at 19 ajn. at the Donelson - Johns Funeral Home, Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Miss Donley will lie in stole at the- funeral home. (Suggested visiting hows 3 to 5
and7to$.)
GIERMAN,	■
tember 4, 1968; (Formerly of Pontiac); age 83; dear brother ~ef —Grara” Okk» Edward and Floyd Gierman. Funeral aerviee will be held Friday, September 6, to 1:39 pm at the Huntoon Funeral Home with Rev. Lida Marion officiating. Interment in Oak HilTCaptoiery: Mr. Giermani will lie in state to the funeral home.
THICK, IRENE E. ; September 4, 1968; 196 Pope Street, Lapeer; age 58; dear mother to Francis, Jack and Kenneth Thick 'Jr.; dear sister to M*g. Mildred Thorsby, Mrs. Myra Ostraiider, Lewis and Bernard De Groat, William, Francis and Donald Vandecar. Funeral srtVroe wQI be held Saturday, September 7, at 1 p.m. at toe Baird-NeWtOft Funeral Home, Lapeer. Interment In Stiles Cemetery. Mrs. Thick will lie fo state at the funeral home.
HAHDOlAN, THEODORE R.; SejAember 2,	1188; 1«1
Jackson Strato; age 8 6; j beloved husband to Frances dear father
THOMAS, GERALDINE September 1, 1968; 397 East Wilson Street; age 39; beloved daughter to Lucy Crowder; dear mother to Paul Edwards, Charles Lawrence, Marshall, Elaine, Richard, LeRoy and Vannesa Lynn Thomas; dear sister to Mrs. Mamix Lee Monroe, Mrs, Maxine WilUams, Charles Williams Jr. and Paul Crowder. Funeral service Will be held Friday, September 6, at 1 p.m. at the Church Af Christ with Rev. Mansfield Simples officiating: Interment to Oak HiR Cemetery. Mrs. Thomas will lie in state to the Frank Camtthers Fun ami Home after 7 gm tonight.
BOX REPLIES At 19 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in tiie following bines:
C4, C4, C4, C44, C-ll, C-19, C-22, C-33, C-54, C-64.
“ COATS
FUNIRAL HOME
DRAYTON PLAINS.	6744461
C. J. GOPHARDt FUNERAL HOME -----Itooso llareof^ Ph: 4S34399:—
Huntoon
'FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for 50 y*«r«.
79 Oakland Av»,_FE 241S9
SPARKS-GRIFFIN
FUNERALHOME ^	• FE 5-72S5
VoorheesSiple
Cemsttry Lots Acacia park cemetery, M*>on
only, roownoblo, coll ev«. 6734165.
WHITE CHAPLE. OAKLAND Hill*. Parkview. Glen Eden. Graves t“ Prtvelo eele. Mi off. GAWP.
reSoxtt.	_____
AVOID GARNISHMENTS Got out of debt wtiti our plan
' Debt Consultants
214 Pont lee State Bank Building
FE 8-0333
boreWo. reaoTFE 4-
wo «
i it i
i to start v
...tcement. Mutt m IVH _________
end good worker. Salary dlscuind at Iniwrvlow. For appoimmont, coll Mr. Cortor. F S-Ott*. 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Ttiure. ttiroueh Tuos.
AMT CORF. HAS opanlnga for stock' hondlsre on sll three shifts. Applicants mutt be at least is yrs. oldwlth propf of age. Apply between 8 a.m. and 4:31 pjn. St 12IS E. Moola. Troy, Mich.
AUTO PAINTER, GM l Saturday work, frit* contact Kan Dudloy,
Manager, Jock Hit Solos. Inc., Clorkstm. i
BOAT RIGGER, steal

BUMPERS
y than to round
Wt need 2 A-l body I
out our (hop. Vo. ________ ___
qualified to earn top wages. Fringe benefits above average dealer. Call Clark Gill tor detait»rS4t4300.
Bus Boys
Ted's of Bloomfield HlilS has openings for bus girls, day and morning shift, good earnings, free Blue Cross and Ilfs insurance, vacation and holiday pay. Apply In
tUSBOY, IS or OVER, 7 a.m. p.m., wii*
1591 S. T
hospitalization. Draper Punch and Dye Co., 3627 Williams Dr., DraVInnPISIns. ____________■
EXPERIENCED StDERS I Top wages, profit sharing, retirement plan, group hospitalization, year-a round work, paid workmen's compensation. Call 332-5231.
EXPERIENCED MILLING machine hands steady work, overtime, full paid Blua Cross and othar fringes. Brlney Mfg. Co., U45 Saba Rd., off West Mr**
mm
FAST
terssted' In kiarnlng business. Full Iringa benefits. Contact Sta Ray Bost Co., 735 N. Lapeer Rd:, Ox-fard;	' i
FULL TIME CLtRRs,
Senellts." a!’" l' Darnmen Co.I Maple Rd., 5254919.
FACTORY
WORKERS
By day or weak: Warehouseman; assemblers; machine operators; material handlers; common laborers) ate. Daily pay. Report tny time if Mr t a.m.
Employers
Temporary Service ~
cierk «r nights, Saturdays, and, Sundays, a, l. Damman Co., Bloomfbld Plaza (Telegraph and Maple).
FACTORY WORK
BUS BOY' W/Utfip,\full tlma employment. Apply In person only, Franks Rsatourint, Orchard Lake, Keego Harbor.
Iusboys, DAY or Evening shift, liberal bon#fits, Baden's Restaurant, woodward end Square ,
CAR HoRl, 'w i xpe rlanca necessary, full and part time work, BUM Cross, paid vacation. Apply
..Daly Rettawiml iw' w. Maple,
Clawson; Mich, is Ml. noar Crooks.
Gar Washer
PERSONNEL DIV.,
Oakland County Court House 1290 N. Tolaarnpir
CAREER SALESMAN at Grlnal 1$ move Into management quickly to tha rapid growth of our company. it you would ilka to bOcomo part ot the last growing and Intereattna! music business and obtain high earnings, apply today as a professional salesman; representing such fins products os Magnavox, Fisher, Cstm, Gibson, SMInway and many others. APPLY AT GRlN-NElLtL PONTIAC MALL.
% CAREER OPENING
r positions
0520, 7:99 o.m.-12:00 noon F
h benefits such Insurance, . Cell 574*
CAREER SALES and Management Training
If you havo ttw unique qualities .. ImaglnaBin and mh LIKE TO SELL and looking for a |JM|
compensated tales T---
2888. Equal O |
i highly call 763-
carpenters, Journeymen, layout men, and crewa, call 574-38M awaf I *m>u CauEhlin Canal. Co.
WIG PARTIES. Wigs by Calderons. FE 1-7772.	- GR 44100. CARPENTERS AND/Ot cenmfr craws wan tad lor work an prolact
Uvt and FowMI S		or IWW' “hernia 'In Birmingham . ara^^all 4444024 or after 5 mn.
POUND: BIRD DOG 522-7274.	CARPENTERS WANTED steady, no layoffs, 7754520 or UL 2-3913.
POUND: MEDIUM SIZE mole, bland hatred, between wixom and WOlMd Lite. 524-21M.	CONCESSION OPERATOR Per the Cthr of Birmingham Munlclpel Golf courses snd Ice Rink. Starting eolory $2.tl to S3.37 quellflcaHons. «Sa have experience dealing with the
LOST: BLONDE COCKER Spaniel, , nM W OA Tamatt, oldtr dog, lost In the WahbigMh area, IS2-1041 Reward.	
LOST: PUREBRED SHELTIE (toy , Collie), IS mot., male, block with wkM white collar, antwera to , PappM, led In., vicinity at 1.75 and Lapasr. Rd. FT 9-1274 aftfr 4.	public. Position offers year around omptemwnt and full employe benefits. An equal opportunity amptoydl Apply Personnel Office, HI MarHn SK, Birmingham.
LOST: FEMALE BEAGLE, Mack, ton and whin,, vicinity d Drahner and Cods Rds. Reward. 425-1287. ■	D£f ENDABLE, EXPERIENCED baker, manager capacity. Apply Dawn Donuts, (4 N. Parry, mem-Ings. .
LOST: BLACK TERRli'R, tamale, / white on chest, vicinity of WaHan l, Blvd., - Baldwin. Reward. FE 5-4940.	DISHWASHER POR DAY 1 shifts OltO Mis boy tor = evening shift: Bottle end Basket Step, 189 N. Hunter Blwcf., 6'nam, 446-6553. *
LOST* BLACK WALLET, valuabl# papart, 332-253f. LOST: BROWN 1WALLET containing tehMlIla papars. In tho vicinity pi Baglay and Franklin. 1354223.	DETAILERS interested In learning
LOST: fOODLB, FEMALE wtilta mlnlatort. Highland Blvd. Dock Lake area, reward. 775-t(23.	12 K'^D to <Dwttd^^tvire 2770 Auburn Rd. Penttie, Mich.
c for mar
simple a)

HOUSEKEEPING . 9 LAUNDRY	t
Full! time and port time poaltlens evelleble Tor man In both of these dapaiMaili. Experienced prerar-red. but not McaMry, snrtmg m rm if JBJ4 pgr naiir plue ex- • cellttd frtnge benefits, and working . condiitons. camitcf P • r ao n n e I department It. , JsaiM JwOfz Hospital, Pontiac, T^TwiI;
L _ _ . LAND SURVEY ........	’
Party chiefs, rodman, experienced or Ain twin. Gillespie Assoc. lr-
LAND SURv'EVOR'S HELPER^ i PtrMnca^altoy Mb. BMgn. .
LA7tG2CAPto"4tiuL4id6toriG. Ill ^nd dear. 2i»4iw.	■- 7T-,. _
Light Mechanical Work
MACHINE OPERATOR
opanlnga, daya I will train rellabta n
tow, Troy, botwoon i da., oft Cool idea
MAfi WITH MILITARY
huabiaat., Job mi . —t of oourlng molds. Stop a wk. to ttart. No oxparltnco nactaaary: Norwest Novelty Co, 33410.,, North^MrnHw..F9rmlnpton.
MAN.FOR CLbANiRG OPBlCE. '
later softners, have own hand . ense, local rtf.
MANFOGLANDSCAPING.
MANAGER
For now dapartmant store. Fenton, Mich, base orgenlutlon seeking a •ailing manager to abrek and supervise all phases or In-store operation. A personable man looking to the future to become asset wi") progressive organization. Op-lunltv Grime rMtMeptolni^ CBlI
MANAGER
MAN'S HABERDASHERY
Experiancad In man's furnishings; to sail and manage department. Salary and commission. See Mr.
MATURE MAN TO WORK on
n large transp.
positions. Mutt bo MlitaMit.;' ■harp and nipt oppoarlng. Only., those who can start work lm- ,
$145 WEEKLY BALAEV
Call Mr:B9«kar9a.m, 8B4M2
: p.m. -
MECHANICS -
Also halptra and paHa darks. Hourly raM. Mutt bo able to wqrk any Shut. Apply at KEEGO SALES B SERVICE, 2990 Orchard Lake Road, Kiwis Harbor.
M4»L
k, will train.
MANAGEMENT POSITION
Duo to promotions wo noad 8 man, S759 month to atort, company ar, TnaanMii end othar banoflta. For Interview, call OR 44S9IL 7)9# O.m. to 12:09 Prldaif inly.
> manager
or Franchlead Dealer Mr
Clark on E Refining Corp.
Has evelleble in tho Pontiac Area
t . Age 21 M 59 2. Experience not required
A Excellent opportunity
Furnace Service Man
A-l on gee and oil. Top pay. Hoepltallzatlon. Truck furnished.
BIRD A GRIFFITH . 0	.. Ml 4-3935
FURNACE INSTALLERS gpod pay, yaar n—* —
hospital Ina., pak. _____
In person, Kaat hasting A Cooling . C«u ArTi. ToMgreph, Pontiac. •FURNtTURE SA L B (MAN, tx-. penerKed, salary and commission,
Rds., BloamtMId HHIt. -
GAS STATION ..HELPER. .............
------1 'L«a •OflonAfar*"
To work Eves.-Weekends
Muirea avoir ti yri; 6M
Apply In poraon only to:
Mr. Ed Swain Rum Johnadn'a 27 M34 Lake Orion, Michigan GAS STATION ATTENDANTS, managers, supervisor tralnaifs. An equal opportunity amployer and Plans for progress company. Vacations, retirement . and othar frintta bandits:. Apply at Orchard Laka Rd. or S684 Hlgl Rd. Pbntloc.
14 Highland
GUARD
IMMEDIATE openings Part tlma and full «mp — Utica, ' Mt. Clemens and Datrelt area. Top Union acalo paid — Blue Cross, vacation end holiday bwiaflts. Call us collect — Bonded Guard Services. 441 B. Grand Blvd., Datrelt LO t-dtto
ZTp
GRILL MAN
A Must hava food oporatlon. Good fospltallzs*'— 1313
— ElfaV Bros. "Big Boy ReVtsuranl Talapraph A Huron.
GAS . STATION : ATTENDANT, ax-perience, mechanically : Inclined, local ref,, full or part tlma. Gulf, Telegraph and Maple.
HANDYMAN TO WC and, outside for apart; fWliniA^-3013.
aosrtm
4734141
Hsating Servict Man
A-t on gat did oil. Top pay. “—■—^^furRUMaL I4492S
immediate vacancy ENGINEERING AIDE 1 $6200 to $7000
PLUS EXCELLENT
Work Includes drafting and prap-araflon of property descriptions. # Requires high school graduation. with completion of High., school drafting course preferred, o Also must have 1-year ware experience In d Matt on# ot the following areas, drafting, kin prtpirlni property
Th* Personnel Div^
OAKLAND COUNTY
court house
1209 N. TELEGRAPH PONT
If InteresMd call Royal Oak, LI 9-
Equal opportunity employar _
MIN wlNTED FOR LAWN CUHING.
NEW CAR PORTER
Per expanding new car dailarsMp. Excellent wnreMi Mndlnene, pay and benefits. A steady IMaltH) "PMesp-iee Mr- jtm DadM, aatee
manager Hllleldt L—------------
1250 Oakland.
N I GHTWATC HM AN , t6Ml maintenance experience necessary, ml range of_bindlts, contact Baa Ray Boat, 726 N. Ls)»or Rd„ Ox-■ foiL--:':,yzz. V . ■■ ..	-.A	■'
Need Part Time Work?
Wa hava schedules In a u r maintenance department for man who con, work, tha fallowing hours:
5 A.M. TO 10 A.M.
S A.M. TO 1.30 PJri.
APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT.
Second floor
Montgomery:
Ward
RONTiACMfttt
NOW
HIRING
o need 5 young m
KStumM^
Two ■ Will
treh*. Mutt "STTSOS, mot ip P.ftL, TBUW. IP-UJS.
oppoRtuNnrv
FORs SALESMEN -
H trfb) two ar three aataamep ir-'-rqpidiy expanding ttre-faot-xmssorles stores. Plant coll for . d oponinga d stores within

THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
Help NhM Mole
:.	.mi.

m oil
COMPANY
LOOKING
1 FOR A
GENERAL
SALESMAN
'Familiar with service static.. operations. experienced preferred Wji NiSk We will also consider fat station managers tor Wn position. Flees# Send complata resume: tat tottor.
PONTIAC PRESS C-64 Pontiac. Michigan 480S6
Help wmN Mete
PORTER
Full tbna parmanant petition. ply In Fcnwi N a.m.-J p.m. partonnal dapt. 2nd floor.
Demerys
r.
bonus,
fidentlal
REAL ESTATE
train 2 ware tain
la larea vowing ot Pi__	...
; trades, new and used houses commercial praparty, Fw aim. Guaranteed . draw, ana commissions. For con-T1 tor Aar*.
TV SERVfCfMAN, RXFRRUlNCID
gara^dag.r1' g B
CROSSf
Help Werted MMe 6 [Help Wwted■ Fewete
BABYSITTER, DAYS, vicinity Jotlyn — Montcalm, myhomo. 3*4-7333. •ARY SITTER WAttTtD. "	““
ggnrra.
6 RMY SITTRr WANTED tor It-, tarnoon thltt, t day week. 412-2134 > . before » p.m.
| Ia^Y SITTER 5 dayt call
lit IhM f id I child, t
part i teem?
OPPORTUNITY
you IHta to Pa an Integral if a dynamic management We only want man who are wart . . . Aggreielve, am-
Plumbing'
and
Heating
Salesman
Wa have a fine carter opportunity tor a man who hi-plumblng or haattng
to work Into a talaa ,_
high aaralnga potential. Many company benaRtl Including grttfR tharlng ah' '	--
toolmaker
REPAIR AND MAINTENANCE OF EXISTING, INJECTION,
MOLDING, MOLDS. DAY SHIFT. CURRENT 50 TO 5S HRS. PER WK. SCHEDULE.
REALTY	1	UNION SCALE AND FRINGE BABV^SITfiR "nights. mutt have
AND investment co.	BENEFITS. APPLY AT 2225
OR 4-3105	MLS E. MAPLE, TROY, MICH.
Wa pay caati tor used hornet --------■-----
RECENT HSG AND COLLEGE STUDENTS EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY You mutt be aggmtlve and hi a mature mind, have a pleat personality and Mt plane '
through hard work.
Wa will gravida a creative, damandl ng environment, promotional a p no rt un 11 tea and aubatonttol mdnttpry rtwarli. (and raauma and Hat ot malor ac* compllthmanlt to: Partonnal Director, Cybre Inc., Pat 7, Grant
isJosEL
Newcoma. 4742
•cm awry. ~
PART TIME
Parti Manager with experience Needed at Once I
LLOYD FRIDGES DODGE
PORTER
For ladtoa apadalty shop. Must hove , good driving record. Store cleaning, delivering marchandUM. IN wsdk. Vacation with pay, reference!. Jordan SHti, Jacqueline shops. Telegraph a Maple,
PRESS OPERATORS
OVERTIME-rFROFIT SHARING PROGRESSIVE STAMPING CO. tm NAKOTA '	ROYAL OAK
■HSWIE--COOLIDOE AREA ! bailiER, WOOL, FULL er part; time, good marking condition!, 147-ill’- •	. a*	^ Xj ■ K j
Plumber and Helper
Far service work. Top p HeapjtoHiptbn and truck
“•IRO A GRIFFITH .....
Mt Mill
PARTS .MAN WANTED, GM ox-
APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. SECOND FLOOR
Montgomery
Ward
An equal opportunity tmployor
Pontiac Mall PUBLIC SAFETY J OFFICER
OAKLAND UNIVERSITY h • * vacancy In. the dapt., at PubL Safety. Theta are parmanant poi tiont with full (rings benefits. A plicants mutt Hava: high, tchc diploma or lit equivalent. App at:
PERSONNEL OFFICE Walton-Squlrrel Rdt. Rochester, Michigan AN EQUAL
OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER
PROJECT ENGINEERS DESIGNERS CHECKERS LAYOUT DETAILERS
Experienced in special machli designs of fixtures. heads, trantf mechanism, tooling, etc.
TOOL MAKERS SPECIAL MACHINE BUILDERS
MACHINE OPERATORS STEEL STOCK CUTTER
Liberal company paid fringe benefits. Excellent working conditions and wages with overtime.
^^ItD^SSScHlNE TOOL INC 200 ALLOY DRIVE
(U.s. 23 and Owen rd. exit)
ENTON, MICHIGAN	44430
RN'S
fANTED MECHANIC
-----r ofr Brunswick maoilnw.
>t_______ood LanaaTsiSIW. Huron.
t- WANTED: AMBULANCE DRIVER mutt be exporlancad, naat i peering, paid toauranca.
»
bakEry saleswoman, f?ll
time, s dayt, no evening oi days. Good pay. Anderson B 124 w. 14 MW, Blrrmiwnam.
Temporary fit. _T _____...... ,
tlac Plant madlcal departments. ... dustrlal ax par lanes required. NEED YOU NpW. Pc- 71‘“raj s
1 Cal*"MA^jpoyfiR	1
SALES EXPLOSION "NEED HELP'1
WEST BLOOMFIELD TWF. Water jfirab JOMaWVK —	—
for a field laborer. Stai
•EMI PUMP Truck AND loader
Irotar. MA jillaf.
....______ aura
:eptlonally high Incema. Wa .ncema. wa nave an ditau Insurance debit open due to motion. Wo will. train —1 you to pa aueeooaful. .......
solo* oxporlonco helpful but not naeetaary. of,1 I *“
BEAUTICIAN
Manicurist, maid, ahampoolst. Wig service and aalas, sSr — “ talon in IpMIMalt,
Mich. Call 4SBB4IS er 4IM72I.
SEMI-TRUCK DRIVER,
^NatMaMM sod In iu...RIMR tvt, S3 par to start.
___________5.7212:____________
SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT, good salary plus commission, 42 nr. wort: weak, paid vacation, call “-LurarV Ag-tjdf.
future In the bulldlnj Ing to loin carpantari apprentice. Call Don 4*2-4158.
trodot, i union at attar S p.m.
She* Coiffures, 424-i&n.
BE A PULL1RETTE
■-----1 deliver orders foi
h Co. sue par h
SERVICE STATION ____________....
or part tlmo, Rochottor, 451-7400. SERVICE STATION PART time otsollnt attendant, 5 PM to 10 PM I 2 or 3 nights weekly and weekends, college students protor--ed, call Ml 7-0700.
— phono 33 - phono OI rmlngton
I BUSINESS IS EXPANDING Charlie Brown's SINO-A-LONO. Wa
SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT, $135 per week experienced, full time. *2 per hr. part time work. Shall station. Telegraph and Long
i -u. a,. .	■	”	*
mfr*-
ailed 1 Lake tree.
SIGHTING APPLICATOR
id year Mrtoncd,
SINGLE MATURE *AAN to work on *“— tarn^-^ oxc. modern living
honRst, ambitious
Real Estate Salesmen i
Experienced full tlm# talesmen to sell new building lobs,, used! homes, trades and government [ repossessed homes. .Celt Bob Odvl* at Valuet Realty A Building Co.
P E 4-3531.
Rochester, Mich.
Cha »rolet
REAL ESTATE SALESMAN
Expertahcad full time talesmei top commission and draw pit
“backus REALTY
4540 BHzdbeth Lake Rd. 4SF7131 RRCEIVliltil AND LAYOUT h sped or, must be able to road Mu
TtiuUwP **** “H m*m ,or 11
EXTRA INCOME
SO. IF YOU'RE LOOKING FOR EXTRA INCOME, DO NOT DELAY
We have positions available now from the hours of 8:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. and chooss your own hours, lack of experience or age no barrier if over 18. Interesting work in circulation sales.
For interview call: MISS DOWNS
338-9706
permanent positions 'eg perlenced stereo plotter Topo draftsmen and dens. Excellent salary benefits. Send currant Capitol Air Surveys. 2)5 *3-	— Heigh'- ■
to D.
or cell collect b
I fringe ume to
PHIIt Mile ■tits. Mich. 43071 Malone, 1-544-
YOUNG MEN
_______................. Pontiac ’ OEAUtV bFERAtpR, MaMflittBaK
Office. No typiM necessary. Wa good hour* and pay, FE 4-217*. ,
gST' ^ *to wri .h^L BOOKKEEPING MACHINE
Salary dlKutsed at Interview. Far appointment, Call Mr. Newman.1 FE 8-035* » a.m. to I p.m., Thurs.
WirauBh Tut*. ____________1
ennett, 332-7111.
10 Women Needed
PUNCH
PRESS
OPERATORS
Madlum and light punch press t> parlance preferred. Day and nigh •hilts. Apply batwaarf 4 a.m.-* p.rr
Employers Temp. Service
OPERATOR
To work In the City Of Birmingham Finance Department. Machine bookkaaping experience preferred. Salary range *95.48-*114.12 wkly. Bandits Include • -------------- sick leave,
nployar. Apply Parson-nnca, Municipal Botldfng,
In Straat, Birmingham.
higher percentage oi
Boutique. —™—
EXPERIENCED SALESLADY full or pert time. Lane Bryant, Pontiac
_______WORK.
..«M eome typing re-..pply in agnan, Kast Heating and CeUIng Cd, ISO C Tdraragh Rd^ Pantfic.
IENERAL OFFICE, CASHIERING ana light htekkeerlng, aver 3*. FE
GIRL WANTED Will TRAIN PAID VACATIONS PAID HOLIDAYS GOOD WORKING CONDITIONS JANET DAVIS DRY CLEANERS
447-3C0t
Maid for bEauty talon, * days.
—t flrna, pleasant working sen-
GIRL FOR OEMBRAL OFFICE -.work, bookkaaping, toping and PdyrdL 334-757S or M4-7W4.
GIRL FOR GENERAL OFFICE, shorthand and typing pratorabla but lid necessary, toll or part time. 3354)74.
Babysitting, if 1 p.m. 3*1-
•irL. for general 6pficP
“■-* b* accurate typist. ■PVMUla mathamaf'— — cashier axperlanca.
I____. must . os SHwrqif lypisv,
good at simple mathematics, and
nave cashier *----------
waak. Salary to
Go With The Big On*
If you wish temporary work I fall and art experienced General office, stenograph-, secretarial, bookkeeping, key punching, ate. — CALL NOW 3& *3*4 "MANPOWER'S" TALEN’ SEARCH IS ON,
An Equal Opportunity Employer
Wy WErttd hWHfc'
I small c
LIYE-W
BABYSlffER, cfllttorA S53-2
BSfrlaSar l
133-2242.
L.P.N. $3.50 P»r Hour
Plus many other fringe banatti toil or part lima. Union Lake art EM SJljl.___________ _	-
MACHINE OPERATOR
Immadiata opsnlngs, days ai afternoons, will ^abl rallab„, woman wtth eome pravtoua shop axperlanca. Excellent year around working cpndlttane aito *WirtlBta. 2*21 industrial Row, Tray, batwaan )4 and II Mila R«U„ ott Ceondga
VANTED:	SALAD GIRL a n
SaMiral kltcnan work. 5 days waaL.
o weekends. Hours » to A Apply Club Rochastar. M; Main. Rochester.____________
Tfir	iS
f. Maple fi^ftimKm. X RqudOepami^iiigBrarr WAwllflkBAhT^	j
■ SitrssiigrJilPdFj^fwIOrua
Cross baneflta, MH iracatlon. ap-
.... £*r™‘ m »«wL 14* S.
kitchen help.
urVd."
MANlduRlST, IN FER cltff. Farmington
tap quality work. Tep pey, good working nfindttlwah•JWWL vica ; tiona and holidays. Drayton MartMmBt 4714 VMtan Blvd., ASK FOR MIKR METRICK. 474-
HE»W«ffti»ErF. |
i taKors .
Mlchiwn, *h4s 'mrrwdto^I^OHninfl^ tor, tallera. Exc. Opportunity,
H^.Drt^n FiatM. OR*iji7i.
wool PRfssER, Experienced desired, toll or part tlma. Collins Cleeneri, 450 Wbedward It^Ttech-
SElds Mp MrIbFbmMb M
EXPERIENCED ^ REAL ESTATE soles pSMM lIJWIK aUr ovsrloaded salat staff handla the large volume of butlnaar we pra new ax-parlenclng. Contact H. O, Coswey, xiiJwJA -	.-.r	- —
ATURf WOMAN to Ilya I adult, Northslde. FE »7S50-
'SANDERS!
JflrijSO*^ KWwdtf ope r I a t,
MATURE WOMAN,
metaMora aRea
•ncad cask wmm «. Babytlltlnfl
Mt
MAID FOR SAhALL SHOP, 35 hour
'	Maral FramadL Sir -
ird, firm. 444-1123.
Reply to Fantiac Press Bak N
NEAT PLEASANT WOMAN, ever 25 tor general heuaework. Must drive here, 3 days M0. Call attar 5, ra-
cant roferanceirs5t-0H».__________
kCR 'lOOKKi EPI NG WHfitorl:
Watartord,
5 days waakiy,
NURSES AIDES, EXPERIENCED ... —'■•train, alt *hHta, mild hava car. Union lmo area, EM *1
ism saiea, sorry, no sruaents,
*173 to dart.
Paid vacatlons-holldeys.	.
Uniforms wmlihed
Apply In parson, Mon,-Prl., » to 111 a.it), er 2 to S p.m.
Bloomfield Shopping Center 45M Telegraph at Maple 150 N. Woodward, nr. Hamilton ' (naxt to Damary't, Birmingham)
FRED SANDERS
An Equal Opportunity Employer
WOMAN FOR COUNTER ll *-id dry ef--" XV J
2 MEN TO SELL Tl.
NEW 1969 FORDS and MERCURY
Top cammlsslen. Paid vecetlonn hospital Insuranc*. Amjv Splker Ford-Mercury, 138 S. Mlttord Rd.,
5M-I7H-________ '	^
SALESMEN
4 men tor MlMpeattlgn wtth lerge firm. Offering draw while, in Training in company school. SIO,000 to SIMM first year. Call
RAY REAL JSTATR
SALESMEN
WANTED
Art you dlsatlsfltd? bo you Want to better yourself7 Does (15,000 to *20,000 per year appeal to you?
J! WOMAN PART TIME for typing In VT our dtlea'. Write Post Office Bold *	232, Pontiac, Michigan. Giving full.
dignified public service work If __
devote 4o hour* a weak to yaur lob, your oarnlhg* will “	«—
Mr. Brqpm Willi
i„ ft Pontlae. "Vour
t ba wntaaT" cir is
>, ega limit — Senior
GUARANTEED EARNINGS
Sail Toys A Gifts, Aug.-Dee. Free Supplies and Hostess Gift' " perisnee or cash dallvarlng — No Col Grace Hodgm 493-11.. _ "Sandra Fartiaa", 73*5 E. 4 Detroit, Mich. 4(213.
GIRL FQR, QEgia5. AHe. ffW.qta some fralni raCTrm. FuH tTm Apply d Burt Cnensrt, 4700 Dlx
Hwy.-.CIdikstoto
HOUSEKEEPER TO PREPARE ■ hmai aid dinner tor coupto. H*—| It a.m. to 7 p.m. Mud havo

STOCK AND DELIVERY bey.
!,*sj{y
SPECIALTY SALES
$200 WK. SALARY
DURING TRAINING
i, olio kitchen t
Orion, Albet’s Inn, 493-9973 tor l
Accounting Clarks
of this company ’ door saws. Car necessary, part tlma. Call Immadlataly.
1 tor llva-<
*"1hk ffiw
n to the.
parlance. 'Must' hava "flgura fltuda and be able to run tn
APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. SECOND FLOOR
Bus Girl
Tad'* of Bloomfield Hills openings (or but girls, day and morning shut, good earnings, froa Blue .Croat and Ufa Insurin'* vacation and holiday pay. Apply perton only.
HOUSEKEEPER, live-in, cara of 2 WOODWARD AT SQUARE' LK. RD., girls, 4 and 2, S day* t3 Mild and CAR HOSTESS, FULL tlma, must ba Mound area. Warren, 264-2755 after
available tor morning hour*, good! 5._____
Wy. Ptod PIper Restaurant. 4370j HOUSEWIVES
NURSES AIDE, FOR aftorhOOn and
NURSES AIDES
xparldRCtd; All ranaperatten as* ratioI. MALCOLM PALMER HOP 30301 W. 13 Mila Rd.
WOMAN WANTED, MORE tor lx..... salary. Compenlon lor deaf
iifOsrily .Tnay weak l ine |-aut. Light 'houeakaaplfig an king. 449-4944, After 7, 4240792.
OFFICE GIRL WANTED, manth, no dwd|rarar ~~ Home d Dl
^Alif^TIME cosmR+ician drug- dork, good Fours, good *
PERSONNEL CONSULTANT $5,000 UP
CASHIER AND OFFICE I----------...
to . Work at authorlxad Buick dealership inquire at Grimaldi Bulck-Opel, 210 Orchard Lake A vs., Pontiac. Aik for Mr. Nqvar-I
portunitles No. 59.
- SEE business bp-
INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ISifl S. Weodwerd B'ham. 442-M6S PLASTIC INJECTION MOLDING Cot hat openings tor machtiva
operators, T shifts. Jebbco1 Corporation. 1225 W. Maple, W*Hed
WOMAN FOR TYPING and general
ill time wilt q necessity,
. Citizens we
iWOMAN FOR DRY cleaning department. General assembly. Pontiac Laundry. 540 S. Telegraph.
Employment Agencies 9
A-1 VaRiRTY . k^OT^UOHJMyplh^
Sea Mr. Stamaa.
control to procure menagemant positions. Must be Intelligent, shory and naat appearing. Only thosa whe can start work lr-medlatoty need apply.
SI4S WREKLY salary To stmt offer to all succas*fuLi
CASHIER
SHS Montgomery Ward
•qual opportunity amployar
PONTIAC MALL
CLEANING LA#IES , housekeepers,	Birr'—1^—
allowance. 442-7*00.
*lto|
LI 5-8800
TOOLROOM
MACHINIST
Exparlancad on all tooln
M. C. MFG. CO.
til indlanweod Rd. a Orion	*92-2711
n Equal Opportunity Employer
k RELIABLE WOMAN to tiki charge ot nice home and help " 'll
the raising of .2 well bahavedi.
rtatlon furnished, must llva
transportatl In, 4*2-5715.
Join. The . Leader! . FORD
needs experienced, graduate : . XRUCK --ENGiKfiERS • _
If you havt a proven record of professional engineering accomplishments in the
DESIGN-AND/OR DEVELOPMENT • ENGINEERING
Of any of the following components:
•	CHASSIS AND FRAME
•	BRAKES
•	SUSPENSIONS ^
•	DRIVELINES ,
•	ENGINES
•	STEERING
•	BODY-ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
•	COMPLETE VEHICLE SYSTEMS
Air mail your resume (including salary record and requirements) pr write today for an application toi
H. O. ERICKSON
Recruiting Section Product Development Group
P.O. Box 2053 Deartiom, Michigan- 48121
.. An EtNBl Opportunity Eniplayar
TIRE MOUNTER, EXPERIENCED
»ucTun,!!s.*,iix»'n,i1....: a&&thr- ■41
opening* on ali : employment. See . v,. Jered_ Products, 1520 Temple Pr., Tray, or call *5-7170.
City
ASSISTANT E 0 OKKEEPER general office. Full-time 40 hr. week. Excellent working conditions. Apply Grlnnell't Pontiac Mall.
ATTENTION M0THERSI1
Are you looking for somathlng different? SELL TOYS! No experience necessary, wa train you. For further Information call —
THE PLAYHOUSE CO.
FE 3-7377 ,	__________ 473-1740
COUNTER-GIRL FOR pRY cleaning, plant. Paid vocation and hulldays.: Will train If nacaaaary. Apply 534 S. Woodward, Birmingham.	i
CAREER SALESWOMEN a t Grinnells ere successful tailing our products. If you hava a setting personality, soma previous sales expirlence and a desire to maka higher earnings; we will train you to tall our Magnavox ~‘-r TV and stereo. Conn band
many ethar preferred
at Grlnall's Pontiac
. Call attar 4:30, 452-
APPLICATION NOW BEING ac-captad tor ushers dayman. Apply Mfcada Mila DrlWth Theater, BABYSITTER, MY HOME. Qwn 12:30
TREE TRIMMER
Climber tor -Parka and Recreation Dept- Minimum “* - —— -parlance. Steady
Including ■* Ore	. _
and Lite ins., Retlranwnt, Paid Holidays, VacatlM and Sick —
Salary range S2.I1 to $3.37. .
•dlutl tor axparlenca. An equal opportunity amployar. Apply Personnel Dept., 1|| Martin St. Birmingham. ‘
_ CITY OF BmMINOHAM
CLERKS-TYPISTS
For General ottlca work, emtact Mr. Walter Glebe, 349-5500 or r*-ply in parson.
' Pyles Industries Inc.,
28990 Wixom Rd., Wlxom Mich.
Ve are an Equal Opportunity Emplbyur
BABY SITTER FOR tram • until, 5, prater rad. 335-1230.
BABYSITTER NEEDED .
"“k- 4 hours a day, Drayton 474-3507.
Plains ai
light bookaaplng. Apply ft parson Hansel & Gratal Shoppe, Blrm-Ingham, Mich. cootC“kAHD~«tKeiwa;"--i Highest wages for a
lady, with recant rafart.__ M
halp ampteyad. Stay tome nights. ■ftcdlMitquarta rs, Bloomfield Witt. Call Ml 4-2140._____■ ’

MICHIGAN
BELL
Has immediate full time openings in Pontiac, Detroit and throughout the Metropolitan area fort
•	LINEMEN
•	INSTALLERS-SPLICERS
•	ELECTRICAL TECHNICIANS
•	FULL PAY DURING TRAINING
•	HIGHER STARTING WAGES
•	EXCELLENT BENEFITS
APPLY NOW!
ROOM 5-175
23500 NORTHWESTERN HWY.
SOUTHFIELD
MICHIGAN BELL :
Port of the Nationwide Bell System
COOK; ' SHORT ORDER. . parlance helpful but will train. 343-
SjHTwt. R era.
CURB OtRLS FOR day and ,:SF.. lino. Must be to. Apply In person t. Blue Star Ratfaurant, comar tyfca aod Pontiac Road.
fringe
Milford.
benefits. Call
Housewives
irt tlma salat positions avail, days •nd-or avanings on rail
APPLY IN PERSON
FROM It A.M. TO 4 P.M.
EMPLOYMENT OFF ICE
Hudson's
Pontiac Mall
Far personal Inter iM Mr. Badtar—9 e.i 3(8-9742
-Angto—Rqek, «Sfip7 mBluiw ~
iSHARPAPPEARANCE AND abUtty to work with ffturaa, 3200, call Kathy King, S)S-*)«7, Associates Personnel,
ADVANCE FAST IN THIS Baherei ' gHM position, (ML. Mil ^nthy 332-9157, Associates Parson-
cantive program. Parks, 334-2471, SntIHng.
ing, mailing, some typing. , _ Interview call Mr. Folay, YORK REALTY, 47MQ43.
RESTAURANT HELP NEEDED.
-Receptionist-
Great cllanta Answer phone Downtown Birmingham
647-888U
RELIABLE BABY SITTER needed
Wanted M. erf, 8
APPLICATIONS NOW BEING taken tar box office, ushers and concession halp. Apply Pontiac Drlva-ln Theater.
ARE YOU REALLY •tvliMt? Or Just existing? Cai! Mr. Fdlay, YORK REAL bSTATE 47*0333.
ARE YOU READY tor the future? Call_ Mr.aj^T YORK RIAL
RN'S
BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED
AM RH Positive _	$7.50
(7.50 , 310
ftt RH N
with positive
312
MICHIGAN COMMUNITY
... ..II In aaslgnmmts.' POn-|. p tl BLOOD center
^ISS Wide Track Or. |£ Mon. thru, FrU 9 a.m.-jtoMMklujUfag
HOUSEKEEPER,. EXP|_R!.ENCED Cell MANPOWI In cooking, llve-ln. Ml 43342.	-.- —-1-
Opportunity Em^yer^
If you think a job isn't good unless it's fun — we agree ... and we try to do something about it.
Our top tomporeriei choose to| companies that guarantaa a warn, welcome and stork OS far from routine u possible.
SECRETARIES, STENOS, AND BOOKEKEEPERT Wl much Tn demand now. Only SO more shopping dayt ‘til Christmas to d— overlook our highest hourly rats
: Kelly Girl
Of Killy Services, Inc.
JOHNSON INSURANCE' AGENCY, SOUTHFIELD AT 11-M>Et • J&K LATHRUP VILLAGE, HAS GCWD OPENINGS FOR 2 GIRLS WITH
JOIN BEE LINE Fashions. Fi
....M»er,,^.UUl1 °r P
KEYPUNCH OPERATORS
Jr. and senior, excellent op-
»£“XS#wk*%M
Small day or attanttrai clataet. Mutt ba high SChoeT graduate. Warair drop In or call Min
KELLY GIRL
Of Kally Services its N. Saginaw	.
38-033*	or	442-9450
EQUAL OPPORTUNITY
SALES CLERK, part ttnwe 'lWatt tailing experience u would * *
hateful. We need Bate bet___________
10:30 e.m. and 2:30 p.m., S days a
Want Ads For Action
SALES
AND
Clerical
Positions
—.	AT
Winkelman's
k lor housewives 30 or
24 hours weakly. 2 avanings i
FLEXSE AFFUT ’MONDAY, TEPT^ *TH FROM Tl A.M. TO 7 j»,M. AT OUR TEL-HURON STORE TELEGRAPH AND HUROt ROADS.
Winkelman's
SALESLADY
irtancad In. sportswear i wa, 3 day weak, Suzatta, : ~«9.
SALAB OIRL, * niiMS. a waak ft restaurant and cocktail lounga In Trey, no ex parlance nacaaaary, 549-
SAM'S RESTAWWN3(L .*#fT t1
waitress, day work, *52-9755.
xiTWwSStetn*1 TV ADVERTISED
AVON COSMRTICS	"
New tlm of gifts and trttetrtes I_
give you an unusual darning opportunity durtin itn h a 11 d a y season. Call FE 4-0439 or write PO Bat: ft, Drayton Plates.
WAITRESSES COUNTER GIRLS
BAKERS
Retell baker and wholesale baker, strictly day work, top wages. Quality House Bdkary, 334S143.
BUS DRIVER WAHTED tor nfomftg interview.
. Call 444-5590 tor
DETROIT FREE PRESS Routa Drivers - Single delivery, . Weyne-Oekland a good part ‘kwwraMlratiBlft 2490, 8 a.m
FEE PAID PUBLIC RELATIONS,
Local division ot national firm. Salary plus ear.
Adams & Adams 647-8880
Good
Placement
Service
CALL 334-4971 FEMALE
General Offlc* .     ....$350
Secretary, typa, shorthand ......1400
Billing Clark . ........ $400
Bookkeeper ....$540
Chock Writer . . ......
Secretary ...... .......
Credit Analyst, young ..
_____T____etery
Key Punch :.............
Stenographer ..........
Advertising Clerk .....
General Office -
Caihtar ................
Secretary .............
Jr. Steno ...............
Medical Secretary ......
E KG Operator ..........
Bookkeeper .............
Nurses Aides	7.t:
Secretary .............
Typist ...... ..........
Telephone Salas .....
Lab Assistant -.........
DISHWASHER, NO , SUNDAYS OR Holidays, wages open, reliable, call 4BMW4I attar 4:30.
EMPLOYMENT COUNSELOR: Hare's yaur opportunity for unllmltad earnings In top pro-fesslonel field. Call Nile Stuart, 334001, Snaltftg and Shelling.
FEEL LIKE LIFE Is Jwtslng V0 by? Cell Mr: Potty, YORK REAl ESTATE. OR 40343.
412-9870 tar apgalntmant:
JOB WITH.a future. Call Mr. Folay. YORK REAL ESTATE. OR 40143.

LIMOUSINE DRIVERS WANTED,, must be 25 or gwar, SIM a waak. FE 29145, FE 29144-MIDDLE AO ED COUPLE OR lady tor halp. to rooming house. Room and board phi* wages. Call 332-
1705.__________’	.
NEWSPAPER MOTOR ROUTE ' er wanted, afternoon!
. call 4440950.
RCA
.. $500
... $325 ...Oi>#n ..,.$350
,Jro

---Open
Ottlca Manager .........
Programmer ..............
Distributor Sales ......
Stott Adjuster .........
Sr. Computer Operator ..
Mot. Trainee ...........
Collector .......... •
Technical Wrltar . Sales Mgr.———
Management Trainee --
. .utomotive Design ..
Repairman ...........
Claims Adiuster ......
Retell Sales
Credit Manager ......
Electronic Tachhldah .
Programmer ...... ....
Sales Ren ..........
...813,000 ... (TOO
:;:.q£So
....Open ...(7200 ....34500 ...47200 ....$550
.19.000
..Jitpoo
7r°jl$r
...to *400 ...812,000
.....S9500
.. (12,000
There ora many,
salary attructNp, Hteral comply mttny fflOIQ benefits. Including company paid	U1 thBSB TIBiaS.
hospital, surgical end giilor
madlcal Insurance. Paid vacations.	Many Tea paiu.
plus I paid IWHdayv For personal	Pinictsr llfuii
Interview visit our branch, Monday	KRgiSTBr WOW.
qjh Saturday,aJn. to 4 p.m.1	___
RcTse'RVICE CD. I INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL
RESTAURANT PERSONNEL, tlma, will train, hMten, i ream wattraia,	■
dining
girls, BahMS, porter ,vdm, meals and unite. .... furnished. Mid Blue Crau Llto Insurance. Apply Greenllald Restaurant, 725 S. Hun'"
mlnflham.___________
SHORT ORDER COOK, no Sundays
^sh.'ssr+sr'-*''*’
INSPECTOR:
ind easy I , 3342471,
t work In
easy hours. 34,1
M
MANAGEMENT TRAINEES
Unllmltad c*raaF®lpotonttol , tor the high school grad*. Earn while you learn. Good salary and braafitt. Including■ ie collaoe asslstanca pro-.
I. Spelling and Snelllhg.
Help Wanted foMdlB
ttivg transportation, and ba wHOne!
*N!bMB[Ea i
«a.S.ggk5!!-
WAITRESSES^ WkNTfeO, toiperlyre
ini
iStt
w/Utresses wantRO. Ira Waraw dkeaRiy snwtira cra«F— ■ *w~-trv Kattte. S9 M-l« Or WAITRESSES FOR DAY
WANTED, Neat-
i@@3SEst:
WE ARE EXPANDING
A good telefrfione voice and if you are 18 or . over we will teach you in telephone sales. Very interesting work in circulation sales. Your choice of hours from 8:30 a.m. to 9:30 (MA.
For Appointment call* MISS ROSE
338-9762
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, I9B8
3-9:
■wplfyut k§mdm
9 Instructions-Schools
HI jm
*3)d'snSltno*,,V' ***,4n'Snollinp
SALESREP TRAINEES
Kern white teaming, oxc. potential, . all haiarfm. MOO guaranteed bait
P| NT(¥n At'iON Al'^PER JON N EL 1M0 (. Woodward, •’bam. 8424261
'fii oSS1* Hwy .^^iyton
Ml,1!!* ***•	by State of
iioHil____ _
~ Sorvtco. OR______ HPHH
IRONINGS DONE IN MY Kama. Ot-
Afternoons mMI eves. Nit mth re 'uuu lioht
nationally known firm.
Adams & Adorn? 647-81
arAircirr.^1^
'	personnel
imp s. woodward rtawi. MMItt. TlUJHti WHI train neat Ippllrlni
ftvwta*
n » VtARS EXPERIENCE In book-
Am l^'good ^^h^nTauailabta!
If l_wn itoip, mdia Box c~« for return. of qualifications.
_■ ■ AND CONSTRUCTION CN«> UP	OR S-1018
LIGHT HAULING. HAND
LADY’S OESIRR INTERIOR paln-tint In Waterford araa, free estlmatas. OR 3004, or OR SUM

. . ... I or 4 yr. aU . „„ -„,j. amlto motbar workt
Saw «b& S35-70M.__________
triMfStrificsIs SBiiphtTlS
40’ CONVEYER FOR construction - SEtt. UL tGcjb ' '
15
CASH FOR FURNITURE AND OP-pllancas, 1 [ placa or housaful.
Paaraon’a. FE 47881_______
IlGHEST PRICES fAlb FOR good furnltura ant appllancai. Or -~E** hava you?
B & B AUCTION
m PiMa Hwy.	or sir?
LABOR DEEP FRIEZE TONI
COFFER. BRASS . RADIATORS,
ATTENTION
DAY-NIGHT CLASSES STARTING SEPT. 30, FOR
AUTO MECHANICS
Enroll now atari training an
ACETY-ARC WELDING
HILI ARC WELDING ■KjHMMCmuan
WOLVERINE SCHOOL
Mich. D
EXPERIENCED LEGAL secretary I. desires work 2 or 3 day* a weak “ or famporary work aulgnmant. OR
LAWN CUTTING
axparlanca. genaral offli soma casualty. 673-36SI.
WANTEJD: WALNUT LOGS or treat.
REFINED WORKING COUFLE sda rpaaanaSN houaa in i—I Ighborhood by Oct. 7. Call if anytlma waakdays affa
Share living Quertprs
DOMINO CONST. CO.
Aiphtlt Paving. Fraa Quotas. 474* ? T8K ',. <•- - •	I
DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST, 33!
DURING MONTH OF --------------M
Asphalt Paving te featuring paving gWpar Sd. ft. 345-47I4.3C-81S7.
Br—kwotgr Constractlon
SHEET PILING BREAKWATERS
Boats and Aecsssariss
BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER
Sterereft, l.M.P.SMve
A-1 CHAIN LINK fence lag repaired, 1-wk.
____ 3340297, 674-3961.
ACKER A-1 FENCES ARE n
CHAIN LINK AND V
drives. 1265	$. Woodward at
BalMing Mod.rizotioR
OARAGE JO X so- - SS75. Cement work, fret estimate. Springfield
Sidp., cp. ms-mm.
LICENSED BUILDER, alteraftons, and remodeling. Fraa estimates. 335-3096 or S3S-7S1S.
KAPPER CARPET SERVICE
i iNTdhioh" AND EXTERigiT
CARPENTRY AND CEMENT work
1 already"1).. UfilTia^spa'ca!1332-2674, 332-3343 after i pjn.
INTERIOR FINISH, kitchens, panel-
MASTER ENQUSH. CRAFTSMAN, specializing In aD *71** ?! parpen try and maaonory; brick, bted$. stone and cement. Price and work
d^j^ ^jkhha<TfcRS,., .do all work auraatvps,. spaaattBnp^ tn room pddlHona, rac-roonw, rcoftna, aluminum tiding. Guarantee workmanship, bondSL Deal adlh a tlaman contractor. Call JPf » nlghtT3445716. 7T1-3927 Br 4274118.
C«ment Work
ALL topee of cinteM wpifc foojlnga. blocks, besefflonto and ,o6tr nm v
■ WiMMHtCIAL, INDUSTRIAL and resldantlsl. Btock and capMlt • » GUINN’SCONST. CO.
- ' sswsjr a? sst-soi PR^B PRIVES- GARAidM
ROCHESTER AREA Aluminum guitars, a a • u 11 Roofing. . Fraa estimates. Cal
WOMACK Roofing co. Fraa Eatlmata __________FE M
Backhoa. Basements. 874-2439. I
BULLDOZING, BACKHOE WORK, basements, grading. 882-3042.
“	■ ■ BULLDOZING, CM
OR S-1165, 674321S FRONT Is NO LOADER'by hour.
FILL SAND LOADING DAILY
SO cahts per yard,
’ lkt Rd., Unlr- 1 —
EM 3-3510.'.
hmm INTERL.. _ -	-
AND GRAVEL CO.
ROAD GRAVEL, BEACH -Sand, till sand, atone, tap toll. Reasonable prlcea-Tast delivery. 673-0040.
SAND. GRAVEL, din 074-2039, or 33S-1J0L
Septic Tank Sendee
COMPLETE SEPTIC TANK, SO!
Floor TlHug Clarkston Floor Covering
Sale, and custom Installation carpet, tile and linoleum. Fraa l.. the-home eatltnatas. 7012 Dixie
741 N. Perry. FE 2-4098.
InsectControl
MOSQUITO CONTROL, also Pine •’shrub spraying. Call tor free C l> H Spraying. 074-3*49, 628-
MERION BLUE SOD, pickup or il. 4043 Sherwood. 618-MOO.
T-A COMPLETE - L-ANOSCAP1N4. retaining waitt. Free estimates, j!
i-OOOS. FEMOfit PR W0S4. SMITH OWVINO CO. Vpur moving
Opdyka neai ULW401,
Trgg Trimming Service
AL’S TREE SERVICE, FREE iSTtMATBS OSHSW, 073-7100, 02SG521
C B P TREE Sarvled. Ramovod, Trimmed. Free eat. TR t-0057 OVERLAND TREE SERVICE and landacaplng, free eat., ins., FE 3-
3 ROOMS. NEWLY radaepratad mar-lleht bath, baby parmfftad, utilities Included, 135 Wk.. 173 iMaMt. Inquire between OiSHP-m. fi Air
fMENTS, IMMADIAtC t. partially turmahad. ri C-27~ Pontiac Press.
ROOMS AND RATH, PRIRI furnished, dap., raq., no children or palsVMMIU.
3 ROOMS AND BATH, malt baby welcome. 75 Clark.
" ■ f •.•sjl.... gamy
S FOOMt.ANO^BATH. Chlldran.
Ail I S HE D
starters and pane rotors. C. D lx son.
WANTED FLAT TOP Gibson pi OR------------|
BEDROM, LIVING room and dining ream, 1190 per mo. plus deposit. In Word. 00-71.-
1>I» .'TrSnY,
—*- only, ™
ROOMS, AIR CONDITIONED, ^MWjpRptrWtoMlilaHmtoiak 333-t70CT
lAffiTr
____________,»4-e902. —
S ROOMS, IMS WILL(Wil Baaeh, laet Lake Avenue. 0SM747.
YEAR.A^D^L^R^^I
_____chlld .er daa. reference
raculrad. OSirOSW.
Rent Rooms
s rooms and rath. ema il dcama, MS wk., 873 dan., Ir 373 Baldwin, call 338-4054.
42
CLEAN SLEEPING Room tor Private entrance and parking. Ncn-
drlnklng. 332-0541.
GENTLEMAN ONLY, NEAR ---
"--pitai, Etlnbath Lk. Rd. 335-
BACHELOR, MAIN FLOOR carpeted, wary nice, qu III
norltiand, vaMtit. PE B4HE.
couple or 3 girls. Beautltul grounds and view. Near Elisabeth Lake B‘> and Oktow Lake Rd. S15D par
GIRL, TO SHARE MY furnished i. on Pina Lake. $55 Mo. 082-
wwrie	■	■
WANTED: MIDDLEAOtD^ LADY
YOUNG MAN WANTED to there
--------- with tamo, mutt bt *’
838 deepen. 034-S49O.
STRICTLY PRIVATE quiet upper flat carpeted near Wat-"—’ Township library business oi fessonai couple available 0
WALLED LAKE, 7V* rooms, Vi mile from lake. $125 a month, security de^wslt required, adults only. 824-
ACREAGE FARCIL*. FARMS. BUtlNEM PROPERTIES, AND LAND CON-
WARREN STOUT, Rtaltor
1450 N. Opdyka	, FE MB
Urgently need toM^nadlata saiei
MULTIPL^TlrrlNG SERVICE
1 MILLION
a available

mortgages or b u y nomas, iota or acreage outright. We Will give you cash for your equity Our appraiser la awaiting your call
474-223$
McCullough realty
140 Highland Rd. (M-19)	MLS
ipen M______________ 878-3238
• OR 3-BEDROOM HOUSE bjBimpnt' .Mtp BPtijp.^ I...—... $18,000, land contract.	Suburban
ar«r$2500 or i“ --------- “*
realtors. 332-7321.
- 2-BEDROOM. NEW. NEAR Mai — Carpeted. Appllanme. Air and aouhi condhlonad, .haatod. Rac. room. Adults, no pats. Prom 3140. FE S-tfiT • ••	•
•niltOOMS HEaYED, WPUtd Lake area. Slot a mot *—&,w dap. 383*481.	~
3 ROdMS KliCHlNETTE and bath, adults, no pata, rat.,	“
Paddock.
4-ROOM l6weR.
nlshad, only 3
ROOMS AND BATH, no children, j
reference required. Holly 834-188* Rent Off ICS 5DBCS
after 4 p.m. ; >	_	\___
3 ROOMS. NEWLY DECORATED,	APPROXIMATEl
ALL CASH
For homes anyplace In Oaklar County. Money in 34 hours.
YORK
REALTY, 842-4320
WITH CASH
______________878-18*8
INDIVIDUAL DESIRES multipT apartment Income property. Non •Ida of Ppntiac. 331-8837 before
YORK
474-0363
TREE CUTTING AND FREE aaBmpfaa. 331-3781.
TREE CUTTING/AND ctaanup, in.m estlmatoS/ FE 3-1185,
TRBB-:.:;R«l<tawar
■ AND. -2289T1
TrIMMING, REPAIR, REMOVAL Spraying, fertilizing free estimate!
J & E TREE SERVICE
383-72*5
RAY
REAL ESTATE Now has 7 offices to batter serve your community. For bail rar '“-
SELLING
TRADING
BUYING
Your real estate today, calls
RAY
REAL ESTATE
n 689-0760
or
RAY
REAL ESTATE
731-0500
TRANSFERRED COUPLE WITH
850 sac
■I ■........, _	7* Ltn-
cMn w. ___________________________
ROOM LOWER, NO drinkers. No
-„rari
BEDROOMS, PULL bW oslf*«^^44 •DROOMS,
Located at 3288 Norton town, axcallant value at $21,500.
Dennis Rial Estate Salts
1123 N. Main	Rochester
BEDROOM MODERN HOUSE,
couple qpl utilities ai
SMALL 8-roont, pais, S10S me. plus nor upkeep. Id —1 nt plus 125
MAN ROOM. AND kltchpn, SIS witk, FE 3-7200.
NICE Ukhot FURNISHED alaaplng
frontage, approx.
CsNay Lk. Rdv i m.„___________
ping center, $29,900, 383-5897. 111800 ON YOUR LOT or " open dally 9. till 9.
d. Capri Builders, 455-1141.
GUIET RbpM F^R
room’ pmi
near north and fictortot. BI-H37. ROOM FOR LADY, k I tf h • privileges If daslrad. 882-1850 i 881-0091.	. x
k66M‘S WITH 2 DOUBLI radio, telephona, car—1 bath, 2 persons, —
IBLE b « Site Me
i Mila I
SAGMiMbRE MOTEL. SI NOLI cupancy, 835 ptr weak, service, TV, telephone. 7
private ■NL. weakly, bad, 2 parson's, 1130
i. Daooalt. 333-9371.
Weaver and AIcott Schools, 335-
RlEt StlfES
LARGE AREA, PLENTY ot parking,
--- rites tor the veer.
MICHEALS REALTY
AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS
applications tor apartments, next avail. Oct.T No chlldran, no t 3385 Watfclno Rd. 873^188.
IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY
Coral Ridgs Apts.
SBCONDMriUOX ROCHESTER 1 BEDROOM APTS.
$145 Mo.
:lud08 all utlllttoa, axoapt at e.
Office open dally 'til 7 p.m.
rlmt. CALL MR. TREPECK. I S1I4.	_
AVAILABLE NOW IN #fl7i Rochester's flnaat and newart flea and commercial cants. . Medical suites, general office sulfas and commercial spaces.
BLOOMFIELD MANOR
immediate Occupancy Few choice apartments . available. I and 2 bedroom luxury apartments built-in Hot Point appliances, models opeh dally 1 to * p<m. 323.3300 Woodrow Wllscn phone UN 4-7405. LOVELY NEW L A k E FRONT Apartment with swimming. pool luxurious at S135 a mo. 824-3933.
MODERN 3 ROOM
utilities inci. wash...............
children or pita, $125 mo. FE 3-
D0LLY MADISON
APARTMENTS l-t BEDROOMS
FROM $145
14 Mile Rd. at 1-71 Madison Haights Near J. L. HUdson's-Saars Oakland Mall
in deck — pool* —*alr conditioning
Prtsidant Madison
APARTMENTS 1-2 BEDROOMS
FROM $145	—
.Jut R between 13 and 14 Mila Rd. Madison Heights near J. L. Hudson’s
aiiiirilSiiiwE
835-3972, O' *" "**
home In Watortord araa. Agent OR 8-1849.
—-pa
FOR YOUR L__,. ,,
OR OTHER, FOR QUICK ACTION
iM- H A G S T R O M --REALTOR, OR 40358 OR EVE- 7~ NINGS. FE 4.7105.	*
and Rgif Heebes, FmMWI 39
BEDROOM HOUSE, garage Cecilia Ann, Ctorktton. Par mere Intormatton call 333E80S.
BEORbOM HOUSE for rant on Orion. 893-8880.
2. oarage, $50 wk. W3E591.
June IS. $125 me. Inquire II
FURNISHED
i **	■	—i, in EBWP,
Security dap. per me. Ratal
_____________llfft.
ORION LAKEFRONt,
'round, 3 bedroom, .p^NIMOT security deposit, utilities paid. 893-7792.
SUBLEASE SJtOOMS from Sept.
TRUCKS - TRACTOR AND EQUIPMENT
Sand Traitof* *. VP
Pontiac Farm and Indusrtial Tractor Co.
BS.. WOODWARD
4mp> QpEy <9	....
SSWIUMh. Uil»ixMw4 it towt—b. Iblwditri j*

CHETS PORT AS L E WELDING, wreupt JiF-	—
demeTlHan
i, boom truck aWvtov,
IMMEDIATE
OCCUPANCY
CHILDREN WELCOME
YOU'LL ENJOY LIFE MORE IN A BEAUTIFUL NEW APARTMENT BETWEEN 2 LOVELY LAKES. COME OUT TODAY.
^LY^CAJPETED	f &Ml& f.
• ALL APPLIANCES INCLUDED
;nA STORAGE'sFACR E • PRIVATE PARKING
I 7 NUNU^SFTO P0NT?AC^™NUTES TO DETROIT MdN.-FRI.
SYLVAN ON THE LAKES
on Cass Lakt Rd., batwMn Cass and Sylvan Lakts
DIRECTIONS:
i. Separata I Walton-Bal
GROUND FLOOR; AIR eondlttejjf
dS?"
mti
aly, ______ I
$82-0123 or WO
apace with street entrance -. Pontiac Mall Shopping Canter, avail. Immediately, neat and ianltor him., call 4977.
OFFICE FOR-RENT _ sq. ft. on west side of town, call Jack Ralph. PR E7181.
Rgm lEslBEM PrBfttrfy 47-
3 BAY GARAGE WITH. otNce jor Near
BUILDING WITH LOTS of
SHOP AftD STORAGB PLDG,
INDOOR BOAT STORAGE. Near
mm 2- BIBROOM'RANCH -
Bear parage, Siojoo, si.ioo down.
FLATTLEY REALTY
N Commerce Rd.	48S49I
ss: *S8E“iaapS**®
modal mobile heme, at partial
FAMILY AUBURN Holghto, SHE00 AND 3 BEDROOM HOMES on towiS''*— ‘—‘	"
3834S31
■^\agw8asxB
’, Nice neighborhood. $3,800 Income. S12.500.	tS, 000
eSwtT __________________
3 BEDROOM HOME IN Elizabeth Lake Estates, mon**”-
2 FAMILY, yearly down. FE
. : BEDROOM --------
$S?dtom» Vloch*Brba. JfiQ^BEfia
Hwy. Ph: C$1333 or S4B-7711.
4-H REAL ESTATE
Pgjgg-TWv-OrionJWtoa^,
baaamant, large gMjirtnrneMRG nice corner let. Pries $21,500 — $8500 down to axMbtoi mortgofP — $120 ma« total payment Would FHA.
M44 DIXIE HWY. 423-1400 8734373	t&M~ 430-2870
BUYING-SELLING-LOOKING-TELL IT TO 260,000 People
With A
Pontiac Press \ WANT ££)
Phone
332-8181
IKPSWttl
. —|„ this rambling MBR, aapprato dining mom. Dying room, 3 bn g. jiiBirEiafa
6 Spacious New Homes By
ROSS
Available about Aug. 28
! RANCHES—2 LAKE FRONT SPLIT LEVELS-2 COLONIAL HOMES IN
(3 LOVELY COMMUNITIES)
$30,900 to $47,900 Including Lot MODEL OFEICEt 623-0670
Open IE dally. Sun Closed Prl.
LAKELAND ESTATES
1941 S, Telegraph Rd. PB 44591 5 ROOM RANCH
Full baaamant, plus garage. About S350 moves you In. Owners agent
kitchen, on your .. .
YOUNG-BILT HOMES
REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT
-----.. young/*334-3130
W. Hr-— **
____ ______ HQMI
Rtaltor, 851-0221.
Far private slwwMp. call
YORK
Gl tor S14.9M, tar
RETIREES
Give this practically new, rt„ ... 2 bedroom ranch some thought. With a 2Vt .car attached heated garage, this home la hard to bar’ for IiLNS. if you Ilka living nei the Mill, give ua a call.
DON
GIROUX
$7Tr7W ,
REAL ESTATE
COMPLETE HOME PLANNING PROGRAM
choice ef hundreds ef designs. Total program Includes can-structlon on vour lot. Convr-'—* farms, easy financing. Wrih catalog to:
Albee Hornes, Inc.
3513 Elizabeth Lpka Road Pontiac, phone: 8S3-3850
4 and l ' S < .■
INCOME I Sellers Retiring
Both apartments now rantaf S^°?oo^triohmTermt. For'pXato thawing. Call	*
YORK'
’nm ■ w,,raf*
702 S. Telegraph	PBMtof
haydeiT
KEEOO HARBOR — 4 bedrooms, ivy stories, now gas furnace, fug ------ only $11/500 on Gl.
garage, fenced yard.
Terms.
WEST SUBURBAN — Attractive S bedroom (possible ttoaMf tMm ) fireplaces, walk-out baaamant and choice lakafrant tot. $28,500.
NEAR HUNTOON LAKE — An at-
J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor
383-8804	1073S Highland Rd. (M-S*)
1 —------1 of Oxbow 1 “
BEVERLY HILLS
brick ranch, base—------- ------
gas heal, incinerator, recreation
Beauty Rite Homes
HUNT00N SHORES $25,550
Cotonlil with 1413 to. «• This home has S bedrooms, a walk-in ctoaat, formal dining room, and 1 car garage. Now under construction. .10x130 ft. tot with traw.
COZY HABITAT
:tty North old# — this con-
Couple Owned," alum., sided
home Is up to the minute In a .
detail: carpeted living and dl room, 9x13’ family room, I ment, comfy oil hoot. $13,501 $3,000 down on land contract.
HAGSTR0M, Realtor
,900 W. Huron	? _ I
ORUm	gVtt. FB 4
Cregtbroak MODEL OPEN!;
DAILY 12-8
3-bedroorn,BfamMv° room and Mar garage, priced at only $17,990 plus tot. Located In new sub with paved streets, curb, gutter, iMawalks and city water. .Drive out MS9 to Crescent' Lake Road, turn right to Crestbrook Street and model.
OON
GIROUX
1 to 8 p. at 874-si:
ir call DIcE Stiar
1)38 or ’5447773,
BEATS RENTINGI
BLOOMFIELD HILLS 3 bedrooms brick ranch. Immediate possession, 134400. FE ASMS.	\
BRANDON V BEDROOM ranch with fireplace, rough sawn cedar exterior, 100X120 ft. Privileged on Parry Lake, 18,00* full price.
GREEN ACRES
1489 S. Leaser Rd.	MY 3-8382
BEAUTY RITE HOMES
LAKE ANGELUS LAKE VIEW ESTATES
Now starting several new homes In . this picturesque community of fine homes. Located ana mile north of Walton on Cllntonvltto Rd., turn right on Costa Mesa.
Sunday, Tto 8 p.m. or by awpolmment. Call Dick Stiar at 8743138 or 9447773 for complete Information.
___________ ... baths, leml ly
kitchen with fireplace, S car attached garage, many extras, >19400. By ownor, 3»4I13.
BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS
3 Bedroom Erick Ranch. IV* baths, large family room, with door to ’ | '"ir oarage, yard.
BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP LdvBLY
3 bedroom ranch an IK ------
Large country kitchen with IPMRI ivy bathe, utility room, 2 car attach. garage, all hew carpeting, $19,080 mortgage, 834,900.. Owner
BRAND NEW 4 bedroom split If Immediate occupancy, only 819, Agant, 3»4813 or 38^****
By OWNER: 3 bedroom ranch, N. Pontlato, on large comar tot, tonc< yard, full tile baaamant, S1*.3D 391-3334.
BY OWNER: 8 raoma, T car uraga, Drayton Woods. I^^maf^
-	----1— CUSTOM
BY OWNER.
room, * Formica ceramic
ment garage, fully

.anshopping w.
4809 for. Mpohttmanf.
hydronlc „ to acre pond, 3 miles from
BY OWNER 7 JtOOM 2 ftory
BRIAN'S
NEED ROOM 5 BEDROOM
Plus lake privileges art offered the older Watortord heme, a so naturae attached garage, nice yard, only S1S,e00 on land can-
Brian Realty Inc. 623-0702
Multiple Listing Service 1904 Date Hwv-. watortord
Beauty Rite Homes
PLEASANT LAKE WOODS
New constructing Sevan beautiful
rsz sr<
Drive out Elizabeth Lakh Rd. to. Severest Drive, turn left. Call Dick Slier at 8743138 or 5449773 for comptofo ’--—
BIRMINGHAM BY OWNER) I room »»«* »»
Ml 8-1M9.	. p
OTY 'QraWtoBOBr'S .ROOM* •"«
v«sw?T
car garage, on Pave water and siwaoe
y/F^.1
HEARTHSIDE REALTY
Large famHy?. ^
Ska this 5 bedroom and dan, colonial, lovely view of Lpen.Xaki. Hugo family room and MWWn combination with fireplace, formal dining room, full taaantaflti attochad car garega, 0» n O r transferred, must sail. $49480.
LAKEFRONT_________
Sharp custom brick, 3 bedroom, 2 Tull $ 2-vy bathe, 2 fireplaces, charming kitchen and dtolni area, with built Ins, wasttar and dryer jn
brick ranch with flr«Ptoe«*. Mj large rooms, portiol basement, I car attached garage, only $28,508.
Haarfhtlda Raatty
3343592	334-3278
HAROLD R. FRANKS, Rtolty BRIGK ON CORNER
Real fine residential ergo ’’HIII.’N’ Dale," blacktop straali, papd Wto privileges. 7 rooms with aH the features nocaaspry tor canyon tool modern living. Attached JMj cp/ garage, waitod L,ke _ schools.— "load rlBrit * 2 7,5 8 8 - Afh
Everett Cummings, Realtor
JSM UNION LAKE ROAD EM 4M8I
Cash For Your Equity
HACKETT
363-6703
ir completely •eting and dn
HOLLAWAX REALTY
SYLVAN MANOR ' . , ■ ^ 2:21 First ottering, S badrapm, brick
Holloway Realty Co;
112 Milford Rd.,	Highland
1-684-2481
tltwoofPLen
SCHUETT EM 3-7188
100 Commerce Rd.— Union Lakl STOP AT OFFICE For largo selection of homos,
HITTER
TRADE - TRADE - W fott Itopt S-level 7 room homo with 2 baths, fireplace, attached, 3 car ggraga, nice lot, toko prlvltogoi. Clarkaton
WILLIAMS LAKE - sharp S reams and bath, attached 1th car Baraga. $12,500, terms.
EARLY AMERICAN
3 BEDROOM BRICK, j Walk-OUl basement. Optional badroomto basement, full ceramic bath, also , Vy beth, bullt-lns, 2 car, attached garage, fireplace. New 18’ concrala drlva, axtoriK raclalmad byjck. cut stone ami vertical paneling, axcallant Waterford I d eat Ion. BUILDER - OWNER. 4734191.
EAST CITY VACANT
n and pood credit will Immediate possesslwi of lorn 3_ badroom homo a on the East aide at Pon-includes alum, atorma and
located tlac. Ii scream only $10,950.
Wily, ElU/TJV. VO»i wvvtiwf —	*?•
Taylor, OR 44308. Eyas. EM 3-
FHA TERMS,-------
with extra lota, Anant, 3834813 or
FIRST IN VALUES
RENTING
$78 Mo.
Excluding Mxas and Inturanco ONLY 1
$10 Deposit
WITH APPLICATION 4PEbRpW'H0ME '
GAS HEAT
LARGE DINING AREA_
WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS ' FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES-
OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. or coma to Saw. Kennett Near Baldwin
REAL VALUE REALTY L
For Immediate Action Call
-FE--S4676^~-642^22S_.
On 8lx tokdk. 8 room
GAYLORD
LAKE ORION. I room boveo, 1th baths, tunraom. Many nice features. Spacious, living. ClMO to schools, Wt#~pn>6*ew> 119,750. Terms. Coll MY 3-2131. FE 1-9893.
OXFORD AREA privileges. On brick ranch, fireplace, tova.,
r^^Mr^Ewir
OAKWOOD ROAD. 18 rolling acres. —-ir horses. On pavement
GAYLORD INC.
2 W. Flint St., Lake Oj MY 2-2131	t
5T&
bedrjWtth
kargi bungalow, htafodp oduL ownar. Fb »w—.
IMLAY CITY - t E E.D.R«fBTjC
IVAN W.
SCHRAM
BOYS DELIGHT
blocks trom^Bws Ctob,^
VA ar FHA with
List With SCHRAM And Call th« Von *
S&gHyaiElss?
IRWIN
north end
2 Badroom Bungalow With carpeted
bjnaflon!°ha» atomlTOm'^ISinfl.^Sii FHA terms.
DUPLEX
Thera are two 3, b ad r 0 am
multiple listing
299 W. Walton	PB >788$
LARGE 2JN3SS..L^M^ ln
ry, large I
8, 3347502.
LAZENBY
NEW LISTING ' J
You must sea, this oxcolton* *-“n homo. $ rooms wlltl 9UB it, 2 ear garage, a tovaly tot. Nice size living room, ning roam, torge weary with toads of a#Mrds.
Priced to sail
R0YCE LAZENBY, Rtaltor
open dally 9-S, Sun. 1-3.. 4828 W. Walton — OR 84301 >
Sole Houses
49 Sale Hesses
COMMERCE AREA
only s».9il PHA forttoL .J 1_
cosway real State 681-0760
SIT* Orchard LtL^ (AI
“ESTABLISHED 1930"
t pressure at <Jty traNIc, * ^ObRurbanl 9" *“*
to t EII.M.
r$7,ss&Ii
ESCAPE) Pram and abundant tai
X^eTS1
with panoramiv. r walkout basement and dropped by cutting off
UNION-OXBOW LAKE.AREA	,
aSIstTng cantiwct el SM a month.
A GOOD START Is the most Important factor In any ract. betterriartT|n Ufa, could ttwr. b. than to buyo
iss-Axm arirAs Swws? v
$18,98$ or discount for co»h.	1
2536 Dixie Hwy.-Multipia Listing ill
______________________ viBKm
-JMl
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY*, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
LAKE LIVING
Huntoon Shorn Quod level
SjiPt5irtlACt TERMS i R S VACANT
Atonslram iWw ranch, war M Won. AjintnunTTs. paymar-
CALL
YORK
REAL ESTATE
WE BUY	WE TRADE
FE 8-7176	OR 4-0363
1702 S. Telegraph 4713 Dixi# Hwy.
LAKE PRIVILEGES
jmhi, largi fanctd lot. IV, car garage. A-1 condition, Drayton Plain” *11,500. erokar, 5*54»14.
modeT
OPEN DAILY 9-v SUNDAY 2-8 P.M.
(k^&aganco w 11 ho u t
nriVu
That's why you can still havaih raw homo of your drranw. bull.t i your lot lor only *17,400. Why dor you bring your family oyar to I apocf our modtl at iM> N> C« Lakt Road today. Salts
MODEL
HOME
OPEN SAT., SUN.MON. 1-5 ANYTIME BY APPT.
1 bedroom brick trMtval with I ( attached garage, 1V4 baths, tint ad family (Hitt. Modal located Williams Lake Rd., 1 block no of Union Lake Village.
Also We Build
I 'JbMlranm Iri-lovol with al aiding, I Macar garage.
I bedroom contemporary rain.
1% baths. I car garaga m
.4 tSfoom' colonial With IV> —
family room, formal and Informal dining arras. Baaamant, t car
tTuo-SUpcraot
PONTIAC
— ntea tat — vacant — ■MMR
' uS kg aSjtir n’or,BiB* — *°r
PRfiSTON~
BILT-HOMES AND REALTY
____________aieettr
Rochester - suburban
SPACIOUS 7 room (inch, Ba moot, Ito baths, fireplace, ai (ItO. IU.900. NIX REALTOR ( oai. 0s —
Sale Hetteet
4f Sale Hetteet
•NCtlltfit condition.
—itr lotf dost to
buy tt $14,500, ISM $ ORION, 305' lakt fi
RHODES :
OXFORD, largo 5 bedroom homo in —Nice largs
MT A
hnfifogo. VS baths,
... __________ nail fO Wall
cargating throughout, lull basement. all Mat, I car garaga, scenic aacludtd area, on Tn-dlanwood Lake. Only *5,500.
A. J. RHODES, REALTOR
E 0-2306 251 W. Walton FE Ml MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE
of your proton! home it fit. a new one this
Tt HAYDEN, Realtor
163-6604	10735 Highland Rd. (M4?)
V* mils woof of Oxbow Lake
Nelson Building Co.
New 3-bedroom models, IV, baths. MBOmanta, Tharmo-panas, alarm abort, guitars, wall paper. Comer Midwood and Ceoiy Uu, Rd., M ml., watt of Union Lako village. (Mil dupllcato. Lake front morals
SUBURBAN LIVING, 3 bedroom home, on largo wall plants-fruit treat, barrltA gropes, jjkmty of —— *—
OR 3-8191
ROYAL OAK AREA
13 Mile and Campbell ,
3-	bed room brick, lvraterobome, good 1 randtttaiir; Irararri kitchen, wall landscaped, faneatf *“**• yard.
ORCHARD LAKE Brand New
4-	badroom Capo Cod, brick, completed within 30 Nw. TM* features waik-in ctotifwialr^ large bedrooms, formal dint roam, plus taMu apace In tar kitchen with bullt-lns, m com it baths. Insulated- gloss windows, car gar ago- Buy new and ha choice of colors:
, COSWAY REAL ESTATE 681-0760
332* Orchard U.
(At Cammarca Rd.)
NEWLYWEDS - RETIREES small 5 room home, Aubu Heights area. Largo lot. ISSOO.
TOM
■ REAOAN
— I. Opdyko
WARDEN
WEST SIDE
A gracious largo I roam home — »Iroquois	u“
rinplacQ,
VOTER'S LAKE
privileges - attractive split
Immediate Possession FHA Terms
3 Bedroom horn* on largo corner
lages
I rick wl
rooms and bath, 1 bedrooms, 18,750 with *750 down and balsnco at 1*0 par month. Walking distance to Banaral Motors Truck Plant.
KENNETH O. HEMPSTEAD -	REALTOR
’ _ fe aasra its Elizabeth; lake rd.
Sylvan Lake Privila]
Lovely 2 Bedroom ~ 13 formal dining mom, bawmant, T car t
Lower Straits Lake Privileges
3 Bedroom Ranch, gas hoot, __,
remolded 25 It. kitchen, 3 car garage, extra large lot. Otr
COSWAY REAL ESTATE 681-0760
337? Orchard Lk.
. (At Cammarca Rd.)
WALTER'S LAKE
.....Iving area, 0 u t a t a n
fireplace, studio cofttno, lichen, plus 3 bsdroom* aths, exterior oil radwooi
WELL MAINTAINED HOME
In Drydan, Michigan, 2 story, train on lama lot, lido of school, not champion, trailer eo., f bedroor.. (town; 2 up, with posalbla third, full bapamant, forced air boat, inclosed gerahj' Ito car garaga, gardan space,
'c°A. WEBSTER, Realtor
Oakland »»5	MY 2-3271
SUPERBLY MAINTAINED
3 bodroem ranch ‘
H Ilia, laaeWtu— wooded tot. Many additional I features. *41,500.	'
BLOOMFIELD HILLS
-3 bedroom 2-baih.trUavaL-patio j .and porch, treed and tenced yard. *34,500.
; NOTHING DOWN Gl ■SNYDER,
S H7« sxiKINNEY & f
* WRIGHT REALTY
MfOabtendAva.	FI
- NEW HOMES AVAILABLE NOW
PCSIONBD FOR HAFPY
house raid* no work, SIMMS v jii ri _	« i
Wrtna. fraM-,,3*^*1* *r butST- Y OPJC S CPOClCd
of the Week
49 Sale Hauses,
STOUTS
Best Buys Today
AVON RANCH-
1165 aluminum sided ranch homo containing 3 bedrooms which >•
i"hrou$«tet area? Now'
J«??H,SC,,rP,"Bfl ^ ** GOING TO RETIRE?—
Compact ranch ' gtyto homa located off Joalyn north of Walton Btvd, Includes 3 ro — Me tdm MHO' part batam Gas heat and hot wator. i garaga. 11* x 1st tot, 1775* < (arms.
ENJOY SUMMER LIVING?
Attractive 3 bedroom brick ranch home with oustandlng finished lower tovaL J jff-rap I a c a a . Streamlined kltchan and bullt-lns.
2to baths. Attached | car garage-12 x U sun deck plus aorch. Blg shaded lot overlooking Oakland Lake prlvltogra.
WARREN STOUT, REALTOR
553 N. Opdyfce Rd. FE SdlM
VON
49 Sole Hausas
ARRO

la yaur family gattfig 4 "• vour house girt*'■
sflmt
large family home
wrga baargnma. CarpNad It n and dining room, ivy fi _ i. baaamant wMt recreation n. Gas hoot. Carefree ntnurn siding. 2 ckr garaga. On . watoftq* sawar. wpnvanlant t side location. Trams.
LAND CONTRACT TERMS Ijngriow ---1^	1“■
on | acre. '
to SB
PHONE: 682-2211 mls «lftMlM>gEJte,h,i
GILES
49 Salt Hemes
49 Sale Houses
Lange Realty & Building Co.
' White Lake ^noar Town HNj. MuataTkoMS with tfHMHO yard, taNNaK, Pands. Flower Bad. Stone wen throughout area, outdoor tog at Its best, nijr
‘ Wm mbw ’fSfS
Lakaarra — M
Ssn~~
CLARK
S)J00 DOWN: 5-room brick terrace, claan and sltara, living room, dining room and •wntoy. carpeted.
»**«! 'SKSiJB'lSS?
tiled
AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR
WIST SIDE I UNIT INCOME In axcsllent repair. (Town twUyres_|lv.
AVON TOWNSHIF: G.l. SPECIAL:
------51*- with walkout base
nice separate dlnlrn
.1 rar
rage, largo lot with beautiful jpto trees and ibmd fruit, trraa. good location, ImjIMSJMLn $12,500. Nothing Dawn lust Closing Cggta. ,
ART LANGE —s	_____
363-2514 ROYER
49 Sele Heueet
MILLER
SMITH
VERY NICE 2-BEDROOM
large mama. Hardwood floors,
hrat, new ra* water hrator, near fisher body. Wt ar# on * paved .atraat, toegtod In oloasod to ottor this axtramely Wolton Baldwin arra, prK*d	—•- -- -
only SI2JSS.
INVESTORS HARKEN
hwri iwy gead incomn prg
ught up to city cadi, S units, 3 M, downstairs apartmant noted. $105 par weak Incoma.
COMMERCIAL PROPERTY
EAST OF PONTIAC, RIGHT
NiXT TO. 1-75 kjptwny,Nto--
potantlal, lot slzo u/x
JUST RIGHTI
Claude McGrader Realtor
221 Baldwin Avo.	FE 545175
Multiple Listing Service	“
Gas heat. Only SI*,
EXTRA SPECI AL I
If yog want to ,ewn s charming
You'll havo
. _________ HI lovely cer-
n ice kltchan with electric
plenty of ner W. t
bulltlns •___ — —
Cozy family room and attached garaga make this homa complole. Call today and let us show It to
OXFORD OFFICE
Around Oakland Lakt *
l condition. Cleat to ochrals . -'-d-'iTtoiiM!- gw Inside and out: las
marwHh "v,r,d
^cV ITNowlyA d^ro'Id
and Immacuiaft- S rooms, iw now baths with vanities. Large remodeled kltchan. fanral dining room, lowly T	with fireplace.
I. See this first
carpeted living room 1 Full bsmt., steam has then gulf looking. *15,
FE 2-0262
FHA.
(I. FHA or VA. SIMM
leisure hours at hornet Call us today for details dn haw this "— | can b* yours.
INVEST IN THIS LAWOE tofamlly Income homa mar city acbeelt and shopping. TIN mroparty It zoned commercial. Sells fir reaao -' land contract terms. *13.750.
rotrremsni property. Locaira -fir
Oxford arra — this prorartyls doie to everything. Bladctopj
iKAMPSEN
I OXBOW LAKE FRONT
This IVi Story bungalow can;
1 makt lako Uvlna aver se enjoyable. it's aluminum sided, has ■ 1 Vi baths, a wilk-Wt basement ai wllh recreation roam and a larga « boat wall. Many axtroi Including dishwasher, bullt-ln oven era H range, 3 a— —* “
JOHNSON
ARE YOU A HANDY MAN?
dellgrtV on ^hlo** extra ? lama IS bedroom home with basement and gs s furnace. JjMMl fitouad and scraaned-ln front „|M, .Lake prlvltogra gn Elizabeth Lika. Needs cloan-uo and dacaratlnn, full price only **,550 with SIM* Wain. Balance on land centred.
NORTH SIDE
Excaptlanally well-kept ranch type homo, Um ,i Qv]ng wm . with carpeting, fikidrto_ twKj twd beautifully landacatUM-
Afigw-BroUfttr twiniiiiiiMlwal Ttaa home must ba seen to be. ap-preclated. Will ooll on land contract. After * call Carroll BraM, FE 4-22(6.
JOHNSON
1706 S. Talagraah	FE 44BSS
O'NEIL
why not Trade?
WHAT A VIEW I
Thro* levels, t\ three t full _ Ceramic —-hs, thrda oil tour Mraonjt, 2300
!LYlQS^fn
irra of
so boa:___
* your*
Nail u
indnaralor, v
•TJii
t be seen
pr*cTatidv"'Ffic*d righ? h*r 092,500, with almoat Immadl
FE 5-8183! Wideman
NEAR GENERAL HOSPITAL i * LAKE PRIVILEGES
Four full bedrooms! nice living I Attractive ranch home, carpeted roern^ family dining-room, full|room,_ 3 bedrooms, family
simp. Septic system only 3 y Id. Plenty of dOett space. I wsemont. lVi cor sttoched garage.
Aay be purchased FHA. Aik for as e. ceil today.	OAKLAND UNIV. AREA
ROYER REALTY, INC. 1	- -
Lauinger
. FHA 1
dishwasher. (All this Mr 136,800). Situated approximately on* milt north of Oakland University on -one acre slid. You can trada-
L tor, call O'Nalf today. TrH»m| only ^ one year aid ovorlooklng Wdltya Lake. Carpeting throjigmut, hill brick wan tlroplaca, Intarcdm system. MorbU sills, tralsd, glass windows, disposal, lights vta fin dosats plus many extras. Also 2W cay garage with doors on both ands. 134.000.	No, 1S-1S
THE ULTIMATE IN LAKE LIVING
That's what this nearly naw thrra
brick r
VON REALTY
REALTOR
1401 W
6>2-5*02, If busy aStoSSt
EASTHAM
WALK TO WORK
Flshar Body and Pentiac A Employes — Get It While, IF* hi
t h rat
oeargom ranen noma. Nice
Mncsd rrar yard,	h—*------
floor, tile bath, beautiful recreation room with b_.. __ bait, raw hot watgr heater. Vp-
NORTH EAST
Neat two Mi part baaamant ' bath, good local
bedrooms; hardwood

. .... --is.iroom, patk). 2 oar attached garage.	MIIDON WOODS
waded It about *500.00 to|E*terlw_.l«rnlnum sldad. Large IS.	Vl^l.-wlde »o ft. | OTTER LAKE
tWrtSSlPRICE REDUCTION
---- ....— i	Th}( spacious, sprawling ten
room brick saml-vllla Is snuatad on a large canal lot to Otter Lakt. The four bedrooms are extra Urge. Features pro many, such as —- three baths, two fireplaces, family and recreation room with an elaborate cocktail tor, two ear attached , parage and o 25 ft. boat house; Ttaa a end septic system. The • bfintranafarre-* —* icrlficing at only 3 a price way below t roductlon costs.
! CALL TOKAY.
',! w'mT~tlr»pi*co?”Cirptited
gsss ««„?, W
wardrobe; ctorat, carntad living barbecue. Full price *34,700. Ban room and dining room, large fiiciura terms, windows, spec loos kitchen with built-
baths, double verity. Walkout "base2 3-BEDROOM BRICK
morn, large rocreafton room. 75x2451 on 71 ft. wstortronl. Full walk-m ft. lot. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION baMmont. Large spec•*»*'« Hvin CALL FOR APPOINTMENT.	room wllii flrwlact. 3
' Full bath up. SnowtT down.
CITY OF SYLVAN LAKE “	A„.
CHOICE BUILDING LOT. good	HIGHLAND ARcA
tendsenw.	I vbndroom brick and aluminum, II
---- -‘0. Largo family kltchan. I A VC ANGELUS
land contract, S3»TOO down. , .	,“rV,7 rbt ,
owner has b
YORK
j by Dave Swan.
HOW WOULD YOU LIKE
living rpom, dining r
i Harrington Hills. It* Evas. Call Mr. cattail FE 2-7273.
Nicholit & Horgor Co.
for o 163Vi W. Huron St.	FE 5-AII3
I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR !
412 W. HURON St.	334-4S26
EVE. CALL	332-4470
BENNETT L&
dacoratad. Owners agent
I FRANKLIN VILLAGE
SYLVAN LAKE
Sam Warwick has 3 tout**
1775 Warwick, 2 bedroom, good un HH|I finished attic, carport, carpet ■ In o homo! ftt,SSto	.
builders. 1780 Warwick. I bedroom brick: i carport, BlffiSB, FRUSHOUR-ANGELL	' 1432 GlenwoodT 2 bedroom frame,
MASON CONS'T. CO. i fireplace, raw bathroom, now root HOMES BY BOOTH, INC.	Ideal Mr retirement, tl5,500 oi
ROYER
HOLLY OFFICE
'BUD"
ANNETT' m
yrar sM. Largo
Ml ■ "^^'mbrtgig*|
costs.
LAKE PRIVILEGE
2 passible 3-bedroom. Garage. On ‘1 landscaped lot. Stone's lakt. Priced ot *15,700.
! LAKEVIEW ESTATES
the location for this Kampsen ut> tu/o year ok! f“,u it featurat
id. This s blade
HONEYMOON SPECIAL !
ledrooms. nice location, lake DRAYTON PLAINS
tihoen K?1,.. ItoS'Luhom*' ""V D*"«Y	1 bedroom ranch	home
*10,700. Lat us show you,	only to	years old with 2 cor #t-
.4a..te4..atow	tacnad	garaga* 2 Mg lota*	shada
S0UTHSIDE	trees,	cyclone fencing,	and
L«* Ja»:	ri!K2Lilvlnsl IfM, & WLiWiffc
room* kitchen, P ____
ucuiwiiia, ggm EffMl full bOSOmant*	Prlrmei
ontlroly raw root ■_ Priced at *7,500.	, NSMPBSffra* lt'tS?yl
_________________ ■ and the
artae. Well worth your lima to visit these models « WESTRlDOE OF PSUPWO, left off the Dixie
right off CUntonvIJU Rd. onk Metso, and FOX BAY, flu~. ...
dltcavar how wall thay'rg built and aaay to maintain. You'll to proud ra punch to own ora. CPU your 0'f“” REALTY roprosontitlvo today.
O'NEIL REALTY INC.
*520 Pontiac L*ku rd, OR 4 SLUE*
(SH714
___ ... .............. -**n*r, *-
year brick, bi-level, t aero lot on hill. 4-badroom, lot* of extras. Professional landscaping. Im-mediate poosostlon. Good buy ot SSSfiSto Ml 6-F107.____________
TUCKER REALTY CO.
70* Pontiac state Batik - -	334.1S45
UNION LAKE PRIVILEGES,
... heat, I------1
3124713
Gay 90's Dream
4 bedroom, 3 story, stone dream that has Man changed vary since It was built. Modor- ’ kitchen, new gas —
—.—
beautiful
1 4-BEDROOM < ko prlvllot |H
lonlal. Uni , 363-0503
,__aluminum
blacktop atroots, ready to move
(Wing, large Formica cob....
In, only *27,750.	...
STATTWIDE REAL ESTATE
*71-2000	Ml I. Lapeer EG.
VACANT
;\M'*KLAr»2b--BPH0NE: 623-8204
and dining arra, os* hast. Hally Branch _-_Holly
12‘xlS' marble fixtures, MPHII _xir iivinr —,— 12'x17' dining room; 7' colli
I---oak and cl_________________ ,
17'x32' unfinished 3rd • largo acraamd In ifiroplacaa, full finished WHRi. all on a beautiful l»r°» tot, only 027,700.____________.1
Reduced For Quick Sale
4 bedroom Capo Cod on 5 acres, between Holly and Grand Blanr Large living room with flroplaci full basement, with -roc. -~roon utility room on tst floor, also I0‘x34'pool. It was $30,400.
WE BUILD - TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC.
ympriP
Bill EasTham, Realtor
20 HlghMnd Rd. (M-S7) MLS, WATERFORD PLAZA
674-3126
■Ion. Priced at
WEST SIDE
Desirable brick ranch Item to schools and (hopping, si span condition and feotu
COZY BUNGALOW
pin, beautiful flowers B shrubs, 2 bedrooms, family style kltchan. Garage workshop. T*rms.
157 ACRES — CLARKSTON AREA
HvSSS o
3 mllfi off-jV5.Y
Ing 2 2nd
KINZLER |
___ FAMILY ROOM j
in this all rad brick ranch beauty built In 1767 and bettor than new. ! Over 1500 square toot end neighborhood i' ‘	'	‘
Has 3 b J-
nee B private both, full rant, gas hoot, aii ants, d B showing
Ice. Exc. take privilege
BUILDING LOTS
We have vacant lot — . privileged —-	-*—
Starting fr
rancher, bedrooms,
garaga, Ai___
plastered waits, . dows. oven, rang* a,™ ... fashionable subdivision h top streets,	community	w,
+	and recently	developed	bei
Quality constructed and	nrl
below the duplication price only S3S.700.	WE WILL	TAKE
YOUR PRESENT HOME IN i	TRADE;
OUR GUARANTEED
ZERO DOWN
To Vets. 4 bedrooms. Full basement. 2 car garaga. Naar Moll.
Price *16,300.
FHA-VA
Wide brick ranch, 3 bedrooms, 2 IUII baths,- family room with
flrdpiace. Exc. Jsks privileges.	||||
*	MRM‘HOMEOWNER WITHOUTJT
i	— YOU MUST SELL BEFORE	YOU
wflOL.	BUY - OR BUY BEFORE	YOU
il 500	I SELL - CALL RIGHT NOW. TO
Dim nikir	trade the home you	own
BUILDING	I for the home you want;
3 bedrooms. Full bisoment. 2.. car tor Bob Harroll. Oltte Howard, attached garaga. Excellent lake Kerr, Bill Mountain, Elllan Mover, privileges. Sea our model.	Elaine Smith," Thurm Witt,
---- ------------ IBOgart, Dave Bradler *"*• '
Emery Butler, Donna
1531 Williams Li
d, at M-57
Hall.
> * y**r. $i7,ooo.
CHEROKEBtttLLS
carptiing, custom
is. modti . Plus
Priced St *27,900.00
NICHOUE-HUDSON -----Associates, Inc.-----
49 University Drive
FE 5-1201,
after 6 p.m. FE 4-8773
old. LR, ■ room with fireplace, i \ kitchtn. l’/a baths, gas
“KEATING |r TFD'St
f,^121064 W. 11 Mile	BlrmUjham; X I > 1'
Trading
rlviltgs* Eves, end Sun. *51-
^ROYER
Custom built n
tile both, targe u homo Is In A-l stwpa. ■„ *12.950. Only *500 rnovn Cell
Val-U-Way
Sale Heines
49 Sale Houses
-DON'T LOOK TWICE
•MHtRE WON'T BE TIMEI Thts Btodroom bungalow In town his art as SiWL down- plus oo*ta.' ■	■.m > ■;	■ ■"**•
NORTH END
WVI YEARS OL
tost, aluminum s~«-,«	—
room with bullt-ln bar, refrlgarstor, piano and record | Sltusted on a large lot (itth plenty of elbow room and All this tor a total price ot *16,750. on FHA term*.
THIS HOME SAYS
t'COMB IK" and you’ll to glad you did whan ybu see it 3 bad--3a |(y baths, full braamant, carpeting, drapes and nlcaly isnd-WM.lMtiM to rail it owy SIMBto on fak ttrms -	payment and IMMEDIATE POSSESSION.
OWNERS GOING WEST
in on* m wirarwi mow
SOMETHING NICE
COMFORTABLE AMt SHARF brldt ranehar In Watartord Two. Full .-fiMmSi, nwraat dRWffmbin. carpatlng. 2 flrepisces, and attached garaga. Nltoty tandteapad.. yard with trots and flewar tods tor pkiasant outdoor summer Ivina. An excellent vatu* *• *21.790. with
■TRADING
"the BATEMAN WAY ottows 1 — dpi as toot with oui
?«a?t

NEW MODELS
ICHBR: 3 bedrooms, lib baths, custom-built klteton, full bpao-P RRL	14 -w. =	*“ ~-
p.m. end other tl
US*
ar attaduid gerege-O^uT oil "tab addttionol it you mid to e RAPAPORT-BUILT HOME
________aRr Voortwla Rd. OPEN BAT £ BUN. 1
AlLY 60 p.m.
INDEPENDENCE
TOWNSHIP — 3 BEDROOM RANCH, full basement, iv> bath, attached 2 car garage - •	" capad left.
EAST PONTIAC
7 ROOMS, 4 BEDROOMS, full basement, h o-r d w o o d floors, plastered wall, alum., tmrfnt and screens. Gl-zero down. —FHA *400 down plus closing coats.
DRAYTON PLAINS
AREA *-	3 BEDROOM
RANCH on Y*„ aero, nlcaly - tandteapad, block Top street,
‘ In excellent neighborhood.
-GROSS1
REALTY
WE HAVE AAORTGAGE , MONEY
6744105
HALL
CLARKSTON AREA -
if....
bath
m gown- uni living room with open stairway. Total pries only *17.250 With 10 pet. down, coll “ polntmsnt.
ceramic his, nwuuiw wom kitchen with ptaftty <>t rating area, Thermo windows throughout. Offered ot only *17,850 with io pet. ‘ ■ “
NEW 3 BEDROOM -homes with lull bora
bath, hot wator t_____
kltchan. Prices started .........
on your Idt or $17,300 on our lot with to pet down, coir — *—

settle estate. FHA S650 down Plui costs or casta only to 01 vstaron,
DIXIE HWY.
In Drayton Plains, commsrcisl siti 60 x 540, 3-todroem modern home and a 2-car garage. Built now or later on tha front 1S0T, Ideal spot tor used furniture, car salts, a~ tractor, ate; A reel good vestment at *10,700.
JOHN KINZLER, Realtor
521? Dixit Hwy.	623-0335
Across from Packers Store Multiple Listing Service Open 5:300:30
Mattingly
- TOR THE TOtJNGTrT HEART
This dellghlful 2 story a full raramant. 3 bedrooms,
---—ray ..
tented
Heights arae. '"prlCfS *15,700 this hotm la available to a qualified Gl.
YOU WERE SMART TO WAIT
-Unttt-wi _	_
LET'S TRADE
B. HALL REALTY. REALTOR 6567 Dixie Hwy. *25-4116 Oran dolly M,.Sst. 7-4
Val-U-Way
NORTH SIDE
Flshar Mr- Lika raw wall to Wall carpeting, gas hrat, sttorma and serrans, fenced yard. Frtaad 01 only BtSJW. ’
« *Extr«, carpeting «r" the good cm ♦(
*S0f
YOU GAIN
Plenty by owning this 3 tod room ranch located m Pontiac Twp. Bedrooms are spacious and features Include a 2 car garaga, new carpatlng, drapes, raw kltchan cabinets and counter tops, an 1X16' Insulated workshop and a 8x10' storago shad. Price at S1MS0.
DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY
OFFICE	_	MODE	l
682-7000	OR	4-3568
JACK
ERUSHOUR.
REALTOR WE TRADE
BEGINNERS
CALL-fOOAY an thtajor^ nlto
$600
axtra claan.
and fawcad yard, locsted on MMk top atroaf; with city water and sawar. Full prira BIMBO Gl fHA'terms,
CUTE-N-COZY
NESTLED IN popular Elfzabtth - •*	TOfc.P-**1
hasemant, panata. .
, raw coTnafb«B i
Syj
i-'rL
front poron, gorogi I and camimBttfu . 017,7*1. LET'S TRA
MLS

ME WB HAVE FOR SALE
Vol-UMfoy Rfolty and
B2at?c«‘	{674-6819	674-2245
« 4-3531	5730 WILLIAMS LAKE RD.
I OoktondJkva,	, Opoa»tafi ‘	,, , ■ /
OXFORD OFFICE
NOTHING DOWN
Just closing costs will movs You Into this slurp 3-bedroom rancher wim <ull basement, tta baths, ax-trlm and brick. Basement
i WE - WILL TRADE
I REALTORS 28 E. Huron St.
i Office Open Evenings A Sunday 1-4
338-0466
Extra latgt kltchan. Natural ga*. City water and rawer. Longfellow grade school
School -- fa
*16,700 .... today tor ai ' fc. - ...,	,
2 Family—S. Marshall
FHA terms Will allow you to lx tha proud owners of this lira I story family Income. Extra largi rooms throughout. Property In ax cellent condition. Liya In orn
.......MM
W.	rararas w. tOWfl. GlVQ
i$iv8 call — «tk for. 3f5 E. _ >
■TOYERMMrnr^iNc. PHONE: 628-2548
Oxford Ottlea	*» S. Lapaqr
Uv*
MRHHIaH ...jR*.
tor fh* property- *12,700
IRWIN
W. IROQUOIS:
This two story hems , has a living room with ttroptsea. alas dining room, klKhtn .... braakfast arra. 3 bedrooms and fun hath up. Gas heat.i r for quick salt.
SYLVAN VILLAGE*
Trl-ltval: Kltchan with butlt-lns. Spacious rlcMy carpeted living room, and dining area, with a door wall leading to, a. patio.
tedroom), .Wood	b u r h I n o
fireplace |n the paneled tamtfy
----- Two ear garaga It ah
I jraata trwa. Tftar'
BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS
313 Watt HuTOn — Since 1*25 FE 5-746* alter s p.m. FE 5-11*3
"STRUBLE
BRICK RANCHER
In t fine Wstortord location. This .roomy i Mira—i	—-
carpeted living r room, lovely Tdti
a pavaid *straa*L mna nus ar “““
“-■» i Rd.
IMMEDIATE POSSESSION
2 bedrooms	,
room,	«
Otmfir tor shopping *15*00 — 7*
bath, plenty ot closets. Large 15' kltchan wllh bullt-lns. aluminum siding and 2-car garage, aalftng an aTjlhnr lot.; Vos, », has taka privileges. Priced at 122.500. Call tor ah ape ....... ‘
REALTOR '	_ ML*
5725 Highland Rd, (M-57)
/ Naxt to Franks Nurssry
674-3175
____ in 1765. Exceltant condition.
Located on 6 acres. Picnic area. New barn built In Jura I960 Thermopane windows all Around Unusually larga spaces. Balcon) sleeping area oft' cathedral call Ingad living roont. New carpets and drapes. Pecan pansling needs no upkrap. Slone bartocua. Fenced In corral, allowed to keep 2 horses. A marvelous buy at *42.000. Cash to moirtgag*. by
Brown
NEAR FISHER BODY — BMUtlfl aluminum sldad, full basement, .
---priced at *14,700. 0200.00
s closing. F.H.A. tt'—|
WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT - * down On land contract. 40 frontaga, 220 fast deep all w —	*	-------, Stall II
*omr
’ heavy beam galling and natural fireplace, 3 badraams, full mant. 2-car garage, q materials throughout, if ya thinking ot building.' bra MIRV homa tor Ideas amt comparison. Open dally by sppalntiment and every Sunday from 2 p.m. '
P.m. Located In iilMWttl *_____
^Artesian oft Cooley Laka
,	■. .tt-t-- 98iRn,,^ —3-™,..-.vErffiszsi. .won. Land 'controet ■ terms. Could
^but not rezonad. All a.pari.ofjtha existing Tand^ontract at 4
DRAYTON PLAINS $18,500
Road.
BUILDING SITES - Lika front tots — wooded lots — exclusive subdivisions. Priced from *1*00.00 to *7,S0O.W — acreaga 2 to ‘ acre parcels.
LES BROWN BUILDERS & REALTORS
590 ELIZABETH UkKE ROAD ' (Across from th* Pontiac Mstl)
AVON
DREAM HOUSE!
Her* It a aherpl Brick ranch stylt home with loads at extras. Larra living ream, overbooking 75 ft. an? excluslv# Loan Lake, modern kltchan with bullt-ins. 3 lovely bairoam* to suit yaur testa, it* baths, f I r ap I a c a , walkout basement for yaur con-vtntancb, you'll lava this oral "Quick Possession", Terms and discount for cash.
BUNGALOW
Newly decorated
bungalow.
ttoo* JusT *T4,70o""fHA 'terms’ *2,000 movse you In.
LAKE FRONT
2-story colonial, 7 roams, 4 bedrooms, largo carpeted living mam with tlroplaca, formal dto-ina room. 2 full baths, —-alls, gat h RMPKi
attjS
-iproa « wad cj
(all carpeting,
■ _.	Traih tram' »
carpeting, lovely kitchen _ :tSui~9r w_-,i.i tactod garage, n lot, just SIMM.
AVON REALTY
excLuttvc sals* of
WBtNBWbMW HOMRO OL l-om? 3520755	6744)474
A Wonderful Investment
Rscraatlon arts, traval trail., campait* bn almost private lakt. Approximately 12 miles from Flint. On* 2 room cottage, not mrJ— two 3 bedroom mobile homos IVi baths. Elarirlc. itova^mil refrigerators. One service building tor trailer pork with servic* fra 100	trailers	Including	ah«
lavatories, wash bowls disposal sinks. Also pIul—. alloy. 3 cold water tanks of 100,1,10 gsl. each. Two 02 gsl. each hot water tanks. 3500 gal. septic tank for service building. Ora disposal station for sstt cixrainra.JSKw*. A 1500 gal. septic tank. Two. water fmuan.	On*	for pur*	drinking
a*	- tor tank	clranlng.
fountains for	-drinking.
Two wate Electrical
commodah. ...____________________
tabtaa. Ates 27 ranted taMra. Drain
s. » boats. 22
ip lakt oovers tpproxi as. Appro»maMy to d which ft yttsbl*. **- 20- aerra rat brat
dmately 35 ■ (eras of Beautiful been rezonad
acres. Taxas
■ Vaar, No si__._____________.______
Good percolation. OR grovel road (ellad or chlorldid). Beautiful woods. Terrain rolling and level. Doing business. Good Income. Owner wishes to travel. Price *160,000. Slightly flexible.
C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT Davisburg
-313-425-3270 or 6340025
TIMES
WEST SUBURBAN
Neighborhood ottered with thli lovely 4 bedroom bPtoval we havt lust listed near Watartord high school. Living room, dining roam and kltchan all have watt to wall carpeting and abhor , featurat Includt built-in a van and range, drop**, gat hrat, 2 car garaga, screened patio and backyard ,bM grin. Oftorad at only S24.300 end there la tha op-portunity to assume • 5Vi -par rant mortgage. Shown by appointment only sa rati us right ;',.fiW*y- ^
LAND CONTRACT TERMS
across tha road tram Duck Lake. All the furniture plus a dishwasher and garbage disposal go with this and It ran ba yours tor Ulm down. Wt hav* tha kay and can stay tt. Sflyfwna. Make
Excellent Neighborhood
On Ttontiac’s watt sld* Tel-Huron. W* have an brick an a gutof bra lint with tots of mom tor a i
§m
First baseman; car gari with tha
bsdrboms, don or fourth to Up to dwa kitchen, tor family roam. Panafad
range « is *4d*,-_. I land, contract *4,000 dram a
with an city con-2 units are complately and tat third has a
‘rtoarator. In----
stR. Availabt
Times Realty*
K» DIXIE HIGHWAY
irms ton this 3-- otaroom oricx ranch, full ItaAta ment, paved street and drive, hrat. aluminum storms i screens. Walking distance . schools and shopping. Carpet and drapes included. A very attractive homa. Priced today ■» *1'“* First time oftorad.
ANGELUS MEADOWS
pric* of *2M0o for this i 3-Bedroom brick ranch, mP_i*mant, 2 flrapl*MS,-2 full baths, bullt-lns, attachra 2V3 car garage, raved street, excellent loqstton, thermopar'
HORSE LOVERS
4-bedroom colonial horn*., on acres of choice land, full bat mant. 2V3 bath*, 24x24 hors* bar... ------- .----1 and screens, git
2V4 ear “
manr, r aluminui
it or trade at
feat, many »*xtras. . First tlm* of-
tered. Priced 7or.fr“- “
*26,900. Call nowl
INCOME
This lovely 3 to
near Indiinwoou •» »»*•* !«■•** >*< the family who wants comfoi peace and qutet and value. The isJa large wall landsoapad let, S*r atria*. In a vary daslrab area, close to SCROWS SIKT 0110 ping, payed street, assy farms -let's, trade.
NORTH SIDE
A lovely 1 story homs WHh ft basement, large luring	’
alum, skted, rsnesd 1
----- slum waMradl
.... r. Jc* *1-tlm* at
' INCOME PROPERTY
Excellent InvastimM for —™ Incoma. - 2 family with sleeping reams, full basement, goad location; turranlty ranting par weak. FHA aF —
g at *75
terms ar you can fr
WATER WONDERLAND
On White Lake. A lovely beach, targ* - iridW lot. 2"'badraante> brick ranch! beautifully decorated beach house and beat ““
carpet -*M .drapes are ______
Stone tlraplact, larga 10x23' family .room,. 2-car oarage. A vary tovete 'homa. PRICED FOR ''SALE OR TRADE at *UMt. Baa th'-and othars in Thrira gala all hew Val-U-VIttan :
4 WHAT'S YOURS
A 3 bedroom ranch, faintly and basement fralf*fi*Bjthi. .... A 3-bad room mbwl sriln family room tar *17,m plus W7 A 3. bedroom 2-story colonial taffittV . roam -0M:;.lteMfMttl'. tor .MIR plus lot? What's, ywinlf Call us ■raw	fin . era m
IftoairaH liiafy Kraft Mamas, you ran smalt the	““
can feel th* -pibfte' ownership, ydu can
* th* quanty
TH)'S CORNER
t is our endeavor to relate to you raratagMjjAwab
immt ^
r self Real Estate.
if you
subject
Ml RRMH timer will-nanoie tt tor you. It* ratha with movie star vanity In .mbta bath, carpatlng and drapes Included. Don't hesitate to se* this on* today. Priced at 031.700.	No. 10-33
JUST RIGHT FOR A GROWING FAMILY
Brick ranch, thro* ap a clou a
------- carpeted' living room,
—iu> lira* patio __ kltchan ewiy ■ with bullt-ln ttova,
ONLY ONCE IN A BLUE MOONt
DIAL OR 4-2222
This will be the moat Important call
you'll makt tor some year* to--------
‘'-pretentstfva W
■..... . ^rtlcularl on a — -____
listing In Wards Orchard. .Tt'*
Srlcad at SI5,7iM with excel lent nancing aval labia. Ityr
w hurry you 0 the end of
No. 1*44
MODEL A. WESTRlbGE OF WATERFORD, north at Dixie (US-10) to Ora Lady of tha Lakat Church, left on Ladgratona; left on Conn* Mara. _ Qpdn dally 2-S P.M. RANCH MODEL AT MBS n . Cara Laka Road. .
OPEN DAILY IB-7, will dupllcato ah
MODELS *HOWN AT YOUR CON-VENIENCE — CALL TODAY FQR YOUR APPOINTMENT.
RAY O'NEIL REALTY
3520 PONTIAC LAKE ROAD
3 FAMILY APARTMENT IN Pontiac. 2 apis, completely furnished. Total Income par month *350l Price *17:500. FHA farms, (mall
2 BEDROOM ON DOLLAR LK. CONNECTS TO CASS LAKE. GAS HEAT, LAND CONTRACT, S1SS KBNRICK — VACANT.
homa plus In-law or Income apt. extra large 2 car garage. Fruits and gardsn. Near an Dixie Hwy. near 1-75. All for *27,500. Elwood Realty, *81-2410,	‘	■
jljSSLw Bros, saw I333ar *40-77)1 HIGHLXHD, MILFORD, Vi a§C-Watartord tat, *3675. to par rant drateg -SmMM spot. iMraft-__ _lx1a HWy. PH.: 6&
_____58-7711. ■ •
LAKE SHERWOOD, Lot No. lk, “ Tn Lafct. SISA00. S474474.
Bra*, i
mo. DWusiupt sutooiii enurum ei .
i(ig D|xt*, Watartord. Ph. Panftacu
i. .... -	__________
LAKE FRONT HOMES;
Now and Ustd.
J. L. Dally Ce.	EM Ml<4
MPHHI________ _..-lna In kltchan,
craBpHng throughout, IncliidbiB larga family room, also Florida -Tbom-'and-"-*—tmr- gar*ga,*nms furnishings, 70" lot with across to
TOWNSEND LAKE
100 ft. taka frontage. 200 tt. dtap: (6500. 10 rar cant down.
SISL0CK & KENT, INC.
1307 Pontiac state. Bank Bldg.
b-wm	mm*
WALLED LAKE SCHOOL District -axrattant tots, tarn* woods, prlv. beach araa;jprlra from *1775. (20 mo., EleCh Bros. 5660 di»i* uw PH: «9-1333 or 548-7711.
WILLIAMS LAKE. Beautiful double terraced canal tat. E-Z Terms, Bloch Bros., 5660 Dixit Hwy. PH:
423-1333 ra S4BT7II.
ttrair
hunting In' aroto camp! furnishtd - *2,700 - 05001
> VACANT ACRES naar Mancalan many streams and takgs ra art cormr parcel- with traatagit rar tratte. las* than a milt troi blacktop. H woods and to raUfii maadows — *1500 cash. -
MENZIES REAL ESTATE
ffattttehaB,.5
on T)tt9l>M<MEE Dluar ftlradswU
County. 0
653-6640 or 653-6040.
LaH—Acreage
covered, ptoas* phone In WMF a* ACRE LANDSCAPED LOT, 135'
yJSS tTSI*9*-;	<H»p- Raster,
Tidte Corner to your Avon Township, 25 Mila rata Adrastaira, *6.2*0, S7.77S"
“ ACRC "PARCELS. Wobdaft -
corner on Real Estate.
McCullough realty
460 Highland Rd. (MS?)	.. MLS
fi—12
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER &, 1968
M Trawl Trail* rs
LARGE ANTIQUE AUCTION.
Lake M. to RIM Grovo «t Cre»-cent Lake, f block eolith to Savoy; Then right to MW Sovoy. Consisting of anttauefuriwure and glasswara
proprlatraas. Phono Pontlkc I 682-4035. BUd Hlckmott Ganoral Auctlontor, Oxford. 628-2150.
TRIPLE GOING TO FLORIDA
AUCTION
Sat., Sept. 7, 1088. 10 a.m, Sala location 1100 Allah Rd., South nf Fenton E. Woatphal, Mrt. H. Roittavan ana JrSwor. Directions: f mile* wait of US-23, pet off at . £htoa. Rd., end go North
ANTIQUE FURNISHINGS WATCHES-DOLLS—BOOKS STANDARD HOUSEHOLD GOODS
Primitive* and Metals
•'	Glassware and China
Musical Instruments Accordion, Bomar, ladies nro fatalonal IN base. Baritone Sai.. -flat, tanor sax, 2 cornels. York and Martin, Clarinet, B flat. Cornet mute, 1 guitars, Spanish and harmony, 2 violins, Xyierlmba, Deagan 3 octlve, metronone, drum pad and sticks, music stands, batons, sheet and book music, music flash cards.
AUTO
1085 Chevalla, 4 door, six cylinder, stick shift, radio, good rubber. Parkslns Sala Service Auctioneers
PHONE 635 9400
TISK MIttER RO. Swartx Creek
TYLER'5 AUCTION
3805 Highland Rd. (M-30)	673-0534
Plarrts-TrBBS-Shrubi *1 -A
CONTAINER GROWN SHRUBS for fail planting. tvt *- **
Spruce; Taxus: capltata; lunlpers nfltiers; Soma ‘~W
Chuck our dtal on — SWISS COLONY
LUXURY TRAILERS
FRpllC
TRAILERS ANC TRUCK CAMPERS	*
SKAMPER
FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS
13 to 10 ft
n display
, Jacobson Trailer Sales
5m Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-SOtl “ tORfiC COLEMAN
PICK-UF CAMPERS ‘ DRAW-TITE. REESE HITCHES
■ F. R. HOWLAND SALES 3155 Dixie Hwy„ Pontiac, OR 3-1418
LABOR DAY SPECIAL
APACHE MESA equipped with stove.
APACHE FALCON SPECIAL
m i i	Mu»ufcyd»« 95
AUTUMN SAUEIII Our 108*'i ere now earning Hit wa Mill have a tow t*era toft at tarrlflc savings. In addition to Una display pf IN* Baron, Stotosman, Academy, Ritl-Creft, Sprlngbrook Mobile Hemet. - COUNTRYSIDE LIVING 10*4 Oakland 334-150*	DUCATTI 128 CC. *140. Runs pood. EM 3,042). ' . ' • .
	HONDA SUPERNAWK, excellent condition* bell helmet* 137$. 363- v$s m»?0HDK
	Blcyclt* 9t
CHATEAU ESTATE!,. 12 X 55 Danish Kino.' Sat up In eduff taction. Many axfrat.- Call 73*-0004 after 5.	A-l REPAIRED BIKES, boys, flirts, all size*. 881-0055. 		r	— —
	Boalt-Accetsorigs 97 j I' HYDRO-PLANE WITH outboard, motor, after 5, 335-8902. 8' HYDRO-PLANE wlth mofor, call, •Iter 8 p.m., 673-3762.
FINANCING AVAILABLE, 1*60 Alplno 10 x 55', 2 badroom. furnished, clean. Immediately available. 3344351.	
HOLLY - METAMORA Trailer village, don't rent — Invostl Bo your own landlord, email down 84* mo., Bloch Bros. 3840 Dlxto Hwy. Ph: 423-1333 or 540-7711.	
	11' 12" MOLDED PLY BOAT, Ilk* new. Meal for COHO flihln*. walk
MIDLAND TRAILER SALES
Featuring Parkwood, Holly Perl and Kino.
ina only. )Jx„ ^jgg 12x44, 83550
Your car, mobile home, boat ate taken In on trade. Large aavinoi on everything -*"1"	*'
stock. Fria
I not knowingly I
E Four-sleeper ..	.. savy
NOW ONLY 8475. . APACHE EAGLE SPECIAL
110013257 Dixie Hwy. ,	'330-0772
Oxford Trailer Soles
Belvedere, Stewart. Gardner, Hartford. Latast models, 2 or 3 bedrooms, Early American or.
St., Oxford. OA fl-2846.
1 SHETLAND PONY 3
tame, 335-2314,__________
» YEAR OLD, BAY Geld callant pleasure. Must se tact. M. Fredel* 651*0042
Hlokil, 79 Park
TIZZY
11* ALUMINUM BOATS .......
Trailers 0120, 15* canoes Big Coho boats, 14*. 0100; 15* . Big fiberglass runabout 1,000 lb. boat trailers
11* ALUMINUM BOAT and trailer.
815-3105. ______________________
', 35 HORSEPOWER motor, skis.I trailer, and accessories, 851-73521 attar 5._______________,
Phone MY 1-0721.
,T£l. !
5* FIBERGLAS BOAT, motor, trailer, 45 HP, sklls and all equipment. Exc. condition. *700 Or trade Bwrcyete	“ '
Slx-slaapar — a4va over 8100.
EVAN'S EQUIPMENT
8570 Dixie Highway. Ctorkston 825-1711	«5-«
Mon. through Frl, 0 a.m, to 0 p.m. Sat. 0 a.m, to 5 p.m. Closed Sunday
NOW ON DISPLAY
Travelmate
Pleasure Mate
83' America's Custom-------------H
Only $1305
fears. Holly Travel Coach, Inc.
‘______15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-8771
ig, „ax- Open Dally and Sunday*______________
I* Con- OVER CAB CAMPER, axeallent or «V condition, $050, $51-5000 after 5
l REAL SHARPIE
und, 814-
GRADE WEANLING FILLIES and stud colt. Also registered
paloosas. PL 2-1150.__________
HORSE, 2 YEAR Buckskin at; gentle riding horse, good with children, broken to hackmore. UL 2-4408. C. van Buren, IOC Auburn. Rochester.
NEW LOAD OF HORSES, $150 a;
1401 Harmon Rd., nr. Lake
PONY WITH* SADDLE and bridle, very gentle 875. 4S1-864*.
SMALL ALUMINUM camping
trailer. Ilka new. 824-5173._
SPORTCRAP1 MANUFACTURING Steel trams pickup ttoaears ft tops, 4180 Foley Watorforo 823-0450._
QUARTER TYPE BAY mareg 8 veers ok). 873-3354.
SPIRITED OR GENTLE horses tor
SORREL GELDING. PART thor bred, 0 years, sound, flashy white Blaze, smooth gaits, well trained, real pleasure horse. 8121 OaMa
Rd„ Pontiac, 383-5547.________
.
WE CURE AND SMOKE MEATS. Ceil FE 1-8155.
OAKLAND CAMPER
k covert and sleepers.
Baldwin at Colgate
Suncrcrit
ACTIVE
50'xl2' Mobil* Horn*
Regular price 84,8*5
SPECIAL
$4295-
(one only)
TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC.
Telegraph at Dixie Hwy.
334-6694
17' THOMPSON SEA LANCER 75 h.p. Johnson and Gator trailer, 81125. 707 Pina Tree, Lake Orion.
22' CHRIS CRAFT, Express Cruiser, 210 H.P. Interceptor, Inboard motor, exc. for Great Lakes Coho] fishing, phono Pontiac, 332-1571 or. Steeles Marina Bayport, Ot r-2501, best offer over >000.
Bv Katu OuaBB|l<r*|p €w»	1M
8
New and U*td Cm Iti
TRIUMPH TR-3, rebuilt motor, wl Wheels, disc brakes, new tire very goed condition, no rust, 145
-tfjjwT:.,..;......
VOLKSWAGEN DEALER SPECIAL
1082 Bulck special, 2 dobr„V$. stlc extra claan# abaolutaly no rust* k mileage, save It
$595
1085 Ford Galaxle, convertlb burgundy with white top, pow steering, power brakes, Dkg no lust,
$1195
Save
1*88 VW Sun real, interior. Ilka nee all the extras only •
$1345
jBillGolling.
ywinc.
1821 Mayltlawn Blvd.
Off Mapl* Road (15 Mil* Rd.)
ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT
Just South,of Pontiac •
IA. hi. TJA Sag US. M. 00
New and Ui*d Car*
106
‘‘Why don’t you tell your father how a $1.50 a week —r-—allowance nrins^our personality?”	~
1-0 trailer, tn water, a
”■ -CRU,SB*	Txra: Wanted Cars-Trucks
>ffor. OA >*2164. j -----——.........-jor— ,
BUICKS, CHEVY'S TONTlACS, and more. H. G. Van Welt, OR 3-1355
1268 JOHNSON* 55 horsepower, 14 ft. _ ~.!PJLP"lL.!gL	---------
aMottr 371 j EXTRA Dollars Paid **E*vinrud,. "c'f.f"$*.^7 5 X EXTRA Sharp Car
Bulwer.__________._______ I Especially 4 speeds end corvettes.
"Check the rest, then get the best"
101 |N*w and Used Trucks 103
liia
___Been
Bankrupt? Need a Car?
STANDARD Auto Sales
3400 Elizabeth Lake Read V* Block West of West Huron (MS*)
1969 BOATS 1968 PRICES
PIONEER CAMPER SALES
Trailers: Jubilee, Globa Star , Barth
Open Sunday 1 p.m. to 8 p.r
""TRAVEL TRAILERS
ALSO
orsalr ana Gam pickup campers d Mecknlaw pickup covers.
Ellsworth Trailer Sales
8577 Dixie Hwy.	835-4400
TROTWOOD
Auto Accessories
BRAND NEW
289 FORD ENGINES
Complete with plugs, ballhousing, oil filter, clutch and pressure plate, carburettor; and head*.
$495	'
Goodyear Service Store
1370 Wide Track Dr., West Pontiac
Friday *tll * p ~
OUTBOARDS 4-Trl Hulls 15 to IS ft.
13-V Hulls 15 to 17 ft.
INBOARDS • OUTBOARDS •	3-V Hulls 120 - 150 HP.
INBOARDS
’•	2 - 1988 Correct Craft - Mustangs 1$
___ HP. VI (aval
01 2-USED OUTFITS Complete with 4 71 A 70 HP. Loaded!
MERCURY AND CHRYSLER OUTBOARDS
Alum. Fishing Boats—Canoas > Fiberglas Canoes
Cliff Dreyer's Marine Sport. Center
15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4771 ^^jMtoDailv and fundhya— .
Averill's
i FE 2-9078 2020 Dixie FE 4-88*8
HIGHEST DOLLAR PAID FOR Extra Shqrp Cars!
REPAIR, MOUNT, and balance M
2—*00x20 10 PLY TIRES. BEST c
Hiy-Oraln-Feed__________l
HAY — 1ST AND 2ND cutting, ; dollvor. 828-1781.
Roultry	85 -------
......... ■ ----—tanksr tow
CHICKENS, CQCKATIELS, DUCKS,I j:.HospHal ___________
pheasants, Persian sheep and‘._^L. _______________!-----
lamb, lovebirds. 837-510*.	I TRAVEL TRAILERS SW5 up,;
---------------------------- - “• Traitor ------- *“*
...  ____________pllLL-ABILITY
ROAD-ABILITY . . . DURABILITY
JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILERS
Corner of Walton A Joslyn
___________FE 4-5853
WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS ANO SLEEPERS. Factory outlet,,	„
repair and parts; new^and usee,
telescoping bumpers, spers lire Motorcycles
ATTENTION COHO FISHERMEN
Flshergla Ster Crz... motors, tilt tra
■uisar built by
Mansfield AUTO SALES 300
Sharp Cadillacs, Pontiac, Olds and Buicks for out-of-stato market. Top| dollar paid.
MANSFIELD AUTO SALES—
1104 Baldwin Aye.
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
PlBuraundy,e*'and ^ 681‘0004
!new finance planR M A MSFIFT n [PROBLEMS. BANKRUPT, OR ,4,1 Ik [GARNISHED WAGES, WE rto^yVXnd|!2t.,r?T,l“^ CAN GET YOUR CREDIT RE-mnes0rS,l owner^spara^has *naver ESTABLlSHED AGAIN. WE salesman^*" <“ c-,W'LLIAMS* HAVE OVER 80 CARS THAT FE 5.5*00B*'dwin Av*>P a.a.25 CAN BE PURCHASED. WITH 1*67 FORCTa, • Ton'stak*7cuilom NO DOWN PAYMENT. COME 4352 attar'**0* condition, $1800, 335- |N AND SEE CREDIT MGR.
MANSFIELD |f nrVv antn
' 1*47 V-0 Chevy plckUP. Vi ton, tong! U U VJlL I A VJ X 1*40 W. Wide Track
dltlon, *1,050. Call 825 2075 after 5
lc 1
SALE
BUY A NEW
1968 AmBrican
2-Door Sedan for
$1888
AND HAVE YOUR CHOICE OF
Automatic Transmission or Radio for
la
NOW AT
Village
Rambler
666 S. Woodward
—Birmingham--
646-3900
1*83 CHEVY IMPALA SS, i
Hay padlM	to*
TOM RADEMACHEK
CHEVY-OLDS .
1*65'’ BUICK LtSabre * OtoY hardtop" automatTc, power atoorlna, brakes, radio, better. wWtew»ll» locally owned tn top »ndltjon. gow a car trade J2y*.r.«751«*1? s&f5 to select from—On us 10 at M13, Clarkston, MA S-S071.	^__—
1965 CHEVROLET Impala Convertible
Power stoorlng. power brakes, V0 automatic,
Bob Borst
Lincoln-M*rcury Sales
1260 W. Meple	M
MILOSCH
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
1*84 Chevy Impala 2-door hardtop, auto., double power. r ■	®'
whitewalls. In axeallent condition, rildy ip. 8iwi.877 M-24. Take Orion. MY j-204). ■	■ '
851-8454 eft Of 8 p.m._■
1*8$ CHEVY IMPALA, 4 door, 1
T nwnar/ploan. 11400. 882-S477.,_
1966 CHEVY IMPALA 112*5. Opdyko Hardware. FE 8-8888.____-
tom"rademacher
CHEVY-OLDS £ ■
1*88 CHEV?~BlieoyhO 2 door, 8 cyl. stick, the ideal back to achool car. 10*5. Over 75 other ear* to
i CHEVY GREINsRTEl, *i passenger, axeallent condition.] 8425, Buy Hbro - Pay Hare.
“ 1966 CHEVY Impala
2 Passenger Station Wagon,
1963 IMPALA SPORTS <
(Suburban Olds
1*87 GMC HANOI VAN, 17,000 miles.]
1965 BUICK Electro 225 ‘
_____ hardtop., beige with saddle
beige Interior, power (tearing.
BIG CLEARANCE
MANSFIELD
1*87 V-0 Dodge, 54-ton, I
_over-sized tires, 4-spead
heater, big sidf mirrors, C WILLIAMS, SALESMAN.
__________ ..	.............. BIRMINGHAM
1*7 down. TURNER FORD. Ml 4--B80 S. Woodward______________MI 7-5I
I CHEVY IMPALA hardlM ■utifful,
1*83 CHEVY SUPER SPORT, steering and brakes, greer —■“i tog,	ttwj
condition. RONEY'S AUTO,
1963 IMPALA -
2-door hardtop, power steering, ---------., >573. .826-2278,
.......v-8. automatic
.......ission, radio and healer,
power steer’ ----------- ££-'■"
- yzj*
vacation specie
1*84 CHEVY SS, 4 WNd, 300
matctU^Jideciac^H
”” brake*;
____ ..... S1808 full
lust SUB d ----- -
johfTmcauliffe ford
1830 Oakland Ave._______FE 5-4101
Intarior."Hi- TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLDS	. ••
1)787 CHEVY Bel Air 4 door, ,V8,
82200. 828.0244.
loriof.
... BLUE' MALIBU, convertible, tall after 4
Mr'
l Suburban Olds:
TOP * FOR CLEAN CARS OR F E 5-5*00
1104 Baldwin Ave
1*84 CHEVY Bel Air station w V8. automatic, radio, h spotless condition,
—tf-you-ere '
nice one. ___ __________
special at only $988 full price ai ' i, 032.48 par month.
Tires-Attte-Truck
92
ir and I trucka. Economy Cars. 2335 Dixie.
molors and irailers. Ponttac's only Mercury and Marc-Cruiser dealer.
CRUISE-OUT INC.
Auto Service — R*PBirM93 43 E• WalD!iiy «.i, sat. *.aFE ''4<M
—-—r-v---.-"' ——-- • |	Closed Sundays
MOTORS FACTORY R EBUIL T , CLEARANCE PRltET^n^airr.-9r„rt». sac i.n m i n h majn|ng )M| merchandise.
537*il77.'

Motor Sceeten
1*88 RUPP MINI Cycto, 3
FOR SALE —MINI BIKE
I Staury Boa's
Taka M-5* to
STOP
HERE LAST
M & M
MOTOR SALES
Now at our new locetlon We pay more tor sharp, lata mode car*. Corvettes needed.
1150 Oakland at Viaduct
T§6t
g tor that extra
I .... M* _y»C4tto
BIRMINGHAM
180 S. Woodward	Ml 7-5111
1*57 BUfCK-REASONABLE [ JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
r. 830 Oakland Ava.	FE 5-4101
I dealer:'' ’	'S
automatic, radio,
owner, low mllaagv, u«w -=■ trade* medium green finish* only $17*5. Over 75 other cars to select from - On US to at M15, Clarkston, MA S-5071.
1*67 IMP,ALA, POWER steering and
1*67 CAMARO BELONGS to llttl
1968 Impala
338-223S 1264 CHEVY* NICE $425
$2595
T I	■>	1	-----—down TURNER FORD. Ml 4-7500. |
International p* ffl-r	Merry Olds
Vt ton pickup ,	! 1984 BLUE BUICK LoSobro, 1 844-5802.	J.VlC7i i J
I DEALER ___________________
i ton pickup ,	11084 BLUE BUICK LeSab;
with . vo, radio, heater, sparklino rod finish. Ready to go at only—_
$1595 Merry* Olds
, ..... | p.m. 648-8968. 3180 Mld-I dlebury Lana, Birmingham. 8*50.
11985 BUICK WILDCAT convertible.
485 Riviera angina. Dual quads. 4-I speed, AM-FM radio, 12.000. 338-
3770. •___________________
11*85 BUICK RIVIERA, one owner,
I everything but air. Call attar 5:30 i,Ip m.-.'825-M»0. ---------------  -J
305 YAMAHA STREET I *<*•' Umdn-L-oka EM 3- caUent shape, seen from

Farm Produce	86
FRESH PICKED SWEET corn, any quantity. Now through Sapt. 825-
TRAVEL ■Ooodott,
Rochester Rd. 052-4550.
2 p.m.; 673-0257,
DAWSON'S SALES AT ax- LAKE. Phone 62»-217*.
»- to XOHO^CHCiSCRAFT THOMPSON
Banning peaches, *4.so per bushel, 2001 Pontiac Rd., Just off of Forty Rd. ____________
FARMERS
TRACTOR WHEEL DEAL No money down. Interest free HR 1*8*. Tall ut what you oof to trade. Alto, tbme good Industrial tractor loaders and backhoas -‘ big savings. Sharp Casa tree._ loader and backhoe $2*95. See Bob Hillman at. Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractors, 825 Woodward.
FE 4-0881 or FE 4-1442._________■
f-8 EUCLID BULLDOZER Old Caterpillar 6 bulldozer. Cat. 21 Scraper, 2. dump trucks — S yard and 10-y ‘
I 10-yard. MA S-2181. HOMELITE CHAIN SAWS, 12
Your- Homallta and New I
Large
to- • sail. Terms Aval Hardware, *05 Orchard 9-6, Sun. 9-2. FE 5-2424.
bar
chain. Ragularprlct ST2V.V5.
SALE PRICE ONLY 8109.95
KING BROS.
FE 8-1882	FE 4-0734
Pontiac Rd. at Opdyka
1*40 CHOPPER. HARLEY Davidson, )d. 8500, $24-4739, after
YELLOWSTONE TRUCK CAMPERS PRICES SLASHED
1*52 HARLEY DAVIDSON,
1*83 YAAAAHA, 8175. 852-28*3. after 6
1*85 HONDA 350 CHOPPER, extra claan, call Phil after 3, 473-3771.
________d With shows
sleeper. Theta 2 campers must
"STACHLER TRAILER
1*88 HONDA, I50CC, a
1*45. 20' 1-0
OR 3-7003._______________
COHO SPECIAL
1*80 Silverline, Rlverla, 18' trl-hull 180 Merc., cruiser, power trim with trailer and brakes, many ex tres. Complete $41*3.
KAR'S BOATS & MOTORS
405 W. Clarkston Rd., Lake Orion
MY >-1800_________
CRUISERS
AUTHORIZED DEALER
TROJANS
LEFT OVER SALE - NEW 31'TROJAN Voyager Sedan TS 28' TROJAN Voyager Exp. TS 28' TROJAN Skiff Exp. single
, 132.00.
1*88 BSA LIGHTENING. 650 CC, exc. condition. 8750. Brook* |HHBU —.....—'	jack*!, "
1-A Beauties to Choose From
WE FINANCE - TERMS ______________■_______________
Richardson	^
HOMETTE	_	LIBERTY
COLONIAL MOBILE	HOMES
FE 2-1857 _	__62*1310
I 544 S. WOODWARD ________647-5600
] WANTED:	1*40 TEMPEST “l-d
automatic, days. FE 2-1222.
25"OPDYKE	5430 DIXIE
Auburn Haights S. ol W4tartord 12x80. 3 BEDROOM, lVj BATHS, *500 down. Tako over payments. Ready to move in. Lot 103. Groyoland Manor.
1*66 SEARS 2S0CC, good condition.
<250. 052-5439.'	__________
1*88 HARLEY DAVIDSON SPRINT, 300 CC, Sat , -	----- -----
1*5* PACEMAKER HOUSE traitor, 2 tolaiaHit. Condition, MtoU ■2*35, Milford.
1*44S harlet davjdson^mo CC;J HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS]
toavlng' for :school. 82*5. Can baU-RF seen at Ortonvilla tire and battery,
1*61 DETROITER ’
1*84 MARLETTE, 10x50	*1.,
1*84 GREAT LAKES,-ordinalI owner,
... |.....‘MMt
-M(y stay on loi.
RICHARDSON MONTCLAIR. uxoO, 3 bedrooms, excellent condition. 8500 down end assume
$270 Barker,
1*88 SUZUKI X6. 250CC. $250. < offer. 674-242*.
and |	TROJAN Sedan Bridge
I 24' TROJAN Exp. demo
CHRIS-CRAFT-NEW
25' SEA SKIFF Sport Cruiser |T1‘ SKI boat 210 hp
USED CRUISERS
1*65 26' Owens Exp- new
fully equipped* radio.
1965 25' Owens Exp..
MANY OTHER BARGAINS COHO BOATS NEW-USED
LAKE & SEA MARINE ........■____________
Woodward__ FE 4-9587 free tow- 802-7000.
MAKE YdUR "	| A CAR OR
best RESERVATIONS FOR WINTER Free Towl
STORATE NOWI AT:'	ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS an(
... MR COMPLETE M|HH
..GLENH'S....,.seev4CE-on-4M1
FOR "CLEAN" USED CAP' |
*52 W. Huron St.
■ 4-73V i_4. - » FE 4-1797 >
We w o u I d like to buy late ] model GM Cars or will nc-cept trade-downs.-Stop by] today.
FISCHER]
BUICK i
AL HANOUTE
Chevrolet
Bulck
On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-241J ,
TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLDS
1965 CORVAIR Monza 4 door* will
! Rochester
52B N
OL 1-9761
v car tre<
CHEVY* V-6 AUTOMATIC,
! Private Owner* >2*350* 331-6610-_
1968 CHEVELLE MALIBU hardtop coupe. Low mileage. ?A u t © transmission. Power steer mg* .brakes. Tilt wheel. Extras, Mint condition. Ml 6-668L
1968 Chevelle
— On US 10 4
o select tror
.Starters..
. Alternators..
Generators.. OPEN 24 HOURS Monday thru Friday
GMC
. Factory Branch
OAKLAND AT CASS FE 3-9405
FORD DUMP TRUCK. S225.
must si____________
1*45 BUICK LeSABRE, custon 1 door hardtop, toll ' Power, i j condition. 651-13*2._____
1;	1966 BUICK
Electro
i 4-door hardtop custom, full PO factory air conditioning.
$AVE v.
Bob Botst
A 5-5071;___________________I___
h 1965 CHEVELLE WAGON, 283 auto.* bower steering* brakes* new muf-4 her* battery. 35*000 ml. Mi 6-2417. d 1965 CHEVY IMF»ALA convertible.
i, 33*000 r
. $1350.
1965 CHEVY — 3-speed.
£.k	B^3644. ______t____\|
'' 1965 cftEVY* GOOD condition*! automatic transmission. Now engine* 22*000 miles* $850. 335-0652. | 1965 CHEVY SS Impala convertible* j
r $2195 , Merry Olds
52$ N. Main St.
ochester ____ 1-9761
MANSFIELD
11*67 BUICK, RIVERIA GS, chroi
power steering, tinted glass, auto, transmission, radio, heater, 1 own-PR or, like new. Cell Salesman. L. C. vary clean WILLIAMS.
____	1104 Baldwin Ava.
GS, chroma | rp	, T-	5-5*00	FE 0-8823
ivals, deluxe I rnnSDOrtatlOn	WE ARE SORRY
_______ 5.	| liunopui	For the inconveni^nce causea by
150 CADILLAC. 4-DOOR. Good	C*______• _,T _	I our street beinq -ropaveij. Alter
H EAP ANflKI |,4r“4,Sc''^!' ow;J- -Specials- K'£»*« »•'.....,
UL 2-5412* pft. 4 p.m
TRUCK
101-A
p$639iiM Cars-Trucks
$4595j m---------- ^ -----
1* IQ* 100 JUNK CARS - TRUCKS*'
owing* FE 8-3832.
cats, Ernl
scrap, wa, tow. FE SM01 ■
Do-It-Yourself Docks _
icnoretors; C. Dlxs^i, pll
1947 HONDA 305 Screml condition, 8525. Call aft. 6:30 p.R
332-8033] FREE TOWING, 24 hour road
1*67 MA1CO. 340.CC INDURO .extra
SIDE MOUNT MOWER FOR Fori
trai
lerfoct condition.
1*68 SUBURBAN S2xl2,
i	__ • -I..
IN. CAMPER, will tit Chovy
truck. OR 3-8823.____________
i* Dived-BUS converted to tiouae
car. Sleeps 4, 81200. 383-0*05.
INS PACER, 20' Hit-contalnad, Call Carson PaU FE 0*4511 between 11::30 a.m. — 8 p.m. 334-9195 10
Lake Viliam. 088-7577.
8 ROYAL EMBASSY,
1*67 YAMAHA, 250 Scrambler, S450.
furnished, 84,000.	80 Brentwooi
i Best Mobile Home Sales Open Daily 9 a.m.-8 p.m.
1*67 HONDA S-90, excellent cort-
dltlon. 332-4410._________________
[Ttor-Ttrrtr m^	bonnev i Lte-.-
1N7 450 CC, HONDA Custom, women owner. 505 actual miles. 8850 01
best otter. 288-0680.	_______
88 HONDA 350 SCRAMBLER. Less
1 miles. Exc. condition.
MARLETTE EXPANDOS ON DISP-LAY
FREE DELIVERY AND SET UP
WITHIN 200 MILES. ,_____
12x50' Marietta 1948, 85.200.00 ON DISPLAY AT: ,jj *■
r,..karru lair* MftH b
1*68 TRIUMPH TR 6-R, windshield, and rollbar, S1175, 482-
Cranber
H______
*820 Highland Rd.
1*87 APACHE CAMPER trailer, like 343-52*4
West of williams Lk. Rd.
new. 682-T13I.
1968 Sfarcroft Campers
a Inside display
CRUISE OUT, INC.
Dally 9-4 FE 8-4402
'APACHE
SCOU
lltlon.
:OUT WITH canqpy.
8125,. 438-485*.
APACHE-DEL REY
Clot* out prleps on all nfw IN* Apache canto traitor* and trava traitor*. Ctoia.oyt PrK»*_on all naw 1040 pick-up truck dCntoara. 20 different models df truck tampon to choose from. 14' travel traUars, OOPS-Tyhlto may Iasi, Wa wlH to
3ao*a AUPUM a.to. Sagtaraar_4
tor vaciiftan ,and invantory. Collar Vx mil* E. of LaPoar City Uretotaah 88-21.
TRAVEL lGy|#fiK Sine* 1*32. Guaranteed tor IL _ thorn and get a demonstration at Wamar Traitor Sato*, 30H w. Huron (pton to loin ono of Wally Byam's exciting caravans).
CENTURY YELLOWSTONE
TRAVEL trailers__
QUALITY AT ANY BUDGET
■ STACHLIR TRAILER SALES, INC.
1771 Htohtond (M-SH	|—i
BOB Hutchinson's 21st
Anniversary
SALE
YES, 21 YEARS Bob has been In Mobile Home Sales Bob Hutchinson Invites you^Kr see the all new
$22*000 D0UBLE-WHJE KROPF HOME
1400 SQ. FT. ^LOOR
SEE THE ALL NEW DETROITERS sgmaihdup .
Free delivery up to 300 ml.
Open Dally 'tll Sh-m- . Saturday and Sunday !>! > '
f DRAYTON PLAINS
II Dixie Hwy.(US-lf) OR 3-1202
l*6tT KAWASKT 350 roed b
Cell Bob at Ml 6-1772.
,500 Competition,
*88 HONDA SCRAMBLER helmet included. Take o; payments, FE 2-1373.__
1963, Ship to
lorvlco. 673-0823. Devo't Towing.
$1495
1966 FORD Vi-Ton
yleside pickup, with above, rerage condition!
$1395
1965 FORD Utility ? j
ickup, Ideal for electrician, in; only
$895
I only' 81388' fuU price, lust 8188; 1*83 OLDS_Conva
^JOHN^AUnFFTfORD i'M wAw automatic ! 630 Oakland Ave.	FE 5-4101 |lN7 CHEVY lm»*i» va
i 1*62 CADILLAC SEDAN, DeVUIe !!*? CORVAIR . | with full power, and . goodies. Vacation special ..
| Tull price, no money down.
$14*5 Walled Lake. _______[________
■ $7*5 1*48 CHRYSLER, EXCELL EN * 811*5 running condition, 673-8857, attar < Sof'MUST SELL IMMEDIATELY. l,58 s?m?	Chrysler Newport. 2-door, powe
520,5	steering, brakes, radio, whitewall!
Good condition. Reliable. 1550. ( a 402-2414 attar 4:30.
82095
V*63 Chry:
nil price, no money down.	^ 	; air-conditioned, new tires, excellent
g.ruilfFi aw Van Cemvimweem
a 1*1(1111 a/*. cbAmi. . peVllle* |	•	• * 1	.'Cxpw^xv "-.tl :m"~
Chevrolet
Used Auto-Truck Parts 102]
____________|-------------------
tabs. $7,500. Can help arrangei327 ENGINE ANO 289 eng I financing. Andy Body. 682-9600*'
Nights 625-2087.
5200* 673-0364.
Auto Sales. OR 3*
1965 FORD Tractor
Heavy duty, with full air, tractor equipment.
$2595
SALE
~ 1*55 MERCURY FOR parts, 825. OR|w
1984 CADILLAC Sedan, beautiful ebony black. OWm Interior, toll power vacation i apodal only S150S full pricq, lust 8188 down and 881.91 par month.
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
1830 Oakland Avo. ___FE 5-4101
and: SHARP 1*44 CADILLAC convertible, air, power, stereo, low mileage; i Special rad. 33S-2194.	_
. latg-mqobvcaghaacs on • ■■
----HAND-AT-AUU Tl^ES ;
JEROME
CADILLAC CO.
424-45011 mo wide Track Dr. FE 3-7021
1*45 CHRYSLER NEWPORT conver-tibia. Dk. blue, black top, top shape mechenlcally, double power,
—On N, Milford Rd.— Milford 814-1025
Radio. 330-2808 or OR 3-9655.
Cloaranco prices on all 1*68 boats,! call after 5
'15SS----ia«a 'ropVFfTF''todv~B»7Ts REFRIGERATED TRUCK, 1*88, lto 1956 CHEVROLET, BODY
. 1	~ mmw&r*? p*r'*- ton chassle. with \r Millington ,Tnew, 327 engine, turbo tram
: can after s p.m. ta-au.	cu.usjam	I	___,	.—. ,,,
1370 Opdyka	*-4	■ Frl. 7-8
___H-7.5AtJUalverslty-Exltl-- —
THE FOLLOWING BOATS ARE
. ?*48BG*aspa?*G-3 *»f|r'boats.
1*8* G la spar 14' Marathon.	i
1968 Glaspar IS' Tri """	1 WM
3 Ray Green* sellboa Several Mirro-craft d boats, and save canoas.
Taka M-59 to W-a |to----- Ridge
Marvel Motors, 251 Oakland Ave, Buy Here - Pay Her*
irismission. $250. f6 s Auto InsuroncB-MariRB 104
£»#	anoersons assoc.) use.
DAWSON'S SALEsTaT T1PSICO engine and transmission, and, otherU044 Joslyn , .	FE 4-3535 Rochester. 852-1414.
1*85 GTO ENGINE, bucket 1 AM-FM radio. Call anytime
-38*6.	__________
1*67 GTX FIBERGLAS 1 piece'
- AUTO INSURANCE
ow Rates — Broad Protection Easy Payment Plan AjU *~'"*iy for quotation
1957 CHEVY V-l etlck* vary claen.
OR 4-1555*.	____________
1957 CHEVROLET V-8* B195. 682-1266
r—i^67'€adihac:::;;..L:
Eldorado
Rich metallic doejkin finish, contrasting vinyl roof and interior, equipped with ail the Cadillac luxury j options including AM-FM rndio and climnta control, new car warranty.
T»57 corvette.
1950 CORVETTE,
Needs et alter*.
LAKE, phona 629-2179.
>arfs. 337-7172.
i New and Used Trucks 103
1001 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE
•xcelllent condition.
TERRIFIC DISCOUNTS
AT TONY'S MARINE
On all boats and supplies have a few Johnson Motors
Aerocrart Canoes ■	....	iM
2695 Orchard LK. ‘ Sylvan LaHejiesi ARMY JEEP, lust rebuilt. 363-1 7782.
USED BARGAINS"”
IS' Dorset!, *0 h.p. Johnson 81395 16' Alum. Cresttiner, top-sIdes-afMS]
1*80 CORVAIR 2-DOOR, ]
1*59 VW, .GOOD condition. 8425. 334- ] .
1*81 CHEVY, 8 STICK, 810^
! 1952 FORD Vt TON Pickup. 835. 628-	04*1,
GHIA (VW). Maka offer. 851-
14' Whitahousa. Evinruda. horns,
is” Alum.' Wolverine. 35 h.p. i
lie? 1*55 CHEVY PANEL TRUCK. Best .I.r : offer over 8100. 651-4150. built-in- «j "l*S» CHEVY Vi TON PICK-UP 8150 67451 DEALER	“
1980 KARMANN GHIA, 8325. 8*3-
1968 YAMAHA 305
Must till, good condition, price Includes Nw^lmets end l«ther ■wWM Call 851-1088 gftor 6 p.m.
ANNUAL SUMMER SALE
all 1968 Models
ON SALE!
SlRTON^nuffiv .montIsa; 'ai?derson*sale$ a service 1845 S. Totograph_ PE 3-7102
BACK TO SCHOOL CLEARANCE	i
200cc Scrambler, was $640, •now . —	• $520
250cc Scrambler, was $725, now ... t......	$575
Plus menu more to choose from *1
^mHOzuki sales
4857 Dlxto Hwy^ proyton 6734450
3rX£ ffSS .miv Mipiu ai .i ' ltd
14' Modern* 35 t
1959 FORD DUMP TRUCK. $650. Phone MY 3«*61?.
1959 FQRD m TON Wrecker. $650. '-1-65B8.

1*80 DKW, STATION WMOh. fairly good condition, complat* with ax-
pa rfs, 855. 3074 Hill Rd., off
Collier.____________________________
1*62 PpRSHE HARD TOP, wilt COB-
30' h.p aiec.'Evinruda 8395 - Craft fiberglas tlshto^
l4~Aero Craft fishing boat .$lf
12* Fiberglas fishing boat	84
CHRYSLER AND JOHNSON BOATS AND MOTORS
INSIDE BOAT AND MOTOR STORAGE
, OPEN DAILY » TO 4 SUNDAYS 10-4
PAUL A. YOUNG, INC:
4030 DtXlE HWY. . ? MARINA on LOON-LAKE OR 4-0*11
iprate. Excellent condition. 334-
1*83 TRIUMPH. METAL flak*. D
1*62- V8 -TON CNEVR PICKUP ftoto I side box, radio, hooter, stick 6.
1963 IVY TON DODGE slake If 8*50; 1988 Ford pickup, $1350.
,r«l!
ftOWILkw af^oiiL.s^7**T Ws,co
1*84 FORD V-l AUTOMATIC,
1*84 GMC lY TON- PlCkup, 6 cyl. stick, good condition, dean. 682-0571, aft. 4 p.m. r .
*40 SKY"HAWK. Sharp. 386.
ISM TT. LIC. to 5/». Mark 12 ^ CH. VO A 5. Mark 2 toll panel. * EGT, Gyre, horizon, gyro co
pass. T L B, R OF C, S.A., 14 . clock, O.A.T. cyl head .temp-, carb.
MANSFIELD
CHEVY: WHEN YOU buy It tot MARKET TIRE glvt It a fra# safety check. 2835 Orchard Lake fe.— ,
1*82 CHEVY 4-DOOR, standard shift. 6 cylinder, good condition. S32S. phono 651-4633 after
1*42 CORVAIR COUPE,
STUDENTS CAR, R E L I A B L E
1*84 AND t*6l \ dltlon, goon 87STil6.
1*84 KARA8ANN GHIA, good con-
1984 V.W„ CLEAN, I owner, btockr 88*5, <79-8277.
1*85 VW GOOD CONDITION. Best
i ENGLISH FORD, G060 con-
1*85 GREEN MGB, good~c 441-0775. aft. 4 p.m
:*88 RENAULT R-8. excellent con-
1962 CHEVY 283 CONVERTIBLE.; new tires and exhaust, $300, before
3,473-0855.	{	__________
1*42 CHEVROLET 6 cylinder, good ' se. engine recently overhauled.,
1963" Chevy Wagon
with radio, heater, whitewalls, one ownar, only
$495
Bill Fox Chevrolet
Rochester <■■	gswMa
CHEVY; 1*83 BELA4RE 2 door.
gmc to-ton 4-speed, „„ heater, big aide mirrors, can L. C. WILLIAMS, SALESMAN.
—I-------'
1*83 CHEVROLET BEL AIR, * Ugr. 4 cylinder, ttangeed, etoan. -8545. ] 334-toa.	______ .!
ttUNTERS-PAINTERS I 1*85 Chtvy V-0, V» ton carryall,
FE 0-8825 :	8*60. EM 3-2312.	'	1*63 CHEVY
.■* POWfeR.ateerlno M brakas. ra verb, A-l{ mechanically, 8400. 8734N77,
1966 Pontfac
Bonnavllto Coup*, desert beige In color with Mack vinyl root, power steering, brakas, windows, and factory air conditioning, vOry sharp. •
1966 Cadillac
Coupe DeVltto. sparkling Caribbean aqua finish, matching Intarior,full power with 4-w*y teat, climate control, exceptional condition.
1965 T-Bird
Landau Coup*, canary yallow
dows, and factory air conditioning, almost naw.
1963 Pontiac
only 37JM mfiee *i
CADILLAC of Birmingham
Ask for Rich Kroll i
1350 NORTH WOODWARD	PHONE Ml 4-1930
E—18
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 19.68
New and Iked Cm
original owner, 5.500 miles, Ilk* wheels. studded snow tlrawnany
jgE&?"*rnn»‘ •"*»*•<■
1966 DODGE MONACO
4^r IwnltBD, dark blua with black vinyl roof and mmMqi I n t a r I a r , v-i automatic, radio, h a a t a r, power ’ (tearing, .power brakes, powar windows, air conditioning.
$1895
ST** the *Trncfv
i miles Cast
BIRMINGHAM
Chrysler-Plymouth
1966 DODGE WAGON *
♦ passenger, silver wlfll burgundy Infarlqr. V«* automatic, radio, Hi B a f e r, power ilooring, powar brakes, doluxs luggage rack, axcotwit condition.
$1895
New mi Iked Ct _ \; 188 1962 DODGE DART
4-door, 4 cylinder automatic.
4295
' Bob Borst
Lincoln-Mercury Solis
BIRMINGHAM
Chrysler-Plymouth
KESSLER'S
DODGE
CARS AND TRUCK* '
Salas and Service (ford	oa s-1400
BRAND
NEW
CLEARANCE
1968 Mercurys
MONTEREYS-MONTEGOS-COUGARS
Every new 1968 in stock must go to moke room for thi 1969's arriving. Wi get the room .	. you re-
ceive important savings. Wide Selection.
Before You Decide See
HILLSIDE
LINCOLN-MERCURY
1250 OAKLAND
333-7863
CARNIVAL
power
brakes
1967 DODGE 500
oor hardtop, copper wll Ing 1 n»arfir, V stlc, r a d I a, haetf Hearing, p a W a
$1995
location at Ilia TROY MOTOR MALL, an Maple Rd. (IS Mila) IVk mllea East o! Woodward.
BIRMINGHAM
Chrysler-Plymouth
FORD:	When
lt)l FORD v-e, auto., drlvts good.
$125, 3334)0*1, dsaltr.
*125, FE 4-32*9.
ItSt FORD OALAXIE SOD. good
1962 FORD, 1 DOOR, AUTOMATIC, like now, (22*. Savs Auto., FE I-
down TURNER FORD Ml 4-2*80.
:ORD XL, A-l, (491 I, TURNBRPOkD.il
1963 FORD Country Squire
9-passongor station wag automatic, aawer staerlng.
$795
Bob Borst
DRIVE A LITTLE
ALL CREDIT APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED
Save A Lot!
raady to da day's work .
1**7 PONTIAC, Bonnavlllt 2-door hardtop, factory air conditioned and all the other goodies, 1,000 actual mllea, new car ............................ *309*
1964 OLDS Luxuiy Sedan, with factory air conditioning, full power, flit wheel and many other extras. Let's go first class. .*249*
1*64 LtMANS Convertible, wlfll Vri,. power stoarlng, automatic, maroon with black top, only stats	1*68 PONTIAC Brougham, factory air conditioning, fuTrpowgr, vinyl top, tilt whoob etc., etc. "Bud" Shelton's own personal Demonstrator 				 $4,493
1(67 MERCURY, Parklane 2-doOi hardtop, with 14,000 guarantood actual miles, nice aqua With whits vinyl top. A Real Beauty. Only	 *24(5	
	1966 PONTIAC 2-plus-2 beautiful maroon finish, white vinyl top, want to girt fliers In a hurry! This'Is It. Only	.... *!«**
1*65 CORVETTE, Convertible, with 4-spaad, AM FM Radio, one of the sportiest cars on tha road. Only *27*3	1*66 PONTIAC . Catalina 2 door hardtop, has all the goodies, beautiful red finish, only . SIMS
1*62 CORVETTE Convertible, with beautiful saddle brown finish, black lop, one of the sportiest cars on the road. Only *11*5	1967 BUICK Elactra 225 4doer hardtop, naw car factory warranty with 8,000 miles, this one Is llks brand naw. Only ... *32*5
1*47 BUICK LtSabro I door hold-tap, power stoarlng, brakes, automatic, new car factory warranty. only 	*2S*S	1*64- BUICK- AMoor sadan, with beautiful light blua finish, full powar. Only 		 	 *19*5
1962 CADILLAC, Sedan DeVllle. factory air conditioned, full power. yes folks, lots go flrstcTass. It's like brand now 	 110*5	1*41 BUICK Skylark hardtop, with factory air conditioning, ana many other extras, company official car, savs an this unit now! Only 	*369*
1966 TEMPEST LeMant Convertible, power steering, automatic, beautiful graan with whlta top. t owner, bought hero new	*17*5	1967 PONTIAC, * pasianger station wagon, power brakas and steering, automatic transmission, nice aqua finish, locally owned. Only 	 *27*5	1967 PONTIAC Catallno Convertible, with beautiful blut finish, whit# too, locally owned, and all the goodies. Only 	 *2515
1*66 CHEVY Bol-AIni door, automatic, V-I. Only 10,000 guaran-taad actual miles, llks now. Only 	 	 	 *15*5 1*67 OLDSMOBILE, Delmont St and automatic transmission, many 2-door hardtop, power stoarlng ether extras, actual miles, new ear factory warranty ...... 125*5	19<7 CATAILAN Moor hardtop* automatic* V-I* radio* hoator* whitewalls, a beautiful maroon with a black Interior. ...... 12495	1965 BUICK LtSobre 4 door hardtop. with powar staerlng, brakes, automatic, beautiful tu-tone finish. Only 				 	 <1595
	1965 PONTIAC Catalina 2-door hardtop, this car la sura a beauty. • 	 	 $14*5	1*44 CHEVY 4-door, with automatic V-t, power statrlng. Only 	 *7*5
1*67 SKYLARK 2 door hardtop, with power steerinp, brakes, V-8, automatic, actual mllos, naw car warranty. Only 	 <24*5	1*43 OLDSMOBILE, Dynamic M 2-door hardtop, power stoarlng, mission, make a nice firrt or sec-power braktt, automatic trans-ond cor. :	 *4(5	1*64 BUICK LoSabr* Moor hardtop, with bosutlful gold finish, wnita top. all tha goodies, extra nice! Only 	*20*5
1*44 CHEVY Adoor, V-t, auto-* malic, power steering, air conditioning. Lika now light green finish, one owner 	 *895	1*64 OLDS Storflra 2-door hardtop, with under 17X100 actual mllos, black with a whlta Interior. One owner. Only .. $1995	1966 FORD Wagon, V-I, automatic, power steering* brakes* vinyl 1 n t a r 1 o r* All price. Only 	 $1195
Dorrall Thybault, Clyde Elliot, Frank Lamoreaux, Tommy Thompson, Sales Manager
Pontiac-Buick-Opel 651-5500
OPEN: MONDAY ond THURSDAY TILL 9 P.M.
855 S. Rochester Rd., ’/* Mile South of Downtown Rochester
By Diek Turner
New gad Used Core
3SMOBILE 441
1965 OLDS 88
or hardtop, power staerlng, er brakes, like new.
$1495
Suburban Olds
V	BIRMINGHAM
*60 I. Woodward	Ml 7-6111
1967 OLDS CUTLASS convertll loaded with equipment and poe.... Including sir conditioning, solid
1967 OLDS Delmont 425'
hardtop. poWar steering, brakes, automatic, turquolso with matching Interior.
$2291!
Suburban Olds
“One reason I object to Jimmy growing a beard is {hat I know he’d insist on wearing it on our dates!”
Now nnd Head Cars 106
BY OWNER. .1961 Galxlo hardtop 2 door, V-», stick, *300. FE 4.5417, 1943 FAIRLANE A-1 S39J with I down TURNER FORD Ml 4-7M0.
New and Used Cars *
1965 T-BIRD LANDAU with power, and all the goodies. BMP Mon special at only — *178*. Full price, fust ties down, ond -per month. S year or M.800
1965 FORD LTD Burgund"
Flannery Motors, Inc. ■■— Waterford, —-*■
*97 down TURNER FORD, h
1965 MUSTANG CONVERT *495 *97 down, TURNER FORD, Ml 4-
1965 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE, 10 peasonger wagon, b a a u 111 u ‘ metallic burgundy finish wl black all vinyl Intsror, V automatic, transmission, rsdL. heater, power steering, power brakes, chroma luggage earrl--
1964 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE, 9 <8Ubl*
1964 Ford
; CONVERTIBLE rad finish, rad Interior, white Warranty, with VI, power steering, swing
—$1095
FLANNERY
FORD GALAXIE 2-door Hn>>. son engine, 4-speed, Hurst wheels, rad lint tires.
linkage,_________
reverb, Ivy graen v too. 11,000. 4I1-007*.
1944 FORD XL CONVERTIBLE.
1965 Ford
STATION WAGON Country Sodon, with VI, otic radio, heater, A-l warranty. On
$1495
FLANNERY
. This car has a
1965 FORD GALAXIE 500 sedan, with VL automatic radio, hooter power steering, beautiful tu-‘—
New and Iked tan 106 1963 PLYMOUTH
l-door, green with beige interior, V-* automatic, radii.
MOTOR MALL, on Maple
- Repossessed? — Garni
BIRMINGHAM
Chrysler-Plymouth
prabam?
SutO, 601-
TOM RADEMACHER
CHEVY-OLD*
1966 OLD* 443 convertible, with automatic, powar otaarlng brakas. radio, heater, brand, new whitewalls, maroon finish, blacktop. *199*. Over 7* other cart to select from — On US to at M15,
red, MA 5-2056.
1968 Olds
Vista Cruiser
irskts, whitewalls, luggage rac Llks new. Only —
$3495V Merry Olds
1968 Toronado
2 door hardtop
with custom Interior, power steering. brakes, factory air conditioning, whitewalls, llks naw.
$4395
Merry Olds
*2* N. Main St.
tochestsr______OL 1*7
1968 OLDS final clearance
LOOK TO BEST FOR THE BEST SAVINGS AND VALUES
BEST
0LDSM0BILE, Inc.
550 Oakland Avenue
FE 2-8101
Double-Checked • -Used Car Specials-
1965 PONTIAC Bonneville
dooir hardtop, ^black with rad g. brakts, lust like nsw.
$1595
1965 CHEVY Impola
door hardtop/ with maroon nltho with a black tntarlor.
x-way Mat, air conditioning, hltawalls.
• $1595
1965 OLDS Jetstor
brakes, radio. O
$1495
gold Interior, automatic, 1 staerlng, brakes, radl walls. Only
$1695
1967 CHEVY Wooon
Impels with blue finish, blua Interior, white tap, tow rmtoage, automatic, powar steering, brakes. Only
$2295
1966 VW 1600
with 4-speed, radio, haetor, whitewalls. Now only
$1395
1965 BUICK Electro
225 4-door hardtop, with blua finish, blua Interior, autonwHc radio, power steering, broke*, nice family car. Only
$1695
1965 Chrysler Newport
2-door hardtop, with automatic, radio, powar steering, brake*, gold with gold Interior, nice clean car. Only
$1495
1964 BUICK Wogoq
with rad finish, red Interior, sir conditioning, radio, power steering, broket, clean and run* good. Only
$1495
BUICK-OPEL
210 Orchard Lake FE 2-9165
Factory
Official
CARS
All Models Power Equipped -Many with Air-Priced From $1895
Village Rambler
666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900
1966 MUSTANG
Burgundy, black Interior. Good V-t with a floor shift. Going back to cottage. Mutt soil. 1100 and taka over payments. Call 6*2-2178 after
1*66 MUSTANG convertible.
1966 MUSTANG
Burgundy, black Interior. Good V-t with a floor shift. Going bock to col logs. Must soil. $100 and take over payments. Call 607-2T71 after
1966 MUSTANG, TAKE
1968 OLDS 98 Holiday Sedan
--- — Foctl- -M
Vinyl t
$3995
Suburban Oldsj
BIRMINGHAM
160 *. Woodward	Ml 7-51111
AUDETTE PONTIAC Offers MICHIGAN'S FINEST
Audette Pontiac, Inc.
at the
1850_MAPLE_RD.J15 MILE) TROY
m
paymonts. 627-3*15.
1*65 FORD GALAXIE 500
1*66 FAIRLANE GTA >14*5 with *97 ird) I down TURNER FORD. Ml 4 7500. 623-0*00 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE, 1*66, air
beautiful artlc while with' black top, and raady for the fun people. Vacation special only 11060 full pries. Just Ml down, and $48.65 par month. J /Oar or 50,000 mil* now car warranty.
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
430 Oakland Ays.	FE 5-4101
conditioning^ lly - I1SH.
1*65 T-BIRD N and factory ■ vacation ipoctal
mile now car warranty.
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
to Oakland Av».______FE 5-411
1965 FORD FALCON
3-door. 4 cylinder auto beautiful condition, read' home at:
$895
AUDETTE
1*67 T-BIRD 4-door landau full powar, 17,000 actual m f beautiful autumn gold finish, vinyl top. Sava a bunch on .. one. $2,881 full price, lust $2M down, and M5.2S par month. This car has 5-year or 50,000 mlla now
1N7 T-BIRD Landau with beautiful champagne finish, with black vinyl top, full power, and factory air conditioning,’ Vocation Special at only >2100. Full price, $288 down, 185,23 per month. 5 year or 50X100 mils. Naw cor warranty.
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD !
<30 Oakland Ave,	FE S-4101
$5 DOWN
$5 DOWN
1962 Corvair Monza Coups, red with black vinyl interior. Stick * shift, black b u c k a’t leats, radio, heater, whitewalls. B a i a n-c a due $186.42, weakly payments $2.37.	1961 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, 4-door hardtop, turquoise with white top and matching interior, full power, factory air conditioned. Balance due $246.91, weekly payments $3.06.	1965 Chevy Bel Air 2-door, white with blue i n t e rToTr, 6-cylinder automatic, powersteering, power brakes, radio, hooter, white-walls. Balance due $632.81, weekly payments $5.07.	1961 Chevy Impala 2-door hardtop, blue with matching inferior, V-8 automatic, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, white-walls. Balance due $194.07, weekly payments $2.36.
1963 Mercury Maraud* er SS 2-door hardtop, white with black vinyl top and matching interior,. radio, heater, whitewalls, bucket , 	seats, console, power . steering, power brakes. Balance due $193.17, 1 weekly payments $2.46.	1966 ford Custom 4-door, rabbins egg blue with rrlatching interior, -6-cylinder automatic, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, --I whitewalls. B a 1 a n c e due $407.88, weekly payments $3.91.	4962 Pontiac Tempest LeMans Convertible, Sahara gold with white top and matching Interior, automatic, bucket seats, radio, heat er,whitewoils. Balance due $$47.38, Weekly payments $3.26.	1962 fontiac Bonneville 4-door hardtop; sunset gold with brown vinyl interior, power steering, power brakes, V-8 automatic, radio,, h gate r, whitewalls. . Balance due $443.61, weekly payments $3.18.
. ____________igod to «t your budget. Immedlato d
Inducting many convortlWts. Wo accept trade-ins I-— bankrupt, garnisheed, lu$* turned It Or are new fit area, ate .
Walk In—Drive Out—Credit Ok'ed
681-0802
3275 WEST HURON
Call Col lad Within JO MM# Radius
Comer M-59 and Elizabeth Lake Road
681-0802
1*86 TOKINOOT-ftAtRLAWE 800 with bsswtHul-wwtotlc- turquoIss .. . .	— vinyl interior, V-
Been Bankrupt? — Divorced? Got a problem* Call Mr. White King Auto, 601-0002.
1*67 MUSTANG Hardtop, With VS,
Tunic, . rar- ‘—— --------------
I ---------
Spoil Of or
steering, beautiful metafile turquoise, with matching Interior. '-‘ ■si condition. Vocation special y tlltt. Full Pries. Just I1M and *55.7* par month. S year
_ ________„___cor warranty.
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
630 Oakland Ave.
II carb. automatic.
Nt
radio, neater, power stealing, brakas. Ilka naw. save a bunch on this on#. BIG TRADE Allowance, 1,000 rnltoi.
John McAuliffe Ford
430 Oakland Avo. FE 3-4101
1968 Falcon
2 SOOR SEDAN
with * cyl. automatic, groan (Inis low miles, and raady to go at—
$1995
FLANNERY
MILOSCH
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
1*63 Mercury Comet convertible, auto., V4, radio, whltowaMs, flow top, Mod tiros, *J95. 477 M-24,
uksb	■
1*65 MiRCURY PARKIANE, Sir
1*61 MERCURY MONTEGO, 2-door, hordtog.^everjthing but Sir. Make
1H* OLDS, 2-DOOR hardtop, good condition. *225. 3334021, attar l 'iJJr mm. U • HOLIDAY X - -
doorhardtap. Auto. Owfeto powo^ Radio. Exc. wtittowallo. WS. 330*
1*64 OLDS, NINETY EIGHT, 4Boor hardtop. This car has awnrthlnq. vacation sgBdtofc .only *im toll I pFlra, |usTsiss .down and *41.65
Y JdHiTmcAULIFFE FORD
Im Oakland Ava.	Ft Midi
TOM RADEMACHER
. CHEVY-OLD*
1*65 OLOe Dynamic M 2 door hardtop,, automatic powar stoarlng, . brakas, radio, heater, whitewalls, white finish. Only *15*5. Over 75 other ears to aatoct from — On US to at MIS, Clarkston, MA S-3B7I.
VSTMT
-jSsrsMShi3
10th ANNUAL
RED TAG
SALE NOW GOING ON AT
1962 CHEVY Impala Sport Sedan wlfll' V-I, automatic, radio, hootor, whitewalls, bright rad -finish.' $697	1966 ' CHEVY Biscoyne Wagon Masssngsr. stick shift, economy -4-cyL angina, silver blut finish, “’■$1497	1966 FORD Galqxie 500 Convt. with V-f, automatic, power steering, radio, haatar, whitewalls, chestnut finish! Only- $1695	1968 CHEVELLE. Malibu Sport Coupo with V-t, automatic powar steer-ln^, vinyl root, factory warranty, * $2695
1964 Catalina Hardtop Moor, with automatic, .powar starring, brakes, radio, hootor, whitewalls tropclsl turquoise flrtiifis $1295	1966; 4-wheel drive comas with two tops, turquolss finish. Only— $1697	196$ 9-Passenger Wagon with V-t, automatic powar steering, radio, hootor, whitewalls, tuxedo black finish, Only— $1695	1964 Dynamic 88 Sport Coups, with automatic powar Stoarlng, brakas, radio, haatar, whitewalls, imperial Ivory finish. Only— $1295
1967 CHEVY Bel Air 2-door with V-I, automatic, radio, hsitor, whitewalls, factory warranty, bright rad finish. Only— : $1995	1966 TEMPEST 2-door sport coupe with V-*. automatic, radio,' haatar, whltswalls, dark aqua finish. $1597	1965 VALIANT "200" Series With V-I, automatic power steering, radio, whltswalls. $1097	1967 CAMARO Sport Coupe with 4-cyl. engine stick, buckets, factory warranty. Turquoise finish. Only— $1995
1964 RAMBLER 660 Sharp Unitl With V-I, automatic, power rtoar-Jjjiy radto, Jitgtor, aqua finish. "" $697	1967 CHEVY . Biscoyne 2-Door . . with tha famous 4-cyl. angina, stick, factory—warranty. India Ivory finish. $1595	1962 PONTIAC 2-door Hardtop Catsllns, with radio, h4atsr, tu-tone blua finish and Ivory, finish. Only— $595	1966 ford :: Fairlone 500 2-Door hardtop, with V-*. radto, hooter, whitewalls, emerald groan finish. Only— . $1595
mmimm
Oakland County's Largest Volume Chevrolet Dealer
FE 4-4547 js^sr 631 OAKLAND
Widest Selection of 'OK' Used Cars in Oakland County-
E—14
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
BEFORE YOU DECIDE
HILLSIDE!
SEE
1966	FORD Mustang
Jwodoor hardtop. "*»" V-*, radio, hootor, rod lino tlroo.
1967	CONTINENTAL Sedan
on. oil Mock boouty with Mock leotM* Intorlor, cordovan tad. Power steering, brakes, window*, 0-way power tcati, Sw^onta™ Metric door locks, AM-FM radio romot* control. Polyglas whttowoll tiro*. *010000 S-yaar or 50.000 mil* warranty. Immocwloto and a baautlful automobile.
1966	CHEVROLET Bel Air
itatlon wagon, v-t, automatic, radio, heater, whitewall*. Wondortul room ter th* family.
1967	COUGAR
two-door hardtop. Bright red wltl automatic, power *teorng, rac Balance 5-year, 50400 mile warn
1964 0LDSM0BILE
f-pattanger vi»t Dome (tatlon power (tearing and brake*, radio,
I* a tine buy.
1964 MERCURY Monterey
brakatTpowor rear wirtdowi'Tadio’rheaterT' whitawolfs. *?» aWandy.
1967 DODGE Polora
itatlon wagon. "30" " premium tire*!**One 8ot The nlceit. '
1964 PONTIAC Catalina
V-t, automatic, power iteerlng and
power iteerlng and
$1495
$ 495 DOWN
J&1495 $219$ $1395 $ 695
$2195 $ 795
HILLSIDE
UNCOIN-MERCURY
1250 Oakland 333-7863
New end 41ml Cars	111
1 ' AM? A
MERRY OLDS MO DEAL MERRY OLDSMOBILE
JJt N. Main
ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN
wagon, *13. ttl-ltU.
INt PLVMOUTH BBLVEDERE II.
-------... wagon, , auto., v -1
l-PM, now whltewal

IE give It a 243T Orchard L
5Avi’ AfoNiY' At. MIKE SAVOll CHiVV. )W W._Mapi*. Ml 4-37S3.
194* PONTIAC CATALINA, 2 door,
vary iood i—---
FOB SALE:
LUCKY AUTO
W w. wide Track
PE 4-1006 or	FC 3-7IS4
IN] BONNEVILLE COUPE -„-DEALER	>
>h tar
INI PONTIAC, IMS COMET, itatlon wagon* 2, 1064 Pontiac* 2 door hardtop, 1*42 Pontiac Bonneville*. Pltnty other cheapla* and truck*.
ECONOMY CARS
2335 DIXIE	PE 4-21*1.
New god Used Cars 106
MILOSCH
BILL HAHN
Chrysler-Plymouth-Rambler-Jeep"
Today's Special	
1966 CHEVELLE Sport39£L....., with 4-speed, ppsitraction, o real runner.	....$1795
1967 DODGE Pickup ..	,..... $1695
with V-8, sweepline box, new car war-ranty.	________!_
1966 FORD Econoline bus .. — $1095 9-passenger, automatic, radio, heater, 24,000 actual miles.
1960 VALIANT 4-door . ..........$99
Automatic, radio, heater, runs good.
1967 DODGE Coronet.............. $2095
500 new car warranty, 2-door hardtop, with automatic, air conditioning, low mileage, factory warranty.______________
1963 FORD Convertible ........ $495
Galaxie with automatic, V-8, power steering, reduced I
1964 PONTIAC Bonneville ..... $995 2-door hardtop, with automatic, radio, heater, full power.
Clarkston 6673 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-2635
MARMADUKE
By Andenon and Learning
“Found Marmaduke’s bone yet?”
New and Used Cars 106
CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH
INI Catalina 4-door * • d automatic, V-l, radio, nice clean car, OTi. 477 Laka Orion. MY 2-3P41,
1964 PONTIAC SBAND Prlx. Maroon -—-top, powor itoorlng, broke*, I. Sharp. $1,095. FE 4-75*7.
LOOK I NO FOB A BABGAIN? try THE
PONTIAC RETAIL STORE FE 3-7951
earing ai 13-0453.
1963 TEMPEST AUTOMATIC *295 with *97 down, TURNEB FORD. ML 47500.	________
r. olr, <1395, 473-7765.
GO!
HAUPT
PONTIAC
1964 PONTIAC GRAND PRIX, 5995. "W down, payment*, M.92 wr— Coll Mr. Park*, Ml 4-7500. Har ----------*rd. air-1—
____ Ford. .mm
1964 BONNEVILLE PONTIAC, Uuw hardtop, rod, V-4 ogt^^l ble powor, radio, heal Flannery Motors, Inc., sou* Hwy., Waterford, Michigan.
1964 PONTIAC STATION Wagon, lust Ilka now, no money down.
LUCKY AUTO
1968 PONTIAC CLOSE-OUT
BRAND NEW
1968 LEMANS
2 Door Hardtop
BRAND NEW
1968 PONTIAC1
Catalina 2‘ Door Sedan
Bine, automatic, hoi
tic, puih button radio. 2 vl*or .......
mirror*, outtlde remote control mir-
— ---------- (tearing, brake*, white-
it safely tooturoa.
$2897
1968 PONTIAC 4-Door Sedan
5289A
with decore group, hydramatic, push Sutton radio, complete mirror group, power steering, brakes, whitewalls, solar red finish. Ask for Stock Np. P-198. Only!
GOODWILL USED CARS
DEMO
4968
Firebird
>r hardtop, cordovan top, tie, doublo powor, radio. I , roily 2 wheal*, custom Ir
DISCOUNTED $700
1963	OLDS Holiday	895
1964	FORD Sedan ..............$ 595
1965	BONNEVILLE Air.......... $2095
1963	PONTIAC Wagon ........... $ 695
1964	GTO Convertible ..	.. $1295
1965	0Lp$ CUTLASS Coupe .... $1595 1968 CORVETTE Convertible Discounted
1968 * Javelin SST
2-door hardtop, V-t, automatic, double powor, red lint wldt oval tiros, cordovan top, deluxe wheel disc*, radio, console,
DISCOUNTED $600
We Need Late Model Trades Now!
Top $$ Allowance Now!
1965	TEMPEST WAGON ...... $1295
1966	RAMBLER 4-Door ........ $995
1965 DODGE PICKUP * 1......... $895
1965	FORD Vi-TON PICKUP .....$1295
1966	PLYMOUTH ..............$1295
1965 CHEVY $9..........   ..$149$
1967	TEMPEST Hardtop .. ....$2195
WE WILL MfEV OR BEAT ANY DEAL, WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD
PONTIA^-TEMPEST
On M-24-Lake Orion
MY 3-6266
76115_______________
1*64 fOntiac Ca+aI
• rdtop, 5750. 2*41 Wood , VoorhoS Rd.rtffrtSOt.
19*5 TEMPEST, V-t automatic, no
LUCKY AUTO
*41 T-BIrd conv......
la Conv.
*45 So^TTnwitaSs"!! *45 Tempos! Conv.
964 Catalina 4-door .
*44 WIMtl Station MS Impola Hardtop *B BotAIro * -1—r
mm
TvmpvBt coi.-----
KEEG0 PONTIAC
FIREBIRD 409	-7
OFFERED to a loving owner-
raaio wnn rear apaamr. re.nr. 11 whoel*. tochomotor, clock, biwcot soots, ttntod glass, oowor Mooring Mtaf custom Interior. Yollow wtth
Star!
■lor. *2*50. Coll *32-5591
1*44 RAMBLER WAGON *4*5 ....
*97^down TURNER FORD. Ml 4-
1965 Rambler
CONVIRTIBLB
with 4 cyl. eutometlc, radio, heotar, blue with Mu*1 Intorlor, A-i warranty Only —
$1095
FLANNERY
1*45 RAMBLER American. 4 Cl angina, automatic, spotless CO dltlon. vacation special only Ml full price, no money down.
JOHN McAULIFFE FORD
430 Oakland Ave.	FE 5,41
BUY A NEW 6
1968 Javelin
2-Door Sedan for $2469
AND HAVE YOUR CHOICE OF
Automatic Transmission or Radio for
lc
NOW AT
Village
Rambler
666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900
Miult Codfefc
In the Greater Bloomfield/Pontiac Area
SPECIAL
i. baftutlful bronzt finish with black vinyl top, wtr brakes, sir cortdltNMiln## redlo. whltewalli.
$2395
1*61 ( Pontlee LeMens, deSp blue, wllh block vinyl top, automatic with dower, radio, whltawolte factory warranty. &49S,	1*44 Pontlee Bonnovll e, convertible, v-t, lutomotle, with power, now wide oveF tires, ■eve It *995.
1*63 Cnrvolr eonVortlblo, automatic. radio, and whitewalls, a good buy,' an oxcollont cor and you can save at *3*5.	1943 Clwvy Bol Air, V4 automatic, oxcollont..condHtan, and ready to go at tho rIjjM price, iovo at *495.
SPECIAL	
1944 Chevy Von, Falntor and	carptntor, epoclol. good running
mnnman h»w $495	
Telegraph Rd. just North of Square Lake Rd. PHONE V
1965 BONNEVILLE. POWER MR • '— —1 brake*. AM-FM radio - syitom. *1,40* -* 1
MILOSCH
CHRYSLER-PIYMOUIH
1*65 LoMons sports coups, outomotlc, double powor, radio, whltowall*. *1395. 677 M-24, Lake Orion. MY 2-2041.
196S TEMPEST SAFARI Wagon, 3 automatic, extra*, original own< St195. 625-533*.
1966 BONNEVILLE 2-DOOR hardton, —idlng olr, like now, S199S. S3S-~~'
*66 L* MANS SPRINT, oxcollont condition. Mui 51550. Ml 4 ~i“
MANSFIELD
1*66 LoMon* Coup*, double power, bucket aoati, tinted Bias*, auto., console, olr conditioning, radio, hootor, whitewall*. Call L. C.
WILLIAMS, SALESMAN._
1104 Baldwin Ave.
FE 0-0900	_____ n MOSS
shift, run* beautiful. Si
.1966 CATALINA WAGON, white, red interior, power steering, brakes, t auto, transmission, exc. condition.
1964 Sterflrt, 3 door hardtop, lust | absolutely beautiful, hat everything. Including AM-FM radio.
$1995
1964 Tempest La Mohs, Convertible, very nlco, only
$795
LOOK TO BEST FOR THE BEST!
BEST
Oldsmobile, Inc.
550 Oakland Avenue
. FE 2-8101
NOW AT THE
@>im
ms
mamma
MAPLE ROAD (15 MILE) BETWEEN C00LIDGE AND CROOKS 2Vs MILES EAST OF WOODWARD ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT
ONE STOP!!!
NEW-USED CAR SHOPPING
Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling Volkswagen Mike Savoie Chevrolet £$
All Brand New Facilities on 60 Acresl
MANSFIELD
1967 LoMons Coupe, 4-speed, console, power steering, vinyl too, 1 owners, V-t. Cell SALESMAN L. C. WILLIAMS.
1*67 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4 door; sodon, decor group, powor steering end brakes, plus air. Coll oftar 4, 425-2265.
19*7 CATALINA, a-DOOR hardtop, full power plus blr- S2150. FE 2-0111, bat. 9-5.	_____________t
power, etc., 444491*. Make ojttr.
1968 Pontiac.
CATALINA Convertible with automatic, radio, hootoi powor steering, brakes, whitewall wheel covers, low mileage. Ilk
Ty $2795 Merry Olds
Bering, i let miles
52,730. Must 'sell. 492-
940 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-door hardtop, doublo powor, vinyl *-» 9,000 miles. *2650. 4024472.
194* PONTIAC EXECUTIVE *door hardtop, powor stoorlng o n d brakes, automatic. much more. 651-4292.
«r
S* TEMPEST 2-DOOR hardtop, full
1960 GTO. RED, LOW mileage.
I27Q0, 482-7630.	____1	_____
19^ixicUTiyC 2 Poor hardtop.
wjTfcATALINA 2-POOR hardtop. |
MANSFIELD
I960 Grand Prlx, double POWOI tinted glees, auto., whitewalls, AN FM Radio, tilt otoorlng whoa hood rest, looitad. C88T L. C.i WILLIAMS. SALElNMAN.
' 1104 Baldwin Ave.
FE 5-5900 ___ FE 04*251
I960 PONTIAC . CATAUNA, Adoor hardton, full Power, 11,000 miles,
KT*
"affimasttsat*
1941 PONTIAC VENTURA.
powgr*
ati
Fg**
lOtt CXTAIWIA tjWWWL.. douhto powor. rod, luBOOPO obrrlor. 6t2-*125.
WfB.yENTGWSr
SHARP l**t LEMANS, . 2 Goor! hardtop, AlpIno Bhio.Jtlodi vinyl; top, white Interior, auto, with oc-sole, power eteerinp, whltewal
1968 Pontiac
Ceteline 4 doer
sedan, with auMfhflta, t radio, hooter, power ttaorktg broket, whitewalls, Whitt covers, Hko now,
kSF , r "	1
^$2695
Merry Olds
YES, ANYONE CAN BUY ACAR FROM STANDARD
EVEN IF YOU HAVE BEEN
Bankrupt, Garnisheed, in Receivership, or Just Out of Service, if You Are 21 Years Old.
JtfE-^Wa.fc FINANSE A GAn F-0R-Y0H-
1961 CHEyY IMPALA, 4-door,
. $395
1962 BUICK SPECIAL, 2-door, <£QQC: hardtop ’	KpOaU
1963 FORD FAiRLANE, 2-door, <t*QQC: leather interior.	KpO^vJ
1962 CHEVY II, 4-door, stick $495
1963 OLDS 88, 2-door, hardtop, $*795
1962 VOLKSWAGEN, like new, $495
1963 CHEVY II, wagon, 4-door, automatic,
$595
1964 PONTIAC TEMPEST, 2-door, bucket seats,
$695
NO CREDIT APPLICATIONS REFUSED?;
COME IN OR CALL . FE 8-4033
B		1962 T-BIRD, like new, $795
U Y	1964 PONTIAC, Brougham sharp $]_QQ5
	1962 PONTIAC, red with block
H E	1962 COMET, 2-door; automatic, $495
	1964 CHEVY 4-door, automatic, $00 0
R T?	1963 FORD, Galaxie, wagon, $005
Ei	1964 PQNTIAC Bonneville, con- (Jilirtr vertible M>llaO
P	1964 PONTIAC Catalina .* con- rhi CT vertible, M>lUyD
A Y	\ 109 e.;
	Blvd. South
H E'. R E	Corner , Auburn
	FE 84033-
THIS PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY,,SEPTEMBER S, 1068
E—15 MS,'
—Television Programs—
Program! fumishod by stations listed In this column a ra subject to change without notice
Choimsiw a-WJSK-TV. 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXY2-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, aO-WKIP-TV, sa-wtva
THURSDAY NIGHT
6:00 (1) (4) <Y) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R —< Dennis the Menace
(SO) R — Flintatones i. (56) Mlsterogers 1:10 (J) C — News — Cronkite
(4) C — News — Huntley, Briiddey (0) R—F Troop (SO) R — McHale’s Navy (56) What’s New 7:06 (2) R C — Truth or Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Sports
(7) C —	News	—
Reynolds
(9) R — Movie: “Stage Fright” (1950) Marlene Dietrich, Jane Wyman (50) R — My Favorite Martian
(56) NET	Festival	—‘
Flutist Herbie Mann and his quintet are highlighted..
7:30 (2) (Special) C — Billy Graham Crusade — The evangelist finishes up his HemisFalr Crusade.
(4) R C — Daniel Boone Trapper seeks an eye for an eye after son is kidnaped while in Daniel’s care,
(7) R C — Second Hundred Years — Col. Gar-roway tries to protect the frozen-people secret as charming Russian visitor gets friendly with Luke, (50) R — I Love Lucy 8:00 (7) R C — Flying Nun , —Sister Bertrille gets involved in a used-car deal. (50) R — Hazel (56) Fairly Tales — “The Three Chests” is a classic .^Finnish tale' about a farmer who must give his daughter to a creature who dwells in the sea.
8:30 (2) R C—Truth or Consequences
(4) R C — Ironside,—' Mark Sanger goes out on his own" to find his girlfriend’s killer.
(7) R C — Bewitched — Aunt Clara conjures up a toy flying saucer, but a real one shows uPggp trailed by two curious Air Force officers.
(50) R—Honeymooners (56) Festival — Pulitzer Prize winner Karl Shapiro’s poetry is featured.
8:55 (9) C — News 9:00 (2) R C' 8 Movie: “Party Girl” ( 19 5 8 ) Robert Taylor, Cyd Char-isse, Lee J. Cobh (7) R C — That Girl — Money-mad pi a y b o y makes a pitch at Ann, who wear? a borrowed chinchilla to a jet-set party.
(9) R —LockUp (50) R — Perry Mason — B ar bar a Hale is featured.
(56) R — NET Playhouse
—	“Past Intruding,” a
* Japanese film; shows^eg; ( periences of a psychiatrist who accidentally uncovers buried memories of a horrible World War H experiences.
1:30 (4) R C — Dragnet -Friday and Gannon visit a self-proclaimed hippie prophet, a suspected pusher of hallucinogens.
(7) C *- Dream House (9) Telescope
10:00 (4) C — Golddiggers — Frank Sinatra Jr, and Joey Heatherton salute the big bands of the ’30s in the finale of this summer series.
(7) R C - Wackiest Ship (9) C — Creative Person
—	Novelist . James Jones, visited at his heme outside Parts, discusses his new book, file war in
TV Features
BILLY GRAHAM CRUSADE, 7:30 p.m. (2)
NET PLAYHOUSE, 9 p.m. (|56)
GOLDDIGGERS,
(4)
10 p.m.
.SILENT MOVIE, 10 p.m. (56)
Vietnam and other topics.
(SO) Les Crane — John Birch Society spokesman Gary Allen and leftish author Paul Jacobs debate.
(56) Silent Movie: “My Boy” (1921) Orphaned waif tries to make friends with an old sea-dog. Jackie Coogan, Mathilde Brumdege, Claude Gilling-water
10:30 (9) Difference — Con-1, flicts between national and provincial interests of French-Canadian p o 1 i t i -dans in federal office are examined.
11:00 (2) (4) (7) (9) News, Weather, Sports (50) R — Alfred Hitchcock 11:29 (2) R — Movies: “Dark A ngeF7” (1935) Fredric March, Merle Oberon, Herbert Marshall; 2. C ->• “Web of Passjon” (French-Italian, 1959) Jean-Paul Belmondo,. Antonello Lualdi, Diane Durocher (4) Johnny Carson (7) Joey Bishop (9) R — Secret Agent (50) R — Movie: “Special Agent” (1935) Bette Davis, George Brent 12:30 (9) Window on the World
1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) News 1:30 (4) C-PDQ 3:00 (2) R - Dobie Gillis 3:30 (2) R—Highway Patrol 4:00 (2) C- News
Army Post Outlaws Flower-Power Cars
Ft. CARSON, Colo. (AP)
The Army is waging a defoli ation campaign against Flower Power car stickers on the Ft Carson reservation.
The adhesive-backed plastic or paper flower stickers have got to go under terms of a recent order, military police said.
Psychedelic paint jobs also are taboo. But racing stripes' are permitted.
Busing Is Out, but Stables Are Free
ATA»:ADERO,:Caiif. '(APf For pupils who live 10 miles from school or less, busing is out this year in the Atascadero Unified School District.
We just can’t afford it,” Supt. Edward Holden said Wednesday. But he said, free stabling will be provided to youngsters who ride horses to school. -
New Alma Prof
ALMA (AP)—John E. Wellington, former pmcipal erf Howell High School, has been appointed an assistant professor of education at Alma College. Wellington also has served as principal of high schools in Holt, Fowlerville and. Mackinaw City.
FRIDAY MORNING 5:45 (2) On the Farm Scene 5:50 (2) C-News 6:00 (2) U. of M. Television (4) Classroom 6:10 (2) C - Gospel Singing Caravan
(4) C — Ed Allen 7:00 (2) C - Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C —Today (7) C Morning Show 7 :55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round
8;l|,(2) C - Captain Kangaroo
(9) Tales of the River Bank
1:30 (7) R — Movie: “What A Woman” (1943) Rosalind Russell, Brian Aherne
(9) Upside Town 9:00 (2) C — Merv Griffin 0(4) C — Steve Allen 1 (9) C — Bozo the Clown 10:00 (4) C—Snap Judgment (7) C — Virginia Graham (9) R — Hawkeye 10:25 (4) C - News 10:30 (2) R C - Beverly Hillbillies
(4) C — Concentration (7) C — Dick Cavett ' (9) R C — Friendly Giant (50) C — Jack LaLanne 10:45 (9) Chez Helene 11:00 (2) R - Andy of Mayberry
(4) C — Personality (9) R — Mr. Dressup (50) C — Kimba 11:25 (9) Pick of the Week 11:30 (2) R — Dick Van Dyke
(4) C — Hollywood Squares
(50) R — Little Rascals 11:55 (9) News
FRIDAY AFTERNOON
12:00 (2) (4) C — News, Weather, Sports .	(7) R —Bewitched
(9) Luncheon Date 12:25 (2) C-V Fashions 12:30 (2) C — Sqarch for Tomorrow i (4) C — Eye Guess (9) R — Movie: “Brimstone’’ (1949) Rod Cameron, Adrian Booth, Walter Brennan (50) R — Movie: “Cain and Mabel” ( 1936 ) Clark Gable, Marion Davies
12:45 (2) C — Guiding Light 12:55 (4) C - News 1:00 (2) C — Love of Life (4) C — Match Game (7) C — Dream House 1:25 (2) C — News (4) C — Carol Duvall 1:30 (2) C - As the World Turns
(4). C — Let’s Make a
Deal
(7) C — It’s Happening 1:55 (7) C ^ Children’s Doctor
2:00 (2) C—Love Is a Many Splendored Thing (4) C—Days of Our lives (7) C— Newlywed Game , 2:36 (2) C —House Party H C — Doctors (7 ) C — Dating Game (50) R — Make Room for Daddy
3:00 (2) C — Divorce Court C -e-AntrfherJKprld	..
GeneralHospital (9) R — Route 66 (50) R C — To Tell the Truth
3:25 (50) C — News 3:30 (2) C--Edge of Night (4) C — You Don't Say (7) C — One Life to Live (50) C — Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Woody Woodbury (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Swingin’ Time 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas r (7) R — Movie: “Imitation General” ( 1958 ) Glenn Ford, Red Buttons (50) R — Three Stooges 5:60 (9) C — Bozo (50) R. — Little Rascals 5:30 (4) C — George Pierrot (9) C Fun House (50) R —Superman 5:45 (56) Friendly Giant
G-*
Places and Things
Answer ts PiwtIokb hnb
ACROSS 1 Swiss > elevations
8	Rail bird
9	Faucet
13 Pike’s---,
Colorado
13	Bakins chamber
14	Employ
30 Rational 41 Mariner’s direction 43 Recent ,44 Glut 46 Keeps 40 Permeate
53	Zoo primate
54	Certain BSA member!
15 Designating 66 Driving
17 Narrow inlat	command
18	Western	57 Assam
cattle	. silkworm
39 Everlasting	58 Very (fr.)
31 Vended	59 Even
33 Varnish	(contr.)
ingredient 34 Wrong (prefix)
37 Body of water
39 Drone beta
33	Mountain crests
34	Narcotic SOCorrect
errors ina manuscript 37 Applauder 39 Paradis*
0 Celestial being .
9 Renegades
10	Continent
11	Bail sound 16 Topical
haadinga 1	____
30 Tala vision’s	49 Fury
forerunner	47 Fencing
33	Misplaces	weapon
34	Feta tie hors* 43 Roman
25	Angered	emperor
26	Adolescent	60 Lump in
_________ year	cloth
3	Top of head	38 Feminine	51 Shoshonean
4	Heavens appellation	Indians
6 The sun	30 Routes (ab.)	82 Essential
6	City in	31 Withered	being
Spain	33	Rlngwom\	55 Chemical
7	Leys*	35	Pertaining to	salt
•0 Cause to revolve -61 Otherwise DOWN 3 Mimics 3 Gave us* temporarily
A Look at TV
Back to Peyton Place
	r"	r	4		r”	r~	T“	6		r-	To	TT
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nr				16						1?		
IV						16’:			36			
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u	X	an									so	31
a												
36												
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		ki										
43	IT									sr	61	52
S3				Si								
56				S7					66			
59				66				.	61			0
												
By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer NEW YORK - The /trouble with vacations and business trips is that they are likely shake the viewer out of his normal television habits.
Missing a few summer variety hours, like “Music Hall” or Show Time” is nothing to fret about, but it is something else wheh one has been away for perhaps several weeks from the daytime Serials or particularly, ‘Peyton Place.”
4	★	4
Constant Viewed, after a two-months absence, was back in the ABC soap opera town last night. It was like straying into a land where everybody spoke a foreign language.
There was that earnest young
clergyman, Tom Winters, nouncing his decision to leave the church because he is “in love with a woman who. 18’no! my wife." Nobody told us who the other woman was.
WIFE PLEADING Meanwhile, in Peyton Place! hospital his wife lay in bed with Intravenous feeding tubes in her arm but every false eyelash in place, pleading for help in get-j ting Tom back. Will Susan go back to the bottle if Tom per-J sists in hl» plan?
another hospital room there is poor Rodney Harrington lying on his stomach with his chin in a sling looking mournful while a famed neurosurgeon presses his spinal coh ■ asks if he feels anything: He doesn’t. What happened to Rodney? Will he ever walk again?
TV Nets Cool to Daley's Bid
— Radio Programs’—
WJR(760) WXYZQ 270) CKLW(800) WWH950) WCARQ130) WPONQ 440) WJ6KG SOOi WHFI-fM(94.7)
TONIGHT 4:90—WJR, NOW* WWJ, Mom, Sporti CKLW, Tom Shannon WXYZ, Ntwooopo
wjbic Nawti ftank |
WCAR, Now*. Ron Ri WPON, News, Phene <
wjr. Time .Vreyelir
T: IB—WWJ, uM SportsLIne WJBIC NeWfTTom Dean WCAR; News,'eick Stewart WJR, Wortd Tonight T:1t-WJR. Business. Sports
Tiio-WXYZ, News, Dave
WPON, Music tin MMnlte WJR, Reasoner Report, Choral Cavalcade, •■sa-wjR, News, Dimension t;f'S-WJR, Penorama tile—WHFl, Tom Coleman CKLW, Scott Regen.
WJR, News, Kaleidoscope 10:00—WJR, News t0;15—WJR, Focus «neorO ItiOS-WJR, News 11:1$—WJR, SportS F1nsl lists—WJR, Music Till Dawn WWJ, Death Notices, Over-
it:so—wxyz. News, Jim Davis	/f k
CKLW, Frank Bredle 7 WCAR, News, Wayne nmifc-
PRIOAY MORNINO 9:00—WJR, MUSIC Hall WWJ, News
4:10-WPON, News, John Irons .
4:SO—WWJ, Morris Carlson
WHFl. Uncle Jay WCAR; rtews, Jim CKLW, Mark Rlehei WWJ, Newt
Jerry
WCML nSJ., Rod Miller WJBK, News, Conrad ■ Pptrk* ...	. .
WXYZ. News, Jehniw Rond-
11:00—WJR, News, KsletJo-
WWJ, News, Emphasis WCAR, News, Rod Miller WPON,. News, Music CKLW, Jim Edwards .... IlstS—WJR. Focus . . 11:IS—WWJ, Msrty McNealey WXYZ, Ntwt, Don McNeill IsW-WJR,
. Godtre WWJ. New IslS—WXYZ, News, Jetmny 1:00—WPON*,* News, Pat AP-
whfSTwb l____
WJR. News
WXYZ, News, Dick . Purten I:1S—WPON, Lum 'n* Abner $:10—WPON, pat Appolson
Human Error
TACOMA, Wash. (AP) - A computer got confused Wednesday and 1>ut a boy in g girls* physical education class—and » vice-versa. School officials, blaming a human error in programming the computer, said, that they got the two- mistakes straightened out before shower time.
Color TV
RCA-ZENITH
LOWEST PRICES BEST SERVICES
CONDON'S
TV Sales fir Service 730 W. Huron FE 4-9736
Marriage Rerun Possible for Zsa Zsa and Sanders?
By EARL WILSON
NEW YORK—Well, here we go again with Zsa Zsa What’s Her Name. Miss Gabor has told us that she would very much like to remarry her once-upon-a-time husband George Sanders, although from time to time she has publicly lacerated him with her choicest ZsaZsaisms. George, whose wife, Benita Hume, died some months ago, is alleged to have replied, ‘.‘It could happen, find your money a great aphrodisiac.”
★	4	*
Did you know that Sidney Poitier is now not only one of the handsomest but also one of f the richest movie actors? He makes not onlyigj^H good pictures but good deals and devotes him-|||HI self largely to his young daughters. His es- < tranged wife is returning to the study of law.
Eddie Fisher is becoming a father agaift around Christmas week. He rushed Connie Ste-|||g vens to a hospital the other day and she almost; lost the baby via miscarriage, but all is well’ now. Eddie is very thin. “From working,” he said.
4	4	4
Nancy Sinatra Jr. bounced up and kissed me the other day when I saw her with her favorite escort, Jack Haley Jr. My goodness, she and Jack Jr. really like’each oti(er, according to what I hear. If they should ever take the vows, would this be the first time Junior ever married Junior?
★	★	4
Hubert Humphrey’s got .quite a sister to stump for, him in vivacious, outgoing Mrs. Frances Humphrey Hart, head of AID in the State Dept., who was reportedly resigning shortly to devote her time to the campaign. When I presented myself to her, she said in a laughing mood as she shook my hand, “We’ve met before but I always shake hands wiih-raen, because I like them to hold my hand.”
★	★	★
Jackie Robinson’s taking care these days since he had a heart attack In late June. For three weeks he was in bed “nr between bed and the,TV set,” be says. But he made a trip to tfieXhieago convention to’speak- for	alt aUbljuVCkly
to go home to New York and rest.
4	4	4.
Louis Armstrong keeps looking thinner and; thinner and distributing more and more copies, of his diet to friends—with a tagline at the end suggesting a purgative every week. Louis’s frieqds are concerned about his skinny appearance but Old Satchmo says it’s-by choice.	*	*
Louis is unique in his language, it seems to me. “Coin’ out and do some scoffin’ " (eating), he says- “Gonna put some grease in me” (eating), “then gonna cut out, Daddy,” he laughs. Guess he’s the whole world’s favorite and if he ever ran for something, there wouldn't be one vote against. Why don’t they people like Batch for something?
THE MIDNIGHT EARL IN N. Y.
CHICAGO (UPI) - Mayor Richard J. Daley is b e i n turned down on the free nationwide television time he wants for presenthtion of his side of the Chicago disorders story, but fs getting offers of TV time from other sources.
Columbia Broadcasting System yesterday fatly rejected Daley's request for an hour , of free prime time to counter what he called “slanted and distorted” television coverage of the disruptions during last week’s Democratic National Convention.
.4	.4	4
said the mayor’s half-hour appearance on its network (luring the convention constituted equal time.
The National Broadcasting Co. 'offered Daley an hour’s time eta the “Meet The Press” interview show, but Daley rejected that offer yesterday as not meeting ’’the purpose for which we 'requested time on NBC.” \
ABC IS MUM
the American, Broadcasting Co. was the mayor’s last hope for'nationwide live c but ABC said it hadnot received Daley’s request aqdVould not comment on it.
'	‘4	4	4
group of Chicago Mabor leaders, who side with\the mayor in the dispute, yesterday offered to finance the cost of prime time on the three major networks, although it had not been decided how to raise the money.
And so it went for 30 minutes. !
It will take at least two weeks of ! faithful viewing to catch up with I all the new twists and turns in “ the story. It is easier and quick, jj ,
with the daytime soaps: 11*v	--------g
Those stories move at a slower • Tnil etc " 1Q9S J pace and they usually pvnlain I IWILtlJ 8 IJ i as they go along.	•
j 3-Piece BATH SET j
— -592}
i White or From ! Colored “B»
NBC’s summer “Music Hall”|l last night vividly illustrated the!I perils of inserting topical humor | in programs taped far in ad-|V vance of air time.
It was shot in June or early |
July. Now that it is fashiohble | for variety show hosts to toss a | few political darts in their open-1 ing monologue, Ed McMahon’s | script had a line about James |
Amess of “Gunsmoke” running | for sheriff of Dodge City, and | winning easily because his oppo- ar nent was Richard Nixon. |L LOST HUMOR	I 0 MM PI IIHRIIIfa!
"Between the time the show’s I	B	1
writer inserted the crack and I 841 Baldwin £ the time of the broadcast, a lot I FE 4-1811 or FE 84111
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of things occurred, including two political conventions. Today Nixon-loser jokes are out of style and Jutve lost their humor, 4	4	4
Over-all, however, the summer shows of (his year-round variety series have the advantage of being fresh programs, a nice change from reruns. i
8-2108 i
99.M. g
Nixon Kin Is Due
LANSING (AP) - Tricla and Julie Nixon, daughters of Republican presidential nominee Richard Nixon, and David Eia-enhower, grandson of former President Dwight Eisenhower, will visit the Detroit area Sept. 14, Creighton Holden, director of the Victory ’68 Committee, said Wednesday. He said file trio was expected to arrive arnnit 11 a.m. but that details of their trip were unannounced.
liiurinEsSRr
Tender, Gold«n Friid Fith Dinners ■
YOU
CAN
EAT
▼ Friday FE 8-9639
CARRY-CUT
CORNER OF HURON and JOHNSON
(Across from Pontiac Gonpral Hoopital)
Eight blade membejrs of “Hair” declined to work a matmee performance after returning from the funeral of cast member j i-amnnt Washington, who died of bums. After a 40-minute delay, white cast members took over their roles—including an impersonation of file three singing Snpremes. (Everybody's back on the job now.)	.. .................
When Mayor Lindsay took his family to see “George M!” a pretty actress told his wife backstage, “I love your husband =J I’m going to steal him!” “That," said Mrs. Lindsay, “is exactly why I’m here.”..'. . Sybil Christopher shuttered Arthur for the night, as a protest against Chicago cops. (Mike Nichols wanted' to do a TV documentary, but. a TV boss said fr would be “too inflammatory”)
Bob Hope, Walter Matthau and Otto Preminger were In Carol Channing’s audience at her big Las Vegas Riviera premiere Secret Stuff: A top H’wood actor finished filming in Europe just in time — the local 09s were about to toss him out for puffing pot . . . Oskar Werner’s unhappy that David Janssen’s billed; over him in “Sloes of the Fisherman.”
TODAYS BEST LAUGH: Taffy Tuttle tries to say nice things about everybody. If she mentions that » notorious gang-| ster is “a man of great warmth,” it probably means he was electrocuted. ,	■
REMEMBERED QUOTE: “The only graceful way to accept an insult is to ignore it If you can’t ignore it, laugh fit it. If you can’t laugh at it, it’s probably deserved.”—Russell Lynes.
EARL’S PEARLS: Marty Allen reports that a French movie company is filming a story about Charles de Gaufie: “It will: end touchingly—he dies In his own arms ’’ . . . Hiat’s earl,
UJait-Stif
Give yourself a treat, make your washday pleasant in a friendly atmoshphere. We honestly believe our place is the only one of its kind in existence in this area. We feature Frigidaire equipment and for the comfort of your husband or friends coming along for the ride a fenced-in lounge to read in or relax in while you wait. For . your convenience, the owners are on duty at all times to help with change or any difficulty with equipment, carrying laundry in and out. Stop in and meet the Masza Family — Bob (Pa), Julie (Ma), Mike and Nancy (Young *uns), GiGi (Family Poodle)
LAUNDRY VILLAGE 747 N. Pony **• '
PERRY SHOPPING CENTER
(Across From Kroger Super Market)
17” Ambassador *19”
17” Crosley -j, *24^
14” Portable *29”
21” Sylvania
*34»5
17” Portable *39”
21” PNIco *39”
21" Emerson *39”
21" Airline *49”
19” Portable *59” ,
21" Zenith Remote *89**
30-DAY EXCHANGE PRIVILEGE
FB 2-2987
WALTON TV
515 E. WaNon Blvd.
ComorJoslyn
E—16
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER g, 1968
MO MONEY DOWN On Sears Easy Payment Plan
Sears Gas Furnace
Regular $189
*105
Sears “600” 75,000 BTU Space Saver is built for long, dependable life. Deluxe features include high power fan, automatic gas pilot cutoff, self-cleaning burners, stainless steel flame spreader, and automatic controls. Summer switch lets you use blower to circulate air during summer months.
105.000	BTU, Reg. $229 .........$200
135.000	BTU, Reg. $169..........$230
150.000	BTU, Reg. $289 .........$240
175.000	BTU, Reg. $299 .........$250
Super “15” Power Furnace Humidifier
",T«r $59
Evaporates up to 15 gallons a day. Makes your home more comfortable during winter by reducing the discomfort of hot, dry air. Also reduces I	annoying static electricity.
Georgia Dem Chief Backs Off Ballot Stand
ATLANTA. Ga. ( AP) - Georgia Democratic Party Chairman James H. Gray backed off a position he took at the Democratic National Convention yesterday and said national party nominees ‘‘naturally" would have a place on flie Georgia ballot.
When the convention's credentials committee split Georgia’s
votes between the regular dele-1 jgation and a group headed by] State Rep. Julian Bond, Gray said he would refuse to certify the national electors fo/ the Georgia ballot.
Howeyer, he said today that in Chicago, he was ‘‘using all I could to get my delegation on the floor.
"But naturally we’re hot I going to deny anybody the bal-| lot," b« said. "I was being] budgeoned at the tim^. Now, of course, we want to give every-1 body a shot at it."	,
★ * *
Gray said a number of plans have been submitted to him about how to handle the situa-
tion, but he said the State Dem-1 ocratic Executive Committee will decide the issue, probably next week.
He said that for example the] I party could withhold the traditional donkey emblem from1 electors for Vice President Hu-bert Humphrey.
Or, he said, the party could
put up electors who are not popular in Georgia or name electors who could vote for anyone they pleased. /	/
"We really don’t have to certify theip," he said. "But, in all fairness, if we made them go signed. Gray said. ‘.‘It would petMinn mute, we would-bajhn, in effect, denying the Hum-denying then}, a place on the phrey ticket a place on the ballot."	I Georgia ballot.”
Members of the Bond group had talked of putting the national ticket on the ballot through a petition drive.
"They Just couldn't get them
12’ Kitchens with All-Wood Cabinets
Choose from 3 Elegant Styles ... Price Includes
•	Built-in dishwasher	• Range hood
• Drop-in elaetrie ranga	• 12’ counter top
•	link with strainers, faucet * 38" sink front
•	1IM base cabinet	• 30" range filler
•	2 HxlO" wall cabinets	• 42x30" wail eabinet
•	30x10" wall eabinat
20% OFF Other Size Cabinets
12’ SHADOW CABINET STYLE
168
Regular
960.68
860* Installation Available
12’ MEDITERRANEAN STYLE
12’ TOWN CLASSIC STYLE
889“
Regular
997.68
Installation Available Sears Kitchen Planning Dept. ,
Sears Basement Storm Window
Reg. 2.09
Insulate your home. • Help!' ■void icy winter drafts. Storm panel removes by releasing : four ciipi. Aluminum, won't rust or warp.
Phone your Sear* store for all your Kitchen Improvement and Installation' needs, or mail this coupon and a Sears representative will contact you.
Open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5:30
Sears
Combination Insulating Door Rag. 45.95
36
Help keep your home warmer in winter, coder in summer. Completely weatherstripped to keep out icy drafts. Heavy, keyed corners assure you a perfect fit- Fiberglass screen won’t sag or stretch.
Reg. 55.96 White............$45
Sears All-Weather Insulating Window
Rag. 15.95,
1 VSb” All-Weather Aluminum Door
Deluxe, heavy duty with adjust. pe, gg,gg able hydraulic closer, vinyl pro- *’	’
tected storm chgin. Piano stylo
sg. IS.98 .. . Salt! $88
Cross Buck Style Aluminum Door
Rugged white finish. Fiberglass Rag. 91.88 screening, attractive black hard-	■
ware included.	’qI
1W' Aluminum Jalousie Door
20 tough, adjustable louvers. R«g. g,|| No-rust fiberglass screening.	6 El
Ideal for porches, breeteways.	*,3
Whits. Reg. 88.88........981
Combination Window
' Vinyl and aluminum frame pro- Rsg. 21.88 vides a more complete weather g.--seal. Fiberglass screening.
Hill Finish
Sears Combination Window
Panels tilt in for cleaning from the inside. Change easily from storing to screens.'In a variety of sixes. Natural finish.
11.15 Whit* Finish.......... .15.77
Sears Building Materials Dept.
m
All-weather window feature* vinyl-cushioned glass inserts. Sava fuel and coaling costs.	Rag. 10.9$ 1577 Mill Finish
	
2-Panel Sliding Window Aluminum outer frame plus ' vinyl inner frame cut best loss. . Fiberglass screen. -	Reg. 22.7$ 2©77 Mill Finish
Downtown Pontiac • Phone EE 5-4171
SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO,
Gas Wall Furnace
Rag. 104.95
No Money Down
20,000BTU directvent gravity unit features cabinet-mounted thermostat with modulating control for even heat. Smart styling^ 400 series. Recess kit available.
3 Section Gas Boiler
Reg. $279
■
220
Efficient, all-purpose holler has a wet base design With working water on all sides.
$319 4-Soction Boiler $250 $359 5-Soction Beilar $290 $399 6-Saction Boiler $320 $439 7-Saction Boiler $360 $479 B-Sactien Boilar $390
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
ONE
AAOINTTGO/IAERY
I fivlil BTrl
Plaid is back! Co-ordinates
OF BONDED ACRILAN* ACRYLIC
What can ever tala the place of rich plaid for Fall? Take these snappy casual black-and-white classics; the skirt, slacks and jumper plus sweater in gold or White are real wardrobe makers! A quick machine wash and dry is aM they need; 3 to 6x.
JUMPER	4**
SWEATER	*^99
1 SKIRT	399
SLACKS	2»»
teg.
8.99
Girls' or boys' hooded iaekets keep winter away
689 each
A.	Boys' cotton corduroy stadium coat with warm acrylig pile lining. 3 to 7#
B.	Girls' quilt-to-quilt nylon parka reverses from print -to solid. 3 to 6X.
Boy*' jeans., no-iron cotton - Fortrel* polyester. 3-7. Reg. 3.99 .........2,8f
Boys* knit shirts, soft cotton In top colors. S-M-L Reg. 2.9?........,.
(ii Pontiac Ma

Color-mated
Separates
NEVER -TtOwSsSTW. oust
C.	Avril* rayon-cotton with
ruffle trim. 7-14...2.91
NEW TWEED DIRNDL SKIRT
D.	Rayon-nylon-wool bonded to acetata. 7-14. .... 4.9*
TURTLENECK PULLOVER
E.	Orlon*h»cry!ic; with long
iloovo*. 7 V» 14. ..3.**
SNAPPY TWEED JUMPER P, Rayon-nylon-wool bonded to acetate. 7-14. '.5.99
OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 6B2-494*
TWO
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
Sal* Ends Sunday I Ml.
AAOIMTGOAAEF
PiVil»
Bedspread Bonanza
FORMERLY $22 to 32.99
fully quilted SPREADS
One of the most exciting values we've ever offered! The fashion bedspread you've always wanted . . . at an extraordinary price! Superb fabrics — closely quilted acetates, cottons, blends. Quality custom features like'plump polyester fiberfill, cord welt seaming and wide, wide hems. Jewel-tone solids, elegant prints... truly the ideal decorator touch.
TWIN SIZE
FORMERLY $22 TO 32.99 NOW JUST.....  I Mm
QUEEN SIZE
FORMERLY $30 TO	$44	-f A||
NOW JUST..........I W
KING-DUAL SIZE
FORMERLY $30 TO	$50	|A||
now just.........  . . lar
JUST SAY "CHARGE IT"
Save 25% now! Bonded wools and wool blends YOUR lor Fall sewing
CHOICE
"CHARGE IT" AT WARDS
BONDED ACRYLIC/WOOL FLANNEL: lively autumn tones in unique patterns and textures. Ideal for dresses, suits, pant suits.
BONDED WOOL PRINTS: Great Fall col- fc] ors ere bonded to acetate—for body, fine fit. Resist creases. 54-inche* wide.
BONDED WOOL GEMS: luxurious new jewel colors in fine wools bonded to smooth', woven acetate. Start your sewing now,
---- —	—— Not of Farmington —

OP1.N VIOMUV THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.,VI. TO 9:00 P.VI. SATURDAY 9:30 A.VI. TO 9 P.VI. sl ND.AY 12 NOON TO 6 P..V1. * (>82-4910
THREE
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER a, 1908
AAOIVTG 0/V\ E RY
; msma
CARPETING
AT TRUE ECONOMY PRICES!
STORE HOURS
Daily 10 a.m. to » P »-Sat., 1:30 a.m. to 1 p.n*. Shu., U Noob to S p.m.
Looped nylon broadloom
"Nylhil" . . . the enswer for budget-minded homemakers seeking a durable, good-looking carpet. Beautiful a I-loop twirl in continuous fiament nylon takes heavy wo o r, won't pil, mat. 4 rich colon.
Handsome tweeds, solids
Save $2 Sq. Yd.
Hie luster of continuous filament nylon stays true and dear in striking tweeds and decorator solids. Choice of Hi-Lo Random Styling or swirl scrol design.
Heavier, tri-level designs
Save S2 Sq. Yd.
Your choice - tri-level tip ML -sheared, random textured	Jr Jr
Du Pont "501"* nylon or ab*	W
-street random sheared. Tri- 1	B	Reg.
level Creslan Acrylic in solids ^	B	J.M
or tweeds.	" to yn
NO MONEY DOWN —dir TO 34 MONTHS TO PAY
SHOP AT HOME
Rhea a your nearest Wards store te have swatehe* brought to yew heme at ae cost.
Installation Available
Or DKpDrfs wlN imUfl, cushion And cirpst.
ft
V
*****	; ■»)I \>11 tiiic Ma 11
fJPEN MONDAY THRl FRIDAY 10:00 V.M. TO 9,00 l’.\|.
SAll RIMY 9:30 V.M. it) f i'.M.
SI \D A\ I - MM)\ TO .1 P. V1. • 682*4940
FOUR
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
ftlIOIVTGOAAERY
im a a
SAVE ON QUALITY STAINLESS
8-Pe. HOSTESS SERVING Si?
(Regularly $7.95) yours st no additional cost with purchase of 50-Pc. Service for • •tonly $40.95
Consists of: pierced labls spoon, sugar spoon, |n\f Not tor knife, cold moot l0f% plorcod dossort ssrvor.
QNEIPACRAFT* DELUXE STAINLESS

•0-PC. SERVICE FOR •
II testpassi, t dlooor knives, • dinner forks. • sslsd forks, I seep mmmaUtkkM
Deluxe blender
WARDS Va-HP., 6-SPEED SIGNATURE®
•Mortons* ChatssM*	Tempo*	Tsiturs* U»Un« Rose*
LIMITED TIME OFFER — SEPT. • THRU OCT. 6,1 HR
9-	pc. Super-Hard Teflon® Cookware
18"
IV REG. 21.25*
Set Includes:	5-qt. covered
dutch oven; 3-qt. covered saucepan; 2-qt. covered sauce-pen; l-qt. covered saucepan;
10-	ln. open "ikillet. Rugged Teflon* over * heavyweight aluminum. BaVelite knobs.
•1/ purcbdjeJ up fruit!J
•	Mixes, Mends, liquefies, dry-grinds
•	Stainless blades remove for cleaning
•	Extra-large 46-oz. plastic container
Tested, compared, proven — so outstanding, it won our Excellence Award! Full-powered 680-W motor means fast blending, i Youngsters love the yummy "shakes" it whirls upland mother finds it amazingly useful in preparing meals. Mixes 'batters; blends frosting, salad dressings; liquefies vegetables. Deluxe speed dial; handle, spout and measure-marks on container. White, blue or yeHow base.
NO MONEY DOWN
Pick a Wards appliance!
INDISPENSABLE TABLE *\ ELECTRICS AT SAVINGS
999
EACH
* Wards own Signature* qualify * Modgnr styling, top performers • Limited quantity at this price
12.99 footer—in newest kitchen coins: Hervest Geld or Avocado.
12.99 deep fryer is convenient for soup, stews end popcorn, too. j 12.99 6-to-l2 cup automatic pare.
11.99 sieam/dry iron; white handle. 12.99 can opener/knife sharpener.
Our elegantly-styled chain lamps at great savings!
COLORS AND STYLES TO COMPLEMENT YOUR DECOR
EACH
REG. 24.95
A fabuloUs collection at this low price! Such varied designs, you're sure to find pne that's just right for your living room, dining room or foyer. Take your choice of colors in Early American, Traditional or Modemstyles, iS-fost bry§rcfreiiHir2Q-f
Battery-powered clocks-* off!
19
99
REG. 24.99
u OIL j2tiuL. Ct/Ouwfidu- •. CO .*
Pontiac Mall
A Walnut veneer contemporary.
B.	Modern polished brass w/walnut.
C.	Lecy wrought iron Mediterranean.
OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 I\M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 I' M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 682- 19(H)
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
FIVE
MONTGOMERY
a
ALL STORES OPEN Daily 10 o.m. fa t p.m. Sot. tr30 o.m. to 9 p.m. Sn. 12 aaoa fa 5 p.m.
		
		
			—x
All-purpose marker h low-priced.
Merle ii. ything.
Fou
olors.
49'
Our best portable!
18x12x4'/<• la. Lid Ola.	A**
nil	
3.99 school bag h plaid or plalu	
With shoulder strop.	3«
	N
V -	|
Strlpad covered clui theme book*
•right cover; wg( Sl-pege book. Q Q
Leather-like brief cdte, ref. 4.4*
ease, appearance	Vinyl case in ^44 black, colors# v
A. Wards finest portable now has f%f% a ful II-in. carriage, removable lK^iyy platen, rugged molded aluminum Mm body, and elegant naw blue finish. Ragular 99.99	
OUR OWN NEW COMPACT	
B. Compact, portabla will delight dH dB M\f% ony student! Standard 88-charac- BaLdlll tar keyboard. Cuts clean stencils. Regular 54.99	h. J
	Save $1 an Wards fine label maker! Reg. 3.99t one +% 99
Double pedestal desk—Reg. 74.99
Walnut - grain top resists mats. 2 files, 2 drawers. Reg. 20.99 adjustable chair.............new H.99
99
SWIFT MANUAL TYPEWRITER
C. Streamlined manual has easy sat and dear tab button, touch adjustment, 4 extra characters.
Mechanism in plastic case.	Regular 49.99
DIAL-A-TYPE Cepverts our 511 typewriter
62
lever does all.
Ve-lo. tape ....... ,79c
to suit special purposes.	^ ^
D. International Language, Meth, Engineer- | iP ing, Medical-Pharmacy terms.	"
50
Reg. $1 crayons la 120 assorted colors
regularly 1.3*
Rag. I,9»t has 449 fast re-load.	I
yp-uOSb fkkju UOaJU. 5(00 ’
99c filler paper big 500-shaat pack Just in time	ML Qc
for school!	w O
OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10(00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M.	'
SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M.
IN DAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. * 682-4940
SIX
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
MONTGOMERY
HQ
4-in. nylon paint brush
34*
Reg. 4.99
Extra thick and long filament, for best pick - up, imoothait results. Wpn't shad, tt, ).4f 2-le. bnd .lh
7-in. paint rellor kit
1
66
Rtf. 1.99
Long > lasting Dynal* modacrylic covar for 7-In. roller with a handy metal paint tray.
Light aluminum 6-ft. stop ladder
9"
Rag. 12.99
Lightweight for easy handling, durable for long, hard use. Extra large pail shelf.

NOW! Save *2 gal. on
OIL BASE OR LATEX ONE-COAT EXTERIOR PAINT
tjjf
(JP
extension ladder
19
STURDY COMFORT "D" STEPS
88
Reg. 24.99
Ribbed flat rD-steps" are designed for comfortable, yet sturdy performance. Strong hydro-locked rungs can't twist or slip. M.*t-M-ft.. .24.99	42.99-24-ft.. .32.99
49.99—23-tt.. .39.99	34.99—32-tt.. .44.99
74.99—40-tt... 39.99
GALLON
Reg. 6.99
OIL BASE covers in one coat and protects like two! Use on exterior wood, metal. Apply with brush or roNer. In white or decorator colors.
LATEX acrylic paint that covers most colors in one coatl Applies even in damp weather — dries in 30 minutes. Clean up in soapy water. White, colors.
1-coat latex exterior or house & trim paint
Brightest trim has high gloss finish. Latex needs no priming. Resists mildew, no odor. White, colors.
YOUR CHOICE
Guaranteed one-coat interior latex enamel
Beautiful soft sheen finish. Sanitized* to rotord mildew. Easy to apply, clean up. Washable.
54*
Reg. 7.49
Our waterproof - basumuot paint
Reg. 4.99
Keeps wels dry! Easy to apply—no mixing or wotting down. Dries bi 2 hrs.
Guaranteed one-coat dripless interior latex
Covers any color h one coatl No stiring, most or odor. Ratfinh|h.l-geL covers to 460 sg. ft.
Reg. 7.49
n 11 ■ ■ ■ 1 " ■ ■ i ... Jkk.jl. UJaxJU. \ 03 :	Pool	tia	lc Mai	■ OPEN MON lip THRl 1 Klim I 10:00 V.M. To 0:00 I’.M. >.VTl UU || •»: .Ml \,M. In M I'M. 1 Mm 12 NOON TO I’ M. e <,H2-1'» Mlj
_THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, .SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
SEVEN
MONTGOMERY
kW » BJ!
Airline8’ 176-sq. in.' color TV
PORTABLE COMPACT! WIDE-SCREEN VIEWING!
Just "Charge It"
Solid state AM/FM stereo
*	Treat your family to vivid, full-range color
*	Color Magic keeps colors true, bright
*	Three IF Chassis for sharpest reception
*	Built-in picture control ends fluttering
disgonml tie*
$288
*	4 giant speakers for crystal clear, rich tones
*	Deluxe radio receives FM in full range stereo
*	Automatic 4-speed changer; turns itself off
*	54-in. cabinet in walnut veneer and hardwood
$
188
y^-QiLf SkkjL, (jJoaA*- CG .*
OPEN MONDAY THRl FRIDAY 10:00 V.M. TO 9:00 P..M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P..M.
H Ml AY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. e 682-1940
EIGHT
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
AAOIVTGOAAE RY
RIVERSIDE ST 107
umi n
LOOK!
•	Rugged tread guaranteed to wear 27 mo.
•	Lifetime quality, road hazard guarantee
Rugged 3.300 sure-gripping treed edges dig m for deep biting traction. Four-ply nylon cord body resists Impact damage, flex fatigue and heat build up. Fortified with polybutadiene for miles upon miles of wear. A lifetime quality and road hazard guarantee comes with tire. Tremendous traction and stability.
Blackwell Tubeless • Sins	First Tire Price	2nd Tire Only	Plus F.E.T. Each	Blackwell Tubaless Sizes	first Tire Price	2nd Tire Only	Plus F.E.T. Each
M0-I3	13.00*	$3*	Ml	7.75/7.50-14 7.75/6.70-15	19.00*	59*	2.19 2.21
6.50-13	15,00*	$5*	1.81	8.25/8.00-14 8.I5/7.I0-IS	21.00*	III*	2.35 2.36
7.00-13 6.95/6.50-14	17.00*	$7*	1.92 US	8.55/8.50-14 8/45/7.40-IS	23.00*	IIJ*	2.56 2.54
7.35-15 6.40/6.50-15	10.00*	»•*	2.05 2.05	8.85/9.00-14 8.85-15 8.00/8.20-15	25.00*	515*	2.85 2.76 2.76
7.35/7.00-14	18.00*	58*	2.06				
*With trade in tires ol		f your car. Whitewalls also ta			e priced.		
NO MONEY DOWN FAST, FREE MOUNTING
Riverside
HEAVY IHJ" i mot0,L
Rimtitl*^ re*»*e»le«« lured engine held witt* OWlleef velve cylinder ^teAed wMch le#e
12,000 flies ef erifbwl InsleSellen, wMcfiever #c-on Ural. IMs •esreetee Is veM enly far engines In
ftuNdMr esetf, end mein-tebied in eccerdence wUb die menwfectvrtffTreceni-wndeHens. Regebt dee t# nege ceased l»y evte Identa eye endeded ; Area Me georantee.
Riverside® heavy-duty Suprenje shock absorbers M'L. orf.qte. xs^ina-ST:,<A. .ML. flO
pacify! O-'Rtng' seal, nylon	■	^
piston ring keeps shocks at'	polr
constant working pressure.	,
Installation available.	w®*	**
Reg. 12.99 pr. Town and County shocks, 10.99 pr.
Riverside® 10-quart can ef Heavy Duty Oil
^99
REG. 3.49
Reg.. 49c 1-qt. All Season eR ...N ........42c
Riverside® completely remanufactured engines
Cuts ;sjudfte, varnish, rust and gum deposits. SAE 20-20W, 30, 40.
The engine yCuS have wile be like hew'with over 200 new parts! Expertly in-staled, precision tested.
(Qm
KEG. PRICES
Hardwood easy-rolling creeper
Easy sliding,	jm gg
comfortable	£L
Tripod feck is self-levaling
Reg. 7.99 lack M !• holds I Vi -tonsl ft
Reg. 9.49 car-
top carrier
'Staal; holds	jr ••
heavy loads	ft
One Quart 2-cycle oil Outboard oils V A( Prefects best ft
Clear vision washing fluid
Windshield sol-vent A de-icer, gg
Our lack stand lifts 3 tons)
Gives extra, firm support
1”
BRAKES
REUNED
48**
coMPurn Reg, 57.99

WHEEL
Alignment
8**
Most Chevrolet* and Fords *
FROKT WHEELS PACKED
1W
REGULAR $3
SERVICE CENTERS OPEN DAILY
9 AM. to 9 P.M.
SUNDAYS
12 to 5 am.
, ypvjtfls JltkjL. 10mJU~ ; Wj
OPKN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.,VI. TO 9:00 P.VI. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.VI.
SUN D A V J 2 NOON TO 6 P.M. • 682-4940
Expect Traffic Controls to
Be law By
Airlines
WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation's major airlines say they expect federal controls aliped at clearing the cluttered skies of New York, Chicago and Washington to become law by Nov.
This was the airlines’ resigned reaction yesterday to the Transportation Department^ listing of. what would be the first-ever federal controls on air traffic.
But the pilots of small planes vowed a fierce fight.
The regulations proposed by the Transportation Department would slash takeoffs and landings during peak hours at O’Hare Airport in Chicago, the world’s .busiest, by 82.
DROP SEEN AT KENNEDY . At New York’s Kennedy Airport peak traffic periods would see a drop by 48 takeoffs and landings per hour. Small planes would be barred from 5 to 8 p.m. daily.
Stuart G. Tipton, president of the Air Transport Association, representing the nation’s commercial airlines, didn’t object to the proposals, although he said they should be considered only stopgap measures.
But the Aircraft Owners and Pilots Association, which counts 145,000 private pilots as members, said: “The AOPA intends to forcefully oppose this proposed rule making with every means at
our command, while we continue to press for the fair and proper solutions to the air traffic management problems.”
* * *
The Federal Aviation Administration plans a public hearing on the proposed limits Sept. 25.
WARNING TO AIRLINES The government warned the airlines last month to propose voluntary measures for trimming air congestion.
Air traffic controllers attracted attention to the problem by strictly enforcing safety clearances between planes, leading to delays of as long as five hours' at busy East Coast airports.
★ ★ ★
The airlines came up with plans for a joint airline committee to act as a schedule coordinator and a scheme of sliding fare rates to encourage travel at slack periods.
The airlines meet with the Civil Aeronautics Board today to discuss the voluntary measures.
★ *
The Transportation Department pto* posals set an hourly limit of 80 takeoffs and landings at York’s Kennedy, where as many as 128 have been recorded in a single hour.
Chicago’s double-runway O’Hare has logged as many as 217, but would be restricted to 135.
The Weather
U. >. Woathur Bureau Feracaat
Cooler
(Dataila rasa 2)
THE
Na
PONTIAC PRESS
PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968 VOL. 126 — NO. 182	★ ★ ★ ★ ★	unitedSpressT!nternational	—72 PAGES	104
LBJ Panel to Probe gSffl
Violence in Chicago
WASHINGTON (AP) - The furor ignited by street demonstrations and police tactics at the Democratic convention has swirled into Congress and prompted mi investigation by a presidential advisory panel.
The investigation, third started in. two weeks, was announced yesterday by Dr. Milton Eisenhower, chairman of a violence study task force named-by President Johnson after the assassination of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy.
★ * *
Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark and Chicago Mayor Richard J. Daley started probes earlier. * , '
Eisenhower said his panel will also study July’s gun battle between police and black militants in Cleveland and, possibly, the rioting in a Miami Negro neighborhood during the Republican convention.
OHIO DBMS SPLIT
The Chicago demonstrations, police
countermeasures and news reporting sparked a congressional floor debate yesterday that pitted Ohio’s two Democratic senators against each other.
The state’s junior senator, Sen. Stephen M. Young, said, “The security arrangements for toe Democratic convention turned out to be a disaster and a disgrace.”^'■■	_ ,
ft ★	*	-
. “Democracy was clubbed to death by Mayor Daley’s police,” he added.
But most congressmen sided with Ohio’s Sen. Frank J. Lausche, who said he’s sick and tired of. reading that violent demonstrations are the consequence of police brutality.
‘TROUBLEMAKERS’
Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La., described the demonstrators as a “bunch of troublemakers.” “The mob included seme of the most dedicated Communists and conspirators in America,” he added. Chicago Democratic Rep. Roman C.
Pucinski accused newsmen of doing “an. outrageous, unfair job” of covering the demonstrations.
•	*	★	*
“I don’t understand what makes the media so squeamish” about showing provocative actions by toe crowd, said Rep. Wayne L. Hays, D-Ohio. “LeSPme American people know what kind of trash, bums they are.”
★	*	*
Mayor Daley asked the three major television networks for time to give his version of what he called a “one-sided portrayal” of the convention.
★	★	*
NBC offered Daley a guest spot on a special hour-long “Meet the Press” interview show. But the mayor said hp wouldn’t appear before the panel of newsmen.
CBS turned down Daley’s request, citing a half hour interview of the mayor convention.
ABC Was considering the request.
Seeking Asylum
WASHINGTON (AP) - The United States may open the door to Czechs who would rather live here than under renewed Soviet domination, authoritative sources said today.
This was one of several responses to the continuing Soviet armored presence in Czechoslovakia discussed at a hush-hush session of toe National Security , Council last night.
Another possibility discussed was a joint pledge with NATO allies that no reductions would be made from the present troop levels in Europe.
★ *
It was understood that the council, made up of President Johnson and his top military, diplomatic and intelligence advisers, reached no decisions, but prepared recommendations for a Cabinet meeting today.
Should the United States issue a' statement promising extraquota refugee status for Czech citizens, it would parallel action taken after the 1956 Hungarian uprising. More than 30,000 refugee cases were handled then.
For the time being, this appears to be a symbolic gesture. .Few Czechs have asked U.S. consuls for asylum.
A State Department spokesman said yesterday he had no exact figures available.
American consuls in Europe already have been instructed to handle Czech requests under the clause of the Immigration and Naturalization Act which authorizes (lie government to grant residence status to refugees of Communism.
The Security Council meeting is understood to have discussed the whole range of problems, military and po-. litical, created by the Soviet invasion of Czechoslovakia.
The administration is understood to be cool toward congressional suggestions to punish the Soviet aggression by curtailing diplomatic, trade and cultural contacts with Moscow.
* * *
In the nuclear age, it is explained, the two superpowers cannot afford to sulk and ignore each other.
U.S. officials on the other hand firmly rejected the Soviet contention, repeated yesterday in the Moscow government newspaper Jzvestja, that the Yalta Conference of tlie big three created spheres of influence in Europe, in effect permitting the Soviets to handle Eastern Europe as if it were part of die Soviet Union.
U.S. Suffers Jump in War Casualties
SAIGON (AP) — U.S. casualties surged upward again last week, reflecting the, heavy fighting that had continued for a second week after a prolonged lull. The U. S. Command said 408 U. S. troops were killed and another 2,513 were wounded, 1,398 seriously enough to require hospitalization. The toll was toe highest since the week ending June 1, at the end of the Communists’ second major offensive of the year.
★ *
The U.S. Command reported 4,478 enemy troops killed by allied forces last week, virtually unchanged from the 4,474 reported the week before. But that earlier total was increased to 5,329, and last week’s figure will probably be boosted similarly as more reports come in.
Rain to	End
EQUAL NUMBER
But the Soviet Union is expected to have an equal number of launchers by the end of next year, and with several-bombs atop them would field what Jackson called a “tremendous” number of warheads.
With that destructive force capable of eroding American nuclear* strength, the issue is whether toe United States should expand the 1,000-strong ICBM arsenal, Jackson said.,
Showers and thundershowers are expected to move out of the Pontiac area late today leaving skies partly cloudy and temperatures a little on toe cod /sidle.';:
Here is the day-by-day official U.S, Weather Bureau report;
TODAY — Partly cloudy with showers and thundershowers likely. High 76 to 82. Low 52 to 57. Partly cloudy and coder tonight. "	' "	'	' ;
Southerly winds at 10 to 20 miles per hour briefly higher In thundershowers.
TOMORROW — Mostly fair and cool.
SATURDAY — Mostly fair and cqd*
J *
Precipitation probabilities in per cent: today SO, tonight 20.
Sixty-six was the low temperature prior to 8 a.m. in downtowrt Pontiac. By 12:30 p m. the thermometer reading was 78. , ! f ■
New Parking Mall Slated for Pontiac
A second parking mall in downtown Pontiac will begin operating Monday, providing shoppers with an additional 91 parking spaces.
Roy Hetherington, superintendent of the Pontiac Electrical Department which is in charge of the operation, said the new mall .will stretch along a two-block section of Saginaw from Huron to Oakland.
★	★ w
The success of the existing mall on Saginaw between Huron and Lawrence, in operation since May, prompted the city to go ahead with its plans to extend the parking mall north, he said.
Short sections of Warren west of Saginaw and University east of Saginaw will also be used as part of toe new mall, added Hetherington.
A total of 127 parking spaces will be provided in the new mall. Presently there is parking for only 36 cars in, the area to be developed for the mall.
Attendant stations will be erected at both ends of toe mall, according to, Hetherington, where motorists caft both enter and exit, while unattended gates will be placed on Warren and University for entering the mall only.
: ft E;»|ji *
Parking rates will be the same as those in the existing mall, five cents for each half hour up to toe first hour and a half, 25, cents for two hours and 35 cents for each additional hour.	, N
The mall will be open from 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. Monday, Thursday and Friday, and from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Tuesday, Wednesday and Saturday. After businesses close each day the mail will be open to through traffic.
Reds Push U.S. in Missile Rac6
WASHINGTON (AP) - Soviet tests of a long-range missile capable of packing “bushels of warheads” may force a sharp reappraisal of the U.S. missile counterpunch.
Expansion of the controversial Sentinel defensive system and the nation’s offensive missile arsenal are being discussed in response to reports that the Soviets test-fired a missile hauling four warheads.
■* ,* *
U.S. experts learned of toe Soviet lest early this week, even though It took place in late August, a week after similar tests at Cape Kennedy, Fla.
Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., a member of toe Joint Committee on Atomic Energy, said the Pentagon—officially mum so far—had not informed him of the test. But military sources confirmed the Soviets apparently - had fired a new type ICBM.
! Sources indicated they aren’t certain whether the warheads were guided or unguided.'
This would make a big difference, indicating whether the warheads could be accurate enough to knock out underground missile silos.
Jackson said a Soviet move into the multiple-warhead field could threaten U.S. missiles forming the bedrock of the American nuclear deterrent.
The United States has peaked construction of the Air Force Minuteman, capable of intercontinental ranges, at 1,000 missiles.
SEWER SHAPES UP — Construction on the giant Clinton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor, designed to drain six townships! gets under way in Rochester. Official ground-breaking ceremonies for the $28.2-million facility-will be 10:30 a.m. Oct. 1. near the Oakland County Service Center.

■L, S £
THUNDERING RECEPTION - GOP presidential candidate Richard Nixon and his wife respond to a tumultuous welcome they received yesterday in Chicago’s loop, Nixon called it “the greatest political reception I ever received in, my life in Chicago.” Estimates of the crowd ranged from 250,000 to 400,000. The Nixons fleW to San Francisco this morning.
Nixon to Stay Mum on Chicago Strife
CHICAGO UP) - Richard M. Nixon says “political figures should not make partisan comments” on last week’s violence in Chicago while federal and local investigations into the disorders are in progress.
“I’m not going to get into it,” he said.
★ ★ ★
The Republican candidate ter president made the statement on a question-and-answer program, televised live in Chicago last night. He said stations in, Missouri and Indiana also were broadcasting the session.
House Stalls Bill to Allow Debate
WASHINGTON (AP) - The odds are against passage of a bill that would open the way for television debates between the Democratic and R e p u b 11 c a n presidential candidates, says a backer of the measure.
★	*	*
Rep. Lionel Van Deerlin, D-Calif., a member of the House Commerce Committee, said yesterday time is working against the bill.
*	*	*
The bill, already passed by the Senate, would exempt the television networks from federal laws requiring that all legally qualified candidates for president get equal radio and television time, aside from news reports and commercials.
* ' * *
Van Deerlin said public support for the bill from Democratic nominee Hubert H. Humphrey and Republican Richard M. Nixon could help free the bill from the commerce committee.
TIME FOR WALLACE
Their support would have to be combined with promises from the networks of separate time for. third-party candidate George C. Wallace, Van Deerlin said.
The divided House committee is scheduled to meet on the issue next Wednesday.
★	★ a
Rep. John E. Moss of California, fifth-ranking Democrat on the committee, said his opposition to the plan remains 1 firm.
The three major radio-television networks have offered Humphrey and Nixon, time for face-to-face debates but conditioned this on Congress lifting toe equal time requirements.
ONS IS READY	,
Van Deerlin said he understood one 1 major network is ready to give Wallace 1 ' 30 minutes free time for each hour given I Nixon and Humphrey .	*
« . ' V. ;	‘ -' - K '
A panel of seven men and one woman asked Nixon 17 questions on domestic and foreign problems difring toe hour-long session.
STAND ON FORTAS He contended that toe appointment of Justice Abe Fortas to be chief justice should be postponed until after the election of President Johnson's successor.
Nixon characterized Fortas as “one 6f the ablest justices in the court!.”
★ ★ ★
A panelist, Dr.' Karl Ripa, president of the Polish Hungarian World Federation, asked Nixon’s views on the situation in Eastern Europe in. general and in Czechoslovakia in particular.
-"‘‘We have to remember that our choices are limited,” Nixon replied. “L can say here that the U.S. can march and help- them. But if we were to do that,- it would mean risking a world conflict. I do not think any of us would want that because it would mean the destruction of those countries, too.”
2 TOPICS AVOIDED After toe telecast, Nixon said he was surprised that no questions were posed about ending the war in Vietnam or about the U.S. intelligence-gathering ship Pueblo captured by North Korea.
In Today's Press
I
Blocking in Viet	1
Allies launch drive to keep Reds from Saigon—PAGE A-14.	ft
History Buff Wanted	|
Mansion’s due for destruction	1
unless someone wants to restore	I.
it - PAGE A-4.
Dirksen-Fortas Senator balks at saying he’ll actively push justice nominee— PAGE A-12.
Area News .............A-14
Astrology .............D*14
Bridge ........ A..D-I4
Crossword Puzzle ......E-15
Comics ......-.........D-H
Editorials .............A-4
Food Section ....JM1—D-13
Markets ...............D-15
Obituaries ............ .04
Sports .............E-l—E-6
Theaters ..............  MB
TV and Radio Programs . E-15
Wilson, Earl ... ......E-15
Women’s Pages.......B-I—B-7
Tr-
..M H3A0 3WH
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 1968
Schools Stay'Closed to 67,733 Students
LANSING (AP) - Although teacher contract settlements were .reported in six school districts, classroom doors today remained closed to about 67,733 students in 12 districts, Lt. Gov. William Milliken’s office said today.
Teachers in another 35 districts agreed to work while contract negotiations remain in progress, officials said!
* *
In ail but one of the districts, classes were scheduled to begin Tuesday or yesterday, Milliken said. The lone exception was Inkster where students were to report today. Inkster teachers,
however, failed to show tip on Tuesday to prepare for the academic year.
, Tentative agreements subject . t o ratification were reported Wednesday in Bedford, Jefferson, Charlotte, Romulus, Willow Run and Heintzen school districts.
1-DAY DELAY
Teachers at Chippewa Valley in Macomb County agreed to work while negotiations continued, delaying the beginning of instruction by one day, officials said.
Students will return to classes tomorrow
in Charlotte, where the scheduled opening was delayed for two days. Negotiators hammered out, a tentative agreement yesterday.
Officials declined to be optimistic about quick settlements for the 12 school districts where disputes remain unsettled. , .
“It’s hard to tell when they’ll get settled,” said a spokesman for Milliken.
* * 1 *
Most disputes.have progressed beyond the mediation ; stage, officials said. Factfinders reportedly are looking Into
the situations in nearly all closed school districts.
ROUND THE CLOCK
The factfinders reportedly are working round-the-clock in an effort to achieve early settlements,
The State Board of Education reported yesterday that about 2,124,000 students win be enrolled in public schools when all districts are in full operation.
The total represents an increase of about 44,000 pupils over the number who entered school last autumn1.
In addition, about 287,000 students are
expected io attend state supported universities and junior colleges, an enrollment increase of about 23,000 over the 1967-68 academic year.
Districts where settlements have not been achieved include Adams Township, Lincoln Park, Northville, Oscoda, River Rouge, Riverview, Trenton, Charlevoix and Gladwin. Teachers in the nine districts are represented by the Michigan Education Association.
The (AFL-CIO) Michigan Federation of Teachers represents faculty members in three unsettled districts — Inkster, Ecorse and Taylor.
Aid	From Area
Asked for Negro College Fund
Two local persons are appealing to Pontiac area residents, businesses and organizations to help educate Negroes by contributing to the United Negro College Fund, Inc.
★ t *
Monroe M. Osipun, a Pontiac businessman and school board president
CUSTOM-TAILORED MARAUDER and safety options are featured in the 1969 Lincoln-Mercury Marauder and the Marauder 9(100. Bucket or bench seats, 429-cubic-inch displacement or 390-cubic-inch engines and
Numerous comfort ‘various interior decor are offered Both members of the Marauder series feature an exterior styling similar to the Lincoln Continental model,
Verdict Is Due Mercury Marauder, XI00 on 1-696 Airing Offer Big Choice of Options
MRS. TURPIN	OSMUN
is chairman of the drive. Mrs. Robert Turpin, 108 Franklin Blvd., is cochairman.
★ > ★ ■
Funds frqm the national drive go to 36 predominantly Negro member colleges and universities for the purpose of:
•	Giving	scholarships	or	aid	to
students.
•	Adding faculty members to meet
growing	enrollments	and	expand	the
curriculum.
•	Providing- competitive faculty salaries.
•	Buying teaching supplies and equipment and providing more research facilities and library services.
•	Maintaining the physical plant.
* *	*
“A college education is the route to an increasing number of occupations and professions,” Osmun said.
* ;•*	*
‘‘By donating, people are giving ambitious and highly motivated Negro Americans at colleges in 11 southern states and the state of Ohio a chance to realize their potential and to contribute to our society as productive and creative
Gov! George Romney’s three-man arbitration panel is scheduled to resume hearings tomorrow morning on the controversial routing of the 1-696 freeway in south Oakland County. However, a decision on a request for a restraining order, filed last week, may put a damper on the talks.
County Circuit Court Judge Arthur E. Moore was scheduled to make a decision today on a request for a restraining order filed by Lathrup Village, seeking to enjoin a possible decision by the papel.
★ ★ ★
The restraining order plea is the second petition filed by Lathrup Village, according to City Attorney Everett Hayes. Two weeks ago, Lafhrup Village and Pleasant Ridge filed a joint petition to halt the hearings completely on the grounds that they are unconstitutional.
Earlier this week Moore denied the initial request, indicating the board could proceed if it did so along constitutional lines.
The judge agreed with the petitioners that it would be unconstitutional for the panel to force a freeway route through a city without the consent of that community, however.
The petition to be considered today contends that a proposed 11-Mile Road route through Lathrup Village is unconstitutional because the city opposes it. Hayes said all discussion of such a
The Weather
Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report
PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Mostly cloudy with showers and a few thundershowers likely today. High 76 to 82. Southerly winds 10 to 20 miles per hour briefly higher in thundershowers. Partly cloudy and cooler tonight. Low 52 to 57, Mostly fair and cool Friday and Saturday. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: Today 80, tonight
20.	V
a
NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers will extend in a narrow band along the full length of the Appalachian region and along the Gulf Coast tonight. It will be warmer he the Plateaus and cooler in the upper and middle Mississippi. Valley, <
Lincoln-Mercury’s entry in the 1969 full-size passenger car line is the Mercury Marauder and the Marauder X100. A special feature of the series is the variety of optional enabling buyers to custom-tailor theta- Marauder.
There is a choice of twin-comfort lounge seats, bucket seats with center console or leather with vinyl bench seat in the Marauder X100 at no additional cdst.
★ ★ ★
Selection of power trains includes the 429-cubic-inch displacement 4V engine with select-shift automatic transmission as standard in the Marauder X100 and optional in the Marauder, as is a two-barrel carburetor version. The 390-cubic-inch V-8 with fully synchronized three-speed manual transmission is available at ho extra cost in the Marauder.
AREA DEALERS
Area dealers include: Kaverley Mercury, 420 Main, Rochester; Don Spiker Ford, 130 S. Milford, Milford; Hillside Lincoln-Mercury Inc., 12 5 0
Remap Appeal to High Court
The redistricting plan for the reapportionment of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors will be appealed in the Michigan Supreme Court, according ;to Joseph R. Farnham, county Republican chairman.
A previous appeal lost in the Court of j Appeals and subsequently a .reapportionment plan was upheld and the election ordered. Both parties fielded candidates in the primary and on Nov, 5, voters Will select 27 members for the new board to take office in January.
The reapportionment plan was drawn upjby a five-man committee which had only one Republican, C h a i r m a n Farnham. Charging a gerrymander in favor of Democrats the plan was challenged in both the district and state appeals courts, losing in both cases.
★ * *
The Supreme Court has now ruled it will consider the case.
Farnham said the new appeal would be aimed at getting a new plan for 1970., Following 1970, a new federal census would call for new districting in the 1972 election in any case, he said.
"The possibility remains the court could rule the 1968 election was illegal, hut that is slim." lie said. “What we’re aiming for is correcting the Democrats’ advantage in 1970," Farnham said.
Car Lines Rolling at Pontiac Plan
Production is under way on all lines of lf§9 model Pontiac cars and GMC trucks and coaches.
Fisher Body plant and Pontiac Motor Division resumed complete production operations Aug. 26.
Output also was begun on the new Grand Prix specialty model. The first' week’s output for this car whs 1,560. It is being assembled in a separate line in the local plant.	•
About 9,000 new. Pontiacs were built as of A ug. 31.	.
GMC Truck and Coach Division began full production of ’69 models Aug. 13, The first truck rplled off the line Aug. 15.
Oakland, Pontiac; and Bob Borst Sales, 1950 W. Maple, Troy.
Both the Marauder and Marauder X100 share styling similar to the Marquis line, with a definite resemblance to the Lincoln Continental.
Ford Motor do. Safety features are available, including a dual hydraulic brake system, safety designed door handles and energy-absorbing steering wheel and column.
Characteristic of all Marauder models is floor carpeting, wood-grain applique on door panels and low gloss vinyl covering minimizing glare and reflections.
The full size 1969 Marauder automobile has a 121-inch wheelbase with an over-all length of 219.1 inches.
Arrest Protested by W Students
ANN ARBOR (AP) - An estimated 400 University of Michigan students marched last night around t h e Washtenaw County Jail to protest the arrest of a student newspaper managing editor.
* * ★
Student speakers at a rally exhorted the students to mass at the jail at noon today. The protestors carried signs saying "Haryey Must Go” and chanted the same slogan in reference to Sheriff Douglas J. Harvey.
Nobody was arrested, deputies said. But an estimated 200 law enforcement officers were called to duty and sheriff’s* mien, backed up by police dogs, lined up in readiness in the jail parking lot during the two-hour demonstration.
★ ★ ★
A 14-man contingent of Oakland County sheriff’s deputies was put on standby alert for possible dispersal to supplement police there, but none was sent. '
OTHERS ON STANDBY
Capt. Leo Hazen, chief of sheriff’s detectives, said deputies from several other nearby counties were also placed on standby.
The demonstrators were protesting the arrest of Stephen H. Wildstrom, 21, managing editor of the Michigan Daily, student paper at the university.
* ★ ★ '
Wildstrom, of Oak Park, Was charged yesterday with assault and battery, against a sheriff’s officer,.
He was released under $25 bond to appear today before Municipal Judge Samuel Elden.
Birmingham Area
Irate Parents Force Easing of Bus Cuts
BLOOMFIELD HILLS - Approximately 500 irate parents have convinced the Bloomfield Hills Board of Education to take immediate action to amend cutbacks of the schools’ busing schedules.
The parents met with the board at a recent meeting in protest against the change in busing rims from “door to door pickup” to more distant stops due to a cutback in the number of drivers and excessive transportation expenses according to Supt. Eugene L. Johnson.
Following a long session with parents, the board instructed the assistant superintendent of transportation to implement a program “commencing immediately and finalizing within a few days that would take all elementary school children off primary rdads and still use a minimum of pickup stops.”
The board did not see fit to implement noon hour transportation, according to Johnson.
MAINJCONCERN
' He said the main concern of the parents was not in the distance students have to walk, but the safety factor involved.
He cited the area around Long Lake Road — a narrow, heavily traveled highway — as a special problem.
Johnson also noted that transportation for Bloomfield Hills area students was $10 to $25 per pupil more than other districts* in the county .
He said that if a way can be found to retain excellent transportation less expensively the board would “be happy to consider it.”
The board also appointed a committee made up of citizens, board members, administrators, and the B1 o o m f 1 e 1 d Township Police, to further study the transportation problem.
FRANKLIN - Douglas Ensor of 24447 Bloomington fias been awarded a Scholarship from the Alfred P. Sloan Foundation for study at Albion College.
Ensor is qne of 151 *male students selected for Sloan Scholarships by 45 participating institutions, Four-year grants totaling $1.2 million were awarded.
The Sloan program has assisted nearly 1,900 students including some 600 who will be enrolled during the coming academic year.
Peek!
Before our Grand Opening we’ve decided to give you another Peek Preview of our fine furniture buys. This is one!
If you’ve ever wanted a Colonial living room ensemble at a remarkable buy, this is it. The three pieces include an 80” sofa for $299; a 56” love seat ifor $219; and a swivel rocker for only $159: All’ pieces feature posture-right extra hi-back construction. Come early before the Grand Openmg, Crowds and get a living roora to be proud of at a once-only low pripe.	\ 1
HARVEY FURNITURE
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A—12
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
Dirksen Balks at Saying Ha'll Push Fortas Bid
WASHINGTON (AP) - Senate Republican Leader Everett M. Dirksen has reaffirmed his intention to vote for Abe' Fortas, but stopped short of saying he Will actively push for Senate approval of President Johnson’s nominee to be chief justice.
“Are you going to take an active part in fighting for confirmation?” Dirksen was asked Wednesday.
“Well, I’m going to vote for him,” he said.
★ ★ ★
Dirksen commented as Congress reconvened after a month-long recess and spent most of the first day grumbling over the electoral system, suggesting ways to changie it but doing little of substance about anything.
The Senate Judiciary Committee, where the Fortas nomination has been bottled up, , had been scheduled to meet on Die matter.
But Chairman James 0. East-land, D-Miss., taking the opportunity to declare his suspected opposition to Fortas for the first time, put- off the session indefinitely when a quorum failed to appear.
★ ★ ★
All of the other members opposed to Fortas’ nomination to succeed Earl Warren stayed away as well as a few supporters.
Whether by accident or design, absence of the opposition seemed to indicate that its chief weapon—delaying tactics—gathered no rust, during the August
The aborted Judiciary meet-i House GOP Leader Gerald R.i president, and a re-examination'week in Chicago, Ford said it jug jack of significant ac- Ford of Michigan called for abo- of the way .national convention “was a pretty sad display of the complishments by Congress on lition of the electoral college, di-l delegates are selected.	way to act at a convention and
its first day back were notlrect popular election of the I Referring to the events last I the
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promising for a mid-October adjournment urged by leaders,
Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield said that if Congress didn’t get through the backlog —which includes the' Fortas nomination, nuclear nonproliferation treaty, gun controls, major appropriations, and extension of the farm program—It. probably will have to recess and come back after the November elections.
★ ★ ★
The'first day’s doings on Capitol H01 included a lot of criticism of the convention system of selecting national candidates, introduction of one bill to reform the system and promise of more to come.
The Senate debated an $18.5- 1%' billion money bin to finance the Jr/ departments of Health, Educa- „„ C tion and Welfare, and Labor. M ' The House passed a bill to let employers contribute to trust WS funds for scholarships or child tf/S care centers' for their employes, then talked about the Manpower Development and Training Act. f§|§
SPECULATION
Dirksen’s comments on the	REPORTS OPPOSITION — Chairman
Fortas appointment followed james Eastland (right) of the Senate Judin speculation that the nomination, ary Committee tells reporters yesterday that of Richard M. Nixon as Republi- j,e opposes President Johnson’s choice of can presidential candidate Associate Justice Abe Fortas to become chief would blunt some GOP support for Fortas in the Senate,
Nixon has >said the nomination of a chief justice should be left to the next President. His position is expected to influence some Republican senators who are interested in party unity.
■ * * ★ • ■ | j The opposition bloc has! threatened a filibuster and Dirksen told newsmen “it wouldn’t be easy” to shut one off. I Besides Eastland, only four] members of the committee j showed up. jHART ABSENT
Eastland said his opposition to*
Fortas “goes to his general phi-j losophy^ but he declined to elaborate.
Michigan Democrat Philip Hart, a strong Fortas backer, told Eastland he Would be about 15 minutes late, but didn’t ar-i rive at all because he had to at-1 tend a session of the President’s! commission on violence.
* ★ ★
Sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa., reaf-i firmed his support of Fortas. j Warren has retired from the [court contingent upon Senate,; approval of a successor. The Judiciary .committee has shelved Johnson’s nomination of Homer Thornberry as an associate justice until Fortas is either icon-firmed or denied.	*
The bill to reform the electoral system was introduced by Sen. Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis. It called for a federal commission to work out a new way of selecting presidential and vice presidential candidates by next Aug.
6 way to run one.”
«■ Z; If You Dropped Out of
HIGH SCHOOL
and an 17 a, over. »nd (or FREE bookl.t - Toll, how you can finlth
HIGH SCHOOL AT HQME IN, SPARE TIME
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justice of the Supreme Court. Eastland, D-Miss . reported that a qifbrum failed to [how up for a scheduled meeting of the Senate Judiciary Committee, where the Fortas nomination has been bottled up.
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Freedom Painfull
LOVELAND, Colo. (AP) - A: youth in custody after an auto chase escaped from two patrolmen in a cruiser. Wednesday i morning he showed up at the police station after being free ov-ernight. He told police it wasn’t! his conscience that was hurting but the handcuffs he couldn’t get off.	!-
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diarcontrols 3 separate cycles • Economy of operation—	M - m DOWN — EASY
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Gentle 'Halo of Heat' gas dryer has no 'hot spots' • Single dial controls 3 separate cycles • Economy of operation — faster drying, uniform drying • Porcelain enamel ' drum
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THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
HAKE OVER PACES
&Mr.; 17 to 6 .
THURS., FRt., SAT.
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Save and Sew For Back-to-School
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GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD
THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 5, 1968
D—1.5
The following are top prices ' covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Wednesday.'
Produce
FRUITS
Applet, Chenango, bu. ...
Applet, crab, bu. .......
Apples. G " I
Apples, McIntosh, bu. ................ 5.00
Applet, Weethy, bu.................'“
Applet, Wolf River, bu. .........
c Lu4^orSp«, il?':..cr'-....:.
Reaches, Red Skin, % bu. Peaches, Rich Haven, 04 bu.
Pears, Bartlet; 04 bu. ______
Pears, Clapp Favorites, bu. Plums, Burbank, vt bu. Plums, Damson, V? bu. ■ “
3 Men Given
State Commission on Aging Hit Transplants
LANSING (AP) - The Michigan Nursing Home Association Wednesday accused the,Michigan Commission on Aging of being “in league with the angel of death.”
In a speech before the commission, Basil F. Boyce, president of the Nursing Home Association, said, “The Michigan Nursing Home Association believes the Michigan Commission on Aging is in league with the angel of death” for advocating less care for Medicaid ; patients.
Boyce, administrator of Seminole Hills Nursing Home, 352 Orchard Luke, Pontiac, referred to an earlier proposal to reduce the basic Medicaid rate from $12 to $11 per day. The $1 reduction has been eliminated Gov. George Romney has appointed a committee to study Medicaid rates for elderly patients in nursing homes.
A spokesman said Boyce requested to appear before the commission on aging before the daily $12 rate was reinstated. The funds are paid on a 50-50
matching' basis between the state and federal governments.
“We have fought and struggled to make the nursing home a clean, bright, cheerful, efficient, competent place for the patient with a long-term illness to receive medical care,” Boyce said. ' <
* ★ ★ ,
“But for the private nursing home,” he added, the long-term ill who the hospitals had no time or space for would have died in flop houses or in the streets.”
Cleveland Operations Have Woman Donor
iltv, Vi b I# bu. ...
The New Yorlc Stock Exchange
CLEVELAND (AP) - Three men —- including a Detroiter— who received the heart and kidneys of a young woman in a of transplant operations in Cleveland were all reported in satisfactory condition today.
The donor also was a former Detroit resident, whose ex-husband is a policeman in the Motor City.
A team of four surgeons and 10 assistants headed by Dr. Donald Effler transplanted the heart of Barbara Smith, 25, to Dellett Lawson Sr., 50, of Akron, Ohio.
2 GET KIDNEYS
Management Lead of U.S. Only Relative
By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst
NEW YORK-Good management, we are constantly reminded, is what gives American corporations the edge over foreign competitors. According] to dozens books on the] subject each year, we have turned the man-| agement art into a science.
The best-selling book in Eu-_____
rope the past CUNNIFF year, in fact, was “The American Challenge,” written by a Frenchman who described situation wherein American industry might dominate Europe because of management knowhow.
Management has been described as a fundamentally
these experts maintains, operate at 65 to 75 per cent efficiency. In other words, they are j|C” performers.
★ ★ *
This is the estimate of Bruce Payne, who runs a consulting firm of the same name with the usual “and associates” appended. Although the estimate may not be a consensus, it certainly ‘ n’t disputed by all consultants.
Most corporations, Payne insists, should be able to grow 10 per cent a year by planning better. But some neither plan nor grow. “Many of them don’t even know where they’ll be two years from now,” he states. PLANNING MISSING
The absence of corporate planning is illustrated by Payne in describing a well-knoWn company with sales of-more than $2-blllion a year that has publicly
operation Wednesday another
team of surgeons transplanted Mrs. Smith’s kidneys to Robert Clapper, 29, of Minerva, Ohio, and Charles Mundy, 21, of Detroit.
The heart transplant was the first in the midwest and the 40th in the world.
Officials at the clinic refused i reffease details of the operations, saying they sought to avoid “the circus atmosphere which has surrounded some transplants.”
POST GUARDS Guards were posted at the entrance to the sixth floor cardiac suite where the heart operation was preformed.
Mrs. Smith, a divorcee with a 9-year-old son, died Wednesday. She had been living in Walnut Ridge, Ark., since her divorce from David Smith, a Detroit police officer.
She suffered extensive head injuries Monday when the tractor-trailer in which she was aj passenger overturned in Cleve-land.
SISTER GIVES OK Permission for the transplant was given by Mrs. Smith’s ter, Mrs. Thelma Elliott. Her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Willie Lancaster, also gave their permission when they arrived at the clinic from their farm home near Lake Village, Ark.
* ★ ★
Lawson, a freight checker for truck firm in Akron until he suffered a heart attack last October, had been hoping to have a transplant for several months.
His 16-year-old daughter Cyn-thia said her father told her: when I get my new heart I’m going to go back to work. I'll run to work and run back.” Lawson’s wife, Leona, 47, and a son, John, 22, were at the clinic when the operation wds performed. The couple have three other children, Dellett Jr., 19, Mrs. Sandra Miller and Deborah, 13.
Mrs. Paul Mundy, mother of one of the kidney recipients, said her son had been waiting since January for a transplant.
“He became ill while in the Air Force,” Mrs. Mundy said. “The operation Was his last chance.” Mundy had received a medical discharge from the Air Force.
Stocks of Local Interest
OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from tho NASO art repre-sentativ* Inter-dealer prices of approximately 11 a. m. Inter-dealer markets
basic study is likely to include an examination of the com pa-efficiency. It is incredibly precise. Even the physical motions of individuals, their arm, leg and eye movements, are measured.
In the old days this involved time and motion studies and was much feared by employes, for it often led to layoffs. Watches are seldom used now; instead, charts of pretimed motions are used. And with labor tight, workers seldom are fired. * * *
The aim, so the consultants, say, is not to turn workers into machines, nor is it necessarily to make them work harder. The idea is to get more work out of the same or even less effort. The purpose is mainly to eliminate waste.
“Without prefcise controls and individual measures of produc-
reputation for being able to Identify and analyze problems and then make plans to cope with them. They are said to know how to utilize technology and how to deploy and motivate workers. Americans, according the popular belief, love to plan
And yet, talks with management experts who analyze American business produces different story. Americans are skillful in management, they say, but only in a relative sense. More to the point, foreign firms are poorly managed. DEAD-ENDS, DEADHEADS American corporations, they say, often are laden with dead-ends and deadheads, with duplicate effort and useless motion, with slovenly methods and ill-defined goals, and sometimes
announced it expects sales to tivity» says Payne “a Compa-rise 10 per cent a year,	lny never will ^ over the 70s.
After the announcement, tojrve seen departments attain securities analysts and news-1 more than 90 per cent efficien-men, the company realized it cy, but never a company.” had no plan for achieving the BETTER METHODS
sales increase. It had no more idea of how it would achieve the goal than the husband who promises his wife on New Year’s Eve that he was going to get a 10 per cent raise from the boss.
The first question the management consultant asks such a company is: “What business are you in?” and secondly, “What business do you want to be in?” Most companies, the consultants say, don’t know who they are.
After that comes the job of setting goals, delineating the route to the goals and refining the methods to be used. Ibis means understanding the strengths and weakness of the! company, the competition, the
From worker efficiency the planning proceeds to broader problems, always with the idea of instituting better work methods and'attainable goals. Subjectivity is ruled out, unrealistic ambitions are shelved.
“When the stock analysts comes around,” said one consultant, “the first question he ‘Where are you going?’ If you haven’t got a sensible, positive protection at hand, his recommendation to customers isn’t going to be good.’^'..^..
Which explains a lot of bearish analyses, for many companies don’t have that projection. They are poorly managed.
no knowledge of how to achieve] technology available and the di-these goals.	section of the economy.
American corporations, one of | Although methods differ, the
Business Notes
Aviation Firm Is Organized in Waterford
The Bell Electrotyping Co. of Detroit has purchased the engraving operation of the Detroit Gravure Co, Bell will absorb all personnel of the Gravure engraving department.
Bell is at 606 Howard, just in back of the Detroit Gravure Building.
Bell Electrotyping has been in business for 65 years.
Four area men are officers or directors of the Patrick Gas and Oil Corp., a recently organized subsidiary of Patrick Petroleum Co. of Jackson.
They are John C. Napley of 5026 Kellen Lane, Bloomfield Township, vice president; and directors John C. Cowe of 2053 Hammond Lake, West Bloomfield Township; Basil M. Briggs of 900 B r o o k w o od , Birmingham; and James Jenkins of 62 Wenonah.
Patrick Petroleum recently
the
Orchard Lake, has been named market development manager for B. F. Goodrich Chemical Co.’s Hycar nitrile rubber and Hydrin epichlorohydrin rubber in Michigan. He will continue to be primarily responsible for the firm’s contacts with automotive industry.
★ ★ ★
McNabb was formerly area marketing representative Michigan. He joined Goodrich in 1935 as a chemist in its home office in Ohio:
m
began drilling Louisiana.
F. L. McNabb of i
Associated Truck ... Braun Engineering .
,	Cltlzene Utilities ....
_____	unofficial.
Unless otherwise noted, r-—
• • —- 1--------- tebtwUP^gSBU
_____ the lest quarterly M
semi-annual declaration. IP*®**1 ,.or N
■-	—-------nents not deslg-*,
Identified In th J^ipto ;
! Wyandotte Chemical .
ft £5
...114 19.4 . 27.0 27.4
Treasury Position

■MM____________ 23,091,247,471.01
Withdrawals Fiscal Year—
35434,110,170,73	30,122,252,441.15
I Debt— ,
354,132,000,571.00	331,274,101,841.
Gold Assets—
10,347,027,542.51	13,005,4144104.
Includes 0440,145,140.40 debt not su ■ct to statutory limit.
BOND AVKRAOBS Compiled by The Aseeclated Brass 30	10	10	11	11
Ralls	led,	Util.	Fge.	L.Y
Nat change	......... —
Noon	Wed.	44.1	00.4	11.2	01.4	01
Frfr.	Day	ui	ss.s	ai.7 si.4	si
Week Ago
h Ago 45.7	17.4
10.5	00.4
00.5
McNABB
MacINTOSH
for oil in A Pontiac man, Richard R.
Macintosh of 40 Mark, has been appointed general office manager at McCullough Realty, 5460 Highland, Waterford Township. He, was previously advertising manager and salesman.
He is treasurer of the Pontiac Area Multiple Listing Service and a member of the Pontiac Board of Realtors.
Milford man, Jay SanCraint of 648 Canal, been named, terminal manager in Flint for the Jones Transfer Co. He was formerly accounts manager sales, in Pontiac.
He will be suceeded by James 1 Williams of 560 Laguna, Wolverine Lake, who has been a ....'dispatcher in Pontiac for the JJ.4 past two years.
A new aviation company has begun operations at Oakland-Pontiac Airport in Waterford Township.
Heading the firm, Monarch Aviation, js a Waterford Township man, Ned Gerndt of Lotus. Also partners in the company are fcarry Noble of Detroit and John Plodpleski of Warren, both formerly associated with other firms at -the airport.
★ ★ ★
Gerndt was head pilot of the Standard Airways line which offered scheduled passenger flights from the airport, but ceased operations early this year.
A complete range of aviation services are offered by the new firm including training- and maintenance work. However, the firm intends to specialize in [used-aircraft sales, according to Gerndt.
SALE BROKER
The Monarch company will
Iso act as a broker and list aircraft for sale and seek buyers, he said.
“The airport needs a firm specializing in used aircraft for those people who , do not have $35,000 to $40,000 to spend,” Gerndt said.
★	★	♦
The firm’s instructors are able to offer training including multiengine craft and leading to an airline transport rating, he said. The company also has planes to rent or lease.
"I feel I’m starting, out at a I od time at this airport because expansion plans will soon be under way and general aviation business is growing rapidly,” Gerndt said.
★	★	*
Monarch’s hangar and office is on Highland, between Airport Road ahd the terminal.
News in Brief
Garage Sale — Sept. 6 and 7.
(37 Williams Lake Rd. —AdV;
ODO Rummage, Friday, September. 6, CIA Bldg., 5640 Williams Lk. Rd., 9-1 p.m. —Adv.
Rummage Sale, Saturday S a.m.-l2 noon, corner Judson and S. Saginaw.	—Adv.
IlSr.
is utilities ..
.71+3^2
09+0.04
55 104k
101. ' kFl NV3 O- ~T I ' 194 35V4 34 Vj 35V? +1'
29 9H- 'fik fib +*' .35 WW tf» im— 1 * 23 ' 12Vk 12	12. ...
__________ n |9Vk 50W SOW-'
Scurry Rsln 11 31Vk.31Vk 31W + ’
la* tffi Ilia
Copyrighted by TM Associated Proas 1948
___.	149.0	232.9
41.9 99M 141.5 33
Sis jmt mS.1 mol £ iSi ISM §1
413.4 159.4 134.5 292JI
____ YOR KIAFI— 7
Stock Exchange lir~ Merket
NEW AVIATION FIRM - Standing front of Monarch Aviation office at Oakland-Pontiac is Ned Gerndt, president of the new
firm. The firm’s specialty will be dealing in used aircraft