UJL »---' Chance of Showers PONTIAC PRESS ONE CO Hdme Edition PONTIAC, MICHIGAN* SATURDAY, AUGUST SO, 1989 you, 127 — no. 170 , ?■' ,* ★ * * ' -44 PAGES Spy Agency Linked to War Rumor JAMES S. THORBURN fi Judge Sued for Libel in Track Case An Oakland County Circuit Judge who once investigated the Hazel Park Race Track was sued yesterday in Wayne County Circuit Court for $2 million by the corporation that runs the thoroughbred track. The Hazel Park Racing Association alleged that Judge James S. Thorburn, libeled and slandered the association in describing a 1967 plot to assassinate him while he was investigating the track. In the suit, the association said Judge Thorburn accused the corporation “of having hired, enticed or in some manner retained an individual in an alleged plot” to kill him. Thorburn, who declined comment yesterday, made the statement to a television newsman June 25. The account was later broadcast in Detroit and fuller accounts published in area newspapers, said William Weinstein, the attorney for the corporation. Waterford Teachers, Board RESERVISTS COME HOME—Army reservists of the 221st Transportation Co. received a wild, emotional welcome when they returned to the Tampa Bay area of Florida after a year in Vietnam. The company is part of the 25,000 troops released from the war zone by President Richard M. Nixon. (Related story, page A-2) Syrians Free All Aboard in Near-Disaster Skyjack Authorities expressed belief the explosion occurred because the hijackers had been unable to defuse the bomb they used to threaten the pilot when they entered the cockpit over the Adriatic Sea. Syrian officials said the passengers would the flown out on a special Alitalia airliner to Athens, from where they could proceed to their destinations. Syria said TWA can reclaim its plane. Pressed by a stubborn lady schoolteacher from Los Angeles who refused to leave four Israeli women who were aboard, officials said they will release •Hits persons on the hijacked Jet. Juries as a result. “All of you, including the Israelis, will leave within the hour,' a Syrian official told the Ml passengers and 12 crew members who ware aboard thg TWA Boeing 711 when it was hijacked yesterday during a flight from Rome to Atoms. ■ OK Pact; Salaries Average Waterford Township teachers and school board overwhelmingly approved a new one-year teachers contract last night which brings salaries up to the county average. The new contract, which runs frdm Sept. 1 to Aug. 31, is estimated to cost the school district $7 million compared to last year’s total of $6-4 million. | * * * A total of 285 teachers voted for the pact while 30 cast votes against it. The school system has about 667 teachers. At the same time, the board of education reviewed the document and approved it 5-to-0. Two members were absent. SALARY RANGE Salaries for teachers with bachelor degrees will range from |7,400, up $700 from last year, to |12,000 in 10 years, up $1,500. The rhnge for master-degree teachers will be $8,600, up $900, to $13,280 in 11 years, an increase of fl,700. Four years ago, Waterford’s teacher salaries were among the highest in the county, acting Supt. Dr. John Pagen noted. Last year they were among the lowest. The new salaries now rank about in the middle of 28 school districts in the county which have settled salaries for the coming school year, according to Pagen. RANKING COULD DROP Waterford could be pushed down in the rankings when five districts still negotiating contracts settle on salaries, Pagen said. Pagen admitted the teachers were given nearly everything they were negotiating for to avoid a teacher strike. But as a result an additional estimated $100*000 will have to be trimmed from a $12.5- million austerity budget. Pagen said it is likely supplies wifi be cut back, equipment won't be replaced as readily, teachers won't be reimbursed for convention or in-service training expenses, the number of field trips will be reduced. PREVIOUS CUTBACK This comes on top of a previous $l-milllon-plus cutback for the coming school year when 75 teaching positions were eliminated and elementary pupils were put on half-day sessions. Teachers also won an agency-shop provision, paid health atfd life insurance for 12 months Instead of last year’s 10 months, and a 7 per cent salary raise to supervise extracurricular activities. WWW Under agency shop, all teachers in the system must join or pay dues of $101 yearly to the Waterford Education Association, their bargaining agent, or be fired. The association had 612 members last year and now expects about 55 more members. * • * A A tentative contract settlement was unexpectedly reached Thursday after six months of negotiations, a state mediator failed to settle the issues and called for fact-finding and a strike was close at hand. Gols Beef, So They'll Raise It | Rogers Isn't Angry at CIA' WASHINGTON (AP) - The State Department has declined to go along with a suggestion that Secretary William P. Rogers is angry at the Central Intelligence Agency for putting out word-that the Soviets may be thinking about -ten air strike on Red China’s atomic plants. Press officer Robert J. McCloskey refused yesterday to take any, side publicly in what he portrayed as competitive newspaper enterprise over a lunch CIA chief Richard Helms had with some reporters earlier this week. Helms has been' identified — by newsmen who were not at the lunch and therefore not bound by no-quotation rules — as the source of stories dealing with the possibility of such a Soviet attack and about CIA’s claim of innocence in the Green Beret murder charges in Saigon. CIA’s longstanding practice is public silence on overseas developments and anti-CIA allegations poured forth daily by foes abroad. When CIA feels maligned by • stories over which other U.S. government agencies may have some control, it sometimes asks them to issue a statement which will put the ClA in a better light. In the Green Beret case, the Army so far has refused to publicly disavow defense lawyer allegations in behalf of the arrested men that the CIA ordered the killing of a suspected Vietnamese double agent. CIA contends it issued no such order. The Army is keeping silent pending further investigation. * * ★ In the Sino-Soviet dispute, there is conjecture as to whether the Soviets themselves might be floating the notion of a possible attack on Chinese nuclear Installations in order to scare Peking. It is also speculated that anti-Soviet Communist sources may be promoting the surprise attack idea for their own psychological warfare purposes. The official U.S. government view is that a Russian-Chinese armed clash bigger than border flareups is both unlikely and undesirable. McCloskey quoted a past Rogers statement to this effect, and when asked about what was attributed to Helms he would not subscribe to a suggestion that the CIA chief had damaged Rogers’ efforts for U.S. neutrality in the Sino-Soviet quarrel. While Helms himself was reported out of town Friday, CIA colleagues expected he would be embarrassed by his identification with the recent stories. It‘would not be CIA’s first embarrassment in print. To take some examples from this decade: • In 1960 the Soviets shot down a CIA U-2 surveillance plane deep inside Russian territory. A false CIA cover story was first issued through the State Department. President Eisenhower wound up publicly accepting responsibility for the spy flight. •When the Cuban invasion failed the following year, Kennedy administration officials pinned much of the blame on CIA. * * * • More recently, CIA was the target of public brickbats upon disclosure that it had been paying secret funds to student and other organizations which were in competition with Communist agencies in foreign countries. The Johnson administration ended the practice, which CIA sources said had been assigned to them by government, superiors early in the days of the cold war. Single Edition Monday The Pontiac Press will publish a single early edition Monday so that Its employes may spend most of the Labor Day holiday with their families. Publication of normal editions will resume Tuesday. TIRED OF COMPLAINTS “it’s not just me, it s a hell of a lot of ranchers across the country who are getting tired of women complaining about thev prices of meat,” Collins said Friday. He said the offer was made as a reaction to meatless recipe campaigns in the East and a “meatless week” campaign in Oregon. “It’s time that H they’re going to give beef a black eye the farmer should show them who’s not coming out,” Collins said. "Pm Just going to send a calf, that’s all, and tell them, ’You feed it and you teU me what it costs.’” Each woman is to receive one calf late next week. Collins said the calves are being provided bjr two Nebraska farmers, Ronnie Rogers of Lexington and Frank Diercks of Gordon. two being shipped to housewives in Levittown, N. Y., and Melbourne Beach, The woman, who have complained that producers are making too much profit, have agreed to feed the calves for market to learn firsthand the costs involved. Collins said the shipments are being made hi reaction to meatless recipes. ATTENDANCE DROP The association said attendance at the track-in Hazel Park dropped as a result of Thorburn’s statements. The group also said the judge’s statement caused potential harm in its relationship with the Michigan racing commissioner who assigns racing dates to the track. Weinstein said his client requested a public retraction from Thorburn pn July 3 and again, by telegram, on July 22. H« claimed there was no reply from the Oakland County judge. The law suit also contended that Thorburn accused the track “through its officers and directors, of being members of an alleged organized crime syndicate or group.” Both alleged accusations were strongly denied by track officials. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 6) Rain May Douse Holiday Ventures There’s a chance of showers or thundershowers dampening the Pontiac area over the weekend. Here is the day-by-day forecast issued by the U.S. Weather Bureau: TODAY — Mostly fair and humid, slight chance of thundershowers, high 85 to 92. TOnight partly cloudy and warm, chance of thundershowers, low 65 to 70. WWW Winds south increasing to eight to 18 miles per hour and tonight and south to southwest 10 to 20 miles tomorrow. TOMORROW — Mostly cloudy and cooler, chance of thundershowers. High 82 to 88. w w w MONDAY — Chance of Showers or thundershowers mostly during the morning, cooler. Probabilities of precipitation are 20 per cent tonight and 30 per cent tomorrow. w . w w A humid .71 was thp low reading in downtown Pontiac before 8 a.m. The mercury had soared to 92 by 2 p.ru. In Today's Press Rabies Victim RED OAK; Iowa (AP) - A Corn Belt’ cattle buyer angry at Eastern housewives’ complaints about beef prices offered to send calves to two women to give them first-hand experience with the costs of cattle raising, and the women accepted. .. “I’m delighted,” said Mrs. Stephen Stophlett of Melbourne Beach, Fla., the leader of a group boycotting beef. "It’s a sign that we’re being noted.” Mrs. Mickey DeLorenzo of Levittown, N.Y., said her first reaction was “complete disbelief” but later she decided it would be a “marvelous experiment.” The offer was made by Eddie Collins of Red Oak, a cattle dealer who. also conducts a syndicated radio program forecasting cattle market conditions. “People would like to prove the farmers don’t have it so well,” he said. “Everybody back there in the East thinks the farmer’s rich.” Collins suggested that the women could feed the calves “right in their backyards.” . Mrs. DeLorenzo said a town ordinance forbids keeping a calf in her yard,b but town and county officials have offered to put hers in an animal shelter. A-4 County Judge Sued for Libel (Continued From Page One) Meanwhile, Weinstein also la trying to learn the identity of a U.S. Justice department employe who named two of the racing association’s directors as Mafia members. In a recent release from the Justice department, Anthony J. Zerilll and Jack W. Tocco were listed as Mafia leaders. Dominic P. “Fats” Corrado resigned recently as a director of the race track after he was indicted on charges of taking kickbacks involving a mQlion-dollar loan from the Teamsters Union pension fund. Corrado claimed he would beToond innocent of the charge but was resigning to eliminate the possibility of any problems for the track. MOTORCYCLE PILE-UP—Two area motorcyclists were injured this morning in an accident involving an estimated IS cycles on MM near Greenshield in Orion Township. A witness told police the cyclists were riding in a pack about 10 a.m. when the leading rider slammed on his brakes because of a mechanical failure. When be did, all the cycles and three cars behind him narrowly avoided tragedy. In fair condition at Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital were Bruce Bailey, 19, of 7MT Woodland, Pontiac and Harvey Schultz, 207 John M., Clawson. Biggest Guard Unit in Viet Home Private Talks May Free 3 in N. Korea Blue Shield Seeks 16.7-Pet. Rate Hike Students will have the opportunity to sample the dishes prepared that day, taste wines and nibble cheese. A course in braille transcribing will prepare students for volunteer work in transcribing children’s books and Other needed reading material for the blind. PROSPECT HEIGHTS, 111 (AP) -The chairman of the Remember the Pueblo Committee says three American helicopter crewmen held prisoner by North Korea can be freed through private negotiation without an apology to the Communists. The Rev. Paul Lindstrom, whose committee was formed in January IMS after North Korea captured the USS Pueblo, said Friday that the State Department would have to take “a certain aeries of actions," however, before the men could be freed. Lindstrom did not describe the actions, but said that once they were taken at least one member of his committee would travel to Panmunjom, North Korea, to accept the release of the men Sept. 11. In Washington yesterday, State Department spokesman Robert J. McCIoskey said he knew of no role being played by Lindstrom or the Remember the Pueblo Committee to win release of the men. 'Truth Squad' Members Millt (Left) And Bailie DETROIT tfl — The Michigan Blue Shield insurance plan filed today for a 16,7 per cent increase in its rates, effective next Jan. 1. The companion Blue Cross plan filed for a two per cent cut in rates for its so-called Blue Cross 65 coverage, designed to supplement medicare. The new rate scheduler were filed with the Michigan Insurance Bureau and would become effective with renewal of contracts in next year’s first quarter. They would be applied subsequently to' those with contracts expiring in other quarters, but subscribers would be assured of no further increases for a year. - Blue Cross and Blue Shield said the increase would be only 5.6 per cent when applied to the cost of their combined coverage. Blue Cross previously filed for a 4.1 per cent increase to become effective Oct. 1. Blue Shield said it had not in-v creased basic rates since 1963, although the Consumer Price Index had gone up M.l per cent meanwhile. The plans have approximately 4.8 million members in Michigan. Blue, Cross assures hospital bill payments; Blue Shield the payment of doctor bills. Blue Shield said its increase Initially would apply to contracts of 274,000 members. Blue Cross said about 370,000 will be affected by its Blue Cross 65 reduction.: John C. McCabe, president, said it was impossible for Blue Shield to resist further "the continuing inflationary pressure common to our total economy.” Half-Day School Setup Illegal7 REDS' OFFER The crewmen were captured Aug. 17 after their helicopter was shot down by North Korean gunners. North Korea said yesterday the crewmen are alive, and offered, to exchange them for a confession and apologies from Washington. U.S. officials in Washington began drafting a statement they hope will be sufficient to induce North Korea to release the three crewmen. Although previous similar negotiations at Panmunjom have been prolonged, there was some optimism that the three might be released before too long. Washington officials said no time has been fixed for delivering the statement North Korea has asked. Presumably it will be sent to Panmunjom fairly soon. Lindstrom said he and other persons were still negotiating for the release of the man. Lindstrom said he could not give details of the negotiations "U our work ia to be effective.’’ TV Debate With Bernadette Tuesday 2 Irish Unionists in US. 'to DETROIT (UPI) — A ruling that could, in effect, outlaw half-day school sessions was handed down yesterday by Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Charles Kaufman. The ruling was on a suit brought by a group of Livonia parents against the Livonia Board of Education, which had planned to open school Wednesday with grades five through eight q# half-day sessions because of a lack of mohey. ■“ NEW YORK (AP) - Two leaders of Northern Ireland’s ruling Unionist party are here to set the stage for a confrontation with Bernadette Devlin, the 22-year-old crusader for Ulster’s Roman Catholic minority. ‘This Fidel Castro in amini-sklrt must Devlin’s activities. The third member, Captain L.P.S. Orr, was in Canada. American tour to raise funds for victims of the recent Ulster violence. Miss Devlin is on a weeek-old North AIIIB r lUL'l UWUU III OIllllll-BRiri II1UNI | . be put into true perspective and that is Cuba Hits Spy Charge what we hope to do," W. Stratton Mills, r/ a member of the British House of Corn-told a news conference yesterday. Mills and Robin Bailie, a member of the Ulster Parllmanet, flew in to Kennedy Airport, part of a three-man “truth squad” dispatched to counter Miss UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) -Cuba says it was ridiculous for the United States to accuse two Cuban U.N. diplomats of being spies and to bar them from returning to this country. The Weather Lazaro Eddy Espinosa and Alberto Boza Hidalgo-Gato couldn’t possibly have been espionage agents, Cuban Foreign Minister Rauf Roa said yesterday in a letter to Secretary-General U Thant, because they were constantly “harried by dozens of CIA and FBI agents." She is scheduled to meet the truth squad on television here Tuesday. Miss Devlin declared herself undaunted by the 3-1 odds: “Their cause is three times, if not 300 times, less than ours so the odds are fair." Mills and Bailie charged at their news conference that Miss. Devlin has been “wildly irresponsible and totally inaccurate" in her presentation of the con-trovery to the American public. it was announced that the Rev. Ian Paisley, a militant leader of Ulster protestants, would arrive here Sept. 6 to begin his own fund-raising tour. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Today mostly fair, warm and humid, slight chance of afternoon or evening thundershowers, Ugh 85 to 92. Tonight partly cloudy end warm, chance of thundershowers, low 65 to 75. Sunday mostly cloudy and cooler, chance of thundershowers. High 82 to 58. Monday outlook: Chance of showers or thundershowers mostly during the morning, cooler. Winds south Increasing to 8 to 18 miles per hour today and tonight, and south to southwest 16 to 28 miles Sunday. Probabilities of precipitation: 28 per cent tonight and 38 per cent Sunday. \TTW2 vast at Till sun, fan rnaa Sunday at fill a.m. Moan aata Sunday at til* a.m. Moan riant Saturday at Sill a.m. m tamparatura at mar—Sunny .aa’tS&S Hlshaat tamparatura DECOUPAGE CLASS A class in the ancient art of decoupage will also be available. Decoupage consists of cutting, pasting, then applying several coats of varnish to a solid surface. Students will learn to adapt this knowledge, to trays, wastebaskets, boxes, wall hangings, baskets suitable for handbags and other possibilities. In the flower arranging course, students will learn simple ine design and mass arranging plus instruction In mechanical aids, as well as the selection and conditioning of flowers. Furcraft instruction will be given in restyling outmoded furs into stoles, bags, hats, collars or coats. The pottery course offers a baric knowledge of raw materials, tools and techniques of ceramics, including hand construction, throwing on the potter’s wheel glazing and decorating processes. In sculpturing, a three-dimensional world will be opened when students learn to investigate different media, clay molding and carving assemblage. Beginning and advanced students are welcomed to the class with personal attention given to each individual project and student. * In adopting the half-day sessions, the Livonia board had cited a state law that prohibits deficit financing by local school boards. But Kaufman ruled that the Michigan Constitution calls for free education and free education has been defined by the Legislature as meaning 180 full days of school each year. Jack Forberg, of 8131 Coldspring Lane, a life insurance salesman has been cited for outstanding sales performance during a recent meeting of the Mutural of New York’s national sales leaders In New York. Forberg was honored by Howard E. Barnhill, CLU, senior vice president, in recognition of his membership in Jhe of New ADMITTED CONFLICT He admitted the deficit financing provision was in conflict with the constitutional provision, but added that the state must provide the funds for complete education. “President’s Council," Mutual i York’s leading sales honor organization. The underwriters attended sessions focusing on advanced life insurance planning techniques for businessmen and professionals at the week-long sales conference. The more than 150 persons attending the hearing yesterday broke into wild applause when Kaufman ruled in their favor that all children in the Detroit suburb would have to have full-day school sessions. The list was compiled last May by the department’s organized crime dhririan at the request of Sen. John J. McClellan, chairman of the Senate Rackets Committee. Zerilll, son of alleged Mafia boss Joseph Zerilll, Is president of the association. Tocco, son of William “Black Bill" Tocco, is fhe association’s executive vice president.' The fathers of the trade directors Were named in 1962 testimony before a Senate subcommittee as top bosses of the Detroit Mafia. The younger Zerilli and Tocco have never been convicted of a felony. TAB PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 1909 TWA's 10 Pet. Tops Air-Fare Hike Pleas WASHINGTON (AP) - Trans World Airlines has called for a 10 per cent increase in domestic fares, the most daring rate hike proposal before the Civil Aeronautics Board. At least IS other airlines have requested fare increases. ★ * ★ The CAB will Bft the lid oh the simmering kettle of airline problems Thursday when it bears oral argument from the airlines and from opponents of any general fare ■ increase. I In thee latter category are 20 i • western members of Congress, headed by Rep. John E. Moss, D-Calif., who have asked the Board to suspend and investigate the fare increase proposals. FINANCES DETERIORATING In a 14-page defense of its proposal Eastern Airlines said the industry’s financial position i s deteriorating rapidly. Eastern said the airlines cannot hope to hold the linee on fares when all prices and wages it must pay have risen steadily. Chairman John H. Crooker Jr., who is resigning, indicated the CAB would act swiftly, so that if an increase is permitted it may go into effect by Oct. 1. ' * * ★ Crooker classified the major fare proposals ‘ in three groups. The prototype tariff fillings are: • Continental — a flat increase on aU tickets ,for flights of more than 400 miles. It would range from |2 additional, for trips of 400 ■v to 499 miles, to a maximum increase of 89 on flights of more than 1,900 miles. • United — a fixed terminal charge of 811 for each ticket, plus a flat line-haul charge of 5.7 cents a mile. • Eastern — an 58-60 terminal charge with a variable line-haul charge ranging downward in four mileage blocks, from 6.7 cents a mile for trips up to 400 miles, down to five cents a mile for flights of more than 1,800 miles. 6 PCT. HIKE LOWEST Continental's plait would raise fares an estimated 6 per cent, United!s 6.6 per cent, and Eastern's about 8 per cent. TWA said that in view ofthe industry’^ serious need none of the proposals was adequate, and a 10 per cent increase would be Justified. TWA said it would support Eastern’s 8 per cent hike as ■' "wMsisl* ..... ......— ★ ★ ★ ’ Continental said it would oppose any increase based on a formula, and said the CAB has no authority to impose upon it the fare structures proposed by United, Eastern or American without first suspending them and conducting an investigation as to their legality. Birmingham Courses Set in CortimOnity Fall Program. BIRMINGHAM -Residents will have the opportunity to eat while learning in the Connoisseur’s Kitchen course offered in the Community House Ftll Educational program. Connoisseur’s Kitchen, a course, in gourmet cookery, will be taught by Madame Charity Suczek, a native of Austria, who has studied with chefs in such restaurants as Maxims, Tour d ’Argent and Les Pyramids. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 1969 SALE MONDAY LABOR DAY 11 AJM. tO 6 P.M. INCUR PONTIAC MALL WAREHOUSE SALE IN THE STORES Year afhr y#a'r thouiand* look forward to this oxciting clearance event at L. •tom. Wall, if* biggor than ovor thlo yoar. Bigger selection* and bigger saving*. Everything goes, everything reduced. Shop your nearest Highland store at once. FREE OFF-ON REMOTE CONTROL Be lasy. Turn TV on or off from easy chair or bed. Free with any TV purchase. - mem,, jl-ohm- ££§ FREE 10-DAY HOME ' TRIAL ON COLOR TV 6E AM-FM portable radio. Solid state. AFC......................$1.99 TABLE RADIO. Solid state transistorized. Compact cabinet...... $3.99 GE portable stereo hi-fi. 4-sp. automatic changer.............$99.93 BATHROOM SCALE. Dependable, attractive. Easy-read dial.... $1.92 GENERAL ELECTRIC personal portable TV, Handle, antenna..........$62 ZENITH 12" portable TV. Built-in antenna, handlo........$99 PANASONIC personal portable TV. Built-in antenna, handle .... $74 PANASONIC 15" portable TV. UHF/VHF. Handle, antenna.....$99 $179 ZENITH 22" TV lowboy. Faw only. Not all stores....$151 $199.95 RCA 20" TV. Wood console. Piev. yr*............$149 Q. E. STEREO COMBINATION item hi-fi with AM-FM *146 WHIRLPOOL AUTOMATIC DRYER Fully automatic aloe trie, 2 cycleil Auto- *88 $299 ZENITH portable color. Handle, antenna. Prev. years ..... $259 $399 RCA 18" Color portable. Deluxe. Prev. years..................$312 SYLVANIA 18" Color portable. Dipole antenna. Deluxe...............$349 $439 ADMIRAL 20" Color portable. AFT. With cart...................$399 SHARP 19" Color portable. Dipole antenna. With cart...............$299 ZENITH 20" Color lowboys. Deluxe with UHF/VHF...........$390 $529 RCA 23" Color TV. Wood lowboy cabinet. Deluxe......$439 $499 SYLVANIA 20" Color TV lowboy. Early American wood .... .$339 $579 PHILCO 23" Color. Wood lowboy. Tuning-Eye..........$499 $549 MOTOROLA 23" Color TV. Wood lowboy. Deluxe.........$449 WHIRLPOOL FOR SLIDE WINDOW *145 WHIRLPOOL DEHUMIDIFIER 'If' Dry olr comfort at a law Highland nrlca. I| Avlomotic humldistat is huBt In, Mipi ■ t*7 has* connection. Easy gild* casters. U No. ASA-H152. *66 WESTINQHOUSE C AAA BTU Bl lift IM ijfllBIIS DfVIIU MTU rLUu-IN Automatic ^ ^adjustable ^ thermostat. 115-volt plug-in. Install It yourself, Insta-mount Included. Modal MCH-061. PmS *125 RCA 14" Color portable TV sets. Prev. years' models.....$237 Sharp 12" Personal Portable TV, Handlo and Antenna...... $69 ZENITH Giant 23" Color TV sots. "TITAN 80"..............$419 $569ADMIRAL Color Comb. Stereo hi-fi, AM-FM radio.......$497 MOTOROLA 12" personal portable TV. Handle, antenna. Deluxe'*. $79 GE Stereo hi-fi console. Solid state. Contemporary... .....$93 ™ RCA. Stereo hi-fi comb, with AM-FM, FM-stereo radio.......$219 STEREO HI-FI combination with AM-FM, FM-stereo radio. Walnut.. $149 , V GE stereo hi-fi, AM-FM, FM-stereo radio. Tape recorder....$474 $199 SYLVANIA portable stereo hi-fi. Garrard changer......$119 PERSONAL P0RTABLETV A ten brand • Imr Hijhland p, Compact and lightweight. Bull antenna and cany handle. Sound front. UHF/VHF. Fieo eff/on ram *51 tMiiiiiiilai ADMIRAL 80" ELECTRIC RANGE TllMia cook top. "Flex-o-Heat" controls. Oven control. Banquet-ebe oven. Modal *126 SPACE-SAVER .CHEST FREEZER aim**! ISO lb*. *T frown Is go f reezor bosket. Ad|ustable thr at for cold control. Mica work *118 ADMIRAL 12V»", 2-door refrigerator. Top freezer.......................$189 WHIRLPOOL 12W, 2-door with automatic Ica-Malcer.......................$229 ADMIRAL 20* Side-by-Side refrigerator-freezer. SAVEI..................$299 HOTPOINT 21" Side-by-Side. Completely Frost-Free......................$999 ADMIRAL Chest freezers. Stores 437 lbs. Deluxe. Save.................. $137 ADMIRAL 10' uoriqht freezer. Stores ever 350 lbs...................... $149 ADMIRAL 15' chest freezer. Stores ever 500 lb......................... $178 ADMIRAL 18' chest freezer. Stores 595 lbs. Deluxe........................$198 UPRIGHT FREEZER HOLDS 282 LBS. *125 SUNRAY 2-OVEN GAS top. SmamlaM broiler. Clock and tin *187 RCA28”COLOR TV COMBINATION *647 DETROIT JEWEL 30" gas ranga. Floor models. Not all stores.$84 HOTPOINT 30" Electric range. FI. models. Not all stores...*. $129 PHILCO 30" Electric range. Automatic, solf-clean ovon.$219 WHIRLPOOL 2-evon, eye-level gas range. Solar speed..$269 HOTPOINT fully automatic washers. Prev. yrs. models...........$139 HOOVER portable washer, spin-dryer comb. No plumbing ,,i......$159 NORGE 18-lb. cap. Fully automatic washer. Deluxe..............$178 HOTPOINT fully automatic washer. Dial cydo.................... $157 SAVE! 2-DOOR REFRIGERATOR F.alum. Includl. Mi, viip.n. Do or bo* Xaky bo,, w* nek raTtall b*ltl. ■ mem *teio*fc S.**nte tep Imw. Trim, compact cabiiwt rifoal tor ap.rfm.nlx ] *131 FRIDGETTE PORT. WASHER-DRYER Mnic*N*>WS-SA. Un.WS-SA. | *139 I doHvory, RCA color tv W sssssSsssSSSasi V-jHpt nTJ3«U«»»»* »«**l‘ A WHIRLPOOL wringer washer. Large capacity. Not all stores......$78 WHIRLPOOL dishwasher, Portable, automatic. Prev. years.......$113 WHIRLPOOL 5.000 BTU air conditioners. 115-v. Instp-mount......$96 EMERSON 8,000 Bill's air conditioners. 115-v. Insto-mount....$160 YOU PAY ORLY... *347 S3F- PHILCO 9,000 BTU's air conditioner. 115-v. Insto-mount.........$185 PHILCO T1,400 BTU's air conditioner. 2-sp. 115-v. Insto-mount.. $199 EMERSON 14,000 BTU's air conditioners. 115v. Insto-mount..... $267 «x PHILCO 27,000 BTU's air conditioners. Heavy duty. Deluxe.......$379 INSTANT CREDIT • EASY TERMS PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH RD., CORNER ELIZABETH LK. RD. OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 4. PHONE 682-2330 OAKLAND MALL IN TROY 1-15 at 14 MILE RD. OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 PHONE 585-6143 Rabies Victim Aided Science THE PqyflAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 1969 SAN DIEGO, Calif. (AP) —, Medical adence kept Tommy Buchmann alive for five month*; after ho was mauled by a rabid bobcat April 1. The little Lake-aide boy, who died Friday, also helped medical science, his doctor says. TOMMY BUCHMANN Dr. Sarduel T. Giammona of “It is hard to say,” the doctor; University Hospitals’* pedia- said. “He had a very strong! tries staff, said Tommy made;constitution for a child and of' twe Important contributions be-!course, he had meticulousj ;fore he died, two days after his care.” third birthday.. , Giammona said no new drug] I . . , , . . . 'or, treatment accounted for the! j We certainly earned how to^,, ^ Qn Ufe j manage an acutely ill person over a long period of time."!NO DOCTOR BUIS Giammona said of the intensive1 The boy’s parents, Mr. and care given Tommy since he, lapsed into a coma April 28,! never to regain consciousness. “This could be important' when science is dose to a cure! for a particular disease and it is essential to keep a patient alive j until it does. RISK STILL PRESENT “Secondly, it has stressed to! us that even after being given the rabies vaccine there is a! risk that a person still can con-1 tract rabies. We had not thought! that before.” Tommy lived longer than any human rabies victim in medical history, surpassing the M-day survival of a lS-year-old Elk City, Kan., boy last year. Why? Mrs. Max Buchmann, are poultry ranchers with two other children. They will not receive • doctor bill, a hospital spoke*-man said. Private contributions, which have exceeded $20,000, the ipital's teaching fund and the Buchmann* will bear the $10,500 ; hospital room cost and special i nursing charge of $13,200, Shirley Temple Black] To Be U.N. Delegate SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. (AP) I representative in the Economic — Shirley Temple Black, be- and Social Council of UNESCO,! came a millionaire at 12 and op-, and William T. Coleman Jr., aj peered hi three doaen movies Philadelphia, Pa., attorney, that made her famous to a gen-{CHARMED AUDIENCES eratlon of moviegoers. But shei .... . says President Nixon has given as her "the thrill of my life.’* ®r.^e 19“T*."®, 19408 *8 The ftesidentnamed the !or-|halredd'it5;ry o^suKTWs as mer child star Friday as one of|,,uu1e MIm Marker., ..Curly five representatives and five al- *M I* 4«*l*r> Choose teu with shirtsofAcrilan 4 acrylic with No-Iron polyester slaekt. cotton shirts with cotton corduroy slacks. 2 • 4. STRIPE FACE TOWEL Our Reg. 56c JM Sunday A Monday Only 00 M ▼ 15x26” bold stripe, Cannon "Tangier” face towel in rich cotton terry. Choose red, blue, pink, green or gold stripes. WWW- ★★★★★★ "TANGIER" STRIPES 24* 77* WASHCLOTH t BATH TOWEL Absorbent 24x46” Cannon® bath tftwel, 12x12” washcloth in soft cotton terry. Red, blue, pink, green or gold stripes. MEN’S COTTON TEE SHIRTS FOR WORK OR PLAY ' Our Reg. 1 C All cotton tee shirts with pocket are colorfast. Sanforised* and reinforced for longer wear. Black, green, blue, navy; royal, white. S-M-L-XL . Kmart YARN Our It... 1.27 Sunday A Monday Only 4-oa. Kmart brand* Orion® acrylic Say-elle yarn. Fold pull skein. Black, while colon 100 MULTIPLE VITAAAINS Our Reg. 97c •, M 4 Day Only each QqC Plus iron, or without. In pill form or rheXbl^iumini in delicious fruit flavor. Compare the formula with na-limiiilly ailvriiinrti limmk Why pay mors? Chars* It THE PONTIAC PRESS « West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48056 SATURDAY, AUGUST 30, 1968 H**«u> A. Hivwahh H. II Chtlrmin of tlio Bond President and Publisher Rich*** M Fitwnnu, John a, Ritrv H*i»» I Traffic Toll Unchecked A Michigan Automobile Club study of 2.353 traffic deaths in the State last year makes somber reading. The death toll ran 11 per cent over that of 1967, three-quarters of which Were alcohol-related. Other significant findings of the report are: • Police patrols on streets and highways as well as general en-forcemeat of traffic laws were at an all-time low. • Traffic violators fWith records caused a disproportionate number of accidents. • Almost three-fourths of all fatalities occurred on two-lane highways. • Young drivers were disproportionately responsible for fatal accidents. Drivers under 21 years of age were involved in one-fourth of the fatalities investigated. • The fatality rate of motorcycles and motorbikes increased faster than their actual numbers. A related report, stemming from the Eighth International Congress of-Gerontology praises the driving ability of senior citizens, declaring that “they may be among the best drivers on the highway.” 1 Covering driving records of over-65 drivers in 30 states, the report points out that they comprised 7.6' per cent of all licensed drivers while accounting for only 4.8 per cent of all accidents. They average 37 per cent fewer accidents totally than projectionable from their proportion of the driver population. Of the six age categories studied, ranging from 55-64 down to 25 and under, the over-65s had the best driving records. The two studies taken together confirm the long-held conviction of highway safety experts: that personal responsibility and maturity of judgment are the two standout attributes inherent in safe driving. Riding a surge of idea-whose-time-has-come popular support, the House Ways and Means Committee, chaired by Arkansas Democrat Wilbur D. Mills, labored and brought forth not only the most comprehensive tax reform bill in history but one of the most equitable. The House passed it by a rousing vote of 394 to 30 and lent it over to the Senate. Among other things, a chunk was taken out of the special tax privileges granted oil producers, reducing the depletion allowance from 27VW per cent to 20 per cent; nicked a lot of fat cats in the over-l100,000 bracket who have been escaping taxes entirely, and eliminated the 7 per cent business investment credit. What began as a tax reform effort, however, gathered such momentum that it ended up as a tax-slashing spree, with hefty cuts not only for those in the lowest income bracket but for the tens of millions of so-called “forgotten Americans” in the $10,000-and-up category. The result is that while the loophole closings are expected to brihg in an extra $5.2 billion by 1972, the wide-ranging tax-cut bonanza totaling $9.3 billion would put the Treasury in the hole some $4.1 billion. That fact alone has caused the Miniwar FoughtWjlth Weapons DIRKSEN By EVERETT DIRKSEN WASHINGTON—The recent little war between Honduras and El Salvador raises an all - important question. In the last * 20 years the United States has supplied military assistance to both of those Central American republics, largely to help them contend with Communist-inspired violence and insurgency. Our help relieved them of the burden of making heavy military expenditures so that they, would not be forced to divert and dissipate their economic resources in building up arsenals for War. The ndnfwar of early summer then demonstrated that the two countries could use our weapons and other mill* tary - assistance supplies for war against each other; which we did not envision nor intend. V? ★ * * The question of what we mould do about military ysistanrc in the future is tjieniarse raised, and i t someday sojifi will have to be acted upon. A study of the conditions of the little war may help us to watch out for the future. Sprawled along the Caribbean lies the| Republic of Honduras with a land area about equal to that of Louisiana and with a populaton of 3.25 trillion people. Bananas, coffee, timber, cotton, tobacco and cattle are the principal crops. Honduras is mountainous. U has an abundance of minerals, but those h|ve been generally undeveloped. It is a poor land. * * * The Republic of El Salvador, on the other hand, Is small, and its area is about twice the else of Connecticut. It has a population of slightly over 3 million. El Salvador's problem is that 9 has too many people In too small an area'toat is essentially agricultural. It might be said that her principal export is people, for it is estimated that 15 per cent of all Salvadorans live abroad and that an estimated 300,000 live. In Honduras, right next door. * The result is that the Salvadorans in Honduras quickly become candidates for jobs*and land, and, under the land laws of Honduras, foreigners cannot own- hid. Hence, those migrants have m Voice of the People Press Again Lists ’ for Writing VOP Letters Here again are the rules covering letters to the Voice of the People. This feature has very high readership, as residents are anxious to know what their neighbors are thinking. Every letter must have a name and address. When the communication is not sharply critical of a private individual or firm, writers can use a pen name if they wish. However, if you want to assail someone, it isn’t fair to your victim to hide behind an anonymous name. ★ ★ ★ Many letters contain statements which would subject the writers (and The Press) to libel suits. We recognize most of these but when we are in doubt we refer them to our attorneys and are guided accordingly. \ ★ ★ ★ We can’t run letters that are purely personal matters between an Individual and his favorite enemy or an individual and a firm at which he’s “mad.” Try and keep your letters within 200 words or less. Even then, to conserve space most letters will be edited. ★ ★ ★ We cannot publish letters-of personal thanks or poetry, due to space limitations. Matters concerning race and religion must be signed. All subjects must be of genuine, communitywide interest. Send in your thoughts. They’re welcomed. Tax Reform Bill Aims High Senate to greet the hill with tempered enthusiasm, if not some alarm. Other aspects of the bill are also meeting resistance, such as the depletion allowance cut, which some senators think is excessive and others think is not enough. Another is a dubious 7.5 per cent tax on private foundations. Nearly 200 tax bills or amendments have been filed with the Senate Finance Committee. Lower taxes will be of little comfort if a massive budget deficit adds another kind of taxation. More take-home pay in the pocket won’t mean much to consumers if business has to turn around and post higher prices to make up for the loss of its investment credit. Nor will the Country’s crying social needs be met by giving everyone a little extra cash to the detriment of .Federal programs in • education, health, mass transit, ur-, ban renewal and all the rest. Middle-income Americans may feel squeezed by taxes, but they are not hurting so much that they want tax relief at the cost of sound fiscal or domestic policy. What they have really been protesting in the past year is not just high taxes but high Government spending and waste, and the fact that not everyone has been paying his fair share. Dell Shields, son of a Baptist minister, is expressing his activist faith through the modern medium of radio. As host on “Night Call” a national telephone interview program, he can reach horn four to seven million persons nightly. “Night Call” is produced by the Television, Radio and Film Commission of the Methodist Church and is released in cooperation with the National Council of Churches, the National Catholic Office for Radio and Television, The American Jewish Committee and the Urban Coalition. 'In a nation where individual is estranged from individual and group from group, “Night Call’s” purpose is to help people find reconcilation—to move toward solutions to problems through understanding. Each night, five nights a week, Shields has a qualified guest to discuss and answer telephone questions from listeners on issues and problems that concern both the black and white community today. The mild, soft-spoken Shields moderates the program with the firm hand of conviction. The opening remarks of one program is typical of his belief: “If the black and white would listen with their hearts they, could hear each other.” That is what ‘-‘Night Call” ' is all about. Confident Living: * 1 Devotion to Task Will Pay Off DR. PEALE mbved in and farmed land to which they have no title. Tensions developed. * it * The border between the two countries has never been well defined. This and other alleged incidents have tended to raise the temperature of both countries. It is hard to believe that a soccer game could trigger a miniwar, but that is what happened. In June, Honduras and El Salvador were to play a series of three games for the title id the regional championship match. The second of the games produced a riot that resuited In injury to many people and much pr6p: erty damage. <•'* .* "vir - In quick succession came a break ,n diplomatic relations between the two countries, troop Invasions, the bombing of villages and airfields. Thus, a mlniwar between Honduras, with an army of 2,500 soldiers- and three dozen planes, and El Salvador, with an army of 6,700, including its National Guard, plus three dozen planes, got under way. And all of the weapons came from Ps, We do not want sqch .a. situation to occur again, especially with our military hardware. (Copyrlfhf, INI) By NORMAN VINCENT PEALE Those magnificently brave men, Armstrong, Aldrin and Collins, succeeded in reaching the moon. Whenever you hear someone say, “It’s good idea, but it will take too long to a c c o m -pllsh,” think about the incredible efforts that have gone into our space program. People have been talking about going to the moon for hundreds of years. They’ve been writing about it, too. Why, I can remember reading science fiction about space capsules and space men when I 'was just a little boy. And slowly, over many, many generations, we developed a body of knowledge and countless technical skills which we needed to make the dream a reality. 1 ’ ★ . , * * But I don’t suppose that any of us really thought we could get to the moon In our lifetimes. Then, only eight years ago, back in 1061, President John F. Kennedy made his famous speech, saying that “the nation should commit itself to achieving the goal, before this decade is out, of landing a man on the moon and safely returning him to earth I " The key word in Kennedy’s statement was “commit.” We had to do more than want to get to the moon. We had to decide that we would get to the moon, no matter how much the great venture cost in time, money and work. And we did commit ourselves. I don’t'know how many thousands of men and women — engineers, scientists, astronauts, technicians, doctors, secretaries, laboring men, and who knows all — have thrown themselves into the project heart and soul. ★ ★ * I do know this: These dedicated people have devoted themselves single-mindedly to the task. And now that all their long hours and all their hard work have paid off, space travel no longer seems incredible. Whenever I see television broadcasts from space, I am amused and amazed by the results of weightlessness. One of our astronauts will say to another, “Hand me that so-and-so over there, will you?” ★ ★ ★ The second astronaut will pick up the object, no matter how heavy it is, and send it sailing gently over to him. The whole thing is easy, effortless. And it looks like a lot of fun, too. If big, heavy objects down here on earth were weightless too, think of the things you could dol Ladies could move their furniture arouiid to get pt the dust with just a flick of the little finger. Construction men could build great buildings in no time at all just by tossing huge blocks of cement and sheets of glass to each other. * ★ ★ ’ Unfortunately, things down here are not- that simple. If you want to move a five-ton block of cement, for example, you can push and pull and tug away until you are blue in the face and you won’t have budged it an inch. If you’ra like some people, you’ll just give up. “Can’t be done,” you’ll say. But if you’ra like a lot of other people, you’ll ait down while you catch your breath. You’U think to yourself, “there’s just got to be some way of moving that doggone thing.” You’ll puzzle the problem through, and you’ll come up with a really creative solution. Maybe you’ll go out and round up a hundred strong men to help you move the cement block. Or maybe you’ll devise pome sort of contraption to lift and haul it, for you. But if you think the problem through — and I mean really through — you’ll find the answer. * ★ * The determination to, get What we want and the intelligence to find a means of getting it are what set the human race apart from any other species. They are what helped us invent everything from the wheel to the Apollo moonships. They are what is going to solve our problems here on earth, in the- cities and tha schools. And this determination and intelligence is going to help us solve the problems we’ll find in outer space, too. * * * Maybe, when you come to ’ think of it, weightlessness isn’t such a blessing. Maybe without the struggle of getting what we want, the human race wouldn’t have come so far so fast. And maybe we wouldn’t get as far as I, for one, think we’re going to get in the future. ‘Hope Some Good Cornea of Lazaroa Affair’ I hope that some community good comes out of this Laz-aros affair. Considering the expense of the two grand juries investigating his charges of official corruption, plus that of guarding him around toe clock, toe taxpayers stand to pick up a pretty steep check to (jay for it. ★ ★ ★ Such controversy has come to fight both In court testimony »nd public charges and countercharges related to toe case that -conclusive, judicial answers to the Mafia-oriented mess may be far off. 9 J. C. MASON Question and Answer . g?ing ea8t on Auburn to Wide Track. I pull into the foft turn lane at Wide Track. There facing me between the two iaites is a sign, “No Left Turns.” ?????? NORTHERNER REPLY Hither you’re a mystic recalling things past or you re seeing things or you habe your streets and . directions confused. At one time there was a left turn prohibition at that comer, but there’s been no sign to that effect at that comer for over a year. We drove the route you gave us and found no sign you could be referring to, and the City Traffic Department concurs. Question and Answer »r th«.Cel£L°! £a" ,ag0 l bought * d,msr’» c,nb h##u«*. on« lw°-for;‘he-prfce-of-one deals. My husband and I en-Joyed It so much. Do yon know where or how I cm purchase such a book again? GRACE BROWN REPLY Metro Passbook, 12701 W. 10 Mile Rd., Oak Park, offers them at $8.95 per book, which includes restaurants, takeouts, sports, discounts at stores etc. You can get them at Metro booths at the State fatr or send a check (no tax) to the Metro office, j he phone is 398-4500 if you want more informor turn before buying. Soviets Blocking U.S. Overtures RYAN By WILLIAM L. RYAN AP Special Correspondent So belligerently defensive are toe Russians in the wake of events in Czechoslovakia and on the ■ China frontier that Moscow seems to have slammed the door to any approach from the United States, at least until It gets matters cleaned up in its own sphere. Embarrassed again by the extent of Csechoslovak resistance and angered by military clashes with toe Chinese, the Soviet party appears to be looking for scapegoats. Hie Soviets are likely to uncover some in Czechoslovakia itself, but the Verbal Orchids Mrs. James Crew of 197 Seminole; 81st birthday, Fred J. Stevens of Oxford; 04th birthday. Mrs. Anna Zoilner of Rochester; 08th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Walter Heaphy of 230 Dick; 51st wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Oscar Elwell of Auburn Heights; 51st wedding anniversary. tone of the Soviet press seems so nervous that it suggests political difficulty in Moscow Itself. - * ii Seldom in the cold war have the Soviet Communists been so much on the defensive as today. They profess to see heinous “Imperialist” plots on all sides, real threats not only to their European empire, but .to toe political stability of the Soviet Union. For these woes, Moscow makes Americans, past and present, the main villains. To hear the Soviet press tell it, Americans are trying t o break the Communiat front and to penetrate toe Soviet Union itself with propaganda inflaming nationalist feelings in the Soviet republics. SECRET ORDERS An article this week in the government newspaper Izvestla claimed secret orders had gone out to U.S. propaganda services to support pro-Cfalnese Communists everywhere and to encourage Mao Tse-tung’s Puking regime, so as to Increase its potential for splitting the resistance to Moaco domination. ★ * * The Americans, s a I Izvestla, try to propagate t idea that there is not real much difference be two* capitalism and “socialism” this ora of technology, a: that eventually the Sovi system will evolve lm something like “capital!! without capitalists.” In Eastern Europe, It sa; the Americans used “t tionalism and revisionism" efforts to erode “socialise from within and to suggi that a reversion to capital methods is inevitable. ★ ★ * Tho Communist inovemc has suffered setbacks becau of too Czechoslovak a i Chinese developments. If t Russians intend to punish ri and imagined “enemies” I all this, they can only ma relations with tho West ev more strained. But in any case, 11 Izvestla article and ma of Milford; 51st wedding anniversary. This prominently displayed article said Czechoslovakia’s rebelliousness resulted from four years of Intensive U.S. “bridge-building” efforts which were epitomized even recently by President Nixon’s World tour. The article did not mention Romania, where Nixon was enthusiastically received, but ft clearly enough suggested annoyance with Romania and lt« & m THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 80. 1969 A—r tmmm V.S. WlATHtR BUUAU fSSA NORMAL I ABOVE Allies Launch Counterattack Near Da Nang AP Wir«pholo WEATHER AHEAD — Temperatures considerably above normal and precipitation near normal are forecast for the Pontiac area during the next 30 days in these charts released by the United States Weather Bureau. SAIGON (AP) - U.S. Marines and Soiith Vietnamese infantrymen launched a counteroffensive against an enemy division today in hills southwest of Da Nang. Initial reports indicated only light contact. Elsewhere across South Vietnam, there was little activity. U.S. Headquarters said reports showed action overnight was the lightest in three weeks. ★ * * communique from U.S. Headquarters said there nine enemy rocket and mortar attacks overnight, the lowest number since six were launched Aug. 10. Five Americans were reported wounded. Allied intelligence analysts said they are expecting another enemy "hlghpoint,” a series of widespread attacks, in the next few days to coincide with North Vietnam’s Independence Day Sept. 5. ON FULL ALERT In anticipation of increased enemy activity, South Viet- namese troops and police went on full alert at noon today in Saigon and 11 provinces around the city. The allied counteroffensive was launched just after daybreak. * •, * * Associated Press correspondent Richard Pyle reported from Marine headquarters Lj at, Da Nang that about 1,500 Marines and South Vietnamese infantrymen moved into the Hiep Due Telephone Firm Names New VP MUSKEGON (AP) - John A. Reitze, traffic director for General Telephone Co. of California, has been named operating vice president for General Telephone Co. of Michigan. The 45-year-old Reitze succeeds P. A. Betty of Muskegon who has retired. Valley between the Laotian border qnd South Vietnam’s populous coastal lowlands 31 mires southwest of Da Nang. Heavy fighting through 100-plus degree temperatures has centered in the region for the past two weeks, taking a heavy toll of American dead and wounded. 72 YANKS DEAD By conservative . count, I least 72 Americans are known dead and 322 wounded Some infantry companies are operating with less than 100 men, roughly 50 per cent under their normal strength. Allied commanders claim the North Vietnam’s 2nd Division already has lost up to 1,000 men under a daily barrage of Ameri- c can bombs, napalm and artil- < lery shells. Since launching attacks on c American patrol bases in the e valley three weeks ago, the North Vietnamese now appear b to have take up a defensive a posture and are said to be re- d treating to old hideaways on I lery continued to blast the thick, I During 10 days of assaults last high ground. \ triple canopy jungle.. j May on Hamburger Hill, farther If we can strip it with artil- north along the Laotian border, lery and napalm, we can get at uumer, them (the enemvl.” one MarinJAmerican paratrooPcr« M 55 The main target of the allied task force is the center hill, a 1,270-foot peak called Deo Ram y the Vietnamese and Hill 381 on military maps. Marines lost 13 men killed and 42 wounded in daylong fighting on the slopes of hui; this hill Thursday. them (the enemy),” one Marine , . officer said. “There’s not a mcn an(* mor® than 300 commander alive who would)wounded. U.S, Congressional call for another Hamburger i leaders heavily criticized the attack. Field reports indicated that fl the task force did not plan a ^ frontal assault on the hill. In- p stead, dive bombers and artil-1 RANK'S NURSERY SALES SHOP SUNDAY 12 TO 6 BUY! SELL! TRAM! JSE PONTIAC PRESS WANT, ADS! FRANK'S NURSERY 24 GREAT STORES TO SERVE YOU OPEN DAILY TILL 9, SUN. TILL 7 Mtss Michigan Slate Fair, IH-year-old (Say queen's future plans include college, a try for the Chipman, is escorted qn a tour of the Fairgrounds Miss Michigan title and, for the time being, con-by her fiance, Larry Walter, the young beauty timing her job as a dental assistant. Fair Win Boosts Ambition Gay to Seek Miss Michigan Crown A petite, blonde, June graduate of Wylie E. Groves High School was frowned Miss Michigan State Fair, 1969, Wednesday. "I was very surprised that I was chosen," Gay S. Chipman admits. "I had someone else picked out/' But her fiance, Lawrence Walter, viewed the situation differently. "I knew that if they picked the most beautiful girl, it had to be Gay. ; "Of course," he adds, "I guess you'd ■consider me somewhat partial," it it ★ ' Larry serves as Gay’s official escort and is constantly at her side from early . morning when the day's activities begin ; until the fair gates close. "I wouldn't have it any other way," he • states firmly. A dental assistant, Gay was selected from a field of 55 in the 120th annual Miss Michigan State Fair contest. ' The six judges based their decision on -figure, face, poise, carriage, personality, charm, speech, and showmanship. , FAMILY The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Francis S. Chipman of Carol Drive, Franklin, Gay was crowned after two days of competition. Her father is owner-relations supervisor for General Motors -Corporation. . A married sister and a brother, Jim, ■16, complete the Chipman family. Gay entered the contest as Miss Senior Class — Groves High School. That was Gay’s first title. "Speaking of firsts," Gay inserts, "that was also my first year at Groves. 1 used to go to Southfield High. “However, it was people right here at the fairgrounds who persuaded me to enter.” As Miss Michigan State Fair, she is the recipient of a $100 savings bond, a $25 gift pertlficate, a Wendy Ward gown from Montgomery Ward (one of the contest sponsors), and a year’s lessons from the Sarah Paul Theatrical Arts Studio. "And, of course, 1 get to keep my roses, trophy and crown," she adds. "The banner and crown have an added significance," Gay quips. "It means free food and rides — well, at least for the duration of the Fair, which runs through Labor Day." Gay realizes also that her title involves responsibility the entire year of her reign. She has radio and television appearances to make, In addition to visiting various county fairs. "I’m also going to eider the Miss Michigan contest," she adds. WEARYING "Frankly, I find myself getting tired," she confesses, "but I have to admit it’s1 a little price to pay for the pleasure 1 am getting. Each day is exciting and challenging. As the Fair’s hostess, I am able to meet interesting and important people." Gay’s interests do not lie solely in the realm of beauty contests. This 5’4", 103-pound 18-year-old, who measures 36-21-34, enjoys water and snow skiing and tennis. Singing and writing are favorite past-timcs during her free hours. As to what the future holds, Gay has some definite plans but believes flexibility is the most Important factor. "I thoroughly enjoy my work as a dental assistant," Gay states, "so I will continue that for at least another year while I am getting settled. I would like to, buy' a car and increase my wardrobe.” ★ * * j She has also received offers from A-Plus Modeling Agency. "But I definitely plan to go to college," she emphasizes. "I hope to major in psychology at the University of Colorado." With a glance at the clock, blue-eyed Gay smiled and excused herself as she announced, "Guess 1 have to go now. 1 have another appearance shortly and would like to freshen up a bit.” Rules on White Remain Same for the Bride By ELIZABETH L. POST of the Emily Post Institute Dear Mrs. Post: You advised an 18-year-old girl not to wear a white wedding gown just because she had had a baby prior to her marriage. Tell me, Mrs. Post, what is more Important — tradition or a bride’s happiness? If that girl follows your advice she will only be advertising her misfortune to everyone at the wedding. Would you have her wear a sign around her neck stating "1 am not a virgin?" Wontewi sSefituw THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 30, 1969 A—8 Teli News to Mom Yourself or Unthinking j By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: Last winter I had some extensive surgery and can have no more children. Fortunately I have a little six-year-old son. I didn’t tell my parents about my operation at the time because they live far away, couldn’t have come anyway, and besides, my mother has a heart condition 'and I didn’t want to upset her. Now my parents are coming to visit me, and I plan to keep quiet about my operation. I’ve, told all my friends and neighbors who know (and that includes about half the town) to please not mention it to my folks. Knowing my mother, she is sure to ask, "When are you going to get busy and have a little sister or brother for Junior?" 1 don’t want to worry her about my condition, but what can I say that will be acceptable? DEPENDING ON YOU DEAR DEPENDING: Tell your mother the truth. If it’s her heart you’re concerned about, she’d' be better off. hearing the news from you at a time of your own choosing than from an absent-minded friend whose mouth works faster than her brain. And if you don’t have at least one, you’re the lucky exception. DEAR ABBY: I am heartsick. My 14- year-old daughter has been picked up for shoplifting! She is a good girl and has never been in any trouble before. I can’t understand what got into her. She gets a generous allowance, has never been denied anything she wanted or needed. She was with two other girls, and all three were caught red-handed. The other girls were even better off financially 'than my daughter.-1 have tried to raise this child right. Where haVe I failed? SHOPLIFTER’S MOTHER DEAR MOTHER: Don’t be so quick to accept the blame. You haven’t failed. Your daughter has. She has failed to realize that shoplifting is a crime. She thinks it’s a "game" ... or a challenge. Or a new "sport." It’s a strange new epidemic. I can offer seven rules for parents as a preventative to curb this new game: *' * ' "* • Explain to your youngsters that shoplifting is a crime, which leaves a criminal record. And a criminal record is a lifetime shadow. • Emphasize that "Going along with tlie crowd” , for fear of being "chicken” is the coward’s way out. going, how much money he has and what he expects to buy. • If your child comes home with more merchandise than he or she had money to buy, ask about it. And don’t take any easy answers about where it came from. • If your daughter goes shopping with an oversized purse, be wary. • Outlaw all clothes swapping unless the parents on both sides know exactly what is being exchanged. • Practice what you preach. ★ - ★ * Everybody has . a problem. What’s yours? For a personal reply write to Abby, in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056 and enclose a Stamped, self-addressed envelope. ★ w . * Hate to write letters? Send $1 to Abby, In care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P.O. Box, 9rPontiac, Mich. 48056 for Abby’s booklet, “How to Write Letters for All Occasions." Woman Lifts Bar to Weighty Job JACKSONVILLE, Fla (UPI) -Southern Bell Telephone and Telegraph Co. has eight days in which to promote a 39-year-old woman who proved she could do a man’s work by lifting a 50-pound weight. U. S. District Judge Charles R. Scott had ordered Southern Bell to give Mrs. Nellie W. Tuten tests to see if she qualified for a job as a telephone company switchman, a position normally held by men. ★ * * The Moot-3, 140-pound,, Mrs. Tuten applied for the Job in January of 1997 and was turned down by Southern Bell, which said the job was too difficult for a woman. * ★ ★ Besides having to make night calls in bad weather1, the job requires that she carry a 54-pobnd pound bottle of distilled water for routine battery maintenance and that she be able to carry 48-pound batteries and a 43 pound connector test set. * FILED SUIT Mrs. Tuten filed suit Sept. 18, 1968$^ charging that she had been denied the job because of her sex and that Southern Beil was guilty of discrimination against her. Under Scott’s ruling Wednesday, Southern Bel) must also pay her $1,000 in back pay. • When youngsters go on a shopping expedition, know where your child is Cultural Calendar DETROIT (AP)—Here is a list of cultural events In Michigan starting I tonight. dr£ama MUSKEGON—"Star-Spangled Girl," at the Red 'Barn Theatre, tonight at i 8:30. | DETROIT—Tonight Hilberry Summer Theatre will present "A Funny Thing { Happened on the Way to the Forum,” at 7:30. ART I BLOOMFIELD HILLS—Annual Student Summer Show at the Cranbrook I Academy of Art^Galleries, now through Sept. 21. The Young People’s Art I Center will also exhibit works done by its students through Sept. 21, Tues.-Sun., 1 1 to 5 p.m. i ■ 1 DETROIT—"Watercolors from the Permanent Collection" at the Detroit 1 Institute of Arts, on display now through Nov. 30 in the Print Galleries of the 1 Institute, Tues.-Sun., 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. I DETROIT—“The Art of the Poster," from Toulouse-Lautrec to Peter Max, I on display on the second level of the South Wing, Detroit Institute of Arts, through Sept. 7, Tues.-Sun., 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. DETROIT—"Titus," new Rembrandt portrait, on special display in the Great Hall of the Detroit Institute of Arts, ends Sunday, 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. MUSIC ROCHESTER—Meadow Brook Festival, New York Philharmonic under baton of Seiji Ozawa. Andre Watts, pianist, guest soloist. Tonight at 8:30; Sunday at 6:30 p.m. in the Baldwin Pavilion. Figure-Conscious Agency Okays Formal Scrutiny LANSING (AP)—The Michigan Treasury Department keeps a close watch on the state’s money, but there’s one thing it doesn't want to see anymore of —miniskirts. ’‘Unseemly short skirts" are on a list of women’s apparel 'specifically forbidden" tor wear by the department's 1,570 employes under*a directive by Carroll Newton, chief deputy state treasurer. Reason for the decision barring pantsuits, pantdresses, culottes, slacks, shorts and the "unseemly" minis was (jie reported appearance of one woman 1 employe in shorts. ;tor. Invented Macaroni parently would be dresses, skirts and blouses only for women, all a “decorous and tasteful length." Men won’t get off without some rules either. They’re supposed to wear ties, at least, If not coats. Employes who buck the regulations will be seat home to change and their pay will be docked for the time off, according to Newton's directive. "We can't allow people to dress as If -they are going to a picnic," said Vincent ^Young, general services division direc- California Honors Longest-Wed Pair ; Newton was unavailable for comment but another department official denied miniskirts are necessarily banned under Jhe appearance guideline. ; Supervisors, according to Young,, would have discretionary power, to carry but the order. The general rule ap- NAPLES, Italy (UPI4I - Food historians say Marco Aroni, an 18th century innkeeper near Naples, invented macaroni when a young' daughter took a jump of pasta to play with, stretching it put In the sun on a clothesline. Aroni retrieved it and was amazed when, upon 'putting it bark In the pot, it failed to hielt back into a lump. * He added tomato sauce—the customers loved It. Many young girls have been Intimate with their hiisbands before the wedding ceremony. They wear white gowns without feeling likp criminals. Perhaps, as you said, a few Impolite snobs will * snicker if she wears white, but a lot ■more questioning eyebrows will be raised if she wears pink or blue. A wedding is the most important occasion in a girl’s life, and if wearing a white gown will add to her happiness, then I Say wear it, by all means! — Mrs. S.M. SACRAMENTO, Calif (AP)- George Muller grinned an "aw shucks" sort of grin as if there wasn't anything special about being married to the same woman for 68 years. "Raise a big family like I did," Muller, 94, confided. "That’s the secret." Mrs. Muller, 85,, added her own prescription: “dot everyone to agree and get along with each other." The Mullers live in Dos Palos, a farm-ring town in California’s central valley. TTiey were honored by Lt. Gov. Ed Reinecke Friday as the California couple married longer than any other. The search for the longest-married couple was conducted by the Commission on Aging and the Califonia Bicentennial Celebration Commission. , Muller was the son of a Merced blacksmith. He married Madeline, his childhood sweetheart, in 1901. They had seven children. Five are still« living. Midler acknowledged that he. and his Wifo"always got along." She'll Keep Cobwebs off White House Ceilings Dear Mrs. M.: Unless she has hidden the baby, or given it away, the guests at the wadding will all know of its existence. Although the attitude toward unwed mothers and babies born out of wedlock has greatly softened in recent years, a great majority of society still does not approve of that order of events, nor should they. Certain standards must be maintained If the sanctity of marriage and the family is to be preserved. 1 do not intend to judge the girls who find themselves in this position, but I firmly believe they show better taste to be married simply (and beautifully), rather than with an extravagant pageant which only serves to. flaunt their situation or attempts to disguise it. WEDDING RINGS 1 Dear Mrs. Post: My mother passed away three years ago, leaving me her wedding and engagement rings. I would like to have them cut down and wear them. My husband says “no." I do not want to have the stones put into a pin because I feel* Bid rings are as sentimental as the stones. Please tell me If this is proper. — Sue Dear Sue:. You may wear your mother's engagement ring any wiy you wish — either above your own ripgs or on your right hand - but you should not wear her wedding ring at all. No matter how close you were, it is not your place (0 wear the ring given her as a symbol of her marriage. SAN CLEMENTE, Calif. UFi - Peggy Carey of Long Beach, Calif., with longtime commercial hotel experience, was announced Friday as the new housekeeper at the White House in Washington. She will taka over the duties Sept. 3, replacing Mary Koltman of Austin, Tex., an expert food economist appointed by the Johnson administration, who left the post Aug. 1. The jpb entails preparing menus and supervising the hourekeeping staff for President and Mrs. Nixon at the White House. Miss Carey has been with the Sheraton Hotel Corp. since March as regional - supervisor and housekeeper, one of a string of jobs she has held with hotels over more than 20 years v ‘ The Western White House press office of Mrs. Nixon announced Miss Carey’s appointment but said that “for personal reasons, Miss Carey requested it Initially be a temporary assignment." The White House did not immediately name her salary. Last year Miss Carey was administrative ' assistant to the vice president and general manager of the Pioneer International Hotel in Tucson, Ariz. For 20 years she was with the Hilton Hotel Corp., in Chicago and Boston as procedures analyst for the personnel, catering and sales department. She is si graduate of the American Hotel Institute of Michigan Sta,te University. Peggy Carey, 55, a veteran housekeeping supervisor for the Nation’s largest hotels, has her hair dtine in Long Beach, Calif., Friday after the announcement that she is to be the new housekeeper for the White House. Shefll supervise menus and the housekeeping staff of 55 to 40 maids and housemep. Hairdresser to Fred Bailey. Schedule Preview The sculptures of Joseph Bulone and oils, lithographs of Ten Beng Chew will be on exhibit in the Little Gallery in Birmingham from Sept. 0 through Oct. 12. A preview next Sunday from 3-0 p.m. will open the show in the gallery whoeo I pjL regular homy are 11 a.m. _ Tueedays through Saturday*. dm ’ \ ‘ 6 t THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 1969 Deaths in Pontiac Area Emanuel C. Lockman Service for former Pontiac resident Emanuel C. Lockman, 77, of Detroit will be 11:15 a.m. Tuesday at Gesu Catholic Church, Detroit, with burial in Holy Sepulchre C e m a t e r y, Southfield. The Rosary will be said at 7 , p.m. Monday in the Ted C. Sullivan & Son Funeral Home, Detroit. His body may be viewed after 4 p.m. tomorrow. Mr. Lockman, retired treasurer of the Detroit Association of Credit Men, died yesterday. He was a member of > the Gesu Church, Rotary Club of Detroit and the Holy Name Society of bi> church. Albert Sloniker of Pontiac J son, Clayton Grata of Battle Creek; a daughter, Mrs. Martha Curnett of Detroit; three sisters including Mrs. Edna Washburn of Waterford Township and Mrs. Margie Sallee of Pontiac; and* two brothers including Carl Niemi of Waterford Township. Mrs. William T. Malloy Service for Mrs. William T. (Mary E.) Malloy, 54, of 168 Lincoln, will be 11 a.m. Monday at Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, with burial in Drayton Plains Cemetery. Mrs. Malloy, a waitress, died Thursday. Surviving besides her husband are her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Service for former resident Paul Peres, 75, of Phoenix, Ariz., was yesterday in Phoenix. He died Wednesday. Surviving is his wife, Marie; son, Leonard Peres ol Waterford Township; two daughters, Mrs. Frank Macy of Pontiac and Mrs. Varton Karagosian of Bloomfield Hills; and 12 grandchildren. Mrs. Herbert N. Watson Milton Henry Is Sentenced in Contempt DETROIT (AP) - Milton R. Henry, a Pontiac black militant lawyer, is under sentence to spend the next five weekends in Wayne County Jail, for contempt of Detroit Recorder’s Court. But Henry, vice president of the separatist Republic of New Africa, says he will appeal the sentence of Judge Joseph A. Gillis Jr. when courts reopen Tuesday. Gillis sentenced Henry after citing him Friday for contempt last July 30, when Henry failed for a second time to appear for a hearing for one of his clients charged with pandering. Henry who had offices at 518 Orchard Lake, insisted he had not been notified of the hearing date, but court attaches disputed this. Conviction followed a 2Vi-hour hearing. WEEKEND SENTENCE Gtlila said he recognized Henry’s duties and responsibilities to cliehts in ordering the sentence served on weekends, from 6 p.m. Fridays to 8 a.m. Mondays. He could have been sentenced to 30 consecutive days and fined $250. Paul Peres Army Sgt. Clyde A. Reiter, |frolicking and “civic participa-son of Mrs. Flora J. Reiter of! lion-” All entertainment is free. 637 Benson, was posthumously!There is no admission charge, Service for Mrs. Herbert N. (Evelyn C.) Watson, 83, of 63 Nelson, was 9:30 a.m. today in St. Michael’s Catholic Church with burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery by Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home. Mrs. Watson, long active in women’s club affairs and charity work in the city, died Thursday in Silver Spring, Md. She was active many years with the St. Michael’s Altar Society, tha Cancer Society and St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Guild. Surviving are a son, Clinton H. Watson of Silver Spring, Md. and three grandchildren. Jamas R. Buchanan BIRMINGHAM - Service for James R. Buchanan, 64, of 940 Henrietta, will be 1 p.m. Tuesday at Manley Bailey Funeral Home, Birmingham, with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Buchanan, a sales The second annual Labor Day Troy High School Band and the celebration of “Troy Daze" will Detroit Clan McRae SGT. CLYDE A. REITER Mother Gets Valor Award for Dead Son Expanded Program A—9 Set for 'Troy Daze' begin at 1 p.m. tomorrow and end at 6 p.m. Monday Sept. 1. Heartened by the response to last year’s one-day celebration, the 1969 committee has scheduled the two-day affair to be held at Boulon Park, Livemois at Sixteen Mile in Troy. The park will be open 1-8:30 p.m. Sunday and 9 a.m. to 8:30 p.m. Labor Day. Band. The parade route, from Sixteen to Seventeen Mile Roads on Crooks will be closed during the parade. The Troy Lions, Jaycees and Rotary and the £lawson-Troy Elks will have floats. Six fire trucks from the Troy department and members of the Ja-quar Affiliates Group of Michigan will be spotlighted throughout the parade. Robbers Get $331 From City Man A city man was robbed of | him to the ground and stole his $331 last night after he told money clip and the cash. Tlie [three men he didn’t, have robbers fled on foot,' he told change for a one-dollar bill. police. Dorsey M. Bugsby, 55, of 18 " V i Lexington, told city police the three robbers approached him as he was walking to his parked' car about 9 p.m. yesterday. The car was parked at 559 Auburn. » Bugsby said the men asked him if he had change, and when he said “No," he heard one of the men say “Let’s get him.” He said the three wrestled Duo Importance What comes out of your Ijnouth. on. a date is very im? _ portant, but what goes on your mouth is equally so. Iridescent, glow-in-the-dark lipsticks only give a garish look to your make-up. Subtle, warm shades are much more appealing. PFC. WILLIAM KAYGA The dual theme behind the, * * * festival will be “country fair’’ The events scheduled for the park include major, minor and awarded the nation’s second although a $1 parking fee will be highest award for valor in the to effect both' days. The Birm-Vietnam war ih ceremonies ingham Civil Air Patrol will Thursday at the U.S. Army assist in parking cars and pro- T a n k-Automotive Command, vide a security patrol. designed especially for children. Army Pfc. William D. Kayga, I Warren. There will be helicopter rides ——----------------- 20, was reported killed in Viet- His mouier received the over Troy sponsored by the nam Aug. 24 not as a result of decoration as well as the Purple Troy Chamber of Commerce e . . o i , hostile action. and pony rides for the children. OUSOGCf IS oOUQflt The son of Mr. and Mrs. ^e \er’ was tk® “inth More than a dozen chance and • _ _ . , George F. Kayga of 2565 Michigan Army man to receive some 30 food and information IH Rape. Robbery Forester> Pontiac Township, he the award. ibooths will be spread V ' was a 1967 graduate of Avon- He won the Cross for actions throughout the park. Monday! of Avon Wnmnn dale Hi8h School. He attended while serving as an adviser to a evening prizes will be awarded5. MVOn vvomon Pontiac Business College and Vietnamese patrol that came , was a salesman for Acme under attack. He was fatallyj:MORNING PARADE j Oakland County sheriff ’s Paints before entering the wounded while administering1 More'than 40 units, including, deputies today are searching or I Army Sept. 4, 1968. Pfc. Kayga pony league baseball games; Ricky the Clown show; the Miss Troy finals and crowning square dancing with professional callers; rock music groups and events and features designed especially for children. Area Gl Killed in Viet Mishap first-aid and while carrying ai 12 floats, will be in the 9 a.. wounded soldier to safety, on1 Labor Day parade. Among the Dec. 28, 1968. -. - - - - - Sgt. Reiter was assigned to Company D, 5th Special Forces Group, 1st Special Forces. maiichers will be U. S. Marine and) Air Force Color Guards; a man who broke into an Avon j had been in Vietnam since Township home last night and'March, robbed and raped a woman' VFW DeWolfe Post Color Guard; Detroit Edison Calliope; Chrysler Plans Minicar Assembly by Spring 71 Mrs. Kayga said that they received information from the U.S. Army that their son was Injured in a fall from an armored personnel car and died the next day. Surviving besides his parents are a brother, Franklin, at home; two sisters, Diane and She said he took money from!Susan, at .home; and a her purse, personal papers and j grandmother, Mrs. Sylvia R _ 50 U.S. Savings bonds valued at Wilcox of Pontiac, envineer for Moltrun Steel Co Car1' Chrv.Ur-. ■ - - “ ^nsend Chrysler chairman, $75 each. The total loss was) Funeral arrangements are engineer for Moltrup Steel Co., Car, Ctoysler s intended entryisaid here Friday. lllsted as $3030, deputies said incomplete pending the arrival the field of subcompact au-| The subcompact field had today. of the body. bC»aiOTiabile M|!)eeV. high taterest P°,nt dur-| After her assailant beat her early as spring of 1971, Lynning Chrysler’s four-day national land bound her he raped her H cai[ preview here. | twice, she told deputies. there. The victim told deputies she was startled by a noise in the house about 11 p.m. When she checked the house, she said she found a man standing in a bedroom who demanded all the money in house. DALLAS (AP) died yesterday. He was member of First Presbyterian Church of Birmingham, the American Society of Metals, and was District Commissioner of the Boy Scouts of America. Surviving are his wife, Isabel; two daughters, Mrs. John Jordan of Atlanta, Ga., and Mrs. Richard Schrage of Royal Oak; a son, James L. Buchanan of Grand Rapids; a brother and five grandchildren. Drug Found to Keep Lab Rats Sober Mrs. Roy C. Church . “I would have been here if I’d had knowledge of the court date," Henry said. Among evidence introduced by Charles Burke, attorney tor the court, was a report by Western Union that a telegram had been read to Henry over the telephone and a copy delivered to his office. Henry told newsmen he had been convicted "many times” of contempt, adding that “I have been subject to harassment by Judges. Basically;' it’s hard for a white judge to deal with a black attorney in court. They resent my presence. My presence antagonizes judges." SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Mrs. Rqy C. (Lillian) Church, 62, of 11487 Ember, will be 11 a.m. Tuesday at the Lewis E. Wint Funeral Clarkston with burial in Lakeview Cemetery. She died Friday. Surviving besides her husband are three sons, Edward R. Church of Warren, Richard R. Church of Davisburg, and Roy C. Church Jr. of Taylor; one daughter, Mrs. Beverly Renfro of Dearborn; one brother, Emil Stuwie of Union Lake; five Bisters, including Mrs. Norm . m of Commerce Township; Mrs. Lee Cameron of Clarkston, Mrs. Edward Wilds of Novi, and Mrs. Jack Smith of Novi, and seven grandchildren. While arguing that he didn’t know he was scheduled to appear, Henry also said the client had paid him only $150 In legal foes and owes him “—“ more." City Off idol Says Home Was Shot At A City Commissioner told city police yesterday his house was shot at late Thursday night. District 5 Commissioner Robert F. Jackson, 41, 01 1675 Featberstone told police “two or three shots" were Bred at Ms home about midnight Thursday, SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) Scientist Irving Geller has found way to keep rats from getting drunk on the test lab martinis he serves them. Dr. Geller, chairman of the department of pharmacology and toxicology at Southwest Foundation here, reports the secret lies in a combination of the drugs diethanolamine-rutin. control group of rats, trained to perform certain tasks, was served large doses of grain alcohol. Their performance level dropped. But an experimental group of rats was fed the drug combination and then the alcohol. They continued to perform their tasks. Mrs. Claude Pilgrim ALMONT — Service for Mrs. Claude (Christina) Pilgrim, 42, of 298 W. Washington, will be 1 p.m. Tuesday at Roth’s Home for Funerals, Romeo, with burial in McChfferty Cemetery, Romeo. Mrs. Pilgrim died yesterday. Surviving besides her husband are three daughters, Mrs. Sandra Schoonover of Imlay City, Claudia Hintz of Almont and Bobbie Sue,, at home; 1 son, Manley, at home, her mother, Mrs. Johanna Hart of Almont; four brothers Howard Sandy of Oxford. Manley Sandy and Robert Sandy of Dryden and Walter Sandy of Almont; and two sisters. Muslim Students Meeting at Alma ALMA (AP) — Some 350 students, researchers and teachers gathered Friday on the campus of tiny Alma College for the 7Ui annual Muslim Students Association Convention. The convention ends Monday. Numerous lectures and panel discussions will be “ through the weekend with a Sunday morning lecture by Dr. Mahmud Abui Saud of Libya who will speak on "Islam: The Religion of Jihad." Jihad is roughly defined as the Muslim’s fight or crusade for their beliefs. Chrysler’s - subcompact would have a 91-inch wheel base, a 166-inch length and a 71.6-inch width. The car would be smaller than Chrysler’s Valiant but Townsend said it would be bigger than the Volkswagen. AMERICAN CAR “This will not be an import-derived car. It will be an American car developed to suit the American driver," Townsend said. The car would be pro-1 duced at plants in the United States and Canada. Townsend said the decision to| go ahead with subcompact development was made last week. The "25 Car" would come in two models, one for the Dodge division and another for Chrys-ler-Plymouth. No hints as to the price o(L the car were given. During its four-day new car preview, Chrysler did not rfeveal prices on any models. Townsend said price tags on the 1970 cars would probably be made next month along with warranty plans. Investigators said the man apparently broke into the house through a bedroom window and fled out a back door. He is described as short and slender. Phones Promise Students Hope HOLLAND (AP) - Students at Hope College should be the envy of telephone - conscious youths on campuses across the nation. With the installation of a new e 1800-phone private branch ex- No matter how cold the air gets, there is still moisture in it and this can fall j change, Hope College offers out of the air in the form of telephones in every dormitory very small snow crystals. >room. Voters Week Set LANSING (AP) - Gov. William Mfiliken has proclaimed Oct. 8-13 as Women Voters Week, noting that the League of Women Voters in Michigan and elsewhere has “provided Americans with information on candidates and issues, furnishing nonpartisan platform from which all candidates may make themselves and their v' known.” A polled investigation alio one of the bullets smai through an upstairs bedroom screen and window. Jackson said he heard a car race down the street after the The commbnioner’s house sms hit by three fire bomba Aug. 29, only 24 hours after ha made an Impassioned plea at a Kjf ,l* 11......I' fog lor an end to fire-bombing ■■ ts. TWo youths srare 1 in connection with that EYES BOTHERING YOU? ‘ Call Today For An Appointment! THE NUMBER IN PONTIAC It Itl-TGTI . Ww Provide: EXAMINATIONS • REGULAR CUSSES SAFETY GUSSIS • CONTACT LENSES SUNGLASSES • REPAIRS This is consumer organization sponsored by your local credit union!. Open Saturday and ovary weekday except Wednesday. . HearingAUU,Tool SIDNEY GILBERT, Optometrist BAY HEFFRON, Cartlfled Hearing Aid Audiologist NKIUC CMSIIBS C8-9F WTICAL Make An Appointment At Our Convenient LecaMOe: mm MECHANICAL ENGINEER STRUCTURAL ENGINEER CIVIL ENGINEER To design heating, ventilating, air-conditioning and piping. Capable of assuming full responsibility for evaluation and selection of systems, design of system, supervision of draftsmen and coordination with other design disciplines'. With extensive experience in the design of structural steel and reinforced concrete for buildings. Capable of applying technical skill and of exercising the thought and judgment which make for complete practical designs. To design site work in connection with buildings; Will be responsible for the .design of parking areas, road-oys,d , drainage systems and grading plans. Thp|e are permanent, responsible positions with Austin Engineers, I tic., which is engaged in industrial, commercial and institutional projects. This office is moving to new quarters (now under construction) in Southfield. Aceess will be easy. Parking will be pro- . vided. Working conditions will be very pleasant. Phone or Write: W. J. Lauck, An equal Opportunity Employer District Engineer AUSTIN ENGINEERS, INC. 2978 W. Grand Blvd. Detroit, Michigan 48202 Phono: 87$-77l7 Sparks-Griffm |SH| FUNERAL HOME “Thoughtful Service** Glenn H. Griffin 46 Williams St Phone FE 8-9288 ENGLISH TUDOR—SEMINOLE HILLS Attractive brick cmd stucco home In excellent condition. Living room 12x33 with fireplace, formal dining room, family room, remodeled kitchen with built-ins, breakfast room, bedroom and full both on first floor. 2 large bedrooms with full bath up. Full basement with recreation room and almost new gas furnace. 60 foot lot, 2-car garage. Practically new carpeting and drapes included at $26,500, terms. 1 WE WILL TRADE ANNETT INC. REALTORS 28 E. HURON, PONTIAC, 338-0466 Office Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 tk'Betta Jld Ih 'Ht-'JuluM (fm Old Diamonds In Outmoded settings spending their days in a vault should be brought to life again with a new mounting. Let us tell you how tittle it will cdst to remount them in modern safe settings creating rings you'll wear with pride and pleasure. You may have your diamond reset to bring out its beauty In a lovely simple setting • ■ • From $25 to $1,000 Chargm e Layaway e Michigan Bankard W'V: 11 1 \ V A—10 til. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 1969 THE BURN-RITE OUTDOOR > Incinerator HOOVER SWEEPER AUTHORIZED •Sak ftmt-Seuw® FACTORY TRAINED MIN BY HOOVER - SAME DAY SERVICE OUR GOAL IS CUSTOMER SATISFACTION PUTS t SERVICE ON ALL BRANDS SWEEPERS PARTS For All Vacuums CLOSED LABOR DAY KEEGO HDWE. NO. 1 3041 Orchard Laka Rd. 682-2660. BUSIER BROWN CLOTHING FOR CHILDREN Cheote now for long wear and bottor values! BLUE BELL WEARING APPAREL FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY fr Carry a Complete Line of YARD SIMPLICITY •"* PATTERNS RESEARCH FACTS REVEAL... Pickup and Delivery Phone FE 2-7132 Cleaning Aims LIFE RESTORES LUSTER CARPETS and RUGS FREE FIOK-UF t Dtuvnr BARNES & HARGRAVES HARDWARE 742 W. Huron St. PARK FREE FE 5-91 Ol Aciom from tho Port Offico Art 6214 - Washable Dolor* GOATS and 0 LARK’S RED HEART KHITTIHfi WORSTED 45 WISNER STREET, PONTIAC HT1?W WAV RUG & CARPET ll£i If If it I CLEANING CO. 4i Years in pontiac ____l ■ Tangle Proof — Ready to Knit - Pull Out Skein $|19 BUILDER’S SAW SPECIALS ROCKWELL MODEL 346 6%" HEAVY DUTY CIRCULAR SAW ROCKWELL MODEL 315 7V4" HEAVY DUTY CIRCULAR SAW ‘AS LOW AS •AwiuiaiKaiiq 1st ANNUAL ^ v JAYCEE , Fm COMING TO THE PONTIAC MALL SEPT. 4-5 -6-7 GAMES • RIDES • DISPLAYS Sponsored Byi The Pontiac Joycees THE PONTIAC MALL Shopping Center TELEGRAPH at ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD Shop in Alr-CondHtomd Comfort Opon Dally from 9i30 o.m. to 9 p.m. Some Store, Open Sunday 12 to 5 p.m. LUCITE PICK A PAIR SALE! R00KWELL HAS MORE WAYS UHAN’S VARIETY STORE 14TS Baldwin Ava. at Walton FE 4-3348 Opon Dally 9 A.M. to 9 P.M., Sunday 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. $69*s CLOSED LABOR DAY KEEGO HDWE. NO. 1 3041 Orchard Laka Rd. 682-2660 The BOSTON CHAMPION PORTABLE A handsome, efficient pencil sharpener that doesn't need fastening £51 GENERAL PRINTING & OFFICE SUPPLY EASY DOES IT WITH THE WORK-SKIPPERS! BUY TWO GALLON! AND SAVE! SAGS W (Mien In white only a Skip priming on yieit ban wood* — it hat It* own prim.r a Skip frequent repainting — now it laitt .v.n longer than before • Skip waiting for .Mend coat* — It drtat In only an hour a Skip Ipngthy clean-up time LUCITE i House Paint I w II Wast Lawranea FE 6-0261 « TOM’S HARDWARE 905 Orchard Laka AVa. 9-6 P.M. FES-2424 THINGS TO DO AND SEE THIS WEEK POHTIAC JAYCEES ROCHESTER COMMUNITY FAIR CENTENNIAL . PONTIAC MALL Week et Sapt. 4th thru 1th •iM to D daNy - Sunday ft to 6 P.M. Sapt 7 thru 14 ROMIO MACH PISTIVAL ■ Day Weekend Let a Gas Dryer Do Your Ironing! § Durable Pratt care dots away with ironing. No boat sotting for fluffing and air- * ing. Eaty-clean lint i door. €RI9MIP * UL 2-3000 CfatfuA 3466 AUBURN H.©****' LABOR DAY SPECIAL TURF BUILDER , M PLUS 2 REWARD! Tho City of Pontiac will pay UP TO *1,000 BONELESS SIRLOIN STEAK 79‘ lb. For Information Loading to the Arrest of Persona Responsible for any or the Following Type> of Crimes CommHtfd in tho CHy of Pontiac from JanOaiy 1, 1969 through December 31, 1969: - Arson (Inoludts *11 sets #1 firebombing) - Intsrfersnes or Atteok on Fireman or their Iquipmsnt - Serious misuse of figsarm* (includes alt eels ot sniping) issautt or attack on any nor any other person - Major theft - Major burglary LEAN MIATY ROLLED ROAST 79‘ lb. - Or any plotting or oonipirtng to commit ony ot fho above erimoa rag. 3 The Pontiac City Commission has begun this reward s system In an effort to further combat the Increasingly $ serious threat of crime to every cltiaen In Pontiac. Use * the following instructions to report a crime and collect 3 the cash reward: MBS 10,MO tq. Ft. W n ohont o orbno on a Monk •> Tear elf and kaena eomor nf the shoot of paper asm taiaing the Information rnvmteh to eoptadM same aamher. A Mail the shoot of information ts P. 0. Box Mt, Pontiao, McNAB BUILDING CENTER MI6 BiiabaHi Lk. Rd., af Daaa Lk. Rd. nmmmammmmsn'mnnAi»e.e,%»memm%isK»'saMB»»%e%eamAe«i»e,%%u!« N your information toads to an arrest. Instruetisas wM ho wHshod tor eollaeting too rsarard without tstowiitg your MmdRy. BigtoHHy tor rowsrd will bo UatonsiaoU as# kept ssnfjdontjol by a torso-man eNixens aamaUesa appalntod by PaaMao CHy Commission SUNDAY ONLY - At 2 ttoraa Lilted Below Only! BAZLEY- FAIRWAY FOOD MARKETS 434G Dixia Highway-Drayton Plains OPEN SUNDAY 9 A.M. to * P.M. 1220 North Party at Maditon OPEN SUNDAY 10 AM. to t P.M. Mksmil SO*.OMkrtw o WON o UOUW e smn I MONDAY S TUESDAY ONLY! S! VALLEY borhd CLOSED MONDAY, LABOR PAY TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY sarr.'a'dkf- Qjpeojoh. Tender, Delicious CUBE STEAK 99t. 0 Lb. Limit Vi DAL FAIRWAY FOODS 1221 NORTH PERRY at MADISON A erase From PenMae Northern Mjgfc IMssI We Reserve The Right To Limit QmnmHtiee BAILYtdf AJLtolPJU. SUNDAYS IIAJL to I PAL ALL BBBF PATTIIS 59*. ■ HOrrMAsrs mhjhd ran. oushbet RataN Dhrlafan 626 North Party Straat ‘ FE2-11M Oval Baby Pictures Of Browns' Three Daughters Hang Above Living Room Sofa Colonial Is Their 20th Home Pontiac Prou Plwtot by Bdword R. Nobis By JODY HEADLEE Home Editor, The Pontiac Press Moving has become a science with Mr. and Mrs. Robert Brown of Farmington Township whose four-bedroom, three-year-old colonial is the couple’s 20th home since their marriage. This does not include the number of apartments they have lived in. “Because of the moves," said Mrs. Brown, “we have to choose houses that our furniture will ifit in." Some pieces, however, have to undergo alteration to make them fit . . . for example, the pine dry-sink-hutch in the family room. “We had the bottom made to use as a bar eight years ago when we lived in Farmington. It was fine. But we moved away and when we moved back three years ago, the pine dry sink just got lost on the wall. “So 1 called the carpenter who built it and he came out and added the hutch, making the piece more compatible with its surroundings." ★ ir ★ Paneled in walnut, the family room acts as a bridge between the kitchen’s ipforjnal fining area and the screened porch and outdoor patio. The wall above its sea-green leather sofa features original art Including one done by the Browns’ daughter Nancy when she was nine years old. Artistically talented, Mrs. Brown has created the rooms’ floral arrangements. In the family room are the dried arrangement in the milk can near the dry-sink hutch and the Williamsburg-type arrangement on the round coffee table’s lazy Susan. Ladder-back chairs with reed seats serve the round, pedestal game table lighted by a converted lamp of brass and copper. Matching gold T-cushioned chairs in the living roony are separated by a cherry Queen Anne coffee table topped by gold candies in brass candlesticks and a Williamsburg arrangement of statice, babysbreath, dried pods and yarrow. Walnut Secretary In; Gold-Carpeted Den Lighted By Tiffany-Type Fixture Boston Fern Is Decorator Accent In Wallpapered Formal Dining Room Colonial Of Mr. And Mrs. Robert Brown Found In Farmington Township Pots Of Bright Annuals Add Color To Screened Porch And Raised Patio Pine Dry-Sink-Hutch Dominates One Wall Of Walnut-Paneled Family Room THI RIALTOR ACTS,At A NIGOTIATOM. Settling of ths flnsr points of pries and othar differences can gat pratty hatie. Your Realtor smoothes ovar tha dataili and halps buyer and tallar arriva at a mutually ad-vantagaout agreement. No Matter Whore You Are Moving... 1 MeStber of International Traders Club GNSMB-BNST REALTOR THE , PONTIAC AREA BOARD OF REALTORS lb|M(NilM3M,NMrvklM> the Home You Own for tha Home You Want! ■ FOUR OFFICES TO SERVE YOU BETTER/ 377 South Telegraph Pontiac PE 8-7161 ROCHESTER UNION LAKE ClARKSTON OL1-8518 EM 3-4171 625-2441 BATEMAN REALTY RIAL ESTATE LISTINGS • Industrial B—2 THE PONT!Ad PRESS, SATURDAY. AUGUST 80, I960 Ten Nays the Realtor takes the worry out of home buying! Buying a home can bo a barrel of fun. Or a pack of pit-fall*. And that's-where a Realtor comas in.. Evan though you may know the difference between a dormer window and a bay, his expert help can opan your eyes to other features you might never notice. And steer you clear of drawbacks you might easily overlook. Below you will find tan of the best reasons wo know for start-your search for a home in Realtor's office. THE REALTOR SAVES YOU TIME, EFFORT AND HEADACHES. He discovers your architectural interests, I e a r n s something of your personal tastes — and tries to show you only the types of homes you want to see, within your price range. 2. THE REALTOR ADVISES YOU ABOUT NEIGHBORHOODS. His professional exparlehfca Is Invaluable to you in analysing future trends and the potential value of your home as a long-range Investment. S. A THI REALTOR HUPS YOU SEE THROUGH INFLATED PRICES. Owners who try to sail personally, often tend to overprice a home. But homes listed with a Raaltor — benefit from his kno&riedga of current market values. 4, THI RE ALT OR ARRANGES Ha makes appointments for your convenience. Ha will also sea that you have plenty of time for a thorough, unhurried Inspection. 5. THI RIALTOR HILPS Y 0 U SHARP*! YOUR VISION. Ho inspects homes with you, calls your attention to Improvements and advantages you could overlook. And points out any disadvantages his trained aye may • ‘ • 1 i- ' . : & ' ' r ■ ■ ■' >■ Jg " Y ^ ' ; 'I. ”J American Backyards Are the Most Popular Summer Resorts Informative Book Out SCREENING • If you don’t screen your ml , p\ LA Tl /“* U.S. Timber Fills Plants Do More Than Grow Hoos,nQ Needs | !n any popularity contest during the summer months Injmer through the purchase ofiseasoned zealot who Isipatio now, you should plan for among the world’s summer : their own private “resort" area, I major equipment for an out- upgrading your facilities — here resort areas, the handsdown,which is equipped in varying door living area, according to|are some pointers on patio winner, without a doubt, would {degrees for relaxation, play,i James Rabbitt, an outdoor liv- planning to help you maximize be the American backyard. : entertainment, and dining. ling specialist. Jyour backyard enjoyment: Many million of families More than a million families! If you are among this groupj p You usually don’t have spend most of their leisure timelwiU join this throng this sum- — either as a newcomer or as aimuch choice as to patio location but insofar as possible you should consider wind and sun direction and easy access to kitchen-dining area. the future by using patio cover supports that will permit easy installation of screen panels. • Don’t forget lighting. You don’t have to light Up every square foot of patiq space. * * * You should provide diffused lights, well above eye-leyel for the central area. And don’t foreget plenty of electric outets for TV, radio, hot plates, coffee makers and so oil. • Heating should be carefully considered. Heating coils can be installed when the floor is laid and connected with the home’s heating system, or portable equipment can be choseni from a great variety of efficient models available. • If backyard space is limited, a side patio or patio-carport can provide the shade retreat you need. Or a front porch can be shaded with a custom, i screened in. For further information on aluminum awnings and patio coat act: Alcan Budding Products Division, 100 Erieview Plaza, Cleveland, Ohio 44114. BATH BEAUTYr-Brlght yellow, spring great and shades of hot pink set the mood for a colorful bathroom designed around a revolutionary new bathtub design molded of fiber glass. Hie unit is one-piece molded fiber glass combining bath and shower with three integral walls and optional ceiling top. Three shelves for toiletries are molded into the back well—bath level soap ledge with drain, shower level soap ledge with drain and shampoo shelf. A 34" grab bar and towel bar for added convenience. Installation of the' fiber glass unit is made during the framing of a home . . . everything goes in at once — tub and three' walls. Its seam-free construction completely eliminates damaging water leadage. SOUTH-FACING Even a south-facing patio can be cool and comfortable when protected by a modern, aluminum cover. Include shrubbery and fencing in your! planning if screening is called for. j • The patio should be designed to fit the pattern of family activity, with room for din-ling and entertaining. Its rela-tion to outdoor grill or pool should be carefully worked out. WAR Remember that an outdooc fireplace has a second Important use — to provide warmtyi and a campfire-like | feeling on cool nights. • Your aluminum patio cover; can be built to fit the shape of ;the patio floor; Aluminum! panels with white undersides i provide a pleasantly diffused i light, but more light in certain areas can be obtained by replacing some of the aluminum panels with translucent plastic ones. Although most homeowners prefer bright, higb-gloss colors, you can also get low-gloss, matte finishes that blend with roof or siding. By EARL ARONSON AP Newsfeptares A garden of performing plants, of flowers that move, grow, or respond to something in little-known or unusual ways, I can be an absorbing, year-round [ pleasure. [ Those words are from a new [ garden book titled "Performing i Plants,” by Ware T. Budlong . (Simon fc Schuster), who says you need little more than seeds and soil to have such a garden. Sketches by artist Grambs Miller illustrate fascinating items such as lu m 1 n o u s mushroom, pitcher plant, compass plant and carnivorous plants, plants that respond to touch or gravity, and one " can bo anesthetized with chloroform. To make things easier Budlong provides background Information and sources of seeds and plants, some of which are hard to come by. COMPASS PLANT For instance, frontiersmen Mississippi Valley pjrarieo discovered in the early 1800s a sunflower-like plant, the sturdy leaves growing so that theta: edges pointed north and South while the broad upper lower surfaces were exposed to the east and west. Mimosa pudica is so sensitive It is commonly called sensitive plant. The leaves fold when you touch them. Another plant has flowers jointed at the base so they may be turned as though they worked on ball bearings. The telegraph plant has leaflets that move up and down like the action of a telegraph key. nearby. Roses and garlic afe very compatlbile. Many herbs benefit vegetables. The gas plant on hot evenings gives off a vapor that will flash into flame If a lighted match is held near the stem. Th oxalis shoots its seeds with a pistol-shot noise. Rattlesnake iris seeds rattle in the wind. TIMETABLE The author presents a timetable for plants with their specific hours of opening and closing. Four O’clock doses its blooms at 4 p.m. There are walking plants, including a fern that sends out a long narrow frond that takes root where it touches the ground and starts a new plant. Budlong describes unusual methods of seed dispersal and scattering of plants, including some “hitch-hikers,’’ and suggests a number of home experiments. Sixty per cent of U.S. softwood sawtimber is In federal forests, but less than one-third of the lumber and plywood comes from these lands. Congress is shaping a funded plan for more-roads and better management, so public timber can fill a bigger share of housing needs. TAKE THEM ALONG - Planning an autumn outing? Take along your bicycles so you can really get back to nature and enjoy the fall scene. This carrier makes loading and unloading the bikes a cinch. The design accommodates two bicycles, one loaded from each side. To obtain the easy-to-follow car carrying bike rack pattern number 457, send $1 (add 25 cents per pattern for air mall delivery) by currency, check or money order to: Steve Eilingson, The Pontiac Press Pattern Dept., P.O. Box 2383, Van Nuys, Calif. 91408. Tulips will move to sunny spots. Directions are given for making a plant take a deep bow through “hellotropism" o r “phototroplsm." Certain plants respond to water and to electric current, and to a source of heat. Did you know that dandelion seeds are attracted by static electricity. Artist Miller Illustrates with a comb. PARTNERSHIPS There are a number of “pi: ants that gi partnerships," piai better when special friends' are PICTURESQUE — To odd a bright accent to your backyard landscape, build a windmill. To obtain the easy-to-follow, full-size Dutch windmill pattern number 897, send |1 (add 25 cents per pattern for air mail delivery) tty currency, check or money order to: Steve Eilingson, The Pontiac Press Pattern Dept., P.O. Box 2383, Van Nuys, Calif. 91401. : FACE BRICK • All Sises • Colors • fixtures I rsmsmueES-MTiot-MMCi-Busmiss ? 1BRIGR • BLOCK* CONCRETE 1 IehBKv? ; BUILDING SUPPLY 1 j VPPpSp- COMPANY \ • Ml 8. Telegraph, Fentiee 335*8185 KlRgil RfttiEilii « r»T»Te tl tors tmtlriAf w, Hm a BETTER PLAN... Developed to Prevent Homeowners Like Yourself from Being Burdened With TWO Homes! Without Our Trading Program | You Must Either . f I SELL BEFORE BUYING BUY BEFORE SELLING Each could bo. an undoslrablo circumstance and you could bo subjecting yourself to unnecessary ! hardships and sacrifices. here’s how the plan works: 1* Yevoffar^ewrchese the heme of your choke sub|ect to a satisfactory trade-in figure from I m THE PONTfAC PRESS. SATURDAY. AUGUST Looking for New Home 80, 1969 Check Sound Control Features • If you’re planning to buy a new home or apartment these days, make sure that it has built-in sound control features or it will be obsolete before you :move into it, the United States ; Savings and Loan League. The friendly warning was ! contained in the latest supplement to the gigantic ■Construction Lending Guide, a volume originally written to aid ; construction loan officers at saving and loan associations, . but which was later made Available to anyone interested ; in home building and homeownership. ★ * ★ “Contemporary living 1 s noisy,” the Guide states, "and today’s electrical servants — washers, dryers, dishwashers, garbage disposers, refrigerators, vacuum cleaners, radios, TV and more—make life easier and more enjoyable but at the same time create noise problems.” The Guide pointed out that central heating and cooling ! equipment prduce noise and carry it into every room. Outdoors,, noise levels havei Increased also, and sound! created by high-speed roads,! fast trains and jet airliners add to the problem. people live closer to their neighbors and engage in an increasing amount of outdoor leisure activity. Commercial sound conditioning began some 30 years ago in churches, theaters and auditoriums; a little later it was used in classrooms, offices, hospitals, restaurants and other commercial buildings. * * +' When it is preplanned in the design of a home or apartment, sound control can usually be accomplished inexpensively. "However,” the Gude pointed out, “after a building is completed, corrections in the construction to control sound transmission are almost always costly.” While the subject of sound is relatively technical, there are some facts about it that are easily understood by the laymen particularly when he lives with sound (or noise as the case may be) eyery moment. . LEVELS decibels causes a "tickling In the ear” sensation; sound as high as 180 decibels, generated by some rocket engines, can cause structural damage to buildings and can be fatal to humans. Some examples of the decibel readings of sounds familiar to all of us. For instance, rustling leaves hit the scale at about 10 decibels — very restful; an empty theater or your own bedroom would register about equipment produce noise and 30-35; office background noise and normal conversation about watch for in the way of sound, control in a new house or | apartment? First of all acoustical correction and second, noise reduction. j * +1 * Acoustical correction Involves the detailed planning and shaping of a room to establish the best hearing conditions for ’wanted” sound. It involves engineering calculations and the of acoustical and other finish materials. It requires the services of an expert. 55-60; inside your automobile in traffic is around 80, and at 90 (or more) the hi-fi addict is happy; inside an airplane or walking ", through a noisy industrial plant registers about 100. At 120 on the scale we reach the threshold of feeling — the passing of an elevated train for example. From the outside jet aircraft transmit 140 decibels to the listener, which, by the way Sound levels, are expressed in *s *ess .^an artillery fire, which ■ • comes in at about 130. Uniformity Is Big Help to Builder Variety isn’t always the spice of life. To assure top quality in building products, the emphasis is often on uniformity aecmeis. A reading of zero ,, : ", “ decibels shows a sound level Anything above 140,” the Nothing is more troublesome that is just slightly less than the|Suidl ?ays’ “Puts the hear«r a builder.°,r do-it-yourselfer . . . t ... flPrimtoltf in fno iim Ihon m atari ale Inal unmilrl Another factor is that today. faintest sound which can be heard by the human ear — and reaches the threshold of feeling. Anything over 120 decibels then goes up from that point. For example, sound at 120 definitely in the acutely" uncomfortable hearing zone apd prolonged exposure can be extremely dangerous.” TIPS What should the homeowner INVESTORS OPPORTUNITY] Now for $18,900 to $24,900. you can buy a Colonial Villago Condominium Apartmont. Whan you buy, you'll realize tax advantages, build ownership equity and watch the potential value If your unit increase. All or thete PLUS feature* are includedf • Year Round Swimming Pool with Sauna Baths e Activities Area with indoor billiard tables, outdoor barbecue pits, shuffle board courts, horseshoe pits, swings, picnic tables. * Complete Westinghouse Kitchen with Freeaer/Refrigerator, Washer/ Dryer, Automatic Dishwasher, Automatic Range, Exhaust Hood, Disposal. e Electric Heat with Humidity Con* trol e Individual Central Air Condition* ing. * Carport • Softened Commumity Water O All Exterior Maintenance includ* ing painting, landscaping, snow re* moval lawn care, trash pickup. Condominium Apartment Model Hours: OPEN DAILY EXCEPT FRIDAY For information call: 673*9669 Rental Management Available Built by LEON BLACHURA, general contractor Sales By: Dan Mattingly than materials match—but don’t. ★ * * Even slight variations in colors or finishes in the same material may require hand matching. This means loss of time and labor—and sometimes less than satisfying results. PANELING One of the most difficult materials to match is natural wood paneling. Hie exception is hardboard paneling, an engineered wood product, manufactured for uniformity of grain, density, strength—and finish. The uniform beauty o f hardboard’s grain and finish is achieved by a unique process. ★ * * For example, in manufacturing a walnut woodgrain finish, only the most eye-appealing grain sections are selected from as many as 150 walnut fliches. These selected sections are then mounted on a 4 by 8 foot panel.’ The panel is photographed, etched on plates and printed in designer colors specially prepared hardboard base panel. UNIFORM GRAIN This process results in a uniform grain and color for all panels. No panel matching is necessary. The same process is used for a variety of pre finished hardboards. In addition to conventional woodgrains, there are also panels in decorator colors, marbleized surfaces, embossed patterns and unusual textures, such as cane and burlap. The composition of hardboards is also of uniform quality. Hardboards are made b y refining wood to Individual fibers which are formed into a uniform mat. * * * The mat is then compressed and bonded under heat and ). All grains, knots and other natural wood Irregularities are eliminated. The decorative surface,is then imprinted oh the panels Because of their uniform density and strength, hardboards won’t crack, check splinter and are exceptionally resistant to dents, scuffs and stains. These attributes make hardboard “wood at its best.” Noise reduction Involves the treatment of room surfaces with acoustical materials to lessen the discomfort and distraction caused by the reflection sound "unwanted” within the space. Among the most common I noise offenders are ordinary smooth hard building surfaces which are highly reflective and throw back 98 per cent of the sound that strikes them. REFLECTION This reflection causes sound to bui}d up to a high level and to die out very slowly. ‘‘When a sound absorbing material is placed over a hard surface in a room, sound does not build up as fast and will die out faster,” the Guide said. Among the many things which rq effective sound control devices are acoustical ceiling files, insulation within the walls of the home, use of soundabsorbing material on the walls! etc. Strangely enough, everyday carpeting is one of the most effective home sound control materials. In addition to this,1 draperies absorb a certain i amount of sound. | Sound control is an even greater problem in multi-unit apartment buidings. OWN NOISE “The fact of the matter is,” a spokesman said, “people can live very well with their own family noise, but they can’t abide their neighbor’s noise. What is the pattering of little feet in your apartment is a thundering herd of elephants when it takes place in, the ! apartment above.” The home or apartment buying family discuss the sound problem freely with the builder. Ask what type of sound control j is being used ih the construction, of the building itself and what! Itype of acoustical materials will! appear in the final product. And if little or no sound control is being, planned Into your dwelling, perhaps you should look elsewhere. B—8 Where The Best Begins Status Symbols lake HilYi aporlmmn r.pr.i to many, iho Highpit psi •partmtnt living and ucial st in BLOOMFIELD HILLS MAKE A SPICE CHEST with labeled drawers. Pattern 275 gives actual-size cutting guides and directions and a wide variety of printed spice and herb labels ready to paste on. Price 50 cents. This pattern also is in the Old-time Furnishings Packet No. 65 which is a big value for $1.50. The Pontiac Press Pattern | Dept., P. O, Box 50, New Windsor, N. Y. 12550. 3 I/9 mlnutPt from 1-75 10 mimit.s Iron, 1-696 . 24 minutes from downtown Detroit •from $300 Hold Brush Near Base of Handle The best way to hold a paint j brush is to grasp the brush comfortably near the base of I the handle. Hold it rather I loosely. 1 Do nol bear down hard on a brush, but exert only enough pressure to make the bristles flex slightly toward the tip. A NEW CONCEPT IN DOOR WALL CONSTRUCTION REPLA SLIDING DOORS OF REINFORCED PLASTIC e JM insulated glass e permanent FINISH IN WHITE & TAN e NO FROST OR 'CONDENSATION e NEVER warps DorwiiT Distributors Phone 67S-9065 5790 Hatchery Road WHAT IS KLINGELHUT FACE BRICK SIDING? s the Multi-Purpose Brick Siding that does so many jobs—BETTER “tUl Wlnylhyl. brick h gsn.jr».>dMd..lly mad., SMlrtd brick of standard dimension tirtsnt that It b » Inch thick. It b hondod to H Inch Insulating panob by on •xclwshw proems do-vnlopod by Kdngolhut. This prod.es on Insobt-Ing combi nation oqual to 4 Inchon of blawrUn Insulation—or 4 hot of solid brick. • Gives year-round insulation • Reduces fuel costs • Beautifies your home, increases its value • Resists fire • Ends repair and maintenance bills — no painting • Economical to install Phone 673*7507 COMPLETE HOME MODERNIZATION 2503 DIXIE HWY. PONTIAC Across From Silver Lake Rd. KAMPSEN Realty & Building Company OPEN MOUSE - SUNDAY 2-5 P.M. TIE CIUFMMM ... 2(34 Casts Mesa Cant A Distinguished Rancher That Reflects the IHthhate in Contemporary Living Driving Directions: Witt Walton Bhrd. to Clintonvillc Rd. to XN4 Costa Mesa Court. 1071 W. Heron St. 6I1-19M WELL, WE HAVE IT! RAY REAL ESTATE Has Unlimited Funds - Waiting to buy your home. $ CASH in 72 hours Don't put it off another day! Call or Slop By 4612 Bine Hwy. 674-4101 OPEN SUNDAY, AUG. 31st... 1 to 6 P.M. YOUR HOST Frank Clark This Deluxe Rancher Features • 3 Bedroom* • Alum. Siding • Drapes ••Wail-to-Wall Carpet o Att. 2*Car Garage • Formica Kit. • Coramie Bath • Alum. Trim • Full Banomont DIRECTIONS: MODEL NOW FOR SALE 5900 WELLINGTON 1* MY POSSESSION ’"jgtil *26,950 Why not stop out Sunday and lot your host, Frank Clark show you,this fine home? We will appraise your home, give you a guaranteed trade-in, and arrange the best financing available. FRUSHOUR REALTY 5730 Williams Lake Road 674-4161 674-2245 * , (Listing — Selling -j Appraising — Building) From Pontiac ao north on Dixie Highway to ona-half mile north of Hie Andersonville Road, and turn right on ROCKCROFT (immediately north of Harvey's Colonial House and directly across the highway ’ from Indf Rendence Square Apartments), take Rock* croft tp WELLINGTON to models. A R—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 30, 1969 Driveway Materials Pool ana Play Sand Limestone - Cobblestone - Marble-stone — Top Soil — Gravel — Sand -• Railroad Ties - Patio Supplies MICHIGAN LANDSCAPING SUPPLY ATI00 Hixson, On M-8B, Between Ryan and Oequindre Utica, Mich. 739-5173 ______nirl< t’f> or Delivery - 7 Day tfrrk , CivEyouR yARO STyiE AN a PROTECTION: ...............Anchor* Fence. Protects ""........ Pjs. children, pet* and property * * '/yymi • Anchor offers a choice of Chain Link, Privacy, f wrents J * Picket or Wood. Chain Link variety includes new Y-gg-^i • Meadow green vinyl-coated Perma- -~P|d^ • fused*, aluminum or steel wire in 1* |ffQ|NfiHflR -Modemmesh* or 2" standard weave. iMP J j FOR FREE ESTIMATE, CALL: J FE 5-7477 j NO DOWN PAYMENT • LOW MONTHLY PAYMENTS 5 THE EPITONE OF LANDSCAPE ELEGANCE LtuuLuofit PLANNING CONSULTANTS AND CONTRACTORS ANN ARBOR PONTIAC FLINT WRITE LANDSCAPE LIMITED, HOLLY, MICHIGAN Phona 634-8829 A-1 CARPENTER WORK AT FAIR PRICES! • ADDITIONS^• GARAGES • ROOFING • SIDING • CEMENT SMALL OR LARGE We uiUl build any style houite on your lot with terms! W%m til CONSTRUCTION pnB WW COMPANY 621 AUBURN AVE. OPEN T DAYS TIL • P.M. Phona FE 8-3628 YORK FE 8-1178 THE SIGN-0F-ACTI0N!!! WE 6IUUUNTEE A SALE Guaranteed Sals la* te key Dm property any IIm DUPING TM MIT- IMMEDIATE CASH SALE Wa buy your house, all money, in 2 days, stay ID days attar sals. TRADE Beeaoae at our ' ' a adver- p.x»: —*-jr OOt MOMK ll TRAOE. Call lor details. 10/flrti irrt ing all of Oakland, Measeik and Wayne CommtUo York' Real Estate or 4-0363 OALL FOR PROMPT FREE APPRAISAL R0 OBLIGATION KING-SIZE BED—Custom-made in Georgia to blend with an antique Sheraton chest and antique rosewood desk, the bed in the master bedroom of the Robert Browns in Farmington Township Is covered by an off- Pontl.c Pratl Photo white quilted damask spread. Velvet throws in pumpkin, gold and green emphasize the room’s accent colors. The candle stand in the foreground was made by Mrs. Brown of an old balustrade, board and salad bowl. Brick House Needs Periodic Care Too There’s a fallacy about brick homes. The fallacy, is that they are maintenance free. Certainly they don’t require the complete painting every few years that the wood home demands. But they do require occasional attention and just because you are not forced to | paint them regularly is no reason to Ignore them. * * * | Crumbling mortar is The pro-; I biem with brick homes, and the brick foundations of wood homes. Don’t neglect bad mortar joints or you may find ] damp spots on indoor walls before too long. One comfortable thing about repairing mortar joints — it’s a job you can do a little at a time. INSPECTION Occasional inspection of your home is the way to detect trouble before It becomes too serious. Use a screwdriver to probe mortar joints for loose material. Use a hammer and chisel to remove loose mortar. Leave the sound portions alone. Clean out fragments with a wire brush. * ★ * Hose down the surface so that it is thoroughly wet. Never apply fresh iportar to a dry surface. If you do, it will dry too quickly and crumble, Use a prepared mortar mix, adding water to small amouts and mixing only what you will need in a short time. TROWEL A pointing trowel is used to fill the joints with fresh mortar. Use the end of the trowel to indent the mortar slightly. This makes it look better and helps it shed water. Keep some rags and bucket of water handy to wipe or wash! away mortar that gets smeared on the brick. New mortar joints should be kept wet for a few days. Mortar can become loose in brick steps, too. But this presents another problem since the constant weight on the step* may loosen bricks. A loose brick also will crack easily. PATCH If wear is slight, just patch as you would for a wall. But bricks that are starting to crack or wobble should be attended to differently. First, break away the mortar so that you can remove the brick. Then clean out the rest of the mortar and whatever hardened mortar is on the brick. * * * Set the brick to soak in a bucket of water. Cover the brick, except Tor the face that will show, with mortar and set it back in place carefully. Finish filling the joints with mortar. Allow the replaced bricks to stand for a time, whtne smooth the mortar. Wet throurghly ant continue to do so for several days. Avoid using the steps, at least in the area of repair, until the new work is thoroughly set. Preservative Helps Wood Wood decks weather more evenly and quickly when finished with a clear water repellent preservative. * * # Deck boards can be soaked in the preservative before nstallation, or it can be brush-or mopped on after assembly. Use as much as the wood will Determine Heating Needs It heating modernization plans are made at the outset of a tiome improvement project, the homeowner can save not only on the heating job, but on the over-all remodeling job. ★ v ★ *. Most remodeling jobs require some heating work, and it is easier to do it before other ■hanges are made. Homes with hydronic heating are well suited for remodeling and the old steam heated Tudor-styled house can be easily updated. The Southern Pine forests oe-j cypy a vast 198 million acre, area in the states of Alabama, Arkansas, Florida, Georgia, Louisiana, Mississippi, North and. South Carolina, Oklahoma, Tennessee, Texas and Virginia.) Ideal for Aiy Hone, Chock thoso features for a stap in baauty • FHA Specifications • Strong Reinforced Casing a Avoid Messy Installation smmzL K free estimates safety Tread Rodvces supping Wo Deliver Anywhere Manufactured and Sold by CONCRETE STEP CO. 6497 Highland Rd. (M59) 673-0775 Add l.outy to your Homs with ConcrstsSt.p. and Railing. Opan 8 to 12 Saturdays BKBFOBB StXajUEOB 1 A PARTM E NTS' Luxury 1- and 2-Radroon from $111 par manth Include* carpeting «d all nHlltlo. ur.pt electricity TENNIS OOURTsTSWIMMINU POOL • VILLAGE HOUSE Miimtwfconido.inlatinemioPtilotlionwdyopmiMH-W.TalaO.il-land UnlaonHy odt. WoHwi Rd. to Roch«itar ltd. Nadi on Rachoitor Rd. to TMmWn. loll on TtonUn to Bsdfoid S«iiaio. Phone 651-8000 MWNw a Slatkin-Hormanoff development A A STORAGE-SPACE BASE with turntable top makea an ideal television stand. The screen may be viewed from any angle. The base may even be a room divider and the machine used from either side. Pattern 420, which gives material list and illustrated directions for the swivel-top base, is SO cents. It also is in the Modern Storage Unit Packet No. 48 which is $1-50. The Pontiac Press Pattern Dept. P. 0. Box 50, New Windsor, N. Y. 12850. Storage Hint a Multi-User Storage couches are great for family rooms. Build box frames of solid fir or pine boards, including one or two drawers in the base. Seals are foam mattresses Covered with a sturdy cotton plaid. Make the couchea six feet long to sleep the children’s overnight guests. The National Housing Center Library in Washington, D. C. is the world’s largest library exclusively devoted to tlon on housing. MOGULS OH IN IAT. 1:00 to 7t00 COUHTRY SQUIRE *30,320.00 • ever 1,600 sq. ft. • 11 -block basement • 2 Vi baths with eedumlc • 13x20 family reem with brick fireplace • Formal dining roam • Three large bodnoome • 22x22 attached garage 6 Insulated glaee wbtdawe with marble tills • Dropped living teem • Extras In ether homes i In aunt OXFOflB OFFICE 828-2848 GOODRICH OFFICE 688-2211 ECONOMY RANCHER 3-bedroom with over 1,100 square feet of living area, aluminum siding, 11-block basement, 2-car garage, V/2 baths, Thermopane windows with marble sills. Ceramic tile dnd custom built cabinets. $1200 well and septic allowance. OH YOUR LOT Only *20,981 18% Finaneing Available E.J. DUNLAP CUSTOM BUILDER, IRC. FE 8-1188 FE 8-8497 OFFICE OFOI DAILY 9-8 EXCEPT SAT, AMD SUN. tin POSTPONING YOUR HOME BUYING DECISION CAN BE COSTLY Lj ' '' HERE IS WHY: The cost of building a now homo, of nocotuity reflects risjpg labor costs, arid this goes beyond tho increased wages which are being paid to tho highly skilled "on-the-site" construction workers. Increased labor costs, which are incurred in tho production of building materials and components ore in one way or another passed along to the homo builder, thus wages and salary increases granted workers in related fields have caused the price of all the materials which go into a modem heme te inch ever upward, as the cost of new heme construction increases, so doeai the valuation of and the demand for existing homes. The home which'sells for $20,000 today will be wearing a $21,500 te $22,000 price tag a year from now. Whether you are considering buying a new horpe ar an existing' home, the time te buy le N-O-WIII Higher labor costs Is fust one of the many reasons why postponing your heme buying decision can be costly, 9 & McCullough realty, inc. 54$0 • " r "■ 874-2238 HI6HLAND ROAD 674-2236 4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST p 1969 , B—5 Ranch With Family Fitness Center TRADITIONAL VERSION of four-bedroom ranch combines brick and wood shingles, with shuttered windows and appropriate details. Architect has alsp provided a contempo- rary exterior design, Using brick and vertical siding, with ho change in the floor plans. By ANDY LANG September has been designated as “Family Fitness Month.” To focus attention on the need for regular exercise, architect Herman A. York has designed a house around an area devoted to this idea. * * * The core of the floor plan’ fitness center is a room large enough to accommodate several pieces of exercising equipment, such as motorized bicycles, lifting weights, etc. Also incorporated in tiie center are an outdoor exercise patio with * privacy fence, a sauna, a stall shower and a closet. ★ ★ ★ In layout out this area, the architect so arranged it that it would be adjacent to the informal family room and away frpm the formal living and din- ing rooms. This enables it to be left in a ,‘lived;in” condition. TWO-WAY FIREPLACE . The living room, to the right of the foyer and at the front of house, has a two-way fireplace, on the other side of which is the family room at the rear of the house. The family room, 22’ long, is separated from the kitchen-dinette by a wrought iron railing and has sliding glass doors leading to a lounging and dining patio. square feet of outdoor equip-ithe over-all square footage of I ment storage wit hits own door the habitable area, 2304 square to the rear yard. - I feet, 'is the same ’in both instances. Included in the kitchen area front foyer re several features which homemakers want, Including a separate pantry, broom closet, mud ' closet, laundry with enough space for a separate sink, a nearby toilet and lavatory, and direct access to the two-car garage and rear On the other side of the house is the bedroom wing, with four bedrooms ana two bathrooms. The owners’ bedroom has a spacious dressing room, two regular closets and one large walk-in. One oi the bedrooms is in a location which makes it to be used, if desired, as a library, with a door leading directly to the FAMILY FITNESS CENTER Because of some of t unusual features surrounding the family fitness center, architect York decided to provide not only a traditional exterior design, btit an alternative In the traditional house, the arhictect has specified brick and wood shingles. For the contemporary design, he has indicated exterior stone and a vertical siding, with a choice of wood; aluminum or one of the ; new plastic-coated sidewall coverings. With the increasing recognition of exercise in the continuous struggle to keep fit, this house affords an opportunity to engage in healthful activities with complete privacy. But even more important, it’s a well-designed place to live. yard. A large space at the back contemporary style for those of the garage provides for 50 —||i|—' How to Build, Buy or Sell Your Home Full study plan information on this architect-designed House of the Week is included in a 50-cent baby blueprint. With it in hand you can obtain a contractor’s estimate. You can order also, for $1, a booklet called YOUR HOME-How to Build, Buy or Sell it. Included in It are small reproductions of 16 of the most popular House of the Week issues. Send drders to House Plans, The Pontiac Press, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, Michigan 48056 who may want to reflect on the outside a greater degree of the layout. From a cost standpoint, there -would not be much difference between the two exteriors, since FLOOR PLANS: While the family fitness center is a feature of this house, the room arrangement is excellent in its own right. Note that the family room is 2’ longer than the living room, in line with a trend towards more spacious family rooms. Check for Outdoor Features When Purchasing a Home Whether you’re looking for a new house or an old one, there are a number of exterior “plus” features you should watch out for. These features, says Daniel Cantor, a home improvement specialist, make for greater comfort and lower upkeep. Many homes, however, are built without them. 1 ★ ★ ★ If you can find a home that contains most of these “pluses,” you are ahead of the home-hunting game, .he adds. First, says the specialist, is the doorway sheltered front the weather by a porch roof door canopy so that persons entering can Insert the key or ring the bell without being drenched? Does the land slope away from the house on all sides so that the basement or crawl space will stay dry? ALUMINUM SIDING A really big plus is aluminum siding. It means no more periodic repainting for 30 years or so and considerable cost savings in heating and cooling due to additional insulation protection. ..And don’t look for it only on older homes, Cantor says. An PRIVACY—Board-on-board design of stepped screen makes an excellent privacy baffle between close neighbors, looks handsome on both sides. Use lx4-inch cedar boards overlapping edges, 2x4 rails, 4x4 posts. Center nailing strip is a 2x2. Decorative crown is made with short pieces of 2x4 set edge out between top rail and a 2x6 cap. increasing number of new home builders are offering aluminum siding now. Another plus is a well-planned front yard that’s easy to mow and not an obstacle course with isolated trees, shrubs and flower beds. Eaves and rain gutters. Eaves shade walls and windows, protect the house from rain. Gutters carry off the rain and protect the house from rot and dampnesp. There should be several downspouts to prevent the gutters from spilling over in heavy rainstorm. GABLE, LOUVERS Large-size gable louvers. The larger they are the better the ventilation in the attic area, a ; for summer comfort. Ana openings should be screer to keep out birds and insects. A light-colored roof to reflect the summer pun. The darker the roof, the more heat enters the house. Flashing should be clearly visible where roof meets chimney and other materials and in good condition. A garage that’s wide enough for two of today’s standard-cars. “Two-car” garages built a decade ago or so might only be able to hold two compacts. A back yard that’s private with a patio and patio cover. This Is getting to be a “must” today with most summer entertaining being done outdoors. Window awnings for a pleasing appearance, to keep the house cooler in the summer, and to protect furnishings from the sun’s rays. Hose connections on more than one side of the house to cut down on watering time and work. IT’S A BREEZE that starts all the action. The mill whirls and the little man begins to saw wood at top speed. His dejected hound dreams hopefully of happier occupations. Pattern 202, which gives actual-size cutting and painting guides and assembly directions, is 50 cents. This pattern also is in the Windmill and Weathervane Packet £lo. 11 which gives four other designs all for $1.50. The Pontiac Press Pattern Dept., P.O. Box S Windsor, N.Y. 12550. tliU 3-bedroom rancher hat thete quality features: all bedrooms carpeted including matter bedroom with its private bath, alatq foyer entrance, carpeted living room, custom kitchen with built-ini and pantry, laundry room and half bath between kitchen and garage, adjoining carpeted and paneled family room with fireplace, full basement, attached 2Vi-car garage. Iota of storage area and 8 oversiaed closets, situated on a beautiful Waterford Hill homesite. Ready for immediate occupancy. Assume existing mortgage or buy on land contract. Waterford Realty 4540 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains . . 673-1273 ■PPP*”" , .TP'. ... ' j Enclosed is 50 cents for baby Blueprint on S-8 1 Enclosed is $1 for YOUR HOME booklet S-8 STATISTICS Design S-8 has a living room, dining room, kitchen-dinette, family room, four bedrooms, two bathrooms, laundry, lavatory, foyer and a family fitness center. Total livable area is 2,304 square, feet. There is a rear patio with accessibility from the family room and a door just off the kitchen. Over-all dimensions, which include a two-car garage, are 87’4” by 49’5”. The plans call for a basement, with a stairway in the kitchen area. FOUR DESIGNS for high fences are given in Pattern 395. All your questions are answered including how to set posts so they will not rot out and how close to space them. So, whether you want to shut out a view or preserve privacy, go ahead with confidence. This pattern is 50 cents. It also is included in the Homestead Improvement Pact No. 30 with three other full-size patterns for $1.50. The Pontiac Press Pattern Dept., P. O. Box 50, New Windsor, N.Y. 12550. “MOW” IS THE TIME FOR HOME IMPROVEMENT WE DO EVERYTHING IN HOME IMPROVEMENTS Free Mantes - Cbeerfilly liivea KITCHENS • Plumbing • Awnings • Tiling • Plastering • Custom Cabinets • Aluminum siding >• • Custom Aluminum Trim • Combination Windows INTERIORS BUDGET TERMS No Down Payment CALL FE 4-2575 24 Hour Phone Service MIDWEST BUILDERS > SUPPLY EttablUhed 193 6 PONTIAC THE -PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY AUGUST 30, 1969 Crossing guard in Washington. Enjoy yourselves-and spare a thought for those who won’t have a holiday because they're working to make yours happier and safer. | WM Named Mr. Youth Conference THE PONTIAC PltKSS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 1969 Honored for Performance For his first place performance In a skit with other teen-agers from the Eastslde Church of Christ, Raymond Wiggins of 15 0 Orchard Lake was named Mr. Youth Conference during the 18th Annual National Youth Conference of the Church of Christ in Los Angeles, Calif, last week. He was In' competition with) the gathering, “Christian Youth teen-agers from some 2 0 Reactions and Actions in states. - - - • - - Mrs. Leslie Seay, one of the youth counselors of the church, accompanied Wiggins, Kay Moore, Linda M o d r e and Belinda Shannon to the conven- Age of Revolution," the skit portrayed the philosophies of three well known blade leaders of the CIVil Rights Movement. RECITES Raymond Wiggins recited one of Dr. Martin Luther King’s , , I well known addresses titled “I In keeping with the theme ofHaveaDream.” MARK FOR SALE - Arranging and pricing stuffed animals, dolls, aprons, pillows and other articles for the pre-Christmas sale and tea Thursday are (left) Angela Pasto-rino and Mrs. William Bridge, both of Union Lake. Sponsored by Pontiac Missionaides, the sale will be 3-9 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Mary Neville, 1093 Boston, Waterford Township. The Missionaides support an orphanage housing 100 boys and a 40-bed hospital in Ongole, India. Belinda Shannon summed it up by emphasizing “that neither black power nor jrhite power is the answer to the problem. She insisted that “oidy living together in an integrated world will prepare us to live together in an integrated heaven.” ★ ★ * The Rev. Andrew Carney is pastor of the Eastside Church of Christ, 168 Prospect. PLAYS TROMBONE A senior at Pontiac Central High School, Raymond plays trombone in Pontiac Central Band, tings in the Youth Choir of his church and is active in the church youth group. it a a A part time employe of Osmun’s at Tel-tiuron Shopping Center, Raymond plans to at* tend Michigan Christian College, Avon Township, for two years, then enter Weston University and work toward a law degree. Offer Prayers af Midnight Jewish Holy Days Begin on Sept. 12 of the Jewish s, Jews offer srs during the the Holy Days sundown on A Salihot service, the best of the penitential traditionally, takes at midnight on the Satur-prior to the sacred i The service is one of spiritual -for High Holy Days, purpose Is to attune the the mind, and the of the Individual to the meaning of thr Holy Days. i SALIHOT A Salihot service is scheduled 11 p.m. Sept. 6 at Temple1 Beth Jacob, 79 Elizabeth Lake,; With Rabbi Philip Berkowitz, ... ...... , spiritual leader of the Temple, K* Ume! officiating. That’s the happy thought of * * * hundreds of Oakland County The service will heiy°unS8ters who will soon be augmented by specW music! Fall Festival adapted for choir and organ. hpM *wpv VMr tt th‘ RECEIVES AWARD—Raymond E. .Wiggins of 150 Orchard Lake (center) shows the Rev. and Mrs. Andrew L. Carney of Eastside Church of Christ the award he received when named Mr. Youth Conference at the National Youth Conference of his denomination In Los Angeles, Calif. Rev. Carney is Raymond’s pastor. Several young people of the church attended and participated in the conference. On Church Grounds Fall Festival Scheduled for Sept. 6-7 held every year on the grounds at Sacred Heart Catholic Church and School, 3400 Adams, Pontiac Township. Prior to the midnight worship, the Sisternood of Temple Beth Jacob has planned a social hour beginning at 9:45 p.m. This 21st annual event, Members of the Jewish Faith ****** ^ ^ 8 and,7? wU1 in Oakland County are Invited helicopter rides to attend i musical entertainment, snack '_____ stands, kiddie rides, clowns, BAR MITZVAH variety booths, game booths, a Temple Beth Jacob will be the scene of a Bar Mitzvah spaghetti dinner on Saturday! The spaghetti dinner will be, and a roast beef dinner Sept. 7. Iserved from 3:30-7 p.m. Satur- Fall Schedule Set for Sunday Worship The St. Andrew Lutheran for three-year-old youngsters Church, 6255 Telegraph, West and up including adults. ! Bloomfield Township, will begin! on Oct. 1 the weekday Church Us fall schedule of services on | School will begin for children in Sept. 7 with worship at 8:30 andjthe fourth grade through ninth. 11 a rn' j Classes beginning at 4:30 p.m. * * * will include religion, catechism, The Sunday School will start supper for all groups, and [on the same date with classes!rehearsals for youth choirs. day, priced at $1.25 for adults j and 75 cents for children. The Sunday roast beef dinner will be served from noon untU late in the day. Hie dinner for adults Is $2.25 and $1.25 for children 5-12 years of age. Youngsters under 5 will eat free | at both dinnets. * * * I The Rev. Henry Kreft, pastor of the Sacred Heart Church, said there is no admission j charge and everyone is Invited i to share in the fun. Carlem i Conner is festival chairman. Sunday is Missionary Day at; Messiah Baptist Church. At 11 a.ni. worship service Mrs. Thelma Spencer of Chapel Hill Baptist Church, Detroit, will be guest speaker. A panel discussion on “The Generation Gap" is planned for the 7 p.m. meeting. Members of the youth department will participate on the panel. The public is Invited. FRIENDSHIP Mrs. Marguerite Mays, a member of Mt. Olive Baptist Church, Detroit, will be speaker at 3:38 p.m. tomorrow in Friendship Baptist Church. A, A A Mrs. Mays, a leader In the field of mission education, is well known for her teaching in the Wolverine State Convention. Assisting Mrs. Herman Tademy with arrangements are Mrs. Akford McCullen and the Rev. Eddie McDonald, pastor. MT. OLIVE BAPTIST A three-way songfest i s scheduled for 8 p.m. tomorrow at Mt. Olive Baptist Church, 458 Central. AAA Participating will be Philip Thompson and the Joy Haraumizers of Detroit, the Southern Faiths of Chicago, III. and the Victory Five of Detroit. MEMORIAL Mrs. Glen Stone will be heard in a violin solo titled “Calvary Covers It All" at 11 a.m. tomorrow In Memorial Baptist Church, 599 Michigan. The Rev. Bob Hart will speak ceremony foi Bruce Karmann! at 11 a.m. and again at 7 p.m. at 8:30 p.m. Friday. Roger Ringbloom will play a cornet solo at the evening! gjryfc. * Rabbi Berkowitz has a i_______. . for his sermon,“What To are «!“£%* ,m 5X1'"“ ““**** All Wed- 1 are! welcome. BETHANY Baptist Bethany Baptist Church Will return to the regular Sunday morning schedule on Sept. 7. Sunday School is listed for 9:45 a.m. and worship at 11 a.m. AAA The first fall meeting of the Women’s Society is set for Sept. 11 with luncheon at 1:30 p.m. Mrs. Ci of Detr dent of will speak on cern.” I Go to Church 'Crisis in Asia' Sermon Topic Tomorrow Dr. Peter van Uerop, Presbyterian fraternal worker at Yonsei University Korea, will b) congregation al with Mr. Vanderhoek, and Charles Kneale, NOTE — This is the eighth in a series o/ en by Pontiac area citizens.) By VERNA M. HAIRSTON Tax Technician, U,S. Treasury Dept. One of the values 1 find In attending church is the opportunity for a fuller Christian service. Another value of the church to its members is found in the opportunity it affords for fellowship. God has not intended that His people should live In Isolation, and the Chiirch is the most important organ-* Izatlon for promoting Christian fellowship. Every th*>« we worship Christ in His church we are serving Him. I go to church lest I forget to treat others the way i wuuld like to be treated; tost I forget without the rain, sorrow and disappointments, trials and tribulations, grief After graduate work in Wayn State University and t h University of Pittsburgh, h received his doctorate degree. He was married to Etoano Creswell whose late father wa pastor of Oakland Avenu United Presbyterian Church ir 1943. . A A A ’ The van L1 e r o p s were pointed to Mission Service ! Korea in 1940. During Chinese attack they lived Japan where he taught at Nortl Japan College in Sendai. Ordained a Presbyterian ilnister on June 27, I960, hej as accepted a ‘call to thei Presbyterian Church in Martton, N.J. I TRY RECIPES—Having fun frying a recipe for the annual fall festival at Sacred Church, 3400 S. Adams, Pontiac Township, ai Mrs. George Khiwe of 2255 Old Salem, Pon B—8 i THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 19i0 ~r NOTICE wliIuTlSBi In having • chinch In the Pontiac area 2. DMno Election of tti 3. Particular Redemption of Christ 4 The Irresistible Orate of The Saints 5. The Perseverance 3 Preservation of the Saints Please writer Rev. T. W. Schullery 10305 Reese Rd. Clarkston, Michigan 48016 _________________ First Congregational Church I. Huron and Mill St. Rev. Malcolm K. Burton, Minister Sunday Morning Sorvico 9:30 A.M. Church of thm Mayflower Pilgrim* Christian Science: Do you know what it is? Fin* Church of Christ, Scientist 164 W. Lawrence Street Sunday Service.. 11 rOO AJ4 Sunday School... 11KX) A.M. Wed. Eve. Meeting •■00 P.M. SUBJECT: "CHRIST JESUS" FRIENDLY GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH Robort Garner, Pastor | Sunday School . . . 9:45 A:M. Morning Worship...... 11:00 A.AA. Evening Sorvico......7:00 P.M, Wodnosday Prayer at .. 7:00 P.M. Independent, Fundamental, Evangelistic NORTHSIDE BAPTIST CHURCH 2024 Pontiac Road (Across from 4-H Fairgrounds) Sunday School 1Q A.M. Church Sendees 11 A.M. Sun. Eve. Evangelistic Service 7 P.M. Midweek Service Wed. 7 P.M. A Going - Glowing - »~.mw “rowing Church SSm COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 64 W. Columbia Ave. (A Southern Baptitt Church) "Where the difference It worth the dittance" * 45 A.M Sunday School - 6:30 P.M. Training Unle It A.M Worship - 7i30P.M.WorthieService Wednerday Night Service 7i30S.M SISSY THACKER. Aut. Setter 1. Clay Polk Patter MLLCREST BAPTIST CHURCH 1240Dorit Road, Pontiac SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. WORSHIP 11 AML TRAINING UNION 6 P.M. WORSHIP 7 P.M. Carroll Hubba, AAlnltter of Mutic I FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH A Downtown Church Huron at Wayne, Pontiac WORSHIP A CHURCH SCHOOL 10 A.M. Infant Nurtary Ample Parking Naar Church Potter-Rev. Galen E. Herthey Atit. Pattor-Rev. O. F. Pope FUR FOR ALL! Me V man M Id Prize • 1969 Mustang SACRED HEART PARISH ANNUAL FALL FESTIVAL Will bo held on the grounds of Sacrod Haart Perish AUBURN HEIGHTS SATURDAY AND SUNDAY, SEPT. 6-7 3400 Adams Rd.—Approximately 1 mile north of Adams Rood exit from 1-75 PRIME ROAST BEEF DINNER (With ."all tha trimmings") Sorvod Sunday from 12 noon — 6 Adult!, ms - Children under 12, $1.25 - Under 5, Free SPAGHETTI DINNER Served Saturday from 44 p.m. Adult!, $1.28 — Children Under 12,7Se —, Under 5 Free Kiddie Rides — Booths - Games — Helicopter Rides ALL THE FUN OF THE FAIR POST PICTURES—Looking over pictures taken of Indians when they served a mission in the Southwest are the Rev. and Mrs. L. L. Schmidt of 106 Tregent. They are shown here with children Jack, Mrs. Schmidt, Douglas, Pastor Schmidt, David and Heidi. The Rev. Mr. Schmidt is pastor of the new house of worship known as Ecclesia Chapel. Services are currently held at 11 a.m. and 7 p.m. in the Bemis Olson Amvets Hall, 570 Oakland. Maj. Leslie Hall, the divisional com mander coordinating the Emergency Disaster Service in Mississippi, reports to the Salvation Army 2 Services Listed for Atonement Labor Day Sunday will be observed at the Church of the Atonement, 3535 Clintonville, Waterford Township with services at 8:15 and 10:45 a.m. ★ ★ * Pastor Crea M. Clark will preach on "An Abiding Faith—Monday Through Friday.” Church camping is listed for Friday through Sunday a t Oakland County Park, Dixie Highway and Grange Hall roads. The early worship service will be held at the camp on Sept. 7. The annual churich picnic Is scheduled for the same location on Sept. 6. Need Funds, Food, Bedding Installation Friday Eve Howard L. Green Heads Congregation Installation of officers will highlight the 8:30 evening service of the New Temple Friday. Services are currently held in the Birmingham Unitarian Church, Woodward and Lone Pine, Bloomfield Hills. * ★ ★ ★ Howard L./ Green will be installed as president; Gerald L. Freedman, vice president; and Howard B. Packman, sec-“ vice president, chard Hendin, director of the religious school, will outline the religious education program and discuss its aims and go;' ■ *. <* * A get-acquainted gathering Sept. 7 for new and prospective members of the New Temple will feature art work and musical entertainment. The event will take place at 7:30 p.m, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Morris Mersky, 4731 Cove, Orchard Lake. ★ ★ ★ Rabbi Ernst Conrad, spiritual leader of the congregation, will be present to answer questions and discuss the philosophy of this newest refomi congregation in Oakland County. Guests are welcome. Old members will be happy to accompany prospective members to the party, Rabbi Conrad said. When a man Is wrong and won’t admit it, he always gets angry —Thomas C. Haliburton, Nova Scotian jurist. FIRST SPIRITUALIST CHURCH 576 Orchard Lake SERVICE 7:30 P.M. ELLEN EUMBRIDVE Speaker Sun., Aug. 31 For Information Call 334-3715 One of the secrets of life is to keep our Intellectual curiosity acute. — William Lyon Phelps, American educator. In Detroit and Pontiac that upwards of 100,000 per day are being served food, bedding and clothing from the Salvation Army Central Distribution Station along a 70-mile coast line. Emergency equipment of 50 canteens and trucks are reaching out to the people in The first meeting of Youth Fellowship is planned for 7 p.m. on Sept. 7 for young people In grades 9 and above. All are welcome, the pastor said. BIBLE REBINDING CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591 FIRST ASSEMBLY of GOD Pony St. at Wide Track SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:45 AM. Everyone Woteomo 11 AAA. "FIRST THINGS FIRST 7 P.M. "THE MAN WITH A TRUMPET Chariot A. Davenport The Church on That March Homecoming Set for Sunday The Rev. Billy Morgan pastor of Pine Knob Missionary Baptist Chuich, announces tomorrow will be Homecoming Day with services beginriing at 10 a.m. ★ * A Dinner will follow at 1 p.m. Thera will be special music throughout the day and early evening. The church is located at 6013 Sashabaw, Independence Township. Principal Named to Christian School Paul James, teacher a Oakland Christian School last year, was appointed principal of the school this week. According to James, Oakland Christian School with grades 7 through 12 will begin classes at 6:46 a.m. Thursday in the former Hickory Grove School, 165 E. Square Lake, Bloomfield Township. V if # James received his education from Detroit Bible College and Eastern Michigan University. Tha school la operated by tha Oakland Christian Sc boo Association. h * ★ Elected to serve on tha board of education this year were tha Rev. M. Donald Currey, tha Rev. Theodore R. Allebach, the Rev. Harold Cranston, tha Ray. Arnold Q. Hashman, tha Ray. Alger Leads, tha Rev. Hlkttng Bihl, James K. Allen and Theran Gabert It la no great thing to be humble when you are brought low; but to be humble when you are praised is a great and rare a 11 ainment.—Saint Bernard, Abbot of Clalrvaux, French ecclesiastic. areas where there is n o transportation. NEED MONEY Funds are needed for operation aa The Salvation Army has involved itself in an initial outlay of $500,(100. ★ * * The urgent need now is in this order — funds, food (imperish-ables and canned goods) and bedding. In response to the shortage of food for flood victims, a transport carrying tons of canned goods was dispatched from the Men's Social Service Center in Detroit on Aug. 23. * ★ * The Salvation Army truck made direct delivery to the! disaster area in Mississippi. BY TRUCK Tha need for funds is urgent, contributions may be sent to The Salvation Army Hurricane Fund, 601 Bagley, Detroit 48226. “AM AMERICAN IAPTIST CHURCH" BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH WEST HURON AT MARK SUNDAY, AUGUST 31 SERMON "KNOWINQ THI LIVING GOD" Dr. Kants CHURCH SCHOOL * 9:00 A.M. WORSHIP 10:00 A.M. Ample Parting Spue* Dr. (mil Kants, Suitor BLOOMFIELD HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 3600 Telegraph Rd. 8:30 A.M. First Service 9:45 A.M. Sunday School 11:00 A.M. Sacond Sorvico 4:30 P.M. Jr. Hi Youth 6:00 P.M. Evaning Service 7:30 P.M. Sr. Hi Youth FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Baldwin-FE 4-7631 Sunday School—10:00 A.M. Sunday Worthlp—11:00 A.M. Evaning Worthlp—7:30 P.M. Wadnatday Prayor—7:00 P.M. • Saturday Evaning Biblo Study—7:30 P.M. Harry C< FE 2-1 ( Food, bedding and clothing may be taken to Salvation Army, 118 W. Lawrence, Pontiac Or Salvation Army, 1220 W. Lafayette, Detroit. Volunteers are assisting. GOOD SHEPHERD ASSEMBLY OF GOD Now Location Between Maybe# and 1-75 Sunday School...10 A.M. Evaning Sorvico...7 P.M. Mld-WaakSarv. Wad............7:30 P.M. Patton JOHN DEARlNG Phono: 335-3313 CALVARY 1 Assembly of God; .! 8060 ANDERSONVILLE RD. 1 BLOCK OFF DIXIE HWY. M 9:45 A.M. || SUNDAY SCHOOL |l A SPIRITUAL TRAINING CLASS FOR EVERY AGE W. BRING YOUR FAMILY ££■ 11:00 AJM. WORSHIP HOUR EVERYONE WELCOME a BIBLE PREACHING 7:00 P.M. EVANGELISTIC SERMON M A GOOD PLACE FOR YOUR SUNDAY EVENING PASTOR m ARNOLD Q. HASHMAN $$ 673-0049 THE FRIENDLY CHURCH $$ Central Christian Church 3246 Lapeer Rd. 11 A.M. Morning Worthlp-9:43 Bibla School • 6 FtM. Youth Mooting—7 P.M. Gotpol Hour Mr. Ralph Shorman, Minister At Auburn, Mariva Found New Church REV. DEWEY M. KIFFER All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St. at W. Pllm St. C. GEORGE WIDDIFIELD EDWIN K. SISK, JR. Sunday, August 31 8:00 AM* 10:00 A.M. MORNING PRAYER and Sermon by The Rev. Dewey M. Kiffer, pastor, announces the founding of a new church In Pontiac. Tha congregation is chartered under the name of United Holiness Church of North America with headquarters in Grand Rapids. ★ ★ ★ The denomination was founded in 1966. The congregation worahipe in tha church building located at Auburn and Mariva, formerly known aa the Evan gal leal Holiness Church. Sunday School •tarts at 9:45 a.m. with worship at U a.m. and 7 p.m. each Smday. ft ” " * ★ * Mr. Kiffer explained, “The church is Wesleyan In doctrine. R endeavors to promote spirituality and simplicity In wordrip.” Tha pastor formally served liviril churches In Northwestern Pennsylvania and has traveled aa an evangelist In tha United States and Canada. ★ ★ # Since coming to Michigan, ha has assisted in the organization of several churches for the new BETHEL TABBkNACLE wrttiem-aaiPJL eniMra-R Cmmb >4eSrt*riaA~ FE34337 Elizabeth Lake Church of Christ Chrittiam 163 S. Winding, Pantiac Sunday School........... 9:4S A.M. Morning Worthlp.....i... 11:00 A.M. evaning Soivico........6:00 P.M. Wtd.Slbl.SMy............7:00 P.M. Minister Konngth William*, 682-2785 APOSTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRIST 1410 University Dr. Saturday Young Paapla 7:30 P.M. Sunday School and Worthlp 10 A.M. Sunday Evaning Sorvico 7:30 P.M. Tuat.and Thun. Sarvicat 7:30 P.M. ■ Church Phono FI 5-8361 ■Uhtn l. A. Ftmnr Pastor's Phono 652-2382 CHRISTIAN CHURCH OF DRAYTON PLAINS Temporary Moating Placai MASON SCHOOL ’ 3835 Walton Blvd. (bat. Sathabaw and Silver Lake Rd.) WORSHIP 9,30 A.M. BISII SCHOOL 10,43 A.M. "The Christian* Hour" WBFG-FM-DETROIT 98.7 M, 1 >43 P.M. Mairitt H. Sakaf, Mjnltlor TV Rtvlvnl Flrtt, Channel 62, Sup. 4:30 Waterford Community Church Airport Rood - Olympic Parkway Robert D. Winna, Paster : Kan Orr, Youth Dimeter • Sunday School — 9:45 A,M. • Worship Service — 11 A.M. • Youth Fellowship — 6 P.M. • Evening Service — 7 P.M. 1 Wednesday Prayer Service — 7 P.M. Tha Nursery will be open for ell services. Welcome To A Friendly, • Fundamental Church! • SUNDAY SCHOOL 9:30 a.r • MORNING SERVICE 10:45 a.i • WQTE BROADCAST (560) 11:00 a.i • CHYR BROADCAST (71) 4:00 p.. • YOUTH FELLOWSHIP 5:45 p.i • EVENING SERVICE 7:00 p.i • MIDWEEK PRAYER SERVICE - Wednesday 7:30 p.l • WBFG-FM WmL (98.3) 9:00 a.: Pastor Shaltoil speaking at the 10:48 a.m. OAKLAND and SAGINAW Rev. Robert Shelton, Pastor Spiritualist Church of Good Samaritan 4780 Hillcrosf. Drive, Waterford 623-1074 ‘U Center of Spirituality and Sociability" WORSHIP? P.M. CLAUSE LILES of Clarkston ^Jirst Wesleyan Ck arch <<4 Wo*/* BALDWIN at FAIRMONT i A' Pontiac, Michigan SundaySehool.........,945 A.M. , WESLEYAN * Worship.................1140A.M. CHURCH £ WedayanYoeth..........j....640P.M. _i_ Evening Family Gospel Hour .. .7:00 P.M. ° I , Wednesday Prayer and Praise . 7KI0 P.M. ■ MV. WILLIAM LYONS, Paata, LAKECREST SOUTHERN BAPTIST CHURCH 35 Airport Rd., Pontiac Sunday School 9:45 AM. - Worship 11 A.M. , Training Union 6:30 P.M. - Worship 7:30 P.M. Wed. Choir Practice 6:30 — Prayer 7:30 Phil Tlndlo, Jr., Pastor - 335-4897 MARIMONT BAPTIST CHURCH 68 W. Walton Blvd. Holding Forth the Word of Life Sunday School.....9:45 A.M. | Morning Worship . ...11:00 A.M. [ Evening Service.... 7:00 P.M. .Wednesday Evening.7:00 P.M., 1 REV. ROBERT F. RICHARDSON, Pastor FIRST GMHtCH OF THE BRHHREN 46 Rosslnwn Dr., North of East Pllw SUNDAY SCHOOL10 AM.—RICHARD GREENE, SUPT. 11 AM. WORSHIP SERVICE-7 P.M. EVENING WORSHIP Rev. Robert P. Hoover_________332-2412 Church of Christ 87 Lafayette St. Sunday 10:30 a.m.—7:00 p.m. Wednesday 7:00 p.m. Tom unto ms all ya that labour and ara heavy laden and I will give you REST." Man. 11.28 For homo film Bibla Study Call 612-5736 or 363-4002 THE LUTHERAN CHURCH INVITES YOU 673-3022 Pastor John Hunter 673-9274’ THE LUTHERAN CHURCH IN AMERICA THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 80. 1060 , B—0 The Pontiac CHURCH OF CHRIST 1180 N. PERRY WORSHIP 10:30 and 6:00 P.M. BIBLE CLASSES 9:3Q AM. SUNDAY Mid-Week Bible Class Wed., 7:30 P.M. BOYD GLOVER TOM MILHOLLAND HEAR HERALD OF TRUTH Ch. 50—FH. 10:30 A.M. Ch. 62-Sun. 3:30 P.M. Silvercrest Baptist Church 2562 Dixie Highway, Pontiac 10:45 A.M. "Saints in Christ Jesus" 7:00 P.M. "Preaching Christ" FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Disciples of Christ 858 W. Huron Street Young People ! Lead Worship Youth of Trinity Baptist Church will be in charge of the 11 p.m. worship service tomor-{ row. The Rev. Lee A. Gragg will preach on “Close the Generation Gap” and the young! people’s choirs will sing. ★ •. Sr * The congregation of Liberty, Baptist Church will be guests of! Trinity Missionary Society at 3:30 p.m. tomorrow. The Rev. Alfred Hawkins, guest pastor, will preach and the Liberty Choir will sing. GAME TIME — The Rev. Ronald Rein, pastor of Mount Hope Lutheran Church, 517 W. Walton chases one of the boys at game time this week. The children are enjoying recreation Puntlac Prm Phots on the grounds of the church during Vacation Bible School. The school opening last week closed yesterday, Youngsters studied the Bible, worked at handcrafts and had fun. “The poor are not those who lack material wealth. That person who lives apart from God's presence is poverty stricken indeed. Conference Closes at Gull Lake Monday Message and music ministries combine with rest and recrea* tion at the Gull Lake Bible and Missionary Conference this Labor Day weekend. , DR. ANDREW SEBBON Kirk in Hills to Hear Guest Pastor Sunday The eighth and final guest preacher of the summer at Kirk in the Hills will be the Rev. Dr. Andrew Sebbon, minister of the Dr. Douglas MacCorkle, Special Speakers at Sunday Services Mrs. William Long o f Newman AME Church will he guest speaker at the 3:30 p.m. program tomorrow in Providence Missionary Baptist Church, 345 Bagley. Alberta Chance and Mrs. Willie Reese are co-chairmen. t it it it The Rev. Harold L. Car-ruthers of Greater Fairfield Baptist. Church in Nashville, t of the Philadelphia College of ‘Bible, leads the pulpit program. Dr. Larry Love pastor of the Kalamazoo First Reformed Church speaks twice on Labor Day. Battle Creek pastor Henry Berends brings a brief message following the sacred concert tonight. * * * Clair Hess, first tenor in the, Melody Four Quartet, is song leader. Merrill Dunlop, noted composer and recording artist, serves as organist, assisted by Ron Boud, pianist. The Gull Lake Ambassadors Quartet also appears tonight. ★ it it The public Is Invited to the services in the historic Midland Park Tabernacle for the concert tonight at 7:30, Sunday at 10:30 a.m. and 7 p.m.; and Labor Day at 10:30 a.m., 3 p.m. and 7 pun. sOnnyvale chapel v Welcomes You 9:45,11:00, 6:00,7:00 HEAR Rev. George Dee FROM S. RHODESIA 11:00 A.M. 7:00 P.M. Surwfvcde CHAPEL United Presbyterian Churches AUBURN HEIGHTS 3456 Primary Street r.Wm, Palmar, Paster Sunday School .... 9:30 Morning Worship.. 11 AM. DRAYTON Cor. Sashabawat Monroe St. W. J. Teeuwissan, Pastor Biblo School . . .945 AM Morning Worship 11 tOO A.M. Youth Groups ... 6:30 P.M. Wednesday Prayer and Study Hour . . . 7:00 P.M. OAKLAND AVENUE 404 Oakland at Cadillac Theodore R. Allabach, Paster Audrey Llnkeman, D.C.E. Richard Picturing, Youth Director Warship 8:30 and 11 A.M. Sunday School... 945 AM. Youth Fellowship... 545 PM Warship......740 PM Wed. Prayer...740 PM LAKELAND 7325 Maceday Lake Rd., Waterford Roy F. Lambert, Pastor Sunday School.... 9:30 A.M. Morning Worship.. 10:45 AM CHURCH OF ATONEMENT 3535 Clintonvllfo Rd. . Waterford Twp. Church School 9i30 and 1045 Worship Soivlco 8:15 and 1045 AM. Croa M. Clark Paster JOSLYN AVENUE UNITED '*1 • 1106Joslyn Sunday School 9:30 A.M. Morning Worship 10:45 A.M. Thursday Bible Study 7:30 PM CHURCH OF CHRIST IN CHRISTIAN UMON 25 EAST BLVD. SOUTH Preaching a Christian Centered Massage A MESSAGE FROM THE BIBLE: AND A CHURCH THAT DOES PRAYt SO COME AND FEAST ON THE SPIRITUAL THINGS Sunday School 9:45 Warship 1160 - Y.P. 660 tvangalirtlc Hour 760 — Wednesday Prayer 760 Church 318-11SS - Res. 332-3953 REV. RICHARD SCHLECHT Rochester Pastor Named President historic First Presbyterian Tenn. will speak and sing for Church In Trenton, N,,J. ,the 5 p.m. service sponsored by jthe Pastor’s Aid. Dr. Sebbon’s sermon for the The Rev. Mr. Carruthera was 9:30 and 11:30 a.m. services will he “Deny Yourself.' Dr. Sebbon has served congregations In New York City, Hackettstown, N.J., and la currently ministering in a church whose traditions go hack to the days of the Revolution. * ★ ★ A graduate of Waynesburg College, Princeton Theological Seminary and Columbia University, Dr. Sebbon served exchange minister in Glasgow, Scotland and was invited to participate in conferences at Iona Community and at St. Andrew’s University. ★ ★ h Dr. Harold C. DeWlndt, minister of tho Kirk, will return to the pulpit Sept. 7. formerly manager and founder of the Famous Fairfield Four Singers of Tennessee, and operated a wholesale business known as Harold’s House of Values. Mrs. Dave Romman of Baton Rouge, La. will be soloist, and the Pastor’s chorus will provide ti^e music. At ,7:30 p.m. Mrs. Mar^e Causley win speak for the Sunday School and youth depart-with music by the Junior Choir. the eastern shore of Gull Lake north of 1-94 and M-89 midway between Battle Creek and Kalamazoo. Youth Active Young people of Liberty Baptist Church, 250 Fisher are sponsoring a car wash, bake sale and picnic today. The day’s events began at 8 a.m. Dinners will be for sale. Be rather bountiful, than expensive; do good with what thou bait, or it will m thee no good.—William Penn, Quaker founder of Pennsylvania. I opttft iaA 9:30 a.m. 10:45 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m. 5:45 p.m. 7:00 p.m. The Rev. Schlecht, pastor of St. John Lutheran Church, Rochester, was appointed president of the Michigan District of the Luthers Church—Missouri Synod this * w * [week. The conference is located on- He succeedg the Rev. Dr. Edwin C. Weber who was elected fourth vice president of Synod at the 48th Regular Convention in Denver, Colo. In July. Pastor Schlecht received pre-ministerial training at St John’s College and waa graduated from Concord! Seminary in the clan of 1045. Ho served congregations In Cody, Wyoming and Royal Oak before accepting the call to the Rochester church In 1080. Emmanuel | "BapttAt (Welt | ft - I 645 S. Telegraph (Near Orchard take Rd.) | DR. TOM MALONE, Pastor j '•'•Iv A Fundamental, Independent, llbla-lallavlng Baptist Church f. BIBLE SCHOOL 10 A.M. :?•:? Departmentalized Sunday School for All Ages ... •i-xi: with NO Literature But tho Biblo I HEAR REV. GENE GOFF 1 (MORNING WORSHIP 11 A.M. EVANGELISTIC SERVICE 7 P.M. PRAYER MEETING Wwd. 7:30 P.M. BUS SERVICE CALL FE 2-8328 Nursery — All Services MUSIC TO BLESS THE HEART Gospgl Favoritgs and RsqusslBd Songs Music Under tho Direction of Joycw Malonw faltb Baptist Church 3411 Airport Read Jesus Christ takes as wo arm and by His grace makes us what wo ought to be. II Cor. 5:17, "Therefore if any man bo In Christ, ho It a now craaturo ,,,* Larry H. Malone Musk and Youth Director 1st GENERAL BAPTIST CHURCH 249 Baldwin Ave. Sunday School..............945 A.M. Morning Wunhlp..........1160 A.M. Ev.ning S.rvic..........6:00 P.M. W.d. Slbl. Study..........7:00 P.M. Sou. T. W. Hand, Pastor - FI 4-7172 - 673-0200 i CENTRAL UNITED METHODIST 3B82 Highland Rd. REV. CARL PRICE SUNDAY MORNING WORSHIP 9 and 11 «.m. WED. EVENING 7:30 PJM. (Same service as above, an alternate service for those undble to worship an Sunday.) Nursery and pro- ’ FIRST UNITED METHODIST i»o H«art at the Heart el the City* 9:45 A.M. 11:00 AM. Church School Morning Worship "What Have You To Say? ST. PADL UNITED METMois? 1 SB 8. Square Lake M» NrereMd MBs - II3-0333aad FI 9-2782 CHURCH SCHOOL 9:30 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP 1045 A.M. SUMMER CHAPEL SERVICE 8:30 A.M. ELMWOOD UNITED METHODIST 2680 Creeks Road Sunday Ishaal 960 a.m. Wunhlp 1065 a.m. EvMlng WonMp 7 p.m. PreyurWudT7p.uk ! ALDERSGATE UNITED £ METHODIST £ 1536Baldwin FES-7797 Worship 9:30 A.M. :h School 10:45 ‘ CLARKSTON METHODIST 6600 Walden Read, ClaHnton ! CHURCH SCHOOL 945 AAA. WORSHIP 10 AJVL Frank A. Coeedd, Minister Adelle Thomas, Director of Music TRINITY UNITED METHODIST WORSHIP 9:00 and 10:30 A.M. CHURCH SCHOOL 9:00 A.M. KEEGO HARBOR TRINITY METHODIST United Methodist Church 2091 Cass Loire Read Robert C. Laphew, Min. £ Church School Warship Youth Fsllsarehlp 9:30 1048 6pds» J Wed. Bible Hew 740 9JA. FIRST MISSIONARY CHURCH 149 North East Blvd. - FE 4-1811 Sunday SchrellO AM.-Wunhle 11 AM. Sunday YautbfaHaaridp 660 OJA Sunday luanlng Warddp 760 PJA JOHN H. SEVAU. MINUTER OF YOUTH Guest Speaker REV. VERN M. GRANGER OF ELKHART, INDIANA RES. PHONE 335-2604 B—io Auto Firm Orders Planes THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 1060 GM Execs Join the Jet Age DETROIT Ifl — General Motors Corp. executives have 1 Joined the Jet setters at last. GM, one of the biggest operators of executive planes In the country, is the last of the Big Three auto makers to provide jets for its executives. * * * For years plane makers have tempted GM top brass to get with the jet age and drop some of the props from their 17-craft Beet. * * * Grumman Corp., the same firm that built the lunar module to land Americans on the moon, finally got the order for GM jets—two $3-million jobs. The twin-engine Grumman Gulfstream II's can go nonstop from Detroit to Los Angeles at nearly 600 miles an hour, or to Europe with only one stop. READY WITHIN YEAR They will be ready within a year, said a GM spokesman. Ford Motor. Co. has had jets for its executives since 1961 and now has five, including two Gulfstream II’s. Chrysler Corp. has had pne jet since 1967, and has a Gulfstream II on order for delivery in mid-September. American Motors does not have an executive fleet. The Gulfstream II, built by Grumman In Savannah, Ga., is the biggest jet executive transport on the market. It is 79 feet long, 24 feet high and has a swept wingspan of 68 feet. It normally seats 15 to 19 passengers in posh surroundings. SUNDAY ONLY 12 Noon to 5 P.M. Shattering high prices! Buy Sunday and "Charge It” OUR REG. 2.87 LADIES’ STRETCH DENIM CAPRIS [ SUNDAY ONLY] Washable capris that N||AA never need ironing. They give when you ■ 7*^* move. In zesly fall colors. In sizes 8 to 18. 1 pm ft... 1.17 lb. 1-LB. « CANNED HAM IsmbayoblyI Limit 2 Delicious, flsvorable and lean. Boneles* canned ham fronts Holland, Cooked and ready to enl.( Great ‘emergency shelf staple! GANNON® "SHARON" THERMAL BLANKETS I SUNDAY ONLY I* <2x90 Napped Thermal Weave for all s 100 PLATES I SPUMY ONLY I 48 9*' fluled-rini white paper plates in pack* age of 100 at a savings. PONTIC MALL 1 DOWNTOWN TEL-HUR0N DRAYTON ROCHESTER BLOOMFIELD 1 PONTIAC CENTER PLAINS PLAZA MIRACLE MILE || STAMPS SHOP WITHOUT CASH - AT KRESGE’S PrUni In thin it nit Sun., Mon., Tun*, Aw*. 31-S«p*. 2, IMS union iSniyln •toted. Right to limit guontltloi. WITH COUPON •BLOW CAMEL0T Rag. or Vac. Pack SEALTEST WITH COUPON SILOW COUPON •blow mnssmm MUB RfbBON SRAM A j LARGE EGGS DOZ. J £nsS”r5».Ti:sr.I.?l L wa/cLgr rm poops BWIUB4.1IU.] I CAMS LOT RE6. VAC PACK Coffee with this nounon 7** j Off* Mat fun., Mon.. Tuoo., jyr Ottsrjiimt ft— ___.I - Ann. Si - «oot. 2. life Limit m nucLtr fink rows SEALTEST POPSICLES 'IHIIB4tlHJil!J lie" Maury Can't Find Handle for Dodgers By the Associated Press Oops,..Maury WiUg made an error. Double oops...he made another. Triple oops...a third miscue for the Los Aiigeles shortstop. ^ - Despite .Wills’ ^generosity, the Philadelphia Phillies-fifth in the National League East strictly on merit—still managed to lose to the Dodgers 9-5 Friday night. dr ★ ★ It wasn’t easy because Wills’ two consecutive throwing errors in the fourth Inning had led to three unearned runs for the Phillies. But the Dodgers pecked away at Woodie Fryman and finally overtook the Phils with a four-run eighth inning rally to win it That kept LA two games back of San Francisco, which blanked New York 5-0. Cincinnati, ltt games off the pacet moved into second place by whipping St. Louis 8-1. Atlanta, also 1% behind, slipped to third place by losing to Chicago, 2-1 while fifth place Houston fell five behind by bowing to Pittsburgh, 4-2 in 10 Innings. San Diego blanked Montreal 3-0 in Friday night’s other NL game. TROUBLE STARTER Fryman was still leading 4-2 going into the eighth inning against the Dodgers, when he walked leadoff batter Willie Davis, who earlier had singled twice to extend his batting streak to 20 games. Davis moved up on an infield out and reached third when the fourth ball to Andy Kosco was a wild pitch. Then Jim Lefebvre doubled for one run and Ted 8izemore’s single tied the score. ' * . ★ Tom Haller followed with a pinch single, sending LA in front and Len Gabrielson’s sacrifice fly gave the Dodgers the extra run they needed to stand off Rich Allen’s homer In the ninth. A wiki pitch bj) Don Sutton, who also made an error, and singles by Fryman and John Briggs had helped the Phils to their three unearned runs following Wills’ two straight errors in the fourth. FOUR-HITTER Juan Marichal pitched a four-hitter and Bobby Bonds’ three-run homer in the first inning gave him all the offense he needed to beat the Mets. It was the ninth straight victory for the Giants and ended a six-game winning string for New York. dr . 0 h Jim Maloney pitched his first complete game, in almost four months, beating the Cardinals for Cincinnati. Maloney, 7-4, scattered eight hits and went the distance for the first time since he no-hit Houston April SO. Alex Johnson tndPete Rose both contributed key hits to'a pair of big innings for the Reds. Jim Hickman snapped a tie with a home run in the seventh inning, giving the Cubs their victory over Atlanta and ending the Braves’ five-game winning ^streak. HOT WEEK It was Hickman’s fifth home run this week and 10th this month for the veteran outfielder. Jim Bouton, making his first start for Houston, struck out 11 Pirates but Pittsburgh pushed across the tying run in the ninth inning on Fred Patek’s single and then scored two in the 10th on A1 (River’s double to beat the Astros. WWW Joe Morgan doubled and scored Houston’s first run and singled home the second one. A1 Santorini pitched a two-hitter and Shut out Montreal for San Diego. It was the Padres’ seventh victory in 10 tries against their expanionist counterparts and clinched the season’s series. Tigers Topple 6-1 Lolich Breezes to 100th Win DETROIT (AP) - The ball kept slipping out of Mickey Lolich’s hand, but that didn’t allow him to let his 100th victory slip from his grasp. Lolich overcame a rash of wild throws to hurl a five-hitter, striking out 12, as the Detroit Tigers pounded the Seattle Pilots 6-1 Friday night. The victory gave the 29-year-old southpaw a 100-70 record in his seven-year major league career, and it upped this season’s mark to 17-7. Denny McLain, 20-6, who won his 100th earlier this year, was scheduled to pitch Saturday’s game against Seattle’s John Gelnar, 2-9. “Another 100 and I’ll retire — like hell!” Lolich said with a pause. “A hundred ball games IS sort of a goal,” he said. “You’d be surprised how many good pitchers there are today and yet there aren’t too many with 100 wins." Lolich threw three wild pitches, and one of them resulted in the Pilot's run. But he threw about half a dozen other pitches to the backstop when no one was on base. W * A “The ball just kept slipping out of my hand,” he said in the humid Tiger dressing room. “I was sweating like a horse out there. I’m still waiting for the cool weather, but it just won’t come.” The hard-working lefthander is traditionally a cool weather pitcher. Over the years he has usually won most of his THE PONTIAC PRESS SPORTS SATURDAY, AUGUST 30, 1909 C—1 Bengal Changes Method of Traveling to Stadium TRIPLE PLAY —* Atlanta Braves second baseman Felix Milland (17) tags out Don Kessinger (11) of Chicago Cubs (top photo) after, a rundown at third base in the first inning at Atlanta Stadium Iasi night as pitcher Pat Jarvis (33) watches. Left fielder Rico Carty of the Braves tags scrambling Glenn Beckert (bottom photo) of the Cubs near second base for the third out of the triple play started by Billy Williams’bouncer to first. The Cubs won, 2-1. By the Associated Press Mickey Lolich was noted for riding his motorcycle to every game he pitched last year at Tiger Stadium. But not this season. Lolich, who picked up his 100th career win when Detroit beat Seattle 8-1 Friday night, has been driving his car to almost every home game. Nine Games Today Chiefs Dump St. Louis By the Associated Press Quarterback Charley Johnson of the St. Louis Cardinals stepped out of character...and stepped into a concussion. Johnson turned defensive tackle for a moment and tried to haul down Jim Kearney, who had picked off one of his QBs in Spotlight for Lions, Skins Local All Stars Ready to Tackle King and Court An All-Star team chosen from area softball leagues will oppose The King and His Court at Wisner Stadium Monday night. With manager Carl Schell and coach Norm Aulseybrook at the helm, the All-Stars will bank their victory hopes on the arms of pitchers Bob Norquist, Jerry Thomas and Dick Schell, and will feature three Haywards in the lineujr— A1 at catcher, BUI at the hot third base spot, and Gary in (he outfield. ■ ★ ★ • ★ Other Infieldars include first basemen A1 Smith and Cjr Green, second sackers Rick Ryan and Denris Deihm, shortstop Earl MdKae, third baseman Paul Atkina and catcher Otto Sanack. Outfielders Tad Wherry and Jim MCddiand round out the squad that will try to forge a replica of a similar game in 1964, when the King and His Court went down to a 9-2 defeat at the hands of Pontiac’s beat ★ - Or . Gatos time will be I o’clock, and. ticket sales wil lbegtn at 4 p.m. Those who purchase tidfots before 6:19 will be charged one dollar (75c for children right to 14), and after that prices wttl be raised a quarter. Children under right wffl be admitted frse. 4 TAMPA, Fla. (XI - The Detroit Lions and Washington Redskins will be testing quarterbacks when they clash in Tampa Stadium tonight. Vince Lombardi, new at Washington this season, may use his No. 1 quarterback, Sonny Jurgensen, and try to find out who'll be Nos. 2 and 3 behind the veteran. w ★ * With Jurgensen will be backs Dick Smith, Larry Brown and Bobby Mitchell, and ends Charley Taylor and Jerry Smith. Coach Joe Schmidt may start Bill Munson but will be sizing up his No. 2 and 3 quarterbacks, either of whom might beat out Munson when the regular season gets under way. With Munson will be Mel Farr, Nick Eddy and Earl McCullough, with Charlie Sanders and Bill Malinchak. SAME RECORDS Both teams are two and one in exhibition games so far this season, and the Redskins are given a slight edge in this one. ' With an advance ticket sale of more than 30,000, a capacity turnout of 46,471 was forecast despite a 60 per cent chance of showers in the area at game time, 6:30 p.m. (EDT). The game will be televised nationally over CBS with a blackout within a 100-mile radius. passes in the second quarter Friday night. The play set up a Kansas City touchdown and left Johnson dazed the rest of the game, ss the Chiefs trumped the Cards 31-21 in a pro exhibition football. The game was the only one Friday night..Nine more are scheduled for today and tonight and two more Sunday. ’‘All interceptions hurt you, especially when they’re in your territory,” said Coach Charley Winner of St. Louis. “But this one really hurt because Charley was the one who tackled Kearney and got conked on the head. “From then on, he was kind of dazed. He said he was okay, but finally took himself out. He said he didn’t know what he was calling.” Johnson’s Injury appeared not to be serious, however. Winner said he would probably play in the next exhibition game. KNEE INJURY More seriously hurt was another Cardinal, Chuck Latourette,who suffered a knee injury while running back a kickoff 29 yards. He was to undergo an operation today. The bruising contest also resulted in a. Kansas City injury when defensive tackle Ed Lothamer, suffered a possible fractured hand. He was at a St. Louis hospital. - “We just didn’t want to come out with no injuries,” said Winner. “We wanted to win.” Kearney’s play was the key. He grabbed a Johnson pass toward John Gilliam and raced it back 18 yards to the Cardinal 13. Wendell Hayes ran for 11 and Mike Garrett punched over from the one to turn a 7-6 St. Louis edge into a 13-7 Chief advantage. The Cards never caught up. Kansas City, only undefeated American Football League team, now is 5-0 in pre-season play. St. Louis, of the National Football League, evened its exhibition record at 2-2. The Philadelphia Eagles and New York Giants plajrjtoday’s only afternoon game in an NFL clash at Princeton, N.J., Other NFL games tonight include Washington vs. Detroit at Tampa, Fla.; Green By at Cleveland; and Atlanta at New Orleans. Plraf Sown Hushing yarriag* Passing yardag* SL-Roland il run (Bakan kick) KC—FO Stanarud 30 KC—Wilson 11 m “I used to take riiy motorcycle last year because a family could only park one car in the special lot,” he said. “So my ,wife used to drive the car and I would leave for the park earlier on the motorcycle. When we left the park I would put the motorcycle on the back of the car.” * * * “But now we have two kids and it’s hard for my wife (Joyce) to get away,” he added. “She has only seen a couple games this year, so I’ve been taking the car.” BUY HURLER The Tigers Friday purchased husky pitcher Gary Taylor from their Toledo farm club. The 23-year-old righthander, who lives in Wayne, had a 12-5 redord with the Mud Hens this season. Taylor was the International League's Player of the Month in July. A product of Dearborn High School, he has attended both Ferris State College and Central Michigan University. * ★ ★ He signed with Detroit in August, 1965, and was on the team’s spring training roster in both 1967 and 1968, but he missed most of the drills both seasons because of school and military duties. Taylor also pitched .with Statesville and Rocky Mount before moving up to Toledo this year. DEAL MADE Marvin Milkes, general manager of the Seattle Pilots, annouAced a two-for-one player trade with the Oakland Athletics Friday. ★ ★ * Veteran right-hander Fred Talbot, who compiled a 5-3 record after coming to Seattle from the New York Yankees, will join the AJs. In return, the Pilots get Bob Meyer, 30, a lefthanded pitcher, and outfielder Pete Koegel, 22, a 6-fooL6Vfe, 225-pounder who has 19 home runs for Birmingham of the Southern League. Meyer, who had an 8-11 record with Des Moines of the American Association, joined the Pilots in Detroit. games in the early part of the season and in September when the weather was cool. He was 14-2 going into this season’s All-Star game but, until Friday he had been 2-5 since. CELLAR DWELLER The loss put Seattle alone in last place in the American League West since Chicago beat. Cleveland to move into fifth. Baltimore, meanwhile, dropped a twi-night doubleheader to California to pull Detroit to within 12V4 games of the first-place Orioles in the East. With the victory, the Tigers’ record climbed to 75-54 and the 21 games over ■500 marked the best for the team this year. Willie Horton knocked in two of . Detroit’s runs with a solo homer in the sixth inning, his 18th, and a single in the seventh after A1 Kaline doubled. Die double was the 402nd of Kaline's career and moved him into third place on the all-time Dger list ahead of Sam Crawford. Detroit took a 1-0 lead in the third. Ike Brown and Lolich walked, then Mickey Stanley flied to shallow left field. Brown tagged up and slid safely into third after Tommy Davis made a weak throw from the outfield. Tom Tresh followed with a sacrifice fly. * * * The Tigers scored twice in the fourth when Don Wert singled, Jim Price hit a run-scoring double, and Brown tripled off the 415-foot mark in centerfield. Brown also hit a solo homer in the eighth. Seattle scored its ran in the fifth when John Donaldson walked, took second on a wiki pitch, and scored on a single by Tommy Harper. Racers Admit Secret Huddles; Deny Rumors of Strikes, Boycotts DARLINGTON, S. C. (AP) - Two weeks after a highly secret organizing meeting in Ann Arbor, Mich, stock ear racing’s Professional Drivers Association has put down rumors its members intend to strike ck boycott racetracks not meeting its demands. “Any talk along that line is strictly hearsay,” said atar Ford driver Richard Petty, president of the PDA. “We haven’t talked about this whatsoever at with drivers . C a I t. meetings.” etty, along . .' PrityW.,. H. Yarborough and Elmo Langley, stated publicly for the first time Friday the aims of the PDA. Objectives include JjU creased insurance benefits, a retirement plan fo rdrivers, higher purses and improvements to racetracks. 4 0 10 Troth it 4 0 10 Kalin* 1b 4 0 00 WHorton If 4 020 campbtl 1b 3 0 0 0 Northrop rl 1 0 0 0 Lolich p Mill Total « Mill* Datratt ... ........ ......... .........WWlllfaHl DP—laaltl* I. LOB—Stattla 7, Oatroh i a Prlc*. Kalina, Qooaatn. 3B— I.Brown. HR—w. Horton (10). I .Brown (4). *B—Harpor, Northrop. 1110 0 Lewi (W.17.7) .......... WP—Lolich I. T—Olfl. TOUCHDOWN AHEAD-fit. Louis Cardinals’ Johnny Roland (23) heads around the left skis of tha Kansas City defense for aa 19-pard touchdown jeunt in tha first quarter of their exhibition game in St. Louis last Kearney (48) hid a shot at Roland but 11-81. Chiefs’ Jim Chiefs won, Pro Ace Barry Quits Oakland, Joins Warriors LOS ANGELES (AP) - Ride Barry, the only man over to lead both tha National end American basketball leagues in scoring, average, may be going to court again to determine who gets his services. Barry, San Francisco Warrior owner Franklin Mieuli and Barry’s attorney announced Friday that the 8-foot-7 forward had agreed to a five-year contract with the NBA Warriors, the team that drafted him in 1985. Dressed In tan, striped, beltbottom trousers and white silk shirt, Barry told a news conference he was returning to the Warriors after just one season as part-time player end part owner of the Oakland Oaks. The Oaks were sold recently to Earl Foreman of Washington, D.G., who has said ha’ll move the ABA team east Barry reportedly had a contract with tha Oaks saying he didn’t have fo move with the team if it were transferred out of the San Francisco Bay area. ( “Based on the fact that the Oaks are going back to Washington,” Barry said Friday, “I don’t feel compelled to go with them.” DIFFERENT VIEW Foreman, on the other hand, said this week he felt that buying tha Oaks meant he’d be getting Barry. And,ha reportedly is planning to fight a court battle over Barry’s services. Barry, tha handsome all-American from the University of Miami, came to the Warriors in the 1965-66 season and tha following campaign, led the league In scoring with a 35.6 points per gathe average. EMU Grid Assistant Joins Detroit College AD, Cage Coach DETROIT (AP)—Mike Taney, assistant football coach and basketball recruiter for Eastern Michigan University, has been named athletic directin' and basketball coach at Detroit College. He replaces Joe Lineman who resigned his position to become an assistant to the vice president at Obaditch Inc. of Detroit, a steel and textile company. Toney’s experience includes • 290 record while assistant basket ball coach for a McKinley, Ohio, high school team In 198162, and a 800 record coaching the Canton Ohio Police Boys CJub from lilt- C—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, ^ SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 1969 Pesky Angels Pin Double toss on Baltimore BE SEATED!—Boston Red Sox slugger Tony Coniglltro winds up In the dust at home plate after being brushed back by a pitch offered by Minnesota Twins’ Tom Hall in the second inning of their game in Minnesota last night. Minnesota won, 104. Missing Game Back for Golf Pro Murphy WETHERSFIELD, Conn. (AP) — The thief who stole Bob Murphy's clubs in Philadelphia six weeks ago took his golf game as well. A parcel post present from a friend in Florida brought it bock. ★ It h “After my clubs were' stolen, I’d be standing over a shot with a new club and I’d look down and it’d be all nice and shiny and you have to know you have a new club in your hand." Murphy said. “You don’t think about making a good shot. You start wondering, ’Which way is this going to go bad?” Melnyk Maintains Golf Lead Third Round Sag Perturbs Florida Ace PITTSBURGH (AP) - i Melnyk still leads the 69th annual U.S. Amateur Golf Championship by three strokes. You’d have never known it, Persperation dripping from his SSS-pound frame, Melnyk looked like his words: “I’m dis- Today's mm He scrambled Friday to a 34-39-73 for a 84-hole total of 216, threi strokes ahead of Allen Miller and Marvin “Vlnnie’ Giles. Miller shot 37-36—73 and Giles 3646—72, both at 219. Another two strokes back was Tommy Watson of 8hawnee Mission, Kan., who fired a 36-36 — 71 Friday for Grouped at 223 were Dick Sider-owf, a U.S. Walker Cup member from Westport, Conn., 36- 38— 71; John Farquhar of Amarillo, TSx., 36140-76, and Bruce Ashworth of Las Vegas, Nev., 39- 37—78. Bob Allard of Portland, Ore. 33-36—71, Walker Cupper Dr. Ed Updegraff 37-36-73, and Jim Rheim, Tulane Medical School student 38-38-76, aU are at 224, eight strokes off the pace. Why was Melnyk so dejected! Well, the University of Florida senior charged around the front nine holes of Oakmont Country Club to a two-under-par 35. Miller, of Pensacola, Fla., his closest pursuer went two over, and when you looked at the big scoreboard Melnyk was six strokes in front. NOT OVER It’s all over, they were saying. That was Melnyk’s trouble. He thought it was over too. “I felt I had the tournament won, that’s why I played so badly the next five holes," he said. “I relaxed and that’s what you can’t do on this course. comonris al '}'*"} umtr ei “I looked at the «fJboard, gag SUU after nine and saw I had a ’ ~ six-stroke lead and I just cake-walked." The 21-year-old Melnyk, of Brunswick, Ga., not only didn't have it won. He almost blew It. He probably would have, except that the trend over OakmontT rugged 6,670-yard course hai been to backup. There have been only two sub-par rounds in 84 holes of this Marvin Giles •rue* Ashworth ., Richard Iktarovrf . Jtmn RMm ..... Ed UliOmraW ....... a* Aimi ........ Ed Tuhvltar ....... Robert Zander .... . Jwm MMMrid ... IAJ0R LEAGUE standings n Ml al Lot An- Flttaburph .. (Dlarkar It-10) New York (Cornwall Ml m (SrliL 13-10) at Cincinnati (Noun 3-3), ntant ^hlcago (Salma N.Y. Suspend, Fine Slugger Joe Pepitone NEW YORK (AP) - Joe Pen pltone, the hard hitting, but moody first baseman of the New set-York Yankees, has been fined 6500 and suspended Indefinitely. General Manager Lee Mao-Phall and Manager Ralph Houk announced the fine and suspension in a hastily called press conference just before the Yankees took the field for Friday night's game against Kansas City. Sunday*! eamai Chicago at Atlanta Pittsburgh at Houston It. Louis at Cincinnati. MSMinSlmas Naw York at Los Angolas Chicago at Cincinnati, night It. uiuit at Houston, night phim"1" *' American Box Scores TON NUNNBSOTA . IK abrhbl abrhbl I 3b 4 0 0 0 Uhlaondr d 4i|OlKsli US lb 4 19 1 Tovar 3b 111 0 kloi Skill 3 0 0 0 oTiwi it UAMh AConlgl icon it Lock tb wbaon c Bgr Schoflold SI ■■WIBL..,___IN L . . KANSAS CITY NOW YORK abrhbl abrhbl abrhbl al UilirillllfHr I “tolly rf 4 0 10 Clorko lb < t s • i, Jfos 3b 4 0 00 Mlchaol ss , w w w w .. J 1 11 Flora lb I 0 0 0 Whllo It 9 1 0 0 0 illiobrow 3b 1 11 i Ptnlollo It 4 0 0 0 Myreor ct , 1 cr 4 110 Quillet lb i 6 6 ( Soy Cl 4 I TO JHoll lb , III u 1111 Root# tb 4 111! Adair lb 4 0 11 Kannty 3b • • 0 4 0 RWOodsn p ooooTRodrgot c 3 0 0 0 Snopay rt ph i o o o Nottloa it 4 f 1 3 Bornondi is 1 0 o o Abbs e < lira rf 4 0 0 0 Rosaboro c SO] g Zachary p 0 0 0 0 Downing p . L 0 0 0 0 Ctroants ss 3 0 I ------ r 1 - * r‘— - 3 I ] 0 TfiK| * * : 1 40 10 ’ 1 I 1 0 Hodlund p 0 0 0 0 K[rkptrck ph 1 o 0 o RNalson p 100 0 iro, kin rover. I- 31 4 7 4 Total 334413 If ; filitjabii DP—Minnesota 3, LOS-Mlnnosota t. it—Rosaboro. ■Ill (33). Noltlos (7). Oliva ■aw 37), Andrews (10). *B~ Klin* T.Hell (W,1 R.woodson School lb 3 0 0 0 Bill Total . 0 00 too 001- I, Gibbs. r (10). I R. Nelson (L,<-tl) . IF H R E R SB SO 31-3 I 7 7 n 3 3-3 4 S l ! 4 1 But very few went bad Friday as the roly-poly Murphy carved out a five-under-par 66- on the Wethersfield Country Club course and tied Joel Goldatrand and J C. Snead—a nephew of Sam—for the first round lead in the $100,000 Greater Hartford Open Golf tournament. * BIG JAM Eight more were bunched at W, including R.H. Sikes, Phil Rodgers, Bob Smith, Bob Lunn, Pace, Holland’s Martin Roesink, Jerry Abbott and Hal Underwood. The big group at 68, three under par for the 6,568 yard lay-included Jack Nicklaus, former Masters champion Gay Brewer, Bob Charles of New Zealand and Dave Hill. * * * Defending champion Billy Casper and Lee Trevino each had 70s. Bob Shaw, winner of week’s Avco Classic, and Masters champion George Archer had 71s. Frank' Beard and PGA champ Ray Floyd were far, far back in the field at 72. ★ it ★ Murphy, a paunchy 26-year-6ld, wait into a decline after the loss of Ms clubs, offered 6100 a club for their return, then bpgan acquiring new ones. He worked through three sets of irons and eight woods before settling on a Joel Goldstrand . .... Pace........ Martin Roeilnk The Yankees won the game 6-1, but the. happenings on the Reid were secondary to the pregame activities in the clubhouse. Pepitone, the Yankees’ leading home run hitter with 24, incurred the disciplinary action when he left Yankee Stadium without permission for the second time this week. On Aug. 12-13 he also missed two games Minnesota and fined two days’ pay. e i e Pepitone, who said then his absence was due to personal problems, left the club again in the middle of Wednesday night’s game against the Chicago White Sox. R. H. 5 __ Paul Harney ...... Jack Nlcklaus ...... Bob Charles ........ John Lot* .......... Bobby Mitchell Bob itanteii ....... Claud* Harman Jr. . Dava H|ll .......... Hal* Irwin ......... pay Brewer ......... Randy Wolft ........ Las Paterson . John Kennedy ....... pav* Stockton ...... Ring Vet Rodriguez Gets Shot at Title _ 341 It 1. Oakland ......... i Washing)** E—R .Jack son, .. ... I ♦ J - - Lonborg (Tovar). f-3:3l. A-| WASHINGTON wrbl, 1 ...Ifft SiifKWb" I ] 2 0 i 0 Alya* N 0 0 0* 4 3 3 0 McMulin 3b 3 0 0 4 211 9 « 3 000 P 0 0 0 0 r mi a Fh 00*0 BT" ] CLEVELAND CHICASO X obrhbl *1 3 Cardanal cf 4 • 1 0 WWIIams It -1 DTi—l-l 3b 4 o o o Aparlcio to 4 0 0 I McCraw lb b 4 0 10 Melton 3b rf 4 0 1 0 Hrrmonn e 4000 imifeM rf , 4 111 Knoob 3b “ " " 0 Morales 2b bOrtti art RJohnson ph Henty e log JNash p »5I_„__, R -- tool Catanav* «3r Loi-r .... igoi Fingers p 0 0 0 0 Hilinin p 3 0 0 0 Llnobiad p loti IMoort p oooo Brtdlord (10). S-Harlon, tmi/Tti* F. Howard, McMullen. ion t LOE-Oaklond 14, 0. IB—B.Alton. D.Groon L , ' h i i n ....... 114 0 | 0 [ I .... IN 4 0 | 4 5 .enoora iu,l-7) ... 14 1 3 3 j a nowlaa .......... 3 4 3 1 1 0 f Llndblad (ClMMVl). T-t:4T. A— Vrnfn Llnobiad Built Name New G.M. CHICAGO (UPI) - Pat Williams, former business mapagar of toe Phil 76ers, was named general manager of the Chicago Bulla Friday. Golf Champion's Long Reign Ends Mrs. Morton Wohlman the Women’s Club Championship at Tam O’Shanter yesterday, ending the reign of Mrs. Louis gchwartx, who had won too tournament for toe last five years. 1 * * * • The three-day medal p!ay| During the 1966 tourney saw Mrs. Walkman fits season teams in the East ragidiofl666eMn, ioodforaiWest divisions will play each throo stroke margin over the 16- jotbar only 12 times. Teams In by Mrs.|the sum division meet II U.S. Wins In Poland WARSAW, Poland (UPI) - i touring American trade an field team won seven events Friday In u eight-nation meet at the Skra Club Stadium. . 3 0 0 0 N itit B "••WTi ........ lot 030 ltR-4 Hand L. Chicago t. 38-Malton; Brodlbre. HR-McCraw (||, Laon (31 MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) Miami middleweight Lula Rodriguez won the longest fight of his career Friday — a two-and-a half year battle for a shot at the world championship. * ' * : * The dial waa scaled here Fri-j | day b et w a a n representatives champion Nino Benvenuti Angelo Dundee, the challenger’s manager. Possible dates mentioned were Nov. 29 and Dec. 9. Benvenuti’s lawyer, Leonard Gilbert, said too fight will probably be held in Italy, London lor Belgrade, Yugoslavia. BUTTONED UP-Denis Hulme of New Zealand is bundled in protective gear as he prepares for a, practice session yesterday on the Road America track near Elkhart Lake, Wis., in tuning for the 1069 Canadian-American Challenge Cup race Sunday. Hulme will be trying for his fourth victory in the Can-Am series. Distance is 200 miles. National Box Scores Clin* cf Sutherlnd 21 Staub rf Fairly 1b li.rLJu Laboy 3b - MjizS? Boccabila S’;?-?' B* lav ph 3 0 0 0 OBrawn rf 3 12 0 0 0 Ferrara If 4 0 0 4 00 0 Colbort tb 40 1. 4 0 10 VKMIy 3b 3 4 3 1 e 3 0 0 0 Gastwt ct 0 10 1 0 0 9 Cannluro c 4 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 Santorini n SAN FRANCISCO Age* ct Mall 3b SS^ky'Sk Boswell 2b rt 1 0 2 0 Hunt 2b larrerO ph 10 0 0 .w,w, 34 3 103 «i 0 0 0 0 0 1 0—0 .. .. oijoootox—3 Wine. LOB—Montreal 7, San |H0lw | . 3S-33-4l wagenv,,»--..,....-. ■ • PBmT . 7T.„ ... 1 5 0 « • »^4-4SlsantoHnl (W.6-12) » 2 0 0 .. 33-35—401 WP—Wegener. T—2;21. A—3,00 HR—Bondi (20). Mishap Takes Life of Prep CASTLEWOOD, Va. (AP) A young football player i killed and nearly a dozen of his teammates were Injured Friday when a goal post being carried onto the Castlewood High School field brushed against a high voltage power line. I e i Wayne Reynolds, a 17-year-old junior at the high school, was dead on arrival at a Lebanon hospital following the midaf-ternoon mishap. * ★ *• Pupils and the school’s young football coach were hospitalized. Other members, of the team received minor injuries and were treated and released at two hospitals. it * * School officials indicated coach Jewel Rhea had been doing repair work on the goal post and to* team had chipped In to move it back into place toe school field when it brushed against the power line. Baseball Winners Battling Today of A ABC Tourney BATTLE CREEK (API-Cold-water was scheduled to meet Flint /rod Kalamazoo was to take on Wyandotte In winners bracket games today North Central regional tourney of the American Amateur Baseball Congress. ★ * ★ Flint won Its way past Mus-egon Friday in a 17-inning, 3-2 contest which tied the tourney record for length of game, while Kalamazoo was whipping Saginaw 10-2 and Coldwater was clipping Dearborn 74 in a late-night game. w ★ ★ Wyandotte ^joined the other three in the winners circle with a 0-0 forfeit beating of Detroit, which was ousted from the tourney because it had two ineligible players, both men who had played pro baseball and never been reinstated as amateurs. 4 0 10 JAtOU rf .. * 13 0 Wynn ct Oamirit* r», 1 I ^ Radar 3b Total 3 0 0 0 4 0 4 Total . 34 3 I 001 001 0 01 I-ousion Oil 000 lilt B—Blotary. Habnar. DP—Pittsburgh Jouaton 1. LOB—Pltlaburgh I, Howfcn 2B—Morgan, Jitorgoll, .. Cjornyb Edwards, A.OIIyor. SB—A.OIIva Morgan, M.AIo«, Clfmw.^ ||(. intonsri. J&S?" 1 P#_ Edwards 2. T—2:53. A—20,405. CINCINNATI Calumet 34 Bussottwr 4 Plckford 5 Saul) St*. Marl* Loratto Coach Boisture Bubbling Happy Days Ahead for Hurons By DON VOGEL YP8ILANTI~Anyono listening to Eastern Michigan University coach Dan Bolsters yesterday would figure that the Hurons are going to have a Boisture told a press day gathering at ikmit completed Rynearaon Stadium that too now faculties are “great;" several players, ara going to ha “great;’’ ha baa a ’*■ group of assistants; and export to have a better team than last year." .it * * ■ Ho tempered this lait remark, however, by pointing out that the Hurons may not match last season’s 6-2 record because the schedule has been upgraded. It’s no secret around these parts that EMU Is aiming for major university status in all I major sports. The sports complex along N. Huron,Drive la progressing. NEW DIAMOND There,la n new baseball field, the 12,999 goat football stadium la expected to bo ready .for toe bomeopaner against Akron Sept 26. Tha concrete stehds ware constructed In a slight are so that toe stadium could even-be expanded to seat 64,000. A 15,000 seat baakatball layout will be started In the future. "Before anyone gets the idea going on around boro is for athletics," sports information director John Fountain pointed out, “we also are expaawbg the campus educational facilities." A now library has been corn-plated, a classroom building capable of handling 4,666 students is being rendted and a couple of other buildings are in the skeleton stage. But the audience was Interested In the coming football campaign which will include such opponents as Murray State, Indiana State, Kentucky State, Montana State and Tam-pn- HOEMOOIONG FOE r Tha first ' game will ba at Murray Sept. 20 and homeCom* tag and dedication of too new 61.4 million stadium will be OcL 25 against Tampa. Boisture hopes ara pinned on, too return of 17 regulars among too list of 27 Irttarwtancra. ’If we have a weakness It I N the offensive line,” said toe former Redford St. Mary coach who came to Eastern by way of an asi............... Michigan State. * 3 la an attempt to bolster the 3 0 0 0 Marshall It ss 3 0 0 0 Diets c 1 0 4 0 Lonjar ss I 1 5 0 0 Marichol p . 000040000- LQI—Now York 4, tan Francisco 5P—by ’ A—13 R .Taylor (Handarson). T- ____ to 300. . I Martinas It 3 0 2 0 0 0 NMIIIer HI j 0 0 0 o o MPaddon i tT. LOU It California Only Squad Molding Edge on Birds Twins Topple Boston to Maintain Uad in AL's West Race Baltimore Orioles couldn’t care >ss who wins the American League West ... since they know it won’t be those devilish California Angels. Of course, the Orioles still have to go through the formality of winning the AL East, but don’t hold your breath waiting for an el foldo—even after Friday night’s 6-2,2-1 double loss to the Angels. If Baltimore wins 19 of its remaining 30 games, the runner-up Detroit Tigers would have to win all 33—to tie, it it ' K The Angels, third in the West but 22 games behind Minnesota and showing only a 58-71 record, are the only team to hold an edge over the Orioles—64 with two games left. Elsewhere, Minnesota walloped Boston 164 to remain VA games ahead of Oakland, which blanked Washington 5-0, in the West; Detroit whipped Seattle 6-1, the New York Yankees downed Kansas City 6-1 and the Chicago White Sox ahaded Cleveland 4-2. ★ ★ . California’s s w e e p of Baltimore brought the Angels’ record to 4443 since Lefty Phillips replaced Bill Rigney as manager. The team has won tax straight—longest of the season —11 of 13 and 14 of 20 in climb-tag from last place on Aug. 6 to third. Andy Messersmith, 134 over-all and 134 since June 3, stopped the Orioles in the opener, with one inning of relief from. Ken Tatum, as Bubba Morton and Fregosi knocked in two runs apiece. ★ it - it ,, . . A two-run single in toe seventh by Roger Repoz—following an intentional walk to Bill Voas —won the nightcap for Jim McGlotldin, 7-12. Dave McNally, 174, and Jim Hardin, 8-5 and the only Baltimore pitcher with a record as low as .500, were the losers as the Orioles lost for toe seventh and eighth times in their last 11 starts. ... Graig Nettles broke a 2-2 tie * j 022 In the third inning with a three-b S Ajoiinson if Jiilrun homer and Tony Oliva and 3010 fotm ib 4110 Harmon Killebrew wallopedcon- 4021 LMav ib oooo secutive shots in the sixth as Huniz.. 4 o o o Haimi* 2db ^ 4 u o1 Minnesota bombed Boston. Rico «oPph !gh nil Petrocelli-No. 33-and Mike 5 0 10 Tolon cf oos; iimdrfp oooo ..nlto ph 0 0 0 0 Glwtl p t o 2 o o * ph 10 0 0 1*1 TOIOl ,»0 . ... ago 1 oo ooo- . .... 004 301 »0R—l -Moloney 1' Tolan. SF- r (L>« . |F H RERBB Andrews connected for the Red Sox. ★ * , ★ Dick Green led off the eighth Inning with a triple and scored the first run of the game on Bob Johnson’s pinch single to start Oakland over Washington. The t i 320 A’s scored twice in the c ^SS^^Uibt9 ojU. Ui* A—23,117. ; PHILADELPHIA^ I Bring, If 4 0 1 1 Wills M ~4 0"0 0 RoFas Tb 5 0 10 MMa If , **** RAllan lb 5 13 1 WDavIs xf Calllson rf 5 0 1 6 FaiRar lb - , -DJohnson lb 5 0 4 0 Kosco rl 3 1 0 0 —- cf 3 10 0 Grbkwlti 3b 0 1 0 J ins c 4 3 11 Lotobyr* 3b 2 1 1 1 y so 3 0 0 0 CrwHOrd rf o • - - ? } and three times in the i Fori Fair 0 0 0 0 HtUor J fill i fir Outton p 2 0 0 0 RUOMlI ph 10 0 0 MMliSiin P. OOOO Gabrlalsn ph 0 0 0 Lamb p ooo 14 Total 3140 5 ..flfjtlOfOl .010101 04K Mocking in the middle, offensive tacke John Sharp, a 64 and 245-pound senior from Warren, has been moved to center. Boisture said a tight end also la needed. The backfield appears set with leading ball carrier Dennis Hewitt returning along with foil back Mike Yankee and swing bade Pete Yelorde. Don Stewart, a, sophomore from Willow Run who had considerable action last year, steps in at quarterback replacing departed Arnold Fontes. ' . ’ ■; * " a it , Yankee, a junior from Kimball, received high praise frdm Boisture forhis blocking ability. The coach also expects great" things from defensive tackles Bob Unta from Brown City and Dave Pureifory from Ecorse. Boisture feels that Lints, a 235-pound senior, is a top pro prospect. ■PEitoHM 10, Loo Angalao... 2B—Latobvr*. HR—Wotklna (3), R.AIIan (29). SB-Wllls 2, Briggs. Hl.la, IF— IF H R BR tB 10 .. 714 4 5 4 5 .. 141 I I 0 .. 1-3 0 0 0 0 .. 7 7 4’ j Danny Cater’a sacrifice fly, Sal Bando’s RBI single and a bases-loaded error by Ken McMullen accounted for the other runs. SCORELESS STINT Jim Nash, making his first start since being placed on the disabled list July 15, hurled sev-en scoreless innings for the A’s before leaving for a pinch hitter. CALIFORNIA*'1' *RALTIMORR Clinch Soccer Crown KANSAS CITY (AP) - The Kansas (Tty Spurs clinched the North American Soccer twy title Friday night with a 24 whitewash ot tl Bays. ' Fryman. T—2|49. A— ATLANTA .. ..rhbl abrhW Kasslngar sa 4 1 3 0 Mlllan Ib a 1 2 Beckarl 2b 2 0 I 1 OoMalai et T 0 1 BWillams If 4 AB B HAaron rf 3 0 t Santo 3b 4 0 2 0 Carty If 4If. i jfllSEv (U74, ;.r4M, ! 5 ? 5 .S7..Hi t J 1 J rnuFo.AX'^mmoa. SSneor^b E.jmEf.?]!; WBRt, p 2 0 0 0 RoBSmi rt 3 12 0 Hanfit b i a i i Si9 fin ItwR v ini fninadP - —£HE POyTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. AUGUST 30. 1969 i^wtsri averages *y Thy Associated Press ^ ^^MS^CAN^leaouIi ^r,-hy team battino AB R H HR RBI Pet r* 4516 654 1 209 155 603 .260 >ti 4520 6311209 124 512 .267 438? 600 1110 165 575 .253 4424 542 1100 114 500 .250 4412 502 1102 115 527 .250 4290 568 1040 146 528 .242 4301 405 1034 94 449 .240 4355 458 1045 70 419 .240 4360 402 1 035 103 447 .237 4252 467 1003 00 436 .236 4270 523 1000 103 470 .236 • ___4 01 300 934 72 303 .220 INDIVIDUAL BATTINO Clemente Pgh C.Jones NY Mote LA Roie Cln StargeOI Pgh AJonnaon Cln M.AIou Pgh Sangulllen P. McCovey SP 373 47 II 10 39 .217 < PITCHING * (13 or more decision!.. IP H BB 10 W L BRA Palmer Bel 133 86 50 93 13 2 2.02 Bosman Was 1371» « « Perranoekl Min 99 71 42 35 - - - -Cuellar Bel 232 163 64 143 10 10 3.24 Cox Was 130 119 52 59 9 5 2.28 tasw' M H *“ m 90 22715 11 2.79 WSSt, NY, rlfh jf Lperr Min M3 l|l 31 11416 5 iff "if S ? WS SM'o. Drego K Lonoorg AP Wirtphote YOUNG CHAMPIONS—Collecting World Junior Golf Titles for their efforts in the 15-17 age division this week in . Sah Diego, Calif., are Jane Renner of San Diego and Dale Hayes of Pretoria, South’Africa. Miss Renner posted a 17* over-par 325 to take the girls’ crown, while Hayes, with a final round 76, closed at four-over-par 295. Injury to Netter Graebner Dims U.S. Cup Ariibitions FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (AP) — Donald Dell, the young Washington D.C., attorney who captains the U.S. Davis Cup team, sounds more like a mathematician as he asseses tile latest blows to American hopes of keeping the silver tennis trophy. “We suffered three serious setbacks, the most serious being Clark Graebner’s injury,” the dapper former Yale man said today. “You might call Friday a Black Day at Black Rock for us. ¥ ¥ # “I think a minus here may prove a plus at Cleveland next month. It may be a blessing in Souter Leading Pro Keg Field in Canada Event disguise. There is no chance now that our team will go to Cleveland complacent, relaxed and overconfident.’’ Graebner, who with Arthur Ashe Jr., shared one of the singles spots in winning back the Cup from Australia last December, sprained his right ankle in a second round match Friday against Roger Taylor of England and had to default in the| U.S. Open Tennis Champion-1 ships. There was some question that j Graebner would be ready for the Challenge Round match against Romania at Cleveland' Sept. 19-21. HOPES TO PLAY Graebner, however, said he “hoped to be able to play in about seven days. The doctor told me the injury was not sert- Horse Race Results 127, Vcntzuda. u 17416, United Stall •Ionad Richard Sue, SAN JOSE, Call/.—kid Raya. Nicaragua, daclatonad Ryu Sorimachf, Japan, i| DRC Entries Int Shut Tight OtK-iOflOOt Claiming; 6 Pur*,! " -a's Stampada Board Markar i. Brick Malcolm . .. iberSongg Natlva Buck Star Fancy Llarevo . Jlh—*25,00?°Addedi 1 Ml. 1/Ut Zuka'a Bad Boy Mr. Clinch Speed Lina ’ Bull Mr. Coincidence Crimion Hill* , Eager Eagle 10th—*2,500; Claiming; 1 Ml 1/14: Besuch Part ot Haavan - ’ Admiral Baa'* Little Man ta t TIpMarony Tudor Monarch Guiaappa DRC Results FRIDAY'S RESULTS lit—11,300; .Claiming; 6 Fur*.i ...........1M0 ai« , •th—03,000; Alowanca; 1 Ml. 70 Yd*. RIO Bravo .............44.60 13.00 Jug Judge ............. 3.60 4.oo| Hazel Park Results 3;4°| FRIDAY'S RESULTS 7.00 1*1—S2,300; Conditioned Trot; 1 Mile: 3.20 Lucky Samm .........37.40 9.00 4.4 6.00 Chrl* Dare* ........ 4.40 3.0 Hazel Park Entries DIck Dora wood ........., _____ Shiawassee Squire Patch Pride tth-MOOO Claiming Paco; 1 Miles Had A Kino The Voyagtr Queens Cadet Timely Goose Midnight Johnnie Pedro Wilson Lightning Led 10fh~$17M Cond. Pace; 1 Mile: Wing Flesh Jay Express Brewers Chip Lucky Greentree Scolow Time Key Preview Cottonwood Cindy Mel Tel P ° KEN JOHNSON o WHY 16 THE square S ** BOX 1AJ C ZONE CALLED VftINC ------- GSM 4 ELLIS w«M5 FE 2-1211 FE 2-2611 115 S. Saginaw GARAGES - ADDITIONS REMODEL CONTRACTOR FOR ALL YOUR PLUMBING NEEDS SEE US AT TRAVIS Hardware 456 Orchard Lake Road 335-S724 FANS from milai around tell ut they can't find better values in cart anywhere. Come in soon . . . See if yo’u don't agree! Visit RUSS JOHNSON'S, too, for automotive servicing and Rent-a-Car service. WOCSGDMMi wfflHianaED PONTIAC ] UiCftOnoit euMs (3-4) psld 156.88 Optional Twin Dowbla (8-8) paid 1188.28' 6lh—83,808; Claiming; 1 Ml. 1/16: Court Ruin ............17.40 8.40 8.80 Thrnn Wedges ................ 6.80 3.60' U.S. Net Team Halts Canada, 6-% Favorite's Role for French Pacer TORONTO (AP) - A power-ful U.S. men’s table tennis team defeated Canada 6-2 Friday night at the Canadian National Exhibition. * m ‘it The U.S. team was made up of John Tannehill of Mid-dleport, Ohio, Del Sweeris of Grand Rapids, Mich., Glen Cowan of Los Angeles, and Errol Resek of Merrick, N.Y. ■"VESTBURY, N.Y. (AP) -Une de Mai, the 5-year-old French mare who upset Nevele Pride of the United States1 in the $100,000 Roosevelt International Trot a week ago, is the overwhelming favorite to win the $40,000 Challenge Cup at Roosevelt Raceway tonight. Nevele Pride will not be in the field, but Fresh Yankee of Canada, Kentucky Fibber of Sweden, Earl Laird and Real Speed of America will be back for another crack at the French horse. MONTREAL (AP) - Dave Souter of Gilroy, Calif., set the pace through two rounds Friday in the Professional Bowlers Association $30,000 Canadian Open. * * A Souter shot 1,328 for his first six games and came back with 1,324 in his second set to total 2,652. Bobby Khipple of Long Beach, Calif., had 2,523 for second place and Tom De Luts of Queen’s Village, N.Y., was third at 2,520. "k k k The field of 112 shoots 12 more games Saturday with the top 16 moving into Sunday’s match game semifinal. The high five then will battle , for the $3,000 first prize in Monday’s Labor Day final. UCLA Coach Levels Blast at Pro Game Trouble Piles Up for Toledo Squad By the Associated Press Any Toledo Mud Hen hopes for a respectable finish hi the International League race died a couple of weeks ago and were buried In a doubleheader loss to Richmond earlier this week, but they were dug deeper into the ground Friday. The Hens were dealt a double blow When the parent Detroit Tigers called up ace pitcher Gary Taylor, 12-5, and when the Syra. Chiefs followed that with an avalanche of runs in a 10-7 drubbing of the defending league champs. In other games, Tidewater beat Louisville 3-2, Buffalo topped Richmond 5-4 and Columbus beat Rochester 4-3. Graebner’s spill only compounded the misfortune that beset the Yanks during the third day of play in thfe $137,000 tournament. ¥ ■¥ V Stan Smith of Pasadena, Calif., new national champion and rated by many as the new hope of American tennis, lost a center court battle to Romania’s No 1 player, Ilie Nastase, 5-7, 12-10, 7-5, 6-3. On an outside court, Charlie Pasarell of Puerto Rico, a member of the six-man U.S. squad and a singles possibility, bowed to a little-known Australian, Terry Addison, 6-3, 9-7,64. The straight-set defeat may have knocked the flashy Puerto Rican out of Cup consideration, increasing the stature of Cliff Richey, the- intent and determined little Texan. “Everybody’s been saying what a breeze we’re going to have at Cleveland,” Dell said. ‘I’ve said we’re in for a tough match. This proves It.” ¥ ¥ ¥ The Romanian team consists of Nastase, a dark-haired army lieutenant of 23 with speedy reflexes and a fiery fighting spirit, and Ian Tlriac, 26, a shaggy teacher. They upset Britain at Wimbledon to gain the challenge round. “I played against Tlriac at Bucharest in the World Student games,” Dell said. “He is very good, but better on clay. Nastase like the faster surface.: Both are well-conditioned and' very tough.” The Cleveland surface is an asphalt base, faster than grass. The current Davis Cup squad consists of Ashe, Graebner, Smith, Pasarell, Bobby Lutz and Cliff Rihey. Dell must cut to four men by Sept. 9 with a' chance of making a substituted five days before the matches. DARLINGTON, S. C. (AP) John Wooden, who coached UCLA to three consecutive Na-t ional Collegiate Basketball j championships, has taken a swipe at professional basketball j for its style of play and its re-[cent signing of a Detroit University star. Wooden, in Darlington for the Southern 500 stock car race, told newsmen the signing of Spencer Haywood by Denver of the American Basketball Association “will really hurt the colleges if the pros are allowed to get away with It.” k k k Haywood signed with the Denver team although he still had two years of eligibility at the University of Detroit. Haywood said he was forced to turn professional to support i his mother and his nine brothers and sisters. Wooden said, “The pros are calling Haywood a hardship case, but if they let this one go, there are going to be a lot more hardship cases in the future.” . Wooden also admitted he disliked the way the pros “play the game. ■ “I’m not saying there’s no finesse in the pro game, but the college game is mainly finesse, the pro game mainly brute strength. “Now that Lew Aldndor is In the pros,” Wooden continued, “all you hear is people saying he must build himself up in order to play well. Ybu can judge game by that.” KRESGE OPEN SUNDAY 11-5 P.M. MIRACLE MILE STORE ONLY STALLION • With 32” twin bladoa • 16” Roar Hi-Fletatien Wheats • 13” Front Hi-Fletatien Whools • 8 Speeds — 6 Forward, 2 Reverse • Trailer Hitch • Height to Hood 30” • Width 32W' — Length 58” • Control* Mounted on Dashboard •• 1 Gallon Gas Tank • Weight 393 lbs. Gross FREE SOWER - IMMEDIATE DELIVERY — 1 WARRANTY*0 MIRACLE MILE STORE ONLY! 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Styled by Bertone, with the lively lines Detroit goes overseas fori Powered tty a hefty reSr-mount engine that'll go 90 and accelerates to 60 as fast as you can Fiat 850 Spider • How does Fiat do it for the price $2180 Grimaldi Imported Car Co. 900 Oakland Avenue 335-9421 C—I THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 19«9 ****w£&*>:v Kw * .wkw! ..VAV.V. ,..™wAAWA 334-4981 SBy W«>>XwwKW>S*X*X*X. . HjKHMBK >XwKvSwXwy* AYiV** Direct. Fast Service For Classified Ads. Count thoml Ton now, fast direct dialing linos to mako placing your Low-Cost, Classifiod Ad in The Pontiac Press odsier. Count thorn - The number of calls you getl You'll soil, rent, trade, htte, notify faster with our Classifiod Ads. • ■; . - - r<_. Z? . Sr£-,\, ■ t _V v •'S' THE PONTIAC PRESS (Iff you got a busy .. * coll ut on 332-SI 81) THE PONTIAC PRKSS. SATURDAY. AUGUST 30, 1060 Boeing Miffed at Nixon Delay on Funding WASHINGTON (AP) - The Boeing Corp.'s supersonic transport plane program director says he Is disappointed by the report that the White House is delaying a decision on additional project financing. The director, Bob Withington, added Friday that he sees no problem is overcoming the unresolved questions, .including noise factors. *• ★ ★ Boeing hopes to test-fly the SST in 1972 and put it into production in 1978. Thus far, the for the finest in food or the finest in atmosphere, visit the ones that specialize in both! Appearing Every Sat. Night, the “4 Miracle Men” Bloomfield Miracle Lounge 2325 S. Telegraph 335*8060 TONIGHT AND SUNDAY "The Lamp Sisters" IN THE NEW FIREBIRD LOUNGE —TWO SHOWS NITELY — HURON BOWL 2525 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 681-2525 government has paid $600 million for. research and design but Boeing needs at least that much more to build and fly two test prototypes. * * * Withington said he is confident the SST will meet permissible! noise levels at airports during taktoffs and landings. He also said the firm has worked on the assumption the plane would be flown over land areas at subsonic speeds, thus the sonic boom shouldn’t be an issue. Secretary of Transportation! John A. Volpe recommended! Congressional foes of the prolast sprihg that the government!gram are against additional continue financing SST develop-!subsidizing of the aircraft indus-ment. Now, Volpe says, prob-jlry because they say they feel lems of sonic booms and domes-1 the money should be spent on tic priorities are responsible for pressing domestic needs. the President’s lack of action on' --------— the recommendation. * i i / s* I i He s Charged U.S. Expert's Study Shows 'Jetport Would Ruin Glades' I in Attack on Meter Maid WASHINGTON (AP) - A senator says an Interior Department study concludes a proposed jetport in south Florida would harm nearby Everglades National Park and that an alternate site should be found. Sen. Gaylord Nelson, D-Wis., said a report prepared for the department, which supervises national parks, says the huge jetport would ruin the unique tropical ecology of the park. ' ★ it if He said the report also recommends that the smaller training > facility for commercial airline (pilots now under construction at the site be moved. Nelson called on federal agencies to stop construction of the jetport. ‘UP TO ADMINISTRATION’ "In my judgment, it is now up to the executive agencies of the federal government to carry out the recommendations of the report, stop construction of the airport and require it to moved to an alternate location where it will not harm the park,” Nelson said. it it if Known as the Leopold report, it was prepared after months of study by Luna Leopold, chief scientist of the U.S. Geological Survey. The Interior Department has not made it public. Nelson said “no further justification should be needed for federal agencies to halt all further activity aiding the planning and construction of these airports until another site C—.1 Tw.ni Soft Ice Cream, Banana Splits, Malts and Sundaes GOLDEN FRIED CHICKEN, JUMBO SHRIMP, RIBS, GOLDEN BROWN FISH, delicious pizza; FROG LEGS DELIVERY / MICHIGAN FRIED CHICKEN 621 Auburn Ave. FE 8-0111 Open 10 to 1 A M. DETROfT (UPI) —''Attorney Kenneth V. Cockrel was charged yesterday with the careless and reckless use of an automobile last week when he! allegedly tried to run down a I meter maid who had ticketed! his car. g I Mrs. Juanita Mlnter said she| 9 Vipf Rnnlrar Ucketed Cockre*’s illegal 1 y Y Id uui fivd jparked car in an alley on Aug. I So VS U S Aid I The attorney became enrag-/ | ed, sh'e .said, and called her a “stupid, dumb bitch," and then got into his car and tried to run her down. I? „ I An assault warrant against' SAIGON (AP) — A South ihe attorney had been con-1 found.” He urged that such a [ Vl”na.n}®se banker-economist sidered, but was dropped in halt be immediately declared, (said Friday night that his coup- j favor of prosecution under the I The Transportation Depart-!lr? . “recklessly and indis-jcity ordinance, according to' ment some months ago made ajcnminmely squandered Amer-1 Michael J. Connor, assistant! $500,600 grant for planning the lca™ a'“’ w™ch has “righteously yy^yne County prosecutor. Con-i jetport and am additional evoke“ complaints and displeas-i viction carries a maximum; $200,000 grant for a study of ur®fr“™ °wr benefactors." (penalty of 90 days in jail or a high speed surface transporta- Ur. Nguyen Van Hoa, director $50Qi fine or both. the Dade County Port Authority, and there have been reports that millions in federal aid would be sought for construction. Is Wasted ISAHMERAF drive-in theater IIIIRiniKiVlVii UNION LAKE AT HA0GERTY RD. OPEN NIGHTLY EM 3-0661 FIRST SHOWING AT DUSK .. FIRST RUN! Man has conquered the moon with the epic APOLL011 FLIGHT! NOW TAKE ANOTHER MOMENTOUS JOURNEY! tion. A few weeks ago it made another grant of $163,000 for runway lighting. it it it The jetport was planned by Meredith Gives Rundown on a Talented Mod Family general of the Agricultural De- Cockrel, a Negro, was charged velopment Bank, told the South w|th contempt of court Vietnamese Council on Foreign Relations: “We have been extremely wasteful in using that aid .. 7We must assume the full responsibility for our unintelli- April after he called a white I judge a “lawless, racist rogue, bandit, thief, pirate, honky dog, fool." The charges were later dropped. By EARL WILSON . NEW YORK — Meredith MacRae came to town and began ling about one of the most modern families in America -hers. “I was on ‘What’s My Line?’ with my sister Heather," Meredith said. “She had a fight with; Henry Morgan on the Merv Griffin show and so' Served Sunday 4-8:30 P.M. JSmLittk Joe Special” pyMRiWi THE RIB EYE STEAK .w Kmart QLENW000 PLAZA North Perry Street — Comer of Qlenwood 388-9433___________________. 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Open 11iM an Wed. thru Sat 7 and 2:M p.m. Sun., Mon., Tun. Continuous All Bay, 334-4436 YOU MUST BE 18 - PROOF IS REQUIRED Adults ONLY! KS? The Bushwhacker 2nd Hit “SEE HOW THEY COME” she didn’t speak to him. Why? Well, the thinkswm he’s an uptight old man. He got kind of miffed Wm when she said that. "I don’t object to my sister taking her||R clothes off in ‘Hair,’ I think it’s cool,” Meredith, gfj the oldest daughter of Sheila and Gordon Mac-H Rae, herself a famous actress, said. Then shell spoke of her brothers Bruce 13, and Gar, who’s p 20 and has been married a year. gent and unreasonable use of it and suffer the consequences.” ★ * . ★ Hoa said that U.S. aid Is intended to make South Vietnam more self-reliant, but instead the nation has become increasingly dependent on American ;lp. Hoa told his listeners, who in-' ^ ^N OOGA, Tcnn. eluded South Vietnamese andi^R * ~ Teamsters President American businessmen and o[fi-[Ja™*R ,Hoofa ^parted here! cials, “The Vietnam economy is KeaterdV .for h,s ,?ennsylv»ni,a a paralyzed, agnizing patient Jla,,1 ,ce11 to ™a,t * J“d«e» „,v.£v, —li. „„ | decision on whether he will get a new trial on jury tampering Hoffa Returns to Jail, Waits WILSON which depends on oxygen generously provided by foreign aid, and which shall Immediately die when deprived of It.” DEFENSE EXPENDITURES He sqid efforts should I made to “prune down” defense expenditures which now absorb two-thirds of the national budg-rerm- " " ; et. He suggested, without going Federal dudSe Frank Wilson “Both my brothers have hair to their shoulders,” Meredith |nt0 (jetai| the establishment of r°°k under advisement Wed-continued. "Gar refuses to cjut his and it makes it kind of hard j a jess expensive “people’s'nesda^ new‘tria' motions for for him to get a job. He’s got Just the right hair to play in | army” which would be support- HoRa and ^ree codefendants. ‘Hair’but they have a long waiting list to get into that cast.” . j ed by a smaller regular army lTh'5 m*n Meredith, vivacious and blonde, began boasting about her; _________________________ husband, actor Greg Mullavey, whom she married in a Hindu ceremony at Big Sur, Cal., in April. They both wore white. Brother Bruce, with hair to his shoulders, handed out roses. “Greg,” Meredith said, “played a group therapy psychologist in ‘Bpb & Carol and Ted and Alice’ and also the lead in ‘The Marigold Man.’ / ★ ★ 11 ★ “Greg qnd 1 went t» a group therapy ‘Institute ft where the men and women take nude baths together, j search. The idea is If you strip yourselves you reveal more of yourselves and are more honest with each other. charges. Accompanied by a U.S marshal, Hoffa was taken from the Hamilton County Jail for a return flight to the federal penitentiary in Lewisburg, Pa., to resume his eight-year prison |Thc men claim the Justice Department used illegal electronic surveillance to bring ilNNES-IAN HENDRY-LYNH LORING* PATRICK WYMARK-LONUFRIEDL OH HERBERT LOM ‘ ■>, CERRVm SYLVIA AN0ERS0N mil DONALD JAMES Dir.ct.d b, ROBERT PARRISH r»du»« A,GERRYmSYLVIA ANDERSON A UNIVERSAL PICTURES LTD. PICTURE in TECHNICOLOR* raub nEiumnn JonniiE uiBomifflRD ■ROBERT UIRGDER lumnmG k UNIVERSAL IMWMM -f OKtUI MIIK 7I»ANAVISION* ——— NOW! Con to Get HearingpSSSd.„ to file motions relating to the I on Food-Cost GripelSXeML.wllr ^ portunity to present further! Ilvine'l COLUMBIA, S»C.*4AP) — A j testimony if new evidence is1 ^ * prisoner has won a federal court discovered. “ rf>J I hearing on his claim that prices r °; at the South Carolina prison! * canteen are monopolistic. I Some things.. are Irresistible.. 71 a ring-tailed rapscallion... a freckle-faced boy and a summer warm with laughterl ffmm SAT.-SUN.-MON. SCHEDULE RASCAL at liM • liM ■ Rill • liM •tlitl MAMR YOUR HAT0N THE WIND at 2i»-4i«-TiN-9in Bridge Tricks From Jacobys to lead a trump. West took his king and led ,a club for East to ruff. (Newspaper Enterprise Assn.) V+CHRD ¥93 ♦AKQ86 + AK.J03 WEST EAST AJ2 A AK86543 VK« ¥752 ♦ J9543 4102 *3965 A7 AQ9 ¥AQJ1084 ♦ 7 A Q842 Both vulnerable West North East South 14 14 Pass Pass 4 ¥ Pass Pass Opening lead—A J 2 ¥ chance and only one chance to jit appeared that South had boat the hand. West had to started with two spades, six come up with a trump trick and .trumps, one diamond and four then give East a ruff some-^‘ibs. In that case a second where. club discard would be of little ______ _____ _ help. Therefore, East simply! Vour partner bids one ‘heart discarded in the third diamond. 2nd ®a*t paaae8- what do y°u South had done his best but 0 now‘ Answer Monday You, South, hold: , AAK984 VQ65 +AK104 +2 What do you do now? A—Double. You have a good hand and preparation for any suit your partner may bid. TODAY’S QUESTION You double. West passes. That somewhere had to be in clubs and East proceeded to getjJt wasn,t ^ „ hgd into ruffing position by leading!___________________ ___ his singleton club right into i (dummy's ace-king-10. East! didn’t worry about killing a jclub honor in his {partner's hand. He was looking at dummy land felt sure that If South did {hold any club losers he would be able to get rid of them on! top diamonds. South could see what was I about to happen to him and! made a valiant effort to avert j disaster. He won the club ini THE BETTER HALF By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY There was nothing wrong dummy, led a trump to his ace with South’s four-herat contract and Proceeded to run off dum-rxcept that he wasn't able to mVs lbree l°P diamonds. He make it. As he remarked after- discarded one club on the sec-wards, "On good days I would’00” diamond and was all set to have made an overtrick.” make his contract if East had) East trtarted out by cashing ;ruffed the thlrd diamond, but I his two top spades. Then he ^asl d*dn * ^ f°r ^ba^ looked around for other tricks, ★ * ★ and saw that there was one, East had done some counting. I Astrological Forecasti By ivDNajMDMAaa Good 1lmo to proposo morrli bocomt onpooM or to colobroto ding. Whon moon It In Taurut. . today, pooplt tond to brop oboi ARIES (Mdrat lllprll^tli Bi "I know it’s a weed, but I never start trouble with something that's bigger than I am.” BERRY'S WORLD-By Jim Berry CAMPUS CLATTER HEY, ROGER/ LOOK WHAT BETTY HAS KNITTED FOR YOU It) WEAR TONIGHT/ By Larry Lewis THE BORN LOSER By Art Sansom formation. Kty It Bo rocop-usoful in- • thrown lolobratlon. I 20-Miv 30): Cyclo it niuti. out ovuid fOOllth dltPUtO OVfr furniture or othor household Hem. Stmt of humor it your proof ally tod.......... * G&lNlP*ifooy }T-Juna oniiphlonment It allalnoblt. b« ^umipra api. ... _________________.... ......... within and pnawora will bo lorrhromlnp. touch** on Imporant proloct. . You Avoid oalromoa. Bo tptclllr Rrmaln in oapoclolly appradottd by younp pf background oa much aa pomiSIo. Hood Turn on charm. You win II dadlcola word* ol wlaa eounaol. AQUARIUS (Jan. N-Sob. It): CANCIR (Juno ll-July Ml: Acconl on1 - ----- ■..... bow you roloto to Irlonda. Br amisbl*. Avoid arpumanl which la boaod on pally nblocllon. Kty la to mpko inIHllitnl eon-rasalon. Than day plows with taotlnp of WLEO 1 July 33 Aug. »): Soma Who di pond upon you may moka demand*, or tain hint from CANCER message, i (ontldarala, you will find othara >ilsp oro leatonabla. ttrlva to smooth over' l»fbl|y misunderstandings. VIRQO (Aug. D-Sapt. 99): Good lut oipoct today coincides with chance to with thoso who havo boon at a dlstan Mokt calls, catch up on correspond >n You may not tlnd ported Ion, out (here * LIBRA (Sapl. 33-Oct. 11): What * By United I’m* International Today is Saturday. Aug. 30, the 242nd day of INTO with 123 to follow. The moon is between its full phase and last quarter. The morning stars arc Venus and Saturn. The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter, On this day in history: j In 30, B.C. Cleopatra committed suicide by permitting j a snake to bite her. In 1780 Benedict Arnold promised the British he ! would surrender the Ameri- 4 can fort at West Point. In 1932 Hermann Goerlng, often referred to as No, 2 Nazi, was elected president of the German' Reichstag. In 1985 Casey Stengel stepped out of baseball after a career of more than four decades when he retired as manager of the New York Meta. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY. AUGUST 1 h 1969 0-7 OPEN LABOR DAY 9:30 A JH. TILL IOPJM. LABOR-BAY-SALE! LADIES’STRETCH NYLON DOUBLE KNIT TOPS DIXIE HIGHWAY AT TELEGRAPH RD. »ontm« I SHOP BAH. Y 9:30 AM HU 10 PM... OPEN SUHDA IS UPON Till 6PM. CHARGE IT! MICHIGAN MIDWEST SICURITT DANKADD BANKADD THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 30, 1969 Record of transactions for Week on Stock Market N6W YORK (AR) -(Ml.) (Ml.) High Ltw L»»l CIW 1.30 157 1»» II 114* -i ______A 5 I m 3» Mt-ii MPCtm 1.60 450 154* »% «_ -)* MoPubS .006 15 M 22'/* 32% -IV MobilOII 210 *10 60% 57V* *04* +1VL Mohaico 1.10 *223 36'4 36V* MV* -1» .6 144* 34'/. 34V* + .. 544 44V* 424* 42V* —14* HU 55V* 54V* 55V* +1 x33 31 2*4* 2*4*.- M 161 27V* 264* 3714 — V* —N— 70 44 414* 414*-2V* 64 47 45 42V*-V* 563 33 304* 3M*-14* NY Hon .50d NYStEG 2.01 NY SE P»3.75 d,.) High U ___________ *1 36V* MV* 30’/* .... x2T5 20V* 274* 20 — 4k xjl 03 on* 02V* — 4* 14 31V* 201* 31V* + 4* 492 31*V* 301* 111* + 4* 260 56 56 56 fll* R „lr „1V 641 17V* 171* 17V* + 1* SSm p45.il 122* 75}* 75 75 - V* agM pf4.65 220 601* 60V* M%........ agM pf4.lt 230 50 56 50 agM pf3.90 — ",A agM pf3.60 'i— agM pf3.4a 2300 49V* i. . .. ... .. ag Shr .27n 26 16V* 16 16 - 4* NorfolkWst 6 l 154 1944 18V4 014* — Vi -. '-|nd ,80 62 2044 1944 20V* — 4* MRU Car 1 235 2344 21’/. 23V* +1V* NAmCoal .40 37 164* 1544 144* .. NorAmPhll 1 ™ igj NoAmRock 2 117 504* 4 41 494* 4 15 634* 4 137V* iSS 136V* +34*| Cham J0 xll 411* 411* 4114 + Ok ....CltyL .00 xl* 244* 23 24 — 4* Nat Distil .00 319 104* 174* 174* - 0* NDjlt pf4.25 117* H 58 25V* 251* 251* - 752 20 251* 274* 4 179 29V* 284* 264* - 2540 634* 62V* 621* ...... 319 11V* 101* 114* +11* 11 16’* 15 1614 .... ______ 1..... 0 17 14V* 17 +11* NatLaad .85h x4tl 324* 311* 311* — 4k NafPresto .90 V36 34V. 30V* 3114 —24* M 364* 371* 111* + £ 16 34V* 314* 324* —1 29 33'/* 32V* 331* + | 101 44 42V* 42V* — 67 141* 184* 14V* + ........... 51 224* 111* in* —M Natomas .25 5562 1031* 90V* 97V* —344 26 22V* 21V* 21%-” 1460 54 521* 521* —14* 99 25V* 24V* 25+1* i 29V* + V* M9AWc.pf4.75 xll 741* 72 7344 J ■PH .. .. ■ + v* 153 30 29 30 +1V* xB76 21V* 274* 274* —4* 468 44V* 43V* 444* + V* „„„„ PH 1150 024* 024* 024* ........ NoNG pf5.80 1370 81% 1044 IN* - % NoIHGas 1.61 NorlnPS 1.14 NoNGas 2.60 32V* 32V* -1% Oak Elect .64 71 15V* 144* 15 — 41 OakHaPd .72 ..... ............... Occldnt Pat ' OcddPat pf OccIdP pf3.6» OccIdP pf2.16 25 56 54% 56 -1% Ogden Cp .60 x367 224* 204* 224* +1% Ogden pfl.17 20 37% 344* 17 +1% OhloEdlt 1.50 x758 25% 24 244* - 4* Oh Ed pf4.56 6210 664* 65% 65%—11* (Continued on Page C-9) What Wall Street Did By WHAYNE EISENMAN AP Busineii Writer NEW YORK - Individual and m iscellaneous investors apparently filled the breah left in the municipal bond market this year by the withdrawal of commercial banks, according to one study. ’Individuals and others purchased three-fourths of the $5.2 billion state and local securities on the market the first half of the year, according to Salomon Bros. St Hutzler, a natinal investment firm. * * * In a reversal of their traditional role as the largest marget for the tax-exempt municipals, commercial banks-strapped for funds by government tight money policies purchased only 1.9 per cent in the first half of 1969. Last year individual investors accounted for only 13.6 per cent and commercial banks, 70 per cent of the purchases, the figures indicate. MM, “Until the banks are permlt-24% - wiled by monetary policy to again “ + I become investors, it will be very hard to finance large state and local expenditures,” the firm said in a weekly publication. Municpals were .under pressure again this past week, by a lack of Investor Interest and uncertainty over pending legislation that would reduce their tax-exempt status. ★ ★ • ★ The Dow Jones Municipal Bond index rose to a record 6.23 per cent from last week’s high of 6.02 per cent. i Other sectors of the market declined sharply this week setting new record price lows. As prices decline, yields rise. Georgia Power Company’s $65 million, 39-year first mortgage bonds, for example, were priced to yield Investors 6.10 per cent. biitlal demand was moderate despite the yield surpassing the previous record for securities set June 9 when Pennsylvania Power and Light Co; 39-year bonds yield 8 per cent. Government bonds price_ have now given up all of their early August advances. Long term governments — over 20 years — declined by about point, the largest weekly drop since May. Intermediates — five to seven years — declined in price by half a point. „ ★ a a The key 4Y* per cent issue of 1967-92 began the week at an investor return of 6,17 per cent and steadily escalated' to 6.28 per cent near week’s end. With the exception of treasury bill rates, most short term rates the money market were lower. Three-month treasuries came within two basis points of the previous 7.20 per cent high for the year. By PHIL THOMAS AP Business Writer NEW YORK (AP) - Despite a sharp early decline followed by a rebound, the stock market didn’t really go very far during the closing week of August, finishing up at almost the same place from which it started out. The popular averages closed with tiny losfses, and the trading pace slowed as many Investors were reported staying out of the market place prior to the long Labor Day weekend. The stock; exchanges will be closed Monday in observance of the holiday. Volume on the New York Stock Exchange totaled 43,016,970 shares, compared with 50,301,030 the previous week, and was the lightest since 41,036,990 shares changed hands during the four trading days in the week ended July 25. The Dow Jones industrial avr erage, which lost nearly 14 points in the week’s first two tracing sessions after spending au of the previous week gaining 16.37 points, turned in midstream, pared its losses and closed off 0.53 at 836.72. The Associated Press 60-stock average, up 5.9 the week before, closed off .8 at 294.5. Standard St Poor’s 509-stock index lost .41to 9.551, after a week earlier gain of 1.92. The New York Stock Exchange index of some 1,200 common stocks closed off J7 at 52.95. The week before it gained U3* Robert T. Allen, Shearson, Hammill St Co., (Inc., vice president, thinks that “even though recent volume has been too tow to allow' any real conclusions about market- action ta be drawn; it is still impressive that prices have held almost all of their improvement made since the low in late July. “This has been accomplished esplte the absence of a good news backgro&nd. In fact, some developments which seemed promising for a brief period, have subsequently disappeared, without sending the stock market into a relapse... “Still, we doubt the market will emerge from its current consolidation phase right away. The basis for a renewed decline is no longer strong, but as yet the groundwork tin not been laid for a major advance-Hopefully, however, as market interest is rekindled by passage of summer, the trading range will be a little more lively than has been the case for the last week or two.” The market tried to keep its previous week rally going early Monday, but the effort tailed and it slid to a loss. It skidded into lower territory again Tuesday, wi(h analysts reporting profit-taking weighing on it as well as President Nixon's Postponement of a decision on fur-U.S. troop withdi from South VletnSta».\^ Week in Stocks and Bonds STOCK AVERAGES 40 Bonds . 1st RRa .. 2nd RR* ... Utils ..... Indust ... Inc Rails First High Lew Last NetCfc 886.72 823.52 838.72 -0.53 201.89 20IJ9 199.66 201;18 -0.84 .. 115.99 116.31 116.41 118.31 +3.08 .. 282.14 282.88 279.68 282.88 -044 BOND AVERAGES .. 72.00 72.00 71.80 71.90 -841 .. 88.90 88.90 68.03 88.37 -9.38 .. 70.82 70.93 71.78 70J1 -0.09 .. 78.60 78.06 78.41 78.86 —9.06 .. 79.T1 79.87 71.71 7M9 +8.10 .. 01.77 81.86 11.78 61.72 -4.1* THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 1960 Week's NY List C—9 (Continued from Page C-6) ir* W ■ * ia XZ 23 vs If Okie ge Ok GE , QklaNGl iai l iTja- m I IJt 117 2 * +i% irsj i|§ S 1 Otis Elav 2 .. „„ Outbd Mar 1 217 36% 35 .43 lo% jl% IMS —ih Spartan^ l»’/4 + % Sou Ry 2.10a 3" i=sww foiffico YTa SBS3B11 *gf !*S» »% *i% IWoyberg 1.20 14 29% 2» 2914 4- % Weyerher .10 070 40% 31% 30% - % WhMlPItt (tl 10W 21% 10% 21’4 + % whSipitSf! ** ** m av>+m { Whirl Cp ,*** R l» Ijfllfii ah 1x273 22% 21% 22% — % 1 35% 35% 35% - % iisa^r-.m- 1 35% 35% 35% % % Whiter, ptC 3 15 34% 33% 34% a 34% +1%; WhltCn 'p»A 3 8 25% Z WhltCn S|| • 31% ini - % WhltCn r, =-• 4m +2% WhIWCrfi State Man Finds It Hard^ to Bridge the Crime Gap 8» + #;I jSporton ,25o Ovor Trans 1 xlM 25 gti| asst —P , SpringsMHI 1 PocGEI 1.50 455 35% 34% 35 + % Squ?bbDl l!S SHlIbltriN mi j11 w* jj% i?% ii% +'% 243 n% m% rJJ sS as aft X54 S£ MV. S'* -iftr TRAVERSE CITY (UPI) -rirerouted. the 80-foot-long bridge looo 24% 21% S%+2 Here in Michigan’s northland. was abandoned. * *jjj§% wiihtstr',2oi> *0* f* IT “% +*S where deer poachers have been * * * ' JH w!!ISoff Te *M 33% 32% 33yJ +m Jjjj®*® lurk and out-of-season | It has stood proudly for 12 J> -—•PwVS ivc 1.10 . 02% -M PonASui J7(j X201 17% 14% 17% — % SlOOh b13 75 Pen Am JOB 1103 j«% 15% 16% — % StdOir- -* ■ gSnhiP U0 X310 30% 20% » + % StJ»!L Paprcrft .44b 40 33% 32% 33 + % St wj w> ParMi .72 316 22 20% 22 - % ltd Preu ParkoDavIs 1 422 33% 32% «*«■ PbrkHffi i.4o xa si% 40% Park Pan .00 105 23 21% PannCan 2.40 xois 43 M PennDIx 40 x}34 20% 10% Pann Fruit 140 12% 11V Pannay JC 1 744 8 40V w “““ 15 70% 70 ___ 20% 20% 20% Pa Co pM.42 PaPwLt 1.40 >¥V PaPL pt 4J0 2500 PaPL pt 4.40 21340 45 .4% 44% ... Pennwt 1J0a 371 37% 34% 37 ... "---" “ " 61% 43 +3 +3 11% 12 + % StauffChTiO ,14 72% 70% 70% I % Ml Mb «% 44% ■ • 230 24% 22% 23 IK as as+5 WUIf 2*Pmt SSS- *« »» 61% 50% 41% + % Mil lois $3% s*+*s k^SR'iS nia f* '’4 +2% £u .Do2 & if li;.3 216 11% 11% 11% .. . 0 23% 22% 23% +1 7 47% 47 47% + % 100 21% 10% 21% +2% a 17 16 17 + *' 00 37% 34% 37% + 3 30 30 30 SteriDrug .70 620 30** 36% Jt +% bm mm 735 26% 23% 24 —2% .is w% »% 34% +i” |fisherman are sometims snared,'years on Kornheiser’s 120 acres 10% ma w% + % there’s a bridge rustler on the | of riverfront property, where hg Wltco Ch .02 ■■■“-jC pf2.65 jPWWl.50 .... Womatco .30 X34 20% 10% 20% +1% Cp .40 xia 20V> 26% 26%-1% Itl 1.20 016 37% 35% 37% + % pt2.20 10 a 56% 56% -2 World Alrwy 160 16 14% 15% - % Wrtoky 3a 20 1W 104 104% + % Wurlnzar .00 27 14% 15% 14% - % XaroxCp .60 _____ X1546 00 03% 05% —1% XTRA Ine 223 30% 35% 37% + % YnpstSD l.» 25 21% 20% 21 ZOla Corp .64 317 51% 47 loose. |intends to build a vacation^ Somebody has been stealing home. But now it’s a bit naked, '* with all the big beams gone. Jack Kornheisler’s bridge piece by piece. iPl State Police at Traverse City,||wg|i_ 36 miles north of the stripped-down bridge, say the skillful JHJftfcT] iZmlL * “They could take it down like an erector set and put it up J k BP PP BP someplace else, I gues “ Norn 2« 49% 47% 49% +*% ed Kornheiser, who lives inj * * * Zayra'corp12 210 37 ”% 34% +, ISouthfield. So far, 11 three-foot-1 They also say Kornheiser has mum flMpiva 24% t ipii ,teel I-beams, each of lost $500 worth of bridge so far. copyrightaa' by Tha AiMclatad Praia 1040 them IS feet long, have been snatched from Komheiser’s bridge. Once it carried traffic on Michigan US over the Betsie River. But when the road was Soon, patients’ completeb medical records will video tape, reports a physician. 1 thieves have chiseled off thei I bolt heads to free the beams. I In a competition recently held to find the most satisfactory hard-opening cover for poisons, there were some 2,000 entries. DUCK SHEEPHERDER - Sixty head of sheep on a Boring, Ore., farm are taken to and from pasture by a pet mallard duck. The duck took over sheepherding duties after its mate was killed by a fox last summer. Neil Pestes, who runs the farm, says the duck became friendly with the ram of the flock and a short time later took over leadership. wVpnC l 37 io% 20 »% 22 T % + % 22 34 ' 53% 33% — % ft 14% 14 14% + % 17 31% 35% 38% +2% " “ 3% 53% TCMPpnS PonnzUn .30 X1137 31% 20% 31% + % PtnzU pfl.33 X302 45% 42% 45% + % PoopPrg no xlt 21% 21% 21% — % FoopOot 1.04 130 33% 32% 32% — % FtpsICo 1 272 Mk 44% 45% PopGBot .30* 40 13% 13% 11% , ■ Porfocf Film 271 14% 14% 14% + % Porknl Kim 220 44% 45% 44% + % Fpt Inc 1.10 124 41% 30% 40 —2 Pot Inc M 1 12 P% 24% 24% + % Pot Inc pi.10 j 23 22% 22% .. . POtOPOUl 1.20 57 34% M% 34% +2% s«.,u«,rnH gu xia, Potrolono .00 XS4. 39% 30% 30% + % Sundst pta.Jo 6 Petrol pffl.37 2 30% 30% 30% + % Sunsh Mn .52 «hX Till TT Potrlm 2.12b 143 21% 21 21 . iSup Vilu l lo X35 M 30M « PflzorC 1.40o X321 37% 15% 37 .. . Suporo” ’ “ ™ .S’* .?] PholptD 1.90 340 43% 40% 42 —1 iugmO Philo El 144 X403 26% 25% 25% — % Supmk PhlloEl pt V z540 100% 100% 100% ..... PhllEI PI4.63 3140 60 47% 47% + %l_„„m _ ..... PhllEI pf4.40 3440 44% 41% 43% — %|iwffTco r60 3M 27 PhllEI M4J0 z210 41% 41% 41% - % UwiMUnO M “ tm PhllEI Milo 3440 33% 55% 55% -l SySfOnCp So Philip NWrr l 114 27% 24% 24% - % Sybron pf2 40 PhilMor pt 4 1340 40 51 50 +2 PhilM pts.00 1170 54% 55% M% ,, v. Ph lip IlMS .14 JM 20% 24% 5% - % Ph i Pot 1.30 35% 10 35 +2% “HIVoH .Wt 42 21% 20% 21% — % 8t*«yC Ml 2730 15 foil 14% StOnOW 1.00 10 36% 35% 35% StoneCont .34 40 14% 14% 14% SWrorBOcit 1 18 30 2/% 28% Studoworth 1 in S,/. 44n StuWor p»B5 StuW pfAl.40 SuburGot .61 Sub Prop 1.60 SuCrnt JO SunChom .40 fun +2% 14 137 iS M 78% »% 781 480 26% 25% 24 » tl IT » “ 32% 34 249 25% 24 PSEG p x27 21% 20% 2 Publklnd J5f x!5 Pueb Sup JO * PR Com 1.10 : PugSPL 1.41 Klfiiini 2.80. “urexC f % + % alcott Net I allay Ind [STmsjo elodyno p«4 rSlaco ?!«* exETrn 1J0 exGaeT 1.48 roxGa ptl.50 roxGSul .40 [0X08 Ind lb rexatlnaf .10 ToxOilGs .05 ToxPLd Jig TexUtll 1.68 , Toxtron .90 'oxtrn pt2.08 Ttxirn Ml Jr .40 It 1J4 UHR.. .nd jo ■■ __________ .. ThrlltyDr .60 173 10% 17% 10% +1% Tlmeln l.OOa x405 47% 43% 45%+2% TlmoiMlr .50 117 47% 45% 47% + ~ Tlmk RE 1.00 05 33% 32% 33% + .. til " 444 31% 20 31% +1% 0 10% 10% 10% + % “ •' 34% 35% —1% ToddShp ToledEd Suoator .! Upoator p Ranco Inc .02 ISpMAfll. >5 RapA pf225 Raybeatoa 3 Raym Int .10 Roythoon .50 ktoth^ ptl.12 RCA cw pt 4 RCA pt3.50 “r- Co I 1 P 124 57% 14% 37 . _ 2 47% 44% W% — % 27 2% 45% 47% + % 00 20% 10% 10% - % I 30 30 Trana Co .10 144 40% 57% 53 TriniUn 1.14 143 31% 20% 30% — % TmWAJr JOB 1742 »% 24% 8 “ nWAIr pt 2 33 27% 26% 26% ■anWF ,00« 144 10% 14% 13 — % . .animr JOb 1445 20 — | 17 Trana* pf4J3 M130. ■ _____________ Tram* PI4.50 3 102% 101% 192%~12% |------ 105 14 15% 14 1 H 178 23 9% 22% — 34 8% 33% 34% + .. X200 32% 20% 31% +1% 510 24% 21% 22% +1 4 40% 45% 40% +3% X34 47% 3% 45% n 103 13 17% lia 35% 23 33 33% 36% 1105 30%3 4% Traveler, i, . Trovlore p!2 TrICont 2.00g Tricon pt2J0 Trlangln 1.40 TRW Inc 1 TRW pH JO TRW pMJO TRW p% 44% 47% + % Safeway 1J0 |IjmLP 104 "xi| 11% 17% 17% — ' iiLianP ijo xio 4i% ii 4i + frit 3%i' Sandora JO 301 SPb S Wb +1 sssssr'i-s kvzw SFi Ind M JO Tl Tft * 0% + % SonPalnl JO no 40% 44% ft — % ----- X4M 15% j7% +1? lerWellcl .50 x 12 54% »' 54% +1% —T— 171 21% 31 _ _ 01 23% 22% 23 — % Ut 34% 33% 34% + % 2W S% S'* 54% +2% mill® +% 1241 25% 23% 24% —1% *5 Mb lift 31% +1 104 120 122% 125% ■’ 310 13% 13% 13% ^PUSHU^CASI1^- FARMER JACK'S DISCOUNT FOODS Steak 1.40 101 20% 27% H 30 10% | i 10% 'Ho o% 30% 38 I 31 12% 11% 11% — % I 253 13% 14% “ ‘ 2314 20% 10% —u- ____ .... . 1231 32% 20W 30% —2% UARCO 1 1 — “ “• Kdi rco A ..... Lid , unit NV ,70p 20 20% 27% 20% +2% U CMM 1 x470 31% 10% 20% “ Un Carbide 2 1414 44% 43% 44% fipaaBm 14 12% if. 1Mb EMC 1.20 X204 10% 11% if RIM4J4 120 07 *7 " ■I pf4J0 8420 47% El M < 240 40 ll P%JO ■ ...JllCal 1.40 UOCOI pf2J0 ____ ............. ■‘-Pee Cb 2 im 50% 45% 42% +1% ...lonPecIf 2 241 47 48% 40% +1% UnPac M.40 120 I 7% 0 ....... Unlonam 1.40 x140 42% II 10% —3% Unlroyel .70 »l SHb 22% 23 — % Unlroyal pt I zlio 111 113 113 -1% Unlehop, .10 mil W 34% 34% — “-“— 1.00 121 47%-41% 4780 +2 124 13 11% 12. + 211 22% 21% 21% — _____ 42 42 47% 47% — I .20 x44 14% 14% 14% — ..... pf Jt xl» 2% •% 0% -r Unit MM 1J0 12* 20% 27% 27% — .. — 174 20% 11% 11%—IE Unit Ci 57% 50 — % ax 50% 50% —1% 53% 51% 53 SS8? US Indi USPlpo uW nflJO 26 34 25% 35% — U 1435 52% M% ft — V 117 74 71% 74 +1 SO 1Mb 34% 35% 451 24 24% 25% PM H 34% » 17% . rCh .04 512 23% 11% 32% - V „.l pISJO 2350 70 78V ~ USPCh MU8 225 34% 34 Ut Ih08 Jl W 26% M. .._ U| smalt lb 11 R% 10% % USSma pis.50 4 71% 70% TVft + % — Steal 2.40 5570 11% 17% 20 -% Tobec 1 X00 10% 17% 17% —1% u.„| Util .10 X450 24% 24% 24% X14 31% 30% 31% UnUtll ptlJO x47 34% 35% 35% UnvUai lJO 21 25% 25% 25% UlvOPd .10 400 24% Mb 8% + % Unlvtty ClM fl Bib 70% fl% ..... Upjohn 1.40 321 43% «% 43% +1% OrloTwg .40 to 2Mb nib W * USLIFE .50 144 25% 21% 25 U5AA Cp 1.50 *4 Mb I* 3H. - SSK:S J SKS S -8 Volvo cp .« ii* n ■Varlan Aim 360 Ml Vaadar 1.00 Xl2 30 Vando Co .40 1 W^fiorp 1 vlPifj’ff VaEIPw 1.12 X021 24 ralfcP pf 3 HAM _ 13% •—1% 74 15% 35% lf%+M* 108 49% 42 47% +5% 11% 11% fin 87%' 00 10% MMl 30 II Is Mf ___ 44 10% 10% S-- VWR unit .72 44 18% M 14% + % -r-W—X—Vy—Z— WapR M 4J8 XII 41 41 »L. - % li § 24% 24% +*% 1SFI . s* s*s* n n oi% 8% 0 112% 180 110%-1% IM Mb 57% SO +fl ASSORTED COLORS Bounty Towels SPECIAL LABEL PIZZA HI* Appion HVoy.......!;. SNOW FLOSS Sauerkraut............. WHOLE BEAN-FRESH ROASTED Spotlight Coffee YELLOW CLING SLICED OR HALVES Avondale Peaches fll P Sunkist Oranges NON-DAIRY COFFEE CREAMER Coffee-Mate I ANY TENDERAY ! ■ BONELESS RUMP OR ■ ■ SIRLOIN TIP ROAST • ■ Valid Thru W.A, S*t. 3, 7H9 | Atfaf>r Pw.| gtjkftjitUft. KJ EYEREADY REFRESHING Apricot Nectar...t!« ^35 SWIFT'S TASTY Vienna Sausaae S SPECIAL LABEL-ASSORTED m Northern Tissue 4 s&3V UA ARAAtlT ilA nrvimu ^ * / W,6“" Tarn Reference Ib to Farr 0/Carpet SskE Hon«yd«ws........... msizE Bartlett Pears 12 RRBNf BRUM PEPPERS OR KROGER ICE MttK r.s^wTteR/ftoyijeirQ»tie«ii AHesAsSl TOP VALUE STAMPS U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY [USOAl Young Heir Turkeys AUNT JEMIMA WITH ATTACHED mi 72-OZ BTL AUNT JEMIMA STRUT c—io THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 1969 Splinter Groups Join in Poll Lumber May Face a Closer Shave WASHINGTON (AP) - The Census Bureau is counting ballots in an election to see if there is general agreement on slicing a little more wood off each stick of construction lumber. If the proposal is adopted, thel standard 2x4—already not 2x4 —will be slightly thinner and a] little narrower in the future. * ★ * For more than 50 years, nominal 2x4—both green and! NEWSPAPERS Me par IM Iks. delivered Royal Oak Wasta Paper A Metal Co. 414 E. Hudson, Royal Oak U 1-4020 ' LOW COST > CAR LOANS Te A C. .FEDERAL CREDIT UNION \»n wooowMP svc— kiln dried—hat left the mill, measuring 1% inches thick by; 3% inches wide. Green lumber shrinks a« it loses moisture con-1 lent. The now standard would relate lumber sizes to moisture content so the green timber—initially a little bigger—would be | the same size as the dry when it loses equivalent moisture. NEW MEASUREMENTS A dry 2x4—moisture content 19 per cent or less—would meas-jure 1V4 bj 3% inches. A f 2x4 would be planed 1 9-16 by 3 9-16 inches. Larger sizes would i maintain the same dimensional {differences. A 2x4 dry would be lMi by 3*4 inches; green 1 9-16 by 814 inches. ★ * * The new standard was recommended by the American Lumber Standards Committee, a government-industry organization. It has the approval of federal agencies and major organi- zations in the lumber and home| building industries. The over-all savings, on the i permitting the secretary of |other hand, in the smaller sizes {commerce to issue the new are estimated in the lumber in-standard requlres acceptance One dissenter is the soil pipeidustry at about m **r hoU8e- by 75 per cent of those voting, industry, contending its pipe .7- * * with at least 70 per cent approv- would no longer fit In a narrow- Hie proposed new standard, al in each of three groups—pro- er 2x4 studded wall. along with ballots, was mailed ducers, distributors, users. The home builders say the answer is to use 2x6’a in plumbing walla at an additional cost of $10 to $12 in an average house. SAVE 30% to 50% Remnants ClnanncB Open Sunday 12 to 5 Oven Stock CfatvuutM Remnants 12’xB’ and under $2.00 Par Yd. Peifect for Halls, Stairs and Bedroom* CARPET SAMPLES 20* each 12’x9’ STORE SAMPLES 39" t. 69" RIMMAMTS PRICID Size D.toription Comp. Isto miB'O" Gold Random 160.00 99.95 12*«10*5'' Olivo Random 140.00 84.95 12*x8'0" Avocado Carved 90.00 49.95 um i Rad A Black Loop 107.00 *09,93 - 12**11*8" Oman Plu.h 160.00 89.95 12'x 16'2" Avocado Kit. Cpt. 176.00 109.95 12**9*B" 8alga Twaad 130.00 69.95 mi 1*2* Avocado Loop 110.00 69.95 m8‘2" Saiga Loop 88.00 49.93 12**11*5" Oman Carvad 165.00 99.95 12**15*7" Aqua Random 237-00 169.95 12'x 12*6" Avocado Carvad 204.00 139.95 mi nr Gold Random 160.00 99.95 12**11*0" Avocado Leap 176.00 124.95 I2**t*l0" Gold Twaad 91.00 49.95 12*«17*3" Rad A Black Kit. Cpt. 200.00 119.45 12**13*7" Bole# Twaad 168.00 89.95 12**19*8" Clover Oman Kit. Cpt. 204.00 129.95 mi 2*4“ Avocado Carvad 120.00 79.95 12**8*$" Gold Random 144.00 59.95 I2‘*I2'0" Bmnia Pluih 130.00 89.95 12**10*0" Chart route Pluih 104.00 49.95 mio* Blue Loop 91100 49.95 12'*9*0" Rad Rutt Kit. Cpt. 120.00 79.95 12**12*8" Blue Groan Kit. Cpt. 136.00 79.95 12**12*10" Idlge Twaad 128.00 79.95 mi3*2" Geld Pluih 270.00 149.95 12**18'4" Rive Groan Kit. Cpt. 200.00 119.99 t2Hrt4‘3“ Brann'Kit. Cpt. - 200.00 129.95 12.106" Gold Carvad 98.00 59.95 12**18' Pink 9*a*%*M,**mPM. BOX REPLIES At 10 mi. today 1 C-8, C-6, C-7, C-8, C-12, C-15, C-tl, C-88, C-84, C-W, C-27, 03$, C45, C-J6, C-J7, C-66, C-41, C-46 and C4L tfd al Ihis________ 1 we WISH TO THANK RUT frUndo. ’ tatomtara MS IjMWiM .»* E ST3rhSE&&n*S &SJSURS FARM VISITS SUNDAY ONLY 11 AM. TO 5 P.M. a bolng hale i at may « d ile. y rldei, or macks may b a UPLAND HILLS FARM FOLLOW SIGNS TOPARM , HRH FOR RENT, RECEPTIONS, todyos. church. OR 3-3103. FE 3- PLAN TO Afteiiirf’Tj'. 1 Confar of Michigan Quartar Horst Salt. Alma Falrgreuds, Alma, Michigan. Stpf. 4, IMF. H p.m. m COATS PUNRRAL HOMS DRAYTON SLAIN*_____ 474-P44I C. j; 0obl)ARPT FUNShAi. HOMS SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME Hul tarvlca" FS MIR Huntoon FUNERAL HOME n aas Kg1*6 z VoorheenSiple FUNpRAL HOME^Wt Csmstsry lets BILL PROSLSMSI -CALL PBST CONSULTaHTS IBM COLLEGE STUDENT naada di ponaaa. W 333-3334. HAPPY BiRTHDAYBABE”' Mr. and Mrs. Homeowntr Do you mud ftnundul odvico oh rupolra, ramodullnd, paying RmI Eitato Taxts, grouping bllla. tfc.f If you do, call Mr. Voot uf 334-3347, t-3 Dolly unpapt lit. READ THIS Art you having IrouMo making onda moot ooch month? Do you run out of monoy baforo yog run out ol MHit Hovo you found out you cun‘1 borrow vourtolf gut gf daMt , THSN LSTi , "DEBT AID INC." HELP YOU WITH THESE PROBLEM! It WSBT HURON IkOnaM A Bonded lorvlnn OokUnd County WITNESS TO ACCIDENT an Orchard LalW Ut TulUErupIl, August 3 at Hi4l a.m. Involving INI Oray Plymouth and 1H4 Blue Bulck, blacktop, woman and 3 chlMranrCtir rtiaw. Lost end MSB 5 POUND DACHSHUND, mar Union Laka Vlllaga, call 343-SPM. LOST! ONl YRLLOW Thomgaon tkl with whtta boot an Otter Lake. Call MS-1431. LOSt; BLACK P66t>Lf. Nawu attantkm. yliTBlty of and W. Huron. 333-1334. LOST; MALE ORBY ahd Whllo klt-ton, in vicinity of Tueoday. Rd. and Wllilamu Lk. Rd. Rawardl 473- LOST MINIATURE DREY PoodU In •ho vicinity of Long Luko, Adorns, and 3aulrrt|~ <4Hw4. Lotfi wHitM Mali muiipw 3 PAINTER! WANTED. txparlon«Ud\ only, 3M4440. or M7-3S7I. PART TIME Ovor ||, marriud, dopondablo and omptoyud. Call ^4-MM bulwoan 1 p.m. ond 7 ajpu J automobile to 9 U a n 14:. • ----- c ■“» rdlno, gir ■ jnnw n«f |- opportunlly tor torn far tbovo ol auto Mechanics Haiti Buratlnu Ut tht MWItt With work. OpunhiB for llpM^mptlfmpn and haavy rapalman. Clean, wall |MT. Liberal frlnsa benefit,. LI 7- HUTCHINSON LINCOLN MERCURY INC 111 N. MUM Royal Dak, Mlchiuan A NiW M&BB6N PLA71NS~plant m Troy neada man ta* ganaral factory hoip. No amporlonco ro-yulraft. TMi N aipi^Mportunny •or^ the man wtw^ wont^ to^ prow gyJ^aTCrtu^om^^T. Batwean IS and t4 M)l* Rd. |uM QfforT-73. ■ AUTO PARTS Ford aroiiucti a«Di jntemmdivhnmPpi intaraatod BihnmtppMy bo com Rig. aialttant mantgor of lorgo/ STlImad aorkma. U%ToSr HUTCHINSON LINCOLN MERCURY |i3iH Auto pAhti lob wRh g futuro Far a willing nasKl imm gram* Pontiac Press Want Ads For Action A1 COOK. PRESTIGE . ■ Canopy. ' ASSISTANT CITY . ENGINEER ClfV OP PONTIAC Excellent aoclal benefit program. {ruTwXrrn Michigan, with aayaral yearn of AWDFAWS ' counter Man Great Opportunity. Top pay wHh very liberal fringe bonoflta. LI 7- HUTCHINSON LlNCOLN-MERCURY INC Royel Oak, Michigan BUILDING AND ground sup< South Lyon Community 9 ---- ... ---- •"'.1177 a fcODY MAN AND body ID body shop helper, wage!, good working ply to gill at tog PE 3-MM t AM to Jl:30 4 end from!pjST^-5 ““ BUS BOYS Pull timu, part tlmu. All con puny bonoflta, paid vacations. Apply In parson. ELIAS EROS. . BIO BOY RESTAURANT BROWN S„ SHARPE automatic operators, exper'----* tolerance work, i * *“■y'Tlgi 111 0 BORING MILL. VERTICAL MILL HYDR0TEL PUNCH FINISHER SURFACE GRINDER DIE MAKERS Liberty ToolT'Engr. Corn. 3330 W, Maple Rdj, Willed Luko, 434-1371___________ BIRMINGHAM PERSONNEL OP-“'Cl — Young man wlm intoroata public conTact, college holpfUl not necessary. 447-auo. . .... ijr^YiauUe, man /cooking profaulon, boat, earn whIU you lld Conopv. 424-1W7. .RPENTERS AND CEMENT MEN ■Mtod. mil Dow Construction Co, sibSwp. ____________. CHEF tS ^ 333-3113 or national organlutkin. High school prod or bettor. Must have car. W*ll^n?lS,p.V«Tl4AXy Rd. JU 3-4000, Inpo bonallt,. Dogree In civil «igrma.rto| with oxporUnct In engineering Involving public work* design and construction. Apply Porsonml Office, 430 Wkto Track Or, E., Punlluc. CLEANINe AND mahitogonca, days. KR u p rmlnghem m Chrysler Plymouth, unalpymunt. Aak tor Mr WBI. COMMON LABORERS FACTOR V WDRKIRS, warehouseman, I ana tea pur a, malarial handlars, prats operator,, DAILY PAT EMPLOYERS Temporary Servibe, Inc. PRRNMLS REDFORD CLAWSON CRNTER LINE Rlvir '%». Mato INS BMfl. lt MIU m equal Opportunity IlMMoytr Not ti Imploymtnt AfliOCy CLARK 6lL IS looking tor umMlloua men who want to gut BMud. wa ham aoyoral ttatlena tor Hutu, MM, training, Inauranco tumpltta. Par 'mam mtormallon call Jtrry Edd*. U 1-7331 after I p.m. 371- t6MplWATi0N noop|He Pn4 ahaot m_.. Corrections Officer Male 0n|^ yoort. bonoflti so lory 33.2L H__________ to tug at the end of -.11 Mkhlgon civil Service Inchidlnp Social Security, Contributory Hospital and Lit a Inauranco. Longevity bonus altar 4 ytirt. Deportment famishes am „ maul par day. Matt bt 31 yaara at aga or ovor and a htah achooi graduate; Villon at toMf 33-lt* In aoch eye wittxwt gioMoe, cortpctod to at least 3PM In mch aye. Rasailua criminal raaard. Smclai interview io flu vacancy at cam Pontiac win ha pHan at Car factions Camp* Hoadquartara, 4000 Ml an Road.. Grass Lake, Jaaman . county (> mliaa NTafTpa an Ctoar Lake Road), cantact S/J. qibnan. I Correction, Cam pa, ■HI eraoa Lake, ___________(313) 473-Mil. DIE SEtTER Exporunco . praRpypS,. Small stifjwmjjTjMaiii. PanHac arm. San wt EXPERIENCED TRER TRIMMER. Good oav. 3354572. ENGINEERING AIDS I AND If CITY OP PONTIAC Salary 33.37-34Jl, dapfendlng upon the position. Excellent fringe benefit!,^mcellont^opportunltla, tor nwSomSirtaowiadga of X* prii clpiaa and proctlcoo of dnittlM or have knowledge of the principle, and pracHcaa of land auftoq^i. 33 Portonml Office. 4 Dr. E^ Pontiac. Experienced Brake ....., Operator Sheet Metal Fabricator Panel Wireman GEMCO ELECTRIC CO. 1030 N. Crooks _______Claw EXPERIENCED SURFACE grim thapar and mlllhaml, also < press operator. Northwest G DNnmarlng, Inc., MMO n I benefits, an equal op- ......... Hoftman, Oakland Packing, 334 N. Perry, Ex pE R i ENCID mlacallamoat ENGINEERING ASSISTANT CITY OF TROY tt.3F to.33.10 -----[parlance In conatructlo.. ly growing angina .... _______it. Steady work w..., opportunity tor advancement. Ex-coliont benefit package. Apply PoraonnU *„J» w'ilg Beaver Rd.. Tray. 4PMF0P. T-y.iMnr.iii, enu ueene n work with people and have had or public contact experience. EXPERIENCED SPRAY palntol paint commercial trallora. 1 bonoflti, Appply of Mlc Transport Trallora, Inc. 4333 DI: BxpBRIKNCID SAND blaatar to EXPERIENCED MEAt -aalaaman tor Instltutloml sale*, mutt hava i following, good wages and benefit, Hoffman, Oakland Packing, 334 N Parry. . f\jll time DA* pjatim 7W3. PULL TIME . AltP JP 1 hardware clerk,. Apply to pe only. Tom's 1 Hardware, 1 ’■------5' ~ o- PonTlac, m work Mtoi-t Sundays or h . 434-3a»7 or aum. FACTORY WORK FOR nr mechanical experience aeeiieine, tlmpla arithmetic nnulmd. Apply 317 central, Vb Black off iaplnaw St., Pontiac, " FORMAN FOR oqulpmont yard alio repair man .tor MM contractor, MS*1 Rotoronco, we goo axpactod, confidential. Writ# to few C*1, Pontiac Pratt. . DUARPS PULL QR .pjft thug, a Marla Detective Agency, MHaap. GENERAL MAINTENANCE and dla GAS STATION HUP Several opanlngt tor attendant,, na apply Tulsa Station MTHIahland. pR4°J1£t ion MACHINE OPERATORS. C '" GENERAL LABORERS II yr». or oku.. CONTACT PERSONNEL OFFICE Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital SAt STATION ATTENDANT. Pull lime, midnight man end port time day man, Clark Station, amp, Coil Lake RdT GENERAL FOUNDRY LABORERS WANTED Commute compiny peld fringe Apply In parson PAM to 3 PM Systemation 35444 NOVI Rd. NOVI An squel.opportunity omployor iwpcMiii RILP~lWWW‘ fhl WiHhdw ctopntoa twiononcud pr will train. Coll 3334448. ICH60C""88Y" marfffiiiir • work latlttiaya to Nursing i. Oantral hoatafcaiplng and I. MILLER SHOES HAS P0SI-TIONS’OPEN FOR THE NEW SALON AT TROY SOMMER-SET MALL, EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY, RRCRIVING, STOCK CLERKS, TBhf 1 ----T---.- ' PORTERS, ____________ v, trainaaa, mtarvlawtop applicant. It KtoPlhw inn, lWMHliMvil|M Como in ami taa TT ovor, or can for an appgwtmant. Call Mr. Soman. 444-i4ii.____________ IMMSDIATE OPfHIlte' ^‘Ipiaiil1 man to tram ao taelatant to aarvka mammr. 3133 par wk. to Mark onioi gaRMtalmy tar ad-vencamant * day waak, no nl|ht war^ Apply Plragtoni itaaoP, Tat I ."MILLER SHOES HAS POSI-TI0NS OPEN FOR THE NEW SALON AT TROY SOMMER-SET MALL, EXCELLENT OP-P0RTUNITY, SNOB SALKS WtrtftMMl tnlMter Interviewing «0Mlc«nts if IANITOT PORTER immtShri* ap on toga tor Ml Mmg ' wwmtW evening hour,. Muaf be APPLY JACOBSON'S SMW. Maple rPRSffll For Wont Adi Dial 33*4981 THE PONTIAC PUKSS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 1069 Help Wanted Mala * • carter that will • Brad*. Call Mr. -- -os4i. f—- - -employer. ''LIFE INSURANCE SALESMAN $10,000 to $25,000 With or without Insurance perlence. Complete tralnlno In rewarding and lucratlve^butli with a generous long-term tralnlno up to $10,000 per year to start, plus opportunity to earn additional commissions and bonus. Income of $25,mo to $30,000 ob-teineble fn 7 to 10 years. management opportunities There la unlimited management and earning possibilities tor high calibre men with our progressive company, as wa are expanding In Michigan and other states. 72 years In business with $450 million In assets, prestige office facilities in Southfield and a fine reputation for advancing our career men. Call Mr. Gaunt, 353-8901. H«lrWaittgd Mil* MAN FOR salary, Oxford vicinity, 42$-Tfol? MOTEL PORTERS Days or midnight, need 2 men. Apply 1101 S. Telegraph. HOLIDAY INN MODERNIZATION SALESMAN -Qualifications: must bo at least Journeyman with 5 years building experience. Dew Construction Co. 330-2198, 330-3529. Needed Immediately! end "GOODWILL" used carol Fringe benefits. Demo turnlshed. Right rrwn can earn from $10400 to $17,000 per year. Must have 2 veers experience or 2 veers of college. See Ken Johnson at Russ JOHNSON, Pontiac. Lska Orhm LANDSCAPE MAN Veteran preferable. Johonnot Landscape A Tree Service. Call MECHANIC - GOLP CAR, gasoline and electric, year aroun I pay raw. FI MANAGER FOR AUTO w MECHANIC Heavy duty truck, must have good ref. Top wages. Year aroui I Adrian Sod, 470-7212. MAN WANTED FOR PORTER a MALE HELP WANTED Material handler and prefofm __ for 3 shifts In plastic moldlno plant. Good hours, pay, and fr* LARGE i — I —Ale, care ol ..... maintenance d clinic. PORTER NEW OR USED CAR. m» be 18 years or older, and h drivers license, experience prei 724 Oakland FE 5-9434 PRODUCE MANAGER Wanted. Full time. Comer of Clarkston and Sashabaw. Pierres Market. PROFESSIONAL TRUCK DRIVERS DO YOU WANT STEADY EARNINGS OF $12,MO PER YEAR AS SLEEPER CAB OPERATPR7 rlence. Contact: T r i r. all Season .truck dr , Toledo, -------- If lobs available In ado, Ohio. Equal Opportunity Employer RETIREE, PART TIME, several CAR ATTENDANT, ... fringe b—t Green, Sales .. Pontlac-Bulck, R< Call Managar, fochester. a NEED 10; YOUNG MEN For outside Order Dept., $142.50 per week to start Must bq 3. Must be able to start lm-mediately For Interview call Mr. Raymar: 332-3826 OR 332-3639 BEFORE 2 ~ “ NEEDED AT ONCE 2 Collision Men with axparlanca to till our staff, we have moved Into our bigger and better facilities, with ell dealer fringe benefits. See Mr. Bob Hetellon, at— Matthews- Hargreaves ----CE ST ATI No experience older, si 05 per V.PnMIEPNRPI Beardsley, Beverly Hills Service Center, Birmingham, 447-2124._ SHEET METALWORKERS Precision, chassis 'and cabinet manufacturer and toed leal one computer field, now hiring experienced men for let and 2nc shift. Grow with the leader In Iti Industries, 32451 N. Avis, Madlsor Heights. Mich. "___ SERVICE ATTENDANT Gas pumper, lull time. 0112.50 per week. Days. Sundays off. Call Ml 7-0000. _____________ STOCK BOYS. GOOD working con HtlpWanttdMaU____ YOUNG MARRIED MAN, YOUNG MAN TO TRAIN as lei surveyors assistant. Outside yei aroeind work. Non-smoker drinker. $2,40 per hr. 332-9570. 61 Help Wonted Female I.COUNTER WOMAN wanted 1 time, position, neat appear! aggressive. Apply at . i Martlnlzing, Miracle Mile Si ___7 Hdp Wanted Female r full I HOUSEKEEPER \ DAI A t„, . ■ t :----------r—------ 7 Help Wanted Female £m.hT RETIREES D—8 Coffee Shop. 2525 Elizabeth L Rd. i Bowl! enuta's Restaurant, opposite P ac^o General Hospital, apply 2 TELEP.H0NE GIRLS Independence Common .. _ MA 3-9300 IMMEDIATE OPENING, ins Ido you enjoy children? now ‘•j you can keep house and H EARN money TOOI Drive a n Bloomfield Hills school, b u s . HHUI Ior „ 1 d^'^k^x^feV/pey Vind5| FEASTS H SS?lo-S^iIMMEDiAT^OPENING „ *DEVON GABLES Apply I Sales Personnel 71 Help Wanted Female WOMAN WITH CAR, companion, ;n housekeeper for elderly woman, p.| live In. Ph. 343-7420._ at j.WOMAN for kitchen woricTTto Y*> »,i In. FE 4-7082*,,*ry‘ J*Ck ’ Dr,v*’ _ | WANTED NURSES AIDES, Will I H#m*’ J WAITRESS WANTED" FOR til time employment; Apply In person only. 1 1"- Restaurant. Keego Harbor, I, apply!$75 TO START, 5 days. 9 to 5, oi I. Steady o Lasher, Birmingham. now nit necessary. We have our training program. Over. Two drad Million Dollars In lie...... throughout the state. The only non- MECHANIC AND ME CH. . helpers needed. Best wages and 631 Oakland Ava. good working conditions. Apply to ---ivKFS GILL at 900 Oakland Ava. niukicis note REAL ESTATE CAREER A SPECIAL OPPORTUNITY -tor man whp want to build ar estate for themselves. Instead ol otter complete training, liberal commissions, draws, and an opportunity to partlcipata In our INVESTMENT PROGRAM. FOR PERSONAL INTERVIEW - CALL MR. GILBERT AT 1-LI RETIRED MAN, part time for stock work. Fingers at the Mall, 482-0411. RECENT HIGH SCHOOL graduate . In Pontiac area wanted for position Sporting Goods Salesman Full time opening for man with sporting goods knowledge whose strong Interest Is In hunting and flailing. Fay commensurate •••’“-background and experience. Purchase discount Paid vacation-holidays Insurance-pension prograi Hudson's PonUciG JMcill bOLANDnvibDE L~"mak«r,mu5t have lay-out experience, fringe benefits and excellent working conditions. Write Pontiac Press or9hshlrt5.Ch^larMLonn,,L«Aa*hand! HA?*5-.T2*no f 81-50 p end ref. 62M199.________________I 1 COOK. PRisTIGE restaurant.I Top wages. Fringe benefits. Closed Sundays and Holidays. Apply I Bloomfield Canopy. 626-1567. ALL AROUND PRI8SEI perlenced or will train, around work or part time. EM 3- 466}. ' j—r _____________ __ ASA?^®kY „_anc!, control ---MILLER SHOES HAS P0SI-l„ to8niONS OPEN FOR THE NEW irtunlty for also Blue Cross fin _ Maple, Birmingham. Ml 6-61BB. DRILL' AND MILL7 operator, ■MgfHI - ^ssary. excellent ...r m qualified applies ___ Pontiac Press Box C-24. DEPENDABLE, “RELIABLE, E | sitter In my home, 2 pre-sc boys, 5 days. 627^797._ DRUG AND COSMETIC clerk, jttjj ■ part time, “ ■ SALON AT TROY S0MMER-iSET MALL, EXCELLENT 0P-i. P0RTUNITY, >. SHOE SALE5. CASHIERS, Help Wanted M. or F. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR 1 ■UL-I- TIME PERMANENT POSI- AMBULANCE PFRSONNF1 NEI TION IN FOI LOWING AREAS: ! ED. drivers, 21 nr over, q Women's Apparel ; ™!>''rln%nrjcorvJiiMJ,,*n?*nc?- " Children's Dispatchers leme"e. IB°or over' Home Decorative *!>Xb»fb.,vp%ene,?e,i*c'imb.na- Men'S m?"tWb? maaoJSr rhi’reTer" EXPERIENCED PREFERRED I PHnn. ,.n. _ K1BBRATl BENEFITS AND GOOD Coma in and talk ll for an appointment. Call ,j Benton, 444-1400. Country Drugs,P4500 JeMTCI KLVrl.n^NCH„n,v0PE?^?«7, Rd. Apply 5 7 4 6* - .. =NEF1f„ IPRH Si working Conditions. JACOBSON'S i 644-6900 136 W. MAPLE BIRMINGHAM! " SECREfARY REAL ESTATE ATTENTION HOUSEWIVES Sell toys, gifts, now for "SANDRA PARTIES" —Over 70 per cant Amerlct made toys —Delivery by United Parcel. —Bags Included with orders. —Hostess, up to 15 per cent p SHOP AND COMPARE! CALL BETH WEBER 332-5377 pr _ 482-1774 A RELIABLE mother with 1 o Call children to care for nth old boy, 3 days weakly, hrs. dally). Mutt have lanced yard! and no pats. Desire location between Pontiac and Bloomfield! Dining Room Waitress DAY OR NIGHT SHIFT s^ paid Blue assistant Supervisors, ch office of Dempsey h Service._ KEYPUNCH OPERATORS BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED II Rh Positive 87.59 ll RH Net, with positive factors , 87 50 A-neg., B-neg„ AB-neg. $10 O-ntg. $121 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER in Pontiac fe 4-9947 1342 Wide Track Dr., W. Mon., Fri. 9-4 JF- Tuts., Wed., Thurs. 19-5_ APPLICATIONS ARE NOW being taken tor full and part-time help* apply in person after 3, Pontiac _ Drive-In Theater. COOLEY LANES, fall I a a'gfu a ’rFence preferred. ( JOYS AND GIFT PARTY PLAN Union Lake — Kelly 'Girl 1 ot Kelly Servicei Telephone 1 (203) 473-3455. ’ handv°man0UCan P|S?'sem?. af,n*r*1 i, Free Blue Cro: 037. i. Reply to Pontiac Press B mounting and balancing car __________ _________ ___________ truck tires. Excellent hrs. ASSISTANT FOR MD, Ponlli benefits, and pay. Apply 45: Taction, laboratory a x p a r l Oakland Ava. Pontiac. i essential, lull tlmi. Send rest Pontiac Press, Box 02. MACHINE OPERATORS and trainees for , •LATHES • MILLS • GRINDERS Lynd Gear Inc. Phone 6514377 361 South Street Rochester, Michigan An equal opportunity employer MATURE MAN WITH knowledge ol tools and Medlem equipment. No drlnkart plaasa. 42 W. Montcalm. MAN WANTED TO work In Store, steady work, good pay. apply In person, Peoples Pish aqd Poultry -Market, 377 s. Saginaw. Pontiac. MEN WANTED EVERY DAY 6 A.M. PART-TIME 21 or over, married and employed,' $50 par week, call 474-0520 between -5 aito 7 only._ PORTER | Part time morninos, many, employe benefits, apply In parson. Robart Hall Clothai, 3 76 0 Rochtster Rd., Troy. J“ PRODUCTION - KELLY LABOR 2117 Hilton Road Farndalt Mile E. of Woodward at 10 Mila DAILY PAY General Labor-Groundtkaepi Worth outa-Factory-Janltor la REPORT"READY FOR WORK n Iqual I 4 A..M. DAILY MANAGEMENT IN FINANCE Rd., Fontlac, 474-2247. Pontiac OWNER OPERATORS ! Man with tandem tractors capable ol hauling trucks on low body trailers needed. New terminal ||U—- Ntw York, Naw J — can 201- nacassary. Call 334-4939. »8, TELEVISION 'JSSW lellvtrlng to New lersey. Del. and F >59-7522. 459-752 F. j. B0UTELL DRIVEAWAY CO. INC. An Equal Opportunity Employer ROMEO, MICH. OUTDOOR WORK Mah are you Interested permanent, steady, full time MH |Oa — — working .considerable ctllent taka horn-------------------- TECHNICIAN RCA Hat Immediate op a n I n g t tor qualified television technicians. Applicants with electronic schooling military, or vocational may apply. RCA offers an outatandlng benefit program Including company paid hospital, surgical, major medical Insurance plan for you and your family,, paid vacation, plus 9 paid holidays. For Interview visit our branch nlty ol I ii“roly_ BABYSITTER: Confident lady SUPERVISOR —‘"Idgt menu growing, ar ince desire turar. It's a fast company. Expert Tape-Tronlcs, Inc, —,, . _ Royal Oak. S74-2777._____ PLANT ATTENDANT To operate and maintain pressure boiler, and work In gu_ —.-,~mce. Mutt have Detroit, Operator license. Salary parlance. Excellent f... . Contact Personal Dept. General Hospital. Seminole Huron, Fontlac, Mich. Pho POT WASHER, kltchan cleaner. Experienced preferred. Good wages, fringes, paid vacations, meals, uniforms. Apply In parson Orchard Lake Country Club. MOO W. Short Drive, ________________________ PARTS INSPECTOR iparlancad. Small stamp int. Pontiac araa. Phone PART TIME MOBILE washing, weekends, must to drive a truck, 474-2402. FART TIME HELP, custom PLANNING FOR A FUTURE Include your family In your plant. The It lipportant. Join our team and have t Company paid ban anca. Blue Cross. Family Di Apply In parson, dally and or Sal. 9 a.m. ‘til 12 noon. Irttarpace Corp. 70M1 Powell ltd. __________ Romeo______ RETIREE' FOR PORTER WORK Evening Shill Apply tl BIG BOY DRIVE IN ________2490 Dixie Hwy. ROUTE SALESMEN For astabllshad dry cleaning route, opportunity ‘ — - ------ill watch 1 child, S days BABYSITTER WANTEO ti ich at 4191 '. 9-4 MK kl Sundays or holidays, P h vn. betwson 9 and 3. 335-9380. BABY SITflR naadad foi child, Itf Mill. SIS a w BABYSITTER, woman o la more for home 1 i pay, 2 t 482-1261. BABY SITTER, HERRINGTON Hills Intarettsd In sarnlng S15,000-)25,MD a year, call Mr. Rots 731-1010, i Cabinets, 7340! school children, motherless homo, peering a between I a p,-OakH H ....... ^ _____9130 a m. or S and Gratham Cleaners, 405 RETIREES Active man are wanted to ti... .. school crossing guards at various locations and schools In the city of Birmingham. Approximately *— hours por week at S2.50 par A equal opportunity ompl area. CqII 334-5112.' BABYSITTER IN MY homo, 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. 474-3744.____ BABY UTTER NEEDED OFF Walton noor Oakland Community CoHoge. Call alter 4 p.m. 373-0045. BABY SITTER, FOR young couple, some on# who llkot children, live out. Crescent Laka area. FE 2-4792! Highland Rd„ Fontlac. I 424-0012 or 424-2133.____ WANTED AGGRESSIVE j®*BY sjTTER'lyWED. M.tu NEAT APPEARING YOUNG homo -lnbWalled Lake area. children, end will be noidad Is MEN I than 30 hours por weak. 424-5345. I ho era' Interested In a career and, BABYSITTER NEEDED days. In. ib, paid training for man out of my homo. Fontlac Moto — —" ''4-4101, Mr. ■ ay - WANTED: Pfoductloh welders and laborers. 3975 M-15. across from Clarkston Equipment, _ WAN+ID COUNTfR help, men or woman, experienced necessary, do not apply uniats you art ax-parlencad, good wages and benefits, Hoffman's Oakland Packing, 524 N. Parry. WANTED; AUTO PARTS Clark, —‘ be experienced In sailing naw rebuilt parts tor all cars. Apply Hollarback Auto Farts, 271 $10,800 to $18,000 COLLEGE GRADUATE TO REPRESENT STARTING INCOME up to $10,8M, $14,000 (■*■*--—ii ....... Ill,M0 In Income. $430 MILLION In asiels. 72 years I OPENINGS FOR: • JOURNEY-TOOLMAKERS • JIG AND FIXTURE ; BUILDERS • BORING MILL •VERTICAL AND V HORIZONTAL MILLS • LATHE AND PLANER HANDS ' '• PIPEFITTERS • EXPERIENCED BENCH HANDS •WELDERS AND WELDER FITTERS 56 Hour Wiik Long Ranga Program USI-Artco, Inc. MACHINE AND TOOL DIV. SUBSIDIARY OF US INDUSTRIES, INC. 3020 INDIANWOOD RD. . LAKE ORION PHONE 6934388 advancing our i____ _____ pit are ludged by the cerr may keep, Companies are |i by the people they keep." INTERVIEWS Will be halt Southfield. Call Mr. Gaunt. 353-8903 Baldwin Ava. Ph. 3M-4054. Skuttla Mfg. Co., ailed? Cell FE s- N 45 to 55 years ... irk. Day and avanlng snins. nppiy after 4 p.m. Big Bey Restaurant, 3490 Dixie Hwy. WANTED — part or full time talesman to sell cemetery monuments and markers In your area for monument dept, ot Sears Roebuck and Co. Write or call. Mr. Wolf son, Monument. Dept., of the Grand River Store at 10750 Grand Rlvar, Detroit. Ph. 933-33M, WANTED TRUCK MECHANICS I Gas or diesel. Liberal pay, insurance furnished, retirement and full benefits. See Mr. Coe, 8 a.m. to 4t30 p.m. Monday thru Friday. GMC Truck Center Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 seal Saloon. 3044 Orchard Laka Rd., Keego Harbor, Short hrs. no exp, necessary. SiiLINE FASHIONS naedi thrtt — stylists • yfi -------------- 474-0727 «r 474-1 BAKERY CLERK - Monday BakaVy, H7S B’aldfln Pjjmiac'I iV*^ 6 * Friday^- -^De* ft*'^^J?i~b~MAWUpYe. Bakery 3337 Auburn Rd. Auburn| lS|S|I txperlance and Friday ‘ J V8PRP8IVI nagotlabTa.*Submit BARMAID AND w time, night ........ H!flhland*Rd!*V(M-MI>^n<1*' 4li>>| SS^DI^wTTw^ JACOBSONS Union Lake.^343-9449, 42®*"°"' *"\ " nfom? •eoivFVnLLDl™n,*»ft«r'V E^LOTmENT—COUNSELOR : ‘ ‘ LanJf a?}\trJ\ vou have the ability and desire I Huron L***wooa L"n"‘ 3121 w,| work wHh ^ople ^and have had SERVICE STATION Attandant*. independent Oil Co. naida full time man. Wa have a hoapitilizatlon plan, paid vacation, a retirement program and wa pay weakly J No axparlanca nacassary, prater local man, married with good credit reference, over 25 years ot aga. Sand resume to Fontlac Press, Box ... ... company btnffHl paid, while learning to be a loan office manager, with t Contact Mr, Lohn.,.., . Equal Opportunity employer SURFACE GRINDER HANDS ... progressive dies. Steady M hour weak. All frlngei. 3244523. SINGLE MAN FOR general care" horses and stables, modern living Miartera available, Rad Bob Farms, 1955 Ray Rd., Oxford. 420-1793 bit. 4 p.m., after 4. 421-3772. ifbtfK‘ iov PART tlmo. Apply 9-5 Singer Co. Fontlac Mall.______ SERVICE STATION! fulT time, Birmingham araa. call ai, 442- 1315. ............... SHOP WORK,— II yaars~an«rovar, mechanically -1 mm •- Electric, 520 3. Saginaw, P YOUNG VETERAN, gat government recant veterans. You mutt be II 24, have a mature mind, and personality which Is pleasant girls. Ca|1 Mr. Sherman betwi to a.m. and 3 p.m. 542-1153 or I 1734. YOUNG SALESMAN TO WORK floor covering store, no ox peris: needed — wa will train. Dap dable for full lima. THE FLOC.. SHOP, 2255 ELIZABETH LAKE Pohtiac Press Want Ads For Action IUST CALL 334-4981 6 Help Wanted Male METER READERS % ' High school graduate* who likes to work outdoors. Uniforms fumishtd, full timo employment, paid hospitalization, lift insurance, paid sick leave and vacation. Starting rate $3.46 per hour. Apply Tuesday & Wednesday 9 to 11 a.m. or 1 to 4 p.m. Room. 103 1030 Feat^ierstone Road An Equal Oppertunl : A FULL TIME wife ai a Queens-way EXECUTIVE OFFICE ASSISTANT TO Top Management Typing and shorthand required. Must also have knowledge of and ability to handle balance sheets, cost reports and assist comptroller in other phases of accounting. Generous benefit program, Good salary. Best of working conditions. Please send detailed resume for prompt appointment to PONTIAC PRESS BOX C-14 Woodward-Square Lk. Rd. are 444-i127. DAILY SITTER IN our home. 7: to 4, own transportation. Uni: Laka area, 343-5117. DENTAL RECEPTIONIST Experienced. Large practice, noon to 1 p.m., 4 days weak, a.m. through 4 p.m. Sat. Ex salary. 335-4144. 333-7987 I Opportunity Empl I babysitter. Cell at Telegraph, 334-2444 exl.J45. MAID -WANTED FOR" motel"? Days or nights. Call 373-0572. MEDICAL" OFFICE Assistant; tlaf, 35 hr. week, InleclTon, ro< lah . typing. FE 5-782I. MIDDLE-AGED WOMAN wen various duties In private hur Phone 794-3440 for Interview. MOTEL MAID OVER 25, guaranteed Income plus and $250 per month. Call in, bonus, hospitalization. Gary Partridge 10S0 W I ire ages 21-55 and ere Pontiac Phone 481-2111. 11 |nMVr R OM,*73H 010 5,000, 6 I Sh^ ASHJf R' » ov, needs"” MATURE benefits, S t *7* % Restaurant, 5395 Dixie [jDiSHWASHBR. Mcin“ ST ENOS' Birir . AMERICAN GIRL sutlne 647-3055 775 S. Adams. WAITRESSES No “ex id for necessary. Apply 575 S. club. Birmingham MODEL-SALESGIRL , Experienced in retailing, latest fashion in womens hair wear. Call! Debbie Americana Wig Company 5905 Dixie Hwy. |-----"anca Commons A 3-9300 :: Waitresses! HUDSON'S PONTIAC ROOM Has full time openings wll employee ban at >ATA P R O C E S 8 Tw G PROGRAMMER Salary open. Graduation from college with additional training in Data Processing. Preferably soma experience in -■'i-----'ng and system work on 360. Card System, For Pontiac Press the LB Box C>Sf Pontiac,. MOTEL DESK CLERK 4>ply IS01 S. Telegraph. HOLIDAY INN Apply In peraon 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Employment Office Hudson's Pontiac Mall marine. 2897 Or at ter 4 p.m,__ NURSES, RTnT”an for afternoon am ‘ 8-0345. NORTHLAND AREA wr hwr"w sTwol l"flrmUneed!’qui'** ^.SIRES A retired' enelits. Call N ng,'o'iJectorM'?I WANTED: PI " i weekend! oft. 442-2144. Dishwashers Excellent wages, avanlng ihlft, 5 or 4 p.m,-2 a.m. Full or part time work available. Apply In you learn. We have. 8* otflceL -HoS salespeople who can't bt wrong. Call today, MILLER BROS. REALTY 333-7156 women! MOTEL MAID work, 81.40 end engineering fled typists, slvnugrepners, secretaries lor work ol a week or more. P e r m a ? n t possibilities. Interesting reacurrlng assignments In a pleasant atmosphart. For appointment caH 342-3343.____ 'Openings’ For counter girls, chockors, baggers, dry cleaning, and shirt department. Apply between 8:00 and 9:30 a.m. or S and 4 p.m. Gresham Cleaners, 405 Oakland Ave. OLDER WOMAN TO care for two! Mail -iy home. 10:30 p.m.i------------------ i. Own 1. 333-7407. Call OFFICE General Clerical Office Machine Operators and cooking, I -- — -------1 and toma ____FE 2-9762 aft, 4 p.m. WAITRESSES—PART or full time evening. Wilkins Restaurant and1 Cocktail Lounge, 4105 Orchard Lake Rd. 6AA 6-9314. WAITRESS,' Full tlmo, h I g h t • . Harbor Bar. 682-0320. WANT TEMPORARY WORK? CaU Manpower____ ______332-8386 WAITRESS* TO WORK lunch hour*, ‘ 2. Apply Club Rocheeter. 806 Rochester._____ WAITRESS lime. SI .70 per hour. Pleasant ng conditions. Uniforms and ...... companv bet. 9:3n •■in. ra n a.m, i:ov p.m. to 4:30 _ P-m. Downtown Kresgo's. WOMAN )• AND OVER to wo benefits. Apply In STATISTICS CLERK 05 • -To till currant Detroit area vacancies. Salary $494 to $59/ monthly. All Michigan civil Service benefits. Including an outstanding atata contributory Insurance program! excollen! . retirement plan, longevity bonus, unllmlied opportunities tor personal advancement, 4nd liberal vacation and alck wance. plus aecla) REQUIREMENTS: : of figure compilation :h Included the use of an machine ar otflca. rsftie bonu* to Hart. Apply ».m. Sterling Building $.v., iv w. Huron. Connolly Na-tlopaI Building, Room 223. WAITRESS WANTED experienced preferred, also needed part tima waitress to work banquets. Apply PERMANENT FULL TIME OPENING FOR M AT U “ -PERIENCED PERSOt LIBERAL BENEFITS. DBSC 644-6900 i 9B....... HU PiL Snelling .whw., r\ .vvm.., w.w^, ....d Snelling. Call Bob Scott, 334- Richardson Rd., Walled Lake. 963- 7471, for appointment. 7131. WAITRESSES Employet discounts Paid vacations 7 paid holidays employed, $50 per woek, cell 474-1 MM between 5 and 7 only. I p hoto'graphers ASSI ST ANT, 1 . .rartunity In studio photographic i ■Apply In person. . S. KRES6E CO. PONTIAC MALL See Mr. Fisher 9:30-5 WOMAN Wc I manicurist. 343-1400 c BEAUTY OPERATORS and packaging shirts. ______ Albert's Colltures. All locations. Laundry, 222 E. Plkfe. FE 4-1450. ■ * m* EXPERIENCED WAITRESS wanted. 01.50 par hour. Pa|d vacation. Paul's Hamburger. 332 0. Tale- . graph Rd. _____ EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES,, full 1 time, Mitch's Tavarr — J BEAUTICIAN lalary plus commission. Good clientele. 474-11017 BEAUTICIAN, G U A R A N T E wage, SO, SS, 40 par cent cl... mission, group Blue Cross-Blue 3529270" CHILD CARE, LIGHT housekaaplr evenings. Motherless homo. Call t 1 p.m.3MNi2t. DDK AND WAITRESS, full or eai. tlmo. Apply In parson. Joe's Spaghetti House, 1031 W, Huron. CURB GIRL For day and night shift. Apply In parson only. Blue Star restaurant, corner of^ Opdyks end Fontlac Rd. Clerk-Typists Ings for clark-tsf!45 w.p.m. typ- ■PM with at Ing. Must ba r yrs. of aga. MMPPmilllipqR Admitting, Laboratory and Medical Records. Min. starting salary 12.21 per hr. EXPERIENCED SECRETARY With -■ jo w.p.m. typing, erred but not noco i helpful. Musi I ivvbi yrs. ol age or older, mir starting salary at $2.41 par hr. CONTACT PERSONNEL DEPT. Pontiac Ostoopathic Hoipital 50 N. Perry St., Fontlac, Mich t 35S-727l, Exl. 242 Cashier-Hostess WAITRESSES KITCHEN HELP Now filling lull time or part tin positions, no axparlanca nacassai wa will train. Apply Biases, n W. Maple, Tray,_____ COOK—EXPERIENCED, references, commute or live in. 354-2031. COUNTER GIRL. APPLY In parson. Flash Cleaners. 339 W. Huron. FULL TIME office girl. Rai Wig Salon. 4444 W. Walton FULL tlME Housekeeper, cook and Nurse Aldas. Call tor appointment bat. 1:30 a.m. and 3 p.m. 451-4422. GENER'AL KITCHEN WORK days. 9-5. No weekends. Apply Club Rochester. 206 Main. Rocntster. GIRL WANTED FOR mold desk work. Cell 373-0572. SR ILL AND" SHORT' ORDER "cook, Devs. Salary open. Apply Huron, Colin Shop. 2525 Elizabeth I ornlngs prof on, 2719 N. w 1375 Baldwin, needs waltrassas ai grill help. Full or pari time, c bet. 1:30 and 10 a.m. FE 5-44 _ Evas. 7:30 to 9:80 P.m. FE 2-0291 PARt TIME secretary-typist" Birmingham law office, hrs. I $2.50 hr., 442-1100. PART flME DRIVER Wanted picking up and delivering cleaning, mornlr— —*------------- early attar----- I FE 2-0505, ______ PRESSER WANTED FOR top quality dry cleaning plant, paid vacatton, paid holidays ar" ' ------ call Ay. c—P ava. Roccos, st7i Dixie Hwy. apply 5 to 3._ RELIABLE BABYSITfER wanted days, 5:30 a.m. til 3:30 pjm. Mon. thru Frl. Vicinity of Webster __School,J?E 2-0037. _ RECEPTIONIST assistant.' for hoar-' - • ■ loglst, r— — H H ind bool 21 to 35. attractive. Lett And tarly evening hours. 9 AM to 11:30 AM and 8 of coltego hours in ______________ statistics, s p o e I • amlnation to bt given on October 4, 1949, PERSONS WHO TOOK THIS STATISTICS CLERK EXAMINATION ON MAY 10, 1949, NOT ELIGIBLE. For application contact the Detroit Office, Michigan Civil Je'ylca, 1401 Cadillac Squara Building, Detroit, Michigan 48224, phone 222-2717, or your nearest Michigan Employ-m«nl Security Commission Office. Applications must ba .....Mf by the MWjji I opportunity Inlbrmitlori II 313-944-4359 day or night, i equal opportunity PHYSICAL THERAPIST “ li Physical Therapy Inr 205-b6d progressiva patient Mich. Excellent facilities, so miiPPPPPPiPII cities ol Ann Arobr and Lansing. Si mid----lionet from cultural nortunity provide Impatient, out-Mllont, home care and rahablllla-lion service to general hospital and s n$w Extended Cara facility. Excellent benefit program salary McPHBRSON COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTER HOWELL, MICH. SJ7-544-UI0 Salts Help Male-Female 8-A Sales Help Male-Female 8-A Ing alt light ti I 1113. typing and bookkeeping, 482-j __nee snop. nzs Eiizapetni ■■■»■ ....... . Latt» _______________________________REAL ESTATE OFFICE sacralary".' least 20 GAS STATION ATTENDANTS' *^ust know shorthand and general li.M. u —— —■ 2nd shift, apply In «<"■>!• Call or soe Ward or: - I ... . .. . Garv Partrlrtn. P.rlrlHn. D parson. Square d Gary ... Estate, 1 — 411-2111’, graph. Standard Station. Hostess • Cashier . „„„ tt r „ , eels furnished. Ap- PERIENCED AIDES'. The t- COUNSELOR, ell you need Is ability to work with the public. Call Angle Book, SM-WW. CasHiIr an_6 666KKiii»ER. PE IMilH CASHIERS: MUST BE IS or ovai lull or part tlma, apply I parson—Arnolds Drugs, 2540 t In person only, between 2:30-41 TED'S PONTIAC MALL ffcWsV*1VrP¥* and baby elttar to live In, 427-3938. HOUSEKEEPER, WALLED l>Kr;. ’o^hre. p.m., S3b, must drive, 424- HELP'liVANTEb DAYS PULL OR PART TIME MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY ' APPLY IN PERSON CHAMPS 1420 W. MAPLE TROY, MICHIGAN HOSTESS: EXPERIENCE preferred, lor lunches plus weekend evenings. Apply Old Mill Tavern 583$ Dixie COUNTER tLERK-assamblar. a» ^srlenced. Flash Cleaners, 129 W, *AL®‘^nKr-”J«hn T" »■ 7940 Cooley Lake Rd. CURB GIRLS Night shin. Jack's Drive In. 22 WV Montcalm. CSBk’T HIlpIH wanted, ox-aarianea not ttacessary, wa will train, werklmi hrs., 12 noon to It p.m. Blue Cross furnished, call Ml Mill. 475 E. Maple, Blrm- tha bed sides, If you went to be part of progressive, patient, cei and anloy an excellent cor ponsellon and henaflt prograr plaasa call Janal Malonson. Rl Director of Nursing, McPhersi Community Health Canter, Howe Michigan. M44-1410. ricepWonist Like meeting people? Attractlv oftlct work. Typing proltrrod.. train. Ph. 4I2-M10, 3711 Elizabeth! Laka Road. RECEPtlONIST — PERSONNEL office, -------- ------- — reliable- WOMAN for housework, 335-1479.' MLis OIRL beiwaon ill-257 tor Pontiac araa, —' ■ mat Corp. 2734450, for Carl Wood Homemakers •! JS» Your skills at a homamai pay, Grai presently accepting applications for > our part tlma tailing schedules. If J vou ara available days ar avanlngs coma In and dltcuss a selling1 petition With us. Apply fn parson 10 a.m. to 4 p.nr. Employment Office Hudson's | Pontiac Mall s, 405 Oakland Av<__ STOP READ THIS TOY CHEST otters antra bonuses for August, plus opportunity to earn a wiglet, SHOW, GUARANTEED TOYS. Earn 20 par cant plus, no delivery-----1 lections. Car? and phone <82-045$ or 343-2121. SECRETARY tor equlpmtn pany. Light bookkeeping and typing. Neiihorthand. Call 152-3S3S tor SA L7AD"PAi!fT(rY”Gi *U"2" p jn. ill 11 10 p.rn. shift, axpsrlenced preferred. good Wages, paid vacations, uniforms, meals, pleasant working conditions, apply In p a r a a n Orchard Lake Country Club. ENROLL NOW CAREER OPPORTUNITY ■ IN REAL ESTATE" BATEMAN REALTY CO. ANNOUNCES THE ENROLLMENT OF ITS 1969 FALL "TRAINING COURSE FOR THE BEGINNING REAL ESTATE SALESMAN." Fundamental Salesmanship Preparation for Board Exams Real Estate Law Appraising J THE COURSE WILL RUN FOR A PERIOD OF 4 WEEKS. CLASSES WILL BE HELD AT BATEMAN REALTY C0.f 377 S. TELEGRAPH, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK FROM 7 TO 9 P.M. APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE AT THE FOLLOWING OFFICESt UNION LAKE 8175 COMMERCE RD. 338-7161 ROCHESTER 730 'ROCHESTER RD. PONTIAC 377 S. TELEGRAPH CLARKSTON 6573 DIXIE HWY. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 1989 For Want Adi Dial 3344981 I Wonted M. or 9. I Help Wanted M. or F. I F M. or P. Club. II Mil# und Haggerty Rd. ' Brenflei, 646-7M9. Soles Help Mole-Female 8-A Sales Help Male-Female t Ingham. ... -1 ,839._ , g.A CHILDLESS dSUWX < Help Wanted M, or 1, * EMPLOYMENT AVAILABLE -ply it Seminal* P1' Horn*, nr - —- - - CLASSES REAL ESTATE Courses Covered Company Introduction Appraising Salesmanship Sales Tools & Aids Financing Listings Preparation for State Examination ROYER REALTY, INC. 823 $. Lapeer Road t 628-2548 FICB: Aik for Mr. Divloon »r Mr. PoquQtt# io livfttock* mutt bt familiar w gag *“‘fa n_.. and car fun : C-3, Pontiac Prati. I XTl nTI'N t'f'D~ PftAPirv taiasparson. good ulery, apply Irving K*y Draperies, 217 N. Woodward Ave.. Blrm.. 444-52S0. IMMEDIATE OPENING "tor full or p«rl lime cathlar. Mutt work ■attends. Apply between i-> p.m, Blue Sky Drlvem Thaalra. Opdyk*. ________111 Orchard Lake Av*. JANlfOR AND KITCHEN help. No experience neceseary. Top wages. Perfect lob for retire*! or couple. Apply bloomfleld-. Canopy. ISM Orchard Lake Rd. 624-1517. Help Wanted M. or F. RBSSER, I Cleenere, 13 LIMOUSINE DRIVERS ■ m*|* or female, must be good driver* and over 15. Steady work, gead pay. PE 2*141. __________ MALfe AND FEMALE k I tchei workeri and dishwashers. Mower. Johnsons mso Dixie Hwy., Drsytoi r modern plant. Year jiili'Oi Sales Help Male-Female 8-ASales Help Male-Female 8-A INDUSTRIAL SALES CAREER OPPORTUNITY PONTIAC AREA ' * Hava lold Industr ability ★ Want to |oln an aggratslva company that racognli achlevamant. Salary. Exports* allowanoa. PROGRAMMER-ANALYST CITY OP PONTIAC N WANTED Ail experienced analyst soma RtP.O. programming. Ta ■ 1m-piemenl a management Information lyitam. salary 111,2m-(ll^SI with axe. fringe banaflte. •naek-bar, baby alttar for nL,.. ,. and cocktail waitress, Apply Strike A Spar* Bowling. AiiayT 4M7 w. Maple at Telegraph, Birmingham. WANTED: YOUNG ¥t! O P L E preferably college etudante for the weak of sept, a-sapt. 13, to do an farabh Ik of 1 ....spend*....... and surrounding it In Pontiac ■r.., muat have Interviewing “ a a. . -na - in sept, I at 1:1 Ate*. Michigar . Commission, HI an appointment IM-etti, WoODWdfetfitfG ftXhT, day shift. wtich ltd, Wittad Lak*. Sales Help Male-Famale 8-A Calling All Salespeoplelll YORK la on trw lockout tor eon adantioua saif-starters with outgoing personalities. If you maet this datcrlpllon, YOU ARE WANTED11I furnished alter 1 I generous fringe IF YOU QUALIFY, PLEASE SEND RESUME TO PONTIAC PRESS BOX C 39 An Equal Opportunity* Employer SS »• SERVICE DIRECTORY Air Ceoditlening ten Carpentry WHY DO IT YOURSELF when Allen mt PATTERSON ALUM. SIDING CO. free Estimates 1 . 3734726 SIDING ALUM. VINYL AND ASBESTOS AWNING-PATIOS SCREENED-IN OR ,l\SS ENCLOSED EAVES TROUGHING Continued Seamless aavestrogghlnu. We Bring Peclory 1e You. PAST SERVICE - QUALITY WORK - TERMS CALL NOW — DAY . O R NIOHT All-2500 TERMS DiAL1R—ASK FOR BOB OR R BO Antenna Service IIRCHITT A SON ANTBNNA Serv- INSTALLATION WORK GUARANteea WINTERIZE NOW -CALL 0S2 S221 1-A, Auburn Heights Paving Tennle courts, perking loti, drive ways, guaranteed. FEIAtM, FB Milt. __________ ' A. JAY' ASPHALT . DRIVEWAY SPECIALISTS, FREB ESTIMATES. Pi 1-4SI0. A A-A ASPHALT CO. Free estimate. PE 5-5320. ___ AADCO ASPHALT' raving Co., licensed and Insured. Free aetlmatlon__________112-4631 A G. Kosiba Asphalt New driveways, parking loll, resurfacing worn out earner* gjd asphalt. License, bonded, a - —esHmeiet. — OR 3-6310 _ OR 1-3776 ASPHALT CURBING Driveways* parking loti. Raiidantlal'Commarclal A. O. Koilba Construction fTMltO or 673-37/6 AAPHAlf FaMKI NO locatlo alnc Construction can astimatat for ntw coni modarnliatlon. 5344501 Carpet Cleaning CARPBTS AND UPHOLSTERY cleaned. For low;rates, 335-4706. STSAAaWAV-OF-*PONY!AC. Carpel end upholstery cleaning. Free' animates. 601-6631. _ Cement Work ALL. TYPet of cement work. 625-MlS. BLOCKS, p68TiRS, end cement. 3344061. lock AtiS CEMENT work. Pon-Hie, 301-1171. CFMFNT WORK OP ell " kinds, nothing too largo or imall. 25 yaan axporlonca, fraa aitlmatai. 421-1372. 6lAlRT"W6llir'fffAT cannol be excelled by Bort Commlnt, »l 2500. COMMERCIAL, "ISbUSTRiAL and reildtnllel brick ond cement work. OU INN'S CONST. CO. iti-wi MlVIWAYir- beeemenls" aiSrioi. orad patios. Oaneral Cement Contractors, 1114016. IASGN; SITfCtfl STONk, slate floor*. No lob too small. 674-1720. iiAWAtLS. DRIVlWAYS. porches, ‘ ^brick patio, frao estimates. Ceramic file DAN'S CERAMIC TILE, lists floors, marbla ill la, Imtall In homai* old ar now. Fraa ait. 474-4341, 423-1301. Construction.,Equipment DOZERS, BACKHOB, LOADER Soles&Rentolt Used Bobcat Loaders Burton Equipment Co. 1776 E. Auburn Rd._____(52-355! •aalar. Ann Arbor Xonitrvction Co. 425-M9K “ DOMINO CONST. CO. 674-3955_ lit iAIlI “ASPHALT-Contraeto'i Fra* estimates. Specialized, peiching and saaiing, drivewai parking Inis. 33(1-1214 or 3344733. , fPECIAL ON ieU Vontlnq;, patching. | guar., 3c eg. ft. 332-5761. __, | * leech Services j1 BEACHES CLEANED SANDED, DOCKS INSTALL STEEL SEA WALLS | Cutler Contracting _, 6SI-03MI Bookkeeping'Service Dressmaking, Tailoring A ALTERATIONS) SUITS, COATS, draws, 335-4707. Mrs. Sebesk* 11 fc RATldNSrALU TYPES.' Kt drttftkM, laafhar coati. 482-9533. Driver1! Training OP DRIVE! ilckup, Drywali CHUCK'S DRYWALL AND 'taping service. New and remodeling, else painting. 399-S4M belore 1:30 and attar 6 P.M^ __ DRY WALL SBkWci7"n*w and -----------------f, 13S-103F Or r Tiling 3930 M-f5, ciafkaton. < Heating A Cooling gas. OIL, Forced air or hoi water. Air conditioning. I a Sales, 612-1101, 674,4141. Landscaping A MERION BLUE SOD, pickup or del. 4643 Starwood. aisjfooo. ■I MERION BLUE sod, laved and delivered. Complete landscaping. Free ast. 612-7192 _ COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, .i.ii.i.. i. reidniag wslls, H. waftman LCK ROOFING CO. WOMACMMIPH.. tea estimates_______pc 1-4543 Sand-Gravel-Dirt A SAND, GRAVEL, Dirt raesonable, 338-1201 or 674-2639, Al DOZING, Tap aell, black dirt, r “id and all graval products. Fra* estimates. 1904. SLUE SOD. on Peel, • yd, delivered, *02- Al'S LAWN MAINfINANCI, Spring and fail clean ups. Cutting, tartllUIng and spraying. 473-3992. COMPLETE UNDSCAPING Sodding, aaadlngi shrubs. Licensed Nursery Man. 4U-7I50. _ EXPERT CAN DSC APir"WO~R_K. REAS. 6024200 CLEM'S______ 674-3601 601-71 CHOICE--SHREDDED blaB< dirt topsoil. Clay topsoil, 6 yds. 110 dal, Aft* doling, FE 4-6S0B. HEAVY CLAY LOAM"To pVol I, doilvarod by S yard loads nr larger. Grading available. J, H, Wellman, landscaping. 373-0666. IcRliNib Klack dirT i peAt DELIVERED, 052-3462. VIBRATED P'rScI'SI, past losdad and dailvarad at Auburn * * Adams, 391-2501 nr 391-2619. Septic Tank Service COMPLETE taPTIC WORK, tower linos. 602-3042, FB 2-1904. TOwnsInd'S SkpTTC-rspaTrT LAWN (PRAYING, tartlllltrs, J killers. Call far f r isles, 625-4019, 674-4449, I .... CRH Spraying._____ _ WHITES CUSTOM lawn cutti firtlllzlng* lawn ipraying clian up. Phont 482 5457 or < 4934.______________________ Lawnmower Service TALBOTT LUMBER Glass servlet, wood or alL.JM Building and Hardwar* lupplltt. W5 Oakland____ ; ' FE 4-4393 Moving. Storage Suipeadedte^ge ARMSTRONG SUSPENDED callings Inslallsd, commercial and ratldt" Mal, tree estimate*. 625-2313._ A - OWENS CORNING Suipandad calling ___William Lennan — 612-2195._ Tree trimming Service A1 CAVANAUGH'* TREE servlc slumps ramovad Ira*. If w* ta~. dawn th* Ira*. Fra* tillm.lt, fully Insured, 1164049.________ BILL'S TREE TRIMMING ANOP Rtmovil. Very law rat*. 6M-1(>43. DON, JIDAS TRER removal. Era* astlmalti, Inturad. MY 1-1>16. OARWer'S TR¥b SERVICE, f rai BOOKKEEPER Becounlant, earl 332-OOI1. _ . um* accounts dajirad, 651-0037. J Savoetreoghlng Beat Repair M & S GUTTER CO. SWAMPED TO THE GUNWALE | LICENSED-BONDED , over the boat? For complete Complete eeveslrcughlng tervlo rellnlshlng wood or fiberglass, call Fra* ast. 673-6S6.. 6734662 *114001. Llmllad storage, pick-upi 1 1 Item to houseful. FR 4-0430 ar FB 4 7631 Flat rata prices ar by hr, SMITH' MOVING c6T^o'ur"movino soaclaljsis. FE 4-4164. Mowing Sarvlct WEED MOWING Vacant lot* and acreage. 607-0336 Plane Tuning Painting and Decorating ....j price. *114001, anytime. i-i “paTntiN'07 Tfxcl work t. raasonabl* prices. 212-5400 alar 4:10 , Electrical Services Building Modernization ADRIAN'S PROMPT Ol*Clrl«.* I service, reasonable rates, *73-1712, I MCCORMICK ELECTRIC......... Residential Wiring-Service I wejsas___________*.__fb **191 arly-lf a ADDITIONS AND ell.relloril, porch . rapglf. Pi M33I.___________ «kWHfll» Wttkk, alurr Excavating I BULLDOZING. Finish Gradlr HHjaa ‘—sms. 674-iti*. f ..Jldorlng, Nlchmohd. A-1 CHAIN LINK fine* Installed or rfMlrtd. 1 wk. Mrv. Fret «it. 338* 0297 Of , 674*3941. CHAIN LINK, and woodlanca. 2 Wk. aarvlca ___________ 33M7M .. , .. „. „Ti NG W_™„ GUARANTEED. Fra* astlmalas 55-0620.__________ _ A-l PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING THOMPSON_________ 371-1021 GEORGE FRERICKS Interior and exterior painting, reasonable. Prat estimates, work guaranteed, 17 yrs. axp. Ca" anytime. 602-5763._ dliALITY WORK ASSURED:' Pa'lni-Papering: Wall WOOhlngi Plastering Service A-l Building Results : omnuter? — Sura wa'vt got I ill adds up to rasuii* — let Heckall Fit you to a new home, EM 3-6703 tVF YOU BEEN Ihlnklno about BBR iddmg • room or ramedollng your I 01701. i*seme.it? Ai* vou worrltd oboulj|0LtB6fifir,; tiACKHGE WORK, 1-A PLASTERING, NEW WORK 1 to ao fno iab prop-1 hesemanl, grading. 612-3062, FE a-1 patching, Irw astlmalas. 36.1-S607. way only and lhat is - ®4l. . ______ _____1 , PLASTER AePAIRsT"frta astlmale, the correct wav CLARKSTON Excavating Company call any lima. 332-2313. John 'vnorta#*, Bldrs. Ine spaolallring In grading, land* ---- 7i’0 M>I* Xwv fiarkston clearing, slump ramaval, Plumbina 8. Mon-r.i »s Sal 103 driveways and septic tank fields. flumping • 623-2*76 Free gsl. Work guarantied. *IS- R¥Ml~M'AihitENiiifcl WTCTf. —----------------------------------r- Matt averythlng. *12-305* _ Ponds, lOKES and Canals MODERNIZATION - AddUloni of1 Dug or claanad. 62MJ30, 0794B13. _•« ™ IS." G " klsehtardt dxeaVatlno <*n. tractor, lakaa. pends, bulidt Carpentry ! i*nd ciaarmg. nf- “ CON DR A PLUMBING 1 O At PLUMBING 0. H George Do It. 6734377. homt rmlr and matnfSnancd. 363 1021. y, carpenYAV INTERIOR FINISH, kitchens panel-! fleers ratlnlsliad, 6274775. , '"Gf fm axfartanca, Ff 2-1B5. john YaYK*. TOiT CARPENTRY AND CEMENT wark! finishing. yr*. *| V------------------------------ 11 floors saflnwM. 152-69 LIST YOIM BUSINESS ^«p8ERVICE HEBfT 'heatTn5Tl*i Restaurants PIXIE AT 26 hra. Hat tar, ahlngli*. repairs. We will not be undersold R. DUTTON Ei H725 HbWN ROOMING. W*~t^Ktails* in rootlng-guttor work. It years par lane*. HM7S1. ROBERT PRICE Raotlito. hgt”HTr and thlngiat, fra* aslimatos, 134 i rook, , ..... 1824157. DENTAL RECEPTlbNIST, train, plaaaant parson to bhona, mak* appointments. «. edema •_________6474510 ig. guar "RODFl ING, fra* animates, In ahlnglei and roll JOB TOO SMALL. ELECTRONICS TECH Skill* learned In service or tact echool? Employers are looking toi you. Good day and location, calls INTERNATiONAl. PERSONNEL i every evening Tues. th and all day Sat. Royal Oak _ 576-1576 LIKE HORSES? Unusual opportunity, will 411-1100 Tree Trli...„» 001 Fully Insurae-Fraa astlmatao 624-4465, Walltd LlkO A-1 LIGHT MOVING, TRASH houlad ““-nabl*. F| 4-1331. Hauling FE 5-42! A-1 LIGHT TRUCKING oFanylci Odd Jobs, FE 6-M47. -1 LIGHT ft A lfL I N R EASON ABLE RATES 331-1266. hauling kVBeAOB'r~^HP COn* Urudlon clsan-up. 6114043. _ LIGHT ^HAULING, reawniBl* price, HAULiho Ailb‘'R0SkjiH. Mi your prlca. Anvtlme. FE 04091. LIGHT hauling, 'basements garegotcleanod. 676.1141._ LIGHT AND HEAVY' TRUCKING rubbish, fill dirt, grading jm gravel and frent4nd loading. *“ * TREE CUTtTnO-^^- ganaral hauling. Raasonabl* raiat. 13S-213I. TRASH, MOVING, CLEANUP. Call after 3:30 p.m. FB 4-0224. Truck Rentui Trucks to Rent W-Ton Pickups I'/a-Ton I TRUCKS — TRACTORS A^«r*.NT Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 125 S. WOODWARD , ACT NOW I Summtr oalo prlcot on chain and sofas rtupholtlared. 3M-1700. fro* astlmatao. UpholsTbri Y Fabrics and work, pick up Walls claanad. ffat.^ME|acll*M twrantooa. iiwt^rpa>\af7 WATER SOFTENER problem? Per MWiirTO.»8W,ntf BUY ALL USED Furaltur* and all unwanted articles. 373-0317. copper," Mass, Aaoiators, starters, and ganlratora. C. Dlx- aon, OR 3-5149. _____ WAfiffeb: BUYING silver calm, l96l and back, can tar latest price quote, 6*2-13*1.______________ Experience I* r... _______ wa will train you fo tarn a rewarding career. Join the Wonted to Rent DISTRIBUTOR—iAdr AAA-l Company oftart protected distributorship. Business established nationally and In area. No financial Invaetmant requlrad. Plv* figure patonllal first year'. Distribute to ratlauranlt. hotels, schools, churches and civic groups. Write full details to: World's finest Chocolttt. Inc., 2521 W. ***■ ** Chicago, ill. 60637. lurale I, LI e-ITWh SALESMAN' This Is your opportunity to gel In on tha ground floor. CMC Real *—> have oponlngs tor 3, will beginners. Terrific pay plan, BEDROOM UNFURN________________ HOME In or noar Pontiac far a Pastor, wit* and 1 grown children, 4714191■___ BLIND "cdUPiE "WISHES to rant ^aua^ can pay up to 1100 par Hava references. Prater1 _____ Haights area. 332-2049. RESlDENfPHYlltlAN OElTRtf ‘ or 3-tad room home, lis-lisi. ROCHkSTkR AREA ~ FAMILY O? 4 needs rental while new horn* is mmhIm-" newt occupancy dbout Estate have openings tor train beginners. Terrific p... r,.,„ hospitalization, monthly bonuses, ample floor tlm* ond parking, draw to qualify. Coll Mr. Kin> wMlY TO RUnT With 0 ti for Interview. 4114370, No ooonti plo_____________ yGung EXECUTIVE, Wl^e^and *■- goraga. Hiding an ■ ____.___, __ora OCt, 1 *5l4519 aitar * p.m. Share Living Quartan Wanted Real Eitate 1346.67. 847-81 MANAGER TRAINEE 21 and up. No axp. nac. 05.40 to start. P* paid. Call: INTHRNATIONAL PERSONNEL MI-1100______10*0 W. Hurt.. 'RSctfpfiONIST 'VoR-niUBURRAN archllorl. S day waak, beautiful Office, (450. PEI PAID, odomijb adomi .'RECEPTIONIST Light typing, a plaaaant personality naMfad for dhf*r*ltl*d work with public contacts. Call: t)INykNAff0NALOTNVa»Ln NlED A RAISE? ......... br th* girl typing akllla. ____10*0 W. Huron SECRETARY ■kins typing •ayvfwnt sslary Must bo mature. NTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 11-1100 I0*( W. Huron SALESMEN HELP I WB NEED YOUI EXPERIENCED AND TRAINEE* Many good lobs naadad to b* tilled. wa have th* lob ordara, now wa need you. Guaranteed salary, Incentive program, car and expanses. Fa* paid. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL loo 3, Woodward, B'ham 64242M saDTs RIT Excellent opportunity ... MB min. Bam while you learn. Good salary and banafits. Fa* pair Call: . INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL Ml-l loo HUB W. Huron TRAFPjd-SUPBRVis6R, direct Co. thorthand, Call: commarca regulations and hauling limits. 111,000. Homo S (dams *6! Initructiens-Scheeli ASSOCIATED TAX SCHOOL State approved lax c a u i qualifies yeu ter. employi....... Associated income - Tax IcQMl, Writ* 221 W. Walton ei'M.rPom tiac. 41053. .kiolklrtR now—^ . .. Fall torm starts Sapt. 0 win* cc— — — :quRtT1 ia balm el ... W TAXATION-COURT REPORTING STENOORAPH (MACH. SH.) Also Rtfrashar Courses Accountlne-Bualnass Math Shorthsnd-Stanaogrsph Taxation-Typing DAY AND iYiNING CLASSES Licensed by Mich. Stole Board of ldUC|)fon MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS 14 ar 14...4* IP 3324W0 "nj| MCARPENTER WORK AT A FAIR PRIORI Additions, family 140ms, kitchen cablnali, gereges. elding, regfing, cement, ate, Lara* or email laiw. DSW CONSTRUTION CO. pit S. 1* E. Huron Si: Painting aa< Peeeratiag ZSI Apqrtmsntt, Furabhed..........V HOUSE PAINTING guaranteed. ------- --- commarcla. •preying. Orvel Gldcumb t Sons, Wanted HousaiiaM Goe^s 29 hevt you? B & B AUCTION 1*9 Dixie Hwy. OR s.2717 WANTlb: R ' ~ ‘ apartment al___ WANTkD cHiST ar uprlghf iraaiar. 2 ROOM AND private t refurnished with prlvato trance and parking. _________________ welcome. All utllltlM turn. Deposit )Ulr*d, 115.2134, rotltad, ANbV"' condition. Phono OR 3-5402. Call 673-2331 Of 474-1316. 4-kOOM^ LOWiR FLAT. 6514174 Sapt. 21th on car* given. I i Lady's h s, S5M2I2. welcome, 037.50 p*f"w**k, tioi C*.ir33B4034* *' ^ ,,ldWl" AVt-APARTMENT . FOR .SjNGLe man, iNTj'l ,■ . ......v, y1 ■ iwdr 5100.C Includes utilities. 625-3M3.___ BEAUTiFUL i BkbRboM, aiactrlc kitchen with washer, and dryer, year-round tncioaod pool, plus cor-porL Call 151-079*. CHILD WELCOME!- LARGE 2 bedroom, unllllas paid. $65 par wk. S1S0 dap. 6*24266._____________ LOVELY APaGtMINT. Suburban setting. Adult couFla, *1*3. 673-7466, ew, l b.EdrMM aMrimgnt. *1*0 per month. Call 3734476. NEWLV DKCOttATEb 1 badfoo apartment tor aulot couple, tag weak, mo a**urBv. ill Stout stT SINGLE MAfi or Couple, no chlldri or pala. PB >4190._____________ Teachers, s raonv wood panalii 1 TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACRE PARCELS, FARMS, BUSl____ PROPERTIES, AND LAND CON- WARREN STOUT, Realtor Opdyk* Rd. „ .WOW* 1650 ... ... urgently nt I* s*l*i Dally Hi I MULTIPLE LilTINO SERVICE ' 1 DAYCASH FOR YOUR HOUSE OR LOT NO COST TO SELL FAST FRIENDLY SERVICE Aaron Mtg. & Invest. Co. ______MBH44 A BETTfeR CASH DfAL aaparrmant. YORK APPRAISALS FREE GUARANTEED SALE 30 DAY LISTING W* guarantee th* aala at your horn* in 20 day*. LAUINGER Any ami OK. Fast aiat-......... commlselon chargad. MR. ARTHUR 39S-790 SflNO,. TRANSFiRRED, n**d"To Ian itnnwaisMly, tor etffi in *r hours, call agent, *74-1121. bWjH BUY FOR small Kama El wood Really. MM610. oisfi FOR YOUR HOME PROMPT, COURTEOUS SERVICE BRIAN REALTY W* (old Your Neighbor's Hem* Multiple Listing Sgrvlc* hays Hi 9 Sunday IS, I Plklf Hwy. 671474 CA'SHI ^ FOR YOUR PROPERTY Idv In move, retire, or load youi . Call, ua tar fast cash LINQUENT i Irouqht UP IS 1 naadad. Agent. 65-- BEHTND" IN PAYMiNTS? I«ga| ••,|1 ——* *--*— Divorce-Foredoiure? 474-0519 Laulnoar 67M16* Q ,MJ|. IN OAK LAND 'MAN — Buyln 473-5613,_______________ KemodILini n*To'; to COUl 674-14 HANDY! Pontiac and surrounding "areas! Will pay all cash. Agent. Ml-0374. i Will Buy Your Houit Anywhere, any condition, i point*, no AMniniSlIoiig CASH NOW MOVE LATER Miller Bros. Realty (SHI W. Huron 333-7156 rWBlTbk WILL. >AV cash I For “*“• aqully today call at*nt> *7*. It McCowan, ______ MM Riviivfin; MV'waMi. bay or woak, maturo, rasponslbl* mother iwi —Pfihw. 67*47*r rtipotu IB -------------- chlldroi _ _____ling Jar^ Mint, asfimtws, gweagg. (TI-toVi. Bl 6 MBW' lil^Ri liaw mats. r*-raol and, vent* Imiaiiad. Dan lav. 1*4- fH , . , ,3-* mm* ■■ diac 334-4^1 rMifiigO>Muriji^lY LIGHT HAULING PuiiHug auB Diieratkif^lB EXPERT PAINTING, rmWanttol and , prlvato entrance, _____ ________ proof, w a * h I n g facilities, must saa to appraclat*. 33*4047 tat. 10 AM4 PM. children, 8J?LitLnfc.‘3ft.W» TEACHER** *PECIAL...~v. ---- -14*dfbom Take front. Sapt,-Jw*. *2|s par month. " *” fireplace,-' niji^'-t»ffi*WT B2-6M1.____________ Rent Hyses. Unfurnlsheil 40 BEDROOM, natural fireplace, carpeting, drapes, full basement. Large lot. l car garage. Sac. dap. Near |.?S by appointment enjy. 673-5757, _______ ROOMS AND BATFl welcome, *37.30 per weak, dep., Inquire at 273 Baldwin Pontiac, Call 336-UM4.________ NICELY FUkNllHBD rooms a"nd FURNISHED r r St. Mike's, *7 **k. Raft. 391-19 baths. Kltohan with *H bullWns. Lara* patio ovarleoka lake. Closa to shopping. Minimum 1 yr. losse. $500 per mo. Call Mr*. Connelly at 6464337 Or — SNYDER KINNEY BENNETT Birmingham Midwest 4-7000 ON~ERIE DRIVE', *275 per mo."Cell for appointment, 6*2-4554. Will b* vacant 15 of Sept. ScH&STER HILL 'dlDtl, 5 bed-rooma, 3'/, bains. d*n and rac. $175 and-dap Riist Leks Coitages NEAR CLARKSTON — nle* lekefront collage, turn, t bedrooms, life baths, utilities Included. Sac, dtp. Sapt. *■ *** Rent JKoome BEAUTIFUL STUDIO *16 GENTLEMAN. CLBAN PoOM, *4 GENTLEMEN SLEEPING ROOM! ROOMS AND BATH. Stove a relrlgarata- *" — ----* Pontiac Mi ' .WitH s t o v e ‘ —TO* In Chrlitlar. • nlc* location ‘ * wk. Will kOOM FOR RENT'. Man. Ctifitalfor* /Hagai, ^ plus, ulllltlas and sac. accept I child, 4I2416Q._____ ROOMS AND bath, adults, OR 1- S714 bat. t and 4.______________ ROOM) 'vIry CLEAN, prator couple or with I older child, 373-4957. ROOM U*PkI! I tadroom, heat •~J water. Sis* sac. dtp. *27.so wk. 70W S. Francis. Pontiac, ■ — and W. of E. Blvd. wtwaan 7 p.m. and t Tal-Huron ___________mrt Tar SLEEPING ROOM, RPIRP8MIP8II. bads, TV, prlvato anlrnnca, near Pontiac Motors. 332-673t, iLEEPlNO ROOMi -MEN-Pop- R!r*T COll (/VWB40 I p.m. M*ti#rl. ____________________ ko6MI. iourtl. 1 ioon-agsif rTT. Benedicts aroo, PE S4019. jillxc, MuuKkN i roan _____i. 331-1760 or MMW. $109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR y n p raced ented oppartunlty—for tamiiiay with laaa than iio.ooo in- weekT719* S.__________ _____ EV1LLE MOTEL, air tondillonad', corpotod, TV. tolophono, maid aarvlca, 160 par waak, Woodward and im Mil*._______ __ oomswitfcgeard 43 , retired elderly man, quint OBuntfy homa,*2Mi50. LA^Ofe cool ROOM near Tai- ---- rlvato antranca, shower i'me n! Sis a- 2 and 3 bedroom 35 min. to downtown Detroit. Open U.liu Sunday 12 to I p.m. — s. For more n,________ APTS. FOR RENT batwtan I I f p.m. Friday I 2nd. at No. * Front drool. AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS 1 ond 2 bedroom, all conveniences, alr-conditloned, all utlllttol Included In rent. No pats. Adulis only, *73415*. BLOOMFIELD MANfffWiST Newly complotad luxury ■partmonts, Hotpolnt aiactrlc appllancaa featured. Carpeting and drape* IncludedModal open dally 10 / IMMEDIAfiT OCCUPANCY aa!ari.ts!*^ COLONIAL VILLAGE N&ww,$i EMBASSY WEST slow* 1- and PMdrgomi, BISS SIM. No POM or ehUdron. call . Schultz, 6744*69, 1 to S p.m. LARGE HOUSj. .3 tadrpoms^SiSQ par manlh, first and last month toil, inquire at 226 S. eraadWBy, ITwwrplwm ..let furflSb* Phone SCENIC HILLVIEW VILLAGE Wlliloma Lake , Rd. t Ittl at M49. Ntw 1. PPFV Iroom apartmanta avail. Octopar . From S1S0 par me. Inciudas ..-it and hot wator. at* attlci apartment No. 166. 361-21 ----sue magnificent view oi ■-*- antranc* PTg dryar. Laum williams and E |MJxSTlfcApt. &EB Rant Heuses, Furahlml 39 3 btdraem hams. Cample_____, furnished. Dap/MO N, Soginaw. ^wilt* iSk* TVm. eomg|at°*7, furnished, tram SapL I Mint May St, Mcurlty daposii required. Ml sn • wANtge^ir pjsrtiw fpANSPikftibt - ~ ■sidisr •raa otMoa and'CTibithlLiika or sultaM* building tot. 60b WANTED child ilhb-nw Otfnllaa-Included. FB 24101. ____ ' i RdSM^FRJVATe Mlh7~MluT1l. rotTaw dip. iBwf. IM Morton: , I ROOMS. PRIVATE bath and en-tranea, averythlng furnished. FE 5- >Ul F6iAfe for S ar 4 j^CPiloi* - — tachtrs. Plus imll stan at- m Orian . Conklin Rd. and Lon* Lake Blvd. Lali* Brion,__ DAILY CONDITION. S1I0 ERR MO. J. LzDAILY CO. EM 3-7114 PONTIAC PRESS Want Ads For Action JUST CALL • 334-4981 2 BEDROOM* IN CIBrtqittn arts, dVh par ctnt mortgage, 111,006 d*wn, *74 par mo. II1400 full prlca mev cotatoar land COntroet. f' HUDSbN — oft Baldwin, 6 rooms, baaimtnl, no garage 1150 mo. Clorkston — 2 bedroom, basement, garage 1150 mo. AIM 3 bedroom bailment and garage. (175 mo. — *11 require security deposits, Im-m ad I at * ocoupsne^. RihlTA^ elKVick" ____„.5s, mod tananta wa Art bfhiaiayiity, (So-1561 Hi____ .. 261-7674 or LAKE FRONT HOME BEAUTIFUL BI-LEVEL Living room erJ -— -- 4-H R&f ESTATE' NEAR NEW CATHOLIC HIOH, sharp 4-room ranch) fenced back yard, lust i|SWm(d> aplc-n-span, *K«il*pf talghborhOOd. VACANT, pr ea (13,100 approx. S130S d *86 month poymont plus T. ar on land contract. -S44 Dixie Hwy. O R 3-3455 ‘ O aleaping roc I. FE 4*7073, Poplar oft Pt B Rent Ofttcu Igucu 47 APPROXIMATELY m *0. ft. df modern office space far has*. 41* Bait ____________ and up. OR 1-1136. Rent Business Progeity 47-A 1f5 SQUARE PIBT OP choice office space on ground floor. Panaiad walls. Include* air conditioning, lighting, ample parking area and lanltor service. SfO par month. Corner of lllzabath Lake Rd. and KBNNfTH G. HEMPSTEAD i»5 lllzabath Lake Rd., Penhat FE *42*4 . , d SOW commercial bi 66. (TORE FOR LEASlTlfXK) square on W. Huron, I Mock* W. Telegraph Rd. 6WI-0SW. ____ iollTH POtltlAt ARlA - for lci„ only, ctoon, 11,200 *q. ft. with' approx. 400 sq. C air cendlttenad attic**, -t— ceilings. lines. J-Rend A Associates. 543- 2 BEDROOMS This ranch alyl* hem*, 2tt car partpt, large 1|vl—------------ Sola Houtss RETIREE'S SPECIAL 1 bedroom, posslbl* 2. glasstd In parch, tool shed, lakt prlvllegee on 2 lakes. *10,900 an land aim'— No doting cotta. Tan lake Id 100x200. i-BEDROOM, BRICK, privileges, 214 baths, .... Paved dm*. Full tlto baaamant with fireplace and bar, tIS-llOO. 3 BEDROOM NEW HOMO-FULL BASEMENT LOW DOWN PAYMENT _ . . 157 NO. ROSBLAWN Call Mr. Sill* attor 7 p.m., LI 2-4577 BEDROOM BRICK, NEAR Tal-Huron, Waterford Schools, (14,9(0. 6(24526. . 3-BEDROOM BRICK FRONT — Iji tore- RANCH.i I,i large life' 816*900* PM/ Zero GMC 8>8edraoin Icbnomy Rancher, on your tot for only S20,*n E. J. Dunlop Custom Builder Sole H o u s e s **-i, r* homa naai :B .FRONT ex- tu______ natural atone"flrtpiaS, 'SS 'baths; 2 kitchens, large rac. room with bar snd shuftiobaard, home hat over 2,000 sq. ff. otllvfi* space. Shown by appointment only — *42,500 - (12,000 down on land contract. • , MENZIES REAL ESTATE — — ' wi ason BEDROOM FARM HOUSE, vtr 6 acres,' 105 fruit trots, irion area. 526.000 farm*. MILLS 664-4305 4 BEDROOM . ZERO DOWN FHA approved tor *11,900. Batter hurry nr this home. Located on Pontiac'* East aid*. Monthly payments or MS. _ . .NEAR AUBURN Real nlc* I. bedroom with full, basement and dining room. Ntw gas furnace. Zero down only ((( LAUINGER gracious homo. Located 30 from downtown Detroit, In 13(5 W. Drahnar Rd. Only with land contract terms., tor Inspection Sunday 1 to Rand and Associates. $424702. to 5. 21 ALLEN STRRRT M:g/n..r^ Wright^ Rail Estate, 3(2 Oakland, $109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR WITH LESS. THAN MMOO IN-COMB. 1, 2 AND. S BEDROOM TOWNHotlSES ADJACENT TO I-75, ONLY 35 MIN. T6 DOWNTOWN DETROIT, OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY It TO I P.M., EXCEPT THURS. FOR MORN INFORMATION CALL 335- bedrooms, ptos on* .... ceramic tilt bath With vanity, full baaamant new 2VS car paraoa, and more, P-90. Coll Ray Today, *74-41 oi RAY 4033 L0MLEY DRAYTON PLAINS New thru* bedroom, bath and halt, to»" schools and atorfa. - don e. McDonald Ucanaad Builder OR 3-2837 313,990 utility room. On your tot. Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY.MNANt-BBTTER.eiLT _ Russail Young, Bldg. 3344*30—(314 W. Huron (t. 517,500. P-55. CALL RAY .TODAY 4764101 A SALE IS ONLY iOOD AS YOUR FINANCING, or Mlllng yeur homo? Lot ut * your mortgage. FHA or OI. ALUMINUM RANCH S bedroom ranch, gas. heat, newly decorated, big kitchen, large comer tot. Total price S14.50O -14300 down —payments oTilll mo. Call Mi-ern. GMC down to q .— monthly payi $13,000 I* oil yeu need to takd aver th* axlatlno mortgage on thl* real clean.3 tadrocm ranch with new carpeting, newly dacoratod plus large corner lot. No doalng cost*. *- 6 *"■ LAtFINGER 4744319 6744M0 irownIR, 'J l|6it6oM> lit brick, In baths, attached garae*, on canal Immediately aft Whit* Lek*. 121,000. *17-5749. iv "bwfilh - Tri TrtRFoPb Township, 3 bedroom bride ranch, m bath. Iliad baaamant, enwjeid palla, 75'xI34' let, 2 car garig*, carpeting and. drapas Included. Cjpaa to Fanttod M*IL *27,9(0. fiSmPuCTB Apartments, Uafuralsketl 38 Apartments, Onfiirnltlted 31 : RIDGEMONT •' TOWNHOUSE APARTMENTS ; * One, Two and Three Bedr6om> * Roper Gas Ranges * Hotpolnt Refrigerators •'Carjwt and. Drapes * Swiming Pool and Pool House * All Utilities Except Electric * Air-Conditioning by Hptpoint FROM SI65.M WIT* ONK NO FBTS ALLOWED, Between Edit Beulevord and Madison—2 blocks from main gate of Pontiac Motors, 957 N. Perry St. Phone 332-3322 < Open Dally IS AM. oxeapt WOdnaaday . ( THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 19 49 Sal* Houses_49Sale Homes 49 Sale I D—3 OPEN [SPECIAL: TIMES b*»uMfu|00m|'« rpUle e'n tu_» ...... ._|oc ... 1 m«rn7w!.tt£r,.3(rt; wIwve what^It takes toeind AIK eon. jjlggg, D0*^ » WSi ^ Y D—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 1969 For Wont Adi Dial 334-4981 49 Sol* House. 49 Sol* N*ot*> MODEL Brown New Ranch ' 49 lok* Property SI] TIZZY HALL i BRAND NEW COLONIAL -and aluminum, 3 bedrn OAKLAND LAKE 14,500, 6$2-u. LAKE FRONT”HOMES M to 175, $l.»49, b] I beach. Offered i ® front 4™®"' WILL build — j bedroom *1 ii *r* carpeted Ir en. Hi bath, am LET'S.TRADE Vol-U-Woy Rectify and Building Co. Ft 4-3531 IRWIN A SONS- -> NEAR WEBSTER SCHOOL: ■n, kitchen end n down. Full betem NORTHERN HIGH AREA: BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS OPEN SUN., 2-6 P.M. Waterford-Union lake ARF A NICE A BEDROOM HOME, with fruit tree* and 2 OPEN ‘'Faily" AKE SCHOOLS payment1 VMWS FHA* Low d0*n DECKER RD. OFF PONTIAC TRAIL - 3 bedroom ill brick e family room, >.j (WILLIAMS LAKE) | • J Just the property you have been I,; looking for, beautiful lake front! j lot with left sandy beach, Home j features 2 bedrooms, large living room with fireplace, separate dining area and large screened! a porch, guest house Included.! 4 Owners will sell furnished. ‘ For information call — JAMES A. TAYLOR. Realtor, OR 4-0306. I Eves. EM 3-7546. ILAKE LOT FOR" SALE. on i TiDAbawas&ee River at Secord b. Located on Hwy. 31, between Jwln and West Branch In While, I Trails Subdivision, about 20 m 1-75. S3,500 cash ori i ’/* down. Call after 5, j Gladwli T a l l TIM mile* troi $4,000 with 624-1363. See this 3 n Blvd. to “CLARK"REAL ESTATE 1362 W.HURON ST. 602-1150 OPEN 9-9 MLS LAKE SHINAG0GUE Beautiful lakafront ANNETT OFFERS H1.LAKE PRIVILEG car o»r»B» and len isrA. Full basement OTTAWA DRIVE BRICK Attractive B root *_______ many fine feature*. 1 tlreplac n Colon large garage. $39,500, termi. BIRMINGM8M 4 BEDROOMS lull basement, ga* furnace. 3 car baraaa. Near school, and walk-in downtown. HOUSE PLUS 31$ ACRES — Attached garage, basement, bone, allowed. Maple Rd. and I Decker area. $33,400. j, L. DAILY CO. EM 3-7114 A&G Gl ZERO DOWN tw aluminum sldtd 3 hadrge d garage, community water, g rnace plus 4 room rental hoe i Loon Lake. 033.000 lull rice. ZERO DOWN FHA IMMEDIATE POSSESSION hedrnom. lull basement and o rnace. 113,300. LAKE FRONT, LAKE PRIVILEGED! Iota, Commerce Cedar Island, Middle Straits, Big Lakes. Fowier, 363-0333, 605-1404, 363-3443, Partridge "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" By Kate Osann Sel* Business Property j 'Burr DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ,.,,3*° feet, on _N. Parry St. Inalda Wide Track prlva. toned com-marclal, presently used as parking lot (paved), with small commercial building and 2 story framo rental Income dwelling. Call tor further IMorfgbge Loans 621 Sale Household Goods FOR THE PAST 41 YEARS Voss & Buckner, Inc. 1401 Pontiac State Bank Bldg, have been loaning $100 to 05000 to homeowners on 1st and 2nd mortgages for repairing, additions consolidating bills, etc. Into ont small monthly payment. Bafort you borrow on your home sea oi phone ua at; ' 334-3267 Swaps ir WOLVERINE b, hp. Electric star.. _ 4858 Hobson. 682-6952. 63 LOVELAND Orchard Lake Rd. 100x103 with large home. All utl. Hies- available. Ideal lor business rom home or build on vacant lot nd have Income from home. (39,900. Leona Loveland, Realtor 3100 Ceai Lake Rd. 4I2-1255 M-59 BUSINESS ZONED C-l This 300' frontage ,oi 1951 CHEVY CORVAIR, r 503-3553. _ 1957 PONTIAC 5, bast offer or tri tor late model pick-up, 583-5147. BLONDE HUMAN hair wig. Sv COLONIAL'SOFA AND high wing back chair, 'J Maple tables, desk, and Naugahyde racllner. 503-5925. CASH IN AT THE , ■ KIWANIS FLEA MARKET Waterford CAI BulMIng Saturday, Saprambar 5m Spaca available for salt of w-Items. Call 5759)03 fbr------1 CARPETING DuPont 501 Nylon, muat »______ 100's of yards of baftar carpeting, large selection of colors, regular 00.95 value, tale priced at only *■ H ME fret estimates. tea*. 501-33S3. CARPET SALE FREE ESTIMATES oj CALL 681-2700 T\DORAN'S WAREHOUSE baa gas ranges for 097, easy termi. 373- Itams. Call 573-9103 for ri for fiberglass sallboar or T 528-1431 baf. 5 or 59348S2 aft. 5. “You know I’ve gotten to the point where I’m not afraid to ask dumb.questions—it’s better than making stupid mistakes!’’ LIKE NEW portable Hoover washing machine, swap for? or sell. Call 332-6204.__________________________ ROOFING DONE FOR CASH-. — .M.59 i, anything of value. 624-1329 buddlna L’Sd1*!?,. .“'i SECTIONAL. FOR children's bed Duitaing and has a 1-story home I i. ^auae jntalnlng over 1100 tq. It. that emodelad lor office. Plenty lor parking. Priced for a |caiLtor_ap- Sale Clothing r electric dryer < l. Plenty: -- — Little Joe's. 1451 Baldwin, FE 2-554? DORAN'S WAREHOUSE saves yet retail stores profits. Easy farm 557 E. Walton at Joslyn 375-5550. DORAN'S WAREHOUSE hat I freight damaged 14 cu ft refrigerator for less than cost. 55: E. Walton at Joslyn 373-5550. DINING ROOM SET; 3 rugs humidifier. Exc. condition. Sacrl flea, 333-1830. DORAN'S WAREHOUSE has In stoves, ranges, refrigerators ana washers, cheap. 557 E. Walton at Joslyn DORAN'S WAREHOUSE hat Whirlpool, Hotpolnt, Admiral, refrigerators, ranges, washer, dryers, stereos, for a lot less money. 373-5560, adt spring fed lake, 3o feel deep, with dam on outlet and live stream. Rolling wooded land. Lodge building with fireplace located In Ogemaw County. 3 ASK FOR NEW CATALOG PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE 1050 West Huron St., Pontiac 681-2111 WO 5-8759 Open week nltes til 9 Lots—Acraags 54 Lots—Acreag* ! POtntmant. Strubla Rlty. 574-3)75, ---; ORION—10(i''FRONTAGE on NK24~S.|C.A.P. UNIFORMS, Female, sizes 12| _____ I ot Clarkston Road, zoned general: and 15, raas. Call alter *00 p.m.: 5-2755. H Srril®**'wvi’USi"0 l*rop*r,y’ IV4 338,787 __________________DORAN'S WAREHOUSE DRYER, $35) REFRIGERATOR *25; 21" TV, $35) bunkBedtt apartment -*—■* —-ilsc.,- G. Harris, FE ■ 0 FERTILE ACRES, V$ Ml. oil I 15. No hills, craak, 2 barns, good. Nice bldg, site with I OWNER TRANSFERRED, taka over! payments, in acres, will sell all or —I, loss than 2 hrs ----- ~ 1 . Wooded retreat acres, $12,900, Land Contrai terms. Includes Inti site, del* In for year around i it $850. 3515 Erie {Sale Household Goods 65 $33,000, llberel Set c Jispley i Engli TAKE OVER PAYMENT'S, MUST) MR..........11 i sell, lake living site on hill | Bloomfield Hills, 48013. I .overlooking sand bottom spring fed BU'ILD YOUR COUNTRY Estate on! j lake. Call owner, 433-H33. ---- ' - ----- -—" ‘ TOWNSEND LAKE .Two 100 ft. can, lots. $4,080 each, j tsstjieracre. Tarmi'. 134-8376. ..Tarmi allabla. SSS5B .i musi sacrifice, like new, woolena, GREEN ACRES 527-3857. Ortonvllla, 12143 Ray Rd. . p®n-|1449J5. Lnpaer Rd. MY 3-53521 MOVING TO FLORIDA — muat tali. ... from7 PAINTING BUSINESS tortile, best! *2!fr Thi* plymTr!t I offer accepted, 334-6994. __ijj!J h‘ I PI |...........l^rUS*. l^Mi OppOrtUflltleS ' 59 _CYdtart TAKE OVER PAYMENTS, acreage Motel ......— ......... - Terrific Investment, live on-prop-1 arty while maintaining a 10 unit, V$ WHAT YOU'P EXPECT TO PAY ell with kitchenettes furnishings. Good construe approximately 2V? acr~~ m near Caiovllle, Mich. , Woodworking Shop Just off t-75 near Gaylord, Mich. ling, desirable^ area, paved^roads, BUY! NGo ACRE AGE ASSURESt/YOU Buildings^ have 5,000 sq.^ ft. of fjoor! FOR SALE SIZE 14 girls wardrobe. | Motorola and Sylvanla color TVs In trade or terms. Evas. 4-7 & Sat. afternoons 2530 Auten Rd. 1V$ Ml. N. ol Ortonvllla. _____ 00'x2H)' LOT WITH septic system In. North Branch area. Additional acreage available. Cash recreation, i uat tall, call b Flint. FE 2-3144. P.O. Box alias, lake privileges, 481-0900. Page A ». WE WILL TRADE! Realtors 28 E. . Huron St. Office Open Evenings 8$ Sunday 1-4 338-0466 123,450. $1,650 I property - 1301 MALCOLM. OPEN sun. 2-6 p.mJFE 5-8183 Lak* Oakland Shores BEAUTIFUL 4 BEDROOM COLONIAL - In an excellent location with taka privileges on' Lake Oakland. Included with hem*: are living room, separata dining room, bullt-int In kitchen', l'$ bath, family room with fireplace, 'full basement, with attached garage. Available on 818,958. U P' DIR: Saihabaw fp Fast on , Oakland Shores Dr., to prnnerty, IMS lake Oakland Shorei Dr. CROSS REALTOR 674-3105 B5A8 EVES. 797-4742. room with bar and fireplace, patio, your own boat, dock •nd diving raft. 2'$ car contract available. CALL 664-•860 BVCS. 793-6946. •2 ACRE FARM-695M. §§ mile off M-24, houie, building, live stream, vy mile of trontoge for subdividing. 146,500 land contract available. CALL 66 4 -8 560 RVCS. 688 3526 basement, 2 fireplaces and fruit Land contract term commtrc,a,>* ANDERSON & GILFORD Building and Realty 3881 Highland RdL (M-59) 482-9000 SISL0CK & KENT, INC. 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 338-9394 ___________338-9395 YEAR AROUND HOMl on Pontiac Lake. A frame style, rustic Interior. 3 bedrooms and a loft. Completely paneled, carpeted. Studio calling In living room, hot water baseboard heat. $38,800. 582- Northern Property 51-A 60 FT. LAKE LOTS tan Lake, 115 miles northwu. .. mtlac, only 81995 to $3500, Lake “YOUR COUNTRY Estate on! \r _ rv_/. , -S K • ! Tk'aVgld^Lg^r. YOU CCUl t MlSSj desirable area, paved roaJ* oer acre. Terms. 724-8270. __ "BUD" JOYMENT. ESTMENT BEAUTIFUL BUSH LAKE laka front lake lots village -* " ?885V-. front lota from I BALDWIN-COLUMBIA AREA Three bedroom ranch. Carpeted1 j liijEASTHAM ossatslon * STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE SMALL FARM OFF 1-75 '*»!**?_______________681-1770 1....11 ...... Rar horn., Wffl' MM Three bedrooms, living and din- has manv axtras^ilrirk wh,,§ ihlnglcd roof, good hunting,' Ing rooms. Kitchen. Basemen^ central air coMItlonlno fjlhlhg or vacatlonlhg, All this an *i\Mu***ii **$*.* hMt «n wIth'hwIif-lns,C?ull t«semenL fenc^ CLARKSTON AREA n Aciu/5‘ mere ! #d coop, two fish slocked wntra^ rr2?Tacraane^vaflaha^ D?BR LAKe “ 4 wo?d#d cl°^6.costs _ M.ooSctot,i.58«: pr,vll( (FHA TERMS laka lota from S4.S80. NICH0UE-HUDS0N Associates, Inc. FUTURE H0MESITES 7V$ ACRES - Scenic land perfect for exposed batemant noma. 9 mllaa N. of Oxford. $5,995. materials are Included. Confrai terms available. Photos and a< dltlonal Information In office. HICKOX-BARNETT 28865 Plymouth Rd. Pi fiinni Iff rij 3 ROOMS ) NEW FURF $3.50 por week $297 FOR SALE, KITCHEN Cupboard. Maytag Wringer washer, rad velvet drapes, other llem*. FE 5-5442. ___________- . Floor Models 1 Frigidalre portable dishwasher 1 Frigjdalra electric clean range 30 1 8,000 BTU air conditioner 1 15 cybic foot chest freezer Crump Electric 3451 Auburn Rd._____________334-3573 FRIGIDAIRE Refrigerator and 35" ^iMMlIll. 391-W34. m ATTENTION, INVESTORS Invotfora wanted for tho dP structlon of * 44-unlt apartment 437-3815 (0307. Commercial Exchange Dept., Mc- Cullough RHy, 474-3335.______________ CLASS C bar, thowlng good return, owner retiring. Box C-l Pontiac Press._________ ROYAL OAK, HAVE Clast CTlquor Meant*,, for Royal Oak area, need location, will consider partner, 879- LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE Baldwin at Walto* —1 * Acres ef Fra* Pi it. 'til I) Sat.'til 4 1 NEW SCRATCHED 15 Cu. Ft. rs-frigerator. Also dlnatt* sals, new spring and maltreat sets, $29,951 CSL, 1084 Oakland, 334-1509. Below Cost, 1 GOLD AND purpl* couch, I three place sectional, green. 1 b—Uggl set with high back chairs. Hotpolnt El _____jarotor, 4 r nablo, 353-5350. breakfast |. solid china . Stove old. All ii$ bam'r1 UHmv* WANT BRICK? erpeted living room. Kllchen ind utility. Ge» HA heet. Extra tice. Located on the Southweit -Ide of the city. Eve. Call MR. ALTON FE 4-5381 Nicholie & Harger Co. i W. Huron SI.___ KB 5-81 S3 •or quick sal*. Why wallf this excallant Blvd. All filial ready to built Call today. your lulurt horn*. , modern klichen, fireplace, GMTC. at Osctxfo 13,900^38-5955. .... MiCOSTA COUfiTY LOT 15' Mecosta lakalront lot, axcollan ’—u sultabla for u»ik«n , many traai, BOB WHITE 0. 2-60 ACRES irt wooded, mile of nlca rlvai frontage, excellent hunting am located In Tutcola County, 836, REAL ESTATE 1855 $. Main, Clarkator _____52*5831 __ good! FOR'SALE. 2 adiolnlng lots.' 138' -----— - "w oeplh, for each Oakland University. AVAILABLE, CALL TODAY 83.000 cash each lot. Call 513-1134 afiar 5:30 p.m._ HOWARD T. KEATING | 22060 W. 13 Milt Birmingham 1646-1234 MS-7951 kl MONT • - 69540, 3 bedroc ding. BUY i. 2 harm. Thli oi 648560 EVE8. 724 JOHN A. ROWLING, Inc. REALTOR 119 W. GENESEE LAFFER LEACH WILL BUILD LAKE OR ION-3 bttfroom on crawl •pace, vacant, $19,900 with $2,000 down. FHA. VOORHEII: tar ga 3-bad room col-onlal with flroplacet 2 car garage and basement, $25,500, with $2,100 down on FHA. 470 RIVARDf 7 bedrooms on •pact In Waterford, 815,900 w VACANT. °Wn °n *n C° 7238 hi UP BIRD: 3 tv MILLER AARON BAUGHEY, Realtor ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES BRICK horn* In A-l condition. f^T t'l're9 kTcNnWHhw;,'hr,p'*nC.,w ' IT 674.2236 Se.'wSi R<’ '“*«TonniMSX STY' 1MCLS*MAN DISCUSSING VACATION \Tlake .■E5:7900teiHy*"d"d;(^> R.AL&R*{vhTH friends, taUTpAgfir- «• “,,h 363-8303 8181 CommBrcB1 TRAVERSE CITY rEA«FUL AND QUIET S,aye(| hom* this YBar. ... H......- — We took a pay-later vaca- $37993. tion last year.- VACATION: 3 weeks on tho sands—tho rest of the year on tho rocks. in Davisbura Area Btsuflful 30 acre hors* farm. Modern ranch type Itouia. l flreplacai. Recreation room. 3 bedrooms. 1V$ bains. New kitchen nnd utility room. BlackTop drlvaway. Vary wall kapl. 3 bqms newly wired. Automatic drinking cups lor horses. Submerged electric pump. Good well. Now riding rlna. Tack room. Whlto board Small laka suitable fo, . Huge barn H|, Spring i decorating, out buHdir,-, . mskat lor Idasl^RWMPX...^. lull pries. Land contract terms. 25 ACRES Horia barn. 3-bedroom farm homo, recently remodeled. Beautiful setting on hill with excallant view. Ideal spot for family »>•* !«»•■ in. outdoor III*. $19.50 “Spare Time's" S' Income Distributor T-I rpi , . 1451 Baldwin, FE *5142._| ror inis Area HS12 Linofiuin Rugs $4795 FURNITURE, GOOD CONOITIDN. must Mil. Kitchen set, bedroom set, deep freeze, refrigerator and portable TV. call weekdays only. FURNITURE and paneled bad. S149 and Mrs. chairs, zlpparad n ble cushions. SIM vi' Spanish bedroom sulto, Ion id balonco $184. sofa with matching Mr. i. chairs, zlpparad raversl- lovely hom*. 5 rooms and bath. Full hp -r ■$"•* v _ . _ with okcoii to Slat* batemant, rac. room, lanced yard, \ / —. I TT tnow-mobllalng and hunt in,*® V al-U - W ay I E. ajsw-,u,ur il,308 down on Aha. t 114 E. FRONT—(414) 945-1 & i i j ■ I EVENINGS vith room for Nsor Oakland UmvBrsity ted andrus 415-947-4185 rh ?;rw«'.v s a .. ADAMS REALTY pHA.*a**r' M%\ SSI'! ■m m w ffi.r'Ni'aa grnffiuixi "ving rnom, 2 nle« btdroomi, full • iRtmunl, gat haat. A sharp r down on FHA. VON OPEN SUN. 2-5 Don't miss thli wondarful bu whan you chart your routa < home* for Impaction. Sharp bad room ranch. Dining roon HOME OF THE WEEK trp^ 5-room hnma on city aatt carpatlng. Suburban Proparty r lot With lake ZERO DOWN! kitchen and dim. Val-U-Way Realty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 OfficB Open Sun; 1-4 $22,900.00 Gl TERMS 0RI0N-0XF0RD ATTRACTIVE NEW ENGLAND RANCH on large hillside lot overlooking lake. 3 fireplaces, m bathi, many axlrat, 2 large .lowar level. . $31,500.00 LADD'S OF PONTIAC 391 3380 Lots-Acrsaga___________ 54 1 ACRE ON CASS Lk. Rd. north qt iretji11,80 ». with itroam t«r RIVARD: 3 t — a out Orchard Lak* Rd. past (848 Oakland Ave. ie*u*3*ph ,0 w,,"nB'on' ,urn IneomB Proparty arpelad, lull b*$e OPEN SUN. 2-5 123,980. Loft talk] HIGHLAND ESTATES Assume 5Vi% Mortgage FLATTLEY REALTY 530 COMMERCE RD. 343-4981 fiSSLiS* I LOTs' w'insO ACHrnrGanoa, $9 each oS°3 24nM Subdlvl,lon- *AS80 I Svk lo 10 acres, black top~roid near 1-73, Highland, Holly area. J 84995, 145 mo. Horses allowed, I ™^n0 and wooded. Sheldon. 425- 4'7^S"l»CtY"*A¥fA^iiibr'i-ra. > payments. Ideal 1197 VANDEN: 3 bedrer •nd hall, rami' firapiaea, full garaga, $35,900. •557 ROHR ROAD: straits. Sidewalks «ar batamanl, 3-carj Full price only ’igidair* bulll-lns. Awnings. Man pleasant surprises aw*M yeti -----------ilySJS.iOO. , i Gnedrlc Oft Ira ! lak* Property FINANCING IS AVAILABLE 5925 HIGHLAND RD. (M-59) 331-4011 474-2143 473-945* nul M-59 le | re *rqy I*. n-[ Edgegaergt. H OFFICE OPEN SUN. 2-5 Hr? ffigM and VON REALTY LITTLE BEAR LAKE - Vsaoo li no ,n.wffa*S343Ur°" ffisST .. ' 50lncom* Property $0 wiggins lake-mxw h. 435-7211 434-8384 || 3 AND 8* ACRES, Oxlerd area, taTml cenlract. 593-S104. S-IO ACRE RIVBR AND stream acreage, wooded and railing, Fowler Realty, 353-8333, 515-1584, iV-A(T*I»~WOODCREE K farms, owner. 542-4518 altar 5:38 p.m, ACRES, CLARKSTON SrMmSr |. 75, horses aliewad, cleared. 89495, *1588 down - tie mo., Sheldon - SEE OUR Educational Investment r- ,Redl Estate -Filps ^ Latest information on— 1. CAPITAL GAINS - 4, Correct timing for buying ond tolling, f. OFOUP INVESTING ALSO *- A dtmonitretion of our Compuftr Anoyrlng Invmfmont Froportioi. BATEMAN INVESTMENT 6 COMMERCIAL CO. „ $77 S. Telegraph Rd, 338-9641 Office will b* tlotwl Sat., tun, and Mon. - CALL *73 sa$? ' 'HICKOX-BARNETT 3*815 Plymouth Rd. Livonia_____GA 13m KE 7-8940 HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty FURNISHED LOG COTTAGE Fishing. WP, EHH prlvalt beach. I 425-5557. 12.750 3I ACR4S' - r'MiT.1 nli M-ll hear - 1 Ortonvlll*. 123.080, land contract. Good! 437-3775. _ Si!na! 6 ACRES, haavliy woodad, good hunting, 'A mile south at Sagas .h. 1 laka. Near watt Branch. 1-517-473-$4,500.; _J78?' Ed. Clark. 1 “ ACRES, APPLfe tT» buys thli nf Large Ih a, bam « fireplace, | enclosed summer porch, beach and boat dock. Land can tract tgrma. Everett Cummings, Realtor 3513 UNION LAKEGIOAD IM 3-3388 : 35*7111 Holly Lake Front US year old 3 bedroom ranch. 58 ft,, on good fishing laka. City walar, sewer, gas. Excallenl condition. Walking distance fa tiaras. Bank terms or assume existing 844 mortgage. Ortonville Lake Front I 2 bedroom Veer around home. Ex-1 teljeni condition, lacegllonally) re«nt, gentle rolling country. It • bergaln al $1000 8. Will tb 80 ACRES Grovtland Twp. — gi frontage. Ideal Inveitmei -Will haw land contract wl down. 48 ACRES Comer Mrcel with good on M-l*. end good coun •mar out buddings In need a2 repair. Land contract tgrmt. 150 ACRES Groveland Twp. near .......... Beautiful rolling land. Wall wooded with large oak, maple add spruce. -----1 od property. Lake possible. dawn. Valance land contract which Cattle Farm 3 miles south ef Norm about II miles N. of Lapeei acres with 2 story house, 1 Houm now rami' far $100 n land It under cultivation, 1 s 3 roads, 1 which „ area. Good lor lulurt Invetlmi or farming at Hit prtMnl Hr Well fertilized, hat had govt., men! soil analysis. Barns nnd out buildings In lino, condition. 3) mllni from Flint, not far from Metamora. Wondarful lor producing beat cattle or dairy cows. Beautiful Horse Farm avlsburg area - 35 miles from iwntowrt Datrelt approximately, wlfh 17 (fails. Naw 7 .. -----.1,0 by form I and electric lift. 18x38 work xnpitild. Owner It . —I fakt ftult«b(t for . iina add Irrigation of 1 fields. U. B. government planned land um Involving Iran planting Mr drainage. Owner nak negotiated far cleaning ol woods. Thli property front on 1 reads. 50 acral more or lass. Scanir $150,000, with 151,000 down. C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT (313) 42W39I "OR 534-912 lull pricu. 20ACREHO^FARM Only mlnutea from 1-75 and Pontiac. Nlca 4 box stall born, steel riding ring. Excoptlonall Like now ranch homo with 2 fireplaces. Hug* recreation roam. Many extras. $52,500 full prlca. Owner will hold land contract. ROYER REALTY Goodrich Office 535-3311 Holly 534-1204 80 TO 800 ACRES In Lowar Michigan. Dairy, grain, beef or hogtl Name vaur farm ntadt, we have It at Dear'-"Michigan's Farm Real Ett( Headquarters," 220 N. Mlchlg Ave^fColdwaler, Mich., Ph.: 5 $795 r'AN' ACRE, 248 acfT'ceuniry gentleman's farm. Stately ' bedroom plus 2 bedroom tai houM, good barns and buildings. nice out buildings, spring-fad Osh and swimming pond, 1500' of blacktop road. $51,000, land con- ... Real Estate, 541-4217 er 418-1738 evenings. COUNTRY LIVING lh three bedroom earl BROOCK 413* Orchard Lake Read At Pontiac Trail MA 64000 _444-4890 FARM HOUSE, 1 ACRE, Rose Twp. 2380 sq, ft., *21.500—*4.000 down. 353-3837 or 353-225* aft, 4, FARM 3Va ACRES WE WELCOME INVESTIGATION National Distributing Co, BUY, seLl, A BUSINESS ■ ..jllonnl Business — FE 3-7841 WAiTTfo (III voUr' Business? Oellnilaly, Raallor Parlrldg* It " bird to M*. 1050 Huron, Per ftl-SIII.___________________ Sale Land Caatracts 1 TO 50 ~ LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See ue IM Warren Stout, Realtor 1458 N. Opdyke Rd. 173-1111 Open Eves, 'til 1 pjw. CASH FOR LAND COHYraSYI H. J, Van Walt ■< - 4540 Pint* Hwy*, — OR 3-1355 THIS CONTRACT originally 1loldTor ---------j room homo monopor. N«w > pump. 10x30 tack urea bfi«* HEARTHSIDE Plenty of privacy hare. 14 acres In all. oi ft. an main retd. Kean (torse* gr whgt hfhta yau. Charniv adjoining Mfiriiwl, treat and fruit treat surrounding home. Near Ortonvllla, »».*so. FARM 17Vs ACRES Gracious country living, building In excellent condition, 3 large bedrooms, living room w 11 f h fireplace, dining room, nlca weed treat, IS miles northwest of Lepttr, 135,000. FARM 80 ACRES so acres, laka peatible, 2 large streams, 3 bad rooms, and barn, Near ortonvllla, lust off main highway. 11*0 par acre. C. PANGUS INC., REALTOR OPEN DAYS A WEEK 530 M-15 Ortonvllla L CALL COLLECT 537-3115 OXFORD 20 acratridtarier horses. 4-btdroom house and 1 barns, numerlout out building* avarieok-Ing reding acres and flowing rtreami. only S59.580, land con. tract farm* available. 1335 W. Drahntr Rd., opan Sunday 3 to i. J-Rand 5 Associates, 54S4782. | Sal* Business Preperty 57 A Goldmine kb t*d in th* Brewing area Katgo Harbor b thle I year o restaurant. Owner lays SSL TRADE or EXCHANGE Ibis * Would make Waal spot for Seoul.. , cy.mH’comr.tc,h^Mbbmp'frjwamiSk ...» 46 ACRES | oartonvllla Rd. 52VI523 'OXFORD AREA REALTOR 2157 ORCHARD LAKE RD. : 234-3513_______ &4-3M4 LARGE V* ACRE LOt-woodao araa j near laka—can be purchased or land contract—l*w daw payment—Orion Twp. WRIGHT REALTY AM qhl ivliburg-r nalaiy 141 ____... „ prlvala ft. an afream. 7 ecret A0YER REALTY ROYER REALTY bh Of Nct *15.2211 J Goodrich offlca 515-1211 Choica bwftdine al TQM REAGAN REAL ESTATE Barber Shop ’osslnp approximately l year, prlca Including at and property only *35, baygh, ______Dabarl 474.3335 or Evex. 512 0053 In wChBTeT “ ( distribute growing In.HHKIPXBPXIIPmP dlstrlbullnq national brand pro- No axp counts a up by c_. ___. restock locations with oi brand products. You Can Earn $800 A Month Or More Based On Youri Effort Inventory of *1,545 to 835*0 cash required lor Inventory and equip-: ment. You must hove a good car Solid Vinyl Tila ... j Vinyl Aabaafot Ilia . 18TH CENTURY Duncan-Phyft, solid Mahahogany, cherry wood. Ex-callent condition. $458, 547-8855. »" AUTOAAATIC GE range, single bad with padded headboard, mapl* bad. (Single) 551-5138. 14" LAWSON SOFA. Raasonabla priced, 544-4485._____________ 1969 T0UCH-A-MATIC New sewing machine* does fancy stitching* makes buttonholes* etc. Sold for $124.50* balance only $29.50 or pay $1.10 par week. Call day r 1 night. 338-2544. Inperlal. _ $1100-4 PIECE WALNUT bed r oo suite* $500, 674-2634. 1969 SINGER ZIG-ZAG Slightly used sewlna nwhinx stylish cabinet. A *-----... Is* ____ _____ _______ ____/ stitches, etc. 1 , parts and labor guarantae. Cash. $67.80 TAX INCLUDED Poly i wllh zl 8239 vai Walnut “chest of drawers, S34.5B. Maple bunk bad eompltl* with matlrM, ladder and guardrail. 1135 MOM, unclaimed balance 191. Hollywood bed Ml, complaM with belanct 149. Full slzad mattresa or box taring, 139.58 tach. Modern Mia with matching chair, zlpparad ravaralbl* cushions. 815* vault, unclaimed balance till. HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 451 EliZ. Lk. Rd. MI-1311 TBlB4»B.k1 (10 a.m enclose name* pushbutton bobbins, fancy designs, monograms, comes with consols* full monograms. ______ __________ price $154.55. Call Midwest pi lances* 9-9 dally* 334-3312. f969 ZIG-ZAG Cabin*) model. Saws an buttoni Call m 7 par month. avaiiabl* at good —J Tit Chrolo C. PANGUS INC., Rsaltor OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 510 M-1S Orlonvll CALL COLLECT 437-3IH Wontsd Contracts-Mtg. 60-A MILLION in mado iv a and aui irtgagas i r acreage you cadi Collacl its el 85.71 por mo. No g charge. For fra* home cad Capitol Cradlt Mgr. 9 ’HI 9 p.m. If toll, call 729-461 ° 1969'USED SINGER GOLDEN TOUCH AND SEW $75. Call 474-3030, aft. 4 GAS REFRIGERATOR 830. ____1054 Crescent Lk. OR 34477. GAS STOVE, WASHER, DRYER and rolLa-wey bad. 93 W. Colgate. 33J. G°OD REFRIGERATOR BUYS “ Alio cleaaoul on ad floor sample Baldwin. FE >4142. HOTPOINT GAS DRYER In "ax. cadent condition $30, and rafrlgara tor $5. 334-1939. HEYWOOD WAKEFIELD living room cmich, chain, and an* collaa lablas, bookcase. 3951 Voorhala Rd. HUmIdTPiER, dthumMifltTT—ill HOUSEHOLD' SPECIALS USB YOUR CREDIT — BUY 3 makai'bu'tl * p.m.dally) BEDROOM SOT; SOFA) chairs) m at* r * I $ ‘ furniture. Ml 20*78. IMMg BOY'S BIKE. Schwinn I yr. old, bail ■j ' m. TY OI s, 42*4743. BUNK BEDS S styles, fgjnd* w TjQPTiO ■■_____ ....______, PM raw's Furniture. 84b Auburn, FE 5-7*11. BRONZE OR~difRbMB—DlSitTi Mia, BRAND NEW, Large and small. lnb?jfrMMb drap-i**f, j— tangular) tables In 3-. 5- and 7- peaImoiPs furniture .JO Auburn « FE W... BUNKblD's: sAvl' plI'nYV"rdwin J**'*, 1461 Baldwin, FE S5I43. CUSTOM DRAPERIES FREE ESTIMATES Oil 681*2700 living ,raom suit*, 2 slap tablas^ il 3: toblw lamp* and . IP JngE rug Included. 7piaca bedroom suite with daubla ',r—— chest, fuil-slza bad with ng mattreu and matching • —-"'O and 2 vanity laimt. bnlac* dinflt* m wHb 4 chrome «h*(a end table. All lor 8399. Your • credit ia good at Wyman4*. WYMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON FM S-1MI 4 KIRBY SWEEPER-" EXCELLENT CONDITION-!** • fullguarantee Kirby Service & Supply Co. 2517 DIXIE HWY. 4li.MSi 120) dlnatle n 331-5533. l/Yoe TABDnWD chalrii IELL ■ iib id chair*, wlfh i top, 143, 435- LINOLEUM RUGS. MOTTsUBS: 440 •vino ROOMS, BRAND naw. about rBP3^<] ^* Jc*^' 1841 Baldwin' iii-L Bold silk brocade draperiat. IS pr. ton DELUXE AUTOMATIC fjB .y JCW'hB machine. Cabinet (wcgal. Embroider, blind hams, etc. 1967 modal. Take over paymenie of: $5.90 Per Month for 9 Mot. OR $53 CASH BALANCE GUARANTIED UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER MU Dixie Hwy, NOhGE DRYER It ■HL.i..-._______ .... _ formal anil with taqs, reasonably priced. 335-574L itORTABLE frIqiDAirI dishwasher. Will Mil ChMp. FE S. PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS REfRtiiRAYofrYf'ova' - *iac.) "mm room table, 4 (Mini 3 gc. upright . fretMr, numaraqa ahM cupboard doors end drawer*. Batamanl *r caff age um. 547-l$l7. ‘w For Wont Ads Dial 334-4981 Sole Homohold Goods 65 REF Rl GER ATORS, DISHWASHERS, jrw*. washers, ranges, crate damaged and scratched models. Fully^guaranteed. Terrific savings! ^CURT'S appliance 8484 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. 474-nni REFRIGERATORS F#r MiKillonooos 67'For Sole Miscellaneous 67 Sand-Gravel-Dirt CYPRESS PRIVACY FENCE •ectjons, S end 4' height; 17 jo Electric built In rang* t stamtoM ,,ee, «5 „ch TALBOTT LUMBER IMS Oakland _FE *45»s c Mi‘.P r° “AJHROOM^flxtSSTfo'r M-» W A' Thomp,on * *«"' 7005 Daico oil furnac*. *5,000 btu, speed blower. 275 aal. tank. * cel lent condition, imp. .139.71x0 *8235*SHOWER over if I Blk. S. of 22 Mile ISO E. 10 Mil* DAILY ISO n SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC Tig-rag sewing machln*. modern welnut cabinets. Mi 2=^ •|umTffaS;,"wTt8 F*mXj7IURE F°R Bv»fYlhlng. Christmas — sble linens. 338-46*4. FOR SALE DINETTE~set, walnut table. 72 yd. b carpeting, beige drapes, si F1lSl.°i!PB AIR-CondltloneV, BTU. PP A.kkAi ' $54 CASH OR $6 PER M0. PAYMENT GUARANTEED UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2415 PM* Hwy, _____FE 4-0905 SEE STONEY FOR _North Cess. _______________ tAKE OVER payments. 4 rooms furniture. MY 3-1412. USED color TV sett SWEET'S RADIO AND APPLIANCE INC. 422 W. Huron ___________334-5677 upholstered caned back chairs, china cabinet, 44" wide, all In A-l condition. 685-2522 after 4 PM._ WESTINGHOUSE REFRIGERATOR with large freezing u I Westlnghous* auto, washer ______ dryer. A-1 condition. 852-5444, UL must be sold. Every Item discounted. NO reasonable off-" refuted, terms, tale Sunday 12-Hilf Appliance Co., 24123 W, Mil* near Telegraph. __ YOUNG 1 MARRIEDS THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 1969 • - ' ■ r : \ ' - \ --- D—7 76ICARNIVAL By Dick Turnet WHEEL HORSE tractor 6 hp. trie start, mower end snow b 8250, 363-2285. / WE ARE MOVING W off or more on bo> Christmas cards. 20 per cent skate I machines. 10 .............._______n‘s boxed sta- tionery. Also many used desks, ‘aftlng, brand paint typewriters, i •z,:r:.z HRVL______________ chairs, files, tables, blue print cabinets, drafting tablet, mimeographs, off-set presses, Addressograph end cabinet, adding machines typewriters, Forbes PRINTING A OFFICE SUPPLIES, 4500 end 5433 Dixie Hwy, OR 3-0767 or M4 7-2444. WE ALSO BUY BULLDOZING, LOADS!WORK, finish grades our spec., reas. 493-2700. Excellent top soil. Mack cm, I and fill loaded and dellverad and; leveled. 628-3750 aft. 6 p.m. 8.A.W. SAND AND GRAVEL I All gravel product*, fill sand and ‘"‘1^|||||iflii|M|ttOM, A-1 top ne 3044)042. All toll black dirt. I areas delivered. SCREENED BLACK DIRT A PEAT DELIVERED, 852-5462. __ SPECIAL — LIME atone, fO-A stonw oversized stone, road gravel, a I MA 5-2161. fTttlngsand | 1-A^_AKC CHOICE *m Hand Tools-Machinory 68 service, i Dealer! ................. GARAGE SALE, GAS dryer! stove r*,c,°,r,d*.r’ mlsc- 'terns. Set. Mon.; 4144 Lanark, Pontiac Lk, 60x80 ALL STEEL Bolt wooden flour sifter, clothes. Christmas o STOW skis, Mlsc. Th 1231 Nancy wood, i Airport.__________ GARAGE SALE, 44~t Frl-Sat. GARAGE SALE, PUL-... mlsc. 6460 Shapple Rd„ Clai____ OARAGE SALE, Wed. through Sun7, ANTIQUES and II dark, ■ 1068 JOHN DEERE 350 Delsel Dozer, 1066 Lorain L-34 combination backhoe, and dragline, generator, 35KVA, generator, Buda. 334-0546, or 682-0662. __ A" LADDERS) 4-8‘ — 3-12* - 2-16' extension lacks. Extension planks, 4-8' — G-IO* 2-22* toothpick planks. 332-2540.______________ AIR COMPRESSORS, equipment, hydraulic lacks, steam cleaners. Welding equipment, etc. Pontiac Motor Parts, 1016 J-A DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC, BSTELHEIM KENNELS. 301-1880 1-A AKC MINIATURE Dachshund puppies. Also stud service. FE 4- 2 CUTE ORANGE and whit* kittens, free to good home. FE 2-5310. 6 COLLIE PUPPIES, o weeSToid, male, AKC, Vet guarantMs exc. health, all ar* adorable. Chem-’--bloodlines, $75 or SIOO. 644-4106. 1571 Parkway,!1 Dodge Park 4.1 ,ractc................... ........... _other mlsc. Items. 852-3068. GENERATOR SETS 2,500 watts. 115- 220 volts. New >235. 632-7782._ M I SCELLANEOUS EQUIPMENT, ' lor ViZ.LTL. "'Ll I tools and parts, call 682-0410 after Elizabeth'Take Rd. behi»n Cr«! 5 pw »"* •» Set.___________________ ““ :3orpmd' Frl Cameras - Servlcs 70 I MM MOVIE CAMERA with cate and light 825. 35 MM Kowa with electronic flesh $50. Argus tilde prolector 825. Call 674-1037.__ LEICA FOCOMAT E NL A R GER 35MM and 1st x Its with 50 MM, F 3.5 Lellz barlob lens. Good Cond. ««•«*»» ...................-At Musical Goods 71; - through 7 p *................ GARAGE SALE — dresses, 7-0 large sizes; blouses; shoes, u AA; lace tablecloth; tklls; Mlsc, items. Aug. 20-Sept. 8, 11 a.m. to * P.m. 1052 Beverly, off Orchar' Lake. Make your own offer. GARAGE SALE. Frl thru Mon, 0 to'aj | 7, 382 Nelson St. _ GA'RAGE SALE': S E L L llTb , everything under th* tun. almost 1 J£UTE...AND. everything less than 10. 10-7:3ol —!i' ,l".“ ‘ Rock 1 colors, puppies, AKC POODLE Puppies," rvlce, grooming, 334- AKC BOXER PUPS/ 7 weeks. 338- AKC REGISTERED English springer. spaniel stud service, 412- AKC REG 1ST E R E D MALE Schnauzer puppy, o wks. ' ' started, 8125, call 682-3151. black mfl*. Shots, tails AKC TOY COLLIES. Adults 835. Others free on breeding terms. Pups. >50 Up. Studs. 625-4384. AKC BIaGLE PUPS. S35 etch! 685- II PIECES, "DAVENPORT 'ENPORT Royal" by Wood (Enoch) rdshlre, Englthd, Blue flow dishes. _________H good condition. I plates, 6 cups and saucers, 7 putter pats, 1 soup tureen, l plater, t desert dishes, 2 vegetable dishes. Call after 4 p.m. 67*2322, _____________ CUSTOM ANTIQUE REFINISHING, Specializing In furniture reflnlthlng and repair* of all types. 363-9361, Mon.-Sat. BeFINISHED COMMODEt Pin* dry Thurt. thru Mon. 671 Dr. Fox Hills Subdivision. GARAGE SALE, clothing items, tale starts ; Fr.. Sathabaw to 4107 Kempt, Drayton !AKC CHIHUAHUA Puppies. All d con-1 stud service. FE 2-1497._ _ 'AKC TOY POODLES, Stud, sites it old. 832-1834 after 6 GIFTS-GAGS. JOKES, novelties Lay-a-waya. Liberal Bill's 3265 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9474. GAS INCINERATOR, Never used, firebrick I, 0135. 887-9327, HOT WATER HEATER, 30 nal. gi Consumers approved >89.50 valL.. >39.95 and 349.95 marred. Alto electric and butana heaters. Terrific values, Mlchlgdn Fluorescent. 393 Orchard Leke. FE 49462 — 16. HEAVY DUTY ALUMINUM tandem trailer. Electric brakes, >650. 391-0613. 1 CONN CORNET, Excellent I call 681-2861 ■ * 12 STRING HOLLOW body MOtrlte guitar with cate, $225. 651-0731, AT GALLAGHER'S Used Console pianos from >369. Used Lowrey Organs from $495. Savaral used 120 bast accordions RENOWN — WOOD BURNING cook 1-A COLOR TV SERVICE Johnson's TV. FE 8-4369 On Vacation Aug. 25 to Sept. 2 ll'* UB66 TV ..! ......... $29.93 515 E. Walton, corner of Joslyn Walton TV, FE 2-32S7_______Open 9-6 22" RCA VICTOR, blend cabinet, >50, 334-2666. CITI-PHONE SS,~ Lafayette HEiOD, CLR-2 tri-pod, p-104 Mike, moblla 2158. it equipment. >1S0. 852- HAY BALER, and deep wiii~1 pump, 391-2070. iRONRITE IRONER, good conditio Make otter. 674-3547 after 3 p.m. HOUSE AND BARN SALE: Moving out of state, Must tell i household and barn Items. 8-29 9-1. 622 Casement. Lake Orion, LAWN SPRINKLING systems. Inch plastic pipe, >3.65 per 100, plastic Hat * 66 — ■** ■ plastic plastic___. ________ ______ . Thompson A Son, 7005 M-59 W. LAWN SPRINKLING PUMPS, AKC COLLIE puppies. Show quality. >75. Terms, Stud aervlce. 373-1454, AKC, GERMAN SHEPHERD pups! ig stock, 625-4274. AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD pups — n >82.50. < CONCORD TAPE recorder. M0 with adapter, $55! 693-2717. to RADIO, 23 channal. Cobra cam i $8, and extras. Excellent condition. 6763782, MAGNAVOX COMBINATION, Ilk* new, call after 4 p.m. 3336088. MANUFACTURER'S CLbSB-bUT STEREO WALNUT OR MAPLE CONSOLE Diamond Needles BSR 4-speed changer $89 Or 85 per month UNIVERSAL 2615 Dixie Hwy. FE 44)903 Dally 10:18-8 Tu**„ Sat. 10:156 NEW COLOR TV's prleed from 8269. Doran's Appliance Warehouse, 567 E. Walton, 335-9724. For Solo Mlecellatieeui 67 2 hp., ___I... Thompson end Son; 7005 W. LEAVING STATE — SALE 14 tool aluminum Starcraft boat) naugahyd* couch, chair; lawn mower; picnic table; lots of other Items. 7664 Barntbury off Willow at Anchor Bay, Union Lake.__ Lawnmower Clearance ALL MOWERS REDUCED 20% Term* available Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Pontiac, Mich. _______PHONE 33S-615f_ MEN'S WORK clothing, women and AUB—'- fiHBtag and mlsc. 294 MEDICINE CABINETS, matching wedding bands. *74-05t WINCH COPPER WATER PIPE! cant* a ft. and M Inch copp water pipe, 39 cents a ft. G. Thompson L Son, 7005 M-59 w. f'COMPLETE KING SIZE Bed and large t without ........ of cabinet* with m .....lout lights, sliding doors. Terrific buys. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 Orchard Lk. FE 46262 — 36, MOVING - SELLING 48 chopper, leather, large. Air conditioner. TV. playar, 895. 1 Sony, 3 heads, tract stereophonic top* racoro., deck, $115. 1 Airline and amplifier, 895. 1 eeif-propeitod rotary lawn mower, used 3 times, 830. 338-6253. )W INCH PLASTIC drain pipe and fittings, no need to thread pip* anymore, If goo* together, with Curtains. Record player ai 9x12 rug, never used. Cpr raoio. Hamper set. Bird cage and stand, baby Items. Lady's lea skates, size 9. Formal*. Clothes, alz* 12-14. n —— 334-970). MOVING TO FLORIDA lacks, 4 area wall.. ... ... sidewalk forms, circle cutter tor sheet metal, stack of < -•terry lumber, meat banai ratal shelving, copper pip* A .... Ip* whit* pine moldings, places of t" birch plywood, etc. 3356741, MtffORCYCLES FOR SALE. Fra* kittens; apartment for rent, 835 8 PIECE BLONDE bedroom set. Folding cot and mdtfrose. Breakfast aat, rugs and other Hama. 6586725, 208 Lorberts Lane. f x W AOUA. ANB 13'Xl6' bate*, cotton ruga, also 3 speed, GE 23" fir x is* uoHf BiioB ... oallent condition, alto girls dresses varv oood condition, alia 5 ■ fifi t> 111*3417. Hv CfiAlti' LINK FENCE, 3 getea, . 37 poets. ETC, WIQ, 4730969. Ml GIVEAWAY TIME at Avon-Troy :. Carpet Warehoua*. Carpet, pad and dolux* Inatallatlo sq. yd. Hurry — ‘ a-ilfetlma offer w It wnllnliLl 1638 _. mm .... (M-59) Rochester. ist. John R A Dequlndr*. 1 of Rochester's largest carpot warahousas, ovar 17,OoO sq, yds. In stock. 832-2444. f946 ENGAGEMENT SET. I Eliza be1 Pooler. ANTIQUE blfHES) TURNjTURE, and rummage. Take Baldwin to Partujoto, Parkdale to 8 5 3 BURROUGHS ^ASH ragliter. Coet 8340, tali for $150. Colin 2 electric ‘ motors, to horse 825, 86 horta, 835. 693-1734. BASEMENT BALE. H\ basement rummage. dumiAiir*, Baldwin Rd., bet. 1-73 Old Angalus No. Aug. It through mw? I* rm 7e _ BRASS CHANDELIER, c a r n I b l on. 4701 Dixie Hwy. i MNoner, < 4746649. Irides-bDyy( 9797. YOUR WEDDiNG iMj — from, OR 3- KIWANIS FLEA A6ARKET Waterford CAI Building Saturday, loptottioor 6th Space available Mf tel* of yo< Items, Call 6736182 for reservation. CARPETS A FRIGHT9 Mako thom a beautiful sight with Blue Lut-fra. Rent olgcfrlc shamoooer 8). Hudson'* Hardware, 41 E. Walton. CUST6m_ BUiCT cam^r^helL M In l, 810.01 p 100. G. A. . GALLAGHER'S 1710 Ttltgraph PB 4-0544 Summer Store Hours 9:30 to 5:30 p.m. , |__Open Mon, end Prl. '♦» 9 p.m. (120 BASE UNIVERSAL Accordli..,, -i excellent condition. $125. Call 4«2-! ■ i 0449. - CONN CLARINET. Used 2 hri. $100. ! Call 493-8054.____ [ fender, SUPER ravarb amplifier. : , and Fandar duo-tonic oultar. Ex-. callant baglnnar sat. S300. 63*6416. i FOR SALE PIANO. Any raasonabla otlor accaptad. 817-9501. _______ GUILD GUITAR. E xITe L L E N T condition. $250. Fonder omp. Customized deluxe reverb. 8125. Hev* other equipment. 6476913. _ HAMMOND ORGAN, 1968 L-100 with large Leslie speeker, exc. con-dltlon. *82-2393. HAMMOND ORGAN A ioo. excellent --------- —-) my 36737.________ BRITTANY PUPS 2V> months old. Perentt AKC roglttorod. 682-5390. BEAGLE PUPS 3736794 JL AKC reglt —.t. Adult meto. seblt ..... collar. Mutt have home old, 310 coll 632-5517 after 6 I weekends._________ ____ COLLIE PUP'S. Show quality “Why EL.SE would Marcia's father open a pizza parlor if she wasn’t after my Dexter?” Auction Salss____ 81 B & B AUCTION SAT. NIGHT, AUG. 30 7 P. M. SHARP August End-of.-tha-Month Clearance such at: New and utad I Ivin room and bedrobm, chroma set: color TV*, stereos, bunk bed! CULTIVATED BLUEBERRIES, pick vour own. 350 Wlta Road, Cc- merct, 343-4072.____________ PEARS YOU PICK This weekend only. C I • p p . Sun. 12 tc 88! Mobile Homes 891 Motorcycles . APACHE! 1966 HOMETTE MOBILE horn*. I Raatonabte^ 634-4558^ Holly. 1966 ~1*2x55 RICHARDSON, loaded i BRIDGESTONE 175, dual twin. 6R Tha best time for SAVE HUNDREDS New Apache's as low as $895 ^ 1 Used Unit Left The best time to camp Is |u: ahead, an |ov the beauty t Michigan Fall Spectacular. Brand new Remade, 8 sleepers | in llmitied numbers, end fully equipped and self-contained. EVAN'S EQUIPMENT | 25-1711 ciarkston 425-2514; mi i iwii, new neimoT eno 1 h | l"»»T«nce, 844 W. Huron. '( , rl Pll 1 SALE',1967 Harley Davidson, ' , .lectragllda. 67 W. Yelo, Baldwin j Manor Apartmqgfs. FE 56310. FAMILY SITES ... HARLEY 66, SpoAstor, Exc. tend! SI200. 363-5751. . ' , SECLUDED AREA ARE HONDA MOTORCYCLE. *) CC. Rod. NOW WAITING YOUR 1N Step thru. Lika new. 6516760. SPECTION. MANY MODELS TO; ep an CHOOSE FROM. ARE NOW ON H DISPLAY. THIS (S A bpaiiti. ”!lA”-, condition, 3275. 6476913. 8H PEACEFUL AREA TO! MUST SELL — 1967 Triumph 6S0 SETTLE IN YOUR NEW MOBILE CC. TR6R, riding lawn mowart, many, mai other artlclas. DOOR PRIZE-DONKEY or BURRO B & B AUCTIONS SAT. NIGHT, AUG. 30 7 P.M. SHARP END OF THE MONTH CLEARANCE and beautiful. S3.50 ‘liners. Set. 0:30 - --- . .. French orcher 1290 State Rd- S. side of Fanton PEACHES Freeze or can. Apples. Oaklfc..u Orchards, 2205 E. Commerce Rd., 5690 bet. Duck Lk. Rd. and Bur1 MM lord, 0:30 to 6 dajly. PEACHES YOU Pick” -Finished Red Heven, start R Haven, Monday, bring contelm ■Iso retell apples, pears, pit., id peaches. Open daily 8:30 to CLOSED SUNDAY PLEASUREMATE DELUXE HARDTOP CAMPERS 1970 models available Open Mon.-Sat. 'til 5 KAMPR VILLAGE 630 E. Walton near Joslyn ___588-0681, 373-5350, 588-0811 CAMPER. 1948 DODGE Sportsmi van. Expandable top, sleeps fully equIppe Mon. 1> (5)7) >56-2048 In CAevllle, Mich. 16' CHRTSCRAPT, excellent condltton 60 ho. motor, trailer reedy to go. Economy Cere. 3346131._____ CUTE BEIGE MALE kitten, p'rae to well trained. FE ENGLISH SETTER PUP. FDSB. ----- * ettote. 1-7666973. ~~ U p p I a I, 1 of Airport Rd. 673- W FREB, 3 ADORABLE Rl+TENS—2 beige, 1 callco. 852-2837. 6-YEAR-OLD WELSH Pinto goldlng pony, reasonable. 673-5458 or 335- 27_ S._ 5 FE 3-7)681 673-6716. 83.98; I stand. v coal, size 16. Mltc. CLEARANCE BALDWIN ACROSONIC. dllten. b a a u l' iT raflnlahad t„. ROM 3 - GRINNELLS CONSOLE, mahogany 1 yr. old, |uit Ilka new. 4— NELSON COLSOLE PIANO, walnut finish ...........8395 5 - WURLITZER SPINET, tx-ceitenl playing condition. 6 - GRAND STETTERGRAN 5' ■t It plus cartago ...■ ■, S225, Smiley Bros.-FE 4-4721 WANTED: USED BOX Wah-wah Salat-tervlc*. AMO 8Mfl Puleneckl, OR 35596. PIANO AND GUITAR L >52-2574 POWELL MUSIC MOVING: DISHES, APPLIANCES, —ilture, clothe*, linen*, toys, ar, email organ, all mutt goi Malcom, Unir* ‘ * , next to Com- OIL CIRCULATOR, caat Iron ( excellent condition. Alto 2 lei metal cabinet*, 399-9431. PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS NOW OVED TO 440 AUBURN, PONTIAC, FE 4-7881, PLUMBING BARGAINS,' F R i I •lending toilet, .]Hm. JME^ healer, 849.95; 3-ptece btlh a 1754.___________________________ AMPHICAT, SNOWMO BILE, ratiiH nworeycte, stla. 588-7205. ANTHONY SWIMMING pool*. CBN today tor damp, RHODES POOLS RAILROAD TIES n tiding, hewn beam, ___vary. FI HIE.________ RIDINO MOWER. 21", ax __ Bahlnd Unfreyal Tlrat.' Aug. 28-Sapt. 7, 106 p.m. SLIGHTLY USED 82 gal. ttoc! waiter httitr; 1 — new i— batln; slightly utad klfehtn tlnkt, ttooii and wash batlnt. Call 273- if AA6e ikY, lI6nbl Train, «« mwq.r^«toy, *1^15 Lake. Open Thurt., Frt„ Sat. and SUMP PUMPS, to] SSj SFECTALtALEdkbafTiri vtnHlat, graft, tavinos, d [ Ren*waS1e-typ* fuses. .ectlon ot Original cost. BOULEVARD SUPPLY __ >, BlVd. E. 888*7161 TRADEWIND CAMPER for pickup 171! Clarlnel, never used, 8108. [ruteMi in, :olem«n ttove, typewr ran. EMetric najr_ u 'r^"™pt^tor~chiin law. Call 2-1657. GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPIES. “ illy markad. $18. Alio (ra* ___6936920.____ HALF LABRADOR pups. 6'wkl. $12. >736115.___________________ LABRADOR RETRIEVER,'12 waakt old. 363-2391. LONG-HAIRED KITTENS, free tf good home. 886-24*4. MINlATURfe 8CH9)AUifcR*; AKC Champion line. Shot*. 626-7066 MALE ALASKAN Malemute,, 2 yrt old, bteck end grey, $150. AKC. 3946295.________ MINIATURE DACHSHUND, 6 week! old, Paper*, Ft <6498. MIXED LABRADOR retrelver, monlht old, temete, HO. 682-718*. PEDIGREE HOMING Pigeon, tree to good home. 363-7441. PEKINGESE PUPPIES, AKC. alto black Peke-a-poo't. 682-6721. POODLE GROOMING, PORTABLE DOG FEN 6ir>1960 PUPPIES WANTED. Either r POODLESTUp, BLACK RED COCKER PUPPIES. $20 eech. ' 5 mo. old poo-cock. »2f 17. REAIONAELE TO GOOD SPRINOER'aND LABRADOR pups, >10. 8B68H. spRfkMQ skAkii'LS aKE! ) Ml ....______ -Ions to DAWSON' SALBS, TIPSICO LAKE, Phon 629.2179, _ GUNS. 900, new. used' modern an. antique. Buy, Mil or trad*. Kan’* Gun Shop, iv. ml. N. ot Oflsvllto on M-15. Phon* 631-2991. Open 7 daw.________________________ GUNS, ammunition, buy, trad*. FOOL' TAPLE, SLATl, 81M. Cloeli Pool Table Warehouse. 632-7505. QUARflR MibOEt racer, horsepower, 673-7365. TRAIL BOSS IS HERE tamoua Apache cemp trailer. This 6-wheel orivi, all terrain vftlMM, net more to otter the family sportsmen. Check theM nature*. • Dual frentmltslont Q m-BiBi : • Full ‘raven* with itaarlnE ONLY 81695 JIM HARRINOTON'S SPORT CRAFT Apactw Factory Horn* Tawn Dealer HB lMdl Huniere, tiUt- lUstf GENE'S ARCHERY, 714 W. Huron. SKI-DOO'S USED SKI-DOO'S 10 HP* UP TO IfRr AMi LATE MODILilN.M CONDITION. PRICED PROM 8491 AND UP. TERMS AVAILABLE. KING BROS. ~ 3734734 Ponilac Rd. «r Opdyk* 74 tand-Sroval-DIrt i Bit throupnouf wnue baaa, Independanea, Watortord Twp., ar to you tor th* wat el hauling. OR 34W, 8 e.m.-lt p.m„ sun. Incl. MONTHS AND 3 YR. temate ' goats, make otter. 621-4936._______“ ARABIAN GELDING, 5 years old, 14.3 hands; 5-yttr-old Tennessee walking hortt, gilding. Doublt D. C. Arabian Ptrm, 6256330._________ ARABS' to TO to mart, galdlng, CAMP HORSES art back. Tumpart, 8180 to 8M0, 3636009._____ DAINTY IORREL Welsh mart, 6 MISS, spirited, ter elder child. 865. II 688-4160. ________________ for s'Ati! Tennettee Welker IOOD RIDING PONY end bridle. 030, 3346971, _______________ GOING AWAY to caltoge- Mutt tail 2 geldlngt. Fine tor 4H. Very reasoneblt. 485-2961 ■ stud tervlce, 3356129 MARE, BRIDLE, AND bera-beck pad. Call IBM818. , MUST SELL, Registered i Arabian, by grand champion. 3 old, grttn broke etud, tilvar v black point*, txc. thow, 1500 ti him homo. 651-2045! Anytime. Nick RIDlMG HOrtftt, oaidingTv good with children. 3550 N. Jo: , champion tired, raatonable. ..-1455. .BERNARD CLUB qf flrieter P«t Suppflto-SBrvfCB 79-A 1-A GROOMING 335-5259 DO MARS Daw^1^ ** Door Prizt — Beautiful Shetland Pony * Dixie Hwy. _ OR 3-2717 13 Time To Take Thai New Trailer Or Pickup Camper Home Prices Slashed MOST EVERYTHING cetsorlet for tH* travel*trailer. JOHNSON'S CLOSE-OUT FLOOR MODlL Sell cheep. 63561! ENGLISH , ______ ‘ child'* pleasure horse. 5950 Lake George Rood, t 9 0S We will not be undersold, prices. Tom's Hardwert, Orchard Lk. Ave. FE 5-3424. _ SUMMER CLEARANCE" USED LAWN AND GARDEN TRACTORS WITH MOWERS — CUB CADETS — WHEEL HORSE — BOLENS — SIMPLICITY SPRINGFIELD. ALL REC( DITIONED AND READY TO CM ALL PRICED TO SELL. TERMS AVAILABLE. KING BROS. 3736734 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyk* NEW, USED and Rebuilt Mowt .. rakes and hay conditioners, DAVIS MACHINERY, ORTONVILLE, NA 7-3292. Your "Hemellte Chain Sew REPAIR. MOUNT, and bftlanct mag117' 1£HR's-ilS5^.2-2S. —. ...—q whet is. New and used: exc. condition. 682-1793 evening. ■PUNPUjaft-Amf-'— as ~--- AP Anten. Trade HPEEiPPEWQHIHPmi Goodyear Polyglast ' llret. Cheater! In slicks. Merkel Tire 2635 Orchard! j8.~ UPmNPWWdReP Complete with trailer end cover, r 682-9663. _ -121' mfg BOAf ISO horsepower, - ‘"I. 2 bunkt, fthlp 1c ^— Motor Scooters 94 ration at Joslyn______F E *6055 McClellan Trav#l Trailers 4*20 Highland Road (M-59) PHONE 674-3163 Close Out on '69 Models • Weil Wind • Wood Leke • Bonanza • WHEEL CAMPER Just e tew left to choote from I Idee Parte gelori "LITTLE DEN" pickup ____ covers custom built. Gulf Servlet, 4880 Hatchery, Drayton. 6736473. NEW APACHE CAMPER .839 ___Even'* Equipment—625-17)1 NEW Yukon Delta Id to 8*11. 625-3593. Betty fe pull, 8575. 626-6650. i5'“ STATESMAN tkAVCL trailer! I9SS Electric Brake. Jelouty wln- 19 FT. COMANCHE, elept 6. tell contained, good codltlon, >1595 625-2733. 20* SELF-CONTAINED f'rT) UTC ------6, 8),5QQ, call 474-0655. NEW TACK 8t6rF^now open telling at wholetele. Ooen 7 da Wfc. • to 8. Hortet t« D. Ranch, 4980 tig 24* HOLLY Self-contained, 2-door, lull belli. Hitch and awning. 2425 Annalut Lane. OR 36558. 1966 16' TRAVEL trailer, 81000 ceil 435-1911. 1967 OMC to-ton truck with tleeper. Evening* end Saturday. 67119118. 968 TRAVEL TRAILER. Selt-con- mm 8leapt 6. 626-5812. PALAMINO GELDING. 7 year* aid. Excellent rlder. aM-lMl.___ PALOMINO FARMS, 1085 Hill Road, REGISTERED QUARTER hor'ti make otter, 693-1166. WeoISTERED PINTd, 5 yet folding, gentle, 4H end EMHA tobon winner, >400. 435-2372, RIDING CLUB IFACE! ' — homo hunting tor l, 600 ecret oi privan Irene, tack room enf kitchen. For Intormellon coll Mr. Elliott Of 646-1949. TlX TAN WiltlRN SAOOLB. to’ IT_______________ ROMEO MEAT CENTER -dratted meat*. A tide or a PM tor vour tobla or freezer. Cut wrapped betore you. Give us » cal tar price, quellti and jepolntmer ip cui. Romao, PL 3-2M1. Open dev* • week. 17140 V*n Pyko- 4-1 MIaT bUrtreoT-filBHBl -rapped. We cura and imok eeteTCell 3736155. _________ Hoy-Oralii-FtEd ___________i4 CHOICE IECOND Cutting A from fltld, big belee. <25-3408. SECOND CUTTINd_eflSJfe' chickens. 101 Baldwin. 0-13 and Auction SnlM B & B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY 7:8) P.M. ™ «a°v*V....... l J p.m! —- BUY ~ SELL - TRADR an 7 Days wtekly CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME If EVERY AUCTION^ "" OR 3-2*17 t; )• aw, YEAR OLD TENT I •laapar, sink, 1 burntr i box, haatar, extra lira, 4’ )to FT. CAMPER-REDUCED >1430 Walrt-GOODELL'S J52-45S0 FOLD OUT CAMPER 2 years old, copperlone sink, ttove, Icebox end dinette, sleeps 4, mutt tell. 1550. 474-2594, I' SCOTTY sportsmen. Excellent 16-Ft. Trailgr Monomatic toilet, gas elec, refrig. Many other deluxe features. $1590 - ALSO NOMAD AND HI-LO VILLAGE TRAILER SALES 6678 DIXIE HWY. CLARKSTO <25.5022.__ WOLVBR'iNEl-RUCK campers a sleepers. Faclorv outlet, repair i parti, new er-to^nadBrillll Jacks, Intoro bumpers, tpert k. 8950. 674-1970 etter ; 1969 STARCRAFT TRAVEL TRAILERS IN$iDI DISPLAY CRUISE-OUT, INC. . Walton Dally 94 PE $-4401 CLOSED SUNDAYS AIRSTREAM INTERNAIONAL# a hitch, axfrai 2 PASSENGER GO-CART, with new 5 hp. engine. $125, 391-3652. _ NEW MINI Bfi. 391-0776. 1966 SUZUKI 120 TRAIL blkf, goc condition, $200, 693-8720._____ 1966 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE, $750 - - best offer, 332-7031._ 1966 SPRINT H 332-2413, after 5:30 p.m.______ 1966 HARLEY DAVIDSON FLH 74, full^dratt, burgundy, low mllttgt. "356! 28' SLOOP, DAY lAlLOR. center IIterv < ..... I lenks, tlebl'lllzlng •hocks. Cab to camper-boots. LOWRY CAMPER SALES 1325 S. Hospital Rd. Union Leke EM 3-3681 raatonable. 636-244*. SLEEPER" Steel frame pick-up covers tops. Cab to camper bool. SPORTSCRAFT MFG. 4160 Foley 423-0630 Waterford my extr ntlec, i quire 113 Rulh, Font WINNEBAGO Motor Hornet—Trailer* Camper Coachet Reete end Draw-Tile. Hltchei iok "f. e’hOWLAND SERVICE SPORT TRAILER, GEM AND CORSAIR TRAVEL TRAILERS Cortalr end Gem pickup cempei Windshield and a Hodeka 100. FE «- 81-2727 or <83-3553. io boat with trailer. ; 14to' HUSTLER, metal flake '196* YAMAHA, 550. $600.' _ 673-2363 1968 YAMAHA 350 'Scrambler, , E il cond. 473-9651, If no entv 117. 1-1969 Yemehe 442._____ ijjik _ ................ SCRAMBLi Moke otter. Exc. condition. , 1516. 1968 RIVERSIDE, 350cc, road bike, ™- —y, 5M5. 62M635. ____ 1969 HONDA 98 CC, 600 mllti. call ---- 5 P.M. 673-8430. ____ 1949 HONDA 350 SCRAMBLER, >600. 674-1431. Excellent condition.___ 1969 HONDA, 350 Scrambler, excellent condition, mutt it* to ao-preclate. 332-6208. only 4 hrt. $2100. Alt. 4 p.m. 31 634-8475.______________________ Boats Art Arrlvingl Must Move Our Stockl ATTEX AnyWher# Fui, . r Outdoor Sports . v». It for Winter too . . . A versatile amphibious Drlv* Your Attax rlqht Into FULL LINE OF MERCURYS—CHRYSLER OUTBOARD MOTORS 1969 SUZUKI X6, 1,280 mltet, $400. Call 62341743 altar I. 1969 HONDA 430. Fully dtotitd. 852-1388.__________________________; A-1 Motorcycle Insurance FARMERS INSURANCE* Agency ot Pontiac across from Anderson'-Honda. Phon* 334-4597. Bodily Ir jury, property daman* tor 126-20(jCC 201-360CC 36I-500CC 501-730CC CLIFF DREYER'S MARINE DIVISION 32T0 Holiy Rd.. Holly ME 4-67 BIRMINGHAM •' BOAT CENTER Srarcrptt, Sllverllne Flberalet o aluminum bools. Merc, outboard Invader, 50 horte Mercury, <83-3738. COHO SPECIAL W Bedger with 1969 Merc. 1000 and traitor, loaded 82,595. tar's Boat* and Motor* <93-14110 DRASTIC DISCOUNTS On ell remaining new GLASSFAR and DUO BOATS and JOHNSON and CHRYSLER motors. v Shell Lake 75 h.p. Evlnruda. 8995 >' **a Ray, 40 h.p. Evlnruda . $693 Crosby, 40 “ - jw «. at 1-75. AIRSTREAM 1989 18 ft. to .31 ft. ON DISPLAY Also Used Airstreams WARNER TRAILER SALES APACHE APACHE n*w*V968 Ing Iral tors; also a _ _ __ models latt at used traitor prices. Hurry, tnoy won't last long. PICKUP CAMPERS DEL. REY FLEETWING TOUR-A-HOME Sava ever 8500 on now 1969 unite. $ and 10 ft! modal* tor Vb ton pickupa in stdek From *791. PICKUP COVERS HUT? FLEETWING MOBILE TRAVELBR / From 8238 JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT Apocho Factory Horn* Town Dealer Vi Ml. i, of Lapaar otl M-21 OPEN SUNDAYS, 866-9412 APACHE BUFFALO, fully equipped! Exc. condition. FE 2-7328. _____m_________ma.. ■ big savings ? mrleM '*le*hed on '49 NIMROD Campers. SALE $t»rt* sept. 2 on M-ai. snan ^corner MOrahem game's — Show models. Rd.i Imftv city. Phone 7261608. BURBANK PLUMS, Hemmi, 231 N. Squirrel, cloead Saturday marnlng. Buyer* —^ Selhrj Meet thru Press Want Am. BLUEBERRIES vour awn, 25 cento $ 7 day t • —| --- 1 EACH IN STOCK REDUCED 111 CLEARANCE, ALL 1969s 12' WIDES, LOW AS $3,999 DELIVERED AND SETUPI UP NORTH BUYERS Atk ter Special Prices! 5 Used Homes tram $17991 ADD-A-ROOM UNITS AND DOUBLE WIDES NOW AVAILABLE COUNTRYSIDE LIVING 1884 Oakland 334-1589 1 New From Holly Park Balcony, kltchan and dining room. Your Authorized dealer tor Holly Park, Oxford, Parkwood, and Danish King. Pra* Delivery with' 300 Miles. WHl trad* tor ms anything of value. Open 9-9 P.M. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 3257 Dixie Hwy. " 3384)772 Anderson'sj Best Buys New I 90cc Honda —$339 Newl CB 3S0 Honda . .$695 New I Honda 50 .$239 Newl Honda Mini ... .$268 Newl 650cc BSA ... .$1095 Newl BSA Enduro —$850 Newl 650cc Triumph $1195 New! 750 cc Norton $1195 Newl 250cc Ducatti . $495 MANY >11.80 0 GENERAL, carpeting, lit “‘j!t((inlhg, skirting, — •** Itlon. 852-457). 12 9 12' aluminum Meyers fit! boat. , ........... ....... YOUNG'S MARINA Open dally 9 ‘til 4 Sunday <0 to 4 4030 Dixie Hwy. on Loon Lak< Drayton Plain* , QR4 .'Set FOR THE BEST DEAL ANYWHERE ON- Star Croft; Glaitron; G. W. Invader boats. Johnson motors i Crest pontoons. Scromblor; Terra Cat end Trail Breaker troll blkoi. Come To JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT Vi Mil* E. of Lapeer City Ltmtto On M-21 Open 9 to 8 Mon-Frl. 9 TO I tAT. 8b 8UN. 6uTb6aR'D MOtOR BOAT, 30 hp Over 100 1969 Boots | NOW OK DISPLAY I Glastron, Sea Star North American Aluma Craft, Mlrro Sail-fish, Sun-fkh Mercury & Merc Cruimr Special Sale I Cruise Out, Inc. i OBjeljj g. wolton Closed Sun. FE 1-4408 , 699 ^ open M, Man.-Prr, 9-5 fat» 300 CYCLES IN STOCK LOW DOWN PAYMENT , ' EZTERMS ' ', | (All price* piut Tex) ANDERSON SALES & SERVICE 8, Telegraph FE 3-7102 AUGUST 350CC REBEL 250CC SAVAGE 280CC INVADER ffiCC STINGER , 120CC TRAIL KAT . >379 . 5275 f jiXONni* 8U,. ipreme, 8K8I >1899- Now >1525 to imtfMIVwat 8)435, new 89 TREANolK TRAILERS ’ ■ 948 . Dally 10-8 $un. 114 13 months or 12,000 m id modeit In ttoch 19' IRONWOOD houte trailer, 8450. C»l BE 8-2091 ottor 7 p.m, 19'65TlBERTViax537eic,COjlWlOn, utility M ^617.1 'b*droomi>'l MG SUZUKI SALES 1965 LIBERTY, 12 x 55 like new. gat 4667 Dixie Hwy. 673-4458 heat, $2,995. 482-3691! I Drayton Ptolnt SALES BOATS-Motort-Tralteri Pontoont-iallboeto In stockl PINTER'S WE TRADE-WI FINANCE 1370 Opdyke 94 Sat. 9 d-7s atg^™** - 1 p—* THE PONTIAC PHESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 30. 1969 For Want Ads Dial 334-4981 laats-Accastories * ecu' CLASS t >ONTOON BOAT, ■on Itacrlt, tor W. SS ho. John- H«w and Used Tmh 101 *47 — 4 DR. Travatall, vs, a tram, power stoarlno, poil-ti axle, 312*5, 20*6 Commonwealth * SAIL BOAT-SNIPE ir, IrH being weed. SHI. 343-4131. IPECIAL YEAR *ni primTi —------------—Ntr, ttoury, i LHANpYVANIN COOP IMI FORD CAMPER New and Used Cars 106 Now and Used Cars 10 1*47 CHEVY 1 DQOR automatic. I NO MONEY DOWN I i MARMADUKE By Anderson and Lieeming SUMMER CLEARANCE! ■. BOATS-MOTORS • TRAILERS SS$I-SAVE-$$$S T Horrington Boat Works • rm S. Tttaarabh 332-5033 THOMASON 14' Deluxe model, 70 hp Mercun, with trailer. Must sell. Sir clftral Drive. Swiss Villi Lake ollwi.______________ TERRIFIC DICOUNTS On all boats, pontoons and canoi AT TONY'S MARINE itors — SS years ret Lk. Ed. Sylvan Lake Wanted Cars-Trucks_101 ATTENTION EXECUTIVE EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "Check the rest, than oat the MSI" Averill's Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 Sharp Cadillacs. Pentlec. Olds and Sulcks tar dut-of-atata market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD , AUTO SALES Standard Auto “Momt of th# Dftportdsblo I 0WM PONTIAC Hi Oakland Avt. PE 1-4033 FORD PICKUP, *6AL PON MAC m-Ml 1f«f CKBVV Vk TOM pickup, l GMC TRUCK CENTER l:M to 5:00 Mon.-Frl. S:C0 to 12:00 Saturday 701 Oakland Avenut 335-9731 John McAuliffo Ford ^DUMPS- 1*41 FORD P-400, with 3-S yrd. rxtri nlcal 1*43 FORD F-3S0 Jn# ton. duel whools, with lto-3 id. durjp, excellent nice. BIG VANS SMALL VANS If45 FORD Hoow Duty Econo Von with now paint. Nl 1*44 FORD Heavy-Only Window van, new paint, > make nice camper. STAKES TRACTORS "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S tOP DOLLARs FOk SHAkP, TOP $ PAID All Cadillacs, Buick Electro 225s, Olds 98s, Pontiacs and anything sharp with air conditioning. WILSON CRISSMAN CADILLAC Jnnk Cnrs-T racks treetaw CfIc *i4W»V r0R *0ME’ »fHht - SR/ | mrm jONk 1,1, L JUNK CARS. FREE TOW ANYTIME. FE 4-147S Used Ante-Track Parts 10? BARREL m 10 Plymoutl ......... ■R.SdMS. . I AIR COMPRESSOR*. 1*44 P 4 THUNDERBIRD w . tit Ford. Silk Call 67S-H74, between to a.m, and < p.m. M* Cu. In Tri-Poirar _____________47*37# Its* VW CHASSIS complata, good anflna, S7S, 36KB16.__________ ItSS CHiVY FOR PARTS, good 1224. i, beat otter, 423- 1*41 Mercury 2*0 engine SIS! 1*43 Ford 319 angina S135 Ford 4 cylinder S) cu. SS0 1H4 Pontiac 30* angina S12S Other body and mechanical parts available. . H. 4 H. AUTO SERVICE OR S-S2O0_______________ 673-W64 WANflb fciOHT front fender and daw tar i*S7 Chow sodan. **> Now Rid Used Tracks 103 1*34 FORD FICKUP, 0100. _______ 33*3304 1**1 CHIVY to TON pickup, large box, cltan cab, 143-0011. dir. 1M2 CORVAIR van. ™ „ oood tires, ISO, 47*1011. -♦43 FORD Econollne? mechanically, new tires 'ital. CHBVROLET VAN, excellent . cendlten, reasonable oiler. 411-2531 1*44 CL CAMlNO . 0700 ., Coll 47M6W 1965 JEEP 2Jf0«n*|ir, fully carpeted, deluxe, 4 jjhaal drive, 9real for camping or - heavy duty work, 07*5. GRIMALDI CAR CO. WC^kland Ay,.___________Fa **421 1*44 EL CAMlNO, tanoau covarTv'l il* *. t^ocki, no . ryto CRlIf, pickup, urn 391.0959. Tw dHByRpLeT CAMPER i5ci*i. iwi iJJl?— - eamoar... tF"- 33*2743. 1967 Ford" H Ton Pickup PICKUPS a have a good selection of id used pickups, reduced and adv to go now) Close-Out Deals On All 1969 Models John McAuliffo Ford Wt Movtd . . . .. . vs Milo N. Of Mlrocta Milo IMS S. TelegraphEd. FE *4 foreign Cara IQS 0, GOOD tar duno buggy. ST* CADILLAC 1*41 COUPE DaVIII*, air conditioning, oil oxtras, you'll Ilk* •ho color. Priced to soil MA *144*, CADILLAC, 1*41 Eldorado, 21,000 mllat, now rubber, loaded, boat otter 335-6470,__________ 1*4* CADILLAC Eldorado, 1*57 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE: High performance. Reedy to dreg. —-01,100. 00*1013. 1*57 CHMvY STATION wagon, "amfc'a ,irM- 1*3* CHEVY. 1*44 Renault, needs 1*41 TR-3 needs a little work, body In good ahapo. 1415. Call attar 1 p.m. S7M40S.___________________ 4» vw ...........................sii PE *1784 attar s p.m, 1*42 AUSTIN NEALY Sprite. 1330 i bast otter. Mutt tall. *42-5011. atti 5:30. 1*41 CHEVY IMPALA, 4 door, Sl»7 1*41 CORVAIR, RUNS wall, need* work, >121 41 1964 FIAT door sodan, tremendous 2nd car r Ideal tar back to school, M2S. GRIMALDI CAR CO. FE *0421 1*44 . JAOUAR XKE body and •arlor In vary good eondltk chroma ww, AM-FM-M abtth < hausl, now battery, cowetto sllvi Needs elnge work, S147I firm. C 1964 MG SACK TO SCHOOL SPECIAL EXCELLENT CONDITION M2S GRIMALDI CAR CO. ♦00 Oakland Avo.____FE S-*421 ‘45 VW STATION wagon bus. Deluxe other extra* tm. 44*4110.____ *45 VW CAMPER, extra dean, low mileage, asking >1050. PE *0517. 1*45 Vw SI ST OFFER, 333-3035. It ~~ amwor, S245M*. 1966 VW nor sedan and It la In real at lent condition, mi. GRIMALDI CAR CO. *00 Oakland, Avo._________FI **431 •4* VW SEDAN. 4 spaed. 1000 miles, SHOO. Call attar 5 p.m. 33* 4*23.______________ W, 1 OWNER. 1*44. Good con 3000. 47*5323. 1967 Jaguar XKE Roadster Mi mile*. Sharpl $3795 VILLAGE RAMBLER 444 I. Woodward Ml « Open Tuesday till 7:00 p.m. l»fiPvw, 15.066 MlLki. Radio and — root. Vary dean, 11,170, ““ HM SLUE MG-B-OT, Coupe, AM- JOHN McAULIFFE Ford blue llnlsh, whitewalls, back to school ipocTall tisu tall prlco. P.S. We've Movedl to mile N. of Miracle Milo 045 S. Tologrgph Rd. PE *4101 1968 VW l-door, axcallant condition and out. 513*5. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 10 Oakland Avt. PE **4H 1140 BMW I40A EXCELLENT, 244100 ml. l track slarao, alr-condlllonlng. ■ EM S-tJOT/attar 1:15 p.r classic 1*54 MO-TP, axcallant condition, 40*0514. CALL MEl JOHNSON In Lake Orion tar lowest price* on dune buggy equip. Sr-——— plot* IlnL ■ ____ available. 4*39*44. With VI, a tarauMM „.... | CAMPER SPECIAL *1 $1895 Flannery Ford , On Dixie Hwy. at BillGollingVW II Mil* Rd. (Maple Old,) Troy Motor Moll Ml »«0flS New nnd Used t«r» 191 DICK CANAANt MOTOR CITY DODGE i 155 OAKLAND AVB. 13**222 YES!. YEAR END SAVINdS Lloyd Bridges Dodge WALLED LAKE 11*1171 WATERFORD STANDARD AUTO MOD Ellxabalh Lk. 1*44 BUICK SPBCiAL automatic, full equipment, axcallant condition, *4*7. Northwestern Auto Sales 2023 Dixie Hwy _________.FE *2520 1*45 BUICK Sport Wagon, full power, plus air. 482-7225._________ $2088 Suburban Olds 1*47 ELECTRA 225 Coup*. Showroom new. Full power, air, vinyl r ■' One year warranty. 527*3 orlc*. Fischer Buick, 515 Woodward. Ml 7-5400.___________ VERY CLEAN JtaO Skytark._ Vinyl, IS Coup*. Showroom . Pull | 1*40 BUICK Li SABRE ...... 400, power sloerlno. power brakes, tilt wheel, excellent condition, must soil, boat otter, call attar 4 p.m. 1*41 BUICK ELECTRA 225 Ilk* m 1*45 BUICK RIVIERA. Full O » ELECTRA 225, FACTORY air tlon, 873. *57-50*7, available, Immediate delivery. Call Mr. Parks, credit manager, tor payment schedule at Ml *7500, naw location of TURNER. FORD MO Maplo (15 Mil* Rd.) Troy Mall _____l mil* asst of Woodward Cadillac Convertible, power, nice *10*3, 47*0473. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1*4* CHEVY SUBURBAN, Travel All, V0, 35* bronza wl" '- Interior, bucket, consol*, alMrlno, radio, wool coat. .IMP *,000 actual miles, priced to go. 477 M-24, Lake Orion, 4**0341. 1**7 CADILLAC COUPE DaVIII* w air. Ilk* naw condlt'“-miles. 03400. 427-3705, 1*45 CADILLAC DaVIII*. Convert, air, FM and AM. Leather. Many more extras. Vary low mileage. HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME 42*51*4 or 424-37S7, 1*41 CHEVY CORVAIR: RUNS GOOD. 452-300*.______________ ill CHEVY WAGON, Parkwood. 0*3. Runt A-1. SAVE AUTO______________FE M275 |l*42 t6RVETTE, 327, *ipaad. OR 3-4*23.__________________________ CROWN MOTORS 1*1 Edldwln Ava. FE *5014 1*42 CORVETTE. Loaded. Attar 4:30 Hurst ahlft. Extras. I 5245. Buy her*. I Molars, 251------- Chavfo *cyMnd*r'i ._ .... 334-4313,''Wed^Fr*: Sat.-Tuas., anytime. 1*43 CORVETTE. 327. 2*5 FI heads. cond hand car 1967 CHEVY Transportation Special 5*7M GRIMALDI CAR CO. *00 Oakland Aye.______FE **421 Call Mr. Parka awstr* • TURNER FORD 1(00 M*Pta,(13 MII* Rd.) Troy Mall 1968 Chevy Biscayne 4 door sedan. Dark mldnli metallic blue with matching tsrlor. V-l automatic, p o w. . steering and brakai. 4 ply tires. NO RUSTI Car In axcallant c« dition. Munlc title. Full price $895 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 Maple Rd. Troy, Mich. 642-7000 1*40 CHEVY IMPALA, Sport VI, automatic transmission, OR,M?{4Vlnyl ,#P' *X<:' “ndl,lon-1*44 CHBVELLE, 227 cu., cellent condition. 4I2-0112 47*274* On M24 in Lake Orion 693-8344 console, hydromatlc, 47 brakes, .....wall!, ra_________........ „ executive car. Muit sail, 3*1-0*74. M* CHEVY KINGSWOOD Wagon, : toot*, alr-condltlonlng, powgi steering and brakes, Turbo Ing, power i dllfenlng, 320 ..c brakes, air c miles, 451.5541. John McAullffe Ford 1*45 CHRYSLER Imperial 2 hardtop, with |*t black tlnlah, a black cordova lop, full >» and air conditioning, dot •psclal only—Sim, full prlco. P.S. We've Movedl V5 mil* N. Of MlradO Mil* MS 5, Telegraph Rd. FE S-4101 1*65 CHRYSLER NEWPORT, 4~dOr, 114*5, 477 M-24, Lake Orion, 1341. _ MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1*44 Chryiitr Nswpdrt. *Hir, J .. choose from, I automatic, double power, 3)2*5, 477 M-24, Lake Orion, 4*3-5341.__• ____ attar 4:30 pjn, 152-203*. 1(44 CHEW Rhcayna, rcyllndtr sttckV 1258. PE 6-4442 attar 4. CHBVELLE CONVERTIBLE. 1*44 auparaport. 253 V-a, good condition. 5423. 451-1714,_________ 1*44 dHEVY t spood, 47**5*7, Tom Rademacher Chevy-Olds On US 10 at M15 . Clarkston MA 5-5071 1*41 IMPALA SI, 4 t.. _______ loch, RAH. 334-3455 after I p day Sat. 1*45 CORVAIR 4 D05~R aadan. Must tall. 3*1-047*. CORVAIR MONZA. 1*45 Maroon and Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Ookloixl 333-7863 John McAuliffe Ford 1*47 CHEVY ♦, nataangar. Nation wagon With VS, igdlg hootar. automatic, powpr tiogrlng. hooutifui metallic tarwokw with matching EH vinyl Interior. Sum-mor ipiiieioT only SIMS, hill prlco. P.S. We've Movedl Vi Milo N. of Mirada Milo * — “■* Pi 5-41M MILOSCH Hahn CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH RAMBLER-JEEP 7t Dixie Hwy- MA *24) ___CLARKSTON_ 1932” DODGE Thal'i right talks, a’ 1*32 Oodg* door aadan with 3,wo mlm. a re< collector's dream. Call Mr. Park Mr price. Ml *730t. TURNER FORD 100 Maple (IS Milo Rd.) Troy Mall ** »,l( o* Woodward KESSLER'S Oxford ________OA *1401 1*45 DODGE FOLARA, 4dsoMi*Sn. aulo. power, fully ogulwad, 2*.ooo ml., 1 owner, 54*5. 442-725l~ 1*65 DObOi CORONET 44oT»alion Wagon, VB, automatic, air m djtioning. holiday apacial at only TOWN ft COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH RochasUr, 1001 Main 451-4220 1645 DO Don canvartlbl*. VAin, double power, 31,225. 451-im. 1968 CHARGER 212, torque fllla.^powar slaarlng. DICK CM4AANS MOTOR CITY DODGE Ifdi aHARaER, 1*2. dsukii pmh vinyl top. dr-“ glass and nv bat., I p.m. iRi tWAi “ Sci. TZ8T MOTOR CITY DODGE YES! YEAR END iAVINOS Lloyd Bridges Dodge 11 take back that remote control if you don’t mind!” Used tors 106 1*52 FORD STATION wagoh. L — --------- -i 4 1*40 FALCON, 1 OWNBlk, axcallant *62 FAIRLANE 500, « cylinder automatic, axcallant condition. Coll attor 3. 243-3*20.___________ i*42 FORD station wagon, dition, *24*. 847-9553. l*n .FORD GALAXlf Mg FOKD GALAX IE XL, power wide ovals. 2425,451-1271. John McAuliffe Ford 1*44 T-BIRD Landau with power, and naw tlraa, run* III_ new on*, summer special at only 810*8 full prlco. P.S. Wa've Movedl Vt Mil* N. of Miracle Mil* S. Telegraph fb 5-410i 1*45 MUSTANG, 3 DOOR 1*«5 MUSTANG, VI, (lick, * 1*45 MUSTANG COUPE, V-l... *475 Id. Pull orlc* 54*5. Bank ilfabl* here. I mm ad Ivary. Call Mr. parka, _____ nager, for payments schedule at 4-7566. Naw tocitlon of TURNER FORD 2400 M*pl* (15 Mil* Rd.) Troy Mall r*45 MUSTANG, V* stkkr v6ry clean, $750, will accept motorcycle In trade, 427-3300._____________ 145 MUSTANG, WHITE with" Interior, 4 cyi. stick, on* ot 35,000 actual ml. 14*5. 442-4201. 15 MUSTS last olfar. BEEN BANKRUPT? Head a car? Want to raaatobllih your cradltT 1966 Ford Galaxi# Convertible $1095 Matthews-Hargreaves 431 Oakland Ava, FE 4-4347 i*44 falcon. Automatic, radio and heater. Pull price 15*5. Bank farm availed* her*. Immtdllli delivery. Call Mr. Park* cradl manager tar payments schedule a Ml injkm* location of TURNER FORD 2400 Maple (H Mil* Rd.) TlW Mall T mil* aaa) afVliiNwrd. 1*44 Falrlana Wagon. V-l,_____ powtr steering. Pull price eTlU. Bank torm* available hart. Im-madlata delivery, call Mr. Park* credit manager for b * V m * nl schedule at Ml *7500. New location of TURNER FORD JOHN McAULIFFE FORD I*!** T-BIrd convartlbla, this ■ will .bo a true classic In a taw to goodleai C 41700 lull or— P.S. Wa've Movedl 14 MUSTANG, » with dacx vmyi nip k automatic, BN Motor, whitewall VI X SINS. LARRY Sheehan s HILLSIDE LincolnaMorcufY 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1967 Ford Custom 2-Door Man, V4. automatic, ■tearing, radio. Motor, rad til $1297 Matthews-Hargreaves 1*47 FALCON 4 door. wltB * bStaHiW 4jlyor MuoNntoh, with .tsstoi P.S. We've Movedl New and Used Cure, 106 1*47 MUSTANG, HARDTOP,* good condition, S14*£ 451-137*. 1(67 T-BIRD, LANDAU, 2-door hardtop, factory air conditioning, full power, black vinyl top, radio. Malar, automatic, whitewall tlras, 122*5. LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 1*47 Mustang. ] „—I ... Ing. Full prlca SINS. Bank terms avallabla Mr*. I m m a d I a 11 delivery. Call Mr. Parks, cradl manager, (or payments schedule a Ml *7500. Naw location of TURNER FORD 2400 MaplaI (15 Mil* Rd.) Troy Mall conditioned, H*00. Phone attar 4 __________n V4, air- ::-3gg5YieT' 1968 T-Bird Landau Full power, and factory air dltlonlng, must M seen to only 534M. Pull Price. P.S. We've Movedl Vt Mil* N. of Mlrar1- **■'-1545 S. Telegraph Rd. 1*40 FORD Falcon station wagon. Six cyllndors, automatic, baautltui sunset yellow finish. Pltnty of room and comfort. Radio, hoator, whitewalls. An exceptional buy. ' LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oaklond 333-7863 John McAuliffe Ford 1*4* Falrlan* Cobra Hardtop. 425 angna, automatic tranimMlan, radio, hoator, powtr ataorlng and brakai. Black cordovan top. Clearance Special, 5241* full price. P.S. We've Movedl .... !? S'1!* N- °* Miracle Mil* 1545 >■ Telegraph _____FE 3-4101 John McAuliffo Ford rusr 1*4* Mustang. Fallback, v-t atar, power inarjr* yellow v... vmy sms run price. P.S. We've Movedl .... to MII* N. of Miracle Mil* 1*45 >■ Telegraph Rd. FE *4101 MUSTANG. FASTBACK, all 4*2-14*5, 151, taka over payments, » MACH I, 351, M* Mustang ' Fallback. V-l. Power steering. Pifll pita* *23*5. Bank New mi Used fare 106 1*47 Mercury Cougar. V-S automatic, power steering and brakes. Full price $17*5. Bank terms avallabla her*. Immediate delivery. Call " Parka credit manager tar payn schedule at Ml *750*. Naw I la aast of Woodward 1*40 COUGAR, XR7, all power, auto., naw rad lino Tlgar “— deluxa interior with apom a Must sacriflca. 4*2411*0. ■ck. plus ayments. extras. Taka 1*04 OLDS (S 4 door h I extras, to*5. 451- 1966 OLOSMOBILE 442 Convertible J spaad. Si400, llrm. Call 402*011 sea TaLVoor. Texaco. 1968 OLDS CUTLASS- 2 door htrdtop, finish, matchln •nek, radio, I_______ MR other accessories, local c mint condition. Special $1995 tinted glass, whltawalls, sharp! Make otter. 451-*766. *20*5 1*41 PLYMOUTH 1*44 MUSTANG 1*45 BONNEVILLE TURNER FORD um Maple (IS Mil* Ed..) Troy M 1 mil* east of Woodward 1(44 JEEPV cYUHBkk, convertible Jdfe togs .««• hubs, wo or bast otter. 451-55*4.______________________ IN* CJ 5 JEEP. 4 cyllndar. 4 whaal N|B "lliy steal cab. Daluxa r 545x15 lug tirai. 2500 .....jt. Wlfl sacrifice (or 52 Call 23*7717 attar 4 p.m! MANY EXTRA! tlnantal 4 dooi 02475. OR 2-2720. 1967 Continental Convartibla Pull power, air condition. Yalta with black top. SHARPl SAVE Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Soles l*le w. Maple Rd„ Trov Ml *2N Lorry Shoohon's HILLSIDE GRIMALDI CAR CO. *00 Oakland Ava. p| 5-9431 1*45 MERCI ---- WIIN RAyegi pi VRHeB LARRY BHIEHAN’I HILLSIDE Lincoln-Marcury 1250 Oaklanjt 333-7863 'SJSCS&Xfcirj: st «4T" LARRY CHICHAN’S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Marcury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 l*dd mr6cuKy 6 a r k l a n --WTWM, 410 V-6 ongIn• iKnur*m LARRY IHIEHAN’S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Marcury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 Final 33 Cars Must Go! 1969 Olds Now-Uood ft Domos $$-SAVE-$$ BEST OLDS 5M OoMand Avo. FE 2^101 VAN CAMP CHCVROLET On N. Milford Rd. Ulltord 4IJ-1C T969~OLDS Supremo 2 Door Hardtop With automatic transmission, radio, powtr ataorlng, brokoa, buckets. Console, vlny to~ whltawalls, OM executive car. $2795 MERRY OLDS 52* N. Main St. Rochaator ______45141751 1*4* OLDSMOBILI CUTLASS S". VS, hydramatlc .5, air, power *tr"“‘~ ‘ i. radio, whlwwaili, .... • vinyl liitarlor. 12,775. New and Used Can 1061 New and Used Cors 106 1*43 PONTIAC, 2 door hard! spaad. *450. 4*2-7*40. 1*42 PONTIAC TEMPEST, 2 >125. 325-5*35._______ 1*43 CATALINA, 5250. 1*64 Pontiac 5*5. 401-0955. Nl « Hyw. 5». 1*U LeMANS 2 door hardtop. Bungundy with black bucket seats, v.*, automatic. Powtr ateerlnd and brakes. Console. Low mil a t. Bought her naw. Call 442-320*. Audette Pontiac 105Q W. Mapl* Rd. Troy 1*44 BONNEVILLE ConywTIbto. < coltant condition, *550. 320* Meiv Rochester, 852-2440.____________ 1*64 Pontiac 9 passenger wage with air... 5550 v, 5600. 527-377*. 1*44 PONTIAC, BONNEVILLE 2-door hardtop, V-0 engine, automatic, power brakes and power steering, radio, heater, whitewall tires, must be seen to be appreciated. 510*5. LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 333-7863 vinyl Interior. 451-0740._ 1*45 PONTIAC STATION Wagon. Double power. 07S0. 052-5715. , YOUR VW CENTER 70 to Choose From -All Models— —All Colors—. —All Reconditioned— Autobahn Motors Inc. Authorized VW Dealer to Mile North of Mirada Mile 1745 5. Telegraph. • FE *4531 194* 2 DOOR PONTIAC Venture. 1*45 PONTIAC GRAND LUCKY AUTO Wide Track 1*45 PONTIAC 2 PLUS 2. 4 S| •ri-power, power brakes, bast i call EM 3-4246.___________________ _ $27*5. Call 332-0*10. TM* PONTIAC CATALINA. Station wagon, hydramatlc, double power, power rear window, $2*00. 332-4707. 1*4* PONTIAC CATALINA, 2-Door, vinyl top, power and olr, low mileage, $3150. 451-4514. ___ 1*6* GRAND PRIX. air, power, --------------- U4j£ many oxtraa, 67*2054. with black vinyl top, 3 condition, 1 owner, 451-0444 or FE 1945 PONTIAC CATALINA LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Ooklond 333-7863 John McAuliffe Ford 1*65 PONTIAC Bonneville station wagon, with beautiful deep metallic burgundy with matching «ll vinyl lntl«ror, lummir clearance apacial only t13ll full Pr‘p.S. We've Movedl to Mile N. of Miracle Milo 1045 5. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4101 ■*" BONNEVILLE COUPE. II price. Fischer i»44 PONTIAC' Ventura, unioned, power brake* i Ing, 4-door sedan. Exes dition. >1,000. 401-21*4. it finish. $2,250. 451-0017. ONTIAC tXtLU i iyc, inw hardtop. Power, vinyl top, 03100. 45)0714........................ f*4* CATALINA, HARDTOP, fuli power, olr, vinyl top. tint glass, I FM, >3150, 651-12*2. _ 1*4* CATALINA, RADl67 power steering and brakes, auto., cordova too, 373-13*5. i*6* BONNEVILLE, 2 door hardtop. 1*4* PONTIAC, 4-DOOR hardtop executive, cordova top, air, full power, low mileage, sharp. 3*1-2215.______________' 1*6* GRAND PRIX, automatic, dual power, air. 53,3*5. OR 3-7012. 196* PONTIAC WAGON custom S, hydra, power steering and brakes, positractlon, rack, axe.'condition, 0 RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC-TEMPEST On M*?4—-Lake Orion MY 3-6266 * passenger wagon, fully (quipped, air conditioning, 537*5. Also !•*• Pontiac Catalina, * t wagon, fully. equipped, passenger *,700, oxKutlvos car, I 1*4* BONNEVILLE 4 DOOR, hardtop, factory air, power brake*, £Ower steering, extra clean. UL 2- PONTIAC 1*4* GRAND PRIX. Blua with white vinyl top. Air conditioning. Many axtraa. Low. mlleago. Lika now. Call 447-31*4. NEW FINANCE PLAN working? Naad a car? Wa arrange for almost anybody with good, bid, or no credit. 75 cars to chops* from. Call credit mgr. Mr. Irv — Dtaltr. H —5 or FE f — f RAMBLER WAGON, i 1*62 RAMBLER CLASSIC, VOIY good, exc. body. 343-0001, dir. FOR SALE, 1*44 RAMBLER, 2 door. >50. 115 Stole St. Apt. 2. It runs. 1944 RAMBLER 770, 44ooir Station waoon. 29,000 actual mllas, 6 cyllndar, radio, il economy plus oataad . .. JSE RAMBLER Laka, EM 3-4155. 1*47 RAMBLER REBEL 44toor, slick shift, radio, haatar, 4 cyllndar angina, economy car priced to sell at 5*95. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP, Union Lrt*,_E«l_S415J. *66 RAMBLER CLASSIC, 4 door, VI, 1 owner, 20,000 mil**, 01,1*5. 651-2755. 1948 SSP JAVELIN 194* OLOSMOBILE 4 door hardtop power brakes and power a (taring, air candttton*d, 651-fll0._ BEFORE YOU1 BUY A car . . . Visit Lucky Aulo tala* tar ana of the finest selections In town. Cor* can b* purchased with no money down, all make* and modali. W* Wilt Not b* Undersold I LUCKY AUTO 1*40 W. Wide Track FE 4-1004 __or____ BE 3-7154 'li4l 'FtYM6UTH 4-OOOR 4744740 1*41 PLYMOUTH WAGON,- 4 PLYMOUTH, 311, d< mlradio, oxcallonPraHOM ir owned. *550. S0S4713. 1004 PLYMOUTH FURY, partact nSo 1968 PLYMOUTH SPORT WAGON 0 passenger, torque tilt*, VI, powai steering. DICK CANAANt MOTOR CITY DODGE M Plymouth road runner, ill, 4 spaad powtr. SHARPI DICK CANAAN*. MOTOR CITY DODGE MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Roadrunnar, 3 door, hardto 4 barrel, automatic, pow —ring, white walla, bronza in « or. 477 M-24, Lake Orion, 4*24)41. automatic shttt, Pdoor, 2 'months 1*41 FoNtlAC, FAST back i7 1*51 lONtiAC. 520 1*47 Imp*la 4-door ..... 1*47 Catalina Poilict car .. ---GMC ItaMlHWk ..... Galaxi* Sdoer hardto >ftaN *12*5 iioM 5 0*5 ioos 9 wrong rfm noromp • ftS i Chtvy IOtliBf ......mm KEIGO PONTIAC SAUS ““*>1. (Hr. New location of TURNER FORD 400 Mnl* (15 Mil* Rd.) Troy Mall 1 mil* aast of Woodward 1*40 RAMBLER, JAVALIN 2-door hardtop, all rad with Mack vinyl Intorlor, bucket seats, comola, vinyl top, V-l onglno, automatic, power slaarlng, radio, haatar, whitewall tlraa. 12415. LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oaklond 333-7863 Bean Bankrupt? Naad a Car? power, vary good comlltton. FE 2-lortaA air, clean Nprfva7,,,|?f50 GOT HAUPT PONTIAC 1*67 VW, WHITE, dition. 22,00) mil*!, si.iu Stirling, oft Walton. 1*47 VWPOR SALE. MOTOR CITY DODGE 155 OAKUND AVE. 3M-9222 YES! YEAR END SAVINGS Lloyd Bridges Dodge WALLED LAKE 424.137* 1 *47~TEMP*EST™WAGON, 6 cyltnttar, gAV*y.ln<8^!S^S!,.b^*l,,,^ M'°“ 1^67 Firebird Vinyl lop, 5 cyllndar, autom radio, haatar, oowar ataorlng brakoi. wire whaals. Car Is Tr callant condition. $2095 PONTIAC RETAIL 05 University Dr. fb stmj 1m? BONNEVILLft. Aik, all power, 11400 mllat, *1150. 4024121. 1M? PONTIAC 2-DOOR hardtop, Spubta^r, axcallant condition. 1X7 ...PONTIAC. FIREBIRD con-vartlblo. 314*3. Maybe seen at Mana'I Mobil SsrvIC*. Corner of Pike endPaddock. 1*45 4-DOOR PONTIAC oxacullvo, nsSo e5!5uf"ny #!rtrM ,"*1' *lr' wja aYACWK .i FAsseHoer r^rffliit. l,ydrB"l,tle' *lr' A PAINTER'S SPECIAL 2-i*6l Pontiacs, Adoor, automatic transmlsalona. Bowor algaring and brake*. 11024 full pries, No monty KUCKY AUTO me PONTIAC TEMPEST I door. Rad with Mack roof, v I, *'•*““** ------ rliia and mi*. All from, Wr. A) (Daalar) 02-2041 - VOLKSWAGEN—Call batwain 12 noon and I j>.m. 3*44115. PICKUP SALE Prom DICK CANAANt MOTOR CITY DODGE 855 OAKLAND AVE. Pontiac ____ FE 5-4525 a car? NO MONEY DOWN! Hundred* to choosa from Call Mr. Al (Doolar) 462-2041 HUNTER” DODGE ' GREAT FINISH TRADES $1995 1966ford Galaxie 500 2 door hardtop. Rad paint. Bucket saatl, consol*,, power slaarlng. rtadle, whltawall 11 r a 1. stock $1495 1966 Dodge Sports Wagon Automatic, 6 cyllndar, radle. stock $1295' 1968 Ambassador Craw Country Wagon, Power •♦•ring air conditioning — wh,n,!w.r^u,KR ** $2295 1967 Dodge Polara Wagon $1695 . 1968 Dodge Dart 2 door. V-l power slaarlng, stars* radio. Sharp carl Stock fin. $1895 Ni do not torn bock spoMomalars. HUNTER DODGE 499 S. Hunter, Birmingham Ml 7-0958 6 Fragile V Was seated 33 Book parts 8 Desert animal 38 Sign of the P0* zodiac 10 US. coin 40 Falls in droos 11 Fruit drinks HI Wise ones 17 Songbird 42CiTwp>rt> WGetaup 43 Take out 23 Small bottles 44 Condition 24 South Ameri- (medical can rodent suffix) 25 Preposition 46 Grafted (her.) rP°*!v* 47 Proportion 27 Mocked 48 Epochal 28 Individuate 50 Faucet 1. - 2 4 4 5 6 7 5“ 9 10 k 12 13 14 15 16 17 19 r° 21 FI bP 24 25 27 28 29 30 BP sr 44 35 36 r 40 BP 42 43 44 I45~ 46 47 48 48 » 61 52 53 &4 56 66 57 to Valiant Line Adds Two Sports Coupes The Plymouth' Valiant line open rear-quarter window glass jTHE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST i -Television Programs- , I960 D—0 Programs furnished by stations listed in this column am subject to change without notice! jPeop/e in the News] SATURDAY NIGHT 6:81 (4) C—News, Weather, (•) C — Lively Spot — ' Nancy Ames guests. (50) C — (Special) Drag Racing — Taped highlights from the National TIot- Rod Association’s world series of drag tracing in Inidanapolis. (56) R —■ , Washington Week In Review (62) C — Best of Swingintime features two additions for 1970. New are a two-door coupe, the Duster, and a high-performance model sharing the same body, the Duster 340. The new models and the restyled Valiant 4-door sedan go on sale Sept. 23. Are* dealers include Hahn Chrysler-Plymouth, 6673 Dixie Highway, Clarkston; Colonial Chrysler, 200 S. Main, Milford; Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth, 724 Oakland; Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth, 2100 W. Maple, Troy; and Milosch Chrysler-Plymouth 0775 S. Lapeer, Lake Orion. Featuring an attractive and youthful sports coupe styling and a ventless frontdoor glass. Standard engine in the Duster is a 198-cubic-inch six-cylinder engine Which achieves a compromise between fuel economy and high-level performance. For a step-up in performance without major sacrifices lit economy , the 225-cublc-inch six-cylinder and the 318-cubic-inch V-6 are optional. All use regular gasoline. The youth-oriented Duster 340 i powered by the high-p e r f ormance 340-cubic-inch, four-barrel engine as standard equipment. This engine features high-flow cylinder heads, manifolds and carburetor, and a theme, the Dusters have tip- high-performance camshaft. 0:30 (4) C -5 News — Huntley, Brinkley (7) C — Micigan Sportsman — Catching whitefish with flies , (50) R —Combat (56) Dr. Posin’s Giants — The accomplishments of Isaac Newton are discussed. 7:00 (4) C - Michigan Outdoors (7) C •- Anniversary Game (9) C — (Special) Palm Beach Party; — Bobby Goldsboro stars in this musical variety show with Jay and the Americans, the Roof Top Singers, the Happening and the Les Elgart Orchestra from Palm Beach, Fla. (Conclusion) (50) R - Bridge With Jean Cox (62) R - Movie: “Tomorrow Is Another Day” (1951) Steve Cochran, Ruth Roman 7:39 (4) R C - Adam-12 -Malloy and Reed uncover a case involving child neglect. (7) C — Dating Game — Sue Lyon guests. (9) R — Movie: “I’ve Always Loved You" (1948) Philip Dorn, Catherine McLeod (50) C — Midwestern Hayride — Stan Hitchcock guests. (56) R - French Chef-How to make the perfect souffle on a platter. 8:00 (4) R C - Get Smart-While grounded in his apartment by injury, Smart studies the adjacent office building which contains occupants dangerous to the Smarts. (7) C — Newlywed Game (50) R — Movie: “They Who Dare” (British, 1954) Dirk Bogarde, Akim Tamiroff — Plymouth brings high per-' formance to the compact car field for 1970 with an all-new two-door coupe, the Duster 340. It is powered by a lightweight, high- performance 34jkmbic-lnch V8 with four-barrel carburetion. A new fully synchronized three-speed manual transmission with floor-mounted shift linkage is standard. —Weekend Radio Programs- it#—WWJ, N*w* CKLW, »t*V* Hunt* WXYZ, K CMM-WJBK. tttv* Ntwm WHFI, Don Alcorn - ■ WtON, NWt WCAR, N*“» >« i WJR, f- wjr. loip pox Derby 4ii*—wwj. Audio/# WJR. Sportx tporte, Dovo WJR. jMfti vMkjE> WPON, Phono Opinion WJR. Wookond Ropor t. Point* and Tnmds e* *:4S—WJR. City Hall Report* jiaa-wcAR. CKUtTprank Rrodla whRh Laa aim WJR, Now*. Michigan Open RajwrT Tilt—WJR. ihawnM Tisa-r—' Tl- - - -WJR, •:#-WpoS7 . Dlxor WJR, Larry WkiHyi *—WJR, Nowa, *jSS—WJR, Snaca Story ti§-ip Uatanar-a Chalad IS:S*—WJR, Saturday I nJOBk. NOW* WWJ. WPS wjbk, Rob Day 11il» -WJR, Sport* Pinal •WJR, Music Till Dawn Si#—WJR, Musical,i Prom L PubHc Atialri wwj, OuanMit WJBK. Buslnoss Ravlaw »i«-WJR, Tha ChrKtoortar wjbk. Whars tha Issua SiW-wjR, N*w* wjbk, CammunHy Currants WCAR, Maws. Choir Loti OKI W, Saarch ter Survival M«~WJR, Hymns -wjbk. Llstsn to This TiJB—WJR, Waakand Rat Choral* cm w, Prank Bredla s WHPI, Don Zm Mill—WPOM, Emmanuel Bap Sunday C ^fr.XdSr'Sii6SBrlL whom' Sunday Sarenada wjbk, nmiiAjOwr WCAR. Tha Cnurch today Jiss-wpon, Mount orivs WWJ, Oood Music li#—WJR, State Pair Sun-d rlaa larvica WWJ, Haw*, Oood Mintc Slip-WCAR, Bach to Oad . WJI LW, Window t i irfeteR* Sl«S—WJBK, Town Siia—CKLW, Windsor Labor WCAR,. Musk twSundoy WPOH, Broad utTlta WWJ, Nawt, Church at tha Croaarpad* WJBK. Wing* of Haallnp WJR, Now* wxyz. Now*. Mika SRer- •mS-wpun, Snining ligM vyB* FtenrA ti#--WJK RM PaJMnw ln...._ MflK& Si# WWJ. Haw*. Ra Pul w«Rf, faranada In Blue WJBK, World of Books WJR, Haws. Sports, Tralllc WJR, Patterns In Music WJIk. Norlhwaalarn Ra- WJR, Sport*, Pattama In lll*^>WWJ. Art Of Living ..WPON, Tha CltrhrtopMr* 11 lie—WWJ, Haw*. St. Paul's WJR, NfWI, Sports, Weak--WPOH?°Canlral MathO- ■ Vsl «vShtvafo WCAR. M WPOH, I WJR, Nawt, Sports CKLW, Hlatorv at Rack V Hits—wwj. Audio/# wjr, SMWilpan Opart R» *.rar SiSB-cS-wT Scott iSbcn WJR, Now*. Showcaau ■ SiW—WWJ, Nmh. Monitor 4i«B—WJBK, K. O. Baylay SJP-WCAR, NOWS, A WJR, Iwmi *i*J- WPON, hnuaic on uoex WJR, Michigan Opan Rp »iSB-WCAR, Stawart WJR, Nows WWJ. mint I CKLW, Jim I 7l#~WPON« Prolaolanl Hour Aims I, Church # m HampSon and Ri — -WPON. . WJBK, Jim SiSO^WXYZ^ Public A ilSi-WJR, Dlmanilon. I. Action: Dal, League l7 Listener** c WJR, SI— tans-wJR, Roils ISrtSiiwSk. in C WBflr Ilisa-WCAR. Jawiah WjSSTaKhWM Show zmm WXYZ, New* CKLW. Mark Kl WHPI, Ira J, C ”1 V ■ ■ (56) Folk Guitar 8 125 (62) Greatest Headlines 8:36 (2) C — Death Valley Days (4) R C — Ghost and Mrs. Muir — Capt. Gregg tries to romance Carolyn with poetry. ; (7) C — Lawrence Welk — A musical visit to a county fair, (56) R C — Black Journal — Blacks present their views on apartheid in South Africa. (62) R — Movie: “Strangers on a Train” , (1951) Ruth Roman, Farley .Granger 9:90 (2) C—(Special) Great Grape Debate — Vic Ca-puto hosts documentary on the dispute between farm laborers and the table grape growers of California. (4) R — Movie’: “Wild Seed” (1963) A young forlorn couple search for truth and love. Michael ’ Parks, Celia Kaye 9:30 (2) R C — Petticoat Junction — Uncle Joe announces h i s retire-* ment. (7) C — Johnny Cash — Roger Miller, O d e 11 a, Charlie Callas, and Bobby . and I guest. (9) R —Danger Man (56) R C — Accent — The Carthage College Organ and Brass Ensemble performs. 10:66 (2) R C - Mannix -When Peggy’s boyfriend disappears, Mannix learns he’s an escapee from a prison road gang-19) C — News, Weather, . Sports (50) C — Lou Gordon — 1. Dr. Eugene Schoenfeld, whose hip medical column is carried in underground new spapers, discusses Willie E. .Thompson of the Detroit Federation of Teachers outlines his organization’s grievances. (56) R — NET Festival — Erich Leinsdorf directs the senior orchestra of the New England Conservatory of Music in Mahler’s Symphony No. 1. 10:15 (9) R — Mov}e: “The First Texan” (1956) San Antonio, lawyer Sam Houston is persuaded by Gen. Andrew Jackson to rally Texans in their struggle for independence. Jeff Morrow, Joel McCrea 10:30 (7) C - (Debut) Passage to Adventure — Mexico and the Baja peninsula. (62) R — Favorite Story — Penniless young man sells his shadow to the devil in exchange .. great wealth. 11:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (62) R - Movie: “It, the Terror Beyond Space” ( 1958 ) Marshall Thompson, Shawn Smith 11:30 (4) R C - The Saint -Simon poses as a policeman to foil a gold holdup. (7) R - Movie: colds, drugs and venereal “Slaughter on 10th Avenue” (1957) Richard Egan, Jan Sterling (50) R - Movie: “Chamber of Horrors” (British, 1940) Lilli Palmer, Lesile Banks 11:35 (2) R C - Movies: 1. “Tripoli” (1950) John Payne, Maureen O’Hara, Howard da Silva; 2- “Of Flesh and Blood” (French-Itallan, 1962) Robert Hos-sein 11:45 (9) C — Perry’s Probe — “The Western Movie” 1:09 (4) C - News, Weather 1:39 (7) C - Wonderful World of Sports 1:35 (7) R - Movie: “Assignment in Paris” (1952) Dana Andrews, Marta Toren 3:00 (7) C - News, Weather 4:00 (2) C - News, Weather 4:05 (2) TV Chapel TV, Features Tonight DRAG RACING, 6 p m. (50) I PALM BEACH PARTY, 7 P-m. (9) By the Associated Press Mrs. Edward M. Kennedy was reported in condition and resting comfortably” Friday night at Cape Cod Hospital in Hyannis, Mass., after a miscarriage Thursday. The hospital said Mrs. Kennedy, wife of the Massachusetts senator, may be released today. It was the third miscarriage since 1963 for Mrs. Kennedy, who will be 33 Tuesday. The Kennedys have three children, Kara, 9, Edward Jr., 7, and Patrick, 1. "very good Presley Top Drdwing Card in V^jas Elvis Presley, rock ’ll’ roll king of the 1950s, joins Frank Sinatra and Dean Martin as one of Us Vegas’ top drawing cards, hotel executives say. ... Presley made his first Las Vegas appearance in 13 years this month, drawing 101,500 persons In four weeks, the International Hotel said yesterday. In a conservative estimate, this means Presley brought in $1.5 million in dinner and cocktail show fees for the new hotel-casino, officials said. GREAT GRAPE DE- i BATE, 9 p.m. (2) British Star Held in Tiff With Police JOHNNY CASH, 9:30 p.n (7) I LOU GORDON, 10 p.m. 1 (50) PASSAGE TO ADVENTURE, 10:30 p.m. (7) British actor Richard Harris was arrested in London early today and charged with assaulting two policemen outside a West End cabaret. Police said Harris, star of the movie “Camelot,” was detained after a disturbance outside the Talk of the Town cabaret, where Sammy Davis Jr. is appearing. FACE THE NATION, I 11:30 a.m. (2) MEET THE PRESS, 12:30 i P-m. (4) } AND ANSWERS, 12:30 p.m. (7) I TRACK AND FIELD, 2:30 \ P-m. (2) BOWLING, 3 p.m. (4) Harris was officially accused of “assaulting two police officers in the execution of their duty,” police said. Richard David Lock, described as Harris’ assistant, was charged with obstructing police. New LA Police Chief Seeks Peace NFL ACTION, 3:30 p.m. (2) “Peace is our mission,” said Edward M. Davia who-after 29 years with the force-is now Los Angeles’ 46th chief of police. Davis, 52, who took the oath of office yesterday, succeeds Thomas H. Reddin in the $34,625-a-year post as head of the nation’s third-largest police force. Reddin resigned to become a local television newscaster. The new chief pledged “courtesy and friendly good humor regardless of color, creed or economic circumstances.” Force, he said, will be used only when persuasion and advice have failed. THE VINE AND THE 1 FIG TREE, 4:30 p.m. -Junior Editors Quiz on- CATFISH •••<- j mSm LOOKS PRETTY 1 FISHY t — QUESTION: How does the walking catfish breathe out of water? ANSWER: Our picture does look fishy, but is really in accordance with fact. Several fishes, such as the mud skipper, have developed an ability to come out of the water for short periods. The walking catfish is another of these. A tropical fish, it is in the news because }t has appeared in Florida and is spreading so rapidly there that it is causing concern, for this fish is aggressive and may eliminate other valuable native fishes. ‘ It seems the walking catfish arrived in Florida when Imported for sale by dealers in tropical fish. Some of the catfish escaped and the species began to spread. These fish have stiff spines in their pectoral fins which can dig Into the ground and help them slither alohg. They bend their bodies and slash their tails as well. They walk to get them from pond to pond, a facility probably developed in areas where ponds dried up during Certain periods. In order to breathe on land, this catfish has developed organs behind the gills which work in much the way our lungs do, enabling them to extract oxygen directly from the air for short periods. (You can win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in core of this newspaper, is selected for a prise.) LOOK IN FILM’N’FASH-, ION SHOW, 5 p.m. (50) SOUNDS OF SUMMER, 7 p.m. (56) j TV Show May Have Led to Student's Immolation CONQUEST OF SPACE, 9 p.m. (9) , TELETHON, (50) 9:30 p.m. Surfboard Fouls 1 Warfare Game CAMBRIDGE, England (AP) I - A television program may I have led a student to set fire to I himself as be dreamed during I the night, a coroner said today. I David Lehmann, 18, son of a I Cambridge University profes-3 sor, soaked his clothes in turpentine and burned himself to His mother told the court his ;last words were: “It was ail a B IBB idream..Something made me do HONOLULU (AP) — The de- it. It was a dreadful mistake. I stroyer USS’Carpenter, search- didn’t know it would happen." ing the Pacific in an antisubma- He died next day in a hospital rine warfare exercise, came up'from burns over 00 per cent of with a strange target. his body. The ship’s sonar spotted drifting surfboa I “I south of Waikiki. City Coroner Dudley Dwell 120 miles jsaid that before the youth went jto bed he had been watching a New Styling Lights television program on primitive religions in which were “vivid shots of men and boys rfuneing through the firelight and one shot of people walking through fire. “I am told the shots were in no way horrific, but It may be that the program directly touched off ideas which led to this. In this case the boy got up, dressed himself and then for 8ome reason it appears he soaked himself in turpentine and set himself alight.” The student’s father, Hermann Lehmann, told the hearing: “David was artistically inclined and he had a vivid imagination. “His painting showed this and so did Ms music. He was also inclined to do little experiments. He was not a sleepwalker.” Priest Killed Dodge Truck Lineup by 2 Young J Holdup Men The new model year brings major engineering and styling changes to the Dodge Truck lineup, plus new engines for heavy-duty trucks, motor homes and compacts, according to Gwain H. Gillespie, Dodge 'Duck Operations general manager. Area dealers are Lloyd Bridges Traveland, 1010 W. Maple, Walled Lake and Mike Canaan Motor City Dodge, 855 Oakfand, Pontiac. Featured on ft- and 44-ton trucks is a new standard grille of bright anodized aluminum with a deep textured insert. Side marker lights as well as reflectors have be e n incorporated into a combined lamp and reflector unit for neater appearance. INTERIOR CHANGES Light-duty conventional trucks have three new instrument-cluster faceplates among their interior changes. In the standard cabs, there is a new allver and black plastic faceplate, while custom cabs have added a bright chrome trim to theirs. The top - of -'the - line Adventurer: features a plush contemporary wood-grained faceplate. NEW YORK (AP) -AnEpjs. c°pal priest who admonished two young holdup men after they accosted him and money was shot to death Friday afternoon on the street near his Brooklyn home. The Rev. Thomas P. Logan, 50, assistant pastor of St Paul’s Chapel in Wall Street area, at first thought the two were not serious in their demands, witnesses told police. Developed for 1970 conventional trucks are four new transmission. A three-speed fully synchomized m a n u a * transmission is standard on ail %- and 44-ton conventional trucks, Sportsman Wagons and vans with V8 power plants. This is also standard on D-200 and W-200 crew cabs with six-cylinder engines. A new improved transmission is standard on Sportsman Wagons and Tradesman vans and 44- and 44-ton oonventlonals with six-cylinder engines.. This Is a rugged transmission wfth _ creased gear width and larger input and output bearings* Father Logan, wearing a green business suit, then identified himself as a priest and told the youths they should not go around holding up people, the witnesses said. One youth pulled a gun, fired one shot in the priest’s chest and both fled empty-handed. Father Logan fell to the sidewalk a few doors away from bis home. St. Paul’s Chapel la the oldest church edifice In the dty. George Washington was sne of the many Colonial era figures who worshipped there. Its country-style churchyard is a wen known landmark for tourists and financial workers In the The newest entry, aimed at area, the special taxi, airport jitney J and small schoolbus market ir the 11-passenger, 108-inch FOR WORK OR PLAY - The 1970 Dodge Adventurer, the sporty top-of-the-line pickup that’s built for work or {day, features a host of luxury, convenience and performance Options. New Dodge trucks go on display Sept. wheelbase Sportsman Wagon. Impifa . roved performance la pro-! vided by a new 196-cubic-inch I engine which replaces the 170 •! cubic - inch engine. HEAMNB AIDS RowrgjpjjWllt \upu»t 30*tfc ebbie: Reynolds “on the Highgflt* *«i the gram" draws inspiration from •he traditional 19th Contury Now England MVillago Oroon" thomo, with uncommon attention to ox* torior architocturo. A passive rocroation area is provklod by the 4Vfe-ocro private park sot centrally in Highgate featuring 6-foot wide bike trails and o 6,000 square foot patio with play areas. THE WYETH ($35,250) A stately cantilevered ^9-Story with old Williamsburg charm, the WyothJtas all the mom you'JI over need, from the colonial accents and formal entry foyer to the "forward" two-car garage. FHA Financing Available lUuuttr fmutfieft 1UIM Models Opm Daily and Sunday 1-8 P.M. Sat 1-6 P.M. - Closed Thursday, 624-1700 Orchard Lakt Road to Com-more# Road, right on Com-morco to Sloath Road, Slooth to Bonttoin Road, Bonstoin to Loon Lake Road, Right to Modolt. AUTHENTIC EARLY AMERICAN HOMES *28,750 FROM The Blue Star Symbol n your at turance of a quality home It it awarded only to hornet offering the new advonced benefits of Notural Gat Service ARE YOU LOSING INTEREST IN MONEY? You are if your money isn't earning for the 1 st of the month 5* 5'/.* PASSBOOK SAVINGS Intorost compounded and paid quarterly. Insured Savings. SZpBSS SAVIN0S CERTIFICATES lam 4%% interest when held for a period of 6 months. $5,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES lorn 5% interest when held for o period of 9 months. $10,000 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES lorn 5V»% Interest when heldfbro period of 12 months. No advanco notico roquirod for withdrawal on any Savings Pa%tboolc or Cortiflcato Accounts. 761 W. Huron St., Pontiac - Downtown Pontiac — Drayton Plains — Rochester — Clarks ton — Milford — Wolled Lake Lake Orion — Waterford — Union Lake — Northeast Pontiac 3 Special for Viewing Will Treat Ears, Too CARTOON PREVIEW Something for the youngsters is offered Thursday at 7:30 p.m. on Channel 7 when “Super Saturday” previews the Saturday cartoon shows which will debut on Channel 7 Sept. 6. Hope Lange and Edward Mulhare of “The Ghost and Mrs. Muir” host a look at “Smokey the Bear44 “Cat-tanooga Cats,'* “Hot Wheels,” “The Hardy Boys” and “Sky Hawks.” * * * A flock of Saturday cartoons on Channel A also will debut Sept. 6 and were previewed this morning. The first appointment of a female member of the United States Cabinet is The Cover More than tjust something to look at, a 90-minute presentation of the life and work of pianist Arthur Rubenstein Friday promises to be music to the ears of a great many area viewers. The special presentation, to air on Channel 4 starting at 8:30 p.m., follows the great virtuoso around the world with Rubenstein himself doing the narration. Then he plays several selections by Beethoven, Brahms, Chopin, Liszt and Schuman. ★ ★ ★ Strains of a different kind are likely to attract just as much interest when the Detroit Lions face the Washington Redskins o f coach Vince Lombardi today at 5:30 p.m. on Channel 2 in an NFL exhibition game. This will be the Lions’ first chance to show what they can do against Lombardi’s Redskins. Debbie Reynold.«, on the cover of Tne Pontine Press TV Schedule thin week, debuts Sept. 16 in her fir at televiaion aeries, playing the wife of a *portswriter\ cm Channel 4. The show will be each Tuesday at 8 p.m. Snorky (left), Feegle and Bingo present a new season of gags and laughs when “The Banana Splist Adventure Hour” begins its new season Sept. 6 at 9:30 a.r:. on Channel 4. recalled in a special program Sunday at 4:30 p.m. on Channel 4. The presentation marks the , 35th anniversary of the appointment o f Frances Perkins as secretary of labor by President Franklin Roosevelt. Some of the major events during Mrs. Perkins’ tenure are dramatized. STILL A HIT Baseball, still making a hit with viewers, comes up with a prime-time offering pitting the Chicago Cubs against the Cincinnati Redlegs Monday at 7 p.m. on Channel 4. The Cubs’ a 1 T- a r o u n d performance as contenders in the National League Eastern Division is matched against the hitting which has Arthur Ruben.tein’* life and work. are explored made Cincinnati tough in the on a program narrated by the great pianist himself Western Division. Friday at 8:30 p.m. on Channel 4. The Pontiac Press Saturday, August 30, 1969 SATURDAY AFTERNOON 12:06 (2) C- Moby Dick (4) C — Super 6 (9) C — Montreal Pop Concert — Chansonnier Gilles Vigneault guests on the final show of the series. (50). R — Movie: “The Conspirators” (1944) Paul Henreid, Hedy Lamarr 12:30 (2) C —*Lone Ranger (4) C — Red Jones (7) C — Happening—Barbra Feldon guests. 1:00 (2) C — Tiger Warmup (4) C “r- Baseball Pregame (7) R C — Movie: “Princess of the Nile” (1954) Jeffrey Hunter, Debra Paget (9) R — Movie: “War of the Wildcats” (1943) John artha Scott — Baseball: Seattle at Detroit (4) C — Baseball: Boston at Minnesota 2:00 (50) R — Movie: “Red Stallion in the Rockies” (1949) Arthur Franz, Jean Heather 2:30 (7) C - Golf - Final round of w U.S. Men’s Amateur from Oakmont, Pa. 4:15 (2) R C “Jail Busters’ Bowery Boys Movie: (1955) 3:00 (9) C * Heroes — Marvel Super 3:30 (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) R — Movie: “Man-Made Monster” (19 4 1) Lon Chaney Jr., Lionel Atwill 4 4:00 (4) C — Sports Album (7) C - Wide World of Sports — 1. Rugby League Cup Final from London; 2. Walker Cup Golf Championship from Milwaukee. (9) C — Bozo 4:05 (2) board Baseball Score- Home swe ■ • ■ m o D 1 1 e 4:30 (4) C — At the Zoo (9) C — Skippy (62) R — My Friend Flicka 5:00 (2) C — News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Huckleberry Finn (9) C — Time Tunnel (50) C — Hy Lit — Dionne Warwick, Bobby Gentry, Diana Ross of the Supremes and Grace Slick of Jefferson Airplane guest. (62) C - Wrestling 5:15 (56) Chimney Corner 5:30 (2) C — Pro Football: Washington vs. Detroit (4) C — George Pierrot — “Cruising the Rhine” (7) R C — Wackiest Ship (56) C — Brother Buzz SATURDAY NIGH I 6:00 (4) C—News, Weather, Sports (9) C — Lively Spot — Nancy Ames guests. (50) C — (Special) Drag Racing — Taped highlights from the National Hot Rod Association’s world series of drag racing it) Inidanapolis. (56) R — Washington Week in Review (62) C — Best of Swingintime r FAMILIES RETIREES NEWLYWEDS live at x THE NEW MOBILE HOME PARK FEATURING COUNTRY OLUB LIVING It WAITINO FOR YOU! Now 12-Ft. Wide Mobil* Homos starting at $3995, Am Now Opm For Your ln*po«tion|| - ' 6:30 (4) C — News Huntley, Brinkley (7) C — M i c i g a n Sportsman — Catching whitefish with flies (50) R — Combat (56) Dr. Posin’s Giants — The accomplishment^ of Isaac Newton discussed. 7:00 (4) C — M i c h i g a Outdoors (») C — Anniversar Game (9) C — (Special) Pair Beach Party — Bobb Goldsboro stars in thi musical variety show wit Jay and the Americans the Roof Top Singers, th Happening and • the Le Elgart Oarhestra fror Palm Beach, Fit (Conclusion) (56) R — Bridge Witl Jean Cox (62) R — Movie: “Tomorrow Is Another Day”* (1951) Steve Cochran, Ruth Roman 7:30 (4) R C — Adam-12»— Malloy and Reed uncover a case involving child neglect. (7) C — Dating Game — Sue Lyon guests. (9) R — Movie: ‘Tve Always Loved You” (1946) Philip Dorn, Catherine McLeod (50) C — , Midwestern Hayride — Stan Hitchcock guests. (56) R — French Chef-How to make the perfect souffle on a platter. 8:00 (4) R C — Get Smart-While grounded in his apartment by injury. Smart studies the adjacent office building which contains occupants dangerous to the Smarts. (7) C — Newlywed Game (50) R — Movie: “They Who Dare” (British, 1954) Dirk Bogarde, Akim Tamiroff (56) Folk Guitar 8:25(62) Greatest Headlines 8:30 (2) C — Death Valley Days (4) R C — Ghost and Mrs. Muir — Capt. Gregg tries to romance Carolyn with poetry. (7) C — .Lawrence Welk — A musical visit to a county fair. (56) R C — Black Journal — Blacks present their views on apartheid in South Africa. ( 62 ) R — Movie : “Strangers on a Train” (1951) Ruth Roman, Farley Granger 9:00 (2) C—(Special) Grgat Grape Debate — Vic Ca-puto hosts documentary on the dispute between farm laborers and the table grace growers of California. (4) R - Movie: “Wild Seed” (1965) A young forlorn couple search for truth and love. Michael Parks, Celia Kaye •:30 (2) R C - Petticoat Junction — Uncle Joe announces h i s retirement (7) C — Johnny Cash -Roger Miller, O d e 11 a , Charlie Callas, and Bobby and I guest. (9) R — Danger Mai\ (56) R C — Accenlt — The Carthage College Organ and Brass Ensemble performs. 10:00 (2) RC - Mannix — When Peggy’s boyfriend disappears, Mannix learns he’s an escapee from a prison road gang* (9) C — News, Weather, Sports (50) c — Lou Gordon — 1. Dr. Eugene Schoenfeld, whose hip medical column is carried in underground new spapers, discusses colds, drugs and venereal diseases; 2. Willie E. Thompson vof 'the Detroit Federation of Teachers outlines his organization’s grievances. (56) R — NET Festival -ErichLeinsdorf directs the senior orchestra of the New England Conservatory of Music in Mahler’s Symphony No. 1. 10:15 (9) R - Movie: “The First Texan” (1956) San Antonio lawyer Sam Tftt« Pontiac Press Saturday, August 30, 1969 Houston is persuaded by Gen. Andrew Jackson to rally Texans in their struggle for independence. Jeff Morrow, Joel McCrea Payne, Maureen JPYIdta! Howard da Silva; 2* ‘‘Of Flesh and Blood” (French-Italian, 1962) Robert Hos-sein pm no SATURDAY 10:30 (7) C - (Debut) Passage to Adventure — Jim Stewart hosts weekly tours to faraway places. (62) R — Favorite Story — Penniless young man sells his shadow to the devil in exchange for great wealth. 11:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (62) R — Movie: “It, the Terror Beyond Space” (1958) Marshall Thompson, Shawn Smith <1:30 (4) RC-The Saint-Simon poses as a policeman to foil a gold holdup. ( 7 ) R — Movie : “Slaughter on 10th Avenue” (1957) Richard Egan, Jan Sterling (50) R — Movie: “Chamber of Horrors” (British, 1940) Lilli Palmer, Lesile Banks 11:35 (2) R C - Movies: 1. “Tripoli” (1950) John 11:45 (9) C — Perry’s Probe — “The Western Movie” 1 : 0 0 ( 4 ) C — News, Weather ■1:30 (7) C — Wonderful World of Sports 1:35 (7) R — Movie: “Assignment in Paris” (1952) Dana Andrews, Marta Toren 3 : 0 0 ( 7 ) C - News, Weather 4 : 0 0 ( 2 ) C — News. Weather 4:05 (2) TV Chapel Trmnrrrnn^^ CONNOLLY'S OF THE WEEK! One of the loveliest choices you con make. A Marquise engagement ring, ninety-one points, with an aura of grace and glitter — o diamond of exceptional fire ond life. $1,000 Miiv He irrunped JCWIlElkS DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ’Corner of Huron ond Saginaw Streets FE 2-0294 Iojljuuuuuuul^ Don’t Move .. . IMPROVE! 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We will remove ond replace your old sweoty steel and oluminum window* with insulated *linyl Seal* SOLID VINYL WINDOWS “Way! Guaranteed No Sweat* • I,Ml timet mere ptftalent than steel • >• timet mere effteient then weed • MAM timet mere etftoteiit than aluminum Member Pontiac Chaniber of Commerce — In Pontiac Since 1931 1032 WEST HURON . ' £V Pontiac FreA Estimates I,Planning 1 ac • Decorator S.rvic. 3 W,ST 1LCQLQR The Pontiac Press Sunday, August 31, 1969 — Little Rascals SUNDAY R — Rerun C — Color SUNDAY MORNING 6:05 (2) TV Chapel 6:10 (2) C — News 6:15 (2) C — MSU Program 6:45 (2) C — Christophers I 7:00 (2) C - Cathedral of/ Tomorrow 7:25 (4) C — News 7:30 (4) C—Country Living — “Accessories for the Home” (7) In-Out-Round-About — Critics and professionals discuss television. 7:50 (9) Warm-Up 8:00 (2) C - Day of piscovery (4) C — Guideline — Carmen Basilio, former middleweight and welterweight boxing champion, discusses his career. (7) Through Children’s Eyes — “Big and Little” (9) Gardener 8:15 (9) Sacred Heart 8:30 (2) C—This Is the Life (4) C — Church at the Crossroads (7) C — Dudley Do-Right (9) C — Let’s Get Away From It All (50) C — Temple Baptist Church 8:55 (4) C — Newsworthy 9:00 (2) C — Mass for Shut-Ins. (4) C — Oopsy the Clown (7) C — Linus (9) Man AliVe — Arnold Rockman, sociology professor at York University in Toronto, is interviewed. (50) C — Captain Detroit 9:25 (9) C — Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 9:30 (2) C - With This Ring (7) C — King Kong (9) C — Samson (50) C — Kimba 9:45 (2) C — Highlights (4) C—Davey and Goliath 10:00 (2) C - Choice (4) C — House Detective (7) C — Bullwinkle (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) R — Three Stooges 10:30 (2) C - Faith for Today (7) C — Discovery — A visit to Sweden (Part 2) td) C — Bozo 11:00 (2) U. of M. Presents — “Crime in America” looks at the scope of crime: where it occurs and by whom. (7) C — Insight — “Madam” stars Jeffrey Hunter and Vera Miles in a drama of a woman publisher of a pornographic magazine who is forced to rethink her policies when her executive assistant discovers the beauty of sex. (50) R — Superman fMP (2) C — Face the Nation-Secretary of Labor George,Shultz will be interviewed. (7) C — Dialogue ( 9) R — Movie: “Massacre River” (1949) Rory Calhoun, Guy Madison (50) R C — Flintstones SUNDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C — Tom and Jerry (4) U. of M. Presents — Greek tragedy yOedipus the King” is analraeq^r (7) C — Championship Bowling (50) R — Movie: “Mission to Moscow” (1943) Story is based on Ambassador Joseph E. Davies’ best-selling book about his assignment to discover the real motives of Russia’s Stalin. Walter Huston, Helmut Dantine 12:30 (2) C — Aquaman (4) C—Meet the Press-Governors will be interviewed in an expanded program at the 61st annual meeting of the National Governors* Conference in Colorado Springs, Colo. (7) C — Issues and Answers — George Meany, president of the AFL-CIO, guests. 1:00 (2) C — Jetsons (7) C — Spotlight (9) R — Movie: “Five Gates to ’Hell” (1959) Guerrillas 1 kidnap the medical staff from a Red Cross field hospital. Dolores Michaels, Neville Brand 1:30 (2) R — Movie : “Live Wires” (1946) Bowery Boys. (4) C — Target — Detroit Once one of the heroes of “I Spy,” Bill Cosby become* a high school physical education teacher Sunday nights on Channel 4 in the coming season. His half hour show will air at 8:80 p.m. Public Library is viewed. (7) C — Haney’s People 2:00 (4) Beat the Champ 2:30 (2) C - AAU Track and Field — Taped highlights of the Warsaw Invitational from Poland (7) R — Rifleman (50) R — Movie: “Courageous Mr. Penn” (British, 1942) Son of a rich British admiral strikes out on his own and becomes the founder of the Quaker settlement of Pen nsyl vania. Clifford Evans, Deborah Kerr 3:00 (4) C — (Special) Bowling — 9th Annual All-American Youth Championship from Washington, D.C. (7) R - Movie: “Ten Tall Men” (1951) Burt Lancaster, Gilbert Roland (62) C - Rebels 3:30 (2) C — NFL Action — “The Linebackers: Search and Destroy” shows why the linebacker is so vital to pro football’s defensive ( : > ft On ion head” (1958) Adventures of a cook aboard a U.S. Coast Guard buoy tender. Andy Griffith, Joey Bishop (62r C — Herald of Truth 4:00 (2) C - 21st Century —“Eye in the Sky” reports on the types of satellites that watch over Earth. (4) C — Car and Track (50) R — Laramie (62) C — Oral Roberts 4:30 (2) R C - Wagon Train — A young boy sees two bank robbers making a getaway and is taken hostage. Ed Begley guest-stars. (4) (Special) The Vine and the Fig Tree — Drama of Frances Perkins, secretary o f labor , to President Franklin D. Roosevelt. Marian Seldes stars as Mrs. Perkins, first woman ever named to a U.S. , Cabinet. J' (62) C Revival Fires 4:55 (?) C — Wonderful World of Sports 1 „ \ V 5:00 (4) C — Congressional Report—Last show of the series (7) R — Movie: “Thunder in the East” (1953) Deborah Kerr, Alan Ladd (50) C — (Special) Look-In Film 4n’ Fashion Show — Teen fashions for all modeled to the music of C r e edence Clearwater Revival, O. C. Smith and Tommy Boyce and Bobby Hart. (62) C - Upbeat -Tommy James and the Shondells, the Classics IV and Gene Pitney guest. 5:15 (56) C - Social Security 5:30 (4) R C — Star Trek-Twinkling lights threaten the Enterprise. (9) RC-Laredo (50) R — Combat (56) R — German Lesson SUNDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) C—News, Weather, , Sports (56) R — Portrait In — Glen Ackerman is shown making his third feature film “The fend' of Summer,” a skate-boarding parody on the surfing film “Endless Summer.” (62) C - Wilburn Brothers — Jack Greene guests. 6:30 (2) C - Job Opportunity Line (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: “Operation Secret” (1952) Marine undertakes a dangerous mission at the risk of his own life- Cornel Wilde, Karl Malden (50) C John Gary — Judy Carne, Greg Morris, Gisele MacKenzie and Sugar Ray Robinson guest. (56) Insight — the conscience of an American combat pilot will not allow him to obey the commands of his superior officers. Bradford Dillman and Ricardo Montalban star. (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 7:00 (2) R C — Lassie — A fantastic world beneath the sea beckons Lassie and her two ranger god-S fathers. 1 (4) C — George Pierrot — The Pontiac Press Sunday, August 31, 1969 “Fun in Switzerland” (7) R C — Land of the Giants — Fitzhugh is captured by two giant boys who believe he is a mythical elf. (56) C — Sounds of Summer — Erich Leinsdorf’s farewell performance as music director of the Boston Symphony Orchestra, taped at Tangle wood Music Festival in Massachusetts, is shown. (62) R C — Movie: 4 4 Checkpoint” (British, 1957) Anthony Steel, Stanley Baker 7:30 (2) C — All-American College Show (4) R C— Walt Disney’s World — “Davy Crockett Goes to Congress” has the frontiersman drafted into politics. (Second episode in the Crockett trilogy) 8:00 (2) C - Ed Sullivan -Tony Sandler and Ralph Young, Jackie Mason, Anna Moffo, Sam and Dave, and Roslyn Kind guest. (7) R C — Movie: “Zulu” (1964) One of the epic battles in African history is re-created. Stanley Baker, Michael Caine, Jack Hawkins (50) C — Lou Gordon — 1. Arthur Hailey, author of “Airport,” is interviewed: 2. Two experts discuss violent storms and our chances of controlling them. 8:25 (62)*Greatest Headlines 8:30 (#1) R C — Mothers-in-Law — Eve and Kaye create confusion with their false alarms about the arrival of Suzie’s baby (9) C — Cesar’s World — -“Hong Kong: The Glittering Outpost” (62) R C — Movie: “About Face” ( 19 52 ) Three cadets, aided by their girls, turn a military academy upside down. Phyllis Kirk, Eddie Bracken, Gordon MacRae 9:00 (2) C — Hee Haw — Sonny James and Tammy Wynette guest. (4) R C — Bonanza — Hoss becomes involved with a freed slave who is trying to keep his family together near a bigoted community. Ossie Davis t-1 and George Spell star. (9) C — Conquest of Space — A look at new space techniques and where space exploration is taking us. Guests include science-fiction writer Arthur C. Clarke (“2001’*), Rocket expert Wernher Von Braun and COMSAT head Dr. William Charyk. (56) Action People — Studeht revolt — its aims, methods and chances for success — is discussed. 9:30 ( 50) C — (Special) Telethon — Jerry Lewis hosts a guest-filled moneyraising telethon for muscular dystrophy. Runs continuously to 5 pm. tomorrow. 10:00 (2) R C — Mission: Impossible — The IMF races to forestall a man hired to stalk a nuclear scientist who is forced to work on a device that could upset the world power balance. (First of two parts) (4) R C — My Friend Tony — Woodruff and Novello try to help a parolee clear his name. (9) C — News, Weather, sports (56) Speaking Freely — Samuel I. Hayakawa, president of San Francisco State College, is interviewed. 10:15 (9) R - Movie: “In Which We Serve” (British, 1942) Noel Coward wrote, directed, and starred in this drama about the crew of a British destroyer during the crucial moments of World War II. John Mills Mi no SUNDAY also stars. 10:30 ( 62) R — Favorite Story — A judge carries on a reign of disciplinary terror using himself as a pattern of law and order. 10:45 (7) C—News, Weather, Sports 11:00 (2) (4) C - News, Weather, Sports , (62) R — Movie: “Carnegie Hall” (1947) Two-hour concert featuring Carnegie Hall greats with a touching story line. Marsha Hunt, William Prince 11:15 (7) R — Movie: “The Picture of Dorian Gray” Film version of Oscar Wilde’s classic. ( 1 9 4 4 ) George Sanders, Hurd Hatfield, Donna Reed 11:30 (4) R C — Johnny Carson — Guests are Jerry Lewis, Clint Eastwood, Billy DeWolfe, Sid Caesar and Criswell. 11:35 (2) R - Movies: 1. C - “7th Cavalry” (1956) Captain in Custer’s Cavalry is accused of cowardice. Randolph Scott, Barbara Hale; 2. “Frontier Wolf” (Italian, 1950) Secret agent, accompanied by his dog, investigates acts of sabotage. Piero Lulli 11:45 (9) C - I Wish You Were Here — 4 4 T h e Caribbean” 1:00 (4) C — News, Weath- er 1:15 (7) C er News, Weath- DIXIE GARAGES MODERNIZATION FAMILY ROOMS - DORMERS ROOM ADDITIONS -BREEZE WAYS - ALUMINUM -KITCHENS 1 5744 Highland Rd. (M-59) OR 4-0371 1 LI 1-4416 Brick • Block i • Frame (Free Plan*, No Con luting Prices, Buy Direct from Owner o/nd Save1 F.N.A. Terms • Up to 1 Yr. Terms FREE ESTIMATES SEE MODELS ON DISPLAY SAME LOCATION IS YEARS Every Job Fully Guaranteed OWNER SUPERVISION ON EVERY JOB ■ nmr MONDAY fy — Rerun C — Color MONDAY MORNING Pontiac Pro** Monday, Soptombor 1, 1969 atfink 7:00 (4) C —■* Today — Leif Erickson and his family, Bruce Yarnell and the Rev. Jesse Jackson guest. (7) C — Morning Show — Special Labor Day show celebrates the program’s third anniversary. The Cowsills guest. 9:30 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies (9) C — Friendly Giant 9:45 (9) Chez Helene 10:00 (2) R C—Andy Griffith (4) C—Personality (9) R — Mr. Dressup 10:25 (9) Pick of the Week 5:50 (2) TV Chapel (50) (Special) C — Telethon — Muscular dystrophy fund-raiser continues. 5:55 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C—Black Heritage — The black response to the Vietnam war (Part l) J (4) Classroom — “Sounds Into Music: Sounds of Singing’’ 6:30 (2) — Woodrow t h e Woodsman (4) Classroom — “Sounds Into Music: Sounds of Singing’’ 7:30 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo 8:15 (9) Warm-Up 8:25 (9) C — Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:30 (7) R C — Movie: “The Gal Who Took the West’’ (1949) Yvonne De Carlo, Scott Brady (9) C — Bozo 9:00 (2) R C — Lucy Show (4) C — Dennis Wholey 10:30 (2) C — Merv Griffin (4) C—Hollywood Squares — Week’s guests are Amanda Blake, Sebastian Cabot, Jack Carter, Rose Marie, Jim Backus and Susan St. James. (7)C — Galloping Gourmet 10:55 (9) C—News 11:00 (4) C — It Takes Two — Roger Williams, James Darren, Annette Funicello and their spouses guest this week. (7) R — Bewitched . (9) Luncheon Date I Singer Terena Graven han dincovered that comedy in her'bag% and nhe'll be nharing her talentn with tele-vinion viewern on “Rowan and Martln'n Laugh-In" ntarting Sept. 15. The NBC nerien will be returning to Channel 4 in itn Monday night 8-9 time nlot. 11:25 (4) C—Carol Duvall 11:30 (4) C — Concentration (7) R C - That Girl (9) R - Take 30 MONDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports (A) C — Jeopardy (7) C — Dream House (9) Luncheon Date II 12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) C - As the World Turns (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C—Let’s Make a Deal (9) R — Real McCoys 1:00 (2) C—Divorce Court (4) C—Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game (9) R — Movie: “Along the Great Divide” (1951) Kirk Douglas, Virginia Mayo 1:30 (2) C — Guilding Light (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game 2:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital 2:30 (2) C - Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say — Mel Torme and Jaye P. Morgan guest this week. (7) C — One Life to Live 3:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show — Mark Bleeker, 12-year-old ventriloquist, guests. (4) C — Match Game — Brenda Vaccaro and Tom Kennedy guest this week. (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) R — Dennis the Menace 3:25 (4) C —News 3:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — You’re Putting Me On — Bobby Morse, Brenda Vacarro, Orson Bean, Larry B1 y d e n , Peggy Case and Ann Meara guest this week. (7) C — Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe 4:00 (2) C — Love of Life (4) R C — Steve Allen — Prof. Irwin Corey, Henny Youngman and the Spiral Starecase guest. (7) R C - Movie: “The Lady Takes a Flyer’’ (1958) Lana Turner, Jeff Chandler (9) C — Bozo 4:25 (2) C - News 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas — Diana Shore cohosts for week. Jack Palance, Mickey Rooney and the Checkmates guest. (62) C — Bugs Bunny and* Friends 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot *— “Lisbon and Portugal” (9) R C — Batman (50) R — Munsters 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:30 (9) R — F Troop (50) R — Superman 0 (56) R — Misterogers (62) R — Leave It to Beaver MONDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C — News, I / Weather, Sports (9) R C — I Spy — Agents must prevent a threatened Muslim uprising. (50) R C — Flintstones (56) What’s New — The screech owl is shown. (62) R — Sea Hunt 6:30 (2) C — News — Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley i (7) C — News - Reynolds, Smith (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) Cancion de la Raza — Spanish soap opera (62) R — Highway Patrol 7:00 (2) R C — Truth or Consequences (4) C — ( S p e c i a 1 ) Baseball: Chicago at Cincinnati (7) C — News, Weather, Sports (9) R C - Movie: “Mark of the Hawk” ( 1 9 5 8 ) Educated African elected to legislative council seeks equality for people. SidneyPoitier, Eartha Kitt (50) R — I Love Lucy —■ Ricky’s plans for a vacation are rearranged by Lucy. (56) C — World Press (62) C — Swingintime 7:30 (2) R C — Gunsmoke — Kitty takes the reins of a stagecoach in an effort to save the life of a wounded friend. (7) R C — Avengers — Investigating the disappearance of a treasury official, Steed finds an exact miniature of the man’s limousine. (50) R C - Hazel 8:00 (50) C — Pay Cards —■ Colonel Sanders of fried chicken fame guests* (56) C — NET journal — Doctors from four nations discuss the moral questions involved in medical practice and scientific research. (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 8:30 (2) R C — Here’s Lucy — Lucy and V i v reminisce about their past Th* Pontiac Prott Monday, Soptombor 1 adventures while Lucy recuperates from a broken leg. ' **(V) R C - Guns of Will Sonnett — Jeff seeks revenge on the man who claims to have killed his father. (50) C — Password — Betty White and Frank Gifford guest. (62) R — Movie: “The Heart of a Child” (British, 1958) A boy’s love for his dog leads to heroic sacrifices but brings great rewards. Jean Anderson, Donald Pleasence. 9:00 (2) R C — Mayberry R.F.D. — Millie’s girlfriend, a New York fashion model, comes to visit. (7) To Be Announced (9) C — Miss Patricia’s Presentation — Final show of the season. (50) R — Perry Mason (56) R — Tempo — Saxophonist Roland Kirk and composer John Cage are featured in the final show of the series. 9:30 (2) R C — Family Affair — Uncle Bill and Cissy find romantic interests in Spain, b u t French loses the twins. (7) C - (Special) President’s Governors Conference Address (9) Five Years in the Life — The Bob Bell family of Edmonton is profiled. (56) R - Bridge with Jean Cox 9:55 (62) Greatest Headlines 10:00 (2) C — Jimmie Rodgers-Roger Wililams and Scoey Mitchll! guest. (4) C — Spotlight on the Stars — Vikki Carr and Frankie Vaughn join in a a salute to guest of honor Bill Dana. (7) c - Dick Cavett—Sal Mineo, B. B. King and 1. F Stone guest. (9) (50) C - News, Weather, Sports (56) Smart Sewing — Emphasis on pleating (62) R C - Movie: “As Long as They’re Happy” (British, 1955) Several swooners woo a crooner from Texas. Diana Dors. Jeannie Carson 10:30 (9) C - What’s My Line? - Gene Rayburn and Joyce Brothers guest. (50) R — Alfred Hitchcock (56) R —Folk Guitar 11:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: “The Third Man” (British( 1950) An American arrives in Vienna to find his friend murdered, Joseph Cotten, Orson Welles (50) R — One Step Beyond v 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson — Wililam Holden, Tony Randall and Turley Richards guest. (7) C — Joey Bishop — Poly Bergen, Lee Hable-wood*%nd Robert Goulet guest. 1 (50) C — Merv Griffin — Bobby Sherman, George Carlin, Barbara Tai-sing, Gwen Davis and rtermione Gingold guest. 11:35 (2) R — Movie: “Revenge of the Pirates” (Italian 1952) Savage rni no MONDAY encounters on land and fierce engagements at sea lead to the capture of a cherished prize. Jean-Pierre Aumont 12:24 (9) Viewpoint 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe -— Aerospace medicine and migraine headaches are tonight’s topics. 1:00 (,|) Beat the Champ (7) R —Texan (50) RPeter Gunn 1:30 (2) R —Naked City (4) (7) C—News, Weather 2:30 (2) C—News, Weather 2:35 (2) TV Chapel I R — Rerun C — Color TUESDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C — On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C — Black Heritage —The black response to the war in Vietnam (conclusion) 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Classroom — “Sounds Into Music; Automated Instruments” 6:45 (7) C — Batfink 7:00 (4) C — Today — Economist Eliot Janeway and pro golfer Tommy Bolt guest. (7) C — Morning Show 7:30 (2) C — New, Weather, Sports 8:00 <2) C — Captain COLOR tiac Pre*t Tuesday, September 2, 1969 8:15 (9) Warm-Up 8:25 (9) C — Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:30 (7) R - Movie: “The Whole Truth” ( 1 9 5 8 ) Stewart Granger, Donna Reed (9) C — Bozo 8:40 (56) Human Relations and Motivation — Preview 1 e s s on for business series starting in October 9:00 (2) R C — Lucy Show (4) Dennis Wholey 9:30 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies . (9) Friendly Giant 9:45 (9) Chez Helene 10:00 (2) R C—Andy Griffith (4) C — Personality (9) R — Mr. Dressup 10:25 (9) Pick of the Week 10:30 (2) C—Merv Griffin (4) C — Hollywood Squares (7) C — G a 11 opi n g Gourmet 10:55 (9) C — News 11:00 (4) C — It Takes Two (7) R — Bewitched^ (9) Luncheon Date I (50) C — Jack LaLanne 11:25 (4) C—Carol Duvall 11:30 (4) C — Concentration (7) R C - That Girl (9) Take 30 (50) C — Kimba TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C — News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) C — Dream House (9) Luncheon Date II (50) C — Underdog 12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) C—As the World Turns (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — Let’s M&ke a Deal (9) R —- Real McCoys (50) R — Movie: “Mr. Dodd Takes the Air” (1937) Jane Wyman, Kenny Baker 1:00 (2) C—Divorce Court (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game (9) R C — Movie: “Phantom of the Rue Morgue” (1954) Karl Malden, Patricia Medina 1:30 (2) C—Guiding Light! i (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game (56) Superintendent’s Report—Norman Drachler of the Detroit Public Schools reports on the upcoming school activities for th;4 1969-70 school year. 2:00 (2) C—Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital 2:30 (2) C—Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say (7) C—One Life to Live (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show — Dr. Joyce Brothers and Marion Love guest. (4) C — Match Game (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) R — Dennis t h e Menace (50) Topper NBC's “First Tuesday” will feature reports on Patrick Hemingway (left), the second son of Ernest Hemingway, and sport parachuting. Hemingway, a professional hunter in East Africa, is currently teaching the tei'hnique of hunting and operation of the tourist industry, at the College of American Wildlife Management in Tanzania. In the sport parachuting feature, viewers will see members of the IJ.S. Parachute Association in action at an airstrip in New Jersey. “First Tuesday99 is at 9 p.m. on Channel 4. 3:25 (4) C — iNews 3:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — You’re Putting Me On (7) C — Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C — Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) C—Love of Life (4) C — Steve Allen — Charlie Manna, Clair and McMahon and Joe Williams guest. (7) R — Movie: “The Hoodlum Priest” (1961) Don Murray, Keir Dullea (9) C - Bozo 4:25 (2) C — News 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas —Peter Max, the Baja Marimba Band, Richie Havens and Charlie Man-* na guest. (50) R — Little Rascals (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Holiday in Portugal” (9) R C — Batman (50) R — Munsters 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:30 (9) R C - F Troop (50) R — Superman (56) R — Misterogers (62) R — Leave It to Beaver TUESDAY NIGHT 0:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R C — I Spy — Kelly and Scott are targets for an assassin. (50) R C — Flintstones (56) What’s New - “You and Your Camera” (62) R — Sea Hunt 6:30 (2) C - News - Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (7) C — News — Reynolds, Smith (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) Cancion de la Raza — Spanish soap opera. (62) R — Highway Patrol 7:00 (2) R C - Truth or Consequences i<4) (7) C — News, Weather, Sports (9) R C — Movie: “McHale’s Navy Joins the Air Force” (1965) While using the services of a zany crew, a South Pacific captain finds himself involved with a Soviet merchant ship. Tim Conway, Joe Flynn (50) R — I Love Lucy — Th^Pontiac Pret* Tuesday, September 2, 1969 Lucy and Ethel take courses at a charm school./ (56) (Special) — Banners and Bombs—Antiwar protests aimed at the military - industrial complex and the Dow Chemical Co. are examined. (62) C — Swingintime 7:30 (2) R C - Lancer -Attempting to rescue a bride-to-be from her boyfriend, Johnny and Scott Lancer land in jail. (4) C r- (Special) Ella Fitzgerald — Duke Ellington guests. (7) R C — Mod Squad — A blind girl becomes the target for an unknown assailant. (50) R - Hazel (56)C — Accent—'‘St$ck-alee” is drama with hero whose successes are due to Satan. 8:00 (50) C - Pay Cards -Gordon MacRae guests. (56) C - NET Festival -Program looks at the folk singing and dancing of the mountain people of western North Carolina’s Blue Ridge region. (62) R — Ozzie and Har-. riet 8:25 (7) C — (Special) President Nixon’s United Community Fund Message 8:30 (2) C - (Special) Billy Graham New York Crusade (4) R C — Julia — Julia finds a newcomer in her apartment when Earl J. Waggedorn runs away from home. (7) C — News Special — “Sex Education, t h e School, the Home or the Street?” focuses on the current controversy, including legislation TBftd sex education in the Detroit public schools, with Mike Kenney as host. (9) C — It’s Our Stuff (50) C — Password (62) R — Movie: “The Great Van Robbery’* (British, 1957) Daylight robbery sends Scotland Yard halfway around the world in a hunt for the culprits. Kay C a 11 a r d, Dennis Shaw 9:00 (4) C — First Tuesday — Segments include: a talk with Patrick Hemingway, second son of Ernest Hemingway; an 10 interview with CfWjgfl Baker; a look at^^ ing; a feature on computer dating; and a look at New Guinea’s saltmanufacturing process. (7) C — (Special) Under the Yum Yum Tree — Comedy of young love and its p o i g n a n t complications. Jack Sheldon, Leigh Taylor-Young and husband Ryan O’Neal star. (9) Man at the Centre — Second program in five-part series examining education in Canada today. (50) R — Perry Mason (56) R— Dr. P o s i n ’ s Giants — Isaac Newton, who was born the day Galileo died, is discussed. :30 (2) R C — Doris Day — A tiger, loose from a carnival, finds its way to the Webb ranch. (56) French Chef — How to pep up menus with eggplant :55 (62) Greatest Headlines :00 (2) R C — Great American Novel—This Emmy-winning combination of two art forms—the novel and the documentary—updates “Babbitt” and “The Grapes of Wrath.” (7) C - Dick Cavett — Wi])iam Holden, Eartha Kitt and Rex Stout guest. (9) (50)C — News, Weather, Sports (56) Rainbow Quest (62) R - Movie: “The Dalton Girls” (1957) After the death of the Dalton Brothers by law officers, the Dalton Girls take over. Merry Anders, Lisa Davis fifiimt TUfcaLA i 10:30 (9) C - What’s My Line? (50) R—Alfred Hitchcock 11:00 (2) (A) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: “Adam and E v a 1 y n * ’ (British, 1950) A gambler falls in love with a girl he was the guardian of. Jean Simmons, Stfewart Granger • v (50) R — One Step Beyond 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson —Jaye P. Morgan, John Byner and Adela Rogers St. Johns guest. (7) C — Joey Bishop — Jeannie C. Riley and Art Linkletter guest. (50) C — Merv Griffin — David Susskind, Lily Tomlin and Eloise Laws guest. 11:35 (2) R - Movie: “Pearl of Death” (1944) Sherlock Holmes and his assistant "Watson solve the mystery of the Creeper and the stolen Pearl of Death. Basil Rathbone, Nigel Bruce 12:24 (9) Viewpoint 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe — “Street Haven” 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R —Texan (50) R — Peter Gunn 1:30 (2) R —Naked City (4) (7) C — News, Weather 2:30 (2) C-News, Weather 2:35 (2) TV Chapel FINAL WEEK OF ANNIVERSARY SALE Salt IMs 1st., Sspt. • Ovor 300 MMNANTS 60% to Hii OFF 501 NYLON 49 OZITE INDOOR OUTDOOR CARPET 2 T9 a a AV0N-TR0Y CARPET 1000 Auburn Rn M-OOt Roehtstar Batwaan Mm R and BnuMn Raadt PHONE 002*2444 12 nut WEDNESDAY R — Rerun C — Color Pontiac Prott Wednesday, September 3, 1969 Morning Show— 9:45 (9) Chez Helene Jerry Baker, America’s master gardener, guests. i0:0o (2) R C - Andy Griffith 7:30 (2) C — News, Weath- (4) C — Personality er, Sports 19) R-pMr. Dressup 8:00 (2) R — Captain 10:25 19) Pick of the week # Kangaroo 10:30 (2) C - Merv Griffin 8:15 (9) Warm-Up (4) C—Hollywood Squares (7) C — Galloping 8:25 (9) C — Morgan’s Gourmet Merry-Go-Round 10:55 (9) C — News WEDNESDAY MORNING 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) C - On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C— Black Heritage —Black students’ views of student movements of the past *, • 8:30 (7) R - Movie : “Paradise Lagoon" (British 1958) Sally Ann Howes, Kenneth More (9) C — Bozo ) 11:00 (4) C—It Takes Two (7) R — Bewitched (9) Luncheon Date I (50) C—Jack LaLanne (7) C — Dream House (9) Luncheon Date II (50) C — Underdog 12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) C — As the World J Turns f (4) C — News, Weathej^ Sports (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal (9) R—Real McCoys i (50) R — Movie: “Janie” (1944) Ann Hording, Robert Hutton 1:00 (2) C—Divorce Court (4) C—Days of Our Lives" (7) C—Newlywed Game J9) R — Movie: “Calcutta" (1947) Alan Ladd. Gail Russell 1:30 (2) C—Guiding Light (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game 2:00 (2) C—Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital 2*30 (2) C-Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Classroom — “Sounds Into Music: Sounds and Composers’* 6:45 (7) C — Batfink 7:00 (4) C — Today — Marc Copage, Michael Link, Thomds Kimball and Alan Bastic guest. 8:40 (56) Modern Supervision — Preview lesson for t h e upcoming business program to be shown in * October. I 9:00 (2) R C—Lucy Show I (4) C — Dennis Wholey 9:30 (2) R C - Beverly Hillbillies (9) Friendly Giant 11:25 (4) C—Carol Duvall 11:30 (4) C — Concentration (7) R c - That Girl (9)’ Take 30 (50) C — Kimba WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy r*'T,tnnW bS °fth* ,urfn* during MU'* "Mu*i, /ro-910,wi «<- >■ /«.-»»<-«. (7) C — One Life to Live (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show — Larry Wilde guests. (4) C — Match Game (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) R — Dennis t h e Menace (50) R — Topper 3:25 (4) C — News 3:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — You’re Putting Me On (7) C—Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C—Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) C—Love of Life (4) R C — Steve Allen — Jerry Van Dyke, Thelma Houston and Clair and McMahon guest. (7) R — Movie: “Stage Struck” (1957) Henry Fonda, Susan Strasberg (9) C — Bozo 4:25 (2) C - News 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas — Comedian Rodney Dan-gerfield, baseball star Richie Allen and the Peppermint Rainbow gue$t. (50) R — Little Rascals (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot — “Lischtenstein, Andorra, SMOM” (9)' R C — Batman (50) R — Munsters 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:30 (9) R C - F Troop (50) R — Superman (56) R — Misterogers (62) R — Leave It to Beaver WEDNESDAY NIGHT 0:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R C — I Spy - Kelly and Scott pose as vacationing fishermen. (50) R C Flintstones (56) What’s New — “You and Your Camera” (62) R — Sea Hunt 6:30 (2) C - News -Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (7) C — N e w s «*-Reynolds, Smith (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) Canciop de la Raza Th* Pontiac Prow Wodnosday, Soptombor 3, 1969 — Spanish soap opera (62) R — Highway Patrol 7:00 (2) R C — Truth or Consequences (4) (7) C - Ne ws, Weather, Sports (9) R C — Movie: “Marnie” (1964) A woman’s complex life leads her to become a thief. Sean Connery, Tippi Hed-ren (50) R — I Love Lucy — Lucy and Ricky plan to celebrate their 13th wedding anniversary quietly at home. (56) (Debut) Jazz Alley — First in series featuring jazz greats playing in the Chicago style. Pee Wee Russell and Jimmy McPartland perform. (62) C—Swingintime 7:30 (2) R C - Tarzan -Domineering mother and her son feud over his desire to hecome a jungle doctor. Helen Hayes and her son, James Mac-Arthur, guest star. (4) R C — Virginian — A young woman found unconscious on a trail by the Virginian awakens to a mysterious fear. Paul Winchell guest-stars. (7) R C — Here Come the Brides — While Jeremy is in San Francisco o n business, Jason criticizes Candy for keeping company with another man. (50) R C - Hazel (56) C—Book Beat—Noel Behn (“The Kremlin Letter”) discusses “The Shadowboxer,” his latest spy novel. 8:00 (50) C - Pay Cards -Peter Lupas guests. (56) C—News in Perspective — New York Times analysts Tom Wicker, Harrison Salisbury and Max Frankel discuss world news developments. (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet i 8:30 (2) C - (Special) Billy Graham’s New York Crusade (7) R C — King Family (50) C — Password (62) R - Movie: ‘‘The Weak and the Wicked” (British, 1953) Woman gambler, sent to prison, discovers a reason for making a better life. Glynis Johns, Dian 9:00 (4) C - Music Hall -Don Ho welcomes Minnie Pearl and Peter Nero to Hawaii. (7) R C — Movie: “Wild in the Country” (1961) A rebellious youth dreams of becoming a great writer. Elvis Presley. Hope Lange, Tue s da y Weld, John Ireland .(50) R — Perry Mason (56) R—(Special) Banners and Bombs — Antiwar protests aimed at the military - industrial complex and the Dow Chemical Co. are examined. 9:30 (2) R C - Green Acres — While discussing reincarnation, Eb says he would like to be a dog in his second life. (9) R—Danger Man (56 ) R C — Sounds of Summer — Erich Leinsdorf’s farewell with II the Boston Symphony Orchestra, taped at Tangle-wood’s summer music school, is featured. 9:55 (62) Greatest Headlines t 10:00 (2) R C - Hawaii Five-0 — McGarrett and his investigation unit seek to clear a policeman accused of homicide. (4) R C — Outsider — Ross is hired to serve a business tycoon with a subpoena William Win-dom guest-stars. (9) (50) C — News, Weather, Sports ( 62 ) R - Movie : “Monsoon” (1952) Ill-fated love drives four people to ruin and tragedy. Ursla Thiess, George Nader WEDNESDAY 10:30 (9) C Line? (50) R chcock What’s My Alfred Hit- 11:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: “Small Voice” (British, 1951) Us-* ing a couple’s country house, gangsters force the' couple to shield them. Howard Keel, Valerie Hobson (50) R — One Step Beyond 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson —Phyllis Newman guests. (7) C — 'Joey Bishop — Merle Haggard and the Strangers guest. (50) C — Mcrv Griffin — Tommy Smothers, Theodore White, Phil Ford, Mimi Hines, Spanish singer Raphael and Myron Cohen guest. 11:35(2)R — Movie: “Blondie Goes to College” (1&42) Bumsteads pretend they are not married and return to college. Penny Singleton, Arthur Lake 12:24 (9) Viewpoint 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe — “Tropical Diseases” and “The Art of Tioping” 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R-Texan (50) R — Peter Gunn 1:30 (2) R-Naked City (4) (7) C — News, Weather 2:30 (2) C—m^ws. Weather 2:35 (2) TV Chapel UHF and VHF FM STEREO COLOR and BLACK & WHITE ROTO ANTENNA Eudlint For Fringo Aroai CQ95 COMPLETE 03 INSTALLATION NO EXTRAS . . • Wiro , , • Rotor ,Labor 4HHH AG Bm v W mm INCLUDES • Mounts • Antonno ONLCOLOR >r*hoc Prw»% Thursday, $wpt*rob#r 4, 1969 THURSDAY rlynn. Cornell IlnrchM f 0 > (! Ho/,o 9:(HI (2) C Lucy Show (4 > C Dennis Wholly Rerun C Color I Il’I.HSDAY MORNING 0:30 (2) C Hillbillies (9) Friendly Giant 5:35 ( 2) C On I ho Farm Scorn* 0:00 (2) C Black Heritage - Maoism and education •0 0:30 (2) C Woodrow t h o Woodsman (4) (Classroom — “Sounds Into: Music: Search for New Sounds” 10:00 (2) R C—Andy Griffith (4) C — Personality (Oj^t Mr. Dressup 10:25 (0) Pick of the Week I0L30 (2) C — Merv Griffin (4) C — Hollywood Squares (7) C — Galloping Gourmet 10:55 (0) C News 7:00 (4) C—Today (7) C — Morning Show Outdoor sportsman Jerry Chiappetta guests. 11:00 (4) C — It Takes Two (7) H — Bewitched (9) Luncheon Date I (50) C — Jack LaLanne IVif Boone maneuvers Barbara Eden beneath the mistletoe in the movie “*!// Hands on Deck" at 9 p.m. Thiirstlayr on flhannel 2. # 7 : ? 0 ( 2 ) C - News. Weather, Sports 11:25 (4) C — Carol Duvall (9) Luncheon Date II (50) C — Underdog (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo 8:15 (9) Warm-Up HF25 (9) C — Morgan’s Mer-ry-Go- Hound 8:30 (T) H G — Movie: “Istanbul” (1957) Errol 11:30 (4) C — Concentration (7) R C — That Girl (9) Take 30 (50) C — Kimba TTIUKSDAY AFTERN()()N 1 2 : 0 0 ( 2 ) C - News. Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) C — Dream House I The MONEY You Need! NOW YOU CAN BORROW UP TO $5,000 ON YOUR HOME EQUITY! Convenient Hepayment Plan Up To 4 Years AMILY ACCEPTANCE COMPANY 101 Pontiac Mata Bank Building Phone PC 8-4022 I 12:25 (2) C — Fashions } 12:30 (2) C - As the World Turns 14) 'C“~=ss News, Weather.. Sports (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal (9) R — Real McCoys (50) R — Movie: “Always in My Heart” ( 1 9 4 2 ) Walter Huston, Kay Francis 1:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game (9) RC - Movie: “House of Wax” (1953) Vincent Price, Phyllis Kirk, Frank Lovejoy 1:30 (2) C — Guiding Light (d) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game 2:00 (2) C — Secret Storm 2:30 (2) C — Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say (7) C — One Life to Live (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show —Fashion designer Edith Head guests. (4) C — Match Game (7) C— Dark Shadows (9) R — Dennis the Menace (50) R —Topper 3:25 (4) C — News’ 3:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C - You’re Putting Me On (7) C — Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C — Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) C — Love of Life (4) C — Steve Allen -v Soupy Sales, Grady Tat$ and Steve Martin guest. (7) R — Movie: “Where the Sidewalk Ends'* (1950) Dana Andrews, Gene Tierney , (9) C — Bozo 4:25 (2) C — News $ 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas --Chris and Peter Allen, Paul Edwards and Marty Allen guest. (50) R — Little Rascals (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (4) Cr-George Pierrot — “San Marino, Monaco, Austria" (9) R C — Batman (50) R —Munsters ig ] 5:15 (56)*Friendly Giant 5:30 (9) R C — F Troop (50) R — Superman (56) R—Misterogers (62) R — Leave It to Beaver THURSDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C — News, Weather, Sports (9) R C - I Spy -Agents check out a murder in a remote desert area. (50) R C — Flintstones (56) What's New — “You and Your Camera" (62) R — Sea Hunt 6:30 (2) C — News — Cronkite (ATTT— News — Huntley, Brinkley (7),C —i News — Reynolds, Smith (50) R — McHale's Navy (56) Cancion de la Raza — Spanish soap opera (62) R — Highway Patrol 7:00 (2) R C - Truth or Consequences (4) (7) C — News, Weather, Sports (9) R C — Movie: “Wings "of Chance" (Canadian, 1961) Pilot gets stranded in an uncharted wilderness. Jim Brown, Frances Rafferty. (50) R — I Love Lucy — A fan magazine writer visits the Ricardos. (56) NET Playhouse -“Devi" is Stayajit Ray’s film about the religious The Pontiac Pratt Thursday, September 4, 1969 fantasies a devout Indian man has of his daughter-in-law. (62) C — Swingintime 7:30 (2) R C — Animal World — Two jaguar cubs encounter a variety of experiences taking them across the Mexican border into Arizona “Crisis on the H cuses on the internal crisis in September 1944-March 1945. (50) R — Perry Mason (56) R — Speaking Freely — Samuel I. Hayakawa, president of San Francisco State College, is interviewed. ONLCtt THURSDAY Pet£r Graves, Robert Stack (50) R — One Step Beyond (4) R C — Daniel Boone — Daniel aides a poverty-stricken young man (John Davidson) by selling him a piece of land on credit. JShelley Fabares guest-stars. % (7) C — (Special) Cartoon Preview — The Ghost * (Edward Mulhare) and Mrs. Muir (Hope Lange) present the ABC Super Saturday, Club, introducing five new cartoon shows which will’ be joining the Saturday morning lineup. ; (50) R — Hazel l 8:00 (2) C — (Special) Billy Graham's New York Crusade (50) C — Pay Cards — Edie Adams guests. (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 8:30 (4) R C — Ironside — Eve’s niece is arrested on a narcotics charge. (7) R C — Bewitched — Samantha introduces cousin Serena to computerized matchmaking. (9) C — Telescope — Musical profile of singer Tdmmy T4unter— (50) C —Password (56) C — Washington Week in Review (62) R — Movie: “The Heart of a Child" (British, 1958) A boy’s love for his dog leads to heroic sacrifices but brings great rewards. Jean Anderson, Donald Pleasence 9:00 (2) R C — Movie: “All Hands on Deck" (1961) A girl reporter stows away on an LST. Pat Boone, Buddy Hackett, Barbara Eden (7) R C - Tom Jones — Guests are Shirley Jones, Dick Cavett, Engelbert Humperdinck, Dusty Springfield and the Foundations (9) Canada at War — 9:30 (4) R C — Dragnet — Friday helps a member of a paramilitary group get a federal gun-selling license to aid recovery of a cache of stolen weapons. (9) Nature of Things—The rare trumpeter swan is studied. * 10:00 (4) C—Golddiggers— Stu Gilliam guests. (DJL C — It Takes a Thief — Muody has to keep leaving his guests in an attempt to disarm a time bomb ticking away i upstairs. I (9) (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (56) R — News in Prespective — New York Times analysts Tom Wicker, Harrison S a 1 i s-bury and Max Frankel discuss world news developments. (62) C — Wrestling 10:30 (9) C — What’s My * Line? (50) R — Alfred Hitchcock 11:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9TR~Movie: ._L‘.War Paint" (1953) Murderer poses as the com-missioner of an unsuspecting army troop. •11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson —Dana Valery guests. (7) C — Joey Bishop — Harvey Stone guests. (50) C — Merv Griffin-Soupy Sales and Terry O’Meara guest. 11:35 (2) R - -Movies: 1. “The Dark Angel" (1935) A pair of lovers* lives are all but destroyed b y blindness, Frederic March, Merle Oberon; 2. “Triple Trouble" (1950) The Bowery Boys find their good intentions trip them up. Huntz Hall, Leo Gorcey 12:24 (9) Viewpoint 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe —‘Science and Religion" 1:00 (A) Beat the Champ (7) R — Texan (50) R — Peter Gunn 1:30 (4) (7) C - News, Weather 3:30 (2) C — News, Weather 3:35 (2) TV Chapel FRIDAY R — Rerun C — Color FRIDAY MORNINfi 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C — Black Heritage —The future of the black student movement 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Classroom — ‘Sounds Into Music: Music Speaks" 6:45 (7) C — Batfink 7:00 (4) C - Today—Scheduled guests include pianist Arthur Rubinstein, Peace Corps Director Joseph Blatchford, film critic Judith Crist and James Farentino and Joseph Campanella of “The Bolft Ones." (7) C — Morning Show — Dr. Leroy Augenstein of the State Board o f Education will discuss decentralization of the Detroit public schools. 7:30 (2) C-News. Weather. Sports 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo 8:15 (91 Warm-lJp 8:30 ('7) R — Movie: “The Devil’s Disciple" (1959) Burt Lancaster, K i r Jk Douglas (9) C — Bozo 9:00 (2) R C—Lucille Ball (4) C — Dennis Wholey 9:30 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies (9) Friendly Giant 9:45 (9) Chez Helene 10:00 (2) R C—Andy Griffith 1.1) C — Personality .9) R — Mr. Dressup 10:25 (9) Pick of the Week 10:30 (2) C - Merv Griffin (4) C — Hollywood Squares (7) C — G a 11 o pi n g Gourmet (50) C — Herald of Truth 10:55 (9) C—News 11:00 (4) C-It Takes Two (7) R — Bewitched (9) Luncheon Date I (50) C — Jack La Lanne 11:25 (4) C—Carol Duvall 11:30 (4) C — Concentration (7) R C - That Girl (9) Take 30 (50) C- Kimba FRIDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) C — Dream House (50) C — Underdog 12:25 (2) C - Fashions 12:30 (2) C - As the World Turns (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — Let’s Make a Deal (9) R — Real McCoys (50) R — Movie: “Four Days Leave" (Swiss, 1950) Cornel Wilde, Simone Signoret 1:00 (2) C — Divorce Court (.4) C—Days of Our Lives (7) C — Newlywed Game (9) R — Movie: “Rocky Mountain" (1950) Errol Flynn, Patrice Wymore 1:30 (2) C — Guiding Light (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game 2:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital 2:30 (2) C - Edge of Night' (4) C — You Don’t Say (7) C — One Life to Live (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show — Jimmie Rodgers guests. (4) C — Match Game (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) R — Dennis the Menace (50) R — Topper 3:25 (4) C — News 3:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — You’re Putting Me On (7) C — Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C — Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) C — Love of Life (4) R C — Steve Allen — Irwin Watson, Charles Nelson Reilly and Evie Sands guest. (7) R C - Movie: “We’re No Angels" ( 1 955 ) Humphrey Bogart, 'Joan Bennett (9) C — Bozo 4:25 (2) C — News 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas —Walter Cronkite, Joan Rivers and Joe Williams guest. i (50) R — Little Rascals (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot 8:25 (9)C — Morgan — “Dutch \yest Indies" (9) R C — Batman (50) R — Munsters 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:30 (9) R - F Troop (50) R C — Superman (56) R—Misterogers (§2) R — Leave It to Beaver FRIDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R C - I Spy - Kelly anff Scott bungle a n assignment and become the hunted. (50) R C — Flintstones (56) What’s New - “All About Animals" (62) R — Sea Hunt 6:30 (2) C . - News -Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (7) C — News — Reynolds, Smith (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) Cancion de la Raza — Spanish soap opera (62) R — Highway Patrol 7:00 (2) R C — Truth or Consequences (4) (7) C — News, Weather, Sports (9) R C — Movie: “Moment to Moment" (1966) Young wife accidentally shoots her paramour, but the body disappears. Jean Seberg, Honor Blackman. (50) R — I Love Lucy — The Ricardos outsmart themselves in an investment deal. (56) Great Books — The discussion of Ibsen’s “Peer Gynt" is continued. (62) C — Swingintime 7:30 (2) R C - Wild, Wild West — A tycoon’s board of directors appears to be the target of an insidious plot. Jo Van Fleet and Joanie Sommers guest-star. (4) R C — High Chaparral — An all-Negro Cavalry unit is sent to fight a band of hired guns in an effort to free Tucson from its town boss. Yaphet Kotto and Morgan Woodward guest star. (7) C—Let’s Make a Deal (50) R — Hazel (56) R — Action People — Student revolt — its aims, FRIDAY methods and chances for success — js discussed. 8:00 (7) C — John Davidson — The Committee and the Moody Blues guest. (50) C — Pay Cards — Cab Calloway guests. (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 8r30 (2) R C - Gomer Pyle — An expectant mother seeks help from Corner and Carter. (4) C — (Special) Arthur Rubinstein — Documentary explores the renowned pianist’s, life and art, with solo performances in Persepo-lis, Iran and Jerusalem. (50) C *— Password (56) Portrait In — Prof. David Black of Ohio State University School of Art discusses his sculpture and wall hangings. (62) C.— Robin Seymour 9:00 (2) R - Movie: “The Stripper” (1963) Beauty-contest winner winds up in a second-rate road show. Joanne Woodward, Richard Beymer, Carol Lynley (7) R C — Judd for the Defense — Judd aids a Negro convicted of a crime he didn’t commit. Brock Peters guest-stars. (9) R — Secret Agent (50) R — Perry Mason (56) R — Book Beat — Noel Behn (“The Kremlin Letter”) discusses “The Shadowboxer,” his latest spy novel. (62) C - Scene 70 9:30 ( 56) R — NET Playhouse — “Devi” is Satyajit Ray’s film about the religious fantasies a devout Indian man has of his daughter-in-law. 10:00 (4) C — Here Come the Stars — Zsa Zsa Gabor and Gisele Mac-Kenzie in a salute to guest - of * honor G 1 e n n Ford. (7) C — Dick Cavett — Groucho Marx guests. (9) (50) C — News, The Pontiac Prost Friday Weather, Sports (62) R — Movie: “Flight to Hong Kong” (1956) Diamond smuggler becomes infatuated with a novelist and double-crosses the syndicate. Rory Calhoun, Barbara Rush 10:30 (9) C - What’s My Line? (50) R—Alfred Hitchcock 10:50 (2) Film Featurette —-“Oh, What a Lovely War” with Vanessa Redgrave and Sir John Gielgud. 11:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R C — Movie: “The Tramplers” (1966) After returning home from the Civil War, a confederate soldier gets in trouble with his patriarchal father. Joseph C o 11 e n , Gordon Scott (50) R — One Step Beyond 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carbon — Linda Bennett guests. (7) C — Joey Bishop — Abbe Lane and Chris and Peter Allen guest. (50) C — Merv Griffin — Zsa Zsa Gabor, Oliver and Madelyn Kahn guest. 11:35 (R) Movies: 1- “Lizzie” (1957) Girl with three personalities struggles to save herself. Joan Blondell, Eleanor Parker; 2. “Rocket to the Moon” (1954) When a rocket ship reaches the moon, scientists encounter the deadly catwomen. Sonny Tufts, Marie Windsor 12:24 (9) Viewpoint 12:30 (9) C — Perry’s Probe — “How to Get a Man” 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R - Movie: “This1 Angry Age” ( 1 9 5 8 ) Anthony Perkins, Jo Van Flcset (50) C — Wrestling 2:00 (4) C — News,*Wcath-er 3:15 (7) C — Wonderful World of Sports 3:20 (7) C—News, Weather 3 : 3 0 ( 2 ) C — News, 3:30 (2) C — News, Weather Romance blossoms between Joanne Woodward and Richard Reyrmer in "The Stripper” Friday night on (channel 2 from 9-11. Miss Woodward play» a down-at-her-beels hoofer whose growing affection for a mother-dominated teen-ager (Beymer) is the focus of the movie based on William Inge's play, “A Loss of Roses." NEED NEW ROOF? IF YOU PUT ROOFING ON YOUR HOME, IT SHOULD BE THE BEST. WE HAVE IT. Complete Exterior Remodeling Roofing Aluminum Siding Enclosures Vinyl Siding Aluminum Aluminum Storm Shutters Windows A Doors Custom Made Aluminum Shutters Tom Higginbotham Roofing ft Siding Co. S2S-SSN MSI Oilie Mwy., Watorford j CAR MODEL INCL. 2' OVERHANG 14x20 Above prico include* oil of the following: 2 large aluminum window* • 22-foot lliolf Or work bench * 2x6 rollert • 16 O.C. »tud» • 44" tiding ft Wind brocet • Stoel overhood door • 6'* be* cornice • Crou-tie* • Hoc. cond. f • 235 ihinglvt • Double heodfrt • fxpontion • Alum, insulation • Oalv. nollt. INCLUDES AU IASOR AND MATISIAl • SHUT to AMY COM. ANY SUSUSS ALUM SIDING « ATTICS ADDITIONS O REC ROOM* PORCHES • ANYTHING remodeling; FE 8-9584 Bonafide CAR ACE WllOilS 1?)17 LAMER RR. WE IUILD WITHIN 75 MILES S YEAR WHITT!N OUARANTfl YEAS* TO MV r SATURDAY MORNING 5:50 i2* TV Ch&pefl 5:55 <2» C — News 6:00 C — Across the Fence 6:30 <2* C—Black Heritage —The role of the black man in the Korean war. 6:45 <71 C — Rural Report 6:S5 <4* C — News 7:00 (2* C — Mr. Magoo • 4 * C — Country Living — ‘Using a Soil Survey” *7> C — / tiNew Time* Casper 7:30 < 2 > C — Bugs Bunny* Roadruriner < 41 C — Oopsy 7* C — * Premiere » Smokey the Bear 35 >9* Warm-Up 45 <9* Sound ’69 0(1 71 C — Premiere* Cattanooga Cats 9» Window on the World 6:30 <2' C — Wacky Races 9' AH Around the Circle O Nrchir Show Pontiac Prott Saturday, Soptombor 6, 1969 11:00 <2) C — Shazzan (7) C — (New Timei Fantastic Voyage (9) Ballads and Chansons 11:30 (2) R C — Jonny Quest (4) C — ( P r e>m i e r e ) Jambo (7)C — American Bandstand (9) Country Calendar SATURDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C — Moby Dick (4) C — (Debut) NFL-AFL Highlights — Replays of the most exciting moments in the past week’s National Football League and American Football League games, with stop-action and slow* motion views. (9) C —Golf (50) R — Movie: “The Mask of Dimitrios” (1944* Zachary Scott. Faye Emerson 12:30 421, C — Lone Ranger (7) C — Happening (9) C — Jim Clark Motor Racing 1:00 *2) C — Tiger Warmup (4* C — Baseball Pregame 17) R C — Movie: “The Black Shield of Falworth” remiere) Here Comes the Grump (7) C — (Premiere) Hot Wheels <9) C — Pinocchio (50) C — ( Special ) Arthritis: Americans’ Greatest Crippler” has film and discussion with Dr. William S. Clark, president of the Arthritis Foundation. 9:30 (2) C — Batman-Superman 14) C — ‘(Premiere) Pink Panther (7* C — (Premiere) Hardy Boys <9* Belle. Sebastian and the Horses (50* R — Laramie 10:00 (4) C — (Premiere) H. R Pufnstuff *7* C — (Premiere) Sky Hawks (9* Chansons* 10:30 <2) C — Herculoids <4* C — (New Time) Banana Splits (7* C — iNew Time* Gulliver <9* R — Three Musketeers (501 R — Movie: “Sand” (1949* Mark Stevens, Coleen Grav (1954) Tony Curtis, Janet Leigh (9) CFL Football: Montreal at Ottawa. 1:15 (2) C — Baseball: Baltimore at Detroit (4) C — Baseball 2:00 ( 50) R — Movie: “Red ' Canyon” (1949) Howard Duff, Ann Blyth 2:55 (7) C — Wonderful World of Sports 3:00 (7) R — Outer Limits (9) C — Marvel Super Heroes 3:30 (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) R — Movie: “Two Lost Worlds” ( 1 950 ) James Arness. Laura Elliott 4:00 (4) C — World Series of Golf (7) C — Wide World of Sports — Hoosier “100” Indianapolis car race is featured (9) C — Bozo 4:05 (2)C — Baseball Scoreboard 4:15 (2) C - Tennis - U.S. Open Championship from Forest Hills. N Y. 4:30 (9* C — Skippy (62) R — My Friend Flicka Old F ashioned Bargain Days > -----------------C___ __V Sept. . 5,6 / Instnmatic KODAK 44 Kodals CX-126-12 COLOR FILM 620. 120. 127 B & W FILM 126 12 EXP FILM Bargains Lalorp Sept, 7,1 P.M. uJ ? PM. CENTENNIAL SHUTTERBUG DAYS Bring your camera. Shoot till your heart's content, Girls in authentic costumes buggies waoons old cars, spinning, wheel spinning yarn cider and pretzels. «\f>w Location ROCHESTER CAMERA SHOP Annex Building 530 PINE Rochester For the Finest Nikon, Fujico, Kodok, Bell & Howell PARKING UNIVfRSiTY DfllVt COMPUTE $ ROOMS A captivating collection of correlated stylet for your enjoy-mertt. Greater in Scope - Greater in Savings - Greater in* Design. A truly amasing value. IMPRUiL YGLV. 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(Over 20 years experience serving Oakland County) ORDER YOUR STORM WINDOWS NOW Kitchens Bathrooms Room Additions Family Rooms Window A Boor Replacements Ceilings Paneling Carpeting Floor Oovorlng Air Conditioning Moating Qas i Oil Attio Stairs Awnings Porohos and Patios Dormers Cement Werk Roofing Qiattors Insulation Siding * Storm Windows and Doors Oaragos Attics Fonoos WRITTEN GUARANTEE • LOWEST PRICES QUALITY WORKMANSHIP • FHA BUDGET PAYMENTS • NO MONEY DOWN FREE ESTIMATES WITHOUT OBLIGATION r'&7Tr- i i i i j A Name You Can Trust99 Io r Home -J Ol IMPROVEMENT 163 W. Montcalm, Pontiac CaU 335-2102 fHREE COLORS Mail Coupon or Phono 682-3232 The J. L. Hudson Company 269 N. Telegrsph Rd., Pontiac, Michigan 48068 Customer Shopping Service, Dgot. 403 $10 buys a lot of fashion— like this pretty princess jumper from Shaker Square. Wear it alone or with shirts and sweaters. Green, blue or camel Col-ora y® rayon bonded to acetate. 10-20 and 14Vi-24Vi in Home and Town Dresses, Pontiac 1st; and branches. Call 683-3232. 3D S O IST ’ s □ Charge Plate No. □ Check or Money Order endoeed □ C.O.D. Name Style Color 81m Arfriraa* Phone. v/ivjr owiir , ~ —— MICRO PHOTO DIVISION JAMES S, THORBURN Syrians Recant, Free Israelis WASHINGTON (AP) - The State Department has declined to go along with a suggestion that Secretary William P. Rogers is angry at the Central Intelligence Agency for putting out word 'that the Soviets may be thinking about an air strike on Red China's atomic plants. Press officer Robert J.* McCloskey refused yesterday to take any side publicly in what he portrayed as competitive newspaper enterprise over a lunch CIA chief Richard Helms had with some reporters earlier this week. ★ ★ i * .1 Helms has been identified — by newsmen who were not at the liinch and therefore not bound by no-quotation rules — ag the source of stories dealing with the possibility of such a Soviet attack and about CIA’g claim of innocence in the Green Beret murder charges in Saigon. : ’ it "k 1t CIA’s longstanding Practice is public silence on overseas developments and anfi-CIA allegations poured forth daily When CIA feels maligned by stories over which other U.S. government agencies may have some control, it sometimes asks them to issue a statement which will put the CIA in a better light. , • lii the Greeen Beret case, the Army, so far has refused to publicly disavow defense lawyer allegations In behalf of the arrested men that the CIA ordered the killing of a suspected Vietnamese double agent. CIA contends It issued no such order. The Army is keeping silent pending further investigation. ’ * * ★ In the Siho-Soviet dispute, there is conjecture as to whether the Soviets themselves might be floating the notion of a possible attack on Chinese nuclear installations in aider to scare Peking. It is also speculated that antfcSoviet Communist sources may be promoting the surprise attack idea for their own psychological warfare purposes. 1 The official U.S. government view is that a Russian-Chinese armed clash bigger than border flareups la both TIRED OF COMPLAINTS • 'It's not Just me, it s a hell of a lot of ranchers across the country who are getting tired of women complaining about the prices of meat,” Collins said Friday. He said the offer was made as a reaction to meatless recipe campaigns in the East and a "meatless week” campaign in Oregon. "It’s time that if they’re going to give beef a- black eye the farmer should show them who’s not coming out,” Collins said. "I’m just going to send a calf, that’s all, and tell them, ’You feed it and you tell mo what it costs.’” Each woman is to receive one calf late tiext week. .Collins said the calves are being provided by two Nebras'ka fanners, Ronnie Rogers of Lexington and Frank Diercka of Gordon. MORE; SHIPMENTS Later shipments will send calvek to housewives in. Denver, Colo., and Port and, Orfe., he said, and added that he thinks as many as 200 calves could be found in 24 hours if others Wish to join the experiment. ! , 'Mablm Vidim i MwStcttl science benefits from' boy’s lout battle Mr ‘Ufa — 11 „ Allies/Wii* counteroffensive ' m In hills 'southwest of Da Nang ■hbvhdHm - jjff Monday Is ' summer» last ’|wiuu>, Church News —B-7—B-i . Markets .. . .-MVtmouwrv C* . RAKIN’ TO GO—Cattle buyer Ed Coliina holds a Hereford calf similar to the two being shipped to housewives bi Levittown, N. Y., and Melbourne Beach, Fla. The’ women, who have complained that producers are making too much profit, have agreed to feed the calves for market to learn firsthand the coats Involved. Collins Waterford Teacher Pact Gets Final Okay Waterford Township teachers and school board overwhelmingly approved a new 'one-year teachers contract last night which brings salaries up to the county average. The new contract, which runs from Sept. l‘to Aug. 31, is estimated to cost the sch6ol district $7 million compared to last year’s total of $6.4 million. A total Of 285 teachers voted for the pact while 30 cast votes against it. The school system has about 667 teachers. At the same time, the board of education reviewed the document and approved it 5-to-0. Two members were absent. RESERVISTS COME HOME—Army reservists of the 221st Transportation Co. . received a wild, emotional welcome when they returned to the Tampa Bay area of Florida after a year in Vietnam. The company is part of the 25,000 troops released from the war zone by President Richard M. Nixon. (Related story, page A-2) Pagen admitted the teachers were given nearly everything they were negotiating for to avoid a teacher strike. But as a result an additional estimated $100,000 will have to be trimmed from a $12.5-million auterity budget. Pagen said It is likely supplies will be cut back, equipment won’t be replaced as readily, teachers wont be reimbursed for convention or in-service training expenses, the number of field trips will be reduced. Salaries for teachers with bachelor degrees will range from $7,400, up $700 from last year, to $12,000 tin 10 years, up *1,500. The range fof master-degree teachers will be $8,000, up $000, to $13,200 in 11 years, an incease of $1,700. Four years ago, Waterford’s teacher salaries were among the best in the county, acting Supt. Dr. John Pagen noted. Last year they were among the worst. The new salaries now rank about in the middle of 28 school districts in the’county which have settled salaries for the coming school year, according to Pagen. RANKING COULD DROP Waterford could be pushed down in the rankings when five districts still negotiating, contracts settle on salaries, Pagen said. Gals Beef, So They'll Raise It RED OAK, Iowa (AP) — A Cora Belt cattle buyer angry at Eastern housewives’ complaints about beef prices offered to send calves to two women to give them first-hand experience with the costs of cattle raising, and the women accepted. “I’m delighted,” said Mrs. Stephen Stophlett'of Melbourne Beach, Fla., the 'legdef.of a group boycotting beef. “It’s a “People would tike to prove the farmers don’t have it so well,” he said. “Everybody back there in the East thinks the farmer’s rich.” Collins suggested that the women could feed the calves backyards.” Mrs. DeLorenzo said a town ordinance forbids keeping a calf in her yard, but town and county dfficials have offered to put hers in an animal shelter. Aide Denies Rogers Is Irked at CIA Sino-Russ War Hint jn’nibtfwe’re being noted.” Mrs. Mickey DeLorenzo of Levittown, N-Y., said her first reaction was ’’complete disbelief” but later she decided it would be a “marvelous experiment.” The offer was made by Eddie Collins of Red Oak, a cattle dealer who also conducts a syndicated radio program forecasting cattle market conditions. The association said attendance at the track in Hazel Park dropped as'a result of Thorburn’s statements. The group also said the judge’s statement caused PREVIOUS CUTBACK This comes on top of a previous $l-million-plus cutback for the coming school year when 75 teaching positions were eliminated and elementary pupils were put on half-day sessions. potentail harm in its relationship with the Michigan racing commissioner who assigns racing dates to the track. Weinstein said his client requested a public retraction from Thorburn on July 3 and again, by telegram, on July 22. He claimed there was no reply from the Oakland County judge. The laW suit also contended that Thorburn accused the track “through its officers and directors, of being members of an alleged organized prime syndicate ' Teachers also wpn an agency-shop provision,'paid health and life insurance for 12 months instead of last year’s 10 months, and a 7 per cent salary raise to supervise extrcur-ricular activities. or group ” Both alleged accusations were strongly denied by track officials. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 6) Under agency shop, all teachers in-the system must join or pay dues of $101 yearly to the Waterford Education Association. their bargaining agent, or be fired. The association, had 612 members last year and now expects about 55 more members. Rain May Douse Holiday Ventures A tentative contract settlelment was unexpectedly reached Thursday after six months of negotiations, a slate mediator failed to settle the issues and called for fact-finding end a strike was close at hand. There’s a chance of showers or thundershowers dampening the Pontiac area over the weekend. Here is the day-by-day forecast issued by the U.S. Weather Bureau: TODAY — Mostly fair and humid, slight chance of thundershowers, high 85 to 62. Tonight partly cloudy and warm, chance of thundershowers, low 65 to 70. Winds south increasing to eight to 18 miles per hour and tonight and south to southwest 10 to 20 miles tomorrow. TOMORROW — Mostly cloudy and cooler j, chance of thundershowers. High 82 to 88. MONDAY — Chance of showers or thundershowers mostly during the morning, cooler. Probabilities of precipitation are 20 per cent tonight and 30 per cent tomorrow. A humid 71 was the low reading in downtown Pontiac before 8 a.m. The mercury had soared to 90 by 12:30 p.m. ATTENDANCE DROP From Our News Wires DAMASCUS, Syria — The Arab hijack of a Trans World Airlines jet with 115 persons aboard missed by minutes being a disaster, the pilot said today, in the wake of a Syrian decision to release six Israelis who were aboard. “We would never have made it if we had had to circle the airport one more time,” said Capt. Dean Carter, the pilot. ★ ★ ★ The Boeing 707 not only had but a few gallons of fuel left whenr it landed yesterday at Damascus airport, there was the threat of a bomb aboard. Minutes after the passengers jumped from the plane it went off, ripping the cockpit wide open. A young Arab couple seized the Boeing 707 as it was en route to Athens and Tel Aviv. They said they were members of the Popular front for the Liberation of Palestine, an Arab guerrilla group. ‘COULDN’T DEFUSE’ Authorities expressed belief' the explosion occurred because the hijackers had been unable to defuse the bomb they used to' threaten the pilot when they entered the cbckpit over the Adriatic Sea. v- •. . ' Syrian officials said the passengers would be flown out on a special Alitalia airliner to Athens, from where they could proceed to their'destinations. Syria said TWA can reclaim its plane. After the plane had landed and stopped, some of the passengers jumped off the wings in panic because of the bomb threat. Others dived into nearby foxholes. Two Americans suffered foot injuries as a reult. Many of the passengers at the news conference were still barefoot. Others were being fitted out with new shoes to replace those they left when they fled from the plane through the emergency chute moments nefore the cockpit blew up. BROKE HER FOOT Helen Valias,, an American from Lynn, Mass., had one foot in a plaster cast. She broke it when she jumped off the wing after the plane stopped Another American, Zachary Pace, 47, Oxford, Qhio, also broke his foot jumping off the wing. He and his wife ran to a nearby foxhole and jumped in, he said. ★ ★ * For 24-year-old Lester Noble of San Antonio, Texas, the hijack ended In a busman’s holiday. A bomb disposal, expert in the U.S. Army, he too found himself in a foxhole after the plane landed. Noble said that from the point of view of the hijackers “the operation worked like clockwork. It was planned out.” He said when the woman' hijacker ad- jlAfsed thp passengers through the public address system shortly after the plane left Rome everybody was calm. “She said no harm would come to us, if we remained calm and everybody did just. that. * * .★ “But about 15 minutes before the plane landed, the woman hijacker appeared to he getting a little excited. She said she was going to blow the plane up and of course everybody became very anxious,” Noble said. “But then she said everybody would have to get out of the plane the moment it landed. There was some panic them,” he added. Park Seeks 3rd Term SEOUL (AP) — South Korean President Chung-Hee Park says any chief of state needs at least 12 years in office to effect any worthwhile changes and that’s why he is pushing for a constitutional, amendment to do away with a two-term limit. The 51-year-old president, whose current four-year term ends in 1971, spoke today to convention delegates of, his ruling Democratic Republican party. The party is backing him in his bid to tack on a third term to the presidency. Judge Sued for Libel in Track Case An Oakland County Circuit Judge who once investigated the Hazel Park Race Track was sued yesterday in Wayne County Circuit Court for $2 million by the corporation that runs the thoroughbred track. The Hazel Park Racing Association alleged that Judge James S. Thorburn libeled and slandered the association in describing s 1987 plot to assassinate him while he was investigating the track. In the suit, the association said Judge Thorburn accused the corporation “of havihg hired, enticed or in some manner retained an individual in an alleged plot” to kill him. \ Thorburn, who declined comment yesterday, made the statement to a television newsman June 25. The account was later broadcast in Detroit and fuller accounts published in area newspapers, said William Weinstein, the attorney for the corporation. Pressed by stubborn lady schoolteacher from Los Angeles who refused to leave four Israeli women who were aboard, officials said they will release all 113 persons on the hijacked jet. “All of you, including the Israelis, will leave within the hour,” a Syrian official told the 101 passengers and 12 crew members who were aboard the TWA Boeing 707 when it was hijacked yesterday during a flight from Rome to Athens. Earlier, Syrian officials said six Israelis — two men and four women — were being detained. Miss Finne Perry, a chemistry and physics teacher, led a band of American passengers who had told the Syrians they refused to be separated from the women. Passengers told a news conference today they had been “very well treated” by the Syrians. also included Cubans and a Filipino. Most of the passengers remained calm until the woman hijacker threatened to blow up the plane. “There was some panic then,” one of the passengers said. -A-2 ™ HMO flVH THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 30, 1969 TWA's 10 Pet. Tops Air-Fare Hike Pleas WASHINGTON (AP) - Trans World Airlines has called for a 10 per cent Increase in domestic fares, the meet daring rate hike proposal before the Civil Aeronautics Board. At least 15 other airlines have requested fare nicreases. * * * The CAB will lift the lid on the simmering kettle of airline problem* Thursday when it hears oral argument fro% Ae atriktes and from opponents mluty general fare increase. In thee latter category are 20 Private Talks May Free 3 in N. Korea PROSPECT HEIGHTS, m (Ap) -The chairman of the Remember the Pueblo Committee says three American helicopter crewmen held prisoner by North Korea can be freed through private negotiation without an apology to the Communists. The Rev. Paul Undstrom, whose committee was formed In January 1968 after North Korea captured the USS Pueblo, said Friday that the State Department would have to take “a certain series of actions,” however, before the men could be freed. 4r K a Undstrom did not describe the actions, but said that once they were taken at least one member of his committee would travel to Panmunjom, North Korea, to accept the release of the men Sept. 18. In Washington yesterday, State Department spokesman Robert J. McCloskey said ho knew of no role being played by Undstrom or the Remember the Pueblo Committee to win release of the men. REDS* OFFER The crewmen were captured Aug. 17 after their helicopter was shot down by North Korean gunners. North Korea said yesterday the crewmen are alive, and offered to exchange them for a confession and apologies from Washington. U.8. officials in Washington began drafting a statement they hope will be sufficient to induce North Korea to release the . three crewmen. Although previous similar negotiations at Panmunjom have been prolonged, there was some optimism that the three might be released before too long. Washington officials said no time has been fixed for delivering the statement North Korea has asked. Presumably it will be sent to Panmunjom fairly soon. Undstrom said he and other persons were still negotiating for the release of the men. Undstrom said he could not give details of the negotiations “if our work is to be effective.” western members of Congress, headed by Rep. John E. Moss, D-Calif., who have asked the Board to suspend and investigate the fare increase proposals. FINANCES DETERIORATING In a 14-page defense of its proposal Eastern Airlines said the Industry’s financial position 1 s deteriorating rapidly. Eastern said die airlines, cannot hope to hold the linee on fares when all prices and wages it must pay have risen steadily. Chairman John H. Crooker Jr., who is resigning, indicated the CAB would act swiftly, so that if an increase is permitted it may go into effect by Oct. 1. WWW Crooker classified the major fare proposals in three groups. The prototype tariff fillings are: • Continental — a flat increase on aU tickets for flights of more than 400 miles. It would range from 82 additional, for trips of 400 to 499 miles, to a maximum increase of $9 on flights of more than 1,900 miles. • United — a fixed terminal charge of 111 for each ticket, plus a flat line-haul charge of 5.7 cents a mile. • Eastern — an $8.60 terminal charge with a variable line-haul charge ranging downward In four mileage blocks, from 6.7 cents a mile for trips up to 400 miles, down to fire cents a mile for flights of more than 1,800 miles. 6 PCT. HIKE LOWEST Continental’s plan would raise fares an estimated 6 per cent, United’s 6.6 per jent, and Eastern’s about 8 per cent. TWA said that in view of the industry’s serious need none of the proposals was adequate, and a 10 per cent increase would be justified. TWA said it would support Eastern’s 8 per cent hike as .“minimal." jV ★ ★ ★ Continental said it would oppose any increase based on a formula, and said the CAB has no authority to impose upas It the fare structures proposed by United, Eastern or American without first suspending them and conducting an in-, vestigation as to their legality. Blue Shield Seeks Big Rate Increase DETROIT W) — The Michigan Blue Shield insurance plan filed today for a 16.7 per cent increase in Its rates, effective next Jan. 1. ' The companion Blue Cross plan filed fqr a two pier cent cut in rates for its so-called Blue Cross 65 coverage, designed to supplement medicare. The new rate scheduler were filed with the Michjlgan Insurance Bureau and would become effective with renewal of contracts in next year’s first quarter. 1 They would be applied subsequently to those with contracts expiring in other quarters, but subscribers would be assured of no further increases for a year. Blue Cross and Blue Shield said the increase would be only 5.6 per cent when applied to the cost of their combined coverage. Blue Cross previously filed for a 4.1 per cent increase to become effective Oct. 1. Blue Shield said it had not increased basic rates since 1963, although the Consumer Price Index had gone up 24.1 per cent meanwhile. The plans have approximately 4.8 million members in Michigan. Blue Cross assures hospital bill payments; Blue Shield the payment of doctor bills. Blue Shield said its increase initially would apply to contracts of 274,000 members. Blue Cross said about 370,000 will be affected by its Blue Cross 65 reduction. John C. McCabe, president, said it was impossible for Blue Shield to resist further “the continuing inflationary pressure common to our total economy.” 'Truth Squad' Members Mills (Left) And Bailie TV Debate With Bernadette Tuesday 2 Irish Unionists in U.S. 'to Tell Truth' NEW YORK (AP) - Two leaders of Northern Ireland’s ruling Unionist party are here to set the stage for a confrontation with Bernadette Devlin, the 22-year-old crusader for Ulster’s Roman Catholic minority. “This Fidel Castro in amini-skirt must be put Into true perspective and that is what we hope to do,” W. Stratton Mills, a member of the British House of Commons, told a news conference yesterday. * \ * * Mills and Robin Bailie, a member of the Ulster Parlimanet, flew in to Kennedy Airport, part of a three-man "truth squad” dispatched to counter Miss Devlin's activities. The third member, Captain L.P.S. Orr, was in Canada. Miss Devlin is on a weeek-old North American tour to raise funds for victims of the recent Ulster violence. She Is scheduled to meet the truth squad on television here Tuesday. Miss Devlin declared herself undaunted by the 3-1 odds: “Their cause is three times, if not 300 times, less than ours so the odds are fair.” Mills and Bailie charged at their news conference that Miss Devlin has been “wildly Irresponsible and totally inaccurate” in her presentation of the con-trovery to the American public. >• ★ 4 4 Meanwhile, It was announced that the Rev. Ian Paisley, a militant leader of Ulster protestants, would arrive here Sept. 6 to begin his own fund-raising tour. Britain Outlines Peace Package The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Today mostly fair, warm and humid, slight chance of afternoon or evening thundershowers, high 85 to 92. Tonight partly cloudy and warm, chance of thundershowers, low 66 to 78. Sunday mostly cloudy and cooler, chance of thundershowers. High 82 to 88. Monday outlook: Chance of showers or thundershowers mostly during the morning, cooler. Winds south increasing to 8 to 18 miles per hour today and tonight, and south to southwest 16 to 20 miles Sunday. Probabilities of precipitation: 26 per cent tonight and 30 per cent Sunday. On* Vaar As* In eontlac BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) — British Home Secretary James Callaghan presented five proposals to end strife between Roman Catholics and Protestants in Northern Ireland then left today for London. He promised to return in a few weeks to confer with British officials who will arrive in a few days to help Northern Ireland's government work out reforms In housing, jobs and election practices. WWW Callaghan dismissed demands of the Catholic-based Civil Rights Association calling for abolition of the provincial parliament and urged its early recall to speed work on reforms. Unless his proposals are accepted, he warned, Northern Ireland could- face chaos and anarchy. The proposals are: • An Immediate 8600,000 grant from London to aid families whose homes and businesses were hit by fires and looting. • A promise by Northern Ireland to appoint a government minister for com- • A British mission to ....._________ Ireland to consider economic and Industrial improvement. e A committee composed equally of Protestants and Catholics to Investigate grievances. • A British-Northern Irish team to investigate the causes of the dispute. Half-Day School Setup 'Illegal' DETROIT (UPI) — A ruling that could, in effect, outlaw half-day school sessions was handed down yesterday by Wayne County Circuit Court Judge Charles Kaufman. The ruling was on a suit brought by a group of Livonia parents against the Livonia Board of Education, which had planned to open school Wednesday with grades five through eight on half-day sessions because of a lack of mOney. In adopting the half-day sessions, the Livonia board had cited a state law that prohibits deficit financing by local school boards. But Kaufman ruled that the Michigan Constitution calls for free education and free education has been defined by the Legislature as meaning 180 full days of school each year. ” ADMITTED CONFLICT He admitted the deficit financing provision was in conflict with the constitutional provision, but added that the state must provide the funds fore complete education. The more than 150 persons attending the hearing yesterday broke into wild applause when Kaufman ruled in their favor that all children In the Detroit suburb would have to have full-day school sessions. He did allow the school board to delay the fUU-day sessions until a later date because they were not set up now to begin school on Wednesday with full-day sessions. Bill Brown, president of the school board, said there would be an emergency meeting over the weekend to decide whether to appeal Kaufman’s decision. There still is the problem of finding the money to conduct full-day sessions, he said. LowmI tomporotur* prtcodlng • a.m. 71 At I t.m.i Wind Voloclty, I m.p.h. Direction, Swtli fun Ml Saturday at 7:11 p.m, tun rltat Sunday at S:57 a.m. Moon aatt Sunday at 10:4V a.m. Mean rne* Saturday at till a.m. Weather—Sunny Detroit Prldey la PanNac Friday, Temperature Chart " H Cincinnati SO 41 l Denver ' *o je Duluth (( 49 JMW „ 44 44 Port Worth 4J 49 Od. Rapid! VI 44 Jacksonville as 70 Houyhten 04 43 Kanaaa city 42 74 mtgwia L. 43 44 Lot Angelas. TV 44 J«aSan 41 49 Loulevllle 47 44 Lowing.. 91 » Miami. ich. 47 tj U.S. Plans Attack, Soviet Marshal Says 42 44 New York •w™. is *4 Omaha or n S.*t*. Marl* It 44 Phoenix ft |T ----- - V0 71 Pitt,burgh 14 41 44 44 ft. Louie 44 72 14 *4 i. Lai* city |7 a _____ *4 J* s. prenclice 71 u Beaton 44 70 Seattle 71 54 Chicago it 71 Waahlnpton 11 44 Atlanta MOSCOW (A—The commander of Soviet rocket troops charged today that the United States is planning a surprise attack on the Soviet Union, but he warned that “every launch pad, aircraft, ship, tank ami gun” of the Soviet armed forces is ready to retaliate. Marshal Nikolai Krylov said his strategic rocket troops have recently taken on responsibility as the “main force to hold back the aggressor and defeat it in war.” * ★ * Krylov’s belligerent remarks, published in the Communist party newspaper Sovletskaya Rossia (Soviet Russia), were among the toughest rocket-rattling aimed at the West seen in the Soviet press in two years. Krylov, who is a deputy defense minister, said the “mass Birmingham Courses Set in Community Fall Program BIRMINGHAM —Residents will have the opportunity to eat while learning in the Connoisseur’s Kitchen course offered lit the Community House Fall Educational program. / Connoisseur’s Kitchen, a course in gourmet cookery, will be taught by Madame Charity Suczek, a native of Austria, who has studied with, chefs in such restaurants as Maxims, Tour d ’Argent and Les Pyramids. * .giTT f 1 Students will have the opportunity to sample the dishes prepared that day, taste wines and nibble cheese. A course in braille transcribing will prepare students for volunteer work in transcribing children’s books and other needed reading material for the blind. DECOUPAGE CLASS A class in the ancient art of decoupage will also be available. Decoupage consists of cutting, pasting, then applying several coats of varnish to a solid surface. Students will learn to adapt this wall hangings, baskets suitable for handbags and other possibilities. In the flower arranging course, students will learn simple ine design and mass arranging plus Instruction in mechanical aids, as well a* the selection and conditioning of flowers. * W * Furcraft instruction will be given in restyling outmoded furs into stoles, bags, hats, collars or coats. The pottery course offers a basic knowledge of raw materials, tools and techniques of ceramics, including hand construction, throwing on the potter’s wheel glazing and decorating processes. In sculpturing, a three-dimensional world will be opened when students learn to investigate different media, day molding and carving assemblage. Beginning and advanced students are Welcomed to the class with personal attention given to each individual project and student. Jack Forberg, of 5131 Coldspring Lane, a life insurance salesman has been cited for outstanding sales performance during a recent meeting of the Mutural of New York’s national sales leaders in New York. Forberg was honored by Howard E. Barnhill, CLU, senior vice president, in recognition of his membership in the “President’s Council,” Mutual of New York’s leading sales honor organization. The . underwriters attended sessions focusing on advanced life insurance planning techniques for businessmen and professionals at the week-long sales conference. Introduction of nuclear rocketry” has transformed the Soviet armed forces. ‘DON’T BELIEVE IT And he warned the United States not to believe its own “propaganda” about nuclear war having no 'winners. “Preparing for a surprise attack on the Soviet Union and other countries of socialism (Communism),” Krylov wrote, “the U.8. government long ago created a special unit, the department of planning for strategic purposes, which is busy working out plans for a mass nuclear-rocket strike on objects in our country and other countries of socialism.” He said he would like to remind “lovers of military adventure” that no aggression will go unpunished. Ige Sued fct tibel (Continued From Page One) Meanwhile, Weinstein also is trying to learn the identity of a U.S. justice department employe who named two of tiie racing association’s directors as Mafia members. In a recent release from the justice department, Anthony J. Zerilli and Jack W. Tocco were listed as Mafia leaders. ★ ' w w The list was compiled last May by the department’s organized crime division at the request of Sen. John J. McClellan, chairman of the Senate Rackets Committee. Zerilli, son of alleged Mafia boss Joseph Zerilli, Is president of the association. Toceo, son of William “Black Bill” Tocco, Is the association’s executive vice president. The fathers of the track directors were named in 1963 testimony before a Senate subcommittee as top bosses of the Detroit Mafia. The younger Zerilli and Tocco have nevdr been convicted of a felony. ★ ♦ ★ t Dominic P. “Fats” Corrado resigned recently as a director of the race track after he was indicted on charges of tak- , ing kickbacks Involving a mlllion-dollar loan from the Teamster* Union pension fund. Corrado claimed he would be found innocent of the charge but was resigning to eliminate the ponibility of any problems for tihe track. - , Biggest Guard Unit in Viet Returns Home NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are forecast tonight for much of the Midwest mri Southwest and Florida. Cooler temperatures are predicted for the Midwest IDAHO FALLA, Idaho (l> - Squinting in glare from the runway, Spec. 4 Mike Dubbe, 21, thought of. the big reception ahead and said quietly: “I wish thay’d just let us go home.” The young soldier's sentiments ware ■hared by others as Idaho’s UMb Combat Engineers Battalion handed home yesterday after neariy a year in Vietnam — tee largest nouragulqr Army group sent to tile war. • The Guardsmen wore iploaaad last night but had to repast tide afternoon far a fullscale review, complete with VIPs and brass, including Gen. William CL Westmoreland, U.8. chief of staff and former commander In Vietnam. Seme 5,000 persons jammed the Falls airport yesterday to welcome tee 421 Guardsmen. DISABLED PLANE had to turn back. It was near before another plane could get some 140 men to Idaho Falls. * Some reunions were especially polg-MT The planes carried home father- then expected. Oae of three troop planes had engine trouble on the way from McChord Air Force Baas, Wash., aid The Guardsman appeared philosophical about haring been sent 26 Vietnam. “They could have dona without ua,” said 8ptc. | Bruce Campbell, “but we did a lot of geod.” Tbs battalion was astegnad tea upkeep of two major highways. Plans for today’s formal review were not a trig bit with tbs men. But thq mayor had declared “116th 'Welcome Home Days,” and the citisans committee had made plans. Besides Westmoreland, the dignitaries included a lieutenant general three major generals, a brigadier general, Idaho’s governor and three* congressmen. Six members of the battalion were ktiled In Vietnam and 16 injured. Families of the dead received special Almanac Daily By United Press International Today is Saturday, Aug. 30, the 342nd day of 1900 w)th l23 to follow. The moon Is between Its full phase and last quarter. The morning stars are Venus and Saturn. The evening stars are Mercury, Mars and Jupiter. On this day In history: In 30 B.C. Cleopatra committed suicide by permitting a snake to bite her. In 1780 Benedict Arnold promised the British he would surrender the American fort at West Point. ' ^ ★ w • -v 1 AIN'T SOT THE ) V \ ^SU6HTEST tP-y PESERT*/ 1 MYSTOWAj/iik J By Tom Ryan DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney \ W II ' Wm4 v r THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGUST 30, 1909 Week's NY List MAKE OVER PACES —:___r ^ ________, C—9 (Continued from Page C-8) (Ms!) High Lew Lett Che! ,JK ?& r » Okl.NG."iTj OlInMsth .M 8*VMW0p* 9 *« mvs OneldaLt .70 X64 18% 17 BUMaEit... 19% w ........ ■ ingeR 1.30 1)7 3M H 24% — * iJft-*, *8 IS T »-» OklaGE 1.0S ... 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Hn 267 49% 47% s 49% 4 % r pf2 Zayia Corp ' 218 37 34% 36% 41 ZanithR 1.40 471 40 38% 40 4 % Zum Ind JO 104 24% 23% 24% 4 % Soon, patients’ complete medical records will be on video tape, reports a physician. State Man Finds It Hard to Bridge the Crime Gap TRAVERSE CITY (UPI) — Here in Michigan’s northland, where deer poachers have been known to lurk and out-of-season fisherman are sometims snared, there’s a bridge rustler on the loose. Somebody has been stealing Jack Kornheisler’s bridge piece by piece. . > * “They could take it-down like an erector set and put it (ip someplace else, I guess,” sighed Kornheiser, who lives in Southfield. So far, 11 three-foot-wide steel I-beams, each of them IS feet long, have been snatched from Komheiser’s bridge. Once it carried traffic on Michigan 11$ over the Betsie River. But when the road was rerouted, the 80-foot-long bridge was abandoned. ★ it it It has stood proudly for 12 years on Kornheiser’s 120 acres of riverfront property, where he lntemfe to build a vacation home. But now it’s a bit naked, with all the big beams gone. State Police at Traverse City, 36 miles north of the stripped-down bridge, say the skillful thieves have chiseled off the bolt heads to free the beams. ' V dr ★ ' * They also say Kornheiser has lost $500 worth of bridge so far. In a competition recently held to 4ind the most satisfactory hard-opening cover for poisons, there were some 2,000 entries. DUCK SHEEPHERDER - Sixty head of sheep on a Boring, Ore., farm are taken to and from pasture by a pet mallard duck. The duck took over sheepherding duties after its mate was killed by a fox last summer. Neil Pestes, who runs the farm, says the duck became friendly with the ram of the flock and a short time later took over leadership. „ .... 14% 14% — % 128 30 27% 28% -1% 310 19% 37 37 —2% I 69% 49 49V- 37 30% 29 301 126 22 20% 22 32 34 33% 331 fi 14% 14 14V, , „ 07 30% £% 38% 42% RH . ji 58% n% ... Oil pf2,25 »3 43% 42% 43% 4 % --------- 303 26% 24% 25% 4 % «% 34% 3546 4' 54% 53% 54% 4 J0 x151 63 lg% 13 lt% — .. 394 37 23% 27 42% M m 26% 27% 121 30 28% 29% I 12 J6% 54 56% 41% —T— 175 11% 31 31% — 91 23% 23% 23 — 550 34% 33% 34% 4 96 23% 23% —' 254 54% 50 is is»% n* fRi Rtv ... 1141 2»S 23% M% —ll' Texts Ind 1b 93 31% Btt 11% 41 “ 504 129 |8% 1tS% —4% 109 Ino 8 ° I_______.... 32 10% 18 , „ TexUtil 1.% X465 53% 52 52% 4- % Tsxlran .90 505 29% 27% 29% 41% Ttxtrn pfl.OO 33 40% 37 40V6 4%g -> pfl.40 45 30% 26% 20% 41% A .40 319 13% 13% 13% Itt 1.04 51 44% 44 44% . I ....... 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'•«» 1 240 47 43% 45% 41% UnPtc pf.40 120 I 7% - Unkmtm 1.40 xM8 43% 29..,■RUM Unlroyol .70 204 23% 22% » — % ------- — * Mi 1M II* 11* —1% xlll 17 34% 16% — % BM «8t 41% 47% fr 136 13 Hi* ft 4 ■HI (HP 211 B% 21% 21% — Un Fruit Mt 4* 49 47% 47% Unit Ind .20 X66 14% 14% i4at Unltlnd pf.42 Xl9 9% OH i.-u 27% Cp m inn- PH.10 USM pfIJO UfahCont .52 —------------ „ Utah PL 1J0 x47^31% 22% 11 ValVd Cp J9 169 31 31% W% vorion Auo Bl Mi M0 ill 30 vicIConW J| 47} 47% 42 VIHMOT J7p ** •* VOflF PI4.30 ry330 68% 13% 47% 4i% VgSp pf4.13 VM |9 ' 59 “■ VonOroc 1.20 90 10% 19% M 4U #* if fi% Mt |f fl IS IL *11* 51 i4% %% immBi w« iji lSi m m m -% M “ 20% 19% Wi 4 % it% it ii% . 31 MM 11% , ... ____JO 8j.. M% l*% 13., -*18 Wtan pf Alio a 17% 17% 17% - % “—mrd iffl 104 if VM H 41% M "S 14 R S% 41% Btb. ... 3 Mb M% Wk 41% J §4J0 ” '“ T81 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 80, 1969 HONG KONG custom tailors A LAST 4 DAYS djOk VI Sat., Aug. M thru Tuts., Sept. 2 only W*jf Open Sat., San, and Slow. (Labor Pay) . AJL AT KROGER U.8. CHOICE TENDERAY ROAST RITE Young Heir Turkeys Wh CORDON'S ROLL Pork Sassage..... % HYCRADE’S I Boll Pork Franks J'*? NO BACKS ATTACHED U.S. i WHOLE FRESH 4Ti Fryer Leys W or Breasts I PETER’S CHUNK LIVER SAUSAGE OR PESCHKE'S SLICED BOLOGNA OR ’* Wieners___... • WTFKO 59* FULL SHANK HALF LEAN RIB Smoked Center Cut Ham Berk Chops part mas ATTACHED AUNT JEMIMA WITH ATTACHED FREE 12-OZ BTL AUNT JEMIMA SYRUP SPECIAL LABEL DETERGENT Bounty Towols.... SPECIAL LABEL PIZZA MIX Appian Way........... SNOW FLOSS ^ Sauerkraut___________ Whole bean-fresh roasted ■ Spotlight Coffee Bold Enzyme............. ASSORTED FLAVORS faftfaWKidcCt Drinks KROGER DELICIOUS Fruit Cocktail........... SPECIAL LABEL-ASSORTED FACIAL Kleenex Tissue............. I-QT U-OZCAN 69.95 109.95 50.05 130.05 10.05 170.05 110.05 110.05 100.05 00.05 70.05 100.05 170.05 110.05 100.05 170.05 250.05 100.05 320.05 100.05 00.05 00.05 •0.05 50.05 50.05 50.05 44.05 30.05 50.05 30.05 60.05 60.05 30.05 50.05 50.05 130.00 150.00 06.00 264.00 154.00 2M.00 102.00 110.00 161.00 160.00 135.00 256.00 2(6.00 310.00 200.00 250.00 430.00 184.00 440.00 203.00 168.00 175.00 144.00 00.00 121.00 121.00 88.00' 81.00 80.00 60.00 108.00 144.00 70.00 120.00 120.00 12‘«1 V I2‘*9*0" 12'* 16-10" 12'«10‘3" 12'* 17*2" 12‘*17‘8" 12‘*1S'3" 12‘*10'4" 12'*14'6" T2’«1 V 12'*24’0“ 12'* 19*9" 12*23 0" 12‘*14'4“ 12*x27‘8" 12'*26'5" 12'*17‘0" 12'*26'8" 12**21'10' 12'* 18' 12'*19'6" 12*93" I2'*6'10" 12'*8‘0'' 12'*9'2" 12*80" 12'*6‘10" 11'*7‘0" 12'*6'l0" UStfO" 1 ?'*9'0" 8'8"*7'0" 12W 12'*8'7" IRWO" YELLOW CLING SLICED OR HALVES JUMBO 72 SIZE “ Sunlcist - Oranges NON-DAIRY COFFEE CREAHRR Coffee-Mate ANY TENDER AY B BONELESS RUMP OB | SIRLOIN TIP ROAST I Vmlld The WU* Sept. 3L J8I9 , ■ At Knter Pit. A EmtiTmih. \ EVE READY REFRESHING Apricot Nectar. SWIFTS TASTY Bedwifli-Evaiu Vienna SsssW* 1 SPECIAL LABEL-ASSORTED Honeydewe............ 120 SIZE £‘*\ / „ Bartlett Pears IS sunrise FRESH in Pol Lumber . May Face a Closer Sha^e WASHINGTON (AP) - The Census Bureau Is counting billots in an election to see if there Is general agreement on slicing a little more wood off each stick of construction lumber. If the proposal is adopted, the Standard 2x4—already not 2x4 —will be slightly thinner and a little narrower in toe future. * *• * For more than 50 years, a nominal 2x4—both green andj NEWSPAPERS •Seper IIDIbt. dalivartd Boyal Oak Waits Paper * Metal Co. r LOW COST ' OAR LOANS T. AC. FEDERAL CREDIT UNION kiln dried—has left toe mill measuring 1% inches thick by 3% inches wide. Green lumber shrinks a* it loses moisture content. , The new standard would relate lumber sixes to moisture content so the green timber—initially a lvttle bigger—would be toe same size as the dry when it loses equivalent moisture. NEW MEASUREMENTS A dry 2x4—moisture content 19 per cent or less—would measure lVi by 3% inches. A green 2x4 would be planed 1 8-16 by 3 9-16 inches. Larger sizes would maintain the same dimensional differences. A 2x4 dry would be m by 7V< inches; green 1 9-16 by 7% inches 6 6 6 The new standard was recommended by the American Lumber Standards Committee, s government-industry organization. It has the approval of federal agencies and major organ!- SAVE 30% to 50% Remnants Clearance Open Sunday 12 tn 5 Oven S CStmmen Remnants 12’x8’ and under $2.M Per Yd. Pwlict for Halls, Stain and Bod rooms CARPET SAMPLES 28* eaoh 12W STORE SAMPLES 39“ t. 89“ TO CLEAR Gold Random Oliva Random Avocado Carvod Rod * Slack Loop Groan Pluth Avocado Kit. Cpt. Sola# Twaad Avocado Loop Saiga Loop Groan Corvad Aqua Random Avocado Carvod Avocado Loop Gold Twaad Rod A Slack Kit. Cpt. Bronia Pluth Chartrau.o Plu.h Blua Loop Rod Rost Kit. Cpt. Bluo Groan Kit. Cpt, 8alga Twaad Gold Plush Bluo Groon Kit. Cpt. Bronia Kit. Cpt. Gold Carvod Pink Plush BpM Kit. Cpt. Avocado Loop Capo Slut Kit. Cpt. Gold Twaad Emorald Twaad Gold Random Avocado Carvod Gold Loop Avocado Kit. Cpt. Groan Twist Gold Nuggot Loop Olivo Random Capri Groan Random Groan loop Avocado Random Gold Loop Emorald Random Coladon Corvad Avocado Twist Gold Shag Rod Shag Capris Groan Plush Orongo Twaad Rad Kit. Corpot Groan Mist Corvad Caloden Corvad Oliva Oraan Twd. Avocodo Plush Gold & Groan Leap Martini Twist Gold Kit. Cpt. Off Whita Corvad Gold Loop Bluo/groan Twaad Gold Loop Gold Random Rustic Groon Kit. Cpt. Avocodo Carvod Off Whit# Corvad Avocado Loop Gold Carvod Yollow Gold Kit. Cpt. Gold Kit. Cpt. Avocodo Random /Martini Random Gold Csnvwd Boigo Carvod Avocodo Corvad Rod A Block Commorci zations in the lumber a building industries. One dissenter is toe soil pipe, industry, contending its pipe would no longer fit In a narrower 2x4 studded wall. The home builders say the answer is to use 2x8’s in plumbing walls at an additional cost of $10 to $12 in an average house. The over-all savings, on the other hand, in the smaller sizes are estimated in the lumber industry at about $166 per house. .6 6 6 The proposed new standard, along with ballots, was mailed this summer to about 5,000 firms and organizations selected as a representative sampling of toe industries involved. A "general concurrence,' permitting the secretary of commerce to issue the new standard, requires acceptance by 75 per cent of those voting, with at least 70 per cent approval in each of three groups—producers, distributors, users. 6- * * Deadline for receipt of ballots as July 31. The Census Bureau has 60 to 90 days to report toe results. Compare anywhere! Compare any time! Why Settle For Less? .2«ou.99* Bologna..............................lb 49* U.S. CHOICE TENDER AY 4TH&5THRIBS Rib FULL SHANK HALF Sntokad iMlt Ham 89 59 9 r