U' WMtMr SurMn ForKMI - ■ ■ ■ Mim «hm| ' Overcast, warmer . ' PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY,. AUGUST 25, 1867 SAIGON (XHSoutb Vietnam's chief of state and le^ing presidential candidate, Lt. Gen. Nguyen Van Thieu, said today a plan has been drawn for a major military purge of corrupt and inefficient officer's, including some generals. it ★ One report indicated that 50 military officers including “some generals’’ , will be tried on charges of inefficiency and corruption. Another account from reliable sources said the shake-up was already under way, with five ranking generals marked for removal or transfer. One effect of the shake-up is reported to be Increasing influence for Northerners In top military positions. This already is S source of friction in the ruling junta. * ★ Thieu told newsmen the generals were He fired yet, any Shotgun Blast Head of U.S. Nazis Hits 4 Youths; Area Man Held Is Killed by Sniper NEARING COMPLETION—Pontiac’s busiest municipally owned parking lot at Saginaw and West Huron has been around the perimeter of the 100-space lot and shrubbery, completely asphalt paved as part of a $41,000 renovating Improvement costs come from the lot’s operation which is project. Still to come are lighting, trees in the darker squares about $2,400 net per month. A full-time attendant is on duty. Qualified that Maj. minister of security, Nguyen Van Vy, the c joint general staff, would be relieved of their military duties and sent abroad as ambassadors. These sources said Maj. Gen. Tran Ngec Tam, South Vietnam’s coordinator with the Free World Forces Command, and Maj. Gen. Hoi Hnu Nhoa, commander of the Urn Doe military school would leave the army. A fifth general was relieved of his. duties, the sources said, but his identify could not be learned. . “We don’t like to disturb tions,” he said. Most province chiefs are ranking tary officers. COULD NOT SAY Thifeu said he could not say how many officers would be Involved in the changes “because it would create some demoralization for others who believe they are.’’ ACCUSED GUNMAN - Detectives escort Candy Michael Hughes (center), 23, of 2123 Willow Beach, Keego Harbor, who was held without bond in Miami, Fla., on four counts 4 Wounded in Florida *e WlrapMM of assault with intent to murder. Hughes is a suspect in the sniper shooting that wounded four men. (Related picture, page A-2.) Keego Man Held MIAMI, Fla. if) — Police in Miami suburbs today were trying to unravel the riddle of a smiling sniper from Michigan while two men lay seriously wounded in hospitals. / , * * * A young man with a Crew cut and piercing eyes who had been described in a Michigan missing persons report as unstable and .depressed was held without bond on four charges of assault with intent to murder. The suspect, Candy Michael Hughes, 23, of 2123 Wiliam Beach, Keego Harbor, was arrested by detectives who kicked in his motel room door after a college student said he saw Hughes reloading his 38-caliber pistol beside! a car whose description had been widely broadcast. Coral Gables Police. Lt. Webster Preston said Hughes reportedly had an ar- All Items in the Kitchen Had to Go - and, They Did,.. “We sold every last item ip old-kitchen. It was a regular field day of activity, thanks to our Press Want Ad." Mrs. G. L. IVERYTHINQ IN OUR KITCHEN TO Si •Old. Stove, refrlBeretor, washer, drVOT. cabinets, counter. etc. Salo+rleed. PRESS WANT ADS take what you don't want into the . “marketplace” and return with buyers who do — with ready cash. Dial- ^ 332-8181 or 3344981 gument with his family in Michigan before coming to Florida earlier this week. ‘ ★ ★ * Police said the shootings began about 2:30 p.m. yesterday when K. D. Orr, 34, driving a school board truck, was cut by flying glass. A bullet had shattered his truck windshield. TRUCKER PARALYZED Ten minutes later Thomas York, 46, was paralyzed from the waist down when a bullet slammed into the cab of his truck and lodged in his spine.. “Something hit me in the left side,” York said, “knocked me over. I thought maybe a tire blew out. I didn’t know I was shot.” Levi Anderson, 48, in pain from bis wounds, could not talk. it ★ ★ The fourth victim was Calvin Joyner, 29, who was nicked once when a man in a car pulled beside film and blasted three shots into the auto. “He had kind of a smile on his face,” Joyner said. “He looked like he was getting a kick out of it.” An off-duty Miami Springs patrolman, Robert Miller, chased the small car with Michigan license plates. MQler said the man only fired at him when he tried to pull alongside and identified himself “Who are you planning on killing?” Monaghan said he asked Hughes. RECALLED BROADCASTS “He just gave me a weird look and didn’t say anything,” said Monaghan, who said he then recalled the radio broadcasts about the shooting which mentioned the car with Michigan tags. ★ ★ ★ Detectives surrounded the motel and arrested Hughes in his room dressed only in shorts. They said they found a 38-caliber pistol hidden in a bathroom wastebasket. Four youths were injured — none seriously — when someone fired a shotgun blast into their midst as they stood near a Pontiac Township intersection late last night. Oakland County sheriff’s deputies later arrested 65-year-old Floyd R. Brian of 2211 Pontiac, Pontiac Township. TO BE ARRAIGNED Charged with assault to do great bodily harm, Brian was to be arraigned this afternoon before Pontiac Township Justice R. Grant Graham. Brian was apprehended in one of the apartments, officers said. Shot about 11 p.m. while standing off the road at the corner of Pontiac Road and Opdyke were John Reigle, 21, of . 919 Spence, Pontiac Township; Charles Yockey, 17, of 715 Cameron; Jay Caldwell, 21, of 119 E. Beverly; and Floyd Schell, 19, of 9416 Whipple Shores, Independence Township. All were treated at Pontiac General Hospital and released. ★ * ★ ’ Deputy Gabriel Ki&h said he was cruising in file intersection while on routine patrol when he heard the shot and approached the youths to investigate. Kish called for an ambulance and for more deputies, who joined him in the search of a building at 2211 Pontiac which houses a business firm downstairs and two apartments on the second floor. i Brian was apprehended in one of the 7 apartments, officers said. * ★ ★ Six guns — all either rifles or shotguns — were found in his apartment, along with a spent 12-gauge shotgun shell, according to investigators. ‘ONLY ONE SHOT’ “There was only one shot fired as far as we know,” said Capt. Leo Hazen, chief of sheriff’s detectives. Hazen disclosed that the sheriff’s department has received quite a few complaints from residents in the neighborhood about youths being too noisy. However, a police officer near the scene said this situation didn’t prevail last night: ARLINGTON, Va. (AP)-George Lincoln Rockwell, head of the American Nazi party, was shot and killed today by a sniper, Arlington police said. Police said Rockwell was in a parking lot across the street from the Nazi party headquarters in this Washington suburb when he was shot. They said the sniper, who fired from the roof of a building, escaped., Warmer Today; Rain Tomorrow Partly cloudy and warmer is the forecast for this afternoon and tonight. The highs are expected to reach 82 to 88. Lows will range between 58 and 66. The cloudy skies will continue into tomorrow with showers predicted. A clearing trend is .expected Sunday bringing somewhat cooler temperatures. The low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 66. The temperature rose to 76 at 2 p.m. Police said they were looking for a man dressed in a trench coat. Police said the victim was struck in the chest in the 6000 block of Wilson Blvd. KILLED INSTANTLY Arlington police officer John E. Mitchell said policemen who rushed to the scene reported the victim was Rockwell, 47, well-known to most of Arlington’s police force. Rockwell apparently was killed, instantly by the sniper’s ballet. Arlington police were combing the mixed commercial and residential area for the unknown killer. ★ ★ ★ An ambulance called to the scene remained for 30 minutes while the victim’s body lay on the ground following the noon shooting. FREQUENTLY AT DEMONSTRATIONS Rockwell frequently appeared around the country leading counter-demonstrations during civil rights marches. Rockwell also was a frequent speaker before college audiences. His appearances usually brought out pickets and hecklers and often produced controversy over whether he should be allowed to appear. LJAW Strike Vote Lopsided DETROIT <*)—The United Auto Workers are rolling up overwhelming majorities to authorize a strike against General Motors, Ford or Chrysler in support of new contract demands. Ballots received from Chrysler UAW members had 36,492 in favor of authorization and 1,532 against. At Ford the margin is 32,976 to 966. The vote at Pontiac Motor Local 652 followed the trend with 89 per cent voting in favor of strike. Some 8,000 workers voted yesterday and this morning and tabulations were ' completed at 11 a.m., according to Local President Wayne Anable. The UAW has disclosed no figures on General Motors voting, but usually reliable sources report file margin there also is 90-plus per cent in favor of authorizing a strike, if negotiators deem one necessary. (Continued on Page A-2, GoL 2) Industrial Giant Henry J. Kaiser Is Dead Miller gat the license number, and Coral Gabies police began back-checking. * ■ ★ * it' Five hours later, police said, Eric Monaghan, 23, of : Wasfabigtan, D. C., saw Hughes loading a pistol. HONOLULU (AP)—Henry J. Kaiser-founder of a billion-dollar industrial empire spread over 40 countries — died in ids sleep yesterday. He Was 85. ★ ■ ★ Kaiser was at his oceanfront estate a about 10 miles from Honolulu when he * was stricken by a,circulatory and heart condition. At his side were his wife, Alyce, whom he married after the death of his first wife in 1911; his son, Edgar; and Edgar’s wife. Kaiser, the founder of a $2.7-billion complex, was involved in a wide variety of interests: giant dams such as Shasta; famed Liberty ships of World War II; the familiar Jeep; the Kaiser health centers; cement; aluminum; steel; chemical*; aircraft’ and missile components and electronic equipment; radio and television stations; hotels; and the latest, a new community of j Hawaii-Kai in Honolulu with a projected population of 60,000. About the only venture in which Kaiser didn’t achieve file success he sought was in making cars. Shasta Dam marked the beginning of his industrial activity. Kaiser’s gijoup tost the $36-million construction contract, Although he had no plant, he submitted a bid oa cement at 29 cents a barrel under that of a cement combine. He won the $7.7-miUion contract, built a cement plant at Permanente, Calif., and launched Kaiser Cement and Gypsum Corp. , ># Shipbuilding provided the big test for Kaiser, who mastered the “impossible” and red tape in World War II. ' * ‘ / : ■ ^ In Today's Press Addison Twp. Sale of mansion stirs memories. — PAGE A-4. Oakland Univarsity Student engineers plan mass transit system. —PAGE, B-ll. Svetlana Stalin’s daughter is embroiled in bizarre literary battle'.-— PAGE C-9. Area News .'.....A4 i Astrology .......... B-ll' Bridge .............. B-ll Crossword Puzzle ..... D-ll Comics ................B-ll Editorials ............ A-C Farm and Garden ... . D-l—D-3 Markets ................C-7 Obituaries . ,....... .. D4 Sports ............ C-L-C4 Theaters ............. 08—C-9 TV-Radio Programs .....D-ll Wilson, Earl ........... M Women’s Pages .. THE PONTIAC PRESg, jFRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 25 Indicted p Theft icl Travelers Checks Birmingham Area News NEW YORK (AP) - A federal grand jury has indicted 25 persona-including two men linked to the case by federal, authorities. John Panardlo Jr., 32, was found shot to death in a ditch near Monticello, N.Y., tigation is continuing. Underworld informers reportedly helped the FBI In the case. linked to the Cosa Nostra and two women—in connection with die theft of $<07,000 worth of i on July il, Was named in the ! indictment as a coconspirator ’ but not as a defendant. FEDERAL AGENTS This indicated he may have ! been cooperating with authorities in cracking the case. Federal agents said he handled $50,-000 worth of the stolen travelers checks. The office of U.S. Atty. Robert M. Morgenthau said the theft plot was engineered by members of two Cosa Nostra “families» . ' Edward Meyer, assistant U.S. attorney, said two of die defendants had close syndicate ties. He described Vincent Potenza, 40, of Manhattan as a button man—lieutenant—for the Thomas “Three Finger Brown" Luch-ese group, and Maurice Savino, 34, of Brooklyn as a nephew of Carlo Gambino, another Cosa blank American Express traveler* checks at Kennedy Airport a year ago. A sealed indictment, opened Thursday, accused the 25 of fraudulently passing stolen travelers checks. Five of the defendants were arrested by FBI agents, arraigned in U.S. District Court end held in bail ranging from $1,000 to $5,000. Many of those accused had been arrested previously. Hie murder of a Manhattan man in upstate New York was i Nostra head. TWO WOMEN The women indicted in the case were Carol Rabinow of Brooklyn and Mary Susan Flynn State School Needs Put at$200 LANSING (AP) r-* The Midi-igan Association of School Boards has hung a $200-million price tag on the cost of added money needed by the state’ school districts, mainly to meet teacher salary demands. The figure was mentioned Thursday as the association again called on Gov. George Romney to open the October special legislative session to consideration of more money "for the districts.. Walter Averill Jr. of Saginaw, association president, said Rom- St. Louis Couple Has Quad Boys ST. LOUS, Mo. (AP)—A 34-year-old mother of six children gave birth early today to quad-ruplet boys in DePaul Hospital. Dr. Nicholas A. Correnti, the attendjng physician, said the rnothey, Mrs. Richard Fahren-krog of St. Louis County, arid her sons were in good condition. The first child was delivered, Correnti said, at 1:03 a.m., and weighed 5 pounds, 2 ounces. The second arrived at 1:42 a.m. weighing 4 pounds, 7 ounces; the' third at 1:45 weighed 4 pounds, 3 ounces, and the fourth ney has admitted there is educational crisis. 'It is his responsibility make this' call," Averill said. ROMNEY RAPPED “A man who is in public life who admits there is a crisis and refuses to do anything about insincere or has some other reasons, perhaps political," Averill said., Romney has consistently refused to open the special session to-the school issue, he thought the Legislative was not prepared to give any more money to the schools at this time. More than 200 school districts still have not signed their teachers to contracts although school opening is less than two weeks away. Averill noted that Romney had turned the school matter over Lt. Gov. William Milliken. CRUCIAL ISSUE “I think the issue is important enough that he (Romney) would want to stay right here," Averill. f Averill, a former Democratic state chairman, charged Romney with “talking out, of both sides of his mouth," on the were cashed by underworld syndicate passers, $28,000 worth were recovered by the FBI and the rest are missing. School District Expects Record Staff of 1,050 BIRMINGHAM - The profes- held administrative positions in sional staff of the Birmingham School District will be at its largest this fall with about 1, 050 personnel. Charles Harmon, the gover-w’s press secretary, commented the governor has made his position clear in the question of opening the session to at 1:47 weighed 5 pounds, 1 school aid “and I see no reason to elaborate on his position." Local unions with 375,000 members at GM, 152,000 at Ford and 95,0t)0 at Chrysler are under orders to complete balloting today and to get results to UAW headquarters tonight. 'OVERWHELMING SUPPORT’ Ken Bannon, UAW Ford department director, described early returns from Ford locals ither demonstration of the membership’s overwhelming support of the collective bargaining program" of the union. A heavy vote for authorization would not mean necessarily there will be a strike. The Ford Motor Co. served notice today on file United Auto Workers Union it wants to place limit on the amount a cost of living formula can add towages over the life of any new contract. The Weather ■ Foil U.S. Weather Bureau Report i PONTIAC AND VICINITY - Partly cloudy and warmer this afternoon and tonight, highs 82 to 88, lows 58 to $8, slightly wanner in the west. Saturday partly clondy with possible showers in the east and mostly cloudy with showers or thunderstorms developing in the west. Partly cloudy in the west and clearing in the east Sunday with cooler tempera-tares. Southerly winds today at 8 to If miles. i 18 to 20 knots today and tonight. Partly cloudy. LAKE HURON-Southeast to south winds 10 to 20 knots this morning becoming south to soathwest 15 to 22 knots this afternoon and tonight. Partly cloudy. LAKE MICHIGAN—Small craft warnings up from Sheboygan pentwater northward. North half—south to southwest winds 17 to 27 knots today and tonight. Partly clondy. Sooth half—southeasterly winds 18 to 20 knots today becoming south to soathwest 12 to 22 knots tonight. Fair. Sun Mis Friday at 1:17 p.m. Sun rltss Saturday at t:St a.m. . Stood sets Saturday at 1:11 p.m. Moon rlsas Friday at 10:4S p.m. p's Tamparatara Chart 71 afTSoiath t. ■ 73 54 Fort Worth fl 70 M St Kansas City 17 S3 Checks were cashed in banks ltd hotels in New York, Chicago, St. Louis, Denver, Dallas, New Orleans, Miami, Las Vegas, Nev., San Juan, Puerto Rico and the Virgin Islands. Meyer said the two women were caught by inspection of I list of the numbers of the stolen checks whifch was circulated to hanks, hotels, gambling casinos and other places by American Express. UAW Voting Lopsidedly to Allow a Strike BULLET HOLES IN EVIDENCE—Calvin Joyner, 29, points out where a bullet went through his jacket, wounding him superficially, as he kneels beside a bullet-riddled car in Miarpi, Fla. Held without bond on four charges of assault with intent to murder is AP Wlrapnot* Candy Michael Hughes, 23, of Keego Harbor. Two men were seriously wounded in the shooting .spree. Floridai police reported that the Michigan suspect had had an argument with his. family before coming to Miami earlier this week. Housing the influx of teaches is proving a problem. District officials urge the community to notify file schools on any available accommodations. Both small apartments and homes are desired. NEW DIRECTORS Two new directors of education have been named. County Board Votes to Join Metro Government Council ByBOBWISLER Oakland County’s Board < Supersivors yesterday g a v unanimous approval to a resolution calling for the county- to be a pert of the Southeast Michigan Council of Governments (COG). About 70 of the 87 supervisors were present for the voice vote. The resolution authorizes county officers to sign an “intergovernmental .agreement" which makes Oakland County part of COG. Oakland ’thus becomes th« first of six eligible county organizations to join the council, which has no taxing or legislative powers. This is one contract clause with which UAW President Walter P. Reuther has said there can be “absolutely no tampering.” CALLED TO DETROIT Local leaders have been called to Detroit, New York, Chicago, Cleveland, Los Angeles, Baltimore and Buffalo. The international pays strike benefits of $20 a week to single workers, $25 to married workers without children and $30 to those with children. The UAW strike fund now totals aproximately $67 million. Discussions continue today' at main bargaining tables at General Motors and Ford. Except for subcommittee sessions, however, negotiators at Chrysler have recessed for the weekend. LITTLE PROGRESS Both sides agree there has been little progress in almost seven weeks of negotiations. Each side claims the other is dragging its feet. Auto Talks Look Bl ST LOUIS, Mo. UB-Ford Motor Co. Vice President Lee A. Ia-cocca said Wednesday, “There has been nothing in current auto labor talks which would cause to be encouraged." Iacocca told 159 newsmen at Lincoln Mercury Division’s national press preview -of its new cars that reports from the Ford negotiators at the Detroit bargaining table indicated the situation was difficult. Before taking the vote t h supervisors spent almost at hour discussing the -merits of contributing to the upkeep of the organization and of being in an organization that Wayne County of Detroit might dominate. RESOLUTION OF INTENT Oakland County has been participating in the formation of COG but has up to now been doing so under a “resolution of intent" signifying that it intends to join. Signing of the agreement fulfills the intention. Any organization belonging to COG can withdraw voluntarily on 90 days notice under the agreement. Some 150 governmental units have been participating in the formation. COG has a potential membership of 345 cities, vil-counties, townships and school districts in Oakland, Wayne, Macomb, Washtenaw, St. Clair and Monroe counties. ‘In ho situation does Wayne County have a majority of votes," he said. David Levinson of Birmingham, chairman of the county board’s ways and means committee, said it would costs the I county about $37,000 during 1968 belong to COG. CONTINUED SUPPORT He said $31,700 of this would be a continuation of support of the Detroit Metropolitan Area Regional Planning Commission and file Supervisors Inter-County Committee. 1 During this fiscal year the county contributed $20,700 to the regional planning commission and $11,000’to the SICC. Levinson said the supervisors will receive back some $10,006 this year which can be used toward COG-next year. Royal Oak Mayor L. Curtis Potior, another elected member of the COG executive committee said COG will have a technical staff which can be utilized by any community large or small. Roy Wahl, Pontiac Township supervisor, said he thought the more rural communities would “be swallowed up by the City of Detroit." Levinson said, “I think that’-e absolutely wrong" because tile method of chopsing representatives to COG. ■aid that “if rep- the basis of population, Detroit and Wayne County would have centr'd. Several members questioned the value of a “committee system." Much of the work pf the council is planned so that committees will handle the bulk of the work with a general assembly taking a vote on all issues. Mainland said that because the general assembly has approval of all matters and can override the executive committee it is too difficult tor any committee to get too powerful. Madison Heights Mayor Lee Walker, in backing the council,I Some 35 teaching positions remain unfilled as of this week. e posts will be filled for the most part by later hirings and by substitute teachers, according to officials. On the staff .are about 442 elementary and 445 secondary school teachers and <5 administrators. Missouri schools. TO SUCCEED CORLISS Dr. Ellis replaces Dr. William Corliss who resigned to her come superintendent of Lincoln Park Public Schools. Of the total 229 are new to the school system and 54 will be in their first year’s experience. At the post of director of secondary education will be Dr. Norman D. White of 18983 Kirkshire. He was formerly director of instructional services at a school district in Kankakee, Hi. . * Dr.-Gerald W. Ellis of 17832 Dunblaine will he director of elementary education. He has Architect Firm for Jail Picked Announcement Made by Supervisors' Unit The County Board of Supervisors Bui|ding and Ground Committee yesterday announced to the supervisors that it has selected an architectural firm for the planning of a new Oakland County Jail. The firm, Giffels & Rossetti, Inc., of Detroit, is known for institutional planning. The supervisors will make the final determination of the selection of the architect. Earlier this year, they approved a $40,000 expenditure to determine what requirements will be needed in a new jail facility and to develop a schematic plan, expected to be completed by the architect Selection of the architectural firm capped a long weeding- Exam Put Off for Indicted Horse Trainer The preliminary examination of a 59-year-old Southfield man, indicted last week by Oakland County Grand Juror James Thorbum, has bee said when the organization was to am. Aug. so. first formed he had marked res- ervations but since the method representation has bee formed “my fears have bee allayed." Road Panel Asks County for $2.1-Million Allocation Hie board of Oakland County Road Commissioners, as promised, yesterday asked the County Board of Supervisors to provide $2.1 million for road construction in 1968. Hie request — backed by the roads committee of the supervisors board — was turned over to the ways and means committee forrftommendations. Indications have been that the supervisors will be reluctant to allocate the $2.1 million for roads, thus making it necessary to make cats elsewhere in the county budget. If, as has been predicted, the issue is, taken to the voters the road commission estimate* that tax levy of 80 cento for each $1,000 of assessed valuation would provide the $2.1 million. Disappointing state legislation, which turns over to the commission money in gas and weight tax r e t u r n s for 1968, prompted the request, Commission Chairman Frazer Staman said. i NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are forecast tonight for the eastern Giitf Coast and parts of the mid-Atlantic Coast I states, with rain expected in New England. It will be cooler in tiie northern and central Plains and upper Mississippi Valley through New England; Hie FoM vice president-car and track group said, “The only thing certain to the labor picture is that our contracts with the United Auto Workers Union run out Sept. 6. Beyond that, nobody knows what the; outcome will be." Both of these organizations will be almagamated into th council of governments. ‘BIG GAIN’ One big gain, as pointed out jr Levinson and William L. Mainland, Milford Township supervisor and a member of the 33-member COG executive committee, is that such a regional organization will be needed to the future to secure federal money. They said the federal government will not approve money for projects which go beyond local lines and affect larger regions, inch as hewer lines, pollution projects, etc., without first clearing it through a regional agency such as COG. PACKAGE REJECTED A tax package considered by |e Legislature, but .turned, down, would have provided about $1.2 million more, he said. Staman, to requesting the county supervisors, to allocate the money, said a 198$ state statute obliges the board of supervisors “to raise a sufficient tax to keep apy county to reasonable repair, and in condition reasonably safe and fit for public travel." He said that during 1966, 30 county organizations tod appropriated money and five counties tod assessed millage for that purpose. lion per year and only $2.2 million per year.can be spent on construction,” the commissioners said. “We are rapidly ground," they added. In making the request, road commissioners presented outline showing how road conr struction in 1968 wotild be financed if the $2.1 million were This calls for another $1.3 million to gas and weight taxes, $1 million received from-participating cities, and $675,000 from federal aid secondary funds, to be spent on 1968 construction. This constriction involves only primary roads, the commissioners said. “Hie local road problem is immense and requires some of our available funds." 1 Drug Lawsuits Will Await NY Verdict DALLAS (AP) - A federal judge Thursday ordered no action taken on a $12 million antitrust suit against the Upjohn Co. of Kalamazoo and four other drug firms until a similar suit against three of the companies is decided. Texas Atty. Gen. Crawford Martin had filed suit Aug. 4, alleging that the five firms conspired to fix prices on drugs sold to state, comity and, municipal hospitals. Hie hearing to* Andrew J. Mavros of 114 First originally was scheduled yesterday to the court of Bloomfield Hills Justice Jack Baldwin. Mavros, a hone trainer at Hazel Park Racetrack, ii charged with two offenses —j resisting an officer and obstructing justice. A 37-year-old Madison Heights man, Also indicted by the grand jury, stood mute at his arraignment before Baldwin earlier this week. No examination date was set for Ross Skinner, a schoolteacher charged with conspiracy to accept a bribe and conspiracy to solicit a bribe. He was released on $1,000 personal recognizance. OCTOBER EXAM The preliminary examination for Peter J. Bellanca of Detroit, general counsel fop the Hazel Park Racing Association, will be held sometime to October before Clawson Municipal Court Judge Bristol Hunter. The hearing originally was scheduled Wednesday to Baldwin’s court, hut assigned to a different judge at Baldwin’ quest. Indicted by the grand jury ist week, Bellanca is charged with perjury. process. The comity government originally sent out invitations to 21 architects. Ten firms were interviewed by the board of auditors and, of these, four by the buildings and grounds committee. ; Oakland’s present jafliis 46 years old and generally considered obsolete. It has a prisoner capacity of 250 and this has been termed inadequate by Sheriff Frank Dons. In,, other business the board of supervisors: • Authorized the appointment of James E. Pemberton as deputy Oakland County drain commissioner, effective Sept 1. • Authorized transfer of federal grant agreements — for installation of in airport instrument landing system — from the City of Pontiac to the county, now owners of the Qakland-Pontiac Airport. Authorized signing an agreement with toe Michigan Aeronautic Commission, which must approve toe grant projects. • Authorized the county’s backing the Richton ($590,000) and Brooklyn ($155,000) relief drains to Pontiac with the comity’s faith and credit. This is a usual procedure for construction of drains throughout the county. • Gave final approval to a resolution calling for establishing toe normal height and level of Cass Lake. The project will be financed over a five-year period by special assessments. Travel to Expo DETROIT (AP) - A Wayne State University debating team will travel to Expo 67 to Montreal today for a debate with the University of Massachusetts, McNamara Backs Bombing Policies The road commissioners said a detailed stu^y of county road needs had recommended spending $200 million to the next 20 years to meet ail road needs. ‘Our entire inoome from the gas and weight taxes is $$.1 mil- Defendants are Chas. Pfizer A Co. Inc. of Delaware, Olto Mathieson Chemical Corp. of Virginia, American Cyanamid Co. -of Maine, Bristol-Myers Co. of Delaware, to addition to Upjohn. Chas. Pfizer, American Cyanamid, and Bristol-Myers afro are defendants to toe New York case. - Sec- WASHINGTON (AP) -retary of Defense Robert Namara declared today American bombing campaign short of attacks on North Vietnam^ cities would alone “force Ho Chi Mtah’s regime into sub- And, McNamara said, no one has proposed such a radical api-proach to endipg the War, In a detailed defense of toe administration’s bombing' policies, the Pentagon chief said: “There is little reason to believe that any level of conven-ai air or naval action, short sustained and systematic bombing of toe population center, will deprive the North Vietnamese of their willingness continue to support their government’s efforts to upset and take over the government of South Vietnam." th Waterford, | Number to | Call Is674-3111 j All offices to the Wa- i terford Township Hall can j now be reached by tele- j phone by dialing a single j number—674-3111, accenting to Clerk Arthur J. Salley. Hie only exception is I the fire station. I Hie common telephone fA number became, effective 8 yesterday after a new I telephone switchboard sys- § tem was installed to toe I Township Hall. The new system ic to 1 enable citizens i& make 8 quicker contact with the 1 various officials and de- I partments to the building. | Ar—8 TgE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 25 in 3 Months Under New Law Colorado Sees Abortion Rise DENVER (UPI) - Colorado, one* threatened with the .title of "abortion mecca of the world,” has recorded 25 therapeutic abortions during the first three months a new liberalized abortion law, state official revealed yesterday. * * ★ Although the figure does not appear high numerically, it is 214 times the number of abortions reported in all of 1966. Robbers Cool 3f DETROIT (AP)—Three gunmen herded 31 customers and employes into a meat cooler of a supermarket on- Detroit’s Northwest Side Wednesday and escaped with $2,500. The manager, Nash Kainaya, 32, was pistol-whipped when he said he did not know the combination to the safe. Opponents of file controversial measure said file increased number prints to the truth of their warnings. Fetal death records in th,e Colorado Health Department reveal that the 25 abortions were performed between April 25, the day Gov. John A. Love signed the bill into law, and July SI. ' ST'';*., ★ The bulk of the abortions, 15, were reported during July. And 16 of the 25 women whose pregnancies were terminated were from out-of-state. Some came from as far away as New York. AGE RANGE The 25 women involved ranged hi age from 12 to 41. All but one of the abortions took place in Denver hospitals. The reports showed that 15 of the abortions were performed for psychiatric reasons, two because of rubella (German measles), one because of sui- cide -risk and one because of medical risk. •On file other six reports, doctors simply listed “tberaf abortion” as fin reason. irapeutic Italian City Is Going MILAN, Italy (AP) — They plan to pave the town red in Milan, or at least part of it. Ait experts in the city public works office have decided after considerable study that red paving can bring out the beauty of ancient architecture far better than black asphalt. So for a starter, Avenue Vittorio, Emanuele and San Babila Square near Milan’s Gothic cathedral will get a macadam layer made of crushed red stone. Work begins in a few weeks. Grab a ‘BIRTHDAY BARGAIN’ In SIMMS Camera & Electronic Dept*. Here are typical Birthday Bargains at Simms — it's bur way of showing you our appreciation for 33 years of fine business in Pontiac. Also look for the many other unadvertised bargains today and Saturday. _. _____ CAMERA DEPARTMENT DISCOUNTS Color Film Processing "fZVST Stock up on mailers for 8mm movie' processing. Super 8 i, 20-exp. 35mpi slide film, 127 slides or In-, stamatic slides. Genuine Kfdak processing at this lower price. Limit 10 mailers per person. 36-EXP. COLOR SLIDE PROCESSING KODAK PRE-RAID MAILERS - now .. 139 Per Mailer Mailer 220 Fully Automatic Electric - Eye - Ne ‘Wind Electric-Drive ■8798 Mil,*9' k Movie Camera i As shown — a regular $49.50 seller by Kodak. Fully automatic electric eye for perfect color movies everytime ond electric-drive so you don't have to stop and wind the film while taking movielt Drop-in insfomafic loading, too. Use your credit cord to charge it or $1 holds in layaway. ■ • Sale POLAROID Cameras & Accessories Charge It1. ,i j All Major * §|| PO 1 credit car®* ' 1 Honored wm sua 39#® POLAROID Color Film AUTOMATIC COLOR PACK $49.50 value — the camera that sets itself for perfect color prints and you'll see the finished pictures in 60 seconds. $1 holds. No. 250 Deluxe POLAROID COLOR CAMERA $ 149.50 value — all metol body camera with electric-eye and finest range finder. Takes perfect color snaps ond see 'em in 60 seconds. $1 holds. 108 Color Pack 8-exposure, roll of 108 color pock film for the Polaroid color pack cameras. Limit 5 rolls. 114*8 POLAROID jCamera Case 398 Cose fits all fhe Polaroid Color Pqck Cameras — holds films, flashunits. With shoulder sfrap. Limit 1. No 1597. Project Regular 8mm and Hew Super 8 Movie Films THREADING ZOOM Movie Projectors Charge it! Major Credit Card? rinfcbrad $169.50 value-— genuine 'GOLD CREST zoom lens projector to show both the regular 8mm movies and the new super 8 movies. Automatic threading model has slo-motion feature, too. Full year warranty. Not as pictured. $1 holds or charge It with a major credit card. Electronics- TRANSISTOR Cent 8998 10-Transistor Pocket Radio $9.95 value — Alaron Rhapsody 1007 JM radio as shown for ait .area AM broad- /^M fill casts. Complete with case, battery and ear- phone. $1 holds. Limit 2 radios. * JHL 12-Transistor FM-AM Radio 1B»8 $29.98 value — Topps' T61.2 radio is, an extra hi-power unit to bring In FM ond AM broadcasts — fine sound,too. Only $1 holds. Limit 1, AC or Battery Operation Portable Phonograph " Alaron PH500 phonograph takes alt 45 and 33-rpm records. Take it any-plays on House Cur-or Batteries. Complete — ready to play. $1 holds. SIMMS™ CAMERA DEPT. -Main Ploor SIMMS Open Today ’til 9:30 p.m.-Sat. Hours: 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. SIMMS ....■ Final Windup of Our Biggest Sale Event of the Year Just today and Saturday l«ft to taka advantage of our 33rd Birthday tpaciale. You will find tha lowest poesibla prices on all these special*, and on the unadvertieed merchandise throughout tho store. Rights reserved to limit quantities. No Purchase required — Just ask for Free Prize Tickets in any department Here at SIMMS ■ Every time you dre in Simms ask for a free prize ticket. Just fill it out and drop it in tho box. You may bo tho lucky winner of a radio, dock, electric coffee maker, cigarette lighter, ice bucket, blanket of other valuable prizes. Look for prize winner* names in Tuesdays advsi Simms employees and thoir families are not eligible. ________________________________ FREE PRIZES Simms Birthday Specials Permanent Press 1st Quality Boys Ivy Style Pants J99 $3.98 Value Regular Sizes Only Reg. $4.98 Husky Sizes . . . 2.49 Boys' popular Ivy style pants of 85% cotton and 15% nylon, permanently pressed, too. All first quality and American made. Regular sizes 12 to 18 In tan, black or olive, Husky sizes 8 to 20 tan, olive or black but not in all sizes. — Basement Simms Birthday Specials Final Clearance of Assorted Summer Wear This group includes mens' straw or sport hats, ladies' and girls' sportswear, boys' Henly collar knit shirts. Men's short sleeve knit shirts, children's terry slipperi and canvas play shoes (2 pr.). Just This is a better group of men's white short sleeve shirts — size 16, short sleeve Ban Lon cardigans, permanent press sport-shirts, swim trunks, boys' and girls' canvas oxfords, girls' swim suits ond ladies' better slocks. i 50! |M Simms Birthday Specials Machine Wash and Dry Boys’ Assorted ^Cardigan Sweaters for Dress or Casual Wear 3" American 1st quality This group includes a brushed, Stripe cardigan in superb Kodel blend with rib-knit cuffs and bottom, a solid color brushed cardigan. The Kodel, mohair and wool blend stays soft jthrough machine washings. And a Grecian key panel cardigan of 100% orlon acrylic yarns. Make your choice while selections are good, — Basement Simms Birthday Specials Box of 64 Crayola Crayons 59‘ Regular $1.00 list price. Genuine Crayola crayons for school or home use, In bright assorted colors. Limit 2. —Main Floor Dixon Felt Tip Markers Regular' 59c sellers. New Dixon redimark felt tip markers In 7 assorted colors. With broad tips. —Main Floor 33* Simms Birthday Specials Coast Guard Approved Life Jackets ~ Reg. $1.95 45 lb... L29 Reg. $2.25 90 lb.. 1*59 Reg. $2.95 Adult.. 1.79 Kapok filled life jackets — Coast Guard approved style. Packed in vinyl reusable bag. —Sundries—Main Floor Simms Birthday Specials Close Out on Swim Fins and Masks #K700 Triangular swim mask ....... 49c #KT4T Pro-Miama Mask............ 69c #K4D0 Fins Small size 2-3-4. .Y.......95c #K401A Fins Med. size 6-7-8 ........ 1.19 •#K402 Fins large to size 13......... 1.33 Sundries—Main Floor Dissappearing Red Ink Reg. $1.29 value, new gag Hem at Simms. A squirt MV w* gun with 8 oz. bottle of red Ink that di»appear» In ' 1 .V .seconds. Safe and notvtoxta M f Sundries-Main Floor ” FREE Roll of ’ADORN' Self-stick contact Decorating Plastic Absolutely FREE to the first 3t)0 people who bring in this coupon, a 25c value Vh yard roll -of Adorn. You'll find o thousand uses for it. covering shelves, books, cannlsler sets, wastebaskets, splash areas,. etc. Your choice of many attractive patterns. 5-Gallon Plastic Trash Barrel «s 87* Plastic trash barrel that is easy to clean, and comes complete with cover. Has bale handle. Limit 2. —2nd Floor 12-Pc. Zippered School Set 98cW • Value M M Includes 6 pencils, ball pen, ruler, eraser, compass in a zippered case, 15-Pc. School Set 98c JW0 Value M M - Includes pencil box, ball pen, pencils, ruler, eraser, pencil sharpener, compass and colored pencils. Handy Book Tote ■a49e Sturdy strap with unbreakable handle for carrying books, packages etc. Sundries—Main Floor Round or Oval Plastic Clothes Basket |00 Easy to dean plastic clothes basket, took* like woven willow. Limit 1. / / —2nd Floor Simms Birthday Specials %” Diameter - Brass Couplings • 50-Ft. Rubber Hose 417 50 foot length of rubber hose for washing cars, watering lawns etc. Bras* Couplings. Limit 100 ft, —2nd Floor Simms Birthday Specials 5-Sewh Household Broom 79* $1.19 value, long lasting corn broom — 5 sewn, for household use. With smooth hardwood handle. Limit T. —2nd Floor Metal Cash Box $2.59 value. No. 1011 Union steel chest, ~M QQ with lock ond key. For storing bonds, in*ur- I **** once paper* etc. —2nd Floor JL Simms Birthday Specials ‘Easy-On’ Spray Starch Will Not Scorch 39* 69c Value For a finer laundry finish use 'Eaty-On' Spray starch . . . won't scorch ... garments may be damp or dry. Limit 2. -2nd Floor Simms Birthday Specials Plastic Tackle Box | Has 2 trays and 5 compartments, hold* every- ’ thing the fisherman needs. 12%x7x6-inches. —2nd Floor 287 ‘DuFold9 Sponge M< $5.95 value, a sponge mop that lets you mop your floors without getting your hands wet. ‘ FREE extra sponge refill. —2nd Floor °P J88 Simms Birthday Specials i-Qt. ‘Revere’ Copper Bottom Tea Kettle 53a Stainless steel with copper bottom for even distribution of heat. Whistles when it's hot. Trigger type fill, and pour. ^2nd Floor Simms Birthday Specials 1-Gal. Ceramic Ball Pitcher Ceramic ball pitcher with easy fill easy pour spout. 1 gallon capacity. Limit 1 per customer. —2nd Floor 30* 3-Pc. Teflon Kitchen Tool Set 78* Includes spatula, pancake turner, and basting spoon with blue teflon finish. —2nd Floor Simms Birthday Specials Cigarettes By the Carton Regulars — Kings and Filters Only — Your Choice 514 ctns. for Choose from our fresh stocks of favorite brands in regulars, kings and filters. Pay this low price plus sales tax. Limit 2 -cartons. New EXTRA LENGTH Cigarettes - Carton You will find the ntw longer length cigarettes your —M choice of Super King Winston, Winston Menthol or W^M g 4-100MM Marlboro at Simms low discount pricas — plus sales tdx. ' —Tobacco—Main Floor Simms Birthday Specials 12-0z. Ronson Fluid, Reg. 59c... ... 29* 25c Value Book Matches, limit 2..... 7* 15c Value Ronson Flints, pkg. 5...... 7® 15c Value Zippo Flints, limit 2........, 7* 10c Value Medico Filter, limit 2 .... * 7* Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac I A-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. ffBH>AY» AUGUST JM> 1067 IfJ-Doy Stbte FUir DETROIT UH — The 118th Michigan State Fair opened in Detroit today promising 11 days of entertainment and displays for both the city slicker and the country boy. From bubble-gum blowing and husband-calling contests to displays of cherries canned in 1883, die nation’s oldest and biggest state fair has something for everybody. He gates to the fairgrounds at Woodward and 8 Mile Road opened at noon. More than a million visitors are expected between now and the closing date, Labor Day, Sept. 4. Today’s fair bears little resemblance to the September day in 1849 when women in hoop skirts and men in galluses took a break from harvest work, hitched Eastern Michigan Fete up the mare and gathered for the exhibit of the Michigan State Agricultural Society. ★ k k About 10,000 people attended that three-day forerunner of today’s fair. Premiums totaling $800 dollars were awarded for articles designed to promote Slated Imlay Fair Is Hailed IMLAY CITY - The Eastern Michigan Fair due to run here from Sept. 4-0 is touted as being "the best ever.” \ Kenneth Ruby, fair manager and secretary, said every bit of available space in the fair buildings has been sold. The number of exhibits is the largest in the history of the fair. Ruby said he would have a $l-milIion machinery exhibit plus the Eastern Michigan Steam Sand, Grav Hinges on Studies AVON TOWNSHIP - Approval of a sand and gravel operation on land abutting Sheldon and Tienken roads hinges on studies to be made by the township engineers and the building inspector. At issue is the request of developer Sidney Weinberger to take out sand and gravel and conduct a land-fill operation on the land before making it the site of a residential development. Weinberger said he could agree to five stipulations recommended by the planning commission, but that two others were impossible to meet. hi essence the requirements state that the operation be confined during its first phase to 10 to 15 acres in the southwest portion and that plans for all phases of the activity be submitted for approval to proper authorities. ♦ ★ ★ The paints said by Weinberger to be impossible were those dealing with time schedules and phase approval. Technicalities of scheduling remain to be worked out. The harness racing, highlight of the annual event, is expected to draw more than 400 horses from alP over the country. He Michigan Colt Stakes will be run Wednesday and Thursday night, and Ruby, said he expected that the track recOrd would be broken and lowered this year. Interspersed with the racing program are variety shows featuring many name performers including those of the Grand Ole Opry and the Camaro Auto Daredevils. AGRICULTURAL DISPLAYS The agricultural displays promise full livestock barns, varied home economic entries, youth exhibits, and vegetable and fruit booths. Ruby said a display by the Chamber of Commerce will feature the local industries of the area. “Given a break with the weather, we can’t help but beat last year’s 100,000 attendance record,” Ruby said. Teacher Pact Near BRANDON TOWNSHIP —The school board and the Brandon Teachers Association readied tentative agreement last night on a new contract. The board approved tiie pact, but the teachers still have to give their okay for final agreement. the agriculture and home industries of Michigan. $142,800 IN PRIZES This year more than 20,000 entries will compete for a record $142,000 in prizes in the agricultural, livestock, horse show, and community arts divisions. The fair’s theme, “Consumer Meets Producer,” is aimed at bringing the city slicker and the country boy, gray Hansel and blue denim, closer together. The entertainment, most of which is free, includes, Diana Ross and tile Su-premes, Sergio Mendes, Buddy Rich and a three-ring circus. * * * Fair officials are hoping that they will have the sixth straight year with attendance over one million. Last year’s figure was 1,195,781. ADMISSION FEES After today, the' gates will open at 8 a.m. each day. Admission is $1.50, ‘ • with children under 12 admitted free when accompanied by an adult. Before 3* p.m. each day, elderly persons will be admitted for half price. •k ■k k At the Music Shell on the 104-acre fairgrounds, Sergio Mendes and Brazil ‘86 appear today and Saturday; Buddy Greco, Buddy Rich and The Klpg Cousins, Sunday, Monday and Tuesday; the New Vaudeville Band, Tuesday and Wednesday; the Sandpipers, Wednesday, Thursday and Friday, Sept. 1; and Diana Ross and the Supremes, Sept. 2, 3 and 4. An auto thrill show is planned in front of the grandstand today through Saturday. k it k The Barnes and Carruthers Circus will appear Monday and Saturday, followed by two days of the Johnnny Cash Show, Wlxom Po$tmaster Approved by Senate WIXOM — The Senate approved yesterday the nomination of Elwood J. Grubb as postmaster of Wixom. Grubb, 5100 Grand River, has served as acting postmaster since Feb. 19,1966. Since then, hd Bad taken the civil service exams to prospective postmasters. ★v wj ★ It is customary for those who have not taken a civil service exam before being appointed head of a local post office to serve as acting postmaster to 12 to 18 months. Grubb also is the Wixom justice of the peace, a position he has held for three years. TIPS ON LAKE—Children enjoying the facilities at Cass Lake, West Bloomfield Township, get a few' safety pointers. Advising them is Clayton Weeks, supervisor at Marshbank Metropolitan Park on the lake. Listening are Doug Sanders, 4, of 415 Marion, Waterford Township, and John Sanders, 6, and his brother, Edward, 9, of 44 E. Newport, Pontiac. The lake and park have been used extensively by families and organizations this summer and will dose after Labor Day. 2 Scouts 1st inTroop Become Eagles WALLED LAKE — Dale Schnepp and Lothair Hardesty are the first members of Boy Scout Troop 164 to receive the Eagle awards. City Manager Royce Downey presented the awards before a court of honor in the dty offices. Dale, 14, is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Schnepp, 1732 Ashton. He has earned 21 merit badges and has served in several positions including patrol leader, senior and junior patrol leader, and presently junior assistant scoutmaster. Dale began Boy Scouts at age 11, with Troop 55 of Dublin School, Union Lake: His father is his present troop’s been in scouting since 1960. He served as assistant patrol leader, patrol leader and librarian for a troop in T&umseh. Lothair, 16, also attends summer camp each year and has participated in Scout Council leadership training courses. His parents are Mr. and Mrs. Lou Hardesty, 2360 Keith, Union Lake. k k k Lothair, now a senior patrol leader, has DALE SCHNEPP LOTHAIR HARDESTY t - * (A ■ jg|| I |H * v'.';1' f' '*”*■<** * -M&dNNqi •* W'A, i-y." pfk f - The two-story living room with its hand-hewn oak beams and great chandeliers hanging from the vaulted ceiling, the balconies at either end, and the large FngHah hooded fireplace was to hpr toe prime feature of the bouse. EVERY CONVENIENCE “We put in everything we wanted —, every convenience,” she recalls. Robert F. Phillips, regional director of the SBA, said the loans carry a 5 per cent interest rate and are available to home owners and businessmen who endured losses in the floods.. Built by Auto Financier, It's Now in Union Hands Sale of Addison Township Mansion Sfirs Memories By JEANSAILE ADDISON TOWNSHIP - Detroit’s society once coveted weekend invitations to the Tudor-style mansion recently purchased by the Riggers Survivors and Pension Fund of Detroit. Located at 525 Rowland, the 18-room mansion can best be viewed across Shadow Lake from Army Road. The home for the last 10 years of Dr. Allen Collins, a Detroit orthodontist, it has been on the market since 1900. Built in 1929 at a reported cost of better than $350,000, it was the pet project of Mrs. Angus Smith, wife of a Detroit auto financier. She now resides in Grosse Pointe. Mrs. Smith summons up happy memories of summer weekends filled with swimming and boating pleasure and frosty winter days of skiing and skating on the 247-acre grounds and its four lakes. TT WAS LOVELY’ “We generally had 10 or 12 people out to the weekend,” 'she recalls, “and it was lovely.*’ “I would never have sold it had Mr, Smith not died,” she, said. Recalling that an English architect was employed to design toe home, Mrs. Smith reported she visited the home every day while It was in toe process of building. * k k Ttm Smith Mansion lit Addison Township — Now Riggers' Retirement Home contemplate making It available to ret-ldents of toe area.” ★ ★ * The riggers are a union of workmen who install heavy equipment and machinery in toe big manufacturing, refinery and power plants. Hie Detroit local is 30 years old, Allen said. Charles Wolfe of Lakeville’s Wolfe Realty, which handled the sale, said toe purchase price of the property was $250,- Dry-Dock Installation Requires State Permit —Lake Orion Official glowing waterfall iLeeds only to bo turned on to be brought back to life. k ~ k ★ . Many of the .shrubs that graced toe bent grass lawn down to Shadow Lake were imported from Europe. WILD GAME Deer and other wild game frequently availed themselves of toe three lakes on the property and of Upper Lakeville Lake which toe ground s abut. Residents of. toe area recall that a staff of about 15 was employed by the Smiths to keep everything running smoothly. “I had excellent, excellent help,” Mrs. Smith remembers. Now the great hallx of toe main house are to become a community recreation center to some 300 retirees. INDIVIDUAL LIVING UNITS Paul Allen, business administrator of toe Riggers and Machinery Erectors Local Union No. 575, said plans are to construct' 100 individual living units about the grounds some time next spring. The other ootbuildingf including a guest house, barns and tenant houses are planned as a future hospital. ?‘We have plans of opening the facility to the public,” said Allen. “They tell us there is a need to it, and we- LAKE ORION — Building inspector Larry Marlin has announced that it is necessary to obtain permits from the State Department of Conservation to install dry docks around toe lake. He was anticipating the lowering of Lake Orion, set this year to Sept. 15 to give home owners a chance to make repairs to beaches and seawalls and to install new facilities. Marlin said toe permit applications are available at the village office. There is no charge. Aid for Flood Victims MADISON HEIGHTS (On - The Small Business Administration (SBA) has opened a disaster office here to help too Victims of the July 19 flooding in Macomb and Oakland counties. The Village Charter provides that toe lake be lowered once every threevyears. A dam gate on M24 will be lowered permitting about tight feet of the water to escape into Paint Creek, Marlin said* k k k THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 196? LAST CHANCE WHITE SALE! Comer Saginaw and Huron FE 4-2511, Ext. 55 FOURTH FLOOR Fancy, Queen and K|ng Sizes available gt White Sale Price* Stedt SPRINGMAID PERCALES 3.39 Double Size................$2.79 1.70 Pillowcases................$1,38 2.99 Twin Fitted Bottom......... $2.49 3.39 Double Fitted Bottom.. $2.79 SPRINGMAID f|j| MUSLIMS •2.99 Double Size................$1.99 1.20 Pillowcases................ 98c 2.49 Twin Fitted Bottom.........$1.89 2.99 Double Fitted Bottom.......$1.99 SPRINGMAID WONDERCALE Reg. 3.99 72 x 108 ? Q 3 9' or Twin Fitted V Reg. 4.99,81 x 108 or Double Fitted 54x76 ..$4.39" Reg. 2-99, 42 x 38 Pillow Cases. $2.38 MATTRESS PADS Cotton Pads *3" $3» Mg. 3.00 Twin Flat Mg. 4.00 Full Flat Celadoud Pads TOWELS Belleair Solid Color (14 colors); Sheared Terry (solid, print & jacquard) or Print Terry (choose from 4) $169 Rag. 1.40 $119 Rag. 60c AQc I , Hand Size I W. Cloth 7 REVERSIBLE SHEARED JACQUARD in 6 Colors PILLOWS Twin Fitted Reg. 6.00 . Full Fitted XTon Reg. 5.00 21x27 2/6" Reg. 6.00 O/-799 22 x 28 Z// Foam Rubber Reg. 6.00 Ext. Plump 2/7" Reg. 7.00 O/Q99 King Size Z/7 S0% or 100% Reg. 15.00 to 17.00 $10" Foam Rubber Reg. 7.00 Queen Size $499 Reg. 8.00 $2.99 King Size O Reg. 8.00 King Size Reg. 10.00 $799 Reg. 15.00 tir)99 Bolster T1 Z Dacron Pads Foam Toppers ♦6" *8" COMFORTERS Reg. to 19.99 *10" Choose from several prints "COQUETTE" Nylon Rugs 24* Rd. 21x36" Contour $700 $700 $700 27x28" ," 24x42" lids $g00 $90 *189 ZENITH 20" DIAGONAL MEASURE COLOR TV COLOR TV A brand n.w Zenith high performance handcrafted color TV chattit. Super Video Rang# tuner. Sunshine Color Picture Tube, exdutive Color Democulater circuitry, 4" twin-tone tpeaker. 25,000 voltt of picture power, full 82 channel UHF/VHF tuner. "Ruth-pull" On-Off .witch. | color clarifier. Legt op- I extra. ,$399*8 "BVifulMiJ ‘ No-Frost 14-ft. Bottom FREEZER REFRIGERATOR WITH INSTALLED ICE MJUUR Separate temperature control*, automatic Interior, lighting, tupor ttoraga doort, twin crisper., 4* let $23990 A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 Lucky tile bride of today ... whether she opts for the unexcelled elegance of sterling silver or the contemporary practicality of stainless steel, she has a superb selection to choose from. Here at Hudson’s Brides Registry, we’ve found that these are nine of her favorites. We’ve priced them by the " place setting, for that’s a convenient gift package. 4-piece settings include a teaspoon, knife, fork and salad fork. 6-piece settings add a soup spoon and an extra teaspoon to that. So come see her preferences. The six patterns of sterling silver, by International Silver Company. And the three of stainless steel, all of which have matching serving pieces available. At Hudson’s Silver Galleries # Pontiac, 2nd floor; also at powntown ' Detroit, 'Northland, Eastland, Westland. Discover which she has chosen at our Brides Registry. HUDSON’S '■"“ra®,. I THE PONTIAC PRESS ' PONTIAC, MICHIGAN. FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 ' ' B—1 His Values Mixed Up Guys Not Worth All Your Worry said, "Yes, she’s delightful to have as a traveling companion.” She went on to say that it is just such poise and personality that judges look for in judging the contests. Sheer physical beauty counts less. ★ ★ ★ Toni expects to enter Western Michigan University in January to compfeft her preparation as a secondary school teacher of speech and dramatics. Her talent presentation in the Miss America contest will be an original reading written by a woman in Musekgon Toni is understandably excited about going to Atlantic City. She has “trunksful of clothes" ready to go, but was bemoaning the fact that an absolutely perfect dress she had seen that morning was too expensive to be considered. The week at the pageant will be one constant round of changing clothes. The girls’ days start around 6 a.m. and rarely end before 1 a.m. “It’s hurry-up and wait,” says Toni, the veteran of several contests. * ★ ★ What is her reaction to having af constant chaperone? "I don’t mind. In fact, I like it. If I get lost, we’re both lost and that helps.’’ By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: I am 17 and overweight. Everyone tells me I have a pretty face; but very few boys bother to look any further. I’ve had only two dates in my life and was so self-conscious I was miserable. You just can’t imagine how much I’d like to be popular and have dates. One night at a party one of the most popular boys in school took an interest in me. I was in heaven. He took me home and we parked on ABBY the way and kissed. It was my first kiss. It was wonderful. We kissed a lot and finally I got scared and called a halt. He said he wanted to see me often, but next time he wasn’t stopping at a kiss. He told me to get wise, that any fat girl can be popular if she will just give in a little. I was shocked and demanded that he take me home at once. to the antique dealer or does it belong to her? NAMELESS IN NEW ORLEANS DEAR NAMELESS: The money belongs to your mother, unless and until someone turns up and proves that the money is his and that he had hidden it to that davenport. In the meantime, your mother has a pretty soft cushion. CONFIDENTIAL TO DEE: Generalizations are unfair and unjust, so I will not say that ALL 14-year-old girls are too young and immature to date 18-year-old boys. I shall be more specific: ALL 14-year-old girls whose parents think they are too young and immature to date 18-year-okl boys, ARE! Snaps, the poodle is unimpressed at meeting Miss Michigan, Toni Jo Abbenante of Grand Rapids (left). His mistress, Roberta Flynn of Ogemaw Road, is less blast. Toni Jo made her only appear- Pontiac Press Photo by Ed Vandorworp once in the Pontiac area Thursday evening when she did informal modeling at Winkelman’s in The Pontiac Mall. Michigan's Contestant-Poised, Confident By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Women’s Editor Michigan residents need not be concerned about their representation at the Miss America pageant in Atlantic City next month. Toni Jo Abbenante of Grand Rapids, a poised 19-year-old brunette, will serve adequately as Miss Michigan. Toni made a brief appearance in Pontiac Thursday evening. She is currently ending a two-week tour of Winkelman stores throughout the state. She modeled informally at the Mail store. When asked how she happened to enter the Miss Michigan contest, Toni said, "I, didn’t. My sorority sisters at Grand Rapids Jr. College entered me.” After winning that contest and the subsequent state contest for junior college queens, she went on to win the final state title. Now comes the big time. One of four children, Toni is of Italian descent and shows it with her dark hair and eyes. She is just under average height for girls these days — 5’4W”. Last night she was weariqg a shocking pink woolen skimmer that stopped above her knees, but definitely was not a miniskirt. .Her shoulder-length hair hangs loosely around her expressive face. Traveling with Toni is a member of the board of directors of the Miss Michigan pageant committee, Mrs. L. C. Den Hollander of Muskegon. In response to a remark about the poise shown by her young charge, she Imply Budget Rather Than a Lack of Funds MRS. DENNIS W. CATLIN Dennis Catlins Exchange Vows in Holland Hope Reformed Church in Holland, Mich, was the setting for recent nuptials uniting Janice Lynn Van Lento and Dennis Wayne Catlin. Parents of the bridal couple are Mr. and Mrs. James Van Lento of Holland and the Darwin E. Catlins of Edgevale Drive. The bride was attired in floor length white organza over taffeta with scalloped hand-drawn Alencon lace edging the hem and portrait neckline. A matching lace capette secured her elbow length veil of illusion. She carried ivory and pink sweetheart roses accented with camellia leaves, ★ ★ ★ Jo Ann Melady of Kansas City, Mo. and Robert Schlett of Holland were maid of honor and best man respectively. Bridesmaids were Ann Wissink of Holland and Mrs. Douglas Cameron of Flint. *JJ£ - t ♦Groomsmen were Gerald Brown of <£apac and James Mace of Chicago, llichael Van Lento and Donald Criffin were ushers. A recption in Point West followed the lita. / d . By ELIZABETH L. POST Dear Mrs. Post: When one’s finances are limited, or at least strictly budgeted, how does one answer such questions as "Why don’t you go to dinner and the theater with us- next week?” Or, “That dress would look marvelous on you—why don’t you buy it?” I hate to-say "I can’t afford it,” although that is often the case.—Barbara Hunt * , * * Dear Mrs. Hunt: I agree with you—to say “I can’t afford it” implies that either your husband doesn’t make enough money, or he’s stingy. Far more complimentary to him and face-saving to yourself is to say, “We just didn't put anything aside for that particular thing this month” or “We’re sending Billy to camp this summer so I’ll wait until Fall for my wardrobe.” These answers imply that you are budgeted, of course, but not actually unable to afford the luxuries mentioned. INSURANCE Dear Mrs. Post: I recently became engaged. Who pays for the insurance on the engagement ling? Also, when, if at all, is it considered proper for the bridegroom to call his prospective mother-in-law “mother?”—Phil Dear Phil: The groom pays for the Insurance. He will shortly assume all such responsibilities in any case, and should the engagement be broken and the ring returned to him, there would be no complications. * it it The bridegroom, unless he is very close to the bride’s mother, does not call her “mother” or any nickname until after the wedding. Sometimes, especially to the case of a long engagement, he does become “part of the family” beforehand, but otherwise it is better if he dpes not push this intimacy too far. A versatile “weekender” that gives two complete outfits in one, with A-lme skirt and tapered slacks for switch-about with the jacket Superbly tailored of luxuriously smooth flannel, lined with acetate tricot for shape-retaining lines. Newer-look boxy jacket with back side-vents ... snappy double-breasted effect with mock-pockets, Both at Robert Halil ; Out-and-out sensations that will “make the scene” in a big wdy this season. Cowl-tuvtieneck or turtleneck-collared styles with bdck zippers . in Orion9 acrylic knit with “hot licks” of colors striping the shifts round-and-round. Bonded with silky-smooth acetate tricot for shape-keeping lines* Sizes 6 to 16. Husbands Are Invited to Saturday Event The Pine Lake Golf Club Niners will havf a mixed foursome including husbands of members Saturday at the club. Dinner and cards or dancing will follow the event. A closing luncheon with election of officers and prizes fra: past tournaments is planned for Sept. 27. He told me to think it over and call him when I changed my mind. That was two lonely months ago, and I’ve been thinking. Oh, Abby, what shall I do? I don’t whnt to be a bad girl, but I want to be one of the crowd. Shall I pay the price? FAT AND LONELY DEAR FAT: The “price” might be more than you’re prepared to pay. The boy is clearly thinking only of himself and his selfish gratification. “Fat girls can be popular,” he says, “if they will just give in a little.” Brilliant! So can THIN girls with the kind of boys who use girls for all they can get and then go on to fresher game. * * ★ He is not for you. And neither is any boy who hands you that kind of line. Don’t be surprised if HE thinks it over and calls you to tell you that he has changed his mind. Some boys qse this technique to “test” a girl, when he’s looking for one he can respect as well as love. DEAR ABBY: My mother bought an old beat up upholstered davenport from an antique dealer. She paid $45 for it and sent a truck to haul it to her home. It sat to her basement for nearly a year. She started pulling it apart in order to reupholsier it herself and she found $1,600 to bills in a yellowed envelope in one of the cushions. She hasn’t told anyone but me about this. Does she have to return the money C. D. Mgrshes Wed AP Wlrvpltttt The newest Beatle baby makes his camera debut in a London hospital yesterday with his mother, Maureen 21, and father, Beatles drummer Ringo Starr. Little Jason Starr was born in London’s Queen Charlotte’s Hospital over the weekend. The Starrs have another son, Zak, "who will be two years old in a couple of weeks. Fashion Choice Unusually Wide for Fall and Winter Seasons The 18th century Bruton Parish Church in Williamsburg, Va. was the scene last Saturday for the wedding of the Charles D. Marshes. Mrs: Marsh is the former Marion Elizabeth Goodale, former headmistress of Kingswood School, Cranbrook. The couple will be at home on Cranbrook Road after Nov. 1. By LUCIE NOEL AP Fashion Writer PARIS (fl — Fall Ind winter fashions offer an unusually wide choice this year so do not scrap your wardrobe before looking at the new designs. Now that the Paris styles have reached Miss and Mrs. Everybody, the question of trends is not on women’s minds. WAIST BACK The main feature of the winter collections is the return of the waistline. This is a general evolution. But many houses,' including many big-name designers, still show plenty of unfitted figure-skimming shifts, trapezeshaped flowing lines and swing coats and blown-up backs. It will be hard for many women to switch from the “free” look to a well-marked waistline and fit. Skirts flare, and when they don’t, fullness is achieved by a bagful of tricks-box-pleating, kilting, siinray and fan-pleating — leaving the hips slim and a i boon for fuller figures. Topcoats flare in a funnel line often cut to stand out, or are circular In the new midcalf lengths. Rich Him woolens such as meltons, broadcloth and velours are used for these coats. Tweeds have been revived, with dark brown flecked weaves, and pepper-and-salt gray and black favored. Dior and Nina Ricci go to town on the complete tweed look, including swirling capes or topcoats, suits, stoles and berets. Tweeds also appear in suits for the hunting season. They step forth complete with sturdy brogues1, quilled or feather trimmed hats, a gun or two, and the inevitable turtleneck sweater. The question of hemlines, though important, does not call the tune. Two schools of thought persist among the pace-setting designers. MINI LOOK To the miniskirt school belong Cour-reges, Ungaro, Cardin for the most part, Esterel and Feraud. The balance, including Dior, show hemlines brushing or grazing the knees. Kneecaps are often barely visible, but that’s definitely for the older woman. The younger set dings to the miniskirt. Methods vary for bringing down the hemline. One is to bring high boots almost up to the kneecaps. The French for that is loche-bottes-the top of the boots skim the knees. ★ * * . Another way is to concentrate on hemlines for evening. Balenciaga, Givenchy and Cardin cut away the front of the dresS to a knee-high level and feature a sweeping back hemline spreading out like a peacock’s tail. Castillo, Balmain and Cardin endorse the zigzag hemline, a good way of solving the thorny question. Umbrella points are a Castillo trademark and kerchief points appear at several houses. - Velvets have been revived in many different ways. Chanel likes printed panne and printed velvets. Other houses favor black velvet and use it in college girl styles with white trim or starched cuffs and collars. They are for after five. Yves Saint-Laurent tailors black velvet suits and decorates than with gold chains. Chanel uses jeweled gold chain belts on many of her dressy and even tweed suits. Daughter Arrives B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 mm , • For Shut-Ins • For Business Associates • Friends For Away • For Helpful Neighbors $6°° _ $750 end *125° Others to $25 JACOBSEN’S FLOWERS for 42 Year* 101 N. Saginaw St. Pontiac Phone FE 3-7165 Creenbotue, Garden Store and Nnnerjr Lake Orion Phone MY 2-2681 Youthful Styling BACK-TO-SCHOOL HAIR DESIGNS with simplicity, styling and facial contour in mind. CALLNOWfor APPOINTMENT CUTTING-STYLING PERMANENTS RANDAI 88 Wayne Street FE 2-1424 traditional good food Sunday Breakfast BUFFET “two beautiful buffets’* Every Sunday 9 A.M. ’til Noon in Bloomfield Hills WOODWARD AT SQUARE LAKE RD. Celebrating their golden wedding anniversary Sunday will be Mr. and Mrs. Alex Martin of Otsego Drive. An open house hosted by their nephew Harold McCann, also of Otsego Drive, and another nephew and his wife, Mr. and Mrs. Howard McCann of Rochester will be Sunday afternoon from 2 to 5 p.yri. at the Gloria Dei Lutheran Church. The Martins were married in Pontiac on Aug. 28,1917. I'Boh Voyage Gala for a Student Dr. and Mrs. Herbert K. Sachs of Ivanhoe, West Bloomfield Township will host a bon-voypge party Sunday for their daughter, Marianne. She will leave Sept. 2, accompanied by bar father and begin stuides at the Academy of Fine Arts at Brersf, Milano, Italy this fall. Among the guests will - be Mr. and Mrs. Gerhard, Sachs of Buenos Aires, Argentina and William H. Sachs of Atlanta, Ga. and Dean Howard Hess. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Lewis (nee Norma Stein) of Villa Part, HI. announce the birth of a daughter, Cheryl Lynn on Aug. 2. Grandparents are the Edward F. Lewises of Chib Drive and Dr. and Mrs.' Keith Stein of East Lansing. Says Separation Aids Marriage LAFAYETTE, Ind. (UPI) -A Purdue University marriage counselor thinks separations between a husband and his family may be good for the marriage occasionally. *•' ★ ★ Prof. Wallace Denton, who conducted a series of family life conferences at Air Force bases, observed that separations often “push people out of the rut of daily family routines.” He said it may be good for the wife to wake up in the middle of the night and discover a vast emptiness and — “good for the husband to experience the loneliness of a hotel room.” Dry in Oven Kleenex Boxes Have New Look | Most of the products bought in the supermarket go straight from grocery bag to shelf Or cabinet. The cereal box hides behind a door in the kitchen, the toothpaste in the medicine cabinet. But one product is bought in the store, then used and displayed at home in the same container — the familiar, indispensable box of facial tissues. To add decorator accents to this, disposable paper product for the household, Kleenex tissue boxes have a new look — a soft feminine rose design for the family-size, an elegant Flor- Celery leaves and tops makes excellent flavoring in maiiy dishes. To keep your Surplus . celery, wash, dry in the ovenlentine pattern for the regular-and then place in airtight small size, and a flowing, graceful jars. It is ready to use when Spencerian scroll for the dis-youneedit. jpenser-size. , “The Press” photographer must have said something very profound to young James Richard Gid-cumb Jr. judging from the look on this one-year-old cherub’s face. Holding the baby who represents the fifth generation in his family, is his mother the senior Mrs. Gid- cumb of Lotus Drive; and from left gathered around them, is great-great-grandfather, Arthur J. Desotell of Oakland Avenue; grandmother, Mrs. Henry Fast of Clover-ton Street and great-grandfather, Joseph Desotell of Hatton Street. Case No. C-502 It's All in a Viewpoint You can be choosey about your hairspray. At the left is a new hypoallergenic spray for fly-away or unruly hair. Allercreme is un- • scented, contains no lanolin or lacquer. On the right is the new hair spray that matches your favorite perfume. Faberge is introducing five new fragrances to match their famous perfumes. By GEORGE W. CRANE, PH.D, M.D. CASE C-S02: Molly G., aged 24, is an irate wife. “Dr. Crane,” she protested a n g r i 1 y, “I think my husband is very selfish and inconsiderate. “He seems to think that I should always be loving and in the mood for DR. CRANE physical affection whenever the mood strikes him. “But I am often worn out with my housework and the care of our two babies, for the 'older is barely able to walk. “Yet he gets., angry and scolds me for my lack of ardor. So will you please de- MAGNIFICENT BEDROOM OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS LUXURY-CRAFTED "DESIGN 70“ Distinctive Moulding in Walnut Finish 72" triple dresser mirror size bed chest -ft $266 A contemporary design whose charm and grace show a transitional influence. The attractive and simple design is accented with outline moulding an the drawers and an arch motif on the mirror end headboard, trass hardware adds a touch of elegance; Our Summer Sale Continues ... SAVE10% on DREXEL KNOLL, GLOVE, DUNBAR, SEU6, BAKER, HERMAN MUM 1MMASVH1E, etc. . Most places in these collection! of fine furniture are available for immediate delivery or may be special ordered in your choice of fabric or finish at *ale savings. INTERIOR DECORATING SERVICE FURNITURE LlMINAV ** M OUCHAID UKI AW* Fi 5-1174 fONTIAC 'BUDGET TERMS, OF COURSE FREE DELIVERY > in your col- scribe my < umii?” . BLIND MEN Most of the trouble in this world is a result of lack of knowing the other person’s viewfetint. You may thus recall the classical story of the five Blind Men of Hindustan who visited their first circus and met an elephant. Each blind man eagerly ran his sensitive fingers over a portion of that huge pachyderm. * One seized his tusk; another his trunk} a third his tail, a fourth his leg, and the fifth, the elephant’s ear. That night at dinner they were asked what an elephant was like. “He’s a spear,” said the first, only to be laughed to scorn by the second, who positively affirmed that elephants were “snakes.” The other three vehemently denied both of these descriptions, insisting that elephants were, respectively a “rope,” a “tree” and a “fan.” „ And these men would have signed affidavits that each was right‘while his four comrades were entirely wrong! ★ ★ ★ Yet you and I, having seen an entire elephant, realize that each blind man was right as far as his limited experience had extended. But they simply had not obtained more than a small percentage of the total picture. And so it is with most of our feuds and divorces and wars! We may be so sincere and self-righteous that we evenigo to war to maintain that our outlook is *100 per cent correct! “Never criticize another man,” runs an old Sioux Indian adage, “until you have walked two moons in his moccasins!" Molly and her husband don’t look out upon life from the same viewpoint and that is always true of male vs. female. But Molly must realize that men are endowed by file Almighty with a much greater gastric appetite, plus a larger erotic hunger, too. ★ ★ ★ Even if she is tired and disinterested in food, Molly knows she dare not stop serving . ho* husband his three meals per day. Otherwise, he will chew her out, argue and be hostile. By the same token, a wife must keep her husband’s much greater erode hunger allayed or he will snarl like an angry bear. And soon be fnay sample the erode offerings of an outside paramour, for there are about five million unmarried women eagerly waiting to snare your husband! ■ Besides, a wife's participation in the erode realm is largely passive. Many of them even snore during such an episode! So it requires much less energy to meet her husband’s boudoir demands than his dinner table requests! Wives, get hep! Researchers are m a Id n g . mine the link, •and deafness. Deter-* hard Glaze. Oven-proof. TTnjftyi 64 pc. set. 8 service. Reg* $62.95. Now at Special Value ^29^ OVER 100 PATTERNS AT TERRIFIC SAVINGS DIXIE POTTERY 5281 DIXIE HIGHWAY 623-0911 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25,1967 Checked Your Insurance Policy Lately? ■ enough curiosi-l H l"? more advantageous Ity about it ]d®rs’ clauses and *Peclal P«>-I ' I visions he can incorporate into | When a young jliis contract, the -better. Certainly he should know what the B» MARY FEELEY A Ihribl. life to™* *|. • ta ! ^y can be of substantial help Money Management - [all through the years. Many a Many young families have all i situation can come up when the the respect in the world for life ^ace ~~ to turn for help Is to insurance. But it seems to me!*e poUcy 0,6 breadwiimer cat, B they don’t have! tha I Hi penings” which could occur — [family plan rider, at a small ■wife writes MARY FEELEY I about her family’s financial I ups and downs, ■ she’ll often reefer to the fact that her hus-j band carries! possibilities are. It’s a fact that even some people’ who’ve carried life insurance for many years forget to remember they might find a solution to some problem right their insurance contracts. SSrfsmSSat «*»> case of his death.” Well, certainly such protection Is the primary1 purpose of life insurance. But what else can the policy do for the 1 family — while everybody’s alive? in invites all the questions and ‘‘what ifs” both husband and wife can think up. This is true whether insurance js being' so you can check the insurance policies you already have o planning to buy, and see you’d stand: • What if, some years from now, you find your health makes you too much of a risk for an insurance company — but you are still short of providing the family with all the protection you’d planned to'give them? • If your present (or about-to-be-bought) policy Includes an “Insurability” rider, you have a guaranteed right to buy more insurance at specified future dates, regardless of your health at that time. ★ * * - • What if you find you can'! come up with a premium payment some year (or just plain forget It) — even by the end bought for the first time or 0*the Srace period? whether present policies are be-' * If y°ur P°licy includes an ing reviewed, i automatic premium loan provi- Let’s brine un a few "harwsion’ Bremlum is wrtomqti-® ** Really paid from the cash value of the policy. | FAMILY PLANS How can the family get in on some insurance themselves, when you take out a new permanent policy on yourself? ★ * * • Some companies will add a additional cost, providing for a small amount of term Insurance on your wife to age 60 or 65, and on each of your children to ag< (age Varies with different policies). Some family plan policies permit each child, as he reaches 25, to buy five times much insurance as the rider him for, without proof of insurability. What if you become permanently and totally-disabled' before you’re 60? * * * a i v e r of premiunri clause included in your insurance policy assures you that in such a situation your policy will remain in effect without any further payments. • How can you and your wife fit your life insurance into retirement plans? * * If there's a retirement Income provision in your policy, its cash value, built up over period of time to the, usual age of 65, can be applied to providing income payments for life. ★ * * (For Mary Feeley’s booklet, 'Make Every Dollar Count|| send $1 to her in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600. P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056). P "8 Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Addis Walter of Clarks-ton announce the engagement of their daughter, Carol Joyce, to Airman 2.C. William Glenn Gillis, son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Glenn Gillis of Perry Lake Road, Independence Township. The bride elect attended Michigan State University and her fiance, University of Minnesota. Dec. 29 vows are planned. He is presently stationed at Shaw AFB, South Carolina. The Donald R. Frayers of Beverly Island Drive announce the engagement of their daughter, Carol Lynn, to Michael George Kassarjidn, son of Mr. and Mrs. George Kassarjian of Royal Oak. Her fiance attended Northwood Institute, Oakland Community College and Santa Monica City College. No date has been set. Menus for Couple Challenge to Wife Rosanna Wright (left) manager of Boot-strings dress shop and Gloria Buie, who works in the Los Angeles store, model gowns displaying “The African Look,” which Mrs. Wright predicts will replace the Mod look as the latest clothing fad. The women wear their hair in the short natural style of Africa. Buying and cooking for two is not easy. It’s a challenge to have interesting meals at reasonable cost. Planned leftovers are one thing; monotonous ones are boring. Roasts for two? Of course. A 3-4 pound roast can be served hot one night, cold sliced the next night, and provide hash or a casserole another night. * * * Baked ham ... buy a one inch slice, bake it the firdt night. . . use the leftover part for ham a la king another time. Once a week marketing saves time, energy, and money if ypu have room to store the food. Buying perishables such as dairy foods and lettuce, to illustrate, must be planned differently. The important thing is to make a marketing plan to fit your situation. MAKE A LIST Check the food in your refrigerator and staples on hand.* Keep a memo pad or slate on your kitchen wall. Use it for remember-to-buy items. Watch newspapers food news. Make your list by the groups of foods you need. Foods in markets are usually arranged in similar groups. A well planned list will save you time in the store and prevent overlooking some important item. Many smart girls with their menu patterns well in mind look for best buys in the market. Then they plan menus around foods they’ve found at the best prices. The amount of food you require depends upon how active you are. People who live quiet sedentary lives need less food. OFFER ENDS SEPTEMBER IS, 1967 Create Illusions Through Colors NEW^YORK (tJPI) - Before you begin to repaint, remember these tips from the National Paint, Varnish and Lacquer Association. Light colors add space to a cramped room and dark colors minimize a large one. If the ceiling seems out of reach, bring it closer with a color darker than the walls. it it it In a monotonous square room, a deeper color on one wall will appear to change the shape. Don’t forget that color may look different, in natural and artificial light, so study it carefully before plunging big increase In United States farm exports in 1967 is expected, with a value of over $7 billion compared to |6.9 billion in 1966. DECORATOR LOWBOY rca Victor Mw Ustd COLOR TV • Powerful 25,000-volt Color chassis • Rectangular RCA Hi-Lite Color Tube • Super-powerful New Vista VHP, Solid State UHP tuners . •Automatic Color Purifier “cancels” magnetism • One-set VHF fine tuning, stay-set volume control • Dependable RCA solid copper circuits We Service What We Sell STEFANSKI ELECTRONICS 1157 WEST HURON FE 2-6967 BUY, SELL, TRADE! USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! TREMENDOUS MRECT-FROM-FACTORY SAVINGS ON ALL APPLIANCES AT.. Low, low priced! K Self-Cleaning Qven Range Costs as little as per cleaning! Just set controls, latch oven door... all oven grease and grime simply vanish! 4 Hi-speed surface units. Large, lighted oven, Pushbutton controls. Only $2143 •Based on 2( per K.W.H. CLARKSTON APPLIANCE & FURNITURE CO. 7183 North Main St., Clarkston . (Next To Jack Haupt) 626-3500 SAVE International* Sterling Place Settings | save *6 on a 4-pc. place setting save *8 on a 5-pc. place setting save *10 on a 6-pc. place setting Comparable pavings also on open stock place setting pieces and serving pieces. GROUP B Crystal Rhapsody 4-pc.Place Setting (teaspoon-place fork-place knlta— oelldferk) _____________ p»». mm n. mm n. 6-pc.Plece Setting (teaspoon-place fork-place knife-salad 57.00 47.00 02.50 52.50 17.00 17.00 17.00 77.(0 fork-placa apoen-tpreadei __ THE INTERNATIONAL SILVER COMPANY The Store Where Quality Counts FPED N/P&UJ& TO. Pontiac's Oldest Jewelry Store 28 West Huron Street FE 2-7257 Open tonight until 9 A 3-piece suit in fine diagonally striped wool ... lightly curved jacket bound in velveteen, and slim skirt, in 'gator green. Add the turtleneck shell. Sizbs 3-15. T&C's TERRIFIC PUMP GOES EVERYWHERE Around the clock, around the world, Time Out by Town & Country Shoes will be the right look in the right place ' at the right time. It can't miss when you select from this sensational group of colors. Matching Bag Available Sizes 4 to 10 AAA to B widths* PONTIAC DORIS HAYES (1968 TELEGRAPH at HURON ROCHESTER OAKLAND MALL L-B-* THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 23, 1967 'Contesters' ReaHy Do Here’s a variation on a theme—these two vests look very much alike and yet the one that the boy is wearing is knitted while the girl’s vest is crocheted. These vests provide an extra layer of warmth under children’s coats and being sleive-less, won’t be too bulky. Free instructions are. avaitable by sending a self-addressed stamped envelope to the Needlework Editor, The Pontiac Press, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich., 48056, along vhth a request for leaflet A-301. Doesn’t this charming gentleman look very comfortable and warm in his vest? Since it’s hand knitted to his exact measurements, it’s no wonder that he looks so well in it. Two generous pockets make for convenience as well. Knitted in oxford grey or natural, this makes the perfect background for a bright, cheerful looking tie. Free instructions are available by sending a self-addressed stamped envelope to the Needlework Editor, and request leaflet PK 1898. I Suspenders Hold j Baby's Diapers In hot weather, when plastic plants are uncomfortable for baby and increase the chance of diaper rash, why not let your little one wear diapers only? It takes almost no effort to pop both diapers and crib sheets into the washer and dryer as often as needed. And to keep diapers from, slipping down make “suspenders” from cotton twill tape and pin these to the diapers — two long strips for shoolder straps, and two short ones across back and front. Pontiac Mall Optical ft Hearing Aid Center Our Services Include a.Hearing instruments custom'fitted . from $75 a All makes of, hearing 1 instruments serviced end repaired e Ear molds custom fitted e fresh batteries available Nathan Lipson Hearing Aid Audiologist S: JO ML to tlMOJjl».MILY 682-1113 Rolled in Ham Roll cooked asparagus stalks in thin rectangle^ of cooked ham; wrap in foil and warm in a moderate oven. Serve the asparagus-ham rolls on buttered toast with a piping-hot tangy cheese sauce. Garnish with slices of ripe-red tomato. The most exciting way we can think of to wear the pants this summer. This border-striped costume made in coolest, silky Arnel jersey—the background white, the stripes in broad sweeps of gold, navy and red. Neckline and sleeves of the diamond front top are edged in navy cording. Bart of a larger coordinate group by Country Set. We excel in preparing for wedding receptions, breakfasts, any kind of party because we know tbe importance of these memor- able times. row Old ? rJoSEPHME loMMAA/ BETTY CANARY I was wondering who was winning all those free trips to Florida and the new refrigerators and cameras and stuff in contests and I decided to find at. ^ ’ Well,0 what I found out was that occasionally there are lucky people who win after sending in only ONE entry blank they picked up on a drugstore counter. Ho# the entry blank happened to be there is a puzzle to me because one of the first [unwritten rules of contesting is Steal Entry Blanks. You make the rounds of all the supermarkets, etc., and tear [off all the blanks on the pad marked “Only one to a customer.” Most contests are won by “contesters.” These people devote as much time and energy to a socalled hobby as would if they ran a fair-sized business. There are books written about how to win and newsletters sent out to fill one in on allj the local as well as national; contests. You can buy boxtops and labels and tips. Contesters,’ who must be counted among the friendliest people in the world) have clubs and hold conventions. They will pool ideas and help each other and wel- come new contesters into thej fold. One thing they almost never know is what slogan or jingle won first prize in the national contests. Winners agree (or they don’t get the prize) not to divulge it. I tried my hand at it and among other small items won a silver tray, an electric shoe polisher, two wallets and a camera. Most contest entries from amateurs are thrown out and haven’t^ a chance of winning, first because people simply do not follow the rules on the blanks, and second, because so mpny are duplicates. The really big winners who have new cars every year and a kitchen chockful of electric gadgets have contesting down a science. They send in hundreds, oL-entries, with the amount of effort and entries to the value of the prims. They mail entries on a schedule to guarantee that at least one entry gets into the many mailbags pouring into the judging agency. ★ ★ * Some say big winners are investigated py detective agencies before the bjg prize is awarded. Therefore, if you put your cousin’s name on an entry, fill him in oh .what he said and hen he said it. Better be sure he’s a real kissin’ cousin, too. He might not hand over the prize a n d take the 10 per cent you promj-ised him. He might decide to ' hog the whole thing, KINNEY'S SHOES For lit, Whole Family PONTIAC MALL MIRACLE MILE Just how much beauty repair is permissible when a girl or woman works in an office? Well, it depends somewhat on whether or not her hand is faster than the boss’s eye. In other words, while he will appreciate a neat well- groomed appearance, most necessary repairs should be made irt the powder room and they should not take a lot of time. Here are a few guidelines. Keep a small plastic bag with the essential equipment at the office in a desk drawer. ★ ★ ★ When you want to freshen up, go to the powder room. However, do not make this an elaborate time-consuming project. Usually, the areas around the nose and chin, and perhaps on the forehead, are the ones which will need a bit of powder or makeup base. These are the oilier spots. Do not try to do a complete makeover unless you wish to spend, part- of your lunch time this way. Renew your lipstick when it needs doing, but don’t do it at your desk unless you arc in the room alone. If you have pressed powder in a compact you can take care of the shine on nose and chin and forehead in a moment at your desk, that is, if you are in the room alone. In most cases, though, it is better to go jo the powder room for a few moments even for these small repairs.'Someone may pop in the door and nothing looks less businesslike and less efficient than cosmetic repairs in an office. Do not comb your hair at your’desk. ★’ ★ ★ You can stop a run in a stocking with a little wet soap. There are also small containers which hold a product designed just for this purpose. If you need to you*can do a little patchwork on a nail tf the polish is chipped, but not at your desk. It’s a, good idea to keep a bottle of nail polish in your little cosmetic kit. Be Sure to Stir If you are chilling that gelatin mixture over ice-cubes and water so it will quickly reach the slightly thickened stage, be sure to stir the mixture frequently so the desired thickening will be even. RECEPTIONS - GROUP GATHERINGS, ETC. Special Sunday Rates CHAMPION BUILDING Paul Aldo is a recent graduate of Michigan State University where he received a B.S. degree in Police Administration. He is the son of the Pete Aldos of Voor-heis Road. Mrs. Carl Christoff (nee Carole McLaugh-lin) was recently graduated from Western Michigan University uoith a B.A. degree in liberal arts. She is the daughter of the F. J. McLaughlins of Wood-low Street, She will join her husband at Ft. 'Bragg, N.C. where he is a PFC with the USA. DORMAN’S OLD MILL TAVERN MSS Dixie Highway WATERFORD. Phone 623-00 Fall Terra PHH___________ Begins Seft. 1! Day School — Evening Division ‘Spacious modernistic PBI is on Independent school of bust-nan located on Lawrence Street. The building is completely air conditioned and is equipped with modem office and school furniture and equipment. Accounting Secretarial . i Clerical Office Machines Speedwriting IBMKey Punch Approved for Veterans Diploma and Certificate Program* Catalogue Available on Request 18 W. Lawrence - BE 3-7028 Now 1aCftApet Time/ vSo' We//t&T2ott(w| BRAND NEW-INTRODUCTORY SPECIAL! Mill MIILI SHI 301IYL0I Carpet Yonr Bedroom or Spare Room Now Roll Ends 1 LAim and Remnants /Z m See One of the Largest Selections of Draperies in This Area! sq. yd, and ug» FLOOR ( OUItl\(, 3511 Elizabeth Lake Rd. FE4-7775 -Junior Editors Quiz on Gl Comes Up Shor Sky PORT ORD, Calif. (UPI) The man who may be Army’s shortest soldier has left this infantry base for retraining as a paratrooper because the Army figures his short legs will be put to better ANSWER: As our picture suggests, yawns seem to pass from person to person, probably because we tend to imitate what another person is doing. Scientists do not know the whole story about yawning. For example, they are not sure what section Saturdays 9 A.M. to 9 F.M. Regular to $75 Use A Convenient Lion Charge Plan BUSTER BROWN. Perfect for school or dress ... the Sunday/Mondoy shoes from Buster Brown. Packed with touches of fashion that mean so much to a young lady . . . full of rugged quality to carry young men on their busy ways. All with famous Buster Brown quality. Sizes 8V2 to 4, B to D widths *9" .*10" Off to school in this adorable POLLY FLINDERS hand smocked cotton dress ... a red Stewart Tartan with white pique collar. Entirely washable and Scotch-garded® to repel rain and stain. $8 7 to 12 \\ FAR AH Chili Red Suede Trapper Green Suede Mahogany Leather BOYS Black SLtL nth FaraPress Free S.A.S.K. Secret Agent j Spy Kit with each pair of v shoes. $ These slacks won't separate the men from the boys, because they're from the same fabrics featured in the finest adult models. Tab-front with elastic sides to give young gentlemen a secure, good fit. Permanently pressed to "Never Need Ironing." Sizes 14to 20 Use A Convenient Lion Charge Plan B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 f Give ' VIEW LIFE To Your Old NEARIM6 AID With a ZENITH Customized Earmold MNVIflBIHU.WneU.ft Tho Pontiac Mall Phono 682-1113 Science Fights Pine-Destroying Beetle equivalent of 200 million board feet of timber each year, enough to build 20,000 homes. j HEADQUARTERS, Idaho ing insects, commonly. called gion, the beetle ia killing the (AP>— Out in the remote Canyon Block of the Clearwater National Forest, warm breezes are wafting hundreds of thousands 'of tiny black beetles on one of | the moat destructive air raids in the annals of forest warfare. I Swarms of these deadly, bor- i. mountain pine beetles, are din-h ing on, and breeding in, the tenderbark of the largest single e stand of white pine remaining in s the United States. Only about an eighth of an inch long, the pests stir into activity when the forest temperature warms to 80 degrees, rising in huge formations. They follow a female scout’s scent as she seeks out a white pine.i Then they swarm over its baric and bore into the tree to lay eggs for a new generation of tree killers. SPREAD FUNGUS Worse still, they spread a blue fungus, deadlier than themselves, before they eat their way out of the crippled tree, leaving it to die. Rejoining in attack formation^ the beetles snif their way to another tree. The cycle goes on and bn. In Canyon Block and other white pine forests of the northern Rocky Mountain re- in an old dairy converted into field laboratory at Headquarters, a German forest entomologist and two assistants are hard at work plotting a counter-'Protectlon is more important ithan control,” says Dr. Joachim Schonherr of Freiburg University-in West Germany. “But until a feasible way is found to protect earii tree, we concentrate on destroying the beetle.” QUICK ANSWER He says he hopes by summer’s end to have most of the Three experiments are being conducted. Probably the most important involves developing a synthetic for the odor emitted by the female sco|it—or queen—beetle which alerts the swarms to the target tree. If a formula is found to fool the beetles, foresters will use it to lure the insects to traps where they can be liquidated in masses. Another method is to plant beetles in holes drilled in small white pine logs. This “bait” is suspended in a white pine weakened by ax cuts in its baric. Bait trees are chosen in areas of relatively low beetle infestation and the immediate area can be cleaned of beetles at the sacrifice of only one white pine. A third experiment is designed to determine why beetles prefer some white pines over others. BLUE FUNGUS Blue fungus carried fay the beetles actually means faster death for a tree than the boring the carrier. The fungus spreads to the tree’s inner bark, sealing off Its nutritional supply line. Beetles hibernate in winter, emerge from brood trees in the spring, and fly usually Until late in August. Aerial spraying is ineffectual, because little of it reaches the lower trunk bark, the beetles work. nanced by the Idaho Cooperative Board of Forestry, Potlatch Forests fee., Boyce Thompson Institute and other foundations. ‘We really have to stop the beetle,” he said, “it is killing 3 per cent of the white pine each year. In 20 years it will an be gone unless we win.” Thant, King Dine Despite Protests UNTIED NATIONS, N.Y (AP)—UJN. Secretary General U Thant paid no attention Thursday to a demand that he should not eat with King Constantine of Greece, who remains on the throne while a military junta runs the country. Outside U.N. headquarters, demonstrators displayed signs saying, “U Thant don’t dine with the ‘Fascist’ king of Greece” and “U.N.—restore human rights in Greece.” Inside, a U.N. spokesman told reporters Thant had .RESEARCH FUNDED Calumet Strike HonorScbmhen'! about 55 persons to a luncheon Friday in honor of the king and his queen, Anne-Marie. WHITE Niftiest PrioBS Paid “We PickUp” FE 2-0200 GARS Used ids Ports flnHaUe Pontiac Scrap 130 Branch 561 Continaons Filament Nylon Nik Oily Bfiotti ftmihM 5390 Dixie Highway 334-0981 623-0025 WANT TO SELL LAWN MOWERS, POWER MOWERS, BOATS, ROLLER SKATES?----USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL 332-8181. ___ REGISTERED _ Keepsake* DIAMOND RINGS A perfect diamond reflects fell brilliance and beauty. In a Keepsake Hag I b beautifully enhanced by exquisite styling. There is no finer way to show your love. TERMS AHRAN6ED - CHARGE IT ! CALUMET (AP) - Some 600 ! workers remained off the job {today at the Calumet Division of Calumet & Hecla, Inc., when [members of the United Steelworkers union (USW) honored picket lines by 27 striking employes. The strike affects laboratory, f§ warehouse, smelter and mill employes at the copper firm’s Keweenaw Peninsula complex. Some 600 miners have not yet smm 24 IN DOWNTOWN PONTIAC (AdwtlunMirt) Now Many Wear FALSE TEETH With Littlo Worry Do your false teeth anno; and embarrass by slipping, dropping, or wobbling when you eat, laugh or talk? Then sprinkle a little rMTBKH on your plates, fasteeth bolds dentures firmer and more comfortably. Makes eating easier. It's alkaline— doesn't tour. Hogummy, gooey, pasty teats or feel. Wipe check plait odor. Dentures that fit are eaaentlat to health. See your dentist regularly. Get FASTEETH r* J -- ---- at all drug counters. been affected , by the picket: lines. dr * ★ The 27 workers went on strike Wednesday to back demands for an interim contract with the company to tide them over until next year when they will be represented by USW Local 4312 at negotiations. The 27 voted earlier this year to be represented by the union, but got permission from the National Labor Relations Board to seek a temporary agreement until they are covered by the steelworkers contract. PAY BOOST Both the uhion and the company have declined Qomment the dispute, but one source said the 27 workers were reportedly a boost in pay of 60 cents aU hour. SHOP IN Mill UK D Z11 DEPT. 11 « III STORE The color-clicked double-knit wool... spare-flared; bandog chest high. More color xing at the sleeves... under the littlo high-rise collar. In sizes 5-15. Advance Sale! Winter Coats Jackets and Snowsuits FINAL WEEK v 10% Off Minerva’s CHILDREN’S SHOP 8184 Cooley Lake Rd. 363-2333 Daily 10-6, Fri. to 9 PlujMta Lei Shop 8178 COOLEY LAKE RD. Open Daily 10-9 EM 3-3254 ALWAYS Famous Labels . •. at Moderate Prices! “Friendliness of Fit99 THE SHOE H0RH In Union Lake Village-IMS UNION LAKE 80. CALL 383-7174 ft ft M CHAROE - MICHIGAN BANKARD SECURITY CHARGE Opdn Sundays 10:30-2-Man.-Thurs. 9.30 *o S.30-Friday 9:30 to 9 (SoAUQjf... Styfe and (J&htfewt SLIP INTO BY JARMAN i Pick the Pair! A1968 Frigidaire Jet Action Washer plus its Matching Dryer Make Washday easy all the way U\ Frigidaire Jet Action Washer has DPC for no-iron fabrics • Durable Press Care. Gentle washing action plus a cold water cool-down help Durable Press fabrics keep their no-iron promise. • Jet Action Agitator. Creates currents that plunga clothes deep into sudsy water for thorough warn* ing. • 2 Jet-Away Rinses. Get rid of lint ONLY and scum so thoroughly there's no nesd for a lint trap. • Jet-simple Mechanism. No belts. "a pulleys. No wonder M's Durable Press Care on this budget-priced Gas Dryer GAS COSTS LESS! • Durable Press Care. Proper temperature plus end-of-cyele cool-down brings Durable Press items out ready to wear or put away without ironing. • 2-cycle Timer. Select exact drying minutes. • Fine mesh Dacron lint screen. Right on the door. FREE INSTALLATION ON CONSUMER LINES SPECIAL PURCHASE FRIGIDAIRE FROST PROOF “14.3” « BIG 2 DOOR WITH • 126 LB. ZERO FREEZER • 100% FROST PROOF - NO FROST EVER! Reg. Price teas 339.95 SAVE a Big Value At *60 *268 NO DOWN PAYMENT 36 MONTHS TO PAYI HKVICE j OPEN T&tPifciafut §■ TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER FE 3-7879 1550IMMIUKE ROAD-UNION LAKE 363-6288 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 B—7 TO WALL STREET WITH LOVE—A flame flickers at the Up of a $5 bill as New York hippies throw their money around during a visit to the nation’s financial center on Wall Street yesterday. More than a dozen hippies threw dollar bills onto the floor of the New AP Wlrephoto York Stock Exchange from the visitors gallery and then burned the $5 on the street outside after guards threw them out. They called their activities “a loving gesture.” No one was arrested. Throw Money Away at Mart Hippies Bring Love to Wall St. NEW YORK (AP) - Hippies can hardly be regarded as big spenders—they eschpw work and begging is their thing—but Thursday they were throwing money away in, of all places, the New York Stock Exchange. ? ★ ★ ★ Startled clerks, runners and stockbrokers looked up at the visitor’s gallery shortly before noon as a shower of dollar bills came floating to the floor. They cheered and scrambled when the bills landed. “We just want to make a loving gesture to these people,” said one of the 15 hippies. “They don’t know what money is. They deal in stock certificates.” ★ ★ ★ , “I think they’re nuts,” said a woman tourist from Warren, Ohio. The hippies also tore several $1 bills to shreds and burned a $5 bill. ★ ★ ★ One of the hippies said $1,000 was thrown away, but observers Flint Sleep-In Continues FLINT, Mich. (AP)-A sleep-in protest moved into its eighth day today on the lawn of Flint City Hall although the demonstrators were under a court order not to tear up the grass. The protest began after the Flint City Commission defeated an open housing ordinance Aug. 14. The ordinance, which would have prohibited discrimination in the sale or rental of housing, was defeated again last Monday. * ★ ★ ' Several city, officials Thursday asked Circuit Judge Philip C. Elliott to do something to save the City Hall landscape. Elliott issued an order barring the demonstrators from playing football, riding bicycles or leaving their sleeping bags on the grass. could count only 20 or 30 bills sailing down. After a few minutes, security guards hustled the hippies out, to cheers and applause from the floor. State Produce on Display LANSING (AP) - Michigan farm products will be on display to tempt food buyers at Cologne, Germany, and London, England, this fall, reports the State Agriculture Department. A booth displaying Michigan-grown apples, cherries and onions will be set up at the Cologne Trade Fair Sept. 30-Oct. 8. Apples, cherries, onions, peppers, pickles and cauliflower from Michigan will be displayed at the London Trade Fair Oct. 12-20. The cost of the exhibits is shared by the State Agriculture Department and several groups hoping to promote markets for Michigan crops. SENSATIONAL 99' PORTRAIT OFFER 6 DAYS ONLY 8” x 10” OIL COLOR Bust Vignette PORTRAIT PLUS SO# handling, wrapping, Portraits by JACK B. NIMBLE, INC. are Nationally Advertised Here's your chance to get a beautifully finished genuine oil tint portrait of your child. Delicately applied oil brings your child’s portrait to life. Perfect match of hair, eyes, and complexion. Clothing excluded. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK! Children's groups taken at 99c par child. Age limit s weeks to 12 years old. No appointment Is naoeasaiy. Limit: one bust vignette per child. Select from finished photographs — not proofs. MONDAY, AUGUST 21 THRU SATURDAY, AUGUST 26 W fWMWMCf I ^Good Housekeeping^ V WARAaTEB / Pontiac Mai Phone 682-4940 to PCS. COMPUTE • DOUBLE DRESSER • CHEST • BOOKCASE BED • TILTING MIRROR i No Money Down FAMOUS SERTA BOX SPRING & MATTRESS, TWO VANITY LAMPS, TWO PILLOWS Up to 3 Y*qr»to Poy Modem design, generously proportioned, with a tropical flair ... Hazelwood Walnut finish under plasticized coating for years of lasting beauty, protection against scratches, spilled cosmetics and marring... wipes clean with a damp cloth. Brass finished hardware and applied basketweave pattern on drawer fronts accents the rich wood graining. All drawers are double center guided ... guaranteed by manufacturer against ever sticking 1 10-PC. MODERN BEDROOM OUTFIT 6 good reasons for buying a No.l Chevrolet in August. -| You’ll get the most driving pleasure for a* your dollar now on new Chevrolets, Chevelles, Camaros, Chevy ITs and Cor-vairs—all at year-end pricesl 2 There’s still a good selection of models, ** but they’re gqing fasti In fact, right now people prefer Chevrolet by an even bigger margin than they did fast year. So hurry. 2 Your present car Is worth more right now than It ever will be againl So trade , now-get more for your present car plus savings on your new one. > A Chevrolets are worth more when you ’’ buy, worth more when you trade. Their Body by Fisher and built-in dependability keep them looking and working like new. C August, September and October offer the year’s most enjoyable driving weather, made even more enjoyable when you’re in a brand-new Chevrolet f. You’re dealing with a Chevrolet dealer, v,so you know he’ll treat you right He’s a good man to do business with, and that’s why he stays No. 1 in the business. Get a deal only the leader can offer. gsiQsr MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES, INC. Authorized Chevrolet Dealer in Pontiac 631 Oakland Ava. — 335-4161 Lake Orion AL HANOUTE, INC. 2Q9 N. Park Blvd. — 692-2411 Oxford HOMER HIGHT MOTORS, INC. 160 S. Washington — 628-2528' Clarkston TOM RADEMACHER CHEVROLET-OLDS, INC. 6751 Dixie Hwy. — 625-5071 Rochester BILL FOX CHEVROLET, IN< / 755 S- Rochester — 651-7000 ¥ LOW IN COST! FAST IN ACTION! PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. PHONE 332-81811 B—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 i The federal government would take over financial qnd wage controls. . “The control of resources and economic stabilization in time of/Rational emergency is a problem of extraordinary magnitude which can only be solved j by the combined efforts of fed-i IK . ssdc5 ■**\ ..(B# V €&**%** JU*'®*5 .JSfgM .llB\ ........«— ajftl w**«H tiJ ... tMf' .»w»Hr 11 11 .mini*11 .. ill.,1, fflmmZ&Z** ^**e*W .fMlNGHAM ^»wwi»1^ssvw':: Slftu k £e/s Fo/7 Reds ‘ MOSCOW (UPD -r Officials wondered for a time if it was sabotage when a 1.8 mile underwater pipeline of a chemical liber factory in Daugapavpils, Latvia, was mysteriously jammed. But it was no saboteur, the Tass News Agency reported. More * than 1,000 eels somehow had gotten through the pipe-jreal he awoke to find his bedline’s protective nets. [room filled with smoke. Aromatic Dream SHERBROOKE, Que. - An apartment dweller here, Patrick Gauthier, 70,. asleep and alone when his building burst into flames, was saved by an extremely. realistic dream. He dreamt that the ham he was to have for dinner was cooking. The aroma became so NOW IN PROGRESS SEARS OUR SENSATION FULL COLOR PORTRAIT OFFER! NOW THRU SATURDAY! YmrOUMtstMft Your Child's Portrait In Full Broathtating COLOR 99* A 5x7fa Color Portrait Sensational Offer • In Kntt 5 Yearsand Under • Additional Children In Family..... 1.99 • 2 CMAm Pend Tegtttir..... 14* • Additional Mots and Reorders Available at XHMiabli Prices. Satisfaction Guarantied or Your Money Back Downtown Pontiac — FE 5-4171 Fairbanks Starts Massive Cleanup Police Set Briefings on N-Attack Economy EAST LANSING (UPI) -The Michigan State Police will start briefinjg county officials Sept. 13 on how to administer rationing and price controls in the event FAIRBANKS, Alaska (AP)—After the deluge comes the) reck- y^e briefings, to be held at oning-and the race to titty up before the subzero temperature? 12 locations between September of mid-September. and December, will be conduct- Last week this city of 30,000 wore a dirty brown blanket of water up to 10 feet deep, spilled out of the flooding Chena River. Half the pbpulation had fled for their lives. Seven were dead. Damage totaled $150 million to $200 million. * * * Today most of Fairbanks looks like a giant back yard, where residents are drying rugs, mattresses, furniture and wearing appaitel on clotheslines, fences, posts and rooftops. ’ Lloyd Teel stood outside .his home in the Aurora subdivision and held his hand four feet up the muddy wall from where his feet sloshed in the muck. WILL REBUILD ’m gonna rebuild,” Teel said. “And this time the floors j are gonna be up here where my hand is, and I’m gonna have walls two feet thick, reinforced with steel." He was one of thousands who have been returning to the I sodden ruins of homes and businesses this week while the devastating floodWaters ebbed away. * ‘ A man in the Westgate district, his basement still flooded, is in ’ eral, state, and local governments,” said Col. Frederick E. Davids, director of the St$te Police and of Michigan’s Civil 'All of us are aware that In this nuclear age plans must be prepared to‘ cope with such an attack.” “I’d be better off to leave,” said Pete Dunn. “I have $10,000 worth of equity, hut I also have $10,000 worth of damage, figure I’ll fix the thing up and move on up a hill.” STORE SALES Many residents, with furnishings and clothing lost during the! week-long nightmare, flocked around stores which offered water-soaked merchandise at bargain prices. One Shop was selling shirts for 25 cents each and you could buy a pair of work wants for $2. As the‘people began the huge cleanup, many found their ses and shops almost a total loss. ★ ★ * Only a scant five per cent or so were reported to have flood j insurance. Some low-lying sections remained under water, preventing! evacuees from returning. About 1,000 were still homeless and) being cared for at flood evacuation centers. DISASTER LOANS Hundreds of householders and businessmen had applied fqr disaster loans. The federal Office of Emergency Planning estimated that loan applications passed the 500 mark by noon Wednesday—and the lines of those patiently waiting grew by the hour. Detroit Bar Loses Permit LANSING (AP) - The State Liquor Control Commission Thursday revoked the liquor license of a West Side Detroit bar owner accused of. violating Gov. George Romney’s liquor sale ban during the Detroit riots. The commission said police, investigating neighborhood complaints on July 28, found about persons drinking behind locked doors in theSkgcot bar, owned by Ted Frappien ★ * ★ An executive order issued on. July 23, shortly after the rioting began, prohibited the dispensing or selling of alochoUc bever-i. The ban was lifted after the riots were quelled. Revocation of Frappier’s Class C liquor license will be effective Sept. 25, the commission said. Walk through this list when you convert to electric heat AM gel a $150 traue-in lor your out heat system. When you convert your home to electric heat, trust these heating contractors to do an excellent job.’Each has tpeen carefully > screened by Edison as to qualificatioh ana financial responsibility. Each has completed Edison's rigorous training program. Each must be properly licensee!. Each must carry insurance to protect against possible damage to your property. / ' / EDISON And. for a limited time, each Will give you a $150 trade-in for your old heating plant when you switch to electric heat. 'We add something else. Our guarantee. You get it only if yoli have one of these approved heating contractors do the work. This is the time to convert to electric heat. So, walk your fingers through this list. Pick Out ydur nearest contractor; Call him. Vou’H be protected every step of the way. ORIGINATED In Colonial America By BENJAMIN FRANKLIN! Specially Priced BASIC UNIT M3995 Include* boot reducer and basket grate! SWING OUT BAR-B-Q GRILL FIRE SCREEN ROPER OUTDOOR GAS BARBECUE GRILL SHUTTERS IC—ALUMINUM—WOOO *6V„, „*141L PEG BOARD HOOKS Complete Lin* to Fit Vi" and W PEG BOARDS x Px&pm&mm Convenient Side Door Parking Phonw FE 4-1594 FRANK!111 THE P03TTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 LBJ's Viet Delegation Plan Hit WASHINGTON WI - President Johnson’s plan to send a delegation of Americans to South Vietnam to observe that nation' Sept. 3 presidential elections has drawn fire from 'two Republicans on Capitol Hill. Rep. Henry C. Schadeberg of Wisconsin said the United States ‘has no more business in at-tempting to police an election in Vietnam” than the Vietnamese would have in overseeing an American eleqtjon. James Pearson of 'called dispatch of the delegation ian attempt by the President “to satisfy critics of Ms policy.” Pearson said the observers, including leading U.S. businessmen, labor officials And politicians, won’t accomplish anything in determining whether the election is fair because they can’t read or speak Vietnamese. They’ll therefore have to rely for guidance, said Pearson, on the ruling military regime target of congressional criticism for allegedly attempting to rig the elections. Pearson maintained t h a while the observers can do no good, they can “serve to promote the natural concern Vietnamese and others have about American domination and influence in their internal affairs.” Johnson appointed the delegation Wednesday. It will leave for Vietnam Monday and return ‘ 6. Pentagon Identifies 15 War Casualties WASHINGTON (AP) - The Defense Department has listed names of 13 men killed in action in connection with Jie Vietnam ar. They included five Army men and eight Marines. One other Marine died of wounds and an Army man formerly listed as missing was reported killed. Killed in action: MONTH Filter-Flo* Washer Exclusive Mini-Basket*— gentle washing for up to 2 lbs. of flraglles you’d normally wash by hand. Great for leftover or nuisance loads like sneakers or colored things that run. • 2 Wash Cycles • Permanent Press Cooldown e 2 Wash, 2 Spin Speeds • 3 Wash, 2 Rinse Temperatures -e Automatic Bleach Dispenser •T.U. of O.l. Co.' HAMPTON I 828 W. Huron I COMPANY FE 4-2525 Tahachapl; CpI. Cary F. Osttl, Lynwood. NEW YORK — Spac. 4 Joseph S. Yancy, Brooklyn) Pfc. Angelo C. Raptls Jr., Rlverdale. Bronx. WASHINGTON — 2nd Lt. Frank M. Bozzello, Seattle. MARINS CORN ILLINOIS — Lanco CpI. Richard C. annatt. Wood River. MASSACHUSETTS — CpI. Richard J. Gilbert, Lawrance. MISSISSIPPI — Lancs CpI. Roy M. Wheat, Moselle. MISSOURI — CpI. Daniel J. Helbel, :olumbia. NEW JERSEY - 2nd Lt. Thomas G. Humphries fll, Effingham. Died of wounds: MARINS CORN TEXAS — CpI. Jesus Yenez Jr.. Corpus Christf Changed from missing to dead — hostile: ARMY CALIFORNIA — Sp Frailing Jr., Palo Alto. Missing as a result of hostile action: NAVY Lt. (|.g.) Wayne D. Goodoi Died not as a result of hostile action: ARMY SOUTH CAROLINA — Spec. S Fay JC. Coopera Blythe wood. OUISIAN . ...o Platt*. Missing not as a result of hostile action: k ARMY Sgt. Ronnla M. Snider. •gr A MODERN 24" VAHtW ALL FOBMICA INCLUDES SINK and RW VINYL ASBESTOS TILE Carpet your Kitchen! ■Mm Usa OZITE Town TT Torraco Carpet made with Voctra fiber anyplace indoors or outdoor* Resists atoms and spotting Hoses clean outsido, *QC vpcuum* clean inside Of sq. yd. 16 decorator color* OzitB TOWN IT TERRACE CARPET " OtlflN teclfci’ 9x9 1/1* First Quality 6€ PARK IN REAR FREE ESTIMATES Mibhibah PLASTIC WALL TILE 1*EACH and UP saspow® cbuww* Priced fr»*19*** iiif Slyr*ft SPECIAL SALE ON ARMSTRONG VINYL CORLON s* Yard *2“' KITCHEN CARPETS By VIKING OPEN MON.-FRL ‘Till 9 P.M. PAINT SPECIAL MAC-O-LAC «... MAGIC FORMULA99*0,!l. MAC-O-LAC .... latex *4" ROYAL BOND PAINT V LATEX, ENAMEL SEMI-GLOSS *21 Officer Urges More Negro Guardsmen DURHAM, N. 2nd class Navy hospital corps-men are the firei males to be admitted to the Dbke University School of Nursing.X WASHINGTON (AP)—A regular Army (officer who helped command federal troops in the Detroit riots Thursday strongly backed a recommendation that more Negroes be brought into the National Guard. Maj. Gen. Charles P. Stone, deputy commander of the Detroit task force, said the regular Army forces, which numbered about 40 per cent Negroes, were more effective establishing good relations with the Detroit Negro community than the nearly all-white Michigan Guard. WWW Under questioning by members of a House Armed Services subcommittee, however, Stone agreed that the situation in the riot area had eased by the time the regular Army forces arrived. The subcommittee.is conducting an inquiry into the National Guard’s capability to deal with urban riots. NO ANSWERS Underescretary of the Army David McGiffert said the Army is studying a recommendation for increasing Negro participation in the guard but has no answers yet as how to do it. In New Jersey, he said, at the request of state officials, special permission has been given to increase the guard’s strength by 700 places in hopes of filling them with Negroes. The New Jersey effort will be studied to if it can be applied in other states, he said. .♦ w ★ Three days of testimony by McGiffert, Stone and Lt. Gen. John L. Throckmorton, who headed the Detroit task force, ended with Stone declaring that the unsoldierly appearance of the Michigan Guard during the first days of its Detroit duty was principal cause for the critical comments its perforinance has drawn. In the Senate, Robert Griffin, R-Mich., said the Michigan National Guard should be praised and not criticized for its performance. Three other senators joined him in tributes to the guard. Bacteria is a source of inexpensive protein, according to $cientists. 2 Sailors Enroll in Duke Nursing School Tirol Roger Voelkel of Mansfield, Ark., and Donald Brown of Cody, Wyo.,.have as classmates 250 young women. After graduating with a Reg- istered Nursing Degree, the men will be commissioned Ensigns in the Nursing Corp£ and serve four more years of naval duty. (Advarttaamaat) TOOTHACHI Don’t aufftr tray. Gat OM-JEl. I* saeoad* you (*t r*l lot from tkroCbtn* toothacha pain. Put on —pain’* torn, until yea can aaa your dantlat, do n mllllona do-uta OM-JEL ft*o-ommendad by many dan- ... tlata. Ask pharmacist lor *\! ora-jel* GLENWOOD PLAZA. . .North Perry at Glenwood KITCHEN CARPET You prbbably have seen this new revolutionary advertised as high at $12.95 sq. yd. Karen's, following their price-slashing tradition, have reduced the price of this kitchen carpet to: IMPORTANT SPECIFICATIONS: 1— Exceeds FHA Minimum Standards 2— Extrema Hi-Density, Microtuft construction S-A non-woven Polypropylene Primary Back (water barrier) «... w 4-Super Hi-Density Hhll Y 1 075 W. Huron St. Phone 334-9957 If You Don’t Buy From Us, We Both Lose Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! Rubber Backing TERMS: 90 Days the Same As Cash or up to 3 Years to Pay! HOURS: Mon. and Fri. 10 A.M. - 9 P.M. Tues., Wed., Thurs. and Sat. 10 A.M.-5:30 P.M. CAMPER-HOISE TRAILER SPECIAL Karen's have over 100 small pieces of quality carpeting under 9 feet long. Ideal for campers, trailers and home. $2 *4' tf' 3750 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains OR 3-2100 ************+**** B—10 | Jacoby on Bridge By OSWALD A JAMES JACOBY On some occasions it should be easy to see that a squeeze may be developing and to And .a lead to brfeak I it up. South won the leart opening | in his own hand led his I three of spades. ■Dummy’s jack llost to East’s ■ace and East JACOBY made the safe (?) lead of a heart. South proceeded to run off five club tricks. He discarded the six of spades and queen of diamonds from dummy. West was one of those players who might be described as poor but honest. Hi " ' discard was the nine of diamonds; his second the three of diamonds and his third the four of diamonds. fourth discard. This turned to bd sheer torture but eventual- monds like a man losing his last tooth. South noted all this. He cashed Idummy’s two high spades; led the seven of diamonds rose with his ace and made his slam. East was indignant with West. “Couldn’t you have played your diamonds in the order 348-8 and without showing any worry? In that ’case declarer would probably have finessed and gone down two.” East’s criticism was justi- NORTH 25 > 4KQJ76 ¥ AKJ 4Q7 4 A J 6 WEST EAST 410842 4 A93 ¥94 ¥ 106532 ♦ K 9 843 * 65 4 97 4104 2 SOOTH (D) 4 3 ¥ Q 8 7 4 A J102 4KQ853 Neither vulnerable West North East South 14 Pass 2 4 Pass 2N.T. Pass 3 4 Pass 3 4 Pass 4N.T. Pass 5 4 Pass 6N.T. Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—¥ 9 fied bat if we were looking for a cilprit we would have to choose East. , When East was In with the ace of spades he should have seen that the only way to set the slam would be if Went held the king of diamonds and a spade stopper and East should have led a diamond and broken up the squeeze before it had a chance to develop. THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 V*CRRD Sense** Q—1The bidding has been: West North East Sot 14 Dble Rdble Pass Pass 14 24 Pass .2 V Pass f You, South, hold: 4K9 VA J54 0432 4K 1076 What do you do? A—Bid four hearts. Your partner* has more than a opening and you have enouch heart support to warrant a same bid. jL Astrological^ Forecast ay SYDNUY OMARS Investments. Welcome ARIES {Mar.il-Apr. 1* *): Details ... . nected with possessions demand personal Mention. Keep eys on valuables. Be sure you eat money’s worth. - Some around you may be Impatient. Heed your TA&A*2GM.y JO): Cycle eon- Sent In thought, action. GEMINI (May 21-JunO 20): Thera art soma limitations. Wrk with material at hand. Don’t rush, push or wee Issues. Study TAURUS message. Conditions at hignt demand attention. Family — .•MUM be Improved. . 3a CANCER (JuntzVvIuly a): Some requests mev be on buiW'IWE- —' mev want to comply. ML rise. Key Is to be realistic, they exist. Avoid m——- iAPRICORN (Dec.' 23-Jen. 19): If __le Is positive some key obstacles removed. Goal Is not as far as :~Mlne. Check details. Utilize LEO (July 2396*722): Key Is author-Hy and reaponafitlttv. You are called upon to live up to potential. Give your sphere c with Ml methods. I rlahten pro Ones open. I (Feb. 19-Mer. in vacation, lourna. ___________ RRRI straight. Don’t be deceived by wishful thinking. OutMno realistic budget. Avow foolish argument with rotetfvA TOMORROW IS YOUR BIRTHDAY are a dynamic Individual, fascinated . ...-..-u. fromlwlth human nature. Avoid tendency to proaaacts. Keep scatter forces. New protect Illuminated * /Sfentj Marriage Licenses Curtis B. Lov, Union Laka-Ahd Betty J. Beacon, Carkshm . Warren L. Smith, 40 Banner and Fe- ;*3Sferinlrn California and Elizabeth Th_,__ f pisJer T, Curtiss, Royal Oak and Donna and Ltod. D. Weeks, Union Lake Kermlt C. Adkins, 30 East Longfsllow and Lucille A. Baker, W Wing .Raymond J- rale, 1M Dresden Dawn B. Cooper, 29 feuffi Tasmania . Douglas C. Christ!#, *744 Oakrtdge g, pratt Holly “ ISA P. Wright, I___.... HE Waterford ’ Gary D. Coffman, 4* Tregenf and Kathy J. Breves, Union Lake Tony C. Odneal, 124 Franklin and Joyce B. Wilcox, St. Clair shorts Kevin M. Dermody, Highland si Roberta J. Cooper, Highland _ David E. Kirby, 142 Plngree ai Reselyn J. McKinney, 470 Oakland Robert N. Frssier, Drayton Plains ei Yvonne M. Huemttiar, Drayton Plains , Louis W Dseneen Jr., 771_CrJHendl and Theresa M. Gonialez, 112 OMChW Ronald P. Thomas, 330 Auburn and Rost M. McDonald, Drayton Plains Donald R. Cobb, Utica end Donna L> Lapeer, Rochester Martin E. Rich, Birmingham and Judith F. Sutkln, Birmingham Charles A. Cola, 3674 LtnoaMahlra Diana J, Adam*, 1404 Wood low •^Petor M. Smith, 740 Bighorn DIaM B. Turner 113 East Chicago "M. Chayka, R--------- Freddie L. SmHlV ■ Diana stars, Rooevlile Jamas Gtocon, 12M SI Johnson, UMMomon 294 Parkwood and jlilanY <(» Nicholes, Orlonvllleand •A. Quick, Orlonvllle » Richard T. Loads, Barkley and Linda -K. Jenke, Birmingham • Jamas R. Webb, S Sheridan Barbara A. Jamas, 906 Cameron Clarence J. Braxton, 4)0 Midway Carnostlno Mosley, 490 Midway > Harvey E.Chapman Jr., Farmington and Julie D. Emerson, Royal Oak , William G. Taylor, Rochestr- —■ Mto urine aa. Ferguson. Rochester • Craig R. Smith, Dotrolt and Card A. White, Watortora iClifford T. McReynolds, Royal Oik •and Juno Beeson, Troy r Anthony Prana, Ctorkston and Undo K. -Knlsley, Drayton plains *_ lshman Jamas, 909 Orchard Laka and Davarly J. Daniels, 90 Jackson I Keith H. Coykendall, Farmington •'and Gall Erickson. Faitnington i Walter J. Tripp, Milford and T Al. Polnton, Highland < Philip L. DeRosla, Walled Lake Sarah S. Gibbs, Welled Lake • Thomas J. wolf, Birmingham and •drlcla A. Harcka, Birmingham • Alfred Pama, 1160 Holbrook Ml. Griffin, 1160 Holbrook , Jamas J. Bsldlno, Birmingham and JMKe Fossl, Detroit ' Dennis L. Msler, kss'h Morkh and JWersho A. Smith, 764 Cameron X William Flamming, Tray and B as tries B. Currie, Troy JUdiari W. Mason, *7 Michigan and Alta F. Snyder, Drayton Flal“ Mickey L. Weaver, Troy------—. J. EMrMga, Tray , - , f. .. , Howard W. Sterling, Farmington and Jacqueline D. Chudy, Farmington Carry} R. Goad, Clawson Rowland, Troy Dale F. Javnas, 2004 Gra L. Vanover, Detroit Dominick A. Serlno, Farmington .Denna M. Fisk, Farmington Pater M. McDonald, Birmingham and' Judy A. Dlebold, Southfield ■! _ Donald M. Corbett,. Farmington and v Dana F. Rogers, Faimtoalon L, i .. David G. Barons, 5397 Graves and . Jannsna K, Lesley, 749 Geneva .Harold L. Fields, 3385 Ytttk and Susan SWawBlWto WW South Rosalawn Z '*2 Jerry L. IHMr. > Union Laka - amt Kathryn L. MaUott, Warren . ■ Dlene^M. W«tts!^Snion Leke Donald R. Gardiner, BlOomf and Linda L .MgmXJgUjm■ FiWy w.JWfc wmwflipiMt — Lorraine K, Stover, 2040 NNfMIlt . Beniamin R. (mum 2036 Hempsl ■ iffifMaighy,DroBmO Lake Larry M. -CanHtt, Farmington and ana K. Carlson, Dotrolt ^ B—11 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 85, 1967 I ■ lilSBBilISll {■ i I'tihm, mkn/£m 'VAw fi raj Sira ■ i WMMm .* |Jfp: Hospital here. The eight were Joseph, 3; Genevieve, 5; Martin, 7; De-lores, 8; Geraldine, 10; Thomas, 12; Christine, 13; and James A. Jr., 15» EARLY BIRDS — These two youthful and enterprising ••businessmen” df»ridfd to get the jump oh advance Christmas sales earlier thii week despite tropical temperatures in Ann Arbor. In fact, Mike Biride, 12, mid Jeff Students Plan OU Mass Transit System * when Oakland University* planners began to look at tomorrow’s transportation problems, . they decided to go to tomor- i 1 row's engineers. ★ ★ ★ They dropped the task into the laps of undergraduate students in the university's , school I of engineering.' The question that needed answering was: "How does a small and compact university look ahead to the days when it has to shuttle more than 28,088 students back and forth between a half a dozen cam-| |S puses?” It was posed to a seminar class of seven undergraduate engineering students whose single assignment was to draw up a preliminary design of mass transportation system for OU in die 1970s. ★ ★ ★ They suggested, an envision-ary $13.4-million system of 12 gas turbine-powered vehicles riding on a nine-mile long network of tracks and guide rail* between the campus dusters. OU’s planning committee and professional planning consultants had asked for a transit study in conjunction with the campus master plpn. Johnson, Johnsonft Ray , consultants of Ann Arbor have recommended that the university develop its 1,818 acres into cluster campuses — possibly four to six—rather than one sprawling campus to meet a projected enrollment of 38,888 by mid-1988s. " At present/'with an enrollment of about 5,008 students, there is not even a network of campus roads serving this land. ‘ • ★ dr A specially designed vehicle, 18 feet wide and 30 feet long , with seats for 22 and standing room for 53 more, was 'recommended by the students. VEHICLE OPERATION With a maximum speed of 66 miles per hour, the vehicles could travel alone or in tandem during peak periods for a total capacity of 150. Large doors on both sides would be provided for rapid loading. The student engineers selected gas turbine instead of in- which they said would produce a high level of air pollution. An initial transit system would consist of an hourglass-shaped track networit of two loops typing the present campus with the second one., A second campus may be developed in mid-1970 about a mile to the southeast. " . - it] ★ it, , If the student’s planning was adopted, the guideways (guide rails) would be sunk into open ditches in the heart of campus areas, both to retain the beauty of the rolling landscape and to muffle the sound of die rolling cars. \ VISIBLE RAILS Elsewhere the concrete-surfaced rails would be at ground level or elevated on a framework of steel I-beams 15 to 25 feet above the ground. John E. Gibson, dean of the OU School of Engineering and teacher of the class, had this to say tbout the 199-page published student report: “It tells us what we ought to look at.in more detail,’! adding that it1 should be quite useful in two or three years when planners will have made a firm decision as to exactly how the campus area Is to grow. Among the seven students who compiled the report were: Patrick A. Gibson of Detroit, son of a Detroit traffic research engineer; Craig E. Downs, 181' Fredrick, Oxford; and Kenneth. H. Goff Jr., 241 Douglas, Bloomfield Hills. Planners look for the present Oakland campus at the northwest corner of the I,-688-acre property to grow to its ultimate enrollment of more than 12,888 by the mid-1978s. A similar-sized plateau . on Butler Road, about halfway between Squirrel and Adams roads, is considered the likely site for development as a second campus clusters. Other possible sites for campus clusters are spread about the campus. * , Futur t NORTH Initial Guideway ZZZ Final Guideway H Stations PROPOSED MASS TRANSPORTATION SYSTEM FOR OAKLAND UNIVERSITY GUIDEWAY MAP — The map shows the initial guideway path (unbroken lines) showi present OU campus and how the guideways would connect the campus clusters. The the location of a possible second campus. 1 CAMPUS “BUS”—Rubber-tired vehicles like this one on a guide rail concrete elevated tracks would connect small campuses within OU’s 1,600 | are proposed for student transportation at Oakland University. Steel and acres. IT FITS THE BILL-Dave Whitehom, 16, from Racine, Wis., puts the finishing touches on a mailbox his dad built out of an old stove, providing appropriate compartments for different kinds oPmail. Farmiloe, 8, managed to commercially wed two 'seasons by also selling, a cooling beverage. They are the sons of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin /. Birkle and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas L. Farmiloe. / Tonsillectomy I Dog Tags Friend in Mail Route Is Package Deal PITTSBURGH, Ua —When take, to cover the rout.. Uren •' 1 mail carrier ^arry Hawrylak he follows his friend to the bus KANSAS CITY, Kan. W — All uets 0ff y,e bus every morning and waits until he gets aboard eight children & Mr. and Mrs. to start his mail route, Apache, before heading borne. The dog James A. Baughman of Kdhsas his unofficial watchdog and has been faithful to this routine City had their tonsils removed companion, is waiting there to far the past five years. • . _ i him. If a substi- ------------— 300,000 Cubans Flee Since Fidel Castro seized power in 1969, a total of 388,888 Cubans have fled the island to the tute mailman gets off^ the bus, the dog. turns around and goes home. Apache, who is ovraed by Mrs. Lydia P. Carter. v stays with Hawrylak for the five hours it United States. TRANSIT TALK — Oakland University junior Patrick A. Gibson of Detroit, (left) explains the route of a student-proposed $13.4- million mass transit system for the university to Chancellor D. B. Varner. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1867 *200,000.00 IN CASE OF A STRIKE -PAYMENTS ; WILL BE DEFERRED UNTIL THE STRIKE IS SETTLED WE MUST SACRIFICE OUR COMPLETE STOCK IN ORDER TO REDECORATE AND REPAIR OUR STORE. ALL FIRE AND SMOKE DAMAGED FURNITURE MUST BE REMOVED BEFORE We can return the store to normal business con- DITIONS. Pontiac’s Finest ucl$AfMO MENTION tij LOW PP/rcc NAjmuYBS MatO?WN $S7*f$ses& B0Mlf^INGS must be *asssL- ■KB^fiBSLJswvco FRENCH PROVINCIAL SOFAS- CHAIRS & SECTIONALS MUST BE CLEARED AT FANTASTICALLY LOW, LOW PRICES BUY NOW AT TREMENDOUS SWINGS RECLINING CHAIRS . y AS LOW AS By the Makers of STflOO Stratolounger *“ CHOICE OF COLORS AS LOW AS BROYHILL PREMIER COLONIAL SOFAS - CHAIRS - LOVE SEATS YOUR CHOICE OF SIZE, FABRICS, COLORS, TWEEDS & PRINTS UVtIM MAM 2>PC. SOFA and CHAIN NYLON FRIEZE COVERS FOAM REVERSIBLE CUSHIONS aslowas $100°° BROYHILL QUALITY AT PRICES DISCOUNTED UP TO 50% OR MORE FANTASTIC BUYS OF FAMOUS BROYHILL - A ONCE IN A LIFE TIME OPPORTUNITY ALL TABLES, LAMPS, PICTURES, HUBS ROOM DIVIDERS ORLY ORIGINALLY $11100 $2500 IIP YOUR CHOICE OF SOFAS IN 72", 84", 96" SIZE LOUNGE CHAIRS or SWIVEL ROCKERS Shop in AirrConditioned Comfort PLENTY OF FREE PARKING IN OUR LOT MANY ITEMS SLIGHTLY DAAAAGED OR STILL IN THEIR pRIGINAL BOXES OR CONTAINERS all Payments will be DEFERRED IF YOU ARE ON STRIKE. I ** Mont^ASh Phone FE 58114-5 FURNITURE COMPANY ORCHARD 'A'V SflF THE PONTI AC PRESS ‘ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, l»67 V\; C—1 Frustrated Bengals Starting Road Trip After 4-2 Setback Killebrew's HR in Eighth Inning Sihks Bengals By JERE CRAIG Another day of frustration behind them, the Detroit Tigers invade Kansas City tonight hoping to reestablish that elusive momentum that could carry them to their first World Series berth in 22 autumns. The Bengals dropped a 4-2 verdict to Minnesota Thursday afternoon before a crowd of 40,293 — including 24,376 paying customers who boosted the season paid attendance to 1,125,124. This is 831 more than all last year. Harmon Killebrew’s one-out, bases-empty home run in the eighth inning off Denny McLain (now 16-14) snapped a 2-2 tie and enabled the visiting Twins to salvage the final two games in the series after the Tigers had taken the first three to slip past the Twins in the standings temporarily. Coupled with league-leading Chicago’s loss and runner-up Boston’s win In other Thursday matinees, the Tiger Stadium result put Minnesota third, a half game out of first, and the Bengals fourth, 1% behind the leader. Detroit’s loss was its second in less than 20 hours after compiling a five-game winning streak and climbing 14 games above .500 at 69-55 — its best mark since June 6. Killebrew’s homer was his 34th of the season — he leads the major leagues -and only his second hit in the five-game series. The other safety also was a solo circuit clout and came in Wednesday night’s 4-3 Twins’ Victory. QUICK LEAD The Tigers grabbed a 1-0 lead In the first inning yesterday as Willie Horton’s double eluded Bob Allison in the left field comer and scored Dick McAuliffe from first base. a It took Minnesota only two hitters to fie the game. Allison led off the second with a double deep down the right field line. The big slugger, however, pulled a hamstring muscle going for second base and had to leave the game. Reserve catcher Hank Izquierdo then blooped a two-strike double inside the right field foul line, sewing pinehrunner Sandy Val-despino. Twins' starting pitcher Dave Boswell dropped a perfect bunt for a lead-off single in the fifth. A sacrifice bunt and Ted Uhlaender’s shwt single to left field preceded Cesar Tovar’s sacrifice fly that made it 2-1. The home team retaliated quickly when the slumping Norm Cash drilled a none on, two-out liner over the lower deck fence in right field for his 17th home run. Boswell and McLain then each pitched out of man-on-third, none-out situations before Killebrew ended the tie. Rod Carew’s two-out double and Uhlaender’s single added an insurance run in the ninth off Hank Aguirre. A1 Worthington, 38-year-old Twins’ relief specialist, earned the decision (8-6) in relief of Bdswell who jammed his shoulder while sliding into third base in the top of the seventh. BID FAILS Detroit had runners on first and second with one out. in the eighth, but Bill Freehan’s long blast to left center was caught at the warning track and pinch-bitter Jerry Lumpe fouled out.. Minnesota — considered by most of the contending managers as the team to beat — moves to Cleveland for a twinight twinbill. California, still 6% back in fifth place, goes to Baltimore prior to entertaining the Tigers next week in a four-game set. Manager Mayo Smith of the Tigers has John Hiller starting tonight’s 8 o’clock game at Kansas City. The Athletics, plagued by administrative unpleasantness this week, received a rousing welcome home from their fans Thursday and should be inspired for the-three-game set with Detroit. The series opens a crucial stretch fw the Bengals, Only four of their next 18 games are at home, and they stand 28-34 away from Tiger Stadium. MINNHOTA DETROIT abrhbl , abrhbl Caret* lb 4 1 1*. MAUliff* lb 4 10b Uhlaendr cf 5 0 3 1 Cash lb 4 111 Tovar lb 4 0.11 Kalin* if, 4 010 Oliva rf 4 0 0 0 WHorton If 4 011 Killebrow lb 4 1 f 1 Main*** Sb 101* Allison If 10 10 Northrup cf 0 0 0 0 Valdspino If 3 11 O Freehan c 4 0 0 0 i Hernoncfi is 3 0 0 0 Grcan *ph Boswell p 3 1 10 Trcawskl as 0 0 0 0 Worthgtn p 1 0 0 0 Lumpe ph 10 0 0 " - McLain p 3 0 0 0 Aguirre p 0 0 0 1 O Stanley pb 1 0 01 Total 30 414 4 - Total 33 1 « ? Minnesota .....: *1* IT* Oil-* Detroit J**4Tp-**|-l E-Caraw, Izquierdo. bdpO Detroit 1. LOB—Minnesota », • DetrST *.. IB— W.Horton (»,.AHIson, IzquIardo. Carew 3B—Boswell. HR-Cash (17), Killebrew (34). SB—Valdesplno. S—Hernandez, Car-. SN-Tovar. |p Boswell ...... 0 5 * 0 7 Mr,®? ' Sh'! 5 Aguirre IM,3 1 . WP—Boswell. PB—Izquierdo. T—3:05-A—14,370. Renda Named PNH Athletic Director Little Ex-'M' Back in MINNESOTA MISPLAY—Instead of picking off Detroit baserunner Bill Freehan (standing), Migpesota Twins’ catcher Hank Izquierdo Thursday afternoon succeeded in pulling off first baseman Hannon Killebrew (foreground) who in turn only grabbed a gloveful of dirt as the ball skipped into right field. The Tiger runner advanced to second base on the third-inning play, but was left stranded when Ray Oyler made the third out. Bada Making Bid for Sixth City Title A classy field of 41, including the present champion and five other ex-tiUists, swings into action tomorrow in the opening round of the 38th annual Pontiac Medal Play tournament. Among the starters will be Kip Inman, 61, and Fonce Fowler, 65, who captured their first championships back in 1929 and 1930, respectively. Both are playing well, but both will have to be at their sharpest to challenge defending champion Paul Bada. The 37-year-old Bada has won the city crown five times, twice in a row, and this long-hitting swinger seldom has any trouble with the 5,689-yard, par-69 municipal course. ★ ★ ★ Should Bada take the title, it would tie him with Mike Andonian for the most victories in the city series. Andonian, whose last victory came in 1962, now lives in California. The other ex-champions in the starting lineup are Ron Rothbarth (1956), Glenn Harding (1947, 1948, 1950) and Dick Robertson (1964). Bada fired a one-under-par 137 last year to win the event, coming from behind on the final nine holes to nip Robertson and Avery Burton. Trailing Robertson by a stroke going into the final nine holes, Bada played the remaining holes in 33 blows — two under par A while Robertson posted a 36. Robertson, 51, is again expected to offer the strongest challenge to Bada. Robertson is having his finest year on the liijks. He finished fourth in the National Publinx recently and made it to the semifinals of the Michigan Amateur earlier in the season. The field of 41 plays 18 holes tomorrow and closes with 18 Sunday. (Continued on Page C-2, Col. 1) One of the smallest players to carry the ball on the gridiron at University of Michigan became the athletic director of a Pontiac high school for the second time. The little gridder was Here Renda, 49, whose appointment as athletic director at Pontiac Northern was announced this week by PNH principal Phillip Wargelin. Renda, who handled the track teams at PNH, replaces Elden R. Johnson who moved up to an administrative position. It marks the second time around for Renda as athletic director in the city. ★ ★ ★ Renda, a native of West Virginia who earned a degree and three football letters at U, of M., came to Pontiac in 1948 as football coach and athletic director at Pontiac Central. CHANGED JOBS He resigned the high school posts in 1953 and went to Madison Junior High as -a teacher. In 1961, he moved to PNH as assistant football coach and head track coach. Although he tipped the scales at only 158 pounds, the 5-3 Renda was a steady performer at Michigan, playing with ( such names as Tom Harmon and Fred Trosko. His first game against Michigan State gave him his biggest thrill on die gridiron. “I caught about a 10-yard pass from Trosko for a touchdown,” he said. After graduation in 1939, Renda eventually wound up in the U.S. Air Force and worked his Way from private to lieutenant colonel. He was working in Miami in physical training and special Davenport Paces U. S. MALMOE, Sweden W — Willie Davenport of Southern University led the American entries in an international track and field meet here Thursday with victories in the 108-meter dash in 10.5 seconds and in the 110-meter hurdles at 13.7. services for the Air Force and rose from private'to master sergeant in nine months. Shortly thereafter, he entered officer candidate school, gained a commission and left active service in 1946 and entered the reserves. He retired last year with the rank of lieutenant colonel. Married, Renda is father of two children. Steve, 18, ih entering Wheaton College this fall. Jo Ann 15, attends Madison. Top Secret Race Car Set in Challenge Cup ELKHART LAKE, Wis. - 24-HOUR SERVICE 556 North Saginaw FE 8-1111 Building and Remodeling ■ Supplies and Materials 541 North Saginaw Strait Open Mon.-Fri. 7:30-5:00 re J Saturday i ti38-12 Moon Midas Nattcaal Transmission Serf ice Director . . Herein Pontiac-AUGUST 23, 24, 25, 28 e FREE Towingt » FREE Road Test! I e FAST-1-Day Sarviea 1990 WIDE TRACK DR. W. at th* South End plWW* Track w__ 334-4727 Opaa Monday ttire Friday 0 to •—Saturday I to 2 ■FOR MUFFLERS e PIPES • SHOCK! tnioAS I MIDAS MUFFLER 5 South Saginaw e at wipe track SHOCKS..i FE 2-1010 j WONDERLAND TOOLS SAVE' fOOO End of Summer Special Prices DISPLAY MODELS FOR SALE BELOW COST Featuring SANO FILTH • SAFETT DISPLAY MODELS FOR SALE phone now 549-9330 Payments As Low As $29.00 A Month Big Trade-In Allowance — No Money Down NO HIDDEN EXTRAS WONOERUND TOOLS Display Medalt-466T N. Woodward nr. 14 Mi. Rd^ReyalOak Display Hours 6 A.M.101P.M. Daily - Sun.12to6P.M. LAMBS' 6:30 P.M. Monday and 9 P.M. Thursday Also Openings On Morning and Afternoon Leagues Washington in the NFL’a Capitol Division this season. k k ★ After Tim Brown was tossed out of the game for a first period fight, rookies Harry Jones and Harry Wilson split his running back chores and djd an admirable Job. Jones carried nine times for 42 yards and Wilson gained S3 yards on five rushes and caught two passes lor 38—one of them a 26-yard touchdown pitch. Two other rookies—Chuck Hughes and Dan Berry—combined on a nifty ,41-yard touchdown off a pass-run option that helped the Eagles wipe out an early Jet lead. THIRD STRAIGHT Buffalo, -meanwhile, lost its third straight exhibition last week, bowing 13-10 to Boston. This is the first time the Bills have lost three straight pre-sea-son games since 1961, when they dropped four in a row. So the Eagles, 2-1, going into tonight’s game, figure to be favored, but the Bills are always tough at home and it could be a close one. ,„ ★ . ★ ★ The other two inter-league games send the NFL’s Washington Redskins against the Patriots at Boston Saturday and the Los Angeles Rams against the AFL’s Chargers at San Diego Sunday. The Houston Oilers meet the Jets at Charlotte, N.C., Saturday night and Denver plays Oakland at North Platte, Neb. Sunday in AFL games. The NFL schedule has Cleveland at Atlanta tonight; Baltimore at Detroit, New Orleans vs. San Francisco at Portland, Ore., and Pittsburgh Louis at Nashville, Teun., Saturday night; and Minnesota vs. the New York Giants at New Haven, Conn., Sunday. Houston has managed Just 16 points in two losses and must polish its offense against the Jets, who’ve dropped two straight after blitzing Boston in their exhibition opener. Head-to-Heqd Growling Ends PEEKSKILL, N.Y. (AP) - I have to team it n it will be- Paul Seiler and Jeff Richardson ( 12-Meter Sloops on Lake Michigan HOLLAND (AP) - Twelve-meter sailing sloops, famed for their performance in the America’s Cup racing series, compete Ibis weekend in a miniature running on Lake Michigan of the Atlantic Coast race.. Baseball Chief to Take Action Commissioner Eyes Kansas City Problems Trophies Won at Pine Lake Trophies were awarded in two women’s tournaments at Pine Lake this week. Mrs. Arthur Emery won the Pine Lake Niner’s title with Mrs. Clifford Jones taking the runner-up slot. Mrs. Arthur Emery and Mrs. Jack Habel ran one-two in the Elmer Prieskom Tournament. NEW YORK (AP)—Baseball Commissioner William D. Eckert, promising “appropriate action at a late date,” has stepped into tiie squabble between the Kansas City Athletics and their volatile owner, Charles 0. Finley. ★ ★ * Eckert acknowledged Thursday that he had received a request from the Major League Players Association that he bold hearing on the dispute which has resulted in the firing of Alvin Dark as Athletics’ manager and the release of first baseman Ken Harrelson. ★ *'-★ ★ Eckert said, “I am gathering appropriate data on the subject and will take further appropriate action at a later date.’|^| The letter was sent by Marvin Miller, executive director of the players assodation. RETURNED HOME The Athletics, in the meantime, returned home to Kansas City Thursday and were met at tiro airport by about 1,000 * many carrying signs criticizing Finley and backing the players. Jack Aker, player representative for the team, said he pected Miller to be in Kansas City in the next few days to discuss the situation. Harrelson was also at the airport, but leaving town to join another American League dub, as yet unannounced. Robert Sligh, vice commodore of the Macatawa Ray Yacht Club which is sponsoring the Great Lakes Cup competition, said the permanent trophy will be given each year to the best meter boat in matched competition in an effort to encourage 12 meter racing on the Great Lakes. k k ‘ ★ Only two of the now sail the Greet La Mitena, at 73 feet the longest 12 meter boat ever built, and the 1938 British built Narsaga, owned by Harry Zienuum of Milwaukee. The Mitena by a Grand Rapids syndicate. The two vesesls will race a triangular course in Lake Michigan off Holland Harbor Saturday and Sunday with two heats of the three-race series planned Saturday. SEVERAL RACES Hie Mitena, sailing for the Macatawa Bay Yacht Club, and the Norsaga, out of the Milwaukee Yacht Chib, competed in several races on the Great Lakes this season. Norsaga beat Mitena by less than one minute iii the Michigan City race which opened the season. Corrected time for the Queen’s Cup race gave Norsaga the nod by one and one-half minutes and less then 7 minutes separated the vessels in the 200-mile Mackinaw race. k k ★ Ail 12 meter sloops are built to the same basic design such as the Intrepid and Dame Pattie scheduled to meet in the September America’s Cup race. Tile Mitena, built in 1936, was for a number of years, part of tiie New York Yacht Club fleet, sponsors of the America’s Cup. The Grand Rapids syndicate purchased tiie sloop from Yale University. ★ k k Die Norsaga was the pace boat in 1969 for the Sceptre, the British answer to the 20-year lull in America’s Cup competition. _____r an Australian challenger. Yacht Intrepid to Defend Cup U. S. Boat Will Meet Aussie Challenger After the race, the Norsaga remained in American waters, sailing in East Coast races, until Ziemann purchased the vessel and brought her to the Great Lakes this season. NEWPORT, R.I, (AP) trepid, the 12-meter yacht shippered by Bud' Mosbacher, defeated Columbia again Thursday and was selected to defend the America's Cup against the Australian challenger, Dame Pattie. Almost before Columbia’s lines were made fast to the dock, the selection committee moved alongside the California yacht and informed owner Pat Dougan and skipper Briggs fbmningham they had bee eliminated from the trials. ★ ★ * Then, Commodore Henry Morgan, chairman of the committee, went immediately to Intrepid’s dock and told Mosbacher his ship would defend the Cup against Dame Pattie In a bestof-seven series of Taces ff Newport starting Sept. 12. Mosbacher successfully defended the Cup in 1962 as the skipper of Weatherly against the Australian Gretel. NEVER DEFEATED The- last race in America’s Cup competition, which started in 1851, was in 1964 when Costel-lation beat the British challenger Sovereign. The United States never has lost the Cup. In posting her 19th victory in 26 trial races, Intrepid crossed the finish line 3 minutes, 51 seconds-ahead of Columbia. spent half 6if hut year’s biggest college football game growling across the line at each other. Now they spend most of their time talking about ail the bus it created. “We kinda joke around about the game, but we don’t realty talk about the game itself. There’s hot much to talk about,’ said Seiler, now a rookie teammate of Richardson with the New York Jets. k k ‘We mainly talk about the publicity it got and ask each other what everyone else has asked us about it.” The game, of course, was the battle between Notre Dame and [Michigan State, tiie clash for the No. 1 spot in the country that ended in a 10-10 tie. Seller was on Norte Dame’s offensive line while Richardson was across from him, on Michigan State’s defensive line. “To the players themselves, .that game wasn’t much different than any other game,” and Seiler, the Jet’s No. 1 draft choice. “I had to go out and block Jeff, and he had to try and' get through me.” Asked who won that particular battle, the 29-year-old guard chose the diplomatic way out “We both played a good' game,” he said. As for the criticism the Irish received for settling for a tie by running out the clock, Seiler said: “When (Parseghian) Irish Coach Are Parseghian called theh last few plays, that okay with me because wii was at Notre Dame, I did anything he asked me to do. That’ the way I was taught.” DIFFERENT METHOD In one way, however, Seiler is being taught differently now and that’s causing some problems. ’All through high school and college and even at the All-Star game,” he explained, “I was taught to block by pushing off an the same foot as the shoulder that I’m going to block with. Ib other words, if I’m going to block with my right shoulder. I should push off on the right teg. ‘Right now Pm not fast enough because I have to think my way through. And-When you think your way through, your reaction Isn’t as fast.” Seiler had another kind of reaction when ha learned the Jets bad made him their No. 1 draft choice, and the lZth in the first common draft between the two leagues. ★ ★ ★ ‘I was a little surprised,” he recalled. “I realty didn’t know I’d go that high, I hadn’t received that much publicity, and I didn’t know the pro scouts knew I was around.” Even if they didn’t, Jeff Richardson did. U.S. Doubles Duo Deserves Day Off BROOKLINE, Mass (AP) -Clark Graebner and Marty Rteasen, American’s last hope to return the national doubles tennis championship to the United States, took a well-earned rest today before resuming action in the 87th annual tournament at Longwood. The top-seeded Davis Cup veterans powered their way into the semifinals by defeating India’s Ray Mukerjea and Mexico’s Rafael Osuna 14-12, 6-3,17-15, in a 2 to hour duel Thursday on is scarred court with the quarterfinals staggered two days. ' BENSON BLANKET INSULATION Ito-laoh . .. . . *36 par M 2-Ink ■ ■ a. a .. *47 oor M 3-hwh ■ » ■ ■ ■ .*66 nr M “Bat here it’s the opposite. If I’m going to block with my right shoulder, I have to off on my left teg. After doing it the other way for so long, it became a habit. Now OFBtDWLTM UNITED TIRE SERVICE Best Mobile Homos SEE NEW YORK EMBASSY Cardinals' QB Ltkely to Play Despite Duty ST. LOUIS (AP) — An Army jmkesman says quarterback Charlie Johnson may be able to play for the St. Louis Cardinals. Now the Cardinals have to figure out what to do with Johnson. Johnson himself said his biggest problem, even if he could play, would be his timing. “After a long layoff I coqjd lose a lot of finesse and timing,” Johnson said at Ft. Sill, Okla. ‘The main thing is to stay in Igood condition.” t uk' ★ ★ If Johnson can’t stay in good condition and if his timing is off, then Coach Charley Winner might end up benching Johnson in favor of second-year quarterback Jim Hart. The Washington Star said Thursday Johnson, 28, found physically unfit to lead troops in combat. The newspaper said Johnson will be assigned to the National Space Administration’s research center in Virginia. The Star said he would work civilian hours and should be available for all the Cardinals’ games. PORTLAND, Main* — Gann Harriett, -JB, Saco, Mains, outpoint*- “*-i— I—-I'Mfc WestfMd, Mat*., II ‘wm Now England ndddU. NEW BEDFORD, UK 9m mSm i MOTORS mcLTototraoh ---- 338-4531 Noxt Door to tba Holiday Inn $1,000 FIRST PLACE ORCHARD LANES Senior House League 850-950 Team Average WED. at 9 P.M. Call Al Hrimlck, Sec. 335-9766 ORCHARD LANES 645 Qpdyke 335-9293 SPORTS GAR ROAD RACES waverforbnius ROAD COURSE ■A mil* toil of U.S. 10 M Waterford Rt contact drill 'Thursday and Elliot said he hopes to get some preliminary scrimmages underway by the weekend. .There will be double workouts daily until classes begin next Thursday, Elliot added. ★ dr * Michigan opens its se; Sept. 28 against Duke, a new addition to the team’s schedule, Ann Arbor. Spartan Eleven Shopping for 3rd Straight Big 10 Titles AP Wlrtphola KEY TO MSU REPEAT—Quarterback Jimmy Raye is the hey player in Michigan State’s hope for an unprecedented third Big Ten title in a row, something no conference .team her ever done. The Spartans began drills this week at East Lansing. Race Results,Entries EAST LANSING (AP)-Mich-igan State has taken two Big [Tta titles in a row and will be lihopping lor an unprecedented [third this fall. No conference team has ever managed a triple crown. The [goal is well worth shopping at, [says Coach Duffy Daugherty. ‘ “It should be a great motivating factor—plus foe fact that they also are eligible for the Rose Bowl this year,” Daugherty commented. Quarterback Jimmy Raye is the key player in Spartan planning this fall. Raye was the practice quarterback when MSU went to the Rose Bowl two years ago. He engineered two touchdowns for the losing Rose Bowl cause and last year led MSU tb an unbeaten season and repeat conference title. “We’re better fixed at quarterback now than any time in our recent history, “Daugherty said. “I wouldn’t trade Raye for any quarterback in the country.” BREAKAWAY THREAT Raye is a scrambling quarterback—he gives defensemen fits — artd can be a dangerous breakaway runner on the option Play. The remainder of the offensive backfield also looks solid. Dwight Lee and Frank Waters are proven performers at halfback. Left half Lee was the fourth leading ground-gainer on weight. He is especially valued i« blocking back. ★ ★ ★ Fullback Bob Apisa, bothered by knee injuries most of his playing days at MSU, now seems over his troubles after a corrective operation. Although [ unable to go full tilt last sea-! son he still was second leading rusher. Defense will be a weak point, Daugherty fears. The U.S. Team 5th PORTOROZ, Yugoslavia (AP) —United States women finished fifth Thursday in group precision jumps from 1,500 meters in the international parachute jumping tournament for the Adriatic Cup. The U. S. team had 1,887 points.' The Soviet Un-1 ion won with 1,945.7. weakness was shown when the reserves made 323 yards against the varsity in the spring game. “We lost eight of 11 starters from our defensive Unit, Daugherty observed. “Our big jobs will be to keep our small group of proven players healthy and to piece together one ade-‘ ' * ' unit.” Some change in the defensive tactics can be expected with the loss of such heavy- weights as Bubba Smith and George Webster. “We’ll be smaller on defense so well have to be footer,” said Daugherty. Another problem will be finding a kicker to replace Dick Kenney, who collected the points by booting them barefoot Fall drills start Sept. 1 with a squad of 78 men expected. There will be 25 letter winners from last year’s undefeated team. For ADDITIONS - REMODELING HOME IMPROVEMENTS - GAUGES .RESIDENTIAL BUILDING CALL Bays Nights 673-8573 (93-5909 THE DRUMMOND CORD. BIG DISCOUNTS UP TO *1800 ON NEW ft EXECUTIVES’ PONTIACS ft RAMBLERS Also On 1966 ft 1967 Demonstrators. Ross Johnson MOTOR SALES, Inc. 89 M-24, Lapeer Rd.,Lake Orion Phone 693-6266 Make larfce Year Hiee Impreveneit Ciitir! *l||pP THE SPLIT RAIL FENCE Available in two and 3 rail style. Made of heavyweight hand split cedar poets and rails. 2 RAILS TWO FINE 3 SAILS 75* "Sf* STYLES "ST* ALSO AVAIL4BLE in REDWOOD Weekend Special FIBERGLASS PANELS Also 10 and 12* lengths in stock. Stocking Colors, Cloar, White, Yellow and Green. FOR EXPERT TRANSMISSION SERVICE MIDAS TRANSMISSION SHOP 334-4727 7590 Wid« Track Wart, at SanHi End of WWa Track I V C—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1067 , ___ • ^ v‘ ^ , \ "'"***' ^, % ^ * *''* '*'^ * * N I "** \ ' $^ " ^ Special offer through August: Get 30 FREE gallons ofgasofine when you buy 4 Atlas Plycron Tires. Get the best deal from your Standard Just buy four At,as p,ycrons (the famous Round Tjres . . ,r J »• .1 that roll up to 3000 miles farther than most new car Ull uealer—and get tree gaSOline} too! tires). And all 30 gallons of Super Premium Gasoline are yours. FREE! Or, you can get 50 FREE gallons for buying four Amoco* 120 Super Tires (torture-tested at 120 mphTo give you greater safety wherever you drive). On top of everything else, you’ll get a king-size trade-in allowance on your old tires. And we’ll give you up to a year to pay—no money down—with your Standard Oil Credit Card. Qr you can ask for Instant Credit Just see us before September 5 when the offer ends. We’ll prove to you, “You expect more from Standard and you QSt it!"* ■ °Th* Am,,lc,n 0,1 Company, 1967 o World's largast distributor ofAtlit tlr.s Tradamarks "Atlas”—••Plycron”—Rag. U.8. Pat. Off.. Atlas Supply Co. Buy 4 Amoco 120 Super Tires and get 50 free gallons of gasoline! fvSSAfc V-’ T •*W*>»’**S VI1 f? 1 Dixie Standard Service No. 1 2434 Dixie at Parkinson Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: 338-7977 Heskinson’s Dix-A-Tel. Telegraph Or Dixie Hwy. Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: 334-9861 Jim’s Standard Service Oakland Or Baldwin Pontiac, Michigan •-* FE 8-8029 Kennedy's Standard Service 378 W. Huron 2 Blocks East of General Hospital 335-5444 fr FE 4-3122 Davis Standard Service He. 2411 Orchard Lake Road Pontiac, Michigan ' a: 682-9906 Davis Standard Service No. 2 Telegraph Or Voorheis Pontiac, Michigan ------ «: 338-7495 -AVAILABLE AT THESE PARTICIPATING STANDARD OIL DEALERS - Hoskinson's Standard Service 559 Auburn Or Marshall Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: 334-5660 Ray's L&S Standard Service 644 Oakland Or Montcalm Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: 338-8013 Wilkins' Orchard Lake Garage Orchard Lake Rd. Or Pontiac Trail Orchard Lake, Michigan Telephone: 682-3311 Smith's Standard Service 1430 Joslyn Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: 332-5776 Wegner's Standard Service 500 Main ■ Rochester, Michigan Telephone: OL 1-1901 Roy Bros. Standard Service 6756 Dixie Hwy. Clarkston, Michigan Telephone: 625-5731 ||§ | f Vmhhiimmm'. »*f *«u» $*«»»* tMTMrt* 558 311 253 b " TO VtAS l||j Use your credit card or ask about Instant Credit Slade's Standard Service M-59 Or Pontiac Lake Rd. Pontiac,' Michigan : 338-3457 Slade's Standard Service 1019 Baldwin Ave. Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: 334-9227 Weis Standard Service Perry Or Madison Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: 338-7682 Weber's Standard Servicenter Huron at Voorheis, Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: 338-8089 Batik's Standard Service Elisabeth Lake Rd. near M-59 Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: FE 8-2348 Crisp Or Sons Standard Service S. Saginaw & Elm Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: FE 8-7611 Blayney Or Cooke Standard Service 4860 Highland & Forest Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: OR 3-9900 Johnson's Standard Service 3990 Auburn Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: 852-9787 Roy Bros. Standard Service 1 N. Telegraph Or Elisabeth Lake Rd. Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: 332-5080 Roy Bi ■■ 4289 Walton B|vd. Drayton Plains, Michfy Telephone: OR 3-9993 Sager's Standard Service 6480 Sasha be w Clarkston, Michigan Telephone: 625-4722 Stephens' Standard Service 314 Walton * Richmond Pontiac, Michigan Telephone: 338-7922 I 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 c-t The following are top pricoi covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by thm in wholesale package lots Quotal ns are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Monday. Produce fruits s.s Apples, Northern Applet, Northern . Apples, Steele Red, Red, > Udt. CM. VEGETABLES ■■"» i.i.Jd. bu. .......>•<.<>.,<<.. Broccoli, dz._belL_l.50 .......... —---------- _L nek. .M u Root, dx. bch................LS Cebbaoe, bu. . Collard, bu. .. Kale, bu....... Mustard, bu. , LETTUCE AND ORERNS i Bibb, pk. bsKt. !, Boston, dz. ... i. Head, bu. .. . S3, m , Leaf, Poultry and Eggs DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AT) — JUSDA) - Prices paid par pound for No. 1 live poultry heavy type hens, 19-Hr roasters haavy type, 27-fit broilers and fryers whites, 17-2U barred rocks, 23W24. DETROIT (AP) -(USDA) ~ paid par dozen' bv first re eluding U.S.): I (In- Extra large, 3J%-35; large, 21-31t medium, 22-24; small, IS. CHICAGO BUTTER, EGOS CHICAGO (AP) —(USDA) -Chicago Mercantile Exchange: butter weaki wtwle-sale buying prices unchanged to 2'A lower; 72 score AA 66; 72 A 44; 79 B *4%; W C 97'AI cars 70 B *5%;*9C better Grade A whltw to; mixed 28% mediums 24t standards 25; checks II. CHICAGO POULTRY CHICAGO (API - (USDA) — Llv - ■—buying prices - war. ■ 24-271 special fed 17W-22. tanged ; le Rock Livestock 751 slaughter steers high chotee and prime 1,000 to 1,190 lbs 27.90 - 27.79; heifers choice 790-700 lbs 25.50-24.90; cows utility 10.90-17.50; cutter 17JXM0JO; canner 15.00- Vealers, a lew head hloh choice prime 24.0037.00; choice 30.00-34.00. Sheep, not enough to estebtlsh I Hogs, not enough to test trade. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) — Hog I 9,000; 100 head 210 lbs 22J0; 1-2 2%. 230 lb 21.75-22.25; ' " sows'* TOO-IO^S^iT350400 ‘lb io3w7.29) 1-3 .. «« Cattle ) lb 17.79-10J0. 1,900; prime 1,200-1,375 lbs alauah-rs 20.29-27.00; mixed high dwteo Ime 1,1501,350 lbs 27.79-20.50; choice end prim Slaughter heifers _______ •00-1,050 lbs 25.50-24.25. ..... Sheep 300; choice and_j>r!me 85+10 d shorn slaughter e; Stock Market Heads Lower NEW YOBft (AP), - Hie stock market headed lower for the fifth’Etrgight day & moderately active trading early this afternoon. + * * The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was down 4.97 at 893.49, paring its worst loss in the morning. Analysts saw the decline as a logical consequence of Thursday’s penetration of the supposed support level at 900 in the Dow industrials. The line sustained a test on Wednesday but was paper thin the following day. Prices were lower from the start. Losers outnumbered gain- ers at a ratio of between 3 to 1 aging strike was increasing as the labor deadline grew nearer. Prices fell on the American Stock Exchange. Losses of a and 4 to 1. LOSSES VARY Losses ranged from fractions 1 or 2 points. Most major sectors of the list declined. Lower were steels, motors, aerospace issues, electronics, utilities, nonferrous metals, chemicals, oils and drugs. The Associated Press average of 60 stocks at noon 1.3 at 330.5 with industrials 3.4, rails up .2 and utilities off .3. ★ ★ ★ General Motors, down nearly 2 points, was the worst loser in the auto group. Fear of a dam- point or so were shown by Bun-ker-Ramo, Rath Packing ANelex while Sperry Rand warrants, Giant Yellowknife, Hitco and Signal Oil “A” were among fractional losers. Mead Johnson paced the list on volume as it rose nearly 2 points in response to a report of merger with Bristol-Myers. •] I Plant food costs per pound have fallen since 1950 while fprm wages have risen 59 per cent and land costs have doubled. The New York Stock Exchange Eric J, Watler was recently appointed product manager of adding machines and calculators on the corporate product management strif o‘ B u r r o (Fg h Corp. For the last WATLER two years, Watler of 6633 Spruce, Bloomfield Township, has held a similar position with the International Group Of Burroughs. Sperry Rand’s Vickers Division has announced the appointment of Donald R. Sweeney as purcha s i n g manager of the Machinery "Hydraulics Divi- ACF Ind 2.20 (Ml) High Low Lait CHg. —A— I 13 50% 49% 50 > 71 27 26H 244. 1 32'/4 32>A 32'A — 71 27 24% 24H — % 1 321/4 32(4 32(4 — (4 29 4777 47(4 49(4 — (2 24 93 fljb 31 13 97(4 57% 57(4 AllegCp .10g AllegLu 2.406 AIM9 Pw 1.20 AlllfilC 1.90b AlltodStr 1.32 Allis Choi 1 Alcoa 1.10 Amerada 3 Am Airlln .00 25 23Vi 23Vi 23% 21 30% 37% 30 27 3Mb 90% 5% 0 11 10* 10* ..... 10 n 75Vi 75% —1% tt sgk + ft .. 24% 04%___9 74 42% 41% 41% 2 34% 34% 34% 244 34% 34% 34% ,. 24 90% 90 90 yft 17 79% 79% 79% 49 39% » “ AmBdctt 1.40 *m Can 2.20 mCrySug 1 mCvan 1.25 mElP 1.44b ..Bnka i-3o» AmPPw 37 57% 54% 54% 10 24% 23% 03% 135 31% 31 31 — % 24 34% 34 34% 5 30 36 » - % 09 25% 25 ^ 14 54% 54 14 49% 401 5 18 18 03 22% 22% BP! 10 53% 53% 53% . i .......... 124 13% 13% 13% - % AmNGas 1.90 25 39% 39 39% + % Am Naws 1 4 27% 27% 27% — % Am Photocpy 247 9% 9% 9% — % -—■* **“ 23 49% 40% 48% — % 49 27% 27% 27% — | Am Smi vtWSug 1.6i ireenGnt j GulfStaUt .00 AMP Inc .34 Ampax Coro Amphenol .70 Anaconda Anken Chem Armco S»l 3 Armour 1.40 ArmttCk 1.40 AshldOil 1.20 Aud DG 1.40 Atchison 1.40 25 34% 35% 35% 47 37% 34% 34% 25 24% 25% 25% 42 49% 49 49% 4 14% 14 14 — % 23 54 55% 1ST 24 37 34% 37 Imt 1 . .14 1.28 - IP Inc .75g 110 47% _____»ack .20 Hoff Elactron Hoi Id Inn .40 HollySug 1.20 Avon Pd 1.40 30 29 28% 20% — % 11 97 94% 94% + g| 114 4% 4 6 — Cp 1.70 99 54% 55% 54% - H 32 34 35% 34 • 113% 112% 113% BabcokW 1.34 Balt GE 1.52 BaatFds 1.45 Beaunlt .19p Backman .50 Beach Aire 1 Ball How .50 Bandlx 1.40 Benguet BethStl l.50a fi sine 1.20 IsaCasc .25 —rden 1.20 BorgWar 2.20 BrlggsS 2.40a BrisfMytrs 1 Brunswick BucyEr 1.60a Budd Co .80 American Stock Exch. NEW YORK (AP) - ArkLGas p 15 39% 39 M Asamera Oil 47 4 13-16 411-16 411*14-3-14 AssdOil I O ........... m AtlasCorp || CalumH 1.20 CampRL .45a Camp Soup 1 CaroPLt 1.34 Carrier Cp 1 CarterW ,40a BrazllLtPw 1 . Brit Pat .«9g Campbl Chib Can So Pat Cdn Javalln Cinerama Ctrywh Creole 2.40a Data Cont EquItyCp .)M Fargo Oils Falment Oil Frontier Air Gan Plywood Giant Yal .40 Goldfield Gt Baa Pat GuH Am Cp 14 8 I 31% 31% 31 Vi + 0 100b 10W 10% + II 7-1417-1617-14 + ■ 1 I 713-1*713-14-1-16 M 2% 2 3-16 2(4 10 9% 8(4 9 — 14 044 1(4 8% + 2 1% 1% 1% .. 7 37(b 37(4 37(4 - 14 15% 15% 154b — 12 444 444 444 43 3 15-16 3(4 3 15-14+1-16 3 11(4 11(4 11(4 + (4 6 25(4 25(4 25Vb - (4 5 4 844 144 - 'A 122 1044 9(4 4(4 — 14 Cant SW 1.60 Carre 1.60b Cart-teed .10 CmnaA 1.40 CPI Stl .10 Chet Ohio 4 ChIMII StP 1 ChPneu 1.10b Chi Rl Pac I Stl 1 GulfResrc Ch 20 29(4 29% 2944 - HoernerW .12 ’ U U U — Hycon .Mfg Hydrometal Kaiser Ind MaadJohn .41 MlchSug 10b Molybden Monog Ind NawPark Mn ClevEIIII 1.10 II 31(4 31 31(4 + 04; -------.11 26 115 114'A 114(4 —1*4! 54 39(4 3IV4 3914 — 44. 1 37 99V4 91 99 -%M*ekTr1.S9t WIIA _ u. Mieki ^ 3, . 17 17 ]> 3 1614 16 lO - ll 1944 1914 14V4 51 16 15(4 16 - 5M 35% 344b 35(4 +144 2 644 644 64b J- 54 494b 41(4 48(4 19 10904 107 107 II 36(4 3544 3544 - 14 nglZToi...HB , SSSLfS «§r :£ 'p 8% SB Stocks of Local Interest P,flur«e.«.rHdB.dm.|N?omR,.sT.r.|aiohH1 Quotations from the NASD are rapri aentatiye Intar^lealer price* of apprpxl-matalv II a. m. Intar-daalar mirhati change throughout tng day. PtIcm do not include retail markup, markdown or commlMlon. |M AMT Corp. ...... H Aatoclatad Truck ...............9.1 *•» Braun Engineering .........J4.0 14. Citizens ytllltla*. Clau A ....27.4 21.. Detrex Chemical ............... JI.O JB.6 Diamond Cryatal .........1J.I Kelly SMvlcai ...A.........•- W.1 Mohawk Rubber, Co. —.. 33J 34.0 Monroe Auto Equipment . .,... 29* ».» North Central Airlines Unit*. .10.5 11.’ pr.,n,"!a.7.5, Wyandotte Affiliated Fund ............ *-2^ Chemical PuSi ...............JJ.1* JJ-J9 Commonwealth Stock ..........1V.34 12,39 Keyjtona Income K-1 9.11 10.00 Ma«L jnvBatorl Growth .......12.72 13.90 Maw, Investor* Treat .. .,.10.07 JM4 Putnam Growth ..............13.71 14.91 Talevltlon ilettronlca ..... 10.(3 10,92 Wellington Fund ^............13.62 Uf Windsor Fund ............... 20.04 20.71 averages a Aaaoclatad Y4«fJ^P‘ 1947 High ... 144.3 . 4^.8 201.7 , 148.2 337.3 m----------'j jjj.9 27 51% 50% 50% -15 30% 30% 30% -3 40 40 40 - 23 14% 14 10 68% 48% ----- 10 45% 44% 45 — 0 i m 73% 73%-47% 47% -M 4% 6% - ___j% 35% 35% - 341 92% 90% 91% -78 39% 31% 39 — a 40% 48% -.. PR 44% 45 — 43 74 73% 73% — 28 48% 118 j4% 91% —1% ..........39 — *j 90 39% 39% 39% —I1 2 54 - m . ■ 30 76% 75% 74% +1% h 11% u% 11% — % 34 34% 34 34 16 16% 16% 16% 5 33% 33% 33% 19 28% 28% .28% . 10 36% 34% 34% — 35 145% j'-' —c— 17 6% 4% /4 144% —1% .. PH 37% 37% -1% 41 23% 23% 23% . 71 59% J 6 51% ' 15 43% 44 40% 4U «u — ■*» 20 18 17% 17% — % 17 49% 49% 49% — % 26 20% 20% 20% — % 6 70% 70% 70% — % 17 44 43% 43% — % 21 42% 43 42% .... 5 19% 19% 19% — % 4 33% 32% 33% 4- %! 110* 47% PoodFalr .90 FordMot 2.40 ForMcK .120 FretpSul 1.25 FruthCp 1.70 ia) High Low Last Chg. \ 14% 16% 14% — % ! 52 51% 51% — % (hds.) m S' 85 341------------ - It 42% 41% 61% — % 9 28% 28% 28% — 18 31% 31 31 — 129 31 30% 21 - 2 24% 24% 24% + .. 34 #7% 67% 67% — % 303 100 107 108 +“ 33 76% 76 76% — ■ 8 74% 74 74 + % IM 83% 81% 81% —1% 101 67% 44 ^ §rssri« gS^STiao Gan Fda 140 GenMIlla 1.50 GPubSvc .44g G PubUt UO GTelEI 1.40 Gan Tlra .80 OaPacMelb Getty Oil .10g Gllletta \jmr- _ - PH PH Gian Aid .70 1$ 16% li% 16% Granites 1.40 GrantWT 1.10 GtA8iP 1.30a Gt Nor Ry 3 Gt .West Flnl GtWSua • i Hacla Hare II.. HawPack Hoff r -Hoi Id HollyJ______ Homastk .80b Honeywl 1.10 Hook Ch 1.40 House Fin 1 Houst LP 1 “ vmat 1.20 itFds .50b >p Cp .17# Ideal Cam 1 IllCant 1.50 Imp Cp Am IngerRand 2 Inland Stl 2 InsNoAm 2.40 Inti Packers tip Pap. US .... 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HP 74% - I 85 71% 70% 70% — % 53 57% 57% 57% i 28 35% 35% 35% 49 25 24% 25 ... ■ 17 39% 39% 39% .... 33 3m 30% 31 - Vd 12 52% 52% 52Vd — % 17 17% 17% 17% ....... 244 39% 39% 39% — % 5 25 24% 24% — % 22 37% 34% 36% —K— I 20 54% 54% 54% — % St Std Rolls .50 StOIICal 2.50b StdOIIInd 1.90 StdONJ 2.40g StdOllOh 2.50 St Packaging Stan Warn 1 StauffCh 1.80 SterlDrug Business Notes Sweeney o f 589 Terness, Wat e r f o r d| Township, was formerly chief| engineer of the value engineer- SWEENEY ing department, Machinery Hydraulics Division. He joined Vickers Division in 1958. cause tills industry not only is one of the very largest in the nation but one that also has,’ in the past, carefully avoided hav-its freedom curtailed by federal power. Many observers are suggesting that the industry is now opening the door to regulation hy seeking federal aid. It would seem that any industry, even the property and liability insurance industry w i t h - - , its assets of $42 billion, has aF£ ,seek aSS,St' .*..«« onna in nnu fnr ini rims" ckse for some sort of aid, because not even the most cynical preview of social events could have led insurance men to believe their losses would be so great. But a quick check of disaster i 55% - 8 29% 29% 29% — x66 44% 45% 44% 42 22% 22% 22% + StevenJP 2.25 ~ Jebak .75g Oil 1b ----ay 1.40 I Swift Co 1.20 83 61 40% 60% +1% 171 62% « ....... 44 71% 71 21 15% 151. ......... 38 50 49% 49% —1% 9 47% 47% 47% ... 49 52% 52% 52% + 35 48 47% 47% —fl 73 63% 62% 43% — 5 71 71 71 — 34 34% 34% 34% - 70 33 32% 32% - %iTexGSul TexETrn 1.20 27V* 27% 27% —T— 2 28V* 28% 28% ... 38 45% 45% 45% —1% 90 101 99% 100% — % 131 28 27% 27% — M 68 72% 71% 72% + 50 23% 23% 23% .. Brush-Moore Newspaper Chain Is Sold CANTON, Ohio (AP) - The Brush-Moore Newspapers Inc. which publishes 12 daily newspapers in the-United States, has beeh sold to Thomson Newspapers Inc., it was disclosed today. Financial details were not disclosed. It was learned, however, that the group sold for around $72 million. This made it the largest newspaper transaction of all times. ★ ★ ★ The largest single newspaper purchase earlier was the sale of the Cleveland Plain Dealer to S. I. Newhouse for a reported $50 million. The Brush-Moore sale was announced jointly by G. Gordon Strong, president and publisher of Brush-Moore, and Kenneth R. Thomson, president of Thomson Newspapers. ★ ★ 9 ★ TTie Thomson group publishes 23 daily , newspapers in the United States, 26 dailies in Canada; more than a dozen in England, Wales, Scotland and North Ireland, including the London Times and the Sunday Times. 31 Livingstn Oil LocNhdA 2.20 Loews Thoat LonoS Com 1 LonOSGa 1.12 LonglsLt 1.16 Lorfllard 2.50 5 12% 12% 12% 19 7% 7% 7% 7 35% 35% 35% - % 16 53% 53 H 3 13 13 7 74 73% ....... 15% 34% 34% - % 15% 94 95% +1% 7% 7% 7% — % T9% 79% 79% —1% Textron 1.20 Textron wl RB 1.80a —isWAtr 1 Transamer 1 -“'nsitron Cont .42g • 1,1* W 1.40 ijTwenCen 1.60 137% 134 134% bz 122% 121% 121% 2 19% 19% 19% 173 76% 76 76% 9 38% 38% 38% — % 43 21 ““ “ 12 99 13 429. - . i 45 42 61 61% — % 106 40% 40% 40% — M 79 14% 16% 16%— 128 28% 28% 28% . 44 65% 44% 45 — 123 62% 62% 62% +1% 14 27% 27% 27% + || 39 33% 33% 33% ... 6 40% 39% 40 — 15 48% 48% 48%— MacyRH 1.40 Mad Fd 2.23g MagmaC 3.60 Magnavox .80 rnernmn 2.40 Mar Mid 1.40 Marquar .25g MartinMar f MayDStr 1.60 Maytag 1.40a McCall u46b McDonD .40b “‘—Cp 1.90 HH pk1+o MarckC 1.40a MerrChap la MGM 1b 144 133% 131% 13% 2 27 27 27 ... 31 41% 41% 41% — V —IH- ii IPV4 *7 17V4 -2 I 17(4 17H 17(4 — V 10 14V4 *4(1 64Vt + V ,1 Cowles .50 CoxBdcas .50 CroUMHInd 1 CrowCol 1.17t Crown Cor CrownZe 2.20 Crue S»l (.20 Cudahy Co Curtis Pub Curtiss Wr 1 13 47(4 4M4 47(4 32 2944 29(4 2944. .. IS 42(4 42(4 4244 — (i 17 30(4 3044 30(4 — (4 41 31(4 30(4 30(4 — (4 49 54 53 53(4 —2(4 35 7144 71(4 7844 + (4 79 59 <8 6144 — M 150 111(4 115 111(4 — 30 Sto 45(V «(4 12 ia 52Vl a — i AAobiloil LOO 31 40% 40% 40% 12 48% 48% 48% . .. 2 25% 25% 25% + % 10 12% m 21 16% iUMC Ind .60 iUn Carbide 2 Un Elec 1.20 UnOIICal 1.40 Un Pac 1.80a I Un Tank 2.50 j Unlroyal 1.20 UnltAirLIn 1 UnltAirc 1.60 Unit Cp .50g Unit Fruit 1 UGasCp 1.70 Dan Rlv 1.20 DaycoCp 1.60 Day PL 1.40 Deere 1.80a Del Mnft 1.10 Delta Air 1.20 DenRGW | 8 22% 22% 22% - MtStTT 1.24 12 40% 40% 40% — % 17 30% 30% 30% % 50 60% 59% ,59% 14 34% 34% 34% 18 111% 110% 111% — % 8 19% 19% 19% + % 36 28% 28 % 28% — “ 11 UM 16% 14% + 12 34% 34% 34% — 16 91% 90% M%-1 17 51% 51 M — ____ ______ 14 76% 75% 75%.— % Dresalnd 1.25 116 37% 34 34% Duke PW 1.28 1 34% 34% 34% DetEdls 1.40 Det Steel .40 DlamAlk 1.20 Disney .40b DomeMliTTaO DowChm 2 20 12 40 40 40 .. 19 31% 30% 31% — \ 243 50% 49% 49% - > 29 40 39% 40 . 54 54% 53% 53% - 1 63 22% 22% 22% + 1 12 51% 51% 51% — 1 81 84 83% 84 - * 28 15% 15V4 15% — J 72 41% 41% 41% - 3 21 18V* 18% 18% 71 i • 23% 23% 23% .. -N— 1 76V* 75% 76 9uq Lt 1.60 OynimCp .11 atonYa 1.25 i?W jectron Sp NatDairy 1.50 Nat Dlst 1.80 NatFual 1.68 Nat Genl .20 Nat Gyps 2 “ ‘tad 2.25g iteel 2.50 Tea .80 aisT ,ir i52 Z X'tjEn3,Er,,:P 13 3IH 31(4 31(4—VliNVCant Xlta Uvt SsSk'S NA Avia 2.80 77 53% 52% 53% + %'NorNGa* 2.40 28 128 137% 127% — % Nor Pac 2.40 14 31 . 30% 30% + Vi NSta Pw 1.52 14 82% 81% 82 + % Northrop 1 47,47% 46% 44% — % NWSt AIN .70 16 28 37% 27% — % Norton 1.50 54 21% 21% 21% — %, Norwich 1.30 10 84 83% 83% —1% 9 28%> 28% 28% — % _ 51 10 v 9% 9% + %tOccWent .80b H 23 44 4)Ml 4“* ™ 20 30% 30 11 33% 23% aee • ' hK- 234 88% 84 84% 13 25% 25 25% 16 40% 60 60 H 13 38 37% 37% ... 29 102% 101% 102% — 50 38% 38% 38% + 84 44% 43% 43% — . _ 41 30% 30 30 - % 92 18% 18% 18% — % 49 45% 45 45% — W 142 p% 62% 62% . Xl3 51% 51 51% - 5 14 14 14 — 1 39% 39% 39% - i 11 24% 24% 24% - % 18 76 75% 76 37 21% 21% 21% 12 106;, 105% 105% 21 45%"- 45% 45% 40% 40% 40% — % . 14% 16% 16% 128 28% 28% 28% 44 65*' '**' " 106 54* 144 22% 21% 21% 112 51% 51*A 51% x36 24% 23% 24% 29 59% 58% 59% — % 76% 77% — Bendix Dividend DETROIT (AP)—Bendix Corp. has declared a quarterly dividend of 35 cents a share on its common stock, payable Sept. 30 to stockholders of record Sept. 8. The company also declared a dividend of 75 cents a share on its Series “A” $3 cumulative convertible preferred stock. 43 43( ' 68(_ ■ 43Vi 43 91M —1(1 32 So”* 49% 50 6 75M 75M 75( 28 27% 27 27( 6 30% 30 30 34 7816 77% 78 Dividend Declared Michigan Seamless Tube Co. in South Lyon, has declared a quarterly dividend of 25 cents a share on its $5 par value capital stock, payable Nov. 24 to stockholders of record Oct. 25. USPIyCh 1.50 15 54 - Vi VaEIPw 1.36 7 55% 55% 55% —v_ 10 36Vi 31 36 — % 57 33% 33 33 — % 21 32% 31% 32% — - 21 44% 43% 43% — —w— 75 47 45% 47 + ^ 12 23Vi 23% 23% + % 23 49% 49 49V* - " .. 31% — ' WnUnTel 1.40 40 37 22% 2 93 25% 24% 25% 15 S% “■ —T 2i 34% 8i% 34% * % ort ■sayra *le sSw isul it** — u! dend and ues In W fMa 11% .22% — % jfo* xr_c» ria 19 21 PM|S% t* % ’ ” 109 21% 31% — % it! m g if + % 33 33% S% 33% - % 110 30% 29% 10% - % Declared or | 7 72% 71% 72% — % P«nMxle ,10 51 34 . 33% 33% — % Penney 1.10a end. y—t dls—Ex 1 v|—In bankruptcy or receivership or Bing reorganized under the Bankruptcy ia. or securities assumed bt.suCMMM •Mat. fn—Foreign Issue subtoct Treasury Position I 5«461 >923*054,39 19,780,461,879.26 " 26,029,501,997.2 Gold Assets— 13,055,808,357.70 13,332,516,728.0 BOND AVERAGES Compiled by The Associated P Rails Ind. Util. Fgn. L.Yd. . Day ,e#.3 91.4 80.9 91.1 83.7 : Ago .69.5 91.3 81.0 91.1 83.7 h Ago 70.6 91.1 81.3 91.6 83.5 1964 Low . DOW-JONES AVERAGES STOCKS 30 Industrials ............. 20 Rails ................... 15 Utilities ........... 45 Stocks t BONDS 40 Bonds 10 Higher, grade rails 10 Second grade rails 18 Public utilities 18 Industrials ............. 256.81 ____ 130.21-0.36 322.71—0.80 79.29+0.07 Friday's 1st Dividends Declared Federal Help Could Mean Controls Insurers Ask By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK—Faced with the necessity of paying something near $1W million for policyholder losses in figures in other years show no consequent appeal for government reinsurance or other assistance. In IMS, for example, parts of Florida, Louisiana and Missis-were ravaged by Hurricane Betsy with an insured loss #7)5 million. This one storm caused seven times as much dainagae as all this year’s urban riots. it ir it One year earlier Hurricane Cieo caused an insured loss of $67.2 million in Florida. In 1M2 the industry had to pay $81 million in damage claims from a windstorm in California, Oregon and Washington. Measured another way, against yearly fire losses, the damage from riots has been only a small percentage. In each of’the past 10 years fire losses have exceended a billion dollars and now are near a rate of $1.5 billion. All these risks the insurance industry has assumed without appeals for aid. Why, then, do ance to pay for the riots? REASONS CITED Several reasons are given. trend for the future: and so premiums are raised or lowered accordingly^ The riots, as one insurance executive explained, were not foreseen/ Premium charges had not been raised in anticipation of such huge losses, he said. "★ ★ ★ The riots also are discriminatory in that they concentrate their damage in small sections of cities. The cost of protecting these “high-risk” areas cannot easily be spread among policyholders in the low-risk areas. ★ * * The insurance companies also suggest that payment for the riots is the responsibility of society, not just of the insurance industry. SHOULD SHARE LOSS T. Lawrence Jones, president of the American Insurance Association, commented that “no one sector of the economy, such ps the insurance companies, can or should bear the economic cost of these occurrences.” * * * But an even greater concern is not with the damage done in the past so much as a fear of First, hurricanes and f i r e s recurrences. If statements by generally are predictable in some militant Negroes leaders number and damage to a de-iare to bp believed, similar riots Previous losses suggest a I could occur in the future. LARGER QUARTERS — B. F. Goodrich opens for business Monday in a newly constructed 12,000-square-foot building at 60 3. Telegraph, Waterford Township. The company was formerly located at 111 N. Perry in a building only two-thirds the size of the new building. Store hours will be 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday and Saturday. Friday the store will close at 7:30 p.m. New Goodrich Store Opening B.F. Goodrich opens for business in a new location, 60 S Telegraph, Waterford Township, Monday morning. The business was formerly located at 111 N. Perry. “We are moving to provide better truck-tire service and more parking space for our customers,” said store manager Fred Peters of 335 Rivard, Waterford Township. The new 12,000-sqnare-f o o t building is one-tiiird larger than the old place, according to Peters. Goods offered in the new store include tires, TV sets and radios, large and small home appliances and bicycles. Phone System Delayed Temporary postponement automatic number identification (ANI) in Pontiac was announced today by the Michigan Bell Telephone Co. The delay to Sept. 3 is being caused by a change in equipment manufacturing schedules, according to Charles B. Wood-head, public relations manager of the Pontiac District of Bell. The original introduction date was Aug. 27. When introduced the ANI equipment will serve Pontiac FE-33 subscribers with one and two party lines for faster and more convenient long-distance dialing. ★ ★ ★ The ANI equipment automatically records the caller’s number, thus eliminating the need for operators asking the caller to repeat his number for billing The service department! specializes in wheel alignments Woodhead said operators and brake service, according tO’COU^ ask the caller's num-Peters iber with ANI in effect if the ‘SAME QUALITY’ j"eW n limn I DRIVE-IN SO. TEIEOIAM AT SO. IAMSO. rt -n? nrri^QPENsToo^P.M; i lake twelve condemned men. Fuse their violence, i Ionite R When its ready to explode-s I 1 ^^RONCS ridcs JjnMptU 5 IMfiBRiM SHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIinil giant free playgrounds " tmiim |fv£ JIIIKIIIIRI ^ giant FREE PLAYGROUNDS MAIN FEATURE SHOWN 1st NITELY a 111 Fourteen Famous Swingers Give You The Do’s And Dont’s —w dwyf S EC MATTHAU MORSE |/.P INGER STEVENS LUCILLE BALL-JACK BENNY POLLY BERGEN • JOEY BISHOP SID CAESAR -ART CARNEY WALLY COX • JAYNE MANSFULO I BP - i iZ*WMtaiiw 3 oAVSi IBPwi panavision ANn COLOR bv DELUXE SeHlEFONDa ,h‘2ZZ!!£Z“hu “-"“JZZZ = jason m&MMf '-35 COLOR . ^lUllHJIlllllllllftim EXCITING CIRCUS TRAIN RIDES.. iniiiiiu Iff* 5 R°n i REdIfomd Fonm B^Sri^ NjotwIck/ 1 “A GAG-A SECOND COMEDY... “ONE OF THE FUNNIEST 3 1 laughed almost films out of Hollywood v4/w| S continuously throughout in a long time.” S the picture.* illlllllllllllUIIII GIANT FREE PLAYGROUNDS • ...__________________ . . _ E fj* pt BOX OFFIC^FEN^O^M MAIN FEATURE SHOWN, Itt NfTELY = *u____ ..... M| ■ At urn lirn £j£Hii ALSO Waterford' O A I X f . 7 N ..... It. UK! ao. AT AIRPORT RO AIRPT WEST Of PIXIE HCWT iU.f |Q| «MtntltSI|a i laumroumiffl 1 IN UNTIE. BUTHOMMU mui n cam I 2ft piP§|_ Rgsssj nSHK sun Dlimiunill GIANT FREE PLAYGROUND! THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 Bizarre Literary Battle Pits Svetlana Against the Soviets I)—Syttlana ( become embroiled in a bizarre literary battle with the Soviet Union over her memoirs of her dictator father. ' V?1'1 '■?% ^ \ * In the latest round, t’h e freckle — faced* d a u g h t e r of Joseph Stalin has fired two salvos against her homeland in retaliation against what die and her advisers think is its campaign to pull the rug from under her |3.5-milllon book by peddling "p i r a t e” copies and photographs In the Vilest The 14 U.S. and European publications that paid a king’s ransom for serial rights to her book have been so distressed over photographs from the Stalin fa “ “ around Europe that she called. them together recently to five them a bonus interview. “She want e d to give them their money’s worth," a source close to Svetana said. •k it Jr At this meeting, UPI has learned, the dictator’s daughter accused' Soviet officials of breaking into her apartment to take Stalin family photographs from her personal belongings. DETAILS OF CONVERSATION Detrail of her conversations will be revealed gunday. Miss Stalin came out of seclusion on the farm of ILS. diplomat George Kennan near Princeton, N.J., to accuse the Soviet Union of trying to discredit her book which will appear on the eve of the 50th *JMtU and 48 CLUB Now Servihg With Your " Favorite Cocktails .., Steaks, Shrimp, Tacos, Burrittos, Chicken plus many other delicious foods. "Tnini/ ajut 148 WOODWARD (NEXT TO ST. JOSEPH HOSPITAL) 10 A.M. - 1 A.M. FE 8-9911 anniversary of the Bolshevik Revolution, a near-holy event to Communists. Victor Louis, a Soviet Journalist believed by diplomats and correspondents in Moscow to be connected with the Soviet government, made the rounds of European publications to sell' Stalin family photographs and! articles he wrote based Svetlana’s memoirs. ★ ; '★ ★ These have taken some of the edge off her book revealing the personal life of the dictatin'. 'PIRATE’COPIES Louis also ^successfully tried I to have published cut-rate “pirate’’ copies of her book, apparently taken from one of two copies she left behind with friends in Moscow and Lenin-1 grad. Some of the photographs show Svetlana in unflattering poses or as a child in the company of the unsavory secret police chief, Lavrenta Berta. Id a counterattack, Miss Stalin, through her 1 a w y e r s, filed suits to prevent or postpone publication of the “bootleg” memoirs in Israel, the Netherlands, Italy and Entertainment Nightly INCLUDING SUNDAY Starring WOODY MARTENS King of tha Twin Keyboards A'uuvay LouiujC' 4852 W. Huron (M59) 674-0425 Excerpts were printed in Germany despite a court injunction; Miss Statin has told friends herd that those exempts were not inj her original book. 3 MAIN PURPOSES Experts on Soviet affairs' think the Russians launched an anti - Svetlana campaign for three main purposes: • To punish the defector by trying to ruin the sale of her book. • To circulate in the West what they claim to be “the original” version of her memoirs. Soviet officials told Americans in M o s c o w they believed the CIA was doctoring her memoirs with anti-Soviet slanders. • To postpone or speed up October publication of her book so it would not take attention from Communism's 50th birthday party. »nnnrrrrrrinrrmrr«TrrmTmTn^ c “Air Conditioned for Your Comfort** * “ % !< ALL YOU CAN EAT SMORGASBORD Saturday 6 to 10 P.M.' CA Children Plus a Complete T ■cov Underlt Menu . ^ *2.50 FRIDAY Complete Menu from Seafood to Chops > Fine/FowU ani Ltyim CALL FOR RESERVATIONS “Watch fer Our Parking Lot Expansion” : Wide Track st W. Hiron FE 2-1170 STATUE TO STAY—Felix J. Cuervo (center), president of the Native New Yorkers Historical Association, is seeking to get the Philadelphia Museum of Art to return the statue of Diana, the Huntress (background), which once stood in New York’s old Madison Square Garden. Here Cuervo and his son, Bobby (left), talk to Assistant Curator Henry Gardiner. The Phidadelphia museum sympathized with Cuervo, but said no. A mobile, “Ghosts,” dangles in front of the statue. It is difficult today to Judge who is winning the liveliest literary quarrel since the William Manchester book on the assassination of John F. Kennedy. : * «a t A .spokesman at Harper and Row, U.S. publishers of Svetlana’s book, “Twenty Letters to a Friend,” confirmed that the furor over the pirate copies caused the firm to advance the Oct. 16 publication date to Oct. 2, with newspaper and magazine excerpts to appear in September. News in Brief From Lansing gmcv In Ltkn County. VU uroed. by tt>n Michigan n of School Coords to-------- r spociol LogloloMvo .1 Hills homo. Nov. 10 for -a proboto court of moro -monoy i Fire Hits Dock LISBON, Portugal (AP)-A fire raced through a section of Lisbon’s dock area Thursday, destroying a .warehouse and goods with a reported total value of $20 million. People in the News| By The Associated Press . Pianist-comedian Victor Borge must pay some $277,000 in back federal income taxes, the U.S. Tax Court has ruled. The court also said in its rilling yesterday that Danica, a corporation organized by Borge, must pay more than $73,000 in back taxes. Tax Court Judge J. Edgar Murdock concurred with the Internal Revenue Service which held that Borge founded the corporation for the principal purpose of evading federal income taxes. Borge sold it was formed to give him future financial security apart from any earnings for professional engagements. CBS Signs Controversial Folk Singer Folk singer Pete Seeger is scheduled to make his first national network television appearance in more than 17 yean this fall. He is slated to perform Sept. 10 on the “Smothers Brothers Comedy Hour” over the Columbia Broadcasting System. The controversial singer and songwriter said yesterday in New York he had not been asked to sign any oaths or statements for the appearance. Seeger has claimed he was “blacklisted” since 1950 from national television because he has refused to sign loyalty oaths. French Movie Actor Seeks Divorce French movie actor Alain Delon, 28, has filed for divorce in Municipal Court in Paris. The grounds for divorce were not made public in the action yesterday. Delon first met his wife, Nathalie, in Spain in 1963 when he was making the movie “Black Tulip.” They were married in August 1964. Director David O. Selznick gave Delon his first break into m o v 1 e s in 1957. Previously, Delon had served in the French navy and had held jobs as a waiter and a porter in a food market. Mart Death Spurs Penny Stock Shifts SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Penny stocks are scrambling to other Western markets from the deathbed of their true love, the San Francisco Mining Exchange. The romantic little old lady died Aug. 15, at age 105. ★ ★ ★ Since the Gold Rush days she had wooed speculators with a gambler’s chance to make a fortune, or lose one. Her’a was the lure of gold, silver, copper, uranium at the penny arcade prices of mining companies trying to make a name and a mint. She died impoverished, almost deserted and in disgrace. EMPTY BOARDS But her passing was mourned by a handful of followers. They came for days after the close to sit facing the empty greeh chart boards in room 200 at 256 Montgomery Street. Thirty-one mining companies stayed until the end, then hurried away to seek listings on exchanges in Salt Lake City, Spokane, Calgary, Vancouver, Pacific Coast Stock Exchange In San Francisco and Los Angeles, or to establish a market in over-tiie-counter trading. On the last day 'only two brokers remained. Business had dwindled from $8 million in 1956, during a uranium revival, to $2 million last year to $725,000 for the six months this year. The glamor of the mining exchange began fading at the end of the California gold fever a century ago. FRANCHISE THREATENED The death knell was sounded in 1962 by the Securities Exchange Commission, the government agency which policies stock and bond markets. In its first move of the kind, the SEC threatened to lift the mining exchange’s franchise. The SEC charged, among other things, that the exchange was attempting to distribute “substantially worthless” securities; that there were irregularities involving *16 of the 42 companies then listed, and that the SEC had to step in and stop trading in 27 securities between 1934 and 1962. For five years the exchange fought back, But volume “diminished to the point where further operation is not feasible,” said President George J. Flach in announcing that the exchange would close. Mrs. B. M. Forsyth, grayhaired secretary of the exchange, told an interviewer the exchange faded away because 'the young men of today are just not interested.’’ KNEW HEYDAY Regular traders were older men; “men who knew the heyday bf gold mining from-thrfr grandfathers.”: Stocks sold on the exchange last year at lows ranging from one cent to $9 a share and highs of three cents to $13.25. r W All tvere speculative, Mrs. Forsyth said. At that moment, the telephone rang. What, the caller asked, could he do now with four mining stocks he jht long ago? Said Mrs. Forsyth: “You can paper your walls With them.” Grant Is OK'd LANSING (AP)—Approval of a $114,284 Economic Opportunity grant to the Delta-Menom-inee - Schoolcraft Community Action Agency has been announced by Gov. George Romney. The money is to be used for a full-year Head Start program enrolling 150 youngsters aged 4 and 5. THE PLATTER BOX' Present* “B00GAL00 SOUL SHOW” at the C.A.I. 1640 Williams Lake Road Waterford, Michigan Sunday, Aug. 27, 8:00 p.m. to 11:30 p.m. The Soul Sound of THE BREED PLUS SOUL SEARCHERS Waterford, Mich, and Quests . DENHIS P0TULSKY, M.O. ADMISSION: $1X0 ROUNDUP WE MOIL FAMIIY AND COME 10 BONANZA .a mo met n bah Boneless Choice Dinner STRIP STEAK Includes t|59 Texas Toast, Salad and Baked Potato Otkfi/hPiiuieM qa tow- oa 7h- BONANZA SIRLOIN PIT. Kmart Glenwood Plaza North Perry Street, Comer Glenwood Carry Out Available 338-9433 Open I Pays a Week 11 A.M.-9, Fri. and Sat, HI IS 6698 DIXIE HIGHWAY FRIDAY, August 25th “THE ZOOLOGICAL EXPEDITION” plu, "THE MIBMSKT SHIFT' 'SATURDAY, August 21th Diek Purtan D.J. Brings “THE TIDAL WAVES” “THE SKYLINERS” and “THE FIVE MORE” “Playing for the FRATCROWD” Admission Always $1.50 Rati Cuts the High Cost of EATING OUT Pf*icea Cut on 15 Regular Menu Items •.. to all our CURB SERVICE CUSTOMERS Starting Tonight! 16-oz. RAEL’S DRIVE IN RESTAURANT 6225 Highland Road * OR 3-7173 0|»|MX*it<* TKtr Air|H»M CHARBO INN 2435 BENSTEIN ROAD Under New SLEETH 8D.| COMMERCE RD;f^gg] MMi COCKTAILS-FOOD ENTERTAINMENT DANCING Fri. Mte-The Lamplighters Sat. Nite-The Derpys Ownership ■ of HOWARD CRAMPTON Q EARL jg LUDWICK }— co 25 Minutes ^ from Pontiac co CHARBO a INN * 5 Minutes from Walled Lake Specialty of the House PIZZAS and SANDWICHES W. MAPLE RD. OPEN 7 A.M. 2435 BENSTEIN ROAD WALLgO LAKE MA 4-9898 DeMi I an I Corner Elizabeth Lake . ' And Cass Lake Roads FE Z-Z981 ! 1 BLOCK WEST OF HURON Ev.ry Tussday, Wednesday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday $ FLOOR SHOWS EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT ★ NICK BALL Roller Skating Sensation ★ ROSETTA COVINGTON | Singing The Exciting Sounds Of The Sixtime EXCLUSIVE PONTIAC SHOWING! WINNER OF 6 ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING BEST PICTBRE IF THE YEJUII AND— BEST DIRECTOR—Fred Zinnefflann BEST ACTOR—Paul Scofield BEST SCREENPLAY—Robert Bolt BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY (Color) BEST COSTUME DESIGN (Color) HURON COLUMBIA PICTURES rm™t« «'RED ZINNEMANNS A MAN FOR ALL SEASONS „„ £,,, ROBERT BCILT-TOMM*' |R1 PRICES FOR THIS ENQAGEMENT SNLY aniu tp Sat. 1 to 8, $1.26 ADULTS: Hites and Sun. 2.08 CHILDREN: 1.00 aayMms . FRI. SCHEDULE. Shows St 7:00 -’9:05 SAT-SUN. at 1;>e-3:te-5:>5-l:1>-9:15 NEED HELP? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST ?N ACTION. PHONE 8324181. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 . -/V You’ll find just what you have been looking fox —color and style to complement your home decor. tABLY AMERICAN, TRADITIONAL, CONTEMPORARY. PROVINCIAL, MODERN, CALIFORNIA MODERN Handsomely upholstered in your choice of rich decorator fabrics* Deep comfbrt - foam cushions -accented with maple, oak, cherry, pine — beau-tifuUy grained and elegantly finished. Lifetime spring base and self covered platform. All protected with armcovers. AT SAVINGS FOR THE THRIFTY, in Living Rooms Beautiful Two or Three-Piece Suite$! Terms to Meet Your Personal Budget Requirements - We Are Sure You*ll be Pleased. “FREEGIFT FOR THEMONTH’ Lucky One. A BpmitifulNtnn iio oiMoandM sm.iiCUUU/W 1J VIA7Clip—Just Moil or Bring to Our Stoi.. -,.f ADUUS ONLY! # COLOR TV ; --—7.^-............................... AVGUST GIFT! *5 announc«d !n early September i A Unique Selection of Home Furnishings for Y| 536 NORTH PERRY STREET - PONTIAC Pr*« Parking-Acrou CleHwood frSm Kmart-H 4.9615 [ li th i a ■ it r3 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 D—I >Auburn Hills Campus Landscape Course at OCC By J(H)Y HEADLEE i Pontiac Preas Garden Editor Before you read any further, go and look at your front and back yards. How do they look to you? Are you pleased? Are they adapted to the needs of your family? Do [they have evergreen interest to provide winter color and a hav-jen for the birds that stay over? Are they like beautiful picture*? Does each one have a focal point with aB flower to that point? Do you have seasonal color In your flower beds? Is your landscape designed for an ardent gardener or a summer pool watcher? In short, is your landscape a slight or a If your surroundings fall in the later category, then Oakland • Community College is launching at . its Auburn Hills Campus a course entitled “Introduction to Landscape Planning" that will be the answer ,to your dilemma. During the 15-week course you will be taught the basic SWEET CORN, LOOK AGAIN—No, this isn’t a stand of sweet corn. It is sugar cane. Grown by Mrs. Josephine Vasques .of 34 W. Wilson, the seeds came from her native state of New Mexico. Whan the seeds at the top of the stalk turn red, Mrs. Vasquez says that the cane is ripe and ready for. harvest. In-Skid Isit Steps 6haok That* Features for a Step in Beauty • One Pise# Construction • FHA Spacification • Pnrmannnt Beauty • Strong Rninforeyd Catting • Ruggod Dependability • Avoid Metiy Initallation _________ FREE ESTIMATES BaMy Dwarf RadueM »pphf We Deliver Anywhere Manufactured and Sold By: CONCRETE STEP CO. 64IT Highland Road (MBS) 673-0775 ■ Add Bneuty la Your Horn* With Cnncwtt Stnpt and Railing* Open 8 H112 Saturdays WANT TO SELL LAWN MOWERS, POWER MOWERS, BOATS, ROLLER SKATES? - - - USE A LOW COST PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED. AD. TO PLACE YOURS, CALL *324181. Some Plants Not Happy Outdoors Keep Cool, Green Look on Inside Too As summer approaches w e naturally go all wit for outdoor living. Water sports and athletic activities occupy us, and even everyday occurrences go outdoors too. We plan patio breakfasts, garden luncheons andbackyard barbecues. Sheltered or open decks become the newv “living rooms" and house plants, that fonherly occupied places honor inside the'home are sent outdoors, too — plunged up to the rims of their clay pots In planter boxes, garden borders, fastened to posts or garage doors — or just moved bodily out to the patio. But, there are some plants that just shouldn’t join the swing to the great outdoors. And, too, the interior of the house shouldn’t be forgotten. Enough plants shonld be maintained indoors to assure a cool green summer look. Certain of the bark-supported large showpiece green pints — like split-leaf philodendrons may benefit from a spell outdoors, strictly in the shade, but somehow seem too tropical and indoorey. So why not use them to advantage where they be-! long? plants is ferns. Display them during summer months in a “double feature” effect. Use one of the new clay pot and saucer hanging baskets add suspend a Boston fern f r o m a curtain rod in front of a bedroom window. At the foot of the window, pave a White tray with pebblep and place two clay-potted ferns, in their matching saucers on the pebble layer. If you water ' pebble layer to the base of the clay saucers, you’ll supply the needed humidity ferns thrive on. , * it ♦ • . African violets when grown out-of-doors become insect-rid-and rain and sun can spot the foliage. So, here’s another New Philodendron Is Discovered Extraordinary houseplants discovered only recently are the self- heading philodendrons those that dp pot climb. of the most popular plants that better stay indoors during summer months. It’s a good idea to double-pot the African violets into the next larger size day pot and line the space between with peat moss during hot weather. You can arrange them on a wicker cart and they’ll make a dazzling indoor garden. Remember that the imaginative use of clay-potted container plants adds immeasurably t o your indoor living during the hot weather, and think how nice it is that there are some plants that are so compatible — they’re just not the “outdoorsy" type. principals of landscape architecture. You will become proficient In the use of drawing tools, Introduced to the symbols used in landscape design and draft! plans tor the .small property including a personalized design' for your own site. Taught by Richard S. NuttaO, Michigan State University graduate who earned both his! bachelor and master’s degrees at the university, the course! will be held Wednesdays at 7; p.m. The class carries three college credit hours and' the tuition is |27. “Registration will take place Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday at the Auburn Hills Campus. For further information, contact Richard Nuttall, coordinator of the landscape technology program, Auburn Hills Campus. Other classes that will interest the do-it-yourself gardener and landscaper include: Introduction Ornamental Horticulture, Introduction to Landscape Gardening and Residential Ground Maintenance. Professional nurserymen will be interested in the Nursery Practices course. All cany three credit hours with the tuition $27 for each course. Your dormant fireplace makes an attractive summering place for these large green plants. Or a plain wooden stepladder — painted white — can hold two or three smaller philodendron pothos plants on different rungs. It’s an attractive an,4 novel way to display them. Ivy — which is used o u tside as ground or bidding cover — is a food indoor summery plant. In small day pots, trailing ivy on wall sconces can bring coolbetjs to any dining area.. .. "* ’. .■ f Another of the “ Botanical explorers have seen; these plants in the tropics and have been describing them for’ many years, but only in 1950 did, they appear on the market in this country. These nonclimbing philodendrons afe sometimes especially desirable for' decoration because they increase hi width rather "lan'in height. .it ' 'it- it. The term “self-heading” indicates that each leaf Is produced from a central qrown at ground level as contrasted itffli' the climbers that put out new foliage from thq top of ff trunk, with each new leaf higher than the one preceding it. , SAVE NOW ON FAST GROWING White Spruce /§ Qc and Scotch Pitie fryes. | Use for Evergreen Screen, Speci- 10 for ^3 men plants, Windbreaks. Reg. f 1.29 Container grown. For planting this --mer—100% guaranteed to grow. INURSERY and LANDSCAPE 3820 W. Auburn R^., 2 Blocks East of Adams Pontiac 852-2310 MEMBER MICHIGAN BANKARD We "Double Dare" You to Try America's FavoriteFertilixer Try a bag of TlftiF BUILDER, the fertilizer that makes grass multiply itself. Watch what it does for your lawn— how it makes it grow tidier, greener, sturdier. If you aren’t truly enthusiastic, send your sales slip to Scotts for a full refund or, if you prefer, they’ll buy you TWO bags of any other fertilizer—any kind, any price. 5,000 sq. ft. 10,000 sq, ft. authorized i $895 dealer *5 OFF iSCOTTS SPREADER Sturdy steel spreader has dial - a - matic rate setting. Full 18 inch spreading width., New rust-resistant finish/ Regularly $10.95 — with any Scotts product $14.95. POOLE HARDWARE v 151 Oakldnd Aito., Pohtlne 834-1594' 2833 S. Telegraph, Pontiac 338-9618 KING BROTHERS 2391 Pontiac Rd., Pontiac 334- 1662 BARNES & HARGRAVE 724 W. Huron, Pontiac 335- 9101 REGAL FEED 4266 Dixie Highway, Drayton Plains 673-2441 JACOBSEN'S GREENHOUSES and GARDEN TOWN 545 S. Broadway, Uka'Orion MY 2-2681 SORDINE'S BETTER BLOOMS 1835 S. Rochester Road Rochester 651-8803 * ALUMINUM AND VINYL SIDING m YOUR AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR ALCOA and MASTIC • ALUMINUM EAVESTROUGH • STORM WINDOWS • DECORATIVE SHUTTERS • SLIDING GLASS WALLS 25 YRS. IN HOME IMPROVEMENT YOU CAN BE SURE OF THE FINEST IN MATERIALS-WORKMANSHIP - SERVICE PH. 674-0169 HOME IMPROVEMENT CO. scons SALE TURF BUILDER PLUS 2 TURF BUILDER PLUS 2 knocks out 17 non-grass woods os it fuH-fectilixes your lawn. Result? Woods become practically a, thing of the past as the fertilised grass fills in where the weeds 6.95 bag—covers 5,000 sq. ft.—now 12.95, bag—covers 10,000 sq. ft.—now 1846 Save or Famous Windsor Seed 3.95 box-50% Windsor—1,000 sq. ft.-3J| 8.95 box—50% Windier—2,500 sq. ft.-IJI 4.45 box—70% Windsor-1,000 sq. ft.-MB 9.95 box—70% Windsor—2^00 sq. ft.—Ml ■ DELIVER — PltOIIO Bn 841 REGAL Food and Lawn Supply Co* ’sy, Drayton Plains, I i North of Pontiac I Dixie Highway, Drayton Matas, Michigan > Milts No “ “ FRIDAY and SATURDAY Lawn ant* Ga Discounts 8-inch pots MEDIUM SIZE ! YEW EVERGREEN | Discount Price 1*77 Charge It Top quality yews. Overall height 12-15”, including 8” plantable 18”-24” Blueberries........*2.57 20-. 30-GALL0H “BMARCUFFE” Plastic Trash Bags LAWN SPREADERS 66c 8.88 Our Reg. 74c S Day* , 1.18 5-lb. Aisles, ovorg rten Food. 88s igs Css mss F 50-lb. Kmart- 50-UL^MG OF 10-6-4 FERTILIZER MICHIGAN PEAT 1.37 4?e tm_ GLENWOOD PLAZA . . North Perry at Glenwood THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1967 Felines Frid^ fn Rose Beds? Michigan Increases Bean Output Still another 'gardener recommends leaving cat canes on the We Have Your Coleus^ Pldrftf Are Versatile You can use coleus plants, with theit delicate shades of green, white and red, both as house plants )n red chQr pots or plunged, pot and all, h> shady, sheltered outdoor locations. Spring brings a variety of these attractive plants to your florists and garden centers. • NEW PARTS Fflranriy Big 4 HIRDWABI STORES Briggs, Tecumseh Reo, Lawn Boy and Clinfdti MOTORS AUTHORIZED SERVICE CENTER Parts and Service “Come in and let us know your needs** LUCITE OUTSIDE HOUSE MINT Special Price New Formulp Self Sfi 9 5 Priming W hit* " and ALL OQLMS II Cal. VOLUNTEERS—Mrs. Walter Stock of 97 Union was surprised to find stglks of com growing in her street side flower bed. “I don’t khow how the com seeds got there,'.' said Mrs. Stock. “They probably were dropped by birds. But I just let the plants grow and now one has three ears of com on It.*' the world's best looking best performing snowmobile Created by Man CREEPING RED FESCUE S9?n. Nature, through a process la* beled “genetic feedback” by an expert on insects, is solving some of the pest problems created by man. Disastrous outbreaks of insect pests often occur when man disrupts the balance of nature, a Cornell University entomologist said.; ; The “genetic feedback” re* stores the equilibrium and this can be speeded up by development of pest resistant plants, Prof. David Pimentel said at,a recent Michigan meeting.' Endangered plants and trees will in time develop resistance to insect attack, Pimentel said. His reasoning: Pest populations build up when: plants are moved from We Have a Large Selection of Usad Lawn Mowers and Barden Tillers We Want Your Bu*ine»* and Will Take Anything In rode on Any Equipment We Carry • new safety features • new peppier engines • new refined transmission • new quality finishing e new deep foam comfort • nfw ell-round dependability come test drive the world's largest selling snowmobile prices as loi NOW I « *«** The insects feed heavily at first on susceptible plants and they increase in population. SR Holds in LAY-AWAY W BRAND NEW IN CARTONS Springfield or Earth Bird POWER and PRESTIGE GARDEN .Tgfe TILLERS .. .the rolls royce ttTCKyl of powered lawn & garden equipment America's most popular bacauta Rear. 1164.9S it's Amarica'z bast. 4 H.P. with * * horizontal driva, with ravers*, — a*. 26" tilling width, Lifatima 14* 4 ilfIRR tines. Exclusive Quick Tina ■ Change. Exclusive balanced da- I WW W The, feeding insects destroy most of the plants before they can reproduce, but those surviving are the most resistant and their characteristics are passed onto their offspring. m 905 Orchard take Ave. Open Fri. till 9, Sat. till 6, Sun. 9-2 YOUR CHOICE! 1 TOMATOES—RADISHES SWEET CORN-tETlUCE GR. ONIONS—PEPPERS—CUKES SIMPLICITY Hie Big Fall and Winter Work fZ Season Is Just Around the Corner n ... Simplicity Gets Big Job* Done . A Better and Faster! JL As yon compare the SimA, plicity home maintenance ■ m giants, be stire to see the' ■ ff many new attachments Sips* plicity offers for 1967 ... qwi. easy to install for less work. ■nHW more tune for play* There’* 2 - 'mm a a tractor and.eqnipment for ■ H 11 every job that needs doing ■ ■ I featuring Briggs & Stratton ImHBkL an engines in 7.10 and 12 H.P., unsurpassed for perform-ance and dependability... so compare our 'prices £.. terms to suit your budget. End of Season 1* Nearing Extra Fine for Freezing Not 2-inch or 2V2-inch but FULL 3-inoh SIDE RAIL “I” BEAM CONSTRUCTION! Mich. Potatoes Now Available Fresh Dill; Garlic, Spices, Vinegar and Jars, Etc. Big 16-ft. Size RITTER’S * LAWN & CARDEN CENTER Open Daily 8:30 A.M. to 6 P.M. - CLOSED SWA reel-PONTIAC ’ FE2 DIAMOND CRYSTAL RED OUT WATER SOFTENERSALT 11 _m$ < am.tMc. t «□ ! i mmtm 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 D—8 Wicker Baskets Perfect for Spring Arrangements You can give your home a luxurious decorative look at relatively lOW OOSt by Fnmhlning flowers with the rustic quality of wicker baskets. Wicker baskets may easily be adapted as flower1 containers. Their rough texture and weaves complement the bright colors and casual beauty of fresh spring blooms available at your local florist. Tastefully arranged flowers tn a basket can provide a change of pace and a pleasing element of surprise in your home'decoration. So, “break out” your ha«Ms of different shapes and sizes, fill them with flowers, and use them in interesting ways — as centerpieces for a luncheon indoors or a patio dinner, as “living pictures” indoors on an unadorned wall, or at an area usually occupied by a somber print or portait. Arrange flowers for a center-piece in an open work basket, water the flowers and still keep the basket dry! Here’s how: LINE BASKET Line the inside of a a basket with foil. Partially fill a metal, glass, or plastic container with water and place it in the basket. Presaturate a commercial foam flower holder and place it in the container so it is surrounded by water. Then insert flower stems into the holder at any desired angle. Add water daily to the container to keep the foam holder saturated. A basket on the wall offers an interesting way to use flowers. Using a shallow oval, fanshaped or round basket, resaturate a foam flower holder with water, cover its bottom and! sides with foil, and attach the holder to the basket with'wire strung through the basket weave. * * ★ Crush chicken wire over the holder’s exposed surface, and insert flower steins into the holder’s exposed surface, and insert flower stems into the holder. Then hang the basket with picture wire and hooks just as with a painting. Occasionally remove thq basket from the wall to re-water the foam flower holder. For a fan-shaped basket, try using one Fuji mum at the bottom as the point of interest. Repeat the fan shape, using a few daisies, tips of stock, and sprigs of pittospo-rum. For an oval basket, use a downward curve of daisies, fill in with zinnias and marigolds, and outline the design with lig-ustrum leaves. * * * A tiered wicker letter holder, containing sweetheart rosea and waxy deep green leaves, would make ah excellent addition to a wall nearest a breakfast nook. ARRANGEMENT A rough - textured, wicker wine-holder can be used for a flower arrangement with a definite flow — almost like the wine itself. Try using delphiniums at the basket’s either end, with complementary greens grouped casually in the center. A tallish raffia basket is s very appropriate container for the long, rangy gladioli or snapdragons. SalQ - Elas p.s. Patio Stones Factory Second Picked Up .. » l\?$ 24*x24V.f/./f ft 53L6 * W' 06 ksr$i CHARGE-IT TRANK'S NURSERY SALES OPEN 3 TO 9 Freshly Dug [ Arriving Daily for, Fall Landscaping! El I P0VER 20 VARIETIES OF CONTAINER GROWN | EVERGREENS p* -4, isnu jjp-N8 Choose from these baautiful spreaders from f Wtt Clemons farm: Hafell Jodei ■ M mm i .......................... Channel Both Ways received a $400 across-the-boa?d raise. In other business, the board officially started work on area vocational education centers approved by the voters In a mUlage election in Jane. A 15-member Oakland County Vocational Advisory Committee appointed for-one-year to plan foul1 centers, which may cost a total of $6.4 million. ★ * ★ A decision on where the first two centers will be built is expected to be made this fall, according to a planning timetable presented by Dr. David Soule, director of vocal vocational education. CONSTRUCTION Constructioh may start on the first two centers next July with completion estimated in August A third center would be built in 1969 and the fourth In 1970. La., with burial there. Local ar- SANCTIONS ORDERED rangementy are by the Frank The number of housing units' _ |____________.. w Carr.uthers Funeral Home. available to servicemen without domestic trouble “wears the [ sources said he could not get an-Mrs. Webb, a member of Lib-lregard to color has more than mask of color. But it really ten'i other extension under city em-erty Baptist Church, died'tripled in two months since De- about color. It’s about the foil-jploye retirement policies, Wednesday. |fense Secretary Robert S, Me- ure in the middle of the 20th S u r v i v 1 n g are a daughter Namara ordered the first use of |Century of all. the social and eco-Mrs. Clonia Roberson of Spring-hill; four sons, Curtis, John and Tom Webb, all of Pontiac and David Webb of Springhill; 16 grandchildren; one great-grandchild; three sisters, including Mrs. Virda Conner of Pontiac; and three brothers, including Willie C. Franklin of Pontiac. off-limits sanctions, Pentagon Mrs. Herman Mason officials said. Essentially, the McNamara order says that within a specified radius of a military instal-laton: "If you don’t agree to rent to all races, you can’t rent to any servicemen.” nomic arrangements” of Ameri- can society. URGES BOYCOTT Baldwin, who has been abroad finishing a nbvel, urged a “massive nationwide economic boycott” by American Negroes saying it might cause some sacri-. . 5 ««n. fices but adding, *We can’t pos- Elsewhere m the nations “PT'sibly be more deprived than we ital Thursday, a National Guard are already.” I general who commanded troops / nenartment an- ATLAS TOWNSHIP - Service in the 1968 Watts riot said ti» “ for Mrs. Herman (Nora E.) Ma- use of tanks and automatic ,. nassDorts of Stokely of 5919 Tody Wifi be 2 weapons in quelling street huts might increase the riot s jng^n y/are< Black Power advo- DOVER, England (UPI) — A 27-year-old restaurant cashier today became the first British woman to swim the English Channel in both directions. Two American women have accomplished the feat. WWW Rosemary George waded Flint Hunting Girl's Killer FLINT (AP), — The search continued today for the killer of ashore at Shakespeare Beach, [a 17-year-old Flint girl whose near Dover, after completing a body was found in a creek near j 17-hour, 50-minute swim from p.m. Monday at the C. F. Sherman Funeral Home, Orton-ville. Burial will be in the Mount Morris Cemetery, Mount Mor-fs. . , j Mrs. Mason, a member of the] Reorganized Church of Jesus Christ Latter-day Saints, died yesterday. Surviving besides her h u tempo rather than qpell it. ! cates, on grounds they made an “If we start escalating .U19; unauthorized trip to Cuba. tempo in these riots, the rioters are going to be ready,” Maj. Health Planner Unit Created 10 great-grandchildren. Steven O. Ratliff WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP Steven O- Ratliff, 13, son of Mr. arid Mrs. Odell Ratliff, 301 Rustic Circle, died yesterday. His body is at Elton Black Fu-LANSING (AP)—Gov. George neral Home, Union Lake. Romney today issued an execu-, *f— ■ five order creating a compre-| hensive state health planning' The commission will save as the state’s long range inter-departmental health planning agency and will qualify Michigan for federal health planning funds. ♦ + a The executive order also creates a citizens’ comprehensive state health planning advisory council to work in conjunction with the planning Commission. Members of the planning commission will include the state health director, state mental health director, state social welfare director, state budget director and the governor’s executive assistant for program development. f w ! ★ .★ w • • The commission, to operate under the executive office, is empowered to apply for federal planning funds and to hire a staff. Michigan has been allocated $235,000 for this purpose to date by the fedaal government. r Members of the citizens’ advisory council will be appointed lata. State Housing Law Is Sought Liberal Detas Urge Action by Legislature LANSING (AP) - A self-described group of liberal Democrats today were to call on the [state Legislature to institute “a full-coverage open occupancy Ford Believes. jSSSl!K'' *' S7 : The group, which cafis itself the Michigan Conference of [Concerned Democrats, released !a statement asking Senate [Minority Leader Ray Dzendzel [and House Minority Leader Wil-liafn Ryan, both Detroit Deiifo-DETROIT (AP)—Henry Ford Crats, to insist that such legisla-II said Thursday he is still in tion be taken’up. favor of President Johnson's; * * proposed 18 peg cent surcharge It also asked Gov. George on personal Ind corporate in-|Rbmney to “see that his major-comes, but-said he feels the ity party aid in its computation method would discriminate unfairly against some companies. “In addition to discriminating unfairly against some companies,'this feature of the proposed legislation would, in my judgment, have the unfortunate effect of reducing business investment needed for long-term growth,” the Ford Motor Co. board chairman said in a telegram to Rep. Wilbur Mills, D-Ark., chairman of the House Ways and Means Committee. Ware is in Nashville, Tenn., where he faces state sedition charges and Carmichael is reported in North Vietnam. Paper Carrier, 10, Hit by Car in Area A Bloomfield Township boy was strode by a car and injured while riding his bicycle at Quarton and Blandford at 7:40 a.m. today. 1 ■, ,|t Ij,- Taken to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, was Walta Green, 10, of 5934 Blandford. Surtax Will Hurt Firms Ford was referring to the proposal that the 10 per cent surcharge be computed before allowing for the 7 per cent investment tax credit or for foreign tax credits. “My endorsement (of the surcharge) was based, in part, on the impression that the income tlx surcharge would be a percentage of actual net tax liability as presently computed and would apply uniformly to individuals and corporations,” Fad add. during the special scheduled to begin Oct 10. “We deplore Gov. Romney’ empty insistence that the Michigan Civil Rights Commission and its vague constitutional mandate are an adequate solution to racial problems,” the statement said. CONSTITUTIONAL Romney, empowered by the State Constitution to call the special session and name the topics-to be considered, has said the constitution already provides fa statewide open housing enforcement through the commission. He has said he believes the quickest way to get statewide open housing is tf> clear up pending court cases challenging the commission’s authority. said the boy was delivering pa-The Alaskan Tsunami Warn-pers and that a witness saF log System, a part of the new him cross Into the path of an nationwide Na tural Disaster oncoming car. The driver was Warning system, will''go into hill not cited, police said. operation Sept. 2. - j * ' --------—-— That is the date of the dedica- An American Indian’s skele-tion of the system’s nerve cen-Jton, believed to be 40$ to 500 ter, the Palmer Setemotegicaliyears old, has been exhumed Obaervatory, reportedly one of from a riverbank, which may tike finest facilities of Its kind be the site of an anicent village fetthe world. jnear West Claremont, N.H. Under the proposed means of computation, he continued, “the effective surcharge rate would therefore be higher than 10 pa Bloomfield Township police cent for expanding end modernizing companies and for those wifif foreign investments. He asked the State Shpreme Court Tuesday to cafi in one such case now before the Oakland County Circuit Court and rule on it. The conference statement said the group “depfores the situation that has brought about the bn erf Maya Floyd McCree of Flint.” HOSPITALIZED The mayor, hospitalized with a stomach disorder, has threatened to resigmin a dispute ova the Flint City Cammis*' , . failure to enact a local open “For these reasons, l do noordinance. innnrt tnp nrnnncpn rruatnrui nf w ^ i ii.; -... support the proposed method of. computing the surcharge.” Ford concluded, “I remain ivinced that a temporary tax necessary qt this time,?’ but urged Mills to amend the bill so that the surcharge would be computed from actued net tax liability. “The Michigan Conference of Concerned Democrats feels that our state can no longer tolerate unequal treatment of any of its citizens/’ the statemoit said. ‘Nor can we allow the hatred and violence which tre t direct outgrdwth of inequality," downtown Flint. WWW Police said the girl, Linda Vufilemot, apparently was attacked while walking home from a downtown beauty school. They said she had been raped and beaten. Police conducted a house-to-house check of the area Thursday in an attempt to find clues in the Cap Gris Na, France. Miss George swam from Dover to Boulogne in 1961. “This has been my ambition for years,” she said. “Now I feel fine.” American swimmers Greta Anderson and Florence Chadwick are the only other women known to have swum the channel in "both directions. Business? or Pleasure? ST. LOUIS W — The course of true love, never smooth, may soon have to wind through the St. Louis license collector’s of-fice. A city official said Thursday he plans to introduce a bill to [the city’s Board of Aldermen requiring computerized dating services to obtain business licenses. A man recently inquired at City Hall about a license for a dating service he planned to establ&h in St, Louis. Officials were not sure he needed one and they want to remove the confusion. One of the most widespread infectious diseases in the world filariasis, spread by mosquitoes and rampant in tropical and underevefoped regions. wkC G& back fo mIuwV with MUSIC! HOME Of WEST BRAND NAMES 19$ N. SAGINAW FE 8*1114 PORTABLE TV IS A GREAT TRAVELER! "The Suburbanite" with 71 sq. inch screen Is just the right six* for your dorm room! Has Automatic Gain Control to assure picture stability tvbn when you move tha sotl Powerful speaker, earphone and feck plus monopolo antenna are included. PORTABLE STEREO GOES WHERE YOU GO! The Magnavox "Stereo Overture" with tilt-down Micromatic Record Player and diamond stylus banishes record wear... lots youralbums last a lifetime! Detachable speakers, swing out for separation in largo rooms. (4 speakers in all!) Has 20 watts of undistorted music power, separata volume controls.' 14990 No Monty Down MAGNAVOX SOLID-STATE RADIO "Th« Cavaliar" hat drift-frta FM plu* powerful AM. Slida rula dialing givat you tuning, accuracy.' Hat YQ trantittors plut 4 diednu Built-In anttnnas for greater pulling power. • No Down Payment $ Up to 3 Years to Pay * • 90 Day* Same As Cash • We Finance Our Own V Accounts HO«ft Of FINEST BBAND NAMES 108 N. SAGINAW FE 3-1114 NEW FM-AM CLOCK RADIO The tolidatata "Noctumn" latt you wake up ta the mutic you like bnttl Hat no-drift FM, wide - ; range AM, iO trantittort, tlidt rula dialing and a O Q 9 5 fuil-ftature clock. VV • OPEN FRIDAY and MONDAY RIGHTS'til 9 • PARK FREE in WKC* Lot at R«dr of Store j TUB PONTIAC P&ESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1987 Mice a Danger pRIBOJ NA WMU, Yugoslavia (AF)-The invasion of mice Jtfhich plagues parts of central Yugoslavia now endangers nearly 50,000 acres of land "around this Serbian town, a health .inspector said Thursday. ' NOTICE OF SPECIAL ASSESSMENT GALLOWAY CREEK SANITARY TRUNK SEWER TO:, Walton Investment Co., Louis Ko-prince, Karl F. Mayor, Latter Day Saints Church. Frad Haynes, Alford J. Denir~ Lois Clark, Calvary Missionary Chur Patrick Murphy, Carson F. Cascade Howard R, Dow: Sevmour Sam I Hal • let Chapdelaln Detroit*,*' P Robert K. Burton, Mr. Holslnqtor erlck B. Glddlnos, Virgil J. May... .... Double* Wlngatfes, william R. Affolder, Clyde Flatter, Mildred C, O'Naall, John K. Phipps, Oscar P. Stations, Stephen A. |------ --------- ... Sm|th Sr ----------1— Damitio, ■ banana grown. Bare.................. Morgan A S. Coleman, E. A., Knowles, ■ Willard 0. Dawaesa, Clyde Sperlce — aid Livingston, Sylvester T7 t Bruce Roy Cord, — Michael Swlastyn , A. Area, Lyla Burtch, Gladys Bishop, Pontiac Missionary Baptist, James El-wood, Frank Patrick, Joseph A. Rob’ chaud, Floyd B. Brooks, Paul Eghlalai Charles Haas, Arthur E. Allen, Wllllar.. H. Harmon, Arthur Marlon, JAM Wrobel; __Robart E. Wernet, Llge Steal:— i £ ‘Menard, Charles Goftar, E. I Edward S. Ellis, Mr. Obc, a... ________ 'persons Interested, take notice: That tlw roll of the Special Assessment heretofo made by the City Assessor for the pt pose of defraying that part of the cc.. Welch the Commission decided should be paid and borne by the special assessn— for the construction of Galloway Cl Sanitary Trunk Sewsr Is now on'flit mv office for public Inspection. Notice Is also hereby given that Cornml—'" ‘------- and place opportunity will be gi parsons Interested to bo heard. Dated August 17, 1M7 W.O. JS» Olga Berkeley, City Clerk August 2$, 1767 NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING Notice Is hereby given that a pub Bearing will be held V the Pontiac City Commission In the Commission Chambers, city Haiii, 450 Wide Track Drive, East, on Tuesday, --------- “ * P. M. EDT, PONTIAC MISS CLASSIFIED ADVIRTISINO INDEX Revised June SA IMS NOTICES Card of Thanks .. In Memoriam .... Announcements ... Florists........... Funeral Directors . Cemetery Lots .... Personals ......... Lost and Found ... 1 2 3 . ...3-A 4 ....4-A . ...4-B .....5 Deted August 21, It August 2S, 1767 NOTICE TO BIDDERS Notice Is htreby glvsn thst bids will be accepted until 1:00 p.m. Septsmb 'tlth, 1067, by the Township of Pontl for certoln repairs to the Townst . Bunding In Auburn Heights nsxt to the ’Fire Hill commonly known as 3432; Auburn Rood. A list of repairs Is avall-“Pbls at the office of the Township Clark, 2060 Opdyke Road, Pontiac, Michigan. I "Bids will ba opened at 0:00 p.m. on ony o EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Male..........6 Help Wanted Female........ 7 Help Wanted M. or F. .... 8 Sales Help, Male-Female...8-A Employment Agencies.......9 Employment Information ...9-A Instructions—Schools.......10 Work Wanted Male..........11 Work Wanted Female........12 Work Wanted Couples ... .12-A SERVICES OFFERED Building Services-Supplies_13 Veterinary.................14 Business Service..........15 Bookkeeping and Taxes.....16 Credit Advisors .........16-A Dressmaking and Tailoring.. 17 Gardening .................18 Landscaping..............18-A Garden Plowing..........,18-B Income Tax Service .......19 Laundry Service ...........20 Convalescent—Nursing ......21 Moving and Trucking........22 Painting and Decorating....23 Television-Radio Service...24 Upholstering.............24-A Transportation ............25 Insurance................ 26 Deer Processing............2/ WANTED Wanted Children to Board. .28 Wanted Household Goods...29 Wanted Miscellaneous......30 Wanted Money...............31 Wanted to Rent ............32 Share Living Quarters.....33 Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 PontlocPr»s» Want Ads fOUNkST ACTION Vim*, it will b« aeeumwel Mi eponeibiljty ier errata other cancel the chergee for that itaining type eitee larger »h< ulor agate type is 12 o'clock no ► May previous to publication. CASH WANT AD JUTIS 3 2 00 , 3 00 3. SB 4 2.44 4.61 4.96 5 3.05 3.40 1.40 * 3.66 6-AI 10*08 7 4.37 7.36 11.76. B 4.88 6.64 13.44. 6 5.46 4.72 15.12' IO 6.10 1060. 16.80 An additional charge df SO canto III be made far via of Pontiac Press In Memoriam IN LOVING MEMORY OF MY HUS-bend. Lloyd L. Bighorn, who passed away August 25, 1763. So many thing! have happened Since you were called away: So many things I shared with you II you could nave only stayed; ’ -— ~’J days back. IN LOVING MEMORY OF OUR tether, Lloyd L. Bighorn who passed away Aug. 25, 1763. The years may wipe out many things. But this they'll wipe out never* When we were ell togethe.. We think of him In silence ..36 GRETA V. BLOCK Clerk August 23, 24 and 25, 1767 Death Notices BALMFORTH, ANNIE; August 24, 1747; 1001 LaSalle, Waterford Township; age 77: dear mother of _ ....________ . uneral service will be held Saturday, August 26, •l 1:30 p.m. at the Bonelaon-Johns Funeral Home, inferment In Ottawa Park Cemetery. Mrs. Balm-fdrth will Its In state at the funeral heme. (Suggested visiting hours, 3 to 5 end 7to 7.) Daevey; „ ...... nest Thompson, Mrs. Wayne Rau-•le, Alexander and George Deevey. Funeral service will be held Saturday, August 26, St 10:30 t. m. at 1 the Stone Baalist Church, SMbUfk Harold R. Davis Funeral Home. Auburn Heights. (Suggested vlilt-Ing hours, 3 to 5 end 7 to 7.) JONES. EMILY G.l August 23, 1767; 544! Sarvls, Waterford Township; Wanted Real Estate... RENTALS OFFERED- 1 Apartments—Furnished.......37 Apartments—Unfurnished ... 38 i Rent Houses, Furnished ....39 Rent Houses, Unfurnished.. .40 Property Management... ,40-A Renf Lake Cottages.........41 Hunting Accommodations 41-A Rent Rooms.................42 Rooms With Board...........43 Rent Farm Property.........44: Hotel-Motel Rooms..........45 Rent Stores................46 Rent Office Space..........47 Rent Business Property...47-A! Rent. Miscellaneous........481 REAL ESTATE Sale Houses ........ Income Property .... Lake Property....... Northern Property .. Resort Property .... Suburban Property .. Lots-Acreage ....... Sole Farms ......... Sale Business Property Sale or Exchange ... ...49! ...50 ...51 ..51-A ...52 ...53 ...54 ...56! ...57 ...58 Huntoon t the Donelton-Johns nerai noma. Interment In Act Park Cemetery. Miss Jones lie In stele at the funeral ho (Suggested visiting hours, 3 t MASON, NORA E ___tr mother ef Mrs. Dorothy Skinner and Reland Mason; dear sister 77 Oakland Ave- ' FE 2-Otl SPARKS-GR'FFIf: FUNERAL HOME "Thoughtul Ssryice" FE 1-72 FUNERAL HOME. 332-5371 Established Over 40 Years l. Funeral service w I Morris, Michigan SHOEMAKER, MARK P.i I 1747; 560 Bette Road. I e 73; deer fall It Shoemaker. Full! be held Satur-... at 1 p. m. at tha t Funeral Home, Oxford, inrarmenf In Lakeville Cemetery. * Mr. Shoemaker will lie In state at »■ tha funeral home. * SMITH,' SANDRA LEE; Aug. 23, 1767 ' 470 Omar; age 22; beloved wife of Wayne Smith; beloved daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Klauss; be-' loved granddaughter of Mrs. C. *—-— mother ef Wayne WII-ir.; deer slsf----------------* ______ ____herlne) Es__--------- ■ Funeral service will be held Setur- > day, August 26, at 1 p. m. at the > Coats Funeral Home, Drayton ■ Plains. Interment In Ottawa Perk -----.— -------------- ||e |r 0 hours, 3 to 5 and a, state at the funeral ■ Rested V ’"- i— «. 716 7.)____________________________ PERSSON, HANNAH; Aug. 21. 1767; 271 Starr; age $4; belthred wife of Gustef Persson; dear sister of Mrs. Chris Thompson, Carl and Edwin Swan. Funeral service will be held , Monday, August 21, at 2 p.m. at i. tha Gloria Del Lutheran Church. Interment In White Chapel Cemetery, Mrs. Perseon will I'-at the Sparks-Grlffln | 2 LOTS, CHRISTIAN MEMORIAL PjirsMHds In state Home. Memorial contributions m hours, 3 to 5 end to the Gloria Del Luther- 1 - - - "jg^ested visiting RATLIFF) STEVEN 0.; August 24,‘ 1767; 301 Rustic Circle, White Lake Township; age 13; beloved son of Odell and Rosemary Ratliff. Fu- SARSON, RENA E„ August 25, 1767; FARM MERCHANDISE WEBB, ALVANIE, August 23, 1767; 234 Hughe* Street; ape 57; dear ■ mother of Mrs. Clonla Roberson, Curtis, John, Tom and David Webb; dear sister of Mrs. Mfttls Smith, Mrs. Res I a . Frank Carruther* Funeral Home Z today, _________________________ WWOobMAN, HARRY J.; August 24, • 1767; 2*430 HMver Read, Warren, • (formerly ef Pontiac); age 43; bate loved husband of Betty Woodman; beloved ton of Mr*. Blanche Wood-m man; dear fattier of Stephanje w Woodman; deer brother ef Mrs. m Edward Davis, James, Willis and T John Woodman. Funeral sarvlca * will be held Saturday, August 26, Z at 1t30 p.m. aftba All Sateta Epis- * ceoal Cnurch. Interment In North-vttie, Michigan/ Mr. Woodman will ■ ■ 11s In state at the Searks-Grlffln Funeral Home. (Suggest visiting ‘ hours, S jo S and 7 to. 7), The temlly suggests memorial contrlbu-. tlons may be made Jf Jha MIctf LIVBStOCK Meats ,83-AI Hay-Grain-Feed ...841 Poultry ...85j Farm Produce ...86 Farm Equipment AUTOMOTIVE Travel Trailers ........ Housetrailers Rent Trailer Space ■ Commercial Trailers...,. .90-A Auto Accessories Tires-Auto-Truck ...92 Auto Service Motor Scooters :.. w.94 Motorcycles' ...95' Bicycles ...96; Boats-Accessories .,.97 Airplanes Wanted Cars-Trucks .... Junk Cars-Trucks ....... 101-A Used Auto-Truck Parts . ..102 New and Used Trucks * ..103 Auto-Marine Insurance . ..104 Foreign Cars New and Used Can .... DAINTY MAID SUPPLIES 202* E. Hammond FE 5-7*06 OfeBT AID, INC.. 711 RIKER BLDG. FE 2-01*1. liter to Credit A* visors. I6A ~ ON AND AFTER THIS BATE AW* gust 34, 1767, I will not bp respon-slbie tor ony debts contracted, by any othor than myself. Crete Caudill. 167 n. Astir st., Pontiac, Mich. ■ th8 faKYy *mo lSft furni-ture at 3602 Highland Bldg, has until 7-1667 to move It or B will bo. sold. . ■ ■* UPLAND HILLS FARM Summer tun on the term. Tours tor the whole family. Seeing milk- Sa<(ly missed by children and 37TH ANNUAL REUNION OF THE Oliva Branch neighborhood, at the home ol Mr. and Mrs. Duane Howe. North Saginaw SI., Holly. UMBariUliatfala-' Sunday, k dinner "AVON CALLING"—FOR SERVICE IN YOUR HOME. FE 4-0437, COLDS, HAY FEVER, SINUS -Hours of relief in every SINA-TIME capsule. Only S1.47. Simms Pruy- at Simms Bros. P BOX REPLIES At 10 a.m. todaj there > ; were replies at The J Press Office in the fol- l j lowing buxes: 1, 2, 8,10,13, 15, 16, 33, i 34, 41, 42, 43, 44, 46, 47, j 49, 50, 53, 55, 58. ) Funeral Directors 4 COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS 474-0461 C. J. GODHAROT FUNERAL HOME Keego Harbor, Ph. 682-0200. BONELS JN-JOHNS FINANCIAL Business Opportunities .....59 Sale Land Contracts.......60 Wanted Contracts-Mtges.^.60-A ! Money to Lend...........61 f Mortgage Loans ...........62| VOOrheeS-Siple MERCHANDISE I Swaps ....................63 Sale Clothing ............64 Sale Household Goods......65 Antiques ............. 65-A Hi-Fi, TV & Radios........66 Water Softeners.........66-A For Sale Miscellaneous .... 67 Christmas. Trees........67-A Christmas Gifts ........67-B Hand Tools—Machinery......68 Do It Yourself............69 Cameras—Service ...........70 Musical Goods.............71 Music Lessons ..........71-A Office Equipment..........72 Store Equipment ..........73 Sporting Goods............74 Fishing Supplies—Baits....75 Sand—Gravel—Dirt .........76- Wood—Coal—Coke—Fuel ....77 Pets-Huntipg Dogs ........79 Pet Supplies—Service....79-Ai Auction Sales ............80 Nurseries ................81 Plonts-Trees—Shrubs .... 81 -A Hobbies and Supplies .......82 white. Free brochure. 336707* any OO YOU HAVE A DEBT PROBLEM? We can help you with a plan yeu can afford. DEBT CONSUL IANTS OF PONTIAC INC. 114 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. FE 60323 STATE LICENSED-BONDEO Opan Saturday 7-t2 a.m. ■ LOOK HERE ... thousands do, every dayl that's why it's such a good idea to place a WANT AD Whether it's a buyer or an item you seek . . . finding is easy when you use and read Pres; Want Ads. when you want to Sell, buy, rent, trade, hire, find. Either Way -They Do.the Trick- Qmekly just call 332-6181 , ptatets. Delightful Delicious food from term k GET OUT OF DEBT ON A. PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME SEE MICHIGAN CREDIT COUNSELORS FOUND: FRENCH POODLE Police Post In Pontiac. LOST: IRISH SETTER. tHILD’S pet. REWARD. 4(2-4106 or 731- LOST IN VICINITY OF PONTIAC Lake Rd. end Teggerdlnt red and white yearling steer with horns. Reward. H. Hoffman. EM 3-6124, FE 2-7114. __________________ LOST: BILLFOLD, VICINITY OF Pontiac State Bank at Mirada Mile.’ Cell FE 5-0477.___________________ Collie lost Union Lake area. White 2 CARPENTERS, WORK FOR buHder, at least 2 yrs. exp. UL 2-1712 after 7 p.m. 3 MEN PART- TIME, OVER 21, and employed, easy hours. Ctll 335-5323 5—7 p.m.__________ 4 MEN 4 HOURS PER EVE. 4 EVES. PER WEEK. $4 PER HOUR Car required. Must be II or ever. diately, h coln-Merci ENGINEERS B.S.IS. - B.S.M-E. - T.E. A manufacturer ef perishable'cub ting consls ulldlng. If » dirty he do not apply. This training w lead to supervteery positions l manufacturing, *■ glnterlng or sate to Pontiac Press Box SS. Our employes know el this ad. An Equal Opportunity Employer EXPERIENCED SERVICE STATlbN help wanted. 27(4 W. Walton, Pon-tlec. Mobile Station. EXPERIENCED TRUCK DRIVER PE 54141 EXPERIENCED BACKHOE OPER-ator, also one laborer. Campbell s Septic Tank Service, 58*6 Dixie Hwy„ Wetertord._______________ Experienced Mechanic Chevy Dealership. Apply In i son fa Mr. Ernst, Homer HI* Oxford, Michigan.________________ FULL TIME JANITOR AND OEN-eral maintenance, flexible hours, gcod health, wltHm to work. See Mr Smith et Mltzeltelds. 312 Mein, Rochester. GAS STATION ATTENDANT, FULL time afternoons, will train, no Sundays, Texaco Station, Woodward at Adams Ed. lirmlngltam. GAS STATION ATTENDANT, Experience necessary, inquire at Jerry's Shell. 6475 Orchard Lk. and Maple Rd.,________________ GAS-STATION ATTENDANT'S -Must be experienced. Full or pert time. Good pay. Sunoco Station, Telegraph et Maple Rdt._________ GUARDS Full and part time. Immediate City and Suburban |ob openings. Mt. Clemens, Utica and Birmingham Included- Bonded Guard Services, 441 E. Grand Blvd., Detroit— LO 64152, 164 p.ir 5500-5650 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEES In all fields, age 21-30, some college INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL1)" 55200 UP HIGH SCHOOL GRADS and college men Interested In permanent employment. Many management trainee positions are available, seme tee paid. Em- A PART-TIME JOB / A married man, 21-34, to work /4 hours per evening. Call 674-0S20, 4 p.m. to I p.m. tonight. / 5200 PER MONTH A PART-TIME JOB/ A married man, 21-34, to work 4 hours pgr evening. Call /674-0520, 4 p.m. to 5 p.m. tonight. / 5200 PER MOtyTH ACCOUNTANT., YOUNG'' MAN—DE-flree not required. Work where you can advance., $4,742. Call Al Barg. 334-2471, SnjjlHnq 6 Snelllng. Accountant College graduate with minimum 2 years public or Industrial accounting experience for position as assistant controller. Office located In tlac Press Box C-50. acle Mile Drlve-ln Theater, 7:26 ASSISTANT STORE MANAGER PONTIAC ATTENTION v 4 well dressed men, part or full time, to work In Advertising and sates Dept., newest subsidiary of Alcoa. An equal opportunity employer. For appointment call 625- 1*06. ,___________________ AUTO MECHANIC tOP PAY AND benefits fbr skilled man. cell Mr. Bridges, 6261572. At Lloyd Bridges, Dodge Walled Lake. 0 MECI SB helper, 6MMIH to Keego Pontiac S Only.____________ AUTO MECHANICS, EXPERI-enced, lots of work, good pay. Blue Cross, apply Service man- —Body Shop Foreman-Working Experience Necessary. Salary, bonus, plus flat rata. Clean shop with paint booth. Good opportunity for right men. See Charlie Barron at— Spartan Dodge BUS BOY, FULL TIME EMPLOY-ment. Apply In person only, Franks Restaurant, Keego Harbor. North side of Tlenken Rd., 1 'west of Rochester Rd. R. L > Oakland. 333-CONSTRUCTION CLEAN UP MEN, have own car. Troy area. 353-5355. DELIVERY MAN, NIGHTS, 18 years of age er older, exc. salary and working conditions. Shtrman Prescriptions, 15 Mil* and Lahser, Birmingham. ____________________ DISTRIBUTOR WANTED FOR THE Pontiac area. Preferably man with experience In selling? Call WH 1-3574,_________________________ DRAFTSMAN, CIVIL, EXPERI-enced on plot plans, subdivision layouts, *47-0211._________. . DRAFTSMAN. FOR ESTIMATING Box 185, Rochester, Mich. knowledge of electronic circutry, tedte sh1tt,^||M|Mwj|^teaMte RkPEkiEWcED ACETYLENE torch men. FE 6*141. ____ EXPERIENCED 'MAN FOR FUR-niture delivery end related work. Year round lob — good pay — Little Joe'e Bargin House FE 2-6*42 MQTEL WIGHT CLERK, FULL time. Call ML 6UM*. PAINTERS. GOOD WORKING CON-ditlons end pay. Cell bet. 1612 neon or after 4 pjn. *463WA EoUteA WANtib ^bk ffltvATp school In arte, *^heurs, S eteys, ~ PORTER Saber. Full time alaady employment. Apply hi parson — Hughes, u.s.1... C..U.U inn DIbpm M . Hardinge Operator Sunnen Hone Operator Days, liberal bentflts and eyarlima M. C. MFG. CO lit Indianwood Rd. Lake Orion , *73-2711 An Equal Opportunity Employer LANDSCAPE HELP WANTED -Apply 3716 Elizabeth Lake Rd., between I and 13. “’ LEARN TRADE Immediate opening for young men with mechanical ability. Fringe benefits Including profit sharing, fully paid Blue CrosS-Blue Shield family plan, vacation, and outstanding retirement program. For appointment please call 1-5*61341 or 71-566-1477 and ask lor Mr. LOCKE OPERATORS AND_TRIM-mers, full time. 24IS Woodward /Ave. 3361237. _______ Machine Tool Wire Man Part time, .must, be experienced and be familiar with JIC standards. Call 349-5211 Novi. EXPERIENCE REQUIRED. FRINGE BENEFITS PROVIDED. APPLY AVON TUBE DIVISION, FOURTH AND WATERS ST., ROCH-ESTER, MICHIGAN.____________ Male Short Order Cook . Good wages. Plus 'fringe benefits. Day or night shift. Full time or part time. BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph 6 Huron driving, 154 N. Parry. MAN 30 TO 45 Y,E A R S, HI school graduate, some experie in maintenance or buildings w« ed for year around work in mol park, FE 5-9902. ------------- or ornamental iron. 6497 Mlghiana | Rd, I MECHANIC FOR AUTOMATIC PIN spotters. No experience necessary. ; Call FE 5-2513. ____________________ strikes. Call 335-5130 tor appoint- rnent.i_____________ MEN TO WORK IN SERVICE STA-tlon, attendants, mechanics, and wrecker drivers. Must bt over 25 yrs. of age with local ref. Full time only. Exc. wages, vacation with pay. Shall Station, Woodward and Longi Lake Rd., Bloomfield Hills. NEW AND USED CAR SALESMAN HOMER HIGHT er franchise. Wa specialize In gasoline sales only. We offer $8,000 per year to start. Age 21-40. Excellent opportunity for advanc6 mem. Hospitalization, life and retirement program available. For additional Information end Interview. Call LI 67222 after 4 p.m. Call FE 2-2017._________= OIL COMPANY IS LOOKING FORA GENERAL SALESMAN familiar with Service Station Operations — Experience preferred but not essential; We also will consider Gas Station managers -for this position. • , Please Send Complete y Resume First Letter to Pontiac Press Box C-49< Pontiac, Michigan Real Estate Salesman ..H _..d monthly renewal. Work hard for 2 years, make a good living, end then spend the rest of your life with a good Income by working only 6 or 7, days per month. Call 332-5*44 ter appoint. ment. SALESMEN - ABOVE-AVERAGE man to grow with prestige Co. Rxc. benefits, 16,000. Call AT Barg, 3362471. Snelllng 6 (nailing. SECURITY MAN Interesting position tor well groomed, alert, mature Individual experienced In dealing wife people preferred. Paid training period, purchase discount, and many other benefit!. Apply In Person Employment Office Basement HUDSON'S PONTIAC MALL SENIOR ESTIMATOR . .For estimating selling prices on packaging machines. Must work from proposal drawings and establish firm cast of equipment. Three to five years experience required in machine estimating. Permanent salaried position with excellent fringe benefit program. Apply In person or MM resume la: E. B. Bieckhoff llofr Wwrted N—I# 7 ADMINISTRATIVE WCRfTARY, immediate spellings at Oakabid Community College Btewntteld Npe office. Excellent salary and fringe banallts. Typing and shart-hand required. Contact Mis* Roach, “ Tmeteyment *— FE3-3I71. AGE NO BARRIER IN THIS GEN-erai office, taka dictation end type. US*. Call Pern Fax, 3362471. Snelllng 6 Snelllng. APPLICATIONS NOW BilttP TAK-en tor concession stand, apply Miracle Mils Drlve-ln Theater — 7:3* to 16- ASSISTANT manager, y5ung lady capable ol assuming responsibilities. Opening In our Drayton plains Ladies' Apparel Stare. Will | ---------------- .JULIET. Or An Equal Opportunity Employer SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT, full time, $110 per wk., Beverly Hills Sarvlca Center, Birmlng- ham 647-2124._ SERVICE STATION MECHANIC, familiar with tuna up and minor automotive repair, $165 per wk. Beverly Hills Service Center, Blrm-Inghem. 647-2124.____ SPORTING GOODS HUDSONS Pontiac Mall Assistant to Manoger To hostess end supervise dining room. Need a mature woman who has tha ability to supervise. Good wages plus bentflts. Big Bov Restaurant. Telegraph 6 Huron. Far Interview call 21645a bet. I and 4 p.m. BABY PI Wa need high school graduate to train at baby photographers la our new department store studio In Pontiac. Nq. previous experience necessary, salary while In training, minimum age II. Groat opportunity tor advancement. Cell cellact, 272-6343 Detroit._______ BABY SITTING AND GENERAL housework, 5 days. Wtlltd Lake area, ref. MA 64461. baIy SITTER WITH LIGHT housakaaplng, $20 weakly, 336*235. BABY SITTER IN MY HOME, 65, 5W. days, Cass-Dedge area. (16 33614U attar 6.________ BABYSITTING AND LIGHT HOUSE work Elizabeth Lk. Estates. FE 614*8 attar 6:33. BAGGER ASSEMBLER, BIRMING-ham Cleaners. 12S3 S. Woodward, BARMAID. APPLY IN PERSON. Avon Bar. 37*2 Auburn Rd. at Adams Rd. BE BEAUTIFUL Miss Betty - Ml 7-3033 Beauticians STYLISTS Needed tor new, beautiful dept, store beauty eaten. Excellent selery, commissions, and store benefits. Cell Mr. Den Rogers 652-4740 ext. 338. BEELINE FASHIONS—N( ----- sporting has an Interesting full-time sales bosition for the person with the knowledge of sports and equipment. Experienced preferred but net essential. Pay commensurate with background end experience. Enloy many fine benefits. Apply In Person Employment Office ' Basement HUDSON'S is Drlve-ln. OR 3-7173. j CASHIER, CLERICAL. EXPERT d TOOL AND MODEL MAKER FOR prototype work, tor company that has its own product line. Good pay for right man. Send replies to Pontiac Press Box C-4, Pontiac, Michigan. WANTED IMMEDIATELY Skilled and unskilled workers for day and night shifts. Factory hands. Apply bat. 4 a.m.-6 p.m. te 45 S. Main 2320 Hilton 27320 Grand River CASHIER Young ladies, 1* or over, ttor Orchard Lake area drug atore. Part-time evenings, earn up to *1.80 per hour, paid vacations, holidays, etc. Apply Dandy Drugs, 3236 Or-chard Lake Rd.. 6*66112. FERNDALE 2320 Hilton REDFORD 27320 Grand r’ ___Employers Temporary Service WANTED Experienced Roofers TOP WAGES OFFERED PROFIT SHARING RETIREMENT PLAN G'TEED YEAR-AROUNO WORK GROUP HOSPITALIZATION INS. ■Mtewea 332-5231 | j WELDERS AND SHOP FABRICA-tors. Apply Ferro Fab Inc. 1542 N. Leroy, Fenton, Michigan. 427- 2266.________________________ YOUNG MAN FOR STOCK AND assembly work. Experience not necessary II ref. prove dependability and aggressiveness. Advancement if qualified. Steady work, paid holidays, vacations, hospitalization plan. $2,00 per hour starting salary. Call 3367)11. Damm'an Co., Bloomflsld Plaza, Telegraph al Maple. MA 63010._____ CHINA AND GIFTS SALES. - 5 days, no nights. Wlggs, 24 W. Huron._____________________ CLEANING WOMAN. FOR BAR. Morning hrs. Apply Inperson. 27 Front St., Lake Orion, Michigan. CLERK, PART TIME, 2 DAYS PER wk.. Mills Pharmacy, Birmingham. Apply In person. Young's Equipment Co5r 24701 Telegraph, Southfield............... ....... ■ CLERK-TYPIST. ARE YOU ABLE to spell accurately? Firm in your area, S325. Call Pam Fox, 336 2471. Snelllng 6 Snelllng._____ CLERK-TYPIST Previous general office experience Advancement opportunities Press Want Ads For Quick Cash. Ph. 332-8181 Help Wanted Male 6 Help Wanted Mole JOURNEYMEN TOOLMAKERS MILLWRIGHTS MACHINE REPAIR MEN ELECTRICIANS PIPEFITTERS Apply at Employment Office SUNDAY, AUGUST 27,1967 9 A.M. to 3 P.M. HIGHLAND "PARK MACHINING PLANT 12340 OAKLAND HIGHLAND PARK <9 CHRYSLER CORPORATION An Equal Opportunity Employer w A N T FAST I E S U L T S- 7 USE PRESS W A N T D—* THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 Mefr Weeded fmmh 7 CLERICAL Pgr Meriting Room, High « hr. wk. Liberal discount, paid Insurance I nd othor ARTHUR'S Short ordor. Experltnced. Nigh RtckyV r» Woodward, Pontiac. Kooks and waitresses, ruths Coffee mmRutf *?•»<*-* ■ «-Highland. «0*417S. S. Milford Rd. CURB GIRLS WAITRESSES TELE-TRAV OPERATORS BIO bS^VWtAURANT dental assistant, personal- My Is tha key, convonlent location. DSL Call Sue Knox, 33+2471. DiNTAC MCEFTIONIST AND AS-slstant, 1-glrl spot. Exc. oppr-‘ -nlty, nice location, 0400. Call H Adams, 33+2471, Snolllng t l Jhy- fclDERLY tkUtfcitNCEb waitEessT tarnoon shMI. Aooly In parson i and Egg. S3f5 Olxla H EXPERIENCED OPERATOR wanted. Mary Lea's Beauty salon, Union Lake: Call between t and S. 34*9000. EXPERIENCED OIRL POR COOK-Ing Hid ganaral. Others employed. ..------ —■ t|va In. i||l Experienced girl for filing insurance forms. Blue Cross and various others. Only axporloncad need apply. Send resume and desired salary to Pontiac Press Box C-33 Pontiac, Mich. In position. Vicinity of Sylvan Lake - S40 par weak. Days, 33+9294. Attar 5, FE 0-3473. Experienced cook. M u ST FASHION SALES. PULL OR PART ----M mtTi txpsrlence * ----specialty r, Hadleys, IWy Wetted Fiwdi NURSES AIDES Experienced or wMI train ust have own transportation n Lake area. Call EM 3-4131 iuRsEKV *64ool '.________ aid*, toil or part time. Apply 1 mediately. Writ* Pontiac Press • OFFICE GIRL. PLEASANT TELE- PAINT Salesperson alloy. Apply In ponon. 29 Front St. Lake Orion, Midi. WAtfRESS WANTED. '714" WOOO- HUDSON'S Pontiac Mail PART OR PULL TIME DAYS ‘■lurly pay, telephone “—*• ** lard Lanes, 33*9293. PAYROLL AiilltANT NEEDED for part tlmo work. “—bi — sonnel dept. Oakland College. 2480 Opdyke, PAYROLL AND GENERAL OFFICE dutlas, exp, desirable. Call 437-2005 for appointment. New Hudson. PERMANENT PART TIME, BOOK- PERMANENT PART-TIME AND ON-CALL WORK , FOR FOUNTAIN SALES SORRY, NO STUDENTS Starting r9f9 No experience nc Variety of hours Work naar your home APPLY Ml A.M. OR 2-5 P.M. 250 N. Woodward at Help Wotted Female TYPISTS tlVAlfRlU WAM!b TOR MiVII now tovorn. Wool of Pontlsc. Prt, Sot, and Sun, eyes. 602-5777 after 7. WAITRESSES, NIGHT AND DAY Shift cdlTlter d PE +4100. WAITRESS, SATURDAY NldWti only. Apply in ponon after ( p.m.. WAITRESS AND A DISHWASHER. Pull time or lunchos. No Sun. or holldoirs- Birch Room, 4 N, WAITRESSES' HUDSON'S PONTIAC ROOM mpkwment bi count, life wrong, Blue Cross i """"•apply in person EMPLOYMENT OFFICE BASEMENT HUDSON'S PONTIAC MALI. WANtED MATURE BABY SITTER. 7:30-3. Mon.-Frl. Lotus Loko one. Coll otter 4 p.m. *73-7170. FART TIME, Soles Help, Mels Fowls B-A ATTENTION LADIES E*m III — *35 tor Chrl*tm_ ... ,pars tlmo. No Investment, deliveries or coMoctblB, Select your own kit. Only CAN YOU SELL? YOU Ail A SPECIALIST IN LI#E underwriting or ter company field Work with 1 plus successful ysaro under your bolt. You Imvo proven ability to troln others. ' looking fbr on open end Ity. Wo ore 0 large •_________ multiple line agency aerving land and Genets* County, Wa a fop-------------- * “ ft hava the rl h salary and Inonttva plan lor -1 CARPENTER, ROUGH i ALUMINUM HOUSES ANO TRAIL- CHIMNEYS REPAIRED, SCREEN-'leaned. Basement wa*— 334-3162, after S p.m. Ian" desires' wSftft’hoW > *.m. t; .1:30^mnp*rt time, Monythlno^ house siding and ewnlino clew — trees and shrubs trimmed .. removed — complete carpentry service — we guarantee. Fair prices to all and ref request. Phono for pr Ice. All other work. PATCH PLASTERING. ALL KINDS. M—ora Moyers. |4f ALL CASH U MINUTES . even N behind In ppymontgjly uw dor forctoouro. Apart. m+m. ■ } Ail CASH ■or homos nny p I a c s In C county, money In 14 hours. YORK nd, dopostt, PE *4C ■orDomduplEx: *4573, 333-7*03, ____, jWntiac Moll or**, *125 mo. Cat attar • p.m. 602-7434. 48 HOURS LAND CONTRACTS—HOMES WRIGHT 302 Oakland Av».___PE M14I i haVI a purchaser.... WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN MnyUtD COUNTY. CALL AG E N T d»«l. Privet* party. 6734909. Sob Houses One bedroom, . __________ Silt per month. Sea Caretaker at BmjjHog Watt Apartmants. 13*7 UXAASii electricity, in Drayton Plain* are* on Woof Walton Blvd. Call OR +3603 aftor .5:00.p.m. weekdays LAWYERS REAL ESTATE | of aerugo nos and also trial property, if you tlMrattud In a short « with Do........ a can. 689-0610 125 Rochastar Rd. Troy LOTk-WANTED IN PONTIAC Immediate closing. REAL VALUE REALTY. 616+575.________ NOTICE: CLARKSTON, AREA HOME, LgT.'TJSr'’ d^t^’>ortl£',Mid3l+ AND ACREAGE OWNERS. Balm aged ,or elderly perferred. — your local Reel Estate Co. wa children Rent —- rties in this area. Please tins ue Manager on premises. Ph. 673-5160. ROOM APARTMENT. repair, salts, shop, etc. 100- on OiwlmaWinl Witt. Immediate FOR LEASE Now block Building, not tq. ft. sWiivCLmstta bv-ss-^jk?s» tor. mo Williams Lab Rd. 4‘ 4-BEPROOM CAPE COP, HIW.tit t privileges. I •om. 3-BEDROOM HOUSE. PULL BASE-mont. $1*000. 3- bedroom full basement. Brick from. I car garage. 6 moo. old. 515,700 plus lot. 4- bedroom trt-level. 2 car garage. Soli Houses 3-BEDROOM RANCH, IW BATHS, EroplMO, walk-out baoomwit. buutlfully lend!coped canal. *34,-IHi bSmfcntea startor f5ffior°youn]! -BEDROOMS, IVi baths. SIMM. On ke 7-7330. mam 4-H REAL ESTATE mom ranch In tact with — roam and 077 per mown piu* mo spa insurance. Complete, pries: 012,950. FRITZ BUILDERS INC. *4441 Van Dyke Ave., Romeo VKyaocludod pluo (ova-om homo. Family, room, separate dining room, awo outdoor family room, 1-c*r garag*. Shad tor horaoa- Ctoia in. Corner of Ellxobofh Laka and Airport Ed. ........ ^ifvSS» 423-1400 on 3-2301 4 aerg*. U, 5044 Dlxfcl p O OR 3-0450 Tilt baths porch, basamant, garage. $13*000. ' SfiSSfe,.,1ir s-bedroom. 3 otory colonial, tamd 2 car Baraga. Lirga ft room with stana fireplace. In aubdlvltlon at Watkins Lk. All these hqmas art la Watertord Twp. Par information call 673-5172. Richard Edam, tulldor._ 3 Bedrooms LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS MODa WEN 57t COLORADO 1:30 toil p.m. - 6 day week WEST0WN REALTY 10% DOWN NEW HOMES ■k 'pV 3-BEDROOM RANCH with men*. 2-csr garage, r— Ing, $15,700 atoi lot. S-BEDROOM ERICK TRILEVEL, ivy beths, 2-car garaga, larga kitchen and dining area. SIMM garage, paneled family room, $29,- J. C. HAYDEN, Rtaltor vy milt west of Oxbow Lake 363-6604 10735; Highland Rd. (MS9) '3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Drive gut M-90 Jim west of on behind fh* Dsn Mattingly >S $50 DOWN -------- iHcgr go- rags. House in good condition, sio,-700 full prlc*. Lon than 8600 down If credit I* good. Sislock & Kent, Inc. 1309 Pontlsc Stgto Bank Bldg. 1*9294 838+295 $1U$0 •RAND NEW. J-bodrm., ranch, on your lot, toll basement fully IN-SULATib, family kitchen. No moooy down. MODEL. Y0UNG-BILT HOMES REALLY MEANS EETTBR-BILT Russell Young, 314-3030 S3Vi W. Huron St. AT ROCHESTER In the country — no stops In this modern 3 bedroom rancher with paneled family room. On lot 1M x2M. Call 6514581. Shepard's Real Estate REH ___QRor»tnr> Ft pert lima. Applications now takon. See Mr. Copparat........ Paarca Floral Co., 599 Orchard blRL OR WOMAN TO LIVE for a nlca family * ** benefits. 850. 353-185 46-go Girls wanted, T6 r- form it the Sax Cocktail Lounge. ------jh't lead--------- *4.00 to on 'tm _____ ' bo IS to 15 yrs. dance. Call 361-759* or 34M064 apply In person at 2325 W. McNIch-oKPetrolt. SrIat HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN, 5 DAYS — AduR family- Frto. room, ' " 850. Rochostor. OL 1-4734. HOUSEKEEPER, ADULT rmlngham, call Prr. Sat. or Si ml 7-1175, ffOUSEKEBPER TO LIVE IN FI light houaakaoplng lor single wo Ing man. Apply in person attar at 2432 Williams Dr„ Pontine. Housekeeper to live mathorHao homo, cara of girl . yrs. Rochostor, reference, call attar * p-m. 45I-WI9. Housekeeper Por mother-less home, live In, 1 school ago children, Troy area. Call collect, hOUSEKEEPER-COM^ANlON, to6T d haw ref. Sand replys to Pon-c Pirns Box C-l, Pontiac, M'"*1 HOUSEWIVES Earn 51 to 53 par hour In your ware time. Pick up and dtilwr Fultor Brush ordars. For Interview Phono OR 1517*. Immediate openings beauty speaking voles, Intaraatlna work, aomt evening hours available, good salary plus bonus. 33*4244. INSPECTOR AND MINOR SEWING tuglot Cleaners Birmingham; INSURANCE CLERKS FRINGE BENEFITS KEY PUNCHERS. EVENING SHIFT — Minimum uf 3 years axpr ‘ — Call *4*H2t. Cady for Saturday and sun J&4* Lady to live in or out. Lounge waitresses and b * p.m. Airway Lanes, 4125 land M. Mature woman to live in for 1 school ago children. 26*3262 kftttb AOal sharp girl to tend bar and waltrete. Good pay. Steady work. For Intorvlaw see 'Wllfil, H a.m. -6 pan- Mi Me 79 N. Saglnaw.FonHac. NEEDED FOR IbiDERLY COUPLE, An aquaf^ opportunity employer RECEPTIONIST FOR DOCTOR’ office, 10B8 Joilyn. PE Mill. in consuming so mainsem sno complete record dtparfmgnt Is are*. Buying, special order controls responsibilities. Grlnnelrt. Pontiac Mill. cleaning astabll_____ ______ __ , ply at one hour martlnlzlng. 1305 S. Telegraph Rd. Aik tor ||| Book or Mr. Bryant. WORKING MOTHER DESPCRAfK- ^^Hek Wanted Famal# 12 i 1-1 GOOD IRONING AND MEND-Irg. 1 day servlet. 33*205f. :1 IRONINGS. 1. DAY SERVICE. you list! Clarkston Real Estate 5. Main____________MAS-5821 WOMAN TO D6 HOUSE CLEAfl-Ing. Call 38*49*9. Waled M. or I. AMT—ASCP TECHNICIAN — 92 bod tr*l ho ............. Illy, k Thuml ee of Mlchlgai I to Detroit,, Flint, Saginaw, Bay City. Pontiac . Law Huron. ^Pop. 3100 Compre- quallflcatlons REGISTERED NURSE LICENSED PRACTICAL NURSES Registered nurses 5600-5720 per mo. r......a.■ ..... Shift differential 50c an hr, LI- BARMAID. OR BARTENDER. FULL censed practical nurses *425-8510 r.glJl'y.Bjy-.APftf in.PjPg-per mo. Shift diftorentlal. 15c — Lakewood Lents. 3111 w. Huron It. hr. Actual btglimlng salary based on training and experience. **** bonus tor 1 hr. shift Credit Advisors . on tat. frlng* hi ... ...._ _. ... shifts. I.. motional opportunity- Outstanding In service program. Contract Personnel director. Pontiac General Hospital 33*4711. REGISTERED NURSL ___________ Tima position, Doctors otttc*. cad FB 5-92Q7 b»iwaan 9 ' * :ESTAURANT WORK._________________ ■ry and frlng* benefttt. Goad R.N. Supervisors and LPN HEAD NURSES NEEDED At 231-bed nursing shifts and at SALAI THAN AVERAGE; DIAL 338-7151 Ext. 95 a.m. to 4 p.m. SALARIES HIGHER SALES AND 6FPICE FULL TIME, porliinliy frlng* boneftts, 1 weeks vacation aftor 1 yr. tick toave, discount,! retirement, etc. Apply w. T. Grant Co., 8030 Cooley Lk. Rd., Union dLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED A-nog., B-neg„ AB-neg. IGAN COMMUNI _LOOD CENTER In Pontiac FE *9947 1342 wid* Track Dr. W. Mon. thru FrL, 9 a.m.-4 p.m. _____Wad. I pjil-7 pjn. CAREER IN Real Estate Instruction class now forming for a class in Real Estate. Openings f or several salespeople, both male and female, who are interested in making money. Bonus plan and many advantages in one of the fastest growing companies — main office plus 3 branch offices. Both existing and new homes. BATEMAN REALTY, Call FE 8-7161, ask for Jock Ralph. DULT SITTER, WiLL CARE FOR pre-schoolers, naar bus, 33*1357. HOUSECLEANING. NEED TRANS-pottafton. OR M3M. QUICK CASH FOR YOUR HOME, equity or land contract. Call Clark Raal Eetato, FE 3-7SM. ONE DAY IRONING SERVICE. Maxine McGowan. FE 4-3867. CALL TODAY Birmingham. BkwmfMd, Wat fjaatBwwi 'Brea. 682-1123.___ room older .homo. 88,000 to S15,Mt. Will buy dqulty or full ash tor homo. No realtors, Call FE 5-3115. Botwoon 3-8 p.m. SMALL FARM OR WOODS WITH pond, tor small laka or hunt Club. Writ* BILL JENNINGS, 37411 Grand Rlvar, Fannr---Mlchlean or call 47+5900. OR OTHfR, FOR OUiCK ACtlON CALL NOW. HAGSTROM REALTOR. OR *4958 ,OR EVENINGS OR HB, ~toa ApartioeEts, FurnMud 37 4-4448 or BEm ________________ ' 12 ROOM, PRIVATE BATH, COUPLE GET OUT OF DEBT , _........ .. AVOID GARNISHMENTS, REPOS-! 2 ROOMS III WEEKLY, 3 ROOM. SESSIONS, BAD CREDIT. HAR- Adults. 75 Clark._____________ RASSMENT, BANKRUPTCY AND'-T^BbSi• Vr..nm ....runir LOSS OF JOB. Wa hava hetoaur 'V."? i2r ' thousands of people v problems I manage' US COI WITH 1 CAN AFFORD. NO I LOW _FAYMENT YOU PussmaldEg t TElleriEg 17 DRESS MAKING AND ALTERA- 1S4 LAWN SOD, KENTUCKY BLUE excavating, PE 4-0358. Aft Lend- PalEtiog and PecoraHBg 23 LADY INTERIOR DECORATOR, Popering. FE M214._______ EXPERIENCED MAN WILL DO houu Inside or out. Jo#, FE * PAINTING ANO PAPERING. { You're next. Oryol Gldcumb, 673- dorson St., or phone Konnolh G. Hempstead, 334-1284. 185 Eltzabdth LakeRd. ,_______________ 1 ROOMS AND OATH, CLEAN, NO children, FE 5-1785. 2 ROOMS. PRIVATE ENTRANCE, welcome. 525 per wk« i_______ — dap-. Inquire at 273 Baldwin Ave. Pontiac, Call 33*4054. ________ 2 3-ROOM, QUIET, ADULTS, NON-i '* logChamberlain. WEST SIDE, NEAR WEST HURON; and Johnson, 3 1 rooms and bath, haat-hot water tuppHad, air con- riHlEfied; nc, dan . rental tlflO nar 682-3100- Rant Houses, Fumiejied 39 1 BEDROOM HOME. PREFER couple. No pots. All ulllttln " SM weokhf. 65*1215.____________ Under 6 rnos. welcomed. No ----- 530 wukly. 890 d«p. 652-3477 2 - BEDROOM AT UNION LAKE Sept. Til Juno. Adults, *110 mon ... Security dtp. Pay utilities. EM 1- 2 BEDROOM MODERN HOME, —“ *—*-*“•, enclosed pr ' ■' Adults. Sec. to June 10. OR *3636. 3 BEOROOM5, TEACHERS WEL-came, all conveniences. White Lake frontage. 3431 Duffield off On Cut Lake. 6 DESIRABLE‘SEMI - FURNISHED how* on Cate Laka Sept, to Couple, or twchers, ■ no chi 60*3421. ELIZABETH LAKE, CLEAN 3 BED-rooms, basement, get Iwat. lake privileges, 5110 mov plw utilities. sec. dep. 8150 required, 1 to 2 children okay, available now. Call otter 6. 682-5018._________ ELIZABETH LAKE, 2 BEDROOMS, paneled family room, gas heal, uflllftot extra, sac. dap. Sept, to Juno. 682-0377. 1-A ALUMINUM—VINYL SIOING Awnings — Storm Windows FHA - Jo* Valtoiy - OL M023 AA ALCOA — Lowest prices - Marcell Con wHon 3-D CONSTRUCTION PARKING LOT* DRIVEWAYS Landscaping Free bRlVlWAY FPBCIALirrS. FREE ROOMS PRIVATE BATH, NICE-children Of goto, upl# only. Call ROOM UPPER. NO CHIU3REN ir pots, 27 Clork SI. 391-1706. SALES HELP DAY OR NIGHTS, excellent working conditions, ------ vacations. Apply Shorman scrlptlont, 15 Mil* and Ls Birmingham.____________________ > pleasant phone voice. Exc. I* benefits. Apply Pt Alia , 3020 IndSnwood Lake Orion. SECRETARY, EXCEPTIONAL OP-portunlty for a career minded r“ *290. Call Sw Knox, 33*2471 SibkiTAllY- FOR lIgAL OFFICE — typing requ1—■* -- legal experienc *1507. STARTING OUT? HERE'S ONE for you. Sharp gal willing to learn — *300. Call Batty Slack, 33+2471, Snelllng > Shelling. ____________ STEADY EVENING WORK, POLISH Ing hardware. 5 to 9 pjn. ~ through Frl. Apply General 244 W. Sheffield, Pontiac, 9 TWWIST Has openings tor won would Ilk* to sat tholr oi— - ing hours, doy or ovonlng, and who would Ilk* to have AMNd average earnings tor tha werked. We trbln you. Call 60 for Intormatlon._______ TOY DEMONSTRATORS iRHPIHIlP’’SANDRA" apart BEST to TOYS Mid GIFTS ..wre. Sail NOW to December, experience necessary. FULL 4913, FE 54511. Also uat coating. Free *s-tlmates. QUALirTslAL COATING jr estlmalu call 343-7034 ELECTRICAL CONTRACTI NO. specialize In wiring of homo, ga-r—0, tic. OR jam or OR *0273. 1-A BACKHOE AND DOZER SVC. Sewer and Saptic installation Basement Exqyatton-FE S-2S5S PLASTERING. FREE ESTIMATES. p. Mayan. SSBRES._________ Pfamhlng A tteEtfag CONDEA PLUMBING E HEATING Sawar, water llnaa — PE B04G- JACKS DRIVE INN ir. Baldwin A Montcalm FB +758 Frank and JMiwttanaifbauoh BROWNIES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS—POLISHERS wau^amr steamers RUG CLEANER—FOWBR IAWS ~ ---- FB *4101 BACKHOE, LOADER WORK, DRY- LAKE FRONTAGE, LAKE ORION, 4 rooms and bath, tea chars or Only, no pots, from i 1, Mutt hove good n I—“ swum. Sept. I to Jl rots. Lees* SMALL MOUSE. PARTLY Y FURN 338-076*. 2 BEDROOMS IN PERRY PARK. 2 BEDROOM, MODERN, CLEAN. oywfs. sits a mo BRICK-BLOCK-CEMENT WORK, ------L 543-2007 Ferndale or Mb AUBURN AND ADAMS. S«ED-—-n. Attached garag*. Workln* ple ONLY. STIS a mo. pit ___luL 2-24*f. CARPENTER SCHOOL AREA. ________ Vacant. *130. ........ with option or will take * trade-in. 1-9SS-4700. CONTEMPORARY HOME, ACRE- «, 8380 a month. OL 1-137*. BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Your family haling headquarters Starcreff aluminum and flberglat --G |.M.P. flbarglas. | M ‘dams Read Brick l Black Service flreplacw •LACES. Wf WRITTEN GUARAi* CUTLER CONTRACTING Licensed-Bonded FE S4B44 FENCES—FENCES—FENCES SpHwr Fence Co.. FE *-454* PONTIAC FENCE CO. MOBILE HOME FOR RENT, bedroom. Stove refrigerator, c pet Ing and drapes. $140 par n plus security deposit. Located RENT AND BUY 3-BEDROOM, story home, full basamant, gas ‘ mam *105 ATTENTION TEACHERS. DOUBLE , parking, Howard St. FE 3- GENTLEMAN, SLEEPING ROOM living room, private bath, private entry, near Jams* K. NICE CLEAN ROOM FOR GENTLE-—entrance, 245 Nelson, NICE CLEAN ROOM F6R ROOMS F6R RENT, l BUt TV,, nur dowi ...J3. _____________ SAGAMORE MOTEL, SINGLE 66- BulMing ModeniliatleE 2-CAR GARAGES, 217x20’, 8875. WE are toal builders and build any size. Camant work. Fra* estimates. Pody-Bullt Garag* Co. OR 3-5*19. COMPLETE RBMODELH'^ Now Is th# bool ttm* to plan or remodel - prices are lowest I Additions—recreation room* ettlc rooms — aluminum Norm windows - siding and Irjm. „ N. Saginaw GEM FE 2-i: Free eetlmatos ______________ Ilf POR GARAGbS, HOME IMPROVE-MENTS, ADDITIONS, RESIDENTIAL BUILDING. DRUMMOND CONSTRUCTION EARL'S, 4 EAST BLVD. S. COM-Plate body repair, motor turnup, brake work. All work guarantoad. Phone 330-7*23, 33*3761. On corner of East Blvd. dnd Plko. 7a*—«> A-t Interior and dxtorlor - porches, recn bathrooms. vJWSPliMI Call aftor S p.m. ««*0648. ALTERATIONS, wgskm yM" tswmt Werk EMENT WORK OP . Fra estimate. 335451 A-l CEMENT WORK .... type* — 20 yrs. exparlana Prep Edt. <3*4EM er 4B*1«7I ALL TYPES OF alMENT WORK. Free Estimates. 623-1166. Ire* * or *b*draom unturn, hi i Waterford or Rochostor a I Quartan M GENTLEMAN WILL SHARE LUX-'— “ “ same. Call Sat. and an only. 363-4195. WOMAN WiLLiNG Y6 ' SifAftfe kryially f(j*mit'Hrb: mam* and bath. 53S a wk. .... utimios paid. I child wglcofiwd. Will Show bat. 5-9 p,m. 31 Jaftor-ton SI.. Pontiac. simLiAEb doubUET rlad couple. 482-3S84, av Wanted Real Estat* I TO 50 HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE FAR-CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROP-ERTIES, AND LANO CONTRACTS WARDEN STOUT, Realtai 450 N. Opdyke Rd. PE 541* Urgently need for Immediate Saiel Pontiac Dally'HI S MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE DOWNTOWN PWlAC. *ROOM, utilities furnished, no chllT-1' wk. 532 dopoelt. MV *2779. KITCHENETTE APARTMENT, PON- gm. J_h# Royal Apts. MSI High- POOR required,' OR ' *5685 " aftor 4 pjn. ' trance. Ceupla only. Na t week. $50 dap. 47 Thorpa. F fTiganiaTVB'T a mt ikn-ari;" ElDerly man. CLEAN COUN- ANDY POR PATIOS, DRIVES, SMugr—. *4213. 23* BLOCK AND CEMENT WORK. PON flat, 391-1173._______. CEMENT WORK OF ALL KlUb patio specialists, UL *4751. Cement and Block Work Guinn’s Construction Co. . E +7*77 Eves. 3f1-2671 LlfcENiE6~8ibEwALK BUILfttfc, 28*1*39.____________ Beat OfHee lpace 47 ATTENTION DOCTORS E DENTIST al building na HospRet. Largo ■ I RHR raSaipt. CMI Roy OTtoll comploto dotolls. OR +2222. Fleer Tiling 4 FLOOR Ct noieum, formica, f 741 N. Porry, Ft 3-____ Janitorial Service MERION BLUE SOD, PEAT, COM-pl*fo landscaping. Tamprack Sod Farm. 740 Lochaven ■ -~ 68*6500. disking. OR *1119. Bui DIR. — LAWN SPRINKLING LAWN SPRINKLING PUMPS AND alias. 4686 Dixie Hwy, — NEW RAILROAD TIBS. ROUGH SMITH MOVING AND STORAGE. 10 - >|fl FE *4866. 'SNYDER BROTHER! MOVING FE *4949 Feinting and PeceraHtg 1-A FAINTING RESIDENTIAL COMBERCIAL CUSTOM WORK, GUARANTEED. FE *4954 or 651-9742. A-l PAINTING AflO PAPER HANOI NO RENT ROTOTILLERS, R6YOR LI NEW, REROOF - REPAIRS -Call Jack. Sava tha lack. 33*4115, CLARKSTON ROOFING CO. Qua eflBB "tret* - <72-9297 Hot TAR ROOMING. WALLED LK. — vicinity. Far Ire* estimate. I 851-148*.______________________ BLACK DIRT, FILL, TOP Bulldozing — Backhot Rees. 4344094, *82-1671 PROCESSED EraVBl analyze 6 SwhwwhH Feels CLARKSTON POOL 7i7n Dlxto Highway Frl.p • i.m. to 4 p.m. *--- 'guilder iln^ and removal, free aetlmates, males. 67+1281 or 72*2095. ‘DALBY & SONS" removal ft, HW Firewood FE5-30M SPRAYING SERVICE. I. Reasonable. 391-1666. Trucking k^&+!“ASH LIOHt HAULING,.. ^epctoanwL” retoe. F^S-IWiSm'PE"***^'.'" IOHT HAULING, BASEMENTS, 8» rages clean. OR >4417. 62*0847. IOHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING! rubbish, fill dirt, grading and grew tl and IrenHhd loading, pe *0601 Track Bertel Trucks to Rent W'TOn TRUCKS - TRACTORS M'M and Bouimmifr Dump Truck* — Seml-Trallert Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Car w *----------— FE *04(1 AparTRiwnts, Unfurnished 38 -BEDROOM, HEAT FURNISHED, t-BB moiiwf. "—T‘ ’+2807, «7*8f97. ■ S-BEDROOM. NEW. NEAR MALL Carpeted. Appliances. Air and room. A?uWs'lNf ** *,,00°- Term*- EM IRWIN PIONEER HIGHLAND clancy kltchan w... Enclosed roar ’ porch and Bear garaga. Shown ni — ^----1 Priced at *22,950. WEST SUBURBAN Beautiful la what you'll uy i VOUaae Inside this 3-badroom_ oalow With laraa carpatad Itvliw room, nica kltchan, tile bath, full basement with large recreation room with exit to patio In roe M*» large 2-car garage abb III 500 full prlu. GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE W W. Walton FE 3-7U3 KENT n large kltchan. sraga ROOMS AND BATH. All l« rooms. Flraplau and fixtures -Vary attractive home. Only 313* 500 — Terms. ‘ Floyd Kent, Inc., Realtor „ W»J?lxle Hwy. at Telegraph FE 3-0123 or FE >7343 Lake Front (Village ef Waterford) Trt-laval, 2-bedrt------ living room ai tactrad garaga d family M0. Call 433-0953 er 362-5246. Sellar 3-badroom, full oarage. On I acr acaped. EM 3-5477. '^J^^tee^rd^area . - Nlealy KEATINGTONGRKJN TOWNSHIP-Lake-front lof In a new Mmmunjy. 312,000. Land HACKBTT REALTY will home — tree estimates BUM appraisal — no charge If not sold. If you want ACTION on tha ssl* OpyM?P*r,y ~ “LL 332-3400 Ellerthoipe jarga” eornar" lot* tamHy"room'wfi circulating flraplau. GLENN A. ELLERTH0RPE h"7- Drayfon Plains *74-3131__623-0081, Evening FIRST IN VALUE RENTING $78 Mo. Excluding taxas and Ineuranu ONLY $10 Deposit WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT WILL ^Ip^TlV^PLICA LL APPLICA ElPWre™™. -NY W0f'“"“* WIDOWS OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH CREDIT PROS- LEMS AND g———— -------- OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. OR COME TO 190 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 626-9575 teles, 391-3177. CITY OF PONTIAC i situated on 2 I YORK WE TRADE OR 4-0363 Drayton Plaint CRESCENT LAKE — NEAT CLEAN - 3 bedroom ranch. 2Vi car garage. Fancad let. Lake privileges. *14.500. Nix, Rultor. 651-0221, 052-5375. Contemporary bRittc kWb: M24-Oxford, 6-room home on U 200 commercial lof, f!3,900 .La contract term*. GREEN ACRES 1469 3. Lapetr Rd. Lake Orl Crestbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY 12-8 3 bedroom, family room and garaga priced at only 315,991 let. Located In new sub with _ streets, curb, gutter, sidewalks and city water. Drive out M59 GAYLORD WALLED LAKE. 66' lake fn Brick and colonial tO-room ____ 323,900. Terms. Call MY 2-2021, FE 0-9693. LAKE PRIVILEGES. 6-room homo at Woodhull Lake. Aluminum siding, workshop. Lots of shade treat. Fenced yard. Call MY 2-2021, FE GIROUX 4511 Hlnhland*Road (M59) 673-7037 DIXIE HWY. ) family home on large ra>. run basement, 3-car garaga, large living room and flraplau. Property to zoned commercial, affording poaslblllttoa for future Income. Offered at $21,500. Mortgage terms. The Rolfe H. Smith Co. REALTORS 244$. TELEGRAPH FE 3-7146__________EVES. 391-3242 DRAYTON AREA Ideal location for who warn to mo . Sltuat- FOR SALE BY OWNER Three-bedroom ranch-type. _____ ad on well shaded tot, 70'x250' with Watkins Lake privileges. IS'x-30' uncrcte patio. Living room, dining room, hall, 2 bedrooms and and bath carpatad. Curtalna and drapes Included. Cupboard and itorage spau galore. Ideal for retired couplq seeking quiet neighborhood with space to garden orl Lauinger ACTION That's what the owners need ♦his beautiful 3-badroom suburban home. Immediate possession. Over an acre lot. Full walk-out bar-rnanf. Many, many extras, or 020,500. OWNER LEAVING STATE Must ull 3-badroom, basement Drayton Plaint. Hug* lot. Me.., extras. Su this todeyl Only 115* 500. Termo. OFFICE OPEN 94, SUN. 1-5 ...1531 Williams Lake Rd. at M59 67441319____________<73-2160 Lot Owners Rustic Model Unusual & California stylo homes UNIQUE-BXCITIVE-COMPLETE Lake 0> Other Lott Avaltobto *14,500 to $45,000 TIMBERLINE HOMES 10 White Lake Road Clarkaton 861-7459 MACEDAYLAKE Beautifully landscaped acruge High, wall drained land. Appru.. 200' of lake frontage, waTt-bullt colonial residence on proper I exc. condition. 5 BEDROOA second floor with room for on third floor, walk-ln c Family room and pul row dltlon |ust 2 years eld. Alur._ storms and screens, sprinkling system, an additional 2 building sins on property. -Call us for a- U pointment, 169,500. SNYDER KINNY AND BENNETT ___________Ml 4-7000 MODEL , furniture finished o - sealed windows lerage -- -........- .16,900. oca t Ion 5 blocks north ot alton Blvd. aast off Sashabaw >meroy Strut. you nova a vaunt lot you v to sell ull us. OPEN Mon. Thurs. Frl. M Sat. and Sun. 1-5 PRESTON MOVE BEFORE SCHOOL STARTS 1 S-badroom ranch, full baso-I, gas radio 'UUtoinun y. 5800 down 363-7001 from 9-5; After 5, 057-4553 Frank Marotta Associates 3195 Union-------------- NEW 3-BEDROOM FOR SALE BY OWNER. LOVELY May be sun by appointment only! Call 651-3537. ________________ 391-2000 NEW HOMES FOR EVERYONE NEWLYWEDS: Start your financial security early a homo of your own where ova payment you make is Ilka putt! ——y In tha bank. Low down pay-. Montly payments less than ---- apartment rental*. Medals itr-* at *13,170. ^ FAMILIES WITH CHILDREN: 3- and 4-bedroom Caps Cod low as 114,350. MIDDLE AGE: Children grown upT Married? Oft to atoja--- At"—- * — - ---------- GOLF MANOR SUBDIVISION, Overlooking golf couru, must sacrifice $31,000 4-bedrum * baths, formal dining r room, kltchan with bullt-lns, parquet family ________ with flraplau, drapes and carpets throughout, newly decorated, basement an4 attic. Bur —— i-vX, $16,250. EXECUTIVE* Custom bull*—Your plan* o n after HAYDEN HIGHLAND. Cut* 2-bed NORTH SIDE. Sharp 2-bedroom home on double lot# full basement# formal dining room end 2-car garage. $1?#500. WEST SUBURBAN. Attractive spllt-evel horn* featuring 4 bedrooms, I baths and 2-ur garage. 420,900. j. C. HAYDEN, Realtor \ 3-6604 10735 Highland Rd. (M59) 0670 dally 1-0 p.m. LAKELAND ESTATES LAKE RANCH Ready by Sapt. tat. Buy now and complete to testa. 740 ft. walkout family room, formal dining “tom, fully carpatad. Potential bedrooms, 2Vt baths. (33,990. *3,400 down plus closing costs. CARPETED 4-BEDROOM COLONIAL Ready by Sapt l31h.x2Vi bath, fo big bedrooms, full basement, walk out family room, flraplau. Over 24100 ft. living art* mi ear hta ----- Bullt-lns, LAKELAND ESTATES ....mP-------------- 0-10 mllu fishing, butlng, city convantonus. Dixie Hwy. from 4-10 mile N. of Walton Blvd. ROYER Richard S. Royer, Realtor THIS WEEK'S SPECIAL In Ortonville try kitchen with RUR garage bladctop street schools gm* -*■—'— i *14,900. It ■hopping. Full prlu WALNUT LAKE “tth large living ■ flraplaca, dMaw ■ is. family 1“^- ■* SSty rum, \S car RBBI _vJrpMpiwlim "GORDON WILLIAMSON 566-1429 WATERFRONT yaar around It HwJffh5?t *! *14,000. Tarmo Sob Homos LAZENBY $500 Moves You In this apettou S-badroom hem* Newly decorated throughout am anty 4 years aid. Large carpatw living room and hallway, family styto kltchan has extra amount o cabinets, full basement with rocro alton area. Rur yard la anctoau with redwood privacy tones and has finished patio. wnar want* action! Priced for Iasi uto at *14.600 on PHA forms. R0YCE LAZENBY, Realtor pen Dally from 9 a.m. fo 1:30 p.m. Sundays, 1-5 p.m. at W. Walton___OR 4-0301 Wideman PONTIAC KNOLLS RANCH HOME Maturing 3-badroom — tlto bath, veatlbuto entrance and closet, kitchen with dining •roped tot! *u“so,*fhaWte rms." MILD0RD TRI-LEVEL FHA TERMS baths, large paneled room, spacious kltch-nty of cupboards, garni i.~ dining v patio. Bart t landscaped fully I fancad, p___ Only $17,950. E-Z farm DIATE POSSESSION. EVES. CALL WILLIAMS LAKE .FRONT The first Tima offered. 2-story l maculate home, living rum fl plau, kitchen, paneled den, i closed porch, and bath down; . extra’ laraa b*droom$ up. Tul -1— -ut-ooor prill. Horn* afto — Clarkston Real Estate 6 S. Main MA 5-5521 WITH PLEASURE Tha pleasant atmosphere ef au-hurhnn living. Ham* cornplr-* 2 bedrooms (third poulbl a large fami a, living am 10* partially family room with ffro-■ — ■"ling room and ulaiod garaga. MMMP____________... and screenr basement. *18,900. Term*. C. PANGUS INC, Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 630 MIS Orionvllte CALL COLLECT NA 7-2S15 It* bath*, 2Vicar garaga — *21,900. Owner. 6r — WYMAN LEWIS REALTY YEAR AROUND LAKE FRONT. JOHNSON ROCHESTER AREA Lovely 2 bedroom home will. ... of 2 extra bedrooms up- atlon room, 2Vto ur hutad gar Over 2 acres of nlu level partly fenced. You can buy I* and lot for $16,950 or 2 lots house for 115,505. SAVEI Precious time-money v nurchaslng f1' horns. C FHA farm*. We trade—call nowl 628-2548 823 S. Lapeer Rd. (M24) Oxf Office Hours, 9 fo 9 except S NORTHEAST SIDE 2 bedroom home. New carpet. Storm* and scruns. Very good buy. *1200 down. FE 1-4109. FE 2-9077. SYLVAN VILLAGE r*t time offered It this custom nch homo touted on a < , and clou to tha lake. This s a large living rum with a cut-o n a fireplace, fully carpeted ....’oughout tha house, a vary nice kitchen with breakfast nook, dining L and 3 large bedrooms, IVk baths and attached double car garage. . Many more futures too numerous to mention. Selling for $24,900. Call YORK WE BUY WE TRADE OR 4-0363 OR 4-0363 4713 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plaint SYLVAN LAKE VILLAGE Sam Warwick hat a S bedroom, custom built Colonial trMaval, 2Vk baths. Insulated alumavue windows, real plaster, ill city urvlces. Lake privileges. Beautiful wooded lot. Rtady about Sapt. ts. nSTStratford. Prlu *31,400 Open Sunday 2 to 5. Show anytime. 602-2820. Will Attractlvo 2- or £beUroem Neat 2-bad rum home, (3rd po*-slble) at tha outskirts of Ortonville Complete with baumant, garaga and large ramlly room, with fireplace. Homo In exultant condition and available for Immediate occupancy. *18,300 form*. C. PANGUS, INC. REALTORS 63 S. MIS, Ortanvlll* 627-2S15___________________Call Collect modal at Fox Bay-H ■*. Rd. past ■I_______ .tilt — "— ____ m on Fox Bay _________ Models Open Dally and Sunday 2 fa ■■n. O'NEIL REALTY, INC. Offiu Open dally f to 9 p.m. Sunday 1 fa 4 p.m. OR 4-2222 NO MONEY DOWN VETS — ACT NOW! Be a home owner, wa have tavaral homes . $0,900 OPEN SAT. 2-6 SUN. 1-5 3-BEDRM. BRICK TRI-LEVEL featuring JVto t > loads of closets ana itorage apace, kitchen pantry and glass door-wall. From 111300 plus tot. Directions: MODEL IS ON KENWICK DR.,between Williams Lake' Rd. ai£ Unton Lake Rd. l block north of (Man Uji OXFORD AREA im farm __ I baumant. side to newty decorated with pan- irai price »u,rw. YORK 4713 Dlxla Hwy. Claude McGruder Realtor 221 Baldwin Ava. FE Ml75 “ Ltotlng Service—Open 94 TRADE TRADE, TRADE WILL BUILD S-badroom ranch glass dear ft. of living area No money down on your Tot, SLOW down on our tot, or your faulty In trad*. 1 C. SCHUETT FE 3-7088 MA 3-0281 TUCKER REALTY CO. 903 Pontiac State Bank 334-1545 TWO FINE LAKEFRONT HOMES AND CHOICE BUILDING SITES IN LAKELAND JsTATES, WHERE HOMES RANGE FROM *32,000 to S4o!oW. HEART OF WATERFORD ON US10 1-3 MILE NORTH OP WALTON BLVD. OPEN 1-t P.M. PHONE 623-0670. Ross Homes Model: 6234)670 Open Dally A Sunday 1-8 p.m. 941 &. Telegraph Rd. PE 441591 Waterford 'NEAR WALTON BLVD. In good Pontiac tocatlon. 3-bedroom, luxuriously uroeted living rum with fireplace, finished hr* roam, Immacuwla, modern. B« In 1961. S1S.JM. SERVICE IS OUE BUSINESS WATERFORD REALTY prlud at *11,500 with *1,500 d balance on land contract. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION basement and oarage#------- lot. $12,: and sawar on corner GILES NORTH END ce dun 3-badrum home, bet-r than new, partly brick, has Fenced yard, FA furiiau, ad school district. Don't miss KEEG0 HARBOR Gl or *3,000 down an land contract, 5 rum H4 story bungalow, full baumant, 2 car garaga, large screened porch. 3 UNIT INCOME Only 034)00 down, *100 par mo — Income of $360 par mot Full baumant, ga* heat, l ntohed. Call for ai—U-i Val-U-Way 0SMUN ST. Sharp 2 bedroom horn* with full baumant. Ga* heat. Tiled bath, borg* dining room. Hardwood floors. Enclosed porch, iu -— an FHA term*. HERRINGTON HILLS Extra nlu 3 bedroom with full baatmanf. Tiled bath. Beautiful wall to wall carpeting throughout. Built • In or— —” rat**. New 16x22 ft. gan redwood s'"~- •-- yard. Call $600 DOWN 16x22 ft. garaga with ng. Nluly landscaped w for an appointment. Featuras: gas hut, 1 venlent kitchen and laraa utility room, cl and ahbpplng area. car garai d bath, o R. J. (Dick) VALUET REALTOR FE 4-3531 36S Oakland Ava. Open 9 KAMPSEN "IT'S TRADING TIME" TEN DAYS POSSESSION KITCHENI | horn#. ALL NEW ------- porch, full . Two ur ■"■sw rmw Ml oat. on north side of city. Ill Lincoln Junior High School DIs-OONRACT50' FMA* 81 °R LAN8 G. |. ZERO DOWN In axultent bath. Formal dining room, ur-oeted living room. Pull baumant, all naat. lVto-dir garaga. Two nlc* tote. Full prlu SU958. NEAT AND CLEAN ba uan to be approclatad. THINKING OF SELLING OR TRADING HOMES — GET OUR ESTIMATE BEFORE YOU DEAL — Call Elatu Smith, Dava Bradley, Lu Karr, Lab Kamptan, Hilda Stewart or Thurman Witt — FOR PROMPT, EFFICIENT SERVICE. 1871 W. Huron St. MLS PE 4-5821 AFTER I P.M. CALL PE 2-3457 SCHRAM t duplex, large rooms. ,, garaga, naces, separata utllitlas, 2 garages with large tot, exc. — dltlon, *3,000 down to land tract. $475 DOWN Plus closing costs puts . 11 In this 2 bedroom bungalow, largt rooms, gat heat - fenced backyard with and shad*. Nur schula on flic's north akta. OPEN EVES. AND SONS. List With SCHRAM And Call Tha Van till JOSLYN AVE. FE 54471 REALTOR _______ Ml* Frushour h carpeting, f I, garaga, bla< id lot and Iter ou. *12.700 wl Ing cuts. hardwood flurs, gas heat and unal leading to good fishing or boating on 2 lakes. 110,305. MODEL HOME This 3-badroom alumlr loaded with custom ‘ *ith tha I range, ISO «............ ........ Or tot us appratu your houu fl JACK FRUSHOUR, Realtor 5730 Williams Lake Rd. MLS 674-2245 VON R00M-R00M-R00M Lovely older homo with 3W rooms. Walking distance from your favorlta shopp1— uMaf Large paneled 2S'xlO' n on ground level. Alu __ -- real Ion room In basement. Double sink In kltchan. Extra tot Included. Only $10,900. Gl or FHA. LAKE ORION Pleasant 1 Id-story bungalow. Llv- room. 2 n 1 12'2',XI37". Din. Full b it with gas heat. 2-car garaga . VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR. _______ 1 the Mall MLS Room 1101 402-5802 If busy 682- ~ “ STRUBLE Waterford-Tri-Level If you era looking tor a nut •hate 3 bedroom homo! Wall to-rated - this could be Itl Ttw Interior to newly decorated. Cer-‘lying roam. th doorwalL sn. Family ■chad garag „ Jot. Rear yet-_ o garden opaf. Priced at *19, , term*. SYLVAN SHORES ’, gas heat recreation room — ““ teas porch .JP privileges n bark. Prtu MILO STRUBLE REALTOR FE 54*15 1 pjn._______Pi_ MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR WEST SUBURBAN S BEDROOM brick setting to a gardanar's paradise of fruit treat, auaparoaito. shrub* KINZLER NEW RANCH-$15,950 Including tot. Just what ma have bun waiting for. BtaM sauare feat In this all a with full TRI-LEVEL BRICK AND ALUMINUM In A-t repair. IM baths, wrought Iron balcony overlooking ‘tvIng , room. Family room, ittached garaga, targe wood-Lake —--------------------- “* 13x16 1 to future patio. Beach ana lake prlvlkigu. Only $1450 down -cost*, LAKE FRONT BEAUTY Delightful 6-room 2-level h with 2 nlc* screened port Shaded tot with gentle slops mercial frontage on Dlxto Hwy. All nurly level and tillable. Nr er 2-bedroom bungalow, and sir barn. Nlu shade and gard Ideal for ratlrau or small ram $16,305 on land untract. JOHN KINZLER, Realtor 5219 Dlxto Hwy. _ _ 623 0335 ANNETT Taylor Twp. Lot—Wayne Co. 83'x400-ft. sift# blacktop street water 8, gas, clou fo shop ping & main highway. *4,000, term*. Near St. Benedict's 3-badroom brick, LR ...... flraplau, DR, badroom. modarn kltchan S, bath on 1st floor, 2-btdrooms up. Full baseman*, gat hut. Large ir tot. f ur garage. Re- bedrooms, IM batha, wall-to- VE WILL TRADE REALTORS 28 E. HURON ST. Offlu Open Evening* 8, Sunday 1-4 3384)466 CLARK LET'S TRADE1 Nut 2-bed roc home clou-ln suburban, Carpat- — "vlng roor- -— kitchen. IRWIN L00N LAKE FRONT: Thli flu home has a 1 apartment on the upper level ■ addition to th# five rums an bath on tha first floor. Over 20( of frontage- Call for appf. today. NEAR PONTIAC GENERAL: You can purchau this flra, old er horn* for only til,900. Offers 6 large rums. Including II----- room, dining rum, kltcher BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN & SONS REALTORS 313 W. Huron SI. Since 1925 FE 5-9446 alter 5 p.m. call FE 5-484 SELLI OR TRADE I SHARP 4-BED-room home, urpeflng, plastered walls, full hi*-----. — 1'/2-car garage, tion. Win accei Financing av Only S16.N0. iWur garag*. Wait Side avaffo-,,m* Call today. OWNER LEAVING STATE: VBIPi old 2-bedroom city ranch with full partitioned baumant and rum for 3rd badroom. Newly 80,x240‘ on paved strati. Across •he streol from * FE 5-8183 WEST SUBURBAN Two-bedroom all an one flur, aluminum aiding, garage, carpeting and drapei, lake privileges, preparty In exultant condition. Terms. RANCH West of town, thru bedrooms, flraplaca, carport, toko privileges, paved struts. It's a dandy and FHA forms available. BRICK Thru bedrooms, 9 gas hut, two-ear ____ wood floors, VACANT. Tarms. THIRD STREET Thru bedrooms, largo cornet lot, carpeting Included. Garage, walking dlstanu to NORTHERN HIGH. FHA term*. Eves. Call Mr. Castoll FE 2-7273 Nicholie & Harger Co. S3M W. Huron_______________FE 5-1183 ARRO TED McCULLOUGH, Realtor WE BUILD—WE TRADE LAKE PRIVILEGES at one ef thi nicest private beaches and parks In this area, well kept 3 badroom horn*, toads of storage space, full baumant with tiled fktor, water softener, gas hut, vary nlu Mlghborhood. “ — by appointment only. LARGE LOT ON CANAL to Long Laka, good building alls with soma trees and 2M ur garage, only $5,000 terms. W* alu have several other choice building situ, lake front, — —■ — OPEN DAILY 9-9 HALL MODEL OPEN SATURDAY 1-7 P 3-b*droom aluminum ranch v full basement, 2M-ur attached garage, thermo windows, marble CLEAN AND NEAT 2 bedroom aluminum ranch, .... baumant, clean gu hut, partially finished baumant, IM ur garaga, large wall landsuped lot. *11.900 total prlu, 0 down phn c1—1™ cuts to ax Gl. room on main floor, homo to vary Mat and clean, tllsd bath with vanity. Gleaming hardwood floor*. Largo kitchen with plenty of ubl- Mattingly This Weinberger Pasadena on . corner lot, community water and blacktop street to ready for Immediate occupancy at only *29,900. Clou to tchuls and shopping. Will lieges. Prlcad at only $14,900, Gl terms or. trade !- --------------------■' ........ _ Pb dead-end street. Will taka trad*. WHITE LK. PRIVILEGES See this beautiful Med rum faRM with large lot, lots of room to grow, has 2 baths, living room with flraplau, very convenient kitchen with brick and aluminum construction. Only 024,900. Will take your equity or homo In trade. WALTERS LK. PRIVILEGES This btauflful colonial bltoval ha: 3 largo bedrooms. 2M baths, 2 fireplaces, fully carpatad, to tell brick and hat steel construction, 2-ur garaga and a hug* tot. I------I possession. Only *31500. .... your homo or equity In trade. TIMES 7 ACRES With an all brick Welnbargar horns, with lull baumant and attached 2 ur garag*. Horn* has hardwood fluring, plastered walla, IM hatha, -.....- ------ and rang*, the_______ ______ throughout. This home Is a real sparkler folks and at the realistic prlu of |29,*50 ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES Hu a lovely ranch offering ter your Inspection with hardwood , floors, plastered walla, gu heat. shopping, wall ur* lieges Inciuoea. appointment to < only *13,000. LAKE FRONT i, alu wall to md lake prlv-Call for your lent resident home, situated Ih Independence Turn, on blacktop (treat, clou to shopping and nlnum aiding, full IM beautiful vww of the toko. As wa stated, an excellent opportunity for Investment guNiwi Cad for your r-i this now ottering Times Realty DORRIS •Rick AND ALUMINUM SIDING THREE-BEDROOM BUNGALOW. Brand new and beautiful with out- • comparison and honastly bo bait. NEAR CITY HOSPITAL A large Practically new ur-HWi. numerous Mil in* * — ■ *—* ments you unnot help but -JEESV I0'x20' covered patio. Dandy garaga with blacktop circular drive. *130* frontage on blacktop atraat. 013400 on FHA t* ATTRACTIVE 3- BEDROOM, --------- “ ■— - 013,900 PHA are proud ‘ have listed. Mlrror-llka oak floors. Rich walMo-wall ur* " nice drapes In living garag* with patio. >i Nlcaturr—Mua High. FIVE ACRES AND ALUMINUM RANCH. Thli Is on* Of th* moat popular package* on tha market today, touted In Oxford school district on a beautiful lot 165'x-320* to this Mto'xa? ranch homo with tell basement and lM-ur attached garag*. Decorated throughout with axultonf test*. Carpeted living and dining room. Beautiful kltchan with built-in mack bar. Gteaming oak floors throughout and several other outstanding sales featuras. *24.900. _ DORRIS 4 SON, REALTORS 2536 Dlxto HWV. , 4744024 MULTIPLE LISl'lNO SERVICE "Buzz" BATEMAN, STOUTS Best Buys Today DRAYTON AREA 1950-bullt 3-badroom ranch conteli. Ing, all largo rooms situated on 130'xWO' lot. Loutt' tea ~ Custom-built with S I >aths, built-in rang* L_ ________ baumant and oversin 24x26 garag*. Built In 1963, nlcaly teMtocapaB and ak* privileges an Little Stiver Laka. NO: 71 TWO FAMILY INCOME L R E A D Y B On* of our top buys at fl3,500. COZY & CUTE Lake Orion lusted with thli 1____ ranch that contains a bedroom* (Iris of Laka Or-;*. Includes dgk It $12,350. rooms, full baumant and almost MW GAS furuca. Garaga. 1"-“ shaded lot. 10,500. Quick poi slon. GARDEN SPOT First Ottering on this bungatow-atyle home built In 1953. COMlsta of 4 rooms and bath with ell heat with 1 acr* of land which Includes fine Irrigation garden Good Independence Town-*Wp location. Prlcad right at SI2r OXFORD Your opportunity to buy on Land contract, this largo 7-rum family home Is convenient to schul and shopping aru. Basament, oil fired hot water heat, largo modarn kitchen, separate dining aru, kl alia lot. (3000 down will hand I*. Warren Stout, Realtor *50 N. Opdykt Rd. FE H ; Multiple Lilting Sarvtu Dally 'fll r mmmm O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? CAN YOU IMAGINE YOURSELF »rntnt, crampad quar •his spacious, bride a f5*5f Thto homo has bain *o spar*. Two full ceramics. on the lower level, actually lour to alll Beautiful first floor family an .authentic Colonial, log burning flraplau and a separ— bar-b-qua. Fully tltod basament v dor wall to concrete patio, facing woods. 2 car, attached healed with hot and nld' water tu„. Full prlu $32,500 and owner •yen consider your pleasant LAKEFRONT Pleasant Lake, Hart's a beautl-9 maintained complataly ref—*~ —Jd horn* that hu "IT" i Spacious lushly earpatad lying I Jrtffi cut sIsm flraplau. L< . kitchen with doorwall to balcony overlooking lake. King size bedrooms. 2 ur attached garaga. Basement, ate. Prlcad to tel Ite -*27,800. 2-30, 2 YEARS OLD This sharp 3 badroo... ..... and tarlck horn* to practlully Thera's a full baumant, IM L-.m ’■rg* country style kltchan, 2M ur irag*. Plus the Mg yard ‘ ---- ndscaaed and fancod. Onl, mile* from Oakland Unlvarilty. IMMEDIATE POSSESSION A real sharp thru badroom b home located In Waterford Town: *14,900. 2-36. F.H.A. TERMS 0500 down plus dosing coats buy this trim 3 bar'------ ----h touted an fn* a Pontiac. Full bosamonl, ______ ____ ■croons. IM ur garag* and fancad yard. Prlcad at 116,950. 3-33 ELIZABETH LAKE ESTATES Attractive 3 badroom ona f I c _. home. Extra spacious kitchen and " Ing room. Oak floors, gas hut. >Wty redecorated. All this plus - known advantages regarding tha —■ te *—‘ park and water- ancad h s. 011,900. Tarma or tr LIST WITH O'NEIL REALTY For 3 Good Reasons I makt you glad you called RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3520 Pontiac Lake Read OR 4-2222 MLS 6234)517 TED'S, Always Trading TRADE Your proton! fof or homo tor a raw harna at Jayno Haights, 4 lafcu ter »8or plaasura, paved FAMILY. PIONEER HIGHLANDS CLARKSTON Area Wfofront horn* with dan, 3 Ml baths, attached garag*, a private taka. Away from JIT tha ctty^Mtoa*. Prlcad to ull. will HERRINGTON HILLS 3-bedrum ranch, full basement fo«..^5^r,,ns-pricM 4 BEDROOMS of land. Trade mmm ...ting ■ 2 full batha, lull t garaga, on | McCULLOUGH REALTY 5460 Highland Rd. (AMI) MU RHODES W*CB 2-bedrum brick home, aapa. r*,*,<,lh>h5. roam, wdre ntoa kltch-^ l«G* Tfolng ream, ternltero In- * a3S' filS iSL Only funhnl d°*m' **•*"«• land NEAR WALTON and Suhabaw. Real nlu 5 room horn*, IM ur garaga, nlc* “mmunlty-SOUTH marshall, $ roam horn*, taro* living room and kltchan, . full basament, recreation roam, -baa*. IVk ur garaga, blacktop drive. Only I12.9M, VA, PHA term*. , AK BEACH. Nur Cauvllto, moblls ‘ horn* with large anclaud porch, furnished, ready to move in, weeded tot, aaptlc, wafer and atoc- Onty,$<750.b,0d< 3 A. J. RHODES, REALTOR FE $-1506 250 W. Walton PE $4712 MULTIPLE LfSTiSo SERVICE . NICER THAN NEW h bath up and 4 ite entrance*. Hate___ basement to hp 1 . Live In am unit fra you. Prlcad far 950. NO. 94 BEAUTIFUL ACRE OP LAND: Landscaped to par- 4 faction. Cantennjal 1 atory term homo houu, extra building i Priced at SIU00 on land contract. .. “•Her ull nowl TALL OAK TREES PROVIDE SHADE for tela roomy i badroom bungalow Just 1 block from Elizabeth Lake, wnar* you un an lay swimming and picnicking In ona of tea ntaaat private park* In -------- -rite • sand beach. New NO. S LOOK QUICKI DOWN: FHA farms on thto .evenant wost-slda 3 badroom horn* with garag*. Good convenelnl location off West Huron clou to all ihopplng and sclwols. Wonderful talus at 115,373 with lust 1480 down cast*. CALL TODAY! rith extras and custom features. Jeautlfully temlahad and ..daluxa quality all tea way. Duplteatton-prlud on your let.at tow a» 519;-948. Several ntw hom« wHh lm-medlate occupancy. OPEN SAT. 5. SUN. 1-$ p.m. Dlxto Hwy. to Suhabaw, right to Walton, right to Big Bateman sign, left to mUels. NEW MODEL RANCHER: 3 bedrooms, IM bates, buufltol custom-built kitchen, lull basement, wood sealed-glass windows wlte .acroau, 2-c»r garag# and glaair^ng-wnite carefree aluminum siding. PfLad. at lust 514,950 plus Inslda decorating -nd building alto, irt raady for aur Inspection NOW! OPEN DA LY •30 to 1:30 p.m. and SAT. 5. SUN. 4 p!m. Corner of Scott Uk* Rd. and Watkins Lake Rd. YOU CAN TRADE BATEMAN REALTOR—MLS FE 8-7161 «■ Rech. Rd. 8175 EM 3-4171 InceHM Property INCOME: J-PAMILY BRICK: CITY closet span, private baths, oak flurs, also on* 3-room apartment with bate. Full baaamant, 4 tomaus and hot water hut-ars all an aaparato matorkjFor further Informattan call today. Priced at 838,125. Contract.farms. Clark Real Estate, 1362 W. Huron SI., FE 37*88. Multiple List-Ing Sarvlu. $50 DOWN 4 ACRES 100 Ft. On BIG MUSKEGON RIVER "STONE-HOUSE SHORES"—Laraa tract approximately 4 term, with way# Ihhm-vj j— ^ and Big Rapkto, naar Paris f -----hare.'. WAT?* _^_tTte HougwS Mlchlga .s _______ to Laka „.. and to evar 200“ wide ____ jlean, clear sparkling wafar. Groat flfhlng tor trout, bus and pika with good canoeing, beating and betetng. Atoo nur Blodgat Lake, Chippewa Laka,. Marttrry Laka and many etear toku and streams. Located clou fo Chippewa River State For ‘ ““ “ “ tern* Arm. WILDLIFE 1 seen on tel* property 1 ana in ms Farasls nearby- Also, ' especially good partridge hunting -and ducks on the rivar, RE; • DUCED. PRICE U^tecre^ttact _________________able. Write or :e map-pictures- \ mm----------Land Co!. Kip- I ero. Box. 365. Muskegon, Mldhlgan. Phone (Aru Ml 'M 722416a! : Evas, and Weekands 759-7441 or 744- -174*. .V THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 D—9 1-A POODLE CUPPING. S3 UP. VU(C *W servki, puppl,,. FE 4 rtJ2S8M.te,NO' “■up- - | WAtfcs, l 7IW OLD 4743511 •tty 4 p.m. fiaE AKC BRITTANY SFANIBLPUP-plti, good hunting stock, fjna ^ Mul-IWITroy. AKC BEAUTIFULLY MARKED FE- AliC MffTANIES, READY TO hunt. Flvo is mo. old pups. 5 yr. old fomolt. 1675 Wooliy Oxterd. 435-2424. F INC HE I Hove, gas stoves, electric stoves, smell tebles, TVs, dressers, chest of drawer, chine, cupboerd, baby bed, other Items too numerous to mention. HAULS AUCTION SALES, 70S W. CLARKSTON RD. LAKE ORION, MY 3-1B7I JACK W. HALL, AUCTIONEER. BASSET PliPS,« V bSKMS. 73M854. Lw—^,. Beagles, akc registered Beautiful, well bred MY 2-521 BEAUTIFUL SOUTH AMERICAN Perrot. Storting to talk end lough. Cege Included, 5125. Also Helf Moon ferret, cege Included, *30. Both e weeks. Shots Mrs. Lovelend. ,— Beautiful hIalthV house-trained kittens tree to enlmal lover. 363-7709. Hack And tan german shep- herd. UL 2-1163. 875. Exc. Watchdog. tagged and shots. 3400 Mildred. Rodtostor. CWitJlsr*>UG, st. Bernard. Poodles, tropical fish, jpet supplies and grooming. Uncle Cnertwra Pet JuBWmmr- ***“■* COLLIf PTyPS. AKC, SABLE t WLUkVuF'S, AKC REGISTERED, table and wtim> champion sired, *------—5W-450f COLLIE PU^sTsABLE AN6 MMlft, AKC REGISTERED, 10 WKSS *50. AND WHITE 'pMOuppies. call aftER a _______424-4132____________ ’ FREE KITTENS ____________FE 4-5001___________ FREE TO GOOD HOME. NICE Public ;* AUCTION Saturday Aug. 24, 11 ejn, N E SALES, 1775 Williams like a Near corner M5f; Waterford, A •, chairs, rocker. PWPWI- ruga, lamps, pic, . electric knlle end skillet, radio, transistor radio, ■ 117 Lake St., Pentlec, Michigan The above cars will be sold pu suant to.Section 252 of Acta 3U of Public Act of 1747 (C. L. 1740 Sec. 257, 252). Sat- August 24, 1747 at 1:30 p. SATURDAY AUG. 24 - 10 A M Real Estate 2 p.m. Nora Howard Home Estate 4451 Butler Rd„ Marlette urnHure — Primitives - Library SUNDAY 3 P.M. Lots of new and used fui fishing equipment, and s goods. End of month sale. 5 AUC LAKE ORION’ MY 3-1071 Jack VI Torture i ive been spent trying to t Is home with quality furnlshln) it now to be sold to the pub auction. 3-pleca bedroom wi pie dresser, 7-piac* Dun $$$$$ Aug. Cleorohce Sol# Phoenix convertible compart, st*.."®..1iraS^ REESEPAN°D*DRAW-TITE HITCHES howlanWes'Men 3255 Dhtle Hwy. OR $$$$ 4' STARDUST TRAVEL TRAILER. Sleeps 4. *775. 473-4172. r 1744 TRAVEL TRAILER. EX-, SI.250. 474-llf Reece hHch Included, 11,275. OR 1740 WOLVERINE CAMBER' WITH bed over ggi -—‘“ "** 423-0490. 1744 12-FOOT TRAVELMATE TENT trailer, 473-0470. 1747 14' HI-LO LIKE Nl OR 3-7735, 4747 Dixie. AIRSTREAM L.GHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAlittlU Since 1732. ---- ■“ Hon st Warner Trailer Sales. 3070 W. Huron (plan to loin one of Welly Bvom's exciting caravans). APACHE CAMP TRAILERS We will be closed for vacatioi August 25, thru Labor Day. Oi models must be sold. Apache Fee- BILL C0LLER ’/a Mil* East erf Lapeer City III I I _ e, Excellent condition. Duncan-Phvfe tables, lr~^ •r top tables, kidney shape c chairs, couch, lawn mower, li lamps and much much mbre. SAT., AUGUST 26# 7:30 P.M. BLUEBIRD AUCTION 16033 Dixie Hwy., Holly PhOhe: 637-3103 CENTURY TRAVEL TRAILERS Inspect 34 years of quality dlzed Aluminum, rounded coi-- seeled frame and under belly, battery system, lined drapes, vinyl floors, front awnings, 30 lb. bottles, self-contained, with meny other luxuries. Plan to loin the Century Caravan. OPEN 'TILL I, Mon to Frl. SAT 0 to 5. CLOSED SUN. STACHLER TRAILER • SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (MS71 “ * Planti-Trees-Shrubs 81-A BLUE SPRUCE, BAGGED OR DIG Uvtstock____________ 83 RIDING LESSON ^REE. KLENT* ner Riding Academy. 363-0009. _ SHETLAND PONIES, NEW SAD-die end bridle, >150. FE H0S0. 0 dog or ver ill I&4635 bj PRES TO GOOD HOME 3 MONTH old klttan. OR 3-5077, OR 4-0874. BERMAN SHORT HAIR POINTER, our bast hunting stock. 052-3447. KITTENS FREE, HEALTHY, PLAY- tuL pratly. 474-1777.___________________ KITTENS FREE TO GOOD HOME. 335-1228.________________________._________ APPALOOSAS. QUARTER HORSES. Rag. Also Stud service. 428-3015._ BAY MARE, BARE &ACK SADDLE, halter and bridle. S115. 627-3031. BEAUTIFUL 2 YEAR OLD REGIST-sd Appaloosa fillie, gentle broke, ■rel gelding, western or engllsh, I jump. Chestnut mare, safe for LITTLE TRAVELER SEEKS LOV-Ing family. Exceptionally beautiful mala cat. Mack with white spot on chest, delightful par LOVELY SILVER FEMALE POO- ____ .„ _>s, S to S. 473-7457. HORSE TRIMMING AND SHOE- Ing. Call 425-2775.___________ MARE. EXPERIENCED RIDER, call attar 2, OR 4-ISSI. die. 150. FE 4-2731. MALE POINTER NORWEGIAN ELKHOUNDS, AKC, HORSE TANDEM AXLE TRAILER, *450. 424-3357. . 3-YEAR-OLD MARE. PART APPA- QUARTER HORSE, SADDLE AND brtdlo, *200. 425-3347.____ REGISTERED QUARTER HORSE gelding. King bred, exc. raining horse, started on cutting. 473-4355. REGISTERED rs, dozers, backhoes and t FIRST COME FIRST SERVE 7 HP. JACOBSON TRACTOR WITH MOWER AND SNOW BLADE ANO ELEC. START, *495. .. located 5 mile* North of Davison on MIS to Richfield Rd. than 3 miles east to Washburn Rd. than 1 mile north to. 5033 Woshburn Rd. 2 Angus jamn. l with calf by side; Farmall Tt tractor; John Deera A tractor; •Ms; plow; disc; culttpacker; gram drill; mower; rake; . new Hallard "64" baler; new Idea No. 7 picker; International 42 combine; wagon and dadt; other farm, tools; 380 crates ear earn; 500 bales of straw; riding lawn mower; 3 mr washers; dryer; Duncan J.table; (ewlry umgon. Ganr Merchant/Bank, Clark. Floyd *. itinklM, 'Prop. Davison, OL 3-2594. Sud Hlekmott, General Auc-tlonaer, 620-2159. 7 HP WHEELHORSE WITH MOWER, SNOW BLADE AND ELEC. START, 5395. MANY OTHERS COME IN NOW AND SAVE KING BROS. FE 4-1442 FE 4-0734 OpdykaRd. FORD TRACTOR hay; Straw; wringer wai Phyla table; PUBLIC AUCTION The Oakland County Convalescent amf Rost Hama Inc. and Proparty »S Oxley Dr. Pontiac. To bo sold on, the promises Saturday aaMMMkr 2, 3 p.m. Written bids are now accepted. HALL'S AUC-lOTmgnSs W. CLARKSTON RD. LK. ORION. INFORMATION CALL 47S-II71. becktioe, 740 I SUMMER CLEARANCE Special discounts on all haw and used MF tractors, loaders, beck-hoes, and all Implements In our Inventory. Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. FE 44)441 or FE 4-1442. _______ 1745 Bolen's with 42" mot ^760 Wheel Horse, with mi 1761 Wheal H&tsa', with mi 1745 Estate Keeper, Clift Drever's Holly Travol Coach Inc. ■ 15210 Holly Rd., Holly ME 44771 - Open Dally — Sundays — SPORTCRAFT PICKUP SLEEPERS. Rigid 1" sq. welded tuba frame. 4140 Foley Watarterd 62341450 LAYTON, CORSAIR ROBINHOOD, TALLY HO Elliworth Trailer Sales 4577 Dixie Hwy, Travel With Quality Line Travel Trailers BOLES-AERO-TRAVELMASTER F ROLIC-SKAMPE R SALES—SERVICE—RENTALS Complete I.T.S. parts canter. TROTWOOD IG IN SAFETY — COMFORT -ECONOMY — INDEPENDENT WHEEL SUSPENSION JOHNSON'S Walton at Joslyn WE CARRY THE FAMOUS Franklins—Crees Fans—Monitor ThunderBird, Ritz-Craft Travel Trailers Skamper and PleasureMate Campers—7 & 8 Sleepers Holly Travel Coach 13210 Holly Rd. Holly, MB *4771 --------Dally —" * — WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS and slaeoera. New and used, 5375 up. Also rentals. Jacks, Intercoms, telescoping, bumpers, ladders, racks. Lowry Camper Salts. 1325 5. Hospital Rd« Union L*v* •=" 3-3481. Spare tire carriers. w 1-A LIKE NEW 52'XI2‘, 2 BEDRMS, Carpeted, on lot, take over paym'ts. Rlchardson-Wlndsor-Monarch-Duke-Homette-Llbarty COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES FE 2-1057 423-1310 25 Opdyke ‘ 5430 Dlxta Auburn Heights So. at Waterford TIZZY 1744 DETROITER 3 BEDROOM 12x54, taka Avar payments. 334. 1744 HOMECRAFT. 40’X12'. _____ \ condition. LocaM 2741 S. Hickory v Ridge, Mltferd, lot 72. 405-1W. 1964 CHAMPION, 20'X40' DOUBLE . 54,700. 750-5145 attar 5, 1044. HOMRTtE, lt*X40'. IMMEOt- 1744 IOTUT LIBERTY, 3-BEDRMt. Complataly carpeted and turn. -Shed, good condition. 3300077. EST ObF^R.- fttO HpMECRAm. best Mobile home sales OPEN DAILY 12 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SEE THE ALL NEiE MARLETTE AND CHAMPIONS. Numerous floor plans and Interiors PANdoI 1 ,nd 1 Mroom EX* 7030 Highland Rd. (M57, 2 miles ^— - williams Lk., Rd.) DETR0ITER-KR0PF Vacation -Homes . wide with largo txpandlng_ ooms and large expending living TMxn only *2775.00. Free do-Ivory In Mtchigon. Also If ’* , 8-1S 1 e 1947 V MU, In. TM IH.S1U “Jane Ellen is In a bad way, telephone-wise. Last night she burned her left ear while she was ironing her hair!" Drayton Plains 1744 SUZUKI I 1744 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE, EX- ------rhage. Also IM BRMHI light walght Winnebago Traitor. OXFORD TRAILER SALES a Orton on M24 Town & Country Mobile Homes PROUDLY PRESENT^ "The Westchester" ALSO FEATURING THE 12'x50 HOMECRAFT AT $3,995 DELIVERED ANO SET UP TELEGRAPH AT DIXIE HIGHWAY 2 or 3 bedrooms as low as *4475. Featuring Travalo, Schuit and Vindalt and T o p p - - daily, llsplay at the _______________Mobile Home e. "Country Club livlno at It ____ 9620 Highland Rd. (M99/ tw. miles wait of Williams Lake Rd., 363-7511. Hours: Weekdays 13 to RETIREE SPECIAL 1747 S3'XI2* custom deluxe Rembrandt. Ey4-laval oven. * WATERFORD MOBILE HOMES 4333 Highland Rd. Acres. From Pontiac Alrpott Also a ■ In I I ... have only l 60x12', brand new. tor (4871 Demos at a giant savings. We will not bo knowingly undersold. Frao delivery up to 300 miles. Free set-up with available parking. PARKWOOD HOLLYPARK Open 9-9 7 days a war" MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 2257 Dixie Hwy.___________33Q-Q7 By Kate Onus 9$ | Beats — Accessories I. Like new. 674-3232. 65 h.p. Mercury, 2 yi 1967 HONDA TRAIL 90 WITH OHC engine, 160 — 5275. 493-4149. 1944 YAMAHA SCRAMBLER, :OM- 1946 YAMAHA TWIN JET ENGINE, ■RMMat^&ktond com »Boot Club Sunday oftomoon, ell 39. Alex Joyce, KE 7-5556. 17' TAFT BOAT AND TRAILER, e&i U—i motor, elec, atari 5950. FE 4-1747. 1967 KAWASAKI. ISCC. 5275. 1947 NORTON ATLAS OR 5-2573 ______ 1967 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE ■ quick selel OR 215 HORSEPOWER CHRIS CRAFT. Must sell, leaving town. 674-3537. 650 MERCURY, COMPLETiTlLlct-trlc start, long shaft, 35 hrs. total time, make offer, 692-3831 1967 YAMAHA 350 CC, 550 MIL new, make otter. 651-1739. Benelli Motorcycles Look at the newest Mini Cycles Leagal St. Carries Two CHAMPION AUTOMOTIVE? 3784 ELIZABETH LK. RD. PONTIAC, MICHIGAN condition, 647-2803, E tandem trailer, sacrifice. $975. LI 9-3434. 963 16' CUTTER FIBER) boat, tilt trailer, skiit, 75 Johnson motor, all controls, best 1963 18' CABIN CRUISER. WITH 75 h.p., tandem trailer, $1,150. 673- 1963 TURBO CRAFT JET. berglas, 150 h.p. full cove., glne like new, $1,395. 673-8329. Kar's Boats 8i Motors, Lake Oripn; Usod Auto-Track Parts 182 SPECIAL gat with k rgoBi n JL . ___,t wnh it mu- M Heavy dfty.trltor/s^i, eg wheal and Hra. Only 51475. CRUISE-OUT, INC.. 43 ( ____________t OBBB M______________ SYLVAN ST (PONTOON BOAT. IN water. A-l ’ condition. Mutt sell Oxford. 43B-I7M. ' __________- (OLVEltlNl BOAT WITH >5 hp. motor and trailer, 5475. 47»- iTr M FE I 17S2 ’ 66DOB / W-TON, 3135. 571- boats. Riviera crulaer pontoons. Jon boats, alum, fishing boats, if to TirlS stock. Complete service Cliff Drgytr's Gun and Sports C*nter 15218 Holly Rd. MB 44771 Open Dally 1757 CHEVROLET. 14 FOOT VAN, 5488. AOir UmHii. MO CMC V, TON, kuNs GOOD. 53581 825-1640. YEAR END SALE All Floor Models of BIG SAVINGS New 1747 14' duo-FIberglas runabout, back-to-back seats, 35 h.p. Chrysler -‘-rtrle. single lever controls, t and box, complete trailer pr inly 51,275. v 1747 15' Chrysler Mustang. B . Chrysler electric. This outfit loaded with extras. Top, spotlight, il air horns, comptota with trall-A real savings at only *1,(75. Naw 1747 15' Chrysler Charger tr Also big savings on all 1747 Chryslei * FREE* WINTER STORAGE •n all boats bought now M0NICATTI Boats and Motors UTICA 731-0020 » 5250 AUBURN RD. (M59) >40 CHEVROLET 1-TON PANEL, 5375 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEV-OLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-3735. 1741 FOR6 to TON PICKUP. 1743 j Corvan. UL 2-3782. 1743 CHEVROLET Vi-TON PICX-lIK 1895 ft MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO-LET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735. >44 INTERNATIONAL SEMI. OOOI rubber. Overhauled. 363-4744. $1095 BILL FOX CHEVROLET On 5. Rochester Rd. Airplanes 1744 FORD SCON*’PICKUP. DE-luxe cab. Soma damage. 5387. Full price. 1744 Ford *4 ton pickup 5(75, LUCKY AUTO 1748 W. Wlda Track ADI Inc. Pontiac Airport. OR 4- Wonted Cars-Trucfcs 101 EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Pa d FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car '"Chock the rest, then 8*1 'he bast" at Averill Scrambler, show r HONDA SPORT 50, 1745, EXC. CON-dltlon. 3128. OL 1-1844.____________________ < FULL SELECTION OF BIKES, ‘ l, small town deal- 1968 JOHNSON SNOWMOBILES ELECTRIC STARTING OR 4-84)1 Dally 7-6 P.m. . Gale McAnnally's AUTO SALES 1304 BALDWIN MINI CYCLES; GO-CARTS HODAKA ACE 90 HELMETS ANO ACCESSORIES. MG SALES & SERVICE 4447 Dixit Hwy., Drayton Plains — | Monica Irr 70. Best otter c SALE - SALE! FE 3-7102 Rent Trailtr Space VILLAGE GREEN MOBILE ESTATE - New and different, 22(5 Brown Rd. Near 1-75 and M-24. 335-8155. Commercial Trailers 90-A DOZER OR TRACTOR TILT tRAIL-tr, $258. UL 2-4213. SEE THE NEW SUZUKI X-5 SCRAMBLER A FULL LINE OF ALL NEW Suzuki Cycles & Accessories MG SALES and SERVICE 4667 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains Auto Acciisorles 2-7400, after 6, p.m. 4 E.T.MAGS AND TIRES. 14" $158 FE 4-4334 Tires-Auto-Truck 2 BRAND NEW B. F. GOODRICH tires, 4.08-13. EM 3-2785. ' THIS WEEK SPECIAL, CUSTOM paint lob, 515. Free pickup and delivery service, satis"— anteed. Excel Paint Ortonvllle, 482-8173. Bicycles MotorScooters 94 HP L|TTLE INDIAN 2 MOS OLD, tton. Reas. 473-7217. , oversized studded i ____ ont hand brake, hl-rise___________ 525: Also a Super Sonde and 14 Inch bicycle. 473-4025. BOYS AND GIRLS 24" BICYCLES, new running condition. 4135 Fen-more, 482-0251 or 425-2243. iEARANCE SALE ON USED 24", 24" boy's blkea. 335-4755. 5-SPEED DUCATI Scrambler, 30 h.p„ 240 lbs. Full price, 8775, easy terms. ANDERSON SALES 8, SERVICE 1445 S. Telegraph FE >7182 Boats — Accessories 1740 BSA, 500CC, TWIN, EXC. CON- 1744 HONDA SCRAMBLER, LIKE - V, 5450. OR 3-7004. • HONDA 305. READY TO GO FOR AS LITTLE AS 1377. No m-- " star AUTO SALES 742 Oakland Ava. 1765 BSA, 350CC EXC. CONDITION 1965 BSA LIGHTNING, CUSTOM OR stack, metal flake, perfect r — lion. 442-4443.__________ 10 TRAIL. MINT CON- 1744 ALL STATE, LIKE NEW, make otter. Must tall this week. Will take trade) Financing available. Call Charlie Barron, Spartan Dodea. FE 8-7222. 1744 HARLEY-DAVIDSON SPORT 50, Helmet and Insurance Included. 317S. 4744BS4, 473*1404. 1744 HONDA, 140 SCRAMBLER. 1500 10X3S CRESTWOOD. 1 I 1744 HONDA 50. $175 OR 4-8874 lO'XSS’ MpBILe HOMi,.MANY_^X- On Lake Lot. 473-1778, 1757 GENERAL, IVXVf. 466 6 " condmon. 3WI«4. , 1«1 HURON, 10'XJO' 2-BEDROOM, must sail 82400 cash. M7-5440, be- 1744 HONOA 305, DREAM, *5*5. Call after 3:30 p.m. FE 2-3170. iWo/HbNPA_305 SCRAMBLER, LOW mileage, Exc. condition. 482-5872. 1744 HONDA 30$ SUPER HAWK, 2 helmets, extra- mufflers, sprockets and high bars and 'fender. Exc ' Cenwt8n, fa0. 473-8143, 1744 RIVERSIDE 125CC MOTOR-' 'cycle.' Noada..fer' ““ *Ttoft| attar 4, 452-4375. to Faint. 5 > CON- BOAT CLEARANCE by hundreds of dollars. Including outboards end air 1-Os Johnson and Chrysler Motors PAUl A. YOUNG, INC. 4030 Dixie Hwy.# Drayton Plains R 4-0411 At' Loon Lake Open daily 9 >— f — Mon 'til HELP! Wa need 300 sharp Cadillacs. Pon-tlact. Olds and Buickt tor out-of-state market. Tap dollar paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES DAWSON'S SPECIALS BIG OIS-counts 85. Southfield.____ INBOARD 17' FIBERGLAS HULL and trailer, 75 hp., recently over-lauled, exc. running condition, irst offer S795. 363-6510. 96 97 2' ALUMINUM BOATS, Trailer! 8115. 14' canoai *159. 1,000 lb. traitors (147. Flsherman'i rig. .boat, tralllar, motor $384. BUCHANAN'S 7447 Highland__________343-2301 "We have all of your boating needs." MAKE RESERVATIONS FOR winter storage and motor . tune-ups. Evlnrude Dealer HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS 1899 S. Telegraph FE 2-8033 M0NICATTI Boats and Motors UTICA 731-0020 5250 AUBURN RD. (M59) USED ENBINBS, TRANSMISSION, rwor exto# trl powora, belt haw 1040 PICKUP, 140 Foreign Cars »1 JfOA,. COMPLETELY RBCON-OHNiili wNi wha.it, to be *ald 1754 M TON Pick UP. I7M VW CA40FI* iU5, BEAUti- wwmrn, aa.io wvwiy. 1 Standard Auto 107 Eatt Blvd. (5.) F(Ma _______ 1743 VW, A-NEW CAfe TRADE. 1960 CHEVY Two-Ton-(Man Cab Platform. Ideal tor tree trimming ---------- a*. Only JOHN McAULIFFE FORD FE 5-410) CQNPiTlON,R WHITEWALLS, I HATER, Y DOWN ^AGR?'Mrr Parkt at HAROLD TURNER FOkD, Ml 4-7500. 1744 VW MICRO BUS, LOW Ml LI-hStamora. **Ww,n Rd- °* *-7777-1744 CORTINA 4-SPEEDr*577 FULL LUCKY AUTO 1762 CHEVY VJ TON PICKUP, real good. (475. Sava Auto. FE 5-3270. ROCHESTER 1044 FORb fAlcSPn SibAN De-iivery, a clean, economy unit, in A-l condition, 1875. JOHN McAU-LIFE FORD, 277 Montcalm, FE 5-4201, with bunk bed, sink, latousto combination storm and screen; heavy duty tires; 3,000 mites an naw or glne. Dark blue. Special at Only- *895 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 277 w. Montcalm 1744 CHEVY PICKUP. 5(56. 10SS Chaw Wrackor, 1458. mms. 1745 CO A VAN CARRYALL 1755 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blrmlnnham. MlO-tTSS. 1745 CHEVY li-TON PICKUP, V-S. radio, apllt rim*. 51,350. 624-2060. 1765 CHEVY VAN. LOW MILEAGE, sacrrftea. 442-5543. 1745 FORD ECONOUNE VAN, EX-tra clean and A-l throughout, 0775. JOHN MCAULIFFE FORD, 277 Montcalm St; FE >4101 1744 VW PICKUP, 5000 MILES, __ —" —"‘Non, 51200. FB 2-5335 King. 1764 FORD ECONOLINE SUPER van. Low mileage, auto, tranjm1-tlon. Radio. Custom cab 152-3700. 1747 FORD CAMPER SPECIAL custom cab, axtra gas tank. Aul transmission. Heavy duty suepi slon. Big liras on truck rims. N 3-1434.________]_______________ MONEY SAVING DEALS ON DISPLAY1 1767 Sport Craft 15M', full top. Bow roll, loaded, trailtr. 65 h.p. Marc. Complete ...................$1995 1766 MFG 16' full top, cover, 65 Merc. Traitor sharp ........ *1995 1963 Owen's 17', lull top, cot hp. Johnson butboard. Trailer. > Reas. EM 3-3724. .., 35 HORSEPOWE R MO-id traitor, S350..6S1-3405. 14' OUTBOAR D, MOTOR AND - — skis and life | 1964 Dorset!, top, cover, 40 ...... to Evlnrude, trailer Complete *1295 * MANY MORE BARGAINS LAKE & SEA MARINA AUTHORIZED DEALER CHRIST CRAFT OWEN'S Saginaw at S. Blvd. FE 4*587 AW 40 H.P. SCOTT MOTOR, TILT bed deluxe trailer, electric start. FIBERGLAS, 45 E We would like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 NOW ON DISPLAY The fdlnous 4-1 Sport Boat by Grumman. While they lest — stop trailer, convertible top, skis. Sacrifice, $725, 338-0108._ 15' FIBERGLASS BOAT, 75. ......... Evlnrude, tilt trailer, sklis, $895. HJH 332- 29314. _______ 4 blocks east of Middle Belt Rd. 15' ANDERSON 40 H.P. .TRAILER, ___________MEMBER OF MMDA exc. ski boat, only $450. OL MOOS. 1 remember l_ 15' SPEED QUEEN. 40 HP EVIN-j rude, $650. FE 4-4239.___________ GRAND RIVER BOAT SALES 28928 Grand River 1 4 blocks er-* “ PINTER'S rigs, low as $695. tnptor, t 15' ALUAi I ^JUMINUME AEROCRAFT cA-j XI-75 at Oakland University ExH) SAILBOAT snipe, WOOD,1 DACRON ___ S^B(^AT 22' aloop with trailer, beautiful mahogany wood. Ilka naw dacron tails, center beard. Easy to sail on large .or small lakes, 674-0414, car top carrier, ci $175. 425-3572. 15 FOOT 1743 SEASPRITE. RED and white flberglas runabout with .. ...... electric start'(Evlnrude motor and Include* a wimm trail, er. A good family boa or water skiing for oi after 7 p.m. 6744)856. tr cruising ■5675. Cali 16' CEtiTURY OUTBOARD, FULLY equipped, exc. ski boat, take toss. 472-3131, after 4 p.m. SEA RAY BOATS Factory to you prices LAKE ORION MARINA M24 NORTH of Pontiac TOP $ PAID for all sharp P0NTIACS, AND CADILLACS. We are prepared to make you better offer!! Ask for Bob Burns. WILSON CRISSMAN CADILLAC 1358 N. Woodward_Ml 4-H WE BUY ANY GOOD LATE MODEL USED CAR! "TOP DOLLAR" tool HASKINS 1967 GMC MODEL CLEARANCE i-Ton Pickup Heater, defrosters, backup lights, seat belts, 2-speed wipers, washers, padded dash and visor, traffic hazard lights, directional signals, inside rear-view mirror. $1828 including all taxes PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER SAVE NOW BEFORE (Price Increases GMC Factory Branch. Oakland Dt Cass FE 5-9485 Clearance Sale 1744 GMC ’/2-ton pickup ftoetslde. 1744 FORD one-ton, pick-up. VS — ' evy duty tires end springs, clean ■no A-l mech. 81,275. John McAULIFFE FORD GLENN'S 1967 Ford Pickup Vr8 Automatic. Radio, heater, whtto walls.^ 952 w. Huron St. L. C. Williams, Salesman FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 Many Mora to Choose Fror i Can-Trucks 101-A I, 2 JUNK CARS—TRUCKS# FREE tow anytime. FE 2-2666. CbPPfcfe, BRASS; RADIATORS; barters end generators# C. Dix-tn# OR | JUNK CARS AND TRUCKS# FREE tow. 673*5224. Used Auto-Truck Ports 102 r, 363-806>. Balanced. 1940 FORD CDUPE AND 389 PON-tiac motor, Best offer. 363-6710. 1958 PONTIAC ENGINE# COM. SPECIAL $1875 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP Special 1966 CHEVY 1 TON STAKE V-8 engine, 4 speed, dual rear wheels. GMC Factory Branch Oakland af Cass 7 FE 5-9485 condition, 558. Pair rebuilt heads tor 1757 Olds. 825. UL 2-1747, 1748 FORD, 4 C Y L I N D E R COM-jrttt^good angina and trans., *25. PONTIAC ALL ’ OR PARTS. xi and rear and. 394-8384. K63 CORVftTe ACCESS. 5 FULL chroma reverse wheels and "'Ito vlmrlhaMtop, altor 2, 442*177. lien. All makes. Terms. 537-1117, 1965 yw 2 DOOR WITH lUDIO. heater, whitewalls, raal nice car throughout I $995. VANDEPUTTR BUICK-OPEL, 174-218 Orchard I -• FB 2-9165. 1965 VW SUNROOF, RADIO, whitewalls, FB 4-7818 al 7-passengar, 6.000 8CtU8l I Now, Fiat 850 Spyders Available tor Immediate delivery Rad, whlto and blue AUTHORIZED. FIAT DEALER COMPLETE PARTS AND SERVICE GRIMALDI CAR CO. 188 Oakland_____ FE 5*421 COMPLETE PARTS AND SERVICE AUTHORIZED TRIUMPH DEALER GRIMALDI CAR CO. 188 Oakland_______ PE 5-9421 VW CENTER 85 To Choose From -All Models-—All Colon— —All Reconditioned— Autobahn Motors tne. „ Ajwtspwd vw Dagiar W mil* North of Mlrael* Milt tt * T—I -■ ■, FE Ml BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Con Finonce You— «rJM!'«K MIL0SCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Small Ad—Big Lot ' ■ 58 CARS TO CHOOSE PROM Wo buy or will adiust yew p* '♦MAUI c K COUPE. 335-3335, AF- 758 BUICK SPECIAL. l6w MlLE-•8*. Real BOOdl 1841 Rambler •Magm vary nleal 323-7542. itomatlc, *___ _______ quois* with whlto top, ii.tti at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, mIngham, Ml 4-2735.___________ 1743 buick l*sXb6e sUHl'WO rust, full power, 44lr. hardtop, ni tires, exhaust, shocks. 3434411. ra».wsswifw ifWWVr# O ir COW IT 100*0# $995 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO-LET# Birmingham. Mi 4»2725e SELLING WIFE'S 1743 BUiCK hardtop. Bucket 744 BUICK RIVIERA. BEST OF-LakaRd“' S,,,lon" 8,5 Orchard ♦*< BUICK RIVERIA 2 DOOR hardtop, whit* with lull power, whitewalls ilk* new) 31475. van-DEPUTTE BUICK-OPEL, 174-218 Orchard Lake, FE 2-9165, 764 BUICK WILDCAT CONVEktl-ble, automatic, pow< wraggira^ra MIKE SAVOIE CHEVI hlngham. Ml 4-2735. 1»*4 juiCK LeSABRE 2 DOOR hardtop with radio, heater, Vt, automatic, power steering, brakes, solid white with rad IntorW, vlnyL top. whltowalli. sharp! *1171 VAN. DiPUTTE BUICK-OPEL I74-2W Orchard Lake. FE 24165._____________ tr Ilk* new! $2175. Spartan Dodge 855 Oakland Ave. GLENN'S 1965 Wildcat 'Coupe. Sharp L. C. Williams, Salesman _ . . 752 W. Huron St. FE 47371 FE 4-1777 Atony Atom to Choose From BEEN BANKRUPT? BAD CRED-IT1 NEED A CART Call FE 54088 and ask tor Mr. While. King. BUICK, ELECTR.A 225 WITH- .......^rwh« radio, h a, ». FE 2-7165. 1766 BUICK SPECIAL, 2-DOOR Vfc Standard Trans. 51475. 651-6712. LATE MODEL CAC... ______T.. like brand new, km kwr ml Nag#. E-Z terms. JACK LONG FORD, 1764 CADILLAC SEDAN b«VlLLtt. Full power. Tinted glass. 4 way seat. 'Air. Shown anytime. FE £ ■ 2432- ... • I 1747 CADILLAC CWjlt dlWUJII, 7 I D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 25, 1967 f nnd UMd Cort 106 AlHANOUTE Dn M24 in lake Orion MY 2-2411 195$ CHEVY New and Used Cars 106 GLENN'S, It5t chBvy imBAla HAR6Tt)P, 1*5* CHEVY STltk, RUNS GOOD. tm Mwt «t». maun. 1m CORVETTE, REASONABLE FE 7-OX.______________________ 1M0 CHEVY DOM. GOOD COte dltton. m. OMill______________ ns CORVAIR. GOOD RUNNING condition. HOP. 674-2443. IMS CMfevV iMPALA , radio. ___Jt MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO- LET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2T35, rTMPALA COWVER1 W'lHUHStReiRO, C L AS 8 •LACK WITH black vinyl root, full power, factory air conditioning, real aharp. Priced to tail, RMS RAMBUM, EM 3-4155: , ,CMM at MIKE SAWIfJlWy. ROLET, Blrmlngitm. Ml 4-2735. W42 CORVAIR MOHtA STICK, RA-dlo, heater, rant and dr1—- mow down,' $5.17 weekly. Standard Auto 10* Ea^JUft-fS.) 1*42 COAVETTt,NEWTOP,ET mam. IMH or bast offer. OR *• . sdE. after — tomatlc, SSH at MIKE SAVOIE1 CHEVROLET, Birmingham. “• '- Pis._______________________ 1*63 CHEVY IMPALA, 2-DOOR, 4-speed, Me tub* axe. condition, 11,400. 425-4*75._______________ 1*43 MONZA 1-DOOR AMtOMATIC, red with black Interior. $7*5 at “ ■ K B SAVOIE CHEVROLET. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS „ ItSt Chevy Impels 4-door hardtop, automatic, power (tearing, brakes, ah' conditioning radio heater, whllewatt*. Only SU*A On U.S. it at MtS, Clarfcston. MA 5-5071. US chIVy ii wpoi mroTw; Ml CORVAIR MONZA , SPEED, HI - AUTO--jerhio, SOtS at CHEVKILET, sir- 1063 MONZA. REAL CLEAN, SSOS COOPER'S Extra Chan Used Cars 1063 CHEVY II, 4 DOOR, STICK Shtft, $4$5.6$M*44. “ttlS CGHvAlk MONZA COHVBRTI- or best offer. OR 4-2104, *1063 CHEW IMPALA CONyERl ' ^ gigwjiiB^ir Ibto. Brilliant gnaw mat terlor. VS. Aufc. Pawer SX!^«S'S ^CHEvy WAQON, POWER MARvl'L MOTORS, 251 Oakland _ 1 —-------tmtnuta" la Oaf "A BETTER ORAL" at: John McAullffa Ford 638 Oakland Aye. PE S-4101 door hardtop, automatic, h TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1064 Chevy. Mior sedan, with 6-cyl automatic, radio, heater, whitewall perfect second carl SOU On U.S lOtt MIS. Clarkson, MA 5-J071. 1064 CHEVY IMPALA CONVERT- MIKE SAVOIE LUCKY AUTO toss w. wide Track PE 4-10M or PE 3-1(34 CORVETTE STINGRAY. —d, S tags, Ilka MW- u ovals, Hurry on 1065 MONZA CONVERTIBLE, AU-TOMATIC, radio, heater, S1.10S at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr mlngham. Ml 4-P3S. 1965 CHEVROLET gen, air-cot whitewalls, $1595 PONTIAC RETAIL STORE „ Mount Clemens PE 3-1054 IMS COhVAlE 3-DOOR SEDAN whits, (-cylinder standard ah radio, whltawalls. Real sharp. Priced to sail. ROSE RAMBLER - Union Like. EM S41IS. CORVAIR CONVERTIBi NOW Is The TIME To Save On A Newer Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Ave,. FE 4-4547 1063 CHRYSLER NEWPORT CON-vertible. Mid white beauty. Matching Interior. Auto., power steering. Hurry on this ana — almost llks newl SMS. Hillside Lln-coln-Mercury,' 1250 Oakland. 333- _____CM____„_____RTIBLE, beige with brown IntertoY, whitewalls, extra clean. Only s’**' VANDEPUTTE BUICK-OPEL 210 Orchard Lake, PE 2-9165. 1*65 Wr Coupe, blue t.. ML Spartan Dodge 155 Oakland Ave. 1965 CHEVELIE Malibu Station wagon, automatic, VI, double power, Ilka new, one - $195 Downl TOM. RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS IMS Chevy Station wagon, with 6-cyl. automatte, radio, heater, whl'~ walls, new car trade, perfect fa fy car. Only 11,5*5. On U.S. 11 riSifiS i GLENN'S IMS Carvalr Convertible. Aut matlc. Sharp. - L. C. Williams, Salesman PE 6-7371 PE 1-1717 ___,------- Choose Prom CHEVELLE, 1P6S MALIBU, 321 IMS CHEVELLE MALIBU. 4 SPEED A-l condition. PE SUM. 1965 CHEVY , AIR WAGON. S1.49S. HlllSIdo Llncoln-Mercury. 1250 Oakland. 333-7163. 166 MM.IBb CONVERTIBLE, AU-TOMATIC, power steering. $2,095 1966 Cervalr coupe, with autoi- radio, hoator, diiaWIb. Only IV 495. A real buyl On US. ft at MIS. CtaitMtan. MA * h power." «;29S'at 11 E CHEVROLET, MIKE BA VO Birmingham, Ml. ea» ', W^ip7*IMPALA. SHARP. STS-tew imwafla, yawner, rs »war.l 0524 attar 5 p.m. 1964 MONZA. AUTOMAtlCCLlAN.Il»46 CHEVELLE. 1 POOR HARD-$750. 625-227S. 1 top, full power like new, 673-S2S0. New and Used Cm 106 1966 CHEVY IMPALA, VINYL hardtop, sport coupe, peworgllds, steering, brakes, Co. aar. It,795 SUB Pries. 648-71M. M67. IMPALA 4-DOOR HARDTOP, illy aqulppsd, low mileage, $2,™' E 2-1046 offer 4 p.m. 1967 CHtVY Caprice bte powor vinyl lop, executives Ur I „u • ■ . Sava $9001 BILL FOX CHEVROLET On 4. Rochester Rd. OL 1-7000 ROCHESTER_________ 1967 CHEVELLE CONVERTIBLE. 327 cubic Inch 325 horsepower, 4 spied, power top, power v dow*. power and due brakes, ... lift (hecka, 331 posltractkm, custom iw camaro, vSkmsmM. Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward Ml 4-2735 1964 CHRYSLER 2-door hardtop, frost ( all white vinyl bucket s Die, power ttoarlng and br< jr windows. On* owner new trade. Priced at only $1395 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth Ntw and Usad Can 166 ""mm uraSf"S12£ si!2t3.BOBbb8llSTh lT^COi!^ mercury Mat, 479 B, Wwj. I—W HEAraK^vracn..^-,-. FULL PRICE (M. JONKSTi LY NO MONEY DOM*" — weekly" payments of SI.**.*?/!™* 1964 for6 sKbM&J&Oft beat isirift KeTMT chard .Lana Mi. Convertible Sale 1965 MUSTANG Convertible 1964 FORD Convertible 1965 CORVAIR CenvortIMo S6M John McAutiffe FORD 636 Oakland Ave. MARMADUKE. By Anderson slid Leeming ]f65 FORD ffAliUNE 3-DOOR, •“l 6, PONTIAC.. 2-OOOR, FUU. 0 PONTIAC. StANOARD SHIFT, 0 PONTIAC WAGON, PERFECT, few tires. Brakes and muHItr. ~h. FE 5-S543. WOULD YOU BELIEVE NO GIA6MICKS—NO GIVEAWAYS JUST RIGHT CARS AT RIGHT PRICES S199.. .'60 Pontiac Catalina $29*). .'62 Chevy 24oor tl**...'60 /Mercury convertible *49* . '64 Monza Coup* SS9* . '41 Cedlllac DeVllle SI** '62 Chevy wagon, loadad HALF-DOZEN CARS AT t»» EA. OPDYKE MOTORS M0 Pontiac Rd. at Opdvka FE S4B3 fiprisnm »fi FONTlXC - boHnevIllI "“-hardtop, leather Maripr, * litlon throughout. Full prl 54*5. No monoy down. 65. - ‘te. Standard Auto New end lleed Cart Ifi i- 1964 TEMPEST Club OOUPlO, automatic, ^wer^steerj * SW5 with' only*** Awn of S13.W. ' Mew and Ueed Care 106 CLEAN 1*42 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF GLENN'S L, C. Williams, Salesman 1*69 CATALINA $550. - convertible!"/ 4-sp**d, WOO. SJ2-1254. 1963 F O H 'f I A C BONNEVILLE door hardtop, autematlc with hi patter 51095 af MIKE SAVOI CHEVROLET, Birmingham Ml Clean, power Steering, bi mileage. 5900. 6S2-44M. PONTIAC 1964 GRAND PRIX, FULL or, Mr, «M MP>..fraofV AM FM radio, atoctrateiwse, 0.335*320. ‘ TOM RADEMACHER CHEVVfOLDS 1961 Pontiac Catalina 4-door sedan, with MtofttMte, to—' ■—HE GLENN'S 1*66 PONTIAC 4 DOOR HARP-tep. Cordova top- AUle. 317, L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4rlte7 Many More to Choose From U.S. to at MIS, Clarkston, MA 5- 1964 PONTIAC TEMPEST CUSTOM convartlbl*. Golden beauty. V-l angina, Auto., Power ateerlng. Power brakas. One of the nicest In town. Llncoln-Mercury, 4 THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING Tray,-Pontiac—Birmingham Are* 1150 Maple, across tram Berz Airport 1*64 POI9T1AC ^ ^A^ALINA CON- vtrtlble, power stoorlng and brakas, radio, hooter, whitewalls, 2*64 Dixie Hwy., 473-9060. 164 PONTIAC VENTURA. 2 DOOR hardtop. Solid white baauty with matching all vinyl Interior. Auto. Power steering. Power brakes. 1 owner. Sites. Hillside Llncoln-Mer-cury. 1250 0iiklend.a3-7*63. y $4* down and weekly HAROLD TURNER HAROLD TURNER double power, 5.62427S4. clean, FE 2-7313. 161 METROPOLI dltton^Fully i TfINANCE REA50NABU '41, Rambler A Chew wagon 5*7 •*. 3 Cadillacs '57 to '5*. 1 EOT, 2 $3*5 3 '65 cars. VW Ford oodra. Reason. - —J- ‘57 to$55 to St**. -Isa Chevy and Ford Trucki 3 4f*nnBat.aiftte88il .r-,Wsw*> ' ECONOMY USED CAIW Texas, 1 owner, A-i, private. I 2-7209. 1. . . v ■■ 1*62 RAMBLER AMERICAN WAG- 1350 Oofcland, 333-7863. GLENN'S L. C. Williams, Salesman _ 9» Wv Huron St. E 4-7371 FE 4-17*7 Many Mora to Choose From Interior, 5260073 51475. FE .2-718$. 1067 tONNEVILLE, 14300R, HAR&-tra. powtr stoorlng and brakas, ^^hjr'OHwraxtras, axe. con-dltlon. Call 6SB3377. ______ 167 fontiac £nm NMonx, brakas, autemattc, whitewalls, new car warranty. $2605. VANOB-PUTTE BUICk-OPEL lte-chard Laka, FE 2-9165. I Cm 106 mr PONTIAC CATA wnger suto. warranty, taS1 d^Ll>Dl‘:NB6tf9|WTiyft ~ SIR 1943 RAMBLER CLASSIC 4 —■*T- "*■**",. fANDI_______ Orchard Lake _____ _ sail ROSE Ram- . BLER, Union Laka. EM S-4155. , 1964 RAMBLER, 1900. 13486SI BE- .1 CLAS*I< WAfSiSS boots w 4