one: color The Pontiac Pre»* Monday, June 30, 1969 MONDAY R — Rerun C — Color MONDAY MOUMN(/; 5:50 (2) TV Chapel 5:55 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:00 (2) C—Black Heritage 6:30 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman (4) Classroom — “Germany Today: Militarism and the German Mind” 6:45 (7) RC-Balfink 7:00 (4) C--Today -(7) C — Morning Show 7:30 (2) C—News. Weather. Sports 8:00 (2) C — Captain Kangaroo 8:15 (9) Warm-Up 8:25 (9) C — Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:30 (7) R C — Movie: “Yankee Pasha” (1954) Jeff Chandler, Rhonda Fleming (9) C — Bozo 9:00 (2) R C — Lucy Show (4) C — Ludden’s Gallery — Guests include Andy Griffith, Glen Ash and Jeannine Burnier. 9:30 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies (9) Friendly Giant 9:45 (9) Chez Helene 10:00 (2) R C~Andy Griffith (4) C — Personality—Totie Fields, Garry Moore and Lynn Redgrave guest. (9) Mr. Dressup 10:25 (9) Pick of the Week i0:30 (2) C—Merv Griffin (4) C—Hollywood Squares (7) C — Gallof)ing Gourmet 10:55 (9) C —News 11:00 (4) C — It Takes Two (7) R —Bewitched (9) C — Luncheon Date (50) C — Jack LaLanne 11:25 (4) C — Carol Duvall 11:30 (4) C—Concentration (7) R C - That Girl -First in series of daily reruns. (9) Take Thirty (50) C — Kimba MONDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) C—News, Weather, Sports (4) C — Jeopardy (7) C — Dream House (9) Luncheon Date (Part 2) (50) C — Underdog 12:25 (2) C — Fashions 12:30 (2) C — As the World Turns (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C—Let’s Make a Deal (9) Real McCoys (50) R — Movie: “Captain Sirocco" (1950) Louis Hayward, Binnie Barnes 1:00 (2) C—Divorce Court (4) C—Days of Our Lives (7) C Newlywed Game (9) R — Movie: “Stake-Out on Dope Street” (1958) Abby Dalton, Jonathon Haze 1:30 (7) C —Guiding Light (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game 2:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital 2:30 (2) C — Edge of Night (4) C — You Don’t Say — Alan Sues and Joe Anne Worley of “Laugh-In" guest. (7) c — One Life to Live (50) R — Make Room for Daddy ^ 3:00 (2) C—Linkletter Show —Neil Morgan and Billy Cckstine guest. (4) C — Match Game — Robert Morse and Sue Lyon guest, (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) R — Dennis the Menace (50) R —Topper 3:25 (4) C —News 3:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4) C — (Debut) You’re Putting Me On — Larry Plyden, Peggy Cass and Bill Cullen co m p r i s e permanent panelists who will team with guest panelists for rapid-fire exchanges in new game show. (7) C — Anniversary Game (9) C — Magic Shoppe (50) C — Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) C—Love of Life (4) C — Steve Allen — Guests include Mickey Rooney, Buddy Lester, Sid Jack Gilford playn a motor vehicle bureau intpector who triet to $mooth matterg when Lucille Ball as Lucy goes along when her son takes his test for a driver*s license on *'Here’s Lucy/* Monday at 8:30 p.m. o Channel 2, on Th« Pontioc Pr«tt Mondoy, Jun* 30, 1 ONE COLOR Gould and the Grassroots. (7) R - Movie: “Billy the Kid” (1941) Robert. Taylor, Brian Donlevy (9) C — Bozo 4:25 (2) C — News 4:30 (2) C—Mike Douglas-Guests are Edie Adams and Norm Crosby. (50) R — Little Rascals (62) R--Star Performance 5:00 (4) C—George Pierrot — “London, Dublin, Isle of Man” (9) R C — Batman (50) R — Munsters (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 5:15 (56) Friendly Giant 5:30 (9) R - F Troop (50) R C — Superman (56) Misterogers (62) Leave It to Beaver MONDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R C - I Spy - While vacationing in Rome with Kelly, Scott gets involved and jailed over the impending marriage of his Italian foster daughter. (50) R C — Flintstones (56) What’s New-“Plymouth Plantation” (62) R - Sea Hunt 6:30 (2) C - News -Cronkite (4) C News — Huntley, Brinkley (7) C — News — Reynolds, Smith (50) R — McHale’s Navy (56) (Debut) Cancion de la Raza •“ First in' Monday - through - Friday soap opera concentrating on joys and sorrows of a low-income family of East Los Angeles. (62) R — Highway Patrol 7:00 (2) C - Truth or Consequences (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: “Gun-fighters” (1947) Gunslinger wants to hang up his pistols but finds himself in the middle of a range war. Randolph Scott, Barbara Britton, (50) R — I Love Lucy (56) C-World Press (62) C — Swingintime 7:30 (2) R C — Gunsmoke — Deputy Festus Haggen and prisoner Riley Sharp find refuge at a ranch which is the h6me of wife and son Sharpe left behind eight years earlier when he went to prison for robbery. (4) R C — I Dream of Jeannie — When Tony’s double replaces him at home, the double i s surprised by Jeannie and finds himself about to marry her (Part 1). (7) R C — Avengers — Steed and Emma encounter two other investigators on the case as they track down a ghost who could also a murderer. (50) R C - Hazel (62) R — Ann Sothern 8:00 (4) R C — Laugh-In — Guest star is Flip Wilson. (50) C — Pay Cards (56) C - NET Journal -Chief Justice Earl Warren's imprint on the Supreme Court and impact on American society are examined in 90-minute documentary. (62) R — Ozzie and Harriet 8:30 (2) R C — Here's Lucy — For Craig's 16th birthday, Lucy accompanies him to the motor vehicle bureau to take his driving test. (7) R C - Guns of Will Sennett (9) - C (debut) Miss Patricia's Presentation—First in series of variety shows. This week features the Poppy Family (50) C — Password — Celebrity guests are Joan Fontaine and Jack Jones. (62) R - Movie: “No Safety Ahead” (British, 1957) The bank was picked, the getaway car was ready, but nothing goes right and robbery turns to murder. James Kenney, Susan Beaumont. 9:00 (2) C — (Special) Campus Crusade: A New Kind of Revolution — Pat Boone, Bobby Vee and the New Folk Singers will tell about it from the campus of UCLA. (4) R C — Movie: “Banning” (1967) Golf pro encounters .romantic com- plications at a posh country club. Jill St. John, Robert Wagner. (7) R C - Outcasts-Earl Corey suspects a respected teacher of being a former Union Army officer who had killed 12 civilian hostages. (9) (Return) Five Years in the Life of — Second season starts for series examining a cross-section of Canadian families. (50) R — Perry Mason 9:30 (9) C -Outdoors (56) Bridge Cox 9:55 ( 62 ) Headlines Our Great With Jean Greatest 10:06 (2) C — Jimmie Rodgers — Kaye Stevens guests. (7) C — Dick Cavett — Scheduled guest is Clifford Alexander, former assistant to President Johnson. (9) (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (56) Casino Society — Gambling casinos in Britain are explored. (62) R - Movie: “Revenge for Paco'' (French, 1965) A police officer finds danger and false clues in his search for the killer of his friend’s son, Jean Servais, Maria Vincent 10:30 (9) C - What's My Line? (50) R - Alfred Hitchcock (56) R - Folk Guitar 11:00 (2) (4) (7) C — News, Weather, Sports (9) R “ Movie: “Crash of MONDAY Silence” (British, 1953) A woman battles to put her deaf daughter into the hands of persons who train the handicapped. Jack Hawkins, Phyllis Calvert (50) R — One Step Beyond 11:30 (4) C — Johnny Carson — Ray Charles and Tony Randall guest. (7) C — Joey Bishop — Joan Baez and S t u Gilliam guest. (50) R — Movie: “Background to Danger” (1943) The Bagdad -Istanbul Express is crowded with spies, counterspies, murder and even romance. George Brent, Brenda Marshall, Peter Lorre, Sydney Greenstreet 11:35 (2) R Movie : “Plunderers of Painted Flats” (1959) Gunman comes across a lad who's searching for his father's killer. Corrine C a 1 v e 1, George -V. Momeier 12:24 (9) Viewpoint 12:30 (9) C — Perry's Probe 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) R —Texan 1:30 (2) R - Naked qty (4) C — News, Weather 2:30 (2) C Weather News, 2:35 (2) TV Chapel rnnsRs CONNOLLY'S OF THE WEEK A ropture of diamonds, 54 toperod boguotte cut diamonds sat in a firoy and sparkling pyramid of brilliance to further emphasize the icy stillness of the oval cOnter. $4,000. d^rfie-taresNi^JIflelUceii Bmmkmrd DOWfNTOWN PONTIAC Center Hwren end Sefinew Itieets OPIN nilOAY IVINtNOS n%o»4 VVoy Nearly Clear for Try to Hike Curbs on Cigarettes WA^INGTON (AP) — A key section of the cigarette iabeiing law expires tonight, opening the way for federal regulatory agencies to try to impose stringent restridtions on smoking advertising. I the current health warning reqidred on cigarette packages or limit advertising. . Although the ban, or |»eemption, part of the law loses eff^ tonight'the House extending that section The section of the law dyi^ at midnight prohibits federal agencies from modifying current regulations to toughen With the modification Im lifted, the Federal Trade Commission can go on .with hearings on an extremely strong package warning, wfaUe the Federal Communications Commission can consider the proposed prohibition of all smoking advertising on radio and television. for another six years, although with a tougher warning required displayed on each pack: But the outlook for the extension is cloudy in the Senate, where Utah Democrat Frank E. Moss is reported working through his Commerce subcommittee on consumer affairs to pigeonhole the House-passed bill. has extended until Aug. 17 the time for submitting comments on the matter. The FTC’s proposed wording —to be explored in hearings beginning tomorrow—would require all forms of advertising to state dearly and prominently: “Warning: The Surgeon-General has determined that cigarette smoking is dangerous to your health and may cause lung cancer or other diseases.” Although the FCC announced some time ago it would consider the prepared TV-radlo advertisement ban, the agency “Cigarette smoking is dangerous to health slid may cause death resulting from cancer, coronary heart disease. chronic bronchitis, pulmonary emphysema and other diseases.” WANTED POSTPONEMENT The tobacco industry had wanted the FTC hearings put off until Congress takes tome action one way or the other on the smoking-health controversy. Tobacco companies are reported to be buying network television advertising at rate for next season despite the uncertain situation. The Weather THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 127 — NO. 128 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JUNE 30. 1969 -56 PAGES UJI ITtft^SisS^ftJrMN 2^101 lOe Surtax facing Crucial Vote Today Critics' Position 'Fantastic/ ABM Plan Supporter Says WASHING-rON (AP) - Sen. Richard B. Russell, a key supporter of President Nixon’s missile defeqs^ program, says critics are taking a “fantastic” position by contending deployment of the Safeguard system would endanger Soviet-U.S. arms talks. The Georgia Democrat, head of the Senate Al^ropriations Committee and long regarded as an expert on militai^ matters, said: - ^ missiles) fdr several year^. That didn’t keep them from agreeing to the nuclear nonproliferation treaty: “You can be certain that the Soviets are going to go ahead with their development of their own MIRVs> and their own ABM system. It is ridiculous to say that they won’t talk because we go ahead.” ‘NO FUND CUT’ “It seems fantastic to me that' the opponents of ABM contend Uiat the Russians will refuse to negotiate if we deploy Safeguard.” “We have been working .pn the ABM and on MIRV (multiwarhead-carrying Euler Sees PGH Hunt as Difficult By DICK ROBINSON A man selected to succeed the fired head of Pontiac General Hospital may think twice about taking the job. This is the reasoning pf Harold B. Euler. Hospital trustees fired him, reportedly without indicating to him the reasons before their move or after. Still, the board of trustees has not disclosed its reasons to the public. “Unless the air is cleared in this controversial matter, I think the applicant named to take over the post of hospital administrator will think twice about taking the job,” Euler commented. Sen. John Stennisi D-Miss., said no serious attempt was made in the Senate Armed Services Committee to strike the MIRV authorization from a military procurement bill. Stennis, chairman of the committee, said the program of perfecting missiles that could carry a cluster of independently targeted nuclear warheads is linked clpsely to the development of the Poseidon replacement for the Polaris* on U.S. submarines. Safeguard critics have said there is no need for such a defense system to protect land-based U.S. mhuiles so long as the Poiarip fleet is capable of delivering a devastating retaliatory strike. A wedding of MIRV with Poseidon presutoably would at least triple the striking power of American underseas craft. WASHINGTON (AP) - Republican C"" al arithmetic is pointing toward approval of President Nixon’s proposed surtax extension, but party discipline must hold, and supporters concede their margin is narrow. The extension bill, facing a crucial House test today, has Democratic as well as Rei But a large block of Democrats has opposed any long extension until the broader issue of tax reform has been settled. ills a reform package la worked out. Storm warnings already are up in the Senate. Majority Leader Mike Manstield, armed with the unanimous backing of the Democratic Pidicy Committee, said yesterday the Senate will Insist on tax reform before ag)*eelng to the full surtax extension.'^ Nixon forces have given top priority to extending the surtax at 10 per cent through Dec. 31 and then at S per cent through June 30, 1970 as part of the administration’s anti-inflation moves. House passage doesn’t assure the ex-„. tension since Senate Democrats are determined to write some meaningful tax-law changes. ’They call it closing loopholes, and insist the people back home won’t stand for any delay. ESTIMATED REVENUE Passage of the surtax at Nixon’s pro, posed level would bring in an estimated I7.M billion in the f^t year and contribute to a 10.3 billim surplus in the INSIGNIA FOR ASTRONAUTS - This is the insignia which the Apollo 11 astronauts will wear when they lift off the launch pad at Kennedy Space Center, Fla., and embark on the first lunar-landing mission. 'The launch is schtouled for July 16 and astronaut Neil Armstrimg is to set foot on the lunar surface early on the morning of July 21. City Lays Stadium Bid on Line ‘USUALLY CHECK’ “Job applicants usually check into these things pretty closely.” Euler himself took over as hospital administrator amid turmoil 11 years ago. His predecessor, Carl 1. Flath, had been ffred by the board after only six months on the job. ’Trustees then said Flath was tired ”in the best interests of the hospital.” 'the firing came after Flath got into an auto accident and was charged with being drunk and disorderly. Pontiac laid it on the line at noon today to the Detroit Lions and Tigers. In effect the city said “Here’s the stadium welll build for you — if you want it, you’ll get it!” Invited to a press conference at the Detroit Press Club in Detroit were officials of both teams, news media from most of the state and scores of public officials and civic leaders. The two-stadium complex is expected to eliminate objections both teams have expressed to seating capacity and some other features of the single arenas proposed by other groups to serve bidh sports. A totally new invention, the sliding ■ ................................meift dome will be used only during incleme weather, enabling fans to enjoy daylight and sunshine when the climate permits. SEARCH UNDER WAY Now another search is under way for an administrator for the hospital. • The administrator runs the hospital. He is in charge of its general over-all (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 2) What thej. Saw were plans for a 065-million stadium complex wMch would include separate all-weather stadia for football and ^seball encompassing use of a revolbtionary new sliding dome. Located at a site near the interchange of I-7S and M59 freeways on the eastern edge of Pontiac, the stadia complex would include a football stadium seating 80,000 and a baseball stadium seating 55,000. These are the announced requirements of Detroit’s two major professional sports teams. During a press conference at the Detroit Press Club, Pontiac Mayor WilUam H.^Taylw Jr. and Harold A. Cousins, chairman Of the Pontiac Stadium Building Antiufrity, showed a model of the proposed innoject. They announced that approxinoately 145 acres of publicly owned land is available for the stadia complex. No tax money would be used for financing the project, which would be paid for by revenue bonds backed by the faith and credit of |he City of Pontiac. 'They released a study conducted by a nationally known city planning firm attesting to the feasibility of the site location and also exhibited an opinion from an investment banking firm which affirped the city’s ability to finance the project. The site would provide parking for 27,Sd0 cars, considered ample to handle crowds of up to‘100,000, although supplementary parking could be made available for 25,000 or more additional cars at an adjoining site. Nixon Diplomat Picks Stir Concern Taylor and Cousins said they had been assured by “virtually every expert with whom we’ve talked that q|)f *e most practical from the standpoint of accessibility to population, highways and public transportation.” They also emphasized “community interest” in building the stadia in Pontiac, citing support from public of-(Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) inent nonprofessional diplom^ perform well as ambassadors. •CSBEP’ HOUSING — Mr. and Mrs. Bird will be able to have a littia ^ace in Birds mity have trmihla i llw subttfbs at a low ceat, thaidEs to inaai productka tty tUs a mmin eoMf Pimm sv a«w wiswr I is their owiL s» they’ll just have to Navigation Plan Is Proposed to Relieve Air Ills WASHINGTON (AP) - The Federal Aviation Administration has proposed a new technique of handling air traffic to relieve congested air lanes, improve safety and reduce flying times by allowing more direct flights between airports. The new program, called area navigation and made possible by better unified government budget. The administration contends such a surplus is desperately needed to dampen inflation, redupe the government’s com-peitlon for scarce credit and bolster confidence in the dollar abroad. If Congress fails to approve, an administration spokesmen predicted, the psychological effect would be devastating — mwe inflation with businesses and Individuals rushing to buy and borrow, thus feeding the inflation. The apposition contends the surtax has not been effective against Inflation. Democratic liberals argued, moreover, unless the surtax is tied closely to substantial tax reforms, the-chance to ram these through the present Congress may be lost. If the reforms are not written directly into the bill, they said, the extension should be held to a few replace a system t restricts airplanes to narrow routes between navigation stations, In effect making them fly dogleg paths from one radio beacon to the next. The new system would allow them to fly through vast areas nOw unusable because they are not directly between radio beacons. In a notice week. rotice of proposed rulemaking last the FAA set out its plan to establish new area navigation routes, or multiple flight paths, histead of flying would. from beacon to beacon, airplanes would, in effect, be able to goierate their own phantom beacons in a straighter line. USE SOON EYED William M. Flener, chief of the FAA’s air traffic service, said the agency has a broad development prograni aimed at tion eqi putting area navigation equipment into use as rapidly as possible. “Area navigation gives us a chance to relieve some of Ihe current air congestion on heavily traveled routes and provide better service to the air traveler,” he said. WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nixon has been rewarding the Republican party faithful with ambassadorships at a rate that career diplomats (eel could damage the fore|gn service if continued. The latest count shows Nixon has named 25 career foreip service officers as ambassadors, while appointing 20 embassy heads on a political basis —or a ratio of about 55 per cent careerists to 45 per cent noncareerists. Flash This falls short of a rule-of-thumb among U.S. professional diplomats; that at least two careerists should be named ambassadors for every one political appointee. The careerists acknowledge every president- has ’’^^ht to choose his representatives abroad, that some posts are best filled by men personally close to KANS^ CITY (AP) — Tha U.8. Weather Bureau has issued a tornado watch tor most of sontheni and the eastern half of Lower Michigan, northeastern Ohio. The Weather Bureau said: “The threat of tornadoes will exist In an area along and 76 miles either side of a line from Fort Wayne, Ind., to Si miles southeast of Alpena, Mich., from 2 p.m. CDT to 8 p.m. CDT today. Severe thunderstorms with large hall and locally damaging winds are also forecast.” him, and that quite a numbdi^of prom-...............................|)lomat!hv can In Today's Press MOST IMPORTANT INCENTIVF. At the same time, the careerists rate the promise of advancement to the top rung in their profession as the single (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) More Rain Today, but Not Tomorrow Highs in the 80s were predicted for today, with considerable cloudiness and a »chance of occasional showers o r thundershowers,' It will be cooler tonight with lows around 60. The outlook for tomorrow is generally fair and pleasant. Wednesday will be a little cloudy, and warmer. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: 60 today, 10 tonight and zero tomorrow. The low in downtown Pontiac before I a,m. today was 65. The mercury reached 12 by 1 p.m. today. Ben Hef South Viets laUnch “Will Win” drive - PAGE A-9. State Budget Legislators working to iron out deferences — PAGE A41. W. Bloomfield Twp. Parks and recreation com-mis.sion Is being created PAGEA-4. Area News ................A-4 Astrology .................D4 Bridge D4 Crossword Puzzle ........D-15 Comics ................ D-4 Editorials A4 Food Section .............D-1 '■ Markets ............ .D-7 Obituaries ...............C-10 Sports ...............B-1—B-7, Theaters ........'......-...-.IM TV and Radio Programs . .D-15 Wilson, Earl ...............D4 Women’s Pages ...........C1-C4 / f. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JX^E 80. 1969 Nixon Asia Visit to Counter Red Wooing NEW DELHI. India tf) » President Nixon’s visit to the Asian subcontinent next month comes at a time of Increasing Sovidt Initiatives there. In contrast, the American approach has been Ih an effort to make friends, Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin has made almost regular trips to the area — going four times to India, twice to Pakistan and once to Afghanistan in the past 3^ years. During the same period, visits by American VIPs have been scant. Former President Lyndon B. Johnson made a stopover of only a ftm hours in Karachi, Pakistan, to meet former President Ayub Khan in December 1966. IKE WAS LAST Dwight D. Eisenhower was the last president to make a thorough tour of the subcontinent, visiting India, Pakistan and Afghanistan in 1959. More recently. Secretary of State William P. Rogers made a three-day swing through India, Pakistan and Afghanistan in May. ♦ .* ' ■ ★ It is known that U.S. embassy officials in New Delhi have pushed hard for a long time to get Washington to send some high-ranking officials to visit India. The absence of high-ranking American visitors to the subcontinent is viewed by many observers here as a reflection of a passive diplomatic approacli to the region. The continually shifting U.S. policy of arms sales to India and Pakistan is an exomple. The United States sold arms to both countries until the two neighbors went to war in 1965. Johnson responded by cutting off arms to the two warring nations, hurting the U. S.-arined Pakistani military forces more than the mainly Russian-equipped Indian forces. ★ ★ ★ Under Pakistani pressure, the policy was relaxed in 1967 to permit the sale of non-lethal equipment and spare parts to bofii countries, and was further modified later to permit the sale of lethal weapons by Nortt Atlantic Treaty Organization members, with each sale to be considered on a case by case basis. Now, the Nixon administration says it is reconsidering the whole issue again. WWW Russia is the largest seller of arms to India and last year agreed to supply weapons to Pakistan, too. Birmingham Board Backs Higher Fence of Rail Tfiicks Drain-Bonds Fund Control Shifts County Focus on Investment Yield MOI8E TSHOMBE Ex-Congo Head Dies in Algiers ALGIERS (AP) - Moise Tshombe, known as the “rubber man’’ of African politics, died yesterday of an apparent heart attack, the Algerian Press Itervice reported today. He was 49. WWW A Communique signed by 10 Algerian doctors said the former premier of the Congo and leader of the breakaway state of Katanga appeared to have died in his sleep. It said an autopsy was to ha performed today. Tile announcement of Tshombe’s death came two years to the day after a French plane hijacker brought him to Algeria at gunpoint. Hie plane had been chartered to take Tshombe frmn Spain, where he had been living in exile, to Palma de Majorca. w w w After a deal fell through between Algeria and the Congo to extradite Tshombe to Kinshasa (formerly Leo^dviUe) to face a death sentence, Tshombe’s status became veiled in tof-fldal sllena. He was kept in solitary confinement for two years, well treated but denied contact with the outside By JEAN SAILE Is the county making as much money as is could on investments? Apparent dissatisfaction with interest rates being obtained on drain-bond funds has prompted the county's drain boards to relieve County Treasurer C. Hugh Dohany of investment control of its funds. Drain-bond investments total 95 million, about 10 per cent of county funds now invested. Drain Commissioner Daniel Barry and Charles B. Edwards Jr., chairman of the County Board of Supervisors, meeting last week named Edwards to act in concert with Dohany on investment of drain bond funds. Edwards said he would seek the help of David Levinson, former county ways and means committee chairman. Daniel T. Murphy, county auditor and third member of the drain boards, was absent from the meeting. ‘NO PERSONAL ATTACK’ Barry insisted the action reflected "no intention to attack anyone.’’ “In, these days of tight money, it seems reasonable that the millions of dollars involved in drain bonds might be invested at returns of 6H to 8 per cent,’’ Barry said. He reported an offer had been received from a Canadian bank to pay 9.53 per cent interest on Certificates of Deposit, but whether a foreign Investment is legal he didn’t know. He noted that county investments are. still being made at 5 to 6 per cent Interest, with few higher and none as high as 7 per cent. 1809,099 THIS YEAR Dohany, who said he expects to earn the county better than 8800,000 this year on investments, said statutes limit the Certificates of Deposit, Treasury Bills and Savings Certificates. He said he felt it unwise to invest money outside the Cuban 'Wetbacks Slowed MIAMI (AP) — By boat, barrel and bravado, hundreds of Cubans are illegally entering the United States from Mexico. About 500 are known to have crossed the border at points foom Texas to Arizona during the first four month.s>of 1969. Concerned U.S. officials have stepped up enforcement, and ^ the same time loosened other regulations, in a bid to stem the tide. They think they’re succeeding. A change last year in Immigration law has spurred the illegal entries by lengthening the time Cubans who try to *come legally from Mexico must wait for a visa. , The law imposed a 120,000-person an- Euler Sees PGH Hunt as Difficult (Continued Prom Page^One) operation. He usually is a person with a background In hospital administration and is not a doctor. "We’re not going to dillydally around finding a replacement,’’ remarked board Vice Chairman Harold S. Goldberg. A selection committee — four officers of the board and three doctors was scheduled to meet over the weekend to review candidates, according to Board Chairman Aleck Capsalis. The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY — Considerable cloudiness, warm and humid with chanoe of occasional showers or thnndershowers today, high In the 89s. Partly cloudy, less humid and a little cooler tonight with lows around 69. Generally fair and pleasant Tuesday with the highs in the mld-78s. Wednesday oudook: variable cloudiness and a little warmer. Winds southerly 16 to 26 m.p.h. and gusty at times today, becoming west to northwest 8 to 16 m.p.h. tonight and Tuesday, Winds briefly hif^er in thun-. dershowers. Probabilities of precipitation: 60 per cent today, 18 per cent tonight an^ near sero Tuesday. ^ Several persons have expressed interest in the job, Capsalis said. NO. 2 MAN SOUCNMT Inquiries arrived after Euler jid-verti^ for the pqsition of associate administrator following his firing of Donald H. Carros. Euler said the ad was placed in hospital journals and with medical professional employment agencies. Eulo* said a requirement of 10 years hospital experience was. set, and it was established the new associate administrator would have a chance to move up when he retired. * * * Carros, former associate administrator, refused to comment on whether he would return to the hospital as administrator if the board asked him to. The board reportedly thought of him as Euler’s successor. But Carros did say he was looking for ar job and that he doubted whether be would stay in this area. it it ir Meanwhile, hospital employes have sought a spot on the City Commission agenda Tuesday for an explanation of Euler’s firing. nual limit on the number of immigrants who can come to the United States annually from other western hemisphere nations. Previously there was no limit. LEGAL ENTRIES DR<»> ' I The rate of legal Cuban immigration has dropped by more than 80 per cent in -the last year, but this does not include ‘ the more than 3,000 Cubans a month who t come on direct refugee flights from t Havana. Most Cubans get to Mexico City legally. But once there, they are faced with the increasing delays, plus the problem of paying living costs while being prohibit^ by the Mexican government from working. Some are quick to accept offers of help in crodsing the border. Once inside the United States, the Cubans are safe because they cannot be deported to Mexico and are not sent back to Cuba. But the. government is to-creasingly refusing entnr to any who are caught or turn themselves in right at the border. During April, when officials said 175 Cubans were known to enter illegally, 31 others were turned back. One woman who was turned back said she succeeded in getting across two weeks later, hidden in a lard barrel. NOPENAL'hES Immigration Service officials said nearly all the illegal entrants turn themselves in once they are well past the border, since no penalties are imposed and they are allowed to remain to the United States. The service also has eased regulations, to nuke it easier for Cubans to Mexico City to skirt inunigration quotas if they can prove they have relatives already to the United States. —‘‘#ni VarlaWt *—" ly at l!l4>m. -----lay a* S;of a.m. a Tutiday at 4:4< a.m. la Monday at 7:M p.m. landay lit ei (aa raaardad da at tamparatv-' M tamparatui <1 54 Oatroit 77 a 74 47 Rorjf'wof.llt N 75 "We’re getting the best rates possible, with banks compounding their interest daily,’’ Dohany said. A statement prepared by the treasurer’s office on all county money shows Certificates of Deposit totaling 950.8 million placed with 19' county banks; the largest amount, some 910.3 million with the Michigan Bank, Maple and Lahaer, Biuningham. y* ★ ★ U.S. Treasury Bill investments totaling 9890,000 have been placed through Manufacturer’s National Bank of Detroit and 91,000,000 through Pontiac State Bank. OLD ACCOUNT The county currently has 99,600 in old savings certificates accounts which Dohany admits yield low interest and which he says the county no longer buys. it it * The treasurer reports that varying amounts on deposit with different banks reflect his self-imposed rule of not investing any more With one bank than 50 per cent of its capitalization. He inferred that there are people in county government who would like to see smaller banks favored more than they are, but he said he persists to abiding by his rule. ★ * ★ Dohany said interest yield depends on the amount of money invested, the length of time it is invested for, and the date it was invested. INTEREST COMPOUNDED He believes he is responsible for nudging several of the county’s bigger banks into providing a continuous jn-interest compounding on the county's funds, tiiereby producing a higher yield on investments. Monies in the drain-bond funds are the sums received from the sale of bonds prior to their dispersal to contractors. Some of the money also represents payments made by special assessment districts in various drain programs. A more flexible due date available on the certificates has caused Dohany to deem their purchase the wisest course of action in many instances, he said. it it it “We’re making the best deals we can,” the treasurer insisted. “I think we can show earnings er spool at a savings of Sports-2nd Floor First IM Spray 57« Sea aad Ski Sua Taa LoHan 98c value Fire extinguisher for burns, pain and scratches. $1.49 and $1.60 values. In plastic or handy tube.....................‘. 79c value pkg, of 5 super atoin- j less blades, made in England... i. MJr W Right SaardBioderaat $1.69 value 8-oz. aerosol. Anti-perspirant that checks wetness. mmmH By Gillette............... 69c and 79c volitea. Upiticb, nrened powder, creome moke-up flqpiidmakeop. : Dfiigs —Main Floor; SSRoitii SaghBwSL SIMMSJI W. Bloomfield Setting Up mmission for Parks, Rec WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -A sU-monber parks and recreation commission to acquire park sites and develop recreation programs is being set up by the township. An informal meeting of the township parks and recreation committee was held Friday to acquaint members with the background necessary to form the land is in small parcels next to various schools in the West Bloomfield and Walled Lake school districts, the two largest of the seven in the township. These areas are, of necessity, primarily used by students. REC OFFICIALS SPEAK * The meeting at the Centaur Farms The committee is headiMl by township Trustee Mrs. Margaret G. Evans, who was authorized to form it by the Township Board about a year ago. There are no state or county parks in the township. The only public recreation Cash Benefits of Park Areas was attended by township officials, representatives from West Bloomfleld and Walled Lake School Districts, and other interested groups. James Beers, program development specialist with the recreation services division of the Department of Natural Resources, and Kenneth VanNatta, director of the Oakland County Parks and Recreation Department, spoke at the meeting. PLANNING TOWNSHIP RECREATION ~ West Bloomfield Township Trustee Mrs. Margaret G. Evans shows visiting Farms, a riding stable and restaurant. The occasion was a speakers James Beers (center) of the Department of Natural luncheon of township and school officials and interested citi-Resources and Kenneth Van Natta, director of the Oakland zens to begin work on forming a township parks and recreation County Parks and Recreation Department, around Centaur commission. Are Explained THE PONTIAC PRESS MONDAY, JUNE 80, I960 A—4 MH/ews Girl, 10, Killed on Minibike Sfofe Weekend Road Toll Reaches 15 WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -I.and used for recreation areas will repay the community more, in the long run, than if homes had been built on the site, according to James Beers of the Department of Natural Resources. Beers, with the program development section of the recreation services division, explained why to some 20 interested township and school officials and residents at a meeting of the township parks and .recreation committee Friday. ★ ' ★ . ★ He cited an, article by Richard D. Goodenough, executive director of the Upper Raritan Watershed .Association in New Jersey. '“It must be realized that the profit to the town from a piece of property is the income received minus the cost of services.” According to Mrs. Evans, the commission will have to acquire land — hopefully including some with lake frontage — to create places to swim and set up communitywide recreation programs, llie latter may be done in conjunction with the schools. Beers pointed out that “West Bloomfield Township is representative of many suburban communities surrounding urban areas which are reaping the benefits of other programs." . “We are not providing adequate space," he emphasiz^. VanNatta suggested that once Ipnd was acquired the users be made to pay for the maintenance. Where people psy for evqything, there is much leu vandalism, he said. ★ ★ ★ Citing examples, .VanNatta claimed that damage at the Groveland County park, where the users paid mainteance, totaled $50 in I'k years. Damage at the Springfield County park area, where the taxpayers bear the m a i n t‘e n a n c e, averages about $700 a month, he added. Robert Bills, a landscape architect who has been active in land planning for years said, “I think we must develop a better awareness of how to use the land instead of taking the old pioneer attitude of just using it up.’ ” DEMANDING SERVICES He explained that the township ‘was By The Associated Press A stuck gas pedal on her minibike cost a lO-year-old girl her life yesterday afternoon as the.weekend death toll oi^ Michigan’s roads climbed to 1$. Police said Patricia Marie Snep of Harper Woods lost control of her small motmlzed bike when the pedal stuck and she was thrown in front of a car passing the driveway in which he was playing. Installation Costs of T^bstones Up AVON TOWNSHIP - As the cost of living rises, so goes the cost of death. The relationiAip between the two cost rates was given recently as the reason for a price increase in tombstone installation costs in the township. The only other child among the victims included in the Associated Press count which began at 8 p.m. Friday and ran until last midnight was Roy Brent Smithson, 3, of 47190 11 MUe, who was killed when he ran into a road in front of his Novi home Saturday and was struck by a car. Other victinfu included; Ella Lebelt, 70, of Streeter, III, in a two-car collision yesterday at the intersection of U.S. 10 and MM near Sears in Osceola County. Wayne Belanger 22, of Flint,'whoso car ran off a road and overturned Sunday in Ogemaw County. Adrian, in a two car crash Saturday night in Lenawee County. Robert L. Parkkonen, 42, of Negaunee, when his car ran off a Marquette County road and crashed Saturday. SERVICES COST MORE COLUDE NEAR LAPEER Vincent Suchorski, 53, of Mayville ahd Therese Putnam, 30, of Caro, whose cars collided Saturday at an intersection on M21 near Lapeer. Jenny Gilmour, 54, and her son-in-law, Louis Smith, 28, both of Plymouth, whd were fatally Injured Friday night in a two-car crash near Plymouth. Thus, services, like schools, garbage removal, water supply, sewage disposal, roads and police and fire protection can add up to more than is lost by taking the land off tax rolls and making it into a public park, according to Goodenough. Goodenough cited a town 1 n Westchester County, N. Y., where it was found that each dwelling pays $100 less in real estate taxes than it received in municipal services. now gettmg residents who are used to having parks and recreation areas and are demanding such services here. Consequently these people are morp receptive to the idea of forming a commission and acquiring land partially with tax monies. Beers said. —• Beers wanred against any delay In buying land, pointing out that many urban areas such as Highland Park claimed they didn’t need any parks when the land was available. “Today, that city has recognized the j^ed for such recreation areas and is p^ing ‘fantastic’ sums for one- to three-acre lots in the .inner city ARMY HERO Spec. 5 Thomas Van Putten, who escap^ after IS months In a Vietcong prison camp, will be the guest of the Orion Area Chamber of Commerce and Jaycees for the Lake Orion Fourth of July parade. Van Put-ten, a resident of Caledonia, near Grand Rapids, will serve as grand marshal for the 10 a.m. parade. Teacher Team Will Take Four Students to Euro|be CAR OVERTURNS Township Clerk Thelma Spencer proposed the Increase because of rising labor costs. The board concurred unanimously. Now the cost will be a flat $25 for headstones of a 1-by 2-foot size and 10 cents per square inch for anything larger. The previous cost had been $15 and 8 cents. The township has the monopoly on tombstone Installations at Paint Creek and Stony Creek cemeterlM. Robert Whiting, 37, of Pinckney, whei his motorcycle crashed into the side of i car Saturday in Washtenaw. County. Gregory Carona, 17, of Somerset Center and Sherri A, Mason, 17, of Laura Jenkins, 38, of Flint, when she was hit by a car Friday night while walking along M21 in Genesee County. Nancy Reed, 35, of Grand Rapidst when she lost control of her car and it crashed Saturday off M45 in Ottawa County. ' Carl Loveland, 22, of Otsego, whose car was hit broadside yesterday while trying to cross from an exit ramp to the entrance -ramp of U.S. 131 at Wayland, “Furthermore, it was calculated thpt the acquisition of a public park, including the loss of tax revenue from vacant land and the purchase and maintenance costs, would result in a 15 per cent lower annual cost'to the town than if the land were developed with houses,” noted Goodenough. Beers also noted that land adjacent to parks frequently increased in value far faster than lands on regular roads. Citing an example, he noted that the land adjacent to Central Park in New York City went up in value eight times, while the city average only doubled, when the park opened. WALLED LAKE — A husband-and-wife teaching team is taking a group of area students to study in England for the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Nix of 3338 Winterberry, West Bloomfield Township, and four Walled Lake High School students leave Sunday for a six-wepk European study tour. They will attend the University of Exeter. the growing demand for serious pro* grams combining study and travel in Europe at a low cost. Rules Explained for 4-H Youth Fair Dote to Finish Toll-Free Phone Link Is Aug. 1 Springfield Township Will Mull Rezoning for New Development Coin Club Will Hold. Yearly Show Sept. 21 He'is a teacher of business and she teaches art at Walled Lake Junior High School. The Nixes wese appointed chaperons by the American Institute of Foreign Study (AIFS), which organized the trip. Going with the Nixes are Janis Merene of 28790 Summitt, Novi, and three Commerce Township students, Gwendolyn M. White of 2042 Meadowridge, G8ry E. Tarabusi of 1738 Big Trail and Patricia of 2010 Meadowridge. ORTONVILLE — Construction on toll-free telephone service between Ortonville and the Pontiac and Clarkston areas Is expected to be completed by Aug. 1, M. E. Morrill, district manager for (general Telephone Co,,..said. Morrill said the project will provide toll-free service from Ortonville to aarkston and Pontiac and vice versa and will be primarily for the benefit of Ortonville customers, since they make considerable daily calls to Pontiac. SPRINGFIELD TOWNSHIP - An ap. plication for rezoning property just south of Davtsburg Road, Mtween Dixie and I-75, will be considered by the Township Board Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the Township Hall. The propoiial calls for the development of a trailer park, multiple dwellings, single family houses and a small commercial site. w 8' ^ , All of the rezoning request has been approved by the zoning board except the trailer site section. , ' Supervi.r Nelson Van Natta said the township has been subject to a fash ol vandalism and Illegal entries in recent weeks. recently o|med county sheriff’s office in Groveland Township. “Only through the vigilance of the entire community can this lawlessness be curbed," Van Natta said. The Rochester Colit Club has selected Sept. 21 as the date for its annual coin show, to be held In the Elks Club, 800 E. University. Jay K(g>rince was chosen chairman of the coin show, to be assisted by George Hildenbrandt, Richard Cummings and Robert Ott. They will all be studying different forms of English literature during their four-week stay in England. Then they will visit London, Paris and Rome before returning home. The AIFS is an association of teachers and students headquartered in Greenwich, Conn. It was founded to meet The building addition to the company’s presept central dial office has been completed. A new cable has also been placed in service. New ^uipment is expected in the near futureT In an effort to- make all residents of the township aware of the problem all citizens are requested to report such efimes to the township office, Van Natta said. The sui)ervi,sor has also urged all residents to take advantage of the The extended area project expenditure of $220,000 is a 4X>rtlon of the $^inillion General Telephone Co. has allocated in the state for expansion and improvement, of local and long distance telephone service. Zone-Plan Concept Gets Avon OK Detroit Man Drowns in Stony Creek Park WASHINGTON TOWNSHIP - A Detroit man drowned in a small cove off Stoney Creek Lake in Stoney Creek Metropolitan Park here Saturday, State Police reported. AVON TOWNSHIP - The Township. Board has unanimously approved a Planned Neighborhood Development (PND) concept to apply to zone change requests for developments of 300 acres or more. Under PND, a developer may receive ^ varied zoning for various portions of his entire site all at one time. It eliminates the requirement that the developer return to the Township Board for spot zoning changes and variances. Police said Richard Tribble, $1, of Detroit drowned^ about jO feet of water at about 1 pTm. Saturdary while at-temptlng to recover a beach ball Uiat had blown into the cove. State Pollee divers recovered the body. For the township, the PND offers pro-z. The tection and control over zoning, developer must complete his site plans and conatructton once the zoping is agreed upon, Avon’s PND was recommended lor approval by the township and Oakland County planning commissions. TTie Oakland County 4-H Youth Fair will be held Aug. 5-9 at the fairgrounds located on Perry and Pontiac Road:' All the youth of Oakland County may exhibit if they are between the ages of 10-18. The deadline for fair entries is July 15. All livestock exhibited must be owned and shown by the exhibitor and health papers are required for animals. Animals must be fed and watered dally by exhibitor. Exhibits must be in place before 4 p.m. Tuesday, Aug. 5, and remain until Sunday, Aug. 10, between 9 a.m. and noon. Entry cards and fair books may be piAed up at the Cooperative Extension Office, 155 North Saginaw. All 4-H members will receive registration InstrucHohs froih their leaders and non-4-H’ers may come in and sign up under open class if their exhibits conform to all regulatinns in the 1969 4-H Fair Book. For further information, contact the Cooperative Extension Service. Michigan State Fair special exhlbil "ecraft, area will cover the needlecratt, canning and baking categories again this year This information is listed in the fair book also. 6 Detroit Firemen Burned in Blast FUZZY FACE-OFF — Here is aa example of friendly Squeaky! The two coexistence between two household pets, Pierre (left) and peace. DETROIT (AP) — Six Detroit firemc were burned when a 50-gallon drui containing magnesium shavings explodt yesterday outside a machine shop. Two of the firemen remaiifa hospitalized today. ★ A W The drum caught fire after dirt wt thrown in the drum. The dirt apparent! contained moisture, and the mugnesiui caught fire, firemen said. The ehumi**. element is explosive under certain coi ditions when mixed with water. The burns were mainly on the haix and faces of the firemen. Remaining hospitsillzed were Doha! Messacar, who suffered first, second ai third degree burns on his , face ar hands, and James Divozze JDr., who su fered first and third-degree burns on hi face, hands and legs. Other firemen- treated were WilUai Mazorowski, who had severe burns i the neck and (ace; Frai* Van Tonjhou who was burned ott the neck and atinj Johp Anderson, wlu> was bunied t * «nd legs; and William A. Bodkhl pets share a water dish in , who suffered minor burns on his le hand.'', THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, AVAILABLE JULY 1st QnnQi§i Save now on swimwear for the whole family at Pehneys! Sp^iall Men's and Boys' Swimming Trunks BOYS’ 1.66 MENS 1.99 Choose from on assortment of stretch styles of nylon knit and oeetate/cotten/rubber Uistex*, All kinds of colors to select from. Men's .S. M. L. Boys' sizes 6-20. Girls' Stretch Nylon Double-Knit Swimsuits 3-6X 2.22 Y-M 3.22 Swimming show^ffs in the noot and trim stylea the girit love best ... smooth^Hting one-piecers in checks, solids, stripes. With fHrly skirts or without. Pick plenty to pack on vocation. Red, navy, ether colors. Special buy for misses! these great swimsuits when you need them 6.99 8.99 t beach looks ready to o«t into *he swim. One and including boydeg styles, hipsters and almost- . solids, prints, dots, checim and eombinationsi LIKE IT . . . CHARQE IT! WATERY SEAT A couple finds a park bench a cool spot to enjoy the scenery at Gladwiq State Park. The bench, once on tte edge of the Cedar River, is now in the middle of the wataitay, swollen by recent heavy rains. Another couple (left) decides that swimming is a better way to cool It, while the sign (center) reminds park visitors that dogs are not allowed on the beach — even though it’s underwater. . ONE DEAD, 80 HURT - A CathoUc |Hle8t‘ died, apparently of a heart attack, and 80 persons were injur^ Saturday when six cars of a 12H:ar New York-to-Mlaml passenger train derailed at Glenn Dale, Md., 12 mllea east of Washington, D.C. The priest collapsed as he walked from an MARK OF CURIOSITY - Concrete evidence of a boy’a curiosity is cemented in a freshly poured sidewalk at Salmon, Idaho. Dean Martonen, 4, watches nonchalantly as FYed Jakovac and his son David, as yet unaware of Dean’s deed, smooth out a section of the walk. READY TO ROLLS t- Amorlchn entertainer Sammy Davis Jr. appears delighted as he takes delivery of a new Rolls Koyce convertible at London'AlrpiHi this weekend. Davis wlU use th^ car during his nine-week stay in Britain while the film "Salt & Pej^ier IT is being made. VICTIM IN THE TEST - A U.S. artilleryman, wnumf^ in the defense of Ben Het, grimaces In pain as his fr- -a 'carry him to an evacuation station. Advisers .d AN WHr*NlWM artillerymen are the only U.S. forces at the hard-hit outpost, where South Vietnamese in' first major combat test since i SMP MONDAY THRU SATUROAT ... TIU • PM. MAMlftt • msotAmaio.iAKi orMiuaMACK • lawiuavyiow ITomMo OwwaaMWaWmSf ^ TmitMomatowOie< • KmaMMONS . bnken in niofe than N homss in an aightblock • Sfat pwsons were treated for Injuries from hrokag |^aM< 4S West Huron Strwrt THE PONTIAC PRESS Pontiac, Michigan 4M56 MONDAY, JUNE 30, 19W AIM Mtecoi O. Mmimiu Joium, Local AdTtniilnc MoBiiir 'ysssr* n Seems to Me... Vehicle Production Turns U. S. Wheels of Progress Pontiac proudly plays a big part in “America on wheels.” Within the last few days, the 100-millionth motor vehicle bowled grandly onto our highways and became an integral part of our stupendous transportation system. We’ve outdone ourselves. Miracles never cease. > ★ ★ greatest and finest vehicles ever known to man. We’re in the front ranks. We stand with the Champions. ★ ,★ ★ According to the best current statisticians, there are now 83 million passenger cars busily plying our crowded and congested highways^ And beyond therie, there are 17 million trucks, buses and tractors. ’This indicates, that for the first time in the history of any nation anywhere, the United States of America possesses one motorized piece of transportation for every two people. Unbelievable wonders con- fingineers with slide rules and computers declare that the Nation is currently producing components to occupy the hi^ways faster than we are constructing highways to accommodate them. Hence, The Hillsdale DaUy News suggests with solemn mien that ultimately “an automobile will come off the production line and take Its place upon the highway. Whereupon, this jig-saw puzzle Will be complete and this car will constitute the last piece pushed Into place. Everything will be duly locked and completed. Nothing will be able to move anywhere.” Pontiac, Michigan, has played a very prominent and very prideful part in this gigantic motorization of humanity, Our Pontiac Motor Division, Fisher Body and GMC Truck and Coach have conceived and built some of the We smile along with the Hillsdale publication and adjure them to learn that when this happens, our production workers will have to go home until Uncle Sam constructs additional running room for more of our beautiful ciirs. XHuba’s Problems . . . Cuba hurts mightily. And this isn’t new. The 1969 sugaf crop was planned for nine million tons, but it will actually ruii less than fiva according to significant figures. Castro himself has admitted that this “is agony for the country." ★ ★ ★ The reasons are myriad administrative errors right and left, transportation troubles, lack of parts, mechanical failures constantly and poor supervision. But the greatest single Gloom Upon Russia When I was in London last week, several European writers suggested that these dozen and a half deaths of high^'anking Russian military leaders may indicate serious trouble. The Reds are strangely silent. They offer no “explanations!" ★ ★ ★ Once an “explosion” was hinted, but this number wouldn’t have been „ slaughtered without a large accon)-panying group. ★ ★ ★ Things “aren’t good" in Russia. This seems certain. Industry falters, agriculture falls to rally and the masses are becoming And in Conclusion . . . Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: Right behind the receptionist at Cosmopolitan Magazine is a huge poster of "a male nude. He’s really nude................And Mademoi- selle, the fashion mag for proper ‘young ladies has some articles currently that make the oldsters gasp. .......... Howard Hughes, our only billionaire, opens a 31-story hotel in Las Vegas. And the very next day a Mr. Kerkorian opens his International Hotel with 1,519 * rooms at a cost of $55 million, breaking all L.V. records. He uses Barbra Streisand at an^l-time nightclub ^^irageTecord." ■■ . w ' ■ Purely personal nomination for an especially attractive young lady of yesteryear. If you ' d«it recognize her, the name wUl be at the end of this . ~ Voice of the People; Soldier Bares Feelings About Vietnam Service To Soothe The Savage Breast Vietnam is a hell hole of a country and I really don’t believe in this war, but they asked for our help and we gave it to them. It’s my country and I have to go where it sends me while I’m serving it. I don’t really understand thils war except that we are fighting communism and for freedom for the Vietnamese. ★ ★ ★ I don’t want to try to get out of here. The guys that upset me are the draft card burners and protesters, I don’t feel people are helping me by trying to get me out of here; in fact, I detest the way they are going about it. It makes me sick when all I read or hear is about the people raising hell at home. Most of the guys over here feel like this. ★ ★ ★ Don’t get the idea that I like this war. But I want to help get it over with as soon as possible. I’m not saying I’ve never been scared. Everybody gets scared. We have had very few guys get killed in my company because we stay straight and do our job. ★ ★ ★ ' I’ll be glad when my time is up and l ean come home and get married and have all this behind me. I’ll be able to say I did toy shaie and I was not sorry one bit. ® David Lawrence Says: SS6 MICHAEL McREYNOLDS CO. “A” 2nd BN.47th INFANTRY 9th INFAN’TRY DIVISION APO SF 96371 President’s Tour Is Explained SDS Advocate States Group's Position WASHINGTON-Many people who ore not aware of some of the nuances of international diplomacy may wonder why cause seems to lie in the fact that the workers just universally refuse to do a day’s work anywhere at any time. Further, the tobacco raising and livestock handling swell the over-all burden appreciably. In the meantime, the Reds grimly and with increasing disfavor kick in with an average of a million dollars a day for every day in the year to “preserve law and order.” How long will this edntinue? Is the day of reckoning ahead? the United States — who made, a seven-day trip 8 t a r 11 n^g on Feb. 23 to visit five al-lies of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization in Europe — now announces he will travel from July 23 to Aug. 3 on a journey to five Aslan,nations and one Communist-bloc country, Ro- President “Is convinced the United States must remain a Pacific power.” He feels that the regiem la one of “dynanqic evolution which is of intimate concern” to this country and tiiat America should continue to play a strong role “whatever the frustrations are.”. The implication of such comments at this time is that, as America’s Intention to pull troops out of Vietnam is widely publicized. It is important to reassure the small countries that they will not be foresaken if serious contingencies arise. In the backyound of all this is the emerging crisis between the Soviet Union and Comnumist China. The manifest purpose of the Peking government now is to line up the Asian countries behind In your editorial, “Team with Teamsters," you Stated that SDS involved itself in the Washington strike in order to “parade its school of thou^t.” .. SDS and other radical organizations realize that students, professed and overt radicals and yonng people In genwal are not the only persons pppressed by Uie capitalistic socleiy in America and the world. The Moscow government, bn the other hand, has lately initiated a plan for a defense pact called a “system of collective security” in Asia. While designed to head off a rise in power by the Red Chinese, it could mean a move to secure Soviet dentation of the whole con- Blacks, hourly workers and ghetto dwellers are degraded socially, economically and politically. SDS wishes to ^w its support for these groups by working with them in such things as strikes. WILLIAM J. MAGOON APPLE HILL LANE, ROCHESTER ^Nursing Homes Can't Sub for HuspitaP We appeal to the people to prevent the “phasing out” of Oakland County Sanatorium'by demanding that the legislature provide financing for its continuance. No convalescent or nursing home could provide patients with the care and services they receive here. We have a TB ■" unit of 57 bbds. Where will these people be takeh cafe ctfT disillusioned and grow sullen and Irritable. Alcohol is often the primary relief. Anatole Shub says: ‘^Abortions, ulcers, high- " blood pressure and Psychosomatic Illness are the toll exacted on an incalculable scale." ★ ★ ★ General morale among the educated and aniong the lower fringes seems to have slumped perceptibly in the.last several years. Communism may be facing dark days ahead. Per-, haps they w^n’t have as much time and money to continue figuring on how tp blow the U.S. to smithereens overnight. ..... Overheard just before take-off; Pilot—“I warn everyone. We haven’t enough gas to get to Cuba."........ ....Along with a lot of other French points, Monte Carlo has priced Itsblf out of the market. Somerset Maugham’s famed villa was once offered.at $2 million. Today itniands at 1260,000 with'no takers. . .......Americans will disgorge an average of $1,542 apiece for Federal, State and Idcal govem-ments in 1960. This is ap increase of 130% In the laiit 11 years. /■.■■■ ★ ★ A Great Big Round of«Hearty Ap- Why, it will be asked, would he be doing this when there are so many domestic prob-' lems confronting him? The answer is that the solution — indeed, the financing — of many of the challenging demands at home la directly related to whether there will be peace 1 n. Southeast Asia. t ★ The journey could be of far-reaching significance, too, in shaping the course of events 'toward peace in the world. First of all, it is a p s ychological undertaking. The empasis is^on peace, and the purpose Is to mobilize world opinion tehind the American objectives. Underlying President Nixon’s idea in going to Asia and then later to Romania, is a sincere desire to assure those with whom he will be talking that the United States stands, ready to participate in the economic development of all countries. GIVING ASSURANCE In selecting the Philippines, Indonesia, Thailand, India and Pakistan, Nixon will be giving assurance that the United States, upon withdrawing its troops from South Vietnam — hopehilly, within the next two years — will continue to stand by the weaker cwmtries to present any aggressors from violating the principle of a e 1 f -determination for all peoples. The White House explains the purpose of the whole mission by saying that the Bob Considine Says: Our patients are suffering from tlm uncertainty this Situation which is anything but conducive to speedy recovery. Briton Runs Across U.S., ' ' pawns in some political game. PART OF THE MIDNIGHT SHIFT Wouldn’t Do It Again OAKLAND COUNTY SANATORIUM NEW YORK — The thinnest man at Shor’s plane the other day was a 33-year-oId Eng-1 i s h m a n named Bruce Tulloh. Looks like the lata Leslie Howard, and may be. He had just come in from Los Angeles. Ran all the way, 2,860 miles. “I lose she pounds going for a glass of water,” Jack E. Leonard, one of Toots’ patrons once said, before shedding half a ton of pure Leonard. Tulloh broke by a full week the previous record of 73 days set by Don Shepherd of South Africa in 1964. Asked in a news conference whether he would consider a second LA- I piaqe me omer 13-year-old Eng- i lope acron the U.S., he ran 20 miles each weekday, 50 miles each weekend day. He averaged abopt 40 mUes each di^ coming across the country. His record is under investigation, of course. He had the wind at his back. Tulloh told us that the hiRtlest part (rf the long run, and the greatest tenvtotiim to hitch a ride, came in Arizona. ‘i came down with a bad ankle in Arizona and it gave me a lot. of trouble,” he said. "But I had to keep going. So I’m hobbling along one day when g western-type shot past me in a pickup truck. About a half-mile down the road he put on the brakes and waited tor me. I cauitot with him. He looked at me as I ran along abreast bf him. “‘Git in,’he 81^.” The poor man must how be Question and Answer 1 have several old books and I’d like to see if they are of value. I also have a violin I’d like appraised. Can you teU me whom to contact? S. J. WALKER 295 N. PERRY REPLY The Detroit Public Library will check auction records and dealer catalogues to see what copies similar to yours have sold for. Ask for Miss Francis in the Rare Book Room Monday through Friday 1-5 p.m. A. B. Seaboldt can appraise your violin. Call him at 334-7196. Quesfion and Answer I have an Altos Lager beer bottle that was made by the . TIvoB Brewing Co. to Detroit. It must he 59 years old. I wondered if someone might be interested to it. NY run. if his new record is psychiatrist. Because Tulloh ^ --------- ---------------j**' Tulloh then thanked him politely and kept ^ Hbwever, you might check REPLY 7 he Altes Company says it has no value so far broken, i uiion snen j»vi»iajr a™ »bi» ---- established a new AAU record running through the desert O’^me dealers tn the area to see if they’re ihter-for understatement. . heat. . ested in it as a collector’s item. ONCE ENOUGH Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Thllito is w^-known to ^ , - Science at the Bulmershe (Grammar) Schod, .Woodley, Reading, England, owns hosts of trophies won in in- plause for Bill Hawkins SmaSnonSitioi” and ms work on Haram- to prepare himsdf for his bee..........Sir Wil- —----------------- Bailey from Encyclopaedia Bri- Verbal Orcluds tannica rather than depart . from the somber ways of . the past for a more Holly; aist birthday. middle - distance footracing. Sfronoe Mutuality ® standing on the edge df He teaches botany and J > ® He could be a ................. * The New York TimeB college kid trying to get home ‘ Events of the past month in During the sanm^Deriod hL* the Middle East should give IwaeU commlTdorhavP ^ <« ttowi M EBVrti.. rL; both sides of the Arab-Israeu statton- and have sahntji0A)i ^ ^ wiU somehow work to IBitir caaifl.' IStnell nlanes have Arizona, only four o( 100 advantage. ' rakj^d suspiecW guerrilla M^hhikers were found to; be ssifvjs,.'................ In the abstece of real peace or all-outi war, a third possibility is emerging that could be as disastrous as war and certainly is far spritely, modern approach Wyckoff dangerous than the com- To stop car thefts, the Japanese have devised two figure combination ignition locks. Dial the the right number of Southfield; 59th wedding anniversary. Richard Roggow Sr. of Rochester; 83rd birthday. Mrs. Rita Griffta promise settlement both sides seem to fear above ail else. That possibility is piecemeal mutual destruction. and down the ’Without previous or current .....,_____difficulties with the law. EadI side; to short, has Along one stretch of road; 84 demonstrated %lnerability of d those thumbing rides had the other to dlwastatlng har- criminal records and 12 f**f**cut dhort of all-out At- others were either juvenile Within the past few weeks and the motor starts .... of 1255 Silver Bell; 97th birthday. Palestinian ^erriliaa have ..........Dept, of Cheers Mrs. Bertha Fskoeoe and Jeers: the C’4, of 966 Voorheis; 80th Idrthday. Shirley TemplS QSlack) pictured above; the J’s — General Hospital Board’s unpopular attitude. i—Harold A! Fitzgerald K: Clayton A of Ortonville; 81st birthday. Mrs. J.L. Kemp of Waterford Township; 80th birthday: Arab oil to Western markets to an operation that tack., Unless both move promptly to reduce the basic causes of strife, this orgy of destruction will inevitably con-ttoito to escalate. Eveh without the major conflict that could ensue, the Middle East would in time be reduced to a wasteland. runaways or AWOL servicemen. Tlw Skm Ii wiWM • m ulated area, killing one Vietnamese civilian and the camp “very systematical- wounding nine others, spokes-ly," and were unable to explain ^ , the lack of contact oil'll* war news, authorita- FNPMV rpiUTFRa informants said Sunday the ENEMY CENTERS I Cambodian port of Sihanouk- But other observers s^d the ville has replaced the Ho Chi war zones around the northwest of Saigon and the southern ^r-tion of the central highlands get all their supplies through Sihan-oukville. WIM Mor« Comferf To o..rOomo Siooomtert wXmi dMituTW .Up, tiUtoarloMoa. Jus. nninkl. • Uttl. r/JSTWm OB TOUT pl.tm. FASmCTH hold. dOituM. flrmer. You mt bwtet fMl moM oomfoitabl*. PABTKKTHI. alkallno —won't «>Ur. Holm ohMk pt»M odor. Denture, that St uo MMBttnl to bulk of the enemy strength appeared to be centered on the western side of the hamp between Ben Het and the border, while the South' Vietnamese sweeps were centered on the eastern and southern sides. Minh Trail as the major channel for enemy war material slipped into South Vietnam from the North. The informants said the Viet-Cong and North Vietnamese forces in the Mekong Delta, the NOTICE OF TAXES CITY Of PONTIAC 1969 City and School taxo. will at tha affica of tha City Traaiurar J July 31. 1969, without foa.. Ausuat I, 1969 a collaetlon foa of 1 % will ha addad, and 1% additional will ha added on tha firW day af aach month tharaaftar an any unpaid City and School taxa*. Payment mada by mail murt bo pottmarkad not latar than July 31, 1969, to avoid panalitiaf. Attar February 28, 1970, all unpaid 1969 real proparty taxa. will bo ratum.d to tha Oakland County Traaiurar tor collaetlon, with additional pan.lliaa a. provided by State law. be paid by July 31, 1969. A. C. LEBIRT City Traaiurar 450 Wida Track Drive, I. Pontiac. Michigan 48058 DONT lET YOUR TAXES 60 DELMQUENT and one was wounded. They indicated the North Vietnamese trm^s got within 100 yards of the camp but launched ground assault and were driven oa by U.S. planes and artillery. Meanwhile, North Vietnamese [unnera eased pressure on Ben Het itself, givtag the surrounded GREATEST VALUE WE’VE SEEN IN FIFTEEN YEARS 'Astromonk' Is Doing Well WASHINGTON (AP) - Bonny, the mild mannered “astro-monk" who finds himself 200 miles above the earth today, is reported doing well, munching food pellets, sipping water.and whipping through “task cycles" cued by electric shocks. The Thailand pigtail monkey, wired so as to tdl just about every-thfaig of wdghUessnesB in space, was laundi^ from Cape Kennedy Saturday nl^t in a Delta rocket. Bpaee agency spokesmen say Bonny will stay in orbit for 30 days. * ★ A The delicate sensors Implanted In his brain, heart and other vital organs are to help set medical guidelines for future astronauts who may spend months or years in space. Bonny, named for his pleasant disposition, passed all his havioral. tests Sunday. Air Force tactical fighter-bomba's flew 81 sorties — one flight by one plane—Sunday in support of the Ben Het camp. Spokesmen said it was a record for the past two moiths. Spokesmen said the shidling of Ben Het itself dropped off over the weekend. TweiityAve mmitar and recoil-lesa-rifle shells hit fhe Special Forces camp Sunday, one of the lightest attacks since it came under daily bombardment early in May. BOMB STRIKES Two South Vietnamese soldiers were killed and two were wounded. B52 bombers kept up around-the-clock strikes on the outskirts of the camp, 280 miles northeast of Saigon. Twelve Stratofortresses dropped 300 tons of explosives on North Vietnamese base camps and bunkers three miles east and three miles southwest of Ben Het. Despite the inidden decrease in attacks on Ben Het, military spokesmen said they had no •KEYS 36,000 BfIFs of air coMUtioMMl Whirlpool Quality and Comfort ^IPr plua installation YOU GET... A A iiallM.NKAM«ni WhM»Ml «Mlr.l rtf twOilwIin syitwi «1 ■ I** srttt. A A wM. MI..II.M f( MMt to .IW.U ln«. A T* aM to ywir grtMiil w.ni tlr hNHi« ayatoto nWi • ■totototo at taatoltoltoa Nm art aaM, AFraaailtaMto , SINRKIP8 JURIST lERE • lEftT 1IE RI8R • Ottl ROW! •PriM aiMtoMl wMi dofllor SBVS&aar •arjsrstfis?* ■ /NaartBMiah. anwiMbiMA. anMaaMiMk »aa8iartMrt.lM.tow»laa, ■wrta.i^h. 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Egeberg has fought vi-| gorously during nearly 40 years! as a physician for pitedlcal care for the poor and the aged. i “He always taught his students that they should take care of everybody, rich and poor,” a' friend says of the man chosen^ by PresIdent Nixon to be the na-' tion’s No. 1 heal% officer. i * A rugged^foot-4, with grayi hair and a Dooming voice, Ege-| berg, 6.5, has been dean of the! University of Southern Caiifor-1 nia Medical School since 1964. { Like Dr. John H. Knowles,! whom the American Medicai Association opposed as Robert! H. Finch's assistant secretary' for health and scientific affairs,' Egeberg has criticized the AMA. FOUGHT OPPOSITION In 1961, when AMA spokes-! men opposed the FoTand bill, the forerfinner of medicare, Egeberg protested. He denied! tile AMA's contention that ali. tho.se Who needed medicai care! were getting it. He told an AMA convention. “Our attitude toward the Por-and biil gives older people the feeling we don’t give a damn about them. We keep saying, ‘no, no, no,’ and this is one reason why the public has a bad image of physicians.” He started a drive after the 1S65 Watts riots to build a multipurpose clinic in the predmni-ngntly Negro area. From 1961 until this year he was chairman of the State board of health. No stranger to Washington, he served on {Resident John F, Kennedy’s medical panel on narcotics, on President Lyndon B. Johnson’s Health and Manpower Commission, and on Nixon’s task force of health advis- In 1960 he advocated a comprehensive health insurance plan for all Californians, with insurance companies basing their charges on the needs of the entire community. He said public funds should help the poor pay their prem'iums. Egeberg, bom in Chicago, wa; an undergraduate at Cornell University before going to Northwestern University’s Medical School. He practiced in Cleveland from 1932 to 1946, when he became chief of medical and professional services at * _ the Veterans Administration Hospital in Los Angeles. , his advisers diftoences WAiwa niNir Egeberg, of Norwegian WATTS CLINIC ! scent, is married and has four In 1956 he became medical di-1 children, rector'of Los Angeles Countyi “His door is always open to General Hospital and two years staff people with problems,” his later wa.i named medical direc- secretary says, “even janitors tor of the county’s department who want to come in and talk of charities. Ithings over.’ KNACK WITH PEOPLE Egeberg, an internist, “has a knack for dealing with the moat difficult kinds of problems by bringing people together con-slrtictiyely,” says Dr. Robert ’Tranquada, an associate dean of the use Medical School. “And ilon’f sweai it! %ppy... 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Nothing's changed but the pricel *75 Two-Trouser Tropicals NOW ■64 *85 Two-TrouserTropicals NOW *72 *95 Two-TrouserTropicals NOW *81 J ♦ S *44M Tropica!Sport Copts now ^38 ^ *49.50 Tropica!Sport Coats now *42 i ' [I *T6 Proportioned-FitSlacks now*1 3®® I ‘ No Charge for Normal Alterations P special Group Ysar-round Wool Worsted Appaiell • One and Two Trouser Suits! ! , Sport Costs! Slacks! I SiMILAn GMAT SAVINQSt i Bmuls ' • Wie/eceiiiteqflieeaieeMiM CHANQB IT Fb8» and eenvanlam ■ your" with your Bond Charge Card! Or use Muter Charge or Uni-Cerd THE PONTIAC MALL Ttltgroph o» Elizobath Lokt Rd. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MOyDAY. JUNE 80, 196» A—11 L^islators Working to Iron Out Budget Wrinkles In the Ucan DemocraUI cut back their LANSING (AP) — The mlcb^ Igan Home and Senate ait down together behind closed doors this to work out fiscal differences that liave pushed Gov. William hniUken’s pn^p(^ budget to a reOord fl.534 billion and raised the threat of new Lower ^mber taxes. I prevailed With an eye to the new fiscal > year, vrtUch begins Tuesday whether funds are available or not, Sen. Charles ZoUar, R-Ben. ton Harbor, Senate Appropria-tions Committee chairmw, has .introduced a concurrent resolu-iriion that would enable the state’s 19 dqurtments to continue operation at current spending levels. a strong Repuls-earlier blocked added soma. |Z.8 million to the proposed ^cation department allocation. One stated purpose of to Imeitts to raise the Wll gaining leverage with Senate many milBons above the $259.< conservatives; million that Millikoi proposed. V * Other points of contention still Democrats awaiting firiak resolution in^ Pridny, however, and elude: ____________ • $4 million earmarked for a new state capitol. Ihe House stripped the sum from a 151-million capital outlay approi^a-tion as a protest against proposed designs. ★ ★ * • 1393,000 fw state subsidy of an osteopathic medical school. The Senate deleted that sum recreation from the budget, but the House< $10dmillion restored it. jfund. • $6 million in additional Subject of contention in the funds voted by the House for state colleges and universities. REC BOND The House, meanwhile, scheduled more debate today on Senate revision of the controversial House are MiUiken’s reconunen-tations to allocate some 60 per cent of the funds for urban recreation. Outdoor conservation proponents in the House sedc to restore what tiiey contend is the “true” 70 per cent balance for bond wUdlife and forestry projects in the northern part of the state; I House floor managers of the bill are expected to press for a compromise ratio, understood acceptable to the Senate, that would direct |55 million to urban projects with $4S million left for traditional, outstate conservation and recreation. Largely a formality, the resolution provides a legal backstop needed to keep government going while the legislature completes its budgetary review, says Zollar. Negotiating teams chosen by Senate Majority Leader Emil Lockwood, RnSt. Louis, and House Speaker William Ryan D-Detroit, face the ivoblem of I trying to reduce or pay for state; programs of which more than 96 per cent involve education and' social services, particularly welfare. ” 77 per FOR SCHOOLS !1 Including the $848.6 million al-1 ITeady approved for public “schools, 77 per cent of the “budget would go for education 1,— from kindergarten to adult *;evening classes. ! “ In addition, the state social! “’ services appropriation, now set ' at $289.3 niiillion, involves 18.8 per cent of the budget. , ■k -k * ! Those two categories are ex-1 pected to cause some of the I sharpest disagreement between committees of the two cham-l bers. I The massive welfare bill re- i ceived oily the minimum 201 votes need^ for passage in the' Senate. Twelve senators voted against it. = Citizens Unit : Seeks an End ; to S.C. Strike CHARLSTON, S.C. (AP) -A biracial group of citizens is seeking a settlement in a strike of Negro wwkers at Charleston County Hospital, and a spokesman for the strikers said there may be an early end to the dispute. About 90 County Hospital workers walked out 13 weeks ago, joining more than 300 Negro workers who had struck the Medical College of South Carolina Hospital. The Medical College Hospital reached an agreement with its striking workers Friday, but the County Hospital said fte settlement was unacceptable. The Charleston Area Community Relations Committee, which played a large part in ^drafting the Medical College Isettlemeni, met separately Sun-^lay with leaders of the SouQlo'n •"Christian Leadership Confer-Tente, which is supporting the .. strike, and county offtcials. “‘VERY ENCOURAGED’ * The Rev. Andrew Young, ex-Tecutive vice president of the SCLC, said after his session with the committee members, “We’re vdry encouraged the strike can be Mttled shortly.” Before the meeting he had said a quick settlement seeiped “very remote.”^ WEEKLY GARAGE SPECI AL Gable Front 20'x20' GARAGE Delivered Cash Price “O # Pbs Tax poob*dkkb Lumbar—Hardwara 151-165 OakUnd Ava., PbnUac 2495 Orehird Lrk* Pk.l3«-1St4 WWW YMm DISCOUNT DEPARTMENT STORES HOLIDAY DISCOUNTS EVERY DAY DISCOUNT - PLUS -ALL MANUFACTURERS PRICE-OFFS - MEAN IMPOSSIBLE PRICES BONUS HOIIDAY COUPONS! BRINQ YOUR FILM TO YANKEE FOR FROCESSING LOOK AT THE BONUS YOU RECIEVE- 5x7 COLOR ENLAROEMENT WHh avary roR of Kedaaelar FHm yuii brinQ hara fof Pwaaealni Jt PiIiiiIiib Only_ Vahm Only 39 Open Nights UnlU 10 P.M. Open Svndays Until 7 P«M. 1188 N. Pony At AfteiM Sterling Heights Riverview Cornar af U Mila I and tchaanbarr At Tha Carnar al ’S ' ■■ ■ ■■ ... , „ ■ ■■ Northern Golf Trips Finally Bear Fruit for Pete Green Def&ats Fedewa, 2 and I for State Amateur Crown By FLETPHER SPEARS CHARLEVOIX - The fruitless excursions by Pete Qr^n to this northern lakeside resort have ended. The handsome 2S^year-old Green of Franklin la the toast of the state’s golfing set today following his vi<;twy yestei> day in the 58th Michigan Amateur Championship at Belvedere Country Club. V It took awhile. Green began his bid for the Amateur crown as a 15-year-o)l He missed hto first time out and continued missing for the next 12 years. But this time around Green survived the grueling week-long tournament to ](dn toe list of 33 others on toe winner’s giant cup. FEARED JINX ‘T thought for a while there was a Jinx,” said toe weary Green following his 2 and 1 triumph over gutty Mike Fedewa, a gangling 19-year-oId PortUmd resident who is a junior on the Western Michigan University golf team. “There are a lot of great nafaies on tois cup,” Green offered ps he accepted toe trophy from tournament cochairman Howie Nielson of Pleasant Ridge. “I’m Just glad to be among- them.” CONTINUED SUCCESS For Green, toe Amateur victory was Just, another in a string of golfing successes. Hie former University of North . Carolina All-American now hiw captured all of tha state’s major Amateur titles. He won the 1867 G diampion Bill Newcomb of Ann Arbor, vtoo had just sent Peter Jackson of Orchard Lake packing with a win at the 19th hole. A strange twist to Green’s win is that he’s not a fan of match play. “I just think I’m a little better mqdal player that’s all,” said Green. “Btit I think there’s room for both medal and match. I did campaign to have one changed (GAM).” That was switched from match to medal this year. Detroit 1314 (Somes Bock etntlw emi, Pholo ALL. OVER — Loser Mike Fedewa (left) offers congratulations to Peter Green of Franklin after Green rolled in a Defending champion Lynn bypassed five-foot putt ai the 17th green to lock up -toe event to participate in the NCAA toe S8th Amateur Golf Championship toimament in Colordao. yesterday- Ponfiac Annputee Wins State Tournament at Adrian With 147 Total ADRIAN (AP)- BiU Harding of Draybiu Plains shot 147 for 36 holes to win the NBchigan Amputee Golf Tournament at Woodlawn Golf Course in Adrian, over toe weekend. He shot rounds of 76 and 71. Harding, who played on only one leg, Is employed by General Motors Corp. In Pontiac. He lost a leg at the plant toree years ago. Harding, who is 24, lost toe championship last year on toe first hole of a sudden death idayoff. Ray Rogers of Adrian had a 157 total for N boles to win toe senior division. He sdao won toe fitle at Battle Ckeek Dm CHAMPION’S REWARD — Peter Gften of Franklin hangs onto the winner’s trophy and gets a peck on the cheek from wife Marilyn following his victory In toe 58th Michigan Amateur Championship yesterday at Belvedere Country Club near Charlevoix. At left is Cleorge Webb, president of the Golf Association of Michigan and at right is Howie Neilson, cochairman of the tournament. THiE PONTIAC PRESS B—1 MONDAY. JUNE 80, *1969. Muncey Outfoxes Boat Race Rivals DETROIT (AP) BiU Muncey, a self-styled “foxy driver With a lot of old tricks,” had another trophy to add to his coUection today after sizzling to a come-firom-behind win in the World Hydroplane meet Sunday. The 49-year-old Seattle, Wash., driver piloted his Detroit owned Miss U.S. around the Detroit River course in a thrilling final heat to retain toe championship he won at Seattle last yev- .The heat was the bright spot of an afternoon marked by two spectacular County Wrestlers at World Tryouts WORLAND, Wyo. IB — Three Oakland County youths were on hand today as a special training camp began in Worland to determine members of toe United States freestyle and Grpco-Roman wrestling team, scheduled to take part in junior world competition July 14-19. Michigan wrestlers present were Billy Davids of Hazel Fark, an upset victim in the 105 lb. freestyle division in the national championships last week; Doug MHIer of Berkley, the 132 lb. champ, and Bin Elsenhelmer of Maduon Heights, toe 1431b. champ. Madison Heights’ 143-pound grappler, Biol Elsenheimer, Berkley’s 13^pound /Doug Wilier and 154-pound Roger Duty or Royal Oak were toe lone winners In the Greco-Roman style competition over jhe weekend. (Xher winners included: Tim Gad-vlnski (106.5), Madison Heighte; Bill Davids (114.5),-Madison Heights; Bemie Gonzales (123), Madison Hei|^ts; John Dunn (143), Pontiac; Marty Chouinard (154), Lansing; DeWayne McCabe (191.5), Warren; Rick EUrion (191A), Lansing; and Tony Zacker (191.S), Sooth Haven. Tigers Find No Joy in Bird land BALTIMORE (AP)— The Detroit and left town trailing the runaway and faced toe minimum 24 batters Tigers wait into Baltimore Uke Tigers Orioles by 13% games. through eight inning, led to his own and came out Uke sheep, toothless and Although they, managed only a sjUit downfaU by walking Don Wert, a .127 aU but sheared of toelr American Sunday, winning 4-3 after losing 3-2, the hitter, and Mickey Stanley in toe ninth Orioles sUllgajn^ a game on rum^ A run-scoring single finished Cuellar, And it made Earl Weaver happy. Boston, which lost a doubleheader to and reUever Fd**** Watt yielded a two-“It’s a good pennant race,” toe Washington and feU 12 games off the run single to Al Kaline after wUd pltch- Baltlmore Oriole manager beamed Sun- P«ce. ing the runners Into scoring position, day. "It’s toe kind I Uke. But I’m trying Before the series. Smith said the pnum ctMrr» not to think about it.” Tigers would have to win six of eight ”, ® Mayo .eniUli akinner of the Tluer* Baltimore on consecutive weekends lackey Lolich, who struck out seven awake ibbhaUilnUiiBiboat the »Kilted '('•'I''* 'SSrfh, la^'” “* race in the Eastern Division of the ‘reading water,’’ said Smith, who now American League. seems closer to drowning. * * ♦ 1 vinwmv ^ three-run ninth Inning rally, Frank Robinson’s ninth-inning pinch UlNE VICTORY reminiscent of the late-inning heroics single won the nightcap; snapping a 3-3 The defending world champion Tigers that led to toe 1968 pennant, won the ‘ie that had existed since Bill Freehan salvaged only one victory in the four- opener tor the Tigers. slugged a two-run homer for Detroit in game weekend series with ■ Baltimore, Mike CUellar, who allowed two hits the third. OITROIT (1) **"* SaLTIMOIIl (I) . , M r k M ' ab r h M I I aiw A mil Stanley c( 3110 Batangar at 4011 C)/cf Pros Seem Jaded •» ®«*«paobinwib j s s ? f I V/ab aw/wv,alll mJ VwlV-I^Vwl Kilkenny p 0 0 0 0 ReltenmOVf 1110 Kaline rl 4 0 11 Powell pb 10 0 0 ....................... .............. f.''*?''*" 4 0 10 BRoblnsn 3b 4 0 10 Norihrup It 3 0 0 0 Laonbard or 0 0 0 0 Age Gap at Wimbledon t iillt:Ji ................Sf m ml WIMBLEDON, Eng. (B -. Pancho and power, la another who seemed jaded *• Gonzales, the veteran artist of tennis, at Wintoledon this year. And it Vas Lutz «•-«•»«»<"»«»■ » - has made hia final bow to this year’s who put him out in the second round. i »nrh iw. i«.n T ? ? ■.*■•••? Wimbledon. SeoanO Rwnm , « 1 0 0 1 1 And as Arthur Ashe was putting him deS;l!tA*’^!li;r^""ii S S J ? 2 wt on the sun-baked centw «urt Satur- N'gi?, nVy '"SSv.-Kiikenny. wp-i^ ^-i:?i. * * ^ day, two youngsters — Bob Lutz of Los Mwe, SowHi Xtrlci, walked over Ken -.:. Angeles and John Alexander of Australia sK'reSrlld!'’* *' dbtroit (ii aALTiMoaa mi ^ — were showing fans on an outside court , iriU," drtMhlHiJSJ e!IXe?“Ild Aian McAuime Jb 4 oauiord it 'Vi a*? the shallot things to come. ...STnU'i, 5Si8 pb 1 i? i Gonzales is 41. Lutz is 20 years _ . Jbw aeonS rJiVih* ? J ? S SHilif'iK H S S younger, and Alexander won’t be 18 until M!c”^nd juife'MeldmM, Naw*Yo^,"De' Norihrup n 4 r i o b RobiniM 3b 3011 . . . • iiiiiS''' v,u And toe generation gap between the AuXeiie^'IRoeM*^^^^^ Neflier: flTheT^*" ' 0000 cfcS^ e 1 ? H old-stagers and toe uj-and-comlng hW^p' 2 fttV youngsters is getting more pronounced. » S JSS Maylm it’s the o^ing of the gates to ?S?bSK;j;ti„-'WV« felSll tISI? '.........mViS? tom .......•*<»« professionalism; The top world players '’^bS HUSfA’ind Prow McMiiion souib ......“..........ffli m m-$ 0^ these days seem jaded, and it’s left to Bojiiiyro. . m the eager and ambitious youngsters — 4-4».? c* • nioro i. aB-^Boionoor, McAuiK^lf^imon. Vuior!ll like Lutz and Alexander - to show the HR-Fr.oh.n a. ^ Raaaa,o “ ^ I Ken Rdsewall, another of the old jonlTMipl^i^iod'D^^ a Michigan Publinx Golf . Association match. Glenn Vallance, Bob Runyon, Truman Hammett and Dick Powell combined to give Waterfoid HlUs a 21H-% victory over Greeen Acres in a White Division duel. “ Vallance, Runyon and Ham-- mett carded 68s over the par-70 layout, while Powell checked In ;; with a 60. rf In a Red Division match, Mike Wiegand and Lloyd Syron turned in sharp rounds ^ but it wasn’t enough as they S and their Pontiac Country Club teammates dropped a 14-8 ^decision to Northbrook. *1^ Wiegand carded a 72, Syron a NORTH BROoS ?14)*-®N*lton (35) 1, J75). mj.BMI_tall^W, One run scored on reliever Bill Landis’ wild throw on a bunt and another on Brant Alyea's sacrifice fly. Then with the bases loaded and one out, Del Unser forced a runner at the plate, but catcher Tom Sa-trlano threw wild to first base, trying for the double play, and Ed Brinkman raced home with the winning run. The Senators wasted little time in the nightcap as Mike Epstein, who hit his 16th homer in the first pime, capped a six-run second inning with a three-run smash. Frank Howard added his 24th homer and Unser hit his fourth. NEARS RECORD Jackson’s homer, which left j|hlm One short'of Babe Ruth’s record as the only player ever to hit 30 homers before July 1, gave Oakland a 3-3 tie in its sec-ond game. Jackson, who singled in an earlier run, also scored the decisive tally on Danny Ca-^ ter.’s single in the eighth inning 1 II after hitting Into a force out in I his last at bat In June-ttaidand UMB 'is idle today. s:stfiis:=! ......W'ls: 4 Told 40 11 II10 300 100 00 0—0 0 4 1 2 0 2 0 0 X—II rztmiki H RERBBIO ^in*^Jo3t. FIRST CrWor ....... H R RRBBSq Cridor (Ktlly). WF-J.»trry, iMibl 1 3 3 3 Fov 30 I 4 0 o n I » 4 000 Horriwn Ik 4 0 00 ”kTn".a.. Tovti Oliva rf lotlrtfaw I . ROOM 1b I 0 0 0 RU» 2b gs'iliiB: ! Pmj^O pb 1 0 0 0 Hedund p 0 0 0 0 Adoir pb 10 0 0 Drpgo p 0 0 0 0 RTiylor pb 10 0 0 Brjrteld' p 0 0 0 0 BRodrgpl p first. BAMB .. OTO 0 00 0 00-0 1 0 0 1 2 0 1 X- LOB--Ntw' York 7,’ Clovo'lond' S, Tiont, S mi. HR-Hi ro w (10). S- (L,I4) (W,M) RBR.BSO i 1 ? l8 obrbW ' ? !! 0 sas3 msEss'-''i!„ ffiaK.'!, tmksgsfj ii!! 3 <^11 4, O«yok (70) 4, Boil I___ n TIAC CC (0)-W»lB»nd (72) 3, Syron (73) PS #iA. RMi h.11 V/,, Birktr (II) 0, -- (71) 4, Owok (70) 4, TIAC CC (»)- StVO, Boil bill (S3) 0. But ball ttOLLY ORBI a Taylor (7») H TVi, Hoy . .. HICKORY HOLLOW (7W)—Sulborlind bj Ml) 0, Wllkla (70) 2, But ball 0, Knock H (70) 2(0, Llttta (10 )lW But ball iVk, tw OXFORD H1LU (14U)-.4loaan (01) 4, « ‘gi,J'a*8l)T II a Cans (71) 4, But ball 1. 5 HICKORY HmIlS (slwf-iSatto (73) SVh, Baku (TO) 4, But ball 3, Sbanabin (IT) Wl^l^jlfB ^^/-Kirtimikl (M) .4) Total s E-Cai___ Kinaai City KaniU City 7. 3B-R.I "“-OINa 3 (12), AlTlnn. g!!{.r'ni?:t>i) ORilay WIckariham Hidlund H a IK./ n SANMARril n JakuMalc (77 R WATERFORD (31W)-Vallanci (ID 3W, lut ball a Hammatt (M) Mil 3. GREBN I) VI, Malhaw* Norlln (72) a ■' l5Ui “ ‘ ciiy .. . iso 000 000-2' rdanu. DF-MInnauta 1. ) 0 0 0|naw York 7 2 ' 1112 Pina p 1 0 0 0 Snydir 1 0 0 0 0 Law p 0 0 ( Kllmcbck ph 1 0 I Burchart p 0 0 ( ______ ui “ • - Tot^l jB-CardaniL *Harrtliin, 'Cox7 Bofhmar. HH-Cowan (1), Fama -Kally, ^ a. 8B~Harralion 2. <3)'! Kakich IBurbach (W,5-S) JULY on T3efiu4ce WHITEWU.1S For 2nd Tin When You Buy lot Tiro at Silo Boad Maiard INSTANT CREDIT-M MONEY DOWN k gu( Y«s . . . Deluxw's 36-mentk on tala. Get lit tire at sole corrMpending six* for only uaranlee whiteiwaile . get 2nd tire of imiEIOKElEgf ■mEX^KEHEB i^EOKElCa it IMhin^ iwwrwiiid «onfovr •IwhMu'for taif sfogring lurimalar -1., WF_Rookar. H R ERBBSq SK;?' .* } ? I ? *-aw 3 Vi 1 3 2 2 1 II HBF-Jby 4 2 110 tu7KirT-i Tigers' Saturday Box BALTIMORi DBTROIT . abrhbl tbrh ».1b liUg^UidSI mi W,.i«t ball.o, ialu (01) I WSoVcSr^'puy-l- ... 514 ♦ I'l 0 ::V,1 i ll .....1 1 0 0 0 ...... S 0 4 4 1 !•? ! J 8 ? MAulIttO 2b 5 0 2 Truh at 5 0 ) WHorton It f 0 1 . _. , ______ PrtOhan' 1b 3 10 0 fiSbIn.n** 3b 3 I 1 fl NoMbrup r, J 0 , , Sj^buon 2b 3 0 2 J I Brown lb 2 0 0 0 Balongor 3 1)0 CUh ph 0 0 0 1 MLepOl P 2 0 0 0 wort.5b 0000 Hall p 0 0 0 0 Malchick 3b ) 0 ) 0 RIeharf p ' ' * ' McLain p 1 0 0 0 Palmar p .Kgjorp’’ nr.'''*"" ,«n"yir isr. 'ns 10 0 0 ^k\r* LFotu. (L.M) ~“'-*''.“brbbl I^clo'u lIlOKuhiorfb .Ikim lb 4 2 3 3 RJackOOn _____ pK ssisgsis?)? nn cTW*''sn?r» ISIS SivSsr JsnSdiVr i?n Knoojft 3b 3 0 0 0 Hanay C 10 0 0 8rnin*3.n% ISSS Wood p 0 0 0 0 Krou.u p 2 0 0 0 Oalnskl p 0 0 00 Flnotr. wwiiomi pb 1 0 I 0 LindisiM Sacriat p .0 0 0 0 MeCraw pb 100 0 Total 30110*. T^a.., 3,0,« M&H ETMMS RAGEMASTERIa GhroiiiMlPOS-A-TRAGTIONj tiad p OOGO UNITED TIRE 1007 BALDWIN AVENUE OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 8 TO 9 . . . SAT., 8 TO 6 . . . CLOSED SUNDAY PONTIAC THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUNE 80. 1969 B-8 _ WINNING STYLE — Jim Pay astrida Bloimifield Open Hunt Horse Show udiidi Steel Master scored a big victory In the finished yesterday. Day is ftom Ontario, North American Jumper Classic at the HER AWARD — Mellma Mdir of Lake OriOQ accepts the wihner’s award from Barry, NDdiigan Junior lliQss 1969, in the Iforse Show adtich finished Sunday at Bloomfield Open Hunt Club. Miss Moir won the N^ American Junior Jumpers’ Class. Champion Had 'That Feeling' Donna Capohi Takes Women's Golf Open PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) - Horse Show Concludes Canadians in Top Spot their mastery at the 'Detroit Horae Show as Steel Master scored upsets to win the two big events id the weekend as ihe show concluded Sunday. The mount ot Eknst Samuel, King aty, Ont., had captured only one fourth {dace in Jumi»-ing competUian under rider DraDiy during the weSk, but Saturday night, beat out That’s Rilpit, owned by Mrs. Patridk Sutler, St. Paul Mhm., and ridden by talented Kathv Kusner, for the prettgious North American Open Jumper Classic in a double jump off. He then came bade Sunday at Bloomfield Open Hunt to take the North American Open Jumpdr Stake, Bonus Point Qass, in vdiich Miss Kusner’s horse firibbed a dismal sixth to allow Steel Master to win the NA Mid-Season Open Jumper horse in the 1968 U.S. Olympic Equestrian Team, had 14 pdnts with one S-point first, one 8-point second, one 3-point second, and one lixdnt sixth. Jim Day had wing last, Jim Day could be more liberal and received on four jump faults. While several Canadian and hei^ while her rivals wilted, had a feeling she could win the U.S. Women’s Open Golf Cham-pionddp even before she teed off. ‘T shot 74-78-75 and thought was due for a good round,” tiie stocky, 24-year-old Califomian said Sunday after she nailed down {he $5,000 first prise with a 69 for a twoHiver par 294 and her first tournament victory. Doiuia, on the Iwink of victory after two runner-up finishes in the last three tournaments, shot a‘ 34 in bUsterii«, 108-degree beat on the front nine. She thoi weathered a thunderstorm and intentiption in play, coming in for a 35 to notch the most prestigious victory in women’s golf. The ^ctory increased earnings over the past years to mwe than $60,000. It marked the fourth year a Canadian horse had won that championship. The last time an American was victorious, was, ironically, the last year Miss Kusner competed in the Detroit Horse Show: in 1965 with the Butlers’ Untouchable. Steel Master finished with 15 points represienting the two 7^ point firsts and one 1-point fourtii. That’s the best -------------- a5ss «li tan rir»» ym; orew w«*-PliM l««rm, r.i». •g,?!'' sSu!«&« "CuSs’^'A.rt.lA. Hunter I, orotM Point*) i. AbW* Aflon, I Pro Avoids Repeat I of Masters' Blowup ' CLEVELAND (AP)-The ' spectre of a dramatic, three-hole collapse was haunting Charles Coody when the big, mild guy came trudgii^ down the last three holes in the aeve-land Open Golf Tournament. "On the 16th, I hit a poor chip about 20 feet from the hole and I had I putt that had to go over two bumps,” he said. "The first one .was five feet short and I thouidii* (di, good gosh, tids is the 16th. I’m on the last three. . "That’s the first time I thoui^t about it. I didn’t want to think about it, but it’s hard not to.” .a, ★ ■ ★ He was referring to his blow; ■ up in the last three holes at the ! prestigious Masters in Augusta, ■ Ga., earlier this year. • “I had the lead standing on the'16th tee,” he said, "and bogey, bogey, bogey. "If I’d been beaten, if somebody had made some birdies, I! don’t think it would have both-' ered me. But I felt like I just handed it back to them. It left me with a very deflated attitude.” ★ ★ A But it was a different story Sunday. He finished with a 271, nine strokes undo* par on the 6,661-yard Aurora Country Club course and was ■ two strokes ahead of Bruce Crampton, an Australian now Uving in Dallas. Crampton had a 69 for 273. S'field Leads Legion Margin Twinbills Dividad) Mott Gains Ground LSelON mNOINM Veteran McCluskey in Stock Car Win chirin Coody, WZ.OW .... <744-71-4*m.271 B^eo CrimiUn, $12,SN .. W40-W-MW272 ....................... John SchM, tl,7M .. B* ChoriM, $1,3*2 .. John Uvlnwn, $3,312 I.Wi2?Jif A. DIcktnion, $2,43* Harold Hanning, $B,43I iordon Jonoo, $3,43*. 72-71 rnold Palmar, $2,431 .... 7443 ommy Aaron, $l,7«..7l-*7 ullui Boroo, $1,7*0...74-70 .uan Rodrlguat, $1,N0 ... 71-*o Oav* Morr, $1430....... Randy Patrl, $1,430 ... *»-7*~^.—.. Jim Colbarl, $1,430 .. *(-«7-7S47-2ll Miss Kusner and ’That’s Riidit' were not spectacular, but appeared to l» collecting* enouf^ points to win the Mid-Season Open Jumper Cham^onship until the jumper bonus point class Sunday, when she received four faults on the first jump off and five others were events throughout winniw various Ehout tee week. Earlier in tee day, another Butler horse ridden by Miss Kusner was announced as tiie winner of the HUl lYoitey for the NA Mid-Season Intermediate Jumper Championship. Toudie Turtle unchallenged with 21 Reserve Chamidaa we Nirvanna, own^ by Heiss, Palmetto, Fla., with 1C TEisteis die name of the game. Imperial AVAILABLE JULY 1st E3^ by Howard Lawit lor iwah Sgroat, KIrt- c“ ASS **! Tha Oakland Unlvaroiiy omblnad lv|mH Trophy-Jaann* »af- I Tha North Amarlpan Junto Ciatile - 1. Sharqa, rIdMan >“ ....AtoIr to Oakland Hllli Pan i£®®ysSrS' -ita Philip Mom Co. CLASS 73: Junior^ ; MEMPHIS, Tenn. (AP) ; Veteran Roger Mcauskey I matched tee lead from A. J. - Foyt with Afro laps to go and ' won tha $2IMI00 Miemplils 200 . stock car race Sunday in weatb-; er mors torrid than tee actim ' on the track. ■ "..X : ie ★ Foyt the defending USAC stock-car champ, had dominated the race frmn tin start But . he had to give up a comfortalde ’ ledd on the 116th lap when a tire ; went fiat. McCluskey, driving a Plytoouth, coasted home ai >aasy winner. M^lfrods Amatfrur Me«t 5*%UMF0RD, R.I. (AP)-Pete Wick,' defending champion k New York^ Shot a one-ir 88 Friday for tile first ead in tbs Northeast -ilmatour , bditetiooBl; oj l touniament Soulhflald . watoford . .. Waliad Lake ~ rklay ... ____ Southfield maintained its half game lead in American Legion baseball as four doubleheaders Waterfonl Mott gained the Z&."p (ThTsiHotT only ground with 7-2 and 8-2 victories over Milford Les Hunt -"=eS5!?'»Sk “ led Mott with two hits in each Kauljynn. Coptomallon Huntar game. Bruce Carlton and Carter Hurled tee victories. » *• ^TSdSaHMAORNINWI RtlULTS CLASS 73: Working Hunter Stake-.... ST' s'!*?- Roger Young tor Mr. and Mr*. Ira. J. SrW’*-- — -^LiS-s Jerry Ostrum collected three hits, including a homer, gained a save in relief aarkston downed Waterford, 7-6 in the opener. But Tom Asbau^ spun a three-hitter for Waterford to win the nightcap, . W' .♦ ' ♦ Clyde Duncan hurled a two-hitter and added two hits of his own to go frith a pair by Terry Villereal to lead Pontiac past Troy 5-1 in the first game. Gary Griffith’s twofun triple in the 'I won the second game for 'ftoy,8.1. . ★ ★ ★ Berkley’s Rick Nelson pitched his team to a 2-1 win over Southfield, but Bdb Miller fimted 11 to give Souteifield a 3-2 nightcap win. « ★ * Walled Lake scored its wlte Ing runs in a M decision over Madison in tits seventh on tfrb singles and two wild pitches. STy ;:^ftr3.li7yriikilii*,*»: AV-MClllWad June II 5 '/4 % SAVINGS aitnnCATES ln«mMnlagf$S.OOO *rm*M FEDIRAI. | SAYINOt MMWItoFIEMKAl SAVINOS AND LOAN INSURANCB CORPOMTION MW.MAPU «47hM00 BUYI BELLI TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT AD8I TONTIAC ICLEARSNCf (TERRIFIC SAVINGS) AUDE1TE PONTIAC “THE GIANT" EVERY CAR WILL BE SOLD URGE SELECTION ALL MODELS NEW 1969 PONTIACS fr EXECUTIVES , (BONNEVILLES, CATAUNAS, LEMANS, fc TEMPESTS) ★ PACVMY OmCIALr '99 CATAUNA HARDTOP AIR CONDITIONED Turbo HySiamatie P«war StBaring *3125 1969 LsMANS HARDTOP 1969 TEMPEST SPORT COUPE *1475®® OPEN MONDAY, TUESDAY and THURSDAY TIL 9 P.M. WED., PRI. TIL 6 P.M, (CLOSED SATURDAY) AUDETTE I860 MAPLE RD. (15 M nili I Mil Bet. CROOKS t OOOLIt (USED CARS 942-1299) tMOY - 442-8600 THE POKTIAC PHESS^ AIOHDAY. JUNE 30, 1969 The upstart R. T. Clippers saddled M. Q. Collision with its first setback of the season but the loss didn’t affect the pacesetters standing in the city Class A men’s baseball. While the Clippers were RAM PLAYER HONORED - Ed : Meador (second from left), defensive back for the I.OS Angeles Rams, won the Justice Byron (Whizzer) White award last night at the third annual awards dinner of the Na- tional Football League Players Association in Chicago. Other White award candidates pre (from left) Carroll Dale of Green Bay, Earl Morrall of Baltimore and Larry Wilson of St. Louis. • ISlim Crowd for Grid Tilt Coaches All-American Game Won by West ATLANTA (AP)-The West won 14-10 without 0. J. Simpson but the Heisman Trophy winner from Southern Cal was sorely missed at the ninth annual Coaches All-America football game. Officials of the game, fighting slumping attendance, had hoped Simpson Would help lure a big crowd and revive interest in the all-star battle. Simpson skipped the game along with 11 otiier first-round NFL Player Award Won by Ed Meador CHICAGO (AP) - Ed Mea- dor, defensive back for the Los Angeles Rams, Sunday night won ,,the Justice Byron R. “Whizzer” White Award at the third annual awards dinner of the National Football League Players Association. The award is presented to the NFL player judged to have made the greatest contribution to his team, to the league, and to his community. The selection of Meador from among five finalists was the highlight of the dinner attended by more than 2,000, including pro football Commissioner Pete Rozelle. choices in the pro draft, and most Atlantans skipped it, too. The turnout of 17,008 Saturday night was the smallest since the game was moved to Atlanta, and renewed speculation that the game might be moved. Paul Gipson, who set a record by returning a kickoff 74 yards, was voted the game’s Most Valuable Player. The East standout was running back Bob Campbell of Penn State, who scored on a plunge set up by his 35-yard pass reception. Ailing Toomey Takes Eghfh Decathlon BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (AP) — Bill Toomey, who won his fifth consecutive National AAU decathlon championship here, Buster Wen, the Richmond for quarterback headed for a pro career in Canada, was the passing standout. He hit on nine of 19 throws for 109 yards for the East. Marty Domres of Colum-bls, the East starter, connected the United States team when it meets the Russians in Los Angeles July 18-19. OTHER CANDIDA’TES Other candidates for the White Award included Carroll Dale of the Green Bay Packers, Earl Morrall of the Baltimore Colts, Don Perkins, of the Dal las Ctowboys, and Larry Wilson of the St. Louis Cardinals. The proceeds from the $100-a-plate dinner went to the Better Boys Foundation of Chicago. Rozelle spoke briefly ade an indirect humorous reference to the case of quarterback Joe Namath of the New York Jets. Despite Defeat M.& Holds Class :A'lead halting M.G. (10-1), 3-1, second-place 'Talbott Lumber (M) took it oa the chin from Oakland Community College (4-6), 3-2. In another game, the Teamsters (5-6) pinned a 3-1 loss on C.I.O. No. 594 (6-5). B’ GAMES In Class B competition, U.A.W. No. 653 and Oakland Community College ran their records to 3-0. UAW downed Auburn- Hills Town House, 9-5, while OCC gained a forfeit decision over Earl Gardner’s All Stars (0-4). Four-hit pitching of Tom WHlworth and the timely hitting of second baseman Dave Houck enabled the Clippers to spring the upset on M.G. WHlworth went the distance, fanning six and walking only two, while Houck stroked a two-run double in the second to pace the batting attack. Willie Holloman scored the third run on an error in the fifth. Bob Burt singled home M.G.’s lone run in the top of the seventh. in the fifth and added the clincher In the top of the Seventh to stop Talbott. Shortstq) Mark Curry rapped out two singles and a double and drove in two runs to pace OCC. Dick Johnson {dcked up two of Talbott’s -six hits -off BROTHERS PRODUCE Brothers Charlie and Sandy Heavenrich drove in single runs and BHi Bennett chased home the other in leading the Teamsters past CIO. The winners, down 1-0 going into the bottom of the fifth, tallied three times on three hits to pull out the win. Rozelle said he had to catch an early plane to New york for "an after-dinner appearance at Bachelors III.” Bachelws III is the New York bistro in which Namath holds an interest. Namath has indicated he wiU quit pro football raOier than sell out under the wder of Rozelle, who has stated that gamblers reportedly frequent the place. POSSIBLE AGREEMENT Rozelle told reporters before IToomey, an ex-Stanford star | the dinner that discussions with from Santa Barbara, Calif., fell! Namath over his |}os8ible agree short in his bid for 8,000 points ment to accede to the commie- six of 13 throws for 49 yards.'because of long pole vault com- sloner’s wishes may be delayed Bobby Douglass of Kansas, petition and a virus. opening quarterback for thej He ran up 7,818 points, well West, missed on his first 12 ahead of Rick Sloan of Fuller- [at least two weeks. throws and finished with Iwo completions in 15 tosses for 33 yards. Edd Hargett of Texas A^M connected on two of eight throws for 20 yards. Calif., who tallied 7,M5 in the two-day, 10-event competi-tioq for the two places on the American team. ATLANTA (AS) I All-Amirlu Foolbill Gam* Yard* panaM RDIllHtd J ■ast .............. East - FC Warren « East—Campbell I run (Warren kick) wait—Enyart J run (Brown kick) Toomey won the discus and javelin Saturday, but finished last in the concluding l,S00-me-ter run, scoring only 384 points in that. Toomey’s other marks inelud-ed: 100 meters, :10.6; long jump, 23-11%; Shot put, 45-10% high jump, 6-4%; 400 meters, of the year and Earl Mc-i:48.2; discus, 144-10%; 110 high'Cullouch, of the Detroit Lions as « 1 7hurdles, ;14.8. 'rookie of Rozelle said Namath is on the West Coast for a movie commitment and has hot Indicated any immediate desire to resume talks with Rozelle. Awards were made to 13 other NFL players including eight departmental champions and players singled out for individual honors. ★ ★ ★ The association honored offensive stars Boh JBrown of the Philadelphia Ea^leS as lineman year. 6 Players Sign With Buffalo AVAILABLE JULY 1st BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - The Buffalo Bills of the American Football League signed six players Sunday. They included two veterans, Dick Cunningham and Paul Costa, and four rookies, including No. 11 draft choice halfback Lloyd Pate of Cincinnati. The Bills also signed free-agents Chuck DeVleigher, safety Henry King and receiver Harry Wood. 5 V4 % SAVIHGS CERTIFICATES In ameunit of $S,000 or mow TH OF JULY mueum! $6a02 $8.31 PRESIDENTIAL WALNUT Rog. $6.69 VINYL OAK Rog. $5.90 SALE 4x7 $2.tt 4x* $>.66 THIS WEEK ONLYl SAVE 10% WLUUE MHEL t TRIM »4i auburn, auburn heirhts DAILY S-S THURS. A FRi. 9-9 SUNDAY 12-5 OCC pushed across two runs UAW fell behind 541 against; Auburn Hills but came back with two runs in the tiiird and three niore in the fourth to square the count at 54, and then won it with four runs in the last two minutes. Pat' Bar-rick picked up two doubles to pace UAW. Jim Bechtel collected a pair of singles for Aurbum Hills. Senior Joe Gavel set a school mark by stealing 21 bases lor Michigan State’s baseball team last spring. NEWPORT 2 Door Hordtop 383 Cubic Inch Engino Automutic TrontmiiMion Power Steering Bock-Up Lights ^ Seat Belts , 124-lnch Wheel Bose Heovy Duty Bottery • Oil Filter 8.55-15 Tires • Heod Rests ^2998 00 Plut Salts Tax This includes All Preparation and Delivery Charge HAHNMOTORS 6673 Dixis Highway . CLARKSTON 62S.;{635 t us HELP YOU PICK THE SIZE m YOUR MAKE AND MODEL CAR! ^ CARTBR TIRE CO. THE HOME OF THE “PROS” 3T0 S. SAOINAW ST. PONTIAC nS41M THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUNE 8o7l969 B-5 StmakingCybs^M to Cardinals Woes By Anodatod Pm$ Tireless Billy Williams and the non-stop Chicago Cuhs are swinging from thefar heels ... whfle the stgrtled St. Louis COtz dinals hang by their thumbs. Williams eclipsed Stan Mu-isial’s National League ironman record Sunday as the Cubs all but extinguished SL Loliis’ 1909 pennant hopes by sweepiug a tjoubleheadw with the defending champs 3-1 and IM behind a barrage of extra base hits. The double triumph sent the East Division leaders eight games up on second place New Yorb and dropped the fourth place Cardinals 14 games off the pace. Williams, flooded with gifts in a between-games ceremony before 41,000 Wrigley Field parti-jjygjjg Musiai’s mark pf HEAD 1X)CK — Pitcher Don Wilson (40) of Houston 095 consecutive games in the clamps a head lock on Atlanta’s George Stone and gets ready nightcap. He celebrated the oc-to throw a punch during Saturday nl^t’s game. The scuffle casion by smacking two triples, started when Wilson fielded Stone’s bunt along the first base a double and a single ... after linjB in the second Inning and was sent sprawling when he doubling In the eighth Inning of tagged the, runner. Atlanta, won, 5-1. AJOR LEAGUE • to Ignite the Cubs’ , winning three-run rally. run of the Chicago opener and Willie Smith helted a two-run ' illh’ Ferguson Jfflkins, 10-5, to survive Vada Pinson’s ninth inning solo homer. CAPS INNING Banks’ 13th homer capped a four-run first inning salyo against Jim Grant and Santo clubbed his 15th homer in the after a walk and Williams’ triple. * Randy Hundley also homered for the Cubs and winner Dick Selma, 0-3, checked St. Louis on four hits, including Mike Shannon’s fourth inning homer. . ★ ★ A Smith matched Williams’ five hits in the doubleheader as the Cubs made it seven victories In their last eight games. ★ ★ * The Mete trimmed Pittsburgh behind Tom Seaver, 12-5, who hurled a six-hitter and struck out 10. Ex-Pirate Donn Clende-non drove in three New York We did what we had to dp,” | runs with a single and double, said Ron Santo, whose five RBLEd Charles, who had three hits. —......,.jn 4, Boston 3, 10 Innings Chicago a. Oakland 3 Saania 3, Calltornia o UiMlayt'l R—“- Mlnnaipla at Chicago, night Calltornia at Kansas City, night ----------——, night By Tho AMOclalad Ri intarnafl^L^i irgh 7, Naw York a cago 3, St. Louis I inta S, Houston I Francisco 13, Cincinnati S 13, Montraal t LosAngalaj^JanOl^^O Naw York 7, Pittsburgh 3 Chicago 3-13, St. Louis 1-1 Atlanta 4, Houston 3 Cincinnati 7, San Francisco 4, 10 In- P^illsdelphla M, AAontraal 0-1 ■ “ Angolas 3, San --day'- Ojs _ (jackson"'l-i) at Pitta- (Ellla 4-71, night ---- York (tlScAndrow (Brilas M), night Clnclnnatf (Clonir (NIakro IM), night w )-2) at si. Louis . ..3 b-t3 a C -, traaningiiin . ■ wv3 031 1^. * 51 Culp, Lyla 0, Romo f and Satrlam ■n Loaggo Won Lost I Asbavllla .. Savannah . IM ....oil on 000-3 I ....... ..........303 001 OOx-7 17 _ Burbach, Johnson 1, Downing V Ham-Iton 7 and Farnandait Ellsworth, WII- L—Burbach, (4-S). TOMS Loaguo Chicago ...... .. no 000 300--a Oakland ......... 000 OOO 300^3 . . John and Harrmann; Nash, Boland (1), ®*,Lachemann (0) an(l Root. W-John, J-5. ' “,^'-Nash, 4-5. » |s«ittl. AB calltornia "•i Talbot, Sagul (») ,tiphy, Way (fl, FIshi ,’’’1 Talbot, 3-3. L-Mur I Rollins 13). iMlhnalota . ~ (I) and Ajcue. W— ly. 4-4. HR-Saattla, in the nighfcap boosted his league lead to 69. “They came to town to beat us and we beat them. They’re still a strong ub,''but I feel we’re going to in it.” ‘"They kicked the brains out of i,” said Cards Manager Red Schoendienst, whose club won the soles opener last Friday and then took three straight beatings. “Catch ’em? It’s possible, but awful tough. Heck, we’ve got two other clubs to catch before we even begin to worry about Chicago.” ★ ★ ★ ’Ibe Mets snapped a four-game losing string with a 7-3 victory over third place Pitts-Philadelphia swept pair from Montreal 2-0 and 5-1 for a six-game winning skein; Los Angdes defeated San Diego 3-1; Atlanta topped Houston 4-3 and Cincinnati nipped San Francisco 7-6 In 10 innings In other NL games. •k After Wlllianu’ eighth inning double off Bob Gilson, Ernie Banks singled home the first and Cleon Jones delivered two apiece. Rookie right-hander Lowell Palmer pitched six hitiess innings before settling for three-hit shutout and his first major league victory and Jerry Jolmson weathered 10 Montreal hits in the second game as the ATLANTA ^ob r h bl FAlou rf 113 1 RJockson 4 0 1,0 CBoyer 3b I, ivsrR«b Gabrielsn asr-r’ .... Pa^or 1b 3 0 0 0 Rubarto c Haller c 3 0 3 0 Gaeton cf Lalebvra 3b 3 0 0 0 Dean.» Sliamora 3b 3 I 1 0 Stahl ib Fotlar p ^ 110 0 Santorini p SiNlakls ph logo Arcia --Brower p 00 Ao 5 0 3 1 Murrell rf 4 0 11 Ferrara If 1 0 0 0 Splezlo 0 0 0 0 Canniur til 100 3 0 0 , iiii Foeter (W.3-4) .. Brewer Santorini (L,34) . “iSfel-f I i I Phillies continued to win despite AUen. F^t Inning singles by Rick Joseph and Larry Hlsle knocked in the only runs in the opener. Hisle and Ron Stone each sent two runs home in the nightcap. * ★ k Willie. Crawford drove in one run with a third iiining sini^e and tripled and scored in tiie seventh as \the Dodgers handed San Diego its 13th loss in 14 starts and remained atop the West Division by one half game. Alah Foster and reliever Jim Brewer combined to stop the Padres on six hits. ★ ★ * ’The runner-up Braves struck for three ninth inning runs—the last one on Felipe Alou’s single —to overtake Houston and keep pace with the Dodgers. Joe Morgan’s two-out throwing error kept the rally alive and allowed the tying run to score. a a a San Francisco’s Willie Mc-Covey crashed a two-run homer, becoming the first National League ever to hit 26 before the end of June, but the Reds tied Giants with a three-run burst in the ninth and beat them Chico Ruiz’ bases-loaded single in the 10th. abrhl 0 3 1 uKnn cf 4 13 1 1 0 MPaddtn If 0 0 0 4 110 Valdtpino ^ i 0 0 4 0 2 0 NMitlar rf 5 0 1 4 0 10 Menk« u 2 0 0 3 0 0 0 Marline st 0 0 0 0 10 0 Eftwards c 4 0 1 nsxgssrjj 3?? A 1 0 0 0 DIarkar p 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 Gladding p 0 0 0 >h I 0 0 0 Guinn p 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 __ 34 4 11 3 Total 34 3 a' _____001 loo OOl- ....... 1 1 0 1 0 0 0 00—. ______jn. . OP—Houalon 3. LOB— Atlanta 7, Houalon 10. *“ “----— N Millar, F.AIou. 3B-Wyi (5). SB-Blafary. J 9 9 I ;;1 Gladding (L.1-3) ... 3-3 3 3 o l o SaIL-u'^aw.‘'''' HBP-by . Raad (Manka). T-3:34. A-30,331. P1RST OA^E. t CHICAGO Rolaa 3b ?»'ib 1 0 0 Phllllpt cf 3 0 0 . 5 13 0 MJonn If 3 0 10 3 0 10 Harrara pr 0 0 0 0 4 0 11 Staub rf 4 0 1 * 3 0 3 1 Fairly Ib 4 0 0 4 0 10 Colllni 3b 4 0 0 3 00 0 Sulbarind 3b 3 00 4 0 0 0 Brand c 3 0 0 4 0 0 0 Wina IS 3 0 0 ... 3 • 3 Total 3f 0 3 0 PkiiaMiphia .... loo ago ooo-3 Maniraal .........ooo ooo ooo~o "'•hW Ealmar (M.JonaD? TlatW.' ph,laoe«"““*mTtr.al _ . 4 0 10 Kataingar sa 3 0 0,0 Brock If 4 0 10 Popovich 3b 4 0 10 Pinson rf 3 13 1 BWIIIams rf 4 110 Torra lb 4 0 0 0 Santo 3b 4 0 0 0 ^hVnX & H 3 0 WSml1h'’lf 4 1 3 [biSS?' Gagilano 2b 3 0 0 0 Hickman rf 0 0 0 0 Jenkins p 3 0 0 0 31 1 I 1 Total 31 3 7 3 .ag. E—Maxvlll, Shannon. DP—Chicago 3. “^iviiilama. S?fe-W?Sminr'(7)*'’plnion *lo). -Young. H RERBBSO »aon (L.tO-5) ... 3 } 3 4 ’* ikint (W.ig-50) . . f 0 113 Total Gluatl, HoarnOr 7, Wlllla 7, Torrai I and McCarvan Handt and H U n d I a y. W— ■■—1, (1-4). L-Gluatl, (3-7). HRa-go. Young 4, Smith 5. - . 33 3 * 3. Total 33 1 »• : ;hIi!!:i . 54"' Olw 5.*TB-M?rrrtt“3B^!oavla', .M^SB-Slpln, W.Oav„ s-Foatar. ^-Vo"3-i Vl ? S H RERBBSq Brock If. it\l 4 0 0 0 Santo 3b 4 3 11 3 111 Banka lb 4 111 3 0 0 0 WSmflh If 3 0 3 01 ■ Huntj 2b 4 0 10 Hickman rf 3 0 0 0 iMavvIll as 3 0 0 0 Hundlay e ^ - Grant p 0 0 0 0 Young cf ToVi Gyapar r, 'rori glrlSr ^ ’iVoS Kiar-Clacoife?.: "Si rojj! ^ gat? inSK’p" Kib'ph" " 10 0 0 JMay'ph •* 100 0 4 0 10 4 0 10 -Cisco, Bl Laagao 000 Ml m- AM4l3tad jaiia 30 NIgM oamt oa Angolas ... 01(10) 142 100-1* 17 0 an DIago . 000 000 000- 0 5 3 Dryadala and Haller, Torborg (5|| Ar-lln, Sisk (3), Rosa (3), Baldachun (5). MeCdol (*) and Hrinlak. W-Drysdala, 4-3. L-Arlln, 0-1. HR-Loa Ang»— ....... American Yacht Upholds Name in Scandinavia Boccabalia, Brand (I). W-Farrall, HANKOE, Norway (AP)-The United States, represented by the yacht Nemesis of Annapoiis Yacht aub, Md., Sunday nh thh second race for the Houston ; . Scandkiavian Gold Cup of the (4r*Ray_*»j and* 5.5 meter class. Nemesis, with Charles Shu-may of Providence, RI., as helmsman and owner Victor F. Sheronas and Bob Cunningham' as crew, finished last of the five entered yachts Saturday but came on strongly Sunday ' in 1 hour, 42.1 seconds. The Swedish Sundelin brothers In Wasa IV was runner-up Sunday, as in the first race, trailing Nemesis by 28 seconds at the finish. Charlas, Cl_______ —.... C.Tdy^. hr—C.Tayior daniifiwn, Htbnar. S—Voola. IP H RERBBSO vealo (L4-*) ..... 3 3-3 7 7 7 4 1 DilCanton .......31-3 3 0 0 0 ' Hartanaitin .....2 o « • * laavar jIW,l3-3) * 300-13 15 11 T-J|!lA. A-37,455. ana man; rianar, rSJ^sNu! S*N FRANCISCO CINCINNATI , (3), Jaekaon (3), orangar (o),l . . ••tflbl •t.fL- loningtr (Of and Banch. Vf-Horbal, 3-1.1 HUM 3b . f ' ? A RUM 'f, 4 13 0 -Flahar, 3-2, HRs—San Franeiac, Mc-iMarihaH rf 5 0 1 0 Stowarf If 4 0 3 0 »vay 3 (25), Bondi (11). Cincinnati, Prai BOnda cf 3 2 10 Carroll p^ 0 0 0 0 SI. McCovay lb 4 2 13 Savaga pb l 11 o ----- Hart If 1111 Granger p 0 0 0 0 hlladtlphla ...... ............................................... .......... lontraaT .......... 400 111 100-0 14 31 Elhtrldga Fryman, Farrell (rt, Raffo (41, Jack- -m (7), Booiar (I) and Ryan; Sip----- Salt ........ 400 1 4 0 #0l 5 Chicata .......... 4 00 t33 1 i i .. E^ung. DP-St. Louie 1. LOB-SI. Louis 4, ^ Chlcegs 4. 3B—B.WIIIIems, Pepevleh, Sento. 3B—•.Wlltlama 3. HR— ■inks (13), Sheniion (4), Stnto (IS), Hundley 03). ‘F-**"-.-„ , „ „ Greni (L.4-1) 1-5 5 4 4 0 - C.Teyler ..........33-1 2 0 0 g Torrez .............0 3 3 3 ) Wlllla ...... 11-3) 3 3 1 Selma (W,0-3) * . T-3;2S. A—41,040. (»), WaslewskI (7), kl (7), McGinn (i) and Moya ph (I). W-Farrell, 3-3. L Fuenfea as 1, 4-10. HRUPhlladalplile, ■ Jo- [’•'■ry P iirigga (3). Montroai, Pli'"'P»|y,ffT g «),*Taylor''(0?ViS'mK 7-5. L-Oontry, 74. HRs feimJ .... 3 0 0 0 Tolancf «rldge 3b 5 0 II Parts 3b 5 2 5 0 3 3 Ruiz 3b ! 1 . ., 4 0 10 LMoy Ib 5 0 3 1' 1 0 0 0 Bonen c 4 0 10 0 0 0 0 Haims 3b 5 0 0 1 «.*o“jav*ph?n? 0 0 0 0 Woodwrd at 10 0 0 I Culvar p 3 0 0 0 i AJahnton If 3 11 t ! Total ioTlOt Total 43 7 15 7 One out when winning run tr«raii San PrtMlece .4 1 * 4 4 4 3 CkMlIIMtl ...1 4 4 1 44 1 1 E—Stewtrt. DP—Cincinnati z. uob-Isan Prancltco I, Clnelmtetl 14. 3B— . , Liilay 3, Perez, A.Jennsen. hr-i Royal Regatta Host U.S. Crews HENLEY-ON-Thnmei, .and (AP)—Three American crews—Harvard, University of , -I iPennsylvania and the Massa^ £x-Ghomp oharp chusetts institute of Technology ■ -together with British squads ^XICO CITY (AP) - Sugar ;i8ia and Leander are seeded top Ramos, former world feather- ogt of 25 entries in Royal Henley weight champion, returned from Regatta’s Thames Challenge Tenement Sunday to knock out cup for eights^ (LV4.5) ■; t LEASE Tcl. 651-7000 Oprn Mon., Thur. S..9 rupM., WeH.,Fri.8.« AVAILABLE JULY 1st Rady Gwizaiez, Philippine light-weight champion, in 1:45 o( die scicond round of a scheduled 10-round preliminary bout M the wnrtd welterweight diampioii-ship card. The unprecedented move toj introduce selected seeding by: the regatta' committee followed' Intense criticism In previous! years when strong crewa often] met in the early rounda. | 5 V4 % sAviiws comHum INSUIANCE COlteOtATIjON If the shirt you're presently wearing doesn't fit as if it were tailor made, drop it—and try on something that does, the body^shirt: torso-trimming, form-flattering and completely under control in a permaijjently-pressed, French cuff version with long pointed collar. I In several deep-tone shades at $10. OUR PONTIAC-.MAIL STORE IS OPEN TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY TO 5.30; MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY TO 9 P.M., TELEGRAPH AND ELIZABETH LAKE ROADS THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE 80, 1969 Junior Golfers Ready for Spring Lake Meef *' Thfi second annual Junior Invitational Golf Tournament gets underway tomorrow at Spring Lake Golf Club in 'Clarkaton. » ★ * ★ ^ There are four divisions of juniors in the t o u r n a m e n.t spanning ages from 11 and under fo 17, Individual trophies will be awarded to the top .finishers in each age group. * ★ ♦ Dan ' Boisture, last year’s winner in the 14-15 age group, will be back to defend his title in that bracket, competing against, among others, Scott Rabakon winner in the 12*13 year old division last year. Leading Team Convinces Foe Conn's Records 19-2 Slowpitch Decision Conn’s (1241) needed only five Innings to convince Timberlanes Lounge (3-11) that they were the best in the league with a 19-2 lashing in Po|^iac Slowpitch Softball league Sunday. ★ ★ ★ Johnson & Anderson heat Congregation 8-5 in a come from behind game as Congregation scored five runs in the first inning. In a second game Congregation held on to win 19-6 over Designers Cabinet in B action. Local 596 emerged with a 9-3 victory over Miracle Lounge as Joe Carter hit a two-run homer. ★ w w Larry Peet led Conn’s with a 2 of 3 night and scored 4 runs. Cy Green and Felix Brooks dach had 3 of 4 in aiding their teammate. Chuck Mason collected four hits for togrega-tion in winning one of two games. British Hold Celebration LONDON (AP) - British polo players celebrated 100 years of the game in this country Sunday with a victory over a visiting American team. Prince Philip, husband of Queen Elizabeth II, led a side from Windsor Park against a frio from San Antonio, Tex., for a five-chukker match at Hur-lingham Club, founded in 1869. w ★ ★ The British team beat the Texas “Plainsmen” of Charles Armstrong, Peter Orthwein and John Armstrong, 9-8. After winning (he ll and under competitimi last jnear, Steve Stoppert is back to bom-pete in the 12-13 grouping. ★ ★ ★ In the girls competition. Sand! Baker will ddend her Utle in the 16-17 division, as wUl Cindy Baker in play among 14-15 year olds. OIRLS i*-ir _^1il T*»-1:»-L»ur« Cook, N»ncy-Ror-niw. OmlM W«tt. Carol Mast. 2 p.m.-Sandl B0k«r, Kay Watt,.Ml-chtlla Qualtlafa. 01RU 14.11 -2:W p.m.—Anna Parr, Valprla Patrick, Cindy Booktr, Cindy Bakar. 2:13 p.m.—Linda Bakar, Gala Slappart, DaliMa Condan. 2:22 p.m.-ShIrlay Pairbrolhar, Lynna Sarra. OIRLS n-11 2:N p.m.—Jody Paga, Paula Rom, Barbara Raid, DaMa Babyak. BOYS II B UNDRR lOlh Taa-l:5S-M1cbaal Marackl. Gary Holmar, Carl RoM, Cram Walla. 2 p.m.—Jim Quallman, Marly Bolatura, Bobjarab, william AAaltaon. 2;W p.m.-MIka Bakar, Mika Sloan, Ed Balulli, Jail Dackar. 2:13 p.m.—Doug Olingar, John Andar. OIRLS II B UNORR 2:22 p.m.-Tarl FIm. Mary Jang An-darion, MIchalla Sloan. BOVS 12.11 — FIral Too—a a.m.—Slavs Schmidt, Mika MItchall, Pat Tumalh, William Hsaly. j 0:0; a.m.-Bob Olckty, Jail Barlsll, John Stomman, John fuachlar. 0:13 a.m.-J. T. Glllalta, Ray Andarmn, Scolt Folllt, Tim ThomMnn. 0:22 a.m.-Oon Short, Slava Sloppsrt, Stuart Arnold, Dala Kllna. Oils a.m.—Chrla Skallingar, Tom MaM, Dava Datrympla, OavM Llawllyn. 0:17 a.m.-Allan Balyaa, William Walak, Charlaa Anhui. Tanth Taa—0 a.m.—Bob ... .... ..... Blanco, Kavin FIth, Bryan KIrchnar, John Mlat. 0:13 a.m.-Klm Jamaaon, Cliff Flm> Paul Stilagyl, Jamas Blacksaall. 0:22 a.m,-Joa Balulla, Dan MIklos, Kan Johnson, John BabyA/ 0:M a.m.—Slava Walta, Dan McGaa, Bill Hamilton; Bo^ar Jr. lit Taa-12:30 p.m.—Bill Braftord, Scolt Horttman, Bill Mtar, Jail Walchal. 12:17 p.m.—Mark DaMIno, Tom Ottar 12:12 p.m'.—Ar1hu^'*tStllai,"' '*klrk Hart, lalt Ball. Marly Lavarsit. I:M p.m.-Vanca Kllna, Bob Mlnlo, Dsn Marl l:0S p.m.- _______ ________ _______ Szllagyl, Aaron AalbrugiM, John Jarab. 1:11 p.m.-Tom Patarton, Paul Fagan, Rich Slubbs, Rum Raad. 1:22 pan.—Dava WIkal, John, Corcoran, Bob MsM, Mark Shaprow. 1:10 p.m.—John Shook, Doc O'Nall, Blaks Watt. Ed Burgar. 1:17 p.m.—Mika Pomania, Dan Boll-tura, Slava Baban Jr. loth Taa-I2:10 p.m.-John Kslo, Ctrl Slalalf, Dick Dancay, Mark Alford. 12:17 p.m.-Mark Johnson, Jaff man, Larry Pagsr, Harry Bachman. 12:43 p.m.-Lynn Wmdruff, Bob B “ ‘ ino, Tim Whila. -Toi ■■ I2:S2 p.m.-.............. Dan Janion, John Foalar. Dn^B'Ss:^r*.;;i&.* 1:01 p.m,—Gary Domagalikl, ba, Dava Thomas, MItchall Ronay. ^ll|W^p.m/-AAark„ltrolla,.^MIka 1:11 p.m,-Banford Eslroff, Jal nalla. Bob Chapman, Bd Shaffran. 1:,0 p.m.-Bob^Fl.ld..,,Scon R Russ Carpantar, Slava Barnatt, irrigan, W 7:43 a.m.—bannit Walt, Dan Hava Burrows, Gary Slocum. 7:32 a.m.-^lka Pagano, Gary Bakar. 1:00 a.m.—Kurt Lusslar, Gary Siawcyk, John Malacos, Phil Klabba (Earl). 1:01 a.m.—Charlas Patrick, Ron Gard-nsr, Ron Ourr, CaMy Wllkans. 1:13 a.m.—Lan Kriyianlak, Jim Phillips, Kavin Kramar, Kan Wallars. S:22 a.m.—Rick leabarg, Marty Brown, David Bakar, Dick Ekay. 1:10 a.m.—Dannls Arnold, Russ Craig, Chinas Bart. 1:37 a.m.—William AAirx, Bruca Vor-Brokar, Dannls Dobba, Ran Erbach. 0:43 a.m.--Jack Dabbs, John Graan, Mark Ebright, Rick Vsrshurs. Tanth Taa----- lOlh Taa-7;1S a.m.-$cott Chanat, Dan Short, Edward Gniawik, Dick York. 7:37 a.m.—William Karrlgan, Dava Kasizlla. Jack Allan. 7:43 a.m.—Jim Jonas, Mdl-M Dinkal, Tom Hlllssy. 7:32 a.m.—Bill RKiami, Bruca Kaigsn, Ron Baxtar, Bob Brallmayar. I a.m.—Laigh Luur, Pals Holm, Scolt SI. Clair, William Mollanhausar. 0:01 a.m.-Tom Nadaau, Jaff HunlfJoa Dalak, Dannls McPIka. 0:13 a.m.—Carl Dalak, Mf ningham. Dan Taylor, Mika Ru . 1:22 a.m.—Gary Harllgan, Tom Faalh-arstona, Ron Trafaf - ■ - 1:30 a.: Randy Pli..... 0:37 s.m.-Paul man, Don Currlw, i.-Dlck killls. Brad itimar, Tom Slsgorawi, Tedmo Wins Top Drivers Stopped by Cor Troubles . France (AP) — Francois Cevert, 34-yearH>ld French driver, rode a Techno to victory Sunday in the Trophy Race for formula two cars. Hia time was 1 hour, 19 mines, 21.3 seconds, setting a record average of 136 miles an hour. ♦ * ★ Robin Widdows of Britain was second in a Brabham in the time of 1;19;21.4 and Piers Courage, another Briton in a Brabham, was third in 19:21.5. Twenty drivers took part in the race, run in 35 laps or a distance of 180 miles . Jackie Ickx of Belgium, the Le Mans victor, went to the front on the first lap in a close battle with Jackie Stewart of Britain, in a Matra-Ford, and Jo Siffert of Switzerland in a BMW. Milers' Duel Rzzies in Miami AAll Outing Clinic Slated for Gymnasts coaches from North Farniing-too School and Wayne State University will present a MILE WINNER - Villa-nova’s Marty Liquor! hits the tape in 3:59.5 to win the mile yesterday in the AAU track and field meet in Miami. Jim Ryun pulled out of the race on the second lap. MIAMI (AP)-World champion miler Jim Ryun dropped back into last place and tl^ dropped out of the mile race at the National AAU track and field meet Sunday. The heralded rematch between Ryun and Marty Liquori, who topped him last week with an NCAA record of 3:57.7, quickly turned into no match' at all as Liquori won the race in 3:59.5. (Mympic record holder Lee Evans outdistanced the rest of the field to take the 440-yard dash with another AAU record of 45.6 seconds. ★ w * John Carlos sliced two-tenths of a second off the 220-yard dash AAU record with a 20.2 second run. OTHER RECORDS Other AAU records toppled during the meet at Miami-Dade Junior College North Stadium Day's Shares First After 4-3 Victory A three-run rally in the bottom of the seventh enabled Day’s Sanitary to squeeze out a 4-3 win over Colonial Village yesterday, and the victory boosted the winners into a tie for first in the Waterford Township softball standings. In- a couple of other 4-3 games, Timberlanes tallied three times in the seventh to shade Milbur Industry, while C. Weedon Construction broke a late tie to down Lighthouse Lanes. In the finale, Trii-Bilt Redi-Mix handed Midget Bar a 3-1 setback. PITCHER DEIJVERS Pitcher Jim Herrington, now 7-1 for the season, delivered a basesJoaded double to bring Day’s from behind against Colonial Village. The win boosted Day’s into a deadlock with idle Spencer Floor for the ad. Herrington gained the win after coming cm in relief of Jim Thomas in the top of the seventh. ERROR DECISIVE An error on an infield popup enablied the winning run to Cokes Pondering Retirement After Battering Bout MEXICO CITY (AP)-Curtis Cokes of Dallas, battered and bloody after a game biit vain attempt to “spread that butter on my bread,” says he will wait for a month before making decision on his boxing future. The 32-year-old Texan was thoroughly outclassed Sunday night by world welterwdght champion Jose Angel Napoles and failed to answer the bell for the 11th round in a scheduled 15-round title bout for the title The Cuban-born Napoles had won the crown from Cokes last April in Los Angeles when Cokes failed to answer the bell for round 13. If You Are Going to Buy a Now Car, Why Not Buy One From the Chevrolet Dealer That Gives You . . * Savings * Service * Satisfaction THIS WEEKS SPECIAL Hew 1969 Chevroletimpala 2-Doof Coupe With Factory Installed Air Conditioning Medal No. 14437 equipment Includeai 350 V8 ingine, Factory . AirConditiening, Radio, Automatic TrantmisBien, Whitewall tires, Seat Belts, Padded Dash, Side View Mirror, Head Rests, Shoulder Harness, Electric Wiper Washers, Back-up Lights, Easy Eye Olass, ' Now Only 33,277 8tl9 AM. to 8 F.M« Ixeept Holiday WsokoRds. Pius Tex end Trent. MATTHFWS HAlKiRiAvis 631 Oakland at Cass FE 5-4161 scoot home In Timberlanes >dc-tory. ★ > w Bob Moore’s triple an sacrifice fly by winning pitcher Amos Rankin broke a 3-3 tie in the sixth and spelled victory for C. WeedcMi. Ed Rondo rapped out three hits and scored twice in pacing Tru-Bilt past Midget Bar. were tbe discus, the javelin and the two-noUe wsdk events. Ron Laird sheared his own AAU record in the two-mile walk. Laird, of the New York Athletic Oub, hit the tape with a time of 13:31.6. * »8* Pontige Scrap Co. 332-0200 BUY! SELL! TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! COODWrCAR SERVICE ^STORES Here are 4 safety spadab to get your car in shape for the big weekend STANDARD CARS «C44* REG. fW.60 w Dehixe HEAVY CARS |p44* HNITlIVHAimVE DOt REfl. ei2J0 » Inspect Gomplsts front and, Includ- front nnd. corract canibar, caster Ing springs, shock nbsorbsrs, bill nnd ton-In (ehisf enusss of fast tin ‘joints, idler arms, tin rod snda nnd wear). Drivs in or eall for bb np-atsarlng whaal atBsmbly, rsallgn pointmBot •Meat fwr any U.S, ButB plus paitB. AM II fcr tonlen ban. Ar You got the sune famous lond-gtipping type tmd dexign that oomes on our new ear “Pownr Cushiat” pdyeitdr cord tin ArWldtawalls or blackwalls—same price :ALufer siiee$64.«* USED «A44 TIRES H-- dr Onssed np, clsannd np-thny look gnat dr.Planty of tmad dtpdi rBnaining dr Idaal for bbo ob that Baooad ear Our finuMi! Raiulir S23.9S SU. tfAEf 3 DAYS ONLY RT^ DOUBU iMiU $J|i|J| BjnrmiY 4 - save! USE OUR EASY PAY PLANS Baanv^MR 1370 WIDE TRACK DRIVE PONTIAC, MICH. Phone: 335-6167 525 ELIZABETH LK. RD. WATERFORD, MICH. Phone: 338*0378 THE PONTIAC PRESS, HOOT AY, JUNE 80. 1969 STEP 10 SEEKING ftDVICE WT ^PERFECT IMI>Ef^CTIONr IF YOU HRVE DCVEkOFEO n FAULT IN VOUR SWING UNO cRirr OERNE OR CORREa IT, THEN *y RU. HMUNS SEEK PROFESSIONIIL ADVICE. REMEMBat., HE CAN HELP ' YOU OVERCOME THE BASIC PROBUM THAT ALL GOLFERS FACE WHEN WORKING ON THEIR GAMES — THE INABILITY TO SEE THEMSELVES HITTING THE BALL (AND THUS TO FAH. At PAOLO. HE CAN SAVE -^SPOTTING* THE 1 2ZB Coast Jinior Wins NCAA Houston Takes Team Trophy in Tourney Record Broken at Rqad Track Rochester, Clawson Drivers Rule Waterford Races COLORADO SPRINGS. Colo. (AP) - Cool, steady golf paid Saturday for bh Clark, as.tbe Junior from Cali< fomia State at Los Angeles won the 72nd NCAA Golf Cfaamploii-ship. Before the tournament, Oark had attracted little notice, with most attention focused on golf-from universities with strong reputations as golf pow- Chuck dartlebaugh of ftochester drove his McLaren I^k III Ford to three victories at Waterford Hills Sports Car Club’s Sports Car Club of Tiger Averages 'TaDitiDU^SSTTiiSSie ..... CiMh-- .-- 37 *111 M J r....>; net Clark's score was 296 for the 72 holes, 18 over Broadmoor’s tough par. But the 2^yea^old California stuck to Us guns as his closest rivals faltered in the finishing holes. JImmya Olri amar > Baran Cal ... 740 3 M 4 .. 51 7 13 i 44 4 II 1 . 77f 74 57 4 . 115 10 30 0 ‘11 70 55 10 “Mf! * 4 .243 37 .730 3 America Midwest regional championships Saturday and Sunday. But, he had to relinquish the Ip honor to Ken Nielsen, Clawson, ;who re-claimed his track record after Bartlebauf^ had esUdilished a new standard. Nielsen, who sat out three years in retirement before returning to competition last mMith, watched the Rochester 22-ycar-Ud break the record by running a 1:15 lap — the equivalent of 68.26 miles per hour — then whizzed around the course in 1:13.8 — 0.25 miles ' — to reign once more. Two in Hall of Fame NEW ORLEANS (AP)-aark Shaughnessy and Abe Mickal, college football stars of years ago, have been inducted into Louisiana’a Sports Hall Fame. Nielsen won two victories in the twoHlay meettng. Don Clining, Flint, also won two trophies with victwles in G-production. Glen Bonner, Grand Rapids, finished second to Clining twice. Andy Fulton, Dearborn Heights, won two H-{nnductiaii events in his' Sprite and Don Cameron of Detroit finished second to Fulton each occasion. Larry Schanz, driving an MG-A from Livonia, won Sunday’s feature 12-lap race for F-pro-duction after finishing second to Bill Larson of Utica in the preliminary. Bill Mundus of Ann Arbor won the class D-Sports Racing event Begra Mark III. BiU Weir of Lansing, was Second. Chris Gahman, Royal Oak, drove his Lotus Super Seven to two wedeend victories in the IL production category and Vic Skirmants of Warren won . the 12-lap Eproduction feature. Warren Tope of Pontiac drove his Mustang to a double victory and Bob LaZebnlck of JacksOn won the B-Sedan title. M Beneker, St. Clair Shores, and Don Kitch, Flint, dominated the Formula Vee competition, each with two wins. Bartlebaugh was followed in the 12-lap race by Ron Justice, Warren, in his Porsche 606. Dave Rossman of Dearborn dondnatied the Sedan-C class with two enqihatic victories. ★ * e The 2S-lap feature race was Bartlebaugh’s from the first lap on with only Don Eichstaedt of Berkley challenging the Rochester driver. * * it The next Waterford Hilla Sports Car Racing event is the ^rts Car Club of America’s northeast and Saginaw regional meeting Saturday and Sunday, July 27 and 28. Sullivans Win HAARLEM, Netherlands (AP) - The Grand Rapids SulU-vans won the Haarlem Baseball Week for the third time Saturday after beating the Californian Stages 6-2. The Sullivans had won the tournament befwe in 1963 and 1968. Gehrig's Widow Victim of Heat NEW YORK (AP)-Eleanor Gehrig, widow of great New York Yankees first baseman Lou Gehrig, collapsed from heat prostration Saturday night at Shea Stadium after an old-timer’s game that preceded the New York Mets-Pittsburgh contest. Mrs. Gehrig was given oxygen and taken to Roosevelt Hospital as a precaution. AmnlnMig’s S MYS ONLY- ENDS SAYUNDAY “4 FOR SALE” Softball Slate NORTHSIDE PARK - JohlMM I ..ndtrson vt MGM ClMiwrt, 7 p.m. Grubbi, Kwimli vt, RglUbl Trantmittlon, 1:30 p.m. BEAUOETTE - Local No. 344 vi TImberlanei 7 p.m., Huron Gulf vi ‘=W'?fell=R“Y'’i"-L0«l HO. 453 *, Duckoyi, 4.30 NORTHSIDE -- Dotlgnort Coblna) Sbop .1, Local No. 144, 7 p.m.i Oxford AAat- '’^bIa'u'dette'—'f^ioe pithm vi. Bot A Kona, 7 p.m,t PonHoc Prati No. I vt. J. A. FrodmanVS:30 pjn. AARON PERRY Church VI. EHlat N ISIDE — Miracio Iracio Lounoo v Pontlae PolTca v uVoifW 13.20 5.00 4.00 IS Aiuwdow Hal 3.00 IS MiUuSb com. Trot, 1 Mlloi *’* To|mny Dorwood 12.00 4M . j|.40 -Wy 1 Mil. Blutwattr Duka Ravo Tom HiOWQMf otew ia!?h’.n&mte7's:?: Mlrehtll, J. Cottroll. 4MVb. Gains Third Place lA CORUNA, Spain (AP) ..._____________ Riqial Charlenri of Belgum de-feated Bayern of Munich, West , Germany, 1-0 £«• third place in uoy Knox the 24th Tforesa Herrera Socc«r||i=^--TYophy competition Saturday. NORTHSlOa —. Tuckor IbNily VO. Filthy Ftw, 4 a.m.i U't vt. Art 1, Ul, 10:30 P.m., toomon'i vt. BMwoIim^i, THURSDAY BEAUOETTE - Rtlocft _yt. Porr Druot, 9 a.m., Hornafi vt._Fimy Fw 10:30 O.m.i LJ't vt. TUckar Raalty, noon. Joyooa I hornolt vt. Gophort, * a.m. CASINO FIELD - Wllllomt Ratal. _ ^T»Ix3oi'-¥TS:d"“-1-*c^V Mug vt. aca; 1 17,40 '^^%'KNaf^ 4il0 PM. . . DRAYTON 4.00 DRAYTON -laMIt W^ld v I. 4.40 LPktltnd Btrbar Shop, 4:1* p.m., Shit- 3.40 pT? xyrrMif- iSisfrtufe U,p.m. m.... Wa..r4,-TMmjh,^SMwp,,M 7.40 4.401 cat! colt VI. Irwin Ritlly. OriS p. 4.40 v3.20 g.aWtnd_ Wholttm^ 1 1/14 MHt; it sec. Fact, 1__ 5S g iRAYTON PARK - C Siimir' BEAT THE HEAT^ CONVERT YOUR RASEMENT isn h soiMER REmaT A REC ROOM IN YOUR BASEMENT •ajMS COMPLETELY FINISHED Everything in Modernization Financing AimUablo m ROOMS • Aities • FAMILY ROOMS • ROOFINO IT " NaniBBr FmAtUu An* Ckmmh»r etCmmmmtA Iw r*mlm» Slmem i9Si tLIVeruon 1032 wsst Huron. .........- . pontiac ebndnitHonaii —1,01— tfgsaa? FITS MANY COMPAOTSy SUCH AS CORVAIRS, FALCONSy ETC. 4 FOR BLACKWALL 6.50x13 Plus LSI F.E.T. par Mre 4-PLY NYLON FITS MANY COMPAOTS, SUCHASOARTIy VALIANTSy ETC. '70 00 WHITEWALL 6.56x13 PlMBlJIFJ.T.parlli« 4-PLY NYLON FITS MOST MEDIUM SIZE CARSy SUCH AS FORDSy CHEVRCLETSy ETC. I FOR BLACKWALL 7.75x14 ft 7.75x15 nut tJM F.E.T. partira 4-PLY NYLON FITS MARY MEDIUM SIX CARSy SUCH AS DODOESy RLYMOUTHS, ETO. 4 FOR *75®® WHITEWALL 7.75x14 ft 7.75x15 nuaS4SF.I.T.parNra 4-PLY NYLON FITS MOST STANDARD SIZE OARSySUDHAtPOimAOty MEROURYSy ere. 4 for *70®® BUCKWALL 8.25x14 ft 8.25x15 Plus S4S P.f4T. par tira 4-PLY NYLON FITS MOST STANDARD SIX OASSy SUOH At FLYMOUTHS, oLosMOBiutyfre. FOR WHITEWALL 8.25x14 ft 8.25x15 nut MS par tiro 4-PLY NYLON 00 FITS MANY UNDER CARS. SUCH AS OHRYSLERS, DLDSMDRILESy ETC. 4 FOR BLACKWALL 8.55x14 ft 8.55x15 nHt2J1f.l.T.partlra 4-PLY NYLON FITS MANY URQER CARSy SUCHASBUIOKSy MERCURYSy ETC. 4 for *85®® WHITEWALL 8.55x14 ft 8.55x15 nutM1FJ.T.parHra 4-PLY NYLON 4520 High land 674.316T or STMISI THEJPONTIAC PRESgj MONDAY, JUXE 80, 1969 'f / AUTO CENTERS OUR BIGGEST TIRE SALE EVER % V DIUUUI IIAE AUTOMOTIVE MLC LIE Celebrating the opening of our Tire & Accessory Dept, in the Drayton Plains Store / w - w ^ /auto CENT! Saf« Prsmium tires of 4>ply nylon at savings Tire size Price F.I.T. Tire size 20.^i ?.ps -WtSf- -ts- JLtt. 2.8S, •86/918-1S 2.8S MAG. WHEELS GIVE CAR A NEW LOOK 34“ 10% OFF ON THESE SERVICE SPECIALS DON’T MISS THESE SOUND SAVINGS ON STEREO BRAKE OVERHAUL HERE'S WHAT WE DOi • Install now linings ♦ Turn all four ^rums • Install now fluid, blfod * • Chock whool eyllndors • Chock groasa soals ond adjust brakas . Chock mostor eyllndar . inspect all fluid IlnSs • Tost drive outomoblle STANDARD SHOCK ABSORBERS e installation ovallablo eSO.SoO mi& guorontoo %r AUTO CENT PRONT-END ALIGNMENT •Sot castor, camber ^ I i « ^sistr LEAR 8-TRACK AUTOMATIC STEREO IHSTAlUQUICIttY 88 t-T&WS&JKSff .“WCSK.-fifr.f*"- PORTABLE 8-TRACK STEREO USES BAHERIES FLAStUin lATTiSIIS 1 ;b- B—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. JUNE 80, 1969 Laird^Sfill Boss as Military Decision Role Grows WASHIMOTON (AP) militaty’s Infloenctt in i tratlon daelitoii-iniddng climbing in the wake of Secrb-tary of Defense Melvin R. Laird’s efforts to loosen the intensive Pentagon centralization imposed during the McNamara Itiei However, officials say, Laird has no intention of letting his authority siip or allowing the military to run unrestricted. ’’Laird is not a man to give up “He and Dave _________________ (Laird’s deputy secretary) have laid out firm guidelines." And, a top official said, “Anybody who gets the idea that Packard cial meanf the yean before service diiefs are noted on post- power,” said an associate whop®'*’* 8®^ back to the old ’wild has worked closely Witt the Nix-y*«s‘’ ^ rivalries Ml administration’s defense “ ®*‘'^*'®'*8-chief. I By “wild west" days this offl- Robert S. McNamara became defense, secretary in 161 __ the services fou^t unlnhiUted-ly over budget shares,'weapons systems, and roles and missions. Withip the Laird guidelines, the military and civilian heads of the armed services and the various assistant secretaries of defense are given cohsiiforable responsibilities for developing programs and dealing with problems. tion papers forwarded to the Security (foundl-, souices said. ■'i 'h it 1 A significant indicator of the military resurgence in the Pentagon is the apparent downgrading of the Systems Analysia Office, vdiich during the McNamara years had the power of life and death over key weapons and other programs. Who says G&w SEVEN STAR has ...Scotch Lightness ...Canadian Quality Associates noted Laird has I permitted the Air Force to han-I die the dispute over the dA au-1 per transport and the Army to I resolve the controversy over I disposal of surplus war gas. I CALLED SHOTS In the McNamara era, the de-I fense secretary and his top I aides called the detailed shots. According to Laird’s assocl-I ates, the defense secretary be-I lieves that if he has a good man I in a Job, that official should han-I die his Job without close super-I vision from the-top. Ihen there were nuu^ retorts of the academically ,000 BTU Sixo 8,000 BTU Six FANS! FANS! ni Emerson 10,000 BTU AIRCONMTIONER Giant- cooling capacity. trals. 115-volt plug in rotor FRIDGEHE FAMILY-SIZE PUSHBUnON DEFROST REFRIGERATOR • Giide-out shelves • Deluxe walnut grain trim • True zero degree freezer Price Includes, Delivery, Service and Guarantee. *139 WNIRLPOOL2-SPEEO 2-CYCLE WASHER TAPPAN30“EUCTRIC SELF CLEAN RANGE HOTPOINT FRONT LOAD CONV. DISHWASHER ielM AAipIo Tom PsNoMo imw. eon Hrao it week homo trial on any Color TV ot Frotters. BCA14«PBRS0HAI PORT. COLOR TV JLSOO volt ehoMli^ Ml UMf THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, JUNE ! 'Ij taTi^ HMT9 Of COHVlHIfHT JUNE HOME APPLIANCE SALE Bedroom Air Conditioner 5,000 BTU MODEL COMPACT, LIQHIWEIOHT-WEIQHS11 LBS. PARHm N£AR Ail STOR£$, Easily carried irom room to rdom. Durable chassis, resisU rust. Soothes , hot weather tempers, removes dost and pollen and lets you sleep. m Sears SEMS. XOUyCK AN9 CO. Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 SIMMS SPORTS SPECIALS FOR «h of JULY! WIIUI442* SPIN-CAST REEL and knob drag coniral, Compl.ta 299 IN PLASTIC CARRY/STORABE CASE BADMINTON ODTFIT F0R4fUVERS Ourtll contliH ofi 4 rackoti, 2 bird., m.ta( poln, and nat. All In handy can a. thowm. loti of outdoor fun for tho family, limit I. 399 M North Sacinaw-Ponliao*^ -Parte Fraa in Dawnlawn Lot SIMMSiW Exciting Linde star gems set in handsome designs for men and woman. Exquisite Jewels in varying colors, priced for tremendous valued fitting setting f 2S N. Sagiiiaw Stroot Talophana SI2-M01 Opan Man., Thurs., Fri. to 9 P.M. Enggass Instant Cradit SPORTS OIPT.-Slnint 2nd Floor c^aCandU&i. Caxfi&h OANacTa - Ruaa - mnolkumb • oRAPERiEa ESTABUSHED1931 Practical Glamour for the UlTnurU KITCHEN Juat Arrived, Beautiful New . KITCHEN CARPET Select from a wide choice of attractive colors. tsr )I((AM)U:SS Coriier of Perry and Pike Streeta IN. Perry St. FE 4-2531 HIGH WILL FMHLY TEITS xippared door, sown>ln floor, stool sfolcos, yollow top, groon sidowollt, wotor repollont. SLEEPS FIVE, 1S'xl2» SALE PRICE lOxSALAMO - 2' largo Scroon win- oagga. dows. 10'x6' Attached awning. Outeido alum. Framo. IT XT HACIENDA 4-Room CASA-GRANDE Umbrolh Tont DININe CANOPY “'■SPRIM Ad|ustablo J|||a Confer Polo'P I Stool Stakes SALE PRICE ... $17.98 PUP TENT 5x7^5,98 DELUXE PUP TENT^ ^t2a! T*x1’UMB.TENT ■WHh Awalaa and Canter Pole. Child tiio, side lipper, vinyl bottoih, quilted insulation. Rag. $8.98 •4M SURPLUS 19 N. Saginaw—In Downtown Pontiac Shea Mon. a Thurs. qil liM, Wad., 'til I P.M., Pri. til I. CONN’S before wwoo-w FOURTH Choo»0 from Our Smart Note KNIT 1/ 1/ SHIRTS /31I/2MI PermaPreu IPBBOR BELL SLACKS 5 Sport A Shirts # FORrfl $5.00 Value . BP PERMA PRES& Mi Mi LIGHT WEIGI^ SC JACKETS *.im,.. ^3 PLENTY OF PARKING IN FRONT OF OUR STORE These Specials at WKC for 4th of July Travels G CONN’S 73 N. SAGINAV7 DOWNTOWN KRESGE’S ONLY B—12 THE PONTIAe PRESg. MONDAY. JUNE 80, 1969 j Old-Timers Voice Carries Day at HollerinT I fimtitrv»c mDMVD vr #.i>ku. •„ , * AVAILABLE JULY Isi SPIVEY’S CORNER. N.C. ;(AP) — There’s a lot more to 'hollerin’ than just making noise. : First off, you got to have a little rhythm and then you need a special style that will set your hoUerin’ apart from another fellow’s h(dlerin’ and it’a got to be clear and distinct and cariy for quite a distance. ★ * ★ Real hollerin’ actually belongs to an age now buried by the telephone lines and television Jetliner Limps 600 Miles; 260 Aboard SHANNON, Ireland (AP) -Nervous passengers cheered and applauded when a chartered Canadian DC8 jetliner landed at Shannon airport day night with two holes in its fuselage and a blown-off engine cover. The jetliner with 2R0 persons aboard was on its way from London and Shannon to Toronto when the top of a starboard en gine burst, tearing two holes in i^e plane and reducing pressure if) the cabin, airline officials said. ★ * * Fearing that the reduced pressure might cause an explosion. ■ Capt. Neil Carey, the pilot, of Vancouver, B.C., dropped down from 35,000 feet and sent out a distress call. The plane was 600 miles from land. Two Royal Air Force planes sped to escort the jetliner back to Shannon. American crews in Iceland and the Azores were alerted, and a Royal Navy destroyer stood by. Fifty minutes later the stricken plane jettisoned its fuel and came in for a landing at Shannon. PERFECT LANDING "I can see her coming in—on fire," the air traffic controller at Shannon said. “She’s down safely, a perfect, three-point landing.’’ The passengers, all Canadians or Britons who had emigrated, were memfaws of the Toronto Natural Hygiene Society and their families. They debarked unhurt with the crew of 11 and spent the night at Shannon. ★ ★ * One pessenger, Daniel Boyd, 74, a Canadian said, “There was a heck of a bang and some pieces of metal broke through the door. We were all worrit and frightened until the Captain spoke to us, “He told us very cahnly that the cover on No. 3 engine had blown off and that we were turning back to Shannon and going to land on three-engines. •JUST ROU-nNE’ “He made it seem as if it were an everyday happening” Another passenger, John Buss, 27, a Briton, said, “There was one hell of a bang and the plane shuddered. It lasted only a second, and we knew something had hit us. “I felt the sweat running down my brow and felt very apprehensive. We strapped ourselves in and waited. The wait was unbearable. There was rousing cheer and a lot of applause when we landed” cables and automobiles and newspapers. It once was the main mode of communications for the predominantly rural population of the South. * * * Last. Saturday night out at Spivey’s Corner, a crossroads community where two highways intersect and cars seldom slow down to less than 60 miles an hour, some 3,000 persons gathered lor the first National HoL lerin’ Contest. The Idea for the contest was hatched by John Thomas, Dunn radio company official, and Ermon Godwin. Jr., a Dunn banker. ★ ★ w They passed the word around for any folks who could still holler to diow up Saturday at the Midway High School football field, about one good holler from Spivey’s Comer. ★ ' w A bunch of teen-agers entered, but all they could do was just plain yell and screech and scream. Then the oldtimers took the platform—which was the bed of a big red truck—and let loose with some downrl^t bonafide east North Carolina country hollerin’. When it was ail over, Dewey Jackson, a 70-year-old dairy farmer from down the road a piece at Roseboro, N.C., was the national champion. Jackson’s hollerin’ was done to the tun^ of “What a Friend We Have in Jesus,” and started off like the yodel of a JSwiss Al-piner and ended up like the lonesome baying of a coyote on a moonlit night. Jackson says he got his start at hollerin’ "just about 70 years ago when my Mammy slapped me on the bottom the day I was bora. And my Daddy did a lot of hollerin’ and I started hollerin’ right along with him.” A couple of Newton Grove, N.C., residents tied fa* second {dace—73-year-
year-old housewife flowed the ttaoi#ts. Four kids, ages 2 to 14, and the 14>yegr-old is beginning to catch on to what iife is like. A husband who is a salesman, knocking himsdf out, working iqito the pigbt because he is seared of his job, and at 43 it n^d be bad to have no Job. ,^sband and wife don’t com-ifpiicate. Wife becomes nag-Husband just wants to be alone. Wife and mother lid^ertain about being in touch wjto each of the chHdrai ^at, in substance, is predicament of the novel’s hdroinO. i Ube novel has a remarkable lilkight into the workings of the feminine mind. Perhaps for that r^n its chief appeal will be to womep readers. But for any rfikder it Is an unusual adventure into the emotions of a human being. *rHB BIG UTTLE MAN FROM BROOKLYN, By Clair McKelway. Houghton, Mifflin. |i»5. ' Here are five true Hie reports kept notebooks about hlk profession and his personal thoughts. All very odd and entertaining, and told very deftly. _ ; MillM A Pedals to Work, 22 Miles Daily ATLANTA, Ga (AP)- James R. Allen of AUanta niakes a 22-mile round trip from home to wk every day— on a bicycle. Tha 35-year:«ld Allen, employed at the Atlanta Army De-says the one-way trip usual-, ikes about aii hour and a half although it may run a little longer if a strong wind is blowing. Ex-Lensman Free Methodist Bishop SPRING ARPOR (JR - W. Dale Cryderman, who once covered seven murders in a week as a photographer for the old Detroit Times, has been named a bishop of the $3,000-member Free Methodist Church, The Rev. Mr. Crydennan Vfas elected one of the church's four last week In a general conference meeting at Winona Lake, Ind. He renlaces Bishop Walter Kendall, 64, who retired. * ★ A Bishop Crydennan will travel widely in the church’s central region vriiich included the states of Michigan, (Biio, Kentucky, bidlana, Georgia, North and South Carolina, Louisiana and Ftorida, along with the Dominican Republic, Haiti j Brazil and Paraguay. ■One of my personal goals U] greater involvement of the Free Methodists,’’ said ^^Cryderman. The Free Methodist group was organized in I960 in Pekin, N.Y.r as a conservative reaction to'what was seen a' liberalizing influence in main Methodist Church. NOTICE CITY OF PONTIAC WEED ORDINANCE NO. 448 Ail el«y of PontUe property ownon ara horaby notified tint their Fyoporty shall bie mowed by the END Of JUNE and remain to during the growing season. Property not so maintained when inspected shall be mowed and all charges billed to the property owner. a R. MATTIWS, SUPT. OPERATIONS DIVISION DEPT. OF PUBLIC WORKS & SERVICE Clodk Rdpair • ^ntlgiii* Cioch SpmeiuUtU 644.7877 /VtOIVTOO/lAERY WARD WARDS RIVERSIDE^ OILS NOW AT ONE LOW PRICE! histories which run up caslonally in the annals of crime and rascality, a theme that McKelway developed In one of his earlier books. The title stwy. and the most Interesting one, is the chronicle of' Stanley aiffwd Weyman, who made a career of being -“dedicated Impostor.’’ Quipped with a variety of costumes — from striped trousers and morning coat to fancy uidforms and a doctor’s gown, he impersonated various important individucals in the fields of medicine, law, aviation and the military. Other case Mstories are about a o^bnlnal who duped a young woman into performing a nearly lethal act; about an old million dollars in cash., securiUes and jewelry stashed aii|ay in her clothing, an old reeluse who had nearly a shoe box and other places; aifCtht a man who thought he had strangled his mistress but ha*i’t, and about a burglar who 23 Americans Killed in Vief WASHINGTON (B - Twenty three servicemen killed In action in the Vietnam war have been named by the Defense De-partmoit. The Ust includes three men from the Midwest. KiUed in action: MINNESOTA -"spU. 4 Thomn J. *»n'SM6 ONnP 1. H. cm. Changed from missing to dedd Died not as a result of hostile action: OHIO - Pie. Cuban Report Cites SDS Factory Drive MIAMI (AP) - Tens of thousands of ihinierican students will flock to U.S. factories this summer to organize confrontations with police, an official the Students for a Democratic Society told a Cuban interviewer Friday. . ' The official was identified as Jess Johns, national secretary for SDS. Accwding to the Miami-monitored iNtoadcist. Johns said that SDS’s objectives were the uA-condiUofial withdrawal of poUea from Negro communities and U S. univeraiUes.” ADDmVEfltEE OIL 5 ™ 99* Rne.quality natural angina lubrieant for any angina raqulring a lighf^duty, M. L oil. SAE 20.20Wy. 30.40. /all-season OIL 3 “99* Givef free oil flow through all tngina temparaturas and conditioni. Multi-grada SAE IOW-30. Sava! HEAVY-DUTY OIL 4;^ 99* Top-quality, singlo-vigposity, ditarganMypa oil for Z' cart, trueib tnadtorsl SAE 20-20W, 30,40, SUPREME-OUR BEST 2,5s99* Wardt finest oil, davalopad spaeially for today's high-parformanca anginas. SAE grade IOW-30. 42«mntli S.OJL botlwry Surpasses or . equals erlglnel equipment on most of tedey’s ears. Give* yen dependeUe stsrtinq power for years fe cornel Buy now end save! 12V IXCHANGI 16®* INSTALLATION AVAILAILI AUTO AIR CONDITIONER Buy new for cool riding all summarl This tarrifie model cools your wholo ear; ro-mpves polloh, dust, humidity, tool *199 Buy fine Town & Country shocks for soft driving OIVE YOU MORE DRIVING CONTROL 5 44 Spodolly dosignod shocb to givo you a more controll^ ride, fight sway and tiro woarl You can depend on theso tuptrior shocb for extra safety In sharp turns and amarganey stops. Raally long-waaring! Ol’l N FflKi FHlim 10:00 \.M, lo 9:00 F.M. \ I i HI)\\ '0.01 \.M. i o 9 r.M. MIX'! 12 NOUN 1(1 I’.M. e 'sSif ■.« THE POSTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JtTNE «0, IMS BERLIN (AP) — A goldenal covering of a huge sphere lo- cross regularly hangs high in the sky above East Berlin. Since the regime of Walter Ul-bricht is rarely knotni to invoke the symbol of Chriktlanlty, the cross’ appearance has become a source of quiet satisfaction and ironic amusement on both sides of the Communist wall dividing the city. Embarrassqient to .the Com* munists is made worse because the cross—formed by reflectibn of the sun—appears on their most prestigious building project: a 1,170-foot televMoa tower that is second in height in Europe only to the 1,761-foot tower in Moscow. The cross can be seen shining on any day the sun is out. It is most visible when there is a cloudy backdrop to the sun. Also ironically, it is the western sun that brings it out to best advantage. TOWER SPHERE The cross is simply a reflection of the sun off the outer met- cated on the tower at about the 800-foot levd, which will house a revolving restaurant. ★ ♦ ;i The manifestation can be seen best from .West Berlin because the afternoon ’ _ " the west strikes the tower Just right. church in the city, the Mareen-Urche, which is directly adjacent. e * ★ But as the tower sphere was completed and the golden cross began shimmering in the sun, weary Berliners began referring to it as “the Pope’s Hie tower is to be opoied hi Octdier in conjunction with the aoth anniversary of the East Germap regime. Told about this an elderly man replied, “I hope that on that day the sun E. Berlin Red-Faced as Cross Shines on Building ..u.itohlTCH tching of minor gkln MUIIono ind rothoi. prieWg' itching of gr-* —' bli... ,.----- grooty, non-otalnti tun FiaURE OR FITNESS MULTSIS... - PROGRAMS FOR • □ SPOT REMOVINQ □ ROOT BUILD UP □ FIQURE REPROPOUnONlNO □ PHYSICAL FITNESS □ PHYSICAL RECUPERATIVE PROORAMS □ Whit* Collar OIrit’ SPECIAL □ Homomakorf < rinu 1 HlllW 10:00 V.M. lO 9:00 f'.M, SAl [ \U)\\ 0:.iO A.m. K) 9 I’M, I MIW 12 NOON l (» I’.M. e nM2- I ^IWEARATHON' CARPET TILES JMmHstrong Dealer Fer ArmstrtfhVi Leneaiter Carpet Lina CERAMIC TILE QEHUINE VERMONT SUTE ALL FIRST QUALITY * Fre-FIniahad Wood Panoling 4x8 Sheet..............$3.98 4x7 Sheet....... $349 ALL FORMICA VANITIES mnandUp 3482 HI6HLAND ROAD ^ FOEIIAC 682-6040 ASK US ABOUT KITCHEN CARPET WE GARRY A LARGE SELEaiON OF Mi CARPETS FOR ALL YOUR NEEDS OeiN MON. ami HU. TIL t PJW. PMRR aSTIMAm ANO llWMEDIATi INSTALLATION CARPlT TILia » Thar* all lhara la to It K mloht taka you a ooupla o( houra imU aataiW I morning... onyour wHa anoltamoon naxt waak whila tha kida an In aehoel. No mattar who Intlalla It you’n oattlng tha quality carpal mada with «w aama Dutabond™ praeaaa aa our kideor/eutdoor carpal... ao you know It wW ba dunbta and a«v to can tar. An ayaraga IV XIV RMMi mISM float *“ *•“*•• 49® each U«x12« 0£7TEfl Hf/HAY... yoi/r wffe fflfghf fxMf you (0/f. WiANATHON CARPET TILE by.(^ITk8trong B&C TILE leyaw.HUMON esi*i07s THE PONTIAC PBESS. MONDAY, JUNE 80. 1969 B-*15 E Junior Editors Quii < BELtBOnOMS old-ti^e Current Status of Major Legislation in Congress WASHINGTON (UPI) Status of major Illation: TAXES - tloiiBo vUl Monday on a bill to surcUrgo 4or ISj] per cent investment tax credit for businessmen and S.4 miUian low-income from the tax rolls. Sawatr Armed QUESTION: Where did the Idas of bell‘-bottom trousers come from? ★ ★ ★ ANSWER: Fashion enjoys nothing so much as to turn things anxmd. If you once wore hats, now you display your hair; it aUrts were long, now they are short n slacks and trousers were once tii^t aU tfaa way down, now they suddody flare out at the bottom, shaped like a bell. But the<'ariginal bell-bottom trousers, as shown by AN INSUSANCICOSSOSAWON spray went cascading over the sUppory decks muek el the time. A man had a Job to keep his balance. In cold weather, he would wear lealhtf sea beets, bet in warmer conditions he liked to roll his trousers so the hottoms wouldn’t get wet, and go about his Job in his bare feet. Trousers very wide at the bottom were quick and easy to roll up to the knee. It is easier to roll up loose trousers than tight oMs. When oo shore, the sailor let down his bell-bottom trousers and was very proud cf them, for they jMroclaimed him a deep-water sailing man. (You can win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your (piestion, maUed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prhis.) Name Doesn't Fare Well When F^ul Weather Hits LONDON (AP) - Whenever it rains, this man shudders. The idione rings and rings again. All the callers have the same request, and it’s none of his busi- “Wet days are bad days,” he said. “I explain 1 can’t help and about 40 per leent are sorry th^’vw tr^Med me. The rest Just don’t seem to understand. They get abusive.” He said he complained to the post office, which runs the British telephone service. They suggested he change his name. “I diMi’t see wly I should,” he said. “My family goes back 800 years, long before these things were invented.” name: Taxis, l>Yanz A., listed on Page 7,638 ci the outer London (diono bode smack in the middle of the cab fleet num<-bers. LOWREY ORC3r LOWREY'S SATELLITE BREAKS PRICE BARRIER to MirONE (but anyone) CM PLR NWwhw bapatlM vetow M dtotodWo hrlL ---1- A aaMlal* 3 havfaoofd Oiwin — ol dw Gpd^nirWhjMi^^ Come in or phww far a ftoe hMMit today. Just $4 o yM—k LOWREY BLUE TAG SALE SAVE $50 TO $306 HOW 1710 S. TELEGRAPH . V4 Mil* South of Orchord Lofco Avo. Lots of Ftoo Parking FE4-0566 DaH, TB 5:10 — Mow:. 0 M. TW * the shape of things to come ...has come with Austin Leeds this summer, in a collection of handsomely carved, handshaped suits. Primary points to view: the trimly suppressed waistline accented by deep vents, the slightly augmented shoulder line, the generous lapels. ' And of course the tailoring expertise, lending substance to imaginatively patterned and shaded DocronVools, and to dramatic black Turkish mohair. From $125 to $145 OUR PONTIAC MALL STORE IS OPEN TUESDAY AND WEDNESDAY TO 5t30i MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY, SATURDAY TO 9 P.M. TELEGRAPH AND ELIZAkETH LAKE I 3^ B—>•16 Spies for Have to Be Slick in'Alaska ANCHORAGE, Alaska UR -The Job of a prying oil scout, kiu>wn these ^ys as iiidustrial espionage, has taken on a new dimension in the world's hottest petroleum spot, the Arctic slope of Alaska. There’s ho way he can peek from behind a tree—there are no trees on the bleak tundra. That’s one of the stumbling blocks to snitching a bit of the competition’s data. ★ ★ * The natural barriers to picking up information are aid^ by some of the, tightest security measures ever practiced iff the oil industry. Alaska’s commissioner of natural resources, Thomas E. Kelly, says security is “about as stringent as you can make it.’’ ■nGHT SECURITY An example of how tight Is the way Kelly’s agency handles information which companies are '^'^required to submit but which the stale must keep secret for two years. The data is placed in double-lock safes in banks, and Kelly’s men either pore over it there or take it back to their offices for only the time needed to study it. And when the latter is done, two men handle the transportatior of the information. ★ ★ * Kelly says that when the time comes to take a sample at a drilling site, all but the essential personnel are cleared from the platform. Then a courier flies the material directly to his company’s headquarters. And if headquarters thinks its men in Alaska need to know anything about the analysis, the information is sent back here. One oil company official said. “We’re going to lengths to keep things confidential that were • public in the past. The fewer people who see any data, the less likely it is to get out.’’ ‘USED BY EVERYONE’ But he readily admitted that “scouts are employed by everyone.’’ It’s fairly easy to secure the sites on the North Slope—it’s nearly 400 miles north of Fairbanks, and the only way to get there at this time of year is by air. Anyone landing without authorization on one of the gravei strips is usually told to turn around and hightail it right back out. There are reports of snooping from planes and helicopters, but not a great deal can be learned by this method. Scouts thus have to resort to such things as studying the reports issued by Kelly’s department and keeping an eye on things at the Anchorage and Fairbanks, airports. They watch to see which specialists from competing companies are coming into to^, and at Fairbanks they keep a watch on the supplies being loaded aboard huge cargo planes. The scouts sometimes frequent bars, trying to loosen the tongues of oil workers come into town for p couple of weeks of rest after working a solid month on the slop^’. But, as Kelly says, “Very seldom can you get a word out of those guys, even when security is not tight." The commissioner also notes that “After the September sale, the lid will disappear” for "pennies a day" you can "BEAT the HEAT" ...iileet AFCO Comfoitmakar Air Conditioning For Cooling alohe or complete year around Air Conditioning — play it smart and invest your money in equipmerttthat ’ will last longer — provide more Comfort. lOWIatyoorAFCO Doolor ZILKA HEATING It all starts July 7 Btaniff International comes to Detroit! We love bringing Braniff International Into a new city. We enjoy meeting new people and letting them see how we do things. We like the excitement of our different colored planes streaking In and out of a new airport. And the Braniff girls in their Pucci dresses add beauty to any community. But our success depends on our servicd. And we know It. So we serve every drink Ice cold. Every meal piping hot. And keep our eyes peeled to serve you constantly. NowDetroltcanfly tig beautiful Braniff jets to big beautiful lands. Like Mexico, and South America, and Hawaii, All-jet Bran iff gives you better service to the Midwest ^ and Southwest than any other airline. * And we do it on time. (Braniff won the 1968 On-TIme Record.) So al ways ask your Travel Agent one question; ‘Does Braniff fly there too? Put me on It.” Htm’t our opening non^p ociiodulo: ;8:15 am, non-stop to Dalias/Fort Worth and on to Houston. 12:00 noon, non-stop to Kansas City and on to Dallas/Fort Worth. 4:20 pm, non-stop to Dallas/Fort Worth and on to Houston. 6:20 pm, non-stop to Dalias/Fort Worth and on to Houston. M2-12I0 m iMMrini iin«ir/aiico dmmt 6Mor ire (fod-given: And that, to me, is being steady schedule of personal appearances. nice person.” Later, she will resume her senior Although her life has now become an studies at Mercy College, Detroit. A open hook, Pam Ih not apprehensive speech and drama majcu-, she hopes to about the fact “I have nothing to hide,” be involved in musical comedy someday, ittie admits and adds rather sheepishly. She enjoys drama because she Ukes to ^unfortunately.” entertain and sees this as her means ofIn responte to whether blondes have self-expression. Pam feels that everyone , |nore fun, she. quips, "It alt depends should have some type of outlet. ***** ” Affection Isn't ^uething You TuiPli On, Off Like Tap hand is on a running kidi. Rl^t after kupper; he drives clear across Houston to run With his brother. ,1 am so bu’ed weey night without hbn, Mr and Mrs William Pldrad of Wort <*au«hter’s doings. Her husband didn’t J finally go to bed. Then be. comes in at want the divorce, but she insisted , W p m- and gets mad because I’m not m^SiLs aX him any more although hw waiting up for him. was a good provider and wasn’t cruel to Don’t tell me to run with him. I put In Melanie, uho is related and attends^a anything like Uiat. ' a good day’s work and at the end of the special school. Most of Pams spare ^ ^ day I don’t feel like running. Your sug- affection for this son-in-law, so when his birthday came along we bought him . a . gift. Chistmas, too. Recently he remarried and now w6 wonder whether we should contihiA remembering him on gift-giving occasions as before. We know his wifo: She’s vra-y nice. They’ve even et|-;i tertained us in their home. My husband says he is still oiW ”'’” - ■* * grandcWldren’s father Md w« iteouldi^ drar ABBY: For the past six years I let tte fact that he married again t Uved to Virginia, but New York a d^erence. What do you ^ay? P im rcity,W rea% “T home town. I am going frankly . . be married soon, and aU my rriatives UNDECKED . ]^d my fiance’s relatives live near New a blach ^sqiqan.” She knows that politics nq ptiltM lor thajiersoiLwiUi sensitive feelings or short temper. Male members of ConfFess try to- intimidate women members by insulting them. “I Just smile. I’m not really tough. Just strong." Although Mrs. Chisholm doesn’t think every woman should get into politics, she does believe that women should take more part to politics. She stresses organization and cooperation and consolidation of woman power. Women have never learned to do the last very well; politicians are aware of this and the men in Congress have been known to say, “God help all of us the day women consolidate their power politically.” During her first months in Washington, Mrs. Chisholm has been learning the ins and outs of the system. “And it’s a system, believe me!” She’s found that by stating her position firmly and acting as she thinks best, she makes her presence felt ‘^You can- make 4he gentlemen concerned about your the Civil Rights Bill dies, trouble lies ahead. If there is too much retrenchment, there may be revolution. While she is not a separatist, she is in no mood to accept tokenism or a sliver of the American way of life. The tolerance level has been reached for blacks who |io riot want to be told to be satisfied With how far they have come; “We love America and measure her success, not by her achievements, but by her potential.” She wants to work within the system and to bring about change with the many good people, both black and white, who are concerned. What of her future plans? Might she be the first woman candidate for the gestions will be greatly appreciated. ALONE IN HOUSTON DEAR ALONE: You ought to be grateful that your, husband isn’t out “running” with some doll. Be a good sport, and wait up for him. Unless your man is the exception, his enthusiasm is Dound to run out soon. If in three months from now he’s still running, write to me DEAR ^ECTOED: York, so we have decided to be mamed w^h*!**! j* **[*^*“* 1 to a lovdy little diapel there. Calendar TUESDAY NlMlck Club, 1 p.m., home of Mrs. Albert Cannes, Dover Road. 40th annual cooperative luncheon. Drayton Plains Nature Center Anxiliary, 10 a.m.. Nature Center. To meet Bruce Radabaugh, new director. WEDNESDAY hlOn ' Yow Figure Club, 7 p.m., Waterfora Township School, Crdscent Liake Road and M-59. TOUB8DAY Friendshto Cltib, 11 a.m., Adah Shelley Library. Michigan Cancer Itociety representative will present charter tj^inbers with ten year When she refused a place on the House Agriculture’ Committee, dealing with forestry and rural developipent, she blazed a trail. No freshman legislator had ever challenged the system in this -manner before. But she stuck to her determination to work on a committee that is at lea’st relevant to her constituents and won a seat on the Veterans’ Committee. She drew spontaneous laughter from her audience Saturday whens she replied to a question about this assignment. “There are more veterans in my district than forests.” Other legislators told her she couldn’t come to Washington and upset their cherished system. But the public in general has responded in different fashion and cheered her on. Shirley Chisholm is beholden to no one, she says, and is in no one’s pocket. She’s a loner who doesn’t depend on anyone else to support her position. She’s not afraid of not getting the “goodies” to Congress nor of being pushed around. Her constituents are the only ones who can give or deny her her seat. She is worried about the reactionary mood of the country. She fears that if Shirley Chisholm Just smiles. Some of her friends have suggested Just that. But personally, she would like to stay in Congress a long time. If she has any higher ambitions, it is to become a Senator. But she won’t push. She has never sought her political offices; people have always come to her and asked her SHIRLEY CHRISHbLM Theodore C. Sorensen is shown trith his bride, the former Gillian Martin, 28, of Grand Rapids as they leave the Fountain Street Baptist Church after the wedding Saturday afternoon. The chapel is not very well known, and . will be difficult to find, so my father and my fiance want me to Insert MAPS and directions' in the wedding invitations! Abby, ,this Is going to be a very lovely formal church wedding, and I want to do eyeifything Just ri^t, so even If the map drawings are heat and good looking, is it considered proper etiquette to* enclose thefo with engraved wedding invitations? A YANKEE IN DIXIE DEAR YANKEE: I am no authority on etiquette, but for my money, common sense outranks etiquette any day of the week. So if I were you I’d provide my guests with maps and directions, if you want to get them to the church on time. k k k ■ DEAR ABBY: I’ll, be 61 In September, so I imagine 1 am about the oldest man to ever write to you. ' I read your column all the time In the Wichita Eagle and I have some advice for people who write and ask what to do about relatives who dr to unannounced at meal time. My mother had the same problem 65 years ago. After about five or six visits from a family of seven who always dropped in uninvited at meal time, Mother gathered up the seven of us children, herself, and Dad and visited this family, unannounced shortly before the noon meal. She had no more trouble with uninvited guests after that. FAITHFUL READER ■ k k k For Abby’s Ixxddet, “How to Have a towety Wedding,” send M to Abby, care of ‘Hie Pontiac Press, Dept &600, P. O. Boz9,Fnnttoc,Mldl.4a05L KITCHEN CARPET HieTloor^ Shop In COOL, Air Conditioned Comfort — Q|i«nJlniidaFaBdrdd9r9^M.to9P.lt,T9M.,WML,llHuw.TifinflSat^{^ik.MUl^^PJL------^ U' THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JUNE 80, 1960 pfifnitive Peoples Tenderized Meat If. IVv carturl88 people in ttop-. leal countries Iwve uMd Oie /Juloi of pine^fM 6gs to ’ tttoderise inento. Tliey also '^toand kog ago that a braised tnpaya leaf wrapped around meat would soften and tenderize it. The Manufacturing Chemists Association says chemistry Improved on these primitive practices with development of carefully formulated meat ten-derizers based on the enzymes in the fruits. associauuf have you heard? Stapp's semiannual Shoe SALE Stapp’s continues this week! Good selections ore still available STARTS 9:30 A.M. where the experts work < 931 W. Huron St. Pontiac for evening; hours phone 681-2121 None KOMI TAILORS Fast free air mail doUvoiy UrtHl mImSm to bIwdh hmm. «B l|pM at Miti, Into aS awat Sto, yM .SSii. Wfc Wawtod, Oaaniitotoili!* tiia *Ie Drive, Independence Township, are honeymooning in Florida. A reception was held in the Italian American Club. Fincannon-Suhart Michelle Lyn Suhart chosa St. Perpetua’s Catholic Church for her marriage Friday to Michael David Fincannon. lAa daughter of the Andrew C. Suharts of Pleasant Lake Drive was attended by maid of honor, Christine Fox. Gowned In peau da sole, with Chantilly lace, the new Mrs. Fincannon carried cascading Eucharis lillies, Stephanotis and ivy. Bruce Fincannon was best man for his brother. They are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Howard D. Fincannon of Tull Drive. Following a reception in the CAI Building, the newlyweds departed on a norther Michigan honeymoon. They will be at home tai'Pontiac. Barsodi~Mors» Linda Leigh Morse chose St Joseph’s Catholic Church, Trenton, for her marriage Saturday to John R. Barsodi The coig)le was feted with a reception at the Veterans’ Hall, Trenton, Immediatdy following the noon ceremony. The grandson of Mr. and Mrs. John Thomas of Trentm and his bride are honeymooning In California, Hawaii and Las Vegas. Lukas-David On a honeymom trip through the southwestern states are newlyweds, the Garron M. Lukases (Daborah Sua David). They were married Wednesday evoiing in Orchard Lake Community Presbyterian Church. Their parents are Dr. and Mrs. William J. David id of Curwood Street was attired in a Chantilly lace cage over satin and held a cluster of carnations with a rose center. Norman Prince performed the (ties of best man for his brother. They are the aona of the Clyde S. Ifrinces of Bude-ingham Street, White Lake Township. Orahard Lake and Dr. and Mrs. Richard Russ, matron of iumor, and Roberta Herrmann, maid of honors the dauj^ter of tha William Herrmanns pf Woodbine Drive chose an organza gown with Swiss Guipure and Venetian lace an>liques. She held a cascade o f glamelias and Stephanotis. ★ ♦ ★ Best man for the son of the Donald Newmans of Lakewood Drive was his brother, Rdiert Newman. The newlyweds are hiMiey-mooning in Canada and Vermont. John Lukas of Merritt Island, Fla. Attired in her mother’s wedding gown of ivory satin with Belgian lace trim, the bride held a cascade of roses. Diana Lee David, sister of the bride, and Rdb^ Glandon stood as h 0 n 0 r attendants. David David was usher. The couple received guests at a reception at the Kingsley Inn, Blopmfield Hills. PrincB-Griffin Janet Ann Griffin became tlia bride of C. Douglas Prince Fri- Andre’s SENSATIONAL SPECIAL 100% EUHAN HAIR All Cut and ^tyled ALL SHAPES ONE PRICE, NONE JHIGHER 889.00 FALLS m.'o. *19 ALL 100% HIIMAN HAIR 100% HUMAN $€199 HAIR WIGLETS O CASCADES AJM •99s .Kts.as9.uo SPECULON PERMANENTS •9S OiiMltl Pwnu *1500 Jtog. $2S.OO Phone EE 5-9257 Beauty Salon PiOE-IOT FAILS Mini Falk •7.95 No Appointment NRceasBi^ 11 N. daginaw, Belwaan Lawrence and Pike Su. C. McPhails of Farmington wore an Alencon lace gown over English net. She held daisies The bridegroon is the sim of, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Sanders of Sutelifra Street, West Bloomfield Township. * ★ * Joining the couple for a in the Elks Lodge,' The Princes are honey-lFarmingtim, were honor at-| mooning in Indiana. Newman-Harrmann Barbara Jayne Herrmann chose Central Methodist Church for her marriage to Ronald Ray Newman Saturday. ★ ★ ★ Attoided by her sisters, Mrs. itendants Beverly Miracle and Donald Hamilton. Bryanf-Sharwood Ann Sho'wood chose Kirk in the Hills as the setting for her marriage Saturday to Ridiard M. Bryant. A dinno^reception was hdd at The Village Woman’s Club, Bloomfi^ Hills, following the late afternoon rite. The bride wore i Galina gown of silk organza with Vmtian lace accents and carried orchids and Stephanotis on a Bible. ★ w ★ Parents of the couple are Mrs. Lloyd Clark Sherwood of Bloomfield Hills and the late Mr. Sherwood and ttie Richard C. Bryants of Dearborn.. w ★ Mrs. Dale Lefever, matron of honor, and Mark Thomas, brat Sandars-MePhail Terry Alan Sanders and his man, led a bridal party M14. The couple is hme^nooning in northern Mldiigan, They will be at hofoe in Birmingham. m ISA t» iil on BEUraOLSIRBING EASY BUDGET TERMS OR 90 DAYS CASH! WILLIAM WltlGHT OcUmmI ('toNIItjr , OwrSAYeemt Fwriilmfw HwArer* eitif I #*»fwewrc 270 Orrhard Lake FE 4-0558 HAVE A NICE 4eii of JULY We’re Going to IN ORDER THAT OUR EMPLOYEES MAY ALSO HAVE THE OPPORTUNITY TO ENJOY A LONG 4TH OF JULY WEEKEND WE WILL BE CLOSED SATURDAY, JULY 5TH. PLEASE CALL FOR YOUR GARMENTS on THURS., JULY 3rd - COMPLETE SHIRT SERVICE -719 West Huron PONTIAC PHONE FE 4-1536 NYLONS POPUL.AR PANTY HOSE pabr THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, JUNE 80. 1969 C-"'8 Weddings in Near Future Announced by Couples Young-N0yala Oakland Univarilty graduatoa, Susan A. Young and Dannla A. Nevala have «et August It for thdr weddtaig' The prospective bridegroom, who is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Alpo Nevala of Crocus Street, is a graduate student at Michigan State University. The dau^ter of the Richard W. Youngs of White Plains, N.Y., plans to teach in the Charlotte Public c School systei His Retirement Is 'Family Affair' MR. AND MRS. DANA K. BADERTSCHER Couple Honored at Gala Mr. and Mrs. Dana K. Bader-tscher of Forest Lawn Street greeted guests at a golden anniversary celebration in their honor Sunday afternoon. Mrs. William A. Braden of ffllver Bell Road, Oakland Township was hostess at the party for her parents. MILFORD, Utah (AP) -wife, sons and grandson i the trip with him when Khnmel Coon ended his S 2 - y e a railroading career with a run from Las Vdgas to Milford, pulling passenger train No. (. D. L Greens Go to Falls FoUowmg their recent wedding, the Darrell Lee Greens Among the guests were a son and daughter, Phillip and Verda Badertscher, respectively. Married June 28, 1919 in St. Mary’s (Hiio, the couple in Pontiac for nearly 36 years. They have four granddifldren and one greatgrandchild. The Union Pacific engineer started work in 1917 as a crew dispatchtf, working for Pacific Fruit Express. He became an oigineer in 1929 and served as secretary of the Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers for many years. David Everett on October 3. Announcing the engagement plans are her and Mrs. Albert Hufnagd of St. Johns. A laundry center in Westport, Conn., town of artists and writers, is called — “The Wasldng Well.” (Ardis Elaine Moon) left on a honeymoon' trip to Niagara Falls. A rec^tion in Malta Hall fet^ the couple who were wed in a candlelight ceremony in St. Benedict’s Catholic Onirch. The bride chose a tradiUonal wedding gown of nylon and lace over satin. She carried a rose bouquet. Honor attendants for the couple were Mr. and Mrs. Gary Parents of the newlyweds are Mr. and Mrs. Earl Moon of La-mont Road and Mr. James Green j>t Lexington Road. ' Aging of Humans Subject of Study in Vets' Hospital CHICAGO un - Aging of humans is under study by a team of scientists at Downey Veterans Administration Hospital in an effort t determine what is involved in the process. Hyman Weinstein, chief of the research - in - aging laboratory, said more than 25 scientists universities are involved in the project. C. R. HASKILL STUDIO FE 4>0553 Their laboratories are seeking scientifle information about the complex substances that form human connective tissues. Scientists believe “weathering’’ by constant exposure to sun and wind and resulting permanent changes in the skin may represent chemical alterations related to tiic aging process. | Your Future Depends On The Quality Training You Receive EmOLLNOW! ELITE ACADEMY Of BEAUTY HIGH-QUAUTr TRAINING 1054 Huron Street West 681-1800 LANpBRiANT CUSTOM SIZE SWIMSUIT SALE 1490 COME ON IN THE SELECTION'S GREAT Swimdresses, sleek knit swimmers and tunic suits —as plentiful as sea-shells in knits, cottons, Amel tri-ocetotes and other sun-lun ' Onhr by mnfler phono 682-7500. AlWdOt far d«H*«yiA»aO*; tor CaOlssHid 4% to* The Pontiac Moll Hufnagel-Eyntt Besty Hufnagel will marry Betsy was graduated from St. Lawrence Mercy School of Nursing. Her fiance is aldmhus of Michigan State University. David is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Ford H. Everett o f Silverstone Lane. Weaver-McFadden Dr. and Mrs. Arthur W. Weaver of NorthviUe, formerly of Pontiac, anmouQco the betrothal and August vows of their daugher Karen to David McFadden. He is the son of Dr. and Mrs. R. I. McFadden of Bloomingdale. The engaged couple are both in their junior year at Andrews University. Berrien Springs. Looking Aheod Fer fall and winttt, Jiillus created « : silver lame knapaadk for women who don’t want their handjuige to float away while dancing. For fall and winter M the year His entry was In a “bags of the future’’ ediibit sponsored by the National Handbag Assoda-Uon. BLOOMHE NION SHOP :k of our at our '^Id in a SPECIAUKiMY SALE T u e s (|o « siloy^T h u r s d o y . YoiraaMop'til 9 SAVMSSI" SPORTSWEAR REDUCED UP 1140% OFF Ono Group of Designer Dresses Sixes 6 to 10 only Woro 79.95 to 89.95 $4990 Fall WEATHERpTSianU 3-PIECE KNITS! JUNidt iWIM SUITS OFF FASHIONS TOWN REGUUR fARE INCLUDEDI A wide vai the very ot "Pro-Foorth" Spi»^|abf» K FAMOUS MAKElilfl? ^NEL JERSEY DRESSES $25 Values USE YOUR CHARGE - MICHIGAN BANKARD > SECURITY CHARGE ^ G*—li THE rONTlAC PRESS. MPyPAY, JUNE 80. 1969 • — If the pants of a tailored pants suit hft above* the ankle and are too narrow, return them and buy some that fit If the pants of a tailored uncle Harry's castoffs. . • — If you are over a i 12, don't buy You'll look better In Harry's castoffs. Chris Sublett, Birmingham, designed this sterling silver wine cup loith gold-plated interior on an oxidized and textured base. Moonstones are set ip the handle. Sublett's cup tied jor third prize in the 1969 Sterling Silver Design Competition, sponsored by the Sterling Silversmiths Guild of America. It is on display at the Museum of Contemporary Crafts, New York. Wrong Ones 'Panting' for New Fashion By BETTY CANARY | This particular girl might thing bulges through the cut-pants suit are too floppy, every^ I When I went into that ln8ur-;*l«> benefit from a glance into outs. See No. 1.) , lone will think you are wearing I ance company office, I thought a full-length triple mirror. I was seeing evidence of job; ♦ ★ ★ equality for women. What 11 Why is it, do yob suppose, mean is, I thought the girl at broad of beanmind the flab-the reception desk was a car-|by of tWgh are the first to penter because she had on bag- adopt new fashions^ gy slacks and a man's shirt, i K you’ve noticea (and it’s After waiting for a few min-l*’®.^ f® ® size 54 pmta utes (I didn’t want to Interrupt wo^n into them . in case she was getting ready 1 **■* who first wore ! to nail something together), I miniskirte on the viliage streets * approached the desk a„d dis- W‘>®" “’ey sh^ld have bew the covered she was a receptionist “P ** '** with her Own personal version . of a pants suit Personalty, I think any wom- it it it an over a size 12 should either Tt hor.li., stort in on those rabbit patch fashion magazine for her. How- * ^ ^ ever, the book was right there' ^he at-home clothes ' are ^ story and the pants Smp toiSna "®w are beauUMly hpTniJfTiS hS*” “ comfortable, ‘ her next coffw break. hqmE. If she would, this girl would i j love the new loungewear discover that her gray flannel:and bravely don a pair of long, slacks, while Just perfect for . bright orange, floppy culottes cleaning out the basement or a in the privacy of my ovm home, walk through chill winds to the|(i do not lock the doors and I corner grocery, are out of place pull the draperies, however, in a business office.______ and I wish my children would “ stop spreading that lie.) Iba rules for wearing the new fashions are usually easy to iearti (check the articles in [this newspaper) - and easy to Mqke-Up Should Be Chosen to Suit Individual Skin Type More than one woman has|undercoat of an untInted been confused by the!moisturizer. Then use either a multiplicity of facial make-ups fluid or liquid foundation which available today, according to! contains moisturizing benefits beauty-fa.shlon authority Max! or a cream-based foundation. Factor, who suggests thej oily skin looks best with a white and Negro women for thel following to those choosing ailight, non-greasy cake foun-1 Neurological Disease and' new foundation for the very|dation, such as Pan-Cake Make-Blindness. Correct Gain for Safe Delivery |/emeS!*^ _ , — M it’s transparent, wear Based on Weight!“ to bed. or, lock the doors and ^ pull the draperies. Women who weigh 120 pounds or less before becoming pregnant should gain approximately 24 pounds during the 9-month gestational period to assure their bearing a 7-pound baby. This Is the conclusion of a research team which studied more than 10 thousand! ‘normal” birth records of both! • — If it has feathers around the ankles, don’t wear it to the office or on the streets. If the material is velvet and it is simple in design, you might look all right friend’s party. • — If it has cutouts, you might look all right at a very igood friend’s party. firkt time. I Up. If you have normal skin, almost any make-up will suit you, so it is a simple matter of personal preference depending upon the amount of coverage desired. For dry skin, first apply an For the woman whose skin is oily and distrubed, Pure Magic Medicated Make-Up, will help to heal blemishes as it conceals them, and restore the skin to a healthier condition. The death rate of small babies, the study found, was extra-ordinarily high — 45.1 per thousand for white and 36.5 for Negro children. Death rates for newborns of all weights were recorded as 6.1 for white and 7.1 fw Negroes. irs JULY Trustees Elected by Art Group New members of the board of trustees %ere elected at the recent annual meeting of the Bloomfield Art Association. Joinihg the governing body re Paul N. Averill, Carl Luckenback, William Roberts, William W. Slocum Jr. and Mesdames: Henry M. Hogan Jr., William B. Saunders and Roderick H. Spann. GROUP #1 DAN RIVER • WOVEN PLAIDS • DUCK PRINTS • SAILCLOTH PRINTS PEHI POINT ^ • PIQUE PRINTS • NEVER IRON PRINTS many, many others to choose VALUES TO ^1.19 YARD Cottons, Rayons, Blonds Many No Iron All Washablo 36"-45" Wide GROUP #2 • SEERSUCKER STRIPES • DIMITY PRINTS • CREPE PRINTS Tremendous selections of many, many fine dress fabrics in cottons, rayons, acetate blends. VALUES TO *1.29 YARD all 45" Wide. all guaranteed walhaUe GROUP #3 • FLOCK VOILE PRINTS • TARPOON PLAIDS • LACE LaFLEUR PRINTS Better dress fabrics in a good range of colors and designs to wear all summer. Cottons and cotton dacron polyester blends. VALUES TO *2.29 YARD THE PONTIAC MALL 245 Talagraph Rd. 682-3930 Omn Dally 10 A.M. H 9 PM. NOW OPEN IN FLINT EodMand Mall 64208 Ea«t Court St. Phene 74243^0 ^ . |0*.>L »a V ajh Daily. lwia«r S THE PONTIAC : MONDAY, JUNE 80. I960 P^HRojDes Swing Fiiishron, Accessory c—« NEW YORK (UPI) Fashion puts on the rope trick for fall and winter. Giving a new meanii^ to the mgup, tha Jawdry industiy doM neeUaces measuring 60 00 inches. If that,^ian't lliat enough rope, you can do as fashion designer did and put two 90-inchers together for a 16-foot string which when looped a- coupta of times around the of Vlcloiy Joris, designer for Cuddlecoat. Many of designora put two 60-inchers t^^ief for 10 (eat of rtgw to neck at a model sUQ rail to the hepi « hw. anida length coat euHwi ■■ watlon was the idea Jeweled Necklaces Adorn Entire Body string around thO npck several times, dther hanging to the waist^ and below or up tight around the throat for the classic choker effect. •Yho b*dk of this ropdn comes from the pearl industry, which is pushing the revival of an NEW YORK (UPI) ^ Put your little velvet-lined jewelry ____I box in moth balls. • Da Vinci Trifnri\ Infin it with a foot locker ® - « you’re to keep step with necklace of melon- the trend to huge trinkets. shaped golden beads hagler’s “body jewel’ looks besywith a high Award-winning designer neckline. The circle ear- Stanley Hagler turned out a ring is a fore and aft neck-to-waist “body Jewel’,’ of textured golden tone. rhinestones and crystals, ac- — ____________ cented with a fringe o f ^ ^ • rhinestone tassels. Some crystal masses of curls concocted with the aid of a dynel fall. -Jewelry and accessories inspired by knights. Sam]de: Ornate metal bras to Wear over or under See-through clothes. —1/mg scarves and stoles to wear any way you wish. chandeliers have less sparkle. 6100 PER POUND Hagler said the piece wei^s about six pounds and costs around $100 a pound. _ !‘The~weight is distributed,^ he said in an interview. “There may be some slight discomfort but women put up with uncomfortable girdles for fashion’s sake, so wjiy not jewelry?’’ OTHER ACCESSORIES Other accessories to watch, for: -The gypsy look of gobs of duins. If worried about them getting tangled in your foot locker jewelry , box, hammer some nails into me wallboard in the closet and hang the things on these. —Jeweled ponytails ain. n and a lat of deaioN wear pan. wsNa; Diamond Crystal SakConyiany SI. Clair, MlcMflaa 4tm frem 10c SR Room Lota Penlimilor Lotax Wall Point 3” ACME PAINT otnamentatloh courtesy of thcjClothes are feminine again, so nvstor * fhdlV^rA m nalumml MAvatKlMMilMM 6f Now York’s oyster. Fashion designers like the idea. A spokesman for _ _ Cultured Pearl Association, wiA 40 importer members, said its stjrlists work^ with at least two dozen pace-setten in the New York garment industry In their fall and winter collections. FEMININE LOOK 'Pearls are a feminine look. they’re a natural combination,' said a. spokesman for the association. “I think they’re big again too .because women are bored witit ‘imiaex’ boy-girl clothes IboMhg alike. Styles Exhibit Gems, Flesh Bodyware, a combination of Arthurian armor and costume large jewetpry was introduced into the fashion world in New York recently. Model is shown wearing a chain vest of costume jewelry. NEW YQRK (UPI) - Heating plants in ballrooms had better work this winter. Othenrise, females wearing gowns that bare bosoms to nearly topless prqwrtions rfak chest colds. Necklines that plunge, some times below the waitline, are one part of the evening clothes picture unfolded in New York by pace-setting designers showii^ their newest to fashimi The other part; Opulence. One example of this, a gown I the Samuel Winston collection. This was embroidered with huge stoned and sparklet in a patchwork design. This dress took three months of ei^t hours days to make in Spain. It wholesales at $2,175. Double that for the retail price. The dresses with falling necklines will give women a chanpe to use Hie new bosom makeup introduced by Kenneth His “bosom delineator’^ coa-metic would be useful for an Oscar de la Renta sequin embroidered gown in blue, featuring a vampish plunge. Give a girl enough rope — when it’s precious “pretend’^ pearls—and she’ll have the hang of fall ’69 fashion mass in multiple array on day or dark costumes with huge pearl globes for ears. Ropes in white, black and golden pearls from 60 to i^O inches long designed by Kenneth Lane for LSguna. Earrings from big to biggish. Bums HOW save 50% tat rar faikloi/t dwe. fabulous buys! Set cutout, dosed styUs for dress or casual wear. Ntu skapts, toes and heels. Mott sites and colors. Umyfirkedtdttlione! THE PONTIAC MALL TeletPaph «l DlnlMlk Lake Rii. Always Saves fou Money During SEMI-ANNUAL SHOE SALE DAYS! All the Big Looks of Fashion V for Dress or Casual Wear I Plus All the Big^Name Brinds.oo. HERBERT LEVINE ANDREV^ GELLER DeOSO DEBS CARESSA ADORES ' CAPEZIO DRESS AMALFI TOW & COUNTRY CALIFORNIA COBBLERS CAPEZIO FLATS BASS WEJUNS TRAMFEZE ; •26.90 •22.90 •16.50 •13.90 •13.90 •13.90 •16.90 ^•12.90 •12.90 • 9.90 ♦8.90 • 7.90 It happens twice a year and it*s happening right now at Alvin*st Your ehance to save BIG dollars on all the bigeiame brand shoes. SQdes, colors, shies aplenty • • ^ if htutt! ShoM Avaflabb In PoBiiae and OaUsaid Man OnlF Also, there is the influence of the 1930’s throughout fashion. Other ways to* wear the pearls: four 60-lnchers hung around the neck, two of them tucked into a dress belt, the other two swinging: assorted! lengths of as many as el^t strands used to fill in necklines, | plunging to the waist and below, i fore or aft; or as belts instead of necklaces. Aiid wear themi with everything from pantsuits to the most formal of evening' Tho pyes, which “everyone knows’’ are delicate organs, ara really quite resistant to disease and damage. “ITie eye is so constructed that’It can normally be expected to function efficiently far beyond its owner’s life expectancy.’’ an eminent ophthalfflMoglst has written In a recent Issue of Sandozi Panorama (published for MDs by Sandoz Pharmaceuticals). Sight Expectancy Better Than Life PERAAANENT WAVES The author, Dan M. Gordon, MD, who la professor of surgery (ophthalmology) at Cornell Univo-sity College of Medicine, adds that “autopsy studies on Wo'r* offoring a summtr pllw with Jmppy day* of carofroo ploosurw.' Our Sunthino spoeial will hold its full-iwdiod, sporkiing appoaranco throughout all tho busy, activo days of tho soason. Call now for your appointmont and aovo In mwa than halt the cases the eyes were normal.” Our Regular 12.50 PERMANENT WAVE Including Haircut, Shampoo and Sot 898 Qoie, Reguhir to 186 •9-‘25 Regular to $70 •28- •49 Slacks Skirts Regulorto $20 •7„»14 Roialurtoil8 *7 to •12 Shorts and Culottes *4 to *12 ^ M 1 m R®*ulorio$18 Loordinated Tops^ Jackets and Blouses *3®® to *14 Regular to $20 L>oung£uieo/C/ ^Seepu/eoic 20%Off OmA, YeOJC^T^OitMjL V2 Off Alvins of Pontiacy Rochester, Oakland MaU 1 THE POyTIAC 'i fiilPLES FOOD TO.VN k PEOPLES FOOD FOOD VJIMIES In erdnr to giv« our om*. ployoot o wolMotorvod helidoy, Food Town and PoopU« will bo dotod July 4.PUNAHfAD,ondtoko odvontoa* of out LOW PRICU boforo Jwly4> CLOSED FOURTH of JULY JMUIIIDARIN ORANOn RtyMM^NptvjfDiitir ALURUIIUMPeiL HAWAIIAN PUNCH flavors We Reserve the Right to Limit Quantities ^ Old Salem charcoal BRIQOEms 20~lb, bag 89^ Open Pit • fJ;S*®"QUE SAUCE^ isws. 7Q0 iAO Fmh TOMATOES 2r 12-ol tray POTATO CHIPS Mb. has 49^ Meadowdalo SAUO DRESSING Kellogg's CORNFUKES 1^0I. MX 27^ SCOTTIES facial tissues-2-ply 200 COUNT SUPER MARKETS mmmm. , HTUND OUIli ^ k. . PIAPUMi OHAMRIinillT ^ PMD vmvit ' (MHUMaSW. ' ijWPiat^V’ n*«Mn«K ^ ■ ■■ ^ - ■.'•■-'v.f ■ k vv...; ■: - : ■■ .■ ■ ■■ r '/■ :ONDAY, JUNE 8g. 1061> Twn m FOOD jmik rcDU n 1* YtMi ■i! POM TOWfVJ#'^'^ MOMpt ’ li|^no/ Loyngewear, Accessories....................... 20% Oif • Ladies'Sprihg Coals, Dresses, ,, ^ Knits, Ensembles. ................................. V2 Off GIRLS’ and BOYS’ • Girls'Pajamas and Gowns.. •R«« to*6 $339 ,.$499 • Girls'Knit Tops and Blouses..... ''•»*»** $199 k, $399 • Girls'Dresses, Slacks, r\/\a/ Skirts and Coats...............................20%*”40% Off • Boys' Sport Coats........r«b. to S30 $099 g99 •Boys'Knit Shirts................................... $2”’**3” • Boys'Wash'N'Wear Slacks.,... 2 *9 and • Pre-Teen Blouses, Jeans, Dresses, m jrv## Slacks, Skirts, Ungerie20%'* 40% Off MEN'S Men'sSuits $100 On«-and two-pant lightwaight and y«ar'round Rog. to $165 40*^ 'iwdC Men's Sport Coats SCO Lightwoight and yoar'round. Rog. to $75 Men's Dress Shirts S>I19 $C19 Long and short bIoovos Rog. to $7.50 . ^ ond ^ ^ Aten's Slacks (tog. t. $30 *H”<»*21” AAen's Wash 'n Wear Slacks R«g. to $12 Men's Pajamos Rog. to $4.50 2 hr $6*1 Use Your Lion Charge, Michigan Banktirdh or Security Charge ^ Open Mon. thru Sat., 9:30 to 9:00 Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center Tta PONTIAC PRESS, MQNDAY> JUNE 80, 1969 C—9 Dispute Could Seifd Queen of Liners to Scrap FORT UUDERDALE, Fla. (AP) — The Queen entertained 3,600 guests last Sunday. They came to admire the grand old lady, and spend wmif, time eying her physical makeup and inspecting her accessorial. The Queen would like for them to remain with her-as overnight guests or maybe for a longer time. She even would like to be the hostess at big conventions. She’s the liner Queen Fiiiia-beth. Now she’s a tourist attraction, moored at Port Everglades. Her sponsors would like her to become a floating hotel and convention center. But the controvert surrounding her could send the Queeh to the scrap ,heap^U 83,673 tons of her. ^The disagreement is between the Investment Qorp. of Florida, which manages the Queen for the Cunard Steamship Co. of Lnndmi, and the Port Commission of Port Everglades. The management company says the port commlssioi) has hampered its operation. The conunlsaipn denies R. “I cah assure you that this ship is not going to scrap,” said James E. Nall, president of the investment corporation. ‘CAN BE SUCCESS* •It’s apparent that the ahRi cannot' stay at Port Everglades. But, without any qiMStion, die can become a great imccess as a hotel, convention m tourist center in south Florida.^' He said the investment company might buy the Queen from Cunard and operate her independently. Cunard’s d^ty chairman, PhiUp Shirley, ordered NaU two weeks ago to prepare the glamorous old vessel for sailing July 12. But no destination was given,' and Nail said Cunard officials "never actually said she would sail m that date, or where she wotdd^ taken if she did saU.” DEADLINE FOR OFFERS AVAILABLE JULY 1st 5 Va % savings cHtriHum in amMiilt •( $5,000 ermoi* 99 W. MAPI! «47-6t00 FEDERAL ISAVINQS AMMSU KDSSAt SAVINOS AND lOAN INSUSANCS CORPOSATION Your relatives have descended. And they need your car. Where does that leav# you? NedrTiour Ford Rent-A-Car deR1«ir,'thhrs Wherel Rent a new Ford, Mustang, Or Torino for a day, week, or month. Low rates,.. insurance included. .. w . . PORD RENT-A-CAR SYSTEM fohn McAuliff* ford Co. Flannory Ford 63ft Oakland Ave. 5806 Dlxla Hwy. , Pontiac. Mich. Waterford, AAlch. 335-4101 623-0900 Ford Ront-A-Car is close to homo. Justchacktho Yellow Pages. r ONE WEEK ONLYI Fourth-of-July FABRIC SALE CofR-Mates. Mix ’n match checks, plakte and'" solids. Checks and plaids: 75% DACRON polyester, 25% cotton. Solids: 65% DACRON polyester, 35% cotton. 45" wide. Reg, $1.98 yd. SapsrSportSetOsbardine. Diagonal weave 80 popular for all fall fashiond. Machine washable. 60% Kodel polyester, 50% Aviil wide, ^ Reg, f1.98 yd. Sale ends July 5th like R^.Chsr*e HI ymw Si£iC.i.B FONTIAC MAU SHOPFINC CINTI8—PHONI 682.0SM TfL-TWILYI SHOPPING CIMTIlt—PHONI I5I-ISS0 »A Ttadamaik al THI Siwaff Sir Basil Smallpeice, Cunard’s board chairmso, set a deadline of July 11 for hash offers for the. Queen and added tint, if neces-sary^ she would be sold for Junk. The company indicated the original price tag of |7.S millipn would be lowered. The Queen Elizabeth was built 30 years ago at a cost of $30 million. Nall said his company is negotiating for a deep-water site elsewhere in Broward County, and if the'new price tag on the Queen is acceptable, “I will buy! her.” ,★ * * During World War II, the Queen EUzabeth outran packs of Nazi submarines to carry whole divisions of American troops to Europe. After the war, the Queoi shed her coat of battleship gray, was refitted, and carried 1.5 million passengers, including the world’s great, in luxury transatlantic cruises. HARASSMENT CHARGED Recently, Nall charged Port Iverglades commissioners who took office last January with ‘‘harassment and a concerted; effort to fwce the Queen out of Port Everglades.” The commission barred advertising the Queen for fear that tourist traffic would strangle the port. It refused to permit parties or other affairs on the ship involvihg more than SO persons until the Queen was permanently berthed and licensed. Chairman Gregory McIntosh of the port commission said tiiere had been misunderstandings about its regulations on parking and parties aboard the Queen but denied the commission had taken a “negative pi»i-tion toward the whole Queen project.” Hotel and catering operations, he said, had to be limited "hi fairness to local enterprises.” OBSERVED ORDER Althought he commission’s order barring advertising of the not believed by Cun-aM officials to have leg a' standing. Nall said they pb-served It because of a threat of dockage lees he said would have been about 18.000 a day. Cunard never has wanted to get into the tourist attraction business, Nall said, and made the decision to sell thd Queen when'nobody came up witii an (tffer to operate the vessel a$ a hotel and convention cei' ★ ' * * Sinqily as a tourist attraction, in which visitors are diarged |<;.50 for a trip through the vesr set, the Queen is not making is profit, Nall said. But he said ahe would have a rich potential if opened to conventions and as a hotel. ★ ★ ★ Under* the original deal with the old port commission, Cunard-paid $320,000 for harbof dredging in exchange for dockage. Later, the company agreed to give the port 10 per cent of the net tourist gate in exchange for 4.5 abres of parking space. Since the ship was opened to tourists Feb. 14, 220,000 visitors have toured her. QUEEN *HED UP’ — The Queen Elizabeth, the world’s mightiest ocean liner, is berthed at Port Everglades, Fla., where port restrictions have hamstrung efforts to develop the ship as a tourist magnet. ivorces LouIm M. from Roaor L. Riehty Bonnio K. from GcroM R. Notbtt J^udllh L. from Jock A. Hornor Ooiy L. from Judith M. Bront KoHiloon from Goorgo F. Horr Donoldi L. from JowjNi C. Yuehou Molvbi E. from Mory L. Waliman ns CBEUmi SHOWBOAT. JULY 14-19 • 8 P.M. 6 NIGHTS • ANPLE FREE PARKING ADVANCE TICKET SALE VIA MAIL ShfMrboaf Tickdt OHIca—Chttanltiz. Mich. Bleachers $2.50 Choir SeoH $3J)0 -$3,50 -$4,09 OUTSTANDING RIV8R ENTERTAINMENT EXTRAVAGANZA SHOWBOAT PARK • FRONT STREET CHESANINO. MICHIGAN npps Americans Leading Discount Department Stores Offers: Part-time Opportunities Fuii-Time Opportunities Maie and Femaie STORE AIDES OFFICE HELP CASHIERS STOCK CLERKS MARKERS Empleymeiit Hears Ii30 to 3i30 Ideal Working Conditions Exporionoo Not Noootsory Wo Will Train You. APPLY AT TOPPS 2101 S. TELEGRAPH MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER AN IQUALWoimiNin IMFLOTia Cold Cash May Buy You Nice Morgue FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (A — Anybody want to buy a nice morgue? ' What about 1,878 Uds for 20-gallon garbage cans? Or electric potato peelera? Better yet, how about 28 mailboxea with 54 boles each? Or nine mailboxes with 85 jles? The Broward County School Board has declared the items as surplus and is looking for buyers. The board saya It has little use for the ttenu espedaliv the morgue. . The morgue, fully refrigerated of course, was sort of Inherited when the school board acquired the old PravidaeiHoapttaIbcre. AiitOGonoiny is lack for people who are tired of high prices Mote monthly specials in your Standaid OH DealefV continuing program to help you save on car maintenance costs FUREOILFlirEn Now is the time to have uo change the oil, lubricate the car, and replace the air filter. And when you do, you get an Atlas Oil RItor foao. Fnn smtRK pujqs Huy a complete tune-up, Including new Atlao Spark Plugs, you get half of the plugs tree. You don’t even need cash. You can use your Standard Oil Credit Card. So hurry. These specials end July 31. MMinv OT OT pinicipsifig oiinoMO 01 Deelero elepleylng tNe etgn. Autoconomy is the Standard Oil Dealer’s Plan that continually offers motorists highest quality tires, batteries and accessories—and saves you money. And that’s only the beginning. When It’s time to have your new car warranty service performed, be sure to talk to your Standard OH Dealer. Why Is he so anxious to save you money? So you’ll discover he has the perfect "store” for all your oar needs. And so you’ll have enough money left over to buy his great gasoline. Thwv’t RhrByt a rmW MbN iwta* FM at yMir tiMWarW OR DMfW'i .... fudad. Tha (tarao cotnai with 2 tpaakara, la solid stata, plays all ragular 8-traok tapa cartrldfaB, llvas 80 minutas of unintarruptad musle.^Can ba installad by yourself pr tha daplar wW tnatai for a raasofiablo eharga. C—^10 THE PONTIAC PKESS, MONDAY, JUKE I Deaths in Pontiac Area Howard R. Backus , Service for Howard R Backus, 69, of 772 Blaliie will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Voorhees-Siple Chapel, with burial in Ottawa Park Cemetery. hb-. Backus died Saturday. He owned and operated Backus Grocery Store for over 25 years. SurvWing are his wife, Celia 0.; a daughter, Linda Backus of Pontiac; two sons, Kenneth J. Wood of Pontiac and Leland W. Wood of-Clarkston; two sisters; a brother, Albert Backus of Pontiac; and seven grandchildren. Eldon H. Hancock Former Pontiac resident Eldon H. Hancock, 21, of Kansas City, Mo., died Saturday. Service will be at a Poplar Bluff, Mo., funeral home later this week. Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Robert Harper of Kansas City, Mo.; his father, Jack Hancock of Rockford, 111.; and three brothers, Pete Brown \rith the military in Vietnam, David Hancock of Pontiac and Charles Roberson at home. ' Mrs. Qtto Klieber Service for Mrs. Otto (Bertha E.) Klieber, 76, Candlelllght will be 2 p.m. Wednesday at Bossarde Funeral Home, Oxford, with burial in Evergreen Cemetery, Lake Orion. Mrs. Klieber, a nurses’ aide, died yesterday. Surviving are her husband: three sons, Richard Ashley and James Ashley of Oxford, and the Rev. Donald Ashley of Indiana; two daughters, Mrs. Myrtle Kingsbury of Port Huron and Mrs. Margaret Kelly of Clarkston; a stepdaughter, Mrs. Grace Gotham of Armada; 14 grandchildren; and 16 greatgrandchildren. Adrian Thompson Service for former Pontiac resident Adrian Thompson, 66, of Lima, Ohio, will be 2:30 p.m. Wednesday at Chiles Funeral Home, Uma, with b u r 1 a' following. Mr. Thompson died Saturday. He was active in Masonic and Shriner orders. Surviving are his wife, Thelma; one daughter, Mrs. Lorraine Blanchard of California; two sisters; brother, Percy Thompson of Pontiac; and two grandchildren. Mrs. John . Voss Service for Mrs. John (Lena W.) Voss, 83, of 2860 Deland, Waterford Township, will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Coats Funeral Home, Waterford Township with burial in Crescent Hills Cemetery. Mrs. Voss died Saturday, was a member of the Presbyterian Church of Missouri. Surviving are her husband two sons, Floyd C. of Howell and Gale J. of Waterford Township; a daughter, Mrs. Ralph Tracy of Pontiac; a brother; eight grandchildren; and six great-grandchildren. Harry F. Decker Sr. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP-Requiem mass for Harry F. Decker Sr., 7p, of 2851 Franklin will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at the 7 Arrested in Raid by Pontiac Police Seven persons were arrested by Pontiac police in a raid on an alleged blind pig early yesterday morning. James E. Turner, 41, of 590 S. East Blvd. was accused oi maintaining and operating an illegal liquor establishment at his home, police said. ★ ★ ★ One man was charged with aiding and abetting an Illegal liquor estidOlishment and one woman was charged with two counts of Illegal sale of liquor. The remaining' four persons were charged with loitering. ★ ★ ★. They were scheduled to be arraigned in Ponjlac District Court this mpmlng, ★ ★ * A vice squad spokesman said a “considerable amount of liquor and beer” was confiscated in the 2:10 a.m. raid. In the next 10 year apartments are expected to account for 44 per cent of all new bomes up from 25 per cent in the past 10 years. St. Hugo of the Hills Churdi with' burial following in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. A Rosary will be said 8:30 p.m. today at the Donelson-Johns Funera Home. Mr. Decker died Saturday. He was a retired divisional buyer for Pontiac Motor Division and a life member of the. American Legion, first commander of Chief Pontiac Post 377 and an honorary chieftain of the Chippewa Tribe. Surviving are his wife, Elsie G., a daughter, Mrs. Louis Gobel of Oxford, Ind.; a son, Harry F. Jr. of Bloomfield Hills; two sisters; and five grandchildren. Mrs. Charles Failing OXFORD TOWNSHIP - Service for Mrs. Charles (Evelyn) Failing, 61, of 861 Spelza will be 2 p.m. tomorrow at Bossardet Funeral. Home, Oxford, with burial in Grand Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mrs. Failing died Saturday. , Surviving are her husband; her mother, Mrs. Margaret Rebtoy of Bay City; and two brothers, including Russell Rebtoy of Pontiac. Mrs. Laura Sanders IN D EPENDENCE TOWNSHIP — Service for Mrs. Laura Sanders. 87, of 8142 Reese will be 1 p.m. Wednesday at the Sharp-Goyette Funeral Home, aarkston, with burial 1 n Oakland Hills Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Sanders died yesterday. Surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Myrtle Brown of Rochester and Mrs. Wilma Ruggles of Clarkston; a son, William of Harri.sburg, HI.; a sister; a brother; 12 .grandchildren grandchildren. Fishing Fleet Gets Cardinal's Blessing GLOUCESTER, Mass. (AP) - Richard Cardinal Cushing, archbishop of Boston, performed his annual ritual of blessiiv the Gloucester fisliing fleet Sunday, and in the process told the crowd of about 1,600 that it is the little things in life that count the most. “Most of us are dot called upon to do great things or big things,’’ the cardinal said, speaking from a dock in the center of the main town landing. “If you want to be happy, do the little things in life in a big way.’’ | Cushing spoke on the 30th anniversary of his consecretlon as a bishop. - SCHOOL VANDALISM are investigating a break-in and vai__ at the new Lincoln Elementary School, Hillside, "rtie break-in was discovered Sj day morning. Desks wqfe ransacked and Items scattered ovgjj^ the floor in the office area. Several beer bottles were found in the gym where entry to the school was made, police said. 3 Men Rescued Out of Cavern in Glacier Park Sanatorium Cutback Amended in Senate Supporters of the program carried on by the Oakland County Sanatorium got some encouragement from state legislators this weekend. They learned'legislation which would have seriously cut state funding of the Oakland County Sanatorium has been modified and is still under consideration in Lansing. Grubba said the Senate amenement reinstated 40 per cent of the House cutback. Interpretation of the amendment showed, he said, that the country could now have to come up with 0410,000 in place of the 1750,000 originally estimated under the House bill. Harry A. Smith WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Service for Harry A. Smith, 61, of 7354 Hardlsty will be 11 Wednesday at Haley Funeral Home, Southfield, with burial In Acacia Park Cemetery Southfield. Mr. Smith died Saturday. He was office manager of the H. H. Dickinson Co., Detroit, and member of Commerce Masonic Lodge, F&AM. Surviving are his wife, Alice; two sons, William Smith and Ross Slosson, both of West Bloomfield Town.shlp; one r; three brothers; and seven grandchildren. Memorial contributions may be made to the Michigan Heart Association. He said the county stands to , An estimated $2-million cut-“>rough arit^ 17 great- back was pared to $500,000 by ^ Senate amendment Friday to ,™P; House Bill 2035. plementation to medical aid The bill, as passed by the j House, would have limited NOT AFFECTED Medicaid and Medicare relm- Another. $1 miUlon, believed bursement to the hospital to the ' nursing home level of $15 to $17 per day. CaSTS$38 Records show It costs the county an average of $38 a day to keep its 120 chronic-care patients at the local facility. Reimbursement, untlls^ow, has been at that rate. ★ * ★ The Senate amendment pushed through by Sens. L Harvey Lodge, R-Waterford Township, a'nd Sander Levin, D-Berkley, is to be considered by a joint House-Senate conference committee today, according to county legislative agent John Grubba. Jeopardized under terms of the bill, will not be affected, Grubba said. Grubba noted that all Oakland County senators with the ception of George Kuhn, R-West Bloomfield Township, who was absent, voted for the Senate amendment. He said there is still hope that the full reimbursement can be reinstated should the i budget show a surplus -possibility indicated Friday by Gov. William Milliken. Over 57 million pounds of gariic are consumed In the U.S. annually. Bsoas! 108 N. SAGINAW - FE 3-7114 OPEN TONITE 'til 9 P.M. DAILY 9:30 A.M. tq 5:30 P.M. 4th of July Special for COTTAGE, CABIN, NOME! FULLY UPHOISfERiD ML FABRIC PARK FREE In Lot at fear of, store or 1-Hr. -in Downtown Parking Moll Hove Ticket Stomped at Cosihier's Office 30 From County in Welfare Protest Thirty Pontiac and Oakland County members of the Na-tlonalWelfareRight Organization (NWRO) were to participate In a rally today in The rally was planned to protest that the welfare departments and legislatures across the nation have not complied with the 1967 Social Security law. The law says that welfare budgets must reflect the changes in the cost of living. ★ ★ * NWRO is also demanding a guaranteed adequate income for all U.S. citizens. Ibis would be at least $5,500 per year, for a family of four, NWRO proponents say. ★ ★ ★ The Oakland County area chairmen are Mrs. Gladys Harris of 219 Rapid, Pontiac and Mrs. Carolyn Carpenter of 3831 Orchard, Highland Township. GLACIER NATIONAL PARK, font. (AP) — Three young men rho spent the night trapped in a cave in Glacier National Park were rescued Sunday harmed. Glacier authorities said. The three, Richard Millsap, I, Fort Worth, Tex., Gary Shaye, 22, Albany, N.Y., Robert Graham, Lake MacDonald, had gone into the natural cavern about 5 p.m. Saturday. Heavy rains in the area filled the cave entrance with water and mud later on in the evening, trapping the three. Rescue operations began Sun-! day morning, and the youths; were rescued shortly before! noon by a team which dug the dirt and mud away. About 28,000 babies of the four million bom in the U.S. each year die in the process of being bom. Pacts on Tap in Waterford The Waterford Township Board tonight is expected to; award contracts for township insurance policies and the delivery of one new fire tmck Bids on the items were received at last week’s meeting and were referred to committees for recommendations. Tonight’s meeting will be at *7:30 at Waterfoi^ Township High School, 1415 Crescent jLake. FOURTH ©FJULY SALE! Doifttiiissflieliotsaviqg^atS OMCE (D» ZereinenthisSogsi:* xig-ng sewing machine with case. Sews buttonholes, buttons, elastic, stretch fabrics; overedges, darns and monograms without attachments. And it's yours for ...or shoot for. this Singer* sewing machine in "Ventura" cabinet. Sews forward and reverse on oil types of fabrics from the very sheerest to the heaviest vyoolens and leathers. like lt...Chorge iti Use your Singer l-to-36 Credit Card, ________ §INCER , AnwtnwtiMTHtSIMneOMMNV HnjMjlrMminifkMSINetllM^* PONfTIAC MALL SHOPPING CINTIR-^HONl U2-0350 TIL-TWILVI SHOPPING CINTIR—PHONI ISI-lAjlO OAKLAND MALL SHOPfINO CINTIIt-PHONI 5I5-50I0 jg B S9|>|95 Operotei on AC, DC or optional battery. 10^ . bolteriei or AC. With handsome walnut com, Choose from WKCs Wide Selection of Portablesi SONY CUBE RADIO Easy to read clock rodlo. 19’ HITACHI STEREO FM-AM RADIO Trim 17 trontittar portable with stereo FM-AM radio and two full-range 4-inch speakers. 69” EASY CREDIT TERMS AT WKC SONY FM-AM RADIO' With botteries, 3ie. oe PARK FREE IN WKC's LOT AT REAR OF STORE OR l -HR. IN DOWNTOWN MALL - HAVE TICKET STAMPED AT CASHIER'S OFFICE C~12 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. JUNE 80. 1969 Just Tell Us How Miidi “Extra Cash” You Want When You’re Hospitalized and We’ll Enroll You in The Doctors Hospital Plan for Only SPECIAL LIMITED ENROLLMENT EXPIRES MIDNIGHT, AUCUST 3,1969 Yes, ''Extra Cash” Paid Direct to You! -"Extra Cash” ThaTs 100% Tax Free! -"ExtraCash”toSpendAsYou Please! —“Exira Cash” On Top of All Other Hospital Insurance, Even Medicare! That's riphtl Now you can choose the amount of "extra cash" you want coming in when an accident or sudden sickness hospitalizes you or a similarly insured member of your family... "Extra cash" over and above all other hospital benefits you receive, even Medicare... "Extra cash" that’s all tax free... "Extra cash" that’s paid direct to you, to spend in any way you please, and for which you don’t have to make an accounting to anyonel And to qualify for this valuable “extra cash" protection, here is all you have to do: Simply check off, on the Enrollment.Form below. The Doctors Hospital Plan of your choice ... Then mail the completed form before the expiration date of this Special Limited Enrollment. In return, we’ll enroll you immediately for the remarkable low cost of only $ 1! There are no other qualifications whatsoever ... No red tape of any kind ... You don’t even have to see a company representative! PLUS 50%INCREASED"EXTOA CASH"FORCANCER.HEARTATTACK.ORSTROKE Why You Need Ixtra Cosh Ivan if You Hovu Ordinary HotplHil Insuranc* Stop and think for a moment about what can happen to yourself and your family if one of you is Buddeoly struck down by an accident or sidkness, and has to go into tlto hospital... U youVa tba breadwinner and you're hos-pitalizad, you’ra unable to go on working at your while at the same time bills are piling up threateningly at home. If youYa a wife or mother and you’re hos-pltalized, your family may have to go to the trouble and expense of hiring help to take care of things in your absence. If one of your children is hospltalixed, you won’t civen want to think of having to ■crimp on a single thing that can hasten quick recovery. And It you’re over 65, even Medicare, fine as it is, doesn't pay all hospital costs-and it can't pay a penny of your day-in, day-out sapenses around the house. Of course, you may be fortunate enough to already have some hospital insurance or perhaps even some kind of "salary insurance." But as anyone who's been ita the hoi^al recently can tell you, ordinary hos-pitid insurance doesn’t cover everything. There are many "extras" you have to pay for . right out of your own pocket—and these "extras" can add up to hundreds of dollars in what may seem like no time at all. As for salary insurance, chances are that it won’t begin to match your regular take-home pay. As a riSiult, an extended hospital stay for an accident or sudden sickness can force yo^ le up savings it has taken years of har^.. in—cash over and above all benefits from ordinary hospital insur6nce, even Medicare —you can say goodbye forever to nagging money worries that so often go along with hospital emergencies. And now we’ve made it easier and more inexpensive than you may ever have thought possible to enjoy this peace of mind. Regardless of your age, your occupation, or the size of your family, we will enroll you in The Doctors Hospital Plan for only |1. All you have to do is take a moment now and decide which of tlie four plans described in the adjoining box you want—then just check off the plan on the Enrollment Form and mail the completed form to us, along with <1 for your first month. But you must do so not later than Midnight of the expiration date of this Special Limited Enrollment, You Also Infey tho Security of Lifo'long Protection In addition to all the valuable benefits described in the adjoining box. The Doctors Hospital Plan also offers you ^s important For as long as you live and continue to pay your premiun^, we will never cancel or refuse to renew your policy for health reasons—and we guarantee that we will never cancel, modify, or terminate your policy unless we decline renewal or modify all policies of this .type in your entire state or until the maximum (Aggregate of Benefits) of your policy has been paid. work to accumulate. You may have to borrow money and go deep into debt. Worse yet, youi could become a "burden" on relatives or on the community you live in. Your family’s entire way of life can suffer—and even personal recovery can be seriously ■■ ly money worries. v"Thu Doctors C REGARDLESS OF YOUR AGE OR THE SIZE OF YOUR FAMILY, YOU CAN ENROLL FOR ONLY CHOOSE THE PLAN THAT SUITS YOU BEST: You eot AH Ibis ALL-FAMILY PLAN; $10,000.00 MAXIMUM Pays you flOO.OO a week (|14.28 a day) "extra cash" when you are hospitalized... $75.00 a week ($10.71 a day) when your wife is hospitalized.., $50.00 a week ($7.14 a day) when an eligible child is hospitalized. Covers all your umnariied children, including future additions, living at home between 3 months of age and under 21. You pay only $7.95 a month and you get your Hrst month for oi^$l. ONE-PARENT FAMILY PLAN: $7,500.00 MAXIMUM On. all plans, you are eligible for "extra cash" benefits from the very first day of hospitalization for a covered accident or sickness—and these benefits are paid for as long and for as many times as hospitalization occurs, right up to the maximum (Aggregate of Benefits) of the plan you choose. New accidents are covered immediately, the same daji your policy is issued. After your policy is 30 days did, new sicknesses that begin thereafter are coveted. Thera areonlythc when you and your wife are both injured and h^itallzed at the same time. Important: Hera is a real "plus" If you have been told thru anyone in your hon-ily is "uninsurable" because of chronic ailments in the past that are likely to recur. On all plans, these praexlsttng con-I will be coversd sflsr your policy You Ort a "HMdrii Bank Aecmml" That Oraws Ivwy AAonrii Here's snotber woiidaMlMDellt,iAkli' Pays you $100.00 a week ($1428 a day) "extra cash” whenyouMeho8pitalized...$50JI0awrak($7.14Aday) when an eligible child is hospitalized. Covers all your unmarried children living at home between 3 months of age and under 21. You pay only $5.95 a month And you get your first month for only $1. HUSBANO-WFE PLAN: $7,500.00 MAXIMUM dons: pregnam^ or any consequence thereof (unless you have the All-Family Plan or Husband-Wife Flan; in wt^ch case maternity is covered after your policy is In force for 10 months), war, mill, tiuy service, mental disorder, alcoholism or drug ad^Uon, or conditions covered by Workmen's (Compensation or Employers Liability Laws. Y(ou are free to go to any lawfully opeiv ated hospital of your own choice, except only nursing homes; convalescent, extended-care, or self-care units of hospitals; or Federal hospitals. ■ it issued, your insunnoe prmrides iq^ to $10,OOOjOO, $7,500jOO, or $5jD0IM», d» pending upon the plan you choose. ThU is your "Heslth Bank Account." Thep, every month your*pollcy ig in force, a sum equal to your regular monthly premfum (kicludfaig yeuf first month) is actually added to your maximum. Similarly, "extra cash" benefits you receive are subtracted from your zmud-mum. It's much like putting numqy into and taking it out of a bank account. Pays you $100.00 a week ($1428 a day) "extra cash" when you are hospitalized...$75jOO a week ($10.71 a day) when your wife is hospitalized. You pay only $6.45 a month and you get your first month for only $1. Plus SO% hKnusod BonolHt ill plans, you get in addition a 50% increase in your "extra cash" benefits if you or a covered nieniber of srourfiimily •- ’ j • - (including Oven If You'iw OvMT «S, You Con INDIVIDUAL PUN: $5,000.00 MAXIMUM Pays you $100jn a week ($1428 a day) "extra cash" when you are hospitalized. You pay only $3.95 a month and you get your first month for only $1. attack(acutemyocaiidialfaifarcticn,ooro-naiy thrombosis, and coionary oodu-Sion) or stroke (apoplexy). DouMo "bcfiw Cosh" Banelhs If you choose the Alt-Family Plan or Husbandt-Wife PUavyoo also get double "extra cash" benefits—$350.00 a week— Even though you’re eligible for Medicare, it will not pay all expenses when you're' hospitalized. You may want "extra cash" tb hdp out. And now you can enroll in the"extta cash” plan (d your dadoe with-' out any qualificadons sii^ly by oontplet-ing the Enrollment Fonn bel^. And if you're over 65 now, or when you become 65, the following modest mcmthly addU tional rate applies: fenmi* on All-Family or Hiitband-Wfe Plan, onhr $250; fenwiit onOne-Parent Family or Ihdividnal Plan, only $350; male on ell plans, only $350. In|uy Peace of Mind with Ixtra Cash of Your Own Coming In As important as all these valuable benefits, the ease of enrollment, and the low cost is this vital fact: Your policy is backed by the resources, integrity, and reputatiop of Physicians Mutual Insurance Company, "the doctors company" since 1902.'For years, it specialized in health insurance for physicians, surgeons, Eowever, wbea you have exda cash coming and its Board of Directors is still composed entirely of respected members of the medi- cal, dental, and insurance professions. HeadquarteredinOmaha,Nebra$ka, where it is incorporated and licensed, Fhysidans Mutual today serves hundreds of thousands of Americans in all walks of Hfe throughout the United States direct by mail. You may judge the high calibre of the company from the fact that Dunne's Insurance Reports, one of the leading insurance industry au- thorities in the lution, gives Physicians Mutual its highest policyholders' rating of "A Plus (Excellent)." Inrell Today for Only $1 Without Risk or Obligation To enroll in The Doctors Hospital Plan, simply complete and mail the Enrollment Bonn before the deadline date. We will then issue your Doctors Hospital Policy (Form P322 Series) Immediately, the same day your Enrollment Is received. This automatically puts your poliqr in force. When you receive your poli(^, you'll see that It is straightforward and easy to understand. But if for any reason whatever you change your mind, retufn your policy in 10 days and yrntrUwm Be refunded promptly. However, you have nothing to gain by "putting off" this important decision to the deadline date. As a matter of fact, you could actually lose, for an unexpected accident w sickness could strike without wuning, and you will not be covered until your poliqr is in force. Play it safe now by inaiilng tba cmnpleted Enrollment Form today. Answers to 15 Important Questions About The Doctors Hospital Plan 1. What la Tbs Doctera Hospital Flan? It i» • low-cost insurance plan that pays "extra cash" direct to you when a covered accident or iUneis hospitalizes you or a similarly insured member of your family. 2. By "extra cash,” do you mean I can collect even If I haveother insurance? Yes. The Plan pays you tax-free cash over and above any benefits from other insurers, even Medicare. Understandably, you can have only one like policy with 6Ur company. S. Why do I need The Doctors Hospital Plan In addition to my regular Insurance or Medicare? Chuices are, your ordinary hospital ■ Insurance^on’t ( .......... Furthermore, under all plans, you receive a 50% increase in cash benefits if you or a covered member of your family is hospitalized for cancer (Including Leukemia and Hodgkin's Disease), heart atUck (acute myo- cardial infarctiop, coronary thrombosis, and coronary occlusion), or stroke (apoplexy). And under the All'Pamily Plan rndHusband-Wife Plan, if you and your wife are both injured and hospitalized at the same time, you get double cash benefits—$350.00 aweek. pay a cent toward your expenses at home. 4. It I or a covered member of my family goes Into the hospital, when do benefite be-gInZ You're eligible for cash benefits from the very first day of hospital confinement for a covered accident or lUnesa—for as long and for as many times ss hospitsUzatlon oocuts, up to the maximum (Aggregate of Benefita) for the plan you choose. ' I. How imioh in cath hencHte ean 1 iscsiva? Ihider the AB^anOly Plan, tlie maximum is $10/100.00! $100.00 a week ($1428 > day) when you're hospitalized, $75.00 a week ($10.71 a diQF) when your wife is hospitalized, $50.00 a week ($7.14 a day) when a covered child is hospitalized. Under the One-Parent Family Plan, the maximum is $7500.00: $100.00 a week ($14.28. a day) for you, $50/» a week ($7.14 a day) for a covered child. Under the Busband-Wife Plan, the maxi-num la $7500jOO: $100.00 a week ($1428 a iday) for you, $75/10 a week ($10.71 a day) for your wife. 6. Why Is The Doctors Hospital Plan like a "Health Bank Account"? Because every month your policy is in force, a sum equal to your reimlar monthly premium (including your first month) is added to your pJan’a maximum. Similarly, benefits you receive are subtracted from your "Health Bank Account" maximum. 7. Does this plan cover any hospital? You are covered in any lawfully qperated hospitsd of your choice, except only nursing homes; con-vaIeBoent,extended-care,or self«aFe units of hospitals; or Federal hosidtals. I. WIU my Glaima IM haiodladjlli^^ Of course. With your policy, you'll Mso^recelve a simple, easy-to-use Claim Form, Your claims will be processed by us quickly and we’U send checks direct to you.' The only qualification is that you complete and mail the Enrollment Form by the deadline date. • 12. When does my policy go hito force? It becomes effective immediately, the same day we receive your Enrollment Form. New accidents are covered on that date. After your policy is 30 days did, new sicknesses that begin thereafter are covered. And under the All-Family Plan and Husband-Wife Plan, childbirth of pregnancy dr any consequence thereof is covered after your policy is In force for 10 months. 13. Can t drop out any time I with? Can you drop me? You are free to mop your policy, if you choose, on any renewal date. However, for as long as you live and continue to pay your premiums, wegrlli never cancel or refuse to rendW your policy for health xdasons —and we guarantee that we wilt never cancel, modify, or terminate your policy unless we decline renewal or mo^ all pedides of this type In your entire state or until the maximum (Amregate of Benefits) of your poli^ has been paid. PHYSICIANS MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY • 115 SOUTH 42nd STRECT, OMAHA. NEBRASKA 68131 LICENSED BY THE STATE OF MICHIGAN URGENT! SPECIAL LIMITED ENROLLMENT FOR “EXTRA CASH” BENEFITS EXPIRES MIDNIGHT, AUGUST 3, 1969! How much do I pay sftsr that? Regardless of your age oy the dae of your famOy, your 9. Are there a ared? Only these exceptions: pregnancy or any consequence thereof’(unless you have the Alt-Family Plan or Husband-Wife Plan), war, military service, mental disorder, alco-liolism or drug addiction, or Any condition covered by Workmen'A Compensation or Employers Liability LawA. Brat month oos^ only $1.00. 'Thereafter, if you're under 65, you pay only $7.95 a month for the All-Family Flan, only $5.95 for the Om-Parent Family Plan, only $6.45 for the Husband-Wife Plan, only $3.95 for the Individual Plan. (If you’re 65 or older, there Is A modest increase in premiums. See the box Above.) ' 10. What If sooMbody in my fomliy haa had Uudar tba JndMdaal Platt, the maidmum to S/NNUOS SOOjOO a week (|1428 k day) existing conditiona are covered after your policy has been in fores only one year. 11. Is than a too of sad taps to quaIUy7 .No- IS. Should I enroll right now or wait till tbs deadlina dsfo? Frankly, you have nothing to gain by waiting. You could actually lose, because an unexpected accident or Illness coiild itrike without warning—and you will not be cqvered until your poliqr Is In fores. Your best hot is to "play it safe’’by eniolling BOW. last Agtt Sou □ Fanils Datsef ■M«i» - 11 Aii-FuiUy Pisa or HmiMad-'NUs Has *~ Ti1irHit_ piMM sive following lafanaslim abent -siw. ^ Wlfo's MlddleluliU Ksawltat , omat ( „ IwH.'sBirtb. 1 »«■ foy 1 Y«r rpanbtat»RNV«ieiANS.|ltlTUAU BBB i-. THE PONTJAC PRESS, MQNQAY, JUNE 80, i960 D-l Hooray for the Fourth of July! Want to put some POP into that Independence Day party that it’s your turn to give this year? You can do it easily and cleverly with these new edible popcorn decorations—^Red Hot Popcorn Firecrackers and a Popcorn Liberty BeU. ,If your guest list includes a crowd of youngsters—and whose list doesn’t on the Fourth?— they’ll get double enjoyment from the firecracker favors. Cinnamon candies give the glazed popcorn its red hot hue and flavor and licorice strings make the fuses. Licorice, too, forms the hanger for and the famous crack in the Liberty Bell. So have a happy, snappy Fourth with kn assist from a really all-American, and native American food—Popcorn. It does make the best firecrackers and Liberty Bells! ★ ★ ★ Popcorn Liberty Bell 2 quarto unsalted popi^ Red Hot Popcorn Firecrackers 1 quart unsalted pq>ped 14 cup butter, . . 1 tablespoon vinegar 114 cups light brown sugar, .14 teaspoon salt firmly packed String licorice % cup light molasses Keep popcorn hot and crisp in a 300-degree oven. Butter sides of a heavy 3-quart saucepan. In it, combine brown*sugar, molasses, butter, vinegar, and salt. Bring to a boil, stirring until sugar dissolves. Clip candy thermometer to pan. Cook syrup to 250 degrees (hard ball stage). Pour slowly over popcorn stirring just to mix thoroughly. Butter hands lightly; quickly form popcorn into bell shape*. To apply finishing touches: Make loop from licorice strings and insert in top of bell. Heat a little com syrup; brush on side of bell; press licorice strings in place to resemble the crack in the bell. CRANBESRY STARS AND STRIPES SANDWICHES Cranberry Sauce for Red Flag Stripes % teaspoon vinegar ^ . V« teaspoon salt 1 cup sugar teaspoon vanilla % cup water 14 cup red cinnamon candles 14 cup light corn syrup String licorice Keep popcorn hot and crisp in a 300-degree oven. Butter sidqp of a heavy saucepan. In it, combine sugar, water, com syrup, vinegar, and salt. Bring to a boil, stirring until sugar dissolves. *Or lightly butter a deep slant-sided mixing bowl and an 8-inch pie pan; pack with glazed popcorn. Unmold and press two parts of bell together. If you have a shindig coming up and you would like to pay a nod of homage to one or another of our ed celery. Mix chicken spread with remaining cranberry sauce inside with thin slices of cranberry sauce cut to fit top of eadi sandwich. Arrange rows of sandwiches on a tray, one row wdth white bread and one row sandwiches topped with cranberry sauce, to resemble stripes on flag. Chill until ready to serve. Makes about 30 sandwiches. TEA AND CRANBERRY JUICE • Prepare hot tea as usual. Add sugar, whide cloves and a strip of orange peel, if desired. Suve with a idtcher of crald juice instead of the usual lemon to add lovely color and piqtunt flavor. A change of pace for that change of pace drink. BE EXACT Clip candy thefmdmeteT to pan. Cook syrup to 250 degrees (hard ball stage) over medium heat. Remove from heat; add vanilla and candies; stir till candies are partially melted. Pour slowly over popcorn, stirring just to mix thoroughly. Butter hands lightly; quickly form popcorn into shape of king-size firecrackers. Insert a short piece of licorice in end of each one for a fuse. Makes 4 to 6 firecrackers. mayonnaise and celery. |- Using a 1% inch star shap^ I cookie cutter cut out 18 stars 'fi*nvn elissaa Af Krsi from slices of bread. Spread 9 flavor, try serving a punch of hot or cold tea with cranberry juice fubstituting for the usual lemon in it Very good. STARS AND STRIPS SANDWICHES 1 can (4Mi ounces) deviled ham % cup mayonnaise Scrape Onion Mu^ recipes call for onion juice.. To prepare, simply sprinkle a................ I little salt on the cut surface Of an onioii, wait a minute, andwen scrape with a knife or spoon to get the juice. of the stars with deviled ham. cranberry sauce lengthwise into Va inch thick slices. Gut out stars and place on deviled ham. Top with second star of bread. Arrange in the upper left hand comer df a tray. Trim crusts from remaining bread. Sisread half of the ilicee with remaining deviled ham and chicken spread. Top the slices with slices of cranberry sauce trimmed to fit bread. T(^ all sandwiches with second slice of bread- Cut each sandwich into 3 strips., RED STRIPES Top sandwiches with Frost and Trim Cake to Resemble Gay Drum If you’re plaiming treats lor the Fourth or for a little boy’s happy Urdiday, the Iclds will love this Doodle Dum Drum Cake. It’s a three-layer fun cake that starts with quick ’n easy pancake mix and finishes with rich butter cream frosting licorice and peppermini sticks. White frosting is swirled between the layers and onto the sides. Ilie tq> is frosted red for hi^ haiq)y birthday spirits. A drum “lacing” of black licorice completes thd sides and pep-pen^t dmmsticks finish this tasty tribute. DOODLE DUM DRUM CAKE » eggs 1 teaspoon salt 1V4 cups sugar 1 teaspoon vanilla 14 teaspomi lemon extract ■ Vi teaspoMi mace 114 cups pancake mix White butter cream frosting Red butter cream frosting 20 fom^inche pieces black lioorce 2 peppermint sticks Heat oven to hot (400 degrees). Grease three 8-inch round cake pans; line with waxed paper; grease again and flour. Beat eggs and salt until and lemon colored Gradually add sugar beating constantly. Stir in vanilla, lemon extract, mace and pancake mix. Pour into iH-epared pans; tread evenly. Bake in , reheated oven 8 to 10 minutes, immediately loosen edges and turn out onto wire racks; cool. ' To assemble cake, put cake layers tilgether with white frosting. Frost sides of cake with white frosting. Frost top of cake with red frosting. Press pices r the exam the exam as the instructors irho sought the resignation. • Assemblyman Ray Johnson, RrChico, distributed copies of the examination to all state legislators, calling the test “forced political doctrination." bearded physicist; said in an interview with United Press Intcanatioiul that he had no intention of quitting. “I plan to continue teaching here like I’ve always taui^t here,” he said. “If there 'are „ , „ things that I fed need to But Zeilenga, a 32-year-old be said, then I’ll say them.” ZeHenga; who calls b 1 slddete a inwbiem, the one about political philosophy “militant students’ blood.’’ radical left,” said he had sec- a a * ond thoughts about the con- „ ^ ui « i troversial final 1 He gave the ifrproblem final . to the 40 students of his basic “If I were rewriting the exam now,” he said, “I might change ' few words. I were stated in term Johnson called “The Epitome of One question read, “If one ounce of botulism toxin prill exterminate 00 million people, how much total energy would be required to orUt a single bomb adiidi could theoretically eliminate the human race, with a factor of 10 overkfllT” FOR YOUR BIO 4th COOKOUT TRY WITH CAMILOT CokSlmur 39$ PORK LOIN SLICIED INTO Ml CHOPS S»e 21>i FAMILY PADK shk or mor# TRY WITH CAMILOT Maoazoni Salad GREAT FOR A PERFECT 4TH BARBEQUE Backa Attached TRY WITH CAMRLOT Potato Salad 39<: BONRLRSSCALIP. STYLE MEL*0?o9^ HOWARD JOHNSONS PROZIN Corn Toastees... • TASTI OUT |.|fc, Grapefauit, Pears, Plums m!;39^ WYLIRS HIP 01CNICKIN Bullion Cubes,.., ....JSrirSSt! LO.CAL ORANOt DRINK Aunt Nellies46^ Fild Beef Steaks CUT FROM THE CHUCK MEADOWDALE Corn (Mds toptcin Soap,.., MEADOWDALE FROZEN IHBA0OW0ALE •FROZEN A P* A Striwl)erries...'ft?i5P ALL VARIITIIIFROZIH Jeno Pizsa RoUa..........69t ,URDX lYI PROZIN Peas and Onions PeomPte. » SNUi wb 88^ •iL THB POMTIAG PRESS. MONDAY, JUNB 80. 1969 D--8 GOP National Committee Gets Larger Role in Patronage Pfcfc WASHINGTON (AP) - TIm Repubttcwi National Conunlttee haa bean given an enlarged role In diaiiming patronage—a move intended to check a major rank and file complaint that the Wxon plministratiao has been slow to divide govemmoit jobs among party members. From now on. most job requests will be through the committee, which will send on to the White House the names of those it feels most worthy of getting an appoint- There is no guarantee the committee’s apidicant will get the job, but the White House has pnmiised to give spedal attention to sudi requests. The new procedure was odt-ned, to the committee by Harry Dent, a White House siUe serving as President Nix-od*8 specidist in Itepublican party affairs. WELOQMENEWS Dent brought the welcome news to the committee at a dosed door session of Its three- day meeting, set to cqndude today. He summed up his remarks later for newsme Some indication of the regulars’ feeling on the subject was the roudng cheer when it pointed out that of M appdnt-ments by Cet. IS-Nov. 2))! Chango iitura. Tharo aro dataHi flngarly w orgiM h raloNvai. Soma may « a of orgumont. __, ___________________t do odnoro to prlnolploi. CAPRICORN (Doe. 12-Jtn. Daily Almanac By United Presa International Today is Monday, June 30, the 181st day of 1969 with 184 to follow. The moon Is between Its full phase and last quarter. ’Tha morning stars are Mercury, Venus and Saturn. The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter. ' On this day in history^ In 1870 Ada Uepely became the first woman to b e griduated from' an accredited law school when she received a diploma from .the Union College of Law in Chicago. In 1906 President Theodore Roosevelt signed tho Pura Food and Drug Act, a law making illegal the ahipment lA intarstata commerce of adulterated foods and drugs. In I960 President Truman annotmeed the traniifer of American troops in Japan to Korea to assist in the fight against Communist aggression. In 1958 the U,S. Senate approved the Alaska Statehood The thought for tha day: JolHI Phillips Marquand wrote «* '‘It la worthwhile for to bava behind tilm a law fenerations of honest, taM-working ancestry." , illuatlont In lannar, aoma loday may wi ' a you along count thot lot IP TUESDAY IS YOUR BIRTHDAY ... — ._ Yw Hi your^ own 1 offing. ■I PoaTurt OUT OUR WAY EEK & MEEK Rv Howie Schneider 1 ( I HeAR. StoO-WC \ 1 Btew mwiois. c4Hiup 1 V Vesj I PR€FeR. 1 Vrr Twor wayi 7 r VUHV-? J ( ’cause: trs wouR^ V BEST SlDei y ) •WlbpMA lMTid.l^ UlM.OfK 1 ' 4->e 1 BOARDING HOUSE :: 7 1 OH. LET'S , FE 2-0111 BUY! SELL!TRADE! i PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! ‘IGCK-IT-TO-ME’ — Cooperating with the countywide campaign “Lock-It-To-Me” is General Motors President Edward N. Cole of 1371 Kirkway, Bloomfield Township. Initiated by the Traffic Improvement Association of Oakland County CTIA), the program has received national rec-. ognition. State Punishes 2 Locals for 'Illegally Halting Work' iS LANSING OB - The State At Lincoln Park, the work stoppage started last Sept. 5 and lasted 10 days. That stop-, page involved complaints about working conditions and job Service Commission has ordered the suspension of ^yroll dues deduction privil-for one year against two q^n locals charged with work classifications. A majority of i|^pages. [the 70 warehouse workers join- Announcement of the decision walkout, tbllowed lengthy hearings on the I . , work stoppages by locals of the' The commission said the work American Federation of state. I efeppeses violated a no strike” County arid Municipal elapse of state employment Employes. , regulations. ★ * * . I ........... ' Affected were Locals 1342 at the Lincoln Park warehouse of: the State Liquor Control Commission and Local 567 at the' Lapeer Home and Training School. The punishment could have becii more severe in that the commission had considered withdrawing recognition of the local entirely. TWO DAY STRIKE ,;;^At Lapeer, it was found the ioeal “did in fact conduct a dffike' designed to force the medical superintendent to sifto a contract with the local.” fhhfract was signed. About 150 employes of the home were out for two days beginning Last Oct. 16. ^■".',''1 II..,:" SOV SAUCC ALL SUITER REFLATING REDI)CEn20% DUBING JULY ONLY BEFORE j AFTER Every Item Replated at Sale Prices since silver metel price* are up SOS FORTNSTANCE and atm rising... thi* Is Sn excellent time to take advantage of these low, n. HZ hw,prl«ilohw«ywjrwofB.Ivw.,,^ ware, antiques and family hairlooma replatad Ilka new. These pieces are •••• now mote valuable then ever, and Can^astlck make wonderful gift*. All work (P«f tneW- ‘ » U4 QUADRUPLE SILVERPLATElTby our Sugar bowl.. 15.95 1171 akillad allvartmitha and Sale pricaa apply to ALL placaa. *q. inj.... .14 .112 EXPERTREPAIRSEBTICES ATAnmE Braken handlai, laia, ■ kneba, repaired A lapiaead Bald, capper plating Mitalni pafit A inaiilatott Bteriing and pawtar lepalted A raptacad «p ffAT.-M BNIMI JULY 81 BKtNG IN SILVER TODAY! D Gregory JEWELRY 9250 Oroliard Uk« Mi. 02.0930 f iT ■, KS Fdrf Beef °eo«u "w 39 1V*~6 THE PONTIAC PliESS. MONDAY. JUNE 80, 1969 Ex-Pakistan Leader X3 Live Political Issue „ ISLAMABAD, Pakistan (AP) r- Mahaipnied^ Ayub Khan, pressured from office in March by a violent, nationwide Insurrection against his regime, lives in his large, modem high-walled house here overlooking the site of a presidential mansion that was never built. Joining the ranks of such unseated leaders as Nkrumah, Sukarno, Khrushchev and De Gaulle, Ayub now leads a quiet life in Pakistan’s modem capi-1a! that he founded. * * * "President Ayuh,” snowy-bearded scribiM his boss, rarely voitures outside his house — partly, no doubt, because he is still a live political issue. According to a recent visitor, nun KEEGO roltDbn^/* Smith InciBdIhip Jouiwy Starts WEDNESDAY! 2001 a space odyssey the 62-year-old Ayub Is not in especially good health. The former president suffered a pulmonary embolism in eariy 1968 and has been ordered Iqr doctors to restrict his diet. PROMOTES HIMSELF An avid golfer, Ayub told his visitor that he has not played since he turned the country over to Yahya Khan, commander in chief of the army, who declared martiat law March 25. Six days later Yahya promoted himself to president — Just as Ayuh did after his 1958 coup. Good friends from their army days, Yahya and Ayub apparently struck a gentleman’s agreeihent that the outgoing president would not be persecuted in retirement. •a ★ But the opposition politicians who suffered during Ayub’s lOMt-year paternalistic yet autocratic reign qre determined to investigate his past. They say privately that, in order to prove its ^tegrity, Yahya Khan’s lartial law adminlstratioq lust take some action against Ayub and his family. To say this publicly would, amount to criticism of martial law and land them in jail. ACCOUNT OF FUNDS Wahiduz Zaman, a prominent member of the Pakistan Muslhn League — of which Ayub is still president — has called on him to “render an account of party funds’’ that were collected for Ayub’s reelection. According to some sources, the Muslim League fund amounts to 35 million rupees or $7.35 million. Zaman charged that Ayub 'never gave any account of funds to either the executive committee or convention of delegates and acted in an arbitrary method.’’ ★ ★ ★ ‘ More controerslal than this sue — for no one is certain lat Ayub himself controls the fund — is Ayub’s son, Gohan Ayub, who became a millionaire aftci- his father became presl-dejrtt. P»f0r Fonda—No Spokesman For Young Peter Fonda Speaks 'Only for Himself 'Calcutta' Wins Official OK to Flaunt 10 Nude Bodies ByKARLWILSWl NEW YORK - New York City’s the land of liberty ... 'Hie off-Broadway show "Oh! Calcuttal" which is about 10 nude bodies, is apparoitly going to be permitted to stay on despite ccmiplaints and even a few demands that It be led. Hie Police Dept, and D.A.’s office are bigly going to let the bn-stage love-making con-| tinue indefinitely. ^ A police official told me that once upon a time, if a parson was nude, and moved, that was illegal. But that has bera thrown out longj^l ago. But if it should have been about Miss Jeri Archer, the actress and modbl of a couple of years ago, tiiat was another interesting story. I (hiening night in "The Entertainer” she flashed her bosom realistically and they chased her. Today she would be considered prudish. The price of tickets for good seats New Year’s Eve at “Calcutta” has gone to $35. ★ ★ W James Mason was asked to delivm- the eulogy to Judy Garland because they knew each other well in the days when bofli starred in “A Sttw Is Bom,” maybe 20 years back. Hie stories he has about Judy are remarkable. ★ ★ ★ Uis Weber Smith, the pubUdst for Usa MineUl’s inner ctnm who boiiished a girl reporter irom. the Campbell Funeral Home when the mporter tried to sit in on tiie pliuining for the funeral, used to bripress agent for hbrilya Monroe. She’s married to NY Timesaiin Gene Smith. Site admfred the girl reporter’s determination lo get a story.but . . . "Oh, weU,” she says, “I learned 1 was with Marilyn, you can’t mpfce everybody happy.” ’pp AVAILABLE JULY ist WILSON 5 AW. ' ’ V4% SAVINGS CEimnaTES In omMinta of $S,000 or mtn . ME/WSES EEDESAl SAVINOS AND LOAN INSURANCE CORFORATION By BOB THOMAS HOLLYWOOD (AP) - “Me, a spokesman for my generation? Forget it. 1 speak i^y for my-8 01 f. As for my generation, it was time they started doing their own speaking. There has been too] much of the fsilent majority’ at both ends of the genera-1 on gap.” THOMAS Peter Fonda, a 29-year-old who speaks—and sometimes blows—his mind, was scoffing at the buildup for which he said American International Pictures was responsible. He made it clear that he is his own man. A * ★ The movie studios are discovering that. For almost four years he has been turning down one script after another. He found one role he wanted, then was spumed by the British di- press in Cannes: “The cocaine my generation? ak i^y for my- ■ n THE A^NIGHT EARL was sugar, the LSD was half an aspirin tablet, but the pot was —pot.’ ” Fonda, whose handsome face is now obscured by a heavy growth of hair and heard, shudders when he recalls his early film career, particularly his debut in “Tammy and the Doctor.” Said he: “One day Meally got stoned and saw that big studio syndrome for what it was. It was fantastic. He finally hit with the younger crowd with the motorcycle gang film, “Wild Angels,” and the paean to LSD, “The Trip.” through my pants pockets, he speaks bitterly of the producers, American International: “For ‘Wild Angels’ they paid me the monumental sum of $10,000. For my next picture the contract called for a $2,000 raise. I finally did ‘The Trip’ for $25,000. “Then they offered me a fabulous deal involving a half-million dollars, my own yacht and a chance to make my.own film. The film of Duke Ellingtoh’s birthday concert at the White House (produced by Sidney Striber) will be shown at the Moscow Film Festival . . . Rudy Vallee says he’ll sue a N.Yi company for $2,000,000 for using his picture in an ad ... Sophia Loren and Marcello Mastrolanni start “Sunflower” in Moscow July 11. Secret Stuff: a major studio, which hoped one of its big new films would save it, now fears it may to “the stinker of all time” . . . Rock Hudson’ll switch from lover to villain In “Chicago 7” ... Jack E. Leonard said at a “Personality” TV taping, “If I was gonna hit anybody with a pie. I’d want it to to Jack Carter. Then he’d have to spoid money to have his suit cleaned and that would shock his friends.” TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: A woman said she’ll stop wearing the new suit styles: “Hiis morning I caught my hushahd going “Woman’s chief asset is man’s REMEMBERED QUOTE: Imagination.” EARL’S PEARLS: Flip Wilsrai, who’ll suh for Johnny Carson the week of July 7, quips, “I hope I do good. If I’m a hit. It could lead to a guest shot on ‘Julia-’ ” Bob Hope praised Jackie Gleason’s golf: “He can putt and drive like a champ. In fact, he can do everything but bend over aqd tee up the ball/’ That’s earl, brother. Yes, H^nny: “Probably Super Rooster’s second proudest moment was seeing all those contented looks, at CHARblE BRCfWN’S last night COMMERCE OPEN NIGHTLY First Showing ht Dusk EM 3-0661 Under 12 FMI Eye Off A UNIVERSAL PICTURE m m TECHNICOLOR' ^ SECOND FEATURE ______ ■M-R-■ —-■- ■-1-- ■nniii8Sfi'UiM. JeMofa rSSTECTVOHt PJUlItTARt MME..../... ««lHi Modem Weec^nen't kiMKNNi MoftQogM ^HironcM ■ luoii. ouL isauura L/uiK;aii wosi an American and Vanessa Red-^“ * grave (who portrayed her) iff ^thpv mid t English!” Fonda argu^ to no I ® would have to do "Three in the Attic’ and ‘The Marquis de avail. Failing to find a film he crni-sidered valid, he made his own. He and pal Dennis Hosier dreamed up a tale of two motor-cycUsta who drift across the coonby in search of or other. They wrote a script with Terry Southern (“Candy”) enlisted tooducer Bert Schneider, who wangled a $875,-000 bank loan. GRABBED BY COLUMBIA Sade’ before I could make my own picture. That’s when I told them what to do with the deal. I wasn’t going to sell out. rassment for Yahya,” anotherj « diplomat said. “But Yahya’s hnfh ? I successors will be pushed to I take action against him.” Easy Rider . " in seven wi^eks, mostly on the .. rqpd beti M. E. DANIELS Dlilrld ItopreMntaHve 888W.ltarea P||.itti Transplant Serurn I ANN ARBOR (AP) - Upiver-slty of Michigan Medical Center officials have announced satisfactory results with a new serum designed to prevent re-Ijection in organ transplants. The seruiti, antilymphocytic globulin, is made by the Upjohn p here and New Orleans. Columbia snapped it up. for a half-milliim plus a share of the profits. The\film was shown at the Cannes Film Festival and won a standing ovation and best first-direction award. Fonda seemed even more pleased with the reception from the “underground Camies festival.” ■ ‘"rhey’re all young people and jthey give no prizes and invite only those pictures they are Interested in,” he said. “When ‘Easy Rider’ was over, they all stood Up and wouldn't stop cheering.” “Easy Rider,” like last year’s “The Graduate,” 1# stacksd against the establishment, ^d many will find it disturbhig, particularly in its exaltation of the use of drugs. ‘T suppose my answer will make it difficult for other film makers who want to use pot. But I’ll tell you what I told the DRUGS USED? Fonda was asked if actual drugs were used in the film. He hesitated, then replied: DETROIT (AP)-The Detroit I%artment of Streets and Railways had a publicity show planned for its new tlcketoHs- ROBERT HOUSMAN Lions Officers Are Installed The Pontiac Lions Club has Installed Robert Housman of 248 Pike as this year’s club president in ceremonies at the Holiday Inn. Other officers include Omar Gagne of 4975 W. Utica, first vice president; Wesley Maas of 1632 Maple Wood, Sylvan Lake, second vice president; Lee Haslinger of 272 W. Iroquois, third vice president; Robert Watts of 88 Oneida, secretary; ; treasurer. DSR Publicity Plans Askew u . „ , . WHS spurnea py me oruiBn ai- .. u* i j /One western diplomat com-rector because he was an Amer-yacht was already pur- , , mented: In that kind of situa-ipan "But Isadora Duncan wasi*^^*®®*^”® 52-foot beauty—and (tion, people would do him favors for me in Florida. I was ’ HFOWS they wouldn’t do for anyone else because they thought it would avance them, make them popular with Ayub or whatever. But it may have been all legal. COULD GET HOT Yahya will be able to protect Ayub as long as martial law continues. If the new president AUdts to his promise to return Mmself to the barracks and Pakistan to parliamentary democracy, things could bwome hot for Ayub. “Today Ayub Is an embar- BLENDED WHISKEY • 86 PROOF • 65% GRAIN NEUTRAL SPIRITS01969 CALVERT OISt! CO., LOUISVILLE, KY. thing went fine until a tem-a^ girl rushed up and threw a monkey wrench into the works. * * * According to the plans. Miss June DSR, Cathy "Dory, would put two dollar bills into the machine and get the first seven tickets from it, altdoie for tele-vislim and radio; And everyone would get publicity. • j^r W ' ■'-■it' Everybody was going to get a riiare untU Joyce Williams turned up. ' w ★ ■ ' While Miss Dory and various bank and city officials were chatting. Miss Williams, 16, asked ff she could buy some tickets because she was in a a hurry. IN ^ HURRY “Wouldn’t you like to wait?” someone suggested. “I really am in a hurry,” she replied. . * w * After a few unsuccessful tries at getting the machine to work, she and DSR public relations man Robert Toohey finally got six bills uncrumpM and right side upi and Joyce had the 21 tickets and caught a bus Nice neat Try it Straight. This way you’ll immediately find out why, in a marketplace of almost infinite choice, it is definitely Soft Whiskey vs. the rest. *10“ *4“ Calvert Extra, The Soft >Miiskey . THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. JUNE 80, 1969 D—7 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown iwoduce by groweni and sold by them in Wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by tin vnmr /a»\ an.- Detroit Bureau of Markets as M MarfHigherin Moderate T rade Thursday. Produce mirket. r.pirt.dll buoyed in part by selective buying, continued higher in moderate trading early this afternoon. The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was up 3.30 at 873.06. * * Gains led losses by better than STS issues. Brokers said the market drew some of its early strength from baying among were considered to have fallen to attractive price levels during the recent sbiirp decline. ‘NOT STARTLING' “There’s nothing '‘startling aixiut the bounce,” an analyst said. “The market is deeply oversold, and a condition like that periodically encourages bargain He added that many investors still were cautious and * - >/4 . -Ir 1* - + Va 5 35 344* 35 -t V> 42 33 , 324* 324k-V* 41 404* 3t<* 401* IM 42 411* - 31 30 241* 41 411* 41'* —— 04 21 27 27 - ... n 144* 144* 144 60 99% 58% 59% 14 23% »% 23% 16 2VM 26% 27 51 38% 38 .. 38% -f % 89 49% 48% 49 f % 69 64 62% 62% +1% 34% 34% 34% ~ % 54 54% 4-1 39% 38% 39% f Va ^ liS Sik fJi ....... Copyrliihttd by Th* Aitoclattd Proft 14*4 Slln figuru *ro unofflcl*! tiockaividmd *-P*ld l*4t y**r. ^Po ■ Miimolod e _-----------jr «.dU»rlbu( g—Dtclarod or g»ld w for ‘ h-Oociarod or paid aflar >1 ______Id or ipllt up. k—Oaclarad or a mit yaar,. an accumulallvo liiuo « dividand* In arraari. n—Now Paid fhl* yoar, dr ' ' ------ or no action taki Ing. r—Doclarod fissr___________ or cx-dl*trlbutlon Dei^ite efforts to reduce the decibels of personal publicity, Kennedy is finding it difficult to fold off hundreds of pnqiosals to put his views in print and his face on television. * * * Unlike Humphrey he has de-Qllned to write a newspaper col- are close together and much fewer at other times, and earns about 8125 a week after penses. Because of the work’s temporary nature and the Erskine Caldwell, the novelist and lecturer, has been sending in comments for years. So has a Milwaukee lawyer viiio travels through the Midwest. Home office personnel, including Miss Stevens, also take to the road, not only Inspecting gathering also the comments of friends and acquaintances they meet In their travels. Editors then read everything, Including other published comments, before a star Is Issued. 4 Incidents of Bombing Hit Seattle SEA'ITLE (AP) — ’Two explosive bombs and two firebombs were set off in s^arate areas of the city Sunday, one wrecking the first floor of tiie University of Washington’s administration building. Police said two of the bombings appeared to be linked. No one was Injured ’The last of the incidents occurred shortly before midnight, when a paint storefront was wrecked by a bomb made from explosives placed in a sawed-off segment of an automobile exhaust pipe. John-Cyra, owner of the firm, said the bomb was placed inside a plywood cover he had put over the window after a firsboiBb had brdcen it three weeks ago. Two cars were damaged miy Sunday by Are bombs In the Green Lake area of N<^ 8Mt-tle. The caii had been left, unlocked, outside the owners’ homes—about two blocks m>art. Police said they assume the same person or persons placed the two car bottibs. *• til .r-? .+'! .+.4 ty of Washlngtm) blew a hole six feet across in t concrete floor of the entrance where it was placed. SUGGESTION AWARD - Brian R. Evely (center), a mechanic In Pontlae Motor Division’s product engineering department, receives a 810,000 award for his material-saving idea for the fuel tank fit on 1060 Pontiac sedans. Presenting the award are F. James McDonald (right), a GM vice president and Pontiac’s general manlier, and Stephen P. Malone, Pontiac’s chief engineer. EvMy Is the first Pontiac employe to receive the maximum award under the General Motors suggestion plsn since It was Increased from 86,000 last Octobw. Pontiac Div. Mechanic's Idea Pays News in Brief man arrested as a’suspect In a break-in at Diny’s Market, 78 Lull, early yesterday morti^. ' in the market was Major Finley, 24, of 50 Chap- 4*2.4 1*3.4 145.2 4*g.l 1*4.2 144.S 4«a.t 1*'.3 1431 “1.1 ill 0 7-ii r-ti ITOCKt IS UtllB 4f SoM* .. 34*.14 A mechanic In Pontiac Motor Division’s product engineering department is 810.000 richer today as the result of his material-saving Idea fdr the fuel tank fit on 1960 Pontiac sedans. Brian R. Evely of 8040 Plnehurst, Independence Township, is the first Pontiac employe to receive the maximum award under the General Motors suggestion plan since it was increased from 86,000 last October, ★ w * F. James McDonald, General Motors vice president and Pontiac general manager presented Evely. the top award during a brief ceremony in McDonald’s office. Also present to congratulate Evely was Stephen P. Malone, Pontiac’s ddd engineer. Evely’a suggestion was to le two thin strips of neoprene foam on a cushicm between the fUel tank and flie underbody. These replaced a thicker foam pad. HOME, COLLEGE Evely plans to use part of the award money to help pay the mortgage on his jhome on Dollar Lake and some to help finance his daughter’s education. She recently finished her first year at Flint Junior College. Axed if he thought his suggestion would earn 819,000, he said; "Not exactly, but I knew that the award would probably ba a big one.” Evely has submitted 86 ideas nee he joined Pontiac in February 1963. Thirteen have been adopted and four are being processed. His largest previous awards were for 8100. He and his wife. Jay, have five children. By ROGER E. SPEAR |lngs. New product lines may Q — I often find that a stockjsuggest added profitability; a stock split or an increased dividend may be expected or a significant corporate move appears likely. by my broker has already topped out and I’m buying it too soon thereafter. Please explain how this hap-ins, - J.M. A -r When a stock is buoyant, there trill be a seriea of profitable buying levels and no one can predict the final top even when red lights start blinkfiig. Your broker seems to be trying to put bis clients Into popiilar issim during the mldiUa and latter phases of what Is called the accumulation period In the technical action of a stock. When a few wetl-lnfinwied srsons — and possibly some institutional managers — uncover a promising situation and start to buy into it, their interest Is quickly noted by others, the stock and its company are talked about, trade journals will carry stories about the company and more and more people “want in.” As demand grows, the price iHU move up on good news about the management perhaps or a strong earnings uptrend or a tiimaround in sales and While the stock's popularity is accelerating, the accumulation period finally gives way to the distribution (or selling) period. Sh(tft-term holders start to take their proflts — a fact that may not be grasped immediately by the public. The trading level begins to sag and the dally closing price continues to show minus rather than plus signs. There is a Street saying that shares are than passing from stronger to weaker hands. If your broker puts you Into a good company in a real growth industry, you need not be disturbed by short-swing technical action. But if you are really skeptical about his timing technique, why not sit out his next recommendation and exercise your own judgment on the time to buy. Gradually you’ll sharpen your timing skill and gain new independence aa an Investor. THE l^ONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. JTTyE 80, 1969 ...J^^- 10 Tramlt, Ine., a Mlchtaan corma-..oil. will IM haM at tha emon of lha II) te cohiMar and taka aclibn wl|h raapact to tha adaption el a Plan of Raoraanitallon Involvinp the mkrgar of Rydar Tranaportatlon Syatams, Inc. and Synihallc Producla, Inc. with and Info Complalo Aulo Tran-•It. Inc. In accordance with lha tarnit of a Roorganlzatlon Agr" mant datad May 23, and ... Agraomant of AAorgar datad Juno It, »U. m To conaldor and taka action will roapact to tha approval and adop lion of an Agraomant of Margor datod Juno 10, 1*09, balwoan Com-plato Auto Tranalt, Inc., Synihallc Producta, Inc., a Michigan corporation and Rydar Tranaportallon Sys-tama, Inc., a Dolawara corporation, onlarad Into and axocutad by a ma-lorlly of the dlractora of Complalo Auto Tranalt, Inc. and Synihotic Products, Inc. and by tha authorltad --- •' Rydar Tranaportallon c., which Adraama'nt ha nna^or of lynthatic Syalams. provldaa f Producta, ..... .... . tatlon Syatami. Inc. Complata the formi 0 Transit, Inc., upon . ......... „nui- of Morgar. (1) To transact such _______ _________ , os may proparty coma balora lha Tha"SoarcP of Dlractora tiaa fixed cloao Qf businass oh Juno 30. Itot, the record dole for the dalarmlnatlon atockhoMars antlllod to notice of and vote at such masting. Only auch ale.. holdors as shall ba stockholdara of record on tho data m ii—' •-.......- - notice of and It Is Imporl...... that your stock bo maaiing. BY ORDBR OP THB BOARD OF DIRECTORS WORKERS PICKET - Members of Pontiac area Local 105, Utility Workers of America, picketed the Constimers Power Plant on Featherstone this morning. The brief wildcat strike was ended after about an hour when a dispute over the dismissal of an employe was iMtled. Chelsea Man Shot by Police A Chelsea man is In critical condition after being shot by Pontiac police following a highspeed chase through the city early yesterday. A Truly Peaceful Funeral Home The Donelson-Johns Funeral Home is peaceful and homelike, far removed from a commercial atmosphere. A soft dignity, possible only In a home, is always present. Oh Our (Premil 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC FOL9INO ALUMINUM AWNINGS line4foots 100 DOORaNOfY Completely Instilled SwddW for your hoMo'i protittion...for your own'protection 444-1212 Wounded in the-' abdomen when he reportedly attacked a policeman with a screwdriver was Mark Wade, 21. He is in Pontiac General Hospital. A * * Wade and Earlle Nicholas Jr. 22, Of 260 Luther were apprehended after their car collided with a police scout car on Whittemore near South Pad-dock. Police began pursuing the car after receiving a report of an attempted larceny from an auto on North Sanford about 3:30 Nicholas is being held for investigation of fleeing a traffic arrest and attempted larceny. Traffic Mishaps Kill 2 in Area A 3-year-old Novi boy was killed Saturday and a Avon Town.ship youth died this morning in area traffic accidents. Oakland County sher-i f f’s deputies are investigating an accident which killed Michael R. Barnes, 19, of 1310 Rochester at about 5 a.m. today. * ★ Deputies said Barnes* car was found off Lakeville Road near Lake George Road, Addison Township. It went off the road and crashed into a tree. Barnes was alone. ’ A ★ * The youngster, Roy B. Smith-son, died from Injuries received when he ran in front of an automobile driven by a 16-year-old youth. Because the driver is a juvenile, police would not release his name. A * Roy, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Morgan B. Smithson of 47190 11 Mile, apparently ran into the street from behind a mailbox and thick bushes near 47200 11 Mile, according to Novi police. The driver, who was released after questioning, told police that he didn’t see the child until the boy was in front of the car. The accident occurred at 5:.30 p.m. Saturday. The boy died shortly after at Botsford Hospital, Farmington, t——---------------------- New homes are being started at the rate of a million three-quarters a year in the United. States at present, along with 380,000 mobile homes added each year. Mafes Head VFW Post, Its Auxiliary A Waterford Township husband and wife, Mr. and Mrs. James Belisle of 3390 Watkins Lake, recently were elected to the two top posts of the Veterans of Foreign Wan David Belisie Post 1008. Belisle today begins duties as commander of the Waterford Township post. His wife is president of the auxiliary. Others elected by the post include G^rge Pappas, senior vice commander; Clarence Jones, junior vice commander; Dixie White, quartermaster; Earl Belisie, adjutant; Jack Van Norman, post advocate; and Ayres Miller, chaplain. Auxiliary officers include, Mrs. Melina Filarski, senior vice president; Mrs. Elizabeth Jones,'' junior vice president; Mrs. Alice Pappas, treasurer; Mrs. Helen Van Norman, secretary; and Mrs. Lucille Miller, chaplain. All attended the Michigan VFW convention in Lansing this weekend. NOTICa op PUBLIC HBARINO ..-lies la haraby glvan of a public haar-Ing tu ba hald by Tht WWIa Caka Town-ihTp Planning Cummlsslon at fh# Town-•hip Hall on July 21, W - • ** - - -conaldar^ tha following !M Dlalrlcl) Iho following doscribtd proporly; Loll 1 thru a Huron RIvor Sub Sac 13 and also lhal part of Soellon 13 describad as lhal part of W of SE Vs Lying Sly of Old Hwy and Sly MS? Hwy. CoSlaln-Ing ?.U Acras ntora or lass. Said proparly known as S31I Highland Rd. and »3I? Highland Rd. Also tmown ■I Ponllac Laka Laundry and Rickard intarprlies. Rickard Enlarprlies wishas 0 dp Machina rapalr and Salta rtpulrlng lutslda storage. Parsoha Infaraalsd aro raquastad 1o ba ^rasant, A cop/Sof lha Zoning Map to-galhar with a list of tho propoiod changaa r> on flla^at fht olflct of tha Township ■ itnad by th— Clark KENNETH ORMANDY, RONALD VC§RHtl*" fa LalW T^sht WhtW Li PItnnIni W88 Police Hunt 3 Men in City Bar Holdup City police today are hunting for three men who fled from a Pontiac bar about 11:30 p.m. last night after robbing the owner and several patrons of about $309. Ray Strickland, owner of the Idle Time Bar, 262 E. Pike, told police that three men entered the bar and one of the men pulled out a small revolver, telling the patrons to lie down on the floor. He said the three men took the money from the bar’s cash register and took cash and other articles from several patrons. The men are believed to have fled in a 1964 or 1965 white Pontiac, according to Pontiac police. Death Notices Cemetery. Mr. Backua wiU fie In state at the funeral home. (Suggested visitiog hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) DECKER SR., HARRY F.; June 28, 1969 ; 2851 Franklin Road, Bloomfield Township; age 73; beloved husband of Elsie G. Decker; dear father of Mrs. Louis (Patricia) Gobel and Harry F. Decker Jr.; dear brother of Mrs. Catherine Hackel and Miss Medora Decker; also survived by five grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be tonight at 8:30 p.ip. at the Donelson-Johns Pu n e r a 1 Home. Funeral service will be held Tuesday July 1, at 11 a m. at the St.'Hugo of the Hills Church. Interment in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. Mr. Decker will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) FAILING, EVELYfl; June 28 1969 ; 861 Spezie Drive, Ox-ford; beloved wife of Dr. Charles Falling; beloved daughter of Mrs. Margaret Rebtoy; dear sister of Albert and Russell Rebtoy. Funeral service will be held ’Tuesday, July 1, at 2 p.m. at the Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Interment in Grand Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mrs. Failing wiH He in state at the funeral home. KLIEBER, BERTHA EVELYN; June 29, 1969 ; 68 Candlelight Lane; age 76; beloved wife of Otto Klieber; dear mother of Mrs. Myrtle Kingsbury, Mrs. Margaret Kelly, Richard, James and Rev. Donald Ashley; dear stepmother of Mrs. Grace Gotham; also survived by 14 grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, July 2, at 2 p.m.' at the Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Interment In Evergreen Cemetery, Oxford. Mrs. Klieber will lie in state at the funeral home. NOTICE OP PUBLIC HEARINO ...jtica la haraby glvan of a public haar-Ing to ba hald by Tha whita Lika Town-ship Planning Cammlsslon at lha Town-•hip Hall on July 21, 1?«? at l;W p.m. to -inaldar lha following changaa In fha oning Map, From;C-1 Commarclal »1 (Local Busl-iwaa Dlalrlcl) to C-2 (OanaZal luslnasa Dlatrlct) lha Mlowing daaeiibiMl property: Lot i$ of Huron RIvor Subdivlalon a part of lha SW Vx • of Saeflon 13 Whito Lake Township, Oakland Co. Michigan, proparty Is locatad at tha North-:ornar^of Highland and Pontiac - ,.»da. OSUnar applicant Is Union Oil Company of Callfornra. Thay wish to con-sfrucl a 3 Bay Gaiollna Servica Station 1 Sfid pramlias. Parsons Intarasled ara raquastad lo bo rasenl. A copy of tho Zoning Map to-ilhar with a Msf of tha propotad changes 1 og file at fha office of tho Township SMITH, HARRY A.; June 28, 1969 ; 7354 Hardisty Drive, Union Lake; age 61; beloveii husband of Alice Smith; dear father of Ross Slosson and William Smith; dear brother of Mrs. Melvin Conger, John Smith, Wayne and Raymond Cartwright: also survived by seven grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, July 2, at 11 a.m. at the Haley Funenri Home, 24525 Northwestern Hwy. (896 Surface Dr.) Southfield. Interment In Acacia Park Cemetery. Southfield. M r. Smith will He in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 2 to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m.) The family suggests memorial contributions may be made to the Michigan Heart Association. Jung 38. July IS, t?« Death Notices BACKUS, HOWARD R.; June 28, 1969; 772 Blaine Street; age 68; beloved husband of Celip 0. Backus; dear father of Miss Linda Lee Backus, Kenneth J. and Leland W. Wood; dear brother of Mrs. Paul Elliott, Mrs. Mable Keefer and . Albert Backus; also survived by seven grand children. Funeral service will be held ’Tuesday, July iv at p.m. at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with Rev. William Lyoni officiating. Interment in Ottawa Park CEMETERY AAARKERS Celmbrating Our 7Sth Anuivertary ~ INCH MEMORIALS, INC. SHN.Pany 33t - IrenM PlatBt for MBinerial Park CamBforitB ____________BtiBlowCBdBBfoty PriCBt SANDERS. LAURA; June 29. 1969 ; 8142 Reese Road, Independence Township j age 87: dear mother of Mrs. Myrtle Brown, Mrs. Wilma Ruggles and Wilburn Sanders; dear sister of Mrs. John Zigler and Otto Turner; also survived by 12 grandchUdren and 17 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, July 2, at 1 p.m. at the Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home, Clarkston. Interment in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens. Mrs. Sanders will lie inr state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. tonight. VOSS, LENA W.; Jtpe 28,1969; 2860 Deland, Drayton Plains; age 83; beloved wife of John Voss; dear mother “of Mrs. Ralph (Dorothy) ’Tracy, Floyd C, and Gale J. Voss; dear sister of Tobias Woehr; also survived by eight grandchildren and six great-gran d c h 1 Idrln. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, July 1, at 1 p.m. at the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains. Interment In Crescent Hills Cemetery. Mrs.„ Voss will He in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) WARRENTMAXnR^^ 1969 ; 5090 Elizabeth Lake Road, Waterford: age 56; beloved husband of Hallie P. Warren; dear father of Mrs. James A. Edwards, C. Richard, Ward W., M. Eric, Terrance M. and Dennis G. Warren; dear brother of Mrs. Roy D. WilUams, Mrs. Oscar Erickson, Mrs, Harry Woodard, Mm. Frank Glb-niewski and Wesley W. Warren; also survived by 17 grandchildren. Elks Lodge of Sorrow will be tonight at 8 at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, July <1, at 1 p.m. at the funeral home. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Warren wtil lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hourf 3 to S and 7 to Dial 334^981 IMa«.iliiu?iLB-n (M.BM3>»I» or 332>8181 (Mwi.lliiuM.) Fmu g AJW. TO 3 P.M. (SuLBluS) Pontiac Prost Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICITO AOVIRTlSiRS ADS RECIIVID IT A P.M, WIU 31 PUSUSHCD THi FOUOWINOOAY. 3.0Q 3.7A S.II 6.27 III Im inoJa 1 »K numbers. Tha Pontiac Pratt Classifiarf D*|nr$m«(tt EROM C A.M. $» S.30 P.M. SPECIAL NOTICE ADVANCED DEADLINES PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED EARLY July 4th HOLIDAY EDITION Friday, July 4th THURSDAY, JULY 3 Ragular — 4 p.m. — 7-2 Contract — 12 noon — 7-2 Display — 3 p.m. - 7-1 FRIDAY, jbLY 4th (Early adltlpn) Ragular — 12 noon 7-3 Contract 12 noon - 7-2 SATURDAY, JULY 5th Regular — 12 noon — 7-3 Contract — 12 noon 7-2 Display - 12 noon 7-2 MONDAY, JULY 7th Ragular — S p.m. 7-3 Contract —2 p.m. — 7-3 Display — 3 p.m. Z-3 TUESDAY, JULY 8th Rtflular 5 p.m. — 7-7 Contract — 7 p.m, — 7-7 fd 12 noon — 7-3 7.5 ^ f a.m. -7*5 7-7 F a.m. —>-7 Thank You For Your Cooperation Ihe P0NTI4C PRESS Classified Oepqrtment BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. today tharo wera replies at The Pross Office in the following boxos: C-5, C-16, C-14, C-15, C-17, C-19, C-21, C-23, C-25, C-27, C-28, C-38, C-42. In Momorlnm 2 IN LOVING MEMORY of Albart P, Norman. I sigh aomatimai to aaa thy (aca. But ainct this can not ba. I'll laava you h> tha cart of Him, Who watchaa that and mp. ladly mlasad by Bartha Norman and chlldran. -^”1 church. OR 34202. I ......-........— nothing lo too what wi can do. Horns calls by Appointmant DEBT-AID, Inc. to W. Huron FE 2-0101 LIcanaad 0. Bondod ‘ Serving Oakland County LOSE WilGHT aafaly w'lTh' Dox-A. 0 1 at Tab lot a. only ?0 cants. Simm's Bros. Drugs,___________ MOONEY FLYrNO CLUB."PLY 10 hours 0 month? If so loin our Moonay Club and fly lor tl4JH> par hour. Oolalli Gammtndor Flight •oTVIcg Inc., Oakland - PantTae Mrport, oywoil. SOME OP OUk "CeiiMguoa cWm m givt 111 ho ircuii ,.. IlMy'ro right coatT"" DRAVTOnT»"'>“* A2AOM. c.LTmdharpt “ Hun toon SPARKS-6RIFFIN FUNRRAIa HOMI -.no. . - — VoorheecSiple CwtortaiY Lati 4-4 Cawamt Lets I SPACE LOT In Oakland Hjlla Mfmarlal Park at Novi, Michigan. LOM 102 B. BMUllful ^lacaflon Prlead raaamaUa or moka an ol-for, Addraaa G. L. Parkar, 3334 Carlton, Jackaw, MIchloon. AF103. ANYONE WHO Ihit accMant at ....-- .. ---- Laka Rd. and DIxIa Hwy. at 1:« p.m. on Friday Junt 30, tOff, plaaia cajl 374-1024 and ask for HAPPY AfiHiVERSARY ALAN ____ All my lova, Kria._____ HAPi*Y ANNIVERSARY, S.6. ___________143 W.P. _____ Plusi Call Bath, 332-5377. Mr. & Mrs. Homeowner ' Oo you, noad IlnWielal advlca on ?-5 dally axcapt Sat.__________ WIG PaIiTIEo. wigt by Caldaron. Larga brown poodla. mala, n U Eric, rgword, 047-7UT. ________________!rlc, ri LOST; BUNCH OF Kl In vicinity of Auburn 1 MALE Baagla, black, I : WHITE a tn In Union 1 Hound. Vary long Mrs. Anowtra to Waldo, tnrvleaman'a pot. LIbaral raward. AubumKIpdykn amg. 330-0331.________________________’ 3 month'^ld kitten Orsnga, black and white, vicinity of 3 fiurllnghim Laka, Oravfan Plains. Sadly mlasad by Its 3 old owntr. Would------------ - tor 111 I... 373-3F48 IT Slid. Raward. 462*4174. REWARD FOR BOY'S st Wonted Mole .5 MEN For profitabla, U...._ labor lobs. Olbtr men na Apply, ready to work — 7 a.m. manpower 1331 WIda Track W. Pontiac S5.00 PER HOUR, nxparlancad duct Installer and fabricator, timt and a half tor ovaiTIma, O'Brien Hail-Ing, FE 2-3FI?._________________ $51) PER WEEK PART TIME 2 man 21-45 to work 2 hours per avjaning, 374-0520, S-7 p.m. tonight As Manager Dperator CHICK-N-JDY AGGRESSIVE HARD WORKIlTo INDIVIDUAL To ba gasoline company reprasan-tatlva, catling On servica station accounts, onfalls kaaplin -— 2327 Wllllamt Dr., I ASSISTANT MANAGER to train for managtr with rapdlly growing petroleum company. Must bo abla to work attarnoon shut to start, top salary and fringa btntllM, paid vacation, futurn unlimitod, must have good rafarancas and ba abla .. stand back..„„_ Only those Intorntod In wo advancement need apply. Palroleum Co., 4?30 Dlxlo Watarfard. 373-0200. ARC WELDERS, LAYOUT' la littara. FI Automatic transmission OFFERS TOP SALARY q LONG TERM SECURITY 130 W. Montitoim.^ntlaS'iialBsi'! A(±ninistrator Dlractor of malnlanaitca and custodial aarvica, ap. ^S'a'M.’^ASSfnW axparlanca with ability to plan and cany out program, work with uniwi, and maintain good am ploy# rala-tlonshlpa. Salgry: t14,o0o - 010,000 par /aor. ‘fijy?. Pontiac ■eaa Box C-23. BARBER, OUTSTANDING op- 5?vgcafpra'«n.'"- BARBER “ Nwd|d^ulM^^ *Rd'!.* W40«*'' BRIDGEPORT OPERATORS Machine .Tool BUILDERS Excallanf npportunlly Jo |pln a fast growing company In the ftald of automallon with a long ranga pr^ Outstanding fringa iSanam with axeallent pay and ovartima. An agual opportunity amployar. CLYDE CORPORATION A subaldtary of Chicago ... .fanun'i'lc Tool Co. ling W. Mapla, Troy a42-32gg CDNTACT MAN ..... For expansion program In Pontiac area, training program, salary Eli’.fSIT.?’'’*'®''' O*®® opportunity toll"';:;" COLLEGE STUDENTS 1133.30 WK., GUARANTEED We hevt aevgral aummer lebt tor “!!*??. •*'Jfnn*a. For Information Sindlpm****' ’”■**** “claim REPRESENtATIVE ' 'SS _ Information contact: . Tha Partennal Division Ptoitljcrgtoblgto, Ext. 4 WVySTiKiW Halp Waatad Mwh CARPiNT Werfcdli SSI: dean-up. Gtood lrlnga”^i!i!f|fa.'3$ COOK. ifIGHls; 3 p.m. to 1 am"* ..............pay. fringa btnilii.! CHECKERS DETAILERS SPECIAL MACHINE AUTOMATION Opporlunlly' ' - - ^" fringe bane year round wore, nn equal opppr. funlty amployar. CLYDE CORPORATION 1100 W. Maple Troy OEVELOPMkNt ENGINElRS Experienced In hydraullct and pneumatics, for design of fluid pumping, matorlng and mixing agulpmenf, graaf growth opL porlunity In tmnll but fait growinii waefnity' plnsHc’*ippllution t'a'id* ■...■us^-?.TMr*'xr. 1 at 349-3300 or apply 1^ Designers-Detailers 333-7009 ____________ structural statl and mlaeollanioui iron. Equal Opportunity Employar. New plant. Divit Iron Worka, txrg Pontiac Trail, Walled Lake, 024- “DETAILER-DESIGNER Looking for a change? Smaller company? Mom rasponslbllllyt Grantor challnnga? Wa ara a dl-varslflad ioOclal machine and controla company, with an opanlng for an axpnriencad dntallar with d a • I g n capability, Tainphonn William McBride. Chitf Ingln-aar, Ebbnrt Enginanring Co. loa W. Mapla Rd. Troy. ria-t2a3. DESIGNERS SPECIAL MACHINE -AUTOMATION Opportunity to bacoma. prolact leader. Fringe benefits, overtime, steady year round work. An tguti opportunity employar. CLYDE CORPORATION DAILY WORK DAILY PAY EMPLOYERS Temporary Service, Inc. FERNOALB 2331 REDFORD 26317 ( CLAWSON CENTER LINE IM An Equal Opportunity d River % MMto DRILL PRESS 0 para tore. Experienced or will - Iraln. Fringe benefits. Apply at Benton Corp„ 3871 Industrial Row, Troy. ENGINEER ’ WITH EXPERIENCE IN INDUSTRIAL VENTILATION. FOR POSITION AS PROJECT ENGINEER, INCLUDING FIELD SURVEY, DESIGN AND STARTUP. CLAUDE B. SCHENIBLEY CO. f14 N. SAGINAW STREET HOLLY, MICHIGAN EXPERIENCED bl ir and pollihnr. Engineers — Droftsmon Planet Corporation -L a loading manufactumr of convtyort, automallon, and material handling equipment has open Inga tor mechanical anginaara, electrical -nginaars, structural anginaara, —------and layout draftsman — nt poiltlon with good working condlttona, Rgctnt grtduatnt considarad. Mall raiuma Including nducallon, axpnrinnen and aarningt to: CHIEF ENGINEER PLANET CORPORATION ..........."ITAVE. Il3g SUNSET A'.— LANSING, MICHIGAN 4SFD1 I rtpllee will bn treated in co 722 N. 1. 542-7731, FOREMAl) Top opportunity to |oln growing long-astabllshad firm, one of tha leaders In Its field. Need a pre-gressive man to grow with Ui. Will *—'ning a men with toma In suparvltlon, light irlng'and a s a a m b I y ,-n famala-------------------- *“• ton, Allch. Give i PULL OR PART time help, gand GAS STATION ATTENDANT, exl parlancad, machinlcatly Incllnad, >1 grinding, steady II fringes, W-4523. GAS STATION ATTENDANT, days. GAS STATIOffATTENDANY, full or part time, nxpartencad. 2ae3g North Wastam Highway, Southflnld, Michigan.______/ GUARDS HARDINOE CHUCKER oparMra. Exparlancad or will train. Prlngn Ewatlto. Apply if Benton Corp., 2178 InduaWnl Row, Trgy._ HAND SCREW oparatnri, ax-parlancad or will train, Fringe irl:i;iu.^y.ylf.?w.'1S!y. IMMEDIATELY, thortonlar eggk, nxparlancad and dtpandibla jor night shift, good aalary to quellflSd parson. Snack and Rack, 4S1 Ellx, Lk. Rd., 381-1177. If You Have the Natural Talent We'll Train You-and Make You . a Top-Paid Pro Sales Representative Not avaryong In bi marketing strilagy al our progrir can ba learned and wn'il apand Hi time training you Ir ------ “■ you mutt have « Sanaa to begin ■—* undnratand and , and'Tf'you*!»uld*Tlka''to bulM a caraar tor. you rat If with • gmwlng i3S!ftoSiw.M*r?!S!;,ijs jss will help make yau weeasatiii. Call COLLECT: CLEVELAND INSTITUTE OF ELECTRONICS AL). DAY SUNDAY I. MONDAY (014) 118-7183____________ JANITORS " MEN AND WOMEN EXPERIENCED 5 NIGHTS A WEEK steady EMPLOYMENT ,• Hr W^nt Adi Dial 3344981 THE PONTIAC PRES3. MONDAY, JUNE D—» m Warty Malt Rechfitar. OL 1- MAINTENANCE MAN Madhin* ripilr or millwright card work. Complaia fri and good working •tarting i ' ‘ •tartihg rata. Aniy Avon Tubing Divlilim, HIgbla Manufacturing Modam facloitt-. ani, .a immadlato opanlhga^ di and'*R%wtlan %a|^^ man with aoMa axaSwIe and aftamooA thlHs avallabla (ritfi evartlma..Apbly In parten baiwaan 0 a.m.—< p.m. to 2921 Induitlral Row, Troy, batwaan Ur ............ Rd., off Coolldoa Hwy. IMACHINB DEgiONBRS PRODUCTS Co. 007 Hadlay M._____Holly, MACHINE SET-UP MEN to bo m^lnaa, ^21. ___ _____ U700 Daxtar MAINTENANCE MECHANICS Immadlato opaninga for man wit machina shop background on lalha grindar and drill praii to do oanaral ahop work on a full oi lyir. Vlikalaly, 341 MAINTENANCE MAN Induatrlal malntananca mat repair and machina Inatalli work, amplolo frlngo prog____ and good working conditlono. $4-39 kAAN WITH FOOD oniorlanL. .. managa CarryOut Food atora. Muat ba bondaUa, axcallant aalary, bonuaaa and hoopital banatita. Call 9 lo 12 mornlnoa, 332-1740. /MASON WANTED MACHINE HANDS W A N T E Lathoa, mllla, and drilla. Al WELDERS. Apply personnel Office SUTTER PRODUCTS CO. 407 Hadley St. HoiTya Mich mechanic EtCPdRlENCED ~ motora. Call FE 5-SMO. MILL OPERATOR For faat growing middia alzed company, top raloi Apply in paraon. Pyles Industries 2W90 WIxom Rd. WIxom An equal opportunity amployor ImAN WANTED for roaldantlal glazing, Inalda ahop work, Blua Cr paid for, unIforma paid for, mi othar hanaflta, 3«M1» or 204-321 . Needed at once - good rallabla lo axparlanoa neadedi pay plan, good Apply to Mr. lad Cara, 1001 N. A OPPORTUNITY Wanted fully llcanaod ci Inauranca agant to taka ovor pras-— ------- . ^ PORTER — HANDY mominga. Call 3M-1100,_______ l*URPLE PICKLE-ROCHESTER, Mich., one of the finest sandwich shops in the area. Excellent compen sation. Full or part time, Grill, waitress, kitchen utility personnel. Apply 600 N. Main St. Car 101 Rochester Junction, Tues. Wed. or Thors., July 1, ! and 3 bet. 1 P,M. and 6 P-M. Ask for Mr. Bishop. Plastic mold maker an3~mdTd maker Apprentlea. New plant, old ci^pany. M hr. wk. Top wagea, fringe benefits. 3 ml. North of Pontiac, on M24. 1 ml. north 1-75. Lapnr Rd._ exit. Sea Kirk Boachman. TD Shea Mfg. 4M0 . Lapeer Rd. Orion Twp._____ RETIRED, GENERAL handyman to do jnalntananca work, flxlngjancas > forth, Kt Michigan. SALESMEN munlcafions, Itructural steel am] fhltcallantoui iron Ityout 1270 I : Tr.p 1 TELEVISION “TECHNICIANS RCA with electronic Khooling, military madlcal inauranca plan — ' Kfjry'"?' yj*'* ““i" Of*™ M^'tou S% 9 to s“'‘ OPParfunlty Employer BABYSITTER In my home tor 1 pro-schoolera. 5 days per wk. Dbpond- aaalatant. Call 332-3553. WANTED: MEN 45,to 55 years old ,work. day and eJinrni shifts. Apply attar 4 p.m. ' Restaurant. 2490 Dixie WAREHOUSE work, must have c h a u f f a ii r *i“"“v*** Mrs. Carole at Simm' Bros., 93 N. Saginaw. WANTED MEN to managers, with company axcallant banafita . «"d,«**i:lda. Call «IS- M I 4iln < WANTED: Exparlancad acri afpr, and dozer operator. C r 4:30 p.m. FE 2^9. WANTED TRUCK MECHANICS Gas or diesel. Liberal pay, insurance furnished, retirement and full benefits. See Mr. Coe, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m Monday thru Friday. GMC Truck Center Oakland dt Cass FE 5-9485 1 equal opportunllv employer |nc. 2S«g Scott Lk. Rd. BAKERY HOSTESSES Allied Sugar Markata Incgrporata presently aatabllahlng Inltts chain stores (Wriglay's, Packer~a, Kmart, Arloan ;FoOd), a bakery dapartmant which will ba atattod by parsenaUa hostasaaa. . accepting as plications for part time hostasaaa. Areas of Responsibilityt EQUIPMENT STOCK TURNOVER Apply Employment Security Commtsslor In Pontiac or call 241-1713. Equi Opportunity Employer. Saby SITTER, over 10. ». My home. aaSdiliS after 482-3995, after 4 Pjn. ask tor Mr. BOOKKEEPER Meet the public - Interesting varied work, good salary, regular Increases baaed on merit, paid Sfr'?!!r.®TSnlSi^''«3«'*^*-jMaSsir' BEAUTY OPERATOR, part time, Larry-a Beauty Salon. FE 5-5354. an,.m«a*aS7l7hy Kwi^iOM, .. . Rda., Birmingham. CURB HOSTESSES Night shift. Full tima or part time. SSS?,tb?«f!S.AW!*^"‘^ WRSI foome tis to If ft. Rite asT-SM jRil' V y , tarneon shin. GljM Aersa Nursing Homo. 12SS W.iiivartiall. diRL FRIDAY Mr growing troy baaarflla. Flax-Cabla Corp., 1S7S part t Hospitalt Good wagai GRILL COOkS, waltraaaas.7'supar ELIAS BROS. BIG BOY RESTAURANT collaiM atudants. For Information call Mr. Namath 332-3439 ba 9 and 2 p.m. :OOK WANTED TO work avanings, call 3524410. COSMETIC AND DRUG .....W S dithms. Intarasting poall son who likes padpla. Pharmacy, Blrtn. Ml 4-S040. worktog tton for CLEANING LA i?rmi%Ln DENTAL ASSISTANT EXPERIENCED GRILL cook, hrs. 11 a.m. to 7 p.m., apply in parson, Clarks Restaurant, 1300 N. Perry. "?.Sn^5'»s if/fSTnow-ffiSS; Blua Crois and •-------- ----- EXPERIENCED madlcal secretary — doctor'a office In Pontiac, ary wn. 4444E7g. Mrs. Oakes. EXPERIENCED WAITRESSES. 21 and ovar, top wages, axcallant working, conditions, Blua Cross, «ia,'" K % 157?’! Highway, watarterd.______ experienced * ^ GRILL COOK NIGHT SHIFT IMMEDIATE OPENING willing to train, top rata of pay during training period, s day work weak vdth ovartlma MllaMa Blue Cron, sick pay, panaloi Ufa Insurance. Vacation and day pay. Apply in person: ..TED'S BLOOMFIELD HILLS HOUSCKECPCRp mutt b* •xRtrltnctd* ■ < right parson, must t HOUSEKEEPERS LIVE-INa 5 dtytp privtt* room, bath ond TV. Social sKurity and paid vacatlont. Mutt llko children. fcW"' HAIR STYLISTS Amarican Girl 19374 Woodward at 7 I L.P.N. $3.50 PER HOUR ttansjjnrti s5i21. ~ NURM‘t_AII RSTiSRSL __________ vra aummar atnpioymant in Its PON TIAC OFFICE, Must ba iMat ap Marlng, ba ana to oonvnpa In lalilgantty and ba ovar 11 year aid. Salary 3S.40 par hour For personal Intarvlaw In Detroit Call Mr. Backer at Sll3lSI W p.w. OFFICE GIRL to handle ‘"Sosjasur ais^i MOTHERS 111 _ Neod' extra nopney Sell toys —fffh plan playhou'iIe toy CO. Ona of the World's largest Toy Distributors No delivery or Collecting Good commission, Plus Bonuses No Cosh tnvastmani Wa train you, no obligation 334.7439 MAID FOR Mb'ffL ___________Call 444-1343_______ MEDICAL SECRETARY Part lima position avallabla In X Ray Dept. Hours 4 P.M-3 P.M. A4on. through Frl. Must ba High School graduala with axcallant typing skills. Dictaphone, madlcal larmirtology axparlanea Shorthand not nacasMry. „>wn Lakd talpphona voice and able to talk to customers. 4 day, weak, or at- ggrt?on?iaP*r!lss,nL^y^'‘‘’'' PHONE GIRL, ovar 13, work 9 a.m to 3 p.m. or 3 p.m. to 9 p,m. Call ., 343-7791 from 9 .a.m. to 11 a.m. LMthlntir&lT ----- soaks stylists. Wrlto Mr. David Mark, Gan'I. Mgr., Marilyn Mark's International, 449 Church St., Ann Arbor, Michigan. 43104, or call (313) 442-S4W.________ lAAMEblATELY, Mturs dapendabla of fashion. Be a full ttmo wife and “ ......me pay tor work. Pall and Winter mother. Earn part time woi... . .... ...... line lust being Inlrsducad. Become BEN'S WAY FASHION NSELOR. Start with 3342 473-2139 or 431-0334. kitchen help, union Lake •rii. tog dMirabla. Foi nnsnt, call Mrs, Clark, 334-9901, Mon, through Frl, Call 335-/T» awar a p.m._______________ shuts, must ba araa. Em’s?!!?** PURPLE PICKLE, ROCHESTER, Mich., ona of tha finast sandwich shops in tha araa. Excallant compan-sation. Full or part tlma. Grill, waitrass, kitchan utility personnel. Apply 600 N. Main St., Cor 101, Rochester Junction Tuas., Wad. or Thun., Juiy 1, 2 and 3 bet. 1 P.M. and 6 P.M. Ask for Mr. Bishop. Stenos — Secretaries Sry assignmantt rates. Ponllae, Mr araa. STENEOS I Sanlor Stanaos for long torn assignmants In Warren area, 40 KELLY GIRL Of Kelly tarvicos ____125 N. Saginaw St. I FACTORY POSJTI iSfmnmnn adamssa^g-'fa' SKREtMY - Good Shorthand and Otfloa, TEMPORARY FOR LIGHT assembly work In stereo tape plant. Day and afternoon shifts. 4413 Femlaa Royal Oak._______________ WAITRESS WANfED ' TO WORli ■ rata plus tlp3. For Ion. Call UL a-34ia, nlngs, hourly her Informall WANTED: HOUSEKBEI "Ja?s' required, rat, required. 43S2444. WAITRESS AND BARMaID'wanted, • ---------42S-32W. Foui I, personal ahd-of phone ^ rMasa call is3-743 . . , WAITRESS WANTED Mr ............ or r. BARTENDER OR BARMAID, nights, aleSlADYJ no alliance rrr-.^rav^Sr'F'S'T BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED see" A/MERICAI WanSertuI Sell toys, gifts now to I for one of tha largest panles In tha midwest. Locally "SANDRA PARTIES" "••dad. No collecting or delivering. Excellent commission plus bonus. Call: ______ BETH WEBER AMERICAN GIRL WE NEED EXPERIENCED: Secretaries Stenos and Dictaphone Oprs. Typists - Jr., Sr., Slat. Teletype Oprs. Clarks (10 key Adding Mach.) Comptomaler Oers. Bookkeepers ypunch Op Oprs. WE pay A MATURE LADY FOR Write Post Office Box 232, giving complete Informatio_____ AGGRESSIVE. Capable, mature woman for responsible position to Real Estatt Soles Mgr. Learn the Real Estate busini from the^ Broker's angle. I i looking for an energetic, eo patible, awtorleftoed man w Initiative, dill Voh Really. < pay callent opportunity. Selling experience helpful but not Call Mrs. Taltalbaun 742-7240, after 7 p.m. OW 4- Want Somsthing Dons Fast? Use Ptess Want Ads — Dial Direct 3344981 ihed apartment plus excallani CLEAN UP AND LIVl FRie business. 334-2521. Calling All SalEspoo^E YORK Is an the look out tor t-fclenllous self starters with eutap-Ing peraonaitty. If you mael tnls description, you era wAnted COMPANY REP $650 UP rjsijs Li;'U"'Sus1»tSTfi!SJ plan. Fee paid. INTERNATIONAL PER|M4UW> 1330 S. Woodward, B'ham position with an axealMnt oif Wrtonltyfor a sharp gal. tS3S4^ Free. Accuracy Parsonnal. 442-3050. OlNEitAl. 61*^1:.....sunan, «-gM nj^”'^iiia 'violea d ndi^*^ Piwiariwl. *«I0 depending an axparlanea. Accuracy Parsonnal. 44^3040. CSOAL SECftETARYi JS*JSK ^ 3400. FREE. Accuracy Parsonnal. Monpowsr DEvsIopmint TrainEE-$8,400 Up CelMge degraa mulred. BxeelMni 6v^ErSeas 35m etc. Omings In protossjens. $400 to protosilo free In •'tr&"!!!ll isa;!;;; PATTERSON I. SONS Aluminum A Jtoofing Specialists ' All types of alum, and roolng work. Siding, awnings, gutli mobile home skirting. . 335-7344. . SIDING ALUM. VINYL AND ASBESTOS AWNING-PATIOS ^ SCREENED-IN OR .iLASS . ENCLOSED Eaves troughing lontinued Seamless. eavestroughing “'■'■NIO&"iir>EVM» DEALER—ASK FOR BOB OR RED SIDING, WINDOWS, DOORS, shut-tars, gutters, porch anclosur A H SaMs. aS-ISOt, 4744341. SAVOIE INSULATION AntENiiE SErvicE 1-A, Auburn Haights Paving Tedllls courts, parking 10 driveways. Guaranteed. FE S-OR 3-^4.___________ A. JAY ASPHALT DRIVEWAY SPECIALISTS, FREE ESTIMATES, FE S-493A ASPHALT PARKING LOTS and roadways, same Mcatisn since 1920, also selling asphalt and sealer. Ann Arbor Construction Co. ASPHALT DISCOUNT Spring Special Recap 13,cents a sq. ft. Free B FE 5-I107J___________ Ft 4 l-A CONCRETE WORK, drlvewayb patios, patching. 352-5043. BAiCK REPAIRS, leaks stopped .TYPES of cement work. *is- BASEMENTS fireplaces, commarclal and dustrlal repair, 432-1143,473-3251. CEMENT WORK CEMENT WORK THAT canni excelled. Bart Commlns, Poi 391-2500. -________ COA/IMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL and brick , GUINN'S CONST. CO. _____334-7477 or 391-M71 CONCRETE FbbTINGS, wall* ---- and masonry. 351-1944 or 434- DRIVEWAYS, basements and col orad patios. Ganaral Camant Con- Iractors, 333-9914._ DRIVEWAYS, FCKHSTTrAfS ■ ....... icommarelal chimney REPaI*. and **of maMnry *^-31*42 _425 Caderlawn, Pontiac, 432-5432. INSTALLAtiON AND REPAIRS — portable dog kennels and ri very raas.. Fates. MI-1347, ask : SANDING and laying, eld I rafinished. 427-3775. Coirect. FLOOR sanding AND FINISHING :USTOM FLOOR COVER_________ panslva price. Ml-SMI aft. 1-1 P A I NT I No 2UA^^n9»ED. Free PAINTING ANE hanging THOMPSON FE 44344 7197.____ HRB dVirpil 4-4HE._______ TOFlNLrSORniiST^ S.;gp«iiJii?y-'%r VI BRATEb'" pNo^BSS, block ' JiS d^USH, ROLLER or spray. Wa do It. Residential or commarclal. Free est, FE 5-2224. HUSSAN^W Mnttiig, *> vn. experlsnea. TOWNSEI Tnstallal SPRAY PAINfiSS" typRlff roai- eves., 33S-142t. QUALITY WORK ASSURiDt~Pitoi. ............ .-I COMPLEti landscaping, maclallzlng in retaining wells. Frss estimates. J. H. Walimsn Landscaping. 33S-33U estimate. M2-7197. QUALITY MASONRY 6HBlp WantEd MoIe CONSIDER!! GOOD SALESMEN ARE TRAINED . . . n6t BORN! '' and lilsithEr ara Doctors, Lawysrs, "Dontist or Enginosrs }fou cen be an outstanding salesmen and earn S3,000, 310.000, Slim « AGE 21 or ovar a AMBITIOUS • energetic • • SPORTS MINDED • HAVE A HIGH SCHOOL EDUCATION OR BETTER .• ApENO TWO WEEKS OP Sc’hOOL-EXPBNSES PAID . a BE GUARANTEED 3450 A MONTH TO START. And, what's more you will derlva U per cent or more of your Income from our established accountsi IF YOU QUALIFY WE GUARANTEE TO; a TEACH AND TRAIN ' YOU IN OUR SUCCESSFUL SALES METHODS. a ASSIGN YOU TO THE SALES AREA OF YOUR CHOICE UNDER THE DIRECTIONS AND GUIDANCE OF A QUALIFIED SALES DIRECTOR. a PROVIDE THE OPPORTUNITY FOR YOU TO ADVANCE INTO MANAGEMENT AS FAST AS YOUR ABILITY WILL WARRANT. FRINGE BENEFITS INCLUDE UNUSUAL PENSION AND SAVINGS PLAN CALL NOW FOR PERSONAL INTERVIEW CALL MONDAY-WEDNESDAY FROM 9-9 DIMI STECCA 334-2448 SUNDAY-WEDNESDAY 9.00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. AADCO ASPHALT Paving Co., licensed and Inst Free estimation 'f new. Free ast. homas. oli 41, 42S-1S01, _________ _____ location s»-..« 1920, also ssllnig asphalt sealer. Ann Arbor Construe* .«i 425-5391, , ^ ASPHALT PAV'NC DOV.1NO CONST. CO irlvo» -.ys, parking lots. ,yeai r-..tractors. Fra* est. 474-3959. "PROTECT YOUR drlvowav all Keith, ConstructlEH Equipimiit dozer;, backhoes, loaders Salos & Rantals. UsEd Hough Loadar. Burton Equipmont Co. 4 E. Auburn Rd 352-3551 DresswiaMi^t tailofliig asphalt seal at It*'test. Call I OR 3-5142 or Gary. FE 24>413. ' DRIVER TRAINING A-1 Building Rssults to rMuli* — Fit you to a new homo. EM 3-6703 THE OAKLAND COUNTY MERIT SYSTEM ANNOUNCES THE FOLLOWINO aOSING DATE EXAMINATIONi Custodial Work Foreman I SS'Kl's Life Insur Retlremai $3.51 HR. (including shift dlftarantlal) too Cross, iranca int plan I, legal holidays, sick days aaeurlty Appileatlone, must ba submitted or postmarked^ na^later than 5:00 p.m. WednAday, July 9, 1949 In order to be eonsidarad. QUALIFICATIONS: 21 to 40 year* old ^ Resident of Oakland-County . One full vaar of custodial, malntsnsnca or related axparlanea, , OR, _ 4 months exoarlsnca (civilian or mill-taryl supervising a custodial or maintenance crew. For turthar Information E appllcEtlon eonlaci: THE PERSONNEL DIV. OAKLAND COUNTY COURT HOUSE M & S'GUTTER CO, LICENSED-BONDED . omplais aavestroughliM service Free est. 473-4344, 4^5442 ilEctrical Sanicai ^ ADRIAN'S PROMPT E I e CI r I a 0 service. Rea*, rates. 473-2712. McCORMICKlLi COMPLEtE LANDSCAPING PlMtaring SarvicE TER. AND DRY wall I si^SniZi no lob too smoll, 234.371s. NwnMai, S HwHiq PmWWisIi PORTABLE (on truckl high pressure wash: Paint and grease stained brick buildings, pSols, alum siding, mobile homes, h e e v - ---------- eircreft, J A B Porto , Inc, Fully Tnsurod. .. LAWN^^TINO. LAWNMOWER SHARPENING ^e^lr, rotary ang rNl PRINTING WHILE YOU WAIT 13.45 per leal ts wi m. im Kwlkle Dui Taiograph SUMP PUMPS REPAIRED. Bought ond Mid,. RIehway's Pump A , isrvica, 421 S. Paddock. 132- RESIDENTjAL DESIGNER ipniyiNfl Sifvlcf ANY .WZB,_AN' JACK'S mosquitoTs oHainMci spraying. Coil 334-2434. ____ MICHIGAN Spraying. S*rvlienB5-Ito Insect spray, 591.1343. wriPRAY"M6S&Dffeill.' ....._...i»W»3.________ ^rEE friinmlRg SEiVliw A-1 TREE SERVICE Trimming and ramAvaL stui removed 472,7149 or 43A1321, T-dAVAS AUGtf'l' tRlI-iittinca, Slump* ramnv*d_ freo. If wo toko down tha Ira*. PrM astl 9949 or 333-3233. AL5—frBB~ttAVICl isllmalas. MI-1197. BILL'S TREE TRL Removal. Vary low "OASDRiR'sHpiEf 3334744 TR^OpTTING7'FRfi“iiri5i^ iWfHTTOTTRoinKiB^iil^^ aflernoon shift dishwashers and weltrassai.. Apply. ln,.par*on. Eat- nsHi^Nff^rAVY" yroc 24 hr*. Hot ter, shingles, rapalri We will not ^ undarsold DUTTON FE P ita A Z , Contracting Ropair LICENSED ROOFER. FHA terms, 1-5 years lo P_ay,_Fre* est. 343-9327. ALEXANDER RbOFING, W-Ton Truck Rontal Trucks to Rent truck's ~ TRACTORS * AND EQUIPMENT Semi Troller* Pontiac Farm and Industrial Troetpr Co. 125 S. WOODWARD Pb 44441 , PE 414« DlSHWASHERl hitt. Cgmpony bom 1. /Mly III potion •II^BOY^B^AUIM imon. ta ""lb. Firmi,-,953 «y«i9or5riai Fraoo motorraulo ond f rondon Tsyp, Atm for toluro oponiMM In all REAL teTA‘ PEOPLE Fhono, Mr. ChOM, 3 'tt'wo coniP^I^H, s*t buy It. MILLER BROS. REALTY 33W W. Huron SI. 333-7156 RECEPTIONISTS $425 UP eul^. North iuburbon ar^ Foe International personnel MO S. Woodwerd, BTtem 44S433B ECRlTARY: For V*lce Freeldent of lerge corporetlon. Reebenelblllty. K'KteTJSS.WylSj SNELLINC SECRETARY: Euftllng salee department ef lerge, loeel cor. ratoWrs':3Si'«iii! Jo Wilcox. RRCBFTlONiSTt Immediate gpenlnf tor iherp eneitiatle girl svHh the S!’J"*T_»nd thejMilatiye..ta.mw •BOINNERi Juit euf ef e«haol1> I have e greet lab tor you. 'Typing wrtoW.?e«iaflK •homand”n£!dI^ RECEFTIONISTI . U rgent I /(g- BOOKKEEPER: Excellent Mtenttal ter ceresiHtiInded Hi. AH, fBTo to oasumo rtipon{lMlliy..Mituro 8MSmdlng^?x%rlenrtL Bxcollon'i ?ir.sdrMb''3SS; TRAINEE) Hotlonolly kn.OWII fliW lo is:!!'"satoV»sss,tF^- Foo paid, 14,M. CairBlirMliriHn. WELDER: Immodloto opining tor a insurance ad JUSTE Rf No. tionwido firm Is oaoklng a.ydung man with o (utufe. Foo po.ld plus full bonollt*. 17,290. Cell Bill Milligan. OALESMBNi Large retell etore le looking for toko chargo Mloemon. Monogamtnt noxf sIm. •" l•ddo^ A grOil chonco. 17,909, Celt. Elli MIITIgon. OPEN MON. TILL 7i30 334-2471 WuirtEd M. or f. WflirtEd M. tr P. Manager Trainees invpetlgoto thlo opportynlty to Hollfy for ■ hlUt NVlhE gfioIlH peattlon In roetturtnl tnanogamaht. • No riitourant ExpEriEnct nEciisory, gEmral buiinEii Education ond bockground mort Im-portont., <:• AttractivE salary during training pirlod. • All odvancEmEnti basad on niErit. • Ftee inturoncE and many othar frigga banaflti. • Must ba ablE to ralocatE. To Arrange for a Confidential Interview Write Howard Johnson Co. Pv P-IO THE PONTIAC PRESS. MQMBAY. JUNELSO, IA69 For Wont Ad$ n«r’ 334-498J WA?REN STOUT, Raaltor tirtorinq 1-7 yi KflcHwwisAvow WM. Rogistrations «57-5417. ---. ___B for < wiok lum tfoy Md ovoning clouu,. BioiNNlfio JULY 7TH GRCOO SHORTHAND •TBNOGRAPH (MACHINE SH TYPING, ACCOUNTING BUSINESS LAW, MATH Incomo Tax y Mich. Slat# Work Wantod Mah ^A.1CA,PENTER AT A FAIR PRICL. tlani, fsm. riro., kllchon cniMlt, garagof, aiding, roofing, camant, are. Larga or amall Iota. DEW CONSTRUCTION CO. PE I-tlfi or FE 1-7577. Opan ova. * CARPENTRY, 3$ YEARS' Ramodaling, panaling, racraailon noma, kitehona a apaelalty. Raaa. Carpenter work, ramodaiin'b^ li5&ir}r,'"?ft*""c'«"aU“3orT, raf, Slt-1101 or 338-W35. Complete dry wall work liaw -ir nmodalad, 10 yra. oxparlanca, nrk goarhniaad, 335-0715. and carpan'iar Work, HpUSEPAINTINO, In or oi Solomon Pittman, 375-0W< M^^ral aaaambly auparvlalon. JU0WIN(>, TRIAAMINO, P ■ -....., . light landacaping. Fraa aatimalaa. By lob or month. EHIclant quality aarvlca. «M-51II0._______ COUPLE WITH tS.OOO down drain ' ■"'■-oom noma In Waterlor Agant OR 4-1449. 33a-aW3. BABYSITTING DAYT. " _________FE ^7_______ AR APERY AND UPHOLSTERY, «74-03lf Laulng^’_ ^ ■"aii-Jiai ELDERLY COUPLE NEEDS naar Mall. Caah. Agant, 33 674-M4». ___________ HAVE A CASH TO morfMnrbuyaf ‘------- ' ily 3 iMdroom CjarkitVn qaidn Exc. work. «24-4657. AENERaL HOUSE C LEANING or"acH>tlo!n*"llof5 *iyping’. ' „nd. Call M3-140 Eata^a^b^ground. C EXPERIENCED COUPLE Raquira 5 day waak houaawork. 3M-1513. iMildjwj S>r¥lcEB«S^ 13 OOMPLETE REMODELING, PONTIAC MOTOR amploya aakad mo to locata (or him a __ 3 badroom homa with good aiiad lot around Bald Mountain 130,000 prica ranga. Call Don at O'Nall Raally, OR 4-2271 or FE Crain tile, approxlmataly llO'-l'' ratal] prica t300, whol SISO or will tall Ir -----ally airtight placaa, *0e ai griion and albiowa S2.S0 aa. 33t ' MAKE ONE STOP SAVE YOUR TIME AND MONEY AT BENSON LUMBER CO. 3" top, 7* .. 4" top, I' .. «" (op, I' .. 4xlx'.i P________ . Ix4xV!irouoh Ply. aeoro cd. . Madicino Cablnat rag. 044 M. A. BENSON COMPANY S4f N. Saginaw PHONEi 334-2521 OPEN 0 to S — Salurdayt to 17 RJ3;o:i!fr” AVON-TROY CARPET WAREHOUSE ......... -laanad. 17,01 iMkhaapIng A Toxbi 16 SCHLUCHTER ACCOUNTING TAX SERVICE "Sptelallzlnj^i^wr butlnata" UmdHBylBg Light ' hauling and moving. Roatonablo. FE 4-W07. Jw A a HAnOYMAN Work, light houling, all tv^ lobt. 337-rtSO. ^Blntliig Md PBCoratliijnta INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR j and PEcoratlng 23 PAPER HANGING. Painting. Ptaatar lira. UL 7-1743. AND . ... ............ and commtrclal tpray- Ing. Orval «71^. fWoBtEd HGUMhold Ooodr29 la you? B & B AUCTION B DIxlo Hwy.________OR 1-7717 Wantad MlMGlianBovB Id Waiitad ta Rant wants (Mrnlohad qfticlaney apt. in Ma(eilnL»S.l&. '• ^ilNISTdR MOVli MOViifO INTO POR YOUR HOME PROMPT. COURTEOUS SERVICE BRIAN REALTY I, FviiMiad 17 1 to 50 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE APPRAISALS FREE GUARANTEED SALE 30 DAY LISTING Wt guarantaa tha aalt of your LAUINGER «73-71^ A BETTER CASH DEAL Apartmants, Unfumishad 38 Call homa p u r c h a a I n g YORK of what to do w us? Wa hava an a forct to tall your h ability to work out datalls, or wa can bt, .... ________ outright (or cash. Ramambar, from tha tima you call, to tha tima you hava your monay. It will not ax- ■ iS?,v?;''i —................... vicinity of St. Bantdlct Church. 135 wk. SltO dap. 335-7754. 72 CADILLAC. MODERN, Util. furn. ptrtonal appolntmant. Times Realty to DIXIE HIGHWAY OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 1- BLOOMFIELD MANOR WEST Nawly complalad luxury apartmania Hotpoint alactric appllaneai (aaturad. Carpatlng and drapat Includad. Modal opar ’* CASHI FOR YOUR PROPERTY Mdy to movo, rotlrta or loio yc property. Call ut for fait oai Ask for owner. WM. MILLER, REALTY Divorce-Foreclosure? aa. Call Mrs. M-72a I Will Buy Your House Anywhara, any condition, n points, no commission. CASH NOW MOVE LATER Miller Bros. Reolty 33',y W. Huron 333-7156 HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER home IN OAKLAND COUNTY. CALL AGENT, 574-lWI or 331-a»f3. LOVELY 4 ROOM, wast sida, adiilta only. S73-74M or 3530737. _ nTcE apartment, p a r (Ta I fy LOTS - WA'NTBO in PONTIAC eOyiTY, VA, HHA, OTHER, F()R GuiCK AcTION -L NOW. HAGSTROM hLTOR, OR 4-035S or EVE- fVBMUIUN. UR 4- NINGS f6 4-7005. SELLING EXPERIENCE' nacassary qualification to Eatata firm you c Hating your homa. , Co.. OR 4-2172 oftars tha Raal ... ..Ith whan O'Nall Raalty - you qualiriad a comblnad " tra of itallng 200 yaar ..... ......, In tha Pontiac Whan you ara raady to sail homa, call OR 4-7177. 1 DAY CASH FOR YOUR HOUSE OR LOT ’fast"?rSM*sI'rVicb Aaron Mtg. & Invest. Co. WE'RE HUMILIATEDII Wa'va sold all o( our listings. Your llatlnga, thair tlstlnga and soma ' " didn't know axiatad. If you h a homa to aalt. Hat It with us i start to pack. ANDERSON A ASSOCIATES lOM Joalyji_ _FE_4-3534 WANTED OstjNGS; " Wa tiava . ,----wawlll bag..™ laSf.’aK'aj!,’”' JOHNSON 1734 S. Talagraph Apnrtnieiiti, Farnlihed 37 PERSON ONLY, naat and claan, privata bath and antranca. S7S par mo., 40 Sandaraon, raar aparti—‘ BEDROOM ON ^LAKE OB coupla only, SISA a mo. utllltlaa. Laaaa and sacurlty privata an ms, adults oi 7 ROOM apartment' ROOM efficiency. Naar Pbn-tiac AAotor, claah and quiat, adulti FE 4-4575, Oaiiaral*Hot"pltar.''FE'V^ RDOMS and BATH,' ________________ -------- privata bath and an- ....___ carpatad hallways, -------- facllltlaa, privata parking. Utllltlaa (urn. From S37.50 par wk. *— $175 dap. 335-2135._______________ ROOM$"ON OAKLAND naar SaarW FE 4-7131 or 2333 DIxIa Hwy. MIch'aala araai also J on In Glngallvilla. FE 5-7»37. ROOMS. Claan, quiat ad “■'•■■ting, no chlldran. Dap. 103 Norton. NICE, CLEAN ROOMS. Homo-cookad maala. 33S-1577. ROOM AND BOARD (or ratiraa Bent OHice Space 1200 SQUARE FEET In RllOMi ANB BATir; itova. 400 aq. ft. ___________ possasslon. 3 — $00 sq, ... .. undar construction. FE 4-45$$. AVAILABLE^ NOW IN SQ. FT. OFFICE at S. water. 25,300 SQ. FT. BLDGS. 2 adlacant bldgs., across Oslaopathic Hospital. ' remodel to ault tenant or ....... provide new bldp. with parking an pita. 130x140. Will rant bldgs. School. Only S mlnuta ________ ________ Body, Hurry — FHA tarmi available wily $15,500. Ray O'Nall Raalty, 574- ACRE ON NORTH PONTIAC Trail, larga 4-badroom homa. carpatad llvinp and dining area, V/2 baths, finishsd basemsnt Incl. poolroom, and 2nd kitchen, 2 car garage, a good buy at $3I,?00. 574- ACRI with fruit trees large ranch homa, family > . . carpatad living and dining room, 2 possible 3 larga badrooma ■' tached 3'/i car garage, neighborhood . S5g Ll_______ Wolvorlno Lake. 123,500. Coll 524- 1434 W. Huron, Pontiac 50M070 BY OWNER, 3 BEDROOM brick, IVi baths, gas hot water hoot, Isndsctpod, Rochostor ^ —•—t. 157-40B3 oftoi 7 BEDROOM HOME, Orton walk-ln closals, ptntlod ft.... room, foncod yard, newly dacoratod. S10,SOO, 0500 required. 2 BEDROOM FRAME sitting TODAY, 574-4101. It 011,500 P-31. CALL RAY 2 BEDROOM RANCH TYPE, SUN ROOM, garage, GARDEN, LOT lOO'xISO'. TERMS 117,(DO. FLATTLEY REALTY 570 COMMERCE RD... 353-5(01 BEO'ROdfOrOME with garage, mo acre by owner. 573-3903. 3 BEDROOM BRICK, 7 car garage; original owner, 3 years old. In the location of Bloomflafo Orchards, _J34j5Ml^a(far_5 p.m^ 3 BEDROOM, axtra large and assume 113,500 mortgaga. 335- 4517. 3 BEDROOMS, (Iraplaca, a basamant location, 573,50( 10 par Cf FE 4-481 I. Let $1x135 (t. I17,s8o. ‘iPHA" tarmtT’Tetai 'S10(» down. 587-?574.____________ BEDROOM BRICK IN Park, rac. room In sTolioto Anytime I Contract « 1185, ottM- I p. 7 botba, can t3S,500. Qu.... RiOlty, IS7-Si73.___________ S ROOMS VACANT Brick torroca,en_EiatJSIwl, orotad, full brtc yn. FE 5-3717. 4 BEDROOM BRICK RANCH, IVi baths, I 575,300. ( 26 X 40 icnar, run oassmonr, 11 d I n g , Aluma-Vlaw atia witl . Open Iday t-l p.m., S gn».’B!?ll Immadlata oc-onday through jt. 10 ta 4 p.m. 4 p.m. 52S-3574 John Veorbali Builders,' Inc. $12,000 BUY'S siagSQ" THE BIO RANCHER - 3 badrllL, tamlly size kitchen, tally Insulated; largo ullllty------------------'*‘ go ullllty room. On your lot. YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT -............ -g, Bldg Russell Young, Bldg. _____334-3130-531$ Wj_Humn»t. AUBu'RN HEiOHfS homo, o _ . ----- — Owner, t AVAILABLE NOWI Attractive 7 ________ Aluminum aldlnli, goo —, ...„. ' EUzobath loM Rd^ Huron APARTMENTS Thay are all townfiouses, one, two, and threa bad-rooms. Furnishad gas haat, air*condlt(onad, rafrigar-aterand gofTtova ora includadrCarpetad^nd^raped. Coin-operated laundry facilities, swimming pool, ample parking, storaga lockers. Wa have them from $165 per month with a one year lease, children are welcome. No pets. The only utility you pay is electricity. The rant ogent Is on the premises. Ridgemont Apartments 957 N. PERRY 332-3322 aa. Land contract. S2SOO d IS monthly Including taxoa. led Raalty ________________4B A SALE IS ONLY AS GOOD AS YOUR FINANCING. Sold or lallloe your hoinoT Lot v ^indla |V^ur mortgage. FHA or Q Aaron Mtg. & Invst. Co. AT ROCHESTER -IN THE VILLAGE IVi-story fromo hardwood floc“ dining rqiFn, (Iraplaca, sttachod garogo. I carpatad throughout. $S?,500. IN THE COUNTRY, living with tl 3 bedroom ranch, tlropTaeo, b» mant, 1 car garaga. Asking IK,51 . Oftica In RaehaaU. MILTON WEAVEnTlNC. Rl 11$ W, Unlvaralty taaltora $5H141 UeURN HijOHT$ AREA tur-rounda thi$ $hirp 1 hadr— ‘ " and rr------------- wssL^oJiiiSrAW'oir'z IMt or FE $-5$«l RAY aa***' h on I aero woodad lot. 1'/i baths. 2Vi car attaebad garaga. ------------- I..,. ^prMtagM. Call BY OWNER Drayton Plaint araa,-ranch. 3 badrooma. Full WILL ACCEPT ALL APPLICATIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. room, l’/i caramic b< ' 2Vi car garaga: -------------f. $25,?00. ita occupancy. 5, 353-$(45. BRICKS DON'T NEED ^AINT Bloomflald Orcharda. 5 ytor old ranch, 3 bedrooms, tall batr-------* bqrdwood floors, tamlly roon natural fireplaco, buflt-lns, utas (ram 1-75. Agant •»'- ■ OR 4-154$, FE l-ftiw. «d“aS’r'S;!S:r •wins, carpatad living room wim (Iraplaca, carpatad dining room, kltcnan with built-lna, lamlly room, util, room, boiomont and porago. S34.500. 573-7347, appt. only. No HAGSTROM, REALTOR -jW. HURON OR 44135$ MLS Attar $ pm..-FE4-7W5 BACKUS Auburn Heights area 3 tMdroomp alum. sl(fad homa landscaped lots. Full basen_____ oas haats 2 car garaotr t27v500a FHA farms. 334»3593 oasemanTy z car anacnao gi ceramic bath$ oak floorsy n mortgaga .............. possession. OR 3-7440. I. $22$900. Immediate BIG, BIG, BIGIIi bMtraonn homo locattd near Lincoln Jr. High more dofallt, P-15. r:sT8'________________________ outsldo. Midst It’s many foaturos Is a 25x14 family room with firor'— and Indoor grill, private da roomy badrooms, paved 0 Priced at lust $35.$00 and v Sm JOSEPH SINGLETON REALTOR 517 S. PADDOCK_ 3354115 KING-PHIPPS OXFORI^- 2 story nlonJ^L 3 largi WARDEN --------- ..rpatad ......... , IVi baths, gas hsat, full basamant, ' ohtaga on small lak' --------- 2,$00 qnd sssuma S'A KING PHIPPS AGENCY 1$$7 S. Lapsar Rd. 578-7555 LAKE PRIVILEGES ■ CUTE AND COZY tcraans, paved drive. On nortbstda. TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE 7751 N. Opdyka_________337-0155 CLAWSON-By owner, 2 badroom ranch, IVi baths, 7 (Iraplaca- ' " basement with rac. room. COOL BREEZES shaded by mature treat surround this beautiful log cabin on largo lot. Thera art 2 '--------- md tall basement, that has lots of posslbllltlas, F-40. CALL RAY TODAYI RAY THEN LOOK AT THIS BRICK HOME WITH 4 LARGE BEDROOMS, SPACIOUS LIVING ROOMcFAMILY ROOM, RECREATION ROOM. KITCHEN, ONE FULL BATH AND ON|f HALF BATH WITH SHOWER, UTILITY ROOM AND ?S>e"Te°r1m.?°“til^'S'n Wfig FLOoAfc^-mu b?^h^ab[K^ rN«K>VgAAWENT“H“(SJ4 MARBLE SILLS, HOT WATEli other ' qUALlfY 'FiATURES. 2 CAR 9E..SPJ-P'‘'nch lane and is «'ce®d“'"aV AJ?oS .5gzsiWknr‘‘-'‘“F'r,, CLARKSTON AREA isida year around hon tats, will accept ■ Michael's I. 527-3$15, 527-3S40, « Clarkston School Arta $701 Thandaro Blvd. fc„Loeotod S blacka N. of Clai Homo. Lota of plant your selection ta build to "live------" 573-34SI Don E. McDonald, LIctnsod Bulldar OR 3-2837 Injoy couk. ------ll 3 bedroom brt.... - ..... of land. Call Ruby Ft HAMPTONHfltt^— New dollghttal aubdivislon loci lutl south at S. Blvd. and Most Squlrtol Road, RANCHES T CHEq prices' RANOB'fROM 143,000 GREATER BLOOMFIELD HALLMARK $700 FENTON—NEW RANCH HOME of ipiclout llvina on H oert li boautital Tyrano Hills. 1300 sq. FIBst IN VALUii RECITING WE ARE NOW A REAL RUY 'irge corner lEo'liOOMS, niy SSyOOOr w$ A. J. RHODES, Realtor FE 0-3305 255 W. Walton FE 54712 HOMES MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE THIS 3 BEDROOM homo It In tl -------..T.„ .....--- ...,|| ,, :... S 3 BEDI — condition, ---------- — .. — corpotlng. In living and dining am, and 1 bedroom, tall basomont and PEOPLE V..... PROBLEMS AND R B ARE Of....... OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND REAL VALUE REALTY For Imediate Action Call FE 5-3676-642-4220 HAPPINESS IS HERE In thli lovely 3 bedroom olum....... aldod ranch on WATKINS LAKE. S7$$ HIGHLAND RD. living room It carpatad, IVi I 13'xl4' family room, attach*. ... car garaga, fancad yard, SO' good baach. $37,500 land contract tarr^ VACANT CAPE COD auLxrtWininS'j. room, FHA opprovad, ..... _ down. Agent (or owner, OR 4-154$. HEARTHSIDE REALTY alr-conditloned room, gas heat____.... _____ , water and tewart, 3Vi-ctr attached garaga on a wall landscaped ' All thli plus Ika prlvlla ««,000. 3157 ORCHARD LAKE RD. 334-35$4 screens, carport, large shady move right In only $1$,$00. brick r|ng~7aom,'i'arga coun; Jy]l__ tastmant, and 0 ranch on 3V4 acres excellent ______I loam, 7'/i car garage, spot to k5ep a horse or 515,550. OA 0-2515 5$3-037l RAY SCHRAM 3 BEDROOMS 14x10' living room, separata dining room, full tiled basement with recreation room, gat toree-heat. Only 5050 down plus c costs on FHA tarm|. List With SCHRAM and Call the Von OPEN EVES. AND SUN. Iin Joslyn Ava. FE------ REALTOR MLS ■ Ing Pontiac Area for 20 years Gl, 0 month, move li BEAUTIFUL 4-LEVEL, 4 bedroom d full basement MILLS ELIZABETH LAKE 00 Feat on Laka Orion, 1 badrooma, "—ilaca, aluminum tiding, lots of I. Only 515,500. , FHA terms. ___Phone 6W-8371 Model Open DAILY 5 TO 8 Family kitchen with a larga panalad ----------- -------- caramic bath, colored fixtures, tall IIRECTIONS; In Commarca Orchard Laka to Commarca Rd. rlbht on Commarca ta Sloolh Rd, i bikt. to Sundtw. ART DANIELS REALTY 1230 N. MlllOrd Rd. NEW MODEL HOME Open dolly $ to 5 E. J. DUNLAP ir Walton ..... ................. bo teen to be approclttad. 3750 Roto City Rd. wast Branch, Tol.' 345-2431. OPEN 9 A.M. TO 8 P.M. 32$4 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. Ir; Drive watt on M-S$, ti irth on Wlllltmt Lk.. Rd. ..S^!B,;*.8f'si'5*,3?.'*^"''™ BEAUTY CRAFT HOMES 574-4721 ly homa ________________$25,000. GREEN ACRES MY 3-5252 ONLYl^ Wh€r« otrwrs pay, top ------------ rates at 0 par cant, corporations art paying 10 — —* — borrow at 3 --Co-Op and I: WALTON PAI payment tram siw lananca, util, except.......... . --------11. CALL NOW 3354171 d buying a ' PARK MAN V lolning a wnnousa at R. Monthly Incl. maln- apdlnatt It braaklbta ,kTr« StaH"! d door wbTi anta tar- iltdlng race, and a rac, room with bolloibly low prieo of $4$,$00. YORK _______________i-7175 P-37 JUST $13,S06 tar fhll 3_________ OsMstoa ranch .with nica alio klteh-Townihie, —■ car garaga. 3 blacka from State ?s?oi«c2srcSi*’^'’* YORK SuIg Hmmf tOCHESTER - By owner, badroom ranch, S75,$M. 551-8501. liOCHEtTER OWNEI ----- .... cer^. . _ la, (Inlahad basamant, fancad m hill with trtaa. Gr. achoot, . away. Immocu— .....- S74,$W, 5SI-5501. RHODES -k,l'*«73Rj.'THV RAY EASTHAM 90, FHA or Gl roomsa sharp na)M hoP luy now you can taloc of carpatino ind tllSr r*. Living -- UNDEr$5000 STARTER HOME ON YOUR LOT P. J, M JUST CLOSING COST WYMAN LEWIS REALTY” WEST SIDE 2 story, 5, largo i pofmal din WEST SIDE Baautiful homa In axe dition. a dining rt,.......... basamant and garaga. kitchan plus full LAUINGER Webster-Curtis HIITER your lot. To tw. ............ .... HHTER, REALTOR, 37$7 Bill. Lake Rd. 5S240S0, after I p.m. 5S2-4553. OPEN SUNDAY 7 TO S. CLARKSTON - structlon ■ im baVaiici Ira5r- “ parcel. sti;eam on roar i - Paved street CLARKSTON ment — fireplace garaga — larga to - 573,000, 15750 morigaga - Wi contraCf or equity DAVISBUR6 — 3 acres r.n«wn.'” CHOICB building lots dr acraagt -soma woodad — soma bordarlng watar*wida prica------- •wida prica ranga. UNDERWOOD 575-7515, If no ant. 575-3 ROYER Delightful Starter Special ' badroom bungalow. 3 blocks m town and 1 blocks to let -' Comfortable Living bedroom 2 story. On aulal town. Gas beat ind plenty o( wa'rt asking. Toaayi Phone. 634-8204 OPEN TRI-LEVEL MODELS Sale HeuMf Les Brown bafhdr 2 car ------------ — Whlta Laka Twp.? you'll w you wait on this ona. yours, 11 Pontiac Lat's gc CLARKSTON SCHOOLS to hear from you today EASTHAM REALTORS Highland Rd. (M-5$) MLS 674-3126 335-7900 IRWIN "YES WE TRADE!" $1000 MOVES YOU IN with ( OFF AUBURN This 7-t yard. 511,6(». Gl ALUMINUM RANCHER With 3 bedrooms. Priced tar average buyer. Located In a suburban area. This homa plush carpatlng, poured cai drive, and Is almost spanking DID YOU KNOW THAT WE BUILD? lavo I 3-sr"oniir114,500 plus GEORGE IRWIN. REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE 7$i west -- JUST A SAMPLE'! Of the many homes basement. OVER FIVE ACRES. RiuutKuily landsci ^ ‘------ rge pond. ....... with "rec" room space, large fenced yard. Jus' tha growing family. S37,' Large loi loctlon. condition. Located on I with spring-fad pond. BROOCK 4139 Orchard Laka Road At Pontiac Trail MA 6-4000 444489D COSWAY • UNION LAKE FRONT lake front, nict----------- »------ In front porch. Garaga, and bath house, 15000 down on land contract. CASS LAKE PRIVILEGES «m apllt level, (eatar.... extra Itamt,' auch aa -- - -------- ck bar aratai BRAND NEW WITH CASS UKE PRIVILEGES Sale Houeet IN ROCHESTER APPROX. 7Vi ACRES • '-sSfV'’ __________ ...,^l»Cta R«Pm l,“,;m.'S:'¥?!SS'a{"s3^!J8. " r BRICK COLONIAL. 1 bodroOm, family room, bullt-lna, rooroatlon room, tlroploco, 7Vi ca^arago. Excollont condition, S44,$0K. SNYDER, KINNEY & BENNETT In Rochester 134 W. Unlvorslty (2nd door) 551-5100 or 31441108 FE 5-8183 / PONTIACKNOLLS ), Targo lot, docoratad In It. i$00 down, VACANT.. SOUTHEAST ' Two story older homo, (gtally dining room, don, t hj-.a a Eadroomt, baaamant with gaa FA heat, 1 car garage. Docoratad Insida and out. VTACANT. $100$ down. VACANT. ^ NO DOWN PAYMENT Two story older homo, got hut, wood floors, family dining room, dacoratod. VACANT. Eves: Call Mr. Caatall FE i;7273 Nicholie-Harger Co. FE 5-8183 AVON BRICK WEINBERGER Shelby Township naar R---- Utica area. A salting of eustom- ----- ' '—‘—mi, famic- 2 car a built homes. 3 b room with flrap..„, . .... tached garaga, baaittlfHl landscaped lot, otsume mortgaga at 5V4 per cent paymenta of $157 per month ---- - Insurance. onth including taxes a VACANT UKE FRONT I Urgt k I. S21$000i IVi car garaga. contract or 61 karmt. EXCLUSIVE SALES OP WEINBERGER HOMES lUO CROOKS RD. GAYLORD OFFERS MODEL OPEN DAILY 24 5$3-2755 3 badroom, 1 car garage, t1$,500. Coma saa tha quality workn ‘' many 1 plans. Wa wilt b_ ... ours, M-34 to Clarkston Ri to Falrladge, tarn right a LOOKING FOR A HOME? It have homaa on acraiga and ym- 2 car g acres, tree nursery 3 badrooms, 2’/i car garaga, finished basamant, large lot. Orion Twp. 2 handyman's specials, bi wa will find It tar you. GAYLORD INC. 2 W. Flint Lok 5$3-$333 Open $■$ COMMERCE AREA - ----- I full basomont, landsct^, g brick, ttrms. Call 351-7700. NEWLY DECORATED - ------ SgrpUl'a'iiT'LiSl'c^M ........ ____4CH, largo lot, t attached garaga. (Iropliew tar rtduced price. 351-7M$. CASS LAKE PRIVILEGES 2-badrooms, comont block, larg lot, only $15,$00. COMMERCE LAKE FRONT 15 room homo, newly 5477. ROLUNG^ WANT TO MAKE A DEALT COSWAY contract' tarma!"8M*|J?», I OR fhA terms. Excallant starter, 812,500. Call for appt, EM 34703. 2-BEDROOM, lowest Lower Straltt . ... --- 2 car garaga. Iota 10. Coll tar ippt. EM, secluded, 2-bodroom homo. 10 bedroom, family room, IVi baths, 1 car garaga. TrI-laval, only $1l,$$0 on your Tot, Highland Rd. (M ~ to Crescent Lake Rd., right $I5,$$0 plus lot. GIROUX REAL ESTATE SSSS MInhI.nH $73-7037 LEACH WILL BUILD LAND CONTRACT pienra n«w norm tot mi« \ only down on Und C It Is, you eoh't mita ou* — one. $ao It to bollovo It. FINANCING AVAILABLE 5925 HIGHUND RD. (M-59) ----- *75-7147 $7$-l$$$ Wideman 5 BEDROOM Ranchor, $ wardrobe closata, large 'tapboardi, racraatlon SILVER UKE FRONT dttaetnd It. boat 'omoIb”: I- 9- WIDEMAN, REALTOR SL.* •^I1'.*.,^CALL®'* "• TIMES LONG LAKE FRONT, B DESIGN TO DELIGHT Every member at tha family. 100' of sand baach on quir* -------•- Silver Laka, and a bri JKWR.*" FULLY PANELED Stsadraoim.' --------- -------- with 3 extra _____________ baths, stone firaplaca, gas water soflanar, paved drive attached 2 car garage. This lovely SINGLE BEDROOM, atartar an' canal, call (or price and terms. > 343-54J7. drapes and a Offered at *" par c( ■fatlal - .....— Jppllances. $41,500 and svailabla on , ant land contract w'“- -substatlal down poymont. NEED MORE ROOM? Lota of tpaco tar the largo (l.. plus a brand new 2 badroom apartment (or guosta ' ' Loettod cloto ta town o LARGE 7 STORY ovarleoking Com-■"^rce Lake, Sundack, garaga, can purchased on land contract. For ----------------- eM3-^. of Cota Th I toaulltally with bullMnfc^mJt/'room.tamtal sMad axtarler and f VERY SPECIAL HOME Waiting tar_tta vary ipacial family that naadt S badrooma, extra ear garaga. Bonus feature IneWea a brick (Iraplaca, wats toftangr, laraa yard, paved atraal -beach -privllagai^^nd Ctarksloi *"'* offarad if ont t3$,$50. Call now to sea this. SPIC AND SPAN watattront ranch In the Unto Lake arta. Ideal tar ntwiy.wodt o ...... oai hat wata. 3 car garage and fancad ciMing costs for t.„ *or an WHEN YOU SE^K OUR SERVICE ypiN THE NIAR^ to TIMES" Times Realty ----IS’HIGHWAY *e"n **M.$.-REA»”'‘ OFFICE OPEN r. ACRES, quiet locatli $14,500, Gl terms. F call/ EM 34703. EbROOM, f_____ -'-’llagas, $10,500. G 3-n»$. EM 1-BEDROOMS, Watorferd, land eoh-tract terms. Call (or appt. EM $•$477. 1V5 ACRES, Highland ' Aim, t-BRICK AND aluminum ranch, fun -------?. w gar^fc^l igar old. Cosh to n 3534701. ISO- FRONTAGE, «i ocroa bardtp- LAKE PRIVILBGU ta LoWdr ^fiiir tana, tanctu ^ord, —s-^ bedrooms, sun room, coll for appt. 4 Acres, Rochester Area, Near Shopping cantor, hWwst p— -Oakland County,_CSnd c forms. Call EM iTTBO. g tita, an'Wat la' t ACRE BUILDING SITE. Watartard' "--g-a&Tisr'ri for Wont Ads Dial 3344981 Siiio Hmm* THE PONTrACTTyESS. MONDAY> JUNE 30, 1969 D—11 FAPRELL ■Silvor Lokt Estatts i>6r Hn..ExyMtlvi -.tlw nun wl ’ wMt* Itw bMt Mr hli wIM wl warn* to attlM Mr nothing but tl but. J.lwdroom brick, largo fan ■*" ilaca. Control a Auburn Haights Area Sharp contomporary brick ranch, 2 Near Fisher Body ROYER OXFORD OFFICE Executive Lakefront Luxurloua Inlorlor 4nlgn. Formal oinino ninm. Sunkon living room. 4 bodrooms. Balcony ..... lako from — . Complataly finlihad . Extra both. Family iput room, walk^out y brickid. Kltchan u 4 Bedroom and Den Noar now RochoaMr High Stiii Full brick tri-lovol. PanoTad fair . variwH UIWOIOI. BUM •Mvo and drahwaBhor. Good Mace'day Lake Handy ipam uvlng kitchen .......... Mads of ^boards. Largo cloaata throughout. Full bath, ------------ III. Saparata dining a'raa. Living VON iAND CONTRACT par ntanlh can plir7n'?&!"IJo*£2S5i'S^^ ^hoS-al^JL^J:?^ ^ ■ pric* lltyfOO. Call today. VON REALTY MILLER AARON D. BAU6HEY, Realtor ro’DgriVGoi Sett on 2 lots. iVi car garaflar aa.ovniOp drivo. Lota of flovvt— • »5Sf.war. with Sl,M0 down plus cuM on "0000 BOV." All I floor, 12x14 carpatod "vlng rum, 2 nica badrooma. Full ,-JMmant, gai hut. A sharp----- "0" down on FHA. 4-B|DHTOM CUSTOM HOME WIHl <*fMras A prioad balow ---- value. Carpalad living odarn kltchan with 'ull basalt with roc. room A work room, ipad yard, pavad drive a. Just $iy,aOO an FHA INDIAN VILLAGE F larga living room formal dining room, largb kitchen, 3 bedn Full basamant, ga paraga. Baaultful ( tovaly area. S24,S00 r firapia&l Sale Nooses 4«Sale Nooses A6cG EXECUTIVE HOME TrI-lavol home wllh aval _ pmtte'toa^!'*Br^ aluminum construction, rxW “ s’^roiT'do'nniSr' 5 FIraplaoa In lama masM. ____________ room, 2W baths, hot water ---- *—It and many attiar r^lsWoTy 'INVeSTER'S SPECIAL" Wa have a S unit Inoatna praparty - 1 Mil basamant, so bodroam lanM and A1 ^bg droem n^sida**'locaMoM*”'li!^*'^^ S3«,M0. ANDERSON & GILFORD Building & Realty t.2^ KINZLER •ss^'o-oTiowai.*'" beach privllagn nearby'. FHA OR Gl AH aluminum axtarta North^sWe^citj homa w]th full car garage. Has 4?»iy werera ime*— —* “■* provementa Only $550 4 C4»fS 4 JOHlTKiNZLER. Realtor paid. Vacant ........ «n on FHA plus clos-closing costs only ** LISTING - SELLING - APPRAISING - BUILDING ONLY $2600 CASH 'Dawn raquirad to move Orayton , Woods. Among Ml s'emT*' « PONTIAC NORTH SIDE Near LoBoron Elommtary school. 3-bodroom, n Full. boumont, Mncod yard and gas hut, SI7,M( DESIREABLE AREA-SHARP PRICE lord ranch and Id potto, tllod hi sowar and —*-no. Your p HERE'S WHAT OUR GUARANTEE MEANS TO YOU your homo In on trade ' to wait to move Into y FRUSHOUR REALTY REALTORS - MLS 674-2245 5730 Willioms Lake 6744161 'O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? HOW SWEET IT IS! could writa a book on tht loturos In this newly on omuiinii conii coxa, on't touch tho walls In getting Iho morning In this huge I4xis - bedroom. Kitchen has on CLARK "INCOME MONEY MAKER" units, good Inoomo propoilY, also 2 —-------------—no Mmings In- ;»n ”toSf dSSgno'Sdlt; SStiLdlw? ------ from S12,7M Inciudi^toL ■^lliabolh Lot DIRECTIONS, Toko Elln CLARK REAL BSATE ia»2 W. HURON ST. M2-SI5S OPEN M M.LwS. -----------HowarS Jo Prtatf 'ZERO" DOWN ...—ito posNSiton coi. „ — If you con qualify for on FHA ourtgogo on this modem .2 MmT nsrsk/o" rSm'!S?'«u' buoiM'tr I car «7,000 plus ctosHw «»■.. SUBURBAN ESTATE Ineludm S floor, MV Full prtco. Capa Cod stylo homa tocotod on 2tk icrn In Indopondanoe Twp. Includu Mil boMmonl, 2W car at-tachsid garage and small bom. Only 2 blocks M grade and Jr. Hlgn schools. Cin bo purchssod Mrnishsd Mr S2S,SM, Mrms M sulf Call - Inc. Evu1"EmV784« BRIAN LET'S TRADE OAKLAND LAKE homo, that you cpn movs InM next and a 2 cor garage, incod. Full price or and Contract, terms. SEYMOUR LAKE smaller homo la Ideal M g. It sots way back fror hut .till far enough fror aulMbto play -— 0 firopli 10 yard 327,000 OPEN COME VISIT SCENIC COLONY HEIGHTS 2 MODELS ARE OIBN FOR YOUR mSPECTION CLARKSTON AREA - 3 bedroom ranch with full wolk-owt buamsnt. 2W car attached gara«o. IW baths, Itrgs country kltchan. • Homo Is “■'“It Mr sorly —" EAST SIDE - Pontiac. S b WE ALSO BUILD rl-lovol, r_________________ _____... ... jm^tot priead from 317,100 M Exc. Financing Available HAYDEN REALTY LAZENBY MODEL 3465 MANIU CT. SMiod glass windows Formica coblnots IW baths $1,100 DOWN sMtd ranch! :hsd gorago,--------- MS on a largo lot. equity on - wo will gus________ 3nly 020.400, FHA prasont hOmo or solo In writing. ROYCE* UZENBY, Realtor Obmi Dibilw fjf OR 44M0I t has 2 BRIAN REALTY old Your ‘ iltl^lo L Sunday 10-4 (03-0702 GILES West Bloomfield Township DOES IT COST MONEY? IM distinctive. Yes It doosl Stylo :otlon, boHor schools, lirga lot, all d up In this 4 bodroam, l bath -Jck and aluminum bOMity. This ■■-Mvol cotontol Is tocoMd "'—Ins Pontlse EsMtu. CorpsMd ind living moms, potto fane-oiMl 0 largo attached 2W car *—-«t Immodloto sMIng, asphalt drive, 2-car garage, gas hut, paved strut, can ha b^ht on land contract wllh $5,000 down, coll Mr appointment today. COMMERCIAL BUILDING 0 Baldwin Avo,iCliM I mIM. Each with Iti < irtori upiMIrt, gran $4,230 DOT yur. Can ___.... jn land contract, i iubstantlal down poymont.. Olvt i coll and wo will show It M you. BENEFITS IN BUYING A HOME This newly listed 3 bsdroom brick In boaullful Lake Angolua Lak— Estates lust to minutes to low $1,500 DOWN ON UND CONTRACT '. This 1 fclI'Trsp'gS 49 Sale Hohms (S 1 call and tots Multipto Listing Sorvico YOUNG COUPLES DREAM HOUSE Exciting and pIcMrasquo doscribu this 2 bodroom olumlnum tldod of Drayt4)n Plains In a^ tnfly 'blacTJ' BLOOMFIELD HILLS kitchen w homo, a location and this 1000 sq. ft. quality brick ranch ------ ,.ito pInsIng' kitchen with slovo, relrigoralor, Pnd disposal, a truly braalh-lakine firoplact botwun moni, 2 cor atti air conditioning DIRECTION OF EXPANSION Brick 3L family In the bosf aru baths and kitciwns and tho main dish-living iO$."Confroi floor oparhitont hoa 3 bodrooms. CLARKSTON NEW HOMES Prietd ,M n lake prlvlta doeeratlng, vent fait, at ■ kllchon IS heat. DORRIS & SON REALTOR 2536 Dixie Hwy. MLS OR 44)324 LET'S HAVE SOME FUN Right In your awn back yard, and 'iM* — listod homo" In Drayton — M schools and ahopphig ■ I "lust IS clou rick and llvoblo. ooms with thru bodrooms, , family room, and a 2tk igt. And Mr tho poor—" ■wars, thoro Is < M !£!,«• No. 2-2t [DO YOU DREAM OF REMODELING baths, largo siding. If you hove S3,0M M Invest —" '18 for help. O'Noll Rnlty 474-No. AS SAYS DOES YOUR FAMILY NEED TWO BATHS? Oood_poMlbllltlss of 0 Murlh sm7 Then this aluminum aldaY ■- "faMrtord TowniMp may bi ,you at mly SII,fsB. Don' ----- jII usi Wo havo vary Mw newer hormo Mr tou than SMJWO. Approximataly 32,500 will mova ' INK'S STILL WET m this naw listing, 2 story, bodrooms, largo living room, Mn dining room, kltchm, Mil basoriH 2 cor garage, city ' —■ priced at 09,OSO. terms. NEW MODELS Angtius La m Walton to :"WE HAVE THE BEST FINANCING THERE IS TODAY" FHA TERMS #7 Ul AVAILABLE M help you oWn this 3 bodroom bungalow, locatod WALLED UKE SCHOOL DISTRICT Is whoro vod'll find th aluminum rancher. Cozy family room with and Wka prlyltogts. 321,000. HURRY, CAL GUARANTEE THE SALE OF YOUR HOMBI ODAYII WE WILL LAKE ORION AREA ENGLISH COUNTRY-HOUSE iwsllod a on the woMr. NoMrol stono firoplaco. #35 mono the trim with 73 Mot l^nSvw?' we** wTuT*oX AR- WATKINS UKE privileges plus a 3 bad room brick #54 ’^pouii;ilon.''WB W?lI!*OUA^ CURKSTON AREA ntom* TOOAyTw'b’ ¥fir'TSB'AtflS? CT'hSSIi^ #86 mily room tiro-flLL GUARAN- SECLUDEO TRI-LEVa #lOl i%^*E"E^Wo8^^ltt*wWuVR« YOUR HOMEIt - . ' _____ ROCHESTER AREA tffl'^^LL^SSiyil WE WILL guarantee thi ^SuWoM*-' #114 _____■ loot 2 Ills, basamant, SAL? OP I. Huron at voofhols Rd 'fONTIAC aARKSTON ROCHESTER 6254441 651-8518 UNION LAKE S6»4171 > Lake Angolus Road. XI Meadows I M-tS Clarkston No. 12-27 Itotes. Rud Boy Estitm Elizabeth Ukt Rood and Wllllai Lake road RAY O'NEIL REALTY, 3520 PONTIAC LAKE ROAD Val-U-Way his ont. Call today. Claude McGruder Realtor Ih Lk. Rd. HAYDEN TIGHT MONEY? BAH, HUMBU6I tlnincine «iyam,al rut«joWO|^l call on any of tho Mllowing. It you don't mut those roqulromonts, coll anyway, we are awMIly nice M talk M you and may hovo,l or 2 land contract, FHA or Gl dools ovilliblo. UNION LAKE AREA Largo 2-bidroom, contomporary brick trl-levol. Firoplaco, Vh baths, Mrmica cupbur-*- —* vanity, carpet and d i ■ ^ ^ A............... a “ ■ “■ ;7ovV. ' gargoe ' QUICK possoiston. ;12,*00 down on land 1, at 7 par emt In- NEAR HAMMOND LAKE SJMdroom brick ranch wllh I basoment, 2 firoplocm, 12x15 i tng room, 2-cor garigo, 14 family room, S34,m£ CEDAR ISLAND LAt 3-bad room ranch with •4' i tVi baths, * —----- I oyor bissmon....... nSSSf**** COLONY HEIGHTS - -"-lroom tri-toyol largo family r, IW ba«M, Ml NEED 4 LARGB BBDROOMS7 ... ...St hos avoiythlng tho I family mods, 3W boths, at dining • eovorod formal 24' CO 349,500. HAYDEN REALTY sf Oxbow.Loko tn "IT'S TRADING TIME" SQUEEZED FOR SPACE? bedrooms, h docorotwl III n boiuify, FuMrs boths, pictures^ vlth firsptaco. Fon uo'vto«r'fram%t^^i^ »«rtSMr ng aru. Full Is, bullt-lns, carptling and uting area. Full MoeiMNil Inished racrutton room, attsidM gorage, and prlvlwgas n Lake. Rusonably priced and flnincltto can be arrangad. FHA SPECIAL Three badreomt, full basamant, anctoaad front parch. SHuatad on thru nicoly iondocapod Mncod tots, on the uttsMo, 014,050 |s tho price. Coll today Mr on appolhlmotif M lU H. CURKSTON SCHOOLS r. dvtr Slop to. of livlntf orM In Sw, low tax aroo \k mlta fa 1-^. A raal ^ at only $35/400. •attar call SOPHISTICATION & CHARM oro ovMoncad by tho fim lasM throughout this oxscutlvs typo irPtovsl noma sIMolod on a booutlMI tot In in upoclolly charming mlghborhoad. FooMras thru badraams, two baths, tlraptoes, and drapartos. The rtgva, waalw It dryer and garbage dlspual ' era alsa Included In itia uto. Tarim can be arrangad. Yeu must SOMEBODY WANTS YOUR HOME - WE HAVE MORTGAGE MONEY AVAILABLE TO HELP OUR BUYERS FINANCEII 1071 W. HURON ST. MLS 681-1000 STRUBLE MODEL 49ISale HMiee HALL OFFERS PIONEER HIGHLANDS RANCH 3 badreom brick, carpalad LR. dining all, tInIM baatmml. Fenced back yard, IW car nunt, 1W car garage. FuMrIng all large rooms, hardwood ftoors, plasloiad wohs. Frtcod M mil it $14,300 with I4«l down plua c------- cuts. Lot us show you Ihit lx ranch homo with -—‘ vood flurs. Tl------ --------- sciuns. 314,930 on your jtot. LET'S TRADE _ 7130'6|xIo H„„ -----Pally 7-t ARRO ATTRACTIVE 14 par cut InMiast hv zlsting mortgage lonthly myrmiMs 49 ACRE ESTATE Ideal aattlns Mr torn lalning, alao enough ai am IntormMd In bora 5 mlnutm M I-7S near 4 badraom nluly farm homa.-awlmming ^—--------- with adlacant rtc. houu 13x24, alM 3 room li bath guoM' howsa b 3 car garage with caratakar's modern apt. Beautifully landscaped b Mncad with S pad- docka b axarcim ■'-* * '------ bams, one wllh 4 _____ _____ . artmlan walla b a Hawing strum wllh pond. $135,0011 JSraioiJii: ^'sibio^ RULTORS 28 E. Huron St. ■.................. Ofjlco Ppm^Eyonlngs b Sunday 1-4 IMMEDIATE POSSESSION flooi% to! Mil mum*. i cal^arigo. spKtim 'k aru with hka prlvIWms. Cash for your equity or Land Contract MARGARET MCCULLOUGH, Rl 5143 Cass-Ellzabolh Rud 682-2211 OPEN 9-9 1200 WHiniER OPEN DAILY 2-6 M-59 Across From Airport BRICK RANCHER Rul mot s bodroom homo roc. room and built-in bo. ... basorrant, carpeting and drapu and water lonimr Included Hn price, olM hos a 3-car gorago on a nicely landscaped fenced tot. Call now. Price S23.900. DIRECTIONS; W. on M-S9 Crosemt Lako Rd., N. 3 biks. WATERFORD Mm, full b a a a m a n t hat a country kl and has a 14' aru. A rul 3)9,700. FHA. 5935 Highland Rd. (M-59) Next M Franks Nurssry 6744175 SOUTH SIDE Sharp s bedroom ranch with IW car gorige. Largo kitchen and utility room, mw wall to war' corpotlng In living room, gas hul alum, itorms and scrum. Onl 1400 nsodsd to move In on FH( AVON TOWNSHIP Largo brick and aluminum rone now undtr construction Maturing bodrooms, 20' family room «^l tiriplaco, bullt-lns, s p o c I o u kltchm, saparata dining room, M tauimnt and 2 car gorago. All c.. 300' tot. Full price 329.900. Um NEW RANCH This horns locatod In tlfld hos ovorylhing ---1 living. 2 I purchased mw yi choloo of colors price on tht •18,900. NEW 4 BEDROOM LOT OWNERS: Wo era a IW story, 1320 • ANNETT TAKE OVER PAYMENTS, -------------------------- ‘' ''haMm^riSg NorMiira Pr«9«rty 51 -A CABINS, FURNISHED, on 20 acres of prime hunting land, state land on 2 sides, strum 14 milt, nsor to ACRE PARCEL WITH modern 24 ' ‘3 cabin and IVk cor gorago, lad on main highway M-23, •s)l?,.Wi,ttrnTn; 338-0466 IRWIN SONS EGESt 4 bodroom doslgnid 'omily living. Nibr bullng Mcniltos. A HI through. 0~ b SONS LAKE PRIVILEGES! tract. EAST SIDE. BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS 313 Watt Huron - Slnu 192$ FE S-9444. Attar S p.m. 423^ TOWNSEND LAKE SI Lte-Aemafe JI4 100 Scattered Lots todfaXSTTOnW. VON REALTY aS24tgg^^ W WOODED letst a and winter sPorts. immwfialo pos-Mstton. $23,000 cosh, or 330,0110 on land contract. OWmr will bo on • ■ ind SIh. Locatod or 4 mitos S. ol: 2S mitos N. of u.nn M» on I_______ i'P'T.' ...........Hoc, Ml... 5-2424 or FE 1-1149. iro dot or coir: T. TotoH, 1190 Loln-Fonttoc. Mich. 4t05S. Ph. FE Partridc^e "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" heuM wllh tidings. Good .—..... _____.... and owlm- mlng. Twsivo montho of recriotlon. Coll now lor dotalls on No. 3b4009-LP-Z2. .7ARBHOUSES iT.Hv «q. It. In Mur buildings plus an office, two ftm homos and other acetsury buildings. Live ths good IIM hers on 74 pirtla|ly woodod ocrot crossed by tho Rlfto RIvtr. Lost thin roplacatnmt cost ol buildings atom at tno,000 on llborol forms. Will consider axchanga. No. 40-414S-CP-ROS.-Z3. a? EXCITING VIEWS oury tot In HI HILL . PrwNBa araa to 2400 aero mrk, Orton Twp. FROM $4000 CALLJDR WRITg/ FOR BROCHURE LADD'S OF PONTIAC ______391-3300 COUNTRY LIVING IS A LET DOWN OU WILL MISS THAT PETITE LOT. l{_ypu Ilka the widt open opocaa. suing iBi tarma. Had*lS?.'A«00, t.rih.. - - - [Lapur araa). 34431^ tlOOO down. C. PANGUS, REALTOR „ .open 7 DAYS A WEEK 430 M-)5 Ortonvilla CALL COLLECT - 427anr sKING-PHIPPS 3.2^ralllng acres, choice building siMl. only SS,100. 30 aero egrmr —col, btoddop road frdnMgi, bo split, sY,ooo par acre, 20 HUNTING FOR PRIVACY 230 Acres of buutIMI woodod aihntv room, Mncid On 2 iMUku County. 1 Slffoo on oero. No. t than S16S.00 4»S42i-VL-Z2. ASK FOR NEW CATALOO PARTRIDG ERBAL ESTATE ---------------Ponf— WO bl lilt 5 uniT~eff1c1¥ncV' bldg., oxc. condition, roi more, high rant arsi, ( lako. 135.500, 39 par ( Terms on balance 14 LK Orton. ALWAYS BOOKED solid, S modim ..........- — - front, I - foot Capa Cod I'/! eoramic b(___ _____ od, uotod gloss windows, marble tills, ready lor---- ----- ROOM DUPLE k Near i-7s. lake privlligos, compliltly Mrnishod, S4995, t1500 down. SHELDON 625-5557 COUNTRY LIVING Brand now 3 bodroom ranch hardwood floors, country Sprlngtlold Tuwnship clou way. moo down or trido. CROSS REALTY 674-3105 WILLIS M. BREWER - REAL ESTATE ----Ikor (Bldg. FE 4-SISI MRS. NELSON, REF, LI 247SI 'BUD' y, 1 finished rd bodroom. WEST SUBURBAN S Bedroom homo, good oondlllen. 3 bodrums and tlla both down. 1 liigo bedroom up. Nlc^i'~ " KHdwn YOU CAM TRADE FOR ANY HOME WE HAVE FOR SALE Val-U-Way Realty and Building Co. FE #-3531 345 Ooklond Avo.' Omn LAKE PRIVILEGES eilzoboth Like, lorgg S bodroom sumimr homo. Big V x IS living room, kllehtn lA dlnbig —— blnattoh, all (wiilthad. Jui dv lor summor voeafiM— ■ family. STOUTS Best Buys Today THE VIEW THAT CAN'T BE HIDDEN- Ofl Upper Long Lai ------OHarii mo a handioma built Mr the . Idul flir-mtranca .. M a warm t roam, lem, 14x14 •aparate dining family room with unusua hearth firaplaea, m strumlined kltchan wit Ins,, utility room, Hr bi convinlmf bodroom on 1 3 torgo bidroomt and 2 baths on 2nd flur. Bi____________ Attochod 2 ear gorago with Wicktop drive, torgo will londscapod yard wllh king size apple tru. Many oxtros Included. Exeollinl aru. Priced it IN TOWNE FOR $700 DOWN- Mlh homo oil efiury brookfoet* room,™*M!i bosamint. FIroploed In living on 1 ft enury ■ ? 1 GO BRICKI- In Harrington Hills this homa hat 2 badraams w tlwr plus extra 4th bMroi basammt. Gas hut, O----- ptyad drive, p-*—' 111,500. s hut. Carport s Priced right THIS IS NO FISH STORY- Charmtng eld fishing toka |ui king iludat . —--------- -.Ihs. Basamant with g« water hut. Large 122 x 442 water .1 322,950. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyka Rd. PE bll45 $^700.00,' land oontract. 'SldO.'OO NICHOLIE-HUDSok Associates, Inc. 1141 W. Huron SI. , 681-1770, after6p.m. FE 4-8773 TED'S Trading 674-2236 Clarkston tchmit, many larga uk P‘'.v«: fisriSirTR'd Contract. MENZIES REAL ESTATE Ollica: 425-MM ^a. SUIL 435-50tS “AT LOON LAki A DREAM INVESTMENT! A DREAM ESTATE I An axcalleni six room homa, pl 15 teanic ecru (nostibllily future private lake). Rauh— •12,000 to hsndls, full price i^,SW. .........-1 Lake Ruify m Rood, MA I LAND CONTRACT PLEASANT UKE AREA Shiro, 3 bedroom quad-lovol hon family room, dan, U6i baths, bS OXFORD AREA S-Mitoom. ranch, garoga. m, WALLED LAKE RANCH WOLVERINE UKE AREAI 2 badraom bl-tovol, sowing room, cor gorago, potto, baautiMI lot, yur old. Coll 434-3400. Cass Lake Area l-btdroom ranch, dining room, tasonmt, forgo tot, paved drive, UNION LAKE AREAI 1 bedroom ranch, attochod gorago, docoritid, povid drive. m,900. coll 424-2400. McCullough Realty, Inc. 3 LOCATIONS 5440 HIGHLAND RD. 674-2236 624-2400 624-2400 WALLID LK. MLS WALLED LK. 49S«I# Heaief Our Position on Mortgage Money Throughout the country you have heard of o shortoge of Home Mortgage Funds . . . fortunately we were prepared and we ARE able to offer the MOST and the BEST financing thot is availoble anywhere today. ITHACA, MICHIGAN N. PERRY ST. Largo Income homo. 3 oi could hove onothir In ________ irkthop, liru h contract. S29,t0 ublo girog II Mil on SMITH 2 FAMILY lett-Amage ____________JS4 RE ON CAW^k. Rd. north of ”--*™46o*k"?o53lrol!loSi" FLATTLEY REAtf rintol ol 1150 par at $13,910 w)^ Mrms. Locolsd t.. ................. property with Isms stortgo barn It roar. Call us today tor Lanur County, Miytli.. ... High and dry building sivorol to chooM from. . s-to ACRi RIvriR Atfb strai —............. "" The Rolfe H. Smith Co. aldon B. Smith. Roall 244 S. Toligraph 333-7W ALUMINUM wal huuilMliy landKop nr 1-7$, mimr axir Miditton. 34,IM doi 625-5557 BEAUTIFUL LAKE^FRONT •indy beach, Like ShlnoiHiguo mito iouth ql Ooedrieh off N Exoollont homo aru, f"“ 422-1114 aftw ^.m. tV 0WNBR..-'7ifemlhiwn ti$$t$Q poren. 111/909# on lono con-tf4Ct. SubsMntlol down. 24IF244I. HAROLD R. FRANKS, Reafty FURNISHED LAKE^FRONT COT-LAKE. Lirgo living r< ■ * badrems, b a porch wllh a toundillon. 114 4NOON LA flrtploco, inciotod fr Everett Cummings, Realtor ... . UNION LAKE HEARTHSIDE REALTY BEAUTIFUL WOODED LOTS, II high ovorlooklito i 35,100^ 334-H37. Leona Loveland, Realtor uiki 6ri6M. I A. J. Rhodes, Realtor FE g-2304 231 W. Walton FE I47II MULTIPLE LISTINGSERVICi WATKiN'r'" ■ --------- i hre. t. Bay RIvar 42H332. aHes I CRES IN PONiriAC 1 —It by ewur, tfMt, SIU-— ACRES HBaVIlY sraodtr'i rt and oHwrs. wfiirw. Swlar*’ Raaity!**J 4ira: l6k47 tRAiLER^ f acm W axlt?*'wali) *ttollc *lank,'™aiaelri'cl 20. 4B, N ACRE FARCBLS. Hlgll aros^rtoMl SIAM aar acra. AL PAULY -72-3IM ______ Evas. a7Sa272 so ACRMs (SHANNOM LAKI; nitr). bMutl/ul Tyrant Townshla, Llv-iMoton Counivi lass than w milt last of Shannon Lake, and LIndan Rud. Batwaon Clyda and Canr- HXnd"'*"cJll!?l'^ tfisIrlS’ Ei dlstonca batwun Datrolt, Flint, .. Lansing aru. I30.0M. L veils KniBhl RSSI Esiato, 494-7142, 2704, or 23i|2S47. Ut oi •sas aawMWsnva. IVTITtSs ^KING PHIPPS AGENCY loveland“ Bloomfield Township Wiwj plut|f RHODES $800 DOWN 0 ACRE PARCELS “huUdtoBa.' •"* •“* sana-w™ 70 ACRES with (arm hoUM, located on ■ ------Rd. noor Seymour Loko. lithol :ould I lolo, 10 ACRES On Ormond Rd. N. H While Lak Rd. NIooly woodod wllh 2 ponda. CSCHUm EM 3-7188 (1)398-78781-517843-6334 W*' ^ Sii:n4i,‘^g.c^“»*- FARA^lTAeSlS------ Large old (arm home i t7/J00 down. C. PANGUS INC., REALTOR ,.*P*’ ^ •••I'* • ■39 M-1S OrlanvIllA _CALL COLLECT 427-2MS * WANTEDi HANDYMAN I ACRES, HtLLY^ one Mmnt. Oravaland townihlp,. North Oakltnd county, nur 1-71 Orange Hall exit and old U.S. to. Bordorod by Ixprotiway and Malo eamad land, in (Ina raertatlon ina. Law WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT- i,oi?W”z:'ui.?u.'i towering trau In a tow ti Land contract, S29,0M. EOAR ISLAND LAKE - V------ itt'soo'' '"* **^*'°*'^ ^«47 ORCHARD LAKE R^^ .r HOWARD T. KEATING g^^W.ISMIto i Blrmjjjham Would You Think LAKE HURON MOBILE HOME AND COTTAGE SITES trshTng to' your hurls continl InformctlM or COM VI GOllOCt. Ray O'Neil Realty 3520 Pontiac Lak4 Road 674-2222 C. PANGUS INC., REALTOR OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK lie M-15 Ortonvllh CALL COLLECT 437-2S1S____ LAkilf^'ONT HOMiS.'' ly^r^^^sa^EM 2.7114 LOTUS UKE FRONT ipa?*iot.***!llh*tS»? boatA ^..X.-^iirt'^rrihTnS room. Larga living room, stono firoplaco and lorgo front porch. I cor garaga. Tha valua to In the land on this first tims otMrsd proparty. su It naw—full prtca BOB WHITE. REAL ESTATE I. /Mn^ClarksMn SVLVAN LAKE FRONT. ISO'. Lovtly 3 bodroom ronch. Family room, I VS baths, 2 fIrtpiKSt. Attpchod 3 cor goragi, fa* hot waMr heat. Baaulltul view. 029,9M. Car- — naw morlatga. Ownar, 243-19 4e%ii7», m Wyman. APOLLO ll's FLYING BEDSTEAD May perhaps reach the moon ahead of the new Interest rates? All in Davisburg Areoi 3 batullf! US 10 ai , _.... aaeh a so f ..... . . aWart reached by a privata road. Mui bt (wld in 1 packtu. Warr waalhar will coma tMyou'll b looking Mr sonwihing Met on Ih wotor. SuifsWi for ummar « yaor arouml. S22(M0 Mr tho pirn (7,0M down, biltneo on 4VS as cant land confriet. h 120 h 150 SSi’.SfilMe'? Nice lot on E. Holly Rd.i .‘anton parachL.. ------, roslrlclod. 13,750, SI,0M down. Bil-one# on 4 par cant land contract Lake property^Nelsey Rd.t Edoa af Walorford - Asking 11,73 ptr ten, SS0,0M down on a 4 mi c#nt land conlroct. 113 ocrot will 17 dsvolopsbls aertt. C. NELSEY, SALES AGENT 111-43S-WI OR 434-90 ivsning Collt Woleamo naw t ue«t_M-S44JM Tor'm£%^ r-7 X'XiTmX W W"B ifWto^rM burtan 'bMaflMi) ieVn»^0*I*"To*al AUBURN AVE.-P0NTIAC •hoMIng eanfor, Idul I’lll ro5*^eelXr«lai UNION LK. SHOPPING DIST. Commtrclal building with apart-mant abeva. Excaltont Mg valuma tocalton. Land cohtraet, farms with tl5,0H down. BATEMAN 338-9641 HEARTHSIDE REALTY ORCHARD LK, RD. 219' IdMl Mr a uw.L'stesiai’p^'^.'^ •' 2147 ORCHARD LAKE RO.^ ^ OAKLAND AVE. M-1 lonlng. 2M ft. frentaga wild over tvs acrat of^lind, Int iq. ft. masonry bldg, 3110,010, Mrms. M-S9 - W. HURON ST. 1?^list“' Sullabto fr ?;.»rc''c5' Mr'^'hau'tsi •a. ft„ forms. BALDWIN AVE. *’ Brick Irani camant block bldg. 40x70 It. with 3IM sq. H. an first floor, Mur 3 rtwm A bath apis.' up. Full bauman' — — ‘‘-* water lumoco. Sn 41x130 ft. lot at ri "ro^fW.Y'*'- Annett Inc. R 28 E. Huron St. 33G0466 OhjlM Opan flvanlngs A tundiy H. D-^ THE PONTIAC PRESS, TTONDAY, iUNE m 1969 For Want Ads Dial 334-4981 ID I ATI OCCUPANCY. li^r'irioiainLdac^^^ «te. mwnOI si)i building. LOCATION IS IMPORTANTJ IT'S GOOD FOR BUSINISSII 1,100 MUdfd to- - fllniMth Ldkd -------- ------ TRldgra^ arM. cornar location. Good parking araa. Building will ba ramodalad. Call 3344>n, altar 7 p.m. «74,Qt5»r________ _ SHOPPING CENTER Complata, axcallani location, ap. Kiximataly S acrai. Food Market, n Franklin Drug Store, beauty •hop, cleaneri, doctor', clinic and dental clinic, plenty of room lor Sola or Exdiango Businois Opportunitiss S9 A BUSINESS OF YOUR OWN Evanilon, III. ( Momov to (LIcania Icmiad Mw^ WANS ^ S2S to tl,OIIO ineurad Faymant Flan BAXTER - LIVINGSTONO Sjib HoiwolioM OojMfa 6S DRYER, S3S, REFRIGERATOR tSSi 21" TV, $35, bimkbada, apailmani a^a, 135, mlic, o. Harrh, FE 5- STOP YOUR HOUSE FORECLOSURE Any-Riik Mortgage 1 - 398-7904 (Call now biSHWASHER SALE A8C WAREHOUSE & STORAGE 40533 Van Dyke OSai E. ID Mile Dally KhO Tuea. Sat. 'til a W'TOY YOUNG MARRIEDS Naad fumlftinl Vt wa CRR MonpMiio Loons 42 NEED UP TO $5,000? Youimay ba auTprlaad bow cheaply yovKan add new rooma, repair — remodel your preaent home doing your own work and u our money for materlala. Whati ELECTRICliRYER .............. —ire, excellent condition, antique by cradle, Braaa Headbr—' »r pollaher, a35-37Sa alt. «. rsi: phOfi> numptr.________ _ Attontion Investors Invaatora wanted to form a______ poratlon and taka over an exiating bualnaaa —— and no n You can 3130,000. Voss & Buckner, Inc. I4M Pontiac Slate Bank Bldg. 334-3267 Swaps ( n. 433-3624 attar 3. E BUGGY tor lale oi marclal Exchange Dept. McCullough realty 460 Highland Rd. (M3ai 576-2236 ______________ML ________ BARS AT BESSMiR, Cadillac, I ’12Z-. Douglaa. H a a 11 n g a. Hendaraon, Won. ,“nS"’5K:nna''« S«l« ^ »"ln*'''rfoi?inrV«o!SSl. SIZE » whit, floor Jengin tiower down. For dalalla phone (MO) 2»2-l girl draaa, 313. FE 4-1363. 3414 (no toll). Stan Loomia A BRIDAL GOWN, never worn, alia 3-Aaaoc. _ _ _ 5. M1-0W7. CLARK OIL arib Refining Corpora- size 13 LACE” wedding gown, (uli lion haa 2 new alatlona available. 1 tiarml, jown and hoop, 160. MA 3-In Mlllord and 1 near Union Lake. 2709 all. 6. Excellent opportunity lor ad-' —...—.... »f"iiir*,^a'i;:'"J{’C.ra."4a!SalB Household Goods 65 tiral year. Call Jerry Edda, 3" 7332, attar 6 calljm^MC. COIN LAUNDRY FOR aaTe.'Prlr resort location. Existing 60 un New washers. Ample parking, I n phone 331-7371 etiar FOR SALE: Suiatta'a Colfluras,” E. Walton, FE 2-6533. _ ' KELLER Restaurant c short orders ana nor mi location In city, vary gooi ght party, gross li >7 W. Huron SI. 411 1533 or 67.1-0793 MONEY $$$ my Oil Company has some nl Gulf'franchise dealer-^"' Ola tor aggressive ------- g Individuals. Both bay type W WHAT YOU'D EXPECT 10 PAT 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $297 53.30 par weak LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1461 Baldwin at Walton. FE 2-6543 Acres of Free Parking Eves, 'til 9) Sat, ‘til 6. EZ terms LARGE BOX SPRING tor a King sized bed. 533. 631-3611. FGAS REFRIGERATOR. __ 1067 Crescent Lake R( I NEW DINETTE SET,''539T5. spring and mattra --- 3y-lJo^CSL.____ fPIECE bedroom" aulle IncH mallraaa and springs. Good dlllon, Jsq^Phone 6740665. S-R'OOM - (Brand'naw 5359. Cash, farms, lay-away 4- PIECl SedioOMSo brand Uttia Joa^B Baroalfi I _ _Sal^ln^ PIS 5- pTecE DANISH rnodarn dl" Incre'aslng recreation ax- EXTREMELY high earnings on THIS AMAZING, BUT P " “ BUSINESS. You do need at least 51300 to cash to starl. _______________ _ il^WO^ 9x12 Linoleum Rugs $4.95 solid vinyl Tile ........7c r- vtnyl Asbestos tile .... 7c < Inlaid Tlla, 9x9 ----- 7c i Floor Shop-3233 Elliabath Lake “Across From the Mall" ^'oda".a<’}?blam3-37.5VaS.'3* ALL SEASONS SPORTING GOODS Sunoco Has Sarvica Station avallabla tor For Information CALL ■ SUN OIL CO. Week-days Ml 6-6674 Evas., weekends Mr. j. Pascoe _ 3?1_-1517 TAVERN Located In Oakland County vlllaga. Has always dona good business. Ba -the BOSS Inslaad ot the tlir-- puncher for lust S7,003 dots lor oppointmtnt to sse. , WARDEN REALTV S434 W. Huron, Pontloc 653-3920 0 SELL VoiTR bu'sTnesst Roiltw ^rtrldQ9_l5^tha Sate Und Coiitractt _ i 1 TO 50 , LAND CONTRACTS Urgently ntodod. Soo ui betoro ' deal. Warren Stout, Realtor USD N. Opdyka Rd. FE S-I15S Open Eves. ‘Ill I p.m. ' CASH FOiTlaNO JONTeAetS H. J. V5n welt 4S40 Dixie Hwy - OR 3-1353 PNi/eSTOR NEEDS 130,000,'wlirpaY 30 pci. dlecount, 0 pet. InleresI, good security. 673-0036. _ Well SECURioTend coiilVact tor sale. Bill Dew Construcllon Co. FE 0-3190, FE 5-3539. Wanted C«irtracti-Mfi|. 60 A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Warren Stout, Realtor (30 N. Opdyka Rd. FE 5-5155 Opaii Bvao. ‘til I p.m. -1 MILLION icreagt outright, — —u cash lor yc— equity. Our appraiser la awaltl your call at: 674-2236 McCullough realty W M^ldlld Rd, (5M9> ^^MU "iAiUlL land eontracla, t Wi»---------- LOANS , 534.95. loo PER CENT NYLON 7 BaaulKul colors to choose from, Meal lor living room or bedroom, rogulorly 55.93 sq. yd., now only 53.67 sq. yd. Free measurements and astimalas. Call ail - 2 3 5 3. Houaahold_ Appliance. 501 NYLON Sacrifice lOO'l of yerdi oi DuPont 501 nylon carptling, tlp-sheored sculptured. Lorgo ■ * '' ■“ ors, regularly 15.1 1968“ SINGER Used ilg tag sawln(i machim ovarcasli, monograms, blind ham: mekat hiiltonholai wllhoul a lachmenls. 6 year parts an-service guaranlaa. Complala prieoi and gai 566.30 or 54.63 a month. For tree 633-3734 homo domonstrotlon, coll Copilot -------- Credit Minigir til 5 p.m. 6MCHIGAN 8ANKARD ACCE FT ED timer, 133. 633-4151. Wb 1900 Plate glass carvtb mirror, S FE H40I._________ CUSTOM ANTIQUB REPINISHINO’, »P9tt5"slhg In lurnituro rtllntshlng aa-sr*” irs'ond I lessons IN FINISH removing end In rollnishing turnlluro. Stripping class, June MIh; first rafinishing class, July 3th; second rollnishing cia.s. Juiv i2fh, Closs^by rasorva-Cuttom Antiques. 363- FURNITURE-STEREO NEW LEFT IN LAY-A-WAY Maditarrsnaan bedroom sull Irlpio drassor, mirror, 6 draw Mrs. Chairs, salt-deckad, ___________ caps, ZIpparad reversible cushons, sow tor 32/9, balanct - - ' cash or 110 monthly. 9361. MARBLE-TOP TABLE: >w a I platform rocker; tootstool; n point pull-up chairs; 42" tabW. Y-Knet Antlquaa, Davli ^ 434;5J91^____________ THE GREAT ORtOHVILLd~Flaa Market wlihas to thank our dealers and friends tor makino Its opanino day a huge succass. Flea Markafs every Sunday Including ..... ‘ * fi. Box N, Mayllle, Mich. 45744.^ Hi-Fi, TV and Radios By Kate Oaana complala with B- 9 dor, guardrail. Only •II, monthly. a and matching chair, zlpoarad reversible --------- -Old tor 5319, balance due 5337 cash or 513 monthly. Modern solo and matching chair, zipperad ravarsibla cushions. Sold and matching ' !«7or sh 0 Sulla, double ■Trgains, teuao. FE 34 COLOR TV SERVICE Johnion'a TV. PE S-4369 45 E. Walton near BdWwIn LIKE NEW REBUILT color TV, 5333 cash or 512 monihl lor 5219 bolanc9 i poly I. Sold HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE 461 Ellz. Lk. Rd. 451-3 (Near Telegraph) JIO a.m. to 9 p.m. dally) _ FRUfTWbOO OROPLEA? din -^m lal. MIsc. UL 2-1637. _ "SALE~F"URNITURi. 6233 JoWa Drayton Plalne. _■____ FOR SALE electric stove 451-53 'd'charr. Free Installation 501 NYLON Must sacrillce. Loods ot yards ot bettor SuponI nylon carpeting, FHA epproved. Ideal ---------------- living rooms and bai-' color solocllon. Buy troa. Only 54.93 ■ man(jfa(:turer's CLOsE-our STEREO WALNUT OR MAPLE CONSOLE Olamond Needles BSR 4*t0«9d changtr $89 Or 53 per monlh UNIVERSAL 2613 Olxit Hwy. FE 4.|)90S Dally 10:13-5 _ Tues.^Set. 10:1M PORTABLE HI-FL; 3 speakers, good cOTdJlton^yjhW.__ _ _ - TRANSMITTER,'exceirent condition, _573. 031-n».__ For Sale Misceilansous 67 ItodHt.^ 5 t^, s^ AXc RaoiSTEEED Miniature --------- -------------- AKC BRITTANY SPANIEL, n AKC FEMALE BEAGLE, I months; AkC oa6hshunds Lade _____________S3S-374I geiFmaH sHlTOlIo, weeks, 563 oa. 733-2021. BEAUTIFUL FLASHY ragltlarad. Quarter Filly, 2 yrs. black, with blazd and 4 aocki. Oentla and groan broke. Alto 2 votr olB Filly, 4-H prospect. 752-7164. itORSE3 FOR r¥nt, lit per hour, Oeubit Knot Ranch, 391-2436. 1 W. on Scripps Rd. off M-26. 335-3512 AKC t^ObbLES, rooionablt, 37r Rd., off 56-24. K(: MALE St. ---------- pimahip Ptdigroo. 2 ytors ol AkC AKC SIBERIAN HUSKY Pups, soil or trade. 39441174.___________ AKC DOBER5AAN PUPS, Toladobos ‘‘I’ll have to hang up soon, Gladys -- my father’s beginning the countdown! ’ ’ ^ Pipers, 335-1305. BEAGLE PUPPfES, 5~WOoks, 510, 473-0633. BEAUTIFUL FaBm COLLlt Pup- Fer Sate Miiceltenaoui LAWN SPRINKLING pumps, 1 hp. to 2 ti.p., prlcad from 592.30. O. A. Thompson and Sen. TOM M-39 W. LAWN TRACTORS Sava up to 3250 on Simplicity tractor, mower, snowblade. Sava 5240 Bolens 1225 UydroslatTc. HOUOHTEN POWER CENTER 12 W. University Dr. 451-7010 DOWNTOWN ROCHESTER lavatories" complete, 534.30 value, 514.93; also bathlubs. toilets, shower stalls. Irregulars, terrific rooms. Michigan Fluor——* Orchard Ll^ FE 4-5463. LAWN "sprinkling 696161716; EQUIPMiNT. Ftnd«r 0 MAPLE TWIN BED i 1 - bOV'* 20" biktp 17. Y youth high chalre 15. 1 Koyitono 5 mm movie cemeri light meter, light bar, $23. FE - IW INCH PLASTIC d I brush. Son. 7003 LITY Iris............ a tan 510. A ScDlls NATIONAL UNCLAIMED FURNITURE 43116 Cast, Utica 731-< I »9______ • ■ - _____ ___ JBIB executive nter, 5123. Cash register, 530. ---------T, $25; New Spirit Free eitimetad. Call '611-2353. J40USEHOLD APPLIANjCE FOR SALE DESK, chair, si table, l^p, table pMs. 335J32: GIBSON refrigerator". 0()6D condition. 30 Norton St. HOUSEHOLD SPECTAL 530 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Consists ol: pifce living room outfit wDh 3-pc. living room suite. 2 siap’leble* • cocktail tablOk 3 labia lamBe (1) 9'x13‘ rug Included. 7-pleca bedroom sullo with do drassor, chost, full-size bad . Innarsprlng mattress and matching box spring and 3 vanity lampt. S-placo dinollo sot with 4 chr..... chain end table. All tor 5399. Your credit It good at Wymin'o. WYMAN FURNITURE CO 17 |. HURON____ FE 5-1301 JUNE clearance 1. 31" Electric range, 139.93. I, Frigidelrt Rilrlg. with bottom Ireozer and auto, dotros' 1, Kelvinelor ratrig., lop Irt CRUMP ELECTRIC 3463 Auburr^Rd._________FE 4-3573 kENMORE WRINGER "withe'rr e cellord condition, 533, 6^4434. KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION-53C FULL GUARANTEE Kirby Service & Supply Co. 3617 DIXIE HWY. 674-3136 LINOLeUM Rutfs. "mi,St SlIfelL 2 LARGE portable" lent;" 0 paptr baltr, ISO to. A Mother S p._ _______ 0 PER CENT HUMAN HAIR FoIl frettod, novor worn. 523. 674-0033. 150 WOOD FOLDING chairs, "31 S'" toldlng tablet. FE 4-7477 -------- Bonqutt Hell._____________________ il3 GALLON TANK tor filtering Iron from wotor, gall 737-0944, ovos. 1942 FORD 4 DOOR, outomotl power stearlng, rur ' * * * fair. Berry garage MClions. OR_3-3^. ATTIiTsALE : Monday," fuesclay Wad., 9 till ? 103 Horn#, Baldwin, oji^djshet and mitc. kufOMAffC WASHi"R, $30, P_ . war, 535, 1961 Chtvy It good. 530. 693-6631. ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN_____________FE 3-7471 ARM CHAIRS USED, oxcolliint tor meeting rooms, oltlce swivel chairs, desk, blue-print tiles, draft Ing boards, 3x5 multi drawer caolnets, fireproof cablnots, _______________________________ DlR?,«grwli.!'“.n3 ...BARGAINS, Auburn Avo. FE 4-755L LI VI NO" ROOMS." BRAND W prict .Llllla Joe's, U( FE 2-4543. MAPLE BED FRAME, bsTgt couch SEWING MACHINE Plus a doik stylo coblnol, ----- vary llttlo. Looks now. Just turn dial lor bultonholot and fancy sewing. Will tell for 7 payments ot 10 call 33 1. For a Iroo trial In “ 1969 USED SINGER TOUCH AND SEW control. ... bultonholot, zig-zag, fancy designs etc. Smooth stoidy stale fiaturas for lach touch button operations. Doluxo nfodol comas complsto with cablnat and Iraa lattont tool " prici 545.43. Call Mldwast pllanct, 9-9 dally, 334-3313. 1969 LADY KENMORE waihor dryer, 2 months old. 651-1374 or FE 3-237L_______________ 1969 TbUCH-A-MATIC New tawing machines, does fancy stitching, makes bultonholas, ale. Sold lor 5134.30, balonct only 119.30 or pay 51.10 par weak. Call day — night, 335-3344; Imperial. PONTIAC, FB 4-7551. REFRIGERATORS, DISHWASHERS, dryers, washers, ranges, crate damaged and scratchod modals. Fully guaranteed. Terrific lavlngi. ^'Turt's appliance 4454 WILLIAMS l^KE RD.J»4-I10X SPEED QUE^N-WRTNOER h pump and timer. A ii ~ PLENTY OF USED wnkliers, ilovaa, ralrigaratori, and trtda-ln lurnitura bargains. LItlla Joe's Trade-In atora. Baldwin at Walton. Blvd. PE 3-6043. ______ AUTOMAT"lC"WASfi¥R, Renmora, 590. 363-nM „ a'warehouse sale Open to public, entire Inventory ol — —‘-’-erelors. waihors. ranges. -------- be sold. Every Hem discounted; many below cost, scratched Hems priced eccerdingly, n o .eesoneble oiler refused. Sale today end tomorrow 10-9, HIH Appliance, 24123 W. 10JAIIe neer Telegraph. A HOUSEHOLD TARGAIN Kie'muP ... ^ .. . .- . . new. 5.33. FE 3-5571^ “ Sm PLENTY tbbAY On ell 1965 floor tampitt ol rangoi, ralrlgtrators, washers enO TVs. Llttlo Joe's Bargain Houst Baldwin el Wolto^^ , FE M542 SUMMER SALE Over 1000 yards ot materiel, beginning at 54 a yard. Let us raupholater y«ur turnlture now - E'ontead workmanship. i COM-RCIAL UPHOLSTERING 335-, EVES. OR SAT., 533-4365. SINGER ZIG-ZAG Sawing machlna. Cabinet model, ----"Diet, Model" make* ns. designs, buttonholes ttetted, pay ott. $53 CASH or Payments of $5 per mo. UNIVERSAL SEWING CENTER 2613 DJxle Hvyr. I, 3 lampt); 5 pc. nattress, springs, lamp's); 6 ‘piece )unk bed - 3 piece dinette. Any Hem Sold Saparotoly AH lor 3195 - 510 monthly KAY FURNITURE Next loJ< Mart In Olenweod Center “ "BUNK BEDS Choice ot IS ttylos, trundit bode, triple Irundla bods and bunk bods comploto, 549.30 and up. Paarion's FurnHura, 660 Auburn, FB 4-7001. BEST OFFE"r. Maytag wrlng^ washar, GE dryar. Cablnat sink. Teppen gat ranga. 601-0471, BlbROOM SALE~ bRoNZE or CHROME OINffffe tala, BRAND NEW. Larga and imail alia (round, dr^laat, — w,»‘*ur «6.A?flr°^'*'‘^"^'TEV7.«. BUNkSEDS, aPoOT Vi priM. Uli Jea'i, 1461 Bdidwin, PE B«t43. CHROMh DINirtBiS, Mw'aO I LiHia Jot'i. 1461 .BaMwtn, PB 6163. ___________________ CHROME blNETTB SETS, •■•dtitbla youksalf, itva; 4 chatri, *■-■ U9.9S valua, 519.93, alSa 5 ...... ^,1'. rchil's: Orchard Lk. FE 44442, >■ 13. t presses tor church work.- FORBES PRINTING A OFFICE SUPPLY, 4300 and 3433 ' Dixie, OR 1-9767. WE ALSO BUY. AIR CONDITIONER end " riding Yardman, 4 hp reel-type lawn mower. 602-7336. Annual Bargain Days Antique Show & Soles 30 Outstonding Exhibitors stale Street el N. University, Ann Arbor. Sponsored by the Stale Street Ares Association. 4 big ■ days. Wad., July 16 thru July 19. Hours 9 a.m. to 0 p.m.__ ■ R bC A N E D U C A T O R yalepedios, - —.jnoner, I'/i ... offer. 674-2996 all. 4.'30. SEWING MACHINES 1969 White new ZIg Zsg, lOtgO, 1969 White automatic, 1109.30; use< singer Touch end Sew, ISO, House hold Appliance, 46i Ellz, Lk. Rd. Mt.33l3. USEO'lOMliiN'GeR"" Golden Touch and Sew Automatic buttonhole maker. Push button bobbin, fancy doslgns. monograms. Comet with console full price IUU3 or 00.60 mo. Cal Midwest Appliance, 9-9 dally, 33; 3313. _______________ "Used color jv sefs; oi99.?s" RADIO AND ^FIANCE. INC. 432 W. MufbP 114-1077 Westinghouse PQRTAPLE FLOOR MODEL DISHWASHER $140 Goo^yoor Service Stori 1370 Wide Track Ponllaci Mich. WHifE AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG Sawing machlna, dalukt features, maple ubinel "Early Amerlcr-" deiTgn. Tike over psymanli of: ■ $5 PErMONTH OR $49 CASH BALANCE J93-I005 ar W^ pai 11^6314511. r 7'x14' CUDDLY PUPPIES mother. AKC CUTE MIXED BEAGLE pupplee, weeks old, S3, FE 2-5763. COCKER PUPPIES. AKC, buff and earn tWier, 673-3160. COLLIE PUPS, AkC, 0 waakj. ELECTRIC HARMONY « —p. 0100........ DOBERMAN PINSCHERS, a DALMATION PUPS, AKC raglstoetd, ----------. ...... . ----- LI ■’ plastic pipe, 3.61 : plastic pipe, 00.31 i platllc pipe, 010.01 p< , Hi 'NEVER USED ANYTHING Ilka it," says users of Blue Lustra (or cleaning corpot. Rant tioctric thampooor,' II. Hudson's Hardware, 41 E. Walton. duplicator, otfico lur_________ dralllng supplies. r/trsis FURNITURE RO orginz fr w $m OR 3 NOW IS THE tiME TO BUY GALLAGHER'S JUNE INVENTORY GALLAGHER'S 1710 Telegraph ' FE 4-0366 PONTIAC OPEN EVENINGS 'TIL 9 P.M. SELMER ALTO SAX, __________ .... 22723, 1130. CG Conn AHo barrltone sax, 3130. Also Conn clorinof, FE 4-6T74. PONTIAC. FE 4-7001. POST LIGHTS, PORCH ................. wrought Iron posts 119.93. Comploto solocllon of lights for all rooms. chlgom F 1 Lk. I finish. "'m"ooV’VaSoy'■RuViVc' Co. 6463 DIxIa Hwy. Clarktion, 623- PLAIJUES -'/?. price. 391-0706. _______ _______ 129.95; 10-oollon haotor, 349.95; 3-olece both sets, 359.95; laundry Irav, trim, 019.95; shower stalls with trim, $39.95;- '3-bowl sink. 33.93; lavs., $3.93; tubs. 530 and up. Pipe cut end threaded. SAVE PLUMBING CO. 0 41 Beldwto, FE 4-1514. __________ RAILROAD TIES NEW end used. 473-197^ lawn mower, many toys, lamps, dog bed, labia, misc. 603-3941. RUMMAGE SALf7"Meflday;""rt and Wad. Ladlaa and c I's clothing, 0-5 p.m, 3 Build you' own AXLES --- - - boai, _____M0-W>-______ XHANDY PLACE TO SAVE MONEY WITH HONEST SAVINGS AND SERVICE BUY DIRECT FROM WAREHOUSE -RAND NAME REFRIGERATORS, RANGES, WASHERS, DRYERS oven more DORAN'S NEW WAREHOUSE BRAND NAME REFRIGERATORS, RANGES, ............ ........... AND TV'S. --un even n,„, crates .......(REHC - .. Walton el Josivn 36 MONTHS TO PAY PHONE: 335-9734 B'ROkEN CONCIRETE, Piion# Pon- tlec, 391-3316.________ ________ BOLENS 9 H.P. tractor wlfli 43-In. mower, disc, cultivator, plow, and snowplow, 1333. Hotpolnt oloclrlc dryer, 365. 1933 Ford holt-lon pickup, 5123. Portablo zlg-Zeg - 'ig mochlno, 535. 623-9543. Fraction ot Original cost. BOULEVARD SUPPLY 300 S. Blvd. E._______ 333-7161 BROKEN CONCRETE, 53 lor the load. 331-1674. B RIDES THERMO PANE Window ai doors. 144 N. Josopint, 451-1339. ____ BUY YOUR WEDDING _________lenli at discount tram, Forbas, 6300 Dixit. Drayton, OR 3- CYPRESS PRIVACY fInCE, 0’ sacllons, I and 6' halght, 17.30 par section. Electric built In ranoe tops, stainless steel, 561 each. TALBOTT LUMBER IMS Oakland^____________EM ENCLOSE YOUR SHOWER over .... ' bathtub with a beautllul glasa tub enclosure, aluminum Irama, with - — ietign, r*" M-39 W. McCormick, Pontiac. Tuas. July 1 d AA, and mItc. June torant Hams. 3505 S. Aylesbury. ^pael^-uH^- haSiGT'ji'rjSlaat; 0iBsoir"ATK"^SiTi^^^ HEARD THE GOOD NEWS Nalghborheod folks are saving pltifhy of Whirlpool washora and dryers, buying direct from DORAN'S NEW WAREHOUSE, Sava even mort, It picked up In rr.M> B-z tarms •*’ 333-9734. liONESTLY YOU CAN Buy Ratrlgartleri, Ranges .... DORAN^S^NEVI^WaVbhOUSe', S67 B. Walton at Jeilyn, 33S4T34. 4SII6 Casa, Utica ^ 73Lt 4 place barroom sulfas. Walnut or Mapla. 190 aach. H) to soil. StorB EqulpmBHt ^ r VICTOR COOLER ___________FE 04736. ALL EQUIPMENT tor suparmorktt " party itora, that Inctudai ——-cooolart and all. Naads t ist tall cheap 007-933$ aft. 6 STORE FIXTURES, shpwcatei, safe, typarwritor, adding machlna, tables, mirrors, glass shtivas and brackets. BLOOMFIELD FASHION SHOP , 30" cut, ditlen. 393. 602-0314. Boulevard S. oft Auburn Ava. snadow box, p'------ 9-? FE 0-1303. "singer TOUCH AND SEW I zap by Insarllng ft II 3M-06M, dealer. SURPLUS" OFFICE CHAIRS AND ALMOST NEW 3-3166.____________ AMPHICAT 6-WHEEL DRIVE Takaa you whara the action It. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. ritos. call today to. __ RHODES POOLS FE’1-3306 -...w STORE IIS W. LAWRENCE ST. .Evarylhinj to m"*--------*" Clothing, FurnlU mufy TRAILE,.. 4'x4'. 1531 Taylor 5 it your no a, Appllon t with Hand Tooli-MachinBry 6B t YEAR OLD, 1 Valve flrinder a:.. .. It 100 - sail tor 3630. KAR'S BOATS Ol MOTORS "compressors, . luBrkotlon lulpmtnt, hydraulic locks, staam TORTAB"iS"lTiAM claanai TRI - AXLE AND TANDEM AXLE TRAILERS FOR SALE BY MANUFACTURER, NO DEAb ERSi COSTyWAND NEW, IMMEDIATE DELIVERY. 4555 DIXIE HWY. imm^SUPER^^bvIt pralaetar and n Y ELECTRIC Hollow body wl >. ISO, roaaenoblo. 57X370, 4 Pick up guitar and cast in good condition, $40. Coil 674-0856. i960 f"b"ndbr' dull- •howmdn~amp. Uttar, Champion stock. Call 6< DOBERMAN PINSCHERS tamales, weeks old, AKC rag. $300. 781-3436. ENGLISH SETTER PUPS,^ FDSB, hunting bloQdllnt. 1-763-597^. FREE KITTENS TO good home. 363- O GOOD non tog 603-4351.. Camping Private Lakt Safa beach, ffuah toliat* aniL •howari."t60 66.15, OrtonvIUa. Ortonvilla. MePaaley Retort. 627> 3530 wotktotidl or ftS-S«M Wiokdayt 9 to 3 p.m. 412 Emolra Bldg., 6otrelt. Michigan. 41226. CAMP trailer's, fully aoH can-"sd. 5530. Phone 673^39. PART WALKER AND thorouohbrtd yMrllng, gonlla,J3W390.______ PALOMINO registered Guorlor ROMEO MEAT CENTER Orlonvlllo. Pays 644.7707. BALED HAY 1c aT¥6UND _____Phono Miltord. 60S-3987 _ HAY CONOlfioFTED, pick up a ----------- ...------- HAY, HORSE OR COW, 30c ourol OVERLAND DISPLAY OP Travel Trailers and Pickup Campers HAYDEN CAMPER SALES EM 14606 10733 Highland Rd. (M-39) >/k Mila watt of Oxbow Lake 9-7 WooKdoyt__34 Sunday 0 POTATOES, 315 16 STRAWBERRIES. 30c a quart, i I, plow and disc. 731- EXPLORER . MOTOR HOME 2t', 23', 25' MODELS a this Calltornla built-in ur ^Ich Is No. 3 In motor hi los. Prices start ot 59,991, up. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 JtlghlpndJM-59)__ 19S1 FORD 5 N. Wogi bock blade, auxiliary tr. BUY YOUR WHEEL horse tractor. --- -----Yardman tillers or . wnv. H..W WW..V...V..W. —, DAVIS MACHINERY, ORTONVILLE, ‘'* 7-3292. Your "Homolito Chain EVAN'S EQUIPMENT is on the rampage again I Prlcai to fit onybody and avtrybody'i pockot- ‘^"bIG, big SAVINGS On oil trailers and truck campers The boss said "Don't lot any deal get by you" EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 633-1711 Clorkston 635-2316 ~. . "vy. Open 9 a.m. to I F;^iLY' CAMPING at Sutter^ USED ORGANS a from. Hammonds a.____ nown brands. Prices as low{ ” GRIK.NELL'S Downtown store V I. Saginaw ___ FB 3-7161 USED THOMAS ORGAN 33 padils, French new, 31000.00. MORRIS MUSIC 14 $. Tfltgrapt ---FB ---------- Summer Sale I SALE Imf-10 tractor with 62" mower, 197$ Sunset Varlatus, Marigold Vorlalus’ plus tax. .... and Rainbow Varlatua. Mixed MF-12 tractor with 43" mower, 3IIS7 Plotlos, Groan Swords, Black. plus tax. Mollies. . MF-135 deluxe 39c OR 4 FOR 31 IMF-13S Special Puppies, Pat Supplies, exotic MF-313S with loader animals, GROOMING. Uncle MF-33M • Charlies Pel Shop, 694 W. Huron, New Molt Mowers. TSh?if'.ph)‘33M5»I'* IJSED AND DEMOS. °l?^tMd'*S MF^j344'crawleV’“to''^^^^^^^ . GERMAN SHEPHERD pups, 1 mail, mF-3163 with loader. 3 tomalas, call 603-1557, ask tor OC-3 crawler with blade. Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. Ge"rMAN SHEPHERD puppies, papers, 682-1357.____________ GER6AAN SHEPHERD and Labrador ---- Gorman Shophord p'"** 3 1 while tomato. ; 2-0567. i"G"HT PIANO S«. H GOLDEN RETRIEVER PUPS, AKC rogtotorad, I weeks old, motot oi*-(omelos, championed sired, shot end wormed, $100 each. Ml 24139; IRISH SETTER PUPPIES, AKi 12 weeks, 642-9002.______________ IRISH SETTER pups, AKC, H.P OUTBOARD, used 10 h 573. s-ploca Spalding golf Clut never uiad, 560. 652-5276. PUPPIES, S wa6ks old, gonlto dogs, 55, 3364737._____________^ qualiTy^oerman SHEPHERB Puppos. Block and tan. II RABBITsTH^TS or r go. 62S-4557.________________ SPRINGER SPANIEL PUPpy. Ai will be txcelloni hunttna ddg o pot. 726-M13. SHELTIES-TOY Colllo Pup plot, $75, 1S3S Poppormlll, Lopoor, "SCHNAUZER PUPPIES , AKC, llftor of 0. 335-BERNARD" SC()tTISH" TERRIER PUPPIES, AKC. 7 weeks. Shots, 602-7I95,' 653- _ ____________44 Magnum rl- tto; gold platod 30-30 WInchottor, Black Hawk convorllblo and archery equip, qtc. OR 3-6000. HANP —•*•* — (NO GUNS, SHOT OUNSo ouni, buy ^^«!/r»?6?3^A".'. k-1 TOPSOIL, sand dallvarad. 351-2532. M~BLAcr6iRTnf— II gravel producti. 602-7197. _________620-3730 all. 6 p.m. _____ S.A.W. SAND AND GRAVE,. .Ml gravel producti, *'" - * - 4515. 050. 363-0344. PERSIAN KITTENS eSA regiatorid,- oil colon. 620-1031 Clarktion. ________________:___ P00DI,E STUD SERVICE ■ -----------pupploa, PB 3-0120. ' RABBITS - Call ol Open doily Including Sunday 52$ S. WOODWARD _ 'E 4-0461 __________FE 4-1443 SPlCIAl OFFER FREE CHAIN FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY, FREE MCCULLOCH CHAIN WITH PURCHASE OF ANY mcculloch chain saw we HivE IN STOCK. NEW McCULLOCH SAWS, PRICED AS LOW AS $119.95 KING BROS. FE 4-1641 FE 4-J734 Pontiac Rd. HAVE YOU SEEN THi ALL NEW OMEGA Motorhome with the Chevy ChasslO 330C inolna, power steering, brake!, ■peed transmission, d u o I • r a a whoala, complalely aalf-contalnad. Only at Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 13210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-6771 ___Open Dally and Sundays_ LEASE OR RENT DODGE MOTORHOME I960 27' AIR CONDITIONED Contact Art Novotnay STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-39)_602-9rJ5 ; 16' TROTWOOD TRAVEL TRAILER, iltont cdndltlon, 606 Stanley ., Pontiac, 3rd houst off itcBim. _______________ 17' YELLOWSTONE, I960, talf 1945 FOLD DOWN MALLARD, can-top, sleeps ■ " ■* —J...— ,. M2-4380.__________________ 1967 HILLTOP CAMPER, sell-con-tained. sleapt J, exc. condition. 474-0603. ____.ZABOVER 6, no built In. S6L-. CAMPER. Sleeps - - “ —p, no. 1969 OMC GUSTO 1-A GROOMING 335-5259 1969 UTOPIA CAMPER 11 TT. . sleper hot water shower, fore ilr heat, 6 and 12 volt lights. ONLY $2395 Merry Olds AKC TOY POODLE SI DO MARS Poodle Salon, 332 W- • Days 335-9635 1969 STARCRAFT TRAVEL TRAILERS INSIDE DISPLAY CRUISE-OUT, INC. E. Walton Dolly 94 PE I CLOSED SUNDAYS $2090 COMANCHE 2V 1969—SlOOPt 6 Ool-olec. retrlg., bathroom Heap Big Savings at— Village Trailer Soles '1 6470 Dixie Hwy. Clorksl 625-2217 SALES-SERVICE-RENTALS 1 SPECIAL AUCTION ANTIQUES AND HOUSEHOLD Wed.. July 2, 8 P.M. Wagon whdtit) chino-tocrofory ^mblnatloni_ *'*< .11 Apache Camp Trailers save $300 Fourth of' July spocltl. Now sleaper with cronkup hardtop 9 MxIS mobllo homo 26 aiuoblrd Hill, Vlllogo Groon Etlafoi or coll Mt- Dollvory within 300 Mlloi......... trade for moat anything of valuo. p?jl’*DlxV Hwy‘.________ 3: DETROITER AMERICAN SUNRISE PARK KROPF Deubla WMm. Expandtf. Cuafom built to your ardor Free Oollvary and Sotug Within 301 Mllao AT BOB HUTCHINSON MOBILE HOME SALES 4301 DIXIE HWY. 673-1202 DRAYTON PLAINS _ Oew Wly hll I p.m. ROYAL-OR-REGAL ACTIVE 2 or 3 bodroama 13'xir living room 30-Gol. gaa hot water hoalbr Nylon carpeting ever rubbor pai TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. $5». 33J.il_ ir ALUMINo5A^OH Evlnrude, 75 hp ________________________Mercury iSr^^ ro/Wy'oitOTORS 403-1400 1040 HOYROMITE, br motor. All flborglao. Muat aoll. Will aocrll boat offer. 427-3157. 0705. 1969 CHRYSLER BOATS 5 lefti Sava 30 par cant and. more. 1 —modal IIS—14' Chargor with traitor, SHOO. 2-modol 151 15' Charger with trailer, S1250. 2-model 220 17' Currier boata. S1200 an. 474-3003 alter 7 p.m. NEW I VACA1 lACATION aaiiing, fun, Inal... aummar vacation ika Bay. Become a ~ Chaaapoaka Bay. Become a aallor In 5 fun filled daya at Annapolla, Matyland. Salt on now fibdtglaaa our many yoaro of exporlot vacation oalling programa. A fun for ao IIHIo aa 1150 per i for a Monday thru Friday —, Ron. Write for brochur — Courao Annopell lex 1440, A inapolla, Md. 2 301^47-7205 BOAT TRAILER WILL haWftoJO want to buy Johnaon Control W I ir tablaa. OR 3-5440. BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER raft, Sllvarlino FIbargIsa and Inum boata. Marc, eunioard Si DRAG BOAT Hondo 434 HamI, trailer. Si aftOr 5. YOUR IVINRUDB pBALIR Harrington Boat Worb ISO* S. Tolagtaph______332-0031 FOR THE BEST DEAL ANYWHERE ON- *nvadar^?K[ia.*JoJimSli moMni Com* To JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT Ml Milo B. «* jj'JJJJ*’ Open »to Owlin-Fri. ' » TO 5 SAT. S TO \oW ON DISPLAY Glostron; S*o Stor North Amoricon Aluma Croft, Mirro Soihfish, Sun-fish Marcury & M*re CruiMr Cruise Out, Inca n^i^ta and OUtboardo 'ilSISKSieSK CORRECT CRAFT Ginxa and aluminum ; To 2Y BoMa ISM to 2SW Atedala AHEX The Oo-Anywhore Pun Vohicia uESgWnte::. . A voraatlla amphibloua. Drive your Attax right Into wator-maneuvor with aaaa. FUy. LINE OF '^uWr^ Ws! COjlRECT CRAFT DEALER CLIFF DREYER'S MARINE DIVISION 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-4771 riREED OF PAYING high prk outboard aarvica: Sea Goon -—mablo or"—'- — - YOUNG'S MARINA JOHNSON G CHRYSLER MOTORS DuS^^MpOTiTI T. W. Th. S. 'tn'o M. F. ‘ Sunday 10 to 4 4030 Dixie Hwy. on Loon Lai Drayton Plalna _OR . Wantad Car*-Tracb 101 Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 '""MANSFIELD EXTRA Dollars Paid EXTRSr»;Car Eapeclally Chavollos, Camai Coniattoo. GTO'a, Flroblida i Averill's 0 Dixie .^E 440W "TOP DOLLAR PAID' GLENN'S STOP HERE LAST M & M MOTOR SALES Now at our new localli • nay, more for aharp, tat. WE NEED , USED CARS Desperately! We Will Pay TOP MARKET VALUE FOR GOOD CLEAN CARS! Matthews Hargreaves 631 Oakland FE 44547 X.S&5*' ^ anytima, FE 5-7705. UNk CAR*. .FAY F( Us*d Aota-firacfc Nrt* |B 13" CHROME WHEELS, 4 lug, t! s«t,of. 450x13 Hrio, 330 like no '04JFontlm^ocfory itick ail up, tuK I 3^tnolnSS*i0S.’‘ :m onolna 170 compi '4i'cSavy*vi mi AM Numtrput Body Porto H & H AUTO SALES 1*42 PONTIAC, OdbD tor parta 245. 052-1323. 144 OTO front and, 2 doort onS complalp angina and atick eel up. S^lal oil pan and pump, 3IM CHEvV 124 post With 4J4 gow> $125, 2 Mallory ipnlNgna, 400 aluminum carb Moha, t«. 307-4171 Ut-X**' iijf FORD fhiCKUlh ftwfT INI Corvair Yen . Alt run good Sava Auto____________ PE S-3170 INI .JEEP 4mhaw dflv« Black with wbnt top and rod taiN. Uatal cab. Warn bubo, mud and anow gwa. 11400 actual miloa. Calf 04G Audatt* Pontiac 1965 JEEP Woggnaar with 4 whaal drive, h ran,“5r,58 rat’s 1 GRIMALDI CAR CO. akiand Ava.______PE S443I k black top. Lew mlteege. Warn 8b. Excellent tlraa. Priced right. II 442-3203. Audatt* Pontiac W. MOpIo Rd.___________tmy 1966 UNDROVER $1795 or beat offerl TOWN & COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER Farrigw Cara ____________ INI BLUE VW, new engine, whitewella. 31100. 332-4M. 1340 AUitiN AA^RIMN. ' 3000 mllei. AM;PM rodle. 01035. 134- 1947 CHEVY Vi «r: 055 S. RedieitOf Rd._<51^5500 147 GMC M'NdY VaM IM GMb CONDITION. HEAVY DUTY 1968 FIAT '124" with ,4 ipetd tyncremeih trtnimlaalon, red with black top, AM-FM radio, full price 01535. GRIMALDI CAR CO. too Oakland Ave.________FE 5-3421 «**» VW RED' mhat aell, 11335, 45t. Bill Fox Chevy 755 S. RxhNter Rd. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1303 Chevy Plekue, allck I, radio, ffom. 47nCa4, L”k”brlen,’40345S??* ^-100 VI. standard, 15.oto mllhi. Comer Pontiac Trill it Higgirty Rd. exc. cenditlan.____________ FOR SALE OR LEASE. 1340 ‘ '"'..ST'her. IlS • eeepm taw**'- UbO*. dbl> OBll 3*3"3sn. GMC TRUCK CENTER 701 Oakland Avanua ________^-9731 Paraiga Cara 1960 MGA "‘^'iSi'rlcf.'SiglS’ t'?:'™ an^ ilmoit ilka new, eee JOHN “wfMALDI CAR CO. Iklend Ave.____FB 54421 ■fRiur’""'" —" . -......‘?e^l5^eiSf^i manner at Ml 4-7S0O. NOW TURNER FORD 1964 MG MIDGET Hat a now lap, 4 tpeid tranimlialen, sssi?! R‘o^sfifr.'o'ir. - GRIMALDI CAR CO. Oakland Ave. PB S44H 1964 FIAT economy apeclal end the Meal gd^cer Nr work, priced right at GRIMALDI CAR CO. Oakland Ava._______PB 1965 SPITFIRE aaad. tranamlMlait, a gaad cl. »y«nt«,,ond If It priead rtghl at Grimaldi car co. ----------- , gram, iTf it's: Noadt meter. “ 1966 RENAULT retlxjaan car, axcallani gift N SSr’puH^p^&Ltr GRIMALDI CAR CO. 1»47„pp«0 CORTINA GT 1 door, wwie wm btack bucket imM. HMh perfermenee enghit. uw mfflM|p. Bxceilent coinditien., Call Audatta Pontiac 150 W. MapN Rd. Trey 041-1203. Audatta Pontiac IN W. MepN Rd. 1968 VOLKSWAGEN , GRIMALDI UR CO. CARNIVAL By Dick Tumei "Living 80 cloaa to the university we didn’t realize at first what waa going on!” INI RALLY KADBTTE, 14.0M mllai. Body damaged, but car can be driven awiy. 0335. ON-IMI. ‘ end Uiad Cars 106 Exacutiva Cars Inc. OM Factory Official Cera Also Paetery Cara jjlw prlce~hia' beiin taken'*eM'"M the aavlnga ere bH youra. Come end drive theae factory cert you will experience the ultlme|e luxury Of driving a factory car. Cera hive aa low aa 10M mllia, buy tor W down, end name your own terma. Open Mon. thru r ' «srL5{Sbnirc?>ML STANDARD AUTO SALES 962 Oakland Ava. • Homa of tha "Naw Used Cars" 338-4033 Bl suiCk wilOcat Ririfep l;rr''fu.?'M:^T;'s'!.'^'hi'l, .f!faJ.wt'»P*s'.’^;“rll Si55;g,'“S our new leceflen end ell uaed —-muat be aoldl John McAuliffa Ford 1344 BUICK WlMcet cultoffl 4d0or hardtop, with beautiful tu-tr--flnlN, ell fhi goedlea, nothing 1 that Bulck rMeT Low mom piymenta. So clean, even ' engine amelli awMlI SHELTON Pontioc-Buick 055 s. Recheator Rd. 1966 BUICK LaSobr* l^em frode. bon'f miaa if. Juat paswi-irsifii! o^Weedwird, Birmingham, Ml 7- f^lattRA M>7Alr cendiflened «M toll power. Show room new. green vinyl top. Pull pi— ..r« tociflM RfM ail UNO can mm MM. John McAuliffo Ford , N Oil^ AvPj__ Pi M ‘’■it* Air cendltlonid and anly 0;— rn^.^r&si^S- hem. Ml f-MOO. New oBd Uwd Cora 106 Tfaa CADILLAC excellinl cohditioh^ 4 new Urea, ||4W. 402-4345. ----... ralllt, no roltl , SHELtON Pontioc-Buick 355 S. Rocheater Rd,______451-5500 1347 ^ORVETTB convtrllbli, 417-330, **• CHBVY Impale convertli with «7, power, lulemillc, thia a reel black Mauly. Something the youM el heirtl SHELfON Pontioc-Buick 53 s. Recbeater Rd._______4ji.55N Phene Ml 4-I3N 1966 Cadillac Coup# DiVilla llmefe oimrol. new tlraa, full awer, ibaoluMy Immeculeli In-de end out. WILSON CRISSMAN Cadillac 1967 Cadillac El Dorado b*K'k'*'vln tlraa. Vary aharp. Wilson Crissmon Cadillac IN North Woedwird him Phene M awS'S'^V'Ts.'ta ntjY Thit week only g^ full ■Mjhhon eng ell uaed cara muat be John McAuliffa Ford JEROME CAOIUAC CO. 1330 WMO Track Dr. PB 3-7WI >-.ipoNi, Must Bi Sold Transportation Specials Ilf? 2®.*.® Oelexle 4 deer.03N Grimaldi Bulck-OjMl CHEVY IMPALA _ lUE l*W. CHEVROLit WAGON, V4 cleen, exceltenf cenditlan. 4730017. ' CHEVELLi, fully egulpped. tory air conflllonid. * bucket AL HANOUTE On M24 in Loko Orion 693-8344 SpKtal only SIOM full pUm! PTt! wa'ra mov'no to our mmv McoiIm end ell uaed Seri SSat U o5dl" John McAuliffo Ford 430 Oakland Ave. PE tMm ^'iLre«l«'"raa'»S Mow BBd Usod ^ 106 Mow and Used fart 106 Mow a«d Uiod Cm |M “• •*«*' »'««• ^ -------------------------------------— —---------------------- MUSTANGS You Wont 'Em? W* Got 'Em 1965 thro 1969 25 in Stock Per Immediate Delivery Fostbocks, Coupes, \ Convertibles I englnea. Big onet or amill enia. TURN TO TURNER 3«I aelietlon aee thIa ei ■"^i$$''?Avr$$$ $599 . Coll Mr. Porb Turner Forci IfU .CHtVY MfAU, 2 deer "--■'lop,, V-fcjiouWe power, vlnvl 01,135. Economy Cera, zils top. 01,1 DIxH. 22 Pace Setter Value 1969 CHEVY IMPALA 1 door hirdtap, 127/ VG whitewolla,' $2,559 VAN CAMP On N^’Mlltoil Rd. W* Will Finance You ?r1?ncSilSl3!Smf“Lr*daL'~" * T<^luDlM«CHEa CHIVY.OtOS Ut 10 ____ AAA 0.M71 M»-a4f4. 'T27'vT;5.Ve'!R^;^SS aconomy and aportyl 'Won' peymania you cen-‘maktf ni Audatta Pontiac ION W. Maple Rd. Troy brakea. Rally whMia, dull axheual. raar defrotlor. 13,000 actual mllta. One owner Like new. Cell 442-JlW. Audatta Pontioc IN W. Maple Rd. Troy 1968 Chevy Impolo Custom Coups While fin lab, black vlnvl roof, VI, WIJ^N CRISSMAN 'Cadillac „ , 13N Nerih Woodward llrmlnghem___________Ml 4-I3N «*"»*rt»»l*- * *«F»-Poallrecllon'ind exlrea'. 0734145.*^ cTfllW II. —--------------- KING AUTO SALES 3275 W. HURON_ i«r"6e(io^ wlW“ "HTHTmTP' $225 1N0 Ford Falrline 2deor * *•» ®" rmr. »r 4 p.m. $495 CROWN MOTORS PB <-l»N rdfL radio and peymania 12,80.* FuH"prleo'*1!jf3! iSi monogar at 'Ml 4-75M. New location of TURNER FORD ‘ 1344 FORD COUNTRY S!.rend*« f|«inej|ir at Ml 4-7300. fiiw l^i' TURNER FORD MO Mapto (If MIto Rd.) Tr 1 mile leaf ef Weedwe l*« FORD STATI&N WAG6M, 3 i)M FAIRUnE 5M, 44oor. IN VH, wMi evela, tlN, OR 24MI. 1345 >ORD haAI>t0p. Aowtr ami P4ymwta M.31. Pull eVlee'*»‘li! B'.X'SS-iSSri'T'" “ 1965 Mustang Convartibla yi eutomellc, radio end heeler. Power. Dark miroon with black lop end black inferior. $1095 HUNTER DODGE Ml 7-0958 "’T* T',*»~”Mr BIrrnIml SL7.sf«ate!g'*» 1345 FORD WAGON i-- KESSLER'S Dooat ‘StIBJSgf MILOSCH CHKVSLER.PLVM0UTH INI Country^Mdan, 1 fa ehoeae g|^r«7l‘MgTer6rro>? 1345 MUSI 331-M17, ^ radio, heeter, . . d luogeoe rack. $795 HUNTER DODGE Ml 7-0958 433 S. Hunter Bln m CHARdlR' isi auto.' __ leilic Tir, vTn'yrf».’pt'G44ir'"^ CHARSir^^ r„SS.,rtnam*l?.ton,*’**rrdft ’fargABPr8nton'»g.S ms'Dodgo Coronet 4jr{.«."S!;k.';*2l!i;: Audatta Pontiac IN W. Maple Rd. Troy iT4TFoTf6“^To?nil®lir^^^ V-l engine, radio end healer, •UMmeirc Irenamiaalon on conMli, P’bl'?Te{"Vr?bKunV aee thia ana. Juaf 017W full price. ■■ ■-" Inc. 515 a. itghem. Ml 7-5400. Maw BBd Used Cara lOAMaw md Used Cora 106 Bill Fox Chevy 755 s. Rocheator Rd.. 45 —' CHEVY, 4 DOoA,' V-l Ofboai o«>«^ V , _ lO^HivY oilA4W oWiff7i»^ corvaiA 1345, .Virtim, iPapeifif, Exc, cendiflon. 1534024._ INS ddkvAlR CerM, navy blue. ■be Charged, Stick. Meg w lirei, Serty, 0325, Ml 1965 CHEVY ipeie^i Mr hardtop, pgwmmeiifa end ateerlng, radio, whitewella, mjgnlfht Mm, full price only GRIMALDI CAR CO- Our Reputation Is BACK Of Every Car We Sell 1966 MERCURY Montaray Marauder Two doer herdlop. aeeuiltui brlpht red wlih ell r $1395 1966 COMET "200" Sedan «, M,a.'"Tl?ir.aVn $99$ 1966 FORD Goldxia "500" Convartibla {lieaf’SJfM'*' '• $995 1968 UDILLAC Eldorado Two deer BoWer — till ala !;«$5895. 1968 PONTIAC 9 Passenger Station Wagon Pectery air, power altering end brakH. Biay Bya,*,rii nr SiSBly 'SlyV^ * reeljracelleh apoclpl '"$3195 1968 BUICK Gran Sport reWtiyrlerW^Mcr nr^tlS^: $9495 ing, radio, heefer, wide evtl tlrea. 1965 CHRYSLER "300" Hardtop . « Sehere beige In color, with ell red vinyl Interior, nnc 1250 OAKLAND LINCOLN-MERCURY 333-7863 raeaenoEle elfer refuaedi SALE 4th of JULY '4 DAY" • SALE cad tor a. No 1964 Pontiac ConvartibIt '4, tulomaHc with power,' a reel rerm wetihtr pletaure car at only $695 ' 1966 Plymouth $1195 1966v Mustang Convortiblo V4, atlek, ihta little, tod btauly, la extra nice InaMe and out, drive It twey for only $1195 1967 VW leeutlhil biM with ten Intorler, ex. tra aharp Inaldt end out. Priced at only $1395 1967 Plymouth VIP door^hmdlopj^^ill the geedltt with thia few, low pAce'ef'Mly *’ $1895 1966 Pontiac LoMoni 1 deer hirdtap. big VO, ottek. g rail good ono and prTead at only $1295 1965 Comet $695 1966 Chryslan to chMN from, root ahera, automobilea, ell A-OK, end reedy to go, priced from $1195 1965 Imperial - doer hardtop, full power with foo> tory eir, a reel aummar-Borgotn ot $1475 1968 Road Runners $2395 1965 Mercury . ^hrmiowey nleo cor, nico $895 1967 Chrysler 4oer hardtop, full power. Meek In. ter or, black vinyl toe, canary yellow, extra ahtrp InalM end out, ntw tirGio only $2195 1965 Dodge •A Ten pickup, thia la a reel aelid work horaa, priced el only $895 1966 Pontiac Vonturo 2-door hardtop. Thia Meek beouiv la extra aharp Inalda end out. Drive It away for only $1395 1965 Comat Convartibla lee and drive thia little red heeuly and you wfii enley your aummar ell aummar lepf, only $795 . WHERE ELSE? ONLY AT Oakland 7,4 0.ku5?^’""'^"*-%.«4S. JfeiL THE PONTIAC PBgSSi MONDAY, JUNE 90, For Wont Ads Dial 33M981 . lltetliJMCm 1M Ihw md UMd Cm idft Nnv and Uh4 Cm 1M CONVKRTiaLB. 1967 Fairiona 500 $1495 . HUNTER DODGE Ml 74)958 1967 FORD XL * ami ataarlno, „—-------- tola, raaljy claan atH) a l ov car. Saa BILL ARMSTRONG. GRIMALDI CAR CO. WsOalcland Ava.______FR »f«i IfM rORO CUSTOM 2 door. Ivy grnn finish, with malchlng In-farlor, V4, aulomttic, radio and htalar, claaranca ipaclal only tint full prica. JutI SIM down. P. S. Wa'ra moving to our ntw loc ' and all uiod cart must bo told John McAuliff* Ford 6M Oamand Ava. PR 8-dloi , 1MT FORD CONVRRTIBLR. (A young man's fancy! powtr and automatic, no down, waokly paynnanta Sim Full prica *\m. Call Mr. Parka, cradft mtnagar at la watt of Woodward Paatbaek 2 + 1, hat floor ah iff radio, powtr brakaa Ing, a rati claan car, _ anly I15M. GRIMALDI CAR CO. Wl Oakland Ava.________FR $■> BS FORD TORINA. ^Boau matallle groan with maid Intarlor, V4 ongnlt, aulo. tr« radio and htalar. Cltoran.. tptcitl, only sun lull prica. Juil SiN down. Now car warranly. P.S. WoTO moving, to our tollon and all uttd cart mui John McAuliffo Ford ^^Oakland Ava._________FR 5-4l», PtYmanIt SM.% Full prica t2lff. Call Mr. Parka, crodR mantgar at Ml +2SOO. Naw loeallan of TURNER FORD .RR-).Tioy « ISS7 MtgTANG MtisTi^. stisr INI TORINO 1 door hardtop. V+, tpoad, powar ataarlng, powtr d wakat, buckoi aaata and conac... TInltd windthlald. Burgundy with black Intarlor. WMo oval liras. Call an-usf. AudBttR Pontiac .. MUSTANG FABTBACK wllhliil automatic, radio, hatitr, powar afatring, factory official ctra, 4 to chooaa from — at low aa tt,>— full prica. John McAuHffe Ford 630 Oakland Av. ---- ------ ---------- vinyl top, lull powar, and air con-dlllonlng. Sailing btlow daaltr —‘ at S44N. Full Prica. John McAuliff* Ford -30 Oakland Ava._________FR 5J10I mBTfORD FAIRLANR Hardtop, VI, -------------- --------- ..... 124 OVRR 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Mapla Road (15 Milt) Balwoon Coolldga and Crooka ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Morcury Bill Golling VW Mikt SovoIr Chevrolet l^m 106New and Ueed Can, 106 SPARTAN DEPENDABLE USED CARS 68 CHEVY Nova ........................$1695 4 door, aulomttic, radio, whltawalla, vary low mllaaga. 66 FORD Custom 2-door ............... $1095 VI, automallc, radio, whltawalla. 67 OLDS 425 ..........................$1795 2 door, hardtop, VI, aulomallc, powar, whltawalla, radio. 65 BUICK Special . $895 or, data maroon, radio, rotl valua. PLYMOUTH Satellite .................$1295 2 door, hardtop, automatic, p , $2495 CHARGER or, hardtop, M3, VI, aulomallc, PLYMOUTH Fury III ....... ..............$ 995 65 Ida 65 I, automallc, radio. CHEVY 2-door ...............................$895 good aacond car. FORD LTD ...................................$1395 THE GOOD GUYS SAY WE WON'T DODGE ANY DEAL SPARTAN DODGE SELLS FOR LESS (TELL US IF WE'RE WRONG) 855 OAKUND Open Saturday FE 8-9222 New mmI Used Cm 106 iiti^ ani4 IM1 BLACK LINCOLN Fult powtr and air cMtton. 94 E. Rutgaro. 412-7597. ___________________________ 1944 COMRT VI, automatic, 2 door, Mcallant condition, 1595, Buy hara. Pay hara, Marval Motors, 251 Oakland. FR 1-4079. „ MERCURY STATION WAGONS COLONY PARKS WITH AIR Now It tht tima to buyl Saval BOB BORST Lincoln-Mercury Sales i5q W. Mapla Rd., Troy Ml +M00 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Mapla Road (15 Mila) Batwaon CooUdgt and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audette Pontiai: Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Savoie Chevrolet tpaclal, only 11411 full PI.... . _ P.S. WR'RR MOVING TO OUR NEW LOCATION AND ALL USED CARS MUST BR SOLDI John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ava.________FR S-4I0I dVER lop CARS (o_chaota tfemT * • FR 3-7IS4 FR +1104_____ 1947 COUGAR ........... , tpaad, radio and haatar. na down, waakly paymanta IIS.#2. 11995. Call Mr. Part......... mMai||ar at Ml +7500. Naw loca- TURNER FORD (15 Mila Rd.) Troy b^rakat, ataarlng and radio, II07I. Ctll M7‘47tf. __________ 1969 mercury COUGARy ataarlng, powtr aaata and w dowa, AM-fM radio. In mint a dlllon, full prica 11795. GRIMALDI CAR CO. - ftj-?421 4n-0700jft. 5:30.___________ COMit CALilNti Sport Coupa, baaulKul bronia wim black vinvl top. V-i angina, radio and htalar, automatic Iranamittlon, powar tlaarlng. Claaranca tpaclal Iljta ,..ll nrlr, iaS mercury i________ -"-a, $2500. PR mi4. naw 'location and all uaad cars muti ba soldi .John McAuliffo Ford 430_Oakland Ava. _FE_5 _ 1947 mercury CbUOER .Baautllul Ivy groan With matching buckaf taalt, V4 automatic tranamlailon, powar ataarlno, allck at a houndt . Claaranca apaclal only 01701 ,u,. prica, luat SIIO down. P.S. wa'ro moving to our now loutlon and all uiad cart muil ba toK" powar I tooth. C KING YOUR VW CENTER 70 to ChoosR From -All Models--All Colors--All Reconditioned— . Autobahn Motors Inc. Authorlzod VW Doolor ONTIAC LOMANS. 2 door, •buckota, 324—VO, automatic transmission, now tiros, good — dlllon. privoto, 44+9174, 19*5 PONTIAC CATALINA < skirt*. \_ 442-3209. Audette Pontiac 945 tempest custom .2 door Dork blue with matching viny. —— "• —- rpood wail tiros. lVw mlloago. Vary condition. Call 442-3W. , Audette Pontiac laso W. Mopio Rd. . Troy PONTIAC Bonnavlllo 2-door ____^top, with automatic, pow~ thls one la axtro ahirpl Slam th doors, solid, man I . SHELTON Pontioc-Buick 155 S. Rochostor Rd,_______45H I OLDS HOLIDAY. Ono owner beauty months to SIS s. ■*— 7-5400. 1963 Valient 2DD DS. JET STAR, 4 door.'^good MILOSCH $595 HUNTER DODGE Ml 7-0958 >9 S. Hunter___Birmingham 144 PLYMOUTH STATION WAGON. Sahara bolgo with matching In- John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Ava. ___FR_ S+1^ fRANSPORTATION SPECIAL liras, vacation sf Orion, 493-1341. 194S 0 top condition, 4! for. Wlf —- LATE V 33.000 dlllon, iii450','45i-1443r' 1966 Olds Luxury Sedan lor, vinyl r MILOSCH 194S Sport sareiiiTO, 1 ooor, naruiop VI, automatic, buckets, 0795. Ful prlcQ. 477 M24. Lake Orion, 493-0341. PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE II 1944 V-I 44loor, power stoorlng, auto tranimlsslon, radio, and haatar, axe. condlllon, low mlloigo, 11075. 42+5422. Cadillac » North Wooc----- h Phono Ml +iW0 brakes. Low mlloago. Now tl ExcallanI condition. Call 442-320 Audette Pontiac 1966 Valiant 2-door with radio, haator, VI, 4 tpoai only 34,000 miles. In Ilka now coi ditlon throughout! Como toko looki I Full price $1195 Town & country CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER loot N. Mom St.______451+UO T966 Olds 88 Holiday 4 door, hydramatlc, powar ™iar brakas, radio, $1395 1965 Olds 98 n loadod with powor int $1195 New md Used Cirs 106 New and Uied Core 106New and Used Cars 106 TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS ALL CARS AVAILABLE WITH LOW DOWN PAYMENTI Easy GMAC Terms Avoiloblel 1963 RAM8LER Nice ..............$295 iuSSTirleer'' 1964 OLDS Shorp ..................$695 roe., .fuel, ..VI,. .outemotle, - 1964 CHEVY Corvolr .............$795 r.^.^•t.^.^5n.*rvo«To coot ruit Bfoetlni procota and la rooly to go. 1964 JEEP Wagon ................$795 with 4 whooj drive, froo whotling hubi, rodio, hoator, anrin the road tlrot. _____^ 1964 CHEVY Bel-Air....... ......$895 mr itaor-ind whlta. 1965 OLDS Hardtop ,............... . .$1295 "IS" 2 door, tvlth aeonomv VI, outomofle powor afoarlng^ brikOA whltowolls, while with matching 1965 CHEVY Pickup................$995 with I ft. floolsldo, VI, custom side moldings, wast eoaat mirrors, roar bumpor, rodle. hoolor. T9^MvY Picku7 with I ft. fiMtitde. « cvl. 2 for ti • on • t tU'fono rod It budaot. ,.$395 1964 CHEVY Malibu ... with economy 4 cyi. onglno, rw walls, an axtramalv citon cir. .$695 1966 CHEVY Chevelie . . ..$895 On USIO at M15, Clarkston 1963 CHEVY Wogon .....$595 MA 5-5071 To44 Valiant i Ooiaxio 5 dork gratr $895 TAYLOR ^ dncuun n 1402.__________________ dlflonod, powor »M2 M7 6LDS jWUDA^ io4iin:jfowo^ hwSffis* W 7500. NOW location of TURNER FORD 2400 Moplsr (IS Milo Rd.) Trey Moll 1 mllo ooit of Woodword or. 'Air. 1,000 USED ass AT TBQT MOTOR MALL Maple Rood (15 Milo) Botwotn Coolldgt and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING AT Audetto Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Bill Golling VW Mike Sovoie Chevrolet 1945 LoMANS 2 door. Sllvor black top. V-i, oulamotl^ power ataarlng and brokis. Excollant condition. Vary giiml tiros. Coll 442-321?. Audette Pontiac 150 W. Mapla Rd. Troy 4000 Lament, OR 1?45 PONTIAC CATALINA Station Wagon, 3 to choose from. A" —-good but naod some body Special price. Call 442-32S?. Audette Pontiac t850 W. AAapkt Rd. 1945 GTO. very ciMn. t 1965 PONTIAC 9 pisienoer n. Power, outomotic. ------- laalsr. No $ down, waokly lymontf $1.32. Full price 1044. Ill Mr. Parks, credit manogar ot I +7S0O. Ntw location of TURNER FORD ipio (IS Milo Rd.) Troy mllo oast of Woodward 1M4 PONTIAC grand PRIX, booullful maroon vinyl top. Lot's go ----- new. What con vou^poy par monthi No apwHt, on thla troodl SHELTON PontlocBuick 155 S. Rochostor Rd.____45I-! TEMPEST 4 door, 11,000 n MILOSCH LYMOUTH , 2. door, ha—,. lots, consolo, vary ?ll.*477*’M24!''L4kt CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH + Sport Solalllto, 2. door, hardtop, automatic, r mllatgo, "*r, priced I, 403-S341. 1 +7500. Naw loco- prlco 01125. Coll Mr. manogar at tion a* TURNER FORD MO Maple (IS Mllo Rd.) Troy 1 mllo oast of Woodward 1047 PLYMOUTH ConVortlbto. OTX. Toko over poymonts. ' —*— torvlco. FE 2.0000. 1?4l ROAD RUNNER, -----T, Oxford.--- 140 FLYMOUTll.......... hardtop, with 313 Vt, automatic, ss^-'i-uc^wmoT.......... save $1,000. Colt I ■owor. outomotic „,.\':fe."WrTr«rMili s^r at Ml +7S00, Now loe+ TURNER FORD US? PONTIAC, 2 door power slta^ i^(|', oxc. condition, no rust, OIOO. im^PbNTIAC TEMFEST, 4 i sodon, goad condltlen. 3S+4147. 1?a? GRAND PRIX DEMO ______ •—-----TRO hardtop coupe . .«S45 -----'Y Bol Airo 2-dr.M?S FURY WAGON ...........MSS CUSTOM i ulo., double p l?4S GTO Convortiblo. Maroon with •slack top. Floor shift. -Mats. Now tiros. Immoculil H2-32S?. . ^ . AudEttt Pontiac 10 W. Mspio Rd. . Troy 1965 PONtlAr mpgst LoMons convortiblo, ---- finish dhd ill mint eendlHon, prlcod GRIMALDI CAR CO. Intsrlor. V-I, automatic, i sorvico history. Imn ditlon. Coll 442-320?. Audette Pontiac ISO W. Maple Rd. Troy 1965 PONTIAC GTO ivartibla, rtally cloanV It wl. Ideal for thoia Sunny Michigan days, full price 0I07S. GRIMALDI CAR CO. Oakland Avo._______FE S+421 14$ BONNEVILLE PONTIAC, go shape, with power, S1000. FE 0437, att. 4 FE +14S4.__ )?44 PONTIAC CATaLiNA i ----- AM-FM, d—“-------- I51-U2t. PONTIAC BONNBVILL_ .. •%Tt« Whlta with a M —proud ot .TON Pc SHELtON Pontioc-BUick lii S. Rochottor Rd. 4it.ii00 PONTIAC 1744 GTO (boupo, 4 apOad, 1?44 PONTIAC CATALINA HoriitOP, automatic tronsmlsslen, radio and hoator, powtr stoorlng, power brakes. Boautitui motoTlIe turquoise with matching intarlor. Cltaronco sptclal only HIM ' ‘ price, lust (Ml down. K S. V moving to our ntw locotlon In ustd cars must bo soldi John McAuliffe Ford 430 Oakland Avo. FE SdlH 1?44 CATALINA WAGON. Tyrol With matchtno •“**-*— gower itMrmf ?alf 64J^ae9. Audette Pontiac .. ---------------JlTICa Ing end brakes. Full . 1.QW mileaMy Vary - ‘-lent SndlWon. WB BBtieVB The Best Used Cars Como From Flannery Ford WATERFORD 1969 Mustang Mach. I Fostbock with radio, hootor, V-I, 3SI cu. in. 4 aoood, only— $2995 1967 Forci Goloxie 500 Hardtop 1 door, with 3?0 VI, outomitlc. powor attorlng. Only — $1595 1965 Chevy Impolo Hardtop with VI, outomotic, powor stoer-Ing, factory air conditioning, $1295 1966 Forci 2 Door Hordtops 1?47 CATALINA 2 door hardtop LIndtn groan with Mack Intorior Automatic, mmor sMoring oih brakas. 27.000 aclual miles. Ex callant tires, condition Ilka now Call 442-320?. Audetto Pontiac 1150 W. Maple Rd. Troy 1967 Pontiac Catalina Vista Xroof. powtr, stoorlng and I, doclory ,>i|r conditioned, xcillont londltieih Intidt and out. Wilson Crissmon Cadillac 1350 North Woodwonl wlnghom_________Phono Ml +1S30 1?47 FIREBIRD Coupe. 324 V-I onglno, --------- Radio, hoot.__________________ $1747 full price. $47 down, 30 monthi to pay. Fischer ~ ' SIS S. Woodward, Blrmli 7-5400._______ 1?47 FIREBIRD, ISM PONTIAC EXECUTIVE, 4 door --- "M*........ 1966 Mustang 2 Door Hordtops ^ I to chooso Ironid VI? automatiCy 4 cyl. tticke tool 1969 Torino Fostbock Hardtop with 3?0 VI, powor stoorlng, powi disc brakas, AM FM stare, huckots, console. Indian tiro flnltk $2895 Drive the Extra 5 Miles an(d Save 1962 Lincoln Continentol 4 door sedan, with full power, a conditioning, burgundy with black roof, ihorpl 1965 Forci Custom SDD 4 door with VI, automatic, powor broka turquoise with turquolta Intorior. 1967 Forci Goloxit SDD Hardtop brokos. 1967 Chevy Impolo Hardtop 2 door with gold tlnlsh. vinyl t( VI, outomotic, powor ataorlt "^966 Ford $995 Flannery On Dixie Hwy. at The double atop llghtl ' Waterford 623419D0 1968 Pontiac Bonnoville V&ta Gold finish, block vinyl roof, power stoorlng, brokos, wtndmyi and factory air oonditlonod. Vary Wilson Crjssman Cadilloc 1350 North Woddword ------- PtWIBMI 1S4I PONTIAC CATALINA Adder —"in. Aquo color wllfi matching rior. Automatic, powor tl+ir-brokos, radio, haato.r. interior. V-I, automatic, powar stoorlng, wide oval tiros. 27,000 actusi miles. With warranty b^. IfU TEMPEST 2 door,' 1 cylhMor, shek. I^^OO^IIos, gold, oxc. awi- t?4? CATALINA +doer sedan. Gold £ matching Intorior. Auloqgallc, • stoorlng and poworTllse s. Radio, hoator, whltawills. Wheal covers. Full daoor graw. IS4S FIREBIRD COUPE. Bright rad with rad Intarlor. High porlormonce. 4 cyl. onglno. 3 spoad floor shift. Roily whtoTs, whltowoM t?M GTO. AUTOMATIC. I 14SS TEMPEST Custom 2 door hardtop. Vtrdoro groon with matching vinyl intorior. 6 cyllndar onglno, ouloma*'- ---------- powtr stoerlng, Whltiwoll tiros. Bought hart now. Excollant ditlon. Coll 442-321?. Audette. Pontiac 1130 W. Moplo Rd. 1?4J _ PONTIAC ^^Cotgljno SI Inlorla ring a rursa ----- Station .... --- -----with motcMng vinyl Intorior. V-I, outomotic, ir stoorlng and brakes. Powor control, chroma ic brakes. Powor Factory oxocullva cor. Call 442- Audetta Pontiac ISO W. Moplo Rd. Trdy IS4I firebird COUPE. One ..... Birmingham trodo. V-I automatic, radio, hoator, whltowoM tIrOs. "— csr warranty. Juit $22?? full i Fischer Bulek Inc. SIS owner and locally owned. Young ai "sHELTON Pontioc-Buick PONTIAC •ONNEVILLB. 1 r htrdm. doublo' MOMr/^oIr, r &«oStef%.F’l![: PONTIAC CATALINA Con-IMo. Auto. PosMf tlaarlng. Its. AM-FM. Air shocks, XUU I. M.SN. EM +7S2I dtys, l«M CATALINA 2 door hardtop; -------— block Intorior. ror sMorlng end d hoator. Excollont wan iim. LOW mHMOa. try worrgnty. Coll 44I.32W, Audette Pontiac ______whool covors. Tiros t new. Factory worronlY. Bought ro now. Call 442-321?., Audetto Pontiac W. Moplo Rd. . TtbY 1?4? CATALINA 2 door hardtop. Burgundy with block vinyl Inltrlor. Automatic, powor stoorlng -Ond powor disc brokos. Radio, hoator, whitewall tires. Whaol cwort. 7,000 actual miles. Warranty book. Save ? 2 DOOR PONTIAC Catalina, 1 ISO? FIREBIRD — ....... Factory official cor. Signal gwa with gonulno loathor buckM soots. titroo. Powtr antonna and poswar top. Roily whools, wide oval tiros. 3,000 ictuol milts. Factory war- $3795 I W. Moplo Rd. Troy I PONTIAC GRAND Frtx, olr automatic tronomlMloo, ^ radio, haator, low mileage ohd_ml clean, full price 07?5. ROTE RAMBLER-JMP, Union Lake, EM 3-4T55. ' ‘ t?47 RAMBLER REBEL h STANDARD AUTO SALES 34DD Elizabeth Lake Rd. Home of th* "New Used Car" 681-0DD4 --------'"difiA' . 1,000 rf USED CARS AT TROY S MOTOh MAHu Maple Road OS Mllel ietwoBr Coolldgt ond Crooks) ONE STOP SHOPPING 41 Audotft Poiitlac * Birnlingham Chrysler-Plymbuth Bob Bent Lincdlit-Mefcuiy Bill Golling VW Mike Sovoie Chevrolet New and Used Can 106 New and Used Cm 106 ECONOMY!! —Buy a Valiant>— Save on Gas an(i Repairs Give Us a Try Before You Buy Chrysler - Plymouth i 724 Oakland FE 5-9436 - ASK FOR BUD DILURD - itM pSStiAd'TrdNNEViLi.# egort coupe. You mutt sot, this .ono. Snow shoo while with oil vinyl Interior, full power and .a.ll the Rsa'Wisrv ■ P.S. Wa'ro moving U location ond all usM ci New'«nd Used Cin 106 New and Used Cars 106New and Uied Cm 106 HAHN John McAuliffo Ford 1,000 USED CARS AT TROY MOTOR MALL Moplo Rood (IS Mllo) Bolwodn CoelMga and Crooks ONE STOP SHOPPING ttT Audette Pontiac Birmingham Chrysler-Plymouth Bob Bont Lincoln-Mercury BilUolling VW Mike Savoie Chevroltt ■ TODA'Y'S SPECIAL 1966 DODGE Coironet "500" $1395 Hardtop, Iw^ots, oontolo, VI, automatic, powor stoorlng, sllvor finish, block vinyl Inllrler, Ml Oil# owntr IrMt. 1968 ROADRUNNERS .Save 2 door hirdigg, fully qqulppod. 4 ipttdt, ond aulomotle+ choleo of esiort. Now cor worranlyt. Pour to choeoa from, 1964 PLYMOUTH Fury $S9S iiiiUil uMhe’Siik*"' 1966 CHEVY Nova ......... $1095 4 door with autamafic, rodle* hootor, one ewnor. 1967 JEEPSTER Wagon ..... .?.$1895 :.!? w'SwMr.' 1969 JAVALIN SST $2795 2 door hordlop, with full powor, foetery olr con-' difloning, Factory offldoi cor. 1967 rODD HSO SSttS »iita>''iur%.s. iisrs.'S JSK 1966 CHRYSLER as low os ... $1395 ceVwarrwnIvs* < door todan, now 1963 RAMBLER Wagon .tm Slflan^ Yory cloon. In oxgallonf ruMM br Chryisler-Plymouth-Rambler-Jeep I Clarkston - 6673 Dixie Hwy. 'MA 5-2635 1 1 80, 1969 Suminf r Avocorions J---in^ < Rocklw IBuy« STWnth 31 I’m MDabUtr 4SStir ------ tfCmkletter • Root for your wFacoiuMka • fovorito—^ ttBIodeofrOlU UHindmart CSBowdath* IS Tim* of life „AT*SP < MLyroUko instrument MToiletryceie ISOpentiesolo SSSeebird^ nstMdsfrom —Television Programs- Pragrams fumithMl by stations lislpd in this column aro subject to chongo without notieoi tlLmunand — 3 Cuban dance SlLatyeanake CCkUeby 32Chack TAnnoy ssr. lllin«|yuiiUa „ e'NewZaa- 2sS?» “SiSr laar. oSSUd SSSilJ"!* withubs SSBIoodfluida MWiUmr 28WlUand M Zenith 'xl TV Audience makes this your best buy! 18 color tv slimmer 2nd Time Around By CYNTHIA LOWRY AP Televl8lon.Radto Writer NEW YORK - Ihe intrepid agents of ABC’s “Hi# F.B.L” denuMistrated Sunday night -r for the second time-that em-beszlement does not pay. The first time the flight of tile I CYNTHIA ; a low, low w HANOCRAFTCO CHASSIS for unrivaled dependability. CHROMATIC BRAIN lor the truest hues In color TV. tor super sensHIv# ^£NiJH SERVICE SPECIALIST:* HOD’S T, FE 5-6112 ]70 CnCH&RD LAKE AVE. RtENT. 8BLL, TRADE ••• USE -POHTIAC PRESS WANT ADSI R — Rerun C — Color MONDAY NIGHT •sM (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, ^orts ^ (9) R 0 -1 Spy - While vacationing in Rome wtlfa Kelly, Scott geta involved and jafled ov» the srriluia of Italian foster it was seen in 12 million or IS homes by almost tfrice that number of people. Oh Sunday ni^t those figures probably droned, in classic fashion, to 8 million or 9 million homes and 14 million or 15 milliim viewers. The statistics are based oh comprehensive study of sum-mer and winter viewing habits made a couple of seasons bach* by the A. C. Nielsen research orgahlzatiiHi. Nielsm studied one typical entertainment program, and al-thou^ it was not identified, it had a midwinter rating uiiich was igiproximately that racked up during the past season by “The F.B.I.” It pinpointed the composition of the hot-weather TV audience. DOWN 7.2 PCT. When Ae anonymous program was flrst run in winter, it was tuned in by 22 per cenMf the nation’s S7-million equipped homes. When it was rerun, it was seen In 14.8 per cent of the homes. The rerun was being seen in i.l per cent of the homes for the first time and 8.7 per cent for the second time. But smaller audiences are just one factor in reruns. 'It is not physically possible for a creative grou|»—writers, actors, directws—to work the year around," added Michael Dann, CBS vice president in charge of progranunlng. “And it is too expensive. Its costs an average of I94.0N to make a half-hour show today, and an average of $207,000 to make an (S0)RC-FUntstones (56) What’a New -“Plymouth Plantatioa” (62), R-Sea Hunt 9:»(2) C - News CronUte (4) C - News - Huntley, Brinkley (7) C - News -l^ymdds. Smith .(50) R-McHale’sNavy (56) (Debut) Cancion de la Raza — First'in Monday - through - Fri-day aoap opora concentrating on joys and sorrows rA a low-income family of. East Los Angeles. (62) R ^ Highway Patrol 7:10 (2) C - Truth or Consequences (4) <7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R — Movie: “Gun-fighters" (1947) Gunslinger ivants to hang up his pistols but flnds himself in the middle of a range war. Randolph Scott, Barbara Britton, (SO) R-1 Love Lucy (66) C-r-World Press (02) C-Swingintime 7:30 (2) R C - Gunsmoke — Deputy Festus Haggen and prlsmer Riley Sharp find refuge at a ranch which is the home of wife and son l^arpe left behind eight years earlier when he went to prison for robbery. (4) R C — I Dream of Jeannie —• When Tony’s double replaces him at home, the double i s sutiH-ised by Jeannie and finds himself about to marry her (Part 1). (7) R C — Avengers — Steed and Emma encounter two other in-vestigaUvs on the case as they .trade down a ^ost vho could also be a (SO)RC-Hazel (62)R-AnnSothem 9:01 (A) R C Laugh-In ~ Ghiest star is Flip Wilson. (SO) C-Pay Cards (56) C — NET Journal — Chief Justice Earl Warren’s imprint on the Supreme Ckturt and impact on American irociety are examined in 90-minute documoitary. (62) R - Ozzle and Harriet 8:36 (2) R C - Here’s Lucy - For Craig’s^l6th birthday, Lucy accompanies him to the motor vehicle bureau to take his driving test. (7) R C - Guns of Will Sennett (9)-<1 (Debut) Hflss Patricia’s Presentation—First in series of variety diows. ’This wedc features the Pon>y Fandly and Craig McCaw. ' (56) C — Password — Celebrity guests are Joan Fontaine and Jack Jones. (62) R - Movie: “No Safety Ahead” (British, 1057) The bank was picked, the getaway car was re^, but noQilng goes right and robbery turns to murder. James Kenney, 9:00(2) C - (Special) Campus Crusade: A New Kind of Revolution - Pat Boone,. Bobby Vee and the New Folk Singers win tell about It from the campus of UCLA. (4) R C - Movie: “Banning” (1967) Gdf pro en-coimters rmnantic complications at a posh country club. JiU St. John, Robert Wagner. TV. Features CANQON DB LA RAZA, 6:30 p.m. (81) NET JOURNAL, t p.m. (56) MiSSPAtRICEA'B PRESENTATION, 6:30 p.m. (9) CAMPUS crusade. 0 p.m. (2) FIVE TEARS IN THE LIFE OF ..9 p.m. (9) DICK CAVETT, 10 p.m. p.m. (7) (7) R C - Outcasts-Earl Cony suapecta a resp^ed teacher of being a former Union Army officer who had lulled 13 civilian hostages. (9) (Return) Five Years in the Ufo of — Second season starts for series examining a crosa-aection of------- * (60) it — Perry Blason “ (») C Our Great 9:31 (56) Bridge With Jean Cox ,9:51 (62) Oreateat 16:^ (2) C - Jimmie . Roogers — Kaye Stevens guests. (7) C - Dick Cavett -Scheduled guest is Clifford Aleximder, fonhur assiitantto President (9) (SO) C - News, Weather. Sports (56) Casino Society -Gambling caainos in Britain are eqdored-(62) R - Movie: “Revenge for P a e o ’ ’ (French, 1965) A police officer finds danger and false clues in hia aearch for the killer of his ^ friend’s son, Jean Servais, Marta Vincent 19:19 (9) C - What’s My Line? (50) R - Alfred HiL dwock * (56) Folk Guitar 11(69 (2) (4) (7) C - News, ' (9)R-Movle: “Cradiof Silence” (BritUi, 1953) A woman battlea to imt her deaf daughter into the train the handicapped. Jack Hawkins, Phyllis Calvert (50) R - 'One Step 11:31 (4) C-Johnny Carson — Ray Charles and Tony (7) C ~ Joey Bishop -Joan Baes and Stu GUllttn guest. (50) ^R - Movie: “Badeground to Danger” 11:31(2) R - Movie; “Plunderers of Painted Flato” (1959) Gunman comes across ■ lad who’s searching for his father’s killer. Corrine Cal vet, Gewge V. Homeier 12:24 (9) Viewpoint 12:39 (9) C-Perry’s Probe 1:99 (4) Beat the Champ (7)R‘-T^xaii TUESDAY MORNING 5:59 (2) TV Chapel 1:56 (2) C - On the Farm Scene 6:19 (2) C-Black Heritage 6:39 (2) C - Woodrow the — Radio Programs— WJS(760) WXYZQ 270) CKLW(900) WWJ(950) WOABQ1 SO) WPOHd 460) WJBKn SOB> WHfMM(»4.n WJR, Raai«ii«r Raport. Ti«-?S!uiC*T!a«r eaat. eaia. ball liM-wmN, Nawf, Urrv rprn cowntwi CKtW, «catt Ragan WJR, Nawf, Mawc Hail lit^jR, laiaWiMt. JMMla i*'8^JR/NaSs**** *||»>WJR. Ogan HtiNa D.YU TUegOAY MORMIMe laiti wawa. eaag Matle «iS*-WJR, MaMt Ha« WCMtNMn, aw IMmII WJB^Maaiit, Ganrag Ral- WRON. Maw*, ea^ Nma Stwa, KaMie liji^wja, N» a vestiture of the Prince of Wales. (7) C — Morning Show l:li (9) Warm-Up 9:35 (9) C-Morgan’s Mwry-Go-Round 8:39 (7)C-<- (Spaclal) hivestiture Ceremonies of Britain’s Prinoe Charles from CJaemarvon, Wales. (9) C-Bon> 9:99(9) C- (Special) Free* dom Festival - Tradi-tional flag - raising ceremony opens llth ’annual Windaor-Detroit Freedom FWtival. Guest speakers are Jerome Cavanagh and Windsor Mayor John Wheelton. 19:99 (7) R-Bachelw Father (9) C — (Special) Dominion Day Parade 19:99 (2) C-Merv Griffin (4)C — Hollywood Squares (7) C - Galloping 11:99 (4) Ludden’s GaUery — Guests include Kim and William Shatner. (7) R-Bewitched (50) C- Jack LaLanne 11:31 (7) R C - That Girl (0) C - (Spaclal) Investitura Cermonies M Prince Charles (toped). (SO) C-Kimba 11:11 (4) C-Carol DuvaU TUESDAY AFTERNOON U:M (2) C - Newa, Weathor, Snorts (4) C-Jeopardy (7) C — Dream House (SO) C - Underdog 12:21 (2)'C-Fashions 12:30 (3) C-As tilt World Turns (4) C - Nqws, Weather, Sports (7)C - Let’s Make a Deal (50) R - Movie: “Pandora .and the Flying Dutchman” (Britiah. 1052) Ava Gardner, James Mason 1:00 (2) CL-Divorce Court (4) C — Days of Our yves (7) C-Newlywed Game 1:39 (2) C-Guiding Lii^t (4) C-Doctors (7) C-Dating Game 2:99 (2)C-BecratStorm (4) C-Another World (7) C-General Hospital 2:39 (2) CL-Edge of Night (4) C - You Don’t Say (7Tt^-OneLifotoyve (SO) R - Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C-UnkletterShow — A filmed interview with Kirk Douglas is featured. (4) C — Match Game (7) C — Dark Shadows (50) R - Topper 3:25 (4) C-News 3:39 (2) C-Search (or |peop/e in ffie News| By The Associated Press Ethel Kennedy has made her first social appearan» since the assassination of her husband, Robert F. Kennecty, more than a year ago. Mrs. Kennedy was one of 350 social and political notablea who attended a fund-raising cocktaU party in Southampton, N.Y., Saturday nitwit for striking California grape workers, , whose cause was supported by her husband. Ws8t Ggrmoii Leadgr Postpongs Visit to U. S. West Ctorman Chanqellor Kurt Georg Kiesioger’a ■chednled August vitit to Washington has bm postponed becauae of President Nixon’s forthcoming trip to Asia ahd (4) Classroom -“Gernuuiy Today: When Victors Fall Out” •:4I (7) C -Batflnk 7:00 (2) C-(Special) Coverage ot the Investiture of the Prinoe of Wales. (4) C — Today — Tha . ahow will cover tha in- (4) C — You’re Putting Me On (7)C - (0) C — Magic Shoppe (may be joined in progress). (50) C — Captain Detroit (56) Efficient Reading 4:00 (2) CL-Love of Ufe (4) C — Steve Allen -Guests include Junior Walker and the AU Stara hnd Mort Sahl. (7) R - Movie: “Tight Spot” (1965) Ginger Rogers, Edward G. (9) C-Bozo 4:2i(2)C-Nem 4:30 (2) C - Mike Douglai (50) R-Little Raacala (62) R — Star Perform- 1:00 (4) C-George Rierrot —* “Touring North Europe” (0) RC —Batman (50) R-Munsters (62) C — Bugs Bunny and Friends 1:15 (56) Friendly Giant 1:30 (9) RC-FTYoop (50) R — Superman (56) MIsterogers (08) R — Leave It to Mrs. Kenaedy KIESINGER WILSON GdLDBERG British Rgds Demand 50 Pet. Arms Program Cut British Prime Minister HaTold Wilson was handed a totter from British (jommunists yesterday demanding a SO per cent cut in the nation’s arms program. The letter was taken to the prime minister’s official residence by 1,000 marchers who had attended a Communist rally In Trafalgar Square. Goldberg Praises Former Chief Justice Warren Arthur J. Goldberg, who wu an aasodate Justice of the Supreme (fourt under CTiief Justice Earl Warren, described Warren yesterday as a “great emancipator.” Speaking at a national tribute to the nUred dilef justioa •vie, toe.>to6adlMn, Wlwemlit The Pontiac PresB Match word eluai with their eorrogpond-ing pleturaa or gymibols. 10 poiiits for each oorrdot anawsr. DHZ , 8..... \ a leaderahip atruggle mariced thla group's Chicago oomrentlOB U.& fliMag boata lo territorial water# dle- symbol of ladooeB- HOW DOVOURATIV (leeie liehBlleof QsitoIipiielity) Ft to BBpatoft-Ctod 91 to MO petals-TOT KOU! 4lle lOpetali-Ma Bile fOpeliilt.hmilBiia MerUMwm-lfia i>AMILY DIICUMldli CNIISIIOi^ What iBiportaBtdaolalOBS haa tte Bupraaie Oomt handed domiafttolaiitoByeMW? ____________ THIt WIIK’S OmENGEI neum Preeident Nlaon oboe# hie first wonaa andwMaa- Save This PraoHoe EKeinlneflon! STUDENTS Valuable Refarenee Materiel Far ftcas ANSWERS o-ii <11 Ig-i IM P9 fr-inmR w ______.1_______ la-g^l fill g«l»ff^|gim'f IHII DNECflUlR TgE POKTIAC PRESS, MONDAt, JUNE 80, 1969 f ' r M * ' 1 'Vo o-tor-tlntf-tho monHfch o-f-ff don**!; nriloo ±h090 olsaellnj^ rod-ho't voImooI JULY EMH AND EVERY ITEM IS AU THOMAS FURMTURE QUALITY MERCHANDISE THAT HAS DEEN DRASTICALLY REDUCED TO CLEARFASn •m. CaONIAL STYLE PATCHWORK SWIVEL ROCKERS Trimmed in solid maple. Sturdy and J /•»Ur(..i Regularly $129.95 at both ^ colorful. stores. ‘89 MANY ARE FLOOR SAMPLES, ONE-AND TWO OF-A-MND OR DISCOUnHUED PIECES AND GROUPS! Aa ARE SUDJECT TO PRIOR SALE! FAMOUS BUNTING PORCH & PATIO GUDERS Sturdy alummum frame With weather resistant vinyl cushions. Roomy sofo size. Regularly $69,95 at both stores: *49 DISCONTINUED CARPET SAMPLES 27"x18" size—perfect for car or door mqts. Regularly $5.95 and up. Limit 8 per customer at both stores. 48! REG. EARLY AMERICAN CAPTAIN’S CHAIRS Authentically crafted In a rich maple finish. Regularly $29.95 at both stores. !14 REG. Rattan lattm, chair ond 2 tablei (P&D).....$409.80 Italian triple dreiMr, mirror, chest, bed (P) $599.00 Lane double dresser, mirror, headboard (P)... $289.95 Solid maple desk/chest (P&D)................$99.95 Solid maple corner desk with hutch top (P).... $149.95 Modern walnut 54" buffet with Formica top (P&D), $ 139.95 Solid cherry 7*drawer hl-boy (P)...........$199.95 60" ipodorn bor with white Formica top (P).$159.95 NOW $229 $399 $199^ $79 $99 $89 $99 $99 I Desks, modern, French and Italian (P&D)....$159.95 38"x60" Lane dining table with filler (P).. $189.95 Modern 36" walnut wolf units (P&D).........$149.95 Spanish 60" glass door china (P)...........$419.95 42" round colonial plastic top table (P)....$69.95 Modern triple dresser, chest, headboard (P&D).. $259.95 Mod. 42" Formica top table & 4 side chairs (P&D) $179.95 Triple dresser, mirror, door chest, hd'boord (P&D) $649.95 NOW $79 $89 $89 $T99 $49 $199 $159 $499 Cddei (P) Pontiac Store (P&D) Pontiac & E)rayton Store Code; (P) P c Store (P&D) Pontiac & Drayton Stores ONLY 6 TO SELL-7-DRAWER UNGERIE CHESTS Ideal accents for any room in smart, decorator colors. Regularly $119.95 at both stores. *59 CHOICE OF STYLES MAN SIZED RECLINERS Modern, Italian, Spanish and traditional designs. Regularly $ 119.95 to $149.95 at both storps. *99 COLONIAL PLASTIC TOP 48” PEDESTAL DINING TABLES Mellow maple finish with protective . plastic top. Round. Regularly $79.95 at both stores. *49 ENTIRE INVENTORY OF LAMPS, PICTURES & ACCESSORIES lea. $4.95 to $279.95 YOUR CHOICE items at both stores reduced to make way for new merchandise. 20% OOFFI 22 FIVE AND SEVEN PIECES PLASTIC TOP DINETTE SETS 167 OCCASIONAL TABLES, walnut, fruitwood, maple, pecan .. 138 CUSTOM COVERED CHAIRS - many styles and colors ... 47, SOFAS, MODERN, TRADITIONAL AND COLONIAL STYLES..... 70 PIECES OF FAMOUS MAKER BEDDING- all sizes ...... 173 DISCONTINUED BEDS, dressers and chests, many styles . 224 DISCONTINUED CHAIRS, taoles,buffets,chinas, etc..... reg. $119.95 to $169.95 reg. $29.95 to $119.95 reg. $99.95 to $280.00 reg. $219.95 to $499.95 $39.95 to »239.00 reg. $15.95 to $195.95 reg. $24.95 to $439.95 206 SO. YDS. NYLON CARPET, multi-level, blue/green, tile, avocado.......................teg C ! $5.95 Sq. Yd. NOW *79 to *99 NOW *19 to *69 NOW *59 to *169 NOW *119 to *349 NOW *28 to *179 NOW *9 to *119 NOW *14 to *299 NOW *3.99^ NO LAY-AWAYS ALL SALES FINAL CONVENIENT CREDIT AMPLE FREEPARKIND PONTIAC 361 S. SAGINAW'FE 3-7901 BOTH STORES OPEN MONDAY AND THURSDAY HWY^^ OR 4-0321 TIL 9-CLOSED FRIDAY-A^D.SATUjll^Y tfsSr? ; 1 / h- Vilay Nearly Clear for Try to Hike Cur WASHINGTON (AP) - A key section of the cigarette labeUng law expires toidg^, opening the way for federal regulhifory agencies to tiy to iiifpose stringent restrictions on smoking advertising. the current health warning reqidred on cigarette packages or limit advertising. The ^H<^n of |he law d;^ng aj|^ midnight pr(^bifo federsd agendes Irom modifying current regulations to toughen With the modification ban lifted, the Federal Trade Commission can-go on with hearings on an extremely strong package warning, srtille >the Federal Conununicatlons Conunission can con-sidfsr the pri^wsed prohibition of all sniOking advertising on radio television. Although the ban, or preemption, part of the law loses effect tonight, the House has passed a bill extending that section for another six years, although with a tougher warning required displayed on each pack: But the outlook for the extension is cloudy in the Senate, where Utah Democrat Frank E. Moss is reported working thipugh his Commerce sub-conunittee on consumer affairs to pigeonhole the House-passed bilL has extended until Aug. 17 the time for submittbig conunents on the matter. The FTC’s proposed wording —to be explored in hearings beginning tomorrow—would require all forms of advertising to state clearly and prominently: , “Warning: The Surgeon General has determined that cigarette smoking is dangerous to your health and nu>y cause lung cance: chronic bronchitis, pulmonary emphysema and other diseases.” WANTED POSTPONEMENT The tobacco industry had wanted the FTC hearings put off until Congress takes some action one way or the other the smoking-health copiroversy. Although the FCC announced some time ago it would consider the prepared 'TV-Radio advertisment ban, the agency “Cigarette smoking is dangerous to < health and may cause death resulting from cancer, coronary heaft disease. Tobacco cmnpanles are imported to be buying network television adverting at an undiminished rate for^next season despite the uncertain situation. Th0 Weafhar Warm, Chance of Showers (DMlMt Oas*!) THE PONTIAC PRESS VOL. 127 — NO. 12^ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1909 —56 PAGES UNITID^P^'u^rNTiRNi^lONAL lOc Surtax Facing Crucial Vote Today Critics' Position 'Fantastic/ ABM Plan Supporter Says WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen, Richard B. Russell, a key supporter of President Nixon’s missile defense program, snys critics are taking a “fantastic” position by contending deployment of the Safeguard system would endanger Soviet-U.S. arms talks. The Georgia Democrat, head of the Senate Appropriations Committee and long regarded as an ex|fert on military matters, said: “It seems fantastic to me that the opponents of ABM 'contend that the Russians will refude to negotiate if we deploy Safeguard.” “We have been working on the ABM and on MIRV (multiwarhead-carrylng inissiles) for several years. That didn’t keep Uiem from agreeing to the nuclear nonproliferation treaty. “You can be certain that the Soviets are going to go ahead with their development of their own MIRVS and their own ABM system. It is rediCulous to say that they won’t talk because we go ahead.” ‘NO FUND CUT Sen. John Stennis, D-Miss., said ^1- Euler Sees PGH Hunt as Difficult By DICK ROBINSON A man selected to succeed the fired head Of Pontiac General Hospital may think twice about taking the job. 11118. is the reasoning of Harold B. Euler. Hospital trustees fired him, reportedly without indicating to him the ous attempts was made in (he Senate Armed Services Committee to strike the MIRV authorization from. a military procurement bill. Stennis, chairman of the committee, said the program of • perfecting missiles that could carry a cluster of independently targeted nuclear warheads is linked closely to the developmoit of the Pdseldon replacement for the Polaris on U.S. submarines. Safeguard crlUcs have said there is no need for such a defense'system to protect iand-based U.S. missiles so long as the Polaris fleet is capable of delivering a devastating retaliatory strike. A wedding of MIRV with Poseidon presumably would at least triple the striking power of American underseas craft. ifASHINGTON (AP) - Republican political arithmetic is pointing toward House approval of President Nixdn’s proposed surtax extension, but party discipline must hold, and supporters concede their margin is narrow. The extension bill, facing a crucial House test today, has Democratic as well as Republican leaders supporting it. But a large block of Democrats has opposed any long extension until the broader issue of tax reform has been settled. ★ *• ■# Nixon forces have given top priority to extending the surtax at 10 per cent may be Ipst. If the reforms are not written directly into the bill, tiiey said, the extension.should be held to a few monChs while a reform package Is worked out. Storm warnings already are up in the Senate. Majority Leader Mike Mansfield, armed with the unanimous backing of the Democratic Policy Conunittee, said yesterday the Sesate will insist on tax reform before agreeing to the full surtax extension. through Dec. 31 and then at 5 per cent ■ ■ 5 30, r" ......................... through June 30, 1970 as part of the administration’s anti-inflation moves. House passage doesn’t assure the extension since Senate Democrats are determined to write some meaningful tax-law changes. They call it closing loopholes, and insist the people back home won’t stand for any delay. Navigation Plan Is Proposed to Relieve Air Ills ESTIMATED REVENUE Passage of the surtax at Nixon’s pro- INSIGNIA FOR ASTRONAUTS - This is the insignia which the Apollo 11 astronauts will wear when they lift off the launch pad at Kennedy Space Center, Fig., and embark on the first lunar-landing mission. The launch is scheduled for July 16 and astronaut Neil Armstremg is to set foot on the lunar surface early on the mOrning of July21. posed level would bring in an estimated $7.64 billion in fte first year and contribute to a $6.3 billion surplus in the unified government budget. The adminix{ration contends such a surplus , is desperately needed to dampen inflation, reduce the government’s com-peition for scarce credit and bolster confidence in the dollar abroad. ' A ★ W If Congress fails to approve, an administration spokesmen predicted, the psychological effect would be devastating' — more Inflation with businesses and individual? rushing to buy and borrow, thus feeding the in- Still, the board of trustees has not disclosed its reasons to the public. “pnless the air is cleared in this controversial matter, I thbik the applicant named to take over the post of hospital administrator will thjnk twice about taking the job,” Euler commented. City Lays Stadium Bid on Line jiation, The opposition contends the surtax has not been effective against inflation. WASHINGTON (AP) - The Federal Aviation Administration has propraed a new technique of handling air traffic to relieve congested air lanes, improve safety and reduce flying times by allowing more direct flights between airports. The new program, called area navigation and made possible by better computerized navigation equipment, would gradually replace a system that restricts airplanes to harrow routes between navigation stations. In effect' making them fly dOgleg paths from one radio beacon to the next. The new system would allow them to fly through vast areas now unuseable because they are not directly between radio beacons. In a notipe of proposed rulemaking last c, the FAA set out its plan to > TIED TO REFORM ‘USUALLY CHECK’ “Job applicants usually check into these things pretty closely.” Euler himself took over as hospital administrator amid turmoil 11 years ago. His predecessor,* Carl I. Flath, had been fbed by the board after only six months on the job. Trustees than said Flath was fired “in the best interests of the hospital.” The firbig eanm after Faith got into an auto accident And was charged with being drunk and disorderly. SEARCH UNDER WAY Now another search is under way., for an administrator for the'hospital. The administrator runs the hospital. He is in charge of its general overrall (Ckintinued on Page A-2, Col. 2) Pontiac laid it on the line at noon today to the Detroit Lions and ’Tigers — In effect the city said “Here’s the stadium we’ll build for you — If you want it, you’ll get it!” , fnvited to a press conference at the Detroit Press Club in Detroit were officials of both teams,' news media from most of the state and scores of public officials and civic leaders. . , ■ ★ ★ ♦ What they saw were plans for a IBS-million stadium complex which would include separate all-weather stadiums' for football and baseball encompassing use of a revolutionary new sliding dome. Located, at a site near the interchange of 1-75 and M59 freeways on the eastern edge of Pontiac, the stadium complex would include a football stadium seating 80,000 and a baseball stadium seating 55,000. These are the announced requirements of Detroit’s two major professional sports teams. Ibe two-stadium complex is expected to eliminate objections both teams have . expressed to seating capacity and some othec features of thp single arenas pro-.posed by other groups to serve both sports.' A totally new invention, the sliding dome will bl ysed only during inclement weatiier, enabUng fans' to enjoy daylight and sunshine when the climate permits. * * * ' During a press conference at the Detroit Press Club, Pontiac Mayor WiiUam H. Taylor Jr. and Harold A. Cousins, chairman , of * the Pontiac Stadium Building Authority, showed a model of the proposed project. They announced that approximately 145 acres of publicly owned land is available for the stadium complex. No tax money wOuld be used for financing the project, which would be paid for by revenue bonds backed by the faith and credit of the City of Pontiac. They released a study conducted by A nationally known city planning firm attesting to the feasibility of thq. site location and also exhibited an opinion from an Investment banking firm which affirmed the city’s ability to finance the project. The site would provide parking for-27,5(to cars, ‘considered ample to handle crowds of up to 100,000, although supplementary parking could be made available for 25,000 or more additional cars at an adjoining site. Democratic liberals argu«l, moreover, unless the surtax is tied closely to substantial tax reforms, the chance to ram these through the present Congress establish n^ area navigation routes, or flight, paths. Instead of flying Nixon Diplomat Picks Stir Concern multiple f _ from beacon to beacon, airplanes would^ In . effect, be able to generate their own phaiitom beacons In a straighter line. USE SOON EYED William M. Flener, chief of the FAA’i air traffic service, said the agency has a broad develoinnent program aimed at putting area i ' . Taylor and Cousins saiU they had been assured by “virtually every expert with whom we’ve talked that our site is the most praOtiCal from the standpoint of accessibility td^opulation, highways and public transportation-.” They also emphasized “community interest” in building the stadium in Pontiac: citing support from public of-, (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 3) WASHINGTON (AP) - President Nixon has been rewarding the Republican party faithful with ambassadorships at a rate that career diplomat? feel could damage the forei^ service if continued! The latest count shows Nixon has named 25 career foreign service officers aA ambassadors, while appointing 20* embassy heads on a political basis ^r a ratio ol about 55 per cent careerista toiS-per cent noncareerists. - use as rapidly as possible. “Area navigation gives us a chance to relieve .some of the current air congestion bn heavily traveled routes and provide. I better service to the air piuviuc J UClibCl traveleriv he spld. This falls short of a rule-of-thumb among U.S. professional diplomats; that at least two careerists should be named ambassadors for evety one political appointee. The , careerists acknowledge every president has the right to choose his representatives alwoad, that some posts are best filled by men personally close to him, and that quite a number of prominent ‘ nonprofessional diplomats can perform well as ambassadors. Most important incentive The. FAA has been testing various items o( area navigation equipment in the WBahington area! and near Its Allan- -tic city, N.J., experimental center. -American Airlines and Eastern Air -Lines-have been conducting extensive area navigation tests in the heavily traveled Washington-New York-Boston corridor. Americani^iLUnlted Airlines Tiave been conducting similar tests between Chicago.and,New York. They have reported great success. In Today's Press At the same time, the careerists rate the promise of advancement to the top rung in their profession as the single (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) More ka'm Today, but Not Tomorrow •CHEEP’ HOUSING — Mr. and Mrs. Bird will be able to have a littie place in Birds may have tnabllB teUing v ||a auhwbs at a fo^crot, thaiks to amm productfoa by tfais area jotrapreniurt The rwg .......... vrwf eiMW hr a«v WMMr so they^U Just have to Highs in the 80s were predicted for today, with considerable cloudiness and a chance of occasioqhl showers or thundershowers. > It will be cooler tonight with lows around 60. The outlook for tomorrow is generally fair and pleasant. Wednesday will bbia little cloudy, and warmer. * ★ *■ . Precipitation probabilities In per cent: 60 today, 10 tonight and zero tomorrow. The low In downtown Pontiac before 8 a.m. today . was 55. The ^mercury rrodched 75 by nooiT’today. Ben Het S^mth Viets launch “Will Win” drive - PAGE A-9^ State Budget Legislators working to iron out differences-1 PAGE A-Il. W. Bloomfield Twp, Parks and recreation commission Is being created —. - PAGE Ad. Area News ............. vA-4 Astrology .............. D-4 Bridge ....................Dd Crossword Pnzife .........IMS Comics ..................Dd. Editorials ............... Ad Food Section .............D-l Markets ..................D-7 Obituaries ............. C-15 Sports ....... .B-l-dl-7 Hwaters .......... TV and Radio Programs . .D-U Wilson, Earl ..............Dd n's Pages .......C*l—C4 I fnn\n THE PONTIAC press; MONDAY, JUNE 30, 1060 NixQn Asia Visit to Counter Red Wooing NEW DELHI. India UR President Nixon’s visit to the Asian subcontinent next month comes at a time of increasing Soviet initiatives there. In contrast, the American approach has been In art effort to make friends, Soviet Premier Alexei Kosygin has made almost regular trips to the area ^ going four times to India, twice to Pakistan and once to Afghanistan in. the past 3% years. During the same period, visits by American VIPs have been scant. Former President Lyndon B. Johnson made a stopover of only a few hours in Karachi, Pakistan, to m^et former President Ayub Khan in Deccfmber 1966. KE WAS LAST ^ ^ Dwight D. Eisenhower w^s the last president to make a thorough tour of the subcontinent, vlsitkig India, Pakistan and Afghanistan in 1959. More recently. Secretary of State William P. Rogers made a three-day swing through India, Pakistan ahd Afghanistan in &(ay. ★ * ★ It is known that U.S. embassy officials in New Delhi have pushed hard for a long time to get Washington to send some high-ranking officials to visit India. The absence of high-ranking American visitors to the subcontinent is viewed by many observers here as a reflection of a passive diplomatic approach to the region. The continually shifting U.S. policy of arms sales to India and Pakistan is an The United States sold arms to both countries until the two neighbora went to war in 1965. Johnson responded by cutting off arms to the two warring nations, hurting the U. S.-armed Pakistani military forces more than the 'mainly Russian-equipped Indian forc^. - > w ★ Under Pakistani pressure, the policy was relaxel in 1967 to permit the sale of non-lethal equipment and spare parfo to both countries, and was further modified later to permit the sale of lethal weapons by North Atlantic Treaty Organization members, with each sale to be considered on a case by base basis. Now, the Nixon administration says it is reconsidering the whole issue again. ★ ★ # Russia is the largest seller of arms to India and last year agreed to supply weapons to Pakistan, too. Birmingham Drain-Bonds Fund Control Shifts County Focus on Investment Yield MOISE TSHOMBE Ex' Dies Congo Head in Algiers By JEAN SAILE Is the county making as much money as is could on investments? Apparent dissatisfaction with interest rates being obtained on drain-bond funds has prompted the county’s drain boards to relieve County Treasurer C. Hugh Dohany of investment control of its funds. Drain-bond investments total IS million, about 10 per cent of county funds now invested. Drain Commissioner Daniel Barry and Charles B. -Edwards Jr:fTchalrman of the County Board of Supervisors, meeting last week named Edwards-to act in ■ concert with Dohany on Investment of drain bond funds. ★ * * Edwards said he would seek the help of David Levinson, former county ways and means committee chairman. Daniel T. Murphy, county auditor and third member of the drain boards, was absent from the meeting.' ‘NO PERSONAL ATTACK’ Barry insisted the action reflected .‘‘no intention to attack anyone.” "In these days of tight money, it seems reasonable that the millions of dollars involved in drain bonds might be invested at returns of 6V5 to 8 per cent,’^ Barry said. He reported an offer had been received from a Canadian bank to pay 9.53 per cent interest on Certificates of Deposit, but whether a fordgn investment is legal he didn’t know. He noted that county investments are still being made at 5 to 6 per cent interest, with few higher iand none as high as 7 per cent. the county better than $800,000 this, year on investments, said statutes limit the Investment of county funds t o Certificates of Deposit, Treasury Bills and Savinis C^ficates. He said he felt It unWlse to invest money outside the I THIS YEAR Dohany, who said he eq>ects to earn “We’re getting the best rafeslMssibie, with banks compounding their interest daily,” Dohany said, A statement prepared by the treasurer’s office on all county money shows Certificates of Deposit totaling /or jointly, install the fence; and re-$50.8 ntillion placed, with 19 county questing the public service commission baAks; the largest amount, some $10.3 installation of the fence if the Board Backs Higher Fence at Rail Tracks , BIRMINGHAM - The City traKic and safety board has recommended that the City Commission ask the Grand Trunk Western Railroad and affected property owners to construct an eight-foot fence along the east side of the (h-and Trunk tracks north of Maple. The request stems from reportedly excessive pedestrian use of railway right-of-way to the rear of the North Eton shopping center, presently protected only by a four^oqt fencd. * ★ ★ ’ The fence does not provide an adequate barrier to the railroad property, according to the board. Board niembers feel the Noth Eton shopping complex attracts sufficient foot traffic, including young children who find the railroad track an attractive area on which to play and cross. TO TAKE ACTION The City Commission tonight will take action on the two suggested steps outlined by the traffic and safety board. The board recommended contacting the owners of the property and the railroad to see if they will, individually ALGIERS (AP) - Molse Tshombe, known as the “rubber’ man” of African politics, died yesterday of an apparent heart attack, the Algerian Press Service reported today. He was 49. bv J doctors said the former bremier of the Congo and leader of the breakaway state of Katanga appeared tq have died In his sleqp. It said an autopsy was to be. performed today. The announcement of Tshombe’s dea*th came two years to the day after a French plane hijacker brought him to Algeria at gunpoint. The plane had been “'"^charfored to, take Tshombe from, Spain, ^^ore he had been living In exile, to Palma de Majorca. * * w After a deal fell through between Algeria and the Congo to extradite Tshombe to Kinshasa (formerly Leopbldvillel to face a death sentence, Tshombe’s itatus became veiled in official silence. He was kept in solitary confinement for two years, well treated but denied contact with the outside world. Cuban 'Wetbacks Slowed million with the Michigan Bank, Maple and Lahser, Birmingham. railroad and/or property owners refuse ' cooperate. The City Commission has been notified t... . . . w of action taken on a problem notification $890,0W have been placed through' from the f^embroke Manor Association U.S. Treasury Bill investments totaling MIAMI (AP) — By boat, barrel and bravado, hundreds of Cubans are illegally entering the United States from Mexico. About 500 are known to have crossed the border at points from Texas to Arizona during'the first four months of 1969. Concerned U.S. oflicials have stepped up enforcement, and at the same. -......' -il—----------------- time loosened other regulations, in a bid to stem the tide, 'ihey think they’re succeeding, A change last year in immigration law has spurred the illegal entries by lengthening the time Cubans who try to come legally from Mexico must wait for a visa. The law imposed a 120,000-person an- Euler Sees I^GH Hunt as Difficult t (Continued From Page One) operation. He usually if a person with a background in hospital administration and is not a doctor. “We’re not going to dillydally around finding a replacement,” remarked board Vice Chairman Harold S. Goldberg. A selection committee four officers of the board and three doctors whs scheduled to meet over the weekend to review candidates, according tq Board Chairman Aleck Capsalis. Several persons have expressed interest in the jpb, Capsalis said. le job, ( ^iouc The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Considerable cloudiness, warm and humid with chance of occasional showers or thundershowers today, high In the 80s. Partly cloudy, less humid and a little cooler tonight with lows around 60. Generally fair anji pleasant Tuesday with the highs in the mld-70s. Wednesday ouUook: varfahle cloudiness and a litUo warmer. Winds southerly 10 to 20 m.p.h. and gusty at times today, becoming west to northwest 8 to 15 m.p.h. tonight and Tuesday. Winds briefly hlf^er in thundershowers. ^^abilitles of precipitation: 60 per cent today, 10 per cent tonight and near zero iliesday. ' • A TMiy In PbnlllJ^' SlTMi NO. 2 MANJSDUGHT Inquiries arrived after Euler advertised for the position of associate administrator following his firing of Donald H. CaiTos. Euler said the ad was placed in hospital journals and with m^ical professional employment agencies. Euler said a requirement of 10 years hospital experience was set, and it was established the new associate ad-ministratbr wb^urd have a chaheo to nwve up when he retired. •a * a Carros, former associate administrator, refused to comment on whether he would return to the hospital as administrator if the board asked him to. ’The board reportedly thought of him as Euler’s successor. But Carros did say he was looking for a job and that he doubted whether he . would stay in this area. 'a a a Meanwhile, hospitU employes have sought' a spot on the City Commission agenda Tuesday for an explanation of Euler’s firing. nual limit on the numbei of iirtmlgrants who can come to the United States annually foom other western hemisphere nations. Previously there was no limit. LEGAL ENTRIES DROP The rate of legal Cuban immigratioa has dropped by more than 80 per cent ii the last year, but this does not includb the more than 3,000 Cubans a month who come on direct refugee flights froi^ Havana. Most Cubans get to Mexico City legally. But once there, they are faced with the increasing delays, plus the problem of paying liyinil costs while being prohibited by th| Mexican govemmeid: from working. Some Ore quick to accept offers of help in crossing the border. . Once inside the United States, the Cubans are safe because they cannot be deported to Mexico and are not sent back to Cuba. But the government is increasingly refusing entry to any who are caught or turn themselves in right at the border. During April, when officials said 175 Cubans were known to enter illegally, 81 others were turned back. One woman who was turned back said she succeeded in getting across two weeks later, hlddoi in a lard barrel. NO PENALTIES Immigration Service Officials said nearly all the illegal entrants turn themselves in once they are well past the border Since no penalties are Imposed and they are allowed to remain in the United States. The service also has eased regulations to make it easier for Cubans fav Mexico City to skirt immigration quotas if they can prove they have relatives already in the United States. kt I i.m.i ' DirffcHftn: WMthtr: Warm* humid* rain .4 Inch 7 a.m. I a.m. f a.m. 10 a.m. H in ifSl Monday at 0:14 p.m. miday at 5:01 a.m. _____ I Tuaiday at 4:44 a.m. i. Monday .t 7:M p.m. V ----- Eictnaba <6 10 DOlulh 53 « ■D.ratur.1 P""' « « •'«■» Wotih M 75 aptraiurti ^ j,ckionvfll* »1 71 ' ........-71 Hauahfon 57 54 Kaniat City ♦!, 71 II n*. .....^ .75 Houghton Lk. 51 51 Lot Angtiot IS 54 Jackson II 70 Miami loach 17 N Lshilng 12 51 Mllwaukaa M 54 Marqutlla . 51 54 Naw Orlaani 15 75 Muskegon 14 55 Now York II 51 1. Oscoda 51 51 Omaha II 52 in ponnae Pension 54 55 Phoenix IM 74 ........... - II Saginaw 10 71 PItlsburgh 15 52 ....... .70. Traverse C. 71 54 St. Louis 14 71 _____ Bismarck 75 41 S. Sta. MirlO 51 52 ----- Boston II 71 Seatlla 72 55 I LowasI Tamparalures Chicago 10 51 Tucson 105 70 Data In 17 Yurs Cincinnati 12 72 Wasliinglon ll 51 Pontiac Lays Stadium Bid pn Line to Tigers, Lions Manufacturer’s National Bank of Detroit and $1,000,600 through . Pontiac State Bank. ' OLD ACCOUNT The county currently has $9,600 in old savings ' certificates accounts which Dohany admits yield low interest and which he says the county no longer buys. ★ ' ★ ★ The treasurer reports that varying amounts on deposit with different banks reflect his self-imposed rule of hot investing any more with one bank than 50 per cent of its capitalization. He inferred that there are people in county government who would li|to to see smialler banks favored more man they are, but he said he persists in abiding by his rule. Dohany said interest yield depends on the amount of money invested, the length, of time it is invested for, and the date it was invested^ INTEREST COMPOUNDED ' ^ He believes he is responsible for hudg^several of the wiih^’^s bigger banks into providing a continuous in- . interest compounding on the county’s funds, thereby producing a higher yield on investments. W ★5r Monies in the drain-bond fuiais are the < sums received from the sale of bonds ' prior to their dispersal to contractors. Ifome of the money also represents payments made by special assessment districts in various drain ^programs. A more flexible due date available on the certificated has caused Dohany to deem their purchases the wisest course of action in many instances, he said. “We’re making the best deals we can,” the treasurer insisted. “I think we can show earnings on Investments like the county has never seen before.” regarding increased traffic and excessive speed in that area. Lt. Jack Kalbfleisch of the police department advised the commission-in a letter that the timing of the Coolidge-Maple traffic signal will be changed. ’This,, he said, would aUow more vehicles to move on Coolidge and alleviate some of the vehicular backup on that street. * ★ ★ A temporary sign has been installed on Coolidge at Maple - which will allow southbound vehicles to turn right on.the , red signal after stopping. Lt. Kalbfleisch said thq police department will continue its extra patrol and the use of radar control pf traffic in that area. waalhir ; Sunny (Continued From Page One) ficlals and residents of Pontiac and neighboring communities. ‘C0^DPLAYBY.197P “If the management of the Lions and LAKE CONDITlOhiS: St. Clair — Small-craft warnings In effect. Winds mostly southerly, IS to 26 knots today, becoming westerly, 10 to 20 knots tonight. Occasional Hnmderstorins. Huron — Small-craft warnings In effect. Erie ~ Small-craft warnings In effect. South to southwest winds, 10 to 20 knots today, increasing north to ^urins declared, northwest, 10 to 20 knots early tonight. Scattered thunderstorms this afternoon and ^Pointing out that they were not “wed- Tigeirs agree on our:slte,^ey cquld be playing their games in the world’s most modOrn stadium in 19W,” Taylor and ded” to the concept of separate stadiums for football ahd baseball, the PonUac leaders said their final decision on the stadium design would be Influenced by the desires of the two principal users, the Tigers and the Lions. modified 'to fit the needs of both teams, the designers of this pomplex assure us that larger of the two propose stadiums can very easily be adjusted to that purpose,” they explained. Taylor and Cousins asserted that the Pontiac proposal meets every criteria established for a new stadium in the metropolitan Detroit area. “One need not be a planner or a traffic analyst, or even a financial expert to Yugoslav Aide Shot BERLIN (JR - The chief of the Yugoslav military mission in'West Berlin was shot and wounded today by an unidentified gunman, a spokesman at the mission reported. \ ★ w, * _ P^e said the gunman had been taken into custody and tlmt, althou^ he had no Identity papers, uiey believed he was Croatian. Korean Proiesh Rage the teams and their loyal followers,” they maintaUied. “We have a superb, centrally located, publicly owned site, the ability to provide the financing, and the support of the If they prefer only one stadium pqople in the area,” they added. SEOUL (JR - More than 4,000 coUege Students staged noisy demonstrations today in three major cities, including Seoul, against constitutional amendment proposah to allow President Chung Hee Park a third term in office. Wildcat Strike Hits Consumers Union members of the Pontiac area local at Consumers Power Co. held a liriBf w«*mt strikeihte taomTng,^refus-ing to honor.a contract ratified Saturday. About 200 picketed the Consumers facility at 1030 Featherstone at 8 a.m. It ended kt 9:15 a.m. w: * ★ ■ inie membership of Local 105 of. the Utility Workers of - America —■ serving the areas of Pontiac, Royal Oak and Photo, Page C-lO Livonia — was objecting to the dismissal of an employe at Livonia for alleged misconduct during the "strike. He was reportedly reinstated this morning, ending the dispute. ’The statewide strike was a long and bitter one which began April 8. Oourt orders to stop mass picketing were issued in Oakland and four other counties. VANDALISM REPOR'TS Frequent reports of vandalism accompanied the strike and several men were charged in District Court with littering and other acts apparently aimed at slowing company operations.' Local president James Koenig, 44, of 47827 Roland, Utica, . was reportedly meeting with company officials in Livonia on the wildcat strike at 9 a.m. today, shortly before the men return to Voting on tlje new contract proposal occurred oyer the wrokend; in a cbifot Saturday, ratificatiim was agreed to by a narrow 55 per cent of the balloting. ' About 210 employes are covered by thd contract here. ’The base pay for linemen had been $4M per hour and, in the second year, would go up to $4.72 under the agree- Nixon Disturbs Career Envoys NATKMAL weather Rain is predicted for tonight in southern Florida, aloag the Gulf Coast, in Texas, New Mexico and Kansas snd in a belt stretching from Indiana northean through Maine. It will be hot in the South and cooler in the Welsh Police Alerted After Bomb Explodes 1.,« *„ (Continued From Page One) faithful before turiilng rnwreLextonsIvdy reserves were called up and a bomb mrot linportant tacenUve In nwlntainlng alest Was broadcast across Wales after a time bomb exploded in the Cardiff post office today, the day before Prince Charles is to be sworn in as sovereign of theWeldi. ^ Police blamed 6ie Efolosion on Welsh nationalist extremists who Ivave threatened to disrupt the investiture tomorrow.They said'the bomb blew a three-foot hole in the wait of file Cardiff I of here! / a first-rate foreign service. They say that the more am--bassadonMps STe dispensed to non-careerists on the basis of polifical pull, the less the Indupenwit to good men to. enter or stay in career corps. Whether the White House will continue this patronisge trend remains to be seen. -r administrations tend to start off And Nixon has joined his recent White House predecessors in pefeonaily prala-Ing the career service. StatisUos show the pcoportMA "of careerists holding ambaasadorsMps was 41 per cent as of the end of the ’Truman administration, 87 per cent at the end of the Bisenhower administration, 78 per cent. when the' Jotmson administratioa began its full foiff>-yeor term in 1985 and i tpost office, 150 miles south i with a rurii of awards to the par^y 63 percent when Nixancama in. fx r The proporfion of political appointments climbed shasidy toward the end of President Johnson’s tmm. He chose careerists as airdwssadors 60 per cent of the time in 1965, 66 per cent in 1966, so per Cent in 1967 and only 32 per cent his last year In^offlce. ■*' i'' A' This means Nixon would have to tom substantially to career men to regain a two4oone ratio for them in heading this U6-U.S. ' I /■ _THE PbyTlAC PRESS, MONDAY. JUNE 80. 1069 MAKE OVER PAGES D--7 iii i| If# i MARKETS '1 Earhf Trading Fairly Active The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growera and sold by them In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as oi Thursday. Produce «.7$ ApWm. JoniHiin, bu. --------------......................... W-qt. cri............«.50 _ ^ vaoBTABLas BMts, dl. beh.....................".$1.75 Broccoli, di. bch.............. Cobboso, Slai^ord VorlMy. bu. calory, Paical, dz. atallu .... Kohlrabi, di. bch...... Onhma, Oraan, dt. bbh. Partlay, Curly, dz. bch. Paralay, Root, dz. bch. Paaz, Groan, bu........ Radlihai, Rad, dz. bch RadlihM Whl^>. bcl Rhubarb, dz. bch...... Squath, Itallank Va bu. Muaih, Summar, V4 bu................3.50 Tomaloai, HothouM, l-lb. bikf......2.50 Turnipa, dz. bch....................j.00 Cabbaga, Collard, b Endlva,,bi Eacarola, ILKITUCB AND ORBBHI $2.00 .jjaUMca,,!^ LaHuca, Roma Muatard, bu. Sorral, bu. . Poultry and Eggs DETROIT (API - (USDA)-Prlcaa paid par pounds lor No. I ^ poultry: tn» hana 2mzi haavy lypa l^llara and fryara, whilaa ‘ niTROIT BOOS DETROIT (API ^-(USDA)-EOO pricaa pa d par dozan Thuraday by flrat ra-calvara (Including U.S.): iT2V«| on moat'alzaa. damand lair to good; li ample; extra largo, medluma, and an adaquala In moat quarlera, while un continue ahort. , CHICAGO BUTTBli AND BOGS CHICAGO (AP) -(USOA) «Ming prices unchi Butter: Wgtwfi^w'acor; Aa'"|.mI^«"®A*Ol'Iizil un"c«'^r ChICNIo SliV ............... 25-20; i; met 2P-30. Livestock DBTROIT UVBSTOCK day, DETROIT (AP)-(USOA)-Callle Thura- Ullllly cowa, 22.00-23.00. Vealara 25; not enough to teat mark Hoga 25; ton lew to teat market. Shaap 50; not enough lor market ta CHICAGO LIVBSTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) -Hoga -------------------- ".SOO; bufchi calpta Thuraday war« ware^25 to 75 higher, mot walghta over 240 Iba; lalrly active; i aorted, 205-225 lb butchera 27.00-27.! --------1 350 head at 27.25; 1-3 l»5-240 I to atrono. Instances 95 I under ^0 lbs; fairly ac< ,'6* JA«9-50« aupply enough i eat; D lully cowa about ataady; ------lor an i ghlel all being held lor Prl-oaya market; utility. and commercial nwa 20.50-21.75; lew high dreaalng utility 22.00; canhara and cuttera 10.50-21.00; lew W%l. Stock Market Edges High& NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market, which finished at almost the same place it started from Friday, moved higher in fairly active trading early td-day. The Dpw Jones industrial average at 10:30 a.m. was up 3.95 at 873.71. Gains led losses by about 200 issues. Early blocks included: Xerox, 16,000 shares at 99, up V*, and Gulf Oil, 21,500 shares at 38^4, up V*. IBM was up 1%. Standanl Oil of California gained 1V4. Amerl-cai|^ Smelting St Refining was down at point. Opening prices included: General Instrument, up 2 at 36% on 14,900 shares; 'w. R. Grace. & Co., off % at 32 on 11,000 shares; Polaroid,'n(i % at 118% on 10,400 shares; Hitco, up V« at 26% on 10,000 shares; and Teledyne, up % at 31% on 9,800 shares. . Brokers attributed the Inar-ket’s lackluster performance Friday to pre-weekend caution on the part of some investors as well as to continued concern over tight money. AVERAGE tS DOWN The Dow Jones industrial average Friday closed at 869.76, a new 1969 low. The previous low for the year was reached Thursday when the DJI dosed at 870.28. The Associated Press 80-stock average lost .2 Friday to close at 310.2, Prices were mixed on the American Stock Exchange. The New York Stock Exchange (AP) . Nuw York Clad mrning prlcai: I.Cp lOg iLud 2 4S $ 2m 2«W| 26H 22 27>A 271k' 27/k 14*/h • )4V* 14Vb 14% 63 32% 31H 31% 4- % ................ + % 22 42V4 41% 42 145 1444 14 14'* - 1* 118 3444 34'* 3444 + 44 72 39'* 304* 384* ^ 1* 127 9'* 49'* 49'* — 4* 7 454* 444* 454* + 4* 8 21'* 2144 21'* + V* Bandix ] BanalFIn Banguat 4 37Vj 37'* 371* 2 24'* 241* 24'* I 481* 481* 4$'* » 42 41?* 41?* 11 271* 24'* 27'* 17 324* 32 324* « 42'* 43V* 42»* +1 39 4244 424* 4244 - V* 13 304* 29?* 29'* + ™ BucyEr 1.20® Budd Co .80 Bulova .80 1.20 14 41 41 18 19V* 19V* 21 + 4* 23'* + '* 19V* -i- 1* 14 11'* 114* 11'* + 4* American Sfbcfes icSrlww'^*^ 2944 2944 2944 + 4* NEW .YORK (AP) - Amarlcan Slock rlniifL .. Exchanga lalactad noon oricaa; I - 1/4 21% AaxMa .log Aim Pair .40g AO Indust AiitLGas 1.70 Aunwra OH AtlatCorg wt Ml.) High Low Last Chg. 13 18% 11% IBVa + % 17 16% 16% 16% + % 20 25% 25% 25% -»-l 5 30% 30% 30% - % 33 8% 8% 81/4 t % 21 30% 30 30% -f % 8r®iiv 91*9 9-14+3-14 ........I + V* + 4* 3344 33'* 33'*-' 38 13 124* 13 Dixilyn Corp. Dynalacim EquItCp .05* Fad Ratrcat FelmonI Dll Fronllar Air 20 18'* 1744 1744 + '* 7 74* 74* 74* 14 13'* 134* 13V* + V* 23 4'* 4V. 4'* -f V* 20 944 ,94* 94* + '* 5 27'* 2>' 27'* — V* 31 19 189* 1*'* 3 8'* 8V* 8'* 8 10'* 9'* 10'* 123 17'* 17'* 1744 .McCrory wl Mich Sug .10 MldwFInT .20 Mohwk Data Molybdan 103' 19 1844 18'* - 844 8'* 8'4 + 317 83 81'* 8244 +2 12 844 84* 844 . 32 42'* 42 42' 24 29 28'* 29 3 27 27 27 - '* 340 44?* 45'* 44V4 ' - 1 +1V* + '* Tho Aasoclatad Prait 1949 Treasury Position parad to Juno 25, 1948 (In dollars): 7,823,347,742.« 7,314,021,344.48 '’*®°’"*99’,?3,4iM84.53 '143,379,240,572 “ awal* llscal year 199,594,349,500.34 ia2,9B4,34l893.n iii Canco Ins Canisw 1.80 Carro 1.40b 8Kln’SS!r'8o CMs mio"* ChIMII SIPP gM *40 crfPiir i.lo CItlasSvc 2 ClarkEq 1.40 ClevEIIII 2.04 20 24 24 24 — < 18 24V* 54 24 - V 25’* 24?4 ,25V4 -1 4 42V* 42'* 3 37V* — 10 34'* 42'* 421* + V* 14 'Wik 34?* 34V* Colg Pal 1 20 Colointst 1.40 SC':*4S ComwEd 2.20 Comsal Conidls 1.80 ?onNal^*.74 ^SSiSoT.TS Com Dll 1.50 cStrmJbatt MVoiH? CowiM .50 CoxOwcas .50 CPC mil 1.70 CrowCol 1.511 Crown Cork CrwnZoll 2.40 Cudahy Co Curtiss Wrt l 9 471* 7'* 47V* ,. 3 45V* 45'* 45'* + 8 52V* 51'* S2V* - 22 28 27'* 28 2 19'* 19'* 19'* -I- V* 4 «?4 43?* 43'* I '* 41 49 48 48?4 -f ?4 1 ?2SJ I 2 45V* 45V* 45’* + V? 4 21'* 21'* 21’* + ?* 44 35 34'* 35 'IIh 3 12V4 12V4 I2V4 2 42% 42% 42% i 36% 36% 36% 11 36 36 36 ' ti'" 28 54'* 54?* 54<* 4 14'* 14 14 14 20V* 20 20 4 19'* 19?* 19?* 5 45'* 45'* 45'* 8 27?4 27?4 27?4 — V4 12 42?* 42?* 42?* —V* 2 24?« 24>* 24?4 18 24'* 24 2'* 5^'* low U'* + W Bii^'H.ir.1 EltroCp ■ ■ Emar EIl. EndJohn .1 —E— 50 19V* 19?* 19?* 40 74V* 73V4. 74'* + V* 7 35'* 35'* 35 I 34V* 34'* + V 5 15 15 15 • -f '/ 27 19'* 19'* 19V* + V 4 32'* 32'* 32' + V 33 52?* 51'* 52?* +1'/ 2 32?* 32?* 3M - '/ 2 32?* 32?* 3m,+ VI 4 -29'* 29'* 29'* ... 1 I4?4 14?4 14?4 — M 44 74'* 73'* 74'* 4 14 13'*»>I4 1+ '* 12 14'* 14?4 I4?4 12 2SV* 21?* 21?* 5 24V* 24V* 24V* + V* 10 34V* 34V* 34V* . 10 30V* 30?* 30V* + - 18 90V4 90V4 90?4 .. 2 81 . 81 $1 3 33'* 33?* 33'* -'* 44 77V* 77?* 77'* + '* 14 27'* 24?* 27 -i- • 19 37V* 37'* 371*- , 34 21V* 21 21?* + '* 4 34'* U'* 34'/$ - '* 40 39'* 39'* 39V4 - V* rSw S'* 2Sv*t;i ,♦ *!* 51?*-^ *Mlg^40 Kan GE I 34 27 47'* 44?k 47 + '* 40 34?* 33?* 33'* -I- '/• 247 m?* 1121* 1'-' , _ 10 55?* 55 58V* — V* 29 244* 25V. 24'* +1 4 32V* 32V* 32?* + '* 3 30 30 30 .. —K— 18 33V* 33'* 331* + V4 10 24V. 2?* 24?4 + ?4X ............ 20V* + '* Kanneott 2.40 fS?".*#.? 1-^ 14 14'* 14'* 14'* . 134 2?4 40V. I -2 33 44'* 44'* Laar Slag .45 LahPCam .40 kSlmlC'i.SS' tSig^/i’sf ting Tv Litton I.... TIvIngstn Oil LockhdA 2.20 LoawsTha ' LonaS Cam + /V* .. 47V* 48'* + '* 24 ^371* 34'* 37'* + ?* 14 19V* 19'*, 19V* + '* 14 14Vi 14'* 141* — '* 24 9?* 9V* 988 ........ 15 21'* 2IV> 21V* - I* 93 51 «?* 51 +1'* 13 11'/*. 11IX V*V*i* ... 22 34?* 3SW 34V* ........... 37 401* 39'* 39?4 ..... 54 48'* 47?* 47?* 37 10 - - Tha .13 110 32 31'* 5 21'* 21V* LongIsL LucKyS J91k, J9V*^ 14 SLt 1.30 21 27V. 27 27'* + 3.4lg 1,1.20 Marathn 1.40 3 SO 1 27'* 27'* 27’* + V* 24 21?4 211* 21?8 -i-8k —M— 4 35?4 35'* '35'* - '* 42 27V* 27 27'* - ’* 34 47 44V. 44'* + ?* 17 53'* 52'* 53’/. + 14 . 55 57?* 57?* S7'A - '* 9 34?4 34'* 34'* - ?* 52 21V* 2IH 211* ' ' S!?SS?'*i.6S RyderSys .sll rtds.iiflirtsw^ifC*^ 5 201* 20V. 20'* 23 SO 49V* 49'* . .. 4 331* 33'* 33'* - '* M I’sl,* SILSanF 2.40 Wa’d*® sWmVi? Ms '.8? SCM Cp® ,40b StarsR 1.20a Shall on 2 40 ShallTrn .73g 10 39?4 W"J.2 SIngarCo 2.4t .... Smrni KF 2 SpuCalE 1.40 south Co 1.14 SouNGas I.4D Sou Pac l.st SouRy 2.800 Spartan Ind 44 24V* 24'* 24'* 4 33'* 33V* 33'* 1 41V* 41?* 41?* 22 43'* 42'* 43 + '/. 101 30?4 29'* 30?4 +1V. 17 29?4 29'* 29'* 8 39?i 39?* 39?4 4 29?4 29?4 29?4 10 43?4 42?4 43?4 +15 35 34?* 35?4 34'* + ?4 9 39'* 39'* 391* .. 14 70'* 49?4 70 ... 22 44'* 44'* 44'* + < --------- 39V. 39S4 j. ! 51'* 5I?4 -fV 25 34'* 341* 34'* 11 24?4 24Vl 24'* - ■'* 5 49'/. 49?4 49?4 - ',1 24'/. 24'* 24'* + '.1 SWARrD-,o’“."5S'*”51'**?OV+-'' ---* “ 11 44% 44% 44% - ^ 4 17% .17% ir/i .. . 50 68% 68V4 68V4 +1 St Brai StdQIlOh 2.7II St PackMQlng StauffCh Vao StarlOrug .70 StavensJ 2.40 StudaWorth 1 Sun Oil lb SurvyFd .60g Swift*Co .60 128 103 3m+ ,1 35% 35% v35% . 6 44% 44 44% % % 1475 39 38% 38% + % 32 25% 25% 2m + % 3 21% )1% 21% ~ % 13 21% 21% 21% ... 20 27% W% 27% % 5 )6% ^ 26% t % X14 3% 43 43 + % 18 36% 36% 36% 4' % 27 67% 67 67 + % ~P— 38 36% 35% 3SV4 - V4 .10 27 26% 26% — % 219 33% 32 32% + % 30 21% 21% 21V] + % 57 21% 20% 21% + % 26 17% 17% 17V, V® 13% 11% 18% 18 »% “30% -30% ;+ % >35 31 30% 30% + % 49 49% 49 49% + % 4 21% 21b) 21% 20 ^1% 41% 41% 27V, 27% - % 26% 26% + % Wat Wat 1.38 3 27 26% 27 WnUTel 1.40 Wayerhsr .80 Whirl Cp 1.60 Mot ‘ +80 no 64 63V, 63V,*+1% 62 34V, 34V4 34% - % hitt^er innDIx 1.56 12 39% 38% 39% 43 21% 21% 31% + 25 34% 34% 34% .......... 32 36% 36% 36% t- 1 .Xerox Cp .60 J18 99V, 98% 98% . Zale Corp .64 6 49Vz 49V4 49% — * ZanIthR * Copyrigh 43V, 44% +1 righted by The'Associated Press 1969 Sales figures are unofficial. Unless otherwise notedy rates of divi dends in the foregoing table are annual disbursements based on the last quarterly or teml-annual daclsratlon. Special or extra dividanda or payment? not detlg naiad at regular era Idantiflad In the tollowrng footnota?. a—Also extra or axira?. b—Annual plu? itock dividend, c—Liquidating dand. d—Declared or paid In 1969 slock dividend, a—Paid last year. I— able In slock during 1969, estimaiad cash value on ex-dividand or ax.dlstrlbullon data. fl-Daclarad or paid" so far Sr. h—Declared or paid attar i Idand or apllt up. k—Declared or !• year, an accumulallva Issue /Mends In arrears, yt—New Issue. iM this year, dividaffi omltlad, dati or no action taken at last dividend r Ing. r—Declare or paid In 1968 plus t—Paid In slock during :ash .value on ax.dlvldand LtlmaMd < IstrlbutloT -Ex ■y-Ex divl- _______ , _ Ex disirlbu. -Ex rights: xw—Without war. r—With warrants, wd—Whan dls-wl—Whan panlai tarast Issutd. nd—Next day tcy or receivership ^ Bankruptcy 1 by such c— subject to News in Brief Pontiac police are holding a man arrested as a suspect in a break-in at Diny’s Market, 78 fcuttrearly-yesterday morning." Arrested in the market was m”m?* "^"'53'^’+ '* Major Finley,*24, of 59 Cliap-— .... jJ* man. , 47'* +1 Stocks of Local Interest FIgurat altar decimal points i OViR-l Qudtatlons from tho NASO are NASO are r«dra-prlcas. Intardallar Hit ^ day. Pricas '6^4 J3V*MV*—’* r- '* 56 35'* M'* 34?k +1'*' 5$ 41?4 41V* 41?4 + V* .if ?4?4 14?*«’* » m jgj m +'-n Teddy Plans European Trip Wants Quiet Look With Little Fanfare WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen Edward M. Kennedy is planning a quiet look at Europe this summer, avoiding meeting heads of state l«ibp might want to talk with a pM(intial presidential candidate. Kennedy, the Senate’s .No. 2 Democratic leader, expects fo take advantage of the August congressional recess for his trip. But he wants none of the fanfare which marked the last trip of his late brother^ Robert F. Kennedy, to European capitals. 17118 trip also promises to contrast. sbarplp.wiilh.tlw,£ur(g|i(^ tour which former Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey, is on Her unusual’ behavior began as oon as she entered the dining room. She was very impressed at the height of the celling, mad a note about the wallpaper, and observed the appropriateness of the art that hung on the walls. She scribbled lilUe notes on thrattciTtlveiie^s-ofthg'waiterai4j KREMLIN CONFERENCE 'Humphrey, the 1968 Democratic presidential candidate and a potential nominee in 1973, will visit England, Denmark, Finland, Switzerland as well as spending a week in Russia. He will make public appearances and may confer with Kremlin leaders. Kennedy’s journey will be made as quietly as circumstances permit as part of an effort to lower the sound level of speculation about his political future. It is Kennedy's judgment that it is entirely too soon to make any calculation about what is going to happen three years from now. He recognizes, for example, that events—particularly a settlement In Vietham— could make President. Nixon all but unbeatable. At 37 the Massachusetts senator is young enough and politically cautious enough to wait if 1972 looks like a bad year for the Democratic nominee. ELECTION PRECAUTIONS There also fs the intervening matter of getting f-e-elected to the Senate next year. Nobody expects any real difficulty but Kennedy’s decision to stick closely to Senate business thb year indicates he intends to take Despite efforts to reduce the decibels of personal publicity, Kennedy is finding it difficult to fend off hundreds of proposals to put his views in print and his face on television. Unlike Humphrey he has declined to write a newspaper column. 4 Incidents of Bombing '^if Seattle Criticdl Diners Give Stars as Their Tips By JOHNCUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - A really curious custonter had lunch at » well-known restaurant the other day. So curiousj was she, in' fact, that wbeni the chef wasn’t looking she ran her finger down the kitchen tiles looking for-dirt. Then she peered into his refrlgera- CUNNIFP tor qnd, behind his back, Peaked into his garbage pail. And although she ate her food with pleasure, she ate critically also. Shee xamined her I.ondon broil closely to make sure it was medium rare, as ordered SURPRISES WAITER After reflecting on tlje quality of the wine and the dessert and the final cup of coffee, and as the check was being presented, she Surprised her very solicitous waiter. “1 would like to speak with the manager,” she said. The manager hurried to the table, apprehension creased in his features, and the curious lady identified herself to him as an inspector. Her card showed she worked for Mobil Travel Guides, which rates 2 5,000 motels, hotels and restaurants. it ir * It was then that she was invited to see the wine cellar and the chief’s refrigerator and the quality of the meats and vgetables to be found in the kitchen. e made a note about the cleanliness of the stove hood, ' observed that there was no standing-water or packed dirt on the floor. She explained later that there was no old garbage in the paii, indicating it was emptiemreguarly. ‘OUTSTANDING’ The restaurant received four stars, meaning it was “outstanding; worth a special effort to reach.” It fell short of five stars — "one of the best in the country” — but only 11 are so ranked. ■ It could have received three stars, meaning cxceilcnt; or two stars, indicating very good, tor one star, meaning goo((—better than average. R could also have received no star at all, and'then it wouldn’t be included in the guide. Racing through the coulitry at spectors, checking food and ac-comnriodations that will make up the ratings that go into next year’s guides. In a sense they have one of the best jobs in the country, but they can’t let it be too widely known. The curious customer oft his story, for example, declined to permit her name to be used because it might compromise her on her rounds. She is a widow and works U|i to stk months a year to supplement her pension. TYPICAL ACTIVITY More typically, a field inspector tratiels six to eight weeks, makes about 10 inspections a day when facilities arc close together and much, fewer at other times, and earns about tl25 a week after ex- Bccause of tho work’s temporary nature and the op- portunity it affords to combine a vacation of sorts, the job lends itself to retired couples and teachers. it * .it One drawback is that the inspector has to pay for everything - out of his own pocket — and tour- and five-star places can'(lost dearly. So also can gasoline and tips and the various incidental costs of travel. Working on a' contract basis, the inspectors can more than pay for a vacation. Attesting to their satisfadition is the low turnover rate, although Mobi(^ did hire 23 new inspectors for duty this summer. QUAUFICATIONS The q u a 1 i f i c a 110 n s are surprisingly simple. Curiosity, of course. But, according to Marlon Stevens, who is in charge of the inspectors, the other attributes sought are, rather ordinary: intelligence, ease witli people,, plenty of ,,,,,, .1 ^ ★ Tile inspectors do not Issue the stars on their own, but are only one of several sources used. Mall from users of .the guides is filed and the comments later matched with the rating. And professional travelers often contribute thoughts. Erskine Caldwell, the novelist and lecturer, has been sending in comments for years. So has a Milwaukee lawyer who travels through the Midwest. Home office personnel, including /Miss Stevens, also take to thq,,md, not only inspecting but gathering also the com. ments of friends and acquaintances they meet in their travels. * ★ Editors then fead everything, nicluding ,pther published comments, before a stir is issued. SUGGESTION AWARD - Brian R. Evely (center), a mechanic in Pontiac Motor Division’s product engineering department, receives a 110,000 award tor his material-saving idea for the fuel tank fit on 1969 Pontiac sedans. Presenting the award are F.> Jaihes McDonald (right), a GM vice president and Pontiac’s general manager, and Stephen P. Malone, Pontiac’s chief engineer. Evely is the first Pontiac employe to receive the maximum award under the General Motors suggestion plan since it was increased from 10,000" last October. SEATTLE (AP) - Two explosive bombs and two firebombs were set off In separate areas of thto city Sunday, one wrecking the first floor of the University of WashiTigton’s administration building. Police said two of the bomb' ings appeared to be linked. No one was injured. The last of the incidents occurred shortly before midnight, when a paint storefront wa.s wrecked by a bomb made from explosives placed in a sawed-off segment of an autom(8)ile exhaust pipe. John Cyra, owner of the firm, lid the bomb was placed inside a plywood cover he had put over the window after a firebomb had broken it three weeks 9^0. Twg tokrs were' damaged early Sunday, by fi^ bombs in the ai-et Green Lake area of North Seattle. The cars had, been left, unlocked, outside the owners' homes-Mibout twO blocks apart. Police said they assume the same person or persons placed the t-ivo car bombs. The explosion at the Universi-tjr of Washington blew 4 hole six feet across in the reinforced concrete floor of the recessed entrance where it was placed: STOCK AVBRAGBS The lirst wind tunnel in the oirld was built by the Wright' Brothers in Dayton, Ohici, in 1 1901. „ ..........'BRA< C%tnpMad by Th* AtMj in' Net Chg , Noon FrI. Rills Util. SlKks h'ISS', 4$1.0 164.4 144.1 310.3 461.0 164.6 144.3 310. 463.) 166.1 144.7 313.1 493,7 1794 153,1 3334 479.3 3ni 1506. 3397 . '513$ gTl. 1591. 36W. , 460.9 164.3 143.3 STl ....531 I 317.4 160.4 361.8 435.6 >1654 $35.1 Sf.1 Pontiac Div. Mechanic's Idea Pays A mechanic in Pontiac Motor Division’s product engineering departm.ent is $10,000 richer today as the result of his material-saving idea for the fuel tank fit on 1969 Pontiac sedans Brian R. Evely of 5940 Plnehurst, Independence Township, Is the first Pontiac emplpye to receive ■ the max itnum award under the General Motors suggestion plan since It was Increased from $6,000 last October. F, James McDonald, General Motors vice president and Pontiac general manager, pre-sented Evely the top award during a brief ceremony in McDonald’s office. Also presqpt to conjjratulato Evely was Stephen-R^iMalone, Pontiac’s chief engineer. Evely’s suggestion was to use two thin strips of neoprene foam on a cushion between the f\iel tank and the underbody. These replaced a thicker foam pad. HOME, COLLEGE Evely plans to use part of the award money to h^Ip pay off mortgage on his home on lar i4ike and some tO help finance his daughter’s education, She recently finished her first year at Flint Junior College. Ased if he thought his suggestion would earn $10,000, he] said', ‘^t exactly, but I knew that the award would probably be a bl^ one.” , J Evely has submitted 86 ideas since he joined Pontiac in February I96:i. Thirteen have been adopted and tour are being processed. His largest previous awards were tor $100. lie and his wife, Jay, have fivc'chlldrcn. I f S(;/cces$fuhlnyesfing'' By ROGER E. SPEAR , Q — I often find that a slock recommended by my broker has already topped out and I’m buying it too soon thereafter Please explain how this happens, — J.M. A — When a sjock is buoyant there will be a series of prof liable buying levels and no one can predict the final top even when red Jights start blinking Tour Broker scems To bTtoyihgi^***^^^ — to put his clients into popular .issues during the middle and latter phases of what is called the accumulation period in the technical action of a Stock. When a few well-informed irsons — and possibly some institutional managers -> un cover a promising situation and start to buy Into it, their interest is quickly noted by others, the stock and its company are taiked about, trade journals will carry stories about the company and more and ings. New product lines may suggest added profitability; a stock split or an increased dividend may bo expect^ or a significant corporate move appears likely. ■ While the stock’,s popularity Is accelerating, the liccumulation period finallj^Sfeives way to the distribution (or selling) period. Short-term holders start to take more people "want in.” As demand grows, the price will move up Oh good news about the management perhaps or a strong earnings uptrend or a turnaround in i^les and earn- not be grasped immediately by the public. Tlie trading level begins to sag and the daily closing price continues to show . minus rather than plus signs.' There is a Street saying that shares are then passing from stronger to licaker hands. If your brokeY putayou into a good company in a real growth ihdustiTi you' need not be disturbed by short-swing te(?bnical action. But It you are really skeptical about his timing technique, why not sU out his next recommendation and ex- ercise your own judgment on the tline to buy. Gradually-you’ll sharpen your timing sidll and gain new independence as an investor. (CogyrigM 1969, Goaqralj^Niurgg Cgrg.) 1 THE POlSTTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. JUNE 30. 1969 pMt Aulo Tranilt; Inc., Synlhtilc Producla/ Inc., • Michigan corpora lion aiMl Rydsr .Traniportallon Syt lama, inc., a Oalaware corporation, aniarad Into and axacutad by a ir- ------a o( Compi -nd Synihi ..._______ ..It aulhorli,. Ryder Trapaporlallon If the direclora Auto Trpnalf, Inc. and Sv Producla, Inc. and by “■----‘ oHIca— Tranapor and Into -tallon Syilema, ....... Complala Aulo Tranall, nn.., uvoni the terms and lublecl to the cand|.{ (3) To transact such other buslr -.. as may properly come before the meetlno. The Board of close of busineaa ... ------ — the record dale lor the datermir ........ .. ...... ue stockholders of reco on the data so fixed shall bo entitled notice of and to vole at said, meein .11 Is Important that you l?e preaenl that your stock bo represented at I meeting. BY ORDER OF THE WORKERJs PICKET - Members of Pontiac area Local 105, Utility Workers of America, picketed the Consumer^ Power Plant on Featherstone this morning. The brief wi||jN*^trike was ended after about an hour when a dispute over the disjnis^ial of aa etas.. ploye was settled. ' J Chelsea Man Shot by Police Detroit. MIchioan Mates Head VFW Post, ^PwTLfER°w"^HS^i?s"*|'Pontiac police foHowln^ with a scrcwdriver| i, A „ *“'^"*'''1 speed chase through the city was Mark Wade, 21. He Is in ITS A\UX///CirV w J aarU, vneinrri'iv | Puntiac Gcncral Hospital.- A Chelsea man is in critical 1 Wounded in the abdomen condition after being shot by | when he reportedly attbeked a DPCKER SR.. HARRY F.; June 28, 1969; 2851 Franklin Road, Bloomfield Township; age 73; beloved husband of ElSie G. Decker; depr father of Mrs. Loiiis (Patricia-) Gbbel and Harry F. Dedker Jr.; dear brother of Mrs. Catht^ne Hackel and Miss MedoA Decker; also survived by five grandchildren.- Recitation of the Rosary will be tonight at 8:30 p'.m. at the. Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Funeral service vWll be held Tuesddy July 1, at 11 «^a.m. at the St. Hugo of the Hills Church. Interment in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. Mr. Decker will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting.hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) ,, early yesterday. t A 'Pnily Feareful Fiiiirnil Homo pi falllllld The Donelson-Johns Funeral Home is peaceful and homelike, far femoved from a commerciai atmosphere. A soft dignity, possible only in a home, is always present. \ Wade and Earlie Nicholas Jr., 22, of 269 Luther were apprehended after their car coj^ lided with a police scout car on Whittemore near' South Pad-dock. Police began pursuing the car after receiving a report of an attempted larceny from an auto on North Sanford about 3:30 am. Nicholas is being held for investigation of fleeing a traffic arrest and attempted larceny. federal 4-4511* /omLson (Paildiiq /i On Our (Prtmiir'/=»imT= 7 / ^l|| -Aonm ‘ Traffic Mishaps Kill 2 in Area 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC A J-ycar-old Novi boy was killed Saturday and a Avon Township youth .died this morning in area r a f f i c accidents. Oakland County sher-f f’s deputies are investigating an accident which killed Michae Barnes, 19, of 1310 Rochester at about 5 a.m. today. City police today are hunting for three men who fled from a „ , iPontiac bar about 11:30 p.m. Deputies said Barnes’car was last night after robbing the found off Lakeville Road near 1 owner and several patrons of Lake George- Road, Addison about $309. FOLDING ALUMINUM AWNINGS lrom^24^ 1 Oakland Hjghway Toll in ’69 69 A Waterford Township husband and wife, Mr. and Mrs. James Belisle of 3390 Watkins ^ lake, recently were elected to the two top posts of the Veterans of Foreign War David Belisle Post 1008. Belisle today begins duties as commander of the Waterford Township post. His wife is president of the auxiliary. Others elected by the post include George Pappas, senior vice commander; Clarence Jones, junior vice commander Dixie White, quartermaster; Earl Belisle, adjutant; Jack Van Norman, post advocate; and Ayres Miller, chaplain. Auxiliary officers include Irs. Melina Filarski, senior vice president; Mrs. Elizabeth Jones, junior vice president; Mrs. Alice Pappas, treasurer; Mrs. Helen Van Norman secretary; and Mrs. Lucille Miller, chaplain. All attended the Michigan VFW convention in Lansing this weekend. Death Notices Cemetery. Mr. Backus will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) FAILING, EVELYN; June 28, 1969 ; 861 Spezie Drive, Oxford; beloved wife of Dr. Charles Failing; beloved daughter of Mrs. Margaret Rebtoy; dear' sister of Albert and Russell Rebtoy. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, July 1, at 2 p.m. at the Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Interment in Grand Lawn Cemetery, Detroit. Mrs. Failing will lie in state at the funeral home. KLIEBER, BERTHA EVELYN; June 29, 1969 ; 68 Candlelight Lane; age 76; belov^ wife of Otto Klieber; dear mother of Mrs. Myrtle Kingsbury, Mfs. Margaret Kelly, Richard, James and Rev. Donald Ashley; dear stepmother of Mrs. Grace Gotham; also survived, by 14 grandchildren and 16 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, July 2, at 2 p.m. at the Bossardet Funeral Home, Oxford. Inte'rment in Evergreep Cemetery, 0;xford. Mrs. Klieber will lie in state at the funerai home. Police Hunt 3 Men in City Bar Holdup Towiiship. It went off the road and crashed into a tree. Barnes was alone. Ray Strickland, owner of the Idle Time Bar, 262 E. Pike, told police that three men entered “The-youngster; -son, died from injuries received when he ran in front of an automobile driven by a 16-year-old youth. Because the driver is a juvenile, police would not release -his name. /, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Morgan B. Smithson of 47I9Q II Mile, apparently ran into (he street from behind a mailbox and thick bushes near 47200 1.1 Mile, according to Novi police. The driver, who was released after questioning, told police that he didn’t see the child until the boy was in tronl of the car. The accident occurred at :30 p.m. Saturday. The. boy died shortly after at Bolslord Ho.spital, fTirmington.' SANDERS, LAURA; June 29, 1969 ; 8142 Reese Road, Independence Township; age 87; dear mother Of Mrs. Myrtle /Brown, Mrs. Wilma Ruggles and Wilburn Sanders; dear sister of Mrs. John Zigler and Otto Turner; also survived by 12 grandchildren and 17 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, July 2, at 1 p.m. at the Sharpe-Goyette Funeral Home, Clarkstop. Interment in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens. Mrs. Sanders will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. tonight. the bar and one of the men llcdr"Out-"a- small revolverr telling the patrons to lie down on the floor. He said the three men took the money from the bar’s cash register and took cash and oth-articies from several pa-troBs. The men are believed to hUve fled in a 1964 or 1965 white Pontiac, according to Pontiac police. - • - NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Nolle* It h*rebv glv*n of a public h* 10 In h* hnid hv fh* Whil* Uak* Tov - Ih* Tov consider' the f of the SW V4 of section 13 While New homes are being started at the rate of a million and three-quarters .a year in the United States at present, along with 380,000 mobile homes adr ded each year. f,*'....... Clerk end Inleresled. NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING thip Flannlhg Commission el the Town- -- Hell on J-- -................. .. lihit. the ...., .. -.. July 31. IM9 s consl#^ the YSm^"f't............ ...... — isl lo C-3 Commerclel #3 (Gener -.siness Dlslrlctl the following describ properly: ‘ ■ thru 6 Hufon River Sub lhat part of Section 13 d Sec 13 •scribed — ..... .... ............ — - -,lnq Sly of Old Hwy and Sly M-59 Hwy. Containing 7.54 Acres more or lass. Said property known as 1311 Highland Rd. and 1317 Highland Rd. Also known as Pontiac Lake Laundry and Rickard Enlerprires. Rickard Ertlerprlies wishes •to do Machine repair and Sales fegulring outside storage. ' Persons Inleresled era requested to be present. A copy of the Zoning Map together with a list of the proposed changes Is on file at 4he olflce ol the Township KENNETH ORMAMDY. Chairman RONALD VOORHEISr 5iacretarv Whlta Lake Townshir Planning Commisslor. June 30. July IS. 1969 SMITH, HARRY A.; June 28, 1969 ; 7354 Hprdisty Drive, Union Lake; age 61; Wovea ' husband of Ajice Smith; dear father of Ross Slosson and William Smith; dear brother of Mrs. Melvin Conger, John Smith, Wayne and Raymond Cartwright; also survived by seven grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, July 2, at 11 a.m. at i.e Haley Funeral Home, 24525 Northwestern Hwy. (696 Surface Dr.) Southfield Interment in Acacia Park Cemetery, Southfield. M r Smith will lie in state at the funeral home, (Sug visiting hours 2 to 5 and 7 to 10 p.m.) The family suggests memorial contributions may be made to* the Michigan ^eart Association. 1 Interested are requested lo be A copy ol the Zoning Map to-ol Ih* proposed changes KENNETH ORMANDY, Chairman RONALD VOORMEIS, SacJTary Whit* Lak* Township Planning Commission Jun* 30i July IS, IM9 Death Notices BACKUS, HOWARD 'R.; June 28, 1969 ; 772 Blaine Street; age 68; beloved husbap^ of Celia 0. Backus; dear father of Miss Linda Lee Baefeus, Kenneth J. and LCland^ W, Wood; dear brother of Mrs. Paul Elliott, Mrs. Mable Keefer and Albert also survived by seven grand children. Funeral service will -TuesdayrJttly p.m. at the Voorhees-Sij Fuficral Hqme with R< William L y 0 n s officiptit _ Interment in Ottawa Park Lirge 4 foot S-100 DOOR CANOPY Completely Installed ' S(«m*29“ for your' lnw>*i protettion... for yoiir «wn protection • •. 444-1212 EMt$i4t PlMII«llL544S2 IDownmer | Bifminiham-SiutMield | ptuskiy j t< AV. S4S9SI Roysl Oak EL 7-27001 $47^21 »3i CEMETERY AAARKERS Celebrating Onr 75th Annivermry INCH MEMORIALS, INC. 864N.Pef^ 338-6931 Orani^ Plcftat for Manioriai Park CamatBriB* at Balow Camalary Prieai yOSS, LENA W.; June 28, 1969; 2860 Dcland, Drayton Plains; age 83; 'beloved wife of John Voss; dear* mother of Mrs. Ralph (Dorothy) Tracy, Floyd C. and Gale J. Voss;, dear sister of Tobias Woehr; also survived by eigh grandchildren and six great-g r a n d c h i Idren. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, July I, at 1 p.m. at the Coats Funeral' Home, D r a y t o Plains. Interment in Crescent Hills Cemetery. Mrs. Voss will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested v i s i t i n hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) WARREN, MAX R.; June 27, 1969 ; 5090 Elizabeth Lake Waterford; age Beloved husbapd of Hallie P. Warren; dear “father of Mrs. James A. Edwards, Richard,, Ward W., M. Eric, Terrance M. and Dennis G. Warren; dear brother of Mrs. Roy D. Williams, Mrs. Oscar Er ickson ,, Mrs. Harry Woodard, Mrs. Frank Gib-niewskt and Wesley W. Warren; also survived by," grartdchildren. Elks Lodge Sorrow will be tonight 8 at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. F u n e r a service will be held Tuesday, July L at 1 p.m. at the funeral home. Interment in Dial 334-4981 IMaa.riwFri.l-S) Hal.tl*2i30> or 332-8181 riam I A.M. TO 5 P.M. (tat. ■ I* 5) Pontiqe Pr«»s Want Ads FOR FAST ACTION NOTICe TO AOViRTISCRS AOS RiCdVfO BY S P.M. WILL BE PUBLISHED Tytl FOUOWING DAY. ogolal^U 13 lOo/ SOavi BOayl $3.00 $ 3.37 S .1. q ftft *1 TA A 200 376 9.81 9 64 10 26. 16.42 The PoniTbesPrett Cloii.litd O.pattmkn^ FROM BAM. la 3:30 P.M. SPECIAL NOTICE ADVANCED DEADLINES PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED EARLY lULY 4TH HOLIDAY EDITION Friday, July 4th Ragular — 13 noon 7-3 MONDAY, JULY 7th Ragular — 5 p.m. 7-5 Contract — 3 p.m. — 7-3 Display - S p.m. 7-3 TUESDAY, JULY 8th CANCELLATIONS 7-3 - 9 a.m. - 7-3 7-4 - 12 nooii - 7-3 7-7, 9 *.m. - 7-7 -^THan^Tou^ For Your Cooperation THE PONTIAC PRESS Classified Deportment 80X REPLIES At 10 a.m. today than were replies at The Frau Office in the feiiowing C-5, C-10, C-14, C-15, C-17, C-19, C-21, C-23, C-25, C-27, ^28, C-38, C-42. In Memeriam IN_ LOVjNG MEMORY ol Albert P. thy face, But sine* this can not bi ....ivB ybu to tba car* ol ____ yatchas tha* and ma. Sadly missad by Bartha No chlldran. HALL FOR BBF4T, neCEPTIONB. lodyas, church. OR 3-St02. Ft ^ IF YOU ARE HAVING financial difllcully - Go to 10 W. Huron -Pontiac, Mich.' W* ar* prolasslonal Counsalorx. It will cost you nothing doma cans by Appolnimant DEBT-AID, Inc. 10 W. Huron FE 34IB1 LIcansad a, BondBd Sarvlno Oakland County LOSE VFBlOHt aaEaly with Daxjy DI tt Tabiata. Only'91 cants. hour, Oalails Commandar Airport, 573-1338. ndar Flight Ronffac Mamorltl Park at Novi, MIcMoan. Lott 102 B. Bfautllul. loeaflon Fricad raasonabl* or mak* an ol- g:HtrjTcU-.»tiichi,%y^^g.*^ ANYONE WHO HAS WITNESSED •he accldeni at Ih* corner ol Silver . Laka-Rd. and Dixie Hwy. at 1;4B p.m. on ' Friday Jun* 30, 19<9, - pleas* call s74-ia34 and ask. lor BE ON TV "Baal Ih* Champ." Qualily *• Airway Lanas, Sal. or Sun., a p.m. —--- BILL PROBLEMSI “•wioMAwr ai4 Ponllac Slat* Bank Bldg. - CALL 338-0333 HAPPY anniversary ALAN - All my love, KrlS;^_ HAPPY ANNiyEhSARYTSBr 143 W.F, HAVE A SANDRA parly. Toy* and gills, racelv* up lo 15 par cant. Plusi Call Beth, 333-5377. r. & Mrs. Horneawner Do you need llnanclal advic* on repairs, ramodelind, paying real aslat* lax**, jerAupIno bHls, alcT II you do. call iMr. Voss al 334-33*7, *««»> Sa*.___________ WIG PARTlBb.' virigt by Caldaron. FE.3 7993.____________________ Lost and Found LOST! Largo brown i LOST: BUNCH OF KEYS on ring, In vicinity ol Auburn Haights. OR 3-9B11. LOST: 1 MALE B LOST: WHITE I Itan In Union Lk. area. 3*3.9*01. 3 MONTH OLD KITTEN I*. • call LOST: BLACK FEMALE Mixed ^nSS;8g?^ilY4‘-g»*kg*^i4^” REWARD FOR BOY'S ttolen 3-ipMd alt chroma Start bika. Vic. Huron GardOni, FE 4-8843. 5 MEN with Cars r prolllabla, temporary, casual :or lo"-- ----------- ■— Epply ready lo MANF: 1338 Wide Track W. Pontiac An equal opportunity employer SS.OO PER HOUR, exparfancad duft $50 PER WEEK PART TIME $150 WEEKLY As Manager Operator CHICK-N-JOY 1 ydu . . . planned salary s, paid vacations and other —• an equal op- Norlh Perry SI. giva t13 hall we do . .. It ------------ ------ Fonta'lnrtleau'*bl«a ■ I'" To be gasoline company represen- tative, calling o.. _________ (Rcounts, anfalls keeping e supply with Invanlory of bi Cross, Iring* benelils. *73- Dr., Drayton Plains. I company. Must be able ____ afternoon shill to *1*1*1, lop salary and Irktge benelils,-paid vacation, luture unlimited, must have good relerences and be able Automatic Transmission Men AAMCO, I OF THE AND LONG TERM si could advance to a lucrative 5 llgure Income. Tima and Va pver 40 hr*. Paid holidays and vacations, axcellant conditions, aMly ”■ -V. Montcalm, Pontiac. 334^951. Administrator Director ol q---------------- custodial s a r V 1 c a , approximately 175 emptoyaas In d apartment. Administrative experience plan and carry i work with unlor tain good a m r Press Box C-33. ploy* rela-' - I ary; pVntt.;- BARB^, OUTSTANDING opportunity lor serious minded In- ............ FE 4.es4a, alter *. BARBER Ull^ ,llme^ *i^_^Jer^^^^r- BRIDGEPORT OPERATORS Machine Tool BUILDERS Excellent opportunity to loin a last growing company In tha Held ol automation with a long range program. Outstanding trlnga banefits, with excellent pay and overtime. with excellent pay and overtliy An equal, opportunity amployar. CLYDE CORPORATION A subsidiary ol Chicago Funsral Dinctori 4 ' COATS ORAYTOiT'pIjhNS ”*'*** 17444*1 Excallant opportunity tor an ex-perlanead adlustw to work tha Oakland County wa*. At least 1 year niMltlpI* line axparlenc* required. Top saMry aitd eqmplet* banafllt, w on* wtie auatltlas. sSir*a5*TSr*ne* OwS'"' ‘=*VaSs™;r«y“-s«fe.ir* pfo!" B*x“^ UniltShMIrtSan; ..AT ' ^BiakaAolIlMl lAfAPMia II Huntoon FUNiRAL HOME Perry Mount Park Gemetery. ■■ -7aire ................. Mr. Wairen will lie in state at the funeral horns. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to I 9.) ■■ ■ , VoorheecSiple 4 LOTS IN Whit* CLAIM REPRESENTATIVE CARPET SALESMAN, axpariaitgd oiH||, salary and eommlssloi^ 419- CAMP COUNSELOR «lor ratardad chlldran, *g* 1*-1S, room, board and salary. W-2272, Orydan. CUSTODIAN FOR Mnaral shop claan-up. Good (ring* b 3S70. COOK, NIGHTS. 5 P.m. (o 1 a m. steady, top pay, fringe banafits, apply In person. Rips Bar- Rastauranl, 99S W. Mifiron. ____^ CLERICAL WOhK 1n Indusirlal of llc* lor man over 30. Early ---------- considered. Sand complala F*r'?s.S8!,j?«?r»C.*' contactHOT For expansion program In Pontiac area, training Program, salary plus commission, good .opportunity for ambitious young man. Call Mr, Sulla, 1431-5035. ““ COLLEGE students ‘ S1S2:50 WK., (itITLRATrrEED We have- several summer lobs (or colleg* sfudonfs. For Information call MISS Novak, 333-303* between 9 and 2 p.m. S2.00 PER HOUR S3.0B PER HOUR CHECKERS DETAILERS SPECIAL machine --AUTOMATION Opportunity tor advancemant, (ring* bartetll ” DEVELOPMENT ENWNEERS ----ECT engineer CHECKER PROJECT ENt CHECKt.-Experlancad In hydraulics -------.... ... ocign.'ot fluid tor design.'*. ------- pumping, motoring and mixing equipment, great growth opportunity In small but fast growing company, which leads t h a specialty plastic application (laid, unusual godd (ring* banMIls and • open salary. Call Mr. Thomat NIcholl* *1 349-5500 or apply In PYLES INDUSTRIES 3B990 WIxom Road, WI x i Michigan. An equal opport DRIVER'S EXPERIENCED ri McNIchols. Oat. bosigners-Dotailers 333-7009 DRAFTSMEN AND CHECKERS tor TJnAILlir-DESIGNER comp*ny?*°''Mor**^'''''rM Greater Chananpa? W* ar* a dl-virrsifiAd sDftclal macMm and r experfaneW defa controls a , Ebbart Englnaarlnp Co. 1935 a Rd. ' t4-13**. AUTOMATION DAILY WORR DAILY PAY EMPLOYERS .> Temporary Service,’ Inc. FERNOALE 3330 Hilton Rd. REDFORD 3**17 Grand Rivor* CLAWSON *5 S. Main center line 85*1 E. 10 Mllg An Equal OOporlunlty Employer Not an Employment Agency_ Prill press o'p * r a tj -" _________________... ..______'a.' Ex- perlancad or will train. Fringe benelils. Apply al Benton Coro., 3070 Industrial Row, Troy. . WITH Ex1»E°rTeNCE in INDUSTRIAL VENTILATION. FOR SURVEY, DESIGN AND START-“ci-AUDE B. SCHENIB^LEY CO* EXPERIENCED buffer and p< It malarial handling nas opaning* lor I englnOirs, alactrlcal structural^ engineers, designers and layout drattsmoi — Permanent position with good salaries above average fringe* and working conditions. R o c o n t graduates considered. __________jtlnga lo; CHIEF ENGINEER PLANET CORPORATION 1830 SUNSET-JEVE. -LANSING. MICHIGAN 48901 All replies wH| ^^ta^lnsatad In eon- E X P E R I E hi d i~0 Mlscoiriivsws Machtn* Oparators. C resent Machine Co. 3501 Wlllianr- —TOtiKra------------------- FOREMAN. .....srlunlty to k long-Ostabllshed firm, one leaders In II* " gressive man to grow consider training a ■*“ experience in si manufacluring and supervision femali ary S*00-S700 par mo. fringes Writ* »“ ' GAS STATION AT-TENOANT, perlenced, mechanically Incllr jpcal ref,, full .or part time, < Talegraph :______________________ grinder HANDS, experlencad I form tool grinding, steady '51 ttou week, all fringes, 3344533. Ill or part Id Mapfa. GA~S STATION AT'fENDANT, day*,' m,,.* he neat. Experlencad nr*. **0 W. HuroPy tarred. **0 W. HuroPy________ __ GAS STATION ATTEWANT, (uil or oart tlme,.*xperlenced. 39030 North '—*—1 Highway, Southtlald, part time, ■ Westetn Hn Michigan. GUARDS rain,' openings all shift, .vening and weekend work. M OeteetTve agency, 3*84340. HAROINGEACHUCKER ExperlencRl or will tral __________^r will train. Fringe banatlfs. Apply, at Benton Corp., 3070 industrial Row, Troy, perlancad or will train, lying* banefits. Apply _at Banton Corp., 3070 IndiMtrftl Row, -Troy. IMMEDIATELY, sHOrtqrder COfflC . experienced and dependable (or night shift; good salary to qualHIad person. Snack and Rack, 481 Elli. Lk. Rd., *81-1177. If You Hove tjie Natural Talent We'll Train You-and Make You a Top-Paid Pro male custodial 9 IMMEOIATB openings (or (lad, tul' — worker*. Qualifications; ,Resident of Oakland -County, bat. IS and *S good physical condition. , For appitcallon ai Sales Representative' Not everyona to be si .... ...a has What . It-takes to be a successful sales rapresantatlve. The mechanics and me training you In It >u ''must have a s inse to begin with af ^ and If vou> would.llke 1i J career for yourself with l _ surrounding area, we can CLEvSllDtNSTrTUTE The P( An Eqaal Opportunity and Merit gyatm Bmptoyar Of ELECTRONICS ALL DAY SUNDAY B MONDAY _________ (*141 8SS-7153 JANITORS MEN ANO -WOMEN------ EXPERIENCED 5 NIGHTS A WEEK 74 'HVf^^p'elW^ISilT.AC CALL DETROIT.----------------------------------------------------------- r , I WIFE wantaB •*i*"'*S house .and oardiH« ASM Sashabaw 9^4 Clartoloiia . , I * ■ r I J < .« ( J* lo ^ri/ *■ If” ^ ' 1 1- f 1 ’ r... 1 i ^^9 li ^ !i f-% W'^ % f f** l_.l 1 1^. ^ 4^ k. ■ i !l I I % % * / I '* I s W W lb>is^ IbMMM w n ■ % #■#*-%• I I 0 %