The Weather U.S. Wutiwr turtau P^oracHt Colder (Dalalli Piaa t) THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 126 NO. 29 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC. MICHIGAN, MONDAY. MARCH ll. 1968 —44 PAGi:S ASSOCIATED PRES« ITEO PRESS INTERNATIONAL Rusk Offers to Stop N.Viet Bombing WASHINGTON UPl - Secretary of State Dean Rusk offered today to stop the bombing of North Vietnam to get war settlement talks going. Testifying at the long-awaited confrontation with war critics on the Senate Foreign Relations Committee, Rusk said in order to bring about the talks “we are willing to meet their principal condition — stopping of the bombing.” Whatever provisos may exist as to reciprocal action by the other side, Rusk did not spell them out’ immediately. He renewed the U.S. pledge that “we are prepared to negotiate today without any conditions.” ★ ★ ★ Rusk’s statement came at the end of a sharp exchange with Sen. J. W. Ful-bright, D-Ark., the committee chairman, who told the secretary he Is more than ever convinced that'our present policies in Vietnam have had and will have effects “abroad and at home that are nothing short of disastrous.” Rusk mentioned the 1964 Gulf of Tonkin resolution, which has been a principal vehicle for attacks on the administration by critical senators, saying, “We hoped that Tonkin would serve as a deterrent” but that “unfortunately it did not have that deterrent effect.” Fulbright promptly criticized the administration’s contention that U.S. responses to the Gulf of Tonkin incident were due to provocations by Communist warboats. “The provocations to say the least were extremely slight,” Fulbright said, adding that “they could well determine that we were determined to attack them.” ★ 1 ★. ★ At another point Fulbright told Rusk there are “striking discrepancies” between events of the war and the administration’s description of them. He said what he called discrepancies have caused a crisis in this countrytover the war. LBJ Backers Lying, McCarthy Charges MANCHESTER, N.H. (AP) - Sen. Eugene J. McCarthy accused President Johnson’s backers today of lying about his position on draft dodgers, while Richard M. Nixon staged a final sprint to turn out the Republican vote in tomorrow’s season-opening New Hampshire presidential primary. McCarthy told a hastily called news conference that the men heading a Johnson write-in campaign were “attacking the motives and loyalty of any man who dares ruit in an election against die President.” He said that Sen. Thomas McIntyre, D-N.H., a leader of the Johnson campaign, had accused him in radio advertisements of wanting to “honor draft dodgers and deserters.” McCarthy called it a “total distortion” and demanded that McIntyre either explain himself or withdraw the ads. It was the second such counterattack by McCarthy in the final days of the campaign. Earlier he blasted a statement by Gov. John King that a significant vote for McCarthy would cause cheers in Hanoi. Nixon’s final campaign stand today featured a series of brief visits to his headquarters in five cities. He set the tone at a Nashua reception last night, urging Republicans to vote tomorrow, telling them; “We’re going to win. We’re going to win in March and we're going to win in November- It’s going to be a new day for America.” i Worst Weekend of 1968 State Road Toll 22 By ’The Associated Press Twenty-two persons lost their lives In traffic accidents in Michigan over the weekend as warm, sunny weather Friday lured motorists onto the roads. Then rain and fog Saturday and yesterday obscured visibility and made roads slippery. Four passengers on a church-owned bus died in a collision with a car in Detroit Friday night. Another accident took three lives and two persons died in a third mishap. State police headquarters at Lansing said the carnage set a record for the weekend’s toll. ’The Associated Press count o f fatalities began at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at midnight Sunday. The victims: Eileen Kush, 17, of Royal Oak, In a two-car accident in Royal Oak Sunday. Patricia Anne Marie Nellenbach, 18, of North Branch, a passenger in a car which ran off a road in Flint Sunday. In Today's Press War on Poverty . County office extends its rural reach - PAGE A-4. Campus Freedom Educator decries “mounting permissiveness” — PAGE B-6. Marine Medic Outcast bkomes a hero at Khe Sanh - PAGE C-G. Area News .............i.A-4 Astrolo^ . ........../ C-8 Bridg;e ................ C-8 Crossword Puzzle ....... D-9 Comics fS8 Editorials .............. A4 Lenten Series ......... A-19 Markets .............. C-11 Obituaries ............ A-9 Sports ............. C-1—C-4 Theaters C-10 TV and Radio Programs .. D-9 Wilson, Earl.............D-9 Women’s Pages ...... .B-1—B-5 Fulbright also told Rusk “I do not accept your version why there has been intrusion” by Communist forces into Thailand. Rusk had cited the increase of Communist guerrillas infiltrating North Vietnam into 'Thailand as one of the reasons for the U.S. stand in Southeast Asia. Rusk noted that “we have undertaken not the task of a world policeman but certain aspects of it.” Statements by Fulbright and Rusk, and their answers to one another, consumed the first 40 minutes of the hearing which although scheduled as dealing with the administration’s foreign aid requests was, actually intended by both sides as a full discussion of the war. The committee contains several of the Senate’s most vocal war critics, including Fulbright. Fulbright and Rusk greeted each other cordially, with a handshake and smiles, moments before the session began. Rocky Urged to Announce His Candidacy IN SENATE SPOTLIGHT-Secretary of State Dean Rusk opens his files (left) as he prepares to answer questions of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee today at the Capitol. AP WIrceholM Committee Chairman J. W. Fulbright (right) listens to Rusk’s testimony on the foreign aid budget and Vietnam policy. Robert Larrie, 61, of Detroit, who was struck by a car on Detroit’s West Side Saturday night. Bryce Devere McComb, 30, of 2828 N. Lapeer, Lapeer, who was hit by a car Saturday night on M-24 in Lapeer County’s Mayfield Township. Shirley Ann Tomlinson, 20, of rural Coloma, whose car hit a utility pole and overturned Saturday night on M-52, about a half mile west of M40, in Cass County’s Silver Creek Township. Larry Berg, 19, of Paw Paw, who died yesterday of injuries suffered Friday night in a one-car smashup which claimed the life of another Paw Paw youth, James Martin, 18. The accident occurred on M40 in the village of Decatur. ACCIDENT KILLS 3 Edward Ellengen, 54, president of the General Appliance Division of Gibson Refrigerator Corp; George Goulet, 46-year-old GreenvOle druggist, and Jerry Hammond, 19, of East Jordan, injured fatally Saturday in a two-car crash on U.S. 131, north of Alba, in Antrim County. Injured in the crash were C. J. Gibson Jr., 47, president of Gibson Refrigerator, and Robert Edsall, 40-year-old Greenville attorney. The f o u r Greenville men were en route to Boyne Mountain for skiing. Loma Gayle Kuney, 26, of Adrian, whose car ran off MSS at M99 and hit a tree a mile and a half south of Eaton Rapids, Saturday. Glenn A. Sisco, 12, of Flushing, who was fatally injured Friday night when he was struck by a car while walking along 1-75 expressway near Flint ft search of his missing dog. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 8) NEW YORK (fl - More than 20 top Republicans, summoned to a strategy meeting with Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller at his Fifth Avenue apartment, have urged him strongly to become “an announced and active candidate” for the Republican presidential nomination. A spokesman for the group that included seven governors, three U.S. senators, five congressmen and Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York, said Rockefeller would decide about plunging into the race after consulting with other party leaders in the next few days. Rockefeller, who has maintained he would not be a candidate unless there was a draft, had no comment following yesterday’s two-hour, closed-door strategy session. Gov. Tom McCall of Oi‘egon, one of those at the meeting, said he urged the New York governor to challenge former Vice President Richard M. Nixon in the May 28 Oregon primary. Rockefeller has until March 22 to declare himself out of that election. Sen. Hugh Scott of Pennsylvania read a brief statement to newsmen that said there was “very strong sentiment” that Rockefeller get into the race as “an announced and active candidate.” Asked if all those present had endorsed Rockefeller’s candidacy, Scott said the statement spoke for itself. OTHER CONSULTATIONS A written statement was not given out. Scott read from notes, which he retained. The statement said Rockefeller ‘‘will consult other party leaders in the next few days and his decision will ultimately be made by himself.” The meeting came only two days before voting in tl^e New Hampshire primary. Senate Passes Rights Bill WASHINGTON (AP) - ’The Senate today approved a landmark civil rights bill designed to strike down racial barriers in four-fifths of the nation’s housing. Thh compromise measure, passed after nearly two months of debate, also embraces antiriot provisions, federal protection for civil rights workers, and extended constitutional guarantees for American Indians. 'The Senate passed the bill 71 to 20. Rails Ask Rate Hike WASHINGTON (AP) - The nation’s railroads asked the Interstate Commerce Commission today for freight rate increases ranging from 3 to 10 per cent— with hikes of 5 to 6 per cent «i most food products. ★ ★ * One industry source estimated the total cost of the package at about $500 million—and this is the amount at which the railroads havq set their labor and materials cost increases for the past year. N-Spread Pact Ready GENEVA (UPI) - The United States and the Soviet Union today announced they had completed their final version of a draft treaty to stop the spread of nuclear weapons to other countries. ’The bill was sent back to the House, where its fate is in doubt. ★ ★ ★ Sen. Philip A. Hart, D-Mich., floor maniager for the bill, praised fellow senators for backing the nation's first federal ban on housing discrimination despite mail running heavily against it. ‘POLITICALLY UNCOMFORTABLE’ Hart said he knew colleagues “who would have been politically more comfortable if the issue had crept away to a quiet death and yet who voted to keep it , alive and flourishing.” “The Senate,” he said not to the demands of expediency to the demands of history.” Southern senators, who staged a seven-week filibuster against the bill before the debate was cut off on a fourth and final try, took the position that antiriot and other amendments had made the compromise measure more palatable. There was no effort.to forestall the final vote today. * ★ ★ The Senate had cleared the way for passage with a Cl-19 vote Friday favoring the expanded compromise version. 'The House originally passed the bill last August as a limited measure dealing only with federal protection of minority groups’ constitutional rights. ‘HOUSE VOTE AS IS’ House leaders have indicated they may try to pass the Senate bill as it is rather than risk a possible stalemate by sending It to a Senate-House conference committee for adjustment of differences. In 1966 the House passed a ipore limited open housing mewuvfe which was strangled to death in the Senate by a filibuster. * ★ ★ Now the situation is reversed and there is a question whether the House will accept the Senate bill. Warrant Sought in City Slaying Pontiac police said today they will seek a murder warrant against a city woman accused of the shotgun killing of a 40-year-old man early yesterday. In custody awaiting arraignment later today is Juanita Newby, 31, of 507 California. She was arrested about 1:30 a.m. yesterday, shortly after Oddee Williams of the same address was killed by a Conservatives Raising Voices Spring Road Rules ’The Oakland County Road Commission announced today that it will begin enforcing its springtime weight restrictions at 6 aim, Wednesday. ★ ★ . ★ • Maps showing all county roads where weights have been reduced, as well as all-weather routes, can be obtained by truckers by contacting the Weightmaster Division at thi; Road Commission office, 2420 Pontiac Lake. AP wircphots CONSERVATIVE TALK—State Sen. Robert Huber (left), R-Troy, and 14th District Chairman Richard Durant discuss the agenda Saturday SiS conservatives of the Republican party met at Grand Rapids. Huber was one of the keynote speakers. GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - Michigan’s conservative Republicans, who have watched their influoice shrink with the rise of moderate Gov. George Romney, have served notice on the GOP that they want a greater voice in its affairs. The more moderate Republicans, who firmly control the party’s state machinery, say they doubt the conservatives will succeed. About 200 conservatives met in Grand Rapids over the weekend to form the backbone of a state organization they dubbed United Republicans of Michigan — URM — and to put themselves on record on several state a ' “Mainstream Republicanism,” was how Richard Ehirant, 14th Congressional District chairman and head of the URM, described the new conservative group. “A splinter group . . . the far edge of the party,” retorted John B. Martin, Michigan’s Republican national committeeman. The 200 delegates Saturday adopted a resolution calling for a declaration of war against North Vietnam and an “emphatic and prompt victory policy” in the Southeast Asian struggle. They also called for a great reduction in foreign aid and an ultimatum to North Kotea for return of the intelligence ship USS Pueblo, which was seized by the North Koreans. The conservatives also voted opposition to open housing legislation pending in the Michigan House and Senate. Officers said they found him oh the floor of the living room of the house. He had been shot once in the chest and was pronounced dead on arrival, at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, according to police. A witness told investigators that Williams and the suspect had argued repeatedly throughout ^e day. SHOTGUN FOUND Investigators said they Impounded a shotgun at the scene believed used in die slaying. Winds, Clouds Cool the Area Following a brief peek at spring, winter charged back into the Pontiac area today on the heels of an 8-to-18-mile-per-hour north-northeast wind, bringing with it clouds and lower temperatures. * * * Tonight’s low will fall in the 15-to-23-degree range. The weatherman predicts more of the same for tomorrow as hi^ tenyieratnres are to remain in the 30s. Cloudy skies are due to add to the frosty prog- nostication. Wednesday’s forecast indicates partly cloudy skies with temperatures on the cool side. * ★ ★ Precipitation probabilities in per cen< are; today 5, tonight and tomorrow 10. i ★ ★ ★ Low thermometer reading in downtown Pontiac prim to 8 a.m. was 2$. By 1 p.m. scattered sunshine coaxed the mercuiy to 37. A—2 'i llE PONTIAC PRESS, JMOXDAV, MARC II 11, 1968 s. SEZ WHO now sticks o\il its neck to give you the results of how our nationwide readers would vote in the New Hampshire primary next Tuesday (ballots returned before Romney's withdrawal announcement); DEMOCRATS - 32 per cent of total votes; Johnson 38 per cent, McCarthy 32 per cent, Kennedy 30 per cent. REPUBLICANS - - 42 per cent of total votes; Nixon 38 per cent, Reagan 27 per cent. Rockefeller 11 per cent, Percy 10 per cent, Stassen !) per cent, Romney 5 per cent. OTHERS — 26 per cent of total votes; Wallace 88 per cent, others 12 per cent. * ★ ★ TODAY’S BAUDOT: A move is on to get Congress to repeal its requirement that welfare dependent mothers take job training in order to get welfare benefits. Do you think the requirement should be repealed or should it stand? SHOULD MOTHERS ON WELFARE TAKE JOB TRAINING? Circle only one choice; 1. Repeal the job training requirement. 2. Requirement should stand. 3. Other (specify): Circle your age bracket: Under 25; 25-49; 50 or over. Circle your sex: MALE; FPIMALE Clip box and mail promptly to SEZ WHO.’, Box 207, North Branford, Conn., 06471. (Odtrlbuted by McNaugbt SyndicaK, Inc.) Vietnam Fires 7 Province Chiefs SAIGON (AP) — The South been assigned to the joint gener-iafter the capture of Hue before Vietnamese government today!al staff headquarters in Saigon. Khoa began to get the shakyj fired seven of its 44 province I Khoa had been severely criti-1 government nlachinery movingi chiefs, including its man in Hue.'cized by U S. official's for hiding at all. > i, it was the biggest houseclean-'out in civilian clothes for seven' New chiefs ^Iso were named ing so far as a result of the^ Communists ov-‘^e provinces of Darlac, (ommunLSt lunar new year of- ,, American offi-'B‘"^' Thuan, Vinh Long, Ani fensive^Earlier the government Ba Xuyen and Tuyen rep aced two of its four politi- strick- ^ ^ ^ cally important corps com-..^y then * * * „ L-u everything had been stolen, A new chief also was named Lt. Col. Phan Van Khoa was sometimes twice ” for Quang Due Province, whose replaced as mayor of Hue and head man was killed in a heli- chicf of Thua Thien Province by SHAKY MACHINERY 'copter crash recently I U. c:ol_l.e Van Than, who had It was more than three weeks sources said morej province chiefs would be re- N. Korea Says U.S. i Must Change Stand TOKYO (AP) — North Korea but to take different measures said Monday it may deal "len-toward the crew.” lently” with the crew of the cap-i The article said the Pueblo tured intelligence ship Pueblo if and its 83 crewmen were the United Stales admits the “caught red-handed while per-ship violated Communist territo- petrating grave criminal actSj rial waters, apologizes and guar-against our country” and were antees against a repetition- |subject to North Korea’s laws.! But the North Korean Com-One crewman has died since the; munist party newspaper Rodong ship was captured Jan. 23. | Shinmoon warned that if thej “The criminal acts perpetrat-| United States does not change ed by the crew of the armed spy' Its present stand, the North Ko- si,jp‘are grave,” the party or-i reans “will have no alfernalive gan said. “But heavier responsi-; ■ ' bility rests with the U.S. author-^ I Hies which ordered them to con-' ^ 1. ' jduct espionage and hostile acts' uOCllQS Out 'against our country. I SETS PRICE of Mine ToiJoy BELLE ISLE, Workers will b surface today the men killed in a nearly a week agi The bodies of the Cargill, Inc., mine were . , , , ,,, found Friday, but officials had for such a setllomen , to delav return of the bodies to ■'ofemng apparently o an apol-, li. _• u r. f f ogv made bv the U.N. Corn-make the mine shaft safe for recovery workers. American When the bodies are brought^,.„^y helicopter pilots shat up, G. P. Musso, coroner of ,St. north of the demilitarized Birmingham Area News Commission to Consider Rubbish Transfer Plan BIRMINGHAM - The City Manor, have complained that Commission will again take up'"odor, dust, rodents and traf-the question of a rubbish fie” would depreciate property transfer station at tonight’s values and create a nuisance, meeting at 8. j a public hearing before the The proposal of the commission on the question took Southeastern Oakland County place Jan. 22, but a decision on Incinerator Authority to locate sale of property to the authority the station on what is now city- was postponed to allow further j owned property on Coolidge study of the objections raised. [Road has met with strong ob- ^ j j ^ Kronbach, authority ijections from residents in the manager, stated at that time that the Coolidge site was j Though the closest residences deemed desirable I to the industrially zoned site are the authority’s purpose. 1,400 feet away and separated ★ -a ★ I p J'J 1 railroad tracks, property! in a letter to the commission, K I flnfllflfltP Kronbach further detailed pro- IJ U V<»UI IVIIUUIV Sheffield Estates and Pembroke yisjong would be made at transfer station for dealing Seeks Area Post as {with nuisance problems. * r. XX- MANAGER FAVORS state Representative RhOdeSIOnS j ^ ^en- II O A il recommended that the Pontiac druggist Howard L. riOnCI JL /VIOT© Sale be approved. Kenning said ...................... ^ the authority “has incorporated I the most modern techniques” Tor eliminating nuisances, and HOWARD L. DELL City Druggist NO ADMIRATION HANDICAP - Nothing stops Vietnam War veteran Sgt. Brooks Peoples of Aurora, Colo., and Shane Markie, 2, of Denver from admiring each other’s accomplishments. Shane, son of M. Sgt. and Mrs. Robert W. Markie, wears leg braces because of cerebral palsy. Sgt. Peoples lost his right arm and both legs were fractured when a mine exploded in May 1966. Shane and the sergeant both are being treated at Fitzsimmons General Hospital in ; placed as a result of dissatisfac-jtion among government and U.S. officials with their reaction to the Communist offensive. I The government recently began training 70 officers to become province and district chiefs. All province chiefs are military men. Sources close toj President Nguyen Van Thieu re-i ported recently that he was| ______________ oo—- going to remove the province! lyg'if announceT today that hej chiefs from the direct control of-,yill seek the Republican L,,i O the corps commanders, a move nomination for state represen-' OUT 000/6 Z long urged by U.S. advisers. jtative from the 62nd District.' ! pointed out that reduction in CIVILIANS KILLED jThe distriot comprises most of SALISBURY, Rhodesia (AP) haul distance for city trucks The government military!*^® Rhodesia’s white minority would save the city ?3,600 a command reported that the Viet Active in civic affairs, Dell government today hanged two year. Cong killed 23 South Vietnamese said, “I believe the participa- more black Africans convictedj Also on tonight’s agenda are civilians Sunday in four attacks'tion of citizens in their govern- murder but reprieved nine two proposed amendments to and wounded 33 others. jment should be encouraged. I blacks who had been sentenced the city building code. A bus traveling from Hue to intend to represent the total {q jijg before Prime Minister Ian | The proposals deal with fire Quang Tri struck a Viet Cong!community.” jSmith declared independence in alarm systems in multi-story mine. Eight persons were killed Presently, Dell, 44, of 201 late 1965. residential buildings and elec- and three wounded. 'Draper is’ chairman of the Four other blacks had been irmai wiring. Communist mortarmen Michigan Area Council of Boys’ scheduled to be hanged today, | ------------------ shelled the neighboring villages clubs of America. He served as but the government said clem-| chairman of board of the Pon-|ency for them was still under tiac Boys’ Club for t w o consideration. | years. - * * * I A graduate of Auburn Heights The execution last week of^ High School, he attended Cen-three blacks convicted of mur-| tral Michigan University and-dcr set off a worldwide storm of-the University of M i s so u r i protests. The government’s ac-| College of Engineering before tion today indicated it might be| (Continued From Page One) receiving his degree insetting a pattern of death forj , pharmacy from Ferris State persons convicted of murderj Mary D. Pullings, 10, o Coiiece 3nd clemency for persons con-lWilliamston, whose mother lost Dell has onerated a drugstore dieted of nonfatal terrorist'control of her car in the fog ,t“ BaldZ)oM.ye.r“® fence is mandatory. ' hit a tree. ACTIVE WRITER j Those hanged today were 4 Qf,j pcs DIE In his spare time, Dell Is a Francis Chiresa and Taka Jere-| q, 44. Mary Parker free-lance writer. He has hadjmiah, who were sentenced to|,^g. Belling! 70, and Eloise "etroit, which was of Phu Vinh and Trqong Dong, some 200 miles northeast of Saigon killing 10 persons, one of them an infant, and wounding 10 others. In Northern Quang Tri province, the Communists shelled Dong Ha with some 200 rounds, killing one civilian and wounding three. ' 12 Persons Die in State Traffic Five Children Die in Detroit several articles published deal-'death three years ago for slay-| LQST-oIOQ rilG ing with juvenile problems,ling a tribal subeWef. They were'^^^^’^ ^ ^ community activities and the accused of serving as execution-^ DETROIT (JPI - Five chil-| Pharmacy profession. -ers for an African nationalist narc nt a nptmit xx^x,iivwxx in. — l ive ei.ii-1-----------—• three other cars at a Detroit dren in one family perished as! He is a member of Elks|party and shooting their victim I The fire struck their frame house'Lodge 810, the Pontiac Citizens as he slept with h.s wife. ^ gg [ Committee on Youth, county pESpn-E APPEAL church, state and natlonali„_ , .. ., They were hanged despite an Robert Pond, 25, of Wyoming, was Grand Prison Rioters in Oregon Hope for Shelter Tonight Killed were Anthony Ford, i five children. Jerome Ford, 7, and three children by a previous marriage, Henrietta Williams, 8; Deborah Williams, 9, and Dennis Williams, 11. SALEM, Ore. (AP) — Con-them hostage in the prison yard Mrs. Ford told firemen she identify them. A blood sample Rodong Shinmoon gave iio4h-victs who all but destroyed the overnight. vvas awakened by Henrietta will show the cause of death in dication whether the Pueblo it-Oregon state penitentiary but! They had won almost every-while sleeping in a chair. won a change of wardens in a thing they asked, including a Flames had burst out in anoth-blazing riot, hoped there would ‘hey would not be er chair which had been cov- , , prosecuted for their orgy of fire,Iered with a plastic material. jbv.hell,ntotb.ml«,gw. ,:i„j.„.k„aklng and .n,vshtagjc„,LDREN PANIC I They milled about in the rec-{ ^ , • .1 mother said she tried in Ireation yard under cloudy skies. Prison officials estimated vain to put out the blaze, the jThe ground was moLst from jchildren ran in panic upstairs light'early morning rain shower.! * * * -in the two-story house and she The overnight low was 42 de- George W. Randall, state di- ^an across the street to seek „ , grees. I rector of corrections, agreed to | help. Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report - demands nresented bv six! Firefighters from a fire sta- PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Variable cloudiness and a little Hoye Cupp, named acting representing the prison tion only two blocks away colder today, tonight and tomorrow. Highs today .33 to 38. Lows warden as one of the ™«ves^ ^ house an inferno, innicrhl I!! In 91\ WinHc nnrfh fn nnrthpn«f X In IR niilpic foH^.V and thrft Pndod Ihp trouble Sundav flamss shooting out of the windows. “There /was no chancq of en C. T. Gladden, 73, who had ' Mary Parish (Coutily), will ^ each case, and then, finally, the self would be returned if the bodies will be given over to the United .Slates met the Commu-grieving families. nist conditions. The Weather today on Detroit’s near east-'- .............. 'nharmaceutical associations He' ^cre nangeu uespue an Robert Pond, 25, of Wyom The childrens rnother, Edna Congressional f"'' clemency from Pope Mich., whose motorcycle Ford, the only other occupan [p.^JJ^ director for t h e ^hit by a train at a Gr in the house, escaped withoutlj^^ Apothecaries ,, Rapids crossing Friday night, injury. ia/ia pad There are more than 100 other. „ „ . i H nnH his wifp Ann havo Africans in Rhodcsian prisons! Pedro G. Torres, 25, of ‘’^^%ondemned to death, and the! Adrian, struck by a hit-run car government is reported reviewhe walked along an Adrian ing all cases in chronological or-|Coad Friday night. r\ 11 T / der from the time they were' ★ ★ * I CittOn I CinK sentenced. Some go back before! Robert B. Ellis, 20, of Birm-the declaration of independence ingham, whose car ran off the /c A November 1965. Thirty AM-Southfield expressway in IS /ADC?II001/60 can nationalists who crossed;Detroit Friday night and hit a iinto Rhodesia from Zambia are | utility pole. KJaxA/ Yrirlr' those awaiting execu-’ Ronald B. Warren, 33, of St. Ill IxCTW I Clair Shores, in a head-on col- Smith’s cabinet at a special lision Fridby night in Macomb NEW YORK (AP) — The U.S. session Sunday considered theiCounty. Army is wondering why one of!cases of 15 condemned Africans,j Bonnie J. Nofs, 19, of Port its 48-ton, M48 tanks was aban-|an official statement said, and Huron, in a car-truck collision doned in the Bronx. nine sentences were commuted'at the intersection of M46 and The Patton tank, of World to various terms of imprison-'M15 in Tuscola County Friday War II vintage, has been sitting !ment. night, atop a trailer truck since Satur- tonight 15 to 23. Winds north to northeast 8 to 18 miles today and that ended the trouble Sunday nrosentpri ahortlv tonight. Tuesday outlook: Partlv cloudy with little temperature morning, told the men by bull-! _ ^ change. Precipitation in per cent: today 5, tonight and tomor- horn this morning he hoped to^f^er midnight yesterday. TJ,10. ■’ " move them inside before night-i , fall, but he added there was a problem in getting them fed. Breakfast was brought over today from the state hospital. The inmates released four guards yesterday after holding urday afternoon. served 15 years. Gladden, ill for six weeks, was not on duty during the riot. The riot started, apparently with no advance planning, Sat- firemen saving the children,” said Fire Chief Charles Quinlan: Cause of the blaze was under investigation, but firemen said one of the children may have been playing with matches. day parked near the Bronx end of the Throg’s Neck Bridge, its! 90mm cannon pointing over the roadway. Saturday night police declared the tank “missing or stolen.” Sunday police learned the $360,000 tank was en route to the Letterkenny Army Depot near Chambersburg, Pa., and that it left the Patchogue, Long Island National Guard armory Friday morning. Final Senate Rights Vote Pushed WASHINGTON (.AP) - Sen-the civil rights bill to the House, to the floor and leaders report- edly hope support of other provisions will outweigh opposition to the open-housing feature. The House passed a more limited' housing measure in 1966 but ate leaders, apparently assured which passed it last August as they face no last-ditch Southern'limited measure dealing only filibuster, are pushing for a with protection of minority quick, final vote on landmark groups’constitutional rights, civil rights legislation. | The Senate has added amend- An overwhelming 61-19 vote ments that would eventually bar!many of its supporters were de-Friday on the bill with its con- discrimination in 80 per cent of'feated in the election that year, troversial open - housing prqvi- the nation’s housing and extend ■*' * * sion cleared the way for final Bill of Rights protection to! The way for Senate enactment schools qr engage in other spe-action today. American Indians. ! of the measure was cleared last'cifically protected activities!. Indicating he has been prom- * / * * ; Monday, after seven weeks of| dwellings except owner-occupied buildings with four or fewer units—and all single-family houses sold through brokers. • Establish federal criminal penalties for interfering by force or threats with the right to vote, serve on juries, use public accommodations, attend public COLD-SINUS Miseriex? «#*•'• good nm ferywl txcltnlv* n«r*liarJ eo l*lt act Initantly and ccnHmiainly to drain and cl.-*hard con* tabint glvM up ta S houn ralinf from pc Allowi you la broertha aoclly — dope wotury uyM an ' SYNA-CLEAR b th# original llia«d ralnaw tnbbl th< (n>m hnod cold cymptoma and cloggori up ainu A TV to tall you oboui SYNA-CLEAR, |uat thii r odvortiting ond product by of EffiKi Introductory Offer Worth *1.50 SimiS-98 M. Saginaw-DRUG DEPT. box of SYNA-CLEAR ]2'a and racoivai If you havo tinw to loll uo c plooaod to hoorlram you. tt and loira »fa SIMMS Drag Oap», PindioM n DIM inow obaoluloly FREE, raauht SYNA^lEAR givo* you, wa would bp Make it a federal crime to cross a state line with intent to incite a riot or to obstruct firemen or policeman engaged in Great exico. Rain is predicted from Texas and colder weather is due from the ;ised that Southern opponents It also wrote in an antiriot debate and maneuvering when a plan no further filibuster. Sen- provision similar to a separate165-32 vote succeeded in shutting ate Democratic 1 e a d e r Mike bill passed by the House last!off debate on the fourth try. jJVlansfield scheduled prompt ac- year. j The 19 opponents Friday in- ;tion on long-delayed money and House leaders said they hoped!eluded 15 Southern Democrats, juppressi^ a riot—or to'make. Senate ethics proposals. to bring the Senate version di-| two Southern Republicans and j^g^gp^pj interstate com- ! Senate action on a pressing rectly to the floor rather than Sens. Robert C. Byrd, H-W.Va., gj. tgggj, to make' supplemental ai>propriation that send it to a House-Senate| and John J. Williams, R-Dd. g^^j g^g firearms, explosives! includes welfare funds for states conference committee where it PROVISIONS and incendiary devices in riots. ' was scheduled later today, could b^ome embroiled in a • Extend to American Indians I Mansfield said he expected con-further stalemate. \^. the protections Of the Bill of Lsideration of ethi« rwommen-yes OR NO „ • Gradually prohibit discrimi-J Rights. Passed unanimously by joalions to begin luesoay. , Rggj,g ^gjg g„iy tomation in the sale or rental of the Senate last year, this por-i I BACK TO HOUSE | accept or reject the entire pack-'housing. By Jan.’l, 1970, itjtion has been stalled in thej I Senate approval would return-age if it were brought directly jwpuld affect all multi-unit] House Judiciary Committee. | 4 All This Week at Simfns [ /me » r Compleie WATCH OVERHAUL with PART^ ,ond LABOR ‘ this price . . . your watch will I disassembled, cleaned and oiled, -adiysled and timed oloetronically. Genuine factory parts used ond you get full year guoranlee on labor. Parts include stems, crown, . . moinspring or balance staff at this price. 5 *Ru«twd wgtchDir outomoticiy cpUndon, caiwf and wokh'bondt at small axtro cot OVERHAUL and WATCH CLEANIMG THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH^ 1, 1968 ‘SUPER SIMMS’Camera Dept. Gives The Best Deals Around... Hero’s More Proof First Combat Test Near Six Fills Due for Viet Action WASHINGTON (AP) — The The plane also carries ad-demonstrate to critics the TFX That's right, you 90 around looking for d*aU and h«r» ‘u® ‘^o^'^'anced electronic gear to jamidea works well. Clark M. Clif- right at SUPER SIAAMS. And you'll got tho fi<»hfpr.hnn,hpr ----------------=_ il if yc" *-. • 1 Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. 1 0”" 'til' U TONITE Til I Bp TUE. & WED. Hours Jm 9AM.toS;3QP.M. host doal if you know Supor Simms is whoio you go. Spociols Tonito, Tuos. and Wods. only. UAMtRA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS 14orth Vietnam this month. ^ allowing the combat test to 1 T’h,. FIRST UNIT continue despite risks this ad- mSl967 is cloakS in secrecy The Air Force has been train-fighter-bomter ^ ^.>der the code name “Harvesting its first Fill unit at Nellis since last summer. |hus made available to the ene-j McNamara was anxious totny for study.' Reaper.” Cartridge Tape Player Portable 2-Track But it is known about six of the swing-wing FlllA aircraft will fly soon from Nellis Air Force Base, Nev., to Thailand. The FlllA will get its first combat test against bomb targets in North Vietnam shortly after that, sources say. NAVY VERSION . The main controversy involving the TFX centers on a Navy! version of the aircraft which is| reported sUll overweight. The' Navy plane is due to undergo carrier tests, but Navy officials already are looking at aircraft alternatives. ^ There have been few recent! complaints from the Air Force about the FlllA. ★ ★ ★ ! Former Secretary of Defense, Robert S. McNamara forced the! TFX on the Air Force and Navy! in an effort to save money byi i developing a standard aircraft [for both services. | The big feature of the Fill [ I is its adjustable wing—when moved close to the fuselage, the plane can travel up to 1,650 ' miles an hour; with the wing ex- j tended outward the plane can be !throttle(j down to below 150 lm.p.h. for missions requiring [slow speed. ■ j SUPERSONIC SPEED ] The Air Force TFX is de-j jsigned to roar in (m targets at 1 I altitudes of several hundred feet and at supersonic speed. ★ ★ ★ I This capability is coupled with unique terrain-hugging radar 'which permits the plane auto-!* matically to duck in and out of high and low places, making it I tougher for the ground offenses | 'to knock them down. 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Tape Recorders Model TP32A transistorized recorder with dual track iW reel size, remote control mike, eor-phone and batteries. $1 holds. 1398 'PANASONIC RS760 SOLID STATC SterM Tape Recorder |159»5 Regular $I79.9A seller — solid state recorder with 3 speed copston drive, vertical or horizontal opero->n, 2 pencil type mikes, separate tone and volume eon-)l tor eoch channel, lvw> built in 6" oval speakers, position digital tape counter, 2VU meters, pause mtrol, sounloye of A1 Martin Real Estate, died Friday. Surviving are his wife. Celeste; a daughter, Mrs. Terry K. Lang of Lake Orion; two sons, John A. with the U.S. Navy in Hawaii and James L. at home; two grandchildren; and three sisters. Mrs. Charles Shepherd MILFORD TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Charles (Lily H.) Shepherd, 77, Girl OH 3)omlm 3)onali Joktu U Service That is Competent and Gracious Every detail of our services must be most competent. This is assured by careful professional standards and our high business ethics. Experience is also in our favor. ^hont rTt federal 4.45i1 OtrOur(Prei J)omLson- J^okns 855 WEST HURON ST. PONTIAC Hillside will be 1 p.m. Wednesday a t Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford with burial in Milford Memorial Cemetery. Mrs. Shepherd, a member of Milford Presbyterian Church, died yesterday. She was a retired librarian for the City of Detroit. Surviving besides her husband are a son, Morris C. of Bloomfield Hills; three hrandchildren; three brothers; and four sisters, including Mrs. Dorothy Pearson of Milford. Mrs. Delores I. SnydSr BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Delores I. Snyder, 36, of 1932 Devonshire will be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at C. J. Godhardt Funeral Jlome, Keego Harbor . Burial will be in Roseland Park Cemetery Berkley. Mrs. Snyder, a secretary at Vulcan Laboratories, Pontiac, died Saturday. Surviving are her, parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Brocher of Pontiac; three children, E., Michael and Anita Snyder, all at home; a sister, Mrs. William Johnston of Union Lake; and a brother. Wounds Kill City Marine Pfc. David C. Moore Was Hit at Quang Tri A Pontiac Marine, Pfc. David C. Moore, died March 2 from extensive gunshot wounds received while in action in Quang Tri, Vietnam. He was the son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd C. Moore of 153 Lincoln. Moore, 18, enlisted in the Marines last August after graduating from Pontiac Central High School. He was a member of the school’s marching band and beionged to the First Baptist Church. Moore was home on leave last December after completing advanced b-aining at Camp Pendleton,! Calif. He then left for Vietnam. Surviving besides his parents are two brothers, Paul of “ Paris, Ind., and Gary at hf a sister, Kathleen at home; and a grandfather, George P. Moore of Orchard Lake. Eager Eaters Argentines dine with such gusto that foreigners sometimes call their nation the “land of the stretched belt.” GOP Names Director for 19th District The appointment of a West district directors in coordinating Bloomfield Township physician the efforts of the city and as the Republican party organ- township directors, jzation directorA* Montante, a graduate of ^ ' I Wayne State University and Medical School, is a member of |Mt, Carmel Mercy Hospital staff and medical director of the Bertha Fisher Home for the Aged. He is a member of the Inter-Professional Committee of the I Wayne County Medical Society die Belt. He MONTANTE and a delegate to the Michigan succeeds Thomas Nolan, who state Medical Society, resigned. j worked in the 17th Cartwright also announced c o n g r e s s i o n a 1 District Tnmnrrniif convention Republican organization before Neei lOmOrrOW March27willbeheldat8 p.m.: 19th District m the Oakland County Court-^ in West Bloomfield Township. DAVID C. MOORE in the 19th Congressional District was announced today by John Cartwright, district chairman. He is Dr. Joseph R. Montante, 3126 Mid- Tax Protest Group The Oakland County Homeowners and Taxpayers Association will hold a public meeting at 8 p.m. tomorrow in the Pontiac Northern High School’s Little Theater, Arlene near Perry. Organized in 1962, the group is presently leading a fight against rising taxes. ★ ★ Plans are being made by the association to have a large house Supervisors’ Auditorium. A separate convention will be Wednesday in the Oakland County Courthouse. held the same night by the conservative element in the district. Headed by Christian Powell and Arnold Jones the group will meet at 8 p.m. in the First Federal Savings and Loan Association of Oakland auditorium in Pontiac. The split between the two groups occurred a year ago. Cartwright’s group, however, is irthlring ‘ attend'^r Board* of Supervisors meeting at 10 a.m. the official voice in the district. Cartwright said Montante will work with the legislative The 18th Congressional District Convention will be held March 27 at 8 p.m. at the Seaholm High School in Birmingham, according to John A. Gibbs, District chairman. The conventions are being held to elect delegates and alternates to the spring state convention in Detroit April 26 and 27. if ir * The 18th District will elect 110 delegates and the 19th district. REDUCED THRU SATURDAY! Plush accent rugs in two of our most popular styles TROr ELEGANT LOOKING ALL NYLON CUT AND LOOP PILE in the classic Greek key design will grace all decors—modern or traditional. In brilliant hues of olive, teak, gold, white, blue, wine and red. Machine washable in lukewarm water. 'SCANDIA' ALL RAYON DENSE, SHAG PILE RUG makes a bold color splash in a mdst luxurious way. It's one and a half inches deep! Just machine wash in lukewarm water to keep it fresh as new. Color drenched shades like Finlandia green and more! REG. 3.98, NOW 2.99 24"x36" REG. 4.98, NOW 3.99 24"x36" REG. 5.98 NOW 4.99 27*x48* REG. 10.98 NOW 8.99 36*^60- REG. 17^98... NOW 14.99 48‘Sc72* REG. 6.98 ...NOW 5.99 27^*48** REG. 12.98 NOW 9.99 REG. 19.98 NOW 15.99 48"k72» Shop Till 9 P.M. ... • 13.MIIE* WOODWARD Monday Thru Saturday . . . • 15240 GRAND RIVER • fort a EMMONS CHARGE IT! THE PONTIAC PRESS, MQNDAy, MARCH 11. 1968 Lenten Guideposts — 11 Abnormal Little Sister Taught Joy of Love (EDITOR’S NOTE — This is The second winter came. Niki the 11th tn a series of 40 again went through the cold cy-articles to be published by The cle. In December she caught a Pontiac Press during L e n t. cold that seemed to linger on Each story is one of faith in and on. , acfion. told by a sincere person. Breathing became difficult for Some contributors are famous. „rder for her to others relatively unknown.) By BOBBIE WAGNER in someone’s arms. Mom, Dad Student, Chilton. Wisconsin and Patty, my older sister, took Niki Wagner was born i„ turns spelling each other. .luly. which gave the rest of our ■ u. i. lu n family plenty of time to spoil One mght when hey were all her before we ‘“-ef ‘hey could not carry themselves, much less Niki, Mom called me to make a few' rounds. struggle for air And so it was that I scooped withdrawn. We were halfway'I could not even wring out a home before he told us the tear. Inews, “Niki died tonight.” | We had a small, private fu-Patty broke into hysterical neral with just the family. Only sobs. ‘‘No! No! No!” she cried. ;then did the truth, the full, hon-j She cried on my shoulder, and iest, deep-down, hurting truth of| her death hit me. Like a tw-lstor professional golfer, tells of , j rent, the tears flowed down my ffrcat changes in his life I cheeks. I had never cried like come when he turned to I that before in my life, and' Ichurch and began to live don’t expect ever to do it again. family. j Tomorrow — Billy Casper,I All You Can Eat! FISH& CHIPS Aho Carry-Out m PARK-INN REST. Corner of Orchard Lake Road and Telegraph WAGNER up this little girl into my armsi and, as I walked around the living room, I could feel her ! struggle for air. This little bundle was the sister of whom I had been ashamed, the one the doctors on love and attention and whose own bright-spirited, outgoing , love was constant. started school in the fall. She was the seventh girl of 10 children, and her name had been deter-mined long before her birth. Dad, of course, had wanted all bovs, so that names. ^ It’s a family tradition to spoii ^hi^s was Niki, hopeles^y In-the youngest Le, and Niki was . '^*'0 thrived no exception. She was small and very dark. Her hair was long, and her face was a small oval of red cheeks and almond ★ ★ ★ | eyes. How could I be ashamed of a | Winter came swiftly but left i whose radiance was so j slowly. Niki caught an unusual bright that she could make me j share of colds and was con- even though I had a great i stantly ill. homework to do, who ... could make a grouchy, grumpy Dad smile? ^ SHE WANTS NIKI I Always, Niki offered me love. | I had returned humiliation. Now I wanted Niki as she was. ‘‘Breathe, Niki. Live, Niki, I live!” j The next morning dawned clear and cold, but Niki (and 1!) had gotten over the hump. ' She seemed to slowly regain spec*. planned for ear,, * spring. -Ti.- 'Pbe summer passed and Niki 1 <1. a tbut niohf seemed healthier than ever. She walk^ in the door that night, all nine of us kids knew some- thing was amiss Later, at he fascinated her. Her V(^ supper table Dad broke the newsto us.Niklwasmongolold. ^ ncura e. Mom and Dad were deter- showed them! mined to keep Niki at home. She also seemed more deter-They dug in to keep our home mined than ever to get around, happy and normal, and we chil- by herself. She was very inde-1 dren were to resume a normal pendent, even though coddled acceptance of our little sister, j by members of the family. The younger kids did not, And Dad, who is not the emo- After a prolonged cold, the situation became gradually worse. The doctor had to be called. His diagnosis; severe dehydration. SHE FAILS TO GAIN Niki, who never had been heavy or large, paid in weight. At six months, she had the weight of a three- or foui^ month-old baby. So a trip to a know what the fuss was about, but it hit us older ones where it hurt — our pride. Why hadn’t God sent us a normal sister? > “Our typing pool’s jammed!” “Our billing is late!” ' “I need a steno . tomorrow at 8!” Everyone’s calling for Manpower \ White Glove Girls iThe very best in temporary t oflice help 1338 Wide Track West Pontioc FE 2-4386 REFRIGERATOR RANGE tional type, would find immense' : joy in a smile from Niki. Herj : pudgy little arms would encircle : his neck before he knew it, and HUMILIATION a cold, wet kiss plopped on hisj : “How is Niki?” friends would ,'^^s a sure-fire way to - : ask. I would give a brief an-|^f^ ® laugh and a toss into thei j swer. I could not tell them the truth. I was humiliated at the I On a night that I shall never thought of their knowing that I forget, Patty and I went to a j had' a hopelessly retarded sis-1 basketball game. We won, and ter. “God,” I pleaded, “please j when my oldest brother came, make her well, please.” to pick us up, he seemed very OUKRETTER ,, One of Mkhiffon's Originat Dj«count«rf FREE DELIVERY. 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FE 3>T051 Fretter’s Southfield on Telegraph Road Just South of 12 Mile Rd. 358-2880 Fretter’s Oakland 411 W. 14 Mile Road Opposite Oakland Malt 585-5300 Optn Daily 10 to 9-Sunday 10 to 1 \, i THE PONTI AC PRESS. MONI)A ^ . J\1 AR('H 11, 1 nr,8 Legislator Feels Almost Any Riot Law Would Be Improvement By BOB VOCES LANSING (AP)-If more thani 30 people rushed out on the field to join in a fight during a' Detroit Tiger baseball game, it could be called a riot under Michigan’s present riot law. Existing law also calls for the mayor and aldermen to circulate among rioters to demand that they disperse. ★ ★ * In a related provision of Michigan’s penal code, shouting in the streets of a village can be a breach of peace. For the act of rioting Itself, I the law now provides no penality. Officers must make an ar-|rest on the basis of some criminal act or misdemeanor connected with the riot. SEEK UPDATED LAW Michigan lawmakers currently are trying to update the state’s riot law. The Senate has approved and sent to the House a bill which defines the crime of riot. ★ ★ ★ Under the bill it would be riotous for five or more persons, acting in concert, “to wrongful- ly engage In tumultous or violent conduct and thereby intentionally or recklessly cause or create a serious risk of causing public terror or alarm.” The current law is completely unenforceable,” said Sen. Robert Richardscm Jr., R-Sag-inaw, chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee. ‘ALMOST ANYTHING’ | “Almost anything we could i come up with would be better I than the law we have now. But we hope to get a much better law.” I Another item in the law as it: exists now would seem to en-| courage counter rioters. It reads: “Private persons may forci-ibly interfere to suppress a riot or resist rioters.” ★ ★ * Sunday baseball as such, the law says, is not a breach of the peace but may become one. An attorney general’s opinion has held: “A crowd exceeding 30 persons assembled on Sunday to witness a baseball game or for any similar purpose, if riotous' or tumultous,, may be orderedicity is a breach of the peace.” by a sheriff to disperse: refusal Suppose a little old lady going to obey the order renders per-^shopping was caught in a riot sons so assembled liable to ar-jand an officer ordered her to rest and prosecution.” “assist in seizing and securing OTHER RUUNGS ,such riotors . i . ■ Anyone refusing such a com- Olher rulmgs by attorney gen- mana - shall be deemed to be eral s opinions have held: | „ne of the riotors or persons un-' ‘Shouting in a village street lawfully assembled” under the between 9 and 10 o’clock at present statute night so loudly that one may be. Meanwhile, the present law heard on another street 150 fe^t [ requires a close and accurate away IS a breach of the peace.”^count by police before they can [declare any unruly assemblage; “The wanton discharge of a a riot, firearm in the public street of aj Present definition says riotors are “any persons to the number of 12 or more being armed with clubs or other dangerous weapons, or any persons to the number of 30 or more, whether armed or not...” Nearly every elected official has to circulate amorfg riotors and order them to disperse un-l der present law. | In addition to state and dtyi police and sheriff’s officers, this includes the mayor and aider-men of a city, the supervisor of a township, trustees and mem-| bers of a common council of a village and any justice of the peace living in a city, township or village. The law does allow these public officials to consider their own safety a bit, however, adding that they shall “go among the people so assembled, or as near to them as may be with safety...” ★ * ★ Public officials who chicken out and fail to perform their duty in this manner can be found guilty of a misdemeanor and sentenced to up to six months in jail or fined up to $2,50. Monday and Tuesday Only - March 11 and 12 yE0E0lER8 Save 82” - BOYS’ Dress Cotton Slaoks Some Iteirts Limited Quantities - No Phone or Mail Orders Accepted Don’t strain-use Wards 6-ft. ladder Save! Men’s reg. 99” Brent® stretch socks REG. 12.99 • Hiii/i for Mofety-fx-cretin /ISA nafety codm • Detigned for painting-extra-large pail ahelf • Made for long teear — alum, conilructipn The convenience, safety and economy of this lightweight ladder make it a 'must'for your home. Eliminate painful back injury from reachirm for corners — see this rugged ladder at Wards today! 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Keep all those dustcollecting surfoces in I your cqr clean with this cotton flannel cloth! Bound edge; 2 feet square! OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:AQ A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 682-4940 A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1968 See Bob Hope soon in “The Private Navy of Sgt. O'Farrell” Bob (tee-fbr-two) Hope saysTly bigtoFlorida-RyDeltar Size isn’t everything. But when world’s biggest jets to Florida, Plan savings. Credit cards? Of you’ve got the Biggest Jets and —Super DC-8s. Only Delta’sgot course! For reservations, call the Biggest Schedules, it sure ’em. At regular jet fares! So if Delta, Air Lines or see your helpsyourscore. Delta’s always you want to get on the green in Travel Agent, been big on personal service, a big way, fly Delta. And let But this winter they have the Delta figure your big Family Best thing that ever happened to air travel Winter season schedules Detroit to Florida TO MIAMI Leave Arrive 11:42a Thru-Jet 11:53a conn. 12:34p NS 4:09p Super-8 NS 5:36p Thru-Jet 9:46p Thru-Jet 9:33p Super-8 12:34a Super-8 NS 2:17a Thru-Jet l:19a(Jues.only)NS Day 573.00; Night $57.00 FT. LAUDERDALE: only 40 mins, away via direct transfers 7:30a 8:00a 10:00a l:35p l:55p 5:10p 5:55p 10:00p 10:00p 10:45p TO TAMPA/ST. PETE/ CLEARWATER Leave 7:10a 7:30a l:55p 5:55p 10:00p Arrive 11:35a Thru-Jet 10:32a Thru-Jet 5:22p conn. 8:13p Super-8 NS 1:04a Thru-Jet Day $63.00; Night $50.00 TO W. PALM BEACH 8:00a 12:27p Day $70.00 TO ORUNDO Leave Arrive 8:00a l:35p 5:10p 9:31p 10:00p 2:10a Day $61.00; Night $50.00 TO JACKSONVILLE 8:00a 11:09a l:55p 5:09p 5:10p 9:14p 8:15p 12:55a Day $55.00 All flights to Jacksonville, Only on Delta—the $9 million Super DC-8^world’s biggest jetliner. 195 passengers in a cabin built to accommodate over 250—six stewardesses assure Delta's high standards of personal service. Save on Delta’s economy fares] Discounts of as much as 25% on Delta's Night Coach fares, up to 40% or more on Family Plan. Ask for details. NS; Non-stop All fares shown Tourist. add tax WofitMA sSedioit Just Afraid fo Say So Wishes Mom Wo.uld Act Her Age ABBY MRS. WILLIE LINDSEY AND APRIL Today's Woman Navy Wife Works, Waits ^ By JANET ODEIX Tlio^ands and thousands of women today are in the same situation as Addie Unds^ — they are servicemen’s wives, 'njeir husbands are in some branch of the armed forces, either in the U.S., in Europe or in Vietnam. Not all wives can live on army posts or naval bases, or even pear them. And when the men are shipped out, the wives can’t follow. ★ ★ ★ So like Mrs. Willie Lindsey of Gillespie Sfcffl®t, they work at jobs, take care of children and count the days until their husbands come home. appealing APRIL The Lindseys have a small charmer named April who will be two July 7. Her father was here at her birth and has had a month’s furlough since then. But it’s her mother who has had the care and the joy of these baby years. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Lindsey thinks she’s lucky. Her grandmother, Mrs.- Nancy Hall of Nevada Street, takes care of April five days a week while Addie Lindsey works as a claims development clerk at the Pontiac Social Security office. “I raised my own children and some of my grandchildren and now I’m taking care of my great grandchild,” Mrs. Hall comments. But her smile and the obvious pride in her voice belie her complaint. , April’s mother says, "It’s the biggest blessing to have a relative to take care of my child. I know she’s not getting just any kind of care, but is being raised in a good atmosphere.” Each night, April is picked up by her mother and they go home to their small apartment. She gets needed attention and special loving during the time they are there. Housework has to be sandwiched in on. the weekends. ■A * * A lyric soprano, Addie sings in her church choir. She is taking an upholstery class at the YWCA and goes to an occasional movie. She likes to attend musical events. Coming to Pontiac at the age of five, she graduated from Pontiac Central High School and took a business course at Pontiac Business Institute. She wants to get more education to upgrade her skills and is considering college sometime in the future. Her engineer husband encourages her in this aspiration. He is nearly through with his master’s degree. * * * Having her husband in the service, even though he is now based in Long Beach after his Viet stint, makes life hard for this attractive young woman. And having April cry when she leaves her hurts. But it’s something to be endured and she’s making the best of it. In this she is not alone. By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY; My problem is my mother. She is 55 years old, recently took off about 50 pounds, dyed her hair silver blonde, bought a new car, and now she thinks we are “girl friends.” Abby, mother never got along with my fattier. They’ve had the same arguments for 35 years so have never had any social life together, ^ which has made mother a bitter person. She never joined any clubs or organizations, afft now she wants to go around with me and my crowd. She calls me all the time and is forever including herself in my plans. The latest Is she wants to join a club I belong to. Abby, there are no women HER age in it — only women MY age. I cannot stop her from joining, and my friends won’t blackball her because they think I want her in it. So what can I do? STUCK WITH MOTHER DEAR STUCK: Perhaps your mother has developed this “girl friend” attitude because you haven’t discouraged her from “palling” around with you. Try to get her to act her age, and make some friends of h«- own. If you have to tell her in more direct language, do so. But do it with love and gentleness. * ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: There is a girl in one of my classes who is really groovy. But she has one bad fault that really turns me off. She uses dirty language and she swears! She is so nice to look at, and she’s a' bright girl, too, but what a big fat disappointment she was when she started to talk to me. When will girls learn? Guys sometimes use rough language to each other, but no fellow likes to hear words like that coming out of a girl’s mouth. How about a few words of wisdom on the subject from you, Abby? E. C. DEAR E. C.: You’ve said it, and you’ve said it well. A wo'rd to the wise. ★ ★ ★ DEAR ABBY: The letter from the young mother whose husband “fussed” so at their two small sons that the boys always left the dinner table in tears prompts me to write this. There is a solution to that problem, and I hope you will be fair and print it. The father who has put in a hard day’s work has a right to come home to a peaceful, quiet dinner. Young children should be fed first, and mother and father (and the adult children) should enjoy their dinner while the young ones are otherwise occupied elsewhere. To force “togetherness” at the dinner table with young children who have not yet learned proper table manners, and who talk and scream and disrupt the meal with fights and arguments, is unfair to the adults. ★ ★ ★ While children are learning how to behave at the table, they may be rewarded occasionally by having dessert with the “grown-ups.” (This can be an incentive for them to learn table manners and propier conduct.) And only when they are capable of eating a full meal with the family should they join the adults. Mother and father and grown children should not have to put up with ill-mannered, restless, tired, and hungry children during meal time. ^ A FATHER * * * CONFIDENTIAL TO “THE HAIRY ONE”: No girl who is old enough to be “embarrassed” by a heavy growth of unsightly dark hair on her legs should have to “beg” her mother to let her shave it off. After all, when a boy has enough hair on his face to shave, he doesn’t have to “beg” his mother to let him shave, does he?” Norman Cheals Tell Daughter's Betrothal Mr. and Mrs. Norman L. Cheal of Bar-chester Drive announce the engagement of their daughter, Barbara Jeanne, to Raymond George, Olle. The Iwide elect, a senior at Michigan State University, and her fiance, who has attended the University of Alaska^ are planning a June wedding. ★ ★ ★ 'The prospective bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Raymond Olle of Berkley and the late Mr. Olle. CONFIDEN'HAL TO FORT WORTH WILLY: If you've made up your mind, go ahead and good luck to you. But remember, no man ever works as hard for his money as the man who marries for it. ★ * * Everybody has a problem. What’s yours? For a personal reply write to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056, enclose a s t a mp e d , self-addressed envelope. * * ★ For Abby’s booklet, “How to Have a Lovely Wedding,” send $1.00 to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. 0. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. Mr. and Mrs. Marshall Van Riper of Muskegon announce the betrothal .of .their .daughter, Daughn, to Kenneth G. Forbes. He is the son. of the Walter R. Forbeses of Island Park Drive. The bride elect is a senior at Michigan State University. Wants Party H on 35th Year to Fete Folks By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: This summer my parents will be celebrating their 35th wedding anniversary'. I would like very much to have a buffet party for them at a nice restaurant and engage a three piece orchestra. My mother likes the idea and wants me to go ahead with it. My question is, do you think the guests would criticize the idea of a party since the anniversary is not a 25th or 50th?— Carol R. Dear Carol: Not at all. One of the loveliest anniversary parties I've been to was a 35th. Twenty-five and 50 years of marriage .seem to be the traditional occasions for celebrations, but I know of no reason that other anniversaries should not be made memorable if the couple feels so inclined. OLD BEAU Dear Mrs. Post; I have a question about my duty for attending a w^e and funeral. In college, I was engaged to this fellow, but after an argument we broke up. Later on I married someone else and he married a college classmate of mine. His father is near death. What is the proper thing at this time for me to do? Do I go to the wake or is It better that I stay away and just send a card? — Ellen Dear Ellen; Let sleeping dogs lie. You are both married to people who might possibly be worried that an old spark would be rekindled if you and your old , beau met. Write him a personal note of sympathy — not just a card — and stay away from the wake. BUTTER PLATE Dear Mrs. Post: Recently while dining in a restaurant, the butter plate was placed on the left of me. I suggested to the waitress that it would be more comfortable for me on the right because when reaching over my soup plate my sleeve would get into the soup. She said that the butter plate and butter are always placed on the left and it is improper to do otherwise. Is that an international rule for setting tables all over the world, or has this rule been modified recently?—Josepnlne Dear Josephine: l^ince one has to use both hands to butter bread or rolls — one to hold it and one to spread the butter — your left sleeve would be just as inclined to get into your soup as the right. The wditresfe is right — the butter plate belongs on. the left side, and the beverage glass on the right aide, above the dinner plate. This Is trua in the United States and every other country I have visited. Music Set to Motion in Dance Provides Delight to Eye and Ear MRS. WALLACE C SPARKS H Mory A, Clouse Exchanges Vows Community United Presbyterian Church was the setting Saturday evening for the wedding of Mary Alice Clouse and Wallace Cffliy Sparks II. Gowned in an Empire sheath of silk organza highlighted with a lace bodice, the bride carried a cascade of orchids and Stephanotis. A crystal tiara secured her bouffant veil. ★ * * Diane Clouse assisted her sifter as maid of honor with Kay Mattone, Deborah Sparks and Mrs. Harvey Gam-mage as bridesmaids. At the bridegroom’s side were Twana Drake, best man, and ushers John Druktenis, Mel Garcia and Charles Bon-nell. , A buffet dinner in the church parlors followed the vows. • ★' .»■ The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John Clouse of Rollins Street and son of, Mr. and Mrs. Wallace C. Sparks of Albuquerque, N.M., will travel to northern Michigan for their honeymoon. By BERNICE ROSENTHAL The Dance was the watchword of the day at yesterday afternoon’s concert of the Pontiac Symphony Orchestra. The third in the regular subscription series was presented under the direction of Felix Resnick at Pontiac Northern High School auditorium to a large and receptive audience. The orchestra was host to and provided accompaniment for the Detroit City Ballet in a performance of “The Intruder”, six episddes from Delibes famous ballet “Sylvia.” Artistic director and costumer for the Ballet is Marjorie Hassard, with choreography by Michael Lopuszanski. ★ * * • It was definitely Mr. Resnick’s day. A community orchestra approaches with hesitation the great symphonies in the standard repertoire, because of lack of both rehearsal time and skilled professional personnel. In Beethoven’s Seventh Symphony, Mr. Resnick not only met the challenge, but produced a performance of great skill, artistic integrity and sensitive interpretation. STRINGS The string section was smooth and unlabored all through the difficult passages; the attacks and releases were technically clean and well taken; the nuances and inner parts were well established. Although the first movement was a trifle slower than standard, the resulting assurance was well worth the compromise. niB famous Allegretto was performed with spirit and proper gravity- The third and fourth movements positively soared and produced some of the finest playing ever performed by the, brehestfa. The wind sections, always a strong point with the orchestra, were at a new high level in these’movements. Malcolm Arnold’s “Tam O’Shanter” Overture opened the program with witches dancing and whips cracking and a grim chase to illustrate Robert Burns’ famous poem. It was a noisy and rousing piece of program music, well played and well received. The second half of the concert was devoted to the Detroit City Ballet, which the orchestra accompanied from the pit. Although the space is small and cramped for the orchestra, the sound that emerges from'that part of ' auditorium is true and very much alive. DANCERS Fifteen young dancers, steeped in all the intricacies of the classical ballet technique, danced competently and precisely through the six episodes of the “Intruder.” The costumes and backdrop were beautifully conceived, and the wholes performance was a delight to the eye and ear. Calendar TUESDAY Churchwomen of Christ Church Cranhrook, 10 a.m., in the church. Rev. Stanley Stefancic and Judge John C. Emery will speak. Open to the public. « North Snhurhan Alumnae of Alpha Gamma Delta, 8 p.m., Birmingham home of Mrs. Arthur Schneider Jr. Vernon Fitch wi “The Importance of Wills.” Cranhrook Music Guild, 8:30 p.m., Cranbrook House. Gilbert Ross and Eugene Bossart, faculty artists of University of Michigan, in an all-Bethoven program. B-2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1968 || Sfie s Spending too Close to Income Now ^"^1®>URI^TER LU66A6E SALE! ilP®iliilPSs^S 26% TO 33% OFF tri-taper 8000 series tor men and women Women’s styles in blue, dusk, fawn or while. Men’s styles in dusk or brown. reg. sale traincase ...........................29.95 22,9$ 21’* weekend ........................29-95 22.9$ 24’* pullman................•.......56.95 283$ 27’* pullman.........................46.95 3$.9$ 50’* overseas .......•..............56.95 43,9$ .women’s wardrobe.....................46.95 303$ 21’* men’s companion.............-...29.95 22.9$ 2-suiter ............................41.95 36.9$ 5-suiter...........•................51.95 393$ Use a Lion Charge Plan — With bptions Miracle Mile — Telegraph Road Daily 9:30 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. By MARY FBELEY Consultant in Money I Management Dear Mary Feeley: Will you please help me with two problems: Set up a budget for me. And tell me how I can explain to| my four children and 14 g r a n d ch 11 -dren that I’ll have to put a^ stop to all the birthday and Christmas gifts that .keep me| broke! I am in my 50s, live alone ii that rents for $95. My take-home pay is $259 per month. Other expenses are: utilities, in eluding was heat, $24; life in-surdnee, $6; necessary drugs, $8; car insurance, $187 a year; [state license and city vehicle license, $48 a year. Fortunate-Iv, I have hospitalization, including major medical expenses and life insurance paid by my company. I gave up smoking to save $15 a month—but it’s harder to give I up the children’s gifts. The children are wonderful to me. Mrs. J.K., Chicago [Dear Mrs. K.: You’ve got more than gift problems, it seems to me. There’s just no dodging the fact that your standard of living ignores the limits of your income — which may be strong-minded of you but not very practical. For one thing, that $95 rent; Is high — $65-$70 would make] more sense, considering your other fixed expenses. All told, the ones you list total $15.3 a month. That leaves only $106— for food and household costs, doctor and dentist bills, miscellaneous daily expenses, clothing, car operation, recreation and contributions. And how about some savings.? Allowing $45 a month for food and household operating costs, plus replacements; $25 for cloth-' ing; and $30 for your daily allowance, brings you to the end of the month with a fat $6. I where food and clothing are concerned. But I recommend a move to a less expensive apart-1 ment—and a firm try at cutting! those utility costs. 'The kindest approach to discontinuing the children’s gifts, I think, is an honest statement of the facts—you simply can’t give them anything but love. Dear Miss Feeley: Can you tell me how much in- terest I will have to pay on a $275 loan at six per cent for five tyears and six months? C.N., Madison, Wis. DearC.N.: The cost in interest will be $90.75. Dear Miss Feeley: I recently heard that men in the Armed Forces have to pay all Income taxes, federal and state, and all the tax on Interest I E and H bonds when they are cashed. Is this true? V.C.R., Michigan Reader Dear V.C.R.: ’True. However, service personnel and Red Cross workers in Vietnam have an automatic extension in paying income taxes. Such taxes become due 180 days after they leave Vietnam. Or, if hospitalized, 180 days after leaving the hospital. PTA Mrs. Vera Shrwm of Mott Street announces the engagement of her daughter, Velda, to Pvt. Jerome D. SHvey, USA, who is currently stationed at Fort Rucker, Ala. He is the son of Mrs. Lucy Silvey and Orville Silvey of Vance-burg, Ky. Seen during a recent trip to Scottsdale, Ariz., are the Maurice Barnetts of Rolling Rock Drive. TW Old ? PONTIAC Tuesday Franklin;7:30 p.m. Finance! Study Council to report on needs of Pontiac schools In-conjunction with millage increase. Kennedy; 7 p.m. Slides on millage issue featured with question and answer period following. Francis Webster and Vem Schiller to present program. Public is Invited to at- Glass bottles and jars come in tend. Vocal music department more than 13,000 different and concert band to entertain, jshapes and sizes, according to ------------------- jthe Glass container Manufac- Feafhers Havinginstitute.__________________________ Spring Field Day The feather merchants must be having a field day. Feathers, .notably ostrich plume, flutter! through the spring clothes collections. * Some designers sew them on the entire garment for late day and evening. And almost everyone is using feather boa treatments and feathery flounces at! the hem. RENT #! BAND INSTRUMENTS Paymenij Apply to Purcha»* SMILEY BROS. 119 N. Saginaw Pontiac Free Parking-FE 4-4721 Don’t lose yourself in the now. It will make your mar-shuffle! By this, I do not mean riage more exciting and you that you should think only in more interesting to your chil-terms of yourself, but once you dren. It will make you a better lose sight of yourself as an in- citizen and a happier person, dividual, vibrant living will be Keeping in touch with yourself lost to you, and you will not will also act as a strong buffer have as much to give to others, against boredom or loneliness the future when circum- Think of yourself as a person, not just as a wife, a mother or a daughter. This is sometimes difficult to do, with all of the stances change. Your children will not always be with yoU. With life as it is today they may live far away from you obligations, pressures, duties, once they leave home. You also problems and stresses of daily;may lose the person you love living. It is also hard to do be- most. I cause our tendency is to live! ★ ★ ★ for those we love. Sometimes,! How to keep in touch yith however, folks overdo this to yourself? Well, I think that just such a degree that they never taking time to remember who think of themselves. This will you are will be a big help, boomerang, on you and those Everyone must have some time you love. alone, if only a short time daily. The most rewarding thing in Perhaps you will have to get up the world is to have a family or a little earlier before the morn-a person to love, and, to be con- ing family scramble begins, or cerned about them and to make stay up a little later, or when happy. However, it is not emo- you are alone in the house, take tionally healthy to live vicari- a little time, in the midst of ously, only through others. your household chores, to get People are as different as acquainted with yourself, fingerprints, and each human! Investing even once a week soul has its own characteristics, in some study, hobby, interest with which to stamp life. All or activity which is yours, inhumans have an obligation to do dividually, is the answer for so. Each has its own dignity j some. I am thinking especially and inner core of strength. It is | of those young mothers who are a loss to a person, and to those]overwhelmed by their love for who love her, if this personal i their husband and children, but signature is lost to life in the are somewhat sunk by the confusion of other emotions and never ending round of household myriad duties. j duties and child care. DON’T Keeping in touch with your-[LOSE YOURSELF IN 'THE self will add excitement to life SHUFFLE 1 SPECIAL FOR NOW PERMANENT with Shompoo and S«f beauty Shop Saginaw St. I*E 8-1343 NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY Michigan College of Cosmetology Beauty School Limited Time Only Our Special Offer^ Complete ^ Beauty Course $^9900 Reg. $495 Course DAYTIME STUDENTS ONLY NO AGE LIMIT EXTRA OFFER Part-Time Classea Refresher Course Tues. thru Sat. $o croo dmi O Course 9 To 9 311 Main St., Royal Oak 545-3500 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MARCH 11, 1968 B—8 Polly's Pointers Enjoy Children Now DEAR POLLY-IThe sweetest be bought and mailed to Viet-sound in the world is that of.nam for the price of one money children laughing. The biggest Lii„ f.,• gift in the world to give these t ^ service children is TIME. We busy!"*® the Richard Rush of Bexley, Ohio (left) exhibits his prize winning entry in the eighth annual Reynolds Aluminum contest for the best original architectural design in which creative use of aluminum is an important contributing factor. The $250 check presentation was given by (from cenUr to right) William Jarratt, president of Detroit chapter, American Institute of Architects; Thomas Stevens, Reynolds Metals Company; and Glen Paulsen, Crmibrobk Art Academy president where Bexley is a first year graduate student people work to supply support but spare time is something too seldom find. ★ ★ * Every day take time out to play and get to know your children. The years fade by so quickly and the time deliber-, ately put aside for your family! will be the only important thing! to remember later on. -ELMER and JUDY DEAR READERS-If I was ever tempted to say Amen to a letter, this was It.—POLLY. DEAR POLLY—I do not think it is proper for Mrs. D. H. to give a house-warming for a relative. I was given one (but not by a relative) and the guests each brought a covered dish and each gave money rather than a gift. same thing and he could pass them around. —MRS. R. DEAR MRS. R.-That is one of the nice things about the exchange of Pointers among readers, one good idea so often leads to another —POLLY YOUR HEALTH Circle of Lace Roses Accents Bridal) Gown Attired in a traditionally Satuf^day evening' in . .. fashioned wedding gown, en-i Methodist Church of Pontiac, circled at the bodice with a garland of lace roses, Kristine Helen Knaus became the bride o< Kenneth Eugene Karns Jr. Fir I ! The money was cleverly taped j ^ [together to form a long roll placed inside a food L/f UIVCi can which had been cut open in I ^ It/ middle and then taped back SDQOK vOW^ [together again. The label was I » . [carefully removed and then re- ! placed, so the can looked up- I First Baptist Church i n opened. This was presented j Birmingham was the setting with a can-opener. Saturday evening for vows ex-1 —MRS. R. L. A. * * * Anne dear POLLY-Mrs. D. D. To complement the Chantilly “ David Michael v. wrote to say how much heCi lace and taffeta ensemble, the ' ‘ ' ' bride wore a shoulder length bouffant veil capped with a floral headpiece of pearls and matching lace! She carried white roses, feathered carnations and Stephanotis. Honor attendants were the bride’s sister, Roberta, and Terry Finan of Chicago. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Jack Salmon of Niles, Mrs. Fawcey Malouf of Lawton, Okla. * * * iMrs. Terry Finan with PauL Mrs. Jerry Glascock wasiMarcenik, James Ward and matron of honor for t h e Gary Carpenter as ushers, jdaughter of Mr. and Mrs.in,^pppqiTn\i Wilson Knaus of North Edith „ n • *u Street with Judy Karns as! Following the nuptials, the bridesmaid. daughtw of the Arthur F. json in Vietnam appreciated re-Iceiving a money clip. A large paper clip, about two inches long, makes an ideal substitute for a money clip. A box of these could doubtless “SLIPPED” DISC The disc acts as a shock absorber for the spine and also separates the vertebra from one another. When a disc “slips”, there is a resultant pinching on the spinal nerves, causing pain in the lower back or legs. Sciatica often the result. Experience has .shown that those people suffering from “slipped” disc and pinched nerves respond very well to the specialized care offered by the Chiropractic profession. Dr. H. H. Alexander Chiropractic Physician . 1029 Joalyn Ave., FE 2-0111 MRS. KENNETH E. KARNS JR. Annual Luncheon for Alumnae Unit A luncheon is slated Tuesday at 12:15 p.m. for the annual meeting of the Bloomfield Hills Alumnae club of Pi Beta Phi. ★ ★ ★ The affair, which will followed with the election of officers, will be held at the Franklin home of Mrs. George W. Bowman Jr. She will be assisted by Mrs. A. B. Chisholm, Mrs. Noel Haberkost and Mrs. Ronald R*eatherstone. Prior to their departure for _ honeymoon in the New England states, the bridal couple received guests at the Knightsj Rubbing alcohol removes a of Columbus Hall. [shoe polish stain from cloth. E. Karns of East Walton Boulevard was attended by Robert Walton with Lawrence Crawley, Vernon Crowe, Kenneth Kimmell and Gary Knaus as ushers. Alden Drive, West Bloomfield Township, were honored with a reception at the Birmingham Athletic Club. ★ ★ The couple then departed for honeymoon in Las Vegas, Nev. They will make their home in St. Louis, Mo. SAXE 3fl%t,40% m KE-VPHOLSTEKDIi or m CESTOM FERITEKE BEY DIREET! AT OER FACTORY-TO-TOB PRICES! Wcrkmanohip Guaranteed 5 Years Ihese savings are pussiiile because you are buying direct from the manufacturer . . . eliiuinaling the usual “middle -man” costs! And you are assured of top-quglity materials and highly-skilled workmanship, too! Sorority Unit Slates Card Party Plans were announced about a card party April 16 at the recent meeting of Gamma Theta chapter of Sigma Beta sorority. The party, which is slated for members and guests, will be held at 8 p.m. at th( Street home of Mrs. Gary Burnett. ★ ★ ★ During the meeting, hosted by Mrs. Michael Marcum o f Coleport Street, members aboj mother-children brunch slated May 5 at Devon! Gables. A province meeting will bej hosted by Gamma Theta chapter May 19 at Kingsley Inn. Chapter members from Ohio,! Indiana, Illinois and Michigan' are planning to attend. i cNeumode Buy a better stocking and see what a ckjference it makes! 0{ewnotkJ(osiertySlu>ps 82 N. SAGINAW ST. BUY NOW, SEW NOW FOR MSTERI pick a spring bouquet of • COTTON CRISKAY PRINTS • DAISY CHAIN COTTON PRINTS • WOVEN SUN VALLEY PLAIDS r*g. 79c to 98c yd. values all 100% cotton _ — 35"/36“wido AQC guar, washable V/ M yd. • Petti-Point Pique Prints • Nylon Chiffon Prints , all combad cotton • Sheer De Swa Prints • Crepette Prints and Solids fabulous design selection 36"/45" widths guar, washable 98f- MATCH-MATE “TWIN” PRINTS sheer voiles • opaque butchers • VOILE PRINTS $119 of dacron polyester and cotton 1 yd. . SANDUNE PRINTS $198 of rayon and cotton butcher weave 1 YARDAGE - CURTAINS - DRAPERIES The Pontiac Mall - Elliabeth lake Rd. at Telegraph Open Daily 10 AM. to 9 PM. Phone 682-3930 TUESDAY ONLY SPECIAL! ACETATE JERSEY PRINTS Easy-core acetate jersey dresses are blooming in lovely spring prints at this wonderful savings. Here, ono from the group; black or gold in 10 to 18. 9.90 TUESDAY ONLY SPECIAL! -, . RAIN AND SHINE COATS 1%.9\) We show just one from a collection of must-have coots for spring. See neyv fashion shapes including belts, side-closings. Fresh colons, misses'sizes. TUESDAY ONLY SPECIAL! SPORTY KNIT SHUTS Wonderful savings on smart polyester or acrylic knit shifts you'll call on often this spring. Choose from favorite stylings and colors; |nisses'sizes. / ' 8.97 TEL-HURON CENTER PONTIAC MAEL shop monday through saturciay to 9 TJIE PONTIAC 1'KKkSS. MuNUAV, MARCH 11, 1968 ^9^ CLEANERS 5 iMcations To Serve You Jam ■Hol/v FoAlu/m We Sell and Service Wigt and Wiglets CLOSED MONDAYS Appointment Not Alwoys Necessoryi CALL 623-1089 5217 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains_______ The engagement of their d-aughter, Mary Cathryn, to Spec. 5 Lawrence St. Clair, VSA, is announced by the Clifford B. Schmanskys of Bratton Dnve. Spec. 5 St. Clatr, who is stationed at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo., IS the son of the Robert St. Clairs of Rosetta Road, Pontiac Township. The engagement of their daughter, Beverly Ann, to Stephen Bour-geau is announced by the Russel Benders of Middleville. Miss Bender is a junior at Central Michigan University where her fiance is completing his senior year. He is the son of the David Bourgeaus of Wake Drive. Mr. and Mrs. Martin J. Bushman of Orion Road, Orion Township, announce the betrothal of their daughter, Nancy Janet of Miami, Fla., to James R. Flack, also of Miami. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James Flack of Hollywood, Fla. Nu-Vision Spring Action Temples Designed for Comfort, Fit. Dependability MEN enjoy tjje day long comfort of Spring Hinge design. WOMEN love the light weight fashion frames with "hold" qualitites built-in. CHILDREN con lead an active, normal life without jarring lenses out of focus 109 N. SAGINAW ST. E. STEINAAAN, O.D. Daily 9:30 A M. to 5:30 P.M. Fridoy 9:30 A.M. to 8:30 P.M. FE 2-2895 A summer wedding is planned by Sandra Kay Cummings and Spec. 4 DouglasW. Bogert, USA. The bride elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Orval Cummings of Whitfield Street. Her fiance, who is stationed at Fort Hood, Texas, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Bogert of Port Huron. An April wedding is planned by Janet Lynne Mieske and Thomas L. Boynton. Their parents are the Walter Mieskes of Midland and the Robert L. Boyntons of Birmingham. The bride elect is a junior at the University of Michigan, her fiance’s alma mater. Vanderlinds Fete Foreign Guest at Bridal Shower Mrs. John K. Vanderlind of Hammond Lake was hostess Sunday afternoon for a miscellaneous bridal shower. Honoree was Beatrys Tobi of Ann Arbor and Delft, Holland. Beatrys was a house guest at the Vanderlind home two years I, just after her arrival in the United States as a graduate student at the University of Michigan. She has made numerous additional visits at the Vanderlinds since that time. . ★ ★ ★ On May 15 in Albany, N. Y. Beatrys will become the bride of Irving William Olender 6! Amsterdam, N. Y. Sixteen guests, includyfng i number of Beatrys’ college friends from Ann Arbor, attended the shower at which Constance Vanderlind was co- Variety iri Belts Watch for a profusion of belts on dresses, skirts, coats, blouses for spring. The belt likes to wander, slim under the bosom, flat at the hip or wide at the waist and often is fastened with big, bold buckles. Summer wedding plans are slated for Linda Boomer and Charles L.Hunt. The bride elect is the daughter of the Charles R. Boomers .of Donley Road, Avon Township. Her fiance is the son of the Robert Hunts of Vinewood Street, Pordiac Township. A July wedding is planned by Anne Marie Brown and Earl Ray Heutt. The bride elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Brown of Warringham Street. Her fiance is the son of Noel Heutt of Osceola, Mo., and the late Mrs. Heutt. BUY! SELL! TRADE! ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! FLOOR SAMPLE FURNITURE SALE! ONE WEEK ONLY Monday, March 11th, Thru Saturday, March 16th SAVE UP TO 40% ALL SALE MERCHANDISE WILL BE TAGGED A Vinegar Rinse Sigma Beta Unit When washing your children’s! PlQf)$ TwO Eventsi hair, rinse with a half and half; water and vinegar solution tol ^^^e reviewed for a get all the soap out. fashion show at the monthly! meeting of Psi chapter. Sigma' I Beta National sorority, recently I at the Elks Temple. ! I The show, which is scheduled I March 16, will include a luncheon. Fashions are being furnished by the Lisbeth Shop in Birmingham. The chapter is also sponsoring a teen-age dance March 22. Both events will be held at the Elks Temple. Mrs. Homer McMahon was hostess for the meeting with Mrs. Jerry McKay cohostess. "'where quality furniture is priced right" 2133 ORCHARD LAKE RD. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel | Herron Jr. of Canal \ Road, Commerce Township announce November wedding plans for their daughter, Linda Joyce, and Seaman Ap-pren. David J. Swiatek, USN. The prospective bridegroom, who is stationed in Brunswick, Maine, is the son of Mrs. Keith White of Middledale Street, West Bloomfield Township 'and Bruno Swiatek of Irwin Street. Mild Suds Care Overseas Vets May Carry Malaria When washing sweaters, rub soiled spots with your soaped finge|-s. Do not rub one part of the sweater against another. Use mild suds and squeeze the suds through the garment. Never wring or twist a sweater. Rinse through several clear waters of the same temperature. ATLANTA, Ga. — During 1967, some 2J01 servicemen came down with malaria in the United States, according to a study prepared by the U.“ Public Health Service Communicable Disease Center. ★ ★ ★ A warning was sounded by a i publication for physicians that Montgomery Ward Beauty Salon 2nd Floor Phone 682-4940 “malaria cases can reasonably; be expected to show up inj discharged servicemen after! their return to civilian life,] since the disease is known to remain dormant and not show any symptoms for months or years after exposure.” ★ ★ If someone who has just returned from areas where the disease is prevalant suffers from recurrent chills and fever, medical care should be obtained once. mm TRUE FOR BRIDES-TO-BE New Bridal RegUtry How oftan it ha* boan said, "I'm not having wadding photos takan, it's boyond us right now." Yot, tha vary thing th* young brida fbisaica* in tha beginning is tha ena thing that, remains foiovar, bringing memories of that wonderful day each time photographs ora Now through "Wedding Pho-’ tography Registry" a prospec-' five bride can call C. R. Haskili; Studios on University Drive in Pontiac and engage a photographer to cover the wedding day festivities. At the same' time, she can select the style, of wedding photography she' prefers — Natural color; the al-; bum; wall - hung paintings;! frames, etc. As a gift, C. R. Haskili provides each of his brides a Wedding Guest Book, O portrait for the newspdperfree and even rice conveniently pack-' aged for the guests to throw of,, tha happjf couple whan leoving Mr. Haskili has also avails able at special discount prices^-invitations and napkins an^ often quips, "We supply every^. thing but the BridegroomI" » Why not coll C. R. Haskili. Studio now at 334-0553 an<^ reserve your vMddlng date, ec, stop in at 1 University Dr!ve,« Pontiqc. ^ He!ene Curtis Color Essence — the great col ors available only from profes s ion a I colorists. Ward's stylists an beauticians will demon-onstrate that you can have true natural-looking color with ColorEssence. 8.50. CoiPrEssence ^ourColor 025 To Complement YourColor Helene Curtis PERMANENT with shampoo and sot Pontiac Mall Phone 682-4940 Ing y]* . Check your elosw let F®* f .. coloif®! -i UghterweigW J neW» I with ®*)'^ I Dryci»o®" /ingp”»'* . returned r.wtoo*««^® j N of 0®°** I Quality Cleaning Since 1929 719 WEST HURON FE4-153S THE PONTIAC PRESS, .AI ()\ 1).\ M A lU 11 n-5 Case No. E-584 Know Cosmic Viewpoint By DR. GEORGE W. CRANE pathy and thus really feel their | CASE E-584: Paul and Polly, loss as your own personal grief, aged 32, are the parents whose* "Remember, Mary thus lost) little girl was killed by an auto- 1’®*' son Jesus on a cross and mobile. i Elisabeth had her sbn, John the Both of them Baptist, beheaded. were in a state of emotional shock for aeveral days. But after a couple of weeks, I had a lengthy! ipterview with! ‘Billions of other mothers j ever since Eve lost her son Abell have also joined this Fraternity! of the Bereaved. j "So the sudden graduation of! Sandra from this earthly* classroom in God’s Cosmic School System, should thus widen your horizons. t • u » I “No longer will you be blind- Now I wish to give you some led by mere social or business strong psychological medicine.”|ambition and the greed for a! { began. quick pile of dough, just toj permit early retirement from foster parents to a large group of kiddies, many of whom are I half orphans and thus doubly in need of your loving attention. * * ★ “But my second prescription takes a little longer. “You are both young enough to have more children, so start a new family and don’t limit it to just one child. “Have at least three or four kiddies, for not only do children help educate each other, but when you lose one child from a larger group, you are not quite as devasted in your morale. | Molce-BelieVe PRINTED PATTERN Tooster Cover I- MRS. PHILLIP T. WELLS “And psychological medicine is often more potent than pills and hypodermic injections. “First of all, you must realize that you have been initiated into that vast and eternal fraternity your job. “Now your horizons have expanded till you experience a more cosmic viewpoint. * ★ ★ “So I am prescribing two of all those who have lost a things for you. chiW! \ j ‘‘First, become active at once “When you read henceforth*in work with other youngsters, about such parents, you will not j as in the Scouts, Camp Fire merely feel sympathetic. | Girls or by teaching a Sunday “Instead, you will be able to.School class, indulge in what we call em-l “In that way you can become ARTIFICIAL LIMBS Certified By The American Board of Certification We Manufacture ALL TYPES OF LIMBS FITTED BY PRESCRIPTION • Over 30 Years Experience • Latest Techniques As Taught By Northwestern University • Training Facilities Available Joe L. Gaskins, Pres., C.P. Dial 334-2529 AMERICAN ORTHOPEDIC Service 1066 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan ALL PERMANENTS 3951,595 M\E HIGHER Includes All This: 1 — New Lustre Shampoo 2 — Flattering Hair Cut 3 —Lanolin Neutralizing 4 —Smart Style Setting NO APPOINTMENT NECESSARY HOLLYWOOD BEAUTY Open Mornings at 8 A.M. 78 N. Saginaw Over Bazley Mkt. 338-7660 If you want to make the toaster look like it isn’t a toaster, there’s a new cover which looks like an old-fashioned spice chest. ★ ★ ★ The chest is made of walnut- ^ finished pine, with four make- j believe drawers wooden pull 1 handles, .and a brass colored I handle bn top to lift the cover. | West Coast Is Setting for Nuptials Phillip Terry Wells of San Mateo, Calif., formerly of Pontiac, and his bride (nee Susan Emma Skarie) departed for Hawaii after their wedding Saturday in San Francisco. ★ ★ ★ For the nuptials in St. John's Presbyterian Church, t h e daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Allan M. Skarie of Sebastopal, Calif., chose a satin sheath with lace trim. Her bridal bouquet was pink and white roses. ! Karin Skarie attended her sister as maid of honor with best man duties performed by Mark Foster of Sylvan Lake. Ushers were John Lienart and Terry Thompson of San Jose. ; A reception at the Presjdio Officers Club followed the vows. ★ ★ ★ t The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Howard E. Fields of East Walton Boulevard and George V. Wells of Drayton Road. Cold water draws juices out of meats into liquids. Boiling water hardens outside of meats and prevents, juices being given off. HANDMADE \VI(;S S VU: ,\s Ifii(lin)! iiii|iiirlci> )iml mkimi liiic>l <|ii.ilit> h;iir .liMM.iilInn.Ml ^l^l.•,■^^l,i^l. ,an, iil.i.Him-- ul lhe ms. ue Inne many lilt- iiK liulecl in lliis win-li;i|i|.> are ,sn niai'nirieeiillv eiil a ^vall^ont ^vea^ill■;'^,.u^ Many normallv w.nil.l . $:U)0. r.el oiir stylists lielp ^o.l . \vi};pe/», 16‘A, 20V*, 22‘i. Size Wk requires 2% yards 45-inch fabric. SIXTY-FIVE CENTS in coins for each pattern—add 15 cents for each pattern of first-class mailing and special handling. Send to Anne Adams, care of The Pontiac Press, Pattern Dept., 243 West 17th St., New York, N.Y. 10011. Print NAME, ADDRESS with ZIP, SIZE and STYLE NUMBER. Winter’s top fashions — see exciting styles for all sizes in our big Fall-Winter Pattern Catalog. Get one pattern FREE — simply clip coupon i n Catalog. Hurry send 50c now. ONE CENT SALE! March 9Hi Thru 10th at BALDWIN PLAZA AND WATERFORD PLAZA -Dry Cleaning Special- Men., Tues., Wed., March 11-12-13th SLACKS-TROUSERS SWEATERS-PLAIN SKIRTS Any 3 for $159 No Coupon Needed NOW OPEN! Clmm M-S9 at Crescent Lk. Rd. WATERFORD PLAZA NOW OPEN! .gfljttij 'Bitiii, Qmm 71 South Squirrel Rd. Auburn Heights, Mich. Now Open One-Hour Martinizing 763 Baldwin Ave. BALDWIN PLAZA ONE HOUR MARTINIZING Miracle Mile S.C. Phone: 332-1822 -SoiCij 'B/fent Clmm (formerly One Hr. Valet) TEL-HMRON S.C. Phone 335-7934 it (At All Stores)-7:30 A.M.-^; One Hour Martinizing Elizabeth Lake S.C. 339T eiizabeth Lake Rd. Phone 682-8910 iOO P.M. FREE ENROLL NOW FOR LESS THAN 83'; PER VISIT On a Course A complete health - beauty club exclusively for a select Membership of Women and Men who are not satisfied with less than perfection. Created by the founders of the coast-to-coast chain of Holiday Health Spas! TOURS VISITORS WELCOME DROP IN OR CALL THE HOLIDAY SPA NEAREST YOU TODAY! IF YOU ARE USEDTOTHE“BESr’ DON’T WAIT fififui n The exclusive Our Modern Studios . . . carpeted, mirrored and luxuriously designed in chrome and leatherette, have been planned with one goal in mind ... to give you maximum resplts in a minimum time. SAUNA STEAM BATH E-X-C-L-U-S-I-V-E ! The wonderful Sauna Steam Bath for relief from nervous tension, fatigue and business pre.ssures . . . Nature’s finest known iiietliod for effitdent cleansing of .skill tissue ... Leaves you relaxed... invigorated... refreshed. The Spa (Hydro-Swirl Pool) Area . . . Exclusive . . . direct from Europe and Palm Springs. Relax in special seats while Hot Whirling Mineral Water explodes against you to give you the very finest in Modern Hydrotherapy. Stimulates entire muscular and circulatory system. Offers relief from Arthritis, Rlieuinatism, Aches and Painsv • CALL 334-1591 NOW FOR FREE TOUR • 3432 W. HURON ST. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH II, 1968 Senate to Get Look TodayatProposal for First Code of Ethics WASHINGTON (UPlI—With its reputation scarred by the Bobby Baker scandal and the censure of Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, D-Conn., an anxious Senate today gets its first look at a proposed code to govern the conduct of its members. The code of ethics was certain to touch off arguments from the small group of senators who want a strong set of rules as well as from (hose who have long resisted any set of enforceable regulations. Chairman John C. Stennis, D-Miss., of the Senate Ethics Committee promised to have the long-awaited report on the desks of the members today. Debate begins tomorrow and is expected to last all week. Although the proposed code has been completed for some time, little is known about it. The six-member committee kept it under strict guard. The most controversial segment of the report was expected to be recommendations for partial public di.sclosure of a senator's finances. Campus Permissiveness Hit EAST LANSING (AP) - The president of the American Council on Education Sunday criticized “mounting permissiveness ’ among students and instructors on the college campuses of the nation. Dr. Logan Wilson, speaking at the Michigan State University winter commencement exer-!, warned that universities cannot survive if they become 'a battleground or an arena. " cater to the kind of ‘togetherness’ provided by motels.” “We must be wary of letting any Institution be pulled apart in the futile endeavor of trying to be all things to all men,” Wilson said. tenths of one per* cent of thelpenings’ in such places as Berk-6.964 million enrolled every- ley, San Francisco State, Madi-where—had any involvement, [son, Iowa City, Cambridge and But I still think that alL of other locales are danger signals us should be concerned. ‘Hap- not to be ignored,” Wilson said. He cited National Student Association reports that during only two months last year, 455 students were arrested and 1,728 faced disciplinary action because of demonstrations. To bCi sure,"” he said, “just 62 of our 2,300 campuses ex- UNANIMITY SEEN Asked how far the recommendation went, one member said it was written so that all members could sign it and the committee could present a unanimous report. This was a clear indication that the committee would not call for total financial disclosure. And yet, he said, “The outside involvements of professors are I causing increasing numbers of] . ITVFR RFnpfFMT IMFS j them to be charged With neglecti per'onced such cpisodcs and oR- LIVER RECTPIENT DIES ^gap^ing. ^ly 14,564 students-about two - It is disturbing to learn of; campus scenes of violence where! the majority of the members of the academic community have] been bemused spectators while' defenders of the institution* were in effect mauled,” Wilson" said. I —Kerri Lynn Brown, a pretty, 1'4-year-old child who lived six months with a liver transplanted from another child, died over the weekend at the University of Colorado Medical Center. Kerri is the second such patient to die within 24 hours. She was the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Brown of Long Beach, Calif. SAan Surrenders After His Wife Is Fatally Shot Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield, who has not seen the report, indicated he would back the committee. But Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen has consistently opposed financial disclosure, claiming it would turn senators into “second-class citizens.” Mail-Fraud Arrests Soar PERMISSIVENESS | “It troubles me to see faculty grand RAPIDS (UPI) - members share in the ethos of ^ee, 27, was held on mounting permissiveness to thel^Pen^^'-'ler charges yesterday extenttL theystandpassively,*". the fatal shooting of his by while some of our campusesCharlene, 19, during a are rife with disorder and vio-|t^™ty qu^rel.^ ^ lence,” he said, adding: “In the larger house of the! He is the father of three 'The proposed code was a direct result of the Bobby Baker ca.se which rocked the Senate several years ago. A long investigation by the Senate Rules Committee disclosed that Baker, then secretary of Senate Democrats, amassed a paper fortune of $2 million while earning slightly less than $20,000 a year. In the aftermath, the Senate voted to create an ethics committee and Instructed it to write a code. After a long delay in naming the members, the committee started working in the fall of 1965. DODD CASE POPS UP whole social system, the univer-ichildren by a previous mar- sity is intended to be the man- *. * x WASHINGTON (UPI) - sion of the intellect and not a u *. .u Postal inspectoi;s logged a 62 roosting place or a staging area! ^as shot to death per cent increase in mail fraud for partisan political forces.” ® .22 rifle at the family i^rests, from 338 to 548, in the * .♦ * home here Saturday night, 'six-month period from July 1 to Wilson said, “It is unfortu-' . .. Dec. 3), 1967, Postmaster nate that so much time should ^ ^ee was on his way to police General Lawrence F. O’Brien have to be diverted from the su^ender when said today. main business of academia and,spotted a police cniiser, ! ★ ★ * given to riot prevention,” but he ® ®^°P’ turned O’Brien told a meeting of the added, “It is gratifying to h™self over to the cruiser postal inspection serivce’s top me to see that a stout defense ____________________ fraud specialists here that-thejof law and order is developing.”|/ (AdvtrnHmtntl WOMEN OFTEN HAVE BLADDER IRRITATION Common Kidney or Bladder Irritation* affect twice a* many women as men, often causing tenseness and nervousness from frequent, burning, Itching urination. Secondarily, you mav lose sleep and have Headaches, Backaches and feel older, tired, de-pressed. In such cases. CYS-TEX usually brings relaxing comfort by curbing germs In acid urine, and easing pain. Get CYSTEX at druggist* today. REPEAT SPECIAL iinwV^^^ Downtown Pontiac Store Only! Fresh-Lean-Meaty SPARERIBS BONELESS SIRLOIN STEAK 79s Tender Juicy ROLLED SIRLOIN ROAST 69IS Lean Meaty Almost as soon as the members were named, the com- jmcrease in arrests reflected] Wilson said he had an “old mittee was faced with the case of Sen. Thomas J. Dodd, improved enforcement techni-|fogey attitude” that a university D-Conn. In its first full investigation, the committee indicted idues and a better-informediwas a place for higher learning Dodd for diverting political funds to his personal use, and consumer. [rather than a haven to further the Senate censured hm last summer. The full Senate voted j ★ ★ * ; contentment among students and to censure Dodd. ' “The low-income customer Is tranquility among the univer- a primary target for mail fraud sity staff. Since then, the committee has worked on the code. But schemes, which are costing “For example,” he said, “I the project was interrupted at times by a second invesUga- Americans some $500 million a have the old-fashioned notion tion, which is still under way. year. jthat dormitories are not suppos- dOWNTOWN PONTIAC BLOOMFIELD | TEL-HURON I ROCHESTER MIRACLE MILE I CENTER I PLAZA _ S. S. KRESGE COMPANY ^ 4019 HOViEliHPIM m MAYTAG PRICES GOING UP! BUT WE BOUGHT A WHOLE TRUCKLOAD JUST BEFORE THE INCREASE WENT INTO EFFECT. All this week every Maytag will be offered at no increase in price. We have every model; automatic, gas and electric dryers, wringer washers, and the new Porta-Dryer. YOU’LL PROBABLY NEVER SEE MAYTAG PRICED THIS LOW A(;AIN. Don’t miss outi MONDAY thru SATURDAY THIS WEEK ONLY. NO DOWN PAYMENT NEEDED TAKE UP TO 36 MONTHS or 90 DAYS SAME AS CASH AVOCADO or COPPERTONE at NO EXTRA COST FAST DRYING . . . WITH LESS HEAT! 21995 Why put up with shrinking, yellowing? You don’t have to! This low heat, fast drying Halo-of-Heat Maytag is amazing. Cottons iron easier because wi^inkles are never baked in. Perma-Press is perfect! 3 cycles, very deluxe. $14995 FAMOUS MAYTAG WRINGER WASHERS A 60 year reputation for getting clothes clean! No wringer washer was ever built to equal it. They last so long they become members of the family. $12995 tlEAVY-DUTY AUTOMATICS Fed up with washer breakdowns? Here’s the automatic built for families who have to depend on their washer. Has cold, warm, hot water, 3 water levels, lint filter, fabric softener dispenser, positive fill system (not afl^ected by low water pressure). You can depend on it! 5 iWAB The GOOD HOUSEKEEPING Shop of PONTIAC OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY and FRIDAY NITE ’TIL 9 51 W. Huron Downtown Pontiac FE 4-1555 I Great Ne« MAYTAG 6-ysir aitiewisHir tr dryer esb- if^nst rust. 2 RAI^ 2 yiin M esmpisti •HtsmutU wsthsr ir diyir. 5 TY* o *Fres repair or sxchings of difective parts S or cabinet If It rusts. Installation of ports 9 Is the responsiblli^ of selling franchised S MiyUg dealer within first ysir; thereifter extra THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1968 Nigeria Tightens Up on Yanks Movements LAGOS, Nigeria (AP) -Nigerian authorities are ciosely watching the movements of foreigners in their war-torn country, inciuding the American community of about 5,000 persons. Americans had been informally exempted from a 1%3 alien registration law, but a top Lagos police officer says, “That’s changed.” ★ ★ ★ The government-controlled press and radio began criticizing the United States last year after the U.S. refused to license the export of military equipment for use in the civil war against secessionist Eastern Nigeria. ★ ★ ★ According to police, a letter was sent to the American Embassy in Lagos last August advising that Americans would have to register. The law requires an alien resident to register 21 days after arrival in Nigeria, carry a passbook, present the book for endorsement if he leaves the country or his province for seven days, and report to an alien-control office on his return. AUENS UNINFORMED Most aliens did not know of the existence of the law, which had not been enforced. The American Embassy did not notify American residents in Nigeria of their obligation until late February. By then, scores of Americans, including some Peace Corps volunteers, had had encounters with Nigerian police. Some had been threatened with prosecution. One American, Phillip Rappa-port, head of Nigeria’s National Library and holder of top civil servant rank in the federal gdv-ernment, was waiting for trial before the combined pressure of the permanent secretaries of the ministries of economic development and information persuaded the police to release him. Violators are subject to three months Imprisonment or $70 fine. Although they are not subject to the law, nonresident Americans also have run into trouble with Nigerian security and military officials. James Miles, a Baltimore seminarian on temporary duty with the Nigerian Red Cross, was held for tliree weeks, including some time spent in chains, in a Calabar prison. Most Americans are working here for the Agency for International Development, the Peace Corps, and education and missionary groups. (UMd A Partt AvallaUa) WITH USELESS JUNK CARS Higheet Prioat Paid - Wa Piak Up FE 2-0200 PONTIAC SCRAP 135 Branch NEED HELP? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 332-8181. Britain Facing Race Trouble Bill Seeks to Outlaw Job, Housing Bios LONDON (AP) - New poliU-cal trouble over race relations lies ahead when the British government introduces a bill to bar discrimination in jobs and housing, Officials hope the measure will demonstrate to members of the British Commonwealth, India especially, that Britain is not developing into a society infected with racial discrimination. Home Secretary James Callaghan is caught between public feeling against Britain’s nonwhite immigrants and various community and national race relations groups rushing to their defense. Advocates of a k,eep-Britain-white policy, centered mainly in the suburban middle class and among workers who feel their jobs threatened, tasted success when Britain barred admission of many Asians from Kenya who hold British passports. WEAK PROVISIONS Many of the labor party’s intellectual supporters feel the proposed antidiscrimination bill is not strong enough, especially in provisions covering employment. Last July Roy Jenkins, then Home secretary, comnoitt^ the government to broadening the present race relations largely limited to discrimination In public places. There was hardly a protest, but now Callaghan feels he may face a public outcry. He has admitted the would limit the traditional freedoms of Englishmen, but argued that this was in the ii terest of creating an integrated society. Under the measure anyone who could prove he couldn’t buy a house because of his race w6uld complain to the Race Relations Board. It would sye for damages. Advocates say there would be sufficient proof if white man bought a house at less money than a Negro had already offered for it. AVOID VIOLENCE The government’s argument Is that colored immigrants must be allowed to get out of their districts in London, Birmingham and other cities before violence develops. Mark Bonham Carter, chairman of the Race Relations Board, has protested to Callaghan about the proposed employment provisions of th^ bill. instant acting pnlish shines •etIwUd, •Ktn hIgh-giM TflRNITE STAINLESS STEEL POLISH FLATWARE • RANGES • SINKS KITCHEN APPLIANCES POTS • MOULDINGS • TRIMS Tarnite li used extensively in hospitals, hotels, banks, factories, and public buildings. Tarnite easily re-inoves tarnish, streaks, smears, heat stains and water spots, leaving stainless steel with thaf brilliant, gleaming luster it had when new. • HICHtST CLOU, LEAST RUUINC • DISSOLVES TARNISH ON CONTACT • ADDS TARNISH RESISTANT FINISH 9 ot. houtehoU tin a $illont lor irtstituliaotl uit AT MOST HARDWARE STORES THE GREAT WIDE-TRACK DRIVE iSONi There’s very little differenee between Wide-Tracking in a Pontiac and ordinary driving...in dollars. A big, powerful Wide-Track Pontiac costs no more than some of the so-called low-priced cars. So if you're settling for less than a 400 cubic inch V-8 and a big-car 121-inch wheelbase, stop settling. Start Wide-Tracking. The drive is on. See your Pontiac dealer. He's out to smash sales records for the 7th straight year 1 See the U.S. Ski Team vs. World Competition, Sunday, March 17, NBC TV. Free 24-page Ski Team Race Guide at your Pontiac Dealers. PONTIAC MOTOR DIVISION RETAIL STORE «5 UNIVER$ITY DRIVE, PONTIAC. MICH. RUSS JOHNSON MOTOR SALES 89 (M-24) UKE ORION, MICH. JACK W. HAUPT PONTIAC SALES, INC. N. MAIN STREET, CLARKSTON, MICH. HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC. 160 S. WASHINGTON, OXFORD, MICH. KEEGO SALES and SERVICE, INC. 3080 ORCHARD LAKE RD. KEEGO HARBOR, MICH. SHELTON PONTIAC-BUICK, INC. 85S S. RpCHESTER RD., ROCHESTER, MICH. B-8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, ISIONDAY, MARCH 11, 1968 Nasser’s government had refused to meet with Israeli officials directly or indirectly. JERUSALEM (AP) - Diplomats say UN. envoy Gunnar Jarring's efforts to set up Middle East peace talks appear to have broken down. Egypt and Diplomatic informants in Je-Israel accused each other of rusalem said Egypt had revert-blocking a settlement. ed to the hard line of no peace Jarring told Israeli Foreign talks until after Israel pulls out Minister Abba Eban Sunday of Arab lands it occupied ‘ that President Gamal Abdel June war. BRE.AK IN COURT MARTIAl^Capt. Dale E. Noyd, 34, and his wife, Sharon, chat during a break in Capt. Noyd's court-martial at Cannon Air Force Base near Clovis, N.M. Capt. Boyd was sentenced Saturday to one year at hard labor and ordered dismissed from the service. He was found guilty Friday of willful disobedience and refusal to obey a lawful order. The case stemmed from his refusal to train a Vietnam-bound pilot. Settle for Viet Stalemate, Hopes for Mideast Talks Dim Mansfield Pessimistic Dem Eyes Riot Report WASHINGTON (UPI) Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield says he doubt whether the United States has either the will or the money to carry out the antiriot mission’s suggesjtions while the ar in Vietnam continues. President Johnson has made no specifci comment on commission report, released March 1, except for a general reference to a group of visiting bankers' here last week when he asked the businessmen to “do what you can” to follow its recommendations. The only other official Government circles here said to be taken, beginning with Is- Israel is ready to comply with any attempt by Jarring to bring the two sides together but will not give any advance pledge to give up the occupied territories. INDIRECT TALKS Various sources reported late in February that Jarring was on the verge of obtaining Egyptian and Jordanian agreement hold indirect negotiations with Israel. Then on Feb. 29 the Israeli government announced that the west bank of the Jordan River, which Israel seized from Jordan in June, was no longer considered enemy territory. i * * * Cairo took this as an indica- An Israeli soldier was wound-tion that the Israeilis would not ed when machine guns on give up the occupied territories.!Jordanian bank opened up to and the Egyptian line hardened cover the raiders' retreat, an again. Israeli officials denied army communique said. The Is-the implications which Cairo raelis were sprayed by sporadic had drawn but conceded their fire for about two hours. The government’s timing was bad. communique did not say if the * * * Israelis fired back. The semiofficial Egyptian The clash brought the number newspaper A1 Ahram said SUn- of saboteurs killed in the last raeli withdrawal from territory of Egypt, Jordan and Syria. VIOLENCE FLARES A1 AhratQ said foreign ministry officials had explained Egypt’s position to the ambassadors of the Soviet Union, Britain, France, Spain, India, Italy and Pakistan. Violence flared again Sunday night in the Beisan Valley on the west bank of the Jordan. Three Arab saboteui-s were killed in a running gun battle with Israeli troops as the Arabs fled toward the river. ministration reaction came last week from Housing Secretary Robert C. Weaver who told Congress it was “highly improbable’’ that the panel’s housing recommendations could be put into effect. s f i e 1 d e X p r essed pessimism that the com-m i s s ion’s recommendations day that Egypt rejected the pro- three weeks to 42. More than 20 would get much action from the posed talks because Israel in-have been captured, government under present sisted that the Middle East reso- ★ * ★ circumstances. lution passed by the U.N. Secur- Four other Israelis were * ★ * ;ity Council last November was wounded when their jeep hit a He said the burgeoning costs!“merely an agenda for negotia- mine near Timna, a copper min-of the war in Vietnam made thejtions with the Arabs.’’ Jng center in the southern Ne- outlook for the war on urgent The paper said the resolution!gev Desert and reputedly the domestic problems dim. was one of “definite measures” site of King Solomon’s mines. I Before You Buy, Be Sure to See the ® iWATER WONDER! HjDuuiLBSi^BrxsMin^ 61 61 61 61 61 61 61 61 61 61 61 Automatic Gas Water Heater Gives MORE hot water WHEN you need it.. Fxclusive Demand-O-Stat figures the hot water you need, and heats it accordingly. Fast heating for wash days . . . slower heating when demand is small. Saves you money! New Control Cone. Beautiful, functional. Coppertone column protects controls; keeps them out ~ of children’’ 61 reach. Superglas-lined ank, tough and durable. Guards against rust and corrosion. The new WATER WONDER is fast and economical. Come in today and see it! 61 61 61 61 News Magazine Urges NEW YORK (UPD - America, published last Nov. Newsweek magazine, taking an 20. editorial stand for the second: Times editorial, head time ln_lts_35-ye^_history,_ said.^^^^ -Suicidal Escalation,’ today the United States should settle for a military stalemate in Vietnam in which “both Washington and Hanoi are willing to make substantial questioned Gen. William Westmoreland's reported quest for 100,000 to 200,000 ad ditional troops. The New York Times also assailed the U.S. stand in Vietnam, calling in its lead editorial for aba n d 0 n m e n t of a' “bankrupt policy." in which it said “each esciation had produced a new stand-off ... at a mounting cost in lives, money and respect for the United States.” In its March 18 Issue, Newsweek said President, Johnson has failed to provide “the firm, clear leadership expected of the man hi the White House.’’ “After three years of gradual escalation. President Johnson’ strategy has run into a dead end . . .” the magazine said. “The T e t offensive . . . has exposed the utter inadequacy of the a d m i nistration’s war policy.” Newsweek called for a withdrawal of U.S. troops from South Vietnam’s borders, and especially from the area just south of the demilitarized zone where the Communists are besieging the Marine outpost at Khe Sanh. WOULD NOT HELP The magazine conceded that such a policy would not help to achieve the U.S. goal of a stable. Independent, non-Com-munist South Vietnam, but it added that “the political fate of South Vietnam must ultimately be decided by the South Vietnamese themselves.” BRITISH HOnDURHSI LAND PER ACRE Newsweek’s only previous editorial stand was its call for action on the Negro problem in Would you beli«iv«-lhi* ]• lli* only country in Ccniriil Amorico where Enyli.h U the NATIONAL LANOUAOE! VIR(;iN LAND chickena, ho|(a, end take adren-laite of the Covernment’a 11 to ie Tax Holiday Ince Our State Department ai|med a pact with British Honduras whereby U.S. citiaena may be in- -----1 arainat loss by aeiaiire, rebellion or inconvertibility. Ever Round t imrchaaer of 200 acres or will be entitled to an Bl- ind from hotel in Belize City) —3 days and 2 nights, meals and lips, an in-iction trip of the properly— less than 50 milea from Belize; Orange Walk Town. NO OBLIGATION! 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ROCHE5TBR PAYLESS DISCOUNT It Telegrai J. STARK PHARMACY 909 South Woodward THRIFTY DRUM IdO N. SnainauU^ WESLEY DRUG NO. t THRIFTY DRUG NO. t 4985 Dixie Highway nr. Williams Lake Read 511 N. Main St. Saginavy^ DRUG NO. I ARNOLD PHARMACIES, INC. FENTOJ^ BILLMEIER STUDIO SHUTTER SHOP DOUBLE D. DISCOUNT AUBURNMEIGim GIANT savings DRUG MONTGOMERY WARD t PARSON'S DRUG 1990 Auburn at Crooks R( Y STORB n Road BIRMINGHAM A CLARKSTON O'DELL DRUG so Van Dykt a1 L REXALL DRUG 8409 Halt Road UTICA HOBBY SHOP 48231 Van Dykt at Carpenter YANKEE 604-^06 Baldwin ROBERTSON PHARMACY BIRMINGHAM DRUGS LK. Rd. r cranIbrook drugs HARRY C. HAYES DRUG 111 Commerce Road cor. S. Commerce Read |O«G0JJARB0R_ CASS LAKE PHARMACY JACK'S CAMERA SHOP 40 S. WatMncifon MITCHELL’S DRUG STORB J N. Weshinoton 35150 Schoenherr at 14 Mile WAUjgD_LA« WALLED LAKE DISCOUNT 707 Pontiac Tral X THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH II, 1968 B—9 W. J. S. ft Associatas IHGOME TAX CompUt* Accounting Sorvicol THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS) IS24 WiUiamt Lak* Road in Watariord, OR S-0II74 AND IIE. Huron (Fraa Narking al Parry and Huron) II2-MM 49 Pet. Feel U.S. Erred on Viet PRINCETON, N.J. ansing also emerged victorious with a District 64 championship win over Lansing Everett. East Lansing’s high man was Blake Ashdown with 30 points. Grand Blanc Wins Loop Swim Meet in Andover Pool With his team holding a 26-22 halftime lead, Daigle took charge and scored all eight of Orion’s points in the third stanza, and then in the fourth, with Rochester coming on strong, Bankert pushed in all seven of his points to lead the attack. Gary Campbell tossed in 17 points to pace the Falcons, while teammate Mike Phillips checked in with 14. OFF TARGET Kimball (14-5) had shooting problems similar to those of Rochester. erzBMa fW) 2 10 0 12 HBP-TNorthrup (By Coin); Hill (By Roekor. WP—Rooker. U~Stewart, O'Don- i n^l, Nauptekar, Flagherty. T—3:27. A— Panllac Prau Photo by .Rolf Winter AIRBORNE — Pontiac Central’s Frank Russell (331 leaps high but this rebound went to Waterford Kettering’s Gene Pankner during this second-half action Saturday night in the district tournament final at Clarkston. At left is Bill Penoza (43) of Kettering, and at right is teammate Bob Lines. In center is Chiefs’ Alton Wilson. Referee in background is Wes Roberts. Pontiac Central won, 68-62. ROCHESTER (43) PO FT TP Phillips 5 4-S 14 LAKE ORION 0 Talali U 11-lt 43 Tolali 12 II SCORB BY QUARTERS Rechiilar .......................... 2 13 13 Grand Blanc and Bloomfield Hills Andover dominated the T r i - C o u n t y Swimming League’s first loop championships Saturday in the Andover pool. The Grand Bland squad rolled up 386 points to claim the title, followed by Andover (306), Lincoln Park (189), Flint Carman (120), Bloomfield Hills Lahser (67) and Livonia Clarenceville (45). Cody Heiderar won the 200-yard (1:56.4) and the 400-yard freestyle (4:22.0) events to spark the Grand Blanc victory. Bill Beiser of lincoln Park was the only other double winner. He took the 200-yard individual medley (2:18.2) and the 100-yard breasti-oke (1:06.4). Rich Matheny won the diving title and teammate Ted May took the 100-yard butterfly (1:03.6) for Andover. The barons 400-yard relay team of Dave Vanker, Russ Slate, Greg Rosin and Dave Groth won that event in 3:39.2. In other Class A district tournament action Saturday night, Saginaw won the District 94 champiimship with a 7346 victory over Saginaw McArthur, and Battle Creek Central became the District 7 champion by beating Kalamazoo Cen tral 58-56. Friday, Detroit Catholic Central won the District 30 championship with an 86-55 victory over University of Detroit High. OTHERS OUSTED Other rated teams which were eliminated prior to regional tournament play, in addition to Pershing, were: Muskegon 70-66; Detroit Murray-Wri^t, downed by Detroit Northwestern 56-55; Pontiac Northern, which lost to Pontiac Central 68-61, and Muskegon, which was eliminated by Traverse C5ty 79-78. Charlevoix, rated No. 4 among Class C teams, was knocked out of competition for regional play Saturday night in the iast five seconds of a game with unrated Boyne City. Boyne City won the game, 40-38, on a 20-foot jump shot by Mike Bade. Charlevoix had led 36-33 with four minutes to go after a nip-and-tuck battie, but Boyne City grabbed the last seven points of the game. EASY VICTORY In Class B action Saturday night, Menominee won the District 122 championship with a 90-59 victory over Kingsford, and Holland Christian sewed up the District 78 final with a 5846 win over Zeeland. Kalamazoo Hackett won in District 8 by beating Vicksburg 54-§2. In other Class C action, Detroit AU Saints, top-rated in its category, took the DisWict 23 championship by defeating Detroit St. Gabriel, 7945. LesUe won toe championship in District 62 by beating Danville 87-30. Homer beat Quincy, 91-70, for the Disrict 12 championship. In Class D, Ewen-Trout Creds w«i the District 125 championship with a 44-35 win over White Pine. Hermansville beat Bark River 77-58 for the District 117 championship, and Bay City 9:. Josefto won the District 91 title with a 6849 victory over Saginaw St. Andrew. C—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS. IMONDAY, MARCH 11, 1968 Lahser 9th, Has Champ in 'B' Pool First-year school Bloomfield Hills Lahser took on state com-| petition Saturday and finisliedi ninth in the Class B swimming championships at Blast Lansing, i The Barrow brothers, Dennis and Danny, sparked Detroit Riverview to \ictor\’ in the meet. The winners rolled up 222 points. Godwin Heights of Wyoming was second (176.,‘)i, Ypsilanti Roosevelt third (138) and Irie Mason fourth (110.,') i. The Knights of Lahser collected 41 points and they produced one individual champion In Rich Amann, who took the IWhyard butterfly in :S9.0. Amann also placed seventh In tile JOO-yard freestyle with a ttme of 2:04.0. Two Claim District Titles Local Catholic 5s Sharp in Tourney other swimmers scoring for the Knights were Kevin Trim-j mer — fourth in the 2(K) in-j dividual medley and eighth in the 400-yard freestyle—- and| Steve Dinsmore, ninth in the I 400-yard freestyle. !" Dennis Barrow, 18, a senior,! won the 200-yard individual medley in 2:12.6, beating the meet record of 2:13.4 set in 1964 by Jerry Gorski of Detroit Visitation. Danny, the younger of the Barrow brothers, took the 200 and 100-yard freestyle events. Pontiac Pron Phot# NOISY DEFENSK - Bob Lines (45) of Kettering gives out with a yell in a bid to distract as Pontiac Central’s Alton Wilson, who gets away a shot during the first half of their game at Clarkston Saturday night. Wilson made 12 points as PCM won the district championship, 68-62. By JERK CRAIG The Northwest C a t h 611 c League batted 1,000 Saturday night on the basketball court at Pontiac Central High School in a district championship double-header. Waterford Our L^idy of Lakes outhustled a taller, but slower Pointe University School in a 61-54 thriller for a Class D crown. I.,eague champion Orchard Lake St. Mary followed with a surprisingly lopsided 69-47 conquest of Detroit Country Day in the Class C portion of the title twin bill. Waterford OLL now will tangle with Litchfield 7 p.m. Thursday at Ypsilanti on the| Eastern Michigan University court. St. Mary will journey to Grand Blanc for a 7:30 p.m. meeting with Capac Tuesday. Litchfield eliminated North Adams, 71-56, Saturday Hillsdale. Capac advanced by Redlegs Change Michigan Tech Six Loses Playoff Bid By The Associated Press j Bergstrom’s 4(Bfoot slap shot de-Denver and North Dakota cided the tournament title, both have won berths in the Gustavus Adolphus claimed NCAA hockey playoffs, while!third place In the NAIA tourpa-Bemidji State wrapped up the ment with a 7-6 overtime tri-first NAIA hockey tournament umph over Boston State- The Bl.,... • A A I ^'hanipionship by nipping Lake tournament was played at St. rlaying Apparsl supermr state of Sault Ste. Ma-iPaul, Minn. rie, Mich., 5-4. | Dakota won its NCAA CINCINNATI (UPD — The Cin-1 * ! playoff berth by virtue of its clnnatl Reds are foregoing their I All of the action came .Satur-Saturday night victory and traditional scarlet pinstripes ;da.V night as Denver defeated scorele.ss tie with Michigan Tech this aeason for home uniforms Minnesota 7-3 and Nortl^ Dako- Friday night. The playoff berth that are solid bleached white. Ja edged Michigan Tech 3-2, j was based on the most goals “nie uniform will have the j both in Western Collegiate scored in two games, player’s number and “C-Reds” (Hockey As.sociation contests, j Tech’s goals were scored by In scarlet letters on the shirt | ★ |Hwb Boxer and Edgar Rivalin. front and the player’s name and Bemidji State had to battlejNorth Dakota knotted the score uniform number in scarlet on Lake Superior State into sudden,on goals by Mike Furlong and the back. death overtime before TerryiBob Tuff. Dave Hudson knocked In the winning score in the final period. Denver’s victory was its 20th straight triumph—a record for the school—and the 29th consecutive win on home ice. Denver had defeated Minnesota t h e night before, 9-0. Craig Patrick and Jim Wiste each scored twice for Denver while Bill Klatt had two of the Gophers’ three goals. ousting Richmond, 104-70, that same night at Port Huron. OLSM’S Eaglets trailed only at 1-0. They were forced into deadlocks with Country Day at 16 and 18 briefly in the second quarter. Although outscoring t h e Yellow Jackets in every period, St. Mary did most of its damage in the middle two sessions. Holding the usually potent attack of the losers to eight field goals (on 29 shots) and 19 points in the two quarters, it amassed 36 points. A 10 for 16 (62 per cent) third quarter generated 22 points — including 11 by Oakland County scoring leader Tim Megge, who did half of the shooting damage with S of 8 — and built the winners’ lead to an insurmountable 54-33. Megge finished with 25 points, making 9 of 23 shots after a slow start in his head-to-head duel with Country Day’s Jack Zwemer, the county’s second top scorer. Plagued with personal foul problems, Zwemer made only 6 of 17 to tally 17 points. ★ A key factor in the Eaglets' triumph was their ability to Idominate the backboards holding an edge in every quarter and finishing with a 59-42 superiority. Senior Greg Fior led the way with 20 retrieves. Teammate Tad Cyman pulled down 14. Guard Tom Siidek shared the spotlight with Megge in the second quarter by hitting 8 of his 15 points. * ★ * Both teams finished with 13 turnovers. OLSM’s backboard margin enabled it to take seven more shots from the field and it finished with eight more baskets although neither team hit 40 per cent from the field. The Waterford Our Lady victory was a dandy. The Lakers never could relax in their tense duel with the rugged GPUS quintet. The game was tied 14 times and the lead changed hands 17 times. It was tied, 39-39, as the horn ended the third quarter. GPUS, who held a 13-8 edge after making the first basket in the second session, and made five points in a row to overcome a 29-25 Laker halftime lead as the third period began, again started quickly for a 41-39 bulge. WOLL retaliated this time with a bucket and two free Wolverines Shake Big 10 Cage Race BIS TEN CONFERENCE r .708 1981 1738 ference campaign with a 67-64 fj’j triumph at Illinois last Monday and held little hope for a playoff since Iowa had won six straight conference games at home this and had beaten Michigan at Ann Arbor 99-86. But Michigan took a three- CHICAGO (AP) - Iowa’s Hawkeyes, still stunned by their one-point loss to Michigan^"*',."*''" 1" Saturday night, and Ohio State’s I ’1*’® happy Buckeyes meet in a****®®*' playoff at Purdue’s neutral floor j The playoff will mark the sec-Tuesday night. lond meeting this season The two teams ended in a tie I between Iowa and Ohio State, for the Big Ten title and will The Hawkeyes defeated Ohio engage in the first conference j State 74-72 in an overtime at playoff in 60 years to determine Iowa City earlier in the season, the Big Ten representative ini Because of Iowa’s letdown the NCAA playoffs. | against Michigan and Ohio Ohio State closed its con-|state’s rejuvenated state for another chance, Ohio State will probably be a slight favorite over Iowa. Twins Down Detroit, 5-4 Timmerman Is Loser for Second Time (Continued From Page C-1) Timmerman replaced Rboker in the tenth and after two outs he gave up the two walks and two singles to take the loss. Saturday’s triumph, Don Wert was the hitting star with a pair of doubles as starter Earl Wilson pitched effectively for three innings and took the decision. Ribant, who had been accused of throwing the spitter while with the Mets and the Pirates | night, argued with umpiri " * Flaherty that he did not go to his mouth for the second time as charged, but he moved his hand to scratch his nose. In the game, McAuliffe was also ejected after saying a few choice words to Flaherty on his first time at the plate. The Tigers face the Philadelphia Phillies today in Lakeland with Hank Aguirre, Jon Warden and Ribant scheduled for mound dqties. Against the Pirates i n Lakeland on Tuesday, Dennis McLain will start, with Pat Dobson slated to follow him. Jim Nort^-njp with three hits, including the homer, in three official times at the plate was the top hitter against the Twins. He was also walked twice and hit by a pitched ball. ( BOUNCES BACK However, Iowa has shown ability to bounce back under Coach Ralph Miller who had to celebrate his 49th birthday niversary last Saturday in the shadows of the loss to Michigan. The only other time the Big Ten has held a basketball playoff was in 1908 Chicago and Wisconsin tied for the league lead and Chicago won the playoff 18-16. throws to go ahead, 43-41. Then the Knights sunk four charity tosses to regain a two-point advantage. Dan Sioma’s drive-in from the foul line made it 46-45 for the Lakers, but GPUS came back for the last time to lead, 47-46. Then Sioma followed up a missed shot to send the winners in front, 48-47, with 4% minutes left. A steal and a long pass to Jerry Yesbick (who played an outstanding game for the champions) resulted in a fast layup and a 59-47 edge. GPUS then threw the ball away. LAST BID WOLL’s Dennis McCulloch looped in a 23-foot one-hander and the lead was 50-45 with 4 minutes to go. After a timeout the Knights reduced it to a three-point deficit but could never come any closer. ★ ★ ★ Although not particularly impressive from the foul line, the victorious Lakers did Improve enough in the closing minutes to build their lead up to eight points twice as GPUS fouled in an attempt to get the ball. Sioma made 7 of 10 field goal tries and shared high-point honors with 19 points. He also pulled down 11 rebounds. McCulloch augmented Sioma’s scoring with 18 points. They offset the 19 points and 14 rebounds of GPUS’ All-State candidate Bruce Barit. Matt Gordon had 13 for the losers but this was matched by Yezbick of WOLL. Both teams had 21 field goals, but the Lakers took advantage of the slower-reacting GPUS squad to draw 38 foul shots. They had a 19-12 edge in successful charity tosses. _____ . district championship COUNT-Y DAY (47) OL ST. MARY (49) PS FT TP PS FT TP Zwemtr < MJ 17 Kslakwicx 4 0-0 8 ^50 OFF! 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I However, this ruling was changed this year and as a result Ohio State could wind up the beneficiary if the Buckeyes can win at Lafayette Tuesday SCORE BY QUARTERS Grossa Pointa Uni. School II 14 14 Watar. Our Lady al Lakat 8 11 10 Fouled out—Michigan, Total fouls—Michigan 1 Attandanca ma035 spt ccessz\ LAKELAND, Fla. iota: IVLINOIS MIC . 11 OFT Pace 4 7-2 10 Edward! Crewf 4 3-3 11 Copeland Schotz 7, 3-6 176eistler 0 0-0 OBaiely 6 0-0 12Rymal 0 ^0 OGib^ns Muskegon Bowler Takes 2nd Place JACKSON (AP)-Gene Jacobs of Muskegon took over second place in the all events handicap and Bill’s Cafe of Detroit moved up to fourth place in the team handicap over the weekend in the Michigan Men’s State Bowling Tournament. The tournament has completed its ninth weekend in a four-month stand. Thu leaders: Team handicap—Adrian Black Label, Team actual—Pontiac Janitor Supply, ,915. Doubles handicap—William LaClaar and lussell Burt of Battle Crepk, 1,354. Doubles actual—Robert Walter and Altchell Barenzoff of Flint, 1.738. Singles handicap—Bill Raabar of Kala-lazoo, 738. Singles actual—tie; Gaorgi Attendance—5, n; I West of Battlo jlcap—Clydo McKentry al — Doyle Hudson of Northern Matmen Vacate Throne OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 0:00 P.M. . SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. StND.AY 12 NOON TO 3 P.M. • 682-4940 The Huskies of P o n t i a Northern left their t h r o n Saturday following a reign of a year as state Class A wrestling king. * * * The new titleholder is Lansing Eastern, which piled up points to nip the runner-up Huskies (35). Ypsilanti (31) placed third and Flint Central (30) fourth at Jackson Parkside’s gym. Hazel Park picked up 28 points to place fifth while the Vikings of Walled Lake wound up sixth (25). Pontiac Central finished ninth with 19 markers. Pontiac Northern and Walled Lake produced one individual champion apiece, while Northern, Hazel Park (2), Pontiac Central and Birmingham Scaholm collected runner-up spots in individual matches. WINS TITLE 11 Green, the Huskies’ cocaptain, breezed through the opposition in the 112-pound class to claim the championship. He ousted Mark Davids of Hazel Park, 3-1, in the finals. Ray Buffmyer gave Walled Lake its first state champion by winning the 103-pound crown. Buffmyer took the final bout With an easy 7-1 decision over Seaholm’s Kevin Wilson. Hazel Park’s other rui came in the 133-pound class with Les Burger gaining the second-place points. Ben Moon, Pontiac Northern’s 120-pounder, placed second losing to John Alexander of Flint Central in the finals, 11-3. ★ ★ ★' Pontiac Central’s best showing was a second in the heavyweight match by Charles Lee was second with 37 and FOLS third (33). Frank Walsh of Farmington Our Lady of Sorrows led the Lancers to third place in Class C-D competition at Lansing Sexton. ' ■ ★ * ★ The strong Walsh captured the heavyweight title and ran his personal record for the season to 28-0. Pat Kern (120) and John VanDusen (165) took thirds for the Lancers. Vandercook Lake won the C-D title with 55 points. Wyoming Pontiac Central ... . (Tie) Flint Northern, 13 (Tie) Detroi' - ■•emorlal 14) )' s, Roseville ); 1 Wilson (Birm. Seaholm), 7-1. — Bill Green (Pont. Northern) de« Davids (Hazel Park), 3-1. — John Alexander (Flint Central) an Moon (Pontiac Northarn), 11-3. ... — Bobby Cash (t-ans. Eastern) daa Kossen (Grand Rapids Union), 4-3. 133 — Randy Rodrlgauz (Wayne Memorial) dec Let Burger (Hazel Park), — Preston Henry (Flint Northern) dec Therlon Harris (Ypsilanti), 4-1. '** — Carl Myles (Kalamazoo Central) d Milt Bowen (Flint Central) 5:18. ivywelght — George Trujillo (-. ion) disc Charles Mason (Pontlae , Takes Saber Crown LODZ, Poland iJPi — Alex Orban of New York scored four victories and one loss in the roqnd robin finals and won the individual title Sunday in an international saber fencing tournament that attracted the top fencers in the world. THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MARCH 11, 1968 C—« BASKETSAiM SCOBES Mlchlgiii Hlfh __________ Baiktlball Toumtnwnlt Dlilricr Champlonihlpt CLASS A BattI* Creek Central 58, Kalamazoo Cetnral 55 Dearbord Fordson 83, Dearborn Edsel Ford 41 Detroit Auitln 68, Grosse Pointe 66 Ecorse 55, Melvindale 47 East Lansing 77, Lansing Everatt . 53 ^^Fllnt Northwestern 64, Flint Kearsley Flint Central 87, Grand Blanc 78 Grand Rapids Catholic Central 54 Grand Rapids Creston 47 Grand Rapids Ottawa Hills 69, Grand .................... 37 18 10 84 206 139 New York ........... 33 20 12 , 78 199 163 Boston ............. 33 23 10 76 236 196 Chicago ............. 30 21 15 75 193 187 Toronto ............. 27 28 9 63 174 155 Detroit ............ 23 31 10 56 212 221 West Division Philadelphia ....... 27 28 10 64 152 158 Los Angeles ......... 28 31 6 62 177 206 St. Louis ........... 24 27 13 61 153 161 Minnesota .......... 24 28 13 61 163 201 Pittsburgh ......... 22 30 12 56 164 188 Oakland ............ 15 38 14 44 139 193 Saturday's Results Montreal 5, Chicago 0 Toronto 7, Detroit 5 New York 1, Minnesota 1, tli Pittsburgh 3, Los Angeles 1 St. Louis 3, Oakland j Sunday's Rasults Chicago 4, Toronto 0 Los Angelas 4, New York 3 Detroit 7, Boston 5 Philadelphia 2, Minnesota 0 St. Louis 1, Oakland 0 Today's Oamss No games scheduled. TuasdaWs Oames Detroit at Los *—' ■astom Division Won Lost Pet. Behind Philadelphia .... 57 18 .760 — Boston .......... 50 26 .658 TVi New York ........ 38 38 .500 n'/i Detroit ......... 36 40 .474 2IVIl Cincinnati ....... 36 41 .468 22 Baltimore ...... 35 41 .461 22. WMfewalfg $3 more each NO MONEY DOWN FAST, FREE MOUNTING MONEY MAKER NYLON TRUCK TIRE Wards bast lira tar dspsndabla performanaa Tri-rib fraad with wide center rib increases traction and raducoB wear. It's tonic engineered to subdue rhythmic noise. 22" 26“ 32“ 6.00-16 plu» 6.79-15 phis 7.00-15 plus 2.37 F.ET. 2.43 F.ET. 2.89F.E.T. POWER-QRIP HEAVY SERVICE Our bast tira far sur»v traetion in mud and snow It combinea Bmbeth over-tho-. that retitts slipping. 2488 29” 6.00-16 /plus 2.61 F.ET. 3488 670-15 plus 7.00-15 plus 2.80 F.ET. 3.28 FJLT. 36-Month High Speed Tire $20 6.50-13 plus 1.81 i^.ET., off your car. 4-ply nylon ceidl body resists heat buiid-up» flex fatigue. 36-month tread weqr guarantee. 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CORPORATION i ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1968 ississippi Murder Trial Starts HATTIESBURG, Miss. (UPI)—A young father of three identified by the FBI as state kleagle of the White Knights of the Ku Klux Kian today becomes the first of 12 alleged Klan members to go on trial in the 1966 fire-bomb slaying of Negro leader Vernon Dahmer. Mississippi brought state charges of murder and arson against eight white men last November. Five others were charged with arson in the Dahmer case. One of the defendants pleaded guilty Friday to murder and arson and may be a witness against the others. State Circuit Judge Stanton Hall called a 100-member prospective jury list for the opening trial today. The defendant, Cecil Victor Sessum, a lOth-grade graduate from nearby Ellisville, was identified by the FBI as state kleagle of the secretive and violence-prone White Knights. FBI CHARGE The order was given, the FBI charges, by Sam Holloway Bowers Jr., the dapper imperial wizard of the White Knights convicted of federal conspiracy charges last October in the Meridian trial that convicted seven white men in the 1964 slayings of three civil rights workers near Philadelphia, Miss. Dahmer, 58. died of hums while fighting flames set off by Molotov cocktails thrown into his house and adjoining store here early on the morning of Jan. 10, 1966. His wife, Ellife, 41, and daughter, Betty, 10, were hospitalized for burns. KEY WITNESS? Billy Roy Pitts, originally arrested with the others, pleaded guilty to murder and arson Friday and was ex pected to be a key state witness. Charged with murder and arson in the slaying are Sessum; Charles Clifford Wilson, a civic leader who won a local Jaycee award for distinguished service; Lester F. Thornton; William T. Smith Charles R. Noble; James F. Lyons; and Henry DeBoxtel, all of nearby Laurel. Charged with arson are Bowers, Travis Buckley, Dea-vours Nix and Lawrence Byrd, all of Laurel, and Howard T Giles of Jackson. SCARS OF WAR IN N. VIET — Natives move past a damaged area in the Hong Bang section of the North Vietnamese port city of Haiphong. A stone slab near the center is called a "slab of grudge” and the words on it express hatred of attacks by Americans. The picture, taken in late January, was released by a Japanese news agency, Nhon Denpa News. Two Women j Despised Marine Medic Charged Wifhj Jailbreak Aid Is Now a Khe Sanh Hero KHE SANH, Vietnam (AP) — him,” recalled Cpl. Daniel Sulli-EAGLE RIVER (AP) — Twoi-phe Methodist minister’s son van of Boston, Mas women were free on $2,500 bond was a conscientious objector wasn’t afraid of dying. He said each today, facing charges of j and a Marine outcast. [it just before the day he was hit. helping a 26-year-old Laurium] He hated war and refused to But he said he could not put man escape from the Kewee-|be a rifleman. himself up to killing a man. naw County Jail. j His strongest swear word was Friends said Spicer, who Kathleen Crampton, 24, and;“Golly.” He could not develop a stands 5-feet-9, tried to declare Jeanne Kangas, 20, both of tough exterior. himself a conscientious objector Lake Linden, were arraigned Saturday before Reuben Rowe, a Calumet justice of the peace, on charges of aiding and abetting the escape of Cari Heik-kinen Friday night. I in boot camp and at various oth-Until he went to work aiding er points on his route to Viet-the wounded at Khe Sanh, Pvt. nam. He was always told; Jonathan M. Spicer of Miami, “Wait until your next assign Fla., was despised by some of ment.” ithe other Leathernecks around The women waived examina-jhim and only tolerated by oth tlon, were bound over to cir,cuit|ers. Now he is a hero, a growing court and were released on legend and badly wounded, bond. I Friends said that Spicer Sheriff Ted Rogers said Mrs. Crampton visited Heikkinen, her brother, P'riday night at the jail before he sawed through two cell bars and escaped. Rogers said parts of a saw blade were found in his cell. ARRESTED IN TAVERN WASN’T AFRAID’ Heikkinen, jvho was awaiting "He just .sort of suddenly real-court examination on charges ized combat wasn’t really for of felonious assault and parole violation, was arrested in joined the Marines almost whim when he went to a recruiting station with a friend. Somewhere in basic training, when the instructors were attempting to turn him into a professional killer, he rebelled. Finally he was assigned to an infantry battalion at Khe Sanh, the besieged Marine base 15 miles south of the demilitarized i,- -k * I He arrived about the same “He was treated with con-jtime a North Vietnamese mor-tempt by his fellow infantry-Kar shell burst among the men,” said an officer who was [wounded men and litter bear-instrumental in getting Spicer ers, wounding about 30 men. transferred to one of Khe Sanh’s Spicer was hit in the heart, many medical units. “He wasiface and. legs. He was saved (naive, and the toughness Ma-|only by a delicate heart opera-rines show outwardly was for-ltion by Dr. Finnegan and Lt. ipn to him ” John Maddilligan of Brooklyn, N.Y. tavern near Eagle River an hour after he broke out of the jail. The two women were arrested Saturday. at . , . YOUR CENTER MTOBIIHN MOTORS For ■ great value on the orIgInaTcompact, visit your VW Canter . . . Autobahn Motora. Drive the VW of your choice at no cost. Ask for our coupon booklet entitling you to a FREE 24-hour teat drive. Coma in. now and sa» our com*' plate selection of the origl* nal compeot. Four-Yeor-Old's Query Too Much for Telephoner J BRAVERY, GALLANTRY A TIGER’ “What no one realized” said; Lt. Edward Feldman, a medical| Finnegan recommended Spl-officer from Forest Hills, N.Y., cer for the Silver Star for brav-‘was that he was thoroughly un- ery and gallantry. The Khe selfish and wouldn’t hesitate to'Sanh base’s commander. Col. put himself in danger.” I David E. Lownds, mentioned Spicer “was a tiger” when itjihc Navy Cross, came to the welfare of the| Men who spent fruitless hours SEATTLE (AF) - Four- wounded. He grabbed an un-| frying to teach Spicer to swear year-old Dana Arnold was be-jwoupded man who attempted to and be tough like a Marine said coming proficient at answering get aboard a medical evacua- they felt a little guilty, the telephone under the guid-jtion helicopter ahead of the ★ ★ * ---- u:. -----.. »«. wounded and roughly pulled “Man, he was really out there him back. when the shells were coming * ★ ★ jin,” said one. “I’m a little sorry Doctors said that when shell-[about the way we treated him fire pinned down he stretcher-(now.” ance of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. David Arnold of suburban Renton. But he lost his composure when one caller said: “Hello, this is Mr. McGregor.” McGregor!” the boy cried. “Are you the Mr. McGregor who chased Peter Cottontail out of the garden?” Mr. McGregor hung up without replying. AUTOBAHN MOTORS We^re so nice to come hack to TELEGRAPH ROAD Just north of Sqviro Uko Road FHONK 338-4531 bearers rushing the wounded men to the helicopters, Spicer repeatedly covered his man with his own body, A month ago the round-faced Marine ran out of luck. STARTED BACK He helped get one litter on a chopper and started back to the sandbagged area.” said Lt. James O. Finnegan of Philadelphia, Pa. Other stretcher-bearers were having trouble loading their litters and Spicer, despite a call from one doctor to "get the hell here,” turned back to the chopper to help. II Sfort Is Op«n Tuesday A Wednesday to 5:30; Monday, Thursday, F Telegraph & Elizabeth Lake Roads & Saturday to 9 P.M. r Autopsy Orcferecf MARHSALL (AP)-an autop-,sy will be performed on a Calhoun County sheriff’s deputy who was found dead in his garage Sunday by his wife. The garage doors were closed and his car’s engine running. The victim, 39-year-old Lincoln R. Crampton, was with the sheriff’s department for three years. ONCE-A-YEAR FACTORY-AUTHORIZED ANNUAL SALE SAVE $60 ON COLOR TV Now—the excitement of vivid Color TV on the largest (295 sq. inches) screen — at a price that means savings for you! Magnavox color TV fine-tunes itself automatically and instantly, brings you excellent pictures that stay precise. Chromatone filter gives yot/ rich, more natural color. NOW ONLY Choice of 5 Consoles '565 WKC S. SAGINAW - FE 3-7»4 OPEN TONITE’ til 9 P.M.-PARK FREE IN WKC’S PRIVATE LOT AT REAR OF STORE J ^I'HE PONTIAC PRESS. iAlONDAV, MARC If 11, 19f.8 C—7 -Junior Editors Quiz on- SATURN QUESTION: What are Saturn’s rings composed of and, how did they get there? ANSWER: Billions of tiny particles, probably the size of gravel, make up Saturn’s rings, which circle the planets as a flat disk about 10 miles thick. Saturn is an extremely cold planet, with a temperature of perhaps 250 degrees, below zero. Some astronomers believe the particles in the rings are ice, which helps to explain why they reflect so much of the sun’s light. Other authorities think rock fragments piay be included. How the rings c^e about is another mystery. Some astronomers believe they represent the fragments of a moon which once circled Saturn. Because it came too close to the planet’s gravitational pull, it broke into many fragments. Another theory holds that the rings are comprised of matter left over when the planet qriginally formed. Sattirn is of very light material; so light, it would float if there was water to float in—an idea symbolized by the impossible picture at lower right. Saturn has nine known moons—a tenth has just been sighted by astronomers. One of these. Titan, is the only moon in our solar system known to have' an atmosphere. Cornerstone Theft Fears Not Without Foundation By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) — This is not the sort of thing the average citizen ioses any sleep over, but the National Geographic Society and I brood about it quite a lot. I am referring to the cornerstones of the White House, Capitol, Treasury Building and Washington Monument, which seem to have disappeared. Every now and th^ the Geographic Society, which loves a good mystery story, rehashes the case of the missing cornerstones; In its most recent treatise, the society said the original cornerstones had been covered up by subsequent additions to the four famous structures. But that’s merely an assumption. Since ef-| torts to locai« the cornerstones have failed, no-1 body can say with absolute certainty that they! are still on the premises. WEST It Is my own theory that the cornerstones have been stolen. ’ ★ ★ ★ I strongly suspect there is a ring of cornerstone thieves operating in this country. i SEEDY CHARACTER Just the other day as I was crossing an alleyway,’ a seedy character emerged from the shadows and sidled up to me. “Pssst, buddy,” he psssted. “How’d youse like to have i old cornerstone? I can fix you up, cheap.” “I wouldn’t touch it with a Kkfoot trowel,” I said, moving away. “It’s probably ‘hot.’ ” I further susp^ that the gang which has been pulling the cornerstone capers may be under the domination of a certain foreign power. TO DISCREDIT U. S. It may all be a plot to discredit the United States in the eyes of the small, uncommitted nations. How can we cwivince them America is the most advanced country in the world if we keep losing our cornerstones. Well, unlike certain presidentiai candidates. I’m not the type to bring up a problem without offering a solution. In fact, I know a way to solve two problems at once. At the moment, the United States has on its hands In Greenland several tons of radioactive snow. The stuff was scooped up after the nuclear bomber accident and is awaiting disposal. ★ A ★ But nobody seems to have a very clear idea of what to do with it. 'ITiere isn’t any great demand for radioactive snow. The solution, of course, is to deposit it inside cornerstones in place of the pap^ and mementq* of the times which traditionally serve as cornerstone stuffing. Then, if the thieves strike again, police c^n track them down with a geiger counter. THE OHIOCANAL WAS UILT TO PROVIDE A WATER lOUTE FROM LAKE ERIE, -------\ND. TO TH’’ . v.,.'SM0UTH. WHEN COMPLEtED IN 1832 THERE WERE m LOCKS CONNECTING 309 MILES OF CANALS. LAKES AND RIVERS " h ' BARGES WERE PULLED BY HORSES WALKING A TOW PATH ON THE BANKS OF THE CANAL. THESE BARGES CARRIED A WIDE VARIETY OF AGRICULTURAL AND MANUFACTURED PRODUCTS AND PASSENGERS. REPAIR CREWS WORKED YEAR ROUND PATCHING THE aAY LINING, MAINTAINING TQW PATHS AND LOCKS AND REMOVING SUCH we care Prices Effective through Sunday, March 17th in Wayne, Macomb, Oakland and Washtenaw Counties “Super- Rlghr STEAKS Round Sirloin 95s! r i 1? i I T'Bone J Porterhouse 15 |I9 lb ) I lb Boneless Rump or Rotisserie Roasts ib99‘ PORK SAUSAGE 59 C 1-L«. ROLL 2 TO 3-LB. SIZE SPARE RIBS ic 59< VLASIC Sauerkraut JAIt 29' PINEAPPIE PUERTO RICAN 8-SIZE Salad Tomatoes....... Pascal Celery . . Fresh Spinach . . Broccoli .... Potatoes MicmuAN CELLO BUNCH 29* ... 20 .Sb 79* "SUPER-RIGHT" - BRISKET CORNED BEEF 79 Cabbage LARGE jjEC HEAD PERCH.COD. HADDOCK OR FLOUNDER Fish Portions WHOLE FRYER LEGS OR FRYER Breasts COc (WITH RIBS ATTACHED) IB MB a 09 a R French'Fries..............- 39* FILLETS Ocean Perch................. CAP’N JOHN'S Breaded Shrimp .... 79* SLICED ^ ^1^. Beef Liver..................">49* BONELESS ^ AS Cube Steaks ........ '‘SUPER-RIOHT** ALL MEAT MT m Sliced Bologna .... 65 JANE PARKER _ Sandwich Bread 4 JANE PARKER ^ Gold loaf Cake 2 JANE PARKER—SAVE 10c Raisin Pie...... B VARIETIES—JANE PARKER . Snack Pies... 2 JANE PARKER Old Fashioned Cookies 10'/i-OZ. LOAVES IN PKG. 1- LB. 2- OZ. PKG. 89‘ 49‘ 39‘ 27‘ 39‘ Glazed Donuts JANE PARKER SAVt lOe PKG. OF 12 1 SH#P 1 ■ Ftono t S = MAID OF DENMARK I were you get a LOWER | LuitCheOlt MeOt • • • 3 1 I weekly TOTAL food >='''• | goldek rise ^ ^ §„,llll,,...iinmuillllllllllW^^^^^ Biscuits ™ ........... • ALL PURPOSE Gold Medal Flour •. 49^ 00 c CHEESE SPREAD 2 -a' 88* r.khq>........'Sf23' CHOCOLATE 1 AC Hershey’s Syrup .. I “ PS VELVET PEANUT BUTTER apple sauce grape drink MOTT'S C2-LB. 3-OZ. JAR AUNT NELLIE'S Campbell's C 101/2-oz. ■ 9 CAN CREAM OF mushroom SOUP crackers 22‘ ’■« CHAMPION SALTINE WHITE BEAUTY ^ i| Ac Shortening.... 3 »(> 49 WHOLE OR SLICED Del Monte Beets.. 19‘ Macaroni Dinner • • • 7V2-OZ. PKG. ia ' 13c OFF LABEL jmm - Top Job • • ’iT°L^'4^r Bright Sail Bleach » 10c OFF LABEL Mm ■■ m Dove Liquid • •••••• 1^45 J4ome of ^ £cOWO ftiCf^ ^ J4ame C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1968 Jacoby on Bridge | I Fire Kills 2 Boys V y j 10 ♦ AQ94 A K 10 2 WT.ST (D) EAST ♦ AQJ92 *76 ¥ A 8 4 ¥ 7 5 ,4 ♦ 2 ♦ K.I10 ♦ A 7 6 .1 A J 8 4 SOl’tH AQ9 5 Both Vulnrrablp NorCh East South Pass Pass Pa: Oponing lead— with 4-S-3-3 distribution only If your hand is very while you can make double with a singleton in yoiir opponent’s bid suit with as little as 10 or 11 high card points.” Jim: “At most tables in the recent Dallas Regional tournament, West was allowed to play at one spade. He always madcj event” his contract. In fact, a couple' of West players managed to make an overtrick, but the top East-West scores came when | North cho.se to double for takeout and South played in two hearts.” Oswald: “Most South play- ers went down two tricks. One Bv OSAWLD AND JAMES : managed to go down three JACOBY \'^es[ opened his singleton dia- „ ,, , , , . , mond. South played dummv's Oswa d: “Whi e match pomt duplicate IS not exactly the ^ same game as rubber bridge, there is ^ question that” you can learn a' “East led back the jack of lot about rubber I‘•iamonds and West discarded I bridge by play |a spade instead of rufifng. South ing duplicate ’’ had to go after the club suii J i m: ‘ ‘0 f I eventually and misguessed thr course. When| iTrTd”g e,” voul Q—The bidding has been: laugh them If you happen to be winning ana; pa^j complain about bad luck if youjPas.s happen to be losing. In dupli-; You, South, hold: cate, your mistakes show up as AA q 8 7 ¥3 2 ¥K J 9 8 AQ 5 3 bad scores and you try to them in the future.” Oswald: “One thing , bridge player should learn is **"h'*h'*i " *hi"* i" that the takeout double with a ! hearts. «■ p o m n balanced hand is likely to be a today’s losing proposition. | p. “Our recommendation f o r yoor partner duplicate or rubber bridge is' fliat you make a takeout double HART (AP) — Two Hart boys died in a fire which destroyed' the packing crate in which theyl were playing, and police said they believed the boys were playing with matches. Killed in two clubs.” ihe fire Saturday night were Jim: “Actually, once the dia-! mond was opened, it didn’t firemen make any difference what:found their bodies in the charred South did. He would be down,remains of the crate where they' * three tricks in any'had been playing behind a fac-j tory. jack to wind up losing two spades, the ace of irumps, a spade ruff, two diamonds and: g e, you Q—The bidding has been: them offj,^‘ Pass's*'’ p”s nwe** ning and,Pass pa^s 24 Ubic the 71st day of 1968 with 295 to follow. ' The moon is between the first quarter and its full stage. The morning star is Venus. The evening stars are Mars and Jupiter. ★ , * '* On this day in history: In 1888 more thari 20 persons died in a violent snowstorm that crippled New York City, The storm lasted four days. , In 1930 former President William Howard Taft became the first President of the United States to be buried in the National Cemetery in Arlington, Va. In 1941 President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed the controversial lend-lease bill, giving nations fighting the Axis powers certain military equipment. * * * In 1959 for U.S. Senate approved Hawaii as the 50th stale. Giant squid can attain a length of 55 feet and a weight of 1,000 joounds. I'rni ¥l / j ' ll' II-'' (' THE ]k)NTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 11. -s » > <» Only Slicker Russians Contrive to Move Into the Cities MOSCOW (J) - The brightl lights of the Soviet city look| pretty dim to a Westerner, buti to Ae young people in Russia’s backitr^ villages they look magnificent. The city — in Russia as in the rest of the world — is where the action is. ★ ★ ★ But due to strict government controls, many of these rural youngstOTs will never feel the excitement of living in a major city. ^en Soviet planners spotted the cause of “urban sprawl,” th^y solved the problem the easy way. They sealed off the biggest, most attractive and , vibrant population centers. ^ Moving into Moscow from a farm, a village or another city I requires more cunning and {devious maneuvering than most can muster. The picturesque old tsarist capital of Leningrad and the Ukrainian capital of Kiev are among the other “closed” cities. The Soviet people customed to restraints that Western countries would consider oppressive, have accepted the ban and have watched it tighten gradually since the early 1950s. ★ ★ * “It’s almost hopeless” said one Muscovite when asked how a rural family goes about moving to Moscow. Great efforts are being made to keep the Moscow city limits fbced at their present boundaries and hold down the Defense Dept. Identifies 188 Yanks Killed in Viet WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense Department has issued a list of 188 servicemen killed in Vietnam. Another six died of nonhostile causes, and 12 were reported missing in action. The list included; Killed u a result of hostile action: ARMY CALIFORNIA—Spec. 4 4.llan D. I teller, Chico; CpI. Joseph A. Zuniga, Angelas; Pfc. Celzhar Pagcalluagan, Francisco; Pfc. John D. L. Duff Ventura; Pfe. Rlehr-* - —-— 'JcOLORADO--lnd ILUNOIS-Spac. 4 Mlfcht iNDIANAr-lpec. 4 Calvin ''*I^SAS-Sgl. John 1. Dill . City. KENTUCKY-Staff Sgf. Ernest Chaffins Jr., Hltchlnos. i MICHIGAN-Pfc. Robart L. Walker. Howell; Pfc. Rodney A. Real, Flint. OKLAHOAAA-Statf Sot. Carl J. Reid, Covington; Pfc. Ernest E. Beanrf, Guthrie. TEXAS-2nd Lt. Louis H. McFarland, South Houston; AA. Sgt. Edgar J. Bross-man, San Antonio; Spec. 4 Andrew Q. Allen III, Galveston; CpI. Alfred S. d Lt. Larry W. Petett, Trinidad. HAWAII —Platoon Sgt. D Chueren, Arlington Heights; ohn Spurlock, North Pekin; Pv loggyess, Chicago. iNblANA —Pfc. Marvin L. Miller, Muncle, Pfc. Jaffrey L. Holbrook; Pfc. Donald G. Hicks, Indianapolis. KANSAS—Spec. 4 Michael C. Zeller, Wamego; Spec. 4 James R. Webster, Wichita. KENTUCKY - Platoon Sgt. John H. Gfeller, Oak Grove; Pfc. Joseph B. Robinson, Ashland. MICHIOAN-Cpi. IMaxle E. Ackerman, Saginaw, CpI. George D. Whitelaw, East Detroit; Pfc John C. Glosonkamp, Flint. MINNESOTA—Spe. 4 James W. Nichols Jr., International Falls; CpI. Danlol R. Bodin, Waverly. MISSOURI-Spec. Pmlar Bluff; Pfc. Saint Louis. NEW MEXICO—Spec. 4 lO-Sgt. Guy E. - David W. Heck, ................... George E. Speck, Ravenna; Pfc. Richard UTAH—Pfc. Otis L. Nick, Myton. WISCONSIN-^taff Sgt. Terry A. C irtson, Boscobol.^^^,^ lOWA-Hospttal Corpsman 2.C. Edwi NIebur. Council Bluffs. OHIO-Gunnor's Mato 3.C. Gary ampton, Dayton. SOUTH DAKOTA —Boatswain's Ml AMRINE CORPS suirwRNIA-Mal. Edwin G...... a Ana; Sgt. William E. Adams, I L^^IMwIn Gj, Melxnw, _ ______"SgtT'Marc W. ----------- ------ Park; CpI. Donald 4t. Cooper, Laguna Beach; Pfc. AMchael S. Garrett, Santa Susana; Pfe. Joe W. Vanderpoll, San °ril INDIANA-CpI. Kenneth R. Bradley, Cedar Lake; Pvt. Ransom L. Stuck, Farmorslwra. KENTUCKY-~Cpl. Charlos Loulsvillo. MICHIGAN-Pfe. I WNNESOTA-Pfe. Thomas D. Rostamo, Minneapolis. NEBRASKA,-Pfe. Richard R. Ballen-tlne, Omaha., NEW MBXICO-Pfe. Roy S. Spurgeon, Albuquerque. OHIO-^gt. John P. Toth, Toledo; Pfc. John E. Berger, Cincinnati. SOUTH DAKOTA—Pfc. ~ c. Ronald C. G TEXAS—Staff Sgt. Joe D. Dunn, Weslaco; CpI. Danny "D" Gard, Wharton; Lance CpI. Roy N. Burris, Dallas. UTAH—Lanca CpI. Kyla "J" Coles, Selt Lake City. WISCONSIN—Pfe. Paul W. Heinz, Milwaukee. Died of wounds: AMRINE CORPS CALIFORNIA-Pfc. Roy R. Maddux Jr., Missing to dead-fros^e: ARMY ARIZONA-Pfe. James L. C Phoenix. CALIFORNIA—M. Sgt. Walter H. Hucks, San Pedro; Sgt. Thomas W. Loos, Camp Pendelton; Spec. 4 Denny M. Jackson, Santa Paula; Sgt. James G. Standefer, Garden Grove; Spec. 5 Galen E. Ohison, COLORADO — Sgt. ft. MaOHce I E. T . D. Williams, NIcoma Park; Spec. 4 Paul D. "rove. OREGON — Sgt. Frank J. _______ ntarlo; Pfe. William J. Block, Mllwaukie. TENNESSEE—Sgt. Larry W. Barnard, Knoxville; Sgt. Ned R. Brown, Columbia; Sgt. William H. Goins, Franklin. TEXAS—1st Lt. Michael S. Lane, Fort •■■nrth; 1st Lt. John R. Lawrence, Horst, ...J Lt. Ranald W. Wood, El Paso; Platoon Sgt. Kenneth S. Andrade, El Paso; Spec. ‘ Wayne B. Platt, Borger; Spec. 4 John .. Nevels, Brazoria, Pfe. Jose A. Hlno-»a, Rio Grande City. UTAH—WO Ray G. Jenkins, Logan. WASHINGTON—1st Lt. Rodger R. Hi !l, Pullman; Sgt. Darrel Z. Wright, Pi irchard;Spec. 4 James L. Zy^, Grange.. WISCONSIN-2nd Lt. Leon G. Gresh-mer, Neenah; Spec 4 Roger C. Atkin-sn, AAadlson; Pfc. Dennis L. Siegel, GMAA—Pfe. Jose B. Herrera, Old Agat. NAVY CALIFORNIA—Builder I.C. Charles O. Missing as a result of hostile action: Sgt. Laiyrence F. Beals, Sgt. Rota Watts, Spec. Ramiro Alvarado Jr., 4 Paul P. Sonstein, Spec. 4 J. D. De Foot, Spec. 4 Garfield Evans, Pfe. AA---- Cmdr. Henry A. Coons, Lt. Thomas ___.lan, Lt. (I.g.) Richard C. Lannom, Boatswain's Mate 2.C. Leslie E. Murray. Died not as a result of hostile action: ARMY INDIANA—2nd Lt. Charles H. Stanli East Gary. Missing to dead—nonhostile: ARMY CALIFORNIA—spec. 5 John A. Bafi Granada H'"- /Winnebago. 10-Staff J Riot Report Frank; Now It's Time to Act By WHITNEY M. YOUNG JR. Executive Director National Urban Lea^e The report by the President’s Commission on Civil Disorders has shaken up a lot of people. It is a forceful and frank document, one which doesn’t try to hide the great dangers the nation faces. And it comes just to time. All over the country, people are arming themselves and police departments are stocking war weapons i like armored cars iand tanks. 'They aren’t think-: tog about how to avoid disaster, they’re preparing to bring it on. The report points out the terrible dangers of such actions. It documents the way police I forces have {Hxivoked trouble, and how they have escalated tense situations into full-blown riots. I Just last month. South Carolina policemen pan- YOUNG icked and fired into a crowd of demonstrators, murdering tluree Negro college students. A great value of the report is that it puts the essential hlame fOr disorders where it belongs—on white racism. “What white Americans have never fully understood,” says the commission, “but what the Negro can never forget, is ti^ white society is deeply impltoated in tiie ^etto. White institutions created it, white institutions maintain it, and white society condones it." But, important as it is to point the finger at the villain, it’s just as important to map a way out of our dilenuna. This the commission has done, recommending massive programs to employment, housing and education. When I submitted my testimony to the commission last fall, I asked for just such sweeping recommendations, pointing out that simply placing the blaipe for what happened isn’t enough. The commission’s recommendations are sinular to the Domestic Marshall Plan first proposed by the Urban League four years ago. Had the nation adopted it (hen, there would have been no riots, and we would be well on the way to eliminating poverty and discriminatidn. But it is not too late. The clock stands at one minnto to fnidnjght, but there is Still time to save our democracy. . The basic question facing the nation is whether the two races can live together to equality and justice, or whether American democracy will be destroyed to the struggle to deny simple justice to a l AT KROGER YOU GET TENDERAY BEEF, LOW PRICES PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS! U.S. eOV’T INSPECTED OVEN-READY 4 TO 8-LB. AV0. S. Small Turkeys - LB. U.S. CHOICE TENDERAY Round Steak SERVE N’SAVE FRESH OR Sliced Bocoli.......'.>159* Snoked Pinics........... FRESH OR SMOKED PESCHKE'5 SLICED Liver Soesoge........^.59* Bologee or Wieeers .39* ••ml-Bc HaBus rLB WHOLE OR HALF U.S. CHOICE TBHDERAY BEEF Rump RoiBSt 99 BONELESS ROLLED i TIED KROGER BRAND Grapefruit Sections 5-’l YOUNG TENDER Del MoBBte Peas........... fmlJaZCAN KRAFT SALAD DRESSING Miracle Whip.................a.-44< PENNSYLVANIA DUTCHMAN STEMS & PIECES Mushreems................ ...wfcAN ASSORTED COLORS Waldorf Tissue............4-»28' COUNTRY CLUB CorBied Beef POINT CENTER CUT RIB Pork Chops LOIN OWls 991 REGULA4? OR ELECTRIC PERK COFFEE Hills Bros* *m69 PASTEURIZED PROCESS CHEF’S DELIGHT CHEESE SPREAD TASTY AVOMDALE TOMATOES 5 l.»1 CANS ■ SUN SOLD FRESH SPECIAL LABEL White Bread 2V/.-LB LOAVES Clerox Bleach......... TASTY TANDY Del MoBite Catsup.. ..WT-STL 17* KROGER BRAND Fruit Cocktail.......3 *1 PURE GRANULAYED PioBieer Sugar...........5 49* 60LDEN RIPE Bananas 12 LB. sunrise FRESH SALAD SIZE VINE RIPENED Tomafees W» Rssarvs Tfis Right To Limit Quontltlmt. Prlcoa And homo EHoetiv At Kngy Ig Dot. t Foot. Mieh. Thru Tuoa. Mor. 12, 1968. Nona Sold To Dmalmrm. Copyright 1968. Tho Krogar Co, VITA-DIET WHOLE Purple Plums CLOVER VALLEY CLIN0 CALIFORNIA Peaches 1 IPREGULAR PIECES KR06ER FRESH 2% Hl-Nu MHk 39 GAL CTN 77* C~10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1968 Race Split Expected in Mississippi Vote JACKSON, Miss. (AP) White candidate Charles Griffin is an odds-on favorite to defeat Negro leader Charles Evers by a wide majority in a spe- Exec Demoted by Chrysler in TV Dispute DETROIT (AP) - Chrysler Co^-p. says it has relieved one of its executives of his responsibilities after he objected to a scene in which singer Petula Clark, who is white, touches the arm of singer-actor Harry Belafonte, Negro, in a forthcoming television special. Chrysler did not say why it took the action against the executive, Doyle Lott, but a company source said Sunday it stemmed from Belafonte’s c plaint, announced last Wedi day through the National Broadcasting Co. * ★ * The company said Lott has not been fired. Lott, who apologized to Belafonte after the incident, said last Wednesday his objection was based on the staging of a musical number and had no racial connotation. ‘MOST OUTRAGEOUS’ Belafonte called It “the most outrageous case of racism have ever seen in the business. Lott was advertising manager for Chrysler’s Plymouth Division, which is sponsor for the special to be aired by NBC April 2. ★ ★ ★ Plymouth said that if any incident occurred, it “in no way reflects” the division’s attitude or policy on such matters. Lott said he had viewed the tape of the musical number before Belafonte’s announcement of the dispute and had approved it with the arm-touching intact. cial election runoff for Congress 1 Tuesday. | Polls open at 7 a.m. and close | at 6 p.m. for the 195,000 voters | in the 12 counties of southwest ^ Mississippi’s 3rd district, nepre-sented 21 years in Washington | by Gov. John Bell Williams. * ★ ★ Griffin, 41, of Utica, No. 1 aide to Williams for 18 years, has largely kept silent, saying he has had the flu, since Evers’ 33,706 votes led six white candi-j dates in the first round of the special election Feb. 27, when 114,871 votes were cast. Griffin got 28,927. Avoiding racial labels, Griffin appealed “to all citizens concerned over having dignified representation in Washington to redouble their efforts to overwhelming participation in Tuesday’s election.’* STATUS QUO Meanwhile, Evers, 45, of Fayette attacked Griffin for declining to meet him in debate. “My opponent syndwlizes the status quo. I have on a platform of constructive change, in our educational system ... in the present system of welfare ... in the housing and unemployment situations,” Evers said Sunday in McComb. ★ ★ ★ Evers reporljdly was angered by a subpoena issued by the defense in a murder trihl at Hattiesburg, outside the district, as the voting neared. He was summoned for the trial today of Cecil Victor Sessum, accused of slaying a Ne^o, Vernon Dah-mer, in a firebomb assault. A Negro-white split is expect-1 in balloting. Whites have about 125,000 votes, Negroes 70,000. Voting on racial lines was in evidence in the Feb. 27 returns, counties, Leave Them a Home Not a Mortgage Call me for defails on Modern Woodmen's LOW COST * MORTGAGE INSURANCE UXMAL VISITOR—Mrs. John F. Kennedy, wearing slacks and a rugged pair of shoes, pauses on die steps of El Adivino (the Fortune Teller) Pyramid during a two-hour tour of the Mayan ruins of Uxmal near Merida, Mexico, Saturday. She plans visits to several ancient Mexican ruins during a week on the Yucatan Peninsula. Jackie Kennedy Tours Ancient Mayan Temples PALENQUE, Mexico (AP) -precinctr a waning moon, Mrs John F. Kennedy gazed at the ancient Mayan temples of Pal enque Sunday night and said “This is simply magnificent.’ Clad in silk slacks and blouse Mrs. Kennedy and 10 com ions rode horseback to ruins, which include some of the finest examples of Mayan archi tecture. MAJORITIES Evers led in five counties but ijot majorities only in three ow-population Mississippi River counties which are about 75 per cent Negro. Whoever wins, the election will be significant as the first in Mississippi this century with a Negro and a white in a runoff for major office. Tuesday Only Special! 10 Students Are Jailed in Warsaw Strife WARSAW (UPI) - Polish newspapers today said 10 students have been jailed for their part in battling police Friday and Saturday. Warsaw was tensed for more trouble. The socialist youth newspaper Sztandar Mlodych said the 10 had been sentenced for “insulting the authorities.” It did not give the length of jail terms. Informed sources said the students may demonstrate again today. There were reports tiiat workers in factories around Warsaw, many of them parents of students, were waiting for an opportune time to go on strike. Mrs. Kennedy said she be jlieved the Mayan group was more impressive than the famed temples of Cambodia which she visited last year. About 500 miles westward, President Johnson’s elder daughter, Lynda Bird, and her husband, Capt. Charles ” Robb, spent Sunday fishing and swimming off Acapulco. The couple cruised aboard the private yacht of former President Miguel Aleman. They are vacationing before Robb leaves for Vietnam. The Kennedy party flew 300 miles over tropical jungle from Merida in Yucatan to this Chiapas village. The group set out for the ruins after attending Mass in the local church and lunching on enchiladas and beer. As the party rode up the steep winding road to the temples. Secret Service guard Jack Walsh fell off his horse, prompting a burst of laughter from Mrs. Kennedy, an accomplished rider. Walsh made the rest of the trip oq a mule. ★ ★ * Mrs. Kennedy waited until after sunset to see the ruins by moonlight. It cast an eerie glow over the ancient piles of stone entwined bj) jungle growth. Mrs. Kennedy arrived Friday for a week of visiting ancient Mexican cities on the Yucatan Peninsula. With her are former Deputy Defense Secretary Roswell Gilpatrick, Mr. and Mrs. Joao Roberto Sampaio Hafers of Santos, Brazil, and the Secret Service man. Police in automobiles and buses roamed Warsaw yesterday. But more of them took up positions in side streets, near last week’s trouble spots, ready to spring at the first sign of disturbance. * ★ ★ The demonstrations began Friday to protest the expulsion from Warsaw University ol two students for their part in January rally over the closing of an anti-Russian play. » I 332-3300 Pfftdiac BgujtShf " DBIVE.IN THEATER lu rurATC DRIVE-IN THEATER 293S DIXIE HIGHWAY (U.S. 10) 1 BLOCK H. TIIEGHAPH RD. DRIVE-IN THEATER tXkE 17S TO UNIVERSITY DRIVE OPDYKE RD. AT WAITON OLVD. Nominated | 10 ACADEMY i AWARDS IBCNIIIE) ALSO- SANDY DENNIS WPTltD DONlI sraiRcasD TECHNICOLOR ai Mi/ucU ' lo, __ BETnOAMS MTHE Anniversakv COLOR BY DELUXE HURON PRICES THIS ENGAGEMENT ONLY d.-$Bf. Mat. $I.2S n..$2.M »rl2)........11.00 ADULTS r;:; WED..SAT.-SUN. "Tha Lontaome Cou(tr’’ l!00-3;40-f:2S-0;06 JUNOLEBOOK>' 2:)0-6:N-1;42-t0:2S MON.-TUES..THURS.-FRI. “Juti(lt Book" 1:00 t 0:1T "Coutar" at 0:20 Only TTiis is Benjamin. He’s a little worried about his future; t THE6RADUATE TECHNICaOR* PANAVISION* j|| P|U$1 3 academv awards ELECTRIC IN CAR HEATERS BOX OFFICE OPEN 7:00 P.M. OklVE IN THE«ni)-FE 21000 'south TEIEGMPH XT SO. UKE RD.t MILE People in the News By The Associated Press Comedian Jonathan Winters’ son, Jonathan Jr., 18, was in satisfactory condition today at a Burbank, Calif., hospital with minor injuries suffered in an auto accident which killed the driver of the car. John F. Hyson, 17, was dead on arrival at a hospital Saturday night. He was thrown from the auto when it rolled over twice. Police said Hyson had been drag racing on Forest Lawn Drive near Griffith Park when he apparently lost control of the vehicle. Czech Conductor to Head Toronto Symphony Karel Ancerl, conductor of the Czech Philharmonic Orchestra, has been appointed music director ot the Twonto Symphony Orchestra beginning with the 1969-70 season, it was announced yesterday. The 60-year-old Ancerl will succeed Seiji Ozawa, who has accept^ an appointment to lead the San Francisco Symphcmy. AncerTs appointment is for three years. A graduate of the Prague Conservatory, he has been conductor and music director of the Czech orchesfara since 1951. He has made guest appearances with the Berlin Philharmonic, the Vienna Symphony, the Leningrad Symphony, the London Symphony, the Cleveland Orchestra and the New York Philharmonic. Burial Is Today for Joe Martin NORTH ATTLEBORO, Mass. (AP) — National, state and local dignitaries gathered today j to pay their final respects to former U.S. Rep. Jo,seph W. Martin Jr., who rose from being a newspaper boy outside factories in his native North Attleboro to speaker of the U.S. House. Martin, a congressman for 42 years and House speaker in 1947-48 and 1953-54 when his fellow Republicans were in the majority, died Wednesday in Florida, where he was spending the winter. He was 83. The Most Rev. James L. Connolly, bishop of Fall River, will say requiem Mass today in St. Mary’s Church, with burial to follow in nearby Mount Hope Cemetery. Among more than 1,500 persons who came to the funeral home during the weekend were Rep. Margaret Heckler, R-Mass., who defeated Martin in a 1966 primary bid for “one last term.” Prince's Writing Delays Garbage Man Prince Charles wrote his first piece for the Cambridge University magazine. Varsity, and now the singing garbage man comes around two hours later. Charles, 19-year-old freshman, wrote last week of “the monotonous jovial dustman’s refrain of ‘Oh Come All Ye Faithful’ and the head-splitting clang of dustbins” below his Trinily College window around 7 a.m. Frank Clarke, 46, driver of a garbage truck, admits being the singer and noted that his department changed the college collection time to 9 a.m. Commented Clarke; “I’m sorry if I woke the prince up, but being an ex-army man I think that 7 a.m. is time enough for anybody to be up and about.” As for his singing of the hymn, Clarke said, “It’s a good deep tune and I’ve got a deep voice.” TUESDAY SPECIAL Spaghstti With Meat Sauca and Cola Slaw All You Can Eat «l.00 From 5 P.M. to 10 P.M. Pontiae Lake Inn 1890 HIGHLAND ROAD 673-9988 i^Z^KEEGO TONIGHT 8:30 P.M. frank Sinatra <*tonii ronie 2a IT 7 and 10:18 BUSINESSMAN WANTED Highly rgted International Corporation Is sookino a top drawtr Individual to fill an Important position In distribution and markoting. 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Shew Starfs 12:00 Noon Continuous—334-4436 ENDS TUESDAY - FOR MATURE ADULTS Ursula I ■ Nllers Is a Different LOVE WORLD! 2nd Adult Hit ‘TRENCH WITHOUT DRESSING'' •••••••••••••oooo••••••••• YOUR NEWS QUIZ PART I - NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL Give yourself 10 points for each correct answer. 1 The President called In both sides to try to end the nationwide strUce in the.Industry which began about eight months ago. a-copper b-auto-making c-steel 2 This month is the 15th anniversary of the death of the former Soviet dictator. a~Nikolal Lenin b-Nlkita Khrushchev c-Josef Stalin 3 The U.S. orbited a so->caUed “space lab.” Qae of the purposes of the satellite is to study radiation from .... which could be dangerous to astronauts making a lunar voyage. a-Mars b-the sun o-the moon 4 Elvln Hayes. Lew Alcindor, and Fete Maravlch have been in the news as..... a-newly^chosen astronauts h-motion picture Academy award nominees o-coUege “AU-Amerlca” basketball players 5 Groups of Communist rebels have reportedly been fitting against government forces in the “neutral” Southeast Asian nations of ... a-Burma and Cambodia b-Thalland and Pakistan c-Malaysia and South Korea PART II - WORDS IN THE NEWS Take 4 points for each word that you can match with its correct meaning. 1... ..cloture a-sampling of publio opinion 2... ..poll b-a change making something fklrer 3... ..primary c-electlon to help choose party candidates 4... 1 commitment d-olosing of debate by calling for a vote 5.... ..reform < e-pledge; promise PART III - NAMES IN THE NEWS Take 6 points for names that you can correctly match with the clues. 1....Jacob Javlts a-U.S. Ambassador to South Viet Nam 2...MarttoLuOMrKlW oaitoria. d-Senator from New 4...Ellsworth Bunker - e-Negro civil rights 5...L.Otto Kemer VOL.XVII No.26 ®VEC, Inc., Madr$oo> WtKon$in The Pontiac Press Monday, March 11,1968 Match word clues with their corresponding pictures or symbols. 10 points for each correct answer. 1... Island in Indian Ocean becomes an Independent nation 2... a symbol of North Viet Nam Senate Minority Leader Everett Dirksen B MAURITIUS c Bite of nation's first 1968 presidential pri- NCAA tournament began oil from wrecked tanker dirtied some beaches here giant Egyptian dam nearing completion 8... a symbtl of South Viet Nam ASWAN Peggy Pleming won third world title in a row Richard Nixon, a can-.dldate for GOP presidential nomination HOW DO YOU RATE ? (Seora Esch SIds of Quiz Sepsntaly) 71 to 80 polnh- Good. 91 tolOQpotnta-TOPSCORE! Alto 70 polsh - Fair. 81 to 9D points - Bceollont. 60 or IMmtT??- Ifimi! family' discussion QUESTION What can private citizens do to help prevent urban race riots? THIS WEEK'S CHALLENGE/ Who id Mijority Leader of the House of I resentatives? CTimcaiwe Save This Practice Examination! STUDENTS Valuable Reference Material For Exams. ANSWERS H-oi !o*6 !j-8 !i*i J^3-9 Jp-8-‘o-p !v-fi ia-z ia-i izinttioams o-s !8-9 |q-g i9-z ip-i :||| jLHVd •uioqepio io iJaqiv ijbq igONailVHO 4*8 ia-p !o-e lB-g ip.( ;|| ^avd »-9 la-p iR-e 1o-Z 1«-l :| lavd - THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MAHC'H li, lOfiS ....................................., . . Nest Egg’s Shrinking Savers Are Warned 1 MARKETS The following areAop prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Gold-Mining Shares Falter I Accord Hinted Glamor Stocks Show Goins Produce FRUITS Apples. Jonathan, bu........ Apples, Jonathan, C. A., bu. Apples, Cider, 4 gal. case . Apples, McIntosh, bu. Apples, McIntosh, C. A., bu. Apples, Northern Spy, bu. . VEOETABLES Beels, topped, bu........ Cabbage, Red, bu. Cabbage, Standard Variety, b Horseradish,’ pk. bskt. '. , Root, di. bch. Squash, Acorn, bi Squash, Hubbard, Turnips, topped NEV/ YORK (AP) - Wide gaips were made by glamour j stocks as gold-mining shares jsank in a higher stock market I early Monday afternoon. Trad-.. S3.J5 ing was active. Gains outnumbered losses by a ratio of about 8 to 3, ;; Waif Street responded bullish-iwl'y ^he international 3.75 gold pool had decided over the, . S2.75 weekend to support the price of ; 'loo gold at $35 an ounce. jjji This removed, temporarily, ^ ““ione of the street’s worst head-5oj'aches and, at the same time, it :: 1 iso discouraged speculators who ::: ilo had been running up the price of By ED MORSE ! called him. By Jan. 1, 1968, his ble. But nobody knows whether AP Business Analyst - money grew to $10,850—and that 5 per cent rates will continue for NEW YORK — “They’ve would buy $4,123 worth at 1933 14 years. And nobody knows T II stock spefulators,’’ prices. what $1,000 invested in stocks in I rvnnpr figures on smith's results would be ifi 14 years. Ill I Uli\J, warned the savers?” Then he'_buying and selling^ust any “Every elevator operator in told a Wall Street parable. stocks on the New York Stock Hie country has the idea he can Plrmc Grandpa Jones, it seems, Exchange-are based on a com-get rich in the stock market,” IWO nrms may nave saved $1,000 in 1933 - a tough puterized study by the Universi- said William McChesney Martin Yielded on Kev Issue '1 ty of Chicago of stock action '1'' • ' bairman of the Federal / I $380 worth at today’s prices, from 1926 through i960, updated Reserve Board, earlier this I Had he put the money in a typi-through 1967 by Merrill, Lvnch, year. WASHINGTON (AP) - Two^-'^l New York savings bank|pierce, Fenner & Smith'inc., * * .* of the four companies involyed^’’^'^ dan. 1, 1934, to Jan. 1, which sponsored the study, Re warned against “inordi- in the eight-month copper strike t968, at compound interest he intfrkst speculation by the public reportedly have reached an un- would have $2,481. But even ^ and some “go-go” mutual derstanding with 26 unions that this would buy only $934 com-l The growth of $1,000 at com- funds. Similar warnings were is-cash positioni may resolve a major roadblock Pafed with vyhat $1,000 bought'pound interest seems low tctday sued by several prominent men. , _____ JQOto settlement. 1 in 1933. .when savings banks pay 5 peri ★ ★ ★ rails up .3 and ulilities off .4. |Baiance-^“"" ‘, >»a7 ★ * * i * ★ ★ cent. Over most of the 34-year “Speculation is a dirty word,” The Dow Jones Industrial av-ip^p^^i*^ 451,W4.48^ The New York Times said to-1 Grandpa Smith, on the other period, however interest rates the broker .said, “But what erage at noon was up 6.99 ®^\^|,hrtrawa\'5^nsca?^Year-’*'’^^'’^'*^'”^^y official sources report-jhand, put $1,000 into the stock! were much lower, ranging up- about investment? Have you '^**25,«20,5m,»35.m*'^Ti2,205,073,»43.7i ed the Understanding reached market over the same period,[wards per cent. At cur-'heard a single man of Martin’s i-Totai Debt- I. . ^ „----- buying and selling completely at rent 5 ^r cent rates it would I prominence warp the millions of gold-mining shares in the hope the official price of gold would be raised. Apparent progress toward settling the long copper strike and a scheduled rise in capital spending by industry also were encouraging. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon was up .7 at ■“.6 with industrials up 1.8, Wright Hargreaves, a gold er, dropped a fraction as it paced the iist on activity. Pato Gold sank more than a point. Giant Yellowknife and Lake Shore Mines fractions. Treasury Position WASHINGTON (AP)-* responding date a year A^rch i, IfiS 7,130.593,703.89 842.: The trend also was higher on the American Stock Exchange as gold-niining shares retreated. Poultry and Eggs The New York Slock Exchange ^'’'*35UM,««,332.04 330,804,508,114.111 between Phelps Dodge, Kenne-*”i!m4,034,724.80 13,100,409,048.05 cott and the unions would cover .ubTierto"rt'!S!I*o^7“Vmit^*’^' '•*" ™'|mines, smelters and refineries —---------------------------------'but not lead, zinc and fabrica- tion operations. CHICAGO (AP) - Chicago Mercantllo;Adless 1 Cyrhanas — Buttar steady.* wholesale . “m'" W B^'^a^vTliAlcanAlSq mediums 25. Standards 25V,; check. |A'lifI'/;,' CHICAGO (AP) -..(,OSDA_)_^; Livestock DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)-Callle 1700;' AXM(:yan choice 900-1200 pound slaughter s'fe/S| AmEIPw , ■■ slaughter heifers 25.00-25.50; good. A 14 43V. 42 43 +V/1 29 57V. 57 57 - V 37 18V, I7'/S 18',^ + \ 82 234 234 23Vj + J 2 634 63vT 63Vj + < a 22V. 22VI 22»S - ^ 52 35V. 35 35 -1 12 43W 43 43Vi — ' 20 52V. 57'M 52W 9 77V, 74V, 77V, -f; : d gills 19.75-20.25; 1-3 220-240 300-400 pound I Am Motors !t Cl 1.90 39 45'/. 45H 45V. ., llaughler ewes 7-1(1.00. CHICASO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)-(USDAI- Hog butchers steady: 1 2 195-240 lb I 19.75-20.50; 1-3 220-250 lbs W.25-20.C steady to strong; 1-3 350-400 I 17.50.18.00. Cattle 400: not enough on < chok-r975 lb 'slau ilhenol .70 : ken Chem . . :hDan 1.40 Armco St I 3 ----1 choice 850-925 lb ^rm Ck 1 ____...... -----s 24.()0, . AshIdOil Sheep 300; around 200 head choice and Assd DG - -1 105-113 lb wooled slauQhti American Stock Exch. Dynalectrn EquityCp .331 Fargo Oils Fed Resrees FelmonI Oil Gen Plywood Goldfield I 34V, 35V, 35V. - 23 22 IV/2 2134 — 3k Mich Sugar MohwkD set Molybden WnNuclr .20 , , .. . .. . . Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1948 ‘ - w Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points are eighths OVER THE COUNTER STOCKS Quotations from the NASD are representative Inter-dealer prices ------ x34 343k 333k 34'A 151 S83k 57W 58H 40 37’/k 343k 37 -FI3k 9 72W 71»4 71V. 40 24 243k 243k Atlas Ch .80 Babck W*1.34 BaItGE 1.40 Beckman .50 BeechAIre 1b Boeing 1.20 Borden 1.21 BorgWar 1. Camp Soup i Canteen .80 CaroPLt 1.38 CaroTOiT .48 Carrier Cp 1 CarterW .40a Case Jl CaterTr 1.20 Cenco Ins .30 (Sent SW 1.70 Cerro Cp 1.40 Cert-teed .80 CessnaA 1.40 CFI StI .80 Ches Ohio 4 ChIMII StP P ChIPneu 1.80 ChrlsCraft la Chrysler 2 CITFin 1 Jones L 2.70 4 243k 24'/, 26'/, — '. 19 60'/, 60 60'/, . 18 143k 13V, 13V, — 5 143k 1434 143k .... 55 39'A 383k 39 ... 4 42 413k 42 -t 4 32V, 323k 32V, 7 35'/, 35'/, 35'/, -F 2 30V, 30V4 3034 -F ChIPneu 1 -irisCr ■■ iryslei _ TFin Cities Sve . ClevEIIII 1.( CocaCola 2. Colei Pal 1.1 CoinnRad .1 ColoIntG U onFood 1.50 X15 50'/, 4934 4 ,! ConNatG 1 27% 2 it include retail markup, r Citizens Utilities Class A Detrex Chemical ......... Diamond Crystal .......... Kelly Services .......... Mohawk Rubber Co. Containr 1.40 4 29 29 29 —1 H ContAIrL .50 28 1934 19'/, 1934 -F 1 • Iconf Can 2 4 4734 47'/, 4734 -F 1 Cent Ins 3.20 5 74 75V, 74 — I •1 Cent Mot .40 4 14>/, 1634 1434 -- 1 ■J Conf Oil 2.80 .................. 3'Eontr-------- u... V,., 4..U 44 6434 46'/, 66'/, . ~ Ci iiv-ontrol Data 265 10934 107'/, 10834 -F134 I? “ Cooperin 1.20 ’ ■ Ill v ft Corn Pd 1.70 Wyandotte Chemical MUTUAL FUNDS Affiliated Fund ..... Chemical Fund Commonwealth Stock . Dreyfus ......... . ■2 Cowles .50 CoxBdeas .ou ■3 Crow Coll 2f ” Crown Cork '3 CrownZe 2.20 ■* Croc StI 1.20 j Cudahy Co Curtis Pub ® Curtiss Wr 1 4 1334 13'A 1334 -F 5 44<4l 45'/a 44'/4 -F 14 54'A 54 54 - 12 SOV, SPA 5734 -f 22 47'A 4214 42'/4 4 x5 29 29 29 4 28 23 2i!',4 77A 28% 28% 4 17 29Vj 15 8 . xU 2934 2934 »3k / 30 2434 74'A 2434 16 IS 14% 14% 4 H T‘ t w 2934 4 W 243k -F Vi .. 442.5 Year Ago 1947-48 High 1967-48 Low ........... 1966 High ......... 537. 172.6 145.3 ' pair^ain .SOa JS'4‘ 1§? 342'4 FJ'rHni’.^ VSi-^i 15’*l Fansteel Met \ 35% 3 388.0 143.9 130. « 0X0 7 reooers lp i M9 4 FedDStr 1. * Fed Mog 1 Ferro Cp 1. t Dividends Declared Firestne I. Pa- Stk. 01 Pay- FstChrt 1.2 Rita riod Record able Flintkote 1 INCREASED |Fla PDw 1. 4-14 FlaPwLt 1 1 45Vk 4 Gen Mills ,8( GenMot ,85a GenPrec .80 GPubSv ,54e GPubUt 1,54 GTel El 1.40 Gen Tire .80 Genesco 1.40 Ga Pacific II 72 34 3S'/4 35'/, — '/ 103 7434 7534 75% . 42 39'/4 30'/, 38V, 41'/ 25 4'/, 434 434 . . 20 24% 26'/, 24'/, — '/ GettyOil .72a Gillette 1.20 Glen Aid .70 Global Marin Goodrich 2.40 Goodyr t.35 GracoCo 1.40 Granites 1.40 Grom 1.30 GtA8.P 1.30a Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt West Pint GfWnUn 1.00 Greyhound 1 GrumnAIre 1 Gulf Oil 2.40 GultStaUt .88 SS’-I Hook Ch 1.40 27 61% 60% 61 — 5 27% 27% 27% + 18 84 83% 63% 39 47 46% 46% + 296 13% 13% 13% . 43 34 33% 34 ... 8 23% 23V4 23% + 3 32% 32Va 32Va — 8 29% 29% 29»/4 — 3 51% 51% 51 Va i- 51 17% 16% 16% + X22 82Va 79 S2% •¥ 23 20% 20% 20% + 11 33% 33% 33% — 38 71 Va 71% 71% + 5 22% 22Vi 22V» + <456 40% 39% 40 - —H— 6 64% 64% 64% + 13 53 52% 52% 48 71 69% 69% —2 52 37 36Va 37 + % Teamsters' Paper Strike Near End? - The strike PubSveColo 1 Pubikind .46f PugSPL 1.68 Pullman 2.80 Rayonler |.40 Raytheon .80 Reading Co ReichCh ,40b RepubStI 2.50 RheemM 1.40 ’^8? .72 RyderSys tS? The Times quoted official sources as cautioning against | optimism that the understand-! ing meant the strike which has .... idled some 60,000 workers would lend soon. 4”42F4 42»4 6254 | ^^6 rcport did indicate the 59 i82vT la'iv. li'iH +tv,i‘'^° companies may have capit-j DETROIT (AP) 19^ 843/.'* eV* 84% -partially—on the started Detroit's newspa-*3 + ',k that has proved the main p^j. blackout 117 days ago may IS 4754 47% - ^31 stumbling block in negotrations ^bis week, but the newspa- ___p, ‘ ‘ UNION DEMAND jpers probably won’t be publish- 105 44'/. 443,4 44’/. -F 5. j That Is the union demand forjins for some time to come. ^ 60 40% 30% 40^ +1'"'company wide contracts cover- The Teamsters uni"" 1« 2*4% 23°% 2554+'54,ing all aspects of each compa------------................ t! 403% 40% 4054 +% ® far-flung, diversified opera- ’‘23 28% MVk common expiration 25 42 4154 41’/k + 54!dates. 10 42 3254 32H + /, + 54 15 7% 7% 55 42% 42 f •/» 16 31% 31% 31% — % 46 54% 53% 54 + % X8 29% 29% 29% + % 42 586 580% 585 +5% <82 33% 32% 323/^ — % 27 22 21% 21% + % 11 104% 104Va 104% + % 4 10% 10% lOV* + % 127 26% 26% 26% + % 68 48% 47% 47% + % 5 62% 62% 62% — % -JdCstL 2.20 SearIGD 1.30 Sears Roa la Sharon s'tl 1 Shell Oil 2.30 SherwnWm 2 Sinclair 2.80 ■‘*->gerCo 2.40 lithK l.eOa ..uCalE 1.40 South Co 1.08 SouNGat 1.40 SowtPac 1.60 South Ry 2.80 Spartan Ind SptrryR ,20a SquaraD .70a Staley ' «%-% The afternoon meeting is 42 im'liS+*54 some 200 union officials was creases of $30 in wages and , mated at less than 10 tons, corns'* 42Vk* 42^ called in the wake of reports fringe benefits for Teamsters pared with more than 75 tons Std KollS .50 StOilCal 2.70 StOilInd 2.10 StdOIINJ .05e StOllOh 2.50b St Packaging StauHCh 1.60 Sterl Drug 1 2.25 KanPwL 1.12 Kerr,Me 1.50 Lear Slag .80 LehPCam .60 Leh Val Ind Lehmn 6.06a LOFGIss 2.60 LIbb McN ' h'W Litton 2.6 • * Ingstn ^.jkhdA __ LoawsTh .lOh LoneSGa LonglsLt —K— 3 4054 40'/. 40'/, I 76'A 26'/, 24'/, t 20'/4 7VA 28 Texaco 2.80 TexETrn 1.20 Tex G Sul .40 TexasInst .80 I 3454 34'/k 3454 .. Lanes Cam ingl!._. _ irfllard 2.50 _rv 1.33 LuckyStr 1.20 Lukans StI 1 Macke Co .30 MacyRH .90 MadFd 3.04a MagmaC 3.40 Magnavx .80 Marathn 1.40 Mar Mid 1.50 Marquar .301 MartlnMar 1 MayDSIr 1.40 .:m’;JSb MeadCp 1.90 Malv $h 2.20 5 74% 73% 74% + % 22 34% 34% 34% + % 60 66% 66% 66% + % 13 8% 8% 8% ... 70 42% 42% 42% — % 43 48% 47 48V3 +1% 16 17% 16% 17% + % 12 60 13 34% 33% 341/2 + 5 30% 30V2 30% + V —M— 15 17V, WA 1754 + V « .57 3654 3654 — 5 2SV, 25'/, + '/ 59'/. 59'/. + 5 403/. 4VA +15 37 343/. 34'A 343/. + V 5 12'/t 12'/, 12'/k 50 1854 18'/5 1854 — V 13 3454 36'/. 34'/, + ’/ 3 34V. 34'/4 34'/i — V 144 49’/. 48 48V. +1V 2 3554 3554 358* + 1 14 89 tVA 87'/, —1 21 74'/k WA 7454 + 1 24 42Vk 4154 41'/4 +1 51 2154 4l'A 21H + 14 *2'/k 8»4 8254 - 5 5 21 21 21 + ' 10 2054 205* 2054 + 38 45 ......... ‘ 14 44^ 45V, 45V. + V4 Phelps Dodge had offered a employed at the two newspa- 23 21H 21^ 2154 i % three-year, wages-benefits pack-jpers over the next three years. 83 59 5854 M5/. 1 w age valucd by the company atj ★ * ★ 22 uvm 74H 7454 +*'/.itl 07 an hour and by the unions! Since the Teamsters strike be- 24 %A 43'/, 43vJ + Is®"’ though, two of the 13 other 14 Mvi 34'^ 36'/I I The unions, whose members [unions have gone on strike and ^7 41'''* 40V4 If’ - 5^ received an average $3.28 an another has authorized a strike. 14 48V4 4754 4754 + I4 h°ur whco the strike started, 2?2 li'/. I?vi 2^ti^,have been seeking a three-year 3M ^ '^ contract with a $l-an-hour overJ 43 3754 37'/4 3754 .'..^’lall boost. 14 21 2054 2054 + 54; 80 40 59'^ 59'/4 + '/. 9*1 48H 48V4 MA 27'A 2754 — 'A H 25>A 25‘ 28V4 2754 2754 — 54 or semi-annual decleratit «, jxtra dividends or pai following fCK)tno%s.* * - *•" -xtra or exirda. «,i„uoi loic dividend, c—Llquidaling dlvi---‘ired or paid in 1967 plus . e—Declared or paid so f—Payable in stock during I 26'A 26 REGULAR '|FMC Cp .75 Hardee's FoodSys .75 3-18 4-1 FoodFaIr .90 Merchants Bk, NY .45 " ' “ “ Neb cons Mills -10 ,0-44 Pioneer Am Ins .. .03. Q 3-15 16 7254 72 . --------- 7 3154 3154 31'A + 'A < ParkeDavis 1 9 315/4 315A 31+4'—'AlPeaCoal ,25e 2 29'/, 2954 29'/4 + 54 ' PennDix .60b 32 50 4954 4954 + V, j Penney 1,60a 12 2554 25% 2S'A + 54 1 PennCTen 2.40 9 225A 2254 2254 —'A PaPwLt 1.5tf 7 7»Vi 39 39'A + 1/4 Pennioll 1.40 i 6S'A 6S'A . . . PepsiCo .90 2 42'A 1? 3hot» dart containing a'tranquilzer drug, propelled by carbon dioxide. Conner demonstrated the weapon over the weekend to civil andmlli-. tary authorities., . Development Bonds Opposed- U.S. Tax-Reform Step Taken By JOSEPH R. tX)YNE |ls free of federal Income taxes, | made known after Congress be-WA^iHINCTON (AP) - After 'he.v can be floated at a lower gins to act on the 10 per cent ' nio''re than "f^^^^ corporate come lax surcharge proposal. Johnson administration hasl°“™®' ... * started down the road to tax re-1 The Treasury can eliminate The administration wants to » . . elermimen form in its plan to eliminate the the exemption by admmistra-Jkeep the surcharge and tax ® exemption for state and local in- live acUon bccau.se the bonds form package separate. Tax-" Ileaders were loined DETROIT (AP) — A psychla- despair as underlying factors jtrlstisays the riot that led to 43 involved in racial rioting. j deaths in Detroit last July 23-30 IDENTITY But Luby, associate director Detroit’s Lafayette Clinic and ^ by Negr^ ^ psychiatry Dr. EHlbtt Lu^, who is white,Wayrte State University, said «^osaidhe Is becoi^g weary j.jot ^ygg ^ expres-| of social scientists making Negro’s "growing white p^le ‘culpabte for Jl; identity, growing pride, growing of the difficulties which blacks^gj^^^ indication that have experienced m this coun- longer meas- * ★ * iucing hhnself in terms of the , , ,, , . ... . ^ white man.’’ Luby said he based his state-i j ments on the results of a studyj the study Involved a he conducted on racism. A $135,-000 grant from the National Institute of Mental Health financed I the project, he said. His findings appear to con-| flict with a report released last week by the President’s Commission on Civil Di^rders. The comnjission're^rt cited “white racisin" and Negro poverty and • Grape Strike \ Leader Ends 25-Day Fast DELANO, Calif. (AP) - Labor organizer Cesar Chavez broke what he termed the “bread of social justice’’ Sunday with thousands of his union followers shouting “Viva!” as he ended his 25-day fast. staff of psychologists and psy-j chiatrists in interviews with 400 persons arrested in last summer’s riot. He said the research-' ers also talked to whites andi Negroes in the areas where rioting took place. “Our studies strongly suggest that this was a well-employed' group making an average of some 1115 to $120 a week, group which felt that it had substantially improved its status in the community during the past three to, five years, a group that I was very optimistic about its future,” Luby reported Sunday over radio station WJR’s “Sun-j I day Supplement” program in I Detroit. j “And certainly this was not ai despairing group of men or an impoverished group,” he said.' ,“They in a sense were making a good income and they were rather confiiient about themselves and their future.” CLOBER DISTANCE I Asked to explain why such a group would riot, Luby said. I “The closer the distance comes between the lower hnd middle class, the more militant and aggressive and assertive the lower class beoumes. “Black people ,.. 4re now developing a sense of id^tity, a feeliilR of S^lf-detenrtttiatlon and feeling^ that they are able now to control their own’/community;’' • Discovered by Emil yt»i Behring, diphtheria antitoxin was first used for patienbt in 1894. dustrial development bonds. Before the total job is completed, the nation’s entire tax structure is likely to come under congressional scrutiny, including the controversial 27% per cent oil depletion allowance. * * ★ Although the administration has yet to unveil its long-prom- ____ _____ . Ised tax reform package, the | compete with regular municipal Treasury Department has de-! bonds and thus drive up their cided to move on its own to end [ cost, the treasury said, what it considers an abuse of i -p^XES AFFECTED tax exempt development bonds , . , Issued in the name of states and! And when a local or state gov-,ernment must pay a higher in- In reality, the Treasury said, .1 . AL nrnnprfv laxP55 and these are nothing more than a were originally declared tax exempt by a 1954 Treasury ruling. TYeasury officials said they are doing hard-pressed state and local taxpayers a favor by moving now. Industrial development bonds issued in the name of a local government—at least $1.4 billion worth were issued last year- land union leaders were joined form legislation is expected tojby Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-take at least a year to move N-Y., in honor of Chavez policy through Congress after it’s sub-'of nonviolence in the 2%-year-jold Delano grape strike. The over-all reform program is expected to cover charitable foundations, estate and gift taxes, multiple exemptions enjoyed by some corporations and per-a minimum tax for the bond used by a corporation to get a cheap interest rale for plant expansion and thus represent a federal subsidy. INCOME TAX-FREE Because interest on the bonds property taxes, sales taxes and state Income taxes. The effort to push through this reform—which many states have requested—could be the easiest faced by the Treasury in the long list of reforms to be unveiled. They reportedly will be Antiwar Gl Is Arrested WASHINGTON (AP) — Aland he was arrested when he Burlington, Vt., Army officer] refused, arrested for picketing the White! s^cific charges were fil-. .. ed, and he was released to House with a sign reading Lptu^n unescorted to Ft. Devens “I20,fl00 casualties — why?”|,yhere a report will be sent to has been turned over t o his commanding officer, Chavez, 41, drawn and weary after his ordeal, appeared at a special Mass of thanksgiving to the shouts of “Viva Chavez, viva Kennedy and viva la un- very rich who are able to avoid ion!’ taxes through large charitable I He took his first solid food deductions and depreciation. OIL DEPLETION RATE No change in the 27% per cent oil depletion rate is expected to be recommended by the White House but some members Congress have said they will try to Jower it. The industrial development bond was designed originally for use by areas of high unemployment to attract job-producing industries. But in recent years since Feb. 14 at the conclusion of the Mass. The symbolic por- i tion of bread was tendered by' Kennedy who told 7,000 persons j gathered at the Delano Cityj Park he was in their midst to honor “one of the most historic figures of our times.” CONGRATULATTCWia But, said Ken^y, “I did Bot come only to hoi^ Cesar, but to congratulate you who are locked . with him in the struggle for jus- companies have threatened to take their business elsewhere if military authorities. A military spokesman said 2nd Lt. Dennis J. Morrisseau, 2fi, will be returned to his unit, the 46th Direct Support Group at Ft. Devens, Mass., where the case will be dealt with by his commanding officer. spokesman said. BUMPER STICKER A Ft. Devens information officer said Morrisseau recently they didn’t get the cost-saving advantage of an industrial development bond signed by a local government, officials said. More than 40 states now authorize use of tax-free bonds, some of them simply to prevent industry from moving elsewhere. North Carolina only recently authorized their use—but at the same time asked the Treasury to eliminate the tax exemption altogether. Spanish-speaking Americans. “You are the first—not first farm workers to organize —but the first to fight and triumph over all the odds without proper protection of federal laws.” ♦ * * Kennedy, who spoke the first few words of his brief remarks in Spanish, pledged to work for federal legislation for farm workers. SWE*11"’ MOH.,niK..wai. 5-PIECE dihetTE set Spacious 30"x40" tabla *x-tsnds to, 48" and hat a boau-tiful plastk top that laughs at heat, mOrs and stains; wipes clean. 6 sturdy chairs have wrap-around 1" tubular frames, comfortably padded seats and backs; 2-tone wash* able plastic. Regulaf 49.95f Now $ PARK FREE S^c 38®® No Money Down Pay Only 1.00 Weekly OPEN TONIGHT TIL 9 displayed a “Let’s Get Out of Vietnam” sticker on his sports car and was told by military police to remove either the * * * bumper sticker or a Ft. Devens The officer, wearing h i s decal, uniform, staged the one-man Morrisseau is due to be senti picket Sunday afternoon. White to Vietnam in April after two House and U.S. Park Police weeks of jungle training in said they asked him to desist, Panama, the spokesman said. Model 68 7R® 19 V $125p I « $150f I 1 $900, 4b $|25p PORTABLE TV $4950 ^DRYER WASHER Grange ^Refrigerator Mobile Maid ^DISHWASHER NEW HOOVER 2 UPRIGHT VACUUM Speed Braided Cloth, All Rubber f Exchangoble With ^ Q 1^ | Your Old Re-Uie- W « ••4 ^ E able Hole Ends bH Regular 7.50 wm Come In or Free Delivery PARTS and SERVICE ON ALL CLEANERS _. , Bogi-Hofes-Brushei-Belts-Attochmenti-Elc. "Rebuilt by Curt's Apoliances Using Our Own Parts" Complete With ^ Attachments , -Disposal CURT’S APPLIAIVCES FaeloryAutherlte rhUt Demftr 6484 WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD 674*1101 FOOD TOWN SUPER MARKETS it’s a Pleasure to Shop ami Save at u MlalWMia^Lk.Mi I etrntr CtlHiiiMa I Unlta Uk* V)H«t« I OPEN SUNDAYS I W2S Saahabaw RS. 2IM Hi(hland Rd. ■ M Pint Kaak Plata HYUHS PUZA ■ Car. Maykaa M. COR. DUCK UKIRO. M OPEN SUNDAYS OPEN SUNDAYS PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS IJIK I’tAAlJM ^I().\DAV, MAKCH 11, 1968 State Guard Seeks Negro Vets Kuhn Replies LANSING (AP) — A National ment ay a commissioned officer tillery Armory to present Infor- TQ ( RV^n^ntl Guard recruiting c a m p a i g n, in the National Guard,” Schnip- rriation on the Guard program ’ lU^I I aimed at 2,000 Negro veterans ke’s letter says. and to answer questions and In the Detroit metropolitan * * ★ whether the veteran would DETROIT (AP) — State Sen. area, was announced today by The letter describes the make-be interested in attending. George W Kuhn R-West Bloom-Maj. Gen. Clarence C. Schn.pke, up of the Guard, points out that Schnipke also includes a list- state adjutant general. it meets one weekend per month ing of Guard armories in the [ thkt^^EtetJS M^voC Schnipke, commander of the and engages in a two - week metropolitan area and describes , i ai ^irou mayor Michigan Guard, said a letter field training exercise each pay, allowances and retirement ' is being mailed to each of the .summer. benefits earned by guardsmen. ° Negro veterans in the area who The letter also includes a Schnipke said the letters are wees as an is assigned to the nationwide re-questionnaire which seeks to being mailed only to persons serve mobilization pool. learn the attitude of respon-jwith prior military service,^ ueiroii. * * w . dents toward the Guard and its pointing out that there current-! ^^uhn said he has written In the letter, Schnipke says function in emergency situa- ly is a freeze on recruitment30 suburban the reorganization of the Mich- individuals who have no pre-. Igan Guard has resulted in an R,\TE THE GUARD vious service, increase of .'lOO spaces in the Detroit area. Death Notices SHELTON, GERTRUDE A.; March 9, 1968 ; 326 East Shef-field Avenue; age 70; dear mother of Jack Shelton, Mrs. Fred (Joyce) Young, Robert and Niles Shelton and Mrs.l____________ Basil (Gloria) Sakell; dear: Funaral Direrton' sister of Clifford Poole; also! survived by 17 grandchildren.: mr- Ghurch. OR t-flOl. I HALL FOR R6NT. 37 W. Y»l«. PH 1- Oora. ABtr t PM. FE 5-0316.___ LET'S MEET FOR LUNCH THE PONTIAC ROOM HUDSON'S . __________Pontiac Mall - - --------3-oi;. Ex-Seminary Official Dies at Age of 70 Rev. Francis X. Orlik, former meeting with the mayor Thursday to discuss riot possibilities and inter-city cooperation. The veterans will be a.sked how they rate the past perfor-’ SEEK B.AI.ANCE niance of the Guard, whether “It is my desire that most of «he.v fevl news media accounts the.se vacancies be filled by col- nf its performance during the ored veterans to provide a bet-f^etroit riots last year were ter racial balance,” he adds, futhful and what type training Michigan’s 10,000 - man Na- fhe Guard should undergo to tional Guard now has 127 Ne- better handle civil disturbances. groes. ★ ★ ★ ___.. - • ^v. VI .*», uici “I am especially Interested In veterans also will be secretary and registrar of St. veterans who will be less than "'bat actions they feel ^e|cyrji and Methodius Seminary, 27 years of age by Aug. 1, 1968, effective in preventing orchard I..ake, died today. He who are interested in attending breaking out when a ^^as 70. i the . Michigan Military Acade-small disturbance begins and. His body is at the seminary, nervous society arming them-l Funeral Home. Interment my and accepting an appoint- ^bat is the most effective meth- Burial will be in Holy Sepulchre Protection Pprrv Mn„ni Park remete ----------------restoring law and order Cemetery, Southfield. and possible survival.” ^OBLje, AUCTION g started. COAIS Funeral service will be held drayton plains________,__P.«^i Tuesday, March 12 at 1:30 p.m. at the Voorhees Siple Funeral Home with Rev. Ronald H e 1 s 1 e r officiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mrs. Shelton will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) i I The senator called upon the [mayor to support antiriot legislation now pending in Lansing, saying “he has been strangely silent in this area.” ' Kuhn charged that a majority of law abiding citizens has lost confidence “in the leadership of Mayor Cavanagh swiftly enough in time of cris-and that “today we have SANBORN, EARL K.; March 10, 1968; 1506 Orchid,^ Waterford Township; age 59;| beloved husbAnd of Marjorie E. Sanborn; deas father of Robert Holmquist; dear brother of Mrs. Thomas, Sinclair and Clinton Sanborn. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, March 13 at l:3o' the Donelson-Johns Huntoon FUNERAL HOME Serving Pontiac for SO years n Oakland Ave, FE i-OlOt SPARXS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME "Thouflhttui Service" FE I-9Z8I Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME. 332-8370 Establlttiaa Over 40 Years_ Cemetery Lots PUBLIC AUCTION SALE ! The letter also announces that a meeting will be held in the Surviving is a sister, Helen of New Jersey. I Death Notices t prcMrty c iztd tor noni r nonpayment ot delinquent In- ■criiai r,venue taxes due from Joe Ray- ________ man, «7 Miller Road, Rochester, MkhI ' ' *' San 48063. The property will be sold In a future at the Detroit Ar- He graduated from St. Mary’s p, ^ w r rr r thristophitr Preparatory School. Orchard ^ ^ Lake, in 1917, and was ordained in 1922. Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Sanborn will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. this evening. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) , JR.; March 6, 1968 ; 381 Fer-T E M P L E T 0 N , GRACE ry; Age 75, beloved husband! SHERMAN; March 6, 1968; AT WHITE CHAPEL Moving to Fla. Cholct graves 395 ea. la Graves are privately owned ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING a friendly adviser, phone fb 2 5122 betora 5 p.m. Conti a plan you can attord. DEBT CONSULTANTS OF PONTIAC, INC. 114 Pontiac Stale Bank Bldg. FE 8-0333 sTSTe LICENSEO-BONDEJ ___Open Saturday 9-12 a.m. GET out OF DEBT ON A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS 702 Pontiac State Bank Bido. FE 8-0456 DATE OP SALE k TIME OF SALE 2:......... PLACE OF SALE Merry C 828 N. Main St., Rochester, I. Main St., Rochesi PAYMENT TERMS; FULL payr Police Action Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated 171 reported incidents and made 14 arrests the past weekend. of Emma Fowler, dearj Pinckney, Michigan; ____ _____ _______ ,r telegraph!^: money order. Make checks and money I orders payable to "Internal Revenue i& **-nT*LE OFFERED: Only the right, title, and Interest of Joe Rayman In and to the property will be offered for sale. 14% HENRY A. WILLIAMSON JR. 11 Revenue Officer 1 sS March 4, 1968 I S Address for ^Jnformatlon ^ Bunding, *R'oom ^ tts.4 PontUc. Mich. 48059. --- March LEOALS kOTir Th# City of K for tala tha folU taaiad bids will . ®f tha City Clerk April u, 1948 for af Koago Harbor. The property li Lots 7 • - - , Clfv c County, Michigan, accordir plat thereof as recorded In page 54 Oakland County aublact to easements and r The city council reserves the relact any and all bids or to ^oposal daemad most advani titled check, A breakdown of causes for police action: Vandalisms—12 Burglaries—22 Larcenies—24 Auto thefts—4 Bicycle thefts—2 Disorderly persons—11 Assaults—9 Shopliftings—3 Armed robberies—2 Unarmed robberies—3 Rapes—1 Obscene phone calls—4 Indecent exposures—1 Bad checks—3 Traffic offenses—26 Property damage accidents—32 Injury accidents—12 I lie was an English teacher at I the seminary from 1920 to 1967. At various times he also was ^ the seminary’s secretary and registrar, director of athletics,! high school disciplinarian,' director of the Dabroski Foun-! Idation, secretary of the board of trustees and moderator of the Mission Society and the Polish Roman Catholic Union. r'^^hone JJS-TloS i March 11, 1968 | Silent Assailant Stabs and Beats Waterford Man | Waterford Township police seeking a man they said brother of Mrs, Fran George, Mrs. Helen Kline,! Mrs. Alva Young, Mrs.: Martha Cassey, Leslie, Clinton, John and T. Warren Fowler Sr. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, March 12 at 1 p.m. at the Church of Christ, Corner of Franklin Rd.l and Friendly Rd. Interment in! ^ Oak Hill (Cemetery. Mr. schnackenberg Fowler Jr. will lie m state at! u the Davis-Cobb Funeral' ' Home. I LOWELL COME HOME, beloved; motherY WIVES - sweethaarta together so we can do nice things tor our guys? Send to Pontiac wife of J. J. Templeton; dearj mother of Mrs. Ann Rogers,' _________ _ ___________ Mrs. Francis Rline and Miss Ruth Templeton, Charier -- HALL, LUCY M.; March 11, . 1968; 242 East Pike; age 46; I beloved wife ^of Robert Lee. Hall; Beloved daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John^;B. Miller; dear mother of Dianna Lee Hall;! s, ... u i Mauricej fe beat up and stabbed another; Lemings, Mrs. Clifford Debe-i ‘ man for no apparent reason. 1 ................'.... •' *i Raymond L. Shipp, 26, of 1160 Boston told police he was walking home near Elizabeth Lake early if when he was attacked. and Arthur Templeton; also survived by 16 grandchildren and 25 great-g r a n d c h i Idren. Funeral service was held Saturday, March 9 at 2 p.m. at the Funeral Howell, with Rev. Robert Mitchinson officiating. Interment was in New Hudson Cemetery. My Sincere Thanks Thank you so very much Citizens of District 1 and to the Fowler volunteers for the vote of confidence you gave me in the Primary Election. I shall endeavor to fulfill your confidence in me with honest dedication to serve our city. T. WARREN FOWLER SR. Commissioner! District 1 ty, Mrs. Willis Williams, Mrs. Clarence Young, Mrs. Lyman; Robinson, Lloyd, Aaron and 25 25 Reece Miller. Following today funeral service this evening ai 7:30 p.m. at the Sparks-Grif-fin Funeral Home, Mrs. Hall will be taken to Wartburg Tennessee for services and burial there on Thursday. 'I The assailant struck Shipp on - the head, knocked him to the ground and stabbed him in the stomach, Shipp told police. He was treated at St. Joseph Mercy McNALLY; JOHN J.; March 8, 1968; 125 N. Perry; age 80; dear stepfather of John Voel-pel; also surviv^ by five Hospital and released. Shipp told police he didn’t know the man nor did the assailant say anything. Police! grandchildren. Funeral serv-said robbery was not an ap-' ^ Tuesday, p3r6nt motiv6. Msreh 12 st 11 s.xn. 3t th6 Pursley - Gilbert F i Home with Rev. Theodore Allebach officiating. Interment in Christian Memorial Estates. Mr. McNally will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 9:30 I a m. to 9:30 p.m.) U.S. House Minority Leader ------------------------- Friday at a breakfast honoring! Congressman Jack McDonald,! R-19th District, in Bloomfield! Hills. Rep. Ford to Speak at McDonald Fete Some 200 persons are expected to attend the program at which tirtie McDonald will give his second annual congressional! report. The 8:30 a m. breakfast! at the Kingsley Inn is sponsored! by friends and supporters of McDonald. | Ticket information can be! obtained by contacting Robert! Smith, 31643 D e 1 a w a r e»,!. Livonia. WKC OPEN TONITE 'til 9 P.M^ Shop for This Wife-Saver Special EUREKA' Floor Polishor • Big oversize brushes to clean a wider path • Special rug dolly lets you shampoo rugs without harsh scrubbing or matting • Automatic toe-touch and handle release automatic switch J/VKC PARK FREE in WKC’S Own PRIVATE LOT at REAR OF STORE 234 Hillside Drive, Milford; age 77; beloved wife ot Charles W. Shepherd, dear mother of Morris C. Shepherd; dear sister of Mrs. Dorothy Pearson; 3 brothers and four sisters; and three grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, March 13 at 1 p.m. at the Richardson - Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Interment in Milford Memorial Cemetery. | Mrs. Shepherd will lie inj state at the funeral home | after 6 p.m. tonight. Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiac Press Wont Ads roll fAST ACTION NOTICE TO ADVERTISERS FOLLOWING 0: 8 64 13 44. The Pontiac Press re D and dining areas. Daytim or evening parties tor groups c 20 or more. JusI the spot to your holiday party. Cad tor ret ervat.ons, -628-UI1. UPLANU HILLS FARM WEDDING^ PHOTOGRAPHY B able. Call 338^079, anytime. Lost and Found I BLACK KITTEN, V LOST: FEMALE APRICOT I Help Wanted Male 5. Call 67441520, 4 Card of 1 WISH TO EXPRESS my heartfelt thanks to my many friends, neightxirs and family, for their Sadly missed by thought to reach SNYDER, DELORES L; March 9, 1968; 1932 Devonshire; Bloomfield Hills; age 36; beloved daughter of George and Orilla Brocher; dear mother of Lester E. Michael, and Anita Snyder; dear sister of Ernest G. Brocher and Mrs. William (Carol Y.) Johnston. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, March 13 at 1:30 p.m. at the C. J. God-hardt Funeral Home. Interment in Roseland Park Cemetery. Mrs. Snyder will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) IN MEMORY OF WILLIAM D. st He thought best, DEBT AID, INC^ 504 COM. NAT'L Antique Show Masonic Temple Mar. 28-31 ■ 10 BOYS WE NEED 10 BOYS TO WORK II OUR MAILING ROOM WEC NESDAY, MARCH 13 FROM 12:0 NOON TO 4:15 P.M. MUST BE 1 YEARS OF AGE. APPLY II PERSON TO: LYLE McLACHLAN Mailing Room THE PONTIAC PRESS " $60 PARTTIME Over 21, married, easy hours 673»9680 between 4-6 p.m. $15,500 A YEAR Is minimum Income potential v leading maintenance p r o d u manufacturer, featuring new QUID METALLIC SIDING, i THREE YEAR gu bcneflte. The price ...,M advancement and a good Income. 674-2272 or FE S.8425. A TRUCK MECHANIC. Good wages. 554 F A-1 TRUCK MECHANIC, i parlance preferred. Mr. S ACCOUNTANT five years experl auditing. Su| ACCOUNTANT STEVENS, DONALD L.; March 10, 1968 ; 613 East Pike Street; age 49; beloved husband of Luz Stevens; beloved son of, Atrs. Mark Stevens; also! survived by two uncles, 1 niece, and 1 nephew. Recita-i tion of the Rosary will be| Tuesday at 8:30 p.m. at the! Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home.j FHmeral service will be held, Wednealay. March 13 at lOi a,m. at the St. Vincent dePaulj Church. Interment in Mount; Hope Gemetery. Mr. Stevens j will lie in state at the funeral home! (Suggested visiting! hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 p.m.) I THIS AD ADMITS At 10 a.m. today there were replies at The Press ; Office in the following boxes: cm, C-13, C-18. Aetna Life & Casualty Career opportunity for ox-ecutlvo salesmen, ages ^ to 40, Business Analysis and Group Insuranco. Progrtm. Phone for app't., Porsonnel Management-Northlend Office, Southfield, 353- An Opportunity The Pontiac branch office of General AAotori Acceptance Corp. has an opening for a floM repreeentative. Tnie .poeltlon provides GM benefits, e- —*•"- benefits. Apply In person. The Good Housekeeping Shop. 51 W. Huron Street. APPLiC/ttiONS n6w bSiNO taken for ushers and <-------- •* over. Apply MIri Help Wanted Mnie__ 6 Architectural bESIGNERS DRAFTSMEN ENGINEERS SURVEYORS SENIOR ARCHITECTS STRUCTURAL ENGINEERS MECHANICAL ENGINEERS long program PREMIUM RATES OVERTIME Science & Engineering CORPORATION P.O. Box 31 Birmingham 480' ..., ... KEEGO SALES & SERVICE, 3080 Orchard Laka Road, Keego Harbor.____^ AUTOMOBILE PORTER NEEDED BILLING CLERK TiteGfural-engineerlng or Must b# ab-/ adding machina ( - - —P-------- ------- Liberal benefits. PERSONNEL OFFICE Smith, Hinchman 6c .Grylls, Associates, Inc. 3107 W. Grand Blvd. Detroit, Michigan 48202 Phone 875-8100 An Equal Opporlunity Employer BOAT CARPENTERS GM Marine Deisel Mechanics OPERATOR FOR^^MARINE GA! Detroit Boot Basin Inc. 9666 E. JEFFERSON DETROIT ______ 4821. CAREER OPPORTUNITY IF YOU CAN ANSWER (YES) TODAY'S QUESTIONS YOU HAVE AN OPPORTUNITY TO EARN 115,000 A YEAR OR MORE. 1. Do you have an oblective In Ufa i you feel that promotiont 5. Would ^ you prefer^ to ^rontinuo 6. Have you ever thought you could manage other men? H. S. JAFFA Ud^ASSOCIATES 16000 W. 9 Mile Rd. Southfield 48075 CARPENTERS — TRIM - CUSTOM CEMENT MIXER DRIVERS AN5 garage mechanic, experienced preferred. 674-0303. CHEFS e**DetaSs c! Avenue Foundry Plant haa immediate openlngt for qualified ap- ?klurd*’tri"d..*"||»e'crr*lc'r!?r."? Machine repairmen; Millwrights; Pattern makere (metal); Sheet metal (Journeymen preferred). Apply: Employment office, Huber Avenue Foundry Plant, 6425 Huber . » . Michigan (near _ Lynch Rd.) 921-8240 Employment office open .; also open Saturdays. ; end Sundays Merch 10 March 9 COMBINATION BUMPER AND painter. Fringe benefitt. Plenty of work. FE 3-7836. DESIGNERS DRAFTSMEN openings available for progressive Division, i Precision Seal “-ole Rd„ 624-1501. DIE CAST OPERATOR, area, experience for eftern leader, must be able to "" “1m dies, d( Blue Cross I________ n plan. Call 476-4550 M Draftsmen, Jr. Electronic Technicians • Outstanding fringe benefits Omni Spectra, Inc. 24600 Hailwood ct. Farmington, Mich. 48024 tear Halstead and Grand Rtver) DRIVER SALESMAN Ambitious stable man .with pleasant personality Interested In a tong -term employment with a prominent Royat Oak quality dry cleaning plant to help build and cover already established route. starting salary, or contract Mr. ENGINEERS — SALES Opportunttlee for d e g r e i engineere. Top netfenel compen)i Chemical,, Mechanical, Electric Help Wanted Male ; 6->‘! ENGINE LATHE OPERATOR FOR AIRCRAFT AND MISSILE WOftK. TOP WAGES AND OVERTIME. McGregor Mfg. Corp. 2785 W. Maple Rd., Troy Ml 4-3540______ Executive Opportunity boy'scouts bF AMERICA 0 men working with largest boys' organization In the world—The Boy Scouts of America. Unusual employe benefits. At- Liletimo career. Age roquk-emenls 21-35. College degree or eqi'------ experience In Scouting as a PHONE BOY SCOUT OFFICE 897-1965 Tuesday or Wednesday, March : outstanding community I 2I-3S. College degree o 965, Tues. and 13, "for *Mr. MACHINE TOOL ELECTRICIAN 58 hour week. Excellent rates, pension. Insurance -and fringe benefits. If you are well qualified apply at Personnel Office. Detroit Broach 8c Machine Co. PHONE 651-9211 950 S. Rochester Rd. Rochester (An equal opportunity employer) EXPERIENCED DOALL . surface ' grinder tor grinding carbide and carbide tipped tools, overtime Champion fool Co., 24060 Orchard ' Lake Rd„ Farmington, 474-6200. EXPERIENCED GAS StafloA el-tendent full time. Airport A4*hii« Service 5995 Highland. Pontiac. E X PERIENCED ^AINTING estimater to take off commericia building blue printi, full or perl time. OK 3-2)36 after 4 p.m. Factory Workers Sy day or weekj^ Warehousemen; Kirers; etc. Dally*pey.' Report eny Employers 26117 Grand Rivr tmploymtnt, oo^ opportunity f right man, call Mr. Lamanikl. 6f 590 Wide Track E.____ FOREMAN lew modern Inlection molding experience ' necessary, top hf shPft. * S STATION ATTENDANTS. Must a experienced. Local references, ull or part time. (3aod pey. unoco. Telegraph at Maple Rde. PORT rings See Ray [ I., Oxford, N GRILL MAN BUS BOY DISHWASHER r night shift. Good wages, > ispltallzaflon, paid lunch hour -Id meal. Apply at Elisa Brathere < Ig Boy Restaurant, Telegraph and GROOM TO TAKE care of saddle horses, elderly man preferred Out^nd's^RldlnB_Rtablfc 23I7S V GUARD For Ufice, Mt. Clemens end Detroit area. Top Union icels Paid Blue Cross, Vacation and holiday benefits. Call us collect. Bended Guard Services — 441 E. Grand Blvd., DETROIT LO 8-4150. HIGH SCHOOL GRADS career position with g INDUSTRIAL — SA4.BS Management potential — ten r tionel company needs sever salesmen. Relpcatlon. Oegree experience In metals Indusfry. r Anderson B Assoc. Pare. 690 E. Maple Rd., BIrm. 4-3692 ________________S^ INSURANCE CLAIMS Large Insurance company < local office In Detroit has open claim supervisors. . _______ adjustor position mu^ supervisory position. E x e benefits. Salary eommensu age and experience. Similar positions available areas. Reply to Pontiac P INSURANCE AGENT lo experience hcceseary, will train i Ight men. $B,000-S10,d(» possible 'St year. Vacation, penilon plan, ■ group Ineuranca. Call Mr. Schenchun, JANITOR SERVICE Full time workers, chance for aC vencements. 642-5530. JANITORS-PART TIME MORNINGS Work 3 hours per day, S or 6 day per week, top pay and fringei Apply Yankea Dapt. Start. 1131 N JOukNEY/WAN TOOL A6AKER or ! equivalent 45-55. Rochester-Pon-tiac area. Reply P.O., Box 208, , Bloomfield HilH, Mich. 48013. JOURNEYMAN ELECTRICIAN OR KELLER Top rata. Overtime. Muaf THE PONTIAC PRESS. MOxXDAV, MARC H 11, Htip Want«d Male UATHl OPERATOR AND operator, experienced only. ; work, day ahift, overtime, paid — henef 6|H0l|^W«nt«d min' eady Full Management Trainee Aetna life & Casualty I wiw Cross eaiiu enoflts. Brlnay Mgf. Co. 1U5 Sobs An out of off Wtst M5». awaits you - maintenance man F0R~p7lvitei SL*''toeclaliv Mkictad" club, good wages and working) 11 conditions, 1-JO «-7W. ** e overtime. MS- Co Ip Wanted Male Real Estate Salesmen .Oil roal estate at the Mail. w... of the hottest locations in Oakland s of business. Will will Encyclopedia Brltannlca and Great Books of the Western World. Lli 2-6666 anytime. MEN WANTED ilflon, oxcellent salary . _ lus and expenses. Must be lege grad, age 74 to 3S, aggressive and seriously desire m a n a gement responsibilities. Phone Management Personnel _ Southfield, 353-S40O. _ MECHANIC WITH EXPERIENCE, Chrysler experience preferred, ask[ 10 coolay Lake Rd., train. Von Reeil^, 6_________ REGISTERED" CIVIL ENGINEER SHOP MAINTENANCE MAN with electrical axparianca background 40-55 Rochostar-Pontlor area. Re ply P.O. Box 30a, Bloomfield Hills. Mjch^ 4*0)3. _ WASHROOM HELPERS. Experience not necessary. Pontiac Laundry, 540 S. Telegraph. yVANTED DRAFT EXEMPT young lull lime people. Cell 5 to 7 p.m. TOP PAY AND F R I I 'ROWING CC ---------- I PROFITS. ' ■ "lauser_____ SURVEYORS GROWU«;__CO. PARTICIPATES r^ssMl_ales Waterford for Al or Wally, 447-3211. Ingham Chrysler Plymouth, »12 S.' Woodward. OUTDOOR Work Report to 135 N. Saginaw REAR ENTRANCE 6:30 A.M. WE PAY DAILY KELLY LABOR DIVISION al Opportunity Employer NATIONAL TREE CARE compel requires personnel experienced pruning, fertilizing, spraying cal ing, removal and general tr On the lob training. around work In Metropolitan Men Wanted Co!I 384*RochMler*pT" 4193.60 Includes expenses per 4 day -----'-’ T. A.P; week, yearly gross *7,000-$9,000. -Immediate full time lobs available ......... New Car FOR APPOINTMENT PHONE: FE B-9444 Executive offices Salesman MANAGEMENT TRAINEES ~ lo work with established dry :leanlng firm. Paid vacations, lolldays, salary plus bonus. Call l32-12St. Ask for Mr. Bryant. ^ cellent Pay Plan. Apply ^_____ SPARTAN DODGE *55 Oakland Ave. ' 5 and 7 0. 6Help Wanted Male GENERAL MANAGER EARNINGS $14,Q00+' National Corporation li neari« men of proven , of subsidiary corporations. .V,wa,w,a, y i.wruur ailUMS. men cnosen WIN oe *5'’ PTOprietary interest as well as profit sharin ability of persons chosen will be primary consideration, h „ — ----- ...sring. Learning ---- -------- . je primary consideration. No traveling. fM 573J w. Maple Road, Orchard Lake, Mich. 4 PHONE: (313) 851-1050 (313) JO 6-2562 OWNER-OPERATOR We need owner operators with 2 ton trucks, 10 to 15 feet overall length to transport mobile homes throughout U.S., also needed, short wheelbase tractors to transport travel trailers on compony lowboy semis. Must be bondable and oble to pass an ICC physical. For morp information and personal interview, oply in person to MORGAN DRIVEWAY Representative MR. HILER at HOLIDAY INN MOTEL, 31200 Industrial Expressway (at Airport), Detroit, Thursday, March 14 thru Friday, Morch 15. ACCOUNTANT Conductron Corp. Has an immediate opening for an accountant familiar with oil aspects of accounting. The individual being sought should have a minimum of 2 yeors experience with a business or accounting degree preferred. Primory ond initial duties will involve financial statements, property and travel expense reports. This is a permanent position ottering substantial opportunity tor advancement. Qualified condidotes are invited to call or write: Mr. Jack Dodge Manager of Accounting Call: 665-9741, ext. 302 or write: CONTROLLER'S OFFICE PO BOX 614 ANN ABBOB. MICHIGAN 4BI07 SENIOR TOOL ENGINEER BLOW MOLDING TERNSTEDT DIVISION of GENERAL MOTORS CORP. is the worlds largest supplier of automotive hardware in decorative parts, and presently has challenging opportunities tor persons desiring professional growth and recognition. Applicants should have a minimum of 3 years experience in the field of blow molding, must be familiar with moterials, equipment, and tooling relating to this specialized plastics oreo. Duties ‘ ore to engineer ond supervise the design of tools to blueprint specificotion. Engineering degree or equivaleht preferred. APPLY IN PERSON OR BY MAIL TO: personnel department TERNSTEDT DIVISION GENERAL MOTORS CORP. 30007 VAN DYKE v WARREN, MICHIGAN An Equal Opportunity Employer PENNEY'S ROOFING And sidina applicators, apply ----- RoofinQ Co Lapeer. MO 4-8112. needs futl-time year round. CLOTHING SALESMAN tor busy department with go earnings, all benefits. Selling i perlence needed, we pay for add training. ROUTE Supervisor WAREHOUSE MEN and^ truck: drivers needed tor wholesale building materials. Age 24 ano over, exp. only. *52-3400 for in-tervlew Mon. and J^es^nJy. | Oak. YOUNG MAN WITH accounting c^^^i;,“g“'1es5.n5rbYlty“:,5l"’t,s1^i hTO ------- promotion. Reply P.O. Institutional food processoi train 0 men In suoarvi: Wayne, Oakland SHOE SALESMAN II benefits, full or part time. ......................i imsumer sales back RECEIVER . Work 8:3M:30 or SALES INCOME FUTURE and disability coverage. plus profit-sharing r e Apply 9:30 to 5 In person.. This, and a good fi s your if you i PENNEY'S GENERAL OFFICE: typewriter, good wi posting, billing, payrol f, 'Madison " s own equipment. Send compar with abi 585-9593.____ HIGH SCHOOL preferably with Commercial c< Including basic bookkeeping .v.. sorting and posting. Call FE 2-0184 Help Wanted Femalt 71 Help Wanted Female HOSTESS no Including list of tquipm, It picture, II possible, nan.r, .... ..mv -Bss, and phone number to experienced srd Rabun. PO Box 395, Pnn ; Apply In ---------- Mich. 4*054. ; Woodward. Royal Oi HOSTESSES The Egg and I has openir 21. G person. 2820 2820 t Woodward, Royal 3017, Pontiac, Mich. Help Wanted Female A LADY OVER 35, WE are ax p^andlng, openings lor full time Earn while you leorn, tringi benefits, pleasant surroundings Rotate Sundays and Holidays. Ap ______ ____ .AITRESSES wanted, full or part lime, excellent opporfunM^^^for advancement, gc—■ ■ • fijiV til HOSIERY SALES girls, experienced. Lady Orva PontJa^Mall. HOUSEKEEPER For small child wellari t residence. Send letter stating , nights atj beneflls. Gwd luTuFe,' un*"o‘rm»''!!Sldh';iB'V°'^l PERSON ' -nished. Exp. not needed. wer, 142 N. Saginaw. RN OR LPN for doctor's office, part summer references to Ponticc Press, Box C-38, Pontiac. Michigan. HbUSEKEEPER. HILL'n’ ' d a"H Village. Walled Lake. 1 or 2 day; s. Call 624-4272 after A TELE^NE GIRL $1.50 to $3.50 per hour, if you t' —-------- - pleasant voice HOUSEKEEPER FOR I can use you I Call Mrs. 674-0520 Tuesday 9-4. ALERT. MATURE LADY 1 Bakery. 1175 ARE YOU A MATURE LADY _ needs a nice home and good wages ---------------- ----------------'-tship Both children ir a long, pleasant association. Our last lady was with 2185 S, Velegr.,.... miracle Mile Shopping C___ al Opportunity Employer Pitney-Bowes 335-6134 7 years I BABY SITTER Please t MORNINGS Parts and Counter Man Mechanically inclined for aqui ......... ____________- FE 2-3190. BABY SITTER,_ HOUSEKEEPER, An liuti ippoj2u_nity ..pployary-l transportation. *52-2057,_ SALES EMPLOYMENT COUN-, BABYSITTER. PREFER ------ I, i„„,„ It Alll«,n SELOR. oardan-dlvurFF ' aj7 isrs" A"*) oesira to work with people, Mr ' a*X sales or public contact exp., we tor Mr. strahle.----------------are the nation's PERSONNEL MANAGEMENT largest with offices coast to coast. irning potential. Call Helen 334-2471, Snelling «, Snell- vetbren, child welcome. North of M-59 phone Linde Kretz* 334-4401. South at M-S9 phone Bel-ly Owen, MA 4-41*3. HYGIENIST, PART TIME; "iv» days, specialty practice, very rewarding olflce._H|WM5, INtERESt ING POSTtION ^ FOR mature person having --------- skills. Good typing, shor Ms. Good typing, Shorthand and! -.-taphone, willing to learn record processing, opportunity for advancement. N^. area. 543-8500. KE"LLY SERViCfS j ,1642-9650 R.N. Supervisor and LPN's WOMEN 18-26 YEARS D-.S 7 Help Wanted M. or F. 8 OLDER PERSON TO DO CLEAN- ing I lurnlture ......t. FE 5-7932. '•ROMOTlON ON YOu1T~fF?Sirf It seniorltyl Call Mr. Fo- , NEEDED On fl to 7 Shift 1145 WKLY. SALARY 70 START OFFERED TO ALl ' SUCCESSFUL APPLICANTS ly youf .......... ........ V Real Estate. 674-0363, TIRED OF THE time''CLOCK'I Call Mr. Foley-York Real Estate, TIRED OF just GETTING BY? Call Mr, Foley-York Real Estite. 674-0363. ' WILLING to INVEST JUST* YOUR Foley-York Real IajHer than average .WOOL PRESSER Estate. 474-0343; Sales Help Male-Femole 8-A aeaners, EM 3-4461 elp Wanted M. or F. BONUS for r PLUS REGULAR CASH Pontiac :t customers. Air Malt W. T. Pres., Texas Refinery Corp., 711. Fort Worth, Texas. 76101. BUILDER &'REALTY CO. Pale, . FE 5-9207 between 9 a lime. In exciting work. For Interview, call 451-47(6, I ARE YOU READY FOR A ( ' Call_ Mr,_ Foley-York le full 01 Estate, 674-0343 REGISTERED NURSE ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF NURSING Beautician.s Stylists used homes desired. ANDERSON GILFORD INC. OR 4-3141. AN CALL on’ Service itatfons. Part time. Long needed Invention. Hugh profits. Write Cycle Mfg,. .1816 Dahlia, Dept. 127, Denver, REAL ESTATE SALES h Osteopathic Hospital $670 to $804 per r Shift differential. Some weekends are requir — Excellent benefits il consideration followings For . coverage 12 paid sicl pci. Blue Cross BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDElJ All RH Positive All RH Neg. with positive COSWAY REAL ESTATE 681-0760 personal con- 3379 Orchard Lk.lAI Cotnmerce Rd lease call 492- ESTATE "CAREER UNITED FARM AGENCY specializing Ir ‘ ' and recreational unlimited. 6. Paid Ufa. Insurance. |0-neg. Please contact Personnel Oepl. i MICHIGAN COMMUNITY Pontiac Osteopathic Hospital[,„ poniiac®‘'°°°at rn A. n- Pontloc, MIch. 48058 I 1342 Wide Track Dr., W Pontiac 3M-727i,"''!'...'^T.-r* Director of Nursing, Miss Ann Clifton, Ext. 363. RELIABLE WOMAN FOR steady lob ''4o' hrs^ as housekeeper, top wages, 5 days - * - and cooking, must like dogs, star representatives, with Income ____ inquiry invited ...» territories available ....... b Area". Take advantaf f UNITED'S 43 years experien* in real estate marketing. Over 4 local offices In 31 states. Contac John S. Otter, District Sal< Manager, Route 1. Box 83-1 Athens, Michigan 49011. Phot CAN YOU SINCERELY^ GIVE ME SINLERLLYy OlVb fi .. _ week? Call Mr. Foley .uiis Real Estate. 674-0363. CARETAKER COUPLE TO i) 729-9107. 3167 BABY-SITTER WANTED Irh-mediately. Older person. 335-8302. BABY SITTER TO LIVE In, matu>e Call before 2:30. 332-7122.______ BABY SITTER AND housekeeper. An equal opportunity Employer Secretary —.....-ration, and d. ment of In-plant training prog Degree In personnel or B.A. 1-3 years experience. Exc salary and benefits. rs. Ample floor lime er 25. Must have own . Apply bet. 9 a.m. BARMAID; ALSO waitress. Apply KEY PUNCH OPERATOR CRUMP ELECTRIC perience required on alphabetical and numerical. Liberal benefit' PERSONNEL OFFICE two years secretariat t . Liberal benetlts. For ap- PERSDNNEL OFFICE 875-8100 Sales JJ4-7171. .... ... CARETAKER- ! GARDENER I ling opportunity lor reprbsenlalivas. Full time now open. Only those i perience need apply. C beaver tor personal inter ■BEAUTICIAN TO RENT booth,! FE 4-35731 Drayton Area, 474-2104. I BEAUTY OPERATOR VyANTED.: ting production barrel shop.! ------ •- George Gendron,' i . --------- —,.iQ Company, Filer Avenue, Detroit, Mlchii 48212. _____________________ My company Is Dunn Fitzgerald Planting Company, )7450| enough men up I e years. We have n I. Opportunity ,42-3930 bet. ! Day and night shift. Contact_______ Kruget. Kernaghan Engineering me., 4101 Product Dr„ Wa-— ........... 1Mound Area. »P PORTER person between 1. 125 N. Perry. Good shoe si apply in ,------- Woodward, Birmingham. PRECISION O.D.-LD. GRINDER luring firm located In 1 Heights area has — ■ a O.D.-I.D. grim In carbide grinding. Salesmen Floor Coverinc? Plumbincj (Sc i Heating Builciing Materials Men's Clothing BEAUTY SCHOOL INSTRUCTOR, Bxc*llent typist. Must be g 1. 5*5-9335. CASHIER WAITRESSES CURB GIRLS rienced preferred, s Ti. 5 or 6 nights , In person only. —.jurant. 20 S. Telec.-^.. -Huron bet. 1 and 4 p.m. 2490 Olxl Smith, Hinchman (Sc Grylls Associates, Inc. 3107 W. Grand Blvd. Detroit, Michigon 48202 Smith, Hinchman (Sc Grylls INTERESTED IN YOUR FUTURE? Call Mr. Folay-York Rial Eaiata, 474-0343. KITCHEN HELP WANTED eve Associates, Inc. Phone 875-8100 Il Opportunity E 3107 W. Grand Blvd. Detroit, Michigan 48202 An Equal Opportunity Employer SAM'S'llESfAURANT Year around position lor responsi- ROYER REALTY INC ble couple. Caretaker and gardener for river front home, 40 miles 628-2548 from Detroit. Optional that ,,, , , , ” lady work as housekeeper and tLT* m... ax,,k° ' “ cook. Ltke new quarters, 3-bed “mL ' room colonial. Present couple re- .. . /'it*,®??Brich,_MJth^_______________ tiring after 12 years, due lo poor WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY for health. Phone Mrs. Baker, *49- ambitious man to aarn ax- 5000, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday ceptlonally high Income. We have through Friday. | *h established Insurence debit open EXPERIENCED' SHORT 'ORDER: ®®S I?,.|Sr®'?Su®'Ji 1!? =o»^L ,M>tchiJ.vern, 4*2,1414. ^ _ "prevlSrs'''..^ ,'x“p.?T*nS“l?eCJi 1476 W. Maplb, Troy. 642-9190. de$ir« to help i f good future to 'ing Aid Center, 450 W. 1796 Auburn Rd. Day KITCHEN HELP, DAY and evening ---------—-— - -—-r-r— hoapitalliation, paid vacationzi oT^/'’N'PyT^rp n CASHIERS AND CONCESSIOiTH*Ip meals. Apply 'In person after 4| S f-( K h ARY j* ^and^ JXdV'a n m‘* £i"'' Ti-i i 1 although we will train you for tor algl working conditions. appointment call 5*5-9090' f. 238 between *a.m kn equaj^pportunily employer APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. SECOND FLOOR Montgomery Ward COOK Ring and ordi preferred but m latter stating salary desired a Pontiac Press, C Michigan. ApplV Village Cleaners. 134 Main. . Four Corner's Restaurs LOUNGE WAITRESSES - ----d, exp. prafarred iry, will train, over y In 21. A r,o’''ro'' Curb Waitresses LICENSED PRACTICAL nurse for small manufacturing plant, would prefer some one with son" experience. Send resume Box 158, Lapeer, Michigan LIVE-IN babysitter; FE 5-0425. MATURE WOMAN HOUSEKEEPER for motherless home, live In. 3 boys 5, 7 and 9. Ml 4-2512, after 4 Excellent challenging position mature, experienced secretary w take charge ability and thorthi ALEXANDER HAMILTON LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF AMERICA 12 Ml. t. Farmington Rds. “MEDICAL Technologists weekend ____________________ .... - hour shift. 21 cents hr. automatic Increase In Aug. 1941, additional 10 cants per hour Increast Aug. — Outstanding tringa benefits, ply — DIract of Laboratories. PONTIAC GENERAL HOSPITAL Real Estate now. For Information PONTIAC MALL ‘1 equal opportunity employer Programmers be trained to program 340 model ALEXANDER HAMILTON LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF AMERICA 13 Ml. *, Farmington Rds. Village of Quaker Town •^armlngton, Michigan PRINTING PRESSMAN To work on letter press cylinder* and chance to learn " ■ business form rotary pre Printery, Inc. 17*01 W. Detroit. 532-8933. s. Walker SHARP YOUNG MEN 18-30 Tremendous Future No Experience Needed taurant has enin s lor _______________________ Operator 1resM*5''on"Vhe‘*n*9ht"shl?L 4^ . RECEpffo^NIST.j mm'*’ le Cross and Life Ins. Commission. 332-9279, ^--- and meals furnished. Top mature lady tor oabv slttino in ^xpwienced. . r< Iin« v/.ratinh. and oaidjjlrl shirt unlL_ Janet Oavis Dry TED'S.................. - BLOOMFIELD HILLS MATURE LADY TO II' le children. FE 2-9510. ____________________________ - MATURE BABY SITTER afternoons. [DISHWASHER ANO SALADS, during Mutf be dependable, ---------------- day and some evenings fori 57*Valencia Pontiac. restaurant In Troy. Call 549-4920. ^ " . , .... _ DRUG CLERK. MATURE. EvenlMS, International firm AAA-1 DVnn and, good pay. Lake Center Drug, 2387 Bradstreet - The Richarts Cy„ is orchard Lk. Rd. No phone Calls. oSrSt^’s “you'”'must 'bl'^Vx PENTAL ASSISTANr-for-nffilce MSttonSnJ' neat be able tS cm- management, at least 1 year ve?se intelligently, he able to devote 100 per cent effort to your| "*9®' training and be aggressive enough area, aae-so---------------------- to move up the ladder with over DENTAL ASSISTANT, Birmingham *1,000 per mo., earnings within 4 area, excellent salary and hour-mos. Participate in pur "On thai experience preferred. Reply Po Job"—904lay Executive Manager; tiac Press Box C-3. Pontiac. dependable homey woman ' couple, to help me keep house ai rpdi.res. X>I.« office procedures, j ^j^e for 2 little ones. Set telephone number or address to Pontiac Press Box C-27. MATURE WOMAN FOR FULL or ™7FnSE--fn-rTi>c''i; part time work In snack bar. Blue J- ______________Road.________________ MATURE WOMAN TO hostess andi Tpervise dining room foi 'S promotion, sales, etc. $600 starting, salary per mo., to those accepted after 4 day indoctrination training program. jr personal Interview PRECISION SURFACE GRINDER SURVEYOR'S HELPER Experienced, steady Job. 647-0211, SURVEYOR-RODMAN PLENTY OVERTIME. TOP PAY AND FRINGES. A manufacturing firm locz the Madison Heights area, I opening lor a precision i grinder evn*rt*nr«H in 4 grinding. Steel Brokers .......... tools. Alternooni Si^,,fs"cmtJ?f M?'MahCe'v shift, Excellent fringe benefits, and working conditions. U S. TRUCK CO. INC. iTA 5-0040 2290 24th St. ' Detroit An equal opportunity employer TUBULAR FABRICATING (Experle Englnu.. Tool Maker Fixture Builder benefits, iiecessarr- Mppiy in person.'-American Plastics Products 1 2701 W. Maple, Walled Lak f°r;ou"n*g'' ™g!ttourma°r!'- Xifh »«'«® "> '»'« »' p'ret"Bo“'cf"""- ’’“""“I wr^unrt^1ir"m. who Hke""to'’'wo‘'r'k "^/fnrxTii r TorCi-------------T"Ti,— ®'®"*' m ' PI U m of DIETITIANS Chief Therapeutic positions open Alliance, Ohio; Danville, III.; z -other mid-west arees for ADA members. A wide salary range available plus a comprehensli benefit program including, prol sharing and educational assistanc Re-Location at our expense. W« --------— '“ulre. Cleaners, 1024 N. Woodward. Royal Oak. STENOS shift, must have restaurant exp., I call for appointment, 334-4503, Big. Boy Restaurant, Telegraph and Secretaries P routable—Tempore ry *—Br Now—Pontiac are NURSES AIDES - 21 years or i afternoon shift, 2:30 to 11 Apply In person to Pina t Nursing "-------- MANPOWER RESTAURANT DRIVE-IN SUPERVISOR Taylor for Inters $70 YOUNG TYPIST J exp. Must type 50 WPM INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1080 W. Huron, Pontiac $275 PLUS GENERAL OFFICE Type 50 w.p.m., file'and phone internatFonal personnel 10 W. Huron. Pontiac 334-4971 $400 AND UP DRAFTING TRAINEES or axparlanced, collega helpful INTERNATIONAL pAsONNEL ... Lj--- .1— _33^4971 $500-$650 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEES $5,000 FEE PAID FINANCE TRAINEES Age 31-3* High School Grad: INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL "------------ 334-497I 10*0 W. Huron, I eluding vacations, insurance i It - Ml' 4-7744 opportunity for II for appointment “**"’■* TED'S ___BLOOMFIELD HILLS_________ "SHOULD YOU" Make an employmant change? NOW IS THE TIMEl Michigan Bell Phone: 393-2*15 $6,000 FEE PAID COLLEGE DROPOUTS 1080 W. Huron, Pontiac $7,200 FEE PAID College Grads-Engineers AGGRESSIVE SiCRETARY. Thia personality plus. Smith, 332-9157, AUTO BILLER TYPE ft. _______________ filing, light bookkeeping, 1320. Call Kay Cole, »---- Personnel. 332-9157 Aisoclelat I Wanted M. or F. 8 Help Wanted M. or F. Nursing Ho Clarks'lon. STENOGRAPHER GENERAL office work, MUST BE GOOD TYPIST, shorthand not necessary. 566-6388 for appolr*-- Office Supervisor TOY MANAGERS "SANDRA" wants housewives experienced In Party Plan to Sbpervise demonstrators to sell TOYS and GIFTS. Free Hostess Delivery. No collecting. 20 per cant commission. Free supplies and hostess gifts. Liberal tncentlva program for managers and demonstrators. Free training pro-i gram. Write, giving phone number,! ’’SANDRA PARTTeS." 7207 E.[ McNIchols, Detroit, Mich. 48212. DOCTORS ASSISTANT-NURSE, days, no eves. Will train. 624-4511. DOCTORS ASSISTANT-NURSE, XPERIENCEO COCKTAIL WAITRESS, neat and sharp. Apply at Chalet Inn. 79 N. Saginaw. FE Terrific opportunity to join a national, fast growing corporation now moving into your area. Must have experience in Office Super-{ision or have been in a supervisory capocity. FILE CLERK For More Information, Call petween 8 a.m. and 5 p. Real Estate Salesmen Men for high earning office, have —' FHA management. ' ■ — 4-301. 345 Call R.J. ValUat, Oakland Ave. -ROUTE SALESMAN purveyor to hotel, restaurant and Permanent position, Institutional trade. Reply stating! fringe benefits, age, marital status and education,! Call S44-2424 to Pontiac Press Box No. C43,l We are an equi Pontiac, Mich. Oportunity employ VERSATILE TOOLMAKER I sTpwvisioh," Exceiiini “cea'"’l^alr m TooPriJl’m. ri produce wood and plastic models ®*"'^ *'• |igs and fixtures, very Interesting ---1, !- ------- surfoundingr 6 Help Wanted Male SALES ENGINEER A large progressive Manufacturer of capital goods is seeking on aggressive Sales Engineer. Must hove experience with large rotating equipment, and switch gear. Travel required. This is an unusual opportunity with a large, expanding Company, located in a pleasant upper Mid-West community. Send resume including salary requirements to Box C-4 Pontiac PrOss, Pontiac, Michigan. equal opportunity employer ALEXANDER HAMILTON LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF AMERICA 12 Ml. *1 Farmington Rds. Village of Quaker Town _______Farmington, Michigan ___ FOOD VENDING COMPANY has 2 openings In the Farmington i for part time work, both days _ evenings. Paid hospitalizallon and If unable to coll: Send letter with your qualifications to Pontiac Press Box C-^4. and On-Call Work No Students experience Starting rates, *1.43, ---------- "-riety shed. Apply Monday-Friday .. . . jday-Fri( 9-H a.tn. or i-s p. Bloomfield Shopping Center 4594 Telegraph at Maple Birmingham FRED SANDERS 250 N. Woodward near Hamilton Birmingham (next to qemery's GENERAL OFFICE builders office ... —...... ---- - needs girl with accurate typing and light shorthand. Real Estate or building TYPIST PAYROLL CLERK Immediate opening for pay Clark in the accounting depart_ of Electronics Mtg. firm. Available candidates will have light typing, figure work, and some payroll ex- B Starting salary d s Outstanding fringe benefits. • Pleasant suburban location. Apply In person Mon.-FrI., 1* a.m. to 3:30 p.m. Omni Spectra, Inc. 24400 Halwood Ct. Farmington, Mich. *- -—' ——Ttunity employer PRESSER On ladies garments. Experlend^ preferred. Apply Fox Dry Punch Pres? Operators Wanted refer a familiarization with pro- Kesslve punch press operation. ly and night shift. Apply between 4 a.m.-4 p.m. Employers Temporary Service 45 S. Main, ejawwn E C E P T I O NISt-TYPISf modern stamping plan* '- ' With general office • necessary, II ' , Excellent working c dally or apply al ALEXANDER HAMILTON LIFE INSURANCE CO. OF AMERICA 12 Ml. & Farmington Rds. Village of Quaker Town •Farmington, Michigan SECRETARY, P/^RT TIME, between 9 and 11 a.m VENDING COMPANY HAS OPENING FOR WOAAAN FOR PART HOSPITALIZATION AND LIFE INSURANCE PLUS OTHER FRINGES. CALL Ml 7-2050 FOR APPOINTMENT. WAITRESSES E'er day and evening shifts In fine family type restaurant. Abovt average earnings with meals. -enable and have transporta-Apply In person only. HOWARD-JOHNSON'S Telegraph at Maple Blrmlnghr— ___________-mingham WAITRESS, NIGHTS, Harbor Keego. 4*2-0320. WAITRESS, LUNCHEONS evening work. Must be e...------- in food and cocktails. Pennells Golden Dome, 2*05 Was! Maple, Troy. WAITRESS WANTED, full employment, *100 guarantee ly salary. Apply In person Frank's Restaurant, Keego H, WOMAN FOR GENERAL' house cleaning ’ --------- ----- ----- 4*2-7231________________________ WOMAN FULL TIME FOR counter. marking, and insppetidn. Quality dry cleaning (ilant. Birmingham-Troy area. Sat. required. Ml 6-8733 FOR n Pontiac.: perience, family statu* to Post Office Box 45, Pontiac, Michigan. working cond'itlonsr'fringe I WOMAN TO CARE FOR 3 small oeneiiis and Vacation pay. Salary | children while moitier Is In plus overtime. Wirte Pontlqc Pfessj hospital. Live In pret. Orchard BqxC-41. ■ I Lake. Vic. *63-7059. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS for Big Ticket Salespeople in the following Departments: Appliances Buil(ding anci Installations Television anci ^Stereo Sporting Goocis Fencing Experience not necessary, wa will train vi n you. Explore this oppor- . . -- - T -7 ------------- the live figurt bracket. Excellent Company benefita, and Immediate discount privilaga. Apply In person from 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. at the Rarsonnal Offlca 28510 Telegraph Rd. & 12 Mile Southfield An Equal Opportunity Employar Sales Help Male-Female 8-A Sales Help Mole-Female 8-A SALESMAN—OUTSIDE , 1. Do you have a car? 2. Are you Bondoble? 3. Would you like a payday everyday? 4. Do you need $200 per week, and want more? 5. Can you sell a product that is reimbursable? CALL MR. MOSER for Interview Monday - Tuesday — Wednesday HOLIDAY INN D—4 TKE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 11. 1968 CLtRK FOR ADMITTING, typing and * nice >mli*. MHV Slack, 33t-»1S7. COLl.eCTl6NS TRAINEE, will trair vnunq man lor collactlons dept., I. Call Angle Rook, 33M157. A.soclatea Peraonnel. COMPANY REP Solary, Bonus, Expfenses Top national Coro, with a top pro duct line needs pood man FEI paid. Mrs. Plland INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL IMP S. Woodward, B'h— COST ACCOUNTANT $10,000-FEE PAID talkir SnalHng i Spelling. ours*'’^ PUBLIC RELSTTONS ^ TRAINEES unlfrnSed 'potential, t tion with u------- otele. Call V public contact PUBLIC RELATIONS $5,000 Instructioni-Schooli . RECEPTIONIST TO GREET pe< personality and poise. Am III phone, typing, $350 plus. Call Is Kendal, 334-2471, Snelllng S. Si k,' _Jng.___________ _____ SALES ORDER DESK $6200 INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL loao V^_H^ron,_PoMjsc 334-4»7l EXECUTIVE MANAGEMENT TRAINEES-FEE PAID Represent a "Blue Chip" mi international PERSONNEL international PERSONNEL GIRL FRIDAY-$450 Non" Exc. earning potential. Goo *'^elsl’ advancemMT potential "m"' Rosenthal. ^^^mTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL^ INSIDE COLLECTIONS FOR fai paced firm. Ground floor spot fc Wills, 334-2471, Snelllng & SneMIng^ Insurance sales traTnee benefits, busy co„ $5200. Call Ra Rand, 334-2471, Snelllng A Snelllng. JR. ACCOUNTANT $7200-FEE PAID Recently college^ grad with ac requIreS, rapid salary ' Increase and advancement. Mrs. Hoppe. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL t«80 S. Woodward’B'ham^_642.«M« ^ MANAGEMENT TRAINEES TO $7200-FEE PAID Unlimited potential for H.S.G. Exi ....Jl Corp. Call Mr. Moreen INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL IMO S. Woodward, B'ham. a4M268 MANAGER TRAINEETIaGER mar MARKETING TRAINEf $7400 PLUS-FEE PAID Car, expanses and bonuses, soli training program, rapid ac vancement. Mr. Moreen. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL SALES PROMOTION $6,000, Cor, Expenses eded. FEE PAID. Mrs. HoPPe. (IT^NATIOflAL PERSONNEIL _ SECRETARY FOR WELL firm, high geared gel with Selling «. Snelllng. Snelllng» snelllng. SECRETARY-$450 ADVERTISING AGENCY BIRMINGHAM AREA Age 24-36. talented young woman, new office. 60. Gian mg woi“ p^epar^ INTERNATIONAL PEr'sONNEL FEE SERVICE -----din $5t_____________ 334-2471, SnalHng & Snelllng. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL J80 S. Woodward B^ham.____M2-8M IsUPE-RVlsORr QUALITY contra male * ‘ pandif _Rand^_________________________ tYPISTS, VERSATILE mature gal, Interesting spot, room to advace, 1390. Call Gerl Kendal, 334-2471, Snelllng & Snelllng.____________ TO $12,000 Assistant Controller AGE 28-31 Degree In business administration or accounting, experience i n auditing, accounting, budgitary controls and report writing. Large netlonal corp. 3» benefits, local TRAVEL CONSULTANT BIRMINGHAM AREA Light typing. Interesting lob a YOUNG MAN NEEDED FOR I growing firm, draft exempt, i Benefits, $65«0 . Call Kathy Kl - Snelllng. YOUNG TYPIST BIRMINGHAM AREA If you are a H.S.G. and can fyp SO W.P.M., you will be trained li general office work. Mrs. Tanner. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL iBitructioilf’Schiwili TO COMPUTER PROGRAMMING, LEARN at home. LaSalle Ex-tansion University, 0.1. approved. Also law accounting, drafting, SfcoriiJLh^^ LAKE ORION, 2 gantlamen to thara i. B64-7627. Gl approved. Work Want^Hlal*_____11 ARPENTER, rough and finish. A-1 HAULING, ODD lobs. Call Carl, CARPENTRY, CUSTOM f I n 11 basements, kitchens, counter bars, paneling, celling tile, fo tops, 'mica 10 ACCOUNTING TYPING, MATH, LAW, ENGLISH AND SHORTHAND REGISTER NOW FOR CLASSES beginning March tsth. MICHIGAN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ATTENTION Auto Mechanic DAY - NIGHT CLASSES ^STARTING MARCH 18 Acty—Arc Welding Auto Body Collision DAY - NIGHT SCHOOL Approved under Gl Bill MICHIGAN'S OLDEST TRADE SCHOOL WOLVERINE SCHOOL 0 West Fort_______WO 3-< MEN WANTED NOW TO TRAIN AS CLAIMS ADJUSTERS isurence Investigators are ba isters Schools Miami, Fla., i axciflng. tional employment assistance. Coupon Todayl No Obligation! NAME ... ADDRESS . CITY ... Dressmal^g^ jrailoring 17 DRESSMAKING AND alter. . STATE . . PHONE HEMS. GET YOUR summer alter done before the Spring rush, up and delivery. Katherini Income Tax Service mVlCE"- SUPPU^ ~ IgUIPMINt Aluminum Bldg. Hems ALUMINUM siding, ROOFInG i ,LT and seal coat. DOMINO CONST. CO. Aaphat Paving. Free Quotes. 674-3955. International asphalt, free estimates, 674-0722. Aute^uffin^^ GENUINE SIMONIZE PASTE wi lob and car wash, not $25, $15, bi only $5.95, by appointment ^1 free pick-up. Wash and Wax, FE 3411- Open 7 days. 57 N. Perry. Boats and Accessories BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Your family boating headquarter: 1265 S. Woodward at Ada nr _ 7-0133. Sno-Mobile sales, i -id storage CARPENTER WORK, l Eavestroughing B & G SERVICE BIG BOV DRIVE-IN M&S GUTTER CO. COMPLETE Electrical ^rvices ING OF HOMES, GARAGES, . New and old. OR 3-9529 or OR Excavating END LOADING AND back ■ 'ing, sand gravel and lele septic work, bulk neni digging. 673 1972 o Piano Tuning NING - REPAIR OSCAR SCHMIDT Plumbing & Heating CONDRA PLUMBING & HEATING Road Grading PRIVATE DRIVES, SUBDIVISIONS, Roofing I ROOFING, NEW and o izing; 88% OUALIT Floor Sanding L. BILLS SR., NEW floor sanding. FE 2-5789.___ . SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING ------Id finl8bing> FE 54)592. Floor Tiling ^ CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. I noleum, formica, llle. Carpetit 741 N. Perry, FE 2-4090. CARPENTRY AND PAINTING Inc^e To^^rvice REASONABLE INCOME CARPENTRY, NEW A Free est. 335-6529, : INTERIOR FINISH, k Carpet Cleaning easwrable. 682-7514. Sand—Grovel—Dirt SAND, GRAVEL AND fllt< Snow Plowing Landscaping lEPENDABLE L rutting, 860"^ work,*^ iVtillzIng A-1 TREE SERVICE BY B&L Free estimate. FE 5-4449, 674-3510. fREE TRIMMING AND REMOV-ai. Reasonable. BLOCK, CEMENT, AND repa _^rk_335-^70.____ C OM M E R CIA L /1N D U sYrTa L' ‘ NOTHING TOO LARGE OR commercial or residential. 2 exp. Free est. 623-1372. J. Ba Credit Advisors S04 Community Bank Bldg. FE 24)1 Dressmaking, Tailoring ALTERATIONS, ALL TYPES, KN ALTERATIONS - MEN^~w6MEN Children. PE 6-2567 FE 5-4251^ BETTY JO'S DR'ESSMAKING Weddings, ajieraliom. 674-3704 DRESSMAKING AND *erteratior Drivers Training AUTO DRIVIh Lumber TALBOTT LUMBER Building anc l:> Oakland Mot^, Storage^ CAREFUL ENCLOSED W :smTtTPMOVING CO. io“i Trucking LIGHT MOVING, your price. Any ) RUBBISH. NAME LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENTS, LIGHT TRUCKING, DAY o LIGHT HAULING, ODD J( Approx. 4 to 5 hrs. p PATCH PLASTERING, Work Wanted Female _ 12 A1 IRONING, ONE DAY Ser N C E D ME DICAL sires work to be done ). All A-1 equipment. > and dallvar. OR 4- WCTICAL NURSE. 3M-9572. WANTED Buildi^ ^rvlMi-Suppli^lJ DRIVEWAY SPECIALIST 3; sinca 1960. Thera Is no cost or obligation examine your problem. Sometimes we can't be of " ' " ‘ ----- checking Into. . _____ barrassed to get Into debt—so y Nan Bant !-0181, Mon. 19 $4 UP. NOTARY PUBLIC KEYS TAX SERVICE Your home or our office FE 8-2297 2628 N. PerfY ALL BOOKKEEPING AND TAX SERVICES william J. Sourlall, 12 yrs. . Formal training In Federal and State tax codes. Certificate from M.S.B. 6524 Williams Lk. Rd. 673-0074. 4674 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains 673-1502. 18 E, Huron. FE 2- EDERXL AND STATE tax « Lake'Orlon Area. 093-6015. slightly higher. FE 4.4013. JOSLYN TAX SERVICE No appdn^mei^^^lacnssary E 8-1984 Open 9-5 Waated Real Estate 1 Million ind assume mortgages on hoi ■nd vacant property. We will I rou cash tor your equity, irompt service this phone nuir s available to you 24 hours lay, 7 days per week. TED McCullough jr. 674-2356 1-50 HOMES. LOTS, ACREAGE PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, AND LAND CONTRACTS WARREN ST0U1, Realtor <50 N. Opdyke Rd. FE 5-8163 Urgently needjor ^Immediate ■ ALL CASH 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS-HOMES WRIGHT Oakland Ave.____FE ^»14l I HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A START- '•'"‘IE IN OA......... CALL AI r'574-1698 Jayno Heights Private party (not agent) desire! contemporary lake front ranch or split-level home. Days — FE 2-9124 _______Eves. — 673-1735__ SMALL PRIVATE epartnMnt, IS per week In exchange for small iffwunt of housework, lady 40 to S5 unencumbered, FE 0-2343 or FE 4- Aportmeatit, Ua^ 38 BEDR utilities, --T Clean, aoi cfilld wale BEDROOM, HfiAT FURNISHED, no children or pats. $135. let^.inie Gea Apts., 674-2887 or 673-6997. required. FE 5-2727 af ApartoieaH, Uafurniihed M ORCHARD COURT APARTMENTS 2 M'anager-Apt SCENIC VIEW Ti fireplace, patio, balcony, personql utility room with washer and dryer. Located In HIlIvlaw Village, Williams and Elizabeth Lake Roads. EM 3-2058, Apt. t ' ' ....... Court, EM 3-3B1I. SYLVAN ON THE LAKES -------- ccupancy. I and 2 be n $152. Children w( I 602-4480 or 357-4300. Beat Heuses, Furaished 39 BEDROOM FURNISHED cortege. deposll. Call AM 6734146. dul-lty deposit, no children. iSI- BEDROOM APARTMENT. carpeted. Refrigerator and _____ Welcome pats. S16S. 417 Parkdala, Rochester. 651-7595. 3-ROOM APARTMENT. 1 smi welcomed. Call bel. 12-S p ROOMS, COUPLE ONLY, i ROOMS AND BATH, upper, ne Oakland U. Newly decoratt deposit required. 338-6330.__ ABSOLUTELY LUXURIOUS Piety Hill Place Of Birmingham within walking distance of 1 unique boutiques and shops .. downtown Birmingham. Sumptuous tiround-floor lobby, c o rr “ " “ ' • room. Covered parking. BEDROOM HOUSE I for baby sitting, m I d preferred. Day work. I ROOM HOUSE WITH 62?-39lf."' Beat Heuses, Uafuraished 40 1 BEDROOM. NEWLY decorated. Sale Heuiei 2 BEDROOMS living room, tun-room ent, garage. $10,650. Ter BEDROOM RANCH FLATTLEY REALTY 20 COMMERCE RD., 363 BEDROOM TRI-LEVEL, privileges, 1V5 baths, 2 car ——" garage, 674-1536. 49 Sale Houses Birmingham Bloomfield NEWLY DECORATED ’Includedf^Coverel 3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Drive out M59 |i DAN MATTINGLY BEDROOMS, LOW d 3 Bedrooms LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS MODEL OPEN 285 Fisher 1:30 to 5 p.m. - 6-dav week WESTOWN REALTY FE 8-2763 days ----- -I. - LI 2-4677 , 2 AND 3-BEDROOM houses, $ up. Pontiac and Ortonville a— 627-3840, 627-28" - ,r 444-4464. After MODERN NEAR ?-* security,* ba1em^nX""nlcB -BEDROOM HOME, I lot anywl SNYDER KINNEY &■ BENNETT FRANKLIN VILLAGE BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP Take over existing lend contract on this extra clean 6 room ranch with new gas furnace. Lake privileges on Middle Straits Lake. Save closing costs on this real YORK ROOMS, BATH, UTILITY, bedrooms, on I acre of • grour.-new barn. Can raise chickens and have horses. 4 yr. " ‘ Carroll Lake Rd.. _________ ______ Shown by appointment. 363-7578. Retiring and moving out of sf BEDROOMS, 2 COMPLETE , off Baldwli a three-l BEDROOM NEAR BALDWIN a Walton. Full basement, sm family room, available now at $1 per month. THE ROLFE SMITH CO. 333-7848.________________ BEDROOMS AND BATH, $125 n .01 plus utilities, call aftear 5 p.r {III 674-1592. DOnSAC. .„v-w=... - ROOMS, PART OF doubi la second through i separate furnace, firepli private balcony' mo. plus dep. 682-5665. $80 sujte jocated overlooking "ihe'' clivT” Custom'- EXECUTIVE HOUSE ON beautiful crafted Hotpqlnt appliances, can- Kirkwood Lake, 2 years old, 5 . . private beach, swim- I— !,-• skating. '626-4426. onditioning, closed circuit morel From $370 per month open 12-6 p.m. dally. Ca " son-Brown Company, 641 r 476-8700 for additional it AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS _ .hlldren or pets plea 3365 Watkins LK. Rd. JaVON APARTMENTS, 3 living, e. ^ ^ First, Second, Third or Fourth St., or vicinity. Must have possession by April 1st. Call - VON REALTY REALTOR I the Mall MLS Room 110 SI! petini FARMS-HOMES-ACREAGE BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS APARTMENTS Ideally situated In Bloomfleld-BIr mingham area, luxury 1- and 2 bedroom apartments available fn immediate possession frt per month Including c Hotpoint, air conditioning pliances, large family Kuenana, swimming pool and large sun deck - All utilities except electric. No detail of luxury has been overlooked In Bloomfield Orchard Apts, located on South Blvd. (20 Mile Rd.), between Opdyke and 1-75 ex- 335-5670, FE 84)770. ____ Clean 5 ROOMS AND bath, older, nreferred, — "" NEWLY MARRIED Has $1500 to put dowi Equity or land contract. Call Clar Real Estate, FE 3-7888. ________ SMALL FARM OR WOODS Wifl FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA, OR OTHER FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR, OR 4-0358 OR EVENINGS Moving Md^rucking BASEMENTS AND COUPLE ires 3-bedroonn ord area. Agent. OR Paiatiag aad Decerotinr231 A LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR i''pvt^mfince.^dX'^F^ "V"''’' L-ADIET-li^l'RE 'iLMorpalMiirgj^ dSn'''IPo ®cXen"-??%e FE 4-1286 or FE 2-9390. 2 3-8304 or OR 3-2956. 2 ROOMS AND BATH, bachelor a| utilities furnished 336-8136. 2 ROOMS AND E and DECORATING and Celling tile In-. Free Estimates. OR 3- Uphelsteriag SPRING SALES n fabrics and upholstery, e experts at 335-1700 tor .jtimate |n vnur home Upholstery Co. Troaspertatioa ~S4^ EXECUTIVE RENTAL Elegant large home, fully carpeted with 4 bedrooms, paneled family room with fireplace, 2 car attached garage In excellent Waterford Twp. area. Depr '* —' --------- "* quired. $! ROLFE H. HOUSE TO RENT Irooms up, 1 down, 2 ba ar garage, northside of F tiac. $150 per month. 674-3752 ................. PONTIAC. 3 basement, large dining room, carpeting. Refs, and sec. dep. re-quired. $185. 363-5364 bet. 3-8 p.m. ROOM AND BOARD I NONSMOKER, NEAR G.M ..... , 673-0969, after , CLEAN ROOM FOR lady. I GRAND PRIX APARTMENTS 1—2 bedroom from 1120 per mo. 1—2 bedroom with carpeting from $130 per month 315 S. Telegraph Rd. Pontiac -ee Mgr., Apt. No. I____r‘ IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY OAKLAND VALLEY APARTMENTS Brand new, near University 75, air conditioned luxury 1- — -bedroom apartments. Including space, parking area, children accepted. From $143 per month. On Walton Rd. between Adams and Opdyke, east of 1-75. Model apart-: ment open Friday and Monday 4 to 7 p.m, Saturday and Monday ROOMS WITH COOKING, 1 sleeping room, tnan. 852-4959. ROOMS, 1 PRIVATE entrance, parking area, combination bedroom^^lttipg room, plus kltch- buslness person. room nice, professional CLEAN SLEEPING r Perking, refrigarato FE 8-8512 FE 5-931 CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM o !. Private entrance. Closi line. FE S-7581._______________ LADY EMPLOYED DAYS. LIVE IN DOWNTOWN Pontiac weekly. CoMact' Mr."shie?ds, *36 i Pike St. or call 332-6591 bet. 9 a.n and 5 p.m.___________________ LlivELY ROOM FOR A genflema throughout. FE 0-6642. CANAL FRONT - $10,900 — bedrooms — Gl zero down EM 3-5477. 2 STORY - 4 bedrooms Walled Lake Schools — Gl zei down — 363-6703. 3 BEDROOM — overlooking ft $"l2?700~full%rlce°— 363-7700. 99 X 203' BUILDING SITE -near Grand River and Novi Rd: $1,050 full price — EM 3-6703, sement — garage — - $1500 down - EM 3- Terms — EM 3-5477. WHITE LAKE FRONT — 3 bedroom log, furnished, $17,500 - only $5000 down — 363-6703. CARGE LAKE FRONT AND WATERFRONT LOTS - In Lakewood Village — Restrictions — 12x1300 sq. ft. of floor space for more Information call 363-7700 — HACKETT REALTY. There's also a 2-car garage. Priced to sell at $19,250. The Rolfe H. Smith Co. Sheldon B. Smith, Realtor 244 S. TELEGRAPH RD. Weekdays 9-B iatt. 9-S 333-7848 2660 WEST WALTON - 3 BED-room home with m baths, full basement, with panelled recreation . room, sun porch, garage, -------- - yard, 528,500 on FHA lAortgagt ....... nent. Immediate -"1 G. Hemps'-- Crestbrook MODEL OPEN . DAILY 12-8 Illy room and *-car , at only $16,600 pi’/s A HAPPY PLACE TO LIVE! I Enfoy quiet suburban living In this comfy 2 bedroom home, near Ellz. Lk., with privileges on one ot our finest beaches — get ready for Summer fun — take over owners equity for lust $2,000 — total price $10,500. A WORLD OF YOUR OWN^ ^ ^partly IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY CORAL RIDGE apartments I NICE sleeping fOOM I HAGSTROM, Realtor 00 W. HURON N R 4-0358 EVES. FE 4-7 clean, everything furnis no pets, $120 monthly. 1 AND 3 ROOMS, PRIVATE bath and entrance. Clean. Adults —" 285 Whittemore St._______ LEAVING FOR “ -h 15. FE 5-4396. CLARKSTON ROOFING CO., SNOW-plowingr 673-9297. DRIVE NEW CADILLAC TO New York, gas paid. 343-9590. Professional or bpsiness person, non-drinker, refs. 628-^23. SNOW PLOWING AND TOW ttrvlc*. FE 5-7655. DRIVERS TO CALIFORNIA Florida, New York, and all Points. New cars waiting. Insured Drlve-away System, 21250 Schoolcraft, Detroit. Phone 531-4070. Wanted Household Goods 29 2 ROOMS AND BATH, private entrance. 25 Monroe. Elderly lady or couple, no drinkers. FE 5-2140. SNOW PLOWING, CONTRACT only, no seasonal charge, pay as you go. daT or night. "338-0211. Ask'for Vob.' 2 ROOMS AND BATH, child welcome, $22.50 per wk., with $50 dep., inquire at 273 Baldwin. Cali 33B-4054. HIGHEST PRICES PAID i good furniture and appliances what have you? B & B AUCTION WILL BUY OR SELL your furniture. Woated Miscellaaeeus 30 MOVING EXPERTS. 8: LIGHT HAULING AND MOVING OF' Roval Oak any kind. Dependable. FE 5-7643. LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENT^ ------Cleaned. 674-12tf. NEWSPAPER 05c PER 100 pound ielivered. Royal Oak Waste Paper .............. - E. Hudson. Painting and Decorofing A-1 PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING FLIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, rubbish, fill dirt, grading and grav-el and front-end loading. FE 2-0603. PAiNTING. WORK GUARAN- QUALITY PAINTING. INTE-! ior-exterior. REAS. 628-4623. ' A PAINTING AND DECORATTnG, I Truck Rental 'Trucks to Rent • EXPERT PAiNT hanging. H 'PAINTING AN , PAINTING, I Vi-Ton Pickups P/a-Ton Sta TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Pontiac Farm and Industriol Tractor Co. 825 S. WOODWARD : 4^1461 FE 4-14 Open Dally Including Sunday N iCulllgan Water Condi. Water Softeners SALES AND RENTALS .ouAlr Plastering Service PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES. D Meveri, 363-9595. REPAIR. Fit-llll WANTED: COMMERCIAL TYPE I compressor, with or without mole Reas. FE 4.6679,__________ _______ 0 children or pets. 3 Marine bath, Formica cupboards. From $23. week, $58 dep. No children, pets or drinkers. In City. ROOMS, CASS LAKE, 1 Beach. 682-1747.____________ LOVELY ROOMS, I Utilities, garage, ground. North side FE 2-6375. 3 CLEAN ROOMS, private L.,.., utilities furnished, young employed couple only, no children, pe*- — drinkers, $38 week. FE 2-2416. Lake. Waterford. > Waated Meaey ___ SILVER CERTIFICATE bills - ..... pay top cash price — any quantity, Northwood Coin Shop — 222 Sherman Dr. R. 0. LI 7-7918. 'fVaated te Reat ■ 3 Children. KE 1-6858, BEDROOM HOME In Pontiac or suburban area. Family man coming to work as manager of Christian dry /cleaning orgarilzation. Needs hoide in mis area. Rat. available. Call 335,2288 or 673-2319 ask for Mr. Brown ol Mr. Bryant. WANTED^: mPontlac. FE 2-6091.___________ WANTED — Rets allowed. Fireplace, carpeting, Jrapes, stove and refrig., air cond. furnished, plus all utilities except electricity. In Drayton Plains area on West Walton Blvd. Call OR 4-3603 ROOMS FOR R SLEEPING ROOM FOR rent. I lerlcan Setting droom home _______ >m, garage, large Straits Lake. ROSS From $31,500 ,—.a beach on Dixie Hwy. 4-l« miles past Welton Blvd. Turn rlgltt ' Parade of Homes sign. MODELS, CALL 623-0670 1941 3. TELEGRAPH RD, FE 6-0591 ^AREA ROCHESTER ge, spacious wooded SLEEPING ROOM privileges. Nr. N. . Single lady, 19-26. FE 3-7255. VERY NICE ROOM. Rooms with Board basement, 2 ci $35,900 - neai quad-level li Rochester. Milton we In Ihe VI . 118 W. University Reat Farm Property ARTIST SUPPLY, OFFICE SUPPLY OR SPECIALTY SHOP BARBER SHOP -. n, 688-9913 or 363-5077. ReAt Office Space 47 ditloned offices located at 34.. ... Highland (W. Huron). Plenty of parking, for additional Information general office suites anc .lol spaces. Plenty of 1re« Phone 651-4526 or 731-8400. 'COMPLETELY PANELED OFFICE ' space with separate for lease — approx. Utilities Included - rental, Walton and t.............. CALL LARRY TREPECK 674-3184. 1. 2220-2390 Woodrow Wilson pi dep. Inquire i 338-4054. BAfcHELOR, FULL BATH, kitchen utilities $35 ■ ... Dixie Hwy. ' bachelor APARTMENT ON White taker $25 wk. ^7*4160/_ BACHELORr QUIETr NEW EFFICIENCY 3 rooms, new, includes garage ~ " " utilities furnished, i 693-6800. _____________ PRIVATE, COMPACT AND ClMn, ----1 and K Mart. ■Iwo^. Immediate Occupanc::^ $125 Downtown dttioningr disposat ROCHESTER MANOR One of the best values In apartment living. Quiet, friendly atmosphere. carpeting, air conditioning and heat, swimming po6l, recreation facilities. 1 BEDROOM, $140 2 BEDROOM, $165 Rochester Rd. to Parke Parkdala to 810 Plata Rd. a quire at manager's bouse. CALL 651-7772 If no ans. call UN 1-2480 and name and phone number. Raot Bwiaess Proptrty 47-A 25,200 SQ. FT. acant bldgs, across lie Hospital. Will n ----- or will provid parking o- Office Open Evenings 8, Sundays I 8,800 SQ. FT. BUILDING WITH 18 ft Clearance, and railroar Ing, O'Nell Realty OR 4-2222 ,9 to 5 . Rates. 334-7677, NOW LEASING suitable far ol restaurant, etc., approximate size : 60', plenty, ol Orchare' ' after 7 buildings retailing, nndftloned. carpet. 510,950. —..........:ated at — - ^ Cell OR 6-3567._______________ BEDROOM TERRACE Blvd. Very good conditio AT ARMADA 4 bedroom bungalow featuring 2 fireplaces. 12x28 living room. 14x28 family room. Breezeway and a' tached garage. Call 651-8588 fc details. I Shepard Real Estate, Inc. attractive bedroom, sit lot, family baths, BRICK ranch, ?i.9ra; AUBURN GARDENS room ranch, full basement . 5 heat. New carpeting, large ilng room, new furnace, con- »i land contract. TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE 1 N. Opdyke d garage, ily $10,958 332-0156 BALDWIN-MEADOWLAWN AREA Alum, bungalow, potential bedroom home. Gas heat, panel throughout. AAodern dining an stainless steal sinks, awnings. About $380 in closing costs will handle this one. Call: YORK Beauty- Rite Homes and community water. From $21,488 Including lot. . HUNTOON SHORES Drive 1V4 miles North ot M-59 on Airport Rd. turn right on Pleasant Drive to nsodel. OPEN daily (EXCEPT WED.) 3-6 p.m. Sat. 8. Sun. 1-6 p.m. Call 6764116 BIRMINGHAM-BLOOMFIELD WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER & RANKE I. WOODWARD AVE., B'HAM. Ml 4-6300 BY OWNER - DONELSON Park. 3 bedroqm brick ranch, I'/j baths, 24i per cent. FHA mortgage. Atfer 6 p.m. 334-5684. __________ .-■age, I 673-5882, CLARKSTON 3-bedroom ranch neighborhood. Gas he_.,___ carport, close to schools. Large lot, on paved street. Possession at closing. 818,500 on land ocntract. 2 STORY Eleganca on 2 choice lots. This large family home in beautiful Seminole Hills features 3 ample. bedrooms, floored attic, fireplace -------------- dining A i COLONIAL ACRES YORK WI TRADE OR AB363 Drayton P----- Crestbrook Street and medal. GIROUX REAL ESTATE 11 Highland Road (MS» 673-7837 FINE NEW HOMES By FIRST IN VALUE RENTING $78 Mo. $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEOROOM HOME GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA (ILL ACCEPT ALL AFFLICT TIONS FROM ANY WORKERS, WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROBLEM S AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. PEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 642-4220 GAYLORD lake FRONT. Seven rooms. 24 ft. living room Glassed In Dorch. Basemdnt. : FOUR BEDROOMS. Sever ranch. Fireplace. Family car garage. Fenced yard. Terms. Call MY 2-2821, FE GAYLORDS INC. . W. Flint St., Lak MY 2-2821________________F ™ of" la'llX oreclafe. OC 3951. HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. Highland Branch Office PHONE: 313-685-1585 HERRINGTON HILLS. -icupancy. 3 bedroom u,ivn, irpeting, drapes, finished base., lent, fenced yard, dish washer 'Id Incineretor. 338-8571 or 693- HIITER WEST SUB -on this ' floors, { AKE PRIVILEGES - with this neat 4 rooms and bath, new gas furnace, alum, siding, fenced kot. $9,250, terms. » $12,600 WE BUILD — 3 bidroom ranchers with oak floors, vanity in bath, full basements, gas heat. On your lot. To see the model call HIITER REALTY, 3792 Ellz. Lake Rd. 682-8080, after 8 p.m. 682-4653. MODEL AND OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5. HOUSE FOR SALE. Call 10 aim. to n or after 11 p.m. 852-T879. , immediate POSSESSION Is available If you can qualify tqr this modem 5 room bungalow with Slastered walls, full dining room, ill basement, gas heat, IVk car • garage. Located on northside of PontTac. Full price, 812,500, H down to veterans, 3 oar cant down 44306. Taylor Agency, Inc. --1 Rd. (AA59) or-- dally 9-9, Sun. r Snl^ousei 4-H REAL ESTATE SCHRAM Salt Houtti________ 'pRESfON BUILT-HOMES AND REALTY «73-«81l 49 Salt Htustf __ Eastham THE PON riAL’ I'HEh.S. MONDA ^ , M AH( II II. lUCH 49! Salt Houses 49 Salt Houses 49 Sole Houses 49 Salt Houses WILLIAMS LAKEFRONT I ! A hug* 3-badroom horn* with ^ wondetful view of the lake. 2. fireplaces. Full basement and 2Vi-carl I oarage, start to en|oy life Instead of .......sting. Selling tor *27,350. WE ■VON ;0'NeL,Val-U-Way GILES 54 T 3 bedroom home . -jsement, Herrington i._$JtOO total down. Full MIXED AREA . Very modern -with full baserr Hiiis Sub. incr price $15,500. List With SGHRAM And Call the Van att OPEN EVES. AND SUN. Hav mt JOSLYN AVE. FE 5-947 sale REAy;qR________________ _ JV\LS Proi LITTLE LONG LAKE: a ^bedroom lake front home, full bath, ■ living and kitchen area. Stone fireplace, shade, good beach. *15,500 with' terms. Inq. -Ira Scofield, Realtor, Hale,_728-2^03. I Cqans on alC'real estate Art Daniels Realty, 1230 N. Milfoid Rd. 6B5-I567._I _____ LADIES^ ■ Dreaming of a new home? Can you picture a stately Colonial with 2 car atUiched garage, shuttered porch? Come on Into yoi home. Step Into your lo Its wrought Iron open stalrecase and spacious guest closet. Glar-~ to the right — to the private livi room and its 8 ft. picture windo or to the left — past your -'-'itfed '/i RETIRING SPECIAL Neat and clean ranch wItt basement, new gas furnace, carpeting, 2 car garage 15x22 living IVraDe" room n Hn..,o jooul *70 per month. I GI-FHA ' 3 bedrooms with modern kit — nice sized living room and h garage. Aluminum storms screens loo. Selling for *13.»00 CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. - ‘Oent. 674^9^ ROCHESTER AREA, 6 room clean and neat, 852-4474. SHINN” Just Listed-GI or FHA 'WHY NOT TRADE? b^”n9*lw’'Trg. •'2“'^Ic'’T iwinl SPACE FOR REAL LIVING room with fireplace. Formal ■■ ■ - room. Kitchen with breaktes 2bedrooms. I'l baths. Full recreahon * Mm‘''''v ’ opener. u'^'sharpl^c'^aS'today lust *16,900. *700 down on FHA. $400 DOWN 0 this sher h full besei Id Eagle LI rXlnrll REALTOR Buyer has excellent c rty near the mall. WIN WITH SHINN S3 N. Telegraph Rd. Village of Holly Bill Eastham, Realtor 5020 Highland Rd. (M-59) Ml I WATERFORD PLAIA 674-3126 ,,e CONTEMPORARY RANCH am Sharp 3 bedroom ranch in h ,--,ringfon Hills. All brick construcfi ily- oak floors, recently decorated, F KINZLER patch, too. Garage Is 1-cer with workshop on 1 side. Let us show It to you today — only *10,700 with *2.000 down. VON REALTY » view REALTOR 'o™ I flame III HIV Mall MLS Room 110 Attir Ta* B living'_____*82:58j5J, 'Lbusy ^ . Y®’ kitchen at $16,500 on Gl or FHA terms. LAKE ORION LAKEFRONr rice $12,700. NO^CLOSING COSTS NORTH SIDE Cost ' $120,000. FRONT and golfing . irge LAKE I draperies. 3Va scenic; OTHER BEAUTIFUL HOMES I UNION LAKE FRONT *24,900 1 MACEDAY LK. *18,500 BRICK LAKE FRONT *30,500. COMMERCE LAKE FRONT *22,500 HAVE LOTS OF LOTS ] ----- ... ----,ood Village, I other areas. FROM »800 UP and ‘ Lake ■ Irult tret.. __________ ne woods. An excellent vaiuv 01 $32,90. LINCOLN JR. HIGH A. I Spacious 3 bedroom home In excellent condition. Living room and tamlly room each with fireplace,' also nice basement apartment. One of our best at *16,500. Terms. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor IRWIN LAKE FRONT Dom home. Situatad 1 Lk. Ha^ h I. Plan for i ith f non room ii 6d front porch i by appointment $15,400 o time to b WOULD YOU BELIEVE It's Dossibic lo buy e 3 b ith basement, 1 Specious Ian lear ceneral Hospital, arpeted bedrooms, huge II 2- LAND CONTRACT ST. MIKES PAROCHIAL 5 tflrge roomv new plumhimj hejl, red cedar siding, carp in living room, beautiful r be bought on land contrat^t ' CLAUDE McGRUDER Realtor 21 Baldwin FF s -jyiULTIPLE LISTING SER' I) 49 Northern Property 51A Lots-Acreagc ' tullabfe^^llr*''’'^, 1°^' '°®' " ^ BEDROOM ranch hor I ro WATTS REALTY ipwisfon GR 4 349J, Farmington ,95^ M 15 at RHODES Positively I nearly 2 ACRES on the Clarn ; Invigorating ^ NFAr''‘'^C.ASFV?i'1^f‘^’ Dav Pam, SATISFACTION AND hf'nch 70' hnn.-tr^'iesr I«» A ti PLEASURE OF OWNING A waiei'and electriaty LARGE TRACT OF LAND , A. J. RHODES, REALTOR 3 ? acrfs. p,n« and hin», $4,995, , f L 8 v.l S (j Resort Property 52 of^'ro^a t!'nntage!'$4."S, a ARKSmtj ARtA lOO'xlSO' loti 10 ACRES, hilly land In the Orton- Open garage A1 Cl )d west side ------ .5 f« ipitai. ring, sepa . . . landscaped lot, FHA :5219 Dixii 623-0335; n 9-6: TERMS. Many real wide ones. Across from Packers SIoE;'” C. SCHUETT j Multiple Listing Service " TO SELL, BUY, TRADE EM 3-7188 8800 COMMERCE RD. UNION LAKE 0 F>EJ^ TIL L D^R^D AIL_ , . -. Closets? The TUCKERTrEALTY CO. “n gleaming oak floors are a breeze 903 Pontiac State Bank 334-1545 citv to care for and you can't even------------------------------- ^ bath, to the 27 ----^ room. Can /ould you prefer laster bedroom witi CLARK TO BUY, SELL 8. TRADE $17,900 On your site ANDERSON & GILFORD, INC. Can make It all come true. 674-3141 _____673-87^0 LOVELAND IF YOU'RE LOOKING- For a sharp 2 bedroom bungalow, | large lot, W. Bloomfield School district, water and sewer connected, move In Immediately. Tha^ price la S10,9«0. Terms. Leona Loveland, Realtor 2100 Can Lake Rd. ____________*02-1255__________ VACANT PONTIAC MALL AREA costs. Owners Agent 330-6993. dining room, oak floor vails, well landscaped i"hX' ................. lood buy at $12,900. plastered •..... lot. ........... ... $4500 V handle. No. 7 HERRINGTON HILLS ATTENTION! QUALIFIED iilW^ese'SiTnT 'aTo VETERANS and hot water, Includes carpeting only closing costs will move you li and drapes. this very well kept 3 bedroom, I basement home, gas heal, nice tar fenced yard, nicely carpeted Hur budgeTstretcher for" Jnd 'drepes: G.I.'S ONLY Approximately *375 c TED'S 5 Oakland Ave. open 9 to 7 pr-| -i , ‘dTOI IT^ ^ rading 1 O run for your WIFE Lots—Acreoge 0 Acres, scenic v and welt. $10,000. 4' ? ACRF S, 489 of fiiqh land and pr sale, $6,940. $1540 do 0 ACRES, recreation touch of Intrigue, la R. J. (Dick) VAULET ir REALTOR FE 4-3531 ^CRE tOTS. SOME ( WRIGHT REALTY 382 Oakland Ave FF g OF AN ACRE, 1 milt nor Best Buys ! Today I cozy brick- y 3 8 TO 10 ACRE p FOR THE LEVEL MINDED CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815 RHODES vllCE BUILDING SITE ON Clark Rd , 6 lo 8 acres 0 ACRES Ortonville. $8500. ^ ACRES Hadley, $15,000 Terms ON M 24, zoned commercial. VON FE 5-8183 VACANT AUBURN RD. AREA oom, garage plus basement. , lown. Owners agent. 674-1698. shopping 10. LAKE FRONT: PRICE REDUCED ol system. Priced to Three bedroom l_ bungak g' Thinking ot selling? CaJ^I us lodayl FHA or Gl terms GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR .MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE - - ------------ 298 W. Walton FE J-7B83 bedroom bungalow, *79M. 132 X 16!, heal, knotty pine walls, 2-car garage, ■ Watertord school system. Priced fo isell, at *15,950. *3500 down, ' ' i contract terms. garage. Just let lipe olleringl ■$400 down- 1362 VACANT , _ —ing? C-.. -----, 'lark r|al estate - • Huron St„ FE 3-788-iple Listing Secvice tile bath u I. Zero down.l Ageni 338-6952. New Model OPEN 14 SAT., SUN. 8-BEDROOM BRICK TRI-LEVEI_ Wllllems L.ake Rd. 1 block north of Union Lake Village. Choice ot 3 alavations. *19,400 to *20,200 plus car garage, *13,600 plus I and 2-car garage, *29,200 plus Let us dispose of your present home and place you - ---------- ■------- - 196*. 1 new home tor J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor 8*3-6604 10735 Highland Rd. (M-5* Vr mile west ol Oxbow Lake__ NEW 3 bedroom borne overlooking' lake, walkout basement, ceramic: gutters, thernxK>«n« winnnwa. si7..' 200, OR >2411, VACANT I ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES ! -bedroom layout with hardwood '-- wet plaster, and full -- Carpeted throughout. floors, M ARRO CASH FOR YOUR LAND CONTRACT OR EQUITY VON WE BUILD 3 bedroom ranch homes starting at $12,308 partly flnlsheb Caberlae Ski area. *3,500, ti MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE n.. mwrnom nuno.iov.,^^^,,, new’'models OPEN SAT. & SUN. -5 P.M. RANCHES, COLONIALS, cap* Cpd brick] TRI-LEVELS repiace^'lnlng: PRICES FROM $17,500 Den ind" backVo?c'h**''FuiI ON YOUR.LOT-"V:. rH'’A'heerU‘’c,"r OTHER MODELS AT I oarage. Immediate possession. WESTRIOGE OF WATERFORD WEST SUBURBAN FOX BAY hv"i!fn* i-*'"* SILVERLAKE ESTATES 'rmii'$'’^'’?SorJ'’'^ ^7."^ CLARKSTON MEADOWS bas7iSard hlaLVwVc7r""g"erag°;i START AT $25,250 Big lot. Early possession. INCLUDING CHOICE LOT HERRINGTON HILLS VsfrTp^s ’w“ir. S JeT I‘ti' Three bedroom brick ranch, (jue to raising material and labor '77® room Kitchen and costs you can beat this Increase in ||TT|F RENTAL dining area. Full basement, u, two ways by buying your new home ivci’iiHL 'fha ^*"!£hi rard. no. FIRST: the Initial cost will be: Sr".*." roor wd's!**' WATERFORD TWP. -- 82 « M 24. Only $3.1,000 *5,00 ■oughoul. Contains wn plus large s istered walls ,iyilh rdwood floors; b, ■w GAS forced air EASIEST LIVING our equity. SUAVE M price $20,500, 52,0 'canal front nTMecedav . oak floors, 0 attic. This ■ It condition, Smy stofyW" 5 to attic. This home is in ....... blacktop I with lake mic tile in bath ly ed bath tlxtures ----linum windows Gas forced air turnac OPEN DAILY Walter's Lake Area Clarkston School District LARGE HOME SITES Trees plus beautiful view FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY 3-bedroom ranch home, IV baths, beautifully decorated, full basement, gas heat, PRICED AT '*26,000. Incl. lot with one of the most outstanding views I n Oakland County. Algonquin, 5 blocks to Thendara to Model for your selection. SYLVAN REALTY 673-3488 682-2300 * bedroom RANCH on bedroom modeT blacktop road, 12x22 living room,, $28,500 626-5286 hardwood floors, lake privileges, VON REALTY REALTOR I the Mall MLS Room 1 682-5802 If busy 682-5800 WALLED LAKE AREA $760 will move you in this } story home with large living room, gas heat and oarage. fj>riced at only ZERO DOWN To q u a M led veteran for full basement and garage, located in North Pontiac area. CROSS REALTY AND INVESTMENT CO. OR 4-3105 We pay cash lor used homes u- .two ways by buying youi 'Ttl.[no. FIRST: the Initial cu.. • PlnV'RIver , aiid """I | lower, SECOND: The home y( SOUTH SIDE "F" .... , 2-BEDROOM RANCH.I two bedroom bungalow. LIvingl LIST WITH O'NEIL REALTY Alummuift. sided, storms and room. Kitchen and dining area. o ' ----- .... a.- . .. utility. Gas FHA heat. Newly rOT 6 bOOd ReOSOnS i decorated. Vacant. Easy terms. iWe Think Our Sense of Values Eve. Call MR. ALTON 673-6130 Our List of Good Prospects M Clad ^ 1 PHONE: 682-2211 , -------RAY O'NEIL REALTY Lduinger ILAZENBY STRUBLE I ■•—4* ij—JA ^ A With fireplace, 2'/2 car garage, lake - I PRIVILEGES. Only 117,200. 13-IN-1 SALE INCOME - WIxom area. 2 family 1 Income, commercial, lake front, home, full basement, family room. ! Draylon Plains area. This 2^story Invest $5,000 and live free. Full ! with full basement and walkout to P'''ce $17,900. I extra large lot. An excellent Investment potential of over $300 per WHITE LAKE — 12^4 acres. Ex-I month with future commercial cellent ouildlng site. $11,000. IToca^eTofl A REMBRANDT YOU'RE NOT ' BARGAIN PRICED ANNETT TED'S CORNER you had your insurai .......^stvrou, LADD'S :0F PONTIAC 3677 LAPEER RD 391 3300 . b n 40 ACRES ^ area -*24*^^rnar/^Ton/! ■ terms. $500 doiwn. j age, several gwd Gilding s^ “ Lake privilege, old house and barn could be Cranberry Lake. $4800. II remodeled or salvaged, $750 per qoq *~L**nd ' ij C. A. WEBSTER, Realtor | wqoj REALTY ; 692 2291 628-2515 AtMLIT * *"* '«*" Room 110 0 m7“'N"'7l “ larkstm, Tis" 'to: " busy 682-5800 . .Fir or^u7 UNDERWOOD Wooded r/» «ra^ hiding site li ' on Lake, $5,950 restricted. $5,500 ' off Lake, $1,700 X 192' Cduntry, $3,250 MENZIES REAL ESTATE id 625-5465 Dixie Hwy. 625-5015 ^ IOO'X200 FT. LOT NEAR QOlf course e Independence Twp. $3,000. 623 1270. rt 140' FRONTAGE ON EDMORE I Drayton Woods. Phone 673-1610. ACREAGE-LAKE LOTS ' INDUSTRAL-AGRICULTURAL- j. Gordon Williamson Co. in Jerry or Fred 624-0500 Dixie Hwy. and I-7S fr BUILDING SITES fn Clarkston, 8665 DIXIE HWY. WE TRADE NEEDS FINISHING sdroom home needs s xhing but very livable completed. 2-car garage. you lo have your insurance agent I A Drown sh.unrt rauiiaw un.ir hnirt-nsBin-.-q. Washington Oakland County, bedroor cellant d $450 DOWN FHA bedrooms, fuil bdserr $0 down to Vets. I DOWN TO VETS ^ 2*/2 car garage, built- Si2mbina,'’'I"rFnd'bam''i^^^ CLOit TO DOWN I OWN installled. Priced at *10,500. Call v„y neat and attractive homeownei 10 McCullough realty REALTORS • 5460 Highland Rd. (M-59) MLS Open 9-9 I 674-'2239 ^ income Property 50 Realtors 6. Builders Since 1939 WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT; High lot with sandy beach. $10,600. 75' on take 96' on road - 195' deep. CLARKSTON OA e-2013. A. 7 80 to 800 ACRES I lower Michigan. Dairy, graliv ' let or hogsl Nam* your farm seds, ,w* hav* It at on* ot tigan'i" Farm Real Ettai* ' Cold, Spotlessly clean bungalow. First lima listed. Large 22 ft. living room and bedrooms are carpeted.: Bright, cheery kitchen, full base-i ROYGE LAZENBY, Realtor Open daily 9 lo 9, Sun. 1-5 __4626 W. Walton — OR 4-030t Frushour SEMINOLE HILLS WALNU'^ LAKE PRIVILEGES, 3^^THIS^3-BEDROOM__ home Is Ideal included at *11,500, terms. SIDE "“b^r^^^Sa^rnFF" r»m‘"'FFth^ MILO STRUBLE ! REALTOR _____ 674-3175 _______________ closing CASH FOR YOUR PROPER! — Let - ------z---------------,------ properly out at ....... ^ ............................. OAKLAND "U" 3-bedroom top dollar. While new home. We hav* plans and I financing. ! 674-0319 VA-FHA 673-2168 I OFFICE 0PEJ^9 A.M.-9 P.M.' ” TlMES^^^ Mattingly i NEAR "JL'J'JL'vk Warden inter. Full tiled besement, tuATi/iAi^ I living room, lJ“ living room large lot. Farm Broker and Auctlonaer. Write or call SI7-27S-2377 — days Headquartar* — Dean RaaHy Co., or 5l/-2«8-«l27 - night*. BY bWNER SMALL Vh acre farm, large 2-badroom horn*, 2 • e a r ---- orchard, naar 1-71 oR M10643;_____________ Country Home On 5 Rolling Acres with 3 large I 2 closets, ----ces and chan is ctisposai Hon to n thara lai-r, H IS a luii oaitmanT complataly ------ - — lop W1/h Lej Brown Bin ders paneled and 2-car garage. Walls Fruitwood cupboards and slai/ess are plastered Including garage steel sink. Only 100 miles ^rth, 509 Elizabeth Lk. Rd. walls. $40,000. Terms. ^t)?TE^i&r^AL is/n ; . ^ C. f^G«,^^tar " 391-2000 / 363 3900 HAROLD R. FRANKS, Realty «o m-i* ortonviii* RlnnmfiplH HilU ACRES with 1320' on lake plus!----CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815___ moomiieia m/is Hartllne Twp. Pric* CROSWELL, 160 ACRES, good road, t property. SI200 per acre on land contract. buildings. 8215 acre. 89.850 down. not call lor \ ranch LAKE PRIVILEGES . -...., kitchen _________ -------- ------ -------dll remodeled throughout. See this real! the rooms are spacious. Has >harp home at a real sharp price of On Sylvan Lake offered with I ' ---- gem with baserr 1,500 I PARTRIDGE “IS THE BIRD TO SEE" "WHY PAY RENT?" 1 bedroom home, large living room, big country kitchen and basement. Good corner location — will sell on land contract for out to appreciate its beauty. Let us show you today. Priced at *32,000. WARDEN REALTY 3434 W. Huron, Pontiac 333-7157 WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP 5 room bungalow. Extra clean with *li5 per mo. Now rented for *145 ^ per mo. Will discount for cash. ASK FOR FREE BUSINESS GUIDE PARTRIDGE REALTORS 1050 W. HURON ST., PONTIAC 334-3581 or 965-8759 OPEN WK. NITES TIL 9.00 country style kitchen. Lake privileges, taka over *75.00 per month land contract payment.] Save closing costs. Call i YORK WE BUY WE TRADE OR 4-03*3 OR 4-03*3 4713 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains RHODES lAkE ORION, lake front honie on water, needs tome repair. Only $13,500. 10 ACRES with small lake with nice 3-bedroom brick home, 2 fireplaces, living room with wall to wall carpet, V/2 baths, full basement, oil heat, 2-car garage. Only $50,000. 15 ACRES, wooded, scenic, with nice Wideman GENERAL HOSPITAL AREA Three bedroom home, large dining room, spacious living room with fireplace. Ample cupboards I n comfortable' aluminum sided 4-room home, 2-car garage, workshop, dog kennels. Only $30,000, $10,000 down, balance land 'XT'RHODES, REALTOR FB 8-230* 258 W. Walton FE 5*712 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE kitchen. Full basement, FA heat. IT'S VACANT - IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. LAKE ORION 3 bedroom bungalow, large kitchen, gas heat, aluminum siding, 1'/s car garage. Situated on 1 ACRE PARCEL, Only *11,950, with *2,500 ROYER down. CALL FOR APPOINTMENT. 1. 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR 412 W. HURON ST. 334-4526 EVE. CAL 335-8*69 WYMAN LEWIS REALTY 389 Whittemore 336-0325 OXFORD 4-bedroom stately home In nice Neighlxtrhood of Oxford. This home YOUNG-BILT HOMES really, MEANS better BILT ' Russell Young, 334-3830 S3'/2 W. Huron St. j car garage on large lot. Very easy to convert to income property. Ask for H-105. IRWIN i with 1*17,500, Today. “'3l JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor i ------illiams Lake Rd. MLS 'BUD^ wa I to wall carpeting, plastered CUSTOM BUILT - 3 walls and gas heat plus paved ranch in exclusive . .v™.„ . drive and garage. Only *17,500 woods. This home has loads with moderate terms. Ideal for extras. Sunken living room the retirees or newlyweds. Call carpeted, carpeted bedrooms, today. baths, completely built-in i [ modern kitchen, 20 ft. famiiv r 1 MULTIPLE LIVING ’ --------------- —‘ I And income is your ^ advan^ij y DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY 682-9000 OR 4-3568 OL 1-0222 No. 10 $350 DOWN CAN PURCHASE this cor HALL --- -----jn land contrt____________________ depth. Offeredby private owner.' araZ -**,., A --"n. 50x200' ^KEf=RONT LOT Everett Cummings, Realtor ......J 2583 UNION LAKE ROAD I bungalow, EM 3;3208____ __________3*1:^181 'llrJolKe"''sm WOODED LOTS, Fox Bay] ^ice biach well ol Boom Also other lots, by owner, 624-1*31 fie’ld/Schools.^ Possesion. $28,500 HOWARD T. 778-1934. Home-Si Acres Her* you can *n|qy Ih* fraadom only country living cqn provid*. 4 bedroom home located approximately 12 miles northeast ot Ortonvillo. Full boiomont ond 1 car garage. Horn* In axcallant condition. *30,280, 10 por cont ' KEATING * No. 18 "MUST BE SOLD! " ATTRACTIVE BRICK 2 baths, large 22060 W. 13 Mile, Birmingham ' ...-eened porch overlooking lake, 646-1234 566-7959 ledgestone Fireplace wall in living j ....... ................ “Before get thee too soon j old and too late smart" I C. PANGUS, INC., Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 630 M-1S Ortonvtil* CALL COLLECT NA 7-2115 ting! *34,500, lake privilege*, fir down, plenty of and dryer, tilt bal (..II --jg, lo«a, Priced at Id Income is your advantaae' Jnd «ntrSl air con Tir ? 'Z ^ P?u"s‘’ mYnTmorJ''ex",?. ^peF S FnT^FTInc n raFor'aiFV '^'"'“'IBRICK - 3 bedroom ranch horn.^,^,g„ iFndsISpe'd" anS"prke"d Featuring newly carpeted "klng| room, large kitchen, sparkling tiled!""'’ " possession. CALL NOWI bath. *15,500, total pric* with 10 „ ^.ointmTnt: ‘"'’IPERRY ACRES IBRICK RANCHER; Located between BROOCK completely furnished plus new carpeting and gas heat. Only *21,500 with land contract terms. dream home. No* eno *20.950.00, look CASS LAKE CANAL FRONT 90-feet water frontage just off the lake, tip-top 2-bedroom ranch home, beautiful view from large picture window, big kitchen and dining area, lots of cupboards, 14' X 15' bedrooms, ample utility room, automatic heat and hot water, glassed and screened potch for summer enloymenf, 24'i X 25' attached garage, tall oak' shade frees, cyclone fenclnq.' Priced at *21,900.00, call now. i NICH0L.IE-HUDSON ■ Associates, Inc. 49 University Dr. FE 5-1201, . after 6 p.m. FE 4-8773 IhiSi gas car attached gar privileges on 2 lakes with no money down, approximately *500 closing costs. Hey, Boy I Why not. JI*3,S)Fo?al 0 ith fireplace and 8 (,e iched garage, ■ - —-utllul CONSIDER THESE: acres in OWNSHIP armed land on 2 roads has had V accepted perk *—*• --- 4139 Orchard Lake Road i loam soil, near At Pontiac Trail Oxford $750 per MA 6-4000 444-4890 «<» HIGHLAND-MILFORD area acre BEAUTIFUL CORNER LOT lake front *50 mo bik top rd. Near In Drayton Woi ' expressways, rolling land. Opent No. 2 lust off Sun. Bloch Bros. 623-1333 FE 4-l Hatchery Rd. *22 4509, 5660 Dixie Hwy. Watervord. ' • lake' FRONT homes, "new used. J. L. Dally Co. EM 3-7114. "P.'T." "" LAKE FRONT CLARENCE C. RIDGEWAY REALTOR MLS______ 338-408* SROYER threshold today? Call tor your JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" B. HALL REAtltY^'IfEALTOR 5 BEDROOM RANCH *5*9 Dixie Hwy. 9-9 dally *25-411* joXFORD AREA with lake schools. Ideal far baths, dual-glazed LAKE HOME fireplace, I basemen! spot, 'Not zor--_ $36,000 I Horse Farm Huge horse barn, house buildings ------- I 1*2 rolling acres n this profasslonal (Not zoned lor I Times Realty 'KAMPSEN'SjSilfi 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY ' ?3-0600 REALTOR Open 9-9 daily DORRIS *-room and bath. Located on 3 ots totaling over 200 frontage, all landscaped. Information about this home and ---------- ---- Call f ranch home with marble fireplace. Huge ceramic bath. Gas furnace. IVj car garage. Home Is carpeted! throughout. Over 100 ft. frontagel on lake. Clarkston Schools. Be ready for summer fun. It GR0VEL6ND VALIEV Builder's model — beautiful brick! and aluminum rambling ranch. 3j large bedrooms. Formal dining!' _________ ______ room. 2'/i baths. Family room with a*“patio‘:*r.fm oS;Ser.T‘'I: CHER0KEE ROAD: pprty. immediate possession. 2-bedroom In the city, all oi floor. Full basemer* -good condition. Gas BRIAN'S BUYS NEWLYWEDS OR RETIREES Extra clean heat, fenced .. quiet neighborhood. __, _ home to retire or start out In. Move right In tor *500 total. G.l. $650 DOWN Trl-leval In Whit* Lk. Twp. area, 3 bedrooms, ttmlly room attached garage, gas heat, fenced —' Tandscaped yard, wall-t:______ carpet. 81500 compiet* move In amount. 'HANDYMAN-PERRY PARK : 2 bedroom horn* with 1 c_. oarage, gas heat, land contract. "ESTABLISHED SINCE 1930" EAST SUBURBAN. Aluminum sId story and half bungalow situate, on an outstanding lot 22S'x400' that! is partially anchor fenced.| ‘IT'S TRADING TIME" ALMOST TOO LARGE But Still cozy a located 1 gas t , . , I and an outstanding dc tructed and heated gar 'x32'. *22500. STEP RIGHT IN. Occupancy upon .« ----- -lortgage, $1,450 you into this Gleaming oak floork 13Vzx17 ....... room with spacioui entrance closet, mx\S kitchen, 3 well lighted bedrooms, tiled bath with vanity and gas heat. We'll trade, naturally. WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE 628-2548 MAIN OFFICE: 823 S. Lapeer f Oxford BRANCH: Phom Holly Plaza baths. I 1 — 21: I carpet throughout. 3 b BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS 313 West Huron - Since 1925 FE 5-944* After 5 p.m. FE 5-484* EAST SIDE DOLL HOUSE. portunity knocks anytime ygu can assume another mortgage interest rates and Towt. ..... closing costs. Neat and clean 2 bedroom home with separate dining room and living room with new carpeting over oak floors, plastered walls, full basement and garage. Monthly payments of *91 Tncl-— ‘--------------' '-------- WATCH FOR TOMORROW Brian Realty Inc. 623-0702 ^sa* dixie hwy S9(M Dixie Hwy., Watartord i MULTIPLE LISTING SERvici" Including taxes and Insurance. DORRIS 8, SON, REALTORS -0324 This three Gardens. The family ------ tached sprawl: feature COTmilnity" waTeY Y satisfied until you h. inside of this spaclou today, we have the ki J comfort n brick r. „jplace is off the Yio. 93 ,Be BTv« mUcU"a;9 ROOM DELUXE! frontal view. Other COLONIAL HOME: Is privileges Beautifully built 3-bedroom home in paved I with attached garage and perfect lily home: sand beach, northeast of OrtdnvMIe windows,! on Hosier Lake. *17,200. Terms. ^rcTanac'lted' C. PANGUS, INC., Realtor e looking tor a OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK make your ep- *30 M-15 Ortonville II price Is ^24,950 CALLJIOLLECT NA 7-2815 I. HURRY, CALL ” LE5JER lake front t Located 6685 E, Windiate Dr. off ' Andersonville Rd. 1 mil# from OTHER ACREAGES AND ' \KE PROPERTIES AVAILABLE . Nelsey, Sales Agent, Davisburg 313-625-3298 or 313-537-5730 Evening Calls_Welcome_j KENT Sportsman's Paradise Only 40 minutes from Detroit Beautiful professionally built 3 bedroom log cabin with stream and small fake on 3 traa-covared acres. 24 more adiolnlng acres available. Ideal exectiva hideaway. WE BUILD-TRADE ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE 628-2548 MAIN OFFICE: 623 S. Lapttr Rd. 1 J y ______ford. 2 Ftrepfarce. Largp 1 _____ jnt and i 1. 3 wooded lots, Cash pric< estate - 15,950. BEAUTIFUL HIGH LOT 80x193, surrounded by nir- -------- shade frees. $4,000 LOT 120x 207. Ga Sale Business Property 57 between Hazel and James RENT BEATER! The payments m#thly on Contract with substantial do-only *80.00 hurry, CALL NOW! ............ ..■‘'"Hur'^'nTRADING Gardens. Within walking dlsIancej-rHE BATEMAN WAY. The ,of Tel-Huron. I"—' CHEAPER THAN RENT put you In this three bedroom] ranch on Pontiac's East r’-" Clarkston Real Estate 5856 S. Main_______ MA_J;5821 TOWNSEND LAKE | Good 100 H. lots. 180 ft. deep.! airabl^"' FE 2-.-S23' SISLOCK & KENT, Inc. 1309 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. _____ 338;;9294_________ _______.338-'_ . Northern Property 51-A bAUGHEY REALTOR NORTH SIDE 'sharp and Ready for YOU. Lovely carpeted living r--- all drapes go. Large family . ________ ... -- ----- - kitchen. Tiled bath, fenced v»rr Id beach. Completely furnished, only *11,500 with'*350 down Floyd Kent Inc., Realtor 2200 Dixie Hwy. at Telegraph : 2-^23 or FE 2-19J „ MILLER BLACK LAKE 2-2 bed roc .VJiWooa seaieo-giass winoows wir ■pet^ and jcreens, 2 car attached aaraoe an I?®, 'rln ^ ^ gleSming-white carefree aluminur line. Cali Today!I ;siding. Priced at lust $17,950 plu THINKING OF SELLING iJpEfi ‘’sAr’t!.""suN‘' OUR^ESTi'maTE^'bEFO'RE you call TODAYI Corner of .“5!i YOU ‘'C6N tsade Bradley, JoAnr .......... A Iso I , ..........Jays. )f Scott Lake. ArnoldrKen"Hall, Eileen Moyer, BATEMAN " REALTOR cottage, 80' I e, rurnisned. 13 lake* >est of hunting and I in Black Lakes Full price $6800. Ten beauty sold. _ ____ oughout. Thick carpeting istered walls, beautiful kitchen, heat,^ BeautiM >t $12,900. See ii, $1500 DOWN 10x14 ), Cheboygan County, 2 yard. — ont lake Jojjay. - .ski-silver LAK£ ESTATES BRICKj arpeted s Hallenbeck, Thui Dick Bryan for FICIENT SERVICE. 1071 W. Huron St. Ml A^TER I PM CALL )om. lovely imlly room MI c i L?St‘|Ng“on "buRT, MULLETT, galaV'fuTr'bsmt. Love'iy'lands' ■1-.5. I lake HURON od S M A L L lornir lot See this spotless f OXFORD! LAKES. PHONE PONTIAC 335-1944 today. O'A 8-4211. OR WRITE M. M. SHERWOOD 2 0262 EM 3-41711 CHEBOYGAN, MICHIGAN. 670 W. HURON OPEN 9 TO 9 AUBURN AVE. CORNER UT'xlTO* plus 20' alley at rear, ideal location for Tak»-Out Food, near new apartments & shopping center. $30,000. terms. INDUSTRIAL 9 ACRES WATERFORD TWP. Railroad frontage, near 1-75. Let us show ORCHAR^ LAKE RD. ■ : Near COMMERCE RD. UVrlfW. '•! Water & Sewer, 4 room hout#,. B| basement, garage. Ideal for doc- HOME & BUSINESS KEEGO HARBOR, ORCHARD LAKE RD. large 8 ROOM Older home, lot 50x183, plus allay, garage, S28.l»0. MANUFACTURING 1 ACRE 325' Dixie Highway frohtage, fenc-ed 4 car garage, smell oftlca., *27,900. Near Telegraph Rd. BATEMAN ERCIAL DEPAR 17 S. Telegraph t 338-9641 Ifler S call 332-3799 D-6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH 11> 1968 Salt Iwims* Pr*|Mrty ^57 J-2^44. PT. euirbiNo"^ y BEAUTY SHOP Business Opportunities 59 1?^ Fully occupIM. Critically ill ..... must sail. $89,500, considar $18,500 down. Lakesido Mobite VHiage, Route ly Sturgis. Michigan, 49091 di6-45i-7097. No Brokers. MOTELraft DELUXE UNITSV lOYaly . Offers ,t Mich. Port City $3,000 AN^W SCMRAM REALTOR down. Call or write Don Jones, 513 Oak. Manistee. 49660. ‘ Realty, 1516 E. Michloai -----------=— ■>23-^4U. motel! so'units'v^ WMttd Contracts-Mtg^60-A NEED LAND CONTRACTS. S dlacounU. Earl Garralt. MA EMpIra 3-4088. 1-50 LAND CONTRACTS Urganlly naadad. Saa u$ o Warren Stout, Reoltor 450 N. Opdyka Rd. FB $-8IMi Sole Household Goods 65 CARNIVAL AT BUILDER PRICES E wall ovans (narrow and wida). rnn In r.nn*. .«•!( claaninc or dlahwaanari, I In GE colors. SPECIALS by sida ralrlgaralori. ( Prayers Appliance, Inc. Money to Loon Lctcensea Money Lender) LOANS KAMPSEN r.x.,‘s AFTER 8 ijAND WEEKEND Looking for industrial? Insurad Paymant Plan BAXTER & lIvINGSTONE FInanca Co. LOANS TO $1,000 BUNK BEDS CUSHIONS-CUSHIONS fa%*r?cs.*0 STOVE, Retrlgera.. I Wringer washer, I FOR SEWING MACHINES >n't be missed by so-called bar ins and gimmicks, We have thi Mortgage Loons Road, 335-9283.__ _ freTght damaged *pi«? rnodcr'n ^roon? By Dick Turner , STORE BUILDING a II hTiter realty, NEW COMMERCIAL BUILDING NORTH $22,000 FOR THE PAST 4J YEAR! Vass 8. Buckner, Inc. JJ9 National Bldg., Pontiac lava bean loaning $1000 to $5000 to .nma owners on 1st and 2nd ar repairing, remodel-IS, consolidating bills, s small monthly pay- GAS STOVE 3 GAS STOVE, $15. Ratrlgarator, I hunting, bast ot 'rout Home Owners PRIVATE money AVAILABLE isoRdi WANTED: LIGHT Industrial, ZONED. INDUSTRIAL K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor Business Opportunities 59 $5380 $37,000 PROFIT IN 7 MONTHS Land Contract Balance WILLIAM WINT MONEY TO loan - FAST J4 HOUR SERVICE Hrst and Second mortgages tor 150' ^U^S.I hj^hway Iron RISK mortgage CO., 1-398-7903. Swaps t9.50. Philco 19" portable. $49.5 ig. Hampton Electric, 625 V d condition, 391«M KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT condition - $50 FULL guarantee Kirby Service & Supply Ca. furniture •_Consl8ts of:_^ rspring maMre: d matching PICKUP FOR ilrs and table. All tor $399, Your Oil I.floo^al^^man.. FURNITURE CO. WORK FOR _____ like new, all Automatic, Elec- PHONE PONTIAC, 33VI944 OR WRITE, M. M. SHERWOOD REAL(- -.------------- ESTATE exchange, CHEBOY-iCoia Ciothlnu GAN, MICHIGAN. EXCHANGE TV STAMP books $3.49 up. Pearson'$ Furnllura, Gold Bell, 682-8731.________ c. Pike Si„ FE 4-7Mt.____________ WILL TRADE ALUMINUM siding MISCELLANEOUS FURNITURE, ■■ ■ - atoon or ski boat of] E. Ypsilantl, Pontiac. 682-4503. “ PURE OIL DIVISION Excellent new locatlpns, i financial Mj MOVED TO g'2,5d“lfn^itfo'’n‘: 115 N. Saglnow M. C. Lipparci SUNN AMP 100S, with reverb and vibrato $800. 332-7856. STARR CONSOLE Call 3S7-M66. TEL-ftAY ECHO AND Rtvarb unit, 673-2912. ORGANS AND PIANOS COLLIES, AKC, LOVELY sable INSTRUCTIONS AND ----- ——“ ’ *’‘- INSTRUMENTS. JACK HAGAN MUSIC cuteWtInsjo 469,EH«beth Lake.Rd. 332-MOt. “ " THEORY classes STAR ‘You would start him using the electric tooth brush! Now he says he thinks he’s got a short in one of his teeth!” Hi-Fi^TVJtRadlo^^_____6i TV. SILVERTONE Mahogam console. Exc. condition For Sale Miscellaneous 67 RAILROAD TIES, SHOWER STALL, MAYTAG washer, misc., boy's racer. 335-6576._ SOFAS UPHOLSTERED AT half the price of new. Call 335-1700. Coml. Upholstery Co._____________. OLYMPIC CONSOLE Stereo. injr____________ STEIl PATIO STONE FORMS I 1968 OLYMPIC 40" STEREO Com-binatlon. A M - F M radio-remote Speaker terminals. 4-spaad autochanger. Balance due, S174.1I cash or $8,50 month. Household pilance, 335^283. SHIPPING BOXES White Pine — 8 x 21 x 32, 7 > 29, 10 X 19 X 29. Call 187-4191._ SUMP PUMP GE motor tff.SO ------------- . Territic buys.' CABINET STYLE STEREO AND radio comb.;, - -‘'- Mathas. 852-5312. COLOR LITTcE .. BARGAINS, ________ - - Bargain House, FE 2-6842. ELECTRO-VOICE STEREO apeakert and components, sound great, Pontiac Music and Sound 3101 W. ------ 332-4163.____________ RECORD P Saa us — we nava most all kli Johnson TV-FE 8-4S69 SALE. OP^N TO Entire inventory ~ot pallets. Table vibrators. 363-3459, attar USED - Unlvox.lAKC BRITTANY spaniel, female ’‘jCLARK^^TRACTORS AND MACHIN-»nH AiM. white m ce, hampsters. _ •na_New iuea perw ga ™ iT’ UprlghTBlrom^$69. , GRINNELL'S Downtown Store BASSET PUPPIES, champion sired, ______ Co., Orlonvliiai ■ust! To' mos. old, AKC rag. 6M-124T____________ beagle"'pDps, PRdM a« hunting stock, 110 aa. 6, attar 2:30 p.m. _____ beautiful 'mIniaturF colli — watchingdog and pet, r 625-4943. 067^392. •" ^ .'*"***' OLIVER TRACTOR OcT loadaT, 2-5319, 1961 Lake Wind Dr. Music Lessons 71-A M DACHSHUND: AKC K IS. Children or adults Beginners or advanced. OR 3- Offico [quipment ADDRESS0(SRAPH—CLASS 1900 and Graphotypa — Class 6300. condition, includes many ac DALMATION PUPS 9 WEEKS A wormed, shots, Outdoor tr«n S7S. PH: 772-0076 01 (ATION f wormed, shois, uuiwu'-$75. PH: 772-0076 or LI 3-5605. DOBERMAN POPS. AKC. $100 c Farmington 476-2592.__________ Special Sale USED BOLENS TRACTOR, 1962 MODEL ‘■"’■‘J ” MOWER ■ N A-1 CONDITION. ROTARY ^„.JDiTir" ONLY $: USED WHEELHORSE TRACTOR, KING BROS.^ ^ t Opdyka Trovei Traiiers 88 lO- CABOVER ALSO 8' lor p COMMANCHE, SELF CON- TAINED. 879-0583. 7-5330. _ ENGINEERING OFFICE COMPLETE EQUIPMENT FOR DRAFTING ROOM AND OFFICE FURNITURE: bRAFTING BOARDS l-LEVEL LIGHT FIXTURES STEEL PRINT FILE ■ OZALID B.P. MACH. _____ SHEPHERD purebred, $25. No papers. 852-2 GERMAN SHEPHERD, AKC, i TIME CLOCK - CARD RACKS GENERAL OFFICE FURNITURES OFFERED IN 1 LOT 642-9820 OFFICE FURNITURE refInIshed Tr.d raupholstarad by experts ^at half the price ot new. Call 335-l7iJo. Coml. Upholstery Co. PRINTING FRESSES-OFFSEI 5433 Dixie, Watertord 623-0200 PRINTING EQUIPMENT multlllth offset press with i making equipment $1495^ puv[son Watertord 623-0200- ) Dixie Store Eqi^pment Female poodle. 0214, after 5 p. 1967 21' CORSAIR cor new, with ext dj sleeps^jL HAVE '■^--hei si7'Mi-4693,‘ conning. Mich. R ‘ home WANTfeO Shepherds, ready for suard duty In vour business. At 6 wk. old puppy prices. 517-046-4693, H. Lehar, Pln- *Ellsworth Trailer Sales 6577 Dixie Hwy.___________625-4400 before 5 p.m., 391-1866 after 5 p.m MINIATURE^oSdigre 7 weeks, AKC, excellent P outstanding p u p p I _______ 1, 229-4339.__________ #>OODLE CLIPPING AND COMMERCIAL CHEST TYPE deepl^'?Y“K“ freezer, 28 red bar stools, 4 cash ennr'i f registers 4 office deskv 1 safe, V^black^^'i females. 682-0162. n perfect condition. 887- reducing AKC POODLE stock, grown- f»mafes> pup* colors, ‘ also stud service, apricot mlnlatura pups, $35, 391-1643 or PE 4-4344. E 4-8462.-32. Sporting Goods ^ SPECIAL r 4'x8x«" parti 125 Oakiahd THE SALVATION aEmY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to meet your naadk Clothing. Purnltura, Appilgncds USED JUKEBOX RECORDS 5V GUNS. EVERYTHING for the shooter. 720 W. Huron St. SMALL MIXED PUPPIES. $10 each. 334-7153. I960 SNOWMOBILE, 17'/j horsepower, IS".* track, complete with trailer,iSSSO. 4175 Crocus, after 4. ST. BERNARD puppies, AKC, Sanctuary Woods and Mighty Moe Line, home raised, guaranteed healthy. 229-4548, Milford. BOWS AND ARROWS-334-6M9 GENE'S ARCKERY-714 W. HURON ST. BERNARb PUPS, registtrad, mantle and splash,- well marked, FE 2-6920. BRAMBLEWOOD COUNTRY CLUB OIr.: 2 MILES NORTH OF GRANGE HALL ROAD ON FISH LAKE ROAD AT HOLLY MICHIGAN. 2154 MINER RD. HOLLY 634 9209 Two REGISTERED Norwegian Elk-hounds for stud. 625-5226. WEIAAARANER PUPPIES, AKC, stud service 620-4466. WEST HIGHLAND WHITE adult and pup, male only, 363-6443. GOLF CART 673-5703 after 5 P.m. Pet SuppHei-Senfice^ 79-A 1 PONY SADDLE/ like new with 2 lakeland bait HOUSE - all , fishing tackle 50 per cent oft — 4870 Highland ’ftd.'^TO i.m. to 7 OUT THEY GO Scorpion SNOWMOBILES COST AND BELOW Machines Only one 15 h.p., One 20 h.p.. One 24 h.p. Trailers, covers and helmets B & B AUCTION EVERY FRIDAY ... 7:00 EVERY SATURDAY .... 7:00 EVERY SUNDAY " NO MONEY DOWN :TERMS STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 15057 N Details r Stan Pe . 635-9400 . , POOL TABLES 5'xlO^ Snooker, 2,000 pound Saffron BMiiard Supply, 81 " 542-8429. Pool Table Special Brunswick Celebrity, $495 now $395. Saffron Billiard Supply, 814 West 11 Mile 542-8429._________ SEE US AT THE PONTIAC MALL Boat Show Feb. 29-Mar. 9 '605 Highland (M-59) (Acros* from ^ Auctioneer service. assets. 3 auctioneer! 673-953 Bza) available. Piants-Trees-Shrubi 81-A 1960 Starcruft-Campers 1968 NIMROD CAMPERS ALL 8 MODELS ON DISPLAY All accessories and parts MG SALES ---- 673-6458 Draytop AIRS I REAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Since 1932 Guaranteed for life. See 'hem and get a demonstration av Warner Trailer $ ‘ — W. Huron (plan to loir Wally byam*t exciting c carpeting, oversi APACHE CAMP TRAILERS PICKUP TRUCK CAMPERS "bIilI colIer City ill m M-21 Camping Private Lake Safe beach, flush toilets and showers, 1140 M15. Ortonville. McFcely Resort. 627-3120 weekends or 96S-S9S8 weekdays 9 to 3 4io Empire Bldg., Detroit, 48226. CAMPERS FOR PICKUPS PHOENIX AND WINNEBAGO Trailers REESE AND DRAW-TITE HITCHES STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. NEW APACHE RAMADA Sleeps 8, dinette, 3 burner range sink, galley, cabinet. Ice box couch. Plenty of storage space. HUSBANDS! In trouble with the little woman' comfortable than a dog house. EVAN'S' EQUIPMENT • 6507 Dixie Hwy. 625-1711 i Mon-Thur 9-5 Sat' OAKLAND CAMPER SKI-DOOS -.......jr'sic____________ mighty Super Alpine II ___Ctric, ♦'"In 1^" trac linVof sr I Hfj; Electric, with .- ----- - f snowmachine accessories. OAKLAND COUNTY'S MERC-CRUISER DEALER Cliff Dreyer's Gun and Sports Center 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-6771 SNO-JET SNOWMOBILES t«5»'re 905 Orchard Lk. FE S-2424 Open Sun. SKI-DOO SKI-DADDLER Snowmobile ARABIANS, "■'■ling, read: 625-3593. FIRST LESSON FREE. Klantne buy now AND SAVE I CRUISE OUT INC^ S3 E. Walton Dally 9-6 r TAKE A DEMONSTRATION rida i ♦n. kcatmoblla, the new lend ar vehicle. A limited supply Demode Rd. Left and follow signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 629-2179. VALLEY POOL^TABLE, 7 wiate MIA, !(Af#rnn Rlillan San40rnvei-Plrt SAND AND GRi^EL, all ________ 673-5516, watertord. PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUI^ ply. Sand graval fill dirt. OR > isk J___________ ESTEP BLACK DIRT. S25-2175. S.A.W. SAND a. GR_AVEL building produ— “ ----- ^-Ilvere< Weod-Coni-Coke-Fuel _____77 FIREPLACE W(WD, (FACE lor OR 3-3501. Pets-Huntlnq Dqqi COLLIE $75, -,Amerlcan_ 79 „„ Poodles' $49.95, Schnauzers. Grooming, pat supplies and. many live animals to choosa from. Uncle Charlies Pet Shop 696 w. •’--^-?yEMN°N&yi^i9 1-A POODLE CLIPPING, « " - Service puppies. FE 3 AND 1 older y gentle with children 682-45 egistered quartei Baldwin at Colgett GOODELL TRAILERS le are outstanding Indivl axe. show records in I------- performance at registered PICKUP CAMPERS SEE THE '68 KARIBOU MADE IN MICHIGAN 31690 Grand River le Rd. Romeo. 752-3464. HORSES FOR SALE. ________363-5592 or 36S0202. HORSES - BOARDING, S35 I — -------- stalls - — '‘“- PIONEER CAMPER SALES BARTH TRAILERS & CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS MERIT FIBERGLASS COVERS ALSO OVERLAND & SALE Inventory Reduction .. S2,39i .. $3,595 Rd., Clarkston. ragistc 5227, t HORSE TRAILER, Meatoj_______________4^ CURE AND SMOKE MEATS. Call FE 2-6155. Hy-Grain'-feed___________84 GOOD HORSE and PONTIAC AAALL Boat Show Feb. 29-Mar. 9 WE CARRY THE FAMOUS FRANKLINS-CREES FANS—MONITOR THUNOERBIRD RIT2 CRAFT TRAVELTRAILERS MIXED ALFALFA HAY, Straw, and Oakland Orchards, 2205 E. Com-mtrea Rd. 1 ml. East of Milford. I to 6 daily.______________________ 1951 FERGUSON TRACTOR. With 1965 — ICklO . tractor, front ai . . trip bottom plow, u Ilka naw. <^2^464. SPECIAL d garden tractors Ferguson 20-30-35. 125 S. WOODWARD I Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. S 4-0461 , FE 4-1442 Opan *■ -- ly Including Si $1,195 $1,795 THESE VALUES TODAY1 ' Tour-A-Homa Jacobson Trailer Sales to Williams Laka Rd. OR 3-5961 O^n M ------------------ SEE US A' Holly Travel toach Inc. 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 4-67; Open Dally end Sundays— Special Sale TRAVEL TRAILERS You dealer for — CORSAIR, GEM MACKINAV/ AND TALLY-HO Ellsworth Trailer Sales 6577 Dixie Hwy. 625-4400 (NUFACtURItiS^ SPORTCRAFT MANUFACtU Steel frame pickup slacpara ar 4160 Fbley, Wottrtord, 623H Trot wood G IN, SAFETY, COMFORT, INDIVIDUAL WHEEL SUSPENSION AT JOHNSON'S 5>7 E. Walton BlVd. VW CAMPING bus, factory equipped- Table, refrigerator, wardrobt, tent, roof rack, 21,000 mi. '67 WOLVERINE TRUCK CA7APERS AND SLEEPERS. Factory outlet, repair and parts, new and used, rentals. Jacks, intercoms, tele- rlers, auxllereting gasoline t Lowry Camper Sales, 1325 S. pita I Rd., Union Lake EM 3 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY, MARCH II. 1968 D—7 JM 1-A Beauties to Choose From RICHARDSON DELTA monarch duke HOMETTE LIBERTY COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES FE M*57 *23-1310 35 opdvke 5«o BIxie Auburn Htights- " ...... Metorcyclei HONDA, GOOD condition, ca -- M796.CAR5 FOR SALE, 10i loss 80NNEVILUE~trlumph. t«i condition. FE 4-0U7. 1365 HONDA. 305 GOOD condition. lO'XSO' ..—I. Carpeting. Aval May. 1007 Linda. Madison I OOW. Ty-XSC Howard, furnished. 1»65 HQLLY PARK. Unturnlsl 60«12 with extension. 852-1378. 13*5 MARLETTE in' x 50', cl -------- -"nr, *20-1303. 13«5 ! X SO HOLLY PARkT" ..-.n!'*5,75'0. 3M-0aM. 13M PARKWOOD, 12x52 3Sadif^ turn. On Lot. 334^10*. 13M PONTIAC CHIEF 42‘x1 bedroom, furnished. Extras. new. 3354720_________ 1367 MARLETTE 60x12 with expando. Holly, ““ 1367 65 CC HONDA. I All Models 1968 Windsors CUSTOMIZING. WHY PAY MORE? J. C. TalKIngton Mobile Homes, 2250 S. Telegraph. Across frotr Miracle Mile. 338-3044. _ BUYING HOME. MUST sell 13M llv'rno” r«MTr*wl'th''Vxtenslir^'’t*’'" dining room, carpeting throughout Best Mobile Home Soles Open Daily 9 a.m.-8 p.m. Marlette ^ Champion WITHIN 200 MILES. 12 X SO- American 1361, 043 ON DISPLAY AT: Cranberry Lake Mobile Home Village 3620 Highland Rd., (M-S3) 2 r West of Williams Lk. Rd. 163-3236 673-1131 WATCH FOR "OUR DISPLAY" AT THE WATERFORD HOME AND BUILDERS SHOW COLD WEATHER SPECIALS FOR EXAMPLE-1360 12'x60' Holly Park at 06800 1368 12'x50' at $3,735 Just In, 1368 12'x65' Mod Also the King, luxury for les: featuring exterior storage. Large savings on everything In stock. Free delivery and let up within 300 miles. We will no knowingly be undersold. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 5 HONDA 250 SCRAMBLER. Ex cellent condition. $350. * ' ’*•' 1365 TRIUMPH TR-* competition, $650. OA 8-2134. 5 YAMAHA. 305 CC r< Boats-Accessoriet WINTER SPECIALS 10' alum. Prams, $53 12' alum, fishing boats, $133 14' e^lum. fishing boat^s^^8l63 17' alum! canoes, $173 few remaining new 1367 Johnson h p. folding modais with carryl case, $153. Small dep. holds 'til Spring. PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. S TT SPECIAL Triumph, nd all, $300. It can be s„.. _. lob Hall Shell, M-53 and Eliiabeth ake^oad. _______ L 2-5373 alter 1358 CESSNA SKYLANE 750 SMO, mender Aviation, Pontiac AIrpor 335-3316. _________ .A.A. approved SCHcioL - LE 7, 305 CC HON Da ondifion, extrai. & ).m. UL 2"2777. .J> SCRAMBLER HONDA, ,— ir payments, exc. condition, call er 6 p.m. 39M453.____________ 1967 NORTON, 750CC, Scrambler. S995. Can 65V9745 after 5 p.m. All 1968Models NOW HEREI! BSA, TRIUMPH, HONDA NORTON, DUCATI, AND MONTE BSA HORNET, 1367, d FREE-FREE-FREE Suzuki. Still at winter prices. THE NEW 500 CC SUZUKI IS NOW HEREI MG SALES 667 Dixie Hwy. 673-6458 Draylon New and Used Trucks 103 John McAuliffe Ford 277 West Montcalm ADI Inc., Pgntlac 4 Wanted Cars-Trueks 101 “extra EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "Check the ratf, thin get the beat" at Averill HELP! need 300 sharp Cadillacs, P :s. Olds and Buicks for out le market. Top dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1104 Baldwin Ave. nph. 12 mos. ranty. Other ___________ ____________ Rupp minl-blkes as low as $143.35. Take M-53 to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge M. to ------------— Rd. Left and follow s DAWSON'S SALES AT LAKE. Phone 623-2173. Special Orders or 4 speeds and Corvette: Out of state market Top Dollar Averill Boats-Acce^sories 2257 Dixll 6ENERAL DELUXE................... offer, 451 S. Telegraph, Tele-Clin- ton Mobile Home Ct.____________ Richardson, i', 2-bedroom. 634-4543 attar 5 Oxford Trailer Sales SO to 63 Early > 60x12 front kitchen, full dining 168 - 17' SILVER LINE with h.p. Chrysler I.O., power tilt ..._ frailer, $3335 complete. Kars Boats a. Motors, 633-1600._ BETTER BOAT BUYS 8' STARCRAFT boat with 33 Johnson, only $335. lew Popcraft 16' fibergits boat 80 h.p. Johnson, just $1887. Weeres Pontooons., low as $435. PINTER'S S.—Grand Blanc Pre-Spring Sale bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen, end utility Spelclal . . . $6370 NOW ON DISPLAY THE ALL NEW 1968 DETROITERS Feeluring 2 full baths or baths, walkin closets. Modern, Early American or Mediterranean dec- BOB HUTCHINSON'S MOBILE HOMES 4301 Dixie Hwy. (US-IO) Draylon Plains OR 3-1202 Open Dally fill 8 p.m. Sat, and Sun, till 5 p.m. BOSTON WHALER, CHRIS CRAFT, EXCELLENT con- THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL Countryside TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES Winter Sale Specials 12x60' luncraft, front end rear bdrm. '/ft bath ............*55; 12'x60'Suncraft, colonial ..J|M5 12'x60' Bahama ............. |543S 12'x60' Homecraft ......... Buy now and sava. Check ( * ""dIlIvERED and SET _. TELEGRA^PH AT DIXIE HIGHWAY 334-6694 Rent Trailer Space ADULTS ONLY, NO lots available. City c Square Lake Trailer FE 8-9563._____________. ____ LARGE LOTS, NATURAL GAS PONTIAC MOBILE HOME PARK. RESERVE SPACE NOW FOR sprlno occupancy — Sun Air Mobile Homes Estates, 6600 E. River, Brighton, Michigan - Auto Accesiories Clafkston Auto Ports North Main 625-S OPEN 3 TO 3 New and rebuilt auto parts Tires-Auto-Truck______ REPAIR, MOUNT, and balance Mag «kE'?*\mE': 2635 Orchard Lake Rd. Kaego. Auto Service — Repoir 93 Factory Rebuilt Motors For cars, trucks. 883 up. High performance engines. C o r v e I r EfTERMS 537-1117 modern engines m tabs. OR 3-2404. KI-BOXr^out-* • “eke, roll-, Dftroit BOAT SHOW On display TROJANS. Inboard cruisers SLICKCRAFT Inboard-Outboard evinrude Playmate, Sportsman, Rogue SEE US NOW WALT MAZUREK LAKE AND SEA MARINE OPEN EVENINGS “■ * ‘ Saginaw____FE 4-9587 626-5286 after 5. CLEARANCE 1967 MODELS BOATS AND MOTORS SAVE-SAVE-SAVE This weeks-specials Used 14' Crosby with Mercury 4S .p. and trailer. 1733. 16' Owens with Johnson 75 DRAG & SKI BOAT 427 Ford powered 1367 KIndsvater, full upholstery. Custom treili SEARAY 1368 380 1-0 155 OMC, custom Interior, special SeaRay Employe. 670,2161 5:30._________________ SEE THE BEAUTIFUL STOP HERE LAST M&M MOTOR SALES Now at our new location e pay more for sharp, late me cars. Corvettes needed. 1150 Oakland at Viaduct TOP $ PAID (Downtown Store Only) for all sharp Pontiacs AND CADILLACS. We are prepared to make you a better offer! Ask for Br' Burns. WILSON CRISSMAN CADILl-AC 1350 N. Woedward 'TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S TIZZY 1964 FORD ton pickup, V-8. BIG I dio, heater, extra sharp. $1295 Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham t. Drayton Plains. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1365 CHEVY '' — * fleetside, V-8, --- heater. Custom cab. On US ■■ ........ 5-5071. automatic, radio, cab, only 81,335. 115, Clarkston, MA — ______ FULLY equipped, used tor transportation only, 81650 or consider best offer. 42' Can I TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1345 CHEVY '/k-lon, with fleetside owJlir and drives Ilka new. 81235. On’uS 10 at M15, Clarkston, MA 5-5071. Foreign Cnr*_ 7-1223. 1366 FORD BRONCO, t i wheel drive, 14,00. radio, $1535. 051-0121. matal cab. ' JEEP WAGONEER, •nnine. 4-whaal driva, bli. > and priced 1 _ ...iMBLER------- >, EM 3-4155. ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP, I 1368 GMC SUBURBAN, Jeep universal w ---Ing hub$ and Ford 'rk-ten pit id Camper Specials—gat th L-O^-G Deal M-- " —■- JEEPS GALORE 10 USED JEEPS 20 1968'/2 New Jeeps at real low prices universal, eharp, W metal c( A-1 running. $588. 1368 JEEP, Wagoneer, V-8 w automatic, 4-wheel drive, t power, save $1,000. 1363 UNIVERSAL CJ-S, full me cab, 7' hydraulic snow blat '“ulSSf'T3'i^ »Ers'lL*sV‘‘c, ' JEEP, ‘v-8 Gladiator [ Complete---------- Service end equ'ipment GRIMALDI JEEP 0 Oakland Ave.________FE 5-3421 FOR CLEAN CARS OR -WANTED- Late Model GM Cars TOP $ PAID FOR EXTRA CLEAN CARS Suburban Olds TRUCKS ARE OUR Business i GMC '/k-ton 8' wideside pICkup, I Chevrolet 'A-fon 8' fern pickup, 1-6 engine. 1367 GMC 8' wideside pickup, V-6 engine, 2 tone blue end white. 1365 GMC '/3-ton 8' wideside pickup. 1-6 engine. 1366 GMC '/i-ton 8' wideside pickup, We would like to buy lute model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 WANTED 1967 PONTIAC I gal. .. Glaspar tri-hull 83" convertible top, S curtains. srd. Ideal tor skiing, cruising. Steury GW-irumman, MIrrocraft, ....irude motors, Pamco Ray Greene sailboats. - - W. Highland. Right ^d. to Demode ____ ____ ..How signs to DAWSON'S SALES AT -TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 623-2173. Take M-55 - ....... to Hickory Ridge R SEE U T THE FREE TOWING. 24 hm • e. 673-0623. Dave's T< PONTIAC ....... Boat Show Feb. 29 - Mar. 9 STILL A FEW GOOD BUYS ON 1367 UNITSI FG, GL'ASSTRON, CHRYSLER BOATS NOW IN STOCK New Silverllne_17' 120 HP Cruiser, Complete $2788 TOP DOLLAR FOR wrecked cars. Free anytime. FE S3044. Used Auto-Truck Parts 102 Clltt D THE SEASON IS COMING, SO MAKE THE MOVE NOW . . . HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS "Your Evinrude Dealer" 1833 S. Telegraph TONY'S MARINE SERVICE 1348 Johnson Mtrs. on Display Discount on all 1367 Boats-M-'— 2635 Orchard Lk. Rd. Sylvan I New condition. $5/?S0. 6i WANTED-14' ALUMINUM bo motor and trailer. 623-0107. Want Ads for Action 93 Auto Service — Repair 93 Chrysler Product Owners! Our Service Department: STAFFED BY EXPERIENCED MECHANICS WHO "KNOW" OUR CARS THOROUGHLY! Our Parts Department: STOCKED WITH GENUINE FACTORY PARTSI Our Policy , , , TO SERVE YOU BETTER FOR LESS! ^ "We Guarantee Our Service 100% /A) —DODGE, INC.— 1, to, 100 JUNK CARS — TRUCKS, free tow anytime. FE 2-2666. Ill JUNK CARS, K.''.Y FOR SOME tree to'w. 682-7080.____________ transmission a ilG ENGINES: (rebulldable) 440 Dodga, 303 Dodge, 3 S, 334 Chevy, Muncl Engineering — 334 I Rochester 852-3777, By Kate Osann New and Used^ars^ 106 New and Used Cara 106|N#w and ^d Care 106 CHEVELLE, 1342 WAGON, "0":I340 TBIRD, BODY AND ENOINEi NO MONEY DOWN |_ FE 8-9661 ” 342 Oakjand__________ 363^0akland' 63 CHEVROLET 2-DOOR jis eutomellc, very nice. 682-3233, R Igglns, dealer.__________ j CHEVROLET, 1364 WAGON. lucky auto ditinn. $400. 626-5686. ^ ^ 'w-'J.'k. X X i. X 1344 CORVETTE STINGRAY taitbeck "7 cu. In., 345 horse, 454 rear end 1,350. OR 3-5352 after 6.________ CHEVY IM^ALA SUPER ipor invertible, A-l shape, new llret U.MlOI8 yii ‘ I saw the first sign of spring this afternoon— the icicles were melting!” 105 New and Used Cart I, 13M BUICK ^^RmERA^^^ COME IN AND SEE TH Landcruiser 4-Wheel Drive by TOYOTA HASMNS AUTO SALES M95 DIxIr Hwy... CLARKSTON 1945 BUICK 4-DOOR. WILDCAT. Exc. condition. FE 2-7228. 1945 BUICK ELECTRA 225 % deer weekends Ml 4-I542. 1944 BUICK RIVIERA 2 ‘top, red with white I aower, $2,<00. 4M-2193. 1964 SKYLARK'com MA 5*3112 DUNE BUGGY BODIES frames shortened All accessories end parts. MG SALES & SERVICE 4667 Dixie H»y. Drayton Plains 673-6458____________________ Dune Buggies PARTS AND ACCESSORIES FRAME SHORTENING BY BILLY DOYLE CADILLAC, 1341 DaVILLE. down, Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. Hi Turner Ford, Birmingham._____ YOUR VW CENTER 70 To Choose From -All Models--All Colors-—All Reconditioned— Autobahn Authorllao'^vw'ibealtr Vk mlla North of Mirada Milt -5 S. Telegraph 1343 CADILLAC DeVlIle, 2. door Sharp in and out black. FE 9*1222. T366 CADILLAC COUPE DaVIlle, (TWO) 1363 CADILLACS, Convertible and a coupe DaVIlle, to b------ tor best offers. GRIMALDI CAR CO. Oakland________________^ New and Used Cara GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 Auto Insurance-Marine 104 AUTO INSURANCE Terms Available CALL TODAY! ANDERSON & ASSOC. PE 4-3535 1046 JOSLYN AVE, Foreign Cart BUICK BUYERS - 1363 TRIUMPH TR-4. Phone 682-53W. t, RUNS GOOD. $400, 332-5072 at 1343 VW, GOOD CONDITION. $525. GAS HEATER, n 1365 VOLKSWAGEN, RED, EXCEL-lent condition, lighter, $lone shields. Spare tire never been us«d. OR 1347 KING MIDGET. 40 ACTUAL radio"L'lTTLE*(^EEN'Bl‘AUfY: $1,343. Used Auto-Truck Parti 102 CORVAIR MOTORS And all Whe'r nnakes from 1113. Can Install. Tarmi and towing. 571- GTO RAM AIR CAM, $1 JSED ENGINES, rear axle, tri Ing, body parti sales. OR 3-520( New and Used Trucks 103 . _______.......... Can be sn at MGM Service, West ---------- _ Elizabeth Lk. Rd.___________ 1350 INTERNATIONAL,, ret engine. 1348 B. 1958 Ford C-600 ft. platform dump, with ti V-g angina, 2-$peed, 825 - duly fl-Inch that can h ^ "ly. $1395 John McAuliffe Ford 277 iWest Montcalm FB 5r41lh lI 3-2 1353 FORD Vj-ton, v A NEW SHIPMENT OF COMPLETE LINE OF THE FABULOUS New 1968 Triumph QUOTA TO MEET BEST DEAL NOW Including a new TR-250 and OT^ fastbeck, with ell new 6-cylinder engine. GRIMALDI IMPORTED CAR CO. Need d Car? New in the area? Repossessed?—Garnisheed? Been Bankrupt?-Di'/orced? Got a Problem? Call Mr. White _______FE^8-4088 NEW FINANCE PLAN. PROBLEMS, BANKRUPT, GARNISHEED WAGES, WE CAN GET YOUR CREDIT REESTABLISHED AGAIN. WE HAVE OVER 80 CARS THAT CAN BE PURCHASED. WITH NO DOWN PAYMENT. COME IN AND SEE C R E D I T MGR. MR. IRV. LUCKY AUTO 1340 W. Wide Track FE 4-1008 er F late model CADILLACS ON HAND AT ALL TIMES JEROME 1IRO, 1364 LANDAU, nice. 853 lown, Mr. P#rki, Ml 4-7500. TURNER FORD, Birmingham iroALAXTrsW XL Convar^bti. ■ower steering and brakes. New vhitewellf. Body, Interwr, motor ^M_A 5-2852._________________ . WAGON. Auto. "0" BUICK-OPEL Wr. /«_rk»^,MI^ ^500. Harold 134-210 Orchard Lk. FE 2-3165 I larold good. OR 3-8323, aft. 4__ .. 1360 FALCON WiFh aufomallc.L^ AIR, radio, healer, runs good. $33 fullllt “-ivandeputteL 1963 Chevrolat Wagon L..vMcnu _____________________________ $695 ^»5Tol^'cONvrftT^BLi^*^9^^^ I?7j5o' Your pavmants art | Harold Turnar Ford, Birmingham. call 473-5013. )" ''station“'v „ _______________ _ _ ■ -nilng^ [MUSTANG. 1945 convertlbieT '-riViin I Wl 4-7500. , radip^, TURNER FORD, BIrmingh tl75. Sava Auf ~F^^^A^lRL>N¥~AufomitTc 1942 FORD XL Conva condition, OR 3-9000. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS &5 CHEVY Impala 2-do C H E V IMPALA 3 DOOR • 07 par month 5-vaar or 50,000 le warranty available. John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave._________FE 5-4lf’ 1365 FORD convertible. convertible. :c. condition, 334-5742. Aftar rwr'WAGO N ~ 9-pa! ^nar Ford, BIrmingh 1963 FORD' MUSTANG, 1365 2 mar. 363-4703. ■ chevy' 'BISCAYNE; bronze Id, standard transmission, 6-Under, 2-door hardtop, good as, excellent conditlan, $1200 or ke over payments. OR 4-0150 $895 Suburban Olcis 16 CORVAIR MONZA, 2-door lutematic, Marina blue. 332-3016. '6o6A ■ payments. '752- TOM RADEMACHER chevy-olds ‘6 CHEVY Bel-Air 4-door, with --------- ----- steering, BIRMINGHAM FORD, 1363 FASTBACK. . ..... Mr. Perks, Ml 6-7500. Harold Turner Ford, Birmingham, 1364 FALCON SPRINT CONVERTI- 1364 FALCON P'utURA T _. hardtop, red, eutometlc, 6 cylinder. This car Is Immaculate. RONEY'S AUTO, 131 Baldwin, FE 4-430f 5 FORD STATION 0 condition. 338- 3R TURNER FORD, Birmingham BIRD, 1361 Convarllbla. $33 dow Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7S00. TURNER FORD, Birmingham FORD, .... ... _____ ... .... Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. TURNER FORD, Birmingham FORD. 1365 SQUIRE Wagon. I lown, Mr. Parks. Ml 4-7500. TURNER FORD, Birmingham 1367 MUSTANG FAST BACK. Ra 682-643S. betore 6 FORD, 1366 GALAXIE. Sharp. 833 down, Mr. Parks, Ml 4-75(>0. TURNER FORD, Birmingham 1366, sharp. $5t ORD, 1366 CUSTOM Sadan, S down, Mr. Parks, Ml 4-7500. TURNER FORD, Birmingham 36'4 CHEVELLE V4, 2 do conditionad, autp., llrOOO n 9456z nights. 482-8900 dayt. real gharpl ' P CHEVROLE MIKE SAVOIE Troy's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1900 W. Maple 2 Miles East of Woodward Ml 4-2735 On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 NOW Is the TIME to Save 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 ass of condition. Wa « 200 A-1 used cart to -------- _____ HAROLD TURNER FORD, 644-7500. 464 S. Woodward, Ingham. CORVAIR, SOLID BODY, - tell or 731-0533. .......hen you buy It let MARKET TIRE^^glve Jt^^e tree Rdf*iiwii«, im 106,New end Used Cars 106|!V1ARM.\DI KE By Anderson and LeeminKiNew and Used Cars 106 IW5 PONTIAC VISTA, powtr, ------ Ilkt ntw. Il»5. F J95. 2U44f5. iW dfO. TRI-POWER. , . Posltrocfton. Enc. condition. Cali attor S, 33UW. )»M"fEMPEST LKMANS convartl-bta, low miloago. MI-4330 attar 6. ifU fEMPEST CUSTOM OC6. 4 dr. d V. Double power, . 18.000 ml. By owner. $1,550. FE ^445S, 1966 PONTIAC | I w*^on, $2195 AUDETTE PONTIAC New on^sed ^rs _ 106 lig and Used Cars 106 l»M PONTIAC CATALINA Con- IM7 FIREBIRD, 8, automatic. OR 1-vartlbla. Hydramatlc. Powar aSOl Altar 6. itaarlno and brakes. 81950. FE 4- - .... 7908 atfar 5:30. . „ SPECIAL ■■ mV’PONTIAC I.'??? Ro'T’b'*'--'!'.*"'* .*L Executive 2^toor hardtop. This one la ibeiievable and clean. Has only DOOR CUSTOM, air conditioned, >*"3yi^09?y''an5'r^°5 T e M P E ST™ H A R D t b P7 w 111 DOWNEY Oldsmobile, Inc. 550 Oakland Avenue FE 2-8101 OWNER, 1967 CATALINA," fac- 1968 TEMPEST m wagon, red with blac... , tinted glass, V-i, automatic, 1957 Chrysler 8, radio Plenty others and lew trucks 1965 RAMBLER CLASSIC, '7-8, idio, heater, power^ brakes and oU*^rXmBLER JEE*P. ^‘^Union _ 9ke, E/y^ 3-4155. RAMBLER, 1965' 'CONVERTIBLE. Harold°Ti?rner ^Ford^ Blrrnlrlghim^’ RAMBLER, 1966 7 $2995 AUDETTE PONTIAC TAYLOR CHEVY-OLDS WALLED J.AKE 624-4501 " ADklNS AUTO SALES ■ FISCHER BUICK Birrninc^ham Trades 1967 BUICKS Electro 225s 4 Door Hardtops, MJoor many colon to choose all with factory warrar ot these •'—‘ ' CHOICE*' TAKE YOUR 1965 OLDSMOBILE 1965 BUICKS LeSabres-Wildcats 1965 BUICK a 225 4-Dopr Sedan 545 S. Woodward - DOUBLE CHECK - — USED CARS — John McAuIiffe Ford 63^0akland Ave. FE 5- 196T CONTINENTAL I ’***'' $V^5 " ; Bob Borst I Lincoln-Mercury Sales 11950 W. Maple _ Ml 6- ! MERC U R Y BUYERS ’ TENTION! $39 or old car d j regardless of condition. We will It in. 200 A-1 used cars to chi !from. HAROLD TURNER FO 644-7500. 464 S. Woodward, B Ingham._______ _ _ SMERCURY, 1962, Colony Park. I MERCUR Y7"l963”4^bbOR." "V'"dl Mr. Parks. Ml 4-7500. Harold Tui ■ Ford, Birmingham. _ _ ’ ' Tom raTemacher^ CHEVY-OLDS 64 MERCURY 2-door hard th V^8, automatic, power st hardtopT" » ,.,.a -DOWNEY ■ Suburban Oldsi LUCKY AUTO BIRMINGHAM 63^5. Woodard _____ I SHARP 19'64 CUTLASS 2-'d 1966 OLDSMOBILE the extra's. Including factory ai ,„"i conditioning, vinyl top. rd!, $ave Suburban Olds roldi^^^ S w ^ ^ I T96tT)TdsmobTle7 Oldsmobile, Inc. 550 Oakland Avenue F FE 2-8101 28*................ ........ 1968 OLDSMOBILE iDelmon't 88 hardtop with vinyl all: terior. automatic transmisslc 1968 OLDSMOBILE 7 OLDSMOBILE, 98 4-door luxury ^ tt—it t“ DOWNEY GRIMALDI CAR C Oldsmobile, Inc. 550 Oakland Avenue FE 2-8101 : P L Y M 0 U T H BUY E 'r"S Suburban 01ds‘;S"lSl!7 TURNER FORD BIRMINGHAM (Formerly Kessler Hahn) Chrysler-Plymouth-Jeep Rambler Clearance Sale m2 Chevy Tansportatlon—Only i $595 I '64 Chevelle iuper^ V8, $1195 '66 Rambler Nassic Wagon, low mileage, $1495 1962 FORD $395 1966 JEEP ' $1995 1962 CONTINENTAL ON DIXIE HWY.-NEAR M15 CLARKSTON MA 5-2635 The Heart of our Business is the SATISFACTION of our Customers 1967 COUGAR^XR-7 ger steering 1965 FORD Station Wagon 1966 BUICK ^SP^ECIAL^ 1964 PONTIAC Station Wagon 1966 FORD Country Sedan 1963 PONTIAC Starchief $2895 $1395 $1495 $1895 $1395 HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY REPOSSESSIONS e Auto. FE 5-3278. 1 PLYMOUTH FURY, good c ^ PLYMOUTH WAGON. \ •uns good, $100, FE S-7613. 4) PLYMOUTH 2-DOb? 1963^PLYM0UTH $795 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth ; Hardtop. $39 .$, Ml 4-7500. 5, Birmingham. 1967 PLYMOUTH $H95 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 0 PONTIAC BON 5. $100. 335-8701. 1965 PONTIAC i"* interior, 'automatic. $1695 AUDETTE PONTIAC GO-GO-HAUPT PONTIAG -OUTSTANDING SPECIALS- 1964 CHEVROLET 1967 TEMPEST 2-door automatic transmission, doubla eutomahc transmisslon.^^^ $2395 1965 CHEVROLET 1963 FALCON station Wagon, In vary good condition, a real th^e^yo^ung et heart. bargain. ^Sav.^ 1965 PONTIAC Catalina 2-door hardtop, hydramatiCr doubla 1968 PONTIAC power, real exceltant condition. $1695 Executiva 9 passen|jar itatlon waggon, DEMO, $avTngs “ 1966 FORD |1964 GMC ^ ^ ^ Station Wagon, automatic transmission, power brakes and ****'"*"®'0^ family car. bla powar, a real bergaltk HAUPT PONTIAC ON Ml 5 at 1-75 INTERCHANGE - CLARKSTON - MA 5-5500 1964 OLDS F-85 Beautiful Indian Turquoise 1965 RAMBLER 4-Door Springtime Turquoise 1964 TEMPEST Sport 1967 PLYMOUTH GTK Hawaiian Bronia Flntih power fteerlng, brekes. white- $1095 $895 $995 '"$2395 1964 CHEVY Impala Sharp Throughout 2-door hardtop, radio, heater, waMs?*l!ke ‘new" On*"'"®’ ** ' 1965 PONTIAC Catalina Snow Shoe and Whit# 1966 FORD % Ton 1966 DODGE Polara 500 Racing Green 2-Door ^^Hardtop, radio, heater, $1295 $1595 $1495 $1895 USED CAR SALES FE 8-4528 SPARTAN DODGE 855 OAKLAND (JUST NORTH OF CASS AVE.) NEW CAR SALES FE 8-9222 1962 GRAND PRIX Good condition. M PONTIAC, ^1963 >r Ford, Birmingharr 1 PONTIAC COUPE, i VANDEPUTTE BUICK-OPEL AS LOW AS $5 DOWN AS LOW AS $5 DOWN 1961 Dodge 9-Po5sen-ger Station Wagon, V-8, automatic, power steering, power brakes, red with matching interior. Radio, heater, whitewoll tires. Bol-once due $267.41, just ossume poyments of $2.06 per week. 1963 Mercury Mohte-rey 4-Door Hardtop, V-8 automatic, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater, white-wall tires, Sahara gold with matching vinyl interior. Balance due $301.92, just assume payments of $2.72 per week. 1963 P r 'M'nc. 2-Door Hardluij, big V-8 engine, floor shut, candy bar brown with brown and white vinyl interior, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Balance due $293.74, just assume payments of $2.85 per week. 1964 Chevrolet V*-Jon PickuD, new engine, in excellent condition. V-8 stick, radio, heater, whitewall tires. 1964 Ford XL 2-Door Hardtop, 390 4-Speed, red with red bucket seats, radio, heater, whitewall tire s. Bot-once due $674.13, just assume payments of $5.09 per week. 1963 VW 9-Passenger Bus, 6-cylinder stick, red with white top and red vinyl interior, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Balance due $286.37, just assume payments of $2.21 per week. 1962 Chevrolet Bel-Air 4-Door, 6-cylinder stick, silver blue with matching interior, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Balance due $196.36, just assume payments of $2.01 per week. 1960 Corvair 4-Door, 6-cylinder automatic, red with white top, and matching interior. Radio, heater, whitewall tires. Balance due $121.06, fust assume payments of $1.52 per week. Walk In-Drive Out-Credit Ok'ed FE 1-4088 W(S mm 3275 WEST HURON Corner M-59 and Elizabeth Lake Road FE 8-4088 PONTIAC: When you buy It I MARKET TIRE give it a fn safety check. 2635 Orchard Lai RUSS lOHNSON PONTIAC-RAMBLER MY '3-626^'°" 763 PONTIAC CATALINA convertible, double power, radio, heater, whitewalls. This car Is like new Inside and out. RONEY'S AUTO, 131 Baldwin, FE 4-4909. brakes, reduced to: $745 Village Rambler 666 5. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 1964 CATALINA *match]ng interior, $1425 AUDETTE PONTIAC ' 1964'tVm P'E^S^fDcbNVERt IbCE, Yellow with black top. V-* auto. Power steering. Sharp little f:ar. $1197 full price, no money down. LUCKY AUTO 'tXliWNIV // Just Make Small Weekly, Bi-Weekly Paymerits With As Little Asi Because at STANDARD AUTO SALES, You Can IBIW mm HERE ARE JUST A FEW EXAMPLES OF THE MANY FINE CARS TO CHOOSE FROM: 109 EAST BLVD. S. Corner of Auburn—Phont ^ ^1J304 BAmWIN h 3400 ELIZABETH LAKE RD. Va BIk. W. of W. Huron (M-59) Phone 1963 TEMPEST Hardtop a'utomatic, extra sharp. Prlca $395 $4.W«*ltlV 1959 OLDS "88" Hardtop --$95 $2. weekly 1962 BUICK Invicta* 4 door hardtop/ metallic green finish/ pS $295 a ’$3.G„ 1962 OLDS Cutlass 7 door, with fully equipped. Automatic, rtal nica throughout. Prlca $195 $2.''^“''''' 1962 PONTIAC Catalina Hardtop,^ J do(x, ^spotless Jjur^undy finish, p'it'cli $495 0"*^ $5 weekly 1960 LINCOLN Continental 7 door hardtop, all vyhite finish, with tan p-rSi $29rs’$3. "-IP 1959 OLDS Deluxe "98" 4 door hardtop, one owner, let black finish, $li“$2 weekly 1963 PLYMOUTH Wagon Automatic, double power, real nica throughout 1 $195 $2. Weekly 1960 FALCON 4 door stick shift, » cyr.,^ perfect trahsportatlon, Prfc* $95 $2. Weekly 1961 BUICK Hardtop ing inter'lor.'pun'power, extra clean. $295 0*IT $3 weekly 1961 FORD Convertible With let black finish, automatic, V-8, ready -cl$19rsS"$2 weekly 1963 CHEVY Super Sport 5 door hardtop, candy apple red finish, black buckets, absolutely Ilka new Inside fa. $89s' », $9.«"'v m smmm sss&sjbbm EVEN IF YOU'VE: HAD A REPOSSESSION, BEEN BANKRUPT, BEEN GARNISHEED, OR BEEN TURNED DOWN BY OTHERS. t4aDE-INS accepted, paid for or NOT. CREDIT MEN (^N DUT'Y AT AU. TIMES TO IMMEDIATELY O.K. YOUR APPLICATION. THE PONTIAC PRESS. MOM3AV, MARCH 11, 1908 —Television Programs— {Programs fumishod by stations listod in this column aro subject to change without notice Chonn>l»: 2-WJBK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYZ-TV, 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56- MONDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (A) News, Weather, Sports C (7) Movie: “The Demon Planet” (Italian, 1 96 5 ) Barry Sullivan, Norma Bengell R C (9) Dennis the Menace R (50) Flintstones R C (56) Friendly Giant 6:15 (56) Merlin the Magician 6:30 (2) News — Cronkite C (4) News — Huntley, Brinkley C (9) Gilligan's Island R C (50) McHale’s Navy R (56) Magic Door 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences C (4) George Pierrot C (9) Movie: “Tarzan and the Lost Safari” (English, 1956) Gordon Scott R (50) Munsters R (56) To be announced 7:30 (2) Gunsmoke—A young drifter whose friends were trampled by a rancher’s horsemen awaits h i s revenge In this first of a two-part story which begins a series of reruns. CR (4) Monkees — A men-talist gains control of Peter’s mind to use him in a nightclub act. Emmy-winning director James Frawley guests. C (7) Cowboy in Africa — Jim has a chance reunion with a former sweetheart and their romance resumes, to the distress of .Samson. C (50) I Love Lucy R 8:00 (4) Rowan and Martin — Guests include Barbara Feldon, Sonny Bono (of Sonny and Cher), ventriloquist Paul Winchell and comic Pat Morita. C (50) Hazel RC (56) (Special) — Senate Hearing — Secretary of State Rusk testifies before Senate Foreign Relations Committee. 8:30 (2) Lucille Ball -Lucy enters Mooney in a boss-of-the-year contest — but Mooney has already entered his own boss. C (7) Rat Patrol - Two Italian soldiers volunteer to help rescue two Patrol members from the Germans. G (50) Honeymooners R 8:55 (9) News C 9:00 (2) Andy Griffith -Andy persuades Sam Jones (F Troop’s Ken Berry) to run for city council, even though he knows Emmett is interested in the post. First in a three-parter C (4) Danny Thomas — “Two for Penny” pilot film for a projected series. Two Greek brothers who run a New York delicatessen also try to run their sister’s life. Object: matrimony. C (7) Felony Squad — A suspected murderer whose public-relations firm thrives on extortion launches a smear attack against Sam. C (9) 12 O’clock High R (50) Movie: “The Servant” (EngUsh, 1963) Harold Pinter’s screenplay about a spineless young man who hires an overly aggressive manservant. Dick Bogarde stars. 9:30 (2) Family Affair — The family takes a cam-- ping trip — a fishing treat Bulletin CBS News will broadcast a special report from 9 to 9:30 p.m. or from lO to 11 p.m. on Secretary of State Rusk’s appearance before the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. TV Features GUNSMOKE, 7:30 p.m. (2) ROWAN AND MARTIN, 1 8 p.m. (4) I SENATE HEARINGS, 8 p.m. (56), 9:30 p.m. or 10 I’ p.m. (2) ANDY GRIFnTH, 9 p.m. (2) I SPY, 10 p.m. (4) for Bill and Jody, but a trial for the girls and French C (56) French Chef 10:00 (2) Carol Burnett — Comic actor Tim Conway portrays the first Indian to be elected president, and singer Shanl Wallis joins Carol in a Bloomer Girls number C (4) I Spy — Kelly and Scott hunt the jungle wilds north of Acapulco for a retired , general (Lloyd Nolan) who is obsessed with the idea that he’s been betrayed. C (7) Big Valley — An embittered 14-year-old who’s been disowned by his parents holds Nick captive in a condemned mine. (9) Front Page Challenge 10:30 (9) Don Messer’s Jubilee C 11:00 (2) (4) (7) News, Weather, Sports C 11:15 (50) Ldu Gordop 11:30(2) Movie: “The Wastrel” (lUlian, 1960) Van Heflin, Ellie Lam-brettl. (4) Johnny Carson — Singer Gail Martin and comedian Rich Little are scheduled. C (7) Joey Bishop C (9) Movie:' “Into the Blue” (English, 1 9 47 ) Michael Wilding 1:00 (4) Beat the Champ (7) News (9) Window on the ’World 1:30 (2) Capture C (4) PDQ C 2:00 <2) Naked City R 2:30 (2) News, Weather C TUESDAY MORNING 5:45 (2) On the Farm Scene 5:50 (2) News C 6:00 (2) Sunrise Semester C (4) Classroom 6:30 (2) Woodrow the Woodsman C (4) Ed Allen C (7) TV College C 7:00 (4) Today C (7) Morning Show C 7:30 (2) Captain Kangaroo C 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:00 (9) Upside Town 8:30 (2) Mister Ed (7) Movie: “The High and the Mighty” (1954) Part 1. John Wayne, Claire Trevor, Laraine Day, Robert Stack. R C (9) Bonnie Prudden C 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin C (4) Ed Allen C (9) Bozo the Clown C 9:10 (56) Let’s Read 9:30 (4) Gypsy Rose Lee C (56) American History 9:55 (56) Spanish Lesson 10:00 (4) Snap Judgment C (7) Virginia Graham C (9) Mr. Dressup 10:10 (56) Of Cabbages and Kings 10:25 (4) News C 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies R C (4) Concentration C (7) This Morning C (9) Friendly Giant (50) Yoga for Health 10:45 (9) Ontario Schools 11:00 (2) Andy of Mayberry R C (4) Personality C (50) Little Rascals R 11:05 ( 56) Interlude 11:15 (9) Canadian Schools 11:30 (2) Dick VanDyke R (4) Hollywood Squares C 11:45 (9) Chez Helene TUESDAY AFTERNOON 12:00 (2) (4) News, Weather, Sports C (7) Bewitched R (9) Take 30 (50) Movie: “The Male Animal” (1942) Henry Fonda, Olivia de Havilland, Jack Carson. R 12:25 (2) Topps in Fashion C 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (4) Eye Guess C (7) Treasure Isle ( 9 ) Movie: “Bachelor Mother” (1939) Ginger Rogers, David Niven. R 12:35 (56) Tell Me a Story 12:45 (2) Guiding Light C 12:50 (56) Let’s Read 12:55 (4) News C 1:00 (2) Love of Life C (4) Match Game C (7) Fugitive R 1:10 (56) Children’s Hour 1:25 (2) News C (4) Carol Duvall C (56) Arts and Crafts 1:30 (2) As the World < Turns C (4) Let’s Make a Deal C 1:55 (56) American History 2:00 (2) Love Is a Many , Splendored Thing C (4) Days of Our Lives C (7) Newlywed Game C (50) I Love Lucy R 2:20 (56) Book Parade 2:30 (2) House Party C (4) Doctors C (7) Baby Ganfe C (50) Mfdce Room for Daddy R 2:45 (56) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7) (Siildren’s Doctc»- R 3:00 (2) Divorce Court C (4) Another World C (7) General Hospital C (9) Pat Boone C (50) To TeU the Truth RC (56) Canadian Medical 8:25 (50) News C , 3:30 (2) Edge of Night C (4) You Don’t Say C (7) Dark Shadows C (50) Captain Detroit C (56) American Business System 4:00 (2) Secret Storm C (4) Woody Woodbury C (7) Dating Game C (9) Swingin’ Time C (56) Business Roundtable 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas C (7) News, Weather, Sports C (50) Three Stooges R (56) What’s New 5:00 (9) Bozo the Clown C (50) Little Rascals R (56) Misterogers 5:30 (4) George Pierrot — “Underwater World” C (7) News C (9) Fun House C Frosty Morning ACROSS 45 Tiny I Zest of 48 Japanese ___rnffea outcast iZZ noies 47 Native of 49 Watchful 13 Mother of Castor and _ 60 Nobever Pravloua Puiila Hopes High\ for New Book HONOLULU (J) - Photographer Robert Wenkam and author William Lederer are working on a new book on the U.S. Trust Territory. “We’re hopeful that the book will be the catalyst that makes the United States get moving in Micronesia and make this area a full-fledged new territory,” Wenkam said. He said he hoped that the| book, set for publication next fall, would be comprehensive enough to become the standard source on the Trust Territory. Micronesia is “probably om of the most exciting primitive areas in the world,” Wenkam said. ★ ★ * Lederer, once a Honolulu resident, co-authored “Sark-” “The Ugly American” and “A Nation of Sheep” with Eugene Burdick. 14 Owed molding 15 Frozen ---- 17 Tatters 18 School of whales 19 Dead-----fall 21 Finish 23 Arena (or athletes (coll.) 24 Before 25 Petroleum 26 Owed 28 Billiard stroke 30 Insects 32 Entire 34 Coronet 38 Descry 40 Glutted 43 Plant exudate 61 Church part 62 .Sin 63 Military force 64 Celt 65 Negative vote DOWN 1 Pronoun 2 Eggs edible herb 7 Ahead of time 8 Roman market Wilson Gives Hershey Tip on Making Draft Popular LA Birthday Party Costly appellation 27 Feminine appellation 29 Tavern brew I 35 False gone individual’s purchase or The nepa«! reV . .,.er tively. Dole said In an Interview more than two years later, got exactly nothing” except an acknowledgement from the Defense Department that would look into the situation. Even at this late date, an SEC official refused to discuss find profit him thousands of dollars, Reportedly, SEC investigators may make no dent in over-alHound that the Defense Depart- reported last Tuesday on one announcement, most stocks Information leak that could dropped. But the aerospace and , u j ,• 1 , , ,r II f. » _ j h , , j • 1 , market activity. Thus suspicion ment had routinely notined have meant windfall profits for defense - realated issues kept.^^y P , ^3„^tract award Links are even tougher to and that word had spread from ........... ... fhtt cAnafnr’e Affmo TVtA bond speculators. l climbing. The information dealt with a' ★ * ★ ! are wen lougner 10,- r and Ratheon up 4'«. | in October 1965, Rep. Robert reply, * * * I A spolesman for thelDole, R-Kan.. asked the SEC| "I am not convinced this leak Securities and exchange'Com-iand the Defense Department toi During a mid- 1967 con-| Is the only one that has oc- mission (SEC), which polices investigate heavy trading inigressional hearing on another federal appeals court, the SEXlj ciirred,” said Chairman Wright the market, acknowledged to three aircraft companies during!subject, Heinz A. Abersfeller,!charged that 13 executives and Patman, D-Tex , of the House the Associated Press t h a t two market sessions immediate-1 commissioner of the Federal employes of Texas Gulf Sulphur Supply Service, digressed to 1 purchased thousands of shares describe government price of company stock while negotiation troubles with a withholding knowledge to the manufacturer of c 0 p y i n g'public of a rich Canadian ore equipment. strike. I sent a letter to each of the nine government agencies and explained the circumstances, I thought rather clearlyr and asked them to cancel that contract,” he testified. BROKER GETS LETTER So far as we have been able to tell, this letter of mine got in the hands of a New York broker and the stock the next day dropped six points.” Abersfeller said in a recent Interview that his investigators. ADVANCE KNOWLEDGE Klotz was not named as a defendant. But the SEC civil suit filed a few days before Klotz resigned said he received knowledge of the ore discovery; from Nancy Atkinson, a Com-: merce Department secretary reported to have been a personal friend of a Texas Gulf Sulphur field geologist. In pursuing such cases, SEC must follow a legal definition of insider which refers only to working with the SEC,° were directors, officers and majorj “never able to establish how stockholders of the firm in this got in the broker’s hands.” question. The definition does notj He said the letters, written to cover government officials with' high officials, had probably-inside information. : passed through two or three] Whether Congress will take: lands at each agency in their steps to insure against its own journey through channels. [members using inside in- * * * I formation for stock market One top government official!Profit® ‘’o^ome ap- resigned April 22, 1965, after his'Parent, role in a different sort of insider The Senate Ethics Committee deal was revealed. He was [is expected to unveil shortly its Herbert Klotz, an assistant!proposed standards of conduct.: secretary of commerce who by 1 There are indications it will his own accounting made a comment on such dealings as quick paper profit of $14,500 in [part of its recommendations on[ the stock of Texas Gulf Sulphur, [conflicts of interest, case still pending in| Don’t fidAle AROUND figuring __ your own ntOMETIU s Th«r«'» only on* way to hondl* your tax problom ... 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MICHIGAN, MONUAV, MARCH 11, 1908 VOL. 120 — NO. 29 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ -44 PAGES State Traffic Kills 22; Worst '68 Weekend By The Associated Press Twenty-two persons lost their lives in traffic accidents in Michigan over the weekend as warm, sunny weather Friday lured motorists onto the roads. Then rain and fog Saturday and yesterday obscured visibility and made roads slippery. Four passengers on a church-owned bus died in a collision with a car in Detroit Friday night. Another accident took three lives and two persons died in a third mishap. State police headquarters at Lansing said the carnage set a record for the weekend’s toll. The Associated Press count o f fatalities began at 6 p.m. Friday and ended at midnight Sunday. The victims: Eileen Kush, 17, of Royal Oak, in a two-car accident in Royal Oak Sunday. Patricia Anne Marie Nellenbach, 18, of North Branch, a passenger in a car which ran off a road in Flint Sunday. Robert Larrie, 61, of Detroit, who was struck by a car on Detroit’s West Side Saturday night. Bryce Devere McComb, 30, of 2828 N. Lapeer, Lapeer, who was hit by a car Saturday night on M-24 in Lapeer County’s Mayfield Township. Shirley Ann Tomlinson, 20, of rural Coloma, whose car hit a utility pole and overturned Saturday night on M-52, about a half mile west of M40, in Cass County’s Silver Creek l|pwnship. Larry Berg, 19,^ of Paw Paw, who died yesterday of injuries suffered Friday night in a one-car smashup which claimed the life of another Paw Paw youth, James Martin, 18. The accident occurred on M40 in the village of Decatur. year-old^Greenville druggist, and Jerry Hamm‘S, 19, of East Jordan, injured fatally Saturday in a two-car crash on U.S. 131, north of Alba, in Antrim County. Injured in the crash were C. J. Gibson Jr., 47, president of Gibson Refrigerator, and Robert Edsall, 49-year-old Greenville attorney. The four Greenville men were etl route to Boyne Mountain for skiing. PENITENTIARy RUINS ^ When firemen got to the smoldering ruins of the Oregon State Penitentiary, this is what they found left of the vocational rehabilitation classrooms. AP Wirgptisto R. A. Lucas, captain of the guards, inspects the damage. Convicts rioted Saturday and yesterday, causing $6 million dam- Loma Gayle Kuney, 26, of Adrian, whose car ran off MS5 at M99 and hit a tree a mile and a half south of Eaton Rapids, Saturday. Rusk Cautions Against Delay in Foreign Aid Prison Rioters Win Bid for NewWarden ACCIDENT KILLS 3 Edward Ellengen, 54, president of the General Appliance Division of Gibson Refrigerator Corp ; George Goulet, 46- Glenn A. Sisco, 12, of Flushing, who was fatally injured Friday night when he was struck by a car while walking along 1-75 expressway near Flint in search of his missing dog. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 8) . WASHINGTON (AP) - Secretary of State Dean Rusk urged Congress today not to delay or abandon foreign aid because of the cost of the war in Vietnam. He argued that the aid program is vital to U.S. prosperity and security. Rocky Urged to Enter Race NEW YORK W — More than 20 top Republicans, summoned to a strategy meeting with Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller at his Fifth Avenue apartment, have urged him strongly to become “an an- Winds, Clouds Cool the Area nounced and active candidate’’ for the Republican presidential nomination. A spokesman for the group that included seven governors, three U.S. senators, five congressmen and Mayor John V. Lindsay of New York, said Rockefeller would decide about plunging into the face after consulting with other party leaders in the next few days. before voting in the New Hampshire primary. Rockefeller aides said the meeting was called to discuss the state of the GOP since Gov. GecK'ge Romney of Michigan who was backed by Rockefeller, withdrew frdm the race, leaving Nixon the sole major ccmtender in New Hanyjshire. “We cannot find security apart from the rest of the world,’’ he told the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. “And in the long run, we can be neither prosperous nor safe if most other people live in squalor or if violence consumes the world around us.” SALEM, Ore. (AP) — A cleanup and rebuilding job is under way at the Oregon State Penitentiary after rioting convicts won a change in the command of the prison by burning most of it down. The inmates released four guards yesterday after holding them hostage in the prison yard overnight. They had won almost everything they asked, including a promise that they would not he prosecuted fiH* their orgy of fire, window-breaking and smashing everything in sight. Prison officials estimated damage at $6 million. Rusk prepared for today’s appearance before the committee expecting that he would spend hours responding to questions about the critical state of the war in Vietnam. Following a brief peek at spring, winter charged back into the Pontiac-area today on the heels of an 8-to-18-mile-per-hour north-northeast wind, brining with it clouds and lower temperatures. Rockefeller, who has maintained he wouU not be a candidate unless there was a draft, had no comment following yesterday’s two-hour, closed-door strategy session. DECLINED TO ATTEND Romney was invited but declined to attend, saying he does not engage in politics on Sunday. Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., the om-mitte chairman, is one of the most outspoken Senate critics of the Vietnam war policy, and many members of the committee also have opposed current policies. George W. Randall, state director of corrections, agreed to the demands, presented by six convicts representing the prison population of 1,156. The demands were presented shortly after midnight yesterday. Randall walked into the prison yard, with several reporters, to talk the prisoners into releasing their hostages. He told the prisoners there would be Tonight’s low will fall in the 15-to-23-degree range. Gov. Tom McCall of Oregon, one of those at the meeting, said he urged the New York governor to challenge former Vice President Richard M. Nixon in the May 28 Oregon primary. Rockefeller has until March 22 to declare himself out of that election. Nixon, who lives in the same building as Rockefeller, was not invited to the meeting. Nixon’s apartment has a different entrance from Rockefeller’s and the former vice president left the building about an hour after the meeting started for some final campaigning in New Hampshire. TROOP INCREASE The committee has been trying for weeks to get Rusk before it for public questioning about the war. And his appearance comes amid reports that President Johnson is considering an increase of up to 200,000 men above the 525,000 already authorized for Vietnam. Randall agreed to fire Warden C. T. Gladden, 73, who had served 15 years. Gladden, 111 for six weeks, was not on duty during the riot. The riot started, apparently with no advance planning, Saturday afternoon when a small group of convicts seized the control center, the^nerve center for all operations inside the walls. That gave them control of almost all of the prison. Most of the convicts soon joined in the riot. By their burning, the prisoners destroyed all of the prison’s rehabilitation facilities, more than half of the cells, and the means of preparing food and feeding the prisoners. All of the offices of the treatment officials, such as the chaplains, sociologist and counselors, were destroyed. The {Mison hosi^tal was severely damaged. The industrial plants, which provide vocational training, were destroyed. 'The damages touched off speculation that a special session of the Oregon legislature would be needed to finance reconstruction. As soon as the hostages were released, prison guard? and state police forced all of the convicts into the recreati(m yard. They stayed there Sunclay night, because making the cells livable take at least until late today. Nixon Stages Final N.H. Sprint The weatherman predicts more of the same for tomorrow as high temperatures CLOUDY AND COOLER are to remain in the 30s. Ooudy skies are due to add to the frosty prognostication. Sen. Hugh Scott'of Pennsylvania read a brief statement to newsmen that said there was “very strong sentiment’’ that Rockefeller get into the race as “an announced and active candidate.” Asked if all those present had endorsed Rockefeller’s candidacy, Scott said the statement spoke for' itself. fs • r> Ini appearing officially to Opring Rood Rules urge support of the foreign aid program. The Oakland County Road Commission announced today that it will begin enforcing its springtime weight restrictions at 6 a.m. Wednesday. OTHER CONSULTA-nONS Wednesday’s forecast indicafes partly cloudy skies with, temperatures on the cool side. A written statement was not given out. Scott read from notes, which he retained. The statement said Rockefeller “will consult other party leaders in the next few days and his decision will ultimately be made by himself.” Maps showing all county roads where weights have been reduced, as well as all-weather routes, can be obtained by truckers by contacting the Weightmaster Division at the Road Commission office, 2420 Pontiac Lake. He said the foreign aid program last year had been cut below the “minimum level necessary to sustain” economic development, and he urged the committee to recommend to the Senate all the funds asked by President Johhson. Johnson has asked for $2.5 billion in economic aid and $420 million for giving military assistance to other countries. MANCHESTER, N. H. UP) - Richard M. Nixon staged a final sprint seeking to turn out the Republican vote, while Democrat Eugene J. McCarthy stuck to his standard low-key style in windup campaigning for Tuesday’s season-opening New Hampshire presidential primary. Nixon’s final campaign stand today featured a series of brief visits to his headquarters in five cities. He set the tone at a Nashua reception last night, urging Republicans to vote tomorrow, telling them: win in March and we’re going to wto in November. It’s going to be a new day for America.” i McCarthy, the Minnesota challenging President Johnscm’s re-nomination, said if he can get 25 per cent of the vote tomorrow it will be a signal of significant criticism for administration policy on Vietnam and other “We’re going to win. We’re going to Democratic Gov. John W. King, chief spokesman for the write-in campaign condhcted for johnson, said the President would win tomorrow by a three to one margin. Precipitation probabilities in per cent are: today 5, tonight and tomorrow 10. Low thermometer reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 28. By 1 p.m. scattered sunshine coaxed the mercury to 34. Lindsay said he believed everyone at the meeting subscribed to the statement and that he himself approved “100 per cent.” Conservatives Raisihg Voices The meeting came only two days In Today's Press Warrant Sought in City Slaying War on Poverty County office extends its rural reach — PAGE A-4. Campus Freedom Educator decries “mounting permissiveness” — PAGE B-6. Marine Medic Outcast becomes a hero at Khe Sanh — PAGE C-6. Area News A-4 Astrology . C-8 Bridge C-8 Crossword Puzzle .. D-9 Comics C-8 Editorials A-6 Lenten Senes A-10 Markets C-11 Obituaries . A-9 Sports . C-l-C-4 Theaters C-10 TV and Radio Programs . ..D-9 Wilson, Earl D-9 Women’s Pages .... .. B-1 -B-5 Pontiac police said today they will seek a murder warrant against a city woman accused of the shotgun killing of a 40-year-old man early yesterday. In custody awaiting arraignment later today is Juanita Newby, 31, of 507 California. She was arrested about 1:30 a.m. yesterday, shortly after Oddee Williams of the Same address was kiOed by a Officers said they found him on the' floor of the living ro(hn of the house. He had been shot once in the chest and was pronounced dead on arrival at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, according to police. A witness told investigat(irs that Williams and the suspect had argued repeatedly throughout the day. SHOTGUN FOUND Investigators said they impounded a shotgun at the scene believed used in the slaying. • GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - Michigan’s conservative Republicans, who have watched their influence shrink with the rise of moderate Gov. George Romney, have served notice on the GOP that they want a greater voice in its affairs. 'The more moderate Republicans, who firmly control the party’s state machinery, say they doubt the conservatives will succeed. 13 Area Villages Voting Today Voters in 13 area communities are going to the polls today to elect slates of new village officers. Polls opened at 7 a.m. and will close at 8 p.m. About 200 conservatives met in Grand Rapids over the weekend to form the backbone of a state organization they dubbed United Republicans of Michigan — URM — and to put themselves on record on several state and national Those voting today include residents in Almont, Lake Orion, Oxford, Dryden, Clarkston, Ortonville, Metamora, Romeo, Holly, Leonard, Franklin, Milford and Novi, CONSERVATIVE tALK-State Sen. Robert Hu)>er (left), R-Tr()y, and 14th District Chairman Richard Durant discuss the agenda Saturday as conservatives of “Mainstream Republicanism,” was how Richard Durant, 14th Congressional District chairman and head of the URM, described the new conservative group. “A splinter group ... the far edge of the party,” retorted John B. Martin, Michigan’s Republican n^onal committeeman. The 200 delegates Saturday adopted a resolution calling for a declaration of War h gainst North Vietnam and an “emphatic and prompt victory policy” in the Southeast Asian struggle. They also called for a great reduction in foreign aid and an ultimatum to North Korea for return of the intelligence ship USS Pueblo, which was seized by the North Koreans. The conservatives also voted opposition to open housing legislation pen- In Milford, voters will ballot ena*ie. GENEVA (UPI) — The United States and the Soviet Union today annomced they had completed their final versitm of a draft treaty to stop the spread of nuclear wetqpans to other countries.. V" I IIK lY)\'nAC I’llKSS. MONDAY, MAUCir 11. 1908 ! ... ^e^UJluo'F* ■ SEZ WHO now sticks out its neck to give you the results i of how our nationwide readers would vote in the New ' Hampshire primary next 'Hiesday (ballots returned be-; fore Romney’s withdrawal announcement): DEMCK^RATS - - 32 per cent of total votes: Johnson 38 per cent, McCarthy 32 per cent, Kennedy 30 per cent. REPUBLICANS - 42 per cent of total voles: Nixon .38 per cent, Reagan 27 per cent. Rockefeller M per cent, Percy 10 per cent, Stasscn 9 per cent, Romney 5 per cent. OTHERS — 26 per cent of total votes: Wallace 88 per cent, others 12 per cent. * ★ ★ TODAY’S BALLOT: A move is on to get Congress to repeal Its requirement %at welfare dependent mothers take job training in order to get welfare benefits. Do you think the requirement should be repealed or should it stand? SHOULD MOTHERS ON WELFARE TAKE JOB TRAINING? Circle only one choice: 1. Repeal the job training requirement. 2 Requiremtnt should stand. 3. Other (specify): Circle your age bracket: Under 25; 25-49; 50 or over. Circle your sex: MALE; FEMALE Clip box and mail promptly to SEZ WHO?, Box 207, North Branford, Conn., 06471. (Dlitribulti) by McN«u(|hl Symticatb, Inc.) s. Vietnam Fires 7 Province Chiefs .SAIGON (AP) — The South been assigned to the joint gener- Vietnamese government today fired seven of its 44 province chiefs, including its man in Hue, It was the biggest housecleaning so far as a result of the Communist lunar new year offensive. Earlier the government replaced two of its four politically important corps commanders. Lt. Col, Phan Van Khoa was| replaced as mayor of Hue andi chief of Thua Thien Province by;®HAKY MACHINERY Lt. Col. Le Van Than, who had| It was more than three weeks al staff headquarters in Saigon. Khoa had been severely criticized by U S. officials for hiding out in civilian clothes for seven days while Jhe Communists overran Hue. One American official said Khoa did nothing about the wave of looting in the stricken city for 17 days and “by then everything had been stolen, sometimes twice.” after the capture of Hue before Khoa began to get the shaky government machinery moving: at all. I New chiefs also were named for the provinces of Darlac, Binh Thuan, Vinh Long, An Giang, Ba Xuyen and Tuyen Due. . * * ★ A new chief also was named for Quang Due Prpvince, whose head man was killed in a helicopter crash recently. Informed sources said more province chiefs would be replaced as a result of dissatisfaction among government and U.S. officials with their reaction to the Communist offensive. The government recently began training 70 officers to become province and district chiefs. All province chiefs arei military men. Sources close to President Nguyen Van Thieu reported recently that he was going to remove the province chiefs from the direct control of the corps commanders, a move long urged by U.S. advisers. CIVILIANS KILLED N. Korea Must TOKYO (AP) — North Korea but to take different measures said Monday it may deal “len-jtoward the crew ’ iently" with the crew of the cap-| Tlie article said the Pueblo tured intelligence .ship Pueblo if , and its 83 crewen werej the United States admits the|“caught red-handed while per-| .ship viblated Communist terrilo-ipelrating grave criminal acts! rial waters, apologizes and guar--against our country" and were antees against a repetition |.subject to North Korea’s laws.i But the North Korean Com-One crewman has died since the: munist party newspaper Rodong ship was captured Jan. 23. j Shinmoon warned that if thc| “The criminal acts perpelrat-United States does not change ed by the crew of the armed spy | its present stand, the North Ko-|ship are grave,” the party or-i reans “will have no'alternative gan said. “But heavier respon.si-| ■-------------------- bility rests with the U S. author- ] itles which ordered them to con-' 1, Iduct espionage and hostile acts Bod IQS Out I agaiiKst our country. SETS PRICE A/inP Tor/nvl "Taking tins into considera-I ,,Ion vre may deal with the ques- tion leniently to a certain extent BELLE ISLE, La. (UPI) - as far as the crew of the'Pueb-Workers will bring to the lo' are concerned if the U.S. surface today the bodies of 21 -side makes a due apology for its men killed in a salt mine fire crimes and gives assurances nearly a week ago. against the recurrence of simi- The bodies of the miners in 'ar hostile acts, the “Cargill. Inc . mine were '''he article said there was a found Friday, but officials had a^ch a settlement, to delav return of the bodies to referring apparently to an apol-make ihe mine shaft safe for ^ ^ recovery workers. ^^"‘"1. , Korea o obtain iitu u J- . u, foe release of two American When the bodies are brought^Army helicopter pilots shot' up. G. P^ Musso, coroner of St. demilitarized Mary Parish (t ounty), will PITT.SBURGH (AP) - Pitts- of the PitUsbWgh Teachers Edu-| Identify' tliem. A bloixl sani|)le itodong Shinmoon gave no in- burgh’s high schools resume cation Association, said the set-will show the cause of death in dji-atio,, whether thq Pueblo it- normal operations today but tlement meank nothing. ^h case and then, tinally, the .self would be returned if the there was disagreement among “There is nd indication that bodies will be given over to the Unjted States met the Commu- teachers on the merits of a com- legislation is foraheoming to al-grieving families. nist conditions. promise that opened classroom low teachers anS other public doors closed for 11 days. employes to bargain collective- ' “ ' One group of teachers ly,” he said. Pontiac druggist Howard L. Dell announced today that he will seek the Republican nomination for state representative from the 62nd Dsitrict. The district comprises most of _________ , „aui uisianue loi cn um The government military i the City of Pontiac. I_ Rhodesia’s white minority I would save the citv $3 600 a command reported that the Viet Active in civic affairs, Dell government today hanged two Lear ^ * ’ Cong killed 23 South Vietnamese! said, “I believe the participa-jj^ore black Africans convictedl asIo on tonieht’s aaenda are civilians Sunday in four attacks tion of citizens in their govern-!of murder but reorieved nine!* lonignis agenaa are AP WIraphoto NO ADMIRATION HANDICAP - Nothing stops Vietnam War veteran Sgt. Brooks Peoples of Aurora, Colo., and Shane Markie, ,2, of Denver from admiring each other’s accomplishments. Shane, son of M. Sgt. and Mrs. Robert W. Markie, wears leg braces because of cerebral palsy. Sgt. Peoples lost his right arm aW both legs were fractured when a mine exploded in May \l966. Shane and the sergeant both are being treated at Fitzsimmons General Hospital in Denver. \ 11-Day Teache\ Strike Settleid in Pittsb\irgh PITTSBURGH (AP) - HOWARD L. DELL City Druggist Is a Candidate Seeks Area Post as State Representative Birmingham Area News Commission to Consider Rubbish Transfer Plan BIRMINGHAM — The City Manor, have complained that Commission will again take up!“odor, dust, rodents and traf-the question of a rubbish|fic” would depreciate property transfer station at tonight’s values and create a nuisance, meeting at 8. j ^ public hearing before the The proposal of the commission on the question took Southeastern Oakland County place Jan. 22, but a decision on Incinerator Authority to locate'pale of property to the authority the station on what is now city- was postponed to aUow further owned property on Coolidge study of the objections raised. Road has met with strong ob- . ,, , ... jections from residents in the! Kronbach, authority- rea general manager, stated at that Though the closest residences that the Coolidge site was 'the only one deemed desirable to the industrially zoned site are' ., .. , ,400 feet away and separated"“'Jority^s purpose, y railroad tracks, property! . , - - owners from two subdivisions, Sheffield Estates and Pembroke ______________________. visions which would be made at the transfer station for dealing with nuisance problems. MANAGER FAVORS City Manager Rogert S. Ken- Rhodesians Hang 2 More but Spare 9 ning has recommended that the sale be approved. Kenning said the authority “has incorporated the most modern techniques” for eliminating nuisances, and pointed out that reducation in SALISBURY, Rhodesia (AP)jhaul distance for city trucks ment should be encouraged. I blacks who had been sentenced to die before Prime Minister Ian .. Smith declared independence in late 1965. 5 Sunday ii and wounded 33 others. A bus traveling from Hue to Quang Tri struck a Viet Cong mine. Eight persons were killed and three wounded. Communist mortarmen shelled the neighboring villages of Phu Vinh and Truong Dong, some 200 miles northeast of Saigon killing 10 persons, one of them an infant, and,wounding 10 others. In Northern Quang Tri province, the Communists shelled Dong Ha with some 200 rounds, killing one civilian and wounding three. SOLDIER KILLED One South Vietnamese sol-.dier was killed and ailother wounded in the attack. Just northeast of Saigon, Viet-cong bombarded a refugee village with 10 rounds, killing four persons and wounding eight civilians and four government soldiers. * ★ ★ In the Mekong Delta city of Can Tho, a 3(l-round attack of 75mm recoilless rifle fire on a school resulted in nine civilians being wounded and one militiaman killed. The curfew in effect in Saigon I since the Viet Cong’s lunar new iyear offensive began Jan. 31 I was eased slightly today. 'The new curfew hours are 8 p.m. to |6 a.m. they had been 7 p.m. to •1 a.m. community.’ Presently, Dell, 44, of 201 Draper is chairman of the Michigan Area Council of Boys’ Clubs of America. He served as chairman of board of the Pontiac Boys’ Club for two years. A graduate of Auburn Heights High School, he attended Central Michigan University and^ the University of M i s so u r i protests. The government’s ac-College of Engineering before tion today indicated it might be receiving his degree i n setting a pattern of death for pharmacy from Ferris Statte persons convicted of murder College. and clemency for persons con- Dell has operated a drugstore vieted of nonfatal terrorist . ----- crimes for which the death sen- tence is mandatory. Those hanged today were Francis Cbiresa dnd Taka Jere- Four other blacks had been scheduled to be hanged today, but the government said clemency for them was still under consideration. ★ 'The execution last week of three blacks convicted of murder set off a worldwide storm of at 219 Baldwin for 18 years. ACTIVE WRITER In his spare time, Dell is a free-lance writer. He has had several articles published dealing with juvenile problems, community activities and the pharmacy profession. a member of Elks Lodge 810, the Pontiac Citizens appeal State and national pharmaceutical associations. He ha"ied despite an “ "Wi. miah, who were sentenced to death three years ago for slaying a tribal subchief. ’They were accused of serving as executioners for an African nationalist party and shooting their victim as he slept with his wife. the city building code. ’The proposals deal with fire alarm systems in multi-story residential buildings and electrical wiring. 22 Persons Die in State Traffic (Continued From Page One) Mary D. Pullings, 10, of Williamston, whose mother lost-control of her car in the fog Saturday near Williamston and hit a tree. 4 ON BUS DIE Ola Banks, 44; Mary Parker," 79; Fred Bellirtg, 70, and Eloise Gail, 40, all of Detroit, passengers in a bus which was hit by a car and rammed into three other cars at a Detroit intersection Friday night. The bus was owned by a Baptist church. Robert Pond, 25, of Wyoming, District director for Michigan Apothecaries Political Action {MA-PAC). He and his wife, Ann, have five children. t J, g'Paul VI and petitions from their TJiere are more than 100 other Africans in Rhodesian prisons condemned to death, and the government is reported reviewing all cases in chronological order from the time they were sentenced. Some go back before the declaration of independence in November 1965. Thirty African nationalists who crossed into Rhodesia from Zambia are among those awaiting execution- Smith’s cabinet at a special DETROIT (AP) - American NEW YORK (AP) - The U.S. [session Sunday considered the Paffon Tank I UAW,AMCMeet; Is Abandoned Strike Notice Neer?! in New York I The Weather ■ictory for city educators, an-the legislation will 1 other said it was “meaningless ji and nothing of substance.” Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—Variable cloudiness and a little colder today, tonight and tomorrow. Highs today 33 to 38. Lows . „ j „ x, u l tonight 15 ti 23. Winds north to northeast 8to 18 miles loda.y and J? ’ tonight. Tuesday outlook: Partly cloudy with little temperatureof Teachers, after c^ge. Precipitation in per cemt: today 5. tonight and io.o. ZZZ rtoE -"o" to recognize a union claimed the .settlement was a' “And it’s very unlikely that’’“t agreed on a national con- '............ ■ V jtract with the United Auto_ Workers Union, meets with the' UAW again today amid speculation it will get a strike notice. It will be the first meeting of the top bargainers for the two sides since Feb. 28, which the UAW had said as the target date for a national contract with AMC. The “target date” did not carry a strike threat. Motors Corp., which still has Army is wondering why one of “I think the teachers have won a victory,” said Albert Fon- The settlement hinged commitment by state legislkors to press for approval of law would allow the Board of E( its 48-ton, M48 tanks was abandoned in the Bronx. The Patton tank, of World War II vintage, has been sitting atop a trailer truck since Satur Todiy In PonliK Mnan temperatur* Weather: Sat,: passed just for the city of Pittsburgh when such laws will have ramifications across the state\” „ ••••" day parked near the Bronx end of the Throg’s Neck Bridge, its 90mm cannon pointing over the roadway. Saturday night police declared the tank “missing or sto- approved Sunday a resolutionrecognize a union iVcarry a strike threat. ' [len.” hammered out in nearly nine, . ,K Tfi® 'wo sides have been re-| Sunday police learned hours of marathon bargaining. J ™ board steadfastly claimed ^rted far apart on many,$360,000 tank was en route to the “They have won a right to an!^^^ Pennsylvania law did not isWg xhe biggest agreement|Le|tterkenny Army Depot near M election ’’ he said allow it to bargain with a single gp^rently involves the duration Chambersbirrg, Pa., and that it ’ ' representative of the teachers, |of the proposed contract, leav-left the Patchogue, Long Island ^ MEANS NOTHING „or sanction an election to'ing Wiost major issues un-National Guard armory Friday 5iJ But Al Lumis, vice president'choose such a representative. Isettled\ Imorning. 45 32 74 .‘'2 77 70 , ii IFina/ Senate Rightsyote Pushed 71 \ cases of 15 condemned Africans, an official statement said, and nine sentences were commuted to various terms of imprisonment. hit by a train at a Grand Rapids crossing Friday night. Pedro G. Torres, 25, of Adrian, struck by a hit-run car as he walked along an Adrian road Friday night. Robert B. EHis, 20, of Birmingham, whose car ran off the Southfield expressway in Detroit Friday night and hit a utility pole. Ronald B. Warren, 33, of St. Clair Shores, in a head-on collision Friday night in Macomb County. Bonnie J. Nofs, 19, of Port Huron, in a car-truck collision at the intersection of M46 and M15 in ’Tuscola County Friday night. s W.\SHINGTON (AP) — Sen-the civil rights bill to the House, 5 ale leaders, apparently assured! which passed it last August as a Uthey face no last-ditch Southern'limited measure dealing only filibuster,-are pushing fpr a with protection of minority quick, final vote on landmark groups’ constitutional rights. ci\ il rights legislation. , The Senate has added amend- An overwhelming 61-19 vote ments that would eventually bar Friday on the bill with its con- discrimination in 80 per cent of - the nation’s housing and extend il Bill df Rights protection American Indians. NATIONAL WEATHERT-Rain- is forecast tonight for the Pacific Northwest. Snow flurries are expected m the Rockies and in eastern New Mexico. Rain is predicted from Texas to. the Atlantic Coast, and bolder weather is due from the Great ^ains to the Ohio Valley. j trqverisal open-housing provision cleared the way for final action todhy. j Indicating be has been prom-i ised that Southern opponents plan no further filibuster, Sen-jate Democratic lea d e r Mike Mansfield scheduled prompt action on long-delayed money and House leaders said they hoped [eluded 15 ^uthern Democrats, Senate cthic-s proposals. to bring the Seriate version di-[two Southern Republicans and transwri '^in interstate **com- Senate action on a pressing rectly to the floor rather than Sens., Robert C. Byrd, D^W.Va., jq make supplemental appropriation that send it to a House-Senate and John J. Williams, R-Dei. • firearms, explosives includes welfare funds for states conference committee where it pnQyjgjQj^g • was scheduled later today, could become embroiled “ Mansfield said he expected eon- further stalemate. It also wrote in an antiriot provision similar to a Separate bill passed by the House last year. to the floor and Readers reportedly hope support of other provisions will outweigh opposition to the open-housing feature. The House passed a more limited housing measure in 1966 but many of its supporters were defeated in the election that year. ★ ■* * The way for Senate oiactment of the measure was cleared last Monday after seven weeks pf debate and maneuvering when a 65-32 vote succeeded in shutting off debate on the fourth try. The 19 exponents Friday in- dwellings except owner-occupied buildings with four or fewer units—and all single-family [ houses sold through brokers. j Establish federal criminal j penalties for interfering by force or threats with the right to vote, serve on juries, use public accommodations, attend public schools or engage in other specifically protected activities. COLD-SINUS Miseries? geoci n«wi fat you! ExcTuitn new •harJ con* SYNA.CUAR nocmigWtant lob-Uu act itirfonfly ohd eonfinuoutly to drain and door oil nafol-«inuo cavitioi. On« 'hord con* tobM giy« op to 8 hoort raliof fram poin ond pro.rara oJ cong.ilran. Allowt you lo braotho oorily — otopo wototy oyoi and runny now. You eon buy SYNA-CLEAR at your fovorito drug counter, without nood (or a pmcri| guaianlood by inaltob Try K today. nliof ten hoodCDld^nphnn*ond clogged opeTno»i«.W«ifa.i!otli^«i«oiw.t« •peoa«tTV1ol.U|oi«SwdSWA^aAAR,Mllia^ll»i MooeSSSSlShfiNSSAnaMl^whrtwiolfircmdasiYMJ* twrtabbtoryoorneiwirlMckiDfuU. ioiriMlBefoiy Offer Worth *1^0 SliniS-98 N. Saginaw-DRUC DEFT. Cut out thle od—write your name on It and fakelt to SIMMS Drug Dept. Pufchonera bbx of SYNA-CLEAR )2'i and receivo one mote obiolutely FREE. K you hove lime to tell u> about tho retulte SYNA-CLEAR give* you, w* would b* pl*as«cl to hoar from you. Make it a federal crime to cross a state line with intent to incite a riot or to obstruct firemen or policemen engaged in suppressing a riot—or to make, 4 All This Week at Simms • would; |YES OR NO I • Gradually prohibit discrimi- I The House could vote ortly to nation in the sale or rental of [accept or reject the entire pack-housing. By Jan. 1, 1970, it Senate approval w(j|ild retufn i age if it were broughF dire<^ly I would affect all multi-unit and incendiary devices in riots. The bill’s major provisions • Extend to American Indians sideratioii of ethics recomen-dations to begin Tuesday. BACK TO HOUSE the protections of the Bill of Rights. Passed unanimously by the Senate last year, this portion has been stalled in the House .^diciary Committee. Complete WATCH OVERHAUL with PARTS ond LABOR or this price . . . your watch will be disassembled, cleaned ond oiled, -cdjvsted and timed eledronicolly. Genuine foetdry parts used and you get luW year»guorantee on labor. Ports include stem?, crown, mainspring or bolonce staff ct this price. -*Ruittd wotchot, eulomotio, colondore, chronsif brolwn Ctytfnll, cat.s and watch bondt at small oxiro cptt. OVERHAUL and WATCH CLEAHIHG OHLY ..... $6.H SiaMW'JJWW THE PONTIAC PRESS. 48 West Huron Street Pontiac, Michigan 48056 MONDAY, MARCH 11, 1968 JOKW W. riTIOHIAlB Executive Vice President end Editor It Seems to Me . . . Will Rocky Outsmart Self as He ‘Plays Hard to Get?’ Mr. Nelson Rockefeller may euchre himself into a peculiar political position. Primarily, he’s “available” for the GOP nomination if the party giants want to tease him to run. I don’t believe there has been an honestly “drafted” candidate out of the last 10,000 officeholders. If “Rocky” thinks he’s that desirable he’s taking himself for a silly ride. , ★ ★ ★ If he wants to run, O.K. Get out and run. If he sits on his hands and waits for those soulful characters to grovel in the dirt and beg, Richard Nixon may collar all the marbles. Also, the New York News says there are scads of influential GOPers waiting for him to declare himself so they can hurl the dirt “for his sit-out during the 1^64 campaign.” ★ ★ ★ AND—his capitulation before the sanitation union when the problem was really none of his business stirred up another set of political savants. Mr. Rockefeller is a capable man and he might make a jim-dandy candidate but he better quit shadow boxing and speak his piece. Voice of the People: ‘Citizens Should Protest Government Spending’ The Press was right in its editorial that defeat of school millage increases were protest votes. Our state and local governments have followed the master pattern of spending set by Washington. Most of us send far more money to Washington than we spend for focal taxes. Since 1960 the population has increased ten per cent, Federal civilian employes have increased 25 per cent, Federal civilian payroll has increased 75 per cent and Federal spending has increased 80 per cent. Ninety per cent of the total income taxes are paid by those earning $6,000 per year or less. Government spokesmen have stated that anyone earning less than $7,500 per year is disadvantaged. It would take 1,334 of these disadvantaged people donating their total yearly earnings to pay the $8 million given to five farms in 1966 for not producing. Everyone else is protesting, why not the overburdened taxpayer? MILDRED FAWCETT 5069 EAGLE LAKE DRIVE WATERFORD Suggests Ways for Schools to Save Money Surprise Statement . The surprise of the current primary campaign came from the candidate who said: “The City of Pontiac is a dying community, in need of salvation. To have salvation it is necessary for a man to be born again, and so it is with our City.” ★ ★ ★ There’s the biggest laugh of 1968 —and 1967 and 1966. Let’s look at the record. Pontiac Motor Division has never been as powerful, successful,’ outstanding and as much in command of its field as it is right now. This has been true for several years. Pontiac’s on top of the heap. It leads in gains. This division gallops and plunges ahead as it nevef has before, setting record after record after record. Employment is at a peak. Payrolls have never been as tremendous, as gigantic and as farreaching. And Fisher? Well, Fisher has to keep pace with Pontiac and one T. Wei-thorn has the bit in his teeth and is literally storming around the track in the wake of that high-powered Pontiac. And he’s highly successful. Payrolls? Wonderful! Hourly rates? An all-time high! Downtown does need help. We’re all prepared to assist —and will. But the word “Pontiac” means the entire city—and the entire area—a sizable community. Downtown is a very important segment—but it’s just a segment. The Pontiac Press reports right here that manufacturing and retail figures for the first two months of 1968 set an all-time record. They’re magnificent. Sick? Who’s sick? Bank deposits and totals climb steadily upward, upward, upward. Who’s sick? The GMC Truck and Coach Division is another stalwart that passes out maximum wages to happy thousands. Retail totals are at an all - time high. Most retail stores report 1967 to be the banner year of all time. Sales exceed expectations and the swing is still magnificently upward. Always there are some who trail and lose, even when the pack as a whole Cities from coast to coast are envious of Pontiac’s tremendous run in the last few years. We’ve struggled to keep up with this magnificent Pontiac automobile and GMC Truck and Coach Division. Other places weep as they glimpse our bustle, hustle and activity. They’re envious of the staggering payrolls that are doled out smilingly and without Ict-up in the Pontiac area. ★ ★ ★ We have too much unpunished crime. We have too much general lawlessness. But so do all the other communities. If we’re “dying” from that angle, the nation is expiring in toto. Instead of featuring the crying towel, let’s unite in some lusty cheering for the good with which we’ve been favored. And in Conclusion . . . Jottings from the well-thumbed notebook of your peripatetic reporter: Sign on a Connecticut highway: “He who has one for the road, gets a troopier for a chaser.” ......... Georgia plans a park solely for the handicapped. The $1.3 million affair would have braille direction signs, wheelchair trails, and special equipment to make fishing possible for those who lack full faculties. The Department of the Interior in Washington is paying half. Could Oakland County get one of these grants?____ ........Authorities are concluding Peggy Fleming is the greatesjt feminine skater of all time—supplanting SoNJA Henie. I takes.” ...........“Darling of the Day” may set the all-time « Broadway record for a financial fiasco. It closed after 32 performances and the red figure is rumored to nudge past $700,-000. Vincent Price and Edna Forbes were starred. .... The jet age has been defined as “breakfast in London, lunch in New York, dinner in San Francisco and baggage in Buenos Aires.” JANE Scouts advise me Jane Camp-b e11 deserves mention as one of the area’s attractive young ladies......... .... Overheard: “Now that I go to work later and leave quite a lot earlier, I lui coruer, i find 1 make a lot fe]wer mis- ★ ★ . Grit says tolerance is the ability to keep your shirt on yvhen you’re hot under the collar................. We think of apartment houses as strictly modem American. Studies disclose more than 2,000 years ago Rome was actually jammed with them. Only aristocrats and government poobahsHhad private homes and some apartments were five and six stories high.......... . . . . Dept, of Cheers and Jeers: the C’s r-r The Pontiac area’s strong and powerful over-all position; the J’s — Thursday night’s Debbie Reynolds show — the absolute bottom for 1968 to date. —^Harold A. Fitzgerald There's Such A Thing As Being Too Casual If the school boards would build plain school buildings, no swimming pools, and let the children go to school in their own districts, they wouldn’t have to have more school taxes. Also, those walks over the streets are a waste of money. I have seen a lot of children go past the walks and cross a busy street where there’s no light. It would be cheaper to hire a crossing guard and give someone a job. Nixon Is in a State of Readiness A. W. LONG 3610 MORGAN Questions Use of West Bloomfield Police is setting records. With these we sympathize. But this tiny and nameless minority can’t tack the phrase “sick” on a sturdy, lusty, growing city. Automobiles, bicycles, clothes, real estate, household goods, etc. move so swiftly that inventories are a problem. In a most perceptive book about Richard Nixon’s life and character, Earl Mazo wrote in 1959: “He has nature matches this public mood. a solid theory about the role of fate and circumstance in politics.” When Mazo began his book, “Richard Nixon: A Personal and Political Portrait,’’ he was possessed of a strong prejudice against the man. No doubt this was absorbed from the anti-Nixon climate at the New York Herald Tribune where the author was employed and from the Washington press corps where he worked. MOLEY WELL PREPARED He has labored long and well in preparation for every task, personal and political, he has faced in the past. But now his homework has been done with much more meticulous care by travels over Ihe world, by his reflective study of the vital issue, by the perfection of his organization and by his most energetic participation in these primary campains. His “readiness” for this test is all that human effort can make it. By all reports, the voters who see and hear him are unbelievably responsive. It is more and evident that these people are sincerely seeking leadership and have found someone who suits the temper of their critical present and future. (Capyright 1N«, Loi Angales Timas) Considering West Bloomfield Township spends close to $20,000 a year to equip and pay the salaries of two highly-trained police officers, has anyone thought about the use of these two officers and two township patrol cars at the West Bloomfield Righ School every morning to direct supposedly reliable high school-age young men and women across the street. While the police are there, you have no coverage elsewhere in the Township. ^ I will vote yes on March 25, for the renewal and Increase in millage. However, will there then be three cars and three men at the crossing? I feel a crossing guard should be supplied and paid for by the school system. MRS. RICHARD EMMONS 7474 CRESTMORE, WALLED LAKE ‘All Students Stand for National Anthem^ Bob Considine Says: But as Mazo studied his subject during the two years while he was preparing the bc«k and came to know Nixon firsthand, his prejudice was supplanted by sincere admir- New Book on Sukarno Is Another ‘King and F Another Comment on Nonpublic School Aid It may be true that some people do not stand up for the National Anthem but at our school every student stands up. Whether he sings or not, ieach student at least has his hand over his heart. The only people you see that aren’t standing are the adults. The adults aren’t very patriotic. STUDENT AT WATERFORD NEW YORK - People . . . places . . . Cindy Adams, the world’s only g 0 0 d - would make another “King and I.” To prove the point quoted above, he. cited what Nixon said of his success up to that time: “It happened that I was in the right place at the right time. This can change. The only thing that I will do so far as the future is concerned is to continue to do the most effective job I can for the country and, of course, for the party. And then what should happen will happen.” looking his- torian When I read that in the Mazo book, I had enjoyed Nixon’s friendship since the Alger Hiss case in 1948. It seemed to be the key to the great misunderstanding and misrepresentation of the character of the man. And I wrote a piece at the time saying that there was a stroqg element of what I called “fatalism” in Nixon, quoting Hamlet’s words: “If it be not now, yet it will come; the readiness is all.” WORD MISUSED rhave realized since then that my word “fatalism” was misused. For it implies passive acceptance. What I meant was that time and chance play a major role in political life, but a recognition of that cannot preclude the labors of preparation. A friend of Nixon over the years has put his finger on an old political truth. He said recently that Republicans this year should nominate “the man who matches the mood” of most Americans. fresh out with her s e c 0 n d book about Dr. Sukarno, the political derelict who was Indonesia’s curious e 0 mbina-tion of George Washington and Tommy Man-ville. “My Friend the Dictator,” published by Bobbs Merrill, moves the glamorous historian to write: “Dear Bob: I guess you’d say this volume completes the set of bookends. The first book was Sukarno’s story. This one’s mine. My experiences, and boy! If some of them ain’t worth six bucks!!! “If you want to buzz over the first three quarters of the book,, wherein the old boy chases me around the palace, read just the, last quarter. I was the only person close to him while he fell politically. “Many times I’ve sat and held my husband’s head when he lost an expected hope and I’ve held my dad’s hand when he’s lost a job or a raise, and I’ve sat with a friend when things have gone bad — but this is the first time I’ve ever sat in a living room and watched a man lose an empire! Gov. Richard Hughes, the Jersey Democrat, steaming a bit after hearing several fellow governors (all Republicans) praising Dick Nixon at great length when they should have been talking about proper uses of the Delaware watershed, interrupted a meeting in New York the other day. After reading recent letters I can only conclude an extreme indifference to the financial plight of the nonpublic school system. Most who are against the bill don’t realize how much nonpublic schools have saved them. Everyone realizes the public school system is in trouble financially and this will get worse if nonpublic schools close. I would be happy to have my taxes doubled, tripled, or more, if only to hear these people scream when they get their future taxes. L. GUZMAN 18 NEOME “Fine, fine,” he said, “Grand fellow, Nixon. Two days ago he settled the race problem. Yesterday he settled the war. What’s he going to do for an encore tomorrow: Endorse motherhood?” Question and Answer In the face of possible snags involving City income tax, the City Manager and Attorney prepared several alternative plans for handling the money. I’d like to know if the alternative chosen (to spend the money now) is the one which the Manager and Attorney feel is best. If they didn’t make a specific recommendalion, why not? CITIZEN End of meeting. REPLY The City Manager says he did make a specific recommendation, and it waS the one which the City Commission chose. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Abridgment... Editor & Publisher Congress shall make no law — abridging the freedom of speech or of the press — but the American Bar Association can. Approval by the ABA House of Delegates of the Reardon Committee recommendations for restrictions on pretrial coverage of crime news is in violation of the spirit of the First Amendment if not in outright contravention of it. state bar groups and trial judges across the country it will be the first time in history that any n o n -legislative organization has been able to dictate terms governing news coverage, treatment and publication. I believe that Nixon has a sense that not only his experience bjat his serious Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. Forrest C. Dandison of Milford; 59th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Lucions Miller of Clarkston; 56th wedding anniversary. Rev. Ernest 0. Sanders of Rochester; 87th birthday. Mrs. Mamie Adams of 3169 Sashabaw; 83rd birthday. “I watched him as his mind deteriorated. I sat with him when he was so spent mentally and emotionally that the only thing he could do was play a n elementary-school game called Movie Stars . . . ‘M. M.’ ‘Marilyn Monroe,’ and that sort of thing. “You might find these chapters a living footnote to history.” They are, indeed. The book Smiles You may be eager to learn about the excitable coat designer who got all worked up in his wrap. Seat Belts can tighten your grip on life. It is one thing for the Bar Association to attempt to put its own house in order by adopting rules which would prevent 1 a«w y e r s from pleading their cases outside of the courtroom and in the public prints. It is something else again for the ABA to impose prior restraints on publication of the news by rectunmending that the police as well as lawyers should withhold certain information from the press and public and, furthermore, to give the courts authority to use contempt powers to punish police and newspapermen who disobey the rule by divulging and printing proscribed in-fwmation. Judge Reardon says the report just approved by the House of Delegates does not ““restrict the media from disseminating publicly any information developed through their own initiative or resources about crimes committed or about the administration of justice.” But it does define information which it says should not oe released and should not be printed under pain of contempt even though caution is advised. Therein lies the abridgment of the First Amendment. American majority aro(ind his point of view or suffered the unprecedented humiliation of being expelled from office — not because the American economy has collapsed, which is what happened to Herbert Hoover, but because the Americans have rejected his idea of America’s place in the world. None of the rivals Mr. Johnson has to worry about, with the single exception of Mr. Rockefeller, is the President’s equal in energy, or decisiveness, or in his vision of what he wants to do with the presidency. By comparison Mr. Nixon is a routine old pro, Mr. Reagan an amateur playing with politics and Senator McCarthy, for the Democratic opposition, a decent but ineffectual mini-Stevenson. Only Mr. Rockefeller ing Mr. Johnson in qualities of leadership. Real Issue.. London Economist If these recommendations are approved and adopted by Mr. Johnson has made it clear where he stands. He is a global American. This is the real issue of the election, and on this issue Mr. Johnson represents what is radical and adventurous in the American spirit; By Novenlber he either will have reassembled the % dispatches. The Pontiac Press Is dellvtre<| by carrier for 50 cents a week) wnete mailed In Oakland. Genesee. Livingston, Macomb, Lapeer and Washtenaw Counties It Is tll.00 Member oT ABC. .,-'1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH 11, 1968 A—5 Band Leader Welk Marks His 65th Year By BOB THOMAS AP Movie-Television Writer HOLLYWOOD - Reads ' uh-one, uh-two "happy birlhdas, Lawrence Weik. liappy birthday m to you!" ^ ■ f tmi bubble merchant is marking h i s 65th birthday today, and the mile.stone finds him in fine fettle. So fine is h i s fettle, i n fact he thinks THOMAvS nothing of playing .% holes of golf -"and I usually have my best score on the last nine." * * * Such prowe.ss, he believes, stems from his boyhood. "1 did a lot of walking behind a plow, 1 really did, 1 built up strong legs, and they have hel|jed me throughout my life. That's how I've been able to stand up in front of a band all these years. That’s also why I'm still able to dance the polka and the waltz” Far from retiring. Dakota-born Wdk continues his busy schedule of recording, api)car-ing on ABC television w-eekly and at the Hollywood Palladium LAWRENCE WELK on Saturday nights lie claims' the work is not as strenuous as It seems. EFFICIENT STAFF ' "I have a very efficient staff; working for me,” he explained.; “When I come in on Tuesday to' work on the television show, most of the preparation has already been done. 1 spend the whole day at the studio, and we tape the show that night. 1 used to spend much more time in' preparing, but the shows have! .been better since 1 let others do . , IN I I ' the work.” Ayiny I rOUlulM He reported happily that the ratings have been holding firm, f 1 I I |and he noted: “Our audience Tor getting younger. IVI VI IMUI.I that especially when we play at state fairs. 1 think it' PHILADELPHIA (AP)--The becau.se we have been playing physician to America's astro-;more and more new songs on nauts says he expects them to fhe show." present him with two tough hu-l * * * man problems in the next few The Welk organization now vears-advancing age and frus- travels only six weeks a year, tration of their ambitions. including three weeks at Lake Dr. Charles A. Berry, medical a va- director at the National Aero-""'*”" for the members. Law^ nauUcs and Space Administra-,^""^',. , Hi ris 'traveling in his 44 years as a tion center m Houston, Tex,. , • i * i ^ said Friday this is bound to hap- more time at home. He and P^ ■ w * ♦ steal away for , ... . , , , ! a few days at their trailer home In an interview while here to Escondido, 100 miles south, receive he Richard Hopper Dayhere he also owns a new re- Medal of the Academy ol Natur-^y|.j al Sciences for "exploration and ' di.scovery in the natural sci-^ave done wonders for his ences," Dr. Berry said the ag- health, ing was being watcbed closely. , -i haven't felt so good i Commercial pilots may fly un-long time," he remarked. ‘..... til they are 60, but no such limit really surprised, because backi has been set for the astronauts, there in '52, '53 and '57. I spent' Dr. Berry pointed out that as- a lot of time in St. .lohn’s Hospi-; tronaut Walter M Schirra will tal (in Santa Monica). 1 had a' be 45 next Tuesday. Dr. Karl C. great deal of trouble with a Henize, 42, a scientist-astronaut,i spastic colon, with mv gallblad-is just taking jet flight training,! dor and gallstones, and 1 and will be 45 by the time he is thought 1 wouldn’t be around too ready for space much longer. for a cash advance Add up the bills you're now paying, month after month ... and pay them off with cash from GAC. Then you make only one payment each month ... and chances are it will be considerably lower than the total you are now paying. That one budget-fitted monthly payment lets you plan ahead ... provide for extra spending money out of every paycheck. Stop in or call for prompt, personal service. Get a cash advance from GAC to pay your bills... or for any good reason. LOAN! UP TO UOM KlIQuC RNMICE CORPOIUIIOII OF PONTIAC Corner Saginaw and Huron Downtown Pontiac, FE 4-2511 Early Spring Clearance Famous Brand Sportswear MISSES' SWEATERS Reg 9,001.5 00 $^88 Rr.i leooMo- $1288 Reg 10.00)2.00 $Z88 S./e42-ISSweulfis Q fur blends, orlons, wools, ond mohairs in sizes 34-40 and 42 )o 46. Charge It. Spotlswenr ... Third floor Sleeveless NYLON SHELLS Reg. 4.00 $044 to 5,00 Z. Jewel neck sleeveless nylon shells with zipper closing. White and colors in sizes 34-38. Sportswear . . . Third Floor Misses' WOOL SKIRTS Reg. 9.00 $Q88 to 16.00 O Slim, A-line, and pleated wool skirts in plaids, checks, and solids. Block, brown, gray, navy, and pastels. Sizes 8 to 16. Sportswear. . . Third Floor Famous Make JUMPERS Reg. 21,00 to 23.00 ^15 88 Long and roll sleeve cotton and homespun shirt dresses. Bermuda collars, button down collars. Sizes 8 to 18. Sportswear . . . Third Floor . Our famous make Jumpers in checks and solids, jewel and turtlenecks. Aqua, gold, red and camel. Sizes 8 to ’6- Sportswear ... Third floor Misses' and Women's SLACKS ^10®® Reg. 16.00 $T|88 to 22.00 1 I Choose from lined wools in solids, plaids, checks or stretch and corduroy slacks. Misses' sizes 8 to 20 and women's sizes 30 to 36. ■ Sportswear... Third Floor Famous Brand BRAS and GIRDLES Reg. 2.50 to 4.00 $1 ' A Reg. 4.00 to 6.00 $2 / / Reg. 6.00 to 8.00 $3 (1^^/ /Ui Famous Brand CORDUROY CRAWLERS $]69 $249 Reg. 2.25 Reg. 3.00 to 3.50 Discontinued styles of women's famous maker girdles, panty girdles and bras in a host of smart colors and styles. Slimwear... Second Floor Completely washable cotton Corduroy in fine wale. Choose from a host of colors in solid and prints. Styled by a famous maker. Sizes 9-12-18 and 24 months, and 2-3- and 4-yr. Infants' Wear .. . Second Floor CRAWFORD HASSOCKS Reg. $0 88 6.00 Z $788 Reg. 8.00 $Q88 and 9,00 O Reg. 10.00 and 16.00 Reg. 17.00 to 20.00 Choose from many styles and colors for fine I Crawford quality. Hassocks . . . fourth floor $g88 ng. Famous DECORATOR PILLOWS 88 Reg. 2.00 to 2.50 Reg. 3.00 $144 to 3.50 I ,S^2®® From bright red to sublime pink you can find a pillow to match your decorations. Charge It. Pillows . . . Fourth Floor Famous Cameo Tie-Back RUFFLE CURTAINS 63"xl00'', Reg. *10 ... ... ^7 Sr'xlOO", Reg. »12 .. 1 ... ^8 81"xl44'', Reg. »17...^13 81"xl86'', Reg. *22... ^16 8l"x276'', Reg. *32..*'*24 Famaus Cameo ruffle curtains that are completely washable, never need ironing. Curtains ... Fourth Floor DELUXE 20" CONVERTIBLE, Reg. 29.00 $22 BOYS' 3-SPEED Caliper brakes, handle grip shift. Reg. 39.99 ^32 DELUXE 20' TIGERCAT 3-Speed Toronodo Bicycle, Reg. 49.95-- $30 24" or 26" Middleweight, Reg. 44.95 .. — • $34 Coaster Broke Lightvveight, Reg. 34.95 . . .; $27 Deluxe 3-Speecl, Reg. 44.95 ....... $35 3-Speed Boys' Tigercat, Reg. 39,99 ...$32 THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. .AIARCII 11, 1968 A—7 i*! Move in with Hudson’s We know what fun, hard work and heartaches are involved in furnishing a home—especially you've more imagination than money. And we're here to help! With hundreds of ways / ^ to l^t you make those bare rooms a place \ ^ to live in, eat in, sleep in, entertain in—and pay later if you wish. With floors full of furniture, accessories and displays that show how to decorate with flair and originality. With hints on how to get the most mileage out of each dollar you spend. There's alvj^ays something to look at, to learn, to stir up ideas in the home departments at Hudson's Pontiac, 2nd Floor;]Detroit'Downtown Northland, Eastland, Westland. Move in and 'j ' ' ■ - A~8 THE I'ONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. MARCH 11. : 2 Senators Voice Disapproval of Health Program Cuts WASHINGTON (AP) - .Sens I Senate committee studies Edward M. Kennedy and Lister show the President requested in Hill have expressed disappoint- Ws budget only 25 per cent of ment at President Johnson's de-jlhP amounts authorized for a vision to cut funds for national of health programs enact- health programs below levelsk^ recent years, authorized by Cdngress. They have just cut them to pieces, " said Hill, the Alabamaition permitted him to request, authorized $60 million for such Democrat who heads the Senate MENTAL HEALTH units. Labor Committee. | Kennedy, D-Mass., termed as He noted that Johnson ini “a great personal disappoint-some cases has asked Congress! ment to me” Johnson’s request to appropriate less than 10 per for $15 million for neighborhood cent of what the basic legisla-1 mental health centers. Congress Here are the amounts asked by President Johnson—compared with amounts authorized —for other programs: • Health research facilities. $93 million authorized, $8.4 million requested. ★ * ★ Health personnel training, $13.5 million authorized, $1.8 million asked. Medical library assistance, $10 million authorized, $1.5 million requested. ★ ★ ★ • Health education assistance, $160 million authorized, $75 million asked. D. FALSE TEETH Rock, Slide or Slip? Don't Uv* In feor ot (alae teeth loosening, wobbling or dropping Jvut at the wrong time. For more aecumy and more eomtort, ]uat sprinkle a little PASTKETH on your platea. FASTXBTH bolds false teeth firmer. Makes eating easier. No pasty, gooey taste. Helps check "denture breath’'. Dentures that fit are eaaentlal to health. Bee your dentist regularly. , Oet FASTKETH at all drug oountera. buy7seliTtrade^^ use PONTIAC PRESS WANT ApS! Gat a free blanket with your new car,.. Let us finance it. If you’re buying a 1968 car or truck before April 15th, we’ll give you a free blanket to finance it at Community National Bank. ^ It’s an $18.95 washable wool car blanket in red plaid with a handy ca^ rying case. And getting one couldn’t be easier. Just pick out your new car and ask the dealer for Community National financing. He can take care of all the details right there in the showroom. Or if you prefer you can stop in at one of our 20 convenient offices. Either way you get the free blanket—as well as Community’s usual fast, friendly service and low bank rates. National \ Bank Offices in Oakland and Macomb Counties Bank at Community... Most people do! Member FDiC llliu lOAllAC 1 Itj’-ab. MUl\Uli 1, iMAULH 11, 1UG8 .............. ' ^ Deaths in Ponfiac, Neighboring Areas Christopher Fowler Jr. Service for Christopher Fowler Jr., 75, of 381 Ferry will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at Church of Christ, 344 Franklin. Burial will be in Oak Hill Cemetery by Davis-Cobb Funeral Home. Mr. Fowler, an employe of the former Wilson Foundry Corp., died Wednesday. Surviving are his wife, Emma; four sisters; and four brothers. Mrs. Robert L. Hall Service for Mrs. Robert L. (Lucy M.) Hall, 46, of 242 E. Pike will be 7:30 p.m. today at the Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, with burial Thursday in Wartburg, Tenn. Mrs. Hall died today. Surviving are her husband; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John B. Miller of Marysville, Tenn. ; a daughter, Dianna Hall at home; five sisters, including Mrs. Maurice Lemings of Pontiac; and three brothers. Earl K. Sanborn Service for Earl K. Sanborn, 59, of- 1506 Orchid, Waterford Township, vrill be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home, with burial in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Sanborn, a Pontiac Motor Division employe and member of the Bethany Baptist Church, died yesterday. Surviving are his wife, Marjorie; a, son, Robert Holmquist of Pontiac; a brother, Clinton Sanborn of Waterford Township; and a sister. Mrs. Andrew Shelton Service for Mrs. Andrew (Gertrude A.) Shelton, 70, of 326 E. Sheffield will be 1:30 p.m. tomorrow at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with burial at Perry Mount Park Cemetery, Mrs. Shelton died Saturday. Burial Surviving are three sons. Jack and Robert, both of Pontiac, and Niles of Milford; two daughters, Mrs. Fred Young of Barstow, Calif., and Mrs. Basil Sakell of Auburn Heights; brother; and 17 grandchildren. Youth Injured in Auto Crash A Waterford Township youth is in fair condition at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital today after receiving head injuries in a two-car crash at Pontiac Lake near Cass Lake at 6:15 p.m. yester-day. •k if -k Injured was Kevin Klein, 16, of 6454 Simmons, who was a passenger in a car driven by Edward R. Ervin, 17, of 65^8 Simmons, Waterford Township. Driver of the second car involved was Cynthia Strahan, 19, of 12 Lucille, Pontiac, accor^g to township police. Unions Support City Tax Hike The milage election called for by the Pontiac School District has been supported by the membership and executive board of the Michigan Central Labor Council, AFL-CIO. ■k -k k A union official said the l£d)or council, with representatives from most of the unions in the Pontiac area, supported the request for a 6.25-11^1 increase on the property tax on the basis that it is necessary to ease overcrowded conditions. The election is to be held March 25. Mrs. Delores I. Snyder Service for Mrs. Delores I. Snyder, 36, of 1932 Devonshire wili be 1:30 p.m. Wednesday at C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Burial will be in Roseland Park Cemetery Berkley. Mrs. Snyder, a secretary at Vulcan L^oratories, Pontiac, died Saturday. Surviving are her parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Brocher Pontiac; three children, Lester E., Michael and Anita Snyder, all at home; a Mrs. William Johnston of Union Lake; and a brottier. Donald L. Stevens Service for Etonald L. Stevens, ’49, of 613 E. Pike will be 10 .m. Wednesday at St. Vincent e Paul C|itholic Church with burial at Mount Hope Cemetery by articles to be published bp Thelcle. In December she caught a| Pontiac Press during Lent, cold that seemed to linger on! Each story is one of faith in and on. i action, toU by a sincere person, j Breathing became difficult for I Some cofdributors are famous,^ others retahmly unknown.) By BOBBIE WAGNER jl" someone’s arms. Mom, Dad i Student. Chilton, Wisconsin jand Patty, my older sister, took Niki Wagner was born injt«rns spelling each other. July, which cave the re.sl of our ^ family plenty of time to spoil' One night when hey were all . X r cn UrMi fnihv rniiin nnf rurrv her before we , withdrawn. We were halfway I could not even wring out a I her death hit me. Like a tor-;home before he told us the tear. irent, the tears flowed down my news, “Niki died tonight." We had a small, private fu- cheeks. I had never cried like Patty broke into hysterical neral with just the family. Only | that before in my life, and I .sobs. ‘‘No! No! No!” she cried, then did the truth, the full, hon-[don’t expect ever to do it again. She cried on my shoulder, and e.st, deep-down, hurting truth of| Tomorrow — Billy Casper, star professional golfer, tells of the great changes in his life thed came when he turned to the church and began to live for God and his family. | (CpoyrtaM, WM, by Guidbpnt* | Aneclitti, Inc.) I All You Can Eat! riSH& CHIPS Also CarryAtui 99< CLOSED SUNDAY PARK-INN NEST. Corner of Orchard Lake Road and Tolagraph so tired they could not carry themselves, much less Niki, [Morn called me to make a few rounds. started school in the fall. She was the seventh girl of 10 children, and her name had been deter-mined long before her birth. Dad, of course, had wanted all WAGNER boys, so that STRUGGLE FOR AIR And so it was that I scooped up this little girl into my arms and, as I walked around the living room, I could feel her struggle for air. This little bundle was the sister of whom I had been ashamed, the one the doctors ;the first year. I -.11., cnniil Thls w8s Niki, hopclcssly, in- the Youngest one, and Niki I^s helpless who thrived ^ ow <^owo«ii|on bve and attent on and whose no exception. She was small i_ * i-a • i ^ i • H„ H.,r long, and her face was a small oval of red cheeks and almond w w w How could I be ashamed of a child whose radiance was so eyes. Winter came swiftly but left slowly. Niki caught an unusual share of colds and was constantly ill. bright that she could make me laugh even though I had a great deal of homework to do, who could make a grouchy, grumpy Dad smile? SHE WANTS NIKI Always, Niki offered me love. I had returned humiliation. Now I wanted Niki as she was. ‘‘Breathe, Niki. Live, Niki, live!” I The next morning dawned I spring. The minute Mom and Dad walked in the door that night, all nine of us kids knew something was amiss. Later, at the su|H>er table, Dad broke the news to us. Niki was mongoloid. Incurable. Mom and Dad were determined to keep Niki at home. They dug in to kpep our home The summer passed and Niki seemed healthier than ever. She seemed to be aware of things, especially objects of nature, which fascinated her. Her vocabulary enlarged to over half words. And they said she would never talk! Niki showed them! She also seemed more determined than ever to get around happy and normal, and we chil- by herself. She was very inde-dren were to resume a normal .pendent, even though coddled acceptance of our little sister, by members of the family. The younger kids did not, know what the fuss was about, but it hit us older ones where it hurt — our pride. Why hadn’t God sent us a normal sister? HUMILIATION "How is Niki?” friends would ask. I would give a brief answer. I could not tell them the truth. I was humiliated at the thought of their knowing that I had a hopelessly retarded sister. “God,” I pleaded, ‘‘please make her well, please.” And Dad, who is not the emotional type, would find immense joy in a smile from Niki. Her pudgy little arms would encircle his neck before he knew it, and a cold, wet kiss plopped on his cheek was a sure-fire way to get a laugh and a tos$ into the air. On a night that I shall never forget, Patty and I went to a basketball game. We won, and when my oldest brother came to pick us up, he seemed very I “Our typing pooFs jammed!” “Our billing is lateF* “I need a steno , tomorrow at 8!” Everyone’s calling for \ Manpower \ White Glove 1338 Wide Track West Pontiac FE 2-8386 REFRIGERATOR & RANGE i OUlERiITTiR . On# of Mi€higan'§ p; Origlnat DI$eounton FREE DELIVERY. NO MONEY DOWN, 3 YEARS TO PAY. After a prolonged cold, the situation became gradually worse. The doctor had to be called. His diagnosis; severe dehydration. SHE FAILS TO GAIN , Niki, who never had beenj heavy or large, paid in weight. At SIX months she had the ^ She seemed to slowly regain month-old baby So a trip to a . though she specialist was planned for early . BIG FAMILY SIZE! ^irlpool 2-DOOR ; Ibh big WhiripMl ha* all of tha papular foaKirott giant toparala ; fiMitr - paitalain criipar - twin ogg trays > big butttr koopar -i plui ipaclou* 17.a tq. ft. ihalf aroa. Choaia whita, coppartona.or $ 199 FREE DELIVERY AND SERVICE INCLUDED 130" Deluxe GAS RANGE INHARDWICIT AUTOMATIC jot rang*, chroma framoa bullt-ln otyling, ______________________j, llft^up/llfl-arr drip proof top, four giant ro- movablo chroma bumora, largo capacity ovon, romovabla inuilatod ovon baltom, 100% oKoclivo closod door broiling aroa- Irand now i960 modals in crota*. Cholco of color*. Automatic clock and timtr HUGE 17 FT. NO-FROST! HHvtpiriiii: 2-DOOR .............nooloM In rill* 1M*u.fl. Mng^lioa^ly H*l|MkrtN^rM "17" on whooM 1h* Mg No-rrast fraonr olono holrit 1M pMinri* of loori. Tho big I2.« (U. ft. No-Fmt nfrigMoMT ho* twin pomhiln onomd erbpon riiot kMp 22 quorl* ol IniiM and v*gMoM*« fiodu 2 portohlo ogg rock* riiot km It *ggt mug. •ot# ond Mganilo; covortd buttor ond diooio Mini o doop dow sh*lf... and 2 of Ht 4 full-widrii didvo* dido out to moko ovwylMiig ki ka*k Ol Mty to roach as Iho food in Irwit. trond now (lolod 'M inwWi. $ 289 30" Deluxe $«K-Clea«Iiig niiUnill Elec. Range Vary doluxo, Mlf-cloonlng oloctric lungo. Automatic dock and ov timer, plug-eut ourfoco unit*, lift-up top lor oa*y dooning. Limb timo only. Drand now I9M modol* in crato*. Cholco of color*. GIANT SIDE-BY-^SIDE 1 ADUPLEXi; NHARDWICK Double Oven! AUTOMATIC GAS RANGE clock end Orntr fif ^KTiMpool Top Loading PORTABLE DISHWASHER porcolain.onamolod work ourfiKO top. $ -HotpflinJr Front Loading CONVERTIBLE DISHWASHER IVk inch AAi^ cultig^ Hf, FULL SATISFACTION C UARANTEEO INSTANT C REDIT 3 YEARS TO PAY 1 Fretter’s Pontiac S. Telegraph Rd., V: Mile South of Orchard Lake Rd. FE 3-T051 Fretter’s Southfield on Telegraph Road Just South of 12 Mile Rd. 368-2880 Fretter’s Oakland 411 W. 14 Mile Road Opposite Oakland Mall 585-5300 Open Daily 11 to S-Simday 18 to 1 j THE PONTIAC PRESS. MONDAY. ISIARCII 11, 19t58 B—3 Polly's Pointers I Enjoy Children Now DEAR POLLY—The sweetest]be bought and mailed to Viet-sound in the world is that of, „am for the price of one money cfuldren laughing The biggest^very bov in the service gift in the world to give these' f , children is TIME. We busyl^*^® ™ed the people work to supply support i sanie thing and he could pass but spare time is something weithem around. —MRS. R Richard Rush of Bexley, Ohio (left) exhibits his prize winning entry in the eighth annual Reynolds Aluminum contest for the best original architectural design in which creative use of aluminum is an important contributing factor. The $250 check presentation was given by (from center to right) William Jarratt, president of Detroit chapter, American Institute of Architects; Thomas Stevens, Reynolds Metals Company; and Glen Paulsen, Cranbrook Art Academy president where Bexley is a first year graduate student. Circle of Lace Roses Accents Bridal Gown Attired in a traditionally Saturday evening in First fashioned wedding gown, en- Methodist Church of Pontiac, circled at the bodice with a ★ ★ * g^Iand of lace roses, Kristine Hielen Knaus became the bride of Kenneth Eugene Karns Jr. To complement the Chantilly lace and taffeta ensemble, the bride wore a shoulder length bouffant veil capped with floral headpiece of pearls and matching lace. carried white r o S e s , feathered carnations and Stephanotis, ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Jerry Glascock was matron of honor daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wilson Knaus of North Edith Street with Judy Karns David Drakes Speak Vows First Baptist Church too seldom find. ★ t Every day take time out to play and get to know your children. The years fade by so quickly and the time deliberately put aside for your family will be the only important thing to remember later on. -ELMER and JUDY DEAR READERS-If I was ever tempted to say Amen to a letter, this was it.—POLLY. DEAR POLLY-I do not think it is proper for Mrs. D. H. to give a house-warmingfor a relative. I was given one (but not by a relative) and the guests each brought a covered dish and each gave money rather than a gift. DEAR MRS. R.-That is one of the nice things about the exchange of Pointers among readers, one good idea so often leads to another —POLLY MRS. KENNETH E. KARNS JR. The son of the senior Kenneth E. Karns of East Walton Boulevard was attended Robert Walton with Lawrence Crawley, Vernon Crowe, Kenneth Kimmell and Gary Knaus as ushers. Annual Luncheon for Alumnae Unit A luncheon is slated Tuesday at 12:15 p.m. for the annual meeting of the Bloomfield Hills Alumnae club of P| Beta Phi. ★ ★ ★ The affair, which will be followed with the election of officers, will be held at the Franklin home of Mrs. (jleorge W. Bowman Jr. She will be assisted by Mrs. A. B. Chisholm, Mrs. Noel Haberkost and Mrs. Ronald Featherstone. Prior to their departure for a honeymoon in the New England states, the bridal couple ived guests at the Knights of Columbus Hall. Birmingham was the setting Saturday evening for vows exchanged by Peggy Anne Manegold and David Michael Drake. ★ * Honor attendants were the bride’s sister, Roberta, and Terry Finan of Chicago. Bridesmaids were Mrs. Jack Salmon of Niles, Mrs. Fawcey Malouf of Lawton, Okla., and Mrs. Terry Finan with Paul' Marcenik, James Ward and' t h e'Gary Carpenter as ushers. RECEPTION Following the nuptials, the daughter of the Arthur Manegolds of Birmingham and the son of the Charles Drakes of Alden Drive, West Bloomfield Township, wOre honored with a reception at the Birmingham Athletic Club. The money was cleverly taped together to form a long roll and then placed inside a food can which had been cut open in the middle and then taped back together again. The label was carefully removed and then replaced, so the can looked up-n opened. This was presented with a can-opener. -MRS. R. L. A. DEAR POLLY-Mrs. D. D. V. wrote to say how much her son in Vietnam appreciated receiving a money clip. A large paper clip, about two inches long, makes an ideal substitute for a money clip. A box of these could doubtless YOUR HEALTH "SLIPPED" DISC The disc acts as a shock absorber for the spine and also separates the vertebra from one another. When a disc “slips”, there is a resultant pinching on the spinal nerves, causing pain in the lower back or legs. Sciatica is often the result. Experience has shown that those people suffering from “slipped” disc and pinched nerves respond very well to the specialized care offered by the Chiropractic profession. Dr. H. H. jUeiaiMler Chiropractic Phyiieian 1029 Joslyn Ave., FE 2-0111 •k * -k The couple then departed for honeymoon in Las Ve Nev. They will make their home in St. Louis, Mo. Rubbing alcohol removes shoe polish stain from cloth. Sorority Unit Slates Card Party Plans were announced about a card party April 16 at the recent meeting of Gamma Theta chapter of Sigma Beta sorority. The party, which is slated for members and guests, will be held at 8 p.m. at the Meigs Street home of Mrs. Gary Burnett. , . * ★ ★ During the meeting, hosted by Mrs. Michael Marcum o f Coleport Street, members also discussed a mother-children brunch slated May 5 at Devon Gables. A province meeting will be hosted by Gamma Theta chapter May 19 at Kingsley Inn. Chapter members from Ohio, Illinois and Michigan are planning to attend. JXeumode NYLONS Buy a better stocking and see what a difference it makes! ^eumod6t}(osierj^Shops 82 N. SAGINAW ST. ^AVE 30% to 40% ON KE-mOLSTMlNli or NEW ClISTOH FERITURE REY DlREfT! AT OIIR FACTORY-TO-TOB PRICES! you aro buying direct from the manufacturer ... eliminating the usual “middle -man” costs! Ami you are assured of top-quality materials and highly-skilled workmanship, too! Werkmanship Guaranteed 5 Years Phone today ... we’ll be glad to bring fabric samples toyourbome. EASY BUDGET TERMS OR 90 DAYS CASK BUY NOW, StW NOW FOR EASTERI pick a spring bouquet of • COTTON CRISKAY PRINTS • DAISY CHAIN COTTON PRINTS • WOVEN SUN VALLEY PLAIDS rag.. 79c to 98c yd. values « ail 100% cotton . ^ 35"/36"wide_ 09f' guar, washable yd. . Petti-Point Pique Prints . Nylon Chiffon Prints all combed cotton . Sheer De Swa Prints • Crepette Prints and Solids fabulous design selection 36'745" vndths guar, washable 98f- MATCH-MATE “TWIN” PRINTS sheer voiles • opaque butchers • VOILE PRINTS of dacron polyester and cotton • SANDUNE PRINTS $198 of rayon and cotton butcher weave 1 T®’ YARDAGE - CURTAINS - DRAPERIES The Pontiac Mall - Elizabeth Lake Rd. at Telegraph Open Daily 10 AJd, to 9 PJU, Phone 682-3930 TUESDAY ONLY SPECIAL! ACETATE JERSEY PRINTS Easy-care acetate jersey dresses are blooming in lovely spring prints at this wonderful sayings. Here, one from the group; black or gold in 10 to 18. 9.90 TUESDAY ONLY SPECIAL! RAIN AND SHINE COATS We show fust one from a collection of must-have coOts for spring. See new fashion shapes including beltS/ side-closings. Fresh colors, misses' sizes. 14.90 TUESDAY ONLY SPECIAL! SPORTY KNIT SHIFTS Wonderful savings on smart polyester or acrylic knit shifts you'll call on often this spring. Choose from favorite stylings and colors; misses' sizes. 8.97 CmCS TEL-HURON CENTER PONTIAC MALL shop monday through Saturday to 9 B—* THE PONTIAC PRESS, MONDAY. MARCH 11, 1968 CLEANERS 5 Loeations To Serve Yoti Jwm ■Hem FoAhwm W« Sell and Serv ice Wigt and Wiglets CLOStD MONDAYS Appointment Not Always Necessary! CALL 623-1089 5217 Dixie Hwy. The engagement of their daughter, Mary Cathryn, to Spec. 5 Laio-rence St. Clair, USA, is announced by the Clifford B. Schmanskys "of Bratton Drive. Spec. 5 St. Ctair, who is stationed at Ft. Leonard Wood, Mo., is the son of the Robert St. Clairs of Rosetta Road, Pontiac Township. The engagement of their daughter, Beverly Ann, to Stephen Bour-geau is announced by the Russel Benders of Middleville. Miss Bender is a junior at Central Michigan University where her fiance is completing his senior year. He is the son of the David Bourgeaus of Walce Drive. Mr. and Mrs. Martin J. Bushman of Orion Road, Orion Township, announce the betrothal of their daughter, Nancy Janet of Miami, Pla., to James R. Flack, also of Miami. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James Flack of Hollywood, Fla. The couple is planning Vanderlinds Fete Foreign Guest at Bridal Shower Nu-Vision Spring Action Temples Designed for Comfort, Fit, Dependability iyiEN enjoy the day tong comfort of ig Kin Spring Hinge design. WOMEN love the light weight fashion frames with "hold" qualitites built-in. CHILDREN can lead an active, normal life without jarring lenses out of focus llll©liH 109 N. SAGINAW ST. E. STEINMAN, O.D. Doily 9:30 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Friday 9:30 A.M. to 8:30 P.M. FE 2-2895 A summer wedding is planned by Sandra Kay Cummings and Spec. 4 DouglasW. Bogert, USA. The bride elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Orval Cunimings of Whitfield Street. Her fiance, who is Stationed at Fort Hood, Texas, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Bogert of Port Huron. An April wedding is planned by Janet Lynne .Mieske and Thomas L. Boynton. Their parents are the Walter Mieskes of Midland and the Robert L. Boyntons of Birmingham. The bride elect is a junior at the University of Michigan, her fiance’s alma mater. Mrs. John K. Vanderlind of Hammond Lake'was hostess Sunday afternoon for a miscellaneous bridal shower. Honoree was Beatrys Tobi of Ann Arbor and Delft, Holland. Beatrys was a house guest at the Vanderlind home two years ago, just after her arrival in the United States as a graduate student at the University of Michigan. She has made numerous additional visits at the Vanderlinds since that time. On May 15 In Albany, N.y. Beatrys will become the bride of Irving William Olender of Amsterdam, N. Y. Sixteen guests, including a number of Beatrys’ college friends from Ann Arbor, attended the shower at which Constance Vanderlind was co- Variety in Belts BUY! SELL! TRADE! ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Summer wedding plans are slated for Linda Boomer and Charles L.Hunt. The bride elect is the daughter of the Charles R. Boomers of Donley Road, Avon Township. Her fiance is the son of the Robert Hunts of Vinewood Street, Pontiac Township. A July wedding is planned by Anne Marie Brown and Earl Ray Heutt. The bride elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Brown of Warringham Street. Her fiance is the son of Noel Heutt of Osceola, Mo., and the late Mrs. Heutt. Keep Insects Out When washing your children’s hair, rinse with a half and half water and vinegar solution to get all the soap out. FLOOR SAMPLE FURNITURE SALE! ONE WEEK ONLY Monday, March 11 th, Thru Saturday, March 16th SAVE UP TO m 0 ALL SALE MERCHANDISE WELL BE TAGGED "'where quality furniture is priced right" 2133 ORCHARD LAKE RD. Sigma Beta Unit Plans Two Events Plans were reviewed for a fashion show at the monthly meeting of Psi chapter. Sigma Beta National sorority, recently at the Elks Temple. i The show, which is scheduled! March 16, will include a lun-| cheon. Fashions are being furnished by the Lisbeth Shop in Birmingham. The chapter is also sponsoi teen-age dance March Both events will be held at Elks Temple. Mrs. Homer McMahon was hostess for the meeting with Mrs. Jerry McKay cohostess. When washing sweaters, rub soiled spots with your soaped fingers. Do not rub one part of the sweater against another. Use mild suds and squeeze the suds through the garment. Never wring or twist a sweater. Rinse through several clear waters of the same temperature. Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Herron Jr. of Canal Road, Commerce Township announce November wedding plans for their daughter, Linda Joyce, and Seaman Ap-pren. David J. Swiatek, USN. The prospective bridegroom, who is stationed in Brunswick, Maine, is the son of Mrs. Keith White of Middledale Street, West' Bloomfield Township and Bruno Swiatek of Irwin Street. Mild Suds Core Overseas Vets May Carry Malaria ATLANTA, Ga. — During!“malaria cases can reasonably 1967, some 2,101 servicemen be expected to show up came down with malaria in the discharged servicemen after United States, according to a their return to civilian life. study prepared by the U.S. Public Health Service Communicable Disease Center. A warning was sounded by a publicati(Hi for disease is prevalent suffers from recurrent chills and fever, medical care should be obtained once. I He!ene Curtis Color Essence— the great co!-t>rs available only from profes-sional colorists. Ward's stylists and beauticians will demon-onstrate that you can have true natural-looking color with ColorEssence. 8.50. CoiPrEssence To Complement Your Color Helene Curtis PERMANENT 8“ Pontiac Mall since the disease is known to remain dormant and not show any symptoms for months or years after exposure.” who has just 6 the Watch for a profusion of belts 1 dresses, ^irts, coats, blouses for spring. The belt likes to wander, slim under the bosom, flat at the hip or wide at the waist and often is fastened with big, bold buckles. DREAMS COME TRUE FOR RRIDES-TO-RE New Bridtd Registry abitt to hav* tirair compUt* bums gii them as weddbig pnmiils. How «A«i it Int been told,. 'Tin not iMvtna wedding' photos toLsn, M's beyond us right now." Yet, the very thing the young bride faisafces in the beginning is the one thing that remains foteyer, bringing mr tries of that wonderful i each time photographs acoi Now through "Wedding Photography Registry" a prospective bride con call C. R. HasUII Studios on University Drive in Pontiac and engage a photographer to cover the wedding day fostivities. At tho same time, she can select the style of woddlng photography she prsfers — Natural colon tiie album; wall hung paintings; frames, etc. Wedding C trait for the I even rice ( aged for the ____________ the happjr couplo when leaving. Mr. Hasicill has ofse Ovail-' able at special discount prieot, invitations and napkins and often quips, "We sup^y everything but the Bridegraomi" .< Why net call C. R. HatVill Studio now at 334-0553 and Mseive your wedding dale, or! stop in at 1 UnivstsHy Drive,^ spring , Violi- any now and 1 yoo' ut Spn"9 1 let P colorful < i ligMotwotoW « < with o'^'^ 1 Oryclooo* ' / ing P"*® * - rotomod ' rtionf* ® -wtooswro ■ ^ froth o* | Quality Cleariing Since 1929 THE PONTIAC PRESS. IMOXpAY, :\IARCII 11. 1968 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them in wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Produce Apples, Jonethan, bu...............S3.35 I, Cider. 4 Apples, McIntosh, bu. . NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market advanced early today as gold-mining shares backed away from recent gains. Trading was active. Gains outnumbered losses by about 2 to 1. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 3.01 to 838.25. 5JQ As gold mine shares fell, 3.75 some were delayed in opening $2.75!due to pile-ups in orders. Ben-2 00'guet dropped a fraction, Dome tw.';liSiMines about 4 points, ^'n^o\\‘'d%,‘’T^V bso Copper stocks strengthened. Parsley, Root, dz. bch...........M Anaconda gamed about 1, Ken- poiatMs', 5o^b.“'bao . . . . . . . . . . . ^ 1^50 nccott and Phelps Dodge frac- Apples, McIntosh, C. A., bu........4.75 Apples, Northern Spy, bu........... 4.25 Apples, Northern Spy, C. A., buy ... 5.25 Apples, Red Delicious, bu......... 5.50 Apples, Golden Delicious, bu. Apples, Steele Red, bu. VEGETABLES Beets, topped, bu.......... Cabbage, Red, bu............. Cabbage, Standard Variety, bu. Stock Market Scores Advance IBM picked up about 4 points, Central Data and Xerox a couple each. Occidental Petroleum, Schenley, Sperry Rand, Boeing, General Dynamics, Zenith, U. S. Smelting and United Air Lines about a point each. Rhubarb, hothouse, 5-lb Squash, Hubbard, bu.............. 2.25 Turnips, topped ..................... 2.50 Poultry and Eggs DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP)-(USDA)- Egg prices paid per dozen by tirst receivers (Includ- A lumbo, 33-38! extra large, 31- 34; large, 29-32; medium, 25-27W; small. DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (API—(USDA)- Price • ■' B poultry tions. The gold mining stocks backtracked on weekend news that the international gold pool had Big Three auto stocks, mailorder-retails and farm implements moved higher. Westinghouse Air Brake opened on a block of 75,000 shares, up at 41V4. American Telephone lost Vd at 50‘/k on 8,000 shares. Chrysler rose • to 54% on 5,600 shares. On Friday the Associated Accord Hinted in Copper Talks Two Firms May Have Yielded on Key Issue WASHINGTON (AF) - Two of the four companies involved in the eight-month copper strike reportedly have reached an understanding with 26 unions that may resolve a major roadblock to settlement. agreed to support the price of Press Average of 60 Stocks fell! gold at $35 an ounce. j .5 to 302.9. Progress toward settlement On the American 5tock Ex-of the 241-day copper strike [change, prices were irregularly accompanied strength in the higher, with gold-mining shares copper stocks. Iweak. mines, smelters and refineries The New York Stock Exchange but not lead, zinc and fabrication operations. NEW YORK' (A^P) - New York Stock Exchange selected morning prices: ’2S-^2; 35-3«. CHICAGO BUTTER, EGGS CHICAGO (AP) — Chicago Mercantile Exchar -----------------------...... Abbott Lab 1 Abex Cp 1.50 ACF Ind 2.20 AdMIllls .40a 92 change—Butter steady: wholesale buy-prlces unchanged;. 93 cars AA 64; A 64; 92 A 64'/4; 89 C^61'/4; cars B 89; C 6 _„s steady wholesale buying prices unchanged to Vi higher; 75 cent or better - le A Whites 29; mixed 28Vj_;_ mediums 25; standards 25'/i; checks 17V4. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)-Live poultry Rock fryers 21-23. 9 18 18 18 17 31H 31W 3l'/i - W I 23SS 23'/2 23Vj -|- 'A 12 12H 12Vj 12'/i - H Gt West FinI 37 17Vt lOVt 1 63% 63% 63% + % GtWnUn 1.80 x8 81 Alleg Pw L20 6 22% 22% 22% .. Allis Chal I 226 35% 34% 35 -I- % Alcoa 1.80 14 70 49% 69'/2 .. Livestock AmBdcst 1.60 Am Can 2.20 ■nCyan 1.25 ....jEIPw 1.52 AmEnka 1.30 A Home 1.20 *— Hosp .60 9 52% 52% 5 3 76V2 76V2 76V2 - I lAmInvst 1.10 11 18% 18Vi 18% — % DETROIT LIVESTOCK DETROIT (AP) - (USDA) - Cattl Ar 100, slaughter steers and COWS steady. Utility (AmMFdy .90 21 nV4 16H 1 ;f 1.90 21 45H 45H - V 45 IIVIi 11% 't absent I AmNatGas 2 5 36^ Z6V4 36H + Mi x22 74\» 733.4 Gillette 1.20 15 47 46^k 464S — Glen Aid .70 162 13V4 13^/4 13^/4 4 Global Marin 17 34'/^ 34 16 34 333/4 34 6 23V4 23’/i .. 2 32^/1 32=VS 32H .. 5 29V4 29VH 29'/% — a 1,1 20Vj 20‘/4 20'/% 4* 1% 9 33Va 33«/4 33V4 - Gulf Oil 3.60 7 71H 71H 71% 4- V% ) x163 40^ 40^A 40'/^ I 64V4 64V4 + Va • M Y.20 so 71 6 52V» 52Vi 52V% — 'A Here Inc .25# 19 36^/% 36V% 369% 4- 6 64'A 64 64Vk + Vi 7 12V% 119% 12V% 4- V% 13 439% 439% 4396 4- 9% X4 28Va 289% 28V% 4- 55 78 77 77 -4 30 94 939% 939% + _____ ________ 82 40 3996 40 4- House Fin 1 12 33 329% 329% + HoustonLP 1 2 42Va 42’/i 42V Safeway I.10 SUosLd 2.80 StLSanF 2.20 StRegP 1.40b Sanders .30 Schenley 1.8O SCM Cp .60b '—If Paptr I ___CstL 2.20 SaarIGD 1.30 18.50-20.00. ,......... ....... 25; not enough for market test 1 Am Seat . Hogs 25; not enough to test prices. Am Smelt 3 CHICAGO LIVESTOCK I all!-rir'b xn CHICAGO (AP)-(USDA)- Hogs 5,50(t I T&T 2,« butchers steady; 1 2 19^240 lb butchers, 19.75-20.50; 1-3 420-250 lbs 19.25-20.00; sows me .40 -*— • - strong; 1-3 350-600 I 4 37'/2 37Va 37Vj + SIngerCo 2., Smith K 1.8C I- % HunlFds '.50b 10 46SS 46 21 30'/j 30% 30V. 120 50% 50% 50% - ' 8 31% 31% 31% — \ —edy to 17.5018.00. Catlla-40«; not enough on offer Ampex Corn 29 27% 27% 27% -I- % provide an. adequate pr e test; p ice 975 lb slaughter steers 27.50; two ArchDan 1.60 t 51% 51% 51% -|- % Sheep 300; around 200 head cho|ce and prime 105-113 lb wooled slaughter lambs 27.00. AshIdOII 1.20 22 36% 36% 36%-)-% American Stock Exch. Atlas Ch .80 Aerolet .50a > oil 36 4% 4% 4% -F 1 AssdOil AtlasCorp wt 39 3 2% 2% ..... BrazilLtPw 1 97 12% 12% 12% + % Brit Pet .lOe 4 8% 8% 8% -I- Vs campbl Chib 545 11% 11 11% + % Can So Pet 93 2 9-16 2 7-16 2 9-16-H-16 Beth StI 1.60 Boeing 1.20 BolseCasc .25 Borden 1.20 BorgWar 1.25 BrisIMyer la 14% 14% — 5% 5SS 5% . Fed Resrees 76 5% 5% 5Vt .. Cal Fine 14% 14% + % 18 7% 7% 7% .. 60 29% 29 29% + 1 13 6% 6 6 -I- % 12 17% 17% 17% — % 6 6Vl 6% 6% — V NewPark Mn Pancoastal RIC Grbup Ryan C Pet Scurry Rain SignalOilA la Synfex Cp .40 Technicol .40 WnNuclr ““ 26 2Va 2% 2% .. 14 11% IIV. ll'/j — V 17 ' 23 22V. 22 Vj — Vi wnnucir .xu 7^ 27% 27% 27Vs H- Va Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1968 Stocks of Local Interest Figures after decimal points are eighths sentative Inter-dealer prices of approximately 11 a. m. Inter-dealer markets change throughout the day. Prices do not include retail markup, markdown or commission. . Amphenol .70 x63 33 32Va 33 41Vxi 71 43Vt 439ii 433/4 4- Anken Chem 15 IIV4 11 IIV4 4 132 589b S7'/2 58 3 72Vb I 72'/i 72Va 4- 10 269b 269b 269b .. Atlas Corp Avco Cp 1.20 Avne! Inc .50 35 5V4 5»/b 5'/b .. 31 43'A 43 43 22 35 3496 34’/4 4- '/b 15 121 I2OV4 I2OV4 4- 96 15 6 7 6696 6 67 39V4 39 39V» - ' Xl5 3V/e 319b 3U/# 4- ; 236 119b 11»/4 11»/b- 20 29% 299b 29% 4* 29 75 7496 743/4 + % 3 46 453A 4596 . 33 68V4 673/4 68V4 .. 29 139b 13V4 13V4 — »/■ 9 22 213/4 22 I 26'/4 26V4 26’/4 4 3 41 ; 40^/a 41 42 173 1709b 173 4-4Va 18 '5V. 53^ 5Vi + ’/b Canteen .80 x6 22Va 22Va 22Va .. CampRL .45a Camp Soup 1 Canteen ,80 CaroPLt 1.3» Carrier Cp 1 CarterW .40a Case Jl CaterTr 1.20 CelaneseCp 2 59 39 389b 389b-29b 5 289b 289b 289b — '/b 379b 38 4- 9b 2 14'/4 14'/4 14'/4 5 149b 149b 1 32 39'/4 39 39 21 56 53% 55'/4 4'1V4 16 46Va 453/4. 4 I 42V4 41¥4 41% 4* '/b cert-teed .80 13 20V4 20 2OV4 Ce8$naA,1.40 I 61V* 619b 61 Va + ' I 3296 323/4 32% .. ChrisCraft la 2 30^/a 303/4 30% + 157 55 549b 55 14 32Vi 32'/a 32«/b - Va CocaCola 2.10 ColQPal 1.10 CollInRad .80 ColoIntG 1.60 31 46 45% 46 19 130Va 130 130 14- Va 2 41V4 41V4 4IV4 ....... 13 6996 689b 69Va +1Va 3 43 43 43 ColuGas 1.52 2 459b 459b 459b - ComSolv 1.20 28 32V8 323/4 32Va .. ComwEd 2.20 Comsat Con Edis Con Elec Ind 1 7 34V4 33Va 339b 4- »/4 7 45V4 45'/b 45Vb — Va 6 43V4 43>/4 43V4 4- % 51 33 32% 329b — Vi 18 36Va 36 36 Con Food 1.50 x9 50'/4 499b 50 4- % ConNatG 1.70 ConsPwr 1.90 Contalnr 1. . ContAIrL .50 Cont Can 2 Cont Ins 3.2Q Cont Mot .iO Cont Oil 2.80 2 169b 16Va 16Va .. 56 66Va 66V4 66V4 + '/b AMT Corp.................. Associated Truck ......... Braun Engineering ........ Citizens Utilities Class A Detrex Chemical .......... Diamond Crystal .......... Kelly Services ........... Control Data 148 1099b 108 108% +1Va. n Pd 1.70 17 36Va 36 Va 36Va - 9b 13.6 l4.4,CoxBdcas .50 ’ 23.31 Crow Coll 2f ..15.2 16.2,Crown Cork . . .15.2 15.6 CrowijZe 2.20 37.0 38.0'Cruc StI 1.20 30.4 31.2 Cudahy Co 7.0 7.3 Curr- 57»/2 58 41Va 13 42»/4 42»/b 42Va 4- 9b x3 29 ,29+1 15 23 22Va 23 4 % I 14.0[Curtiss Wr 1 12 99b 99b Wyandotte Chemic,i MUTUAL FUNDS Chemical Fund ....... Commonwealth Stock . Dreyfus ......... ■ ■ • Keystone Income K Keystone Growth K-2 ■ Del Mnte 1.10 . 23% 23Vs 23Vi —D— 4 299b 29' Mead Cc ' ad Cp ..._lv Sh Merck 1.50a MGM 1.20b MidSoUtll .82 MInnMM 1.45 5 42 25 34% 34'% 34% + '/. 5 12'% 12'/. 12'% ... 33 18% 18'% 18% — '% 9 35% 35'/. 35'% + % 3 35'/. 35'% 35'% — Vb 141 49'/. 48 48% +1'% 2 35% 35% 35% + Vi 12 76'% 76'% 76'% + V 18 41'% 41% 41'% +1 15 21'/4 2T/4 21'/. 4 It Tex 9 20% 20% 20% + t 87 27'% 26% 27% +1'% MontDUt 1.60 , itPvy 1.55 15 27'% S 28 25'/4 25'% 25'/. 4 41 105 105 105 43'% 1 22'/i 22% 22'% 4 '% —N— 14 25 25 25 4 '% 9 34% 34% 34% 41 /. 103 103'/4 41'% 36 35'% 34'% 35 — % Nat Fuel 1,68 1 37% 37% 37% 4 % NatLead .75e x28 61% Nat Steel 2.50 ’ Nevada Pw 1 . 28'% 28'% 28'% — Vi 48 24'/. 24 24'/. 4 '% 17 48% 48'/. 48% 4 '% ... 43>% 43% 43% 4 '% 40'% 40% 40'% . . 2 33% 33% 33% + '% NiaqMP 1.10 Noi^lkWst 6 NoAmRock 2 NoNGas 2.60 NoStaPw 1.60 Northrop 1 ■kin .80 ----Jn 2,10a Norton 1.50 Norwich .75 1 26'/. 24 19'% 1 ^ + 13 90'/x B»'% l»lb 22 341% 34'/. 34'/. 3 53 52% 52% — % IS 29% 29'% 29% + '% 4 34'% 34 34 + % X9 69% 68'% 68'% . . 4 56>% 56<% 56% + <% 4 359/x 35% 35% 4 '% 9 43'/x 43'/. 43'/x + '/. Occident .4 ElecISp 1.011 EIPasoNG I 13 18% l8'/x 18%*4 'x OwenslU 1.35 6/ 8 led?Str^f.70 Fed Mog ' x7 29'% 29% 29'% 4 '% 15 24V% 24'% 24'% . 8 15 14% 14% .... __F— ' 40 57<% 56'% 57'% 43% 26 16% 16'/. 16% 4% 11 35% 35'% 35%-% 22 55'/% 45% 45% 4 % PanASul 1.50 52 30% I 72 72 72 P 1.20 Filtrol 1.40 FIrestne 1.40 Treasury Position FstChrt 1.24f Ftintkqte 1 Fla Pow 1.44 .FlaPwLt 1,76 I FMC Cp .75 jFoodFaIr .90 FordMot 2.40 iForMcK .25e FreepSul ' 7 ai9b 319b 3V>b + % 9 3196 3196 3196 — 96 1 299b 299b 299b + % 14 4996 499b 4996 + 9b 11 2596 259b 2596 + 9b I 2296 '2296 2296 .. 3 65V4 65V4 «5V4 .. WASHINGTON (APl-The cash position ‘X of the Treasury compared with corre-sponding^d^ I ttear ^ 1»‘7 Gam Sko 1,30 Bal®™-, t 4,844,194,861.86 GenDjnam''? Deposits Fiscal Year July 1- Gen Elec 2.60 101,056,9*5,966.74 >8,277,527,241.44 Gen Fds 2.40 Withdrawals Fiscal Year— I Gen Mills .80 124,117,409,005.84 111,629,947,737.88 GenMot .856 X—Total Debt— IGenPrec .80 S51,n5,ie2JW7.43 330,858,825,250.25] GPubSv ,56a Gold Assets—_________ __ 28 2B'% 28'/. 28% 15 48'/x 4fP/i 48'/. _P— 21 33'% 33% 33% - '% !i’.g 45 15'% 15'% 15% + 8 22% 22'/. 22% + '/. 10 23 22% 22% - Vt Pan Am Panh EP 1.60 ParkaOavIs 1 Penney 1.60a PennCen 2.40 t PaPwLt 1.56 Pennzoll 1.40 PepsiCo .90 Perfect Film PfIzerC 1.20a * 32 31% 31'% + % 46 23% 23'% 23% + % 2 42'% 42 42'% + % 28 18% 18% 18%-1 5 65% 65 65 —1 39 54% 54% 54% + % 9 28% 28% 28% — '% 7 106, 104V4 106 +1'% 21 39