State Weekend Road loll 25 Willerton Dottson, 22, of Detroit, fatally injured in a two-car collision in Detroit Friday night. ★ ★ it Michael P. Muma, 18, of Grand Rapids, Friday night when the car in which he was riding overturned in James ^own-ship, Kent County. ★ * * Vanda M. Winegarden, 68, of Muskegon, Saturday in Muskegon when she was thrown out of a car in a two-car. collision and then run over. Hopefuls Eying County's New Judicial Posts AP Wirephoto TOMMY MANVILLE DIES B. A heart attack has claimed the life of playboy Tommy Manville, 73, hgir to an asbestos fortune. The 11-times-married millionaire took his first wife, a chorus girl, in 1911 when he was 1£. His marriages and divorces made headlines for almost five decades. His wives are (from top) Florence Huber, Lois Mecoin, Avonne Taylor, (bottom two rows, from left) Marcelle Edwards, Bonita Edwards, Wilhelmina Boze, Made Marie Ainsworth, Georgina Campbell, Anita Frances Roddy-Eden, Patricia Gaston and Christina Erdlen. Manville died in: New York, (See story, page A-2. > Dues Hike Bolsters By The Associated Press Twenty-five persons lost their lives on Michigan highways during the weekend. The Associated Press count of weekend fatalities began at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at midnight yesterday.' The victims: Timothy Swan, 3, of Owosso, when an auto smashed into the family pickup truck which was parked in the street, and careened into the driveway where Timothy was standing with his mother and brother Saturday night. The latter were injured. * * * Mr, Henry Webber, 69, of St. Charles and his wife, Florence, 67, when the car in which they were riding collided with aother auto yesterday afternoon at an intersection in Lakefield Township in Saginaw County. * * * Paul E. Rabine, 39, of Mount Clemens, when his car ran off the road and rolled on U.S. 31 in Mason County near Freesoil Township yesterday evening. Joadele L. Bor, 29, of Hillsdale, whose auto collided with another car making a left turn off M39 in Reading Township, Hillsdale County. ★ ★ ★ Amelia H. Martin, 53, of Mount Pleasant, when the auto in which she was riding collided with another auto at the intersection of U.S. 131 and M20 in Big Rapids. * * * Joseph Fong, 67, of Detroit, Saturday in a Detroit hospital of injuries suffered Friday night when he was struck by a car in East Detroit. ★ * ★ Archie Reinhardt, 53, of Birch Run, yesterday when his car ran off Woodward Avenue in Bloomfield Hills and struck a tree. TWO-CAR CRASH* James Shepherd, 20, of Windsor, Ont., Saturday night jp a two-bar crash on U.S. 23, a mile south of Linwood, Mich. Margery Peterson, 75, of rural Leroy, a passenger in a car which collided with another auto yesterday at a U.S. 131 intersection in Osceola County, south of Cadillac. . * ★ ★ Jerry Hardley, 25, of Grand Rapids, who died in a Grand Rapids hospital Saturday of injuries suffered earlier in the day in a two-car smashup pn the U.S. 131 expressway in Grand Rapids. Len J. Ferrell, 19; Richard M. Underwood, 16; and Paul D. Underwood, 19, all of Taylor Township, a Detroit suburb; and James Ferrey, 13, of Lincoln Park, who were killed when a car hit the rear of one in which they were riding in Taylor Township Saturday. PLUMMETS 30 FEET Ralph Raymo, 32, and his wife, Pat, 30; Maurice Trombley, 50, and Clifford Barhydt, all of White Cloud, killed Saturday near Morley when their car crashed through a guard rail plummeted 30 feet into the Muskegon River. They drowned. Charles Hoyt, 68, of Pullman, killed Saturday when his bicycle swerved into the path of a car and was hit on a rural road near Pullman in Allegan County. ★ ★ ★ Ernest D. Britton, 22, of Highland Park, whose car struck a pole on a Detroit freeway exit ramp Saturday. ★ ★ * Dorothy Jean Denning, 41, of North. Adams, Friday night when her car overturned north of Hillsdale. FATALLY INJURED ' HIGH -LEVEL NEWS CONFERENCE-Mrs. Jody Head-lee (right) school page editor for The Press, conducts a seminar for high school correspondents. The students learn the rudiments of newspaper reporting and file stories for the school page, which appears twice weekly. In the background are other editors and school officials taking part in the program. Junior Journalists Mark Week This is National Newspaper Week and there are at least 38 persons in the Pontiac area for whom this has considerable significance. The 38 comprise The Pontiac Press high school correspondent staff — one in each of 38 area schools. They write articles that appear each Tuesday and Friday on the school page. Each fledgling reporter relates the most In Today's Press Orion Township New leg to the Clinton-Oak-land Sewer Interceptor is proposed. — PAGE A-4. Farmer's Almanac Whopper of a white Christmas is foreseen. — PAGE A-J. Drunk Driving Britain institutes tests to catch drinking motorists.—PAGE B-5. Area News ................ A-4 Astrology ............... C-10 Bridge ...................C-l# Crossword Puzzle.......... D-7 Crime Series ............ C-7 Comics ...................C-19 Editorials ............... A-8 Markets .................C-ll Obituaries ............... D-l Sports ........... C-l—C-4 Theaters ...............r- C-8 TV-Radio Programs ........ D-7 Wilson, Earl . . . ....... Ot. n’s Pages....... B-l, B-2 significant happenings at his or her school in genuine newspaper style. Mrs. Jody Headlee, school page editor, is particularly proud of this community-oriented program and announced a new internship program for promising students. * Sr * Starting next summer the top two senior correspondents will be offered a summer training-employment period in the newsroom of The Press. UNUSUAL PROGRAM The winners will perform newspaper tasks for the summer prior to entering college. Mrs. Headlee said this was an unusual program in that it reached down to the high school level to assist in professional newspaper training. After four yearB of directing the school page, Mrs. Headlee said she has noticed “a vast increase in the ability of the high school correspondents.” * , * Fledgling newspaper writers face deadlines and assignments, much like their professional counterparts. FIRST CONTACT A correspondent's first contact with The Press would come with selection by school (officials, such as a principal or journalism teacher. The beginner would then attend a fall workshop presented by Mrs. Headlee where matters of style and content would be explained. This is where the writer’s first copy comes under scrutiny, and contact with the editors and photographers is established. Columns are then filed with The Press during the entire school year, except for the winter holiday break. * * * The year finishes with a June banquet at which awards are presented, At the , banquet next year will be announced the winners of The Pontiac Press internships for the following summer. WORKSHOP WINNERS Also announced will be winners in a summer workshop program. The workshops, for high school papers and yearbook work, are held at Michigan State University and the University of Michigan. Students, in their sophomore or junior year are eligible. Pins and special awards for performance and years of service are also presented. Mrs. Headlee pointed out that the school page program is a basic part of The Press trainee policy. During the summer, college students in journalism are also employed. By JIM LONG Although details of establishing a district court system are far from being worked dut. it appears that there won't be a lack of candidates in Oakland County for the new judicial positions. ■Early indications have revealed that a number of justices of the peace, who "ill automatically be put out of a job .Jan:.], 1969, and some municipal judges already are eying a seat on the new bench. In Oakland County as many as 22 new district judges will have to be elected in November 1968 to assume to a greater degree the duties of the 45 justices, and possibly the municipal judges, they will replace. The State Legislature, convening this peek for a special session, will undertake the task of coming up with a measure reorganizing the lower court system that will satisfy all concerned. * * * "We are faced with a very difficult situation, and the solution must be something that will be acceptable to two-thirds of each House,” lamented State Sen. L. Harvey Lodge, R-Waterford Township. PUBLIC HEARINGS Lodge is, vice chairman of Senate Judiciary Committee, which last Friday ended in Pontiac two weeks of public hearings around the state. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 5) UAW for Long Strike DETROIT (Ah - Armed with a dues increase that will pump $20 million a month into his union's strike fund, United Auto Workers President Walter P. Reuther says the 34-day-old strike against Ford Motor Co. could stretch into the industry's longest. The longest automobile strike lasted 119 days in 1945-46 and was called against General Motors Corp.' by the UAW to support wage demands. It was UAW wage and fringe demands in the new contract which triggered the strike at Ford. A special UAW convention yesterday voted an emergency increase in dues from $5 to $25 monthly for most of its 1.4 million members. Asked at a postconvention news conference if the strike fund was being beefed up to support a General Motors strike later, Reuther replied: “It’s not Rainy, Cool Outlook Umbrellas and topcoats will be the order of the day through tomorrow as occasional showers and cool winds are expected in the Pontiac area? Tonight's low will fall in the 40-to-46 range. * * * Precipitation probabilities today, tonight and tomorrow are J10 per cent. Low temperature readingHn downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a m. was 46. By 2 p m. .the mercury inched to 49. • Continued cool weather and cloudy skies are on the agenda for Wednesday. Th? five-day forecast indicates that a warming trend is likely Friday or Saturday. ST.'. LOUIS (Ah—The weather bureau changed its outlook today and predicted clearing skies instead of overcast for the 'fifth crucial game of the World Series. However, the forecast called for chilly temperatures, in the lower 60s, and a westerly wind 7 to 15 miles per hour. An easier forecast predicted considerable cloudiness. The St. Louis Cardinals blanked the Boston Red Sox, 6-0, yesterday Jo run up a 3-1 ’lead in the best-of-seven Scries. A, St. Louis victory today would end the Series. Red Sox Manager Dick (Williams said if his team won today, Gary Waslewski would start the sixth game in Boston. FIRST INNING BOSTON - No runs. ST. LOUJS - No runs. SECOND INNING .BOSTON — No runs. ST. LOUIS - No runs. THIRD INNING BOSTON — Lonborg struck out; Foy singled to left; Andrews’ bunt was bobbled by Shannon for an error, Foy moving to second; Yastrzemski called directed against any specific corporation, but it could include GM.” Reuther also told the news conference that “if there is no significant change in the company’s attitude in the next week or 10 days. Ford Motor Co. will have made a policy decision to force a long strike.’' * Sr ★ And in that case, he said, “it might equal or exceed the one we had at General Motors.” Dem Loyalty Oath for Confab Sought WASHINGTON (API-Western Democrats moved today to write into their 1968 Chicago convention rules a loyalty oath pledging delegates to sgpporj the party presidential nominee. ■k -k k ■ Aimed primarily at Vietnam war Critics—some of whom want to dump President Johnson—the proposed pledge also would affect civil rights dissenters in the South. Sr Sr * California National Committeeman Eugene Ll Wyman said representatives' \ of 13 Western states, meeting in ad-1 vance of the National Committee’s formal ratification of the choice of Chicago for the convention site, voted unanimously to back a loyalty oath under which individual delegates would have to give their word that they would support the ticket in the general election. * EX-BRITISH LEADER DEAD—Clement Attlee. 84, father of the British welfare state and prime minister from 1945 to 195), died yesterday in a London hospital. His ashes will be placed in Westminster Abbey, burial place of the nation’s sovereigns and statesmen. (See story, page A-2.) News Flash WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of Transportation Alan S. Boyd has asked the nation’s governors what the impact would be in their states if the $4.4 billion federal-aid highway programs were cut by as much as one-half. Red Sox Hoping to Stay Alive out on strikes; Harrelson grounded to left for a single, scoring Foy and moving Andrews to second; Scott hied to right. One run, two hits, two left. ST. LOUIS - No runs. FOURTH INNING BOSTON - No runs. ST. LOUIS - No runs, FIFTH INNING ST. LOUIS - No runs. BOSTONfggNo runs. ' SIXTH INNING BOSTON - No runs. ST. LOUIS - No runs. First Caller Bought Everything for $175 •We must have had 20 calls from’ our Press Want Ad. The first caller bought all hand tools and machinery.” Mr. E. W. PRESS WANT ADS comprise the daily “marketplace” for thousands of people. Their offerings amount to a gigantic shopping list from which they make their selections. What do you have to sell? Dial 332*8181 or 3344981 A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER % 1967 Trial Starts for 18 in '64 Rights Deaths MERIDIAN, Miss. fAP) —i No state charges ever wereiphers could not' go onto the I the FBI dug the victims’ bul-Jury selection begins today in brought in the case.' block where the courthouse is let-riddled bodies from' a new the trial of 18 men charged in) Defendants "include Neshoba'located, in the downtown post earthen dam on a farm about the deaths of three civil rights,County Sheriff Lawrence Rai-|office building. eight miles southwest of Phila- workers at Philadelphia, Miss.,'ney, 43, Chief Deputy Cecilj * * * delphia 44 days later, in 1964. [Price, 28, Sheriff-elect Ethel | " Signs on all comers tell news + + +. A special 350-member venirejGlen “Hop” Barnette, 47, all ofjcamermen that the area, includ-| Nineteen men were indicted was summoned to federal court, nearby Philadelphia, and Sam’ About 200 were expected to re- Holloway Bowers Jr., 42, of main vafter routine exemptions. Laurel, described as the.impe-* * * rial wizard of the White Knights The charge, strongest possible of the Ku Klux Klan. under federal law, accuses the * ★ ★ 18 of .conspiracy to violate the U.S. Dist. Judge Harold Cox, civil rights of Michael Schwer- who dismissed the charges once ner, 23, and Andrew Goodman, only to have the U.S. Supreme “1, both white New Yorkers, and! Court overrule him, set strict ing the sidewalk, is off limits, but one of them-James E. Jor- John Doar, the Justice De-’dan, 40—will not go on trial partment’s chief civil rights i here. His case is under the jur-counsel, heads the prosecution, isdiction of the U.S. District The government had about 100 court for northern Florida, witness ready*, tetify. | WITNESS PROTECTED Jordan has been whisked in 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.” “It was a part of the plan and purpose of the conspiracy that Deputy Price while'having the trio in the Neshoba County jail would release them from custody at such time that he, Price, Jimmy Arledge, Horace Doyle Barnette, Travis Maryn Barnette, Alton Wayne Roberts, Jimmy Snowden, Billy Wayne Posey .and Jerry McGrew Sharpe could and would intercept, Schwerner, Chaney and Both the prosecution and the UPPmRMH, SHRHI BUU defense were armed with a'and out, under FBI protection, ( G^manuponm^ The - background study on each pros-) to testify before the federal i area of the Neshoba County jail James E. Shaney, 21, a Meridi-procedures for newsmen and pective juror. grand jury which returned the and threaten, assault shoot and an Negro. - (photographers covering the * * ★ jindictments. (kill them,” the indictment said. Maximum punishment under trial. | The government said Deputy * ★ ★ ★ * ★ the 1820 Reconstruction-era law, j ★ * * . Price arrested the three victims The indictment charged all 19! Others named Included', Ber- ts 10 years in prison and a $5,000) Among the restrictions on on a speeding charge on June with conspiring “to injure, op-jnard L. Akin, Olen L. Burrage fine. No federal charge of mur- newsmen is that they cannot en-der can be brought except when ter or leave the courtroom ex-the deaths occur on “federal cept -during recess, property. ?Jj Cox ordered that photogra- 21, 1964, held them at Philadel- phess, threaten and intimidate’ phia about four hours, then re- the trio “in the exercise and en-leased them where they could Ijoyment of the rights and privi- be seized and murdered. j leges secured to them by the James T,. Harris, Frank Herndon, , Edgar Ray Killen, Herman Tucker and Richard Andrew Willis, U.S. Envoy Leaving Ecuador Under Fire QUITO, Ecuador (AP) — U.S.i “The Ecuadorian government Ambassador Wymberley DeR. saw itself forced to ask for his ■ withdrawal to protect the na- Coerr prepared to leave Ecuador today after the Ecuadorian government requested his withdrawal for what it called “publicly and openly criticizing” President Otto Arosemena Gcfmez. Ecuador’s complaint was over a speech in which Coerr, 54, defended the Alliance for Progress and called it a success in Ecuador. Arosemena had criticized the American program i^H speech two weeks ago. G/r/,.3, Hurt os Shotgun Is Fired ot Home A 3-year-old girl was injured by a shotgun blast fired through the front door of her home early yesterday, it was reported to Pontiac police. Investigators said Tina Tover, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Nick Tover of 259 S. Anderson, suffered a head wound when someone shot into the house from outside about 2 a.m. She is reported in satisfactory condition in Pontiac General Hospital. Trimi Rodriguez, 16, of Utica told police he was holding the child on his lap when the shot smashed through the front doorj tional dignity and demand the respect due by a foreign envoy to the chief of state,” a Foreign Office statement said. Coerr, a career minister and member of the Foreign Service since 1939, spoke Friday at the American School in Guayaquil. Ecuador asked Washington Saturday to have him out of the country by tonight. REQUEST, ‘UNJUSTIFIED’ The U.S. State Department said that under traditional diplomatic practice its only possible response is withdrawal of the ambassador. It considers Ecuador’s request “to be unjustified by the circumstances” but added that ft sees ho reason to ask Ecuador’s ambassador to withdraw in retaliation. Coerr said he was sorry that his sudde^ departure made it impossible for him to fay good-by to “my colleagues and good Ecuadorean friends.' Coerr’s speech did not name! DR.HAROLD SPONBERG 2 PAUF Units Start Drives Wednesday The commercial and manufacturing divisions of the Pontiac Area United Fund will kick off Wednesday, with a noon lun- 4 Motorcyclists Shot, 25 Arrested at Party ELMER H. REYNOLDS Death Claims City Retailer One of Pontiac’s pioneer businessmen, Elmer H. Reynolds, died yesterday at the age of 85. Mr. Reynolds was co-owner (with his son of the Pontiac Glass Co., 23 W. Lawrence, one Of the city’s oldest downtown businesses. The company, YPSILAIWI (AP)—Four mo- farm about tour mile, north orcyclists, including one worn-Ypsilanti. Eieht women and . g retailer-ana glazing an, were shot and wounded Suit- two juveniles were among those! r » *" day night in a gun battle which|arrested. Their ages ranged iana uwnty' contractor in Pontiac and Oak- climaxed an all-day beer party from 16 to 35, he said, of several motorcycle clubs. | Charges of felonious assault Washtenaw County Sheriff:were expected to be filed against Douglas Harvey said 25 persons | several of them, police said, were arrested at the scene of gig||g|Mgj|MajMg| the shoot out, an abandoned U.S. Jets Hit N. Viet Airstrip A Pontiac businessman for 50 years, he served on the Salva-Army’s Board of Directors for 42 years before his death. Reynolds was honored for his service last April. He was also a member of the First Presbyterian Church of Pontiac, Exchange Club, the Sheriff’s deputies, Michigan State Police and Ypsilanti police converged on the scpne after three men rushed up to two city patrolmen at a drive-in restaurant and shouted, “They’re shooting. Three are shot al-!boar<* o{ trustees of Clinton ready. We need some help.”. (Valley Boy Scouts and the old When, officers arrived, shots!Osskland Motor Car Co. band rang out from the farmhouse, where he was drum major. Police returned the fire, then ★ ★ ★ l threw a spotlight beam on the Service for Reynolds, 21 Eliz-6th 'Restricted' Target house and ordered the people abeth Lake, will be 1:30 p.m. out; Wednesday at Donelson-Johns Bombed in Five Days “We’U come out if we’re sure Funeral Home with burial at you’re police,” a voice came Oak Hill Cemetery, from inside. “Show us the gum SAIGON (AP) — U.S. Navy ball (scout car roof-light)." fighter-bombers struck a North A red light was flashed, and wviuwvio « 41VIUI « uglll noa UdMICU, W Vietnamese MIG airfield near the motorcyclists came ou.t. cheon at the Elks Temple, 114 Haiphong Sunday, the-sixth in- The wounded were found in a Orchard Lake. The total goal of the two divisions is $323,969. Some 400 commercial and the Ecuadorian president but it manufacturing solicitors will stallation hit in five straight nearby barn, which apparently days of raids on targets once j had been the target of gunfire ruled by the Pentagon as out of (from the house before police bounds off U.S. warplanes, arrived. They included a woman SURVIVORS j* Surviving ace his son, Gordon . Reynolds of Pontiac; one sister, and one grandson. The family requests that memorials be made to the William H. Marbach Memorial Fund of did quote a number of remarks | bear the feature speaker, Dr. (The strike that dug wide craters'whose leg was shattered by a the First Presbyterian Church m&rlA k«» - AMnnwiAnn HarnlH I?. SnAnhurff nrAcirtpnt in+n ika PnAnnli KniU1 ini shotgun blast. — - .. made by Arosemena as Harold E. Sponberg, president (into the French-built' jet strip published in Ecuador’s newspa- of Eastern Michigan University, at Cat Bi left untouched only pers. | Or. Sponberg, a national ora-wo bases in the North capable Arosemena had complained tory winner and an author, has | launching MIG interceptors, about high interest rates for (been active in civic work since | 1952', when he received his doc-1 tbe ground war, an Ameri-tors degree in philosophy at(can platoon fought out of a sur-Michigan State University. j rounded position in rainswept , jungles and Communist mortar- Damel T. Murphy, commer- men fire on gg major cial division chairman, will be Army-Navy base in the Mekong or to the Salvation Army. Fire Hits Bar-Hotel in Waterford Twp. loans, high costs for materials that had to be bought in the United States and the cost of the services of U.S, technicians under the Alliance for Progress. In his speech, Coerr said in- window wounding Tina andjterest rates were 1 per cent ^“c^on which j? sponsored by showering glass-around themi in the first year and 2.5 per cent . *\ both. thereafter. He said that of ttfei «f fhJ Neart,y in the , delta, a today by the Waterford Town-I He suffered superficial cuts,(total of $216 million in alliancedMriiln chX!l?°'ye»?ld1Bud^hisln.un burnedjship fire marshal. were called to the master of ceremonies at the I De)ta A fire which led to an estimated $3,000 to $4,000 loss at (Jayson’s, Dixie Highway (Hatchery is being investigated British Mourn FormerLeader Birmingham Area News Hearing Slated Tonight on Ann Street Relocation BIRMINGHAM - A proposed special assessment district for the relocation of Ann Street between Landon and Lincoln has been strongly opposed by several property owners, and a hearing on the matter will be held tonight at 8 p.m. in the route Ann Street around/this last section in order to have the two pieces of property adjacent. The objections charge that Patterson would be the only benefactor of the relocation/ At the City Commission meet- commission room of the Muni-“n8 tonight Birmingham resi-cipal Building. (dents will hear the announce- * 6 * * mentpf a Michigan Public Serv- The relocation is proposed byjjc® Commission hearing regard-Charles Patterson having busi- *n8 ^e cont‘nuance of a De-ness property facing on Wood- troit-Pontiac Grand Trunk corn-ward as well as property just muter train begun on a trial across the east side of A n n, busts last April and the addi-Street. Patterson wants to re- t*on ®f four new trains to ter- Safety Chief Suggests Car minate at Birmingham. The hearing is set for Friday in the Detroit Court of Appeals, 900 First Federal Savings and Loan Association Building, Detroit. ADDITIONS PETITIONED lDPPn Control The railroad is petitioning to add four trains leaving Detroit at 8 a.m. and 2 p.m. and leav-WASHINGTON (UPI) — Dr. ing Birmingham at 9 a.m. and William Haddon Jr., the fed-|2:40 p.m. These are planned spe-eral highway safety chief, has! cifically as “shoppers” commu-suggested that automobiles be ters and would be initiated Oct. built in the future with speed:28. governors to prevent them from going faster than 80 or 90 miles per hour. Haddon, who administers federal auto safety standards, said built-in speed governor would have considerable safety payoff, particularly in those cars where a bunch of kids who were either joyriding or trying to get a why from police either kill themselves or someone else.” a .copyrighted Interview with U.S. News and World Report, Haddon said it was technically possible to equip a car “so that it would perform normally np to very close to the speed limit biiilt into the car." “The technology would similar to that now widely used in controls available as an option on some models that dri% ers use to set and sustain highway speeds,” he said. Officerss.,0.‘ PS ■ ^ Police, who are continuing an lion had to be spent in the Unit-' ’ ’ DaDer said, the second suicide:-------- LONDON (AP) - The ashes of Gement Attlee, father of the British welfare state will be placed in Westminster Abbey, burial place of the BatlblTs Haddon said he could see no reason why passenger cars should be designed to run at speeds far in excess of any legal speed limit in any part of the country. NOT MATURE “A foreign manufacturer recently bragged that his car would do 170 miles an hour. I do not regard that as a mature behavior on anyone’s part, driver or manufacturer,” Haddon said. Manville Dies; Had I Wives NEW YORK UPT-p Tommy Manville, playboy of the Roar-’20s and Depression ’30s whose marriages and monetary^ settlements made headlines forSj,, almost five decades, died yesterday of a heart attack. He was 73. With him at the end was his 11th and last wife, the former Christina Erdlen, 26, at their Westchester County residence in Chappaqua, some 30 miles north of Manhattan. Manville took his first wife, a chorus girl, in 1911 when he was 17, and his last In 1960. He remarried twice, was divorced 10 times, and widowed once. He was heir to a $10-million asbestos fortune, and his divorce settlements cost him in the neighborhood of $1.5 million. 'Marrying Manville” was no misnomer for the son of the founder and chairman of the Johns-Manville Corp. PENCHANT FOR SHOWGIRLS He had a decided, and oft-announced, penchant for showgirls, squiring dozens and marrying five of them. As for his settlements, the fre 1 e ss mfth-about-town re-marked, “Manville is not Investigation, said they could ed States and only half of 1 not determine how the assail-per cent was needed to pay U.S. ant fled the scene. I technicians. . vice chairmen JoseDh PoeDichal Sa,'d’ the sfC0!Cd .su*cide|combination bar-restaurant and vice chairmen Joseph Po^cha!,^ fire in a week_during the|hotel about 7 p m yegterday The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Cloudy and continued chilly with occasional light rain and showers at times today, tonight and tomorrow. High today 48 to 55. Low tonight 40 to 51. Wednesday: variable cloudiness and continued cool. Southwest to west winds 10 to 20 miles and gusty today. Precipita-n probabilities today, tonight and tomorrow, 30 per cent. Henry Gotham, Fred Robertson, T. Gordon Scupholm and Wayne Michelson. Vice chairmen appointed by Murphy for the commercial division are: George Stout, chapter plans; Richard Fitzgerald, small teams; John Pagen, education; John Witherup, government; John B. Wilson, professional. This year’s total United Fund goal is $1,130,000 which will help operate 55 local, state and national agencies. . drive by militant Buddhists to Miami Bch. 84 77 ‘ Firemen Begin Safety Drive force the government to abandon a charter recognizing a moderate faction in the church. The Cat Bi strike damaged a Soviet-built liaison plane, but the U.S. Command said the carrier-based jets found no MIGs on the ground as they flew in “virtually unopposed.” MONSOON RAINS The raid was part of a maximum U.S. effort to cripple the North before the monsoon rains start this month and cut flying time by as much as 75 per cent. Since Wednesday, U.S. planes have also hit three bridges on supply routes from Red China and two fuel dumps, all previously barred as too sensitive to attack. The blaze is believed to have started in a linen closet of the bar, which is closed on Sunday. Jay Beres, the owner, said fire damage was not severe, but water and smoke damage contributed to his estimate of the they smelled smoke. No one ; peace he served his sovereigns was injured. Iwell.’' The two major MIG bases still on the forbidden list are the Gia Am installation and the big The Pontiac Fire Department is launching a year-round cam- SSSXSX jjlpaignfor fire Mfety in conjunc-Am inSia.iai.on ana me Dig c a 11 S£Jork M £ tion with the 8tart 6f National Phuc Yen base which houses ...—1!— .. .. ------- .. iFire Prevention Week today. the North Vietnamese air Officials described the con- force’s major operations center 44 E Francisco 75 it tfnual program as a concentrat-“ “ ed effort to teach fire preven-" " lion principles. Firemen will visit city elementary schools during the week, showing a film to students and delivering a talk, according to Fire Chief Charles Mdrion. and serves as headquarters for the air defense command. Both are near Hanoi. Autopsy Set in Fatal Crash Archie Reinhardt, 63, of Birch Run was dead on arrival at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital following a one-car accident on Woodward north of Lone Pine at , NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are expected from New England through the Lakes region tonight. Showers are forecast also along the North Carolina coast and in southern Florida. Drizzle is expected along the northern Pacific Coast. ‘ It Wl)l be cooler from tbe mid-Atlantic coastal states into the southeastern region of the country. The same type of program will be available to civic groups and other schools throughout the year. As part of the same policy, which Marion said is aimed at ‘making the public more fire 515 p m *yeste*rday* safety conscious,” voluntary home inspections by firemen will be initiated in the coming months. “this way we get the younger set more interested in fire prevention and we also give their parents the opportunity to hav'e their homes checked for possi- ble trouble areas,” Marion said, attack. According to Bloomfield Hills police, witnesses said Reinhardt,, who was northbound on Woodward, slumped at the wheel, and his car went off the road and struck a free. An autopsy is being performed to determine if he might have suffered a heart Other safety features the gov-... i ernment some day may require1 sovereigns and statesmen. jfor a„ automobn£ buf,t the n * * * [United States, include roofs cheaP- At ,east 1 keeP ™y Attlee, prime minister from (which will not collapse when a money *B circulation.” 1945 to 1951, died yesterday in a car rolls over, taillights of a different color ‘ than brake ti lights, auto seats for infants, ‘ headrests to prevent “whip- < lash” injuries, and more pad- ( ding on the Inside of cars, he H said. Several tenants living above the bar left the building when London hospital after a long illness. He was 84. Tributes continued to pour in from all over the world today. The Queen said Attlee “made an enduring place for himself in the history of our country and the Commonwealth. In war and He spent other millions maintaining what he called his honeymoon cottage” a luxurious estate in New Rochelle called Bon Repos-Good Rest. He sold it in 1955. Eventually, he predicted, cars will be made so safe that death serious injury would be averted at speeds of less than 50 miles per hour. He often said that, in addi-. tion to the millions his father left him, he had “lots of shares of Johns-Manville,” and added: That's where I got most of my dough.” Hopefuls Plentiful for New Judicial Posts (Continued From Page One) “Financing and selfish Interest are the two major stumbling blocks facing the Legislature,” Lodge said. Committee last week said they could care less if the city courts are abolished. Jt has been tentatively estimated that it will cost approximately $25 million to set up a court system throughout the state. They reason that they will Just become a candidate for one of the higher paying district court positions, probably winning it easily because their name is known to the public.' “Experience should be rewarded by permitting attorney justices to be designated incumbents,” said Hempstead. MIXED FEELINGS The other problem facing the lawmakers has been raised by officials of municipalities, who-, are fearful their .cities will lose considerable revenue if municipal courts are abolished and no provision made for the channeling of court money back into the communities. Verne C. Boewe, a municipal judge in Warren and president of the Michigan Municipal Judges Association, said that this would be the case as far as he was concerned. Royal Oak Municipal Judge Keith Leenhouts suggested that the Incumbent problem could be overcome If a judge in office would be allowed to select the term of office, with others falling in behind for other terms if they felt the odds were too great. LITTLE WEIGHT Some, proponents of eliminating the municipal courts say that cities shouldn't make a “profit” from justice, but this argument carries little weight with city officials who emphasize it isn’t a surplus and generally goes toward the operation of their police departments. “There are mixed feelings among members of the association, and we have passed no resolution in connection with the matter,“"said Boewe. Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson, who reportedly is considering a district judgeship, said he was in favor of a unified court system because it would be less of a burden on his staff. •3 SUBDIVISIONS I He pointed out that in Oakland County there are 63 political subdivisions each “Generally a judge in a large city that could comprise one election district believes he is assured election," -Boewe explained. “It’s a different story An official from Howell told the committee his city couldn’t afford to lose municipal court revenue because it has been earmarked to pay off' parking up north where one district may take in several counties and any number of municipalities.” While municipalities are attempting to hold on to their courts, a few municipal judges testifying before the Judiciary Waterford Township Justice of Peace Kenneth Hempstead, expressing a desire to be a candidate, recommended that the committee change its earlier proposal to allow judges in offices to use the word incumbent on the ballot. with some type of court that , must be handled by his 17 assistant prosecutors. Noting that the Legislature is considering paying $20,000 to district judges and allowing the county to supplement it up to $27,500, Bronson said that he was of the' opinion that the job of judge must be a full-time position. H can envision a number of circuit judges quitting to run (for district judge) if they could practice part-time,” said Branson. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 9. 1967 i 20 Arrested, Including Gregory 30 Hurt in Milwaukee Clashes A—3 Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. THE CAMPAIGNER—President Johnson reaches for the outstretched hands of well-wishers at th# Williamsburg, Va., golf course tonight before boarding a helicopter for his j MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP» -Police clashed twice with open housing demonstrators in Milwaukee’s Virtually all-Negro inner core Sunday night. Thirty j < persons were injured, including! ia policeman hit by a rock. | Police arrested 20 marchefSr Among them was Negro come-' dian Dick Gregory, a leader of the protests, now in their 3rd day. , ; The violence was the first to flare in this .racially troubled city since mid-September de-! spite nightly marches, and; countermarches by opponents of open housing. A shotgun blast shattered the' 'windows of a police car in the ap wirephoto j neighborhood of the disturb-return to Washington. The executive was in .ances ,The offic"rs in th,e M the Virginia city to address an international ;lowed the incident education conference Others in the picture I CENTER 0F STREET j are members of the Secret Service. , .. j , , .... Most of those arrested, includ- ing Gregory, were seized after, about 400 marchers moved from! the sidewalk into the center of j the street in opposition to police! orders. Earlier, police moved in on. ve demonstrators when they at-smpted to approach a band of! white opponents of open housing j also marching in the inner core where most of Milwaukee's 86,000 Negores live. Three open housing marchers] were arrested in that clash. The rival groups had been parading on opposite sides of the same street. A Roman Catholic priest, the Rev, Russell Witon, a hospital chaplain, was among those in the white march, At a rally on the virtually all-white south side pfter the march, Father Witon told about 90, demonstrators: “We’re not! going to stand by and let any, savages move into^tur neighborhoods even if it takes force. Un-j til we have organization, you will be under the black claw of rabble-rousing no goodetrs.” Milwaukee’s Common Council four times in the past has re-, jected open housing ordinances. Oii Johnson Deplores War in Speech to Educators W1LILIAMSBURG, Va. (AP) edge of the world can be stored — President Johnson stepped on microfilm and channeled from his helicopter into Vir- through computers and commu-ginia’s elegantly restored co- nications links to give every na-lonial capital and deplored a lion the best in libraries and world in whic-h “We have fought1 original research, he said, among ourselves like animals.’’; TRAIN TO LEARN ; Rapid expansion of such new “In this century.” Johnson techniques of learning are vital, told an International Convention Johnson said, if educators hope on the World Crisis in Education to ‘Train a young man’s eyes to Sunday night, “man has spent absorb learning as quickly as literally trillions of dollars on we can train his finger to pull a the machinery of death and trigger." war., nearly 100 million people • The ultimate question, he have died in the maiming and said, is "how to shape a world disease which come with war.” in which men employ their ★ * ★ I minds in projects of peace— He told the 200 educators from instead °f icing their bod-54 nations the world must face on the field of batt1e ' the shocking contrast of the fact, that in an era of unparalleled] affluence “most people endi their lives unable to write ‘cat’ or ‘dog.’ ^ NEW 7-FT. 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Genuine KODAK pre-paid mailers at thrs.fast chance price. Limit 10 per person. The best minds of the present age can be made available to all through educational television A relayed through satellite com- ~ munication. the President sug- ^ gested The cumulative knowl- S. Viet Bans Magazine Issue SAIGON (AP) - The South Vietnamese government hast banned an issue of Newsweek 4 magazine for an article that the military regime says “consti- 4 tutes a deliberate and extremely grave offense against the armed forces of the Republic of Vietnam." * * * 4 The order, which does not affect copies sold in official American establishments, came after I ^ most of the 3,000 copies of the Oct. 9 issue received here were 4 sold. Newsweek's article criti-j dzing the army was titled, “Their Lions, Our Rabbits.” ; a * * * A government communique conceded that the South Viet-namese- armed forces could be1 4 improved but said “freedom cannot cbhdone press sensation-] alism at the expense of men who fight and die on the battle-1 field." :\4 povde U LUMBER CO. DO-IT-YOURSELF WEEKLY GARAGE SPECIAL Gable Front 22'x24' GARAGE Delivered Cash Prince 00 •414 Gurov* Door ond Comotit Not Included FREE Garage Plans Available CALL FE 4-1594 or Stop in Personally at 151 Oakland Ave. Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Domestics to Brighten Your Home For the Winter Months at SIMMS Low Prices Prices Good Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday 100% French Super Crimp Rayon Bath Mat and Cover Set Irrs. of Better Quality Hand and Bath Towels ‘EMPIRE’ 4x40 Sport Binoculars 50% Nylon, 50% DacronH Polyester Bath Mat & Cover Set wmBBk 249 Goos size and power—clear, sharp viewing. Grey and black finish with chrome trim. With case. 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Layaway for Christmas Gifts Now! Chrome Portable Mixer 3-SPEED Dyna-Torque Motor 2-Speed Electric Blender 1 52-Oz. Capacity II North ttroot A § Solution to Oxford-Lake Orion Disposal Problem? I I “ ' ;------i —— ---S--------<• ! Paint Creek Sewer Interceptor Proposed THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 A—4 faaHem SHELBY TOVVNSHIP - Fire Chief Clyde Schmidt has accepted a salary of $11,200 retroactive to July 1. Twice last week he asked for $12,000 and the Township Board refused. The fire chief said he wasn’t satisfied with the offer but had no further comment. V The $11,200 offer was made by the board at a special meeting last Monday night and again at the regular meeting on Tuesday. Both times Schmidt flatly rejected the offer claiming that the .traditional sal-’' ary is based on a 50 per cent increase over the lowest firemen’s pay, which is $8,000. , ★, * a Township Supervisor Kirby Holmes was the only board member voting against jsven the $11,200 pay which gave Schmidt a $1,200 increase over his present salary. ^ MAKES COMPARISON " "v Holmes argued that Schmidt shouldn’t get the $12,000 because he only has 17 men under him while the Warren Police' Chief ylth 167 men gets $12,732. Schmidt’s acceptance will probably reflect the salary of Police Chief Robert W. Smith who has also asked for $12,000. Action was delayed on Smith’s raise since the police budget isn’t set yet whereas the fire budget is. ★ ★ Schmidt’s new salary is a 12 per cent hike compared to an average'of 15 per cent for the men under him. He has been fire chief for 10 years and is the president of the Southeastern Michigan Association of Fire Chiefs. Troy Adult Workshop on Parties Is Renamed TROY — The Troy Adult Education workshop cplled “Facets of Sparkling Entertainment,” has been renamed “Party P’s and Q’s.” The six-week program which begins tomorrow at 7 p.m. in Troy High School room 120 is new to the schedule this fall. , ★ ★ * ■ The course is offered through the cooperation of t h e Qakland Community College under the direction of Dorothy Thomson. The fee is $10. shinglp building has risen f*» the burned-out area on Oxford Business Battles Back OXFORD — What local businessmen can do without outside help has been ably demoifttrated here. efi Faced in January 1966 with a $250,000 fire which destroyed two stores and damaged a third along Washington Street, the localites saw die area sit in disrepair until last January. At that time four men, Francis Baldwin, owner of the Party Shop, Gerald Olrich of the Oxford Lumber and Coal Co., Dr. Rodman Jacobi and William Matus, executive director of Camp Oakland, decided to do something about it. They purchsed the property at 28 S. Washington and have succeeded in erecting a mall-type cedar shingle building containing a total of 7,200, feet 'of floor space. A sewer problem was solved with the construction of septic tanks under the mall. Acheson Jewelers has moved into the front lower half of the building and the Oxford Board of Education has signified 1 will occupy the top floor beginning Nov. 1 The rear of the first floor, abutting the mall, remains unoccupied. Acheson Jewelers is looking forward to its grand opening in the new location Friday and Saturday. An Oxford establishment since 1928, the jewelers have relocated from their previous address six doors north of the new building. A remodeling job in the third store adjacent to the new building has provided a furniture outlet for the Gamble Store, whose headquarters remain across the street. for the 8 p.m. Band at Rochester one w mo new umiorms, directs David Jones and Martha house and its fiht business meeting pnwwd*. Ginni Iff® &fUS H* ** * T T*"' ™“" " « “» StffSJt ’ Helping Hand Program will he shown » Pontiac Pron Photo tone of the new uniforms, directs David Jones and Martha Deadline Nov. 7 in Avon's Charter Commission Race / AVON TOWNSHIP - Would-be city charter commission members for the proposed city of Avon have until 4 p.m. Nov. 7 to file petitions with the county clerk’s office. Township Clerk Mrs. Thelma Spencer said such petitions must bear 20 signatures of registered voters and be accompanied by an affidavit of identity Papers are available at the township office. K The name? will be on the ballot with the question of incorporation for the township in the Jan. 15 election. Mrs. Spencer said the last date for registration to vote in the election is Dec. Keith PTA to Meet The Parent Teacher Association of Keith Elementary Sqhool, 2800 Keith, West Bloomfield Township, will hold open house and its fltst business meeting WasHl’t AOffl a *r n( 9i4A — M A jttl— Am The disposal of sewage upstream from Lake Orion and the interconnected lakes is extremely difficult, according to the engineering report, since there is no continuing stream flow to which treated waste may be discharged. For that reason two other solutions were studied for the Oxford area. They included the lagoon system with disposal by spray irrigation and the lagoon system with disposal into Paint Creek. ★ • * * The large amounts of land needed for such operations were counted against • the feasibility of their use. The further method of discharging effluence into Paint Creek would call for further refinement of the sewage than is possible in a lagoon system, engineers reported. 160 ACRES NEEDED In combining its study with Lake Or- The Paint Creek Interceptor, if constructed, would pass through Oakland Township and would be available t o them for possible service. Johnson and Anderson report t h a t the extent of the latter's needs has not been determined at this time. The report continues, “It can be assumed, however, that Oakland Township participation would be to the mutual advantage of all concerned since additional capacity can be provided at little or no cost.” * * * It concludes, “We have not stressed the advantages to the village of Lake Orion and the township of Orion. However, we believe that the problem of sewage disposal is area wide and that individual community disposal systems can only be stop-gap measures which must eventually be abandoned in favor of an area wide solution." Novi Councilman: Decision on Quitting to Be Surprise NOVI — Councilman Joseph Crupi, the village’s former president for some six years, said his decision on whether to resign from the council "will be a surprise.” I He said he had no further comment. While angrily opposing recent council approval of a method to levy sewer fees, Crupi had said he would resign. However, Crupi’s resignation isn’t effective until he submits it in a registered letter to the village clerk and the council acts -upon it, said Village Manager Harold Ackley. * a “The village office has neither heard from nor seen Crupi since the Oct. 2 council meeting,” Ackley reported. AMENDMENT APPROVED The other four councilmen unanimous? ly approved Oct. 2 an ordinance amendment, for a graduated sewer availability connection fee. The original ordinance had set up a uniform $300 fee per property owner. After the resolution was made to accept the amendment, Crupi called the council “stupid” and walked out, recalled Ackley. Crupi had criticized Village Attorney Howard I. Bond’s wording of the amendment. Helping Hand Program will be shown. ‘VERY CAPABLE’ “Mr. Bond is very capable of preparing ordinances,” Ackley asserted. Crupi also objected to “the failure of the council to uniformly apply the original ordinance.” “Slome people had to pay and others d»d not in substantially the same situa-/tionst” he said. / There Is much more to these objec-j t*ons, which "would take several hours to explain,” Crupi said. 2-YEAR CONTROVERSY Ackley said that this controversy has been brewing for two years. “It is the problem oyer the method of levying sewer -charges for residents not in a special assessment district,” explained the village manager. ’ Property owners served by sewers in a special assessment district have already paid their share for the sewers, said attorney Bond. The $300 uniform fee was set in April 196& afjdrthe Michigan Supreme Court PTA Meeting Tonight The Parent Teacher Association of Milford and Baker elementary schools, Huron Valley School District, will hold its first general meeting tonight at 8 at Baker, 716 N. Union, Milford. A representative from the Mott Center for Community Affairs at Oakland University will discuss “Are Schools for Everyoffe?” ruled that special assessments couldn't be levied for sewer mains already in the ground, said Ackley. Residents outside a district can hook into the mains financed by the special assessments. However, the previously uniform fee dws not allow for sewer installation cost differences due to varying land conditions and nearness to interceptors explained Ackley. The council will use special assessment levies — which reflect the varying costs - as a guide In determining the graduated fee, said Ackley. The specific guide would be the levy In the assessment district nearest the property owner who is going to be billed, said Ackley. „ Bond estimates that the new fee will begin at $300 per property owner. He said that the highest special assessment district in the village has an assessment of $2,200 per property owner. The new method of assessing persons outside a district should “equalize fees in that particular area,” said the attorney. Different areas can't help but tave differftit tap-in fees to the main inter-ceptor. Bond said. These fees are included in a special assessment. , Home owners can pay the fee to be set by the council at once or over several years. Businesses must pay the total fee at once, said Bond. Sesquicentennial Fete Ends inJJtica UTICA The city wound up its week-long Sesquicentennial Celebration yesterday with a huge 175-unit parade down Cass and Auburn. It was viewed by some 10,000 area residents whose enthusiasm remained undampened by a cloudburst. Sesqui Chairman Jerome Donahue issued his thanks from the committee to everyone who participated and gave their time to the celebration. “We are very pleased with the oyer-all result — the cooperation was great, and we think the activities helped weld the community togetHer. The weather was great all week, too, except for a little rain yesterday.” Yesterday’s parade at 2:30 p.m. was marshaled by Congressman James O’Hara and leading off was the new Adlai Stevenson High School band in its first public appearance. * ‘ * ★. Mayor Fred Beck and city councilmen appeared in a horse-drawn wagon. Sesqui Queen Mrs. Dorothy Kaiser and her court rode in one of the many floats entered by schools, churches and clubs Antique cars, fire trucks, many bands and clowns made up some of the other entries. the area will stunt the excluded communities’ growth, end will not give adequate pollution projection to the area,” reads the report. As suggested, the new interceptor would hook onto the proposed Paint Creek Arm of the Clinton-Oakland interceptor north of Rochester in Avon township. - It would proceed northwesterly along Paint Creek thrpugh Oakland and Orion townships to Lake Orion thpn westerly and north to connect with the planned location of the Oxford arm of the interceptor along Drahner. ion, the engineers found that 160 acres would be required for a holding pond and treatment plant. A report of high operational costs due to the need for chemical treatment for nutrient removal and the estimate of a 24,000 to 26,000 population as the maximum which would be served and still not pollute Paint Creek has caused the latter solution to be rejected in favor of the interceptor. While the details of financing the solutions were not made a pert of the report, it was noted that an* Oxford village and township treatment facility would run about'$1,430,164 at an annual cost of $129,000. The combined Oxford-Orion system wp pegged at $3,496,341 with a total, annual cost to the four communities of $294,000. INTERCEPTOR COSTS The interceptor, designed for the year 2000, estimated at $3,447,888 would cost the participating communities $224,000 a year. By JEAN SAILE A new leg for the proposed Clinton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor?1 In the eyes of one area engineering firm, an immediate addition is “the logi- “ cal long-range solution to the sewage disposal problem of the (Oxford-Lake Orion) area.” A detailed study of the proposed new leg — the Paint Creek Interceptor — has been forwarded to the Oakland County Department of Public Works for study and possible action. Prepared by the Waterford Township engineering firm of Johnson and Ander- son, Inc., the report was made on the combined request of the township and village of Oxford. * * * ■? It advises that immediate steps be taken to secure capacity in the Clinton-Oakland Sewer and that application be made for federal planning assistance. Asked to study three means of sewage disposal, engineers h£fve opted for the interceptor over a purely local solution or one designed to also include the village of Lake Orion and Orion Township. “An interim solution by one, or more communities which excludes any part of Fire Chief Takes $11,200 Salary in Shelby Twp Johnson and Anderson, Inc., have recommended that it be built to accommodate the population of the area in the year 2000. If it were to be built for the ultimate needs of the area, Johnson and Ander-son, Inc., figures the cost would run $7,-056,812. A 42,000 population by the year 2000 in the Oxford-Orion area is foreseen as opposed to the current 12,600. However, engineers have plotted an ultimate popu-latioh for the area at 215,000 people. Constructed to meet the needs of the year 2000, the cost of the interceptor is plotted roughly at $3,447,888. This sum does not include the necessary right-of-way purchases. The main interceptor — the Clinton-Oakland — is currently waiting approval to sell $16.9 million in bonds and a contract with the Detroit Water Board is being drawn np by the Oakland County Department of Public Works. Acquisition of easements is continuing. It' will empty through the Macomb County Interceptor now in the process of preparing construction to Detroit treatment facilities. ★ ★ ★ It has been the aim, of Oakland County planners to build the northerly Paint Creek arm in about 10 to 20 years, after the Clinton-Oakland was functioning. Hard-pressed by citations from? the State Water Resources Commission in regard to pollution ,pf Paint Creek and area lakes and nudged by an ever-expanding population, the northerly communities are faced with the need to find a sewage solution immediately. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1067 A—5 PENNEYS MIRACLE MILE STORE HOURS 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.N CHARGE IT! Whats new for tomorrow it at SIN C E R today r SINGER DOWNTOWN PONTIAC 102 North Saginaw Phono 133-7929 *A Trademark of THE SINGER Former's Almanac Seer Sees Snow DUBLIN, N. H. (UPI) S Venerable forecaster Abe Weatherwise predicts a “whopper” of a white Christ, mas followed by a leap year only skiers will love. * ★ ★ Couched between yellow covers in the pocket-sized 176th edition of the old Farmer’s Almanac, the 1968 predictions of old but able Abe include a hurricane for-New England in mid - September that “may come in from the Carolinas.” Nonbelievers take note: Abe predicted last January’s big blizzard in the Midwest and the summer deluge which ended the drought in the East. Abe’s predictions for 1968, which also includes the winter of 1967, are not encouraging. ★ * A He envisages a “major coastal storm” this November while the last week of December “will keep a lot of. people home for Christmas.’.’ The new year will experience Snow until April and a cool August with bad storms. NOTE OF OPTIMISM But there is one note of optimism. Abe suggests holidays be taken in July because it “will be the best month for vacations." Having proven himself a success with New England weather predictions for well ‘nigh over a century, for the second consecutive year Abe has extended his forecast to cover eiglit climatic regions of the country. He predicts two heavy snow storms for the Midwest early in the year, “a dangerous storm of rain and wind” for the East except New England in'mid-April, heavy rainfall in late August for the Great Plains and May rainstorms in the Pacific Northwest. In the South, “it looks as if both Florida and Texas will be hit with hurricanes this year (1968) at least once.” Tornadoes are predicted for early March and April, The 148 - page, 50 - cent weather bible contains more than the nuances of sun, wind and water, however. While sitting under-a tree on one of the sunnier days of the year, there is an opportunity to leaf through Edgar Alien Poe’s “Hie Raven,” complete with woodcuts. Or, if in {^different mood, there is always the “origin of the shrunken head” to which to turn, or a table about the proper time to mate the cow, female buffalo, the boar or the stallion, etc. 1 Mishap Is Fatal MIAMI, Fla. ffl - Peter Marcum, 24, of Detroit died Sunday when his car went out of control and overturned into a canal in a remote section of South Florida’s Everglades, the the Florida State Highway Patrol reported. In I960, 29 per cent or 487,000 persons in Detroit were Negroes. At present, 33 per cent of the total population are Negroes. 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W. of Telegraph A—6 ONE COLOR THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 0, 196T Air Travel HasCome a Long Way By DICK KLEINER LOS ANGELES (NEA)—-Coast to coast commercial air service is 40 years old this year and it has come a long way in just four decades. Hardly anybody has to wear a parachute and hold a tnail bag on his lap any more. In these days and lobster and miniskirted stewardesses, a flight from one coast to the other is pleasant and commonplace. But in 1927 it was a rather uncomfortable adventure. ger in and among the,mail bags. They charged $200 for the trip. Coast-to-coast travel was then possible. Tickets on both lines were with the understanding the the plane became overloaded with mail, the passenger Would ■* champagne T2 gaudy giant it is today. But, back in 1027, there was nothing glamorous about it provided with flying suits, helmets, goggles and parachutes — but nothing to eat. It was recommended that the traveler invest in a sack lunch. In- that first year, 168 . made the New York-Chicago run on NAT, and 445 took the BAT plane for the Chicago-San Francisco flight. (As a point of comparison, in 1966 United carried more than 18 million people on its many flights.) LUXURY TOUCH The trip was long and Uncomfortable. The only luxury touch was NAT’s boast — it provided a Thermos bottle of cold water 'on hot days. The National and Boeing, together „ _ I with two other airlines, joined That P®ssen-|ffces in 1934 and became United ger, whose name is tort Lines. From then on, air New’ YwkMd Sa«PFrSci.co.,travel gradually grew into thelmay have needed the water to The time for the trip — a zippy ^ 32% hours. y There was, of course, no air-1| line which had that flight on If its timetable. In those days, the p few commercial carriers were § more interested in, transporting mail than people; there was more money in it. stave off thirst, for. thil was long trip. From New York, the stops were: Bellefonte, Pa.; Bryan, Ohio; Cleveland, Chicago (to change planes), Iowa City, Des Moines, Omaha, North Platte, Cheyenne, Rock Springs, Wyo.; Salt Lake City, Elko, ,Nev.; Reno, Sacramento, Oakland and, finally, San Francisco. Sometimes, in those pioneering days, the plane wouldn’t work or the mail load was so heavy the passenger litely eliminated. Thg airlines had a policy about this. They would take the passenger to the railroad station, see that he got on the right train, and meet him at the next scheduled stop, Maybe he would get lucky and catch the plane again tomorrow. ★ * ★ Weather, too, delayed the flights frequently. Very few passengers made the trip in the advertised 32% hours. But thing improved rapidly and, by 1931, flying was luxurious. Note the words of this description of flight then: * * * "The enclosed cabin with its wicker chairs and sliding dows for proper ventilation is very comfortable. The fact that cabin is enclosed makes conversation possible in an ordinary tone of voice.” From there, it’s only a step to the coffee-tea-or-milk paradise that is air travel today. But in July of 1927 Boeing Air g| Transport began regular service from San Francisco to Chicago, using a plane called the Boeing 40-A which had room for | two passengers. The fare was ! $204. The time was 22% hours. ROOM FOR ONE Then, in September, National Air Transport got a contract to carry mail between New York AIRLINER OF THE DAY — Back in and Chicago. They had a fleet 1930, the Boeing Monomail carried six pas-of ten Douglas M-4 biplanes sengers in a cabin forward of the pilot’s which had room for one passen- open cockpit. This was an improvement over the 1927 Boeing which carried two passengers who were likely to be bumped by the mail, but nobody could guess how far the airlines would continue to progress. PIN-WORMS I A FAMILY AFFAIR I Fidgeting, now-picking, a tormenting rectal itch ere often telltale eigne of Pin-Worm#...ugly parasite# that med-lcal expert# say lnleet 1 out of every S person# examined. Entire famillsa may be victims and not know it. To get rid of Pin-Worme, they must be kilted in the large intestine where they live and multiply.That’s exactly what Jayne's P-W tablets do... and here's how they do it: First—a scientific coating carries the tablets into the bowels before they dissolve. Then — Jayne's mod- Don’t take chances with danger- which infect entire families. Get genuine Jayne’s P-W Vermifuge .. small, eaSy-to-take tablets... speeds sizes for children and adults. PENNEYS MIRACLE MILE CHARGE IT! % THE PONTIAC PRESS MOXDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 THE THIN' DEFENSE U. 5. Identifies 13Casualties WASHINGTON MB - Thirteen servicemen killed in action in the Vietnam war have been listed by the Defense Department. Five others were reported missing in action. Killed in action: ONE COLOR A—7 ^omtafagonTmcte?^lunht L°9 ProPos«d br defense Secretary McNamara would be capable for a radar fe theeaHyl??©, but not a massive Soviet attack. The planValls missiles would be launched to exalode while utill several hundred miles from the U.S. coast. Spartan fense would be interceded ^ destroying the invader. Missiles slipping past this first line of de- much more numerous Lviet miwilM ^9^ S d.efe!,*,ve ««;«***** »)- I» would take a $40-billion system to block launching a cluster of nuclear warheads (4) a^wTlJ^SK °"e "8 "°M * Mp0bl* °f U.S. Plans N-Shower Missile WASHINGTON (UPI) - Thel United States is planning to build and deploy over the next few years a new type of offensive missile that would be able to shower down nuclear warheads on several targets at once. The Pentagon gradually is taking the wraps off the plan, a major development in nuclear warfare. It would be an intercontinental ballistic missile (ICBM) that would separate into numerous! warheads, all of which would! strike targets that could be several hundred miles apart. One missile, therefore, could strike several cities at once. ★ ★ ★ Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara told a United Press International editors conference | at San Francisco earlier this [month that in the future “many! of our launchers will carry mul-j tiple warheards.” ! OFFICIAL NAME I This*week, in an interview) published in Life Magazine,' [McNamara for the first time in! [public record used the official) Pentagon name for proposed system: “Multiple Independent I Reentry Vehicles/’ or MIRV. I I He confirmed what has long been known unofficially, that the United States is buying MIRV for its Minuteman III [missiles, soon to be added to the ICBM that in the 1970s will replace Polaris missiles on submarines. MIRV is strategically important in two ways: • It is intended to make it much more difficult for a Soviet antibailistic missile system (ABM) to shoot down a significant number of warheads, even assuming Russia goes ahead with a “heavy” ABM deployment. • It is designed to do a better job of putting the right number of megatons on a given target. If a target can be destroyed with one megaton, little is gained by using 20. In Defense Department figuring, five separate megaton blasts may accomplish the destruction of one 20-megaton bomb. A total of 8,598 licensed physicians was added to the United States medical profession in 1966, bringing the humber of physicians in the nation to 300, 376. * t. Likely, ALABAMA — Sow ieorgiana. ILLINOIS — Pic. Thomai E. Josepl aint Charles. KENTUCKY — Pfc. Michael L. Mlllei lenderson. MONTANA — Pfc. Roger D. Eckstelr Allspell. NEW YORK — Pfc. Robert J. Smith, uffalo. • PENNSYLVANIA ; Spec. NEW MEXICO—Pfc. Alan n F. Smit fictorle Chicago. NEW JERSEY—Pfc. Gary L. Rober ewark. Missing as a result of hostile action: ARMY T. Sawye A, Neisess, S. Sot. Jessie S. Brewer. Sgl. 'tmuel C. Phillips III. AIR PORCH Mai. Robert W. Barnett. Died not as 9 result of hostile action: MARINE. CORPS ——tK — Lance CpI. Conroy, Keeseville. AIR FORCE CALIFORNIA — Ma|. Ronald R. King, (Advertisement) TOOTHACHE W&wOjiJ •KKJ.lR minute* get relief that SPtetf-rtlMse formula puts it to work quickly to relievo throbbing toothache pain. yZjitjyy. Recommended by many dentists. t, ^ Mk your pharmacist for I mdcutt 1 ora-iel* 1) cummii ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY 9 HOME . Penney'* I* having open horn* of wonder-SHOW values In fashion fabric* to mak* your towing mor# rewarding than ovtrl GLOW GREEN COORDINATES vital new color for’68 to brighten the scene in fashions you make now! Take a print and a new heathery homespun solid to make your own total look. The prints, our famous silky-smooth Regulated Plus woven of Regulon, 65% Polynoslc* rayon, 35% combed cotton. The solid our Heatherlook, a firm tex-tury weave In cotton and acetate. Both crease-resistant, machine washable with barely a touch-up. Priced to give you maxi-fashion for mini-money. We show glow green, but see our great collection of gther coordinated colors too. See Regulated Plus In your October Good Housekeeping. Regulated Plus 36* wide 98c yd. Heatherlook 44/45* wide 1.59 yd. PENNEYS MIRACLE MILE D BIGGES1 '0> [D vTh ilSCOI it ■ NEVER R IIIH11 HICK HIS IMI Call FE 5-9452 I * pisTiftcnow 26400 W. Eight Mil. Rd. VA Mile West of Telegraph East Side. I I Downriver I Blrmingham-Southfieldl Toledo I Petoskey PE. 1-88101444.12121AV. 5-35951 Royal Oak iL.7-2700| CH. 8-426113474442 BUT DIRECT- We Design • We Manufacture * We Install * We Guarantee i It West Huron Street THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigan 48058 MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 5i*?9.-*• HowAta H. Pnwc*ALD^ir It Seems to Me .. . . Oakland County Airport Steen Bursting Its Seams It seems as though theJjfuture of Oakland County’s airport can be almost limitless. Progress in air travel on all levels beggars description. The volume today is’ tenfold over what it was not too long ago; and the future is — Who knows? Who can forecast at all? ★ ★ ★ When Chicago finished that gigantic O’Hare Airport competent authorities figured the Windy City’s aviation problems were splved fqr the foreseeable future. It p o s s e s s e d length, breadth and great facilities for passengers. But see what happened. It’s so crowded, officials are scared. Manager Rosenbrier spys a passenger arrives there every 1V& seconds all year long. With the least semblance of bad weather, air lanes are congested up above, ground facilities are jammed down below and the traffic piles up interminably. ★ ★ ★ New York is experiencing the same dilemma and already is talking of two and possibly three accessory airports. Once La-Guardia handled the whole situation. Then gigantic Kennedy was built to take the load and it was rated one of the greatest and most modern airports of all time. However, the jam there increased until LaGuardia was reactivated and re-done On much more ample lines. ★ ★ ★ ; Today both are inadequate. Newark helps—but it’s insufficient. Southeastern Michigan is working into the same spot. Willow Run solved the problem originally but it was too far out to be practical; and Metro-politah was opened. Big, sprawling and handsome it was supposed to handle the problem indefinitely. But those days are gone. ★ '★ ★ I ',) If Oakland County’s airport could extend the one runway appreciably, and then erect another on an angle, it probably wouldn’t be too big for the future. In thinking of aviation, we are apt to consider big airliners and huge jets. But the smaller Commercial traffic is as great as the passenger planes. LaGuardia, Newark and Kennedy find private and corporate aircraft providing 48% of the total traffic. The average layman has no conception of this. ★ ★, ■ ★ Business and pleasure are served. And they’re growing rapidly. Voice of the People: Englishwoman’s Letter Prompts Several Replies I feel compelled to reply to the recent letter from an Englishwoman. It was w.ith surprise that I learned that Britain has “policed the world, fought their wars and paid their bills for the past 500 years.” It is a matter of record that Britain owes the U.S, a considerable amount from World War II. Also, I am sure the U.S. .spent millions more than Britain in successfully con du d i n g World Waril. If Britain has “policed the U.S., fought our wars and paid ouT bills,” I wish she hadn’t. It. might have been cheaper if we had done it ourselves. RAY P. CRADDOCK 36 OAK HILL As an American woman living in Pontiac, I comment on the letter of an “Englishwoman.” Where would Europe be today ;f h hadn’t been for our American men who lost their KMM ives helPin8 Europe? The Odd Couple! David Lawrence Says: Fund Stalemate Is Unparalleled WASHINGTON — An un- Congress today has worked people’s reaction will be in precedented situation in out a program for which it November 1968 if prices have American history has devel- can be held responsible at the skyrocketed and the purchas-oped between the President polls. ing power of the dollar has and the Congress. Each side is guessing what been further curtailed, it emphasizes a significant is “popular” and what the (capyngh ________ JQ HH m fact that the Without doubt, Oakland County’s TwIipitJhM airport could play a big hand, in FKfi Southeastern Michigan if the one run- ity in both the way were extended and another built Senate and as soon as practical, depending upon die House, established need. With 850,000 the executive people living in Oakland County, and 1,88 be€n un" 400,000-plus in Macqmb, the demand “ble t0 obtain is a reality, by vote of We must keep abreast. weakness in the existing system of gdvemment. For, despite the II Syndicate) Bob Considine Says: Tanzania Leader Strives to Unify Divided Land Rights and Freedoms . . Our American Civil Liberties Union demands that President Johnson abolish the 100 limit he generously established on pickets around the White House. The ACLU declares there should be no limit and that imposing one even as large as 100 violates the First Amendment which guarantees free speech and the rights of open assembly. How about the rights of everyone else? America is full of people who would just love to see loudmouthed radicals tossed in the hoosegow. Don’t the President and the public have their own rights and their own freedom? LAWRENCE national legislative body the funds he deems necessary for the welfare of the country. The Congress, on the other hand, feels the President is n/ercre, spending more and asking for pr esident of more than the country can the United afford. DAR ES SALAAM, Tanzania—Don’t know why, except that I’m ignorant, but I somehow ex- Astounding Comparison . . Just recently The Chicago Tribune —----- - computed the cost of a phone call from there to Los Angeles and compared it with the postal rates since 1932. The results are simply astounding. Here they are: phone call Letter Postcard 1932 16-25 2c lc 1*33 6.25 3e lc 1952 2.25 3c 2c 1*58 2.20 4c 3c 1963 1.95 5c 4c 1967 1.80 ’Proposed. •6c •6c Republic of Tanzania, to wear feathers and carry a spear. He didn’t. He wore a neatly tailored straw-colored outfit not unlike collarless pajamas, and opentoed And open-heeled sandals. He seems to have no “side” or Messianic complex to him, this respected leader of the largest Of East Africa’s dawning nations. Nyerere, 49, is attempting And in Conclusion . Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of .your peripatetic re-porter: % Bookies have taken a horrible beating the last two or three weeks in football results....In the light of all the violence we’ve seen, high circles are worried ,pver the safety of presidential candidates one year hence...............Over- heard: “Women who complain they have nothing to wear are getting closer to . the truth evejy year.” . . . ...... . Gov. Rockefeller will begin his “not interested in the nomination” trip with a ten-state tour later in the fall.............Three net- works are tentatively scheduling live coverage of Lynda Bird Johnson’s marriage December * ★ Tru s t e d scouts advise me Diane McCall deserves mention as one of the area’s attractive young ladies...... \------Just 30 years ago, Oakland County’s own Charley dianje * Gehringer became the last American leaguer to get 200 hits for five successive years...... ...... Anyway, the New York Mets can claim “their games are never over until the first man goes to bat.”.............Bar- bara Nicklaus has taken up golf and she followed hubby Jack many times this summer. Her best score to date is 61-59—120; “I took 30 strokes off my game in two months,” she says, “and that’s a lot better than Jkck can do.” Zsa Zsa Gabor’s most quoted remark is: “I never accept gifts from perfect strangers, but then, nobody’s perfect.”.............Margaret Mc- Namara is the cabinet wife LBJ likes most, and that’s true with a lot of other people, too.......... Over- heard: “They ought to spell it: De- tRIOT.”............. Well, well, well. Harold Stassen, perennial; GOP Presidential candidate, expects to enter the .Wisconsin primaries • • New York schools are panning much broader and earlier sex education. . . . . .*.....'Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: tjhe jC’s — the past week’s weather; the J’s — the FCC’s desire to have TV cigarette advertising* give equal time to people who insist they’ll kill you. —Harold A. Fitzgerald This is what political scientists would call an “Irresponsible” system. The crisis — and, indeed, the President so terms it — has arisen over the admlnls-• tration’s request for a surcharge tax of 10 per cent, which is sought as a means of curbing the present inflationary trend. Congress through its spokesmen has asked for cuts in proposed programs of «yerere, «, is attempting spending so as to reduce sub- *° steer Ns huge and hitherto stantially the deficit for the unmanageable land toward current fiscal year, which will economic as well as run to $29 billion. This, it Is P°UUcal Independence. The conceded, could affect inter- odds 8,18 egNnst him. est and mortgage rates as * * + well as prices all along the line. But there is a better way, and the British and Canadians have it. The chief executive and his S-vSS* party is responsible for the acts of the prime minister SHOOTING FOR STARS The U. S. has promised him a road into Zambia. It will be finished before the Chinese make good on .their unprecedented promise. In his famous Arusha Declaration Presideht Nyerere just about ended corruption, told the people they could expect good things only if they worked hard for them, pleaded with them to help him get the country off the backs of all the powers who still cast covetous eyes toward it. When the customarily pampered and subsidized college student elite corps demonstrated against him, he dismissed 80 of its leaders and assigned the others to public works after school and study hours. When our men have ice cream, it is considered a luxury. Usually they are lucky if they get to eait in peace. They, also, don’t always know where their next night’s shelter will * * . * Vietnamese are not the only people losing in the war. Eveiy person who loses someone dear also loses in the war My husband is fighting in Vietnam, just as thousands of others are, and I pray he will do his job the best he can and return home. No one wants this war to continue and Americans can pray for our men, back them the best we can and give a good long thought to election day next year. MRS. C. HENRY ‘Article Contained Bad News for America’ ^cle in the September issue of Barron’s entitled Lonely Weekend - A Report on the Third Conference of Socialist Scholars” stated: “While comfortable, complacent, capitalist Americans went to church or played golf or lolled around home reading the papers or watching television Sun-Se,P‘ember j1’ 8 Black Power Panel session at the Tturd Annual Conference of Socialist Scholars was talking about burning down 20 American cities next year and waging a military struggle in the streets.” * * * i 23MSS Lspeaker was Dr- °wen LatUmore, the man in-votyed in the betrayal of China in the late 1940’s. Chairman of the pan^l sessions was James Boggs of Detroit Panelists were Raymond S. Franklin of Queens College, Ivanhoe Donald-n."’n,C“mFaJ?n ™ana*er Nr Julian Bond of Georgia, and Gilbert ihft University of Illinois. Remember these names. They all spell trouble and it is bad news for the United States. CLAIRE LEMAN 5140 DRIFTWOOD, MILFORD r (Edi!°r’8.,N°fo: If the writer of the letter signed “A ^rhlC, Zen Wil' f“rnish 88 W8 n8me and address, we win be happy to consider the letter for publication.) Question and Answer Why do they take the Friend of the Court charge out of fir i^T8 Wrtimoney instead of making the man pay ♦hi !*; ex-husband has never paid It, but what right have they to deduct it from the check be sends for our child? MRS. M. REPLY The court has ruled that after 30 days if a man doesn’t pay the fee, it’s taken out of the payment and the man’s account goes in arrears by that amount, so it’s eventually paid by the man. Those at Friend of the Court regret this must be done, but find it to be the only way to collect the fee in some cases. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages His 10 million people are divided into more than 100 tribes, each with a distinct dialect. And, as elsewhere in Africa, tribal customs and superstitions reaching back thousands of years, still take priority in a pinch over the u~> - has for acts of the prime minister and cabinet as well as of the parliament. The people can at an election vote out of office the head of the government and his cabinet and put another parly into control, or they can affirm the incumbent party’s acts by a “vote of confidence.” Apparently neither party in make it. He broke relations with Britain when it refused to take action against the mi: norlty government of Ian Smith in Rhodesia, thus forfeiting British military protection and aid programs. He returned a 520-million development loan from West -----------------------— Germany because Bonn told xr i i ^ him he could not recognize Verbal Orchids Ea,t Germany- He is critical of the U. S. Reporter Henry De Zutter’s reminder that a halt to industrial pollution will go only a pitifully short way toward saving Lake' Michigan is as timely as it is gloomy. For the chief villains are not the visible miO wastes — ugly and smelly as they may uwiuiu r un biiuio be — but phosphates and oth-Nyerere is shooting for the *r nu^r*enfo that are not ordi-stars, and could cooceivablv n8ri,y removed ^ convention-—- . . .. J a nitration. These nutrients fertilize and promote the dense growth of algae that, in turn, can choke a lake to death. Lake Pollution . . . *2* 18 whatever is program when it is already in done ™*y not be in time. dire political trouble Chicago Daily News * * * .e’.. Albert C. Printz, the local But to our mind, the most ------ P . .u,u, U1C ,w.m cogent reasons for rejecting water quality standards offi- the CIark amendment were cer for the Federal Water Pol- fWmned up generally in Mich-lution Control Administration, ***" Republican Sen. Robert says that a ten-year deadline 0rimn’s charge that it is “as for nutrient control is the" best extravagant in its promise as it is vague in its operation.” that can be hoped for in view of “the sad state of technology in this field.” False Hope... The Toledo Blade As an emergency, two-year program, Senator Clark’s proposal suffers the same weakness as a long string of other “crash” plans offered in reaction to summer riots — the same weakness that has kept evfen some more or less permanent anti-poverty programs from fulfilling their bright promises. Mrs. William S. Church of 191 Elm; 88th birthday. Mrs. Sadie Strong perennial T'"““i,1 , ....___Mr. and Mrs. F. J. HueUmantel of 930 Lakeview; 60th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Jesse J.‘ Friday of Clarksion; 60th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Floyd H. Stockwell of 140 W. Hopkins; 80th birthday. Mrs. William D. Thomas Sr. of 90 Dakota; 80th birthday. role in Vietnam, permitted Red China to build the radio There is virtually unanimous agreement among ur-Thpv have rinna a t „t. banologists, civil rights lead- Erie and, wless countermeal knowlSiweMhtSr^nd ®fsignf Primari|y to make sures can be stepped up be- STf. sh°Wu °f quick 8ction for the yond anything now envisioned, selveMhatthe t1"1®. being, their long-range will do it to Lake Michigan. ££ wtv^^I'Z"SS f** 18 Tn Uke,y to be HSguteX fish could not live. ocii. uuaepn Clark’s $2.5 billion supplement • **>•" viuiuu supplement — , to the anti-poverty bill for an _ The fact that algae, not emergency 500,000-job pro- Finance, TOO the more gram on such shakv urnimH? r,______________________.... _ • * * * here In fha 'Xi Iaw wat algae, not emergency 500,000-job pro- „nj' ^ ^ chemicals, pose the more le- gram on such shaky ground? and send experts to train his thal threat to Lake Michigan c„ * „ 8 . . police. does not diminish the iniivn- S®”™* Republicans oppose . . . , , kinceof tt becan“* they say, it smacks , ^bachelor is a guy who is abatement too much of the make-work *"«oom l^ee /ree. Cambria (Calif.) Cumbrian - ^ » tance of the 1968 pollution w IT «7J’ ‘But we are not going all abatement deadline set by In- 12® m c“ V t“e mak®-work tie way to Peking,” he has terior Sec. Udall for the steel pro?ra™8 ®f. the 1930’s, It ex- the way to Peking,” he has said. Mao’s government has promised to build him a railroad reaching more than a -thousand miles from Dar and other Tanzanian ports to the copper treasures of Zambia, terior Sec. Udall for the steel mills to quit dumping polluted water into the lake. r*8*"uis va use auou b, 14 a* ceeds the Administration’s already over-stretched budget, „ . ™ ~ »nd they do not like the pres- Nor does It downgrade the ent anti-poverty program in urgency of prohibiting the general, dumping of oils and oth# sub- v. teww, Stances which would pollute J3LA£S!8tr8Uon — being airlifted since the water and disfigure the “Chftor Clark s proposal chisf-Zambia broke with Rhodesia, beaches. ]y 8ua* fbe GOP ob- ■tops must be taken, and a of salvaging the anti-poverty Th* Associated Sum* la M ssm &s~%asz M «MnMAS ’ Tlte Pontiac Pratt la Itellvarad bv cSmrnT Mttnbar ASC. """ THE PONTIAC ( , MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 Easy-care fine lace tablecloths Just wash and use. No ironing needed. Acetcte/nylon lace in woven design. 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Flock and print pattern in white or champagne. 48x45" pair 72x45" . 96x45" . 48x63" . 72x63" 96x63" 144x63" ..15.99 pr. .. 20.99 pr. . 28.99 pr. 48x84" 72x84" 96x84" 144x84" 9.99 pr. .. 16.99 pr. 22.99 pr. 32.99 pr. 48x14" valence 3.99 eo. “Starburst” print Fiberglas® shorties Washable no-iron, Fiberglas glass in starburst print, gold, blue or red on white. m 0^ 0^ 48x36" pair 4 99 72x36" ......9.99 pr. 48x63" .... 6.99 pr. 96x36" .....13.99 pr. 72x63" 11.99pr. 48x45" ..... 5 99 pr. 96x63" # 18.99 pr. 72x45" .....10.99 pr. 48x14"velance 3.99 ee. 96x45" .... 15.99 pr. mRtg. TM Oweiu Corning Corp. Sea eur complete line ef curtain end drapery hardware Including rods. Keeks, cords, brackets end mere. Give your furniture a new with lovely slipcovers Washable cotton Colonial prints CHAIR COVER 5.88 Easy-care, washable cotton slipcovers In outhentic Early American floral print on Ivory or nutmeg backgrounds. Featuring box pleated skirts, welt seams, and reversible cushion covers for longer wear. Protect or renew’ youc furniture now. Sofa sever 12.88 Soto bed cover ... 9.88 Hide-a-bed cover.............12.88 Easy-care, washable, ding-fitting rayon and cotton knit throws are ideal for protecting and beautifying your furniture. Smart tweeds in brown, gold, green or rust. Shop now for big savings. 72x90" 5.99 72x108" ... 6.99 72*126"......7.99 teffa '%!S SSS| wsar iSSJ m-mr ■5?'? I f I I m DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS Ww 'm VISIT OUR NEWLY COMPLETED BRANCH AT 1108 W. HURON NOW A SECOND LOCATION TO BETTER SERVE YOU -s.»um»iMiHsaa j34-Q526 mi.*** A>—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 RADIOCARBON M PROM COSMIC WAYS M STRIKES ANCIENT MAMMOTH THE MAMMOTH CONTINUAULy GIVES OUT a RADIOACTIVE -RAYS THE RAYS STU. m A scientist, burns a sample, of the skull io carbon. the amount P loaclivity to determine Ihe age>. QUESTION: How can scientists use radiocarbon to date ancient things? ^ ANSWER: Atomic particles called cosmic rays continu-starts to decay at once, sending out distintegration rays—this ally smash certain atoms, causing them to change to radiocarbon. Every living thing takes in this radiocarbon, which starts to decay at once, sending out disintegration rays— this is radioactivity. While plants and animals are alive, the loss caused by radioactivity is replaced by the intake of more radiocarbon. But when they die, no more radiocarbon comes in; disintegration rays, however, still go out, at a definite, known fate. A man, while living, gives off 918 disintegration rays every hour for each gram of radiocarbon his body contains. Now, assume he dies. After 5,600 years, a gram of radiocarbon from his skull would be giving out 459 rays an hour; after 11,000 years, 229 rays and after 44,000 years, about 3 rays an hour. Using a Geiger counter, it is possible to count the rays being emitted. So if toe find 3 rays an hour per gram coming from a human skull* we know it is 44,000 years old. • Before testing, however, a scientist must reduce a sample of the object being tested to pfire carbon; it is from this that the test is made. EXPO ’67 Books AVAILABLE AT ALL OUR OFFICES stfisw OAKLAND OWN YOUR OWN HOME Without Increasing Your Current Payments ' OUR TRUE OPEN-END MORTGAGE PAYMENTS INCLUDE • PRINCIPAL • INTEREST • TAXES • INSURANCE Your Equity increases in value with each payment You may pay up your mortgage at any time, or pay any additional amount, without advance notice or penalty. You can increase your mortgage at a later day for improvement or additions. You may pay principal or interest in advance to suit your own convenience. Terms on our conventional open-end mortgages run up to 25 years. Come in and talk with one of our friendly representatives today. 761 W. HURON STREET DOWNTOWN PONTIAC - DRAYTON PLAINS - ROCHESTER - CLARKSTON - MILFORD - WALLED LAKE - LAKE ORION - WATERFORD General Electric Refrigerators, all shapes, all sizes-now on sale! Tell your wife that she’s a free woman from this moment on. Give Mom Back Her Free Time to Spend With the Family Open Evenings JP A 9:00 Saturday 'til 6:00 at Both Locations i General * Electric Dishwasher Address FREE FROM THE DRUDGERY OF DOING THOSE 3 WASHES A DAY! WE’RE CELEBRATING THIS EVENT WITH A STORE-WIDE SALE AT BOTH LOCATIONS! FREE NORMAL INSTALLATION FREE 40-LB. BOX OF SPECIAL LAUNDRY DETERGENT WITH EVERY WASHER-DRYER PAIR DURING THIS SALE FRAYER’S CUSTOMER: This is your personal invitation to visit our new and complete home appliance center at 1108 W. Huron. In the Same Location with Don Frayer Home Furnishings. DAD, DON, MILT, CLAREl^E and LEE SEE YOU THERE EXPERT FACTORY BRANCH Service on All Merchandise! TOUCAN BUT WITH CONFIDENCE AT FRAYER APPLIANCE Our Low Overhead Family Operated Stores Will, 99% of the Time, Allow Us to Beat All Deals! |1 H1 RCA PORTABLE TV ........ .Phone...... RETURN TO EITHER LOCATION GENERAL ELECTRIC AMERICANA SELF-CLEANING RANGE NOW ON SALE! ALSO Celebrating this sale is Con Frayer Home Furnishingl featuring store-wide sayings on all items. New furniture, custom re-upholstery, carpeting, custom draperies and all services, available. YOU ALWAYS PAY LESS AT FRAYEB’S APPLIANCE FREE, PROMPT DELIVERY THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 A—11 KB Our Pontiac Mall Storo Open Mon., Thors., Frl. and Sot. to 9 p.m. Tues. and Wed to 5:30 p.m. 309 N. Telegraph Rd., Pontiac 4 Our Birmingham Store Open Thors, and Frl. to 9 p.m. Sat. to 5:30 p.m. 300 Pierco St., Birmingham Checks and plaids: very fashionable, very right, and handsomely expressed by Eagle in an exciting collection of.menswear at HHS. The emphasis centers on the <grey/black tones,, although Eagle also shows the popular black/white, brown/black, and blue/black shades. The fabrics, in pure wool and wool-silk blends, are styled in art one- and two-button models... in checks that are subtle and refined ... in plaids thJit are clear or muted. One-trouser suits (below right) are priced from $115; two-trouser suits (above right) from 139.50. (Below left) A striking two-button, black-and-white check sport coat with slanted flap pockets and Side vents, at 69.95. (Above left) An elegant four-button (two-to-button) double breasted sport coat in a black-and-white (Slen plaid, at $75. The Eagle collection of suits, sport coats, and topcoats in checks and plaids is one of fall's freshest fashion stories... and it's at HHS right now. 1 ________________________________________________ I ^ to focus — the colors — the textures — a I ■lr\._ A pair for every outfit — colors for every whim. ''l^A \A year covered legs are' madly modern, ** modish, just waiting for a second glance. They UNINHIBITED, OUTSTANDING glitter by moonlight; gjb cabled, textured, ribbed in natty frights, neutrals ; make the most of monotones in colorful opaque*. Gome to ’Hud8on’8 — 8e^ °Vr exciting collection in the Hosiery Department, Hudson’s-Pontiac,lbt; also Downtqwn Detroit, Northland, Eastland, Westland. Or shop by phone. r ' ®r?nd ®pa?u*Vjor col?rfl* 8emi- Van Raalte stockings, lacy and lovely.; h °nj t?ch‘ Ch!°Se from black’ D* Boucle, in white, beige, gold end brown ....... |2 creole, red, beige, navy, dark green, brown, and White. v T. M __,, , . * . . , &:' ..................... >2 Lmea»a srentle texture for day or evening to white, ... * beige, navy, brown and dark green.’.... $2 ». Felice opaque parity hose in lacquer red, sun yellow, - Bonnie Doon texture for foil riwi nni«- >*'- . spruce, black, navy, jet brown, and chamois color* ti ST textures for fall. From the collection: /’ J ’ . n mols C0,OT8- 93 ■ V. Siren, a rib net pattern in black, brown, copper, C. Round the Clock glitter stockings highlight the S°M, ivory, navy, parsley, white and green.$2 bmM.,lp«^r,erta* • '«• *«*»•.op.quegeometric,tairiW.do* iS UDSON’S m A—12 THE PONTIAC PRKSS^MONPAY, OCTOBER 9, 1867 fflUR COLORS 1 sJfffTE PC^TIAd PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 B—1 three .Pqlitiac Groups ‘ ttS Office Gossips Jetift Federation Might Consider This 'Meaty' Practicing a, segment from the skit they will present at the Michigan State 'Federation 6f^omen’s Clubs* Southeastern District, annual convention in Royal Oak Tuesday and Wednesday, ar.e (from left) Mrs, Ifarry Vernon of West RundaU No More* Pinched Toes Street, and Mrs. Forbes ~S. Hascall of Bloomfield Hills. Mrs. Hans 0. Schjolin, who is directing the effort “on ttii boards” asks for “a little more emphasis with the gavel.” \ .0m--------; 10,, Itfijfe New Squeeze on Fashion DEAR Awh'r/Sirfne years ago I remember rant^g, in ybar column a lot ;trf letters from ladies who wanted • 9>e shoe manufac-totarA to get rid of pointed .isaazsGzsg I re_ hron JNsH. Ht«y did JE&Ki1 think the tom shoes arp terrible looking. So you lailles wlio wanted them can go ahead and weir them and may the Lord blesa^yqu.Me? I’m aHU' with POINTED PENCIL REELS DEAR are Correct. My voice 'Wp ifhong (he 4oudfe#t! ft protest of fcptottirtieeled shoes. ButMpr Wwhile, I became accustomed to the m. (Yet,' ttW ruined my feet.) flow that the batyyktoH, Cuban heels «jre back, t admit they look as strange to me ss the pointed-toes looked at first, tiut I am wearing them. And I most confess, I LOOKED better in the Wd,' .cripples, but I FEEL better In thK&ir ones. yviifW-* #• is. DEAR AftBY. My' husband and I have been Jtoppily married for almost six years, and we have two beautiful children. My problem is my mother-in-law. She refuses to admit to me the kind of person my husband’s ex-wife was. 1 know that she knows because she Michigan History Tof The liamentary Study Club Was held recently at the First Federal Savings of Oakland. Michigan Bell Telephone Company representative, H. Robert Kull, traced the history of Michigan for the group as represented in the paintings of Robert A. Thom, Birmingham illustrator. Mrs. Ervin Christie and Mrs. David Saks cochaired the affair, assisted by Mesdames Harry Vernon, John McNeely, Vivian Tubbs and Ross Elliott. Area women interested in parliamentary study are welcome to join the groyp. Guests at the luncheon were Mrs. Fred Froede, Mrs. Cameron Clark and Mrs. Creston Tooman. Early Start Is Given on Holiday Decoration Christmas decorations made from cones and greens were displayed by Mrs. H. W. Schoenlein of Ferndale during her address to Brookslde Branch of the* Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association. ■The recent meeting took place in the - Watkins Lake home of Mrs. L. Raymond Sampson. Cohostess was Mrs. E. P. Sammut, new president of the group. Mrs. Harry Bendler of Bloomfield Hills attended as a guest. Hie branch’s Pontiac Mall Flower Show chairman, Mrs. pari Bird, gave a report on the show. ter from told o t h e r people, but every time L bring up h^ name,Jthe defends the warn an as though’afo were a saint. (ft-lieve me, sta ls#^) Please print ydjr jg getting me down.' PEEVED" Forget your hgSv ns you want to ray icurlty. For' ttgttf? eIsa, .is what is*) ■TV , r-T«v*j|er reading tlwf ^ ., tmfly.-who signed “Hurt*&i Eugene” “f'tojfcw, tq speak up for the sitters. I .Agree, it wasn’t very nice for that teepriger to have left the ndte, “CLEANUP YOt# FILTHY HOUSE, PLEASE^huti Abby, I honestly knoW how she must tive: felt. I am l$ and I wqp asked to sit for a lady whose husband was out of towin She was going to, a iluau and called nie Mrs. Carlifi'vSpeaks Before PAR Chapter gj3 Mrs. Leslie . 0. Carlin, state first vice regent was .speaker at the recent meeting of General Richardson chapter, Daughters of-tw American Revolution. Miss Sarah Van Hoosen Jones and Alice Serrell opened their Romeo Road home for the afternoon event. Hostesses included Mesdames: Earl McHugh, R. J. Ruggles, Robert Wilson; Lewis Anscott, Duncan McVean, Maxwell Drierr, Charles Gregson and S. A. Baillo. Mary J. Doerr was also a hos- at the last minute. If she hadn’t driven off as soon as I set foot in her 'house, I would have walked right out the doot. When f say her,’house was filthy, I 'am. not kidding. The kitchen looked like ® cyclone, had hit, it. The sink was f pileg high with dishes, and there were rpot^ and paps on eVery inch of counter Pphoe, and' even on toe floor, which aMDoked like it hadn’t seen a mop in a f I tried to lift a’bowl from the table 'and it stuck! There were even ants cfdwling around. I didn’t even want to Jsit down in that house. The lady was goite for seven hours, dicing which time ‘5- had to give her children dinner and put them to bed. She left no instructions, but told me to fbc them “anything” they wanted tdhat. A She said .nothing' about bedtime, so when I suggested * going to bed I hadCca terrible time with all. of them. These are so-called upper middle class peqpld, Abby. When the lady got home, she apolo-Jtod'for being fate, underpaid me, until t corrected her, And drove me home. I wish I had the>. nerve to leave her a note telling her to clean up her filthy house. Thank You. - TEEN-AGE SITTER Representatives of the Pontiac Woman’s Club, the Pontiac Literary Club and the Round Table Club will attend the 49th annual : convention of the Michigan State' Federation of Women’s Chibs, Southeastern District, Tuesday and Wednesday in Royal Oak. Tbe Rpyal Dak Woman’s Club, hostess duty for the ^convention, will be assisted by ft} member clubs of the Oakland County Federation. The Royal Oak Junior Woman's Club will greet registering delegates at a coffee hour scheduled for 9 a.m. at the Royal Oak Womans Clubhouse. Mrs. William Meyerhoven is handling reservations. The theme of the convention is “Broadening Horizons for Tomorrow’s World." Mrs. Hans Sthjolin of Stdneybrook Lane, president of the Oakland County Federation, will extend the official welcome to the delegates. «*> Sen. Robert J. Hubei) of the 16th District will be guest speaker at the Tuesday banquet. Judge Keith Leen-houts of Royal Oak wUl give an ad- Calendar TODAY Altrusa Club of Birmingham, 1 6:30 p.m., Birmingham Commu- | ■ nity House. Dinner meeting with g | speaker, Mrs. Edna Newmap, I | chairman, of vocational services 1 I committeel . TUESDAY , 1 | Bloomfield HiUs Alumnae abb j ! of Pi Beta phi, 12:15 p.m., Paul J. ] Ethlngton home in Birmingham. ; | Hostesses site Mesdames: E. *C. j : Monahan Jrc; Marshall Potter and ] Harry Vlbbrn. Oakland County District Michl- . I gan Licensed' Practical Nurses As- I j sociation, 7:30 p.m., William Beau- j ' mont Hospital. Vernon Swaninger, j R. N. on “The Role of the Male In j \ Nursing." Waterford Kettering Band Par- I ents Boosters Association, 7:45 1 p.m., Kettering High School. First 1 regular meeting. North Suburban Alumnae of Al- j pha Gamma Delta, 8 p.m., Bir- | [ mingham home of Mrs* Rober t I j Stern. Paul Thams otj “Programs f for Crippled Children.” Cohostesses J are Mrs. Marlowe Alsager and j ! Mrs. KenriCth -Carlson. Detroit North Suburban Alumnae ■ Group of Alpha Omicron Pi, 8 p.m., 1 Clawson home of Mrs. Robert 'i ' Hoover. Cohostess is Mrs. Brian., « Hillington. Philanthropic workshop. | dress at the scttalttiled Girls town Luncheon. '1 Other speeches ;1q cbnoegtjqn with ari open forum on '^OMk^rvftfon' Wjfif be by G. William tjWjtols'wetftp'totolii T of the Division ucation, Michigan lie Health, on ‘‘A] and William G. gineer in the enf( the Michigan Wal sion on “Pollution A skit win be bers of the Oakland Busy Time for Jaycee Auxiliary A benefit sale will be held Friday at the home of Mrs. Rf* H. Landis on Preston Street, sponsored by* the Pontaic Jaycee Auxiliary. Sixtyrfive years ago, Wilma Sayers Milliken and Timothy J. Wisecarver were wed in a make believe “Tom Thumb Wedding” play. Saturday, Mrs. Milliken, Waynesburg, Pa’s, first woman mayor and Wisecarver of Charlotte N.C. were married for real. They renewed their friendship last year after their mates died. They were four-year-olds when they appeared in the play. By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: I have just taken a position with a large firm, and a particularly attractive young lady has been vyateried to me as my secretary. Since *T8M^r,7r atmosphere in this company is far formal than in the smaller firm fairitkie. - 4<fftere I was employed before, I would ...fiujpj to know if it would be proper to take ‘pMl <~]lit|rirnn|[ ,ady t0 lunch? ~ Ken Buckley i Mr. Buckley; The question isn’t ,. whether the firm is big or small, formal dr’ informal. The fact is that fdrming a personal relationship with a young girl Whb .works for you, spells TROUBLE. Ify.you feel like dating a secretary, fhsir/ but find one who works for some-. one qlse so the gossips will have no rea-ton. to bother you, and your work won’t The Drayton Plains N&i^Celfcr’s from emotional complications. Women’s Auxiliary met ritytontly ^ . EVENTUALLY REPAID Center and elected new dtfioeini as fol- ’ _ lows: Mrs. J. Herbert ltoQSr Mrs. Post: We are often invited man; Mrs. Charles Wodfl, secretary; lar«e “°Pen House” md cocktail Mrs. Daniel Hosier, treasiufr; Mrs.Rob- W**8- We wonder how these invitations bert Lomerson, volunteers . can be repaid, whether we accept or not. Mrs. Mueller said th*>r7W^>nny tjpa taught that aU InvitaUona reways in which interested womdlit may be to1®— repayment in kind, of assistance to the Nature Oetoamn its ' However, we do not have the space projects and programs. > ■ *r;toe ability to give this kind of party, These include performing mHcdl du- -preferring small groups of eight or 12 'Cards, etc. Can these invitations be repadd in other ways? — Rita H. Auxiliary tnScfs j Mrs. J. H. Mgell§r to Head Positiorl ties, answering the phone, ctotetoiniiJ-ence, painting, cleaning, fund-rdiSmg, assisting with study classes, caring for the grounds, etc. She suggests that this might Jie an excellent way for women to cfovefop undiscovered talents or abilities. ■ ' A pressing need is for volunteers to be , Dear Mrs. H.: Invitations should, as ‘ywfsafd, always be repaid if possible, but not necessarily in kind. An invitation n pressing need is lor volunteers to be <^>en ^ouse t*oes not ^P08® as at the Center when groups of tchoolchll- ,sf*T an obli8ation a». example, one dren tour. » ■ to (r dinner, because it may come from Two hours work at a timeLfrom%30 i ® *^re acquaintance and does not Imply to 11:30 a.m. or from 1 to j)|to/w all ^ relationship, that is asked of a, voluntequw^^J even those should be returned Further information ^Bqptoally, and you should try to include by contacting Mrs. ^ tmife ^vho have invited you In one of Lomerson, or through jateglamto the your Signers. Or if that is difficult, you next meeting of thpJgMtol1! ilMpAan a couple of small cocktail ter, slated for Npra^ y1 - parties to repay this sort of Invitation. • - — -*■■■--------------------------------------- At a dessert meeting the group discussed plans for raising scholarship money to be awarded to the Junior Miss contest winners. ' A bake and boutique booth is planned for the Pontiac Federation of Woman’s Clubs bazaar Nov. 16. * * * The auxiliary will cooperate with the Pontiac Jaycees in a pumpkin sale Oct. 21. The auxiliary is interested in receiving nominations for the outstanding young woman (n the Pontiac area. She must be between the ages of 21 and 35 and be . active in community affairs. ★ * * Guests at the meeting were Mesdames Richard Abbott, John Tolbert and Michael Hamel. Canterbury Club Has Opening Gala for Five New Couples Five couples were welcomed as new ^members of the Canterbury Dance Club at its first dinner dance this year. The gala was held Saturday evening in Edge-wood Country Club. The five newcomer couples are the Howard Deeters, the junior Adolph Magnuses, the Charles Opies, Mr. and ,Mrs. William Rogers and the Morgan Siples. ★ * ♦ New officers assuming their posts ^re Robert Hasse, president; William Doerr, . treasurer; Mrs. Donald Weiss, secretary; Mrs. Lloyd Fay, house chairman; Carl Rose, orchestra chairman; and the hospitality trio, Mrs. James Wilkinson, Mrs. John Gibson and Robert Papen-guth. SPECIALS Genuine Q«nuin« MOSAIC TILE Easy, to Inatoll CERAMIC TLE FREE AA, estimates fromOvs each First duality - Grease Proof Light Colors-Marblo Chip Dosign ! PLASTIC WALL TILE 1 c -2n^ 3c la. ■ SANdJaN * #NLAIft- $|59 TILE Sq. Yd. WE BUY GLASS LAMPS AND LEADED GLASS SHADES! HUDSON’S PONTIAC MALL 2211 ELIZABETH LK. HD. FRONT DOOR PARKING 9”x8” FE 4-5216 MICA SOLID VINYL THE 1 Each 1* VINYL RUBBER TILE 9"x9« LOAN YOU THE TOOLS B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 Five Area Couples Speak Recent Vows Several Units of Sorority Discuss Plans Members of Iota Nu chapter of Beta Sigma Phi will have an opportunity to work with “Resuscitation Susie,” a full size doll used iq mouth-to-mouth respiration training. The doll reacts as a human would to .the life-saving technique. I Mrs. Robert Lally.is in charge of arrangements for the demonstration. Joann Blain hosted the 'group’s meeting in her Le Grande Street home. C. R. HASKILL STUDIO Has Photographed Over 2,000 Wedding* May We Make Your Picture*? Price Includes: a Picture for Pret* # Just Married Sign e Miniature Marriage Certificate # Rice to Throw “Everything but a WILLING MATE!” Clyle R. Haskill 1 University Drive ? FE 4-0553 MRS. D. BLOODGOOD The First Baptist Church was the setting Saturday for vows exchanged by the Douglas Cotton Bloodgoods fnee Kathryn Ann Cross). y Parents of the newlyweds are raicuu ut uic iigwi^wcub ate . .... Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Cross 0fjDuumng- # MRS. J. KOTZ1AN JR. Following vows Friday clve ning iq St. Patrick’s Catholic Church, newlyweds, Mr. and Mrs. John Joseph Kotzian Jr., greeted guests at the Middle Straits Community Association VrfcS e,S f;he°^c®rneTth^ br.ide Federal SavingS of of her Empire gown was / eia uray, aaugnter ot ine nicn Ham Arthur Taylor Jr. |Uakiana. with Detal scalloDs. MRS. W. TAYLOR JR. For her wedding day, 25 years ago, Mrs. Marquis V. Young chose a cream satin floor length gown with long fitted sleeves and pointed cuffs. ■ Friday evening the gown was worn a second time, by her 'daughter, Mary Catherine, as MRS. G. 1SLAS The former Yolanda Villarreal became the bride of Gilberto Islas In a double ring ceremony Saturday in St. Michael’s Catholic Church. Following the mid morning vows, the bridal couple and their MRS. M. D. DeVAR Gowned in ivory peau de soie, Margaret Anne Korreck became the bride of Michael D.'DeVar Friday evening in St. Hugo of the Hills Church. Alencon lace, frosted with seed pearls and aurora crystals, ac- Xi Gamma Delta A'“Las Vegas Party” is In store for the members of Xi Gamma Delta chapter on Oct. 21. Final plans were announced at a recent meeting in the Wood-shire Drive Union Lake home of Mrs. Edward Weliver. guests gathered for dinner at Cented her ensemble. The bodice Rapids. ard oV7vs7f“AonlVwood'\tri.Pt'li8m ArthUr Tayl°r Jr' * * * WfoteLake TotnshiD The couple exchanged vows in j For the evening nuptials, the * * P* the Churchy of the Precious' bride chose a white satin floor j Parents of the bridegroom are Blood’Detroit length gown accented with Alen- the senior Kotzians 6f Poin con lace. Her silk illusion veil Street, Commerce Township. was secured with a matching lace headpiece embroidered with seed pearls. She carried a bouquet of Ste-phanotis and white roses' with Ivy. Following the ceremony, the bridal couple and their honor ‘How to. Be a Real Person,” was the topic presented by Mrs. Earl Kreps. Guests were Mrs. Clyle Haskill and Mrs. A. Byron Barnes of Zeta Eta chapter. An evening reception was held at the CAI building. Hie new Mrs. Taybr’s gown1 Parent, of the newly** „e23“> <*—" ™ H ,wa, accented with alencon l**.|S™)“f,Jlr7,!i! “i™° nCjUndon veil sue.carried white with petal scallops. A lace court cap, fashioned j from silk petals with Phi The’new Mrs. Kotzian woreHer chapel traln was «**«* with matching lace. A satin floral headpiece held her shoulder length veil. The bride’s bouquet was made up of Phalaenopeis orchilds and Stephanotis. a white organza gown with a detachable court tram. Her ensemble, which featured tiny seeds pearls at the waist, was accented with Alencon lace. Honor attendants were the Street and Mr. and Mrs. Bias _ Islas of Mercedes, Tex. The bride wore a floor length gown accented at the bodice and sleeves with lace. Her layered detachable train was edged in matching lace. k The tiered veil was secured with a pearl embroidered head- Matron of honor for her ter’s wedding was Mrs. Milo Jones. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Orrie Donley, Mrs. Robert Barrette, Mary Lee Myers, Lillian Wrobel and Catherine Morrick. Thompson, assisted by Mrs. Albert Padar, at the fifth birthday meeting of Phi chapter. Mrs. Charles Gryner was a guest at the meeting held in the home of president, Mrs. John Nord of Colrain Drive. Drive. Zeta Eta The bride’s brother, James Several parties are planned in A petal headpiece made crystals and seed pearls capped . (her shoulder length veil. She'bride’s sister, Elizabeth, and piece, attendants, Mrs. Pnilup Town- carried white chrysanthemums.'Richard Thomason. Susan Mc-j uer hridal bouauet was made send and Thomas Bloodgood III, ] * * * Gregor and Constance Sprauer up 0f wax pear|s and glass flow- as flower girl and William Kor-iZeta Eta chapter, greeted guests in the church | Members of the wedding party were bridesmaids. ers. reck as ring bearer. ' Mrs. Jerome Y parlors. were Mrs. Joan Harrington, ma- Other members of the wedding Honor attendants were Rafaela Other members of the wedding group’s business meeting re- Other members of the wed- ,tron of honor, Dennis Gearardo,1 party were ushers Edward El- the birde’s sister, and Chris S. party were ushers Gary DeVar, *n **er "ome. on Law-j ding party were bridesmaids best man and bridesmaids Mi-kins and Rodney and Robert giiler. Bridesmaids were Noelia Lannie Thompson, Norman Cil-re"“ when ® was re-j was best man with Karen Jones the near future for members ofj eta Eta chapter. Mrs. Jerome Yates hosted the Don’t Forget Our Annual FILL SALE! 90 DAYS CASH ON RE-UPHOLSTERING or NEW CUSTOM FURNITURE WILLIAM WRIGHT Furniture Maker• and Iphoht&n 270 Orrhard Lake • FE 4-0558 All Workmanship Guaranteed 5 Year* Phone today . . . r’ll be pad. to bring fabric templet to your home. Mrs. Thomas Thompson, Mrs. Ichelle Gray and Thomasine Alton. Michael Burrill, Mrs. Charles Monique and Judy Jeltema. / * * * Ushers Were Thomas Thompson, Phillip Townsend, Kerry Cross, John Steltz and Carl Shook. Charles Thompson and Thomas Bloodgood IV were ring bearers with flower girl Wendy Jo Townsend. Hie newlyweds are honeymooning in the New England states. Czach. Gerald Gray Kotzian ushered. iMorales, Maria Garza, An Cut Milk Calories New evaporated skimmed milk that is 99 per cent fat free contains only 89 calories per cup when mixed half and half with water. Regular evaporated milk contains 178 calories per cup prepared the same way. Available in 13-fluid ounce cans. A Wisner tour A tour through the Wisner Home preceded a recent meeting of the Home and Family Child Study Club which took place in the Emerson Street Home of Mrs. Bud Millmine. Consumers’ Power Company will be the site of the November meeting. Breakthrough in color photography! BIG 8x10 uvm COLOR PORTRAIT* Gtt Your ChrMmat FIRST TIME EVER OFFERED r$l?8 Thil very tpedil offer is presented at an a pression of our thanks for your patronage*" * IEIIIIE FILL IATIIAL C0L0I FMTMITS! Not the old ityla tinted or painted black A white photo*. $ SATISFACTION GBAIANTEED or your money refunded. * FOB ALL AGES! Babies, children, edulls. Cmupe photographed at an additional 99c (wr subject. afe LIMIIEB OFFER! One per subject, two per family. SIX DAYS ONLY Monday thru Saturday October 9-October 14 Studio Haunt II a.m. to 8 p.m. Consumer Diseonnt Center 178 N. Saginaw Pontiac Following a reception at the Garcia and Velma Mejia. Whittier Hotel, Detroit the newlyweds left for a honeymoon in Trinidad. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. William A. Taylor of Birmingham and the late Mr. Taylor. The Youngs are from Lathrup Village. t a ly, A1 Storm, Jerry Clark. I Parents of the newlyweds are th.e Theodore J. Korrecks of Margie Garza was flower girl with Jeffry Morales as ring bearer. Ushers were Philip Cortez, Robert Stubblefield and Dennis Castillo. The hewlyweds ai'e honeymooning in Niagara Falls. Bridle Road and and Mrs. Henry DeVar of Scottsdale, Ariz. and the late Mr. DeVar. ★ ♦ " k The bridal couple left for a honeymoon in Montreal, Canada following a reception Alvaro’s. Bearded Lady Shaves It Off Vote Monies The Wisner Home, the Birmingham Historical Society, the National Trust and the White House Preservation Committee each will receive a contribution from The Heritage Society. The group met at the Sasha-baw Road home of Mrs. Donald Filmore. it it it A lecture on antique guns and swords by John E. Schwarz of Birmingham is planned for the November meeting at the Pon- sc YWCA. i Hostesses will be Mrs. Walter jObenauf and Mrs. Charles Hutson. NEW BRITAIN, Conn. (UPI) — Few women qualify for Lola Conklin’s job and fewer still would want it. Miss Conklin is a d bearded lady. She has been on tile road circuses, carnivals and vaudeville troupes for 45 years and claims to be the original bearded lady in the business. ★ * ★ Miss Conklin, now 60, bears no bitterness at the quirk of nature that made her different from other children. She was born with three sets of teeth, her heart is on the right side of her body and even as a child she had to be shaved at least once a day. k k k She grew up in Hawaii where she was bora, the daughter of an Hawaiian girl and an English sailor. During the winter, when the circus lays up until the next season, Miss Conklin stays at her home in Tarpon Springs, Fla. and designs clothes. SHAVES When she’s not on tour, she shaves twice a day. Otherwise, she keeps her beard trimmed at about three Inches in length. During tours, Lola finds it preferable to stay in her frailer quarters much of the tone. "People see you on the street and they don’t know what to make of it,” she explained. She watches television a tot. "That’s about the only relaxation I get,” she said. CLOSING OUT OUR Chubette DEPARTMENT Vaotf WOOL SKIRTS Plaids anj4 Solid* 8% to 14% BLOUSES Print* and Whita Parma Pros* Included DRESSES SKI slacks STRETCH and DENIM SLACKS NYLON and DACRON COTTON SLIPS LEROI TIGHTS 'WINTER COATS T2% to UVtt (4 loft) V20ff on all ramaining summer SHORTS and SUMMER SKIRTS SHORT SETS Not all sixes In this group Security Charge A genlankai Michigan Bankard Wearing a terry-cloth apron when you. sew any kind of slippery material will keep the material from sliding off your lap as you work. ported that plans are complete: for a theater trip Oct. 17. I A woolen mills party is stated for Oct. 24 in the home of Mrs. Clyle Haskill, plus a Hallowe’en party on Oct. 28 which will be hosted by Mr. and Mrs. Byron Barnes. The chapter has been chosen to handle reservations for the Pontiac City Council Annual Founders Day dinner. Mrs. Joseph Galardi was cohostess for toe evening. YWCA Pledged Aid by Sorority j Iota Kappa Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi met recently in the Manson Street home of M r s. I Lindel Bridges. The YWCA will receive the l proceeds of a current fund-raising project. A guest at toe meeting was Judith Perkins. Outsize or Mini The ordinary-looking watch is replaced either by oversized numbers or ones with minidials. Bands on toe big ones dwarf toe wrist. Watch also for color on dials and straps and with numerals looking like telephone dials. JKeumade NYLONS TWICE-A-YEAK CKeumode Jiosieriy Shops 82 N. Saginaw St. ALL PERMANENTS 395t.595 ME HIGHER Includet All Thltt 1—New Lu *tre Shampoo 2 — Flattering Hair Cut 3— Lanolin Neutralizing 4— Smart Style Setting NO APPOINTMENT HOLLYWOOB BEAUTY Open Morning* at 8 A.M. 78 N. Saginaw Over Bayley Mkt. 338-7660 Fashionable is owning a jet black PRINCESS GARDNER* ‘Aztec”clutch... | and carrying > the matching accessories "CONTINENTAL” CLUTCH $750 Matching Pieces include! French Purses ..............from $9.00 REGISTRAR* Billfold.......... 8.00 , Cigarette Case ................. 4.00 Cigarette Lighter ........... 3.00 Eyeglass Case................. 3.00 KEY GARD*... Key Case......... 3.00 Secretary ................... 7.00 "PicturamB” Photo-Card Casa ! 3.00 Available In other Fashion Colors Charge account service—Pay all utility bills _______ at any Perry Pharmacy_________ PONTIAC-619 East BlVd. at Parry, Ft-1*1182 PONTIAC-1281 Baldwin Nagr Columbia. FE 8*7057 BIRMINGHAM -597 S. Adams Next to AtP. MU-4470 WATERFORD-3417 Eliz. Lk. Rd. at M6|, FE 1-9248 TROY-2870 W. Maple-Somerset Plaza, Ml 7*7010 H1BHLAND—2868 Highland Rd. Eoot EM 1*8200 BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! * till* 1 THE PONTIAC-PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, X967 Top Living U.S. Ace Planning to Retire Soon B—3 WESTHAMPTON B E A C H. been one of the most interesting N.Y. (AP) — Col. Francis S. jobs in the world, especially Gabreski, the nation’s top living during these times we live in.” air ace, plans to retire after 27 He is credited with 37% en-years service. lemy aircraft during World War Gabreski said today, “It’s | II and the Korean War. Gabreski, 48, has been commander of the 52nd Fighter Wing at Suffolk County Ah' Force Base here on Long Island since August 1964. The base provides air defense for the New base Oct. 31. sistant director , of public tions for Grumman Aircraft En- NOW 3 1 'Bm 1 dry CLEANING 1 LOCATIONS TU % SERVE YOU / ONE HOUR t / MARTINIZING / Miracle Mile Center /Elizabeth Lake Center / Sally Brent debaters *0000 (formerly One Hour Velftk Tel-Huron Shopping Center -Dry Cleaning Special. Mon., Tues., Wed., Oct. 9, 10, 11 Slacks, Trousers, Sweaters PLAIN SKIRTS 3<~$1.79 Reg. 85° a Piece ONE HOUR i MARTINIZING Miracle Mile S.C. Phone: 332-1822 Open Daily 1:30 A.M.-7:00 P.M. SajMy "B/ifint Omm (formerly One Hr. Valet) TEL-HURON S.C. Phone 335-1934 Open Daily: 1:30 A.M.-StOO P.M. One Hour Martinizing Elizabeth Lake S.C. 3397 Elizab.ni Lake Rd. Phone 332-0884 Open Daily: 8:00 A.M.-9:00 P.M. York metropolitan area I Distinguished Service Cross an September 1947, when he began Gabreski—who has more than Army decoration, the Distin-j studying Russian and political 5,000 hours of flying time-will'guished^Service: Medal .which is science at the Russian InsUtute be honored in a ceremony at the awarded by both the Army and f Co1umihfl university Now base Oct, 31. Kfe wiu become as-Air Force, the Distinguished ffi Lolumiba University, New tor,of public ,rela-!Flying Cross with 12 oak leaf York City.^He received a BS de-j clusters and several foreignjSrfee-decorations. Gabreski was credited with downing 28 aircraft and destroying three planes on the ground in the European theater during World War II, before he was shot down over enemy territory in July 1944. JET ACE’ gineering Corps, at Bethpage, Long Island. ' ★ it 1t Gabreski will be succeeded at le base by Col. Jack K. Gamble. Gabreski, whose Army flying career began in 1940 at Maxwell Field in Alabama, has won the Shampoo, Style and Cut. $5.00 Permanents From...... $8.00 PARISIAN BEAUTY SHOP Ship Is Freed From Bridge ZILWAUKEE (AP) - The limestone carrier J.F. Schoell-kopf Jr. was freed from the Zilwaukee Bridge Sunday, ending four days of confusion which had tied up traffic on squthbound 1-75 in Bay County. The State Highway Commission said a tugboat helped free the 532 - foot ship which "had rammed the bridge Thursday when her steering mechanism reportedly failed. ★ ★ ★ The ship, which suffered only slight damage, moved under her own power into Saginaw Bay. Highway officials said temporary repairs have been made on the southbound.lane of 1-75, but emphasized that only one lane would be open to traffic until permanent repairs can be 'made in about two months. The southbound lane had been closed ever since the incident and traffic was routed on a 13-mile detour through Bay City. BUY, SELL, TRADE I USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! He was sent to Korea in June 1951 and, while serving as commander of the 51st Fighter In-! terceptor Wing, he became his-! tory’s eighth “jet ace” and one of seven who became aces in two wars. He was credited with shooting down 6% MIGs in Korea before he returned to the United States in June 1952. ★ * * After starting as a flier in Alabama in July 1940, Gabreski served in Hawaii and later was transferred to England. There he was liaison officer to the Polish air force, and flew 20 combat missions with it. * * * In February 1943, he was as-1 signed to the 56th Fighter Group! and after 166 combat missions! he was shot down. He was a prisoner of war until May 1945. After being liberated, Gabreski served as a test pilot at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base, Ohio. In April 1946 he left the armed forces to take a position with the Douglas Aircraft Corp. RECALLED TO DUTY Gabreski was recalled to active duty in 1947—the year the Air Force was created as a separate branch of the armed serv-! ices—and was named command-! ing officer of the 55th Fighter Squadron, Shaw Air Force Base, S.C. He served there until Focus on Fashion Good vision is important. . . and so is your appearance— Nu-Vision has over 400 frame styles for your selection. Shapes for every facial contour, colors to compliment every complexion designs to dramatize every personality. Nu-Vision offers a complete optical service including examination, contact lenses, precision lens grinding, fast repair service and complete eyeglass manufacturing facilities. DIVIDED PAYMENTS AVAILABLE E. STEINMAN, O.D. fWism 709 North Saginaw St. Phone FE 2-2895 Open Daily 9:30 to 5:30, Friday 9:30 to 8:30 ORCHARD FURNITURE'S CITY OF PONTIAC PERMIT NO. 2098 0 , 00? /L/ wMm dim-’'Vr *200,000.00 STOCK MUST BE LIQUIDATED EVERYTHING WILL BE SOLO ON A FIRST COME, FIRST SERVED BASIS. ALL FLOOR SAMPLES WILL BE SOLD “AS IS,” ALL SALES ARE FINAL. SORRY-NO PHONE ORDERS CAN BE TAKEN. BEDROOM SETS AS LOW AS $9000 DRESSERS MIRRORS CHEST BOOKCASE BED DINETTE SETS ALL STYLES ALL SIZES GREATLY REDUCED CONTEMPORARY Mr. and Mrs. CHAIR SOFA and OTTOMAN all four £« pieces *200 ALL TABLES, LAMPS, RUGS AND PICTURES REDUCED UP TO 50% OR MORE IN CASE OF A STRIKE - PAYMENTS WILL BE DEFERRED UNTIL THE STRIKE IS SETTLED WE MUST SACRIFICE OUR COMPLETE STOCK IN ORDER TO REDECORATE AND REPAIR OUR STORE. ALL FIRE AND SMOKE DAMAGED FURNITURE MUST BE REMOVED BEFORE WE CAN RETURN THE STORE TO NORMAL BUSINESS CONDITIONS. BROYHILL PREMIER COLONIAL SOFAS-CHAIRS-LOVE SEATS - . •» ( Your Choice of Size, Color and Fabric Fantastic Buys off Famous Broyhill - A Once In a Lifetime Opportunity FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE STORE HOURS WILL BE MONDAY thru FRIDAY, 9 A.M.-9 P.M. SATURDAY 9 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. BROYHILL QUALITY AT PRICES DISCOUNTED UP TO 50% OR MORE Shop In Air-Conditioned Comfort Phene FE 58114-5 ORCHARD "“SLy 164 ORCHARD LAKE AVBNUE • PONTIAC 2 BLOCKS WEST OF SOUTH WIDE TRACK DRIVE RECLINING CHAIRS AS LOW AS $7000 BY THE MAKERS OF FAMOUS STRATO LOUNGERS CHOICE OF COLORS LIVING ROOM 2-PC. SOFA and CHAIR AS LOW AS $100°° NYLON FRIEZE COVERS FOAM REVERSIBLE CUSHIONS Nationally Advertised Mattress and Box Springs At Prices We Cannot Mention Many In Their Original Packaging NO MONEY DOWN 90 DAYS CASH 24 MONTHS TO PAY NO PAYMENTS WHILE ON STRIKE FREE PARKING DEAL DIRECT NO FINANCE CO. J B—A THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 ■■i Officers Elected by Editorial Writers NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) Paul McKalip, editor of I Tucson Daily Citizen, is the n president of the National Conference of Editorial Writers. McKalip was elected to succeed Wilbur Elston, associate editor of the Detroit News, during the group’s 21st annual convention Saturday night. William D. Snider, editor of Greensboro N. C., Daily and Record, was elected vice president. Paul Ringler, associate editor of the Milwaukee Journal, was elected secretary. AUTOGRAPHS BANNER - Michigan’s Gov, Romney autographs a “Romney in ’68” banner during a visit to Perry, Iowa, over the weekend. Romney again noted that he hasn’t committed himself to seek the Republican ^presidential nomination next year. He spoke at Perry, Newton and Iowa City during the one-day trip to Iowa. Women Suffer WITH BLADDER IRRITATION Common Kidney or Bladder Irritation! affect twice at many women aa men. often causing tenseness and nervousness from frequent, burning, Itching urination. Secondarily, you may lose sleep and have Headache-Backaches. and feel older, tired, d pressed. In such cases. CYSTEX usually brings relaxing comfort by curbing germs In aclr* — -■— pain. Get CYSTEI Florida Teen Saves Tot, but 3 Drown as Car Sinks SOUTH BAY, Fla. (AP) — Aigirl from a sinking car that car-j teen-aged girl plunged into the ried the child’s mother and waters of a 25-foot deep canal Sunday and rescued a 3-year-old Bridesmaid's Gown a Shroud PHILADELPHIA (AP) - grandparents to their deaths. The rescuer, Paula Scoggins, 14, of Miami, said a woman handed the baby out of the window of the car and cried, “Save her! We can’t “swim!” as the car sank to the bottom of the murky water. Miss Scoggins swam to the bank, about 15 yards away, blonde Laura Ann | Schick to her boyfriend and Bryson, 20, will be buried Wednesday in the south Philadelphia neighborhood where she lived and where she was murdered. George B. Goins, 27, of Philadelphia was jailed without bail, awaiting a hearing Oct. 17 on a charge of homicide in the stabbing Friday — the day before Sareta was to have been s bridesmaid at her best friend’: wedding. On Sunday, Goins’ mother, Mary Goins, attended church and said she wanted to meet Sareta’s mother. “I want to see her because Tm sorry,” die said. “I feel sorry for her daughter and I want to tell her how sorry I am, how sorry it happened.' She’s hurt, i and I’m hurt, too.” BUTCHER KNIFE Police accused Goins of stabbing the girl with a butcher knife after he had been drinking. Sareta had gone to a store to buy some hair spray and was returning when she was attacked about six doors from her home. Police said Goins, an employe of the city streets department, surrendered to police through a clergyman Saturday night. “The car was gone,” said state Trooper J. L. McLean. The doors were still closed when the car and its three occupants were recovered, McLean said. The rear doors were still locked, he said. CAR PLUNGE Miss Scoggins, a junior high school student, said she was traveling along the ' highway when she saw the car. suddenly veer off an isolated section of U.S. 27 and plunge into the canal at a 45-degree angle. The victims were identified as the child’s grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Michael J. McGill, and her mother, Mrs. Joan Schick, all of Hollywood, Fla, Miss Scoggins said she thought she saw four adults in the car, but troopers were able to find a fourth body. A search for a possible fourth victim was planned. . * * ★ Laura Ann was taken to Everglades Memorial Hospital for observation, troopers said. Catalina says: Trust the care of your clothes to your Sanitone Certified Master clothiers Catalina recommend our Sanitone Certified Master Drycleaner to keep clothes looking new longer. Sanitone drycleaning restores both the original brightness and original feel of the fabric. Sanitone tbrtifkdMaskrDryckaner Pontiac*» Only Authoriaed SANITONE Service Center DLC-100* NEW TREADS RETREADS ON SOUND TIRE BODIES OR ON YOUR OWN TIRES Tirttfen* 67^ ANNIVERSARY) VALUES Larger Sim 2 for 128 Plus 37* to 57* per tirs Fed. Ex. tax, sales tax, and 2 trade-in tires of same size off your ear. firestone WINTER TREADS RETREADS ON SOUND TIRE BODIES OR ON YOUR OWN TIRE8 DRIVE IN TODAY— NO MONEY DOWN-MONTHS TO PAY! Priced as shown at Firestone Storesr competitively priced at Firestone Dealers and at all service stations displaying the Firestone sign. 269 N. Perry 430 Orchard Lk. Ave. Tinstone TIRE and APPLIANCE CENTER 146 W. HURON ST. - 333-7917 Reelect LBJ, Teddy Urges DES MOINES, Iowa (UPI) Sen. Edward M. Kennedy has urged President Johnson’s re-election on the ground no Republican can match the President’s ability. “There. Is no Republican on the horizon with the skill and the training and the heart to take on the burdens of the Presidency in a time of peril, as has been done by Lyndon Johnson,” Kennedy told Democrats at a Jefferson-Jackson Day dinner Saturday. POWERFUL PLUNGER CLEARS CLOGGED TOILETS ...especially when you buy your new '68 car It's great to own a '681 The new models incorporate more safety features than aver before. And when you finance your, car through a credit union, you not only get safety in the car but safety far your family, Qualified credit union members receive life' insurance at no extra cost. You also save money on low C-0. rates. You see, credit untan rates are clear cut. A credit union is in business to help He members. H Is owned by Its members-and there's no polot in CnwMXlSSF. AtNWsse CrWIt Unjw! LmsW charging yourself high Interest rotas. That's why a credit union offers advantages you find nowhere else. Go ahead. Buy that new '60 you've Set your heart on. And for low-cost financing, sea your credit union. It's the smartest move a oar buyer can make. For full details, contact the C.U. where you work—or the one ta your parish or neighborhood—or write Michigan Credit Union League, P.O. Box 4210, Detroit, Michigan 48233. , / f THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1967 B—5 Fall Tonic Time! SINCE 1915 — FAMOUS O-JIB-WA. BITTERS HAS HELPED MILLIONS ENJOY BETTER HEALTH Upm-WmI O-JIB-WA BITTERS b Hi* most officlait herb tonic an* ramndy yon can bny. I* tb* past S3 years It ha* holpnd millions at pnopl* |*st lll|* yoarsoH to batter prepare for th* changing weather ahead. If yon really want to enjoy batter health, and are fed ap with th* depes aad pain hilling dregs ased \ so much today, w* erg* ye* to try fame** O-JIB-WA BITTERS. This original toalc and remedy mad* entirely from God's heirbs dan help yoal ___FEATURED AT ALL DRUG STORES TRY O JIB WA BITTERS Bar Trade Plummets Britain Tests for Drunk Drivers LONDON (AP) - Cllirbslde breath tests to catch drunk drivers began today amid complaints from British.motoring organizations and reports from bar owners of a sharp‘drop in business. The tests were pushed by Transport Minister Barbara Castle, who had already irked drivers by cl a m p i n 70-mile-an-hour speed limit on the nation’s previously unrestricted highways. Mrs. Castle does not drive. dr ★ ★ ' London police -with “breathalysers,” plastic bags containing chemical crystals that change color when exposed to alcohol fumes, made their first test ip front of Buckingham Palace, the Queen’s home. The driver passed and was let go. But for three of 13 other driv. ers who wer<p stopped and asked to breath^ into the bags during the night, the devices gave Fresh Whole PORK LOINS (WE ACCEPT FOOD COUPONS readings of more than 80 mill!-grajns of alcohol per lJW milliliters of blood. FURTHER TESTS Under the new law, this means a trip to the police station for a blood or urine test. A too-high reading in these tests can be used as evidence in court. Bars in many parts of Britain reported a sharp drop in business Sunday night. Traffic in London’s normally busy West End nearly disappeared. * t * There was a surge of sales of s6ft drinks and beer and liquor to be taken home. The automobile association reported six calls from “motorists fearful they might not be in condition to pass a breath test, it gave them telephone numbers for taxis. Motoring organizations have criticized the tests as inaccu- rate, claiming that the effects of alcohol vary in individuals according to age, weight, physical condition and other factors. .One newspaper said Cven the vinegar on fish and chips could change the crystals , from white to green. Other critics have called the new law an infringement on civil liberties. ★ ★ ★ Police and the Transport Ministry emphasize that the breath test is not by itself sufficient to convict a driver of being drunk. Mrs. Castle commented Sunday, “The law is tough but not harsh. A driver who has been drinking can park his car and arrangjpw go home by other luse of the possibility of ertor in testing, police were exited to -give motorists the benefit of the doubt during the first few days. U S. May Plant N-Mines in Viet Zone-Republican WASHINGTON (UPI)—The ranking House Republican on the joint Congressional Atomic Energy Committee suggests the administration may be planning to bury nuclear land mines to reinforce its anti-infiltration barrier across Vietnam. “Is this the next logical step in file Johnson administration’; shifting nuclear attitudes and changing nuclear applications?’ Rep. Craig Hosmer, R-Calif., asked in a statement yesterday. ‘What has evolved from 1964 to date gives reason to believe so." The Pentagon had no comment on how the anti-infiltration barrier just below the demilitarized zone would be built, but a spokesman noted that Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara was on record repeatedly ip the past as saying “I can foresee use of nuclear weapons in Vietnam,” pons in \ But Hosmer quoted McNamara as saying recently that Turkish proposal for Rowing its Soviet frontier with atomic land mines to thwart invasion should not be considered provocative because the mines/could only be used for defense. / * * * “If the mines are deemed effective against potential Soviet invaders, why should they not be deemed equally effective against actum North Vietnamese invaders?” Hosmer asked. RAISE QUESTIONS I “The Administration’s moves and pronouncements raise these /question/ and they ought to be answered, one way or the other.’) Attention Parents! If Your Child Takes Band This FaH, Grinnell's Offers You This Convenient, Unique Instrument, RENTAL PLAN For only $5 a month you can RENT a trumpet, cornet, clarinet, trombone, flute, violin, guitar or snare drum kit. Rent for as long as you wish with unlimited return privilege l If you buy, all rental fees apply! (Alto sox, vlalo or cello S10; harp $ 15) GRIN-NELL'S, Pontioc Moll, 682-0422—Downtown, 27 S. Saginaw, FE 3-7168 Use Your Charge, 4-Pay Plan (90 days same as cash) or Budget Terry BUY! SELL! TRADE! . USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! / PUBLIC NOTICE! Owner of Cioon* THRIFTY DRUG STORES and CLOOtyAN DRUGS & MEDICAL SUPPLIES COMBINE /FORCES TO BECOME ONE OF THE MOST FORMIDABLE SUPPLY COMPANIES DRUG and MEDICAL IN OAKLAND COUNTY. This Merger Adds Up to Over 80 Years of Collective Pharmaceutical Know-How, Over 5 Million Prescriptions Filled and an Expansion of Services to the People and Doctors of the Greater Pontiac Area and Oakland County. • Ask About Our Retiree Tho 1 Aft^tiAn nf fMnnn#n Discount Program! • We Will Maintain Our Prompt City-Wide Free PrescriptiomDelivery Service iii6 Lucaiion OT uioonan Drugs Has Moved to 140 N. Saginaw Street.. .The Present Sift ef Thrifty’s Downtown Store Near Sears 1k GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP You Don't Have to FE 4-1555 l©0ie ANY FURTHER to SAFE MONEY! GENERAL# ELECTRIC Big-DELUXE-2-CYCLE AUTOMATIC WASHER 168 NOW ONLY 2 CYCLES for All Fabric Safety! Wash and Wear, Permanent Press “Cool-Down!” Exclusive G-E Filter-Flow Washing System! New, Improvea Dual-Purpose Turbo-Type Pump! Giant Capacity A Best Seller at S 198-00 Easy Terms - S8.95 Monthly DELIVERY - SER VICE - WARRANTY See* $40 no- - on* pH ■ boodle of finer General Electric feetnree that can take moat of th* work out of washday, and giv* yoa brighter- cleener clothes, too Look el Its imposing list of tdvinlsges above! Other wooderfnJ features Include: S Wash and Rinse Temperature - Unbalance Load Control - Cold Water Wash and Rinse, too - Self-leveling Rear Feel - Pin* Beavy-dnty kb-B-P General EJectrte Motor YOU MUST SEE THIS VALUE TODAY * FREE WIRING NOW WITH THE PURCHASE OF ANY ELECTRIC DRYER * 230-volt wiring on Detroit Edison Co. Lin eh FRIGIDAIRE Deluxe Automatic Dryer Automatic Cool-Down features keep* wrinkle* out of Permanent Press Garment* • Up front Linj Trap, easier to clean • Safety Shut Off • 140 Minute Timed Cycle • Porcelain Drum • 2.10-V installation included at no extra cost (turquoise only) "VNAldjMeL “Permanent Press” Dryer • Ideal for permanent press fabrics. Has Automatic uCool Down” 5 Drying Cyclea, drying temperatures. Full 70-minute Timer • 230-V Installation included at- no extra coat No Money Down-Free Delivery-Warranty-90 days same as cash TBE GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP OF PONTIAC 51 W. HURON ST. * FE 4-1555 B—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. OCTOBER 9. 1967 ( THAT'S WHAT YOU'LL BE CALLING YOURSELF NEXT WEEK ... / If v. . I. ■ YOU DON’T READ THIS IMPORTANT PIECE OF MAIL (it should reach you in the next few doys)l Why? Because it offers you this FREE CATALOG and tells all about a FABULOUS NEW DISCOUNT-CATALOG OPERATION just opening in Pontiac LOOK FOR IT IN THE m f THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 B--7 Viet Nun Dies in Protest; Dispute May Be Near End SAIGON (UPI) - A high-j ranking nun burned herself to death in ah antigovemment protest, it was announced today. The dispute she gave her life for appeared op the verge of settlement. The nun was Identified as Thich (venerable) Nu Tri Chon, SO, a leader of the nuns who follow militant Buddhist Thich Tri Quang, now in his 12th day of a sit-in on the lawn outside the Independence Palace office of President-elect Nguyen Van Thieu. ! am very sorry to learn of the loss of another life,” Tri Quang said. “It is a great mis- Wake Up Your PERISTALSIS And Be Your SMILING BEST Peristalsis Is the muscular action of your digestive system. When peristaltic action slows down, waste materials can build up In the lov^r tract. You can become Irregular, uncomfortable, stuffed. The unique laxative formula of today’s Carter's Pills gives effective. temporary relief of the Irregularity by activating the slowed-down muscles of the lower tract and stimulating peristalsis. So If you’re sluggish due to irregularity, take Carter’s Pills to wake up your peristalsis and you 'U bounce back to your smiling best. Millions of satisfied users take Carter's Pills, for effective temporary relief of Irregularity. Why don't you. 49*. TRAVEL SERVICE PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER 108 Moll Office Building Phone 682-4600 But the militaht leader said he plans to continue his personal protest until Thieu gives in and withdraws .a charter recognizing a more moderate facj tion as South Vietnam’s official church. In the latest of a series of conciliatory letters, Thieu urged Buddhist leaders to call off their struggle, promising that their demands would be met soon. CANCELLED MARCH Buddhist leaders gave the letter as their reason for calling off a march yesterday to Tri Quang’s side. Observers felt the tough police action may have broken the back of the dissident students. The death of Nn Tri Chon was announced by Thich Nhat Tru-chairxnan of the militant Monks and Nuns Committee for the Defense of the Charter. He said she burned herself at Sad-ec, a Mekong Delta city about 80 miles southwest of Saigon. On Tuesday, a few hours after Thleu’s election was validated by the provisional National assembly, a 20-year-old nun burned herself to death at the Delta city of Can Tho. ★ Meanwhile, sources said it’appeared that Tri Quang may have gained two of his short-term goals but has made ilttle progress toward a long-term goal, the overthrow of Thieu. SHORT-TERM GOALS The short-term goals vocation of the charter that recognized- the moderate faction - JT: CJS ,+ LINDA FITZPATRICK JAMES HUTCHINSON NY Suspect Is Arrested in 2 Slayings NEW YORK (AP) - Aj By late Sunday night some 50 26-year-old man was arrested detectives working on the case today in the bludgeon murders had questioned more than 100 of a teen-age daughter of a persons in the lower East Side wealthy Greenwich, Conn., fam-'area. ily and a long-haired, tattooed ] * * . * . , . . . ~ „ man, whose bodies were found Near the victims lay a brick At the same time, however, *. 7* ... . . _ ... “(Sunday in the boiler room of a wrapped in a pair of men’s trou- ............the nations off,pial Buddlust hippieland tenement. Isers The couple’s clothing lay Donald Ramsey, who lives in [folded on the floor near the police threw barbed wire barri-l . vfu n.s. .. I cades across all streets leading !church- ar^ to assure some to the palace and surrounded pagodas from which the march i to have started with < certina barbed wire rolls. Police earlier had announced new get-tough tactics, warning that no more than 20 monks and nuns would be allowed to “visit’’ Tri Quang. The warning came"on the heels of antidemonstration directives that subject violators to loss of civil rights and draft age youths, including students with deferments, to immediate military draft. In the past few days police] I have sent to the military at | least 15 students involved in [ antigovernment protests, includ-ing the head of the powerful] ^BSShSSSBSSeBBBI Saigon Student's Association. of his followers will be on the ticket Oct. 22 when the nation votes for a new National Assembly. Candidates loyal to Tri Quang were disqualified during the election for the 60-man Senate Sept. 3, the same time as the presidential election. Several militant Buddhists have been approved as candidates for the national assembly in central Vietnam constituencies. Observers said this might not have happened if Tri Quang had not started his public protest. * ★ * Meanwhile, a spokesman for Thieu said he has not yet chosen his new prime minister who will replace premier Nguyen Cao Ky, the vice president-elect. the building, was ordered held door, for booking on a homicide charge by Asst. Dist. Atty. Daniel Harris. The couple’s nude bodies, about 10 feet apart, lay face down on a concrete floor. Their heads had been severely battered. Bloodstains were on the floor and walls. The girl was identified by a stepsister as Linda Fitzpatrick, daughter of Irving Dr. Elliott M. Cross, who performed the autopsies, said the couple died of multiple blows on the head “with a blunt instrument consistent with the brick. " Gross said he was unable to determine immediately if the girl had been raped. FOUND BODIES Freddie Wright, assistant superintendent of the five-story! Fitzpatrick, president of the building on Avenue B, between] Knickerbocker Mills, a tea and] 10th and 11th streets, found the' spice import firm at Totowa, I bodies. N.J. Her home was a 30-room] Hutchinson kept a room nearmansion. by on 11th Street, police said. The man, who had a police The Fitzpatrick girl’s family record in both New York City said she was attending school in I******* America's lightest Whiskey YES! Canadian Quality 1 Scotch LigWness and New England, was identified as James Leroy Hutchinson, 21, of Central Falls, R.I. New York but did not identify the school. C*up* daVIII.. CadlMao Motor Car DMtlM The master builder of theV-8’s introduces the fourth great V-8 engine design in motoring histbry. Here’s what it means to the man at the wheel: Automotive critics are'enthuslastlc about the 1008 Cadillacs and their entirely new 473 V-8 engine. it Is unquestionably the largest, smoothest engine ever put Into a production passenger car. Its quiet operation Is remarkable. Its response In traffic surprising, Its stamina on the turnpike truly amazing ! The torque, or usable power, surpasses any other passenger car engine. This unmatched combination of performance and smoothness Is In no way compromised by the operation of Cadillac’s usual conveniences. Even air conditioning Is handled with ease by the new 473. The debut of the completely new 472 V-8 engine marks the fourth time Cadillac has led the industry with a major V-8 engine developmenLThe first time was In 1014, when Jhe first V-8 that could be reproduced In quantity was lowered onto a Cadillac chassis. Bach of the eleven new Cadillac models Is equipped with the celebrated 472 V-8. if you’d like to get In on the celebration, test-drive one. Then you’ll know what elegance In action really means. Your authorized Cadillac dealer will be pleased to assist you In this exciting discovery. See him soon I SEE THE NEW 1968 CADILLACS AT YOUR AUTHORIZED DEALER’S. JEROME CADILLAC COMPANY 1980 WIDE TRACK DRIVE, WEST • PONTIAC, MICHIGAN YES! G&W SEVEN STAR A Smooth American Blend Preferred by Millions For Its Taste H52 $085 $1085 4/5 QT. ^PINT iKJ1/2 1/2 GAL. . All Taxes Included ■UNDID WHISKCr, m ROOT, m STRAIGHT WHISKEV—«096 CHAIN NEU1KAL mm, GOOOBHAM a WORTS LTD, MDMA lb S. S. KRESGE COMPANY B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAYT OCTOBER 9. 1967 ONE COLOR A ff THE VOICE S PEOPLE SURVEYS SHOW THAT THIS HIGHLY POPULAR DEPARTMENT IS ALWAYS ONE OF THE BEST READ FEATURES OF THE PRESS U(HL oml TO READ AND LEARN WHAT YOUR NEIGHBORS ARE THINKING ... -AND- YOU’RE CORDIALLY INVITED TO EXPRESS YOURSELF! Names and Addresses must always be attached biit in most instances your letter can run without identification THE PONTIAC PRESS For Home Delivery Dial 332-8181 1 > Tired' Gibson Tames Bosox, 6-0 Cardinals Eye Fourth Straight World Series Crown ST. LOUIS W - St. Louis’ Bob Gib-son has four straight World Series victories, and now the Cardinals are on the threshold of equalling that streak. Urey put themselves into position to extend their series record to four straight today by coasting past Boston 60 Sunday behind Gibson’s five-hit pitching. ' * * * The victory gave St. Louis a M lead in the Series and Gibson a four-game winning streak dating back to 1964 when he was the Series’hero. In an attempt to force the Series back to Boston, Manager Dick Williams of the Bed Sox called on Jim Lonborg, who threw a one-hitter last Thursday to face St. Louis today.' Manager Red Schoendienst had a fresh left-hander, 22-year-old Steve Carlton, set to go. If the Cardinals wrap up the Series today or .back in Boston, it’ll be the fourth straight time they have won the postseason affair. The last time they failed in a Series was in 1943 when they lost to the New York Yankees four games to one. EDGED NEIGHBORS They came back the next year to take their neighbors, the St. Louis Browns, 4-3; they edged the Red Sox 4-3 in 1946 and did the same to-the Yankees in 1964. . In looking toward their fourth in a row, the Cardinals have hitting, pitching and precedence in their favor. Only three teams in history have come back from a 3-1 deficit lind won the . whole thing — the 1903 Bed Sox over Pittsburgh in a nine-game series, the 1925 Pirates against Washington and the 1958 New-York Yankees . over Mils' waukee. “We’ve come back all season long so let’s see what happens,” said Williams. “I know we’ve looked bad the past couple of days, but we looked bad at times during the season. Nobody quit then and nobody will now.” . The Red Sox'didn’t quit Sunday, but they were pitched into retirement by Gibson. - The 31-year-old right-hander was pitching on three days rest for the first time since last year’s All-Star game, and he said he became tired id the last two innings. But the Red Sox couldn’t do anything against him. They got harmless singles in the first, fourth, t sixth and eighth innings and then Carl Yastrzemski’s meaningless double in the ninth. • ' “I was more comfortable in the first game; I was more tired in this one,” said Gibson, who hurled a six-hit 2-1 victory in the opener last Wednesday. “I really had tq force myself in the eighth and ninth innings and when yon force yourself, it’s not as easy.” Williams agreed on Gibson’s self-appraisal. * * * “He didn't have as good stuff as he did in the opener,” the manager said, “but he’s a great pitcher and deserves all the credit in the world. He was throwing strikes and that’s the big thing. Lions' Attack Sags in Defeat THE PONTIAC PRESS mm Packers Thump Detroit,27-77/ Defense Stars By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press When you play ffte best, you've got to your play your best. This is what the Detroit Lions didn’t do yesterday as the World Champion Green Bay Packers overcame a 10-0 deficit and rolled to a 27-17 victory before 57,877 at Tiger Stadium. It was the third time this season that the Lions had taken a fast lead and failed to gain a victory. In the opener at Green Bay, they led 17-0 and salvaged a 17-17 tie; at St. Louis they led 14-0 and lost 38-28 and yesterday they led 10-0 and again lost by 10 points. * * * The Lions’ offense which was showered with praises in the first three games couldn’t dent the Green Bay defense, headed by defensive end Willie Davis who spent most of the afternoon in the Detroit backfield. In the first half the Lions had only one yard passing in net yardage and just 26 yards rushing, even though they left the field with a 10-7 lead at intermission. Mitt Plum, whose pants were hardly dirtied in three previous games by good pass protection, and Karl Sweetan who hadn’t played a minute until yesterday, were on their backs a total of five times as the Pickers blitzed continuously. In the first peijod the Lions throttled the Packers and when Green Bay was threatening on the Detroit 23, Pontiac’s Jerry Rush broke through to smear Zeke Bratkowski. Zeke’s attempted pass went astray and Darris McCord Intercepted on the 35 and went to the 50. Five plays later Wayne Walker booted a 38 yard field goal. PROTECTIVE SHIELD Pat Studstill's punting was the protective shield for the Lions during most of the game. His 51-yard punt in the first period forced Green Bay back to its own goal line shadows and as the second quarter started Bratkowski’s pass attempt was batted into the air by McCord. * Larry Hand grabbed the ball at his. •hoe tops on the four, hobbled it but held on as he tumbled into the end zone for a touchdown and a 10-0 lead with Walker’s point. On the ensuing kickoff Green Bay rqarched 80 yards on 11 plays. Bratkowski was nearly smothered but just managed to get off a pass to Donnie Anderson who was all alone at the goal line for a 19-yard touchdown. * ★ * A moment later, Studstill’s punt went 78 yards Into the end zone, setting a new Lions’ record which previously was held by Yale Lary’s 74 yarder. The Lions got a break when Anderson fumbled and Alex Karras recovered on the Green Bay 2J, but a penalty add a 10-yard loss trying to pass shoved the Lions back to midfjeld to end the threat. (Continued on Page C-4, Col. 8) #73 17-» . 3 .7 0 7—IT ^ Del—Hand 4 pats Inlarcaption (Walker CB—Anderson 1# pass from Bratkowski (Chandler kick) GB—FG Chandler 33 GB—FG Chandler ,14 GB—Nitschke 20 pass Inlarcaption ■ (Chandlar kick) > \ ■ ,1 \GB—Dowler 13 past from Bratkowski (Chandler kick) Dot—Mallnchek 34 pats from Sweetan (Walker kick) IMD1"* PACKERS MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 19G7 C—1 Red Birds Chirping; Sox Singing Blues ST. LOUIS (JR — The St. Louis Cardinals chirped merrily while the Boston Red Sox sang the blues today as they awaited the fifth, and possibly final, game of the 64th World Series. The Cardinals took a commanding 3-1 lead in the best-of-7 series by defeating the Red Sox 6-0 behind Bob Gibson’s five-hit pitching Sunday, but the National League champs shied from making any predictions. “We don’t know whether we’ll go back to Boston or not," Manager Red Schoen-dienst said before, falling back on the. time-worn cliche, “we’ll play them one game at a time.” Boston Manager Dick Williams, disappointed but not disheartened, faced the facts of life realistically. “We have our backs Jo the wall,” Williams said. “Now it’s du-or-die." Asked if the Red Sox would try to duplicate Boston’s comeback from 1-3 to win the first World Series in 1903, Williams grinned and replied: “That’s something I didn’t know — I wasn’t around in 1903. But I’ll tell you one thing: We’ll give it everything we’ve got.” The Red Sox won the first official fall classic 64 years ago in a best-of-nine series. Only two teams have bounced back after losing three of the first four games'of a best-of-seven series — Pittsburgh against Washington in 1925 and the New York Yankees against Milwaukee in 1958. “Sure, the odds are against us,” Wil- ■ llams said. “But theytye been that way all season. We’re not giving up now. We’ve come back ail year long, so let’s see what happens. couple of days, but we looked bad at times during the season. Nobody quit then and nobody will now. We’ve rebounded all along the way and I’m proud of every one of the fellows.” Jim Lonborg, who won 22 games during the American League campaign and fired a one-hit, 5-0 victory over the Cardinals in the second game-of the Series," was ready to try to keep Boston hopes alive. AP Wirephoto ARRIVES SAFELY — St. Louis’ Lou Brock, who is likely to head Boston’s most-wanted list, continued his stealing tactics against the Red Sox in yesterday’s fourth game of the World Series in St. Louis. Above, Brock swipes second in the sixth inning, beating catcher Mike Ryan’s toss to second baseman Jerry Adair. Backing Adair is shortstop Rico Petrocelli. Calling the play is umpire Paul Pryon. Cards won, 6-0. « Eaglets Keep on Rolling, 7-6 Big Prize at Stake Casper, Brewer Have Playoff “i I i looked I ST. ANDREWS, Scotland UP) - Billy Casper, already the winner of two high-priced golf playoffs this year went into a third one today with Gay Brewer in the Alcan Golfer of the Year Tournament whichi carries a $55,000 first prize. “At least we’re making a little bit of golf history,” Casper said. Earlier this year, Casper beat Art Wall Jr., in a playoff in the Canadian Open, winning $50,000, and A1 Geiberger in the $35,000 first prize Carling World Tournament. Brewer and Casper tied Sunday with a 283 for the 72-hole' title, five under, par the past over the 6,926-yard, par 36-36-72 old course of St. Andrews. Casper remarked “We’ve never met head to head before in a playoff. And nobody’s met in a playoff for such a big prize anywhere in the world.” Meson Rudolph, *2,700 .... 72-70-77-75—274 Doug Sander*, (2.700 ....... <0-74-74-74-274 Maleoln Gregsbn, *2,400 .. 74-74-73-74—275 Tommy Horton, *2,100 .... 73-75-77-72—277 Miller Barber, *2,100 .... 71-73-00-73-297 Homan) Blancas, *2,000 .. 71-77-87-72—278 Peter Butler, *2.000 ....... 77-7«-7<-7<-30S Those Eaglets of Orchard Lake St. Mary just keep on rolling. The Eaglets ran their record in Northwest Parochial League play to 4-0 yesterday by pinning a 7-6 setback on Fern-dale St. James. Pontiac Catholic dropped a 33-6 decision to Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows and St. Francis de Sales pinned' a 26-6 setback on Royal Oak St. Mary. Waterford Our Lady broke into the win column after three straight setbacks with an 8-6 triumph over Detroit St. Rita. , The win yesterday puts OLSM in the driver’s seat in the league race. The Eaglets have St. Rita^Pontiac Catholic and RO St. Mary (remaining on the schedule, and, barring^fletdown, should win them all. A 26-yard pass from quarterback Dan ■ Kowalski to senior end Greg Fior and Van Muehlfeld’s PAT run sent OLSM ahead at 10:19 of the second frame. TOUCHDOWN DRIVE With a little more than five minutes left in the half, St. James launched a 45-yard drive after intercepting an Eaglet pass and the visitors covered the distance in six plays with quarterback Dave Burt sneaking the final three yards. A pass for the PAT was dropped by Gary Johnson. It was a big win for coach Fr. John Rakoczy, who has been chosen as the ‘Coach of the Year’ by the Michigan Catholic and he’ll be honored this evening at the Soup Bowl kickoff at the Capuchin Monastery in Detroit. The OLSM victory gave the team a 59-30-3 record under Fr. Rakoczy. -*> Mike Hartwig scored three times in pacing FOLS CJ-l) to the easy win over Pontiac Catholic (2-2). (Continued on Page C-2, Col. 6) UON JUGGLER — Detroit Lions’ Tommy Watkins does ap wir.pi.Mo Milt Plum In J2? * ,5?ng ??“ fr0™ qu*rtJ“’b*ck yesterday. Packers defensive back Willie Wood (24) is ready Milt Plum in ffist half action against Green Bay in Detroit with open arms but the pass fell incomplete. WOLL—5ofMv, Dion ( »nt by Mlllor. w seonn nv quarters Waforford Our Lody 4 0 0 I ' 1 ) ' 1 When be got the 4-0 lead in the first inning, he just made sure we hit the ball.” The Cardinals certainly hit the ball in the first inning, clobbering Jose Santiago for four runs and six hits before Williams replaced him with Gary Bell, who as a starter was rocked for three runs and five hits in the first two innings Saturday. BOTH SCORED Lou Brock and Curt Flood singled, and both scored as Roger Maris lashed a double. One out later, Tim McCarver singled home Maris, and after Santiago managed to get another out, singles by Julian Javier and Dai Maxvill brought McCarver around. “When you have that many runs so early, you can relax a little bit although I don’t think to the point where you get careless,” commented Gibson. The Cardinal ace, who was out from July 15 to Sept. 6 with a broken leg, never did get careless. He walked just one man, Reggie Smith, in the seventh but ended the inning by snaring Rico Petrocelli’s little check-swing pop down the first base line. “It kind of surprised me,” the pitcher explained. “I realized it was going to stay up, and I ran over and got it” Gibson might also get his prediction right. "Before it started, I predicted*we’d win four out of five,” he said. “Maybe that’s how it will go.” Jono* 3b 4 0 0 0 Flood cf YOilikl If 4 0 2 0 Mori* rf Scott lb 4 0 10 Copod* 1b RSmith cf 3 0 0 0 MeCvof c Adair 2b 4 0 0 0 Shannon 3b .... -Potcolll to 3 0 0 0 Jovlor 2b 4 0 3 1 Howard c 2 0 0 0 M—....... * * * • Morhood p 0 0 0 0 R Sloborn pn 10 0 0 Foy ph 10 0 0 Stphson p 0 0 0 0 Ryan c 2 0 0 0 total* 32 0 S 0 Total* S3 0 * 4 Boston (A) ............... 00* 000 000-0 St. Loot* (N) ........ 402 000 OOx—4 E—non*. 2B—Marl*. Capoda, Javlar, Brock. Ypttriomikl. SB—Brock. SF—Mc-Carvar. LOB-Boston 4, SI. Louts, 4. IF H R IR BB SO • 2-3 4' ' 11-3 0 Slaphanion . 3 2 . j 1 By Tha Auodalad Frau Wan Loaf Pel. St. Loul*. NL ........... 3 1 .730 Boston, AL ........ V 3 .230 Pint Gama, Wad., Oct. 4, at Boston St. Loul* .......... 001 000 100-2 10 0 Boston ............. 001 000 000-1 4 0 B. Gibson and McCorvon Santiago, Wyatt (0) and R. Glbaor —11 —Gibson. L—Santiago. Homo run—Boston, Si Sacand Osina, Thur., Oct. 9, at Boston St. Louis .......... 000 muMi 1 Boston ............. 000 101 |B-4 * 0 Hughes, Willis (4) Hoarnar (7), Lamaba (7) and McCarver; Lonborg and Howard. W—Lonborg. L—Hughes. Home runt—Boston, Yastnomskl, 2. Third Oamo, tat. Oct. 7, at St. Laal* Slang* (4), Oslnakl IS and McCarver. W ie' runs—St! Louis, Shannon. Boston, Fourth Gama, Sun., Oct. 0, at St. Louis Boston ............. 000 000 000-0 i 0 St. Louis . 402 000 000—4 * 0 Santiago, Ball (1), Stephenson (3), Merahead (1), Brett (I) and Howard. Ryan (5); Gibson and McCarver. W—Gib- ion. I__Santiago. Financial Facts Playars’mnVMMMil^^ Boston club's shore—*33,041.00. St Louis club's share—*35.041.00. Amsrlcai National rha023 ihara-S705.07t.44. ;b's share—4117444.41. club's share—4117,444.41. , League's share—*117,444.4). League's share—*117,444.41. KM-Liens-PaSr*'™ s Inlarcaption (Walkor mmmm r (Chandlar kick) GB-FG Chandler 33 GB—FG Chandler 14 {Chandler* Wd?) ” M“ lnta,CWMM MSH&MS3& P«M from Bratkowski (WMMrMk!ek)h*'' U P*“ ,r#m Attendance 37,077. Pontiac CC Captures Championship Playoff Among Publinx Teams Pontiac Country Club climaxed its reentry in the Michigan Publinx Golf Association by capturing the team championship in a playoff at Burroughs Golf & Country Club near Brighton. The Pontiac squad totaled 47 points to take the crown, followed by Rochester No. 2 (37%), Rochester No. 3 (33'A) and Salem Hills (26). Paul Bada carded a 73 to pace the Pontiac squad and teammate Trueman Hammett came in with a 78. Bob Me-Masters of Rochester No. 2 gainH medalist honors with a 72. ■ PohliAt-^^loyS *yron 77; a Ion 2. Rochester (2)—37V5-Don Brooks 12; T*“ E,“— “■ tod Kondrotko 77; “■ “lb McMestern 72; Tex Ellison ... ... Charles Thornton 74; B Jack Floch 73. 3. Rochester <3)-33'A—George Greerv helgh 03; Leo Gobs It; Roy Can* 74; Adi “—““ Ik “'ll Curtis 77; Roy *rIe& John Kowulskl 711 ► OU Booters Win, 3-1 Freshman Steve Lanctot scored twice and sophomore German Tovar tallied once Saturday as Oakland University posted,a 3-1 soccer decision over Macomb Community College. C—a THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 (|49ers Belt Rams, 27-24; Volk Spurs Colts Over Bears 6.00x13 Plus 1.S* F.E.T. / 6.95x14 7.75x14 8.25x14 6.70x15 7.75x15 7.10x15 8.15x15 HI ORIGINAL EQUIPMENT: I Firestone, Goodyear, Uniroyal, | I Goodrich, Gonoral... Change- [ Over Tiros! Excise Tax 1.18 to 2.11 _____________With any ol It *3.00 additional. * N Tim changed fnm 8> than 5 milai 4-Ply Nylon Cord FREE MOUNTING $2.38 18.88 $2.88 t.2l 7.18/8.15x16 $16.08 $2,13 "SLEDGE" SAYS: “Service So-o Good IT’S GUARANTEED 1” FRONT-END GUARANTEE Front-End Alignment • s*t Camber and Caster ^E88 • Adiust Toe-In , Sir e.n<Hi»n.d-0tl.t_ I w# e brAKE GUARANTEE wicial sup,,v,,“ jd Fill Lina* with - —. Vuolify SAE Approved Broke Fluid r,n8* and iitts Deluxe Standard shocks Ne iiwrintoe 8a laalace Ihie ehach lee# of charge H it fade within the gvop note# peried. This guarantee includes installation. Heavy Duty Shooks $M8 fori BLUE RIBBON TIRE CENTER w Len Dawson'Ad-Libs in Chiefs 41-0 Win Len Dawson, Kansas City’s I conservative quarterback, was I at his ad lib best but Bob Scar-] pitto, Denver’s impromptu pun-I ter, would have been better off | sticking to his script. Dawson hurled five touch-I down passes, touching off the spree with a 77-yarder on a broken play, as the Chiefs bombed Miami 41-0 in the American | Football League Sunda; Scarpitto, trying to run from I punting position on a fourth I down, was swarmed under by I Buffalo defenders, giving the | Bills possession and setting up Buffalo’s 17-16 victory over Den-| ver. In Sunday’s other game, San | Diego rallied behind John Hadl a 31-13 tie against Boston. I Saturday night, New York knocked off previously-unbeaten Oakland 27-14. I GAME PLANS Dawson, the AFL’s all-time | leading passer, has often been \. ■■ criticized for sticking too firmly to the game plan and not innovating on plays. But he was unconventional enough for the Chiefs on their first TD, a razzle dazzle maneuver that left the Dolphins stunned for the rest of the day. 'It was an off-tackle play," explained Dawson, who started the move by handing off to Mike Garrett. “But Mike got stopped. I hollered for him to throw me the ball.” Otis Taylor, whose assignment on the play was to black the safety man, wound up with a TD instead. “I saw Mike was in trouble,” said Taylor, ‘‘so I came back to help out. Then I heard Lenny hollering for the ball, so I just turned around and starting running downfield.” ★ ★ ★ Garrett lateralled to Dawson and the quarterback threw for Taylor. ‘‘I was going to run with it,” he Skid, “but I saw Taylor downfield so I threw to him. I figured he -could make more yardage than I could.” Dawson was right. The play made 77 yards and was the first of five scoring pitches for the veteran quarterback. Over-all, he completed 13 of 23 for 250 yards as the Chiefs buried Miami. Scarpitto, who had pulled off six straight successful runs from punting position, had the string broken but good by the Bills. Denver was leading 16-10 in the fourth quarter when Scarpitto gambled and lost in a fourth and 11 situation. A 15-yard penalty for piling on the poor punter pushed the Bills back to Denver’s 44 but six plays later Keith Lincoln bareled in for the tying touchdown and Mike Mercer kicked the decisive extra point. Dolphins Chiefs KC-Tcylor (Stanariid'kiebi PACKER TOUCHDOWN—Donny Anderson (44) of Green Bay is tackled too late by Detroit’s Bruce Maher Sunday as the Packers begin their cpmeback from a 10-0 first half (deficit. Anderson caught a 10-yard pass at the goal line from Zeke Bratkowski. FO Stenerud *7* KC—Arbenee 17 • pass fror (Stenerud kick) KC-Toylor 1 (Stenerud kick) KC-Arbener Jlfcayherdwn 54 pen from Dawson Ex-M Gridder Goes 94 Yards Long Runback Breaks 3-3 Deadlock LOS. ANGELES (AP) - The San Francisco 49ers, presented with a 20-0 lead in the first half, blew It in the third qiiarter but came back in the final period Sunday to belt the Los Angeles Rams out of the thinning ranks of unbeaten teams in the National Football League, 27-24. San Francisco took advantage of numerous fumbles and pass interceptions to build up their lead in the first two quarters. THREE TIMES The Rams, as boos turned to cheers, scored three touchdowns in 10 minutes, three seconds to go ahead, 21-20 after three quarters. The Rams added three more points on Bruce Gossett’s 32-yard field goal early In the fourth period. ★ * ★ But quarterback John Brodie rent to work on the Rams and the 49ers stormed 69 yards in eight plays, capped by a 26-yard scoring strike to Sonny Randle for the winning touchdown. . I 17 • 7-37 . • #71 3—34 Jackson 4-47; Kansas Cits Arbanas 2-42, Rlc* | 1 PASSING—Miai..., ...... yards, Roberts SUM, 11, Dawson mey 6-102, ^Taylor 4-97, 'Norton *15-34*4, 179 SF—FO Davis 16 SF—FG Davis 10 Giants Land Haymaker on Scrappy Saints, 27-21 NEW YORK (AP)—New Or-son and , Saints* pass-catcher leans’ scrappy young Saints Tom Hall—former teammates took another haymaker on the'at the University of Minnesota— chin ... and came upswinging triggered the brawl that marred after the bell. |the clubs' first meeting. * * * Hall took a pass from gary The New York Giants, led by [Cuomo during the Saints’ des- elusive Fran Tarkenton, battled perate drive upfield in the. - , .. . - . from behind Sunday for a 27-21 closing seconds, ran out of,J?”*«t in Baltimore Wstory to victory over New Orleans’ wih- bounds and collided with Lar-feH|8§&i* *** less National Football League'son, who was standing on the over .the Chlc8g0 expansion club ... then had to sideline. Larson appeared to "““SIs™®*';... r.. ,... fight their wayoff the field in ajsmash Hall with an elbow, Mu- bwk!!h wild, post-game free-for-all withlrating the New Orleans.players "■•*7 o-a ■ , ffZ*BJS8w5* A last-minute incident involvJ When^Spkier Lockhart “jr-*1™” frOT^the^rtght'^wae 6 grabbed near the corner by ing New York center Greg Lar-r6^ Cuozzo’s long pass lend zone as the final gun went HANG AROUND AWHILE! — Denver quarterback Jim Leclair (10) receives attention in a hurry as he makes his starting debut in the American Football League Sunday against the Buffalo Bills. Linemen Ron McDole (72) and Bob Petrich catch the Denver Passer for a loss. The Bills won, 17-16. RECEIVING—Oakland, Dixon 6-65, Miller 4-39; New York, Maynard 4-86, Smolinski 2-36. PASSING—Oakland, Lamonica. 16-38*4, 176,yards; New York, Namath 9-26-Z 166. At San Dlago—23,620 Patriots .............. 7 14 10 0-31 Chargers ............. 7 10 0 14-31 SO—Hobbort 20 pass from Hadl 0)raa* Shorst kick) Boo—Garron 44 pill from P.rllll (Cap-rallettl kirk t 1 SD—Hot run (Roaphorst kl Last Second TD Pass Gives Dallas Victory SO—Alworth 34 pall from Hadl (Raa-horit kick) individual Laadara RUSHING—Boston, Nonet 37-137; San Diego. Hubbart V-3V. Hadl 4-30. RECEIVING—Boston. G.rron 5 96, Whalen 4-72; Son Diego. Hubbert 2-49. WASHINGTON (AP) - Dal-I las running back Dan Reeves was worried: He was all alone, the goal line was so close and quarterback Don Meredith’s | pass just hung in the air. “I didn’t think about dropping | it,” Reeves said after the Cowr boys defeated the Washington Redskins 17-14. “I just didn’t I think it was coming dowA." Meredith hit Reeves on a 36-I yard touchdown play that began ] with only 18 seconds remaining. I DEFENSIVE ERROR It was a Washington defensive I mistake—set up by the Dallas I offense — on which the Cowboy | won despite the strong defensive effort by both teams through the first three quarters and up to I the last few minutes. At Washington—50,546 . Dali—Rentiel 25 pais (Villanueva kick). 1 Dali—FG VHIanuavt . Weeh—Taylor I past " —- kick) I—Roevea Atlanta passes—with end Don Hultz returning one 16 yards for a touchdown—and recovered two Falcon fumbles. At Atlanta—53,141 Eagles ..............24 t 7 Falcons ............ 0 0 0 Phil—Ballman 17 run (Baker kick Bakar kick) Phil—Woodoehlck 2. run ( Atl— Simmons 10 past f Trayntiam kick) R U SH1NG—Phi Malphia!* JO-129, Lara 15-55; Atlanta, R ECEIVING—PhlledelphlL. ■_________ P »• BBko 3-40,-Kelly 1-59; Atlanta. Colley ■**- - 3-44, Smith 340. Coffey I] ■, Ballm LA—Pardta 2 past Interception (Goo-ttt kick) LA—Gabriel v run (Gooutt kick) LA—Jotophson 12 pass from Gabrlol CHICAGO (AP) - Rookie Rich Volk of Michigan scored on 94-yard runback of a pass— !off, linebacker Steve Stone-| breaker led a New Orleans march on the Giants’ bench. Stonebreaker swung at Larson, New York’s Homer Jones flailed at the Saints’ Doug Atkins and Jim Garcia with his helmet and other players traded punches all over the field. MINNEAPOLIS-ST. PAUL (AP) — Jim Hart and Johnny OLSM Nears Loop Crown; Shrine Loses (Continued from Page C-l) Waterford Our Lady broke a;Roland picked up sagging St. 6-6 deadlock with a safety in thejLouis in the final seven minutes fourth quarter when tackle Dave I Sunday, wiping out an 11-point Volk. He raced down the sidelines, slithered through an attempted tackle byBukich on the Bear 35 and bolted into the end zone. ** t * The league interception runback record is 103 yards. At ChlCOflP-47,170 Colts .. . . . ....... • * 7 14-24 Bears .......... 2*14-2 Chi—FG Perclval 35 Balt—FG Miaicclt 47 Balt--Mackoy 34 past from Unltat (ML 4 pass Interception (MI-V fumbla return (Michael Miller and linebacker Pat Mc-Colgan dumped St. Rita quarterback Jim Dion in the endzone. John LaForge took a 19-yard pass from freshman quarterback Jim Tracey to pat WOLL 6-0, in the first period, 15-yard scoring pass from Mike Ottman sparked the in .5^*^ defense with a couple n 471 of pass interceptions. .750 111 v .500 S3 ? :»o 9* m Failure to add the extra point i o .25* 4* ns je,} t0 a 28-26 defeat for Royal Oak. Shrine at the hands of Detroit Servite Saturday. Mikecy Brezezinski scored on a five yard 17m, and teammate Nitschman scored three times on runs of 15 and" 1 along with a 30-yard pass from Brezezinski. Brezezinski kicked to PAT$ but failed on the other pair. deficit with three quick touchdown strikes to pin the fourth straight National Football League defeat on the Minnesota Vikins, 34-24. Joe Kapp, Minnesota’s quarterback, mpking his first NFL start after eight years in the Canadian League, had staked the Vikings to a 24-13 lead earfy in the fourth quarter with an 85-yard scoring pass to rookie Gene Washington. At Mlnn**polla-St. Paul—40,417' Cordlnas . ___ B “ Vikings StL—FO Bakkan 39 Minn—Hackbart 21 'Hm Map MlnnBrown 2 rim (Cox kick) StL—Gambrtll 5 pats from Hart (I k*n kick) . Minn—FG CM 44 StL—FG Miilt 17 Minn—Wtihkitcn It Pisa from K (Cox kick) StL—williams 44 past frdm Hart (I ktn kick) StL—aojend 1 run (Bakkan kick) ... ——■a t. -YTiSr - •'1 Mrm taStton kick) RUSHING^SL ^uJuls.' Roland 17-122. Gautt 9-21; Minnesota, Brown 14-40. Os-■-orn 14-30, RECEIVING—St. Ltula, D. Williams 3 W. Stnlh 4-13; Minnesota, Br- * *** (aehlngton 2-9V. PASSTNG-St. Louis. Hart 14-27-2, 147 yards) Minnesota, Kipp 12-22-2. 211. RECEIVING—Dallas. Rentzal 0-104, , Reaves 3-54, Hayes 3-45; Washington, I Taylor 7-73, Lava 4.91. Smith 3.J9, I PASSING—Dallas, Meredith 17-31-2, 237 I Jjards; Washington, Jurganscji 24-33-1, ATLANTA (AP) - Philadel-I phia’s explosive Eagles demoralized Atlanta with a 24-point outburst in the first quarter-Sunday and coasted to a 38-7 National Football League victory over I the winless Falcons. ' 1 *' *** * • Quarterback Norm Snead | tossed a 67-yard touchdown pass 8 Gary Ballman, threw a two-I yard scoring strike to Mike Dit-I ka and set up another touch-I down with a 59-yard pitch to COWBOYS MISFIKE-Washington Red! 1 lead the Eagles to their third skin defensive halfback Dick Smith (28) [ victory against one loss. picks off Dallas pasa intended for i.antra Philadelphia picked off four Rentzel (19) during the first period of Sun- . i V': ■■ - l£: A# WlroptoM day’s. National Football League game at the Nation’s Capital. Don Meredith threw the pass. Cowboys rallied for a 17-14 victory by the closing seconds of play. chatli kick I Bnlt—Brai kick) RUSHING—Baltin— I 4-22; Chicago,_ Sayara 1440. Bull 7- ---- -.. :ago, S Concannan 2-15. ——.......IG—B........ . .... 5-27, Moora 2-24, I 3 7 2 21—34 * 14 0 7—24 Intarcaptlon 2 Capital Dlvlilan * W L T Pci. Th. 47 -----J ........... 2 1 4 .754 M ** WaiSliigton* I 1 f ■» IH mSSS: : . 2 2 0 .500 106 CMtral Green Bay .. Detroit ...... Chicago ..... f. Matte 10*474 I Jnitet 19*37-3, CLEVELAND (AP) - Frank Ryan, Apparently recovered from assorted injuries, fired the touchdown passes and Cleveland’s ground game shredded Pittsburgh’s league leading rushing defense Saturday night for a 21-10 National Football league victory before 82,949. * * * The Browns’ quarterback shaking off two sprained aqjtles along with shoulder and fUtger injuries, threw a 15-yard touchdown to Paul Warfield in the second quarter and added two more in the third. Ryan connected on a 49-yard 15-yarder to Ernie Green that gave Cleveland a 21-10 lead. -roan* ................. 4 7 14 4-21 Plif-PG Cltrk 43 Cltv—WirfMM 17 pile from Rycn Gran kick) Pitt—Hock I put from Nix (Clerk kick) ciev—Green IS pan from Rycn (Groza kick) Individual Landart RUSHING—Cleveland, Green 11-105. Kelly 25-80; Pittsburgh, Hoak 14-22. Atbu--■» 11-14, RECEIVING—Cltveltnd, Warfield 3-45, olllne 344, Smith. 144; Pltliburgh, ompton 14-104, Wilburn 1 “ PASSiNCL-Cisv' yards; Pltleburgl nd, Rycn 41k 23-34-3, 11-25-3, 190 $300 Earned by Gene Bone Icadcy*_________ San Francisco 27. Leo Angalet 24 icltlmorc 14, Chicago 3 Groan Bay 27. - Pontiac’s Gene Bone finished I fourth and picked up $300 in aTTi-ioo "Ithe Spring Valley Open In Lex-3 i o >30 125 M ington, Ky., over the weekend. “ -*| Kentuckian Frank Beard won the event with a 66-67—133, with E. J. (Dutch) Harrison, second (135) and defending champion Joe Campbell third (136). Bqne carded a 79 on Saturday and closed with a 72 yesterday for a 148. BUI Mattson, pro at Walled Lake’s Shenandoah Country Club, shared ninth with a 150 ahd picked up $80. ft. Ldui* 34, „ Philadelphia 34. Atlanta ,7 Now York 27jJ4»w Or leant 21 Datroll at CWcogo* * * Lot Angeles at Baltlmora : MlnnMora vt. Green Ray ct Milwaukee NM/OflMM at Dsllai New York at Pltliburgh , ^^coWraemi,,. Ington al Atlanta 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 C—3 MSU Rpmps to 35-7 Victory Spartans Lift Gloom by Rousting Wisconsin By FLETCHER SPEARS EAST LANSING — Happy days are here again. the cloud of gloom that had enveloped Spartan Stadium for the past couple of weeks was lifted Saturday as Michigan State ripped Wisconsin, 35-7. Looking like the Spartans of old, MSU played it. straight for the most part with a crunching ground game that rolled up 296 yards, although coach Duffy Daugherty did toss in a couple Except for a brief flurry by of tricky little maneuvers that Wisconsin in the second period, should give the Michigan coach-; MSU held the upper hand all ing staff something to stew Over:day over the Badgers with a this week. MSU and ‘M’ meet senior-dominated offense and a Saturday. sophomore-dominated defense. The win was^MSU’s first after losses to Houston (37-7) Southern California (21-7), and it was the 15th straight in Big Ten Conference action for the Spartans who are looking for their-third title in a row. * * ★ The last setback for the Spartans in Big Ten play came at the tailend of 1964 when Illinois took a 16-0 decision. MSU CONTROLS And while the old hands were the steadying factors in the offensive efforts, one of the two sophs on the first string was a hit in his first starting assignment. LaMarr Thomas, a 6-1, 195-pounder from Markham, scored once and passed for another touchdown and rambled for 106 yards in 14 trips with the ball, and his runs around and through the Badger line made it look as though All-Amer-icji Clinton Jones had returned. Thomas and tackle Ron Saul, a 6-2, 226-pounder, are the only sophs on the first‘String offensive Unit, while nine of the sec- ond-year players have gained spots on the first and second defensive units. ★ ★ ★ The Spartans struck quickly, taking the kickoff and moving 63 yards in six plays with senior halfback Dwight Lee of N e w Haven racing off right tackle yards for the touchdown. Mitch Pruiett kicked the first of his five, extra points and a 7-0 lead. LEE SCORES A time-consuming drive of 16 plays ended early in the second quarter with Lee diving the final yard of the 89-yard march. The Badgers, down 14-0, showed their only punch midway in the second period when they rolled 55 yards in 14 plays with quarterback John Ryan sneaking the final yard. Fullback Wayne Todd picked up most of the yardage in the drive with off tackle slants. Thomas capped an 80-yard drive with a five-yard burst off the left side behind a block by tackie Tony Conti making it 21-7. Moments later, following a short punt by the Badgers, Thomas took a pitchout from quarterback Jimmy Raye and headed around the right side. It pulled the defense in and he floated a pass over the defend- Wolverines' Johnson Explodes Navy Weapons Batter 'M' Mich. St. Ohjo Sf. Michigan *" c,<SnJr««"cIii eim.s Church, leading the Academy to ine cornerback George Hoey w iLoToP,m°uW3L(iToP77 °57a 26*21 triumPh over W Big most of the time. ’ 0 0 M 7 iso w as Ten Wo,verines- I Michigan’s second fumble, by ooo o jio £ m Michigan had just one explo-jMandich at the Wolverine 38, oo o o iso 40 la sive weapon that was halfback set up another Church field io it js ! 20 3*Hon Johnson who scored twice goal in the third quarter. But j{ 7 35 o 3 o n 94on runs of 62 “** 72 Yards andJohnson electrified the crowd on ---- who set up another with a 37 the first play of the fourth Ann Arbor — Navy invaded yard dash. quarter when he raced 72 yards Ann Arbor Saturday afternoon, * * * to score. Hankwitz made good and the Middies had a battery' Johnson set an all time Michi-jon his third straight conversion of offensive weapons with pas-'gan rushing record with 270 ofifo put the Wolverines ahead 21-ser John Cartwright, receiver the team’s 308 ground yardage. 20. Bob taylor and kicker John Cartwright had only 13 of 28, * * * ;------------■“----5------- - passes, but the Michigan: But Michigan failed to hold i defense was caught napping on the lead as Cartwright drove several occasions as 6-2 his team 80 yards to score ini lend Taylor was left in seclu-'the fourth quarter, sion often on the sidelines. Navy Mich. I FIRST TOUCHDOWN i RurtlnYT.’rd.se 1M Johnson scored on Michigan’s!!^'"0 J!rS»S* I second play from scrimmage!£2™* ij-3»-o 9-21-^ !on a 62-yard power sweep but i Fumbles lost jthe Middies came back to takej^J* p*nahz"1 w Mich ?o"o m*^d *2Lo s!*'? a lead on a 3-yard run by Mich'*»n Ohio u.' 3 1 0 02 49 3* 0 112 64 Jeri Balsly, who led Navy run- N^vy-B#uiy03 n?n o Toledo' I'o 3i 27 I i o S’ wlners with 86 yards in 25 car- n»vV-fg Church 31 s TrUt 0 1 0 3s 10 210“ to ries, and a 31-yard field goal by| Nivy^Ta^o? ws" p« Marshall 0 2 0 31 42 0 4 0 27 99 John Church. K AL AM AZOOUR-After The Middies’ 72 - yard TD losing two in a row, the Bron- [drive included a fourth down cos of Western Michigan have ®nd two gamble at midfield and' shown they can win where it> 35-yard pass from Cartwright! counts in their campaign for a ih> end Mike Clark, second straight Mid-American j Church’s field goal was set up Conference football title. iby Emerson Carr, who recov-| Western Michigan held off an:ered the first of three costly! early threat by Bowling Green Michigan fumbles at the Wol-' and went on to beat the Falcons|Verine 47 after an onsides kick-! 10-6 Saturday on the Ohioans’ i0ff by Church. - i home, ground. Broncos Edge Bowling Green s 9^-39 6 4-39.5 ers to end A1 Brenner at the 15; and he romped in to complete! a 44-yard scoring play. South-; era Cal scored the winning: touchdown on a similar' play' against MSU last week. Sr * ★ The reserves put the final tally on the hoard. With Bill Feraco, a junior quarterback! from Pennsylvania, quiding the attack, the Spartans moved 61' yards in eight plays with half-, back Frank Waters diving over left guard for the final two yards. PASSES WELL Feraco complete) passes of 16 to sophomore end Frank Foreman and 20 yards to Waters in the drive, and his tossing was the only bright spot in the MSU aerial attack. Raye had little success with his passes, hitting on only four of 12, so Feraco-, playing most of the fourth quarter, may be seeing more game time as the season progresses. The MSU defense held the Badgers in check, giving up only 48 rushing and 77 in the air. Defensive end George Chatlos js the only senior on the first, string defense which continues; to improve with each game. Wit. MSU 7- 17-1 *—1»- MSU—Thomas 5 ri MSU—Brennan 44 (Pruiett kick) Mich.-Johnson 72 n Navy—Murray 25 ru Attendance 72.341. GRIDIRON DANCE — Halfback Dwight Lee of New Haven dances over the goal line td complete a 12-yard scoring run for Michigan State against Wisconsin Saturday in East Lansing. Lee leaped the final yard over the Badgers’ Mel Walker. No. 42 is Tom Schinke. It was MSU’s first score of the day in a 35-7 victory. OU X-Country Runner Breaks Course Record Caro’s Louis Putnam led Oakland University’s harriers to their best showing ever Saturday as the Pioneers won a triangular meet with Wayne I State and Olivet. I Putnam became the first man to break 22 minutes on the four-mile OU course apd the Pioneer By the Associated Press [Its biggest victory margin in lli Wayne State made a 31 - 6 ^He compihne 2Tnoints P'aCeS The Wildcats of Northern years when it steamrollered |ptsy out of the University of I Wavn„ cta»p haH Js Hfit Michigan University led the Western Reserve 47 - 0 on theilllinois-Chicago Circle and the|vet 7, p.ltnam,_ timin" ronlro nf ninin nnllnnA nhifUtnc' KaIYIO Orr»l lnfl . QmiOn nnrrtn iitnn n Ann nL/v...nnr.n O was 36 seconds ahead of the old record set by teammate D o n N. Michigan Pacing State 11s * * * ] After the field goal, Michigan; ranks of state college unbeat-i Ohioans’ home ground. Seven .game was a one-man showcase' Hie Falcons were inches from | drove 71 yards in seven playsjens with five straight football different players scored touch-|for quarterback A. J. Vaughn. I paydirt, but were stymied by an j with Johnson accounting for all; victories to their credit. downs for the Hurons as they; In other MIAA action Satur- alert Western Michigan defenseibut four of the yards, including I handed Western Reserve its! day, Olivet downed Albion, 24-7, Colpitts of Walled Lake that later came up with two key, a 51-yard run. Fullback Warren I K .„rn Mi„hi_an Ir ■ j second loss in as many outings.! while Adrian walloped Kalama-! pass interceptions in the fourth'SIdd scored on a fnur-vard run e-asiern ivncmgan university, Alma came close to tnmhlinoivno I pass interceptions in the fourth'Sipp scored on a four-yard run. quarter. I Michigan’s Mike Hankwitz! and Alma share 4 - 0 records'; Alma came close to tumbling|zoo, 14-3. I Cojpitts finished third Satur- — ~ ithPP noiiMTiu ... Wa ,r • •, from .the unbeaten ranks in its) ★ * * jday with 23.06, three seconds Fullback Jim Majerle put the missed a 33-yard field goal try . ,. , university,Michigan Intercollegiate Athlet-I In the other conference behind Pioneer teammate Mark Broncos on the scoreboard first in the second quarter apd Navy .asi! as M defeat in three |c Association, thriller withig ames, Central Michigan Dutton of Royal Oak, Pontiac’s: when he plunged across fromicame back to score on Cart-!0 e ' A iHope. The Scots foiled a two-jswamped Eastern Illinois 21 - o Bruce Anderson placed eighth, the one-yard line late in thelwright’s 15-yard pass to end _ ,. I point conversion attempt that.in the IIAC, while Western|Tom Merchant was 1,0 th, Randy first half. Dale Livingston add-j Bob Taylor to take a 17-14 half-j Northern Michigan’s latest Wou!d have tied the score in Michigan dropped unbeaten Petiprin (Pontiac) 11th and Don ed the extra point, then booted I time lead. triumph Saturday was a 35 - 8 the closing seconds and squeezed!Bowling Green of Ohip, 10-6 Jn Balkwell (Walled Lake) 12th to a 26-yard field goal in the fourth; ..We don’t think anyone can* !.n®. ° Hi,lsdale- which suf-|Past'Hope, 20-18. the Mid-American Conference, round out the OU (93) scoring. period for insurance J fered its second straight loss.....— • -- j..- .. _-.--.-r.: -—---------—_________________________4________ liciiuu sus iiuuiauix. cover Tavlor nne-nn-iine ” said .j- ....... — 6 - cover Taylor one-on-one,’ i j_ii Navy Coach Bill Elias. West.—Malerlt BG-r-Green rec end zone. (Run West.—FG LK Livinostor 12,972. The Wildcat offense Was t • i i- ii ' | sparked by a touchdown by the i Taylor caught seven passes'state’s leading rusher, Lonnie for 87 yards, taking advantage!Holton., j of the inexperience of Wolver-I Eastern Michigan chalked up What do you say to a fine whiskey at a modest price ? HELLO; PENN A FAVORITE BLEND IN AMERICA * SINCE 1898 06HTY PROOF • 72MX BRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS | '' $*264 %-/4/5 qfc 129 4 pint 600DERHAU l WORTS LTD. • PEORIA, IU. mmmm 10 POINT AUTO SAFETY CHECK Wa will check your car'a brake tyttam, (tiering, ■HMO^HaHR front and rear light*, tirea and horn, axhauit, washer glass, wiper*, mirror* end | | seat belt*.. ■ ENGINE TUNE-UP We'll predslon tun* your ongin* end adjust ths eleo- trical lyitem for smooth economical performance. 1 cyl. U.S. autos $4.11, Any • cyl. U.S. auto, part* RRPfi* ';rn"d“l- extra If needed. with air-conditioning ANTI-FREEZE PROTECTION Hera'i whet we do... *■ Af check hose connection*, drain and check radiator, V MM Install 2 gall, of Goodyear, _ 1 permanent antl-freeze, and check thermpitat and _ . _ ft pressure cap. Nrti extra If needed BRAKE ADJUSTMENT We remove front end rear $11 kR wheals, adjust brakes, In- 1 •pact front whsel bearings, 1 Inspect grease aeals, add ® brek* fluid (no extra illW;,*!!!0p,u* rh.ro.3 and Md *2 If dllllisnibly cnargej ana test. greiissmbiyofssU •diustlng brakes It needed. WINTER TIRE CHANGEOVER We Inspect all four tires on All for only... your car, place your two _ nest regular tires on the MM front wheels and mount both your present snow * tirei on rear wheels. ■ BATTERY CHECK 'N CHARGE W* do all this work... 0^ 0^ dean and inspect battery,' ImlmU clesn cables and hold ■ down, add water, recharga ^0 to maximum capacity and fZ y. j ,ut# #r tef t. (up to H Um) GOODYEAR REDICE! 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TODAY IS OCT. 9 • if your waistline is 42 ...'.Ifosby Dec. 9 • if your waistline is 40 m..»»]4by Dec. 9 • if your waistline is 38 Dec. 9 • if your waistline is 36 m..'Jl32fcy Dec. 9 COURSES FOR ALL MEH Special Courses I Spet For Business Men | for Commended & Approved by U.G.A, open 7 days a week 10 a.m.-1Q p.m. 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. Monday thru Friday Sundays 10 a.m.-0 p.m. Saturdays f Friday 'til f P. m. lyHiqdl) HEALTH SPA 3432 W. HURON STREET (Just Wast Of Etizabath Lk. Rd. C—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 Firebirds Withstand Dayton's Rally to Win, 21-12 Goldsworthy, West Reach Paydirt Birch Run 25, Boyne City 9 New Haven 13, Capac 4 Grosse Pointe 27, Monroe 0 Southgate Schafer 24. Southgate Marine City Holy Cross 50, Uti .awrence 19 Mt. Clemens St. Mary 20, »t. Louis n Ypsflaim St. Detroit f* * Child U it St. Ambrose 23 MFL STANDINGS born Divine Woods Notre Dame 20, Detroit usfin 6 Detroit U. of D. High 35, Cathedr Center Line St £j---------* |g|jg| 12 (tie) Ypsiletjti Pontiac Dayton .. 4 2 0 101 3 2 0 54 m _____________H_______________ _______ - - - If: final quarter had the 3,400 fans LAST WEEK'S RESULTS The last eight minutes of the final quartei | fff;on their feet Mike Pryor intercepted a Day-ton pass, but then a bouncing r>ont<aC at, bayton is— punt by Bill Apisa for 65 yards «t*ctemeni s^Detrew puummu,, o pushed Dayton back to its own '---------------- 20. Last-minute heroics have been: Miko hit Keith Smith for 15 common in the Pontiac-payton; yardSi j,ut then on fourth down, series in the Midwest Football iSmith.s t was blocked by League and Saturday night was Ron Bemis and Izer reCovered no different. for Pontiac on the Dayton four. The Pontiac Firebirds defeat-1 when three running plays ed the Dayton Colts, 21-12, and failed Motzer Uned up for a it was a blocked punt and a | field goal with Tim Jones hold-fake field goal attempt which Ung jones quickly stood up and clinched the victory after Day- flift)ed to Apisa in the end zone ton had closed the gap to 14-12. for the touchdown. There were two interception Sf. Clement 12, D< WIP .. ...e) Detroit Bedford St. Mfery 4, Benedi Madison . ...... ... ____ Pontlec Catholic 6 Detroit St. Thomas 38," St. Philip 0 U Orchard Lake St. Mary 7, Perndale 5t. ames 6 Detroit St. Francis deSales 27, Royal lak St. Mary 4________ MICHIGAN COLLEGE Michigan State 35, Wisconsin 7 Navy 24, Michigan 21 Western Michigan 10, Bowling Green 4 Olivet 24, Albion 7 '“•"♦'•el Michigan 21, Eastern Illinois 0 •n Michigan 47, Western Reserve 0 State 31. University of Illinois-Chicago Circle A ^Wayne 20, Hope 18 Norttern Michigan I-. NorthWood 45, Ohio Norther AririAn 14, Kal-------- 8 21, Ft The Firebirds played a sterling defensive game and capitalized on the breaks when they were presented offensively. The win was costly however, SCRAMBLING - Tim Jones, Pontiac Firebirds’ quarterback, has Dayton defensive tackle Bill Sealey (76) closing in on him in their game Saturday night at Wisner Stadium. exchanges before the game ended, and a big play in the last second was a steal of the ball by Pryor Just after Mell took a 22 yard pass from Miko. as starting halfback Larry Pontiac, now 3-2 in the MFL, Goldsworthy, former Emmanuel has beaten Ypsilanti once and Christian-High gridder, suffered Dayton twice, two of the top a fractured ankle just a few|teams, and lost both games to minutes after' he made a 32-;league leading Mount Clemens, yard touchdown run in the first quarter. John Motzer added the point and it was 7-4) after four minutes of action. Tim Jones, Lions* taxi quarterback who was bedridden with the fin for several days, started the F-Birds on a 65-yard march after Gold worthy’s injury with eight minutes left in the) Raiders Boost Title Prospects USC vs. Irish By the Associated Press i Southern California, which Is the top-ranked college football team in the country, and Notre Dame, which used to be, both rolled to convincing victories Saturday, setting up their clash .this week as one of the top contests of the season. Rally Kills Lion Hopes | for Upset i (Continued from Page C-l) In the third period, after a strong, downpour covered I stadium, the Lions returned fo their conservative ways. x ! They had the ball for only six {Scrimmage plays in the third period as the Packers tied it f 10-10 on Don Chandler’s 32-yard {field goal at 6:56. { A Packer punt late in the period was flubbed as Tom Wat-I kins and Tom Vaughn ran into each other and the Packers got the ball on the Detroit 28 as former Michigan player John Rowser recovered. On the opening play of the 4th quarter, Chandler kicked aj {16-yard field goal to make it] 113-10. jjV I After the kickoff, just 11 sec-| jonds later, Plum’s pass was batted into the air by Dave Robinson and Ray Nltschke intercepted on the 20 and went untouched into the end zone to make it 20-10. I Karl Sweetan replaced Plum! _ T l t l ... as the lights were turned on. The Irish, knocked from first'State raided from a six-point Herb Adderly intercepted h i s to sixth in the rankings by los- halftime deficit and beat the first pa8s and Green Bay had ing to Purdue a week earlier, Cougars 1<H>. j ^ bail on itg own | came roaring back and pounded I The only other team In the _ Iowa 51-6. The clubs meet at Top Ten to lose was Texas'-, Ldon* for.c?^ a and SSKfHhvSS South Bend, Ind., Saturday and Tech, No. 10, humbled 7-3 byjgJwetan a^er fo^ng nicely on. Tutu -- -..... Southern'Cal mav be insnireri nrevimislv winioce Miceiccinni “*e Pecker 46, aimed for Jim wme Pontiic Press Photo Jones passed for two touchdowns as Pontiac defeated the Colts, 21-12 in a Midwest Football League contest. FOOTBALL SCORES Clem re 35, Hillsdale 8 ’ 24, Superior 4 liinois 28, Bell State k 19, Panhandle A&M 17 Southwest Ida State 19, Texas A&M 18 as 19, Oklahoma State 0 ilssippl State 7, Texas Tech 3 11 jona State 33, Texas-EI "..... Utah 42, New Mexico 27 Texas 19, Oklahoma State 0 Mississippi State 7, Texas Tet.. 9 rlzona State 33, Texas-EI Paso .. ------3 27 31, New / •rth Can U E ast Texas ]%*H \ o 28, Califr Riverside 7 California 14, Air Force 12 rmnrarin 34, Iowa State 0 State 41, Idaho 14 ■ g| Oregon 0 rnia 30, Stan! Ohio State 30, Oregon o Colorado State College 14, Western State Montana 2h University of Pacific 7 Fort Lewis 47. Colorado Mines 28 Cal Lutherai^ 41, Omaha 1 -taywood State imboldt State a 21, Whitti Mankal • 28, Mlchl Gridiron Plot Thickens Princeton 28, Columb Dartmouth 24, Holy C Syracuse 7, Maryland Pennsylvania 28/Brov West Virginia 15, Pitl Yale 14, Connecticut UCLA 17, Penn State Harvard 19, Boston U Duke 10. Army 7 Cornell 23, Colgate 7 Wesleyan 29, Bowdoii Soutl Alabama 21, Mlssissi Arkansas 24, Texas < The Citadel 20, Arkar BULLETIN NOW IN |UST THREE EVENINGS A WEEK YOU CAN BECOME AN ELECTRONIC TECHNICIAN AT E.I.T. . All courses V.A. I. Southern llllnol Virginia Tech 3, Villanova 0 Virginia 14, Wake Forest 12 Baylor 10. Washington State ; Midwest Cincinnati 14, Wichita State 4 Ohio 30, I Nebraska ______I Minnesota 23, Southerr. .. Missouri 17, Arizona 3 Notre Darvu^|B|gn^ Southern Cal may be inspired'previously winless Mississippi H'l™1''1" ™’ si? by the memory of the 51-0 drub-lState. A couple of other top^^bons with a pass. Tom Brown owo \aiiayan ’ 35. Augustan*. i North Farmington’s hopes for tests of the season. bing it took from the'Irish last teams had their problems in “tercepted and went 51 yards j 34, wabasu o' quarter. I the Northwest Suburban AA The Trojans remained unbeat-season. winning, however. to the Detroit 10 from where it fKno.'T/"'"' * A 17-yard screen pass to BiU ?rid ^ remain bright but Ox-ien by knocking off Stanford 304) * * * BLOCKED POINT ^ °"ly. th^ee Plays * a paf I ^f«5rTS,.“,24Coifi™!S: &E Apisa and a broken pitchout play i*ords Central Suburban chances on touchdown passes of 28 and Houston, ranked second last ruiINI 'from Zeke to Boyd Dowler to o southwestern, Kan. is, B»th«ny, i which forced Apisa to pass toisu^ered a iolt in Saturday after-!29 yards from Steve Soggo tolweek, got a surprise before a UCLA, ranked third, pulled score. I Tarki# v. s Mickev Blazitz for 20 vards noon action' Earl McCullouch apd the run-lrecord crowd of 52,483 in the out a 17'15 victory oyer Penn There were only 46 seconds d.p?uw io. jgJ to^CL^/*8 iolted^Madison!,^ of O. J. Simps! A............................ .......................................... ton {Heights Lamphere, 40-0, as Bill, , . , . .,11., Watson passed for two touch-1- y, ,d y , . {downs and ran one over from passing, pushed Pontiac back to ^ five Pat w , and Tom its own 45, but two plays.la erMcComb each crosJd the twice. Both icm, J SI Electronics Institute of Technology 2457 WOODWARD AVI. “Action at Jackson” NIGHT RACING rslso 21. Butler 7 at the 20 and the little receiver! in the circuit. Race Results, Entries TUESDAY Sir Qullk Barter “ d MapIt 115 Nu Dragon 115 Lucky Jawi 118 Mr. Bill D ________ 115 Naw Dack Power Thought 118 Fergie's Fi Rad Eff Jr. 115 Klaa ‘.iohthaaded 115 Bangln 4 Furlong I Hard-Rock- scampered the distance for a 45-yard TD play. Motzer made| N#rth Farmington remained it 14-0. tied with Livonia Franklin and Wayne John Glenn by trimming CALLED BACK {Oak Park, 35-6, with Rick Knock Early in the second quarter,'and Mike McCoy grabbing two a pass interference penalty gave TC aerials each from Norm De-Dayton the ball on the Pontiac ,Conrcy. J^Pete MkoIajewski fumbiwi at) this point and big Dan LaR<»e|Thurgton 13_7 a- - picked up the baH and rambled cranhrook upped its mark to W yards to the goal line. But, L., with a ^ romp over De-| pCumbi.. . the play was called back and]^ Country Day Dirk DeiterslM^^U ............RRR Pontiac was handed an offside taj^ on a 17.yard ^ and penalty. {Mark Steiner went one yard. It was second down from the Craig Tuohy and John Walde-three and Dayton made threejmar had the other TD’s. tries at the stubborn Pontiac ______________,_____ line. With the ball just s 1 x I Astrodome when North Carolina IState when the Bruins scored left on the clock when Sweetan.................. {after blocking a punt in the passed for Bill Malinchak in the RimnP47.’ 'third quarter. Purdue, rated end zone. Malinchak made a ESSS.,* fourth after upsetting Notre1 final tram statistics ^ co^ai, c Dame a week ago, came from'Tot»i First Downs is ' 7 ’; weslmor 10-points behind to beat North-! 33 SSS M * 2 ! western 25-16. | Total wo* teln«5n?ntt) 249 122 5ta,<Norte And seventh-rated Nebraska1 ^J5!CSi rSSSn« vir $ • S!tv<nt p 4.0D 4.40 beat Kansas State 16-14 when'pa”« . . Wl bfigS 1.40. | Bill Bomberger kicked a. 31-yard ~ ., 13. Illinois College 0 xiOS Optional Twin (0-7) 112 7tti—04*500; Allowance 115 Carpontora Rule 115 Our 115 Will t X102 Egeo 115 Groat 115 Quaer 2 40 «am^* I^Furlonyst WWW 7-io s.'io' Georgia, ranked fifth, Colora-miics: do, No. 8, and ninth-rated Ala-' , J# ].oo 2.so bama all won with ease. sn*s Hi VTwi« Doubts (s-7-4-4) fsm Georgia had a surprisingly] W S §E®B?aW '?ath hig,hly regaf One Pontiac game was among “ j . Qro J?a .eam’j.. .'four date changes announced by American Basketball Oxford Runners Win Doug Bass and Dennis Clack] i Cage Date Changed of 9:35 Saturday as they paced Oxford to a 15-50 cross-country i victory over Madison Lamphere.' )0 Races Nightly Rein or Shine (except Sundays) Din# in our new Sulky Lounge October 9 thru December 9 JACKSON HARNESS RACEWAY JACKSON, MICHIGAN for City Pro Team kimboll Rolls to X-Country County Crown! Hazel Park Results 4»h—82,208; Claiming, 11/14 Mllatt SATURDAY (Final Night) Conditioned Poco, 1 N Harry Littlo Log- f snu inches from the goal line, Miko-lajewski tried a sneak and the entire Pontiac line led by big Tom Yody, Jon Izer, LaRose, John Gerometta■ and just about: every Firebird on the field stopped the Dayton qb. Pontiac had to pant out after three plays and again Dayton | ..... returned the ball to the Fire- 81 points to capture the Oakland crluu,* bird 22 after Willie Turner’s 26- County Cross-Country champlon-l ff^trTrrniiii niinV yard return. {ship Saturday on the Oakland! Tom m fJ Again Pontiac held on its own ^ornmun^y College course. J mm a,u* jh om^; ...... - akiST ■ "* •-Mrs. and R. F. Roborts tntry. 5th—S2,f00; Clolmloe, « Furlsngii Champaign Mrs. J. C. Muilc in Dick's Crick* > Sashayar I Lady Ball) l Upastraam ___ _______^ I Wto, 71 Yardii 'Wghr*^ Pick _____ Gltam x104 Uncle Cy IIS ^ Lanora Prlda xl«7 In like Flynn Co Hyp 118 Cotmlgraph -,w*r /^*** 115 Bayorka n Red 8.20 5. ..... - Jltldted Pact, 1 Mile: ' Aerial Doug 11.20 4.80 3.< i Lady Knox 5.40 3: I Tod J. Direct a 1 it (nDtH^DouhleJM) Paid 835.48. 114 j T. Twlnl “ i; Conditioned Pact, 1 2.1 Moore scored on an 87-yard run S commissioner for the BuUdogs and set up an- Bor^ers Jr ^ other touchdown with a 29-yard ^ Jan 21 c4ag0 . Pontiac Encounter was moved to Sun- :•<] Wilmer Cooks scored a pair of day Feb. li. It is one of 12 S short touchdowns for Colorado, ] Tomahawk home games, all g which bombed Iowa Statq 31-0. slated for the Northern JUgh -ii: Alabama beat Mississippi 21-7 school gym. The first one will as Kenny Stabler ran for. one be Saturday Nov. 18 against :::: touchdown and passed for an- Grand Rapids, {Captain Braeza ; Preferred Pace, 1 it Chip 112 Hindu Widow . Tahitian Oancar 11,1 ‘th-AMtOl Condition.!! Trot, I OI- Wlllum 116! Oalophona Star 5 60 I Quahala III Mr. - - ...... Lord Doyla a Farltcta (1-4) Paid 540.M. j 7lh-»f-------------B 5 Vaata' 15 and had to punt out from itsl Mike Koerner of Cranbrook]wh^n,")4oi claiming, 1 min, n VMjJchig/S own 35. This time Dayton scored 'won the race in 10:35, pacing!°g,M A pass to Roosevelt Mell for 25, Ms teammates to a third-place j gggjj __ yards and anothet interference^finish with 115 points. Huel **^ penalty put the ball orUhe Pon- Park was second at 98. ^ * 5 Appr«(tii.''Aifovti.kca eiaimwi tiac two. j Hazel Park’s Warren Kreuger' An offside pushed Dayton'was second in 10:40 and Pon-1 back, but Mell went over from ti a c Central’s Larry Hurst' three yards to make it 14-6 as grabbed thlrd at 10:50. Dave Harris’ kick failed. . pakland County CraaeCaentry In the third quarter Dayton Fark%*3.^ranbr^^is'V'arathw got the ball on a pass Intercep- f^^trWI. »i5 i tion and again on a Pistol Pete started connectinc n Nor,h Fcrmingion 241; 12. Pontiac # , 7 !. 7: ® Northern 298; 13. Bdrtlcy 325; 14 aa»»- qna in four plays from the Pon- to* 383; is. Birmingh«m Grovei tiac 32, Mell hit paydirt fromlw/Vi!’N^yiiiar^;rtifL*c*btOTon the three* and it was 14-12 as [ UB8|jfiRB* . A vandals 4T5: DRC Results ' Countess Rana v -2,6001 Allow.nc.t, 6 Furlongs: Vatartord' kattarfng Me' *1. 'soutthl *':0° 596; 22. (Tig) Bloomfield Hills Lnh. 1!'40 lit—»J,5061 Claiming, 6 M ________ Conditio Rhythm Void Darlng*Duda IMh-itJMi C Sunglow other. Other changes In the schedule j !:■: Then there was Virginia Tech involved three Columbus con- j:-: and Villanova, won 3-0 by Tech tests. An early league opener but not .before a Villanova as-] was set up when the Feb. 4 S slstant coach leaped from the]Muskegon-at-Columbus game ] S bench on the final play of the]was moved to Nov. 4 at Mus-] game to tackle Tech safety kegon — one week ahead of the jS Frank Loria who was running other NABL openers. iji;! upfield with a ball that had Chicago’s Nov. 19 visit to Co- §: bounced off the cross bar on a]lumbus will now be Jan. 7, and S] mo j.* Villanova field-goal attempt. {Holland will play at Ohio capi-1 Trot, v mini1 i So far nobody tias confessed tal city Jan. 12 instead of Dec. $ 17M Jgito the transgression. !26. ,1 ■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■■! 6.40 6.20 . 5.20 Old Col - eaU for a \ MANPOWER |i WHITE GLOVE S girl : e ■ Suspended S 19c i Per Sq. R. Acoustical FUSTIC 1 1 Covered 1 16L SHINGLES New in Stoek Z0N0LITE INSULATION ALUM. 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Free delivery, sere- NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH ROAD, Corner Elizabeth Lake Road OPEN DAILY 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. ★ PHONE 682-2330 *138 *197 SALE REGINS TODAY - MONDAY CONTINUES THRU SATURDAY Open Daily 9 to 9 C—6 THE, PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 Captured Document Tells Cong to Forget 'Illusions of Peace' SAIGON (AP) — The U.S.:have revealed themselves to be mission made public today what j particularly serious, especially it* said was a 10-month-old cap-in difficult and hopeless situa-tured Vietcong directive telling tions. Communist cadres and troops tol “These deficiencies have chase from their mind “the illu-lcreated great obstacles that sion of peace” and reaffirm have Impeded the execution of their determination “to win at our tasks and limited our victo-| any price.” ries. In the days to come, the The mission said the directive U.S. imperialists will make was issued Jan. 20 by the po- changes in their strategy, litical staff department of the Vietnam Liberation “South Army.”! “Each individual should remain firm in any circumstance of the revolutionary struggle, chase from his mind the illusion of peace, endure difficulties and hardships and stay behind the party,” an American translation of the document read. In its introduction, the document notes what it calls “thousands of matchless examples of sacrifice and gallantry” by Communist cadres and troops. Then it goes on ot say: “However, besides such heroic examples, there still are now and then shortcomings in various areas. These failings include confusion of mind, fear of hardships and protracted war, lack of heroism and los revolutionary pride.” FRICTIONS APPARENT “Noticeable frictions have also appeared from time to time in relations between cadres and fighters. Certain of those cases “We should control and severely criticize on decidedly correct the following signs of passive rightism: • “Fear of hardships and a fierce, protracted war, escapism and demoralization. “Lack of determination to t and fight the enemy. “Overestimating the enemy, and becoming subject to his psychological warfare; dreams of an illusionary peace and the slackening of alertness for enemy propaganda; signs of wea-and the inclination to enjoy some rest.” x.. DETROIT (AP)-Police and Internal Revenue agents arrested 18 men in raids on 10 alleged gaming places over the weekend, seized thousands dollars in cash and checks and cracking an alleged football and horse racing bet ring. One of those arrested was Edward J. Vitale of Livonia, an ex-convict and Irish Sweep-stakes winner who once allegedly worked as an undercover agent for the IRS. Vitale was one of 12 men arrested in suburban Warren by the suburb’s police who used a fire department ram to smash igh a heavily reinforcedl door Friday. Genuine FLEX-O-GLASS it the only plastic window material that carries a 2 year guarantee.The name FLEX-O-GLASS it printed on the edge for your protection. M tUrdw«r« 4 Lumbar Ivtrvwharu * Russian Paper Raps Reagan MOSCOW (AP)—The Soviet Communist party newspaper Pravda attacked Gov. Ronald Reagan of California today as a 'movie star with a hawk’s profile.” Besides denouncing Reagan for backing U. S. military escalation in the Vietnam way, Pravda described him as an ultra rightist who has taken up the “worn banner” once carried by Barry Goldwater. It suggested the American people will reject him for president if they heed the facts. ★ it ★ The article, written in Moscow by staff writer Boris M. Orekhov, was the first lengthy attack on Reagan in the Soviet press. j Pravda told Soviet readers how in movies Reagan used to iplay nice [guys who didn’t get 11 the girl. Then, it said, during | World War II he was an Army captain but stayed in Hollywood making documentaries. ■k k A “Maybe the governor likes making bellicose speeches so much because he never smelled real gunpowder,” the Communist newspaper said. SANTA ROSA, Calif. (AP) -Three young killer-rapists are being sought as police retrace activities of a 19-year-old college student and his newly met companion before his slaying. Charles Louis Kaufmann Jr., Santa Rosa Junior College freshman from Alexandria, Va., was Shot from behind three times early Saturday—once in the head and once in each shoulder. His companion, 18-year-old girl estranged from her husband, was forced from her car parked on a lover’s lane just before Kaufinann was killed and then drivah to a nearby area where, she told police, she was repeatedly raped. ★ * * Kaufmann was the son of Charles'L. Kaufmann, an officer of the U.S. Agency for International Development (AID) now The first U.S. president to use I the telephone for campaign purposes was William McKinley in 11896. WANTED! Highest Prices Paid” “We Pick Up” I FE 2-0200 JIMK CARS i Used Auto Parts Available L Pontiac Scrap 135 Branch SIGN OF SUPPORT — Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson walks in a procession with Williams College President John B. Sawyer at dedication ceremonies yesterday for the Center for Environmental Studies and Planning at Williams College in Wil-liamstown, Mass, The sign in the background is in support of her husband’s Vietnam policy. About 60 persons walked out on Mrs. Johnson when she addressed a 1,000-member audience at fall convocation ceremonies at the college. Circulars distributed beforehand said a walkout would be held to protest the President’s Vietnam policies. Youth Slain, Date Raped; California Police Hunt 3 Paris Writer and Historian Dead at 82 PARIS (AP)—Andre Maurois, whose humor-filled interpretations of British character launched him on a literary career, died today. He was 82. Maurois had undergone surgery for intestinal blockage two weeks ago. He was taken from a hospital this morning and died at his home nearby. Bom into a family of Jewish textile-makers, Maurois was well on the way to becoming an industrialist when World War I changed the course of his life. He served as a liaison and intelligence agent with the British forces and was quickly adopted into their ranks. From his associations with the British officer corps his first book, “Les Silences du Colonel Bramble.” His sympathetic accounts of the only b'are- stationed in Washington. The parents flew here Sunday to claim the body. , Police Chief Melvin Flohr said the girl, questioned Saturday and Sunday, has retold her story ,with no significant changes and unable to provide additional dues. MET AT PARTY He said the young man first met the girl, whose name was withheld, At a party Friday night. They drove to Proctor Heights, a fashionable area about 1V4 miles from downtown. The girl told police they had been parked about an. hour when another car drove up. Two men from it approached, one on each side of the car. As brandished a gun, the couple was ordered out. She said her sweater was pulled over her head and she was forced into the rear seat of the other car. Flohr said the girl told of hearing scuffling noises and then three shots. 18 Arrested in Detroit Area Gaming Raids Lt. Walter O’Bee of the intelligence division of Warren police said his men confiscated four loaded revolvers, $165 in cash, poker chips and cards. DEMAND EXAM Emergy Volpe, 53, of Detroit demanded examination at his arraignment Saturday on a charge of operating a gaming house. He was freed under $500 bond pending examination. The others, including Vitale,! were charged with frequenting a -gambling establishment and freed under $100 bonds leach. No date was set for hearings. Macomb Prosecutor Anthony Viviano, • who accompanied O’Bee on the raid, said ^followed three months of surveil-anpe by Warren Patrolman Robert Wilson. Vitale was serving a federal term for fraud in 1960 when he won $140,000 in the Irish Sweep-stakes. He told a Senate subcommittee on wiretapping last April that after he was released on parole, the IRS recruited 1« him as an undercover and taught him to use an eavesdropping device to gather evidence on persons suspected of evading income tax payments. The Warren raid was not collected with the other nine raids conducted in Detroit, St. Clair Shores, Harper Woods, Roseville and Grand Blanc. John Jay Olzewski, chief of the Internal Revenue Division of the IRS, said he and 33 spe-' cial agents, aiding by local police, seized more than $81,000 in cash, $53,000 in checks bet | i, six cars, two pistols and large quantities of flash paper, which burns quickly without leaving ashes. U.S. Atty. Lawrence Gubow said the alleged football and horse race ring took in about $30,000 a day. Only one filly has ever won the Kentucky Derby — Regret in 1915. 1 Killed, 500 Hurt in Tokyo Protest ly fictional Col. Bramble, outwardly calm and tacltu fire, were an immediate success in France. SECOND NOVEL Another work “Les Dlscours du Dr. O’Grady” was in the same theme and established Maurois as a best-selling novelist. Maurois took a different role In World War II when, after joining Gen. Charles de Gaulle’s Free French forces, he went to the United States and became a principal spokesman for French culture and civilization. From 1942 to 1944, he crisscrossed the United States on lecture tours. He taught French literature for a period at the Uni-versity of Kansas City. Maurois’ prolific output of novels, biographies and histories gained him membership hi the prestigious French Academy, an exclusive body of distinguished citizeps. ADOPTED PEN nXmE Maurois was born Emile Herzog July 26, 1885. He took his pseudonym when he began to write and officially changed his name in 1947. He plunged into the family business for 10 years, using his spare time for reading and writing. After World war I, turned to biography, writing of Shelley, Disraeli and Byron. TOKYO (AP)—About 800 students rallied at four Tokyo universities today to protest “police butchery” at a leftist demonstration Sunday that left one dead and 500 Injured. The incident was the worst in Japan since violence in 1960 caused the cancelation of a visit by President pwight D. Eisenhower. Government officials began investigating means to prevent possible npw eruptions triggered by leftists opposed to Prime Minister Eisaku Sato’s coming visit to South Vietnam. Sato arrived in Jakarta on the first leg of a five-nation swing and began talks with Indonesian government officials on financial assistance for the coming year. Recently this puppy was offerd for sale in a Pontiac Press Want Ad . . . A grown dog may or may not be man's best friend, but there's no doubt about a puppy being a young boy's great love! This happy owner, and thousands of other youngsters like him, is enjoying one of the many benefits of Pontiac Press Wont Ads. It's a typical Want Ad benefit... the seller, with a small investment in newspaper' space, has found a happy buyer. 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Whatever direction these con- .* * * 5 tributions take, they are made I Court appearances mean time meaningful .by one force—opin- 0, ^rom work and perhaps a smaller paycheck for a given week. But it’s all to promote what Hanger describes as a mutually beneficial partnership. PUBLIC SUPPORT Bakhsheesh on Way Out in Pakistan If the public wants specific changes in the restrictions on law enforcement agents, it must apply pressure for interpretations of process-of-law requirements which are less restrictive. If the public wants legislation changing criminal laws and the law process, it must press its [legislators into action. | And the public itself must take ithe initiative in self-protection. WITNESS SUFFERS KARACHI (UPI) — The gen- Crimes that go unreported tie art of greasing the wheels Cannot be investigated. When no of government by judicious ap-|witnesses step forward to aid an plication of bakhsheesh may be|investigation, the witness him, grinding to a halt in Pakistan, self suffers. whether he wheels of govern-munit as „ „ aff , ment will likewise grind to a in ,he words #f willitm K HaJ halt without the bribes that are ger Pontiac chjef of ,jcc ‘It’s up to the public to support the police when it comes to work in the field, in any ase,” he said. ★ * ★ “It’s also up to the public to make certain that the effective- ness of their police agencies are not being impaired to the detriment of its work and thus to the detriment of the community. * * ★ ' “Even though the role of the police has traditionally been to protect the community, there are occassions when the police require the protection of this same community.’’ I It’s a two-way street. SH@P The store that cares—tibout you! A battery - operated shaver can be charged from foreign Tho , And it may take some time current sources as well as those l^^nd inconvenience on the part:in this country. / an accepted way of life. (Advwtlnmtnt) V. Mohammad Ayub Khan has strengthened cleanup commissions to sweep out corruption f and is drafting new methods of controlling and checking on the wealth of officials. A Pakistani matron comment-1 ed that “backdoor blessing is a| way of life in this country and! If you close that door the whole I administration will collapse." | N#w York. N. Y. (Special): A * , * & I scientific research institute has Not everyone is that pessimis-j discovered a medication which tic — but backdoor blessings are has the abilitjrdn most cases — indeed a part of the fabric of to actually shrink hemorrhoids, life in Pakistan and no one can ln c»se-the sufferer . . . first ik)tices prompt relief from estimate how much money is tl^&hing, burning and pain, lavolvcd and the consequences .Then this medication starts of its removal. \ Tifcht in to gently reduce the Bakhsheesh ranges from the *wellin* of ‘"flamed, irritated policeman who extends a hand] for a bit of folded 'persuasion" (ACvwtlum«nt) Now Possible To Shrink Painful Hemorrhoids N And Promptly Stop The Itching, Relieve Pain In Most Cases.' to the highest winks of government where-dnountains of red tape can tie snipped in a second -^for the right price. hemorrhoids. 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The star system reached a peak in the 1930s and 40s, especially at Metro-Goldwyp, whose galaxy included Ava Gardner (center) and Elizabeth Taylor. After waning in the 1950s the star system is coming back. But now stars aren’t under contract to any one studio and some, like Mis? Taylor, can command million - dollar fees. . Henry Ford, Auto Maker, Plays Role of Auto Taker BY EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Henry Ford—and we do mean THE Henry Ford—no substitute—was at El Morocco the other morning, anc so entranced by the ways of the doorman there, that Mr. Fort borrowed the doorman’s cap and went through the motions of helping him park cars. And not Ford cars, either, wliich must have™ depressed him. But Cadillacs, Rolls-Royces, Jaguars, Lincolns, cars like that. He didn’t really spend much time at it. When he gave the doorman his cap back, Mr. Ford went inside the famous club and jitterbugged madly and expertly. As we write this, Juanita Hall, the original "Bloody Mary’’ of "South Pacific,” is gravely ill, after a brave fight. Miss Hall, who suffered diabetes, uremic poisoning and near-blindness, had made great gains after readers of this column donated generously to the Juanita Hall Fund. She even left the hospital and went to live in a friend’s apartment. But then she took a critical turn, went back to the hospital and had been receiving transfusions. Marlene Dietrich insists upon a special stagedoor watchman for her one-woman show, to protect a gown allegedly costing Pay IV Faces Congress Static FCC Chairman Called Before House Panel (EDITOR’S NOTE — This is the first arpcle in a two-part series on the movie industry!s much-criticized star system.) By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD (AP) — The star system, much assailed and berated through film history, staging a comeback. There is no chance that a studio can advertise, as did MGM in its heyday, that it has “more stars than there are in the heavens.” Long gone is the era when film companies kept 50 to 100 [ stars under contract and could cast them in Mama never - end-| |ing combinations. Not a sin-; gle star is uii-i d e r exclusive] contract to studio today. But the gen-| eral movie business prosperity' has increased THOMAS production and the need for name players. T haven’t seen it this years, WASHINGTON (UPI) - Pay television faced static that could the Biograph Girl, after the-company for which she toiled. ★ ★ ★ Shrewd, little Carl Laemmle, fighting the monopolists who controlled the new industry, hired The Biograph Girl away from her employers and publi-her by tier own name, Florence Lawrence. The star rush By 1914, Adolph Zukor was paying the immensely popular Mary Pickford $2,000 « week. In 1916, Charlie Chaplin had won a $670,000 contract for a year’s work; a year later, he was earning a million dollars. Trend continues Hie trend of high salaries for a few top performers continued through the 1920s. This was the time' of the superstar, when the industry was dominated by a handful of personalities: Pickford, Chaplin, Douglas Fair-Lillian Gish, Gloria Swanson, Rudolph Valentino, Harold Lloyd, Buster Keaton, John Gilbert, Ramon Novarro. The sound era brought further flowering of the star system. The great popularity of the! Mayer continued development of he star list. He enjoyed being photographed with, the players: 3reer Garson, Clark Gable, Katharine Hepburn, Spencer T r a c y, James Stweart, Fred Astaire, Robert Taylor, Eliza-beth Taylor, Judy Garland, Red Skelton, Esther Williams, Mickey Rooney, June Allyson, dozens more. The creation of stars was of-in long and painstaking. A hundred young players were kept under contract and nurtured through musical and dramatic then cast in bit roles. Most were never heard from again. .But some—Ava Gardner, Van Johnson, Debbie Rynolds— developed info stars, a The revolution in film economics beginning in 1948 struck a severe blow to the star system Beleaguered studios could no longer afford the heavy overhead of contract lists. Stars were dropped as their options came due—and many later were hired back for individual films fit far more than their contract salaries. by a falling market due to television and other compete ers, thus propelling the un-cnown to stardom. Film companies seem more willing to gamble on'new talent. Thus a new breed of star i? rising to supplement the few veteran stars who continue as vestiges of Hollywood’s golden (Next: The Golden Dozen) talkies brought a demand fortion. the film companies could says a top actors’|more product,' and each studio longer afford to develop new ‘The studios are more!began pouring out a picture a stars; they^continued to hire the than willing to pay top money week, for stars who can deliver a per- This brought the need for a large reservoi^ of acting talent, tied to contracts which assured availability at salaries that weren’t too excessive. Nowhere was the star system formance. Most of my clients have more offers than they can handle.” $1-MHiLION FOES Prices for stars have risen correspondingly, and mfllion-dollar fees are no longer unu- be ruinous today in its latest'sual for the likes of Julie An-airing on Capitol Hill. jdrews, Elizabeth Taylor, Elvis Chairman Rosel H. Hyde of Presley and Audrey Hepburn. WILSON $50,000. Advance word is that she’s so good and lovely, that exploded, “she performs for an hour and 20 minutes, then takes bows for 40 minutes.’' Federal Communications ,Commission (FCC) was called before the communications subcommittee of the House Commerce Committee to explain a pending FCC proposal to give the go-ahead to pay TV, with some restrictions. When the full committee learned from the FCC last March that it was moving toward a decision that could authorize permanent pay TV, Chairman Harley O. Staggers THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . . Secret Stuff: That big Mr. and Mrs. Hollywood star split-up is blamed on many things, including a foreign male star .. . Ex-Yankee Whitey Ford saw the World Series over the weekend —on TV at Grossinger’s ... If Shirley Temple doesn’t make it to Congress, David Black will offer to star her in a B’way play. TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: A starlet at the H-wood Beachcombers: “I can tell when my husband drinks — his face starts getting blurred.” WISH I’D SAID THAT: “When she found that first gray hair, she thought she had nothing to live for . . . so she dyed." —Kay Lederle. REMEMBERED QUOTE: “He knew the precise psychological moment when to say . . . nothing.”—Oscar Wilde. EARL’S PEARLS: Flip Wilson’s not saying Ronald Reagan has his eye on the presidency, but he hears he’s already signing a marquee for the White .House. “Romeo and Juliet” looks sort of funny now—men in miniskirts . . . That’s earl, brother. “I think you are really trying to pull a fast one on tee Congress and this nation,” he said. HURON TONIGHT AT 8 P.M. ONLY The Most Popular Picture Of C^Tune! WINNER OF 5 ACADEMY AWARDS ^ Including "Best Picture"! 4 Rep? Torbert H. MacDonald, D-Mass., chairman of the subcommittee conducting the hearings, commented teat there were "many opponents to this in the Congress.” EXPRESSED CONCERN He also expressed concern teat tee FCC was moving ahead without consulting C o n g r e s first. While other members of tee veterans. That, too, was self-defeating, because audiences were demanding new faces. Gradually, in recent years, the situation has been brightening. Creative young directors of Europe proved that films can do business with unknown perform- Even Barbra Streisand in her first movie, “Funny Girl,” is drawing a million. But there’s a limit. It is'ex-pressed by Robert Evans, new production head for Paramount and himself a onetime actor. * * ★ “Stars can no longer guarantee box office for a picture. A movie loaded with stars can flop if it has a poor story. Today tee story is the biggest star. A good story can be enhanced by star names. But good stories filmed by gifted di-| rectors can also be successful with unknown actors.” The latter factor has also con-, tributed to revitalizing the star system. Producers can afford to take chances on new performers, and if the film is a hit, a star is born. Examples: Albert Finney in “Tom Jones;” Lynn Redgrave In “Georgy Girl;” Sandy Dennis in “Up the Down Staircase." FANS CREATED STARS In the beginning there was star system. Primitive film more fully developed than at MGM in the 1930s and 1940s. Under tee leadership of Irving Thalberg and Louis B. Mayer, tee studio amassed a galaxy WMU Queen KALAMAZOO UP) t- A 20-never equaled. When Talberg year-old Western Michigan Uni-wanted to dazzle audiences with,versity junior from Clark Lake star power, he needed look no has been chosen the school* further than MGM’s contract list homecoming queen. Linda Todd to cast Greta Garbo, John and Lionel Barrymore, Joan Crawford, Wallace Beery, Jean Her-sholt and Louis Stone for “Gra|d Hotel.” After Thalberg’s death in 1936, was crowned Sunday and will preside over homecoming festivities this week, culminating when tee Broncos play Kent State University in football Saturday. Tuesday Only Special! Because of Popular CUSTOMER REQUEST We Are Returning Thip Special TAKt A TRIP TO TUB 0U> WEST!in AS CLOSE AS YOUR HEI6UBORHOOD BOH AREA I ‘Little Joe ” The Ribeye Steak Salad, Baked Potato, QQc Texas Toast.... Qv TUESDAY-0CT. 10 OMy Served in Our Friendly Western Style — So Jump In Your Saddle and Join Us At Bonanza for Little Joe's Special BONANZA SIRLOIN PIT. KMART Glenwood Plaza North Perry Street, Corner Otonwood Cony Out Available 338-9433 Open 1 Day* e Week 11 AM. - », M ant Set. W It committee reserved their finaljmakers used whatever actors) verdicts, the going was expect- they could .find-legitimate ed to be harsh for pay T^ or stage actors scorned employment in tee “flickers”—and players got no billing. WED., SAT., SUN, at 1s30—4i45—8:00 MON., TUES.p TOURS., FRI. at 8 P.M. Only subscription TV. An added hitch lief in the imminent final enactment of a “public television" bill to support a wide range of educational, cultural and special programs to broaden free television fare. The proposed restrictiQns would limit pay TV to areas jwith at least four free commercial stations. Anticipating that pay TV would depend mainly on movies and sports events, tee three commissioners also proposed: • Limiting pay TV to films less than 2 years bid, except for up to a dozen “old” movies more than 10 years olil. • Prohibiting pay TV from showing any sports events that had been regularly televised within the previous two years. • Forbidding commercials. Movie goers themselves created tee stars, as they do today. Patrons of nickelodeons made favorites of performers with tee most appeal. One of the earliest was a beauty known only as EHSKEEGO BAREFOOT IN THE PARK And PENELOPE Starts WEDNESDAY! ACADEMY AWARD WINNER LEE MARVIN BOX OFFICE OPENS 7:00 P.M. O ft I v e • I N re 2 iooo I MIRACLE MILE HPONTDAC SO. TUf GRAPH AT SO. LAK( RO 1 Mill y». WOODWARD CHILDREN UNDER 12 FRIE 2935 DIXIE MIGMWJ DRIVE-IN BLUE SKY gum W 09# MGftT&er LAKE RD. AT. MILE WEST OF DIXIE NCWT. (U S. 101 CNIIMIN UNDER 12 FREE NIGHT IN §W, JERICHO gfj i ^ wunri i Bffl 3£l*i\ sf|nl£& =4 is mjust a wm mm z i-VULWRE * TllllliM,lllllllllllllllll|RllTtRIR,i,M,„IIIIIIIIIIIJUUJiJJ uMWijjii jjjiiifjfiiiMi YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct uiElwer. 1 During National Newspaper Week, October 8-14, our nation's free press is honored. Freedom of the press in our nation la protected by the ..... Amendment of the Constitution. a-First b-Fifth o-Ninth 2 President Johnson met and talked with Eric Hotter, who is noted as a..... a-phllospher and author b-missile engineer c-tax expert and economist 3 Our nation’s Supreme Court began a new session. The Court is made up of a chief justice and. associate justices. a-flve b-eight c-eleven 4 One of the main duties of theU.S. Supreme Court is to a-make laws b-advise the President c-interpret the Constitution 5 King Hussein of ..... met with Soviet leaders in Moscow. a-Saudl Arabia b-Syrla c-Jordan The Pontiac Press Monday, October 9,1967 'Hew* 'Pwpuim Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. U. S. Supreme Court Chief Justice Earl Warren Columbus Oct. 12 ‘ Roman Catholic bishops meeting in Rome 4... ex-President Elsenhower celebrates 77th birthday PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with Its correct meaning. ■ 1..significance a-not keep a promise b-court decision c-law problem brought tooou^t d-Importance e-not pay attention to 3.,...negleot 4....ruling ..renege PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. 1 ..Nguydn Van Thleu 2 ..Wilbur D. Mills 3 ..Thurgood Marshall 4.....Kurt Georg Kissinger a-Chairman, House Ways and .Means Committee b-a South *Vletnamese Buddhist leader o-approved as South Viet Nam's President d-new Supreme Court Justice 8...Thlch Trl Qu&ng VOL.XVII. No.5 *VEC, Inc., Madlion, Wlscomln e-Chancellor, West Germany Curtis Cokes kept welterweight orown U.S. building barrier along northern border YOM KIPPUR a holy time for Jews WORLD SERIES Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield celebrated 18 years of Communist rule a baseball "olasslo" HOW DO YOU RATE? (Score Each Side of Quia Separately) 71 to 80 point* . Good, 91 to 100 poM*-TOP SCORE 41 to 70 points - Polr. 81 to 90 point* - ExcalUnt. 10 « (Mar?Tt - HW FAMILY DISCUSSION QUKSIION In what ways do newspapers in our i help protect our freedoms? THIS WEEK'S CHALLENGE! ZZZ A Negro state Representative was chosen to be the Democratic candidate for mayor of Cleveland. _ Save This Practice Examination! STUPE NTS,Valuable Reference Msterlel For Exaim. seyng ’g nej laaijjmvBrt Ml IM fM lH-l <M iM fM <M l»l f|-| iZIftB 101NAI mWV«Io-Z lo-itiH jBJ •■i jt? j*t jo-j fp-i in mw tyfl lo-f lq-f le-z fe-j i| xHVd ANSWERS TIIE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 C—9 Boredom, Drunkenness: Big Soviet Problems MOSCOW (AP) The large) display in the waiting room of! Moscow’s International Airport! depicted the Siberian industrial^ city of Novosibirsk as a cultural!; center. Photos showed the ballet troupe, the opera company, the symphony orchestra, the Shake-) spearean theater and other so-i phisticated diversions for the one million residents on the' Siberian frontier. It’ was an impressive display for foreign visitors. ★ ★ ★ About the same time recently, the Soviet Communist party) newspaper Pravda wrote that| drunkenness was increasing in) Novosibirsk. The reason, Pravda said, was) the habit of drinking on payday plus “the emptiness of leisure time and the inability to put free time to good use." Seven out of 16 persons interviewed by Pravda said they got drunk “out of sheer boredom." ACROSS COUNTRY Both aspects of life in Novosibirsk are reflected across the Soviet Union. In some way$, this is a very sophisticated nation. The visitor can meet Russians who knows more about his own literature than the visitor does himself; who are more familiar with classical music, who are generally more cultured in an Old World sense. ★ • * But boredom remains a major problem in this nation of 235.5 million which will be celebrat- ing 50 years of Coomuinist rule early in November. Related to it are other social problems such as broken families and juvenile delinquency. Paradoxically, however, some of the same problems are aggravated by the reverse of idle boredom: the lack of spare time caused by inadequate public service facilities. WAY OF LIFE Waiting in line is the Russian way of life. This situation combines with the economic necessity that women work and the slowness of public transport to and from work to leave little leisure time for most Russians. Hie long weekend is being advertised as a boon of communism. HEIGHTENS PROBLEM It also heightens the boredom problem. “It is impossible to avoid serious negative consequences when the working day is shortened,’ Pravda said. The working day jwill, in fact, be lengthened, but I Pravda riieant \ the five-day 'week— “without simultaneously {expanding places for cultural recreation and atnusement, without'improving the. organization of leisure, especially for young people, and without conducting the appropriate ideological preparation.” The more blunt paper of the Young Communist League saidi there are not at present enough) leisure amenities such as theaters and sports stadiums. But the paper’s survey also found that 37.7 per cent of those queried said they lacked enough ; money to go to leisure entertain®] 'ment. Begorra! What a Surprise Chris Got in New World That, in turn, means strains on family life and inability to supervise children adequately. In an effort to provide more leisure, Soviet leaders are now switching most of the nation’s 81 million nonagricultural workers from a 41-hour week spread {over six days to a five-day week of the same number of hours. DUBLIN <UP1) — Two Canadians Were trying to raise a fund today with which they hope to prove that American Indians - bade Christopher Columbus a “top o’ the morn* ing” in ancient Gaelic when the Italian explorer stepped, ashore in 1492. “I am a great admirer of Columbus but no one with a real knowledge of history or geography could believe he was the first to reach North America,” Louis Lourmais, 46, •aid, lyourmais add his companion Vintan Lloyd, 26, say they believe Irish navigator St. Brendan and other Celtic ‘voyagers landed in' the Americas hundreds of years before Colum-biits. The two adventurers made one attempt to prov theory In August bv trying to sail the Atlantic in a 22-foot canoe. Their .frail boat was ripped' to shreds by the seas off the Irish coast and the pair wound up swimming ashore, , * * * At the moment they are looking for money to finance a second attempt. They said they need about $280,000, of which they can provide three-quarters. They are trying to raise the remaining $70,000. POINTS TO TRACES To support his contention that Celts reached the Americas as early as the sixteen century Lourrpais points to Celtic traces in - the origins of Indian and Eskimo art, architecture and language. For instance the Indian word “tee” was derived from the ..Gaelic word “tejir" for house, Lourmais said. Hundreds of other words in use by the Indians before Columbus landed showed a Celtic flavoring, he ■aid. On their first attempt to cross the Atlantic the Cana- dians hoped to follow the route supposedly taken by St. Brendan which would have covered 5,000 miles and landed them near Boston. ★ *■ ’if Th$fcpushed off in their timber pnd canvas canoe from Fenit Harbor, birthplace of the Irish saint. Hundreds of villagers cheered as they sailed out. HURLED ON ROCKS Two days later their tin; craft was hurled against the rocks. All their equipment was lost and the two had to swim for shore § Lourmais was undaunted. “No one has ever told me St. Brendan and his monks made it on the first effort,” he said. Few of the F e rft t villagers were surprised at the setback. They had argued all along that I the canoe was too frail. ★ ★ ★ There was of course no doubt in their minds that St. Brendan did reach the Americas ahead of anyone else. * # * But he did it in a ..sturdier boat than the two Canadians used, they said. Lourmais and Lloyd apparently have taken the villagers’ advice and their next attempt will be made with a more solid craft. RiltSray instant polish shines stainless steel TARNITE STAINLESS STEEL POLISH Mi* perfect polish for FLATWARE • RANGES > SINK* KITCHEN APPLIANCES POTS • MOULDING • TRIMS ' ACTS INSTANTLY DISSOLVES TARNISH ON CONI Gives brilliant, lasting lustra. tarnish-resistant finish; needs nc hard •rubbing. 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SUMMER and WINTER! featuring quality GAS ''FURNACE With LIFETIME GUARANTEE HEAT EXCHANGER t and h*0,i"9 —• «*""»ii-- vjjWm *EmcIu»Iv« Greater Oakland County Dealer -----------ENJOY TOTAL HOME COMFORT » HEATING >AIR CONDITIONING » ELECTRONIC AIR CLEANING » POWER HUMIDIFICATION NO MONEY DOWN .. . 5 YEARS TO PAY CHANDLER HEATING CO. 5480 HIGHLAND ROAD, Vz Mile East of Pontiac Airport SALE! 114-1411 FNA Terms MIGHT SERVICE OR 1-6612 THIS Say WELCOME in a Warm and friendly waY with a . £. GAS YARD LAMP Stemfling as a beacon at the front door, the gas yard light says "welcome" in a warm, friendly way. ft '‘casts a soft radiance beside doorways, along driveways, patios and porches. It also helps to prevent accidents by enabling the family and guests to see walking ha^ands at night. It helps guard against unwelcome- intruders' and it provides an* unfailing source of. ijluminqtion. The gas yard light is picturesque, decorative and practical . . . adds a nostalgic charm to a home. See these smart, new gas yard lights at Consumers Power Company today. consumers power C—10 The pontiac press, Monday, October g, 1007 *v wysr Jacoby on Bridge NORTta 9 4k Q 10 5 2 ¥KJ9 ♦ Q 8 3 ♦ Q 9 4 WEST EAST 4b A J 8 6 4 3 A K 9 ¥83 ¥ A 6 5 , ♦ K 2 4 9 7 6 4»K 5 3 ' 4k J 10 7 6 2 SOUTH (D) Neither vulnerable West North East South 1 ¥ 1 4k 1 N.T. Pass Pass 2 N.T. Pass 3¥ Pass 4 ¥ Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—4k 3 • Eric Murray and Sammy Kehela1 ducked. The next play was a diamond finesse which lost. For-quet of Italy led his second heart and Garozzo gave him a ruff. Italy still managed to get a club trick and America was down one at the safe contract. of Toronto running second. “A study of the hands from q the finals shows that we appear h jto have outbid the Italians while r they won on superior play.” Jim: “l think that maybe our d team tired while the If seem to be indefatigable.” Oswald: “So it seems. On the V*CRRD Sense** t You, South, hold: 4k2 ¥K Q10 8 4A O'J 5 4 ♦K 68 What' do you do? A—Double. You can stand any suit your partner bids. TODAY’S QUESTION You double and your partner bids two clubs. What do you do now? Answer Tomorrow ROBIN MALONE By Bob Lubbers THE BETTER HALF By OSWALD & JAMES JACOBY | Jim: “We have just received the official book of the 19671 World’s Championship. The ACLB has cer- ■ tainly done a 1 wonderful job |of preparation.’ Oswald: "A s ■usual, Italy won ■with the North ■American team ■of Bill Root, Al- ■ vin Roth and: JACOBY EdSar Kaplan of New York,’ Norman Kay of Philadelphia and very first hand of the match d’Alelio and PabisTicci of Italy] reached a reasonable four heart; contract on the bidding shown in the box. The Aiperican West opened the three of clubs. D’Alelio rose with dummy’s queen and proceeded to make his contact to score plus 420.” ] Jim: “A trump lead would have beaten the contract but jwe can’t really blame our West player. Give East the black j queens instead of the spade king and club jack and a club lead might have been essential.” Oswald: '“The sad feature of the hand came when America sat North and South. They reached the safe contract of three diamonds. West opened 1 the ace of spades and contin-j ued. South decided that West was underleading the king and rose with dummy’s queen.” This took away all chance to get rid of his losing club. Then South led a heart to dummy’s jack and Garozzo of Italy THE BERRYS WE CAN SIT IN OUR, OWN * HOME AND WATCH PROGRAMS "7 LIVE FROM ALL OVERj—-T THE WORLD/r~' 1 M § ! hswii yfSlIl l _J_ -L [and VOL |i WHA 1 CAI NTO TS MORE V EVEN THE RAJ ■UNI jOOf 5T/j isualJ 1 1 jjjj 4* By Carl Gruber? By Art Sansom Astrological Forecast By SYDNEY OMARR For Tuesday in, wise man controls ms oei . . . Astrology points the way." ARIES (Mar. 2) - Apr. 19): Pro* Standing elevated. Be reaay it nent. Bright prospect I Keep eyes open. TAURUS (Apr. 20 - May 20): Sti______ what you gain through adulation, knowledge, reading. Reach out horizons. Potential Is gri ' | dent. You move toward that u key Is willingness to make chant complishment depends upon fle«.u>..i,. Young person today demands attention. CANCER (June 21 - July 22): Tie up loose ends. Stick to quality. Real bar-—■- — —‘-'-*1 promises long-lasting Is pro LEd' (July 23 --Aug. 22): given chance to display versatility. There Is also opportunity tor Improving relations with co-workers. A good laugh at . your own toibles clears air.. VIRGO (Aug. 23 - Sept' 32): You can Impress special groups, — e presentation. LIBRA (Sept. 23 - uct. at. tlon Illuminates personality, wear, do makes deep Impre chance .tor greater security Personal magnetism shines. SCORPIO (Oct. 23 - Nov. 2)1 come temptatior ‘ Ish one project to scatter lor || without losing power < ♦ration. Neighbors, relatives %iGITTArTuS (Nov. 22 - Dec Patient Sets Fire in Hospital JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP) — Patients at the county hospital were led to safety Sunday after a woman patient touched off a.two-alarm fire in a locked mental ward. Head Nurse Mary Davis said the woman was one of two pa-, tients in a second-floor ward of Duval Medical Center. The other patients from that floor were attending a lecture, she said. Miss DaviS said the patient set fire to eight beds, then! blocked the door with a bed. She said nurses got the twoj women out of the room and evacuated patients from the] third floor. About 50 patients | were in the wing at the time. None was reported injured. Patients were returned to the hospital and beds were set up in a lecture hall. Communist-Rule in Russia Studied STANFORD, Calif. (AP) — About 30 of the world’s top stu-j dents of contemporary Russia will meet at Stanford University I this week fbr an attempt to! evaluate 50 years of Communist; rule in the Soviqt Union. I The conference, “Fifty Years of Communism in Russia,” will; be held at Stanford’s Hoover Institution on War, Revolution and Peace. The institution was founded by President Herbert Hoover in 1919 as a repository for the documents of the 20-century history. Conference Set AKRON, Ohio (JH — The Society of Real Estate Appraisers has Announced it will hold its| 1968 Greit Lakes Regional Conference in Detroit Oct. 3-4,1968. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 C—11 i ,Tbe following are top price? Covering sales of locally grown -produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the, NEW YORK (AP) - The ®ureau ,of Markets as stock market advanced briskly or rriaay. I in active trading early this afternoon. Produce The New York stock APPIM. cortund........ adw? ticker *1* trailed by fifl oih^’spy.'bu:'■ ^iabout • mi"ute * reporting Appi«i. Greening, bu......2.50 floor transactions during most Applts, Johnathon, bu. i so ____:__ Apples, Cjjder, 4-gal. case . . 5,75 Of the morning. iPeace Sought I in HauIer’Strike Stock Mart Advances Briskly i Spy, bu. , .. . -------ig. bu. Applss# Johnathon, bu. Apples, Cider, 4-gal. c< . Applet, McIntosh . . Apple!, Northern Spy, SB™!" Applet, Red Delicious bu. Applet, Wolf River, tu. ..... Blueberries, 12-pt. ert...... Grapes, Concord, pk. btkt. ... Peers, Bartlett, U bu. ...... Peart, Bote, S4 bu........... Plums, Prana, u bu. ........ Plums, Stanley, VS bu. ______ ! Watermelon!, bu.............. ; VEGETABLES Btens, Green Rourd, bu. Beans, Kentucky Wonder, bu. Beam, Lima, bu Beans, Roman, I Beans, Wax. bu. Beets, dz. ben. Beets, topped, lx. Broccoli, dz. bch. . Cabbage, Curly, bu. Cabbage, Red, bu. . Cabbage Sprouts, bu. Cabbage, Staagjjd • n An encouraging factor as a » report that corporation purchas-“g executives View the econom-outlook for the next 12 “months more optimistically than they did a year ago. Steels, rubbers, farm implements, aircrafts, oils and tobaccos were mostly higher. Motijrs and rails were generallylower. Changes of most key issues were fractional but a few ranged to a point or so and there were some wider swings! million, by issues involved in special r.7 with industrials up 2.6, rails off 1.0 and utilities off .1. Plough advanced 5 points on news of its plan to acquire May-belllne Co., a maker of eye cosmetics, in an exchange of stock valued at more than; $102 situations. AVERAGES UP The Dow Jones average of 30 industrials at noon was up 6.01 at 934.75. The Associated Press 60-stock average at noon had gained .5 to Prices advanced on the American Stock Exchange. Allied Artists, Aberdeen Petroleum and GF Industries were up about a point. Fargo Oils, Reeves Industries and Electronic Assistance gained fractions. Violent Dispute Aired at Conference Table PITTSBURGH (AP) - The violence-marked' steel haulers’ strike has reached the conference table amid expressions of hope and determination to settle the walkout, now entering its1 Pay*n8 f°r The New York Stock Exchange (Mi.) High Low Lilt Chj 85 92 .......H 641, 19 14V4 14 14V% 128 2134* 2104* 213V* 4 90% 90*/* 90% 30 211* 21% 21% . B 13 9% 9% 9% + % 7 35% 35% 35% . . ■......... “*■* + % Money Plentiful as Snow Ski Spending Soaring By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK , (AP) - Businessmen who sell to the ski trade are talking these days about the increasingly higher prices that customers are willing to pay for everything from boots to building lots near ski slopes. Although spending per skier is now estimated to aver-1 age a bit under $300 a year, more and morej participants are developing at the very timi the increase in ski population, now totaling somewhere from 2.25 million up, shows signs of decelerating. * ★ * A very large' percentage of those on the slopes this season will be novices, but their brand-new participation in the sport may be nearly offset by the number retiring. More are quitting than ever before. CUNNIFF their skies, $80j for boots, $40] for bindings, $30 for gloves and $35 for poles. real'estate development between two ski resorts in southern Vermont is now selling lots beginning at $2,700 to $4,900 that in preski days would have brought a fraction of that price from farmers or campers. third month. Pennsylvania GoV. Raymond . Shafer called the meeting bringing together representatives of seven states, the Teamsters Union, striking truckers and trucking companies today.’ ** ★ ★ ‘He wants them to stay in the conference room until this thing is settled,” said a Shafer aide. ‘The governor says he won’t stand for any more violence and this thing must be settled.” Daniel M. Berger, Pittsburgh attorney assisting the strikers’more luxurious accomiftoda-two attorneys, Bernard A. Berk- tions,- thus helping to finance the man of Cleveland, Ohio, and transition of ski areas with bare Porter Draper of Gary, Ind., necessities to year-round resorts said, “I think that our attitude I with golf, swimming, dining and is hopeful—that reasonable men dancing. Not all of those who retire, however, discontinue their snowtime spending. Many snow 11 romances that lead to marriage 1■ lead also to retirement, but couples later may return for swimming, sunbathing, dancing, skating. Transportation for this hyperactive, spending crowd is improving. Wide highways and excursion buses have more than offset the discontinuance of ski trains. Money seems plentiful (snow. Each year skiers demand will sit down and try to work out these problems.” ‘NUMBER OF PROBLEMS’ He said “There’s not one problem but a number of them. Ski resorts, as distinguished from ski areas, are now what modern full-service motels are to the Ma and Pa operations of early 1950s. Glamor ] abounds, liquor flows and thej?usP®nd diplomatic relations The waiting-time problem is one hins aft(!r dark echo and twinkle with Communist China. of the things we want to get settled . . . and theres’ a number of other things that I don’t want to go into. We’ll stay as long as need be.” Ohio, Maryland, Mcihigan, New Jersey, New York and West Virginia joined Pennsylvania in sending governor’s representatives. Re vo/uf/onary j1 with fun. ■ | A Foreign Ministry statement The spending spree, says Ski “id Indonesia has demanded Business, a trade publication, is *81 the Chinese government | immediately allow the entire Indonesian staff in Peking to much of the risk out of the busi- ileave the country. ness. Just 10 years ago most * , * * major slopes gambled on snow When this is completed, the as a farmer gambles on rain. A^/^V/a Panrorl .Statement said, Indonesia will They often suffered disasters. • » » w I wW • allow the Chinese staff in «Jalcar~l ^ow at least 350 resorts . i |ta to leave. 'around the world have snow- /n Portunn .Earlier, Indonesia tried to move makers. Some machines are C7 I its embassy staff in Peking to: owned even by the high moun- NEW YORK (AP)—The New, 0n® ^on.®’ bu* China refused! tain. resorts in the West, which on tract, reached through'York Times said today Portu-i6*'1 Perm,tS- generally are, embarrassed to the Teamsters. They want better | guese authorities are becoming COUP ATTEMPT say they are less than knee- terms, and a separate contract'increasingly concerned about a Under deposed President Su- deep in powder, for owner-operators. The union clandestine revolutionary organ- karno, Indonesia was a friend ofi W*th technology lessening the has refused to recognize the ization seeking to overthrow the Red China. But that changed!business riSks, with money and government of Prime Minister .after the military put down a leisure time growing and with The strikers, independent truckers who own their rigs, have rebelled against a national Indonesia Cuts Chinese Ties Return of Diplomatic Staff Is Demanded JAKART A(AP) announced today its intention to Each weekend hundreds of | buses leave large Eastern cities for the mountains. In Seattle, where -snow sports exist at several resorts 1% hours away,, an estimated 150 buses leave each Saturday and Sunday in season. CHARTER FLIGHTS Some airlines also report charter business from the Eastern population centers to the Western ski areas has increased in the past couple of years. And southerners, too; can travel a few hours to slopes in Tennessee and North Carolina. The big money spent on skiing and winter vacations is based in the trend for more Americans to-make bigger wages for working fewer hours. Leisure'^ime and incomes seem to be moving upward as inevitably as a ski tow. * * ★ Some evidence of this new way of life, and its effects also, come from a study by Ski Business. It found, among other things, that the median income of its ski subscribers was $13,572, far above the national average. More than 13 per cent of those surveyed owned swimming pools, 17 per cent had vacation homes and 48 per cent had traveled outside the country in the past year (perhaps to the Laur-entian ski resorts of Canada). REDUCED RISKS Because such money and time abounds, operators of ski resorts have greatly reduced their risks. Rooms once vacant in midweek are now filled by skiers with more flexible schedules. The development of snowmaking machines also has taken transportation improving, outlook in the mountains is up. the Japanese Boy,4, Rescued After 6-Hour Ordeal The highways were relatively Antonio de Oliveira Salazar. coup attempt led by the Indone-1 calm Sunday, compared with) The Times said the organiza-'sian Communist party in Octo- 0 violence that reached a peak .tion is made up of armed forces ber 1965. Peking was accused more than a week ago with 40 officers and former military I of having a hand in the incidents in 24 hours along the men and is reported to have ] coup and later was linked with Pennsylvania Turnpike. (carried out “two successful and pamphlets urging Indonesian TRArrmz nvMAByn'TE'n highly professional commando [Chinese to resist the government i KALI UR DYNAMITED actions to obtain money and of acting President Suharto. Pennsylvania troopers said a |arms.” | Mobs of Indonesian youths tractor parked near a diner inj * ★ ★ 'have attacked the Chinese Em- New Kensington, Pa., was dyna-| The existence of the year-old bassy in Jakarta on four occa- mited, destroying the cab.j“League of Union and Military sions over the past year and a KYOTO, Japan (AP)—Rescue Troopers arrested a man at the'Action,” believed to have 50 to half. workers lifted 4-year-old Hiro- Bedford interchange of the turn-'75 members, "is fully known to * * * yuki Aral to safety today after >ike when he refused to move [the Portuguese authorities,” the; The government expelled two he was trapped for more than Chinese diplomats in April,[six hours at the bottom of a ‘larging them with subversive [23-foot foundation pipe on a conations, and two in August, for.structioh site here. Ilegedly shooting at the Indone-] The child was rushed to a hos-an youths who stormed the pital in serious condition be-mbassy. j cause of fatigue and shock, but The Foreign Ministry said In- doctors said his chances for sur- lesians in Peking have noth-but the clothes they were :aring when the embassy was icked Aug. 5. News in Brief vival were good. ★ * * Hiroyuki was playing alone at the construction site when he fell into the concrete pipe, measuring 1.2 feet in diameter. His cries attracted the attention of his parents. Vandals ■ armed with BB or Rescuers began pumping oxy-guns broke out some 50|gen into the pipe while digging p i_iwindows valued at more thanl at its rim. They eventually dug >urt in8880 at *e Alcott Elementary<23 feet under the ground, bv thi! k001, 480 w- Kennett- Pontiac cracked the pipe open and lis ex-|P°lice >were to,d yesterday- I dragged out little Hiroyuki. . % ** > h % x ** X r Successful iH X- ** I s fr: X*i X Net By ROGER E. SPEAR | Q — I’m afraid I’ve done a sot I? so 2bh 2tv. +2*1 Q — A stock which interests foolish thing. I borrowed $2,500 45® j) jfjl*! tlli }112 t me *s recommended because It on my house with the idea that Lsl s ]•’/■ ire 3«’. Vis selling below its book value. I could make more than the ................ Could you explain what this 6 per cent charged on the loan. means? —A.N. I bought 50 shares of‘Armour i A — Book value is an ac- at 51 and have seen it go down counting term which is not al- substantially. Should I hold on ways clearly understood by in- or switch to something else? I + 'v. vestors. It is determined by add- have three children whom I I {J ing up all the assets of a com-(want to help. — A.L. II P“y’ ‘hen 1dtd1“ftin« •“ debts| A - In general, it’s a mistake “d othe!; babuibes: Jhls *Hto try too hard to make profits is than divided by the number ta the gtock market. If m hu of common shares outstanding ^ gWck ^ith your own gur. to arrive at the book value per ,ug {unds and wjthout great -hare. This is one o the many for immediate gains, innmpntfll pdIpii almnc marlo .. . ... . ° .. I fundamental calculations made evaluation of common the chances are you’ll do pretty (well over a period of time. I ■ . , « ■ Well UVCI Cl UC1 IUU VI L1II1C• A , uU‘ iff? 8lr,d never believe that Armour is a good “ wl b P°wer- stock and that if you have pa- _ * which is considerably more »m-tience you wl„ ultirnate!y be + ,/, portant. ..... 'all right in this situation. “, -w As a rule, shares of situations: * * ★ , . '(operating in static or depressed 52 “ industries can be expected to (Roger Spear’s 48-page Guide *-,Jsell under their book value since‘o Successful Investing isavail-sre is relatively little demand “Me to readers. For your copy ' such stocks. On the other send $1-00 to Roger E. Spear ind, companies in rapidly.hi care of The Pontiac Press, owing, popular fields are us- Box 1618, Grand Central Sta-illy bid up to prices far above!Rob» New York, N.Y. 10017.) >k value. , (COPYRIGHT, 1967) “*‘A C—w THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 Parents' Irresponsibility Is Reflected in Hippies By WHITNEY M. YOUNG JR. Executive Director National Urban league One of the most publicized aspects of the current scene is the “hippie” movement. The sight of thousands of young people, most of them from middle-class homes, dropping out of society for a life of bohemian irresponsibility is widely reported and discussed. A popular explanation of the movement is that they are rejecting the values of their middle-class patents. I wonder. In some ways they remind me of their parent’s irresponsibility. Hippies, for example, say they want no part of politics. While they are superbly integrated and'withoht overt prejudice themselves, they say they don’t care about the Negro’s efforts to secure equality. Meaning-YOUNG ful social action doesn’t concern them. How does this differ from their parents’ attitudes? They, too, reject involvement in society’s problems. They, too, including many who say they are “liberal,” have abandoned meaningful efforts to join with Negroes to secure a better society. So in this respect at least, both the hippies and their middle-class parents don’t want to become involved in the world around them. The hippies “drop out”; their parents just turn their backs. ★ ★ ■ ★ One hippie told a reporter: “When this many people decide a society is worthless, it’s something to think about.” He should have said: “When so rhany people decide a society is worthless, they should work to change it into something better, rather than running away from it-” it ★ ★ ■ It’s too bad these youngsters don’t share the idealism and courage of the thousands of young men and women who also turn their backs on middle-class values, or lack of them, to work in the slums and ghettosyrf our nation to help war on poverty. It Is disturbing that they don’t get a tenth of the publicity given to the hippies. In fact the whole War on Poverty effort is nnder attack from citizens seeking to escape from responsibility. Some of the things I’ve heard about the antipoverty effort sound wery much like excuses not to support it. One such comment I’ve heard is that the War on Poverty doesn’t matter because riots occurred in cities like Detroit, which got all the federal money it wanted. I don’t know how that idea got around, but nothing could be further from the fruth. The Office of Economic Opportunity, which administers the War on Poverty, said that Detroit only got 14 per cent of the funds it asked for. Some big cities got even less; New York only got a tenth of its needs. I’ve also heard stories about all the antipoverty workers who were supposed to have taken.part in riots. But the facts are that only six anlipdverty workers in the whole country were arrested. That’s (probably less-than the total number of policemen charged with misconduct during the riots. gy goas Wtwforfcofhaai wad John Um Homo of ths Bottomless Cup of Coffee Open Daily 11i30-9»30, Fri. and Sot. 'til 10 P.M. ELIZABETH LAKE RD., OPPOSITE PONTIAC MALI Cuba-Bound Jet Makes Repair Stop in San Juan SAN JUAN, P.R. (AP) - A jet airliner carrying 40 persons from Spain to Cuba made a safe emergency landing in San Juan, P.R., Sunday after losing one of its engines over the Atlantic Ocean, the Coast Guard said. No one was reported injured on the DC8, an Iberian Airlines flight from Madrid to Havana. •k it it The pfakie radioed a distress that one of its four engines had out and it. was losing hydraulic pressure. An amphibious Coast Guard plane from San Juan flew to meet the jet and guided it into San Juan as the crippled plane’s crew hat' quested. The 30 passengers were taken to the U.S. Immigration Office to wait for the plane to be repaired. Ten crew members were aboard. Worry of FALSE TEETH Slipping or Irrltgting? Don't be embarraned by loom false teeth tapping, dropping or wobbling wbra you aet, bit at lamb. Jim* tprlnkle a little FASTHIWmi your r—-—~ ——- of gddad comfort and security by bolding platee more nrmly. No gummy, gooey, party taatr penturaa that fit are neetnllti t_ health. 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THURSDAY, FRIDAY TIL 9 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1867 fcr-1 Team Sent in Philippines ||| Doctors to View Faith Healer MANILA (AP) — The Philip-1 girl from Michigan -pine Medical Association sept a ported. team of doctors today to observe the activities of Antonio Agpaoa, self - professed faith healer who is treating American and two Canadian invalids. Agpaoa, a grade, school dropout who once was convicted of illegal medical practices by Philippine authorities, is meeting with his patients at a beach resort in the northern town of San Fernando. The invalids, accompanied by half a dozen Relatives and friends, include children and elderly persons suffering from tumor, eye, heart and other afflictions. Many are considered incurable by doctors. Each paid $1,350 for the trip. The first report of a cure was carried Sunday by the Philippines Herald, whose correspon- i claims he can perform surgery without the aid of instruments and cure sick people through the power of prayer. Unconfirmed reports from San Fernando, some 100 miles north of Manila, say Agpaoa has been attending to some 15 persons a day. Two unconfirmed “curves” — involving a 1-year old boy and a 16-year old County Drivers to Get Awards Road Commission Banquet Tomorrow The Oakland County Road Commission will honor 205 of its drivers at a safety banquet tomorrow night at the Pontiac Elks Temple, 114 Orchard Lake. were re- the faith healer. The girl was identified only as “Lynn.” Medical authorities here sayl they cannot prevent anyone from seeking out the faith-healer but that court action can be taken to stop him from administering cures. There was no immediate sign of such a move over the weekend. initial reaction on the part of newspapers was to criticize what one termed “dangerous hocus pocus.” Agpaoa was denounced as “an imposter with a gimmick.” dent in the Northern Beach area of San Fernando said a Roman Catholic priest, uncle of a boy, 14, crippled by polio, told him that Agpaoa had made it possible for the boy to walk again without crutches after 11 years. • * ★ ★ The Herald said'the Rev. Joseph Kernosek, identified parish priest at St. Aloysius Catholic Church in Romulus, Mich, reported that the faith healer, had helped William Kernosek bend his knees, one at a time. I prayed to God innmy own way, and he (Agpaoa) prayed in his own way,” the priest was quoted as saying. The report said the boy later was seen walking without forth patients and heqjer. crutches. | Dr. Pacifico Marco, president! WALKED PREVIOUSLY | of the Philippine Medical Asso- But, in Michigan, the boy’s ciatton> complained that his rep-' A columnist warned Sunday that, unless action were taken, the Philippines would become known as a land of quack doctors and fakes. Another newspaper commentator, noting belief in such shrines as Lourdes, France, argued for “humanity’s right to dream and hope for relief from suffering, sickness and even death itself.” V EFFORTS FRUSTRATED Efforts by officials and newsmen to witness the faith-healing operations have been frustrated by reluctance on the part of Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas Herman Hardison [for Fisher Body plant, died yes-,Lodge No. 46, F&AM, at 7;30 . terday. He was a member of'p.m. tomorrow. Service for Herman Hardison, St. Paul Lutheran Church and! Mr. Hall, a retired Pontiac |5lr of 411 Franklin Road will Eagle L*dge 2887 in Waterford State Hospital employee, died Township. lyesterday. He is a member of Surviving are his wife, Gwen-jjr&AM Lodge No. 410 of Plea-dolyn; his mother, Mrs.. Ivanjsurevg]e jjy Webber; a.daughter Mrs. Ter- surviving are his wife, Flori-rence Ferre of Fenton; twod 0ne daughter, Mrs'. Arthur sons, Michael Cntes and Rich-1 Barr Uke m arn iTitM hnth nr Pnntiflp’ ... , _ g . . m son, Edward T. of Lake Orion; ;!one brother; three sisters; two be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the New Hope Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by I the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home. Mr. Hardison died Saturday. | He was a Pontiac Motor Division employe. Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Annie Hardison of Pontiac; a sister, Mrs. Ann Jones of Pontiac and a brother. ard Crites, both of Pontiac;^ eight grandchildren; a sist Mrs. Camilla Belanger __ . Waterford Township; ahd fc^ESSSJ? ** brothers, including LeVerne 8randchildren. and Leon of Waterford Town-1 ship and.Dallas of Clarkston. .Mrs. Brian W. Johnson ! COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Henry Brandt Service for Mrs. Brian W. (Lil- METAMORA - Service fori!1?" R)r fohn9“1- 37 > ®f 3055 Lynn C. Irwin Service for Lynn C. Irwin, 74, of 695 Sterling will be 1:30 I p.m. Wednesday at the Voor-hees-Siple Funeral Home with Henry Brandt, 89, of 4544 {Union Lake wtill be 1 p.m. BIRTHDAY GIRLS—Miss Barbara Floehr and her great-grandniece, Gale Ann Sander, both celebrated their birthdays yesterday—the 100th for Miss Floehr and the first for little Gale, who seems pretty solemn about it all. They got together at a home for the aged in Lancaster, N.Y., near Buffalo, where Miss Floehr lives. Gale’s home is on nearby Grand Island; burial in Perry-v^M o u n t Headley will be 2 p.m. tomor- Wednesday at Union Lake Bap-Park Cemetery. jrow at Christ Lutheran Church, |jsttl^rc^;ltBufja,_,^,1 b* in Mr. Irwin died Saturday. 'Hadley Township, by C. F. Sher- “ “ He Was a retired millwright man Funeral Home, Ortonville.c from General Motors Corp.jBurial will be in Christ Luth-r Truck and Coach Division. Night to Boost Scouting Oct. 17 at Area Schools Surviving are his wife, Lola; two daughters, Gertrude of Pontiac, and Mrs. Cloella Parris of Lake Orion; two sons, Denser H. of Birmingham and Glen-del of San Antonio, Tex.; a brother and sister; 13 grandchildren; and 12 great-grandchildren. eran Cemetery, Hadley T6wn- ship. Mr. Brandt, a retired farmer, died Saturday. He was a member of Christ Lutheran Church, Hadley. Surviving besides his wife, Elsie, are four sons, Howard of Metamora, Elden of Hadley and Armin and Edwin of Goodrich; in grandchildren; 10 great-Mrs. Claude Pardo grandchildren; and a sisterj for location of the| private graveside service for j^8- LiR‘an Hawk, MetamorB. Mrs. Claude (Lela E.) Pardo, oui in iym.ni <,„ llIC m a ____r A special school night to pro- lin Blvd. mother U,NOTma Kernosek “raid resentatWes,‘‘werq drivYn away mote Scouting programs will be {nearest participating school. her son had been walking thislby burly men” guarding the|he,d in several ^ schools at Cub packs, Boy Scout troops;80, of 140 Ascot will be tomor-past summer and at times he co^a8es where Agpaoa and tiis;^P-m- Oct. 17. could climb the stairs in their home. “There’s just not enough information to be able to tell if he’s and Explorer posts and theirlrow at the Brookside Cemetery leaders will be at each parti-in Fairgrove. Her body is at cipating school to explain scout- the Voorhees-Sipte Funeral ing, demonstrate activities and Home, provide information materials. Mrs. Pardo died Saturday. COUNCIL PARTICIPANTS LShe is ^ a sister’ I „ „ _ ..three grandchildren and one The Clrnton yaR®y^uncdgreat-grandchild. as AnnrnYimfltplv 10 000 males ° ° patients were staying. + + + Boys interested in becoming Joseph Ruffner, 47, a steel acub sc°u‘- ** scoutt> or “* plant worker from Detroit, ls Pjorer and their parents are in- better or not,” she said. “Misleading the group. He says ^- ^1 scout coundlC° "g ° 6 situation has changed quite a paoa cured him of a back all- 1 bit from time to time. Forwent during a visit here last' The evening is sponsored by has approximately 10,000 males The drivers, 81 of them withawf,ne this summer he was year. the Clinton Valley Council, Boy {taking part in scouting in more Perfect safety records the lastieven cutting the grass.” i The Philippine News Service Sc®"1® of America, to show seven years, represent 985 j Philippine News Service said says it has learned that groups pie the Scouting activities. ■ H Ior .Mrs. Wimam u.i years of safe driving experi-|an “eyewitness who declined toiof Germans and British are Those interested in attending ships in Oakland and Macomb (Lilian M.) Penman, 78, of 204 CArifi/*A CaJiAaI enc®- |be identified had reported see-iplanning to make similar trips the school night should contact counties and the cities of Pon- Auburn will be 3 p.m. tomorrow 3Cl Ylvv 3wl lUUl Each will receive a wallet-|in8 patients emerging Lromof hope. the local scout center, 132 Frank-; tiac and Mount Clemen!. at the Donelson Johns Funeral sized award card and a lapel Agpaoa’s cottage^ “happy and j Sphe council also operates two Home, with b u r i a 1' in. Whitel Hi from the National Safety seeminsly cured ” [large camping facilities, Camp Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Walter S. Hall ORION TOWNSHIP - Service for Walter S. Hall, 79, of 499 Hoag will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Allen's Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Masonic memorial service will, be conducted by Orion >-ithan 250 units. Mrs. William G. Penman The council includes 33 town- Service for Mrs. William G. Council, cosponsor of the program. Frazer W. Staman, chairman of the road commission, will be the keynote speaker.. The agency said that according to the witness a girl, 16,! who was suffering from loss ofj speech was .able to utter a few words” after being treated by j Deadline Near People in the j U. S. Sen. Robert P, Griffin, Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi, by Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Mrs. Johnson died yesterday. Surviving are four sons, Ray, Jerry and Brian of Union Lake and Clayton of yyaterford Township, and three sisters. Mrs. Nellie Laidler OXFORD — Mrs. Nellie Laidler, 31 W. Burdick died today. Her body is at Bossardet Funeral Home. Julius W. Ludwig ( OXFORD TOWNSHIP—Service for Julius W. Ludwig, 72, of 3501 Thomas will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will be in Oxford Township. A Masonic memorial service will be at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home. Ludwig, former Meta-jmora Township fire chief, died yesterday. He was an auto mechanic and a life member of Metamora Lodge No. 413, F&AM. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Marcella Frost of Oxford, Mrs. Kathryn Best of Metamora and Mrs. Shirley Guest of Harrisburg, 111.; Road Commissioner Sol D. Lomerson will present plaques Pri7P tn thrp» rpfirincr pmnlnvps And ■ wULC? I I \MmW to three retiring employes, and Commissioner Paul W. McGovern will give the safety suggestion award. RECIPIENT Receiving the safety suggestion award will be William Burt, 2657 Judah, employed in the electrical department. Winner Dies in England - Agawam near Lake Orion and Troy. 1 the new Lost Lake Reservation* Mrs. Penman died Saturday. near Clare. 1 Surviving are two daughters, I MM.__________MLa> _ i, i, i, Mrs. Earl DeMond of Waterford R-Mich„ said today that young {brother Marvin of Lapeer- and Boys who are at least 7 feiJSglfi“nd,iMrSa s?eking aPP°intmenV° grandchildren, in the third grade are ei.ffibip|Sanford of Pontiac; a son, Rich-.nation’s service academies By The Associated Press ' jfor Cub Scouting. Boys 11 years'ard G °* ^ M°n the' O. John Pari$i Prince Charles, Britain’s future king, began his college |of age and older may becomeian wo®r !deadb®e ®ext Monday. ^ j career as a freshman at Cambridge ye s t e r d a y and was Boy Scouts. High school boys _. , ^ Griff,n » permitted to make AVON TOWNSHIP - Re- J 14 and older may become ex-* Fred W. Rickert two appointments each to the quiem Mass for O. John LONDON (AP) — Sir Norman ‘ i Angell, 94. winner of the Nobel Burt will receive a $25 sav-1Peace l" lg33 for„ “» , ... , ... many books and lectures on be- ings bond for suggesting «>a‘| half "of ^ died Saturday. t fluorescent streamers be at-i known work wa8 tached to baskets on booms of | traffic signal repair trucks. “The Great Illusion,” in which he tried to show that war dam- greeted at the main gate by Lord Butler, master of Trinity College. A crowd of about 1,000 persons, mostly women and girl students from nearby schools, shouted, “Good old Charlie Boy” to the 18-year-old prince. Trinity's 700 resident under-graduates are all men. His senior tutor, Dr. Denis Marrian, said, We will treat the prince as normally as possible. I am sure he will be accepted easily." plorers. , Air Force, Army and Navy Parisi, 63, of 2740 S. Rochester Service for former Pon 11 a c schoo,s and ]Q for Merchant win be Wednesday at St. Pas- resident Fred W. Rickert, J5. °j,Mai1ne Academy for the schoollcal’s Catholic Church, Willow- aMJapfSs«-' “ **in '”id-i9ra M r * 1 Mayville. Burial was today at To qualify for an appoint-! ’ ‘ the Fremont Cemetery, May-ment, an applicant must be a e sa,d a‘ » toni8ht atith® M ville. resident of Michigan, unmar- ,‘an! R; Poter® Funeural Home» Mr. Rickert died Friday. He ried, a U. S. citizen, and at;Rochestei!’ and anotber t®mor- was a retired salesman at WKC.Ileast 17 years old but not yet 22 rH0W 4®erJFuneral , Surviving is a sister. on July 1, 1968. Home Richmond Hill, Ont. AUCKLAND, New Zealand | , ’ Mr Parisi- an antique dealer, (AP) - Angry scenes, with cus-| Mrs William Rocarek I Inter?st?d. a p ? 1 Lca.,n ‘.s died yesterday. He was a mem- New Zealand Bars in Uproar[ are asked to write Griffin ln:ber of St. Andrew’s Catholic Charles will study archeology and anthropology for at least |tomers serving themselves,; , , c . ntr a im i_ L L serves as a warning to truckers [ brought no real economic ad- university now gets the majority of its student body from dayj - ’ ’ ! • L with high vehicles who may not i vantage, see the suspended basket. I More than a million copies of the book were sold after its publication in 1910. For his views, Angell was accused of lacing patriotism during the years before World War I. He had no doubt, however, that Britain was right in resisting Nazi Germany. Injured Milford Boy Listed Satisfactory A 6-year-old Milford boy is in satisfactory condition after be-ing hit by a car Friday afternoon, reported a Pontiac General Hospital spokesman.' Angell was knighted in 1931 and served briefly as a member of Parliament after his election as a Labor party candi- Michael Slentz, son of Mr. and {date. Mrs. Robert Slentz, 764 Manor,] Born in 1872, Sir Norman was Injured when he apparently {spent much of his early life in walked out from the shoulder the western United States, first of the road and in front of a ranching and prospecting and car, said Milford police. later in newspaper work. He re- The accident occurred on Sum- turned to Europe in 1898 as cor-mit near Squire Lane. respondent for several Ameri- Driver of the car was Mrs. can publications and served for Joseph Lucyson, 543 Washing- nine years as general manager ton, White Lake Township, said of the Paris edition of the Lon-the police. Idon Daily Mail. Violent Youths Overrun Frisco Amusement Park SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - A break it up. He was quickly sur-thousand youths erupted in vio-lrounded by a racially mixed lence Sunday night at Playlandlthrong, groups of which began Amusement Park at the beach, breaking concession stands win-and police sealed off six blocks dows and looting.cash registers, for two hours before' they I Police estimated $2,700 worth of stopped the bottle-throwing'windows were broken and $1,600 crowd. {stolen. Police arrested four adults! police said the crowd was and 12 juveniles for assault and predominantly Negro but that] resisting arrest, then herded the they saw no interracial fighting, unruly youths Into municipal K was a warm night, buses and sent them back into the City. At least twice boys got state schools. On Monady, Charles will sign the college’s admission register, which bears the signatures of his grandfather, George VI, and great-great-grandfather, Edward VII. Astronaut Dedicates Home Town Airport Astronaut Neil Armstrong returned to his home town, Wapokoneta, Ohio, yesterday for dedication of the new' Auglaize County airport, named after him. Armstrong, command pilot of the Gemini 8 mission in 1966, told a crowd of 2,500: “I little dreamed 20 years ago when I was learning to fly here that, at any timp, would an airport be dedicated in my name.” ARMSTRONG Rockefeller Gets World Leadership Award John D. Rockefeller III, board chairman of the Population Council, Int., has been avtarded the annual Margaret SaJiger award in world leadership, it was announced yesterday in New York. ^en Casey' Breaks Heel Bone Actor Vince Edwards, making a movie In Lisbon, Portugal, was hospitalized Saturday after slipping and breaking a heel bone. A doctor said yesterday Edwards, the former “Dr. Ben Casey” on television, “will have to stay in the hospital for four more days, but he must stay off the foot considerably longer.” Edwards is starring in “Hammerhead" for Columbia Pictures, also featuring Diana Dorns and Judy Geeson. After 50 years of 6 p.m. clos-hie will be in Cedar Rapids,I * * * | toria; a son, Gary with ing, pubs and hotels stayed open I«wa, this week. Griffin said that he already-the Coast Guard; , a daughter, to10 p.m. for the first time—but1 Mrs. Rocarek died yesterday.{has received 250 applications Carol at home; a grandchild; there was no one to serve thei^008' arrangements are by jfor next year’s appointments, thirsty customers. {Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home, m Bar staffs went on strike at 7 p.m. demanding higher wages. In many hotels, managers and their families tried coping with the rush but were stamped by celebrating crowds. {three brothers; arid four sisters. son, Edward of Cedar Rapids. Baby Boy Simpkinson Service for the infant son ofjg|l||[l=U {Mr. and Mrs. Charles Simpkin- (jjj=|||i An "honesty box” was placedlson of 454 Auburn will be 1 p.m.|=Tjjm^n on the bar of one Auckland ho-{tomorrow at the Sparks-Griffinj =llllll=£> tel. Said the manager; “Serve'Funeral Home. Burial will be yourself and leave a fair pay-|in White Chapel Cemetery, ment.” The infant died Saturday. Sur- It’s a great idea,” one worn- viving besides the parents are a{ an drinker declared. brother, Charles at home, and; grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Earli Carr and Mrs. Sylvia Garger, all of Pontiac. Jerome I. Webber Service for Jerome I. Webber, 53, of 691 Second will be 3 p.m. WASHINGTON (UPI) — Sen. j Wednesday at the Voorhees-Sip-Joseph S. Clark, D-Pa., claims le Funeral Home with burial ini ;the proposed $5-billion U. S. an Perry Mount Park Cemetery, j j anti ballistic missile (AHM)| Mr. Webber, a crane operator' system is “a very expensive flying erector set.” The Pennsylvania Democrat made public during the weekend Mp^=»o^=^dj Carl OV: 3)onelson **J)onald 3t. Joimt Dem Clark Raps Missile Defense We Will Take the time . . . . and gladly answer any and all of your questions. The Donelson-Johns Funeral Home will be pleased to give you full information about the funeral service offered and about funeral needs encountered. Call on us for information, discussion, or helpful suggestions. (Phone FEDERAL 4•4511 the Text of a speech he planned to deliver in the Senate today. He contended that the “thin" missile shield approved by Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara "essentially contriubtes nothing to this country’s securi- Club Hosts Film Si8 (hk i Paxkinq On Our (Premite\=||||||3 The Waterford Township Republican Club will host a movie, “Anarchy in the U.S.A.,” at 8 p.m. tomorrow at Pierce Junior School, Hatchery at Crescent Lake. Visitors are welcome, club president Frank Lane an- 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC , MAN ATTACKED off the I Clark quoted McNamara’s own statements to the effect Inounced. that the proposed ABM would _____________________________ | be “ineffective against a sophis- ; , . ticated Soviet offense,” and Suicide Is Ruled {challenged the idea that it would _ ,. , , .. . 'protect the United States against The gurtshot death yesterday! Singer Frankie Avalon must pay his former manager, relatively primitive Red Chinese of a 63-year-old Avon Township Frankie Avalon Loses Suit to Manager started all A man on a municipal bus| Robert P. Marcncci, $49,100 in commissions and expenses, a over (again, but these local dis- was attacked by one group of turbances were quickly quelled, the boys after, the main disturb-, * * * , jance was over; His arm was Trouble started when two Ne- twisted and his shoulder dislo-gro men got Into a fight and a cated. He was taken to Park motorcycle policeman tried to|Emergency Hospital. Los Angeles Superior Court judge has ruled. The singer signed a contract with Marcucci on his 21st birthday, Sept. 18, 1961. Avalon contended the contract was meant to end in three years, but the contract had no eXpira- missiles. • man was ruled a suicide by He suggested that if the Chin- investigators, according to Oak-ese really wanted to risk an at-{land County sheriff’s deputies. tack on the United States they could deliver nuclear bombs from submarines or even in suit- Officers said Orlando J. Parisi of 2740 S. Rochester died at his home of a head wound about noon. CEMETERY MARKERS Markers from $35 Monument Builder» in Pontine for Over 73 Yean INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Perry 335-6931 Bronze Plates for Memorial Park Cemeteries at Below Cemetery Prices D--3 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 0, 1967 Sr — Ndo^’. 7 ARMSFUL OF FEAR -* Two young Arabs, who fire not convinced of the good intentions of an Israeli soldier, get an assist in crossing the wrecked Allenby Bridge to the western bank of the Jordan Riyer. The youngsters were among 200 refugees allowed to return home recently after they were termed “hardship cases.” Droves of Arabs crossed the Jordan eastern bank after the war, but only a few have been allowed to return to their homes on the Israeli-held side. A scientist has devised a diet designed to starve cancer cells. It reduces the .patient’s consumption of one of the amino acids found in sugars, starches and'proteins used by the cancer cells in greater than normal cells’ quantities. Death Notices SELL, ROBERT B. T.j October 7, 1847 i 335 North Woof Third Avenue, Boynton Beech, Florida, formerly of Barkley; one 77. Beloved husband of Holen Ball; dear fattier - of Unlay, Willard. Earl, add Ever-survived by eight ----------------------------------great- 11 will lie in state a " (Suggested visiting ind 7 to 8.) GUY; October 2. , Florida (formerly of Pontiac); age 72; beloved husband of Marvel Bevlnpton; dear father of Mrs. Marvel Etta Ochoa and Beecher Bevlngton; alto survived by four grandchildren. A day morning. kRANDt. HENRY; October 7. IM7; 4U4 Headley Road, Metamora; age ft; beloved husband ot Elsie Brandt; doer father of Howard, Armln, Edwin and Elden Brandt; dear brother of Mrs. Lillian Hawk; alto survived by 17 grandchildren and 10 proat-grandclilldron. Funeral service will be hold Tuesday, October 10. at 2 p.m. at the Christ Lutheran Church, Hadley, with Rev. Norman Amen officiating. Interment In Christ L u t h o r n Church Comotery. Mr. Brandt will lie In state at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, 125 South Street, Qrtonvllle. dlton; dear brother ot Mrs. A Jonas and Hanry Hardison; da nephew of Mrs. Julia Lastor a Mrs. Rosie Porter; deer nn,u Clarence Hardison; a d Wednesday, Octo- at l p.m. at tlw New Hope Baptist Church. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery. Family will meet friends Monday 7-t p.m, at the Davls-Cobb Funeral Homo. fkwiN. LYNN C.) October 7, ltifi jfl Sterling; age 74; beloved husband of Lola Irwin; dear father of Mrs. Ctoella Parris, Miss Gertrude Irwin, Do mar H. and Glendel Irwin; dear brother of Mrs. Hattie Malone and Roy Irwin; also survived by 12 grandhMMnui ms to SWKsl bar 11, at hoes-SIple Funeral Home with Rev. James M. Johnson officiating. Interment in Perry Park Cemetery. Mr. Irwin will lie In state at the funeral home. JSuggested visiting hours 2 to 5 and 7 fo *.) Johnson, lillian r.j October i, 1847; 2055 Union Lake Road. Commerce Township; age 67; dear mother of Ray, Jerry, Brian and Clayton Johnson; dear sister of Mrs. carl Eckfald, Mrs. Elsia Jackson and Miss Edna Farber; also survived by nine grandchildren and four great-grandchildren. Funeral service win be held Wednesday, October 11, at I p.m. at tha Union Lake Baptist Church. Inter- ---* 's Oakland Hills Memorial J. Mrs. Johnson will lie In it the Elton Black Funeral nwn*. 1233 Union Lake Road, Union Lake. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 3 and 7 to f.) LAIDLER, NELLIE; 31 West Bur-dick Street, Oxford. Funeral arrangements are pending at tha Bossardet Funeral Home. Oxford. CuDWIO, JULIUS WILLIAM; October 8, !9f •>'— ----- - - Oxford To Gardens. I . 1867; 3501 Thomas Road, 1 Township; age 72; dear — Of Mrs- Marcella Frost, rs. Kathryn Best and Mrs. Shir-v Guest; dear brother of Marvin survived by eight . Masonic memorial .. Jo field tuosday, Oc- at 0 p.m. at the Flumer-terol Home, Oxford. Fu- ______n state at tha '.funeral borne. PAtcoo, LELA E.l October 7, 1847; 140 Ascot; age 00; dear sister of davr October 11, at i.-jq tha Brook side Cemetery grove, a... r« w In i FunaraJ tha Voorhaas-SIpla WAN M.; October ' 7, SB J32 Auburn Avenue; age 71; K y Mr.. Earl DaMond, H t'Tf Reynolds, elmer 7' Elisabeth L-™ U; bear father tri Gordon B. Ray* *">“*■ gear brothe- gC «KL-‘ Death Notices RICKERT, FRED WILLIAM; October 6. 1867; Moyvllle (formerly of 125 North Perry, Pontiac); ago 75; dear brother ot Mrs. Virgil (Edna) Langford. Funeral service was held Sunday, October. I, at 2:30 p.m. ot the Blackmore & Tubbs Chapel, MayvIHe. Interment will be taken from the Voorhees-Siple Fu- loved Infar Judy Slmi________ grandson of Mrs. Dolor Mrs. Sylvia Barger and Eon corn deer brother of Charles Glenn Slmpklnson Jr. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, October 10, at 1 - p.m. at the Sparks-Grlffin Funeral Home. Interment In White Chepel Cemetery. ._____________ WEBBER, JEROME IVAN; October aga 53; Webber; Gwendolyn uuvia son of Mrs. Lai* ear father of Mrs. Ter- t, Michael and -------1 r brother of Mfs. 84 1967; 691. Second Str beloved - Webber; ..., nMr father of AA,«. .m-Rlchard Camll- -------- -------ip Leon, Dallas and Douglas Webber; also survived by eight grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, October 11, at 3 p.m. at the Voorhees-SIple Fifneral Me** «»**»» Rev. Maurice G. Shacke Park (Cemetery. Mr. Wet lie In state at tha funeral nome. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Press Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICf TO ADVfRTISCRS AOS RfCIIVID BY 5 P.M. WILL BE PUBLISHED THi FOLLOWING DAY. Tha deadline far CASH WANT AD RATES Linas T I-Day 3-Day • 6-Days 2 / . $2 00 $2 46 $3.64 3 / 2 00 3 60 S.SB 2 44 448 6.96 3.05 5.40 8.40 366 648 1048 4.27 9.56 11.76, A 6.10 10 60. 16.80 In Memoriom 2 IN LOVING MEMORY OP SARGEY Rosin who passad away October it; 18*1. In my heart your memory lingers, Sweetly fond ond true; There Is not a day door Father; That I do not think of you. —Sadly missed by daughter, Sonya. IN MEMORY OF SARGEY-ROSIN who passed away October 8, 1861. Often s lonely heartache. Many o silent (por; But always a beautiful memory, Of one I loved t* -— —Sadly missed Rosin._______ lie, Lucia Nothing can ever lake away The love a heart holds door; Fond memories linger every day Remembrance keeps har near. Sadly missed by family a » PH5 tablets. Fast 6EBT AID, INC.. 7)8 RIKElk BLDG FE 2-0181, Refer to Crldlt Ad-rlsors. “ NORTH END AMBULANCE SERVICE 2 CARS SERVING THE: Waterford — Rochester — 1 Clarkston — Lake Orion -Oxford — Auburn Heights — Pontiac — Sylvan Lake and surrounding areas. HOSPITAL TRANSFERS: $15 plus SO cents per mile out of Pontiac. EMERGENCY RUNS: $20 In city of Pontiac surrounding areas# $20 plus 50 cants par mile OUT OF TOWN TRIPS: Load fat — 85 plus 50 cants par mile FOR MORe"*&FORMATION CALL Mr. J. Howells, Jr. FE 3-9500 FE 2-2016 34 HOUR SERVICE BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there | were replies at The Pre»g | Office in the following ; boxes: 2,3,8,21,31. Funeral Directors 4 COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS_____6744)451 C. J. GODHAROT FUNERAL HOME Koepo Harbor, Fh, 482 0X10. DONELSON-JOHNS Funeral Home "Designed for Funerals" Huntoon FUNERAL HOME _ Serving Pontiac for SO years 78 Oeklend Avg. FE 2-8IS8 ____Service"^ FE S-83SS Voorhees-Siple Established Over 40 2 LOTS. CHRISTIAN MEMORIAL 623-3383 __ whTYI Chapel - ips Mach 16 FOR COMPLETE POODLE Morton; de*F:#4Mfpl ard O. Reynolds. Fui will ba hold Wodnesi 11. wT1:3# p.m. of tl ..........._ _motsry. Mr. news grill Up In Mite at a, MMm- bama. (Suggested -' hours I fa I and 7 to 8.) any girl or Woman needing o friendly advisor, phono FE 3-5122 before igjn, Conildentlel _ GET OUT OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM ■ • YOU CAN AFFORD ' TAILORED TO YpyR INCOME MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS >89 Dnnllar CB.B*. B .«b BU- visors io-a r t0 CrMflt ** KUTTKUHN WIGS AND HAIR-pieces. Demonstrations. S t y 1 • d. New and usad« 363*4985 after 6 p.m. 6n*and after THIS DATE, OCT. 9, 1967# I Will fiot be responsible for any debts contracted by any other than myself. Richard Deshar- i Wallace, 1616 I Rd„ four scout group, church, club :ALL HAY RIDES. 6n|oy 6 horse-Irawn ride through fields, woods, START PLANNING NOW FDR your «||| Bm i FALL I followed by a home______ ghetti dinner. For reservations * 628-1611. UPLAND HILLS FARM DO YOU HAVE A DEBT PROBLEM? Wo con help you with o olan you can afford. DEBT CONSULTANTS OF PONTIAC, INC. S14 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 8-OS33 STATE LICENSED-BONDED _____Open Saturday 8-12 a.m. _ WILL PERSONS WHO WITNESSES ........ — jfi-*“is and Dlxia in accident or on Thursday OR 3-9551. ir 5 plea: LOST: 2 SCHWINN BOY'S BIKES. Size 20". Fastback Stingray ram sky blue ..... ... ...... . black and 6 LB 57415. Both 5 speed. FE LOST: 1 GRAY AND WHITE FE- LOST-FEMALE GERMAN SHORT Hair pointer# vie. of Joslyn and “-itcalm. Rr—fifi f ttjm LOST GERMAN POINTER AND hound# male# gray and black# black speckles In gray# reward# $100 — child's pat# dog gets bronchitis. FE 8-1843.___________________ LOST# SMALL BLACK PURSE with' red wallet# behind Rlker Building on Clinton St.# Contact Mrs. Smith# 674-1010.____________ LOST: PURSE CONTAINING BAD- 1 DEPENDABLE MAN 10 a weak guarantee, part timt. tarried, over 21. Coll 334-2771 overhead, prestige product — manufactured by Dupont Co. Excellent growth opportunity. Owner unable to handle alone. Requires small Investment for equipment and inventory. Con finance j>art If 10 BOYS WE NEED 10 BOYS TO WORK IN OUR MAILING ROOM. WEDNESDAY# OCTOBER )1 FROM 12:15 P.M. TO 4:15 P.M. MUST BE 16 YEARS OF AGE. APPLY IN PERSON MONDAY OR TUESDAY TO: BERT FALKNER Mailing Room THE PONTIAC PRESS $400-S600 FEE PAID MANAGEMENT TRAINEES In office# finance# retail# sales . Aga 21-32# some college INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL $5004650 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEES n all flalds. aga 21-30, som $5,000 FEE PAID FINANCE TRAINEE Aga 21-31, High School Grad. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL $7,200412,000 FEE PAID College Grods-Engineers Management positions In all fields INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron__________334-4971 A PART-TIME JOB A married man, 21-34, to work 4 hours per evening. Call 67441530, 4 p.m. to I p.m. tonight. $200 PER MONTH accountant for cost and general office work. ------- . Exc; opportunity. Send C-36 ume to Pontloc Ft Pontiac, Michigan.__________ ACCOUNTING, immediate open-Ing In prominent company. Exc. -potential, company paid banallts. s»,ooo. Call Halan Adams, 334-3471, Snalllng A Snalllng. ASPHALT RAKER Truck drlvtr, experienced. Ba at 12 Mils and Norlnweetern highway Gulf Station, 7:3# any , morning. AUTO MECHANIC AUTOMATIC SCREW MACHINE OPERATOR David Machine Co.# 1794 Pontiac Dr. (Sylvan Vlllaga)# Pontiac. BOOKKEEPER# PULL CHARGE r-accounting background# exc. benefits, $9,000. call Kathy King# 334-2471# Snalllng fcSnalllng._ BRICKLAYERS Veneer man. Work In Pontiac araa. Call Detroit, $38-2419. CARPENTERS AND AFPRENTIC-......—S. EM 3-3037 offer 6. #-7404, d Wise, Inc. FE- coil CARPENTERS OVERTIME Union Journeyman only Local apartment prolact Call 574-1862, 6353303 OPERATED LAUNDRYMAT ___a mr~ -■----- Consider _ i. to 7 pjn7 COLLEGE MEN AND HIGH school seniors, potl-tlmo work la fit your schedule. Good earnings plus bonus. Must bo neat and : have use of car. Call 332-4627, 3-6:30 p.m. COLLECTIONS, INSIDE WORK, EA-ger man with a desire to got ahead, $5,500. Coll Kofhy King, 334-3471, SnolllnB A Snalllng, EbIZTSiOfc-MAN, WO PAlfiTING, East Town Collision, 515 S. log- Inow, Pontloc.______________ COMMERCIAL CONSTRUCTION SU- M 11 .sftijsag 900,1 DESIGNER-DET AILERS 687-7200 DISHWASHER tl or over, ll p.m. to 7 shift. Apply In person, S ond Egg. 5385 Dixie Hwy., llflh scl I the bi NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY TRAINING AT OUR EXPENSES -CAR FURNISHED ■ Call Mr. Bonnott Boloro 3, 338-0350 EXPttKfEMttlb ”a'S|6~DTl burnar service man, S4J8 par hr, Tlmg and vs ovartlma. O'Brian Haallng. FE 3-2818._________ EXPERIENCED MARINE MECHAN-Ic. Pull ttma work. FE BMW, experieMDM w‘AitIHDUIb hafp. Apply In person. Brooch lh-terprlsai, Inc., 2100 B. Maple, Blr- EXCAVATING CDNCEEN NEEDS foreman capable df laying siri and suparvlslng, medium-size axcava-flon arolacfs, exp. In hWtvfay and . building excavation necessary — Good opportunity for right man with growing concern. CO 4-4167 br CO 4-4177/___________»___ ’ Experienced Welders Also port time truck' lube men. 61 Jickion St., Poaflac. EXPERIENCED TURREV LATHe ■ oparators. Mlse. 1--— -------- tors. Crescent Ml 2851 Williams Dr. P EXPERIENCED MAINTENANCE man for largo nursing horn*, must bo good dll around. Right salafy for good man. Aga no barrier, Union Lake, BM 3-4121. iKPlltWMCkb SALESMAN Commercial and Industrial Elec- EXPERIENCED USED CAR SALESMAN COOPER'S. Extra Clean Used Cars 4271 Dixie Drayton Plains Open 8 to 8 dolly_____. 674-2237 Experienced Mechanic Needed for Pontiac- Bulck and Chivy Dealership Apply In person fo Mr. Ernst, Homer Hlght, Oxford, f—1— FACTORY WORKER, RELIABLE man, 25 to 35 lor small manufacturing plant In Troy.* Steady employment, storting $2.25 per hr. plus benefits. 688-2446 between 8 GENERAL OFFICE 1 WORK FOR aggressive Pontiac orea industrial equipment daaler. Salary, $125 per week plus fringe benefits. Re-ply to Pontloc Press Box No. 8. FOR I t Soil Ray Boots HEAVY EQUIPMENT OPERATORS — mechanically inclined. Experienced only need apply. Good pay, benefits. CO 4-4167 or CO 4-4)77. INSTRUMENT MAN, RODMAN, chairman, for lend survey party, Wakenhut Engineering ond Survey $8,000. Coll 338-4630 1 workers. Best working conditions. porsonf*jK»boon??<26 W^oplol BlrmlnBhgm. _______________ LABORERS See MANPOWER Men with core also needed Report — Roady for work 7 A.M. 1311 WIda Track W. Equal Opportunity Employer_ Male Short Order Cook Good wages. Plus fringe benefits. Day or night shift. Full tima or part time. BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph 8$ Huron___ Man over so for machine MANAGER-TRAINEE STRONG DE-sire to luccood is 17,200. Call Kathy I Snalllng G Swelling. Management Trainees $500 PLUS BIRMINGHAM AREA MANAGER FOR AU.TO WASH _ call FE 3-7968. MANAGERS. SERVICE STATION. Dev and evening shifts, full time Experienced, references, 3)21 - 6 doya, uniforms, b__________ leneflts. Apply 8-11 a.m., 24 4 p.m. I, Purs NEW AND USED > CAR SALESMAN Needed fo sail Chevrolets-Buicks-Pontlacs, Real Good benefits, Good Pay, Sea. Mr. HOMER HIGHT NATIONWIDE COMPANY NEEDS 2 or 3 salesmen. If you ore looking far: , T. A lob with a future 2. A |ob • 3. Abovt-i 4. No trov. 5. Leads ov Coll 3354447..... _ polntment, 1-4:30 p.m. 'Authorized Dealer, Undsay Company, Division of Union Tonk Car Company. monthly outran our rtqulromor Phono 473-8474, __________________ OUTSIDE ALL-AROUND MAINTE-man for mobile homo pork — for appointment 363-5386 or sontlol and lob Involves coiling on young mothers. Leads furnished. Mon selected will earn 3173 to 1225 weekly. For appointment coll Mr. Adorn of 5354144 collect. Production Workers PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION EMPLOYMENT DEPT. OM IS AN EQUAL ORPORTUNITY EMPLOYER p. There it wim In . Phono parte monag 333-7663 PORTER Day shift. Apply In ptresn. Big Boy Drive Iri. MM Dixie Hwy. aflgr ep,m. >______■ PORTER i-. FULL TlMJIVf. ning shin, uniform and — PUBLIC SAFETY OFFICER Apply pf Personnel Office OAKLAND UNIVERSITY ROCHESTER. MICHIGAN An Equal Opportunity Employer PURCHASING DEPARTMENT IM. mediate opening In hospital work, . prefer mature man. axparlanca helpful. Duties consist bf supervising receiving stock. Reply Pontiac Proas Box. c-2. ROUTE MAN OR DRIVER, OVER Soft Water Co., 214 V Pontiac._ ,___ RETAIL Management Wm with ptfdil SPl_________ •nee to train for Dopt. Manager - positions. Montgomery Ward offers great ad- Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL Equal Opportunity Employar SALES EMPLOYMENT C oTTn-salor. Dp you like o challenge? We will train If you hove the gift of gob and like working with paoplo. exceptionally high earnings In this spaciallzad rigid. Call Angla Rook, 334-2471, Snalllng B Snalllng. SALESMAN — ABOVE - AVERAGE man to accept . challenge with prominent organization, $15,000 — Call Halan Adams. 334-2471, Snail- 3120 par waak. I hour. Hbward S Telegrepti and I field Hills,s SHOEMAN, EXPERIENCED, WELL oavlno permanent — ■I S^oppr, | iURVEY PARTY CHIEF. INSTRU-ment man and halpars. draftsman, hncnit.ii7.tinn end vacations paid, t tor right persons. W. Gillespie Asso- TEST TECHNICIANS For devolobmont and tost of pneumatic and hydraulic valvas. DRAFTSMEN Exparlanctd an email mechanisms Sunnen Hone Operators GRINDERS INSPECTORS 118 Indlanwood 6 JERED INDUSTRIES 1399 Axtell Rd. Troy IS Mile Coolldge# Troy 674-1200. An equal opportunity employer UNION CARPENTERS For yoar around work. Both rough ond flnishori. Call 334-6744 or 353> 9191 from 5 p.m. till 10 p.m; WAREHOUSEMAN FOR FULL- WALLED LAKE THERMO PLAS-tlc Injection plant desires good man with oxpdrienct in molding YOUNG MEN Pleasant Outdoor Work PONTIAC AREA EVES. M0 P “ - $275-$350 GENERAL OFFICE a-i AaIV sittIr wantb6~Tn my homo, 1 child, own transportation, Clarkston area, ref. re* gulfed, 423-1243 after 5:38._ ACCOUNTING, PROMINENT COM-pony, axe. earning potential — hours and benefits, $450. Call Helen Adams, 334-2471, Snalllng l Snalllng. ______________ ALTERATIONS Pull lima. Experienced In man's and ladles' alterations. Gresham Cleaners, 405 Oakland. ALTERATIONS ill company 0 conditions. tSLi Full or pert t Assistant to Manager For Morvlew c “ ftABY PHOtOGRAPHER No previous experience necessary. Salary while scalnlfW. Minimum. ago 18. Exc. opportunity for advancement. for Pontiac area. Call Detroit, Collect 372-6363._ portatlonTcairaWgr 3:30. Ol i BABY SITTER NEEDED, 2 TO hcs., 4 eves. wk. 612-5487. VIClnL ty Alrport-Ellzabefh Lake Rd.___ BABY SITTER NEEORlTlMiiliVB. lately evenings. Raftrencee 671-1383. ^ IMY SITTER, OVfl C MUIT live In - 334-4355. •HWJiMlfcs -1 plRV • lo llva-ln, -care for 3 children. 330.3378.______________________ ham argg 434-«»d7Ex1. 7 mit^iwn. MI 47)14, ■ r u Mila, sir- R-RESTAURANT WAIT.R Part time. FE 58381. BEAUTY OPERATOR. PULL OR part time. Chez Coiffures. 424-1033. - BEAUTY OPERATOR Excellent wages, good hours. — Steady. ANDRE BEAUTY SALON 11 N. Saginaw FE S-W57___________ BEELINE FASHIONS—NEEDS YOU FOR HOSTESS OR 3TYLIST-334-4128 or 335-1081 CAREER GAL FOR A GOLDEN opportunity. The usual secretarial skills fills mis *450. Cpll Batty Slack, 334-2471, Snalllng S. Snalllng. CHRISTIAN LADY WANTED FOR baby sitting and light housgkaap-Ing, 5 days a week, give ref.. insure a Marry Christmas tor your family. Call Avon, FE 44438 or write P.O. Box 81, Drayton Plains. CITIZEN'S RIGHTS7~COUNf"“AND CLARKSTON AREA — LIVE IN OR out. Woman to baby sit. 1 4-yoar-old, 3 In school. S days. Own traqsportatlon. AAA 54321 after 4 p.m. _____________________________ CLEANING WOMAN-KITCHEN help, nursing home, must have own transportation. Union .Lake, EM 3- CURB GIRLS WAITRESSES TELE-TRAY OPERATORS BIG bSWe^TAJJRANT 20 S. Telegraph Tol-Huron Shopping Confer ...... .......... $347. Cali Sue Knox, 334-2471. Snalllng A Snalllng. DREAMY SPOT IF YOU HAVE the inferior decorating and aales DRUG AND COSMETIC CLERK, full or part time, Russ'* Country Drug. M00 Elizabeth Lk. Rd._ EXPERIENCED OFFICE CLEANER, must hove own Irons. 5W day EXPERIENCED MAID FOR Women's Sociality Shop. Good handwriting asoontlol. ‘ — 22-40. 40 hr - ‘1- other b< Apply A lloL Ago Iborol dls- Mlchlgan Security Em-Commission. Experienced Waitresses Over 21. Good pay. Apply lit person only. Steak & Eggs. 5395 Dixit Hwy.# Watarford. Between f hours of 9-5 p.m. EXPERIENCED WAITRESS# NIGHT shift# no Sundays or holidays. FE >5760. FOR _ C»17 Pontiac# Mich.___ FULL-TIME DISHWASHER^ days off. Apply In per‘— Town ond Country# 177 graph._______________________ GENERAL K ltd H E N HELP 1727 S. Tala- e. sJToTxl#* HOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE ON TO do light housekeeping for single working man. Apply between 4-0 Evte. pt 2432 Wllfiama Dr. Pontiac HOUSEWIVES Earn $2 to S3 par hour. In your spore time. Pick up and deliver Fuller Brush orders. For Interview phono 334-4401, HIRING: FULL, OR PART TIME 10 Ladles over II to (how and waar lovely Sarah Coventry Jewelry. NO INVESTMENT, no collections, or delivery. Goad pay. For appointment coll Georgia, 335 4*81. HOUSEKEEPER FOR 4 BOVS IN wages. FE 54441, bet, H p.m. HOUSEWIVES We ore occeptlng applications for port tima positions In soiling either days or evenings. Enloy such Dane-flts as paid training, purchase discounts and many othars. Apply In '"'“EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Basement HUDSON HYGIENIST# FEE PAID# IMM^DI-ate opening flexible hours# modern office# nice location# 8650. Coll Helen Adorns# 3344471# Snelllng A Snell Ing. INSTRUCTRESS! 18 TO 25 WANTED for full time work at the newly built Holiday Health Spa, must haya attractive figure. Contact 334-1591.________ , ____________ KELLY'SERVICES 12S N. Saginaw 442-8650 3350334. An Equol Opportunity Employer LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES, LPN $50010 START Manv other fringe benefits s shift. Union Lake Arte Call EM 84121 ransportatl ________L# 8S6T62A MATURE GAL. PROFESSIONAL phone service. High school grid.# spell well# $245. Call Ruth Gibbs# 334-2471# Snalllng A Snalllng. MATURE WOMAN WITH REFS FOR babysitting S days weak 3 to 9 p.m. Apply In person 73 Charles Call 335-5979 after MEDICAL OFFICE# MATURE. GAL who likes people. Exc. hours# location. S325. Call Helen Adams# 334-2471# Snalllng A Snalllng.__ MEDICAL ASSISTANT To assist doctor In Rochester area. - - . Intalllgant girl. Call 1-5 p.m. Mon-Frl. OL iG841. NURSES Al5i£ EXPERIENCED or will train. Must have own car. Unlow Laka araa. EM >4131. PEX LIKE TALKING ON THE phono? Than phono ma. axe. bona-fits, $325. Call sua Knox, 334-3471, Snelllng A Snalllng. PIANO PLAYER OF OLD-TIME SONGS RECEPTIONIST,"" SHARP' GAL, A cheerful hollo la the key to this door, *310. Call Kathy King, 334-Un, IneHInq i R.N. Supervisors and LPN HEAD NURSES NEEDED At 231-bad nun Ing home on a shifts end at SALARIES HIGHEI THAN AVEMGlk DIAL 338-7151 Ext. 85 nil a.m. IB 4 p.m. He» WtHrtBd FbwIb r RETAILING ASSIST. OEfT. MEAD, nim | - --- RELIABLE ^ianing rKJmaN. Good Rot., own transportation. 514 plus. 444-0501.______ ' RELIABLE LADY TO LIVE IN and do housekeeping. 335-7504, RNS FOR EMERGENCY ROOM. 12 noon to I p.m. and 11 p,m.-7 a.m. shift. Exc. pay. Mrs. -lndlsh. Avon Center Hospital. 651-838). ALES EMPLOYME---------- lor, do you like i -win train It you RPPNEPqpPW gob and like working with people, exceptionally high earnings In this spaclallMd field, Call Angla Rook, 334-2471, Snalllng A Snelllng. SALESLADY WANTED, WlLLING-ness to loam more Important than axparlanca, axe. opportunity for right person. Own transportation. SECRETARY, TAKE CHARGE — work independently# choice location# $375. Call Ruth Gibbs# 334-2471# Snelllng 8$ Snelllng.___* ; SECRETARY# SHARP GAL, LOOK-Ing for a future. Good office sl ,a‘ SHIRT PRESS OPERATORS AND general laundry help# many benefits — Apply Pontiac Laundry — 540 S. Ttlegrr^ SHORT ORDER COOK FOtt AFTER-noon shift# no suns or holidays# vacation pay and other benefits. 852-3418.__________________ ■^“STENOS-SECRETARIES $425-5500 BIRMINGHAM AREA 22 up# typing 50# shorthand 80# fee paid. Mrs. Nichols. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1880 S. Woodward B'hom. 642-8268 TRAINED MEDICAL OFFICE AS- TYPIST, SHARP GAL JUST OUT of school? Here Is your career *>t, $300. Call Batty Slack# 334- 2471, Snalllng 6. Snelllng. WAITRESS. FULL TIME. EVE-ning work. Rocco's 5171 Dixit Hwy. Drayton Pins.___________ WAITRESSES No experience • necessary. Paid vocation, Blue Cross Benefits, Apply in person. 300 Bowl, 100 South Call 333-1254, tor WAITRESS WANTED FOR FULL tima employment. Apply In person only, Franks Restaurant, K.ego U»kt, . WAITRESS AND GRILL COOK -In parson, Gaves Grill, 075 Bald- WANTED DOCTOR'S RECEPTION-Ist. Port time. References required. Reply Pontloc Press Box C-3. WANTED: WOMAN PART TIME, over 31 years ot sge to moke sary. Some evening work, full ■ training program. Phone: 3350447, Mr. Ozburn lor appointment, I to 4:30 p.m. WANTED WOMAN FOR SNACK bar, good wages, day shift, paid holidays, gold vocation j FE 2-2634, WOMAN TO LIVE IN, CARE OF 3 children while mother works. Week-ly wage. 3353388. WOMAN FOR INSPECfiNG AND shipping. Must bo ovar 21, full time. Apply Fox Dry Cleaners. 718 West Huron.______________________ Help WawtiJ WL or Eg 8 BOOKKEEPER FOR tOCAL Government to be in charge of accounting and assist treasurer — Must hove experience In payroll# payroll taxos# general ledger through trial balance and Bur-- -----------—*lc bookkeeping m~ n. Ki—r*'J— ___________Itectior required. Salary H.... with experience. Good _ conditions, benefits, etc. complete resume of educatio and salary require----- • and Moran CPA, 33211 _____ (Ivor - Michigan 48024. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED All RH Positive , 87.50 All RH Neg. with positive facte $7 50 B-nag., AB-nei """'MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER n Pontiac FE 4-9947 1342 Wide Track,Dr., W. ' Man. thru Frl., 9 a.m.-4 a.m. 6.1 p.m.-7 p. BROILER EXPERIENCED, STEAKS saa foods—4 to 11 p.m. 6 days# no Sundays. Apply Club Rochester# 306 Main# Rochester. COOK, NIGHTS. SOME EXPERI-ence — apply In person —Ricky's 118 Woodward. Pontiac, COUPt-E TO MANAGE HOTEL-Apts. operation to overt., cleanup and maintenance details! Living quarters provided. Contact Mr. Dlnsmors, Waldron Hotel, 36 E. Pike St., Pontloc. EXPERIENCED SHORT ORDER cook. Apply Harvey's Colonial House, IBM Dixie Hwy. _ KITCHEN HELP Day or night shift. Will train. Ages 25 to 45. Good wages,plus benefits. Apply Big Boy Restaurant, Telegraph r “------- “ — “ 0 iortunlties. 'Farm I MAN OR WOMAN MUST HAVE desire to help and work with old-tood cor necessary. Wo ........HB good future to right person. Call &-3355 or write qualifications to Bqltono Hearing Aid ' ‘ 450 W. Huron# Pontiac. ■■■ --- — - •* ortwrite qual- C enter__ MEDICAL TECHNOLOGIST Immediate openings for ASCP registered medical technologist# salary range $600.50 • $800.12 a month. fringe benefits, apply Dept. Pontiac General fclYERS WAN.._ _________jr ovr. FI »9146* PIZZA C06K WANTED, FULL OR time, experienced only. 642- ?iZZA MAKER, MUST BE 11 OR mgr, will train. Apply In, person, 6WP N, Rochooter Rd. boLlU's. RETAIL ,SE(iURITY ivoiloblo. Many e Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL IWp1l»w^|l|.wrf. RESTAURANT DRIVE-IN SUPERVISOR ♦unity tor advancement. Would con-.bte. a parson available on Frl. Saturday and Sunday night ar appointment Ml TED'S If BLOOMFIELD HILLS nfiy SALES TRAINEES AGE 18-25 graduate. Neat op- ’ fho ---Id 'Itegl---- P .......iaml cal business, i 6*DAY WEEK SALARY $125 Coll Mr. Paffont 8 a.m..3 p.m. ____________Ft 50358 “■ SHOULD YOU Make an employment change? NOW IS THE TIMEI Michigan Bell 1345 Cass Ave., Detroit “ s: 383-3115 TELEPHONE SaCES FROM OUR UNUSUAL SALES OPPORTUNITY FOR THE GO-GETTER: Salary, draw or commission. Previous experience Is not a requirement — however sales ability, drive and genuine desire to help others art all MUSTS. Loads furnished bv nation's largest advertiser In Its field — Many of our distributors kind of ad and ore now Independent business min who en|oy a very abundant Incorho and tha prestige ot being with ono of the finest companiM of ltssiklnd. Must day Oct, 10i fr a of the „. ... ...id. Must II John Slvek, Tues-Torn 8 to 5 -- *— — 444-1480. Salas Help Male-Female B-A CAN YOU SELL? If so. wo hove on opening tor 3 people interested In making money. Real Estoto experience Helpful > but not necessary. Wo have a good building program and an atfrac- schedule. For imgjj _______; call 4-0306. Eves. EM 3-7546. . Taylor, OR EXPERIENCED REAL ESTATE salesman needed for Immediate opening. Inquire Warren Stout, Realtor, 1450 N. Opdyko Rd., Pon. tloc, FE 5-0165 tor Interview, Guaranteed Annual Wage AGGRESSIVE NEW SALES OF- FICE OPENING WATER- OR FEMALE. NEEDED IMMEDIATELY. RE“ -------- PERIENCE t 'WILL TRAIN. BRIAN 623-0702 Msary. College preferred. Reply Pontiac Press, Box 22._ Instructions-Schools 10 Tncometax COURSE BOTH FEDERAL AND STATE JOB OFFER FOR BEST STUDENTS Earn good money during t a x season, full or port tl— “ i paoplo ___________srn lax prepar. . I and R Block will train .. Tuition courses start Oct. 23 id 24. Register now. Phons “ * “ ■ 3358323 tor details. switch* Ln't . ow. AIR MAIL, for complato drills. Absolutely no obligation. A vision ot U.T.S., Miami, Florida, itabllshad 1845. UNIVERSAL MOTEL SCHOOLS Dapt. 1145 1873 N.W. 7th Street, Miami, Florida 33125 PRIVATE PILOT OROUND SCHOOL some ol tha finest aviation Instruction In this area. Elghl-waek course starts Oct, 10. Enroll now. Call OR 4-0441 or WO 3-1844. AERODYNAMICS INC. ______PONTIAC AIRPORT_____ TRUCK DRIVERS Ing. For Interview and application write All-States Sami Dlv., USS Corwin Ave., Hamilton. Ohio. 45015. Work Wantad Mala A-l CARPENTER. LARGi OR snwll lobs. Calling Ilia, pansling mxMiocraatlon rooms — specialty. BXS~i M i N T CLEANlD, lioht hauling, any add lobe. Call Carl 3334144. EXPERIENCED IN S A L E S, FAC-tory management, ottlce. Ago 50. Neat appeorsnee. Located In Pontiac Area. Sand replies to Pentlae Prase Box C-ll, Pontiac._ PATCH PLASTERING Howard Mayers,_______OR 5)345 Work Wanted Female 12 GENERAL H O U S E CLEANING, flys^woodwork, windows. Exp. IRONINGS WANTED. WEBSTER- Credit Advisors GET OUT OF DEBT AVOID GARNISHMENTS, REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CREDIT, H4. RASSMENT, BANKRUPTCY AND LOU OP JOE. wo have helped ■MHlMfeMMr enwBgr managed, organized program. LET US CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBTS - WITH ONE LOW PAYMENT YOU ;■ CAN APPORD. NO limit at to CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OUT OF DEBT..." LICENSED AND BONDED Qomg Appointment Dtediy Arranged No Cost qf -OWlgetlpn it.. HOURS 8-7 |TmU4aT.>S p.m. ; - DEBT AID 714 Hiker EMt. ' Ft, Mill WiB t TfBiiff 17' ALTERATIONS^— 240 NELSON I THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 D—3 Moving and Tracking . 22 TRUCKIN® OP ALL KINDS Pontiac area. FE Hm Short Living Qoortofs Pointing nnd pocoroting 23 A_LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR, PAINTING & DECORATING RATES reasonable. FE 2-4004. Fainting and paper. .. _ You're naxt. Orval Gldcumb, 473-0476. RATES REASONABLE Wonted Real Estate1_ ■ TO 50 NOTICE] CLARKSTON AREA HOMO, LOT AND ACREAGE OWNERS. Being your local Real Estata Co. ---nova many calls In this area properties In this area. Please tacTys before you Wsl Clorkston Real Estate 156 s. Main ___________MA 5-5171 S CLEAN, WARM ROOMS, PVT. hath, utilities. Newly deedrated, quiet, neat, adult. PE 2-3990. I ROOMS AND BATH UPPER, 67 Mechanic St. Sea between 4 and 6. 3 ROOMS, QUIET ADULTS, UTILI-garage. 743 Chamberlain, - NEWLY DECORATED I ROOMS It U U M S AN a BATH, NEAR downtown. Inquire 2335 Dixie Hwy. Upholstering * ' SMALL FARM OR WOODS WITH I Pond, or small lake tor hu ' Write BILE JENNINGS, ----1 River, Farmington, welcome. FE 2-S333. SPACIOUS 2-BEDROOM GARDEN-type apt. with balcony, frost-tree .refrigerator, deluxe stove, disposal, central air conditioning — pie storage. No children, no >175 per mo. FE 4-5472, 3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Lake Rd. behind | Cental FE 5-7477" Solo Huraga _ _ 491 Sole Houses BRICK 3 BEDROOM RANCH, IN ■ Clarkston. Paneled Tandh^MiM ■ with fireplace, IVi baths,__|_____| screened patio, 2 car attached garage, large fenced tot. D” 625-5641.________■ DAN MATTINGLY 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE ENTRANCE, AGED FURNITURE Reupholstered, better than new halt the price. Big savings a on carpet and..draperies.,,Call : 1700 for FREE estimate In y Wonted Children to Beard 28 BABY SITTER, DAYS, LICENSED. Wanted Household Goods 29 CASH FOR FURNITURE AND Appliances, 1 piece or houseful. “ear- son's. FE 4-7MI,___________ CASH FOR GOOD USED HOUSE- Urgently ndbd for immediate Salel Pontiac Dally Til I MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE WANTED: MEMBERSHIP LOT I Canada Creek Ranch. 336-0100. ALL CASH or homes any place In Oaklar Coqnty, money In 24 hours.' YORK Apartments, Furnished 37 n If behind In payments or un- ! dren FE 5-1705. 2 ROOM BASEMENT APARTMENT ....S Incl. $70 mo. Bui. in non-smoker. PE 5-5744. AND 3-ROOM APARTMENTS id houses for rent. FE 4-2156. 2-ROOM. PRIVATE ENTRANCE, 118 University. PE 5-S466. IF IT'S FOR THE HOME- -will buy It. 627-3344, or UL 1 * ■„ Trading Post. WimtadChildren to Board 28 1 CALL, THAt'S ALLI CASH FOR 48 -HOURS LAND CONTRACTS — HOMES WRIGHT 382 Oakland Ave. ' FE 2-7141 CASH FOR YOUR EQUITY NOW. WATERFORD REALTY 4540 Dixie Hwy. 673-1273 Multiple Listing Service 1- generators, C. Dlx- WuntedMoney ____________31 WANTED TO BORROW <12,000 ON a 6 per cent land >, contract. 391- ____JtoRent m 3 BEDROOM HOME. JOHN PUR* CASH _'2 ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH AND entrance. Quet couote, <12 v—z- 19 Cross, Pontiac._________________ 2 ROOMS AND BATH, PRIVATE entrance, N. end, women only, $20 per week for one. FE 8-6642.________ 2 RbOMS PRIVATE BATH AND entrance. Couple or man. 620 West- HAVE PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGENT YORK AT 674-1690 LAWYERS REAL ESTATE Wa era In dire need ’of for development purposes in need of commercial an. ----- trial property. If you would be „ J999P99 ... Interested in a short term listing! $50. Small 05 week. <130 month. Parkway Motel. Pixie Hwy. ME 6*9107. DARLING COURT p APARTMENTS, in Waterford/ Comple- ontlac. Call 338-4054. 2 ROOMS, BATH—ADULTS, UTIL-Itlas, clean, decorated, FE 2-4991. 2 ROOMS AND BATH, NO CHIL- r. Utilities furnished. 673- — .... Oct. 31. For the busy professional man or woman fast needs al the conveniences, D, Court Apartments have furr each apartment with the folio Individual room control elec. Central unit air-conditioning GE Combination washer-dryer 2-ROOM, CLEAN, UTILITIES — Adults. 285 Whlttemore. 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE ENTRANCE, utilities, adults. FE 2-7562. 3 ROOMS LOWER, PRIVATE BATH 3 ROOM, $25, 2 ROOM, $20 DEP. o obligation, please give u 689-0610 e 530 weekly. 673-6M3. " REALTY,”424-9575 ' ' I Inquire 115 Stout St. IUR HOME. 3 ROOMS AND B/ t. Call Clark garage, child ^ SUmiBS - IQUIPMBNT Drivers Training ALUMINUM—VINYL SIDING A P P R O V E D AUTO DRIVING1' PIANO TUNING • REPAIRING PHA — Joe Vallety - MY 3-S279 pickup. o me OSCAR SCHMIDT Eavestroughing Asphalt Paving ASPHALT PARKING LOTS AND roadways. Same location since 1920. Also selling asphalt and sealer. Ann Arbor -Construction Co MApjt 3-5891. Asphalt and seal-coating, Into eatlmatea. 674-3755._ Driveway specialists, free Estimates. FE 5-47S0. PONTIAC ASPHALT PAVING Seal Coating MBS GUTTER CO. COMPLETE eavestroughing service free est. 673-6866. Licensed — bonded Elect ricol. Contracting WIRING OF HOMES, GARAGES, Plastering Service Plumbing & Heating CONDRA PLUMBING 8. HEATING i. OR 3-9529 o Excavating OR IIG BOY DRIVE-IN, DIXIE AT ROOMS AND BATH. 1 CHILD welcomed. FE 4-6606, OR 2 LARGfe CLEAN ROOMS. WEST SIDE, 2-BEDROOM. FULL dining room, $125 month. Refs. Adults only. TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE from $152 682-4480. ~BEI> . 3EDROOM, NICE private. Ideal for work- R^O^^AjND BATIJ' SMALL dep. In 338-4054. Rent Houses, Furnished^ 39 1-BEDROOM COTTAGE, $75 PER month plus utilities. Prefer elderly couple, occasional baby-sittfhg 3 Bedrooms LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS MODEL OPEN 579 COLORADO 1:30 toa5 p.m. — 6-day week BEDROOMS, RANCH. RECREA- _____________ _______ Golf Course Area. Must sail. $17,500. Call 673- Manager, Michael's Realty, 627- 3-BEDROOM BRICK RANCH, WOL-verine Lake, heated Gunlte swimming pool, completely carpeted, 2-way fireplace, bullt-lns, vh baths, agy attached garage, 20* screened gas heat, 16-acre wooded ’,900. 624-4280. Eft idatti ah ™ 3 -ff’sSSftn. 4 BEDROOM HOUSE, 3 LOTS, LAKE GE Elec, rangi 12 cu. refrig. COMPLETELY FURNISHES-bedroom home, full basemen car garage. Near GM True Coach, $125 mo. Security d< and references a must I Sislock & Kent, ’Inc 1309 Pontiac Stata Bank Bldg; HHH 338-9295 LARGE 4tBEDROOM HOUSE, ALL conveniences, central hear— shore of Big Lake, Spr nble now t0 j field Twp. .Aval 1968. $200 per nn After 5:30 p.m OR 3-0455 OR 4-2004 MEN ONLY, REFERENCES, DE- posit and lease. 623-0541._ MOBILE HOME. ADULTS * ONLY. FE 5-9902 before 9 P.M^_ ______ SMALL NEAT 2 BEDROOM AND bath. Garage. No children. No' ____ne 1. <120 mo. dep. FE 4-3154. UNION LAKE AREA — 2-BED-n, couple, only, no pets coupU. ________ ____|___■ ________ entrance, good parking. FE 8-8926. URNISHED 3 ROOMS AND BATH. Rent Houses. Unfurnished 40 •BEDROOM TERRACE, NEWLY MUMPS a month, Mi pets. FE 2-5485. LARGE LOVELY 4-AND-BATH — glassed-in porch, fireplace near Airpor^^H^^^^p gd 3-1943. i and wife only. OR UTILITIES MODERN BEDROOM, ■ paid. Adults. 10003 Dixie. 625-2546. NICE CLEAN APARTMENT^ NO drinkers. FE 4-3292.________ NICE, CLEAN, BRKgnr“| room en equipment. St. corner of Hi AUBURN AND ADAMS, 2 children. Apply r Johnson. SMALL APARTMENT FOR A NEAT quiet man, no drinking 590 East Walton BP"-* SAAALL, 1 BEDROOM WAITING FOR THAT NEW H kitchenette cottages, Pontiac North Side, $30 w... pets, 1 child welcoi chad's Realty, 627-2825, c ____plus deposit. UL 2-2469. FARM HOUSE ON PAVED ROAD. Garage, garden space ‘ for a horse. Small ft........... _ h plus deposit and r IMLAY CITY. 3 BEDROOM Duplex. $95 monthly!_724-8255.____ PARflALLY FURNISHED 2-BED-H lake privilege Lake, 3 bedr 682-2820. Rent Rooms temporary, large lot, mUir location, „...Watkins ______________ Price: $10,000. Approx. $500 cost — $77 mo. full payment. NORTH SIDE SUBURBAN— 3 - bedroom bungalow basement, lovbly hood, cornr- JaL “ 500—GI — r lot. Price $ r. 2461 Emmons, Roch. :e Road, Pontiac. 9 Acres-White Lake Twp. 4-bedroom^ ranch ^ home, 4 year 10% DOWN NEW HOMES 3-BEDROOM' TRILEVEL, flnlshM " ' n, lto-car garage. .13, RANCH with full base — garage, aluminum sld Ing, .15,700 plu> lot. 3-BEDROOM BRICK TRILEVEL IWi baths, 3-car garage, largi kitchen, dining area. <10,500, plus 6-BEDROOM COLONIAL, 21/, baths AlumdWew windows, 2-car brief ^ageJBeneled family room, $27, J.X. $135 LEASE 40'20 ACRES __ wnnHari_ UNFURNISHED ROOMS, USE OF HAYDEN, Realtor '6 mile west of Oxbow Lake 363-6604 10735 Highland Rd. (MS9)! hwasher, carpeted, bal- Brown Professionally decorated, 1__I ed and also includes . kltcnei bullt-lns. Three bedrooms, sun room, 2 baths and family roorr with fireplace. Brick externa: ranch with attached garage anC paved drive. Extensively landscaped with flower gardens anc even a pool for your tropica fish. This home must be seen to be fully appreciated. Offer $37,500. Call our office fc appointment. Les Brown, Realtor 507 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. (Across from the Mall) 5 2-4S10 or FE 4-3564 built-in! cony, 6 el, . ect. yard, 2-ear per cent down. "RUSTIC SPANISH I CONTEMPORARY" 1900 sq. ft. split-level, 5 bedrooms,' open beam ceilings. $28,950. 5242 White Lake Road - Clarkston V6 mile south of Dixie Highway OPEN Sat. Sun. 1 to 8 p.m. "TIMBERLINE HOMES" | "Will Duplicate" S61-7457 BY OWNER. 3 BEDROOM, WEST Carpeting, drapes, paneled ' room, IMr baths, screened -srport-patlo. Chippewa Rd. :E 2-1062. lor mort details. YORK WE TRADE _ _ vood fenced backyard, 625-2589! COMMERCE LAKE FRONT 3 BED-ififfn home, 821,000. 363-7506 after Crestbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 12-8 i. ,8mi v on^j^Joo 3-bed rot garage, priced lot. Located in city water. Drive oi cent Lake Road, Crestbrook Street ar DON GIROUX REAL ESTATE 4511 Highland Road (MS9) 673-7837 852-4959. iping room, Pontia BUSINESSMAN, SHOWER, WESt CLEAN SLEEPING ROOMS - pegged0 oak beam vel snotty cedar iravel pit — I $50,000. — BIRMINGHAM BOAT clNTCR Your family boating headquarters Starcraft aluminum and fibergla Shell Lake and I.M.P. fibergla! 1265 S. Woodward at Adams Road ___Condri LB’aC-K HOE, LARGE FRONT END loader on rubber, septic tank | basements, etc. 334-2879. BACKHOE, LOADER WORK, DRY JACKS DRIVE INN Cor. Baldwin & Montcalm FE 4-7882 "rank and Jeanette Slaybaugh ____________Props.___ Rental Equipment "Dick" Royer SAYS Let's look Let's talk Let's trade Let's build HOME SWEET HOME . nice qulel comfortable home ... the fringes of Ortonvllle. This home ie complete with family room end fireplace, basement and large garage. $14,700. Terms. C. PANGUS INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 30 M-15 Ortonvllle CALL COLLECT NA 7-2015 ■TIT'S the RIGHT TIME To get settled in this comfy newly decorated ranch before the snow files. Basement easy to convert Into Ideal teenage rum- Can be purchased on Ian tract with lust $2,500 down. ROOM ROOM ROOM 5-badroom frama older City North. Nawly decorat ragel"»10',70?*— STO0 plui OPEN DAILY Model Home Opon Mon.-Thurs. 4:30 p.m. to 7 p.m. Sun. 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. Located North of Elizabeth Lli! Rd. 4 miles W. of Williams Lk. Rd. LOOK FOR J. L. DAILY SIGNS - FOR RANCHES. TRl-LEVELS, COLONIALS AND 2 LEVELS - SEE USHI Union Lake Privileges New Alum., sided 3-bedroom, full basement. 516.500 - to per cent down- (S. ol M-571 .15,750 buys J. L, DAILY CO. 1640, UNION LAKE RD. EM 3-7114 ORCHARD LAKE AREA HAGSTR0M REALTOR .... W. HURON MLS OR 4-0358_____ FE 8-3068 LAKE PRIVILEGES, 2-BEDROOM. “ ‘ ‘ .......h $500 down. MY rTBED- RHODES 10 ACRES with beautiful 3-badi mercial, $8,500. CLARKSTON RD. - Farm hon on 3 acres 5-bedroom, baseme and garage, ideal commercial I cation, offered at $23,500. GREEN ACRES 1469 S. Lapeer Rd., Lake Orion MY 3-6262 I After $ p.m., call MY 3-1544_ LAKEFRONT HOME Within 6 minutes of 1-75. Faml togetherness Is important. You ai a little boating fishing. »---- carpeted CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815 Lauinger 'MUST BE SEEN - Round 5 room home, breezeway, attached garage, corner lot, zoned commercial. Ordy $16,500. 5-ROOM BRICK HOME. W. Walton. I......... ........5 NO. 3. An Ideal I----- home, selei stie today. A. J. RHODES, REALTOR FE 8-2305 758 W. Walton FE 5-6712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ROCHESTER — 4 BEDROOM BUN-galow. Basement. Garage. Shaded lot yard. $17,500. Nix, Realtor. 651-0221, 852-5375. Brick & Block Sorvico BRICK, BLOCK, STONE, CEMENT, work, flraplacae specialty. 335-4470. SEPTIC FIELDS, DRY WELL. Building Modernization A ADDITIONS AND GARAGES. . Springfield Bui FLOOR SANDERS—POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER—POWER SAWS 952 Joslyn___________FE 4-6105 RENT ' ROTOTILLERS, ROTOR A-1 NEW, REROOF — REPAIRS - Fencing FENCES—FENCES—FENCES Immediate Installation __Spitzer Fence Co., FE 8-4564 ■■■■■ PONTIAC FENCE C0~ ~ 0. 625-2128._S ’______ ".5932 Dixie Hwy. 623-1 f-CAR GARAGES, 20'X20', $875. WE' ‘ Call Jack. Save the i Mptel, 8230 Highland Rd. (MS9). Aportmenn.Unfufnish.d 38j-guw yoV^-mmT fe'm BEDROOM. STOVE, REFRIGER.|L^Hur<!^ S I turn 'nr^a'S1'tnia9!lN,CE ROOM FOR GENTLEMAN, rage. FuH° price $14,900 —' EM _month^75 Uc' dep. FE 4 3844 | ^n,own' 41 P1™ S,rM' PE * ‘drEenRor0pet,?N*13^^ Eolith. ^in.QuTETTTEAN SLEEPING^ ROOM. Wj'M' LAKE FRONT _ ranch 3 Yile Bea Apts. 674-2887 or 673-8997.1 M*n_cmly- FE 8-1315. _ Sdy°$16,000 —"fE ^3488 m0dern‘ -BEDROOM, LIVING ROOMr DIN- R^r,F0«^NT' NEW. HOME. °n'V Ing room, kitchen, N. Saginaw, —A,ter 3' "S*509- _ _ 60x150' LAKE FRONT — 2 bedroom .. —quired. O^GAMORE MOTEL, SINGLE OC-! possible 3 - attached garage — i cupancy, $30 per week. Maid serv-l carpet — closed front porch — 1,500 — 363- - Carpeted. Appliances! Air indl | room ACdults,,°nodMts’eF,fom $135' ^00mS WHH Board 43 0 DOWN TO VETERAN •— Only FE 5^8585. • - nn ^ BEDROOMS WITH BALCONY,1 °R ?. living room with fireplace, 1»/a meals, lunches packed. FE 8-3255 baths, completely carpeted, a I r- HOME COOKED MEALS, PRIVATE conditioned, all kitchen appliances! room, close to plant. 335-1679._ with garbaga disposal. Own utility I ROOM WITH BOARD, LAUNDRY, ----- — ---- *185.1 lunches packed. FE 2-7430.__ b—n: Rent Office Space 47 local buitdars < Floor Sonding size. Cei...... IP| . ... BMBB Pedy-Bullf Garage Co. OR 3-5619. CARL^ L. BILLS SR. COMPLETE REMODELING ___ 391-3144 or 391-0947 _ WOMACK ROOFING, REROOF. I Complete Ins. coverage. Free esti-I m«tes. 338-4545._________ kandrng^F e '2-57wW AND! Sand—Gravel—Dirt «i G.“ SNYDE R, FLOOR- LAY ING! sanding and finishing. FE 5-0592_ ^ BULLDOZING, ve to know the exact c at you are buying. We wi i a firm price, not |u •mate. We have houses at $12,9d0 on your TRADE Heated pool j 10 per cent di iUPPER STRAITS LAKE — 3 be | room, possible 4. Beautiful brlcl Ranch. Full basement. 2V> car g rage. On large corner lot. Grw Lake Rd. Only $26,500 with terms. OFFICE OPEN 9-9, SUN. 1-5 t-1674-0319 LAZENBY $400 DOWN s lovely 2-sti ', 3-bedr« > s. Cyclone fer irate dining roi d shopping. Or condition. | :e^’ yard, I" *sl5x 21 ■ m - 2 forma' and 12 x 24 pat mM "‘ ie situated o active home si itio. — 363-7700. NOTHING DOWN TO VETERANS — | heaTed- — priced for quick sale. j Richard S. Royer, Realtor 823 S. cal building ..... _____ , Hospital. Large or small suite available. Call Ray O'Neil for ___>»ete details. OR 4-2222._ ■ W. no children or pats.'^52751 NEW COMMERCIAL OFFICE~CEN- I after 5:00. _________ I ter. Spaces from 400' to 8,000 sq.j E D 6 ROOMS, SECOND FLOOR."CLOSE Ba[ber;, Beaut^ Add-ons-Recreation windows — Siding and > G & M FE 2-1211 r- ree esnrna.es________Terms For garages, home improve- ^MENTS, ADDITIONS, ReMDEN-*TIAL BUILDING. \ DRUMMOND CONSTRUCTION >33-3302 _______Eves. 693-6909 Floor Tiling 682-6145. SAND, GRAVEL ALL £lNbs7TQP '■ reasonable pr‘- prices. Fast delivery. 67341049. 74rN. Perry, fe ’ I froo Trimming Service Heating hntuliution-Service A l tree service by bs.l t. 673-7160 or FE . servlet. Call Mrs. : (ltrh«n«C y»hVoom»r*StiSI A*1 COMPLETE LANDSCAPING — STUMP, TREE, REMOVAL Reas Call afNtr 5 pm *P«cia,lzlnO «n broken concrete,|FE 5-3005 Fireplace Wood FE 5-3025 fftelnlrw walls. Free estimates. J-Itree TRIMMING AND ftEMOV- ALTE RAT IONS, NEW AND REPAIR Free Estimates. 673-2114. CARPENTER AND CEMENT work. Free estimates. UL 2-5252. CARPENTER, REPAIR; ALSO painting. Free est. 674-0616.__ CARPENTRY AND PAINTING ____New and repair., FE 5-1331 CARPENTRY, NEW AND REPAIR Fret estimates. 335-9981. INT^RflOR FIN I S H, KITCHENS years experience — FE 2-1235. Licensed builder, recrea- tion rooms, attics, additions. 673-0716. _______I Cement Work A PAIL OF CEMENT NEEDED?! Call Chuck for minor repairs. FE1 _ 4*43 Sherwood, 628-2000. A-1 LIGHT MOVING, TRASH MERIOM BLUE SOD, PEAT,~COM-plete landscaping. * |gg ----- 760 Lpchavt NEW RAILROAD TIES. ROUGH r tn hardwood. Boa grading, OR 3-1589._ SIMHIBR j rels for sale. FE 2-8863._ LIGHT-HAULING, f RUCK ING AND moving. Limited. FE 5-8329. LIGHT- HAULING, BASEMENTS, i service, wood or aluminum. 1 garages cleaned. 674-1242. Rdlna and Hardware supplies. LIGHT HAULING, BASlMENTS, Oakland ._______FE 4-4596 garages clean. OR 3-6417. 6234)847. Mnilhnv Pncfc LIGHT AND HEAVY fRUCKING, maiiDox rosrs rubt?lth# tlll dlrt# gradlng antf grav. el and front-end loading. FE 2-0603. -------*3«a. INSTALLED j------ TANDEM TRUCKsrliM _____473-1410 _ Truck Rental ANDY FOR PATIOS, DRIVES ' BLOCK AND CEMENT WORK. PON tlOC, 3*1-1173.____________________ Cement and Block Work Gulnn'j Construction Co. PE 4-7477 __________Evt. 391-3471 443 0354 Moving and Storage CAREFUL, ENCLOSED moving work. Appliance and furnl- ture, free estimates. 338-3570._. SMITH MOVING AND STORAGE. 10 8. Jessie. FE 4-4864. LIGHT, Pointing and Decorating __________________________ -1 PAINTING AND LT.*J?.9.*r.9.P^5?® THOMPSON PER HANG,NGFE 4-8344 orlSM, 482-/373.T d M E ' |A-1 PAjNTINO. WORk_ GUARAN- ilOTHINO TOO LARQi OR Commercial or residential. 29 yr>.l^_FAINTINQ AND DECORATING •xparlanca. 623-1372. 1 Fret estimates. UL 3-1298. dATi0i, DRIVES. OARAGES, iLABs CMjkRUES DECOPATmG'. ESTI- - 40 cents sq. It. FE 4-3874. days. I main. 3M-W77, 0-3 p.m._ ■------------------------- EXPERT PAINTINS; SPECIAL get acquainted prices. PE 3-7733. . Expert paintFng and paper hanging. Call Herbie. 47*4790. ALTERATIONSALLTyPt*, KNIT1 TAPIR iNPV ’ W A J. L drassas. laathar coots. OR 3-7193. cleaning, paper removal. B. T. San-BETTY JO'S DRESOMAKINO dinky. PE 4-8548. UL 3-3190. Woddlnct, aharatlons. 474-3704 I DUALITY wDRk ASSURED.' PAihT- Dressmaking, Tailoring Trucks to Rent V!i-Ton Pickups I’/^-Ton Stake TRUCKS — TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Semi-Trailers Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 835 S. WOODWARD FE 4-0441 FE 4-1442 Open Dally Including Sunday Water Softeners I SALES AND RENTALS n Water Cond 334-9944 673- 2" WELL DRILLING, WELL RE- ---- -----, Insurai... ______B Plenty of parking. Cell 651-4576 oi FHA Ca!/363-5477. ^ !„ NOTHING DOWN TO VETERANS— cVrfleattachedr0°ara e5”^'^ 5 2< 2 features — built-lns — only $700 down FHA — 332*3488. BEDROOM -n Unidn-Oxbow Lake area — basement — fenced yard — $2000 moves in or nothing down ... .. --------; i 731-0400. sc LOTS ■ROOM AND 2-ROOM APART- beMT~nPiPirPx_x,is ...n — 3 ii menls - 54 Gillespie - 332-1970. UP‘ 4540 3 U ALL UTILITIES AND CARPORT! FIRST IN VALUE . RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding taxes and Insurance ONLY ^ $10 Deposit | Bhd 2 bedr _________________-Jectrlc hea.. AMERICAN HERITAGE APTS. 3365 Watkins Lake Rd. lanager on premises. Ph. 673-5168 BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS APARTMENTS Ideally situated In Bloomfleld-Bli mingham area, luxury 1- and 1 bedroom apartments available to immediate possession from SIS j>er month Including^ carpetint pHances’ a|arge0ndfa,0n,na ®nd ” swimming pool and detail looked OFFICE SPACE FOR RENT | •prox. 800 sq. ft. office space, mil lease; or rent c- ------------ basis. Call Jack Ralph Realty Co, FE 8-7161. i REMODELED OFFICE SPACE AT reasonable rates. Connolly's Na-I tional Building. Huron and Sagin; tchens, i deck le Hwy. OR 3-1355. $13,900 — $3000 down li let — EM 3-7700. 2 ACRES - wide ranch *--- -tony — 2 possible - 30' living room ^VITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA - ACCEPT ALL APPL TIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, Office Suites 134 West Uni New Vote GAS HEAT !GE DINING ; . _ ACCEPT ALL APPLICA- NS FROM ANY WO---------- WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. , 3-5477* “ ,ak# P^vlleges — EM I PE0PLE W1TH CREDIT PROB-,\ • LEMS AND RETIREES ARE VACANT LOTS AND ACREAGE OKAY WITH US. tfdm $1100 to $12,000 ter story building with en uweu Hw»ch and knotty pine In terlor on paved road — lake prlvl $77500 — $2,000 down. UNDERWOOD REAL ESTATE 665 Dixit Hwy., Clarkstor YORK /E BUY WE TRADE R 4-0363 OR 4-0363 §§ Dixie Hwy._Drayton Plains MILFORD AREA ROSS BEDROOM HOMES RANCHES — COLONIALS SPLIT LEVELS FROM $20,700 Incl. base laka privilege lot Lake Lotslrom $7,000 OPEN daily, Sun. 1-8 P.M. LAKELAND ESTATES Off DlxkTHwy!4-ufmifpast Walton Blvd. Shoreline Drive 623-0670 ROSS HOMES MODEL 194L S. Telegraph Rd. FE 4-0591 TRADE 2836 Orchard Laka Ava. 't miss this opportunity of a ime modern 5-room bungalow iplete with basement, gas heat bonus of extra large 3 car in be used tor business antique shop. Doctor's ...99.U can ba purchased on land contract or will trade. WRIGHT REALTY 382 Oakland, FE 2-9141 Cash for_ail types ol property TRADE WILL BUILD 3-bedroom ranch with lull basement, alum, siding, oak ^tloors^ storms and screens. No money down on your lot! ILOOO down on ,our lot, or your equity C. SCHUETT FE 3-7088 MA 3-0288 TUCKER St. Joe Area 4 BEDROOMS—2 BATHS with this garage c heating, carpeting n, full partitioned HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. Highland Branch Office PHONE: 313-685-1585 $500 down on liberal FHA terms. 1-FAMILY RANCH HOME SPACIOUS s- EXTRA LOTS 3 bedroom^ with den end attached garage, loaded with fruit trees and Only *4c8adown8at *55$ Sutornig Si. — South sida. TUCKER REALTY CO. - 903 Pontiac State Bank » 334-154S UNION LAKE BRAND NEW 3 Bedroom ranch ' Eloo rnlleld* Orchard Apts, locateo on South Blvd. (20 Mile Rd.), between Opdyke and 1-75 expressway. Open daily, 9 to 8 p.m. Sunday, 12 to 8 p.m. For information: UN 4-0303. Mgr. 335-5670, FE 8-0770.____________________|| OMFORTABLE 3 ROOM AND1 bath upper apartment, I m busline. Mo. plus Court Apartments h ROCHESTER" wew protessionel and*general ot- ON YOUR LOT OR OURS - build! . tv I_________-----------------I-------_ ''Stt'ered For Immediate^ Action^ Call NEAR NORTH SIDE pElMn,3.4,7ion3*nc'nB y#ur n**d‘ ! FE 5-3676 626-9575 J ‘rKoo-mj $11i590 lent location!*close lo*new9Roches- LIST WITH HACKETT — and start A "\7"T /^DT^I cor gorage^ L^nnd 'contract1'ternisl BRAND, NEW. 3-bedrm. ranch, on m Crittenden Hospital, ^|ust^mln-| to pack If — Hackett Realty Of-( *-r Y I \ ) ii I il to qualified buyer. | L1?’ atmosphere.. Gen-___ iilabirNiv.^47.,OCa8|i0Ml-4?74 ‘TW0 ACRES 7 rMm Good 'value, $18,000, EM 3-6703. ’Roches-LIST WITH HACKETT ---- --------- ,JSt min-! to pack if — Hacket -75. Real "Honest to Good- . flee* BMSili ‘‘“ospher- in 8,000 Now. '67. Ci 731-8400.________________________ Renf Business Property 47-A 25'X45' ON ORCHARD LAKE, COR- ; SULATED, faml . I Air conditioned, heat t_P ___ihed. Parking. 682-3100.______ 5794 MAYBEE ROAD AT SASHA-baw. Commercial 2 story building. Garbage disposal GE Elec, range with timer 12 Cu. Refrig. Lazy Susan pantry All formica cabinets Carpeting throughout hese apartments rented furnished of unfurnished. Please contact Leon Blachura, General Contractor. 674-3136 8 a.m.-6 p.m. EMBASSY EAST APARTMENTS conditioning, $130 r— — —_________laker at Embassy West Apartments, 5367 Highland —. ^.partmari.., Rd., Waterford! Twp. LAKE VISTA APARTMENTS 3 rooms and bath, carpeted. Stove, refrigerator, utilities. Adults only. 5366 Cooley Lake Rd.___________~ rv**yr , ROOMS AND llATH. Is 150x80. This hor Selling price 1« 82 FHA mortgage (KENNETH G. HEMPSTEAD, Rei MY 2-2821, FE 8-9693. ir| FIVE ACRES - Beautlfi i, carpeting 25,200 SQ. FT. Two adjacent buildings ac from Qsteopatlc Hospital, remodel to suit tenant or provide new buildlno The Rolfe H. Smith Co. Sheldon B. Smith, Realtor I .. ... 244 S. TELEGRAPH bed- 333-7848 Office Open, 9-81 lionallv well-kept and[NEW 3-BEDROOM, IWi BATHS,!. ¥.uuhuo la.iuicaped. All for $22.-j Aluminum sidino with backer full * l22'* SVlJ*™*- Ca,r MY 2 2821' FE‘ basement, 22'x24' attached garage, Q'9493- ! Including largo lot on nlca road C11 . C*riORD INC. School*bui^omas"*©*dS)r°n$l8,95o: MY 3 3.71 Lpe im 0B 3 ,1,1 Building Co.__. j excellent-conoition. I beI! N^J 9^R0_044.H0ME W,TH 0R! I Y0UNG-BILT HOMES EALLY MEANS«ETTER-BUILT Rusiell Young, 334-3830 53W. Huron St. VACANT LAKE PRIVILEGE ’active 3-bedroom ranch with ner tot/paved street. *1481 family room, oa> heat, attached ga- _ I FE 4-8284. 185 ELIZABETH_ ", . AT ROCHESTER 4-BEDROOM BRICK ranch in ^-. EXCELL^ CONDITION. 3 BEO-; 'wiihiuT'taMTOntsVVrWe teart,|Almoal new S^edrpum trl-hvel o hhlswith h^e ttmhJ Jo^n fiVlS XnL recr**"on| low down payment. Clarkston area. Maceday Lake. Has garag *11 place, W^ bath*!^ kltchan ' bullh I ~ I 9*H M,‘M40 or maln ot-l .S".?!!. LAKEFRONT It 119,500 with tarnr Annett Inc. Realtors E. Huron St. 33MRI Ice Open Evening! & Sunday! 1-4 Hwy. pr old 5R t BLOOMFIELD PONTIAC Telegraph Rd. 9000 iq. ft. modern building for lease or eale. 2 floors, 45'xl10% plate glass, air conditlon- ___________ SQUARE FEET 2943 Orchard Laka Rd. An. parking. Low rant. Owner, 343- MODERN 2,1 ■ 2943 park! 3140. Rent Miscellaneous rammiL pontu only ( EM >4)616._ LUXURIOUS 2-BEDROOM, CAR-!-' NORTH SIDE OF PONTIAC. 2 SIN- ■ ’f^-sSo,*’ Su t*bl* l0f Adults1 Sale Houses. 49 IN A COUNTRY LOT — 2-bedr brick. Large family room fireplace. 2*car attached gar $25,200. Terms. 4 1_________ M te Village of Rochester AT ELIZABETH LAKE 3 bedroom. Brick and frama :__ home. Carpeted. Fireplace. Lots of closets. Plus family room and ga- $32. i’HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty I___________________■ 11 ; suburban, commerce twp. ! NEW HOMES FOR EVERYONE •"with Mi* b.*,?m,oTc 3 NEWLYWEDS: 1 beds * midB^eskb*<Glr|1^ al,homeUof,lTouV*ownCUwhere,reuerv lullf-in vanity plus fourth; payment you make is like pulling n paneled basement. 'Car-imorwy in the bank. Low down pay*|i a«trnnm u osn__Pri$/ii»n*q draped living room. Sep- ment. AAonthly payments less than!* B-droSrn - itoaoo r944a!r^v4lhr«:!*i.d ^°r,^rmgnt ren,,,‘- b4pSsJT _ SUJM oughout. Only 51S.750. 20 per cent down—We tr EL WOO* REALTY _____ 682-2410 _'L ; * ____682-0835 EM 3-^208 ^ AT ROCHESTER j Bright end cheerful 3-bedroom brick ranch In tha country, north of town. Large half-acra lot with! , M||| r;r,S,7,Sd.Pr,V,ey-|NEAR_ THEkMALLB Warden Realtv 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 Walters Take 1 Bedroom — $6,950 — Prlv MB $10,600 — Lane Trons. $16,150 — Privileges. $24,000 — Privileges. FAMILIES WITH CHILDREN: I B*dr°ll!;m^llSS,0?cu^ncyV"*9*’- SeT 20 m* 3- and 4-bedroom Cepe Cod - As ‘.'i?4"______________*?.!-._______“4J223 cent^ down. (Tall today for appoint-1 low as <14,350, | ^WALTON ROAD AREA Everett Cummings, Realtor [MIDDLE AGE: 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD iChlldren grown up7 Married? Olf :< ----- 343-7181!college? Attractive -m|wi 814,250. ■ HIITER Ion and Pontiac. 391-286$4 2 BEDROOMS I Nice location — large living room,, I gas heat, large lot, on black top! road. $$,500. Terms. MODERN 2 BEDROOM APART- 4-3603 after 5:00 p.m, BEDROOM^j/- OWNER, DOWN- I decorated. $450 ! Daniels Realty, i 750°4 KE 7-7220. 3’ BEDROOM HOME ON LARGE lot. vacant. .10,500 — 52000 down on land contract. 197 Bridge Lk. Rd., Clarkston 492-M17. Quick posse SHEPARD REAL ESTATE ________451 >503 Beauty- Rite Homes Trade your uiad home on a new Beauty-Rite Home , from $15,550 "Buy direct from Beauty-Rite and Save" 353. Pontiac Laka Rd. 174-313S 47U741 EXECUTIVE: 2 bed- Each m| *13,900 term d and built to yi O'NEIL REALTY, INC. Office Open dally 9 to 9 p.m. Sunday 1 to 4 p.m. OR 4-2222 -OAK ISLAND Sharp 2 h Ole dlnng .......I______________ _____ room, saljfaril ELIZABETH LAKE RO. FE 2-0179 ovorlo LAKE FRONT - Excellent 5 roomi ond bolh.^ar^e carpeted I l^v^l n^g siding-garage, sand baach. Saa this one. 1*11,200 — We build this 3 bed-■■■— rancher, uajc floors, vanity In lull basements, gas heal, on 40U,< leaf Asb. ranch hone, with 2 bed-... ....ooms. Alum, storms and screens, tdroom Also a 1Ya-car garage. Selling for - t as only $9,000. Call Yorfe. C YORK /E BUY WE TRADE •R 4-0963 OR 44363 713 Dlxle Hwy. Drayton Plaint Waterford HIITEfe, REALTOR, 3792, room, After 1 HOLLY. yaar olt. —.. . room, kitchen, pi with fireplace* Mil first floor. Largo b, eutiful shaded I YORK WE TRADE OR 44363 Drayton D—4 Ml Hesses 49 WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD Lars* brick ranch .home wilt »xlrooms olio hat alunlum sto. ...„ and screens, 4-car garage, situated an a large tot. YORK WE BUY WE TRADE OR 4-0303 OR 4-0343 4713 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains ' Wyman lewis realty 389 Whinemore_ 338-0345 Sole Houses THE PONTIAC PRESS JMONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1067 CLARK ZONED COMMERCIAL - North City Large 0-room home with 4 baa-rooms. ;il ft. living room with brick fireplace, full basement,, oak Hoof*. plastered aMdtgBgl I parking ag^^^d 819.517'-"“ .19,500 w»h $3,500 down lot. Only STRUBLE I Lake1 FE 5-8183 FOUR BEDROOM Two-story older home. Living and dining rooms, kitchen, basement. Gas HA lil'et. Vacant. FHA or Land Contract terms. NORTHERN HIGH AREA Three-bedroom. IVtotory home. Carpeted living and dining area. Kitchen and utility. Garage — Large corner, tot. FHA terms available. SOUTH EAST SIDE Three-bedroom bungalow. Living and dining rooms, kitchen, basement, automatic HA heal. Only 8800 down. COMMERCIAL Vacant. 230” of Aubui frontage. Zoned Commer__ Excellent high and dry corner lot. Terms. Evas, call MR. ALTON. 473-4130. Nicholie & Harger Co. S3W W. Huron St. FE 5-8183 Wideman EAST SIDE RAMBLER; Featuring 3 bedrooms Spacious -kitchen with cupboard: galore, tile bath, basement, ga: FA heat. Good landscaped Tot. ONLY_ $1,450 DOWN, QUICK Contrai [4 UNIT INCOME — Wi unit. Part basement -with" Oil FA heat, enclosed porch, 3-car garage. Asking 814,500. FAMILY INCOME — West City. Brick construction, 4 five room and bath and I 3-room and bath, separate furnaces and utilities, Sul* Houses "Buzz" BATEMAN "Says" TIZZY By Kate Osaxui 3 Off t Ing. $38,125 full price. CLARK REAL EStATE 1362 W. HURON ST. FE 3-7888 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE GILES ALL YOU COULD WANT 4 bedrooms, fli notch Investi business. Cc commercial condition. ,Top- i. Could II ELIZABETH ACRES Completely rebuilt In 1944 — 1 room ranch home, lVa-car gi rage, twq lots, new kitchen cab SPACIOUS HOME AND GROUNDS Over 1-acre corner lot with 0 4-' room brick quality-built ranch home. Lovely large" living room with Tennessee marble fireplace NO. 7S that works perfectly, full-size din- fi I TFRMC ing room, wall arranoed kitchen ■ I cimvij with plenty of cabinets, ceramic N0 DOWN P/ tile bath and 3 large bedrooms, c°s,s moves you each with a "dpuble closet. with basement with ’gas heat. space house hast,on in Keego garage shopping. Price opener, j closing costs to move you in. scaped"front' "and”reor'“yard "?f NO. 33 ' >[HOUSE OF THE MONTH EXTRA NICE ln-dty bungalow lie NO DOWN PAYMENT, lust closing H ro*to moves you In If you qualify. Jith blacktop drive and garage. Enclosed rear porch, large kitchen recre- Aluminum ttorma and screens windows are f“s city ! 5se to school ■t $13,500 with d paved drive, beautifully •—t front and rear yar.. .. a looking tor a home close * has a lot to otter, i appointment. Priced G.I. NOTHING DOWN Paymanta lower than rant on ti 2-bedroom homo with lte-car I rage. Waterford School arte, c now, 810,250. MILO STRUBLE REALTOR , M 674-3175 KINZLER panel.- . be a study or a third Is an exceptionally nlca proparty mat Is priced at |uat $12,950 It sold this month. Terms can be arranged. NO. 4 $400 DOWN FHA TERMS: on thlt excellent 3-bedroom with fenced rear yard. Alu- m,""“ -----drain*, excel- lust outsld* •In-pr-..... t adge-of-town i :lty limits. It's 1)2,400 with |usl for young 4-bidroom ich on West side, gas heat, privileges. Call for appolnt- Cloude McGruder Realtor 441 Baldwin Av*. FE 5-4175 Listing Strvlct Opg~ POSSESSION. WEST SUBURBAN irge family home, 5 BEDROOMS. Targe living room, - closets galore. Full basement, gas FA heat. Also o 4-roam homo at rear currently renting tor 5100 per mo. SEE IT TODAY. I. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR new s-bedroom 2 W. HURON ST. 334-4524 *r«m« r»"'h I" (if m 334-4490 “ 1 down plui BRICK RANCH ! BRICK RANCHER Spacious and colorful 3-bkdroom!alaaosYueu> t , homo lust west of city. Modoll«T. . BRTND NEW: built In kitchen with colored builtl-ns? I vl j9?5 In beautiful wooded area vMh baths, recreation room and at-l,k*, fi'''1****' straate i tachad 4-car garag*. All Improve- ?T?rl“kln« s,llver °<"* Coui ments are In — water, sewer and A custom features and paved streets. To Include gooditras. you could hope for and carpeting In 4 rooms' and dra-1!ot- Lots—Acreage 54 10 LARGE LOTS AT FINE LAKE— bimOeritsrlws. Pinter 473-3480. 25 ACRES NEAR 0RT0NVILLE Corner location With good fr both roads. Ideal BWebte HI MENT pay- FACED WITH LACK , OF JOB SECURITY? ESTABLISH YOUR FUTURE SUNOCO MAY HAVE AN OPPORTUNITY FOR YOU!! Sunoco offers you the following: iSf$iffai.i?|o mentt balance on "Yand” Contract. C. A. WEBSTER, Realty 4491 ; 428-2515 . ACRES NEAR HOLLY REC i-Fu™peM (retains ■* —------URate „« ------------ *-tu*FtbA refund:. m* facts to you and area — near 18-hole golf .. orid 1-75 romp — rolling land high building al*- ■“*' frontage — barn __________ ________ per acre with low down payment.! course 4—Annul nd with Let/us i V road; -#our » —' 1700 Call: WEEK DAYS Ml 4-4474 AND WEEK- n prices. Call tor details. 1445 Dixie Hwv. ; HALL Anchor fenced lot. A real PwU pH vith 10 per cent financing $36,950. CALL TODAY1 LAKE FRONT no. 90 ?.'lSdWui^^W.'^S?l ELIZABETH LAKE Wooded lot with gentle slope foMTATES:An axealton* area, 3-bi sand beach. Truly a real value T00"* b'lck rancher with panel tract!Wi# °r °"*r lmd cor>' rear jwch. rLa'rg*°rcar*garagl'’* 40 NEW H0MESITES !SSKh SPartBMi n/3 Irlcted development private beach and park prTvIleg: excellent perk test!Reasonably priced at $23,950 with 00x150. Lake prlVl- j|ttte^ as 84,400 down plus cos' JOHN KINZLER, RealtoH No”Vi W*1" ' .rs store3-0335 3-BEDR00M i new restrlc *52sSft 100x1^ ___. 10-1 • W7 R kM, Iw. TM 8» 11$. tet e« "I don’t mind her new math. It’s her new floors me, Baby!”- English that Sale Houses ARRO 49 Northern Property 51-A CABIN AT WEST BRANCH, 51800 ce«h. 493-0144 attar 4 p.m. SPORTSMAN'S SPECIAL, 3 BEO- I. Southwest of Cadillac. I IVAN R. SCHRAM COMPACT HOME 4 rooms, mat and car garage, shaded 1: cated on Pantlac's I_ __ $1,000 down. Full prlco, $7,950 on land contract. HANDYMAN'S SPECIAL Will easily convert to 4 rooms. Need* some parson OPEN EVES. AND SUNDAY List With SCHRAM And Coll the Van 111 JOSLYN AVE. FB 5-9471 REALTOR Serving Pgntlac 18 Yean le Listing Servl >. $2500. 887- TED MCCULLOUGH, Realtor 54 ACRES^RESTRICTED SUBDI-CLARKStON AREA FHA OR GI TERMS 0 closet room. ‘[lichen with an /at to choose _______________ ________ at .only $13,900. Complete with lot. Dbn'l miss this bargain. 3-BEDROOM BRICK RANCHER — Close to schools and ahopplng In West Bloomfield Township. Horn* features: large carpeted living room, famlly-slz* kitchen with dishwasher, 14' master bedroom, IV) ceramic bath*, this homo Is vary clean and mat. Early possession here. Prl~ —1 *- - $00 for fait s< . Let o CLARkSTON AREA - Over 1-acre lot- 3-badroom brick ran-*- tachad Bear garage. Fi.. _____ basement. A lew Of the extra features are: m ceramic baths, built-kitchen.- hot water base- heat. thermal t hlng \mlssln $25,000. Doi IRWIN LAKE FRONT 1 bedroom brick ranch type bungalow with larga carpeted living room, real nice fireplace with bar-b-cu* grill, covsrad patio. Over-locking Oakland Lake. Priced at 142.910. Better taka a look! N. PADDOCK 2 bedroom bungalow with full base*I mant with lVb car garage. Carpeted living room and bedrooms. Glassed-in front porch. GI or FHA terms. Full price $11,500. EAST SIDE I bedroom bungalow with cprpoled living room and bedrooms, ivy baths.' Full basamant, with nice recreation room. 2 cor garago. / I condition. FHA. TERMS. GEORGE IRWIN. REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 191 W. Walton Fr 3-71*3 Offered at oi this beauty. B. HALL REALTY 4549 Dixie Hwy. 7-9 Dally 421 PARTRIDGE \ IS THE BIRD TO $EE" TIMES' PRIME LOCATION Ottered with this vac low ranch with full gas Nat, wall to wall carpeting. hardwood floors, plastered walls, ceramic bath and in A-l I nj>> -------! floors, "Mb aM ... M 194-car garage need corner lot. to itoras and WepMiP ..2,750 with — opportunity to assume an ax ■“ "-lance of 180 per mor ion for your personal MOSTLY BRICK Constructed ottered with this bedroom west side bungalow w 1 water, sidewalks. 625-3895. ......... ----- ----------- 3 ’paling In living room, plenty 54500 . 334-5375. kit,K— . ACrES-overlooking pine IDEAL FOR RETIRED OR YOUNG COUPLE. Cozy bungalow, ------ paneled wails, carpeting down on land contrai PHONEt 682-2211 , • 1143 Cast-Ellzaboth Road OPEN DAILY 9-9 50,350. ! E _ N*vada_ S»„ Oak Ion AKE L GREEN ACRES " 1449 S. Lapeer Rd„ Lake Orion MY 34242 After S p.m. cell MY 3-1544 n shopping c home for the? money, so not call now tor your pet-appointment? ........ -- to veterans, inanimately rate opportunity, to star -ur own Mirraiil ivolved. Call Closing costs approximately $35o! IRWIN RAEBURN STREET: 7 rooms and bath, axcallai dltion. 4 bedrooms. 5400 — FHA. AUBURN HEIGHTS: ' 4-bod room, 3-atory, $-room _ Located walking distance Grad* and Jr. High schools. Built-In oven and rang*, raw carpeting In living room and dining room.! Gas mat. Lot SOxtlOi Priced at only: S1«,000 - O.l. BUYING OR SELLING CALI. JOHN K. IRWIN «, SONS HmraMtemte- since 1925 DOWNTOWN CASS LAKE privileges om.r«t!*lN.'?r B^Totejsr*!? Very suitable for many bualnass-ts or parking lot. $37,500, tWms. 9 A. 1-75 \ milts from Pontiac. A rare "tlnd" of this size parcel right at thp clnverleet. Buy all or part. $85,V 808. Easy terms. M-59 6 $4rO0O* down"*** C‘P* 1,6,000 w,,h tr«ct. Only $120 ptr month. 70 ACRES this one. WE HAVE MANY CHOICE •< —Meble, 10 acres an e time to purchase , Call M39.^»1M.OOO with 825.000 down. ASK FOR NEW ILLUSTRATED CATALOG PARTRIDGE REALTORS 1050 W. HURON. FE 4-3581 OPEN WEEKNITBS'TIL*:te> KAMPSEN FrCishour ________n Varv. are only o tow faoturas of thlt farad at 831,500. EAST SIDE 2-story largo family horn* -v, with oak loors, plastered walls, full basement, 5 bedrooms and full dining mom. Already approved by FHA. 813,900 - 8450 down. Hur-ry on this on*. BRICK RANCHER Its as sharp na It can bt — you have 3 bedrooms, ceramic bath, new carpeting and finished recreation room in the basement. Located In tha city, 514,900 — - r. i—. 1400 down plus costs on FHA. kJ*e*’en, ni5* Trad# In (hat TOO SMALL house W flrrtlte; of yourt. room with loads \ up. Full basemtnf, g« JACK FRUSH0UR, Reoltor Prloed,atV114,lIB?*1* *730 Wllltemi Lake Rd. MLS 1#ZLW- Huron.St. MLS F_ ..... 674-2245 |after s f.«A. call or 3.3ml IT'S TRADING TIME" TWO ACRE LOT Within walking distance to Highland Community College. AII brick ttiraa-badroom hr— first floor family root Ilona fireplace In II 12 ceramic lilt ‘■'•-.han with *>■ basement Ice and anyone of Ined sales people \ n happy fo serve w-. iWiWP here et Times Realty good vice and dependability Is cur >to. Oh yas, we do have Ider — Nick Pelmer of Per WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU "JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES'* Times Realty ANNETT iwSTo West Side Brick 3-bedroom homo with full basement and gas heat. Cor-/n*r lot and 2-cnr garage. Con-/ to 'My bus line and wmmmmmm .. _________________ Tel-HOron Shopping. Possos- Sharp kltchai ~ ...‘ ' MW ii-in bar. Many itei‘“aiu**!Seminole Hills •hla custom built ---------- Primd separato DR, _ an and breakfai :ar garage and gli refree aluminum sldi it $17,750 plus Inslc d building site. ir.WVIIPmH your inspection NOWI OPEN DAILY 4:30- to 8:30 p.m. and SAT. and SUN., 1-5 p.m. corner ol Scott ----- and Watkins Lak* — Lake Rd. and Watkins Lake Rd. YOU CAN TRADE Bateman REALT0RS-MLS PONTIAC ORION-OXFORD Br. FE 0-7141 428-421V 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 1120 S. Lapeer ROCHESTER Br. UNION LAKE Br. PL 1-S51S EM f ■— 730 S, Rochester 0175 Cgmmarci VON ONTIAC — 5-room 2 bedroom Fisher Body. Home is comfor and close to work. Basement, oas furnace end hot water he Just S9r000. GI nothing down. COZY BUNGALOW — This ^~******* --- sided honr.. family, in Pon- tiac Northern School i room. 3 piece br*" ment. Recreation r Pavad straat. City ar. $12,500. Gas h VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR, Real 1 tha Mall . MLS Room ttUm “ "...... 4324880 Val-U-Way Cute and Cozy ranch Quick ___________„ 500 — 10 per cant down. HIGHLAND AREA Beautiful three bedr features a separate kitchen with built- tlte baths. Nature.____________ fireplace, china cabinet. A rear Mflo, two gas lights. Lake ^rh floor. 3 bedrooi an 2nd tlpor. F 1SS. ta*r PONTIAC MOTOR AREA bus*W3oor. iLtoo!1** FHA TERMS - Sharp, clean, 3,1-.. .... _ . j — nawiv! Ottawa Hills Brick lying joom, large. oor, large I ol dosat >p kitchen far "Mom. Orion-Oxford clous 4 ■ bedroom b r I c k -il rancher,with full basement, I bath and a half. Country-kitchen and dining area. Rallied hardwood lloors, located • larye lot. Requires <880 down What Everyone Wants 3 large bedrooms over a lull ' ment with a 2-ear garage, Includes hardwood floors, gai nace, a pavad drive, fenced and maintenance-fret elun siding. Total movt-ln cost j 280, paymenis itts than rant. R. J. (Dick) VALUET tEALTOR FE 4-3531 STOUTS Best Buys Today LAKE PRIVILEGES I1 On Lotus Lake 3-badroom ranch, beautiful stone fireplace, full, basamant, 3-car garage, large *,7'9W>- Landjm om brick ...---an with b iramlc tlte bath. 5 ROLLING ACRES NEAR DIXIE and 1-75, Clarkston schools and phona, over 1 acre of large ever-groan trots on roar of parcel — 35,500 - (1,008 down. MENZIES REAL ESTATE 425-5485, 9202 Dixie Hwy., 425-5015 5 ACRES CLARKSTON WOODED HOMESITE, SACRIFICE, (3495. TODAY'S-BUYS HAVE YOU BEEN LOOKING beautiful wooded lot — nice high, close to lake privileges and ^t^irrnWiii^hiPor or It will b* vour ntw homeait Full price: 54,500. WOULD YOU LIKE - 3.2 acres LOVELAND Leona Loveland, Realtor 2100 Cass Laka Rd. Pm&VILEGES 120' WOODED. HILLY LOTS. In FOX BUSINESS Grocariaa, drygoods, boor end take out. Large living qua Wall established In growing- T area. Building, business and lures. $14,500 plui Inventory. Sals HovtBhoM Goods 5 85 CROWN DOUBLE-OVEN COP-partone range; T Kalvlnator Cop-pertona refrigerator,- 1 maple bedroom suite. After 5, 221 W. Falr- *18. i-pteco sectional,, $35. Rsfrlgarator, SSL aim, *ju. Dinette, $19. pining room set, $69 Desks, $10 up. 3 truck loads jised furniture Just arrived. M r i i*». perd. 559 N l USBO BARGAINS AT STONEYS 1W YEAR OLD FROST FREE RE-frlgarator, Detroit Jewel Stove, bedroom sulfa, and tables, and sewing machine, 334-7414. 214 MAPLE BEOS, * Pas station north c it caso and cash ri 1. Priced at $35, Rlyer, Royal Mich. Writ* 1319 la Rapid . 11 Mila, Have Stations Will Lease In and around Pontiac area wt have some excellent high yallonag* gasoline stations for lasso — with or without bays. Small Investment only —will give financial sslst-ance. Contact: Gus Campbell or Larry Trtpack. 474- road. Beautiful;MOTEL - ng^ sit*. Only 410.950 on landj TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE . Opdyka 90 ACRES intora Creak, Matamora area, beautiful —-— - It on* today. EVERYTHING - INCLUDING LOCATION AND PRICE This real sharp 1-story brlc 'anch, dost to Oakland Unlvai >lty and Community College - (Above av< Ortonvilli half, 3 bedrooms, t lot 80*x280'. Priced ilshed, 2 bedrooms, 1 ■ bride. Automatic gas hot water heater, alumi 'ms and screens, good n Warren Stout Realtor 1450 N. Opdykt 9 " liMpW Lli lulMple Listing Sei Dally Tli 8 p.m 10 ACRE FARCEL5, ROLLING. OA 8-2813. A. Sandora.__ 1957 AVERAGE COST PER ACRE $300 1967 AVERAGE COST PER ACRE $180 1977 AVERAGE COST PER ACRE? Hadley i Income Property 5 UNITS, WILL ACCEPT 3 payment. FE 5.89»!**B* ** I, LR 9 ement, { FE 4-0921 MILLER AA0N BAUGHEY REALTOR INDIAN VILLAGE family home I.. exceltent repair. New root, newly painted, 3 largo bedrooms, LOTS of closets. Full basamant, - landscaping, 2-car garage. Jus CLEAN AND SHARP North Side home built In '42. Foaturat large, carpeted living roam, 3 bedroom lovely kitchen, full basement, gi heat. Just 115,450 on FHA. 8450 DOWN FHA tor thl'i shai horn* featuring lo^' carpeted If Ing room, lO'xV dining room, lari glassed tun porch. Basamant, ne gas heat. 2-car garage. 215 rol frontage. 513.458 Sat 191 FE 2-0262 «70 W. HURON ST. OPEN M "BUD" HURON GARDENS Five <51 room' bungalow, no •» » 'pin, 2 bedrooms, plat! tlte bam, largo living room, ft dining room, carpeting, kltchc.. wllti eating apaca, gaj hast, ga-r*B», tencod yard. Oniy 51,500 Mjwni bajanro on land contract at 871.10 par month. W. SEVEN MILE RD. 4-BEDROOM BRICK Near Wyoming In Oatrolt'a north-west area, closa to schools, bus TED'S Trading MOVING UP? Make it an stay move — ct„ i thlt attractlva 3-btd- brick ranch, attached garage ana patio, 1 b«*hs, family room with flroplai air conditioning unit, stove a refrigerator. Trade your prose home lor this ntw modern ram Excellent location. Terms to suit. NOTHING DOWN To qualified veterans. 3-bedroom ranch, family room, largo carpet-'lose to* grade" schpo* Svar^M occupancy- EXECUTIVES 4-bad room trl-levol on a lot. Larga family room ........ plan. Bar and Vi bath. BulM-ins, gjatom cupboards and 2W baths. AMachad garage, Immadlata pot-aasslon. Terms or trada. TED'S CORNER Mulflpla Mating 1$ a service to you. To be a polar"-71--- or aalter, It putt i personal. It *9’ *BWBj»"t TOC. room, . EM 'Mil and hot water, gar'— Priced at $19,908. Call us todi NICH0LIE-HUDS0N FE >1201, after 6 p.m. FE 4-8773 listing to a a plena of id all plrta- sent out to presantatlves, .... corporation. This _ bits tha raalton SjY9 ' you far graater service, we atrongiy urea you to list with Service*’®'' ^ ““M'B1* LI‘Mhg McCullough realty MO Highland Rd. (MJ9), j „ - RiALTOkr large bedrooms and lull c» ramie bath with separate Mall shower on second floor. Full basement, gas heat. J-r garage. Auto, tprlnking ' Mtar outstand- O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? BIRMINGHAM 3-badroom IVb-story bungalow will WE WILL TRAD! REALTORS 28 E. HURON ST. Office Open Evenings 8, Sunday 1-4 338-0466 DORRIS fi LAKE PRIVILEGES ON WILLIAMS LAKE ' t tub. , lVi WOULD YOU BELIEVE -round loti That*! right - mis Is almost perfectly. round < covers approximately % of tore with a tmall pond. In ( -d. $15,958. f0 per "die. No. 334 let; WATERFORD-KETTERING I AREA • 2-btdroom horna •r«t» dining room, I'xl t«ri|i -*• * porch. $19710.: with double Just rooms Mp- • floor • _ plus n apace and a garden $14t900. Sure a to tha A BLOCK FROM WILLIAMS LAKE CLARKSTON Juit 10 per -- ‘ houi_..„ “22 2-bedroom wim a beautifully $ new gas furnace and a healed 21 car garage. $15,958. Zara down 1 qualified GI. ZERO DOWN to qualified Ol an that mans If you 7 - - - -—- Jjjjjj, -------- a larga trada. Cali horn* with attach- >,nm. J WMMvw WEST BLOOMFIELD SCHOOLS I. Walking distance to downtown ‘***“ M “ly flllw. Lli.*; duty ( credit, \ place and gas soma work Inti bargain tor the on Ol terms i tend conract. I Is a raol man. tlOAOO ..I garage, <uMi WATERFORD walk-out doer to Sharp 2-bedroom back yard and recant «. turn... shu^i ut— — Separato dining room kitchen. S8,5oo with « manta et only 170. rSli* LAKE ORION RANCti -__ im— .iBuatoJ on handy —Otia furnace, storms'and MO1 — — tors. Aft mis i. only ttjwo. 1)1.500, tarmt. 9 APARTMENTS Showing an Income ol per month. Consists .. . nomas, all In good condition, dose to downtown. Large ' $55,080, terms. Annett Inc. Realtors I E. Huron St. 33S-0466 Office Open Evenings 1$ Sunday i- - Property 51 COLDWATER LAKe, BRANCH CO. 5 build Hut dream laka hoi I beautiful Coldwater Lake. „ Has of lake frontage by boat. CO. - Coldwater, DEER LAKE BtauMta^ large Jaka lot "Buy direct from Beauty-Rite and Save" BEAUTY-RITE HOMES M38 Pontiac Lake Rd. LAKE FRONT LOTS. EXCELLENT iVti?ni.l<Sn^•c,• 0n,y 3 '•,t McCullough realty 5440 Highland Rd. M-59) MLS Open 9-9 474-2239 LA*E LIVING, PONTIAC 1* MIN-ules. Lois, 5995, tip mo. Prlv. Oh large lakes. Open ,»un. BlOCh Brot.4 623-1333.. FE •* 4509, 5660 Dixie Hwv,. wtterferd_ NEW LAKE HOME All alactrlc 3. bedroom home rom ^^M^ntrcoCTteg brick and surrounded with nl C PANGUS INC., Realty OPEN 7 BAYS A WflgK ^ Ml 5 COLLECT NA 7-3215 % ot an aero.' 12'x2g' 'living" JZ!**0! kitetwn, hor water ih a a t, lOMi'xllW braazaway aat “ tt garage. Laka prlvlls Lang Lake, imaoo. WRRIS ASQN, REALTORS MULTI*PLB*lj5TINQ SiRVICi"4 location ._. ... __ range financing. ' no. fit LIST WITH O'NEIL REALTY for Three Good Reasons W* Think Our (ante of Values And Our L at ,ot Good Frospects And Our Tireless Efforts Will' Make You Glad Veu Called RAY O'NEIL REALTY , MW rontlae Laka Read „ DR 4-22*2 MLS FE 1(4414 BEDROOM CABIN, FURNISHED, South of Gladwin near tlte Titta-bawasaaa S4WL FE MM. ROOM CEMENt ELOCK ttoUSB, . CTcaK'Frag*.Ml#'Mleh- HARRii6Nrhf«raBiwribTrRTv- «r. 1100 down, 530 a - 2:20 mom. TRAILER LOTS On emi, Clare area, 1400 wit M percent dawn, only a tow laf JtojBTjlijjMtotr hunting and axes STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE BM1 I. Lapeer Rd., Laka Orion. ABLE WHY NOT CONSIDER THE quiet LEiiHiAMifiiifiMMM COUNTRY? 5Vb ACRES, good school land and 414 feat of frontage. $4,500. $900 d< ACRES. A little touch of country site, oak and pine trees, $7,500, pond. Beautiful hillside building 005 OHIO touch of city <— 10 ACRES. Excellent possibilities for 15 ptr cent down. 10 MRES. RollInAtend, n $5995, 20 par cent down. 10 ACRES. Clarskten are woods, near expressway, f ACRES. Rolling land, about 10 HHH of urtonv “ miles north , $6,940. C. PANGUS, INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 10 M-15 Orton vllle CALL COLLECT NA 7-2T| AUTUMN COLOR Is worth a trip to Hl-H set your future homes lie. Lap td., Va mile N. Of 1-75. LADD'S OF PONTIAC 7 Lspoer Rd._________ 291-2 _ FISHING BOAT AND MOTOR FREl with our btaullful wooded, on acre Ranchttta In Cpmrol Florlda' lake section. No money down; 52 par month. Will •«««* met >n, color photos. " . Write Gary M 145, Chicago, III. I, on blacktop road. (43,008. ear Schools. 150 ACRES tarry Laka Road, $400 acre. 11 ACRES Waterford Township, Cooley Lake Rd. 1800' frontage, Clinton River 1080'. Older home on property needs repair. Ideal clost-in Ir cation tor tmall estate. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 S. Telegraph Rd. 338-9641 ______After S call 338-3739 80 to 800 ACRES jn^lower Mlchlgap^ Dairy, gralr needs, we have It at on# c "Michigan's" Farm Real Estat Coldwater, Michigan. Dale A. Dea Farm Broker and Auctioneer Write or call 517-276-2377 — days Headquarters — Dean Realty Co. or S17-MM117 - nights.__ FARM HOUSE-ACRES ' WATERFORD. LOW DOWN -LAND CONTRACT, TERMS. BRIAN PRIME COMMERCIAL i* kitchenettes. Nice 2 bedroom living quarters. Exceltent price and terms. Might consider your property. Call or write 3, LaNoble. Realty, w. S75. P 3-Rooms Fumitura BRAND NEW 288 $2.50 Weekl PEARSON'S FURNITURE 0 E. Pika FE 4-7111 Between Paddock and City- Hall ■S’— 9 p.m. id Prl. Til ORIENTAL RUGS, ..2X1*a 11 ___ )OM SET Mini 4-PIECE BEDROOM SI (Brand Ntw) 88 $2.58 Weekly PEARSON’S FURNITURE 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $3.89 Soild Vinyl Tilt ... ..... 7c ea. "Inyl Asbestos Ills ....... 7c ea. llaid Tile, 9x9 ...........7c aa. Floor Shop—2255 Elizabeth Laka "Across From the Mall" % CU. FT. COLDSPOT REFRIQ-erator. 558. Folding screen SS. Chair S15. Altar alx call 338-2811. ELECTRIC STOVE, NORGE ' ator. good condition — r S45 or 538 00. 473-8102. . C Hllter Resl- SFORTING EQUIPMENT STORE — One of the largest in tha Thumb area. Shows good profit, EWB down will put you In b PIFER REALTY. Phono oi with A BEAUTIFUL CABINET MODEL 1967 Sewing Machine Make button holts, etc., - twin noodles, zlg zags, sic., ill claimed lay-away 85l.lt or tak on payments of 19 ptr mo. FI fcraT— Hilton Sowing Mach. C< APARTMENT Spare Time Income Refilling end collecting money from NEW TYPE crlb. Good wi 25 acres — 2 patad living n garage. $25JNN 623-0702 , chicken coop and c i. Basamant, 2-car 444-2891 and_________444-4791 NEAR DAVISBURG, 75“acre farm with modern home, 1 mils road frontage. Ideal for development, $75,888, $28,888 down, balance land 18 ACRES; Ortanville. $8,500. 20 ACRES. Hadley. $15,000. Terms. A. J. RHODES, REALTOR ■L__ _FE 8-2304______________. Sale Buiingss Property 57 5794 MAYBEE RD., AT SASlfA-baw. — Commarclal 2-story build. Ing axe., medical, or Multiple potential. Sylvan, 473-3488 or 334-8222. DRAYTON PLAINS 493- FI. on pavad road, approximately 2 acres, zoned light manufacturing. 125.000. Terms. AL PAULY _ . ,—ily yoi ...... ..... .... references, 5400 tc $2,980 cash. Sevan to twelv* hours weakly can net exceltent monthly Income. More full timt. For personal Interview write WINDSOR DISTRIBUTING COMPANY, 4 N. BALRH AVE., PITTSBURGH, PA. 15202. Include phona number. VILLAGE TAVERN A sharp Oakland County Tavarn with good mant. Has the . .9... people an|oy patronizing All brick building WI.., __ apartment up incl. tor |uot $15*000 Warden Realty — “--------- “intlac 333-7151 call 335-iteO Sals Land Cantracts 61 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Jroently needed. Se# ut befori 47 YARDS ok GREEN WOOL CAR-petlng with pad. Good condition. Still on the floor. 580. 2515 W. Hickory Grovo Rd., Bloomfield 1967 COLOR TV CLEARANCE $3 A WEEK Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Dr., Wait Pontiac Open Friday »t 1967 SINGER Dlal-a-stltch only 3 moa. old. Just dial for buttonholes* designs* hams* Pay small balance of $51.02 ■ jaa ** a month. 5-yaar guar-lessons. Call 335-9283* trie i refriger Maytag ivra oad rooms, chests. Lots of \ Little Joes at Walton* FE BABY SCALES* HIGH CHAIR tables* $5.85 ea. Llttla Joe's, FE 2-6842. ET MY OFFER BEFORE YOU sell your tend contract. L. Sir clslr, 333-4843._______________ UTICA BUSINESS PROPERTYTtad contract. My equity S6.303, mo.* 6 pet. interest. Discount Wanted Cairtraets-Mtg. 60-A 1 to 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. Set us before you deal. WARREN STOUT, Reoltor 158 N. Opdyka Rd. FE 5-8145 ______Open Evas. *911 8 p.m. :ash for land contracts. u . rat Dixie Hwy. BRONZE OR CHROME DINSTTE sate, BRAND NEW. Large and small size (round, drop-laaf, rac-tangular) tables in 3-* 5- and 7-pc. •ats* 824.95 up. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 E. Pika___________ FE 5-7881 BUNK BEDS Choice of 15 styles* trundle beds* triple trundle bads and bunk bads complete, 149.50 and up. Pearson's Furniture, 210 E. Pike.___ P CARPET Add enloyment to your home with well to wall carpeting at prices and payments you can afford. Big tavinos also on reupholstery and 335-1700 for FREE Maple* V 210 C FE 4-7881 COLONIAL FURNISHINGS — SOFA SIM. Recliner chair 875. Tables. Assortment of lamps. Boston rocker. Eagle. Milk can. Many more. OR 3-6370. DRYER, 135. WASHER. 835. APT. size refrigerator* 829. TV oat* 835. G. Harris* FE 5-2766. 849; Writ ris* FE ~ •inger wa 5-2766. >. G. Her- ELECTRIC STOVE* GOOD CONDI-lii $25. 66 oal. electric water Mar >23. 682-1W6._____ FREIGHT DAMAGED BEDROOMS and living rooms. Sava almost half — LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE* Baldwin at Walton* FE 3- m, j. Van V OR 3-1355. discounts. 1 GAS tTOVE, FULL-SIZE, COPPER, tone, used 2 mo., $149. G. A. Thompson, 7885 M59 Waal. __ OOO USED FURNITURE — i truckloadi lust arrived. Com* ear- OM|H M * *-"► lOO'xltO'. Corner- tot. Lake $ togas. S3,400. I00'x350'. canal tel, ts.soe. 1- .ACRE WITH IMF lake I Clarkston area. 17,100. Lakefronf Vi acre on Cooley Road. Facing Beautiful Elizabeth Lk. 174' lakefront plus 175' canal front, plus 2 beat docks. Terrific offer will get this al only $7,908; WATERFORD REALTY US -Dixie Hwy. 473-12 Mulflpla L toting Service HOWARD T. KEATING SUITABLE FOR DEVELOPMENT Rd., Dnyiiburg Rd.. Rd. High and dry, cleared land, amalr wood a In on^jjornar. Fat^rovnM.----- ENDLESS OPPORTUNITIES W^rWk« property aultahte for recreation, davelopmant, fine tpmiiGiOig tag academy, mulflpto dwelling. LAKE PROPERTY acres, hardtop vats lake, tone iSrtSLT C. NELSEY, Agent, Davlaburg 313-425-3298 or 313-437-5730 ’ Evening calls Waleoma KENT ESTABLISHED IN 1914 COMMERCIAL — Large building on South Saginaw St., Pontiac. Sult-atat for varlou! types * ' ' Alio parking lot actio price: 533,000, farm! o irmation. Set If this" fits y tarms. 1l„f?0“7AGE - On U.S. 1#, also 341' frontage at rear. Approx. 400' P,r^rn,te«r,0n,,rm‘- Floyd Kent, Inc. Rtaltor »» Dixie Hwy. at Talaoraph XW» 07 FE 2-73. PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD fO SEE" DOWNTOWN Commercial lot 45x200 on main Bell Telaphone. Very a tar many butlnetiei ng lot. 537,500. Terms. 9 A, 1-75 EXIT rom Pontiac. A rare "fir la size parcal right at 'leaf. Buy all ar part, tl iaty farms. M59 P. $16,000 Contract, only1120 par’ month 70 ACRES th 900 ft. Commarclal frontage on M-59, 8105,800. With $25,000 down. NO. 14-457 VL A5K FOR NEW ILLUSTRATED CATALOG PARTRIDGE REALTORS Huron, FE 4-3581 __________WUliHl* Til 9:8B Sola or Exchangp 58 59 UNION LAKE. BEAUTY SHOP jMoro S-room rancher wit.. ■ BSSf ^luwr.baauiy then i Money to Loan tUcansed Money Lander) LOANS” L0AND TO $1,000 Jaually on flrat vlalt. Quick, frla y, helpful. FE -2-9206 la the number to call OAKLAND LOAN CO. 202 Pontiac Stale Bank Bldg. 941 Friday — »-7 Sat. LOANS 525 to 51,000 insured Payment Finn BAXTERS LIVINGSTONE Finance Co, 401 Pontiac State Bank Building FE 4-1538-9 SMM MOVIE CAMERA FOR 5W oft. Hi I 14' 6-PLAYER PAR TYPE BOWL- ““TChlnt* Will tr«rfa rhJbln «•!!. UL 2-1113. §•^1 Rr* ■ •■•Bon e rwi E. Pike SI- FE 4-7SS1. MAHOGANY DROP-LEAF ‘ 1943 C6MRT~iTATl6N WAObN TO »w«P tor hunting equipment. 335- J979 after 4 p.m, ______ aKc labrador male7~f1Sfes-tlonally trained, sake. M— " toagkWi*-* M^YTA® AUTOMATIC WASHFC $50. Good condition. 482-4874. NEtD A CARt -\fAK4 IN ANY- WANTED _ OLDER USED FUANI-— .Iteaba, <)l>h*a, mlac. tor iaM 247. F; Clark._____________ Sale Ctathiag 64 SEMI-FOl .. jB ViJNHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY 3ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $277 $2.58 per weak LITTLE JOB'S Bargain House >1 Baldwtajd Walton, PR HU Acrot of Free Parking i. 'fir *i Sat. Til 4. Bt Tarim HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL *20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consist* of: B-piece living room outfit with 2-pc. living room tulle, 2 atop tablet, 1 cocktail fable, 2 table Tampa and (l) 9'xl2‘rue Included. 7-ptoco I wing m Ih double bad with matching imps. I chroma 199; Your ___....____. ---ly 5-plec* dinette sat with chain and table. All tor credit Is good at Wyman's. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E, HURON__________FE5-1J01 KELVINATDR bELUXE WASHER, alto dryer and bar type ralrlgara-“r, all for S175 cath. Moving yi Imt. 9 KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION - 150 , FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service & Supply Co. A17 niVIB UUIV Ate AM* Colonial solid brass andirons, 135. Alia ell apaca heater. 482-4721. MAYTAG WRINGER WASHER AND ta-Jjrj tub!, $100. Oosd condition. NECCHI DELUXE AUTOMATIC ’cablnaf ___I hams, 1945 Modal. Tqka $iC9b PER M0. 9 M0S. * OR $53 CASH BAL. Universal Sawing Center FE 4-0905 RSjKAT RANGl. likM HIW. IH. Pontiac Resale Shop Buy-Sell Anhnuaa^furnlfura, e I ■ a« war*. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 , Sale HgusaheM 6fd» ROLLTOP DESK. MAHOGANY D—5 SEPTEMBER SPECIALS Maytag Wringer Washer rPrigfielreRehir--- F<r Sib MJsceDanenns 47 __PRINTING PRESSES—OFFSET M3 Pixie, Water-lord , <aw RAILROAD TIES, NEW AND USED — Antique rell fence. OR +1972. Frigid _____ndltlot____ Floor model__________ CRUMP ELECTRIC 24*5 Auburn Rd. Auburn FE 4-3373 elghta .2-3000 SINGER Used, In lovely welnut cabinet. Bullt-lns tor hems, buttonholes, etc. Sold new for over 1300. Must sacrifice for S«4.50 cash or $+45 a month. Guaranteed. Call 335-0213 — Household Appllar~~ ruMmage sale: sat., sun. and Mon. MISc. Items, office desk and chair, good books, mlsc. clothing, Bolens riding mower. Westing-house roaster and stand, little used, 34“ Hotpolnt elec, stove, Phllco refrigerator, late model Norge elec, dryer, 21“ Zenith maple cabinet TV. Moving, mutt sell. 1455 Hiller Rd., between Com-merce and Cooley Lake Rd. ALL HOUSEHOLD SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC Zig sag tewing machine — In modern walnut cabinet — make designs, appliques, buttonhole) ate. Repossessed. Pay off. $54 CASH Or $6 per mo. payments. Guaranteed Universal Sewing Center FE 4-0905 USED FURNITURE We don't deal In |unk, terms able, Pontiac Resale Shop, a( fayetto, 335-6932 days, 33 FILING CABINET, 29" X 4T X 11 LIKE NEW ELECTRIC TYPEWRIT. ’ H For further Information. F SINGER Does beautiful tewing and dig « Only $33.10 cash or $4.90 per n — will accept trade In. FE B-W Hilton Sewing Machine Co. STALL SHOWERS COMPLETE with faucets I ' value, $34.50. STEREO. AM-FM RADIO AND REC-ord player, roll away bed — double size, 9 x 12 gray cotton rug. bedroom set, bookcases, and small radio record player, mens' ski-boots (9Va), Ice skates (I). 644- STORAGE FOR BOATS, CARS -farm tools. Orchard Lake. 332-1970- SUMP PUMP GE MOTOR $79.50 value, $29.95 marred. TessUiG buys. Michigan Fluorescent, USE& TVs, $19.95 COLOR TVs, 1150 Repo. Free of frost freezer, 1 ft., $149.95. SWEETS , RADIO AND APPLIANCE. IL_. 422 W. Huron____________ 334-5677 VENTING KITS, $4.95; REFRIG- WANTED: FURNITURE FOR house that calls for Q«— | furniture — also cupbo; ft you la**Ware' WC ^ call Ml 7- WANTED TO BUY glMs>?ampshades.nSE 4-9096. ** * Dasher-and dryer, reason- THOR WASHER WITH ATTACHED open end Ironar, $15. UL 2-1113. TUB ENCLOSURES, GLASS ONLY $25. G. A. Thompson. 7005 MS9 W. TWO LAMP 4-FOOT FLUORESCENT lights, ideal for work benches, shops, $19.95 value $10.90, marred. Call at factory ehowroom. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard 11 Antiques 65-A BEAUTIFUL CHERRY WOOD COR-ner cupboard. 662-0341. Custom antique refinishing Spaclallzlng In tlna antlqua — finishing, furniture repair of types, all Work guaranteed. Her — 363-93T >361. Mon.-Frl. MANY ITEMS OF FURNITURE, glassware, hanging lambs. 1051 Charast, from 9-5 p.m. Off Cass- Hi-Fi, TV & Radios *1“ COLOR RCA VICTOR. TV. SIS0 425-4659_____________ 21" USED TV , .... $29,951 Welton TV, FE 2-2257 Open 9-6 TALBOTT LUMBER 14“ Black and Decker drill, $9.99 Appliance rollers, $7.95 a pr. 4'x8'xH" particle board, $3.75 ea 4'xSxW" particle board, $4.95 ee. THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 111 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your need! Clothing. Furniture, Appliances Restores forgotten colors. R e AKC DACHSHUND FUPSTl lature. 674-2513 after 5.' V GUNS—720 W. HURON. 334-7651. Exc. selection of used guns.____ GAUGE BROWNING SUPER i Poly Choke, 3135. lend Rd. (M-59), vehicle. Demonstration AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD, MALE 2-year-old. $75. l female, 5 mos. old. Pedigree, $40. Call 474-2511 after 4 p.m.____________________ AKC BiGiStERED WEIMARANER. ■ r. old Male. Best After. 33+ AKC BEAGLES, SOME ALREADY started) AKC Brittany, femat-started. Cell eft. 4 p.m. «2+*l<7. iw signs to 'l T TIPSICO LAI AKC BEAGLES, EXCELLENT hunting stock, I wks and 4 Sprlnpfi—, ..... * -- ,,,, Mokel 30-06, never Issued to troops) Remington, NRA rating, excellent. Priced to sell quickly. First come-*lrst served. 662-0724. 5 GUNS, 444 MARLIN LEVER, AC-tlon. 30.30 Savage bolt action. 12 gauge Noble pump, 20 gauge Mos-berg bolt action, 22 Colt dual cyl inder Magnum revolver. Best ol ter over $350. 334-6923. BOWS AND ARROWS—334-634? GENE'S ARCHERY—714 W. HURON BUY NOW 1960's HERE OUTBOARD MARINE CORP. PRESENTS TRADE WINDS SNOW MOBILES 15 H. P.095O im H.P. $850 20 H.P. SUPER TIGER S1,11J SNOW BLOWERS Jacobean from >99.95 Sunbeam Elec. >119.91 DEAL WITH SCOTTY ON A NEW 1961 SKI-000 From $695 differ Qreyer's Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly. Rd., Holly ME 4-47711 CARNIVAL cheted coat end hat- FE 2-2072. (female) old, OR 2-5007. BEAGLE PUPS, CHOICE OF LIT- BEAUTIFUL COLLIE, REGISTER- BASSqTT PUPPIES, AKC COLLIE PUPS, AKC 6 WEEKS OLD sired, $50 up. 3355197. ENGLISH SETTER, FEMALE. 1V5 m------- GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES. 682-7892 between 11 a.m. and- By Dick Turner A-l BIKES. 335-6755 GIBUS' 26“ iNdOlri RACkR Bicycle. OR 3-1301. Boats — Accessories 15 FT. THOMPSdN BOAT ONLY end trailer. 1350. Phone V “ * Lake 624-4450.______________________ “What do I do to get a kitchen floor scrubbed good and clean? Wiell, first I start with a strong, no-nonsense tone of voice . ,* healer (20,000 EVINRUDE SNOWMOBILE. L BTU) Washer. 674-1933. _ g*“ ' ----- ||| USED ANDREW OFFICE DESKS, *jTiprintin' , Forties, 4500 Dixie. Drayton, OR 3-9767 o 36' van trailers, can t GERMAN SHORT HAIR. 13 MO. , start, $950. Cover end Sle< - OR 3-7583 or 634-9913. I. Saginaw. FE 4-5141. GUNS-GUNS-GUNS One of tho largest selections Oakland County. Browning, Weath-erby, Winchester, Remington, Colt and Smith-Wesson pistols, scopes. lark fork lift truck, 4000 lb. rill bits and cutting tools. Save! 50 to 75 per cent. All sizes. 1 ew and used steel, angles, channel, _____i beams, plate, pipe. MMUlTXti; ■■■■■BTjfe 2-6M2. BOULEVARD SUPPLY COLOR TV, S200. STEREO, $100 500 S. Blvd. E._'_j__ FE 3-7001 ■r-.. ...-.j WATER WELL PUMP, LIKE NEW, RCA SOLID STATE STEREO. LIKE Jacuzzi submersible. 120-gal. tank* hew condition. 391-8911.____all valves, fittings and contrail. RECORD PLAYER NEEDLES Best offer.,353-3615. DRAYTON CUSTOM CAMPERS 6" ell aluminum caps, $13$ 27"-30" cover, $195 34" cover, $210 __Discount to Union Members OAKLAND CAMPER Open daily until 8:30 p.m. All day Sundays MIXfeD COLLIE PUPPIESr-wormed, shots, $10-825. 731-8257. PEKINGESE PUPPIES, WHITE and cream, stud service. 682-6721. POODLE. 6LACK MALE. 67>6Q55 Johnsi to find? i TV—FE 8-4569 WEI fEPOSSESSED STEREO ONLY 1 mot. old. Solid stats 40" welnut i. ___KEPT CARPET SHOWS THE results of regular Blue Lustre spot cleaning. Rent electric sham----- .. .r------- 41 n pooer $1. Huds Water Softeners GOOD WATER SOFTENER S3S. ■CALL a2-0615. For Salt Miscellaneous 67 to OFF - ON SPECIAL BOXED Lr; Christmas Cards. Buy early. w Forbes, 4500 Dixie, Drayton. OR 3- 9767.___ V NEW GAS FURNACE, 100,000 BTU unit, completely Installed to present duct work, $385. Pontiac Heat- (M59) 674-2161 or 682-5574. _ ^Ssle AS|nsieMatlonLondEservlc«N £y licensed heating contractor. You or I Install. Call early e.m. or lets evenings. 612-5623. 1-A ALUMINUM-VINYL SIDING quality guaranteed |ob, call Joe Vallely ,;The Old/Rellable Pioneer" No money down/MY 3-8279. i NEW WHEELS FOR “i960 TO 1967 Chrysler. $4 eech. UL 2-1829. IMPAIRS LOVELY DRAPES, GRAY , and Silver, $40. FE 4-3000. _ 9'XV' LINOLEUM RUGS, $3. Plastic wall tile Ceiling-IMe — wall paneling, B&G THe, FE 4-9957. 1075 W. 225-GALLON FUEL OIL TANK AND! 98,000 BTU Luxelre oil furnace.1 heat exchange cracked In furnace -- take both — 850. Ph. OR 4*0081. 1966 HONDA SCRAMBLER, 350 CC. Walnut dining room suite. Auto. ^ 1 O^h .p. tjoat, NypI ----, 875. ____ nPH_________825. Beverley's, 7751 Auburn Rd., Utica. 731-5480.______________________ ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN FE 5-7471 BLOND HUMAN HAIR WIG, $25. Crib and wardrobe, chest, 845. 334- 5762 after 12_noon._______| ILOND KOREAN HAIR WIG. WORN I twice. Cost 8125, soil for $9p fig 4- 6912.__ fROKEN CONCRETE. 4“ term, J. H. Weltman 333-3314.__ BRIDES — BUY YOUB“WEDDiNG announcements St discount from, Forbes. 4500 Dixie, Drayton. OR| Tools—Machinery 68 CUSTOM ENGINE REGUILDING, cylinder boring, pin fitting, auto motive machine shop service, hy draulic cylinders, lack, repairs anc parts. Pontiac Motor Parts, 1016 Mt. Clemens St. FE 2-0106._ DELTA ROCKWELL BAND SAW, -------- ,J“* model with motor, like . 2740 S. Rochester Rtf., All types of archary equipment BROWNING BOOTS—ALL SIZES SKI-DOO'S —Complete Stock— FROM $695 Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. Holly, ME 4-47711 — Open Dolly ond Sundays GUNS AND GUNS^J Winchester, . Remington, Savage end others. - Scopes — ammo-ac-ceSsories. SPECIAL ON CLAY PIGEONS S2.45 PER CASE. Sell or trade your old gun here. MG SALES & SERVICE 4667 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plaint PUT THE FUN IN WINTER WITH OUR SPECIALS. . .ONLY 3795 Wo ora giving ■ Snowmobile er with teen 1966 Trado-« Fox Tree, and Bolin's C Savo yourself $169 with this TOY POODLE, CHAMPION STOCK PICK-UP TRUCK CAMPERS Wa will bo dosed tor vocation August 25, thru Labor Day. Or~ big September clearance sale b gins Tuesday Sept. 5th. All 19< models must be sold. skirted end shed I JaakCors-TracIa 1H4 3 JUNK CARS—TRUCKS. FREE tew anytime. FE 2-2646. ALWAYS BUYING JUNK £ A R S end eerwy we tow. FE 5-9946. CONFER, BRASS; RADIATORS) HIGH DOLLAR PAID 1959-1962$ WE PICK UP FE 8-9661 STAR AUTO JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS, FREE THOMPSON SEA LANCER txcellent condition' a Us«d Ante-Track Ports IM 1965 327 CHEVY ENGINE. REBUILT — Navy run. 634-4027. USED ENGINES, TRANSMISSION, rear axle, trl powers, bell hous- BCT &fc H»M Aut0 Saturday. 335-*7943. * New and Used Trucks 103 V. 150 HP Marc-Cruiser. Check Chrysler, Lone Star, j| boats and MM ruiser ponl fishing I Glastron, ____ boats. Riviera Jon boats, el.__________. ______ 12 to 14' In stock. Complete service of outboards — Mercury outboarda 3.9 to 110 h.p. and Merc-Crulsar authorized dealer. GRUMMAN CANOES DEALER Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd. ME +4771 Open Dolly end Sundays 1939 FORD STAKE STRUCK, RUNS good, SITS. MY 3-3773. 1947 JEEP UNIVERSAL. F U _ _ canvas top. Good tiros, (550. 67+ 3363 after 6 p.m.________ 1954 FORD PICKUP. I-TONTi 1963 INTERNATIONAL TANDEM. Good condition, 63,000. 673-1410. 1964 CHBW I, 86-TON PICkUP, wiring. Tandem trailer, OR >3707. 1964 INTERNATIONAL 4 k balance. 363-4966. NS IDE 3ol $2595, rea. $3440. INTER STORAGE COMPLETELY FURNISHED, bedroom, located on lot, Immed ate occupancy, raas., FE 2-1657 i DETROITER—KR0PF Vacation Homes ft. wide with large expanding bedrooms and large expanding living room only $2995.00. Free delivery In MM|— ---A d AUCTION EVERY SATURDAY P \ EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 6507 Dixie Hwy. 625-1711 EVERY SATURDAY".’.W' 7:00 p!m EVERY SUNDAY ...... 2:00 P.M WB BUY — SELL — TRADB RETAIL 7 DAYS WEEKLY I CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION 5089 Dixie Hwy. OR >2717 PERKINS SALE-SERVICE AUCTIONEERS Plants-T rees-Shrubs 81 -A EVERGREENS, , Including drill press, 1_Closed Sundays__ HEADQUARfERSj for Rupp Sno-Sport Polaris, Scorpion SNOWMOBILE OUT THEY <?0 ALL 1967 MODELS WHEEL CAMPER TWO 8 SLEEPERS YELLOWSTONE One 21' Capri (deluxe) I One 18' 8 sleeper One 16' 6 sleeper ( These are not here to look a1 I Our. 1968 CENTURY and YELL STONES are now arriving. Mon. and Tues., 9 A.M. to 8 Wed. thru Fri., 9 A.M. to 6 Sat. 9 A.M. to S P.M. Closed STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (MS9) FE 2-4928 PIONEER CAMPER SALES BARTH TRAILERS * CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS (8"-27"-35" covers) ALSO OVERLAND I. COLEMAN 3091 W. Huron FE 2-3989 PICKUP COVER&, $245 UP. 10'6" cabcovers, $1,295 and up. T&R CAMPER MFG. CO. 1180 Auburn Rd._______ 852-3334 Sportcraft Manufacturing PICKUP SLEEPERS AND TOPS Ironger square welded tube fram.. 160 Foley ' _Weterford _623-0650 TRAVEL TRAILER New 10, 12, 20 and 24 ft. widei Yes we deliver and set up. BOB HUTCHINSON, INC. 4301 Dixie Hwy. (U.S. 10) Drayton Plains OR 3-131 22350 Telegraph Rd. Dint v stocked to IvTaND USED_____________ ALL AT A LARGE DISCOUNT FOR EXAMPLE -W 60'xl2', list price 35,103 OUR PRICE: $3,395 —n't mls$ this chance of a llf+ time. All sizes In stock — *“'■ models on display PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. 4030 Dixie Hwy. Drayton OR +0411 Alton, to 9 p.m.. Sun. 10-4 1968 s IN STOCK Glastrons-Mercurys SAVE-SAVE-SAVE Fall discounts now 1967 Close-outs , Winterize and storage SKI DOOS-SEDADDLE RS CRUISE-OUT, Inc. 63 E. Walton Dally 9-6 FE 6-4402 ANNOUNCING WALT AAAZUREKS LAKE & SEA MARINA NEW TROIAN DEALER At Pontiac ^8 MODELS ON DISPLAY ALSO DEALER FOR SLICKCRAFT CHRIS-CRAFT EVINRUDE LEFT-OVER >7 MODELS AT CLOSE-OUT PRICES 1966 CHEVY % TON PICKUP $1295 ^t MIKEV SAVOIE CHEVROLET, . Free MIDLAND TRAILER SALES BIG DISCOUNT AT TONY'S MARINE, 31 YRS. Close-Out Sale! Pontiac Lake Road. 335-9601. ROAD GRADER. TANDEM, GOOD >hape, $2,750, owner. <«j||[W|M 4-PIECE LUDWIG DRUMS, 1 CYM- MG SALES & SERVICE spreaders. 682-4969. LANDSCAPE EVERGREENS— shade trees. 4-6 ft. white spruce. clump $1.25. Dig your ovt Sunday. McNeils Nurser _Rtf. at Dixie Hwy., Clarks Hobbies & Supplies SALE Fall Inventory Reduction 14' Frolic ......................HR 16' Frolic ..................$1,895 19' Frolic ..................$2,395 21' Tr aval master ......... $3,595 Hgjg $5,875 24' Boles- -e self co 4667 Dlxlo Hwy. Drayton Plains 103 E. Montcalm________Pontiac Polaris Snowmobiles PERRY'S LAWN 8. GARDEN 7665 Highland_________ 673-6236 1 SKI-DOO'S I960 MODELS ON DISPLAY ONLY $695 KING BROS. PONTIAC RD. AT OPDYKE ex-;PE 4-0734 Open 9 to 9 7 Days Week 2257 Dixie Hwy. 338-0772 MARLETTES 50'-63' long, 12' to 20* wide. Early American, Traditional or Modern Sava now on '67 Starcraft, Thunder-bird, Johnson Boats and Motors, Weares Pontoons, Watsrblkas. ! PINTER'S 11370 Opdyke 9-6 FE 4-0924 Space available in 4 Star Park, no extra charge. Also see the famous lightweight Winnebago Trailer. OXFORD TRAILER SALES OPEN 9-8, CLOSED SUNDAYS (1-75 et Oakland University Exit) DUCK BOAT, $20 ", 673-0433, after 4 p.m. GLASSPAR — STEURY - MIRRO Craft — Grumman — Kayot — 1 mile south of Lake Orion on M24 MY 2-0721 SALES AT TIPSICO* LAKE — Phone 629-2179. Rarch —°DuiTE ^^omItte0- LIBERTY. "MANY BEAUTIES TO CHOOSE FROM" INSIDE WINTER STORAGE KAR'S BOATS 1$ MOTORS 405 W. CLARKSTON RD. LAKE ORION — MY >1600 8' Tour-A-Home ......... $ 85 SEE THESE VALUES TODAYI rs and trallari 9 YEAR BAY MARE. WESTERN —" h pleasure. Spllritad but Colonial Mobile Homes FE 2-1657 623-1310 250 Opdyke 5460 Dixie ‘"-‘-hts S. of Waterford 964, 56', AIR CONDI- ishrr and dryer. Close Jacobson Trailer Sales 5690_Wlillams Lake Rd. OR 3-S981 SACRIFICE A 12 X 50 1967 RICH-Gienhaven. Owner going er, 1961 VW. G. Hi CHILD CRAFT 1966 EDI werld Beak, 350. 636-4333._ DITCH-WITCH TRENCHER FOkl'' rant. Will deliver, pickup. 682-3020. L Before 9 a.m., attar 9 p.m. 7" —■10 bOG HOUSES, INSULATED, slzas. 743 Orchard Laka Rd. Floor model b Carry with, 325. G. i For The Finest In Top-Quality Merchandise Shop At Montgomery Ward Pontiac Mall Fuel oil space heated and tank, 325. 1017 Myrtle. _ Furnace. oiri’i&ED, forced air. 1 yaar old, 1195. 225 Elizabeth water-gas-oll 5-rm. avg., 35) Salts. 625-1501, OA +3966,______ FIREPLACE WOOD, DOOR FIX- - tores, lumbar. FE +1926.________ &ARAGE SALE - TUES AND WED. 9-5 at glv+a-way prices. )02 Dra- Dlxla Hwy. OR +9474. HOf AIR FURNACE, LIKE NEW, complete with ducts, rsat. 33+4221. Hot WAtBR BASEBOARD RADI-“ —t lineal «. G. A. v • vert lb l« car seats, 2 high chairs In excellent condition. Bethlr*“-335-0731,_______ 6iL Hot wAtbr FulNAtl!! . thermostat control with 2 hanging blowen, exc, condition, 682-9909, FlumbiHg BARGAINS, free standing MM, 316.95) T heater, $49.95;, 3-plece bat $39.95) laundry fray, .trim, , showar stalls wfm trim, — 2-bowi sink, I3.tif Java., U.Oli tuba, szq and up. Pip# cut and SAVE PLUMBING CO., Mi.Fi +1516. thraadad. it HI Baldwin. ?ranct?*horns!*^new ^'^nd** used0,**^! and up. Peoples. FE 4-4235. BUFFET CLARINET, GOOD CON-dltlon. 682-2888. CONN CLARINET, NEW CONDI-I tlon, 8125. Call Mr. Taylor OR 4-0306. ELECTRIC GUITAR, CASE AND ompllfer. 840. 335-8635. FENDER BASSMAN AMPLIFIER. 1 year old. exc. condition. Ml 4-0170 GALLAGHER'S 3 USED ORGANS. . . PRICED FROM $495 UP. USE OUR LAYAWAY PLAN. 1710 S. Telegraph FE 4-0566 Ve mile south of Orchard Lake Rd. Dally 9:30 to 9 p.m. Saturday 9:30 to 5:30 Skidoos—Skedaddlers ( SNOWMOBILES BUY NOW AND SAVEI CRUISE-OUT, INC. 43 E. Walton, Daily 9-6, FE 0-4402 1 THE GREAT SNOWMOBILE SCORPION (m°ORO^IT'eARI^Y AND SAVE STACHLER TRAILER ’ SALES, INC. v | 377) Highland (M-59) FE 2-4920 , WE BUY, SELL, TRADE GUNS. , ''Browning — Winchester — Rem-0 tnjton. Opdyke Hardware, FE > GALLAGHER'S BRAND NEW CONSOLE PIANO 3535. BENCH INCLUDED 90 DAYS -SAME AS CASH OR MANY MONTHS TO PAY. |171> S. Telegraph FE 4-0544 </. mil# south of Orchard Laka Rd. Dally 9:X to 9 p.m. Saturday 9:X to 5:X Sand—Grovel—Dirt 76 i A-1 LIMSTONE, ALL SIZES. SAND — gravel products, top toll. Del. . all area. AW Truck. 394-0042 or I 620-2563. 1-A SAND AND GRAVE Lv ALL1, areas delivered. 67>5516. Water 1 ford. DARK RICH FARM CLAY ALUME top soil, also black dirt, 5 yards for $12.30 dal. FE 44588. FARM TOP SOIL, GRAVEL, FILL • sand, delivered. 338-9756. 334-8964. 1 GIBSON AMPLIFIER. $225. 335-2153, after 6. 1 GIBSON ECHO CHAMBER* ONLY usad few times, $175. FE 4-8005. GOLD CONN TROMBONE, 8100. IVb years old. 391-2063. GREfsdH GUITAR ANDAMP 377Vi S. Edith St. JOHN COPEMAN-r-SAND GRAVEL, bull ddzlng, end loading. FI 5- , 1081. 1 GOOD USED ACCORDIAN 152-2098 PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP-ply. Sand gravtl fill dirt. OR 3- j 1534. . 1 GUITAR WITH REVERBERATOR. Amp., books, strap, case. 673-0433. HOLTON PROFESSIONAL TRUM-iMt and case, nice. 8125. UL 2-3833. IVlRS POND WALNUT CONSOLE piano, 1964 modol. Llko new for only 1575. ! MORRIS MUSIC 124 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 2-OS67I , Across from Tel-Huron IF YOU WANT TO SELL YOUR' PIANO? i CALL MR. WOOD—AT GRINNELL'S | FE 3-7168 i KALAMAZOO BASS AMPLIFIER"-1 excellent condition, will talk terms - OR >2815. NEW CONN TRUMnPET, VERY reasonable. 6824)716. SCREENED TOP SOIL, WHOLE-sale and retail. Loading 6 days a week. 625-2175 Or_625-5470. TOP SOIL, ROAD GRAVEL. FILL sand and dirt, delivered. FE 2-1485. ’ WHITE LIMESTONE, CR U S HE 6 and 10-A stone, road gravel, mason sand, fill sand and topsoil ; i American Stone Products. MA!1 i Wood-Coal-Coke-Fuel 77 CORD WOOD 815, DELIVERED. 67> 3609 or 612-7311. SEASONED FIREPLACiT WOOD ~ $18 a cord. 335-3744. NEW CONSOLE' PIANO, WALNUT with bench .. .sot SMILEY BROS. MUSIC 119 N. Saginaw FE +4721 USED PIANO, CHOOSE FROM Uprights, grands spinels, and consols!. Uprights from S49. GRINNELL'S Downtown Store - Sl|gln"w WURLITZER AND r THOMAS OROkNS AND PIANO 1 NSTmjct lONIjSND INSTRUMENTS JACK HAGAN MUSIC 449 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 322-0500 0192 Ceol+y Laka Rd. 30-010 Must * Lessens 71-A ACCORDIAN, GUITAR. LESSONS Sala+Servlca, Pulanackl, OR 3JS94. Pets—Hunting Dogs 79 +A PEKINGESE, COCKERS, ST. Barqards, poodles, tropical fish, pet supplies and grooming. Uncle Charlie's Pet Shop, 696 W. Huron, 332*8515. 1-A DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC, ESTELHEIM KENNELS, 391-1S89 1-A POODLE SALON BY "ARLEEN" — FE 8-8569 1-A DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC, 810 down. JAHBIM'S KENNELS. FE 8-2538. 1-A POODLE CLIPPING, 83 UP. AKC stud service, puppies. FE 4- 4VS MONTH OLD MINIATURE SIL-‘ | var Gray poodle, >33. $52-3321. '1 AKC BEAGLE f*UFS. $35!* OTH-1 »r». Nlcal Stud t»rvloe^62$-3015 1 5 BEAUTIFUL KITTENS. L 0 N-Gt hair. 3 dusty grey, 2 black. 3 mala, 2 tomato. Call FE 5-4047 or 54 Edison, altar 4 p.m. ORGAN ANO PIANO LESSONS. Popular and theory, any age. *7+ 1430. ABYSSINIAN CAT, SISB. PERSIAN,* 1 yaar, ertam, $50. Sail or trada. Siamese at stud. FE +1793. PIANO LESSONS Pontlea Music . OT414) AKC ►oiNt'ER, GOOD HUNTER, sail or swap for hunting rlfla. +2+ PIANO LESSONS. ffXPB«TEf4C¥D istchsr Near hams Or mine. Wetor-tord - Drayton area. 332+741. 415$. - . t AKC ltfcMALE DACHSHUND, 135. AKC poodles, $35 up. +25-2S4J. _ pOUBLE_D._673-7657___ Open M....... F..... , ____Sat., 9 to 6, Closed Sundays N. TRAVEL TRAILERS jj . Your dealer for— L LAYTON, CORSAIR je ROBINHOOD, TALLY HO -r 20 new and used trailers In stock I _|ALSO CORSAIR PICK-UP CAMPERS! K ’ NEW SERVICE DEPT. | servlet. 723-0430.______ Town & Country Mobile Homes MAKE RESERVATIONS FOR winter storage and motor tune-ups. HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS 1899 S. Telegraph FE 2-8033 WANTED — TRAILER TO CARRY j Airplanes P A A APPROVED SCHOOL — LET Offers Fall . Clearance Sale w™*** car»-Track» Hay—Grain—Feed 84 )ND CUTTING ALFALFA HAY by the ton or bait) also, straw. ist be moved at once. 628-3863. Farm Produce 86 50 LBS. NO. 1 POTATOES, $1.29. OWN DELICIOUS, 1967—12'x60' Bahama 1967—12'x60' Bahama . Farm Equipment 87 j 13 -HORSEPOWER CRAFTSMAN r blade and snowplow. Exc. 2132. BACK HOE AND LOADE^T"CASE W-3 diesel, excellent condition. $3,300. 887-5868.________ CLARK'S TRACTORS ANO MA-chinary. 100 used tractors, loaders, dozers, backhoes and ------- Between Holly end Fent< 9-9376^ ' _ JOHN DEERE AND NEW IDEA parts galore. .Ybur^HomflH^ ‘ CO., Ortonvil TROTWOOD BIG IN SAFETY — COMFORT — ECONOMY — INDEPENDENT Wheel suspension JOHNSON'S Welton at Joslyn FE 4-0410 PE 4-5853 r^lWE CAliRY THE FfORbUS Franklins—Crees Fans—Monitor ThunderBird, . Ritz-Craft Travel Trailers Skamper and PleasureMate Campers—7 & 8 Sleepers Holly Travel Coach 15210 Helly Rd. Hally, ME +6771 Open Pally and Sundays — w6lverInB TRUck campers 1967—12'x6. _ 1967—!2/x60' Suncral _ _„J, 8395 I, Intercoms ladddri up'. Also rental) telescoping, but_______ racks. Lowry Camper ___________ ____ S. Hospital Rd., Union Laka. EM 3-3681. Spare tire carriers.________ YOU HAD BETtER LOOK AT THIS 10 ft. pickup camper, like I slightly damaged but greatly n duced 3-bedroom Bahama. , ALSO FEATURING THE 12'x50' HOMECRAFT AT $3,995 DELIVERED AND SET UP TELEGRAPH AT DIXIE HIGHWAY.! 33+6694 _____> , ■ Rent Trailer Space . . 90 ADULTS ONLY, NO CHILDREN OR pets, some smell lots available. Square Lake Trailer Perk, Tele-graph Rd. FE 0-9569._____ VILLAGE GREEN MOBILE ESTATE — New end different, 2285 Brown Rd. Near 1-75 and M24. 335-0155. Auto Service 93 THIS WEEK SPECIAL, CUSTOM paint |ob, $85. Frer - gag delivery service, setl anteed. Excel Palm Orton villa. 682^0173. Motorcycles 1 — 1965 2 condition, t 'EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR that EXTRA Sharp Car I th be itt' tCh*cl1 ,h* r•,,' Averill 8 pickup and Gale -McAnnally's AUTO SALES 1304 BALDWIN :4 HELP! AND 1 — 1967 250 JUNK CARS-- WILL RAY >1300, 627-3)93. New and Used Can -106 BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Can Finance You- Just Ceil Mr. Masen er • Mr. Murphy at FE 5410! McAuime MANY NEW 1967 AND 1001 AUTO* *- —— ■“» strike won't to deal. Free MIL0SCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Small Ad—Big Lot 50 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM Wt^ buy or wHI adjust yeur paw 3427 after 6 p.m. O^ca^O™ 1966 ELCAMINO, S1M0 up. Exc. condition. 1968 GMC i-Ton Pickup Heater, defrosters, backup lights, seat belts and retractors, 2-speed wipers, washers, padded dash and 2 padded visors, emergency flasher lights, directional signals, 2 outside rear-view mirrors, full rear width windpw. * $1955 including all taxes PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER GMC Factory Branch Oakland dt Cass FE 5-9485 New 1967 Jeep Universal New 1967 Jeepster Convf. New 1967 Jeep CJ5, V-6 BEFORE YOU BUY-GIVE US A TRY ONTIAC'S ONLY AUTHORIZEI JEEP DEALER Immediate Delivery Financing Arranged GRIMALDI CAR COMPANY 900 Oakland Ave.____Ft 59421 LARGE SELECTION - NEW AND USED PICKUPS AT JACK LONG FORD, R0CH- ESTER, 0L 1-9711, ONLY 4 LEFT ion 5 San. 664-4511. MpeCw VW CENTER 85 To Choose From -All Models-—All Colors— —All Reconditioned— Autobahn Authorized VW Dealer $ I11* Not*) of Miracle Mila 15 S. Telegraph ■ FE 1-4531 la lass axpanslva c< NEED A CAR? GOT A PROBLEM? BEEN BANKRUPT? DIVORCED? GARNISHEED? REPOSSESSED? NEW IN THE AREA? Call Mr. White at FE 84080. King. NEW FINANCE PUN. IF PROBLEMS, BANKRUPT, OR GARNISHEED WAGES, WE CAN GET YOUR CREDIT REESTABLISHED AGAIN. WE HAVE OVER 80 CARS THAT CAN BE PURCHASED WITH NO DOWN PAYMENT. COME IN AND SEE CREDIT MGR. MR. IRV. LUCKY AUTO 1940'W. Wide Track ------> er Fe 3-7354 1961 BUICK STATION WAG6n — CHEVROLET, 1963 BUICK LESABRE +OOOA AU-TOMATIC, power, air conditioning, 3995 at MIKE SAVOIE CHIVRO-LET, Birmingham. Ml +2735 1963 BUICK 2-DOOR HARDTOP. B war steering, fur ihlto lop, >1,195 at I CHEVROLET, Blr- MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRG mlngham. Ml +3738. 1963 BUICK CONVERTIBLE. NEW tap and valve lab, 3550. 1030 Mon-ica-Pontlac. 1963 BUICK WILDCAT CONVERTI-- la with automatic transmission, ill power, needs a little body >ork. 1666 full price, Mt down, nd 126.30 par month. John -McAuliffo Ford 630 Oakland Ava,_______FE 56101 WOULD YOU BELIEVE' NO GIMMICKS — NO GIVEAWAYS 1964 Bulck Wildcat 1961 Mercury Cm. 1961 Plymouth w models to choose fr 1964 BUICK LESABRE StAtTON wagon. A golden beauty. All vinyl western trim, air conditioning — power steering end brakes, automatic. Must be seen to be eppre- SPECIAL $1875 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP EM 3-4155 er____EM_3-4I54! Special 1963 GMC Vi Ton Pickup 1962 FORD 8 ft. Wideside GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 SUICK. 1965. +DOOR ELECTRA hardtop, looks and runs like new. Want a bargain? Call Ml 44)211 attar 5 p.m. _ NEWEST DEALER IN FONT I AC Vandeputte BUICK-OPEL 196-210 Orchard Lake ___FE 2-9165________ 1966 BUICK !lactra 4-door hardtop, full power# *°r#n,y' $2688 Fischer Buick Auto Insurance Mnrine 104 Quality Automobile Risk insurance and ' low cost auto ins. For good drivers. BUDGET PAYMENTS. BRUMMETT AGENCY ■id# Mil# ________FE +Q539 Foreign Cars 105 1956 VW, NEARLY REBUILD, EN-gine rebuilt, new brake lining and clutch, good body, neods a frland to finish. 332-1144. 1957 AUSTIN HEALEY CONvEfcTI-with Ford angint. 8200. FE I 852-1703 f 1 8 to i . DAVIS MACHINERY!" “ ■ 7-3»2- I 300 sharp Cadillacs, Porv Ids and Buicks for out-of-irket. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES ^ _____mpemusp fe 53279.__________________________*?_***$?-_ ■___________pe 53325, furnace cleaned. Moving 1»*4 YAMAHA, 250 CC, LOW MILE.jyop $ "for CLEAN CARS OR,, --------------------1 _________________ I trucks. Economy Cars. 2335 Dixie. 150. ALSO 1966 $250. Save ~ II Berry's. 363-6739. |. blade $450 651-1196I-ALPTNE~V0)&~S2JB0-AFTER 1965 BONNEVILLE, 650 “ Diaae, S4jb. ts) ( 27i0 s Hickory Rldgt, Milford, I CC T120R. $659. 67+0293. - W. Hllghland Trailer Pk. No. 112. 19*4 HONDA 160 SCRAMBLER,. 11964 MARLETT6. lO'XSO',' 2-BED-; make offer. FE +5956. _ ■I roam. Completely turn. Barbecue 1966 HONDA 305 SCRAMBLER, 1500 1. Mac 15 with IS In. bar a iain. ONLY $99.95 KING BROS. 4-1662 FE 44)5 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke Rd. _____Call 628-1212. 1964 CRANBROOK MOBILE HOME $150 down taka over payments. 10 X 50, Inquire at Kmma Trailer Park, lot 46. Travel Trailers $$$$r • Aug. Clearance Sale Phoenix convertible campers, Wl nabago and Phoenix pick-up cam ers, 16', 17', 19' vacation trailer Pick-up covers. REESE AND ORAW-TITE HITCHES Sold aod Installed HOWLAND SALES AND RENTALS ■3255 Dixies HWy. • , OR 3-1456 ___________$$$$$___________ f0' CAB OVERT RUCK CAMPEft,i $795. 1880 N. Baldwin Rd., 628-158/ 1 iO’/a' WINNEBAGO C AMP E 8 sleeps 6, self contained, * ■ PARKWODD 12x56', LIKE NEW, $3,700. Call 335-7692. 1965 BAftON. 10x49t $2300 OR RWf — '•‘ ‘ * “ FE 4-7566. it offer. 335-0 1966 HONDA DREAM, EXTRAS. I $350. 4899 Irwindale Dr. Pontiac 338-3432. 1966 NORtON, 750CC ______________363-2127 _ 1967 TRIUMPH fR6. HIGH RlSei BEST MOBILE HOME SALES OPEN DAILY 12 NOON TO 9 P.M. SEE THE ALL NEW MARLETTE AND CHAMPIONS. ^ Numerous floor plen$ and ln< Including 2 and 3 bedroom PANDOS. - 620 Highland Rd. (M59, 2 West of Williams J-k., Rd.) On Display at: jCranberry Laka Mobile COUNTRY CLUB LIVING A , BIST" 363-5296 HONDA IN LAPEER .FULL SELECTION OF BIKES, parts, accessories, small lown tfcai-ar with friendly parsonnaL 664-8872. OWNER TRANSFERRED, MUST sell 1966 Super Her* “ ^ “z* 682-0630. SALE! I SALE! STOP HERE LAST M&M MOTOR SALES Now at our new location '• pay more for sharp, late mod l cars. Corvettes needed. 1150 Oakland at Viaduct 338-9261_ “TOP DOIIAR PAID" GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CARS 952 W. Huron St. 1959 VW, f NEW TIRES, 1,000 miles on rebuilt engine. Now brakat, battory, and .front and. Just palntad, good ahap*. 0425. 33+1342._____^ 1964 VW 2-DOOR, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS, FULL PRICE -$895. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Atsume weakly payments of $8.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7500. 64 TRIUMPH CONVERTIBLE with yellow finish, black tnfiJ blacK vinyl Interior, bucket sea 4-spaad transmission, white* tires, radio, real low mileage, sharp, ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP,! ___Union Lake, EM 3-4155.___ 1944 Vw7 RADIO, NEW TIRES, dutch, generator $150. Call 473-7453.____________________________ staarlng. 1 Beautiful matching priCe, fl _jrre beige with Interior. 82,288 full LATE MODEL CADILLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME INDIAN SUMMER Special 19+4 Cadillac canvartlbla, full p turqualta with a whlta top. —try sharp officials car. No n 1967 CADILUC •rdtop coupe with 11,000 actual miles, new car warranty, I veer-g-------------------- down. WE TRADE. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 0 Oakland______FE 5-9421 MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735 i9<+ Cadillac.sedan devill^. warranty, pertoct at itnd campar tpadal. HOMER HIGHT MOTOR SALES PPM jnd only 13,600 private, $3,975. Ml 4-3111. CHEVY 327 CUBIC INCH, POW- SAVOIE' CHEVROLET, ~Blrmln(h 19+4 FIAT CONVERTIBLE 31395 at MIKE SAVOIE CHfyROLBT^ta mlngham. Ml +2735. i9M vw. Like new, radio — whltowalls, >1,295. OR 3-7297, ill used motorcyclas mark,, down’ W» WOUld like tO buy late fN&ERSo'tTsALES I'sERVKE^I m<>del GM Cars 6r Will OC-1aito*i«ak!YPpiynton?|5d'slfl.9? ' -------- ■■ ............... cept trade-downs. Stop by “ “ ~ — “ — today. mounts, Florida car, dean, over 8800 Invested. Beet offer over 8300. Cell Rick, 623-8327. 195S CHEVROLET I DR. +CYLi4. tti stick. ADKINS AUTO 731 Oakland Ava." , Fe 2-423+ inf' cheYY v-g HAiibToP. 33> 7542 Rtoglns Dealer. 19+2 C6RVAIR. >125. 19*9 8IMCA, tx. 195+ Pontiac, $25. Attar I, 3*3- old. 67+2413. AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS ’ Sine* 1932 Guarantaad tor Ilf*. CHECK OUR PRICES DelUxe 60'xl2' 2 bedrooms. Miller gun^ furnace, carpeting, panorama SUZUKI CYCLES GREATLY RE-duced. 50CC-250CC. Rupp Mini bikes. Cycle accessories. Take M59I to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge Rd. to Demoode Rd. Left' aruf follow signs to DAWSON'S i SALES TO TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 629-8179. FISCHER TURNER See tham and gat a demonstration at Warnar Traitor Satoi. 3091 W. Huron (plan to- loin on* of Wally Byam’s exciting caravans). tras. Reduced to low*prlce<of Ur 995. r WATERFORD MOBILE HOME BUICK FORD, INC.' 464 S. WOODWARD AVI. BIRMINGHAM Ml >7508 6 R Ao ley camper: pickup slaapars and covari. 3259 Saabaldt, Drayton Plains. OR 3+52$. <211 Highland Rd. (Across from airport) <7+3400 VaMaha'' REAPJXwA-tALIP6A* nle, 350 CC. CZ Mato, 2S0 CC. All good condition. 731- 1944, Utica. 1 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 1947 tRIUMPH W MAfck 1 CON-1 vartlbto. Graan wlm Mack top. Wlra wha.il, Claan, $2,350. *2+523+ 1 1940 CHEVY 9-PASSENGER, $95. Sava Auto, FE 5-3271. 1941 CHEVROLET GREENBRIER 9-pattangar Van, automatic transmission, radio, heater, roar seat speaker. W9st Coast mirrors, whitewall tires, tutone grata finish and priced to s*n. 'ROSE • RAMBLER. Union Lake, EM 3- 4155. __________ 142 CHEVY V4 IMPALA HARD-top, vary nice — 333-7542 — Rig- Bins' Dealer. ___ TOM RADEMAOHER I. D—6 THB PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 I Can 106 I CHEVY | NOTATION WAGON, white finish; standard dim whitewall, tires, real share and priced to'ssHTrOSE RAMBLER, Union Lake. EM *4155. 1962 CORVAIR 4-DOOR, RADIO, heater, whitewalls, $445 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, M------------ ham. MI 4-3935. DOR IMPALA r steen Ight blue, ring, bra ikes, i feY OWNER, 1963 4 DOOR BEL ^Alr, 1 owner. $525. 335-7900. 1963 IMPALA CONVERTIBLE, 8 AUTOMATIC, power steering, $1. 095 at' MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO-LET. Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. STATION MSHIm— .'oom? Here Six-cylinder, stick shift for 1963 CORVAIR SPYDER, EXCEL-lent condition **** out. •v«rv. thing except ’ be seen to 332-6097. loning, n elated. $ TOM RADEMACHER Chevy-Olds 1963 "CHEVROLET IMPALA 4-door V-8. automatic, power steering and brakes, whitewalls, air conditioned, new car tradp, $1,095 on US10 at M|i|t rimlrstnn fin 1*43 CHEVY BEL. AIR STATION wagon, power steering — b"4"*-V-8, stick, $675. By owner. 2384. _______________, 1965 IMPALA 2-DOQR HARDTOP, 8 AUTOMATIC, power steering, $1595 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735. 1963 IMPALA WAGON V-8 engine, power steering, white-wall tires, radio, baby blue, white top. $995. OAKLAND OHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland A»e.____FE 5-9434 1953 CHEVROLET CLUB COUPE, J I ‘ , power steering Mi n, $75. 563-5124._ I CHEVROLET 2DOOR WITH automatic transmission.. . heater, d-cyllnder engine, buy today. Only $788 full p SIS down and *30.98 per m John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ava. FE 5-4101 1964 CHEVELLE 4-DOOR AUTO-matlc, radio, haater, $1195 e* MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Bli 1*44 CHEVELLE CONVERTIBLE. - Ml 4-2735.___________________________ tHEVY 1944 2-HOOR BLACK. POW-er steering, -adlo, snow tires, fine ■WHIR............JO. Owner, 682-2552. 1944 CHEVY 4, PERFECT CONDI-tlon, $900. Call 623-1317, 1964 CHEVY IMPALA. £ L E A Kentucky car, 394001 $■ TOM RADEMACHER Chevy^Ok*-1944 CHEVROLET 4 cylinder standarc . power etaerlng, radio. Ideal family car $995 i.. Ml 5 Clarkston. MA 5-5017. 1*44 IMPBLA WAGON, I AUTO- jfi--------‘ erlng *1)95 at EVROLET----- SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr if and Us«d Cart 106 1964 IMPALA 4-DOOR HARDTOP. AUTOMATIC wtthgowbr* air conditioned, $1495 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET# Birmingham. ,t IMS CdkVAIR 2-DOOR HARDTOP, $1195 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO-LET, Birmingham. Ml 4-27M. 1965 MALIBU 2-DOOR HARDTOP, * -utomatic, power steering,. $1,-at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO-r, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735. ON, automatic power steering $1495 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO-LET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. 1965 CORVAIR 2-DOOR HAROtOP, 1967 Chevrolet Demos 14 to choose from All models and equipment «.ve $i,ooo BILL FOX CHEVROLET Rochester____ OL -1-7880 966 MONZA 2-DOOR kAftDTOP — automatic, $1,545 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track AL HAN0UTE re 3 • doer hardtop, me-vinyl top, I automatic, POw«r wearing and brakes, radio, neater, whitewalls, j On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 1M* IMPALA, VINYL tOP, POW- er steering, standard shift -*- tape, 363-3355, Mtwaan 4 1945 MONZA CONVERTIBLE, AU TOMATIC, radio, heater, $l,29s at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr-mlngham. Ml 4-3735.________ 1966 CHEVY ___ -jtomatlc, radio, hash whitewalls, lull’ price S139J only L. -own and weekly-payments of $10.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM___Ml 4-7500 Truly ■ classic. $3400 full price) SIM down end M3.7S par month. John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Avo.________FE 5-4101 1966 CHRYSLER NEWPORT V-l, automatic, mlmf- radio. $2295. OAKLAND CHRYSLE R-PL YMOUTH 724 Oakland Ava. *■ ■■ 1966 CHEVY Super Sport Convertible with automatic transmission, Vf angina, ----- 1962 DODGE sanger wagon, 0<ylln4er, .... c vrith power. Ideal tor hunting Only — $495 ' BIRMINGHAN Chrysler-Plymouth 860 S. Woodward_____ Ml 7-3214 t finish v i beautiful i Interior......... „ price: S497 with 05.00 down, 1 year warranty. - ASK FOR; Mr. Smith DOWNEY 0LDSM0BILE 3400 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 338-0331 3324HQ1 KESSLER'S DODGE CARS AND TRUCKS Salas and Service Oxford oa 8-1400 1918 FORD STATION WAGON. *75. For parts, 391-3134. stereo radio, S now tiros. 1 ol... “ St selL SUPO- Cell 335-7573. 1947 IMPALA COUPE. 327, HYDRA- 1947 CHEVY BELAIR, 4 PASSEN-SPORT, 1961 FORD AUTOMATIC V-8, door, looks and runs Ilk* n 8495. FE 4-Q412. ___________ 1962 FORD 2-DOOR V8, AUTOMAT-1C TRANSMISSION, POWER STEERING, PULL PRICE: $995. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN — Assume weakly payments of $5.95. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Porks «t HAF'" fi BUBfifiM FORD, Ml 4-7500. mm 1961 MERCURY MONTEREY Moor hardtop. Power itaerlng and brakaa, radio, heator, automatic *193 with *2.18 weakly payments. gfflM 1963 CHEVROLET IMPALA Moor hardtop. Blua with matching Intarlor. Full powar, radio, heater, whitewalls. $39* with *5,27 wtokly payments. 1961 PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE Moor hardtop. Sahara brown with white tap, power steering and brakaa, radio, heater, v-e, automatic *193 with 32.10 weakly payments. 1962 CHEVROLET IMPALA 9-passenger wagon.' V-l, automatic radio, hooter, white-walls. Mint green with match-Ing Interior. 1495 with I4J7 weekly payments. 1964 COMET 4 cylinder automatic radio, hooter, whitewalls. +door. Jet Mack. A real economy car. MfS^wtlh *4.27 weakly pay- 1962 GMC Wton. V-4,' stick, pickup. A real workhorse at *295 with *2.7* weekly payments. 1964 STUDEBAKER Skyllner, 4 cylinder, automatic groan. *29* with $2.79 weakly payments. 1963 BUICK LeSABRE 4-door hardtop. Full powar, one owner. Silver blua. Radio, huh ar, whitewalls. *7*1 with *3.41 weekly payments. As Low As $5 Down j - Payments Arranged to Fit Your Budget 1 Immediate delivery. Courtesy car will pick you up. Over 100 cars to chooaa from. Wo accept trade-ins and handle the financing. If you've bean bankrupt, garnisheed, repossessed, tea us. M59 AND ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD FE 84088 There's a Lot Riding With You! ' Every time you ride in your car, you have a lot riding 1 with you. It may be getting to work on time, it may be arriving at your destination refreshed and looking 1 your best, or it may be the .staple enjoyment of a drive in the country. But always! riding with you is your own personal safety and (the safety of your passengers. That's why it is so important that you drive a. safe, dependable car . . . the kind you get with a WILSON-CRISSMAN trade. ■ i 1967 Cadillac Coupe DeVille, spotless sedan, black vinyl roof, block leather interior, full power, air-conditioned, absolutely like new. 1966 Cadillac j Coupe DeVille, Hampton Blue, black roof and in-terior. Full power, air-conditioned, very, very sharp. 1965 Cadillac Sedan DeVille, one Bloomfield Hills owner, full power, 6 way seat, air-conditioned, vinyl roof. Traded on a 1968 Eldorado. Extra nice. 1966 Cadillac ! Hardtop sedan, blue matching trim, power steering, windows and ! brakes, almost new rub- i her. Special reduced i price. mmern mmmsr CADILLAC of Birmingham Ask for Rich Kroll * 1850 NORTH WOODWARD PHONE Ml 4-1930 I Cm 106 New «md Used Cars 106 NOW Is The TIME To Save On A New Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 I WAGON mPMcai con-*-- Attar S tom. lardtop. V-e angina. Auto. Full HlBM "*0. EM $2425. MARMADUKE 1965 T BIRD Landau, alr-condittonad, powe equipped, radio, heater, whitewall automatic, full price *3395 with onl *49 down and weekly payments i HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM__Ml 4-731 >r gold ’ W-peck finish, bleck nylon n OT deluxe Mam on sole, 4 sp___________ -■ - mra wheel covers, real sharp. Original pwner. *1995, EM The Pick of Our Used Car Lot New and Usad Cars 194 BONNEVILL 'Shrctorv air automatic, power' steering and brakaa, radio. Heetor, whlti Only 1944 CHEVROLET 1963 OLDS "88" Hat power brakaa and power steering, radio and .heater, auto-mafltc transmission, 1 owner beauty. Full price 1497 with $5.00 down and 1-ySor warranty. ASK FOR: Mr. Smith DOWNEY OLDSMOBILE • 1944 CATALINA WAGON $1044 ,.i4 PLYMOUTH two door V-t, automatic, radio, ■Mlrr, whitewalls. Only 1043 FALCN 2-DOOR, STICK . 0295. COOPER'S Extra Clean Used Cars 4278 Dixie Drayton Plain Opan 9 to 9 dally 474-223 r, whitewalls, full prl I _______toly no money oow... uma weakly payments of SS:44 I credit Mar. Mr. Parks, at •old Turner Ford, Ml 4-7300. BIRMINGHAM_ FORD 1943 GALAXIE, AUTO, RA--B, heater. 391-3344,________________ 1917 to U S t A N O CONVERTIBLE with beautiful Metallic llmegold finish with black nylon top. V-8 1963 Ford Fairlane 2-door, 6-cylln- ton. MA 5-5071. 1963 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN Marla m 1M3FORD FAIRLANE, 2-DOOR LUCKY AUTO to w. w i Track I - SUP .. FE 3-7854 1963 THUNbERBIRD, WHITE WITH rad Interior, very iow ml. 67*3681. TOM RADEMACHER Chevy-Olds 1964 THUNDERBIRD 1964 FORD wagon, radio, heater, 8 cyl-with power, very $995 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth S. Woodward 1964 FORD Country Squire ______|___|_____• steering, to price 1395, with $100 down ar 1 year warranty. ASK FOR Mr. Smith DOWNEY OLDSM0BILE 3400 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 338-033T 332-810 II eccsasOries. OR 1C TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS, FULL PRICE: SS95. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weakly payments of 17.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parkl at HAROLD INDIAN SUMMER Special 1943 Ford Goloxle convertible, 1 ------ V# automatic, whltawalla. auty 814*3. JACK LONG FORD golden beauty w Interior. Full p whitewall tirw, M,393. HMisfia HI coln-Mercury, 1230 Oakland, 333- HAUPT PONTIAC On MIS at 1-75 llarkston_ MA M500 1966 COUNTRY Squire, 10 passenger, power equipped automatic transmlsalen, radio, heater, whltawalla, full price *2393, onl *49 down and weakly payments < "HAROLD TURNER Pretty Ponies 1965 & 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE FROft^ CONVERTIBLES HARDT0PS FULL EQUIPMENT Priced From $1295 As Low As $39 Down ‘ And $39 Per Month HAROLD TURNER 1967 PLYMOUTH V.I.P. Factory official car, 44 gins, radio, hooter, automatic, BIRMINGHAM ......... Mr4-7300 Rf*1r'..l111 ****!: .b,u^undy 1947 THUNDERBIRD LANDAU DE- By Anderson and Leeming Hew md Used Cm INi 1966 PONTIAC Catalina 2-door hardtop, full I 1946 PONTIAC GOLD VENTURA, . door hardtop, power, t-----H 950. call M4m. 1964 2 DOOR BONNEVILLE HARD-toto Burgundy with parchmant Interior trim. Deluxe equipped. Low OrTSi 34.R***°n*bly prhtod. Call 19« 4-DOM IWNNEViLLE HARD- INDIAN SUMMER ~ SpeCim 1944 Pontiac Catalina convertible, |j||n -lower, automatic, whltawalla, a sharp car *2195. JACK LONG FORD OL 1-7000 “What happens if he’s unclaimed for 30 days?” 1943 PONTIAC CATALINA. AUTO-matlc, radio, -— Ing, decor gri.„ *795. HIIIsM* Llncoln-Marcury, 1250 Oakland, 333-7043. 1964 0LDSM0BILE Vista Cruiser 9-paissnger station wagon with full power, 1 owner, radio, heater, whitewall tires, full price, *1,495, with no money down, I year warranty. ASK FOR: Mr. Smith .. DOWNEY 0LDSM0BILE 3400 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 338-0331____________332-8101 1963 TEMPEST LeMANS 2 - .door, V-0, automatic, rad.., whitewalls, bucket seats, real nice M95. OAKLAND l CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 7*4 Oakland Avenue_FE 5-9436 1963 PONTIAC, 4-DOOR HARDTOP, auto., power steering, brakes, *197 full price No money down. LUCKY AUTC 1940 W. wide Track TOM RADEMACHER Chevy-olds. 1944 OLDS Cutlass Supreme 2-door hardtop, V-0 automatic. Power steering ana brakes, radio, hooter, whitewalls. In new car warranty, *3.095 on US 10 AT MIS, Clarkaton New Faces—New Policies KEEGO PONTIAC-GMC TRUCKS Orchard Lake 4027300 1964 PONTIAC Bonneville Hardtop with new tires, ^^ajKmmift power ttoanNIPQP , automatic transmls- MERRY OLDSMOBILE *38 N. Main ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN OLDSMOBILE 90 4-DOOR HOL-Iday. beautful metallic gold with block nylon 338-0331 1959 PLYMOUTY 2-DOOR HARD-TOP, AUTOMATIC, FULL PRICE *140. . COOPER'S Extra Clean Used Cars 4270 Dixie Drayton Plaint 0 to 0 dolly______474-2257 1964 BARRACUDA FASTBACK V-8, 4 speed, radio, whil i, must be seen. *1,095. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland A»a.____FE 5-9436 1944 VALIANT TWO-DOOR, AUTO-matic, radio, hooter, MpmliMll Ideal second car, $995J MM Llncoln-Marcury, 1250 Oakland — low mi "|£o95 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth hixa. Ml *............... FE 40540 or 3424140. , 33595. !-W.O. vinyl top — save *1,200. BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 040 *■ Woodward________Ml 7-3214 NEW AND USED JEEPS PARTS AND SERVICE PETERSON AND SONS JEEP LAPEER 664-4511 144 4 DOOR LINCLON CON-tlnental, 0,000 ml. SM30, Call Mr. Brewer, FE 43111 ar Ivaa. 402 2073,_______________ 942 MERCURY MITfeOR PER-tact condition, priced right, 4 North Saginaw. Pontiac. 94* MERCURY PARKLANK 4 door hardtop. Factory air, full power. Locally owned. A one-owner beauty- *u It. f1.79S, Hillside Llncoln-Marcury, 1230 Oakland — 3327842, 1944 MERCURY PARKLANB CON---. All rad with rad vinyl In-Automatlc, power etaerlng — tumjTE 1230 Ooklond, 332 kept beauty, coln-Mercury, 1967 MERCURY MONTCLAIR. AU-tomatlc, power steering, power brakaa. Black vinyl root, save hundreds, new car warranty, 32,493, Hillside Llncoln-Marcury, 1230 Oak-land, 3327043. 1967 MERCURY Colony Park 10-passenger, factory- t, power w lectrlc aye, matching Interior, Ilka new. BOB BORST LINCOLN-MERCU-RY Salas, 479 S. Woodward. Ml 4-4534 BIRMINGHAM. Chrysler - Plymouth - Jeep Rambler Oakland County's Fastest Growing Dealer 1966 Scout Itatlon wagon, Awhaol drive, 4spaed, radio, hs-torv only— $2095 1967 Chrysler Now Yorker 4Door, full power equipped, 4,088 actual mlloa. $3495 '62 Plymouth Italian wagon, full malic. Vary clean. $695 1967 Chrysler Newport. 2door hardtop, air conditioning. Ml power. 4,088 actual mllae. $2895 1961 Chevy Wton pickup. 8 cylinder, spa dal of the day) * $295 15 4-WHEEL DRIVE Sam* have winenas, prows, and other ecceetones. Reedy to work—ee law so-’ $495 ON DIXIE HWY.-NEAR M15 CLARKSTON MA 5-2635 t PONTIAC CATALI NX SYaT ION consola full price *397. "Buy hare — save herb" Marvel Motors FE 8-4079 $5 DOWN SALE' 1942 Bonneville Convertible 1961 CheVy Wagon Auto. . 1942 Plymouth Fury ...... 1940 Chevrolet Impala .... 1942 Ford Convertible ... 1841 Chevrolet Impala ___ 1941 Pontiac 2 dr. IMS Tempest ------ •‘W Chevy . II Otds .. 1*37 Cadillac ........ 1943 Pontjgc-Xonvertll | India alW arri 312 W. Montcalm DIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS — FULL PRICE: *493. ABSOLUTE LY NO MONEY DOWN. Assurra OLD TURNER FORD# Ml 4-7388. at MIKE SAVC r steering $995 Birmingham. Ml *2735. 1967 PONTIAC CATALiNA 2-door hardtop, V-l, automatic double power, air conditioned. 9, 808 miles. *2995. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 724 Oakland Ava.____FE 29434 1967 BONNEVILLE, 2 DOOR HARD-top coupe. White exterior and In-; terlor. Balck Cordova top. Hydra-matlc. Power brakaa. steering windows. *24*0. Call after 6:30 1947 GRAND PRIX. VINYL TOP. I Double power. Alr-condittoning. « 080 ml. FE 28411 t* ■«. Ganaaaa. ! 1*47 PONTIAC CATALINA HARD-i top, loaded, 325*0. Low mileage. OR 3-4871 alter 4. irranty. 944 PONTIAC CATmLINA. 2-DOOR hardtop. Auto. Power steering -power brakes, radio, 39,080 mllot. Like now. Owner, 81,24*. 447-1390. 1941 Rambler wagon ....... 1961 Chevy straight ...... 1943 Pontiac power nice *■■'“ trucks — small foreign ECONOMY CARS 3335 Dixie Highway ORIGINAL OWNER, 1944 PONTIAC Catalina 4-door ar1— 1962 rambler American, good tranaportatton. 3328144 ext. 343, *'~ Mono. ________ 1944 RAMBLER WAGON 4-DOOR, radio, heater, 3495 at MI K EI SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blrmlng- »l 4-273*. Clarkaton. 6222035. 1945 PONTIAC CHIEF, 3 bedrooms, sot up, gas lx Immediate occupancy. $3,000. < 334-7494 bat. 4-7 p.m._____ exceptionally fine condition. Electric windows, radio, tinted gloss, power brakes and steering. Call Sat. after 5. FE 27*43. ring and brakes, radio, hooter. $1695 HILLSIDE UNCOLN-MERCURY 1230 OtKIand__________33*7883 hardtop, V-8, automatic, i 1965 MUSTANG convartlbla, tl IMS FORD CORTINA two door, i 1M3 PONTIAC Catalina, h HASKINS FACTORY AIR CONDITIONING 1*45 Pontiac Bennavllla 4-door \ ----- ■—udlng vent leather Intel wan to be appreciated) real quality, real reasonable. GRIMALDI CAR CO. F« 2*421 1*43 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-vertible, automatic, with po' or, $u*5 at MIKE SAVOIE CHE ROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. THE PICK OF 47 NEW '67s AND DEMONSTRATORS WITH ONLY $150 DOWN1 1967 DODGE DART two-door sedan. Night mist blue, automatic. Music-Master radio. Economy six. Whitewalls. Looks sharp. Only 1177* to finance on this demo. 1967 CORONET “440" two-door hardtop. Metallc cop-. matching trim. V-t, 1967 DODGE CORONET “440" sedan Bing dowry rad, i 1967 DODGE P0LARA tasy light group, Mueto-Maetar, radio, _______ power steering. Only 12223 to I nance on this demo. 1967 DODGE Charger two-door sport coupe. Bran .new. Fire angina rad, whll vinyl roof, white bucket sect: hlett? 1967 bODGE Charger <“t coupe, brand now Tad-turquoise, "383" IV, V-8, CAR* INCLUDE FACTORY DESTINATION CHARGE*, DEALER PREPARATION, FEDERAL BXCIM TAX. *TATE SALE* TAX ANO TITLE FEE* EXCEPTED. MAKINO FRIEND* AND PLEASING CUSTOMERS I* OUR m 855 OAKLAND AVE. i $2195 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE I FE 27*34, I dean, 11.9*3. 3385 Sraw- > TEMPEST LEMANS, AUTO- THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING Troy—Pontiac—Birmingham Area 158 Maple, across from Berz Alrpor BEATTIE FORD 1961 Chevy l-ton 'stake, 6-cylinder, 4-speed. $695 1966 Ford F250 pickup, V-8, custom cab, standard transmission. $795 - 196& Ford F250 Camper special, custom cab, V-8, radio, heater. $995 1963 ford Econoline Van, 6 cylinder, standard transmission. $595 , 1964 Ford F250 V-8 4-speed $1095 - On Dixie Hwy. in Waterford -Your Ford Dealer Since 1930 623-0900 1967 GRAND PRIX Plum mist with black vinyl top, white Interior, bucket seats, air,, double power, auto, on console-low mileage, posl-traction, reverb,' — —ndlflon.^” * | 1967 GRAND PRIX Signet gold, gold Interior, block vinyl top, power brakes, steering, 4*8 angina, alrcondtttan. other — Iras. Under coated. Low mile and prlco. Warranty, or m power, 334-8327. AM-FM, double 1*43 RAMBLER CLASSIC 2-DOORl “" ----------------- 4-cyllnC inimlssk ...-..-II tlrr priced to nww wV“ ' EM 241*3, sedan with rad finish, 4-cytlnd angina, automr"- |--------- radio, heater, real sharp anu M ROSE RAMBLER, 1965 AMBASSADOR, VI, AUTO, power steering, brakes. AM-FM radio, 21,380 ml. axe. condition. *1393: 4422183.___________ Clearance Sale FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS NEW CARS DEMOS All models fully equipped, many with air-conditioning. Ambassadors from $2,066 ALL UNDER FULL NEW CAR WARRANTY VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham I 646-3900 mmMM mm ONE-STOP TRANSPORTATION CENTER VALU-RATED USED CARS 1967 OLDS 98 ........................v....$3495 Luxury sedan. Full power, factory air. Burgundy with black vinyl fop. Only ........................... ....... 1966 OLDS 98 ............................ ..$2695 Holiday hardtop, full power, facotry air 1965 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Convertible ..................$1895 Metafile blue with matching Interior, priced to nil at 1964 PONTIAC Grand Prlx........ ................$1395 Silvdr with block vinyl top,, power steering and broke*, electric windows 1963 BUICK ........................................... $AVE Riviera. Full power. Burgundy with vinyl Interior. 1965 OLDS 88........................................$1795 2-door hardtop. Turquoln with vinyl Interior. Only 635 S. Woodward Ave. Birmingham 647-5111 -SPECIALS— 1964 BUICK $1995 1965 CHEVY - Biscay no 4-Door Sadan. 1966 PONTIAC $1595 $1095 1963 VALIANT 2-door, 4<yllndar, standard transmission, radio, heator. A perfect second car. $695 mtmw PONTIAC-RAMBLER Ask for Chuck Moriarty, Jim Barnowsky, Arnold Denison Open Doily 'til 9 P.M. On M24 in Orion 693-6266 WIDE SELECTION 4 LOADED WITH LIKE-NEW 1-OWNER TRADES I 1*47 BUICK, Riviera. Full power, tilt wheel and many other goodies. Bronzo with black vinyl top. WOWI $3993 1944 PONTIAC Bonneville 2-door hardtop, with booutltul block fln-hh with white leather trim. New car factory warranty ....... 32495 1*43 BUICK LeSabro 4-door hardtop, buutilul blue and white finish. Onoownor with 17,088 guaranteed actual mile*. *1795 1943 VALIANT 2-door aadon. Looking for soma thing nice and reasonable, too. Tnla gam has a beautiful white finish with red intarlor $1293 IM7 PONTIAC Catalina 4door hardtop, power steering and brakes, automatic, 3,300 guaranteed actual miles, now car factory warranty $2695 IMS BUICK, Wildcat 4-door hardtop. Yes, folks, IS,$00 guarantied actual miles. Wat bought hart brand new 12085 1944 CHEVY Sport Van custonrl, 3-sealer, radio: Ideal vacation apodal, on all-year-round van. *149* 1947 TEMPEST. Custom. Beautiful rad flnlah and hat black Interior. Bought right hart brand new and hat new car fadorv warranty *2395 1943 HONDA 2*0. Thto little baby hat lots and lots of "go" power Os A "whaalla" out to Shettgn't 1947 PONTIAC Bonneville 2-door hardtop, factory olr-condltloned. Silver with black vinyl tap and black leather Intarlor. Go lira* class ' *3295 1944 PONTIAC Star Chief 4-door hardtop. Buutlful white finish with rod vinyl Interior. Folks, |uat Ilk* brand new (1495 1*44 LeMANS, 2-Door Hardtop, rad with black cordova top. Automatic, 324 V-» engine. 421*3 rnsamw 194* LINCOLN Continental, factory air, full powar, local owned. Ilka brand newt Only II89S IM7 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE Brougham Hardtop. 4-door, lap-lory air, full powar. Mr. Shelton's own personal demo. Yet, folks, IFa loaded 1 Only 339*5 , 1947^ PONTIAC*. 20r. Herdtopt. we have 5 Demos., and all dttfer-??L“»mm. Auto- 1944 LINCOLN Continental hardtop. Factory elr-cond It toned, full power. Yu, talks, this on* to loaded. Sava a bundle ....*1793 1947 PONTIAC Executive Wagon, * passenger, with power steering, brakaa. automatic,'plenty ol new car factory warranty left, Otoy 1943 PONTIAC Wagon with power etaerlng and brakes, automatic. Guaranteed actual miles SIHl 1*44 LEMANS 2Door H ■ r d 10 p, Sprint, a rad beauty, gat tola on* f»«t *1*93 1944 BUICK Elactra 213 convertible. This little baby It lull of power end custom interior. 17,080 actual mHat. Go fleet clan In thle beauty 82815 WKfe cjlW Prlx. MS-roan finish with Mack vinyl ton, yl™,,!*-!*- Hat mi me Sorttoft go first claae *1*95 IMS PONTIAC Catalina 3-door hardtop. Buutlful dark Mua fin-'•hr 22,800 guarantotd actual. miles. One owner *1795 1947- PONTIAC hardtop, power tturlng and brake*, automatic, whit* with blue trim. 4,800 miles with a new car factory warranty 12785 IMS BUICK LoSebro » top. Powar attiring at automatic, buutlful and hat matching loath; door hard-id brakaa, rad finish tr interior; Pat Jarvis, Darrell, Tommy Thompson, Sales Mgr. PONTIAC-BUICK 651-5500 OPENt MONDAY and THURSDAY TILL 9 P.M. 855 S.. Rochester Rd., ’/* Mile South of Downtown Rochester THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 0, 1967 D—17 —Television Programs— Programs furnished by elation* listed in this column are subiect to change without notice Channels! 2-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WK9D-TV, 36-WTVS TONIGHT 1:00 (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports (C) (7) M o v 1 e: “Jailhouse Rock” (1957) Elvis Presley, JudyTyler. (9) Pat Boone (C) -Guests are Buddy Ebsen, Shari Lewis, Pat Carroll and the Four Freshmen. (R) (50) Flintstones (C)-The girls spend the evening at , the Bedrock Amusement Center. (R) (56) Friendly Giant 6:15 (56) Sing Hi-Sing Lo 6:39 (2) (4) Network News (C)' (50) McHale’s Navy-After Binghamton picks exotic dancer for base show, he gets word that hi* wife is coining for a visit. (R) (56) Magic DooV 7:09 (2) Truth or Consequences (C). (4) George Pierrot (C) — “Canadian Rockies” (9) Gllligan’s Island (C)— Giliigan sees a ghost. (R) (50) I Love Lucy (R) (56) Creative Person 7:30 (2) Gunsmoke (C) • (4) Monkees (C) — Peter is given job of copying an art masterpiece. (7) Cowboy in Africa (C) — Anne Baxter plays rancher who refuses to help drought-stricken natives. (9) Movie (C): “Hie Maverick Queen” (1956) Barbara Stanwyck, Barry Sullivan. (50) Perry Mason (R) (56) Legacy 6:09 (4) Man From U.N.C.L.E. (C) (56) Beyond the Earth — Characteristics of “giant’ planets are described. 8:30 (2) Lucille Ball (C) -Lucy returns to high school to get her diploma. (7) Rat Patrol (C) -Wounded German nurse is returned to German hospital at great risk to the patrol. (50) Honey mooners — Newspaperman asks Ralph who is head of his house. (R) (56) NET Journal -jj “Right of^RrfvacJ’’ examines eavesdropping and other prying tactics of business and government. 9:00 (2) Andy Griffith (C) -Keeping Opie in an exclusive boys’ camp is a strain on the Taylor household. (4) Danny Thomas (C) — Bing Crosby, in a rare dramatic appear ance, plays a fading screen star who is faced with the loss of his voice; George Ma-harls and Joan Collins co-star. (7) Felony Squad (C) — The squad seeks to prevent a gangland killing. (50) Movie: “The Swln-. die” (1955) Broderick Crawford, Richard Base-hart. 9:25 (9) News 9:30 (2) Family Affair (C) — Jody is being bullied at •school by a girl who is older. ( (7) Peyton Place (C) Betty gives up on her marriage. (9) Fights of the Century (56) French Chef 10:00 (2) Carol Burnett (C) — Guests are Imogehe Coca and Lainie Kazan. (4) I Spy (C)—Kelly and 1 Scott risk their lives to bring « child prodigy out of Bulgaria; Harold J. Stone guest-stars. (7) Big Valley (C) -James Whitmore and Susan Strasberg guest-star in psychological drama about conflict between young woman and puritanical sheriff that Involves the Barkleys. (9) Don Messer’s Jubilee TV Features COWBOY IN AFRICA, 7:30 p.m. (7) * NET JOURNAL, 8:30 p.m. (56) DANNY THOMAS, 9:00 p.m. (4) CAROL BURNETT, 10:00 p.m.-(2) I SPY, 10:00 p.m. (4) 1G VALLEY, 10:00 pm. (7) (56) Child of Darkness 10:30 (9) Front-Page Challenge (C) (56) Turn of the Century 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News, Weather, Sports (C) (9) News, Weathef, Sports (50) Lou Gordon — “I God Dead?” is debated. 11:30 (2) Movie: “The Lost Weekend” (1945) Ray Mil-land, Jane Wyman. (4) Johnny Carson (C) (7) Joey Bishop (C) (9) Movie: “Emergency" (1960) Dermot Walsh. 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) Untouchables 1:30 (2) Harry S. Truman (R) (4) News, Weather (C) (9) Window on the World TOMORROW MORNING 6:00 (4) Classroom 6:15 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News (C) 6:30 (2) Sunrise Semester -Russian Literature (C) (4) Ed Alien (C) (7) Treasure (C) 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman to (4) Today (C) . (7) Morning Show (C) 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (C) (9) Barney Boomer 8:30. (7) Movie: “Woman Obsessed” Part 2 (1959) Answer to ProstouB Null Park 'Comes Alive' in Japan TOKYO (UPD - The concert crowd drifted in by twos and three as darkness gathered over Tama Park. It wasn’t a sellout crowd, but 300 came to sit on the grass and listen. The audience grew quiet as ke first high-pitched note sounded the opening bars. Then came clear and crisp metOllic notes. A section of the orchestra joined in with a whispering vl-bratto that swelled into a crescendo punctuated by a “tut” sound. The tympanist performed a (yell-received solo, an incredibly rapid 140-to-the-mlnute belllike tone. . ★ * * After three hours the audience began drifting away, as they came, by twos and threes. The musicians continued to play. In Japan, where beauty is in the eye and the ear of the beholder, a late-summer cricket concert Is rated high on the list of things to do for free. Book Reviewed Irving Stone’s “Those Who Love” was reviewed by Mrs. Robert Fuller at a recent meeting of the Women’s Literary Club. rs. Harry Vernon entertained the group at luncheon in her West Rundell Street home. Susan Hayward, Steven Boyd, Theodore Bikel. (9) Bonnie Prudden (C) 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (C) (4) Gypsy Rose Lee (C) (9) Bozo the Clown (C) 9:10 (56) Let’s Read 9:30 (4) PDQ (C) (7) Africa Special (C) (R) (56) American History 9:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 10:00 (4) Snap Judgment (C) (9) Hawkeye (50) Yoga for Health 10:10 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 10:25 (4) News (C) 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (C)~ (7) Dateline Hollywood (9) Communicate’ (C) (50) Carlton Fredericks (C) 10:35 (56) Children’s Hour 10:55 (7) Children’s Doctor (C) 11:00 (2) Andy of Mayberry (R) (4) Personality (C) (7) Honeymoon Race (9) William Tell (50) Dickory Doc (C) 11:05 (56) Interlude 11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R) (4) Hollywood Squares (C) (7] Family Game (9) Luncheon Date TOMORROW AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) News (C) (4) Jeopardy (C) (7) Everybody’s Talking (9) Take 30 (50) Dialing for Dollars 12:25 .(2) Tdpps In Fashion (C) 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (C) (4) Eye Guess (C) (7) Donna Reed (R) (9) Movie: “Kansas City Confidential" (1953) John Payne, Coleen Gray, Preston Foster, Neville Brand, f ‘ (50) Movie: “Smash Up" (1947) Susan Hayward, Lee Bowman, Eddie Albert. 12:35 (56) Tell Me a Story 12:45 (2) Guiding Light (C) 12:50 (56) Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News (C) 1:00 (2) Love of Life (C) (4) Match Game (C) (7) Fugitive (R) 1;10 (56) Children’s Hour 1:25 (2) News (C) (4) Carol Duvall (C) (56) Arts and Crafts 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (C) (4) Let’s Make a Deal (C) 1:55 (56) American History 2:00 (2) Love Is a Many Splen-dored Thing (C) (4) Days of Our lives (C) (7) Newlywed Game (C) 2:20 (56) Book Parade 2:30 (2) House Party (C) , (4) Doctors (C) / (7) Dream Girl (C) / (50) Topper (R) '' 2:45 (56) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7) News (C) 3:00 (2) Divorce Court (C) (4) Another World (Cl (7) General Hospital (C) (9) Matches and Mates (C) (50) Make Room for Daddy (R) (56) British Calendar 3:15 (56) Mathematics 18 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (C) (4) You Don’t Say (C) (7) Dark Shadows (9) Swingin’ Time (50) Alvin (C) 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (C) (4) Woody Woodbury (C) (7) Dating Game (C) ■ (56) Business Roundtable (Debut)—This half - hour series will present representatives of business and government examining timely aspects of economics. Today, (Gardner Ackley discusses "Economic Growth: Decline or Stability?" 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (C) , (7) News (C) (9) Bozo the Clown (C) (50) Three Stooges (R) (56) What’s New 5:00 (9) Fun House (C) (50) Little Rascals (56) Misterogers 5:30 (4) George Pierrot (C) (7) News (C) (9) Dennis the Menace (50) Superman (R) (56) TV Kindergarten UMieaiU’ kr -n™. 7—tth orwrnag^r 54 Fabulous bird “XSJHESPO »TauSe (myth.) . “eoctondo") i0Andmitw*tgM« STqawe 555*“““” , 11 Ancestor 38 Serious 19 Brasilian maciw 39 Greek letter 21 Molten rock 40 Drainage DOWN 22 Gnndptroatai 1 Rabble 24 Eyea (dUL . 41 Storebouee ___ 2 Feminine name Soot.) 42 Measures of 23 That would be 3 Newspaper 28 Detachable land a————day broadcast magazine 43 French city asT«.<«iaMeneS 4 Money (slang) advertisement 47 Feminine 5 Straw hat (Eng) (2 words) ' ' appellation SI Brew made 27 Affirmative vote 6 Stimulated Evcg.13 30 Apparitio 31 Chums Thermos Bottle Sets a Record WICHITA'; Kan. UP) — Roy Montague, an aircraft plant worker here, wonders if he set longevity record with his lunch bucket and vacuum container. He bought the tw,o, items in Tacoma, Wash., in 1928. ★ ★ The lunch bucket wore out In January of this year, but at last report Montague was still toting coffee in the vacuum container, which still .has its original glass liner. r~ ft 6 7 8 nr rr 13 14 Ift 17 9 20 21 a ■ 24 » n 2ft wmmr 3& 31 32 33 ■ r 3ft L u w is ■ ■ 45 Ift 17 4ft 50 bl 52 53 54 55 5ft 57 5ft 9 Worker to Go Daily Again? NEW YORK (AF) i- Hie Worker, the American Communist party’s newspaper, says in a 45th anniversary announce-| that it hopes to start publishing daily again next spring. The anniversary was served Sunday at the Hotel Roosevelt, with almost 1,000 persons present. The program included protest songs, and speeches. ★ ★ ★ The Worker, which has had recurring financial troubles, started as a weekly in 1922, went daily in 1924, returned to a weekly in 1958, and started publication twice a week two years Simon W. Gerson, heads the new project for daily publication, said at the birthday celebration: “We are coming back, in the same tradition and [spirit.” Indians Dig Here The name of Topeka, Kan., comes from an Indian word meaning “a fine place to dig .potatoes.” Penn Team 1st in Pizza Bowl PHILADELPHIA (AP) Teams from three colleges gobbled 260 pizzas Sunday in the first Pizza Bowl at the University of Pennsylvania. The home team won, teeth down. ★ ★ A Hie eaters—five to a team-representing Penn, Drexel Institute of Technology and Temple University, squared off in the plaza of Penn’s Student Union building. Army Maj. John 'Sturm of nearby Elkins Park won the speed contest by downing 1% of the 12-inch pizzas in 10 minutes. The 31-year-old native of Manawa, Wis., is working on masters degree in transportation at Penn’s Wharton School and expects to be assigned to Vietr nam early next year. Joel Silverman, a junior in the Wharton School from Wood-mere, N*Y., took the endurance contest by putting airay four pies between 2 p.m. and 4:45 p.m. ■ „■ ■ ■ ★ •-<- . Penn won the team endurance contest by eating 14% pies, compared to 1114 for Drexel and 7 for Temple. Held in Drug Sale KALAMAZOO (in - A 19-year-old youth was arrested at his home in Kalamazoo Sunday and charged with selling tbs chug LSD. Clifford Lester Hup-rich was arraigned in Kalamazoo Municipal Court and bond was fixed at $1,000. Examination was set for Nov. 1. AVOID GARNISHMENT gat you a solidsting____________________ payment you'can afford. No .limit to tho amount owod or number of creditors. Not a loan. Call or stop in. Debt Consultants of Pontiac, Inc. 814 Pontiao Stats Rank Udg. State Liconsad and tandad Open Sat. 9 to 12 in a Hurry? Start your Stran building TODAY! Tbit 30,000 a*, ft. baRdtaf t BURKE LUMBER CO. at 4301 Dixie Highway. Drayton Naina The modem Stran method of construction allows many time ____■ | 1 more than 2,500 basic designs. Stran building components are pro-engineered to fit right and go together faster at the building site. It It not unusual for Stran buildings to bo ready for occupancy within 60 to 90 days. We can provide this fast, officiant construction service. Call us for an estimate. Wo can start your job TODAY! NEWMYER Constriction Co. 6-1 Squirrel Rood Auburn Heights 852-3240 el FRANCHISED BUILDER Radio Programs- CKLW, News, Shennor WJBK, MUSIC, Sports WCAR, Nows. Jack Sander. WPON, News, Sport-WHO I, Unde Jey 7;oo-WWJ, News, A WCAR,NNews,SRod' WRON, News. MOO WHFI—Dinner COM rilsUtiiXYZ, Joey Reynolds, CKuMowJJ Du SitO-WHFI. British Jell WWJ, News, Carlson WJR, News, Music liSP—whfi, Aimcnec WJR, News.'Music Hell WPON, News, Bob Lawrence tiSO-WHFI, Jack..Fuller lltM-WJR, Newe, Sports, •tie-WJR. News, Sunnyslde Stie-WJR. Music Mail WPON, Arizona Woston WWJ, Ntws, Sports, Music Raws. Harris WCAR^ews. Davit TUBSDAY MORNINO •tW-WJR, Music HPH, WHFI, Unde Jay S&JMiRVpn wwj, Newi| Nddibar WWJ, Haws, Borders Ctaw. News, Bud Davies Good imT'wowiasi Chib WCAR,'News. OeUM ttSSSteifci wjbk. News, a very-WXYZ, More Avery News. Music Oodtrey WXYZ. Pat Murphy News. Music TUESDAY AFTVRNOON re 1C , Newe, Marty lilO-WWJ, .. WJR. News, CKLW, News WXYZ, Deve 3)10—WCAR, I WJBK, News Homes start at $13,900 £)/4//V<5 /7?e£AF 1 1 ^ 12’10’. Ufl Jrlm, 7 /Cjo A! Everything you could ask for is yours in a Home Built by US. Complete Financing at Low Bank Rates Available. Invest in Happiness First Floor Plan-Alternate No. 1 CALL 673-6775 First Floor Plan-Alternate No. 2 h: KTTDTT"DIWT‘' 13TTTT TYP'D C! ‘ : AUJdUJKiN dUILL/JLflo 4494 DIXIE HWY., DRA' tuition CreaME INS 1 PHONE 673-6775 f THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 Wg a lPleasure to Shtqt and Saw at 2111 Highland Rd. Hyland Plait Car. Dunk iaka Rd. , OPEN SUNDAYS IN Orehard Lk. Hd. OPEN SUNDAYS . OPEN SUNDAYS OPEN SUNDAYS Everyday Low Prices • Friendly Service • Gold Bell Stamps PETERS SMOKED or FRESH LIVER SAUSAGE Maxwell House Instant Coffee Maxwell House Coffee...... Jiffy Cake Mixes......... Jiffy Frosting Mix........ Kleenex Towels. Hart Whole Kamel Aflny or Cream Stylo IpUNII a a a a a a a a a Thank You Purple Plums... Sffi*. Grapefruit Sections.... Giant Rinso. .......... Dinty Moore Beef Stew.... Moo?. Meat Ball Stew...... Creamettes Elbow Maearoni. Camelot Crackers....... Jeno Pizza Mix.......... Colura Seamless Hylons mm. iP W . , ■ m Florida Seedless RED or WHITE GRAPEFRUIT ORANGE JUICE •-11 Chef's Choice Frozen ^ French Fries 2-29 FROZEN PEAS Birds Eye _ FROZEN CORN ^15 HDb Michigan CARROTS CHEESE SPREAD Grade “A" URGE EGGS FREE HOLD BELL Stomps Wltli Purchase TQIbn-ormora POTATOES PORTERHOUSE 7QC qqo $io9 U. S. Choice Steak m lb ^ ||| p ||| HEil af ROHD SSI II1IEIIIHP IMS! Sli mi, ■ . ^ Dues Hike Bothers (JAW for Long Strike iaMSHraH fmmSm Michigan's Weekend Toll DETROIT UP — Armed with a dues increase that will pump $20 million a United Auto Workers President Walter P. Reuther Says the 34-day-old strike against Ford Motor Co. could stretch' into the industry’s longest. The longest automobile strike lasted 119 days in 1945-46 and was called against General Motors Corp. by the UAW to support wage demands. ' Reuther also told the news conference ■ that “if there is no significant change in the company's attitude in the next week or 10 days, Ford Motor Co. will have made a policy decision to force a long strike.” Traffic Claims Lives of 25 It was UAW wage and fringe demands in the new contract which triggered the strike at Ford. And in that case, he said, “it might equal or exceed the one we had at General Motors.” A special UAW convention yesterday voted an emergency increase in dues from $5'to $25 monthly for most of its 1.4 million members. TO BE CONTINUED The emergency dues increase will be continued . until new contracts are reached with the Big Three auto makers and the union’s strike fund that had been built up to at least $25 million. By The Associated Press Twenty-five persons lost their lives on Michigan highways during the weekend. The Associated Press count of weekend fatalities began at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at midnight yesterday. The victims: Timothy Swan, 3, of Owosso, when an auto smashed into the family pickup truck which was parked in the street, and careened into the driveway where Timothy was standing with his mother and brother Saturday night. The latter were injured. Joadele L. Bor, 29, of Hillsdale, whose auto collided with another car making a left turn off M39 in Reading Township, Hillsdale County. Margery Peterson, 75, of rural Leroy, a passenger in a car which collided with another auto yesterday at a U.S. 131 intersection in Osceola County, south of Cadillac, Charles Hoyt, 68, of Pullman, kiiled Saturday when his bicycle swerved into the path of a car and was hit on a rural road near Pullman in Allegan County. Reuther returns to the bargaining table with Ford today in search of a new contract he hopes to carry later to GM and Chrysler for matching or bettering. UAW members who make $3 or more an hour will pay $25 a month, those making between $2 and $2.99 an hour will pay $15 a month and the handful making less then $2 an hour will pay the current $5 rate. • Amelia H. Martin, 53, of Mount Pleasant, when the auto in which she was riding collided with another auto at the intersection of U.S. 131 and M20 in Big Rapids. Jerry Hardley, 25, of Grand Rapids, who died in a Grand 'Rapids hospital Saturday of injuries suffered earlier in the day in a two-car smashup on the U.S. 131 expressway in Gran^ Rapids. Ernest D, Britton, 22, of Highland Park, whose car struck a pole on.a Detroit freeway exit ramp Saturday. Dorothy Jean Denning, 41, of North Adams, Friday night when her car overturned north of Hillsdale. Mr. Henry Webber, 69, of St. Charles, and his wife, -Florence, 67, when the car in which they were riding collided with aother auto yesterday afternoon at an intersection in Lakefield Township in Saginaw County. . Joseph Fong, 67, of Detroit, Saturday in a Detroit hospital of injuries suffered Friday night when he was struck by a car in East Detroit. Archie Reinhardt, 53,' a Birch Run, yesterday when his car ran off Woodward Avenue in the Detroit suburb of Bloomfield Hills and struck a tree. Len J. Ferrell, 19; Richard M, Underwood, 16; and Paul D, Underwood, 19, all of Taylor Township, a Detroit suburb; and James Ferrey, 13, of Lincoln Park, who were killed when a car hit the rear of one in which they were riding in Taylor Township Saturday. FATALLY INJURED Willerton Dottson, 22, of Detroit, fatally injured in a two-car collision in Detroit Friday night. NEEDED TO WIN More than 2,400 convention delegates cheered when told the emergency increase was needed to win at Ford and “possible strikes at Chrysler, General Motors and other large companies.” They passed' the dues increase overwhelmingly. Earl Mazey, UAW secretary-treasurer. reported that the international strike fund, which stood at $67 million at the | beginning of the Ford strike Sept. 7, was down to $51.6 million Oct. 6. Paul E. Rabine, 39, of Mount Clemens, when his car ran off the road and rolled on U.S. 31 in Mason County near Freesoil Township yesterday evening. TWO-CAR CRASH James Shepherd, 20, of Windsor, Ont., Saturday night in a two-car crash on U,S. 2J, a mile south of Linwood, Mich. PLUMMETS 30 FEET Ralph Raymo, 32, and his wife, Pat, 30; Maurice Trombley, 50, and Clifford Barhydt, all of White Cloud, killed Saturday near Morley when their car crashed through a guard rail plumeted 30 feet into the Muskegon River. They drowned. Michael P. Muma, 18, of Grand Rapids, Friday night when the car in which he was riding overturned in James Township, Kent County. Asked at a postconvention news conference if the strike fund was being beefed up to support a General Motors strike later, Reuther replied: “It's not directed against any specific corporation, but it could include GM.” Vanda M. Winegarden, 68, of Muskegon, Saturday in Muskegon when she was thrown out of a car in a two-car collision and then run over. '68 Dem Confab to Be in Chicago Hopefuls Eying County's New Judicial Posts By JIM LONG Although details of establishing a district court system are far from being worked- out, it appears that there won’t be a lack of candidates in Oakland County for the new judicial positions. Early indications have revealed that a number of justices of the peace, who will automatically be put out of a job Jan. l, 1969, and some municipal judges already are eying a seat on the new branch. WASHINGTON iffi - Democrats officially ratify today President Johnson’s decision to forge a beachhead in the politically hostile Middle West with an August 1968 presidential nominating convention in Chicago. The party’s national committee scheduled speedy acceptance of a site committee’s proposal to meet , in a state with a Democratic governor and a city with a Democratic mayor — but in an -'area where the Republicans are in re-Surgeney. CLEMENT ATTLEE British Mourn Dead Ex-Leader National Chairman John M. Bailey predicted Johnson would be renominated unanimously at the four-day extravaganza opening Aug. 25. In Oakland County as many as *2 new district judges will have to be elected in November 1968 to assume to a greater degree the duties of the 45 justices, and possibly the municipal judges, they will replace. ‘HIGH’-LEVEL NEWS CONFERENCE-Mrs. Jody Head-Ice (right) school page’ editor for The Press, conducts a seminar for high school correspondents. The students learn the rudiments of newspaper reporting and file stories for the The |State Legislature, convening this week for a special session, will undertake the task of coming up with a measure reorganizing the lower court system that will satisfy all concerned. In a fight talk today, Bailey summoned the Democrats to back Johnson’s Vietnam efforts “lo prevent World War III.” The choice of Chicago for next year’s convention came after Miami Beach. Fla., and Houston, Tex., made opposing bids. Miami Beach, which will have the Republican nominating convention starting Aug. 5, turned up $50,000 short of the $750,000 cash and $150,000 in fringes benefits offered by Chicago. LONDON UP) — The ashes of Clement Attlee, father of the British welfare state will oe placed in Westminster Abbey, burial place of the nation’s sovereigns and statesmen, Attlee, prime minister from 1945 to 1951, died yesterday in a London hospital after a long illness. He was 84. Tributes continued to pour in from alj' over the world today. The Queen said Attlee “made an enduring place for himself in the history of our country and the Commonwealth. In war and peace he served his sovereigns well.” Manville Dies; Wed 11 Times school page, which appears twice weekly. In the background are other editors and school officials taking part in the program. “We are faced with a very difficult situation, and the solution must be some- NEW YORK UP) Junior Journalists Mark Week I^ITbmmy Manville. thing that will be acceptable to two- Playboy of the Roaring ’20s and De- thirds of each House,” lamented State pcession ’30s whose marriages and mon- Harvey Lodge, R-Waterford Clary settlements made headlines for Sen. L Township Manville took his first wife, a chorus girl, in 1911 when he was 17, and his last in 1960. He remarried twice, was divorced 10 times, and widowed once. PUBLIC HEARINGS almost five decades, died yesterday of a heart attack. He was 73. This is National Newspaper Week and there are at least 38 persons in the Pontiac area for whom this has considerable significance. The 38 comprise The Pontiac Press high school correspondent staff — one in each of 38 area schools. significant happenings at his or h e r school in genine newspaper style. during the entire school year, except for the winter holiday break. They write articles that appear each Tuesday and Friday on the school page. Each fledgling reporter relates the most Mrs. Jody Headlee, school page editor, is particularly proud of this com-m u n i t y-orientated program and announced a new internship program for promising students. The year finishes with a June banquet at which awards are presented. At the banquet next year will be announced the winners of The Pontiac Press internships for the following summer. Lodge is vice chairman of Senate Judiciary Committee,' which last Friday ended in Pontiac two weeks of public hearings around the state. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 5) With him at the end Was his 11th and last wife, the former Christina Erdlen, 26, at their Westchester County residence in Chappaqua, some 30 miles north of Manhattan. He was heir to a $10-million asbestos fortune, and his divorce settlements cOst him in the neighborhood of $1.5 million. mmmm ‘Marrying Manville" was no misnomer for the son of the founder and chairman of the Johns-Manville Corp. Rainy, Cool Outlook In Today's Press Orion Township New leg to the Clinton-Oak-land Sewer Interceptor is proposed. - PAGE A-4. Farmer's Almanac Whopper of a white Christmas is foreseen. — PAGE A-5. Drunk Driving Britain institutes tests to catch drjnking motorists.—PAGE B-5. •Area News ................A-4 Astrology .............. c-10 Bridge ................ C-10 Crossword Puzzle..........D-7 Crime Series ..............C-7 Comics ..................C-10 Editorials ............... A-8 Markets ...................CM Obituaries ............... C8 Sports .............. ci—C-4 Theaters ............... C-8 TV-Radio Programs ........D-7 Wilson, Earl ..............C-8 Women’s Pages........B-l, B-2 Starting next summer the top two senior correspondents will be offered a summer training-employment period in the newsroom of The Press. UNUSUAL PROGRAM The winners will perform, newspaper tasks for the summer prior to entering college. Mrs. Headlee said this was an unusual program in that it reached down to the high school level to assist in professional newspaper training. After four years of directing the school page, Mrs. Headlee said she has noticed “a vast increase in the ability of the high school correspondents.”, WORKSHOP WINNERS Also announced will be winners in a summer workshop program. The workshops, for high school papers and yearbook work, are held at Michigan State .University and the University of Michigan. Students in their sophomore or junior year are eligible. Pins and special awards for performance and years of service are also presented. Mrs. Headlee pointed out that the school page program is a basic part of The Press trainee policy. During the summer, college students in journalism are also employed. Umbrellas and topcoats will be the order of the day through tomorrow as occasional showers and cool winds are expected in the Pontiac area. Tonight's low will fall in the 40-lo-56 range. Precipitation probabilities today, tonight and tomorrow are 30 per cent, Low temperature reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 46. By 1 p.m. the mercury inched to 50. Continued cool weather and cloudy skies are on the agenda for Wednesday. The five-day forecast indicates that a warming trend is likely Friday or Saturday. PENCHANT FOR SHOWGIRLS He had a decided, and oft-announced, penchant for showgirls, squiring dozens and* marrying five of them. As for his settlements, the tireless mag-about-town remarked, “Manville is not cheap. At least I keep my money in circulation.” He spent other millions maintaining what he called his “honeymoon cottage” a luxurious estate in New Rochelle called Bon Repos-Good Rest. He sold it in 1955. TOMMY MANVILLE He often said that, in addition to the millions his father left him, he had “lots of shared of Johns-Manville,” and added: “That’s where I got most of my dough.” Fledgling newspaper writers face deadlines and assignments, much like their professional counterparts. FIRST^pONTACT A correspondent’s first contact with The Press would come with selection by school officials, such As a principal or journalism teacher. . Red Sox Hoping to Stay Alive The beginner woudd then, attend a fall workshop presented by Mrs. Headlee where matters of style and content would be explained. This is where the writer’s first copy comes under scrutiny, and .contact with the editors and photographers is established. ST. LOUIS, Mo. UPl — Considerable cloudiness and chilly temperatures were forecast for today’s crucial fifth game of the World Series! However, the weatherman took some of the Sharp edge off the gloomy prediction with “some sunshine possible'’ and little chance of rkln. • , , Right-hander Jim Lonborg, a 22-game winner who pitched a one-hitter in the second game, which the Red Sox won, 5-0, in Boston, will start for the visitors. Card Manager Red Schoendjenst assigned left-hander Steve Carlton, who had a 14-9 record in season play, to start for St. Louis. ’ Dick Hughes, the second-game loser, or Nelson Briles, winner of game No. 3 in St. Louis." Astronaut Burial Today Columns are then filed with The Press The Sf. Louis Cardinals blanked the Boston Red Sox, 6-0, yesterday to run up a 3-1 lead in the best-of-seven- Series.' A St. Louis victory today would end the Series. Red Sox Manager Dick Williams said if his team won today, Gary Waslewski would start the sixth game in Boston. Schoendlenst was considering either WASHINGTON (AP l - Marine Corps Maj. C. C. Williams, the eighth American astronaut to die accidently in the past three years, will be buried today in Arlington National Cemetery. >■ ’• . ; 'i Firwt Caller Bought Everything for $175 “We must have had 20 calls from our Press Want Ad. The first caller bought all hand tools and machinery.” Mr. E. W. COMPRESSOR, power including 2 DeVilblss spray guns, air hammer and other pneumatic hand tools, S17S complete. PRESS WANT APS comprise the daily “marketplace” fpr thousands of people. Their offerings amount to a gigantic shopping list from .which they mhke their selections. What do you have to sell? Dial 332-8181 <>rJ134-4981 THE POfrTIAC PRESS. MjONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 19)87 narStarts fof 18 in '64 Rights Deaths 14th Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.’* > | “It was a part of the plan and purpose of the conspiracy that Deputy Price while having the trio in the Neshoba County jail MERIDIAN, Miss. (AP) — No state charges ever were phers could not go onto the; The FBI dug the vietims’ bul-Jury selection begins today in brought in the case. block where the courthouse is!let-riddled bodies from a new fhe trial of 18 men charged in Defendants include Neshobaj located, in the downtown post earthen dam on a farm about the deaths of three civil rights County Sheriff, Lawrence Rai-j office building. eight miles southwest of PhUa- workers at Philadelphia, Miss., ney, 43, Chief Deputy Cecilf * * * jdelphia 44 days later. ‘ . in 1964. Price. 28, Sheriff-elect Ethel | Signs on all corners tell news: * * * A special 350-member venire Glen “Hop” Barnette, 47, all of camermen that the area, includ- Nineteen men were indicted I would release them from custo-was summoned to federal court, nearby Philadelphia, and Sam ing the sidewalk, is pff limits. but one of them—James E. Jor- dy a* such time that he, Price, About 200“were expected to re-'Holloway Bowers Jr., 42, of John Doar, the Justice De-]dani 40—will not go on trial Jimmy Arledge, Horace Doyle main after routine exemptions. Laurel, described as the impe- partment’s chief civil rights here. His case is under the jur- Barnette, Travis ftfaryn Bar- * * * rial wizard of the White Knights counsel, heads the prosecution. | jsdiction of the U.S. DistrictInette, Alton Wayne Roberts, The charge, strongest possible of the Ku Klux Klan, The government had about 100 Court for northern Florida. I Jimmy Snowden, Billy Wayne under federal law, accuses the * * * witnesses ready to testify. witmpcs PnnTwr-rirn Posey and Jerry McGrew 18 of conspiracy to violate thej U.S. Dist. Judge Harold Cox, * * * t ! Sharpe could and would inter- civil rights of Michael Schwer-i who dismissed the charges oncei Both the prosecution and the] Jordan has been whisked injcept, Schwerner, Chaney and ner, 23, and. Andrew Goodman,[only to have the US, Supreme [defense were armed with a and out, under FBI protection, I Goodman upon their leaving the! 20, both white New Yorkers, and, Court overrule him, set strict-background study on "each pros-!to testify before the federal area of the Neshoba Coiinty jail, James E. Shaney, 21, a Meridi- procedures for newsmen andipective juror. . grandjury which returned thejand threaten, assault, shoot and! an Negro. photographers covering the * * * indictments. [kill them," the indictment said. Maximum punishment under trial. The government said Deputy j * * * . j . ★ ★ * the 1870 Reconstruction-era taw, * * ★ ]Price arrested the three victims; The indictment charged all 191 Others named included: Ber- is 10 yeai's in prison and a $5,000 Among the restrictions On on a speeding charge on June with conspiring “to injure, op-jnard L. Akin, Olen L. Burrage, James T. Harris, Frank j! fine. No lederal charge of mur- newsmen is that they cannot cn- 21, 1964, held them at Philadel- press, threaten and intimidate der can be brought except when ter or leave the courtroom' ex“ phia about four hours, then re-’the trio “in the exercise and en-the deaths occur on :federal cept during recess. leased them where they could joyment of the rights and privi- property. Cox ordered that photogra-;be seized and murdered. lieges secured to them by the Herndon, Edgar Jtay Killen.l Herman Tucker and Richard! Andrew Willis. ELMER H. REYNOLDS Death Claims City Retailer U.S. Envoy Leaving Ecuador Under Fire QUITO, Ecuador (AP) — U.S. “The Ecuadorian government] Ambassador Wymberley I)eR. saw itself forced to ask for fits Coerr prepared to leave Ecua-i withdrawal to protect the na-dor today after the Ecuadorian tional dignity and demand the! government requested his with- respect due by a foreign envoy drawal for what it called j to the chief of state," a Foreign "publicly and openly criticiz-; Office statement said. ■ing" President Otto Arosemena] Coerr, a caredr minister and Gomez. member of the Foreign Service Ecuador’s complaint was over since 1939, spoke Friday at the a speech in which Qoerr. 54, de-j American School in Guayaquil, fended the Alliance for Progress;Ecuador asked Washington Sat-and called it a success in Ecua-jurday to have him out of the dor. Arosemena had criticized country by tonight, the American program in speech two weeks ago. . 4 Motorcyclists Shot, 25 Arrested at Party One of Pontiac’s pioneer businessmen, Elmer H.- Reynolds, died yesterday at the age of 85. Mr. Reynolds was co-owner with his son of the Pontiac Glass Co., 23 W. Lawrence, one of the city’s oldest downtown businesses. The c o-m p a n y, founded in 1900, was the original glass retailer and glazing contractor in Pontiac and Oak- Birmingham Area News Hearing Slated Tonight on Ann Street Relocation BIRMINGHAM — A proposed]across the east side of Ann special assessment district for Street. Patterson wants to re-the relocation of Ann Street be- route Ann Street around this tween Landon and Lincoln has last section in order to have the been strongly opposed by sev- two pieces of property adjacent, eral property owners, and aj The objections charge t h a t hearing on the matter will be|patterson would be the only ben-held tonight at 8 p.m. in the | efactor of the relocation, commission room of the Muni- At the City Commission meet-cipal Builduig. ^ «* png tonight Birmingham resi- The relocation is proposed by dents wiU hear the announce-Charles Patterson having busi- ment °f a Michigan Public Serv-ness property facing on Wood-j ice Commission hearing regard-ward as -well as property just ing the continuance of a De-| troit-Pontiac Grand Trunk commuter train begun on a trial basis last April and the addition of four new trains to terminate at Birmingham. Safety Chief Suggests Car DR. HAROLD SPONBERG Girl, 3, Hurt as Shotgun Is REQUEST ‘UNJUSTIFIED’ The U.S, State Department ] said that under traditional diplo-matie practice its only possible [response is withdrawal of the ambassador. It considers Ecua- jdor’s request "to be unjustified1 \A/orl nacrlnw by the circumstances" but add-j ” " '-LII ICoUUy ed that it sees no reason to aski The hearing is set for Friday I * in the Detroit Court of Appeals, SfTPPn ( rtnfrn/1900 First Federal Savings and OfJUCU V-U/TITU/ Loan Association BuUding, De- - troit. u>m^SHIuGI?N (,UPIL_ Pa ADDITIONS PETITIONED William Haddon Jr., the fed- . , .... . ■■ I I _ eral highway safety chief, has railroad is petitioning to YPSILANTI (AP)—Four mo-,were arrested at the scene of nal glass retailer and glazing suggested that automobiles be add ^our tra*ns leaving Detroit torcyclists, including one wom-ithe shoot out, an abandoned contractor in Pontiac and Oak- built in the future with speed at 8 am\ a”d 2 pm: and eavj an, were shot and wounded Sun- form about four miles north ofiland County. governors to prevent them from 'n?„ Birmi"?ham at ® a m: and day night in a gun battle which Ypsilanti. Eight women and A Pontiac businessman for J going faster than 80 or 90-miles 2;,40 P ,1"' Th®s®are planned SP®' climaxed an all-day beer party two juveniles were among those *"Tl ^“[per hour. lHf,ra"v M shonners comrnu- of several motorcycle clubs. arrested. Their ages ranged“ S * * * Washtenaw bounty Sheriffdom 16 to 35, he said. SMSS!.Haddon, who administers fed- Douglas HaryCy said 25 persons] , * * * l^42 years ^ ^’[eral autosafety standards, said 4a —LT5n : Charges of felonious assault f ey"o d® *aa h®nored ,or his:a built-in speed governor were expected to be filed against erv,ce lasl APr' "woiild have considerable safe- He was als jmber of the ty payoff, particularly in those First Pres! an Church of Pontiac, E ange Club, the board of trustees of Clinton Valley Boy Scouts and the old Oakland Motpr Car Co. band where he was drum major. U.S. Jets Hit 2 paufUnits j N. Viet Airstrip Start Drives 6th 'Restricted' Target Bombed in Five Days SAIGON (AP) - US. several of them, police said. Sheriff’s deputies, Michigan State Police and' Ypsilanti police converged on the scene after three men rushed up to two city patrolmen at a drive-in restaurant and shouted, “They’re shooting. Three are shot already. We need some help:" SHOTS HEARD When officers arrived, shots rang out from the farmhouse. Navy|Police r®fe™e<l the fire, then cars where a bunch of kids who were either joyriding or trying to get away from police either kill themselves or someone] else.” cifically as “shoppers” commuters and would be initiated Oct. 28. Youth on Trial in Slaying of 5 fit HoniP 'Ecuador''s ambassador to with-] The commercial and manu-1 fighter-bombers struck a North|f|,re'^ a spotlight beam on the i ii vU I IUl l l” draw in-retaliation, facturing divisions of the Pon-Vietnamese MIG airfield near bouse and ordered the people ! Cocrr said he was sorry that tiac Area United Fund will kick; Haiphong Sunday, the sixth in-A 3-year-old girl was injured his sudden departure made it off Wednesday, with a noon lun-|siallation hit in five straight by a shotgun blast fired through■■ impossible for him to say good-]cheon at the Elks Temple, U4ldays of raids on targets once the front door of her home ear- by to “my colleagues and goodjOrchard Lake/ The total goal|ruled by the Pentagon as out of ly yesterday, it was reported to| Ecuadorean friends.” I of the two divisions is $323,969. [bounds orf U.S. warplanes. Pontiac police. v Coerr’s speech did not name! Some 400 commercial- and,The strike that dug wide craters ^ Investigators said Tina Toyer,jf,e Ecuadorian president but it] manufacturing solicitors will into the French-built jet strip daughter of Mr. and Mrs. NickqU0(e a number 0f remarks!hear the feature speaker, Dr. at Cat Bi left untouched only Tover of 259 S. Anderson, smi-/made by Arosemena asiHarold E. Sponberg, president two bases in the North capable fered a head wound when some- pub|jshed jn Ecuador’s newspa- of Eastern Michigan University, of launching MIG interceptors, one shot into the house from r ! ’ * * * outside about 2 a m. ' ^ Dr. Sponberg, a national ora- , Arosemena had complained tory winner and an author, has 8r°und war, an Ameri She Is reported in satisfactory about high inlerest rates for been active in civic work since can P,atoon fought out of condition in Pontiac General loans, high costs for materials 1952, when he received his doc-|rounded Position rainswept Hospital. I that had to be bought in thejtors degree in philosophy at!junSles a"d Communist mortar-ALI-DAY PARTY Trimi Rodriguez, 16, of Utita, United States and the cost of the Michigan State University. !,men Poured fire on the major Harvey said the gun battle told police he was holding the services of U S. technicians un-1 _ „„ . j Army-Navy base in the Mekong started after an all-day drinking child on his lap when the shot der the Alliance for Progress. I xfigM.1- T' Muul;phy’ commer- De|ta. party held by h , / d « smashed through the front door In his speech. Coerr said tn.;c,ar d,v,s*on ^man. w.ll be] * * * |motorcycle gangs from the De- window, wounding Tina and terest rates were 1 per cent , as*er ot ceremonies at the; Nearby in the delta, a|troit area, which showering glass around them in the first year and 2.5 per cent j uncf’fon.wh,c|?.,s sPonsored byj50-year-old Buddhist nun burned both. thereafter. He said that of the, „ ?US1”^S , ri"?s' .. herself to death, a Saigon news- He suffered superficial cuts,'total »i $216 million in alliance; Un®*r *•* leadership ofthepaper sajd jbe second suiCjde officers said. s loans to Ecuador, only $26.5 mil-imanU,^anng dlvislT ..c*iair‘by fire in a week during the Police, who are continuing an lion had to be spent in the Unit- man’ ,Wa‘»aCe ,B Schroth, are drjVe by militant Buddhists to Investigation, said they could ed States and only half of 1: vice chairmen Joseph Prepichal, force the government to aban- not determine how the assail-per cent was needed to pay U.S. a cbarter recognizing “We’ll come out if we’re sure you’re police," a voice came from inside. “Show us the gum ball (scout car roof-light) A red light was flashed, and the motorcyclists came out. The wounded were found in a nearby barn, which apparently had been the target of gunfire from the house before police arrived. They included a woman | whose leg was shattered by a shotgun blast. In a copyrighted interview with U.S. News and World Report, Haddon said it was technically possible to equip a car “so that it would perform normally up to very close to the speed limit built into the car." "The technology would be Service for Reynolds, 21 Elizabeth Lake, will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial at Oak Hill Cemetery. SURVIVORS Surviving are his son, Gordon IsJmilar to that now wide,V used E. Reynolds of Pontiac; one ln contr°ls available as an op-sister, and one grandson. Uon °n some models 11181 driv ers use to set and sustain high The family requests that memorials be made to the William H. Marbach Memorial Fund of the First Presbyterian Church or to the Salvation Army. GOP Senator Endorses Viet he said WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Hugh Scott, a Republican included “The Highwaymen -]moderate, endorsed President Vikings," “Nightriders" theJohnson’s Vietnam P°lic'es ‘°-and “God’s Little',nv ““ i||| -------------------------gH ant fled the scene. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Cloudy and continued chilly ~r *1 ^remen Begin Li! Safety Drive m T. Gordon Scuphoim and Wayne [moderate faction in the church. Michelson. > * w w Vice Chairmen appointed by The Cat Bi strike damaged a Murphy for the commercial di- Soviet-built liaison plane, but vision are. George Stout, chap- the U.S. Command said the carter plans; Richard Fitzgerald, rier-based jets found no MIGs small teams; John Pagen, edu- on the ground as they flew in cation; John Witherup, govern-“virtually unopposed." ment; John B, Wilson, profes- M0NS00N RAINg , This year’s total United Fund The raid was part of a maxi- [goal is $1,130,000 which will help muni U.S. effort to cripple the operate 55 local, state and na- North before the monsoon rains I tional agencies. [start this month and cut flying 5— --------i------- , time by as much as 75 per cent. [Since Wednesday, U.S. planes have also hit three bridges on supply routes from Red China | and two fuel dumps, all previously barred as too sensitive I to attack. day and said “it is imperative that we do not undermine the stature of the President as com-mander-in-chief and as the nation’s chief diplomat.” He said the Republican party should not “misconceive its role become a ‘peace at any ‘SS Men Children. Witnesses told police there had been a brief argument earlier in the evening when a member of one gang pulled a gun on another gang member. The flare-up settled down, they said, but then shooting erupted pr*ce’ Party-” lash’ a couple of hours later. | ding on the inside of cars, he The Pennsylvanian said he said PHOENIX, Ariz. (UPI) - Robert Benjamin Smith, 19, goes oh trial for his life today, accused of shooting to death five persons and wounding two others in a beauty college 11 months ago in Mesa. The prosecution is seeking the death penalty. Smith, a former high school honor student, has pleaded innocent and innocent by reason of insanity. w w w: | Selection of the 38 veniremen Haddon said he could see no f,.om wbich the 12-member jury reason why passenger carsL,, t0 ^ choscn took jg should be designed to run at L believed to be the longest “y leJselection process of any Arizona case. Maricopa County Atty. Robert Corbin and defense at-NOT MATURE Itorney Robert Wood questioned "A foreign manufacturer re-130 prospective jurors, some for cently bragged that his car j would do 170 miles an hour. way speeds," he said. gal speed limit in any part of;] the country. I do not regard that as a mature behavior on anyone’s part, driver or manufacturer," Haddon said. Police found two wounded men in a car parked inside the barn one on the front seat and one on the back. The woman was lying on the floor of the back seat. as long as two hours. Smith, his dark hair contrasting with his prison pallor, spent most of the time staring down at his hands or rubbing them across the table top during the Other safety features the gov-|days iury selection, eminent some day may require * . * * for all automobiles built in the His parents, Mr. and Mrs. United States, include roofs Robert L. Smith, maintained an which will not collapse when a almost constant vigil outside car roils over, taillights of a the courtroom but their son different color than brake never glanced at them as he lights, auto seats for infants, was led to and from the area headrests to prevent “whip- each day. _^®r_e_.pad'|PROSECUTION REQUEST Superior Judge Laurence T, supports present policy because ★ * ★ "I know of no better alterna- Eventually, he predicted, cars tive." . will be made so safe that death Scott’s remarks were in a or serious Injury would be speech prepared for Senate de- averted at speeds of less than livery. [ 50 miles per hour. Wren denied a prosecution request that the parents be movqd from outside the courtroonfi The prosecution contended they were attempting to solicit sympathy for their son. Hopefuls Plentiful for New Judicial Posts Florida. Drizzle is expected along the northern Pacific Coast. It will be cooler from the mid-Atlantic coastal states into the southeastern region of the country. ‘j! The Pontiac Fire Department .“is launching a year-round campaign for fire safety in conjunction with the start of National Fire Prevention Week today. Officials described the continual program as a concentrated effort to teach fire prevention principles. Firemen will visit city elementary schools during the [week, showing a film to stu-[dents and delivering a talk, ! according to Fire Chief Charles | Marion. The same type of program will be available to civic groups and other schools throughout the year. As part of the same policy which Marldn said is aimed at “making the* public more fire safety* conscious,” „ voluntary home, inspections .by firemen [will be Initiated in the coming months. “This way we jget the younger set, more interested in fire prevention and we also give their parents the opportunity to have their hemes checked for possible trouble areas," Marion said. The two major MIG bases still on the forbidden list are the Gia Am installation and the big Phuc Yen base, which houses the North Vietnamese air force’s major operations center and serves as headquarters for the air defense command. Both are near Hanoi. Autopsy Set ih ratal Crash Archie Reinhardt, 53, <>f Birch Run was dead on arrival at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital fallowing a one-car accident on Woodward north of Lone’ Pine at 5:15 p.m. yesterday. . * A . * .% , According-to Bloomfield Hills police; witnesses said Reinhardt, who was northbound oh Woodward, slumped at jhe wheel, and his car went off the road and struck a tree. * * * An autopsy is being performed to determine if he might have suffered a heart (Continued From Page One) “Financing and selfish interest are the two major stumbling blocks facing the Legislature,” Lodge said. It has been tentatively estimated that it will cost approximately $25 million to set up a court system throughout the state. * * * The other problem facing the lawmakers has been raised by officials of municipalities, who are featful’“■their cities will lose considerable revenue if municipal courts are abolished and no provision itiade for the channeling of court money back into the communities. LITTLE WEIGHT Some proponents of eliminating the -munidpal courts say that cities shouldn’t make a "profit” from justice, but this argument carries little weight "with city officials who emphasize it isn’t a surplus and generally goes toward the operation of their police departments. An official from Howell told the committee his city couldn’t afford to lose municipal court revenue because it has been earmarked to pay off parking bonds. While municipalities are attempting to hold on to tbeif Courts, a few municipal judges testifying before' the Judiciary Committee last week said they could care less if the city courts are abolished. ★ ★ * They reason that they will just become a candidate for one of the higher paying district court positions, probably winning it easily because their name is known to the public. MIXED FEELINGS Verne C. Boewe, a municipal judge in Warren and president of the Michigan Municipal Judges Association, said that this would be the case as far as he was concerned. ‘ \" ’' (; “There are mixed feelings among members of the association, and we have passed no resolution in connection, with the matter,” said Boewe. "Generally a judge in a large city that could comprise one election district believes he is assured election,” Boewe explained. “It’s a different &ory up north where one district may take in several counties and any number of municipalities." + ' -It ■ ir. Waterford Township Justice of Peace Kenneth Hempstead, expressing a desire to be a candidate, recommended that the committee change its earlier proposal to allow judges in offices to use the word Incumbent on the ballot. f* “Experience should be rewarded by permitting attorney justices to be designated incumbents,” said Hempstead. Royal Oak Municipal Judge Keith Leenbouts suggested that the incumbent problem could be overcome if a judge in office would be allowed to select the term of office, with others falling in behind for other terms if they felt the odds were too great. Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson, who reportedly is considering a district judgeship, said he was in favor of a unified court system because it would be less of a burden on his staff. 63 SUBDIVISIONS He pointed out that in Oakland County there are 63 political subdivisions each with some type of court that must be handled by his 17 assistant prosecutors. , Noting that the Legislature is considering paying $20,000 to district judges and . allowing the county to supplement it up to $27,500, Bronson.said that he was of the opinion that the job- of judge must be a full-time position. ■ * 1 Jt * “I can envision a number 'of circuit judges quitting to run (for district judge) if they could practice part-time,” said Bronson. > THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 20 Arrested, Including Gregory Mtv.r«r Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. 30 Hurt in Milwaukee Clashes! Q t^IITE ’til 9 P.M. THE CAMPAIGNER—President Johnson reaches for the outstretched hands of well-wishers at the Williamsburg, Va„ golf course tonight before boarding a helicopter for his return to Washington. The executive was in the Virginia city to address an international education conference. Others in the picture are members of the Secret Service. MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) — jing Gregory, were seized after Police clashed twice with open about 400 marchers moved from housing demonstrators' ,yi Mil- i the sidewalk into the center of waukee’s virtually all-Negro in- the street in opposition to police her core Sunday night. Thirty orders, persons were-injured, including Earlier, police moved in on a policeman hit by a rock. j the demonstrators when they at- Police arrested 20 marchers, tempted to approach a band of Among them was Negro come- white opponents of open housing dian Dick Gregory, a leader of also.marphing in the inner core the protests, now in their 3rd j where most of Milwaukee's day. . 186,000 Negores live. The violence was the first to * * * flare in this racially troubled | Three open housing marchers city since mid-September de-iwere arrested in that clash, spite nightly marches, and] The rival groups had been countermarches by opponents of i Parading on opposite sides of open housing. ! the same street. A shotgun blast .shattered the! A Roman Catholic priest, the 'windows of a police car uf|\he t ^usse^ Witon, a hospital neighborhood of the disturb- chaplain, was among those in ances. The officers in the cart the white march, escaped injury. No arrests fol-l At a rally on the virtually lowed the incident. !all-white south side after the I CENTER OF STREET Father Wit°" t0ld ab°Ut I Most of those arrested, includ anot! Tues. * Weds. Hours: 9 a.m.to 5:30 p.m. going to stand by and let any A A A A A savages move into our neighbor- IjtAAAAAAAAAAAAAi hoods even if it takes force. Un-I ~ til we have organization, you 4 will be under the black claw of] rabble-rousing no gooders.” i d Milwaukee’s Common Council.^ four times in the past has re-1" jected open housing ordinances. ^ Johnson Deplores War in Speech to Educators WILILIAMSBURG, Va. (AP)jedge of the world can be stored — President , Johnson stepped on microfilm and channeled from his helicopter into Vir- through computers and commu-ginia’s elegantly restored eo-jnications links to give every na-lonial capital and deplored a tion the best in libraries and world in which “We have fought original research, he said, among ourselves like animals.”! TRAIN TO LEARN I Rapid expansion of such new “In this century,” Johnson!techniques of learning are vital, told an International Convention I Johnson said, if educators hope on the World Crisis in Education j to “train a young man’s eyes to Sunday night, “man has spent j absorb learning as quickly as literally trillions of dollars on I we can train his finger to pull a the machinery of death and trigger." war...nearly 100 million people The ultimate question, he have died in the maiming and I said, is “how to shape a world disease which come with war.” I in which men employ their www 'minds in projects of peace— He told the 200 educators from iinstead «f sacrificing their bod- 54’ nations the world must face10^ 011 thc field of battie._ the shocking contrast of the fact that in an era of unparalleled affluence “most people end their lives unable to write ‘cat’ i ^ Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac The best minds of the present age can be made available to all through educational television ] 4 relayed through satellite com-! munication, the President sug- 4 gested. The cumulative knowl- S. Viet Bans Magazine Issue SAIGON (AP) - The South ^ Vietnamese government has] banned an issue of Newsweek ^ magazine for an article that the I . military regime says “consti-4 tutes a deliberate and extreme-!^ ly grave offense against the H armed forces of the Republic of ^ Vietnam." The order, which does not affect copies sold in official American establishments, came after most of the 3,000 copies of the Oct. 9 issue received here were sold. Newsweek’s article criticizing the army was titled, “Their Lions, Our Rabbits.” it ir it A government communique conceded that the South Vietnamese armed forces could be improved but said “freedom cannot condone press sensation-1 alism at the expense of men who fight and die on the battlefield.” tpeoOe M LUMBER CO. DO-IT-YOURSELF WEEKLY GARAGE SPECIAL Gable Front 22'x24' GARAGE Delivered Ctuh Price $41400 "X I I Plus Tax Garage Door end Comont Not Included FREE Garage Plans Available Pries Quotations Available on Other Sizes CALL FE 4-1594 or Stop in Personally at 151 Oakland Ave. Domestics to Brighten Your Home For the Winter Months at SIMMS Low Prices Prices flood Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Positively the Last Time This LOW PRICE on KODAK Color Film Processing Mailed Back to Your Home SIMMS 2nd Floor TONITE ”n TUESDAY Specials Simms Blasts Prices again —and here’s proof. Shop these TNT specials tonite and Tuesday. Sate ends Tues. at 5:30 p.m. Rights reserved to limit quantities. 2nd FLOOR SPECIALS Famous ‘OWEN CORNING DUST0P’ In. Furnace'Filters Stock Up For the Winter Season Stock up at this lowet price — choice of mailers for 8mm movies. Super 8 films, 20-exp. 35mm films or Instamatic slides. Genuine KODAK pre-paid mailers, at this last chance price. Limit 10 per person. 100% French Super Crimp Rayon Bath Mat and Cover Set Irrs. of Better Quality Hand and Bath Towels Irr of ‘EMPIRE’ 4x40 Sport Binoculars DIIIUUUUIIo 4 Bfagp 698 U 50% Nylon, 50% DacronK Polyester Bath Mat & Cover Set *d ioor > de'i?" j * o°^ 4 0 ■ vLlifSi - Basement PMWr Goos size and power —clear, sharp viewing. Grey and black finish with chrome trim. With case. Ideal for the youngsters. ‘BELL A NOWELL’ 340 CAMERA $52.65 Value I6x28-lnch Terry Hand Towels, Pr. 100% DuPont Dacron Polyester and Nylon Wall to Wall Bath Carpeting 5x6-Ft. $21.95 I nlue 10 99 s like o million and wears like a dream. Deep cloud-soft with Ie»i;e* coated backing Machine wash and dry m lions arid paper pattern included Yellow or white - Basement Nopsacking-Fiberglhs-No-lron Curtains and Drapes v 94% Rayon, 6% Acrylic Blond Chatham’ Thermal Blanket Florolaire thermal blanket is .Z2x90 ’inches Washablfc m beouhful floral design in assorted colors <00% nylon binding Limit ? - Basement Instant- cartridge loading , . electric-eye . . . fiasheube, fast f35 lens. Fill your album with color snaps or block V white snaps plus you con take color slides with ihii camera — rapid winding feature. Complete with batteries, color film and bulbs. $ I holds or get if on a 'major credit card. Layaway for Christmas Genuine ‘REALTDHE’ Radios & Recorders PORTABLE 5-Trs. Tape Recorder Full 5-ironsistor tope recorder {s ..fully portable with remote mike and good sound quality. Only $1 holds. Deluxe Battery and Electric Portable FM-AM Radios Finest Sound 10x20, 15x20. 20x20,< 16x 20 or 16x25 inch sizes at this price. Limit 6 per customer. (20x25x1).............44c Get Extra Storage Space With Steel Shelf-Units IN 5-FT. TALL 6*7 4-shelf storage unit stands 60" high is 36" 'wide and 12" deep. Sturdy all steel jtrriits, .cci.n be used anywhere in the home, shop, ollice, etc. Limit 4 units.1 Keep Cozy and Warm With Famous Electric Blankets American Made ◄ ◄ < i quality blankets in twin bed siz 4 American made blankets with single control variety o! colors. Modern blends are Buy for yourself Or gift-giving: lachine washable, too. Layaway for Christmas Gifts Now! Chrome Portable Mixer 3-SPEED Dyna-Torque Motor ixer only weighs 2 lbs. Fits m drower 2 triple chromed beaters, outomotic toned chrome and plostic housing, ee tor 1 year. Famous Lady Vomty. 2-Speed Electric Blender 52-Oz. Capacity Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac SIMMS!* H mmmmmmm l|Wi* «rs* am »S 4» ! *8tS -«V< ICT8 riiniiiiniyi iiiiii vwm it iiiaitwwiM Solution to 0xfb}a-tS¥‘9non Disposal Problem? Paint. Creek Sewer Interceptor Proposed By JEAN SAILE A new leg for the proposed Clinton-Oakland Sewer Interceptor? In the eyes of one area engineering firm, an immediate addition is “the logical long-range solution to the sewage disposal problem of the (Oxford-Lake Orion) area.” A detailed study of the proposed new leg — the Paint Creek Interceptor — has been forwarded to the Oakland County Department of Public Works for study and possible action. Prepared by the Waterford Township engineering firm of Johnson and Ander- $on, Inc., the report was made on the combined request of the township and village of Oxford. ★ * ★ It advises that immediate steps be taken to secure capacity in the Clinton-Oakland Sewer and that application be made for federal planning assistance. Asked to study three means of sewage disposal, engineers have opted for the interceptor over a purely lpcal solution or one designed to also include the village of Lake Orion and Orion Township. “An interim solution by one or more communities which excludes any part of the area will stunt the excluded communities’ growth and will not give adequate pollution protection to the area,” reads the report. As suggested, the new interceptor would hook onto the proposed Paint Creek Arm of the Clinton-Oakland interceptor north of Rochester in Avon township. It would proceed northwesterly along Paint Creek through Oakland and Orion townships to Lake Orion then westerly and north to connect with the planned location of the Oxford arm of the interceptor along Drahner. Johnson and Anderson, Inc., have recommended that it be built to accommodate the population of. the area in the year 2000. A 42,000 population by the year 2000 In the Oxford-Orion area is foreseen as opposed to the current 12,600. However, engineers have plotted an. ultimate population for the area at 215,000 people. ★ ★ ★ Constructed to meet the needs of the , year 2000, the cost of the interceptor is plotted roughly at $3,447,888. This sum does not include the necessary right-of-way purchases. jf Fire Chief Takes $11,200 Salary in Shelby Twp. SHELBY TOWNSHIP — Fire Chief Clyde Schmidt has accepted a salary of $11,200 retroactive to July 1. Twice last week he asked for $12,000 and the Township Board refused. The fire chief said he wasn’t satisfied with the offer but had ho further comment. The $11,200 offer was made by the board at a special meeting last Monday night and again at the regular meeting on Tuesday. Both times Schmidt flatly rejected the offer claiming that the traditional salary is based on a 50 per cent Increase over the lowest firemen’s pay, which is $8,000. ★ it it Township Supervisor Kirby Holmes was the only board meihber voting against even the $11,200 pay which gave Schmidt a $1,200 increase over his present salary. MAKES COMPARISON Holmes argued that Schmidt shouldn’t get the $12,000 because he only has 17 men under him while the Warren Police Chief with 167 men gets $12,732. Schmidt’s acceptance will probably reflect the salary of Police Chief Robert W. Smith who has also asked for $12,000. Action was delayed on Smith’s raise since the police budget isn’t set yet whereas the fire budget is. * ★ * Schmidt’s new salary is a 12 per c£nt hike compared to an average of 15 per cent for the men under him. He has been fire chief for 10 years and is the president of the Southeastern Michigan Association of Fire Chiefs. p,n"*c Pr,H ----------------- UP FROM ASHES—An attractive mansard-roofed cedar ford’s Washington Street. Now occupied by Acheson Jewelers, shingle building has risen frm the burned-out area on Ox- the new building will be host to a grand opening this weekend. Troy Adult Workshop THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY. OCTOBER 9, 1907 A— ha News Deadline Nov. 7 in Avon's Charter Commission Race AVON TOWNSHIP - Would-be city charter commission members for the proposed city of Avon have until 4 p.m-. Nov. 7 to file petitions with the county clerk’s office. Township Clerk Mrs. Thelma Spencer said such petitions must bear 20 signatures of registered voters and be accompanied by an affidavit of identity. Papers are available at the township office. The names will be on the ballot with. the question of incorporation for the township in the Jan. 15 election. Mrs. Spencer said the last date for registration to vote in the election is Dec. 15. Keith PTA to Meet * Oxford Business Battles Back OXFORD — What local businessmen can do without outside help has been ably demonstrated here. Faced in January 1966 with a $250,000 fire which destroyed two stores and' damaged a third along Washington Street, the (ocalites saw the area sit in disrepair until last January. At that time four men, Francis Baldwin, owner of the Party Shop, Gerald Olrich of the Oxford Lumber and Coal Co., Dr. Rodman Jacobi and William Matus, executive director of Camp Oakland, decided to do something about It. They purchsed the property at 28 S. Washington and have succeeded in erecting a small-type cedar shingle building containing a total of 7,200 feet of floor space. A sewer problem was'solved with the construction of septic tanks under the mall. Acheson Jewelers has moved into the front lower half of the building and the Oxford Board of Education has signified it will occupy the top floor beginning Nov. 1. The rear of the first floor, abutting the mall, remains unoccupied. Acheson Jewelers is looking forward to its grand opening In the new location Friday and Saturday. An Oxford establishment since 1928, the jewelers have relocated from their previous address six doors north of the new building. A remodeling job in the third store adjacent to the new building has provided a furniture outlet for the Gamble Store, whose headquarters remain across the street. UNIFORM MUSIC — Tooting their horns for the 8 p.m. pmmc Sms phoi# presentation tonight by the U.S. Marine Band at Rochester one of the new uniforms,., directs David Jones and Martha Senfay High School are three students who hope to get new Pixley in a warm-up session. Tickets are available at the uniforms from the proceeds. Ginni Foss (left), who wears door. The Parent Teacher Association of Keith Elementary School, 2800 Keith, West Bloomfield Township, will hold Open house and its first business meeting Wednesday at 7:30 p.m. A film on the ' Helping Hand, Program will be shown. on Parties Is Renamed ' TROY — The Troy Adult Education workshop called “Facets of Sparkling Entertainment,” has been renamed “Party P’s and Q’s.” The six-week program which begins tomorrow at 7 p.m. in Troy High School room 120 is new to the schedule this fall. ★ * * The i course is offered through the cooperation of t h e Oakland Community College under the direction of Dorothy Thomson. The fee is $10. If it were to be built for the ultimate needs of the area, Johnson and Anderson, Inc., figures the cost would run $7,-056,812. The main interceptor — the Clinton-Oakland — is currently waiting approval to sell $16.9 million in bonds and a contract with the Detroit Water Board is being drawn np by the Oakland County Department of Public Works. Acquisition of easements is continuing. , It will empty through the Macomb County Interceptor now in the process of preparing construction to Detroit treatment facilities. ★ * •* would be required for a holding pond and treatment plant. A report of high operational costs due to the need for chemical treatment for nutrient removal and the estimate of a 24,000 to 26,000 population as the maximum which would be sexved and still not pollute Paint Creek has caused the latter solution to be rejected in favor of the interceptor. While the details of financing the solutions were not made a part of the report, it was noted that an Oxford village and township treatment facility would run about $1,430,164 at an annual cost of $129,000. It has been the aim of Oakland County planners to build the northerly Paint Creek arm in about 10 to 20 years, after the Clinton-Oakland was functioning. Hard-pressed by citations from the State Water Resources Commission in regard to pollution of Paint Creek and area lakes and nudged by an ever-expanding population, the northerly communities. are faced with the need to find a sewage solution immediately. The disposal of sewage upstream from Lake Orion and the interconnected lakes is extremely difficult, according to the engineering report, since there is no continuing stream flow to which treated waste may be discharged. For that reason two other solutions were studied for the Oxford area. They included the lagoon system with disposal by spray irrigation and the lagoon system with disposal into Paint Creek. The large amounts of land needed for such operations were counted against the feasibility of their use. The further method of discharging effluence into Paint Creek would cajl for further refinement of the 'sewage than is possible in a lagoon system, engineers reported. 160 ACRES NEEDED In combining its study with Lake Orion, the engineers found that 160 acres The combined Oxford-Orion system was pegged at $3,496,341“ with.a total annual cost to the four communities of $294,000. INTERCEPTOR COSTS The interceptor, designed for the year 2000, estimated at $3,447,888' would cost the participating communities $224,000 a year. the Paint Creek Interceptor, if constructed, would pass through Oakland Township and would be available t o them for possible service. Johnson and Anderson report that since the extent of the latter’s needs has not been determined at this time, effect of their participation in cost to the other communities. The report continues, “It can be assumed, however, that Oakland Township participation would be to the mutual advantage of all concerned since additional capacity can be provided at little or no cost.” It concludes, “We have not stressed the advantages to the village of Lake Orion and the township of Orion. However, we believe that the problem of sewage disposal is area wide and that individual community disposal systems can only be ^stop-gap measures which must eventually be abandoned in favor of an areawide solution.” Novi Councilman: Decisioi on Quitting to Be Surpnse NOVI — Councilman Joseph Crupi, the village’s former president for some six years, said his decision on whether to resign from the council “will be a surprise.” He said he had no further comment. While kuigrily opposing recent council approval of a method to levy sewer fees, Crupi had said he would resign. However, Crupi’s resignation isn’t effective until he submits it in a registered letter to the village clerk and the council acts upon it, said Village Manager Harold Ackley. ★ ★ “The village office has neither heard from nor seen Crupi since the Oct/2 council meeting,” Ackley reported. / AMENDMENT APPROVED The other four councilmen unanimously approved Oct. 2 an ordinance amendment for a graduated sewer availability connection fee. The original' ordinance had set up a uniform $300 fee per property owner. After the resolution was made to accept the amendment, Crupi called the council “stupid” and walked out, recalled Ackley. Crupi had criticized Village Attorney Howard I. Bond’s wording of the amendment. ‘VERY CAPABLE’ ruled that special assessments couldn't be levied for sewer/mains already in the ground, said ytckley. Residents outside a district can hook into the niains/financed by the special assessments. However, the previously uniform fee does not allow for sewer installation cost differences due to varying land conditions and nearness to interceptors, explained Ackley. council will use special assessment levies — which reflect the vary-ihg costs — as a guide in determining the graduated fee, said Ackley. The specific gujde would be the levy in the assessment district nearest the property owner who is going to be billed, said Ackley. Bond estimates that the new fee will begin at $300 per property owner. He. said that the highest special assessment district in the village has an assessment of $2,200 per property owner. The new method of assessing persons outside a district should “equalize fees in that particular area,” said the attorney. Different areas can't help but have different tap-in fees to the main interceptor, Bond said. These fees are included in a special assessment. Home owners can pay th«? fee to be set by the council at once qr over several years. Businesses must pay the total fee at once, said Bond. “Mr. Bond is very capable of preparing ordinances,” Ackley asserted. Crupi also objected to “the failure of the council to uniformly apply the original ordinance.” “Some people had to pay and others did not in substantially the same situations,” he said. There is much more to these objections, which “would take several hours to explain,” Crupi said. 2-YEAR CONTROVERSY Ackley said that this controversy has been brewing for two years. “It is the problem over the method of levying sewer charges for residents not in a special assessment district,” explained the village manager. ’ Property owners served by sewers in a special assessment district have already paid their share for the sewers, said attorney Bond. , The $300 uniform fee was set in April ‘1965 after the Michigan, Supreme Court PTAMeeting Tonight The Parent Teacher Association of Milford and Baker elementary schools, Huron'Valley School District, still hold its first general meeting tonight at 8 at Baker, 716 N. Union, Milford. A representative from the Mott Center for Community Affairs at Oakland University will discuss “Are Schools for Everyone?" Sesquicentennial Fete Ends in Utica UTICA — The city wound up its week-long Sesquicentennial Celebration yesterday with a huge 175-unlt parade down Cass and Auburn. It was viewed by some 10,000 area residents whose enthusiasm remained , undampened by a cloudburst. Sesqul Chairman Jerome Donahue issued his thanks from the committee to' everyone who participated and gave their time to the celebration. “We are very pleased with the overall result — the cooperation was great, and we think the activities helped weld the community together. The v weather was great all week, too, except for a little rain yesterday.” Yesterday’s parade pt 2:30 p m. was marshaled by Congressman James O’Hara atid leading off was the new Adlai Stevenson High School band in'its first public appearance. * * * Mayor Fred Beck and city councilman . appeared in a horse-drawn wagon.. Sesqui Queen Mrs. Dorothy Kaiser and her court rode in one of the many floats entered by schools, churches and clubs. Antique cars, fire trucks, many bands and clowns made up some of the other entries. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1907 now look/new look fashionable. Very right and handsomely expressed by Eagle in an exciting collection of menswear at HHS. The emphasis centers on the grey/black tones, although Eagle also shows the popular black/white, brown/black, and blue/black shades. Jhe fabrics, in pure wool and wool-silk blends, are styled in art one- and two-button models... in checks that are subtle and refined ... in plaids that are clear or muted. One-trouser suits (below right) are priced from $115; two-trouser suits (abov^ right) from 139.50. (Below left) A striking two-button, bl^ck-and-white check sport coat with slanted flap pockets &nd side vents, at 69.95. (Above left) An elegant four-button / (two-to-button) double breasted sport coat in a black-and-white Glen plaid, at $75. The Eagle collection of suits, sport coats, and topcoats in checks and plaids is one of fall's freshest fashion stories... and it's at HHS right now. Tues. and Wild tv 5:30 p.m. 3Q9 N. Telegraph ltd., Pontiac Our Birmingham Store’ Open Thurs. and Fri. to 9 p.m. . . Sat. to 5:30 p.m. t 300 Pierce St., Birmingham THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 Money Plentiful as ^ Snow Members' Speeches Limited J MARKETS ■' The following are top prices | hovering sales of locally grown I produce by growers and sold byl Ujem in UNITED NATIONS, N.Y.idelegates should hold theirlday off because the General As- *! (AP) - With’ the United Nations speeches to half an hour. ■ jsembjy hall was occupied by growing in members, the Gener- Nearly everybody has. But So-'conference for the pledging of al Assembly is talkier than ever viet Foreign Minister Andrei A. | voluntary contributions to the U.N. Assembly Gets Detroit Bdreau of Markets as of Friday, Produce FRUITS ‘ Apples, Cortland/bu. .. Apples, Crab, bu..... ..Apples, Graham 6py, bu. Apples, Greening, bu. Apples, Johnathon, bu. * Apples, Cider, 4-gal. case Apples, McIntosh ......... Apples, Northern Spy, bu. . Apples, Red Delicious bu. Apples, Wolf River, tu. Blueberries, 12-pt. crt. ... Grapes, Concord, pk. bskl. Pears, Bartlett, It bu. Pears. Bose, % bu...... Plums, Prune, % bu. . ^•Plums, Stanley, 'A bu. . •♦Watermelons, bu...... VEGETABLES Beans. Green Rou Beans, Kentucky Wonder. &u, Beans, Roman, inn * Beans, Beets, Beans, Beets, oz. ocn Beets, topped. •rRed,-bur~..... • Sprouts, bu.... Cabbage, Standard Variet dz. bnch. Cello Pak, 2-dz. this year. Delegates have been [Gromyko spoke for 55 minutes asked to limit their speeches, and Egyptian Foreign Minister In the current 22nd session, Mahmoud Riad spoke forv an 5IJ1113 of the 122 U.N. members hour and 20 minutes, to name a J “'signed up to take part in the couple that exceeded the limit. ,:ls general policy debate, which be- The assembly’s president, Ro-4.^0 gan Sept. 21 and will end nextmanian Foreign Minister Cornell Friday. liu Manescu, let them run on be- 4-g ★ * * cause that has been the practice aoo That compares With 108 tak- in the general debate. 2.50 ing part last year and 101 the | There is no limit on subject year before. The figures came.matter. The most popular sub-|members and others are con-lout over the weekend after the jects this year are Vietnam and suiting privately on what the 3 5<jspeakers’ list was closed Fri-jthe Middle East. But a lot has council can do to settle that si-iso day. been said about disarmament, i % I This year the word was colonialism, apartheid and eco-jjf passed that, to squeeze all the nomic development. ’^.speakers into the allotted time,I The general debaters took to- U.N. development which helps backward countries build up their economies. Next Monday,, after the al debate is over, the assembly is expected to start debating the situation in the Middle East that has resulted from the June 1s-raeli-Arab war Meanwhile, Security Council tuatiop. Lord Caradon of Britain, who is on the council conferred Sunday with Foreign Minister Abba Eban of Israel Cabbaoe Sprouts, Cabbage, Stands Carrots, dz. bnch. Carrots, Cello Pa Carrots, topped, bu. Cauliflower, dz. Celery, Pascal, 2 to 5 Celery, Pascal, dz. sit I ' Pascal Hearts, Cucumbers, slicers. Dill, dz. bchs......... Eggplant, bu. Eggplant, long type, pk. bskt. Gourds, pk. oskt. Horseradish, pk. bskt. Kohlrabi, dz. bch.............. Okra, Leaks, dz. bch. o]Onions, dry. 50-1. ag Onions. Green, dz. cn Onions, Pickling, lb. Parsley, Curly, dz. bch. Parsley, Root, dz. bch. Parsnips, Cello Pak, d Peas, Blackeye, bu. Peppers. Cayenne, pk. bskt. Peppers, Pimiento, bskt. Peppers, Red Sweet, pk. Peppers, Sweet, bu. Potatoes, 50-lb. bag .... Potatoes, 20-lb bag .. Pumpkins, ton Radishes, Black, % bu. Radishes, Rad, Radishes, white Squash, Acorn. Squash, Buttercup, Souash, Butternut, The New York Stock Exchange NE WYORK (AP) - New York Stock i Exchange selected morning prices: Sales Net PMC Cp .75 (hds.) High Low Last Chg. FoodFair .90 A I FordMot 2 0 — ForMcK ..... 51% 51% flU (hds.) High Low Last Chg. 3.00 ABC Con .80 2.25 Abex Cp 1.0 2.25 ACF Ind 2.20 32Va 32% + : 32% 32% 32% + white, dz. bch. 22 38% 36% 36't Admiral .25o AirRedtn 1.50 AlcanAlum 1 AllegCp .log 25 HU 14% 14% AllegLu 2.40b 2 73*4 73'A 73% -t Alleg Pw 1.20 23 23 22% 22% - Allied C 190b 22 43% 43% 43% AlliedStr 1.32 12 40% 40% 40% . Amerada 3 1.75 AmAIrlln .80 35.00 Am Bosch .60 2.00IAmBdcst 1.60 1.25! Am Can 2.20 1.00 AmCrySug 1 2.25 AmCyan 1.25 2.25 AmElP 1.44b . 2.25 A Enka 1.30a . 2.25 AmFPw 1.16 67 +2 82% + 1 3 55% 55% 55% 25 24% 25 ■ 34% 34% 34V 35% 35% 35% 37% 37% 37% + 1 Tomatoes Turnips, Turnips, dz. bchs. 1.25 Am Hosp .50 2 25 AmlnvCo 1.10 * 50 AmMFdy .90 1.00 AMet Cl 1.90 I Am Motors 2 25 55 343 23 35% 35% 35% ^% 37% 37% V* 30% 30% 55% — 70 — 10 18% 18% 18% + 27 22% 22% 22% + 21 55% 55% 55% + 68 14 13% 13% — 12 38% 38% 38% — 3 m Kale, ou is? 7 26V 25 9Vi 7 71% 71% 71% - ' 9% LETTUCE AND GREENS eceiery. Cabbage, dz. -Indive, bu. «£ndlve. Bleached, bu. Sscarole, bu............ Escarole, Bleached, bu. ipr aft m Lettuce, Boston, Ampex Corj Amphenol Anken Cher Armco Stl 2 oo J Amphenol Jo 259 3.00, Pk. bskt. iuettuce, Romame. bu. »SSBr1 TO ArmstCk ISO! Ashld Oil ...I'tftlAssd DG 2 SO Atchison I 60 ^ lAvto Cp 1.3 Avnet .50b Avon Pd U 4 13% 13% 13% — 1 8 53% 59% 53% ... 20 35 35% 35% - 1 10 66 56 66 ... 16 31% 31% 31% — ' Poultry and Eggs DRTROIT POULTRY 20 47% 47% 47% + 9 117% 117% 117% — —B— 50% 50% + ype, 28-29; broilers /DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)- Prices paid tor pound for No. 1 live poultry: roastei 530. T DETROIT EGGS maooa ecessryyryyx hn DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)- Egg Balt GE 1.52 7 30% Beat Fds 1.65 15 63'/a 63% G Accept 1.30 Gen Mills .80 GenMot 2.55g GenPrec 1.50 GPubSvc .46g G PubUt 1.50 GTelEI 1.40 Gen Tire .80 Ga Pacific lb Gerber 1.10 Getty Oil .10g Gillette 1.20 Glen Aid wl Glen Aid .70 Goodrich 2.40 Goodyr Grace C< Granites GrantWT GrantWT 1 Grace Co Granites GrantWT GrantW* GIA8.P ■ m Rv 3 Gt West Finl GreenGnt .80 Greyhound 1 GrumnAir .80 Gulf Oil 2.60 GulfStaUt .80 37 35% 35% 35% + % —(v — 2 32% 32% 32% — % 3 30% 30 30 — % 27 21% 21% 21% + % 3 25% 25% 25% + % 18 61% 61% 61% ____ 20 112% 112% 112% .. 16 72% 72% 72% + % 2 36% 36% 36%..... 56 86% 86% 86% .. .. 79 72 71% 71%+2% -2 6% 6% 6% — % 14 30 29% 30 ... 58 47% 46% 47 + % 42 29% 29 29 — % 19 61%* 61% 61% + % 7 35% . 35% 35% + % 6 91% 91% 91% — % 16 60% 60 60% . 14 14% 14% 14%..... 11 16%, 16% 16% + % 10 72% 72% 72% — % 32 48% 48% 48% ... 12 45% 45% 45% + % 4 28% 28% 28% ..... 6 36V 36% — 1 15 31% 31% 31% xIO 62% 62% 62% ... 24 15% 15% 15% — 1 5 39% 39% 39% ... 8 23% 23% 23% — I 22 34% 34% 34% + * 36 74% 74% 74% + 3 3 23% 23% 23% + 1 —H— HollySug Homestk .30 * x22 47% 46% 47% 12% 12% _ 46% 47% 3 34% 34% 34% — % -4 48 47% 48. to 20 91% 91% 91% Howmet 1.20 9 100% 100 100% "ds .50b 25 43 42% 42% CP .17f 152 8% 8% 8% —I— Pw 1.50 2 31% 31% 31% — % Bell How .50 Bendlx i.4o BethStl 1.50a .Boeing 1.20 ices'BolseCasc .25 3 47% 47% 47% - 13 81% 81 81% 19 53% 53% 53% ■ large, 31-33%; large, 29W31 %; me-1 BrlslMyers l mall" 14-15. Brun™”k CHICAGO BUTTER, EGOS aSSTr/m? ------- m «*• sa&^i■,# V+lBulova .70b | c 58*4 carl 90 Bj Burrough/l ° wholesale buying prices* lower; 75 per cent or ra, Fln.n, Whites 30; mixed 29; CalumH 120 lards 25; checks 18. CampRL Me _____O POULTRY ----* CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) - I poultry: wholesale buying prices changed; roasters 26-29. 43% 43% 43% 36% 36% 36% 2.20 8 55% 55% 55% CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mercantile Exchange—Butter steady; whole* ‘ " Ing prices unchanged; 93 score 92 A 67; 90 B............* 66%; 89 C 60% Eggs uneven; 82% 82 82% - ; 34% 34% — 3 21% 21% — 3 39% 39% 39% + _ J2 32 32 + 1 12 39% 39% 39% + > IngerRand j InsNoAm 2. | terlkSt 1.1 lowaPSv 1.24 93 21% 21% 21% 5 31 2 32 - 393 171% 171 Jewel Co JohhMan 2.20 Jon John .60 JonLogan .80 Jones L 2.70 ns .50 Mfg 1.25 Livestock Camp soup Canteen .80 CaroPU 1.34 Carrier Cp I Carterw .40a Case Jl CaterTr Case I Cater ICelaheseCp leant SW x8 33 15 23: 3 37 10 61 32 18% 18% 18% 23% 23% 23% — % 37% 37% 61% 61% — % 18% 18% + % 21% 21% 21% — % KimbClk 2.20 2 64% 64% Ins .30 20 48*i DETROIT (AP! iot enough est; utility _________ , Cert-teed .80 (USD A)-Call® 75. CessnaA or heifers for, prf 50-18.50; cutter 16. DETROIT LIVESTOCK ■■■U$pA)-*R^^^R, I ssr,-- heifers for. price CFI Stl - ag 'Cites Ohio ChiMil StP 18’ ■ 18% 18% Ch K] Hogs 25; not enough in today's supply | CHICAGO >,000; 1-2 19 250 lbs 19.00-19.75; 1-3 325-400 Chrysler 2 CIT Fin 1.60 CiiesSvc 1.80 ClevEIIII 1.80 CocaCola 2.10 ColRnRalT.OO 3 47% 47% 10 19% 19% 25 35% 35V 69 53* 23 35V 36 51H 2 38% 53% 53% 53% ■ __ 35% 35 35 ■ 36 51% 51% 51% 2 38% 38% 38% 5 123% 123% 123% ‘ Cattle 6,500; calves none; heifers prime CololntG l..60 *1,150-1,400 lb slaughter-steers, yield grade JBI l-40h 3 and 28.25-2875; mixed Cslce and Col Gas 144 prime 1,1507,375 lb 27.75 - 28.25; choice.ComlCre 80 *U50-1,400 lb yield grade 2 to 4 27.00- C°mSolv 1.20 28k00; mixed good and choice 900-1,150 Somwfd 2 20 ribs 26.00-27.00; high choice and prlme C°m**t 950-1,050 lb slaughter heifers 26.50-26.75; 50nJ<l‘* I s? choice 800-1,025 lbs yield grade 2 to 4^J ----------------good and choice 759- ConFood 925 lb 25.00-26.00. ConNGas Sheep 400; a few lots choice and prime ConPow 1 90-110 lb wooled slaughter lambs 23.00- J00!*1/'! 24.00; Choice 80-100 22.00-23.00; aood «nd ContAIrl Choice 20.50-22 ^ont Can 2' Cont Ins 3 Cont Oil 2.60 Control Data Cooper In 1.20 Corn Pd 1.70 CorGW 2.50a Cowles .50 CoxBdcas .50 43% 43% 43V 18 27% 27% 27% - 4 32% 32% 32% • 3 37% 37% 37% 8 47% 47% 47% 58 53 51% 51% • 44 33% 33% 33% 37 42% 41% 42% ■ 3 56% 55% 55% 18 82% 82% 82% 48 79% 79% 79% Stocks of Local Interest ■ STOCKS OF AREA INTEREST Flat"’** decimal points arc eighth,{Crow OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Crown Cork . Quotations from the NASD or* repre- Crown, tentative inter-dealer prices ol approsl-'Cruc. Stl II a.m. Inter-dealer market,.. .change throughout the dav. Prices He [Curtis pud 2 345 345 3,5 —1W CrowhZe 2.20 S mately II a.m. Inter-dealer nierkets!£ud*,hV Co ..... .....mm...__________jassaButm commission. .Associated Truck ... -Braun Engineering Citizens Utilities Cles ' Detrex Chemical . ^Diamond Crystal . . <* Kelly Services . ‘Mohawk Rubber Co. ‘Monroe Auto Equipn -‘North Centr. Day PL 1.40 I Deere 1.80a rlntlng Wyandotte MUTUAL FUNDS Affiliated Fund Chemical Fund Ommonwealth stock Keystone Income K ) Keystone Growth K-2 •MBin. Investors Growth Ma)16- Investors Trust 18 1 Del Mnte 27 | Delta Air 21 DenRGW 15.7 DetEdis 1 38.6 Det Steel 32 2 DiamAlk 8! Wm DowChm 1 Dresslnd I 25 Duke Pw l .20 duPont 3 750 14] IfcmSVSSSS* -40 1.34 21.151 [7* 12.83|East , 7 27H 27Va 27Vj - —- Dv— 6 24% 24% 24% ••• 3 40% 40% 40% - 1 3 30 30 30 — ' 4 63 63 63 + 1 3 35% 35% 35% + 1 15 110% 110% 110% — ] 26 18% 18% 18% — 1 19 28% 28 5 18% 18% 18% — 1 14 34% 34% 34% ... 2 96% 96% 96% .. 2 42% 42% 42% + ; 12 84% 84% 84% + « 4 36% 36% 36% + 1 4 33% 03% 33% 4 * 9 170% 170 170% 4 1 1 31% 31% 31% - j 14 19% 19% 19% 4 \ 94| E Kodak 1.60a 20 133% 133 133 33 51V 339 34% 34V , GAG 13 E IBondS 1.72 10 Electron Sp 43 12.46 EIPasoNG t 13.84 15.04< Emfer El *1.68 ----1 End Johnson EthylCorp .60 " ancPd r.60b BONO AVIRAGBS Compiled by Tha Associated Press 88 10 Vlit 10 If I Util Fgn Y.Ytf. flat change Prv.. Day Month Age 61.5 90.8 A 02 90.4 mi w.6 .7%4 95.6 H h*6. M3 92l3 83J 80.8 91.1 83.3 U 84 84 80 2 90,1 H.7 Ever sharp FarroCp 1.20 Fllfrol 1.40 FlrMtne 1.40 FlrstChrt .fit 139 140% 41 43 70% 70% 70% 72 53% 52% 53% 41 12 26 25% 26 - 03 25% 24% 25% 4 2 86% 06% 86% 4 28% 28% 28% — 16 43% 43% 43% 4 21% 21V 31% 3V 4 21% —F— 42 97 lie# LOW 70.1 88.9 79.2 . 90.4 83.71 Fla FL1 1.1 23% 23% 23% 4 13 110% 110 27 8% 8% 8% ... 17 51% 51% 51% — % 7 35% 35% 35% ... 24 62% 6IV4 61% 4 7 32V* 32 32% 4 % 9 569% 568% 568% 4 % 7 37% 37 37 — % 34% 34% - V - 10 —1% 74 29% 29 . 29% 4 V* 57 115 114% 115 4 % 1 24% 24% 24% 4 * —J— 12 30% 30% 30% — « 8 63% 63% 63% — to 4 94% 94% 94% 4 to 2 58 58 58 12 62% 62% 62% 4 to 1 24 24 24 ... x6 35% 34% 34 4to —K— 7 53 52% 52 %V 54 31% 31% 31V II 49% 48% 4 9 143% 143% 143% 64% 64% 64% — 20 40% 40% 40% PepsiCo .90 PerfFilm .41 PfizerC 1.20a PhelpD 3.40; Phlla El 1.6-PhiIRdg 1.61 PhilMorr PhlllPet PitPlate 2.6 Pitts Ste< Polaroid “ octerG ibSvcColo blkli Pat 2.40 ate 2Mm Pitts Steel Polaroid .. I ProcterG 2.20 PubSvcC; i Publklnd I ->ugSPL 1.60 ^ullman 2.80 j 1 !r®w Last Ch 39 60to 1 117 30 WM 38% 39% 66 52% 50 51% 8 82 81% 81% 35 75 - - 26 30% 27 92 40 48% 51% 42 Sales (hds.) _ 40 30% 30 ....... 58VL .... 117 117 66 52% 8 82 35 75 74% 74% — ’ 26 309' 27 92 40 48V 37 60% 60% 3 64 63% 63% • 12 14% 14 14% - 86 213%. 211 211 • 2 90% 90% 90% . 23 21% 21% 21% i 4 9% 9% 9% . 1 35% 35% 35% 7 49% 49% 49^ - —R— 104 61% 61% 61% • 15 73% 73% 73% 17 37% 37 37% 39 51% 50% 50% 57 40% 40 40% 23 43% 43% 43% 4 % RoanSel .35g 120 10% 10% 10% .. Rohr Cp JO 14 -27% 27% 27% 4 RoyCCola .72 3 36% 36 36% 4 1 Ml 33 44 44% 44% — 23 28% 27% 27% — I StLSanF 2.20 StRegP l.4b Sanders .30 Schenley 1.80 Sobering 1.20 Sclent Data SCM Cp .60b 43 24% 24V 6 44% 44* 3 52% 52% 52% “ 31% 31% 31% 58% 57% 57% soon SbdCsL 2.20 SearlGO Sears Roe la Seeburg .60 Sharon Stl 1 SherwnWm 2 Sinclair 2.60 SlngerCo 2.20 Smith ' 11 6 44% 44% 3 52% 34 31% 68 58% _ . _____ 13 53% 53% 53% 9 67% 67% 22 124% 123% I 56 *“• 186 31 IS 60 ID 58% 57 59. ____ ___ 31 22% 21% 22% — 124% 55% 55% - 59% 60 3 50% South Co 1.08 SouNGas 1.30 SouthPac 1.50 South Ry 2.80 Spartan Ind Kaiser Kayser... m - I Ktnnecotf 2 11 49% 48% 49 23% 23% 23% r Slag .80 20 39% 39 LehPCem Lth Val Ind Lehman 2.ug LOFGIs 2.80a LibbMcN .36f Llvingstn Oil LockhdA 2.20 LoneS Cam 1 LoneSGo 1.12 LonglsLt 1.16 Lordlard 2.50 Lucky Sir .90 4 32% 32 13 13% 13% 13% 4 % 25 8% 8 8% - % 5 38% 38% 38% 4 % 6 55 54% 55 4 % 49 15% 15% 15% 4 % 7 33% 33% 33% % 28 107% 107% 107% 4 % 26 9% 9 9% 4 % 46 63% 63 18 r 15 27 26: 52% 52 20% 20 20% % f 27 27 4 % xIO 26% 26% 26% 4 % 8 52% 52 52% 4 % 78 135% 133 133% 41% Macke Co .30 Mad Fd 2 23g Magnavox .80 Marathn 2.40 Mar Mid 1.40 Marquar 25a MertinMar 1 MayDStr 1.60 Maytag 1.60a McCall 40b McDonD .40b MaadCp 1.90 Malv Sh 1.60 MarckC 1.40a MGM i.20b MldSoUtll .76 MlnnMM 1.30 MlnnPLt 1.10 AAo Kan Tex MobilOM 1-80 Mohasco 1 Monsan 1.60b MontOUt 1.52 MontPow 1.56 MontWard 1 Morrell Motorola 1 4 26% 26>4 26% .. 45 49% 49% 49% — % 1 75% 75% 75% 4 % 1 31% 31% 31% . 19 16% 16% 16% 4 % 52 23 22% 22% ... 22 36% 36% 36% — % 1 38% 38%' 38% 4 % 2 32% 32% 32% - % 86 52% 51% 51% —1% 11 40% 40% 40% 4 % 1 77% 77% 77% 4 % 17 87% 87% 87% 4 % 17 59% 59 59% - % 8 22% 22% 22% 15 90% 89% 90’ 4 22 21% 22 64 19% 18% 18?. 23 44% 44% 44% 89% 90% 21% 22 18% 18to 44% 44* 33 19 18% 19 87 48% 8% 48% 4 31% 31% 31% StdBrand 1.40 Std Kolls .50 StOIICal 2.50b StdOIIInd 1.90 StdONJ 2.40g StdOilOh 2.50 St Packaging Swift Co 1.20 Tampa El .60 Tektronix Telodyn 3.81f Tenneco 1.20 Texaco 2.60a TexETrn 1.20 Tex G Sul .40 Texeslnst .80 Tex PLd 35g Textron .70 Thlokol .40 Tim RB 1.80a TransWAir 1 Transamer 1 Transltron Trl Cont .63g TRW 1.40 TwenCen 1.60 IC Ind .60 Carbide 2 Elec 120 UnOilCal 1.40 Un Pec 1.80e Uniroyal 1.20 UnltAlrLin 1 UnltAlrc 1.60 Unit. Cp .S0g Unit Fruit f UGasCp 1.70 Unit us USGypsm US Ind .70 US Lines 2b USPIyCh 1.50 US Smelt 1b US Steel 2.40 UnlvOPd 1.40 Uplohn 1.60 Varlan Asso Vendo Co .60 VeEIPw 1.36 95 24% 44% 24% • 80 135% 134% 135% +1% MtSfTT 1.24 7 23% 23% 23% —N— . Nat Air I in .60 ?6 83% 82% 82% 48% — % Can .50 9 37" Nat Bisc 2 Nat Can NatCash NatDairy 1.50 Nat Diet 1.80 Nat Fuel 1.68 Net Genl .20 Net Gyps 2 N Lead 2.25g Nat Steel 2.50 Nat Tea .80 Nevada P .92 Newbrry ,30g NEngEt 1.36 NYCent 3.12a NlaqMP 1.10 Norf Ik Wst 6a NoAmRock 2 NorNGas 2.40 Nor Pac 2.60 Occident job Ohidldis 1.30 OUnMath lio Omark 1.17# Otis Elev 2 Outb Mar .80 58% 58% 21% 22% 34% 35% 50 50 23 76 75% 76 +1% 6 77% 77% 77% 27 99% 59% 99% 16 35% 34% 34% 78 25% 25% 25% 558 40 39 39 59 30% 30% 30% 5 52% 52% 52% + 139 20 20 -20% + 193 49% 49% 49% — 23 27% 26% 27% — 1 37% 37% 37% 7 39% 39% 39% 11 36% 35% 36% 35 61% 61% 61% 22 58 57V4 1 127 68% 67% 71% 71% 71% 37 15V 12 48% 48 48 39 49% 49% 49% # 11 48% 47% 48% — 4 56% 56% 56%— 84 60% 59% 60% + 1 76 76 76 .. 24 35% 35% 35% .. 26 27 26% 26% + —T— • 28% 28% 28% — 52 55% 55 55 .. 105 122 119 119% —: 120 30 29% 29% + 67 82% 82% 82% + ~ 23% S% 23% + 185 153% 155% 4-1% 9 23% 23% 23% - 155% . 1 118% 117% 117% — 4 20% »% 20% + 36 46% 45% 45% — 105 22% 22% 22% + 2 45% 45% 45% ... 21 50% 50% 58% 4* 21 55% 54% 55% 4- 25 23% 23% 23% 4 61 51% 51% 51% — 17 23% 23% 23% 4* 54% • Peace Sough! in Hauler Strike Violent Dispute Aired at Conference Table PITTSBURGH '(AP).S The violence-marked steel haulers strike has reached the oonler-ence table amid expressions of hope and determination to settle the walkout, now entering its third mo^th. Pennsylvania Gov. Raymond P. Shafer called the meeting bringing together representa tives of seven states, the Team-sters Union, striking truckers and trucking companies today ★ ★ ★ “He wants them to stay in the conference room until this thing is settled,” said a Shafer aide. The governor says he won’1 stand for any niore violence and this thing must be settled.” Daniel M. Berger, Pittsburgh attorney assisting the strikers' two attorneys, Bernard A. Berk man of Cleveland, Ohio, and Porter Draper of Gary, Ind, said, “I think that our attitude is hopeful—that reasonable men will sit down and try to work out these problems.” ‘NUMBER OF PROBLEMS He said “There's not one problem but a number of them The waiting-time problem is one of the things we want to get settled . . . and theres’ a number of other things that I don’t want to go into. We’ll stay as long as need be.” Ohio, Maryland, Mcihigan New Jersey, New York and West Virginia joined Pennsylvania in sending governor’s representatives. The strikers, independent truckers who own their rigs have rebelled against a national 0 n t r a c t reached through the Teamsters. They want better terms, and a separate contract Ski Spending Soaring By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK (AP) - Businessmen who sell to the ski trade are talking these days about the increasingly higher prices that customers are willing to pay for everything from boots to building lots near ski slopes. Although spending per skier is now estimated to average a bit under $300 a year, more and more participants are paying $170 for their skies, $80l for boots, $40| for bindings, $30 for gloves and $35 for poles. A real estate development between two ski resorts in southern Vermont is now selling lots beginning at $2,700 to $4,000 that in preski days would have brought a fraction of that price from farmers or campers. ★ * ★ Money seems plentiful snow. Each year skiers demand more luxurious accommodations, thus helping to finance the transition of ski areas with bare necessities to year-round resorts with golf, swimming, dining and dancing. Ski resorts, as distinguished from ski areas, are now what modern full-service motels are CUNNIFF developing at the very time the increase in ski populatioh, now totaling somewhere from 2.25 million up, shows signs of decelerating. A very large percentage of those on the slopes this season will be novices, but their brand-new participation in the sport may be nearly offset by the number Retiring. More are quitting than ever before. ★ * ★ Not all of those who retire, however, discontinue their snowtime spending. Many spg\y„ romances that lead to marriage lead also to retirement, but couples later may return for swimming, sunbathing, dancing, skating. Transportation for this hyperactive, spending crowd is improving. Wide highways and excursion buses have more'than offset the discontinuance of ski trains. Indonesia Cuts Chinese Ties Return of Diplomatic Staff Is Demanded JAKART A(AP) — Indonesia announced today its intention to to the Ma and Pa operations ol suspend diplomatic relations the early 1950S. Glamor with Communist China. abounds, liquor flows and the a Foreign Ministry statement, J u hills after dark echo and twinkle Ud Indonesia has demanded !n?,dweek Lare Each weekend hundreds of buses leave large Eastern cities for the mountains. In Seattle, where snow sports exist at several resorts 1% hours away, an estimated 150 buses leave each Saturday and Sunday in season. CHARTER FLIGHTS Some airlines also report charter business from the Eastern population centers to the Western ski areas has increased in the past couple of years. And southerners, too, can travel a few hours to slopes in Tennessee and North Carolina. The big money spent on skiing and winter vacations is based in the trend for more Americans to make bigger wages for working fewer hours. Leisure time and incomes seem to be moving upward as inevitably as a ski tow. * ★ ★ Some evidence of this new way of life, and its effects also, come from a study by Ski Business. It found, among other things, that the median income of its ski subscribers was $13,572, far above the national average. More than 13 per cent of those surveyed owned swimming pools, 17 per cent had vacation homes and 48 per cent had traveled outside the country in the past year (perhaps to the Laur-entian ski resorts of Canada). REDUCED RISKS Because such money and time abounds, operators of ski resorts have greatly reduced their I risks. Rooms once vacant in with fun. The spending spree, says Ski Business, a trade publication, is that the Chinese government immediately allow the entire In- Revolutionory Move Feared in Portugal NEW YORK (AP)—The New York Times said today Portu- skiers with more flexible schedules. donesian staff leave the country. Peking to I The development of snowmaking machines also has taken much of the risk out of the busi-When this is completed, the|ness- ^ 10 V^rs ag° most statement said, Indonesia will maJor ,slopes gam^!ed on snow allow the Chinese staff in Jakar- as a 'armer gambles on ram. ta to leave. They often suffered disasters. Earlier, Indonesia tried to move Now. at 'eas| ^50 res0rts around the world have snow- its embassy staff in Peking to , Hong Kong, but China refused !mak«rs- So"ie machines are exit permits owned even by the high moun- rmiP attempt tain resorts in the West’ which COUP ATTEMPT generally are embarrassed to Under deposed President Su-j say they are less than knee-guese authorities are becoming jkarno, Indonesia was a friend of deep in powder, increasingly concerned about a Red China. But that changed With technology lessening the for owner-operators. The union clandestine revolutionary organ-1 after the military put down a business risks, with money and has refused to recognize thelization seeking to overthrow the coup attempt led by the Indone- leisure time growing and with strike. ' ’.government of Prime Ministerisian Communist party in Octo-itransportation improving, the The highways were relatively Antonio de Oliveira Salazar. her 1965. Peking ^vas accused outiook in the mountains is up. < The Times said the organiza- of having a hand in the! ------------------------------- tion is made up of armed forces coup and later was linked with officers and former military pamphlets urging Indonesian men and is reported to have]Chinese to resist the government carried out “two successful andiof acting President Suharto, highly professional commando | Mobs of Indonesian youths actions to obtain money and have attacked the Chinese Em-arms.” jbassy in Jakarta on four occa- * * ★ jsions over the past year and a The existence of the year-old'half. KYOTO, Japan (AP)—Rescue League of Union and Military * * * workers lifted 4-year-old Hiro- Action,” believed to have 50 to The government expelled two^^j ^raj to sa[ety today after 75 members, “is fully known to Chinese diplomats in April, was lrapped for more than the Portuguese authorities,” the charging them with subversive six hours at the ^om of a Times said. actions and two in August for moot foundation pipe on a con-. The newspaper said foreign allegedly shooting at the Indone- gtruction site hereK K diplomats and Portuguese ob-js‘an youths who stormed the| The child was rushed to a hos. servers believe the league embassy, should be regarded with con- calm Sunday, compared with violence that reached a peak more than a week ago with 40 incidents in 24 hours along the Pennsylvania Turnpike. «r sm siv 17 23Vj ■" » 55 23 40*% 40 40 IB 454% 4JV. 45V, 94 65*4 444% 65V, + 24 ft 88 V, 884% + 1 11V% 11*6 11V% + 29 539% 534% 53Vi + 'A 8 10*4 80 »0'4 + *4 111 38V% 179% 20V% -I- 'A 8 32*4 319% 319% — 4% 20 749% 74*4 74*4 — 4% 43 2944 2»V% 294% — 4% 1 35*4 35*4 35*4 . 15 519% 51*4 -5W% + 'A 97 61V% 604% 61 +2 48 4544 454% 4544 . 5 919% 91*4 919% + 9% 10 60 5944 5944 . 45 36V, 36 36'/% + 44 1 2944 2944 2944 - 'A 17 414% 41 414% 4- 4% —w— 23 44 434% 439% — V% 3 234% 23V% 23 + 4% TRACTOR DYNAMITED Pennsylvania troopers said a tractor parked near a diner in New Kensington, Pa., was dynamited, destroying the cab. Troopers arrested a man at the Bedford interchange of the turnpike when he refused to move his car which was blocking a tractor-trailer loaded with steel tubing. In western Pennsylvania, along with eastern Ohio a hotbed of violence, state police substations were beefed up by troopers from areas not affected by the strike. State police cruisers also were escorting tractor-trailer convoys. .★ * * The strikers, numbering some 10,000 to 20,000 want their fed in creased from 73 per cent of the freight charge to 70 per cent They also want to be paid $15 an hour for the time they spend waiting in mills to be loaded beyond the first two hours. The strike, which began at Gary, Ind., has disrupted, steel production. - Steelmakers cut back produc tion, laid off workers and turned from trucks to rail in an effort Age magazine estimated that the nation’s steel production was cut 30 per cent by the strike. 34V% 34V, — 1 49% 49% 49% + % 23 38 72 43' 2 30% 30% 30% 48 19'/4 19 19% + 'A IS 43% *3% 43% — % 39 67% 66% 67V4 — % 14 S1% 51% 51%........ 6 15 15 15 .... 19 38»/4 37% 37% 29 30 29% 30 + % 17 25% 25% 25% + % 72 43% 43% 43% - Worthing 1.50 33 Pac G El p!Sn PgcPwLt ParkaDav Peab Coal Penn Dixie 7 103% 102% 102% 38% 39 49% 49% • 59% 59%-30% 30% 37% 36% i 109% 105% 101* ?? 26*4* 26% J6% + % 40 79% 78% 79 + % 4 31% 31% 31% + % 12 42% 42% 42% . 31 27% 27% 27% + % 6* 87 56% 56% — % 15 34% 33% 94% + V» 26 28% 28% 28% — % 18% 18% 2f% ..v.. 7 23% 23% 23% 99 18' 7 29 11 24% 24% 11 24% — % 35 31% 30% 30% — 1 —X—Y—Z— Xerox Cp 1.; YngstSht 14. (■ ■) Zenith R 1.20 24 68% 67% ------H ify - Copyrighted Sales figures are unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rates of < dends in the foregoing table are am dlsbursamants based on the last quart semi-annual declaration. Special payments not dc are Identified In ir extras, b—Annual . vidr ‘ ---------- dividend, d—Declared extra dividends nated as regular following .footnotes, a Also extra d __________ mm mmm SShS iui (lock dividend. - *—Paid last year. Payablo In stock during 1967, nth . --- , on ax-dlvldond or ox* a—Declared or paid to -Doclarod or paid attar r win up. k—Daclarad or paid this year, an accumulative issue wBh dividends In Srresrs. n—New Issue, p—Paid this year, dividend omitted, deterred or no' action taken at tut dividend meeting, r—Declared or paid In 1966 plus stock dividand. 1—Paid in stock during 1966, estimated cash value — — - ----or ex-distrl 1 ted cash tributlon i far this year. DOW JONB* AVERAGES 30 Indus ......... 30 Ralls v|—In bankruptcy or receivership I ------- undtr Bankruptcy t/gaiag by suth C— subject to Treasury Position TREASURY POSITION WASHINGTON (AP)—‘Tha cash position of tha Treasury compared with cor- TSk 4, ,966 * 6750,079,411.33 * 4,707,390,905.18 Withdrawals Fiscal cd Tjseswb tefei , , 13,003,389,393.00 13,358,388,631.11 (*) — Includes S86lJ«4AI3.n Sm not sub act ta stalutary ilm t. Japanese Boy, 4, Rescued After 6-Hour Ordeal siderable seriousness” on the basis of its initial successes. BANK ROBBERY These include a bank robbery in May said to have netted over $1 million and a raid on a military headquarters at Evora last month in which six submachine guns, six cases of ammunition and a number of revolvers were taken. The Times said a suspect' in the bank robbery, Ignacio Palma, would appear in court in Paris today on a request by the grounds. Lisbon government for his extradition to Portugal. ||| __ ... . . ., . .pital in serious condition be- 1 hy„Sal£■ cause of fatigue and shock, but S h t thT .S* S "f* doctors said his chances for sur-ing but the clothes they were ^ , were d wearing when the-embassy was attacked Aug. 5. Hiroyuki was playing alone at ARMED TROPS • the construction site when he Eight Indonesians are still in fell into the concrete pipe, mea-Peking, five of them with diplo- suring 1.2 feet in diameter. His matic status. China has £0 per- cries attracted the attention of sons in its embassy here, four with diplomatic status. The Chinese here are barred from leaving the embassy and armed troops are on constant guard around the battered his parents. Rescuers began pumping oxygen into the pipe while digging at its rim. They eventually dug 23 feet under the' ground, cracked, the pipe open and dragged out little Hiroyuki. Palma was arrested in Paris]; in August, the Times said American Stock Exch. NEW,YORK (AP) •' American Stock Exchange selected noon price*: tales Net (hds.) Hi^h Low Last Chg. 27% 27% • By ROGER E. SPEAR i Q — Pm afraid I’ve done a Q — A stock which interests foolish thing. I borrowed $2,500 me is recommended because it'on my house with the idea that ArkLGas 1.6? Asamera Oil AssdOII & G AtlasCorp wt Barnes Eng BrazllLtPw 1 Brit Pet .49p Campbl Chib Can 8o Pet 5%.5 13-16 + % if Utils .. bonds'* 4# Bonds . io NWiar' io Pubic i 928.46+1.33 259.51+0.26 129.09+0.06 . 330.09+0.38 .. 78.43 + 0.06 .. 78.53+0.17 .. 81.47+0.12 GulfResrc Ch HoernarW. .82 HuakyQU .30g STOCK AYE 0A8II N* chjno. Year Ago 1967 H^li 1967 XEt Ind Ralls Util Stocks . + J +.4 -hi +J .485.5 199.2 144*6 337.1 144.5 316J 486.0 201.1 146.3 pj 475.5 mO 146.5 335.4 388.0 143.9 134.6 269.4 493.2 2194 159.1 242.4 .4184 199.4 144.5.292.5 537.9 213.9 ml fil.T 380.0 143.9 120.2 269, 5 58 14 17' ______ 8 38% 38% 38% 45 5% .......... 142 4% 67 3% 3W 39S — vs 27 36% 34% 36% +1% 129 13% 13 13% + % 7 8 11-16 8 11-16 20 8 7 13-16 38 2 11-14 2 9-16 29-16 13 36 129. ! 3 7 13-16 7 13-16-116 1-16 2 9-16 — % 9% 9% — % 8% 1% + % 2% 2% 2% ......... I 16 35% 36 ... 22 17% 17% 17% + % 44 5% 5% 5% — % 149 4 11*16 4 7-16 4 H-16+3-16 6 12% 12% 12% , 14 22% 21% 22% + % 16 1% 8% 8% 118 7-16 8 3-16 8 7-16 + % 322 9% 8% 9% + % 349 5% 5% 5% + % RIC Group Scurry Rain Signal OIIA 1 32 37% 37% 37% + %] 3 17% 17% 17% + % 35 22 21% 21% f % 15 23% 22% 23% + % 18 21% 21% 21% — % 3 8% 8 8% ... 27 17% 17% 17% + % 3 9% 9% 9% ... . 119 37% 37 37% + % 8 7% 7 7% + % 19 48 47% 47% + % 49 #% 9% #% + % 23 1% 1% 1% — % 14 3 . 1% .2% . 17 34 33% tt% — % 94 40% 39% 39% + % j 52% }?% ay -. - Technicol .40 94 25% 24 Wnfforo.Jr.. J ■■ Copyrighted by The 24 Iltt Q 10-31 11-15 Q 10-12 10-19 * #»*#%[ Successfublnvestina is selling below its book value. Could you explain what this leans? — A.N. A'Book value is an accounting term which is not always clearly understood by investors. It is determined by adding up all the assets of a company, then deducting all debts and other liabilities. This sum is then divided by the number of common shares outstanding, to arrive at the book value per share. This is one of the many fundamental calculations made in the evaluation of common stocks, but you should never confuse it with earning power, which is considerably more important. As a rule, shares of situations operating in static or depressed industries can be expected to sell under their book value since there is relatively little demand for such stock#. On the other hand, companies in rapidly growing, popular fields are usually bid up to prices far above book value. could make more than the 6 per cent charged on the loan. bought 50 shares of Armour at 51 and have seen it go down substantially. Should I hold on or switch to something else? I have three children whym I want to help. — A.L. • A — In general, it’s a mistake to try too hard to make profits in the stock market. If you buy a good stock with your own surplus fends and without any great urgency tor immediate gains, the chances are you’ll do pretty well over a period of time. I believe that Armour is a good stock and that if you have patience you will ultimately be all right ii; this situation. .. * /★ ★ (Roger Spear’s 48-page Guide to Successful Investing Isavsft-readers. |"or your copy send $1.00 to Roger E. Spear in care of The Pontiac Press, Box 1618, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 10017.) (COPYRIGHT, 1907) THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1967 D—1 Team Sent in Philippines Doctor to Watch Faith Healer MANILA (AP) — The Philip-jgirr from Michigan pine Medical Association sent a ported, team of doctors today to ob-| The invalids, accompanied by serve the activities of Antonio Agpaoa, self - professed faith healer who is treating 108 American and two Canadian invalids. Agpaoa, a grade school dropout who once was convicted of illegal medical practices by Philippine authorities, is meeting with his patients at a beach resort in the northern town of San Fernando. half a dozen relatives and friends, include children and elderly persons suffering from tumor, eye, heart and other afflictions. Many are considered incurable by doctors. Each paid $1,350 fertile trip. The first report of a cure was carried Sunday by the Philippines Herald, whose Correspondent in the Northern Beach area of San Fernando said a Roman Catholic priest, uncle of a boy, Agpaoa claims he can per-14, crippled by polio, told him form surgery without the aid of instruments and cure sick people through the power of pray- were re* the faith healer. The girl was identified only as “Lynn." Medical authorities here say they cannot prevent anyone from seeking out the faith-healer but that court action can be taken to stop him from administering cures. There was no immediate sign of such a move over the weekend. Initial reaction on the part of newspapers was to criticize what one termed “dangerous hocus pocus.” Agpaoa was denounced as “an imposter with a gimmick.’’ that Agpaoa had made it pos sible for the boy to walk again without crutches after 11 years. Unconfirmed reports from, ^ Herald said the r^. Jo- San Fernando, some 100 miles north of Manila, say Agpaoa has been attending to some 15 persons a day. Two unconfirmed “curves” — involving a 1- seph Kernosek, identified as parish priest at -St. Aloysius Catholic Church tin Romulus Mich, reported tnpt the faith healer, had helped William Ker- year old boy and a 16-year old nosek 5end his kriees> one at a time. “1 prayed to God innmy own way, and he (Agpaoa) prayed in his own way,” the priest was quoted as saying, The report said the boy later was seen walking crutches. County Drivers to Get Awards Road Commission Banquet Tomorrow The Oakland County Road Commission will honor 205 of its drivers at a safety awards banquet tomorrow night at the Pontiac Elks Temple, 114 Orchard Lake. The drivers, 81 of them with A columnist warned Sunday that, unless action were taken, the Philippines would become known as a land of quack doctors and fakes. Another newspaper commentator, noting belief in such shrines as Lourdes, France, argued for “hunianity’s right to dream and hope for relief from suffering, sickness and even death itself." fm Deaths in Pontiac,Nearby An i. 8 f~*zjsrr'mranm'fi.r: :«as>,*a»pwya—ap Herman Hardison : 1for Fisher Body plant, died yes- Lodge No. 48, F&AM, at 7:30 - terday. He was a member of p.m. tomorrow. Service for Herman Hardison,)St. Paul Lutheran Church and Mr. Hall, a retired Pontiac 51, of 411 Franklin Road will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at the New Hope Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery by |§§ the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home. Mr. Hardison Died Saturday. |He was a Pontiac Motors Division employe. Surviving are his mother Mrs. Annie Hardison of Pontiac; a sister, Mrs. Ann Jones of Pontiac and a. brother. Lynn C. Irwin Eagle Lodge 2887 in Waterford:State Hospital employee, died Township. yesterday. He is a member of Surviving are his wife, Gwen- p&AM Lodge No. 41£ Plea-dolyn; his mother, Mrs. Ivan surevflle Ky Webber; a daughter, Mrs. Ter- surviving iu-e his wife, Flori-rence Ferns of Fenton; twoL. one dmlghteTt Mre ^u,. sons, Michael Crites and Rich- G Barr of Lake Orion; one ard Crites, both of Pontiac; eight grandchildren; a sister, Mrs Camilla Belanger of, and ^ Wa fford. Township; four grandchildren. brothers, including LeVerne and Leon of .Waterford Township and Dallas of Clarkston. Mrs. Brian W. Johnson son, Edward T. of Lake Orion; one brother; three sisters; two Henry Brandt BIRTHDAY GIRLS-Miss Barbara Floehr________„ I grandniece, Gale Ann Sander, both celebrafed their birthdays yesterday—the 100th for Miss Floehr and the first for little Gale, who seems pretty solemn about it all. They got together at a home for the aged ip Lancaster, N.Y., near Buffalo, where Miss Floehr lives. Gale’s home is on nearby Grand Island. Service for Lynn C. Irwin 74, of 695 Sterling will be 1:3( p.m. Wednesday at the. Voor-| METAMORA — Service for hees-Siple Funeral Home withj Henry Brandt, 89, of 4544 burial in Perry Mount Headley will be 2 p.m. tomor-Park Cemetery. I row at Christ Lutheran Church, Mr. Irwin died Saturday. ' [Hadley Township, by C. F. Sher-He was a retired millwright'man Funeral Home, Qrtonville. EFFORTS FRUSTRATED Efforts by officials and news men to witness the faith-healing' operations have been frustrated by reluctance on . the part of without both patients and healer. Dr. Pacifico Marco, president WALKED PREVIOUSLY of the Philippine MedicaJ Asso-But, in Michigan, the boy’s 0*04*011’ complained that his rep-mother, Norma Kernosek, said resentatives “were driven away . , . , her son had been walking this by burly men” guarding the ta[®e™raarea schools at past summer and at times he ritages where Agpaoa and his •* p’ could climb the stairs in their patients were staying, home. „ • ★ * ★ “There’s just not enough infer- Joseph Ruffner, 47, a steel mation to be able to tell if he’s'plant worker from Detroit, is better or not,” she said. “His leading the group. He says Ag-situation has changed quite a paoa cured him of a back ail- bit from time to time. For'jment during a visit here last) The evening is sponsored by awhile this summer he was1 year. the Clinton Valley Council, Boy perfect safety records the last LVen cutting the grass.” I The Philippine News Service,S00048 of America, to show seven years, represent 985 j Philippine News Service said says it has learned that groups I P,e the Scouting activities, years of safe driving expert-|an “eyewitness who declined to of Germans and British are Those interested in attending ehce. | be identified had reported see- planning to make similar trips the school night should contact Each will receive a wallet-(***8 patients emerging from! of hope. I the local scout center, 132 Frank sized award card and a lapel | Agpaoa’s cottage “happy and I pin from the National Safety! seemingly cured.” jp Council, cosponsor of the pro-1 The agency said that accord- j| mote Scouting programs will be Boys interested in becoming a cub scout, boy scout, or explorer and their parents are invited to attend, according to the local scout council. from' General Motors Corp. Truck and Coach Division. Surviving are his wife, Lola; two daughters, Gertrude of Pontiac, and Mrs. Cloella Parris of Lake Orton; two sons, Dem-er H. of Birmingham and Glen-del of San Antonio, Tex.; a brother and sister; 13 grandchildren; and 12 great-grandchildren. /Ars. Claude Pardo Private gradeside service for (Mrs. Claude (Lela E.) Pardo, Cub packs, Boy Scout troops^, of 140 Ascot will be tomor-and Explorer posts and their row at the Brookside Cemetery leaders will be at each parti- in Fairgrove. Her body is at cipating school to explain scout-1 h e Voorhees-Siple Funeral ing, demonstrate activities and Home, provide information materials. Mrs. Pardo died'Saturday. COUNCIL PARTICIPANTS I She >s survived by a sister, mu !5i . „ „ .. three grandchildren and one The Clinton Val ey Gouncl great.g8randchild. has approximately 10,000 males, taking part in scouting in moire Night to Boost Scouting Oct. 17 at Area Schools A special school night to pro-ilin Blvd., for location of the nearest participating school. Burial will be in Christ Lutheran Cemetery, Hadley Township. Mr. Brandt, a retired farmer, died Saturday. He was a member of Christ Lutheran Church, Hadley. Surviving besides his wife, Elsie, are four sons, Howard -of Metamora, Elden of Hadley and Armin and Edwin of Goodrich; 17 grandchildren; 10 greatgrandchildren; and a sister, Mrs. Lillian Hawk, Metamora. Walter S. Hall ORION TOWNSHIP - Service for Walter S. Hall, 79, of 499 Hoag will be l’p.m. Wednesday at Allen’s Funeral Home with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Masonic memorial service will be conducted by Orion gram. ing to the witness a girl, 16, g bi ... „ . . who was suffering from loss of 1 Frazer W. Staman, chairmanL* wa$ ab,e tQ utter a feJ| of the road commission, will beLords.. a{ter Mng treated by § the keynote speaker. _______— ___* People in the News than 250 units. jMrs. William G. Penman The council includes 33 town- Service for Mrs. William G. ships in Oakland and Macomb (Lilian M.) Penman, 78, of 204 counties and the cities of Pon-IAuburn will be 3 p.m. tomorrow tiac and Mount Clemens. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral The council also operates twosome, with burial in White £W| large camping facilities, Camp C h a P e 1 Memorial Cemetery 11 Agawam near Lake Orion and Troy. 1 Mrs. Penman died Saturday. Surviving are two daughters, | the new Lost Lake Reservation ; near Clare Service School Deadline Near U. S. Sen. Robert P. Griffin COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Brian W. (Lillian R.) Johnson, 67, of 3055 Union Lake will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at Union Lake Baptist Church. Burial will be in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi, by Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Mrs. Johnson died yesterday. Surviving are four sons, Ray, Jerry and Brian of Union Lake and Clayton of Waterford Township, and three sisters. Mrs. Nellie Laidler OXFORD — Mrs. Nellie Laidler, 31 W. Burdick died today. Her body is at Bossardet Funeral Home. Julius W. Ludwig OXFORD TOWNSHIP—Service for Julius W. Ludwig, 72, of 3501 Thomas will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford. Burial will be in Oxford Township. A Masonic memorial service will be at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home. Mr. Ludwig, former Metamora Township fire chief, died yesterday. He was an auto mechanic and a life memher of Metamora Lodge No. 413, F&AM. Surviving are* three daughters, Mrs. Marcella Frost of, Oxford, Mrs. Kathryn Best of Metamora and Mrs. Shirley Guest of Harrisburg, 111.; a in England Road' Commissioner Sol D. Lomerson will present plaques Dpripp Pj‘f7£* to three retiring employes, and ' CLJV.CT I-4 Commissioner Paul W. McGov- . . .. i . em will give the safety suggest yy /DflGT LslGS tion award. RECIPIENT Receiving the safety suggestion award will be William Burt, 2657 Judah, employed in the electrical department. Burt will receive a $25 savings bond for suggesting that fluorescent streamers be attached to baskets on booms of traffic signal repair trucks. The eye-catching device serves as a warning to truckers with high vehicles who may not see the suspended basket. Injured Milford Boy Listed Satisfactory A 6-year-old Milford boy is in satisfactory condition after being hit by a car Friday afternoon, reported a Pontiac General Hospital spokesman. Michael Slentz, son of Mr. and Mrs. 'Robert Slentz, 764 Manor was injured when he apparently walked out from the shoulder of the road and in front of a car, said Milford police. The jpccident occurred on Sum mit near Squire Lane. Driver of the car was Mr$ Joseph Lucyson, 543 Washington, White Lake Township, said the police. LONDON (AP) — Sir Norman Angell, 94, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize in 1933 for his many books and lectures on behalf of peace, died Saturday. His best known work was The Great Illusion,” in which he tried to show that war damaged winner and loser alike and brought no real economic advantage. More than a million copies of the. book were sold after its publication in 1910. For his views, Angell was accused of lacing patriotism during the years before World War I. He had no doubt, however, that Britain was right in resisting Nazi Germany. * * * Angell was knighted in 1931 and served briefly as a member of Parliament after his election in 1929 as a Labor party candi: date. Born in 1872, Sir Norman spent much of his early life in the western United States, first ranching and prospecting and later in newspaper work. He returned to Europe in 1898 as cor-respondent for several American publications and served for nine years as general manager of the Paris edition of the London Daily Mail. Violent Youths Overrun Frisco Amusement Park SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — A break it up. He was quickly sur-thousand youths erupted in vio-jrounded by a racially mixed fence Sunday night at Playlandi throng, groups of which began Amusement Park at the beach, breaking concession stands win-and police sealed off , six blocks dows and looting cash registers, for two hours before they Police estimated $2,700 worth of stopped the bottle-throwing windows were broken and $1,600 crowd. Police' arrested four adults and 12 juveniles for assault and resisting arrest, then herded the unruly youths into municipal buses and sent them back into the city. At feast twice boys got off the buses and started all over again, but these local disturbances were quickly quelled. ★ ./ ★ ★ . Trouble started when two Negro men got into a fight and a motorcycle policeman tried to CHARLES stolen. Police said the crowd was predominantly Negro but that they saw no interracial fighting. It was a warm night. MAN ATTACKED A man on a municipal bus was attacked by one group of the boys after the main disturbance was over. His arm was twisted and his shoulder dislocated.- He was taken to Park Emergency Hospital. By The Associated Press Prince Charles, Britain’s future king, began his college career as a freshman at Cambridge yesterday and was g&eted at the main gate by Lord Butler, master of Trinity College. A crowd of about 1,000 persons, mostly women and girl students from nearby schools, shouted, “Good old Charlie Boy” to the 18-year-old prince. Trinity’s 700 resident under-graduates .are all men. His senior tutor, Dr. Denis Marrian, said, “We will treat the prince as normally as possible. 1 am sure he will be accepted easily.” Charles will study archeology and anthropology for at least two years at Cambridge. Once the domain of the rich, the university now gets the majority of its student body from state schools. On Monady, Charles will sign the college’s admission register, which bears the signatures of his grandfather, George VI, and great-great-grandfather, Edward VII. Astronaut Dedicates Home Town Airport Astronaut Neil Armstrong returned to his home town, Wapokoneta, Ohio, yesterday for dedication of the new Auglaize County airport, named after him, , Armstrong, command pilot of the Gemini 8 mission in 1966, told a crowd of 2,500: “I little dreamed 20 years ago when I was learning to fly here that, at any time, would an airport be dedicated in my name.” Rockefeller Gets World Leadership Award John D. Rockefeller III, board chairman of the Population Council, Inc., has been awarded the annual Margaret Sanger award in world leadership, it was announced yesterday in New York. 'Ben Case/ Breaks Heel Bone Actor Vince Edwards, making a movie in Lisbon, Portugal, was hospitalized Saturday after slipping and breaking a heel bone. A doctor said yesterday Edwards, the former “Dr. Ben Casey” on television, “will have to stay in the hospital for four more days, but he must stay off the foot considerably longer.” Edwards is starring in “Hammerhead” for Columbia Pictures, also featuring Diana Dorns and Judy Geeson. Frankie Avalon Loses Suit to Manager Singer Frankie Avalon must pa/ his former, manager, Robert P. Marcucci, $49,100 in commissions and expenses, a Los Angeles Superior Court , judge has ruled. The singer signed a contract with Marcucci on. his 21st birtkday, Sept. 18, 1961. Avalon contended the contract was meant to end in three years, but the contract had no expira- * * * IMrs. Earl DeMond of WaterfordiR-Mich., said today that youngibrother, Marvin of Lapeer; and • WiMfM 8rB,“,dre"' aaJmteBBw- «.***■« -» H D. JOhn and two grandchildren. • deadline next Monday. * Griffin is permitted to make| AVON TOWNSHIP — Re-Fred W. Rickert two appointments each ‘ to the quiem Mass for O. John . t . n .. I Air Force, Army and Navy Parisi, 63, of 2740 S. Rochester SeTV1?ej°rJf^,m«r ^ ° I1 le schools and 10 for the Merchant will be Wednesday at St. Pas- resident Fred W. Rickert, I Marine Academy for the school cal’s Catholic Church, Willow- MayviUe wa® f atnyear that begins in mid-1968. dale, Ont Burial will be in Blackmore and Tubbs Chapel, P'. 8 Thornhill Ont A Rosarv will Mayville. Burial was today at To qualify for an appoint- ™ ’ . ^ the Fremont Cemetery, May-ment, an applicant must be a!,.Rd £ |Jneral Home, ville. resident of Michigan, unmar- . . . ■ . „ ' Mr. Rickert died Friday. Heried, a U. S. citizen, and aad was a retired salesman at WKC. feast 17 years old but not yet 22! „ R. ,® . JJ.. n . Surviving is a sister. Ion July 1, 1968. Home Richmond Hill, OnL I 7 ’ Mr. Parisi, an antique dealer, .. \a/.||. d I I Interested applicant s died yesterday. He was a mem- Mrs. William Kocarek are asked to write Griffin in ber of St. Andrew's Catholic Service for Mrs. William (An- care of 44,e Senate Office Build- Church, Rochester, na M.) Rocarek, 81, of 572 Mar-|*ng. Washington, D.C. 20510. Surviving are his wife, Vic-★ ★ ★ toria; a son, Gary with Griffin said that he already the Coast Guard: a daughter, has received 250 applications Carol at home; a grandchild; of age and older may become Boy Scouts. High school boys 14 and older may become explorers. New Zealand Bars in Uproar AUCKLAND, New Zealand AP) — Angry scenes, with cus-omers serving themselves, greeted a new drinking law today. After 50 years of 6 p.m. clos- bte will be in Cedar Rapids, | ing, pubs and hotels stayed open Iowa, this week, to 10 p.m. for the first time-but Mrs- Rocarek died yesterday, here was no one to serve the Local arrangements are by thirsty customers. Vwrhees-Siple Funeral Home. 1 Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Bernard Pait of Pontiac, and a son, Edward of Cedar Rapids. for next year’s appointments. Bar staffs went on strike at 7 p.m. demanding higher wages. In many hotels, managers and their families tried coping with the rush but were swamped by celebrating crowds. An “honesty box” was placed on the bar of one Auckland hotel. Said the manager; “Serve yourself and leave a fair payment.” “It's a great idea,” one woman drinker declared. Carl W. CDonehon DOT] ^>*={^=05$ 'Donald 31. Jolnu Dem Clark Raps Missile Defense WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen Joseph S. Clark, D-Pa., claims the proposed $5-billlon U. S. ah anti ballistic missile (ABM) system is “a very expensive flying erector set.” The Pennsylvania Democrat made public during the weekend the text of a speech he planned to deliver in the Senate today. He contended that the “thin” missile shield approved by Defense Secretary Robert S. Me Namara “essentially contriubtes Bab/ Boy Simpkinson | Service for the infant son of s|||l||=l) Mr. and Mrs. Charles Simpkih- IfflSj son of 454 Auburn will be 1 p.m, =i|jljj=!j tomorrow at the Sparks-Griffin =»IhII=o Funeral Home. Burial will be in White Chapel Cemetrey. The infant died Saturday. Surviving besides the parents are a I brother, Charles at home, and grandparents Mr. and Mrs. Earl Carr and Mrs. Sylvia Garger, all of Pontiac. Jerome I. Webber Service for Jerome I. Webber, 53, of 691 Second will be 3 p.m. Wednesday at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Webber, a crane operator We Will Take ihe lime . . . ... and gladly answer any and all of your questions. The Donelson-Johns Funeral Home will be pleased to give you full information about the funeral service offered and about funeral needs encountered. / Call on us for information, discussion, or helpful suggestions. (Phone FEDERAL 4-4511 Peviklnq jl On Our(Pnm$={» Club Hosts Film liiiiB ^oneb The Waterford Township Republican Club will host a movie, “Anarchy in the U.S.A.,” at 8| p.m. tomorrow at Pierce Junior High School, Hatchery at Cres-nothing to this country's securi-lcent Lake, ty.” , Visitors are welcome, club Clark quoted McNamara’s president Frank Lane an-own statements to the effect!nounced. that the proposed ABM would be “ineffective against a sophisticated Soviet offense,” and challenged the idea that it would protect the United States against 855 WEST HljRON ST. PONTIAC Suicide Is Ruled I The gunshot death yesterday relatively primitive Red Chinese!of a 63-year-old Avon Township missiles. , f He suggested that if tjie Chinese ideally wanted to ris&an attack//on the United States they could deliver nuclear bombs from submarines or even in suit- man was ruled a - suicide by investigators, according to Oakland County sheriff’s deputies. Officers: said Orlando J. Parisi of 2740 S. Rochester died at his home of a head wound about noon. CEMETERY MARKERS Monument Builder* in Pontine for Over/73 Yean INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864 N. Perry 335-6931 Bronze Platfci for Memorial Park Cemeteri** tat Below Cemetery Prices