MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) - Richard M,1 Nixon, winner of the Republican preridential nomination, today picked Qov. Spiro T. Agnew or Maryland as his running mate. Nigon made the announcement In a See Related Stories, Pictures, Page C-? brief news conference at 12:40 p.m. He said some 100 party leaders had been consulted. t 'A * .... * The selection of Agnew, a onetime supporter of Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller of New York, was a major surprise. The Maryland governor delivered the nominating speech for Nixon last night. Nixon opened his news conference saying the deliberations "have been, very thorough on what ,we think la a tremendously important decision.” He said he wanted a man qualified to be president, who could campaign effectively and who would be able to assume new responsibilities dealing especially with the problems of the nation's cities. Nixon said he had been in almost con-' tinuous session with one hour out for sleep and that 100 leaders had been consulted, in person or by phone. '“I have now made a decision," he said, adding that he will recommend the convention nominate Agnew for vice president. Agnew was elected governor of Maryland in I960 after a term as county executive of Baltimore County, which surrounds the city of Baltimore. DEMOCRATIC 8UPFORT He attracted considerable Democratic support in the heavily Democratic state after George Mahoney, an outspoken foe of open housing had captured the Democratic nomination for governor. Nixon won a smashing first ballot Republican presidential nomination early today by bowling over Rockefeller and Gov. Ronald Reagan of California. Rockefeller got 287, Reagan 182 and the holdout favorite sons — including Michigan's Gov,. Romney and Gov. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) The Weather v V. s. wmmmt Swtw * '■ ; f. '' Peace, Maybe Thieu Sees 1 LONG XUY.EN, Vietnam ^ (AP) — President Nguyen Van Thieu said today he sees signs that, peace will come, possibly next year. - “I am optimistic. I have my hopes in peace,” Thieu told a news conference oh a trip to this rice-growing area in the Mekong Delta. . A A A "Not this year, but we might see the light at the end of the tunnel next year.” Despite hip optimism, Thieu said he still expects the enemy to renew coordinated attacks throughout the country: He said he saw no sign that the recent lull was a de-escalation by the enemy. cant'd© IT “They are planning to launch a third offensive but at present they cannot,” Thieu said. “And if they cannot, they will say they are de-escalating. But I believe they must launch their offensive to haven point at the negotiating table. . “The fact that (he Communists cannot attack Saigon does not mean de-escalation, because they are rocketing elsewhere.”' Thieu said he remained opposed to any Flash A 12-year-old Pontiac hoy was electrocuted today by aa apparent short in the electric drill he was operating at his home. Police said Jeffrey D. Miser, son of Mr. and Mbs. Dean Miser of 28 W. Fairmont, was pronounced dead on arrival at Pontiac General Hospital about 1:30 p.m. attempt to halt completely the bombing of North Vietnam. He added that Hanoi should first respond to the allied “good will” shown by the limited bombing halt. • A- ★ ★ “If they do not attack, we must not be naive and give them a respite,” he declared. ‘They might build up for another offensive later. The Communists are having more and more difficulty in launching their offensive. They might launch some small scale attack, they do not want to fail again.” Asked when he thought Hanoi might respond to allied “good will,” Thieu replied: “They will respond after they fail bi their third offensive.” Thieu was asked about toe choice of Richard M. Nixon as the Republican presidential candidate. ★ * ★ GREENVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Rescue workers began the slow process today of carrying out the bodies of nine miners reported killed yesterday in a fiery explosion in a coal mine shaft near here. A mine employe, who asked to remain unidentified, said the rescue workers had found eight bodies in one area of the mine. The body of the ninth miner was found nearby, he said. The employe said it would take some time for the workers to bring the victims to the surface because the shaft area was small. The first body was discovered at about 4 this morning —14 hours after the accident was reported. Throughout the rescue operation and the reported finding of the bodies, mine officials, police and other authorities have refused to discuSs the accident with newsmen. The. entire area leading to the River Queen mine entrance was cordoned off soon after the accident and newsmen have not been permitted in. The mine, owned and operated by Peabody Coiri Co., is just south of this small coal-mining community in western Kentucky. . . ★ A ★ About 300 persons — women, children and miners — lined a road leading from the mine area to seek oift loved ones, relatives and frierids among those being carried out. One of those bystanders, a middle-aged man wearing a work uniform said: “I’ve been in mining- all my life and my brother-in-law is down there, and I know there is no chance.” The explosion rocked a shaft inside toe mine with a series of blasts. A miner who had[ boon working nearby said, “The blast knocked you down every time you got up — just like a cyclone.” W W A Rescue operations, coordinated by the Kentucky Division of Mines and Minerals, began soon afterward. A A A , It was estimated that the trapped miners were nearly 8,000 feet back from the entrance to the mine and about 00 feet beneath toe surface. Initial attempts to enter toe mine were hampered by debris that dogged the entrance, thick coal dust- and intense heat. At one point rescuers reported toe underground temperature in several adjoining shafts and tunnels to he above 200 degrees. trooper, Youth Killed in Inkster INKSTER (AP)- Police said “hit and run" gunmen today killed a State Police Romney Disaccord Is Planked Down Injunction Refused in Orion Airport Suit Oakland County Circuit Judge James S. Thorburn yesterday refused to issue an injunction against toe Oakland County Board of Supervisors in taking action on expansion plans at the Oakland-Orion Airport in Pontiac Township. Thorburn’s ruling came at a hearing requested by Bennie R. Warden, of 1123 Doris, Pontiac Township, last week. A . * /Av A Warden was seeking an order that would have restrained the board of. supervisors from authorizing any improvements at the airport until after a reapportioned board takes office in Januaiy. Warden was defeated Tuesday in his bid for nomination to toe new 27-member board. He was a candidate in District 22. , In his law suit against the board, Warden contends that the present 87-man board improperly approved land purchase and construction commitments at the airport. Had toe injunction been issued it would have prevented the board from taking action on matters other than those toot concern toe usual operation and .maintenance of existing facilities. The board is presently waiting the approval of a Federal Aviatio'n Administration master plan before beginning construction and purchasing additional land for an all-weather aviation facility. f The county already has acquired 590 acres of toe estimated 1,400 needed for the planned expansion of the airport. “I have no comment except to congratulate Mr. Nixon,” Thieu said. Thieu has met Nixon on the candidate’s previous trips to Vietnam: y ★ -k “There is a difference between a candidate and a president and anything he said that might have been valid three weeks or tome months ago will not necessarily be valid if he is elected. . We will just have to wait.” „ TO WATCH HARVEST Thieu went to Long Xuyen to watch the harvesting of a crop of so-called miracle rice developed in the Philippines, which he had helped plant ; three months ago. Downbeat for Reagan MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) - When losing Gov. Ronald Reagan went before toe Republican convention today to endorse toe nomination of Richard' ML Nixon, toe hand struck up, “California, here I crane—right back where I started from.” detective and wounded two Inkster officers. In an ensuing manhunt, officers shot and killed a 14-year-old Negro jpoy. The shootings erupted after four nights of isolated gunfire and firebombtogs, police said. ★ ★ ★ Police identified the slain youth as James Matthews of Inkster. They said officers attempted to stop Matthews .9$..... 1" Exclusive Optt-Gard lens. Men's and ladies' styles plus over Specs. Sundries ^Motn Fleer Swiss AAade ENDURA Pendant Watch 37-Pc. Stainless Steel Table Ware Set Choke of 6 attractive styles, Swiss made En-. [dura pendant watch (with matching gold I color . chain. Factory, Non-Allergenic Odorless ikDacron Pillows! $1.09 value, 4.5-oz. Wild root 360 the natural hair groom for men. SS. VSmW.il.. ST. V5med.li.. SS.VS msdili.. (lO.VSmtdsls. 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WW 4, Slight Irregulars, quilted bedspreads, floral prii)ts or solid colors in n size, solid cd- f Constructed of ' select leather with deep pockets, 100% nylon stitched and , rawhide laced. 2nd Fleer k 2-Speed 1-lneh WEN Polisher Sander Thermal Blanket Orion Township's Al Salisbury, Of 850 Markdale, Won The Adult Hog-Calling Contest Livestock Auction Top Fair Event Today Tht Oakland County 4-H Fair, In lta third'day, continues to draw big crowds of enthusiastic spectators. Interest is running high for tonight’s annual 4-H livestock auction. Last night, spectators were treated to three hard-fought contests as winners were chosen in a freckle contest (see photos, page 1), pie-eating and hog-call-ing. Winners were also announced for individual projects in many 4-H catagories. WINNERS LISTED State showt winners for art notebooks are Lotto Newman and Karen Carrigan, both of Holly Achievers. Paintings and drawings selected for the state show were by Karen Carrigan, Holly; Brenda Kilmer, Holly; Sigrid Medlen, Ortonville; Ann Keith, Frontiersman; Debbie Stoner, Paint Creek Valley^ Bonnie Peace, Holly; Deborah Brown, Ho Hi; Debbie Stoner, Paint Cteek; David Brown, Bo Hi; Sina Rhodes, Bo Hi; Sandy Marchand, Ro Hi; Ed Stoner, Paint Greek; Rich Eagle, Straw Hats and Diane Scott, Frontiersman. THE PONTIAC PRESS THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 A—4 ho/lrn Scuulpture and Ceramics picked for the state show were by Eric Rathburg, East Orion, and Melynda Girst, Ro Hi. Swine senior showmanship trophy goes to Patty Wright, Seymoiir Lake. Greg Trese will receive the junior showmanship trophy. He is also from Seymour Lake. CHAMPION SWINE Grand Champion Swine: Ronald Hess, Ro Hi; Reserve Grand Champion Swine: Russel Hbss, Ro Hi; Grand Champion pen of three, Russel Hess, Ro HI Trophy winners in the archery tournament — 10-12 yrs old, Ken McKay, Ortonville; 13-15 years old, Connie McKay, Ortonville; 16 and over, Jack Middleton, East Orion. Rifle match trophies went to Stan Rekawek, Oakhill, for the 10 to 12-year-old division; Mary Jo Murphy, Ortonville, for the 14-15 year old division and Gloria Dickson, Paint Creek, for the 16 years and over division. Flower arrangement trophy goes to T-imnn Gonyou, Oxford. State show winners for home grown flowers are Greg Sokolowski, Seymour Lake; Brenda White, Oxford; Luann Gonyou, Oxford; Beriy Austin, Oakhill; Mary Jo Murphy, Qrtonviile; Valerie Krantz, Ortonville, Connie McKay, Ortonville. State show winner with purchased flowers is Colleen Welberry of White Lake. Dried flower arrangement awards go to Mary Allmayer, Los Cabelleros and Kay Cooper of Oak Hill. Commerce Station to Telecast Soon COMMERCE TOWNSHIP - A new television station serving southeastern Michigan is scheduled to begin operating early next month, according to a station spokesman. Construction began on the station, located at 14Mile and Decker, in March. Hie building is completed and cdor broadcasting equipment is being installed to meet the scheduled Sept. 1 programming date. Channel 62, WXON-TV, owned by Aden E. Johnson Jr. 4861 Shoreline, Waterford Township, was issued the last permit to operate a station for the Detroit area. Programming will include live broadcasts, syndicated shows and movies, no earlier than 1950 vintage, says Ronald St. Charles, program director. Pie-Eating Champ Is Tim Clifton Of Pontiac Area Vote Corrected WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — It was incorrectly reported yesterday that Mrs. Elaine T. Calder, 2010 Walnut Lake, who received 576 votes, won the Republican nomination for the unexpired term of township clerk. The nomination actually was wan by incumbent Mrs. Robot B. Dupree, 7230 Stonebreok, with 1,210 votes. No Democrats filed for file clerk’s post. The term runs until November 1970. Exam Toda f in Officer Kidnap NOVI — Three South Lyon youths will. Undergo preliminary examination this afternoon in Justice Court here on charges of kidnaping and assault with intent to murder. Giles Karl Askins, li, of 21939 Pontiac frail; Floyd L. Kirkendall, 17, of 302 W. Blake, ami 'William J. Jobe, 17, of 433 Donovan were charged with kidnaping and injuring a Novi policeman July 30. * V a The group allegedly abducted patrolman Robert E. Starnes, a father of tlx, at gun* point and threatened to kill Mtft after ha bad answered a complaint of beer-t>ottl» throwing. Adkins has beat held under $100,000 bond at the Qftk2pbd County Jail, while Kirkendall and Jobe are held under $50,090 bond each. Juveniles rnojD Two other suspects, age 13 and 16,’Ore being held at file. Oakland County Youth' Home. i The 15-year-old underwent preliminary hearing Aug. 1 according to Novi police. He remains in the youth home pending another hearing Aug. IS. f - * * The 16-year-old is in the youth home under a $30,000 bond. A preliminary. State show corsage selections were by Luann Gonyou, Oxford; Valerie Krantz, Ortonville; Connie McKay, Ortonville; Kathryn Smith, Ortonville; Connie Wellberry, White Lake, and Brenda White, Oxford. ■ ie it ★ * Vi ■: A complete schedule for tonight and tomorrow follows. TONIGHT 6:30 p.m. — Circus acts. 7 p.m. Pledges, dog obedience trials, share-the-fun act and revue awards. 8:i30 p.m. — 4-H livestock sale TOMORROW 7:30 a.m. — Flag-raising and breakfast. 8 a.m. — Horse judging. 1 p.m. H Dairy judging and dairy junior showmanship. 6:30 p.m. — Circus acts. 7 p.m. — Pledges, senior dairy showmanship, awards, service club initiation, Joe Haas dairy heifer presentation, and horse costume classes. Peach Festival Opens Friday Junior Winnor Is Sue Greenwood, 7 0, Of Pontiac Supervisor Units Work Out Army's Lease of Area Site ROMEO — Hie first phase of the annual Labor Day weekend Peach Festival begins here tomorrow evening with the crowning of the Romeo Pepch Festival Queen. -v) The pageant will begin at 8 pm. In the Romeo Junior High School Auditorium, Prospect and Church. There is no admission charge. ★ ★ • ★ , An annual event, the Queen contest is entered only by young ladies who have previously won a similar event in another community. The contest has entries from 10 . neighboring communities including Pontiac, Rochester, Oxford, Ortonville and Lake Orion. GIRLS APPEAR TWICE In the Pageant the girls will appear twice, once in street attire and again in formal dresses. ‘The winner has a full slate of events ahead of her,’* said Mrs. Robert Miller, chairman of the event. ; ★ * * “Among her many activities,*’ Mrs. Miller said, “is a trip to Washington D.C. to present peaches to Michigan and U.S. government officials.’’ She also has similar appearances scheduled at Tiger Stadium before a Tiger game and at Hazel Park Raceway, where a race will be run in her honor, according to Mr*. Miller. Details involved in leasing land to the Army, for a hew Reserve Center in Waterford Township were worked out by two committees of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors yesterday. The lease met final approval by the ways and means and buildings and grounds committees; and, after legal details ate complete, the agreement is to be signed. Hie Army has. announced It plans to build a $380,000 facility at Watkins Lake Road, near Pontiac Lake Road, across from the Road Commission building. Hie structure will be located on 3.5 acres of land owned by the county in its County Center complex of facilities surrounding Uie site. * , The building will contain training classrooms, . a luge assembly room and garage area, according to the Army. It will house the 2nd Battalion, 2nd Brigade (BCT) and Battery C, 4th4Rattalion, 20th , Artillery. Both units are Pontiac area Reserves. Hie structure would replace facilities at 40 Walnut in Pontiac. $1 YEARLY The lease is $1 per year far 25 yettrs. At the end of that time period ownership of the building would revert to the county, it was specified. The two* committees were ordered to review the lease agreement by file entire Board of Supervisors, which otherwise approved the deal July 18. . An Army spokesman said last May if the lease was approved" quickly construction could start within file year and be completed in 16 months. hearing was held/ July 31, but an additional preliminary hearing took place Tuesday at the request of the juvenile’s attorney who was absent from the first hearing. . * . Hie attorney was informed by the prosecutor’s office that a waiver ,has been filed asking the 16-year-old be tried as an adult.vHie waiver .hearing.is set ; for Aug. 14. ‘ Patrolman Starnes returned to duty Tuesday, according to Novi police chief Lee jiegole, He said Starnes was treated and released from Sfc Mary’# Hospital and spent some time resting at his • home. ’ ' »__ • Oxford-Orion Council to Air Suburbs- Bigotry OXFORD—’ ‘Hypocrisy and Bigotry in Suburbia”, will be the subject discussed ai the Oxford-Orion Human Relations Omnci! meeting at 6 tonight at the Lake . Oyion Methodist Church. . Julian ’ Cook Jr., Pontiac attorney, presided of the Pontiac Urban League land cochairman of the Michigan Civil Rkfiits Commission, Wifi bo the speaker. Notice of Work Schedule Change at GNC Truck & Coach Division Pontiac, Michigan The following changes affect many employee who ore temporally off work due to modal change, inventory, and plant rearrangement. All production and iiflpoctipn departments associated with track linOt1 and *2, report for work on# day later than scheduled, with the exception of deportments #1401 and #1715, who* are to report on Monday, Au-gust 12, 1968. . / A|l Building #29, production and inspection departments associated with truck lines #1, #2 and #3, report for work one day later than scheduled with the exception of the machine shop and deportment #3100 for basic angina assembly. ‘ > % ► j Employes in tfie foilowing departments 'ore to report as originally scheduled: Plaift #1, Plant #3, Plant #5, sheet metal, coaches^ receiving inspection, department #3100 and machine shop both in Building #29, -final conditioning and repair truck, and tool division. THE FONTIAC M^Sa. THURSDAY. AUGUST 8, 1»6» School Employes May Serve on State B6ard, Kelley Rules LANSING (AP) - persons employed by Michigan institutions of higher learning may simultaneously serve as members of the State' Board of Education, Atty. Gen, Frank Kelley ruled Wednesday. Rep. Jack Faxon, D-Detroit, questioned possible conflict of interest in the two positions. Hearings Set in Theft of Money Orders Kelley held that legally there was “no incompatibility.’’ “I’m delighted with the results,’’ said Faxon. “I’m very pleased by the opinions of the attorney general. I just want to remove any charges of conflict of interest that might surround present members. \ A GRAND RAPIDS (AP) -Hearings have been scheduled for Aug. IS before' U. $. Commissioner Stephen W. Karr for five persons arrested in connection with the theft of money order blanks. Hie five, are charged in connection with a .July 9 burglary of the post office at Irons, a small community in Northwest Lake County. -'Four Grand Rapids men were charged with cashing fraudulent money orders. They are: Arthur Joseph, 23; Elbert Hardlman Jr., 24; Larry E. Haywood, 24, and James W. Childrey, 22. Andrew Childrey, 24, of Grand Rapids, was charged with receiving and concealing a stolen postal money order machine. DEMAND EXAMINATION All demanded examination when arraigned before Karr, and ibonds were set at $10,000 each. Authorities said $200 in cash, $200 in stqmps and 190 postal orders were taken in toe robbery. chairman of the department of biophysics at Michigan State University. Carmen DrfUlquadri of Houghton is a professor of business administratiop at Michigan Technological Insti- “My questions and these opinions also will serve as guidelines for those who may. seek candidacies for toe board of education in toe future.’’ “Whether such a public employment and public office should be simultaneously held by the same person is a question left to the good judgement of toe electorate,’’ Kelley said. ‘We concern ourselves here only with the law." OU LECTURER Dr. Charles Morton of Detroit is a part-time lecturer on philosophy at Oakland University. Marilyn Jean Kelly of Detroit’ was formerly a teacher at Eastern Michigan University. Peter Oppewall of Grand Rapids i professor at Calvin College. The attorney general further ruled that holding office as,a member of a state professional licensing board and membership on toe education board are hot incompatible." This question was raised because Edwin Novak of Flint, board chairman, formerly was a member of the State Board of Examiners in Optometry. His term on the optometry board since has expired. In answer to another query i by Faxon, Kelley held that a member of the board who has a A majority of toe board members how have or formerly had connections with institutions of j higher learning. i— i , 1 ., ... . , , , „ . contractual relationship with a Leroy Augenstein of Holt is^, ,chool district mJy * conflict of interest if his inter- Cyclist Is Killed in such a contract is substantial. FLUSHING (AP)—Earl Skinner, 38, of Flushing was killed Wednesday when he hit a car broadside with his motorcycle, police said. The driver of the car, 17-year-old Fred Daniels, was listed in serious condition in a Flint hospital after running into a tree stpmp in an apparent effort to avoid the cyclist, police said. N Faxon said one of his queries was aimed at clearing toe status of Thomas Brennan of Dearborn, a lawyer who has been advising the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit on school matters. Brennan’s private employment was found proper by toe attorney general since it does not interfere with his public position. SIMMS DISCOUNT ANNEX 144 N. Saginaw St. ‘back-to-school’ bicycle specials in SIMMS annex bicycle riding is healthful exercise for the kids . . . let’Pm ride bikes to school for fun and health. And you should ride, too, for the sake of your own health. 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UNTIL * P.M. •FREE PARKING AT ALL ORTHO STORES V v 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS m VlK Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan MM THURSDAY, AUGUST I, IMS SS£?ErSL. R3S^JPB»J? ■MNtknr^wa AdwtM.ln* TWSfl ^SaSSuLiar LS4MmWi|HuM« Primary Ballot Machi Well-Oiled Tuesday's primary election went much more smoothly titan most observers anticipated. There were relatively few complications,in filing vote totals and the election returns came in to, the Oakland County Clerk’s Office with amazing speed considering the vast array of candidates and ballot proposals to be decided. A good many returns were available before midnight and the steady flow of ballots continued until aU were present and accounted for by about 5 a.m. Wednesday. This is a far cry from past primaries when some races were not complete until the middle of the day following the election. ★ tor ★ We can point to some top-notch organization and hard work by election officials from the precinct level right up to the county clerk’s office for the smooth operation of this primary. Now that the voters have spoken, the field of some 230 candidates has been narrowed to 112 who will seek various county, state and national offices and judicial posts this fall, tor ★ ★ Now the voters have until November to study the nominees, and this they should do with care and insight so that they* will be able to make a knowledgeable choice when they return to the polls three months hence. Tuesday’s primary also saw four ballot proposals decisively settled by voters. Three state proposals were given wide approval by voters here in Oakland and elsewhere in the state. -A local proposal for a 1-mill tax levy for road improvement funds in Oakland was soundly defeated in a manner which would indicate the populace is fed up with the constant increase in taxes, particularly the newly-established federal income tax surcharge. Another Shot At The Title! David Lawrence Says: VP Nomination Most Interesting Can Saturation Bombing Be Justified Militarily? Long after the shooting stops in Vietnam, the American people may get some answers to many of the perplexing questions which seem to be forthcoming quite regularity. One of these questions involves the extraordinary use of America’s huge B52 bombers and their megatonnage of bombs within South Vietnam. ★ ★ tor News dispatches recently said the B52s dropped about 7,200 tons of bombs in a small area near the Cambodian border. The reason given for the use of the equivalent of 240 B52s each carrying 30 tons of explosives was that ground forces (supported by recon planes and helicopters) had been unable to catch the enemy in his base camps. ★ ★, tor If the ground forces can’t find the enemy, how can the B52s? What happens, really, when the eight jet Stratofortresses “lay fiery carpets of bombs” on the countryside? Who gets hurt and who suffers in this type of military operation? Meteor Showers Trigger ‘Flying Saucer* Season Thei Perseid meteor "showers” occur annually for about two days, beginning Aug. 10. As many as 50 meteors are visible every hour. The meteors streak through, the sky, sprinkling the earth with stardust. ★ tor • ★ About this time of year, reports of Unidentified Flying Objects (UFOs) come in from anywhere from Oklahoma to right here hi Michigan. It’s the Saucer season. tor ★ ★ Some doubt in the scientific community remains, about getting funny about little green men. Six scientists insisted before the House Committee on Space and Astronautics, July 29, the UFOs were fitting subjects for serious investigation. They urged federal support for a huge project to collect information finally settling the decades-old debate. ★ ★ ★ A study by the University of Colorado scientists was completed on schedule last April Disagreement among the staff led * to considerable controversy. A final report will be given to the National Academy of Sciences in September. •* ' Dr. Edward U. Condon, physicist and former head of the National Bureau of Standards, headed the project. Perhaps next month we’ll know more about flying saucers, if not about visitors from space. It might just, take our minds off politics for a little while which would not be such a bad idea. Theologians Debate Controversy By DAVID POLING NEW YORK (NBA) - The most prominent people discussed and debated at the meeting of the World Council of Churches were not even present. They were Father Hans King, the Rev. William Sloan Coffin Jr. and the next president of the United States. Each of these men represents the significant issues that worry and inspire the leadership ef the Christian church. So even though none was fii Sweden for the World Council gathering, all were in the conversations and deliberations that lasted for almost three weeks. - ★ to ★ First of aU, Dr. Hans Rung, Dean of the Catholio Theological Faculty in Tubingen, Germany, has emerged as the leading scholar in the ecumenical movement. Many believe he was the principal ad-viser to Pope John XXIII in that pontiff’s pursuit of Christian unity. Hds past year, Dr. Rung has been guest lecturer at Union Theological Seminary In New York where he has gained a vast following among^. pmirurians His appearances In Protestant churches have toawn capacity crowds and his books sell with increasing popularity. ;. OFFICIAL CHARGES ) His most recent, “The Church,” proved too much for the conservatives in Rome. Official charges are being made against Dr. Ktmg. He has refused to appear in Romo until his critics sign specific allegations of heresy or disloyalty. One statement of Father Rung’s sets the tone of his work: “The Church, therefore, is the pilgrim community of believers, not those' who already see and know. The Church must ever and again waqder through the desert, through the darkness of sin and error. For the*Church can also err and for this reason must always be prepared to orient itself, and to renew itself." ^ -to " , . Just as Dr. Rung is too popular and too influential to be silenced by the conservatives at Rome, so is the Rev. Coffin of Yale too forceful to be imprisoned in the United States. His opposition to the war and his support of conscientious objectors may not be your favorite viewpoint. But toe-cannot deny the historic right—evoi duty—to dissent when one’s convictions lead to a' challenged the official line, be it political or theological. PETITION SIGNED The cauee of Dr. Benjamin Spock and Chaplain1 Coffin is widely supported by delegates of the World Cquncil. Some MO Americana signed a peti- tion at Uppsala,endorsing the right of the doctor and the pastor to dissent as Christians and American citizens. Hie constant discussion at Sweden — often initiated ty foreign churchmen, newsmen .and youth—was the next president of the United States. By their interest and fervor you would believe that they were voting. But if not voting, certainty their lives and destiny are shaped by the policies of our country and the leadership of our chief executive. ★ ★ to TO the non-American, the question of peace in Vietnam is the biggest problem around. Near that is our handling of the racial crises and our at-* titude to the underdeveloped nations of the world. Many of our.overseas friends fear that we really are the skids if Vietnam remains unsolved of enlarged,. We have spent our moral reserves. We are /winded financially and burdened with old cltieS and a decaying social order. SHAPE HISTORY The new. administration must realty lead the United States nut of this snakepit. If it does, we will shape world history hi the process. * To the theologians in Sweden, politics and religion are like brother and sister. It’s time tor the brother to do the right thing tor tile family. Unlike other conventions in the past, the contest for the vice presidential nomination has become the most inter eating phase of the 1968 Republi-can convention at Miami Beach. Usually the presidential j nominee goes I into a huddle LAWRENCE with a few leaders to choose a vice president, and that’s all there ia to it. But this time something different has been happening. ' Former Vice President Nixon, for instance, has outlined in advance exactly how the vice presidential nominee should be selected. to to to He did so at meeting of the delegates of seven states on Tuesday. Here’s a significant portion of the transcript which appeared in the Miami Herald: "I can say to you that in making the decision on vice president, these are the things I want: “First, would he be a good president of the U.S.? to --to1' to "Second, would he hie a good campaigner . . . not just in your sjate but in the rest of the country? “Third, will he be a man who is close enough to Nixon in his views so that Nixon could trust him; that Nixon could work with him,” SEVEN NAMES There have been from the start several names prominently mentioned. Gov. Reagan and Gov. Rockefeller — both of whom have said they would not accept — Sen. ,Porcy of niinlos, Sen. Hatfield of Oregon, Gov'. Rhodes of Ohio, Gov. Romney of Michigan and Mayor Lindsay of New York City have been the outstanding ones, to to ★ Looking over this group, ' Percy might have a better chance if he had lined up with Nixon in the firat instance. Rumors spread throughout tiie convention, however, that Percy had made an arrangement with Rockefeller whereby he - would not only support him but would in turn be given support for the presidency by Rockefeller in the event that the latter could not be nominated. to to to Romney’s wavering attitude has not helped him with the various delegations, and Hatfield is relatively unknown in national politics- j... <, Lindsay’s chances art slim, for there is a serious con- Verbal Orchids Mrs. Jessie Kletring of Chicago; 86th birthday. Mrs. BDa Rupert of 114 E. Howard; 82nd birthday. f|g Mrs. Viletta Brown of Clarkston; 89th birthday. . Mrs. Grace Alhes of Bloomfield Hills; 80th birihday. stitutional question whether two men from the same state can run for the presidency and vica presidency on one ticket. STRONG IN SOUTH The South, of course, would like to see Reagan nominated. While he may be strong in' that area, however, many of the Midwestern and Eastern delegates feel that there should be a selection made from a populous state in the Midwest. This naturally brings up Gov. Rhodes of Ohio, who not only is a good campa igner but probably could awing the Midwest to the Republican ticket. ■ to to to ■ The ideal choice always is someone who does not offend voters in any section of the country. There are indications that Rhodes has been regarded as likely, i f nominated, to get the support all wings of the Republican P^ty- (Copyright, IW, Bob Considine Says: Voice of the people; *Oakland and Baldwin, ~a Traffic Nig* Who devised that nightmare at the corner of Oakland Avenue and Baldwin? ★ * ★ .. Oakland Avenue from Wide Track to Baldwin has four lanes of traffic. At the corner of Baldwin, it narrows down to three. Who has tho right-of-* way to that middle lane aa theta are two lanes of traffic feeding into it? Sometimes there an time lanes of traffic fighting for that middle lane. * * ★ 'Jfi Can unmathing be done to correct this situation? It seems a potential death trap. MRS. THOMAS BEST 4431 CHEESEMAN drayton Plains ‘Yield’ Sign Often Unheeded by Drivers I wish the drivers who make a left turn off M-5t onto Williams Lake Road would take notice of the “Yield” sign. Drivers craning from Williams Lake Road cannot see you because of the curve. Mora often than not, wa have to stop or be hit. ___, L. O. WILKINS 3408 WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD ‘Sheltered Workshops’ Column Appreciated Your recent column by Dick Saunders regarding New Horizons Sheltered Workshops was very informative and greatly appreciated hy the Hoard, staff and the workers. Abraham Lincoln is quoted as having said, "With public sentiment, nothing can fel; without it nothing can succeed.” » to ★ to We need community sentiment and involvement. J. LYLE WINSLOW, PRESIDENT NEW HORIZONS of OAKLAND COUNTY, INC. 36 EAST 14 MILE ROAD MADISON HEIGHTS, MICH. Walled Lake Firemen’s Efforts Appreciated I would like to commend the Walled Lake Fire Department for its swift response to my call and their magnificent effort in trying to save the life of my husband recently. MRS. ALMA WAGNER 615 SOUTH PONTIAC TRAIL - » • WALLED LAKE ‘Voters of Tomorrow’s Education’ Speaks “We, the V.O-T.E. (Voters of Tomorrow’s Education) do hereby resolve that we are in no way associated with the Board of Education, its administration, or the faculty of Avondale School District in respect to the forthcoming millage election on September 7. ..vV *■ , * ★ - * Our actions are of our own accord and our objective is that of getting citizens out to vote. •to to to We declare that we are united and wifi accept full responsibility for our actions, regardless of the outcome ef the Actor Gives Youngsters a Look at the Convention CONSIDINE MIAMI BEACH - One of the busiest blokes in town is Hugh O’Brian, the actor. He’s got 26 high school youngsters in town, showing them how a Repub-lican presidential nominee is manu-fac t u r a d , wound up, and pointed in the direction of the White House. Hugh’s foundation, which bears his name, is picking up; the entire tab for this experiment in political science. The 26 lads were elected with the help of the National Education Association and the Department of Health, Education and Welfare. They are from 25 of the states, plus a boy foam Mexico. to to .'to,- Another group of $8 will be taken to Chicago for the Democratic convention later hi the month. They will be chosen from the remaining 25 states. A Canadian high school student will accompany them. Why? “It’S an experience they’ll never forget,” handsome Hugh, an ex^Marine, said today at the YMCA, where the group is staying. talk rr up “I hope that when they go back to school in the fall they’ll talk to their classes and their friends about what they saw and heard at the conventions. "I want to provide them a sense of involvement with the way our democratic system works. I don’t know of a moire basicway.” - The Hugh O’Brian Foundation is 10 years old. It was inspired by Albert Schweitzer, not known for Ms wide acquaintance among movie ; ptara. . ■. ', . ’< “I road his ‘Declaration of Gonsdancg’ in 1968 and derided that I must meet that man,” Hugh told us. “I went to Norman Cousins of the Saturday Review, who knew Schweitzer well, and asked him to arrange it if he could. A couple of days later I received a cawed invitation from Lambarene. "It was ail unforgettable ex-, perience. Schweitzer was utterly unique. "I came away from that visit with a great, urge to create my own Lambarene. to to to "So I got up this foundation With the hope of expanding tiie horizons Of such kids as I could reach. We’ve, gone in for things like oceanography, for Instance, on the ground that they’ll grow up into a world that wfil depend heavily on the seas for food and minerals and just about everything else. “Now politics. They’ve got to live with politics, too.” We are not being forced into an affirmative or negative decision by anyone, but are merely recruiting voters for the upcoming election.” KAREN E. SHELDON, CHAIRMAN V.O.T.E. Question and Answer Are then any countries that doa’t extradite accused criminals? MRS. E. WEILAND UNION LAKE REPLY According to Mr. Milnes of the FBI, the U.S. Government has reciprocal agreements with many countries, but not all. These agreements differ from country to country as to the type of crime involved fot extradition. For information about extradition agreements with specific countries, write the U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, D.C. , ; . W, In Washington: Protesters’ Sights on Chicago By raY cromley WASHINGTON (NEA) -For several months, activist groups have been laying toe groundwork for protest or disruption at the National Democratic C o n v e n --tion late this month In Chi- The evl- ■ dence thus far j la that these plans are so i jerry-built and uncoordinated that serious trouble could be held in check through careful preparatory groundwork by poliea and convention Officials. But the clutch of hot heads assembled in Chicago outside toe convention hails will be so large that if security measures are slipshod, one incendiary incident could erupt in serious, sustained violence. .to- *- * Reportedly, several hundred brined antiwar activists plan a "crash-in” much like the attempt to storm the Pentagon in the 1967 march on Washington. The planners Want a deliberate confrontation with toe Chicago police. At gatherings hi Baltimore, the Southern Christian Leadership Conference distributed handoutavpromising a renewal of their protests in Chicago. Lowell Rheinheimer, a leader of the Chicago Area Draft Resistors, has announced a demonstration. The National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam plans "massive protest demonstrations” throughout the convention period. Hie committee’s demonstrations coordinator, Rennie Davis, is attempting to organize a coalition of New Left and anti-Vietnam war groups. The National Conference for New Politics says it will bring demonstrators, to to to The Youth Intematioqaf Party (Yippies) reportedly is organizing a “festival of life” for convention time. Ills said the militant, violence-prone, all-Negro Blade Panther Party, based in California, wifi be Rumors, so for unconfirmed, are prevalent in way-out circles that two jpoups named "Provo” and "Mota” plan to ’flood the convention area” with hakicinogenic drugs, v ibe Students for a Democratic Society art preparing an “expose” time for the convention. If they complete preparations, SDS members wfil distribute information **» who the Democratic national committeemen are, What theirfi- nancial interests an and how this affects their political derisions.” The aim la to “expose the power behind” these men. Some SDS men hope to march with posters, each showing the photograph of a convention delegate raid fisting his corporate raid political connections. to * to The June state convention of the Communist Party USA, Illinbis District, adopted a motion that complete party support would be given nonviolent protest demonstrations sponsored by activist groups during the convention. If toe militant leaders have their way, very little of this effort, apparently, WBl aim at influencing the nomination of a particular presidential candidate. Most simpty wairt to “exposed protest, heckle — and gain publicity -fk notoriety. ' • ; . * 4 ' TUB PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968/ No Word on LBJs Checkup SMIMITONIO Tax. (AP) -4 Press secretary George Chris- President Johnson is described by an aide as feeling fine but there is no Indication when a public report on the physical checkup he is undergoing win come. ' , Such reports usually have been reteased about the time of each preeidential birthday. 11 be 00 Aug. 27. tian, King that Johnson Xncl lete his physical In a brief visit to Brooke Army Medical Center today, said the President “feels fine.' it # Bui Christian told newsmen he did not know when the presi-doctor. Vice Adm. SUMMER SAVINGS! COLOR TV VALUE Mm lifts lintIn Color TV, thin's cot to be ■ inns. Uhl the mw RCA 8up«r Slight Hi-Ute Color Tabs. Pmmfu) 25JX»-volt chillis. Automatic color puriSsr. M Ml It a Mtst-ptasing pries. *«WM I THE MOST TRUSTED NAME IN ELECTRONICS ALWAYS SWEETS SB DAYS DISCOUNT PRICES RADIO t APPLIANCE SAME AS CASH 422 Wist Huron FE 4-5677 Open Monday and Friday Evonlngt ’til 9 P.M. George G, Burkley, would Issue a report. nvK-uoim visit Johnson began his checkup Tuesday with a five-hour visit to Brooke's extensive facilities at San Antonio, T9 miles from his ranch. * * * Mrs. Johnson, getting an examination of liar own, remained at Brooke all the white- There the heart of a SKyear-oid accident victim to an It-yoar-old youth in the world's 90th such operation and tbs first in Japan. “The operation is successful and the patient ia Mating well,” aaid Dr. Fuaayoahl Tomita of Sapporo Medical College on Jean’s northernmost island of when she would wind up bar stay. In any event, she has not been confined to the institution but has visited Mends in San Antonio between teste. * * * There has been no indication that either of the Johnsons baa been ailing in any way. Johnson’s spirits got a boost Wednesday from indications the administration had won its battle against a 5 per cent across-the-board hike in steel prices. Or W W One Johnson aide called It “a hell of a victory for the Presi-'.** And Johnson had Christian quote him In a special statement as being convinced price rollbacks mean a “substantial improvement from the general inflationary threat." ★ ★ of The President, with Congress iaway, is staying at his hill country ranch home 65 miles west of here. If he spent any time watching television coverage-of tiie Republican Nationt! Convention, Christian said couldn’t prove it by him. GG&PE4aed Aog. S you Tokyo Doctors Switch Heart TOKYO <\UPI) NEW YORK (AP) - Representatives of VlcePresidentJIu-bert H. Humphrey have had extra telephones installed at bis Chicago offices despite a strike by electrical workers the Illinois Bell Telephone Co., The New York Times said today. Tomita aaid Dr. Jure Wads, 17, who studied at the Univer-sity of Minnesota and Harvard, and a 20-member surgical team performed the 9%-bour transplant at the government-operated medical college. Peace Corps Test Will Be August 17 Veep's Chicago HQ Gets Extra Phones Spokesmen for Sen. Eugene J.ltlon. But they said they had not McCarthy of Minnesota, Hum- sought and would not seek to phrey’s rival for the Democratic circumvent the striking Interna-presidential nomination, com- tional Brotherhood of Electrical plained that lack of telephones Workers in acquiring extra was Jeopardising their opera-'phones. The story from Chicago, where the Democratic National Convention will be held later this month, also said in part: Boy ts Wounded HORTON (AP)—A 12-year-old Horton boy was critically wounded in tile chest Wednesday when a id-year-old friend shot him with a 22-caliber revolver the boys' believed was empty. Gary L. Pittman was taken to -the University of Michigan Hospital in Ann Arbor. A Humphrey spokesman at first denied that extra telephones had been installed, them said that Illinois Bell management personnel had put six in one office. Pontiac area residents interested in joining the Peqpe Crops can take the placement test Aug. 17. The test, which meat general aptitude and the ability to learn a language, will be given at 1:90 p.m. in room 1 of the Federal Building. * * ★ The test requires no prepara-ion and is noncompetitive. ft Dentists believe that the greatest single cause of children's tooth decay today is eating the wrong kind of shacks. ft eimeus WAVS FIRST QUALITY m Super shirt savings start here... GLENBROOKE AND GLENBROOKE JR. TAILORED SHIRTS REDUCED-LAST 3 DAY'S! eimatff ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY w SPECIAL BUY! for back-to-compus! Smashing new-term looks for juniors! ' Pint slop for campus-bound junion — Penney*! Here's the most complete collection of the semester's newest' look* of prices geared to a junior'* budget! Fabric* — the easiest'of care, naturally. Like the*e fust-proof knits with acetate tricot backings to keep them in line. Colors — all a girl could ask for and then tome. Hirt, just a sampling. A. 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You’ll find solids, checks, stripes " and prints. Roll sleeves, Jong sleeves, French cuffs. All your ■ * EACH, NOW favorite collars from buttbndpwh to notch. And tb**fabrics are • ) \ ''dtSHif something else! J)acron * polyester/cottonwoven checks and_ i stripes, Dacron/oottan broadcloths, polyester/cotton oxfords, and more. Easy care, some Penn-Prest*. Misses’, junior sizes. Mm FOR # • 13-MILE i WOODWARD Nerttiweod Shopping Center A-«4l, THE PONTIAC PRKSS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, W» FBI Calls Nationwicfe Parley Bank-Related Crimes Are Up 240 Pet. WASHINGTON (AP) - FBI Director J. Edgar Hoover said today bank robberies and other crimes against financial institutions have risen by 240 per cent ‘since I960. Hoover said the bureau was so alarmed at the increase— there were 2,558 robberies or bank - related offensives last year—that nationwide law enforcement conferences sponsored by the FBI will, discuss methods to prevent such crimes. Announcing the meetings, which in the past have concentrated on more mundane topics, Hoover said that while many financial institutions have kept abreast of developing techniques "all too many . . . still have inadequate protective devices (and) some banks have been found to contain none whatsoever.” The conferences bringing together local law enforcement officials, prosecutors, and rep- LOBBY SALE Clearance !4 Off or More BOYS' SPORT SHIRTS 99* Assorted Styles JACKETS $£00 Vz OFF & Up MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS 99* iwnd up Assorted Styles SUMMER KNIT SHIRTS $2oo Assorted Styles Tux Rentals.. . Reasonable Prices CONN’S 2S3L resentatives of banks, savings and loan companies, and credit unions will be held during September and October In communities across the «country, and in Canada and Mexico. Hoover said the bureau Is I particularly concerned oyer the number of bank-related crimes last year which resulted in violence against employes and customers. FBI statistics show that 23 people were killed in 1967 and another 61 injured in 1,769 holdups. Working Class, Poor Bear Brunt of War—McCarthy CLEVELAND, Ohio (AP) -Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy said Wednesday the burden of the | Vietnam war has fallen "most heavily on the backs of the ! working people and the poor | people of America.” “These are the people who have sent their sons in overwhelming number to the battlefield,” he told the International Typographical Union convention. in Columbus on whether to remain committed to the favorite-son candidacy of Sen. Stephen M. Young. They have 115 votes at the convention. Starting his swing through with a statehouse rally in Columbus, McCarthy urged several thousand supporters, mostly young people, to do everything they could to indicate to delegate)! what the judgment of Ohio " " " | people is. The Democrat presidential! Georgia state Rep. Julian hopeful spent rfbout 10 hours in Bond, a Negro, introduced Mc-Ohio Wednesday making earthy in Columbus and later in speeches and seeking to win the (Cleveland said he was endorsing support of delegates to the par-i^g candidacy for the presiden- ty’s national convention in Chicago starting Aug. 26. The Minnesota senator urged delegates to remain uncommitted and called the state critical to his convention hopes. FAVORITE SON Delegates will caucus Monday 73 N. SAGINAW Your perfect decorating plan starts here... Migrant Confab | LANSING (AP) — Migrant education administrators and teachers from Michigan, Ohio, Illinois, Wisconsin and Indiana will attend a regional conference Aug. 11-13 at Lansing. The educators plan to study the Michigan program for migrants, which is serving some 8,000 children through 62 schools this summer. new PRATT & LAMBERT COLOR CENTER now ... make aure the colors for your walls, ceilings, and woodwork are deedratively correct I This professionally-designed P&L Color Center helps you use color correctly and creatively. Here are hundreds of actual P&L colors, to make every room In your house a showpiece... to compliment your furniture, carpeting and draperies. It’s like having a professional decorator helping you, to achieve any effect you want from casual comfort to formal elegance. And all the colors ars available In easy-to-use P&L finishes for every purpose. Stop in soon I BRING NEW WARMTH & BEAUTY to MASONRY WALLS L. I *f; Vapex* MASONRY PAINT & L Vop«x Masonry Paint luickly brings lively, lasting leduty to concrete 'block, tucco, brisk or -asbestos ement shingles or siding; his fast-drying Vapex latex oating is lime-proof and ade-resistant. 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Deep Carved nylon 501 • 4,99 t v Extra thick, rugg'ed. Six colors. Indoor-outdoor carpet 4.99 & Stain - free acrylic. 8 shades. SHOP AT HOME Our carpet consultant' will (how - you samples. No obligation, of oautse. CALL: 332-0271 or 673-1275. Fiber content refers to pile surface ... 501 is DuPont's certification mark for carpet pile meeting DuPont's quality standards I IQ A.M.T© 9 P M. (Sot, 9:30-9) bon open Sunday Noon to 4 p.m, trrim closet Tur.,s.. tfVrf. at 6 p.m J DOWNTOWN AND drayton Plains Si iX THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 Dems to Host Mississippian LANSING (AP) — Aaron Henry, chairman o{ the Loyal Democrats of Mississippi, will be the guest of honor Friday at a fund raising cocktail party in Detroit, Michigan Democrats hive announced. Henry’s organization is described as “a coalition of groups seeking to send a racially balanced delegation from their state to the Democratic National Convention." The fund raiser is part of a national effort to raise 130,000 to bring the Loyal Democratic Party delegation to the national convention at Chicago to challenge the regular Mississippi delegation. The Michigan Democratic state central committee has pledged financial support to the Loyal Democrats and sent a 329 against, 293 for. Ferency Loss in Fight for Seating LANSING (UPI) — Zolton Ferency, the former state Democratic chairman who resigned after stirring up a fuss by backing Sen. Eugene McCarthy, doesn’t think McCarthy forces from Michigan will win a credentials fight at the national convention. ‘‘It’s becoming more more' dear that the Democratic National Convention is wired for sound and all of the establishment types will be In control of the procedures,” Ferency said Wednesday. ■k 4 k The fight for the seating, of four delegates from the 6th District'7 at the convention is in the hands of the Ingham County .Circuit Court where a decision is expected this week. Supporters of McCarthy brought the suit, charging that delegates representing the district were improperly chosen. Births The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father'): Charles D. Smith, Birmingham JaTry L. Brown, Walled Lake Robert E. Hess, Union Lake Richard P. Kassa, Birmingham John A. Obi Insky, Bevtsburg James R. Schultz, Keego Harbor Victor A, Scram, Oravfon Plains William E. Betters, (343 Pontiac Lake Fraderlcfc L. Tschlrhart, , Norman D. White, — Barry E. Doss, It Salt Landrum, Holly James Lortle, Rochester Richard L. 'Stevenson, Utica Robert J». Gardner Jr., Rochester Edward H. Saple, Highland^ John D. Tuckfleld, Birmingham Gerald D. Vess, Davlsbura Robert W. Carpenter, Waded Lake Peter J. VanHorn, Birmingham William L. Stafford. Nov;. Robert D.' Pearsall, 14(3 Otter Bin E. Arthurs, S. Lyon Thomas Covington, 130 State Charles S. Frazho, Utica JamerS. Berry, Utica William H. Morgan, Rochester Walter H. Sullivan, Rochester Oonald W. Thompson, Romeo William C. P—MM William L. Sturd, Walled Lake Barbara L. Pull Ins, Welled Laka Rodney L. Weekley, Rochester John B. Daniels, Utica Richard H. Gladding, Rochester Cbarlaa K. Weaver, Leonard Lawrandb C. Wheaton. Milford ... Cliert F. Bruns, f Imrlngham Ernest A. Westwood, Troy ■meet E. Woodecre, Bloomfield H DETROIT’S LUXURIOUS NEW REVUE SUPPER CLUB Presents JIM, PATI and the SPARKLERS 1rt the Lunar Lounge ’:’ N«w Cast! New Music! “Salute te Brotfdway" telictOUS rooa ana unit* ffiSSSSSisine low THIS MOON-CHART TO 118 M. CknfJlir - in Hazel Park. TOWEL SALE Luxurious colors and patterns Con* Mills “Boutique" bath towels 88c Colorful, washable, long wearing aioa rug* 2-*3 OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. (Set. 9:30-9) Drayton opan Sunday Noon to 6 p.w* (Domaum eioees Tims, F'dA at 6 p.mj ’ 24x36" DOWNTOWN and DRAYTON PLAINS A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST* 8, 1968 ABA Endorses Consumer Credit Code PHILADELPHIA (OH - The list annual convention of the American Bar Association (ABA) endorsed a tough uniform consumer credit law, the right of “peaceful dissent" and expanded lega^ services for the ghettos. The 1968 session ended yesterday with outgoing president Earl F. Morris of Columbus,, Ohio, handing the gavel to William T. Gossett of 420 Goodhue, Bloomfield Hills. The 1969 convention will be in Dallas. The ABA’s policy-house of delegates balked at supporting "responsible civil I disobedience," which was de-J scribed as “peaceful resistance, j on grounds of individual coin-1 science, to law considered unjust, pursued with voluntary assumption of the risks of the sanctions of the law disobeyed; Dem Poll Puts Hubert in Lead McCarthy Fares Better] Among Independents j PRINCETON, N J- (AP) Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey runs better than Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy among rank-and-file Democrats, but McCarthy had the greater support of Independents when the two candidates for the Democratic presidential nomination were pitted against each other, the Gallup Poll reported. The Gallup organization said Wednesday that 53 per cent of rank-and-file Democrats favored Humphrey for their presidential nomination while] McCarthy won support from per cent. * A * But the poll said that independents favor McCarthy over Humphrey by 53 to 32 per cent. Gallup said the Minnesota senator is "far stronger" with young Democrats, from 21 to 29 years old. He also holds an edge with those who have a college background and Democrats living in the Far West. HUMPHREY STRONG Humphrey, however, is stronger with older voters who classify themselves as Democrats in the Midwest, South and East, the poll reported. Gallup added that Democrats who disapprove of President Johnson’s performance in office are “more apt to side” with McCarthy than with Humphrey Closing-Out Sale Draws Big Crowd KANSAS CITY (AP) ~ Thousands of bargain . hunters jammed streets and sidewalks Wednesday for the Emery, Bird, Thayer Department Store’s two-day closing-out sale ending a 105-year business in Kansas City. . A line of shoppfers two blocks long formed an hour before opening, arid 33 traffic officers were assigned to intersections surrounding the store. and without Infringing on the personal or property rights of others." This philosophy was proposed by the ABA section on individual rights and responsibilities and the board of governors as well. Some delegates were said to fear this language permitted flag burning. ‘FUNDAMENTAL’ But the house said “the right of peaceful dissent is fundamental to both Individual freedom and social progress." Through the consumer code, which is tougher than the re- cently enacted federal truth-ih-lendlng act, states will be urged to bring their money lending laws into harmony. ' The hpuse, through its legal aid committee headed by John D. Robb of Albuquerque, urged expanded opportunities for ghetto residents to participate ’in the formulation of public policy." ★ A ★ On Tuesday the delegates endorsed four wide-ranging reports designed to improve the conduct of criminal trials and the treatment of defendants. The nomination of Aba For-tas for Chief Justice created a minor ruckus, fed by the appearance of Fortas himself at a dinner of the American College of Trial Lawyers^ Fortas declared that Judicial yielding to pressure by the executive or legislative branches would signal the end of the American constitutional government. STAUNCH SUPPORT The justice received an indirect tribute from Atty. Gen. Ramsey Clark and staunch support from former Supreme Court Justice Arthur J. Gold- berg, Dean Louis H. Pollack of Yale Law School and individual ABA members. Pollack criticized the senators who grilled Fortas at July hearings on his confirmation. ' * " * A No opposition to Fortas developed openly, although three New York attorneys submitted a resolution to the ABA assembly urging an inquiry into how better to assure that nominations be confined to those “clearly best qualified." The delegates referred the resolution to .a committee. U.S. Traffic Toll Is Up by 6 Pet. CHICAGO (AP) - Traffic accidents killed 25,200 Americahs in the first half of this year, about 6 per cent more than in the corresponding period of 1967, the National Safety Council said today. It said motor vehicle,travel had shown a similar gain. Iri June alone, the council said, traffic fatalities numbered 4,820, an increase of 8 per cent, compared with June 1967; IT'S ROUND-UP TIME FOR OLD REFRIGERATORS E YOUR PARTICIPATING FRIGIDAIRE DEALER SAYS IT'S TIME TO PUT YOUR OLD REFRIGERATOR TO PASTURE ... HE HAS A PUN TO HELP YOUII HURRY ON OVER TO HIS STORE. FRIGIDAIRE FROST PROOF SIDE-BY-SIDE REFRIGERATOR with 198-lb. size Vertical Freezer It's Only 32" Wide! Frost-Proof! You’ll nsvsr defrost againl No space lost to frost. Defrosts only when needed. Flip-Quick Ice Ejector. Flip the lever and cubes zip Into the handy server. Easy and quick. Full-width Flowing Cold Meat Tender. Keeps-up to 23.8 lbs, fresh without freezing. E 5-year Nationwide |____...... Warranty backed by General Motors! 1-year Warranty for repair of any defect In tha entire refrigerator, plus a 4-year Protection Plan for repair of any defect In the refrigerating system. 198-lb. size freezer is made for easy usingl Roll-To-You sliding shelf, too. Basket and adjustable shelf put more at your fingertips! Full-width vegetable Hydrator. Keeps 17.5 qts. garden Removable eggtrays. Room for 281 Taka them out for cooking or cleaning. Ff ALL PRICED TO SELL! ir Frigidaire Frost-Proof with New Up-Front Lighting ■ Host-Proof! You’ll never/1 frost stain! ■ Up-Front lighting “its everything r *l*‘" -u-i 126-lb. sin h ■Jig Frigidaire Frost-Proof with Automatic . Ice Maker / , / v ■ No fill! No spill! let Maker even puts cubes m door server! ■ ‘Frost-Proof! You’ll never de-- frost again! ■ 1534b. sin top freezer. Roouqd FPCD-162BN 16.2 cu. ft. Frigidaire Frost-Proof with 174-lb. size Bottom Freezer a ■ Frost-Proof! You’ll never defrost again. ■ New fully adjustable shelves move up or down to fit foods of any height. ■ 2 removable trays hold 26 aggs. Easy to clean, too! - See Your Participating frigidaIre dealer He has a plan for you! ’1'JrdJB KTETWS IN Young Juniors’ Back to School Sale Famous Maker wool sweaters and skirts 5.97 Go to the head of the class with savings on kilts, A-lines, pleats and dirndls in an assortment of patterns and solids. Top off with a pullover, cardigan, crewneck or V-neck sweater. Some synthetic fiber sweaters in group. Pre-teen, teen sizes in Hudson's Young Junior Sportswear. 4-SEASON COTTON DRESSES FOR PRE-TEENS 7.97 Great looking ways to go back to school! Wide assortment of stylos, colors,plaids, some Permanent Press! FAVORITE FUZZ Y JACKET 21.97 Acrylic pile short-coat is tops with toons — double-breasted , pocketed guilt-lined.What a value.Beige,ash. TEEN WOOL DRESSES FOR FALL ■ ,c. 14.97 A huge selection of wool drosses in. favorite fall colors and the now ways of the season—xingy! savings. PRE-TEEN PRETTY WOOLS 10.97 Ton'll love those drosses, pre-teen- If you donY know who your participating dealer it, call ]h ors, they have fall's fashion nows * T~ j zp wrapped ap at WOW savings. 444-9560 IIP- |.f,.. ’•. * § ’v /.L < ' we’ll be glad to Mell you! THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, ALTGUST 8, 1968 A-ir Come in or call for specially priced storage accessories in Hudson’s Notions Expanding metal garment rack, value priced new specially priced 1L89 A. You-can make this expanding metal garment rack higher or wider as necessary for large or small storage problems. Expands from 42' to 7Q' in width, can be lowered to child’s reach. With hat rack, shoe rack and easy-rolling casters, garment rack is easy to assemble without tools. V specially priced 27.89 B- 6-drawer hardwood chest doubles as an end table, is carefully made in sturdy, compact 12'xl8'x33' size. For lingerie, stockings, shoes. In avocadoi mustard, white, or wood finishes. Allow2weeksfordelivery. specially priced 2/4.99 C. Jumbo quilted dress bag holds up to 16 garments, is 54' long, 15' wide and 20' deep in gold color and assorted prints. Has full-length corded zipper, sturdy 3-hook frame. A must for every homemaker. specially jJHced 5.89 D Hudson’s Own utility hag has 4 shelves for handbags, 16 outside pockets for shoes. 13'x8J4rx57', with zipper. Gold, avocado, white. specially priced 2/L89 E-Lee Rowan skirt rack holds 5 skirts Or pants plus 5 belts. Movable vinyl clips fit any waist size. Chromeplated. Folds flat for travel. specially priced 2/L89 F. Lee Rowan blouse tree holds 6 blouses or shirts on form-fitting, vinyl tipped swing arms. Sturdily made of durable chromeplated metal. specially priced 3/2.89 G Setwell rock maple hangers for skirts or pants have the new closet tier design that ends jamming or wrinkling, takes less closet space. specially priced 2/1.89 H.Ideal guest hangers of %' tubing. Contoured with gold-tone finish. A handsome extra closet at savings specially priced 24.99 Classically designed metal wardrobe finished in white with gold color striping, sturdily constructed and reinforced. Large 24'x63' xl9'size has hat rack and clothes bar,? plus double doors. Allow 2 weeks fot* delivery. specially priced 10.99 Imported wood bedspread holder from Italy designed with bamboo turnings. Large size for extra covers or spreads. Folds fdr storing. specially priced 4.99 Underbed steel chest \in a Washable, dust-resistant gold color finish is ideal storage fdr small quarters. 35'xl8' and just 6 inches high, specially priced 4/3.89 Hjome storage boxes of durable Kraftboard kdep most anything in little space. Use for* toys, blankets, sports. 15'xl2'XlO' size. HU D SOJST’S ' PONTIAQJtfALL Telegraph and Elizabeth Lake Road NORTHLAND. CENTER 8 Mila and Northwestern . EASTLAND CENTER 8 Mila and Kelly Roads • WESTLAND CENTER Warren and Wayne Roads . OAKLAND MALL 1-75 antf 14 Mile Road ■„ DOWNTOWN DETROIT Woodward Ave^and Grand River. . Janitors Plight Is Uncanny NO MONEY DOWN * INSTANT CREDIT FREE DELIVERY * FREE SERVICE Side-by-Side Combination J«««t irwMl. Refrigerator aoctioo mvw PITTSBURG, Kan. (AP) - It took a policeman, the fire department and an animal .control officer to dispossess five skunks from an apartment house shed. Patrolman . Steve Marshall tossed .a tear gas grenade in ■ their direction. The skunks volleyed back. - * * ★ Ventilating fans in the apartment house picked up the fumes. Its seven . residents, caught in the crossfire, beat a hasty retreat. Steve Berry, an animal control officer, finally trapped the skunks. Firemen pumped out the building with a big exhaust fan so the inhabitants could re-turn. - • Marshall and Berry had to throw away their clothing. And it required two washings to de-skunk Berry’s truck. .; ' ' MP Killed in Vietl SAIGON (AP) - A terrortat flipped a grenade into an Amer-j lean military police jeep in Sai-j gon early today killing one MP [ and seriously wounding another.' Tough to Evict APPLIANCE CO. A—18 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUSTa,196B 25 Hurt 100 A in Miami, Fla., Strife MIAMI, Fla, (AP) - Bands of young Negroes set fire to cars, atoned white motorists and looted stores In a five-block area of northwest Miami Wednesday night in a disturbance touched off when police massed at a rally aimed at airing problems facing Negroes. Some 25 persons were Injured, Including two Negroes who police said were shot by unknown gunmen. * * * About 100 -Negroes were arrested, mostly on charges of disorderly conduct leading to rioting. Trouble broke out in the. predominantly Negro area about 6:30 p.m., several hours before Republican delegates 10 miles away across Biscayne Bay on Miami Beach nominated Richard M. Nixon as their presidential candidate. IN GOOD CONDITI ON Miami Police Lt. Jay Golden said both of the men who were shot were In gpod condition. He said: “The police have not fired one bullet.” Clarence Curry, 25, was wounded as he was being questioned ff. J looting case. Golden said two shots rang out in the darkness but no gunman Was seen. The other shooting victim, Cephus Griffen, was hit by s stray bullet as be walked along a sidewalk, police said. * * ★ Most of the injured suffered cuts from broken glass and bruises from rocks and bottles. Pblice said at ]east 32 stores were broken into and seven were tooted. Three cars were burned and two were damaged by rocks. 4 NEWSMEN INJURED Four newsmen were among the injured and a man driving a car with a George Wallace bumper sticker was stoned as hundreds of Negroes circled his wrecked automobile. Dazed and bleeding, he was pulled to safety in a bar by two Negroes. The violence ended after the Rev. Ralph David Abernathy, leading his Poor People’s Campaign at.the GOP convention, and Gov. Claude Kirk, a convention delegate, walked through the streets urging calm and conferred with Negro leaders. * * * The rally was called for Negroes to plan ways to gain mors control of their communities. Abernathy and basketball star Wilt Chamberlain were scheduled to attend but had not arrived when trouble started. ♦ ■ ★ w Leaders of the rally said the presence of about two dozen policemen caused resentment among young Negroes at the rally. PERSUADED TO LEAVE After a couple of bottles-were tossed toward the officers, they were persuaded to leave the area,so harmony .could be restored. But the youths then began stoning cars carrying whites, looting and setting trash fires. * ■ * ★ Police with riot equipment returned to the area to protect firemen apt fired several tear pit a large crowd of Negroes threatening a pofice-rhan and a newsman. Mayor Stephen Clark's pleas for calm were met by jeers and profanity. SMASHED WINDOW Police then agreed to pull out several cruisers and as they were moving away a brick smashed a window of the mayor’s car. He was not hurt. | The police tossed several tear gas grenades and left the area, * * * Bob Johnson, one of the organizers of the rally, said “We were trying to give our people some of their black culture. The people we are trying to reach, they can’t sit down in peaceful assembly without being harassed.’’ Jackson Police Car Is Hit by Gunfire JACKSON (AP)-Jackaon police said late Wednesday that a 38-calibcr bullet t was fired into the left front tire of a police car on the city's south Side'. - , . -| No other incidents were reported, and Jackson Police Lt Calvin Watson, who called the incident “definitely serious," said no special measures were being taken. Watson said the bullet was removed from a patrol car driven by a police sergeant on Mitchell Street. BEDFORD, England (UPI) - Bertie Oibl^ Janitor, was doing a fine’job cleantag oat a room when a can of whlto powder-on a shelf overhead fell and spilled all over him.‘ Bertie, 31, picked up the can, “Radioactive Isotopes— Danger. Do hot touch," the label read. Bertie put the can in a pintle hag and drove to tho police station. “Don’t come near me," shouted the duty sergeant ss he jumped away. ' * The sergeant sent Bertie to Bedford General Hospital. “They ell kept their distance,’’ Bertie said ofitft nurses. “Some tnk-three stepsbackward." Bertie was told to go to a cubicle. After a long watt, two doctors came to. “They would not touch me and went to and out thumb- * ing through medical books" Bertie said. "They'made phone •cilia. M v 1,1/1 “The next thing 1 knew was when what looked like a creating from Mars bunt through the curtains." It wa»N» fireman-in protective clothing who tested Bertie and the can with a Geiger counter. * Both proved nonradioactive. The powder's Identity remained A mystery. Doctors breathed easier. Bertie was annoyed. *FHLT LOSE A TWERP' *1 fait like a twerp sitting there covered to white powder bolding a plastic hag.” When Bertie got home, his wife, Rita, 22, kept her Til*-tance and dealt the final blow. ’ “Take a bath," she ordered. i shell| a These Polecats QE 6-TRANSISTOR POCKET RADIO FOLDING LAWN CHAIR $3*7 WESTINQHOUSE 15,000 BTU’s POWER 3 ipeedi. Frwah air and exhaust. Permanent, Mtor. Adjustable th * ‘ *-gb •« EMERSON 5,MO BTU AIR CONDITIONER Inattnl installing system. $IMi gut pinnmnl Mtor, Pushbutton cmlralt. 11 $- RCA VICTOR TV RCA VICTOR 15” PERSONAL PORTABLE PORTABLE TV ■ta 71 *+ In. Eoctonoulor tub*. UHF/VHF. 131 m In. octangular tub#. Font Mid atoto circuitry. Built-in antenna and picture. Front oaund. Handle and ‘ ^ * UHF/VHF. AUDIO STEREO HI-FI COMBINATION ZENITH 12” DIA. PORTABLE TV UHF/VHF »fOO '99 *149 '99 ♦90 GENERAL ELECTRIC COLOR TV >ta nodal MyllnB. 60 «: ta. pi !Uont colon. UHF/VHF. From co i round. 90-doy laryicc, '199 XI RCA VICTOR 14” COLOR PORTABLE ADMIRAL 265 SO. IN. COLOR LOWBOY UHF/VHF. Snpnr color tuba warranty dotlvory, 9 Vows were spoken Saturday during an exchange of rings in Kirk id the HHis. For the candlelit ceremony, the daughter Of Mr. and Mfy. James B. Charters of TYoy wore an ivory skimmer fashioned by Bianchi. Imported hand corded Alencon lace formed the Watteau 'train encircled in peau de sole. LACE CAP To complete her look, she chose a court veil'of silk illusion secured with a matching Alencon lacS cap. Her bridal hjwet ™ comprised « Eucl»ri, The problem: We want to give our daughter a lovely big church wedding. Her fiance’s parents say teat they will attend, but they will not send any of" their friends or relatives invitations to this wedding — or even announcements afterwards. Their reason: "All of our friends and relatives have given wedding presents on the occasion of our son’s first wedding, and once is enough.” Abby, do. you think this is right? What has our daughter to do wi|h tee wedding gifts his first bride received? Do you think they have the right to cut down on the number of lovely gifts she shall receive just because her fiance was married before? \ THE GIRL’S MOTHER B/Vjk ♦ DEAR MOTHER: An invitation (or announcement) is not always a bid for a gift, although most people think it is. But tbs parents of the groom don’t wish to send Invitations or announcements far this «- or any other reason, it is up totbem. October Nuptials Set Oct 18 wedding vows are planned by Victoria Christine Hurford and Donald Joseph Mountain of Chamberlain Street ^ ' * ★ y * The bride elect is the daughter of Mrs. Gene Hurford ofChamberiain Street, and Joseph Hurford of Dunedin, Fla. Her fiance Is the son of tbs lets Mr. and Mrs. Walter J. Mountain. Anne Press of Endno, Calif., led the party of bridesmaids formed by Mr. and Mrs. Harold C. Heym of Birmingham announce the engagement and October wedding plans of their daughter, Kbther-ine Louise, to JamesT, McKesson. The bride elect received her Bache lor’s. degree from Ohio Wesleyan University, Delaware,, Ohio and a Master’s degree from the University of Michigan. Her ft* once it the son of the Lewis J. McKesson* of Maitland, Fla. Stephanie Smith of Grasse Pointe, Debby DeWitt jnd Lynn Chandler. Following a reception in Red Run Country dub, Royal Oak, the newlyweds departed for a wedding trip to Bermuda. *:• Best man honors, lor the son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur H. Meyer of -Half Day, III., were performed by Pauf Casey of Queens, N. Y., with Bruce Charters, Carl Spamer, Robert ’ Beckley and Allan Spalding as ushers. Family Dinner Fetes the Roger A. Chopes A iamily dinner at Kingsley Inn followed vows recently by Marcia Allen DtiVal and Roger Allen Chope in FranHin Community Church. Diene DuVal attended her sister as maid of honor with David Cummings, tourin 'of the bridegroom, assisting as best man. Parents of,the newlyweds are the Grove DuVals of Franklin and Mrs, Eleanor Chope of Birmingham. Group Sets Tppe Talk Parents Without Partners, Pontiac chapter, will hear a taps of Dr. Mary Calderons At Wednesday’s meeting in Oakland County Supervisors’ Auditorium St S:15 j>.m. v ’ i- . ■ 'Rigolettc/ Draws Overflow Crowd By DAVID MASCITELLI Last nightc>t Baldwin Pavilion an overflow crowd was treated to a superb concert performance of Verdi’s Rigoletto presented by the Meadow Brook School of Music. By some miraculous process, conductor James Levine had assembled a cast that included four of America’s best and busiest opera stars. Cornell MacNejl (as Rigoletto), Roberta Peters (as Gilda), Jan Peerce (as the Duke) and Ezio Flagello (as Sparafucile and Monterone) constitute a nearly ideal cast for this work; and they were provided A JuBilant Mrs. Is Ready to Hit BY FRANCES LEWINE Associated Press Writer MIAMI BEACH, Fla. — Pat Nixon celebrated "the top moment in my life” watching her husband nominated a second time as a Republican presidential candidate and looked ahead to another tough campaign. Going to Convention Hall for the big moment, Mrs. Nixon said: “I just feel like An astronaut’s wife when her husband is shot into space.” - When it was all over, she relaxed in the Nixon’s 18th-floor penthouse suite and said she was ready to "go on tea road” again. ★ it' h * t “I don’t imind the Haiti work,”'she said of the prospect of the forthcoming election campaign. Mrs.- Nixon said she never really retired to private life after her husband’s -defeat in 1960. "Every two years," she reminded, "Dick was campaigning for .someone.” Now 56, a veteran of more than two decades as “A volunteer for Nixon,” she said "My life is just one kind of continual excitement.” Mrs. Nixon is optimistic about her with vocal and orchestral support from Meadow Brook students teat they could be proud to sing with anywhere. it it * Cornell MqcNeil was powerful and thoroughly convincing in the title role and Ezio Flagello more than lived up to his reputation as one of the finest lyric basses performing tocjay. Though Roberta Peters had a couple of uncomfortable moments with her top notes in “Caro Nome,” the feet seems trivial in the face of her marvelous singing throughout the performance. And, while Jan Peerce'may no longer Richard Nixon Campaign Trail husband’s chances this time and is ready to get back on the campaign track, with her Usual pattern of coffees and meetings with GOP Volunteers. JOB TRAINING . She’s said she’s Interested in pro-' moting such programs as job training, quality education for all and community involvement programs, She’ll go along with her husband and off on her own as well, Pat arid. But there will be no speech-making for her. “Dick should speak for himself,” she reiterated. The climactic homlnStihgday left Mrs: Nixon tired after three and a half hours of handshaking, followed by the * * tremendously exciting” convention spectacle. The pace had been so hectic that Mrs. Nixon didn't get dinner. And a hamburger, ordered for her long after midnight, got cold while she gave just one mors interview. ★ * ★ The Nixons lieave Saturday for San Diego, Calif., where the candidate will spend 10 days in staff conferences. Mrs. Nixon will stay part of the time at San Diego, then return to New York. have quite the magnificent voice he did a few years ago, his musical intelligence and uncanny judicious phrasing make listening to him as wonderful an experience as ever. Even in top opera houses, you will rarely find four principals of this quality together on the same stage. And special mention Should also be made of student performer Maria Ewihg who, as Maddalena, seemed not the least bit out of place among these top professionals. But what made the performance so totally satisfying was-the work of the remarkable young, conductor, James Levine, in bringing together all the ingredients in the service of Verdi. These four great singers seemed to have no qualms about putting their talents completely at the disposal of Levine's conducting; and their confidence was more than justified. * ★ it The performance was especially enhanced by his emphasis on maintaining continuity, ‘ which h e accomplished with tempos that were often brisk and with the same unerring instinct for making intelligent transitions that he displayed a couple of weeks ago iff his performance of Mahlers Second Symphony. Levine’s hand was also very much in evidence in the superb ensemble among soloists, orchestra and chorus maintained throughout. And one of. the highlights of the evening was the playing Of the Meadowbrook student orchestra, which Levine has. molded into a group that can hold its own among the finest professional orchestras, ■ it.1t h Its balances, precision of attack and sensitivity to dynamic shadings are as fine as I’ve ever heard; and last night it played with a flexibility, warmth and intensity that would havb made it a credit to any opera bouse in the world. For the more than eight thousand foriunate spectators this was a glorious evening of music. . And the occasion served notice that the Meadow Brook School of Music Is ready to take its place among tee veiy finest institutions of its.kind. A REAL SLEEPER IN OUR 6th ANNUAL MIDSUMMER SALE JUST MARRIED! BRASILIA, a new design marriage of Spain, and South America inspired by the world's newest city-Brasilia, Capitol of Brazil. You get all this — headboard, double dresser, mirror, chest of drawers in h.and matched American wdlnpt veneers. Superb at just $324 (formerly $360). The Better SUNDAY No Sales. Browse to Your Heart's Content nouse oi Dearooms 171$ S. Telegraph Rd., Bloomfield, Between Miracle Mile and Orchard Uk# Rd. OPEN SUN. >2-5 ... No Buying, Just Browsing TOltoimn mu nrm‘»:»Tr»Tr>irronrrfr» R-—$• THE TONT1 AC PKKSS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 W« in plaasad to announce the addition of European Hair Stjrlingand Harper Method Technician , PIERRE MOUNTAIN j® ®*r jjMpI* Mr. Mountain hat been on the examining boui* of Canada, ia a member of the Coiffeur Committee, end taught graduate work jn Canadian Beauty Schools. HE IS HERE TO CONSULT WITH YOU ON YOUR SCALP OR HAIR PROBLEMS aa well aa a HAIR STYLIST. RANDALL’S BEAUTY SHOPPE 88 Wayne Street FE 2-1424 @ GENUINE 7ie*y DIAMONDS aacki'C 14k GOLD! MEN SWEDDING With Purchase of Sat Above PARK JEWELERS | and OPTICIANS 1 N. SAGINAW (Coriur Pike St,) FI 4-1889 Entremont and Moffo Return to Meadow Brook Model demonstrates one way of finding out if a new hairdo will fit the head—try on a photograph first. The hairdo is g creation of Claude Maxime of Paris. After a weak of balls performances tb£ M a a d 0 W Brook Feativil resumes its concert series featuring* the Detroit Symphony Orchestra under Sixien EhrUng’s direction with programs scheduled in Oakland University's Baldwin Pavilion tonight, Friday Saturday at 8:90 p.m. and Sunday at 7:30 p.m. French pianist Philippa Entremont returns for t h * Thursday • Friday concerts to play Brahms' Concerto No. 1 in D minor on a program, which Includes Mendelssohn' Overture "Buy Bias" and Reger's Variations and Fugue on a Mozart Theme. ANNA MOFPO Anna Moffo will return Saturday at 8:30 pan. and next Sunday at 7:30 p.m. to sing the Mad Scene from Donizptti’s "Lucia di Lammermoor,” and arias from Verdl'a "I Vesprl Siollani" and "Rlgoletto." The program ■ will Inc Smetana’s Overture to "The Bartered Bride," the overture to Verdi's 'T Vesprl SIcHani, and* Weinberger’s Polka and Fugue from "Schwanda." Of major importance will be the premiere performance of Letter Trimble's Duo Con-certante for Orchestra and Two Violins, subtitled *’To a Great American,*' which was cop-missioned this year by the Meadow Brock Festival. Mischa Mischakoff and Gdrdon Staples will play the two violin soloe. Trimble, who has. just completed a year as artist in residence for the New York Philharmonic, is one America’s most sought after composers. He will be at Meadow Brook for the premiere of his work. LANE BRyANT SWEET KID BUCKLE-UPS Forward-looking foot fashion reaches new heights in heel and toe. Block, chocolate or grey leather from our high-stepping selections. $14 medium (B-CX 7 to 12 wide (D-E) 6to 12 x-wide (EE-EEE) 5 to 12 Ordar by'moll or phono 682-7500. Add 35c for doll vory plus 10c for C.O.D*t and 4% tox Thw Pontiac Mall. anrrnmTrrTrmTrwfiymTrmTlrrmTTTTTTrrTT sms wwitmwi 17 - 19 S. SAGINAW ST. - DOWNTOWN PONTIAC OPEN MON., THURS., FRI. TIL 9 P.M. 4 COMPLETE FLOORS 05 HOMO FUANIIHMOS - MVATOt SISVICI TO SACK HOOS • PROVINCIAL • COLONIAL • TRADITIONAL • MODERN All By America's Leading Manufacturers! Music Program Continues After Campers Leave INTERLOCHEN, Mich- -Though the campers Will leave, the National Music Camp here in mid-AUguat, activity will continue through the end of the month with several post-camp music programs. About 200 adult musicians win attend the Adult Music Conference and the American Recorder Society Summer School August 20-27, while , approximately 700 high school students will be. on campus forj marching band and orchestra camps the same week. The Adult Music Conference, which is at Interlochen for the 10th year offers chamber music, piano and s t r i h (j workshops to music teachers, performers and non-professional musicians. Participants will study in ensemble groups and master classes. , | Oliver Edel cello Instructor! at the music camp and pro-: fessor of music at ..the! University of Michigan, is1 director of the Chamber Music Workshop. The Baldwin Acrosonic Rent from $2.50 Weekly* TRY BEFORE YOU BUY Choose your'piano for rental withithe same car# as to tone and reputntion that you would when buying. A beautiful new piano built by Baldwin at less than you would pay for some ordinary brand. We can provide a good teacher in your neighbor-hood. A phone call will" bring our consultant to your home. You may select your instrument from our catalog. §miley Bros. ' Pontiac 119 N. Saginaw KK 4-4721 Detroit Birmingham 5510 Woodward 115 S. Woodward I K 3.6800_____Ml 7-1177 BIG BUYS from the KR0EHLER "Lively Living" Collection Vows Announced Mrs. Sandra Kay Hook became Mrs. Jerry W. Hawthorne | in an evening ceremony at Wa-terford Community Church, Sat-1 urday. The couple was feted! with a reception in the church! parlor following the exchange! of vows. "Mystic Lane" by . Philadelphia Raridorh Sheared Pattern of 100% Fortrei Polyester Face Double Jute Back, non-allergenic, 12' and 15' Broadloom. 14 colors. NOTE: Wa carry a large selection of indoor-outdoor and kitchen carpot. Specially Priced *9.95 Laid ovetW heavy 60-oz. waffle spang* rubber pad. tiUUtimt’B “HUUtgr (Harpet — 139 Romso Rd. In Rochester Tsl. 651-4162-3 S Mon., Tuos., Wed., Thurs. 9:30 to 5:30 * Fri. Til 9:00 - Sat. Til 5:00 OKR MON., THURS., FRI. TIL 9 P.M. “Tarn Mutt Hr Satitfird—This Wr (tiniiimiiJL THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY', AUGUST 8. 1989 B—S mi ■■hSa PRE J SEASON I jSJALE'l OF OUR J MAGNIFICENT IMAGINE, 10% OFF EVERY FUR IN OUR ENTIRE STOCK! WHY BUY IN AUGUST? "A • Because of new '68 styling, careful work* / manship, oxcoflHonat (kin*. / HATS • Because all our fashions are Personally Selected and Impacted to meet our HIGH STANDARDS OF QUALITY. X ; • Because fur prices will be higher this 'fall, and these furs were bought before the rise in pelt prices. YOU SAVE DOUBLY durihg this event with these EXTRAORDINARY LOW PRICES. „ . • Because'this is the PERFECT OPPORTUNITY to buy your fur* at the prices you have been waiting for. Carrying a cascade of daisies with baby’s breath, Cynthia Sue Tedbam* was escorted to the titer of St. Paul United Methodist Church Saturday where she became the bride of David 0. Gregory. " A * * For the evening vows, the former Miss chose an Dish linen sheath fashioned with a fitted bodice, Bat-teau neckline and elbow length At h recent buffet dinner party, Mr. and Mrs.. Paul L. Drinkard of North fjivetnois Road, A-vort Township, announced the engage-merit of their daughter,. Shirlee Jane; to John B. Czarnecki. John is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Czarnecki of Warren. The bride elect and her fiance ore students at Michigan State University. The engagement and upcoming Aug. 23 vows of Kathleen Lois Wdr-field and Michael Peter Mulhem are announced by her father? Dr, J. W. Warfield of Orchard Lake. The bridegroom-to-be is the son of Mrs. Betty Mulhem of Arlington, Va., and Col. John F. Mulhem of Chicago, IU. The couple are students at Jacksonville State University, Jacksonville, Ala. Orchestra, Chorus at Cran brook Roger Wagner will direct the Meadow Brook School of Music SUMMER SAVINGS SPECIAL 3 Rooms of Furniture for only STOP M AND SEE THEM TODAY NO MONEY DOWN LONO EASY TERMS Little Joe's BARGAIN HOUSE Comer Baldwin ami Walton Telephone 3I2-M42 Open Dpily to 9 P.M. Sat. I A.M. to 6 P.M. Chorus and Orchestra in a performance of Johann Sebastian ’s “Passion "According to St. Matthew” at 1:30 p.m. Sunday. Director of the Roger. Wagner Chorale and head of the Choral Institute of the Meadow Brook Summer School of. Music, Wagner will lead the musicians in a presentation of me Passion in its entirety. w ★ ★ Tickets for the performance at Christ Church Cranbrook are jlimited and available only In 1 advance through the Meadow , Brook School of Music at Oakland University. Bakeware Gets Prettier Look I Reusable disposable bakewear is getting prettier. One new line has white inner finish and terra cotta exteriors. Designs include five by six-inch snack trays, custard cups, six and 12-cup muffin tins, cookie sheets, pizza pans, pie plates, - cake pans, loaf pans and nine-inch plates. The same designs also are available in regular aluminum with" white non-stick coating. David Gregorys Wed During Evening Rite Accents of heirloom Irish lace Italian Males to Feel Pinch highlighted her ensemblp end matching linen Watteau train. A Medici cap secured her tiered veil of illusion to complete her look. ATTENDANTS Honor a ttendantsfor the couple ere Sharon K. Pinney and the the bridegroom's brother. John, with ushers Douglas BIH and Sidney Gregory. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul H. Tedhams of Midland and the son of Mrs. William Gregory, of Marshall Street and the late Mr. Gregory greeted guests in the church parlors before departing for a honeymoon trip to Florida. ROME (UPI) -thousands of self-styled latin lovers are in trouble with the law. A special force at, TOO policemen using walkie-talkies began petroling favored tourist sites of the Eternal City to chase off the gallants who go around pinching, bottom slapping and whispering spicy invitations to young, pretty female tourists. * * ★ The Romeos, knov Romans and foreigners alike as “Pappagalli” (Italian for parrots), long have been; one of the chief complaints, or delights, of foreign girls. The Pappagalli are sure the girls want attention. Their role, as they see it, is to accommodate millions of girl tourists who want to be able to go home and tell how they were pinched and romanced in Rome. The Ministry of the Interior thinks'otherwise — and is ready back up its views with criminal charges. Under the law, anyone molesting or disturbing others in e public place can be jailed for six months or fined $66. It may not get that drastic. The course of justice is slow and complicated in Italy and general amnesties for misdemeanors usually wipe Sentences of less than 1 i months. Not that it makes it any easier for the 'miniskirted blondes from abroad. MRS. D. G. GREGORY Pedestal Tables, Swivel Chairs Are Favorites CHICAGO (NFS) - Pedestal tables and swivel chairs are top contenders for most popular furnishings on the home dining scene. The B. Brody Seating Company, Chicago, a major manufacturer of dining sets, reports that pedestal sets win resounding praise from both men and women. row Old? > /|\x x sm * LIVING ROOMS REDUCED SAVI *100** MOWII! Parties Note Coming Vows A kitchen shower at thi Ham* mond Luke home of Mrs. Arthur Young marked a host of parties feting bride elect Cynthia Jeanne Nash. > Miss Nadi, who will wed Peter Edward Meagher II on Aug. 31, is the daughter of Mb', and Mrs. Frederick C. Nash of Bloomfield Hills. Following the kitchen shower, cohosted by Mrs. Harold Furlong, Mesdames Clifford T. Eke-lund and Carl H. Birkelo gave a luncheon at the Ekelund’s Ottawa Drive home. ' Prior to a miscellaneous shower for Cynthia and Peter, which was hosted by the George C. Dillmans at their Winkler Mill Road, Avon Township home, the couple were honored at a party slated by the bridegroom’s par-' ents, the Peter E. Meaghers of Onagon Trail. 4-Piece Living Room Suite This is an exceptional value. The 4-pieca suite includes a 90-inch sofa in durable tweed covers, matching contrasting Mr. & Mrs. Chair plus ottoman. All fabrics are Scotch-Garded. Reversible zipper cushions for easy care and long wear. SPECIAL, 3-Piece Occasional Tables $169 Only $21 NrlMeeet living Inns By Hilbert GILBERTS FURNITURE, Inc. 6969 Highland Rd. _ o-nwwwesj*. » Wait of Airoort Tarm* Arranged, 90 Day. Ca.li sees mgmnna na. Phone 614-3149 Barbara Floye was recently awarded a BA degree in Elementary Education from Midh-igan State University. Barbara is the daughter* of Mrs. Ivadpll G. flore of Elizabeth Lake Road and Peter G. Flore of Troy. SALE! Hundreds of Remnants Priced to Clear! SAVI 30% to 60% ON MANIION-SIZI REMNANTS Becfewctk- Evans FINE floor COVERINGS TEL-HURON SHOWING CENTER - PORIAC - 334-9544 MRS. R. E. KOVACS Newlyweds Honeymooned Niagara Falls. Ronald Eugene Kovacs and his bride (nee Catherine Ann Sturgeon) are honeymooning at Niagara. Falls following vows Saturday afternoon in Orchard Lake Community Church. Hr it it Prior to their departure, the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William R. Sturgeon of Orchard Lake and t^e son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene Kovacs of River Rouge, were feted at a reception in the church fellowship hall. ATTENDANTS Attended by Mary Battles and Ruth Clark, the bride wore an ensemble fashioned with silk organza skirt over taffeta with an Alencon lace bodice. Her elbow length veiling was capped with a matching lace headpiece and she carried white glamallis and daisies. A V ; Best man honors were performed by Michael Krenshaw with Ronald Kovar, * Roger Cox and Carl Sturgeon ushering. William Sturgeon and Eugene Kovacs, brothers of the bride and bridegroom, respectively, served as junior ushers. Set Open House Honoring Pair Ah open house for newlyweds, the Phillip J. Gouveias (nee Carol Helling) is slated Sunday at the Silver Lake Road home of the J.L. Taunts from 24 p.m. Parents of the newlyweds are Mrs. Ruth Gouveias of Pine Grove Street and the Ingvald Hellings of Golden Valley, N.D., where vows were recently held. ★ * .. Assisting as honor attendants for the ceremony were Angie Wise and Norman Gouyeia with Michael Jassmann and Gary Walth as ushers. About a third of the people now living in the world are under 15 years of age. Can No. F-550 We're Giants to Kids By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE CASE F-550: Thelma R., aged M, teaches kindergarten. ’Dr. Crane,’* i school principal is a stickler for elves.! 'Instead, ahel wants us teach-i ers’in the early DR. C** ‘NE grades to stick to factual narratives. ‘But I And that kiddies are fascinated by fairy talas. Are they psychologically bad for youngsters?” GIANTS . Actually, toddlers- are living in a giant world! For their parents and tepchers tower above them in gigantic fashion and outweigh them terrifically. lults have forgotten this outlook of the kiddies. But we can easily regain their viewpoint if we merely stretch our imaginations a little. For example, suppose we alone remain at our present adult height wh|le all the other people around us ape 12 feet tall and weighing 800 ponuds. ★ it it That’s precisely the relative outlook of .a toddler when he sees his daddy. And "even ids mother is figuratively a giantess, standing maybe lift feet tall, if we adults use comparable figures. Thus, children have no difficulty In believing stories concerning giants, for they live for years as tiny folks (elves) in a literal giant world. Moreover, we adult “giants” are not only omnipotent in their sight, but omniscient, too. For their limited mental age does not permit them to make the simple, logical deductions that are a-b-c stuff to parents. When our son Philip was about 18 months old, he would relish a game in which he’s stick his head under a pillow on the davenport.. Where is Philip?” his mother and I would exclaim loudly . Actually, we could see all of him below the neck, for only his head was hidden beneath the pillow. a . h .# ■ But Philip apparently figured, I can’t see them so they can’t see me!” And don’t think Philip wasn’t a bright youngster, for his I.Q. was in the genius category and he now holds a Ph. D., and has long been a university professor! But kiddies cannot comprehend the things when their mental age is three or four, which we adults can easily understand. For example a little boy, aged 4, was left alona Mr a fair moments while Ms mother went next door to borrow a «ipv of sugar. j Meanwhile, he tipped over the goldfish bowl add broke It. As ha waa vainly trying to recover the flopping fish from under the davenport, haheard Ms mothtr‘s step on the back So he rushed into his play 10m to build castles with wooden blocks. ‘Junior, did you break the fish howl?” irritably demanded Ms mother. (Suppose an irate giantess 11% feet tall asked us adults that question?) Junior shook Ms head, but Ms mother paddled Mm, anyway. “How did you know I did It,” he qqeried through Ms tears,” for you didn’t see me?*’ A little bird tells mother such things,” she fibbed and he soon was “gunning” for that litUe bird with Ms toy bow and aifows! ti Mr. and Mrs, Donald W. Ringler of Francesca Drive announce the engagement of their daughter, Sue Anne to David C. Moilanen. He is the son-of the Wayne J. Moilanens of Angelas Drivf. The bride elect and het fiance are sophomores at Michigan State University and the University of Michigan, respectively'. To water a potted fern or ivy, stand the pot in a bowl of water overnight TMs is a better way to water the plant than pouring water over It. What’s Special Friday Night? SHRIMP FRY Served Family Style “ALL YOU WANT BROILED SHRIMP, lerved with Drawn Butter. DEEP FRIED -SHRIMP, with home-mad* Snappy sauce. Huge TOSSED SALAD. Choice of POTATOES, Het HOMEMADE Bread. EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT S to 10 P.M. in Bloomfield Hills Woodward at Squar# Lake Rd. menswear patterns come on strong in the Apache-look Houndstooth. paisley and foulard prints in sA twill move out of menswear fo make a smashing impression. Sketched from our collection: A. Versatile 22" square. 4.00 B. Apache scarf with antique brass ring; 2)6x26 inches,3.00 J Oblong 11x45" scarf, 4.00 Not shown: Narrow Tonto band. 160 Jacobsons 33& West Mopla Birmingham i 7 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 B—g FINAL REDUCTIONS ENTIRE REMAINING STOCK OF SUMMER MERCHANDISE Presents 285 Summer Dresses Entire Stock Swim Suits All Summer Handbags All Summer Sportswear All Spring & Summer Coats ring and Summer Formals t/i« Your Charge All Sale* Final Shop Thur*., Fri., Sot. end Mon. 'til 9 Tuesday and Wednesday 'til 5:30-p.m. Triple Dresser, Mirror ahd Bed $179, Chest Available * , Ask the advice of our trained staff of * Ulterior decorator . ■ | Designers. , Livonia 2B796 Plymouth toed KE 6-9242 e 427-MOO HALLMARK Find Paris look PAWS (UK)—The Kris look hasn't been so easy for the average woman to copy in years. 7# • a" •'' With a good long dig through the attic, a clever bit of sew-manship ud a few small expenditures she should.be able to look in the height of ta«Mnq, \ t- * First of all, that old duffle coat that refused to wear out pan be dry-cleaned and maybe given a fresh touch like new -toggle fastenings, if it's light- colored, it could be dyed black or dark brown. St Laurent,'Dior and half a doaen other houses showed ones Just like that for wedr front early moaning right through evening. » When removing thread from a ready-made garment that you intend to use over again, straighten his crinkly thread by rubbing it over wax or paraffin. It straightens out immediately and the wax makes it stronger yd easier to ai Corduroy Mokes the Combination A plain corduroy. bedspread nd patterned corduroy curtains make a happy eomblna-tion for decorating school quarters. Corduroy comes in beautiful colors, washes easily and needs no ironing. Sqfurday V Unite the Timothy Willises Announce Birth STENOGRAPHERS I m mediate Openings Salary Rtintfn 1 $4600 - $6200 Fringe Benefits Entrance Salary .Based Upon Experience and Training APPLY NOW! OAKLAND COUNTY PERSONNEL DIVISION OAKLAND COUNTY COURT HOUSE 1200 N. TELEGRAPH RD. PONTIAC Call • MRS. HOSKINS 338-4751 - Ext. 495 Frequent Airing Frequent airing of the blankets you use when the weather permits not only makes lor better sanitation but helps to make them last longer and hold their :fluffy wnnpth and comfort. I This *gom for pillows, t .They will be fluffier and iqy much better when they are | aired regularly. Pennsylvania ranks first £ I production Of pretzels. Mr. and Mrs. Richard Mills, (nee Lorraine'Paul), of South Hammond Lake Drive, West Bloomfield Township, announce the birth of a daughter, Lisa Marie, on Aug. 1. Grandparents are Mr. and: . ,lul . ... _ .Mrs. Joseph. Paul rif Southfield1 WUUi and Mf. and Mrs. George for their jweddlngjnturday. i-Milctuk of Detroit. Feted in the church parlorsi . ■ my .----------- following the candlelight Old yellowed lace can be Columbia Avenue B a p 11 a Church was chosen by Sarah j MRS. T. B. WILLIS SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer ceremony, the couple was joined by their parents, Mr. and Mrs.’ John I. Little of West Strathmore Street and Mr. and Mrs. Donald *E. Willis of Clive Street. * * * The former Miss Little chose! a bridal ensemble of Spanish lace over satin with pearl and crystal trim. Her elbow length silk veil of illusion was secured by a satin bow of matching pearl and crystal accents. 'She carried carnations and ivy. -Matron of honor, Mrs. Jamie J Brock led bridal attendants, ' Jean Street, Lynn Meechara,, Sherry Smith, Joyce Lane, Debby Bland, Cathy Windham! and Roxanne Little. bleached by soaking in sour, milk for eetefpl hours and will) not damage the delee ate threads. flNb (JfliK ®uDmt announces Friday? Aug. 9,1968 Style Show and Wig-O-Rama Featuring the Latest in Fall and Winter Fashions. Fashions by The Penthouse Fashion Shop — Wigs by Wanda’s Coiffeurs. | Serving the bridegroom as I best man Was Mickey Henderson. Ushers were Steve Dear Eunice Farmer, Willis, Skip Smith, Jerry Wal- I have a beautiful suede coat that has heeded shortening for |ace, Charles Terry, JoHn'Le-several years, and I was always afraid to cut it off. Now with land and Jamie Little, Larry everything fashionable in .leather, 1 must get it fixed for this Windham and Roger Street, fall. Is this a job that should be done professionally or can I was. d0 W Faye A honeymoon trip to Ohio Dear Faye, ..... . followed for the newlyweds. Fortunately, this Is a very simple Job and if you work well _______,______________ with your hands, you can certainly shorten your own; leather The 13th wedding anniversary roat.Carefully have someone mark it with a skirt marker so Js traditionally known as the SPECIAL!! BiPoirarmoN by BIGELOW DUPONT 501 McCauftles* Offers You Quality, Price aqd Custom ' Workmanship; by Our Own Mechanics. The only way to beat this is to do without carpeting altogether. per sq. yd. SAVE $2.00 a yd. 6®* per sq. yd. SAVE $2.00 a yd. Stop In and See For Yourtelf McCANDLESS I X. Perry Sf. \F£ .4*2531 it will be even. Allow about 1% to 2 inches for the hem. Use the milky household glue and Simply glue the hem in place. If you tove several inch*! of leather left over, use it for pocket flaps, collar. Unbelt,, or whatever to trim a tweed or knit dress, and you will have a beautifully coordinated ensemble. ★ it ' x'. ■’ 7 ; ' ■ i .i *|| Dear Eunice Fariher, II - I am In the process of making three very formal gowns for my daughters and after spending many frustrating hours on the first one, I am turning to you for help. J ; ’ The pattern looked very^simple, however, it was a Designer Pattern. When I got totnednside, there were two pages of in-' structions about making % very complicated undergarment which Would later be used to build the gown on' I am beBide myself with stiffening, hair braid, and feather boning. Surely there must be an easier way. Is this foundation actually necessary? \ 1 Mrs. J. D. Dear Mrs. J. D.: , You, are the first to write me about the new gowns which I are yery different in line from the straight A-line’s to which we! Dave become accustomed. I imagine the gown you are referring to is strapless with a fitted bodice, which would need a well-1 fitted foundation. I have found in the past that one of the easiest wpys to. make ball gowns was to begin with a well-fitted long line strapless bra. ITiis already comes with ail the feather boning and support you need and eliminates the need of making a strapless bra as well. You can begin your instruction sheet with the con-.j struction of the gown itself. I’d like to hear from you readers who try this. It lies worked beautifully for us! Mrs. M. E. says: “I Would like-to share with your readers I a little 9ewing tip that has worked beautifully for me. “With the gathered skirts, and especially the shirt cuffs long sleeves, it is very difficult to keep the gathers even while | stitching either the waistband or the Cuff to the gathered area. | Instead*of the ordinary two rows of machine stitching for the! gathers, which are placed at the seam line and V* inch closer to 1 the cut. edge, I stitch Y« inch above and Y« inch below the seam] | fine- v; '■ ■■;- it, ' - !1 When the gathers ebeTjnilled in place, it is much easier;] to keep them even at the seamline. After the seam has been '1 the gathering thread that shows.”^H Lace Wedding. YOU’LL ENJOY Annual Fwmihm £ak! Store • Wide SAVINGS UP TO 30% AND MORE On Sofas, Chairs, Occasional Pieces, Bedroom Groups and Dining Room Furniture. Many one-of-a-kindLand.quantities on some are limited. Come Early for the best selection. Some Floor Samples Included. ; \ . . ' / . "J. ■ LANE BRYANT THE KNITS NEW SIDELINE oun alono in $izo$ 38 to 56 COOL SUMMER COMFORT in smart restful sandals with genuine RIPPLE* sole. Beige, whKeor Mack, $11 -9fi iracic OrcUr by moil or phon# 682-750Q. Add 3Sc for dolivory plus 10c for The Pontiac Mall and 4% tax 235 Piorc# Birmingham I THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST », 1888 Korea Noty Exemplifies U.S. Foreign Aid Success* SEOUL (AP) - ••Korea was one* an example of American foreign aid failure and now it is •n example of outstanding Saying this, the deputy prime minister and minister for economic planning, Park Ghoon Hoon, went on to paint at length Ms predictions of a economic future for his once war-ravaged and poverty stricken nation that still lives under the threat of a Communist invasion from the North. "America spent, a lot money developing an economic! base here that Is now blooming, tie told a reporter. “We’ll not need grant aid 1971 and this is a great change Once reductions in grant aid{ meant the crippling of our economy. This is no longer so. "Almost our entire people are moving ahead in nation development.” STARTED CHANC.E He said a change came with the vigorous leadership President Chung Hee Park, pragmatic professional soldier, who first assumed powe through a military coup, and| then was elected by j enormous majority in 1967. "Another important thing our very high level of education, which is now beginning pay off,” the deputy premier said. ★ ★ ★ •Another reason for his country’s progress, he said, is “our diplomatic policy: normalizing relations with Japan and ing troops to Vietnam. The latter enhanced .the morale our people — to not always be the recipient of help but be helping someone else In their time of trouble.” ★ • ★ w Generally satisfactory foreign investment in Korea, reforms and increased collection of taxes, a potential tamper harvest of rice and other basic crops, expanding exports, developing Industrial capacity andj price stability, Minister Park asserted, all will contribute to a boom in the Korean economic picture. AVOIDED DEVALUATION He shrugged off a suggestion that the won, Korea’s money, might have to be devalued, although he did not definitely say that it would not, "We are concerned about the sharp increase in our imports,' he, said in answer to the won question, “and are trying limit imports of nonessentials such as television sets, refrigerators and air-conditioners. These things might be essentials in the U.S. but they aren’l here. Not yet. A A A “On the ninth of July we installed a new system aimed at curtailing nonessential imports. Diis raised import collateral on 283 items from 100 per. cent of Import prices to 150 per cent, COST, OF LIVING Koreans complain of the cost of living. Park said: “Last year we had a bad crop and power shortage because of drought but the wholesale price rise was only 8,4 per cent. So far this year it has been 4.9 per cent. Consumer prices went up 10.8 per cent last year and only 5.1 per cent, so far this year. “Compare that to 1963 and '64 when we had rises of 25 per cent." One thing possibly limiting an Increase in foreign investment, he acknowledged, is “We have a problem most places don’t: the' 'Pol' Manual Not for Student Loan SAN LUIS OBISPO, Calif. (AP) *— No longer may a pupil at Morro Bay High School checkl out file book “Pot: A Handbook! of Marijuana.” * * The last time!, it was lost and a citizen turned it over to the (tariff. ft it The book now may be checked oiit only fay teachers—but pupils may read it in the library—the San Ita Coastal Unified School Dijrtrkft Board decided Tuesday. WALLPAPER I INVENTORY SALE •M* a yaar unheard aI bargains I DECORATE A ROOM FOR sj $2 »3 $4 possibility of sabotage or dam-|Vletnam and resulting loss of[ Roods total only 120 million to age through guerrilla activity, income. j$30 million Out of an expected We are studying the possibility I NOT SOON half billion In export earnings of guaranteeing firms against [ “First, \ we don’t expect such loss,’’ i jeease-fire all that soon. Even if Park said he was not worried it comes, our visible exports to about a possible cease-fire ini Vietnam including military this year. “Invisible earnings” Vietnam, soch as income for Korean technicians serving ithere and construction other finds operating in Viet-; nam, total possibly 8110 million. | v * t#!, * ‘But trade with Vietnam is very low compared to Taiwan or even Singapore,” he noted. Bv -—* 0 ^ r C LOON AN'S '..'JKaj bujm, DRUG HUNT *-‘1**. ACME MINT tl>tp|fiMW!l Downtown GOOD HOUSEKEEPING OF PONTIAC 51 W. HURON / FE 4-1555 OFEN MON*, THURS. wufrFRI* TILL 9:00 E PRESCRIPTION 48! FILLED BY OUR EXPERT PHARMACISTS 15 Dixie Highway 140 North Saginaw Huron Street V Nflor Start Corn*, T*l»gtaph Baar THE gONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 Each Man Had His Hour, Then Nixon' MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) Rockefeller, “the man lot o time/'m^,.,,,,^ , ... *' Reagan, "the man ... desti ha* found." | For only one man had the hour Indeed, come, well past midnight, ip the, drone of nunh bers and the din of a’ngi hero | hailed, as {he Republican, party i chose its 1968 man for the presl- before, there had been for each! for the nomination by Mrs. Ivy man thp praiae and applause, Baker Priest, former U.S. treas-the moment of magic as ttegurer, now California state treas-convention roared at the mqn-lurer. tion of his name. ■[ * ' * * * * * Mrs. Priest told the 1,333 dele- For California Gov. Ronald gates, "The present leadership Raigan, 4he name was offered I of our country is confused and tion for the presidency of the United States the flame of a man who is the man for our time—Nelson A. Rockefeller. “He does not offer America a politics of joy and over-optimism that unrealistically says all is well with America. He does not offer America a politics of pessimism that tells us constantly how bad we are. He offers us a politics of realism that tells it as it is to all Americans .. the man for our time.” nego ate peace w rnout sacrine- ing life, land dr liberty. A map RECENT CONVERT, | who had the courage to rise Up For Richard M. Nixon, the | from the depths of defeat six nominating speech was made by years ago—and to make the Maryland Gov. Spiro T. Agnew, I greatest political comeback in a recent convert, a favorite son American history ... candidate who came into the wltAT ic Nixon fold only two days before.' , . . "The final test of a man who * * * | seeks the presidency is not what he promises but what he can Agnew said, "We are a nation I do; not what he says> but what in crisis, victimized by crime js and conflict, frustrated by fear + * * and failure. A nation tom byj war ... a nation plagued by dis-i “When history speaks firmly order ..! a nation haunted by to that natiort that it needs a crime ... a nation wrenched by man to match the tftnes—you division.. .if there is one great | don’t create such a man; you cry that rings clear, it is the cry don’t discover such a man; you for a leader. recognize such a man. ''America will not settle for more of the same. America demands a change "What America needs today Is a man with courage to meet problems headon, who courageously faces the issues ... a man who will confront the radicals on our campuses and the looters on our streets and say: the laws will be obeyed. "Because he Is in tune, the people—young and old, rich and poor, black and white—have responded to him. He has never lost an election ... I need not remind this convention that the only president we have elected in the past four decades is our great and beloved Dwight David Eisenhower. And his nomination was not won easily in convention, although his November victory was overwhelming .,. “What America needs today —what America calls out for today—is a man who will make it unmistakably clear that If we -must fight for freedom, we will fight to win .. DIVINE PROVIDENCE "Throughout the history of this great republic, in times of peril, uncertainty and crisis, a Divine Providence has always placed its hand upon the man to lead us out of the storms and upward to the stars. "At this moment of history, the Republican party has the duty to put forward a man—a man to not only match this moment but to master it . "It js my privilege to place in nomination ... the one man whom history has so clearly thrust forward—the one whom All America will recognize as a man whose time has come—the man for 1968 . . . Richard M. Nixon." "We should nominate Nelson Rockefeller because he is the Republican who can win. He is "A man firm in upholding the "Destiny has s# marked this man, a man to match our mountains and our plains, a man steeped in the glorious traditions of the past, a man with a vision of the unlimited potential “Yes, destiny has found the man ... the man who can restore the free world’s faith in this beloved land ... the man who can restore our faith in our country and ourselves ... Ron- *e winpkoiM aid Reagan. NIXON BACKERS WHOOP IT UP-A forest of signs fpr “the man who . . ." crops up on the convention floor during the demonstration following the placing in'nomination of Rich- ★ * ★ For New York Gov. Nelson A, Rockefeller, the man who put forth the man wap Pennsylvania Gov. Raymond P. Shafer. He said: Among the placards, at middle left, a dis- 2 of Losers Muster Smiles "We are a people in need of a new Lincoln—an uncommon man with the Intelligence to face realistically his problems and the courage to rise abovd petty political criticism to create a new national conscience Dick And Pat Nixon Beam Winning Smiles f FOR OUR TIME 1 “Lincoln was the man for his H time. I come before this conven-jjf tion tonight to place in nomina- Romney in Spotlight ... Just for a Moment milling mob of demonstrators I were concluded, ushers began poured onto the floor to the »«««••« i«*« accompaniment of a 50-piece. brass band. Television commentators Romney. Sen. Romney became a favorite-son candidate after withdrawing from the national race following his defeat in the New Hampshire primary last March. X The Michigan delegation bed been pledged to support his favorite-son candidacy through a second ballot, Romney said. On the first ballot, However, four Nixon supporters split off about the floor for nearly 15 state chairman, and Elly Peter- from the governor and gave minutes. son, Michigan Republican state their votes to the former vice ’ X * * 'chairman. president while Michigan’s 44 Romney sat beside his wife,I Before the seconding speeches'other votes went to Romney. Lenore, in a box next to the convention floor. As the cheer- 'S ing crowd surged by, he moved forward to shake, hands and greet his admirers. “Thank you, thank you,” the « governor said. ‘PARTICULARLY GIFTED’ Sen. Robert Griffin, R-Mich., called Romney'“a man who is particularly gifted and suited to : lead our nation at this crucial day night as scores thronged sought out onto the Republican' National Edward W. Brooke, B-Mass., Convention floor to demonstrate end Gov. John H. Chaffee of their loyalty to thp first man/to Rhode Island were among the withdraw from the race. / delegates who spoke briefly with i # ★ ★ y him during the demonstration. The raucous demonstrators * * * carried placards reading “Rom- Speeches seconding the nom-ney’« Great for ’68’’ and “Still Ination were delivered by Our Choice" as they marched Richard Richards, Utah GOP IT’S ALL OVER—Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller manages to summon a simile early today after the Republican National Convention rejected his bid for the party’s presidential nomination. The governor promised to support the .party nominee, Richard M. Nixon. MAKES PITCH fOR UNITY—Gov. Ronald Reagan, who lost to Richard M. Nixon in the battle for the Republican presidential nomination, is shown prior to a posthanoting speech to the convention in which he urged the party to unite behind Nixon in the campaign. Wisconsin Vote Is the Clincher j Tonight's Timetable | MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) —I Gov. Warren P.* Knowles After hearing his name placed MIAMI BEACH own AMC brushed acrylic thermal blanket is cool when used alone, extra warm insulator when used under another blanket, Stays soft after repeated machine washings and dryings. Finishing touch, nylon satin binding. In white, gold, blue, pink , Bfistol blue or green. Yours at savings at Hudson's Blanket Departments, ' 80-23-10 Twin size blanket, 66x90"...... \6.99 00*23-12 Full size blanket, 80x90",.... .. .1.99 80-23-14 Dual 8lzeblaMet,108x90"..... 14.99* *AUow 4 day* for delivery. Majesty comforter by Barclay shows the delicate pastels on one side, reversing to vibrant tones of the same hue on the other. Dark gold/light gold,' verdian green/light green, dark rose/pink, dark blue/light blue. Machine-washable, no-iron cotton • with Dacron® polyester fiberfill. Choose yours at Hudson's Blankets. 80-40-11 Tyin size comforter, 72x90"..... 14.99 80-^0-12, Full size comforter, 80x90"...... 16.99 80-40*1^ King/queen comforter, 108x90' 29.99* *Allow i days for delivery. Antoinette guilt-coverlet keeps your bed beautiful by day, keeps you warm by night. Fine cotton bat;ste cover with a dainty floral print in tones of blue, pink or yellow. Celacloud® oelanese acetate filling is just‘as soft after machine washing. Self ruffled edges add femininity. Buy now and-save at Hudson's Blanket Departments! 80-43-11 Twin size quilt-coverlet......... 10.99 80-43-12 Full size qui^t-coverlet........,.. 12.99 80-43-14 Queen/dual size quilt-coverlet. .18.99* •Allow l days for delivery. ’ ' - . Luxor blanket by Martex uses a new Vellux "process that electrostatically affixes nylon fibers to-a polyurethane base . . . resulting in a blanket that actually, when tested, looked better than new after 50 machine washings. Nylon binding. Ivory, gold, light pink*, deep green, deep blue. Save on it at Hudson's Blankets. , 80-02-10 Twin size blanket, 66x90".. ,.... .9.99 80-02.12 Full blanket 80x90".. .;v... 11,99 80-02-14 Oueen/dual blanket 108x90" 18.99 •Hot available in lOStMf THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 C—41 Come in, write in or call and save on towels, sheets, shower curtains, mattresses, mattress pads, kitchen linens, blankets, bath rugs, pillows, bedspreads, and more. sole 2.99 Tmn flat or fitted NORTHLAND CENTER 8 Mila and Northwestern GRACEFUL EMBROIDERY ON WHITE sale 3.59 Twin fl<\t sfieet Stevens Utica Scallop sheets and cases ..show softly • scalloped embroidery in choice of pink, gold, blue, white or olive On-186 count white cotton percale. 70-22*42 Standard case, 42x38":....... .2/2.49 70-22-72 Twin flat sheet, 72x108",.......3.59 70-22-8T Full flat sheet, 81x108"...........4.59 Pontiac,. Northland, Eastland, Westland, Oakland open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday till 9 P.M. 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Also at savings, 3 case sizes. 70-20-42 Standard case, 42x38". -------.2/1.89 70-20-45 Extra large case, 45x38"__________ .2/1.99 *70-20-54 Bolster case, 42x54".......... .2/2.79 70-20-63 Daybed sheet, 63x108"...........2.89 70-20*72 Twin flat sheet, 72x108". .........2.99 70-20-.81 t Full flat sheet, 81x108"..... .3.99 70-20-720 Long twin flat sheet, 72x120".... .3.99 70-20-810 Long full flat sheet, 81*120"..... .4.49 ,70-20-90 Queen flat sheet, 90x120"........ 4,99 70-20-108 King flat sheet,, 108x120". .*...... .7.99 70-20-100 Twin bottom fitted sheet.,..., .2.99 , 70-20-200 Full bottom fitted sheet..... .. .3.99 70-20-3980 Extra long twin fitted sheet.....3.99 70-20-5480 Extra long full fitted sheet....4.49 70-20-6080 Queen bottom fitted sheet---... .4.99 70-20-7880 King bottom fitted sheet.... ..... .7.99 70-20-4876 Three-quarter fitted sheet........ .3.79 70*20-3976 Twin foam bottom fitted........, .3.29 70-20-J5476 Full foam bottom fitted......'.... .3.79 70-20-101 Twin top fitted sheet............3.79 - 70-20-202 ’ Full tob fitted sheet........4.79 STEVENS' NO-IRON BLOSSOMS sale 5.69 Twin flat sheet Stevens Canterbury Beauti-Blend® 50% cotton, 50% polyester sheets; pink, blue or; yellow print on white. 70-28-42 Standard pillow case.......... . 2/4.09 70-28-424 Bolster case................. .2/4.49 70-28-72 Twin flat sheet... ................. 5.69 70-28-81 Full flat sheet....... .........6.69 70-28-90 jg Queen flat sheet........ ....9.99 70-28-108 King flat sheet................... 11.99 STEVENS DURABLE PRESS BLEND ^ Tmn flat or fitted Stevens Beauti-Blend® no-iron sheets of white 186-count 50% cotton, 50% polyester stay fresh all week. 70-24-42 Standard pillow case....:.........2/2.79 70-24*424 Bolster case. ^. 2/3.29 70-24-72 Twin flat sheet........ *;> Yjv......3.99 70-24-81 Full flat sheet..’.....'........... .4.99 70-24-90 Queen fiat sheet —., .^.......... 7:19 70-24-108 King flat sheet...... ...........9.99 70-24-100 Twin fitted bottom sheet. ..........3.99 70-24-200 Full fitted bottom, sheet----4.99 70-24-6080 Queen fitted bottom sheet....... .7.19 70-24T88Q Xing fitted bottom sheet........ t .9.99 70-24-3980 Long twin fitted bottom sheet...... 6.19/ STEVENS, IN AN ENGLISH MANNER . sole 3.79 twin flat sheet Stevens Coventry'sJacobean-inspiredprint is a fashion find in either blue or gold. 186 count cotton percale. 70-23-42 Standard case,, 42x38"............ 2/3.59 70-23-424 Bolster case, 42x48".......... .2/4.39 70-23-72 i -Twin flat sheet, 72x108"......... .3.79 •70.-23-81 Full flat sheet, 81x108".......... .4.79 70-23-90'’ Queen flat sheet, 90x120"..... .7.49 ■ 70-23-108 Kihg flat sheet, 108x120"..... . .9.79 : Save on Stevens Utiee White Sale values at Hudson's Sheet Departments S O 1ST ’S EASTLAND CENTER ^ 8 Miti and Kelly Roads . WESTLAND CENTER Warren and Wayne Roads OAkLANDMAL-L I-7S and 14 Mile Road DOWNTOWN DETROIT ’ Woodward Ave. and Grand River C—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1968 Mexican-Americans Push Drive for Rights SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (AP) -|with Anglo-Americans. Texas | Because the new militancy In-lone, “why should we be hyphen-In the not-too-distimt past, some Sen. Ralph Yarborough once de-jevitably will affect traditional| ated citizens?" Texas restaurants put up signs scrlbed this as “the crudest political and social patterns, life years BEHIND that read: “No dogs or Mexi- form of discrimination." I in the Southwest may never be i ~T\ cans allowed " I •' Better facilities and teach-lquite the same again. At the' The Mexlcan-American Things have changed. "Now,1* !ers at higher level schools ini moment the scene is one of ap- ment is about where the Negro •ays Angela Castrejon, res-'Merican-American districts, and [parent passivity, but there are[militancy wa*at the tinnj of the taurant cashier in El Paso, more emphasis on academic [signs of ill-concealed hostility Selma, Ala., march in 1964, says Tax., “we are allowed in as rather than vocational training among Anglo-Americans toward Pena. waitresses and dishwashers.” (for Mexican-Americans. “The|Mexican-Americans in areas of| “At that time," he stresses, jAnglos want to make us a race An exaggeration of existing [of garage mechanics and car-conditions, this view reflects a penters," says an El Paso col-measure of the bitterness and lege student, frustration helping nourish a * * * relatively new civil rights mill- To the argument that Mexi-tancy among the nation’s 4.5 can-Americans lack the training million Americans with Spanish [or education to hold good-paying surnames. jobs, Behar (San Antonio) Coun- A by-product of Negro civil1 ty Commissioner Albert A. Pena rights agitation, the new move-' Jr-. a lawyer, says: “A lack of ment still lacks precise form education is a result of discrimi-and central organization. But nation. When the Mexican-what is of social and political American gets better pay, he’ll significance are the first hardihave th® mMns wlt*J whlch to signs of unity at all levels, from ec^Jpatc children." chili picker to doctor, dentist,!. There are recognizably less priest. \ [ MILITANCY CRADLE extremist militancy. There’s also deep concern among the more conservative Mexican-Americans that trefnist agitation may result in didn’t act, the extremists moved unpleasant reactions. “Our alle- in. I think that's the point at glance isn’t hyphenated," said! which we stand now.” Cradle of the new militancy is the great Southwest, lusty 19th century frontier, fountainhead portunism of the more articu- of vast modem fortunes in cattle and oil. But to the impover- lofty motives behind some of the new militants: the anarchic schemes of the emhittered “An- glo-hating” racial zealots, and the political and economic op- iate, better-connected “instant Mexican," a term applied to the 'the black man was telling the American people something, but they weren’t listening. And because they weren't listening and lshed Mexican-Americans in late-blooming civil rightist who East Los Angeles, the slums of fered clear of the movement south El Paso arid west San An-|until federal and private funds tonio and in dusty, blistering hot fe sustantial amounts were farm fields of Arizona, New made available. Demagogues .Mexico, south Texas, Colorado:«* a»*> *»«*• No evidence| *and California’s Imperial Val-!^* tunied up in support of ley, the vast area could qualify * Mttoa»“y circu,ated claim FRIGIDAIRE RECORD-BREAKER SPECIAL! We’re out to beat our past sales record. That’s why we’ve slashed prices so low. Hurry to save! for U.S. foreign aid—if it were a foreign country. Of this five-state area, Texas, one of the richest in the nation, has the most backward Mexican-American population. Fifty-two per cent of the Spanlsb-surnamed population has been classified as “functionally il- that 100,000 people were starving in the San Antonio area. COLORFUL STYLE Grim in the articulation of Its objectives, the new militancy sparkles, nonetheless, with colorful protest style and language all its own, a mixture of border Spanish and accented literate," a term applied by so-lEnglish. In East Los Angeles,! ciologists to those who have not'young “Brown Berets” speak completed four years of school-seriously of “Chicano Power.” ing Twenty per cent of persons “Chicano” is verbal shorthand-over 25 years of age in this for “Mexicano.” Ultraconserva-same ethnic category have not lives 'n th* movement are completed more than one year tagged “Tio Tomas” for Uncle j of schooling. T’'”' The living conditions of the Spanish-surnamed population in the Southwest and other areas •roused protest movements shortly after World War n. Deprived of incentive by a postwar boom that left little to protest about, they withered and lay dormant for more than a decade before surfacing anew in the early 1960s. Affluent businessmen, professionals, college students, migrant laborers, white-and blue-collar workers make up the ranks of the new militants. They come from an ethnic group whose ancestors were irrigating lands in what is now New Mexico before the first pilgrims reached Plymouth Rock. STRIVING FOR UNITY ^ Striving for the kind of unity ~ that will provide the most effective political pressures at state and national level, they are demanding first of all an end to what they feel are discriminatory practices in classrooms and jobs. They regard these as the main causes of backwardness among Americans of Spanish surnames. Some of the specific needs cited: • Bilingual education in the primary grades to help Spanishspeaking children who are being forced to compete in English Old Engine Tom. Some leaders despair of ever achieving national unity because of the diversity of issues confronting the various groups regionally. The availability of substantial federal and private funds has encouraged a real effort at unity, but many feel this may be the source of serious discord among groups with different views on militancy, Mexican-American and Negro militants also have quarreled over their share of the poverty pro-| gram pie. BUDGET-PRICED DRYER DURABLE PRESS CARE Gentle Flowing Heat No-Stoop Lint Screen SPECIAL PRICE WHILE OUR STOCK LASTS TWO-SPEED WASHER JET ACTION Flexible—Adapts to Ypur Needs HURRY! DONT MISS THIS SPECIAL VALUE! Frigidaire Is Our Line CRUMP ELECTRIC 3465 Auburn Road FE 4-3573 - UL 2-3000 Sears Comparison Days Sale HURRY- THURSDAY, FRIDAY and SATURDAY DULY! Men’s Underwear ATNLKTie SHIRTS, T-SHIRTS, SHORTS, BRIEFS Mg. 6 for |.M Hu Pima* cotton athletie »hirt* and briefi, combed cotton T- — thirts, and boxer or yoke style ^ C25 cotton broadcloth ihoiti with LI ™ Or 8§e Each conon oroiacioiu armored crotch- S, M, XL. Mon's Furnishings Depart! Vinyl-Covered Footlocker Rag. 11.49 1397 Heavy-gaug* black vinyl cover; sturdy 2-ply wood box construction, nickla Roomy Dormitory Trunk Rag. 22.49, 1897 For back to cam-put. Resistant to scuffs, stains and moisture. 33x1814-x21” siao holds 7.3 CO. ft. 36x20x21 Vxm Dross Trunk, Reg. 27.49.28.97 40x22x22H* Packing Trunk, Reg. 32.49 .... 27.97 36x20x7" Under-Bed Trunk, Reg. 7 2.99...-10.07 Sears Luggage Dept. Maker’s Closeout! Luster Chino Work Outfit m Pants, 2.97 ea. (sizes 29 to 42) Set, Was 7“ Shirt, 2.17 ea. (sizes 14 to 17) Ti»n| aleeve, double pocket shirts and cuffed panto are 6Vh-oa. weight for extra wear. Double-ply combed cotton in wear surfaces. Sanforized, mercerized, vat-dyed color*. Tan, medium gray, green, charcoal, bine, white (toot all sixes in all colors). Sears Msf'i Work Clothing Department Sears Pontiac Store 154 N. Saginaw FE 5-4171 ATTEN7TON BARS/UN HUNTERS! CARPET CENTER Lures Buffs k to Australia MELBOURNE, Australia (AP) — A Belgian-built Decauville locomotive is attracting railway historians from ail parts of the world to Frankston, 20 -miles south of Melbourne. The locomotive, built in ]I^H| hauled coal for Melbourne’s Metropolitan Gas Works between IKK) and 1940. * ★ * Today, it hauls young and old train fans around three-quarters Of a mile of 2-foot, 6-inch track at a Frankston amusement park. Jade Griffiths, oWner of the 93-acre park, said, the locomotive, except for the valve gear* pins and mountings, is much as it was when built. 1 '■ * i * S, The Light Railways Research Society in Melbourne says the Decauville, is “thd! oldest of its type in the world still operating, and the oldest of any type of steam locomotive operating in Australia.” The locomotive’s only caf-riage carries 70 at a time. About 6,000 have ridden it on Sundays and. public holidays in, the fifst six months since the track opened lajst Uecember. Two more carriages are being hrift THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 C-^S I SLEEPING FINAL CLEARANCE (Last Week) NATURALIZERS Twin-cell Cds Behind-Ihe-Lens Exposure Meter Discontinued styles and colors ' AMERICAN GIRL Values to . 13.00 Discontinued styles and colors WOMEN'S SUMMER CANVAS Values ^|OQ CASUALS 7fSo Z°° Just 79 FAMOUS MAKER Dacron-Cotton Batiste Discontinued styles and colors SELECT GROUP OF CHILDREN'S JUMPING'JACKS Values to 10.00 MEN'S PORTO-PEDS • Heavy duty Dura-Due covering e Double air myttress pocket • Top quality flannel lining Values FLORSHEIM Values to 29.95 Special 14” (NDIAN GUIDE BAGS ('.olors mill Sizrs Limited. All Sale Layaways or Phont e Wotor repellent e Full 100" zippar, finish eizo 33"x75” 29 S. Telegraph | USE OUR CONVENIENT LAYAWAY PUN Special 9 JUNIOR CUB BAGS OUTSTANDING VALUE FOR JUNIOR CAMPERS Special 5" Generous Center Cut, Corn-Fed Ham with Grilled Pineapple, Served with French Fries, Chopped Lettuce Salad, Choice of Dressing, Dinner Roll and Buffer. No More Bad-weather Boredom For Kidsi Wonder Pony Swinaster Can Come Right Indoors 3 Days Only ^ 3 8 $12.88 Value Jj STORE HOURS: 9:30 to 9' new belted wool skirt Belted A-line skirt has kick pleat. Navy, brown, green/gray, 10-18. , Silver Lake Rd. and Dixie Highway 20 S. Telegraph Across from Tel-Huron Cinderella has a BALL! FABRICS FIT TO SEW WITH A GOLDEN NEEDLE 'versatile Orion® shell, ABRICS 'Make your daughter feet like Cinderella LEATHER ; VEST Ribbed turtleneck t white or fashion , colors. Orion® acrylic 36-40. SKIRT . CHARGE or LAY-AWAY TEL-HURON - FE B-IB55 /T Childrens^ Tol Huron Center in Pontiac Open Every Night 'til 9 Special FAMOUS “COMFY” VALLEY FORGE SLEEPING BAGS • 4-lb: dacron 8B filling, taztad to 1 3* • Extra haavy duty zippar • Pair modal, two bogs can zip togathor REFLEX CAMERA 97 syy SPECIAL PURCHASE * Fully Automatic 135mnf, F-3.5 Telephoto Lens FOR: PENTAX |K’ YASHICA & 1 PRAKTICA r|j ’ MAMIYA g Spacial Sola Prica Charge 111 ittiwilm Cmy PONTIAC MALI TEL-HURON CENTER THE CAMERA MART Tel-Huron Shopping Center 55 S. Telegraph FE 4-9567 CLOSE IN ON THIS CUSE-MI! We're selling out our ■ t complete stock of famous Crosby Square Shoos! These are First Quality shoes in a £ great selection of popular styles. Good size selection. And they're all • going to go!. So come, and get yours at these great savings I , Reg. NOW Available n% TEL-HURON Only HAM. $|C90 SMUN’S Cr THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1088 Move Afoot to Lift Secrecy of House Presidential Vote WASHINGTON (A - Secrecy may be lifted from the voting if election of the next president Is thro wo into the House of Representatives as it has on two And the public may not have to watt several months after the November election to know who These departures from past practice are the objectives of a bipartisan move headed by Rep. Charles E. Goodell, R-N.Y., and Morris K. Udall, D-Ariz. They are designed to prevent political bargaining and horsetrading if no candidate wins a clear majority of the 538 Electoral College votes in November. In that event, the Congress convening next January would decide the outcome. MAJORITY VOTE The House would elect the President, with each state having one vote, and a majority, 26 votes, being required. The choice would be limited to the three top candidates. Hie Senate would elect the vice president, with each senator, rather than each state, having a vote. Public opinion polls indicate George C. Wallace of Alabama, candidate of the American Independent Party, might win enough electoral votes to' prevent either the Democratic or Republican nominee from getting a majority. In 1801 and in 1625, the House had to elect the There were no records kept of who voted for idiom when the representatives east their ballots. SECRET VOTES Each of the IS states in 1801 held separate advance huddles, and the members cast secret votes. The vote of the state went to the candidate who got a majority. If the vote was split, it was recorded as "divided." When all the Representatives met in the House chamber, the roll of states was called alphabetically, with tellers from each state putting a ballot in the bal-. lot box. The ballot simply stated the name of the candidate but not the name of the state. Then they were counted. "We are not saying that we would enter into a deal to decide who gets fleeted, leading Southern representative said. "But we would be able to negotiate over the proposed policies of the next president." A top Democrat called the proposal "politicaliy stupid." His reasoning was that even if a Republican received a plurality of the popular vote for President, Democrats likely will retain control of at least 26 state C o n g r e ssional delegations, enough, to elect a Democrat, Democrats now control 26 House delegations, Republicans escribed the plan as 'unveatlatlc and unenforceable." A few Republican in strategic House districts, he said, would dive (he GOP a fafjority of the state delegations even -if a Democratic presidential candidate got • plurality Of the popular vote. The GOP could have a state delegation majority without controlling the House Itself. A potent' argument for the plurality proposal is that Butcher Knife Routs Robber ERIE, Pa. (AP) — "I thought to myself: 'Oh, God, help me.’ Then I saw the butcher knife," said Mrs. Robert Airgood, 58. Air good grabbed the knife and thrust it toward the armed youth who had entered her grocery store Wednesday. He dashed out the front door with Mrs. Airgood, screaming and waving the butcher knife, following. After about a one block chase, te youth disappeared in a 18 and three are equally divided. A leading Republican candidate receiving a plurality of the popular vote would know the day after the election that he would become president in January by vote of the House. He wouldn't have to'wait until the new Congress convened to start picking his cabinet and other top executive appointees. Aproposed constitutional amendment to abolish the Electoral College is gaining strong support in Congress. It calls for election of a presidential candidate who receives a plurality of the popular vote. If no candidate received more than 40 per cent t>f the total vote, there would be a runoffi election between the t leaders. But it would be impossible for such an amendment to be ratified before the 1968 election. Any Bedroom, Quality-Built with Mar-Rulstoat JypATHUTM Plajdk tops DOUBLE DRESSER, MIRROR AMD FULL SIZE BED Chest with Any, Group, only $39 « 6-drawer double dresser, tilting ir end full site beokcese bed. 3-Piece Group... *99 COLONIAL IN MAPLE FINISH DANISH STYLE IN WALNUT FINISH Graceful off • the»floot design' contrasting wolnut groin effect « . t»s of drawers, flowing Into sculptured pulls. Protective plostic lops. Includes double dresser, tilting miner, panel bed. 3-Pjece Group... *99 LUXURY FEATURES RARELY FOUND SO LOW PRICED! e Plostic tops protect from damage e Interlocking frame construction • All stirrers hove tilting feature • Drawer fronts dovetailed toeidey • Woods era seasoned and selected • Drawers glide on centor-guldes Ageless beauty and charm for your home! Authentic-Colonial detailing in selected woods with plostic tops; honeybee maple finish. Includes spacious double dresser, tilting mirror and.panel bed. 3-Piece Group... $99 THE SAVINGS ARE TREMENDOUS ... THE SELECTIONS GREAT. HURRY, 37 S. Glenwood ONLY $5.00 A MONTH! OPEN'DAILY f:M A.»f. »• **• P;M- „ TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY UNTIL S P.M. SEE FOR YOURSELF HOW MUCH YOU’LL SAVE ON EVERYTHING KAY FURNITURE Qlmwood Plaza—Naxt to KMART It took 36 ballota to elect Thomai Jefferson over Aaron Burr in 1801. Tha final outcome was 10 votes for Jefferson, 4 for Burr and 2 blank or divided. Official records show that the voting lasted "for several days” with some recesses. In 1825 only one ballot was required to elect John Quincy Adams, who got 13 state votes to 7 for Andrew Jackson and 4 for William H. Crawford of Georgia. Again, the voting was secret. GROUND RULES The Constitution provides that the House by resolution spell out the ground rules for the voting. Each state gets one vote on adoption of the rules. The 1801 and 1825 rules banned the public from the actual balloting. The Goodell-Udall plan calls for different rules if the House has Jo elect the next President. When the name of a state is called, the individual members from that state would vote and there would be no secret about „lt. The public would know only how each state voted but ho# each member cast his ballot. One of the arguments against that procedure is that the secrecy of the ballot should be maintained. Proponents counter with the argument that a representative actually is casting the vote of his constituency and the constituents should not be kept in the dark about how he cast it. The open-voting proposal appears to have a better chance of being approved than does another Goodell-Udall plan. ADVANCE PLEDGES It calls for advance pledges from all candidates for election to the 1988 House that if no candidate wins a majority of tha electoral votes, the pledged representative would vote for the ope who got a plurality of the popular vote nationally. The voting id the Rouse still would be by states. Some opponents of the plan, including Wallace, claim it would be illegal in that it would circumvent the Constitution. Hie advance pledges to support the plurality candidate Would pot be binding. Some Sbutbern Democrats supporting Wallace claim tha plan would deprive them of DIMWIT inability in the House PARK FREE in Lot at Rear of Store Here’s Why WKG Is Headquarters For FRIGIDAIRE’ Products in Pontiac... • NO MONEY DOWN • 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH • 3 YEARS TO PAY • FREE DELIVERY • FACTORY TRAINED SERVICEMEN FRIGIDAIRE 2-SPEED Automatic Washer SAVE $11 ON REG. $199 -$ • 2 speeds — regular and delicate • Deep action agitator • 2 Jet Away rinses • Durable Press Care • C . 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PERSON-TO-PERSON CREDIT • No Down Payment • 90 Days Some at Cask • Up to 38 Mohtks to Pay 108 N. Saginaw St.'FE 3-7114 Our 44th Year in Downtown Pontiac STORE HOURS: E3tSZ2Sm 1 :'X '&M \ K ml :\v THE PONTIAC PRESS, THLfRSDAfr, AUGUST 8, 1968 C—T Our Rcfr L' WOMEN'S c MISSIS' Thrifty ' o^playtac BA8YNURSER £> i MVE AT KMESBE 3 Day*OH^ Our Reg. 3|c. SOFT RUG YARN 23c 70-yd. hank* of Kentucky *oft-*punru8 yarn in f«no decorator color* I Our Reg. 4.66 POLE LAMP 394 Thurs., Fri., Sat Thraa-Light Pol* Mmip For Standard Ceiling Our Reg, WIBSER Hem- kit Wffl I,® 5«8 I(m Sat RECEIVES LOCAL POLICE CALLS! Aif Get all your local favorite* plus HPI the big network *how C|| Enjoy full *111011 fidelity" music, riH *how tunes and variety entertainment INTHMATHMIAL 0*t- **e-i,in9 longuogo SHORTWAVE », Paris, London, Tokyo. REALTONE RADIO HAS AM/FM INTERNATIONAL SHORTWAVE! 1993 Our Reg. 24.88 Reg. 1.89 30 Daytime PAMPERS Thurs., Fri., Sat. 1.38 1 lb. Can Famous DANISH BACON 3 Days Only - Reg. 4 Prs. 92c "A brute for wearl— Soft, absorbent white cotton socks with thick, cushjony sole far extra comfort all day long. Snug-fitting, elasticized top. Sin* lOVa • 12. Charge iti * > ALUMINUM TRASH CAN CARRIER Thurs,, Fri,,. Sat. Pkg. of 12 CAN LINERS Cfkc DOWNTOWN TEL-HONON DRAYTON „ ROCHESTER TT PONTIAC CENTER PLAINS PLAZA mml 20 GAL GALVANIZED TRASH CNN BLOOMFIELD MIRACLE MU£ Shop without cash- "CHARGE tT" AT KRESGE'S THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 Nlvy to Retain Indicted firm suppner, despite the firm’l in* dictmcnt on charges of defrauding the government on earlier C-WASHINGTON (AP)- The SRavy says it won’t revise a con* f' W’’* Ifr I’ : AP WlraplMM •f; M* GOES HOME Film actress Ei I «#betb> Taylor leaves the Fitxroy Nufield Nursing Home ta-London yesterday after recovering froth gn. operation. With her are her husband, actor Rich* ard Burton, an^his daughter, Kate, 10. ' ■ U S. to Free Large Number of North Viets WASHINGTON (UPI) - The United States decided to release a large number of North Viet namese prisoners to encourage Hanoi to free more of the hundreds of U.S. military personnel it is detaining. State Department officials said today arrangements are being worked out with the North Vietnamese for the return in .the very near future of the 14 North Vietnamese naval personnel designed for release by U.S. negotiators in Paris yesterday. ★ * * ■ This group, which fell into U.S. Navy hands July 1, I960, would be the largest group toe United States has freed at one time since the Vietnam war began. , From- time to time. South Vietnam in coordination with the United States has released • somewhat larger groups of N o r t h Vietnamese prisoners captured during land engagements. The North Vietnamese sailors were taken by Ur.S. authorities' in a naval engagement between, three North Vietnamese PT boats and U.S. ships in international waters off toe Gtdf of Tonkiii. SMALL NUMBERS North Vietnam has released small numbers of U.S. prisoners in gestures much appreciated by U.S. officials. But on the whole Hanoi has. been uncooperative in regularizing prisoner exchanges by refusing to deal with toe usual Red Gross machinery and by refusing to supply a list of the Americans in its hands. * ★ t U.S. officials report there are more than 650 American military personnel missing or capture!! to North Vietnam. On Feb. 16, the North Vietnamese released three U.S. fliers. On March 29, the United Statgs reciprocated by releasing three North Vietnamese sailors who were taken in the Jute 1, 1966, naval engagement. Two others of toe original 19 sailors taken in the engagement were returned because of illness and wounds. The indictment returned by a federal grand jury Wednesday accused the firm and four Individuals of feeding more than S3 million through sham subcontractors into Swiss bank accounts. * * * The indictment also charged the defendants with receiving over a half million dollars in kickbacks from another firm. ♦ ★ ★ The defendants named in the indictment were Chromcraft Corp.; Alsco be. of St. Louis; Andrew L. Stone, Alsco’s main stockholder and chief executive § Francis N. Rosenbaum, difwctor and special counsel; Evelyn R. Price, Stone's executive secretary, hind Robert B. Bregman, president of Bregman Electronics Inc. of New York City.1'. 166 MERGER Chromcraft Corp. merged with Alsco in 1966. Since 1962, Chromcraft and Alsco have been the Navy’s sole supplier of 2.75-inch rocket launchers. The Navy told toe House Appropriations Committee in March that the launchers are patented by Chromcraft and Alsco. ,* ★ “The time which would be required to develop a similar Navy-owned item and to get a new manufacturer into produc- tion l« completely prohibitive,” said the Navy. •The Associated Press report* ed exclusively that the Justice Department investigation • of Alsco afreidy was under Way when toe Navy awarded tod1 contract for $13.9 million July 23. •' ■. ■ V.te The Indictment said Chrom-craft fed $9,607,284.23 to Swiss bank accounts through Scientific Electronics Ltd. and Bref-man Electronics be. from 1963 through 1966. The indictment said the money was supposedly for equipment, but none was ever furnished. The indictment said kickbacks of $663,481.05 were furnished by Western Molded Fibre Products Inc. of Gardena, Calif., which supplied parte to Chromcraft. NEW MOMENTUM The exchange, of prisoners gained new momentum last Friday when North Vietnam released three more American fliers, who are now back in toe United States. Yesterday’s gesture was ap-p a r e n 11 y not made to reciprocate for those three Americans but rather to pave toe way for further releases by Hanoi. 'Racism Leaves No Man Safe' DETROIT (AP)-.Hatred on toe basis of race creates a “society of anonymity—a society in which no man is safe from any other man who differs from him in color,” the outgo-tog president of Alpha Phi Alpha-fraternity told the group Wednesday Alpha Phi Alphfr is a college fraternity founded by seven Negro students at Cornell University in 1906. It is predominantly Negro, but has several white members, a "spokesman said. Next to NewYork and California, we’ll have the largest delegation at either of the conventions. More than 150 faces in that crowd will be ours. Does that sound like a lot of people on one story for just one newspaper? It is> But there’s a good reason for it. We’re a member of The Associated convention in Chicago. Every minute, our AP staff of seasoned political news editors and reporters will be on the scene. Special convention news desks will be set pictures through AP’s vast transcontinental Wire-photo network. It takes a staff of more than 150 to do a job like this, It takes a newspaper to cover such Dr. Lionel H. Newsom of Atlanta, Ga., told the group's 62nd anniversary convention that despite “our nation’s noble pronouncements of equality and justice for all, Negro Americans stiU constitute, relatively speaking, the largest proportion of toe despised, the rejected, toe poor, the pt* erate, the. economically handicapped, toe occupationally unemployed and ' toe politically' disenfranchised.” Newsome said toe fraternity is not opposed to black power ' si long as it remains militant and aggressive, but nonviolent. • ^ * a * Mi,' Press. That means we’ll have men and women to cover every single detail of the Republican convention in Miami Beach and the Democratic up to work around the clock, ready to transmit convention happenings the moment they take place. Experienced photo editors, photographers and darkroom technicians will operate from strategic photo workrooms, ready to send headline an array of news. No wonder we’ll be the newspaper to give you the complete, accurate and up-to-the-minute convention story. THE PONTIAC PRESS * Ernest N. Mortal of New Or-1 leas, a member of toe Louisi-and Legislature, was elected new president to succeed Newsom, . , V' East German courts jailed 327 persona in ,1967 for political rea- v For Home Delivery 332-8181 - .V THE PONTIAC PRESS. THUKSDAY.' AUGUST g. H>«» FAMILY DEPARTMENT STORES buy out *0*01ur BUY a second : *0B ONLY« Limited Time! • PANTS! • SCHOOL SUPPLIESI • SCHOOL BAGS! • LUNCH KITS! • WATCHES! • RADIOS! • CLOCKS! • DESK LAMPS! • BLANKETS! • RUGS! • JACKETS! • COATS! • RAINCOATS! • HATS! • HANDBAGS! • SHOES! • DRESSES! • BLOUSES! • SHIRTS! • SWEATERS! • SKIRTS! • SLACKS! • BOOTS! • SOCKS! CORNER OF DIXIE HGWY. AT TELEGRAPH RP -PONTIAC 8 GREAT STOftES IN DETROIT CHARGE] MICHIGAN ITI /, BANKARD L II! / CREDIT CAR I SUNDAYS... NOON TILL 6 P.M SHOP DAILY 9:30 A.M. TO 10 P.M MONEY REFUNDED IF YOU’RE NOT SATISFIED FREE PARKING i ■:rin»vfil MjuMQjj jup[ j 1 BJTTiitB fij um/tes L % 60* $188.00 $170.00 $129.99 Medium and Extra Firm Stylet. Twin, Thitoe-Quorter, Full Sira. Rug. 39.95. NOWONLY Open Sunday 10-6P.M. - Oaiiy 8-8P.M. SPECIAL BEDDING BUYS OCCASIONAL TABLES C—lo THE POXTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8. 1968 Latin Chief Looks LA PAZ, Bolivia UP) — Presl-Ithe barren Altlplano, a rugged an# Dana Darpinninu hau unanl liirfK nlninu aPaa ai nlnnae 11 AM dent Rene Barrientos has spent his political career cultivating support among Bolivia’s three million Indian and Mestizo peasant^ Last week he Issued a call for them to be prepared to fight civil war on his behalf. ... * _ . ★ >. The call was Barrientos' trump card as political friends seemed increasingly to isolate him while his old ally. Gen. Alfredo Ovando, took a watchful hands-off attitude toward Barrientos' worst crisis in office. “Be ready to take to arms,' Barrientos told the peasants. The peasant must take power." NO DOUBT Barrientos left no boubt that he considers his gevenment the manifestation of ‘ ‘ Pe asan' power" and their welfare identical with his political survival. Almost every weekend, Barrientos travels to Bolivia hinterlands, striving to create reputation for paternal benevolence. Glowing tales of his dar-lence. Glowing tales of his daring physical courage and masculinity add to the reputation. S • ★ -irv/ ★ Whether it is Barrientos the man or the power he holds that might impress peasants is open question. Bolivians remember that‘exiled Presiden Victory Paz Estenssoro called for peasant help three days before Ovando and Barrientos overthrew him in a 1964 coup ’etat It is doubtful how many peasants have even heard of Barrientos in the more remote Bolivian backiands. The weaterh-beaten Aymara Indians live in scattered settlements of high plains arjw at places 1S,( feet above #sea lewd. The Queciiua Indiana work i eastern valleys far frpm this Andrean capital. FILTER BACK Some reports have filtered back to La Fa* that more sophisticated settlements in the nation's central zone responded to Barrientos’ call for aid. One peasant leader before 600 armed followers at the farming village of Quillacollo and declared they were ready to "repel any attempt it subversion." ' ik * it Barrientos needed all toe help he could get- His administration first was rocked early in July when Cuba published toe diary of Ernesto Che Guevara, the Argentine Marxist who was slain leading guerrillas in eastern Bolivia. MAKgST ADMIRER The dairy was supposed to be safe under lode and key. Then Barrientos' close friend, farmer government minister Antonio Arguedas, Bed to Chile and announced he leaked the didry to Cuba because be was a Marxist admirer of Guevara and Fidel Castro. ‘Suppose President Johnson’s best friend in his cabinet passed on some vital secrets to the Chinese Communists because he admired Mao,” said one Bolivian. “That's how we felt." ■* ,♦.■■■. ir Next, Vice President Luis Adolfo Silea and Barrientos started quarrelling regarding Barrientos’ apparent refusal to Area Births The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as re corded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father); LSrrv D. Fulbrlaht, 104 Auau.ta Paul A. Loder, mi Picturing Roger A. VenKleek, 2SS3 Newberry Chariot J. Ahdtroon. 14. Lorberte Joseph L. Brower, Union Lake William J, Ellison, 1001 Kaltering Dennis R. Forslund, 7332 Hatchery William A. Havel, 1203 Jeffwood . *-Barry B. Meyo, Drayton Plains Ronald L. Moors, * W. Longfellow Joseph R. tores*, Ortonvllt* Jaime ChenhalU, 144 Summit Dennis J. Joyce, 140 Carriage Circle Terry Ward, Wnom Michael O. Ktslirlfen, 444 Marlon Jots* Balderas, Rochasfer William R. Alrd, 004 Latimer Bobble C. Gray, 204 Raobum Calvin D. Henry, 41 t.Knferty William f. Hurst, Ortyfen Plaint Antonie Mandoia, 14» W. Btvtrly William P. Shaver, Orchard Lake Kenneth C. Creel, UTltguf, . Lloyd D. UktlbW, Hid Ciutt Hill Robert A, GrltumdriB Herrlt William J. MtnmS Wallad Lake John- W. Pickering J7., Lake Orion Frederick A. Warren, ITtu KWfe Felix Andrekovlch. Birmingham Harvey A. Hantan, lltlca Bonny L. Millar, Walled Lake Satlnando G. Naiareno, 2437 s. Blv< Frank it Wells, Oxford Orfeitd G. Weet, 735 Kinney ,» „ LeRoy G. W, Fielding, 3430 Chalice Lawrence A. Hull, 3W Cameron Sam E. Brazelton, Clerkston Gordon G. Peterson, Oxford John P. Wecklo, 143 S, Edith . . James W. Vaughn, Walled Lake ' William J, Franiel, Lake Orion Thome* M. Pair, Welled Lako Fred L. Bean, Walled Lake Steven J. Kyrlacou, Walled Lake MRpwlp, Hoard, HM Lakewlnd Richard A*.^errnallmlcifcwonvlll Jack McSmtid/'jOM Wllllami Richard J, King, >13 S. Sanford jam#* E. Kirk, 2114 Oldsmobll* Robert I. Moehlman, Laka Ori Lanny B. Dbt, 41 S. Jessie 4, Mil ColrOln on, Clarkston James a, Siam, is osceoi* Jimmie P. Fleldi, 111 N. Squirrel Mim KJloirld, 40 Seminole Warren E. Paul, Cwrkstorl panny. A, Parry, n Crawford Billy O. Baker, Union Lako Jmuiy J. Franklin, 42 Victory Frederick M. Merslno, 147.Euclid Curtis Roborti, 205 RiebiJ/n Robert C. Line, Utica FILL YOUR HOMK WITH BEAUTIFUL NEW FURNITURE ............NOW AT VERY SPECIAL PRICES DURING OUR GREAT. DININGROOM SUITES 10 Identified as War Dead WASHINGTON (AP) The Defense Department has identified 47 U. S. servicemen, as killed In action in the Vietnam war. The casualty list included 10 from toe Midwest: ARMY MINNESOTA - Pfc. Donald L. Carlton, UnnMpons. ILLINOIS -- Sgt. Lorry G- Bandy, Kin •Id. OHIO — Spec. 4 Cheater A. Wright, WISCONSIN — Spec. 4 John W. Jacobin Sr-, Marinette. MARINE CORPS MICHIGAN — Pfc. George L. Carr, drjan. OHIO — Sgt. William G. Cua, Akron/ _anco CpI. David I. Morton, Codorvllltt Lane. CpI. John J. McGlew, Wlllowlck. Changed from missing to dead —hostile: ARMY MICHIGAN — 2nd Lt. John C. GrotsoL Dtwoglac. -- i • MARINR CORPS MINNESOTA—Pfc. Russell D. Splerow-iki, souk Rapid*. ■ in action: ARMY WO James W. Arvldson, Richard L Bomholmer, S” | Pution. AIR FORCE Capt. Thomas J. Bayer Returned to military control: AIR FORCE ' M»|. Prod N. Thompson, Mo|. James \ Low, Capt. Joe V. Carpenter Died not as a result of hostile action: ARMY Illinois — sgt. j« •Boon, Oak Lawn. Missing not as a result of hostile action:' Sr£^.T,“:* $396.00 Italian Provincial Tabla-* Pile Mil* Choke, China and Suffer... 0**IU*WU MedHananoan Table-* eeflfl MM Chain, China end IvHot... *»**••» $489.00 iTilapla dS* Raund TaW*. ^TmwHhuaf,4Sid. $109.95 $129.95 3Rlgy.^ $149.95 $179.95 $159.95 gyg $199.95 $299.95 $299195 $99.95 $129.95 ma ilfederlaViayl. ' .$®9*®0' $119.99 $149.90 OFEN Mon., Thurt., Fri. Tue*., Wed. and Sat. •miPM. 1 FINE CHAIR BARGAINS 1 Mr. and Mrs. WiltM MS Chain Madam Swivri $59.95 Modsm $49.95 ChokT!7.T.".......J, $99.95 1 MISCELLANEOUS PIECES AAopIt Rocker $25.00 School ntottor Dash Maria.. Odd Walnut PfesNC'Tap 30 Aleminu ROCKERS, RECLINE RS .. $58.00 .$90.00 ..$29.95 .. $5.95 .. $9.95 ..$49.95 L $1-99 .. $4.99 ..$9.95 .911.95 Quality A Service For 22 Yean in Detroit 2135 Dixie £ Telegraph Phone 334-4934 TERRIFIC LIVING ROOM VALUES] "' Comfertabl* Contemporary Sofa . *toow 90” California Modem Sofa with Walnut Frame................... *188" 3-Pc. S»t Sofa Mr. and Mrs. Chairs ............. *199" 90” Madam Sofa with Nylon fabric and Foam Rubber. *129" 2-Pe. French Provincial Rubber Cushions - - *199" (SPECIAL deluxe BEDROOM BUYS! Modsm Double Dresser, Mirror, Chest and Bsd with Plastic Top* ... *129" Pine Double Dresser, Mirror, Chest, arid Bod .. • *229" Mediterranean Triple Dresser, Mirror, Choet, Bed *239" Italiqn Provincial Double Dresser,/ 1 Miner, Chest and Bed .......... *299°°; While Provincial Dresser, Minor, Chest, Bed *199" MODERN DINETTE SETS call Congress Into iesalon Aug. 6 and his jailing of opposition legislators. A mostly civilian cabinet Assigned when Sites withdrew toe support Of his Social Democrats from a four-party government coalition baching toe govefo meat. ALLMILITARY CABINET Barrientos then named ap all-military cabinet. Bolivians waited for Ovando' taction. All-military cabinets summonod memories of army coups and dictatorships. 1* * *'. * Ovando, the armed forces’ chief of staff, said Barrientos’ soldier friends in the new cabinet were carving as individuals only and the army would continue to stay out of politics unless “things fell apart” in the government. Most observers hero believe Ovando wants to be president. They interpreted his statement as meaning he will wait until the 1970 presidential elections when he can seek office constitutionally. ★ * * But Ovando also appeared to be watching Barrientos closely to see how he resolves toe crisis. 1 If Yom Sroppod Out of I HIGH SCHOOL j ■ nadefeiram**.andfcr»«KhaaUd»-tae»haaiiia*i*.lkd* s ! HIGH SCHOOL At HOME IN SPARE TIME ■ S AMERICAN SCHOOL, Box 63, Align Fork, Michigan 46101 | Send mu your frog Nigh towl 6«eMet W** 5 ■ cay.............................»p............Jahaesj......*... 5 SAVING FESTIVAL TERRIFIC SAVINGS ON ALL AWNINGS AWNINGS ina S5< 66400 W. 8 Mila Koad IK Mite West •( Tiktrapk Call FC 5-9452 lost Side I PsatiK I Doamrlvsr 4 Blrnsh HI 1-toll |7I 5-04521 AV 5-35951 Rw,i o*k U 7-2700 | #014000\i We Design ■ We Manufacture • We Install - We Guarantee Some cars are asking you to buy them not because they’re great but because they’re on sale. See your Chevrolet dealer. He isn't asking, he’s giving big year-end savings on aH his great cars. And with big Chevrolets and Chevelles you get special savings on automatic transmissions, popular V8's, whitewalls, and more. You've waited this long, don’t settle for less. THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8,1968 0-11 < No other cor con come near that statement.) forget it. And that’s why Chevrolet is alto the least expensive full-size car. (No other dealer can make that statement, either.) You 9«t tha biggast year-end sbvlngs just where you*d expect to. Or, that its Body by Fisher Incorporates Hide-A-Way windshield wipers. Or, that its standard V8 is 307 cu. in. strong. Or, that under each fender is another fender that fights rust Or, that it runs so silently you’ll wonder where the world Went Putting you first keeps us first. We never S. S. KRESGE COMPANY Slump in French Tourism Tied to Desertion by Americans * PARIS (AP)—When a tourist Esteps up to'a French hotel's re-r cepUon desk these days, the -greeting is . “Only monsieur, “ what kind of a room would you I like?" * Last year, or moot years be-, * tore that during the summer season, the reply would probably have been a grumpy "We're all filled up." f a . a The change in tbt answer may be good for the tourists, built1! bad for the French tourist Industry, which is rick. kresges Low-cut Reds” Let You Enjoy Bore-leg Comfort Sheer nylon knit or fine cotton; with exclusive heel prosector and Snug-fitting elastic edge. 9-11. Nylon 3*42 At Forties, Drayton Plains nnd Rnchsttsr Stores The staSdent - worker strikes, street fighting and general shutdown in May and June killed the summer seam in Pgris. Hotel keepers add restaurant owners have written it (iff as an almost complete toss. The tourist centers In the Provinces are hoping to salvage something from August, but over-all 1968 ia an extremely bad year. ONE REFRAIN . tel- keepers, restaurant owners, n»ghfa>luh operators and souvenior shop salesmen have one refrain: "The Americana have deaerted us." .A maitre d’hotel at the Lido ntghtnluh said: “Our businesses down at least 25 per cent, it's the Americans who are missing. We used to turn down reservations for weekends; now we can care of all requests." . * it ■ .it business in the was down 50-40 cent in July, and no one expects to get back to normal full i August. Villas us-by Americans are aurants complain is off up to 30 per cent because of the shortage of American clientele. On Die French Riviera, Paul Augier, president of the regional tourism committee, said: For the month of August, the hotels on the Riviera .will, be almost full, but no one will be turned away. Occupancy will be at least 10 per cent below last ySgr. MORE NUMEROUS ‘Tito American cancellations have been less numerous than was feared-*After the address of President Johnson in April, we thought there might be 40-50 per cent cancellations. In reality, the organised groups are down 30-35 per cent, but the individual 'OveMdl; 0>s number of Americans

THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1068 Daughter I It's 2-Way Race Now AAONTCOAAERV By JOY STILLEY NEW YORK (AP)—When youngest goes off hi pursuit of a higher education this fall, we won’t be losing a daughter — we’ll be gaining one-third of a chair. chair, that It la already occupied by an alert opponent. Thus, once a member of our family trio has established squatters' rights, he will endure the pangs of hunger or the boredom of an unwanted No .. y-, ■'V>1 ■, Because our living room Is ‘el*vlsi°" Program rather than • . rialr iMHintf sin onrl Irwiner (Wo heed to pamper Wards new Fall dresses with designer touches crammed with such objects as-wall-to-wall bookcases, electric organs and other assorted furniture not made for sitting purposes, there Is space for only one easy chair in the entire room. The coulh, It is true, provides ■eating for three persons, but is cold, hard and forbidding compared to the deep luxury of that overstuffed chair with broad armrests, which is the real seat of family Inactivity. Since this refuge of comfort also boasts the best reading light in the house, its popularity cannot be overstated. In our home the game of “musical chairs” is constantly in progress. Should the sittee arise for brief moment to dash to the kitchen for a snack, no matter how speedy the sprint, he or she will find, on returning to the Used-Car Bugs: Beware of'Em Guidelines Are Given to Judge a Good Buy By United Press International Less than half of the cars sold in the United States each year are new. The used car market, in terms of volume, is even bigger than the new car market. During the past few years, the total car sales market has run around 20 ■ million, of which between 8 and 0 million are new cars. Hie rest are used. ★ ★ * , Most people buying a new car have an old bus to turn, id, and the dealer takes it in trade to resell on the used car market. It has been estimated that « dealer handles two and one half cars before he “washes out” new car sale. Some of the cars he takes in trade, he resells on his own lot. Others are wholesaled to a used car dealer, and the real dogs are sold for junk. All this means that there are more used-car buyers in this country than there are new-car buyers. Beyond a limited warranty, sometimes lasting only 80 days, the used-car buyer has little guarantee that he’s getting his money’s worth. HINTS OFFERED There are a few guidlines that can tell a prospective used car purchaser whether the gar he’s considering is a good buy. First, don’t worry about a few knlcks in the paint. In fact, the car to worry about is the flashy one that looks as if it came from the showroom. It may be a new paint job covering evidence of a bad accident. A rough-running engine doesn’t necessarily mean a bad engine. It may only need a minor tune-up. And poor brake linings can "CHARGE IT” AT WARDS Any dress that never needs ironing is Mother's best buy, but these are real party confections I Even with fanciful pleats, tucks, ribbons, bows and sashes, they machine-wash and Kimble dry wrinkle-free. Polyester-cottons and cottons in A-lines, empires and natural waist styles. Lively prints and solids. Sizes 3 to 6X. But examine the car carefully around headlamps, on the panels beneath the bumpers and under the doors. If they show blister marks on the (feint, it may be that the car is rusting out. On a*car with an automatic transmission, let it run for about- 15 minutes, then check the transmission oil stick. If the oil smells like burned rags, the transmission is going bad — big money. GET A CHECKUP Of course the best method of all is to take the car to an expert mechanic or invest $10 or $15 for a complete diagnostic center checkup, if the owner or dealer is willing to let you. If be isn’t, that’s the best “beware” of all. sKofi4-— Pontiac, Mall USE WARDS CONVENIENT CHARG-ALL CREDIT PLAN—JUST "CHARGE IT!.’ (JjoaJU. :65: Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9 00 P.M. , SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M, SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. ♦ 682-1910/ f THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 / ,,u t)—8 WHEN YOU INVEST IN AN EXCLUSIVE WINCREST NATURAL MINK, YOU GET THE FINEST FASHION RETURN FOR YOUR MONEY MINDING THe MUSCOVITES—A police- aspects of his job. Moscow policemen are man guides traffic in the downtown area noted for their technique of denying the ob-or Moscow as one of the many and varied vious and refusing to answer questions. Bureaucrats of the Beats :j Many Moscow Police (EDITOR’S NOTE - like his counterpart nearly everywhere else in the world, the Moscow cop on the beat has to be on the watch at all times jor the obstreperous pedestrian trying to' pull a fast one. Here is a picture of the Russian cop.) By ANTHONY C. COLUNGS MOSCOW (AP) - It was like a scene from the Keystone Kops. A Moscow policeman, stern and dignified, was Standing in the middle of Kutuzovsky Boulevard, faced with an impossible task. * * ★ He was supposed to keep Muscovites from crossing the street at a place where they had always crossed the street but where now someone in city hall decided there shouldn’t be crosswalk any more.' V . *i ★ Tie first woman came scurrying across. The policemen blgfc his whistle. She kept com-IngrHe blew his whistle louder. He%ld her to go back. ALREADY HALFWAY “But I’m already halfway across,” she said. * Never mind," he said, back.” A man started crossing from the. other side, behind the cop’s the American was treated courteously by a captain. Loqjiing informal with his uniform jacket unbuttoned, the Pilot Parachutes to Safety Before Fighter Crashes CLOVIS N.M. (AP) - A pilot from -Cannon Air Force Base parachuted safely Wednesday from his F100D jet fighter plane before it crashed on a training mission in south-central b|[exico. * * ★. _ A Cannon AFB spokesman said 1st Lt. George G. Guthrie, 25, of Mountain Lakes, N.J., bailed out of the aircraft over a gunnery-bombing range near Holloman AFB. ★ # ★ Guthrie was picked up by a helicopter. An Air Force board of review was investigating the crash. This rare bit of Russian rebelliousness, contrasting with the usually sullen, obedient attitude, is one of the many things Moscow policemen are on the lookout for. Official figures on the size of the force, are not disclosed, but foreigners visiting here say Moscow is one of the most heavily policed cities in the world. A five-minute drive down a main street is likely to turn up many as 15 policemen stationed along the route. They’re even seen often in toe countryside, miles outside the city. ★ i ★ The cops stand in gray sentry boxes outside embassies and the tew apartment buildings assigned to foreigners, ostensibly protect .the foreigners. Diplomats say the cops are - really there to keep curious Russians from making contact with foreigners, especially those from the West. The policemen ..also dire ct traffic, control crowds at mass gatherings, haul in drunks and guard trains- and river boats. TRIM AND TOUGH The typical Moscow cop, smartly dressed in a blue uniform with bright red trim, looks and acts tough. Invariably he clenches between his teeth the hollow-tube end of a papirosa, the Russian cigarette. In winter his formidable appearance is enhanced by black for hat, shin-length greatcoat and ’boots. back. The cop turned and began captain remained’ cooperative shouting at the man, and the woman, seeing the cop wasta’t looking, defiantly dashed across the street. This went on for hours, the cop getting furious, Soviet'citizens craftily waiting for the moment his back was turned. A “visit to a precinct station recently gave one American a close-up look at Moscow police, in action. Reporting his car was stolen' two Russian women came hi, In a timid voice, one Of them asked about her relative who i been arrested. ‘No one has been arrested,” toe policeman said curily. 0 ★ ■ * ‘But he has been, I know,' she replied. 'Be quiet. You listen and II do the talking.” The captain shouted and slammed things on the desk. “No one has been arrested.” AN ADMISSION After he finished Ms tirade, the woman, close to tears, said she was sure someone had been arrested. Finally the captain asked for the man's name again, after the woman had already given it several times. He looked in the registry book, snapped it shut, and said: “He’s here.”1' ] When the woman asked why he was arrested, the policeman said: “No personal Information can be given out. * ★ Hie woman pleaded, but he repeated in a menacing way: “Didn’t you hear? I said no personal information can be given out.” The two women looked intimidated, and fell silent. DENYING OBVIOUS This same police, technique-denying the obvious and refusing to answer questions—was demonstrated last winter when a six-story apartment building collapsed after an explosion. When a Western newsman wanted to get closer, a cop standing in plain view of the rubble refused and said: “No building has collapsed. You must be mistaken.”* For all their effectiveness in keeping-file citizenry in line, Soviet “military” policemen are not directly Involved in the state’s policy of suppressing political dissent. That task is bandied by the secret police, known by its Russian initials the KGB, special on BEDSPREADS FIRST QUALITY QUILTED BEAUTIES ROUNDED CORNERS WELTED EDGES PRINTS SOLIDS in e good rang* of colors and fabrics PLEASE ’SHOP EARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS TWIH or FULL tag, *21“ Value;, $g«« Reg. *31" Value as *1388 THE PONTIAC m Wm * WnSm mmm %■ irSfJLz. . I Daily 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. Phone 682-3930 EVERY MINK IN OUR FALL COLLECTION BEARS THE WINCREST LABEL—YOUR ASSURANCE* OF TOP QUALITY AT THE LOWEST POSSIBLE PRICE 299.00 and 399.00 Choose from our new collection of luxurious capes and. stoles. Each is created from quality skins, carefully selected and. colors matched, then hand-sewn and lined with silk. Natural mink cape with stand-up collar, 399.00, Natural mink stole, double fur collar, 299*00. See our entire collection of stoles, capes,. jackets and coats, from 299.00 to 699.00. Far proUkctt liMM Is Mow country of origin at Miumtmi run. D—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1068 Negro Role in History Emerges (SDifom VffJTK — Dr.iystems, river navies, religious!mention this African Institution Prince Wilson is executive see ; temples, and royal palaces had|altttou8h European and Arabic retary o/the Atlanta Vnioerstfyl^ rt of th# of scholars went there to study. Center Cory., which coordinatea ^ f [tijwi than hnl, INor do our history textbooks joint program)/ of six predominantly Negro educational institutioni in Atlanta, and he, is a member of the executive corn- one for more than half millenium. Nowhere In Europg, for example, was eye surgery sue- a even hint that the African experience in mining gold was a boon to the Spanish and memomr m mm r««wivi vwr.,- i • .. - - __ Portuguese* seekers after gold mittee of the Association forl***™V perf^meda»S*“["« when America was discovered. .. nu nn/iitime it was brought off in the " .__ JST1* .“ V *. >«" “t- u<“r:e,ry .0| from the University of ChicagojMy universities almost neverlAmerica had black help. Few By DR. PRINCE E. WILSON Written for the Associated Press For more than 300 years, white Americans have believed that Negroes or black men have had no history. The great universities of this and other Western-oriented nations gave no serious attention in their curricula offerings to . the role and scope of the black men in world cultures, a * * “African history" seemed to be a contradiction of terms. A first major point of awareness for the average white American is that black Americans do in fact have, a history and that that history is badly known .or sadly unknown by white Americans. WHITES MISEDUCATED White America has been/ worse than poorly educated ia this area — it , has been miseducated. / A second point of netued understanding is that /the average white A m e r/1 c a n "knows" about the Negro only I as a slave in the/past, a knowledge both incomplete and) replete with errors. T h I s | knowledge about Negro slavery did not properly /prepare the average white American to understand the developments of the 1960s. The At-ins, boycotts, "freedom rides," and the violence of /Watts, Hough Detroit and Newark showed the perceptive j American tba something was wrong with his "knowledge’’ of the Negro. WAR BLANKS OUT COLOR - In Vietnam, black GI carried a wounded white buddy to medical aid. Americana have dreamed that black explorers came Into Georgia and the Carolines a century before the Mayflower brought the first English to America. TJ> e average white American does not know 'that free Negroes served as a type of quistador with Balboa when he first looked out upon the Pacific Ocean, or that some 200 accompanied Spaniards to discover Peru, or that a black planted the first wheat crop in Anprica as he accompanied Hernando Cortes to Mexico. Until recently, no textbooks for white America told the story of the Negro named Estevenico Whose searches for the Seven Cities of Cibola led him to disoover Arizona and New Mexico for the Spanish. Historians who had followed the lead of Ulrich B. Phillips and the Burgess-Dunning School at the turh of the century had misled Americans to believe that Negroes were inherently happy and docile, i n f e r i o creatures. They had not told the true facts that blacks had revolted and protested their enslavement at almost every juncture beginning with their capture in Africa. The knife, ax, and gun were Indeed taken up by some free and slave blacks in the 19tb century in similar fashion to the Molotov Cocktail in the 20th. Burnings, looting, and killings were used by Cato in the 16th (Continued on Page D-5, Col.' 1) only , some gave black ^events of the 1960s not new freedoms Americana, they { new freedom and signif-i historians in revealing i unprejudiced truth about the j of the Negro. Although 1 too frequently ignoring the /pioneering studies by black / scholars, white historians threw Off the manacles of race prejudice and turned out more objective publications. Abandoning the foot rule as a measure of Negro history, the newly freed scholars turned to study ancient Africa and found there amazing' civilizations and cultures. BLACK PHARAOHS Ancient Egypt and Ethiopia were publicized as having had important and illustrious black leaders. Black pharaohs had built some of the great Egyptian cities, temples, sphinxes, and pyramids while driving Asiatic invaders before them. That blacks in Africa were among the earliest to make iron was known for nun than half a century by white and black scholars, but it was n revealed hi white America’s textbooks. Scholars and publish turned*to West Africa—"Dark Africa,” supposedly the area of “barbaric and savage subhumans.” But, facts showed that complex kingdoms, confederations and empires sustained by standing armies, tax collectors, standard weights and measures, bo o k k e e p i n g mssm •MOH Ml ] BOV| AN• •till Ml for boy* ond girl*. S0f- * Yeor F»#rsl*eiw flies Were 25 Great Stores in Michigan * Ohio • Illinois 1MUIIBLE AUGUST COAT EVtlST! Three Days Only! Aug. 8, 9,10 Zip Pile Lined The leather rage is on* so get with it at early season savings with our posh suede jacket with Harm zip - pile lining for any-season wear. Taupeor brown. 8-20. LUXURIOUS MINK TRIMMED GENUINE SUEDE £»>80l SUZY MW or WOW! PURE IMPORTED CASHMERE WINTER C0ATS A complete selection Of color*. mink trims and sizes! Furs labeled to slum country of origin. , ’ . ^ " Open An Alberts Charge! with Gant, everything that's buttondown isn't buttoned down The traditional buttondown. here in the ultimate classic: Solid-shade oxfordeloth. But for news, it's blended of durable-press Dacron-cotton.-Button cuffs, hugger body, box pleat, hanger loop, jn white, blue, or maize. 9.50 Once more, the buttondown of Jclassic aspect—in pure cotton oxfordeloth. It has all. the traditional detailing; adds1 a ’newsworthy touch in two-toned stripes on pewter, kelly or blue. Thi£” is one pf the shirts that made Gant a legend, happily in your own time. 8.50 Thoroughly classic are the buttondown collar, button cuffs and hugger body. New is the hunter .striped bxfoidcloth of durable-press cotton polyester, in unquestionably proper shades of blue, pewter, or brindle. $10 OWL PONTIAC MALI ST0R£ IS OPEN TUESEDAY & WEDNESDAY TO 5:30, MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY 4 SATURDAY TO 9 PM TELEGRAPH & ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS ■» THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, IMS D—< "Cuir Sauvage" is the aristocrat of leather, with antiqued and natural markings adding elegance to sumptuously tanned skins. Brilliantly interpreted for Fall in lively separates. The sleeveless tunic vest is $46. teamed with an presents a lew 01 the black leaders, In many fields, from ~ Americas earliest day? to the present. Negro Role in History Emerges (Continued from Page D-4) century and Gabriel Prosser I and Nat Turner in the 19th. One historian has told this story to 20th century Americans but he was not deemed significant until recently. NOT SO THE BLACK Painted heroically were white American immigrants who opened the American West, built the railroads and developed the industries. Not so the blacks who opened the Cotton Kingdom, rode the Chisholm Trail as cowboys, and made Inventions which helped in the development of American industry. Most high school pupils know of the Indian’s maize or corn, but few white Americans know of black Henry Blair’s invention of a com harvester in 1834 or its effect on opening the great Cora Belt. Few white Louisianians are told how the Negro New Orleans machinist, N o r b e 11 Rillieux, invented a sugar-refining process which increased the value of their sugar plantations. Detroit does not celebrate its native-born Elijah McCoy for his 57 patented devices, some of which were used on steamships in the Great Lakes and on the Canadian and Northwestern railroads, while others were u s e f U1 \ in telegraphy. * ★ * There is no “Benhamin Ban-neker Day” for the Negro who excelled in astronomy, wrote and published a series of highly reputed almanacs, and helped to develop the plan and survey for laying out the nation’s capital city. , Few white Americans know that America’s first shoelasting machine Was invented by black Jan E, Matzeliger. Nor that Negro Granville T. Woods worked on inventions ranging from electronics to steam boilers and automatic air brakes. Perhaps only a figurative handful Of white Americans know that a black American invented the “red light” that is used to regulate our auto traffic throughout the dountry. Again, even few blacks know that this was an Ohioan, Garrett Morgan, MEDICAL CONTRIBUTIONS Within the last decade, scholars have brought to( greater levels of cognition the j fact" that Negroes have made significant contributions in the fields associated with medicine America’s leading white physician, James Derliam, in the 1780s expected to suggest new medicines to America’s leading blade physician and found im stead that the latter “suggested mine to me.” . *" * * White American admirer* of /,(the current heart transplants are likely unaware that the world’s first successful heart operation was performed by Negro Dr. Daniel Hale Williams at Provident Hospital In' Chicago in 1893. During World] War H, Dr. Charles R- Drew developed the first blood; plasma bankinthe world and*, was appointed director of Brit-j ain’s blood plasma project] during the famous Battle of Britain. Only very slowly wwej Negroes allowed into the ■*•] tion’s colleges and universities| so that they could indeed train their minds and make major contributions. The first black to graduate froih college in America, John B. Russwurm, did so almost 200 years after the establishment of Harvard University. The first Negro to win a] the Revolutionary War but were found in many of its major battles, — Concord, Lexington, Bunker Hill — and crossed the Delaware*’ with Gen. George Washington on that cold Christmas night in 1776. Tough-minded Andrew Jackson praised {their valor at the Battle of Davis Sr., in 1940, although blacks had defeated Napoleon Bonaparte’s finest almost 200 years before that. . Scholarship of the last decade as drawn toe veil of ignorance from the white American about Negro history in many other unmentioned areas. In the field Ph.D. degree ' had to go to New Orleans during the War of;of belles lettres, for example, Belgium for the purpose. This man, Patrick Francis Healy, S. J., Ph.D., was inaugurated as president of Georgetown University, the oldest Catholic university in the United States, in 1874. Yale conferred toe Ph.D. degree in physics on America’s first black man to receive a doctoral degree from an American university in 1876. This w*s Edward Bouchet. CARVER FAMOUS. 1812 and regretted their courage when they sided with the In-jdians in the Seminole War. Abraham Lincoln indicated hi? belief that it was the black soldier who helped turn toe tide in favor of the Union in the Civil War. Negroes helped to save Teddy Roosevelt at San Juan Hill, and more than 200,000 of them where race prejudice so subtly withholds value from black { writers, one could look Europe for black literati' are recognized as great. by white critics. Water Use Curbs APEX, N.C. (A?) - Due to a fought in the war to “save the | water shortage, the Town Board world for democracy.” One in Ap^x has adopted an ordi-million blacks joined the battle nance prohibiting residents Almost all white Americans] agajnSt Adolf Hitler’s Nazism, from washing cars, watering know that George Washington * * * I lawns or gardens or using water White America named its first in air-conditioners or swimming black general, Benjamin O.'pools. Carver developed more than 100 products from the sweet potato, 100 from the pecan, and 165 from the peanut while developing several products from the clays of the South and using soybeans in the making of paint. Few white A m rt* i c a n s, however, know that almost 1,500 Negroes held the d o c t o r a 1 degree between 1920 and 1962 when university doors were more widely opened to blacks. ★ * * Recent scholarship is reveal-; ig that black achievements in, toe Army and Navy have been hidden, even falsified. One history book used in the 1930s devoted 517 pages to a biography of Gen. Ulysses S. Grant and only seven lines to the Negro soldier during the Civil War. The black soldier and sailor have fought valiantly and well in almost every war staged in | North America. They were in the wars before the American Revolution, including the French and Indian War. Crispus Attacks was the first American to die in our revolution although only Massachusetts has memorialized him by monument. NOT WANTED Negroes were not wanted in QualiCraft white fabric pumps TINTED .f REE PONTIAC MALL Ut» OfU«* (untinwd ootr) ^ Add 80# pod*** Sony. No O-P-O. > LANE BRYANT BUDGET FLOOR jacket dresses . special purchase $ |99 ■ each - '’Cap-sleeve dress shapes with their own oover-ops in acetate prints! At collared jacket civet in brown or bluei B. Piping detailed twosome ... in blue or green, sizes 1416 to and -4£ to 52. The Pontiac Mall - A-Line skirt at $27. Both lined, both in sizes 7-13. The low-waisted jumper is $50, comes in sizes 7-13; is teamed with an imported fisherman knit turtleneck at $16. All leather items In Antique Brown. More, too, jackets and coatsl | OUR PONTIAC MAU STORE IS OPEN TUESDAY 4 WEDNESDAY TO TELEGRAPH 4 ELIZABETH THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 Ipr &£RK£ ■ ■m m /M M ,/ M Sli rings are for proclaiming an engagement or symbolizing a marriage Jpr / having a birthday £7 going to dinner' Rf graduating impressing your friends from school showing your love commemorating an anniversary fQ-making amends displaying your lodge Wy showing your monogram mrf)' sealing a letter remembering you by and making you beautiful fP^ The next time you give someone a ring, call on us first. PRE-21? Charge ot Rose Jewelers !lf you're between* the age of 17 and 21, you con open your own credit account PONTIAC MALL TELEGRAPH & ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS THE PONTIAC; PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1668 Patgrs — Skinless Heinz Pork Roast I owl— Loan Cubed Pork Cutlets . OurOwnBwHc Pork Sausage . Fmahly Sliced Pork Liver . . . 12”xf6» mm 1 pt. Non Returnable 6 Pak, Spartan Potato ChipS Bag Buglet, Daisys, Whittle* Hfcthey Chocolate Symp Cold Water ■ Surf • 1 Franco American ; Spaghetti Anwar- Tract Spartan tiambwger Dill Slices Chili Dog Sauce Kraft Jet Puffed iiarahmallcw Reg. er Hard ie lltM V.O. Hair Spray Colgate Toothpaste 'rt1 TOHMTOES Chicken of 'the Sea Libby's lo-Cal Fruit Cocktail 3510 lathabaw Mon. Him Sat. 9 9 Sunday 9 'til 6 IlfIT Michigan IIU I Grade 1 Tissue CIaIIII ound™88( FIDE FOR GRILLING _ _ _ ■ _ _ . Benelett Rump or Rotiiterie Oeee Swiss Steak *78* m Roast » *• 98* Rib Steak * 98* ^ Stew Meat - 78° L«|^;J|k|^|$liced, Northern Bath Room Betty Crocker Cake Mixes iv • Mix or Match Toast Em Cookies Ik* Fkg. •z. to Michigan Beet Sugar Hi Asa’t. Varieties &jhr THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST S, I»68 Best Turkey Is Big, Young arid Tender When turkeys are plentiful and your budget Is not, it’s wise to buy a big, young bird. Young turkeys weighing 14 to 23 i are tader-meated with pliable, smooth-textured Guidelines to use 'when selecting turkey ere the U, S. Department o t Agriculture's grade shield and inspection drcte. The inspection mark assures the buyer that the bird is wholesome while the grade sign indicates quality. This Cook-Out Stew Is Prepared-on a Grill Begin Well at Breakfast Sonia recent brides, turned homemakers, may believe pre- paring breakfast each morning takes tod'' much time. Is too costly. Or is unnecessary. Not the nutrition-wise bride. She knows it Is a good way for her husband and berself to start the day. An adequate breakfast will help them to feel better and work bettor, especially during the late morning hours. r> Not aillood cooked over coals d has to be grilled. A hearty stew e prepared in a heavy Iron earthenware casserole offers a welcome change for anyone who Grade A Is top quality but finds it more convenient and Grade B and C birds are just as I pleasant to move mealtime nutritious. They don't have topjoutdoors. quality appearance, but theyi FJsh atew can ^ agsembied often wear more inviting price; an(j c00ked quickly and easily tags, notes the Consumer and because K „ baaed on . Jready-to-use frozen ingredients. Ybft butcher may be willing toj^ recipe is an adaptation of cut the big bird Just for the|French Bouillabaisse, but it has asking, leaving It whole only;, touch o( Naw 0rleans Gumbo 1 package (10 ounces) frozen rock lobster tails 1 package (1 pound) frozen shelled deveined shrimp Heat olive or corn oil in large (about 4tt-quart) iron or heavy earthenware casserole at edge of grill. Add onion and green pepper; cook, ptirring, thawed and soft. means longer cooking time. Whether whole or cut-up, young turkeys are scrumptious when barbecued, fried, broiled or roasted. Check cookbook for methods and time required. Since the big bird was bought to save pennies, care and storage of leftovers is vital. Meat, gravy, broth and stuffing should each be put into separate' containers immediately after the meal. Us# within three days unless frozen. Frozen cooked turkey should be used within SO days. BROTH Remember, too, that there are bones about it — bones that make excellent turkeybroth. Ule the bones, skin and bits of turkey meat. Cover with cold water. Add a small onion and carrot, sliced; • peeled garlic clove and salt. A few celery leaves, parsley or bay leaf add an interesting flavor to the broth. Cover and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer hours. Strain. Use at once or refrigerate in closed Jar for 1 or ft days. Broth may Ke frozen, with the addition of cut okra and a little rice. Cook-Out Fish Stew 3 tablespoons olWe or corn oil 1 cup frozen chopped green until noted nutrition scientist said: “The failure to eat an adequate breakfast results in-undue fatigue and Increases accident rates in the home and in the plant.” 'One needs breakfast to replenish the body’s fuel and nutrient reserves after 12 to 111 , hours’ fasting.” , i Add tomatoes, water, dam Coffe# and aweet ^ at broth, salt, pepper, bkyieaves, counter do not meet these Tabasco, thyme, raw rice and n cdB parsley. Bring to boil over, coals, then move to cooler per-i NOT HEAVY tion of grill. Cover and simmer Because of our more seden-10 minutes. Add okra. tary way of life, today’s break- Cut fillets into 2-Inch pieces; fast needn’t be heavy to be ade- _ ■■__________________ tail, andqu,te- icup frozen chopped green! ■JrimP to mixturo ln caiscrolc. Med|ca] and nutrltion authorl. pepper j Stir gently to dlstolbute ta-t|eg have forroulated a baslc l cans (1 pound each) wholej*redl*"j! evenly’ R*tern to boU pattern consisting of fruit, peeled tomatoes 1 cup water 1 bottle (ft ranees) clam broth 2 teaspoons salt y« teaspoon black pepper , ftbayloives 2 to 3 drops Tabasco Vi teaspoon crumbled thyme V* cup raw rice V* cup frozen chopped parsley 1 package (10 ounces) frozen cut 1 package (1 pound) frozen fish fillets — haddock, cod, flounder or ocean perch, partially thawed o er coal . cereal, milk, bread and spread. - Cover, move to reduced heat jit is a speedy, economical and simmer 10 minutes, or until meal. It may be supplemented seafood Is codked. Remove baylwith eggs or breakfast meats leaves. for those whose energy needs Serve in soup bowls with I are higher, crusty French bread heated In foil at edge of grill. If desired, garnish each serving with additional frozen chopped parsley. Makes 10 to 12 settings. In most cases, this simple basic meal can be prepared in the time‘it takes to make the coffee. Blend and Chill For a delicious dressing for sliced tomatoes, combine 1 cup deity sour cream with to cup Andy diced or shredded, wejl drained cucumber, 1 teaspoon minced onion, to teaspoon seasoned salt and additional salt* to taste. Blend well and chill briefly to Mend flavors. Hamburger Dish Has Nutty Flavor Chunky peanut butter gives subtle nutty flavor and interesting texture to this hamburger skillet dish. In skillet rown 1 pound ground beef with medium onion, chopped, and 1 medium green pepper, cut in strips; pour off fat. Blend in % cup chunk style peanut butter and 2 cans (I ounces each) tomato sauce with mushrooms. Simmer, covered, 10 minutes. Serve over 4 servings hot cooked rioe. Makes 4 servings. COOK-OUT FISH STEW — Speedy preparation is assured for this Cook-Out Stew which combines -three kinds of frozen seafood with frozen okra and other vegetables. Here, it’s accompanied with frozen French bread, baked indoors, but kept warm in foil at the edge of the grill. First Cakes Were Flat, Originated in Norway The term "cake” descends from a Middle English word, and, before that from Old Norwegian. Cakes of the Middle Ages were the flat, pancake kind of pastry King Alfred was said to have allowed to burn. Cakes become higher at lighter when it was discovered that eggs would raise a batter flour and sugar and still later with the discovery of baking powder, The time spent beating the cakes with totaled four to five hours, but luckily today the time is reduced to mere minutes. In fact, in mere minutes, you an make Lemon-Lime ** ringue Cake—just the thing for the next time you entertwn! Spread over pie filling, sealing to edge. Place layers on dampened board; bake about 3 minutes or until frosting is lightly browned.- This modern "flat cake” Is luscious, zippy lemon layer cake baked in a pie pan, covered with a lively nine filling and meringue. The filling might be lemon or orange if you prefer, or of jam or marmalade. Lovely Lemon-Lime Meringue Cake is mix-easy to make with new Sunkist Lemon Cake Mix and Fluff Frosting Mix. Do try this sunny new version of an old favorite! mix as directed on. package. Follow recipe for Lemon • Lime Meringue Cake (above) except—omit -pie filling; spread each layer with ft packages (10 ounces each) frozen raspberries, thawed and Onpge: Follow recipe for Lemon - Lime Meringue .* Cake (above) except — omit pie filling; spread each layer with 1 cup orange'marmalade. LEMON-LIME MERINGUE CAKt *- This is a delightfully refreshing one-layer cake to berve in warm weather. Lemop fluffy-type frosting mix becomes a meringue to top a lime filling mixture. The cake itself is lemon-flavored. LEMON-LIME MERINGUE CAKE Heat oven to 350 degrees (glass pans — 325 degrees). Grease and flour two 3-inch pie pans. Prepare lemon cake mix as directed on package. Pour batter into prepared pans; bake about 30 minutes. Oral. Do not remove from pans. Prepared package (ftto ounces) lime pudding' and pie filling as directed on package. Cool. Spread each layer with pie filling. Heat oven to 500 degrees. Prepare lemon fluffy-type frosting Second Fruit Is in the Shortcake 'i Uce recipe of blueberry muf- fin mix to prepare coffee cake ^P| batter. Pour into a buttered 8- 0'^ inch round cake pan. Sprinkle with sugar. Bake according to directions. .»■ Cut ahortcake into wedges m. 1 and spoon on sweetened fresh peach slices. Pass whipped ■•neuri m cream if desired. Did you know that a dozen large eggs weighs a hound and half? Try comparing the price per pound with price per dozen. FRESH H0MFGR0WN PRODUCE ABBAGE lb. ernusa Tender 49* CUKES -■ 3 -29- LETTUCE — 19* GR. ONIONS <-■ 10* TOMATOES lb. 29' DRY ONIONS 3*39' #1 BANANAS >10' WATERMELONS LONG STRIPES 29 LBS. 1 59 POTATOES U.S. 1 Michigan io* to MBPS an "" WHOLE lb. 59! PICNICS SMOKED lb. 39' /HOT 1 I0GS SUNLESS 3 lb* !10 mm IA OR. 1 lb CHUNK ,Di Mil f dAUBURGER SSL -63* POT ROAST 69' LIVER Fresh PORK erBEEF 39' MEADOWDALE SHORTENING 3 « 49* Meadowdale 0LE0 6 Meadowdale LEMONADE 10' Can Open Weekly 9-9-Fri., Sat. 9-9 Price* Subject & . ‘ V-, *' - JftillfttoMliMIlSl front City Side Super Market TiuilO Del Monte Tomato Sauce With Onions ‘•""at* pack NEW 15-oz. Can 22' Cool-Whip Frozen Dessert Topping \ ot. se* Crisco Shortening 3-lb. jt jr e Can DO 1 Mate Ajax ^Plates Laundry Detergent «o«-8G* J&,tf Musselman’s Assorted Jellies Vtosie Cntadln. 1855? Pickles Cheese Pina Mix I.^.r 39* ’»« 3/Sjoe Velvet Drand ICE GREAM r • OPEN 39c {SUNDAY { 1 V2Gal. war , | Limit 1 With Coupon j Miracle Whip j 1 Salad Pressing 1 39eet. ! Limit 1 with Coupon I Sun. Hrs. 10-9 CITY SIDE Open 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. SUPER MARKET 608 W. HURON STREET NEAR WEBSTER SCHOOL 1716 Joztyn 3 Blocks North Walton Blvd. * 338-03ll/ - SW. Mm THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 E—8 There's a Salad for Everyone Southwest chef salad Add Curried Oat Puffs to Ladylike Salad Entree Oat puffs, buttered and lightly curried, give individuality to this turkey or chicken salad. Use a liberal sprinkling of them, but not too many to mask the poultry, pineapple bits, or other ingredients provide crunch and unique flavor. CHICKEN OR TURKEY SALAD WITH CURRIED OAT PUFFS 1 cub °*t puffs 1 tablespoon butter or margarine, melted 1 teaspoon curry powder 2 cups diced cooked chicken or : turkey % cup salad dressing 1 tablespoon chopped preserved ginger % teaspoon salt 1 cup thinly sliced celery 1 can (13)4 ok.) pineapple tidbits, drained )4 cup halved green grapes, optional Combine cereal, butter or margarine, and )4 teaspoon curry powder; mix. Cool. Combine chicken or turkey, salad dressing, ginger, salt, and remaining curry powder; mix. Chill several hours. Add celery,'pineapple, grapes, and cereal; toss lightly. Use for stuffing avocado halves, tomatoes, or serve on crisp salad greens as an entree salad. Yield 4)4 cups. Southwest Chef Salad is an excellent way to use low-calorie lettuce, ami it also provides a disguise for leftover vegetables. Be sure and marinate the the vegetables In a favorite oil and vinegar dressing before ad-ding to the crisp salad greens. Southwest Chef Salad 1 quart Iceberg lettuce and romaine leaves * 1 cup cooked beets 1 cup cooked potato, cubed 1 cup zucchini squash, sliced W cur cheese-flavored f crackers 3 radishes 1 hard-cooked egg Italian gtyle Dressing In a large cold salad bowl, add crisp salad greens torn in bite-size pieces. Add Just enough dressing to coat greens. Use fresh cooked or canned beets, drained and cut into julienne strips, tightly sprinkle beets with dehydrated horseradish powder if available. Cut cooked potato hi cubes. Wash znechinl squash, but leave the -skin on. Cut in thin slices. Pour boiling water over the squash slices and let stand for one minute, then drain. Sprinkle dressing on the vegetable ingredients. Cut radishes in roses. Cut egg in quarters. Group the vegetable ingredients and cheese crackers on top of the salad greens with an eye for color contrast. Garnish with radish roses and egg quarters. Makes 4-5 servings. CandyBits, Nuts Stud Cookie Bars Chances are your youngsters will enjoy these cookie bars.' Chewy Peanut Bars ' 44 cup unsifted regular flour Mi teaspoon baking powder Mi teaspoon salt 1 cup firmly packed brown sugar 1 cup chopped cocktail peanuts Mi cup butterscotch-flavor morsels 2 eggs 2 tablespoons butter, melted )4 teaspoon vanilla Grease the bottom of an A by 8 by 2-inch cake pan. * * * * In a medium mixing bowl, thoroughly stir together the flour, baking powder and salt; stir in the brown sugar; add the peanuts and butterscotch morsels. . A -.it A In a small bowl beat the eggS until they begin to thicken and are lemon color; add to dry ingredients with butter and vanilla; with a spoon, mix well. Spread in prepared baking para A Af A ■ Bake in a 350-degree oven for about 25 minutes. While warm, cut into 18 two-inch bars; with a small spatula remove to wire rack to cool. Store in tightly covered container. f t v r - CHICKEN OR TURKEY SALAD WITH CURRIED. CEREAL It'sZesty Herb Dressing for Ham Think of Mexican food and Isay aficionados of good eating. |h a s made south-of-the-border you think of fiery hot, mouth- Ham salad, Mexican-style, is the chefs famous, searing dishes. Not. always so, | kind of cool, colorful, salad that I • . . Ham Salad fpound fully cooked ham, in one piece % cup salad oil . % cup cider vinegar 1)4 teaspoons sugar 1 teaspoon marjoram V» teaspoon thyme Vt teaspoon oregano Vi teaspoon chili powder 1 clove garlic, minced 8 cups crisp salad greens, torn into bite-size pieces 1 green pepper, cut into tjiln strips 1 medium cauliflower, broken into flowerettes and thinly sliced 1 medium onion, thinly Sliced arid separated into rings 4 tomatoes, sliced 1 avocado, peeled, pitted and , sliced * Cut ham into Julienne strips; keep chilled until used. Combine next 8 ingredients in jar with close-fitting cover; shake well. Combine salad greens, pepper strips and 14 of cauliflower and onion. Drizzle one-third Of dressing over vegetables; toss light- ly- Spoon half of vegetables into large, shallow salad bowl. Edge bowl with alternating slices of tomato and remaining cauliflower.. Spoon remaining salad evenly over top. Arrange ham, avocado and remaining onion attractively on top of greens. Service with remaining dressing. Yield: 6 servings. HAM SALAD BOWL, MEXICAN STYLE Dressing Stands for 5 Days Chef Jacque Richerds of the tstnous Santa Ynez Inn in Can* loriiia shares his Blue Cheese Pressing recipe with home cooks. It’s delicious on a Chef’s Mriad. BLUE CHEESE DRESSING 2 cups mayonnaise I cup commercial sour cream 44 cup buttermilk Mi teaspoon MSG % teaspoon salt )4 teaspoon sugar 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice % teaspoon white pepper 4 ounces blue cheese • A . A . A ■ In large bowl of the electric food mixer, add die first eight ingredients in the order given. Blew! together about S/ minutes. Cut tbe cheese with a tarife-into very small nuggets. Add to the other ingredients. Mix only until bloided. Put into a quart jar. Refrigerate. The flavor will be mellow in 5 days. If It is thicker than you like, thin with half-half. Makes 1 quart Try New Burgers of Corned Bed Whatever the weather, can plan on corned beef burgers as a hearty and satisfying sandwich. For the outdoors, corned beef burgers can be grilled over the ypen fire and saved In Cheese in Rolls Makes Wee Loaf I#' a change of flavor, serve cgagM^fly slash hard foils at tiie burgers with an assortment intervals. Do nlft cut (of relishes including horseradish jj,,, way through. Place Or Dijon-style mustard com- smajj squares or strips of Moz-U e with pickle relish. zarella or Swiss cheese, brushed FiOS ¥ , claimed beef burgers are justjwitii tomato sauce, into each tow a nw^ter messing uswallas good- when, prepared in the garii. salads stir WhpoUer. j Warm rolls in preheated 375j ^confectioners sugar into To make qorned beef burgers (degree oven 3 to 5 minutes of ? rf^imSerciaf french jfor any weather; combine 1 can until cheese melts. S«*ve hot. Jno The suear besides! (12 ounces) owned brief, un- •■■■-—------j—• , dressing. ™e, ^..Uated. 1 egg and 1 slice bread Tray a new fiavw for pot S tf^uch fruits^as torn into bits. Blend well, shape roasts or meat loaves by bast- Lich^7wtoti« pineapple, into burger patties and grill w mg them duruig cooking With Rice-Tomato Combine for Side Dish The truly perfect hostess, and • joy to blow, is the one who ean put together a good meal on short noticri. This Impromptu feast starts off With baked ham with spiced apricot garnish, "Tomato Rice Medley," and a, relish P|late. Buttered green peas, hot rolls and pineapple sherbet with cookies, and hot coffee complete the menu. The ham is an already-cooked one that requires only a brief heating in the oven. Meanwhile, quick-cooking rice, convenient canned tomato sauce with cheese, mushrooms, onions and green pepper cook in bouillon in a matter of minutes for a delicious rice side-dish. The roils can be purchased at the grocery store or bakery, w use Dozen bread dough from your freezer. Follow the directions on the package for speedy thawing and proofing. Canned tomato sauce with ieese is a handy item to keep on your shelf of staples. It sauces rice, pastas, and many other foods with robust Italian herbs and spices, plus a generous amount of aged Romano cheese, ail simmered into a rich red tomato sauce. TOMATO RICE MEDLEY 3 tablespoons butter or margarine % cup minced onion y« cup minced green pepper Mi cup sliced fresh or canned lcup (8-oz.) can tomato sauce with cheese 1)4 cups hot chicken bouillon* Dash of salt 1 1)4 cups packaged pre-cooked rice *Use canned bouillon or dissolve 1 chicken bouillon cube in 1)4 cups boiling water. Melt butter in chafing dish over direct heat. Add onion, pepper, and mushrooms and saute until lightly browned. Add tomato sauce with cheese, bouillon, salt, and rice. Mix well. Bring to a boil. Then cover tightly, remove frdrq heat and let stand 7-8 minutes. Makes about 3)4 cups or 3 or 4 servings, A A A Note: The recipe may be prepared in saucepan or skillet if desired. Freeze Two Juices for Cool Appetizer Cool off with apple-tomato frost, a refreshing appetizer. Soften 2 teaspoons o f unflavored gelatin in % cup of tomato juice. Dissolve over hot water. Add 1 cup of apple juice, % cup of tomato juice, 1 teaspoon each of sugar and salt, V» teaspoon each of pepper and celery salt, 2 teaspoons of onion juice and several dashes of bottled red pepper sauce. Mix well. A * A Pour into refrigerator tray. Freeze until mushy. Beat mixture until smooth. Return toi tray and freeze until firm. A A A To serve, spoon into chilled sherbet glasses. Garnish with sprig of parsley or watercress. Makes 4 to 6 servings. Calls for Lemon Spark wedges of crackling-crisp lettuce or seafood salads with a lemony dressing. In a l)4-quart jar combine )4 cup sugar; 1 teaspoon salt; 1 teaspoon paprika; V» teaspoon chili powder; 1 green pepper, finely chopped; 1 tablespoon grated onion; %■ cup lemon juice; % cup pure vegetable oil; and 1 can (8 ounces) tomato sauce |with cheese. Shake well; chill. Shake thoroughly before serving. Makes about 1 quart. UMTS Lean — 7 Rib Cut PORK 4QC ROAST UlT (Sliced 45c Lb.) Center Cut PORK CHOPS 79S Sliced Bacon 3-lb. Package or More Loin End PORK ROAST (Sliced, 55c lb.) STEAKS ROUND RIB FRIDAY EVENINGS TIL 1P.M. 4340 Dixie Highway DRAYTON PLAINS V Wednesday 9:00 A.M. to 8:30 P.M. Thurs. Thru Saturday S A;M. to 9 P.M, Sifndays9A.ll.to S P.M. CLOSED MONDAYS AND TUESDAYS Quality Meat Since 1931 >1220 North Perry AT MADISON OPEN DAILY 8 A.M. to 9 P.M. SUNDAYS 10 A.M. to SP.M. If s not I dtet tom. If 9 ml tuna. Empress uses only tho plumpest filets of white Alba-core. We call it skinny tuna because of the way we pack it Mosttuna comes packed Inoil. Fatty oil You can pour off tho oil but nottho calories. Skinny tuna, packed in water, hasonly half the calories of the oil soaked kind. And with no oil to disguise the taste Empress has a fresher, more natural: flavor. Serve your family a tuna that tastes like tuna. Empress, the skinny tuna. Half the calories of the oil-packed kind. You don’t need a weight problem to love it. Empress, the skinny tuna. (fflPR€S§ fWlAwvAlltosM. KUDWHfTE TUNAMVMB THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1908 m /fms PROOF m M SALE DATES: THURSDAY U-O-’SS WEDNESDAY 8-14-'68 BLUE CHEESE SQUARES - Soften 1 envelope unflavored gelatin In one-third cup milk for S minutes; then melt over low heat. Combine 1 package (S oz.) cream cheese with 1 package (4 oz.) Blue cheese,' crumbled, and blend until smooth. Mix in soft- ened gelatin, one-third cup salad dressing, 1 tablespoon lemon juice and Vt teaspoon salt. Fold in 1 cup cream whipped. Pour into 8-inch square pan or individual molds. Chill until set. Serve with fruit salad. Makes 9 servings. Salads Are Colorful and Tempting Think Twice Before Buying hlon-Dairy Imitation Milk Probably the number one go-along with most dairy foods is fruit. Certainly the number one fruit salad in the country today Is cling peach and cottag For a variation of this longtime favorite try fruit cocktail with its live refreshing fruit flavors, or a new twist with spiced-up cottage cheese as in Noon-Whistle Peaches. NOON-WHISTLE PEACHES 1 can (1 lb. 18 oz.) ding peach halves, chilled Lettuce cups 1 cup small curd cottage chaeaa ■■ 1 1 can (2Vi to 1 oz.) deviled 2 tablespoons dropped sweet pickle Drain peaches; place cup-sides up in lettuce cups. Mix cheese with ham and pickle. Spoon into peaches. Garnish with tomato wedges if you wish- Makes 8 or 7 salads. CHEE8& AND FRUIT COCKTAIL SALAD 1 can (1 lb. 14 oz.) fruit cocktail 2 tablespoons crumbled blue 1 tablespoon mayonnaise Vt teaspoon garlic salt tt teaspoon onion powder 1 pint cottage cheese 0 Iceberg lettuce cups Drain fruit cocktail. (Save syrup to use in fruit drinks a noth e r time.) Mash blue s with fork; mayonnaise, garlic salt and onion powder. Stir in cottage cheese. Place a mound of fruit cocktail on each lettuce cup, saving some fruit for garnish. Top with cheese mixture. Garnish with remaining fruit»cocktail. Makes 8 servings. Not Necessary to Soak Lentils before Boiling Different, from ^all of the legumes in which the water lost in drying, no soaking is necessary for lentils, cookbooks to the contrary. Unfortunately, many recipes insist on this, also in draining off the soaking water, thereby ' losing many valuable nutrients. So do, please, adapt the redpes you may find. EAST LANSING, Mich..—! Housewives with young children may be pennywise and nutrition foolish in purchasing non-dairy imitation milk products, reports Mary Zehner, Michigan State University agricultural econo- Since non-dairy Imitation milks frequently are displayed in foe dairy case next to more expensive homogenized whole milk, many budget-minded consumers assume that these products are nutritionally close to cow’s milk. But such is not the case, Miss Zehner says. While imitation filled milk products manufactured from either fresh skimmed milk or reconstituted nonfat dry milk are nutritionally comparable to whole milk, non-dairy imitation mitts are inferior in two ah calcium and protein, she reveals. FEWER NUTRIENTS According to limited analytical tests performed by MSU's food science department, the total protein level in non-dairy imitation mitt is about one-quarter that of whole mitt. The calcium level is only one-eighth that of milk. Although some imitation milk products have Vitamin D added, calcium and phosphorus must be present hi order for the body to deposit and utilize the Vitamin D, Miss Zehner points out. Also, many diet-conscious people consider vegetable fats to be rated, she says, However, coconut oil, which is the fat used in most of foe imitation mitt products, is .more highly saturated than butterfat. To foe extent that the degree of saturation is Important, foe fact that coconut oil is highly ‘Saturated should be taken into i account, Mrs. Zehner cautions. Fruit Sauce Is for Bacon Canadlan-style bacon tender cut that is cured and smokied. Tasting like ham, needs only short broiling or pan-broiling to heat and brown for this recipe, says meat authority Reba Staggs. A quick-fix pineapple-raisin sauce goes well with this meat which provides a delightful en-with skillet-candied mashed sweet potatoes, a green salad and a fruit shortcake for a seasonal supper. Fruited Canadian-Style Bacon 8 slices Canadian-Style bacon, cut %-inch thick 8 slices pineapple 1 cup raisins 1 cup pineapple juice 1 cup water 2 tablespoons cornstarch Vi teaspoon sal^ 2 tablespoons cold water sides in bacon. frying-pan. Brown slices of raisins, pineapple Juice and water for llmtatstes. Thicken with a mixture of cornstarch, salt and 2 tablespoons cold water, stirring until foe cornstarch Is cooked. Return bacon to pan. Pour sauce over foe bacon and pineapple and simmer slowly, 15 minutes. 4.servings. Guidelines Are Given for Buying Butter Thousands of years old, Lentils are perhaps foe first of the convenience; foods. With ~~ coddling at all, they cook puffed tenderness in a mere half hour. With this short cooking period, the use of a pressure cooker is not advised. What effect does butter have when generously spread upon fresh sweet corn-on-foe-cob, nestled into a stack of buttermilk pancakes or tucked into the center of a hamburger patty? It enhances the flavor essence of any of your favorite foods, expiates “How to Buy Butter,” from the Consumer and Marketing Service. The bulletin answers consumer questions related to grading, storing, using and serving of butter. have a slightly acid flavor because it is generally made from selected sour create. If the choked lentils are to be drained, as in making salad, do save the cooking -liquid to use for a cup of luncheon soup or in gravies and stews. Popular as salads, soups, meat accompaniments, whole- are hearty, nutritious,and always good eating. Because of their large amount of high quality vegetable protein, they need only a little meat, < fish, poultry or cheese to round out their body-building ability, Adding sugar to whipping cream before It is whipped will decrease foe volume that can be and will increase total whipping iftoe ... add When buying butter, look for the- USDA grade shield -* a reliable guide to quality. All butter bearing the grade shield (U.S. Grade AA, A, and B) has been checked by a Government grader, who judges its quality on foe basis of official written standards. The shield also indicates that the butter was processed In a plant that meets USDA approval of , sanitation and operating practices. TOP GRADE U.S. Grade AA* butter has delicate, sweet flavor because it „ made from, high quality, fresh sweet cream. The smooth, creamy texture yields to spreadability. Completely dissolved salt is blended in to \the butter’s savory Quality.: ■ . *1 0.S.. Grade A butter has a pleasing flavor, fairly smooth texture, arid ip made from fresh Other salient points in the publication include: • Because of i t s delicate flavor and aroma, butter should be stored in the original protective wrapping or container until ready for use. FREEZE IT • Freeze butter you can’t use within two or three days. Butter will maintain quality in ‘ the freezer for about two months. Make butter foe first ingredient on sandwiches it adds to the flavor and keeps the filling from soaking into the bread. For a free copy of "How To Buy Butter,” Home and Garden Bulletin G-148-, send a postcard request to Office of Information, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C;, 20250. Please include your zip code. ’ ■ '■ Sauce for Corn Everybody’s favorite—grilled com-on-the-cob—gets a snappy, jazzy new taste and look with a tomato-bright barbecue sauce. Just heat together iz(t-oa.) can; tomato sauce with, mushrooms. Vi cup butter or margarine and % teaspoon onion salt. Use to baste ears o! fresh corn (husked, of course!), as they grUL KRAFT Famous MAYONNAISE DMNTSIZE AJAX BETER6ENT Hills Bros. COFFEE i Kosher or Polish OVEN-FRESH FLAVOR ■ideal Hill nm RTBRABE’S Slieod, Whole or Dieod BUTTERFIELD Alint Jane's ICERERR PICKLES HAWAIIAN PUNCH RICH HOLDEN SLICED BREAD LUNCHE0R MEAT POTATOES “ 38* 5 28c S 30' 12-Ounce A AC w.r 39 0z. 4 AC Your wt III Oh.*. ASSORTED AURORA TISSUE 2“-194 Cypress Harden Broken GRAPEFRUIT SECTIONS 5 ia *100 STOKELY’S CutD 51-Lb. MS Min. O Weight 100 Smueker’s Pure SHUWBEimr PRESERVES 3 *100 No Deposit-No Return Bottles R-C or DIET RITE C01A 6 & 694 FELICE USDA CHOICE Tender BUIE CUT CHUCK ROAST 494 u. e Choice Loan, Boneless "Vile 1 . STEW SERF Lb- 79 1 USD* Choi.. ROUND BONE or EN0LISH GOT ROAST IISOA Choic. BONELESS CHUCK ROAST Freeh, YOUNG, SLICED 0A0Y BEEF LIVER Lb. 494 Lean, Freeh All Beef HAMBURGER Lb. 494 Bias Water Brand LEAR, SLICED BACON Hygrade’s BALLPARK FRAHKS 1 69$ Pkg. HYGRADE'S DAIRY LOAF Lb.Loaf 48* Hygrade’s Little Link PORK SAUSAGES u. 694 AWREY’S -Frozen CAKES SINGLETOR Froztn SHRIMP Cocktail 3-a TTfi Wt. Jars Jf Jf T Sealtest CHOCOLATE MILK „ or BUTTERMILK <""• 22* • Danish Cinnamon Twirl (14-0z.) • Pecan Crunch (14-0z. • Pound Cake (1-Lb.) o Double Chocolate Cake (13Vi-Oz.) , Each 59* Your Choice "TRY THESE NEW AWREY TREATS TODAY" REALEM0N Trash Frozen LEMONADE 6-0z. Fluid Can Fresh Oman Maas (bunch) Fresh One* Peppers (cmo Fratb Crisp Radnhas Fresh Cucumbers (ea.) 10* oral FRESH, SWEET MACHBS 2 Lbs. 29' FELICE QUALITY MARKET 1116 W* Huron St. Mg Rights Reserved to Limit Quantities f I GOP [deadlocked? A Look at the Future ,/ THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 i Pally 10 >• 10) Sunday 11 ft _Hr—8 By BOB CON8IMNE MIAMI BEACH—Well, folks, hew it is Thanksgiving Day and the new mood of the Republican convention to to come up with a nominee before Christmas. A* you’ll perhaps reca., balloting started fast Aug, 7 at Convention Hall before an excited throng of delegates and free-loaders shouting “we want Nixon." * ★ tir v This was a reference to Rich* ■rd M. Nixon, a former vice president. Nixon went back to his law practice in New York over the Labor Day weekend, but did not entirely rule out a return to MiamT Beach "if I detect a last-minute ground-swell." Hie early leader for th4 GOP nomination has also asked to be kept in touch as to new locations Of the sessions. Delegates were evicted from Convention Hall by the city fathers during the third week of last August after the 492nd ballot had once again failed to give Harold Stassen the two votes he needed for the magic 667. STASSEN’S CRY UNHEEDED Stassen’s charge of foul play —somebody cut the cable on his only airborne campaign sign as it was -being towed' along the beach-front—went unheeded in the hue and cry over the eviction. ★ ★ ★ "You people got to get out of here," a derby-wearing spokesman for a Miami Beach Household Finance firm told Republican National Chairman Ray Bliss. “We got to get this place ready for the Jackie Gleb* son Show. So. git!" * ★ ★ The convention has been held at various places since then and has not been without its'little surprises. It is regretted that the television networks pulled out their plugs and went home on Veterans Day. The Miami Beach stringers for the AP and UPt swear that on that very day Ivy Baker Priest, former treasurer Of the United States, almost won the nomination. She attracted 666 votes on the 711th ballot but was unable to .wake up Tier husband delegate to cast the deciding vote. He had been sleeping soundly her toughest opponent at that time, former Rep. BID Miller. SUCCESSIVE MOVES That excitement took place at the Miami deg track, where the convention had been laolding day sessions, it has since moved successively to the Jal-all fronton, the basement of the Second Baptist Church, and the gym of the YMCA. * * ★ Chief Justice Abe Fortas last week wrote the majority (5-4) opinion rejecting the contentions of Democratic Presidential nominee Hubert Humphrey and Dixiecrat George Wallace that the national elections, postponed since Nov, S, must be held immediately. Humphrey complained that it wam't his fault that the GOP couldn't make up its mind, so whp deprive him of his chtnce to move into the White House? Wallace made an equally vigorous speech to the high bench. Ho protested that it was unconstitutional to deprive him of his opportunity, if he won the Presidency, to throw 30,000 troops around the White House and make the neighboring streets safe enough for him to walk on. RHODES CALLED KEY Moat political observers, cording to a recent poll taken by the Gallup-HsSrls company on the Coney Island roller coaster, agree that what has bogged the GOP convention is the adamant refusal of Gov. Rhodes of Ohio to yield his stranglehold on his delegation. The polls shows that 13 per cent of the experts who were questioned on the coaster felt that Rhodes was waiting for David Eisenhower to become 35 ] and thus eligible to run for the' Presidency. ★ w ★ Some 61 per cent thought Rhodes Just liked the sound of his name booming through the meeting places day after day. Eleven per cent were undecided. The remaining 15 per cent of the observers lost their hats. Little has been heard from i Gov. Nelson Rockefeller and Ronald Reagan since they left Miami Beach in separate huffs. Priest broke her deadlock withldecades in California. IT COSTS LESS JO PICK UP AND GO WITH SONY SOLID-STATE AC/DC PORTABLE 222A AMERICA’S FIRST CHOICE IN TAPE RECORDERS Now you can own the new Sony battery-operated tape recorder with Sony’s famous ServoControl Motor for only $99,501 Perfect for businessmen, students, home use, the Z22A performs flawlessly wherever you go. It automatically corrects for speed variations and maintains precise timing accuracy thanks to Sony's space-age ServoControl Motor. Other professional features such as Automatic Recording Control assure perfect recordings without touching a knob. And at the flick of a switch, you've got manual control tor full-orchestral music recording! No need for headsets either. There's a Speaker Monitor right in the Record Mode. The 222A comes complete with remote Stop/Start dynamic microphone that works With i footswitch. 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Rugs are in_ multicolor combinations, an reversible so you double t' ends are fringed. a the wear, and the JUso^1”xl4” Run Rug. 141 Serged Edge 8'6”xlV6” LOOP PILE VISCOSE 'TWEED" CARPET Our Reg. 13.88 WMM 88 3 Day* Only j/f Viscose rayon, loop pile rug has a resilient {ate back and serged edges. Choose brown/ • »lack/white or beige/brown/white or blne/green. Charge It at Kmart! Pontiac Store Only. 9x12'R Our Reg. 29.96 3 Day* Only King broadloom heavyweight assortment of rugs Includes nylons, acrylic, polyesters and wools -.. plus many mom. x backing. Choose from solid colon and 27"x45" FRINGED AREA RUG 24"x42" RAYON AREA RU& 3.44 Our Reg. 4.77 3 Day* Only •a rug is 100% rayon, suitable for living room, ________ r family room. Excellent wearing qualities as well as rich appearance. Not exactly as pictured. Just say 1Chargelt 3 Day* Only 1.88 Our Reg. 2.66 3 Day* Only Ana rup are cut loop rayon and acetate, rectangular and oval shapes in combination colors, a choice of many. Some rup have fringed ends. Select these for a bedroom, bath or halL Charge It. 21x34"CUT PILE Viscose Area RUG is* Our Reg. 96e—3 Day 75% cotton, 25% viscose rayon Latex back. Many colon. Fringed. 27x48” Rayon and Cotton Area Rug, 2.33 Our Reg. 2*M — 3 Day Rup are 50% rayon and 50% eotton. Choose from A lovely /// /// SWAG CHAIN LAMP IN MULTICOLOR PATTERN - 30” Bar Stool Has Vinyl Cover Seat and Back Our Reg. 13.44 10.66 Chargelt Bar stools arc 30 inches high, have bronze-finish tubular legs. Choose from black/walnut, persim-mon/walnut and avo-cado/walnut in good* looking vinyl upholstery. 3 Day* Only 3-Picct Cocktail Toblo Set in Wood-Grain Plastic Our Reg. 19.96 14. 7.96 Ombre pattern taffeta on vinyl. Big puff trim top, bottom, tassel poll chain. 10x18”. Blua/green; tangerine/brown. ----- “Ifc I .Ml, Our Reg. 10.97 3 Day* Only ASSORTMENT OF PICTURE FRAMES DltcountPrice »'l Day Ornate gold color metal. Site* are 5x7”, 8x10” and 11x14” Our Reg. 1.27-3 Day. Clastic subjects, antique gold, or green,, walnut frame. Charge it. METAL IRONING TABLE Our Reg. 3.97 $4 3 Day* Only' * Shop Kmart and save on avocado color 54x15” folding metal ironing table with •tardy T leg stability ... won’t slip or mar floor. Features perforated metal top. Shop Kmart and Charge It 13” Plastic Ball SWAG LAMP Our Reg. 15.97 bell. Trunslurent strand trim, mg uk gu Amber or blue/grren 13” balL Translucent stand trim. POLE LAMS, RE0.24.lt......... 11.11 FLEXARMMETALDESKLAMP Our Reg. 2.77 Knud finished base end gmgeggge eoncohapad bmp Avocado H# or gold. Adjuatabto for mumm focused light eg / LOUVERED FUSTIC BED LAMP Our Reg. !.84 m 17”x38” MAPLE or WALNUT WOOD FRAMED PICTURE Our Reg. 3.44 3 Day* Only 2*5 Choose from 18 oxehuivo aubjeete including thorn by famoua artista auch aa Delaefaen, Thomas. Frames are 7" maple or walnut finished with gilt line. 17x38” sise Charge It. at Kmart WjU Save You Hundreds of Dollars Every year GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD AUGUST 8, 1968 Thurs., Frl, Sat. Slim Styled! BOYS’ NO-IRON DUNGAREES Big *N Little Girl** SKIRTS AND SWEATERS Our Reg. 2.78 to 2.97 3 Day* BOYS’ Jomp. at 3.4 Charge It SWEATERS: Our Reg. 2.78-2.97 DuPont Orion® acrylic. Bone, white, red, turq.| navy. 3-6x; 7-14. SKIRTS: Our Reg. 2.97. No iron. A-lines, dirndl waists, vent walker, and more. 4 to 14. Blue, copper-tone, coffee, hot olive. Reinforced super knit, noiron weave. White, Color* NO-PRESS UNDERWEAR Cotton Pile Lined! MELTON PEA JACKETS Our Reg. 13.97 The New Longer Look! FLATTERING SLACK SETS A-ehirts, T-shirts, briefs of soft knit Boxer aborts in fancy mints or solid broadcloth. DuPont Dacron® polyester, cotton. Men’s sizes. OtM.«fDwP«itCwp. j * 3 Day* Only Flattering and warm! 90% re* Srocessed wool, 10% other fibers. avy or grey. 'Good lime to bny! Sixes 6-16. 3 Day* Only Cotton hopsacking and canvas cloth/in Nehru or Meditation*, look. Print jackets, EUie pants. Green, brown, navy. 8-16. Our Reg.14.99 Wipe-Clean Vinyl Upper* id Black! Popular Priced JR. BOYS’ DRESS OXFORDS, SLIP-ONS Set the style trend for bacloto-school in these! Well-made dress oxfords or comfy slip-ons. 814-3. Also in Boys* 314-6 at............ .i4\..................;4.97 Show Up for. School Show-Off in k mart’s Fashions “Thank You" far shopping at Kmart—we appreciate your business. GLENWOOD PLAZA corner north perry at glenwood THURSDAY, AUGUST i AUGUST SPECIAL Friday Only-4 P.M. to I P.M. CHICKEN DINNER o WOODWARD AVE. at 14% Mila M. • 15325 W. t MILE RD. Juit E. af Breenfleld • 10001 TELEGRAPH RD. Naar Plymouth Rd. IF YOU LIKE STREET PERFORMERS—Peg Murray of “Cabaret" fame arranges and coordinates the, movement of Broadway in the Street productions throughout New York City. With her during a recruitment effort is Joel Grey* who brought 16 members of the "George M!" cast to help during the upcoming summer effort , CONFRONTING THE KID-Joy, part of the Joy and Jill down team, confronts a youngster on the streets of New York as part of an over-all effort to bring entertainment into potential trouble spots and ward off turbulence in the summer heat. Mobile Broadway Cools NY Streets A person consumes about 30 pounds of air a day, whereas the average automobile in the U.S. consumes about 160 pounds. (EDITOR’S NOTE — Broad-|“but at the end of the afternoon, way stars and povice talents are, they know somebody did give a giving up their free time this summer to bring theater to the deprived sections of New York. The goal is to provide an entertaining safety valve for tensions in the slum areas). By WILLIAM GLOVER AP Drama Writer NEW YORK - East Side, West Side and all over town, Broadway in the Streets is helping cool the long, hot summer. Taking part in the glamor-to-,|the-ghettoes program are such | headliners as Joel Grey, Diana |S a n d s, Tony Martin, Shelley ||Wlnters, DaVe Brubeck, Butterfly McQueen, Herschel Bernar-di and Nancy Dussault. 4 . 4 4 Also some maybe-stars of tomorrow like Dino and the Dinosaurs and' Teetsie’s African Dancers. The mixture is a deliberate one of expert and nov-e. Their audiences gawk from tenement windows and skeptically gather on the sidewalk as the gaily bedecked mobile stage comes down the block. “They may not know why we turn up,’’, says Peg Murray, Saturday, August 10 Summer Fun and Excitement In The Huge Hawaiian Room with dancing to BRAHM WARD and his Orchestra and a Hawaiian Floor Show Starring Princess Audrey Kalua, Eva McKeon and Lori Leilani ' ■ Also ‘ Dancing to the Magic Rhythms of Berg and Jby on the glass Volcano in the Waitoma Grotto Lounge ■ ★ . ★ ■’ ★ , ★ . ★ , ★ COMING THE GREAT BIG BAND WEEKEND \ Friday,. August 16 The GREAT**Band ofJIMMY DORSEY starring LEE CASTIE ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Saturday, August 17 The BIG Band of FRANK JAMES Flaying all the GREAT Arrangements American and Polynesian Food Mini-Vacation Flans . Open for Lunch and Dinner daily except Mondays HAWAIIAN GARDENS , • RESORT & MOTEL . - < 4501 Grange Hall Rd., Reservation* Holly, Mich. 48442 ; ; 634.8231 damn and didn’t just sit talking urban relief In an air-conditioned office.” ’• v Each weekend from now through September, two of those sweaty, goring neighborhoods that tourists never see and where interracial tension can explode at Die click of switchblade are viqited by Broadway in the Streets. * * ★ Thirty-two programs are delivered on an every-body-works-for free basis. Every show ^is different — “you’ve got to stay real loose in planning," Miss Murray says. She and Virginia North, actresses both, are cochairmen of the'new show biz venture, it was set up by the Urban Action Task Force, an agency created by Mayor John V. Lindsay, to devise suridry safety valves for Several acting troupes also give free performances of plays around the city •, jbut this is the lone enterprise sponsored by municipal authority. ALL LIVE HERE’ ’‘When I ask an entertainer to enlist," Miss Murray declares, ‘I just say, ‘You do want the | summer to go well, don’t you?’ 'After all, we live here." 1 Emphasis is on turning each show into a cooperative enterprise that integrates local hopefuls with' visiting stars. Audi-stions are regularly held for tyro ! rock-beat bands or whatever. 1 “By the time we arrive any- where,” notes Miss Murray, 'we’re so many colors, shapes and sizes that we blend in rattier well and are not just a great white cloud descending.” In many areas, the variety shows use two- emcess speaking English, the other Spanish. RED TAPE To activate the venture a lot of red tape had to be unsnarled; The entertainment industry is steadily besieged with pleas from worthwhile causes for benefit performances. Actors Equity, 'after two years of deliberation, agreed to let stars and featured performers participate i a volunteer basis. When Joel Grey, of “Geroge f!,” joined up, 16 other members of the musical went along. In addition to stage talents, a number of TV, nightclub and recording attractions are also appearing — Gene Rayburn, Sonny Fox, Ed McMahon, Norm Crosby, Anthony and the imperials. ★ ★ ★ Miss Murray herself is a busy member of the . cast of “Caba-in which she won a Tony medallion as a Berlin tart and in which she has also subbed 100 times for Lotte 'Lenya. “I’m >one of those corny girls who was always interested in theater," the Denver, Colo: brunette says, explaining heir abandonment of free time to organize talent and map huge schedule charts for Broadway in the Streetk I know from the theater that if you’re in a lousy dressing room, you’re ready to burn the place down yourself. But if someone comes around and says, T know the place stinks, things are bad, but we’re trying to fix it,’ you feel a little better. “If we turn our backs on the ghettoes, no wonder the people want to bum things down. ‘The streets where we play hre terrible, terrible — in one place we had to call the sanitation department to clean enough so we could get the show up — but it’s good, too, for us to know such things. 'Sometimes I look around at the people watching and the way they look you know it is doing some good, flesh." OWN PURSE The mayor’s office allowed her a telephone to handle all the booking traffic, but Miss Murray dug into her own purse for" the first supply of balloons when the program began in June. | “Balloons provide an air of GLASGOW, Scotland (fl — It's innocence and fun,” she says, a condition of John Sharplin’s “That's what wq want to give lease that he keep a light burn- people." ing in the window. HURON NOW SHOWING! T^y re having PRICES This Engagement Only I JII|i. W*4„Sal.MoHiim..I.3S Adults suchawnndetful crime... it’s a shame to call the police! mmM VANDYKE-ROB i PROtfWE . COMPLETE PROGRAN Stcrt. ... WED., SAT., SUN. MON, TUE.. THURS., W. 1:SO • 400 - 6:20 . MS *00*9:20 Newlyweds Must Keep Big Light Burning TODAY AFT. S. NITE + 2-8 P.M. PONTIAC MALL AuspicMi Drayton Plain* Lions ClUk WORLDS LARGEST POPULAR PRICES APiBci RESERVED AND ADMISSION TICKETS ON SALE CIRCUS DAY AT ' Smiley Bros. Music Co. I 119 N. Saginaw St. John, a 37-year-old engineer, and his wife of six months have rented Bona Lighthouse, at the entrance to Loch Ness. 4 4 ★ John, who works in the area, said “It was not easy to find a home, but my wife learned the lighthouse was for rent” When the couple saw the whitewashed building on the shore of the Loch, with the mountains flung up on either side, they fell in love with'the place. „ MARKS ENTRANCE One term of the lease isthat John and Margaret must keep eye on the light which shines from the lighthouse, marking the entrance to Loch Ness, which forms part of the Caledonian Canal jlicing across Scotland from east to west. Some say the beam at times lights up the wash stirred up by the monster reptued to live in tiie Loch. John has to make sure the light is on. “If it goes out I have to put ah oil lamp in its place and report i t da mediately," he says. COMMERCE HELD OYER DRIVE-IN THEATER SHOWTIME: DUSK CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE ACADEMY AWARD WINNER JOSEPH E. LEVINE MIKE NICHOLS / Lawrence turm^n njj^^ __ GRADUATE 44.-—- .ram LOCKWOOD- JA6GER • BEGLEY- FL1PPEN .vision brom wuwn bros-sevin1 arts M SPECIAL! 3N IN A DRUM ‘ ‘ ‘ . ® . Mt OFF 3-Piece CHICKEN DINNER Buy One at Our Reg. $L45 Price and Get One for Half Price Please Pardon Any Inconvenience Our Construction May Cause 313B W. St., Pontiac 681-1130 # Dine-in or Fast Take-out M8MN pm ! customs • CHICKEN LUNCHEON On* large portion of chicken, eolo slow, French fries, roll and honey but- Your Choice in American governments. « Jahn said the Foreign Mini try refuses to accredit, or r moves the accreditation, of an person known to have bought DINi-IN OR FAST TAKE-OUT SERVICE w • 756 North Porry ■g££S» BIM.W.94M TRAINEE TEACHER — In die training of the Recondo units, Sgt. William C. Clancy of Olyphant, Pa., demonstrates camouflage techniques in dress and skin. At the same time, drivi-in theater! "Chilling. Vivid 1 and to i the point!’ RobeitNfee^ Burt Lancaster Hie Swimmer TECHNICOLOR® ®*) /1’HJfi FONT1 AC l'HKSS. THURSDAY', AUGUST 8, 1968 Benefits for Veterans Clearing Congress \ ^ . *y JERRY T, BAULCH ' ' > Associated Press News Features 18 k> the White House at a fairly fast clip a number of bills affecting veterans. The bl* 5?®? if°V^ tnpreasea in disability compensation, GI educational benefits for widows and more easily available voea-tlanal rehabilitation. ■ The first that reached President Johnson ■ °™ he requested permitting service ■ oisabled veterans to be trained on a part-time basis as well as full time. Under the old rules a veteran could gel ■ vocational rehabilitation only If ho trained ful ■ time. Thus, he had to give up any job he had or miss out on the training. And in many case! the men have families to support IKtt^aP ★ ★ ★ haiti/'u ’n,e new ““hsistence allowances will bi BAULCH prorated this way: j With no dependents—full time, $110 a month; three-quarters time, $80; half time, $55; institutional or farm apprentice or other on-the-job training, full time, $00. With (me dependent-full time, $150; thre*quarters, $110; half time, $75; on-the-job training, full flas, $125. Two or more dependents—full time, $175; three-quarters, $130; half time, $85; omthC-job training, full time, $150. Nursing Home Subsidy Two bills are aimed at overcoming situations where veterans are unable to find nursing homes when they no longer need care in a VA hospital. The government will pay for six months of such extra care, but the limit on the VA could pay was making It harder and harder to get its patients in, as the rates in nursing homes continued to rise. ' ’★ it ★ So Congress has changed the rates in this fashion: • From $2.50 to $3.50 a day in state homes for domiciliary and nospital care; $3.50 to $5 for nursing care. It extended for five more years, at $5 million a year, the federal matching grants to states to Construct nursing homes. • Where veterans are placed in community nursing homes, the government will reimburse them at a rate of 40 per cent of the cost erf VA hospital care, rather than at the old rate of 30 per cent. Physical Exam Rule . Explained There’s been a bit of misunderstanding about the Selective Service announcement that it plans to suspend preinduction physicals during August and September. It doesn’t change anybody’s draft schedule. It’s just a toe-in-the-water experiment to see if this is one place where Selective Service can comply with President Johnson’s edict to all government agencies to save money. Enough men must be given physicals in advance of their being drafted so there will be a big enough pool of 1A men to meet any draft calls the Army or other services might issue. Selective Service tries to calculate this need three months ahead. Lt. Gen. Lewis B. Hershey figured he might be able to lower the size of the pool and save the costs of transporting and feeding the draftees on preinduction physical trips to Army centers for a couple of months. ★ ★ ★ If the military should raise its draft calls beyond the currently anticipated leVels, the experiment will end up as a futile effort and Selective Service won’t have saved a penny in this fashion. It will just have to build the pool up again. _______________________ KS3KEEGO DOUBLE-FUN SHOW FOR GENERAL AUDIENCES! —------JSr iPwftwiwuMl MMTl . m .V EASTMAN COLOR IfkJ —coumbia Pictures p*s£m“ Jury IMIS Pont RAISE Tim Bnm BOX OFFICE OPEN 6:45-Admission $1.26, Childrsn 50c nrrrrwnmrs 11 iTiTmrrrmTiTrriTnriTW ROYAL OUNGE BOWLING! Dancing Every Nite Live Music Fti. and Sat.. Featuring , ★ Bill Seaman on Drums ★ Lee Baldwin on Organ and Trumpet , Food By loretfa in Doyvntown Lake Orion tmiUAll.LUJUUI.» JUUUUUt JUUUUUULA AII WATCHING AND DOING-Part of the physical requirements of being a member of Recondo units training in Nha Trang, Vietnam, is the ability to slide down a rope properly. Reconnaissance School in Viet AP Nawsftaturt* Photo While trainees study the process (left), another descends in almost perfect form from the tower. Recondo: Tough War Scouts NOW! SUNDAY UQUOR OPEN ALL YEAR •m Only at MOREY'S QOLF A COUNTRY CLU5 WILL YOU SEE LIVE LOBSTERS at Sensible Prices SALAD TABLE INDESCRIBABLE SEAFOODS MICRO OVENS SING-ALONQ PIANO BAR You'll Sing, You'll Sh MOREY’S 3 QOLF & COUNTRY CLUB Phone 311-4101 2280 Union lake Read UNION LAKE (EDITOR’S NOTE—They call it Recondo, for reconnaissance, commando, doughboy. When a soldier in Vietnam finishes Recondo school, after three weeks of grueling training, he’s one of the toughest war scouts in the worldJ By T. JEFF WILLIAMS NHA TRANG, South ^Vietnam I — The young soldier wearing a heavy pack leaned into space from the top of the 40-foot rappeling tower^ His legs were shaking as he let the rope slip slowly through the steel link tied to his waist. As he toppled into the void, the gravelly voiced instructor beside him said: “Hey, where do you think you’re going? I ain’t through talking to ya.” ★ * it The youth checked his slide and tiie pack slowly tilted him upside down, 35 feet up. The instructor, a* Special Forces sergeant, barked again: “C’mon, troop, you’d better shape up.” Hie soldier started his slowltics and use of Communistivens of Biloxi, Miss., recalled slide to earth again,, his legs weapons. how one team recently had to be flailing the air as he tried to The men are taken from ajextracted by helfcopter as Viet-right himself. |wide variety of units in South cong forces moved to on them. As he untangled himself at the Vietnam and trained to become the eyes and ears of their units. bottom, another instructor snapped an order: “Get down and give me 10 push-ups. And one for Recondo." Recondo: reconnaissance, commando, doughboy. It’s one of the toughest schools in the Army. For three weeks, men in this volunteer unit take up to 18 hours a day of intensive training to make them some of the finest reconnaissance squads in the world. j . From the day they arrive, it’s( fiO/ID fO CHCI up at 4 in the morning for hard a runs that progressively lengthen r) jrtlnmntir to eight miles. J L^ipiVIHUyv. Field training is carried on the steep hills that rise directly behind this seaside base 200 miles northeast of Saigon. The men had better know what they are doing—Vietcong still move in the area and the trainees sometimes run into them. Hie commander of the Recondo school, Maj. Robert L. Ste- nt, Post-Selling? Made with Betty Botters Better Batter eight MORE IMPORTANT Physical training is important! for the men but more so are the hours of map reading, medical BONN (UPI) — The practice training, handling prisoners andof selUng dipi0matic ap-North Vietnamese military Hutments may be stopped soon by a hew West German1 law. Gerhard Jahn, parliamentary State Secretary in the Foreign Ministry, told deputies the government would welcome legislation giving it authority to take legal action against professionals who it ego ti ate diplomatic appointments for a fee. ★ ★ fk j At least 12 individuals or firms are known to be engaged in this in Europe, Jabn re- often covet an honorary consular title forj reasons and because it enables them to evade personal inspection when traveling. * * * Parliamentary demands for action resulted from disclosures, Hans Hermann Weyer, a adowy character who collects fees from West German for getting them consular appointment from Lat-vernments. is- The men are taught to outfit themselves with great care. Seemingly simple things are drummed into them—like never removing their equipment, even while sleeping. Their M16 rifles are taped to prevent the slightest rattle. Extra tape on the stocks can be used to cover the mouth of a prisoner. Medical supplies include pills to stop coughing and a serum that will expand a 1 man’s blood if he is wounded and losing blood as he flees an j | enemy. The school is relentless. “We don’t want half-trained men out1 'there that could jeopardize a whole mission,” Stevens empha- Those who make it through the school—there is a 43 per cent washout rate—will be among the world’s toughest 12 NORTH SAGINAW IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAO MATINEES DAILY ONN 11:45 5.M. Show Starts 12:00 Noon AIR CONDITIONED YOU MUST BE IB - PROOF REQUIRED NOW 2 BIG ADULT HITS IN COLOR SHEDDIT IN COLOR PLUS 2nd ADULT TUE MOTION piC• ■ TURi THAT SHOWS mRmmimisi AN EXPERIENCE FOR ADVENTUROUS ADULTS THINKING ABOUT A TRIP TO CEDAR POINT? Gala Drawing Saturday, August 10,2 P.M. TAKE ONE FOR FREE! Contest Ends Friday, August 9,1968 (no pure Koto nocoitary) YES, HIE RED BARN IS 6IVHI6 AWAY “A 8AY OF FUN AT CEDAR POINT FOR THE FAMLV.”v 12-2 P.M. 1 COME JOIN THE FUN ... BALLOONS FREE COKES 1 YOU MAY BE A WINNER! FOR TO ALL (many Other prises) ■ 1 THE KIDS oy RED BARK 445 ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD Across From The Mall 332-5141 appointment. he lectures on weapons handling while on maneuvers outside the Nha. Trang, Vietnam, base. of their V^..please don't spoil the fun by calling ths cops! «I AlEltiUDULL iipawir VANDVKE• ROBINSON• PROVlNE HENRY SUVA • JOANNA MOORE - TONY BILL • SUM HCKENS «• ““**— ~~ * DEARBORN DATEWAY MAIN-'Ju? * RAMONA • BEDFORD; TERRACE • WYAWDOTTE-MAIR' NOW! EAST SIDE • FORT GEORGE GRAND RIVER • GRATIOT - OAK ’■lOUV ROGER-VAR DYKE-WAYRE 2935 DIXIE HIGHWAY (DA. 10) I SLOCK N. TELEGRAPH RD. cHttown utwar a met Mwcnn PRICE wuemcSi EDGAR ALLAN POE'S U»iQg£R9]L iwwwn -COLOR PLUS oiftflT year’- ■ A Sfil E—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAV,. AUGUST 8, 1968 Jacoby on Bridge A A J *10 8 2 ♦ Q 10 6 4 3 2 ♦ AS NORTH t ♦ KQ88 VAKJ 4,A J98 *Q« (D) HAST' ♦ 10953 V Q 8 7 5 4 ♦ K5 *74 + KJ109853 Neither vulnerable West North Eiit South PlM 2N.T. Pass 6* Pus Pus pass Opening lead—♦ 4 By OSWALD and JAMBS JACOBY The Italians seem to favor the Napoleonic maxim that luck Is on the side of the heaviest artillery, but on today’s hand we had the artillery and a misfire at the crucial momentl cost us the bat-] tie. Our Wei^ opened a mond at the first table and JACOBY Forquet and Garrozzo of Italy I worked their way up to a nice comfortable three clubs and [ made five. Avareiii passed at the second! | table and Norman Kay Edgar Kaplan reached five clubs in two bids. ! . i - w w *- West’s diamond lead fell to dummy’s ace and the eight of clubs (lost to West’s ace. The diamond return was ruffed and a trump led to dummy’s queen. I Smith’s next play was to ruff a third diamond. East discard-led a low heart and Norman Kay noted that West, who had passed as dealer, had already shown up with six diamonds to the queen-10 and the ace of ubs. It looked as if East would | hold the ace of spades, but Kay led a spade toward dummy anyway. West played the jack and dummy’s queen held the trick. Sitting in an easy chair at home we can see the ace of spades in the West hapd, but Norman was sitting at a card table in France and- no one showed him that ace. He returned to his hand by ruffing the last diamond and, after mature deliberation, decider that the heart finesse offered a better chance of success than a second spade lead. He tried it and went down one. w * * If anyone thinks for one: moment that we intend this j hand as unfavorable criticism! of Kay and Kaplan, let us point out that their bidding was i' < magnificent. Nine pairs out of * 10 would havo bean in three trump, going down two or three tricks. They avoided tills trap, reached the right contract and finally went down when Norman made tip same play that almost'any expert would have V*CfiRD.Stafe4* Q—The bidding bu bm: Waaft North M South »Wo » You, Soutk kdk *10Sl WASil WANS* 441 You, axe not vulnanblo. What do you dot A—Pom. Sometimes thi ■pads doubles are left in. TODAYS QUESTION You pass and West bids four dubs. North and Bast pass. What do you dot ROBIN MALONE THE BETTER HALF By Bob I By Carl Grnberf THE BORN LOSER "You and the girls ought to be able to finally finish a game this time — there’s a full moon tonight.” BERRY'S WORLD—By Jim Berry * By SYDN1Y OMARS AMES (March ll-Aprll It): Important to Mribcroot, especiallyr— family affairs, individual — — right to know otki Impertinent question!. Be charming, but — TAURUS (April •etMecmtion * tap eTT t a requirements from mere Illusions. Much nr----------- behind the scenei. Obtain t aries massage. GEMINI (May 21-June 20): ara given choice of two Plena. One hop i ■siting benefits. The other Is fiuhy. I itlllze peat experience. Build on solid 1 aae. Bo thorough. Do those IT--------- CAPRICORN?Dec. 22-Jan. It): Accent .n short tourney in roaponae to cell, , message. Ideas fro abundant. Kay la to bo selective, choose quality. Family ; member may confide need. Do your best to fulfill It. ’ AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Fob II): Take .art where possessions, money ■ picture. If you aim high, you gain. II approve slipshod methods, y— — ‘ ■AML mo 21-July 22): Long-range h brings picture Into clean locus, Take unto to no loose ends. Avoid persons who are sarcastic, preludlced. Chance for rool . gain lies In creative thinking; people LEO (July 2S-Aug. 22): You a _______________ Cion to accept constrictive challenge. I material at hand. Express yourself In confident manner. Accept on oth*' people's money, problems. Yeur advice *m> (Aug.: 22-Sept. 22): Recognise limitations — ovoid extremes. Give consideration to Mods of, mole, partner. Be aware at public raoctlon to you-it legal question arlsas, chock you to bo caraiias. Stress today hoalth, basic Issum- prals "sCORPIO y(8et* 21-* Nov. 2)): Mb Mv7ehanoo*to IsSrl? trutR!'*Si wlXing to accept ILWishful thinking causes delay, possible toss. Featured are change. _______actions Oi Singly. . ISCES (Feb. 11-March 20): Your personality Is emphasized. Express your toolings. Accept challenge, responsibility. Many r~ taMtaMM “U1- --------- — Know tl 'dance. IP TOMORROW IS YOUR BIRTHDAY you attract people to you with the|r r~ olems. Current cycle Is one of movsmi chsinbo. * W W GENERAL TENDENCIES: Lunar n .on favorable tor fishing, planting. Cycle ■tad for PISCES, ARIES. Special word to /IRGO: do plenty of llttonlng, observing. (Cepyrlght, IMP, General Features Cap.) By Art Sansom ■4^ sm B-B By V. T. Hamlin ...LOONIES,CRACKPOTS, AN' Li_l / ITS ONE NOTCH KNEEZEES PARADING \ DOWN FROM AROUND HOLLERIN' f WHAT'S A_\ A HIPPY/ INSULTS I MAN, ITS ( KNEEZEE? k PISSUSTINSi CAPTAIN EASY By Leslie Turner © 1»6S by NEA, lac. "For pinkos, them Ruskies sure know how to handle liberals!’ OUT OUR WAY •riffy. TAR I US ( -Daily Almanac By United Press International Today is Thursday, Aug. 8, v the -221st (jpy of 1968 with 145 to follow, The moon Is full. The morning star is Saturn. Hie evening star Is Venus. ★ * w w ■ « On this day in history: In 1940 the German Luftwaffe began a series of daylight raids on the British Isles. The raids continued until October 31. In 1945 President Truman signed the ratification of the tJnited Nations Charter. Also in 1945 Russia declared war on Japan — seven days before Tokyo surrendered. In 1963 a gang of masked bandits tobbed a British mail train of |7 million. WWW In 1950 Florence Chadwick, San Diego, Calif., set a woman’s record by swimming the English Channel in 13 hours and 28 minutes, A thought for the day: Thomas Mann said, "Time cools, time clarifies; no mood * can be maintained quite unaltered through the course erf hours.” Bell Will Erect HQ in Detroit DETROIT CAP) - Construction will start in six months on a $20 million, 13-story headquarters building in Detroit, Michigan Bell Telephone Co. announced Wednesday., . w i ■■ W ' w The public utility said the 443,800-square-foot building will be adjacent to, its present main offibes in the downtown area and will be designed to allow tom expansion to 26 stories. Completion of the budding is expected by mid-1971. EEX & MEEK By Howie Schneider BOARDING HOUSE YOU FORGOT OUR DATE — YOU'RE VERY ABSENT-MINDED LATELY' TUMBLEWEEDS ITS ABOUT TIME YOU SHOWED OP, MOLE-EYE!... I SENT YOU OUT WEEKS AGO TO SPY ON THE INDIANS! I DONE EXACTLY UKE Via*.. o x YOU TOLD ME,COLONEL! ...MADE FRIENDS ff™. WITH'EM, JOINEDTHE.I TOU HAVE TRIBE, TOOK PART IN A TO' TELL THEIR CUSTOMS!,., v'Y ME? by Tom Ryan DONALD DUCK By Walt Disney THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, Ws B—11 Some Foreign Data Errs U:$. Inflation Worst? The fallowing ire top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold bjf then in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Tuesday. Produce . Market Up in Heavy Trading Big Steel Pares Its Price Hikes I Since 1957 the quetzal report-1 updated for changes hi living edly has dropped in value just | habits. They could have more NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market advanced in he trading early today. Gains outnumbered losses by more than 2 to 1 and the New York Stock Exchange Index posted a substantial gain. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 1.63 to 878.55. The ticker tape was late as the market went through its usual routine of filling pent-up orders caused by a Wednesday recess for catching up with paperwork. Volume was boosted by a parade of big Mocks in miscellaneous issues. Steels advanced following news of a partial steel price rollback. Most gains were fractional. Jones & Laughlin was up about a point. AUTOS ARE UP All the leading auto stocks posted fractional gains. Among early volume leaders, guns of about a point were posted for Great Western Financial, Canteen Corp. and Phillips Petroleum while American Portland Cement lost more than a point. Imperial Corp. of America was among savings and loans which rose aniid mounting signs of easier interest rates. Among early blocks were: Occidental Petroleum, up V« at 47H on 19,000 shares; American Telephone, up % at 50% on 18,700; Canteen Corp., up % at 20 on 11,800; American Portland Cement, off 1 at 21% on 13,800; and RCA, up % at 45% on 7,900. AP AVERAGE ' On Tuesday the Associated Press Average of 80 Stocks gained .8 at 328.5. Prices advanced on the American Stock Exchange . ' price levels “significantly re-; ★ * ★ just don’t add up. duced the threat of a large andi This quivering victim of to-jsLIGHT RELIEF general inflation in steel prices, fiation might actually become | The New York Stock Exchange (•In (Mi.) Hisk Law I Perfect Film 27 (1 *■“ J PflzerC I.Me 34 4* BUS n I PKIIMorr MO I ill (Mi.) High Lew LestC 4 fp 8 S + 33, 43 MVi 42'/h as fw aoH 20ft -“ im hy, 7M* + _ 19ft lift If + 14 2?ft 29 29ft 4 72 MW f* **“- 1 15ft Wft mb-ft ... 51ft 50ft SOft-ft 40 23 Hit 23 + ft 44 3444 35 .... 3 42ft 41ft 42ft + ft I2f 20ft 20 20 —1 MS 3ft 44ft-ft 31ft 31ft 31ft + ft I 88 8 43ft 43ft 3ft ►hill Pet 2.44 243 42ft UriBi TM Polaroid 42 * ’ PugSPL Puflman ’ 39ft 19 ■ “t aft „ ..J IT* mm M 72ft 71ft 72ft-H„ 12 Wft 37ft 30ft +1ft *1 22ft 21ft 21ft & fll RelstonP .40 ghMSlnc £1 iwymooii Jw urn* RfVlOfl 1.40 f§jW|! .... __lift t ft -I***# mmr 7 37ft -87ft 37ft .. < 37 flW 37 0 47ft 47ft 47ft.+ ft —— as* sssst'S 10 31ft 31 31ft + ft 3seI+« If Bft 14ft 14H , 14 40ft 4fft 40ft + ft n o3ft Sft 3 — ft ISO 34ft 34ft 34ft • 90 15ft 34ft 35 |f 41ft 41ft Aft Seeking comfort, some slight week, American consumers National City Bank reported!HI* mnrlf 'ovAn^thLeh! SailLbmn.StiT^’ 8 ha‘f billion tl;is.7ek'that thf. “J rate somebody else’s headache! /s PkkinQ Up dollars inflation. of dollar deprecation last yearidoesn,t necessari, cure thel ^H * * . i was 2.7 per cent, a rate greater , . U S. Steel, the nation’s top than that of Britain. France and p , B i, illustrate 100' DETROIT (UPI) - Produc-pTOducer, made the key move Germany, and Iran and Greece , ^ of’ the vear 195i ar-!tien of 1969 model cars began y »r «• »'“> X Mr To strike this man dumb-gentina, 100 centavos in 10 years! Chrysler Corp. leading the way posieu earner Dy omer oig however, one need only inform haVe been reduced to the pur-1 as the nation’s automakers v . _ hi*" that the currency showing chasing power of six. And in began building an inventory for Within hours, Bethlehem, .Re- the least depreciation in the chl|Ci too contesimos now get j the September introductions, ptijblie, Armco and Wand said past 10 years, according to First you only 11. The current week’s U.S. pro- their earlier boosts of virtually j National City, is not the dollar * * * duc'tion of 15,301 cars reflects DETROIT POOS DETROIT (AP) - (USDAi—Eggprkes ■•Id per do»n by first rK.iv.rt (Includ- 1 Grade A I umbo, 42-44) extra large, 17-40; larg., 34-37; medium, 27-30; .m»ll, | Xveo , 2 Mft Mft Mft + ft .{ 14 44 43ft 43ft —Ift.bvm 44 419ft 111ft 118ft + ft 1 Scott Paper 1 44 43ft 41ft 43ft + ft Sbd CttL 2.20 * H fig 4Mb - W Searl 6D 1.M Seeburg .40 iftwaon a*»o Sinclair 1— SinoerCo 2.40 Smith K 1.00a SouCalE 1.40 fio Poe 1.40 light ....... _________ Prit 4 to Oft cents, CHICAOO EGGS CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mercantile Exchange-Butter steady; wholesale buying prices unchanged; W score AA 44ft; 92 A 44ft; fO B 45ft; “ C 90 B 44; Of C 42. Egg* about steady, prices unchanged; M per cent .. Grade A whites 34; mediums 28; standards 2f; checks lift. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) • — LI Kiii/inn prices .; ; special I - White Rack fryers 20ft-21ft. Livestock i DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) — (USDA)—Cattle IMl slighter steers indIheltwjotaMf cows lf.M-20.00; cutter 17.50-1f.00. Not enough t\ogr —“■ ■* offer to set up l CHICAGO LIVESTOCK -CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA>- Hog* 441M, 1-2 sorted 205-221 lb- K&wn *L»2M0; Id 300-400 lb. SOWS 17.00-10.00; .14 *®0-hono; tewjoed, SIS! 1,000-1,250 Ibs. yleld f«0o 2 to 4 27.00- 30.00; choice loLf75 *. yield glade 2 to 4 25.50-3 end choice 25.00-24^00. Cel Plnanl CampRL .45a Camp Soup T Canteen .00 . CaroPLt i.3l CoroTbT .74 Carrier Cp 1 CarterW ,40e Case Jl Castle Cook I CaterTr 1.20 CeleneseCp. 2 Cenco Ins .30 Opt SW l .70 Ctrro 1.40b Csrt-teed .to - CessnaA 1.40 cPr m m Cbw Ohio 4 .! . ChIMII StP P ChIPneu 180 Chl RI Pac ChrlsCraft la Ki* Cities Svc 2 ClevEuS 1.92 'etfafttfsftif 3ft- *29 -14ft 13ft 13ft . .. 9 30ft 30ft 30ft - ft 32 2f 20;14 28ft 155 24ft 24 24ft KanGE 1.32 KanPwL 1.1 Katy Ind KayserRo A Kennecott 2 Kerr Me 1.1 KlmbClk 2.3 KdppKS 1.4 KrtigeSS J Kroger 1.30 Mft +2ft 11 »ft 2fft 2fft —K— 34 3Sft -~35ft 35ft-ftf- 34 24 25ft 24 IS Mft 23ft Mft I 31 ft 3 ■ l 21ft 4 Mft 43ft Oft - _ 75 ,74ft 75. 4 151 94 91ft 92ft 107 39ft 38ft 3»Vn - X30 41 ft 42 + 55 ib 43 43 - I Co la in Mft 14ft 17ft —' 72ft 72ft - •a tl -; ' 32 49ft 4 58 27ft -27ft Mft ' 33 50ft 50ft 50V4 —. • 32ft 32ft - 51ft 51ft — S ir & & 1 mx 1-40 M Oft 39ft 40ft if ft ltd Kolls .12p 23 21ft 21ft 21ft 4 ft umcbi in lot mw 43ft 43ft — ft ltgillff l.,0 58 52ft 52ft 52ft — ft StOllOh 2.50b * mm Onn 1 ISJ 2.25 • I 77 1 74ft -t By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK—Nothing Is more! one-tenth of one per cent a year, j inflation than they idmit. ! certain to cause normally calm or ,n equivalent^ just one The figures also might hfe dis- penny in 10 years. The dollar torted by the simplicity of the has shrunk 16 ceWts in that time, standard of living, which admits And, difficult as it is to be-1 of no change, or by the fixing of lieve, the First National City prices on the one major crop, or charts also show that the El Sal-simply, by stagnation of the vador colon, Venezuela Bolivar [economy at a low standard of and Thailand both have main-[living, tained their values better than * * * the dollar. An absence of inflation in a * * * country with a bogged-down Such statistics as these give fits to inflation-frantic people. And even Dr. Franz Pick, a money and gold expert whose continental accent becomes heavy with denunciation when he speaks of the subject, refers to the V S- dollarette. Somehow, though, the figures men to lose their breath, their rationality and control of their | Move Eases Inflation blood pressure, _. _ , ,, [than the subject Threat, Says Johnson 'of inflation or, as some say, PITTSBURGH (AP) -steel price increases settled at 0 «... momjnodytte^levels Wednes- with t‘wd chil-day, President Johnson said the!dren new prices are “a substantia he must ear' ............... mprovement from the general,|14 m a year to equal ^ pur. inflationary threat. 'chasing power of $5,000 in 1939 Arthur M. Okun, chairman of an(j animal response is im-the President’s Council of Eco-rmediate, ranging in pitch irbm nomic Advisors, said the new|a|,ieattoaroar. CL'NNIFF economy is nothing to brag about. And though the depreciation of money and inflation are something to holler about, it’s nice to blow that the noise is muffled a bit by the sound of a booming economy. '69 Model all products would be pared but the quetzal of Guatemala, down to match U.S. Steel’s selective increases. If applied throughout the industry, the in-; creeses would mean an average hike of about 2.8 per cent or $4.30 a ton on 00 per cent of the industry’s shipments. FIRST TO COME IN But it still doesn’t seem right.) the changeover to the 1969 Raw figures can lie, especially!model cars, according to when the raw figures them- Automotive Industries, a trade selves are little more titan lies publication, to begin with. [ *' * * I The $5,000-a-year man of 19391 ®y the end of the week, year-: Two area men have been nearty three tinwg as badly I to-date production will stand at promoted to vice presidents of 0ff today, even though he must 5,472,942 cars, almost 1 million American Savings Association.jearn |i4(282. The fact is, he is! ahead of the pace of calendar Business Notes Bethlehem, the No. 2 produc-iThey are* Andrew J. Lindsey of earning it_and er, was the first to announce a1 .......... cut 1q. its previously posted hike of almost 5 per cent. Although the hikes ‘ affect steels used for such major prod-' ucts as autos and appliances,! the Johnson administration seemed'ready to let them stand. White House Press Secretary George Christian, however, cautioned: “The success of our con-tinued efforts to combat infla- LINDSAY tion depends on renewed priee 255 Cherokee stability ' “ ahead. He’s 1967. Eight weeks of 200,000-pfys 'production during the first half, 'of 1968 contributed to the ! substantial increase over last ®lyear. more. much better off. I NOT FOR BASIC NEEDS In addition, all that extra is going to pay for what the manjc I of 1939 couidn’t aspire to: more *' changeover before the other auto~companies, planned pro-' education, better health care,iduction of 11,835 cars this week; : pensions, a second car, televi-! £eTa' Motors Cor . W I Sjon hi-fi i Ford Motor Co., 1,500; and I In’ other .words, depreciation American Motora Co^- M4* of currency doesn’t always! —— ■ • , mean a reduction in take-h'omej State Gl Killed steel in the months ibm«r^lOB~i^iou^,iPj nf the take-home pay is ^ Waterforii Township. t rising faster than inflation, as it [WASHINGTON (AP) — A --- . 1 ' natciiuiu lumioiuiiA u . Some officials in Washington! Lindsey is currently chief recently in went unstinting in their praise 1 appraiser for American Savings l of Johnson. “It’s a hell of tory for the President, one. 143 REFUSE TO CROW But others refused to crow X + i7*i about the development, which • +iH| apparently ended the while Thomas is the internal auditor. Both men work at the downtown Detroit main branch. P « 25 17ft i;i U Mft 38 35 49ft 4M 21 53ft Ml ^ + a 1 confrontation between the gov-7ft [7ft 7?* - ft ernment and the steel industry 119 24ft 23ft 24ft since 1962 when the late Presi-'dent John F. Kennedy forced a New VPs Named at Ford Motor Co. Still the figures do look puzzling, and so First National Cjty was queried. And from there it was determined that the statistics afe, at best, the only figures available of a rather bad Jot. For one thing, the statistics on cost of living in industrial countries and less well-developed nations are hardly comparable the United Michigan serviceman was | among 14 Americans killed in recent action in Vietnam, the Defense Department announced Wednesday. He was Army CpL, Larry L. Elzinga, son of Mr. and Mrs, Martin Elzinga of Charlevoix. .... 38ft Mft — ftlTWIMW i.a 4 izift 12ft 1&4 + ft T.X.CO 2.80 I 42ft- 42ft 42ft TexETrn 1.2 17 33ft 33ft 33ft + ft T«x V M 40 305 lift M*-V* 34ft »ft ft TS..lhlt lao 2 257 121 30ft 37ft 5ft 4-lft . 28 58ft {(ft 58ft -Uf 41 43ft. 43 43ft ,, ■............... 41 43ft 42ft 43ft + ft LO^GIll.Jjp XJ53 I S3 m il 4 24 lift lift 10ft 4 10 44ft 44ft 44ft - 14.3 54ft 55 .... 1 .1 rM14 Mft Mft + ft jJ 1 24ft 24ft 34ft -f ft 14 19 37ft lift 34ft + ft 154 43 M 42ft — ft '.3 43ft 43ft 43ft i+ ft 214 3ft. 54ft 55 + ft y Clip 1-20 n TV 1.33 03 14ft Mft Mft “ #±r 13 15ft . 15ft 15ft + ft SM 42ft + ft ft 25ft ft-ft S57 L 8ft.+ 8 22 Wk 4 I 73% mk 10% p iwa 38 51% 51 51% 41k 83% 13 83 306 25% 24% 25% 19 .M 29ft- 29ft + ft1wr -r*"*.* *—™ ^^^* DETROIT (AP) -• The Ford at aff. The figure f dr Saudi 225 95ft 24ft 27ft + I 46ft 44ft — ^Hl. W 4 nlroyal 1.20 RRAirLIn 1 ltAlrc 1.40 Fruit V? 0 41 — ft. 79 22ft 22V9 , 22ft 4 ft '45 P6 62ft 4 ft 44 51ft Mft 51ft 4 ft 103 59 55ft 59 211 Sft Mft Mft 32 Mft Mft 328*4 A USGypsm 3a 39 Ml US Indust .40 228 27 USLInOI JOp 18 428 USPIPe 1.20 « 26V USPjyCh 1,50 109 49, US Smalt 1b i 24ft 24ft —1 Hart Praises LBJ for Role in Rollback president for car engineering. He joined Ford in 1948. He is succeeded* in that post by Robert B. Alexander. ★ * ★ | .Frey, who previously was a vice president and general manager of the company's Ford division, resigned effective Sept. 1, He had joined the company in 1951. rate statistics generally are maintained by the industrial nations* In some small countries,; for example, cost of living indexes are really based on surveys made years ago and not men failed.. Hie first written constitution in America was Connecticut’s' Fundamental Orders of Connecticut (1639). . «: m v , ■ ____ 40ft 40ft — 2.40 234 38ft 38ft 38ft JO M 40ft 40ft 40ft 4 ft 40 17 40ft 47ft 47ft —ft Varian Asm vandp Co i •*- Ii Pw —V— 59 27ft 27 WASHINGTON (UPI) - Sen. Mpu/C in Rripf Philip Hart of Michigan IlCWi IH WUCI [ Wednroday called the action of j Wegley Quertermous of 4900 Sundale, Watered Township, told Pontiac police yesterday —W—X—V—Z— mLamb 1 X24 50ft 50ft SOW 4 KJ4 »» l.ir I» '■“ It* M inDIx 10 72ft 72ft 72ft . - 30 40ft «0ft 4084 4 ft 34 52W Sft Sft 23 32ft 33ft 4] _ 92 27ft 24ft 26ft 4 XeroxCp 1.0 100 275ft 275ft 277W 4 VnSm H0O 57 34ft 44ft.,t- ZenlthR 1.20a 45 jSft 54ft 55 Copyrighted by Tha Associated Press 11 Sales figures” are unofficial. . unless otherwise noted, rates ot oi ds In the foregoing table ere annt lursements based on the last guertei semi-annual declaration. Special ‘a dividends or payments not aes |h as regular are Identified In 1 following footnotes. a—Also extra or extras. ,b--A«nual rete plus stock dividend. C-Llquldetlng dividend. d—Declared or paid In 1947 plus stock dividend. e-Oecjared w paid so -— Li. — lr {—Payable In Stock during dad cash valua ^ .exftlyidarfl aution data. g-Paid tost yaar, i er paid attar stock divvbbnd ■ __ k-Declertd or psld this year, an KsumulMhft^us wHh dlvIdMtmi ln arrSanu n-Na wlssue. p-Pald this yaar, dlvldand omlttad, deferred or no ectlort B’/fflBTia tutt. >rJ cld—Called, x—Ex dhrtdlHd.jt—I dend and sales to toff. Xftto-jfjt t i 45W + U.S Steel in announcing “selective” hike that forced other steel producers to roll back their prices a “victory for the national interest.” U.S. Steel Wednesday announced prices hikes lower than those of its major competitors. Successfuhfnvesting 1 By ROGER E. SPEAR i' Q—I’m 65 years old and have Q—Our modest income has $20,000 in Certificates of Deposit been severely strained by my | paying 5Vs per cent. I’d like husband’s prolonged illness. We J haye a $7,500 mortgage o home, a $450 loan against tty S husband’s life insurance less than $1,000 in savings. We have just been notified of an t unexpected legacy that will s provide $25,000 in cash and 8 ti shares of Diamond Interna- 5 tional. Ice’ll appreciate yonr v advice on how to make the best capital would be the assurance use of this surprise in-! that the good yield, would con- | _____ HI heritance.—M^M. tihue for severail jt e a r I. senator;Stocks Of Local Interest, A—I’d be inclined Sllectiie Certificates of Deposit are 'Btghtht mortgage stand if you’ve been short-term ^obligations. You live that someone stole a stereo unit and a tape pack valued at more than $100 from his car while it was parked in the 100 block of Lake Street. Church Rummage Sale: 6216 Eliz. Lake'Rd., Aug. 8-10, 0:30-5. . —Adv.. I have seen estimates that consumers will save one half billion dollars this year as a result of the action by U S. Steel,” the Michigan said. “President Johnson’ s'p|o“r«s »«er OKimai, • OVER THE COUNTER. STOCKS your opinion on U. S. Treasury Certificates paying 6 per cent. Should I switch to these and where do I buy them?—A* B. A—The 6 per cent Treasury bond, maturing May 15, 1975, is selling at a premium which takes the yield back to approximately 5.6 per cent. The principal advantage from switching your or w-dlstri h—D«lire< t—Paid Ii ■Ex dhd- being reorganized uni Act; or MCurltles ess panies. to—Foreign t wrest •—— firmness ih defending price! 'J!sbg'^filg to swing it thus far. I’d near an drban center where any statxility has been vindicated.” Mt*i repay the bank loan, clear up one of several brokerage firms * * * ^cfigiit hills and establiih a! ““Id execute'your order. Hart, met with members, of commission. _______ 812.000 savings account at the Copyright, J968) , best available rate of interest. the Federal Trade Commission Wednesday and reaffirmed his request that the FTC analyze the matter of price competition to the steel todtfetry. iSSJ Truck* _____i Englmorlng Citizens Uflimi* Cll “■----1 Crystal srvlces ... _______Rubber Co. .Ootroxjraomml ( Sat ran '.Printing' •. Ktor8)°iCentral Alrifn. “**—aimlcal................ Mutual funds TM Affiliated Fund Chemical Fund .. ....... Commonwealth StKk ... Keystone Income K-l l. Keystone, Growth K-2 ■•■■■ Mass. Investors Growth . Mass. Investors Trust Putnam Growth Technology Citrus growers are Taising insects imported from Sioutfa Africa, Australia, India and Pakistan to kill- other insect* that infest citrus groves. Everyone, including the steel-makes, are better off if there would he an objective ta-depth study of factors which enter into tiie pricing of steel,” Hart said;.".. “As a result of the rollback, there is not tile same imr HH|H|| mediacy for such an to-fund vestigation but it still should be dow-jones averages done,” Hart said, “the fact that^'-g* we have had a rollback at the]*® . request of President Johnson « stocks does not necessary mean .tiiatSobSms . .. . competition is at work to tiie).'® s«^d vSk r«i'« setting of steel prices.” !]J The remainder might be. divided, putting $5,000 into bonds—to n enhance your feeling of security ■».! ■" 16.2 — end the balance into growth stocks for capital appreciation. ■f ///[,/* . * ★ . -Jr 'aw Asked Hold Diamond International, .!# which represents a good growth ____industry (packaging) and pays 'SiS !an annual dividend of $1.80, J2T7- iMi regularly increased since 1960. 'ISi i'*21 For bonds I’d recommend AAA- 14 4? rated Aiq. Telephone 5%| -4-—( debentures of 1995 or Consumer stock Average* ------By The Associated Press Treasury Position Aeg. 5^ 1950 Aug. », 1947 . 4,323.759,444.81 8 7,024,758.107.88 Deposits Fiscal Yeor July 1— __________ 15,844,402,395.90 1U70J09,071.49 Withdrawals Fiscal Year— 19J09.077447.42 16.150,741,049.30 X—T 2 0 0 0 Allison H 4 0 10 FrRtfbnan rf 4 1 1 1 Carow 2b 4 0 10 Powsll lb 3 0.0 0 . RonClark *4 3 O O 0 Blefbnrff 4 1 2 1 Holt rf 3 0 10 BRoblnsn 3b 4 10 0 Lotte c'., 2 0 1 0 DJohnson 2b 3 O 2 0 Boswell p 1 0 0 0 Etcbebrn c 100 1 BMItlor p 0 0 0 0 Hardin p 3 0 0 0 Oliva' ph 10 0 0 Kollor p 00 0 0 . , Roseboro pH 1 0 0 0 Roland p 0 0 00 . Total 31 0 4 0 Total 21 3 f 3 • Mtonsssfr ....IMIIMM-J Bofttmoro •'.I Iji t In — 3 . E—Tovar, Look. OR MMnaaala ■ 1, Baflbwani ..1. LOB—Minnesota _S, Bletary, Belanger ^ ' h ll er BB SO Boswell ILA9) ...I 2 1 1 1 2 rgF j l| f J f (EtchebarfenJ. WP—Boswell 2, Hardin. ' / SECOND GAME _ . MINNESOTA BALTIMORE . abrhbl abrhbl Tovar % 50 11 Buford 2b 30 11 Mata lb 5 0 1 0 CFrnendz 2b T 0 0 0 Uhlaendr cf 5 0 0 0 Motion If 5 0 0 0 QflVS rf 4 1 3 B Blefary rf 2 0 0 0 ROMDOra c 3 2 V 0 FrRobnsn rf >3 2 2 0 Allison If 4 1 1 2 Powell lb 5 1 2 1 Caraw 2b 4 111 Handrcki c 4 2 2 1 Renick at 3 10 0 BRoblnsn ,3b 4 2 3 2 Refttns ph 1011 DJohnson at 1 Wi < DChanee p 1 0 0 0 Bslangtr at 3 0 1 0 Richer! p Haney pn Drateaky o 30 4104 Tani MO-132 ...... 0 0 0 Bit BB 1 —|. .... BOB 00* 3 0 r . THE PONTIAC PRESS Hi (’ 1 . ■ \, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 F*-l spouts New Challenger for Firebirds Flint Wildcats First Home Foe % Wisner Stadium in MFL Clash at A new challenger moves into the spotlight in the Midwest Football League and the Pontiac Firebirds will be first to get the test. The Flint Wildcats, who demolished a strong Ypsilanti team, 32-12 last weekend visit Wisner Stadium in what should be an early showdown affair. ^ With an all veteran team, added depth and a new headicoach In Len Christman, the Wildcats have running speed, strong passing in the arm of Mace Segal and a flock of rangy receivers. One of the owners of the Flint team Is defensive backfield star of the Minnesota Vikings Paul Krause, who was with the Washington Redskins for many years. AFTER’tt TITLE Flint has always been troublesome fa* Pontiac in the past three years, and this year the Wildcats, as indicated by their rout of Ypsilanti, feel they can win all the marbles. The Firebirds met Flint in an exhibition game in July and barejy got by with a 19-18 verdict as Segal came Takes Medalist Honor in Canadian Tourney EDMONTON, Alta, (fl - Jim Doyle of Winnipeg—shot a two-under-par 69 Wednesday and won medalist honors in the Canadian Amateur Golf Championship with a 36-hole total of IS). Among the Americans who qualified for match play Thursday were Gary Haden, Mesa, Ariz., at 149, Robert Ihlanfeldt, Kenmore, Wash., at 150, James Smith, Clarence, N. Y., at 151, Ton Draper, Royal Oak, Mich., at 152 and Andrew Gard, Bolton, Mass., at 152. into the game in the second half and hit. on 16 of 22 passes for three touchdowns. Segal will have big Ray Brown at 225 pounds at fullback and backs Leroy Scott and Jim Cobbins providing the speed. Felix Miller, a 6-3 and 200 pounder, John Mayne and speedster Jim Walker are all veteran pass receivers. The Firebirds are hurting on defense and shorthanded on offense. Leading end Ron Bemis is still in the National Guard while defensive tackles Ron Clark and Bob Minton are both out with leg injuries. Veteran quarterback Bill Harrington who had a respectable mark of 14 out of 26 against Hamtramck last Saturday will get the starting nod, with former Pontiac Central QB Bob Pomeroy in the backup role. Tom Eifert, sturdy little running back, who led the ground attack against Hamtramck with 54 yards in 6 carries will be in the starting backfield with power runner Marty Malatih. The Firbirds will take to the road after Saturday and will not be bade to Wisner until the game with Ypsilanti September 7. Tickets for Saturday, or season tickets can be obtained at Bob-Kens, Griff’s; Osmuns, VFW Post 1370, Prayers and Dixie Williams Service in Pontiac, a Ad at Morley’i Drugs and Shelton’s in Rochester. Kickoff Is 7:30 p.m. at Wisner Saturday. PONTIAC .1 Flint j 40 10 12 Ypsilanti # 12 32 gort Wsyno i o 48 o nil WMk's Sams* FLINT AT PONTIAC Ypsilanti at Dayton Fort Wsyns at Hirntrsmck Financial Pains Cloud Montreal Baseball Picture MONTREAL (AP) - This city’s volatile baseball situation was rocked late Wednesday night by the reported loss of a third financial backer of the new National League franchise. Robert Irsay, a Chicago air-conditioning executive, was said to have pulled out his support, leaving still greater financial problems for dty officials and remaining backers to solve. ★ ★ * A meeting is scheduled at 5 p.m. EDT this evening to search for those solutions. The Montreal Gazette said Charles Bronfman of Montreal, another backer, was told Irsay severed his financial connection with the franchise In a telegram to Bronfman. Irsay would be the third backer to withdraw. J. Louis Levesque of Montreal and March Bougie of Montreal preceded him. Two Lions Trimmed; Club Roster at 58 Hie Detroit Lions cut two players Wednesday, reducing the number of players in the National Football Leagub club’s camp to 58. Cut were flanker John Robinson of Tennessee State and defensive back Erik Watts of San Jose State. Both players were members of the Lions taxi squad last year. Watts was the foam’s No. 12 draft choice in 1967. SPECIAL TRADE-IN PRICES Frank B. Audette | THE GIANT I who can | really move J P0NTIACS By The Fastest Growing . Auto Dealer in the World nilDIklft AIIR CLASE-AI1T! All 'M's 1968 CATALINA 2-Door Hardtop Hydramatic transmission. 400 cu. in., 290 H.P. engine, heater, deluxe wheel covers. Deluxe 8.55x14 tire*, power ^steering, retractable seat belts, outside mirror, washers and wipers, full carpeting, 121" wheel-base. $2850°° 196S CATALINA 4-DOOR SEDAN Hydramatic. Full Decor Group. Doluxo steering wheel. Deluxe wheel covers. Retractable seat belts. Deluxe foam cushions. 121" whoolbase. 1969 TEMPEST 2-Boor Sport Coup* Automatic transmission. PB radio. Largo heatar. Foam cushions. 2-spaod washers and wipers. Back- ‘2744* up lights. *24«r AUDETTE PONTIAC, INC. 155* MAPLE SOU, TSOY, MICH. (Aeon from B.n Airport) • 642-560* 3 Minute. Eatt of Woodward - 2V> Mmul.i W..t of 1-75 - Owt of Town BuyM. Accepted LOCATED IN TNI TROY MOTOR MALLL I THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 1, 19— Lions' Defense Shows Old Form . ; - ............• • - ^ ■ Front 4 Get New Member .’SH ■HflB in Joe Robb It looked like old times for the Detroit Lions’ defensive unit even in the 13-9 loss to Buffalo last Monday. The front four of the Lions, once called -the Fearsome Foursome of the NFL when it was the scourge of the league’s defenses, has had many changes since the name was given to it back in 1958. The original Fearsome Foursome was made up of Bill Glass, Alex Karras, Roger Brown and Darris McCord. QUARTERBACK QUARTET—Four players are after the quarterback job in the training camp 6t the Philadelphia Eagles in Reading, Pa. From left, they are John Huarte, John Hankioson, King Hill and Norm Snead. At present, Snead and Hill are coach Joe Kuharich’s “No. 1" signal-callers, and one will get the nod Sunday when the Eagles and Detroit Lions meet in Mexico City. NEWEST FRONT FOUR-Hie Detroit Lions’ front four, once known as the Fearsome Foursome when they were the scourge of NFL defenses, has the new look and some of the old touch this year. Left to right are Larry Hand, Jerry Rush, Alex Karras and newly obtained Joe Robb. Robb came to the Lions from the St. Louis, Cards in exchange for Ernie Clark, and last Monday night against the Buffalo Bills, the entire defensive unit, looked like its old self with Robb lauded for an outstanding performance. Cards Whip Redlegs in Fast Time, 3-1 St. Louis Ups League Lead to 14 Games By The Associated Press M The league leading Cardinals needed only 1:58 to whip the ‘ Cincinnati 'Reds 3-1 aftem rain delayed the starting time for one hour and 20 minutes. Los Angeles defeated' Pittsburgh 6-2 in a late night: game, and San Francisco nip-1 ped Philadelphia 4-3 in a day game. The win put the Cards 14 games ahead of the pack and dropped Cincy from second to fourth. Tim McCarver singled in Cardinal run in the first and they made it 341 in the fifth on doubles by Bobby Tolan, and Orlando Cepeda and a single by Phil GagUano. Peter Rose homered for the losers. Willie McCovey’s second, home run of the game, and 28th! of the season won it for the Giants against Philadelphia. His first of the game and helped build a 3-1 edge, but the Phils tied it In the eighth with four singles. CINCINNATI IT. LOUIS ab r It M ibr h b> 4 111 Srack It 2 0 0 40 10 nun cf 2 2 1 4.40X0 RDavIs et 4 0 0 0 Morn rf 4 0 o o Caaeda lb ______"i'of o OpIlHi Cardenas 00 1 0 2 0 ichofiold * .... BRAZILIAN BOOT—Soccer-style kicker Fernando Souza of Bello Horezente, Brazil, was signed to a contract by the Green Bay Packers. He is the latest candidate trying to succeed retired Don Chandler. Quarterback Bart Starr holds the ball as Souza displays his kicking form in training camp. ii? , _ 4 0 2 0 SO 4 0 I Beuchmp ah 4 0 0 0 Hughs* I MJones 00 1 0 0 0 Carroll P 0 0 0 0 Total “ ’ * ’ ■ 0 0 0 0 2 i I 0 X- *lDMI .Louis 2! ’ LOB^-CInclitoati St.LOUlt 9, 2B—Schofield, Cardenas, ova m ▼«" 2 B—ocnonviPi varuanfit 1. Tolan, Canada. HR—Rota (»). 1 R ER BBSO Culver (LA-11) ...• a 4 3 12 2 Ritchie ...... 1 1 0 0 I 1 Carroll ..... 1 4 0 0 0 < NOIton (W.W) ....7 7 I I 0 3 Hughes ........ 2 1 0 0 0 ( HBP—Culver (Tolan). T—1:54. A-14,995. PHILADELPHIA SAN FRANCISCO ab r It Id ob r h 01 TTayktr 10 5 0 0 0 Bondi et 4 0 1 I Pong u s i 2 0 Hunt 20 2011 Caillson rf 1 0 0 0 Cline If 4 0 0 1 Oonroler e» 4000 MeCovav tb 1 13 1 RAIItn * —*- -7 a 1 1 0 Dietz ■ I JAlou n 0 Mays cl 0 Lanier ' 0 Sadeckl Roles 2b WiHe pit 1 2 2 Dovenpt 3b OanRranclico 0 1 0 0 1 1 0 1 > E—Gonzalez. DP—Philadelphia. LOS—Philadelphia 9. San Frandsc IB—Lock. HR—McCovey 2 (21). Bondi. S—Dietz. OF—Hunt. Atlanta Whips Chicago, 10-2 ATLANTA (AP) - George) niviwi„ vuiv ynr, _ Stone's tw^ut single and air- p , out today to break HirM ’n f/ohinff Inrl tho Atlanta . r . Palmer Hopes to End Long Sbmp at Akron CHANGES START Sam Williams later replaced Glass and this was the big front four in the early 80’s when the Lions were challenging Green I Bay for defensive honors and couple times for divisional title honors. Sam Williams departed and young Larry Hand moved into the defensive end spot. Then; Roger Brown was traded and ] Jerry Rush took his spot at defensive tackle. ★ ★ ■ Now McCord has retired, and to candidates, veterans of the NFL, Joe Robb and John Baker are after the position. Baker started at defensive end against the Bills Monday but sustained a broken forearm early in the game which brought Robb in as a replacement. Robb had quarterback Jack Kemp running for his life through most of the second half and when it was all over, all that Buffalo could muster was 70 yards on the ground and 75 yards through the air. COACH HAPPY 'It looks like the old defense, doesn’t it,” said coach Joe Schmidt afterward. The play of linebacker Paul Naumoff, who took over the spot vacated by Ernie Clark was also praised by Schmidt. 'If that’s a sign of our defense this year,” added Schmidt, “we can turn our attention to the offense without! too much worry.” The Lions leave Friday to meet the offensive minded Philadelphia Eagles in an exhibition game in Mexico City. The defense will find out if {their performance against the I Bills was for real. A s Take Nightcap to Split With Yanks as Hershberger raced home. i tW(M)Ut infield s The A’s had tied the game in fir|t two Yankee the eight inning when Joe d ^ ^ g|xth when m. NEW YORK (AP) - Reggie, sacrifice. Then Jackson looped i lead an inning earlier when Jackson’s 10th-inning single1 his game-winning hit to center j Gene Michael raced home from scored Mike Hershberger with;.. ________ (second base on Roy Whites the tie-breaking run and Oakland Athletics defeated the New York Yankees 4-3 hi the second game of a doubleheader Wednesday. The Yankees took the rain-delayed first game 3-0, with Mel Stottlemyre winning his 15th game. Hershberger opened foe 10th with a pinch single and moved second on Bert Campartefis’ when Joe Keough, batting for foe first time in foe major leagues, lined a pinch home run into foe right field stands. FIRST TIME Keough became foe 37th player in major league history to homer in his first at bat. The Yankees had taken the! chael and Bill Robinson both scored on John “Blue Moon" Odom’s wild pitch. Jim Pagliaronl homered for foe Athletics’ first run. Stottlemyre scattered six hits in the opener and matched his total number of victories for last season. AKRON, Ohio (AP) - Arnold tight pitching led the Atlanta Braves to a 10-2 victory over foe Chicago Cubs Wednesday Night. Stone, making only his second start for foe Braves this season, bounce a bases-loaded single back through foe middle in the second inning to end Ken Holtz-man’s scoreless inning string at Wmmt p Sullivan c Wagngr Had (U4-1J / Sadackl Unzy (W.5-7) . Chicago Atlanta Chicago 4, Mosbacher Holds Lead in Trials for Sail boa ting ..... HOUSTON m - Skipper Bob Mosbacher of Houston held the lead in foe U.S. Olympic trials for Dragon Class sailboats on ^Galveston, bay despite a ninth place finish in foe fourth race /Wedheiaay. . • ■•://'. Mosbacher, a member of the! , n .. Texas Corinthian yacht club. rwhned ho. 23., nvpr-sll nnintc In th*!BTrnUn*ham and Chipped The rookie left-hander had a two strike count when he singled, scoring Joe Torre and De-ron Johnson. Felipe Alou, extending his hitting streak to 12 games, singled to score Marty Martinez, and Stone scored when Felix Millan beat out an infield hit. 3b 4 0 0 0 Torr l lb 4 111 RJol Ity e 3 0 00 TAai HoopJoi Hickman rf. 4 13 1 Man Phillips cf 4 0 10 Stan Hetttman a. iooo . Arcla pH 10 0 0 Lamabe p 0 o o o the shackles of a long slump as firing opened in the first round of the $125,000^ American Golf Classic. The muscular Pennsylvanian and 127 other pros and three amateurs challenged foe backbreaking Firestone Country Club course. The par-70 Firestone layout, rated one of the best -in the world, measures 7,180 yards. ’ ★ ★ ★ Palmer, golf’s all-time leading money winner, has only one victory to show this year on foe long tour. He won foe Bob H6pe Classic last winter and has been up and down since. The millionaire golfer has a lot going for him here. The defending Classic champion, he captured this event twice, four other Classics, he finished Second twice, third once and fourth in 1961. Palmer waited out a mid-afternoon thunderstorm Wednesday before touring the monster course in a hurried practice round. “Not too good,” he said afterward about his tuneup. or lose, Arnie’s Army stays solidly loyal as Palmer continues tb draw the large g*l-lery and the autograph seekers. Another crowd-pleaser expected to be in hot contention was Jack Nipklaus, the Columbus, Ohio, bomber who won the Western Open last weekend in Chicago, his first tour triumph In 9Mi months. Nicklaus, who said he was pleased with his practice round, hasn’t had much luck in the Classic. His best showing was. a tie for third place in 1962, the year Palmer was winning his first title here. ★* + Other threats were leading money winner Tom Weiskopf, who already has won more than $140,000; towering George Archer; U.S. Open king Lee Trevino; Miller Barber; PGA champion Julius Boros, and A1 Geiberger, who won here in 1965 and again in 1966 when foe PGA was staged at Firestone. Among the notables absent were No. 2 money winner Billy Casper, British Open titlist Gary Player and Californian Dave Stockton. her way to ail 86 and first place in, the weekly Women’s has 21 over-all points in foe seven-race series. The fourth race was won by HH , Buddy Friedrichs of the South- Metropolitan Gdlf Association era Yacht Chib of New Orleans, outm« at Partridge Cr eek who now has 35.7 points good yesterday for third place in the over-all standings. Mrs. Mortimer collected five O. J. Young of the New Or- pars and a birdie cm the front leans Yacht Clqhgwas in second {side (playing back nine first) for place In foe over-ail series with j a 42 and then finished with an JS.7 points after an eight-place 86 on foe back. Wfifah in foe' fourth' face;'' " i Two shots off the pace ’were Mrs. Max Evans of Soufofieldi AAU Exec After Guarantee From Olympic Stars H , I KNOXVILLE, Tenn.* (AP)- f- Lan*ford of David Matlin, president of the Dearborn Heights. AAU, said Wednesday athletes «£ srEv'r'rujt^ir -jtta J* .v*. ngto« 2. Lo8-45>iii^memmml-Jt: Hinton, Ktwea, M|nrk“ “ ****** % DbvbHIIo. Mip pmmn c 5—PBStUBlr ,a», ■fiT^r’ench. T-»:4a. A-1 THE jpQNTlAC P&ESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 F-fi Piston Grows ' in Poverty Program HOUSTON (AP) - “If Harry Walker had kepi hii mouth shut, SEATTLE JAP) — For the 6-loot-7 professional basketball player the buck was always the important thing. But, says Happy Hairston, the $90,000-plus star of the Detroit Pistons of the National Basketball Association, 0 summer as an unpaid instructor in a poverty program has changed him. Hairston, 20, is a consumer-education and Afro-American history instructor on the staff of 3-Year Pact for Orr, Bruins BobYKnee on Mend Following Surgery BOSTON (AP) - Bobby Orr now is officially in the Boston Bruins’ fold for the next three National Hockey League sea-■onl, but the Mg question still is when will he be able to begin skating again. . The 20-year-old All-Star defenseman still is recuperating from knee surgery which he underwent after the past campaign. The knee is reported coining along right on schedule, however, and he is talcing therapy two hours a day at his home in Parry Sound, Out., in hopes of being ready few the opening of training camp in London, Ont., Sept. 14- Orr has just completed a two-year contract covering his first two seasons in the NHL in which he. won Rookie-of-the-Year honors in. 1966-67 and then last season was named to the All-Star team and voted the league’s outstanding defense-man. He won his 1967-68 honors despite a knee injury which required surgery in midseason and again after the end of the campaign. the Seattle Opportunities Industrialisation Center. He came here from Detroit to work for expenses only when he learned there was a shortage of male instructors. HELPS PROGRAM This is the first time, Hairston said Tuesday, that he has become involved in a program to help develop the black community. 'I realized it’s time for everyone to pitch hi add do what he can," he said. Named to PR Position BALTIMORE (AP) - The Baltimore Bullets announced Wednesday the appointment of Jim Henneman, sports writer for the Baltimore Nows American, as director of public relations and promotions. Hairston said he agreed part with those whd say black youths have turned their admiration from Negro sports heroes to anti-heroes—the hustler and the pusher,, 'The guy on the block is the guy they know," he said, adding that that’s one reason he’s here. 'It’s a matter of kids identifying with somebody,” WaveHy Davis, SOIC branch manager and former Seattle University basketball player, interested Hairston in the poverty program when the Pistons visited Seattle to play another NBA team—The SuperSonics. There were other reasons for his coming back. i Fists Fly as Houston Edges Mets, 4-3 said New York Mets’ Manager Gil Hodges. That’s what Hodges claimed caused a lulu of a brawl in the fourth taming of Wednesday night’s game between the Mets and the Houston Astros. The Astros won the game 4-3, but the fist fights apparently ended in a draw. l* crew should have known keeping Walker, the talkative Houston skipper, quiet is near to Impossible. The ihubarb erupted when the Astros’ Dqpg Rader tripled to left center off Tom' Seaver, steamed into third base with e hard slide and popped up quickly. his teammates poured out of the dugout. Joe Pignatano, a hefty Mets’ coach, and Rader engaged in a shouting match. They tried to get at one another but were temporarily restrained. • Rader came up, his drawn-up right elbow came in contact with the right side of Mets’ third baseman Kevin Collins’ face. The Mets’ rookie was flattened. 'I was a bachelor and a wanderer and I fell in love with Seattle. I also met a girl here 1 liked," the Piston forward said. Hairston, who is attending night lectures, is learning along with his pupils. He went to school at New York University and began his NBA career with the Cincinnati/ Royals before being traded to the Pistons. “Being brought up On American history, I had to do a lot of research and I realized how little I knew." | And aside from book learning? “Before this summer, I had been interested only in the buck," he said. “I realized that wasn’t enough." DUGOUT CLEARS With Collins lying on the field. By this time just about every one was out at the scene, For a moment all was quiet. “But Harry came out and yelled, ‘He didn’t do it on pur-Hodges said. “We all knew that wasn’t so.” Walker insisted his Intentions were those of is peace negotiator, but the Mets failed to get the message. Don Cardwell, veteran Mets’ pitcher, was one of the first to reach Rader. He rocked the Astros’ infielder with a right-handed punch and wrestled Rader around the neck. “Five of them came at me," Rader said, “i was on the bottom of that pile. I don’t know how it happened. ing our guys throughout the series. It was a hard slide, just like they been doing to us." PUNCHES GALORE Plenty of punches were thrown by both' sides. Tommie Agee, Leon Jones and Card-well landed some good ones for the New Yorkers. Denis Menke, Denny Lemaster and Steve Shea did well for the Houston club! Houston coaches Mel McGaha and Buddy Hancken managed to ‘I came up when I hit the bag and just happened to hit him (Collins). But they’ve been spik- LANSING (JB — Michigan’s f “*"« »»» prison trusties have proven they! M 11 *,, t®’}1,, # can be trusted to go home alone Houston .......... mi tn r for a funeral or when a family' n.w v^rfni Llos—n«w York°»!*i member is seriously ill, State iUd^7K'*S^Ji*s•,m, Corrections Director Gus Bar- s,,np“n- ,P rison reports. !conn!!!-» AUGUST S, 1988 Pros Play Down Boycott Talk NEW YORK (AP) -r- There I “Thera will be no boycott, won’t be any revolt of tournh- “laid Sam Gatea, who repre-ment prop against the parent seats the touring pros. "We are Profeasional Golfers Associa- going tb play straight through." tkm, not thtayear at least. I Gates, a New York lawyer, ffttON FOOTBALL SHOES REG. *19" $1425 This oxford model is on exceptional value with many top features. Inside padding around top edge, three white side reinforcing stripes, nylon cleats and steel tips. Other Football Shoes Priced From $9.50 up SPORTING t4 E. Lawrence - Oewatawa Peatiac FE 2-2M9 made his statement Wednesday night hi Akron, Ohio, after a eloped meeting with more than 100 golfers inf Akron to Compote in the American Golf Classic. Si * Sr Before the meeting Gardner Dickinson, chairman of four-man Players Tournament Committee, had termed the situation “grave." The players reportedly are seeking the right to run the $5.1 million tour without Interference from the PGA. * * * “We want to resolve this thing within the framework of tl PGA constitution," Gates said. He planned to meet in New York sometime today with Bill Rogers, the PGA counsel. No time was set, however, and the meeting may be put oft tor a day or two. "I haven't anything I can say ; In the way of a concrete pro- gram In the future until I talk to Rogers," Gatos said. “We have to h^ve some amendments tb the constitution." The latest' threat of a break between (he touring pros and the PGA developed Tuesday aft; er an 11-hour meeting between player representatives and the PGA Tournament Committee. * * ★ Gates said an Impasse developed when the players and the PGA committee deadlocked 4-4 a resolution by the pros urging a separate sectional play for the touring players. * # * A counterprospal by the PGA committee was not ceptable to the players, Gates said. Neither Gates nor Dickinson would disclose the nature of the PGA counter proposal. Horse Racing Benefit Cage Game on Tap J^ONTICEUiO, N. Y, (AP) Ed Jucker of the Cincinnati Royals will coach the Western tpsm and Red Auerbach of Boston will direct the Eastern team in the annual Maurice Stokes Benefit Game at Kut-sher’s Country Club. The game, scheduled for Aug. 13, will feature star players of the National Basketball Association. Michigan Trooper Recaptures Title CAMP PERRY, Ohio (AP)— EJwyn Burnett, a' Michigan State trooper from East Dm-sing, recaptured the police title at the National Pistol Championships Wednesday ’ with three-day point total of 2,613. * * * A Michigan' woman, Prude Schiernitzauer of Lowell, won her second woman’s national championship by dethroning Sallie Carroll of Spokane, Wash., 2,571 to 2,518. Her other title came in 1965. UNITED TIRE SERVICE WHITEWALLS! FULL 4 PLYI ARY SIZE i Hazel Park Entries Mel Spirit Tire Discounts I COMPUTE I Nylon Tubeless Whitewalls 4 Ply 1 NOT SECONDS 148-15 15.95 16.18 14.98 16.95 2.36 2.54 Lifetime Read-Hazard Ouarantee-Free Mounting-Hut Tax This Tire Is Built For Safe, Constant Control At Moderate Cost. Plus Extra Mileage and Safety. Hrs. Men.-Frl. S A.M.-8 P.M. Sat. * A.M.4 P.M. TIRE SERVICE CO. 190 W. Walton Blvd. Pontiac Ph. 332-5888 Sandy Knox Cool Customer . Hickory Stardwtt THURSDAY'S RNTRIIS I Claiming Pace) 1 Mill! _ MN Rlchatd McGregor Brownl. Mighty Grady Duka of Amboy High Abbey Johnny Kevin led MM claiming Tret) I MHai | Knilgn Lucky Sam M-S1IM Cend. Trgfl 1 MUIa: iMh-tlJM; Condltlonatf Pace) 1 MHe: . Releo .................< 00 3.00 p Captain Braait ......... 4-10 3.1 xira Truax “ 3.1 loth—si,too; Claiming Handicap Facet Perfect! (34) sss.«e DRC Entries WINDING UP-Tammy Nelson of Yakima, Wash., puts a lot of motion into her windup in the recent Washington State Women's Softball tournament in Yakima. m Song I'J Pillar 5tt>—Sliao Cowl. Paca; Spanloh Boy * Hal I ___ _,_d *. -Garret Hanavar ‘ Mile: Tona r-iying Tima Wally** Angel Amberly Tret) I Mile: Gogebic County Lover Dancer Ind—SUM Cla! Adagio Dancer t Songstres. M A King Mlat Triple E. Twilight ExprOlt Facet 1 MNa: Kip A Roo Pedro Wilton I. Trott I Mila: light D Infilled Roberton indy V Top Day Triicy'e Pride Chippewa Fire Kl An Lewie Face Kahla'e Grattan Hazel Park Resylts WEDNESDAY'S RESULTS MUmRI Just A Whim Bleacherlta Grand Marala -») at Oolrol 4)r mint , IBoglo 0-0) at Naw York (Bar qht 7 ' J .......... (Kaaf 1-7) at Baltlmori (Phocbui 12-10), night , California (Brunot 12-10) at Washington ^Boston tcJiipnr;. V*. Chicago (H j-io) at MllwAiikoa. night > Today's d______ , ChlcaM (Hands 12-4) at Atlanta ( Clnlnnatl (Clonlngar Ml at tt. I Washburn KM), night , Phlladalphla (Wisa 7-1) at La An Mneor MB), night (Cuw^fi) ftEft1* M1) *' ~-'Y gamas schrdulod. ______k at cMMHYjwht: . Boston 9 Datroit. iBjht California at Battlmora. night Mlnnasota at Naw York, night Oakland at Waahlnglan 2. twl-nl| pc. .B ?i t wodnaaday's Baa San Francisco 4, Phlladolt Houston 4, Now York s Atlanta IS Chicago 2 St. LOuls 3, Cincinnati 1 " laattri Division &*)»• Oklahoma cltv fax' . k/1 42 .421 H4 SO .1 4 I | Nr« Division W :rmrrW: m 40 S4 .524 8 8 :S Cage Ace Set for Michigan ANN AfUpOR (AP)-.Richard Carter, who averaged 34 point* a game for Fort Dodge, Iowa, Junior College last year, has signed a letter of intent at the University of Michigan. * John Orr, Michigan’s new basketball coach, said the 6-foot-3 Carter, who played prep basketball at Detroit Northwestern, will enter Michigan as a junior this fall and would be eligible for the Wolverines first game Dec. 3 against Northern Illinois. At Northwestern High School, Carter played for Fred Snow-den, newly appointed assistant basketball coach at Michigan. City«#iiK*li$t$ /Battle I ' ■■ v "-- ' Slow Pitch 9 to Be Crowned Pontiac will crown a slow- At Beaudette, Town & County playoffs, Dog A Suds whipped pitch champion and the finalists takes on Ron’s Roost at 7 p m. Reese Standard, 6-2, and Pon-U. 0,(11 K* in.whUe J. A. Fredman and tiac Press downed Oxford Mat- in fast-pitch will be decided in Timberjeneii colliSe at 8:30. The tress, 6-5, action tonlghti N o r t h s I d e , Oxford Merchants will take on Local 596 in a battle for the National League alowpitch. crown. Oxford, which will represent the.city in the Michigan Parks & Recreation Association tournament starting Monday in Detroit, faces the union squad at 7 p.m. If Oxford wins, it’s all over. If the unionmen win, a second game is slated for 8:30, winners tonight then move to a two-out-of-three series starting tomorrow night Gordie Bovle picked up three hits and Bob Vollmar checked in with two to lead Dog A Suds to victory. Jack Claus clouted a homer in the third for the .winners. The losers managed only five hits each by a different batter. AUTO CENTERS Toledo Splits Pair; Buffalo Snaps Slump By The Associated Press The Fourth of July came one -month and three days late in -Buffalo. • It seemed like the holiday, at -least, when the Bisons finally ^Snapped their losing International League ways Wednesday Sight by sweeping a double-header from the Jacksonville Meta by scores of 3-2 and 4-3. The victories were only the Bisons’ fifth and sixth in their last 18 starts, ■ ★ 1 * ★ • The front-running Toledo Mud Hens divided a twin bill with the j last-place Richmond Braves, winning the nightcap 5-4 behind Mike Kilkenny’s relief pitching after dropping the opener 3-1. ■k k k At that, however, Toledo padded its lead by half a game when third-place Columbus knocked off'Rochester’s second-place Red Wings 7-3. The yictory pulled the Jets to within half a game of the runner-up spot. The Syracuse Chiefs whipped the Louisville Colonels 5-3 in the other encounter. Toronto Wins Soccer Game, Free-for-All .In National League slow pitch play last night, MGM Cleaners ousted Wagon Wheel, 10 before' bowing out in the nightcap to Ldcal 596, 5-3, LEADS ATTACK Tom Palmlter knocked in four runa with three hits to pace _ . . MGM in that first game, while apiece to spark the Press team. jGary Hayward chased home Mike Thornberry collected three five runs with a double and safeties for the mattress unit. Green Boy Signs {home run to give the unionmen; In International play of fa that nod over the Cleaners in the tomorrow night at Northside, second tilt. Grubbs Kennels meets Pontiac * * * Press at 7, with the Eagles In the International slowpltch 1 Huron Gulf tangling at 8:30. Chuck Cox, Jere Craig and Sid Gregory picked up two hits Ex-Soccer Booter < to Grid Contract By TIM Auocwto* Prat ...W « 27ft *1 BBN. AMERICAN LflABUB « AB k H PCI. K.Hgrrglton Bin 77 147 17 172 .277 Ctrow Mb) UhlswMlor Min W.Horton DM F.Howard W« Andrew, Bin Ystlngmskl Bin 77 227 33 25 .274 IN 422 41 121 .271 101 354 SI 102 105 214 'gdjgj 110 .277 104 350 42 77 .277 104 304 42 104 .274 HMIM buns F.Howard, WaMlIngton, 32t K.Horrolson. Boston, 27; W.Horton, Datroit, ill Powell, Baltimore, »^.ckjon, f^and, ,7. Boston, 73; F. Howard, wasningion, ,4; Powell, Battlmora, 1\i Northrup, Detroit, 43) W.Horton. Detroit. Player Ck M.Alou P Rosa Cln By The Associated Press Toronto not only won the soccer game, but the fight, too. With Irish Debrito scoring two goals, the Falcons beat the Cleveland Stokers 3-2 in the North American Soccer League Wednesday night. There was a free-for-all late in*the first half with players from both teams rushing onto the field. After order was re-j stored, Amancio Cid and En-rique Mateos of Cleveland were! ejected, along with Toronto's! Joe Ponce. Louis defeated Kansas City 3-1, Oakland trounced Van-| couver 6-1 and Houston .edged San Diego 2-1 in other games, j GREEN BAY, Wls. (AP) -Fernardo Souza, who enjoyed a j 60 * per cent success average I when he tested his soccer- r trained foot against the Green I Bay Packer defense, wasjl signed .to a 1868 contract by the I National Football League Cham-1 pions Wednesday. The 28-year-old center-for-1 ward for the Fall River, Mass., I Astros of the America Soccer | League was a guest of the I Packers Tuesday in their 1 isearch tor a place-kicking ' replacement for retired Don Chandler. ^Drhre a little-save a lot^ See for yourself how much you con save on o now Pontiac or Buiek by driving to Shelton — just a half mile south of downtown Roc hot tor. shelton PONTIAC • BUICK • OPEL 855 .Rochester Road, Rochester (14 Mils South of Rocho»tor) 65 1 -5500 BRAKE JOB 30,000 mile guarani*# HERE S WHAT WE DO • Install new lining* • Install fluid • Check sonls, matter cylinder • Bleed broket • Adjust and lubricate hand brake • Road test car for safety • Check wheel bearings, fluid lines • 'Turn all four drums 27.88 I SELF-ADJUSTING $4 MORE NATIONAL (.BABUR lib B AB R N Pet. gh 77 342 S5 117 .227 cin IS Sis i i 74 217 B 117 3 L 112 421 41 144 .]_ lit 421 42 117 M 211 37 124 .272 if RMB_________K Lft.gv. EASTERN conference Atlantic Division wl T BP FIs. BF B ....... II I 4 It 14* # M nov ySS".::::: } U g jg S | Br*’Ifl 4* 11 1 l Flood SIL Staub Htn L.Moy Cln USS^Wby SF _____________ ______________ Station, Pittsburgh, 22) Bonkt, Chicago, ■at as SB 100 J73 74 337 M 71 *7 ...... 7 7 7 45 124 « .... 11 7 4 41 125 43 ..... I ill *r 44 i Wootaro CRBirggsi eutr Division Knnsos CIty .... 12 * J 37 12* » St. Louis ........ IB It S 32 110 40 Houston ......... IS 12 3 34 111 41 READY-MADE WEAVE FENCE EASY TO EBECT PREFABRICATED SECTIONS* OF REDWOOD FENCE 41 high $10.40; f high *12.95 r high *WwM_____________ ** Sfeitdetd Longth Is 0 Ft. FORMICA COUNTER TOPS $3*8 I PLASTER BOARD y4" 4 X 8 ...... 1.45 W. 4x8.........1-65 Vk" 4 x 8 .....1.90 2 12 ■ WOOD Mw Screen Deort $0«o 32” ... 51.47 | ROOF SHINGLES 2S5 lbs., 4 Colors *222 ALUMINUM COMBINATION SCREEN DOORS LUMBER CO, Free Delivery 7374 MgMoad Rd. at WWaan Uka Rd. or 4-0316 °ri£:z?&?z!r erei m. te-3 SAVES’20000 NOW Lu/lEBL TWME pecial Summer Sale 10 & 12 Horsepower Tractors. aS The finest in the world. U Bran d N ew - Fully Equipped Mow any size lawn with choice of 36, 42 or 48 inch rotary mower. FRONT END ALIGNMENT 188 Air Conditioning ■ Most $3extre DOUBLE-COATED MUFFLER Most Amurlcon Curs • Cultom cootod stosl * Mochanically soalod soaml guard against muffler loakogo iMtsllaHoe Available Bonus trade-in allowance for your tractor or mower op any new 1C|- or 1 2-Horsepower Wheel Horse r- The best lawn and garden tractors in the world. Special deal for first-time; tractor purchasers She the. best... ' See Wheel Horse! Get a Horse! WHEEL HORSE, of course! Sold and Serviced by These Quality Dealers STANDARD SHOCKS - 2 7“ Most American cars. £00 Expert installation available. DEAL OF THE YEAR! LIFETIME WHEEL BALANCING - PONTIAC - KING BROS. INC. 2391 Pontibc Rd. -CLARKSTON-EVANS EQUIPMENT ^ 6507 Dixie Hwy. -ROYAL OAK- MANUS POWER MOWERS 3116 N. Wbodward -TROY- TRI CITY MOWED; 3326 Rochester Rd. TOM’S HARDWARE 965 Orchard Lake R(L -OXFORD- ' / HARP’S SALES Q SERVICE 1666 S. Lapeer Rd. -HOLLY- CLIFF DREYER SPORTS CENTER 15216 Holly Rd. -AAILPORD- BICKFORO MOME & AUTO 405 N. Main 6" Here'S what «w do; Balance and; rotate 5 tires, then rebalance, rerotqte as often as desired for tha -We -of th e tread, at no extra cost. 2 BIG LOCATIONS 1910 Widetrack Drive, Pontiac 5272 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains Open Mon. thru Sat. 9 a.m. to 6 p.rr 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 k Talbott Nine Topples CIO Lumber Crew Posh 9*8 Baseball Victory Both teams checked lit with big Innings last night as Talbott Lumber pulled off a 9-8 decision over CIO Local 594 in Pontiac men’s Gass A baseball. With Talbott ahead 5-1 after four innings, CIO erupted for six runs in the bottom of the fifth, but Talbott pushed across four more in the bottom of that frame to pull it out. Larry Tremper scored once and drove in two runs for Talbott, while Mike Clancy and Randy Stitt picked up two hits apiece and drove in a run each. Bud Williams and Ray Heaton drove in two runs each for CIO. The Calss A squads head into the playoffs tomorrow night with Teamsters and CIO opening the action at 5 p.m. The 0:30 game | • ' Breath-Holder After Dive Mark FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. tf) — Robert Croft, the breath-holding diver, practiced Wednesday and went down 181 feet. He will attempt today to break the record of 231 feet set by French diver Jacques Mayol. Croft, from Ledyard, Conn., has held his breath for more than six minutes in his deep-sea dives. Yank Swatter Hot in Japan TOKYO (AP) — George Altman, former outfielder for the Chicago Cubs and St. Louis Cards, hammered his 22nd homer Wednesday in pacing the Tokyo Orions to a 2-1 victory over the Nishitetsu Lions in a Pacific League baseball game. Altman leads the league in home runs and runs batted in with 84. His batting average is ,322. ill SALE Supertred Nylon Tiros Lifetime Tread Guarantee plus 36 Month Wear Out Guarantee 6.50x13 Tubeless Blackwall Regular 21.95 and aid Tlrt Plus 1.11 Federal IxeisO Tax and Old Tiro A Full 4-ply nylon cord construction resists dam* aging heat build*up. Has greater moisture and puncture resistance. A Patented contour safety shoulders give tires more “bite” when turning corners and curves. Makes steering easicfr, more positive. a Patented silencer buttons give better traction. Fast, free tire installation Wheels balanced 4 for *5; weights included NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Suportrod 4-ply Nylon Coni Tubal ass Blackwall Tim Sola Price with aid tira Plas Federal 6.50x13 Blackwall 21.95 16.46 1.81 6.95x14 Blackwall 22.95 17.21 1.95 7.35x14 Blackwall 24.95 18.71 2.06 7.75x14 Blackwall 26.95 20.21 2.19 8.25x14 Blackwall 28.95 21.71 2.35 8.55x14 Blackwall 31.95 23.96 2.56 5.60x15 Blackwall 21.95 16.46 1.74 7.75x15 Blackwall 26.95 20.21 2.21 Whitewalls in most sizes, only |3 more per tire Racing Greats in Midget Race HOUSTON (UPI) — A. J, Foyt, Mario Andretti a n d Parnelli Jones are among the racing greats Invited to compete in a $25,000 midget auto race at the ^strodome next year. Astrodome president Judge Roy Hofheinz Wednesday called the event, scheduled for next March 8, ‘‘the race of*races in the midget car field." If you oum a busines, is it properly insured? Perhaps It’s time you took a new and objective review of yonr coverage. We might be able to Bttke some suggestions. \ taium ■ ') mrimss.msmi 1 mmnasmiat □AUTO □HOME . DBUSINESS ^ 1 IE. UTTENLOCHER Agency,Inc. Biker Bldg., Ft 4*1851 H. W. Hutt*nloch*r Max K*rp> Jontoa HvH*nloch*r Richard Huttonloc her ChaH*. F. Hattor rV ... OVER 33 YEARS OF DISTINGUISHED INSURANCE SERVICE J SALE! Heavy Duty Mufflers GUARANTEED FOR AS LONG AS YOU OWN THE CAR Reg. 8.49 144 Most 60-61 Falcons, Comet. Use Your Handy Sears Charge Low Cost Installation Available Sale Ends Saturday >«t i ~ nktREPAIR KIT . r Heavy Duly Shocks BETTEfi THAN MOXt ORIBINAL EQUIPMENT - 6" Premium all-weather fluid add. imoolh cushioning action in any climate or road surface. Hardened eteei rod. give firm action. Installation available. Fits Mali Cars Listed Below Rsg. Pries ,i. tele Fries '11-’84 Pontiao 13.99 1244 ’64-’67 Chevelle, Chevy 10.99 944 '65*’67 Chevelle, Chevy 10.99 944 ’65-,67 Plymouth, Dodge, Chrysler 1249 19.19 ’54-’S4 Chevrolet 11.99 7\ 1944 ’88*’86 Dart, Lancer, Valiant 9.49 744 ’6t-’64 Buick 23.99 , 2144 ,’62-’67 Chev., Chevelle, Chevy II 10.99 144 ’62*T68 Plymouth,Dodge f 11.99 1844 ’60-’65 Ford, Fairlane 1149 1944 Leaf-Type with 1 l*ottr Spout Coit-’l type Springs Helper Springs , Fer Only HH & 8?r? Fer OAA . only ® pr. Easily |iirrrn Hard rarbnn :ranu for ru\v |muring. dwrk away and .a* Aused bv nver. rcretjsc vehiide1 carrying to l,5tKMb», Mint rara."' Reatore. arches In weak, a .■.rings. Add.. 1.000 ■ lb. load ea to ear. Imtallation available. One. Speed Scissors Jack 5** a 14V4 inches. MAt Hi ten* from S l« Si)' folding handle. .V'»*7" base. • Light-ddly. Twe ipt.a iciiian jack *...., .1 J.M Heavy-doty Pin Jack Stand Open Monday, Thursday, Triday* Saturday 9 to, 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5t30 Sears , SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO, Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171. mi G—-1 THB PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 Marriage Licenses ,nd JUE■MhWr P,*,M wWiP *"* .no «.ry L. Thom*, , A Nww.ll, F.rmlnalon and Msdelln* R. Prk«, F.rmlnalon SFSSr^ amEiSjji . .-be. -i ri ■ Androo C. sinnfe*1^rmii>gton °" *n,, I I.?fy *’.y.. • *■ ** Wonon.h and Sarah L. H.rfon, Mtl Lokoward JlaKSg*...............- °“ — , CMrtia A, VanEvery Til,. Novi and Robert A, Kraft, Sharon R, Canning, . idwln L, schlic... My on j. Daw, Troy jim1 d Dorothy K. Floora, Cambodian Ruhr Sets Terms for Freeing Yanks PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP)W Prince Norodom \Sihan-ouk raid today he will not free a US. Army boat and its 11-man crew, captured July 17, unless the United States gives Cambodia 14 bulldozers and takes responsibility for a helicopter attack on a frontier village that he declared killed 14 Cambodians. The ruler of Cambodia, speaking at a news conference said otherwise “I will keep them until the end of die Vietnam war, unless a very important event occurs in the United States giving Cambodia the occasion to free the prisoners.” He did not elaborated A A... A Cambodia claims a U.S. helicopter attacked the Cambodian village of Svayanhong June 29. Gene Linked to Crime Feared More Common . BAR HARBOR, Maine (AP)-New studies indicate that a genetic defect linked to crime and violence may be upwards of six times more common than previously thought. Instead of affecting one man in 2,000, the abnormality may be present in one out of every 300, three prominent geneticists said Tuesday. nurses, is XYZ, but his case still is before the courts and the role of an XYZ condition is not clear. Men with the XYZ condition characteristically are excessively tall, often six inches above normal. Many are dull mentally and often have acne, Their behavior varies from passivity to extreme aggressiveness. Men with the defect discussed The three geneticists — Dr. at the seminar have an extra Y| fork S. Gerald of Harvard Med-element in their sex chromo- ft®# School, Dr. Malcolm Fergu-son-Smith of Glasgow Univerei- soraes, which are designated XYZ. The XYZ condition gained worldwide attention recently when Daniel Hugon, a French stable hand accused of murdering a prostitute, was found to have XYZ chromosomes. His lawyers contended he was not responsible for his actions because of his genetic makeup. SPECK TOO? There also has been speculation that Richard Speck, convicted of killing eight Chicago ty in Scotland, and Dr. William j. Young of the University of Vermont — spoke at a conference being conducted at the Jackson Laboratory by Johns Hopkins University with March of Dimes support. Their conclusions were based on a total of 3,700 consecutive births, half Ynale and half female, in Canada; 'Edinburgh, Scotland; New Haven, Conn.; and Pittsburgh, Pa. Six cases of the XYZ syndrome were found among the male babies. The American boat was captured when It allegedly violated Cambodian waters. Sihanouk said that the crew members are well treated and are living a '‘semitourist life. AAA He said the United States had made a new request to have the boat and crew returned. He added: “If Cambodia satisfied the American request it would encourage tee American argument teat the Cambodian frontiers are badly delimited.” He said tjie United States has never recognized Cambodia’s frontiers. Ancient Bones AreUncovered ENSENADA, Mexico (UPI) Workers digging for construction material at El -Gallo Creek near here turned up huge bones said to be those of prehistoric animals. A A A Oceanologist N i s i k a h a u Kinumara, doing research work in this northwest peninsular state, got the workers to suspend operations to avoid damaging the prehistoric bones with excavation machinery. AAA Tractor operator Guadalupe Sanchez said he saw the first bones when removing sand along tee creek’s banks. “They were huge ribs and a tusk more than three feet long," he said. A A * The tractor had Crushed pieces . of bones and the fragments were turned over to the Marine Science School. * * a ' ■ The school said it had attempted projects with the Natural History Museum of Los Angeles, trying to dig up prehistoric relics in the area. The world’s total population will pass 3.5 billion before this year is ended, it is believed. Ike Is, Showing Some Progress WASHINGTON (AP) - Former President Dwight D. Eisenhower’s doctors say he has shown some progress since suffering his sixth heart attack but that this early “the outcome is unpredictable.” There have been cardiac irregularities since the attack, described as major, Tuesday morning but they have not been pronounced, doctors reported Wednesday. A A. A They indicated optimism over tee 77-year-old, five-star general’s condition after his third heart attack in three months and sixth since 1965 by limiting medical bulletins to one a day unless his condition worsens. Eisenhower has not beep allowed to watch the- Republican National Convention on television since suffering tee attack Tuesday morning, but has received reports from hip son, John, who flew to the Capital from Miami Beach. NOT AWAKENED Presumably the general was not awakened to be told of the nomination early today of Richard M. Nixon as the Republican presidential candidate. Eisenhower, who gave Nixon lukewarm endorsement for the presidency eight years ago after Nixon undersbidied him through two terms, came out strongly for his , former .vice president in a hospital news conference several weeks ago. ■A A A ■ David Eisenhower, the former president’s grandson, told newsmen in Miami Beach that he had been told Elsenhower’s condition was “normal for this stage and his progress is satis1 factory.” We expect he’ll be confined for another 40 days or so and then we hope maybe we’ll get him out of the hospital,” David said. He said he got this information from his father and added that since the general had discussed politics he assumed “he’s doing okay.” Volunteer Aid for Suicidal 'Here to 1ST. LOUIS (UPI) - Two years ago Suicide Prevention Iric,; received its first telephohe call from a despondent person. Since then, Raymond L. Harris, the man who helped start the local organization, said, “we have received dose to 3,000 calls, of which at least 150 were suicide attempts in progress.” A A ’ A Harris, the St. Louis County coroner, said,* “We are now convinced that Suicide Prevention Inc. is serving a purpose, and is here to stay.” Harris said tee. volunteer agency “has been generally accepted among physicians, clergy and police officers, as a valuable arm in not only doing a job on its own, but also in helping them in their various businesses and professions.” A A A Hie agency has a telephone number open to those who need someone to talk to. Volunteers staff the telephones, listening to problems of the collars and giving advice. “It is our belief that suicide prevention centers are here to stay,” Harris said, ‘‘and through their help and research work will materially reduce the number of suicides and attempted suicides.” Births The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births as recorded at tee Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father): Ronald A. Dork, Utica Philip Sotlroff, Birmingham Jamil K. Symington, Birmingham Joseph D. Lower, Blrmlngliam Martin A. Scheldt, Birmingham Peter J. RMMvIck, Birmingham Michael J. Goode, Troy Thomas F. Roth, Birmingham David G. Granzln, Farmington Richard B. Ward, Birmingham John R. Bacon, Birmingham John H. Steward, Bloomfield Hills Clark M. Wartham, Birmingham. Ronald H. Isaacson, Birmingham Donald L. Mlchau, Bloomfield Hills Frank L. Harvey, Bloomfield Hills Richard M. Blake, Birmingham Wniiam J. Bryant, Utica Peter Siegel, Birmingham John P. Baranowski, Birmingham i People in the News By The Associated Press Senate Majority Leader Mike Mansfield left Moscow today without having any announced meetings with Soviet officials. Mansfield took off for Prague after a stay of less than 24 hours in- the Soviet capital. He was quoted in New York before his departure as saying that he would meet with Soviet officials. But when questioned by a reporter last night, tee senator said he had no meetings. Asked to explain what happened, he said repeatedly, “I have nothing to say.” Mansfield is on a two-week tour that will take him to Paris and London after Prague. He will report to the Senate' Foreign Rela- tions Committee on the tour. Concertmaster Gets Manual Workout Among the workmen hoping erect amusement rides at The Wisconsin. State Fairgrounds in Milwaukee yesterday was Philip Aaron, who becomes concert master for the Savannah, Ga., Symphony Orchestra later this year. Aaron, of Milwaukee, said his two-day tour of hard labor at the fair, which opens tomorrow, “is work therapy for me. It’s a good feeling to be doing manual labor—and certainly a change from teaching school. 1-Man Beautification Effort Lauded Wilson Glenn bought some fertilizer and grass seed last spring and set on a self-appointed mission to beautify his west St. Louis neighborhood. He’s still working at it and has received some encouragement from Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson. Mrs. Johnson sen! a letter to Glenn, 49, which said: “I was delighted to learn of the initiative you have taken to plant and .care for grass on your block. I hope your fine example will inspire others to do what they can to brighten their area.” Glenn’s wife said she is going to frame the letter. Glenn said he is going to .keep LADY BIRD after his project because he wants to see “tee entire city of St. Louis become more beautiful.” Greek Girl, Bit by Pig, to Get New Face Giannoula S. Tsoumas, a 19-year-old Greek girl, has arrived to undergo plastic surgery at New York Hospital for correction of a facial deformity resulting from an animal bite in infancy. Arrangements for the flight here and the operations were made by Mrs. Joseph Ramsey, a St. Paul, Minn., philanthropist who saw pictures of the girl hi Athens last November. Giannoula was bitten in the face by a pig when she was three months old, Mrs. Ramsey said, adding, “I told myself I just bad to do something about this.” Giannoula, one of four children of a farm family from a village outside Athens, said before leaving Greece: “I’m sure I’ll return with a new face. It means so much to me. I’m deeply grateful to Mrs. Ramsey.” m Vietnam Tpflg/ Reflects Lull f in Fighting SAIGON (AP) - Combat cas. ualties among American and enemy forces decreased again last week, the U.S. Command reported, continuing to reflect tea lull in major ground fighting in the Vietnam war. * * * The number of South Vietnamese troops reported killed increased slightly over the total for the week before, while the number of wounded decreased. ★ ★ * The,U.S. Command said 171 Americans were killed in action last week, compared with 193 a week earlier. The number of wounded last week was 1,060, down slightly from 1,086 the week before. Of the wounded last week, 563 required hospitalization. A * A The American command reported 899 of the enemy killed last week, the lowest weekly total reported since the first week of January 1967. But the enemy casualty total each week is usually increased considerably 1 in the following week’s report as ground sweeps turn up more bodies. ★ * * The South Vietnamese command said 250 government soldiers were killed last week compared-with 243 a week earlier. The wounded totaled 738; there were 781 the previous week. The number of missing or captured last week was 10, compared with 25 tee previous week, A A> A The U.S. Command said the casualty report raised to 26,461 the number of Americans killed in action in Vietnam from Jan. 1, 1961,'through Aug. 3,. while the total wounded rose to 166,180. The command said 1,187 Americans are missing in a» , tion. Death Notices DRINKWINE, JOSEPH C. ; August 6, 1968 ; 8903 Arlington, White Lake Township; age 52; beloved husband of Velva E. Drinkwine; dear father of Mrs. Jo Ann Ormsbee, Leone, Charles and' Leo Drinkwine; dear brother of Mrs. Addie Hubei, Mrs. Betty Biscovich, Loren and Gerald Drinkwine. Funeral service will be held | Friday, August 9, at 3 p.m. at j the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Drinkwine will lie i n state a t the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) ENGLEBY, ROBERT R Tj August 5, 1966; 537 Renfrew, Orion Township; age 50; beloved husband of M a a Engleby; dear father of William, Malcolm and Michael Engleby;, also survived by one brother and three grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, August 9, at 2 p.m. at the Flumerfelt Funeral Home, Oxford under the auspices of the American Legion Walter Frazer Post No. 108, Oxford. Interment in Christian Hills Memorial Estates Cemetery. Mr. Engleby will lie in state at the funeral home. PERRY, JOSEPH L.; August 7, 1968 ; 3990 Quillen, Drayton Plains; age 46; beloved husband of Victoria A. Perry; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Perry; dear fatted j of Miss Vanessa and RotMjgf j Perry; dear brother of hire. I Mary Valentine, MichSt£ I John, Lawrence and James 1 Perry. Funeral arrangements I are pending at the DonelsiSi-I Johns. Funeral Home.' ’ I jSEAMON, NATHAN; August 6, I 1968 ; 284 Cedardale; age 54; jj dear father of Mrs. Nettie I Scott; dear brother of Mrs. ij Ida Churchwell, Mrs. Lydia ||i Crim, Mrs., Margaret Hicks j and Sam Seamon; also survived by three nieces and one nephew. Funeral will be held Saturday, August 10, at 1 p.m. at the Church of God and Christ. Interment in .Oak Hill Cemetery. Mr. Seamon will lie in state at the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home, after 3:30 p.m. Friday. ) ________. ^ IjSMITHv, LAWRENCE YjjjS. (August 5.1968 ; 820 Robinwood Street; age 52; beloved son of Nellie Smith; dear father 01 || Mrs. Barbara Rogers, Larry. ' Robert and Katherine Smite; 1 also survived by four brothers and six sisters. FunefKl |j service will be held Friday, ' August 9atl:30p.m.at the 1 Huntoon Funeral ’ Horn *V } Interment to Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Nfr. Smith | will lie to state at the funeral JH ‘home. « ;fnrwimriiBnwnswsmBr-iiia.in'‘iiwrnrasawiMmasreiiiraw'miiww'iin:v'iii''»viwrisBiiaMatoMWiariii'' iiiiiiiniiiTirifiir'ismarwiwssiiriiin.iunnwimi.TrDiinnTiriinTfn.in.;.n.rniirrrrr'Tnnnrniinin Scenic Shenandoah a Summer Showcase A Panoramic Blue Ridge Vista From Drive In Shenandoah National Park Shenandoah National Park, in the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia, is a nature-lover’s paradise with its magnificent views and tree-lined trails for hiking or horseback riding. Well-stocked lakes and streams offer campers excellent facilities for boating, fishing and swimming. The area was a favorite retreat for President Herbert Hoover, who was avid fisherman. journey through^ beautiful Shenandoah National Park gtoia* G—2 THE PONTfAC PttESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 Dial 334-4981 or 332-8 111 Pontiac Pmis Want Ad* KM FAST ACTION NOTICiTO .. .r'MKamuM AM MCIIVID IV f A M. Will H PU6U5MIO THI FOt+OWmO DAY. 4-A Htlp Wanttd Mil* AT WHITS CHAPEL, Ml EACH, I ASPHALT FOREMAN, F I NM » H ,_____. Ml MM, NMr, Ell inuM esphetl h»lp. wHiti i Parkview, Olan Eden, ML MM. portencod Anly. 474-1113. i wo, ' ________. . mn I Hsip WtEfrd malt 6 Holy W—M Wlals 'll ENGINEERING I - jrveylng firm In Ullc 'I TO. ,hW J5 < requTrt n-gm n MBCHAN 1C, Chaw and^Old*'CARPENTERS, ROUdH M trim, - - MunCM. Taylor] »M»._______________ laboratory aalaiman and ___ tftSsasvSB — \ lABWjjjjl APPARATU S QUALIFIED MECHANIC FOR »rra£55ig&......■“ ‘ S@F^ Automotive; Supply. ANY’OIRL OR WOMAN NIBDINO Rochester Rd. RMR). ~ friendly adviser, phona r * “ lore I p.m. Confidential ■ CtokHMd*,. Welled L«lia. C06kt>RiIl MAN. Top pay Mr IAUTO FJIRTS COUNTER man. Troy | flood mj- * — Mapia (l VevrtTBelee | PtotlecV CiTmeldl' I iHpip WsaHd 8MMs .jm WANTED jjjLig*L*iESa- •*. Contact , \YANT A FUTURE? grw & % Hslp WooUd tmUk 7 ■ COUNTER OIRL tall or Bart lima. Will train. MM Orchard Lk. NO. Kongo Harbor. Max’s Party Mora, COOK* Alil*+ANf TO A*SliY doing InttitaHanal Cooking In • Nursing Homa. Should hava «oma knowledoa el DM Cooking. Those iMjt WwM PbweIb _ 7 LEGAL SECRETARY JSSft'Ss ms determine* % C-tt Portia* BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today there | were replies At The Press | Office ia the following boxes: C-8, C-l», C-15, C-30, C-32, C-50, C-57, C-67. 0-71, C-72, C-77, C-M. Funeral Dirocfors COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAfNS 474-0441 C. J. 60DHARDT FUNERAL HOME Katgo Harter, Pfi, 682-0200. DONELSON-JOHNS _____ FUNERAL HOME Huntoon Ify^empioyer. a^ErtSigt i" w i nn.n - FOLKS fiob.... GENERAL SHOP WORK Need men for permanent positions in faff growing company, ex-; parlance not neeeatety will train. Excellent fringe benefits Include a S^rT^JiOTiAWM4 madlataly nc 0143 WEEKLY SALARY To atari offer to afl auccesaful a For personal Interview M2-9742 ' ' YOP-KNOTCH OH. SPARKS-GRIFFIN | FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtful Servlet' FE STMS VoorheesSiple! FUNERAL HOME. 332-8378 | Eetabllahed Owar 40 Years I APPRAISER TRAINEES. Due to increased growth we need Sam and Appraisal Trainees also Toi Commissions and Bonus Plan fa Licensed Real Estate .Personal For Private Interview cell Mr Fpley OR 44)343 YORK REAL ESTATE CO_________V____1__________ ARC WELDERS Structurgl Lay-Out Men ■f tat Welder5 *3.33 per hour * SS*d °hoUdayVrS vacations, °B1ue benefits, reply Paragon Bridge Steel Company, 44,000 Granc Other folks make money from Pontiac Press WANT ADS •\ . If you haven't... try one. Hundreds of others do ... daily I MEAt CUTTER foe quality In * —J—‘ -tarkel. Good full GRILL MAN I * ‘ For nights. Mutt have experlenr for feet food operation. Good wages. Hospitalization. . Vacation °Blor Bov *Resi aur an! MAN TO WHEEL' AND POLISH! Highland’ TelMi Vph6*'Huron. Y R**laur>n cart and^do minor bump .and paint prgss Box Oakland ibia vmrklng "renditions with benefits. Contact t BE A FULLERETTE Pick up and dalfver orders to Fuller Brush Co. S2.50 par t tooTmaker Top-notch ohly (86. hre. we lav nfh. AM benefits. Hudson's Pontiac Mall AAN TO LEARN SHEET metel trade. Inquire 4142 Drayton PI,’ Wallen. 1 MECHANICALLY Inclined for ^MP^^at, air conditioning; pipefitting i. Call and duct work. Liberal Mnaflts, ______________ _ yaars' .banch and mill experience. J» hour*. Monthly Bonus, profit thara. Blue Cross, Machinery, fit lotted plant Gibraltar 51300 Pontiac Trail. Detroit LO 8-4150. - “ INSPECTOR; RECEIVING AND LAYOUT Help Wanted Male. 6 Help Wanted Male * It pays... Bryant C division of Inspector. mputsr Products, a :x-Call-0 Corp., has an; a receiving and layout Wit be able to read , OIL 3 COMPANY LOOKING FOR .A | GENERAL SALESMAN j TRUCK DRIVERS. TRUCK DRIVER AND HELPER fc'.to ork aley's Inc., — I, Shop- hospitailzatlbn. An portunlty employer. A 15188 W. I Mile. Gre ■ g Canter. 547-30T TEXACO HAS SALES AND ENGINEERING POSITIONS available Collage grads are offered the chance to develop and advance, with the leaders in the oil industry. . I -BENEFITS ARE - • Training Program • Company Car • insurance Plan • Savings and Pension Plan, etc, t Vacation Please Send Resume tot * Pontiac Press Box C-77 TRUCK HELPER, werehouteh I Apply Wing’s Were"-------- | Friendly Rd/ behind A ! Shopping Center. BOOKKEEPER. MATURE WOMAN, experienced through trial balance and^profit & Lots. AA,. A. Benson,; BOOKKEEPER - SECRETARY Immediate employment. 885 to 1180 wk. (5 day wk.) References re, quired. Reply to Pontiac Press, BOOKKEEPING MACHINE OPERATOR Machine bookkeeping experience preferred, but not required. Typing required. Salary range *4HM>M7. Benefits include vacation, In. sick leave, and retlre-An equal op port unity ^ App'y e.MSoAJ Office, Mui..... Martin Street, I s position It's quick, simple and pro- an equal opportunity S BAAPLOYEJ8, M AND F ductive. Just look around'nt^t^^^ilHCED^ your, home, garage and |!SaU?^Jffc. *s.1 BiSdn!PONTIAC PRESS • ** * 1 East. Fonflac. basement and list the many TV TECHNICIAN pay and fringe benefits. One' 1642^Bof, 8esh for* Mr. Collins, - :e Mgr. Inspector USHERS, MUST BE 18. Apply In r i a \ person only aft, 3. Blue Sky Drlve-C-64 m Theatre, 200 Opdyke, Pontiac. | PONTIAC, MICHIGAN 480561 u^oft^Vi«e“' tULwiiiortr?l?m ......■ 1 248-0240. items that you no longer ,%0cti^n,iwii,,hieyo” use. Hundreds of 'rfaders! m ^ are searching The Press's . s6t up and operate classified columns daily for just such articles. Perhaps the piggy bank itself would-^JSSS bring more than the Change that it holds) Try it! BOOKKEEPER-SECRETARY. -Ei perienced competent women, 25 i over, for smell business offio Accurate typing end efficiency all phases of office work require Exc. salary to 84S0 plus fringes k Sualified person. Must have trensi trite resuffw te Pontiac Press Bi C-4, Pontiac, Mich. flee work, tome accounting — perience preferred. Call Culligan Water Conditioning, Hta fgg AAcAHIatar; 33AM44. GRILL COOK WANTED. Apply ^^jg^»rtW, 875 Baldwin. HOUSEKEEPER TO ASSIST IN CARE OF 2 SMALL CHILDREN AND DO LIGHT HOUSEWORK, MUST LIVE IN. HIGHEST WAGES AND BENEFITS FOR EXP. LADY WITH REF. EXC. LIVING QUARTERS IN BIRMINGHAM. AFTER 5 P.M., 864-3139. C leaners, 405 Oakland Avs SPORTSWEAR MANAGER luian Ivts Store, nationally known chain he* opening for energetic lady for Oakland Mall store. Top starting salary1 plus .fringe benefits. TEACHER MOTHER needs dependable baby sitter for 2 pre-school boys. Light housework. Start 835 per week. Union Lk. area. 343-387*. TELEPHONE SALES It you have a pleasant voice and telephone manner you can tarn a substantial Income working from your dask In our convenient, air conditioned office • In downtown Pontiac. Aga no barrier If 18 years or older, experience not required, earn .while you learn. Telephone Mr. James iff 3*9786. s. Ortonvllle. 427-3244 alter 4. HOUSEWIVES CASHIER AND SALESGIRL. John R (T Co., 774* C Union Lake-. ;e Orion, Texaco Station. Set yaip, 89 M-24,~ Lake. Orion. VENDING SERVICE MAN For work in the Lake Orion, an Experience heipful or will train, you are a reliable person* neat ty and somf mechanical! apptitude, position v Instrumentotion, Technician Earn $150 to $200 Per Week We need a man to run d sales crew of 12 to 15-year-old boys 'Ho personal selling is required but applicant must have ability to motivate and train- teen-agers to sell -0 popular product. f|jgh commissions ond FAST advancement will be your CALL MR. MARCUS. ,338-9762 YOU'LL BE GLAD YOU DID I M. C. MFG. CO. , 111 Indianwood Rd. LAKE ORION 4*2-2711 I An Equal Opportunity Empleyer- JUNIOR ACCOUNTANT SOME COLLEGE OR _ , . ACCOUNTING EXPERIENCE . EXC. FRINGE BENEFITS ! APPLY AT - ’ i ARTCO INC. XBO Indlanweed Rd. Lake Orion Programmer ESTABLISHED FIRM CON- wanteP union carpenter*; VERTING FROM EAM. EX- oet^.Vv.re Fri2dt!:i S'PERIENCED MODEL 20 RPG|-f" °r ...llT^BC- I PROGRAMMER. SALARY J COMMENSURATE WITH ABILI- CORE AND CAVITY TY AND EXPERIENCE. IM-| SStftTgr.vipg MEDIATE EMPLOYMENT. AN VSSS^h^HL i4 Mt*indAoV EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER. CALL TED PADLEY, UN 2-3413. CASHIER AND SALES girt l liia R. 'Lumber ©>.. TWO Rd, union Like. CASHIER-T Y PI ST. ExeSfi portunlty for young lady IHfc-—™-] In maiiftng people. Good working conditions and starting _Mlajy. N° Sals. Contact Mr. L« at 3384142)■ CASHIER and 2 days on night shift. APb TELIAS BROS. ^ BIG BOY RESTAURANT ____ Telegraph * Huron COOK AND GENERAL HOUSEWORK Highest wages for experts lady with recent- ret, stay nights, eke. quarters, Bloomfield MUST BE AVAILABLE 2 EVEN- WARNINGS EXCEPTIONALLY GOOD FOR PROMOTION ALLY TRAINED OR PERSON. WAITRESSES WANTED, day, et-—evrtilng shift, paid Ue Crosa, pleasant full and part-tlma l W. Maple, near 15 BWWaMBMpks. WAITRESSES FOR DAY or averring ■ full time only. Apply Ellas Big Boy Rasta uran t, ______aph and Huron. (WOMAN FOR OFFICE cleaning, 3-4 hours par ntqbt. OR 3-2112. WOMEN 13-24 YEARS . , NatlOMl _Co^_wHT train r stngla ^ control sharp and those who can aiau w» madlataly need apply, , S145 WEEKLY SALARY positions. ' Must bo "^nteRiSuS. -- - —J ialt appearing. Only TE8HSTE D To si r- COOK manager I PHARMACIST Permanent part time, 26-25 hours, hour* hl iiult. 482-2520. Phone1 THE PONTIAC PRESS 332-8181 Day* right' .'S5t reliable. Cal 674-0526 between, i PORTER, PART TIME, Steady JOB SETTfR be highly mechanically I WELDING , Depart- \ ment (Supervisor |CS erage 10 hrs. mSm. : TO OO Institutional Cooking a Nursing Hama, should have it knowledge of DM Cooking, ise Interested ,can apply at West kor/ Nuvslng Home. 3310 Com-rce ltd, NUftord, or tor ad- PLEA S, E APPLY FRIDA' BETWEEN t-S F.M. , , Pontiac Mall Winkelmans For personal Interviaw CallMr. BtCker —* a.m.-l p.m. - ■■■ ' --■■■ ; 332-9742 . ■ ~ WAIT RESSES, EXPERIENCED. Liberal benefit*—Insurance, No Sun. or holidays. Apply bi person. Bedell’s Restaurant, Woodward and ‘ Square Lake.________ WAITRESS WANTED. Must be ex-werieneed. No school girls. Clare t Reataurant. miff- Parry. WAITRESS. NO E X PERIENCE •ssary. Afternoons, good pay-. tips. Ptaasant counter work. Is' Grill, Tafegraph at Maple HOUSEKEEPER FOR mottmrlatt W CLEANING WOMAN MUST HAVE OWN CAR, TOP PAY FOR RIGHT GAL. FULL 77 TIME, SOME WEEK-ENDS, EM 3- tome, to II BtoomflaW Hflls.areB. 343-2227 attar 5:30 p,m <■ WAITRESSES, ■saagang .■ijar-^^iPROTO TYPE! ■■I1HWJ4.M1-' Shot Metol Mon KITCHEN — YbUNb man lesires a food service < viiiing to work andvtraln < ,,miS i£TAjSlg Van. Anzick Mfg Go, Permaiient Position 2367S* Mound Kd., X Frmge>h.fits Experiancad Only Top Wages, Top fringes Experienced In Holi-Art * Fusion . Resistance'Welding Airerdft Experte'hco ! COUNTER GIRL and SEAMSTRESS. 1 ' Flash Cleaners 339 W. Huron Experienced rater end policy typist for large general Inaurance ““ cy. Lathrup Village. 356*343. KEY PUNCH OPERATORS, d paid vocation' izaiton. Apply . CLERK-TYPIST if "**!£*: Key Punch iwvica. 4434 *. Ooiii .SaSJSS? dqtlreable, prefer Wm. tom* mtorn.attenal corporation It expanding lie services ta Pentlac. Sv* ■SSuffi ,n<* womwo to till departmental vacancte* created ^i&,m£ hrinir '^*rN-„ wv5l!Smw7i:ell' rtlne *®"rv *™** IkhnO mmw! housework, two adults. eberltortS h^aygltlens, must have tramp. parlance helpful. Good wages’ end 1 fringe benellit. Call Mr. Stout, 335- 1 ■ *3*1. WOMAN FOR HOUSEWORK. 1 day I * week. PE mai. 338-0359 9 A.M. to 3 P.M. Doily vasslng from pur office, hourly wage glut commission. *0 N. 1 Josephine. Call 333-1354. Ask for porsonnol department Mr. Probst Must be abl* to start Immedlatoiy. WOOL FINISHER 1 Good wcrttlrUJi^ndlllons * Paid vacations Janet Davis Ctaanara HUM WITT — AMERICAN GIRL '*42-3055 725 s. Adams B'ham. THE PONTIAC ERESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 G—8 mw...... above iviript li berrl-- ^ Htif W«rttf M. trTT $20>.000 YEARLY just * alert M you »r JRS----with ambltk Intelligence. .... ... ■r. wo ore specialists In the of business apportunlt'--properties (wt* commissions or — .a t_______________, ^5w t"ii AM you Mroom i rn.trt ***** its 9.1 Ai I August 10 through Labor Day. $60* II Dr. Roy J. Bull. 335-4192, ext. 226 or 6^. rofrigar 3665. 1 1 ,*1"- ~ _________ nings 0 . I la Court. Phono FE 2-1037. ROOMS AND BATH* Luke privileges. Adults. $135. sure Coolev Lake Road. Lake vista . $7,000! JR. ACCOUNTANT, DEGREE MANAGEMENT TRAIN AUDITOR, YOUNG GRA SERVICE MANAGER $12,000 Open Wi HAVE QUALIFIED fElfANTS SI 5,0001 with a verified employment, good !-*?!*'__________ "* “ credit and security deposits for;5 ROOMS AND BATH, rantal homes in the Waterford,! $30 week. 603*1030. Drayton Plains end Clerkston; AMERICAN HERITAGE *r“»- I APARTMENTS cicmrx a kfkit iwr NO VACANCIES tlmPmtlac State Bank Mda' S•con,, "** bulldlnB J° b* com’l' twVrYnke«7'FE ^7S1*: 1309 Pontiac Slate Bank Bldg. ple|#d pbout s,pl No children, BnE/TuT------- WigP W94_________________ ______3M-7794 * pets. 3365 Watkins Lake Road, B 5- A. V .l VAffi I «*«»«»• (325 Shore Living Quarters Rees. (51-3248. U P. - LAKE FRONT Drui —- Cabins or houset x 32. S. Jacobs. Rent Rooms 4Z 12 ROOMS FOR YOUNG gentlemen. _____ ______ ROOM professional man. 583 W. I PE 3-71H. dealership. 310 Orchard Lk., ron-, ASPH/ estlr IALT AND SEAL coating. Free istlmates. FE 2-4(31. ASPHALT PARKING LOTS AND rojdwayp. • *•— t*2o. Also sealer. Ann Arbor Construction Co. MApte $48*1. _________ AUBURN HEIGHTS PAVING tennis courts, parking lot driveways. Guaranteed, FE S4 OR 3-0326. M & S GUTTER CO. LICENSED-BOttOED Complete eevestroughlng servli CARETAKERS FOR SMALL apart-1 ment building, 3 rooms completely furnished. No drinkers. No children A-t PAINTING AND or pets. Men can Work elsewhere. PAPER HANGING Write Pontloc Press Bex C-1S. THOMPSON FE 4-83(4 CARETAKER COUPLE to assist A-t PAINTING WORK GUARAN manager full time. Good ealory teed. Free estimates. 012-0(20. Plus apartment. “ — V ADMINISTRATIVE SEC. ^ OFFICE EQUIP SALES 9IHERAL OFFICE I ADMITTING CLERK - AUTOMOTIVE DESIGI CLAIMS ADJUSTER . Excavating -1 BULLDOZING. Flnlah gi Backhoe. Basements. 674-263 nan, BULLDOZING, D-4, |C5.M PAlNTiNGp INTERIOR end exterior, tree estimates. PE 5-2985 . I DO YOU WANT your barn painted! I Ren Beardsley, as-im._________________ -tiI1!!l_ . a. To l;00 p.i .. -cceptad 1:00 . FE 4-7171. couple vyAll tEU managers for exclusive suburban spertments. Must have expar — Call Eric Lute Detroit UN 1- COUPLE, PRIVATE furnished ______ — ' --- --- TiMWCTylng on Lake. Free ( interior, ouerentepd tint clS CREATIVE SALESMAN IP YOU ARE A SELF-STARTER And bet. 25 and (0 years of eg you may quality. The annual S5000. Call Jack Perks, FE 2471' _SNELUNG & SNELLING^ SALES ORDER DESK secretary *». vww outside sales. Mrs. Smith: 851 1050. fV order desk INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL nppicl SALES TRAINEE Taeles pfeoMOTfoNRY' All you need Is ambition end a ACCOUNTING CLERK daslra to earn el JeestJ13,500 per GENERAL OFFICE . 1390 - ***» 2 FEMALE TEACHERS went ■ **.000 ,55 ( month. (74-1(73 belors J>.m or after 0 30 pm:______ BIRMINGHAM BACHELORS ' mn house to share with ci * *(500 graduate. 644-3170 eyes. .. (450 CLEAN WORKING GIRL, ( board and home p r I v 11 a i 512,000 _Watertord area. FB t-mr «« COUPLE TO SHARE llvlnfl qua ■ -pm (74-117*.__________, ,7500 GIRL WISHES TO SHARE h*r *1111 ...I.,._- ,0.0, uo.un 331 APARTMENT FOR REy 7 Sm”n: CLEAN KITCHENETTE lor^diSi | Porry, PE 8-2297._f_______| tenant only. 6254347. M BLOOMFIELD MANOR,------------------------ I CLEAN, HOME P .............G I s. Responsible professional man, west ! apartments evell.ble.l »M«. 335-IM1 efler 7. - ■room luxury apartments| CLEAN, COMFORTABLE ROOM, point appliances, neHaHBsMiHaiRBigiiaw TnTERNAT|5KaL PERSONNEL 851-10 All Fee Paid GOING? WHERE? To 511,000 In 2 years, $25,000 In 4 years, management trainee, Mrs. Smith. ' ...Ju^ing^euto^fowance* For thei TO BE A SECRETARY opgortunlty of your We, phone FE| To S6500 end top notch b ASSISTANT OFFICE MGR. • EXECUTIVE SECRETARY " REPAIR MAN, Case Equip. parts man. easy Equip seme. 10-24. (42-3160. Ml .-.j./MO-ltflO. __________________________ ,55® LADY TO SHARE MY HOME, can S700 -- -n ,octal security, (25-20*0 after I and 2 “Dint appliance., ------------ ■RSMRPW to * p.m. 222-2390 338-9456. Woodrow Wilson phene UN 4-7405. BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS APARTMENTS Ideally situated In Bloomfield, Birmingham area, luxury ’ bedroom apartments avail: BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Starcraft, I.M.P. S11 v a r 111 Mercury outboard? ■»<* »♦ drives. 1265 S. Adams Rd. Boodi Services A-t CHAIN LINK f and repaired, l-m— est„ 338-0297, 474-3*41. ACKER INSTALLED PENCES ARE 15 yrt in Pontiac---- ~— ere low. Free o CHAIN LINK AND I CHAIN LINK ■ warkmenoblP, >_____ ____ . Cat! Bud Efleesen, 343-7855. SHEET PILING BREAKWATERS)Mlin( INSTALLED. 334-7(77. GUINN CONSTRUCTION CO. Brick Block l Stone PONTIAC FENCE CO. I ■■l Hwy., Waterford 423-10401 Floor Sanding j DISHWASHER WANTOd. night shift. Restaurant. 5?S°nQrcWdW,El!S T® Rd., Orchard Lake. T OFFICE WORK PEEL LIKE LtPE I* Jju To 15200 and up, your choice by? Call Mr. Foley, YORK REAL ot location, Mrs. Haggman. ESTATE. OR 403(3. ___ FULL TIME JOBS available in our JQ SALES MANAGER salad department or cafeteria <7 ^ ..... counter, experience unnecessary; Begin at $7,2W as sale* will train. Meals and uniforms | Jr™'".®*- c*-0,ct furnished. Pree Blue Cro*» and Jg5&_ corT)pl paid vacations. Retirees qualify. Apply Green field Restaurant* 725 INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL ^th’iieiTw'.''c,el|,'673-^''beio're' 1080 W. HURON___________ 38M>71 P’m~ ^—-------- lmtrvctlons*Schoals 10 Wanted Real Estats APPLICATIONS BEING ACCEPTED Beginning Tuesday, August 13, 1M8 desses will be held at the Den Mattingly Agency for those Interested In obtain- ELDERLY GENTLEMAN, close to North end plant*, FE 2*1127. ___ j NEWLY DECORATED sleeping I room for lady, west tide, FE I-1. 3455 after s. - - * ' . _ 2 QUIEf IOOM FOR working girl or ileblo tor lady, kitchen end living -------- ---- privileges, close to bus fir.. per wook. 335-301* or 332-537*. 1 to 50 HOMES. LOTS, ; EASE S. Hunter. Birmingham. IS YOUR INCOMB Mr. Foloy, York REAL ESTATE. JOB WITH A future. Call Mr. F 2-1034. work ) „ „ .... _____ part-time available. Blue Cross, paid vacations. Apply 1331 W. Maple, Walker.. TO $22,000 ENGINEER Background • In e 11 h o electronics processing, M Frye. Bnlhflng Mtdoriia»Biij GARAGE 20 X 20' - 0075. Comont (LICENSED BUILDER, alterations, and romodellnp Free estimates. 335-38*6 or 330-7 NO JOB TOO SMALL! Brick — Block - ----- Allumlnum Siding A CARPENTRY - new and rt tad----- 335-452*. 33S-75t AND EXTERIO-rough or finished, dormers, porches, rocrootlon rooms, kitchens, bathrooms. State licensed. Reas. Cell after S p.m. 402-0443.______ 1.. ADOITONS AND ALTERATIONS of R. G. SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING, Floor Tiling TAR, BUILD UP-ROOFING, t5 years experience. Robert - PriceMMMHQMMMI Roofing. FE 4-1324. Free oetlmtesj near 15 Mile end Crooki_ NEW ROOFS FOR OLD HOT ROOF. MANAGER OR A~S S I S T trirr Shingle*, .24 hrs., free estlmeto, manager to run an airport repair roots. FE 3-1725. _ cafeteria. Good salary. Apply In ROOFING, ALUMINUM Person, Pontiac Airport, 4500 IQ est. (OS-7514, WT" TO $12,000 AS AUDITOR Pick your spot, ell travel Or no travel, Mrs. Smith. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL from 7 to ♦ p.m. Job IS* guaranteed when license Is obtained. For Information call Mr. George Shipp at DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY 452 *000 Mil Highland Rd. PARCELS. FARMS. BUSINESS i PROPERTIES, AND LAND CON-j TRACT. : WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke FE 5-S145' Urgently need tor Immediate sale! MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 1 MILLION Dollars have been mad* available to us to purchase and assume land contracts, mortgages “* K" ” RON'S ROOFING ____FE 5-40(0. NOW HIRING BREAKFAST, short jFroo Estimate 741 N. Perry. FE 2- HOUSES WASHED CHEMICALLY. Homeowners - Automobile Life - Motorcycles Mobile Hornes • Businesses ANDERSON & ASSOCIATES 1044 Joslyn FE 4-3535 Insect Control Sand—Gravel—Dirt BLACK DIRT, VIBRATED process, loaded and delivered, 7 days, 120 Opdyko near Auburn. PE 4-1731 or BLACK DIRT, FILL, TOP BULLDOZING — BACKHOE REASONABLE -x 682-T671 ■ FILL SAND LOADING DAILY feWwd& ATTENTION Gl's and NON-GI'e Enroll Now Start Training AUTD MECHANICS. BODY PENDER COLLISION ACETY-ARC WELDING HELI-ARC WELDING WOLVERINE SCHOOL Michigan's Oldest Trad* School 1 naw.Night School ' , Del. WO 3-06*2 n homes, lets or acreage outright. We will glvo you cosh for your equity Our appraiser is awaiting your call 674-2236 McCullough realty 5(40 Highland Rd. (M-5*) ' MLS swimming cool anc - All utilities Located on South _________ Rd.,) between Opdyke expressway. Open dally * ITS FULLEST -Stamp Out Struggle is* a fine apartment In . PIETY HILL PLACE CITY OF BIRMINGHAM Stroll easily to smart Birmingham StO ROOMS TO RENT. 671 W. Huron MOTEL. SINGLE OC- SLEEPING ROOMS suitable for 1 or ■ 3 wear bus Hno. P»S-730t. SLEEPING ROOM for glrta, CKrla- LARGE SLEEPING ROOM; man, VERY NICE ROOM Rooms with Board utiauc mptuc tuoul community room (yourt Iht night). J»t off • to Canary Islands, tans soucI.~A1. m this, and more, can ba yours if you become one of the fourtunafe fourty families of PIETY HILL PLACE. The complete story? N6on to 6 p.m. Dally* Southfield at Brown* lust South of Maple, right In Birmingham. Telephone 642-2444 or 476-8700. Rentals from $370 to LARGE AREA* PLENTY of parking* ch^al! Vealt y Rant Offitt Spacs Work Wanted Mala ROCHESTER BIG BOY HAS openings for full time waitresses, cooks, cor hops end dish boys. Top wages. Fringe benefit*. No experience necessary. Apply in person 727 N. Main, Rochester, Lake Rd., Union Lake, MA 4-4335 or EM 3-3514. interlake sand Secondary AND GRAVEL CO. ROCHESTER COMMUNITY SCHOOLS Teaching Positions Elementary Social Worker Speech Correction Orchestra Counselor fcARPEliii*Y - ALL KINDS, let me make your home more func- ----- and more beautiful than It V Is. Utilize space, 332-2674, 332- i£SS^ r 5 pjn CARPENTER WORK. Reasonable at ' its bast. Racreatlon rooms, ceiling •lie, formica work, kitchens, roofing and aiding, wlndM* rjpl ment. Aluminum trim. 363-2337. CARPENTRY, REMODEUNGT___________ dltlons and rapalrs.. Kltehan conversions, fwoflng. —-fiipih “t‘ 5601, roofing. Siding ar rk. CaH 682-0M3 e INTERIOR FINISH, kitchens, panel-ing. 40 years experience, FE 2- try and maeonery/ btlek, block, stone and cement. Price and. work cannot be exceeded. 338-9430. WE ARE CARPENTE1B,, do —k ourselves, speclellzlng -n additions, rac-rooms, roofing, nlnum siding. Guarantei work- ILOCK AND CEMENT WORK. CEMENT WORK, oarage ft patios dlrveways, sidewalks, t ment floors, smell additions, walls, SS yrs., standing proof. 673- nall additions. Sea COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL ’and residential. Block and cement GUINN'S CONST. CO. 334-7477 or swain CUSTOM CONCRETE CO. AH typae cement work bu,ldlnfl' CraOt ABvtson 50^t^U^Bj?BWgWFg 7-01*1 CRAFTING (74-2(39. or 338-1201. I-A MERION BLUE SOD, pickup I del. 4643 Sherwood. 628-2000. D LANDSCAPING, S(X sh grading, fill dirt, ulna light and heavy hai LANDSCAPING, SEEDING, sodding and rota tilling, tractor work and retaining walls. Gilbert Landscape Service, 682-6702, 673-1443. X'PERT SODDING, seeding killers. Call for free estimates. 474-— 628-1552. C A H. Spraying. CUTTING AND Light H Septic Tank Service COMPLETE SEPTIC WOAK, set TOWNSEND'S SEPTIC REPAIR a Tr«a Trimming Service Inquires Rochester Board of Education Office Fourth & Wilcox i j Rochester, Michigan 48063 Telephones 651*6210 AL'S TREE SERVICE, FREE ESTIMATES 68M3*7.r6730l48. 62S-3521 estimates. 674-1 itlng, j -1281. 7 Trucking A-1 LIGHT MOVING. TRASH hauled . reasonable. FE 4-1353. HAULING AND RUBBISH. ---- price, r—1'— -** * SUBSTITUTE BUS DRIVERS npwl being Interviewed tor coming cprrp*nrv school year, anyone Interested. Secretory Call 817-4118. I Work with well ---------------------m~1 in I good Birmingham Mqre I h»v* Bood secratar me than wages. Apply in • ',• , 46530 pontiac Trail. Receptionist fANTED: 2-WAY_Radto Dispatcher| Pleasing personality JAMES GRAY OR handyman, trucking, basement repairs,_______ — lawn service with tree trim-338-3832. Ing, let mind, 3 LIGHT HAULING PP AMY KIND _____ grading and gravel and front-end lading. FE 2- THOMAS JAMES BEACH. Bricks. *'l~*s, and cement repair. Light ling and moving. FE 2-9652, 472 SHOULD YOU MAKE AN EMPLOYMENT CHANGE? ’ ) NOW IS THE TIME . Michigan Bell Phono: 3*3-2815 Management Trainee No Experience Necessary COMPLETE TRAILING PROGRAM (PAY WHILE LEARNING) IMMEDIATE HIRE Rapid Advancement $7200 PER YEAR PLUS BONUS FERRED TO OTHER PARTS OF THE COUNTRY IF YOU WISH. CALL MRS. BATCH-ELDER. Your Dream Come True FEMALE' Public Relations Enloy exciting career working with the public, pleasant surroundings In beautiful office. Northwest area. Salary open. Fes. paid. General Office a Receptionist-typist dutle*. S433. BRICK CONTRACTOR wants ta HANDYMAN. Please cell 662-178 LIGHT HAULING, HAND digging. NEW PORCHES, chimney repairs, , side walks and driveways. 682-8749. ODD JOBS. CALL BOB 3*1-1*14 CARPENTRY, 35 YEARS Repairs, remodeling, kitchen specialty. Reasonable. 673-5728. , Work Wanted Female 12 Y0RK AVAILABLE NOW IN ONE OP ELDERLY COUPLE NEEDS home near Mall. Cash. Agent, 338-4*52. THOMPSON-BROWN CO. ALL CASH For homes anyplace In Oakland County. Money In 24 hours. : YORK WE BUY - WE TRADE OR 44)963 FE 8*7176 4713 Dixie Hwy. 1792 S. Telegraph EXCEPTIONALLY NICE 5 rooms and bath in quiet middle-class neighborhood,* newly decorated, carpeted, this is a second floor floor and Is selective at to tenants, adults only, ret. required. Rental Is $140 monthly with ell util. Included. Tenant will pay first and last.month rent at Inception plus' 850 deposit. KENNETH G. HEMPSTEAD FE 4-8284 IBS Eliz. Lake Rd. 1 HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGENT 474-14*1 IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Coral Ridgo.Apts. SECOND-WILCOX ROCHESTER 1 BEDROOM APTS. LOTS—WANTED IN PONTIAC Immediate closing. REAL VALUE REALTY, 442-4220 $145 Mo. Includes ell utilities, except eltc- LOTS WANTED . . 50 ft. or longer, any location. Cash Office open dally ‘til 7 p.m. 'PH- 651-0042 Of beautifully paneled office apace for lease. Soparate private office attached. Walton-Bladwln area. Utilities Included In reasonable rent. CALL MR. TREPECK, 674- commerclal riemy ot tree parking. P*" 4576 or 731-8488._________ Ing, private parking., 332-47*8.__________________ A-1 IRONING, one day service. Mrs.I McCowan. 334J867._______________■ 63-YEAR-OLD WOULD Ilka baby: sitting in walking distance from Baldwin ond Montcalm. 338-1775. COOK 5 DAYS, transportation needed. 336-2477. __________,_________ | c, 815' * day. r5 Mile, Mid- i baby 332-0055 sit- . RAY REAL ESTATE Mow has 7 offices ta better se tour community. For. best resi SELLING TRADING BUYING Your real estate today, cell: RAY REAL ESTATE 689-0760 l%- RAY real estate 731-0500 known firm In1 ''nv. N0 Transpunaiion. jjx-wjj. InininTs SM 2?" WELFARE SOCIAL WORK SUPERVISOR „„ ___I Lans- ing, Mich. Salary rang* $10,732 ta (11,*r AN Mlchtgon civil service bmaflta. Including an outstanding state contributory LIGHT AND HEAVY Hauling. ----(able rates, FE 84665, FE > r FE 54064. MOVINO Truck Rental Trucks to Rent Vk-Ton Pickups IM-Ton Stake TRUCKS — TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Semi Trailers Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD », etc. 334-7436 or 391-3257, Orchestra FRANK VENICE AND hie orchestra "“ ~lanqn8 IwJBiC 3 to 5 piece n Dally Ir BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Walla cleaned. Rees. Satisfaction guaranteed. Insured. FE 2-1631. Well Drilling „~,if ^ plan?1 longevity unlimited opportunltlee tor personal advancemtnt, and liberal vacation and tick leave allowance, plus social security. Applicants must possess a master's degree In social work from an accredited school bf social Work, In addition to three years of social week experience, one yeer of Which hat been gained subsequent to the M S.W. degree. Position otters challenging opportunity n VMT, pTus accurite typing will Businest Service appeal to' this choice Birmingham! ^ Co. Good salary and "------- WANTED: Listings on vacant lend houses. In the Clerkston Waterford ares. H Clerkston Real Estate 5858 S. Main________ MA 5-5821 ____....... and phont *arvlce. Carpet, drape* furnished. Pertl-tlon allowance. 642-7188. LOCATED IN STRIP CENTER. On* 13.080 sq. ft. air conditioned professional office avaltobto. 3 to J-yf. lease basis. Cell 682-5040. lights turn., ample parking, Ideal tor attorney or accountant, 7231 Cooley Lake Rd., r------ OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE, 12 Mile end Northwestern, Southfield, ! INDEPENDENCE GREEN APARTMENTS ; Beside an 18 hole golf course — included In rent — all for n~ charge, clubhouse. Indoor, pool, fu ; use Of golf course,- washer an conditioned, appliances, heat, hotlD - _ B ^^ « » water - 1 and 2 bedroom Rent Business Property 47-A apartments, 3 bedroom townhoutos. | ‘ ----*"•" *» 38 x 50* BUILDING WITH LOTS of *r,rpr parklng. W. Huron, FE 3-7968. available _ from SIM................. ington (Grand River at Halstead), children 17 years end older. No pets, 474-7284. NEAR W. HURON, modern 4 rooms and bath, 1-bedroom, refrigerator stave, carpets, and drapes turn Garage available. References re qutred. $100 per month. Reply giving name, address and telephone to Pontiac Press, Box C- manufactlng bldg. Rent or leas*. DOWNTOWN PONTIAC ! Woodruttr WO 3-2737. i INTRODUCING CREATIVE venture Cuetom Cabinets. Gens--' We have many more prestige Modernization. 546-1674 or.33i positions In the Detroit and i__j.__.i__ ' suburban areas. We may also be LOBOICapilig able to relocate you If you _ desire. Most positions ar* too paid. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1888 S. Woodderd B'ham *42-8368 To $12,000 and up ACCOUNTANTS Full Charge 0,000 YARDS SECOND Merlon Blwegr— —1 This It 2-yr.-oli .-old, fully matured — peat soil. Sullivan Sod LAWN CUTTING, 6514885. WE LAY SOD. Moving and Tracking 22 tntarhetlonel Perse CAREFUL, REASONABLE MOV-! ING. Free estimate. PE 1-3570 or 628-3514, TRANSFERRED' COUPLE WITH 85000 down ' desires 3-bedroom . home In Waterford area. Agent OR NEW DOLLY MADISON APARTMENTS 'Tl 1-2 BEDROOMS FROM $145 14 NUIe Rd. at 1-7S Madison Heights Near J. L. Hudson's-Seers Oakland Mall |___g, for telephones. jS8Vg*8l. I ORCHARD LAKE CENTEX , 7,000 square feet of now air con-1. ditioned space. Last large unit In i this high- traffic service shopping ) center. WIN -divide. 33*4400. MEININGER REALTOR | Sale Houses 49 Apartments, Furnished 37 36*4. i cooking 270 month. 335- BEDROOM, LAI only FE 4-036*.______ 2-ROOM KITCHENETTE, .adults preferred. Ref. and deposit. 159 2-ROOM Ut>PER, s worker. FE 2-1559. nigh ! LESTER'S LIGHT T I Service. Sn-4446- itad dellquent I ages ix w 17. For Odditl—— information contact Mr. Paul Spate, Jr., Director. Bovs Training School. V Th ^ ’ LIGHT H Your, Drearn |_eMi Come True MALE President Madison APARTMENTS 1-2 BEDROOMS FROM $145 _______ -. , . , John R between 13 end 14 Mile Rd. 2 ROOMS AND BATH, 822 week,!Madison Heights near J. L. Hudson'! utilities furnished. PE 5-2283. and Sears —-----------j-----------------i Oakland Moll . Includes: lun deck — pool — air conditioning I All utilities except Electricity Models Open 11AM-SPM 588-6300 2 BEDROOM HOME, EAST side of Pontiac, $3,800 cash. FE 4-9645. BEDROOM, NEWLY decorated-with new carpeting, S acres, 2< miles N. of Columblevllle, Ingulre, Dwight Brown, 427S Marathon Rd.,. Otter Lake.- BEDROOMS, LIVING. TUNING 2 ROOMS, PRIVATE. Single man. 335-001*.___________, ' I- room, kitchen, furriiiee, very on___RPP __. ping center, plants and bus, paved, street, newly decorated, excellent condition. FE 4-34*1. ________ 2-BEDROOM ON CONNECTING waters- to Cast Lake. Land contract, gas heat, 3165 Kenrick, only 88,758. isohable. 334-9049. LIGHT HAULING and - moving,1 reasonable. 334-8*87. I LIGHT AND HEAVY HAULING, •ubbkg* plck-w. 338-0533. ■ 823 p(ir week. 473-*550. , Sales Help Meh-ftmale t-A REAL ESTATE SALES DO YOU WANT TO enloy your lob? Call us today end let m show you how ta earn good money and ojjloy being your own boss jalHnj' ““I Esteta.^Call Von Realty, 682-5800 REAL ESTATE SALES Experienced or tnexpertenced man or woman. We train. We oftorln-todrity and niitutation. pine work- r ing conditions end ttw chance U grow with a progressive company. ■ For a personal Interview ask for' Accountants College degr required. £---------- ----- ... experienced accountants needed. 87100 — 812400. Comptroller Industrial accquntlng -Terrific futur»T$12,0M. LIGHT HAULING . rtaaottahl*. 682-7515, 1 BEDROOM, $35 w 2 family money malntrp reiwne ____, tor STO weekly, full furnished, tar *0 lust $2,580 down on land contract. 333- mm m t 52,500 d 3, free estimate. 334-5595. LADIES DESIRE INTERIOR pelt •Ing, In Waterford area, _Fre eatTmatae. OR X m to R 343*4 or OR 3-2956. nixt. OrWir oidOUmb, 673-84*6. VELVETEX YOUR HOME, business, etc/ or whet h(ve your, ‘— “* F E 54256. ROOMS AND BATH. Ne decorated. Furnished. Adults o . n. .caretaker 3 ROOMS, $100 • month plus heat. Cell from 11 A.M. - 4 P.M. and Interested in Finance? College grads 8700 per mo Excellent potehtlel. Upholstering 3 ROOMS AND BATH, near trensp. ~'*du.lt«.-'P'E~:S4OT.-.....--- - r 3 ROOMS, -DEPOSIT REQUIRED C»H «ttor S PJlCPE B44t0. 3 ROOMS, FIRST FLOOR, Mw AdUlt*. Olhoellvlll*. 3*1-2227. 24.A 3 ROOMS AND BATH and 2 room. ‘ and bant, Inquire el »"• « 20 TO SO PCT. OFF 2 BEDROOMS, AUTOMATIC gas heat, water, no pets. 334-2804. 2-BEDROOM LAKEmlUP^RNRI Union Lake area. Garage, 2 baths. Newly decorated. Exc. condition. Sept.-June. Adults. $158. Lease. Security deposit, Ref.'334-127B. 3-BEDROOM BRICK RANCH, family room, 2-beths, garage, fully carpeted. 822,500 take ever Sto mortgage. 2047 folnSford. 424-1717 furnished, security deposit, 8125 month. 852-5418. :DROOM, . GARAGE,' CASS LAKE JFRONT, 3-bedroom, 'lean and nicely furnished, good t owner. 4*3-1572. 3-BEDROOM BRICK ranch with family room, 19k baths, Bear, garage. In Sylvan Meitar. Owner tnevlln out M stole, fSld to **ll quickly at S2I.008. Coll 482-7134. bedroom HOME wlto aluminum ■ privileges. Can be purdiaaad r5 *19,500 with small down peynw ........ i acre, terraced *nd fenced1 lot. ^ 2 fireplaces, family room, jjei Earn « . teaming,-excellent •dSKS"*!.*^2548 18W - readfng'nattonai ff gSm tutem!, Transportation O^ij^^nxmrd Mldf" V . Car md expenses turnTshted. " R—Ify* Inc. qipr<»t mien. —;—Guaranteed salary $600 plus com* J SALESMAN WANTED FOR Veiyjrtex. mlMtenT^ ^ / ^.LEAVING JiuGUSl txislnttot, car7 necessary. .Com-; «* , I Mteaaurl. Going ..... mlsslentoste. Per further. Info r.i m miny mwe Prestige I rteburg. Room_tor 3, positions ta me OetaolT and | penses. FE 8- 4 men tor _ ____________ ... ... . ROOMS AND BATH. 1 ' Child CLEAN DEPENDABLE COUPLE. 2 h“*> Imrrtodlat* occupancy. On a selected group ot fabrics. Let ^«« <*«>•' the experts reiipholstier your 4138 after 3.30 P.fti.__________________________j reference, fgg 4»213e. furniture »t halt the price. (SiH 3 ROOMS* NEAR TOWN* call FE 4- ELIZABETH LAKE, ^can j, : -------- •••-■-- ---------------- taS ■ i -------- ----------- i—- > with fireplace, carpeting and- “J drapes,, IV9 beta*, toll basement,) _____________________ 3 ' BEDROOM BRICK ranch near > LAKE. CLEAN j. Watkins,. Lake. LargeJf-'—1 H m >* basement* large kitchen^ gas haat* available Sept. 1 to Ji ! $150 * *•»«*-**» <*'••• •.*181*1— c — pets* 33S-7»42. X,*' it 273 Baldwta, ball 75 dec., hi 338^4554... training In cl to 815,000 fin ’ SALESMEN suburhan areas. W* may also ** ffnetetl SBBtoew tn Itnnril 98 sales position with large able to re-tecat* you K you se WBnlw wimBfBW IQ WOT *» J ferine trinlf whH* Tn desire. Most position* ar* to* paid, i ~ j 4-1 * RAY REAL ESTATE LICENSED DA' INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL o.d?enTsiStc » S. Woodward, B‘ DAY CARE ■' -|r* tor 3 or • year, . 2nd, days only, 335. i nonth plus OtllitteS. Securi-■ v deposit 5125 1 to 2 cmidrfid okay. 682-2257 alter 4*30.______ 1ACEDAY LAKE FRONT cottage' 3-BEOR06m RANCH n**r_piklai available Sept. 4 to JUne 1. Living I University. 2*14 Janies Rd. Po room, kJttfhen, bathroom* V huge tlac. badfoom*’^--- ——— «—J .-rssarar oK^S’sh MIDDLEBELT 3324. On Pin* Lake/ Bloomfield senoett. 4 bedrooms. Sept,-May occupancy. Also 2 bedroom house, winter or yearly: Appt, 483-2444. let, 3 blks. from school, lake grlv. to Cm* end Etlz. Lk., RMaM. L Open 1-4 ajn. and MKa^amN Q—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 4-H REAL ESTATE iterfor >niw> «* tBf ■WEmr nothing tc •am. : b OARAGE, brMItway. •wifmrnrap MW, 2 KIM, 7 miles watt of Font toe, 343-7074. ' I ROOM RANCH Pull bmimant. plus garage. About •mo movn you In. Owner* »o*m ___________________ 6 Spacious Ntw Homes By ROSS ' Available about Aug. 28 it RANCHES—2 LAKE FRONT “*• SPLIT LEVELS-2 ■' COLONIAL HOMES IN (1 LOVELY COMMUNITIES) $30,900 to $47,900 Including Lot . MODEL OFFICE. 623-0670 r Open 14 belly, tun Closed Erl. LAKELAND ESTATES roao. Approi of wolv 0.424-3633._____________ MOO d6wn~ with connecting both, \ ond 2 car garage, i $11,500 LOT OWNERS *Ce&nla|IR|0bo3rMmh *1* Volta BEAUTY RITE HOMES. LAKE AN6ELUS . LAKE VIEW ESTATES Moduli, open Saturday ond appointment." Coll** Dick St lor at <74-3136 or 544.7773 lor comp let* Information. V OWNER MOOM h0UM, bedrooms, 3 rooms newly carpato full basement. 30 Glen woo4 *16,770, 04,000 down. 334-4373 i 334-7203. BY OWNER GOOD CREDIT NEEDED 1 bedroom ranch. Pull basement, g® uv evi HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP, 1 bedroom HIGHLAND AREA — ‘ Nice bedroom trl-leuel, p < n a 11 a throughout; carpeted and tile kitchen galley and many built-ins, full baths* CO 4670. HOWELL Town A Country Inc. Highland Branch Offlct PHONE; 313-685-1585 HIITER TRADE YOUR CAMPER — In I thli 3-bedroom end both. * a m LOVELY SPLIT LEVEL home on Kro and M In Troy, bMutl S^sRiwSjEII draperies, appraised et S45.000, gS^ae »lor a Kick -- Lange Realty & Building Co. SIMPLICITY THAT SPARKLES tender loving core. T ily mom, » car garaoa, city h side. 111,300. KINZLER. SMITH "BUD' FAMILY ROOM (Nc0*B " »w .e..*,.. fireplace, 3W car gerege, plue 2W «<• - r*roOTt, M* pit on iirtpiicw. mim,_ BY OWNER, 2 BEOrtOOMr lmTa City, largo cornar lot, $9800, ca Attica. Michigan. 734-5040 or 72< 1264.______y _____ BY OWNER Angelus Meadows, ^3 bodrooi garage. 3 fireplaces,' 7 ceraml baths, carpeting end drapes 330,300- OR 34436 alter 4 p m. COZY AND NEAT t Bedrooms, firs garage, boat house, fenced acre eetete, nice beach. G possession. Call today. WE BUILD - 3-bedroom rom oak floors, lull batamon__________ aluminum elding. All tor 014470 on your lot, or wo have lots. Coll today. B. C. HIITER, REALTOR, 3773 Elisabeth Lk. Rd. 4024M0, otter Q p.m, 403-4413.______ HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty S ACRES-BRICK Brand now 7-room -brick, very modern, 3 levels, 10* fireplace, 3 large bedroome, 22' family room attached 2-car Oarage, 24x24 horse i, (odlolnlng acreage available •1,200 pen ecre). Con--------- ... 4 miles from Union shopping. 030,700. 013,700 13 Union lake road cm j-j closing costs on this 3 mgolow with lull basei iwly decorated. Owns WE TRADE OR 44343 __Drayton Plains FAMILY ROOM rod brick rondt beauty _... ....47 and SmKJhMlsr- Over Mir square toot and nelghberiwad at all nawar ham Has 3 bedrooms. lto baths, mat kitchen and tiled basomont. Plu corooting, custom draperies, wal softener. Anchor fenced ^nwr^ya trade ter email lake cottage'.. NEW RANCH, $16,256 Over 1,000 square feet In thlt i white aluminum exterior rone Hoe J- bedroome, 1H baths, oi lull hisamant. Finished modal y cant and will duplicate. Wo have selection of choice lots for yoi approval and will arrange fine clng. 10 per cent’down on MGl 'johnTkinzler, Realtor 0217 Dixie Hwy. <&-»- ....... FR0M PACKERS stores jltigle Listing Service * "excellon JNIOR EXECUTIVES _ We art pleased to otter maculate, fully CggOtOd . it ores ef ......|, . residences. There ora 3 ample bedroom- * full baths, .on attached gai Ideal * lor°r«nterta!lnlnprn \/lrtuYlly D maintenance tree with brkk ond aluminum axtbnor, your valuable WEST SUBURBAN 3-bod room home. . ........ asbestos ah Ingle exterior, tto-tep condition. I bedrooms down, large bedroom up. Good else living room, hardwood Doors, plastered walla, nrgfnlc nil Mth. Convenient kitchen, full dining arm, tango utility room. Gas hoot, attached 2-car garage. Convenient to 1-75 Ingham shopping at on if 6n{bylng your working on It, WARDEN m onmb schools, I. This EXQUISITE LAKE FRONT A beautiful now quad-level __ M47 and U.S. 23 expressway, everything completed tneT the lawn, lust waning for you to ~~ toy. Hoe luxurious carpotl..., family room with fireplace, largo bedrooms, 2 baths, ito-car garage, 160 teat of lake frontage. Priced far below replacement THE R0LFE H. SMITH CO. Shaldon b. smith, Realtor 244 0. Telegraph Rd. 333-7848 FE 5-8183 office, etc.) Priced ol 112.730.00 ‘"mCHOLIE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. 49 Univarsity Drive FE 5-1201, after 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 EASTHAM LOOSE YOUR COOL? gain It with Dili neat a _____ Carroll Luba front. bod rooms, 10-x24' living room, g leaving *»•*•■ A good buy 332,004 Terms, WARDEN REALTY 4 W. Huron, Pontiac 462-: JOHNSON WEST SIDE . Four-bedroom two-dory homo near K ——. - -pipital. Family dining § esement with auto, hoof n A terms. h fireplace In I enclosed beck p WEST SIDE ... ............. 2-story frame, 3 both, fulliwbFi carpeting. ------------ -------------- .* ----- being used for 3 3- room. Three-car garage, two tots. By ;a „----- ||vtl |n , | appointment. • ••«•••< a oewieew »8 *“ condition, 3-car oar a room opoi------------- .. apartment. This home Is good conditio — price, 312,700. possibility of Enclosed Iron furnace and hi drlvewa*r*^?ou • Fun HERRINGTON HILLS j Three-bedroom brick with full basement, gee heat, hardwood floors, tile bath, decorated In end out. Vacant. I, tell I Eves. Call Mr. costal! FE 2-7273 , *whh Nicholie & Harger Co. ooms 163W W. Huron St. PE S4103 IRWIN A HOME FOR THE EXECUTIVE KTbSlM the bOSt of Cite living alga 1 late, beautifully.. tondTcapsd. Large htdroom* with BMnty of closets. Two ftrapiecas. One tell and I halt bin*, Corprtlng in spacious living roam, dining room and dan. Paneled recreation room, breeieway and I car attached garage. Many other Specious rooms art the keynote of Hue lovely 7 room homo located on one of Pontiac's meet desirable streets. 3 bathe. New BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS 311 West Huron—Since 1725 PE 34446 After Stem. PE 3-4044 STOUTS ' Best Buys Today apartment with share hath. I twotaom with Vi bath and ana 2-room with ihara both. Basement Is family. nic AUBURN HEIGHTS— Only 3600 down, K FHA to qualified buyer. Includee 2-story 5 rooms ond both with aluminum tiding, tell basement In tine Bill Eostham, Realtor 5720 Highland Rd. (M-57) Ml 6744126 OAKLAND LAKE— j Unusually attractive .. 3-bedroom brick ranch? home with outstanding finished lower level. 2 ll..wlan.a ClMBIII IllArf IfltChEn water heater. s Val-U-Way :K AMPSEN h doting i II Carroll Bi kitchen, on your lot. - Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT Russell Young, 334-3130 33Vk W. Huron St. 121 SOUTH ANDERSON. Largo bedroom ranch, gas hoot, fun> basement, only S years old. PHA,j ~AAIlLfR*8R'0S. REALTY 1-543-7520 ATTENTION HOUSE LOVERS. Who Isn't? 7 scree, new, 20 “ ** —* barn, ranch ftyla bedroome, lib bathe, .. family room, M x 30 attached garage. Lovely secluded — Owner hot purchased larger t sailing at eacifflca erica, call Crestbrook I ■JMODEL OPEN DAILY 12-8 er By Appalnl im, family ro MILTON WEAVER II THINK CAREFULLY !! BUT THINK FAST I of |utt saving i 6-room, 2-story Market ipwiwe Brum, r family w’ha*wT# aisartments! ^ mak* u> _______ SirVHrSSffJi oS Clauda McGrudBr present lend contract. d..ua, IMMEDIATE POSSESSION |», B.ldwln Kealtor pe 34175 3-badroom home with full base-; Multiple Listing Service m ment, gas haat. Also has oak: 1 .. ■ floors, paved street, $15,500, FHA terms. Low down $500 is all you NEW HOME 3-bod room ranch with merit naorlng completio East side. His mony ________ features. 316,500 Include everything. 3600 down, FHA terms Gl's 0200 down or trada In you present home. YOU CAN TRADE FOR ANY HOME WE'HAVE FOR SALE Val-U-Way Realty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 <5 Oakland Ave. Open f to garage located contract (savas mortgage costs.) — oi HOWARD T._ Keating Co. h Ranch Looking Over !r Beautiful Hammond Lake ring room 13.4 x 21.3, 3 bedrooms, II basement, large closed-in porch -eble'F-H-A. SPECIAL & g , Wo already have rms.1 on title older .......... excellent condition. Is situated on a corner lot ai Includes the adlacent lot. Ide for e garden with fruit treo *13,750 Is the price. pointed, largo lot, con purchase PHA with low down payment. MILLER BROS. REALTY EASJ SIDE Largo 3-bedroom home basement, automatic g carpeted living room, i back yard, and garage. Carpeting, d 631-7367, tor Including li 6.^623-2674.*^' * OUR PROGRAM 3-bedroom ranch. s U p o r t landscaping. Fireplace will raised hearth In living room, large family room. 341,300. SNYDER, KINNEY & BENNETT FRANKLIN VILLAGE. MA T-76M ALUMINUM SIDED RANCH, 3-bedroom, formal dtnino room. 1 baths, 1 - garage. Feved ’dri landscaped yard * “ «»nres. bus and k FE 4-1706. AN EARLY AMERICAN CLASSIC In tha Quarton Lakb area ElmdnghanL'a I bad room houi of unlqwa charm and function character. By owner. <60,000. Ml ' OWN - -‘am. aiueo cuam n wMeK mu garage, hof»o ban., .... and Implements, Shetland , on 1 aero of land, 034,000 l, Gary, 37*4440. Beauty Rite Homes laks Front Homes Being Constructed HUNT00N SHORES Lax No. 73 Quad-Level $32,603 Lot No. 74 Giuad-LOVOl *32,105 Lei No. 77 Dutch Colonial 032.440 ‘ Cot No. 77 Ranch 030,730 Cash For Your Equity HACKETT 363-6703 •TRY CLUB A ranch!" lots ao|r*extSs. S3»,66o.'6»i T 1702. | CLOSING COST NEEDED 4 spacious rooms, full bosami natural fireplace, large din room and kitchen. Owners ag 474-1647. ----- EAST CITY 5 BEDROOMS $130 down plua closing costa a “urchase this modern 2-story _ edroom homo. Includes full dining Handy to schools, tronsportatl ond stores. Full price, 313,230. J. A. Taylor Agency, Inc. 7732 Highland.^IMSTj' OR 44304 FIRST IN VALUES RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding taxM and Insuranca ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT - LARGEDININa AREA L ACCEPT A IOM ANY WL... R DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PR<> BLEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH ■* GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE ITS W. Walton _FE 3-7M3 IVAN W. SCHRAM ARRO MILLER ! AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR LARGE FAMILY HOME, featuring living and dining room, new formica kltclwn, 3 bedrooms, full bsmt. and 1-eor garage. Competely redecorated Inside end out. Only S15.3S0.S0' on FHA terms. .0dW?I.n?‘, thousands. Write tor information *°: ALBEE HOMES 3513 Elljoboth Lake Rd. Pontiac or phono: M2-3«50 ACK YOUR PICNIC BASKET a KautitulP,|ndfan0nLoSoW*d ' — —toon boats I , private ur budget. ........... . o signs on Route 131, oi PROPERTY WE NEED BUYERS WE'VE GOT." mortgag*. " List, With SCHRAM And Call the Van FE 5-7471 is for 20 years plastered walla, t 120x126.,— pai STREAM OF what this west , has plus glass the balcony ovt. 3 bedrooms, ceromlc main both, Vi bath with mud room, family size kitchen and dining area, full basmt. I OWN? Than ban brick ranch ......out doors, onto the balcony overlooking the stream. Large, lot~pius "loti FT2-0262 more. $26,450, KENT .. . basomont, fenced back, 1 Refrigerator ond stove with hi *13.500 with $2,000 down. bath. Northwest suburban. Alum oxtorlor. Now gas furnace. Largi Ibt. 34,500. FLOYD KENT, INC., Realtor 2200 Dlxte Hwy. at Telegraph i 24133______or FE 2-7341 PRESTON BILT-H0MES AND REALTY PHONE; 682-2211 5132 Cass-Ellzabelh Road REALTOR Open Dally t LAZENBY JUICES. 651-0221, 852-5373 Lange Realty 6c Building Co. 3 bedroom, ranch 2 bedroom, home REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 6424220 Subdivision Itos t GAYLORD ART LANGE 863-2511 7343 ■ Commi feature oil electric living. Trass o ovary lake lot. Momloy-Tuesdoy, 4 to 0 p.m. Friday — By Appointment Oeturday-Sundey I to 4 p.m. Far information, phone Dick If let <743134 or S44-7173 kLOOMFIELD HILLS. 4 bodroor contemporary ronch, b o a u 11 f u wooded and secluded area, heate swimming pool, 2 Car garagt SMJOO. Call 6424367 for AppST ' BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS 4 bedrooms, living, dining room) kitchen, IVk both*, utility rootr. 2 Wear attached garage, largt , i fenced let, exeat lor* ----■*"— *27,f0tL COU 33W347. s. So much value, Y 2-2821, FE 6-7673. bargain at :E 0-7473. , <31-4146 oft. GAYLORD, INC. 2 W. Flint st., Lake Orion 5Y 2-2821 FE *4673 GRACIOUS LIVING Charming custom built homo In the rolling hills overlooking lake. Huge 4-bad room trl-level, 24' family room with fireplace, 2vy-car garage, lust KfiM. BREATHING ROOM j DesIgnM tor nva young family. A : bedrooms!’ tell basement, select your colors, just *2500 down, oil j this for 017,700. WATERFRONTS Building 3 bedrooms walkout basements — toll basements --! without, basements — Waterfi i and lake prlvileaei — start price $13,730. LAND CONTRACT TERMS . VACANT Aluminum siding ranch, new ga furnace, 2 bedrooms hardwooi floors. Aluminum S.S. payment only S70 month. - »«— CALL YORK REAL ESTATE WE BUY WE TRADE FE 8-7176 OR 4-0363 1702 S. Telegraph 4713 Dixie Hwy. SEMINOLE HILLS Nearly new 3-bedroom ronch, 34 living room, , full basement Including wjaohor and dryer, gas iTlYeMPLETON, Realtor 2237 ORCHARD L ~ — .... SAAALL FARM, ROOM FOR hoi end kids. Buy, sell, or trodt v..... Art Daniels Realty, 1230 N, Milford Rd. 605*1367 or 7030 Dexter Pinckney Rd. 426-4676. SPECIAL’' Boosts of a large carpeted llvln large kitchen with eatlni , extra dining room area, IV 214-car attached garagt large 160x100 ft. lot. Taka over Nil •existing mortgage with monthly nayments of only Silt Including LIVING CAN BE FUN. n this waterfront home at Watl .aka. Large Carpeted living rt nd good sized bedrooms, osomant has recreation room. ' trge family room hot sliding d arage. Owner wants action HALL ANNETT SYLVAN VILLAGE RANCH 2-badroom home, basomont, new ga furnace. Sylvan Lake privileges, wel -haded lot, 2-car gorage, pav« root, sewer ond water. 011,500 hfamTly--north side rooms, 3 bedrooms In each apt nil basement, separate ga. rnaces. TVh-cer garage. Immediate possession on one apt., other rented for 0125 per mo. 122,000, terms. 40 ACRES-CLARKSTON AREA im. and permastona sided bedrooms, 2 baths, tell with oil hot water hoot. _______and outbullkllngs. 1320 ft. road frontage, blacktop road, convenient to 1-73. Ideal tor horses, pardoning or truck forming. $60,000, SCENIC HILLTOP ESTATE One of the most panoramic views In Oakland Cty. overlooking Oxbow ’ e, 10 mflas from Pontiac. Ap-c. 4 acres of land, privileges on lake. 3-bedroom alum, sided :h, over 2400 sq. ft. of living i. Swimming pool, alt. 21x33 f ’^ET*rmWILL TRADE REALTORS 28 E. HURON ST. Office Open Evenings A Sunday V 338-0466 , baths, fuN t__________ _____ fireplace in recreation room o largo redwood sundeck oi --- GUARANTEED TRADE-... PLAN IS DESIGNED FOR YOU. “1. HOMEOWNER — WITHOUT IT YOU MUST SELL BEFORE YOU BUY — OR BUY BEFORE YOU SELL - CALL RIGHT NOW TO TRADE THE HOME YOU OWN mom^rulnfeesrYou' must' see ne, only *30,400. OPEN SUN. 2-5 2286 Middlebalt Ua[tko Drive [.VERY SHARP BUNGALOW ' Largo living room 12 x 22, plus din-’ ino room, eating space In kitchen, pull down stairs to fbilahod attic, now aluminum awnlngo over porch and windows, 2 cor garage plus covered carport or patio attached. House ond 2 lots ron be told separately or oil 7 lots for *17,700. CONTEMPORARY ON THE LAKE 3 bedrooms, with open lower levob family room, 2 baths, this homo built In 1764, and completely remodeled In 1767, excellent ttehino •rid swimming# priced at $44,900. NEW 4 BEDROOM COLONIAL i completed b FOR T : HOME YOU WANTI JACK FRUSHOUR REALTOR -WE TRADE 2-BEDROOM BUNGALOW — loc at 72 S. Ardmore Ip the < Featurina I a rap carpeted li1 m » on Wotklnt Lake Front. 4 large bedrooms and V/t is of this beautiful homo ore ■ —- - “ 3670 sq. ft. large living’ full basomont. early possession. Don't wait oi IEW 3-BEDROOM — Alum. I___________ with full basomont. Featuring ceramic *bith, * beautiful0 kltdM with large dining area. Total fffk only SI8430 with 10 pci.' down ( MICHIGAN AND WYCAMP LAI *7,700.00 on lond contract. MONEY MAKER; City Duplex, ... come of ovar *3,000.00 yearly and only til400.00. AN OLD TIMER but well cared tor imlly°that . ice for money. 4 bedrooms. R0YCE LAZENBY, Realtor -Open daiijr 74 Sun. and really lor I basement, garage. Off Move Before School Starts New Three Bedroom Ranch isement, "U" kitchen, Wideman RANCHER Aluminum skied ranch homo situated on opproxlmotoly I 1-3 aero par ' Step saving kitchen with ample Val-U-Way Realty and K , Building Co. FE 4-3531 __ 343 Oakland Ave. Open 1 ti SUMMER COTTAGE Close to Cats Lake, 5 rooms I heater, tAso/ down' SYLVAN LAKE . 3-bedroom brick homo with at tached garage — now vacant. Win boat dock on 45" water front. Onh 13 years old. In wooded area: Tht price is right.---- C. Schuett EM 3-7188 USED THREE BEDROOM Large kitchen, full basement good size lot with easement tc Lower Straits Lake, lovely vlev of the lake 317,500 — Will take offers. 'frank MAROTTA AND ASSOCIATES 3)75 Union Lake Rd. o tin 4 p.m. after 3 p.m. reverie charges 007-4333 MADISON JR. AREA BUNGALOW ON 30x130 ft ‘*‘ 1 bedrooms, large living room hi hot ample cupboards, base ___forced air heat, lWcar garage. 6NLY *7,200 ON LAND CONTRACT CALL TODAY. BALDWIN AVE. 24x34 ft. mum-purpose frame ' building, gas heat, large corner lot.1 Only S6,5M with *1,200 down. CALL I FOR DETAILS. SHINN _______________Effi sliding glass doors on the lake .—. ---.,ki.g t0 tohgid, J t Included In a LAKE FRONT ? bedroom ranch, possible third on lower level, beautiful living room with all picture windows and fireplace, recreation roojrn, on acre of land, ^fanced^yard. Call for ap- CALL WEST BLOOMFIELD OFFICE 682-7700 THREE-or MORE? need that many bedrooms? Then, keep reading; FIVE BEDRbQMS, 2 baths, trl-level THREE-BEDROOM, 2 both, brick — stem, ranch In exc. condlt on. built-iris. ?n5,,iS LOTS OF ROOM OU TALK ABOUT A HOUSE; ___on ■ to what this ««« Usttno has to otter; it's ~ THREE-BEDROOM, brick ranch eras with loads t£rir!£?R?*rdn” bedrooms, IVa $7,500.00 will ownership of DEAL" Small 4 this: "HANDYMAN own payment, n enloy It, or ® K-MART: 2-bedrm. cornar chad garage (HEATED TOO) r will.always start during the ether. Fun basement all for ____ wont: One of SUSAN Lakes finest hillside lots and a go ‘ * -bedrm. ranch style home wit tached garage. Everything he.. ■ the very finest. ONLY 123,108.0* contract terms. V COME SEE US ABOUT BUILDING YOUR NEW HOME. WE BELIEVE WE CAN SAVE YOU PLENTY. AND YOU'LL AGREE. of fruit trots baths W areas with* sTldlrte" g?ass "doors that overlooks b 24 x24' patio, large living room 30x12* and o huge fireplace. The basement Is fully paneled and could be used tor i rental. It has a 216-cer attached garage and a blacktop drlvo. For living at Is finest — Coll today — and let us take your present home In on trade. Gl—NO MONEY DOWN . GOOD 2-BEDROOM HOME on o beautifully shaded corner lot. It has o full basement, ivy ear garage and can be had ot only 313,700. All you need ta --------- closing costs on this on* a brand new listing — large living room fireplace. Quick P carpeting i surroundings. Full ed floor arte space mm. Slate entry Into room with ledgarock 06,700. THREE-BEDROOM C H A I built belora the turn of 1 fury. This Is one of tho homes that has been ax renovated. Including w woodwork, windows, pi Five and one-half scenic i with this delightful homo, with land contract terms. ME A FO U ______________tOO M CON- TEMPORARY W-IOvol, noodo some finishing. Top quality construction, all tbermopene window* and doors. Two flroplaces, kitchen comptete MLS 674-0819 674-2245 5730 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. BROOGK 4137 Orchard Lake Rd. At Pontiac Trail _ MA 6-4000 444-4890 TIMES “TakT fr6RT~ .jpeqfid between it and 12 Mile , Roods, near . Evergreen, I ni iHBiteM <33400. 3*04411. ! i$Y OWNER - NORT HSIDE ot ■ 7»qiiMac, 3 badraony tell-basement,! , contract. 424-577*. I ■, l^llFULSGEPRgoM brtdb|674-03T9 VA-FHA 674-0310 '215'I 1331 william Lake Rd. at M-57 aS;p GOOD CREDIT? j That's all thats needed on thlt Lauinger HUBBLE / JDL. car' garage, new teroac*, plu* LAKE PRIVILEGES. OXFOR Walled Lekt I carpotW^wnora ogont, 474-167*. bedrooms, 1 Vk baths, 493-4465. FLATTLEY REAiTY 4*7 COMMERCE RO. 36347611 LARGE HOME 3 badrqoms, formal dining room big kftenon, natural fireplace. Full; basement, get heat, FHA op-proved, ownoro agent, 331 <773. . [ LAR& LOT 3 BEDROOMS, 1VS BATHS, FAMILY- TYPE KITCHEN. FULL BASEMENT, i . DON E. MCDONALD ’BUILDER ■■■■ ■ OR irtuf: LAKE PRIVILEGES. OXFORD, SI: STRUBLE WE TRADE 2 ACRES SOUTHFIELD ; OR THE MAN WHO "WANTS" EVERYTHINGI This custom built quatf-teval Hat Its own hailed tool with dual dressing rooms! 6 bedrooms, 3 baths plus 2 lavs, 2 family —— * fireplaces and a recreation --- " lot with underground sprinkling system, this house cannot be duplicated for lets than SI 25,000, but ^js now on the market for BENJAMIN 6T BISHOP, INC.' T wo a I. To at * to want thlt MUMPwrsi sn it already planted. Th* lot lSS* frontage and hit tots of; . Priced tor quick action it' 6-room, 3-bejJroom carpeting In tell rooms kitchen and family rootff. family room that It approx. , There/ Is • 2-car attached end an extra *te-----I E. *2^300. WALLED LAKE immaculate 3-bedroom ranch home that boasts of o 28x16 carpeted: living room with sliding gloss door • to covered patio. Beth has ceromlc tiled walls and corpofM f— plenty of ctosqts tor storage. I yard anchorA fenced, atumli storms and screens. Alt. bi. _ 70x220 lot ort paved street, Priced 3723 Highland Rd. (M-57) Next to Franks Nursery 674-3175 VON It Sparkles Extra thorp boat describes bedroom trl-level totting on________ comer lot with- plenty of shade trees. Now carpet and U------------- fireplace in living r kitchen with electric bu....I_______ plenty ot cupboards and counter --------- -----family room oof i- mokes it i Is In tip-top *24.500. i aluminum sided colonial boon almost complete., remodolad ond feature* on up-to-the-minute kitchen with bullt-ln oven and range, largo family ' room and go* hoot Offered at only *33,730 and wo. know you will want to see this right away. Call us tor personal appointmanf. 7-ROOM BUNGALOW UAtnn "ESTABLISHED* 1930" OTTAWA HILLS TRI-LEVEL. Quality Inside and out describes thlt brick home with * beautifully landscaped and fenced lot. Oak floors, plastered walls, 12x1fft. carooted living room with stovo/ Nrqpwca, ------a-.---------------------■ te|| -ib-ltvol family riot Of $27,500 dryer, stove, refrigerator and oovoral other WOWEE! IT'S NO SECRET y“&(7« ; Pontiac Township near Oakland University. 13WX23W ■*■ over oak floors, kitchen with eating, space and !__________P :, U'/ixtr/i first floor family room. Strago, for sole i out of to ____ ___________Mfltor hor . „. f wont It told fast. For *21,000 wNI got a 3-bedroom- brick ft with attached garage, 30 ft Hy room. Sower and water we show It to you? FHA APPROVED moves a qualified buyer Inti 3-bedroom home with base t. Outside has test recent!) brick family room wtm a nrqiw formal dining room, basement, car attached garage and acraaoad. paw overlooking 1 beautiful backyard. Priced *27.730 and we will arrange yt financing. Why not call today I ometoMtod In tSilflnsf 3 beXI|/aiff1 ll*r >nd 1 HwNtoWw ACCORDiON. GUITAR. LIMONI lokoa ooryfco. A loo piano f— PufinicM. 01 **m. OWwIy^pR I NATIONAL CAIN registers. 4 Mali, recently robullt. tola I price r? QUO 1 fypowrlftr. Call oaf. 5 p.m. IMS FROLIC THAW IMS 12X41 ROYAL Embaaay, DROWNIBt HARDWARE I I'floor $ WALL-__________ DLUI LUSTRl SHAMP05kRS f55 Joalvn PI ijll GALORl- I lay-owoy. Only MO t**“ — ---------ita of il BRIOia - BUY YOUR weoblNO . fjj^MO. _ , L«lg Jot'. Bargain _________ iPl»Mn 3 WaHon BiwI. pi hm I DAROAlNr __________ ■ SIT OP 4 DININO chplra, nowly Items ond etoffilno. l cant uO«Bar*d.Phiu* mi jnwrnbrTir Way off_L SEWING MACHINE fancy1 das! Unctelmad total or a... JM gMweek. coil any Wi SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC Zlg lap ' towing machlna — I modern walnut cabinet — make •Main** appliques, button ho lot. oti Repossessed. Pay off: • $54 CASH or $6 par month payments GUARANTEED Universal Sowing Center DIXII HWY._______Ft 4-0005 STOVE, REFRIGERATOR, wrought Iron fabla pnd choir tot, anfiaua ctotot, now ttudlo couch and platform rocker, arm chair and ItCA STABLI OP UNUSUAL prlmlllvo ruins ana relict Including antique alahaa, carnival glaaa, crock, and lugs. 3444 Craathavan off S. Win* Ing, BIUoDotti Lake lafatat. STALL SHOWERS COMPLETE with faucata SS4.fl. SS4jg Lavatories ------toucjtsBWS, tolldto cony lata wtl SIS.fi. Mkf —hard Lk. S OAI tl’ih duct work'>'and' Tntteitafl latructlont. Coat nearly ISOS « aerifies, «r SWIMMING POOLS Coml, Upholstery Co. PIV '40S. lahing u TNI SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE ■vervttUrn^^mMd vour neade i 83l!B!TPiwlSrel IBpitonw '• UPRIOMT FREEZER, WO. MovL ----STB end wolector, *50/ youth la and bfTdli, SJOi game table, even s, SUi£ s gallon milk PaeteurUar, SIR Electric butter chum. Sit. OE Dlahwaalwr, SI IS. 4M-WW. n_______________ U^J|p_ CEMENT BLOCKS, oil tank. ltfHrsByN(MMN t _ 73 ■IP REACH BEER Coolor, J-l roach toai 1-1F Dal Caaa, al»< mltc. ttora fixtures and thalvlng alto building tor rgnt, agparatp e at a lot with operatorlng baa atari. 35S-505X, afternoons.__ 1 ELECTRIC PRY POTS with cam *Elactrlc*'etoam *taWa“ *< ____ ..id two moat pane, will covers. Coll FE 1-150. 1 11 PT. 6p STAINLESS, hoad( atam and # burner grill, atoem tabla - ahalvaa. Refrigerated talad Bar, BastiajvBtoealng carbonator, JHm naWi Compraaaora, Ruttlc pin, tablet, bench*, atoola. ► dishwasher, 451-127). Raaaoi other Hama will threw In. IN — XI***, miner, dish air coadltiwiar, sink, fryer, frasiar, rafrlgera-k fablat, ataamars, ate. jpertwgtBBii ________________74 POOL HALL Tabtoa, Solid sloth. ARS CAMPER 400. SlodpD. M lg MM, ha m at M, M thootor. 750 W. Huron St. VTEXt- " ' 331-0631. "Listening to a Yankee doubleheader is not MY idea of a groovy afternoon!” i Rets-HwEtiNg Pegs 79(1 - LABRADORS — MALES -------- ———x M|cki u 1968 Storcroft Campers *tibMt display CRUISE OUT, INC. 43 E. Woltaa 'rQattf M PE BAS -------------- •*- -,dW- Attention Retires ur 1PM 25' Londcrulaor tri illar would ba portoct to tab orlde tar the1 wlntqr. Pan ndltlon, loadod with oxti Mtg Irontltrrtd, must toll. CAMPER TRAILER. Portoct , km, 4450, Ml APW. ) cmW-' ■ YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS Quanto at any budget SPECIAL Yallowatona Truck Camper One tOWjadlr STACKER TRAILER SALES, INC. Highland (aimm 4fa-ff40 PER Open Daily 9 a.m.^ p.m- MARLETTB |XPANDOS I FREE OBLIVERj AND SET UP last RivERbiai itsCC, *db mii«; year eld, age. «J.. ¥»aJmeae i«. „ ..'a 415.55 Rttrlgaratori, sif. SWEETS RADIO AND APPLIANCE, INC. Usad T ad Rafrlg WANTED to buy LEADED GLASS LAMPS OR LEADED GLASS SHADES. SIS-4421. 1 warehouse sale 6p1n“ public. Emlrg Inventory of t waahort, rofrlgarttora, r-- mutt bo aols. Every 3S4-SS77| 1025 Oakland TALBOTT LUMBER toy trl-cyclo and PptnS DINING ROOM TABLE ‘irtoblo plot, waahor. I I Hgysfeb MOSt PE 441WI 0 ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER 0 '"ellir"; Appliance, 2414 14 « aaat at Wiwdward. 2 pc. living room aet EWBF£uJc carpota with Blue l llocTriB ahompogor ______i‘a Hardware, 41 E. Wt____ OARAOt SALE: Aug. 7-Aug. 14 Loom, waanar, font, ooda, pollahar, furnlturt, clothing, toola, toy*. 73W citprl. Laktmmi [Whlta Loko Twp.) 117- raclbiltig chain SlfJO yp, 4 humor apt. gat rango.S75.S0, 4 burner aloe. rMOT mJm, 2 atop tabm, t < coffee tpaie 514.55 far MT. Maf-traaaaa far moat avarythfni, ‘— bade, roU away bade, hide _ bad)i and ate. Laade of « PEARSON'S FURNITURE tia E. PIKE x PE 4-7M1 Oean fll 4 p.m. Man., Prl„ til ♦ PJW. hunk OARAGE BALE: AUOUST It, 5:30- OS Glani ----------—- ----- etc.. naiiB. WASHED WIPING RAGS, aa tow < *' — 25 lb. boxea to 300 II AAA GOLF SALE ____ _______ ..... carle, hallo putteri, SO par cant off. Why retail? Eliminate the middle...... J J 1 “TO Golf Dlatrlbu- MALE SPITZ PUPPY law s hp, 1 photo all S550. law and uaad atoal, an Deama, Mala, pipe, lead metal garage do, algne, lamp, ahdnt, at boulevard si WHEEL CHAIR LIKE nSriHP*HI away doubla bad with Intar-aprlnp maltreat and haadhoard, 440. tn- WHIRLPOOL AUTOMATIC waahar; d buy dlri L.ra, ids Rd., Royal Oak. Dally 10 to Sunday 11 to 4, k OOLP CbMPANY rapraeentall.. must toll 14 man's now temple BRUNSWICK POOL HALL Ml tfjSSkU“B.t!Broa GENE%*/kRCH B R Y-Tl^V^fuffoN DON'T BE LEPT looking for Cofw Don't Bair Shop, ssso 21 M ----■—Michigan, phf and! MINIATURE SCHNAUZERS, *■’*' ragjttarad. black and allvor, A ART BASSETT PUPPIES. Pomaloo. SS. 4»-70iS, offer 5. GOOD FRESH HOLSTEIN Cgwt, HOUND. 13 i -OOSAS. d Servlc, CAMPl *'TJ______ Check our dial on SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS SKAMPER FOLDDOWN CAMPERS .13 to IS ft. on dlfploy at — Jacobson Trailer Soles sm WHIIomt Lake Rd. OR 3-551 10 FACTORY INVENTORY clearance tela. Direct factor tq you. Price an deluxe fully equipped Brand •w XT travel tralleri. Terrific evlnaa. Loi I ‘ I :ell Mobile -nvSjg.- BOB Hutchinson's 21st Anniversary SALE YES, 21 YEARS Bob has boon in Mobilo Homo Sales Bob Hutchinson Invitos you to ste the ail new $22,000 DOUBLE-WIDE KROPF HOME 1400 da. FT. FLOOR SEE THE ALL NEW DETROITERS 04155 AND UP Prat delivery up to 300 ml. Open Dally Til ) p.m. Saturday and Sunday 'in I DRAYTON PLAINS 4301 Dlxla Hwy.(US-10) , OR 3-1202 IAUTIFUL 1043 MCDONALD 41 ft trailer heme. Already on lot, ilk, POODLI PUPPIES, AKC DarWIn TmT ahow quality, line-breed apricot, - ■ — alra pointed tor champlaMhlp, 343- B 5384. POODLES, TOY, AKC, brov Excellent btoodllnaa. Soma nice 4-H £*>v~ TO-srtSrs/S FORRENT Marv'a Campi all day Sal Joalvn. GO CHRISTMAS TREES, whalaaela, ahapad and aprayad, Scotch r' and Whlta Struct, tMk| alia fa Plata order new. Millington ________ 2Vk mile, aaat Of M-15. Prod Juno, 0 PRECIOUS KITTENS FREE to good - home, Uttar trained. 44A5443. J PUPPIES, SIS aadu mlxad * ' * and collie. FE a-3455. - STALLS, SS0. I, SIS. Good Ml jdairfiM lit* ovaHablh ^ff Oraar ^Rdr, ___ir Hiller Rd. 30*47 alto a tow privately owned 1---— from 5175 fe 3550. OARAOi SAL*! AUflUH^IhT-y..^ GARAGE SALE: Aug. 5 and ID, 4034 * CH|BB Wanonah Lana, Near Dodge Pr"~ n—■■■■J., M --TZ WILSON STAFF USED, gelt Cluba, f ha^a.*sil-3prrssir.,nL.,ss3M^ 1527 DODGE, 2 pailtnoer coupt. Lika new tmo, or 3-ih2. wanted. BLuk bYrd*'auctiSns! 334-870 or 1*4*51. Antique libIiary tABLi, iafif ____ - OLD PICTURES, lamp., crock., dlthaa, loola, Iran, araat, allvar, furniture. MS Oakland, 12 BL„ Rd. fee. . ________________> 2nd tt. an Taft. - GARAGE SALE: Mtacatleneoua, tome anliquaa. Frl., Sal., Aug., * 10, at 314 t. Broadway, La! Orlen. OARAO|i[ SALE:. Thursday, ^Frldy s p.m. GARAOE SALE, . CRAFTSMAN JOINER , i between cantara, 4-way tool peat, . bullt-ln Coolant, S H P. 5Pindal t BERNARD. PUPPIES, AKC . .glatarad; brad tor lam-- X-ravad stack, S1SB. 421-11 „ TOY POODLES, FEMALE, aduttt q ^-^-^4344. __________ ° n TOY POODLES. Apricot, SSD. MY 2- ■ BUCKSKIN GELDING 4 yaara, garrtto WltbM tola of pap. Gra^p- _ ENGLISH TRAINEI HORSES FOR RENT OR SALE. 3 S. Lapeer Rd., Pontiac. Ba» Mountain Riding Stable. LARGE BLACK .WfelVERN saddle, axcallent condition S100. Brown Wettorn saddle, $50. {Black pony saddle, padded feet, nlckle trim, nparly now $35. FE B-1141 avan- WINNEBAGO IS Pbi5*H^^^ntlac^bR*3-14SS ■LY ir. A-1 condition. 3 Neomo INTERNATIONAL CHURCH BUS EXCiLLiNT con-Icramblar, IBB mllea. 1547^TRIUMFH^tSDB, 5S0 mllla, 4S1- fwTVi YhONDA IBS SCRAMBLER, cutlam paint, tow mltoaM, ax valiant condlllon. lHtw PE 1-3435. 154B TRIUMPH Bonnavlito, axcallent condition. »U50. Includes hekat ---tie after 4 p.m I, jp* ifrttoa, 4 new, $50o. ul 3- ___________”* 154$ YAMAHA f*AlL-MA$TtR~1 M — —IHlttlon. Hwlmwt and __________jl. t325. 6t2*2312. ANNOUNCING THE NEW 1968 Hodoka 100 cc. S-SPBED TRAIL BIKE. Thi Bronco 50 cc. 4-SPEBD BIKE. MG SALES, 447 Dixit’ Hwy. .Qfwrton ■ 4714>M ANNUAL SUMMER SALE ALL 1968 MODELS ON SALE! TRIUMPH. nun i uA DUCAT I, AND MOTMim . ANDERSON SALES i. SERVICE S4S 3. pBtfflriPh, FE 3-7102 SULTACO - 17JCC f T R EE T MIDLAND TRAILER SALES Ftalurlng Parkwoad, Holly Park and King. On# only: 154$ 12x45, $4200 12X44, $3550 Your car, mSlto JWM,__________ lektn In an tradg. Largo savings HARLEY CHOPPER 74 In itedL^Praa • Lot 145, Grovaland I toward down payment. $2155 MO.'Low as $300down. COUNTRYSIDE LfVINO MOBILE HOMB _ 334-1505 “ to , TV 11 Bl IN. ADMIRAL. TV, M caMna^jtortoct picture, ilka il" Uiib TV .............S25.5S Walton TV, FE 2-2257 Open ii SIS E Walton, earner at Joslyn CHAIRS UPHOLSTERED, save w..„ Cali fiS-iygo. :: Refrlgeri .... ».....—Jd furnhura, pM| , —S Mlsc. S410 Barkley off Eliza. Lake. 4BB-731S. Starta Mmd. I GARAGE SALE: Badapraadl * pllancaa, linens, allvar, mere, 535-3334. GARAGE SALE — I goods, Saturday, Auu>>« — Beverly, off Baldwin Rd. atarla at 10. GARAGE SALE, PRIDAYM. WSBVKmIoh, .VPMBil mvipmant, hydraulic lacks, steam £ cleaners, welding etRilpment, ate. ", Pontiac Molar Parts, 10-14 now leeaino er University Drive. FE >41104. ’SU, iJraSiIl2.ii. MECHANICAL TOOLS, roll-a-way Sun. U. 5445 1 $75, afud tarvfca. A nr£-t _____Old. $40fc 4SM3BS. REGISTERED TfetfNESSfeB walking EVAN’S EQUIPMENT 4370 Dixie Highway, Clarkaton IIS-1711 _ 435-2514 Mon. through PrL, I a.m. to “ p.m. Sat. S a.m. to I p.m. Clot Sunday. ' NOW ON DISPLAY Travelmate International far di cloaa out fabrics. ( Coml. Uphototorv Ce. 45 B. Walton naar Baldwin kY M, SOt;, Meman't toll I TOP SOIL and fill dirt, r' #0HtiAfj LAKE BUILDERS SUP- . |^Sand, gravel, fill dlrta. OR 3 AND OkAVEL all ■nd products. Crushed I tom. Tasted top- HalHcraftort mod., S3t Intammonal, ciystal AMECO pra-empliflar iffina. St CWaeawa._ GARAGE SALE — 10:00 a.m.-S:« — - dlahaa^arl, books. T.V ■ Preview app'llancas, homi furnishings tala. 144 Starr, north o Sylvan Lr1™ transmitter^with power supply also t motor beam, S1BD. fetal. 3435475. GATE-LEG TABLE, NICE, Y-knot _ Antiques In Davlaburg — open ' ' Day*. ' ... " NEW UNCLAIMED STERlOS ttorao conaolefts AM, PM radii save $47, new only SIM. 4 speaker 30" console stereo, AM Antique bads ira, Vldrola, b Bookcase, V hard coal I ir, picture frames. II' ca y irallar, mlsc. house i and delhlng. 1 lac, Thurs., Frl., 1 ~*B BALE : N ma. 3131 St, Cialra D X^ngftPwg&°lWnr 2SLI. After 5:30.*3f44l042. ‘ : PEtmHiwHBg P#g» 79 I PINT CHIHUAHUA*. Doxies, alkara. Poodles, Tropical Pith, at lupplles and GROOMING, ncla Charlies Pat Shop, 4H W. MR | i i. d jatoflraph, y^ios^pR 4aS». ANTIQUE FURNITURE, art glass. Tiffany lampa, docks, etc.. Sat. Auguit 10, BTugblrd Auction, 4:30 p.m. ___________________ B & B AUCTION WATCH THIS SPACE FOR 3-SPECIAL AUCTIONS ON FRL, SAT. & SUN. S years, pleasure, SPIRITED OR ilTED OR gENTLE horses f *bia SaAaLl GENTLE Pony, nice fi chHdran. $40, 55 4-3547. . WELL BRED QUARTER TYPl! irs, $225, or w5"--|d|| a. 345-5077. Pleasure Mate iy1 illy America's Custom Hardtop Only HIM Travel Coach, Inc. 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4771 Oxford Trailtr Sales bedroom*, Early American modern. Pbrk Space avsilabl — “tofirr.TIfil. 3. ol La HONDA ISO EXCELLENT condition, 5700 mi. saw. 3544051. MOTORCYCLE INSURANCE S. K. JOHNSON AGENCY FE 4-2533 . Motorcycle Insurance Anderson & Associates >44 Joalyn FE 4-3MI , .SED 1544 120cc Suzuki TralL S255. - USED 1541 120cc Suzuki Trali Dame, * S34B. 3 Rupp MlnLMket from 5144.50. Suzuki cycle* SOcc to SOOcc. Taka M-55 to w. Highland. Righ to Hickory Rldgt Rd. to Domodo Rd., latt and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE: Phono 425-3175. _______ llcydts ___________ 9t k-l REPAIRED BIKES, beys, girls, UP-1 1 Boats-AccBssories SAVE 2 Ways! r HYDROPLANE. Plborglos. steering indthroffto, 427-359$. n WT APROCpAPY ALUMINUM star 10x54', good a . .2'. ALUMINUM BOATS .. Trailers 1120, 15' canooa . “If^lSir’rail'b.S"'. Bo lb. boat trallora ... OAKLAND CAMPER (tool frame. Tour-a-home o Bargains in Ussd Pianos Uprights and grands, all deal tuned and dallvarad. Morris Music B & B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY ....7:00 —----SATURDAY ....7:00 IXED ALFALFA-TIMOTHY I I-A DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC, ESTEI HEIM KENNELS, 3>1-lj*5 I GROWN AKC MALE poodles capes. MWf sell. «M*tt 3 AKC apricot mini pogdle pupi WE BUY — SELL — TRADE llafall 7 Days weakly CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME CASH PRIZE EVERY AUCTION H5 Dixie Hwy._______OR 3-2717 $45 FURNITURE AND ANTIQUE AUC- ■ Straw AND HAY, big halos, good' price on quantities from field “■ Campers: Swinger, Mackinaw, Travel Quean, caribou, Barth CnwartiShih iMirar. Merit 01*4)720 SPORTCRAFl MANUFACTURING TROTWOOD ... ...d Sot., 10 to AMPEG _ ■ out of stato. condition, odds and and*. 432-2575. n L*k* Dr. Con ' AMPLIFIER. E-Z TERMS HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 17 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. 335-52531 Per SoIe MIsceB—bqub 1 MOBILE RADIO, S aquariums. , m«m. ' * f whQelt 2 BAREERCHAIRS, Isrgs olocfrlc mftt si leer, 343-5077, or 4S14W2. _ i liAIR ORVliRS, hydraulic choir, I sink. IMJMl. __________________ 3 WESTINGHOUSE COMMERCIAL washers. $20. 314*10. 4 BURNEh llO'fhOINT glaclrlc stove, good even, $45. Kanmora sewing machlna, hardly usad, S35. Mlscsflanaous after S dresses. , GARAGE SALE, 1145 Orchid St. off ' i Watkins Lake P* ............- i clothing, artificial rangaments, vary nl GARAGE SALE: TUES I Saturday, V" *- Mayhae Rd« i at Furniture, Hagan Music _________________33241500 CABLE PLAYER PIANO, btll< camplataly radons, also hat b* - aftachmam, $375. 431-7051. * ELECTRIC GUITAR, amplifier, ci I BEAUTIFUL GERMAN Shephard dinette sat, chair*, —is. 1 wks. aid. |10 r—*• — I. 1074 Maadowlawn. FLUFFY TERRIER TION SALE 3 miles South mile East of Rochester North of AubUrn Rd. 3777 John R. Road on naausii SB -** t 10:30 Oak dinette. Chrome! Wlriif2L L*ks C U L T I V T B D JUKI |. PICK YOUR own - 30c per Rd. (M-55) at rtady ptexfid - 50c per qu. on Sat. August «••?,- Laka Rd.. Ilnette. Chrome! Williams Lake MHMltol 0X 3-0232. WITH SUPERIOR lamps, lamp, _ rugs, electric 0 BLACKBERRIES. 652-4014.____ LIVE-ABILITY 7 T . PULL-ABILITY ROAD-ABILITY . . . DURABILITY JOHNSON’S TRAVEL TRAILERS TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES A-1 construction, 65,000 BTU ( furnace, GB anM Magic Chat W 1 pllancts. Insulated floors, ceilings and wtlla, screens and storms In- C 12x50 HOMECRAFT, S4J5S M' CHRIS CRAFT RUNABOUT, 35 I' SEARS FISHING BOAT, ramot* controls, soots, many extras. 10 h.p. Johnson motor, heavy duty trailer. All pxc. condition. $275. TRAILER LOTS, don't rant, I Bo your own landlord tor .... down payment, 844 monthly. Bk Bros., Open Sim. 433-1333, S4S-771 Corner of Walton A Joslyn scelianeoue. Hi M Maybss Rd„ 3 tuples', 453-15017___________ AKC WHITE T6V POODLES, weeks, 155. 34»*73. __________ 1 AKC CHAMPION LINE poodla pups. All colors. Miniature and toy stud service' 453-4133. ' GREEN BEANS, BRING containers. I Frank Colburn, 1474 Glddings. FEi. STOP PAYING-TRAILER PARK RENT treHsMot lnWbrandUnewWMontic( Estates with 40' wklt pat streets, underground D11 r e Edison wiring, undorgroui telephone linos, and natural o No unsightly polos, up to 100’ wkto am Goodall Trailera. too S. Rochester Rd. deep tor and $300 HALIFAX DINGY, --------------— par and mast, stainless stool jontor board, 2 sola of tolls, traitor, oxc. condlton, $575. 752-2337. ’ SAILBOAT, >ND trailer. Exc. condition. Root. 752-2337. RENKIN FIBERGLAS, «S horse M sresry, Master-craft traitors, oxcall. cond. 4«>4>4«. 14Vo' WAGEMAKER, fiberglass, 40 horse Evlnrude Lark wins Penco traitor, $155. 3134 Island Pork (oft Soshthaw) OR 4-3614.__________ 15' CENTURY RUN-aboul S7S, and 40 horse MSrcury otoctrie start and controls, $250. FE 5-5S25 befors 2 • ELECTRIC GUITAX a________ - ampllttor, $100 tt taken a JAR GUIT) 1 FENDER BAND MASTER to_________ amp. Glbaon cherry rad ES 3 TDC guitar. Stella guitar and an AKC DACHSHUND PUPS AKC REGISTERED Malamute pups. Forced to soli Choap, show o- — stock, tlto. All shots and wot these, era terrific voTuoo In qualify g heaters. Michigan Fluorescent, 353 » Orchard Lk. FE SUBMERSIBLE Pioneer, 334-71)6. I1 tkauirs unVi5^2 1 LOWREY ORGAN, Thaatre deluxe ^y^_*l«y.'C|.WLT« ***5X1!^ •'S., spinet with Leslie. Ilka now. S1300. Coll 363-7005. AKC- REGISTERED D a puppies, 673-2625. AKC BLACK POObLE, tomato, wormed Mi " . ... RIDING TXAcTOR, S125. rn’etfar*' * ^ ptr V HORSEPOWER deluxe riding town mowers. To bo said at store coat while they latt at IM4.S0. Call . Goodyear, 335*147. * FOOL TABLX, almatl now. Brunswick. RIdiM disc. OR 4- K^linolEum rugs, Ib.fi eA.' I Fwttto tNdl Ilia ...............1c aa. 1 Caking file — stall paneling, c'' lEG TOto FE 4-5557. WS W. 1 U'x4t" Muakan pool, 20' out! 22 2;,w sisr&r7«a, mxx acfflrsTvhto V^a'tO. SJOO lakes INKLING RYSti .AWN SFpi avslloblo. Cm PONTIAC MUSIC A SOUND .... Woat Huron 612-33 LUDWIG DRUMS. GOOD conditio i" $3.65 For hundred A. Thompson, 71 I MOWERS '^ torSSor.’T'B ► Wooloy Rd., 42$- La rat taction vy! tfio COOlWfltg 1 ' RANGE iud Savor; F " ~E S-531 I, MAPLE END TABLE $20, Lamp .... “ triamp $20, Couch $20, Wooden kar «r —•— SwNjT >f drawers $20, Color — “-iftlv ■— ‘“4‘ - fa 1 ALL PET SHOP. SS WllllatTO, F% 4 4433, selling out at bird*. BEAGLES. AKC Roglatorod. , compotes, c ishes and Sr. and Mrs. National bo: •k, Paul HI abs._____ Home has boon sold AUCTION Sat., Aug. 10, 10 AJL Mrs. Huftto (Anderson) Johnson 414 North Street In Holly Household Furnishings Rofrlgirator, Frlgldalre Deluxe 13' with cron top fraazer. Washer Frleldalra, Deluxe, TV, RCA, walqut console, sectional, parlor tabto, walnut. Dining room suit*, a place walnut, dining chain, oak, uphoetored chair, pHf*“— — with toot stools, atop i and SunHavon pooches, oplei. Oakland- Orchards Commerce Rd. between t. Rd. and Burnt Rd. prlcg, these art on* oMha Seat applesauce and Ml apples. <051 Parry Lk. Rd. clarksfon, 1 mile nortt»; df Clarkston, .—1 • —*K1 aaat. Ralph M. Kragar. Farm Iqulpment B’ ELEC1 elevator n TRAVEL TRAILERS Your daator lor — CORSAIR, GEM ROAMER AND TALLY-HO ALSO orsolr and Gam pickup camper: to Macknlaw, pickup covers. Ellsworth Trailtr Salts <177 Dhtto Hwy.______ 43S* TOLVEXlNE ' TRUCK 6kMPEI AND SLEEPERS. Factory outl: repair and. par*, new and uaa rental*. Jaoca, In I a r c e m: Pontiac In the Lapeer 11 t 1280 toot from M-71 ’ exit now under con- Ti Ul 1-CE 4-4121 or 1-PI 2- 91 convert, top, curtain*, jtXk. i 4 aldmnljs, goo 14 TIRRS, , good condition. $30. 334-io// aner 5:30 p.m. ” Clarkston Auto Parts ______________ < North Main 4254171 14' SKIN DIVING I OPEN 5 TO t “' '—““ 4 bad trailer. , Lowry Campor S tspltal Rd., Union L) s REPAIR, MOUNT, and hi it Mag w and CLEARANCE SALE, Wheal Horse Tractors, save up to S200, 10 or 12 {w7tm i Hardware, MS Orcaard Lk. Pally 5-6, Sun. 5-2, FE 5*34. UB TRACTOR WITH A WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE SALE EVERYTHING MUST GO NEW AND UiroMnnaojnd^to^an*. g MANY FAMOUS NAMES 1 1 T). — Hammond, Cr pransen, Fisher, Lowrey, Nancy . t, Wurlltzer, Gallagher, Kimble, ( springs a chest of i •d'.h:cs droporioa s, blonde 1 FDSB C : tor poti broiler!** clocks, artificial scales, bird cage, holders, plants .and J___l?J 1-A Btouties to Choose From WE FINANCE-TERMS RICHARDSON DELTA L.b8UR?? COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES ANNOUNCING Expansion of facility OUTBOARD i veiw. rav n.p. Evlnrude moron trailer. Used very little. $1900* 36* trailer, 334*7804, IF HYDRO-FLITE SKI BOAT, 4^7 Chevy, must sell this beautiful boat now. Contact Bob at 217-4541, 22421 Clinton, Taylor.. • FARMALL Hydraulic, cultivator bottom plot drags, can blade, wM Jr * > TR raulk. .... - b|od*. C 2-m3. a rubber, 3 section I- ENGINES - FACTORY rebuilt, for 33 care, trades, Sif up. High performance. Specialists. Terms. MINNEAPOLIS MOLINE TRACTOR, Model-R 2 bottom plow, Cato manure spreeder, horse 1245. iltajl DETROITER, expendo, bedroom mutt bo moved. 4>2-4)32 . melor rebullta. Call g I, Maple chest grt""*!. Whitney, Lester, ■ TY *' ?,Sr.?.0 »nu lilt UP. No reasonabl Housedog, broken tamale, 335*57. end 25 ft. extension. FE $-105. bo SQ. FT. NO. 215. Asphalt saal tab roofing, $25. 4 sheets pl^scori of 5(0—14 studded snow tiros *20, ■**—, n gauge pump, taathar t gun, good condition $70. 335- ■ FROM S15S UP. No reasonable offer,COCKER PUPPIES, refused. NP down payment, no payment 'fit fall. Free delivery. Free lessons. PLAY WHILE YOU PfY WE HAVE A LARGE DISPLAY OF -USED RIDING, LAWN AND * TRACTORS. COCKER FUFPIES, AKC raglatored. 44505. 1 Antiques & Relics __ _____ lescope, Astro 3" bran, extends GARDEN TRACTORS. A L L 12x52', 50" on wrought Iron tripod Wlthl RECONDITIONED AND READY $500 so, Pino wash stand, laboratory! TO GO. > call: ‘ ‘ ise. Imperial.; PRICED AS LOW AS 1 MERCURY 41 HORSEPOWER, 225. Ml 4-1S27.____ v ' - 1562 MERCURY MARK S5 motor. 0 TRIUMPH COMP., t motel door frames, 3-0 x 4-0 100*0 — — ------------------ J gas turm 1304544, GALLAGHER'S MUSIC * 1710 W- Talagraph FE 4-0561 “ ■' aoutt: of Orchard Loko Rd. . .. . — ——^ AUDWt ay *fn f p » to 5:30 4^MchryslerT socrlflco lor Qwo!"fE 3- B^gyg'V autput goa tumaco, 0200. r ..... Iw matchless motorcycle 500CC 34* tool filter and all ac-i CUTE KITtENS. 1 ca —r 363-7705. __________ ENGLISH BULL .090~ carnival and mm rl!lsh- i, rolling pin, •ettern 'glass?^a.._ glass, moonstono divided MisCBlIaneous lower, hose*, poully netting, 26", atop ladder, man 60x12 GOLDEN EMPRESS, never *~~1n usad, full carpaling, furniture. . real Beauty 1$ prleaT ------ “* — •“ -*d tor $ $7,ioo a 2*5. 1555 LOMBRETTA delUXO. 055 ^ yard a fitoitng Baldwin, PE 4-151 cat andwireadad. ...,_iNO __________ 4.151*. PlumbMq W^Ores^sp EtiAT 10" Vanity, *5.55 / Toilets revoraa trap*, $24.55 Toilets B grade, *15.55 • •^fSmaaoaTrew M-55 w USED ORGANS wse tram Hammonds, ana om II known bronda, price* at k m GRINNELL'S ***** “*3jfeB-HS? " >« papers, hi n to rutu.h h Van Unit, il POOL TABLE AND accaaortot, ! condition. 4024*0. ’ |RAILR6AO TIES, now and i YAMAHA ORGANS TO GOOD HOME - it Salos-Str , Phonoll WEDNESDAY AUOUST 14, 10 A Rathavan Repair Shop 11MN. Ltroy in Panton tobto Are jm gas watdore,« mb, littiafr^' Garden Tra< mowers, with at business fix .ETaTPTM-JSLSjgsa—Saturday august 17,10 a.m. klHetv.Going, away to school; CoU ^ 335-504 evenings. _ ' ~L... Parkins Sotes4ervlce AucttonOers • owbUaA WIREHAIR POINTER, ™3£«S|3 a. A. Thompoon, 7005 M-55 W. REFRIGERATOR, GOLF CLUBS, * -------- moi 4455 - x Smilev Bros. ^ murst,* LMAN SHEPHERDS.,^. IRISH SETTER puppies. registered. 3*3-7365. >■ ' KERRY BLUE TBRRIBR~PUPpt«e, AKC btuebiooded peoplt levgra. 624-5*45. r------in. ftotiy T . Detail* hare • ' Perkins SatoGaraiea AwaHenai * Ph., 434*408 SWARTZ CR tYLER'S AUCTION MBS HIBtHand Rd. (M-S5) 673-5SI4 Hwh-Ttooi Mwh tl-A SHADE TRIES, wtocletlzlng TrEyol1 firyBlBH BB 1555 lO'xSO* MOBILE homo. Excoltont condition.. Carpeted. May keep on tot In Willed Lake. 624- 1541 PARAMOUNT IBxSO. Exc. com gg-asMgffjSgr* g 1 partGoIfl.314-lS». ' “* w ,n r X so- MARLETTE TRAVEL ttall-ar with MfpiMi and aWMiigs. in A-T condition. Sot up In SoBbtow Bay area In county park at Port Austin. Pull It or bAa it. *1000. *53-1745. iO* PICKUP CAMPER, Ilk* . now, 01,250, 3634257. 1563 HOMETTE, 10x50, 2 bedroom. H^JW^VBRSID*, REAL nlct, 17# ALUMINUM HOUSE TRAILERg 0x35 SINGLE BEDROOM, vary nice, eat jp to porta, call after 7:30, Mg PONTIAC CHIEF. sfaXtED, 10x54', 2 bedrooms. FE 4-270 or . FE 5-4733. Call between 5-5 pan; IT- COMPLETELY SolKstoMlnOd, • trovol traitor. Excoltont condtfton. 'Sleep* 6, small hath. $1500. 363-3037. 1544 PARKWOOD 10X51, skirted newly cerpotod and turn. In nice pork. Exc. eandlttan. Must soil IF YELLOWSTONE, SELF can-, talnad, $1300. FE 5-1473. now. Hove now hoitoa. Make offer. $52-2503. |2F YELLOWSTONE traitor. WS. \ 335-7570. 1564 0 FT, SKYLINE, 2 side rooms, $3200. 4024227. 31 FT. TANDEM wheels Gam, salt 1 contained, MWMBLHFpmB. 40 Omar, Pdnttoo' att. S lun. 1952 ELCAR. FINE condition. Good to^j|v»l or northern preparty. 1543 SHASTA, ttoaps 4. stovwovan. gas and atoc. lights, real- nice. $455. OR 4-3441. 1545 LIBERTY itocSO, 2 bedrooms, only *3355 ^nctudlng dollvery, fully 15MPAMCWOOO MOBILE MNto, ll botwMn jnJ*o * Milford. 4*5-2402 1565 AMERICAN WESTWOOD, 12x60, on krL^noor^l-rL^outsIdo Pontiac. 1144 IF TRAVEL TRAILER pressure water etc. sail or trad* 731-BS53. 1544 CENTURY IF, salt contained with side bunka and rear bath, Blew <, 13 volt llahta, water pump ihd radio btcludaa Raosa straight lino hitch, S2.45L Coll 4X1-1112. 1514 MARLETTE, 10x50, 2 Bedrooms, gnraitod, furnished. Exc. condlWon. 03408. 14634713. Att, 6, 1566 UNFURNISHED 3-bodr oom ■ Bkametoik-Ja wfp Groan Estota*. Woke* rowtotrator, oyo-towdl oven Included, SSOO. $334557. Call 052-2653 after i . |_. ... . /■'• tt 1144 YAMAHA TRAIL M, S150. 1567 Suwkl Trail Eblaw. 6344145. 1564 MATCHLESS^ 75B CC. 0450 er l,' rebuilt, best Of-0 Second St., IMS TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE/ mechanically portoct, candy aapto red, much chrema ond extras. 363- ircruiser, power Wt. SXttS. KAR'S BOATS A MTRS. > W. Clarkston Rd. Lakt Orion MY 3-1600 IMS DUCATI SEBRING. 350cc Rod ' und fiat“ i S---SS' tfi-aiL -WFP": ■' ■ Z ■ top and 1566 HONDA CB 160, $250. Butty 652-5321. Tren^lsston. FE 840317^ 1M7 OwT Star traitor. Ilka new. Mr M. haura of uaa, S2I5S. OR H4B7. ; I5» StA SPRITE W Trt-huEy W. Clarkston Id. Laka Orion 'Ii • tf GtVBRLIW dtontxJirjM . Mercury comptoto with traitor Pnd accessories, call any lima. 6 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE mjU ustom In ax cot lent condWton, talE gwi tgukai ond battery Incl., 89S0, -^thEORAL ______________- ----- fiberglass, 40 top. Evlnrude, new top, *1500. 26760 Lehser, 357-5*66 1541 Hr FIBERGLASS tXLhUlL EMM. with -iIbIiwe rontFr MittOlA, open,' with deluxe cantor consol*, aassrlng wheel and. remote con-“-*“r*l*o. 156S Mercury 20 ttora* MQ TftlUMPH BONNEVILLI, THE PONTIAC PRESS, THI RSDAV, Al’GL ST 8, 1968 tyfWiwtwl tw-Tmh G-tT ______ appreciate! MW. BOAT LOVERS 7 CDryilw n ft, CATHB-al CRUISER, all eu. In ♦hit dsmo lets you nemo your own down payment. Bonk rant on Rennet. > Birmingham ChrvtliNMymouth *100 W. Mo pit Rd. Troy 642-7000 •nalno. 40~ hours! lUstf0!;JSt3" ^ ot Sun and Ski Marino! a work, $ifS or host i Do-It-Yourself DOCKS Aluminum or Wood Larsen Boats Grumman Canoes HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your Evlnrudo Dealer" 1199 S. ToIwriMi M NOW ON DISPLAY IS*. COME Mercurys left, fishing bo OUtl At low at *59.95. Ml ♦Into to' buyl 4 modtlt Silverline inboard - outd outboard. 4 modtlt Renken. Both modtlt li and trl-tiull. Conventlo .... open Bow. 2 IMS correct Craft inboards, IIS horttpower V-S, competition Ski-boats. Chrytltr boats and motors available. now**on”display, alto a wide selection 0* *- stock, roo. AND SEC DREYERS MARINE SALES lilt* Holly Road, Holly Mich. . ME 4-6771 PONTIAC'S DEALEI CHRIS-CRAFT, TROJAN CHRIS-CRAFT MIDSUMMER CLEARANCE NEW TROJANS lt«l si' Troian Voyager sedan 1 l9M°3l'PSklff Exp. Bridge1210 top. 1941 21' Troian Voyagar Exp. TS * IMS Sr -'ol*n IMS $ Skiff Sedan-Bridge Exp. demo., 1*5 h * NEW CHRIS-CRAFtS 1241 25' Corinthian 210 tup, 1241 22* Cutlass 21S h.p. 1941 ir. Grand Prlx 210 h.p. USED CRUISERS i 1941 24' Owens Exp. 95 hours 14495 1945 25* Owens 155 h.p. i,ttffWTS 1941 ir Ttdlan 115 h.p. $1795 1957 ir Century 130 top.JEW MANY OTHER BARGAINS LAKE & SEA MARINE S. Blvd. at Woodward FE 44547 SMALL FIBERGLASS cARi cruiser. 70 h«. Mercury. Extras. props, twee. FE 4-2S5I. HIGH DOLLAR FOR R T R i 5 *Pi^w** ..... 210 Orchard Lk. STOP' HERE LAST MOTOR SALES ^'TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S Wb w o u I d like to buy late ■ modal GM Cars dr will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. ’ FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 WANTED Late Modal GM Cars TOP $ PAID FOR EXTRA CLEAN CARS Suburban Olds ■IRMI NOHAM ftraip tilin'' ,W:J3°5»'e^CfcW "TWO VOLKSWAGBM, from i^MiL-ia o.m. 1940 VOLKSWAGEN VAN, ■r miloaf SERVICE. 4119 FERRY 1 Ml8 mA,]mar|na it S1250. Cell M 1945 ^VOLKSWAGEN Station Wogon, M^'irstMOG'428-5210. MINI COOPER S, rally lights, il shocks. Bast otter over ttoo. 3044 oftor 4:00 p.m._________________ 1945 ALFA ROMEO. 1406.' Valoc* » “ ........ 1945 KARMEN GHIA. Student must toll, going to college. Si will f1'1 tank for week. Cell after 3 pj 474-1439. 04 VW. 22,000 miles. Radio. Bi —>1125. — will buy furIign bad motors or other mechanical trouble. Call Pros. 33MH. Jank Can-Tracks 101-A «■*%«£ pSralSig Usad Aote-Track Porta 102 5 GARWOOD DUMP box and 114" WHITEWALL SNOW TIRES. ---- k“*“ -nit for ' “ ‘ * stang roar Is. 39141951. 1954 CHEVY WAGON 1940 TR-3 FOR PARTS. V good body, new side c top. 424-5144. ■013595 SPECIAL MERC dtUiSBR DEALER CRUISE OUT INC 03 E. Wallen _______FE 4-4402 TERRIFIC DISCOUNTS At Tony's Marina On all boats and supplies W# have a tow Johnson Motors Li 2495 Orchard Laka Sylvan Li 682-3660 USED 15' SEA-RAY 500. w McCullough electric sto *778. USED 14' Empire FI b Runabout, S279. ALL. NEW boats going ■MP.,. have a 15' Glasspar fri-Hull, a G-3 ski boat, Glamor Marathon, a 17' Cltatioh. Rev Green* Sailboat, 10* Vixen end a 14' Raaaal rigged and reedy to tall. Going at demo price*.'Steury, Mirro-craff boil. Grumman canoe, Oolphln Pontoon, Evinruda motors and Pamcd trailers. ' Take M-59 to W. Highland. Right srrr,f,Ri% “iu-,0.S DAWSON'S SALES AT T1PIICO LAKE. Phono 429-2179. USED BARGAINS v 14' Atro Craft Newport, 75 Ti.p. Johnson, eompldto top. slo»* aft cover, gator traitor ,.....» 395 14' Dues 35 olortric Evlnrudo *795 iEvlnrixto —homs-liflhts-bullt In la gol. tank, trailer ..... ;fi| 14' Glaspar, 30 top. oli l?K*y. 30 hi‘. alec. Eyinijd* ii‘ Wnltehouso, 35 h.p. Evlni 'boat- •• ....'•••* ■- m - - - 14' Flbarglas Aero Craft flshjnj 12' Fitwrglas fishing boat *4" CHRYSLER AND JOHNSON Boat* and Motors OPEN DAILY * to 4 SUNDAYS 10-4 PAUL A. YOUNG, INC.* 1943 CORVAIR angina, goad. Cm hear run. $75. Alsol9t5 Ford 291, S*H- ** New and Usad Tracks 103 to-TON PANELS. ; Van. Tractor* i v tires. Excell. < 1955 CHEVY 12' DUMP. “ 1966 BMW 1100 series, white flhlih with I '"'"GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Ave. 4 KARMIN GHIA, good condition. 900 VW SEDAN, SUN-TOOT, rai good tires. S1250. Coll 3944052. V WAGON, $1295. *39 down. Hits till* week. Call Mr. , Ml 4-7500. Harold Tumor id with block Intorlor. Full price ^GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Ave. 1947 VW SQUAREBACK. Radio ond I MOB, wditi i id Interior, wlr* “ -I condition. 4 1947 JAGUAR 340 Sedan Auto, transmission. 1130. Pooler._____________ 1967 SUNBEAM GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Ava. CARNIVAL By Dick Turner “Of course I’m concerned about the spread of nepotism, but I’m sure that plenty of money and medical research will discover a cure!” New aad Used Can 106 5 BUICK CUSTOM wildcat, 22JMO dual miles, vinyl top, douhle ower, wlr* wheal discs, beautiful ondltion inside and oof. *1795. 423- 1945 BUICK LaSABRE convertible, ■beige, white top, power windows seat, brakes oiwl fleering. Privets 1945 BUICK 2 Wifi rmi ngmr. 91979. Motor*, Inc., SIM Dixit , roof, V-* automatic) 10 posy, radio, hooter, *1595. 1966 BUICK Electro 225 loor hardtop, vinyl fop, er, factory air conditioned. SAVE Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Soles W. Maple Ml 4-210* 1944 RED GUICK GRAND Sport. 1941 TRIUMPH TIMA ROADSTER, 4,808 mlloe. *51-1477._________ 1941 VOLKSWAGEN GHIA con- vartlbto, AM-FM radio, --------- miles, vinyl trim, oxtra i *2300. 4*2-0449,___________ 15 442-9576 or 424-1033.. COMPLETE DUNE BUOGY, 1947 — chassis only 10,800 miles, tow bar. 7195 Cooley Lake DUNE BUGGY ivi I960 JEEP, FC 170 and mow plow. 994 Promont, Pontiac. FE 4-7112. _________________’2-4120 1942 FORD,, *4 TON, 6%1475. "*W r**’ "Michigan's Fastest Growing VW Dealer" OFFERS A FINE SELECTION OF 100 PER CENT YARb DUMP. *950.1 WARRANTfED USED CARS M J *950. Dtys' 1940 CHEVY PICKUP, RUNS good, *275, Save Auto. FE 53271. 1940 CHEVY to TON PICKUP I II CHEVY to TON glass roar window. AM A fm, bast 1947 BUICK LaSABRE Wildcat Con-vertlbl*. call 334*544 bat. f a BUICK SKYLARK. 2 Fords ‘41 to '45.'radios. Plenty others — and taw______ Economy Cars, 2335 Dixit. FE 4-2131 CADILLAC 4-OOOR hardtop. , *900. 24740 Lahsor. 357-9444. 1944 CADILLAC Convortlbll, best “WOT: 1945 CADILLAC, ,4-OOOR hardtop, *2m. *2*740 1966 CADILLAC Sedon DaVilla nlnS* vinyl only 1 i. Priced to sell. $3595 Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM Ml 7-5511 New and Used Cars 143 CHKVftO hardtop, pot in* •“*' » 106 1943 CHKVROLST IMPALA, A---------------\jrjd » IMS CHIVY .. _______ ___... . down, payments *3.97 weak. Call Mr. Parks, Ml &500. Harold Turner Ford. Birmingham, j ? THj .bliMAY ol~owni 1945 CHEVY IMPALA SS with V-S, auto, consols hoatar, power sfeorlng. a $1358. EM 3-9744. SVGMhJk, wondrou frustrated Arabs i vrono. Call 477-9*31. machin*. 257 BLUE - 1944 4-DOOR Imp4la. h with Madi top. $1895 Suburban Olds , *3.50 | . tier Auto. 33SM41. 144 CHEVY STATION wagon. V* auto, qi-8329. 1944 CHEVELLE Wagon, 4-cyllnder slick. 3tJ)00 miles. *500. 674-2753 1944 CORVETTE WHITl with red ‘ | horse, 3 tops. Intorlor, 4 speed, i *2350. 752-9*44. 1944 CORVAIR MONZA 4-speed. Good condition, *408, 3355133., t964 CHEVY 2-DOOR# W95. "0" HUNTER DODGE m SOUTH HUNTER 55_____ Blrmlnqhan Now awl Usad Cart' 106 194S ELDORADO. Low mileage, ixc. Oman- 338-1952. glass, « to, Utlce 71 JEROME 1*55 CHEVY, 4-OOOR automafk, “v. liras, running condition mad full pried. 291-U84. 1959 CHEVY, STICK, radio, Iwa whitewalls. $191 "8" down, S par toook. Star Auto, 33M441. LUCKY AUTO 1540 W. Wide Tr*< mi CHEVY WAGON. 3 INI RED CORVAIR. t On M24 in Laka Orion MY 2-2411 1945 CORVAIR MONZA. S600 Can bo •ring ai autlful. • 1944 EORD V-a automatic. Clean ee a pin. 8495. H. & H. AUTO SALES _____________OR 3-5288 1945 CHEVROLET BISCAYNE 2-door sedan. 5 good whitewalls ground. 213 ci i. angina with a id transmission t buggy t real brakto hove Body" ■PR _______ point i_____ ________ ot that th* car It In excollent point work, outside condition. are asking tor theirs. Bern 8980 and 81.008. or will at li for *725. Call OR 3- anytlme at 7352 ^to|- off i Lake Road In .Weter- 1945 CORVAIR MONZA. 4-speed. Exc. condition. Tim like new. 334-4085. CONVERTIBLE. excelll. Cand i. M2-14I7. 1945 CHEVY,WAGON, V-l automatic, 8995. "8" down, *18.11 par weak. Star Auto, 331-94*1. Naw god Utaod Cars CHEVELLE 2-door, out ..Under, radio, hoator s Sto,™. m 8 14» Naw aod Uaad Cora letlc, 4 I. /to" 5 CORVETTE 394 425 horsepower, -ipeed^l tope, magi, cherry. Call 1v66?CHEVR0LET Malibu Convertiblt BIRMINGHAM 1944 IMPALA SUPER SPOTr -nvertlble, V-8, power gild* and wring 13,11* actual mllM, *1795. in be toon *1 4241 If-------------- avion Plains. <73-1531. R CHEVY NEWPORT, 2-door, hardtop, 1 to chooee from, vs automatic, power steering, power brakes, radio, haator, \ $1795 s ibis auto at our now location at Ihs TROY MOTOR MALL, on Mtpla Rd. (15 Mila) .IW milts East of Woodward. BIRMINGHAM Chryslar-Plymouth »E*HLSSifiS_L«JJS Mi HMH ---- * laarf 3 1966 CHEVY Super Sport, 327 v-l, automatto, vary vary sfiarp car. (1495. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Ooklond Ava. ♦44 CORVAIR, automatic, frdeiir IrSnln^ III. ..., ..W nf*WS#.... $21H HUNTER DODOB 09 SOUTH HUNTER Drop In and See Us Now! Mac Morrow OUR SPECIAL Bab ChaiG 1967 VOLKSWAGEN SPORTS WAGON George Sanford 3 stats. 10 postongort. blue end white exterior flnleh with o custom Interior, luet 5,080 actual miles. Drive It home today: Jutt: Frank Culotta' $2095 1964 CAfALINA Convartibla v-s, hydramatle. power Steering, powei radio, hoator, now whitewall*. Sharp. $1095 1966 LaSABRE 2-Door Hardtop twithtoni finish, c $1995 ;K 1965 CATALINA 2-Door Hardtop ...tic power eteerlng, ri r*ilsL eperkllng black tint $1595 1966 BONNlEVILLE 9-Passenger Wagon 1966 LeMANS Convertible White vinyl Interior, bucket seats, console, power etoerlng, power brakes, radio, hooter, now wtiltowells, sparkling turquoise finish with $1895 1966 GRAND PRIX 2-Door Hardtop - $2495 1968 BUICK Riviera Coupe rlor, power etoerlng, power brakes, ey tool*, electric windows, AM-FM steering wheal, rear toot speaker, Cruise Contro, electrtlc antenna, rear wlndofr M------- —i*. $4295 1966 ELECTRA 225 2-Door Hardtop Powor steering, power brokee, power windows, power soots, vinyl roof, tinted windshield, radio, hoator, whitewalls, automatic, silver gray with blue Intorlor, on# owner, low mlleago. Extra $2095 $2495 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE USED CAR LOT NEW AND USED CAR SALES OPEN ALL DAY SATURDAY Corner East Wide Track and University Drive FE 3-3 CHEVY: WHEN YOU MARKET TIRE gh " Sir i lototy chock «d. Kamo. Orchard Lake 3 CHEVY IMPALA, 4 standard. DOOR 1963 Bis outo., 6 cyl. — I Bltceyni 1458, 33>l 19*3 CHEVY IMPALA 2-di hardtop, 1795. "«» down, MTS weak, sty Auto, 33M461. 143 CHEVY BEL-AIR, 1 automatic, S59S. "8" down, ) per week, star Auto, 331-9441. 7*Mi heater, holpar springs, i. .. ------- CB1I *25-4217 after 6 o'clock. BillGolling 1943 FORD Vk ton pickup, good tires, good condition, new point lob, no rust, FR 2-3487. VW Inc. J 1944 FORD DUMP TRUCK, 7» h.p. Excellent condition. *1,400. 332-2290. 1821 Moplelawn Blvd. 1944 GMC to TON PICKUP, S ft. box. V-4, good condition. *1395. LLOYD BRIDGES TRAVELAND, Walled Loko, *24-1572. Off Mapl# Road (15 Milt Rd.) 1*44 GMC HANDYVAN, private owner, oxc. condition. *1008. *12- . °JusT sSrth of Ponti*cPORT Trey Ml S4*8S 1947 JEEPSTER, 4-wheel drive Now aad Used Carl 106 Pickup. 10,000 actual milts, will trade or sell et a tony low price. NEED A CAR* - Now In the area? ROSE RAMELER-JEEP, Union Lake, EM 3-4155. — Repossessed? — Garnisheed? — Been Bankrupt? — Divorced? — co prices on all new Motors, Pontoons; . .n stock. SAVE NOWI PINTERS MARINE Airplanes COMPLETE SERVICE ON . Starters., - . Altinators.. . Generators.. OPEN 24 HOURS Monday thru Friday GMC Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS FE 5-94*5 1943 BUICK LE SABRE 2-door hardtop, power steering and! brakes, whitewalls, excellent condition. RONEY'S AUTO. H • BaWWto, FE 4-4989. Automatic. V-S, dHUr , great (econo cor, HUNTER DODGE 499 SOUTH HUNTER " Birmingham 1944 BUICK SKYLARK, I *958. *44-7344. 'JULadiSL (Formerly Kessler Hahn) Chrysler-Plymouth Rambler-Jeep TODAY'S SPECIAL 1963 CADILLAC Sedan DeVilie power, low mlleago, a beautiful cor. $1295 1964 PLYMOUTH WAGON V-l, automatic, full power, ready for vocation fun. $895 1964 DODGE Polara 4-door, Moot family car. $895 1964 CHEVY 9 Pass. With V-S, power steering. Ideal vacation car. Only — $995 1965 GT0 2-door hard top, full power,-platinum silver with vinyl roof, -1——now. $1695 1966 CHEVY SUPER SPORT 4-speed, posltrectlon. t runner, bright rod With vinyl roof. $1695 ON DIXIE HWY. - NEAR Ml 5 . —i Mark 2. A.DJF. marker, full panel, 3 marker, toll r | casa 1V. rui in A CjJJ* JSJj, Sponcer Wald* Wlxom' ; LEARN TO. FLY Sponcer mold, 1---- 2 miles north of 1-94 C LgAN194i*TO WGLHjjdson oTm* to 1957 Packard. 23B7344._ EXTRA Dollan ibid ; FOR THAT ' , . EXTRA Sharp Car •t Averill's. Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 Share Cadillacs. Pontiac, Olds end ■Utah tor out-of-stet* market. Tap dollar paid. • MANSFIELD AUTO SALES _ ll*4 Baldwin Av*. _ » Ft 5-9988 FE H9M! . NEW '68 PODGE DART 2-Door Sedan SPARTAN DODGE USED CAR SALES FE 8-4528 855 OAKLAND (Just North of Cass Avg.) NEW CAR SALES FE 8-9222 1968 CATALINA 2-Door Sedan ‘2897 with complete decor group, hydramatic transmission, pushbutton radio, 2 visor vanity mirrors, outside remote control ihirror, power steering, power brakes, Whitewalls, all 1968 safety features. ■ WHOLESALE- RETAL SALE! OF "GOODWILL" USED CARS 1965 CORVETTE Conwtt. ...... $2595 1962 RAMBLER WAGON .1 $65 1965 BONNEVILLE 4-Door Hardtop $1595 1965 BONNEVILLE 2-Door Hardtop $1795 1965 CATALINA 4-Door Sedan .. $1495 1964 PONTIAC Wagon .......... $79#' 1962 CHEVY 4-Do6r . ......... $545 1964 BONNEVILLE 4-Door ...... $895 THESE • CARS MUST BE SOLD NOW! 1965 TEMPEST WAGON ......... . $995 1966 RAMBLER 4-Door ......... $995 .1965 DODGE PICKUP .. •..... . $895 1965 FORD '/2-TON PICKUP .....$1295 1966 PLYMOUTH ,............. $129$ 1965 CHEVY SS ................$1495 1966 CHEVY 2-Door ............$1495 1965 TEMPEST WAGON ...........$1395 1965 OLDS CUTLASS Coupt ... .$1595 Buy At Wholesale Prices*- Only During This, Sale! WE WILL MEET,OR BEAT ANY DEAL, WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD PONTIAC-TEMPEST On M-24-Lake Orion MY 3^266 frHB POXtlAC PRESS. THURSDAY; AUGUST 8, 1068 •hi DURING OUR 1968 MODEL • ••o PRICES. WILL NEVER BE LOWER EXAMPLE._________________ NOW YOU CAN BUY A BRAND NEW 1968 RAMBLER FOR JUST WITH ONLY RedSE° 499 SOUTH HUNTER 161 7-0955 , Blrmlngti *Cll 965 DODGE Is 0 low* mileage u Full price $11*5. „ GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Ooklond Av«. ^.oSS06.Eu^marw *jse healer, power Ataorlng. power brak„.R^rEdRtodb.. .•61799. ..-.y, SOUTH HUNTER^^ By Anderson and Leaning P 1*S6 MiRCV«Y convertiblI. —L 839 dwtn, payments 814.91 I. Sill Mr. Perks. Ml 47508. ^- JldTurner Ford. Birmingham. 1967 COUGAR. 6.5 "■— 1967 MERCURV 1 door, hardtop, block with rod top, bucket seats end ' ci automatic tranamlstion, p < "Remember when I said you’d he paid an extra $10 for this route? Well, now I’m going to show you WHY!’’ New end Uaed Cers 106 1940 FORD COUPE, corvette engine. California car, A-1 condition. 8800. OR 43330, FORD New and Uied Cars MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE. 1966, jgfi {jS8,r«a?ds»,nrf 1960 FALCON, automatic, runs good 413-9331. Rlgglno, dir. _________ 1961 FORD GALAXIE, 6165. Ssvl 1962 T-bIrD, VERY good condition. 1962 FORD GALAXIE i 966 DODGE DART, 3 stick, radio, whe«l cu-v, ., . 35.000 miles, 8850. 333-5946. HARDTOP, is Auto Salts. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 830 OAKLAND AVE, FE 5-4101 963 T-BIRD 2-DOOR hardtop, v top. 1795. "0" down, 11.10 week. Stor Auto, 336-9661._ 1961 FORD, AUTOMATIC — Oil DEALER _______________ 338- 961 FORD CONVERTIBLE, 8 "0" down, payments *4,88 wi can Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Hai Ford, Birmingham. mi Ford club coupe, t down, payments, 13.97 we* Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Turner Ford, Birmingham. 963 FALCON 2-DOOR, *35 ■ 4§Mi“&r' r Ford, Glrmlnghsr ... foro rrAtkm Country Sedan. 36,000 m>. • RM 2-tone paint, chrorm lugogo roc NOW time. $750. 33I4)145._ 1961 FORD T-BIRD, all powar, aqi with matching Intarlor, $1006. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 716 Oakland , FE 5-9436 1963 T-BIRD HARDTOP, 1905. -— payments *0.92 weak. Parks. Ml 4-7500. H 963 FAIRLANE 2-door, down, payments $4.92 wn Mr. Parks, Ml 47500. Turnsr Ford, Birmingham. WE CAN FINANCE* ANYONE WITH ONE HALF DOWN NO MONEY DOWN If You Have Established Credit 1964 Ford Fairlane Full Price $695* V-8 automatic. 1963 Olds F85 Full Price $595 it soot*, console. 1963 Ford Galaxie 500 >wor steering, power brakes, black Full Price $595 1963 Buick Wildcat Convert. vtomatlc Full Price $395 a top, 6-cyllnder automatic 1962-Ford Galaxie Moor hardtop. Full Price $295 1962 Chevy Impala . 2-door hardtop. V-S automatic Full Price $395 1964 Ford 2-door, V-l. automatic, whll Full Price $495 1961 Mercury Monterey Con. * Full Price $295 1966 Ford / Full Price $595 1963 Pontiac Catalina I, power steering, power brakes. Full Price $595 Moor hardtop, V-l automatic, r 1961 Rambler American 24oor, s cylinder stick. Full Price $95 1964 Mercury Monterey ewer steering, powor brakes. Full Price $695 >, V-s automatic. p< 1964 Rambler American Full Price $595 1964 Ford XL 2-door hardtop, green with black vinyl top» V-8 automatic, power Full price 5095 1963 Ford Galaxie 500 l-door hardtop, red and white. V-8 automatic, powor itearlng/brekes Full Price $395 1963 Plymouth Belv. Wgn. a passenqer, V-8 automatic, power * tee ring, power brakes,chroma Full Price $695 1961 Cadillac Coupe DeVille 4-door hardtop, full power \ Full Price $295 1963. Chevy Bel Air Wagon V. W—.. teg's •p~,"e $395 1962 Plymouth Belvedere FSfPrice $295 -8 eutometlc, meroon, p 1963 Ford Country Squire * passenger Station wagon, V-l eutometlc Full Price $595 1963 Chevy Impala -i matching Interior, V4 automatic. Full Price $495 , turquoise with 1962 Pontiac Catalina Wgn. V passenger. V-8 eutometlc. power Hearing, powor brakes, blue with r—- ' Full Price $595 1963 Mercury Marauder 2-door hardtop, white with black Intarlor and black vinyl mot. V4 ssr&sr“fr Full Price $395 /Walk Iri-Drive Out-rCredit Ok'ed The VOLUME Used Car Dealer SUPERMARKET SHOPPING* . OVER 800 CARS TO CHOOSE FROM! 681-0802 3275. WEST HURON Corner M-59 and Elizabeth Lake Road Cbll Collect within » Mile Radius • 681-0802 1763 FORD RANCH WAGON, double HUNTER DodGE 497 SOUTH HUNTER 7-00S5 Birmingham 963 FORD WAGON, 3475. payments $4.88 week. Parks, Ml 47380. Harold Turnsr Ford, Birmingham, MILOSCH - CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1963 Ford station wagon. Gold, automatic, ‘ double power, radio, whitewalls, vary nice condition. S795. 677 M24, Lake Orion. MY 2- 63 FORD GALAXY 2 door hardtop, beige, 6 cylinder automatic, power steering, radio, heater. 1795. Flan- braket. Clean, j IEED A CAR7 — New In Been Bankrupt? — Divorced? Got • problem? Call Mr. Whitt at King Auto, 681-8881. 104 1944^.MERCURY CONVERTIBLE. MERCURY CON SOME SUMMER SAVINGS *mm WYvniDit, riq wiin ., , _„.id vranirmiBlon* only 11195 1966 PONTIAC _____It, hardtop, green with matching intarlor. rial nice family $1995 FOR YOU GRIMALDI BUICK-0PEL MERRY OLDS, MO DEAL MERRY OLDSMOBILE 528 N. Main ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN 196!|OLDS 98, hardtop, tojiury^oupw.| mechanically, clean Inside and out,! no rust. 1 owner. Day time 334; 0966, ext. 14), pva. 363-3B65. I 1964 OLDS DYNAMIC (M, hardtop,1 9.non mil. Mr. lull Bower, $1695. l Edmore, 2*9, Yellow with black vinyl top ,!] and black Interior. Radio, heater, M ------ —,|n« Automatic trans-; He’s --------------- 1 mission. Wife1 FORD'1966 LTD, 673-8926. ’. with vinyl j 375J DS 442 Convertible. '66 double power, 4-speed.1 and tachometer. S126S. 651- PORD COUNTRY SEDAN, S1495. 339 down, payments $13.81 week. Call Mr, Parke, Ml 47588. Harold Turnar Ford. Birmingham. 1967 FORDS OFFICIAL CITY CARS I cylinder, power steering, FULL PRICE $1395 Harold Turner Fo'rd BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 FAIRLANE 500, 2 door " herdtoi-, 18,000 ml., axe. condition, 1967 whltowalla, 390 II OR 3-7858, after 3 p MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1967 Ford Landau 2 dear hardt factory air, automatic, full pow Gold with black vinyl top. $29 Brand new tires, 677 M24, LI Orion. MY 2-2041. 967 FORD COMPACT wago standaid shW. SHWO, 3356888. FORD: Who MARKET 1 fety c- — I. Kaai 1965 JEEP WAGONEER, full p< air conditioning, 4 wheal 0 61495. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH AC TO R Y AIR-CONDITIONED. Powar steering, power brakes, power windows, 4wu^pewer seats, seat speaker, pleasure lifts and trailer hitch tor boating or cam- praclated. The true mileage of this distinctive automobile fs 11,577. The color Is metatic blue with matching Interior and Is equipped as follows: ! Cornering light* BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1963 GALAXIE 500, / white, with red Interior, perfect condition, low. mileage. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1964 FORD GALAXIE' 500, 2-deor hardtop, power (tearing, exc. condition. low mileage, 1895. Call 674 , paymen.- ___ ____ Parks, Ml 47500. ■ —Birmingham. [> WAGON, 3685. ' ...31695 .! 41295 1964 Ford Gal. hardtop T964 Catalina 4-door |||A Chav. Van . . Impala hardtop Chrysler conv. 1965 MUSTANG 2-plus-2, V-8, fantastically preserved. Bea.utlful midnight blue with rally pack, 1965 FORD GALAXIE 500 , hardtop,, light sllvi :k Interior, VI au io, heater, power steer $995 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 965~MUTTANGF"3_SPPw4/~stick, aaad condition. 394-8286. 8 MERCURY AND COMET, $45 ,2 Pontiac '63 rtlble), $395. . 16 Chevy, '63 Flail 963 CONTINENTAL conver spotless, full power, 31000 r 31385. r~ ' *“ ICURY 9 passenger statlor automatic, VS, \ radio 'power steering, luggagi d air conditioning.. ReducM 1966 OLDS 98 Luxury Sedan | ditianing, vinyl top. \ to choose from, both priced at only: $2495 ^Suburban Olds BIRMINGHAM 860 S, Woodward 1 Ml 7-5111 j 1967 OLDS 98 j Luxury Sedan > eluding factory air conditioning, vinyl fop. 2 to choose from at: $3495 Suburban Olds ___BIRMINGHAM 868 S. Woodward MI 7-5rrT 1966 CONTINENTAL Convertible Blue with matching interior, ext . $AVE Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales I condition In- 961 COMET Moor, 3265. "6" payments *2.88 week. Call Parks, Ml 47500. Harold 1 Ford. Birmingham. 964 COMET WAGON, $7* sr-v 1965-1966-1967 MERCURYS Closing Out Sale PRICED LOW — SAVE MORE Bob Borst S5 COMET 289 1-barrel, 3 sp< automatic, new tires, brakes 1 ihocks. Good running order, $7 ^urner Ford. Birmingham. 963 PLYMOUTH WAGON, 3595. "0" down, payments 35.92 waelc Call Mr. Parks, Ml 47500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham, TW5 PLYMOUTH Barracuda 2-door hardtop, v-l, stands ransminlon. Bob Borst Lincolh-Mfrcury Sales 1965 Ply mouths OFFICIAL CITY CARS FULL PRICE $795 Harold Turner Ford BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7500 YbfcfiwCwtek In the Greater Bloomfield/Pontiqc Area 196^ VW camper, 1, Factory warranty. rsasati ssa?iwJt8i.,,rtr 1985 Grand Prlx, burgundy finish, with black vinyl no, automatic. with , power - stoaring, powar brakes, priced to aall at 1 rad Interior, lew Telegraph Rd. just North of Square Lake Rd. PHONE EXCELLENT BUYS IN PRE-OWNED CARS! $1595 $1495 $1595 whitewalls. Really n 1965 FORD Galaxie “500" two door hardtop, A fawn baas' power steering and brakes, air C( whitewalls. Don't wait too long. 1965 PONTIAC Catalina convertible. An all whlto beauty with rad vinyl Intorli white top, V-l, automatic, power Hearing, power hraki radio, heater, whltowalla. It'a Its* season tor one. 1966 TEMPEST LeMan; two door hardtop. "326'' V-a, automatic,.power Hairing $1895 and brakat, radio, heater, whltowalla. Simply gorgaous. * , 1968 CHEVELLE Two Door - Mvlng. an tola $2195 has $2395 $2295 1966 FORD Country Squire 10 paiaangar atatlon wagon. A bright rad beauty wl vinyl Intarlor. "390" V-l, automatic, power steering brakes, chroma luggage rack. One of The nicest. 1963 MERCURY Colony Pork 9 passenger station wagon, v-8, automatic, powar sharing $995 and hrakaa, whltowalla, radio, heater. Need lota of room? * " HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY 1250 Oakland 333-7863 VALUE-QUALITY Both Words Mean a Lot at WILSON CRISSMAN CADILLAC CADILLAC 1967 Cadillac 1967 Cadillac Eldorado, normandy blue with black vinyl top and beautiful houndstootn Interior trim, fully equipped with AM-FM stereo. and air conditioning. Sharp. Coupe DeVille, cap* Ivory With black vinyl roof, and matching Intarlor, tolly aqulpped With 6 way seat, air conditioning, only 3.000 actual miles. On* Blrmlng- 1966 Cadillac 1963 Cadillac Sedan DeVille, the ever popular hempton blue, with matching Interior, black vinyl top, toll conditioning, only lo.Mp miles, one Bloomfield Hills owner, Immaculate condition. Coups DeVille, turquoise finish with matching Interior, full power* only 37*000 miles. Sharp. CADILLAC of Birmingham Ask for Rich Kroll 1350 NORTH WOODWARD PHONE^MI 4-1930 _____________ . _____ hardtop. Burgundy, I automatic, power steering, radio, heater. *1495. Flannery Motors, Inc., 5186 Dixie Hwy., Waterford, Michigan. $1395. *39 daw 19*5 FORD CUSTOM 1-daor, fires, excellent condition, widow mutt aall, *«75. MY 3-1654, 1966 MUSTANG, door ^hard-top, H |____<8°an ____Bank o« The Trust Dept.. 963- , ___... ....... whitewalls, cohdltlon. To ^ estate. $1400. i WBcdUlti or 8*3. _ 1966 FALCON CLUB COUPE, $ ; *39 down, payments *11.72 v Turm Pretty Ponies 1965 and 1966 MUSTANGS ' MANY tO CHOOSE FROM Priced frbm $1295 As Low, as $39 Down HAROLD, TURNER FORD, INC. 464 Sy WOODWARD AVI.' BIRMINGHAM , Ml 47380 NOW AT THE WM I mm mm MAPLE ROAD (15 MILE) BETWEEN C00LIDGE AND CROOKS 2’/i MILES EAST OF WOODWARD ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT mm lilMRB ONE' STOP!!! . NEW-USED CATt SHOPPING mm ms f Audette Pontiac & • Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth ■Hi Boh Borgf Lincoln-Mercury T ^ ® Bill Golling Volkswagen «4nr Mike Savoie Chevrolet Q ? ' 4JI Brand Nvw hscilifiM ag 60 Acml THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 G—• i Can 106 new finance plan., if. problems, bankrupt, or garnished wages, we CAN GET YOUR CREDIT REESTABLISHED AGAIN. WE HAVE OVER 80 CARS THAT CAN BE PURCHASED. WITH NO DOWN PAYMENT. COME IN AND SEE CREDIT MGR. MR. IRV. lucky auto 1940 W. Wld* Track FE 4.1101 or PE 3-H34 fM4 PLYMOUTH I, stick ihlfC $109]. Good condition. Call ilMW fM7 PLYMOUTH SPORT Fury; . b,u- viny' OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH tm Oakland N*w ami Used Cart SSBfc — - aatot^chack. 2435 o f»38 PONTIAC DRAG car, AHRA legal. trlbowtr, beafad hydro. 4-11 posl-lractlon, new haadl, $250. FK Sa_poh -- -' ’ owner, axhauat. predate, ,942 PON conditio, 43*3414. Now iM BmE Cai . LOOKING FOR A BARGAINS TRV TMR PONTIAC RETAIL STORE FE 8-7951 Mr^NNEVILLe convartlbla, 3450, Stt'T'Rmp|‘ii cd*tvERfiire. n, payments $4,44 Perk*. Mi 4-Jjfii. Birmingham. SPECIAL }M Pontiac Bonneville, needs I llttl* body work, $297 full price. LUCKY AUTO njl VKANU rRlil, $$95. "0" 9»-3» par weak. Star Auto. 33 'MJ PONTIAC CATALINA cun-vertlble. Good condition $500. 426- 1*64 PONTIAC CATALINA. I < ^to^^povmr. auto. a, JJ. ».ll par weak. Iter Ai 1944 POlttlAC! I a n n a v 111 a can. IM4 4-000It lOtiNRVlLLK, factory SV 1161 AND 1944 PONTIAC'S, t doors, 4 doors, station wagons, hardtop#, vary good selection. All can M purchased with no money down. Ml priced to sell quick. , LUCKY AUtO 1944 PONTI4&..I .PLUS 2, .new engine, esc. cond., $400. M74N7 If1 ——— > ■ 1 ?! BUROANDY. 1044 PONT I AC Aluminum Wheel,. 4-speed. Res otter. 323*479. 1944 BQNNBVILLI COUPE — S9J0. DEALER_________________334-023$ IM^CATALINA $100. By owner. 315- door hardtop, OR 3-4770 afler $. 1904 PbtiTIAC, CUSTOM Coup#. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH sssr vocation trip. Call PI Now mti Used Opre 106 ADKINS AUTO SALES fjilS^ton’^ffi . 1944 tONNEVILLE PONTIAC. . SrsSRSMS'iiR 4-7500. I iflham, ... .oRviftTIIL *utom*tlc^M9?? 331*268. “ ilveI Biur ' * door hardtc I Pontiac 2x2. 1944 PONTIa£, 4door Catalina, fra ciaah. JMS.S** at imawi Mobil* Same*. 442 Wast Huron. 1964 GRAND PRIX> Moor hardtop, s wftk- 1944 P6NT1 AC CONVERTIBLE, silver blue, one earner. ISM. "0-down. 110.11 per ms-mi. 1964 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, red with bMcl.tiMrier. *995. "0" down. 011.00 pqr week, tier Auto. 336-9641. 1944 PONTIAC CATALAINA con vertlble, power dteerlno, brakes. Good condition. Call after 4 p.m. OUR USED CARS SPEAK POR THEMSELVES ftw imi Umi Cm J fSSS 3 gr. PyjjSj M .4-yCB. Harold 1965 PONTIAC Bonnovillo Convertible Power steering, power brakes, n $1195 Bob Borst Lincoln-Msrcury Salas 1947 FIREBIRD FI—_.... -Jl S2S-1IS6._____________ 1947 GRAND PRIX CONVERTIBLE, 1963 PONTIAC SHORTS COUPE, 1966 BUICK ELECTRA s-door, full power, factory air conditioning, one owner new car trade In, Immaculate condition. $2595 1967 BUICK ELECTRA ♦door hardtop, lull power, air conditioning, IUM0 actual miles. $3395 1967 BUICK ELECTRA 225 Convertible, I TO CHOOSE PROM, with full power, air condition, one owner, low mileage $3395 1964 BUICK LeSABRE 2-door hardtop, automatic, power atearing and brakaa, clean, on# ownar. $995 1966 BUICK RIVIERA Full power, air conditioning, low mileage, new car trade, beige with black bucket seels, consol*. $2895 1965-BUICK WILDCAT 44oor hardtop, white with red vinyl custom Intsrlor. full power, factory elr conditioning, $1895 1966 BUICK LeSABRE 4-door hardtop, V-8, automatic, power steer, ing, powsr brakes. $1795 1964 PONTIAC TEMPEST 2-door hardtop, V-l, automatic, power Soaring, power brakes, one owner, 13,000 honest $1295 1964 BUICK ELECTRA . 4-door hardtop, one owner, new car trade, ;■ reel sharp. $995 NEW CAR SALES 515 S. WOODWARD Ml 4-9100 - JO 6-8660 um BIRMINGHAM USED CAR SALES 545 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 MS TEMPEST. V4. ...... automatic, power steering. Ruin and leek* extra Bead, »i®00. 673- 1734- __________________ MS CATALINA Convertible, tike overpayments, before I p.m., FI 1963 TEMPEST Convertible, end brat— *“* GO! HAUPT PONTIAC 1965 PONTIAC HARJ3TOP, 31393. $39 MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1963 Bonnavllla convartlbla, — white Mb ----- WWr~iliil 477 N MV 2-2D4I. ier. si393. 677 M24, Lake Orion. ^ GTO 3-SPEED, 22.000 mil 11 .$00. Call after 4:48, 642-7075. 1946 . PONTIAC CATALINA passenger station wagon, auto. VS, radio, heater, power steering. Reduced to .. ......sisif. HUNTER DODGE 499 SOUTH HUNTER Ml 7-0935 Birmingham M7 CATALINA EXECllTIvl, 339 down, payments *'...._ wesk.Call Mr. Parks. Ml 4-7330. Harold Turner — ------ 1M7 BONNEVILLE 4 door, vista, air, power window*, brakes, stter-Ing, other extras, 32390. will consider pickup truck ae pert pay------^4 HM9. 1947 FIREBIRD, 400, 4-speed, 32,430. 'SRr IBM CATALINA 9 Passenger W double power, will consider 1 1943 FIREBIRD 400, p brakes, rally 2 wheal 7-0223- _______ oprlMI TiMPEST CONVERTIBLE, cylinder, power brakes, auto. 3237 47M882. _______ 1361 FIREBIRD 350 1 334-3124________ 1940 GRAND PRIX, v i, red, blad DR 3-0060. automatic transmission, power. Red end white end priced to sell. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP. Union aTittie $ 0 V© A Loti ALL CREDIT APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED; 1963 TEMPEST, 4-door Sedan, with 326 Vi. automatic, white with all custom Interior. Ontj 1M7 COUGAR, Hardtop, with air conditioning, automatic, power steering, plus - a vinyl too, WOWI 82595 0Kig 1947 BUICK Electro 223, Moor hardtop, with factory air conditioning, all power, yes folks, ioadMall the way. Only ,. 33793 1M7 MERCURY, Perklane 2-door hardtop, with 14,000 guaranteed actual mllaa, nice aqua gnp W ^ A ^ 1965 CORVETTE, Cenvertlbla, with Aapaad, AM pm Radio, an* ^th* sportiest cars on the n^d. 1966 VW With b06Ut(tol blue finish, wsnt sconomy this It III Only - $1293 anrw arisa 1M7 FIREBIRD, Moor hardtop, power brakes and power steering, automatic transmission, 324 v4 engine, new car warranty . 32393 1963 CHEW Impala 1 Door hardtop, with 327 V-i. power steering, a u t o m a 11 c. 17.000 guaranteed actual mile*. nS 1967 PONTIAC, Bonneville 2-door 5Mr tSrXr'VSSftSS guarantssd actual mllaa, naw^car 1942 oldsmobile. Dynamic SI 4-door with power brakes, automatic transmission, power steer* ing a^ real nice car aad you must 1964 OLD* Luxury Sedan, with factory air conditioning, toll power, tilt wheal and many other extras. UN's go Aral class . .33693 1963 CHEVROLET, Impala station wagon, V-6 engine, automatic tranamtoaton, power steering, ton on* you'll Ilk* *095 1964 PONTIAC Bonneville 4 dear hardtop, factory Mr Conditioning, full power, beautiful maroon fm> Ish, whit* leather trim, llkii^naw 1947 WILLY* Jaap, 4-wheel drive, and hydraulic snowplow, yes folks buy new, uos later and save money 1 Only 32,495 1961 CADILLAC, laden DeVllle, factory air conditioned, toll power; ves folks, lets go flrttclaia. It's Aka brand new $1093 1947 FIREBIRD, Moor hardtop, power brake* and stotrlng, all power even air conditioning; tola one's loaded completely .... 13794 , smmm 1946 TEMPEST LeMan* Convertible, power liter Ing, automatic, beautiful graon with white top, 1 owner, bought hero now .. stiff 1967 PONTIAC, 9 passenger station wagon, power brakes and steering, automatic transmission, nice aqua finish, locally owned. Only 13793 1947 PONTIAC Catalina Convertible, with beautiful blue flnUh white tap, locally owned; and aK to* goodies. Only .32395 1966 CHEW Bel-Air i doer, auto-matte. V-l. Only. 13,000 guaranteed actual mil**, Ilk* new. Only $1695 1966 PONTIAC, Station Wagon, power brakes end steering, automatic transmission, this one Is ilk* brand new. Hurry ,,,.3219$ 194S BUICK LeSabro 4 doer hardtop, with power atearing, brakes, automatic, beautiful tu-tone finish. 0n>V ij 1967 OLDSMOBILE. Delmont 88 and automatic transmission, many 2-door hardtop, power steering other^ extreij^actuad miles, ^new 1966 PONTIAC, Catalina 4-door aeden, power steering, brakes, automatic silver with blue trim, nice one owner. Only .... 31795 1944 BUICK, LeSabre 4-door hardtop, with power steering, brakes, automatic beautiful blue finish, extra nlcal Only ....Sllfi 1939 AUSTIN HEALEY convertl-Me. Yes, talk*, we've finally , got one. Runs out real nice. $495 1963 OLDSMOBILE, Dynamic SO 2-door hardtop, power steering, mission, make a nice !lr«t or sac-power brakes, automatic trans-ond car 1495 1942 OLDS Dynamic IS 4-door, with power (tearing, brakes, automatic. A beautiful car you must see. to appreciate Itl Only 4593 | 1946 CHRYSLER 2-door hardtop, ) with beautiful on* owner, and jocally owned, actual milts. , Only *1993 I 1963 TEMPEST LeMens 4-door •edan, 326 V-6 engine, automatic tranamlaeten, power steering, beautiful maroon finish and blade Vinyl top. $1495 1943 BUICK Wildcat hardtop, folk* tola one la Ilk* brand naw, you must sea to appreciate HI ^Onljr Darrell Thybault, Clyde Elliot, Frank Lamoreaux, Tommy Thompson, Sales Manager i Pontiac-Buick Opel 651-5500 ;! OPEN: MONDAY and THURSDAY TILL 9 P.M. 855 S. Rochester Rd„ Vz Mile South of Downtown Rochester Largest and Most Fantastic Annual Used Car Sale of Sales in Oakland County—Now in Progress at— (Oakland County's Volume Chevy Dealer) 1964 CHEVY Bel-Air Wagon $1297 1964 CHEVY Impala Sport Coupe 0 “engine, powerglld* trenmls->n, power steering, radio and ater end a spotless cameo Ivory lists. SALE PRICED AT: $1297 1968 CHEVY Impala 2-Door SPORT COUPE, hit 327 V $2797 -1966 CHEVY II metlc . transmission, radio beater and whitewall tires, finish Is a nice tropl SALE PRICEO AT: -■$1497 • 1963 BUICK __ Skylark SportCToupe $947 . 1967 CHEVELLE Sport Coup# Has powerful V-i engine, suto-metlc transmission, power *t“*'-Ing, radio, heater and white tires, nice grenade Gold fir SALE PRICED AT: $2347 1967 PONTIAC Firebird Convertible is powerful V-8 engine, aul atlc transmission, consol icket seats, power steering, J o, heater, whitewall tires, and ce Granada Gold finish. SAL RICED AT: $2547 1968 CHEVY Bel-Air Wagon 4 passenger model’With 327 v-8 engine, automatic transmission, power steering, radio and heater, premium whitewall. tires, earn- BSZ ^ $800 1963 CHEVY II 4-Door Sedan Thrifty 6 cylinder engine, mi •rglide transmission, radio i $797 1968 TEMPEST 2-Door Hardtop Has automatic transmission, V-3 angina, power steering, radio and heater and whltewall tlnss, factory warranty, Inca gold finish. SALE PRICED AT: $2697 1966 CHEVY Biscayne 2-Door ■ with gas saving 6 cylinder *h-glne, powsrglld* transmission, radio and haatar, whitewall tire*; and a nice sllvarmlst finish. SALE PRICEO AT: C$1347 1967 CAMARO 2-Door Hajdtop This beauty has 327 V-4 angina with automatic transmission, con-Btiio Mil KurkMt iBEti. radio end Hr SALE PRICED , ' $2397 BUY The Car of Your Choice FROM The Salesman of Yo.ur Choice WIL CROSBY Sales Manager FRANK HOULIHAN Asst. Mgr. NORM H0V1S FRED DARTER BUCK HULL JERRY DARK CHUCK VANCE BOB HILL BUD MISFELDT OVER 394 New and Used CARS-TRUCKS to Choose From LARGEST SELECTION IN OAKLAND COUNTY 1966 TEMPEST . Custom Convertible has rsal good V-l angina, 4-spesd transmission, power steering, radio and heater, red trim white top, cheery red finish, SALE PRICED AT: $1497 1966 CHEVY impala Spdrt Sedan V-l engine, automatic transmit sion, power steering, power windows, radio and heater, whitewall tires, and a real dean tropical turquol!* finish, SALE PRICED 'T $1897 1967 CHEVY II 2-door Sedan Has money savtng/4 dlnder engine, standard shirr transmMtlen, radio, heater and whitewall tires, willow green finish. SALE PRICED AT: $1547 1967 1967 1968 CHEVY PONTIAC PONTIAC Biscayne 2-Door Firebird 2-Door Hardtop Firebird 2-Door Hardtop SEDAN with 4 cylinder engine, standard -shift transmission, healer, whitewall tires, ermine white finish, factory warranty. SALE mfsslon* power' toSSnS^lweSS seats, consols, and a real nice marina . blue finish. SALE 4.1 liter engine, automatic transmission, power atonne, whitewall liras, whit* bucket seats, radio and haator, and a nice gold fin- PRICED AT $1597 PRICED ATt $2497 ish, SALE PRICED AT: $2997 TRANSPORTATION SPECIALS 1963 DODGE ....... .... , .... ...... , - - -$395 Polar# 4-door sadan, 4 cylinder, automatic radio, heater, cameo Ivory. ...........$895 $495 1963 CHEVY 1962 CHEVY ; India Ivory .$395 1963 OLDS Si........................................................... -...... .$695 Cutlasa convertible, automatic, powdr steering, bucket seats, dark blue. 1963 PONTIAC......................................................................$795 Catalina 9 passenger wagon, automatic, power steering, radio, heater, cordovan finish. , / W idL C3j dL ■ ■ Oakland County's Largest Volume Chevrolet Dealer 031 CDctklctnCi 3t CclSS Widest Selection of "OK" Used Cars in Oakland County FE 4-4547 PLUMBING DISCOUNTS NOTICE OF PROPOSED ALTERATION TO: Proparty owners* qualified school electors/ and all other Interested parties of the Huron Valley • Schools, Oakland and Livingston Counties, Michigan and of the Waterford Township School District, portions of Sections 12, 11, and 14, being more particularly described as tax code numbers on the Oakland County Treasurer's racords as follows: TIN ME Trail's End Subdivision #1, Section 12, White Lake Township. Y l-Y 1J, both Incluslvs Y 16A Y 16B Q—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8,m* NOTICE OP rySLIC SALE ,______rm~ MBMoon lbdPii sale of a « StTHCiPi bearing motor num-e Mr mbTWM eMIbo held, for com to tba MgMaf Mddsr. Inspection thereof i^^ inade atm Mekn si7, Rochester, . the place of storage. The undorjgnod rrj4cmc, Wa buy, Mil and trada PISTOLS, RIFLES Ml SHOTGUNS iamst MaaHsa t> Ohppsg Fieri! Cash Paid for 2124 N. WOODWARD AVt, Batwaan tfM S«d IS-Mile Daily S, tun. til IU Mill Renewal Grant WASHINGTON (AP) - Port Huron baa been awarded a 93.4 million federal Department of Housing and Urban Development grant for a community college urban renewal project. TTte project Involve! building clearance, redevelopment and expansion of the community college. __________ ' OFFICIAL NOTICE OP SALE *515.000.00 BLOOMFIELD HILLS SCHOOL district COUNTY OP OAKLAND, MICHIGAN • 3-Piecs BATH SET ?£&%•"" 59”! I TOILETS -T 19" 5 FIREPLACE Has Logs SUMP PUMPS VANITIES CABINET SINKS TUB Enclosures :« EXTRA SPECIALS! n a " ■ UwtdtyTmy and Trim.llt.M V 1 StotoK.RN.ttk.to...IUH i ^ Bath Tvto, Imf..410.00up ■ I Sham, StadwM) That.IU.IS g I gfeSToMw $49,951 II . masEowi— 13 jfittVt PLUMBING [ Pontiac Area Death Truck Injures Sleeping Youth ---- Michael, both at boms; BATTUE CREEK (VPI) — a-*.«, a* ^ “pm SmmLm H ml* - .to* Friday at La Valley Johnson ™at.gram|moqier Mrs Hilda ,toP> Ju8t e8st f*Wl£rpifc, Funeral Home. Manistee, with g**«• Snarl J. Foster ■liter and brother, Lisa and Mrs. Homer Rollins burial in Nortbport, Mich-Mr. Foster died yesterday. Surviving are his mother, mrs. numci iwimw - £ es.£s ? ess -mm tywKww-fodw voiu roxw«. «a £CkHT5t.?^^ J5**. rWtf £ M. Nathan S«n,»n -“^2" * “** “ “* Swvlc, hr U >*■** 11 mon, M, 284 Cedardale wilfbe Rollins, an operator for 1 p.m. Saturday at Churchof... . ’ - l— SlUPi JIIBl caai mx vHhue vi where he apparently curled up under a parked buck to sleep early todays finishing restaurant. A pair of die truck’s dual wheels ran over the youth, crushing his chest and hips. He was hospitalized. ii> poor con-dition in Leila Hospital. flira. iwiiiiio, a*s »v. 1 ¥.uu "J Michigan BeU Telephone Co., God In Christ with burial In ... • terdav ^ Oak Hill Cemetery by the surviving are three sons, Ter-Davis-Cobb Funeral Home. Darryl and Keith, all of Mr. Seaman died Tuesday, Ij>[Wr, ‘two brothers, and a Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Nettie Scott of Nashville,8151 • Tend.; three sisters including Car| p Unruh Mrs. Ida.Churehwell of Pontiac; wd a brother. BIRMINGHAM - P H vat e service for former resident Mrs. Basil A. Flood Carl F. (Maude W.) Unruh, 78, will be tomorrow at the Bell WASHINGTON TOWNSfflP - Chape, the wmiam R. Requiem mass for Basil A- Co t Birmingham with Flood, 53, of 11721 Jean Ann mil burJal Woodlawn Cemetery, be 11 a m. tomorrow at St. D|Wt Clement’s Church, mornjm Mrs. Unruh, who died Tues-burial In McCafferty Cemetery, ^ g member of the Kirk Romeo. A Rosary will be 8in Hills, Bloomfield Hills, tonight at Rotn s ^ Detroit Athletic Club, the mem rougiu a uuuse me «fCTOa laRvrpr.n ^theV^can* b,Pehowed^to' go iome alone for a funeral or wnan a Family member It aarlouily 1U. NOTICE OF PROPOSED ALTERATION' TO: Property owners, qusllfled school •lectors, end all other Interssted Par*»* of ths Waterford Township School District, Osklond County, Michigan, and of the Huron Volley Schools, Oel Inspection. Ji&tii»_.is August, A.D. IMS and XU ... persons Inter* Dated August t In the, Commission u on the 20th 4oy ot t ( o'clock P.M. to at which tlnlo notice of special assessment WATER MAIN IN DEWEY ifttSEX/ TO: H. Smith, H AM Land Company, Btlaira Home Builders Ma'M pmr Interested, taka notice: That ttw roll the Sgeclal Assessment heretofore me by the City Assess&r tor the purpose defraying fMt port of the cast whldh tl Commission decided should bs paid » borne by special assessment for the cc struction of: Water Main in Dewey Strc from Dearborn Road to Kennett Road . (tort on flit In my ottlca tor public ™1B®?nis also haraby given t Commission and the Assessor of, t... .... of Pontiac, will mast In the Commission Chombsr in said City, on tha 20th day ot August, A.D. 1960 at I otfock P.M. to review sold assessment, at Which time the Jordan river exchanged fire. Each side accused the other of starting it, and neither side reported any casualties. At U N. headquarters in New York, pro-Arab delegations were working on a resolution to have the Security Council condemn Israel’s bombing attack on Jordan. Informants said Algeria, Pakistan and Senegal have worked up a draft which would reaffirm a March 24 resolution condemning an Israeli land thrust into Jordan and 4 warning of “more effective! The Israeli-Jordariian frontier] measures’’ in the event of flared up again today as troops repetition. ■ Man Plans 2nd Bid for Buried Treasure HONOLULU (AP) — A for-. Important ship’s papers and the Israel said its air force attacked guerrilla camps near Salt in reprisal for raids by Arab Commandos. A1 Fatah accused Israel of waging genocide against the Palestinian Arabs. “The policy of extermination against civilians is a two-edged weapon,’’ it said. “Israeli civil- entrenched on opposlde sides of | Yesterday's News ians should not hope to be safe i if Arab civilians are subjected at a Glance in Jto genocide. the State Capital ship logs which von Luckner stowed in the box. Hie papers are of value to collectors and may exceed the tangible treasure in monetary value. Von Luckner, “the old sea pirate,’’ pillaged the gold and jewels from eleven Allied Vessels he captured during World War h 5 Charge GM Fixed Prices at Wholesale CHICAGO (AP) — Five (persons sued General Motors Corp. Wednesday, charging the giant firm with conspiring to set wholesale auto prices during the past four years. The U.S. District Court suit was filed in behalf of the plaintiffs apd all other persons who bought GM cars in the four years. • * ★ ★ The action seeks treble damages of an unspecified amount. The suit maintains that the five auto divisions of • General Motors are separate businesses under antitrust laws, but that nonetheless General Motors set the prices of autos supplied by the divisions, thus having restrained interstate trade. 7: .. ;W"“ ★ • W ...;ii« The plaintiffs are Chicago area resideiits who purchased General Motors cars in the last four years. Y 345 AS Vft A From the W«tortord Township School (strict, Oakland County, Michigan, and Ming tha same to tho Huroiv Valley . :hooTs, Oakland arid Livingston Counties, Michigan, and el proposed alteration of i—jr.iZ. Huron Valtoy Schools. boundaries of tha Huron Valtoy Schoc Oakland and Livingston Counties, by 1 taching the following described lam. Lake Townshlp—SE ' Dudley's Subdivision, Section 1 1 and 2. Supervisor's Plat #3, Sections 14, lots 1-4, sat, 2-10. 11 a 12, is a 19, so-as, i ■ ‘hot pi vision....... IP_______„.._jt E 15' of 1C lots 57-90, both Inclusive. Supervisor's Plat #5, Secttbn IT, lol , 1-30, both Indusluo. ■ • ; Callahan's Subdivision, Section ll. lo 1-37, both Inclusive, Acreage coded as Y Its A-43.SS acre Y ItS B-0.75 acres, Y ItS C-22.1 •eras, and Y 164-1.06 acres. Pram tho Huron Valtoy Schools ar.-a It aching the tame to the Waterford Township School 'District. Oakland County, *RL eby notified that a public I hearing win be held at tha Oakland Schools offices. Campus. Orlvs, Oakland County Service Confer, Pontiac, MlCh- ________ equitable confer* . .Wtotorostad parttaa wll$ be given opportunity to be heard af the time place above quoted. , . - -7. Dated pt Pontiac, Michigan, tola 5th day of August, A.O. 196S Huron Veiiey-watortord Board of Education pf«Oeklond Schools 1TKUUBTU Ul AROWN,' m; * SQUATOH NEW HEBRIDES^* CORAL StA \ BIG ON PHOSPHATE)—Phosphate is the main source of .income for the island of Nauru, which celebrated its independence on Jan. 31. From 1947, it had been administered by Australia, New Zealand and Britain as * United Nations trust territory. Maps chow communities on the tiny atoll and locate it hi tha Coral Sea. Police Action Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated 63 reported incidents and made six arrests the past 24 hours. A breakdown of causes for police action: Vandalisms—7 Burglaries-^ Larcenies—9 Auto Thefts—1 Bicycle Thefts—2 Disorderly Persons—3 Assaults—2 % Shopliftings—1 Unarmed Robberies—1 Obscene Phone Calls—1 Bad Checks—1 Traffic Offenses—10 Property Damage Accidents—Bjfc , • Injury Accidents—8 TENUTA’S RESTAURANT YW CM EAT Also CARRY-OUT 97* DAY Friday 9639 CORNER OF HURON and J0HHS0N (AcrosB From Pontioc Gonoral Hospital) IMPROVE YOUR HOME DEAL DIRECT "SS.™ REE PLANS and ESTIMATES-N0 CHARGE KITCHEN CABINETS 5-Ft. Kitchen $04IQOO COMPLETE 7-Ft. Kitchen $OQQ00 COMPLETE INCLUDES: Upper and Lower Cabinets, Counter Tops, Sink with Faucets, W00DFIELD CONSTRUCTION pn 1 ~ j No School Levy ; JACKSON (AP) - The Han-| over-Horton t School District! southwest of Jackson has re-{ jected a five-mill operating: jevy. The vote on the levy was check for |1,000. The jiarty seeks an additional $i;S00 from] county and district party organizations. UJoAtr—Siaf) Give yourself a treat, make your yraskday pleasant hi a friendly atmoshphere. We honestly believe our place is the only one of its kind In existence in this area. We feature Frigidaire equipment apd for the comfort of your husband or friends coming along for the ride a fenced-in lounge to read it\ or relax in while you wait. For your convenience* the owners are on duty at all times to help with change or any difficulty with equipment, carrying* laundry in amd out. Stop in and meet tho Mazxa Family -* Boh (Pa), Julie (Ma), Mike and Nancy (Young *un»), GiGi (Family Poodle) J-, LAUNDRY VILLAGE YAYILPtirytt. PERRY SHOPPING CENTER (Across Fpm Kroger Supor Moikat) Qr-iy THfe PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1088 ?1 -Television Programs- Pngnmi furnished fay stations listed in this column am subject to change without notice «> ]. i; * • ■ ,-iV|.Vi chemsht a-wjm»Tv, 4-wwmv, y-wWz-^v, e-Ciaw-Tv, so-.wk»K-tv, 9*-vrrv$~ THURSDAY NIGHT 6:09 (S) (4) (7) C - News, WCsther, Sports (I) R — Dennis the Menace (50) R C -- FUntstones (56) Misterogers 5:30 (2) C — News—Charles Kuraft (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (•) RC—F Troop (50) R - McHale’s Navy (56) Whet’s New 7:99(2) R C - Truth or , Consequences (4) C (Special)—Republican Convention (7) C — News — Reynolds (») R - Movie; “Kit Carson" (1040) Jort Hall, Dana Andrews, Ward Bond, Clayton Moore (50) R — My Favorite Martian (55) NET Festival Third of four programs from the Monterey (CMH.) Jazz Festival Includes B. B. King, Richie Havens and T-Bone Walker. 7:30 (2) C (Special) P RepublicanConvention (7) R C — Second Hundred Year* — Luke finds himself competing -far attentions of attractive ranch owner. (50) R—I Love Lucy 8:00 (7) RC - Flying Nun Sister BertriQe i s trapped in mine cave-in with born loser. (50) RC-Hazet (56) Fairy Tales 8:38 (7) R C - Bewitched — Samantha shows Darrin what it would be like if she were to confess her witching powers. (50) R — Honeymooners . (56) Festival — “Picnic on the Battlefield" is a farce about a family .. outing in the midst of World War H. 8:55 (8) C —News 9:68 (7) R C - That Girl -Ann, evicted from her apartment, takes advantage of Donald’s absence by moving into his, only to-be confronted by a brash friend of Donald. (0) R — Lock-Up (50) R—Perry Mason (56) R r~ Festival Orchestra 1:30 (7) C-^ (Special) Convention Coverage — This is ABC’s final 00-minute report from Miami Beach. : (0) R — Twilight Zone 10:06 (50) C - Les Crane (56) R — Movie: “Shadows" (1022) Lon Chaney portrays a Chinese laundry man who is shipwrecked in a New England town. 10:30 (0) Creative Person 11:00 (2) (4) (7) (0) C -News, Weather, Sports 11:30 (g) R — Movies: 1. C — “Mistress of the World" (1050) Martha Hyer, Satu, Gino Cervi, Mieheline Presle; 2. “Island of Lost Women" (1950) Jeff Smith, Diane Jurgens (4) C — Johnny Carson (?)C — Joey Bishop • (0) R—Secret Agent (50) R — Movie: “Out of die Fog" (1941) John Garfield, Ida L u p i n o, ' Thomas Mitchell, Eddie Albert, Jerome Cowan 12:30 (9) Window on the World ‘ 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) News 1:30 (4) C —PDQ 3:00 (2) R -t- Dobie Gillis 3:30 (2) R—Highway Patrol FRIDAY MORNING 5:45 (2) tin the Farm Scene 5:50 (2) C — News 6:80 (2) U. of M. Triedision (4) Classroom 6:39 (2) C — Gospel Singing Caravan (4) C —EdAl'en TV Features REPUBUCAN CONVENTION, 7 p.m. (4), 7:30 p.m. (2), 0:30 p.m. (7) NET FESTIVAL, 7 p.m. (56) FESTIVAL, 8:30 p.m. (56) 7:00 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) C-Today (7) C — Morning Show 7 :55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:00 (2) C - Captain Kangaroo If tire Republics is still in progress, networks will preempt regular programming to cover significant developments. (9) Tales of the River Bank 8:30 (7) R - Movie: “Oh, You Beautiful Doll” (1949) June Haver, S. Z. Sakall, Mark Stevens (9) C—Vacation Time 0:00 (2) C — Merv Griffin (4) C —Steve Allen (9) C—Bozo the Clown 10:60 (4) C-Snap Judgment ,'. (7) C — Virginia Graham (9) R — Hawkeye 16:25 (4) C --News 16:30 (2) R C — Beverly . Hillbillies (4) C — Concentration (7) (4) C — Match Game (7) C Dream House 1:26 (2) C — News (4) C —' Carol Duvall 1:36 (2) C — As the World Turns , (4) C — Let’s Make a Deal (7) C 1:55 (7) C Doctor 2:60 (2) — Love Is a Many Splendored Thing HI * Days of Our —It’s Happening Children’s <4)6 Lives (7) Newlywed Game 2:36 (2) C — House Party *■ Doctors -Dating Game , — Make Room for (4) C (7) C (50) f Daddy 3:60 (2) C — Divorce Court (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital (9) R — Route 6 (50) R C — To Tell the Truth 3:25 (50) News 3:30 (2) C — Edge of Night rate of 500 daily since the offi- May 15. Maj. Gen. Francis P. Kane, (4) C- You Don’t Say (7) C-OneUfetoUva (50) C — Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) C—Secret Storm (4) C-Woody Woodbury (7) C-Dark Shadows (0) C — Swingin’ Time 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas (7) R - Movie: “The Oregon Trail" (1940) Fred MacMursay, William Bishop (50) R — Three Stooges 6:60 (0) C-Bozo (50) R- Little Rascals 5:30 (4) C-George Pierrot — “Honolulu to Tahiti" (0) C —Fun House (50) R — Superman 1:45 (56) Friendly Giant Gun Registration mounting as mail is opened. is believed that the new registrations are new guns purchased through dealers." The gun ordinance makes it an offense to possess a gun handgun, shotgun, rifle, even antique or old war souvenir that is not registered. . ChicagoTakes 17 Steps to Halt Foul Air CHICAGO (AP)-Air pollution control in Chicago may become more effective now that a package of 17 new amendments has been adopted by the City Council. 1 Most effective provision is eventual stoppage of burning garbage in cdal burners and unapproved incinerators. Director William J. Stanley said the new amendments were necessary to bring about a visual reduction of air pollution in high density areas of the city. The first revision since 1959, the legislation will reduce pollution from incineration and garbage burning by 70 per cent. Other provisions control particle emission from' fuel-burning units. The sulphur content of fuels will be limited. It Was Enough to Curl Her Hair SALISBURY, Rhodesia (AP) -the kind of nightmare most women dread — being caught wearing haircuriers in public— came true for pretty Wendy Berk, but with a difference. Thousands of televiewers saw the- sophisticated TV personality do her one-girl advertising show blissfully unaware that two haircuriers were holding her blonde tresses in place,. Apparently none of the studio crew noticed the curlers, but moments after concluding show, studio telephones were janimed with balls. Some suggested it was all a joke. Others tijpught the new fashjon rather becoming. A few males were not as admiring and a 'lot of women offered sympathy. Wendy’s only comment: “1 just want to curl up and die.’1 — Radio Programs— WJB(760) WXYZQ270) CiCLWCOO) WWJ(95Q) WCARti 130) WPONQ 4*0) WJMCU 500) WHFl-f —WJR, News WWOBm, Sports CKLW, T«n Shannon WCAR, New*, Ken Rose „ WPON, News. Phone Opinion WHFI, Don HOOP 0:15—WJR. Spertt S:M—WWJ. Todey In rtevlew, Emphosls . WJR Business aerometer ♦ite-wxYZ. Diet Oevt WJR, Tlmo Traveler ♦:«5-wjr, Lowell Thornes, t:Se—WWJ, News, SportsUne WJBK, News, Tom Dean . WCAR Nows. Rfc* Stowort WPON, MUSIC TUI MWflte WJR. Roesoner Roport 7:J5-WJR, aesebeli Pentere SSl Site—whfi. Torn coiemen cklw. Soott Rep*" itffcKS: s* 1, Sports 11:se—WJR. Mirstc ,t m wwj, Deeth NoBeos Over »:M-j)JxYZ. News. Jim Dew CLW, Frank Brodle car, mm — War* IMlIklUPn . ... 7 WJBKr Nlghttim# FRIDAY MORNING 4:00—WJR'. MUSK Hill 5S5xvi,NNews, Merlin A Howard CKLW, Chuck Morp»n^_ WJBK. t*^“ WUM, nvwsr Bill waiw* wpon. News, Arlspne Wet 4:J0—WPON, ; News, ' JWtn Ira (Jury . WPON, News, Chuck Worren S:ie-WJR, News S: 15—WJR, Sunnyskto i:ie—WJR, Meek Hen tree—WJR. News fill—WWj" Ask Your Notph- WXVZ> News, Johnny Rend-•II Uipe-WJR. News. Keleldo-’WHPL*jlm Zlnsor..... FRIDAY AFTERNOON 12:10- WCAR, NNews, Rod0 Miller WPON, News. Music CKLW, Jim Edwards 12.-15—WJR, FOCUS tiise-wWj, Marty McNeeity WXYZ, News. Don McNeHl 1:11—WJR, News, A . WwSHsJws. 1:11—WXYZ, S Rtndofl l:«e—WPON, News, Fat whfi, am Lynch WJR, Newt t:1S-iWJR. Musk Hsu tm i|iC*R, Niww. Res. —— WJRK, News, Honk 0*NoM CKLW, WWW Rivers WXY?. News. Dick Purten S:M-WJR, Progress Roport on Michigan Open ftlZ-JWJnL JRMk Hell -5:15—WPON, Lum 'n' Abn 5:M—WPOtL Pat A IT 7” 6 6 7" 9 10 TT1 it W 14" is” W 17 z it“ 19 ■ W L. W 1 2T 23 1ST 25 i 26 ■ zT 28 29 5T 31 1 , H W 33 ST r w ST ■ 37“ 3 ■ w 40 1 41 pT «r 44 ■ 46 46 47 48"] ie” 60 w W «“ 54" 5T — bT — — . 67| m • Mechanical Bit ACROSS from a 1 Eccentric federation wheel 38 Motive 4 Automobile 3fl Dietreea call accessory 17 Chemical B Smithy’s suffixes short 36 Greenland 13 Masculine 40 Kind of drill 41 Girl's name .43 Bridal path 46 Saving A Look at TV Convention Ratings Off U Dry, as wine parrot 18 Strong 51 Neither lg Moral 53 Master 34 African 63 Feminine antelope suffix 31 Noah’s boat MAga repairmen 4 Trail 6 Particle 6 Kind of bearing 7 Greaklettar • Descriptive 26 Region 27 Enervate . 30 One who nullifies 12 Bring Into vmggfev,' 65 Grafted (bar.) 56 Direction 57 Period of ,MffN 1 Instance . 17 Nullify MStdtenic decree 38 Darling* 24 Disorder 2 Encourage 26SphiMoC 48 Achromatic 50 Golfer’s gadget By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Television-Radio Writer HOLLYWOOD - By the time the Republican National Convention worked around Wedneaday night to the first demonstration after the first nomination speech for a presidential candidate, the two television networks by implication had conceded thg nomination to Richard M. Nixoh. They already had shifted their primary attention from the selection of a presidential candidate to a vice presidential candidate. As they had for the perfunctory oratory of the first two days, CBS and NBC—in their gavel-to-gavei coverage—paid minimal attention to the favorite-son nominating speeches. The floor reporters warned their way around the convention hall, interspersing interviews with wives and families of prominent men along with purely political interviews It was all pretty sluggish until balloting time. The hard working staffs, from anchormen to the technicians behind the cameras, tried every device to keep things moving. There were jaunty commentary experiments with off-beat camera angles and studies of delegates— dozing off, eating, talking. Distressing to both CBS and NBC has been the cool reaction of the general public to their superior efforts. Overnight audience ratings taken indicate that NBC has had overall a slight edge in the number of viewers and that ABC has Increased its audience with its nightly wrap-ups of convention coverage. But the ratings also showed that only about ope of every three TV sets in the country has been tutted to the Mg show in Miami Beach. color rm RCA-ZENITH LOWEST PRICES. BEST SERVICES CONDON'S TV Salat & Service 730 W. Huron FI 4*9736 HOME IMPROVEMENT IS MY BUSINESS DIAL DIRECT WITH LOCAL BUILDER! NO MONEY DOWN-FHA and BANK RATES NO PAYMENTS TIL OCTOBER FE 8-9251 FREE ESTIMATES ■ * WfcWi ino oblation) 323 N. Perrjr, POMTfAG Our next newscast may be on right now! Have you noticed? Whenever news happens, TV2 brings it to you ... at any time, day or night. You no longer have to wait for regularly-scheduled news programs. You know when it happens. With TV2 NEWS UPDATE, you can enjoy your favorite entertainment shows and get all the news, too. Now, ANYtime is NEWStime on TV2. It’s another service of DETROIT’S FIRST NEWS TEAM . . . another reason why, in the Motor City, most people watch TV2. TV2 NEWS UPDATE WJBK-TV2 TOTAL HEWS OOOH, S 4 fS , a? . • .’ .; * iiiitt SCOTT'S WINDSOR OR BLEND "70 GRASS SEED 2,500 SQ. FT. COVERAGE REGULAR PRICE 1,000 SQ.TT. COVERAGE 50*OFF SCOlTS CLOUT i 5,000 SQ. FEET COVERAGE' The crabgross M MW killer. Now it the MU A ft time to control summer crab- grass. * * * ” 10-6-4 WEED & FEED DEPARTMENT STORES G—ia THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 cious Western States Find 'Fa Increase who express an Interest' in moving in. # • # . A - «;< ‘ Montana, lor example, la receiving 500 letters a week from such workers as factory em- HELENA, Mont. (AP) Emtorn city dwellers, disturbed nyhtftMB rtote, pollution and re-lated metropolitan problems apparently find the spacious Weil M alluring economically aa did their ancestors. "Alaska still has a strong appall as a frontier,” says R. Scott Withers, Held supervisor fir Alaska's Employment Security Division. It’s a hold from the gold rush days." ■ | . _ a • e a Withers reports letters from out-af-state Job-seekers have increased SO per cent during the past two' years. The Increase Is aba typical of several of the sparsely populated Rocky Mountain states. The area, with an essentially rural economy, generally Is attracting an influx of permanent residents along with tourists this summer. Not all the letters stem from disturbances, although a Nevada official figures 75 per cent of.thoae to his state cite riots as the reason for writing. CHANGE IN CLIMATE Other factors Include change in climate, a desire for simpler life and avoidance of smog and congestion. Some believe a given area Is undergoing a boom or, as New Mexico’s job service f director, Paid Cruz, aays, "wiant more opportunity that they believe is In the West." Net all the Rocky Mountain states are having an increase in such letters. New Mexico finds tilings about normal. South Dakota receives few letters from urban centers. Utah and Arizona say there Is no increase. * * But taken altogether, Alaska and the Rocky Mountain section receive about 900,000 job Inqtdr-les a year from out-of-state residents. %: •' A | * ★. /•' The response these job-seekers get varies from a form letter to personal replies, from a glad hand to aome discouragement, from descriptions of the climate and oftwrlunlties to lists ofjob scales sometimes dotably lower than their equivalents In the East SIGNIFICANT RISE Montana, Alaska, Nevada and Idaho report a significant rise In jobseekers. They face a problem, however: they find most of the hopefuls do not have the qualifications needed In these.ployes and from professional orihas been a more or lest constates. (specially skilled personnel. Itjstant demand for people in the Or, to put it another way, the [needs cowboy*, seasonal labor- professional and technical eato-stales can’t use most of those era and teachers, to name a few. Alaska, with about 14,000. tot tors a year which its employment service calls "fan mail," cites an oversupply of unskilled and semiskilled labor. "Diere says Withers. HIGH WAGES Of the high, wages you can -make in Alaska," Withers added. "People think they can coma up here for a summer, grab one of those jobs, build up a nest egg and pull out. It. has always been state policy to diacourage this type of approach.” Idaho says It receives a substantial number of letters but doesn't keep tabe on the actual count. Most of them come from Californians who want to move east—but not too far. Tha De- partment of Commerce and Development says tha totters from Eastern areas dto riots and general congestion. The gist Of the California letters, said a department spokesman, is "smog, smog; I want to get out." J. A * * ■■ Idaho’s employment needs are similar to those of Montana: miners, agricultural workers, dairy hands and such with a chronic shortage of such professionals as accountants, draftsmen and women workers. The Reno district manager for Nevada’s Department of Employment Security, Robert Ro-maine, says totters cite family problems such as ill health. "But the real reason they want to leave," Romaine aays, “is that they are disturbed about the explosive situation in their areas. They are concerned about the riots In the big cities.” * ★ A. .-.j 0 Romaine said this Un’t mentioned in the totters but i| apparent in conversation. WatehmanNips Bombing Try BEVERLY HILLS, Calif (UH) A homemade plastic bomb with a burning fuse was snuffed out by a watchman last nig* outside the office of a travel agency. Police said a red, white and blue, sticker declaring “Unite: Cuban power" In Spanish was found nearby. ■ r»|jpv Tha watchman, Arnold Bolton, called the police department and reported: "{ just found a bomb in the hall down here. It was burning bpt I put it out." Bomb experts from the Los Angeles potice and sheriff’s department rushed to the office of Herron’s Travel Agency on the fourth floor of the Gibraltar Savings and Loan Association on Wilshire Boulevard. BOMBS SIMILAR They said the bomh had a two-foot fuse and appeared be a homemade plastic device similar to those used tost July to wreck four consulates tourist offices. . 'A j-. A The attempt appeared to be the latest in toe series of anti-Castro activities across the na-tion against . consulates and tourist offices whose governments trade or maintain diplomatic relations with Communist Cuba. :i . : A'". A A Police took secret security precautions July 30 in the wake of i bombing of the British consulate where a Cuban power atic$er Was found in the wrqlkaga,. Authorities said 56 consulates or h""** of consular officiate were under guard to forestall terrorist Attacks. Shot Fatal to Girl DETROIT (AP) - A »year-old girl was fatally wounded Wednesday when a 22-caliber rifle leaning against a wall in her jlmiso accidentally dls-s and her brother night in Detroit Children’s Hospital. She haTbean shot In toe heed. SUNDAYS TO 7 Scotts MVB 911 Turf Builder Plus-2 Quality formula gives your lawn a full feeding besides. killing weeds. 10,000 sq. ft. 6.45 5,000 SO. FI SCOTT’S AUTOMATIC SPREADER • WALL OR HOUSE SAVE $2! $2 off with purchase of any famous Scott Product. Latex wait paint or oil • base house paint., You’ll be pleased with the results. 5’ ALUMINUM STEP UDDER 26" ALUMINUM STEP LADDER 20-10-5 LAWN FOOD L ightweight. Sturdy construction. Pail hold- Many handy uses in the * kitchen and outdoors. L ightweight. Heavy foil nitrogen feeding. . < 1125 NORTH PERRY STREET AT ARLENE m MONEY BOYS' STRIPED. PLAID. PAISLEY SPORT SHIRTS AAONTGOAAEI OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 A.M. TO 9;(H .SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:00 PM. siaihv iq mmm to 3 P.M. • 682-1910 Starts Thursday, Aug. 8 SALE ENDS SUNDAY, AUG. 11 at 5 P.M. * ky styling, short deeves • N.ver-iron cotton bbMk Hoi look hit bed et school or ploy in these trim ivy *hirt*. Outstanding selection in Dee-ton* poiyeiter-cotton and eot- •. ton oxford that mechine Wash, Y dry: are ready to wear again ; without ironing. • to 20. SAVE $3 ON TRUCE FALL GIRLS’ COLORFUL N0-IR0NIHG DRESSES S3* Rag. Ut 88 Rea. k 14.lt 29 Rag. 3/I.M Leakproof! Rust-resistant! Cor- Wrinkle-free Dacron* pofyes- Vary soft! Spun-Lo* acetate ruga ted tides, doubla-saamad, tar-cotton. Mistos' sixes in tan, tricot. Elastic and band leg. So raised bottom for extra beige and navy. Half sties in comfortable, absorbent. 3/2.48 strength. With cover. deep-toned mansWsar plaids. extra-large, 3/1.79 Save $50! Oxltft. Save 50*! Quart Save 50*! 6-pack while patio cover pool sanitizer outboard motor oil 89”'!* mm & v " 1-' » . St ' 4-peek of girts Ixl4-ft. white aluminum roof, Concentrated pool sanltlsor Blended oil for outboards,'chain heavy-duty understructure he* keeps wals, watarlines, fitters, saws, lawn mowers, motorcycles a 30-lb. lead capacity. Orna- dean—eliminates algae-caused and ether 2-cycle engines, mental columns Included. odors. Non-irrifiting to skin. Keeps engine running dean. leeae —. ass, itt.ss ixt.ts eves. 1 RUG. *4 RACM a tVm're smart to buy a whole armful a Then's a wonderful, wide selection # User’re smart ■ looking , " mtsdoasy^aro • /Yards has the right answer for the sow school yaar — drosses that beep their good looks without a carol Como too bouncy plaids, bright solids, oven plaid and »olid^ combinations. Size* 3 to 6x. Save 50’! on 20-gal. galvanized can Save *8! Classic rein or shine coats Save on Spun-Lo* run-proof briefs THB PONTIAC PRKSS, THURSDAY, AyOUST>8, IMS winning FacMon's newest duo ., f dress-and-coat ensemble co-ordinated lor elegance! MONTGOMERY TWO See you at the fair~ ♦. ‘Our Wendy Ward models wil present these fashions and many, many more at the Michigan State Fair See the Wendy Word FASHION SHOWS ' Au«. 23 thru Sept. 2 Made far each otherl' The1 fabulously-effactive combination ef yarn-dyed plaids arid chads . . . mated wBh solid colors *in wonderful-wearabla ensembles. Go-everywhere knits that heap their shape, send you forth looting poised and wal*' dressed.Shown, just two .from our stunning group in rich, non-crushable bended Coloray" rayon. Each ■ wise investment in fashion that you’ll live in end love season fo season, travel in with ease. Both fa misses' shes 12 to 20. A Checked coat and cO-ordinated yarn-dyed dress with welt detailing; brown-gray or eher-coat-light gray. Missas' 12 to 20. .. B. Thrae-pleca plaid ing sleaveless shel and binding, rad-gray, 12 to 20. Buy now for Fall on Words convenient Charg-all Credit Flan Sale End* Sunday, Aug. 1 lih — 5 P.M. \ ' . ...................................................... ' . Luxurious mink tail hats , SOPHISTICATED TOPPING FOR YOUR NEW SEASON FASHIONS * Exciting selection of the newest ihapes • Most glamorous of furs at special savings So very chief Magnificent hats that, lend any outfit a vary special look of elegance. Youl find toquef^berets, hoods, piVbbxes . . . even a toque diet converts .into a flattering hoodt Simply stunning in nature! rench, natural pastel or dyed black mink tails. - Special VALUE! iifM THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, lftBfc THREE >OD-GRAIN VINYL WARDROBE i\vx\wti Sale Endt Sundc August 11 — 5 P. Solve storage problems with a roomy wardrobe 'Charge Cabinet cnttricfcd of sturdy steal Designed to make every inch count Put on oral to crammed closets and jumbled shelves! No need to pack it away . .. store it in a handsomely designed wardrobe cabinet that puts your "extras" at your fingertips! Practical steel cabinet lias a realistic walnut-grained vinyl covering to complement a room's decor . . . makes cleaning easy with a damp cloth. Big 6ix2l*36-inch site with big shelf, clothes bar included. See H todayl Save $10! Decorator wardrobe has fruitwood louvered doors Fruitwood finish doors hove ~; '• pa dbftO tie rack, accessory bar and mirror. Bottom shoe bar, OPr 7 shelf. 66x2lx42-ineh siie- tegular *».»» ' Save $5! Enamel-finished cabinet with extra features Has fie rack*, hooks, shoot ,0% 7%OC glass mirror. Bottom shoe X M ^ ^ bar, hat ami sweater shelf. ' Mm 7 shelf. M|2fx42-uich sboV* . ||| tegiitar JS.f* Save $51 New household utility-broom cabinet - Ideal fsr the Utchee, workshop or utility reond You can store aa the deers, too! M«ISx30-in. A great organiser! In a generous 66* 15s30-in. she. Steel cabinet gives years :of service! - __________ . __________________ OPEN MONDAY! I'llRt|‘ FftllUY. -' Em ' ' 10s00 A.M. TO'9:00 !*..% I , SATURDAY TO 9 P.M. MONDAY 12 NOON, [QSSjkkx> / 7 YOUR eHOICE! AAOIVTGO/IAEIxVl OPEN MONDAY THKl FRIDAY 10:00 VAT. TO 9:00 P,M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 PM IN DAY 12 NOON TO 3 P.M. e 682' FOUR THE PONTIAC FRFBS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 HERE'S HOW TO MEASURE KM SIZE YOU NEED A. WMHt: IWWhHJ pl« H to. S. T. tlHi to .Ill plm I to. & V* n..n I to. lU ml to * to. too IU. 0. Cclltoa-torllMR M to* to I to. from fl»r. Sale Ends Sunday, Augatt 11 — 5 P.M. BUY TODAY.,. ,ff HANG TONIGHT! Mil 111 . ‘If RICH decorator colors - IN ELEGANT JACQUARD WEAVE 50*63-in.PAIR "CHARGE IT!" l ’’ Highlights any decor! Rich Avisco- rayon-cotton that | b machine washable, needs little or no Ironing. The '■ 3-in. bottom hem, U/2-in. side hems are blindstitched. Re* II.ft. SEsM-h. pT. «H Re* ]f.9T. 75sM-h. pr. is.ee Re* $24, IEEsM-h. pr. 21.ee Re* $33, 125*M-le. pr.24.fe Re* S3*. 1SMM4* pr. Miff Voieece ..............3.7f "BOUTIQUE" Made-to- \ .. 1- ■ Measure draperies 20: ON ANY SIZE YOU NEED jjdxa&l i WITH CHARG-ALL YOU CHOOSE CONVENIENT MONTHLY PAYMENTS TO FIT YOUR BUDGET! Sa ve to *120 on 40 KODEL OR NYLON PILE LONG-WEARING CARPET SQUARE YARD REG. 8.9? and 9.9? •R* yi "SUDEL" — Rich-looking Kodel* polyester pile closely-woven to look end wear tike wool Beautiful random sheared design in 5 clear colors to accent your decor. Extremely durable, resilient. ( ) "NYLAIRE" — Lustrous continuous filament nylon has maximum body and rasiBenca. Its nylon yam produces beautiful oolor combinations. Choose from warm tweeds in random sheared pettern. Ask for information regarding Wards low prices for padding and professional installation. Shop at heme £— call Wards fa see swatches, get free estimates. cAjgUS* Sale End• Sunday, Angmti 11, 5 PM. MONTGOMERY Similarity «tyl»d sofa M op»«* t« k*«l that slaapi twei SAVE UP TO MO! Recliners & Swivel Rockers WONDERHJLC HAIRS FOR TALK OR TY Reg. Tf.ff m *».»» '• ; f 'S| What i day! Release that built-up tension (l|f: relaxing in one of our reclining or swivel rockers at a real special price! A. 3 positions, Wide seat; B. pleated back, tufted loOtrast; C. open arms, poly-. .... . foam headrest; D. biscuit-tufted back. - AJMfcjj §jMMii THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1068 FIVE SAVE 60.99... 4-piece modem group ■bi iliac Ma OPEN MONDA'i 1 HKl FRIDAY 10:00 V.W. TO 9:00 i\M. SVH RDAY 9s30 \.M. TO 9 jp.Jl SI NOW 12 NOON TO S P,M. a 682- , . \j^o jk&JL. Us) end tables end ceckMI table. AT* Save 70.99! 5rpc, casual living room REG. 359.99 GROUP 289 no mOnst fef* Our versatile country cesuel group fits with grace and beauty In casual or fennel setting. Sofa and chair frames are of sturdy ash wood finished in a rich nut-brown shade. aad aphal stared in co-ordinated print andfweod decorator fabrics. RaversibJe Ward-fioam* cushion. Matching tables withheld Mock spIndUs. NO MONEY DOWN—Iff TO $ YEARS TO f AY WITH WARDS SPECIAL HOME-PURNISHfNCS CREDIT PLAN! 10 SIX THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1068 AAOIVTGOAAERY km « >1 171 Sq. In. TV Console with pure SAVE $0.95! MODERN WALNUT OR colonial Maple Regular 379.95 V- If‘ ’ * ’ '1U? • Irigbt receptleei fre«. clear caters e Saieetb, fmitMre-fiaisli cabinet AM of Wards wonderful color fe«* tures PLUS a beautiful walnut or maplo cabinet AND at a big savings! Phosphor - coated tuba, gives 43% more brilliant color. Pre-set fine tuner jocks VHF channels after first setting. JUST SAY "CHARGE IT" Sate End* Sunday, August 11, 5P.M. Save over % on Signature® Portables! HANDY CARRYING CASE INCLUDED WITH EITHER FINE SEWING MACHINE A. ZIG-ZAG YOUR WAY ^ . ■ ■ ricmrmd ^ WITH BTtWX I maomne * B. SIGNATURE* COMPACT8^|l|P' jH||q| ”**'*'* is ^^jjjjj^PPPPI^^ wiTn accoisorws, ■ WIlfcflhspMfcsiA tf euy StOMlwt* MwlGf smcUr# ( ijAA/XA NO' THE PONTIAC PRESS. THURSDAY. AUGUST a. lflflS SEVEN /V\ONTCiO/V\ERY imma Huge 18 24x30 ft; MOWS! 4/11 PITCH Beauty and protection that will last through yean of urn, wind, rain. Made heavier (235 lbs, per 100 sq. ft.J to last longer. IS-yr. guarantee, meet* UL approval. Export In-ctalatfon included. Salt- End* Sunday, August 11,5 PM Ironwork railing 3 nr S ft. leaglk* Twist spindles. Eesy-fo-inilall. ^ rearing wool Inflation of ipaa fiber glean Reef loevera wHk built-in acraana ® Our finest ahingle- No ex-P posed cut-out* to wear £5 out. Resist* hurricane j£< winds. Cools in s a m- QQc mar. Saves fuel MM Rust-proof alu- ftft minurn w/mesh *# screens. Take-out panel, Aft alum, screen. Mm mer. Saves fuel in winter. . Ml Save 5*95! 24-in. economy vanity Vinyl covered cabinet, gold C fleck Formica* top. ' t&JE REG. 44.TS Best folding tub enclosare m Reg. It.n lest quality! Tampered safety glass. Fr a m e folds flush for full access, opene right or loft. Wards new Signature* 24-inch "Classic" yanity^ SOFT WHITE WITH GOLD TRIM . . . REG. *115 SAVE $16! Styled with a fresh and delightful/ feminine look! Doors have piano hinge* with {magnetic catches. Includes 25-in. cultured marble top, 19x11-in. china bowl. Faucet, fittings extra. Rag. $130—3*-Ie. vanity with 31-in. tap and IfxIHn. chine bowl .................. $10t Signature* plastic toilet seat r , Reg. tees Finest plastic seat around ... pearl#scent v finish hi colors to match all bathrooms. Oatvan 37.8 GPH at 100* rise — up to *5% mote than other 30-gallon models. Glass fined tank, safety pilot, temp, control. TIM 40-gal. water heater...........|66 NINE THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1988 GALLON Guaranteed one-coat oil or acrylic exterior or Supreme latex interior Our b«t qualify roU Ur and mafal tray. 3-pc. extension hand la far calling,. Flu* an antra carnar rollar. 4-inch nylon paint bmth HOUSE AND TRIM . .. oil-base outcry lie latex guaranteed to cover in just one coat! Extremely durable and long-lasting. Choose from white or top colors. INTERIOR LATEX . . . our finest guaranteed one-coat drlplfqp. So easy to apply, dries in '{ust 30 min, utes. Sanitised*, for walls or woodwork.' White, colors. Easy-to-use antique Lit ^•.1W* SjSt Just S steps to a lovely antique look! Everything yea need, many color tanas. Sj49 woodteee hit In many shade,. 4.4V LATf* -House mi*1’ . ^WtsoW i***" money down ••w-ron wnus • v/ooowon* j ft ONE-COAT fell , 1*»S» . mvfl.mm.Mt • *»<***' GUARANTEE This point is guorsMIead to cover any color' painted surface with one coot when applied according to labd directions at a rate net la exceed 430 sq. ft. per gallon. If Ihl, paint fail, to cover as stated here, bring the label of this point to your nearest Wards brand* and wn will tumlsh enough point to Insure coverage or, at yoqr option, w* refund the complete purchase pr|ce, Save $4! D-step aluminum 16-ft. extension ladder HUavv DIJTV «roflCH Bu3t safer for glyoor outdoor jobs! Comfortable D^sheped st*ps cen't loosen, extension slides easily end locks, log. 23.99. 20-tt. Reg. 20.99.244b 10.99 23.99. Guaranteed ONE-COAT LATEX ENAMEL Sdva $10! 1/3-HF power sprayer Latex cement floor paint or floor and porch enamel YOUR CHOICE! New! Guaranteed one-coat enamel has soft finish yet resists dirt, stains, grease! Rols on offortlesily. Nontoxic, odorless, and dries in 2 hours. Extremely washebIe. Sanitised* Easy clean-tip. White, colors. LATEX fast-drytng one-coat for basements, patios. Many color,. : ENAMEL weather and atkalf-resist-ant. I-coat coverage. Colors. ■eg. 39.99 Compact power sprayer does many-Jobs aronnd tie hansel Lightweight. Spray .gun Is Included. Reg. «.yy Gallon Safe End* Sundny, Augustl l, 6 PM. OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 1 G;00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. I<> 9 P.M LNO.AY 12 NOON TO 3 P.M. • 682< Pontiac \0SL> jLkjL. (JJoaJU- *. ot THE PONTIAC PRESS,. THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1968 • PROTECTION • PRIVACY • BEAUTY Smlm End* Sunday, dugiut II, S PM. ORTHO-KLOR 44 Chbrdmt Spray CALI YOUR PONTIAC WARDS RETAIL STORE Or till anP mail this coupon today ,fiu ttV a FfeE ..Hm.t. M a t«m MMUallaa. I will L* bi m it.Mir.Tlaon calfm...n........ Ortho Trio, 1.19 • Keeps patios free of weeds. Kills insect posts quickly, thoroughly! All-now oscillating sprinkler—Save 1.41 Covers 2.500 •* EM ft. <1 low water J pressures. ISO. 7.4t' Reinforced rubber 50 ft. garden Hose Durable end aVft| flesible. Fu» % / in. diameter. Me. »A» large all-purpose steel wheelbarrow iff of . key, riveted lege mtwP ' 4*/2 cubic ft. BOO. Z7.M /WOIVTGOAAERV Save 13.99! 20-Inch vacuum rotary mower Vacuum action stands gross C AT AT up! 3|/2-hp Powr-Kraft* en- tAq gine. Wind-release impulse^ W w starter, automatic control. RES, Tt.M ' Save $12! 6x5-ft. all-steel building Double - ribbed wall panels, gm» MOQ-A gliding door, front ramp. Jf jf. S fc'.i 7.H. Rt«. ..SIM REG. 09.99 TEN Lawn ft Garden TI.,allon Lawn Sprayer Jar screws onto hose spray noeda. Convenient, 0#syl Priced Low 48-in.: a 100 ft. minimum 'Wards, strong, durable ll-ga. chain-link fence is. inferWdven and. dip-galvanized. Uniform 2-inch mesh. Hardware, accessories end installation extra. wJb iV a£.y Save 1.02 on heavy-duty hedge Shears •Vi,!».forged <|W steel blades for e# neat trimming. ISO. 4.M ip Words best electric bodge trimmer &*r"Z&26,# • eh. path. see. MM Uriech electric hedge shear Cuts en both dt • 8 edges 52,00. dLO times/minute. kc*. Sl.tf OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY lOtiJO A.M, tD 9t00 PM. SATURDAY* 9s30 A.M, TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO S P.M. • 682-4940 Powr-Kraft portable tools - DESIGNED TO DO THE JOB BETTER Save *5 to $7 A. 4-in. belt sender C. Vari-speed drill Tough jobs e prOblem? Ogre through masonry, Industrial sender tackles . steel, wood, aluminum, big jobs and smeB-part even mesel C*nffol s • n d Ing. Bel bearing speedfrOMO-1000 RPM, motor develops l-hp. 3 , no dials Or gauges to sanding belts, watch. 0.7y*-ln. sow' ; m. D. Sabre Saw Develops 5,400 RfM. Variable 400-2.000 Helical gears for maxi- r stroke ..per min. speed; . mum power. 100% bad, ■ cuts flush to any vertical bronze bearings. Intern- surface! Adjustable al safety clutch prevents shoe, rip, ctriele guide;' 7 burnout. blades. SASM SAW CASE — in CIRCLE SAW RASE i.tt Special Riverside Doubl-life muffler >PFN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9 s00 P,M, ATURDAY 9:30 A.M, TO 9 P.M. AY 12 NOON TO 3 P M. • 682-4940 1B1 PONTIAC. PRES& THURSDAY, AUGUST 8, 1088 ELEVEN Wards Special Ik dependable, gives lots of power, reserve capacity. Your carwitgtert even on,the coldest days. 42-MONTH SUPER O.E. BATTERY Fast starts, lots of power for accessories. More id ^ 99 reserve capacity than most new ones. I h#] 50-MONTH EXTRA HEAVY DUTY Starts your oar for a ful year. Wards as- <| *999 suras. More powerful than other heavyduties. ■ * K con All Season Oil ! You coo tenet eotWseesI 9*9 Wai r MEM ' improved add- tlvtt niritaf|a MMMOT ■••e.p vwiwil jnwiuvis et el tempera-twee. Free oil flew through el dir! via g conditions cuts rust end sludge. Designed for se- mSSSSmm Par uatmt« yuu uam Dm' am—wmm yamltrardia DoeM-lifo amfflur »•» mtgMp tmlaDads ood prwv moat if—>1U> uammdaa daoajssdopMymesuttUrs t-OT. ALL SEASON i. oil _ an. xa. mlkkiulsaaMendom —odla —«*» aaddaut S FEW EXAMPLES WHY MONTGOMERY WARD PONTIAC'S AUTOMOTIVE HEAOQUARTERS ENGINE TUNE-UP lV* PLUS PARTS MO. 9.9* pms we-'ii um • Mail el hail wepiiswl • War, right fit to tollpjp. • Strang. speweseM akdaeeaw Don't worry about high nobe level or deadly carbon-monoxide gas leakage. Our Dottbltwfia muffler fates care of both. Get Oh ) today and drive carefree! FHs 'M-'Se Chevy "Reg. 12.VS muffler ...... new ?.** Fit* 'Sa-*S4 Ford Sag. If.*9 mufflar.....new f.*f BRAKES RELINED 44P COMPLETE REG. 57.99 WHEEL ALIGNMENT Riverside® rebuilt engines ‘ Thoroughly tested... Choose from 700 models 102? REGULAR LOW PRICES a FaHy raballt angina and hands • Guaranteed 12-ma. or 12M nd. • Liberal trnda-ia an old anglne It often coifs more to repair an old engine than to replace it. So why fake chances—order a Riverside* rebuilt engine end restore new ear performance. Each angina is thoroughly tasted ; for quality and performance. Cheese from ever 700 models. Words Sopor spark plug me. M< Hard-working jure-firing pkigs are dependable, keep ear at peat efficiency. Mott Ckevrolati •nd Fords SLkjL. (/JoaJU. w ; Wards pistol grip timing light Profmsional ac- _ curacy; for A or /fl” 12-volt cars. ^ , *w Heavy-duty 3-piece ignition hit KM includ.s ro- M tor. jrelnfs and 9”* condansar. * , AafemnMve Cenferss OPEN DAILY 9 to * SUN. 12 to 5 Mat at Amdawae ■ ... FRONT WHEELS PACKED r REGULAR $3 Riverside >. UfCTIMl ROAD HAZARD GUARAN VCC |t«n|R ro|NriraM# P««*wti| fo* *c Bfa *t *• mi*i-al tread. Ad|u,l Mi> w imod *»•» fc*w< oaotie* lm •Mrs* •» ihe H«» •' od|vi* metf M»fede>ol luNo Too. A TRIAD Wf At GUARANIfI far a*HN motif..*. A4,u.«menS. hosed on price In •Tract at Iw Rh«I NhiiHkmI alM Mod Itdit To. »l «»f tin .___a_____ -__tv-ia_. _______ 4 ftA?l$f ACTION GUARANTIED NATIONWIDE lihM Nr* tm nTI>nI Ward br*Mk for ediwsimoei. , TWELVE THE PONTIAC PRESS, THURSDAY* AUGUST 8, 1968 MONTGOMERY THE NEW Riverside" GLASBELT |g: ■ *.50-13 Tabclets ; llwltwall ,laa 1.(1 MC Fiber glass belts stabilize the tread so it won't squirm Kite on other tires. Wears 40% longer than beltless. •WlA «M*e-h Mr* •# WSH.—.IU IS ■*n aaat RIVERSIDE ST-107 tlYLON Tread It goaraeteed to woer 27 months IM-tl IWnlm **M Ful tdpV nylon cord resists impact. Guaranteed, to w e a r 27 mo. 3,300 road-gripping edges tor traction. Lifetime quality. LIGHT TRUCK OWNERS ‘Itivarsida* Hl-wey Commercial' Nyloe i m i % i i ifi j f Jf ; 1 with r nUS Ml SAT. ; ,.; FOR PICK urs, PANELS, VANS AND CAMPERS Zig-zag rib tread digt in for, traction, braking pew-op ond mileage. Nylon cord body is extra tough. *-FLY RATING ton, &kjL UJcmJU. i SJ i Pontiac ^ OPEN MONDAY THRU Ff UDAY 10 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M; SATURDAY 9:.*50 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. a 682-4940 WHEN YOU BUY THREE SAME SIZE, TUBELESS BLACKWALL RETREADS POE SI* EACH PLUS 34c tO 44e FEDERAL EXCISE TAX OH EACH. ANY SIZE TUBELESS BLACKWALL LISTED RIVERSIDE* XLT NEW TREADS 7.00-14 6.50-13 PASSRNOiR TIRI %■ 4-WAY OUARANTCE I. UfZftMf OUAtffV GUAtANI If am «Mt mm*y at amfertal aed wetlweee. ddp wr A* M* at lbs Wood. AAeUmndi prorotrd #e Dead mom Noted mi price hi tHW dAthmd •dprstmewi plus Federal Cache lea. • 7.35-14 • Retreads on sound cord bodios New-tire treed rubber — fortified with Wards extra-mileage compound Rlv-Syn, the same os now tires. Now-tire treed depth — for long mileage. New-tire tread width — for maximum road contact. New wrap-around shoulder — for positive steering. High-speed tested — lOO MPH tor 100 miles. Proof they're tough enough tor today's'driving. What's more, they carry a Metlme quality and road hazard guarantee, 24-mo. tread wear guarantee. •Mrm same she la frorfe. Whlfewelfs ora ** emra eoch. • 7.75-14 Lifetime Quality, road hazard, 24-nto. tread wear guarantee Sulr End* Sunday.»* Auguit 11. S PM. NO MONEY DOWN FREE MOUNTING 'Back to SCHOOL Wards has the # ' brightest ideas for Fall classes SAVE ON ROYS’ NIW-NOW CANVAS JEANS REGULARLY 4.49 Newest fabric going—crisp canvas! Fabulous colors: loden,navy, brown, bronze. Permanently creased cotton-nylonblend. Slim,regular 6-18. Regular 4.99 husky sizes 10-18.......4.17 ROYS’ SNAPPY TURTLENECK KNIT SHIRTS Fall'* "with it" look I Luxury-knit Orion® Ji49 acrylic m zesty blue, green, gold. 8-20. MATCHING CARDIGANS, 14-20.6.99 GIRLS’ JUMPER IN THE SNAZZ-PLAIDS Special ( Sizzle-colored plaid in a jumper of shape keeping, hand washable acrylic that’s acetate bonded. Sizes 7 to 14. GIRLS’ NEW FASillON-MATV TURTLENECK Special I Super sweatering that's color- 094 cued to juniper, great with skirt and slacks, too. Machine wash acrylic. 7-14. Mr AN ADVERTISING SUPPLEMENT TO THE ONTIAC PRESS CHARGE THEIR ENTIRE SCHOOL WARDROBE ON WARDS CONVENIENT CHARG-ALl CREDIT PLAN PONTIAC MALL Open Monday thru Friday 10 A.M. to 9 P.M. Saturday 9:30 A.M. to 9 P.M. Sunday 12 Noon to 5 P.M. Phone: 682-4940 •SP0H SALE! Girls’ pretty bonded knit dresses SAVE 1/3! $4 Regularly $6 ® Wait ’til you see these knit dresses—you’ll agree they’re worth far more! See trimly tailored styles, in chic, young shapes and color-combinations. Wards has them now at a fine saving. All, of Orion® acrylic that washes beautifully. Little girls’ sizes 3 to 6X. © Bonded jumpers of acrylic knit are so versa-tile for Fall. Choose A-lines, dirndls, empires in ■! assorted colors little girls love. Sizes 3 to 6X. © Regular 3.99 cardigans of heavyweight, virgin $4% Orion® acrylic in knit textures. Lovely Fall colon. W Girts* small, medium and large fit sizes 3 to 6X. © Regular 2.99 skirts of Orion® acrylic and m ^ wool in rich plaids or solids. Sizes 3 to 6X. m © Regular 1.99 parity hose of opaque stretch nylon in a plenitude of colon to go with her new lOO wardrobe. S (1-3), M (4-6X), L (7-10), XL (12-M). " Regular 39c puntios of cotton and rayon come in A fresh white or pastel shades. Save now for back- W| to-school. Girts* sizes 3-6X. (Not shown.) .97. "{CHARGE IT ON WARDS CONVENB4T CHARG-ALL CREDIT PLAN Page 2 Regular 1.99 slips—in sturdy polyester and cotton that you never need itqn, White, with dainty trims. Girts’ sizes 3 to 6X. (Not shown.) * Back to HOOt. ECIAL! Girls’ styles ishioned with young view > DRESS SETS THE SWINGING FOR A NEW FALL SEASON "CHARGE IT” AT WARDS Eye-catching A-line dress crisply collared Id neatly bowed. Made of blazon, a narvelous new machine washable Acrilan® crylic (see guarantee) that’s acetate tricot >nded to stay new and fresh looking Hashing after washing. Sizes from 7 to 14. RUFFLED PRETTY-GIRL BLOUSE )Tovely topping sweetened with Aes at the collar and the cuffs. ■de of polyester and cotton that’s easy to wash. Sizes 7 to 14. E DIRNDL SKIRT TAKES A BELT Waist defining and very pretty. )f Blazon, Acrilan® acrylic (see * JC iiarantee), acetate bonded and w bine washable. Sizes 7 to 14. IE JUMPER TAKES A TURTLENECK Fit 'n flare jumper. Blazon, “ Acrilan® acrylic (see guarantee), acetate bonded. Paired with an acrylic sweater. In sizes 7 to 14. *•* "CHARGE IT" ON WARDS CONVENIENT CHARG-ALL CREDIT PLAN Page 3 WEAR DATED GUMANTK Those Acrilan® garments will be reploced or your money refunded they normal give Return Word and with slip SALE! Wards has all the smart young fashions for your on-the-go campus life! 'L YOUNG JUNIORS! 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Rockefeller of New York and Ronald Reagan of- California in a smoothly organized convention assault. Delegates erupted in a turbulent shouting; band-blaring, sign-waving demonstration when Wisconsin was readied on the state roll call, Nikon had sewed up tee 30 Wisconsin votes in a primary and it was those voted which put him over the 667 count necessary for the nomination. **.«•. V* : 1 • The next order of business today was for Nixon, to name his choice for the vice-presidential spot. At 3 a.m., Nixon got a call from the he thinks he will oppose ' in November, Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey. UNREPORTED BANTER There was some unreported banter between the twotfriendly enemies. The call came at a time when Nixon was winding up . a meeting at which he listened to the views of about 25 congressional and other supporters about his choice ~©f a second man. ■* * + When the initial and qnly roll call was completed after a wearying 7V4 hours of convention nominating and seconding speeches, Nixon had chalked up 692 votes. This was only eight short of the 700 total the former vice president’s camp had been claiming for 1ft days. Rockefeller got 287, Reagan 182 and the holdout favorite sons — including Romney and Gov. James A. Rhodes of (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) NOMINEE AND HIS FAMILY—Richard M. Nixon, winner the convention verdict early today. Daughter Julie and her of the battle for the Republican presidential nomination, gath- fiance, David Eisenhower, are at left, while daughter Patricia era his family around him in his hotel suite after learning of stands next to her mother. Talks Focus on VP Choice Removal Operations Under Way 9 Bodies Found in Coal Mine Explosion GREENVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Rescue workers began the slow process today of carrying out the bodies of nine miners reported killed yesterday in a fiery explosion in a coal mine shaft near here. A mine employe, who asked to remain unidentified,4aid the rescue workers had found eight bodies in one area of the mine, the body of the ninth minor was found nearby, he said. * ★ * The employe said it would take some time for the workers to bring the vicfimif to the surface because the shaft area was small. The first body was discovered qt about 4 this morning — 14 hours after the accident was reported. Throughout the rescue operation and the reported finding of the bodies, mine officials, police and other authorities have refused to discuss the accident with newsmen. The entire area leading to the River Injunction Queen mine entrance was cordoned off soon after the accident and newsmen have not been permitted in. The mine, owned and operated by Peabody Coal. Co., Is just smith of this small Coal-mining community in western Kentucky. ★ 1 - ,W * f- About 300 persons — women, children and miners — lined a road leading from and mine area to seek out loved ones, re|atlves and friends among those being earned out. *L < One of those bystanders, a middle-aged man wearing a work uniform said: “Ive been in mmlng all my life and my brother-in-law is down there, and I know there is no chance.” LIKE CYCLONE The explosion rocked a shaft inside the mine With a series of blasts. A miner who had been working nearby said* “The Refused blast knocked you down every time you got up — just like a cyclone.*1 Rescue operations, coordinated by the Kentucky Division of Mines and Minerals, began soon afterward, " ■ It was estimated that the trapped miners were nearly 8,000 feet back from the entrance to the mine and about 90 feet- beneath the surface. , initial attempts to enter the mine were hampered by debris that clogged the entrance, thick coal dust and intense heat. At one point rescuers reported the underground temperature in several adjoining shafts and tunnels to be above 200 degrees. CARBON MONOXIDE Rescuers who discovered the first dead miner said he probably died of carbon monoxide poisoning. Mine company officials refused to make any statement on the cause of the explosion. in Orion Airport Suit Oakland County Circuit Judge James S. Thorburu yesterday refused to issue an injunction against tee Oakland County Board of Supervisors in taking action on expansion plans at the Oakland-Orion Airport in Pontiac Township. Thomburn’s ruling came at a hearing requested by Bennie R. Warden, of 1123 Doris, Pontiac Township, last week. * * * * In his law suit against the board, Warden contends that the present 87-man board improperly approved land purchase and construction commitments at the airport. Had the injunction been issued it would have prevented the board from taking action .on matters other than those that concern the usual operation and maintenance of existing facilities. Veteran miners speculated, however, that it could have beefc touched off by the ignition.of coal dust?*Another miner said, “They could have hit a pocket of methane gas.” , Methane, a compound that makes up a large part of natural gas, the chief substance of what miners call “firedamp,” a gas that'Often causes explosions inside underground coal mines. Warden was seeking an order that would have restrained the boa^i of supervisors from authorizing any improvements at the airport until after a reapportioned board takes office In January. Warden was defeated Tuesday in his bid for nomination to tee new 27-member board. He was a candidate in District 22. The board is presently waiting the approval of a Federal Aviation Administration master plan before beginning construction and purchasing additional land for an all-weather avia- <. tion facility. The county already has acquired 590 acres of the estimated 1,400 needed for the planned expansion of the airport.- *,v Downbeat tor Reagan MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AB) - When losing Gov. Ronald Reagan went before the Republican convention today to endorse the nomination of Richard M. Nixon, the band struck up, “California, here I come—right back where I started from" FRECKLE CHAMPIONS-The Oakland County 4-H Fair p*mu rrm pmm was the scene Of a Freckle Contest lftst night. The two first- field township. The two dumps received $25 tf.S, savings place finishers were.Connie Burling (left), U, of 328 W. Hop- bonds from 1iie Pontiac Press, sponsor pf the contest. (Re-kips, and Mark Wkbnan, 11, of J^est Bloom- lata^d story and pictur«jjj, Page A-4.) MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (ft - New York Mayor John V. Lindsay and Sens. Charles H. Percy of Illinois and Mark O. Hatfield of Oregon, were the most mentioned possibilities today as Republican presidential nominee Richard M. Nixon prepared to pick a running mate. A Nixon aide said eight names were mentioned at a staff session, including two who had not come up before. Nixon held a predawn meeting with top party officials and planned more talks later. * * + Nixon's two defeated rivals, California Gov. Ronald Reagan and New York Gov. Nelson , A. Rockefeller, both repeated they were not interested in the vice presidency. But Govs. George Romney of Michigan and James A. Rhodes of Ohio were believed in the running, along with Sens. Howard H. Baker Jr. of Tennessee and John G, Tower of Texas and Gov. John A. Volpe of Massachusetts. HEAVY PRESSURE Nixon was under heavy pressure from the divergent wings of the GOP, and he admitted that the party would have a real donnybrook if he threw the choice open to the convention. By picking a candidate, as most presidential candidates have done, Nixon will presumably foreclose such a fight, and his choice will be nominated tonight at the final scheduled session of the 29th Republican National Convention. : * * * t. Just before he was nominated, Nixon dropped one clue to his thinking when he told two reporters he wanted someone who understands the problems of the. cities. This could point to Percy or Lindsay. ★ * ★ One top GOP leader, declining to be quoted by name, who said earlier Wednesday he thought Nixon would pick 46-year-old Hatfield, said later bn that more recent talks with those in the Nixon camp indicated Lindsay had become the more likely possibility. NOT INTERESTED The mayor, however, has said all along he is not interested in running for Vice president. One problem with a Lindsay nomination is that he has a strong civil rights record. Nixon told Southern delegations in soliciting their support teat he would heed their views in picking a naming , mate* Trooper, Youth Killed in Inkster INKSTER (AP) - Police said “hit and run” gunmen today killed a State Police detective and wounded two Inkster officers. In the ensuing manhunt, officers shot and killed a Negro youth. The shootings erupted after four nights of isolated gunfire and firebombhigs, police said. ★ ★ * file slain youth was not immediately Identified. Police Said, however, he was a suspect who attempted to flee officers on foot and ignored warnings to halt. Detective Robert Gonser, 34, of the State Police post at nearby Detroit, was' killed when hit in the back by a high-powered rifle bullet, authorities said. REINFORCEMENTS About Mb officers from other departments and four FBI agents were rushed into the city of 37,000 near the southwest side of Detroit, said Inkster Police Chief James Fyke. • * * Gonser was killed early today after encountering several persons in a car at an Inkster intersection, police said. His assailant was sought. it ft ft Some 4V4 hours earlier, Fyke said, a shotgun blast fired from a passing car wounded Inkster Patrolmen John Knight and Thomas Freeman while they were patrolling a main street. Knight, a Negro, and Freeman, who is white, were treated for superficial wounds at Wayne County General Hospital. SUSPECT IS HELD Fyke said Titrtiian Lewis, 24, of Inkster, a Negro, was arrested for Investigation in the shooting of Knight and Freeman. Two-Day Forecast Is Wet and Sultry {Showers ' and thundershowers with highs in /the mid-OOs and low 90s are forecast for the Pontiac area until the weekend. The wdktherman predicts cooler temperatures and Clearing skies Satqr- The mercury will register a low of 68 to 72 tonight. ^ 4 Winds, variable kt five to 15 miles per, \hburs, will continue through tonight. ■j 5 +■ t, Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 30. tonight 59, tomorrow 40. Sixty-eight waftjjhe low in downtown Pontiacpreceding 8 a.m. Tile 12:30 p.m, tijppera&re was 80. r •. ‘ . \ ; Romney Disaccord Is Planked Down By HOWARD HELDENBRAND MIAMI BEACH, Fla. - Unfinished!, business department: the short, impassioned disaccord expressed by Gov. George Romney with one'Section of the Republican platform adopted Tuesday night was the most lucid, realistic exposition of the imbalance of various elements of the economy that I have ever heard. _ Thus far there has hot been the least sign of disorder inside or outside the convention area, although as always delegates and spectators have been generally inattentive. ; * * * • The business of the sessions and the many addresses have had to compete with a continual buzz of conversation -and movement. In fact, one disgusted speaker concluded his remarks with an acid “thank you for your inattention.” I was interested to find out what happened to a group of dissidents from Michigan’s 19th Congressional District, which was supposedly bent on appearing before the credentials committee Mod-day to claim recognition as convention delegates. Well, nothing happened. The group never put in an apearance and,-as of now, nobody seems to know what the dissidents were dissident about. nomination hopper, and 44 plain and fancy speeches produced. Gov. Romney, as Michigan’s favorite-son candidate, won a 15-minute demonstration when his name was offered for nomination. The effective parade of delegates and alternate, and the accompanying whoop-de-do, reflected the handiwork of George Trumbull Jr. who has been in Miami Beach for a week making preparations for it. A former Pontiac Press staffer, George has been a member of Romney’s staff for several years. - .* * * Eventually came the first nominating roll call, and as it progressed it was evident that Nixon was in like Flynn. His total vote was 692 (25 more than needed for nomination). Rockefeller and Reagan trailed with vote- totals of 287 and 182 respectively. The convention winds up tonight when a vice - presidential running mate for Nixon will be elected. Who will get the nod? I hate to put my prophetic reputation on the line, but there’s a lot of whispering about New York’s Mayor John Lindsay and Mark Hatfield, U.S. Senator from Oregon. FOUL BLOW En route to the 5 p.m. convention session yesterday that would see the nomination of, Richard . Nixon as Republican candidate for president, I got to thinking about the foul blow radio and TV dealt would-be political orators who head state delegations. Before the advent of these electronic fortes of communication, a chairman * responding to a roll call simply Intoned, say, that his state cast eight votes for Joe Zilch. ■ a it - Blit now, with national exposure at his command|, does a histrionically-inclined chairman follow file name script? He does not, He makes the most of his opportunity and gives out with something like tip: “Mr. Chairman, as‘the honored head of the distinguished group of delegates representing a great and dynamic commonwealth, the salubrious Stole of Coma, it is my duty ,‘and my privilege, sir, to cast a unanimous ballot of eight votes for that illustrious statesman and t servant - of the people who has -so diligently and ably serviced his country, Joseph Zilch.” Last bight’s convention session was a honey. It lasted more than’mine hour!, .during which the names of 11 praldea-4 tial candidates Were put into tjte In Today's Press Tigut Win 2 Wyatt wraps up suspended game, Wilson wins regular one - PAGE W«l. ' Jp V Steel ReJUtack President says price hike cutbacks ease threat Of inflation— , PAipyRy, »j . Supplier Indicted •ft avy, to stick, with roc ke t-1 launcher term — PAGE C-8. Area News •.;...-..A41 Bridge ...E-lt Cross weed Puzzle ..G41; Comics ..............E-10 Editorials ....... Food Section .....E-2—E-4 Markets Obituaries .....G-lft ' Picture Page ........,.C4 Sports ..iB.......F-1-F4 Theaters ............JHHW: TV and Radio Programs . G-U Vietnam War Nkwt...... A4 Women’s Pages ....14-84 f ■: mci* \ THE PONTIAC PRES&, THURSDAY*, AU<&JST 8, 1968 State, Nursing Home Unit m to Dicker on Aid Payment Nixon Is Winner on First Ballot Birmingham News (Continued From Page One) Ohio — accounted'1 tor the remainder of the 1,333. LANSING (AP) — The Michigan Nursing Home Association said yesterday it would advise members not to evict elderly and indigent patients — if the state will negotiate reimbursement payments. The statement followed reports that nursing home operators in Wayne County bad turned out more than 30 patients. homes not to take any action during a period of negotiations,” David Lebon* bom, association legal counsel, told an MNHA meeting in Lansing. TELLING THE STATE Such action had been threatened by the association and individual operators if the state did not increase the amount paid in nursing home fees under the Medicaid program. “We are prepared to advise member President* Basil Boyce said the group was telling the state “you sit down with us and we’ll hold our membership in line.”- . R. Bernard Houston, state director of social services, spoke to the membership along with Dr. Gerald Rice, state director of public health. would be considered. He added, however, that the department was awaiting formal association reaction on a proposed $1 increase — from $11 to $12 per patient —j on state payments to nursing homes for basic services. • ‘ big States cool Houston said such negotiating sessions The proposal, Houston said, would increase the payments to homes that would agree; to provide the-department, records to show what services were received and with financial information concerning costs; comply with civil rights provisions; accept all patients and agree not to discharge or transfer them. But Nixon’s victory was fashioned with only dribbles of support in six industrial states of New York California, Ohio, Pennsylvania, Michigan and New Jersey where the November election could be decided. The only big state which went for Nixon on the showdOwn roll Call —• which immediately was made unanimous in the customary bow to party; unity — ' was Illinois. U.S., S. Viet Troops InvadeValleyAgain SAIGON (AP) — American and South Vietnamese troops have invaded the A Shau Valley for the second time in three and a half months, disrupting the major Communist supply base again as part of their campaign to blunt the big enemy offensive expected in the next month or A fleet of 200 helicopters landed more than 3,000 soliders of the U.S. 101st Air Cavalry Division and the Vietnamese 1st Infantry Division in the valley in the northern part of South Vietnam Sunday and Monday, but announcement of the operation was withheld until today for security reasons. allied force has met with “minimal resistance” so far. Probably warned by heavy air activity that preceded the invasion, the North Vietnamese presumably pulled back across the nearby Laotian border. U.S. headquarters reported that 15 North Vietnamese troops had been killed in the first four days of the operation. U.S. losses were two dead and 22 wounded, while eight South Vietnamese were killed and 18 pounded. 3 COPTERS DOWNED The U.S. Command in Saigon said the Golf Tops Bill asCofC Meets Golf was the main feature a t yesterday’s annual Pontiac Area Oiamber of Commerce summer meetiqg, attended by more than 300 chamber members and guests. First tee-off was at 8 a m. at Spring Lake Country Club, 6060 Maybee, Independence Township. Events included a plate Inuch and a buffet dinner with music and door prizes. Trophies were given to golf tournament winners Joseph Grace, auditor for Pontiac State Bank, and Ralph Norvell of Ralph T. Norvell Insurance Agency. Chamber members were urged to support an area civic committee’s proposal that the new metropolitan .Detroit Stadium be built in the Pontiac area, the bid will be presented Sept. 11 to the Metropolitan Stadium Committee. . Just outside the eastern edge of the valley, units of the U. S. 1st Air Cavalary Division uncovered an enemy bunker complex and another weapons cache that included five mortar tubes and assorted equipment, five antiaircraft machine guns, one recoilless rifle and 30 pounds of explosives. The first allied visit to the valley lasted a month, and the American and South Vietnamese troops are not expected to stay long this time either. The - valley is at the end of the allied supply line and is often dosed in by clouds and fog; and U. S. officers say it would take a division of troops to control it. A U. S. spokesman said the invasion is considered a spoiling attack to cut the enemy supply and infiltration lines and ‘‘do what*other damage we can before the monsoons begin this fall." The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Partly sunny and warm today with occasional thundershowers likely late today or tonight. High 85 to 90. Low tonight 66 to 72. Chance of showers and not so warm Friday. Winds variable 5 to 15 miles per hour today and tonight. Saturday outlook: Partly cloudy and a little cooler. Precipitation probabilities 30 per cent today, 50 per cent tonight and 40 per cent Friday. LowtSt temperature pi .: Win* Velocity 5 E £an* do // os G. Rapid! 80 66 Houghton 76 59 Temperatures Fort Worth t Jacksonville 9 Kansas City 1 res. i WMntMUy in PMtIK T have made that same statement to delegations from northern states, Nixon said. “I want a dandidate that will not divide this country. So I don’t intend to pick a candidate that won’t be acceptable to the North, just as I don’t want to pick one that would be unad--ceptable to southern states.” HATFIELD MENTIONED This seemed to point to such , a selection as Hatfield, rather than to a Lindsay or Rockefeller who are not liked in the South. Uruguay Exec, Aide Kidnaped Claims Victory at County Polls MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay (AP) - The Uruguayan government says it won’t compromise with pro-Peking terrorists who kidnaped a key official in an attempt to force a softening of President Jorge Pacheco Areco’s austerity program. The largest manhunt in the country’s history was under way for Dr. Ulises Pereira Reverbel, head of the state electric and telephone company, and a male secretary. They were kidnaped yesterday by four members of the Tupamaro National Liberation Front. Armed with machine guns, the kidnapers wounded Pereira’s chauffeur and another secretary. Pereira, 48, a wealthy cattle rancher, lawyer and close adviser to the president, had been a strong advocate of Pacheco’s crackdown on labor agitation and his program of belt tightening to check inflation. A leaflet-distributed by the front said Reverbel was kidnaped “as a warning that nothing will remain unpunished and that popular justice will be exercised through the most convenient channels.” CONSERVATIVE GAIN ‘SOLD OUT’ The leaflet accused Pacheco of “having sold our country to North American capital through the International Monetary Fund and through the meddling of neighboring dictatorship.” Prices to Go Up for Detroit Papers Pupil Housing Plan OK'd! BIRMINGHAM — The Bofcrd of Education'has finally agreed on a plan for locating Bingham Farms Elementary School students until the new school building can be completed later this year. .On July 16 the board decided not to place the Bingham Farms students on double sessions with students of Valley Woods Elementary School in the Valley Woods building. Smith explained, “this is 'the same approach that was used for Evergreen Elementary School three years ago.” • The decision came after a number of protests were lodged as parents of students from both schools objected to the double session idea. In a report’’to the board this week, Superintendent John; B. Smith presented five alternate plans dor housing the affected students until their school is completed. DETROIT UB—The Detroit News and Detroit Free Press made it official Wednesday; the price of home-delivered and Sunday newspapers is going up when they return to publication this weekend. Sunday edition prices will go from 2$ cents to 30 cents, whether sold at newsstands or home-delivered. Boy 5, Man Drown in Area He said in most cases the art an$ music rooms of Valley Woods, Franklin* Tony, Meadow Lake and Greenfield elementary schools will be used for th? project. “This plan means that five of our elementary buildings will be disrupted to some degree in terms; of full utilization of art and music rooms,” Smith said. “However, these programs will in no way be curtailed.” ADVANTAGE^ CITED Amoiig the advantages of this prof- gram, according to the superintendent " ‘ ............ ' e district wiN AS A-UNIT Smith recommended, and the board adopted, a plan which will organize the Bingham Farms students as a unit and wifi utilize various rooms available in other elementary schools in the district until the regular building is completed. are that all children in the <9 be on full-day schedules and. there art no overcrowded classrooins. ; He also pointed but that the plan does not depend on availability of portable classrooms''and is tint least costly of the Daily editions home-delivered will cost 60 cents weekly, instead of 50 cents, but will remain at 1ft cents on newsstands. This will rafse the seven-day, home-delivered rate from 75 to 90 cents. Price increase plans were reported Monday by The Associated Press, Which quoted usually reliable sources. The forecast matched those announced. CARRIERS GET RAISE River Dragged for Mother o4; Children Dead The board also agreed to help establish a liaison program with the local police department in an effort to help prevent juvenile disturbances. Dr. Smith estimated cost of the program at approximately $12,000, shared equally by die Board of Education and the City Commission. « PEACE OFFICER DETROIT (J1) — Police dragged the Detroit River today for the body of a woman whose, four children were found dead by her husband in the basement of their Northeast Side home yesterday. A short time later police said a purse containing identification for Mrs. Rosalie Jones, 30, was found on the Belle Isle Bridge which spans the Detroit River from the mainland to an island park. Her husband, William, told police he found his four children when he returned home from work and a note from his missing wife. The contents of the note were not disclosed. Doctors told police they believed the children drowned in a basement bath or shower. An autopsy was set for today to determine the exact cause of death. The children — two boys and two girls — were identified as Daniel 5, Joseph 3, Jean 2, and Catherine 7 months. The couple has no other children. The plan, already approved by the City Commission, would call for the. employment of a peace officer on a fulltimp basis in the schools within the district. Smith emphasized that the program i L /' , t * .came only last Monday. % \~ Two area residents, drowned yesterday and Tuesday in separate accidents in Oakland County. Police identified the victims as Marc E. Furman II, 5, of 2333 Hempstead, Pontiac Township, and Joseph L. Perry, 46, of 3990 Quillen, Waterford Township. Police said the Furman hoy, son of Mr. and hue. Kenneth Furman, was found in the swimming poo! of Echo Park Day Camp in Bloomfield Township. Lifeguards discovered the boy shortly after the camp’s swimming period b>d ended. Perryv a trimmer at Fisher Body plant, was found at 8:30 last night in Ppntiac Lake in White Lake Township. His body : is at tee Donelson-Johns Funeral H . _ Save $7 on Your Choice Hi-Back Rocker or Boston Rocker ® tO "70S n f.y / VJ ockers ' f • Up to $34.95 sellers — save $ * •' Outstanding in Handsomely signed • Classic beauty & sturdiness of Early Americana. SAVE $2.07 ON CHILDREN'S BOSTON COLONIAL ROCKERS $ 13.95 Chair, Now $ 11.38 — $15.95 Chafr, Now $ 14.88 $17.95 Chair, Now $15.88 Fri. & Serf. Sale! NO MONEY DOWN - EASY , Terms at WKC OPEN FRL 9:30 a.m. to 9 j=>Am. SAT; 9:30 a.m. toj5:30 p.m. PARK FrIeE In Lot at Rear of Store / new PRATT & LAMBERT COLOR CENTER now .., make sure thg colors for your walls, callings, and woodwork are decoratively correct 1 This professionally-designed PAL Color Center helps you use color correctly and creatively. Here are hundreds of actual P & L colors, to make every room in your house a showpiece... to compliment your furniture, carpeting and draperies. It's Ilka having a professional decorator helping you, to achieve any effect you want from casual comfort to formal aleganco. And all the colors aft available in easy-to-usa PAL finishes for every pujpoai. Stop In soon! MASONRY PAINT PAL Vo pax Ahasonry Paint quickly brings lively, lasting beauty to cone rata block, •tucco, brick or asbestos cement shingles or siding. This fast-drying yapex latex coating is lime-proof and fade-resistant. Colors -are exceptional in ^ ^ ■ thair clarity and f f 15 ■ Osl. beauty BROADLOOM BARGAINS Top 1968 luxury styles, fabrics, colors! 1st quality! Stain-free Herculon* 4.99 8 Herculon*® olefin, 6 good colors. Kitchen proof tweeds 4.99 8 HerculotV® olefin. In 7 shades. Acrylic loop colonial 4.99 8 So soft, resilient and practical. Vtlvtty nylon pile 4.99 8 Subtle plush. 14 fashion colors. SHOP AT HOME Indoor-outdoor carpet 4.998 Stain-free acrylic. <8 shades. Deep carved nylon 501 ® 4.99 8 Extra thick, rugged. Six colors. Nylon twoad cobble 4.99% Rugged DuPont nylon, 8 shades. Fiber content refers to pile surface*. . . 501 is DuPont's certification mark for carpet pile (fleeting DuPont s quality standards OPIN 10 AM. TO 9 P.M. (Sat. 9:fO-9) .Drayton open Sunday Noon to 4 p.m. (Downtpwn doses. TiUs.. W*d. al 6 D.mJ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TltimSbAY. AUGUST 8, 1968 MAKF AVER PACES- Each; Man Had His Hour, Then Nixon's the: One MIAMI BEACH, Fla. Rockefeller, “the man ' ■ tra».M^p^ -Reagan, “the man .. has found.” CAR) -for pur For only one. man had the hour indeed come, well past midnight, in the drone 19% 18% 11ft + 44 M HU 28'/. - s m im 22% - 17 ISM 15% 1M4« 58 52 51% 51% - M m 22 2144 21 — ¥ 15 3444 5444 + » 4244 42V4 43V4 — Sr 29V, 2844 29% + tf*4% 8344 4344 .. « 1............ of stocks listed on &|ttts page are those as of ^jiHnlay. $ BMMMMMWMMN &*Fr8 1S% ]JH,+ % OBTROIT okas DETROIT (API-(USOA)— Egg Prices ...................— — Grad* A lumbo. 42-44) txtra large, 37- 40; largo, 34-37; madlum, 23-38;----- 1544-10, Comment; Market ganarally steady. Supplies of large and eeceoMMM —ME large ttMktup Tieevv •ring. Balance a Ml demand. i fully a DETROIT (APJ—fUSDAI— Prices paid roasters, 25-24; broilers at Comment: Market steady. Offerings ado quota for a seasonally slow der~— Farm offerings of light type hens of a fair demand. Prices at the 5 to 414 cents. CHICAOO BOOS CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mercantile wrm—i 00 B 447 84 C 42. Eggs about steady, prices unchanged; 80 p ; mediums 28; stand- ards 20» checks 1814. CHICAOO POULTRY CHICAOO (AP) — (USDA) - wholesale buying prices i roasters 24%-M%i special 1 ock fryers 20V4-2U4. Livestock OBTROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP)-(USOA> — Cattle K —— t 950-1200 a---' -s— I 5-0.50. choice 050-1300 pound slaughter steers 27-28; mixed good and choice UMVMl good 24.75-34.58i couple lots choice 780000 pounds slaughter heifers 25.50-24.00; good Hots 288; U.8. 2-3 200-308 pound and gilts 20.50-21.00; 1-4 220440 20.00-20.50; U.8. 1-1 1884)0 poun 14.7517.75. 4 vealers 100; high choice and 34-38; Chaleo 3536; good 24-32. Sheep 200; couple lofichofee and 00- ioo pound spring slaughter lam 27; cull to good sladghfer ewas CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)— He..________________ 1- 2 sorted 285-221 lb, butchers 21.0811.58; 1-3 108-480 lb. SOWS 17.8818.00; 1-3 408 450 lbe. 14.5817.25. Cattle 1,880; ceh. ■ mixed high choke and prime slaughter steers 1.5)81,350 lbs. 20.0828.35; choice 1.8081458 lbs. yloM grade 2 to 4 27.08 M40; choice 888175 lb. slaughter heifers yield grade 2 to 4 25.5834.75; mixed good —1 chOlCO 25.0824.88. — tomtolP' S 24.0825.50. 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Tell a man] with two children that today__ ihe must earn CUNNIFF edly has dropped in value . one-tenth of one per cent a year, or in dollar equivalent, just one !>enny in 10' years. The dollar lias shrunk 16 cents in that time. And, difficult as it is to believe, the First National City charts also show that the El Salvador colon, Venezuela Bolivar and Thailand both have maintained their values better than the dollar. mediate, ranging in pitch from a bleat to a roar. Within houts, Bethlehem, Republic, Armo£ Mdufiiland said their earlier boosts of virtually all products fepld; be pared down to match U.S.'Steel’s selective increases. If applied enpuhout the tnduibCy, the in-! ONjain would nwM average hike of about phr cent or $4.30 a ton on $0|gjr gent of the industry’s shtymMs$' FIRST TOffljjjjlpfi Bethlehem, tber No. 2 produced was the first to announce a cut in its oigWusly posted hike 6f aimoet 8 per cent. Although the hikqs affect steels used for such major products as autos and appliances, the Johnson administration seenfed ready to let them stand. This quivering victim of inflation might actually become irrational to learn, as the First National City Bank reported this week, that the annual rate of dollar depreciation last year was 2.7 per cent, a rate greater than that of Britain, France and Germany, and Iran and Greece as well. To strike this man dumb, however, one need only inform him that the currency showing the least depreciation in the past 10 years, according to First National, City, is-not the dollar but the quetzal of Guatemala. Such statistics as these give fits to inflation-frantic people. And even Dr. Franz Pick, a money and gold expert whose continental accent becomes heavy with denunciation when he speaks of the subject, refers to the U.S. dollarette. Somehow, though, the figures just don’t add up. SLIGHT RELIEF Seeking comfort, some slight relief was found in looking at the very worst, even though somebody else’s headache doesn’t necessarily cure the pain in anther man’s head. In Brazil, to illustrate, 100 centavos of the year 1957 are now worth two centavos. In Argentina, 100 centavos in 10 years have been reduced to the purchasing power of six. And in Chile, 100 contesimos now get you only 11. Business Notes Two area men have been promoted to vice presidents of American Savings Association. They are Andrew J. Lindsey of White House Press Secretary. George Christian, however, cautioned: “The success of our continued efforts to combat inflation depends on renewed price stability in steel in the months Some officials in Washington were unstinting in their praise of Johnson. “It’s a hell of a yic-tory for the President,” 'said one. LINDSAY THOMAS REFUSE TO CROW But others refused to crow about the development, which apparently ended the biggest confrontation between the government and the steel industry since 1962 when the late President John F. Kennedy forced a rollback of price hikes. The price increases last week came in the wake of a billion dollar phis contract won by the United Steelworkers. They represented the first across-the-board hike try since 1962. Prior to last week steelmakers had made selective price increases. Hart Praises LBJ for Role in Rollback Virltn WASHINGTON (UPI) -Philip Hart of Michigan Wednesday called the action of U.S Steel in announcing ’selective” hike that forced other steel producers to roll back their prices a “victory for the national interest.” U.S, Steel Wednesday announced prices hikes lower than those of its major competitors. §7% + % r 148 frICp 148 ipw R%nt^WPHPPHWH|l WToftyth 1 48 24% 25% 241 xorgicn 1.40 *9 271 iB MM YngitSM 1.M 25 14% 33% 34 ZMMlR 1.208 51 54% 51% "■ Copyrighted By The Ateoclelei Selei figure, ere unofficial. Unleu otherwise noted, ret* foregoing table mn 272% +4% disbursement, besed on the lest quarterly — seml-ennual decleretIon. Special or antra dividends or payments not df-'------- H ' v* Identified In * *oo?notes.*r — ___jjjaHng |ll «d or paid In 1187 pli 1187, estimated, caah value on tx-dlvMand or n^lrirlbutidn date, g—Paid last yfar. h—Declared or eald afttr stock dlvvbbnd or split up. k—Daclarad or paid mis year, •n accumulative Issue with dtvMMs In arrears, n—Na wissue. p—Paid this year. takan at last dWBnd sa.\rsa;“ cash value “ — Son data. on. xr-Gx^rlglits. xw—without war- Act, or sacurtna* a*., panles. (n-Foreign Ii INCREASED Goodyear TAR .171 w REGULAR Bangor Punta .15 O have seen estimates that consumers will save one half Mite dollars this year as a result of the action by U.S. Steel,” the Michigan senator said. “President Johnson firmness in defending price stability has been vindicated.” Hart met with members of the Federal Trade Commission Wednesday and reaffirmed his request that the FTC analyze the matter of price competition in the steel' si industry. Everyone, including the steel-makes, are better off if there would be an objective in-depth study of factors which enter into the pricing of steel,” Hart said. “As a result of the rollbacks there la not the. same iro-for' such an in-vestlgatlon but it still should ho done,” Hart said. 'The fact that we have had a rollback at the request of President, Johnson does not necessary mean that competition is at work in the ^setting of steel prices.” m 255 Cherokee and Alex W. Thomas of 3108 Schooolhouse, Waterford Township. Lindsey is currently chief appraiser for American Savings while Thomas is the internal auditor. Both men work at the downtown Detroit main branch. New VPs Named at Ford Motor Co. DETROIT (AP) - The Ford Motor Co. reported Wednesday that Harold C. MacDonald had been named to succeed Donald N. Frey as vice president for product development. ■ MacDonald had been vice president for car engineering. He joined Ford in 1948. He is succeeded in that post Jjy Robert B. Alexander. Frey, who previously was a vice president and general manager of the company’s Ford division, resigned effective Sept. 1. He had joined the company in 1951. News in Brief Since 1957 the quetzal report-" i just updated for changes in living \ habits. They could have mom inflation than they admit. ! The figures also might be distorted by the simplicity of the standard of living, which admit* of no change, or by the fixing of prices on the one major crop, or simply, by stagnation of the economy at a low standard of living. An absence of inflation in a country with a bogged-down economy is nothing to brag about. And though the depreciation of money and inflation are something to holier about, it’s ' nice to know that the noise is muffled a bit by the sound of a booming economy. But it still doesn’t seem right. Raw figures can lie, especially when the raw figures themselves are little more than lies begin with. ' The $5,000-a-year man of 1939 isn’t nearly three times as badly off today, even though he must earn $14,282. The fact is, he is earning it—and more. He’ much better off. NOT FOR BASIC NEEDS In addition, all that extra money isn’t going into the filling of basic needs. A lot more of it is going to pay for what the man of 1939 couldn’t aspire to: more education, better health care, pensions, a second car, television, hi-fi. In other words, depreciation i^mer*can ^°^°r* C°rp-. 944. of currency doesn’t always —5"— mean a reduction in take-home State Gl Killed pay, not If the take-home pay is — '69 Model Car Output Is Picking Up DETROIT (UPI) - Production of 1969 model cars began picking up this week with Chrysler Corp. leading the way as the najion’s automakers began building an inventory for the September introductions. The current week’s U-S. production of 15,301 cars reflects the changeover to the 1969 model cars, according to Automotive Industries, a trade publication. By the end of the week, year-to-date production will stand at 5,472,942 cars, almost 1 million ahead of the pace of calendar 1967. Eight weeks of 200,000-plus production during the first half of 1968 contributed to the substantial increase over last year. Chrysler, which began its changeover before the other auto companies, planned production of 11,835 cars this week; General Motors Cor., 1,022; Ford Motor Co,, 1,500; and rising faster than inflation, as it has recently in the United States. Still the figures do look puzzling, and so First National City was queried. And from there it was determined that the statistics are, at best, the only figures available of a rather bad lot. For one thing, the statistics on cost of living in industrial countries and less well-developed nations are hardly comparable at all. The figure for Saudi Arabia, in fact, looked too good to be true. First National City Analij lt out WASHINGTON (AP) - A Michigan serviceman was among if Americans killed ® recent action in Vietnam, the Defense Department announced Wednesday. He wai Army Cpl. Lurry L. Elzinga, son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin EUnga of Charlevoix. SKETCHY FIGURES It seems that the most accurate statistics generally are maintained by the industrial nations. In some small countries, for example, cost of living indexes are really based on surveys made years ago and not Baby Girl Drowns EAST DETROIT (AP) — An 18 - month - old girl was found floating in a backyard swimming pool Wednesday. Helen “‘ of East Detroit was pronounced dead on the scene after attempts at artificial respiration by neighbors and firemen failed. The first written constitution in America was Connecticut's Fundamental Orders of Connecticut (1139). By ROGER E. SPEAR Q—Our modest income Wesley Quertermous of 4900 J**? severely strained by my Sundale, Waterford Township, UtaeM- We told Pontiac police yesterday that someone stole a stereo unit and a tape pack valued at more than 8100 .from his car while it was parked in the 100 block of Lake Street. Church Rummage Sale: 8218 ;iiz. Lake Rd., Aug. 8-10, 9:30- Stoeks of Local Interest oVocVr* ---- m from tt% NASD ar*r*pr*- ________ lntir-» >— 14,355.340,144.21 -------,604,802.40 331.082,988.774.73 351/838.481 10,344,934,542.12 13438488,118.15 eota iE-ili . ..4S}4 Sj Mii ___*Hfc- if m i__ ft,