Heart Lapses Stir Increasing Concern for Eisenhower t WASHINGTON (AP) — Army doctors reported today that former president Dwight D. Eisenhower remains in “critical condition.” They expressed “increasing concern for hips as a result of irregular heart action following his major heart attack yesterday, The doctors reported that Eisenhower, since being stricken Friday, has suffered two episodes of irregular heart action, losing consciousness briefly during both* They said he rallied after each episodb, becoming “alert” with \ no evidence of brain damage. However, “the occurrence of these episodes fef irregular heart action is of increasing concern to his physicians,” said a, 10 a.m. EDT statement on Eisenhower’s condition. The doctors reposed that the flve- star general has received oxygen continuously ever since, he was strickenrat 1:25 p.m. EDT Friday with his seventh, and possibly worst, heart seizure. The official statement issued by Walter Reed Army Hospital said: “General Eisenhower has remained* in critical condition since the previous bulletin (at 4 p.m. EDT Friday). During the past 17 hours he has sustained two episodes of irregular heart action-ventricular fibrillation. Both episodes were terminated promptly by electricaTmeans— defibrillation.” .The.doctors said Eisenhower is also receiving “continuous medication” directed at maintaining normal heart rhythm. t “Members of the immediate family are remaining at Walter Reed. Mrs. Elsenhower visits at the bedside frer quently in,response to the general’s request.” ★ ★ * The new attack was the fourth in 3V4 months. And it was the third in a row to strike when the old warrior and elder statesman had appeared to be on his way to recovery from the previous one. Eisenhower already has more than1 defied mortality statistics on heart tacks. * , His seventh and latest means that be has now had more than twice as many attacks as the number—three—that nfiost often add up to certain and swift death. Eisenhower’s latest series of heart attacks started with a minor one on April 29 during a vacation at Palm Calif. 7 The Weather U- S. Weather Bureau Forecast Pleasant .. - (Details Page J) THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 126 Hr ★ Hr PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 —48 PAGES ,UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE South Dakota Sen. George McGovern, a late entry in the race for Democratic Democratic Convention. McGovern called for a complete nomination as the party’s presidential candidate, visited Oak- change in the country’s Vietnam policy and effort! to end land County last night to speak before delegates to the County “division that sets black against white.” Sen. McGovern s Call for Bombing Halt Hailed By BOB WISLER Democratic presidential nomination seeker Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota took his campaign before the . Oakland County Democratic Convention last night and got enthusiastic reception for his call to end the bombing of North Vietnam and an end to the war. Surrounded by Secret Service men, Pontiac police detectives and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies, McGovern was accompanied by .his pert, attractive wife, Eleanor, and 13-year-old daughter, Mary. McGovern answered a variety of questions in declaring he is for an end to the war, and. end to the draft, pnd an end to the tenures of Selective Service Director Lewis B. Hershey and FBI Director J.. Edgar Hoover. He also spoke out for the establishment of a well-paid volunteer army, efforts to bring mainland China within the sphere of influence of world opinion, and °a reassessment of the method of nominating presidential candidates. ‘NO ILLUSIONS’ - McGovern, 46, a college professor before truning senator, said he had no illusions about his chances of getting the Democratic nomination. 18th District Dems Favor McCarthy in Straw Vote The 18th Congressional District Oakland County Democratic party .meeting yesterday had a heavy McCarthy flavor as .prednet delegates elected a new district chairman and voted a heavy pffef-erence for SeiC Eugene McCarthy as the Democratic presidential candidate. „The 18th District group and the 19th District Oakland County Democratic In Today's , Press ’ Sports Highlights McLain wins No. 25; twoex-champs in finals of Women’s Amateur golf tourney — PAGE C-l. SCLC Confab Group expresses disenchantment with GOP ticket, uncertainty on Democrats—PAGE party held a joint county convention last night as well as separate district meet-• mgs. Elected chairman of the 18th District group was Vernon G. Leopold of Hunting-ton Woods to replace Eugene Kuthy of Royal Oajc. Kuthy, a backer of Hubert Humphrey, chose not to seek reelection, so Leopold, a McCarthyite, was chosen unanimously. During the meeting the 18th District delegates took a presidential preference vote, with 88 votes going to McCarthy* 10 to Humphrey, four to Sen. George Mc-' Govern and three uncommitted. In the 19th District Aldo Vagnozzi of Farmington was reelected chairman without opposition. Both conventions picked delegates to the state convention to be held next weekend. State Sen. Sander M: Levin of Berkley, the state chairman of the Democratic (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 1) He entered the race, he said, to keep the Democratic convention open, to decrease the possibility of a first-ballot victory for Vice President Hubert Humphrey and to move the party “toward a more hopeful stance in Vietnam. He declared that he would not accept a vice presidential spot on the national ticket but said that if he were nominated as the presidential candidate he considered Sen. Frank Church of Idaho, Sen. Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin and Sen. Philip1 Hart-of Michigan as likely vice „ presidential nominees. -McGovern spent the afternoon in De-> troit yesterday attempting to line up' support among Michigan delegates to thA national convention in Chicago. A DARK HORSE An admitted dark horse, McGovern said he hopes to have 200 votes on the first ballot at the convention. The senator castigated the Republicans and indicated he thought the issue of (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) Lower Mi Hit by S By The Associated Press ' Heavy wind and rain and a few reported tornadoes throughout much of lower Michigan yesterday left widespread but minor property damage, flooding and utility failures. Three Boy Scouts hit by a fallen tree at Camp Rota-Kiwan near Kalamazoo were injured, one of them seriously. Detroit Edison said scattered damage in north Oakland County consisted pri-.maril'y of wires down, leaving many people without power. Royal Oak and Fern-dale were harder hit. ★ ★ ★ Michigan State, Police said a tornado touched down briefly last night near the Allegan County town of Martin, some So miles south of Grand Rapids. At Niles, inr Berrien County, State Police reported a funnel at about. 10:30 p.m. The St. Joseph County Sheriff’s department reported a tornado touched down on M60 at the St. Joseph-Cass. County border. FUNNEL-SHAPED CLOUDS Earlier the U S. Weather Bureau said it had received three reports of funnel-shaped clouds in the Battle Creek area. The bureau said it had unconfirmed reports of similar clouds southeast of Zilwaukee, five miles east of Saginaw. ★ ★ ★ In the Detroit area, Royal Oak police said the storm knocked down trees and caused wind damage to homes. Extensive flooding was reported. Police estimated 2,000 to 3,000 homes were without electricity at the height of the storm. Berkley police said they had three tornado reports. The reported power failure throughout much of the city and several minor fires caused by lightning striking homes. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) Racial Vi Hits Two Cities Nixon Will Confer With Gov. Romney in Lansing Monday A-5. x The Party's .Over V Mia Farrow gets Mexican di- vorce from Sinatra^ -PAGE D-l. 1 Astrology . . D-2 Bridge D-2 1 Church News ...... .. B-8—B-ll Crossword Puzzle . .. ...:jmT Comics : D-2 i Editorials . A-6 1 1 Home Section ... B-l—B-7 1 Markets G-Ig 1. Obituaries C-13 Radio Programs / D-1I % Sports ... C-l—C4 . i 1 Theaters :....C4 1 1 TV Listings C-5-C-1I, D-lt Wilson, Earl .... . *«D-3 I I Women’s Pages ... .... A-8, A-9 I ss j :..V ' ^ - J \ 1 J ' ✓ Women's Amateur Leader Is One-Up Two of the winningest players in womeri'k amateur golf battled head-to-head in the 68th U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship, and after 18 holes of the 38-hole finale, Mre. Jo Anne Gunderson Carrier of Seekonk, Mass., held a one-up lead over Mrs. Ann Quast Welte of Mount Vernon, Wash. The match, which was delayed this morning because of the water conditions on the Birmingham Country Club Course following the heavy downpour during the night, was deadlocked for five holes. On the No. 6 hole, Mrs. Camer made the first break by winning a par four. Won No. 9 with a par. * On No. 13, Mrs. Career ran In an 18-foot birdie putt, and Mrs. Welts halved the bole with a two-footer. LANSING (AP)— Republican presidential nominee Richard Nixon will visit Lansing Monday to confer privately with Gov. George Romney, presumably to plot strategy for the upcoming campaign. In addition, Maryland Gov. Spiro Agnew, the GOP vice>presidential nominee, will speak at the Republican state convention-next Saturday at Grand Rapids. ★ ★ ★ Nixon is scheduled to arrive at Capitol City Airport about 2:15 pm. and make brief remarks on the steps of the State Capitol before going.into seclusion with Romney. - Romney has pledged to support Nixort during the camp’aIgri,TnifTras stated that it will be a “tough battle” for the former vice president to carry the state in November. STATEMENTS EXPECTED Nixon and Romney are expected to make statements to newsmen following their conference. ~ Meanwhile, in San Diego, Calif., Nixon is holding more Republican strategy talks. He blended politicking and sightseeing last night in a two-hour visit to Disneyland. But today.it was all politics again with a visit from a group of mayors. Nixon drove north to Anaheim yesterday after a session with California Gov. Ronald. Reagan, ^ meeting that gave Reagan a starring television role in the national Republican campaign. TV APPEARANCES Nixon said Reagan agreed to seek votes “to the extent that his California commitments will allow some national campaigning.” ______________★ ★ ★ Reagan said his major role will be in appearances on national television to appeal for GOP votes. “I think there’s a very definite restriction on the barnstorming that can be done,” he said. Reagan said that is because he has a legislative election coming in California, plus a sessionof the legislature opening early next month. New Viet Battles Heavy Casualties By The Associated Press Police have charged two white men with the killing of a Negro woman, whose death touched off racial violence punctuated by sniper fire and property' damage in several sections of Cincinnati, Ohio, last night and early today. And St Petersburg, Fla., early this morning experienced its first full-scale racial disorder since a garbage collector’s strike began in May. A wave of fire-bombing, window smashing* and looting swept the city’s predominantly Negro soiith side. \ >%.' ★ ★ Police said nine persons were injured', most of them whites struck by rocks or bottles as they drove through the disturbed area. None was seriously hurt, however. At least four persons were injured, two critically, in Cincinnati. -Police,made 10 arrests. MURDER CHARGES First-degree murdjfer charges were filed today against William Harrison, 22, and Elvin Billman, 31, both of Cincinnati. An 18-year-old Middletown, Ohio, girl, riding unknowingly through the riot area hi-Avondale with three friends, received a. serious eye injury when the car tit which she was riding was halted by several Negroes. ■ v A Negro yriuth was shot and wounded critically as he hurled bottles at police.. Officers said Harrison and Billman were arrested on descriptions supplied by witnesses at the shooting scene. Clearing, Cooler Is Area Forecast A delightful Sunday is promised Pontiac area residents by the weatherman. The official day-by-day .forecast by the U.S. Weather Bureau looks like this: TODAY — Cloudy with scattered showers ending by this afternoon with ^paHiaraearfiigTliaiurnir^OTolerfot^ this afternoon. High today .76 to 83. Fair and cooler tonight. Low 54 to 60. * * Winds southwesterly 10 to 20 miles per hour and gusty at times, becoming northwest to north this afternoon. TOMORROW — Mostly sunny and pleasant. MONDAY — Warmer; with chance of showers. ★ * * • Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 40, tonijght lj|and tomorrow near zero. Sixty-seven was the low temperature in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. By 2 p.m. the mercury stood at 79. SAIGON — The Democrats have had it with that old convention standby, the planned floor demonstration. No more, at least not in 1968, the blaring bands and marching delegates after the nomination of each candidate — unless some delegations rebel. In, announcing the demonstration ban GOV. LESTER MADDOX yesterday, party chairman, John M. Bailey said a representative of Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy told him the Min-* nesota senator concurred. Earlier, Vice President Humphrey and Sen. George ’ S. McGovern had asked that the demonstrations be dropped. The convention’s Arrangements Com- Georgia Governor Enters the Race ATLANTA, Ga. Wl - Gov. Lester G. Maddox formally announced today that he would seek the Democratic presidential nomination “with great pride in and love for my country.” Maddox said he expects to have the support of several hundred delegates at the convention. The governor, who selected the state’s delegates, told them ifi a-letter;,: “I am' counting ori your support at the invention.” The Maddox-selected delegation may become an issue at the convention!, since it is being challenged by a group elected last weekend by the* Georgia Democratic Party Forum, which questions the party loyalty of the Maddox delegation. mittee also arrived at a’ seating plan for the 5,611 delegates and alternates, and detailed allocations of guest passes and other convention arrangements. FORMAL INVITATIONS Bailey said formal Invitations will be extended to President, Johnson; the Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, head , of the Related Stories, Page A-2 Southern Christian Leadership Conference; and the widows-of President John F, Kennedy, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Other demonstrations — throe outside the convention hall — also came to the Arrangements Committee’s attention. ★ ★ ■ ★ Bailey said the committee agreed that locations should be provided for the thousands of protesters expected to gather in Chicago. In a further effort to streamline the convention* Bailey said nominating speeches will- be given tiine limits but that the details would be worked out later. ★ * * V g „ . * He said state delegations*will receive 1,310 guest passes, one for each two ' by the state. A— THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 Test Flights Add 2 Missiles to N-Arsenal CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) - Two highly destructive multiple-warhead missiles designed JW penetrate deep into entered the U.S enemy defenses entered the U.S. nuclear , arsenal yesterday with spectacular' back-to-back launching?. The missiles—the Navy’s Poseidon, capable of carrying 10 warheads that can be sprayed on preselected targets hundreds of miles apart, pnd the Air Force’s Minuteman 3 — were labeled completely successful in maiden test flights from the space complex at Cape Kennedy. When they become operational, the missiles will replace the Polaris 7 and Minuteman 1 and 2 as the backbone of America’s retaliatory force. Both are expected to be placed on operational status in about two years. Details of the test flights were not disclosed. Official spokesmen foe the space agency and the two services' announced only that the Minuteman successfully traveled its planned 5,000-mile journey to a splashdown near Ascension Island and the Poseidon came down at a predetermined point 1,000 miles at sea. Poseidon, rated potentially night times as effective as Polaris, is 34 feet long, 74 inches in diameter and weighs 65,000 pounds. Like the Polaris, it has a range of 2,500 miles but it reportedly is twice as accurate. The jigger, far-ranging Minuteman 3 is designed to take up to‘three warheads on a rocket that is 59 feet, 9 inches long and 6 feet wide. The missile weighs 76,000 pounds and is' capable of traveling more than 6,000 miles. Both have computerized and motorized devices capable of dispersing nuclear warheads over scattered targets selected prior to touncfe^PreSfent Polaris and Minuteman payloads cantonly follow a ballistic trajectory. ** termeasure to the Soviet Union’s expansion of its offensive missile force and establishment of an antiballistic missile shield around Moscow. Air Force Lt Col. Ward M. Millar, chief information officer for the space and missile systems organization, said Poseidon and the new Minuteman -‘together- make up our strength When both go as well as they did, it shows the country is in good hands.” . The concept for the multiwarhead missiles was developed as a cotflt- Defense spokesmen say the missiles, with their multitarget add penetration capabilities, could give the, United States an edge in deterrent strength. Birmingham Publications Head Na at Ford Motor However, some critics say the development of the new missiles could bring on a deadlier arms race with the 'Soviet Union. 'Remarkably Similar to'RFK Views' VP Spells Out Viet Stand NEW YORK (AP) - Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, one of the Johnson administration’s chief defenders of its Vietnam war policy, said today he and the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy “came to hold remarkably similar views on Vietnam.” Tfflfe Humphrey appeared to be making one of his strongest campaign efforts ' to inch away from the political shadow of Vietnam and to identify himself with Kennedy. Kennedy said he was opposed to forcing a coalition government, which would include CommUnists on the government of Saigon. And added: “I would make it quite clear that we are going to the -negotiating table, not with the idea that we want them to unconditionally surrender and that we expect the National Liberation Front and the Vietcang will play some role in the -future political process of South Vietnam, but that should be determined by the negotiators and particularly by the people of South Vietnam.” Humphrey said he believed the same thing. FREE ELECTIONS 18th-District Dems Favor McCarthy in Straw Vote (Continued From Page One) party, delivering the keynote, address, said that “history has passed the Repub-.. lican party by” and said it must be the Democratic party which fills a ‘'vacuum” in national politics. The senator also said the party should nominate a'vice presidential candidate who is in the mainstream of American life and one fully capable of being presi- dent. Both district groups passed a number of resolutions. The 18th District groups called for “reordering money priorities” - with commitment to U.S. internal problems rather than the war, a four-step program for an end of the war in Vietnam, and elimination of the draft with a substantial, well-paid volunteer army under civilian control. The 19th District group passed resolutions calling for lowering the voting age to 18, peace in Vietnam, spring primary elections rather than fall primaries, a presidential primary in Michigan, and more allocation of state gas tak money for repair of local roads. Oakland County Party Chairman George Googasion said the county executive committee will meet next week to reconsider its decision to name Shane Murphy,' son of missing County Clerk John D. Murphy, as the party’s candi-, date for county clerk! This came about after a “black caucus” of Negro Democrats met and asked Googasion to reconsider the candidacy of Charlie J. Harrison of 85 Carr, who became a write-in candidate for the nomination a few days before the primary election. Humphrey said he also wanted to emphasize that he subscribes to most of the program proposed by the National Committee for a Political Settlement in Vietnam. A-, * * That program includes free elections with all political groups in South Viet* nam, including the Vietcong, allowed to enter candidates a bar to military escalation or unilateral withdrawal by the United States and an immediate cease- BIRMINGHAM — Richard Morris of 1030 N. Glenhurst has been named publications manager of the public relations staff of the Ford Division of- Ford Motor Co. A former reporter for the Richmond; Va., Times-Dispatch and the Washington Post, Morris joined Ford Motor Co.’s news department in 1952. He served as public relations manager of the Continental Division and later for the Lincoln Division. For nine years Morris was executive assistant to the vice president — product planning and styling, and in 1965 he became public relations manager, Ford Division. TABBERT MORRIS fire. Die only modification to the program, Humphrey said, is that he would end the U.S. bombing of North Vietnam only after “restraint and reasonable response” is obtained from North Viet- GROGGY GORILLA—Casey, a 756-pound male gorilla, is administered a heavy dose of sedative for his jet flight, sans cage, from St. Paid, Minn., to Omaha, Neb. The 12-year-old Casey has spent most of ids, life in captivity and has not known another gorilla during that' time, However, zoo officials in Omaha-are planning to change that in a hurry. Casey will be introduced to two female gorillas—Brigitte and Benoit—sometime next week. County Dems Hail Senator Severe Storms Hit Lower Mich on Call for a BombingJdait BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Burton R. Tabbert of 885 Dursley has been named vice president—marketing by the board of directors of Holley Carburetor Co., Warren. - In his new post he will be responsible. for all automotive sales, advertising, and marketing few both original equipment and replacement sales. Elected a vice president in 1967, Tabbert has served in various sales and marketing capacities in the automotive division at Holley. They included general manager, general sales manager, assistant automotive sales manager and truck . sales manager. A member of the Society o f Automotive Engineers and the Detroit Athletic Club, Tabbert has been with Holley since 1947. (Continued From Page One) Edison’s Oakland County crews are The Weather working with borrowed crews from Macomb, Wayne and Lapeer counties. Supervisory personnel are manning the crews because the linemen are on shrike. Consumers Power Co. reported only scattered disruption of service to customers. Service was restored by 6 a.ih. this morning. (Continued From Page One) crime in the streets was a convenient “political" issue. “I don’t know of any congressman who is in favor of lawlessness . . v It takes neither brains nor courage to come out with a cry for law and order.” Die senator said that along with law and order there must he justice and compaission. pens at the convention, he would support the Democratic candidate for president as vigorously as he can. „ Political experts indicated that McGovern may not have picked up any immediate delegate support at the national convention. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy with scattered showers ending by this afternoon with partial clearing and turning cooler later this afternoon. High today 76 to 83. Fair am) cooler tonight. Low 54 to 60. Sunday mostly sunny and pleasant. Monday outlook: warmer with chance of showers. Winds southwesterly 10 to 20 miles per hour and gusty at times, becoming northwest to north thiqgafternoon. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: today 40, tonight 10 and tomorrow near zero. Play for the final round of the U.S. Women’s Amateur Championship was delayed this morning at Birmingham Country Club as officials made efforts to make the course playable following the heavy rainstorm last night. McGovern, who said he was the Sen; ate’s first critic of the conduct of the war in Vietnam, speaking out against administration policy on 'the Senate floor in September 1963, said he believes that “even the most confirmed hawks are beginning to see the futility of the course we have been pursuing in Vietnam.”' „ An Associated Press poll shows that of Michigan’s 96 votes, 66 lean to Humphrey, 14 are for McCarthy, one avows support of McGovern and 15 are uncommitted. It is possible that the uncommitted candidates cOuld swing to McGovern. The Oakland Cpuhty chapter of the . National Association of Accountants has announced the election of Harry G. Troxell of 5305 Wing Lake Road to Director-of Programs for 1968-69. As a director he will plan a balanced program of technical sessions and apply accounting practice and concepts in it. Troxell is personnel manager for Touche, Ross, Bailey & Smart of Detroit. He is a member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountants. He is also an. active member of the Michgan Association of Certified Public Accountants where he is currently chairman of the membership committee. LAKE CONDITIONS i.____Lake Erie — Small craft warnings-in effort Northwest wind* 18 to 28 knots becoming northerly 15 to 25 knots. Showers and thundershowers ending today. Chance of 40 linot gusty winds during the thundershowers. Lake St. Clair — Small craft warnings in effect. Northwest winds 18 to 25 knots, becoming north to northeast 14 to 22 knots tonight. Showers and thundershowers with chance of gusty winds to 30 knots during the thundershowers. Lake Huron»- Small craft warnings Jn effect. Southern, half: Northwest winds 18 to 28 knots, becoming northwest to north late today and northeast 14 to 22 knots late tonight. Northern half: Southwest winds-19 to 30 knots today, becoming north to northeast winds 12 to 20 knots tonight. Lake Michigan — Small craft warnings in effect — northwest to north winds 18 to 28 knots, shifting north to northeast 15 to 25 knots early tonight and east winds 10 to 29 knots late tonight. « ' Lake Superior — Small craft warnings in effect. North winds 29 to 30 knots, becoming variable 8 to 15 knots early tonight and southwest 10 to 20 knots late tonight. Clearing today, fair tonight. The two finalists, Mrs. Joanne Gun-derson earner and Mrs. Ann QUast Welts, were waiting on the practice tee at 10 a.m. as ground creAvs cleared the greens of brandies and leaves. The ninth fairway was completely flooded this morning, and the 18th green was covered by the overflowing Rouge River, The Detroit Zoo Was closed because of storm damage. He said he doesn’t -believe the future of Vietnam^ or any Southeast Asian country, will ever be decided by outside military presence. McGovern said the U.S. has for 14 years spent money and blood to support a series of .regimes, “no one of which has ever had the confidence and respect of the people of Vietnam.” The senator said that whatever hap- Most Cabdrivers Strike in Chicago Ipwa Home Fire Kills 7 Children CHICAGO (AP) — More than 5,400 cab drivers struck Chicago’s two largest taxi companies today, leaving the city with only 20 per cent of its taxi fleet in oper-ation. \1' ' ' The strike, affecting all but 900 of the city’s taxicabs, came just nine days before the opening of the Democratic National Convention Aug. 26. Against Lawlessness HAZLETON, Iowa (DPD - Seven children in a rural family were killed early today when fire swept their two-story farm home a half-mile east of here. All seven died of smoke inhalation, authorities said. Die children—ranging in age from 8 months to 13 yearn — were seven of the 11 children living at home in the Doras Latham family. TMWy In Pontine. Lowest temperature preceding 3 e. -At I e.m.: Wind Velocity 3 m.p.h. Direction: Variable Sun eats Saturday at 1:33 p.m. Sun rim Sunday at 4:44 e.m Moon sets Saturday at 4:27 p.m. Moon rim Sunday at 12:09 a.m. One Ypar Ago In Pontiac Pontiac Pastor Issu Weather: Sunny day, thundershowers Friday's Temperatures I 43 Fort Worth W 74 Downtown Temperatures Escenaba 74 57 Jacksonville 95 73 Kansas City 94 73 i Los 'Angelas 74 44 i Miami Beach 37 32 39 54 New York e Orleans 90 72 A leading Negro minister in Pontiac today appealed to Negroes to refrain from violence and lawless acts and report such acts to police for the good Friday In Pontiac (as racerdec * st temperature . ; St. Louis 94 72 i Tampa 92 30 i S. Lake City 32 43 i S. Francisco 44 54 S. Ste. Marla 77 53 ! Seattle 49 57 of the community. “I feel it is time that Negro leaders must speak out against lawlessness to ease the minds of more rational people in the community,” said Rev. Matthew M. Scott, pastor of East Side Church of Cod, 343 Irwin. This Data In 95 Years “We are pleading to reasonable and rationally minded people not to ride with or sanction persons who' break the law, disrupt society and threaten the morality and principles of others. “No person or group has the right to break laws and expect the same laws to protect them in.doing so. Justice is acceptable to those that believe in justice and is executed upon those who disregard its power.” Negotiations between representatives of the drivers and Yellow and Checker Cab companies with federal mediators •; broke down last night with, both sides trading charges. No new talks were scheduled. Adding to concern over convention transportation is a call for a wildcat strike pn Aug. 25, the eve . of the convention, by some bus drivers for the Chicago Transit Authority. The fire alarm was given by the father, who ran to a neighbor’s house shouting that his house was on fire and that he couldn’t get the children oiit. The victims were Sally Latham, 8 months; Michael Latham, 2; Charles Latham, 3; twins Lori and- Lynn Latham, 8; Mary Latham, 7; ■ and Sharon Greathead, 13. Four boys escaped from the tire. One, Gerald Greathead, was treated for smoke inhalation. REV. MATTHEW M. SCOTT NATIONAL WEATHERr-Showers are forecast for Saturday night in the Pacific '* Northwest, the northern Plateaus, the middle and northern Atlantic states and west Texas. It will be cooler in the Great Basin, the upper Great Lakes and the North-east. •- : \ ■ ' " •’ • „• ' CITY REWARDS Rev. Scott’s comments came after the City Commission Tuesday passed a resolution offering rewards up to 11,000 for information leading to the arrest and conviction of individuals responsible for arson or an attack on police and firemen Which constitutes interferenefe with the performance of their duties. “The City Commission ruling is right,” he said; “We cannot condone wrong. People should report violent' acts when -they see them to maintain peace between the. races.” Rev.' Scott also-leveled a strong pies for an integrated society." >’ “Thp ministers'of this'city are against any and all persons or groups . .. that practice hate and segregation in our city, county, state and nation. We, as a people, mu$t stand together as Americans . . . regardless of race, creed or color. AGAINST SEPARATISM “I believe that 90 per cent of the Negro papulation does not support separatism;” he concluded. . Rev. Scott is also president of the Oakland^ County. Ministerial .Fellowship and toe Oakland County' Ministerial' Missionary Association. Dancing Tonight & Sunday NEWLY OPENED, (WEN AIR DANCING GARDENS Where You Dance Under-the-Stars! Featuring The Music of WARREN COVINGTON and His Tommy Dorsey Band Tonight-August 17th. RUSS CARLYLE and His Orchestra Sunday, Aug.. 18 Only BUDDY MORROW Orchestra Aug. 21 thru. 25 Serving All Beverages — Dining in Pine Knob Lodge FREE 1,000 Car Parking tot INE NOB GARDENS Exit from 1-75 of Saihabaw . Road-North 14 Mite; ,/•* THE FONTlAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 A—8 End of Feuding Top Romanian, Czech Sign Friendship Treaty PRAGUE (AP) — Romanian President Nicholas Ceausescu warmlyendorsed Czechoslovakia’s reformist regime Friday and called on feuding parties in the divided Communist bloc to settle their differences in “comradely” talks. “At this time, so many differences have amassed between Socialist countries and in the movement that we regard it as a basic and most urgent Ceausesctl said in munist party, and Czechoslovak President Ludvik- Svoboda signed a 20-year treaty friendship, cooperation and mutual assistance. IN SAFE HANDS Speaking to workers in Prague” aircraft factory, Ceausescu said: • ■ “During our brief stay Czechoslovakia, we have, come convinced anew that the fate of socialism is in safe hapds and that your nation has trust in the Communist party. “A basic condition strengthening the unity of Socialist countries and of the Communist movement is respect for the right of every party to work out its own policy independently.” He said party differences “on this or that problem” should be resolved “in comradely talks, with patience and understand-t lng.” As an example, he cited, the Czechoslovak leadership’s talks with the Soviet party Politburo at Cierna and with the Russians and representatives of four other Communist countries at Bratislava in the week of July 28. REGAINED TERRITORY Ceausescu and Czechoslovak party Secretary Alexander DUb--cek called on West Germany to declare invalid the 1938 Munich Pact which led to Hitler’s seizure of the Sudetenland, a section of Czechoslovakia heavily j populated by ethnic Germans. Czechoslovakia regained the territory in 1945. As a condition for. recognizing the Bonn government, Czecho' Slovakia has demanded that West Germany declare the Munich Pact invalid from the start. “We want to come out against militarism and revanchism and at the same time support democratic forces in West Germany which wait that country to be peace-loving and democratic,” Dubcek added. “An indispensable part of this policy is tie support of the (East) , Goman Democratic Republic. Dubcek pledged Czechoslovakia would maintain its ties with the Warsaw Pact, the Communist defense alliance, and with the Soviet Union. Fund Sets Record GRAND RAPIDS (AgJH[ record 8967,440 in cash and pledges was reported in the 1968 Diocesan Development Fund Campaign which ended July 31, Bishop Allen J. Babcock announced. Last year the amount was 8943,290. The funds are used to support the 29-county West Michigan Diocese and a department of human relations in the diocese. AUTO-TOUAISTSI TAKE LAKB MICHIGAN SHORTCUT Muskegon, Mich.-Milwaukee, Wis. S*n 275 Mild »f trivial *«wy Duty 1* Seamiest Steel Tubing Portable Record Stand Heavy Topl-pruf Base Simms Sat. A Mom. Special 488 Regular 85.88 seller, ideal for living room, den, etc. Bras* finish discotheque portable record stand holds plenty of records. Stands 52 inches high with decorative flnialu Easily carried from room to room. Housewares — 2nd Floor Outdoor Family Fun ‘Jarts’ Missile Game Summers Favorite flame This summer's most popular butdoor game for the whole family. Metal missiles are thrown underhanded into a plastic ring. Comes complete with 2 extra fins. Sports — 2nd Floor flet needy for COHO Fishing W Life Jackets 45-lb. Small size 1.66 A 90-lb. Mad. sin 1.88 Adult size.... 2.22 Ldst call for Coast guard opproved kapok filled life jackets with vtn^f inserts. For. boating safely. Vinyl Foam Ski Belts a Regular $3.95 Vinyl, foam ski belts with extra I «Fcr floating power, choice of smoll, med. or large. JL Sundries — Main Floor Look Elegant For Any Occasion 100% Human Hajr Wiglet 100% human hair wiglet that con be added to your regular hair-do for d touch of glamour for any special occasion. Can be styled and combed. In handy plastic case. Main Floor OPEN Be A Smart SIMMS ‘BARGAIN GRABBER’ On These Specials OPEN ;■ we \ |H|r" SATURDAY--M0NDAY MONDAY M Irnnlol rea stares Tpur. Enjoy CL Outride staterooms With toilet., berths, children’s playroom, free movies, TV, dancing, tea ted at ree-aonahlg prices. Scnd&rhtocfcursshow-inf rates, schedules. AUTO- One way SULK.. PASSENGER-OnewuyS«.25. CHILDREN-Stoll Half Fere, Under • Free. 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Gentle effective Bromo Seltzer helps relieve excess acidity from overeating and overdrinking. Relieves tension too. Choice of 3 Sizes Train Case 111 J09 Weekender jt 25" 099 New - Cook 6 Hot Dogs in 60 Seconds PRESTO Hot Dogger jits Automatic Use as Spread by Day - Blankat by Night ‘Splanket’ Spread & Blanket Regular 86.88, you'll love the flavor this fast-cook way. No waiting or boiling water. With heat resistant see-through plas-He IW. Housewares — 2nd Floor Twin or Full Sizo ».ioo% cotton is machine washabfo* With . rounded corners and loog fringe. CKoice of Cuts Light end Heavy Fabrics DRITZ Electric Scissors 4-Qt. Hand Operated Ice Cream Freezer Fibarglas Tub Pullman... / Just arrived — another shipment pf our eturdy fiberglas reinforced frame luggage with vinyl covering. Just in time for the college bound youngsters. ^Slight irregulars. Your choice of charcoal or blue in 3 sizes. —Basement No more tired fingers from cutting but patterns, its sofe,_ and quick. Cuts light or heavy fabrics in half the time, nless steel blades. UL Approved too. Drill Cordless Electric Scissors.............. 4.99* Sundries — Main Floor Dolly Madison hand operated lea, cream freezer with fiberglas tub and 16-page recipe booklet. 6-a*. Size..........12.88 Housewares — 2nd Floor Clearance of Heavyweight Carpeting 24-In. Rug Runners , Loafer or Oxford Style Men’s Canvas Shoes Key Woiyid Select Hardwood Seth Thomas Metronome $17.95LUt Sat. A Mon. Squibbs Theragran M 'AmBo/ single burner hot plate ideal for snacks, and small apartments. Come* complete' with cord. 2nd Floor 90 North Saginai St. SIMMS"! Drupe ■» Main Fleer A—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 ITOml JsiSKyi Written '^Varantee Rent-Supplement Units Lure Senior Citizens By BOB WISLER When rent-supplement housing was first proposed lor • the city more than a year ago there were mixed reactions. Some saw it as a boon for file underprivileged. Others including two city commissioners who voted against a .proposed 525-unit project in the city’s northwest section, predicted it-would develop into a ghetto. \ w, ★ ★ As it is turning out, however, the rent-supplement proj-- ect how being constructed on West Kennett near AJcott Elementary School appears to be a haven far a group of people who are too often forgotten—elderly citizens living on .. small pensions or Social Security payments. Developer Charles L. Langs, who expects to have completed the first 200 units of the planned 525-unit project in September said the first applicants for housing in the development have been those who are over 65 and who are over 65 and who are living on less than $3,000 per year. LIST OF 380 Langs said he already has a list of 380 persons or families who are eligible to occupy the 200 units which ,wiii be opened this fall. The developer, who is constructing the housing under a federally-sponsored program which subsidizes rent payments for persons who need housing but are unabje to afford standard rental charges. ‘ ★ 4 ★ Langs said he decided early this year tdT give preference to those over 62 in processing applications because “these are the people that should be helped the most. Younger people. * generally are able to work and afford standard rent.” Langs reviewed applications of the first 180 persons who applied. They are revealing. More than three-fourths are single or two-person family units ipore than 65 years- old: Most of those gave income levels as under $2,000 per year. More than half §t the applicants were .women over 60 living alone. Of these, only 12 listed an income of more than $2,000 per year. ' Far more predominant were incomes ranging from $1,000 to $1,500 per year. At least 16 persons indicated that they had yearly incomes of less than $800 per year, with the lowest being $565. ' ★ it it f' Single men over .65 who applied were far fewer and relatively more afluent. Only 13 single men over: 65 applied, with incomes ranging from $1,200 to -$2,700 per year. There were another 48 applicants from husband-and-wife units in which the oldest partner was over 65. Incomes listed for this group ranged almost exclusively frpm $1,200 to $3,800 per year. Most were in the range of $2,000 to $3,000. Langs said many studies have showed a great need for senior citizen housing. He also is developer of a planned 234-unit senior citizen project to be constructed in two high-rise buildings on Auburn near.Opdyke. The developer expects to break ground on that project near the end of this month. NEED IS CITED Roy McAfee, city housing commission director, estimated that there are 4,000 elderly family units in this area which need senior citizen housing. To be eligible for rent-supplement subsidy the tenant’s yearly income must not exceed $2,800 for one person, $3,800 for two persons, $4,700 for three and $5,000 for four. t ' - Standard rent charges as approved hy the government are $106 for efficiencies, $131 for one-bedroom apartments and $150 for two-bedroom units. < . ■ Under the program renters with low income will have" to pay 25 per cent of their monthly income for rent, the government will subsidize the difference between that and foe standard rent. < - . . LIKE TQVfrt HOUSES Units in the project on \ Kennett—known as North Hill Farms—are efficiency, one bedroom or two bedroom units. Similar to town-house units, the buildings are one-sfory/high and have brick facing. Rental charges include payment of heat, electricity, gas and maintenance of the units and grounds. Refrigerators and ranges Are supplied for the units. The buildings are planned so each family unit has a great deal of space and yard area, Langs sai^. Facilities to be built in the complex include a community center for social meetings. ★ it it Construction of the development is under a “limited dividend’’ concept. The government allows no builder’s fee and mortjgages 90 per cent of the cost. Langs has to mortgage the other 10 per cent and is allowed six per cent profit on Oat 10 per cmt equity, as well as six per cent of the rental fees for managinging the development. 2ND PHASE SOON The developer said he hopes to begin construction of the next'325 units next month. Re said lie might have to delay initial construction to wait for the city to,construct a road into the project, to connect West’Kennett to an extended Columbia. —Persona lnterested in housing in the 325 unit$ to ’be constructed npxt can notify the developer by mailing him the, coupon below. I am interested in securing* living unit in the North Hills Farms rent-supplement housing development. Name: ............................ Street Address: . ........... City: .......:...................................... Number of Persons: ...... ..Ages: .................... Bedrooms Needed: ........Yearly Income (Combined) Send to: Charles L. Langs Inc., 785 Auburn, Pontiac, Michigan 48058. v 'Airlines Responding to Congestion Woes' Since it’s , an industry problem, it is well that the airlines intend to do something about congestion at major airports, 19th declared airline industry ___JHe airline was responding to' recent congressional hearings on air traf- ,ic-_ , ~ MCDONALD Air traffic congestion has reached the point where both the public and the government insist upon a solution, he added. * ★ it The airlines met in Washington recently to map a study program that .may provide the basis for remedial action.—— Created were five subcommittees, one of which will study the question of whether fares should be reduced for nonpeak-hour flights in an effort to OU Gets Portion of GM Donations Oakland University was”lme of 26 Michigan colleges and universities tb receive $562,000 of educational grants, Scholarships and special contributions from General Motors Corp. during 1967. Nineteen of the colleges granted 179 General Motors scholarships totaling $231,800. spread out daily traffic more evenly. OTHER PROBES The other panels will investigate the congestion problem as it is related to international flights, domestic flights, cargl and charter service , and the capacities of the three New York airports. They are to report their findings late, this month. ★ * * McDonald said some airline officials believe . government help is imperative. “They contend that congestion involves on-the-ground as well as in-the-air problems that cannot be solved by the airlines alone. This means more air controllers and new facilities, as well as implementation of master plans for many airports.” OUTGROWN AIRPORTS At hearings before a House subcommittee studying the congestion problem, David D. Thomas, acting administrator of the Federal Aviation Administration, said the problem was simple — “air traffic has growa than airport and runway capacity.” McDonald pointed out the industry was warned to overhaul its operation and scheduling or - face- the alternative of -govern-ment action. $ . ★ ★ ★ ’ “The recent airline meeting here will, hopefully, come up with some answers that will satisfy the public and the government and, in the end, improve airline service — thus benefiting the carriers, as well, concluded McDonald. NEW HOUSING—Construction of the first 200 units of North Hills Farms, a rent-supplement housing project in the northwest Section of the city, is expected to be completed MONTGOMERY this month. When finished, the project will be similar to this artist’s drawing. . MONDAY ■ will be the PERFECT DAY to buy CARPET! 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Saginaw — FE 3-7114 Mon., 9:30 A.M, to 9’ l THE PONTIAC HJ&ESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 A—a 1 9 SCLC Disenchanted With GOP, Uncertain ; MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) -■ The Southern Christian Leadership Conference has urged its ; members and friends not to vote ;for the Republican national ticket and has adopted & wait-and-see position on the Democrats. ' “We are disenchanted with the nominees of the Republican party,” said a resolution adopted by the delegates at a rally attended by more than 6,500, The resolution urged tbat no Support be given to GOP presidential nominee Richard M. Nixon and his running mate, Spiro T. Ag- new. This is the first time the organization has steppied into a national campaign. Democratic Primary in Louisiana Today BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) -With a light turnout forecast, ^Louisiana Democratic voters to-'day decide a low-key contest for tU.S. Senate and seven congres- Woi/ace fo Speak to VFW in Detroit sional races in the state’s primary elections Sen. Russell B. Long is the heavy favorite to win nomination for another six-year term Maurice P. Blache of Codington, a supporter of Alabama’s George C. Wallace. Blache has,done little campaigning. MONTGOMERY, Ala. UR Former Alabama Gov. George Wallace’s campaign headquarters in Montgomery said Friday Wallace has accepted an invitation Mo address the Veterans of Foreign Wars at their national convention Detroit Thursday.- , ' Earlier, it was announced that Wallace had canceled plans to attend the Michigan convention of his American Independent Party in Dearborn next week. James Hall, state vice chairman of the party, said It was necessary that the former governor be in Oregon in order to get on the ballot there. 3 Postmasters Mamed for State AUSTIN, Tex. (AP) — President Johnson Friday .nominated three new postmasters for Michigan cities. Named were Alice M. Guger of Buckley, Eileen H. Stoudt of Muir and William C. Stottlerheyer of Wayne. The nominations require confirmation by the Senate. SCLC yroul Cratic ticket—to be named |n Chicago later this month—only if the party platform calls for ending the Vietnam war immediately and eliminating poverty. SCLC delegates in another resolution called for an. immediate cease-fire in Vietnam, a halt td U.S. bombing of North Vietnam and: “We call upon our.na-tion and the North Vietnamese to stop sparring and begin serious peace talks." Three other veteran Louisiana congressmen have only one opponent and thus their races will be decided at the polls today. They are House Whip Hale Boggs, opposed by Cy Courtney, a Wallace Supporter; Rep. Otto E. Passman, opposed by Antho? ny J. Bruscato; and Fr Edward Hebert, opposed by Carlton H. Pecot, a Negro. POLITICAL UNKNOWN Of the challengers, Bruscato has waged the most active campaign although he faced the handicap-of being a political unknown. Courtney ran for ernor last year and lest by a big margin. Pecot, one of tire three Negroes running for congressional seats, is head of the Louisiana Advancement Association, a civil rights group. Four congressmen have more than one opponent, and thus will have to enter a runoff unless they win a majority of the votes. , The organization, founded by | poverty and for a guaranteed in-Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., cmm- The resolution also said the fraiild support the Demo- ended its first convention since his assassination April A in Memphis by. affirming its conit-mitment to nonviolence in the human rights struggle. King’s last public address was made on the eve of his death at Mason Temple where King’s successor as SCLC president, the Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, announced at 12:33 a.m. today the annual SCLC convention was over. ‘We’re going ^o get together in this,” he said. “I know there will be those that will not go with us on this journey.. firmly committed to nonviolence.” He said any dropouts from the nonviolent movement would be replaced by “hundreds Abernathy earlier recalled that he introduced King the night of April 3, then pledged to continue leading a fight against think the Democratic party ought to give serious consideration to a black candidate for vice presideht.” BLACK CANDIDATE Mayor Richard G. Hatcher of Gary, Ind., suggested in speech to the convention that Democrats should consider nominating a Negro for president or vice president. At a news Conference earlier, Hatcher, a Democrat, said, “I Catcher, a Negro, said he was not a candidate. Hatcher called for action to solve America’s racial problems, not more studies. “The essence of the urban crisis is a dream deferred,” he said. BOYCOTT OF AP “Black people all over this country are saying, ‘Ready or not, here we come’,” he said. Among the resolutions adopted was one calling for a nationwide “selective patronage campaign” or boycott against A&P food stores in an effort to obtain and. better jobs for Negroes. Tire Rosa Parks Award, the SCLCs\ highest, was presented posthumously to King. It cited King as a man “who lived, worked and died that op- pressed* people might be free," | It was accepted by King's old-est child, Yolanda, 13, who said: ‘ 'If he had been here he would have accepted this award not an honor to himself but on half of the people for whom died.” - ’ fl ! THIS MAN HAS A PLAN ... • That will provide living dollars whan you 2 retire or whan accidbnt or illness prevents | you from working and naming. |P j LAWRENCE J. SOWTER j 1 ||,f f j 5624 Highland Road rip**' i 1 i 673-3091 / Vi 1 j u."" Res. OR 3-3681 Etl J i Leon Tarver of Shreveport, a Negro who is a funeral home director, is counting on increased Negro voter registration in the Northwest Louisiana district in his try to defeat Rep. J. D. Wag-gonner of Plain Dealing. Die third opponent is Andrew Pap-[pas of Shreveport. MONDAY ONLY 9:30 am. to 9 p.m. ^ SAVE $20 on This Comfortable Swivel- Rocker Regular *79.95 This versatile rocker is just what you need for healthful relaxation. Drain away tensions built - up during the day. Fuji 360° swivel ‘allows you to turn" in any direction without effort. Choice of vinyl or fabrics in several decorator ’ colors. PERSON-TO-PERSON CREDIT [• No Down Payment e 90 Days Samo as Cash e Up to 36 Months to Pay 108 N. SAGINAW ST. - FE 3-7114 PARK FREE in Our Lot at Rear of Store OPEN HOUSE MONDAY 8 a.m.-9 p.m. Consumers Power Company proudly announces a MEW ARRIVAL r s s« The complete line of filBSQR HOME APPLIANCES! Refrigerators • Electric Ranges • Freezers and Air Conditioners! SPECIAL PRICES • DOOR PRIZE • FAVORS SPECIAL PRICE GIBSON Frost-Free REFRIKMTOR ONLY $289°° ^Mnriol KR.R7R Model 68-576 Le$i Trade-In Allowance FREE DOOR PRIZE GIBSON Model 68-1087 Side-By-Side Refrigerator-Freezer No purchase It MdiMif and you need not be present to win. Consumers Power {Company employees net eligible. Delivery made , only te customers of Consumers Power Company. •> * Downtown Showroom, 28 W. Lawrence consumers Power ME-20014S t A SI* THE PONTIAC PRESS 4 West Huroa Street Pontiac, Michigan 48056 SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 BeSetMy^M? Advertising o. liuntH Mh Rich aid M. VntUMt* Treasurer and nuance Officer County Must Give Roads Top Priority Many months ago, this newspaper editorially pushed for new and expanded jail facilities for Oakland Cotinty. We still support the need for a new jail to replace the outmoded County jail on Wayne Street. But, during the time that has passed since, that initial editorial support, we have watched inadequacy grow and grow and grow. We refer to our County roads. ★ ★ A avoid a crisis. AH that these actions have accomplished is to delay the crisis; not avoid it It is regrettable that the millage proposal was defeated, yet this doesn't change things any. The roads still get continually worse every day. TheJ^ have deteriorated to a point where something must be done quickly, or we will face years of trying to “catch flfe” in maintaining minimal standards for good roads. It is time that the County stepped up to this problem. It is time Oakland County included Road Commission needs in its budget. Therefoife, it appears we must es-tablish some priorities. In doing so, The Press now feels that our roads are in more vital need of attention than the jail. We suggest it is time for County government to do the same. ★ ★ ★ While other gpvernmental units for years have been struggling along on the brink of fiscal deficit, Oakland County has done very well. Its fiscal state has been comfortable. It is one governmental unit which mysteriously ends each year with a sizable surplus. . The time has come to establish priorities, and our roads should be at the top of the heap. Voice of the People: The Press Takes a for Printed TV Schedule We appreciate your very fine newspaper for the TV schedule you have been supplying to your subscribers. We all hope this will be continued. ★ ★ ★ ' ihr It is a fine thing for senior citizens whofhave •a small income. It is also very handy. Mr. AND MRS. LLOYD WHIPPLE 539 NORTH CONKLIN ROAD 9 LAKE ORION Confusion Reigns in Tiny Broadcast Booth One radio station says: “And now Herman Glut*.will bring you the news.” And a voice immediately says: “This is Peter Joker with the morning news.” When he finishes he says: “This'is Peter Joker signing off after bringing you the morning news.” Immediately the ne*t sentence goes like this: "Y0u have just listened to Herman Glutz bringing you the seven o’clock news.” If they don’t know each other any better when they’re In the same tiny broadcasting booth, I can’t place any faith in their news about events that happen two and three miles away SIGNING OFF Suggests More Negro History Articles The article “Negro Role in History Emerges" by Dr. Prince E. Wilson, was a great beginning. It but scratched the surface of the vast contributions of black men to worm and American history. ' Perhaps The Pontiac Press would continue printing a history which would be a source of pride and knowledge to all people. DAVID HACKETT FRANKLIN ELEMENTARY SCH&OL TEACHER CORPS On Aug. 6 the voters of thisCoun-ty madq-it clear that they have absorbed as many tax assessments as they can at this time. A baUot proposal asking for a 1-mill levy for County roads was soundly defeated. The Road Commission has borrowed money from the County. It has floated a bond issue to try and At the sapie time, efforts should be made to bring the Road Commission closer to County government, possibly a .distinct part of it. A§, it is now, the Road Commission, as an autonomous body, is; sitting off in left field with neither funds nor motivation from the parent organization. Evenhanded Justice Dealt by Circuit Court Judge At a time when lawlessness is rampant throughout the Nation and threatens the security of every American, the dispensation of equitable but stern justice is a paramount social need of the day. Always quick to recognize such action, The Press now commends Circuit Court Judge Clark J. Adams on the 20-to-40-year sentence ADAMS he imposed on Milton Pratt, re- cently convicted on a robbery con-' spiracy charge. .. ★ * .. * In the course of a subsequent robbery, a West Bloomfield Township trustee, Edward De-Conick, was murdered and his sister seriousljLWQunded. Collette Ramsey lived in an almost silent world for 20 years. At the age of 13 she had a sevei*#hoss of hearing, but with help and faith she finished her education, was married and had two daughters. At 33 new surgical techniques made it possible for her to return to the world of sound. It took two operations. The night before the first one, which did not guarantee 'restoration of her . hearing, she prayed and promised that, whether or not her hearing returned, she would devote her life to alleviating the handicap of deafness. She did get her hearing back and, true to her prayer, she has devoted her life since to the service dif others. Through her dedicated zeal she founded. “The Deafness Research Foundation.” It was, and still is, the only voluntary organization devoted to the furthering of medical research into causes, improved means of treatment and prevention of hearing disorders Through her persuasive' powers she enlisted the voluntary help of leading sci-entists and doctors in the field, and collected money from foundations, corporations and individuals. ----So that all of the money coukibehsed for otological research, in 1963 She inspired the establishment of the Centurion Club of tl\e Deafness Research Foundation, composed of the nation’s leading ear, hose and throat specialists and of their professional societies. The annual dues underwrite the administration costs of the Foundation. Collette, Mrs. Hobart C. Ramsey, is fulfilling her purpose in life. She says, “My prayers and the work of the Deafness Research Foundation will be unceasingly directed toward twinging closer the fulfillment of Isaiah’s promise \ deaf shall be unstopped’,”__ -J! ' ^-----£— Student Regrets Ban on School Prayer It is really too bad that prayer isn’t allowed in schools, because prayer is needed everywhere. Take a look at a Christian school where prayer is used and a public school where it is not, and see where the most trouble is. I used to go to a Christian school where we prayed before each class. It helped our whole class stick closer, together. Why don’t yon ask the people that do pray? DAVE McSKULIN 4420 OAKVISTA, DRAYTON PLAINS Question and Answer We plan to go to Canada and stop at Niagara Falls, but have heard part or all of it is closed. Can yw find out for us. MRS. C. E. P. REPLY Niagara Falls Chamber of Commerce tells us none of it is closed. Part of the flow of water over the falls was to have been stopped; but that plan has been discontinued until next year. THE BETTER HALF . . and the ears of the Confident Living: To deal successfuUy with crime, a “ two-prong weapon must be wielded by officialdom: the prompt apprehension and prosecution of criminals supported by a severely realistic attitude on the part of the courts. Be at Peace With World and Self By NORMAN VINCENT PEALE a fire that brings a sense of heart be troubled.” ' nparp0 “fmilH hd” h To relieve tension buildup ri ‘Gut Issues’ Will Decide Election a man writes that he takes time out from the job drives' to By EVERETT McKINLEY The fnmpaign for election of the 37th President of the United States is going to be fought and won on the gut That is perhaps an inelegantly rough expression for use in a family newspaper, but only an aging maiden aunt would have the delicacy at a time like this to substitute “gut issue” with something nicer— "visceral issue,” for example. I assure you, my perspective is not that of a maiden aunt. Some things are going to be said in September and October that will rough up the country. Richard Nixon and Spiro Ag-new and the Democratic candidates are going to have to fight the issues that have given 200 million citizens the Cold, awful feeling of fear that Americans have.never seen before. ,H the people are afraid their sons will be killed in Vietnam, they are afraid, too, of the war in the big-city streets. They are afraid to go to church to the morning or to the corner drugstore in the darkening evening. When they drive home at night, they are afraid to steer inja the dark alleys to their garage. Older people -are afraid prices will, go so high they won’t be able to afford to live. Fear is a gut What are the gut issues? One of the two most important is combined in the problems of Vietnam and the tension between two super powers. Nixon. cannot go to" Moscow before election day, so he will bear down on Vietnam. He will try to convince the people to accept his ideas for de-Americanization of the war. That means promotion of the idea of making the war an increasingly Viet-Uamese war with the best of American weapons to arm the South Vietnamese, . The second, but no less important issue, is the fear ttigpred by all of t h e fpihfag things that beset us. The people who know the condition of America’s inventory of weapons—as of today—are crying out to us to replenish that inventory. When we were at war to Korea, our factories ground out every kind of weapon we knew how to fabricate. Our inventory of weapons to 1053, after the Korean armistice, was sky high. That is not the case today. In Vietnam we are using up everything we have. That is a gut issue. There are very few countries of the world that do not, in one form or another, receive aid from the United States. Those countries must help us to Vietnam or forget all about aid from this nation of 50 states. India is receiving' mountains of food from this country every day. Yet India is unaligned and isn’t giving us even token help. Japan has received the mosi generous ^concessions from us. Its exporters have are inexpressibly lower than ours—so low that on a basis of’ price alone, sales of foreign-made goods and steel products to us here to the United States have placed us behind the 8-ball. Those entrepreneurs and export adventurers in foreign lands have moved to on'us during our agony * in Southeast Asia. . They will hove to agree that Pipy Aren’t ship Into America more than the exactly right percentage of our growth market. If that isn’t a gut issue, then ! don’t know what DR, PEALE Other issues are the hecessIfyonfiaktog^aiTall-out effort, through manpower training and close co-operation with industry, to lay low and defeat the jobless problem; and the crying need to- work my ‘mental medicine chest’.” He means that he has stored up to the mind healing words from the Scriptures and ptjjer spiritual thoughts thtrt he likes. Sitting by that cairn expanse of water he “reaches” into his mind out Of* that mental medicine chest a healing thought such as. the following: “Thou wilt keep him to perfect peace whose mind is stayed oh Thee.” Men find peace in other ways. Music has power to heal, not only “the out a pattern for dealing with brea’st » but what is perhaps the strikes that have even more difficult( the WM paralyzed us across the nation from time to time —and always at the wrong time. Politicians do not make the issues. The people make the issues, and so Nixon and his Democratic opponent have got to talk about the things people want to hear—the gut issues. Americans don’t like to be disturbed in the even tenor of their ways. They don’t like to be afraid. tated, mind. Peace is found, by some before a cabin fireplace deep to the woods. What is it about Verbal Orchids Jphn E. Linabury of 81 E. Iroquois; 90th birthday. - Mrs. Fred Rosenau of 6150 Willow Road; 80th birthday. There is a feeling of peace in watching the sea rolling and tossing, drawing back only to surge with enormous power against the rocks, roaring in and pulltag out.' One day I chatted with a friend in a great grove of old live oaks. The live oak, ancient and gnarled, its moss trailing down sriggests venerable men with long beards. The sand of the forest floor that day gleamed white Jqd by/the ’grove a gemlike lakeshone to the sunlight. My friend, highly sensitive to all this beauty, exclaimed, * “Look at the way the sun sifts and falls through those branches. Notice how it lies softly on the white sand warming it into life. See the glint of sun on dancing water. Sense the stillness trembling in the air.” I turned and looked into his sightless eyes. Blind though he was he had described the natural beauty around us better than most could with eyes that hate sight. . Impressively our sightless friend.continued as we stood amidst the live oaks: “My mind is flooded with peace. And though I may be sightless for uie'rest of my life, still I am happy and don tent. He contrasted with another man who has everything but lives in a perpetual rat race. 'Could be,” he said thoughtfully. “It just could be.” Ultimately he found what many modern men desperately need — peace of mtod. (Copyright, IfM, “I was a superior baby ... When I was bom the doctor didn’t even spank me—he simply mentioned that he’d appreciate it if I ’ would cry please.”' ' Moscow's Bluff‘.Is Called Czech Crisis Bares Soviet Split ByLEON DENNEN NEA Foreign News Analyst UNITED NATIONS, N.V. — It takes a Communist to outwit his fellow Communists in the dangerous game of military brinkmanship. Alexander Dubcek, Czechoslovakia’s reformist leader, is obviously as skilled in the game of Red bluff as his Soviet mentors. He was trained as a Communist in Russia, where he acquired firsthand knowledge of the tortuous twists and turns of the Kremlin’s foreign policies. He knew what was generally ignored by Western “experts” — Soviet leaders were themselves divided on how to ope with Prague’s “liberals.” and the politicians of the Communist party’s machine is not unusual in Russia. But in the past such conflicts were veiled in seprecy. The crucial events in Czechoslovakia have brought the new struggle for power into the open. As specialists o n communism see it,' Premier Kosygin represents the moderate wing of the Kremlin. The Republicans were afraid at-Miami Beach. That .... . was the fountainhead of their Mr. and Mrs. Albert C. Renter mood for nominating a gut of Southfield; fighter. That’s why they 52nd wedding anniversary. This tensed-up executive flopped down in my office, “IVe had it,” he growled. “I’m all run down. What a lousy existence.” “You’re not all run down,” I said. “You/are all wound up. A™1 what you need is peace of mind, or else.” "And just where to this Thus, when the Russians hinted that they might invade Czechoslovakia, Dubcek* remained calm and refused, to bow to Moscow’s blackmail. This goes a long way to explain why the mighty Russians finally agreed to meet Dubcek on his own terms and on Czechoslovakian soil. According to East European Let there be no mistake about it: Kosygin is hardly a liberal or reformer. But he is primarily a technocrat and not a politician. He plainly wants to chart a new course for Soviet foreign policy. He would like to continue the dialogue with the United States on how to slow down the arms race and negotiate a peace settlement in Vietnam and the Middle East. In .the Czechoslovakian crisis, it is dear, Kosygin was anxious to avoid even the threat of a military ehowdown. DOMINANT POSITION But his “revisionism” was challenged by ' Leonid endanger riot. «dy . tf1 ® survival of the regimes in Poland and East Germany but the national security of Russia itself. By' openly repudiating Kosygin’s efforts To come to terms with the Czechoslovakian reformists, Brezhnev pulled the rug from under the collective leadership to the Kremlin- He destroyed the delicate balance of power between Soviet ‘’hawks” and “doves,” precariously maintained since the ouster of Nikita Khrushchev in 1064. ’ It is still too early to predict the outcome of th^ Kosygto-Brezhnev conflict. Moscow’s zigzag policies in Czechoslovakia and to relations with the United States are some indications that the acrimonious debate in the Kremlin continues. DAMAGED CAUSE J *H o we ver, even by threatening to intervene to the Internal affairs .of a Communist stafe, the Russians , have '’damaged their own cause almost beyond belief. on t£u! They »•'-»: tLHL tK to b« united* _ _2 ** A*. mtpmmM American producers, can and now must help us to Vietnam with food a nd manufactured articles. That is another gut issue. The labor standards of EurQpe and other countries were And tiie Democrats are afraid, too. That’s why Sen. Eugene McCarthy .has a <»h»ru««» to be nominated for the Presidency by the Democratic N a t i o n a 1 Convention at Chicago next week. 55th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. WUUam Holmberg of Waterford Township; 52nd wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Orsel Dudley of Orion Township; ’ 54th weddiitg anniversary. challenged wistfully. “Well, this might help.” I quoted some words which have proved a therapy to hf!any. “thou tell beep him in perfect peace whose' mind is stayed on thee.”' ‘’Peace I give .unto you. Let not your party boss -Leonid Brezhnev since June 1967 when -Israel defeated Moscow’s Arab clients in the Middle East. CONFUCTS VEILED Friction between the Soviet g o vernment’s bureaucracy the leader of aeo-Steltoist conservative and m li l t ary factions to the Kremlin. These, factions want to reimpose Russia's dominant position to world communion. They oppose any curtalbnent of Russia’s armed might. Brezhnev, it teems, insisted that Kosygin's policy might te ,' | y THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 A~7 It's Not Too Lalhs^ to Leam — Approach Different in .(EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the fifth in a series of 10 articles on adult education.) By LESLIE J. NASON, Ed.D. It 1* important for a student to know that how one reads depends upon his purpose. Reading for study requires a different approach to the terial than reading for enjoy-, ment. Recognizing the difference in approach and mastering the approach to study can be the key to success in the class- Almost everyone reads for pleasure. Part of the pleasure is that one can proceed at a rapid rate without pausing to ponder the portent or stopping to take stock of what facts may be needed later.. Not so with reading for study. To make what you read part of your permanent knowledge you must not only understand it but you must think about it in your own words. Don’t try to read a whole chapter and then start ypur thinking. By the end’ of the chapter you will have' already forgotten much of what you haye read. Stop at the end of each section of material and think oyer the ideas. if you find this difficult, make a couple of adjustments in your reading. • will be a matter of habit and seem effortless. Here are a few other points regarding reading: • Visualize the events in history on a mental map as you read. • Associate each new word in biology or life science not only with its location in plant or cell or animal structure, .but also with 'its pronunciation and spelling. Repeat it aloud until ft “rolls off your tongue” glibly. Learn everything you can about each thing studied, such as consistency, function, location and relationship to other tilings near it. (Tomorrow: Success in reading job training manuals.) First decide what you should be looking for as you read a section of the material. From the table of contents or the author’s bold faced, headings you should be able to determine what he thinks is important. Search for these ideas as you read, and read fast enought to keep your mind from wandering, This time you should be able to recite back successfully. Ait the end of each chapter think over the ideas that- have j been presented. Skim through again if necessary ’to refresh your memory. Try explaining to someone else what the chapter was about the points ft covered. FoT~tfte firsti few weeks it will take' persistent effort to maintain this approach to study. But take heart, it gets easier time goes on and eventually it COUPON I f 2-Piece Plain DRESSES 99* Coupon Expires Wednesddy, August 21 COUPON Ladies’ Slacks or Plain SKIRTS 59$ Coupon Expires Wednesday, August 21 DRAYTON PLAINS .OPEN SUNDAY NOON’TO 6 BOVS f S Alt SHIR' JR |b«W * ■ on U/tent Clmm M-59 at Crescent Lake Road WATERFORD PLAZA - 673-8833 _ Telegraph Road TEL-HURON S. C. - 338-7934 71 South Squirrel Road Auburn Heights— 852-3737 ALL STORES OPEN 7:30 A.M. - 7:00 P.M. One Hour Maitinizing South Telegraph Road MIRACLE MILE S. C.- 332-1822 763 Baldwin Avenue BALDWIN PLAZA - 335-2200 3397 Elizabeth Lake Road ELIZABETH lAkE S. C. 682-8910 A LESSON THAT’S WORTH REMEMBERING ••• WHERE YOUR MONEY EARNS MORE For Mcurlfy at wall at flexibility. Capitol', pa,tbook plan it far yaw. This plan allows you to save any amount, with funds cenvani- paid and compounded quarterly. The annual rate an funds left in your account far 12 months is 4.84%. CAPITOL BONUS SAVING CERTIFICATES Offer CAPITOL’S NEW BONUS SAVINGS CENTIFI0ATES offer earnings of 5%% on funds invested for a specified time (six months or longer). Certificates in amount of $9,000 or more are emm CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION INCORPORATED 1800 • LANSINO. MICHIOAN 75 W. HUROli STREET, PONTIAC 838-7117 | OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. (Sal. 9:30-9) _ v.- , ___ ’ * — AaS***— a —_ 7. Drayton opbn Sunday Noon to 4 p.m. I (Downtown cloiet Tuet* mod. mt 6 pjn.) FEDERAL'S DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS -;’S' * Arts Festival * Slates Concerts Valter Poole will conduct the Detroit Symphony Orchestra in five free concerts on the steps of the Rackham Building as part of a city-wide arts festival entitled, “Detroit Discovery." V " - ^*#•'*7,ii;: m Mom Gets Dates for Her Daughter, i.4 , , ’ /(>-/ / 1 , J. . Igngrihg the Youth's Protests ndver The concerts are scheduled for Aug. 20-21 and 23-25 at 8:30 pjn.„ Four of the five concerts will feature native Detroiters in their first solo engagements with the Symphony. DEBUT On Tuesday night, violinist Joseph StrlpUn will make his Symphony solo debut in a performance of the first movement of Mozart’s Concerto No. 3 for Violin ahd Orchestra. Strip] in has performed with the Metropolitan Opera National Company, and last season was a member of the Indianapolis Symphony. The Symphony’s Wednesday night concert will be all-orchestral. On Friday, soprano Onita Sanders will be heard in an aria from “La Boheme.” Miss Sanders is currently, studying for a master’s degree in music at Wayne State University, where she is a pupil of Celeste Cole. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I Jive in a small and during my dated. Pm 19 and nave been away to college for the paist year. I'dated —|| college, back home « WIW- < less summer. I don’t really mind, but my mother does. As ■HMp&V a teen-ager she was ex-ilsHHHHff tremely popular. She ^ must be afraid I’ll be an old maid the way she *®*®®®*®“* tries to scare up dates ABBY for me with anything that comes along. Last night I went out with the son of one bf her friends. He was a wolf, a bore and a Waste of time. He called me for a date again tonight and my mother stood right there by the phone to make sure I didn’t refuse him. I tried to tell her what kind of "boy he was, but she said it was better than staying home.-So what does a girl do with a mother like that? > STUMPED - DEAR STUMPED: She uses her own judgement (and in this case I think yours is better than your mother’s). Flatly refuse to go out with anyone you consider a waste of time. the difference? His MOUTH is in the middle. DEAR ABBY: Will you please put a few words in your column, about the “forgotten man” at all these weddings. I do not refen to the father of the bride or groom. I refer to'the minister who has Lady Bird Prepares for Final Move WASHINGTON (UFI) Lady Bird Johnson is taking no chances in this-era of -political reassessment. She already has one foot out of the White House door and she is packing—just in case. While others might suspect President Johnson might run again, the First Lady is convinced he won’t. As an organized * woman, she has taken inventory and already has her. staff shipping boxes of books arid personal objects of art which have graced the White House' during their tenure. given his time for pre-marltal counseling, has arranged for die use of the church and its facilities, has guided the wedding rehearsal, has performed the ceremony and then has registered the marriage as the. law requires. A young man who considers himself mature enough to take .on the responsibilities of marriage should be aware that "his first responsibility is fb offer to the minister, by way of the best man, a monetary token of appreciation. (After all, the couple could, haye gone to a J.P. who would have asked a dollar a minute for a five j minute ceremony.) My_ husband has performed four “thank you”'weddings in a row, and I am Beginning to wonder if the wedding etiquette manuals are missing a page, or whether the bridegrooms haye no mothers to tell them that they have a duty on their wedding day beyond kissing the bride. Thank you. PASTOR’S WIFE' A recent tour around the Edenborough Drive, West Bloomfield Township home of Mrs.. Robert W. Lees'(right) easily convinced fellow members of the Bloomfield, Welcome Wagon Garden Club that her English gardens would prove a favorite site during their annual Garden Walk. Cochairmen Mrs. Robert J. Mallow of Detroit (left) and Mrs., Joseph P. Kardas of Dunmore Drive, West Bloomfield Town-■ ship have organized a tour of six homes including that of Mrs. Kar--das’, Aug. 23 from 1-7 p.mh and Aug. 24 from 10 a.m. until 5'p.m. Tickets may be obtained either day. Mezzo-soprano Ruth Dansby will be featured Saturday in the aria “Che fare senza Euridice” from Gluck’s “Orfeo ed Euridice.” Miss Dansby has taught music in the Detroit public schools for the past 15 years. DEAR ABBY: I realize that this is no earth-shaking problem, but I would like your opinion. On < Sunday evening, soprano Gloria Hill will sing arias by Handel and Mozart. Miss Hil) was graduated from Northwestern High School in June and will enter the University of Michigan on a four-year scholarship this fall; * Our little three-year-old boy, Jeff, eats with his left hand, and we are afraid if he keeps on he will become left-handed, so we’ve been trying to break him of it. I know it's no crime to eat left-handed, but it looks so clumsy. Could forcing him to eat right hand have a bad effect on him later on in life? JEFF’S MOM DEAR MOM: Possibly. Let the,boy eat with which ever hand he chooses. What's Mrs. Johnson acted on the knowing advice of a former First Lady, Mrs. Harry S. Truman. Every time a courier plane flies to the LBJ ranch where the Johnsons* are spending the month of August, some personal LBJ. belongings are aboard. The Johnsons have spent some 30 years in Washington and jt’s a long haul back to Texas for all the accumulation of furnishings, gifts, plaques, awards and photographs. Much of the personal memorabilia will wind up in the LBJ Library, under .construction at the University of Texas in Austin. DEAR ABBY: About the GI whose girl let her mother talk her intq “trading” her engagement ring in on another bigger and much “nicer” diamond, and who was told he' could, pay the difference when he got home from overseas service: Don’t you suppose he would be well advised to forget die diamond and trade the GIRL in oh a much nicer (though not necessarily bigger) one? JUST SUGGESTING: gEDONA, ARIZ. Everbody has, a problem, What’s yours? For a personal reply write to Abby, care of The Pontac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Bpx 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056 and enclose a stamped, self-addressed envelope. Cultural Annual Garden Tours Set Six gardens will be ‘featured on the -Bloomfield Welcome Wagon Garden Club tour Aug. 23-24. Tickets may be used On Friday from 1 to 7 p.m. or Saturday from 10 a.m. to 5 p m. Should walkers not complete the tour in one day, this allows a second chance to see all of the gardens. The dahlia garden will be featured at the home of Mrs. James Neubacher of Tamerlane, West Bloomfield Township. An example^ professional landscaping will be shown at the home of Mrs. Robert Lees of Edenborough, West Bloomfield Township. WofttewA vSectuw Calendar DETROIT (AP) — Here are the major cultural events scheduled for Michigan fpr today through Friday, Aug. 23. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST A—8 Theme of this year's walk will ,be Patio Entertaining, according to cochairmen Mrs. Joseph Kardas and Mi’s. Robert Mallow. GARDENS OPEN Opening her garden for the tour will be Mrs. Earl Esse of Lone Pine Road. Mrs. Roger Spence of Constitution Drive, Southfield; will show visitors through her greenhouse. Vegetables are the focal point In Mrs. Ray Koertge’s garden on Inkster Road....... and a city lot landscape will be shown at Mrs. Robert Mallow’s of Wakenden, Redford Township. A picture page featuring Mrs. Mallow’s garden appeared in The Pontiac Press June 28. MORE In addition to the tour, visitors will be treated to a display of crafts done by club members, a white elephant- sale and a plant sale from members’ gardens. Grandchildren Visiting Visiting theii' grandparents., Mr. and Mrs. C. Burr Lane of James K. Boulevard, are Louise, Bea and Emily Lane. They are the children of Mr. and Mrs. Donald B. Lane of Rye, N-Y. — Tickets may be purchased by contacting Mrs. Joseph Kardas of Dunmore Drive, West Bloomfield Township or Mrs. John Madgett of Tamerlane Drive, Birmingham. Refreshments will be served. . „ Visitors are asked to wear low heels and to bring no pets. . December vows are planned by Susan Kay Stranahan and Larry Macdonald. The bride elect is the daughter of Mrs. Evelyn Stranahan and Richard W. Stranahan, both of Rochester. She is a senior ■ Hurley Hospital School of Nursing. Larry is the’son of the William R. Macdonalds of Rochester. Adult Music Session Held at Interlochen Approximately 150 adult musicians will attend summer sessions at the National Music Camp at Interlochen Aug. 20-27. The Adult Music Conference and American Recorder Society Summer School are scheduled. Instruction will be given in .chamber music, ^)iano, string instruments, consort coaching, recorder techniques and Baroque flute. Several state high school bands will also be at the camp receiving training. ART ’ DETROIT -J Detroit Institute of Arts: The Graphic Art of Mary Cassatt, 80 aquatints, etchings and lithographs by the celebrated American artist. Through Aug? 18. 9. a.m,-6 p.m. Tues.-Sun.; closed Mondays. DETROIT - J. L. Hudson Gallery: Gallery selection^ sculpture, paintings, graphics, through Aug. 31. MUSIC ROCHESTER — Oakland -University: Meadow Brook Music Festival, Detrol Symphony Orchestra, with soloist Gregor Piatigorsky, cellist, 8:30 p.m., Aug. I1 and 7:30 p.m. Aug. 18; soloist MicHa Mischakoff, violinist, this will be his final performance before retirement 7:30 p.m. Aug. 18.' STAGE DETROIT — .Detroit Institute of Arts Summer Theater: Brigadoon, Aug. 17 8:30 p.m.; Aug. 18, 7:30 p.m.. Roosevelts' Marital Rift Revealed NEW YORK (AP)—Mrs.. Franklin D. Roosevelt left the White House abruptly following the death of her husband when she learned of another woman’s visits with the president ’ there, according to author Jonathan Daniels. » Daniels writes in his. new book, “Washington Quadrille,” that Mrs. Roosevelt Inquired about visits by Lucy Mercer Rutherford who had once served as her social secretary. ' widower of 55, in 1917 and Daniels says that Roosevelt's polio attack four years later made him more dependent on his wife. l 1944 “Evidently even in, the midst of the solenurqbsequies there was on her heart a secret something she had to face,” Daniels wrote. “She made direct inquiries.” “The truth could not be denied,” he wrote.. “Eleanor’s resentment could not be dissembled. She announced she was getting out of the White House immediately.”. Daniels, a one-time aide to'Roosevelt, is now editor of the Raleigh, N. C., News and Observer. * Mrs. Rutherfurd was widowed and died in 19481 • u .. After Pearl Harbor, said the author, Roosevelt began to meet Lucy regularly in. Washington “for long drives together." * “They would drive and talk for two, hours and the president would return to the White House a man refreshed by the lady whom his protectors remembered as a charming and beautiful woman,” he wrote, Mrs. Rutherford was present-at least twice at the Little White House in Warm Springs, Ga., Daniels said, and was there when Rooseyelt was stricken fatally by a cerebral hemmorhage in April, 1945. “The certain thing is that Lucy was not a lady who would have had to be ejected,” he wrote. “In thesq hours even more than when he was stricken long before at Campo-bello, he was Eleanor’s—and Eleanor’s alone.” . According to the author, William D. Hassett, Roosevelt’s correspondence secretary, deliberately omitted Lucy’s name frdm a list of those present when the' president died. She Complains That Neighbors Are Dog Snobs Couple Wed in St. Michael's Church Carrying a bouquet of white roses, Kathleep A. Smith became the bride of Robart J. Bishop today in St. Michael’s Catholic Church. and Rebecca $mith assisted. Flower girl, Barbara Raymond, was escorted by ring bearer, Peter Smith. The son of the John Bishops of Chesa-The daughter of the Floyd D. Smiths ning was attended by best man, Ray-of Lake Oakland Shores Drive wore a ’’’ mond BishoD. Performing the duties nt Lake Oakland Shores' Drive wore a gown of embroidered batiste with an Organdy train. Her veil was secured by an organdy bow. By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: ,L am a dog lover, curb my dog and never allow him to run loose. I resent people who ask me to-take my dog elsewhere when I take him out for a walk. Many dogs in dps section are allowed to run loose and I have often had to clean my lawn of dog waste. ATTENDANTS • Mrs. William Raymond was matron of " honor for the former Miss Smith. Bridesmaids,. Mary Himburg, Cheryl Winkler mond Bishop. Performing die duties of usher were Dennis Vehn, Edward Bishop and Roland Siebert. ■ * ★ -W ★ ‘ Following) the ceremony, the newly weds were feted at a reception at Pine Knob Resort, Upon their return from a New England honeymoon, they will reside in Cadillac But Daniels said Hassett told him Stephen Early, Roosevelt’s former press secretary, blurted to him; “There’s hell to pay, Bill. Mrs. Roosevelt knows that Lucy Rutherfurd was here.” JOINED FDR Daniels said that Roosevelt met “blond, slim” Lucy Mercer when he first went to Washington in 1913. He was then 31 and she 22. According to Daniels, she joined the president and others for yachting trips on the Potomac While Mrs. Roosevelt was at the family's summer home in Campobello. The author quotes* several-accounts that the relationship came close to breaking up the Roosevelts’ -marriage. One said a breakup was prevented by Lucy’s Catholicism. ' Lucy married Winthrop Rutherfurd, a This is an early photograph -—Agi Lucy Mercer Rutherfurd whose friendship with Franklin D. Roosevelt is mentioned I wish someone would start a campaign to have each dog owner clean, up after his dog. I would do so, gladly,, if others would. Just because mine is not a pedigreed dog doesn’t give them the right to ask me to go elsewhere. —Mrs.P. G. Dear Mrs. P. G.: A person should make every effort to “curb” his dog, keep him from performing his duties op lawns and flower beds. Ideally, the pet lover choose an undeveloped area — woods or vacant lots. , If the dog’s owner really tries to do this, home-owners should be patient when an occasional mistake occurs. A SMALL WEDDING .Dear Mrs. Post: My aunt is getting married for the first time. Because is 40 years old, her family , feels il not proper for besides the maid of honor and best man. Is it proper for her to have a larger wedding party? —Barbara Miss Messier to Wed Kathleen Sue Messier and Jack cr Wagoner have announced mid-October -wedding plans. The daughter of Mr, and Mrs. Leon Messier of Cottage Groye' Street will marry the son .of the Mitchell Wagoners of London, Ky. new bm% by Jonathan Daniels, Dear Barbara: Women of 40 or more rtnaing that ‘right spot’ for each hanging on exhibit tonight at should restrict their bridal party to one Fine Lake Country Club marked the final stage of plans by Mrs* attendant. Just as long white gowns are William L. Cotter (left), Mrs. William H. Bagiev 111 and Mrs Jumps' bec°/min?ji? th“S’ "®!*her E- Gibbons. The exhibit by Michigan artists, the first ever held at would a group of middle-aged brides- the Club,«nU coincide with a fJ^ner^e There is no reason, however, that your Quests. Mfs. Cotter 'Qnd Mrs. Bagley, cochairmen, reside on aunt should not have as large a recep- Gharel Court, West Bloomfield Township and Water Wheel Lane l tion as she wishes—complete with all the respectively, and Mrs. Gibbons, Comers'Drive, West Bloomfield’ trimmings. Township, , . * * THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATljRBAY, AUGUST 17. 1888 OW to Make YOUR HOME SPARKLE New Way Professional cleaning methods - will restore the original luster and color to yonr rugs. : The deep cleaning wu> «» remove die grit snd dirt that cut* nap - add Ufa to your ruga, have them cleaned by New Way. Call FE 2-7132 RUG and CARPET CLEANING 42 Wiener Street, Pontiac 40 ymart’ tarvicain tha Pontiac area NEW WAY FALL TERMS Begins SEPTEMBER 9th Make a Start Noyir Toward a t Rewarding Career in Business! Secretarial... Accounting Business Administration Office Machines Clerical You can prepare quickly for a position in business, where you will earn a good salary, have unusual opportunities for advance* ment and enjoy job security! You may start a course at the beginning, or on an advanced level, depending upon whether you have had previous business training. Yon will progress swiftly toward a definite career goal. .Every subject you tqko here will have a practical use in a business office. Experienced teachers will take a personal interest in yonr progress. You will make new friends among the business leaders of tomorrow. Day, Half Day — Evening Division . 18 W. Lawrence — Pontiac VETERAN APPROVED FE 5-7028 Will it be AmeSy Iowa, with his not be returned to Iowa when FVGITT-MARTUS Patricia Ann Martas chose a gown of ivory peau de sote and beaded Alencon lace for her wedding Friday to George Louie Fugitt. The couple’s sister and brother, respectively, Mrs. Frederick Bourdeau and Thomas Fugitt were honor attendants. Parents, Jjfr. and Mrs. Basd-Martus of Myrtle Street and the Oral Fugitts if Andersonville Road, Independence Toumshipr joined the newlyweds at d reception in the Waterford C.A.L Building follotoing the vows. The former Miss Martus carried a cascade of red roses for the candlelight ceremony at St. Perpetm’s Catholic Church. The newlyweds are honeymooning in the Smokey Moun- Cadetfe Scouts Slate Round-Up Some 120 Girl Scout Cadettes from the Northern Oakland Council will gather Sunday at Camp Sherwood, Lapeer, for the third annual week long Cadette-Round-Up. ★ . * * The theme for this year’s program, which is organized by the young participants, is en-titled “Tomorrow Challenge!” . , ★ * | Among activitiST^siated by I Cadettes, who will be joined by 130 adult councelors, is an open house Wednesday afternoon for parents and guests as well as junior scout troops.. Highlighting the week agenda will be a senior capping ceremony by candlelight Friday evening. grandparents, and a “stable, dependable, conventional, mid-dleclass, middle west” upbringing? Or wiU it be Brookdale, Calif-, with his father and stepmother and a “romantic, impractical, unstable, arty, "Bohemian and probably intellectually stimulating” life? CHOICE The choice today was Mark Painter’s. It was a decision very few 10-year-olds get a chanCe to make. A 10 minute talk with minister will determine young Mark’s future. The minister, an emissary from Mark’s grandparents in Ames, will decide whether the boy will stay with his parents. "His grandmother, Mrs. Dwight Bannister, said she would abide by Mark’s wishes. j IOWA COURT The atmospheres- in the respective households were, described in memorable language by the Iowa Supreme Court during the si* year court battle for custody of Mark. The high court awarded Mark .j his grandparents, saying their stable, conventional, mid-dleclass upbringing would be more desirable, though probably less stimulating to the boy, than the a rt-y, Bohemian life his father led. Mark had been sent to live with the Banisters after his mother, Jeanne Bannister Painter. died in an auto crash in 1962. When Mark’s father, Harold r. Painter of Brookdale, remarried, he wanted Mailt to live with him in California, but the grandparents refused to give up custody. Painter was granted one ponth a year visitation rights. SCENE SHIFTS Last week, a California court granted him temporary custody DRAYTON PLAINS * I SALE Regular 3.00 SARONG criss-cross cotton bra Amazing Sarong cool cotton bra gives the comfort, and freedom of an oil-elastic bra. Elastic shoulder strap tactions prevent digging. Molds beautifully. Cool, lightweight and machine washable. 32-42, A-B-C cups, 3.95 D-cups—2/6.89. TO-Year-Old to Choose Typical or-Bohemian Life BROOKDALf?, Calif (UPI) - and Painter said Mark would the one-month period was up. Mrs. Bannister said Wednesday in Ames she had asked her pastor, the Rev. Clay Lumpkins of nearby Gilbert, Iowa, to fly to California to find out Mark’s "true feelings.” “If Mr. Lumpkins is convinced that Mark wants to stay ip California, I shall accept that decision,” Mrs. Bannister said. But she said Painter’s decision to seek custody was “a flagrant violation of trust that .should be a matter, of deep shame to him." Washer Renews Shower Curtain When a plastic shower curtain becomes water-spotted, soap streaked and stiff from long you can renew, its appearance by giving it a quick trip through an au4omatlc ', with just a Water conditioner added to the water. This strips out the soap and dirt and leaves the plastic curtain clean and pliable. Date Corrected The Charles W. Seaman’s Golden Wedding anniversary party was incorrectly reported in The Pontiac Press as scheduled for tomorrow. The celebration will take place on ^ug. 25. Luxurious Bathroom Is instant Status CHICAGO (NFS) - A luxurious bathroom has become one of the newest status symbols. Gold faucet handles and even marble bathtubs with jewel-studded fittings are readily available — if you have the money to buy such baubles. Few people have a fortune to spend on decorating a bath, but the luxurious look needn’t cost king’s ransom, according to the home fashion experts at Norwood Mills, Inc,, Janesville, Wis.----- The stylists who design this leading manufacturer’s line of decorative bathroom accessories, note that you can achieve a luxurious look with little outlay of cash by dressing up your bath with imaginative accessories. ★ ★ ★ Accessories made of pile fabrics, such as those to the luxurious Mona iisa line, range from doorknob covers and stylish bonnets for spare rolls of tissue up to two-piece jackets for toilet tanks snd fabric-covered hampers rfnd brush containers. There are also lid covers, scale and tissue box, and wastebasket covers to jewel-llke colors ranging from pearly whites to ruby-rich reds. There are fluffy rugapto fit any size bath and for the ultimate to luxury, soft pile wall-to-wall carpeting. Picker-Upper Is Tepid Wafer Relax for .15 or 20 minutes a day in a tubful of tepid water containing 1 cup of * soda bicarbonate (baking soda). Not only Is this a refreshing pick-me-up during wilting hot weather, but It’s a soothing remedy for the sore sunburn or the itch that accompanies summer dry skin, OPEN 10 A.M* TO 9 TM. (Set. 9:30-9’ open Sunday Noon to 6 p.m. closti JW. Wad. at 6 pjaJ DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS Whitney Bloomfield Nursery School Enroll your .child V Now lor Summer and Fall Sessions. Mrs. Claudtoe Whitney .. > Director Pontiac Trail A ArUne Dr. Mr. and Mis. Jack H. Carlsen (nee Diane P. LaBurn) were awarded Bachelor degrees during commencement exercises Friday" at Western Michigan University. Jack, son of the Richard E. Carlsens of Barkman Street, received his BA in Social Sciences. Diane, whose parents are the William LaBwns of Detroit, graduated with a BS in English. FACTS ABOUT PHARMACY by HOWARD L. DELL Your Neighborhood Pharmacist QLAUC0MA - SNEAK THIEF OF SIGHT ind normally affects 2%'gf the people ii ogo group; consequently, there an •00,000 parsons in thit country who couh many of theta people do not know they have glaucoma. The need for regular check-ops with your ophthalmologist (eye physician) it of greet Importance. "EC Baldwin Pharmacy —S.iyIc.— 219 Baldwin FI 4-2929 St Cm Se-JM Vs-Chou (fm Ttiamd 'Sjm Chm Cjm The value of your ring is in-the'diamond— Diamonds come in many sizes; shapes and qualities. There are many advantages in buying a loose diamond—You save at least 20% because Connoll/s buy direct from-brokers and, you may design a ring to suif your taste and budget. chartW OlMyuxay • Mlcklrn* Baakard JEWELERS DOWNTOWN PONTIAC mmtr at Hmmm mmd Sm/ana* StrrrU FE 2-0294 OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5 P.M. m 1 Seminole Hills Brick 8-room home in excellent condition, living room, dining room, family room with fireplace, den, modern kitchen with built-in dishwasher and lavatory on first,floor, 3 bedrooms up with 2 full baths. Carpeted throughout. Fuji basement, gas heat, 2-car attached garage. Immediate possession. $33,950, terms. 124 Ottawa Drive. WE WILL TRADE ANNETT INC. REALTORS 28 E. Huron St., Pontiac 338-0466 Office Open Evenings and Sunday 1 to 4 SUNDAY 12 TO 5 MONDAY 9 TO 9 CLEARANCE WE ARE IN THE PROCESS OF REMODELING OUR PONTIAC STORE. SUNDAY AN0 MONDAY ONLY SAVE FROM 30% TO 60% ON ODD LOT RQLLS, DISCONTINUED FLOOR SAMPLES, READY MADE RUGS, AND A LARGE SELECTION OF REMNANTS. CONTINUOUS FILAMENT NYLON PILE LOOP Longer Wearing Than the Price Indicates—5 Colors Clearance-Odd Lot Rolls 359 798 4S9 A59 498 RANDOM SHEARED WOOL PILE Very Heavy Weight Wool Pile 6-Fine Looking Colors. HEATSET NYLON PILE TWIST Dense, Tightly Twisted Nylon Pilo. Choice of Colors. NYLON PILE TEXTURE Heavy Weight DuPont Nylon Carved Texture 5 Beautiful Colors Remain ACRYLIC PILE TEXTURE Heavy Weight Carved Texture 2 Colors Remain ' SPACE DYED NYLON PILE TWEED Continuous Filament Nylon Pile Tweed ^898 Space Dyed for Extra Beauty. 5 Colors Remain . REMHAHTS PRICED TO CLEAR Corrip. , Save 12x9’8” Sand Beiga Shag . $155. 11.90 12x12*2'* Beige Plush $325 119.90 12x7*0” Turquoise Tweed $83 39.95 12x10’6” Raspberry Shag $155 09.95 15x10*5” Purple Shag $168 ^ 99.95 15x10*5** Blue Tweed $210 1 109.05 12x14*9” , Blue Shag $199 119.95 12x12*10” LemeitMag $204 119.95 12x12’9” Gold Kitchen Carpet $170 94.50 12x11*0** Green Plueli , $130' 84 A0 12x11*2” Avocado Shag $180 114.95 12xB*2»* Aqua and Breen Tweed $99 49.95 12x17*0** Red Plush $135 12.50 12x11*5** Blue Qreen Kitchen Opt. $125 09.95 12x10*2” Avocado Shag $140 09.95 11*7x0*1”. Beige Tweed $65 34.05 , 12x10*2” Oold Tweed $79 44.95 12x0*2” Avocado Texture $66. . 29.95 f. 12x12*2” Lemon Texture $159 09.95 12x0*2” 12x11*0” Orange Tweed Avocado Carved — $77 $216' 49.95 109.95 12x11 Blue Random $176 19.95 12x11*0” Oold Wool $186 94.95 12x11*7” Straw Random $210 109.95 12x10*0” Rod Commercial $240 99.95 12x12 Oold Plush $187 99.95 S*11**x11 field Loop $49 29.95 11*7”x9T’ Sold Tweed $ $65 34.95 12x0*0” Whit* Plush $125 9440 12x10 ■iigi Pluih $180 109.95 12x8*11” Bathroom Carpet, White $81 45.95 Beduniiii-EvafM Serving North Oakland County FINK FLOUR COVIDINCS Tel-Huren Shopping 0eliter, Telegraph at Huron Roads Oall 224-9544 for ia-tlie-Heiee-SfiviCP * f Open Sunday 12 to I P.M., Mohday 9 UL to 0 ML A-—1P THE PON^AC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 SPECIAL PRICES FOR AUG. 18,11-6 WHILE QUANTITIES LAST. Sunday Only FLEECE UNEO SWEATSHIRTS FOR BOYS Our Reg. 1.37 Charge It Long sleeve styling! Orange, lemon, pale blue, banter green, navy, coffee. Fall cut, shrink resistant. S-M-L. Padded or Unpadded Selection of TEEN BRAS Our Reg. 1.37 / Yell Sunday Only Assorted fabrics .in white! Designed for comfort and flattery. 28-34AA) Charge It. CHILDREN'S PICNIC TABLE 3.97 Our Reg. 7.97 Sunday Only enamel finish; seat and table top have steel slats with rolled edges; and zinc plated hardware. Just “Charge It.” 50-U).* BAG OF MICHIGAN PEAT 57* Out Reg. 73c Sunday Only Weed free. Excellent soil conditioner. Use as top dressing. •N.tWr. & Portias Stars Only MOTORIZED HOODED GRILL 0.44 Our Reg. 9.97 Sunday Only Hurry, for terrific savings on this brazier grill with moto-ized, two-position spit, and ratchet grid adjustment. 5” rubber tired wheels: 1” tubular chrome legs. Sturdy metal. Save! 1 1.SS Table Top Grill,...................1.44 ICE CHEST KEEPS FOOD HOT, COLD 9.72 Our Reg. 12.96 Sunday Only Sturdy steel ice chest is 13” widej^22” long and 15” high. Holds 70 lbs. of ice. Expanded polystyrene bead insulated. Atherlite liner. Enamel finish. j-. ' PATIO SQUARES IN COLORFUL PASTELS 5 For$1.00 Sunday Only Cement block patio stones are approximately 8”xl6”x2” size. Pontiao Stars Only Sunday Only EVERYDAY HOUSEHOLD ITEMS IN STURDY PLASTIC Our Reg. to 84c 2-77* Charge It Choose from 20-quart tub, *11 V» quart pail, 17-quart waste basket, bushel-capacity laundry basket. Heavy-duty plastic, a choice of popular colors. Charge It. 13%-oz DRY • ROASTED PEANUTS OurReg. 78c 37* Sunday Only Delicious dry roasted peanuts, no sugar, salt or oil added. Vacuum jar helps maintain freshness. Save! Pontiac Stars Only Sunday Only , 31” HIGH SCOOP CHAIR KLMOIIIED POLY PLASTIC ___Our Reg. 3.97._ 2.22 Charge It For home or office. In poly-plastic with tubular legs. Choose tangerine, turquoise, sandalwood, black or avocado. MEN’S LEATHER SLIP-ONS 4.00 Our Reg. 5.97 Sunday Only Classic “penny” slip-ons, genuine leather, brown, with Everlite heel and .sole. Sizes 7 to 11. Charge It. ■ BATHROOM CARPET KIT , Our Reg. 7.88 Sunday Only nBr For 5*x6’ bath. 75% cotton, 25% viscose rayon. Lid cover. Kraft pattern paper included. Many colors. Charge It. HATCHED JACK ADJUSTS EASILY 2e97 BRAND NEW Famous Make SPARK PLUGS 47* or Outdoor Summer Play Gym Equipment Swing Seat Our Reg. 2.66 1.33 Sunday Only Climbing Rope Ladder OurReg. 2.66 1.33 Sunday Only For healthful fun outdoors.' Sturdily'construct-, ed, hardware included., PaaNaa Stan Saly Charge It at Kmart KMART BRAND FACIAL TISSUE -U BllX OF 250 2 For 39* Sunday Only Save on 250*onnt box of Kmart 2-ply facial tissue*. Soft, extra absorbent. Buy new at special. savings and just say. Charge Wash 'n Wear Polyester THERMAL WEAVE 72x90” BLANKET Our Reg. 4.33 3.63 Sunday Only Thermal-weave polyester fiber (it ' washes beautifully), blanket, is warm for winter, cool for the summer and comfortable all year round. Charge It. Our Reg. 3.97—Sun. Only Reg. 58c to 68c—Sun. Only Extra sturdy steel. More rigid Champion, Fisk and others! supports on all surfaces. 25-1000, 25-2000, 25-3000. “EXPANDO” PEGGED WOODEN WALL RACK NR HATS, COATS OurReg. 88c 57* Sunday Only Back attaches to . wall, pegs hold hat* or lightweight coat*. Varnished wood . , . suitable ’for a hall, recreation room. Charge It. FULL SIZE SLEEPING BAGS 6.99 OurReg. 9.99 Sunday OnlyC Adult size sleeping bag boasts warm 3-lb. insulation, full separating zippeh With colorful cotton flannel lining and protective canopy. Limit: 2>. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD ;'.W8 THE PONTIAC PBESS APftusT n, xms Winged Brick And Batten Colonial Of The Charles J. Pollock Family Located In West Bloomfield Township Blue Ribbon Winner All the Way BY JODY HEADLEE Home Editor, The Pontiac Press___ Blue ribbon winner, Mrs. Charles J. Pollock of West Bloomfield1 Township continues to be a champion whether she’s arranging flowers or rooms. Putting , her ingenuity to work Mrs. Pollock with the aid of her ..family covered an armless occasional chair in a rich cut velvet tapestry. The fabric introduces shades of green, red, blue, orange and gold in a medallion floral. * * * For additional emphasis in the living room grouping, she used the same fabric to cover a lampshade. ‘Aft avocado greert velvet button-back chair picks up the green of the tapestry. . ★ - ★ ■ ★ Serving the two chairs are a gate-leg table and a round table covered with a gold cloth. , HUTCH CABINET The room’s hutch displays family heirlooms including a pressed glass pitcher which belonged to Mrs. Pollock’s aunt mid a round fruit bowl which was her grandmother’s. . ★ ★ * Double doors open into the. den spiced hy the bittersweet-area rug. _ “My husband is a sports enthusiast,’* said Mrs. Pollock, “so I cross-stitched the duck and pheasant pictures above his desk. ★ ★ “That arm chair in front of the desk I found at a church rummage sale. It was a sight. .All black and dirty. When I refinished it, I discovered its burled in-lay. My aunt made the pansy needlepoint cushion on the seat.” h ★ In the family Atom, paneled in butternut, the Pollocks have foed'sed on comfqft for the convenience of their three sons, Chris 15, Cary 12 and Carl 5. Mrs. Pollodk frequently changes the floral arrangements ih the fireplace’s tokonoma (recessed for display of art objects or flowers). * Pontiac PrMl PhrtM ky l< VIMnw> White Boucle Draperies Separate Dressing Room Ariel Master Bedroom Installing The Fruit Pattern On Mosaic Kitchen Tile Was Family Affair Living Room's Cut Velvet Lampshade .Duplicates pdbrlc On Armless Chair B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 row Ac's *m stop mam sauna* • ADDITIONS » ALUMINUM SIDING • BREEZE WAYS • ATTIC CONVERSIONS • AWNING WINDOWS • AWNIR • DINS • PATIOS • GARAGES • RECREATION ROOMS BrMTMrlMiliif Hm 86 North Saginaw — Downtown Pontiac SNUG PACKAGE — With no pretensions to size or ■ flashiness,-this house nevertheless has wappearaace of comfort and graciousness. Hear right hand comer gives glimpse of porch that could be enclosed, if desired, to provide a family roonrorden.———___ Flexible House Plan for Modest Budget Economy and flexibility are effectively combined in this small Colonial. Essentially two-bedroom house, it was designed for those who like the extra living space of an expansion floor but also have an effection for the outward appearance of a ranch. The small family— a young OPEN SAT. 2-5 P.M. -HOLLY AREA- Beautiful Riviera Shores * We are offering this 3 bedroom dll brick ranch home; Has full basement, gas FA heat, tiled vestibule, V/i ceramic tiled baths, blacktopped street and is located only 3 miles from 1-75 Expressway. A real deal. DIRECTIONS: Tak* 1-75 north to Grang. Hall Road, turn w«*t about 2 milot to Riviora Shoroi Drlvo, loft to Impala Drive and right on Catalina Way. Watch for tigni. Royer Realty, inc. Holjy Plaza HOLLY, MICHIGAN 634-8204 WHY PAY TRAILER PARK RENT? See Monticello Estates Now! 238 Acre /Mobile Home Subdivision- “Country Living for the Discriminating Toil*” -16 High Restrictions For Your Protection- e 60-ft. w|jdo paved straits • Vi mile from new M-78 • Underground utilities including gas cross-town expressway e As low as $300 down — $40 per e Lot sixes from 80' wide by 135' deep month to qualified buyers e 8Va miles of lots O Low taxes CALL NOW CE 4-6821 or PI 2-3111 Cash or Terms Open 7 Days a Week i Rial “Rttirts’s Nsvss” 1266 ft fiesi ptepeeed expi husband and wife with one or two children, or perhaps retirement couple'— need only utilize the first floor’s 1187 square feet of habitable area. In’ addition to the bedrooms, the owners would have a living room, dining room, kitchen, bathroom, a one-car garage and, behind the garage, a porch that could be left as is or enclosed to make a den or family room — all within overall dimensions of 48’ 6” by 36’ 2”, including the garage and porch. LATER For the family that* required, two extra bedrooms, the upstairs area could be finished Into two bedrooms and a bath as * shown in the plans of architect William G. Chirgotis. 'Even if this were not done during the original construction, the need for use of the expansion floor might arise at sdme later time. The living room, to the right of the entrance hall, is 20’ long, a good size for this type- of room in a smalt house. could substitute a carport for the garage. Both main floor bedrooms are at the left side of the house. AMPLE CLOSETS Ejach has ample closet space. The sizable bathroom is strategically located between tiie two rooms. -Plans for the upper floor include two bedrooms, one of which is 18’ 6” long, a large bath and generous closet and storage space . % * * The exterior is traditional in character except for the picture window. Wood shingles, brick veneer/ flush boarding and conventional gables give it a homey appearance. FIRST FLOOR PLAN ipactfi for small family, with everything necessary for good living. Second floor need be finished only if extra rooms were needed. Finished or not, the area provide* a great deal of storage space. A picture window adds to the appearance both from the inside and the. outside. Hid dining room, accessible from both the living room and the kitchen, has a window looking out to the rear. How to Build, Buy or Sell Your Home Full study plan information on this architect-designed House of the Week is included id a 50-cent baby blueprint. With it in hand you can obtain a contractor’s estimate. You can order also, for $1, a booklet called YOUR HOME—How to Build, Buy or Sell it. Included in it are small reproductions of 16 of the most popular Hous£ of the Week issues. Send orders to House Plans, The Pontiac Press, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, Michigan 48056 , U-SHAPE Also to the rear is the stepsaving U-shaped kitchen, with a full complement of appliance, a large countertop area and a maximum number of cabinets in a minimum amount of space. Just off the kitchen is a porch, an ideal location for serving refreshments or quick snacks. This is the area that could be inside into a den, a family room or whatever.. In front of-the porch is a one-car garage which, of- course, could be expanded to take care of two autos if desired and the land were available. As a matter of fact, the reverse Is also .true. Enclosed is 50 cents for baby blueprint on Z-54. □ % Enclosed is $1 for for YOUR HOME booklet □ : i : ■ ■ M ■ Name ................................................. Street ...... ............ ...............'........... j City . ................... State ............... i There’* only one cure for "washday blues: ” a h o m e laundry center. It need not be an elaborate setup, although it should be located In an area large enough to accommodate necessary facilities, including enough storage and work counter space. Perhaps a little-used guest room or garage or an empty basement can be converted Into home laundry. If this is not feasible, a large closet , can be outfitted with washer-dryer, Mmmmi.l A family that wanted to cut ] down on construction co Z-54 STATISTICS Design Z-54 has a living room, dining room, kitchen, two bedrooms'and a * bath on the first floor, with a total habitoble area of 1,167 square feet. Also on that floor are a one-car garage and a porch. The expansion second floor, if finished, gives 756 additional square feet of living space. The plans include a basement. Overall dimensions of 48’ 6” by 36’ 2” include the ga-rage and porch. OPTIONAL FEATURE — Artist’s rendering shows fireplace at one epd of' living room, with traditional mantel around it. Fireplace, however, is listed as optional in architect’s plans, . Beat the Blues Wfth Center shelves and drop-leaf counter on the back of the door. " Adequate plumbing is the mqst Important consideration in planning a laundry center. But -just as important is the choice of surfacings for wails, floor and countertops. A material such as ceramic tile is ideal. It has all the necessary functional features: water and moisture resistance, stain resistance and durability. And it has a decorative diversity that can give the laundry room a cheery atmosphere. Non-Skid UNIT STEPS OliMk these features for a step in beauty. • FHA Specification • Strong Reinforced Caring • Avoid Mtuy Installation Safety Tread Rsducsi Slipping FREE ESTIMATES We Deliver Anywhere Manufactured and Solti by CMKRETE STEP CO. 6497 Highland Road (M-59) 673-0775 Add Beauty to Your Horn* With Concrete Steps and Rpl ' Open 8 til 12 Saturdays Pole-Frame Takes Hurricane Winds Wood pole-frame construction — the predominant structural system for farm service buildings — is also utilized for many beach-side homes particularly , those in areas which may be exposed to, hurricanes. A framework of pressure treated wood pole* is embedded directly in soil or sand, and the house is built around their upper extremities. Because of this elevation, hurricane spawned tidal waves can pass beheath the home without striking it directly. Most pressure treated poles iq the United States are of Southern Pine because of its strength and ease of treatment. I EASTHAM 1294 CONCORD, Rochester 7345 MILFORD ROAD Located in the Rochester area near Meadow Brook on 114 beautifully shaded acres/{this/ sprawling ranch assure* quiet and gracious. living both new and in the future. Open for your , inspection Sunday 2 to 5 p.m. take University Drive-to Adams, turn south to left on New England to right an Concord. ■* "V . Beautiful JO acre farm utilises professional architecture and interior design. Almost new and in absolutely perfect condition. See this property in person Sunday 2 to 5 p.m. Take M-59 west to Milford Road, turn right 5 miles to property. YOUR HOST—Bob Beamer YOUR HOST- Tom Jackson G.S.P. Our GUARANTEED SALES PLAN is unique because wo will-guarantee the sole, of your pre^ynt homo whether you buy your new heme from us Or not, -; BILL EASTHAM-Realtor la the Waterford Plata 674-3126 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY> AUGUST 17, 1968 B—-3 Quality Conttructaxl Pools Custom Designed -* Complete Gunite Construction Financing Up to 8 Years “Quality Pool Builders” Call 391-3841 2111 Sr laptM* Rd. (M-24) Lika Orion, Mich. 391-3841 1 Milt N. Of Silverbell • Check Equipment Before You Camp , In the middle of a summer: j rainstorm is a poor place to be 'reminded .that you forgot to! check your camping ;To get the mo6t out of outings, | the tirdei to check your equipment is right now. j First, check your tent for rips)1 or tears, and mend wherever ; necessary. Repairs of this type can be made with surprising ease these days. Just buy a {small extra piece of inexpensive' | canvas or cotton drill — or use a good piece of fabric from a I discarded tent. Even a section from an old shower curtain will do. Another point to check is. water rjepellency, especially if youf fent is an older model. Any, of several ^types of colorless spray-on or brush-on water repellent may be used to restore it. Some of these also contain a mildew preventative, an especially * desirable extra feature. • Once your basic equipment is serviceable 'again, look over your cooking, refrigeration, boating and other sporting gear, too, and then your outings should be smooth ones. WHAT IS KUMELNIIT FACE BRICK SWUM? It it tht MuttHHirposi Brick Siding that Moot so iliany jobs— BETTER v«1op*d b/kl-ngtlhul. | Gives year-round insulation AfldmftAP' e Beauti- • Reduces fuel costs t lies, your home, increases i value e Resistrfiro • Ends repair and maintenanoo bills •*- no pointing • Economical to install Phone 673-7507 COMPLETE HOME MODERNIZATION 2503 DIXIE HWY. PONTIAC Across From Silver Lake Rd. Cut a patch slightly larger j than the tear, coat with a silicone rubber clear sealer, andj press patch firmly to thel underside of the tear: t The bond will cure completely! within 24 hours, making a dependable waterproof seal, yet! the sealant remains flexible! after curing so that it will not pull loose under stress when the tent is put up and. taken down! frequenUy. OTHER MENDABLES A similar technique can also! be used to mend rips in tent] trailers, hammocks, canopies,! awnings, outdoor furniture and other equipment made of canvas Of heavy fabrics of this] type. If the tear is in die nylon; screening of your tent, this1 material, too, can be-purchasedl in small pieces by the yard and repairs made in much the same way. Since the sealer is translucent, the mend will hardly show, . Shower Controls Going Modern Modern shower controls have: a range of settings, from needle spray to full flow.. You can also get controls that enable you to! preset the temperature you want before turning on the water. The water then remains at that temperature, regardless of changes in pressure. No more sudden showers of scalding hot lor icy cold water! — Are included with this 4-bedroom a large nicely landscaped let with' gat heat and 1 LARGE AND ROOMY , ; ** : 4-BEDROOM QUAD-LEVEL with ever 2500 sq. ft. of living space. Located in the Union Lake area, this lovely home hat a family room with stone fireplace, formal dining room, carpeting, hot-water heat and! an extra large lets for the children. You'll search long and hard to find this much home for the price. OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 6 V 1 E. COLUMBIA BE GLAD YOtTWAITED - At this Tri-Uvel in the Northern High area has everything you have been looking for. Wall to wall carpeting; 1 h baths; rec. roomy gas heat: aluminum storms, covered patio and a garage with hooted workshop. On a nicely landscaped lot, this Is a "MUST SEE QUICK" property. PerrySt. to Joilyn, left to Columbia, right to property. Your host — Tam Barr, YOU CANT BUY THIS HOME IT IS ONI OF OUR MANY MODELS — But we would be happy to duplicate it for you on your let ei^pne of ours. This.? > bedroom ranch is aluminum sided, fully insulated, has 1» baths, full basement, o 6 p.m., daily 6 to 9 p.m. TRADE PLAN QuMiMmL THE RISK-FREE WAV TO SPEND YOUR EQUITY BATlAAAN will guarantee "in writing" the sale of your present home to enable you to buy now and soil later without the risk of owning two homos. Enables 1*i to sell at the highest market price and in the event your heme is net sold by closfogftmo of your now homo: BATlAAAN will write you e chock for your equity as par guarantee. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. PONTIAC 338-7J61 UNION LAKE 363-4171 OR ION-OX FORD. 628-4211 Three extra large bedrooms; two full bdlhs, each with double lava-lories; kitchen-family room; basement, oversized. two car garage. See it under construction — Call for appointment. Sales Exclusively by Waterfprd Realty 4540 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains 673-1273 Have yon ever wanted- to live at the water’s edge? Only 35 Minutes from Downtown Detroit GRAND OPENING: New Apartments Detween Two Lovely Lakes On Cow tales Rd. .Cass and Sylvan Inks* Spacious-1 and 2-bedroom apartments facing Cass and- Sylvan.Lakes in one of Michigan's Most* beautiful wooded areas: Apartments are air-conditioned, sound conditioned, fully carpeted — with largg living room, separate dining area, private balcony, deluxe kitchen, and your own private beach on Sylvan Lake.. Private boat docks. • Rentals.from $1 >2 monthly. OPEN FOR INSPECTION. Saturday & Sunday,' NSon-i pm. Monday thru " *fri ’ tinguished economists predicted real estate will go up 20% in the next three A The steady rUe in population, In vir-£ tnally every section of the nation, exerta a ateady upward preianre on land prices. 1 Today, right now, you can find real bar-Y gain* in new home*. 8ee Kampaeu Rlty. i you’ll find the.(election waa never 5! '•gfwi y<>« ' 3 better. pin (Interest rates may go even higher. The actual difference between present and past interest rates is only a small factor ih‘ the cent of your home. For examplet A one-half percent increase in interest 4 rates is only 16 per month on a 25-year, $26,000 loan. Remember, your interest is deductible on your income tax. * If you shop at Kampsen’s, you’ll find I architects and builder* are now figuring with sharper pencils, because of the momentary lull in demand. Yon ean save important money by acting now. J The family who buys now will be ahead of the famfly that continues to collect Xent receipts. Each monthly payment ■builds equity. At the same time, the home can be increasing in value. | The best security in the whole tforld, | for you, your wife and children, is the security of owning land. * List Your Property WhortTho Action Is. Kampsen Realty FE 4-0921 A HOME VISIT Our new VAL-U-VISI0N slfow of homes if Our office or hay* a courteous salesperson explain this new method to you. YOUR HOST BOB BARTELBAUGH A very attractive 3-bedrbom brick ranch, completely carpeted, 2-car garage, large, well landscaped lot, 'paved street, an excellent buy at $18,500. A very quiet and lovely neighborhood. Terms or let's trade equities. V DIRECTIONS: West on Walton Blvd., to just east of Mason Junior High School, too left at Plains. Watch forOpeasigns. let us help with a Home Improvement Lpan Don't delay needed additions or repairs any longer. A low-cost Home Improvement Loon can make your Koine more livdbleand enjoyable — now! 4 Convenient Locations to Serve Y#u Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation Hours; »;M A.M.-4:30 P.M. Daily Including Friday to 6:80 P.M. CREDIT DEPT. HOURS: 8:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. including ALL DAY SATURDAY Phone: 689-1092 Pb: 689-4200 Window Sfyles Can Widen Outdoor View : if you’re lucky Enough to have a good view from more than one side of your house, don’t lose sight of the advantage. j You may not want a fixed-sash picture window, or a bow I or bay in every room/but there I are other adaptable wood window styles that trill bring the beauty of outdoors inside, and ■still suit the room in which they’re installed. Casements are readily available at local lumber dealers lit stock size* of ponderosa pine. • Sliders open to the left and right, and are suitable almost anywhere. Like casements, they open and close easily, and have no crossbars to interfere with the view. • Awnings open upward and outward at a 90-degree angle for maximum ventilation, and come in stock sizes (some as large as approximately three by For instance: .four feet) to give an expansive • CasemCnt windows are an! view, jideal way to give your kitchen; • Hoppers are similar to awn-1 a view. They swing outward at ings, except that they open in-a 90-degree angle with the turn I ward and down. Either style of' an easy-to-reach handle,lean be stacked three or four making them convenient fori across and atop one another to that awkward area above the I create the illusion of a glass sink, wall. ★ ★ ★ I They make an unusually dis- . Their uninterrupted glass j tinctive window treatment used area affords wide visibility, es- this way, especially in dining pecially when used as double and family rooms, units or in a series above the . • Sliding glass doors in wood countertop/ > sash are a natural for rooms that lead to patios, decks, terraces or a rustic-view backyard. Insulating glass is recommended for glass dooni^ because, / combined with the nat-1 ural insulation of wood sash and factory-applied weatherstripping, it affords the. best safeguard against heat loss in winter and heat gain in summer. / ★ ★ ★ This assures that the rooml from which you trill enjoy the! changing beauty of the outdoors j will be comfortable all year; * round. Protect children, pets and property ...with • choice of Chain Link, Privacy, Picket or wood. Chain Link variety includes, now forest green vinyl-coated Permafused*, aluminum or steel in 1" Modernmesh or 2" weave. Call for free estimate. FE 5-747] NO DOWN PAYMENT • LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS. /THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1068 B—5 Bugs Still On the Wing Not Too Late to Check Screens With Bummer here end temperatures high in most parts of ti>e country windows are thrown open to admit refreshing cool breezes. Therefore, now is; a good time to mate a careful inspection of all screens to be^eertain t there are wrTfiSes, fears, separations from the frames which, will let flying insects enter your home. Screens that need repair cause annoyance and danger to the families’ health from bites and stings. The Wire Weavers are with The Alumir to call the public’s attention to the need for screen care. There has been -some con-bet wean screen ciothf; woven from pure aluminum and substitutes in recent years. To assure the homeowner that the screen they buy is genuine aluminum, weavers this spring for the first time are attaching Combination Less Efficient The long, hot summer is here, and all of us need to learn how to "cool It.” Too often, when the heating system is combined with the cooling system, the result is unsatisfactory compromise. For the home to be most cook fortable, each of these'systems should be separate. Water Cools Summer Air When was the last time you went to a movie theater and it wasn’t air conditioned? What new office building have you worked in or visited that didn’t have aif conditioning? Back in the “Bonnie and Clyde” days that blazoned “refrigerated” on the marquee and advertised “air conditioned” on all the doors. New we take it for granted, in the theater,'or office, or anywhere. BASEBOARD PANELS By placing hy dronic baseboard panels on the perimeter of your home, you are able to select the type of cooling units which are most adaptable to your' home and budget. It may be a sepa r a te, overhead air conditioning system, individual window units or something as simple as an attic fan. There is one factor about these air conditioning systems that might surprise you. If you ask engineers familiar with the workings of larger buildings, .they will tell you that most air conditioning systems use chilled water for cooling. While the uge of hot water for heating is common —many of today’s homes have hydronic (modern hot water heating) systems—not so many people are familiar with the other role for water in comfort control — taking heat away when it is not wanted. ‘CHILLER’ In cooling ^vith water, water is cooled in a*‘chiller” and cir- culated torcOohqg units either right in the roomor on the roof of large buildings. The chilled water “picks up” unwanted heat and is piped back to the chiller. It’s as simple as that, in principle, although the machinery is a bit more complicated, of course. But it isn’t too complicated because there is increasing use of chilled water for larger and better residential systems. A good maxim to observe in dealing with these problems, that “heated air rises and'oool-ed air falls.” If this rule is followed, heating units will be placed as tow as possible on the outer ’perimeter of the home. This will create a curtain of warmth which will eliminate chills and* drafts. Codling registers will be located as high as possible, close to the ceiling. The natural circulation of air will keep the home cool and comfortable. labels to their material for identification. The foil labels printed in red and black feature the aluminum industry’s symbol. NOT HARD Reacreenlng- to—a relatively simple procedure. An inspection will generally reveal the easiest and best method. Aluminum screen cldth is available at most • hardware * stores and building materials dealers. If you have a problem with rescreening your dealer will be glad to-assist you. Aluminum wire screen cloth made In several widths. For economy pick the one closets to the size of the screen being repaired. Once the screening is trimmed to the proper size (dace it to , the opening and secure it with nails, tacks or staples. In metal frames spline or structural members are used to secure the doth. The advantages of the genuine aluminum screen arej many. < The Wire Weavers mention the fact that aluminum does not build up static changes and attract airborne dust. This means that more air and light enter the home.'It is easy to care for. An occasional washing with a garden hose and brush is all that is 'needed. Aluminum screen^will not billow and stays taut to its frame. Painting not required. Manufacturers supply screen to a series of attractive colors as well as metallic aluminum. The color is applied before the wire is woven into screen cloth assure a clear uniform air passage. One damaged screen is all it takes to let annoying insects to your home. Be sure all windows that open are screened. Check all screens doors and patio sliding jglass doors. Remember screens are available for basement windows as well as for the living area. Move in Today! Ideally situated in the Bloomfield-Btrmingham area; architecturally designed in the French Provincial motif. Each unit contains the ultimate in comfort and sound-proofing contraction. Located conveniently on South Boulevard (20 Mile between Opdyke and 1-75), 2 miles East of Woodward. e Spaciousness and Luxury 1 Hotpoint Air Conditioning and Appliances e Largo Family Kitchens * Pool and Large Sundeck e One and Two Bedrooms * Includes On-Site Parking AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE 0Q0UPAN0Y JUST Aim LIFT *140 Per Month INCLUDES CARPETING For Information Call 335-5670 or FE 8-OTTO Open Daily Slot Sunday 12 to I Closod Thursday* Humidify of Summe Now that the heat of summer is here, you may be complaining about too much humidity. However, you need humidity in your home during the heating season when static electricity ’ a sure sign that your house is probably drier than the Gobi Desert. To -read up on the - subject now, send for a free booklet available from the Plumbing-Heating-Cooling Information Bureau, 35 E. Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111. 60601. Ion-Exchange Softens Water Water softener appliances today operate on the ion-exchange principle. As hard water flows through the unit, calcium and magnesium particles are attracted to a permanent bed of softening materials. There they remain as the fully softened water flows oh through the house. COmPDRE! s'.’?*.' ' p® MM? 1 , * J: I MmM Apartments in the heart of ROCHESTER m MSSttai ^ .»&***»«. . DWnvtahw . Pt^r . H BUILDINGS FOR FAMILIES WITH CHILDREN! Why continue dreaming! No doubt you've bod a yearning to build • hide-away for you and your family ... a home away- from home ... where you, con escape to for complete relaxation. A place to spend your summers or weekends. Build your own precision-cut “World of Leisure,” but before..you do, learn more , about planning - and materials by sending one dollar ($1.00) for our Second Home booklet today. ' RUSTIC CtjALET homes P.O. Bex X222 Detroit, Mich. 48220 (guarantpfit ftaaspsHtmi OF YOUR NEW HOME No longer is it necessary to be forced into the ridiculous position of moving out of your present home, storing furniture and living as best you can until your new home is completed. The Dan Mattingly Agency has 18 staff members who wtU, at your convenience, explain our exciting new concept in modern home planning. This concept guarantees you just one move, one price and one house payment. Call us today or stop by our model located on the west side of Williams Lake Rd. between Dixie and Highland Rd.(M-S9). ONE MOVE! ONE HOUSE PAYMENT! ONE PRICE! sales by DAN MATTINGLY 3881 Highland Rd., Pontiac ’ 682-9000 674-3568 m LH7E/T up BIE in a lakefPonthoiTie with carefree, all electric living! • YEAR-LONG LIVING AT ITS BEST TREES ON EVERY LAKEFRONT LOT, • PRICES RANGE FROM $29,130 to $32,440 IDEAL FOR PLAY, ENTERTAINING, FAMILY • MINUTES TO EVERYTHING 1612 sq. ft. living space 20x30' walkout family room, full basement with walkout doors. 1W baths, 3 bedrooms, carpeting in living room and hall. Brick front, aluminum siding, large 2 car garage. 80x160' lot. QUAD -LEVEL - LOT 82 $31,630 at HUNTOON SHORES, a young subdivision A PUCE FOR ACTIVE PEOPLE . * • I MODELS OPEN - 1% P.M. sat. and Sun. 4-8 P.M. Daily (except Friday) \ „ or by appointment 3136 44-7773 'BeauJu-Rife HOMES V LEpN BLACHURA, General Contractor, Inc. DRIVE - 4 Miles west bn M-59.from Telegraph Rd. . Tb Airport Rd. Turn right and drive 1H Miles to Thomaby *Dr. Turn right to Models. mm hms 3f! THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 168-170 AUBURN In th* Rochester area and walking distance to an elomentary school ... Attractive brick ranch with carpeting, drapes. You can assume Mortgage of $17,500 at 51/4%. MAX BROOGK, inc 4139 Orchard Lake Rd. at Pontiac Trail Ml 4-6700 Realtors JO 4-6700 Jag Sales Are Becgpiing Big Business Tag sales at home becoming a lucrative business all over the United States because just about everything one owns, even' something disrepair, may be worth something to someone else. So say Pat Fay and Carole Mad-dock of Westport, Conn., who conduct such sales. Before tag sales became big business, most people tagged their own shleables — bodes, bird cages, a beat-up dining room table and Advertised it — jnst to make a few dollars and avoid carrying the stuff to a dump. But tag sales have grown to where they are often conducted by professionals like Mrs. Fay and Mrs. Maddock. Some people sell everything they own when they move and many estates find sales less bothersome than auctions. “Frequently, there is enough in a house to justify the demand. One customer finally took down curtains she had planned to leave at windows, washed and ironed them as we sold them slightly damp,” says Mrs. Fay. Often, Mrs. Fay and Mrs. are too late, to save been relegated to traBh.bf their clients. They dig in boxes of discards and find as they did recently, a handsome Tiffany vase. But alas, it was broken. No. 1, they say, is: Don't throw anything away. Tag it and see if you can sell it. "We look around for things hidden from view that owners have forgotten about. That’s how we found a wonderful Quezelle lamp globe (blue and greenish) that a dealer bought for $125.” * * it Mrs. Maddock and Mrs. Fay both wanted it but they decided it would end ,their partnership if either bought it They prefer to work for estate lawyers who hand them keys and give them carte blanche in| the uninhabited house where! they can peacefully uncover dii^, wash, sort aim tag. COLLECTORS * {treasures that have already an inlaid Cover and played five tunes. The girls said it for $15Q. ★ ★ ★ At such savings, it pays homemakers- to. hire them1 for the 25 per cent foe, they figure. One woman said they could have her sale if they could pull it off that afternoon. How to inform the 500 clients on their mailing list? It was too late for a newspaper ad. SELL OUT They telephoned, rushed to the house and tagged the wares and sold practically everything. There is a big demand for sofas, dining room sets, used chests, desks. Many tag sale followers are now permanent clients and the girls keep a ~ of things wanted refrigerators, freezers, a harvest table. One man called them for a bathtub with leg;. A movie star has asked them to sell his old sofa. He just wants the price pf the slipcover— $80. ★ ★ it They gwtgussted up fof lhe first day of a big sale but soon they are crawling around in dungarees and flats. It’s hard mirk. ★ * ,★ "That's why we both go to gym classes every day," explains Mrs. Fay. “It’s to keep fit so that we can pick up something like a color television set and quickly run to owner’s car with it before she changes her mind.” Mrs. Maddock had, one frustrating experience when they were conducting an indoor-outdoor sale in the pouring rain. One woman looked up a tree and said “how much for the bird bouse?" ■ ★ ; , it it Carole glanced and said |2. It developed she had sold a $1,500 museum sculpture, The buyer willingly returned it when she was contacted. 'We’ve both furnished our homes in Early Tag Sale,” explains Mrs. Maddock, mother of two, who spends her off days going to other tag sales. ★ ★ ★ She confesses to being a compulsive buyer and often stashes her overbuys next door where Mrs. Fay lives with her husband and four children. “Everybody is sort of a collector at heart and we fin strangest things in the unlikely spots. We always manage to sell odd batches of anything.’’ They unloaded 100 pairs of eye glasses - teen-agers wanted the old-fashioned frames. They sold innumerable dental tools stashed away all over one house at $1 each. An old barn produced 150 beautiful old Japanese fans— easy to sell. Most people have -trouble pricing articles. One woman thought $10 would be great for a music box in disrepair. It had- FRENCH—No wonder brides love French provincial furnishings. Nothing could be nicer than the delicately sculptured charms that characterize the style. New Coquette is a happy marriage between traditional beauty and hard-working modern maimers. Bloomfield Manor Immediate Occupancy 5-5 DUPLEX with 3 baths, double basement, 2 car garage, FHA Terms. OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5 Your hostess representing YORK REAL ESTATE will be DELORES WILLIAMS FE 8-7176 OR 4-0363 1702 S. Telegraph, Pontiac -4713 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains In A Quiet Residential Area Your Monthly Rental Includes These Features 1*2 Bedroom Apartments Many Quality Features Found in $50,000 Homs Found in $50,000 Homes From $155.00 Month • Hotpoint Rufrigura- • Ampls Parking • Full Dining Room Security Intercom* • Carpeting-Drape* • Hotpoint Oven Lovely, well-kept homes in choice WESTRD3GE OF WATERFORD be sureto see them "LOT OF HOUSE FOR THE MONEY” "A TOUCH OF ELEGANCE” Priced from *25,950 including site OUR MODELS MAY BE SEEN SATURDAY AND SUNDAY FROM 2 TO 8 PJL OR BY APPOINTMENT Off4-2222 DIRECTIONS! , North *■ Dixie Highwar, left el Our Ladr ef the Like* Church and School (14 bloek south of AndanunvUlo Road). Watch for Open Sign.. Everything you could want for elegant family living... new schbola, bustling shopping centers, churches and all recreational facilities... are but minutes away from WESTRIDGE OP WATERFORD. Arid a FRUSHOUR-ANGELL or MASON CONSTRUCTION COMPANY home has everything you want for yotfr family, too ... efficient, yet comfortable design and beauty of house arid lot you’ll be proud* to own. Isn’t this the home in the area where you’ll want to live? R ay ©’Nell H 3520 Pontiac Lake Rd. ealty,. Office Open Sunday 1-4 Lne* ■data OR BEAUTY CENTER — Double-mirrored chest is a doubly wise buy for brides: the Spanish accent speaks the language of style, in a storage Unit that’s equally at home in personal or company quarters. See story on page B-7. Fixing-Up? Get Booklet Summer is traditionally home fixup time, A booklet full of tips on how to keep your pipes clog-free, how to repair ' leaky faucets, what to do about noisy plumbing and dozens of other maintenance tips is available from the Plumbing-Heating-Cooling Information Bureau. ★ ★ The booklet also tells you how io avoid plumbing problems by proper maintenance and what |obs should be handled strictly >y qualified plumbing contractors and their trained journey-to avoid such hazards as cross-connections between the pbtable water and the waste lines. For a copy, send 25 cents and a 6-cent stamp to the Plumbing-Heating-Cooling Information Bureau, 35 E. Wacker Dr., Chicago, 111. 60601. Vapor Barrier In airconditioned homes, use pf aluminum foil vapor barriers within the walls and ceilings helps to stop outside vapor frpm infiltrating the house. The vapor barrier should be placed faring the interior portion of the wall, Home Modernization! We Will Supply and Install.. ALUMINUM SIDING • ROOFING • STORMS AND SCREENS • PATIOS • COMPLETE KITCHENS • IRON RAILINGS • ADDITIONS • RECREATION ROOMS • ATTIC REMODELING * GARAGE DOORS* FLOOR and Wall tile • ceilings • insulation • air-CONDITIONING • GAS AND OIL FURNACES • SOFTENERS AND HEATERS • HUMIDIFIERS • DISPOSERS • AIR CLEANERS • BATHROOM REMODELING • INCINERATORS * CARPETING * DRAPES • FENCING Call fbrFREEEstimate, 682-4940 ‘ , ;v. trr THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY. AUGUST 17. 1988 What to Look for When Furniture., burnishing a firat home? Iberian orisinal sealed Hnnm tn »dm snndst th>t on • .11..—j.. l. j ul. > VurnL....B a , 1.1131 name r More than 1.8 million brides are doing just that thityear - and buying far more fob their money than their mothers ever dreamt cl, Iberian original scaled down to fit small modern rooms. * ★ ★ Spanish or other, furniture styles ..fall into four major groups: traditional, for regal _____ groups: iraaitionai, lor regal *1* worI^i"which roore aqd elegance; pro^ln*la more seem tor purchase Iesaandgr ace f u 1 charm- eariv lefM’ * Utfrally a bljy American, for casual llvSgT of a lifetime -- at prices, by contemporary, for lively young and large, that are lower than moderns. y y ung case goods) that are a bride’s basic buys. High on the checklist of qualifies to lode for are Apish and veneer. Finish should show skillfully-matched graining. (S* Additional Pictures on Page B-6) ever for value that’s higher. The secret is modem materials and manufacturing methods. ; ’ A • ★ a As a matter of fact, while that would otherwise be prohibitive — but you won’t want a clumsy “patchwork’’ effect. BEHIND SCENES Check what other people Yog’ll want veneered furniture, won8! seer too, Jffordr j to with a fine wood laminated on remember* are interlocking the surface, to out the weight of niAAil an Children David McMahon Directs Salvation Army Camp At Lakeville Carrie Good Of Detroit Finds Eating Fun At Echo Grove Camp Create Animals,v Birds Note ChgpeJ, Cabins On Shore Of Lakeville Lake jfers?'. Children Splash in Swimming Pool When Dinner Bell Rings, ‘Dining Hall Fills Up Fast At Solvation Army Camp / THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 B—9 At St, Perpetua Church Fourth Annual Festival (body* cakes end cookies fill the baked goods booth at the fourth annual festival of St. Perpetual Catholic Church Opening after toorning masses tomorrow. Festival hours are from 1 to 8 p.m. There will be ample room for willipgrking on the 11-acre church property. - Men of the congregation are busy today putting up booths and arranging for pony rides, games and refreshments under die leadership of dames Dean and James Brown. Activities are under t b el chairmanship of William Dean Jr., Mrs. Richard Stock and Charles Merithew. Other fair chairmerr+rirtude Steve Cloonan, finance; Charles Uhnany,—tickets^—Carl Leo. prizes; Mrs. Frank McGinty and Mrs. Ira T e r b u s h , {refreshments; Frank Fleck,] public address system; and Dr. ■ Joseph Drapek, clean up.' Also assisting at the annual -event will V Mrs. Tlionaai Swettman, m|s. Steve Cloonan, Mrs. Stanley Steck, Thomas Reed, and the “ReV. Bernard Zaglaniczny, pastor of the congregation. NEW YORK - The President, a high-ranking army of- | ficer and a well-known bush leader, all named Johnson, are I among prominent persons]] across the country who., are 1 stressing the need for daily F* ble reading. Life of St. Martin de Porres Featured in Living Rosary at St. Joseph Church 'President Lyndon B. Johnson, honorary chairman of National Bible Week, sponsored by the American; Bible Society and the Laymen’s National Committee, Oct. 20-27, affirms that, “Hie . Bible is a binding and abiding . force in a world too often grip- §|| ped by hatred and prejudice.” 1 In a letter to the General Harold Keith Johnson, I * 24th Army Chief of Staff, who survived the 1942 Bataan death march, wrote,” in Japanese prison camps I again turned to the Bible ... I can say categorically that the Bible has had a profound influence on my life.” W the past 18 years SL | The Living Rosary seeks to Joseph CathOMc Church, Bagleyjdramatize the role of the and West South Blvd. has been I Blessed Virgin Mary in -the host for the Living Rosary j Mysteries of the Rosary. Pageant, under the direction of This year-s theme, ’‘Mary, Mrs. John Stevenson of Union Queen of Saints,” features the Lake and Mrs. Louis KoprincelU{e of st Martin de Porres and of 147 E. Howard. . the Mysteries of the Rosary. officially recognizes men and mpther was Anna Velasquez, women of outstanding virtue. Martin was "born in Lima, Peru on Dec. 9, 1579 in a hut opposite what was once the Hospital of the Holy Spirit. freed Negro 1 woman f r o m , Panama. They had one child, Juana. ’ St. Martin de Porres entered the order of St. Dominic at an The room, now enclose diearly age and spent the rest of within a large mansion, haslhis 80 yeari ofjp aerving lha. The* twilight program begins been turned into a chapel andiPhysical and spiritual^needs of -Cosponsors for the 8 p.m. with an organ recital by Davidipublicly authenticated by the!the poor, pageant’Thursday are the P°n*|scull on tbe church grounds. City Council of Lima. 1 * tiac Daughters of Isabella and Knights of Columbus. | ^ HAND PAINTED - Mrs. Maurice Fitzgerald of Mil Elizabeth Lake, Waterford Township shows the Bavarian china she painted for the anniiaL festival of St. Perpe- tua Catholic Church to Mrs. Thomas Sweet-man of 5925 Loch Leven, Waterford Township. One of the prizes will be the dishes consisting of eight place settings. President Johnson recently] pinned an oakleaf. cluster to] General Johnson’s Distinguished^ Service Medal saying, “The; Army is a stronger, more, responsible . . . more humane service because Johnny Johnson was its leader.” * * • * * | . * * * And Wallace E. Johnson, gRAY TEMPLE i lections The Smith Sisters will Marshall of Unitarian Church | .The Most Rev. John F. president, jof Holiday Ihnsvnf( jibbers -of Bray Temple‘also be heard in musical num- i win preach the seirmon titled Dearden, ‘arcBbishop of .... —— —— — ~_' - 1 “Amos, Hosea and Us.”. in.*—i* iws'of Area CiSf| Girls Make Perpetual Vows Friday | Seventeen young w o me n made Perpetual Profession {vows -at ceremonies in die Institute of the Sisters of'Mercy of the * * ★ | In a special ceremony during R was chiefly through his in- - Martin de Porres, a,the celebration in honor of St.Ifluence that a rich merchant .Dominican lay brother, received|Martin in November 1939, the]and his wife established a the highest honor of t h ejThird Centenary of his death, school and orphanage of the , Catholic Church on May 6, 1962] the City Fathers attached a Holy Cross for disinherited when he was officially raised to bronze plaque tojhe wall of the youth of Peru, |the rank of sainthood by Pope room in which he was born. I Because of his great charity •John XXIII. * . ★ ★ for unfortunates of all classes, The process of canonization is Martin’s father was Don Juan i he is the symbol of Interracial usually a long and arduous one de Porres, a native of Spain and fraternity and class solidarity of by which the. Catholic Church a knight of Alcantara. Hislthe Catholic Church. chairmanship of National Bible wlll celebrilte annual Woman’s. IINITABIAN Week said ” We need more than D tomorrow with Mrs. Lila UNITARIAN ever the guidance of God daily;Ljndsey, a missionary of Mace- I ’ru“ in our lives, in our busmess, inidonia Baptist Church, speaking all our domestic and foreign Lt morning worship, affairs.” 'Without Onion'Set at Highland Church The Highland Congregational Church, Ruggles and Milford in Highland will present the film ‘‘Without Onion,” a Ken Anderson production, nt the drive-in service scheduled for 9:30 p(m. {pa]mer’s sermoh at 11 a.m. to-tomorrow on the church morrow ’ in Auburn Heights grounds. Mrs. G. R. Fleming of Macedonia Church will speak at the 3:30 p.m. program. The Rev. Mrs. Fannie B. Potter is general chairman and Mrs. Anna Williams, cochairman. The Rev. H. V. Grissom pastor. AUBURN HEIGHTS UNITED PRESBYTERIAN ‘The Almighty” will be the theme of the Rev. F- William I The Rev. Mr. Marshall and The congregation of Unitarian j Jacob Klein are involved in Church has accepted the invite- ] bringing to this country the tion of Newman AME Church | refugee family of Col. Y. A. for an exchange worship serv-iTawila, an anti Nasser Egyp-ice on Aug. 25. The Rev. Robert ] tian. United Presbyterian Church.]the First Church of the Brethren * * * jo Ellen Crawford of Stone in DanvHle. ^ 7“ .pfaBge “T ★ ★ * bring his last message in the ings wm begin at 9 p.m. j. Proofs of pictures taken of p°ntiac church at the ll a.m. it a a church families for the church and 7 p.m. services Aug, 25. Those attending may sit in directory will be available for Pastor Blackwell has server their cars during the service, i viewing from 3 to 8:30 pm. his denomination as a builder as sponsored by young people of Monday through Friday. Pas- well as minister. During the the church tor Palmer asks that mi adult first 15 years of his.mlnistry be v -w * ^ from each family select the built dfuhdMt> in Newport Vy; proof to appear in the directory. ‘News, add Norfolk, Va. and Ta- The Rev. Marion E. Towne, . tnm, coma, Wash, pastor, will be in charge:pf the] - Detroit Catholic Djocese, was officiate. One of the girls is Mariaiine Clare McDonald, called i religion, Sister M a r 1 an n McDonald. She is the of Mrs. Charles J. _] member of St. Hugo of the ] Parish, Bloomfield Hills. I * * * Rita Marie Daprai called in religion, Sister Anthony j is the daughter of Mrs. Daprai of All Saints Catholic Parish, Detroit. * ★ ★ She has been assigned to St. Leaving the First Church of;also served the community as)j*®,eph Mercy Hospit8'’ the Brethren this month for a member of Church Women ua j Danville, Va. is the Rev. Leon- ] United. The Blackwells are na-ard W. Blackwell. Hrvwill serve ■■ tives of the State of Virginia. Pastor Resigns Galled tef Virginia projector and make brief an-' UNITED METHODIST. nouncementai. Lois Deb-| Family Day will be celebra-bie Russel and Paulet Towne ted at 3:30 p.m. tomrrow in. will supeiYiae the parking of St. John United Methodist' cars and hand out programs. jChurch with the H«v- * -it it Crocker, pastor of the Third The Gospel Film Production Street Church of Christ, the titled “VfmM’i Apart” wffi be'speaker, shown Aug. 28; The public is in- The Youth Choto of the vited. , ' , • {Church of Christ mil sing se- IN CANADA "V 5 > He swed three churches in Alberta, Canada before comlnif to Pontiac; • •; ■ The Rev, Mr. Blackwell was. an active member of the Greater Pontiac Evangelical Ministers’ Fellowship. . Mrs. Blackwell, active in women’s groups of her church, St. Joseph Church Hqst to Pilgrimage The 21st annual Pilgrimage to the Shrine of the Immaculate Heart of Mary will take place at St. Joseph 0 30 (. Dal* laarunw, RaMnr ST. TRINITY 31 ( Auhurn Mr (£. Sidn), Pnnlioc Rhone: rt 4-9405 - Sunday Chweh School 9:45 ■ Sunday WonMp 8 .30 ond 11 KM Ralph C. Claire. Radar THE LUTHERAN CHURCH — -IN AMfRfCA t CHRIST . JSL&Jfa ' * Sunday Worehip • A.M. and 11 AAA. Sunday Church School 9:20 Wayne I. Peterton, Paator Sunday Church School THE AMERICAN LUTHERAN CHURCH •tAUTIFUL SAVIOR Rhone 335-9811 Sunday Worship 10:30 Sunday Church School 9:30 Phon., 682-0770 ' Name Events l TTie Angelic Choir of Liberty Missionary Baptist Church will Observe its eighth anniversary with a program at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow. A mock wedding is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. today.) Ttys public is invitedv The Rev. i Alvin Hawkins is pastor. FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 0rchqrd Lake SERVICE 7:30 P.M. Sharon Bucy ' Speaker ■Aft AMERICAN BAPTIST CHURCH* BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH Wfst Huron at Mark SUNDAY, AUGUST 18, 1968 10 AM. SERMON "Color and Character" Dr. Xenix W*d; Ev*.y 7:30 CHURCH SCHOOL 9:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 10 A.M. Ample Parking Space Dr. Emil Kentz, Pastor REHEARSE—Singing Sunday at Messiah Baptist Church, East Pike and Anderson wilt be the New Bethel Quintet composed of local, young men. Shown rehearsing selections tor the 5:30 p.m. program are (from left) George Marshall of 66 Florida, Horace Davis of 494 Branch, Myrvin Brimm of 297 W. South Blvd., and Mark Rutherford of 66 Florida. Mrs. Sara Hinton Moore (seated left) of 106 Tull will be accompanist and Debra Jones of 375 Joslyn, a' soioist. Eric Warden not in the picture Will sing withtthe group and Tawana Cummings, the pastor's daughter, will also be heard in solo numbers. The musicale is sponsored .by Usher Board No. 1: Worshipers Admitted Free State Fair Sunrise Service on Judge Luther W. Youngdahl, the U.S. District Courts of Sanitively with the YMCA, Boyl He has received a long list-of senior member of the U.S. Diego and San Fr anci see, j Scouts, PTA, and the-National awards, including the Grand district court in Washington,!Calif. {Council op Crime and Delin-Cross of the Royal Order of the, D.C., will be the speaker at thej 18th annual Sunrise Service on A native of Minnesota1 Religion Day at the 113th Youngdahl received his law Michigan State Fair, which runs degree from' the. Minnesota from Aug. 23, through Sept. 2. I College of Law in 1921 and later * * . * j was Assistant Dean of that col- The announcement was made by E. J. ‘'Jeff' He became a municipal judge in 1930 and rose through the bench until he was elected to Keims, State :Fair general manager, and Dr. Robert L. Kincheloe, executive {director of the Metropolitan! Detroit Council of Churches, ca-lthe Minnesota Supreme Court in sponsor of the Sunrise Service. 1942. He resigned in 1946 to run Religion Day will be Aug. 25,jfor governor, winning three with the service at 8 a.m. : terms. Worshippers will be admitted j Bjq BROTHERS free to the Fairgrounds until . , ' , ,, , that time Judge Youngdahl always has been known as a great charnel RSTSTJNKTSE SPEAKER ~ (pjort of youth and unrelenting Judge Youngdahl was spokesman for justice and speaker for the first State Fair, humanity. He is a national Sunrise Service ina(1951 when he director of the Big Brothers, an was governor of Minnesota and organization which helps again in 1953 and 1965. He has fatherless boys; has served ac-been one of the most popular of the long list of speakers at the Sunrise Service which annually attracts up to 10,000 persons, j -THI LUTMCHAN HOUR" luck Sunday WPON 705 A.M., CKLW 12:30 PM. Judge Youngdahl became a. senior U S. district judge in 1966 on his 70th birthday and has; since served by assignment ini Mount Olive Church; MarksAnniversary I The ninth annual Observance of. the founding of the Mount Olive Baptist Church will come to a; glose tomorrow with the Rev, Benni? E. Williams' of, Hale’s Tabernacle • B a p t i s t Church, Detroit, guest speaker for tlje 3:30 p.m, program. The congregation of the Detroit church will accompany the pastor. At 7:30 p.m. The Rev. Claude Goodwin and congregation of Providence Missionary Baptist Church . will • be guests. The visiting minister will preach. North Star, presented by King Gustaf Y of Sweden; the Finnish Order of the Lion; honorary degrees from 15 colleges and universities;, awards from, the Boy Scouts, PTA, the Big Brothers, and the, Washington Federation of Churches. ★ ★ * . ■''» Judge Youngdahl was appointed to the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia In. 1951, and. has! served on numerous bar association and judicial com-1 mittees. JUDGE L. W. YOUNGDAHL Christian Temple Set for Quartet Chorus Celebrates WII.I.IE MORGANFIELD Gospel Singing at Get Together The Rebels''Quartet organized several years ago in Tampa, |Fla., will be' at Christian jTemple, 505 Auburn at 8 p.m. Eighth AnniversaryMonday* . * Men of-the group consecrated The Pastor’s Chorus of Prov- their lives to the helping of idence Missionary Baptist others ln sav>"8 of souls by , Church will celebrate its eighth singing the great Gospel anniversary at 3:30 p.m. to* message. ^Sv-morrow With the Rev. Alvin * , * * Hawkins and Male Chorus of; “They believe that God has a J Liberty Baptist Church, special mission for them in these! m guests. 'chaotic days. The group has, .../ The Justory pf the chorus will [traveled thousands of mileg in; be presented by Mrs.. Jojin nearly every state with the! Smith. message of salvation. At 7:30 p.m. the chorus will A * * feature Willie Morganfield, a- jt is the, prayer of each recording artist and Gospel member that through this, singer from Cleveland, Ohio. | ministry of songs, Christians Other soloists and singing (wj|j ^ strengthened and the I groups to perform include Flor-be found .. pastor Mrg 1 ence Morganfield of Qeveland ^ MaHon 8aid. the .Queens of Harmony, and „ ' ■. . the Sons of Harmony with Sam- In times pagt) ^church ,my Stephens of Dayton, Ohio ^ kno^ a praying CHURCH of GOD 623 I. Walton Church Phone 335-3733 at the organ, Regular services include Sunday School at 9:30 a.m.; wor-Old time Gospel singing and S^'P a* U a m- a,,d again a( -•» scheduled for 1:30 p.m. tomor-j3;30 p.m. each Sunday, row by the Retired Christian! -------------------........"i Fellowship Club. Hear Tollman The group will gather for a ^ Rev. Ronald Tallman, as-cooperative dinner following gociate pastor of Central United Morning worship in W h i t e Methodist Church, will preach Shepherd Cnurch, 3535 Auburn, at the 9:45 morning worship Pontiac Township. The club hour in Aldersgate United meets every Sunday. The Rev. Methodist Church.” The Rev. George Kibbe is host pastor. H. Cleon Abbott, pastor, is serving C. Smaitz assists with the club as a camp counselor for, the activities. ' iMethodist Church. church: Today, it’s becomming a serving ehurch. — Brother Lawrence Huff of the Protestant Episcopal Order of St. Francis. FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Baldwin— FE 4-7631 Sunday School—10:00 A.M. Sunday Worship—11:00 A.M. Evening Worship—7:30 P.M. Wednesday Prayer—7:00 P.M-Saturday Evening Bible .Study-7:30 P.M. Harry C< FE 2-1 < Jhltb Baptist Church |34'11 Airport Road Services Sunday School..... 10 A.M. Worship Service ... 11 A.M. Evening Service 7:30 PtM. Wednesday . . . . •.;: 7 P.f^. Deaf Alwayi Welcome LARRY H. MALONE ’ Muiic and Yeulh Directar THE GOSPEL TMEMUCLE 25 East Blvd. South The Church wttti« Onirt Ceelerad Meweg« IT TAKES MORE THAN CHURCH MEMBERSHIP AND BAPTISM TO GET YOU TO HEAVEN Good Singing AKijSys Enjoyed. A Friendly Welcome te One and Alf. Sunday School 9:45-Worship Hour 11dK»-Y.P. 6:00 Evangdlistfe Naur 7:00—Wednesday Prayer 7^0 ■; Church 331-1155-R0I.332-3953 You may have no difficulty financing a Vacation trip, but you cant afford a vacation from God, SUNNYVALE CHAPEt WELCOMESYOU 9:45 11:00 6:00.7:00 i ' WORSHIP THIS SUNDAY AND t. every’ mam wm SUI^°A4 SUNNYVALE !?u5 CHAP«- Attend The New Beanch Sunday School of Sunnyvale Chapel at 9:38 A.M. at Balia Ann Schoal Brandon Township Sunnyvale CHAPEL 5311 PONTIAC LAKE ROAD y. L Martin, Pattor 1 3AD1 LS First CongresationriChurch E. Huron' and Mill SL Rev. Malcolm K. Burton, Minister Sunday Morning Sendee 9:30 AM. ... Church of the Mayflower Pilfrim* Independent, Fundamental, Evangelistic NORTHSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH 2024 Pontiac Road Located Between North Perry and Opdyke Road^-Sundqy School 10 AM. ' Church Service-4+^CM. Sunday Evening Eyangelietic Service 7 P.M. Midweek Service, Thursday 7 P.M./ Nursery Provided For Transportation or Information 335-5590 Pastor — Rev. Jack Turner Com* And See And Hear Him Bishop C. E. Thomas of Toledo, Ohio A Special HeplIngOnd Blessing Event on August 26th at 8:00 63 Elisabeth Street, Pontiac, Michigan •ring Your Hat And Bo Blossod Bishop C. B~fhomos, Poster. Min. W. Howard, Assfr Pastor. THE SALVATION ARMY CITADEL 29 W. LAWRENCE SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M. Toon Ago Fellowship Hour As Announced MORNING WORSHIP 11:15 A.M. . EVANGELICAL MEETING 7 P.M. Tuesday Prayer and praise meeting 7 p m. Brigadier and Mrs. John Grindle, Commanding Officers (iootl Muxic —'Singing — Preaching YbtPAHFIhvited SPIRITUALIST CHURCH OF THE GOOD SAMARITAN 4780 Hiilcrost Drive, Waterford 623-1074. SERVICE 7 P.M’. GUEST SPEAKER "OUR SILEMT PARTNERS" Stiver Taa Thurs^ Aug. 22, 7 P.M. . ’ Missionary Alliance Church North Cost Lake Road at M59 Fimg DQpu&l LnUW • SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:30 a. • MORNING SERVICE 10:45 a. • WQTE BROADCAST 11:00 a. • OSP BROADCAST 4:00 p. • YOUTH FELLOWSHIP 5:45 p. • EVENING SERVICE' 7:00 p., • MIDWEEK PRAYER SERVICE — Wednesday 7:30 p., • WBFG-FM Wed. 9:00 a. i OAKLAND arid SAGINAW Rev. Robert Shelton • Pastor t«M; Mtkiyb naiT n«m«t etmot ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1868 B—11 Knowledge comes, but wisdom lingers.—Alfred Lord Tennyson, English ppet^ AUBURN HEIGHTS FREE METHODIST JSlSBStf&L SS::r''S^: EVENING WORSHIP..MO KM. WIONISDAV PRAYER . ... . . 7:30 PJA FIRST ASSEMBLY or GOD Perry at Wide Track ' Sunday School 9:45 A.M. Everyone Welcome 11A.M. Morning Worahip Guest Speaker for Men's Day The Rev. Robert Grant of Detroit will be guest speaker for the 11 a.m. worship service at Greater Mt, Calvary Church when the congregation observes ’s Day. He serves as host for the Sunbeam Spirituals on Radio Station WGPR Detroit. 1 ■ " ’ 1. ★ it: > Claude McMillan and Guy Fillipins are cochairmen for the day. , . Pastor Charles A. Davenport "THE CHURCH ON THE MARCH" CALVARY Assembly of God 5860 Ander»onville Rd. 9:45 AM, 1 Sunday scwgpLi For Every Age, Bring The Family | 11:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP ; A Cordial Welcome To All Who Attend 7:00 P.M. EVANGELISTIC . SERVICE • Good Music • Bible Preaching • Prayer for Needs 6:30 "Prayer Hour* 6:00 P.M. f'TEEN FELLOWSHIP" CHRISTIAN CHURCH of DRAYTON PLAINS Temporary Meeting Place: MASON SCHOOL 3835 Welten Blvd. (bet. SaebobOw and Silver Loke Rd.) WORSHIP 9:30 A.M. BIBLE SCHOOL 10:45 A.M. If you want to succeed you should strike out new paths rather than travel the- worn paths of accepted success. — John D. Rpckfeller, financier. WORLD COUNCIL — Entering the Cathedral in Uppsala, Sweden foe an opening session of the World .Council of Churches are leaders of the group. Shown (from left) are the Archbishop of Canterbury and Archbishpp Iakovos of Greek Orthodox Church. Directly behind are Charles C. Parlin, Methodist layman from the United States, Dr. David A. Moses of United Church of Christ in Northern India, and Dr. Martin Niemoller of Evangelical Church in\Germany. Dr. Eugene Carson Blake, general secretary of the WCC is behind Dr. Niemoller. Church of Christ . 87 Lafayette St. SERVICES: Lord'* Day, 10:30 A.M. and 7 P.M. Wad. 7:00 P.M. 682-0042 “Let the Bible Speak" friEnoly General BAPTIST CHURCH I UL 2-1155 334-7407 3454 Auburn Rd. (Nestle the Flra mNm) SUMMER REVIVAL SERVICES August 10 All SPEAKER: Rav. Everatt of 7:00 P.M. Nightly Sj. Petersburg, Florida APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRIST 1410 Univottity Dr. ! Saturday Young People 7:30 P.M. i Sunday School and Worship 10 A.M. jlunday Evening Service 7:30 P.M.i Tuos.and Thur*. Sorvico* 7:30 P.M., : Church Phona FE 5-8361 Paster's Phona 852-2382 Top Businessmen Serve Bible Week NEW YORK -return to the Bible by businessmen, more than 100 top executives in corporations is the country are serving as industry - chairmen for National Bible Week, Oct. BO-27, an interfaith program co-sponsored by the American Bible Society and the Laymen’s National Committee. ,The announcement was made by Wallace E. Johnson, president of Holiday Inns o f America, Inc., and chairman of National Bible Week. - Mr. Johnson is also chairman of the Bible Society’s Worldwide Bible Reading program which continues through Thanksgiving. A self-made multimillionaire from Memphis, Tenn., who begap his extraordinary rags-to-riches career with a 1250 loan, Mr: Johnson stresses 4he responsibility of the laity ‘‘to persuade as many Americans possible to become daily readers of the Bible.” Ministers Announce Services of Church CRESCENT HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 9:45 to 10:30 Sunday School 11-12 Church Sarvico 2274 Croscant Loka Rood Drayton Plains, Mich. 673-7200 REORGANIZED CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST of Lattar Day' Saints Pontiac Congregation now mooting at 1990 Croscant Lake Rd. also 5353 Liver-nois, Troy. J. A. (Jutland, Paster 651-0732 BIBLE REBINDING CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9291 BLOOMFIELD HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 3600 Taltgraph Rd. 10 A.M. Sunday School 11 A.M. Morning Worship 6 P.M. Evening Service Wednesday, 7:30 P.M. Prayer Mooting the Bible speaks to you CHRISTIAN SCIENCE RADIO SERIES SUNDAY 9:45 AiM. WQTE 560 on your dial CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Subject: - SOUL Sunday Sorvica 11 A-M. Sunday School 11 A.M. WEDNESDAY SERVICE... * 8:00 P.M. Reading Room 14 W. Huron Daily 11:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Monday through Saturday FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST 164 W. Lawrence Pontiac REV. KENNETH D. BECKER GFM Speaker Scheduled fori 7 PM. Service Ecumenical Texts Readied for Teens CENTRAL I UNITED METHODIST \ 3882 Highland Rd. ■ REV. CARL PRICE f Brotherhood Without Restriction Morning Worship and Church School | AMPLE PARKING SUPERVISED NURSERY • 9:30 A.M. and J 1:00 A.M. "THE OTHER SIDE OF HEAVEN" Rav. Carl Price Broadcast on WPON, 1460 K - 11:15 A.M. j Applications now being accepted for Fall Weekday Nursery P FIRST UNITED METHODIST [ South Saginaw at Judsori / Walter T. Ratcliffo, Minister "All Races and All Man Welcome at AM Times" Sunday Service ChUfWjSdjaal | 10 A.M. 9:00 A.M. Sermon: "PAX VOBISCUM" NEW YORK (BPD-Ecumenical history will be made this fall when for the first time abput 250,000 Protestant and Roman Catholic teen-agers will study-, about the Bible and Christian beliefs from the si textbooks. The spark of sin in our hearts j can also blaze up into what put j Him on the dross. — Arthur L. [ Miller, American playwright. BETHEL TABERNACLE First Pantacastel Church of Pantiec W School 10 a.m. WoraMy Ti cun,; EVANGELISTIC SERVICE Jon., Toot, and Thun.-7:30 PM. Rav. and Mn. E. Crouch 134S SeldwinAva. FE 5-4387 ST. PAUL UNITED METHODIST 165 V Square laka Rd., Bloomtiald HHU-FIM283eed K 2-2753. j CHURCH SCHOOL 9:30 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 10:45 A.M. Ample Parking - Samuel C. Seisert. Min.- fopa^lcad Nyrsa^ ELMWOOD UNITED » I* ALDERSGATE UNITED METHODIST 1 * METHODIST '. • Sunday School 9:30 a..„ Worahip 1045 a.m. ‘ I Evening Worship 7 p.m, : Prayer Wad. 7 p.m. I Dudley Moaura, poster f 1536 Baldwin Ff 5-7797 ' | • Rav. Clean F. Abbott Worship 9:45 a.m. Church School 11 a.m. CLARKSTON METHODIST 6600 Waldon Road, Clarkston CHURCH SCHOOL 9.45 AM. WORSHIP 10 A.M. Frank A. Cozadd, Ministar Adolfo Thomos, Director gf Afowte St. Jamos Unitod Mothodift Church 451 W. Konnott Rd. Opposite the Alcott Elementary School Sunday School -. - 9:30 A.M. ^ Vership Sarvico 11:0Q A.M.-Nursery Proyidad j REV. ROtERT MCWST, MWISTIR * Tha Pontiac CHURCH OF CHRIST 1180 N. PERRY Mid-Waak Bible Clast Wad . 7:30 P.M. The Rev. Kenneth D. Becker, executive secretary of Gospel Fellowship Missions, will speak1 at the 7 p.m- service tomorrow! jin Sunnyvale Chapel, 5311 Pon-1 tiac Lake, Waterford Township. GFM wa$ founded Scriptural evangelistic organization to send. missionaries into many fields still open for missionary activity. It is hot limited to one particular field, but its -missionaries go wherever there is a need and an opportunity to servd. • The Rev. Mr. Becker, a graduate of Bob Jo'neji University, was awarded the master of arts degree in 1959. While attending Bob Jones University, he spent several1 summers doing evangelistic' work in Latin America.. Currently Mr. Becker spends; the major part of his time in speaking engagements on behalf of Gospel Fellowship Missions: | Organ Recital Set j for St. Augustine's Arinin G. Zapf of Detroit will play organ selections at the ecumenical vesper service at St. Augustine’s House, Oxford* at 6 tomorrow. His numbers include ‘‘Prelude in D Minor” by Bach, "A Mighty Fortress Is Our God” by Percy Fletcher, “My Heart Ever Faithful” by Bach, and ‘Tocatta in C” by Bach. Devotions will be ty Paul Benoit, Zapf served several large Lutheran congregations in the Detroit area as organist, choirmaster and teacher before his retirement. KIRK IN THE HILLS The Rev. Dr. Ray H. Kiely, pastor of Westminster Presbyterian Church in Buffalo, N.Y.. will be the sixth guest speaker of the summer' at Kirk in the Hills “Sick of Home, or Homesick?” will be his sermon topic at both the 9;30 and 11:30 morning services tomorrow. * * it j A graduate ,of Middlebury College and New. York’s Union Theological Seminary, Dr. Kiely | has served as chairman of the ecumenical committee, and committee for church union for 10 denominations in the western New York state area. ~ *—* ★ Dr. Kiely has had several articles published in various theological journals. The Kirk School will be ip session at the same hours as morning worship, and the foil I Chancel Choir will sing at both services, FIRST UNITED METHODIST Vacation Church School at First United Methodist Church : planned for the family, The school will starL Monday with the theme “Goers World and Plan for Families.” Sessions are scheduled from 7 to 9 p.m. . > - ★ • ★ A Teachers working with the Rev. Walter T. Ratcliffe include Ejlen Hamel, Mrs. Lester Pitts, Mrs. Howard Bone, Mrs. Ver- ner Macon, Diane Olsen and Oliver Dunstan. Pastor Ratcliffe will preach on “Peace Be With You” tomorrow morning. Mrs. Floyd Q. Hicks will be offertory -eofo-1st. NEW HOPE BAPTIST The Senior Usher Board of Hope Baptist Church will I celebrate the 30th anniversary jof its founding at 3:30 p.m: to-! morrow. ★ ★ ★ The Rev. Eddie' McDonald and congregatioh of Friendship Baptist Church will be guests, ★ ★ ★ Music will be furnished by the. New Hope Senior Choir and choirs of the visiting congregation. Th6 Rev. Mr. McDonald will preach. ★ * * Gilbert Preston is general chairman for the day. Mrs, Irene Birdette is president of the usher board. MIDWESTERN BAPTIST COLLEGE 825 Golf Drive, Pontiac, Michigan 48053 REGISTER FOR FALL SEMESTER . SEMESTER BEGINS Monday, Sept. 9, 1968, 9:00 A.M. Fundamental, Co-Educational, Orthodox , “Sound Education in ChrUt-Contorod Atmosphere” Com potent Faculty, Excellent Facilities BIBLE, MUSIC, SPEECH DR. TOM L. MALONE, Pres. Write for Phona 332-8328 or 3344)961 Free Catalqg FIRST WESLEYAN CHURCH 19 W. Fairmount Sunday School.........10:00 Worship.............. .11:00 Wesleyan Youth.........6:15 Evening Family Gdspal Hour 7:00 Wednesday Prayar and Praita 7:00 R,v' Better Education for, Ghetto Poor WASHINGTON (UPI) -Plans to upgrade the.education of the disadvantaged i drawn here at a meeting of I Catholic educational and social action leaders convened by the 'National Catholic Educational I Association. Central Christian Church 347 N. SAGINAW 11A.M. Morning Worship-9.45 Bible School 6 P.M. Youth AAeeting —7 P.M. Gospel H^ur Mr. Ralph Shannon, Mini iter All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. at W. Pile# St. THE REV. C GEORGE WIDDIFIELD ’ .Rector The Rev.Tom S. Wilton, Associate 8 A.M. HOLY COMMUNION 10 A.M. Morning Prayer arid Sermon by the Rector Child cam and Church School through the Fourth Grade FIRST CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN 46 Roselawn Dr., North of last Pika SundayScheol 10: Herald l.idy, Sup:. Worahip 111 "Whet Ought We He* 7: P.M. Worahip Spaa Icar, Mr. Dels Heffner Subject: "The Soul ef Yeurfeet Shell Trued" r ! Wednesday, Bible Study and Prayer Service_ Lftmard W. lUnekweU, RwtUtr .1.11»2< COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 64 W. Columbia Ava. MARIMONT BAPTIST CHURCH - 68 W. WALTON BLVD. -\ § SUNDAY SCHOOL. w.....,.. 9:45 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP...........11:00 A.M. EVENING SERVICE....... .. 7:30 P.M. Rev. Robert F. Richardson, pastor FIRST NAZARENE 60 STATE ST. "The Church where AH tha Family Worships Together" 9:45 A.M. SUNDAY SCHOOL ' "Class for all Agas" - 11:00 A.M. MORNIMG WORSHIP U. B. Gedman, Speaking John Burton, Directing the Adult Chair Trias, Special Music, Adult Chair, Blblu Study that Inspires Personal Faith "REMEMBER TO GO TO CHURCH SOMEWHERE EVERY SUNDAY" Emmanuel ^BaptiAt ChAUtcit 645 S. Telegraph (Near Orchard Lake Rd.) DR. TOM MALONE, Pastor BIBLE SCHOOL 10 A.M. , Dapartmantalizad Sunday School for All Agas . with NO Litaratura but tha Bibla HEAR DR. TOM MALONE, pastor j teach the Word of God, van# by varaa, in tha forgo Auditorium J Bible Class, broadcast an WPON 10:1 S to 1045 A.M. ] MORNING WORSHIP 11 A.M, j EVANGELISTIC SERVICE 7 P.M. PRAYER MEETING Wed. 7:30 P.M.S BUS SERVICE CALL FE 2-8328 Drof Clara and Nuraary — All Sarvtcas JOYCE MALONE Choir Director DR. TOM MALONE Pastor- 7:00 P# MUSIC TO BLESS THE HEART Gospel Favorites and Requested Songs- —-Choir Under Direciidn of Joyce Majone r COLOR ' THE PONTIAC PRESS ^ j , . SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 immm ** HBBg.5ggaB. ——MB —M RYvwNifiisiBfeswGi iwmwtviIVMvWWRWMV ErjwS SUPER KEM-TONE - R.|. $7.(1 SB49 Reg. Color Our Special Price MP • iMMMiHBfirirriTii ■nmn HEW LOW PRICE taw EASY-T0-GET-T0 —1 CLEARANCE Still Going On! We Are Not Going I ^^butofBuSinene. Save Now On A Variety Of Lawn and Garden Equipment! USED ROTARY MOWERS AS IS Four Choice 1 Per Customer ■ 1A We Service l| What LEE’S We Sell! 921 UNIVERSITY DRIVE PONTIAC FE 2-3412 KEM-OLO,Reg. $10.49 Special Priced., WE CARRY Ready Mix Oensitt ARP Ready Mix Silica Sand -• Whito BIG GARDEN HOSE SALE Save 25% or More Mattie or Rubbsr Hot* *8M Wo ctrryZACK-O-MIX guaranteed to ttop leaks or your See Us For Your SWIMMING P0OL CHEMICALS Storm Windows and Screens Repaired Prompt Service “Thrifty Saving.” HOURS) "ftT CONTRACTOR’S s PECIAL! THIS WEEK ONLY! Reg. $39.95 NOW $3495 ' Contractor's Heavy-Duty deep-tray wheelbarrow. Modal M-11 represents the finest heavy-duty wheelbarrow for thp contractor. * KEEGO HDWE. NO. 1 3041 Orchard Lake Rd. 682-2660 ft TOM'S HARDWARE 905 Orchard Lake Ave. * FE 5-2424 I MONDAY AND TUESDAY ONLY! | FAIRWAY FOODS Feat taring BAZLEY MEATS Boneless Sirloin Steaks ic lb. Valley Brand Ice Cream 79‘ 0 39’ Vz gal. FAIRWAY FftODS 1220 NORTH PERRY at MADISON Across From Pontiac Northsm High School » IFV Rem-rvr the Right to Limit QuantitieM DAILY 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. rr A SUNDAYS 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. I t 4-/ZOU FREE PARKING for 1,900 CARS! Shop in the weather-con-trollad North and South Molls of Tha Pontiac Mall, ' for all of your Back-To-School noads. SUNDAY ONLY-At 2 Stores Listod Bolow Only I BAILEY-FAIRWAY FOOD MARKETS 4348 Dixie Highway-Drayton Plains OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. TO 6 P.M. 1220 North Perry at Madison OPEN SUNDAY 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. Authored S.D.D. Distrubut.r * WINE • LIQUOR V BEER p Skinless . . .3 lbs.M^ ! j Delicious, Tender, M Boneless OKLMOWCO OAc STEAKS , F t Retcrve the Right to Limit Quantities HOFFMAN'S PONTIAC FREEZER MEATS 921N. Perry ~ 332-1100 mmmmmmmwa M UHAN’S VARIETY STORE 1415 Baldwin Ave. at Walton FE 4-3348 Open Daily 9 A.M. to 9 P.M., Sunday 10 A.M. to i P.M. Sherwin-Williams SUPER KEM-T0NE FINEST WASHABLE LATEX WALL PAINT YOU CAN USE. use Hp , WORK SKIPPER i ONLY 49 gallon HUDSON’S1 4Y EAST WALTON . hrfcull I HARDWARE NEAR BALDWIN PARTS For All Vacuums • PAPER BAGS .SWITCHES e HOSES s REITS ! « ro. FREE PICK-UP A DELIVERY RARNES & HARGRAVES HARDWARE 742 W. Huron St. PARK FREE FE 5-9101 Across from th% Post Office ~ m LUMBER CO. ‘ 151 Oakland Ave. GARAGE A Compter. Lin. ’ BUILDERS Siiilding Needs e Attached or Unattaeke^ _ a Brisk er Frame |i Cell FE 4-1594 Haw far Proa Estimate COMPLETE OVERHAUL BRAKE SPECIAL TUES. WED. ONLY Moot Cars S.H-Mj.tll.1 Br.k*. M M.n. HERE'S WHAT WE DOs . MON. TUES. WED. ONLY 1. Reline all four .wheels with Bonded Linings. V-. 2. Turn all 4.wheel drums. 3. Check all four wheel cylinders. 4. Bleed, flush and refill hydraulic systems with approved SAE fluid. 5. Clean, inspect and carefully repack front wheel bearings. 6. Adjust brakes on all four wheels and' pedal clearance. 7. All work performed by factory trained brake specialists. Even at thUf low price, you can chdrgolt at Kmart! I NO MOMEY POWIV I "IMMMMiMMMMRBmraBj / Boston 25th Victim, 4-0 After five hours on the course and at the typewriter, we deliberated our leav-' tog. i We waved good luck to Ron as he left and he returned the wish. As We compared our Thursday * escape routes on Friday we set up our plansJoriaday. , But really the tournament was great. Hie security was -good. Working conditions have been beautiful. Tigers' Sparma, Manager Playing Down Brief Rift BOSTON ®— Pitcher Joe Sparma and Manager Mayo Smith of the Detroit Tigers are both playing down the controversial incident in which Sparma was yanked and spoke out against the action. “It was « personal incident that one time he that one game," Sparma said Friday night. “I said the things I said then, and I don’t have anything to add What Sparma said then, after Smith took him out in the fourth inning of a scoreless game at Cleveland, was that he was “completely embarrassed” and “humiliated.” .'“I just wanted Sparma to go as far as ha! pould and then bring Lolich in,” Smith said. “The most important thing is winning the ball game,” Smith said. “After Sparma thinks about it a while he’ll be ' aD right” Sparma indicated he didn’t intend to question, his Manager’s strategy in this regard * , McLain Stiff, Tired—But Loose at Right Time BOSTON (AP) — Dennv McLain savs “Think ahnil it I know what it ran toll rai ttip—PQnpr»inllv in ttip pirrMh nnrl -Ukt _a a j ' Ai .... . . . From the Press Box By BRUNO L. KEARNS . Sportt Editor, Pontiac Proa* The 68th U.S. Women’s Amateur Golf Championship becomes history today and overall the members of Birming-ham Country Club must be lauded* for the way they handled the tourhainent. .The consensus of opinion of the contestants was in high praise for the hospitality extended them and the courtesies of the officials and galleries. The gate security has to be commended for its alertness and the ex-huberapee of some of the ladies watching the gates was at times more hilarious than It was irritating. ★ ★ ★ On the fourth day of the tournament, Thursday, this writer, loaded down with briefcase, notebooks, papers and pocketful of pencils and no badge in sight star-tied the ladies at the gate by boldly walking through, their security. ‘^Goodness, where are you going? Where’s your badge? How did you get in? Where are you from?, etc., etc., etc.” Before we could answer the first question, one of the ladies- whisked us into the car, closed the door and we were on our way to the clubhouse door.' “Whew,” said the lady,“if I let-you in without a badge the guard will be after me.” “McCaffrey, you did it again, he would say,” continued the lady. EXPLANATION GIVEN I finally explained that when we changed shirts the badge was left on the shirt worn the day before. But the explanation apparently wasn’t convincing. As we reached the door to the press room, our lady guard assigned another watchman to escort us to our typing headquarters. A * * Meanwhile, back at the gate our young photographer Ron Unternahrer ^loaded down with earners, cases and equipment, and just as startled, offered to waive'his non-frisk rights to be permitted to enter. Ron’s approach to the gate brought everyone to their feet waving at the huge sign which read “no photography” with tie. words “except accredited Press’* in small letters. The shock at seeing the cameras gave one of the ladies a chance to practice her authority, with “Oh, no. Definitely not. No cameras. You can’t come in, and the same line of questioning we received, etc., etc., etc. *...* *...... With perspiration rolling down his brow from the three hundred yard walk from his car, the cringing young photographer then had his turn at being whisked into a car heading for the clubhouse. GETS PINNED He was led by the . wrist to the press room where badges were pinned on him from all sides and credentials of all sorts for parking and walking were stuffed into his pocket. “Wow, I thought I was trying to smuggle my way into Cape Kennedy,” Ron said as we met to discuss-our plans for photo coverage of the tournament. During our conversation, we did get a chance to - wave at our lady friend, Mrs. McCafrey, who, was back to check to see if our entry was really legiti- 3N (AP) — Denny McLain says his arm feels stiff at the beginning-of games and more tired than usual at the end nowadays, bub it looks as though it will take more titan that to keep him from becoming the major leagues’ first 30-game winner since 1934. “Thirty games? Sure it’s on my mind,” the Detroit righthander, said Friday night after shuting out Boston 4-0 to boost his record to 25-3 and the Tigers American League lead to eight games. ‘Think abou it. I know what' it | mean to. me. But No. 1 is tite pennant. If we don’t win the pennant, I could win 45 games and it wouldn’t make any difference/’ McLain said his arm is definitely more tired now than it has been at this stage in past seasons—and with good reason. ★ ★ ★ “I’ve pitched mare than 250 innings already,” he said. “1 think it’s understandable that my arm is more tired. It has to be more tired. It’s beginning to tell on me—especially in the eighth and ninth innings.” ANOTHER PROBLEM The Tiger right-hander said an equally big problem, however, is getting loose early in the game. “My arm is tight and stiff,” he said.J “Tonight, for instance, I didn’t really get in the groove until about the fifth or sixth inning.” f- * ★...★ As it turned out, that was just the right time. The Tigers were leading 2-0 on Al Kaline’s third inning homer when the Red Sox got runners on second and third with nobody out in the sixth and the heart of their batting order coming up. . ~ V ★ ★ * McLain turned on the steam to pitch out of the jaip by striking out Dalton Jones, Carl Yastrzemski and Ken Har-relson in order. The confrontation with Yaz was . the Womens Amateur Final 'Dream Match' Ex-Champions to Finally Meet By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Ptoitiac Press The “dream match” of women’s amateur golf, which would be the parallel of a head to head clash between Arnold Palmer and Nicklaus, began today in the 36 hole finale of the U*S. Women’s Amateur Championship at ^Birmingham Country Club. Two veteran amateurs, Mrs. Jo Anne Gunderson earner and Mrs. Ann Quast Welts, who have dominated this tournament with seven victories in the last 11 years, face each other in the finals for the first time today. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. earner prevented a foreign break through for the title yesterday when she eliminated ,23 year old, French golf star LOSER — Miss Joyce Kazmierski of Grosse lie completes a chip shot which failed on the 8th hole at Birmingham Country Club where/she took a bogey-6. Joyce' lost her semifinal match in the U.S. Women’s Amateur, 2-1 to Mrs. Ann Quast Welts yesterday. Reserve Passer Aids Colt Win WASHINGTON (AFJ^- Terry Southall won the game for the Baltimore Colts but he hasn’t won a job. The; taxi squad quarterback - from Baylor hit three straight, passes for 66 yards in a lastminute push to set up Lou Michael’s field goal for a 15-13 victory over the Washington Redskins, in 0 National Football League preseason test Friday-night. __ ★ - ■k k Southall won praise from allpro Johnny Unitas for the clutch drive that resembled the familiar heroics of the Colt master passer, but Coach Don Shula said the question of a backup quarterback to Unitas this season is still up in the air. “It’s like this,” Shula said, flipping his hand, one side up, then the other. He shrugged, “we might even trade for a quarterback.” Washington .... ....... Wash—FG Gogolak » Wash—FG Gogolak 9 Balt—Safety. Thaoflladas fl AL Countdown GR W. L. Pet DETROIT .... 77 43 .642 — Baltimore — 69 51-.575 8 Boston ....... 66 56 .541 12 Catherine Lacoste, 4-3, with a birdie spree on the bade nine. In the other semifinal match Mrs? Welts ended the hope of giving Michigan its first champion when she defeated hard working Joyce Kazmierski of Grosse lie, 2-1. LONG TIME RIVALS Mrs. Carner and Mrs. Welts have been partners and rivals ever since their younger teen-age days when they lived near Seattle. “We’ve never met each otiier in the finals of this tournament,”,'said Mrs. Carner, “but Ann and I have played each other 7 times in various tournaments and it’s been a real close series.” Mrs. Carner holds a one up advantage in their rivalry and in today’s final " round, she will have a chance to. win her 5th U.S. Amateur title, or Mrs. Welts will gain her fourth. Most often winner in this amateur championship is Glenna Collett who won the crown in 1922-25-28-29-30 and again In 1935 as Mrs. Edwin Vare Jr. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Carner who won the title at the age of 17 in 1957, relinquished It in 1958 to Mrs. Welts. Jo Anne recaptured the crown in 1960-62-66 while Ann Quast Welts was the champion in 1961 and 1962. Mrs. Carner, who is one of the most powerful swingers in women’s golf, won four straight holes from Miss Lacoste starting at No. 12 with a par and then - with three straight birdies to end it on the 15th. TAKES LEAD Mrs. Lacoste, who led the 36 hole qualifying .with a one under 143 took the lead on the second hole with a 12 foot birdie putt, but she lost No. 3 when her sand -shot went over the green to force her to bogey. The French women’s champion went one up again on No. 6 with a par but Mrs. Carner evened it at No. 9 with a par. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. earner’s approach shots were deadly -as she started her four hole winning streak and on the par-3 No. 15 Hole * she dropped in a 27 foot birdie putt to end it. Miss Kazmierski, 1966 Intercollegiate . champion while at Michigan State, and the current Michigan amateur champ, broke the deadlock in her match by winning No. 4 when Mrs. Welts three putted. On No. 5 Joyce had trouble in the rough and the match was back to even as die bogeyed. CHIP FALLS SHORT Miss Kanpierski went behind on No. 8 when her chip shot fell short of the green and she had to pitch and two putt for a bogey-6. Both golfers went par for the next three holes and then halved No. 13 with . birdies. . ★ . ★. ★ When Mrs. Welts trapped her approach on No. 14, Joyce parred and tills., evened the match. - They halved No. 15 -with pars, but Joyce lost 16 with a bogey and Mrs. Welts finished it in spectacular fashion With a 4-iron approach which stopped three feet from the pin for her birdie. “She deserved to win it,” said a dejected but complimentary Miss Kazmierski. it it it “She finished me off with a , couple of great shots, she certainly didn’t- back into *it,” Joyce added. “I wasn’t too sharp with my putting, I wasn't lining them up too well,” she , added. The final 18 of the 36 hole finale today war scheduled to start at 2 p.m. THE PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 Pantlac frtu Phot* LONG RIVALRY — They have dominated the U S. Amateur Championship for the past 11 years, but.Mrs, Ann Quast Welts (left) and Mrs. Jo Anne Gunderson Carner have never faced each other in the finals, that is until today. They are meeting in a 36-hole finale at Birmingham Country Club. Strong Finish for Pontiac Entry in U.S. JEvent Special to The Press, . EUGENE, Ore.,® — Jon Costello of Ponitac turned on a strong .finishing -sprint to win his 880 semifinals race here •Friday in the rain-drenched opening day of tiie U.S. Jaydles’ Junior -Champ national track and field meet. Costello passed four other, gunners in the final 80 yards to finish in 1:55.3 —. fastest clocking of the day in the four half-mile heats. The final is this afternoon. Title Action Resumes in Softball Today Action resumes at 6:30 p.m. today in the Class B district softball tournament at the Drayton Plains Park with Ferndale holding an early lead on Day’s Sanitary of Waterford Township. Die Republic Underwriters nine grabbed a 3-1 margin after 2% innings Friday night before rain forced a postponement of the action. The game will be resumed at that point The Ferndale nine must win to force a second contest to determine the district titlist. If necessary, the seednd game would be at 8 p.m. Coho Sighted for 4 Miles Conservation Department fisheries workers today reported locating a large school of cobb salmon stretching 4 miles long about 2 miles west of Arcadia toward Frankfort ' The concentration of . coho is the largest sighted in their survey efforts this summer. « i- * * * • The Arcadia-to-Frankfort area now marks the northern-most point that the fish have been discovered iri their migration from lowjer Lake Michigan toward parent streams where they will make their spawning runs this Jail. Nets set by department fisheries men in this new sighting area turned up 11 coho averaging, about 9 pounds. The largest coho taken weighed 13 pounds, 8 ounces. Also found in the nets were two Chinook salmon; one a 7-pound, 8-ounce maturing female, the other a impounder"" » •* ★ * Netting of these fish confirms the earlier prediction of fisheries men that A few precocious chinook would this fell-move up the little Manistee River, where the department planted more than 500,000 of the fish as smolts in the spring of 1967. < Other survey findings indicate that a smattering of early-running Chinook will also ascend the Muskegon River, where about 200,000 of them were released a year ago last spring. Additional recent reports point to good colfo fishing this weekend between Pentwater gnd Manistee in Lake Michigan u weather conditions allow anglers to get on the big, unpredictable waters. Best action is expected two to six miles offshore id these waters in depths 50 to OO^feet below the surface. most dramatic, as the 1967 triple crown winner got behind 0-2 on the count but then fouled off several pitches before fanning on a high and tight fast ball. Detroit Manager Mayo Smith came to the mound after that to discuss—the;— possibility of walking Harrelson, the league runs batted in leader, but McLain said he dedided “to take my chaneeg with him.’* * ★ ★ After that it was fairly clear sailing, although McLain had to pitch out of a two on, two out jam in the seventh, and if he was tired at the end if didn’t show. “He’s the toughest in the league by far,” Yastrzemski said. “He’s throwing pitchers’ pitches this year—not just strikes but tough strikes.” Even Jim Lonborg, 1967 Cy Young Award winner whom McLain seems a sure bet to succeed, couldn’t conceal his admiration. ★ fR ★ ^ borg said after pitching the first seven “He’s pretty exciting to watch,” Lon- innings and taking the loss. _________ “Even when you’re pitching against him?” the Red Sox right-hander was asked. “No, I hate his guts then,” Lonborg grinned. UNBEATEN ON ROAD McLain’s victory was his seventh in a row and the 16th in his last 17 decisions. It also was his sixth shutout and 29n«j complete game of the year, and lifted his phenomenal road record to 16-0. Thp Detroit ace also stayed ahead of 'the pace of the most recent 30-game winners. Dizzy Dean, last pitcher to accomplish the feat, didn’t win his 25th game until Sept. 10. 1934, while Lefty Grove, the last American League hurler to do it, got his 25th on August 19, 1931. DtTROIT BOSTON • V WJWIM ID 40QO * ■ 1 t Ystrmskl If 4 0 10 Mfe&SS ^mS5'cf Wl Oyltr u 0 0 0 0 Nixon c 3 0 10 GBrown ph 1 0 0 0 Wolowskl pr 0 0 0 0 “ 0 0 0 0 Gibson e 0 o o 0 Wert 3b 4 0 0 0 Lonborg p 3 0 2 0 McLain p 4 0 0 0 Tartabull pb 1 0 0 0 Lylt p 0 0 0 0 Slaiiga p - 0 0 0 0. Rochester’s Bob Woodroof also impressed by winning his preliminary and semifinal heats in the 220-yard dash.. His : 22.2 timing in the semifinals was the. day’s best on the Wet track at the University of Oregon. Mike Koemer, a miler from Birmingham, is in today’s finals, too, running a 4:22.3 to place fourth ih the qualifying. TEAM CHANCES With John -Morrisoh of Retford Township (high hurdles), shot putter Gay Van Elst of Middleville and Willie Polk of Flint QOO-yard dash) aim reaching the finals after impressive showings, Michigan’s chances are good for a high finish in the team standings. , High jumper John Mann of Farmington and pole vaulter Larry Biskner of Waterford also made it into the finals. Mann cleared 5-10, 6-0 and 6-2 without a miss ip the high jump qualifying, while Biskner cleared 12-6 and 13-9 without missing in the pole vault qualifying. ★ ' ★ Kevin Reabe of Waterford placed second at :50.4 in his preliminary heat qf the 440 but . failed to make it past the semifinals when he ran fifth-. Only the first four places were timed. Jim Kaat Halts Orioles, 5-2 By Die Associated Press Jim Kaat batted and pitched the Minnesota Twins to a 5-2 victory over Baltimore last night, dropping the second place Orioles eight games off the .American League pace. In other games, Lou Johnson’s bases loaded hit in, the 12th lifted Cleveland by the Chicago White Sox 4-3, Roy White’s run-scoring double in the sixth inning sent the New York Yankees past Oakland 2-1 and Washington scored four unearned runs for a 4-2 victory over California. ★ k ★ . Kaat ruined Baltimore as he doubled in ^three runs in th esecond inning and then pitched but of repeated trouble^ striking out 12 add scattering nine* hits >to even his record at 9-9. - (Continued bn Page C-2, Col. I) BALTIMORE MINNESOTA if.,ri>. M ... *brh« . ... ab r bbl Buford If I ! 1 0 Tovar 3b 4 9 1 0 Belanger u 2 0 10 RMM 1b 4 110 Valentina W 2 0 0 0 Caraw 2b 3 10 i ■ Blair d . 4 1 1 0 Oliva rf 413 FrRobnin rf. 4 1 1 0 Roitbcro c 4 0 1 (■ BRoblnsn 3b 4 01 1 Uhlaandr cf 4 1 1 DJohnson 2b 4 0 2 1 Allison If 110 HoMy C 400 0 RonClerk si 30 0 BMtary lb 3 9 0 0 Kaat p 4 0 3 CFrnandz ph 1 0 Id PhoebOs p 1000 Motion ph 10 10 Leonhard pr 0 0 0 0 Morris p 00 0 0 Nelson p 0 0 0 0 DMay ph 10 0 0 Rlehort p 0 0 0 0 Powell ph 10 0 0 ! Total 37 2 f 2 Total 31 If S ..... 000 002 000—1 .... 020 000 20X-I ihinan. Tover, B.Roblnson. LOB—Baltimore > 0, Minnesota 7. 2B—Belanger. DJohnson, E—Fr.Ri LaaL Fr.Robjnsn, Reese. 3B—B.Roblnson. H R ER BE SO , Rlehort .....2 . 2 2 T T f Kaat (W,»-f) . ....* 7 2 2 0 12 WP-Nalaon. T—2:10. A—1*411. Need Qualifying in Western Open . A record entry has forced a qualifying round for the Western Amateur which gets under way next Tuesday at Gross? lie Golf k .Country Club. With an entry of 284, tiie sponsoring Western .Golf Association is sending 135 of the players into 18-hole qualifying rounds at two sites. ’ 5 * / ★ * A field of .54 was slated to play for 16 places today at Knollwood Chib in . Chicago, while 91 will go after 19 berths in an 18-hole round Monday at Plum Hollow Country Club in Southfield. . The field of 180 will then {day 36 holes of stroke play Tuesday andWedneaday with the low 50 after Wednesday’s round\ playing 36 more holes on Thursday. After the 72-hole medal competition, tha low 16 then move to match play on Fri- c—a THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 Cleveland, , Washington Prevail (Continued From page G-1) Minnesota's Tony OliVa also took over the league batting lead with three hits for a .307 average while teammate Rod Carew went hitless and fell ' INFIELD HIT Johnson’s infield hit tor / Cleveland came with one out after the White Sox tied the score in the ninth on Pete Undy McDaniel worked out of Jams in the seventh and ei_ inning to save A1 Downing’s first victory. Lions Acquire 2 Ballcarriers Trade With Packers, Buy From CFL Team The Detroit Lions made two deals in search 6f a running ejback to fill the void caused by Nick Eddy’s surgery yesterday. Giving up ’an undisclosed draft choice to the Green Bay Packers, the Lions obtained back Brendan McCarthy of Boston College. An error by Winston Llenas in the fourth inning opened the way for two Washington runs, one on' a wild pitch and the other on Bernie Allen’s hit, and errors by Jim Fregosi and Tom Satriano led to Del Unser’s S sacrifice fly and Ken Waiti’s two-out, two-run homer, |McMullen.s run./coring hit ln 12th- I the fifth. .Torn Tr^h gave New York a, Joe ^ ^ wjth relief 1} ,Ws m in the eighth, got the victory, tiie third inning and White won! 6 6 J _ U after Jake Gibbs singled and CH,CA®° ,b f h bi CL,v,LAJb°r Mickey Mantle walked against AP*rieio » «oiocsrd«nai ct sir*! *1 _.no ° . McCraw lb 6 0 1J8 LJohnson rf 6 1 2 l! Jim Nash, 10-8. |• j?* • } $ J " purchase pqce of $7,500. ? 5 5 1”?^ ,b 51??i McCarthy, 23, is a 6-3 and 220-"lund halfback was the ... o Packers’ fourth round _ draft _____LBrown "s« 502® choice this year. 2 0 0 0 MDowell p 10 0 0 ------------I ]; « v KNEE INJURY oooo Eddy had surgery Friday to 0 °0 P| correct damage to the right in knee. He missed all of last niyffKiii J1 • • 2*77- i season with a knee injury, and 'it, Jotephion. DP—Cleveland 1. e cego 0, Cleveland 9. 2B—Maye, .vhihitinn — -- - Bradford. HR—Ward (12). SB— eXIUDlUOn gar Nelton. ^Snyder._ mm tvfO Weeks ago. The Omaha Mustangs bf the Continental Football League have also announced that the bi | Lions purchased back Pete Tat-rt ail? man for the standard CFL GoIPChamp Will Defend Mrs, Evans Expecting Closer Competition 4 10 0 Azcue c 1 0 0 0 Alvli ■ 2 112 Hart 5 0 1 0 Fullt. 1 5 0 10 Nelson Spanish Ace Wins Li-* U.S. Netters Wied, CLEVELAND (UPI) - A hot Spaniard played it cool as Spain forged a 1-1 tie with the ynited States in the Davis. Cup interzone tennis competition. Manuel Santana, billed as the best of the amateurs when it comes to important international matches, handed hometowner Clark Graebner his first setback in* Davis tup singles play. ♦ ★ ■ ★ “Santana handled the mental pressure Well'and Clark didn't, was the way Donald Dell, the captain of the U.S. team, put it after the match Friday. Santana’s 6-2, 6-3, 6-3 defeat of Graebner left it up to Army Lt. Arthur Ashe to salvage the day. The Virginian downed Judn Gisbert 6-2, 64, 62 in the second set of singles. DOUBLES TODAY Neither Dell nor Spanish captain Jaime Bartoli has revealed their doubles lineup for today. They can wait until one hour before the l:30lp.m. match begins before doing so. . Based on Friday’s play, it would seem certain that Santana will figure in the lineup. Dell said he also expects Spain to file Manuel Orentes in the doubles. ★ . * ★ Ashe is not a doubles man so Dell will have to draw on Graebner, Bob Lutz or Charles Pasarell for his team. Friday’s split insured a down-> - the - wire finish for the matches. Had Spain shutout the U.S., it would have only needed the doubles win today to clinch the best-of-five series., Graebner’s problem seemed to be his inability to keep his service Friday and Santana worked a flashy ground game to perfection and ousted Graebner in less than 1*4 hours. The victory was extra sweet for the. Spanish ace who was defeated in straight set play by Graebner at Wimbledon six weeks ago. Graebner’s loss was the first defeat for the U.S. team in Davis Cup play this year. The tournament. winds up Sunday with Graebner meeting Gisbert and Ashe tackling Santana in singles. Lacker p ------ Wagner ph 1 0 0 0 Romo p Wood p 10 10 Salmon ph WWIIamj ph 1 0 1 0 EFIsher p Wilhelm p __0 0 0 0 Snyder ph 5 2-3 5 3 2 CALIFORNIA The Lions have a week off 0 o from exhibition play, but will 1 S meet the Baltimore Colts at ? o Tiger Stadium, next Friday I night. Detroit is 1-1 in exhibition I play. « City Boys Will Tee Off Monday in Tournament ‘ It was a snap last year, buti wfihlim a.2-4) file test is expected to be a little] roitoT*11 stiffer Monday as Mrs. Evans of Southfield opens defense 4)t her W O m e n’s Washington Metropolitan Golf Association un»r ct “Vo" medal play championship. !m£mui 11^31 'The 54-hole tournament is:Er°tyl*r<{bl slated for Tyrone Hills nearjgAJj,ennovfc Fenton and play'opens with holes Monday. *«<*»;• " ! Mrs. Evans won the title last " n p year by a whopping 14 strokes in Bmnm P i o o 01 . PH ,______ fftfflsiST8*Creek T V- ! TheMSouthfleld shotmaker putgsSff" 2••*“!TTTr5 together rounds of 968667 fora 2.n^SfcL^ - P 263.“Runner-up was Mrs. G. F. w««hiootpn j, c»iiforhlS 9. ss-unwr, — , . , r, _____ „ . .. strwd. sF-unwr, gtpoiX There will be divisions for Lsnsford of DcBTbofn HcishtSi • ip hNj er bb so la.,c ■«r «« _ » f*«« m■ « i vn coitman 4 0 0 o'" i 4 111 -Dovolille cf 4 0 10. 4 0 0 0 Rolchardt If 3 1 1 o! —3-f 0 « IWnehor-ib 3 0 0 0, 4 0 11 Morten rf 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 Sotriino c 3 111 4 10 0 Llonot 3b 4 0 2 0 3 0 0 0 Knoop 2b 2 0 0 0 iooo Ropn ph oooi 0 0 0 0 Morimlfh p O 0 0 0 Rodgers ph 10 0 0 WHaroion p l o 0 0 Bennett p 10 0 0 MFartano ph 1 0 O 5 Cottier 2b 1---------------r 32 X43 Total Mis Mann Has Her Day of the rioting in Detroit, but! Mie’s expected to be on hand for tills year’s tournament. Helps Win Match t An ace on the 175-yard 15th ifole yesterday helped William german win his second flight match in the Tam O’Shanter dub championships. He used a three wood and posted an 80 j for the round. , 3 0 11 Bando 3b 3 0 10 DOrian 2b_______ 3 0 0 0 Hanhbflr If 2 0 0 3 0 0 0 Donaldtn ph ’ * * 3 0 0 0 Kootigh if 3 0 10 Pagllaml a MDanlel p 1 000 O 10 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0000 10 0 0 NO MONEY DOWN NawYark in oao #♦•- DP—Oakland....L___ Oakland 11. 2B—D.Orean. White, Cater, HR—Trash (10). SB—White. S—J.Nash, D.Green, Llndblad, Kosco. SF—Bando. IP H R ER BB SO Downing (W.1-1) . 6 1-3 4 1 1 4 3 McDaniel ......... 2 2-3 3 0 0 T 2 J.Nash (L.10-1) . . . 41-3 5 2 2 4 4 Llndblad ......... 2-3 0 I * * * LaVoie, Craig Smith, John Guillean. 8:45 a.m. —Tom Hillsey, Jim Greer, Roger N o v o t n e y, Richard Kallis. BOYS 12-14 8:52 a.m.—Steve Hoffman, Greg Mihalek, Gris Wright. 9 a.m —Tom Hoffman, Steve Fleming, Ricky Morris. 9:06 a.m.—Andy Alexander, Kevin Murphy, Mark.Martin. T—2:34. A—12,14 0 0 0 2 Mid-Summer Oil r CLOSE-OUT wRIC Z’STARCRAFTP TMIlIRS art PICK-VP CAMPERS that take off wkoro othars loavo off! Tho difference? It begin* with our fooling that Camper* aren't tent* on wheel* . . . they're temporary heme* on wheels. For instance, every Star-craft camper has equal sleeping,"seating, serving and storage capacity. If a Stare raft camper sleeps eight, it has complete accommodations for eight. BoHovs it or net... most campers don't; ’88Modols a. low ..$895 F.O.B. CRUISE OUT, INC. “ IS C. Walton, Pontiae SAT. M Ex-OCC Cager Chicago Bound Former Pontiac Central and Oakland Community Highland Lakes College basketball star Eddie Pruitt will enroll at George Williams College in Chicago this fall. George Williams, which specializes in recreation leadership training and sociology, plays a full senior college basketball schedule. ST. LOUIS (AP) - On her first tee shot Carol Mann hooked the ball into a clump of trees. The ball kicked right out into thecenter of the fairway. “I knew right then it was going*to be my day,” the 6foot 3 inch Buffalo, N.Y. native laughed. It was. The blonde-haired amazon fired a par 69 on the Norwood Hills Country Club course Friday for a one-stroke lead in the $16,000 Holiday Inn Invitational Ladies Professional Golf Tournament. V* * ★ And even when Sandra Hay-nie had a chance for a tie on the 18th hole, Carol still had the charm of the day working. Miss Haynie’s 10-foot putt fell six inches short of the hole. .That i Haynie tied with three others at 70. The others tied at 70 at the end of the first round were Judy Kimball, Peggy Wilson and Marilyn Smith. Randy Wardlow - North American Speed King local Skaters Win Four National Titles Special to The Press LINCOLN, Neb. — Pontiac Rolladium skaters have chalked up four first places and Will be seeking, three more here today in the North American Roller - Sko-tiJLg-Championships. . Kurt Anselmi captured the junior boy’s figures and Robyn White pulled a surprise in the novice ladies’ singles. Lex Kane won the juvenile boy’s singles and Randy Wardlow sped off with the junior boy’s speed title. ROBYN Kane added another second place to the local club’s total in the juvenile B boy’s speed. Mary Heath was third in the girl’s division and her brother, Robert, was third in the juvenile boy’s C division. ★ ★ * Kane and Kim Anselmi placed fifth in the junior pairs. The three events to be skated today are the juvenile boy’s figures in which Kane is entered; the novice ladies’ figures with Sue Gravelin competing; and the senior men’s figures with Ron Gustafson the Rolladium entry. Kurt Anselmi **- His Figures Were Best The meet, Which concludes today, has been running since Monday. Gerry Gohs of Rolladium lost his five-mile speed title when! he placed second. He also was! runner-up in the senior men’s! speed. Rookie Holds Golf Classic Lead HARRISON, N.Y. (AP) —| Sometimes a bad shot will cost|for the last two rounds today ob Murphy, a rookio «i the|you a bogey. But you should)and Sunday. Seventy-nine made tour and yet to win a pro tour- never, never have a double bo-|^‘ nament, held a two-stroke lead gey,” said the brash Floridian going into today’s third round of who led the first day with a 64. the $250,000 Westchester Golf Classic—but he wasn’t happy. “I’m a little disappointed,” he said Friday after posting a three-under-par 69 for 133. His round included a double bogey six: on his 17th hole and that’s the one that had him. bothered. ★ ★ ★ I had *a good round going, and then I take a double bogey,” he said. “It shouldn’t happen. “We play for par and let the birdies fail where they may. TWO AHEAD As it was, his 11-under-par total. had him two strokes ahead of a menacing field of five locked at 135^-PGA champ Julius Boros, 65; Dale Douglass who says a new-found putting secret helped him to a 65: defending champion Jack Nick-laus, 68; long-hitting Daft Sikes, 68; and Reeves MCBee, who had two eagles en route to a 66. Behind them at 136 are Orville Moody, 67; Australian Bruce Crpmpton, 68; Don Bies, 66; veteran Art WaU, 70; .and' former PGA champ Bobby Nichols, 68. The tight little Westchester Country Club course, 6,648 yards long with a par 72, took such a terrible beating from the elite field seeking the $50,000 first prize,^that it took a score of 144r-«ven par—to make the cut Jacky Cupit, who had a 63 with nine birdies and a bogey, headed a quartet at 137. Cupit, Douglass, Boros, Moody and Crampton shot their rounds in the morning. Scores generally were a little higher in the afternoon. The Renault 16 Sedan-Wagon, The Renault 16 Sedan-Wagon is a sedan that can change into a station wagon, and back again to a aedan whenever you want. It hat front wheel drive. 4-speed synchromesh transmission. 4-wheel independent suspension. 5 main-bearing engine. 5 doors (the 5th door is in the beck). Wet cylinder sleeves. Rack and pinion steering. A sealed liquid cooling system. Disc brakes up front. Self limiting dram brakes in back. Up to 42 cubic feet of hauling capacity (when it’s a station wagon). Fully reclining seats. It can get 28 miles to the gallon. And costs only SOOOO. R&M MOTORS FE 4-4738, 177 \W. WALTON 3 Blocks West of Baldwin Bob Murphy ........ Julius Boros Dale Douglass ..... Jack Nlcklaus ... Dan Slkas ......... Rives McBeo ... Orville Moody .... Bruce Crampton .. Don Bies Art Wall Bobby Nichols ..... Jacky Cupit . . George Archer ..... Tony Jacklin . . Dudley Wysong . 1 Gay Brewer ,....... Frank Beard ....... Charles Siftord .... Fred Marti ..... Tarty DU! .......... Gardner Dickinson . Bob Charles ....... R. H. Sikes _______ 70- 45—135 47-48—13" . 45-70-1-. 49-44—135 69-47—134 . 68-40—134 . 70-66—134 . 44-70-134 . 48-48—134 74-43-137 . 49-48—137 . 71-46—137 . 48-49—137 8266-138 71- 67-138 . 69-49—138 • -, 70-48—138 - 70-48—138 . 48-70—138 . 48-71-1139 .. 71-48-139 Split Appears Final as PGA Takes Control PALM BEACH GARDENS, Fla. (AP) — The split between the Professional Golfers ciation and the touring pros apparently is final. The Executive Committee of the PGA, at a special meeting Friday, abolished the PGA Tournament Committee and announced it had assumed complete control of the tour “for all time.” Gardner Dickinson, Jack Nicklaus, Frank Beard and Doug Ford were player members of the tournament committee. They are among the rebel players who have set up a rival organisation to conduct a tour of their own, starting next year. *-• ★ ★ There whs no immediate comment from Dickinson or Nicklaus at Harrison, N.Y., where they are competing in the $250,000 Westchester Golf Clas-There was none, ..either, from Sam Gates, attorney for be rival organization tentatively called the International professional Gotfer,, Murphy got his double bogey on the 436 yard, par 4 eighth— his 17th. He hit his tee shot into nwhat looked like an old divot and was short with my second shot.” He was on in three, about eight feet away, and three-putted. But he rallied with a birdie on the final hole, reaching the par 5 in two and two-putting. Kan Still ......... Butch Baird ....... Bob McCal lister ... John Lively : t: Tommy Jacobs Was Etllr ......... Ron Howall ........ Al Balding Robert da vlcenzo Billy Caspar ...... Bob Lunn Jim Wiachers ...... Dick Crawford ..... Howie Johnson . Tom Welskopf Dale Seavoy Bowls 2668 in 12 Games From Our News Wires WAUKEGAN, 111. — Birmingham’s Dale Seavoy averaged 222 for 12 games Friday and is making a strong bid to reach the finals of the $36,000 Waukegan Open Tnnmaiywnt on the Professional Bowler*’ Association summer tour. Seavoy’s 2668 total for 12 games leaves him in second place at the midpoint of the 24-game qualifying, 41 pins behind Bill Hardwick of Louisville, Ky. Hardwick, who has won only one tournament this year despite being in the finals 11 times, totaled 2,709 for his: 12 games, an average of 225 "per game. . GAINED LEAD Hardwick, who'was 18th after six games with 1,272, rolled 1,437 Friday night to take over the lead. It was the highest six-game series of the tournament which runs through Sunday, He had games of 218, 247, 265, 214, 245, and 248, to move ahead the field" of 144 bowlere. They’ll roll six more games Saturday before the field is cut the top 72 -for Saturday night’s semifinals. Billy Hardwick. Louisvllte 1709 Date Seavoy. Detroit 2448 Bob Strampe, Detroit 2447 Nick Raphael, Syracuse, N.Y. 240* ' Bud Horn. Los Angelas 2594 . . . Nelson Burlon Jr.. St. Louis 2304 ’ Norm Maytrs, Los Angolas 2574 Therman Davis, Chicago '2557 Pick Mayer . «(tti,:ron;. Arnold Palmar . Bert Yancey Dava Hill Bobby Mltchtll . .. 70-71—141 . 70-71-141 ... 70-71—141 . 71-70-141 .. 70-71—141 ..) 74-67-141 ■ 7349—142 ... 70.72—142 ... 49-73-142 .. 72-70-142 ... 70-72—142 ... 71-71—142 71-71-142 ... 72-70-142 . . 69-72-14} 71-71-142 StonycroftiC Has Golf Championships The men’s club championship at Stpnycroft Golf Club is being completed this weekend with 18 f»ier~today andTfinotherTf Sunday. Jerry Bums with a 75 holds a one-stroke lead oyer Tim Roach. In the women’s club championship completed yesterday, Miss Jean Perkins successfully defended her title in 54 holes, with rounds1 of 81-8445—250. Maggie McGinnis was runner-with 268. June Evans took low net honors with 225. Nina Zepp won the first flight, Mid Greene the second flight and Wilma Brenton the third flight. Johnny Brook*. 153(4. New Orteans; it. , NEW YORK, National Marltlma Union 1 — JWB Nieves. 135, New York, Mad Gaba Mamarca, 134V4, New Allle Clark, R__________________ Jim Godman, Hayward, Calif. 3 A Bassett, Brooklyn, N.Y. 251 Bill Tuckar, Louisville Rain Postpones Class A Opener Rain wiped out last night’s scheduled opener between The R. T, Clippers of Pontiac and Bishop Construction of Flint in the Class A District Baseball Tournament at Flint. . Game No. 1 now Is slated, for 8 p.m. today at the new lighted diamond in Lincoln Park, Hammerberg at Atherton (near Southwestern High School) «t Flint: j* The seeffnd game will be. 7:30 p.m. tomorrow at Pontiac's Jaycee Park, and the third OF necessary) will be 8 day at Flint, again. i*' ★ * ' Manager Paul Johnson of the Clippers — The Pontiac phtfoff champions — has added three regulars from the M. G. Collision squad that won the regular season city laurels and just missed making the state cham- pionship round last summer. Shortstop Willie Holloman,) catcher Ron-Kind and pitcher Jack McClpud have boosted the: Clippers’ roster up to 18 players. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 C—8 ilM XU Mi tU 09 435 .341 4)M yn 974 64 vi Jos 4012 494 111* 139 47? 22) «^o,vioiaiw 2* (399 wr mare at bait) ---At R H HR RBI M 407 SO 125 17 38 JV “ M 99 1 29 .302 KMPrrtaan Bin in a m 31 in .294 BaNrd Bal 251 39 75 11 31 .291 AfaUem Ban 391 55 113 4 35 .239 354 42 101 4 33 .285 340.32 96 3 34 .202 477 59 134 2 25. J" 454 45 129 7 51 J 275 II 77 4 32 .! Kalina Dal W.Horton DM __________________ Yestrzemikl Bsrt 390 54 104 1 FJMoo Atl S»K?Vh Chariot NY MWan Atl R.Jackson Oak T.HOrtOn Clo 218 34 59 3 19 .271 448 47124 4 31 .249 372 40 91 7 44 .263 422 58 111 9 42 .243 399 42 104 22 57 .241 454 45 US 4 34 .240 455 52 US 4 .49 559 430 49 111 20 73 Si . 389 42100 .15 AIlJR 343 23 N 4 37 557 449 42 115 5 . 34 457 57-117—9—30--__ 297 51 76 10 35 .254 345 41 88 11 45 .255 441 77 112 14 45 .254 210 33 S3 4 19JS 282 41 71 11 40 .252 S 53 101 19 44 .251 398 40 100 16 57 251 411 42 03 9 .45 .251 376 35 93 7 25 247 215 13 53 5 24 .247 321 45 79 14 38 .240 305 28 75 11 ■ " Mf Gabrlalson LA D.Jonat Ban 233 21 54 3 21 J Alomar CM 217 25 52 0 7 .1 Northrop Dot 430 53 103 15 47 X~ Cash Del 271 33 44 18 40 .234 Papltone NY 247 28 43 13 44 .234 Unter Was 444 49 105 0 24 .235 ♦■Allan Wat.______260 23 61___4 JL2S| *** U 75 1 5 43 tot 402 37 93 ’ 6 30 .231 329 28 76 6 24 .231 338 28 78 11 41 .231 205 22 47 3 -22 .229 324 35 74 . 2 25 .227 350 31 79 10 4l .224 241 19 54 2 10 .224 412 38 92 2 20 .223 307 24 40 4 29 .221 299 16 49 2 B 292 29 44 12 39 ---------- 210 21 45 6 24 .214 294 24 42 9 24 .211 219 22 44 2 16 .210 339. 39 71 4 28 .209 358 39 75 10 29 .209 233 26 48 7 22 .204 215 19 44 2 15 .205 240 34 S3 13 34 2t' 354 20 71 2 13 -2€ 373 42 74 10 43 J9 394 35 70 11 29 .11 318 32 42 8 29 .19. 239 13 44 1 12 .192 235 14 43 4 19 .183 287 20 52 2 20 .101 Wynn Htr T.Aaron t Casanova Wat Scon Ban I a_ C18 or "Tiont cla McDowalt da McLain DM McNally Bal Wood Chi John Chi j.Nath Oak _____n NY MurphyCal Dobson Oak 216 128 55 215 18 8 1.54 197 130 00 222 12 10 1.69 255175 44 201 25 3 1.07 191 117 3914215 9 1.93 122 95 27 52 0 I 1.** 144124 47100 9 5 2.1 172130 39119 10 8 2-181 149 4411011 8 2.13 91 42 28 51 4 6 2.17 184134 791401311 2.20 124 96 42 84 9 4 225 185134 5011815 8 2.38 215155 53 mil.ll 2.47 105102 47 72 6 4 142125 41 74 It 6 2.53 167 127 40 * " 174142 42 •rranoskl Mjn 73 71 26 56 7 5 2.58 ..AH-----L i3}iio 38 97 9 7 243 209183 51 1151510 2.44 140107 43 82 8 9 2.49 179 138 49 91 12 12 2.76 102 90 20 40 8 6 2J1 159134 57 70 811 2 82 114 118 32 40 6 7 2.84 193 134 01 137 12 9 2.00 Ellsworth Ban IS* 134 49 104 10 9 J.19 144 152 26 91 11 6 3.21 01 69 34 57 ' * M F.Paterson NY Coleman Wat Priddy Chi .161 142 54 86 10 0 3.35 167 143 39 105 9 13 3.39 6 34 53 3 8 3.41 R.CIark Cal Culp Ban Hargan Cla Waslewakl Bar Hunter Oak Carlos CM Sparma Det —._ll 85 4N .1 3970 407 933 K 304 J 3942 388 913 73 364 3 4039 383 «l 49 340 .2— 4139 354 Ml 61 317 .225 — fi 8N 47 285 .223 INDIVIDUAL BATTINO By The Associated Press Milt Pappas, whose hobby Is bowllhg, finally knockedX the pins out from' under the St. Louis Cardinals, but it took relief By Claude Raymond kparfe him from ninth-inning grief. Pappas, now in his third Na- 538*,°! m J1 130 0 20 .332 450 62 144 1 42 .320 494 55 155 '9 40 .314 236 27 73 2 42 409 424 31 128 ] 41 22 277 35 82 11 39 296 413 34 122 0 22 .295 450 43 132 5 52 .293 349 40 108 30 77 .293 414 55 121 16 42 .292 360 23 105 3 32 .292 ■IMPH 490 44 IN | 51 .*1 Shannon StL 420 47 122 15 48 .285 83 45 135 JO 48 .280 498 49138 2^26 J77 421 45 116 10 61 .276 tional League season had an 0-5 record against the Cardinals before finally turning the tables on them Friday night in Atlanta’s 5-1 victory. 1-41 120.13 48 .271 . 40 116 13 43 2*7 ) 64 122 21 63 .245 275 23 72 2 15 .242 420 42 109 1 43 .240 303 20 77 0 24 .254 335 47 85 20 59 .254 431 44 109 17 449 50 113 12 53 252 399 57 100 17 50 251 211 16 54 1 21 .248 208 24 51 5 13 243 342 s* 33 10 4T AM 395 33 93 3 21 21 344 43 N 12 34 235 Popovich LA- 201 27 44 2813 .235 | - 307 12 '72* 1 17 215 274 20 44 4 31 .234 200 17 44 0 14 .230 332 22 76 1 29 229 325 33 74 4 24 22* 273 19 42 4 17 — 388 33 00 1 81 _. 203 22 44 7 2* .M* 257 17 5 6 30 .222 355 IS 77 4 34 .216 304 35 83 2 2* 216 301 29 45 0 8 214 250 23 53 1 12 .212 256 27 54 1 If .Ml 207 24 43 0 12 201 271 22 54 4 23 207 214 33 44 6 19 2T ivenport l Davit StL Martinez Atl ■ Varieties LA Lanier SF Age# NY Wait NY Ryan Phi 345 23 45 0 10..10* 275 22 51 4 12 .105 243 13 42 1 12 .173 200 5 31 0 4 .155 Kaotman NY ______Othy Cln Cuellar Htn Fryman Phi Briles StL Upshaw Atl Moose Pgh Perry SF IP HBB SOW LIRA 225145 4317517 5 1.04 *4 49 22 1710 2 1.54 104 77 29 77 4 4 1.69 228 105 51 150 14 10 1.05 197 150 49 137 16 7 1.07 104 02 17 5210 2 1.99 211 172 30 140 10 9 Ml 259.213 34 173 21 5 105144 73111 912 101 *3 45 45 * 2 124105 34 96 4 B . 100144 5512711 11 193 1M 40 109 16 7 90 71 14 49 7 5 194161 53 100 9 12 Washburn StL 144134.31 1 Carroll Cln ■|U' “ L.Jackson Phi Sadocki SF 84 81 20 39 5 5 187 102 40 94 10 14 Giustl Htn Carlton StL Reed Atl Dlerker t McGlothln Cal 140135 44 94 1 10 3.43 ■ —, CM 125116 44 tt 310 3.51 —1 91 73 52 55 111 3.53 137113 43119 9 4 3.611--------.... 142 122 70 73 7 12 3.73 Jostor StL 94 99 34 40 4 7 3.02 C.Osteen LA 14X150 54 124 9 10 3.04 D.WIIton Htn 95 92 20 42 4 11 3.97 McBean Pgh 154149 70 97 110 3.981K.Johnson Atl CordwMI WY 138 111 41 45 6 10 .... 124 04 47130 4 9 Arrlgo Cln 144 121 50 104 I 7 ■——*—*■— 178 1*4 50 123 9 12 3.03 198 174 53 144 7 12 3.05 185 15* 50 12911 8 3.04 154 141 34 84 10 7 ' 115161 7212431 10 121 116 30 57 8 8 190195 42 80 117 151 133 47 115 9 12 MW 177 100 57 95 9 11 3.291 Gaihs First Win Over St. Louis Pappas Pins Loss on League Leading Cards The big right-hander held the Cards to two hits going into the ninth when he ran into trouble. Then with two on and two out, Raymond came- on to get Johnny Edwards and nail down Pappas’ ninth victory San Francisco' topped Philadelphia 7-5, Pittsburgh trounced Los Angeles J5-5, Cincinnati clubbed the Chicago Cubs 11-7 iston* outlasted the New) single. Celts Sold to Brewery in Jersey BOSTON (AP) - The Boston Celtics, National Basketball Association champions in nine of the last 10 seasons, have been sold to P. BaUantine & Sons Brewery of Newark, N.J. for a reported $3.5 million. Officials' of the new owners, who emphasized that they planned to keep the team in I, would say only that the purchase price was “ii offtf* million.”, * ★ ★ They also said Red Auerbach will remain as executive vice president and general manager, and that player-coach Bill Rus-sell, yet to sign his contract, is* being counted upon to operate in the same capacity. The transaction was consu-mated Friday with National Equities Inc., holding company which owned the Celtics. NEEDS APPROVAL Marvin Kratter, chairman of the board of National -and the outgoing president of the Celtics, said' the sale still had to be approved by the NBA Board of Governors and is on >nda for the board’s meeting Aug. 22. It is the second sale in three years for the Celtics, acquired by Kratter's organization in 1965. ★ ★ * Kratter said National Equities Inc., was in the process of being acquired by Levin-Townsend Computer Co., which wanted the Celtics disposed of. He said he started looking around for a potential buyer, and at the time Waldron became interest ed on behalf of BaUantine. Returning as president in the >w setup wiU be Jack Waldron, who held the post previously and is now a senior vice president of BaUantine. Dick Griebel, president of j BaUantine, will serve as chairman of the board of the Celtics. York Mets 3-1 in 12 innings in other National League action. kappas, Who pitched nine years in the Ailierican League with Baltimore. gpt all the offensive helpjhe needed when Joe Torre slammed a three-run ho-fner in the fifths , RUN IN FOURTH St. Louis got its run in the fourth when Curt Flood reached base on an error, stole second and scored on Orlando Cepeda’i Horse Racing San FrancisCo came up with three runs injthe ninth for its victory over Philadelphia. The first run scored,-on ♦single, an error and a forceout. The other two came home on Ron Hunt’s double. Cookie Rojas’ fourth hit of the game drove in two runs in the sixth and gave the Phillies a 5-4 lead. * * * A three-rUn fifth inning gave Los Angeles a 7-3 lead over Pittsburgh and set up Don Drys-dale’s 14th victory. A walk, four singles—one by Drysdale—and an error produced the three! runs. | Netienel Lenque Cincinnati ....... 400 202 201—11 IS 0 Chicago ....... 000 302 020-7 7 V Maloney, Carroll (7) end Corrales, Bench (7); Handi, Reynolds (5), Regan (7). Lamab* (9) and F— DRC Entries ‘ MONDAY'S ENTRIES Be A Ham Wesspat - Gogebic Q King Jami Do It Shadow Suave Host Royal Everett KnoCkemitIH ■MR _. .. ...pp entry ♦tt)—*2700 Claiming; 6 Furlongs: Petition Lady Pay'n'Taklt Idle Love Or Mi Ramette Sherbeauty Fly KIM Fly Shimmy Str-Hope Ye G Hazel Park Entries SATURDAY'S ENTRIES Lynden Alex Mary Carol Mlschlevoue Queen Good Pal Prln . I..I Knox Abbedale Gary's Jo Anna Song of Venice Blarney Russet Creed Whanga Earl Act's Baby 4th—SON Cond. Pace; 1 Mile: Boo ' Isaac Darby Royal I. Cardenas (4). Chicago, Hundley (6), Banks J22). Atlanta ............. 001 001 000-5 15 1 St. Louis ........ . 000 100 000—1 4 1 Pappas, Raymond (9) and Torre; Carlton, Granger (6), Nelson (7) and Edwards. W—Pappas. 9-9. L—Carlton, 112. HR—Atlanta, Torre (10), SaftWErancisco ....... 100 012 003—7 0 1 PfflNBelphla Oil 102 000—5 9 3 Sadeckl, Herbel (2), McCormick (5), Llnzy (6), Gibbon (7), Monbouquette (9) and -Dietz, Barton (9); Johnson, Wagner (I) and Ryan. W—Gibbon, 1-2. I______Wag- ner, 1-2. HR—San Francisco, Dietz (6). Los Angeles -....... 220 030 010—8 12 O' Pittsburgh ........ 300 000 001—4 10 1 Drysdale, Brewer (8). Billingham (9) Drysdale, who. has lost 10, was relieved, by Jim Brewer in the eighth, and Brewer gave way to John Billingham in the ninth with a^njn in, two on and none out. Billingham put down the threat. BIG WEAPON The two-run homer turned out to be Cincinnati’s big weapon against Chicago. Pitcher Jim Maloney, Mack Jones, Fred Whitfield and Leo Cardenas each hit a two-run shot. The Cubs got two-run homers from Randy Hundley and Ernie Banks. Bob Aspromonte’s two-out, two-run double in the 12th gave Houston its victory in a game twice delayed by rain, the second time, between the top and bottom of the lifh, Tor 1 hour, 3 minutes. Houston had tied the score _ with Jim Wynn's two-out homer ‘ in the ninth. J. C. Martin’s first homer of the season in the seventh inning gave the Mets a 1-0 lead. BULTACO MOTORCYCLES Sales and Service M. G. SALES Mist Frisco Hal —idsome Hal _______________ Doyle's Dandy 1 Little-Tee sth—$1100 Cond. Paco; 1 Mile: Wally's Angal Iroquois Chi, Harbor Island Roberton Bee's Little Men Royal Dick English Prslrls Rpmai),.C. „ ge; 4 Furlongs: a-Ramblin Road Hudson's Laddlo | Brooke's Rebel W—Drys-|R—puls- 1—53000 Cond. Trot; 1 ) a-M. H. Van Borg Stable Jack's Aloha Cautery **~*~ *o!5 llag*s“ Surf's city™" cao Ruler a-Scltturo-Astiar-Parls* entry h—417M Claiming; 1 1/14 Miltti Chickasaw La Chat Windy Mint Show Talk . Right Dot . Weerello First Picking Moot Chips Best Irish 9th—S3500 Claiming; I 1/16 Mll4i> Esscay Nepesslng Me Gemini Aurata Baa Mewisdom Miss Breathless Waltformeboye Bayorka Count Graphic William Siavent O. Faeilna DRC Results FRIDAY'S RESULTS lit—125*0 Claiming j * Furlongs: Bonnie Baby 14.00 6.40 4 Spanish Countess 5.00 3 Almost April 4 2nd—$2900 Claiming; I 1/14 Miles; Count Dormal 5.80 3.80 3 Tulwar* 4.00 3 Sir Maple 4 Dally Doubled (5-S) Paid $48.80 3rd—$2700 Mdn. Claiming; 8 Furlonm: Frank Lynch Mr. Daddy Thirty Day Note 4th—$1000 Mdr * LIT Slicker La Eva /.4v Gaukler Point H| Claiming; 1 1/W Milas: Houston ........ 000 000 001 002-2 7 0 New York ....... 000 000 100 000-1 4 0 12 innings Dlerker, Shea (8), Coombs (ID. Dukes (ID, and Bateman; Seaver, Koonce (11), Taylor (12) and Martin, Grote (12). W-Dukes, 1-2. L—Taylor/ 1-3. HRs—New York, Martin (1). Houston, Wynn (17), l American Dog Registry will ploc* a ’100.00 LIFE INSURANCE POUCY ON YOUR DOG _. ... Pat guidance manuals. Register your pel for "Red" PLUS Medallion national tracing service in case it is stolen ... plus periodic new* lettetr. ALL FOR ONLY $6.75 PER YEAR (Lest than ie per day) for detaile, write local director ROBERT JUBELT ----r Express Z. Sudan's Comet Ted J. Direct *th-4400t Open Pace; 1 Mile: General Knox Hope Time Red Wave Blaze Pick Boy Dlllar Philip Brian 9th—*30*0 Cond. Paca; i Mila: Imperial Counsel Loverglrlnik Royalallen Sunglow Lenawee Creed Brady Adtos Mareflen Hanover Candy Yates Cunny's Philip Beginner's Luck Con Men Hazel Park Results FRIDAY'S RESULTS 1st—81000 Claiming Fact; i Mila: Roger L. is.OO 8.20 5. 6.20 3.40 3.40 _ _ ___________nlng Hdp. Pace/ 1 Mila: Ridge Valley Duke 9,60 5.00 3.8 Knight Direct ' 4.20 2.8 Rich Dan 5.2 Daily Doubla: (8-4) Paid $128.20 3rd—$1100 Cond. Trot; 1 Mild: Carol Hoot 6.40 3.60- 2.S Prince Elby 3.60, 2.8 Lady Missile 3.2 4th—$1000 Cond. Face; 1 Mile: 3.60 3.20; Laird Michigan Red 101 Dearborn's Hal Racem Opt. Twin^C Coursehewiii 7th—$3700 Alla Happy Irish 7.00 4.60 3.201 6.00 5.201E 6.4C 4) Paid $13.4$ Mila 78 Yards: 5.20 3.20 2.60 j 3.80 2.80 3.001 6 Fur *.2o a.w .00 5.20 Skip Spehcar 10.20 4.20 2.80 4.20 3.00 2.60 IA10R LEAGUE Minnesota 5, B__...---- Washington 4, California > Detroit (Dobson 3*5) ot Boston (Culp 9-' Baltimore (McNally 15-1) at Mlrmasota (Roland 3-1) New York (Peterson 44) at Oakland •Huntor 9-10), twilight .. Chicago (Rlbant 7-2 or Lazar 0-1) at ——- ""Illlams 9-7), night (Pnscunl 11-41 at California Atlanta 5. St. Louie San Francisco 7, Philadelphia I Lot Angeles 9, Pittsburgh 4 Houston 3. Now York 1, 13 Innings Today's (tames Houston (Wilson 9-13) tt Now York (McAndrowt 02) • Cincinnati (CuIVtr 9-12) ot Chicago tanklM 13-lt) San Francisco (Marlchal 312) at Phllo-slphlt (Wlse i-9) Los Angeles (KOklch 32) ot Pittsburgh (Moose 54), night Atlanta (Jarvis 112) I tor M), night Snooty's Ot Atlanta at St. Louis Son Francisco ' it St. Louis (Jas- Detrolt at Eaolon -Chicago at Cleveland, 3 Nagy, New Cougars Coach, loses Debut ! DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Cougars had a new coach Friday night, but the Cougars lost a North American Soccer League game to the Cleveland Stokers 4-1. The Gdugars 'opened scoring in the game when Johnny Kerr netted a rebound with 7:40 gone j In the first half. But Cleveland I came back later .when John Mueller tied it up and Amancio Cid scored the winning goal. ! Stokers Sergio Kfesic and Roy Turner scored insurance goals in the second half, both on assists from Dietrich Albrfecht. The Cougar’s new coach, An-der Nagy, formerly of the Washington Whips, had taken over the team only at noon. Friday after the resignation of Lei! Julian was announced. ing tick* . --j ___Ciaimin Tudor Monarch Proxy Fight Oh Yes Perfect!: «■ . _ ____ Attendance 10p4l6; total handle $848,187 Cashing Beauty Way To Go 8tl»—$5000 Preferred Trot; 1 Mila: Solon Pick v 10.60 3.20 2.80 Muck Finn ........ El Darno 9th—11600 Claiming Hdp. Royal Ellis TASTY-TWIN BURGER ROAST BEEF SANDWICH 88c The World of Specialisation Calls... and MR, BIG the SPECIALIST in Quick Self-Service Reetauronts Answers NOW SEKVM6 THE COMMUNITY ^ -GRAND OPENING FESTIVITIES AUGUST 2&25 To Be Celebrated in th« New Waterford Ploxe ' Comer of Highland; (M-591 and Crescent Lake Read* it CONTACT JOHN. MAftiY » 2^060 Summer’s End . Year’s Best Boat Buys! 1. New, 19 Ft. Popcraft by Thunderbird. A Fiberglass 1-0 with 155 OMC motor. Complete with convertible top, side, and aft curtains, boot and bow rail. Reg. $4495.00 Special now 83850.00 YOU SAVE $645.00 2. 17 Ft. Sea Ray Demo. 1-0 with .150 OMC motor, includes convertible top. Reg. $4,390.00 Special now $3,695.00 YOU SAVE $695.00 3. New, 19 Ft. Carver boat with 100 H.P. John- son motor, convertible top, boot, side and, aft curtains./ " Reg. $3,186.00 Special now $2,695.00 YOU SAVE $491.00 Also many excellent used rigs to choose from.' All sixes and prices. All Summer’s End Bargains. STOP IN TODAY AND LOOK THEM OVER pmrs marine 1370 Opdyke R*L, at University Drive, Pontiac <1-75 at Oakland University Exit) 334-0924 MIRACLE MILE STORE 8HLY Square Lake at Ttlsgraph Rd. OPEN SUNDAYS 11 to 5 P.M. 7 H.P. GARDEN TRACTOR • With 32" Twin Bladas • 16" Rear Hi-Flotation Wheals • 13" Front HirFlotation Wheels • 8 Speeds, 6 Forward—2 Reverse • Padded Seat — Trailer Hitch • Height To Hood 30" • Width 3216"-Length 58" • Controls Mounted on Dashboard • 1. Gallon Gat Tank • Weight: 393 lbs. Grots SNOW BLOWER/-JIGS95 SNOW BLADES *49” LAWN SWEEPER *29 95 LAWN DUMP CARTS s2995 LAWN MOWIR SALE 22" ClftjrJS HePe Briggs & J Stratton “ 7" Wheels TWf 9 Biel 36 88 19" Cut, 3 H.P. Brigg.6 J Stratton w 7" Wheels 3388 M" Cut, 3'/3 H.P. S23& $0088 7“ Wheels IPV 22" Cuts 3^2 H.P. Briggs & s5777 Stratton With Tunnel Deck. CHILDRENS1 - YOUTHS1 - LADIES1 CANVASFOOIWEAR Regular •1“ to *1” 4 Days - Rog .68c Fine-fitting Hose Mode of Aglloa^NylM 48t Trim stretch nylons that never bag or sag, Mist-tone, Sun-tone, Cinnamon. Petite, average, tali. • Kt$. u.z r*. ot. PANTY o-« THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17. 1968 Visiting Diplomat and Wife Relate Congo Experiences "You mast accept something to drink when visiting in the Congo or you will be considered rude,” explained Mr. and Mrs.' John Vindent, while , on leave visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Vincent recalled flow she once had to accept — and drink quickly — a glass of ginlike liquid at an early morning ceremony. The informal visiting and the Mrs. Lloyd O’Rourke of 2300 offering of refreshments are Pontiac, Sylvan Lake. I part of the African way of life, Vincent is second secretary at according to the Vincents, who the American Embassy in!describe the Africans Kinshasa, the modem capital ‘’probably the most enjoyable S people in the world." city of the Republic of Congo. HOLLY It TONITE - 7s30 ESCAPES! WORK AT FRIENDSHIP “They take friendship very seriously, “said the couple, who have been there 13 months. Vincent, who has been in .the foreign service for three years, by outsiders — for the past several years. “We hope that we’re finally out of the crisis-to-crisis period and that the Congo is now in a stage of developing stable political institutions. k kr * “It is an extremely wealthy country whose economic development has been greatly retarded because of the crises," said Vincent. Entertaining and being entertained are a significant portion of a diplomat’s work. The Vincents visit or hold informal gatherings most flights. works in the poHtical section of [ CONTACTS IMPORTANT A UNIVERSAL RELEASE •»TECHNICOLOR*- LAKE THEATER WALLED LAKE 624-3900 DHL A Sun. 3:30 P.M. Continuous Walt Disney’s “THE ONE AND ONLY ORIGINAL FAMILY BAND” Walter Brannon Cuddy Ebson the embassy. His-job is to help .assess, as accurately as possible, the internal policy of the Congo and how it will affect U.S. policy. He attempts to sense general trends by talking to the youth groups, businessmen, local governors and party leaders. The role of the U.S.‘ government, to date, has been to maintain the “integrity of the state,” according to Vincent. TORN BY UPRISINGS__________ The area has 1 been torn by uprisings — largely organized 12 NORTH SAQINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC MATINEES DAILY OPEN 11:45 A.M. Show Starts 12:00 Noon Continuous — 334-4430 AIR CONDITIONED YOU MUST BE 18 - PROOF IS.REQUIRED NOW - 2 BIG ADULT HITS TO TURN A TRICK The Vincents explained that initial contacts , with other diplomats and area people arc made during the evehings and appointments are often made for the next day. You can gather a lot of information while talking at parties, Vincent pointed out. Most of the Vincent’s entertaining is informal although they may hold about two sit-I )wn formal dinners a year. i k k k “The Africans consider a good housewife as one who Is always prepared,” said Mrs. Vincent. “I usually cook enough food for six or seven people although there are only four of us,” she added, explaining that thej African custom was to drop by I for casual often unannounced visits. '------ DRIVE-IN THEATER UNten IbitOyiiy M. COMMERCE msT Ml smwnw.DU» v CHILDREN UNPER 12 FREE An adult look at a police detective. FRANK SINATRA EC1 DIPLOMATS TO AFRICA - Mr. and Mrs. John Vincent and their .children, Rachel, 2, and Matthew, 1, gather around a wooden fertility figure from an African tribe. ..Vincent, who is second secretary at the American Embassy in the Republic of the Congo, and his family are visiting his wife’s Pontiac Pmi Phots parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd O’Rourke of 2390 Pontiac, Sylvan Lake. The clothes are western styles made from native doth. The fertility figure, with a python skin necklace and a monkey-fur belt, is greased with palm oil during tribal ceremonies. Vying With Enemies Mental Health Confab Told HURON NOW SHOWING! PRIQES This Engageinant Only • , |, Wad.. Sot. Mothwo. I M Adults SKrtSSiv.Ys s MEET THE MODTHaTSet crime 9 back too years! KAN DYKE- ROBiNSONPROIfiNE IMMOOUK. M0N.-TUES.-THURS.-FRI. at TtOO A 9:10 WED.-SAT.-SUN. 1:00-3:10-5:00 1:05 A |:l 2 Juror's Probe of State Roads Starts Monday LANSING (AP) - Ingham County Circuit Judge Marvin J. Salmon, named as the one-man grand juror to conduct a second probe of the State Highway Department, announced yesterday he will start taking testimony Monday. Salmon reported his staff Is now 90 per cent complete with the addition of 18 more persons. ★ ★ ★ New staff members include four additional assistant.prosecutors, four auditors and two Police investigators plus various clerical help. Leo Farhat, special prosecutor for the one-man grand jury and former Ingham County prosecutor, «*aid auditors al; ready have started auditing “certain contracts to review alleged irregularities and to determine if there is any basis for criminal prosecution.” REVIEWING NOTES The staff, Farhat said, also has been reviewing some 1,000 of notes of previous testimony, taken during the probe by Atty; Gen. Frank Kelley. Farhat said he hoped the investigation would be completed within six months. * ■ *- ★ Salmon was asked if the $150,-00 grant from the state ’would last that long. He expressed doubts, but Farhat declared: “Not one dime is being wasted. We hope we will have some money left ovbr.” SPECIAL AIDE ► Robert Derengoski, state solicitor general, fas named a special aide to the grand jury. Stuart Freeman and James Ramsey of the attorney general’s staff were appointed special prosecutors and James Theophelis, formerly of the Ingham C o u n t y prosecutor’s staff, also was named a special prosecutor. LONDON (AP) — Being nasty to your enemies, may be good for you, temporarily, an international mental health conference was told Friday. Two thousand delegates from 73 countries spent the final day of the 7th International Con-on Mental Health hearing that: Mankind may be basically committed to conflict, now considered one of the few manly arts in the United States, and campus demonstrations may relieve student hang-ups. * k k Group conflicts, Prof. Ronald Taft of Australia’s Monash Uni- Police in Boston Kill Man, 35, After Siege BOSTON (AP) - A house painter was shot and killed while two officers tried to subdue him after he held his wife, daughter and two other women hostage and fired several shots into a congested area, police Said. John J. Wallace, reportedly was killed by police in the kitchen of his home during the struggle Friday. Some 40 policemen, and a crowd' estimated at 300-500 persons gathered during the 90-minute siege„ outside a brick apartment block in a largely Negro SiHa. Help! help! he’s going to kill ” the women shouted, according to witnesses. Police fired tear gas into the apartment from outside. The Opera's Elm Ailing Tree Doctor Sought ST. LOUIS (AP) - Is there a tree doctor in the house? That’s the call at the Outdoor Municipal Opera in St. Louis’ Forest Park; The theater’s only tree has been stricken with a fatal virus disease. k -#* The majestic tree just east of the stage has been a tradition at the opera for 50 years. But the disease that has plagued elms across the nation has taken its toll in Forest Park. There is no sure cure for the disease but an opera spokesman said Charles Freers women leaned from windows to escape the fumes. In the apartment with! Wallace' were his wife Georgianna; his daughter Lillian; his mother-in-law, Mrs. Rosetta ^Wallace; and a family friend, Georgie Jones. __Wallace’s wife said her husband had been suffering the aftereffects of a head injury suffered in an auto accident two weeks ago. He had been under a doctor’s care, she said. Police said Wallace, a Negro was seen on a porch outside his apartment just before the officers broke into the flat. Officers said they ordered the crowd cleared from the vicinity when he was seen waving a pistol. “My black brothers! My black brothers!” he shouted from the porch as he held one of the worafh. One shot was fired, pod* said, during the time. Other shots had been fired earlier. None of the spectators or police were injured, police said. O Neighbors were quoted as saying they had heard Wallace shouting at someone in the apartment just before the shooting began. His wife said lie had complained of pain just prior to the incident. Mrs. Wallace said she had managed tor calm'her husband down and that his head had been on her shoulder when officers broke into the room. The three members of the at- chemist from Muscatine, Iowa, torney general’s staff will re-'has been developing a serum-main on the state payroll and The tree at the opera which has will not be paid from the grand no stand-in has been given sev-jury funds, Salmon said. - era! .doses. [versity contended, “may lead t< a temporary improvement ii some aspects of mental health.’ Taft said that during student unrest on the University of California’s Berkeley campus, fewer students sought help from the university’s counseling service indicating heightened ten-helped them forget personal problems. But after the demonstrations died down, he said, calls on counseling services reached new heights. AGGRESSIVE INSTINCT Prof. Anatol Rapoport of the University . of Michigan said men may commit aggression through instinct, the way birds build nests. But he added, that very built-in characteristic may destroy mankind the way dinosaurs became extinct through their sheer size. “In the United States,” Rapoport said, “business, sports and now war- are considered to be almost the only manly arte.” Yet war has become so mechanized and depersonalized that “it is difficult to imagine the modern instrumented war as an outburst of rage,” he said. The biggest danger, the Michigan professor said, is that large-scale conflict has become so impersonal it is now “indistinguishable from any other activity in a technologically oriented society.” Winding up the weeklong congress, the World Federation for Mental Health announced that Clement Stone of Chicago had offered to finance the- federation’s work by donating $1 for every $1 raised by the tion this year. MC4aed Aug. 17 Community Theaters DNMPME: "Th« Junglt Book,1 Disney, color; "Cherlle, the ' -Cougar," Welt Dliney, color. Wed.: "Bldekbeerd’s Ghost," Welt Dlt- Feblen, Diene McBelri. Nelly Set.-Tuee.: "Theroughly Modern e Lillie, a -— Bute Davis in tin AlVNIVEHSfWir »« m 'SHEILA HANCOCK • JACK HEOLEY • CHRISTIAN ROBERTS • JAMES COSSINS ELAINE TAYLOR • r, M> SJVCSt£» • mm. Mir 8AttB• WAt SWCSTtHi Color br Oeluu - ASesen Arts-Kimmer PriductieeI OPEN 8tfS~~ 624-3135 .»ACADEMY AWARD WINNER Its! SCAll^V-WILLIAM ROSE , coiumbi»piciu«wi»m«i«* Stanley Kramer i»«iucin« “1. SpepcerTRACYl Sidney POITIERI Katharine HEPBURN C guess who's coming to dinner WavNE fell PoiRs theWARWAGON mwsibbhb TECHNICOLOR* PAN AVISION* ■■■■ A BATJAC PRESENTATION • A MARViN SCHWARTZ PRODUCTION - A Universal Rctore SATURDAY SHOWS CONTINUOUS 11 A.M. TO 12 P.M. SUNDAY AFTERNOON COMPLETE SHOWS START AT 12:15 - 4:00 - 8:00 NO ONE ADMITTED EXCEPT at the START of COMPLETE SHOWS SUN.AFTERNOON IT’S MO TO BE CRIME CAUGHT FOR WITH A A GAL... MUR* __ dp* bundle ^ of them jf *sm / UF'Y /How f would you murder! CRAIG STEVENS EAGLE I TWO COLD! M Mother’s Place Join The^ Wtomet The Sveden House. Whan Mom’s vacation from cooking Meant the fatally still •ats well. Kids love to chooso what they like from a tempting array of popular salads, an unsurpassed» variety of,choice meats, fish and fowl dishes, garden fresh vegetables, potatoes and hot rolls, and an irresistible assortment of homemade desserts. So gather try Our 6 “jr*. : 1 1 Almost like home. OU ICKLUNCHI BANQUET FACILITIES OUR SEATING OCA JULIENNE SAUD CAPACITY IS OJU AND SANDWICH $» 11.19 LUNCHES - $1.59 DINNERS •r your cholc. of Mr othw fin. wladi - $1.19 SUNDAYS TQC RelOx in Air-Conditioned MW Comfort! SOUP, SANDWICH and JULIENNE SALAD 89* HOT SANDWICH and JULIENNE SALAD 89* Open 7 Days a Weak HOURS: 11 A.M. - 2 PM. and 4:30 - 8:00 P.M. Daily We’re Open Sundays 11 A.M. to I P.M. 785 BALDWIN at MONTCALM - CUT HERE Th. Pontiac Prois, Thursday, August 22 THURSDAY THURSDAY MORNING 5:45 (2) On the Farm Scene 5:50 (2) C —1 News 0:00 (2) U. of M. Television (4) Classroom 0:30 (2) C — Gospel Singing Jubilee (4) C—Ed Allen 7:00 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C—Today , 47) C — Morning Show 7 :55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:00 (2) C - Captain Kangaroo - , (9) Tales of the River Bank . 8:30 (7) R — Movie: "No Leave, No Love” (1946) Van Johnson, Ke e n an “ Wynn, Pat Kirk, Guy to mb ardo, Edward Arnold (Part 1) (9) C—Upside Town 9:00 (2) C—Merv Griffin (4) C-Steve Allen (9) C-Bozo 10:00 (4) C-Snap Judgment .', .(7) (^-Virginia Graham ' (9) R—Hawkeye 10:25 (4) C-News 10:30 (2) R C - Beverly ’ Hillbillies «(4) C — Concentration / (7) C—DickCavett (9) R—Friendly Giant (50) C — Jack LaLanne 10:45 (9) Chez Helene 11:00 (2) R — Andy of . Mayberry (4) C — Personality (9) Mr. Dressup (50) C —Kimba 11:25 (9) Pick of the Week 11:30 (2) R -r Dick Van Dyke . (4) C — Hollywood Squares (50) R—Little Rascals 11:55 (9) News / THURSDAY AFTERNOON 12:19{2) (9) C ~ Weather, Sports (7) R_ Bewitched (9) Luncheon Date 12:25 (2) C —Fashions ;12:39 (2)C-- Search for Tomorrow ^v (4) C—Eye Guess ~ (7) C—Treasure Isle (9) R — Movie: "Inside Story” (1948) Marsha Hunt, William Lundigan (50) R — Movie: "Slim” (1937) Pat O’Brien, Henry Fonda 12:45 (2) C — Guiding Light 12:55 (4) C —News 1:99 (2) C —Love of Life (4) C — Match Game (7) — Dream House 1:25 (2) C — News (4) C — Carol Duvall 1:39 (2) C — As the World Turns (4) C — Let’s Make a Deal (7) C—R’s Happening 1:55 (7) C — Children’s Doctor 2:99 (2) C----Love Is a Many Splendored Thing (4) C — Days of Our; Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game 2:30 (2) C—House Party (4) C—Doctors (7) C--DatingGame (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 3:99 (2) C —Divorce Court (4) c — Another World (7) C—General Hospital (9) R — Route 66 (50) RC — To Tell the Truth 3:25 (50) C - News 3:39 (2) C—Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say (7) C—One life to Live (50) C — Captain Detroit 4:99 (2) C —Secret Storm (4) C — Woody Woodbury (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C—Swingin’ Time 4:39 (2) C—Mike Douglas (7) R C — Movie: **-Jungle Book” (1912) Sabu, Rosemary He Camp (Part 1) (50) R—Three Stooges 5:99 (9) C-Bozo (50) R —little Rascals 5:30 (4) C - George Pierrot — “Norway’s North Cape Cruise” (9) C —Fun House (50) R —Superman -5:45 (56) Friendly Giant THURSDAY NIGHT 6:91 (2) (4) (7) (/- News, Weather, Sports (9) R .— Dennis the Menace (50) R C — Flintstones (56) Misterogers 6:30 (2) C - News — Cronkite ^ (4) C -News - Huntley, Brinkley (9)R—F Troop (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) What’s New — Story ofOldIronsid.es 7:00 (2) R C- Trtith or Consequences (4) C — News, Weather Sports (7) C — News -Reynolds (9) R — Movie: "Fury of Hercules” (1961) Brad Harris, Brigette Corey (50) R — My Favorite Martian (56) NET Festival — An inside view on how an opera is recorded-7:39 (2) R C — Cimarron Strip — Deputy marshal is plagued by his cronies. - (4) R C — Daniel Boone — Daniel has to act quickly to prevent Indian reprisals after a hard-headed settler claims : land. (7) R C — Second Hundred Years — Abolitionist Luke frees go-go girl from cage, much to her astonishment. (50) R—I Love Lucy 8:06 (7) RC - Flying Nun — Teen-age girl falls for Carlo*. (50) RC —Hazel (56) Fairy Tales 8:36 (4) R C — Ironside -Two inmates break out of cells and overpower Ironside and Eve Whitfield. (7) R C — Bewitched — Endora tries to bring Darrin down a peg. (SO) R—Honeymooners (56) Festival — “The Telephone” a one-act opera by MenotU revolves around young woman who spends so much time on phone that her boyfriend can’t find time to propose. 8:55 (9) C—News 9:19 <2)R C — Movie: "Stolen Hours” (1963) Wealthy playgirl is stricken with %ncumnt loss of vision. Susan Hayward, Michael Craig, Diane Baker (7) .R C — That Girl -Don’s prudish mother finds Mi pants hanging in Ann’s closet. (9) R-Lock-Up (50) R — Persy Mason-Young heiress sets trap for man ate believes responsible for sister’s death. Barbara Hale is featured. (56) R — Lincoln Center — Ballet,, drama and satirical opera are featured in this three-part performance marking the third anniversary of the New York facility. 9:30 (4) RC - Dragnet — Friday is confronted by ypung couple who consider marijuana good and regulatory laws bad. (7) C—Peytott Place (9) RC - Telescope — , Mod fashion designer Mary Quant is profiled. 19:99 (4) C — Golddiggers — Avery Schreiber and Barbara Heller do skit on outlaws of’30s. (7) RC - Wackiest Ship — The Kiwi is assigned to sink submarine carrying Japanese admiral. (9) C —- Creative Person ■—, Brasilian architect Oscar Niemeyer Is.profiled. (50) C — Les Crane — Hitler’s Germany is topic. (56) Silent Movie: "Ella Cinders” (1925) Colleen Moore stars In this old-time comedy about a small-town girl wh(f makes it big in Hollywood. 19;89 (9) The Difference — Quebec conscription crisis during World War I is examined. 19:55 (2) C — Political Talk —Humphrey 11:99 (2) (4) (7) (9) C — News, Weather, Sports (&» R—Alfred Hitchcock 11:39 (2) R — Movies: 1. "A Man Named Rocca** 4 (1959) Jean-P aul Belmondo; 2. “These Three” (1936) Merle Oberon, Miriam Hopkins (4) C — Tonight — Jerry Lewis is substitute host. (7) C — Joey Bishop (9) R—Secret Agent (50) R — Movie: “World for Ransom” (1954) pan Duryea, Gene Lockhart 12:19 (9) Window on the World 1:99 (4) Beat the Champ (7) News 1:99 (4) C—PDQ 3:99 (2) R - Dobie Gillis 3r99 (2) ft — H fgh way Patrol x 4:99 (2) C—News, Weather OPEN DAILY 10 to IQ; SUNDAY 1.1to 6 Viceroy No. 204 Super "8” Movie Camera Kmart9s regular *99.88 NOW ONLY SB88 This quality power Zoom Camera loads instantly, has reflux viewing, through the lens electric eye and custom built-in pistol grip. * Fast Photo Service By a Very Reliable Local Firm! mm Kodachrome Kodacolor Black and Whit? HMM Movie roll Super8 MM.----- HKxp.' Roll, .. 2.18 HKxp. Roll.. .85 1.17 ...■m ...... 1.25 3SMM...... 1 Oi? Reprint» /Of Kwh.____ Charge It at Kmart! GLENWOOD PLAZA . . . North Perry Street 126- 20. Jumbo____ Reprint*. .10 I 1 SATURDAY Nag a (M) Adventures a Captain Fabian 9p.m. (?) TW Purple Mask (•) The Steel Bayonet (SO) Slattery's Hurricane S:M (|0) The Secret of the Blue Room liM ($0) The Sands o f Beersheba TV Movie Roster 9:9t (4) Something Wild-ll:!5 (9) Sweet Smell 11:30 (1) Just This Once (7) Portrait in Black 1:30 a.m. (2) Garibaldi (7) The Lady Is Will, ing . SUNDAY 11:39 a.m. (9) Oregon 13:39 p.m. (50) Woman in White 1:99 (9) Scott of the An* tarctic 3:39 (7) Double Crossbones (SO) Red Stallion in the Rockies 3:39 (9) Teh Seconds t o Hell 5:90 (7) Boots Malone 9:30 (9) fcoming Out Party 9:99 (7) The Greatest Show on Earth 11:15 (9) Operation Snatch 11:39 (3) Rich, Young and * Pretty i;a» mm. (2) The Goldwyn Follies MONDAY 3:30 a.m. (7) Whistling 1 n the Dark 12:39 p.m. (9) Lady in the Dark (50) The Secret of Convict Lake 4:30 (7) Back to. God's Country 7:00 (9) Outpost in Morocco 11:30 (9) Angel With a Trumpet (50) Sea Fighters TUESDAY 1:39 a.m. (7) Interlude x 12:30 p.m. (9) That Brehnan Girl - (50) April Showers 4:30 (7) Belle of New York 7:99 (9) On the Beat 3:39 (4) No Man Is an Island 11:30 (2) The True Story of Lynn Stuart (9) The Stranger's Hand (50) Shadow of a Woman. WEDNESDAY (50) Slim 1:90 (7) Jungle Book (Part * *) § 7:09 (9) PUry of Hercules * t(M (S) Stolen Hours 19:99 (56) Ella Cinders 11:99 (I) A Man Named 1 Rocca (50) World for Random FRIDAY 3:30 a.m. (7) No Leave, No Love (Part 9) -----■ 13:39p.m. (9) Lady From 8:30 a.m. (7) Appointment for Love 12:30 p.m. (9) Wicked as They Come . (50) The Lady Takes a Sailor 4:30 (7) Journey to the Seventh Planet 7:00 (9) The Corsican 'Brothers 9:09 (7) Bus Stop 11:30 (2) Honeychile (50) You Can’t E s cape Forever THURSDAY 8:30 a.m. (7) No Leave, N6 Love (Part 1) 13:30 p.m. (9) The Inside Story (50) Pit Fall 4:30 (7) Jungle Book (Part 3) 7:00 (9) The Last of the Mohicans (56) Ella Cinders 9:00 (2) The Horizontal Lieutenant 11:30 (2) Hot Blood; Harem Girl ; 1 a.m. (7) Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde SATURDAY Noon (50) Angels Wash Their Fades 2 p.m. (7) Revenge of the Creature (9) Shanghai Story (50) Gas House Kids 3:30 (50) House of Horrors 5 3fMWf handcrafted TtAm giant 23 rectangular picture Vinyl clod mtul cabinet in grained r. Super Video Range Tuning-Syslem., x 1" Twin-cone speaker. Zdnrth VHF and UHF Spotlitc Dials. TV-RADIO SERVICE 776 Orchard Lake Ave. The Pontiac Press, Sunday, August 18 SUNDAY SUNDAY MORNING 6:05 (2) TV Chapel 0:10 (2) C-News 6:15 (2) U. of M. Television 6:30 (2) C - Cathedral of Tomorrow _ 7:25 (4) C - News 7:30 (2) C — Christopher Program (4) C -^Country Living — Mrs.' Lucinda Wyckoff, of Pontiac, will answer ques-tions on “How and When 1 to Antique Furniture and Things.” 8:00 (2) C - This Is the Live (4) C - CatholicHour -Topic: Is the conscience of me Christian churches challenged by the war in Vietnaim? .... • ____(7) Guest Artist Concerts 8:15 (9) Sacred Heart 8:30 (2) C — Temple Baptist Church (4) C — Church at the Crossroads (7) C — Green Up Time (9) Window on the World (50) C-Hearld of Truth-Topic: “Involvement” 8:55 (4) C—Newsworthy 9:00 (2) C - Mass for Shut-ins —(4) C — Oopsy the Clown t (7) C — Dialogue ' (9) R - William Tell (50) C — Captain Detroit 9:30 (2) C-With This Ring (7) C - Milton the- Monster (9) Spectrum 0:45 (2) C—Highlight (4) C — Davey and Goliath 10:00 (2) Breakthrough (4) C — House Detective (7) Linus (9) R —• Hawkeye (50) C — Kimba 10:30 (2) C - Faith for , Today* ■ . (7) C — Bugs Bunny (9) C 7- Bozo’s Big Top (50) R—Three Stooges 11:00 (2) U. of M. Television — Dramatization of Chaucer’s “Parliament of Fowls” (7)E —Bullwlnkle (59) R — Little Rascals 11:3049) C - Face the Na-tioa — GueSt is Vice President Humphrey. (7) R €— Discovery '68 “Jets, Orchids and Kangaroos,” a look at the ■business of a i r - c a r.g o transport. (9) R — Movie: “Oregon Passage” (1957) Toni Gerry, John Ericson (50) R — Superman SUNDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) R — Mister Ed (4) U. of M. Presents — First in new series on U S. culture explores the kinds of pop music that appeal to contemporary Americans. (7) C — Championship Bowling (50) EC — Flintstones 12:30 (2) R - Patty Duke (4) C — Design Workshop (50) R —Movie: “Woman in White ” (1946) A strange assortment o f people resides with a young heiress at a country estate. Outside the estate, a woman in white paces at night; attempting to warn the heiress of . impending danger. Eleanor Parker, Alexis Smith, Gig Young, Agnes Moorehead ’ 1:00 (2) C — Tom and -ferry (4) C — Meet the Press — Guest is Senator Strom Thurmond * (7) C-Spotlight (9) R C — Movie) “Scott of the Antartic” (English, 1949) A dramatization of Captain Scott’s race to the South Pole. John Mills, Diana Churchill, Derek ' Bond, 1:30 (2) C — Music Treasures (4) C —At the Zoo (7) C — Issues and • Answers — Guest is Senator McCarthy 1:45 (2) C — Tiger Warm-Up 2:09 (2) C — Baseball: Detroit at Boston (4) R C — Flipper -Flipper frolics around with a live, floating mine from World War II. (7) C rrr Choice — “The Last, S>a n c t u a r y ” investigates brainwashing and its potential,, for good andkvil. 2:30 (4) C — Animal World (formerly "Animal Kingdom”) — A profile of Mike TsafieJUi, • trapper in toe Amazon jungles of South America. (7) R C — Movie: “Double Crossbones” (1950) A clerk suddenly finds himself the master of a pirate ship. Donald O’Connor, Will Greer (50) R — Movie: "Red Stallion in toe Rockies” (1949) Two ex-circus performers try to capture ’ toe lead horse of a wild herd. Ray Collins, Arthur Franz 3:00 (4) C — Professionals 3:30 (4) C - Comedy Playhouse: In pilot film, “The Seven Little Foys,” father Foy faces open • r e b e 11 i o n from *• his youngsters when he decides to break up his family vaudeville act and send the kids to school. Eddie Foy Jr., Mickey Rooney and the Osmond . Brothers star. (9) R — Movie: “Ten Seconds to Hell” (1950) After World War n, five Germans disarming bombs in Berlin put half their salaries into a fund to be split between the survivors. Jeff Chandler, Jack Palance, Martine Card 4:00 (7) R C -r Wackiest Ship (50) R — Laramie 4:30 (4) C (Special) — Westchester Classic — Final-round of play (56) Georges Simenon 4:50 (2) C — Baseball ■Scoreboard 5:00(2) R C — Wagon Train . (4) International Zone (7) R — Movie: “Boots Malone” (1952) A tough, underworld rider trains a young bqy to be a jockey. William Holden, Johnny Stewart (50) R — Wells Fargo 5:30 (9) R C — Laredo (50) R — Silent Service 5:45 (56) London Line SUNDAY NIGHT 6:06 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports (50) R — Victory at Sea — In the first Anglo-American offensive of World War II, the Allies completely .destroy the powerful Afirika Korps and gain control of the Msdlterraiiean. (56) Insight — A smalltown mayor is caught between white bigots and Black Power advocates. 6:30 (2) C — Job Opportunity (4) C — News, Weather, Sports « . (9) R — Movie:. “Coming Out Party” (1962) James Robinson Justice , Leslie Phillips (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) U.S.A. - POetry -Poet Louis Zukofsky talks about his style and his work as a poet, critic, translator and teacher. 7:66 (2) R C - Lassie gg (First of three, episodes filmed at the National Space Center in Florida) Lassie attempts to comfort Atlas, a guard dog pining away for its dead master. (4) C — George Pierrot — “New England Holiday” (7) R C— Voyage — The crew, of the, Seaview battle -alien invaders who are trying to, turn the earth info a * jungle-covered planet with Jtn un-breathable atmosphere. (50) Daytona 500 — Highlights of the 1967 and 1968 Dafyona 500-stock car races . ... v"" . (56) Summer Sampler — ‘ ‘Police-Community Relations” focuses on Des Moines, Iowa. 7:30 (2) C — AU American College Show (4) R C - Walt Disney’s World — Sancho, a homesick steer, leaves a Montana-bound Cattle drive and begins a 1200-mile trek back to toe Kerrs’ Texas Ranch. * (56) (Special) — Lincoln „ Center — The third anniversary of New York’s Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts is honored in this three-part performance produced in 1965. 8:66 (2) R C - Ed Sullivan — Guests are Rex Harrison, as “Dr. Dolittle”; singers Diana Ross and the Suprernes, the Temptations and the Kessler Twins; comedians Flip Wilson and Lewis and Christy; trumpeter Fernando Pasqualone and . apache dancers Ivan and Astor. , (7) R C "S FBI ^ A .. morder .investigation Miss Bacall Hosfs Fashions S McGill (Richard Bradford) picks, up the threads of an old romance with Yoko Tani as he scours Europefor a million-dollar fortune in “Variation on a Million Bucks” a two-part “Man in ,a Suitcase” adventure which begins Friday, at 8:30 p.m. on Channel 7. “This wasn't like acting at all. No planned dialogue! Everything I had to say and do was completely natural.” \ Lauren Bacall was talking about Rer role as hostess for “The Paris Collections: Fall.Fashion Preview,” look at toe world of French haute couture in a one-hour color special Aug. 24. The broadcast will'attempt to capture the mood and flavor of Parisian fashion-show activity from original sketches of designers through frenzied workshop preparations of seamstresses and models to ultimate presentation of the collections. \ Miss Bacall will supply commentary on the new clothes to be displayed this month in toe top Paris fashion salons, and she’ll be seen in informal chats with four leading French couturiers — Yves St. Laurent, Pierre Cardin, Emanuel Ungaro and Marc Bohan of toe House of Dior,. Interested when she was first approached to host the special, Miss Bacall became highly enthusiastic about what she was doing after.she met these designers personally for ' the first time. “I was particularly surprised, even impressed, by one thing about these people,” says the actress. “They have absolutely no feeling ..of. being in competition with their American or Italian counterparts. They say flatly that they’re not even in competition with one another. There seems to be no rivalry at all, despite what you read in toe fashion columns.” Honeymooners Pat and Mike MtCoy (center) tary “Honeymoon Mexican Style” to be colorcast of Los Angeles explore the sights and sounds of Friday from 7:30 to 8:30 p.m. on Channel 7. exotic Mexico for ABC-TV’s one-hour documen- 17 GOODYEAR 1/ COMBINATION OmR TUNE-UP G SAFETY CHECK ALL WORK DONE BY FULLY TRAINED MECHANICS USING MODERN EQUIPMENT AND TOP QUALITY PARTS. Includes labor and all parts listed for any 6 cyl. U. S. auto. 8cyf. U.S. auto $25.95. Add 82 for air conditioning. Get this Pre.season Value NOW! HERE’S WHAT WE DO: • Replace spark plugs, paints) refer ■ • Clean fu.l bowl, air filter and battery a Inspect ignition wires, distributer, starter, regulator, generator, fan belt and battery a Adjust timing end check cylinder compression * Complete lubrication and oil change (5 qts.) usitig top quality and graaia HERE’S WHAT WE CHECK: Make an appointment NOW—Be sure your car runs' smoother and trouble-free I a Tims • Front* • Hem Rear Lights • Exhaust • Washer System Bottle a Brakes •Wipers • Mirren * Seat Pelts Take your car where the experts are ammmui ’ SERVICE STORE . Daily 6:36-6, Sat. Till 2:30 1370 Wide Trdek Drive 335-8167 SATURDAY AFTERNOON 12:99 (4) C — CoolMcCool ffiC-Beafies (9) G — Audubon Theater — While capturing' the — Mauty of New* England's hills, valleys and sea coast, cameras focus on such wildlife as the black duck, whitetailed deer and wild turkey, and on the many species of songbirds and wildflowers. (SO) R — Movie: “Adventures of Captain Fabian” (1951) A Creole girl seeks revenge against the people who hanged her mother. Errol Flynn, Mlcheline Presle, Vincent Price 12:30 (2) C—Jonny Quest (4) C — George Pierrot §3 j “New Orleans to the < Gulf” (7) C — American * Bandstand — Part 2 of Bandstand’s 11t h an-niversary show will ‘ feature film clips of Elvis j Presley, Jan and Dean, | the Monkees, the Byrds, the American Breed and Cozy Cble. (9) C — Country Calendar — Cameras visit one of the largest fruit farms in the Niagara area. 1:09 (2) Music Treasures (4) C — Car and Track (9) C — Championship Golf — Billy Casper meets Gary Player at Royal Cinque Ports Golf Club in Deal, near London. 1:1S (2) C — NFL Action 1:30 (4) C—Red Jones (7) C — Happening ’68 ■ Tiger Warm- 1:45 (2) C ■ Up 2:90 (2) C - Baseball: Detroit at Boston. (4) C - Baseball: Baltimore at Minnesota (7) R C —. Movie: "The Purple Mask” (1955) A French adventurer raises by kidnaping members of Napoleon’s cabinet. Tony Curtis, Dan O’Herlihy, Colleen MUler (9) R — Movie: “The Steel Bayonet” (English, 1958) Survivors of a North African' battalion get orders to occupy a strategic farmhouse. Leo Genn, Kieron Moore (50) R — Movie: ■ “Slat-. tery’s Hurricane” (1949) ' Plot involves an ex-Navy pilot, a narcotics ring and Florida’s hurricane-warning system. Richard Wid- . mark, Linda Darnell, Veronica Lake 3:25 (7) C — World o.f Sports 3:30 (7) R — Outer Limits — (First of a two-parts) Bullets lodged In the brains of four soldiers 'produce a second mind controlled by an alien intelligence. (50) R —, Movie: “The Secret of the Blue Room” (1933) Lionel A twill, Edward Arnold 4:00 (9) C —- Wrestling — Windsor 4:30 (7) R-Mr. Lucky 4:50(2) c - Baseball Scoreboard' 4:55 (4) C — World of Sports 5:00 (2) R — Dobie Gillis (4) C — (Special) Westchester Golf Classic — Third-round action telecast from Rye, N.Y. Jack Nicklaiis is defending champion^ ,, (7) C — (Special) Auto Racing — USAC National Indianapolis - Car Cham- James Stewart stars as Buttons, a clown wanted by the police, in “The Greatest Show on Earth/* Cecil B. DeMille’s Academy Award-win-ning picture of the other side of circus life which will be presented on Channel 7 Sunday night at 9. plonship telecast 'from Springfield, I1L Expected entrants: Bobby Unser, A. J. Foyt, Mario Andretti (9) R - Lock Up - A girl is awaiting! the electric chair for the murder of a millionaire playboy. (50) C—By Lit 5:39 (2) R C Gentle Ben — Mark spends the day\ with his cousin, Virginia, who feels compelled tot make a faSh show of 7:99 (2) R C - Truth or courage. 1 (9) R C —Gidget 5:45 (66) World Traveler SATURDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) C — News, Weather, Sports (9) C — Robin Seymour (50) R — Combat — Frightened private (Sal Mineo) leaves Saunders trapped under fallen -beam. (56) Fairy Tales 6:30 (2) C- Bill Anderson (4) C-News —McGee —(7>€------- Michigan Sportsman — Jerry Chiappetta takes inner-city friend on outing to Ptptlac Lake and learns that recreation is just as big a problem for the inner-city resident as jobs, schools and housing. (56) Hans the Pup-petmaster 7:00 (2) C — Death Valley Days, — Poor freight hauler marries wealthy girl by mistake. (4) C - Michigan Out- doaA (7) C — Anniversary Game (9) C — Big Bands — Si - Zentner and his orchestra perform. -(50) C-Hayride (56) Festival — British poet-novelist Robert Graves discusses his life. 7:30 (2) C - Prisoner -The prisoner finds himself caught up in chess game in which all the pieces are live people. (4) R C — Saint — Simon becomes involved i n disappearance of valuable collectipn of antiques in Istanbul. (41CA— News, Weather, Span7, ~ (7) C f- Nows - Reynolds (9) R -i Movie: “The Last of the Mohicans” (1936) Randolph Scott, Binnie Barnes (50) R •— My Favorite Harthty \ (56) R Silent Movie: “Ella Cinders” (1926) Col-leen Moore, Harry Lang-don 7:39 (2) R C — Wild Wild West —- To find a hired killer,-the agents join a wagon train filled by bizarre characters and beset by recurring violence. (4) R C *- Tarzan — As Tarzan and a bandit engage in a battle of wits, a young woman attempts to use both men to free her'husband. ’ (7) C — Mexico Special— Cameras record vivid cultural contrasts as they follow the Mexican honeymoon of a newlywed couple. ' . The Pontiac Prow, Friday, August 23 (50) R—I Love Lucy ' Carter, Jim Backus 1:99 (50) RC-Hazel ~ “ ------ (56) World Traveler 9:15 (56) London Line 8:39 (9) R C - Gomer Pyle, USMC ' — Friendly Freddy tries to get back a valuable ring , he sold to Gamer by creating trouble between Gomer and the ring’s Owner. , (4) R C — Star'Trek -Capt. Kirk .suspects his old ehemies file Klingons, of escalating (be development of weapons in a primitive society. (7) -C — Man in a Suitcase — Love complicates (9) R —Lock-Up ' (50) R — Perry Mason • 9:30 (4) Fall Fashion Happening — Carol Duvall’s guests at the New York press showing of American d.esigners’ Women’s fashions include Caroline Simonelli. (7) R G — Guns of Will Sonnett — An unwed mother claims that her baby is) James Sonnett’s (56) R — Power of the Dollar — The reactions of British businessmen to American take-over o f their failing firms. matters for McGill who is 10:00 (4) C (Special) - “Up competing with' So vie t with People” — 150 young agents for a miUion-dollar prize stolen from Russia. (50) R — Honeymooners 8:55 (9) C — News 9:00 (2) R C - Movie: “The Horizontal Lieutenant” (1962) Roman tie comedy features a bungling Army officer, one luscious nurse and one sinister villain: a Japanese guerilla who steals soda pop. Jim Hut-ton, Paula Prentiss, Jack people sing out irsermon on what they believe America is all about; love, unselfishness, honesty and purity. (7) R C — Judd - (First of two parts) Judd and Ben move into a luxury hotel to prepare a defense for a resident playboy accused cf murder. (9) Let’s Sing Out (50) C — Les Crane — (50) —. Les Crane (56) NET Playhouse — “The Traveler’’ 10:36 (9) C —Five Years in . the Life 10:55 (2) Political Talk -Humphrey 11:00(2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports (50)-C — Job Fyne 11:30 (2) R - Movies: “Hot Blood” (1956) Jane Russell, Cornel Wilde, Luther Adler; 2. “Harem Girl” (1952) Joan Davis, Peggie Castle (4) C-Tonight (7) C—Joey Bishop (9) R—Arrest and Trial 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ __ (7) R — Movie: “Dr. Jekyll qpd Mr. Hyde” (1941) Spencer Tracy, Lana Turner, Ingrid : Bergman 1:30 (4) G— PDQ 3:15 (7) News-Local -34 30 (2) C — News, Weather HAPPINESS IS: A Well-Planned Futur HOWEVER: I Even the best made plans sometimes go astray. > You can (pel confident and rest assured that when a financial crisis does exist you may solve your problem through pur convenient HOMEOWNER'S LOAN PLAN MaV Borrow PttymenU Arranged | Up to 4 Years to Repay! FAMILY ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION 317 National Building 10 WEST HURON FE 8-4022 MONDAY MONDAY MORNING 5:45 (2) On the Farm Scene 5:50 (2) C — News 0:00 (2) U. of M. Television (4) Classroom 1:30 (2) C — America Sings (4) C —Ed Allen 7:00 <2)C — Woodrow the Woodsman 1 <4) C —Today (7) C — Morning Show 7 :55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:00 (2) C - Captain Kangaroo (9) Tales of the River Bank 8:39 (7) R — Movie : “Whistling in the Dark” ~insiir Red * ffjf pSSp Conrad Veidt, Ann Rutherford _____'' (9) Time for Adventure 9:90 (2) C — Merv Griffin (4) C —Steve Allen (9)X - Bozo 10:09 (4) C - Snap Judgment — Guests are Don Meredith and Joanne Carson (7) C—Virginia Graham (9) B — Hawkeye 19:25 (4) C-News 10:39 (2) R C-Beverly Hillbillies (4) C — Concentration (7) C-DickCavett (9) Friendly Giant (50) C—JackLaLanne 10:45 (9) Chez Helene 11:00 (2) R — Andy Griffith (4) C — Personality — Guests are Cliff Robertson, Flip Wilson and Pat CarroH.. (9) Mr. Dressup 11:30 (2) R - Dick Van Dyke (4) C - Hollywood Squares (50) Little Rascals 11:41(0) News MONDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C-News, Weather, ' SP01*8 7 ; (7) Luncheon Date 12:21 <2)-C— FAjfiiions 12:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4>43— Eye Guess (7) C—Treasure Isle (t)RC — Movie: “Lady IR (fas Dart” (1044) Thu Pontiac W Ginger Rogers, Ray Milland (50) R — Movie: “The Secret of Convict Lake” (1951) Glenn Ford, Gene Tierney 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 — Jt’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 2:30 (2) C — House Party (7) C — Dating Game (50) R — Make Room for Diddy 3:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C —Another World (7) C — General Hospital (9) R —Route 66 (50) R C - To Tell the Truth 3:25 (50) C — News 3:30 (2) C -Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say -Guests are James Fran-ciscus and Susan Oliver (7) C —One Life to Live (50) C—Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) C—Secret Storm (4) C — Woody Woodbury (7) C —Dark Shadows (9)- C — Swingin’Time 4:30 (2> C —Mike Douglas (7) R — Movie: “Back to God’s Country” (19 53 ) Rock Hudson, Marcia Herderson, Steve Cochran (50) Three Stooges 5:00 (9) C-Bozo (50) R—Little Rascals 5:30 (4) C — George Pier-rot ; -!• “Holiday in Switzerland” (9) C—Fun House (50) RC —Superman 5:45 (56) FriendlyGIant j MONDAY NIGHT 0:00 (2) (4) (7) C — News, Weathfcrr^ports (9) R — Dennis. the Menace - (50) R C — Flintstones . (56) Misterogers |:30(2)-C - News r¥ . Cronkite r, August 19 (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (9) R C — Gilligan’s Island (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) What’s New — The art of gliding is demonstrated. 7:00 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Sports . (7) C — News — Reynolds (9) R — Movie: “Outpost in Morocco” (1949) George Raft, Marie Windsor (50) R -T- My Favorite Martian ‘ (56) Creative Person — Author-humorist Harry Golden discusses his life. 7:30 (2) R C — Gunsmoke — Feuding cattle barons battle for ownership of a ».large herd.. k.._-(4) R C — Monkees — The boys need a female Monkee in Order to enter a band contest, so Davy is decked out as a girl. (7) it C — Cowboy in Africa <— Hayes dashes with an African demagogue who is exploiting an epidemic of cattle disease to drive out the game ranchers. (50) R — I Love Lucy (56). Innovations 8:60 (4) C — Champions *-The superheroes battle an Englishman who is trying to pluhge the world into a nuclear testing race. (50) R—Hazd . (56) On Hearing Music — ROger Sessions discussed his composing attitudes and techniques. 8:30 (2) C — Political Talk — Wallace (7) R C — Rat Patrol — Sgt. Troy’s, brother is the bait as the Germans set a Rat trap. (50) R — Honeymooners (56) R — NET Jouranl — A profile of Lord Thomson, the newspaper tycoon of Fleet Street 8:55 (9) C—News 0:00 (2) R C - Andy Griffith — Howard Sprague tries to enhance his image ♦ as a swinging bachelor after his mother remar-riM- : (4) (Special) C Medicine Today — A heart attack is dramatized to show what happens to the human body during a collapse. (7) R C — Felony Squad — Sam and Jim try to arrest a record company owner who charges police brutality (conclusion). (9) R - 12 O’CIock High —_Savage and others are trapped during an air raid in a cellar,, with a live, ticking bomb. (50) R—Perry Mason 9:30 (2) (Special) C — Pro Football — The Chicago Bears and the Green Bay Packers meet in .a National Football League game at Milwaukee. (7) C — Peyton Place — The Rev. Tom Winter and Jili~ have an emotion-packed meeting; Susan speaks to the congregation; Norman visits -- -Rodney in the hospital; -(56) French Chef 10:00 (4) R C — I Spy -Kelly “takes a wife” in order to pull off a caper in Acapulco (7) RC- Big Valley -An escaped murderer holds Audra and her pupils at gunpoint, and . hysteria grips Stockton. (9) Music in Miniature (50) C—Les Crqne (56) Music — Aaron Copland talks about six French composers called “Les Six.” 10:31 (•) C — Singalong r! Jubilee 0 (56) Folk Guitar ' 11:00 (4) (7) (9) C — News, Weather, Sports (50) R—Alfred Hitchcock* 11:30 (4) C — Tonight (7) C —Joey Bishop (9) R — Movie: “Angel With a Trumpet” (English, 1951) (50) R — Movie: “Sea Fighters” (Japanese, 1962) 12:30 (2) C — News, Weather, Sports 1:00 (2) R - MoVle: , “Sherlock Holmes Faces Death” (1943) Basil Rath-bone, Nigel Bruce (4) Bowling — Beat the Champ (9) Window on the World 1:30 (4) C-PDQ 3:00 (2) C -Capture , 3:30 (2) R — Hi g h W « y Patrol 4too (i) C — News, Weather Don’t Move i.. IMPROVE! WINDOW PIIOBUMS? We Will Remove end Replace Your Old Sweaty Steal and Aluminum Windows with Insulated *Vinyl Seal’ solid vinyl Windows FROM THIS GUARANTEED NO SWEAT fO SOLID VINYL WINDOWS _____insulator against huat and cold vinyl is 7,680 times mom efficient than ete*l, 20 time* mom officiant than wood, 34,800 timae mom efficient ■than aluminum. Custom made, and clean both sides from tha inside. Made to any SIDING We Will Install All-Types of Siding On Your Houst ML*. ' VINYL • ALUMINUM —STEEL* ASBESTOS 22x24x8 At Lou At $389 ALUMINUM: $27.95 per 100 Squars Foot FREE ESTIMATES • PATIOS e AWNINGS • PORCH ENCLOSURES • 0USS t SCREENS Csmyltle With Oeawirt Work Finance Plan Available BUILD NOW . . \ Avoid The Ruth! SPECIAL PRICES NOW! Everything In StodernlMatlon » » • j_ow l THE FINEST ; MATERIALS AND CRAFTSMANSHIP SIINBAYI CALL; Ofeefion 6onstrudion6a Member Pondee Chamber of Commerce — In Pontiac Since 1931 1032 WEST HURON PONT,AC FE 4-2S97 ■»—»— * y/fsssg • __''__ V ■ THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY? AUGUST 17, 1968_* __'____. C—ll '* ™ ^ ^ ' ‘ . .. . : fT. , % ; . • ' ' . 1 " ; ■ *. • ‘ ■ ' •, ' i I sh ^ v; -• !| •• Hf* —— It’s-Tremendously Important • ’ S p ' 1 ^ . / To Have All The News ' ..B3“' ^ m 'j'*" " * *' ‘ -ar ^ *1 ____ • THE ENTIRE WORLD • YOUR OWN NATION % • ’ , ft* ° ' - .-----.. - *> . ....-.. • MICHIGAN _z • YOUR HOME AREA When You Want It Pick The Press Up When You Personally Please and Review the Activities of the Globe When It Suits You Best e' n ’ . a THE PONTIAC PRESS For Home Delivery Dial 332-8181 . C—>18 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURQAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 Record of Transactions for Week on Stock Market NBW VORK )- WfkUw Last m xu s*% ns ill nt wS imS +i% ft nA '3040 +3% Norwich .10 •JH 414* 43% 44%—1% s-----------J|| 33% 17% +3% Oak Eloct 414 114 31% 32% 25 4! Occident ,40b 0575 47% 44% 45% — OccMPat pf 4 17 130% 130% 131% —140 OccldP pfi.M 1054 141% 132% 135% -140 WHO P12.M 33 71% 0540 4040 +1% Oflden Cp .00 012 30% 35% 31% +24* Ogdon pn.07 11 00% 55 50 +2“ QhioEdll 1.43 130 mt 37 27% — Ed PM.50 1410 00% 71% 70 +1 ... Ed p»4.44 0050 n% 7440 75%+9 Oh Rtf pfMO Z420 75 74 74% f ... Oh Wg'jjRM 1130 47 05% 05% +1}S Ok la 36 1.04 371 24% 14% 3440 +J0 OkGEp f4.24 1130 72 70 72 44% High Law Lift Chg. PatePaul 1.20 X33 33 32 3240 +1 1 Polrolono .10 111 44 42% 43% 4-1 . Patrol pfl.37 31 3140 31% *140 + 40 Mrlm+.00o 35 34 35% 35% + 45 PfliarC 1.20a 240 70% 0040 00% -1% PhalpaD 1.40 X229 73% 0040 0040 - % Phi la El 1.04 344 30% 30% 10% + % Phifsi pt44i mo m* n% gjo 4 % PhllEI p(4.40 1300 75% 75 75% +1% PhllEI p94.30 z1);0 74Vi Jm UVl +2Vi- PhilEI pl3.80 z920 05% 44V. 05 4! 104 54% 53% 5} fr Pllltbury 1.25 07 50% 31120 1340 13% 1 k S2 I E OklaNGa 1.12 72 30% 20% 20% + % Si JItlfisFiHf ftsEft*rift ft% 59% +114 « « 24% 2140 2«k + S T’S Onallka 1 *0 MU. lm 99% _10h PIparAI PltnayC PltCoka .40 Forg .10 FtW pf 7 a Steal . ..jtaal Pf A PlttStl pi Ilk PltYngA pf J Pltfston 1.30b Plough .00 Polaroid Jk ’ Portae 1.20 Mrtor pt5.50 Opelika 1 23 24% • 22% 22% ~ OranoaR 1.12 110 1040 10% 3040 f . *11. Ble* 2 455 40% 43% 46 +1% -iltbd Mar 1 xlSO 30% 20% »% +1% Outlet CO AS 150 30% 21% 2340 + % *—------------- ft 30% 20% 20%+1% 104 10% 77% 10% +3% ISO 0040 57% 51% +2% Over Trana 1 Owanalll pro Oxfdlrwa *- vl2 33% 13% 21% 4 —P— PacGEI 1.40 413 35 14 34%- ■Mila “ 111 33 21 32% 4 ■ - T50 -200n74r27%----% 043 30% 10% 20% 4140 f K P 301 34% 32% 23% — % ... ......_ 44 12% 12% 12% — % PuiASUI 1.50 573 10% 20% 20% 4 % Pan Am .40 1731 33% 12% 22% ..... Panh EP 1.40 240 35% 34% 35% 4 % PanhEP pf 4 z40 00% 00% 10% 4 % Papercrfl .44 40 20% 29 30% — % Pargaa .40 X307- 27% 25% 27% 41% *>arpai pf2.44 x3 40% 49% 40% —2 '•rfceOavl. 1 591 27V. 24% 27% 41% •OrkHMI 1.20 A7 4m 44% 44% - ’ark Pan .00 *34 30% 30% 30% H-------1 — 72% 00% 73% L pf 4.40 , -----izUn 1.40 34 + %' PennzUn pf 4 II +1 PeopDrg 1.10 24% + % PeopGas 1.04 3-1441-14; PepsiCo .90 20 37% 34% 26% — % 310 30% 30% 30% — % 204 47% 44% 47 4 % 90 25% 24% 35 + % 304 44 40 64 +5% 322' 44 - 41% *41%—1% 114 30% 30 30% 4 % 9 19% 10% 10% 4 % 10 19% 10% 19% ..... I OhHMorr 1 ■OMIAA pfS.I I 40% 42% 40% 45% 20 53% 51% 53% 4 % Rtf 05% 04% 45% 4 % 72% 70% 72% 42% 345 53% 51% 51% 41% JBo 75 70% 75 44% 1104 100% 104% 100% 44% . , 79% 05 45% i 04% 4 [S pf5.20 ziow pseg pis'.30 ziio n" 70% 72 nee 5»tB zmo « «% « +2 PSInd pf3.50 ' z340 40% »Xi40% 41% PSInd Pfl.00 ^ U% 10%4 % PSInd pfl.04 z740 17% 17% 17% 4 % Publklnd ■ .46f 003 17% 15 t Cam 1.10, 177 i Poroiafr 1.60 • 1 34% 4 QuakOat 1.20 112 49% 47 QuakOat^pf 4 ZOO 113% 112% 112% - 1 32% 31% 32% 41% RalatonP .40 : 172 24% 23% i S----- nfn20 34 33% 32% 3 _____Inc .02 174 32 30 3 RapIdAm .50 223 24% 23% 3 RapA pf2.25 5 74 73% 3 Raybasros 3 Rayatta .40 Raym Int .00 Rayllraon .50 Rayth pfl.12 443 60%’ 54 40% 4 129 25% 22% 2 Reading 2 P> 26 21% ”20% 24 +1 (Continued on Page C-13) What Wall Street Did Stocks Bonds NEW YORK (AP)-The stock' NEW YORK (AP) - The cut 44% 4514 i * market posted its first advance!in the discount rate from 5V4 to 4*%|in five weeks this week .as the‘5Ya per cent by the Minneapolis trading pace quickened. Federal Reserve Bank helped to McDonald cp 245 54% »% 53% +2%| The week got off to a good arrest a decline in the bond and McirEd01.40 'iw S% 34% 35% — start on the basis of reports money markets this past week. mcghh, .40. | 44% 43% 44%+, tot pwgrMs was being .made to the announcement m the Vietnam peace talks in _ . . parjg Thursday, government and mu- 1, nr -' |* nicipal bonds prices were lower It closd on an Upnote due in while corporate bonds were part to a move by the Federal mixed. On Friday, all sectors Reserve Board toward lower in- improved slightly, according to terest rates Salomon Brothers & Hutzler, na- a- 54--%! “Wall Street Still insists thattional investment firm. • W4 to+ 5 any progress toward peace in % Vietnam would be very bullish 100 35% 34% 34% — % 25 20% 20 20% — % 2,o 35% 34% as% :::::|on the stock market,” said wie 452 37% 34% 54% + % hrnlrpr 252 40% 30% 40%+i%ioroKer. Z20 73 “ ~ Long-term government issues failed to rally much Friday and j closed lower by more than half The Dow Jones Average of 30 f P°int- Intermediate Issues -5 Industrials turned in a gain of1? 8 years-rallied about an 16.24 for the week, rising from ^ \P°mt to,o£fset hff 869.65 to 885.89. The Associated of lhe ear,l®r ,n lhe Press 60-Stock Average nJ« ^ort-term rates were 30 20% 30 41 4.6 to 330.6. Standard & Poor’s steady *»■a ]lltle h«h«r th[ough-t’Sw'fi +’%!500-stock index added 1.67 at ^ of the week Three -Wj-«W ,gMm~tjw[98.68. --------------------month Treasury bill rates open- Of 1,677 issues traded this week, 1,038 advanced and 507 declined. There were 134 new 1968 highs and 40 new lows. Volume rose to 45,812,760 shares from 39,796,102 last week Spurred by heightened peace hopes, the market jumped to one of its biggest gains in recent months on Monday. Other favorable factors were a surge retail sales in July, improvement in new orders and production and a rise in employment. The gain of 11.37 by the Dow Jones industrial Average that was its largest since ’April 11. The market followed up with a smaller advance on Tuesday. After the regular closing of securities exchanges Wednesday, the market slipped to a moderate Ipss on Thursday. ★ * ★ The market sewed a substantial gain on Friday. The five most active stocks on the New York Stock Exchange this week were: Occidental Petroleum, off at 4514 on 957,500 shares; Schen-ley, up at 54Y4; Universal Oil Preferred, off 2 at 38; American Telephone, up % at 5H4, and Commercial Credit, up 4* at 68%. ed at 4.99 per cent, rose to a high of 5.18 per cent on Thursday, and declined to 5-12 per cent following the Fed’s announcement. Federal funds continued to trade a little above $ per cent. Most corporate issues sold out following the discount rate change. Seasoned corporates were steady and changed little at the close. Recent issues were shade lower. - ■ A * . , , \ Despite better prices Friday, municipal bonds declined for the first week since early July. Advances Friday offset about a third of the declines earlier in the week. Long term munici- , pals closed about lMt points below their highs of the year, reached the previous week. The Week’S most sizable offering was a 5129-million block of local housing bonds sponsored by the U.S. Housing Assistance Administration. The federal agency awarded 48 separate issues wi behalf of 48 local bousing authorities across the nation at.an average net borrowing cost of 4.2518 per cent. In May, when the agency awarded 37 issues aggregating $1+4.355 million, the average net borrowing cost was a record 4.7281 per Week in Stocks and Bonds- Following gives the range of Dow-Jones closing averages for the week. ---J--~- . STOCK AVERAGES ----=.*r —J.r . Ffrtt High Low Last NetCh. 885.89 879.51 885.89 +16.24 248.33 250.45 248.33 250.45 + 4.69 131.13 131.52 131.01 131.52 .317.13 319.09 317.13 319.09 + 5.05 BOND AVERAGES 64.61 77,20 . 81.78 . 84.40 . StIS, 77,20 7699 77.13 + 0.18 64.83 . 64.61 64.67 + 0.11 77.70 ,77.20 77.55 + 0:45 82.13 81.73 81.73 + 0115 84.58 84.40 - 8158 + t>.rt 66.25 66.13 66.25 - 0.02 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 C—ia Week's NY List (Continued from Page C-12) RdgBate* .8 SX.1V" 1 am m* + w RelchCh ,40b RellableStr 1 RfHanir 1.20 RellenEI pf 3 RtllM pfl.40 Republic Co RepubStl 2.50 nquifoe 1J0 153 ] 173 5094 15 7*94 ts ink 542 62V4 <7(6 43V. M1W M MM 7494 7414 571* 40 mm UnPec pf.40 Un Tank £fc Unlroyal 1.20 Unlrpyaf pf I Uniehope JO UnltAlrLIn * i ink t Un Knffcr I Unit Pin Cal Un Fruit 1.40 Raxill pf I RtynMet .90 RAM pf4.50 awes RayT pf 3.5 RhaamM 1.4c Rhelnpold r RIchMer l.i RegrtPep 1 RlegalT 1.20 r»Hflr+ • 439* 4394 -» 3394 34 9M4 (194 +1V> 39 39 + lb b 4014 4(84 Ritt Pfau .40 $47 3014 34H 37 RlytMOP JO *54 «* 0V4\ RochG 1.10b Roch Tel 1 RohmH 1.40b Rohr CD JO Rollinilnc .30 Roper Cp 1 RoyCCola .72 Roy Dot J*r 121 1914 2014 2014 — 44 170 3944 3744 3(44 ' i 74 90(4 (544 U 310 2744 2444 2714 132 4444 45 45 127 2314 2214 2244 Roy D fn.tl Rubbrmd . RyenAero .20 RydarSya .(0 (hda.)HI(h Lav Lett Ch El Pf4.50 1590 TT 74H 7414 —1 El pf T 190 47 47 47 El pf3.70 1100 42 4144 42 +2 190 MW 4014 MW __ n< »44 -MW Ml (H Mb (W .. 82 87 1594 86 - 365 S 341 844 Jl IL —- 525 60W 50 000 134 13“ 4044 1 ink * : 1J0 (20 42W 59 MW +1 MM 1.20 419 3W4 S3 33W + Nuclear 425 Sl4 3U4 3314 +1 Pk Min 324 414 fib. 44* — jura* la 121 24 24(4 KW t USForS 2.83a 37 341* 3514 MWif Pine Knob Gardena, a newly built terrace for dancing to big bands, opens this weekend at Pine Knob 'Ski Resort, 7777 Pine Knob, Independence Township. Dancers can glide to the sound of the Warren Covlngtori band tonight. USGypsm 3a 319 (4(4 (4$ B + V USGyp pfl.eo 195 4314 42 43'4 + 1 US Induat M 1314 29W 2444 2744 4-1 US Lines .50p 34 44W gW | USPlay l.40a 17 STM 37.■HI USPIyCh 1.50 4(9 7414 49W 74W +494 USPCh pfSJO xlM *4 92 92 +1 USPCh pfl JO 472 3794 34W 379b 4 US Shoe 1 JO 50 4714 —------------ US Smalt lb 471 4Mb 5914 MW + 4* USSme pf5.50 ( §494 (39* *414 +114 ■ r 13M 3944 3(94 3844 123 20W 1914 2014 533 2614 25(4 26W I’M 37'A 3894 ___________ 20 3194 3094 3114 Lf pf* 2M 128W IttW 120W I Pd JO 4744 4(94 S7W 3 n 1J0 314 479k 45W MW tide .60 7f 4114 3994 3994 — W 164 3694 34 3614 +1'A is J. y. USTobac .90 Unit uni !r Un Ufllpf. ■ • Lf Uf &1X StJoe LP 1 StLSanP 2.20 StLSanF pf* StRaoP 1.40b MM ---PL 1,44 UTOcVt.20 StRaoP 1.4 s£!<£i“.3t Sanoamo .40 SanRlnt JO 337 $2 4794 5194 + 5 199b 1(94 199* .. (0 5394 541* 15----- S 109 100W 109 - 404 339b 31W 3*W + Veaderln 1.60 226 4394 43 4196 + 94 Z30 |1 712 4 I 94W f SchlltzBr 1.20 —______... 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WallTler 1 Walworth co WardFd 1.02f Wamaco 1.20 Warnc pfi.50 ISSSMS- Sears Ro, 1.20 Seebwrg .60 Selion in® Servmat ,40b SharonSt 1.5o Shell Oil 2 JO SIwllTm .46a 2ta 4494 421-___________ X5X5 47W 449b 449k 591 29W 2694 2E^6t 2044 4194 3494 4194 200 70W 64W 70W 4 4294 4294 4294 155 35W 33W 3514 4 3594 1 3594 09 5(94 5694 5*94 51 30 ms 150 4994 47 49 73 27 2594 2694, 65 22W 2194' 2214 546 3694 3594 36W 14 72 70W 71 14 72W 7094 71W WarLam pf 6 z450 Way G Wtfan Un i.iv Waan pfAl J6 • 5 2194 21 H| “ ’946 1494 1294 1294 .35 3314 3314 »W Webb Del E ... . nfd WstPtPep „ WVPulp 1.90 195 55W 5196 (51* +394 ’ 2794 2794 094 Simmon* 1.M simp Pat 42 Sinclair 2.(0 Singwco 240 Singer pf3.50 Shelly Oil 1 Skil Corp .90 SmHhAO 1.40 WVaPulp wi WVaP ^>f 4.50 (50 7694 7314 76W +2W x293 7294 70 71 + “■ x73 9494 9114 9314 +i x22 77 7594 77 +1 14 3(94 MW 3*W ... — — ■ 411* 419* WnUTet 1 Wn Un pi _ Wn Un pf4.M 80 36A — 60V. — 3294 —114 I 4514 4 30 4594 44W M +3. 357 52 5094 52 + 9 PM 1M 153 154...+3. MW 39V. SOW — 1* .. 2094 20W IT' 115 21W 19W 21 It 21V4 (M4 “ Jamrich spoke-at dedication of the new Bay De Noc Community College Escanaba and announced “a. sincere intent not to compete with or duplicate programs properly being fulfilled” by the cdmmitoity 115 +1H Watkln John* ISO 55 52 MW if84 Goa 1.M 141 421*. SOW 4194 +394 -X 15 pL gp +394 ih^ 171* 17W " I | *94 7W + 9* ZlO (OW (OW MW i- 94 261 SOW 3594 3694 —IV. 297 3994 30H 3994 — 17 31 3094 31 35V. 3394 349k 1024 36W 34W 3594 0 90 (994 90 23 79 77W 71 26 42 653 659k < M7 29W i 70 S2W 5T 030 29Va MW 28 Va t 363A 25% 25% 917 M96MPPPI. 18 108W 106W 107 M » 19V. 20 X—Y—Z— XeroxCp 1.M 456 2879k 279 2069. _ Xtra Inc 195 5694 5194 52W —29k YngatSht 1.M 427 34H. 33V. 3314 — V. YngstSD 1,1“ M MW Zap Off Sh Zayre Corp 1.20a 14 +194 .24 157 339k 32’A 33 Copyrighted by Th* Associated Pr*>t 19M z—Sale* In full. Unless otherwise noted, rotes oi extra dividends or payments n r are identified li or g^-dlsti tStt- Also oxtra or extras, b—Annual rah dock dlvIdOnd. c-Liquidatlng divl . d—Declared or Mid In 1967 plui ; dividend, a Dadared or paid st his year. 9—Payable in stock during aatlmatad cash, value an ax-dividend i^llstribution dete^^t—Paid ' - or «pW^up.k:rBaclared orpald dividend omitted, daferred or no action taxon at leaf dividend maatlng. r—De-—| —““ In I960 plus stock dividend. Ck during I9M, estimated ex-di*trjbu- dend Pad sales rafts. ww^Wlfl , v—Ek divf ■Ex dlstrlbtr ..... X :« day y|—In bankruptcy ---------- .. baing-lkbo2Lted under th* Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such <— panles. fn—Foreign Issue sublect to terest equalization tax. _ WEEKLY N Y STOCK SALES Total tor week ............. 45,012,760 Year ago .*”**“":"”^ 4i*,97«',oio Jan*. ^Yo^tato* l^K • • •• V.Sjiojoi American Stdclc Exch. Aerolet J Air West Ajax^Ma ArkLftas T High Lew l 26% 25% i 19% II st Chg. Va — % * +1% % — % I Oil 584 7% 613*16 7% if k G Alt . 7% 7% +1% Craola 2.60a SSir&p Dynelectrn JB%Sr£ ^9iTVf 27W 26V. 27W + H 169k 1514 151/4 ... OH 0 IW — H .9W 'jib 094 — H 2294 2TV4 2114 — 12H|2 1294 + m 1594 13H 1594 i flW 1094 WW MM — 14 1294 11W 1?W + 14 Am* CP 1435 I — .02 64 «i .15* 115 2594 25 594 594 - WW pi 17/ iw #194 67 7094----- 297 194 7H *9* +19* 51 12W 1114 11W + 14 54 Mb 914 994 + W 1995 11 »W (W if (4 645 Mb 14 0794 +4H 76 35'A 3394 3494 + H 599 9W (94 9W + W 4M 14W 11W 129* —1H 529 13 W1H4 12 —W 9* 5(3 5314 4Mb 5M^ J-”/- 9(1 3414 301* 34 78 37W 3414 35 61V4 - 34W 321* 3294 —1 1(14 24(4 26H—294 Associated Prose IN* STOCK SALES 20*47,59; ....... 16.197.1M .. .. KJ43.715 ...... 476,663.607 Dance Bands Featured at New Facility Gov. Romney’s panel of arbitrators Monday morning will hear objections raised to the imposed route of the controversial 1-698 freeway in south Oakland County! The three-man panel, named Monday by Romney to make a binding dedsion on the route of the roadway, convened for the ^arbitration hearings, probably first time Tuesday, that day it heard the route proposed by the Michigan Highway Commission. Several county' communities that have been bickering over the roadway for more than four NMU Mod Eyas Scholarship Fund 1-696 Panel to Hear Communities' Gripes years are expected Monday morning to raise their objections to the Highway Commission’s proposal and to submit alternate routes. The meeting is scheduled for 10 a.m. at the Oakland County Courthouse in Pontiac. To make matters worse, the U S. Strife Puzzles Touring Italy Official will have to settle more than a simple dispute between the several communities and the Highway Commission. Each objecting community could—and probably will—submit conflicting alternate routes. Involved ..are Royal Oak, Pleasant Ridge, Huntington Woods, Oak Park, Lathrup Village and Southfieldr BIRMINGHAM Ala. (AP) -An Italian city official says ids people can’t understand radial problems in this country. ‘America’s biggest prob lem, as we in Italy see it, is dvil rights,” said Vice Mayor Salavatore Paonni of Turin Italy. “Those of us who are favorable toward America only wonder when we read the reporis of riots and ask this-be?’ ”— Paonni who is touring the United States as a State Department guest, commented Friday at a meeting with Birmingham dvtc and business leaders. Ferris W. Gillett Service for Ferris W. Gillett, 68, of 3070 Detroit will be 3 p.m. Monday at the Reigle Funeral Home, Flint. Burial will be in Thetford Cemetery, Flint. Mr. Gillett died yesterday. He was a self-employed painting and decorating contractor. Surviving besides his wife. Sylvia, are one son, Ferris Jr. of Pontiac; one daughter, Mrs. Berden Swain of Pontiac; five grandchildren; and one greatgrandchild. William Martyn Service . for William Martyn, 94, of 39* Waldo will be 10:30 a.m. Tuesday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mr. Martyn, a retired employe of the Fisher Body Division, died today. Surviving are tjjreg sons, Otto |L. of Waterford Township and Ernest W. and Russell, both of Florida; two daughters, Mrs. A. J. Cadieux of Pontiac and Mrs. Elmer H i b 1 e r of California; three grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Service for Roy H. Cole, 73, of 4770 Hamilton will be 7 tonight at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home. Mr. Cole’s body will be taken to Virginia for burial. Mr. Cole died yesterday. He was a member of the Emmanuel Baptist Church in Pontiac and a retired Fisher Body Empolye. S u r v i vi ng—are—three daughters, Mrs. Clyde Alvis pf Ciarkston, Mrs. William Heldreth of Pontiac and Mrs. Wayne Childers of Rochester; three sons, James M. of Pontiac, Roy of Cleveland, Ohio, and Earl 0. of St. Charles, Pa.; sister; three brothers; and 21 grandchildren. Mi*. George Roth - Service for Mrs. George (Dona) Roth, 54, of 6195 Hatchery, Waterford Township, will be 1 p.m. Tuesday at the First Free Methodist Church of Pontidb with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. Roth died today. Surviving are two1 sons, Kenneth of Rochester and Raymond of Pontiac; two daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Gregory end Joan, both of Pontiac; two brothers; and Mrs. Sidney Shurtz Service for former Pontiac resident Mrs. Sidney (Elba) Shurtz, 55, of Millington will be 1 p.m. Monday at the Hamlin Funeral Home, Millington, with burial following. Mrs. Shurtz died. Friday. Surviving besides her husband are two sons, Charles of Millington and Dr . Carl E. of Columbia, Mo.; five brothers; five Sisters'; and six grandchildren. Raul W. Carpenter WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Paul W. Carpenter, 54 of 2164 Lawndale will be 1:30 pjn. Monday at the Dooelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in Pine Lake Gemtery. Mr. Carpenter died yesterday. He w*s a sergeant in the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department and had been in the department 14 years. He was alto a member of. the Benevolent and Protective Order of the Elks and of the Metropolitan Club of America. Surviving besides his wife, Ada M., are two sons, Larry of Marine City ap* .m. tomorrow at the Manley Bailey Funeral Home, Birmingham. Burial will be in Lakeview Cemetery, Calumet, at 2 p.m. Monday. Mrs. Taivaloja died yesterday. She was a member of the Finnish Lutheran Church Calumet. Surviving besides her husband are a son, John C. of Troy; six sisters; and two brothers. John C. West Sr. WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Jr* Service .for former resident John C. West Sr., 76, of Mio will be 11 a.im. Monday at tiie C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home with burial in Four Towns Cemetery Waterford Township. Mr. West died yesterday. He was a member of Veterans of Foreign Wars No. 4126 in Mio. / Surviving are six daughters, Mrs. Matilda Hollister of Twining, Mrs. Howard Yale of Gould City, Mrs. Lou John of Rockford, Mrs. Dora Kennedy and Mrs. Russel Vanderhoof, both of Lansing, and Della of Levering, and seven brothers, including Wiliam of Pontiac, Arthur of Walled Lake, Alvin of Waterford Township and John C. of CSarkston. Gaylord Meeting LANSING (AP) — The State Commerce Department scheduled a meeting Friday of commission and staff members of five economic development districts organized recently in the northern part of the state. The meeting will be held at the Otsego Ski Lodge in Gaylord. It will give those attending chance to exchange ideas to aid their efforts to promote economic growth in the 47 counties in the districts, FLAT ROCK (AP)—A head-on crash of two cars near Flat Rock late Thursday claimed five lives. Scene Explosive at Columbia U. Thomas Olender, 16, of Flat Rock died Friday from injuries suffered in the crash. The other victims were Samuel Kondratiw, 25, of Toledo, Ohio; Dale Schudel, 17, and Robert Riley, 17, both of Flat Rock, and William McKane, M of rural Mohroe County, NEW YORK (AP)__________The Columbia University campus, « of recent student explosions was the site of another kind of blast Friday. A cannon Police said the car driven by Kondratiw, with the three teen-agers as passengers, collided with McKane’s car on a sharp curve on South Huron River Drive, then left toe. road and hit the porch of a nearby home. Saws and crowbars Were required to remove the victims from the wreckage. Field. The firing was part of an experiment on noise being conducted by Eugene Galanter, a professor at the university for the federal government. ■| Sparks-Griffin (■Bi FUNERAL HOME Dams'll Listen HHH “Thoughtful Service99 if Pig Talks 46 Williams SL Phone FE 8-9288 detail H. Griffin _ CHICAGO (AP) - During a m - — news conference held Friday by John M. Bailey Democratic national chairman a bushy-haired tJ yippir-said his group intends io ~ “ nominate a pig for president. “Will the pig be allowed to i dress the Democratic convention?” the yippie asked Bailey. “Do you have a pig that talks?” Bailey replied. Bridge Is Stolen SEATTLE (AP)’i- A 15-foot-long foia^fr^t'Wide wooden bridge spanning a lake inlet!_ this area was stolen. Man's Mummified Body Found in Wife's Home PHILADELPHIA (UPI) — The almost mummified body of an elderly man, dead for between three and four years, was discovered last night in thq second floor bedroom of a home in which his 78-year-old wife still lived. ----Police went to the home after they were contacted by the Veteran’s Administration (VA) who discovered they had been sending benefit checks to Harry Schwartz although he had been carried on their records as a terminal cancer patient for the past four years. Schwartz, 80, a Navy vet-erah, lived with wife Mark, 78, on a quiet, treelined street. Some $7,000 in VA checks were found hi her possession when police discovered the body. The woman whs taken to Philadelphia General Hospital for observation. Police said neighbors, who did not see toe man’ for “about ■ three years” complained'to the Board of Health and Veterans. Administration officials two years ago. NOTHING DONE “Apparently nobody ever came around to do anything about it and police were never notified,” a police spokesman said. ■ v The man apparently died in the winter, police said, and his body was semimummified. He weighed about 35 pounds. “All she kept doing was calling for the admiral, t guess that was he nickname for him,” police said. No chaises wore brought against toe woman. “Maybe she didn’t hive the money to bury him or the heart to,” a spokesman added. ; Flat Rock Mishap Claims Sth Victim on your present income ■nd avoid the problems of garnishmont and re- Seethe Company that has helped thousands of Pontiao area families for over 14 years. John M. Hanson Director Licensed and Bonded byStateefMieh. SeeJMLCC Michigan Credit Counsellors 162 Pontiao State Bank Bldg, FE 8-0456 Att’n. of Credit Counsolloro THE MASONIC SERVICE — Since ages ago, it has been the custom of Free Masons to conduct final services for their departed brothers upon proper request. When funeral services are held foC a Free Mason in an area or- place that is not the home lodge of the deceased, the J. L.VOORHEES local lodge of that area will take charge and conduct the »>ervice upon— request and verification of his Masonic affiliation. . The Masonic service can be the entire service or can be in conjuno-tion with the clergyman of the family’s choice. When Masonic or «ty other fraternal gronp is to take an active part in a service conducted by a clergyman, then the clergyman should be notified and the details M. E. SIPLE approved by him. VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME 268 North Perry Street Phone FE 2-8378 I THINK ABOUT IT!! OBSTACLES . . Georg* Washington, even with his muscular power, wot in ill health during ] hit whole Ilf*. Beethoven was deaf, yet h* wrote music Helen Keller, on* < of the world's greatest personalities, wot deaf, mute and blind. John Milton ' continued to write poetry after his eyesight foiled him. Homer was also blind. Robert E. tee, defeated in/4ar, became a great educator. Dostoy-ovsky, the Russian novelist was an epileptic. Hideo Noguchi,‘brilliant Jap- i anese bacteriologist who paved the way for syphilis cure, had a childhood in pitiable poverty. Won* yet, at age three, his left hand and arm were- ■ badly crippled in an Occident. M)JL, a crippled polio victim was elected President four fimes. P. T. Barnum of circus fame had to start all over again ' < at age 601 gained greater fame and fortune than in qarDar year*. X C ' Penney had horrible financial reyenos in the depression but he continued, ] Such people from all ever the world, show us how la food reality. Steven- < eon spotlights such example* in these words, "You must some time fight t ' out or perish; and if that be so, then why not now, and where you ifcindf* ... HUNTOON FUNERAL HOME; 79 Oakland Ave.. PontfOc. Member ^ Nationnl Selected Morticians. Phone 332-0189. aifaiit m C—14 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 \ BOYS KNIT SHIRTS Handsome turtle-neck, mockturtle and collared styles in assorted ^tades^-16^^ 77* MEN’S CANVAS SLACKS Yeung fastbacks. Western pockets, Fortrel polyester/cotton. 3 colors. 28-36. 3,88 TWO GIRL’S SLACK SETS Rugged fashion. Cotton corduroy slacks with-matching cotton knit 1.22, WHILE QUANTITIES YANKEE MENS FAMOUS MAKE ’T" SHIRTS Cotton knit. Barely detectable flaws will not affect wear, appearance. S-M-L-XL. 9 VOLT TRANS. BATTERIES 13° LIMITS -------n r 19 SPECTACULAR BUYS! omm It’s fun to shop at Yankees! Come, find out for yourself! Bring the whole family and make a day or night of it! Plenty of room to park in front of the store. GIRL’S DENIM SLACKS The ” fashionable lean look in action stretch, cotton / nylon, many k colors. 3-6x. 83* FISHNET PANTY HOSE Non-run bikini panty top. Preferred dia . Fashion hue4, pro- portioned. 66* CHROMElTOWEL POLE 1" heavy-duty-pole with 2 towel rings, steel towel bar. From 7'6" to 9'2”. 1.19 V 12 OZ. CASSEROLE Individual French style has Currier and Ives .deaeration on white ^r^nd^cncl^^ %49* --- HOME OF DISCOUNT PRICES * 1125 NORTH PERRY STREET AT ARLENE THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 3D—1 Dr. Oaks Says: Jogging Better for. You Than Playing Golf (EDITOR’S NOTE — This is another in as weekly series of articles issued by* the Oakland County Medical Society. Dr. Oaks is the collective voice of the Oakland Couftty Medical Society.) : * In terms of your good physical health, jogging is better for you than playing golf. The benefits derived from a round of golf are largely psychological or mental wlfth perhaps only a nominal effect on your physical fitness. Similarly, brisk walking is good physical exercise, but strolling leisurely is of no value ' in enhancing physical fitness. Bowling falls into-much the same category as golf, while tennis offers considerable potential physical stress. The object of jogging or anyi fitness exercise is the gradual Increase of the physical load to greater and greater levels and regularity in performing the exercise. *-»•.** Isometric exercises, in terms of a normal fitness program are really of no value. The goal is not to build muscle mass, but to make the person physically fit. JOGGING THOUGHTS Our jogger who has been keeping a diary of his thoughts has Just completed his seventh lap. EIGHTH LAP: “Why do I continue this ridiculous activity. . Puffing! Sweating! Why notj play golf! Swim! Hide a bi- cycle!” * * ★ (Jogging requires nothing more than a few spare minutes and for the busy individual is thus the best form of exercise. Five minutes of running will bum up about 100 calories. For example, an eight ounce glass of beer has a caloric content of —114. This requires six minutes to expend the caloric energy by running, 10 minutes by swimming, 14 minutes bike riding and 22 minutes walking.) NINTH LAP: “Boy, a steam-bath will feel real good . . . wonder how much weight I’ve lost.” * * * (Exercise alone will not di-minish .weight; caloric restric-tions ahe necessary. Jogging merely oils the weight reduction by replacing fat with murele, , just as protein should replace the fat in the diet.) TENTH LAP: “I’m too busy 20 War Deac/j Are Identified by Pentagon WASHINGTON (AP) — Sixty-& one servicemen killed in action were named on the Pentagon's recent casualty list of the Vietnam war. They included 20 from Mid-West states: ARMY Illinois—Sat, Alan D. Trucono, Sli . vllle; Sot Leslie J. Tegtmeier, Chlo Heights; Pfc. Eugene Baker. Chicago. Kentueky-Spec. 4 Myron Thompson, Manchester; Pfc. Welter L. Walls, Louls- V MICHIGAN—Pvt. George N. OavIsToe-flMt. Minnesota—Pfc. Thomas rjWissouflTrSpec. 4 Robert O. Bumlller, breathing to talk; wait and I’ll be able to talk after I cool off.’ Jogging should be designed to enhance health. No effort should be made to everexert. The aim is to “stress” the body cautiously. Competitive situations are to be avoided, particularly by those persons who have been away from physical stress for some time. The sole purpose of physical though, fitness is good health. Medical experts still do not have all the answers on fitnes;. It is highly individualized; what is ideal exercise for one person may be too much Stress for another individual. RUN FOR LIFE Heart attack victims should particularly consult their own physician before embarking on program. In the end, i, proper exercise and fit- ness now may avoid medical problems later in life/Jogging truly can be a “run Tor your life.” For information about jogging programs in Oakland County, contact by card or letter the medical society office. If you have a question for Dr. Oaks, send a card or letter to: Oakland County Medical Society, 348 Fade, Birmingham 48009. Specific medical advice cannot be given.) 2 State Soldiers Killedin Vietnam WASHINGTON (AP) - Two Michigan servicemen were among 18 recent casualties of the Vietnam War, the Defense Department announced yesterday. Killed in action were Army Pfc. James H. Hllyard, son of | Harold J. Hilyard of Adrian! and Army Pfc. Thomas R. Po-I lisky, son of Mr. and Mrs: Cas-' mir J. Polisky of Filer City. Mia Gets Mexico Divorce From Sinatra John D. Rockefeller, once the richest] man in the world, lived be is. HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Actress Mia Farrow, Frank Sinatra’s young bride, says her two-year marriage was unbearable, Without an announcement, she obtained a quickie Mexican divorce Friday ,in Juarez. “She’s really not going to bare her soul" about the reasons for the break-up, a spokesman for the 23-ydar-old actress | said, “but she said, if anybody asks, there’s certainly no third party involved.” ★ * * Haggard looking, the foriner star of television’s “Peyton Place!’ flew home to Hollywood after the 30-minute diVorce proceeding. She went into seclusion at her $300,000 Bel Air home. Sinatra, 52, flew east Thursday after taping a television show in Hollywood and was unavailable for comment. SEPARATE CAREERS The introverted, seemingly fragile actress with the close-cropped hair and frightened gray eyes married the fastiliving Sinatra on July 19,1966. Hollywood was abuzz, and some in the film colony predicted that because of the difference ages—29 years—it could never last. Their on-again-off-again courtship quickly turned into an on-again-off-again marriage as their separate careers often kept them apart. Then Miss Farrow said she couldn’t appear with Sinatra in “The Detective," the latest Jilm he produced, because of her starring role in “Rosemary's Baby.” The incident reportedly irritated Sinatra. They were separated last November, after 18 months of marriage. And early Friday Miss Farrow hopped a private plane to Juarez. SPARTAN FAMILY DEPARTMENT STORES has the low price! I. Prewar, CulkJ. MIHl A. Negron-Rod-Sgt. V Ictor- B. ““~" Columbus; CpI. Allen J. Wisconsin—Set. Miguel rlguez, Milwaukee; Sgt. V.icror u. n Superior; Spec. 4 James A. Looby, *°n' MARINE CORPS lows—CpI. Jemes M. Robins, Rose Hill; Pfc. Robert 0- Harvey. ■■■—•.-AN — CpI. Rebar Wisconsin—Pvt. Richard Died of wounds: MARINE CORPS -Kentucky—Pfc. Prankllnf: Renfro Richmond. Changed from missiflg —hostile: ARMY "pec. 4 James L. Moore, MICHIGAN—Sgt. Steven Detroit. Minnesota—Wo James V Altken. Died no! tile action: ARMY Illinois—Spec. 4 Vernon Junction. Ohio—Spec. 4 Engeno M. Barnett, Cincinnati. Changed from missing to dead —nonhostile: MARINI CORPS Indiana—Pic. Charles V. Firth, .( Missing in action: ARMY pfc. David R. Howard. AIR FORCE Col. David W. Winn, Mai. Wayne Wolfkell. Lt. Col. Carl B. Crumpltr. Changed from missing to captured: 'AIR, FORCE 6WF*““ Wilton, Copt. Leon F The first large-scale factory producing fish protein concentrate Is operating in the village of Bua on the west coast, Sweden. The gray powder is used for animal feed and contains 83 per cent protein. LOW COST CAR LOA>IS GMTC EMPLOYEES FEDERAL CREDIT UNION MR Woodward — Pontiac , CORNER OF DIXIE HGWY. AT TELEGRAPH RP.-PONTIAC FREE PARKING MONEY REFUNDED IF YOU’RE NOT SATISFIED! D-^S TftE PONTI&e PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 Jacoby on Bridge By OSWALD AND , JAMES JACOBY Texas and the Jacobys have "no monopoly on the Jacoby transfer bid. California tised it, against the Dallas Or a n g e| Team to bid a] fine slam. The biddingl is interesting in that it shows] how far modern expert bidding] has gone on the road to artifi- JACOBY dal methods to get the most nut of good hands. —1 ★ ★ - South’s opening no-trump bid is standard and North’s two-spade response is a special Ja-j coby transfer bid to show both minor suits and a hand that might range anywhere from a bad hand to a tremendous one. The three-diamond rebid by South said that he had better than clubs and North’s three-spade bid said, 'T have something in spades.” South knew that no-trump was going to be a bad contract. North had shown a minor tWO-suit hand and something in spades. He could not have; NORTH ♦ AJ5 ¥ Void 4QJ9643 * K10 3 2 WEST ♦ 96 4 3 -¥ AQ96 3 ‘K2 ♦ 95 EAST ♦ 872 VK 10854 ♦ 10 ♦ J 8 6 4 SOUTH (D) ♦ KQ1Q ¥ J 7 2 ♦ A875 ♦ AQ7 Both vulnerable West North East South 1N.T. Pas* 2 A Pas* 3 4 pass 3 ♦ "Pass 4 ♦ Pass 4 ¥ Pas* 5, N’T. Pass 6 ♦ Pass Pass Pass ‘ Opening lead—¥ A hearts also. South bid four elubs! North was now ready to invite the Siam. What better way could there be than a four-heart bid? This had to be a cue bid j because North had already shown spades, diamonds and dubs. South’s jump to five no-trump was the artifidal bid called the grand slam force. It asked North to bid seven with good diamonds. North had good] diamonds but they weren’t good enough. He needed king-queen or maybe king-jack. North signed off at six diamonds. ★ ★ ★ The Dallas audience was worried once more. They couldn’t gain. Could they break even? Of course, they broke even. After all the Jacoby transfer is a Dallas invention. The Orange North-South pair reached six diamonds on exactly the same bidding sequence. V*CHRD Sense** Q—The bidding has been: West North East South 3 ♦ 3 N.T. Pass 4 N.T. Pass Pass Dble Pass Pass 7 You, South, hold: ♦K2 ¥K2 48 3 ♦AKQJ965 What do you do? A—Pass. There is no reason to redouble hut far less Reason to ran out. TODAY’S QUESTION Your partner opens one spade. You, South/hold: ♦14 ¥KJ98 .4A2 ♦KQ1054 What do you do.?' Answer Monday Daily Almanac By United Press International Today is Saturday, AUg. 17, the 230th day of 1968 with 136 to follow. The moon is between its last quarter and new phase. The morning star 1 s Saturn. The evening star is Venus. ★ ★ On this day in history: Iii 1807 Robert Fulton’s steamship Claremont made its first trip up the Hudson River. In 1915 a hurricane struck Galveston, Tex., ldlUng 275 persons. In 1935 first baseman Lou Gehrig of the New York Yankees set an American League record by playing his 1,308 consecutive game. In 1965 the curfew was lifted in the Watts section of Los Angeles after 34 persons had been killed in 6 days of rioting. A thought for the day: Writer Bret Harte said, “One big vice in a man is apt to keep out a great many smaller ones.” ROBIN MALONE By Bob Lubbcra THE BORN LOSER By Art Sansom (T) jr / if vouke 6oiHtV f Our, THE KEV£ ) V ARE IW THE U ,« a little | > JCOTI ►rmW Others to toko Initiate CAPRICORN (Dec. 22-Jon int to. complete basic chon— . -ep on even keel. Steody *PP| CSeb. 19-March 20): Past 'oporty are emphasized. Fix things — **- rt safety precautions | GEMINI# Q rd to ARIES: t which visitor For Monday S iRUES (March 21-April It): w sas, rentals. Overcome tandenci ,od about past. Someone you •w communicates. Take this as neM. Not wlsa to hash over 5u«us (April 20-Mny 20): Mon*V •*-ided for trayal. visits Is spotlighted, r Is to Unlsh one task at a time.„Avold I S3E£ Check expenses. tEMlNi (May 21-June 20): Prelec M oress nears completion. I n c o m« entiaf cart bb ’enhancOd. Accent / d ’feSln ANCER*' (June ves up. Circumstances torn or. You are able to make constructive itacts Emphasize Independence, ijnaltty. Look ahead, not to tha past. Eor Uuly 23jAug.^H)^ A beyond surfecs apoe ibid the, scenes. Much d may be under covar. ' 1 (Aug. 23-Sept. 22): Special .IW1 id brightens day. Socialize. Ce-letlonshlos --------- Dem Will Go With'Winner' JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Rep. Charles E. Bennett, D-Fla., said Friday he would go with the popular candidate — regardless of party — in November if the presidential election is thrown to the House of Representatives. * * Bdnnett predicted that no! candidate would get, a majority] with three in the field, and that] was “almost inevitable” that the electipn would be decided ' by the fiousq. ¥ B ; it 'i “I think it is consistent with r my responsibilities to vote far file man who has received the popular vote of the people, whether he be a Democrat or Republican, or American tj Independent or ^Whatever party may claim Ms i allegiance,” Bennett said. The annual eoat of forest fires In the U& is about Ft million. 10 Orphans Stay Together-for Awhile MADERA, Calif. (UPD The and contributions of more than 1° Moaned children of Mr. $50,000 from persons as far and Mrs. Robert Morria re- away as Vietnam and West mained together today, their Germany, vow not to-be separated real! _ — ised at least for the moment. TRUST FUND Two relatives who had peti- -A® official for the Bank of tioned for their guardianship j America, where a trust fund withdrew their requests “in the has been established, estimated best interests of the children" the fund plus Social Security closed hearing yesterday. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 The family was ordered to discuss the matter further and appear again within lb days before Suprerior Court Judge. Jack Hammerberg. Attorneys indicated there was some dispute among, the relatives, but would ftot Elaborate. would yield the children come of about $600 a month more than when their parents were alive. ★ it ★ Four of th orphan?, Judy, 16, Michael, 10, Theresa, 12, and Robert, 11, appeared at the hearing yesterday. They made nA comments but appeared to ' be in good spirits. Meanwhile, the orphans,! ... , , ! , , , j ranging in age from 3 to 17, After .their parents’ death, the will remain wards of the ju.[ children expressed the desire to veiule Court and continue living |[ema*n together in Madera in the home of their parents, k*8®86. We ve always been a were killed in a four-car free- >c'°se’knit family.” way crash July 2. , I Judge Hammerberg said he ONE PETITION I would need more time and the c. _ ., .. . ... ... 'families would need to consult Smce the accident, the ctol- further before he Could dnm have been cared for by determine “the least objection* their maternal grandmother* decision." Mrs. Bolis Lachawico of Fres- , J no. She and her husband had submitted one of the petitions for guardianship. The other petition was sub-j mitted by a paternal aunt, Mrs.| New — Black lights. Lights Gloria Graves of Concord. that make objects glow in the * * * dark. Black light paints, post- An attorney for Mrs. Graves"8:.s‘ ™§§8?$ said at the hearing yesterday, 0rchard Lake Ave “We would Jike to get them in a r home where they would be able Faith to grow up normally without all Baldwin the......... News in Brief Dougherty of 209 told Pontiac police! People in the News By The Associated Press "i W> bappy to know that b|ack Americans have returned spiritually to Africp,” says Amy Ashwood Garvey, the first wife of Marcus Garvey, who founded a black nationalist movement half a century ago, Riding along a Harlem street yesterday, she gestured at the crowds and said: “It was peoplA like these ... that gave my husband his greatest success.' I couldn’t write about him without returning to Harlem.” Mrs. Garvey, who returned to the United States nine months ago for the first time in 27 years, said she plans to complete a book about her late husband during her stay. During her years away, she lived in Africa and, snore recently, in the West Indies. Garvey, in the years between 1917 and 1925, organized thousands of American Negroes in both an effort to build Negro economic strength and to lead members of his race back to Africa. .The federal government jailed Garvey for using the mails to defraud in connection with his business activities and deported him in 1927. He died in London in 1940 at the age of 52. Warhol Shooting Suspect to Be Committed Valeria Solanis, actress accused of shooting pop artist and underground movie maker Andy Warhol, has been found incompetent to stand trial and ordered committed to a mental institution. Miss Solanis had been indicted June 27 on charges of attempted murder, assault and illegal possession of a weapon. The 26-year-old actress starred in Warhol’s “I, a Man.” Warhol, 36, was hospitalized for two months recovering from his wounds. State Supreme Court Justice Joseph A. Brust certified and approved the psychiatric report on Miss Solanis yesterday. Her attorney said the court’s ruling would not be contested. Teddy Home After Vacation in Greece Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., flew home Friday after a vacation in* Greece and smilingly declined any interviews at Boston’s Logan International Airport After clearing customs, Kennedy, encountering both newsmen and photographers, was led out of a back door by airport officials. He left immediately for his home at Hyannisport on Cape Cod. Kennedy had been yachting In Hepatitis Hike Tied to Floods DETROIT (API - Detroit-Wayne County health officials said Friday a peak in a seven year cyde and .extensive flooding early this slimmer have produced an unusually high number of cases of infectious hepatitis in the area. Health offidals said 287 of the liver disease have been reported so far this year, corn-paired with 265 cases for all of last year. The disease caused 17 deaths this year, compared with 14 for all of 1967. ★ * * Dr. Willard Lenz, director-of epidemology for the city-county health department, said the flooding following heavy rains in June may be a cause of the upswing in hepatitis cases. Hie ase, which is caused by a virus, can be transmitted by contaminated water supplies. Lenz also said 1968 Is a peak year in the seven-year cycle of hepatitis.'He explained that an outbreak of the disease usually immunizes enough people that! it takes seven years for the protection to wear off. Andy All for 'N butHe^Won't Take Up Golf By EARL WILSON NEW ,YORK — AiKfy Griffith, the TV star turned movie se. symbol, is impressed with the “New Leisure” that the masses now enjoy, for he has his first four-week vacation in years. But Andy won’t be playing golf. “Down home we didn't have any golf courses," Andy said the other day. "Our people didn’t know what a golf course was when they i went travelin*. They’d say ‘Look how short themf* cows eat that grass.’ ” 4| Hollywood hasn’t inveigled him into golf. 1 He illustrates this with a story in a Carolina drawl. "They was,” he says, instead of “There was” . . “They was this- woman said to her husband 'Why did you and George quit playing golf?' “Her man says ‘Would you play golf with a man who lied about his score and cheated and mOved his ball around?' “No,” says the wife. “Well, George wouldn’t either.” WILSON Death Notice^ COLE. ROY H.; August 16, 1968; 1770 Hamilton Drive, Bloomfield Township (formerly of Keego Harbor); age 73; dear father of iMrs. Clyde Alvin, Mrs. WUUam Heldreth, Mrs. Wayne Childers, Roy Jr., Earl O. aiid James M. Cote; also survived by three brother's and one sister; and 21 g r a n d c h I Wren. Funeral 1 service will be held Saturday, August 17 at 7 p.m. at C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor, after which time Mr. Cole will be taken to the Huey Funeral Home, Mannington, West Virginia for services and burial. Mr. Cole will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) GILLETT, FERRIS W.; August Andy, who started a new movie career with “Angel in My! 16’ 1!^i> ^et,ro'tL Street: Pocket,” in which he plays a Southern minister, had simple! enough vacation plans. Ah’m goin’ home to the Cdrolinas. Ah'm gonna get on the boat, and fish and play and sun and picnic and mow the yanf and go up town and do all kinds of stuff like' that. But golf because there again, we just got cows that eat the grass short.” j Use Lip Brush for Perfecting publicity they ’ ve ex-yesterday that someone entered] Aegean "with Greek "ship 'owner*8 Aristotle penenced recently. her home through an unlocked. Onassis. -— But toe puclicity has brought door and stole a six-string Flying back to the United States by way the children more than 100 of-j guitar valued at $225 and a of London, Kennedy told newsmen at the fers of adoption from strangers radio valued at $30. I British capital: “I’m not talking about A Want-Adable is an article you no longer need which would be most useful to someone else. It may be that power mower sitting idle in the garage, or any onto of hundreds of other useful items. It is a Want-Adable because you can find an eager buyer for it simply by running -a Pontiac Press Want Ad. " . . r . Ordering a Pontiac Press’ Want Ad is' an easy, pleasant experience. Just dial 332-8181 or 334-4981 and* ask for the Want Ad Department. A friendly well trained Ad-Visor will help you word your ad for quickest response at lowest cost. ■ r 'IT , ' , ’ .. Convert your Want-Adables to cash today! PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS Be Sure.fo Order the Thrifty Six-Time Rate! be just what your face needs to keep its-over-all proportions balance. For full lips, paint out your mouth with foundation, then draw in a slightly smaller outline. Use subtle lipstick shades. For thin lips, brush on the outline beyond the natural lip line. For ■ well-defined tips, add an illusion of fullness with highlights of ’ a paler gloss on the too-tin Up. age 68: beloved husband of Sylvia Giilett; dear father* of Mrs. Berden (Ruth) Swain and Ferris Giilett Jr.;- also survived by five grandchildren, one great-grandchild, several nieces, nephew and cousins. Funeral service will * * * j be held Monday, August 19 at Andy and Don Knotts are still buddies and are currently 3 P m- at the Colonial Chapel ' '* • Mi of Reigle Funeral Home, 2417 South Saginaw Street, Flint. Interment in Thetford Cemetery. Mr. Giilett will lie in state at the funeral home. MARTYN, WILLIAM; August . 17. 1968 ; 39 Waldo Street: age 94; dear father of Mrs. A. J. Cadieux, Mrs. Elmer Hibler, Ernest W...Russel J. and Otto L. Martyn; also survived by- trying to work out a movie outline for themselves. “Our friendship started in October 1955, on Broadway, in “No Time fot-j Sergeants,’ ” Andy says. •THE WEEKEND WINDUP . . . Steve Lawrence and Edyie Gorme have offers to bring their I “Golden Rainbow” musical to Las Vegas . . . A1 Hirt’s writing la book about New Orleans food and music: “Creole Cooking Use. a lip brush to reshape a and Ail That Jazz" . . . Irving .Wallace gave a role in his film less then perfect mouth. It may "The Man” to Allan J.' Ehrlich, general manager of Kippy's— playing a Nazi officer.. Richard Harris’ next film, “A Man Called' Horse," wifi have just a few minutes of English dialogue, all the rest will be in! Sioux Indian language . . . Arthur Godfrey signed singer Julie Bndd, t4, for his radio show .... . Tony 'Quinn, who finished Shoes of the Fisherman," is*'buildjng a 17-room villa on Capri. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Many things have been said about radio, but it has never been accused of showing an old movie. WISH I’D SAID THAT: Prosperity is a matter of not being quite as broke this month as you were last month. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “Your character is what you are. Your reputation is what you got caught at.” (Pilbllfh«n-H*li Syndicate) three grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Tuesday. August 20 at 10:30 a.m. at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in' Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mr. Martyn will lie in state at the funeral home after 3 p.m. Sunday. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) Yesterday's News New Rocket From State Capitol ls inched September 16, 1968, i VANDENBERG AIR FORCE.*;_____________ 9L V»S* "°TJnee- tes-Burner 2 rocket ha? made Jlili5' Mlchloan' 00 I* Drive. Pontiac, Mlch- ilflcatloni will be avall-- ... . ‘ ;cg|M Arehl. Associates, epubHcen^State Convention at Grand its space debut. Carrying a ^ issues totaling $435 minion tor~improved record dozen satellites aloft and of » state recreation facilities and water r™1 ’ -- • --------- sjsustflnp I THE ATTORNEY GENERAL I ranging from 99 to 2,500 mites, negotiations I The Atlas missile and a four-!« by the Architect. _ _____________ ad check In the amount of i% 10 shaW accompany aach pro-- -1"" be made payable to Board of Education, the amount of $5.00 i deposit check ‘ be required ,ur « specifications which a refunded Leelanau County Clrc jfreighter t t by-five-foot maneuverable up-TiSS? within ten (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 and7 to9.) QUESTION: What is love? ANSWER: There is no word, except God, that people treasure as much as the word love. It is used a number of ways.« It might be mother love (upper left), a combination-of pride, adoration and dedication. Years later, this mother will be getting up at dawn to press her son’s pants and cook him a tasty breakfast so he can get to his summer job cheerful and on time. It may be the love of God (upper right), prompting man to seek help from a higher source than he can find in his own reason. It may be the experience of failing in love (below), where i whole new life suddenly opens. Yob can tell the genuine article when you know with absolute conviction that you want to go on loving And caring for this one person the rest of your life. - There is something similar fa all these uses of the word love. They show people caring for something outside of themselves, people willing to give as well as to get. People think of love as something cmuiected with a higher, more generous kind of being and feeling; perhaps that.is why we treasure - this wonderful word. ' (You can wm $10 caeh plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prise.) ' ■ ' V* Pontiac, Michigan qr petition of Thelma Hatmaker to: ..M the name of Thelma Hatmaker . Katie' Thelma Hatmaker. Publication and service shall be made a provided by Statute and Court Rule. Dated August i, )968 James L. Carr, Atty.' 2)91 Dixie Highway Pontiac, Michigan 4)055 DONALD E. ADAM$. Judge of Probate. Death Notices CARPENTER, SGT. PAUL W.; August 16, li Lawndale, West Township; age 54; beloved husband of. Ada M Carpenter; dear father ol Larry and” Calvin Carpenter; dear brother of Mr?. Dorris Calvin, Mrs. Roberta Farmer, Charles and Ronald Carpenter; also survived by eight grandchildren. Funeral Service will be held Monday, August 19 at 1:30 p.m. at Donelson-Johns F u n e r a 1 ..Home. Interment fa Pine Lake Cemetery. Mr, . Carpenter will lie ip state at the funeral home. Ml visiting hours, 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) The family suggests ^ memorial contributions may ’be made to Emmanuel Baptist Church. WEST, JOHN C., SR.; August 16, 1968; 403 McKinley Road, Mio, Michigan (formerly of West Bloomfield Township); dear father of Mrs. Matilda Hollister, Mrs; Howard (Edna), Yale, Mrs. Lou (Ethel) John, Mrs. Dora Kennedy, Mrs. R u s s e 1 ( E I i z a beth). Vanderhoof, -Della, Edgar C., John C., Jr,,— Robert, Alvin, Fred, Arthur and William H. West; also survived by 30 grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Funeral service will he held Monday, August 19 at 11 a.m. ‘ at C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Interment fa Four Towns Cemetery, Waterford Town- > ship. Mr. West will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 216 4) 5 and 7 to 9.) Bloomfield1-1*7--—--—7“ /■:V> WOOD, WILLIAM E.; August 15. 1968 : 8919 Gittins, Commerce Township; age 52\ beloved • husband of Ora Wood; dear father of Victor and William S. Wood; dear brother-af Mrs. Leona Rush, Mrs. Harry Van Houken and ' Or in Wood;* also survived by several grandchildren. VFW Memorial Service will b0 held Sunday, at 8 p.m* at the Elton Black Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Monday, . August 19 at l p.m. at the funeral home. Interment fa Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. Mr. Wood will lie In state at the funeral home. ' tip D—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY; AUGUST 17, 1968 w A N T FAST R E S U L T S ? USE PRESS W A N T A1 1 [Nw—bt , 4| AVOID GARNISHMENTS Gal out at debt with our pi on Debt Consultants 114 Pentloc State Bonk Building FE 8-0333 state Licensed—Banded FOR FOR THE WHOLE FAMILY AT UPLAND HILLS FARMS •w lambs galort. Colvoi. Piglets, .... --- 1 Ipg hatched dally. I whole family. Sod1 Ml | CABlNET SHOP MEN, experience preferred or related background apply Wlf. Maple WalledTakt. carpenters — Layout mon to INSPECTOR - EXPERIENCED ... machined porta. Good wages, plus — ^ reelsIon ! CARPENTERS-ROUGH union. United Carpentry Contractors Incorporated. 474-9444. Or after 3 p.m. call 887-5280. COMBINATION TRUCK DRIVER- baby animals. Delightful > T|»S perfect bud ol hayrldes, — food fron. ________ _____ nlsslon and tour 25c, i axtra. Open Sunday . FAMILY VISITS 'frliqje b II plant you; |fun FOjCthE WHOLE FAMILY Sadly missed by Mommy, Daddy, _Sisters and brothers.___ N LOVING MEMORY OF Elmtr Upland Hills Farm. N* Call Jack Foster FE 1-4171 for ! appointment, ___ to DELIVERY. MAN. WITH CAR , 18, full, time, nights, Iftquiro I Leasers, 41 Glen wood Plaza. DESIGNERS Special‘Machines. posllns. chicks ai these baby animal! fashioned hayrlda acres of fields [ Beautiful ducks and Gonglor Corp. 3 Edgeland 544-4200 Royal Oak ind woods. WANTED: lUbe MAN Immediately, geese on our 2| Coll the aorvfce manager St Bill Admission. 25c f®* Chovrolel in Rochester. 451- t Vneejod*, ... .......... . SUNpAYS ONLY. Hayrldes. pony rides end DISH MACHINE OPERATOR, days, positions „ #« wl _ ___mi is bii oh ternoon work, for -more Information coll 175-7510. Collect In pwrelh JANITOR-PORTER IMMEDIATE OPENINGS I... PULL TIM) WORKERS, MUST BE BONDABLE, BEST WORKING COND., LIBERAL BENEFITS, APPLY IN PERSON. JACOBSON'S N W. Maple 1 Birmingham layout menC must be Ale to I Stool I MEN WANTED iKedy1” benefits, apply In pars 70001 Powell fid , Romeo, an i opportunity employer. MECHANICAL DETAILER—DESIGNER Medium site shop In Pg....„ vicinity, good pgy and working condition!, oxc. opportunity tor advancement. Paid vocations holidays and Insurance, tend resume to Pontiac Pats, eqx c-17 ____ Top rotas, liberal (ring* benefits. Moving to now- plant In Walled Lk. early 1948. Davis Iron ‘i., 21000 W. • Milo Rd., ■P 111 UiUVER AND INSTALL appliances and water softnars, must be ovsr 25, hove own hand tools, chauffeurs llconso. local rat. PE a-3S7s tor inpnlntmont. Works, Inc., MAN FOR GARDEN WORK Ml 6-3399 fr ’ ■utomotivo ports storo, must be txperlancod, apply In parson. Novi Vuto Ports, Novi, Mich.________ VN WANTED TO work In storo. ' in ^arson.^ People's Fish and MECHANICS Also helpers and porta MAINTENANCE 7AAN POR CL_______ home builder. Basic tmrfclng Foul ■2WT* try, plum 4444431, MEN’S FURNISHING SALESMAN Experience preferred but not rs qulred, salary and commission, so# PORTER Fuli-timo \ Enloy all the company banollts Apply to manager at - ~ WinkelmarTs Pontiac Mall iNriBW—X HUb I WELDER OIL MAN Wltllngjo learn PORTE A, PART" .. employment, paid hosx ——eanifttons. Js — M7-30W. spsL REAL ESTATE II train 2 more solos people •e*tr!2e* V-iume of business i hour, plus commission. VOU.NQ MAN l*OR..genaralTtflm 2 PART TIME woltrossas wonted, it hove dining room experience, CROSS REALTY . ; AND INVESTMENT CO. OR 4-3105 A D S 8 a 8 ___ _________ ___ Wilcox, Bond ... ... „„„ ....A- .. 1 ' .HANDYMAN, w,. 10 Women Needed PUNCH PRESS 5s! OPERATORS. COOK FOR ADULT HOUSEHOLD It CASHIER FOR PRODUCE market. Apply, In r---- ‘ ' Pontiac. CLERK-TYPIST Smalt office experience helpful, permanent work, gold Insurance holidays ond vocations.' Reply .to Box C-25, Pontiac Press. CLEANING WOMAN MUST HAVE OWN CAR, TOP PAY FOR RIGHT GAL, PULL TIME. SOME WEEK-ENDS, EM 3- COUNTER GIRL FULL or port time, no experience necessary. Max's Parly Store, 2004 Orchard Lake Rd,7 Koopo Heritor._____________ I Olenwaod Plea. COUNSELOR, Sincere desire to work with the public, akc. telephone voice. Call Anglo Rook, SXM157. Associates Personnel. CURB WAITRESSES WANTED, full MBet' time. Must bo IS. Apply Ljjjji “lrniriH ruf ri FACTORY WORKER •AVON CALLING"'FOR SERVICE 1 __ IN YOUR HOME. FE 4 0434.___ I CLARKSTON PRE-SCHOOL ! Now taking1 applications for full1 | enrollment. Phono 425->454.__! END WORRIES i [ with A Payday^ Payment r counselors provfie you 'with confidential money management service .that has helped .thousands solve their bill problems. Gettlna^s j big loan Is not the answer. You ’t borrow yourself out of debt)! staff, the" opportunl CPA's ..____ RD, BIRMINGHAM, MICH. 4SOI1. Replies Will bq held in absolute confidence. . ACCOUNTANT OPPORTUNITY " FOR A CONSIDER PROFESSIONAL AC-j COUNTING, AND BECOME A CERTIFIED P U B L tC ACCOUNTANT, WITH A FLINT ^FlRM; MUST QUALIFY WITH ACADEMIC OR EXPERIENCE Crescent! BACKGROUND. SALARY OPEN.j ” 1 10 | REPLY TO PONTIAC PRESSl FOR RENT,_ RECEPTIONS,| BQX CJ] OIL COMPANY LOOKING GENERAL u Motor Bike salesman [| Mechanic F ACTORYi S^nEY^i?^ncVCSpoNT|Ac press cm • . ^ ^ Srtary plus commission. Many ex- PONTIAC, MICHIGAN 48056 I A J f A I J 1/ I 1 n c* CGlItnt company benefits, including-—-- --- W UnKLno'*rr»-" * PRES$ 0PERAT0R . :ifically per hour, c >: -JANZ A ! 2444, 9 to II ^■WnPaPWHiP*P^"BARMAID AND WAITRESS I An Equal Opportunity_Employer parlance not necessary, g TURRET la tup rtpPeATrsD wages, PE pWV.-—fiS—_ ______________ experience necessary. Set up and BAR MAID ALSO waitress apply In FULL .AND PART TIME I rOn. Also OD and ID grinder hand, person Avon Bar,- 3912 Auburn Rd, Experience jwcessary. Reply - *|— »-< — “ els Box C-52, Pontla teacher. Phone 425-4959. Pontiac f Mich. ontlac, BARMAID - WAITRESS. I irance. Apply in person. r, 137 Oakland. . I BEAUTY OPERATOR. Carlos t ROUTE S. 473-3498. . Get .... ... H ....... for by taking all your I discussing your problems-’ ^ DEBT-AID, Inc. 504 Community NatM. Bnk., FE 2-0181 Licensed S. Bonded FIRST ANNUAL E.C,L.A'-beach on Elizabeth ‘ between Cooldy Lake i Lake Sunday# Aug. 18 : Warehouseman . OR 3-5202. FE 2 Employers Temporary Service Clawson 45 S. Malnj Redford 4 24117 Grand River Ftrndaje___ ______ 2320 Hilton Rd.1 FACTORY WORK FOR ’ cellant company benefits, I immediate discount privilege.. , Apply Personnel Department! Second Floor Montgomery j Ward PONTIAC MALL TRAINEE MACHINE OPERATOR TRAINEE xcellent opportunity for men ,« WAITERS WANTED, sh living quarters, call pointment, Meadowbroc clientele. HALL FOR REnTTFE 2-FE 5-0314, after 4 p.m LOSE WEIGHT SAFELY wl . A-Dlet Tablets. Only 98 ( ^ MECHANIC, DIESEL preferred; mechanical^ i benefits. CaM Mr.9Still,**2*4-1875.1 *17 Central - Equal opportunity employer_______ ___! St., Pontiac j} AUTOMATIC- BRUNSWICK p i n -! FITTERS, A erience desirable. BOX REPLIES | | At 10 a.m. today there ! were replies at The Press I Office' in the following | ; boxes: i C-2, C-4, C-5, C4, C-7, ; C-10, C-14, C-15, C-17, C-20, ; C-22, C-24, C-25, C-29, C-30, | C-32, C-33, C-38, C-47, C-40, | C-51-, C-04. C-67, G-71t €-72. - Area Crew Supervisors , 1 field, 353-3378._____ [FULL TIME, YEAR roi s ment for productron v si paint line. Formr--------i | Mechanics Volkswagen PRESS OPERATORS OVERTIME—PROFIT SHARING , Progressive stamping co. - 2725 NAKOTA ROYAL OAI ~ I MILE—COOLIDGE AREA i. supervisor ti — .... ........pply in person 1080; If you are Interested Wi a 3-flgure | Welch Rd.. Walled Lake, Mich. I advancement, °?all^Mr^Johnson Gii? STATION'. ATTENDANTS,] 338-9706. ______/________ _ ‘ KMF MACHINE mechanic .wanted.! „ Pontiac area. State qualifications.; Vacations,' i Reply to Box C-34 Pontiac Press. |- fringe bam A PART-TIME JOB OrcKart Lake Rd. or 54i4 Hlghlan Funeral Directors COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS ^f044* C J GODhXrDT FUNERAL HOME -Keeqo Harbpr, Ph. 682-0200. _ D0NELS0N-J0HNS __FUNERAL H6ME_____ , Huntoon B FUNERAL HOME Seryjng Pontiac for 50 years 79_ Oakland Avef, FE 2-0189 SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME ® ^Thoughtful Service*_FE 8-9288 VoorheesSiple FUNERAL HOME. 332-8378 [ hours per evening. -674-0520. Gall ^n$200P,PERPMQNTH_________ AUTOMATIC '. OPERATOIL^--ALSO«. hetper, for multiple spindle .crew; Products Co., 319 Cogshall St., equal opportunity employer MMriftCKeT wm fringe Orcharu u«n Rd. Pontiac. GENERAL SHOP WORK In* last*n growing mcompenyf perience not necessary, will *r. Excellent frfnge^taAMttr profit snaring, program. Barber St„ Pleasant Rlc . include ... Apply et Ridge. (Off < Cemetery Lots OY ~ MAN, EXPERIENCED on oliislon repair. Must have own tots,. Guaranteed wage. Steady rork, year around, apply in; arson. Judge's Collision. 145 w. 14; Mle Rd. ciawsqp. 885-9220. " ILDING CUSTODIAN 1 - Ex ' erience prefarrad but not re-ulred, good fringe benefits, al-trnoon shift. Pay scale 82.92 to erentlal. Apply to director of 'ersonnel and Labor Relations, Jty of Oak Park, 13400 Oak Park ceded . . . Excellent pay for >p men . . . Experienced on-/ GRIMALDI'S IMPORT EO TIME HARDWARE sales Wants You I /Top Pay for Skilled Mechanics | Plus ' y “ Paid Vocations _ Benefits •-.- - i I Advancement Opportunities: Excellent Working Conditions Usfnq SpecleTvw And equipment, Take courses to Presser Full time 40 hours Fine earnings. Hospitalization Purchase discount Overtime beyond 40 hours. Liberal Vacation policy' - Paid holidays . Many ofhar benefits. Apply in Person Employment Office rwjis? ly work,! JS___________________________■ BEAUTY OPERATOR, CHEZ Colf- 349-3400---Country furg, 0reh>rd Llt- Rd, 424.1033. BEAUTICIANS — RECENT; traduates. Excellent opportunity. IIMaai------ lop. Salary and i hospitalization, liss Bryce. Ml 7-I 4-8383. Bernard GENERAL OFFICE Alert lady for typing and gener office In a busy company, steai vacation, hospitalization. Apply 9- gradual High MAN, I other WANTED: YOUNG MAN with desire! tor career In electrical wholesaling- Apply Standard Electric Co. 175- S- Saginaw. _________________ WANTED: MOLD MAKERS CORE AND CAVITY MEN Small, clean work. Excellent benefits, Neumann Engraving Company. 32700 Industrial Ave., BOOKKEEPING machine OPERATOR m Machine bookkeeping experience! preferred, but not required. Typing; •required. ^Salary ^ranye vacation, insurance, sick Wave, GRILL COOK An openmg for an experienced grill cook on the night shift. Good earnings, free Blue Cross and life insurance. Vacation and Holiday pay. Apply in person only. TED'S Woodward and Square Lake Rd. ' Bloomfield Hills. WASHROOM HELPERS. Full a part time. Pontiac Laundry, 540 ] Telegraph. Personnel Office, Municipals llll 35 hr*- Pontiac Press Box C-BuiWIng, 151 Martir if'eWn-j I Help Wanted Male 6Help Wanted Male _ GIRL FOR ALL a Hudson's PONTIAC MALL CARPENTERS, UNION, ROUQH High .School Grads i PERSONNEL MANAGER One of Michigan's' olitost Manufacturing Cempanlts ’ has epan a challenging posltlan with a splendid, young management team as head lor Hi new Personnel end Leber Relations function! Located In Central Michigan, thirty minutes from ~ WELDERS! FULL OR PART TIME! FIRST AND SECOND SHIFT Secure steady employment good wages ond fringe, benefits Contact Joe Davis Between 8:30 ond 5 P.M. ANDERSON TANK- - and Mfg. Co. 270? N. Dort Hwy. Also Subsidiary Holly Tube 6t Mfg.,.Holly, Mich. cellent school system, Cifti^RT---- City of Pontiac 0). Located at Oakland I orial Gardens on West 12 / Leaving state. Std to higi ir. 335*958. ............ Must Sacrifice Supervise j laboratory background analytical In Pontiac, ivote 100 — energy eparatlon. Company President. Ha will have ; solid Personnel and Labor Relations experience, collage training, and he will be mentally and physically equipped to develop and lead this department on a level with other [Company departments which have : grown substantially. The company leinploys 125 - presently, and . has lust /^|BIIiC30LLING||aa^‘3ra!i Phone ' MR. BROWN 5 zvr . ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone f E 2-5122 before15 p.fn. Confidential , BALANCE OF i6, m6nTH , contract « Clothing Salesmah ESSTLg Pontiac Press Want Ads' ARE jj FAMOUS : FOR "ACTION", We have a full time permener position for a men who- has ha men's clothing experience., This i a position that pays a guarante and < excellent commissions witl fng* Excellent company benefit! Including profit sharing, APPLY PERSONNEL OFFICE * SECOND FLOOR Montgomery Ward our corporation and; divisions. All In-kapt confidential. ie wages. For Mr. Stood, 338 GAS STATION ATTENDANT, I perience, mechanically inclli r Telegraph and Map?*. 1 i , GRILL MAN For nights. Must have expert'____ for fast food operation. -Good , wages. Hospttallzatlon. Vecatlon with pay and other heneflto...iulllln i at Elias Brea- Big Boy Rash ! Telegraph A ------- ■ VW INC. 1821 Mgplalawn Blvd. troy, Michigan Ml 2-6900 Michigan. Maple, Birmingham. GUARD .) IMMEDIATE openings , I Part time and full time — Utica,. ! Ml. Clemens and Detroit arob. Top Union scale 'paid — Blue Cross, vacation and holiday benefltf. Call us collect — Bonded Guard Services. ,441 E. Grand %vd.,. Detroit LO 8-4I5B. - . j f ■ HOUSING AJDE 1 \ City of Pontiac SALARY OPEN i 2-4 full veers of college required 1 with specialitetten In social work ; or related fields. Soma experience — IMMEDIATE OPENING — WINDOW WASHER $6900-$7300 ' PLUS EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS • Family Blue'Cross-Blue Shield , - • io-20 vacation Days ai3 Sick Leave bays Par Yaar • to Legal Holidays Par Year • Liberal Retirement Plan k 'Applicants must: have one yaar commercial window washing experience in last 5 years; ha age 1I-S9; have completed. 9th achool grade; possess Michigan Driver's or Cheqffeur', \ license. Interested applicants should contact the:.. --— PERSONNEL DIVISION OAKLAND COUNTY COURTHOUSE 1200 N. TELEGRAPH RO. PONTIAC PRINTED^IRCUIT TECHNICIANS Modern air conditioned plant in Pontioc, Michigan, requires the following: «■ 7V CAMERAMAN I and other trained photo technicians for film -stripping, step and . repeat, film tooling, etc. Camera has 31x31 film plate, must be able to reduce and register front and back films to .002 or better. ☆ QUALITY-CONTROL and inspection people, tape drilling, routers, etc. SUPERVISORS for all photo and machine departments. / . Excellent Wages Medical qnd Retirement Positions Open Immediately Please mail resume to P.<). Box 869 U-' Pontiac, Michigan An equal appertunlty gmptoytr 18 or Ovar Full Time—Part Timi Personality and pleasant 1 Factory work ■ and w»r* D,SATISFIED w ladies l ^he?z»* sief?r*“'IV' Pontiac. Openings for be corner of Telegraph, IMMEDIATE OPENINGS ALL SHIFTS ALL DEPTS Aodam 400 bed accredited Osteopathic hospital located in Pontiac. Michigan. REGISTERED, NURSES STAFF NURSES: 8450 to 1770 per mo. HEAD NURSES: 8480 to 8000 per-me. SUPERVISORS' [Depending on qualifications) SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL I p.m. to U:30 p.m, — 83per day. It a.m. to 7:30 a.ni.-84.50 per dev. LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES 8450 to 8540 per mo. Depending an experience and qualifications) SHIFT DIFFERENTIAL l p.m. to 11^0 p.m. — 8240 per day 1 p*m. to 7:30 e.m. — S3 per day. EXCELLENT BENEFITS —^Individual Blue Cross paid after -- 12 paid sick days per yaer.-- — 4 paid holidays. . . ' - 2 weeks paid vacation altar 1 -?**weeks paid vacation attar • ' PONTlAc'oSTEOPATHlC k HOSPITAL I \ il^ _____JjHdp Wuntnd 18. nr F. GUARANTEED EARNINGS **', * to n shift, excellent , ri nnn nnhinpc Sail toys s, Gifts, Aug-Dec Free . worWieo condition*. I BLOOD DONORS fiwWj C Ho*}** eXr- NICE ROOM FOR LADY, kitchen jM^Sj*r!i*TSr ’Y Wnnt»d Real bfite 1 to 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACIIL., PARCELS. FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACT. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke FE Mil Urgently need tor Immediate talel MULTIPLE Dally 'til t ' - LISTING SERVICE 1 MILLION Dollars have been made available to us to purchase end assume lend contracts, mortgages or buy homos, lots or acreage outright. Wo will give you cash tor you equity Our appraiser la awaitlni TEACHER Want Ads For Action ROOM, HOME PRIVILEGES, I ROOM FOR RENT, privileges, close by 1 Motors, second shift pr 5-4432. . neAr ...____ ....____nces. All conditioned, heeled. Rec. „.... Adi " ‘ ........... E 5-8585. i. Adults, no pets. From SI43. 674-2236 McCullough realty IB Highland Rd.(M-Sf) Ml wn 3W~~ .___________474-2! ALL CASH For homes anyplace In Oaklei County. Money In 24 hours, YORK ROOMS AND BATH. STOVE, refrigerator end utilities tarn. Adults only. 425-1610._______________„ rooms and bath. Drayton aluminum and wood windowsIRatIqS, drives, ga — —•'** —wired. Pickup end deliver. OR SLABS. 40 cents sq. ft. later OR 27490. ________ I days. American Heritage Apartments ALUMINUM SIDING,_____WINDOWS, ~ roofing Installed by "Superior." Cell FE 4-3177^ anytime. , 3345 Watkins 1 1772 S. Tslsgreph APARTMENT FOR RETIRED r; Couples ONLY. Utilities, stove end, | refrigerator tarnished. Reasor*"*1 - -|| 335-3273 between 5 a , ASPHALT PAVING and s I. Free estimates. FE 5-7457. ELDERLY COUPLE NEEDS home near Mall. Caleb. Agent, 33S4M2. ■ PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGENT ‘ _______474-1471 . LOTS-WANTED IN PONTIAC Immediate closing. REAL VALUE REALTY, 442-4220 , Hotpolnt air i appliances, large swimming pool ai ; guaranteed. Free es Cradit Advisors IF IT'S AT ALL possible — we d our best. Read Classification then sea or call Debt, Aid. 504 Community Bank Bldfl. FE 2-018 ___Dressmaking, Tailoring ALTERATIONS, ALL TYPES, KNIT dresses, leather coats. 4327533. DRESSMAKING. ALTERATI I. FE 44137.. BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS I APARTMENTS j Ideally situated In Bloomfield-i Birmingham area, luxury 1 & 2 PONTIAC ASPHALT CO. bedroom apartments available tor_____________FE 4-0224 ASPHALT AND SEAL coating. 'patlnOe PctimAtfsd FF 2.4A11 APPROVED AUTO DRIVING school.! trhdsok ASPHALT, SEAL coating, licensed. ee oo... *■—- ---------t-^— 1 ndtek Jns* Free eat 674-0722. — WfUS -lactr lc.1 ASPHALT PARKING LOTS AND i Located on South Blvd. (20 Mile roadways. Same location since Cash Rd.,) between Opdyke and 1*75j W20. Also selling asphalt and i expressway. Open daily 9 to 6 n.m.| sealer. Ann Arbor Construction Co. _DRAFTING HOUSE PLANS DESIGNED and! drawn, ear ^ Drivers training OVED i _FE .1:7444. J Hniio Tuning . ...NO TUNING OSCAR SCHMIDT _____________ Pal^ng^on^DKjM^in^ A-l PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING ’SON __________FE 4-8344 A-l PAINTING WORK GUARAN-teed. Free estimates. 682-062B. CAM PAINTING, INTERIOR and i ggA^gww^pkMns -1 Snits Help Moltfnwln t-A EXPERIENCED SALESLADY . curtains, draperies and bedspread! Downtown Birmingham. Hlghei REAL ESTATE ’ TRAINING Evening classes alerting September 2 i plications will apply In person. WANTED PART TIME DENTAL ^ “'slant, experience preferred, la Box 559 Highland, Mich. • name# age#, and working *** WAITRESS WANTED^^ — ^AC____ Park-In WAITRESS WANTED: Joe's Coney Island. 1451 S. Telegraph, 3384020. WAITRESS, NIGHTS, SI— H txc. tips, pleasant counter v Biff's, Telegraph r ----" WAITRESS TO WORK PART time evenings, restaurant and lounge, hourly rata plus tips, for furthei Information cell UL 2-3410. RELIABLE WOMAN^for ^onlno^ ISil.* ‘ _■ RECEPTIONIST FOR M D. rttlee Pontiac. Must type end file, e perlence riot necessary, write ^-./TPonttac Press. ___ RECEPTIONIST FOR office. Smd quellflcetlpns. _rtc.. k, Pontiac Press Box C-10, Pontiac, Reinsurance Clerk Rorience In the- Uto insure dustry. Must also possess eklBs, «l SB iW^.m. or bet For confidential Interview . -personnel department. 476-9000, 9 ALEXANDER HAMILTON LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF AMERICA kM', FOR DOCTOR^ time. Reply tc RN FOR ASSISTANT f Ingham pwttk>n, 4yj)^ _, patient assistance. Ml 4-2122. -Receptionist- sr phone ____Bmningi 647-8880 Modern office, hwipttel N< and bengflta. 2357321- Winkelman's NEW STORE OAKLAND MALL OPENING SEPT. 12 Has Positions for FASHION MINDED MATURE. WOMEN . Who Enjoy Meeting AND Working -With the Public ' VARIED SCHEDULES ' /FULL TIME Share fhe excitement and thuslasm of our fashion ^satosje store. Enjoy excellent earnings I benefits including a purchase dV count. See Mr. Amato, flora DAY thru FRIDAY, 7 a.m. OAKLAND MALL 1-75 and 14 Mile Troy Winkelman's WOMAN FOR CLEANING * days • wk. Hunt Club Manor, 1740 Huntington Wood Lane, ----------- Hats 6474*58. ____________ WOMAN PQR PART-ftme counter ■RRI ooay ana R reix ii uver. , ^ JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 5417 Dixie Hwy. 623-K ---i Packers Store Service 8:30-8:30 :stete**proSsslon. 'Cali now letalls. Openings limited. ROYER REALTY, INC. ORTONVILLE-GOODRICH-427-2M1 j TUTORING, ELEMENTARY school sub|octs.^S2 ger^hour. A. Brown, For bast results SELLING TRADING BUYING ' '**' W°d*v' 1 ■ REAL ESTATE ' 689-0760 ATTRACTIVE - ROOM UPPER, furnished. In Pontiac. Call Royal uak 393-0375 att. S P.m. BLOOMFIELD MANOR ■- Immediate Few choice * 1 and 3 bedi built-in Hot I DRAYTON PLAINS . l-bedroom luxury apartment featuring carpeting, dishwasher,: -75! W20. seek........ MAple S-SB71. AUBURN HEIGHTS PAVING Tennis courts, parking I o I _ Guaranteed, FE 5-4983, luxury apartments 1*3^4,' __________ DOMINO CONST. CO. Anhalt. Paving.. Free Quotes. 674- ORIVEWAY SPECIALIST, 335-47 Drywoll COMPLETE ORYWALL service ol Eavestroughing B & G SERVICE Free gutter estimates,,674-371)4 M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BONDED Complete eavestroughing service. Free eat. 673-4844, 673-5442. DO YOU WANT your bam painted? Ron Beardsley. 62S-I146._ PAINT 176 G AND DECORATING. — —'mates. Far quality work INTERlORTTGuaranteed firs - work. John McFall. 682-2273. JOHNSON PAINT WORKS. II DURING MONTH OF August Asphalt Paving Is featuring |.---. .. . ______ - 20c per sq. ft. 345-4714, 342-4187.1 Backhoe. Excavating BULLDOZING. Finish grading. jHU ------■ ,ts. 674-2439, FE RAY REAL ESTATE 731-0500 EXCEPTIONALLY CLEAN ri—end belli In nice East ? lion. Upper flat with Hwy., Clerkston. ' SALES OPPORTUNITY , EXECUTIVE TYPE Seles |ob—Income 88,008 to 838, for man to represent larga c poratlon. No traveling, establlsl Pontiac Prase Box C-21. man for sales position’ with largo firm. Ottering drew while In training In company school. $10,000 to 015*8 fl—----------- gig $5,200 HIGH SCHOOL GRADS Interested anagemen reliable. ATTENTION over 21 who art high school-graduates. The positions open are management trainees with a. i ri TRANSFERRED COUPLE WITH! *""W down desires 3-bedroom te In Waterford arte. Agent OR KINDS OF CEMENT ns, A-l quality. FE S-3387. LIGHT HAULING AND CONSTRUCTION Work Wonted Ftmalt Al IRONING. ONE DAY • HOUSEWORK IRONINGS DONE } IRONINGS, PkkUP Bvilding Services-Sapplies 13 WANTED: Listings on vacant lend houses. In the Clerkston Waterford arte. Clarkston Real Estate 154 S. Main MA 5-5821 Apartment*, Furnished 37 _ ROOM AND KITCHENETTE. B-lvetf bath. Clean. 71 Norton. . DROOM, ’ ‘ College • ill 482-4333. 3 ROOMS AND B L 850 dOP. 473-7984. 2 ROOMS AND BATH, $25 a Bunlnew Service INTRODUCING CREATIVE ventura ----n Cabinets. Gansr-al ■taxation. 544-1674 or 335-5933. 2 ROOMS PRIVATE I both, utilities fuml ' men. FE 2-1559 b< | after S pr Bookkeepping t. Tnxee 16 1 BOOMS AND B LAWN CUTTINGr Con valescen t-N ursj ng I, child welcome. 2 AND 3 ROOM. Private bath A a trance, utilities tarn, see i ROOMS AND BATH. 58 Stout St. Utilities Included, dep. & ta m qulred. 482-3304.________________ 2-ROOM APARTMENTS, R 3-ROOM AND BATH, main <1 Looking for a . Good Job? BASEMENTS AND rssrc LIGHT HAULING. GARAGE basement cleaning, will move 6 thing, anytime, very very reel General Office .. ling Cle fairer . Mgr. Trainee • Bookkeeper ... Receptionist .. Check writer LIGHT HAULING and m reasonabta. 482-7516. __________ Pcrintirig and Decorating 23 LADIES. DESIRE INTERIOR painting In Waterford araai free estimates, OR 3-004 or OR 3-2754. PAINTING AND DECORATING, In-.tartar and exterior, all work guaranteed. 431-5274. PAINTING AND PAPEklNG. You're 19,000 - ' ... $550 *10,0001 013,000 ..Two °&SI Programmer - .... Distributor Sales .... Credit analyst, young ... Staff Adlustar ........ Sr. Computer operator .. “snoral office ........ Exe^Sec rotary...... Key. Punch ............ Drug Sale, car expenses Accounting trainee .... 20 TO 50 PCT. OFF On a selected group of fabrics, the experts rauptwtetar " furniture at half the prl MMM '— —1—** Cali Com*!. Upholstery. ^IWaoted Hnmfcnid 0wd* 29 S4500'CASH FOR FURNITURE AND. ap-... *500! pllancas, 1 Piece or houseful. ..>$408 UP I Pearson's. FE 4-7881 • *Zggl HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR good ....furniture end appliances. Or whet .....JtSi have you? • »»Mooo: B & B AUCTiON $378,5887 Dixie Hwy.________OR S-27171 ROOMS UPPER, , 3 ROOMS AND BATH. Inquire at 208 3 ROOMS AND BATH S ... first floor. Selective as la tenants. 1115 per month. Heat, stove end refrigerator furnished. Deposit required. FE 2-1719. _ IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Coral Rjdge Apts. SECOND-WILCOX ROCHESTER 1 BEDROOM APTS. $145 Mo. Includes ell utilities, except electric. Office open dally 'til 7 p.m. PH.: 651-0042 ■»-PtetfrCo. 1972 -M-IL-Orton-— _______________M ». 427-3270. .. . Paul Wyatt Co.__________FE S- FRONT END LOADER by heur. Plumbing A Heating CONDRA PLUMBING 8, HEATING Sewer, water tines - FE 8-0443. DUCT WORK MADE end Installed. UmmU ' 758-3577. Roofing Boats and Accessories BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER . Co. RMHMPMN- 62S-2128. t&m: ' ~~ I HOT TAR, BUILD UP ROOFINGTiS WE SPECIALizriN '^S. Bulldozing, btseisent digging, NEW ROOFS FOR oOThoOWF, trucking, fill sand. Shinfllas# 24 hrs . free estimates ta. Woody, 425-3735 or Burl, FE 4- repaTr rMls FE S-1725 **' - QUALITY ROOFING, ‘ ALUMINUM NEW 2 BEDROOM FULL bath with! shower, stove and refrigerator i carpeting and drapes, electric heat>r furnished, lake privileges, large Vutlery”.K*a!3L_ . Fencing ACKER INSTALLED FENCES ARE * INDEPENDENCE-GREEN— ’ APARTMENTS , Beside an 11 hole golf course - ■ Included In rent — ell for no charge, clubhouse. Indoor pool, full - use of god course, washer end ■ dryer in every apartment, built-in vacuum, carpet and drapes, air conditioned, appliances, heat. hot. water — 1 and 2 bedroom , apartments, 3 bedroom townhouses, tome furnished a part m e n 11 available —. from SlaS. In Farm* 1 Inoton (Grand River at Halstead), children 17 year* and older. No pets, 474-7284. ° SHPPT PII IM« BREAKWATERS INSTALLED. 334-7677. GUINN CONSTRUCTION CO | Brick Block A Stone FIREPLACES. WRITTEN guarantee. EM 3-4879. Alter S p.m. Building Moderizotion GARAGE 20 X 28" - 2875. Cement work, frae estimate. Springfield Bldg., Co. 625*2128. LICENSED BUILDER, alterations, and remodeling. Free estimates. 335-3876 OT 338-7515. DOLLY MADISON ; APARTMENTS ,1-2 BEDROOMS FROM $145 14 Milt Rd. at l-TS Madison Heights Near J. L. Hudson's-Seare Oakland Mali Includes: . Sun deck — pool — air conditioning > All utilities except electricity Models Open 11 AM-t PM 585-1125 NO JOB TOO SMALL 1 Brick — Block - Carpentry Allumlnum Siding Roofing Cement work What Have u? 8583233. Curpnt donning KAPPER CARPET SERVICE low rates, 335-4784 turpentry 1A CARPENTRY - new ahd repair. And Roofing. 335-4529, 335-7585. A-l CARPENTRY, NEW and repair, 338-142*, A-l INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR -Family rooms, .rough or finished, dormers, porches, recreation rooms, kitchens, bathrooms. State , licensed. Reas. Cell after "( p.m. 482-0448. President Madison f APARTMENTS 1-i BEDROOMS 1 , FROM $145 : John R between IS.’end 14 Mile Rd. * Madison Heights near J. L. Hudson's and Saars Oakland Malt Includes: i Sun deck — pool air conditioning All utilities except Electricity MedeteJCtten itam-spm • -566-630P ‘ A^ffi. ^LlTERAT,°NS "'I Fleer 5flndlng Carl l. sills sr.. new and o FILL sand, ROAD GR..._. filtered black dirt, top so reasonable. 423-1372 or 623-0396. Floor Tiling CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING, notourh, formica, tilt, r.mi 741 N. Parry. FE 2-4090. ROAD GRAVEL, BEACH Sand, sand, ftone, top soil. Reasr prices—test delivery. 673-8847. AND, GRAVEL, d 474-2437, or 338-1201. Hbuss Wanking Homeowners -Automobile Life - Motorcycles -Mobile Homes - Businesses ANDERSON & ASSOCIATES MOSQUITO CONTROL, also: Pint - j, spraying. Call- lor frei H Spraying. 674-3745, 428 landscaping ■ ..... ■ I balance, 128 Wilcox. Rochester, see work. OR 3-1402, 2 ROOMS, NEAR TOWN, cell FE 4-1 manager. 451-0042. 'rAPPFWTPV^ND~CEM¥Nf~ii^rk -------------:___________ Danf Hnucas FH/niclioil 18 free eetlmates. UL 2-5252. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, close to WIW llww>» refWIOB ——' arlveta. no children or T I. 4443 Sherwood, j ________ LANDSCAPING. zing In broken concrete, g walls. Free estimates. J. ling, tree est. 482-7314. RON'S ROOFING WOMACK ROOFING G Sand—Gravel—Dirt BLACK DIRT/m, TOP BULLDOZING - BACKHOE REASONABLE - 682-1671 Septic Tank Service TOWNSEND'S SEPTIC REPAIR e Tret Trimming Service A-l .TREE SERVICE BY. B ( L Free estimate. FE 54447, 674-3518. AL'S TREE SERVICE, FREE ESTIMATES 48813*7. 673-7148. Si- B&B TREE SERVICE. Fully I ramoval. W4841I. ES REMOVED AND trlmmad, le estimates, TR 84057. 'TRIMMING, REPAIR. REMOVAL free estimates J & E TREE SERVICE 363-72*5 Trucking A-l LIGHT MOVING, TRASH hauled ROOMS AND BATH, email child welcome, S35 wk., S75 dep., Inqur at 273 Baldwin, cell 3384054. ROOMS AND BATH, S35 per wm SI 00 deposit, baby welcome, Jtare at 273 Baldwin Ave. Call X NICE QUIEf ROOMS. All prhte -*35 per wk. or SI35 per month. S50 security deposit end ret. 4I2-8152. BACHELOR APARTMENT, S2S per "Ht, Waterford Two.. 850 dep. bets, $30 week, (70 deposit, 6 Mr v jfZ 3 BEDROOM, UNlbN LK. area, ell modern, gas Jfeat, Sept.-June, Adults, Sec. Deo., 8135 monthly, 3484541.' COMPLETELY FURNISHED r approx, 4 lx services dally. £«. Only coup,. Pontiac Press .Want Ads For Action I, 3382674, finish grading, “wtajj^Hg1-* — CARPENTER WORK. Reasonable Its best. Recreation rooms, celling tile, tormlcs work, kitchens, roof-! ing and siding, window replace- ____________________________________ mini. Aluminum trim. 343-2337. [EARTH MOVING, , f INE INTERIOR FINISH, kit 12& 40 Year* expert H. Wellman. FE S-8314. FURNITURE AND LIGHT hauling. 1-1 MERION BLUE Peat Sod. 42C Phene 334-4741. per yard. Delivered. 482-1704. HAULING AND RUBBISH. NAME sodding, your, price. Anytime, FE 8-807S. * ‘-""i JAMES GRAY OR handyman, light - I jjjjh ' LANDSCAPING, SEEDING^ lervICt, 482-4782, 6781443. “ LIGHT HAULING. BASEMENTS, REMODELING, 481-0512 or OR 8.1 _ WE ARE CARPENTERS, do all . work- ourselves, specializing In room additions, rec-rooms, roofing, aluminum siding. Guarantee workmanship, bonded. Deal -with a gen- Apartments, Unfurnished MApartments, Unfurnished 38 WITT - AMERICAN ,GfRL 442-3055 ' TM S. Ademt B'hei ' ' WOOL'FINISHER ■I WMCTii.08wmiri‘ Paid holidays Paid vacations tat Davis Cleaner 447-3807 Help Wonted M. or F. t are V«1 REALLY •Mnsfr Or Wst existing? Ca>: Mr. *otoy, YORK REAL ESTATE 478B34S. ASSIfTTANT BRANCH MANAGER for retell stores In suburban areas. EQMH opportunity employmenl. WQ 84XB8. ext. 3I. E. Souse. APPLICATIONS ARE now, being taken tar concession. Apply Pen-ftec OttaMn Theatre. -1W, Me V»6 "'N A Rut? Call Mr. Foley. YORK. REAL ESTATE* OR AM^WDU READY « I B| Cell Mr. Foley, ■■ ESTA?E, OR 44043. NEWSPAPER — IS'._______puma lbs. delivered. Royal Oak- Waste Paper and Metal co., 414 e Hudson, Reval Oak. Li * WANTED-SMALL ELECTRIC cement mixer. 673-3391.' bus. Praterably on Wasl S .4514, aft. 4 IMW. ■ - ■ . PONTIAC MOTOM1 N O I N E E R ---*- —'shad 3-bedroom or 8 basement. 33804S4. RELIABLE FAMILY D E S I R E S VOUNG CHRISTIAN COUPLE with I girls snuid like to rant a home. [ 3385742. •: 1 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY CHILDREN WELCOME YOU Lt ENJOY LIFE MORE IN A BEAUTIFUL NEW APARTMENT BETWEEN 2 LOVELY LAKES. COME OUT TODAY. / > PONTIAC, 35 MINUTES TO DETROIT MON.-FRIi. j-7 P.M, PHONE «8*m or 357-8388. rlght en Cass Lake Rd. SYLVAN ON THE LAKES on Cass Lake Rd., between Cass and Sylvan Lakes DIRECTIONS.' From Pontiac, take EHzabeth Lake Rd. te Cess Lake Rd. and tarn toff, or taka Orchard Lake Rd- to Cast Lake Rd, and turn right. From Detroit, take Middle . Rett to Orcbafid Lake Rd., add tarn. toft. flight. 349-5716, 73i-3927 flr 437-3118. ALL types of cement w BLOCK "AND CEMENT WORK. gKLjHfrdB COMMERCIAL, ft CUSTOM CONCRETE CO. ai| tjMee cement work rattan, (tarage building, LAWN SPRAYING, fertilizer, weed killers. Call for free est. 474-3745, 4281552. C A H Spraying.-_________________ LAWN SPRAYING, fertilizer, weed LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, rubbish,, fill dirt, grading and jrwtl and front-end loading- FE 8 THOMAS JAMES BEACH. Bricks, cement raptaragUakte moving. FE RAILROAD TIES j Hardwood lumber, ell sizes ter general use. 424-7453. TAl BOTT LUMBER Glee* service, "wood or aluminum. 1 Building and Hardware supplies. , 225 Oakland___________ FE 4-4595 Trucks to. Rent i-Ton- Pickups lW-Ten Stake TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Sami Trailers ' Pontiac Farm and Indusrtial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD E 4-8441 FE 814Q| Moving, Storage ' heavy. 5-0844 i K & B MOVING and' hauling. Light . Reas, rates. FE 2-5024. end FE 88445. . BLOOMFIELD V end guaranteed. Insured. PE 81431. Mower Service Will Drilling #3 D—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SA^flJRDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 flc* and comimi Plsnty 5^rer‘ r.TrTinaC^PhoJS*iS-rn tr BMm _________________ OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE. Secratarlsl service I SHOPPING CENTER LOCATION OFFICE AVAILABLE AT MIRACLE MILE AIR-CONDITIONED CARPETED 1 PANELED RECEPTION AREA AND 3 OTHER ROOMS , -I I 45 per month. Approximately 100 square Mot. Coll 3334210. R BEAUTIFUL 04* SEMINOLE I BUILD ON YOUR LOT hundreds of homo plana, professional planning and constructkm ouporvlsor. c*-“- tor catalog and Information to: ALBEE HOMES 3S11 Elizabeth Lake Rd. -----------— Rant Butintss Proporty47-A derground 1000 SQUARE FEET, ..— piping lor phono, partitions tc flea. Plenty of parking, front I_________________,__.------------------- rear, control air conditioning. gas, BY OWNER, OPEN SUN. r OWNER. 2 BEDROOM, dlnlno toga ~~«ng and drapoo, full cor garage, fenced BY OWNER ■nch, 1 co indtcaped. ! garoge, Elizabeth CITY OP PLIKT io mortgage, email —... nt, S bedroom*. Ito-car CLARKSTON AREA — 3-bed room brick ranch, carpeted llvbr — ra.utih.i olr conditioned fireplace and glow patio. 1 —---- Ih Mrc go* hot paved i largo lot. Only lto mil** I pressway. Only *29,750. REAGAN REAL ESTATE |||g!J&dyk*_^M N OWNER: JAYNO HEIGHTS -front, lir on lake. 3 bedroom*, 2 ------------------Kjygjjb 4615 DIXIE 25,000 iquore monufoctlng bldg. Rent .er J**! immediate possession. MA 5-2161. CORNER BUILDING city of Sylvan Lake. 2500 Orchard Lake R« Multi-purpose, gas heat. month. 6*2-75**. ___________ ORCHARD LANE CENTER-7,000 square feet of new air a dltloned space. Last large unit ... this high traffic service shopping center Will dlvlda. 3130400. *■ MEININGER REALTOR Silt Homot 1BEDROOM NEAR_ ■■■■— carpeted. 304 > ______ 1-BEDROOM HOME. East side Pontiac. Sacrifice 33500 cash. 33 2-BEDROOM R E D E C O R bungalow, gas heat, feno located 575 Nevada, |MP lto L—.— ....... fireplace, dining room, almost new carpeting, country kitchen with cupboards, lot of lots, l-cor garage. Lovely older horn* next door. Mixed neighborhood. Near General Hospital. FHA approved. West Huron St. to Johnson BY OWNER x A choice 3-badroom ranch, beautifully landscaped, large-lot In good subdivision near Union Lake. Finished family room with wal - >to baths, garage, $27,500 1-7350. after 0, ■week dayr. BY OWNER Angelus brick, fi ssr i BY OWNER. BRICK Manor Sub. Beautifully landscaped BY OWNER, 2 FAMILY bedroom, living room, fu kitchen upstairs: l bedroc. .. --- en, living and dining room, full bath downstairs; full baserr— new furnace. 403-1401 alter 5. Cash For Your Equity HACKETT 363-6703__ 474-1449. fireplace, ind kitchen. Owners agenl COUNTRY LIVING 4 beautiful acres with 4 I older home, IV* baths, family room with fireplace, largo kltchon with eating apace, first floor lac and partial basement. 30X52' c block 2 car garage and horse ! Many fruit trees and large t trees. Class to Oakland University and 1-75 expresaway. GORDON WILLIAMSON A. L. DOENGES, MANAGER ,7 M,r. E- Birmingham DUNHAM LAKE -----BLUE HERON DRIVE Executive or professional family sacking saclufijn fjftjjj Sola Houses LARGEHOME 7 LAKE FRONT 3 bedrooms, large glassed-in porch, large kitchen, carport, 111,400. Lange Realty & Building Co. "•'^•ia’rgnriisrssr ART LANGE. 363-2511 9545 commerce LAND CONTRACT TERMS VACANT Aluminum ^sldbg^ S.S. payments YORK REAL ESTATE a'lUiuVy iTving wifiiWE BUY WE TRADE of both worlds her*. SraSfKT FE 8-7176 OR 4-0363 rastrlctad t^nharn Lak*. ] 702 S. Telegraph i motor boat noise ana . ,, r mature '4713 PlXIB Hwy. 1 -FAMILY MONEYr ft tor *70 wotkly. full lust **,500 down on I SB-4131 of— U| or, mntlngj-d centred. 2 BEDROOM HOME, largo screened in porch, fireplace and .paneled dlnlno roam. Walnut Lk. privilege*, *15.000. 424-7*31.________ 2-BEDROOM ON connecting waters to Cass Lake. Land contract, gat 1 hast. 314* Kan rick — Vacant. _ S BEDROOM BRICK r e, fenced, —™ 0. 451-345*. PMMI BRICK r* ast of Pontiac. This t r'eplece^bEflt^hi kitchen, y'tsrw nas Beauty Rite-Hemes HUNT00N SHORES $25,550 Colonial with i.283 aq. ft. This home hat 3 bedrooms, a walk-in closet, formal dining room, and 2 car garage. Now under construction. 10x150 ft, lot with trees. Models open Monday-Thurs.-day, 4 to I p.m. Sat. 8, Sun. 1 to 4 p.m. Or call Dick Stlar at 474-3134 or 544-7773. i at only *21 Realty, 4*2-713 Edith, I BEDROOMS, Raeburn 4-bed- Very r BY OWNER-IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY-MOVING Across the road1 from Cass Lake ............... . —. ---------Jd garage, 110 ft. frontage, kitchen built-in, large utility room. 4*2-3129.______________ lavishly" gami hardwoods, an. —— „ grounds provide tranquil setting for custom ranch featuring 24’ x 14' family room, 37' roc. room, and extra 14' x H' room with low* rl*v*l opening to broad paho and 20 x 40 swimming pool. 3 twin bedrooms, 1 full baths, 3 fireplaces, central air cond!tk>nlng. Complete built-in kitchen. Living and dining area* designed gracious entertaining. Scenic proach across lush shaded l invites you to sample the n delights Inside. Cell- now to appointment for leisurely spection. *110.000. MATHERS-STEVENS MARTIN 45 N Main Milford j, >- -1-404-1045 BEDROOM RENTING $78 Mo. $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT -----IING ARE4 L APPLICA LARGE DINING AREA flLL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. able. EcotWWW, FE 4-2131. | 3-BEDROOM, 2 lull baths, 2-can basament 8sf»ee, toW w»*d, let, 3 blks. 4rom school, lake pnv-1 to Cats and Ellz. Lk., fenced, i Open 1-4 p.m. and 7-9 p.m., axeep* 1 __ 111. V.u«,H Mn i-BEDROOM, WITH fireplace, lanced yard, large extra lot, near schools, 2 blkt. from Pontiac Mall. 1004 S ROOM RANCH ~ ----- gorago. A . Owners a 6 Spacious New Homes By ROSS Available about Aug. 28 2 RANCHES—2 LAKE FRONT SPLIT LEVELS-2 COLONIAL HOMES IN Beauty Rite Homes PLEASANT LAKE WOODS Now constructing ixcluslve astablish- community-llke feature: beautiful sandy beach swimming ana p I c n I privileges. Drive out Elizabeth Laki Baycrest . Drlye, turn I Dick Stlar at 474-3134 or PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 6424220 .A. APPROVED arage. Abou gent. 330-4993. Genes Dr. off Wfflton 2 bedroom with dining family room and garage. *14,500. 10 per cent down FHA, Call Nina Martin; (3 LOVELY COMMUNITIES) $30,900 to $47,900 Including Lot MODEL OFFICE: 623-0670 Open l-o dally. Sun Closed Frl. S LAKELAND ESTATES 1941 S. Talaoraoh Rd. FE 441591 BIRMINGHAM BLOOMFIELD BRAND NEW COLONIAL Ready tor occupancy. Charming FOUR BEDROOM .with . brick *14,990, *4,000 < td**?arnHy room" ica. Kitchen. , hat MM area and all bullt-lns. 2to Full basamant, patio, ■ screens and carpeting ...^.™_. Cbuld not bo duplicated today tor *49,500. buy baths. storm.. —MB included. Criuld today tor *49.— -AND MOVE RIGHT FOR GOOD CREDIT NEEDED i. Full baseman iXved- MODEL HOME NOW ON DISPLAY Open 1 to 4 dally except Prl. 10 W. Yale St., 1 block west of Baldwin. *400 down and closing cost. 30 yr. FHA mortgage. 3 bedrooms, large living room, gas heat. 40 gallon hot water tank, country kitchen and dining room, oak floors, full basement, tiled bath, copper plumbing. Person son Builders Inc., 338-8508. 491 Sale Hawiei NORTHSIDE PONTIAC. LOW price. —-d lor horn* or Imr**------1 || irooms, bath up. 5 n -jmjn^drapa^. Cart OWNER TRANSFERRED Must sail lovely 2-year-old . brick ranch. 3-bedrooms, sunken llylng room, 2te bath*, lot. flopr utility room, living room and dining area carpeted. Paneled family room with marble fireplace. Full basement plus other extras. Nicely landscaped, beach privileges. Lake Angel us Lakey law — - cIpTes Only. 473-5015. basamant, a fireplaces, beautiful kitchen with butlf-l “ * natural swimming Immediate Possession DRAYTON WOODS 9371 Weverly. Jut off Hatchary Rd. and Ednwm. I bedroom,.lto kltchon with area, living. ...... I fireplace. Only *32,500, land contract, will t_____■ cash to mortgage. K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor 2239 ORCHARD IK. RD. r 4*2-090 is too Humorous to mention. 1 Schuett OPEN SUNDAY-1-5 P.M. LAKe FRONT RANCH Duck Lake, Ax ford Acrai Highland, Mich. 3-b*droom, nt. ceramic bath, gas forced air, 7 years old, good beach, fishing, •kllna. trees, ratio, naneled kite1— Rd. i t. M-59 IX t. Rd. .......... Klngswey li Klngsway. Shown anyth polntmant. 474-1(45 or 47 OPEN SUN. 1-5 PM. 3140 FREMBES OR. DRAYTON PLAINS — Immaculate 2-bedroom, yanch, full basement. carpeting, ner lot ■ STNM. Cheesema.., ......... ------ — Dixie and Walton, heart of Drayton "8pr!c*ln|l3lm' *350?* down ...... Dir: Frembes Dr. and Cheeseman, Frembes —‘ MODEL OPEN Hackett Realty —. Modal home I open 12-8 p.m. Monday thru Friday. 12-4 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. M-59 and Dolan* Drive near the? White Lake ,Twp. - office. 343-4700. Kanwlck*St. I basement, off L Orion schools, price '*0 down to existing Payments $120 mo. 4355 ISLAND PARK DRIVE 3 ACRE ESTATE — Overlookl Woodhull Lake grounds _ a ; fabulous. Has 20* X 40' Balal accessories. Kvely*3 -bed r o o ranch home (but not S35.U. bracket) full basamant. family room, brseztway, fireplace, “ tached 2-car garage, tor h price for all .this *37,900 api $15,000 down, cash to CTNM. > Island Park Dr MODEL HOME 3PEN SAT., SUN. 1-5 ANYTIME BY APPT. Also We Build bedrpom trl-level with alum siding, lto-car garage, bedroom contemporary ranch; lto baths, 2 car garage and basement. bedroom colonial with 2to b family room, f~—(tear* dining areas. PRICED FOR QUICK SALE (OWNER LEAVING STATE) Lovely 4 room ranch situated on beautifully landscaped 1 acre a ner lot, overlooking Crescent Lak This horn* features a full finished basement, fireplace, 2 car attached garage with braazaway, fenced lot SEE THIS BEAUTY (HURON WOODS SUBDIVISION) This Is an all brick ranch situated on a large corner let. Thl* tol||d| features 3 ‘ ‘ tlon r ■Ivlleges. DO not mist this anal COSWAY REAL ESTATE 681-0760 3379 Orchard Lk. (At Commerce Open Sun. 4*5 49 Salt Hearn OPEN SUN. 2-5 J. C HAYDEN, fiealtor 3430404 10735 Highland Rd. (M-59) of Oxbow Lake MODEL OPEN DAILY 9-V SUNDAY 2-8 P.M. carefully "FrusKour-Angall" That's why you ear PRESTON BILT-HOMES AND REALTY 473-0*11 ROCHESTER SUBURB* tractiv# 3 bedrooiTL ROCHESTER years, old. Open Sunday 2-5. Priced! at *21,950, for directions call Bill Stlremen at: CHAMBERLAIN Co. a Road today. Salts exclusively RAY O'NEIL REALTY I 3520 Pontiac Lake Road OR 4-2222 _____________________MLS HAYDEN WEST SUBURBAN. Attractive 2- ANDERSON - COZY bedroom ranch only *Vi years ol Gas heat, lull basament, FHA SgS-sJnSlW y°Ur “ *° " MILLER BROS. REALTY 1-543-7520 *400 DOWN 5 rooms With connecting bath, r basement and 2 ear garage, pi full dining room, owners agent 330- SNYDER, KINNEY & BENNETT UNION LAKE AREA. S-bedroor brick ranch on approximately V acre. Fenced and attractive! landscaped. Lak*' p r l.v 11 a g a s *24.900. J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 363-6604 New Models "THE MORGANTON" *4 bedroom colonial, featuring paneled -family room with fireplace and beamed celling. This quality built home has 1V3 baths, custom Ffirmni dining room, full ar garage. Also $13,896 ___t, fully Insulated, femily kitchen, on Vour lot. . Y0UNG-BILT HOMES LeSeile^Gerdens', near* M-59 and Duck Lake Rd. 423-0202. - BEAUTY RITE HOMES LAKE ANGELUS LAKE VIEW ESTATES H0LLAWAY REALTY SYLVAN MANOR First offering, 3 bedroom, brl ranch, IVb baths, ear-port, cover patio, bMutiful grounds. Must s to appraclate this value. Holloway Realty Co? . ; 112 Milford Rd., 1 Hlihla ,, 1-684-2481 "THE FRANKLIN" WE ALSO BUlLb the "Raleigh" e 3 bedroom ranch for 319,250 plus lot. All those homes feature many ANDERSON & ASSOCIATES, INC. '044 Jdslyn - PE 4-3534 After 4—FE M939 orFE 2-4353 A NICE 3-BEDROOM home, OJ beat, 2-csr garage. FHA term Triced below appraise!., C»M at 4:30d.tw.170 SerninoiSr Pontiac. ATTENTION HORSE LOVERS WHO ISN'T? 7 acres, new 20x20 ig bam, ranch alyle bgi»a, J ------'..x ■—.j,,, i8'x20' family AT ROCHESTER 4 BEDROOM — 2-story colonial, I how. Large family room * fireplace, formal dining roe kitchen bullt-lns, 2Vb baths. Ho carpeted throughout, full bosom wtth boautHuT recreation roc attached Vcar .garage, p*v«I driveway. Homo to excel Ian* condition, Located ‘In th* Hills ot Rochester. $55,900, Models open Saturday i Sunday, 1 to 4 p.m. or ‘ appointment. Call Dick Si fc IMMEDIATE POSSESSION New 3-bedroom, 1W baths, basement, thermopane, windows, brick with .J aluminum, 2-car garage pries *23,000.1 * location, 3910 Sashabaw comer ot, I Midland, 3 block*, N. ot Walton b,vopen sat. and sun. PRESTON BILT-HOMES AND REALTY 473-Mll______ Lange Realty f & Building Co. NOTHING DOWN 227 WILLARD 5-room bungalow — ges *350 closing cost* moves vo WRIGHT REALTY «* Oakland A vs.___FE 2-9141 SECLUDED AREA With 200' water frontage i Independence Township, i bedroom ranch, full bast ment, ■ slate vestibule, full carpeted, lib bath*, attache, 2-car garage, on nlceli landscaped property.. *35.95( Gl SPECIAL ’ 2-bedroom ranch ’ with heated . porch, fireplace, carpeted living end dining room, 11b car garage, close to shopping CROSS REALTY WE PAY CASH FOR USED HOMES . 674-3105 SOUTH SIDE - 299 CENTRAL.Jl! with *750 down atid balance at *80i par month. Walking distance to General Motors Truck giant. Nelson Building Co. basements. Thermo-panes, storm doors, gutters, wall papa- "—" Midwood and Cooley ,Lk. nil., west of Union Lakf Will duplicate. Like froi available soon. -J0R 3-8191 NICE 2-BEDROOM MODERN ranch type home on 11* acres. Imlay .CI- ty. By owner, 724-9391.______J NEW ,4-BEDROOM COLONIAL, family room, fireplace paved drive. Union Lake area, *32,500, 343-0503. ~u?TSv.dw,,eb« TOm iwr«iiiWish REAGAN | N#-a • I R EAL EJTATB 1 Commerce area, 3 b*droom.B ranch. | Qpdyka 3324H54, VACANT: 2-bedroom, newly decorated, FHA mortgage or land, contract. Mov* right In. Will trade for truck or heavy .equipment as down payment. Anchor-Powell Real Estate, 547-9*00 or 424-7240.__ c* closet, 21 ment, dll host. . ■ family room, 2-car garage, i. aiding. *15,500. -NEW RANCH HOME If_______ HP *17,900. Deal direct with builder end save. 425-2474,___ NEW HOMES AVAILABLE NOW DESIGNED FOR HAPPY LIVING. Mattingly OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5 UPSET? Because you can't find a nice horn* In th* location you want and at the price you can aftord? If so, drop by 37*7 f ' ■let Larry Fon— (hi WARDEN EXQUISITE LAKE FRONT *9 and U.S. 21 expressway. Everything completed^ Inch th* Fortassl ed ranch. It features 3 large bedrooms, spacious kltchon, Ira car attached garage, aluminum storms and screens. Thera Is also a 14'x28' paneled family room with patio door and gas wall furnace. Carpeting and drapes ar* included, it's price *11,450. Go north on Baldwin to Maybe# Rd. turn right to Grafton, right on Grafton to Mlnto, turn left and watch for signs. SOME LUCKY FAMILY Will soon ha th* proud owners of this brand new 4-bed room brick colonlalr-lf-hb*—a largo kitchen with bullt-lns. IVb ceramic tllad bath, large living room,1 with beautiful .fireplace, eluma-vlew windows, and large 2-car garage. Priced at *29,WO t *.""— Stop by r Iglt c > Baecham. Watch WAITING FOR YOU 4638 MEIGS Lovely white aluminum i.badroom ranch bungs tow, fully carpeted with large itotog room, dining room, and efficiency kitchen. Has over-sized Soar garage, and Is situated an tarp* tot. Dbito Highway to SMhabew, go to fir' ■treat past Walton, tom toft. GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE It W. Walton FE 3-71 » bedrooi..., . r--■ 140 feet of toko frontage. Priced far batow cost at *42,950. Terms. GRACIOUS LIVING M0DERNATE PRICE *22,000 wlrt never *“■* vou mor comfortable living with this west »— decorated O-rOom horn*, formal dining room, ... lounge room, 3 bedrooms plus year stooping porch up, full bi ment, gat heat, garage, -manicured lawn, savaral large shad* trass, fast posabsslon. ^WARDEN REALTY you'll PINE CREST Overlooking toko, rolling . large tob 3 bedrooms, fan^ly custom kdehan, IVb bflb*, basement, 2-car attachad garage. 1 flreplac ,1th flrepl Many outstanding features such as hardwood floors, 2-car attached garage, aluminum siding, —' bl-fold closat doors make a to sas. This Including lot or worthwhile price — C_________ *18,900 duplicated sills, 2rcar attach** garage, bifold closet doors, carpeting. Full price Including lot Is *24,900. Taka Highland Rd. (M-S9) to Airport Rd. turn south, to mil* to Gordon. Our courteous salesman will b* there to answer all of your questions. SALESMAN BRUCE STEWART WILL BE AT THE MATTINGLY OFFICE ON SUNDAY FROM 2 P.M. TO 5 P.M. TO ANSWER ANY QUESTIONS CONCERNING NEW AND USED HOMES. WATER FRONT ( rancher, largo spacious llv l room with a fireplace, tul Ikout basamant, axe. neighbors. SHINN ll'l Sr overlooking1 tr* Island. WIN WITH SHINN I. Telegraph. 32S-0243, apti STRUBLE WE TRADE 2 ACRES rancher, if has hardwood floors throughout with carpeting In all rooms except iriMoa mnrt family room. Yes, a i that Is approx. 14x11. 2-car attachad garage ana an axir* storage building. A garden Is already planted. The lot not 155' frontage and has lots of trees. Priced for quick actl ' family n BRIAN'S, BUYS NORTH PONTIAC d basement, 2-car Mraga, wall-railcarpeting, .tofm« dining m, gaa hast, malntananc* fra* m. tiding, only SIS,MB on FHA Brian Realty Inc. 623-0702 Multlpto Lilting Service Sf&Dixl* ftwy., Wateitord Brown W.Woo £ SCOTT LAKE FRONT - I large rtc. room bedroom, country tlzai with plenty ol cablntts, backyard with itoragt si to grad* ■ school. Call polntmant. Only *14,900 li .. .......j axlarlor, country styl* kltchon,, ceramic bath, paneled living room with fireplace — reduced from *21,000 to *19,900. Owner must tall, moving to Montana. OPEN MODEL HOMERustic ranch with heavy beam celling and natural flreplac*, 3 bedrooms, tull basement, 2-car garage, quality materials throughout. If you ar* thinking, of building, se* this horn* tor Ideas and comparison. Open daily by appointment and tvery Sunday from 2 p.m. to 5 - ”, Located In Elizabeth Shores Artesian off Cootoy Lak* family sized kitchen. His basement also fenced yard, attic has i-------- for 2 additional bedrooms. Th! on the north side of Pontiac close to schools oh raved it All thi* for $14,300 VA-FHA rancher, 2 toll bi n with fireplace, 3 I built-in kitchen, i REALTOR I 5925 Highland Rd. (M-59) Next to Frank! Nursery 674-3175 WOODED LAKE FRONT ni, garage, W living i fireplace, walk-out to 00 down land contract ' I possession. SANDY BEACH Deep wooded toW. safe beach, goes with Tnl* all nav^Y furnished - 2 bedrooms, largo court 20 min. from Pontiac, full price $15,900. _ MOVE in today Sea this 3-badroom rancher, large modem family kitchen; I $1500 90' x 120* building lot, i Lak* Rd. and Casa Lak* Lauinger 674-0319 VA-FHA 674-0310 1531 Williams Lake Rd. at M-59. HAGSTROM, Realtor OR*4%3S*Ur<>n EVES FE *7003 Crestbrook MILTON WEAVER | a*-- UHIbm rot m w. i BLOOMFI&Lb HILLS _ SCHOOLS# ntcelV SndscapSd, "IJ quiet dead and etraat off l;?5. 3 e bedroom! \UOD^°?EN\AOT°LANGE 363-2511 DAILY 12-8 By Appointment _____—i, family mom aito 2-earj garage, priced at only *17.990 plus tot. Located In new sub with paved streets, curb, gutter, sidewalk* and city water. Drive out M59 to Crescent Lake Road; turn right to 9545 Commerce Commerce * ___ Wjftod IgrtBi^itANO BJrAN^^^t!Sdrot5> l» *Mjpf 2H2f SSTlit Mrwaiir M mam-. «ff*9w. worwi or Und S^tSuNDERWOOD mUrm P-m. 425^*74 .. * LAND CONTRACT TERMS 5 room randit bosoment, oat haa carpeting plo* oarage. Excellaf YORK , LAKE ORION HOME Immaculate family home at 2— _. Flint StI In ideal location, large 2 badrooms, 2 baths, basement, — hot water fieat, madam kl» newly decorated, fenced rear with .EMWlftto glass**' pbreh. All tor $22,500, tarms, LADD'S OF PONTIAC 3477 LaP** Rd. lUl-asOO1 WY4 9 Whltte N LEWIS REALTY r models — and t ■Ice. Well v ......... ‘ ' ■ ese models _ WATERFORD, Hwy. at Our uaay OT me uerw Catholic Church,' or ..LAKE ANGELUS LAKE VIEW ESTATES, right off Cllntonvlll* ltd. .onto Costa Mtssa, and FOX BAY/, right off Williams L*k* Road onto Perry Drive, toft to Fox Bay Drive. You'M discover how well they're built and easy to mainttin. You’ll b* prowl as punch to own on*. Call your O'NEIL REALTY raprasantatlv* today. O'NEIL REALTY INC. 3520 Pontiac Lak* rd. OR * YORKS SPECIAL * OF THE WEEK 4 BEDROOM Mult) level — with 2 baths, ft basement, finished family rooi 90' lot. Term* Available. Call YORK ZERO DOWN Just dosing costs on- thla 3 bedroom bungalow with toll basement. Al newly decorated. Owner* agent. NEAT AND CLEAN modbm gas IhwI. Drayton -Plaint GAYLORD BUILT 1945. Ranch home 75x150 ‘ lot. Lak* privltogos. Brlc.. flreplac* In If living room. Good horn* for *14,90B. Catl MY 2-1- FE $9493. garage''THREE ACRES. On main re garage, c BEDROO NORTH TROY IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Large Custom built 3-bed rooi ' brick ranch with 2.250 square ft tanSfy r^K.^tol.^L frult^traas, prlci to'sell *t's42,900 Reltmaytr, 3999954 or' LI 7- EXTRA LARGE LOT. W11 home- 2-car garage. A mortgage - of . 514 Intere ' Total Price *13,500. Call N or FE *9493. GAYLORD INC. O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 P KNOB PRIVATE WORLD FOR SALE Well kept nearly navy ranch, brick and stona. 3 largo cantor ball. In an exceptional 15 acre Pina Knob Ski rtoort and taring Lake golf coyi house from road. Baautlful fireplace In carpeted In kitchen, also built In china cabinet. Large brick, with walk out to patio from dining M rec. room In basament, 2 car he- ease: a horse here tool 500 evergr**...... miles from 1-75. Price *49,300. North on Clarkston Rd., left onto Pin* Knob. Georg* 332-3*44. i. Windir _____ring room. irge porch of at OMPOMP mom. Hobby n heated garage. Th* family c garden #12-27' SMILE Yas you will really smll* when you buy fhl* custom built home wllh 3 spacious bedrooms, attachad 2 car garage, large tot, finished rec. room, your teenagers will be proud to entertain their friends here. Bloomfield schools. Some Intofligmt executive will ,buy thls-why not you? Pack your toothbrush and mov* in. Pull price *32,900. We will trade. Rutherford off Square. Lake Rd., East of Woodward to Devonshire. Your host—Fred Hamilton. , #9-31 OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. 2849 LANDSDQWNE LOOKING FOR AN EXCELLENT WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT? Be sure to se# this on* Sunday. 3 bedroom, 2 toll bath home. Thera s still lots of summer left to *n|oy excellent boating and safe swimming with this near perfect sandy beach. Priced to sail quickly *29,500, Left off Williams Lake Rd MStototliMMMfei Tom Solhott, 423-0517. OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 P.M ' 4375 WATERLOO TOO MUCH TOGETHERNESS! I host- lovely ktchen large lot. 90x,uv ■ u, livability for your only 527,000. Why Sunday to soa It. Dt 451 51^2*r>V' ”Ur iter pf activity for themselves and their f for you. Spacious family rpom. larga living dlnlno area. 3 bedroom, 1W baths, 2W car g present home? Drive out -** to Waterloo, right Long—your host, i spacious kitchen, a Highland It Sunday. 324,500. West on M-59 past Crescent L-host—Mika Moultrup. i. You will notice v notice when you are Inside how th# via spacious living room, 3 bedroom*, dining room and xitcnen. ot Surifc you probably already know about the axcMIentlak* privileges on Sylvan Lak*. Drop over Sunday to see It. Right off brehaVd Leke Rd., onto Sherwood. Edna Grean-your hostess, 4*2-3074. OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. 1220 BEACHLAND ONE FOOT IN THE COUNTRY It's so close and seems so far from fh* City-. Big, big tot with, lak* orlvlleges on Sylvan Lak*. Ideal place to jals* your children In an anraettve 2 badroom ranch hwtid. Acttwlty room, 2 e»r #*rao*. Flrat time offered. Price S14,»», Baachland off Casa Lak* Mrs. Hamilton your hostess, 334-4345. #LL23 Visit o new models at FOX BAY Sunday from ^5 P.M. ou did. West on Elizabeth Lak* Rd., to Parry Blvd., y Drive. Bud Leak* will ihow you around. A VIEW? I levels, three fk of living on i y restricted a ■ homes In Clarkston. rlooklnbth* k cston. This b* t STATUS MAV HAVE ovlnjl |UP.In tha_a #15-42 CHANGED- „ ... ..„ ..arid mutt pause at tlmo* to bring hit rroundings Into focus. To you wa extend an Invitatton to vtaw nils Impressive brick home In Sylvan Shore*. To .the right of ttw foyer is ttw charming library adlolnlng, ttie spaclous living, room with marble fireplace. Thereto a right size dkilng room, with door to veranda, to bath and kitchen plus breakfast room down. S grand size bedroom up. Attached garaQ# with beautiful ylctorlan courtvard add luxury and value. If you are looking for the ultimate In prestige locatlon-6* first to catl to see it. #10-25 BRAND NEW .•—, . •«—_ i Over 1000 - ft. living heat, only 30 mlnutot Immediate occupancy, m. We have the key area, alum, exterior, hardwood flqor*, gas Northwest of Pontiac. Vacant and rdady for Full price Is 014.900' with approx. 30% dot end can shew anytime. NEW MODELS AT WESTRIDGE OR WATERFORD, north St.Olxl of the Lakes Church, left on Ledgeatone, left < FOX B*Y7 Wdit on Elizabeth Lake Road. RANCH MODEL AT 1052 CM* Lake Read. . OPEN DAILY 109, will duplicate on your lot i (US-10) to Our Lady RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3520 Pontiac Lake Road R 4-2222 MLS 332-3*44 MLS Road. BUILDING SITES — Lak* front loti — wooded lots — exclusive subdivisions. Priced from *1400.00 to (7500.00 — Acreage 2 to 5 acre parcels. LES BROWN BUILDERS & REALTORS (Across from th* Mall) 509 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD TED'S Val-U-Vision Show of Homes FEATURING FIND YOUR HOME in living color in the air conditioned comfort of our pleasant office. The interior and exterior of each home is featured for your house finding enjoyment. "Pre-Visit" each home and save several valuable hours of your time driving in the hot summer weather. When buying you exchange money for property and when selling you naturally want your properties worth in money. We feel our procedure is alone at the top of the list when it comes to buying or selling o home. Our office is open Sunday for your convenience from 2 to 5. Come in and browse around our gallery of fine homes. Call us now at 674-2236, or 363-5065. OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 could pay much more for, features garage, large shaded lot. family living room with fireplace, 2 full 100 CHEROKEE Excellent location* a home thai to keep It that way. A home y< include, a fulL basamant, 2 c room, naw modern kitchen, lei baths, completely redecorated immediate sale, terms or trt.......... TIONS: West on Huron to left at Charoka* ass: Da* Clarkson. 681 FREDA LOVELY 3 bedroom brick ranch home, full basament, lto bath*, attachad brick garage, naw carpeting, large family styled kitchen, lots of cupboard and closet space, all ntwly redecorated, large fenced lot, lake privileges, paved street and drive, excellent value, first time Offered, bettor hurry. DIRECTIONS: West on M-59 to left .at Crescent Lake Rd., to left at Piddle to left it Preda. YOUR HOST: Jim Nltbauar. ARDRETH 3447 For your living convenience we have a very attractive 3 bedroom ranch horn* with tha following extras: Enclosed patio, a fireplace In both roc. room end living room, lovely fenced yard; paved drlvt, lak* privileges, attached garage, carpeting throughout ----- A value that you'll have to see to believe. Immediate DIRECTIONS: North tin Dixie Hwy. to left at Wllllatiia to left at Ardratn., YOUR HOST: Dora Tompkins. 3432 PLAINS A-Very attractive 3 bedroom - Brick Ranch. -2 car garage, large, well landscaped tot, pavet at *11,500. A vary .qultt lovely neighborhood, equities. DIRECTIONS: West on Walton, turn host Bob Bartetbaugh. See Peg* B-4 of tod*' picture ef house. OFFICE OPEN SUNpAY 2 TO 5 Largo ” FulVpric*' (LTOoTAn' axcaM*ntU , formal dining room, patio, ______ ____I attachad garage, Intercom .... many, many other extras, priced to toll. Terms or trad*. Excellent location with lak* privilege*- ONE FOR THE MONEY AND SOON to GOI-On White Lak*. lovely beach, large 50x283- lot,2btdrooms, brlckranch. Baauth decorated beach houa* and, boat Hit. All carpet and drapes FS kSo^rflCEy F^SALEn'l8rRr^D^ « Sat tnisliom* and other* In living color In our naw Val-U-show of homos. DOCTORS, LAWYERS, INDIAN CHIEF—A lovely 5-bedroom on 7 acre* with 2 acres completely fenced, 2-car garage, n kitchen wllh tam-toa, flreptore In family room jand living ro full baths, 3 half baths, main floor laundry and basement Is room, 3-room apartmant In basament wtth separate entrance, -fl way, lots ot cupboard and closat space, patio, sun dock and ---- -lake on property. A most baautlful horn* In an almost unballavabls setting. Beat of aya.rythlng w„ ■ - - Tarms or trad*. Priced to sail r INCOME PROPERTY—Excellent Dd rental location, eurrinTly' ORION TWP.—Lovely 3-badroom aluminum sided rand family room, 21x22" living room, lto baths, beautiful arlumMum storms and screens, gas hast, 2to-car garag of land, -flret time offtrad. CALL NOVVI _ ______ MM _.... - large bedrooms, 2 I< Cass Lakp. WalHandscspad, attached saftaV 3 Refrigerator, range, carpeting and drapes Include: —J=* *t WM0 cash to ylstlng ir-—— larage, I t *95 p ORTONVILLE AREA Just hit market—lovi toontt, 2 ' ‘ that hat or°SS^tra*'*^?t1*s. hat bean converted to o^lc irty, excellent swimming and |—3—--hto*. Full price Wgc space, 3 acre*, small lake on Ishlng fadlltlas. Tarms availabto *32,500. - McCullough REAL ESTATE, 5460 Highland Road (M-59) Sal* Kami NEW 4 BEDROOM RANCH HOMES THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 EAST SIDE PONTIAC Loe*|ed south of Auburn on Pork Pisco, Perkins, Center, end O'Riley, Pick yours now. Choose interior, ond exterior paint, coi-ors, both tile, formlco, ond kitchen eeWr“' — ‘ ----------- some wttti si h tUdlne gloss doors schools, bus, .end el Ins room, kitchen. LOW DOWN PAYMENT For the family who nee, bedrooms, living and d rooms. Full' 1---* $200 DOWN basement, gas la north of Auburn. Full OPEN sun. a to t 2470 W. WALTON BLVD. BRICK -RANCH quick possession owner retiring and leaving state, 3 bedrooms, large carpeted living room with fireplace, veslleule, “-1 recreation r plastered garaged -------------1* fine t come out Sunday and see for yourself, Mr. Dtnkel, Salesman, 673-— representing CLARK REAL Brown WILLIAMS l Frontage FRONT — W 200- Deep HI* living roe QUAD LEVEL — Brick an sawn cedar exterior $34,900.00 fireplace" Priced< rtel^o cergetod wrinkling system, bsoemsnt — many, i Priced at I62.S00.00 OPEN MODEL HOME — rustic ranch wl... beam celling and natural firepfaco, 3 bedrooms, full base- ySrS thinking of building, see th home for Ideas end comperleo Open dally by appointment or every, Sunday-frotn-i p.m. to Located In Elizabeth Shores Road. BUILDING SITES - Lake front lots — wooded lots - exclusive sub-rlslons. Priced from $1600.00 j 500.00 — Acreage 1 to 4 ac LES BROWN BUILDERS & REALTORS (Across from the Mall) 500 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD (Across from the Pontiac Mall) GILES Sal* Hottsgs D—7 VON OPEN soil WAW BAN SEE 22? VSJSf t kitchen has custom walnu boards, family room, Bear secluded w ooded surro Direction»§1o Orion Rd. *to N^EMton” Waw Ban Sea. IT'S- NO SECRET The sellers art moving out J MR and have purchased another homo and they want It sold foot tor $21,000. You will get a 3-bedroom brick rsnch with attached garoga, 30" family room, sowor ond water, this homo to In tip lop condition. 5 FAMILY INCOME Real money maker In vary good condition, located In a nice quiet part of town, 3 unlta and 2 down, basement, Bear garage, priced tor quick sole, lust 110,900 and -— lend contract: VON REALTY REALTOR------- n the Mall MLS Room 110 662,5600, If no answer UL 2-2326 OFFICE OPEN SUN. 2-5 CLARK ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES: bedroom homo In oxcollo neighborhood, carpeting, ceran tiled bath, gas heat, basement w 10 x 24 ft. tiled floor anp knotty pi finish, attached carport, alumlm siding, quick possession. $16/ vF.H.A. Or G.l. terms, less tor casl NORTH OP OAKLAND: Comfortable 2-bedroom home, large B 15x17, kitchen 15x19, porch, carpeting, 54 ft. lot, garage $10,990 terms, will sell on G.l. or to house the entire family guests, 5-bedrooms, fireplace, country kitchen, lake privileges, family room, enclosed play ) shade trees, quick possession, tor appointment today. Pries $19,950. Mortgage or contract terms. SUN. CALL FE 5-5166 -HOLLAWAY REALTY ^AKE PRI I). Immediate occupancy. ’RIVI LEGES. SYLVAN MANOR 2570 EMPIRE—KEEGO HARBOR First offering — 3 bedroom brick VILLAGE LIVING — i ^ HIGHLAND ^ ^ looking for. 6 ro Holloway Realty Co. 112 MILFORD RD., HIGHLAND 1-684-2481 LAZENBY OPEN SUN. 2-5 table_____... .„ party room for mama __________ jamily*1will enjoy5 thls°one! boys, the g.. .„ M ... the whole family __________ wlth'TlSSroo_, ..., iharp, located on west side, hurry 11 COMMERCIAL PROPERTY EAST OF PONTIAC, RIGHT NEXT TO 1-75 highway, vary good p ‘ Hal, lof size 60'xlB4', small bedroom homo, with basement garage, on a paved street. ARE YOU A 61? t this 2 fami-down and lei, Kprtor^W Claude McGruder Realtor _ a Id win FE i Multiple Listing Servlet Ops / income wit if psy ter 1 $T 1,900? You Open Sun. 1-5 267 NAVAJO d shopping, carpeted II lots of storage u with gas heat, 1< lots, trill FHA. Directions: West on Genesee left right to Navajo tc WATERFORD REALTY JOHNSON CANALTRONTAGE bedroom homo with 60' on can ist across road from Casa La— id sandy beach, gas furnace, star and sewer, fenced In — ose to store and but, owner ill sell on land contract. modern kitchen,' carpeted living room, separate dining room,'brick fireplace In living room and In finished recreation room 1n basement. Large covered patio, 2-car garage, garden with fruit, end shade trees, flowing stream. Priced to sell on land contract. OPEN SUN. 2.5 NORTH SIDE Exceptionally well kept ranch type lome, large living room with arpettng, elec, heat, 2 beautifully Will sell on land contract. Ev after 6 call Jack Joll, 662-0262. JOHNSON OPEN SUN. 2-5 P.M. 2687 MONTEBELLO LAKE ANGELUS LAKEVIEW ESTATES i the location of thle Kampsei •“ *-- *pBt ' bedrooms, two car attached garage, full basement, 116 baths, ^toMered walls, Aluma-Vue von, community s ently developed Ml Quality constructed and priced below the dupticotlon price. WE WILL TAKE YOUR PRESENT HOME tN TRADE I DIRECTIONS: Walton Blvd. to Clin-tonville to Lake Angohr — ' “—— -» Montebello, ... YOUR HOST: . right to 49 OPEN Sun. 2 to 5 p.m. 3 BEDROOM-BRICK AND ALUMINUM '4430 Rohr Road North suburban 3-bad room ranchor. Mar 1-75, built In 1967, fireplace, thermo windows, dandy kitchen with buttling. 2 Mbs, full basement, gee heat, attached garage, large tot. Priced at S28,ogiL to Inspect drive north on Baldwin Ave. lust post I-75 to Morgan Road, left to Rohr Road, light en Rohr to J!Opiii*—Salesman on NICHOUE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. 49 University Drive FE 5-1201 or 391-2666 Val-U-Way ^Sxtre-sharp-2*story large bedrooms. Ii_______ .. . large living room and carpeted dining room. Convenient kitchen with ample cupboard space. basement with recreation ro aluminum storms and screens, heat, tile bath, ivy-car garage i patio. H 61000 down plua doi $450 Moves you Into this story, 3-bsdi--- carpeted I! dining roo Ide. Featuring l room, family _____ convenient kitchen. minimum money, bath, pert basement, garage, Baldwin Ave., close-in. Only ---------- $89.50 per monf 2860 CHADWICK FOR THOSE WHO CAN AFFORD THE FINEST This specious, sprawling ta room brick semi-villa to sTtuata on a large canal tot to Oth Lake. Tha four bedooms are e: tra laroe. Features are man1,, baths, two Val-U-Way Realty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 . [345 Oakland Ave. '_Open 9 fa i AVON unity am ■ beautifi It's expansive, but IPs priced way below today's reproduction costs. DIRECTI6NS: We" ■ Huron to Shoreview It.. ._ Chadwick, right to property. YOUR HOST: EMbR Y BUTLER, — BEFORE YOU SELL - CALL RIGHT NOW TO TRADE THE HOME YOU OWN FOR THE HOME YOU WANT! 1071 W. Huron St. MLS FE 44921 ' ~ ~ — 4-3920 ANNETT Pioneer Highlands full basement, gas furnace. Corner Jot, 2-cer garage. Terms. 2 Family—North Side 7 rooms, 3 bedrooms In each apt. Full „ basement, separate gas furnaces. 116 car garage. Immediate possession on one apt., other rented for S12S per mo. 122,088, terms. West Side—Cape Cod hu*~i 2 nicely landscaped lots, llv-I room with fireplace, separate ling room, kitchen! n— iroom. lavatory and scr_... porch on first floor, 2 1158 N. Cass Lake Rd. e . thisbeaul ranch living n You TIMES with sMPMiPemeepi a lovely ravine. A new exclusive bedrooms, formal dining room, kitchen with the latest In bullt-ln appliances. 2-car garage, and over 2 acres of beautiful ( yard. Located In tha Clarkston school district 1 end offered at only 132,950. We can art financing to call txr .personal appointment. BRICK TRI-LEVEL In tha Commerce Lake area built In 1967. This Immaculate home features 2 bedrooms, family room with fireplace, large utility area on the lower It— attached garage., Offered sareWSOBoBM we'-will strange Jtew! i financing or you can astu per cent mortgage. Call ei your personal eppointmer Cherokee Hills 3-bedroom brick and alum, level In excellent condition, prox. 5 years old. Living room, dining room, family room with fireplace, modern kitchen, UA baths, eas heat. 2-car n family room a conditioning, i Just 829,908. BUNGALOW bWwtowT^Wafi-to-wel] ~ carpet! extra large kitchen, ell on one floor! Juet 814,900. FHA terms, $2,000 moves you Ini LOON LAKE FRONT Sharp 1 story brick Loon La—, NMM i, 1 Vi baths, wplkout pasemeni, fireplace, gsra“ | It. on Loon Lake. Q . possession, terms and d| ROCHESTER Near Walton Blvd., Rochester schools. 3 t; bedrooms, large carpeted ream, formal dining room, —JM large kitchen with dishwasher, many extras, quick possessllonl Cell for an appointment todeyl Just $31,100, forms or trade. AV(Mf RIAtTY EXCLUSIVE SALES OP — MgjflfS 335-9373 WEINBERGER HOMES v and separate dining' room newly carpeted. Bedrooms --- gleaming oak floors, lovely kitchen with built-in range and oven, IVi ceramic tiled baths, 2-car attached garage. Full basement has finished recreation room. Fenced In yard. Owner leaving state has priced this home for qyldcwalk_^^^_ ROYCE LAZENBY, Realtor Open deUy 9-«, Sun. 1-5* 4626 W, Walton — OR 4-0301 JACK FRUSHOUR REALTOR WE TRADE BRICK RANCH WATERFORD THIS BEAUTIFUL 2 BEDROOM HOUSE with toads of closet spsc* featurlng a full basement and 246 garage on a dead-end street ft . privacy. This air-conditioned nous In an excellent neighborhood i« bargain at 824,900. Let te la a trade. kitchen and dining area car attached garage an patter larolilving------- a huge fireplace. Sb'a'flC a 24'x24' iacaT the "basement to ..lly paneled and could Be used for e ,rentol. tt haa a 2Vk-cor attached garage end a blacktop drive. Far living at Its finest — call today ’ fnotUrede**** you' pr***nt hom* LAKE FRONT , IF YOU WANT A LAKE FRONT HOME but -fust can't -**— a featuring LAKE FRONT In the Highland < 2-bedroom ranch siding on a large no. Is partially furnished and thei Is a safe sandy beach with got swimming, skiing, fishing at boating. We have the key at can show this anytime so call i and stone home has room foi lots of kids. Mom wHI Ilka tlx large kitchen wilt) bullt-ln over and range and Dad will ah' predate tha attached 2-car ^wVOnl^msM tor all thto WHEN YOU SEEK'OUR SERVICE "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY ‘ , Wideman IF YOU ENJOY su‘11 want to Inspect thto m ne featuring carpeted living and dining room, paneled front _ _ basement, paved d r 1M * larege, near shopping center, V -- AMm in Pontiac Mi TERA6S — Trees, ' oareg wig i ONLY s>a,'w (TTODAYI EAST SIDE ant, gam infract. NORTH SIDE Good two or three bedroom ho large living reotn end dining ro with drapes and well t o t ------— — . basement, 2,. XorWterms. RANCHER | ‘Sc reuat? The1 Aluminum sided ranch homa sltuatod eon ap- h2t,^SfadS oarage, ideal tor retired couple. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. f. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR 4T2 W. HURON ST! . M4-4D4 EVE. CALL B3S4M9 I -----------h fireplace, nice Big Lake, ttto —* " “ fishing lakaa in PQINTMENT TODAY. MLS condition. Living roon room, ultra modern MMMS family rbom with fireplace,' lVi baths. Full flnlshtd- bear-----------* bullt-ln bar end gas heat, aft. garage. $32,950, terms. WILL / TRADE REALTORS 28 E. Huron St. Office Open Evenings A Sunday 1-4 338-0466 STOUTS Best Buys Today LIKE A LAKE FR0NT?- New offering on beautiful lake, room and bath t story with at tached garage. Very ettractlv tot with shade trees A fruit tree, plus unusal stone work, 45 feet at lake frontage end 267 d— Only $21,000 with $5000 down land contract. ECONOMY MINDED?— Compact ranch style h located off Joslyn north Walton blvd. Includes 3 re and bath plus pert besom Gas heat and hot water. 1 garage. 150x132 M “ AVOFMNCOME- 4 family Income.— .— - well cared for and has been recently partially reconditioned. Situated on large shaded let convenient to all areas. This Income should pay tor Itself. Can S7958 v Sal* Houses 49 Sal* Houses FE 5-8183 HERRINGTON HILLS Three-bedroom brick bungalow. Living room. Kitchen and dining area. Full basement. Gas FHA heat. Vacant. Newly decora' ' n About tl.908 moves you In. NORTH EA5T SIDE bungalow. LI ana dining • . was HA heat. Pr assy FHA terms. FOUR BEDROOM BRICK Mlddtobalt to Pina Lak< open sign. SILVER LAKE ESTATES - d dining ri Three-car_ garage. Two-bedroom bur bungalc and d I oven, carpeting, at- PONTIAC NORTHSIDE. 3 b and bath, basement, r> furnace, all for *7300. Li BEDROOM ranchers, rs, full basements, elding, ell for 814,590 ,vui m or wi have lots. Ca" . HITTER, REALTOR, 371 :■ Latos^fd. $82-8080, after 1,500 DOWN, 2 BEDROOMS a basement, lake front, Milford ar< 363*703. 1 LOG HOME, on No. Square Lei Lake Orion, atone fireplace, a prox. 2 acres, furnished. 122^1 Lend contract terms. 363-7700. 2 BEDROOM bungalow, full bai ment, gat heel, $7500. Land cc tract terms. 363-5477. , LAKE FRONT, 2 $14,500. Terms, 363-6700. ZERO DOWN, on Gl mortgage. 2 MIDDLE STRAITS lake privileges, 5 room brick and alum., rimeh, part basement, gas heat, on 2 lots, fenced. S19.000. Terms. EM 2-5477. 3 BEDROOMS, part basement, brick veneer bungalow on l acre. $15,800 terms.- 363-6703. 1700 SQ, FT., living space for $17,000. Ranch type, 3 bedroom brick and frame. See this one now. 3634700. UNION LAKE, 3 bedrooms, rancher, lovely yard, kennel, patio, good location. $19,200. Terms. EM terms. 363-6703. i, priced right at 024,000 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION, In by school time, 3 bedroom ranch, full basement, family 2 car attached garage, 1 to I____I *—* H lovely area. Owner 1-7700. 1-level, 2 car garage, gas heat, 4 80'xlM’, partly fonced. Priced » sell 018,500, Terms. EM 34703. WALLED/1 LAKE, 4 bedroom bungalow, 2to car garage, $15,900. Terms. EM 3-7700. DIXIE HWY., Clarkston area, on 4$e acres, with large 4 bedrooms, bl-level Colonial brick, 2to car garage, air conditioned, water softener, 2 full baths. See this. $50,000. Terms. EM 3-5477. NORTHERN PROPERTY, for sale. 3634703. 3 BEDROOMS, attached garage, full basement, large dining area, built-in vanity. Indirect lighting: *17,500 on yeur lot. 3634700. MODEL — OPEN DAILY — 12 TO 8 P.M. MONDAY THROUGH1 -FRIDAY.—H—TO—6; ~ " SATURDAY AND SL___________ . . DOLANE DR., AND AA59, WHITE LAKE TWP., 3634700. 49 HIITER OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 _ .2020 PINE LAKE RD. Owner says tail this a bedr HOWARD T. KEATING CO. OPEN SUNDAY 2-5 Come and sas tor yourself, 3 bedroom brick ranch, attached 2to car garage, full basement, recreation room, huge closed-ln rear porch, nicely landscaped. Including many fruit trees and all fenced, carpets end drapes. 2286 Middle Belt Rd. BETWEEN SQUARE LAKE A HAMMOND LAKE DRIVE. CALL WEST BLOOMFIELD OFFICE 682-7700 IRWIN' 2 FAMILY INCOME: 3 bedrooms each unit. This__ Well built large Income located on Miller Street near, shopping end schools. Cell for more detelle about this property today. FLORENCE STREET: Well kept 3 eidreem heme on i lovely smell lot In the City. (Clean) and l*r oxcoliorrt condition. Owners Moving up North end would Ilka quick sale. Price only $12,500. BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS 313 West Huron — Silica 1925 FE 5-9446 After 5 P.M. FE 5-4846 ROYER HOLLY OFFICE HOLLY VILLAGE Close to ell tchools, charming 3-bedreom home, In excellent condition, full basement, gas furnace, larg»~seraenaWn,man,, full price Sl0,9$0. 30 days possasslor LAKE FRONT m ranch, with ,wa_____, :ar garage. This Is a home built In 1958, SeleNeMc* - 49 ARRO ir family getting lerg >ur houee getting smi to gatwour equity oi y net give u$ ■ call? . carpeting, close to schools ar shopping, tpacleue lot In goc neighborhood. 015,900. Terms. SPACIOUS WOODED LOT In quiet neighborhood wll privileges on 2 lakes. Thl| woul be an Ideal epot to build yoi heme. Let one. of our salesme show you this today. CLOSE AT 5 SAT. OPEN SUN. 24 PHONE: 682-2211 .. 5132 Cass-Ellzabeth Road MLS REALTOR OPEN Dally 9 WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC. ■ PHONE: 634-8204 mm DRAYTON PLAINS 2-bedroom ranch, asbestos ‘exterior. Dandy family heme, 10 year old. Llvlrm room 16x16, fireplace, tile bath. Kitchen end dining area 14x16, loads of cupboards, base hot water heat. Utility 8x10, attached 2-car ghrage, paved drive. Large workroom in back of . garage, screened porch 8x10. Lot 200x150, lots of trees, cyclone fencing. 33 day^possesslon. Priced $20,900, drayton Plains pt'oii2 W. Walton Blvd, 15 275 feet, zoned tor Prc I services (doctor's, der NICHOUE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. 49 university Drive FE 5-1201, after 6 P.M. FE 2-3370 Lang© Realty 6c Building Co. Walled Lake, 2 bedroom ranch, forge rooms, large lot, $13400 WLH .............1 fireplace, large to 16x30 tool phod, basement On garage, quiet area, well con plated, $14,900. ommerce area, 2 bedroom, home for handy men, dn 200’xl09' tot CTH No. 11. ART LANGE! 363-2511 HALL CLARKSTON AREA' — Clean and neat 3-bedroom brick ranch with 216-car attached garage. Paved drive, large 100x195 fonced lot, newly carpeted living room, tiled bath, total price only 020,900 with 10 per cent down. Let one of our courteous sales psopla shew you basement, Priced t< NEW 3-BEDROOM — Aluminum ranch with full basement, ceramic tiled bath, beautiful kitchen with dining •«» r„m. pletely finished on y it for more details., LETS TRAD! -------iLTY, R 7,3^0Ur *°* *or^ town. Trade In i. Cell or stop 1071 W. HURON STREET AFTER 6 P.M. AND SUNDAY fE 40921 OR 4-3920 OPEN-7145 L0CKLIN DR. ^*K^'^3wI||0Comptotot^fortlsh2d ....__ , 1«nch with beautiful a t Mary lesions to left on L^klln. Your hosteii i Including r fun win id retreat. OPEN-295 NESBIT LANE . *N0 OAKLAND U—Bright and cheerful 3 OPEN-290 PENINSULAR FksKS * Situated on a peninsula v bedrooms are carpeted, family room, left fo-----* ve possess! left to pro _„.T^ „| pOrCt. „..w ira.tv enioy the lake this summer, Your hostess—Ruby, Curvln. e fronrt every window. i for comfortabla a o Central, OPEN- 2344 ANDERS Hwy. to Sllyer Leke Rd., right' to wg.A'IoTen^I rVglS &Ul^r»hSto2fu^'{Io^;il! OPEN-783 KING'S CIRCLE E5S E*MLLT.,|NCOME: Overlookl, vlev?r^*ths ... basement, gas-fire/ ste the Income from one half ike, which you can enioy IL”'..J ™no. rriceo rignt t o ! to Heights Rd. (In Lake Orton), turn I pea, cycloni s shaded I, OPEN-502 KN0LLW00D L^,I£.BJ!R0NT — MANITOU LAKE In eplltrock rancher. Exposed basement, i vanf hoods. Also featured are 2 ceran with electronic filter and a 2 car garag Your boot—Larry Statwlck. iths, dressing room a OPEN-1568 BLUE HERON E.snre;c& ‘Mr j=5*±*ar^EL p zaSLsntasb. .•<«. *« ijM-??' fo ■fflicS^uka r hostess—Cindy Jamnlck. Rd., right to Woodcock, right OPEN-1701 BEVERLY SYLVAN VILLAGE-HIGH DEMAND AREA and thle _______________ ____ ,l'*^*"* 'Ivjng room and attached 2 car garage. Situated Drive out and Inspect, you'll b- -- —Tom Bur*“ ----r. fireplace, privileges on Sylvan Lake right to property. Your hi 3 bedrooms, natural -------- corner Idl with lake Orchard Lake Rd. to Beverly, OPEN-619 E. PREDA PM'gNEP TO DELIGHT AND JUST LIKE NEW: 3 bedroom rancher only 4 years eld, In ... — This custom-built home has 1V4 baths, dining room, carpetlnc aaafo*flfo»». windows, gas heat and 216 car garage. S—’ ST.^SEE_ • II Triw extras this lovely home has to offer. Elizabeth St., right to E. Freda. Your host—Richard DeRousat. refrigerator,, snack-bar v large landscaped lot, you Crescent Lsl^a Rd., right rpetlng,. re Situated o OPEN-1963 BEVERLY OWNER LEAVING STATE ai carpeting, gas heat, new 216 _ . Lake, willing to seerlfice-for QUl? Orchard Lake *d. to r--- SI^Hal 4 bedroom brick bunagdow with 116 t landscaped lot, beach end beet p o drive out end Inspect this for y fy. Your hostess—LeFem Tremper. OPEN-766 E. COLUMBIA *E>GLAD YOU WAITED es this tri-level In the Northern High t looking for. Well-to-well carpeting, 116 baths, rec. room, gas hea •id a garage with heated workshop. Perry. St. to Joslyn Avp., l< Your, host—Tom Barr. • aluminum storms, covered patio 1 to Columbia, right to property. NEW MODELS OPEN DAILY 6-9 P.M. AND SAT. & SUN.. 1-6 P.M. euftom-bullt kitchen, full basement, sealed-glass windows, 2 cor —........—-------—ng. comer of Scott Lake Rd. and Watkins RANCHER: 3 bedrooms, attached -----— Lake Rd. COLONIAL AND MID4.EVEL: baths, custom kitchens with L___ find In a RAPAPORT-BUILT HOME. Corner of bedrooms, family fireplace, 2V6 car attached garage, 116 a.....^Wltfcnil customized feefuret that you Huron and Voorhels Rd. IS EASY-THE BATEMAN WAY MOUSE TOO SMALL? START PHONINGI This 4 room, 116 baths,---— «t |ust SI&SOO. 0i 9 DOWN paytnont to a qualifying Veteran. THE KIND OF HOME PEOPLE "SLOW DOWN" to admire! Almost new splitrock quad-level electric bullt-lns/ family room wltti fireplace, recreation —-1- —J * m | |------ licapoo ^ ' 'A*, or 4 bedrooms, carpeting, ... ... — attached garage. Located ond there'a also Jake privileges on a amaze you, at terms you can afford. THE TINY SUM OF CLOSING COSTS Will move y< Lake privileges on both Elizabeth L carpeting, gas host, bullt-lns and i TRUEI Hurry, CALL NOWI i Into this lovely 7-room ranch home. If you art a ouallflad veteran, ike end Cass Lake. Large family room with brick fireplace, basement, garage, all on a 160 ft. tot. This 1s a Gl'a DREAM HOME COME CLARKSTON-------------" IT HAS ALL THE "I WANTS"! Brick randfor w -----* and fenced 1U ft. lot, Located in an a CALL NOW a* It won't last long at thle He bath, e to ail TELEGRAPH RD. ROCHESTER KM ^ROCHESTER RD. MUOIFOXFORD' *MB* . 120 S. LAPEER RD. UNION LAKE 0175 COMMERCEr'd! H D—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURJDAY, AUGUST 17, 1068 Hi-Fi, TV A Rodloi R CENT.European ^xc^con* 'US32SS- 1 RS?IBwaforr*15( 1 ontmuo dining ----- conflating of China ibla and chairs, bulfat. I hauling traitor, 16' x Immediate Possession! ON THESE NEW ROSS ■HOMES ‘ Landscaping Included! WATKINS HELLS.: .Corner "L" Ranch—3 bedrooms 2 hill baths, circular hearth huge basement, carpeting I $31900 LAKELAND ESTATES: Country living with all the conveniences I Private beach, golf, tennis, 3 lakes available! 2 COLONIALS . . . 2V4 baths Carpeting — family room with fireplaces. Appliances, W floor laundry Formal dining room* from .$37,900 LAKE FRONT RANCH-3 BEDROOMS IV* baths, huge walk-out basement. Family room, balcony tool I $38,300 • 2 LAKE FRONT SPLIT-LEVEL HOMES) Bloomfield Hilli Area: SPACIOUS 4-BEDROOM. COLONIAL that has everything. Fully sodded) : $49,500 Phone: 623-0670 N 1-1 dally; Closed F mediate possession, only *29,900. 'cedar ISLAND LAKEFRONT — i Bi-level ranch on extra large lot. i Three bedrooms, 2 baths, two fireplaces — one in^the^ large separate family room. House completely carpeted. *36,500 full CROSS LAKE FRONTAGE -i UNION LAKE PRIVILEGES — ... -rsectlon. Full price, ! Clarkston Real Estate i SB5B S. Main _________ MA 5-5821 EXCELLENT ^OPPORTUNITY. ^140 fireplace serves t LAKELAND ESTATES Dixie Hwy., Vi mile past Walton “■vd. — Williams Lake Rd. s. Teleoraph Rd. FE 44)591 ... __ .... priced right *16,000. C. Schuett EM 3-7188 WOO Commerce Rd. Income Property 3 FAMILY. *11,900. Groi 9 FAMILY INCOME - AUMirn Brinas In $95 per week, fun r --~ *14,950 with *3500 down, .payment KENT Established In 1916 4 UNITS - On small acreage. 480 paved street frontage. *42,500. flOYD KENT, INC., Realtor ec H7r' £ T,le?E*?7342 lot, excellent return on you vestmant. Heights Rd. near Ji “7'M0'GREEN ACRES lake Property i ACRES. 1 OWNER. WATERFRONT ■One of the most beWWH-»!•» overlooking Loon Lake *14,900. EM o Pontiac, sibilities, expressway to to,™ ... property, **00 per acre. LO 'Tahct O' PLENTY C. PANGUS, INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 30 M-15 Ortonvlll# CALL COLLECT 627-2*15 JEW 200 PAGE FALL Wlnte; Catalog ..... Yours FREE for the asking! Over 2,600 actual. PHOTOS) Over 2.100 properties . Largest selection CLASS C LIQUOR LICENSE, building, fixtures and property located on 2 of Watarfords busiest highways. Plenty of parking, excellent seating capacity, over *100,000 gross. Land contract farms, or cash or you can exchange. I Contact Bob Bartlebaugh or Tod McCullough. McCullough realty REALTORS Business Opportunities RESTAURANT FOR SALE man and wife operati.... ______ . potential, FE *-7(31. Mon. through bed' soTwW mattri ------nd box spring^:, sm ' And Ottoman, *169. Italian Sofa and Matching choir, S239. Sofa and Matching Chair, *142. 10.7 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator, (134. 1 7 Piece Dinette, (89. 18" color T.V, with stand, (319. Stereo Consoletta, AM, FM radio, (102. », etc. EM 3-4435. PUBLIC NOTICE Factory blemished 1969 GE . HOT-POINT, ADMIRAL, RCA, KELVINATOR, **c. 2-door auto, defrost rafrig. INCH THROAT —--Grinder and Sandar. 2 motors. Castared bench *100,- 60} pound capacity slngle'ceitertraller, rack and canvass with hitches, *7S. 1 16 .....—UW “ 2 badsprlnjjs. Farms UNITED ^ catalog! 15460 Highland Rd. (M-St) -----its I COASTI F businesses In 32 ' states Egs—icitp ■-----“"-I Pteasa specify location prefer. Agency, 1380-p! BHOOCK l|| 4139 Orchard Lake Rd. | !ns' 1 At Pontiac Trail . . MA 6-4000 444-4890 ti solid 24x40 schoolhouse, TIMES FOR SALE — 25c 4 l tor walk-out b UPPER LONG LAKE CANAL — Sloping lot tor bHevol, 75x44' Nice, cleao canal dose to Clark Real Estate, 1362 W: Huro 682-6850 or FE 5-5146. OPEN HOUSE, Saturday ar J Nakomls, Lai mad1ataSoccupancy. County. 2 largo barns with be stalls, running water and offlc space. Large paddock, boar fencing. Only $25,000 to handli Call for more particulars. . WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" HR. H5SHS9 Times Realtv sand beach. *25,000, *7,000 down. 1 A ICTLvU 1/ l 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY 17 ACRES. Over 570 feet of roed, 623-0600 REALTOR Open 9-9 Dally Clarkston. *5,900. 0 ACRES. Corner parcel, 1 s gravel. 1 side blacktop. Excel) for horse owners, **,175. Terms. S ACRES. Beautiful private lake, - - - —- »■—rsf fich nmrfmct i Indianwood 9Rd., 2V* Ortonvl ACRES. Private, nice trees, i im-i oeautiful winding river lust north moving1 of Lapeer *475 per acre. - - ■ | lies' to 160 ACRES. SI. Louts.^MIcmgan. _40 OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 OXBOW LAKE Furnished cottage with beach out on the peninsula rounded by water at $16*500. CASS LAKE PRIVILEGES Story and a half 3-bedroom IMP has enclosed front and back porch] C. PANGUS, Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEf CALL COLLECT 627- bungalow In good repair, larg living room, family size kitche with many built-in cabinets, als many closets, full baspmenl stoned spring flowing in yard, smal barn, excellent garden spot, a HOUSEWIVES Unable to work out of homo or o account ot Children? Now tarn_ $80 PER WEEK |Sale Land Contracts^ 1 MILLION Dollars has been made available to us to purchase and assume land contracts, mortgages or buy homes, lots or acreage outright. Wo will give you cash tor your equity. Our; appraiser Is awaiting your call at 674-2236 McCullough realty l <60 Highland Rd. (M-Sf) MLS jte| ” “ 674-2236 E-Z TERMS HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE REFRIGERATOR, .— vary good condition, 3356225. ' gas st i, both 1 JO PER CENT HUMAN HAIR WIG. Excellent condition, machine sawn, auburn In color, 10' long. Will sell far *40. FE 5-1000 GALLON OIL storage tank, Word-aire — ■— ajj ------------- and controls,, i I and 10 gallon ~E 4-1360. INVESTOR WITH * poriun 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us before ' deal. . Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 54165 Open Evee. 'f * - - LAKE FRONT MOTEL, Oakland », 20 units, 4-bad room homa. cash down req*,,™‘*. *“r appointment OR 3-7700. LAPEER. GROCERY - GAS, bear and wine take-out, grossing------ $250,000 par year. Excellent tion in fast growing area.. T*Falriaoa Really li rtonvllla acres, priced f Attention Housewives Highest prices tor used turn!__ and appliances. Ask for Mr. Grant ■t Wyman's Furniture FE 5-1501. guaranteed. 674-11 Appliance, 6404 Notional Unclaimed FURNITURE end new Sofa, Mr. A Mrs. Chairs ONLY *15* 45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 FREE DELIVERY Wanted Contracts-Mtg. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See u* before Warren Stout, Realtor 450 N. Opdylg^ Rd.^ t p FE 54165 b Farm Real Estate, 6 ■'! Sole Busmen Property57 k 150 — ELIZABETH Lake Rd. Waterford Two. 1 Northern High Area______________________________|_________________ 42/3 acres consisting of 10 lots, CLINTONVILLE; ROAD ZONED suitable far developing, church faanng|al fajamt -"*■ site, etc. Frontage on 3 streets, sewer and water et property. *30,000, terms. Located n EXECUTIVE COMMERCIAL n Dixie Road, 20 minutes to Flint or Pon-tlac. This property combines IVOj main highways end lake ar feet of lake frontage on a private; *155,000, terms, restricted lake with a rural at-j M'rSWM ANNETT INC. REALTORS strMts.^ This ^-vaaMld^in^Jypo 28 E. Huron St. sprinkling system, sodded —4 ’ o«ic« levels On lake, balcony o — ROCHESTER. Llvernols, about of Walton. Idoal nalt apartment d| Idlng. Price *13, bedrooms, 2W living area plus t fireplace, built-lns, 4 baths, laundry on fli- ---- dining room, living room, eating area In kltchan, carpeting, drapes, dog kennel, and many other extras. Prioe — *54,000. This properly Is available to a qualified purchaser on land contract., terms with 20 per cant down. Call tor appointment. Holly 1-6344792. SEVERAL EXCELLENT LAKE front |S|ri In lovely Waterford —Ui— s offered by | HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty 338-0466! ZONED MULTI-DWELLING Office Open Evenings A Sunday 1-4 5.01 acres in Commerce Twp. 444’ • p J frontage on paved road. Price 1,000. Good terms. ZONED COMMERCIAL I acres on cornor with ovar 600' ..... ... .i or paved road frontage: Near WALTER'S I- A 1CC privities,! vVatartortl. Mlch. prlc,“ *15,500. Clarkston School District, several. Good terms, chofaes, 120x120' building site. , Cummjngs# Realtor WALTER'S LAKE FRONT 100x330' 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD site. *7,500. ; EM 3-3200 . 363-7111 siderEoffer- M *"** ~ “"'jSTORE BUILDING, 20x50, 102-2300 ' SYLVAN 673-3408 PINE LAKE privileges, several choices. 100x150' building sites. PRIVATE LAKE 155 Acres, Oakland County. I fishing lake,- — ..... —™. .. Gambia':. Store In Oxford. *12,900. *2,000 down. Balanco on land contract. Commercial corner In Oxford, ... ft. frontage on M-24, with office — garage building. *15,500. n. Balance on land con- acre* of State' Farrar, 2026 Ar George No'jthern^ ®-^beaut„u, roiling, eargrtlng. 10x53' .P" *37,500 down. SPRINGFIELD T0WNSHIP 42Vj Acres, off ROttalee l near Davlsburg, high .lar pond spring-fed; and barn property, secluded with 130 road. *31,500 with *5000 dow 360 ACRES Business Opportunities Michigan, Resort MAKE MORE $ $ $ rr without. Only I will got you "guT cV^L^'™ Or LARRY TREPECK, NEED LAND CONTRACTS, SMALL DISCOUNTS. EARL GARRELS. AAA 4-5400 OR EM 3-4006. ' CASH FOR land contracts. MOTEL, NEAR PONTIAC, , shows excellent gross. Also has nice Ing quarters. Call today for polntmant. Priced to sell, SI Money to Loon (Licensed Monev LOANS $25 TO *1,000 COMMUNITY LOAN CO. j* 30 E. LAWRENCE FE 04421 'LOANS *25 to *1400 • Insured Payment Plan . BAXTER & LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. 401 Pontiac State Bank Building National Unclaimed FURNITURE Brand new plush back Redlners—*50 45116 Casslutica) 731-0200 FREE DELIVERY 11 R-CONDITIONERS, SEASONAL closa-out sal*, dirt's Appli--- '64*4 Williams Lk. Rd. .674-111 AUTHORIZED sale Of color TV'S. ZENITH, mm ADMIRAL, SYLVANIA, etc. Selling direct to public. 21 "-23". Large choice, *260; also black and white , 315 GALLON TANK tor filtertng Ir i from water, FE 5-9902, before 15,000 BTU NEW | —age 1 ed. Fr------- ■ d marble. Reas. SAVE UP TO 50% WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE On Floor i E-Z terms available. KAY FURNITURE Next to Kmart Shopping Canter SAVE PLENTY TODAY ‘ On all 1963 floor samples ot ranges, refrigerators, washers am Little Joa's. if Walton'VlvtL E 2-6042 BEAUTIFUL FRENCH'AND Italian provincial living room furniture, also lamps, black naugahyde couch i and chair, tea cart, girls btdroom furnltute, etc. 626-9606. National Unclaimed FURNITURE Brind new Nylon Sofa-*68 45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 FREE* DELIVERY complete, *49.50 end up. Peartor.'s Furniture, .210 E. Pike. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE tale, BRAND NEW. Large and small size (round, droj>leaf, rectangular) tables In 3-, 5- and 7-pc. sets, *24.95 up. PEARSON'S FURNITURE! 210 E. Pike _______________FE 4-7061 MULTIPLE PROPERTY 6 acres ozned multiple dwelli Okayed far 60 units, sgw;. okayed, smell pond on property, frontage on 2 road*, near Dixie HOWf and Walton, axe. location. Mortgage Loans McCullough realty REALTOR W Highland Rd. (M-S9) Ml Partridge COMMERCIAL BUILDING Suitable far light manufacturing, contains 13,900 sq. ft. nr" ~ GMC plant. Replacement i asking p 1. 14-5363-CI malor st well *55,000. Swaps 121 ALUMINUM BOAT, 6 h.p. motor, used 3 times, trade tor anything of equal value, also electric counter top. Baker'* Pride pizza oven with timer, and counter top potato pealar, 16629 Dixie Hwy. LITTLE RED HEN .r'S ALL THE RAGE! Country Chicken Carry O'* “ after S:30 p.m.________ 1956 MOBILE CRUISER, 4x50 .ft. ------swap. Call Mary, 33*3561, ______j 1 end i n.m.. Mon. through Frl. 1950 M-TON DODGE pickup, 1960 ton Ford Panol, for *now mol whot have you, FE 2-9629, I960 PONTIAC WAGON, clean, tor? , well ,6hd septic. 625-. n Pontiac. *60,000 3344729. LAKE LAPEER AT PRE-DEVELOPMENT PRICES Among rolling hills and woods. South ot Lapeer. From l-3 to acre lots with snedy shprelln Pure, cteor spring fr" —**" " - —-t| streams to HOLIDAY VACATION HOMES otters large HOMESlTES, take privileges|“J".' lots and cottages at_.Steytmsqn| on indianwood , Lake.^ reasonable j p|^°|C Boat Storage Stop bi , w purffY; the excitement ot n*w.-jnt- Call si collec* information and pricot. C. PANGUS INC-, Realtors team h DAYS A WEEK BOSCQMMOH AREA, -2 L< 150-X155' wooded, 2 blocks Higgins Lake, 335-7057, after id rolling aftAfi"rjealty Open Sur—■ ■- -LAKE FRONT HOMES, » 4. L. Daily CoT and U EM 3-7114 LAKE FRONT HOME-PLUS INCOME PROP. Wall constructed brick bungalj Year-* round. Plastered wall SimlcXbalh, full dining roj full basement, wrage> beat, W teke.frontaga. Also a lake front lots bSgi sSTonly *4 500 Term fo sum i WILLIAMS LAKE. OaautHul ,** front lot. *5cpi, kteda ef tra* t j breakwater. Only SI2400 an Ian Resort Property^ 4 LOTS, MANY LAKE VIEW, minutes Pontiac, 100x150' county road, full price $25, $6/000 down. Sheldon 625-5557, NORTHERN BUILDING Cottage Chalet Ranch We manufacture 41" pahel c ponents, fully insulated, prewl choice of exterler end Inte finish, thermalpene sliding pai completely UMBfa*'** Bj. k Taylor Agoitty, Inc. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL & INVESTMENT , 377 S. Telegraph Rd. ^ 338-9641 C®n%-oS«Ch*rd I PA^RlDGttreAtE^W ' 1050 West Huron, Pontiac REALTOR! 334-3501 ,f|| ? »654760 PRIVATE ESTATE LIQUIDATION, property located In Detroit. The neighborhood. Only i i io ACRES. Ortonvlite, n'HOMESlTES, Lake location 100x300', *2^~. - 1 1 i A. J. RHODES,. REALTOR | I PE 8-2306 258 W. Walton FE 5^67121 J MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ‘ ROYER i rrectlon from; II also dlrectl panels. Simple nn drawings, we i Northern Michigan. For fr*oi brochure and location of models,; call SKANDIA Custom Homo Mfg. Co. 642-0323. HUNTING LAND Ton acre parcel from 42,500, terms. Also taka lots near Gaylord. TROY-GLENMORE ESTATES, large corner lot- tsano. term* bv owner. 609-3719, ■ HOLLY OFFICE o L0TS-ACREAGE Davlsburg 20 acres rolllnq Ian close to M-59, easy driving i STRUBLE REALTY REALTOR — MLS 5925 Highland Rd. (M-5f 674-3175 COHO COUNTRY LIQUOR "BAR. sharp ^straight Imon country. - |ust 445,000 PARTY STORE r 41*1,MO ‘’‘^j Warden Realty lots—Acreage^ 54 SAAALL LAKES, I 6 ACRE CORNER NORTH Clarkston; 411,900. 45M061.__ IV: ACRES, near 1-75, Clorkston, 620x600', S799fc easy t ar im s . Sheldon. 62S-5SS7. Op*l» «UB- ' ■ t LOTS . NEAR LONGFELLOW School - Trade far tend contract, feSTAT*FE44.M r*. 682-2073 WlLLISlM; 06 736 Rlker Bldg. Evas, and Sunc LAKE FRONT PW. lake front lot* developments1 In Holly a - - “lores, Groyotoi ■nd Rlvatara S--- acreage parcels. Ieastham springs/ rtloi butWIngsIts, $^3,0(»w trlect oppor J*l' business. This malor ...: tinn Hm hem REDI rrtunlt^ for an In- I excelltnt chance of raallzlng a NEAR ORTONVIUE 4 teres of frontage on 2 roods, eautiful butldlng sit**, only *2,000 Own oh tend contract. WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY; INC. PHONE: 634-8204 i immediate tale. Lend contract Bill Eastham, Realtor 5920 Highland Ed. (M-59) M Waterford Plaza 674-3126 CARRIAGE-STROLLER, a woo< Ylgh chair, bathtub, dressing tat Intent chair, playpen, 625-4655, U FOR THE PAST 42 YEARS mortgages for repairing, i Ing, additions, consolktatir CHAIRS REUPHOLSTERED COPPERTONE G COUCH, $10; , ___________ pair of tamps, 48; reclining chair, 425; 4 choir*, *13. 341-3534. ianish Imports with iw set- twin-size mattress, good tings, 25 per cent off. Teak Walnut " Rosewood, normal settings. Formal toak Dining Tab!*, —| ( for qjr ot equal . CENTURY with 344 ...for and trallor. Sate or nous* or camping trailei • i, 693-4741 attar 5. SWAP OR SELL 1 1963 Pontiac, tetegnj-MlIiD----- Also 1 2-watt Sole Clothing 64 MISSUS CLOTHING. Sizes 9 to 12. Exc. cond. Cheap. 642-0683. LIQUOR BAR FOR SALE: Always! Busy — grossing between *40,000 and *56,000. A1I remodeled living! quarter*. Excellent location on highway. *55.0M. *15,090 down. BEAUTIFUL MOTEL — 10 year*, old. Each unit 16x16. 10 units plus; living quarters. Black t - -driveway. Flowers. 2 highways. VERY GOOD BUY!! $55,0— 415,000 down. YOU HAVE TO SEE PRACTICALLY NEW Parslsn lamb coat. .JMOKI) Purchased at Richland. Furs. Will sell for *500. 335-5533. __ Sale HaaeahaW Qoods 65 V* WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY ---------SINGER------ TOUCH AND SEW Slant needle gear drive, 600 serlas. Auto bobbin, winds directly from neadla. Zlz-zagger, makes button-hoias, fancy efltchot, overcasts, ate. Pay small balanco of *55.10 cash or *5 month.' Coll credit dept., 335-9283, W WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $297 42.50 par week . LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1*61 Baldwin at Wdlton, FE 36*41 Acre* of.-Fred Parfcin^^ , almost note, 474-359* after 4 ____ _____, new wedding rings, priced, GlbSon rafrig. Lika new SI 00, Gas stove *25. 332-7221.___ 1944 NORTON 750 CC, *700; tap* ■ ' —ord player, *50, *f, 460, 334-4392. *» ALL UNIT SALE TRACTORS, MOWERS, SAWS BOLENS, SIMPLICITY LAWNBOY, JACOBSEN, COMET, HOUGHTEN'S POWER CENTER 112 W. University Dr. 651-7010 DOWNTOWN ROCHESTER k NEW METHOD OF connecting cast iron sewer pipe Is available by using stainless steel damps with lifetime rubber gaskets. I" Cast Iron sewer pipe 10' for *10.95 3" Cast iron Sewer pipe 10* for *8.91 G. A. Thompson, 7005 M-59 W, $1.50! bumper SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG Sewing machine — sews single or double needle, designs, overcastr buttonholes, etc. — Mode* cabinet. Take over payments of: $7 PER MO. FOR 8 M0S. OR $56 CASH BAL, AQUARIUM 26 GALLON. Aquarium —iplies, impace wrench, 2 portable lios, portable TV, Vi" copper «, Scott 75 lawn spreader, OR 1-12. ATTENTION JANITORS — I960 ■ylng SINGER Deluxe Model—Portable Zig zagger, in sturdy case. Repossessed. Pay off: $38 CASH Or payments of $5 per mo. Universal Sewing Center 2615 DIXIE5 HWY.U,r*n>** FE 4-090! AUTOMATIC WATER SOFTNER, ■ :t conditions. 1-349-3490. range, dressing table and bench. 330-2948 after 6 — week-ends. and Contemporary sofas. 20 to so pet. group of fabrics. Call 335-t700. Coml. Upholstery Co, STOVE, REFRIGERATOR, _— — - bedroom suit. 363-3910. TAPPAN GAS RANGE, $100; gas range 040; FrlaMalri ______ range S35; Admiral' apt. size refrigerator $25. Signature ringer-washer 440; Hettrlck 9x12 tent *30. 335-1595. i \Tcr Fit *139. 52" Buffet, *1 .RADIO AND APPLIANCE, INC. -422 W. Huron_____ 334-561 BACK TO SCHOOL SALE Up to Vi off on used t> desks, chairs, drafting b BEIGE NYLON CARPETS, 15' ex- I; 4 MM Prolector, 425; K portable sewi 2638. BRIDES announ ____ YOUR WEDDING innouncements at discount from, MMgfMI ' Drayton, OR«3- BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS—POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS BLUE LUSTRE SHAMPOOERS Desks from 496, Uphol. choirs, from *75, -folding lounge chair, *24.50, Safari VI Chair, *36, many ;oth*r Item*. Our Wnrehouse will be open Sot. Sun. 12 FM til 5:30 PM. Bi Imports, 30555 Grand R Iv Farmington. 1-2759________or GR 4-4063 !ng room secttonal $11 reclining chairs 039.50 up, 4 apt. gas range, *79.50, 4 Reasonable, FE i : furniture. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 EVPI_KE_ _ FE 4-74*11 COMMERCIAL WINDOW I close-out Coml, Upholstery Cl ir CHINA, SERVICE FOR 8 pieces. Bohemia r-------- fireplace screen aiJPOBHI --d 2 chair* Ilka new. am teapot, coffeepot, cream and sugar. OR 3-9275, evenings. COAL , ■ FURNACE, ^ke Ridge Rd.,1 National Unclaimed FURNITURE rand raw Maple or Walnut Clwst 4-drawer _ *29.4* 45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 FREE DELIVERY GOLD CONTEMPORARY sofa and carpeting. 240 5tarr, 332-4740. HAVE POODLE. ( WITH NEW G ANTIQUE AUCTION — SUNDAY, August 14th, 2 p.m. Located at the Early Antique Shop. 2160 S. Telegraph, Pontiac, across from Miracle Mile Shopping Contar. Jack W. Hall' Auctioneer. Auction handled by Hall's Auction, Laka Orion, Bloomfield Llqanse No. 16. For Information call 693-1*71. ANTIQUE LOVE&EAT and chair, newly upholstered, 363-2935. CUSTOM ANTIQUE REFINISHING. Specializing In fumlturo refihlshlng and repairs of all types. 363-9361, Mon-Sal. ( . „r*ss56 will rat up to t13,99 Lady owner wants i terms. Everything estate, fixtures and HURRYIII HURRYItt DAIRY BAR: Serving^ WHOLESALE l RETA___________I lea cream distributorship. G congHsMy oquIopodL Building very tomfortaw* living —■ Lady owner with 4 children umnw handle. Grossed *156,900 la*t year. Full price *65/000. Tor m e, ENOUGH WORKMib BUSINESS FOR TWO FAMILIES 0 R PARTNERSHIP! !«■ . - Coll: B. A. Calka, Realtor 6306 w. Main St., Cass City, Mich. Phene: Area Cod* 517, *72-4355 1 GAS REFRIGBRAT61(, i37JO a| gas stove, 425. OR 4-3567. National Unclaimed FURNITURE Brand new Po*ture Mattress and Bdx Springs- Regular *139—Our Price, ML 2* Sets to see 45116 Cass (Utica) 721-0200 FREE DELIVERY HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL 20 A MONTH BUYS ,3 ROOMS OF . furniture consists ot: -piece living room outfit wltt living roan suite, 2 step tel_ . cocktail tsblt, 2 table lamps and .1) fxiy rug Included,, 7-piece bedroom suite s SWEETS, . 10101 T BABY BED, buggy, play pen, high chair, Muntz TV, bookcatt. 674- 2 M BEDS, FROM TRAILER, n box Spring and I vanity lampa. -piece dinette set * with 4 chrome chairs and tabte. AII for 0199. Your credit It goad at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 7 E. HURON ' . FE 5-1501 KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT.CONI7ITION - *50 FULL GUARANTEE ~ Kirby Service & Supply Co. 3H7 DIXIE HWY j Wfi, TV t Radios t^CBRADfOS,? Currtef 1 . —— 19" PORTABLE TV a 025. I Approximately 41' ^^TALBOTT LUMBER 1035 Oakland FE 46595 COPPERTONE GAS STOVE, IV* years old, FE 46963. _______ COURIER 23 CB Radio with CLR 2 Antenna, 1 year old, *225, 3-7. 15.5 tiros, * Ply With rims, *75, 731-1403 -- -HOUSES _ MOST Size*. 740 Orchard Lake Rd. ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER over the bathtub with a beautiful glass tub enclosure, aluminum frame, with sand blasted Swan design, S20.95. G. A. Thompson, 7005 M-» W. FLINT AND WALLING t j>ump. 42 gallon tank, r stallation. 105,000 BTU g.. IWMI : Installed complete 2 bedroom horn “ “ —. Other sizes c estimates. Westco Heating, 693- FINAL GARAGE SALE ‘ AT 4576 Walton Blvd. Drayton Plains, F\?5d Off! 33869M INST^^D *'* GARAGE AND MISC. SALE: 3754 ________nt. B 11 * r * GARAGE SALE. MOVING AH m"'* “■ 114 Mechanic off Pad- tartlnj: F with horsepower motor, Dreml sander-polisher. Household i|------- and furniture. 12 to 6 ------ day. 1543 Northur Rochpster, Near Croak: GARAGE SALE SATURDAY Olid Sunday 9 to 5 mlsctllanoous items • Including twin beds cdmplate double dresser, 4-place sectional living room suite, washsr anddryar, 2 lawn mowers, 1171 AJhl st. GARAGE SALE:' PETITE to taros ^za ciofhlng. mlsc. Items. iSK Everest Or. Maybe* Rd. to Mary Site, second street. Saturday 9-3, GEHAOE SALE: 2 CERTS to *15. Stowe, clothes, mite., starts Sat. 10 a/nw 30 Jefferson, off Cadillac. 15 E Walton, corner of Joslyn k WALNUT____________ _______ IW^.'ted^S^Rd^ad^e^ OARAGjE 5AJJ COLOR TYSERVICC^ . ■" Johnson's. TwWJfSar^ 45 E. Walton ij>«r OMISfo KITCHEN AND DINING Rooifa total* COLOR TV BARGAINS, LITTLE and chairs, buffet. 30-In: das Joe's Bargain House. FE 26442. l. Reas. FE 4-3*62. K«b TV, Imik., 179 Nichols Dr.; *'*•” mag, MLMM, ~ - GARAGE SALE: ANTIQuk dlshW, U^V*furnr!h^ ara^ 10:00, 2024 Pauls THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 ffStthMhull—iw Wlttgcdg?** ■ 91 ilwri BVtRYTHINQ MUST GO TO MAKE ROOM. FOR OUR CMWMJKl^OjKnlnle*" “>•"* 1 AKC APRICOT Mi »■ *734949. WEEK OLD PUPPIES U M. 474- if Lasher, 2 houses N it 1795; wM! w tats SgiSg ■afessw GARAGE-RUMMAGE SALE: 636 Wurlltier was S2495 . .Lounsbury, Frl„ Set. 10 A.M. to ilNancy Hort was tltS; P M. _____' Lowrey was *M95f .. GIBSON TRACTOR end equipment.Ifmb*11 WljjlBji .. call 391-2367 attar 5. Ln“"*“ — *"'* 5i?!3£mrapFe$ 3205 PIXIE HWY., OR 3-9474 GO-CARTS FOR SALE, *125 aach. AIROALE TERRIER, J yi tamala with papaFi. FE 2-6 AIROALE FEMALE,'Che'i Sired, 4 months old aftor 1447-42*9. , GAS CONVERSION IN your torcod air Ml furnace. Completely Installed. tltO. Offer good until Sept. 30. Wottco Heating Co., 2*7 w. Clarktton Rd.. Lake Orion, *93- ^ consumers approved, SifJo va%_. $39.95 and S4t.t5 marred. Also electric end bottla heaters, “"in — ■‘-rrHte values In _____________ Fluorescent, 393 Lowrey was 1,000) £ ", no* No reasonable otter retused. iSAUTIFUL QUARTER typo bay eeldlng f yrs. — wonderful Children's horse — Guar, toynd. GELDING PONY, 3 HORSES BOARDED — Rand box stall, $35. Box stall ortl' Includes tf‘J Agg U' 17471 30 Mila Rd., I AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD puppies available Ip snow white ana silver gray. IV* milts S. of StancRth “■* oft freeway on U.S. 23 (A) Lasher, Plnconnlng, Mich. S17 AKC MINIATURE POODLES, GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. . 1710 S. TELEGRAPH FE 4-0544 PONTIAC | AND AKC APRICOT POODLE, $05. 474- NORTHERN CAMPING f R t P Horseback riding, swimming, fishing avalitbli. Trento. furnish- FARFISA COMBO. COMPACT organ, $440) Leslie tone cabinet, $250) Wurlltztr elec, piano, $240) also Fender echo chamber. Green Lake, 343-2480. —AMPL4 n $400, w KENCO SUBMERSIBLE PUMP, repaired. CwSt Ren?aL*FE S-6642?j PLffOR gPINEt plaro idHffiMSg J Pontiac, $195, 3884 Percy King Dr , K?H|.ER _AND CAMPBELL, Walnut $250, 343-9794. AKC REGISTERED Norwegian i PAL AM I NO MARE ANI gelding, both gantla. available. Pontiac Lake PALAMINO MARE, WELL mar AKC POODLE PUPS. BLACK! apricots. $45 UP. FE 4-2747, AKC TOY POODLE. Mack, female, 4 LAVATORIES COMPLETE ..... »ufS, tier tails. I RHCV _________________ $24.50 $14.95, also bathtubs, toilets, r stalls. Irregulars, terrific i. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 kKC CHAMPION LINE P All colors. Miniature an service. 493-4138. ___________ ILL PET SHOP. 55 Williams, I 4433. selling wit of birds. LEONARD (GRINNELL) CONSOLE! matching b*—*• 1 I --- 451-714 LOWREY SPINET ORGAN, $700) I cellent i also viollh and case, $75. Both In ruamps ~ exc. condition. 338-3113. . champs « PIANO: WURLITZER. beaut ITU I i* blonde spinet. Sacrifice $295, FE 2- . 5304. . . ..... PIANO. ACCORDIAN AND guitar l, $75 to SI25. 391- COCKER PUPPfES, AKC registered. LENOX FURNACE, 95,000 BTU, new UALpHOMd duct work, for I rooms,,- 5 double s *n™NML' XI condition. OR 3-2912. LUX A IRE OIL FURNACE “wl controls, humidifier, register* duct work for 7 rooms, *125. MY champion stock, ____— shots and dewormed, 271-4718. T DACHSHUNDS, LONG-H A I______ AKC 'registered, the aristocratic Dachshund, 2 (months, old. fl—‘ line breeding, top quality for s or pet. From *100. Call 451-irni after 4, _ FREE KITTENS and/or mo MAHOGANY DROP loaf t table, . upholstered chairs, semi-band tied, "r—-■ 1--------wig. 473-4334. ' is $289. NICE 1*4 GAUGE, DOUBLE. *55, 12*! alum, boat with 5 H.P. motor. *115) Started female beagle. 4X Rifle scope, *20) 473*"" N YLON - WOOL BLEND* —dltlon, “ I ibinatloi . 852-2485. E HOUSE bl « n.ni„?2.Wn,0V"' S,°r* « , .../FREE TO GOOD HOME, LiSP1”*_________FEJT168 beegle' pups, 391-2322._ WAREHOUSE fr6maim8ENS- CLEARANCE SALE I -----------FREE^WtiNSf-------1 ________ _______________ EVERYTHING MUST GO well trained Good pet. apartment, rental house. 338-2907. NEW AND USED pjanos and organs.! _451-4882 473^597™' 10RSE5 FOR RENT OR SALE. 3085 loumAgk^' ■ j. 335-1935 aft. 10 a.I REGISTERED QUARTER HORSE, . mare, 5 year old Bay, ..exc disposition. Shown 4-H and open Bv Kate Osann _______JRKaMtABIAN mare,3 years old, flashy chastnut — blaze; ~~h stockings, Is hands.! iORR E L GEL b 11 flashy white blaze. Exc. rt Smooth gait. Great for cn country. 343-5547. 4121 Greer R Pontiac. n-K WE CURE AND SMOKE MEATS. Cad PE 2-StSS. Hay-Orain-Fra4 lfa iy, ;-----... . Held. OR 3-4144. Form Produce BLUEBERRIES Pick your own 25 conts per po Bushes are leaded. Picking > TACO MINI BIKE. I months old. Motorcydt» ____fj 100CC BUCATI motor-scooter, like new. lest then 200 miles. FE 4-5449 warranty good. 200 CC. TRIUMPH Tlgor Cub, 1200. “Certainly I’m going to the party like this! I don’t want the car seat-belts to rumple my*dress!” Travel Trallert SB AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TP*“ nee 1932. Guarani ...am and gat a c Waraar Trallar < Huron (plan td |oi.. ...... Byam's axcltlng caravans). 3090 W. e of Wally Check our deal on SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS call 798*0291, 7 Shoemaker 941 Boats-Acceis«ri«s , MARGIE Craft, . EXTRA Sharp Car 14' DORSET RUNABOUT with 100 Especially 4 speeds and corvettes. t:5ii..JS«M8l •l#c' ,,t, "Chock the rest, than got the best* condition. Bast offtr ovtr $425. 391. •1/Ble 17' .CHRIS CRAFT 215 HP* old boat* now motor. OR 4-3537. 1948 HARLEY DAVIDSON, Chopper, 80 cubic In., runs good, $450. 363-4940. 17’ CHRIS-CRAFT, 220\h.p., new varnish. Sea owner at 1677-A Cass Lk. Rd. Kaego, after. 5:30. 1959 FLH HARLEY OUAL-gllde. 74 overhead, loaded with accost., recently overhauled, S495 or trade for small car. 924 Spence St. Pontiac, attar 5 p.m. 11' CRUISERS INC., Twin 40's Tandem Pemco Trailer, 81,(00. 1-427-3115, Ortonvllle. 19' CABIN CRUISER 1943, sleeps 2, sink end stove, 1941 75 h.p. 1944 HARLEY 175CC trail. $150 492-9387. Johnson, trailer, electric brokes, 19470 Derby, Detroit. Between 7 and 0 mile roods off John R Rd. 9 1964 HONDA - 250 SCRAMBLER -391*1803. 1964 HARLEY 74* .good condition. Call aftar 6* 612-4012. 21' OWENS CABIN crulitr. Inboard. Hood, small galley, $1450. Dockad Steel's Marine at Bayport. OL 6-2501, ask for N. McConhlo or 087- 1966 HONDA SljPER 90. $170.' 674-2663. 1944 TWIN"lWTYemefia 1944 HONDA CB 140 Hondo, black, oltc. start, runs good, $300, Nlghti, 473-1790, days OR 3-7342. 1944' HONDA SUPER HAWlC excellent condition, adult owned, $400. OR 34)592. _________ 1964 TRIUMPH CUB. gi 1967 HONDA CL li Best Mobile Home Sales Open Daily 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Merlefte Champio Royal Embasiy Reger Squire Landol Delta American Vide MARLETTE EXPANDOS ON DISPLAY , FREE DELIVERY AND SET UP WITHIN 200 MILES. 12x50' Marietta 1940, 97 Wanted Can-Tracks 111 - •^^-.CHEVY^WNTIA^ met dr*. $1300 OR 4-0449 after EXTRA Dollars Paid AveriH's ! 2-9878 2020 Dixie FE 44194 HIGHEST DOLLAR PAID FOR Extra Sharp Cars I Grimaldi Buick-Opel I' CRESTLINER IN-OUTBOARD with Ford Intirctplor engine. Thir boat has everything! Tyler's Auc ♦km. 7605 Highland Rd. 673-9534. 55 HORSEPOWER Evlnruda motor a -y good condition, $300. OR 3 1958 EVINRUDE ?°r horsepower, good cond., electr,* remote control and tank. 681-0231 after 6 or weekends.______________ 67 SEA-RAY excellent condition. MY 3-7581. |___§1 gj 11 SEA SPRITE 1968 M c 650S and tr HI “OATS 8$ ton Rd. H Y 3*1600 . $1895. price Includes tr Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 Sharp Cadillacs. Pontiac, QMs and Bukks for out-of-state market. Top aollar ^MANSFIELD AUTO SALES l 5-59001104 Bdldwln 8-8825 STOP HERE LAST M&M MOTOR SALES Now at our new location i pey more for sharp, late model cars. Corvettes needed. 1150 Oakland at Viaduct - milts, $1100. Call 5-10 17 MOTOGUZZI V-7, 8 FIBERGLAS BOAT, —— —tor, conver* .. ____rlisrpirw; ____r, etc., 682-5257. 18 AQUACAT RACING'iAIL, 8500. .58 15' STEURY FIBERGLAS Lap-i ^OI?/.'aCS Slrekejfynebout, 5-yeer wjrrenty,land CADILLACS. Wfl are TOP $ PAID ON DISPLAY AT: 820) 673-5412. mm., beige-brow 4351 Losiing. 423-0491 Orating tables « ____________ ___ ____ Items to nutflt aoveret oHIcos. OR 3-9767. . PAIR METAL TOOLBOXES For I _______ELBERTA PEACHES, ' studio AKC7 Out *oi Ridgewood 'kenneTs,' | year's beautiful . temr-----* -■— s. GERMAN SHEPHERD, * of Rklg—a temperar impletely rie'n B'rue'be r r y Jacobson Trailer Sales City. MB4 td M-2i :S491 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3-S9S1 CI,V °"! DEALER WANTED FOR THE ell 343-5294” corner. j nmr pi^gy-gj^ nr ,nd truck-----------------1 camper. Call or write Piggy-Beck Camper Mfg., 3911 Western Rd.. Flint, 48504.1.742-1105. TRUIMPH Bonneville, .8: rtn of extra chrome, like nt .. ... ist sell. Best offer. Call between1 Clos im and 5 p.m. 335-4361 ■ ,ir* •x-,"9UiE^*inrJde! prepared to make you a Grumman Square Stern! better offerll Ask for Bob 1941 IVi h.p. Evlnruda Rums. $845. OR 4-3939. DUCATI K ivy. 8375, 69 WILSON CRISSMAN- obedience II Pontiac R IANY FAMOUS >IAMES to choose old. 6M-4473.________________________ from - Hammond, Chickerinfl,!GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES Gulbransen, Fisher, Lowrey, N*nr"1 —- — u| Um ■■—. j„-j Hart, Wurlitzer. Gallagher, Kin PLUMBING BARGAINS, FREE Gr|nnen( Whitney, Lester, S standing tollat, $16.95) 30-gellon Krueger, heater, *4995) 3-plece both sets.!FR0M ()v5 UP- No reasonable i - payment. I toll. Free d shower stilte with^Yrlm. *39.91)” 2-bowl sink. *2.95) lavs., *2.95,- lute, Frj" Sr “plumbing ,ndcohr*M i PLAY WH,LE Y0U Baldwin. FE 4-1514. 'PLUMBING FWTURES^SPECIAL lance, OR EM 3-4137._______ r'! GERMAN SHEPHARD AKC puppies. ' . grown dogs and stud service. Hally J 434-4717: to GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS AKC HP FORD ECONOLINE lust oft CAMPER 1944 or t-orry.___________^________| Sloop* 4,' atovo, Ico box, oink. FOR SALE at Middleton'* Orchard, ELEVATING TOPI 19,000 mlloa.i —■-«, ijtg Predmore *1495. See Tom at ol jyS VlSlVAfttr FLANNERY MOTORS INC. ! Saturday and Sun- 5104 Dlxte Hwy^ Rd., Laka C ____________atud tarvlce. 42S-HS3. GERMAN SHEPHERD, AKC, large mala, good watchdoa. 423-1470. GOLDEN RETREIVElr pupa. EATING POTATOES. 2545 ClarkstOn FOR Rd. bat. Baldwin and Joalyn, Charles Young Farm. 623-0900 PEACHES — APPLES ... REN+ CAMPING • Waiters. Mary's Campars. Call after 5 p.m., all day Sat. 391-2(11. 3491 N. Oakland Orchards, 2205 E. Com- 60 —rce Rd. 1 mil# aast of Milford. dally. Toilets B grade, ... G. A. Thompson, 7005 RAILROAD TIES, WINNEBAGO “ MOTOR HOMES P. E. HOWLAND SALES MSS^DIxIO-Hwyw Bonitac, OR M454 HEILITE,CAMPTRAILER,sleep^4 ROOFING, 13 SQUARES No.--------------------------- Seal-lob, Inatollad, S395. 338d966. Music Lessons PIIBBFR WHEELED HORSE buggy —~ and sleigh. e«u crass .Lake -Rd-, ACCORDION,—GtffTAR- ' a mild west of Porter_Rd.---- Sales-servlce. Also pi RUMMAGE SALE Pulaneckl. | **“ d with Garmon Shepherd, I. 338-2547 or 424-4717. !• I MACE" BEAGLE PUPPIES, * I, S15 each. 482-01'" ,hl?^4,*nM; Hudson oft Baldwin.____________" 'RUMMAGE - SOME ANTIQUES. ■=SNORWEIGAN 70 months old, regl female. F.E 4-3011 jistered, male and SPEED QUEEN WRINGER washer, excellent condition, S20. Large fuej tank. $10. Rummage salt — miscellaneous, 244 W. Strathmore^ Thurs., FrK, S»t„ Sun,____________ * PR ED-SATIN »AINTS. WARWICK SOUP'S ON, THE R i that is, s SI SO. 4 single! PART BASSETT FEMALE $ ..... desk *45 ea. 2; *5. 482-7088. after 5. ______ .________ executive desk ' secretarial deak, *15 aa. 4 drawer legal size file cabinets aa. 50 1-drawer storage originally 14.95 n||^j|||U 2 PART BRITTANY PUPPIES, *7. OR 1410. ns. Gear Associates, : -J, Bloomfield F IDLE CLIPPING A I N GTON POR $ DRY COPY machines. F mpooer s*i.;Stora Equipment^ s Mina 1 SA4NT BERNARDFEMALfHJ shots, pedigree AKC, *150 includes dog mg^gL^unyak 332-1943. system. Call_ S!i^go&B condlHwnJ^^^ 1---------------------------'■*:----^lAMfWfk SUSPENDED, ACCOUST.CAUrCEIL-7 ^ MAUSER RIFLES. ! SIIAMESE KITTENS. PUREBRED. luge savage pump_ gun, w# .. NOW ON DISPLAY Travelmate FARMERS TRACTOR WHEEL DEAL No m°P«v *25 "£\ 10 H. Double Bed, Dlnotto *1395 trade. AlVUmo^^trllfi Doubl. bed, Dinette 11,495 troctor pleasure Mate Cast t....... ^ der and backhoe 12995. Sea Bob| Iman at Pontiac “ ‘ lustrlal Tractors, C Pi Custo Only St FARMALL TRACTOR WITH snow plow, tilling plow, cultivator. Honey tank,, steam generator, other boo equipment. 194 Baldwin d manure. 394-6737. INVENTORY REDUCING a a I make your own bid. Da Machinery Co., Ortohvlllo 627-32 Sale’ closes Aug 28, 6 p.m. Stc BOB Hutchinson's 21st Anniversary SALE YES, 21 YEARS Sob has been in Mobile Home Sales Bob Hutchinson Invites you to see the all new $22,000 DOUBLE-WIDE KROPF HOME , 1400 SQ. FT. FLOOR SEE THE ALL NEW DETROITERS *4295 AND UP Free delivery up to 300 ml. Open Dally 'til I p.m. Saturday and Sunday ’til 5 DRAYTON PLAINS 148 HONDA 350 SCRAMBLER, take over payments/ FE 2H373. J I960 T R I U M F H BONNEVILLE modal motorcycle. 450 CC's, 1700 actual miles. Showroom condition. $1095 Hillside Lincotn-Mercury 1250 Oakland HUM) Take M-59 to W- Highland. Right to Hickory Ridge Rd., to Demode Rd.. left and follow signs tb DAWSON'S SALES AT T1PSICO LAKE. Phono 629-2179, 1350 N, Woodward .1941 SILVERLINE MAYRICK. 1940 HODAKA, 100, 5‘ spOOi demonstrator, 200 miles. 451-7023 451-0250. T-200 Road Bik. Lika 1969 BOATS 1968 PRICES CUSTOMIZED mbler. S500. 332-701 “TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CAR* 952 W. Huron St. E 4-7371 ' FE 4*1797 Wo Will Pay TOP $ For your Volkswagen. BILL G0LLING VW 1121 Maplelawn Blvd. Off Maple Rd. 05 Milo) Like HR 363-8254. - I960 Correi Firebird Scrambler, 650cc. ------------------------. - y8 Save! ____ 2-USED OUTFITS Complete with 40 I960 YAAAAHA, 350CC, loss than 300 A 70 HP. Loaded! ioymotfte!8OSMWotter 7'p!m.°Vtr MERCURY AND CHRYSLER OUT- ANNUAL SUMMER SALE I Aium. FishinS^ts-c.no.. ALL 1968 MODELS » ON SALE I N DA , NORTON*...DUCATI* MONTESA* AND MOTO-GUZZI. ~ ,............. ANDERSON SALES 8t SERVICE BEAUTIFUL 18# Fibergias Canoes Cliff Dreyer’s Marine Sport Center 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4771 12X50 PONTIAC C h 1965 LIBERTY 10x50, n\ only 83395 Including dc egrpated. 33A1509. SWIMMING POOLS lightly damaged, buy how and ■ O.A73-29U, I feo*. * 112-GAUC THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 110 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to moot your need* Ciolhino. Furniture. Appiloncas LITY | mg, 3 9781. STANDARD POODLE. MALE black, AKC “• registered, 1 - “ r - "1" Housebroken, Exc. « Reas. 474-4224. ____1 SOLVER male 332-8515.' attar 147 LL. . . Irons, 3 woods E L. C. SMITH double —— shotgun, S200. 405-1450._|T<||U W sPECIAL.122 rev°lv^; T.^RmAN sSEPHERD mm, ana otnen. v, Jtu<| Good temperament. d Female, from 0125. < SALE McCulloch chain sows i Mac-15 with 15" "Bor . Regular price SI29.95. SALE PRICE ONLY *109.95 KING BROS. FE 4-1442 FE 4-0734 Pontiac Rd. At Opdyka 3- SICKLE BAR MOWER, 3 pt. ____I guson, SI 75. 391-2324.____________ KC, 'WHEEL HORSE RIDING tractor ii1 Matt ' “ - *125. 673-1044. WASHBASIN, complete. . Furniture ----. bathroom accessories, ideal; -for cabin. S20. 423-0022.________ WASHED WIPING RAGS, as low as .24 per lb. 25 lb. box#* to 300 lb. desks, to tell.------1 New 5 hp, 3 pnose air compressor, I Np*?1and used steel, angles, channel, ! beams, plate, pipe. Used metal giraga signs, temp, shads, etc- _ BOULEVARD SUPPLY 500 S, Blvd. E. ____________333- W ESTINGHOUSE Refrigerator, I h accessories, $595. 473-4370. irgest Inventory In ttx me brand mere!) nheard of diseounts._„ 903 S. Woodward, ;' Auction Sales _; | , B & B AUCTION Sun, Aft. Cleanup Auction August, 18, 2 P,M. Sharp r”Ur'i%ra^omfKmpa?i:| MIDLAND TRAILER SALES x covers and sleepers. Parts! Featuring Parkwood, Holly Pai accessories. | and King. "* °"IV' 1940 12x45, $4200 12x44, $3550 Your car, mobile home, boat etc. taken in on trodo. Large savings on everything la ^4>a|ta^|aft delvIary^M^^ 1 sleeper: It Colgate 335-0434 ' PIONEER CAMPER SALES Trailers: Jubilee, Globe Star . Barth Campars: SwInqar. Macklnaw, igtr,________— ____________ Caribou, iarttrl >vers:Stutz Bearcor, Merit 40140720 mlles. We will n 2257 Dlxia Hwy. SEE THE NEW design Baamar, 10 SPORTCRAF1 MANUFACTURING SUMMER CLEARANCE SALE ON ALL NIMROD CAMPERS and Access. Some BELOW dealers cost. MG SALES 4457 Dixie Hwv.. Drayton 473445$ WILL PAY. t» FOR > regardless of condition. I BOW AND ARROWS, excellent eon-| dltlon, call 391-2494. ________J BRUNSWICK POOL' HALL table,! ' solid slate, 8 cues, Belgian balls, I S225. Deliverery available. Dealer. i 3SM33S* __________________________a COLT GOLD CUP, Nat'l. match .45 ..... *itn .,7.1017 offer S Hand Tools-Mochlnery 68; I CHIEF t BAG CEMENT r I $400, 6335 Sashabaw,_Clarkston, M A, 5-2161. BOWS AND.R°WjS- Groceries, some antiques, new and Used furniture ”” F|^SLEEPS nr and" ^appliances, electric . 6S1-3740 1 ___l J ninnn 19' SELF-CONTAINED TR organ, small size • piano, traMtr for Mlc> FE 2-wheel travel trailer, 12tr frolic trailer/;! power lawn mower, some1 _J2so.r toofs,’ and hundreds ,of " ~ other articles to numerous to mention. Trailer Parts AND Accessories JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILERS 517 E. WALTON BLVD. FE 45*53 BACK TO SCHOOL CLEARANCE 200cc Scrambler, was $640, now ............$520 250cc Scrambler, was $72$, now ...............$575 Plus^many more to choose from at 0rWMG SUZUKI SALES 4657 Dixie Hwy.* Drayton 673-6458 SA 1966* 650 CC. Driven 1 Viar.l >750. 624*2539. _ Special paddles Indudir ^-7488. MV l"'*— BIG CLEARANCE 1948 boat and motors traitors comping trailers, also used b< motors and trailers. Pontiac's i Mercury and Merc-Crulser d*( CRUISE-OUT, INC. We w o u I d like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today.a FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 ^ lank Can-Tracks 101-A "54* !' ,#^,## J9,NK CARS - TRUCKS, P* • I trap tow anytlmo, PE 2-2444. PAY* FOR "SOME, HONDA 50 CC. 8125. Coll OR 44)125. INDIAN CHIEF MOBILE h for rotlrod people ■led couple. *2000. 493- , toward down payment. $2195 1800, LOW Oi 8300 down. -COUNTRYSIDE LIVING MOBILE HOMES 334-1509 1004 Oakland used mg mcctuniki Tran Demo,I HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS | "Your Evlnruda Dealer" Suzuki 11099 S. Telegraph ___332-8033 INBOARD 18 fY„ 215 horsepowai Y *0721, T ml. S. of L, RpYCRAFT - 1965 TiyxSl', Lapeer 444-9710. SAVE 2 Ways! Bicyclss 4' AVALIER. EXCELLENT con-! ditlon, like new, sleeps, 4, completely self-contained. Cost *5,600.. - >11 *3600. i bag. in good jolt. 842-5405, | Hack saw, 8110: Boice Cr_. Press KT >110. ml$c equlpr and hand tools coll 634-9379_ K for appointment or Drill " SAVAGE 110 E 7 4X SI I. SI 15. 3! ir 8250. 673-7405 bi MODEL 100 B & B AUCTION SATr-NIGHT SPECIAL AUGUST 17, 7 P.M. _____ SCUBA GEAR, noi Holly ............at 005 H«lly Dr. Otter 5 p.m. WINCHESTER: orocerv on wiibpis 'ofttvE. c<«sooEYrayton Plain 1968 Starcratt Campers Inside display CRUISE OUT, INC OR 1-2717 43 E. Walton Dally 9-4 FE 8-4402 MONARCH 1-A Beauties to Choose From WE FINANCE- TERMS RICHARDSON DE,LIA ‘HYDRAULIC BRICK CUTTER, 1280. 3914)724 TUNE-UP MACHINE, SISOQ aril tor 14W, 674-2840. WELDING HOSE, I Free consultation, ______Open da 9445 Highland Wim , EVERY SATURDAY CONSIGNMENTS---- ^ PRIZE EVERY AUCTION TRAOE ,._kly WELCOMI ‘UCTIL OR 3-2717 £2U42*£| FILL SAND, ROAD gravel, filtered black “dirt, top soil, reasonable. 623-1372 or 623-0396. PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-1 gy Sand* gravel* fill dlrte. OR Cameras—Service 70 12a AtLdjL3fc*»«3Btt ' SATURDAY HONEYWELL SUPER. I - movie; camera* -power worn* [Ike .new must sell* uaed \ 4 times. MA 6-2615. Bargains in Used Pianos Uprights and grands, alt clean, tuned and delivered. Morris Music 8 s. Telegraph Pets-HuiitingDogs h PINT CHIHUAHUA, AIREDALES, Norwegian EWwunds, Cockers, “-“lies. Dachshunds, p«* *“<>-and GROOMING. PUPPIES, MINIATURE MHies and shepherd. Must sacrjflca Mav-Ina State. IIS ■*. PE *-«S9, SPECIAL English cocfcars, S39.95 (shots and mile L* Telegraph, 3324515. iJk^b^LE ORi^IttNG^ pupP<«*. r" ^ i.A JflritSHUNO PUPS. AKC, - BALOWtN SP.NET brgwu ^ PUGsT.11 ft^d n^'i^TTsnyi.*”0 0, * Ml loTM aft.? lA^STUD, 1 black gelding, 1 Black pony.4IB-l4kO. . 2 GOOD POLO BONIES. rafsonaWe. Hagan Music ' 3SI4S001 -*■__' i|^HSHU^p . 6 YTEAR OLD flatdibfl* Itiofowflhbrtd type, tall* oanNa* 6&1895; 7 YEAR OLD BLACK rnldlng, pleasure horwe, standard Bleed, sound and gentle. Ml-?709. MONDAY AUGUST It. ... Chlrlch Carefree Camper Co. 3909 Western Rd., Flint alters, Camper*, Parts and 4 Sale Service,' Auctioneers: Swartz Creek, 435-9408. AY f PJOL COMPLETE cabimt, r5 Htahlend RcL (M-59) 671 Aurnst 21, f ■orton*Sd.,*Sert»ion. Details Sara ah Monday. Parkins Bate*, Service, Auctioneer.. Ph. Swartz Crteb ______________*35-9400 . Sat. I a APACHE-DEL REY lees on ail n«* - „ g trailers and (ravel CENTURY YOlftMipNE . TRAVEL TRAILERS Quality at any Budge* , SPECIAL ' Yallowstona Truck Campar ■ v Ogri)Mf .and tr •• stacRler trailer SALES, INC. 1 Highland (M-59) 4824 52-gal. Edison v L ter- _____Hick 485-2750, 83,200. Call 492-0721 I 27(54 ROYCRAFT mobile hi aluminum skirting, utility -- gal. hot tweter hajjpr. Call 3354092 12X40 MARLETTE. 1945, bedrooms, skirtad, — pork. 452-2131. 12x40, 3 BEDROOM. tW BATHS, 8500 down. Taka over payments. Reedy to move In. Lot 103, Grove land Manor. _______ 332-1457_______ *23-1310 ?M9 PA&MAKER HOUSE trailer. 2 bedrooms, excl. cond. 50x10. 'jgu 444-2935 Mlltord. STOP PAYING-TRAILER PARK RENT I gas. No unsightly poll up to 100’ wide u_ ... .... ... as little as $40 per month ana 1300 down. Clow to scMoli, shopping, north of Pontiac in the Lapeer area, pnly 8200 feet from M-78 expressway exit now Under construction. All 1-CE 46121 or 1-PI 2-__ Auto Acc«ssgrl«s park!X«i95. 334-~l»9.~ 1944 PONTIAC CHIEF. SKIRTED. '10x54', 2 Bedrooms. FE 4-2742 or FES-47^cft jattewn IMtiaijw litters b*aM,n9naw!>e,b?1s»ons' ore balanced. 3304018._______- MAG WHEELS f. 4 FOR $95 Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr., WOst Pontiac Friday *fll 9 p.Tn. REPAIR. MOUNT, and balance Mag and chrome wheels. New end ' wheels. MARKET TIRE, \ ATTENTION CORVETTE OWNERS ANNOUNCING ^ Expension of’Factlttlw For Corvotte Body l^ipalr Matthews-Hargreaves BRASS) RADIATOR! -------- C, Dlx fRee”towing, service. 4734423. Devo's fSwIno UmK^uta-TracR Parte 102 4-super REVERSE 13" Chrome wheels. 4 lug, *40. 62S4334. m - HIGH PERFORMANCE, notched MOTbRCYCLEINSURANCE S. K. JOHNSON AGENCY FE 4-2533 Do-It-Yourself . DOCKS Aluminum or Wood Larsen Boats Grumman Canoes *124114. __________ 'tX£Hk8gSrr' *r 1941, 1963 PONTiAd Hydremotic;~3- ----. carburetors, sun toch. Ml A vonlnot. 1941 vw paneLed'truck for’port* only. Engine hat 17,000 mllet since overhaul. Transmission, roar axle, tir.. *" in good shape. $100. wn, Pontle~ ycles 50cc to 500cc. g W. Highland. Rlgh tournament skier, A-l condition. Rd." W ind" follow "signs to I McCULLOUGH SCOTT, 25 hors DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICOi with controls. Ilka r~ — *------ LAKE. Phono 629-r " ___ NEVER BEEN con- fibergias boi“ 1 trailer. 81400, 96 —mmsm , PONTIAC'S DEALER ' CHRIS-CRAFT , , TROJAN SKICK " MIDSUMMER CLEARANCE J NEW TROJANS I ,*£?„3r Tr°i»n Voyager sedan I960 20' J 1960 28' 1 - 1940 24' T 1243 Meadowlawn, F 1944 MUSTANG V4 r 1947 EXPERIMENTAL GTX, 1 piece fjbw^leu Body. $400 or boat offer. INTEGRAL ALUMINUM 'drums, complete cc. „ Pon,,*“ - MOTORS: 1942 FALCON Comet’ 4. "• Chrysler 383 Dodge, 4047 evroiet 303, '61 Pentlacr'42 Nash LEE ____________ FE 2-2446 J MUST SELL REBUILT 34S Chevy «npin« with papers. 852-3319. _,____5' Owens iutHP RM 7 1944 20* Badger 140 h.p. 14, S379S USED BOATS H 10' Troian 185 h.p. $1795 12' ALUMNICRAFT HARDTOP boat, oars, carriers, 3 horse outboard, 3145. 14' Aluminum row boat, like now, 3145. Boat holit for 20' In-, board aluminum roof. $250. Pontiac' REBEL *?‘'‘,nd Rtl- | salls' 14't CHRIT^gRAFT. RUNABOUTv34| >■ £Seek?oi< MANY .MBMIilPiMI LAKE & SEA MARINE S. Blvd. at Woodward FE *-9587 New and Used Tracks 103 5-YARD DUMP - 195* Chev,, 8500. I Sashabaw, Clarkston, 1952 ONE-TON Chevy, 1952 $ 1-731-4062 or 335-3513. WHITEHOUSE, Evlhrudo, trailer, ten, ui ’ SEA RAY WHITE with terlor, 40 h.p. Johnson, condition, tilt trailer a $1,500, MA 5-1443.___ 14 FT. FIBERGLAS. dalux " *- -i„ 500 ttrs., *1150) V 330-2959. TERRIFIC DISCOUNTS ' At Tony's Marine On all boats and supplies w 2495 Orchard L I' FIBERGLASS BOAT and trailer, 40 h.p. Gale Motor; Newly painted. >500 FE ---a Sylva 682-3660 , FIBERGLAS. with 10 horse Evlnrude motor, trailer, 673-7667: V STaJSICRAFT, 64 JOHNSON etewromatic, LONE STAR,. 45 hors AcCullough electric,, trallar end.; S495. 442-9410. _________ is FOOT -ALUMINUM, convartlblt curtains, 35 h.p. Evlnruda, start. Tilt trallar, 4624435. 15' THOMPSON . Run-about $125. 40 horsepower electric motor, *150. SAILBOAT. RHODES 19, CB, fully rigged, trailer end motor, excellent Condition. S17S0. 4424255-SUNFISH. EXCELLENT condition. Union Lake area. 343-9974._______ USED BARGAINS 16' Aero Craft Newport, 75 h.p. Johnson, complete top. sides and aft cover, gator trailer $1395 14' «uo. 35 electric Evlnruda $795 I 14' Wnltehouse, 40 h.p. elec. I Evlnruda — homs-lights-built In t> gal. tank,, trailer ....... 8745 T4' GlespOr, 30 h,p. a lac. ^ 1 ohnson S595 l' Kay, 30 hj). disc. Evlnruda 0395 Fibergias fishing boat 049 CHRYSLER AND JOHNSON BHHt and Motors OPEN DAILY 9 to 4 SUNDAYS KM PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. - OR 3-9747.______________ 14' AEROCRAFT FIBERGLASS, horsepower Johnson eteetremetje, WANTED: ____ starter for 4-cyl. — »■ *71417*. OJH. 0S2-2903. 194* PONTIAC CHIEF. C Ik 12httr MONARCH, Appliances, 2 bedroom, oak paneling, carpeted, skirting Included. 673-1473. 541*1 16' OWENS FIBERGLAS DELUXE, “ 75 Evlnruda, trailer end etl access. Excellent condition, si,300, OR 3- MOTORS FACTORY R t B U I L t, cars, trucks, $89 up. High performance ^ ipecMIsts. Terms. Modem Engines, 537-1H7. * - 1* FT. 0UQ, trine on Loon Lake OR 44411 HOUSING 1959 DODGE PICKUP, S85 474-2153 9 FORD 1 TON STAKE. New 0 |jw4|—. Some r—* --------- I960 DODGE Vj-TON pickup, 8325, 1961 Chevy Cbrvalr pickup. 8235,. 1944 Chevy M-ton duel whaM stake truck, 8995, 1951 International ,!'*-' ton 4-whtel drive Winch trunl 1*75, 1958 Clwvy 80 Series Dor rich Truck 1445. All In very good condition. Dealer 3354412. 1940 FORD PICKUP. Mechanically sound. Good engine with 14400 ml. 79 Park St., Oxford._____________ 19*1 CHEVY U TON wheels, 2 spate wheels >400. 482-4443, after 2. 1944 CHEVY M ton pickup WHAT'S LIFT SALE Clearance prices on all now boats, Johnson Motors, Pontoons) used rigs In stbek. SAVE NOW) PINTERS MARINE 1370 Opdyka . 94 (1-75 at Unlvorolty End Airplanes LUCKY AUTO ; Mini T, A.U.r. J HM * tot) panel* axis tut Wartt Ads For Action D-^10 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1963. W>w aw* Used Truck? 103 W7.FORD ECONO-VAN Good Tn7 FOR'b"'i# waIk-In V* cond., 30.000 mil*., In M 11 month*. 4cyl. etot hi,, mw tim. red P.m. 343- New and Used Cm TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS «l BUICK LoSobro t I COMPLETE SERVICE ON .. Starters . ... Alternators.. Generators OPEN 24 HOURS -Monday thru Friday GMC Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS _____FES-0415_______ Foreign Cert____ 105 1937 ANTIQUE ROLLS ROYCE. new paint and chrome, classic Dr: j Pane. GR 6-2401._ bakas, whitewalls. radio, medium grub* finish, low mileage nr frMt. lists. Over 7S other < j«lect from—On us 10 al Ttorkaton, MA 8-8071. . flM BUICK SPECIAl VS mileage, excellent condition, .im-iBBT _______ 1967 OPEL KADETTE Sport Coupe with l.ooo mllgs, beautiful silver tray with black GT stripes, saw* plenty on this ana. Vacatior pedal only 81,388 Nil price, lusl ills down and 840.22 par month. John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Av*. FE 5-4101 • BUICK LeSabra. 4 door, radio liNbw eed Uted Cm ; 1ft* TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS I04S CORVAIR Monza enu ipMd, radio* htater, dartn-“-“ mm —‘ Kuo, naaior* finish* mafoil nmi second car, I afig Only $9*5. Over 75 Mlftct from—on Ul S-5071. MILOSCH New end Used Cm loss CAMAROCbNVfcdTIBLB, 677 M-24, Lake Orl 1960 BUICK* 225 CONVERTIBLE, cream with black top* 16*000 miles* 53*650* OR 3-6233.____________ 1958 CADILLAC* 56*000 original miles* beautiful condition. $600. Cell S-10 p.m. 334-3996. 1960 CADILLAC* 1965 CHEVY WAGON* V-0 automatic* $995. "0" down; 110.11 per week. EASY CREDIT* Star Auto. 330* ’-*i--------— ' MILOSCH IS CHEVELLE, 1-door, todon, with matching Interior, * cylinder, raft: $1795 I *** athfta*lr$59 CHEVY, STICK, RADIO* heater, whitewalls* $195. "0" down, >j~60 DW'wefkr ¥A%Y nCRfUITT Star i - Economy Cars* 2335 Dixit.. FE 4- 2121.______________________ 1956 CORVETTE 270 — 3-speed, r 6 1965 CORVETTE FASTBACK, 396-425, - I h.p. lust rebuilt. 4-spd. hurst* 411 posi.* envfm* heavy duty brakes* *27,000 milts. Bast offer. 330-2000_ 1965 CORVAIR MONZA j Sport Coupe, 4-speed, radio, heater, real clean, red with . black interior, must sell. Will tocrlflco ^70Q CALL AFTER 6:00 P.M. OR 3-6691 1966 CORVAIR *Door~~ j Powerglide, radio. Only 1 $945 J966 CHEVY^Suburban^ I $1495 1966 FORD Galaxie | 500 Sport coupe, wltt power .teerlng.^kes L -TAYLOR'S j’ ______CHEVY-OLDS________ - Yelled Lake _ 626-4301 TOM RADEMACHER 1 CHBVY-OLDS BUY A NEW ,11968 American j 2-Door Sedan for AND HAVE YOUR CHOICE OF I Automatic Transmission or Radio for m NOW AT , Village ‘ Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 Naw End Uwd Cm .166 [New and Used Cm , Jtt 1965 OLDS 88 r hardtop, power ateering, brakes. Ilka new. $1595 StiburbanOlds Ml 7.8111 1*64 TEMPEST LE MAN It j &g«r* 1*64 PONTIAC TEMPEST Custom Convertible, 326-V-6, power, steering, brake* * top, Automatic, cellant running, good -“““ Naw Ptraatww. tires Saturday ar later. MSP. Mow wdUwd tin 1B6 1*67 PONTIAC, /POWER steering and brakta, formerly , municipal car, 81417 lull pried. LUCKY AUTO 151-3165 1966 O^DS 98 Luxury Sedon Pull power, factory air nri dltlonlng, vinyl tap. 2 to choose; from, both priced at enly: $2495 Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM j 860 5. Woodward__Ml Mill I ' "- £ 1 ' • . | ; Transportation -SPECIALS- 54 Olds Convertible, power ... 1795 1963 FORD 2 dtogr VI* stick* . $495 1964 Pontiac Vtntura^Hardtop* with aylomath ~ ; $1095 FLANNERY 1*67 PONTIAC, - Tl L 3(0k* (Formerly Beettle Ford) Watartard . 623-0*0# 1*64 PONTIAC QRAN.b PRIX] 1*65 CORVAIR, St 1*8* chevy Wagon v .... — "VG Hard* , auto. .. 814* RAMBLER-JEEP. Union Lake, MM 8-4385.____________________ 1967 CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, $2395 335-2992 *67 PONTIAC EXECUTIVE I wagon, loaded plus air conditioner, it's wrecked, but will till tor any reaaonablo otter, 625-5452. _ 1*67 FIREjBIRD .CO.NVfatmi.E.„4 Call Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Turner Ford, Birmingham. 1*64 BONNEVILLE COUPE — W DEALER_______________ 3304 1*64 CATALINA 4 DOOR - 5—■ DEALER _________________336-923* 1*64 BONNEVILLE PONTIAC, __TEMPEST V-8 Custom 4 hardtop, all power, auto., cori top. $2600. FE 5-6038. 1*68 GTO, FACTORY , air, powor “Today we’re changing you. from the putfield to catcher, so pay attention to what we say!” New and Used Cars 106 New and Usod Cars * GUARANTEED FOR 3 YEARS Van Camp Chevrolet GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Avenue « FORD 9~P - - ---------Z WAGON, 84*5, TURNER PORD, BIRMINGHAM. 1*64 FORD, 6 CYLINDER, standard shift, 8600. 887-935*.___ I wagon, ' jaSvtlner ............t condltloh. non r, vacation special only, S*6 : tun price, no monty down. Moto 'completely rebuilt. ft JOHN McAULIFFE FORD tj 630 Oakland Ave._____ FE 5-410 r- 1*64 FORD V-0 Custom 2-dodr, owner, vary nice, bargain, 6*2-9223 • Riggins Dealer. _____ !l 1*64 FALCON, *5*7 FULL price, n *67 FORD GALAXIE 500, 28* V-0. 2-door hardtop, auto., power ateer-Ing, 82.W0- 852-5)56. _ 1967 Mustang GTA Fastback 2 plus 2 hardtop, with 3*0 VS, powar steering, brakes, dark green matching In- $2495 FLANNERY I OLDSMOBILE Itlonlng. powar brakes ig, tilt and tol-------1 eck release, ..._____ ________ ________ including ilr conditioning, 6,000 miles. 647-06301 I TORINO GT FAI~RLANE 500 tl carb. automatic, Hwy., watartard,. Michigan. 1964 CATALINA,- doubl* ( automatic, 332-7321. ,e.«H attar * p PONTIAC LaMANS. 2-dooi ■dtop, console, double power, ih button radio, yellow, black zrlor, bucket teats, 38,000 mllaa, c. condition; 31.200. 332-603*. 1*61 LaMANS - -T—--. Ralv wheal*, synchronised^ 3- 1 Calf OR 3-0233°U ™*r' 1960 ' PONTIAC passenger wag attar * - m 1*65 PONTIAC C... must sell. Burgundy condition. 334-5510. i*mtemp«;F~XMIPPMWIIW transml*sjofi~ 626-3611 alt. 4:30. 1*65 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE - hardtop.—Automatic, V0, radio, hoatar, power steering, power; brakes, powar windows, air conditioning, extra sharp! Look* and1 drives (Ike new ......816*5> HUNTER OOOGE 4*9 SOUTH HUNTER j _ ' Birmingham CATALINA, * 83,380, MI-3115 RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC-TEMPEST On M-24 In Lak* OHori MY 3-6226 i TRADE Allowance, | steerlna! 11**5 PONTIAC Grand Prix, —g -- with console, factory air condition,; really one In a million, vocation! , special only 01.50* full prlco. Just John McAuliffe Ford | 630 Oakland Avfc. FC 5-4101 ! McAullff® Ford 1 Oakland Avt. FE S-4101 CHEVY* 1900 W. AAapIt* MI 4-2735. 11965 PONTIAC CATALINA con-— •" —- ——■ i vertiblVa deep metallic burgundy iSAVE MONEY ATMIKE.SAV0IE-CHEVY* 1900 W. Maple* fOBA 1,1 1961 VALIANT* GOOD r< . $1595 $7295 .. $1095 7 T-BIRD LANDAU* 1967 CHRYSLER Is r PLUCKY AUTOP5S GALAXIE 50(! 10 W. Wide or_____ I GALAXIE Com FE 3-7054 vacation 1*57 CORVETTE. N all original chrom sda anoint , *650 lint 195* CHEVROLET, SPOitts sedan. 283C.I. 4-barrel duel axhduat. 1964 Chrysler, conv............3 595 .1*65 Mustang hardtop ...........84*5 1963 Bel Air 2-door ...........I 3*5 KEEG0 PONTIAC : Keego Harbor :* 492*3400 ">60 PONT* hardtop* $ 391-0535. IBB 1968 FT5E-BiRD 1H -------------*---- double power positrec.* cordove top* custom interior. $2*900* 334-7770. 1965 PONTIAC GRAND Prix* real nice cpr* no money down. LUCKY AUTO efras. Must sell. Sharp, fi berg las front-end* < 692-5132. _ _ "IMPALA hardtop, beautiful, midnight -blue wilt latching interior*. V-8* automatic . 1960 CHEVY* 2-door, 6 cv ! 335-1319. I CHEVY: WHEN YOU I I MARKET TIRE give tring* brakes* 303 . 2635 Orchard t COMPLETE DUNE BUGGY, 6 swo.—*- —- condition. 332-0726. 9 1965 DODGE P 1 gghgBS 1 CHEVY Bel Air, 6 DUNE BUGGY complete ct PERRY'S 1*62 CHEVY MAKE OFFER — 338-33*3 _ ! CHEVY STATION WAGON, I KARMANN GHIA convertible 1*63 Radio. Hoatar. Whltewdlls. Shan Jawlina mftoag*^121250. 47MlM*o gasoline r 063-0110, i i, pay bi toe Polare, balance. $mo SSHB SHARK, 62“ Volkswagon Chassis. Coll 731-9376. after 5._ VW FOR DUNE BUGGY | 863 CORVAIR C camper. OR 3* Percy King Dr. Naw and Usod Cart Been Bankrupt? Need a Car? CHEVY I »u*NER FOR 106 1963 CHEVY hardtop, $795. ' . EASY CREDIT Star 1963 Chevy. automatic, powar : 681-0004 I CUSTOMIZED HOT ROD. 8250. 335-] $995 FLANNERY MOTORS* INC. 1966 CORVAIR 2'Door Power glide* radio. Only $945 1966 GHEVY Suburban Carryall, with V8, stick, radk ready to go at $1495 foRD Go ring, brakes. $2195 TAYLOR'S 1967 CHEVY >65 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER* 4-tdoor hardtop* vinyl roof* bucket seats* power steering* power dows^txh Extra n?c*r'.. P°.W#!- $7j95 HUNTER DODGE 499 SOUTH HUNTER \ I 7-0955 ,!1B Birmingham! 65 DODGE VAN A-100* $995. 602- i eviinder* i 1965 FORD LTD 4 door hardtop, transports-1 Burgundy* 0 automatic* poweP annery Motors* Inc.* 5006 Dixie I vy., Waterford* Michigan: | .... FAIR LANE,—Nf€t;—$0 9 5*-TURNER FORD* BIRMINGHAM._ g. 1965 Ford j FLANNERY ! MERCURY WAGON, good HUNTER DODGE 49* SOUTH HUNTER 1*55______________Birmlnghar Factory Official j CARS All Models Power Equipped 1 —Many with Air— ! Priced From lie - $1895 I Village i Rambler , 666 S. Woodward ' 'll Birmingham 646-3900 1962 RAMBLER SEDAN, 31*5, TURNER FORD, BIRMINGHAM-1*63 RAMBLER 77 series, V-8, auto., radio, heater, whitewalls. In excellent condition, 8675 full price. RONEY'S AUTO, 131 Btldwln. FE > buckets, console. PONTIAC Cat! $19*5. Over 75 oi from—On US 10 MA 5-5071. ■ 1*66 CATALINA VENTURA, 2-door owner, 31*95. 330-2*5»J*nY ” r*8' DOGE CHARGER, 1*66. 4-soeed, post 383, tinted glass, axe. don-ditjon S T600^«24-253*._ KESSLER'S 1 15 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE, metallic burgundy finish wl black all vinyl interor, V automatic, transmission, radi brakes, chrome luoaaoe cerrie by far the n ■ month. 1*65 MERCURY MONTCLAIR PONTIAC: When Breezeway sedan, full power —-1 --—------- ceptionally clean. 30-0003. 1965-1966-1967 MERCURYS Hard tops and Breezeways Closing Out Sale MARKET TIRE give it a free 1*66 PONTIAC CATALINA, 4-door safety check. 2635 Orchard Lake hardtop, power and air con- Rd./Keego. dltlonlng, 602-91*4.____________ 1*50 PONTIAC. ’ FAIR condition, 1*66 TEMPEST, CUSTOM, Moor needs work, make oftar, 674-3764- ; hardtop, light blue, V-8, automatic. lc SALE - BUY A NEW 1968 Javelin 2-Door Sedan for $2469 AND HAVE YOUR CHOICE OF Automatic * Transmission or Radio for lc fransportatton. 3100. UL 2 \C , GOOD r 50,000 mile r DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS ■■■■IB lord s*'« *nd s,rv,c,OA 8-Uoo! joHN Mcauliffe ford Is 530 Oakland Ave, . PE 5-411 5 DODGE POLARA 4-door' lardtop, automatic, radio, heater, 1*5* PONTIAC CATALINA. Bob Borst lincoln-Mercury Soles 1966 COMET VILLAGER »-passengi wagon, V-8 very clean low milea) 6)7*5. 6*2-3201. - John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Av*. FE 5-4101 6 DODGE CORONET. >, 12,000 ml, 21600. 626-9022 i 1*66 Mercury Parklane. R a---------- heater, automatic, powar brakes and steering. Excellent condition 21650. 626-5720. 1965 FORD Custom 500, 2-door, ■■IftilBIWmiriiM "later, beautiful Interior, which - vacation automatic* radio* I price* i 7 OLDSMOBILE* or best offer* Highland* o (,nCitarvey week. EASY CREDIT* Star Auto. ~3-9661. ■„ CHEVY STATION WAGON,1 NEW FINANCE PLAN. IF 11*63 CHEVY I PROBLEMS, BANKRUPT, OR i ‘omet^ «?5. GARNISHED WAGES, WE. CAN GET YOUR CREDIT RE- V ESTABLISHED AGAIN. WE| HAVE OVER 80 CARS THAT hardtop, ' CAN BE PURCHASED. WITH (,|J-^wTe“fVstback-NO DOWN PAYMENT. COME IR AND SEE CREDIT MGR. MR. IRV. , ' j cjjllndjx-s. stick, axcallant condt LUCKY AUTO i' 1940 W. V anty. SALE FORD: HUNTER DODGE 499 SOUTH HUNTER _____ When you buy it let MARKET TIRE give It a free tafety check. 2635 Orchard Lake John McAuhffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 FORD 1*66 10 PASSENGER Wagon, rad, V-8, ^double ^power, appreciate, call 1961 OLDSMOBILE. S-85 w transmission, motor In gi front and wracked, best 1*62 TEMPEST CONVERT. 831 TURNER FORD, BIRMINGHAM. 1*63 .TEMPEST 2-DOOR, very got .......... dealer. 1967 PONTIAC ! 'top- Tempest Custom, white with bis *51- convertible top, red Interio 1 automatic, very sharp 21*95. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 90P OoklandSAvenue 1*67 PONTIAC VENTURA convei i* I, 4-door hardtop, 2375. STUB. 4-spaed, Many extras, FE 2-4*07, I t9M__PONT|AC HARDT0P,,P0WER 1967 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, 2-door NOW AT Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham . 646-3900 STUDEB h autematii “$495 334-0060. 1963 OLDS HOLIDAY 2 jdoor,j hardtop/ radio, heater* whitewalls* like new Inside and out. RONEY S AUTO* ISt Baldwin* FE 4-4909. L 2-4962 0 "ImRala- I 11963 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, / FOR- SALE 1936 Convertible, j Matthews- ,HargrBav.es«. SHOP SUNDAY *' BUY MONDAY GRIMALDI Your New BUICK-OPEL Dealer 210 Orchard Lake FE 2-»iQS FE 3-7054 1963 MONZA'CORVAIR convertibl 6 cylinder nd heater.^ |___FE_ 44547: sedan,^ bright 10 MODEL A FORD/I condition". Call after 6, 602-4012. 1951 FO’RD, 30.000 actual miles, 673-. 3305. • • CLASSIC 1957 T-BIRD, needs body work, oxc. condition, <600. Call M2- 1964 CHEVY II Nova U 6 cyl. automatic, rad difibnt Only 2895. Over 7S cars to chaost from—On U! Ml 5, ClarKSBSn, MA 5-5071. 196* CORVAIR, 4 door, el condition, 2425. Buy Here Here, Marvel Motors, Oakland Ave. FE 0-4079. i Bankrupt? -*■ Divorced? — Got a probem? Call Mr, White * KlnO AUtO, 601-0002.____________ : 1*37 BUICK, NO RUST, extra pprl «—da some work, 8200. 647-2729. I960 BUICK, j*62 POMTIAt, ... * 682-1015. “ BUICK SKYLARK < CHEVROLET IMPALA ton- it transportation' .. HUNTER OODGE '499 SOUTH HUNTER 1*65 HBHr . Birrr 14 MALIBU — $550. - miles East of Woodward. BIRMINGHAM; h % Chrysler-Plymouth ,'i; 1967 CAMARO RALLY SPORT, 1 black, V-8, vtnyl^ top, ^air con-j '* I difion!U1%M,,miiM*0M4of.r”1^5-5136! . or 334-9018. _ _ »; 1967. CORVETTE. DAMAGED: , 11 435 h.p., 4-apead. 673-6412. ; | /1967 CAMARO 2-Door Hardtop 160 FALCON 2-door, 6 cylinder, euto.* radio, heater* whitewalls, $11S* after 5 p.m.* 626-6195._ i 160 FORD SEDAN* NICE* $95* [ TURNER FORD* BIRMINGHAM, j >60 FORD WAGON* runs good* $75J FE 2-6069. 51966 Mustang! Private Owner, Save Dealers Commission. Bur-gondy • Black In- . terior. V-B, Stick shift, on the FLOOR. CAR IN ABSOLUTELY TOP SHAPE. 682-2178 PC EASE CALL AFTER 5:30. , call 332-2968 1963 JEEP WMeONEER^ 4-whael 2-3*00 CHEVY. 1*64 OLDS, NINETY EIGHT. 4 iiaiuiwp. »PWytiliM, vacation special, only 21200, fu» price,1' lust 2100 down and 240.65 per month. john mcauliffe ford 630 Oakland Aye._FE 5-4101 1964 OLDS 98 door hardtop, full power, ir conditioning. $1295 factor GO! HAUPT PONTIAC " ' Add SdV6 $ $ - Ci-ARKSTON__625-S50C SHELTON Suburban Old? 1*61 FALCON 4-DOOR NO BODY, MUSTANG rust: Runa good. 2225. 363-61*5._ ' 1961 T-BIRD CONVERTIBLE, white. In goodvmechanical condition. -674- 2316. ____• ■■ ■ 1961 FORD. TUDOR, NICE, 2*5, TURNER FORD, BIRMINGHAM: j 1*62 FORO. AUTOMATIC - CONVERTIBLE 1*66, , power steering and Claan. SI ,350. 602-13; 1*66 FORO. LOADED, AIR, 21.31 1*63 BUICK SPECIAL 24*5. down, 05.11 per week. Ei CREDIT,- Ster Auto, 338-9661 __ 1*63 BUICK SKYLARK sport coupe.] Full POWOf. 363,8457. jj IMS IIUICK LeSABRE, i 327 1 mission. cylinder. ! FALCON, RED SHARP, $1*S, 1966 MUSTANO-Vdr gold, excellent indltion, auto, power, wit-'- — .000 miles. S1525. 602-9498. " JkXIE illeage, 4 CHEVROLET 4-DOOR hardtop.! SALE PRICED AT: TURNER FORD, BIRMINGHAM. n HiatS FORD HARDTOP, S3* whttawall tires, vinyl top, 1 TURNER FORD, BIRMINGHAM. ■— ------H gold finish'.tejj FORD XL COUPE, 851 TURNER FORD, BIRMINGHAM. '’•63 T-BIRD HARDTOP, *0 9: TURNER---------------- condition, < 18,000 mint 1966 GALAXIE 500 2 Low mile— - 332-2320. b I BUICK Special. 1964 CORVAIR COUPE, A-1, 8495,1 TURNER FORD, BIRMINGHAM i 1 --- CORVETTE Convertible, 2^tags,I 1965 Buick SPECIAL 4-speed* 1 6-0509. $2397 Matthews- >, BIRMINGHAM. steering, radio, Nigs. '■ 1 $1295 Suburban Olds l«tf MICK J DOOR hardtop, t Mack Vinyl rod*. V-8 outom ecaaaa* WcGnt Ads For Action ! 1964. CHEVELLE STATION v cylinder, straight stick, . miles. 674-2753. ir 1964 CHEVY .IMPALA, 327, I 1*64 CORVAIR 2 DOOR 500. Radio. 1*64 CORVAIR COUPE - 8300. Hargreaves M-ilOO 631 Oakland Aye...^ 1968 CHEVY AL HANOUTE .Chevrolet / Buick On M24 in,-Lake Orion MY 2-2411 CREOIT, Stir Auto. 330-*661. Want Ads For- Action Impala 2-Door SPORT COUPE, has '327 engine, powerglide transmlssi power ateering. radio and hea whitewall -Tires, vinyl; rose wll green finish. SALE PRICED AT '$2797 j Matthews-Hargreaves i" ill Oakland Av*. FE 4-45,«/> 1963 FORD GALAXY 2 door hai beige; 4 cylinder a : steering,^ r.a-"- | 1963 FORD FAIRLANE, V-8 atan-dard shift, radio, heatar. $295 *7 Sea this auto at Our new location « ,. the TROY MOTOR MALL, on 1/ Maple Rd. (15 Mile) m milea East of Woodward. ilRMIHGHAMl ! Chrvsler-Plvmouth • ] :1962 T-BIRD 2-DQOR hardtop vinyl j Y CREDIT,' Star Auto, a DOOR Statlon .waoon.: MERRY OLDS M0 DEAL MERRY OLDSMOBILE 528 N. Main ROCHESTER MICHIGAN d 885.25 per month. This| ir lias S-yaar or 50,000 nilla haw! John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE S-4101 | Been Bankrupt? — Divorced? Got 'a problem? Call Mr. White. < Kina Auto, en-0002-____________ 88^AND85Js SPECIAL SALES TREMENOUS SAVINGS On all remaining stock, Watch far big announcement ;; black), GET DOWN TO DOWNEY'S FOR THE BEST BUYS BEST Oldsmobilt, Inc, 550 Oakland Avenue 1964 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, rad with black Interior, 0*95. "0" down, 810.11 per week. EASY CREOIT star Auto, 3- 1964 GRAND PRIX, 2-door hardtop, S995. "0" down, 810,11 per1 week. EASY CREDIT, Star Auto. 338- 1967 MUSTANG1 Hardtop, red with black vinyl root, v-8 automatic, LIKE NEW THROUGHOUT. $2195 , AUDETTE PONTIAC 2-8101 US'. 4-DOOR, V^, _ OLDS STARFIRE ____________ beautiful tllver blue, with mat bucket seals, —*— nission, console iwer steering, I a reel beauty, vaca___ only, 81488-toil price, lust 8188 down, and 257.4t per month. john mcauliffe ford 630 OQkland Aye, TE 5-4101 1*65 pLDS M, 4-DOOR, hwfWto M I with matchhto. tVWI.. totertor, \ WE ARE SORRY j TURNER FORD, BIRMINGHAM. ^.|nCLSTnn,?fSnfJd !1W MUSTAN(T HARDTOP, V-0 *iayy Be i hM^*1weImf!r «Hailk r*tur See this you In our usu»‘ way. »e! quoi„ wlth matching tntortor, vdiv. seftie lor second best, own f inest bol^ ItOtl full I _ mfes East ef Woddward. - condition, 8295. Buy I here. Marvel M“ oeklend Av*. FE |- 624-3192 , '(^Mj - MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1963 Cetellne Venture, 2-do< hardtop, autpmatic, double powa rania. whiiwaaiia, light blue, 31,09 Orloa, MY 2-20*1. LOOKING FOR A BARGAIN? TRY THE PONTIAC -RETAIL STORE FE 3-7951 1964 &LUE PGNT+AC Hey, Shoppers— —Look at This! BRAND NEW 1968 PLYMOUTH FURY Ju!' $2249 /,?. EQUIPPED WITH: Torqueflite transmission, Heater, Defroster, Multispeed Washers, Padded Dash and Visor, Shoulder and Seat Belts, All Factory and Safety Equipment. OVER 200 BRAND NEW CARS TO CHOOSE FROM - 50 WITH FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING COME ON OUT TO Birmingham AT CHRYSLER- r THE PLYMOUTH I/O. .__ TROY MOTOR MA On West Meple (15 Ml 642-7000 CREDIT, Star A TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1964 PONTIAC Catalina -2 XU hardtop, automatic, powar steering, brakes, radio; hea*“ $795 > this auto at our new location at tha TROY MOTOR (WALL, on Maple Rd. m Mile) m miles . East ' pt Woodward. BIRMINGHAM1 ChrysIti^Plytnduth' SAVE. MONEY AT. MIKE UAVOfE V-8, no rust, origin; i, 31171 vw CcnteY In the Greater Bloomfield/Pontioc Area SPECIAL 3an tow”" F°* ura* V0, automatic tram $1495 (mission* radio* whita- 1964 Bonneville, 2 dear, hardtop, VI, automatic, ——- 1964 Pontiac, Bonneville, convertible, VI, automatic, power sharing, power brakes, excellent condition, lav*. - ' fc1»67 Square Back, Telegraph Rd. just North of Square Lake Rd PHONE T THE /PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 D—11 r '—Television Programs— Programs furnished by stations listod in this column ara subject to chango without netkio CHonnelti 3-WJSK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, yLWXVZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, SO-WKSP-TV, 50-WTVs" SATURDAY NIGHT 6:00 M).'C — News, Weather, Sports (9) C — Robin Seymour > (50) R — Combat •/ Frightened private (Sal Mineo) leaves Saunders trapped under fallen beairh (56) Fairy Tales -6:30 (2) C-BiU Anderson (4), C — News — McGee (7) C - Michigan Sportsman — Jerry Chiappetta takes inner-city friend on outing to Pontiac Lake and learns that recreation is just as big a problem for the inner-city resident as jobs, schools and housing. ■(58) I$ans the Pup- petmaster------—— 7:00 (2) C — Death Valley Days — Poor freight hauler marries wealthy girl by mistake. (4) C — Michigan Outdoors (7) C — Anniversary Game (9) C — Big Bands — Si Zentner and his orchestra perform. (50) C-Hayride (56) Festival — British poet-novelist Robert Graves discusses his life. 7:30 (2) C — Prisoner —I The-prisoner finds himself caught up in chess game in-which-aH the pieces are live people.. (4) R C — Saint — Simon becomes involved in disappearance of valuable collection of antiques in Istanbul. (7) C — Dating Game — Shani Wallis is guest. (56) French Chef 8:00 (7) C-Newlywed Game # (9) Canadian Pro Foot-ball: Regina at Hamilton (50) R — Movie: “The Sands o f Beersheba” (1965) Group of Arab terrorists attack I s r a e 1 i village. Diane B a ke r , David Opatoshu, Tom Bell (56) Folk Guitar 8:30 (2) R C — My Three Sons — Steve is plagued by a rash of family crises. (4) R C - Get Smart -Don Rickies plays girlchasing onetime Army buddy of Max. (7) C — Lawrence Welk (56) R — NET'Journal — “Freedom and Famine” 9:00 (2) R c — Hogan’s Heroes — Hogan is faced with task of returning a Soviet pilot to his homeland. (4) R — Movie: “Something Wild” (1961) Young woman, raped by unknown a s s a i lan t, wanders aimlessly through Manhattan until she meets a strange brooding mechanic. Car--%-rolI Baker, Ralph Meeker, Mildred Dunnocky 9:25 (7) C - Political Talk — Humphrey 9:36 (2) RC — Petticoat Junction — Sam’s Shady Rest holiday threatens to end his friendship . with Uncle Joe. (7) R C M-. Hollywood Palace — Don Knotts "ghosts Douglas Fairbanks / Jr., Nancy Ames add Met / soprano Mary Costa. (56) R — Real Revolution — Nationalism and propaganda are discussed. 10:00 (2) R C - Mannix -Detective investigates attempt on life of movie queen who is about to p u b 1 i s h her lurid memoirs. / (50) C — Lou Gordon — Guest is Negro economist Thomas Jones,, who discusses “Government-Sponsored Black Business” (56) NET Festival -Concluding program of 10th annual Monterey, Calif., Jazz Festival features Dizzy Gillespie and the Modem Jazz , Quartet. 10:30 (7) C - Cine Mondo -Travel (9) Tonigfrt in Person — Folk singing 11:06 ($) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) News, W’e a t h e r , Sports. 11:15 (9) R - Movie: “Sweet Smell of Success” (1957) Burt Lancaster, Tony Curtis, Martin Milner 11:20 (4) C - News, Weather, Sports 11:30 (2) R — Movie: “Just This Once” (1952) Janet Leigh, Peter LawfOrd, Lewis Stone, Marilyn Erskuie (7) R C — Movie: “Portrait in Black” (1960) Lana Turner, An t h o n y Quinn, Sandra Dee, John Saxon, Lloyd Nolan, Richard Basehart, Ray Walston (50) C — Alan Burke — Guests include soul singer James Brown. 11:45 (4) C — Johnny Carson iz:i5 (9) window on the World 1:15 (4) Beat the Champ 1:30 (2) R . C t^*-JMovie: “Garibaldi” (1964) 2:00 (4) C — News (7) C—World of Sports 2:05 (7) R — Movie: “The Lady Is Willing” (1942) Marlene Dietrich, Frtd MacMurray, Sterling Hayden SUNDAY MORNING 6:05 (2) TV Chapel 6:10 (2) C — News 6:15 (2) U. of M. Television 6:30 (2) C — Cathedral of Tomorrow 7:25. (4) C — News 7:30 (2) C — Christopher Program (4) C — Country Living — Mrs. Lucinda Wyckoff of Pontiac will answer questions on “How and When to Antique Furniture and Things.” 8:00 (2) C - This Is the Live ' (4) C — Catholic Hour — Topic: Is the conscience of the Christian churches challenged by the war in Vietnam? (7) Guest Artist Concerts 8:15 (9) Sacred Heart 8:30 (2) C — Temple Bap-, tist Church (4) &*—' Church at the Crossroads (7) C — Green Up Time (9) Window on the World (50) <5—Hearld of Truth- , Topic: “Involvement" -8:55 (4) C —Newsworthy 9:00(2) C — Mass for Shutrlns (4) C — Oopsy the Clown (7) C — Dialogue - (9) R - William Tell (SO) C — Captain Detroit 9:30 (2) C-With This Ring (?)' C — Milton the Monster (9) Spectrum 9:45 (2) C—Highlight (4) C — Davey and Goliath . , 10:00 (2) Breakthrough (4) C — House Detective (7) C - Linus (9) R — Hawkeye —(50) C — Kimba------ 10:30 (2) C - Faith for Today (7) C — Bugs Bunny (9) C — Bozo’s Big Top (50) R — Three Stooges 11:00 (2) U. of M. Television — Dramatization of Chaucer’s “Parliament of Fowls” (7) C — Bullwinkle (50) R — Little Rascals 11:30 (2) C - Face the Na-. tion — Guest is Vice President Humphrey. (7) R C — Discovery ’68 “Jets, Orchids and Kangaroos,” a look at the business of air-cargo transport. — (9) R — Movie: “Oregon Passage” (1957) Toni Gerry, John' Ericson (50) R — Superman SUNDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) R — Mister Ed (4) U. of M. Presents -First in new series op U.S, culture explores the kinds of pop music feat appeal to contemporary - Americans. (7) C • — Championship Bowling ---------------- (50) R C — Flintstones 12:30 (2) R - Patty Duke (4) C — Design Workshop (50) R — Movie: “Woman in White” (1948) A strange assortment -of people resides with a young heiress at a country estate. Outside the estate,'a woman in white paces at night, attempting to warn fee heiress of impending danger. Eleanor Parker, Alexis Smith, Gig Young, Agnes Moorehead 1:00 (2) C — Tom.and Jerry (4) C — Meet fee Press — Guest* is Sen. Strom Thurmond, R-S.C. (7) C-Spotlight (9) RC - Movie: “Scott of the Antartic” (English, 1949) A dramatization of Captain Scott’s race to the South Foie. John Mill#, Diana Churchill, Derek Bond 1:30 (2) C — Music Treasures (4) C — At the Zoo (7) C — Issues and Answers — GuestisjSen. McCarthy, D-Minn. 1:45 (2) C — tiger Warm-Up 2:00 MfefjBaa^ Detroit atBostoh : (4) R C — Flipper I Flipper frolics around —Weekend Radio Programs— wjW760j WXYZd 270) CKtWteOO) WWJ(950) WCAR(1130) WPONfl 460) WJBKd 500) WHFI-FM(94^7) CKLW, Newt, MNUon-Ooller Weekend WXYZ, Newt, Close-Up WJBK, Henk O'Nell WHFfc Larry Baker -WPON, News, Phone Opinion WCAR, Newt. Ron Rose wjr. Nawi - /----- - A: 15—WWJ, Audio 'M " wjr. Sports 4:io—WJR, Weekend Report, PoMtand Trendr XYZ, Tom Harmoi WJR, Weekend Dimension, Showcase I:**—WHFI. Don Bosco ♦;JO—wjr. Listener's Choice t#:00—wjr. Mews, Cavalcade■ 1tilS*-WWJ, Best From Niter-10:35—WJR, Treasury of Stars Hits-wwj, ^ News ' 11:15—WWJ, Overnight WJR, Sport* Final WCAR, Mews, Weyn* WJRK, Nlohttlme TOMORROW MORNINO 5:Sp—WJR, ■ Mwleei From- WJBIwModr ot CrucKled CKLW. Prophet June*-WXYZ, PubSc Attelrs WWJ, OverntgM 4:**—WJR, Weekend Report. : Organ Ehcores . . WJBK, The Book «t«—WJR, Th* \Chrlitophors 7:**—WJR, Naim WJBK, Notm WCAR, News. WPON, Choir Lon d Christian CKLW, Unit! Evangelists 7:15—WJR, hymns WJR,' Weekend Report, Sunday ™—>-—VJ. Mar __LW.Orc., WJBK, Ught WPON; Sunday WCAR. the Church Today 7:45—WPON, Mount Olive Baptist - WWJ, Farm News ItSS-WJR, News WWJ. News, Music CKLW, Your Worship Hour WJBK. Revival Tim* WCAR, News, Lift tor Living WPON, St. John Lutheran I:IS—WJR, ThreeWuarter S:30—WCAR, Beck to God CKLW, Old-Fashioned Re- WJBK, Radio Bible Clast WJR, Renfro valloy »:*0—CKLW, Windsor Labor WCAR, Musk tor Sunday WHFI, Jim Shields WPON, Breed of Lite WWJ, News. Church .at Crossroads WJBK, Wings of Healing WxVz. Newt, Martin A flit—WPON, Shining Light CKLW, Milllon-Dollar Week-WJR, Changing Times f:jt-*UR. Weekend Report Pattern* In 'Music CKLW. Million Dollar Week WPON, News.ot PAjjt WWJ: Newt: Music v t:45—WPON, Religion In th t: 15—WPON, Emmanuel Bep- f-WWJ Nev Humane 1:45—WWJ, Art of Living WPON, Th* Christophers l:M—WWJ, News, Si Paul': Cathedral * WJBK, Lutheran Hour WHFI, I' Remember Ger- WJR Patterns m Musk 11:35—WJR, Weekend Dlmen-. tion. Salt Lake CHy Choir ll:«-WJBK, Aye Merle Hour TOMORROW AFTERNOON 13:00—WWJ, News-WCAR, Musk tor Sunday WPON, Newt: Sunday Set-. •. slot) /» WJBK, News, Dm ; WHFI, Bavarian new WJR, News, Sport* 11:15—WJR Showcase WWJ,7 Audio ‘«t 13:30—WJR, Weekend Dimension, .swr-J- -~-T-— 1:45—WHFI, 3W5-WHFI, Larry Baker 4:354ifJR, Soares 4:45—WJR, Showcase 3:0# — WJR, Newt,' Sports, t:3^^^^Week*nd Report, TOMORROW EVENINO YZ; News, Dick Pur. . S:1S—WPON, Guard Session unvi. «M4aW Reanrt > JR, Dimension, Showcase, News 5—WPON, Voices of Vista WJ, Meet the Press WCAR, News, RICk Sfewar WWJ, News, Monitor WJR, Nows, Sports 7:15—WPON, Army Show 7:1>^WJR, Ask th* Proles; 7:35—WPON, Protestant He 7:45—WJR, Action: - Detroit Urban League 5:55—WPON, Church of Week WJBK, Llstbn to This WHFI, Jazz From Britain ——4 -■------ —-v World wxyL I WJR, t‘" wjK, news# 5:15—WJBK,---------- 5:35—WJBK, Science Newt WXYZ, Public Affairs l:35-WJR, Weekend Dim* slon. Report 1:45—WJBK, Books Unllmltl 7:45—WPON,-OldlOS Show WJBK. Rx for Health WJR: News 7:15—WJR, Visit With Lenore . Romney WJBK,.| Living With Adoles- 7:35—WJR, Face the .Nation WJBK, Young America Looks at Books 10:05—WWJ, Newt., Catholic WJR, Sport*, Suhday Show- WJBK, N 5:15—WJR. Action ~ ■ 5:35—WJBK, U.ofD. Jot WWJ, Eternal Light WJBK, Newt, Labor 11:15—47WJ, Anatogu* WJR, Saorts final 11:35—WJBK, what's the WCAR, Jewish Cf.mmi wjr All Nkint Shew 11:45—WWJ, Written We 13:15—WCAR, News, V Wife a live, floating mine from World War H. (7) C — Choice - “The Last Sanctuary*’ in-, vestigates brainwashing and its potential for good and evil. 2:36 (4) 6 — Animal World (formerly “Animal Kingdom”) — A profile of Mike‘Tsalickis, a trapper hi fee Amazon jungles of ' South America. (7) R C — Movie: “Double Crossbones” (1950) A clerk suddenly finds himself the master of a pirate ship. Donald O’Connor, Will Greer (50) R — Movie: “Red Stallion In fee Rockies” (1949) Two e x - c J r c u s performers try to capture fee lead horse of a wild herd. Ray Collins, Arthur Franz 3:99 (4) C — Professionals 3:30 (4) C — Comedy Playhouse: In pilot film, “The Seven Little Foys,” father. Foy faces open rebellion from his — youngsters ‘whenhe decides to break up his' family vaudeville act and send fee kids to school. Eddie Foy‘Jr., Mickey* Rooney and the Osmond Brothers star. (9) R ;— Movie: “Ten, Seconds to Hell” (1959) After World War II, five Germans disarm i.n g bombs in Berlin put half their salaries into a fund to be split between the survivors. Jeff Chandler, Jack Balance, Martine Carol 4:00 (7) R C - Wackiest IsKip (50) R — Laramie 4:30 (4) C (Special) — -Westchester Classic' — Final-round of play (56) Georges Simenon 4:50 (2) C — Baseball Scoreboard 5:00 (2) R C p Wagon Train (4) International Zone (7) R — Movie: “Boots Malone” (1952) A tough, underworld rider trains a —young boy -to be-a jockeyr-William Holden, Johnny Stewart (50) R - Wells Fargo 5:30 (9) RC —Laredd (50) R — Silent Service . 5:45 (56) London Line SUNDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports (50) R - Victory at Sea ' In fee first Anglo-American offensive of World War II, fee AUies completely, destroy the powerful Afrika Korps and gain control of the Mediterranean. (56) Insight — A small-tpwn mayor is caught between white bigots and Black Power advocates, 6:30 (2) C — Job Opportunity (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: “Coming Out Party” (1962) James Robinson Justice , Leslie * Philips (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) U.S.A. '0 Poetry —' Poet Louis Zukofsky talks about his style End his work aX a poet, critic, translator and teacher. 7:00 (2) R C — Lassie — Ihree episodes ; filrned* ht^he National , Space Center in Florida) Lassie attempts to comfort Atlas, a guard dog pining away for its dead master. . (4) C — George Pierrot — “New England Holiday” , (7) RC- -Voyage — The crew of fee Seaview battle ‘ alien invaders who are trying to turn fee earth Into a jungle-covered planet wife an un-breathable atmosphere. (56) Daytona 500 ••— Highlights of fee 1967 and 1968 Daytona 500-stock car 'races * (59) Summer Sampler 1 ‘ P o 11 c e f C ommunity v Relations” focuses on Des Moines, Iowa. 7:30 (2) C»# All American College Show (4) R C -rv Walt Disney’s World Sancho, a homesick steer, leaves a Montana-bound cattle drive and begins a 1200-mile trek back to fee ,' Kerrs’ Texas Ranch., -(56) (Special) - Lincoln Center — The third anniversary of New York’s Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts . is honored in this three-part performance produced in 1965. 8:09 (2) R C - Ed Sullivan —Guests are Rex Harrison, as “Dr. Dolitt^”; . singers Diana Ross and fee Supremis, fee Temptations and the Kessler Twins; domedians < Flip Wilson andv Lewis TV Features Tonight , MICHIGAN SPORTSMAN, 6:30 p.m. (7) PRISONER. 7:30 p*%. LOU GORDON, 10 p.m. (50) -Tomorrow COUNTRY LIVING, 7:30 a.m. (4) FACE THE NATION, 11:30 a.m. (2) MEET THE PRESS, 1 p.m. (4) ISSUES and ANSWERS, 1:30 p.m. (7) BASEBALL, 2 p.m. (2) COMEDY PtfAY-HOUSE, 3:30 p.m. (4) - 1NS1GHT,6 pm. 156) LINCOLN CENTER, | 7:30 p.m. (56) INTERTEL, 10 p.m. (9) j and Christy; trumpeter Fernando Pasqualone and apache dancers Ivan and Astor. (7)'R C - FBI - A murder investigation leads Erskine to suspect feat a Red spy ring, ac-. tive in eWorld War II _l_ G-eAimany ,_____is now operating in Washington. (50) C — David Susskind — l. Sargent Shriver discusses fee War on Poverty, giving his impressions of what poverty is. 2. Four male models discuss how they got into the modeling business. 8:30 (4) R C -T Mothers-In-Law — A battle of fee sexes erupts when Jerry —-spends a night playing poker wife the boys. (9) C — Lowell Thomas — “Where Brides Do the Choosing,” a look at, the traditional marriage customs of the Berbers of fee Atlas Mountains of Morocco. (56) Adolph Hitler — Documentary traces the rise of Nazi dictator. 9:00 (2) C — „ Summer Brothers Smothers Show-First Edition ando comics Jerry Stiller and Anile Meara join host Glen Campbell. , (4) RC - Bonanza — In show written and directed by Michael Landon, John Postley (James Whitmore) seeks revenge against Ben, whose testimony unjustly sent him to prison. (71 R C - Movie: “The Greatest Show on Earth” (1952) Cecil B. DeMille directed this spectacle ' centering on a circus manager’s struggles wife poor attendance, a love affair, . temperamental performers and a clown trying to hidfe his past. Betty Hutton, Cornel Wilde, Charlton Heston, James Stewart, Emmett Kelly w ^9) C— Peny’s Probe ' 9:30 (0) Mari Auve: "' * 9:55 (2) C - Political Talk — Humphrey 10:00 (2) R C - Mission: Impossible — The IMF goes into action aboard a plane on a twofold mission: rescue a captured leader-in-exile and retrieve an incriminating list of his loyal Balkan followers. (4) RC - High Chaparral — The Cannons encounter trouble when they take in a wounded relative, unaware that he’s a wanted man sought by bounty hunters. -—(9) Intertel Pope and fee Pill (50) C — Lou Gordon — 1. John Godwin, author of “This Baffling World’’ discusses the 14 world mysteries feat still baffle scientists. 2. Donald Riegle, U.S. congressman from Flint, discusses why fee census questions must be so personal. (56) NET Playhouse — Georges Simenon’s story ^ of a young man whose sordid life at fee edge of fee underworld counts against, him when he’s accused of a murder he didn’t commit. 11:00 (2) (4) C - : News, Weather, Sports" — (fl)News—Cameron —^ 11:15 (9) R . — Movie : \ “Operation Snatch” (English, 1962) 11:30 (2) R C - Movie: “Rich, Young and Pretty” _ (1951) * Jane Pno w • 1 j, Name Game Antwer l* Previous Puzzle ACROSS 1 Famous ‘•unclg" 4 Noted designez 5 Golf 12 Actress-director 13 Macculine appellation 14 Islands (Fr.) 15 Twitching 16 Adjoins 18 Lincoln's war secretary’ 20 White poplar 21 Caviar 22 Strays, 24 Pismires 26 First man 27 ----Roy 30 Decapitate 32 Unruffled 34 Extolled 35 Redacted 36 Stray 37 Communists 39 Solicitude 40 Dreadful > 41 Hawaiian garland 42 Scene of Pueblo incident 45 Joust 49 Effervescent 51 One of the Gershwins 52 Swelling 53 Lo! (Latin) 54 Nothing 55 Golfer’s gadgets '56 Summers (Fr.) 57 Driving command DOWN 1 Perches 2 Mine entrance 3 Noted general 4 Italian poet 5 Margarine 6 Showered 7 England (sb.) 8 American physicist 9 Tropical plant 10 European ^ blackbird 11 Essential being 17 Injured 19 Keen of scent. 23 Demolishes 24 Competent 25 Approach 26 Viper 27 Keeping 28 Heavy blow 29 English monk 31 Antenna 33 Kitchen gadget 38 Discover 40 Cancels 41 Musical instruments 42 County in Delaware 43 Wood-wind instrument 44 Rough 46 One time 47 Iroquoian Indian 48 Colorado peak - 50 Electricians’ group (sb.) r" F~ 5“ 4 5 6 7 r~ 9 TT 14 13 14 iT~ 16 b 18 19 21 24 25 i 28 29 do 3T r 34 35 36 dd r ^2 43 44 If 48 49 bl 52 53 54 55 56 57 17 Dream Realized as Woman, 83, Learns to Read ATLANTA, Ga. UP) — “I knowed the Lord would let me go1 to school if I lived long enough,” declares Mrs. Ella Walker who, at 83, may be fee ojdest student ever to enroll in a Georgia public school. Mrs. Walker, who has worked since she was 7, dreamed all her life about learning to read. Two years ago she began adult education classes at DeKalb county’s Lynwood Park Elementary School. Still vigorous, she continues to work full-time as housekeeper for Mrs. Robert B. Barnett, a job she has held for 26 years. “I begged fee Lord to let me live to go to school and He did,” she says. “Now I just want to keep on going and I want to read my Bible.” . The Library of fee International Bureau of Education in Geneva contains 25,000 school textbooks from 110 countries. Danielle Darrieux (4) Beat the Champ 12:00 (7) C — News 12:15 (?) C — Haney's People 12:30 (4) C —News 1:05 (9) Window on the —World------ 1:30 (2) R C — Movie: “The Goldwyn Follies” (1938) George and Ira Gershwin did the music and lyrics for this Ben Hecht story. Adolphe Menjou, Zorina 1:45 (7) News 3:00 (2) C - News, Weather 3:05 (2) C - With This Ring MONDAY MORNING 5:45 (2) On the Farm Scene 5:50 (2) C — News 6:00 (2) U. of M. Television (4) Classroom 6:30 (2) C — America Sings (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 8:00 (2) C - Captain Kangaroo (9) Tales of the River Bank 8:30 (?) R - Movie: “Whistling in fee Dark” (1941) Red Skelton, Conrad Veidt, Ann Rutherford, (9) Time for Adventure 9:09 (2) C -Merv Griffin (4) C — Steve Alien (9) p — Bozo 10fOOt4j'C -* .Snap Judgment — Guests are Don Meredith and Joanne (7)^_ Virginia Graham (9) R —Hawkeye 10:25 (4) C —News 10:30 (2) R C—Beverly Hill-v billies (4) C — Concentration (7) C —DickCavett (9) Friendly Giant s (50) C — Jack LaLanne 10:45 (9) Chez Helene 11:00 (2) R - Andy Griffith - (4) O — Personality —r Guests * are Cliff Robertson, Flip Wilson and Pat Carroll. (9) Mr. Dressup 11:30 (2) R - Dick Van Dyke (4) C — Holly wood Squares (50) Little Rascals 11:45 (0) News MONDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C-News, Weather, Sports (7) Luncheon Date 12:25 fc) Ci-Fashions 12:30 (2) C - Search for Tomorrow (4) C — Eye Guess (?) C — Treasure Isle (9) R C — Movie: “Lady in the Dark” (19 4 4 ) Ginger Rogers, Ray Milland (50) R' — Movie: “The Secret of Convict Lake” - (1951) Glenn Ford, Gene Tierney 12:45 (2) C 4 Guiding Light 12:55 (4) C-News .1:00 (2) C-^ Love of Life I ■ 4: (4) C- Match Game (7) C— Dream House 1:21 (2) C —News (4) C -v- Carol Duvall 1:39 (2) C - As the World Turns —(4) C >- Let^s—Makc^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 _ (77 C — Newlywed Game 2:30 (2) C — House F ty (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game, , (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C-Another World (7) C — General Hospital (9) R — Route 66 (50) R C - To Tell fee Truth 3:25 ( 50) C —News 3:30 (2) C —Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say 4' Guests are James Fran-ciscus and Susan Oliver (7) C r-One Life to Live (50) C — Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) C —Secret Storm (4) C — Woody Woodbury (7) C — Dark Shadows „ J (9) C — Swingin’Time 4:39 (2) C - Mike Douglas (7) R - Movie: “Back to God’s Country” ( 195 3 ) Rock Hudson, Marcia Herderson, Steve Cochran (50) Three Stooges 5:00 (9) C-Bozo (50) R - Littte Rascals 5:39 (4) C — George Pier-rot — “Holiday in ^Switzerland” ,(9) ‘C — Fun House (50) RC —Superman 5:45 (56) Friendly Giant HEARING AIDS Rosamond Williams MAICO ME. Cornell FE 2-1221 Services J, Supplies ALL HEARING AIDS If U R Seeking Peace of Mind in This Restless Age Dial 335-0700 AUBURN HEIGHTS PAVIHGC0. Would a lira or other casualty loss toko a big bit# out of your resources? A Homeowners Package Policy . covers you against financial loss. • ★ POLICE MONITORS SONAR - REGENCY HALLICRAFTERS - *29-95 Mdup T0WM 8 COUNTRY RADIO 8 TV Learn to $ave TAX DOLLARS with Income Tax Training/ • BASIC AND ADVANCED COURSES NOW BEING OFFERED ENROLL NOW! DAY OR NIGHT CLASSES For Free Information CALL NOW. * V ASSOCIATED TlX service 4835 Dixra Hwy., Drayton Plains PHONE 574-2312 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 You Can Count on Us ... Quality Costs No More at Sears 6**6 •r 1.07 oath Savei-oi^T-shirts of heavyweight combed cotton and our best selling briefs of 2-ply cotton. White,-■ Sizes S to XL S (not ot Gross* Point*) Dan River® “Mandalay” 88 ic ■ Smooth, lustrous cotton fabric Is machine washable, dc- . Foshion Fobrics (not ot Gross* Point*) Sweater and Pant Seta 589 S.t zuu'rtt1 wooi Vants or nylrn/rayon stretch Fsnts in solid pales and bright*.. Co'or coordinated fashion sweater to cc-nple e the set. Sizes, 5-13. 10 Transistor Portable Radio «««.• 21.99 v ■ «»8 AM/FM'radio with 3-in. speaker, anten-na. AFC holds FM steady. Slide rule dial.. . black leatherette cabinet; il«* 2Hx7V’. Save $4! Sears Rodio Dept. Boys’ Navy Oxford Nylon Coacher Jacket Charge It Streamlined jacket, features smart snap front coacher styling. The fabric is rugged oxford nylon with spot and stain resistant finish. Drawstring waist, elastic cuffs. Boys’ sizes 6 to 12. Sise 32-42, ref. 5.99, 4.97 MONDAY ONLY—from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. ac or tVjfaudottf Boys’ Clothing Dept," (not at Grosse 30 Grand River at Oakman, WE 3-3300 • Gratiot at Van Dyke, WA 54)100 • Woodward, Highland Pk., TO 8-1300 BEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. • Lincoln Park, Southfield at Dit, DU 3-7000 • Uvonia Mali, 7 Mile at Middlebelt, 476*000 • Macomb Mall, GraUot at 13% Mile Rd., 293-8000 • Oakland Mall, U Mile Rd, at John R, 585-1000 •' Pontiac, 154 N. Saginaw, FE 5-4171 • Wyandotte, Biddle-Maple, AV 4*9000 • Crowe Pie., 7 Mile-Mack, TU 4-6000 - Ike Suffers 7 th, and Possibly Most Severe^)&Ji^&£A!i& * WASHINGTON ($—Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower once more lies gravely ill after Suffering his seventh, and possibly one of his worst, heart attacks. ★ * . ★ ; ( The five-star general was stricken at the Army’s Walter Reed General Hospital at 1:25 p.rti. yesterday —just as he had apparently j been on the road to recovery from his most recent previous cardiac assault Aug. 6. The new attack was the fourth in 314 months. And it was the third in a row to strike when the old warrior and elder statesman had appeared to be on his' way to recovery from the previous one. An indication of the severity of the newest attack May in the fact the Army doctors voluntarily ({escribed it as “‘another serious” one in their Initial" report. ,In the earlier attacks suffered at Walter Reed, the initial reports said only that the 77-year-old general had suffered “another” seizure without using such labels as “major” or “serious.” Eisenhower’s condition is reported as stable, which means that Ids so-called “vital signs”—blood pressure, pulse and breathing rate—have remained at satisfactory levels for at least some period after the attack. Eisenhower already has more than defied mortality statistics on heart attacks. {lis seventh and latest means that he has now had more than twice as many attacks as the number—three—that most often add up to certain and kwlft death. Eisenhower’s latest series of heart attacks started With a minor one on April 29 during a vacation at Palm Springs, Calif, He was moved to Walter Reed May 14. He suffered a second, more serious one ^ June 15. He recovered sufficiently from the June attack to address the Republican National Convention on television Aug. 5, looking thin but strong and speaking in resonant tones. He was due to return to his Gettysburg farm home a few days later, but less than 12 hours after the Speech, he suffered another heart attack. Doctors described it as major.' He had finally been permitted to sit up and do some light reading before yesterday’s attack. The Weather D. f. WMther Bureau Ftrecei! THE PONTIAC PRESS VOL. 126 — NO. 160 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1968 —48 PAGES By BOB WISLER Democratic presidential nomination seeker Sen. George McGovern of South Dakota took his campaign before the Oakland County Democratic Cf^vention last night and got enthusiastic ’reception for his call to end the bombing if North Vietnam. Surrounded by Secret Service men, Pontiac police defectives and. Oakland County sheriff’s deputies, McGovern was accompanied by his pert, attractive wife and 13-year-okl daughter. McGovern answered a variety of questions in declaring he is for an end to the war, and end to the draft, and an end to , the tenures of Selective Service Director Lewis • B. Hershey, and FBI Director J.. Edgar Hoover. H$Mao spoke out. for th$T|jrtabUsh-menit of a well-paid volunteer Jrmy, efforts-to bring mainland China Within the sphere pf influence of world opinion, and a reassessment of die method of nominating presidential candidates. ‘NO ILLUSIONS’ McGovern, 46, a college professor before turning politician, said he had no illusions about his chances of getting the Democratic nomination. 18th District Dems Favor McCarthy in Straw Vote The 18th Qppgressional District Oakland County Democratic Party meeting yesterday had a heavy McCarthy flavor as precinct delegates elected a new district chairman and voted a heavy preference for Sen. Eugene McCarthy as the Democratic presidential candidate. The 18th District group and the 19th District Oakland County Democratic 1 In Today's . Press Sports Highlights ~ McClain wins No. 25; two ex-champs in finals of Women’s amateur golf tourney — PAGE 1 CL SCLC Confab if Group expresses disenchant- 1 ment with GOP ticket, un-I certainty oh Democrats—PAGE ™ A-5. I The Party's Over . I Mia Farrow gets Mexican di- ll vorce from Sinatra—PAGE D-l., 1 Astrology .'.......yD-vt 1 Jr Bridie...... ........ ;.'.d4 Church News ...... B-8-B-11 Crossword Puzzle .. ... .Dill . Comics .... ......... . lM Editorials ............. A4 Home Section ........B-l—B-7 Markets ............... CM* Obituaries ..... ... .. £-1*, '■ Radio Programs..........D*U > Sports .............CM—03 , Theaters ...............x 04 1 TV Listings......C4-rCMf, D4f 1 I Wilson, Earl...... .......D4 I 1 .Women’s Pages ... —,A«l, AS ■. | I -• n 1 Party held a joint county convention last night as well as separate district meetings, 4r ~k * Elected chairman of the 18th District group was Vernon G, Leopold of Hunting-ton Woods to replace Eugene Kuthy of Royal Oak, Kuthy, a backer of Hubert Humphrey, chose not to seek reelection, so Leopold, a McCarthyite, was chosen unanimously. During , the meeting the 18th District delegates took a presidential preference vote, with 88 votes going to McCarthy, 10'to Humphrey, four to Sen. George McGovern and three uncommitted. McGOVERN SPOKE The vote was held early this morning after McGovern had spoken to the county convention. In the 19th District Aldo Vagnozzi of Farmington was reelected chairman without opposition. Both conventions picked delegates to the state convention to be held next weekend. SB w ★ State Sen. Sander M. Levin of Berkley, the state chairman of the Democratic Party, delivering the keynote address, said that “history has passed the Republican Party by” and .said it must be the Democralic^party which fills a “vacuum” in national politics. . The senator also said the party should nominate a vice presidential candidate whb is hi the mainstream of American life and one fully capable of being presi-' dent. He said the choice must not be “dictated by a desire to appease” and ' be ruled Out Texas GOV. John Connally -as a candidate. * MONEY PRIORITIES Both district groups passed a number \ of resolutions. The 18th District groups called for “reordering money, priorities” with commitment to U A internal problems rather than the war,- a four-step program for an end of the war in Viet-(Continued on Page A-2, C01. 5) He entered the race, he said, to keep the Democratic convention open, to decrease the possibility of a first-ballot victory for Vice, President Hubert Humphry and to move the party “toward a more hopeful stance in Vietnam.*’ . it ★ He declared that he would not accept a vice presidential spot on the national ticket' but said that if he were nominated as the. presidential candidate he considered Sen. Frank Church of Idaho, Sen. Gaylord Nelson of Wisconsin and Sen. Philip Hart of Michigan as likely vice presidential nominees. McGovern spent the day in Detroit yesterday attempting to line up support ainong Michigan delegates to the national convention in Chicago. A DARK HORSE An admitted dark horse, McGovern said he hopes to haver 200 votes on the first ballot at the convention. The senator castigated the Republicans and indicated -he thought the issue of (Continued oh Page A-2, Col. 4) Racial Violence Hits Two Cities PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE — South Dakota Sen. George McGovern, a late entry in the race for Democratic Democratic Convention. McGovern called for a complete nomination as the party’s presidential candidate, visited Oak- , change in the country’s Vietnam policy and efforts to end land County last night to speak before delegates to the County “division that sets black against white.” Sen. McGoverns Call for Bombing Half Hailed Lower Michigan Hit by Storm By The Associated Press Heavy wind and rain and a few reported tornadoes throughout much of lower Michigan yesterday left widespread but minor property damage, flooding and utility failures. Three Boy Scouts hit by a fallen tree at Camp Rota-Kiwan near Kalamazoo were injured, one of them seriously. Detroit Edison said scattered damage in north Oakland County consisted primarily of wires down, leaving many people without power. Royal Oak and Fern-dale were harder hit. ★ ★ ★ Michigan State Police said a tornado touched down briefly last night near the Allegan County town of Martin, some 30 miles south of Grand Rapids. At Niles, in Berrien County, State Police reported a funnel at about 10:30 p.m. The St. Joseph County Sheriff’s department reported a tornado touched dgwn on M60 at the St. Joseph-Cass County border. FUNNEL-SHAPED CLOUDS Earlier the U.S. Weather Bureau said it had received three reports of funnel-shaped clouds in the Battle Creek area. The bureau said it had unconfirmed reports of similar clouds southeast of Zilwaukee, five miles east of Saginaw. ★ ★ ★ In the Detroit area, Royal Oak police said the storm knocked down trees and caused wind damage to homes. Extensive flooding was reported. Police estimated 2,000 to 3,000 homes were without electricity at the height of the storm. ' Berkley police said they had three tornado reports. The reported power failure throughout much of the city and several minor fires caused by lightning striking homes. \ (Continued on Page A-2, Col. •) By The Associated Press Police have charged two white men with the killing of a Negro woman, whose death touched off racial .violence punctuated by sniper fire and property damage in several sections of Cincinnati, Ohio, last night and early today. And St. Petersburg, Fla., early this morning experienced its first full-scale racial disorder since a garbage collector’s strike began in May. A wave of fire-bombing, window smashing and looting swept the city’s predominantly Negor south side. * ★ ★" • Police said nine persons were injured, most of them whites struck by rocks or bottles as they drove through the disturbed area. None was seriously hurt, however. At least four persons were injured, two critically^ in Cincinnati. Police made 10 arresfo. , MURDER CHARGES First-degree murder charges were filed today against William Harrison, 22, and Elvin Billman, 31, both of Cin-cinnati. Mi 18-year-old Middletown, Ohio, girl, ’ riding unknowingly through the riot area in Avondale with three friends, received a serious eye injury when the car in which she was riding whs halted by several Negroes. *v ^ A Negro youth whs idiot and wounded critically as he hurled bottles at police. Officers said Harrison and Billnian were arrested on descriptions supplied to witnesses at Ite starting scene, Clearing, Cooler Is Area Forecast A delightful Sunday is promised Pontiac area residents by the weatherman. The official day-by-day forecast by the U.S. Weather Bureau looks like this: TODAY — Cloudy with scattered showers ending by this afternoon with partial ^clearing and turning cooler later this afternoon. High today 76 to 83. Fair and cooler tonight Low 54 to 60. * it ♦ Winds southwesterly 10 to 20 miles per hour and gusty at times, becoming northwest to north this afternoon. TOMORROW 7—; Mostly sunny and pleasant. MONDAY — Warmer with chance of showers, it * * Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: tqday 40, tonight 10 and tomorrow near zero. Sixty-seven was the low temperature in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a,m. By 12:30 p.m. the mercury stood at 75. Nixon Will Confer With Gov. Romney in Lansing Monday LANSING (AP)- Republican presidential nominee Richard Nixon will visit Lansing Monday to confer privately with Gov. George Romney, presumably to plot strategy for the upcoming campaign. In addition, Maryland Gov. Spiro Agnew, the GOP vice presidential nominee, will speak at the Republican state convention next Saturday at Grand Rapids. * it :,it Nixon is scheduled to arrive at Capitol City Airport about 2:15 pm. and make brief remarks on the steps of the State Capitol before going into seclusion with Romney. Romney has pledged to support Nixon during the campaign, hut has stated that it will be a “tough battle” for the former vice president to carry the state in November. STATEMENTS EXPECTED Nixon and Romney are expected to make statements to newsmeh following thefr conference. Meanwhile, in San Diego, Calif., Nixon is holding more Republican strategy talks. ★ ★ ★ He blended politicking and sightseeing last night in a two-hour visit to Disneyland. But today it was all politics again with a visit from a group of mayors. Nixon drove north to Anaheim yesterday after a session with California Gov. Ronald Reagan, a meeting that gave Reagan a starring television role in the ‘national Republican campaign. TV APPEARANCES Nixon said Reagan agreed, to seek votes “to the extent that his California commitments will allow some national campaigning.” ★ ★ it. Reagan said his major role will be in appearances on national television to appeal for GOP votes. “I think there’s a very definite restriction on the barnstorming that can be done,” he said. Reagan said that is because he has a legislative election coming in California, plus a session of the legislature opening early next month. New Viet Battles Flare Heavy Casualties Re SAIGON til — Fierce new battles flared up along the northern frontier, in the central highlands and east of Saigon, with heavy, casualties reported on both sides, the allied command said today. Allied troops repulsed four enemy attacks Thursday and yesterday, and U. S. Marines making a helicopter assault yesterday, against North Vietnamese positions ran into an enemy mortar barrage. », * ★ * These actions and a clash near Da Nang today left 205 enemy soldiers and 74 allied troops killed and 252 allied troops were wounded. The sharp, scattered fighting stood out against what U. S. officials have interpreted as a long general .lull in the war while the enemy refitted and rested ,ffs forces for an expected major offensive. The heaviest action was around the training camp and artillery headquarters of the South Vietnamese 18th Division at Xuan Loc, 40 miles east of Saigon. The'Vietcong sent sappers and riflemen against the installation behind a 300-round mortar barrage Thursday, then ambushed one of the division’s battalions yesterday five mites southeast of the town. Vietnamese sources reported 100 epemy soldiers kilted in the two clashep. They said 52 government soldiers were killed and 112 wounded. 5 ★ ★ * In t|p northern sector, 15 enemy sappers gttt into positions of a U.S. 1st Air Cavalry Division unit yesterday as 'the enemy' launched a strong mortar and ground attack against, the American positions 15 miles northwest of Hue. it it it Spokesmen said 18 Americans were kilted apd 55 wounded and 17 enemy bodies were found, including those of, three sappers killed inside the defensive perimeter. ★ ★ it . Farther north, about 10 miles below the colter of the demilitarized zone, enemy mortars kilted four U. S. Marines and wounded 82 as the Leathernecks landed by helicopter for an attack. American artillery returned the fire and killed 10 enemy soldiers. Dems Agree to Cut Hoopla CHICAGO tiB — The Democrats have had it with that old convention standby, the planned flow demonstration. No more, at least not in 1968, the blaring bands and marching delegates after the nomination of each candidate — unless some delegations rebel. In announcing the demonstration ban GOV. LESTER MADDOX Jt- ’ y ", yesterday, party chairman John M. Bailey said a representative of Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy told him the Minnesota senator concurred. Earlier, Vice President Humphrey and Sen. George S. McGovern had Asked that the demonstrations be dropped. The contention’s Arrangements Com- Georgia Governor Enters the Race ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - Gov. Lester Maddox formally announces his candid dacy for the Democratic presidential nomination today. Maddox said he expects t6 have the support of several hundred delegates at the convention. it it it The governor, who selected the stated delegates, told them in a letter: “I am 1 counting on your support at the convention.” The Maddox-selected delegation may become an issue at the convention, since it is being challenged by a group elected last weekend by the Georgia Democratic Party Forum, which questions the party ..loyalty of the Maddox delegation. mittee also arrived at a seating plan for the 5,611 delegates and alternates, and detailed allocations of guest passes and other convention arrangements. FORMAL INVITATIONS Bailey said formal invitations Will be extended to President Johnson; the Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, head of the Related Stories, Page A-2 Southern Christian Leadership Conference; and the widows of President John F. Kennedy, Sen. Robert F. Kennedy and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Other demonstrations — those outside the convention hall — also came to the Arrangements Committee’s attention. it it it Bailey said the committee agreed that locations should be provided for thfe thousands of protesters expected to gather in Chicago. In a further effort to streamline the convention, Bailey said nominating speeches will he given time limits hut that the details would be worked out later. , ★ ’ it ’ ★ He said state delegations will receive 1,310 guest passes, one far each two votes possessed by the state. # ' ■V, lv ' A—a (Uhl) THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1068 Test flights Add 2 Missiles to N-Arsend CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) - Two highly destructive multiple-warhead missiles designed to penetrate deep into enemy defenses entered the U.S. nuclear arsenal yesterday with spectacular back-to-back launchings. The missiles—the Navy’s Poseidon, capable of carrying 10 warheads that can be sprayed on preselected targets hundreds of. miles apart, and the Air Force’s Minuteman 3 — were labeled completely successful in maiden test flights from the space complex at Cape Kennedy. ' When they become operational, the missiles will replace the Polaris and Minuteman 1 and 2 as the backbone of America’s retaliatory force. Both are expected to be placed on operational status in about two years. \ Details of the test flights were' not disclosed. Official spokesmen for the space agency and the two services announced only that the Minuteman successfully traveled its planned 5,00-mile journey to a splashdown near Ascension Island and the Poseidon came down at a predetermined point 1,000 miles at sea. Poseidon, rated potentially eight times as effective as Polaris, is 34 feet long, 74 inches in diameter and weighs 65,000 pounds. Like the Polaris, it has a range of 2,500 miles but it reportedly is twice as accurate. The bigger, far-ranging Minuteman 3 is designed to take up to three warheads on a rocket that is 59 feet, 9 inches long and 6 feet wide. < The Missile weighs 76,000 pounds and is capable of traveling more than 6,000 miles. Both have computerized and motorized devices capable of dispersing nuclear warheads over scattered targets selected prior to launch. Present Polaris and Minuteman payloqds can only follow a ballistic trajectory.- * * ★ Air Force Lt. Col. Ward M. Millar, chief information officer for the space and missile systems organization, said Poseidon and the new Minuteman “together make up our strength. When* both go as well as they did, it shows the country is iri good hands." The concept for the multiWarhead missiles was developed as a coun- termeasure to the Soviet Union’s expansion of its offensive missile force and establishment of an antiballistic missile shield around Moscow-:1' ’ * ‘ ,* * Defense spokesmen say the missiles, with their multitarget and penetration capabilities, could give the Uiiited States an edge in deterrent strength. * w ★ However, some critics say the development of the new missiles could bring on a deadlier arms race with the Soviet Union. Birmingham Publications Head Named at Ford Motor 'Remarkably Similar to RFK Views' VP Spells Out Viet Stand NjSW YORK (AP) - Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, (me of the Johnson administration’s chief defenders of its Vietnam war policy, said today he and the late Sen. Robert F. Kennedy “came to hold remarkably similar, views on Vietnam.” Thus Humphrey appeared to be making one of his strongest campaign efforts to inch away from the political shadow of Vietnam and to identify himself with Kennedy. Kennedy said he was opposed to forcing a coalition government, which would include Communists on the government of Saifon. And added:' “I would make it quite clear that we are going to the negotiating table, not with the idea that we want them to unconditionally surrender and that we expect the National Most of Cabdrivers Strike in Chicago CHICAGO (AP) - More than 5,400 cab drivers struck Chicago’s two largest taxi companies today, leaving the city with only 20 per cent of its taxi fleet in operation. The strike, affecting all but 900 of the city’s taxicabs, came just nine days before the opening of the Democratic -National Convention Aug. 26. * ★ ★ Negotiations between representatives of the drivers and Yellow and Checker Cab companies with federal mediators broke down last night with both sides trading charges. No new talks were scheduled. A spokesman for the cab companies said, “Hie situation is hopeless. The union just kept raising its prices.” Union leaders retaliated with a charge of being locked out by management. The The dispute centers on the union’s demand for higher wages and increased fringe benefits. The strike may affect the Democratic Credentials Committee hearings, which begin Monday. If the strike continues it probably Would affect transportation of delegates during the convention Adding to concern over convention transportation is a call for a wildcat strike on Aug. 25, the eve of the convention, by some bus drivers for the Chicago Transit Authority. llieir dispute centers on a demand by Negro drivers for representation in leadership of their union, the Amalgamated Transit Workers. A little more than, half of the 8,840 drivers are Nbgroes. All union officers are white. Liberation Front and the Vietcong will play some role in the future political process of South Vietnam, but that should be determined by the negotiators and particularly by the people of South Vietnam.” Humphrey said he believed the same thing. FREE ELECTIONS Humphrey said he also wanted to emphasize that he subscribes to most of ^ the program proposed by the National Committee for a Political Settlement in Vietnam. That program includes free elections with all political groups in South Viet* ham, including the Vietcong, allowed to enter candidates a bar to military escalation or unilateral withdrawal by the United States and an immediate ceasefire. The only modification to the Kerr proposal, is Humphrey said, is that he would end the U.S. bombing of North Vietnam only after “restraint and reasonable response” is obtained from North Vietnam. BIRMINGHAM — Richard Morris of 1030 N. Glenhurst has been named publications manager of the public relations staff of the Ford Division of Ford Motor. Co. A former reporter for the Richmond, Va., Times-Dispatch and the Washington Post, Morris joined Ford Motor Co.’s news department in 1952. He served as public relations manager , of the Continents Division end later for the Lincoln Division. For nine years Morris was executive assistant to the Vice president — product planning and styling, and in 1965 he became public relations manager, Ford Division, GROGGY GORILLA—Casey, a 750-pound male gorilla, is administered a heavy dose of sedative for his jet flight, sans cage, from St. Paul, Minn., to Omaha, Neb. The 12-year-old Casey has spent most of his life in captivity and .has not known another gorilla during that time. However, zoo -officials in Omaha are planning to. change that in a hurry. Casey will be introduced to two female gorillas—Brigitte and Benoit—sometime next week. . ' Iowa Home Fire County DemS Hail Senator Kills 7 Children on Calf for a Bombing Halt The Weather Full U.S. Weather Burea Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy with scattered showers ending by this afternoon with partial clearing and turning cooler later this afternoon. High today 76 to 83. Fair and cooler tonight. Low 54 to 60. Sunday mostly sunny and pleasant. Monday outlook: warmer with chance of showers. Winds southwesterly 10 to 20 miles per hour and gusty at times, becoming northwest to north this afternoon. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: today 40, tonight 10 and tomorrow near zero. LAKE CONDITIONS Lake Erie — Small craft warnings in effect. Northwest winds 18 to 28 knots becoming northerly 15 to 25 knots. Showers and thundershowers ending today. Chance of 40 knot gusty winds during the thundershowers. Lake St. Clair — Small craft Warnings in effect. Northwest winds 18 io 25 knots, becoming north to northeast 14 to 22 knots tonight. Showers and thundershowers with chance of gusty winds to 30 knots during the thundershowers. Lake Huron — Small craft warnings in. effect. Southern half: Northwest winds 18 to 28 knots, becoming northwest to north late today and northeast 14 to 22 knots late tonight. Northern half: Southwest winds 19 ty 30 knots today, becoming north to northeast winds 12 to 20 knots tonight. Lake Michigan — Small craft warnings in effect — northwest to north winds 18 to 28 knots, shifting north to northeast 15 to 25 knots early tonight and east winds 10 to 29 knots late tonight, Lake Superior — Small craft warnings in effect. North winds 29 to 30 knots, becoming variable 8 to 15 knots early tonight and southwest 10 to 20 knots late tonight. Clearing today, fair tonight.. HAZLETON, Iowa - Seven children in a rural family were killed early today when fire, swept their two-story farm home a half-mile east of here. All seven died of smoke inhalation, authorities said. The children—ranging in age from 8 months to 13 years — were seven of the 11 children living at home in the Doras Latham family.. ★ ★ ★ The fire alarm was given by the father, who ran to a neighbor’s house shouting that his house was on fire and that he couldn’t get the children out. The victims were Sally Latham, 8 months; Michael Latham, 2; Charles Latham, 3; twins Lori and Lynn Latham, 8; Mary Latham, 7; and Sharon Greathead, 13. Four boys escaped from the fire. One, Gerald Greathead, Was treated for smoke inhalation. ★ ★ ★ The fire started in a rear kitchen area In the hpupe, Mrs, Latham had been . married previously, and five of the children in the house were hers by her former marriage. They were Sharon and Gerald and the other three boys whp escaped from the fire, Raymond, Fritz and Beryl. (Continued From Page One) . \ crime in the streets was p convenient “political” issue. “I don’t know of any congressman who is in favor of lawlessness ... It takes neither brains nor courage to come out with a cry for law and order.” The senator said that along with law and order there must be justice and compassion. McGovern, who said he was the Senate’s first critic of the conduct of the war in Vietnam, speaking out 'against administration policy on the Senate floor in September 1963, said he believes that “even the most confirmed hawks are beginning to see the futility of the course we have been pursuing in Vietnam.” He said be doesn’t believe the future of Vietnam, or any Southeast'Asian country, will ever be decided by outside military presence. McGovern said the . U-S. has for 14 years spent money and blood to support a series of regimes, “no one of which has ever had the confidence and respect of the people of Vietnam. The senator said'that whatever happens at the convention, he would support the Democratic candidate for prasi- Against Lawlessness I _.m.: Wind Velocity I ....... Direction: Variable Sun ut> Saturday at 0:32 p.m. Sun rises Sunday at 6:44 a.m. Moon sets Saturday af 4:27 p.m. Moon rises Sunday at 12:09 a m. : Sunny day, thundershowers Pontiac Pastor Issues Plea NATIONAL WEATHER—Showers are forecast for Saturday night in the Pacific Northwest, the northern Plateaus, the middle and northern Atlantic states and west Texas. It Will be cooler hi the Great Basin, the upper Great Lakes and the Northeast. i. Pf /“li'Sr 'H 4 A leading Negro minister in Pontiac today appealed to Negroes to refrain from violence and lawless acts add reports such acts to police for the good of the community. “I feel it is time that Negro leaders must speak out against lawlessness to ease the minds of more rational people in the community,” said Rev. Matthew M. Scott,* pastor of East Side Church of God, 343 Irwin. ,* / * ★ - “We are pleading to reasonable and rationally, minded people not to side with ' or sanction person; who break j the law, disrupt society and threaten the morality and principles of others. “No person or group has the right to break laws and expect the same laws to protect them in doing so. Justice is ac- ’ ceptable to those that believe in justice and is executed upon those who disregard its power.” , CITY REWARDS Rev. Scott’s comments came after the Cify Commission Tuesday passed a resolution offering rewards up to $1,000 for information leading to the arrest of individuals responsible for arson or an attack on police and firemen which constitutes 1 n t e r f e r e n c e with the performance of their duties. ! “The City Commission ruling is right,” he said. “We cannot condone wrong. People should report violent acts when they, see them to maintain peace between the races.” - Rev. Scott also leveled a strong plea for an integrated society. dent as vigorously as he can. Political experts indicated that McGovern may hot have picked up any immediate delegate support at the national convention. An Associated Press poll shows that of Michigan’s 96 votes, 66 lean to Humphrey, 14 are for McCarthy, one avows support of McGovern and 15 are uncommitted. lt is possible that the uncommitted candidates could swing to McGovern. 18th District Dems Favor McCarthy (Continued From Page One) nam, and elimination of the draft with a . substantial, well-paid volunteer army un-f der civilian con tool. The 19th District group passed resolutions, calling for lowering the voting age to 18, peace in Vietnam, spring primary elections rather than fall primaries, a presidential primary in Michigan,' and more allocation of state gas tax money for repair of lpcal roads. Oakland County Party Chairman George Googasion said the county executive committee will meet next week to reconsider its decision to name Shane ? Murphy, son of missing County Clerk John D. Murphy, as the party’s candidate for county clerk. This came about after a “black caucus” of Negro Democrats met and asked Googasion to reconsider the candidacy of Charlie J. Harrison of 85 Carr, who became a write-in candidate for the nomination a few days before the primary election. TABBERT ................MORRIS BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Burton R. Tabbert of 885 Dursley has been maned vice president—marketing by the board of directors of Holley Carburetor Co., Warren. In his new post he will be responsible for all automotive sales, advertising, and marketing for both original equipment and replacement sales. Elected a vice president in 1967, Tabbert has served in various sales and marketing capacities in the automotive division at Holley. They included general manager, general sales manager, assistant automotive sales manager and truck sales manager. A member of the Society of Automotive Engineers and the Detroit Athletic Club, Tabbert has been with. Holley since 1947. The Oakland County chapter of the National Association of Accountants has announced the election of Harry G. Troxell, of 5305 Wing Lake Road, to Director of Programs for 1968-69. As a director he will plan a balanced program of technical sessions and apply accounting practice and concepts in it, Troxell is personnel manager for Touche, Ross, Bailey & Smart, of Detroit. He is a’ member of the American Institute of Certified Public Accountant. He is also an active member of the Michgan Association of Certified Public Accountants where he is currently chairman of the membership committee. Heavy Rains, Wind Hit Lower Michigan (Continued from Page One) Edison’s Oakland County crews are working with borrowed crews from Macomb, Wayne and Lapeer counties. Supervisory personnel are manning the crews because the linemen are oh strike. Consumers Power Co. reported only scattered disruption of service to customers. Service was restored by 6 a.m. this morning. Play for toe final round of toe U S. Women’s Amateur Championship.was delayed this morning at Birmingham Country Club a; officials made efforts -to make toe course playable following the heavy rainstorm last night. * The two finalists^ Mrs. Joanne-Gunderson earner and Mrs. Ann Quast Welts, were waiting on toe practice tee at 10 am. as groimd crews cleared toe greens of branches and leaves. The ninth fairway was completely flooded this morning, and the 18th green was covered by the overflowing Rouge River. REV. MATTHEW M. SC6TT “The ministers of this City are agairist Any and all persons or groups ... that practice hate and segregation in our city, county, state arid nation. We, as a people, must Stan dtogether as Americans ... regardless of race, creed or color. AGAINST SEPARATISM “I believe that 90 per cent of the Negro population does not support separatism,” he concluded. * ★ ★ , ' Rev. Scott is also president of the Oakland County Ministerial Fellowship and the Oakland County Ministerial Missionary Association. Dancing Tonight & Sunday NEWLY OPENED, OPEN MR DANCING GARDENS Where You Dance Under-the-Stars! Featuring The Music of , WARREN COVINGTON and Mis Tommy Dorsey Band Tonight—August 17tb RUSS CARLYLE and His Orchestra Sunday, Aug. 18 Only , BUDDY AAORROW Orchestra Aug. 21 thru. 25 Dancing 9 P.M. to 1 A.M. Adm. $3.00 each. - Serving All Beverages — Dining in Pine Knob Lodge FREE 1,000 Car Parking lot INE NOB GARDENS The Pontiac Pratt, Saturday,. August 24 22 SATURDAY SATURDAY MORNING «:ix7V\ Save $4! Sears Rodio Dept. Boys' Navy Oxford Nylon Coacher Jacket Charge It Streamlined ‘jacket features smart snap front coacher styling,’The fabric is rugged oxford nylon with spot and stain resistant finish. Drawstring waist, elastic cuffs. Boys' sizes 6 to 12. Six* 32-42, reg. 5.99, 4.97 MONDAY ONLY-from 9 a.nt. to 9 p.m. Boys' Clothing Dept, (not a Save! Men’s Nylon Warm-Up Jackets at 497 Lightweight nylon jackets have two -slash pockets. Choice of navy, black or burgundy. Sizes S to XL. Save! Maker’s Closeout MISSES JO?) OUTFIT MAKING SWEATERS FOR MISSES For the looks of the year ... a collection of sweaters to mate with pants and skirts. Pullovers, cardigans, bulkies and. classic knits done up beautifully in wools, Orion®, pick, your -favorite look' from sizes 34 to 40. PERMA-PREST® Hopsack Slacks r.9 ST97 8 00 cr Dacron® polyester/rayon oxford weave in traditional or continental style. Popular colors . . . 30-42. 2 pr. mm PERMA-PREST® Twill Slacks, 3-6x *5 2.67 each Continentals in new colors. Classic or ivy shirts in PERMA-PREST® polyester-cotton blend. 3-6x. Short sleeve 2/S3 or 1.61 each. Long Sleeve 3/|5 or 1.77 each, Wear : Pointe) Reg. Men’s Handsome Leather Slipons 697 Choose the classic smooth leather beef-roll in black, antique brass or the grained leather Venice style (not shown) in black. Sizes IVi to 11, 12. Pendant and Wrist Watch Assortment 88 8* Swiss made watches for men, women and teens. Skindiver, Go-Go, and Pendant styles in many colors and designs. Louvered Wood Shutters 84" cigar kiln dried American pine with joints that ire rabbited and doweled for extra strength. Each panel is pre-sanded and ready for finishing. Seamless Mesh Panty Hose s99- Flattering fit and fashion . . . seamless stretch nylon with nude heel. Beige or sunset. Petite, Average. Tall. Hosiery (not pt Gro: ! Pte.) Automatic Blanket WITH FULL 5-YEAR GUARANTEE Reg. 17.99 “88 19.99 Full Size Single Control,.... 24.99 Full Size Dual Control ... 32.99 QuieW Sizi Duel Control 42.99 King Size Dual Control 13 „ Twin Size Single Control e Pointe) Women’s Glove Leather Slipons •9 7.99 Soft glazed glove leather for bxtra comfort. Durable composition sole and heel. Nylon tricot over foam lining. Black, brown or navy, sizes 5 to 9, 10, Women's Shoe Dept. 14.99 24x36" Well, 18.99 30x40" Well, 21.99 30x48" Wall, 32.99 30x60" Wall, 34.99 36x60" Wall; 21.99 4OX6O" Door, 11.97 16.97 18.97 24.97 28.97 14.(f7) Save! Plate Glass MIRRORS WITH 10-YEAR GUARANTEE Reg. 9.99 Vi" plate glass with copper and paint protected backing. Guaranteed 10 years against silvering defects. Elegant %” beveled edges; adjustable Bull Dog hangers included. In carton, take-with. Sears Lamp 6 97 1 Dept. I Wyandotte, Grosse Pointe) 6.99 5/8”x50’ Rubber Garden Hose 399 Flexible rubber cover, strong' rayon • cord rein-iorccuient, rubber inper > lube. Solid brass couplings resist rust. Save! Sears Hardware Dept. One-Coat White Latex House Paint |99 l-gel. pail 15.99 9s Covers any color in one coat. Flows on, easily. Brush marks, touch • ups won't show. Stays white. 3.49 4" Brush ........ 2.77 ' Sears Paint Dept. “Brittany” 9x12’ Rng SMOOTH CONTINUOUS FILAMENT PILE An inter-mixture of low loop and high Reg. 69.99 cut pile gives this pattern a hand carved ' .. ... _ _ look. With bonded cushion back. In 5 /fl ■hRQ decorator colors, Save over $20 Monday. / B 'jR 12x15’ "Brittony," Reg. 119.99 .... 99.88 Delivered Carpeting Dept, (not at Grosse. Pointe) SAVE 33% packed WITH FIATURBS: e Infinite water level control e Fluorescent consalo light e S wuh-rlnio temperatures • Blotch dlspcnsor end fabric softener dlsponsor o Super Koto-Swirl agitator, , scrubber cop, detergent cup o'/t-HP motor . . . UL listed 3-Way Bunk Beds SET UP AS BUNK, TRUNDLE OR TWIN BEDS Richly finished solid maple beds ' ’ can be used as bunk beds,,a trun- Reg. 175.75 die bed, or as separate twin beds. ^ Inclines 2 mattresses and link' "9 I 9 B lv springs. M.MW%3 Matching 4-drawcr Chest .... 74.88 Delivered Matching Student Desk. 74.88 Furniture (not at Grosse Pointe) , Open Monday, Thursday, , Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5:30 Save! Hostess Center power Unit for kitchen attachments Push button control unit* becomes the basis of 5 appliances to do most kitchen jobs speedily, effortlessly. Saves space of extra appliances. 7.99 Meat Grinder attachment .. 6,97 5.99 Can Opener Attachment ........4.87 Small Electric Appliances Dept. j|! Edison Co. lines. Save! Kenmore Washer Reg. 24.99 1666 AUTOMATIC 2-SPEED, 3-CYCLE MODEL Reg. 219.95 9 Grand River at Oakman, WE 3-3300 • Gratiot at Van Dyke, WA 5-0100 • Woodward, Highland Pk., TO 8-1300 SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO, Vigorous speed for regular fabrics; gentle for delicates. Normal, Delicate and Permanent Press cycles. jR’tf Lint filter. White, coppertone, ™ B ma A avocado.. JBSkW-' B Installed* Matching Gee er Electric * Delivered Dryer, Regular 189.95 .. . $1*7 Sears Washer- erhd Dryer Department 9 Lincoln park, Southfield at DiX, DU 3*7000 • livonia Mall, 7 Mile at Middlebelt, 476-6000 • Macomb Mall, Gratiot at 13J1 Mile Rd., 293-8000 • Oakland Mall, 14 Mile Kd.AtJohn K, 585-1000 Save! Highway Retreads 6.50x 8 18-MONTH GUARANTEE AGAINST WEAROUT New treads — recapped on sound tire 6 50x13 bodies. Made by special Orbi tread process that does away with the tread- MM/l/i splicing problem — a major cause of failure for ordinary retreads. installed lech Tubolox* Blechwoll Hut Me Fed. IxcHt Tex, Old Tire Prices with Old Tire—Seors Tire Dept. • Pontiac,’ 154 S. Saginaw, FE 5^171 • Wyandotte, Riddle-Maple, AV 4-9000 9 Grosse Pte., 7 Mile-Mack, TU 4-6000