Ekpress Your Choice—Polls Open Until' 8 Tonight The Weather 1IJ. Weathar Bureau Forecast Mostly Cloudy THE PONTIAC PRESS Home Edition VOL. 123, — NO. 193 Mrs: Wilson, Founder of 0 Dies in Europe Mrs. Alfred (Matilda) Wilson, benefactress of Oakland University, died today in Brussels, Belgium, at the age of 83. Mrs. Wilson, and her late .husband, Alfred G., founded Oakland University in 1957 when they gave their 1,400-acre Meadow Brook Farm estate to Michigan State University for the creation of a new university. Mrs. Wilson, Dodge heiress, society matron and phitanthorpist, died in a Brussels Red Cross hospital of an apparent heart attack, according to the U. S. Embassy there. At the time of her death, she lived on the Campus in Meadow Brook Hall — considered one of the great homers in America. She retained the home and its surrounding 127-acres. Funeral arrangements are pending. Value of the land gift plus a 12-million endowment was estimated at $10 Oakland University has grown from an initial enrollment of 570 to today’s 3,800 with 30,000 students expected by the mid-1960s. The university is hailed by many as having the possibilities of becoming one of the greatest in the United States. ACTIVE IN ORGANIZATIONS MSU President Dr. John Hannah called it “the most generous benefaction ever received by Michigan State.” Mrs. Wilson, reportedly one of the country’s wealthiest women, was known as a somewhat shy, unpretentious woman who was active in many civic organizations until her death. Once an interim lieutenant governor in Michigan during 1940, Mrs. Wilson was a familiar figure on the Oakland Uni-veristy campus. College officials say she took an interest in meeting every student, and every year the highlight of college activities was a student-thrown birthday party for her. A classroom building — Matilda R. Wilson Hall — was named after her at OU, and a dormitory named after her and her late husband at MSU.' The university’s first lady was widowed twice. Her first husband was John F. Dodge, one of the two brothers, who started the Dodge Automobile Co. Mr. Wilson, a wealthy industrialist, died in 1962. (Continued on Page A-3) iwm In Today's - Press Baseball Cardinals clinch pennant; AL race tightens — PAGE C-l. Clarkston Objecting petitions slow village annexation plans — PAGE A-4. Surtax Proposal Discussions now involve House committee members, LBJ aides — PAGE A-5. Area News ............. A-4 Astrology ..............C-4 Bridge .................C-4 Crossword Puzzle .......D-7 Comics .................C-4 Editorials ........... • A4 Markets .......'......C-7 Obituaries .............D-l Sports .......? . .. C-l—C-3 Theaters ............. "C4 TV and Radio Programs D-7 Wilson, Earl............D-7 Women’s Pages B-l—B-3 ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 —32 PAGES City's Voters Expressing Tax Basis Pre ferences Judge Rules Out Novi Vote on City Circuit Court Judge Williatp J.» Beer ruled today that Novi Village cannot hold an election on its incorporation as a home rule city. Beer said he was upholding the first-ruling in the case by Circuit Court Judge Arthur E. Moore in early 1966 that die petitions asking the election were faulty. There can’t be an election now unless new petitions are circulated and meet all requirements of the law on population density and are accompanied by a proper map describing the area, declared Beer. Judge Beer had been considering three cases requesting court action against the village's desires to incorporate as a home-rule city. County Okays Study of OEO By JIM LONG The Oakland Cojinty Board of Supervisors yesterday approved a $4,000 allocation for a study that could decide the future of the county’s antipoverty program. Supervisors, by a 60-17 vote, ordered the study so they can measure the effectiveness of the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) program! before allocating any county funds for its operation. The board approved the study on the recommendation of its ways and means committee which stated that an evaluation of the OEO program is essential before the county made any financial commitments. The county has been asked by the OEO to provide $25,000 to assure adequate local funding which is required under the federal program. * * * In the past the county’s participation in the program has been restricted to free office space for the OEO, equipment and some services. In answer to opponents of the study and additional aid, Supervisor Carl F. Ingraham, the chairman of the county OEO program, told the board that without the study it was not in a position to evaluate the program based on newspaper headlines. “We want to know if we’re doing the job and if we can do it better,”' explained Ingraham, “but we have no funds in our budget for an impartial study.” The study, which will take about two months to complete, will be undertaken by a panel to be appointed by Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of the board of auditors, and James McNeely, executive director of the OEO in Oakland County. White Lake Township Supervisor James Reid said he would be opposed to funding tile program until he is shown some results. * ★ “There’s a (OEO) substation set up in our township hall two days a week, and there are two other people out beating the bushes, but I know of no one who is being helped,” said Reid. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) Pontiac voters go to the polls today to express their preference for either a city income tax or a four-mill hike in the present property tax levy. The polls are open until 8 p.m. # ★ ★ City officials anticipate that about 20 per cent of nearly 30,000 registered voters will turn out. . Voter preference will point the way city commissioners will go in attempting to meet financial problems. If the city income tax is favored the commission intends to enact an ordinance which would make the tax effective beginning Jan. 1. * * * The income tax — one per cent tor residents, one-half of one per cent tor nonresidents — would be accompanied by a three-mill cut in the property tax levy. If voters, however, show a preference tor a property; tax increase of four mills ($4 per $1,600 of assessed valuation) another election is necessary. Hie commission has scheduled a special election for- Oct. 17 in this event. To hike the property levy it |s necessary to change the charter which now fre< of his ca warty tore the car in occured about 9:20 a.m.jon Opdyke at Perry. Hare, Milliken Urge Traffic Safety Action Car Crash Kills Waterford Man By MEL NEWMAN ’’Action” was the key word at the Governor's Regional Traffic Safety Conference at Oakland University yesterday as both Lt. Gov. William Milliken and Secretary of State James M. Hare called for specific measures to cut down Michigan’s vehicle accident rate. Milliken and Hare delivered the main addresses before the gathering of area traffic officials in the university’s Oakland Center. Both acknowledged that.the state’s fatality rate has decreased significantly thus far In 1967, but neither was ready to submit that Michigan’s vehicle safety goals have been reached. Milliken pointed out that although 228 fewer lives have been lost on Michigan highways in 1967 — a decrease of 16 per cent — injury accidents have decreased by only 3 per cent. Accident costs, he said, will pass the $400 million mark tor the second straight year at this rate. 3 KEY PROGRAMS “There are three key measures for any action program in traffic safety, he said. “These are implied consent, a uniform statewide driver licensing lav and a periodic inspection law." Milliken praised implied consent; already in effect, as a big step toward solving Michigan’s drinking driver problem. He said a uniform driver licensing law would make sure all motorists have an adequate knowledge of state traffic regulations and that compulsory periodic vehicle inspection would assure that cars on state thoroughfares would be more roadworthy. Hare asked fpr action primarily aimed at drivers, rather than vehicles. He asked r (1) that his department be given the^authority to revoke the driving licenses of “accident-prone” drivers and (2) — that Gov. Romney include in his call for the state’s fall legislative session consideration of the “Illinois traffic citation system,” making a traffic offender liable to loss of his license if he failed to answer a summons. Hare said his “hands are now tied on .the matter of accident-proneness or involvement” and said his department “should be permitted to investigate persons who have been involved moio in .one or more accidents” involving FOR SAFETY’S SAKE — Three of the principals In yesterday’s regional traffic . danger to a person or property, safety conference at Oakland University, (from left) Lt. Gov. William Milliken, He said the Illinois system would Bruce Madsen, chaihnan of the event, and Secretary of State James M. Hare, dis- make ft mandatory that "incorrigibles” cuss the conference program. Milliken and Hare delivered the main speeches to -who' drive with revoked licenses be im- the gathering, which included many Oakland County traffic officials. 4 prisoned. Oakland Highwav Toll in ’67 A Waterford Township resident was killed when his car collided with a gravel truck at Perry and Opdyke in Pontiac Township, at 9:22 a.m. today. The Oakland County Sheriff’s Department identified the victim as .Wayne L. Progar, 22, of 2419 Elizabeth Lake. Deputies said the car and truck collided at the intersection and the car was crushed and dragged under the truck. 1 Deputies said the victim had apparently not stopped for the stop sign while going north oh Perry. ★ ★ ★ Driver of the truck was James Nicolay, 26, of 1737 McCoy, Walled Lake, working for Troy Aggregate Co, The man was apparently killed instantly and was pronounced dead at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. The truck driver was not held. limits the amount that can be levied for the operating budget to 10 mills. VOTER APPROVAL Voter approval is necessary for any charter amendment. Not known at this time is kow much opposition there will be to any new tax. It’s likely that those Who oppose new city taxes will not bother to vote in the advisory election. Detroit Opens Its Classrooms DETROIT Ufl — School doors swung open today for 300,000 students in Detroit, ending a prolonged summer vacation of almost 13 weeks. -Teachers returned to their jobs Monday after winning an across-the-board raise over two years of $1,700 through a 13-day strike. In addition to the salary increase, $850 this year and $850 the next, the teachers won reduction of the school year from 40 weeks to 39 and limitation of class size to 39 pupils. Ratification yesterday of the proposed contract, hammered out during early morning sessions, lowered to 13 the number of Michigan school districts where agreement on master cohtracts for teachers has not been reached. * * * In five of the unsettled school districts, teachers have been ordered back to work by court injunctions. In one of them, Crestwood District in Dearborn Heights, most of the 211 teachers have resigned. In the remaining eight of the 13 districts, some 75,000 students are still out of school. Lt. Gov. William G. Milliken Monday asked the school boards in Bloomfield Hills, Oak Park, Dearborn and Menominee to get back-to-work orders , from the courts. 0- Miliiken, acting as governor during the absence of Gov. George Romney said injunctions are being sought jn Bridgeport, Highland Park, Hamtramck and North Dearborn Heights. Detroit teachers ratified their new contract by a vote of 3,316 to 376 after union leaders told them “that is the be%we can do.” $1,700 OVER 2 YEARS The teachers demanded $1,700 immediately when negotiations opened. They had to settle for having it spread over a two-year contract. Under the old pay scale a beginner with a B.A. started at $5,800. A teacher with a Ph. D. and 12 years service could earn as much as $11,000. Independence Nixes Police Independence Township voters yesterday turned down a 1-mill tax increase which would have provided them with, a police department. The proposal was defeated by a margin of more than 3-2. About 10 per cent of the registered voters rejected the formation of such a force, 342 to 212. The mlllage would have been spread over a period of 10 years. The township last January elected to turn down a $13,000 annual bill which provided two Oakland County Sheriff’s Department patrol cars in the area. *< * ★ It is still serviced, however, by the Sheriff’s Department and by the Pontiac post of the State Police. Thundershowers Possible Tonight The U. S. Weather Bureau forecasts mostly cloudy tonight with a chance of shoWbrs and thundershowers wifh not much change in temperature.' The low is expected to register near 54 to 58 tonight. The mercury will climb into the 80s again tomorrow. ★ ■ * * Winds variable, mostly southeasterly will continue at five to 15 miles per hour. The low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 60. By 2 p.m. tile temperature had climbed to 81. A Very Special Sale of a Very Special Dog... “We were really amazed at what our Press Want Ad accomplished. First night, first caller — sold.” Mrs. G. T. ^Year-old. akc registered, black and silver Overman Shepherd. Name: Rots A Ruck Riki von Westbruch. Out of cham-_ plon wilva Don't Faust and Antorra's Mona Lisa C.D., for personal reasons we must PRESS WANT ADS are hustlers in the “marketplace.” They work for you day and night and then results start. Put one to work for quick cash. Dial 332*8181 or 3344981 A—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 Each U.S. Region to GetICBM Units WASHINGTON (AP)- The! Pentagon’s plan to build a IS-billion Nike X antiballistic missile system will provide each region of the United States with ati least one battery of far-reaching warhead interceptors. Defense scientists made this dear today in guarded interviews about Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara’s so-called “light" defense against nuclear attack, primarily directed to guard against a potential threat from Red China. The decision to proceed deployment of an antimissile sykem was announced by McNamara Monday in a speech to news editors at San Francisco. Although the plan be announced is one of the biggest strategic decisions in U.S. history, it is not Hie often-discussed full-blown' antimissile system which would have an estimated cost of up to 940 billion. McNamara opposes such an outlay. CLOSELY HELD SECRET The exact locations of the an- timissile batteries, each with several missiles, remain a closely held secret But one Pentagon official familiar with the plans said the main line of defense will center on several antimissile complexes stationed just below the Canadian bonder. Other antimissile sites will be interspersed along the western and astern seaboards, in the Midwest and in the Southwest and Deep South. Each site will______ be protected by a battery of PRIME PURPOSE Sprint Government sources also indicated Canada has given the United States permission to tablish one of the i missile-detection radar sites on Canadian territory near the Great Lakes. ' Nike X is a technological marvel of the 1960s widen, according to Pentagon scientists, is far more advanced than the only other missile defense in Existence, the Soviet ABM. Its prime purpose: to defend against what McNamara termed a possible irrational nuclear missile attack by Red China in the 1970s. . ★ “It would be insane and suicidal for her to do so, but can conceive of conditions under which China might miscalculate,” McNamara said. In addition to providing regionwide defense, some Nike X missiles will be deployed to protect American offensive missile batteries against Soviet attack. Last-Minute Appeal Set for Road Funds Refused operating funds from the county, the chairman of tin Oakland County Road Commission said today that he will make a last-minute appeal to the board of supervisors when Red Scientist Taken Home LONDON (AP) - Pale, gaunt and looking like a sleepwalker, Soviet Scientist VMdimir Tkachenko, 25, was bundled aboard a Moscow-bound airliner today after his wife accused British officials of Inhuman tactics to blocking his departure Saturday. She contended the British action left her husband in“a very bad state.” The British said they: acted out of fear the physicist had been drugged and was being taken back to Russia against his will. They later, released him. Tkachenko was half-lifted, halfrcarried up the steps of the plane by two Soviet Embassy officials. Another pushed him I uoridatio Rule OK'd LANSING (AP) - State Health Director Dr. Albert E. Heustis said today he has adopted an administrative rule requiring fluoridation of all Mfcfai- ing more than 1,000 people- ★ ★ ★ Heustis said the rule was filed with the secretary of state yesterday and will take effect when printed in the next quarterly Michigan Administrative Code to be published about the middle of February 1900. the I960 budget is considered for adoption Oct. 2. The board rejected the request of Frazer Staman yesterday on the recommendation of its ways and means committee. The road commission is seeking eight-tenths of one mill from the county’s 5.40 allocation, or more than $2 million for constntctionand maintenance of county roads. The commission says its rev* enue from the state Is not quate for continued highway improvements. ★ / * Despite the committee's statement that no fends are available, Staman said it is that the board may reconsider the appeal after reviewing the I960 budget. OPERATING BUDGET Staman admitted that it would be impossible to remove any portion of the general operating budget without completely revising it, but added that the commission now is eying at least a portion of the estimated |1.2 million (he county is to receive from the new state income tax. The anticipated revenue is not Included in (he operating budget, but is only earmarked i pit this time toward the construction of a new jail to be built at the county service visitor. . The board, In other business, a p p r o v e d the nomination of three persons for membership on the new Metropolitan Transit Authority created by the Legislature this year. * * * . Those nominated are David F Brack, Birmingham attorney and city commissioner; Eugene W. Kuthy of Royal Oak; and Durward B. Varner, chancellor of Oakland University. SUBMITTED FOR APPOINTMENT Their names will be submitted to Gov. George Romney for his consideration for appointment, The nominees were selected by a special committee of the board of supervisors. Fun UA Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND YICBOTY-Mottiy cloudy today. Mostly dandy tonight sad Wednesday with a chance of showers and today 77 to SS. Low tonight 54 to 58. Winds variable mostly southeasterly five to 11 miles. Showers ending and turning colder by evening. Precipitation probabilities: 20 per cent today; 40 per cent tonight; and 50 per cent Wednesday. WWhPMllK ^LowMt hnwritun preceding S «.m.: At t a.m.: Wind vatodty i m.p.h. Direction: Southuit. Sun Mts Tuesday at 7:37 p.m. Moan rlMa Tuaaday at 1:11 p.m. (anS^Mwa it Nfliparatura . t tamparatura ... jrcsK*........... s s ftggrafe a & Qd. jtapldl U 40 U^Anylw 73. M MNwaulM* ft 2 T5r 1 s Jf ¥ ?• S... Maria 7» jj gatrolt $4 51 Tampa *1 74 DuMh, 3 5 Washington - Sort Worth tin NATIONAL WEATHER — Showersand thundershowers are expected tonight from the Dakotas into the central Roddes and in the lower Mississippi valley west Into Southern Caflfernia. Elsewhere it wffl be fair to partly deafly. heartfelt LESSON - Nurses at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital learn coronary-pulmonary resuscitation from representatives of me Michigan Heart Association KMHA) in preparation for the hospital’s opening of a coronary care unit next month. The method involves putting pressure mi the heart. Standing around the table are Dr, Allan Silver-gleit (sport coat) of St. Joseph, Dr. Eugene Pious (next to him) and Matthew Maxon of the MHA along with two training nurses. .A dog is being used in the demonstration. Board Tables the Bee Issue Indefinitely Waterford Township’s proposed bee ordinance, which would restrict the owning, raising and keeping of bees to agricultural areas, was tabled indefinitely last niflht by the Township Board: / * * ★ The tabling motion of Trustee E. Frank Richardson is subject to the cooperation of the Michigan Beekeepers’ Association and locally involved persons in working toward a solution to the problem. The proposed ordinance was (tying in the neighborhood of a North Winding beekeeping at a previous Township Board They contended the bees presented a nuisance to their chil- Thomas Stachler, owner of Stachler’s Travel Trailer Sales, 3771 M59, however, was the first to complain. He said that the bees inflict damage to his trailers by de- that they sting his customers. However, results of a survey presented to the board more residents of the neighborhood are unopposed to the A petition, bearing the signatures of about 46 residents unopposed to the ‘operation, was given to the board. \ 4r it A Dr. E. A. Martin, an entomology expert from Michigan State University, said his con earn was that the ordinance did not establish precedent by being overly drastic. DEPENDENT ON BEES He said that at least $100 million worth of crops are fle dent on bees, but admitted that bees can sometimes be a nui- Joe Howard, a state bee inspector from Detroit, said he is a hazard. ifi v • * *' v- Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson Indicated that bee complaints have been confined to just the Income Forecast A college graduate starting to work today cah eflpect to earn an average of 8444,000 during Ms career, the Institute of Life Insurance reports. St. Joseph Nurses Learn Heart Revival Method Joseph tion Some 50 nurses at St. Mercy Hospital learned a method of gettfeg qxygen to the lungs and blood circulating in the hekrt yesterday in prepara- Big Business Role in Society Cited by Exec Chrysler Corp. President Virgil E. Boyd today told the Birmingham - Bloomfield Chamber of Commerce at a breakfast meeting that there is growing public recognition of the importance and effectiveness of private enterprise in bringing about social change in the public “In Detroit, for example,' said the auto executive, “the business community' has assumed a leading role in healing the physical and psychological wounds suffered here.” Boyd dtod several top 11b- for next month’s opening of the hospital’s coronary care unit. ♦ it ★ Representatives of the Michigan Heart Association demonstrated to the nurses coronary-pulmonary resuscitation, a 7-year-old method of reviving the heart of a heart attack victim. It involves putting pressure on the heart and pumping an air bag before a doctor arrives. The method is used when the heart is not open for surgery. When the doctor arrives, he gives the patient’s heart shock treatments to further revive-it. ★ it ★ • Matthew Maxon of the Heart Association said the method is widely used to keep patients alive before a doctor arrives. “You don’t have to open the chest and expose it to foreign materials to keep the patient alive,” he Said. Sen. Robert Kennedy and Daniel P. Moynihan, director of the MJ.T.-Harvard Center for Urban Studies, as agreeing wife Ms position that the profit motive can be harnessed to achieve social objectives more efficiently than can publle agencies. . “I think there is a need for greater reliance upon private enterprise in solving social problems, thereby removing the uncertainties et tax increases,” he said. ★ .* '* Financial Incentives to businessmen, including tax deductions, accelerated depreciation and subsidized interest rates, are among the measures being proposed to encourage the opening of johereating businesses in the slums and the construction or rehabilitation of low-rent housing, Boyd noted. General: Don't Halt Bombing SAIGON (AP)—Lt. Get*. WB-Uam W. Momyer, commander of the U.S. Air Farce in Vietnam, said today that stopping the bombing over North Vietnam would give the enemy a tremendous advantage. * '*’3)''! The U.8. Air Force should “keep up what we are doing there," he said. Mmnyer declined to com on proposals by Presidentelect Nguyen Van THeu that a bombing pause be pnttMed as a peace overture to North Vietnam. * , * ■ w > But be declared at a news would have from the one day.” Thant Fears MjdeastWar * Lays Down Principles for Resolving Crisis UNTIED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) - U.N. Secretary General U Thant said Tuesday he fears there will be a new war in the Middle East in a few years unless progress is made toward eliminating the causes of the June clash between the Israelis and the Arabs. He laid down five principles fora solution and said the par-tiro were already committed to them under the U.H. Charter and the 1949 armistice agree- Thant sounded his warning and sketched his plan in an introduction to his annual report published just as the General Assembly was to open its Mad regular session withjhe Middle East as the main issue. He suggested that he be authorized to name a special representative to the Middle East “as a much needed channel of communications, as a reporter and interpreter of events and views fob the secretary general and as|both a Sifter and har-monizerof ideas in-tbe area.” MEETING SUGGESTED He also suggested that with foreign ministers ;here for the assembly, the Security Council hdld a private meeting soon on tiie government level to .seek a consensus an “matters relating to international peace ahd security which are within the competence of the United Nte He offered to draw up an agenda for it. A U.N. charter provision for periodic council meetings attended by members of governments has never been carried out. Thant noted that the June war was the third in 20 years between Arabs and Israelis. He said that while the parties were mainly responsible, the United Nation’s failure “over with the deep-seated and angrily festering problems in that area has to be considered as a major contributing factor.” BIRMINGHAM — City voters will be asked in a special election Nov. 7 to approve the sale of general obligation bonds for the construction of a new municipal pariflng structure. The election was scheduled by the Cltb Commission last light The amount of the bond Is* sue win hot be known util ar*~ chitects submit final cost estl- The Birmingham architectural firm of O’Dell, Hewlett & Luckenbach, Inc,, was author* ized a week ago to begin preparing plans for the structure to be built on the present surface parking lot bounded by Merrill, Pierce and Brown. ♦ * * Commissioners > directed the firm to return with two pro-posals, one designed for 555 cars, the other with a 701-car capacity, so they can make a final determination once they know the exact status of the city’s financing ability. Hopefully, commissioners intend to retire the bond issue entirely through parking revenue and an assessment against ben-efitted property owners in the business district. Projections of anticipated Nationalists' Viet Embassy Is Blown Up SAIGON (AP) — Communist terrorists blew up the National 1st Chinese Embassy In Saigon’; busy downtown section today and Red agents gunned down two prominent Chinese elsewhere in tiie capital. South Vietnamese police said the blast that brought down the twestory embassy and an exchange of gunfire with terrorists killed one person and wounded 27. Fears spread of a new Red terror campaign in Saigon. i ★ - •* .* On other fronts U.S. planes raided inside North Vietnam’s port of Haiphong for the second straight day Monday and Com- Birmingham Area News Bond Vote Set Nov- 7 for Parking Structure can be paid off without tiie use of tax money. The general obligation bonds, however, pledge toe full faith and credit of toe City in the event parking revenue is unable to cover payments. ★ it h Preliminary estimates place the cost of the proposed structure at 1.3 million or 81,558,000, depending on which plan is finally chosen by commissioners. HEARING ADJOURNED A hearing of necessity on toe Chester-Wallace and Lincoln relief sewers was adjourned by the commission until OCt. 16. Property owners affected by the proposed improvement requested fee postponement to give them time to discuss the merits of toe sewer construction. ' .* 3.-/ The Birmingham Board of Education meeting tonight will be held in the Seahobn High School Gym instead at at the Baldwin School. Texans Flee Killer Beulah BROWNSVILLE, Tex. (AP) __Texans by toe thousands fled before the 130 mile-an-hour wrath of growing Hurricane Beulah today and toe big storm hewed to a line straight toward toe mouth of toe Rid Grande. The Weather Bureau said the storm was picking up speed and strength. Hurricane warnings were out for miles of coastline, extending as far as Port Aran-safe, Tm. , ★ * Aside from the possibility of death from its winds, Beulah poised a $20 million killer blow toward crops in toe Lower Rio Grande Valley of Texas. State Agriculture Commissioner John C. White Said $15 million in citrus and |5 million of other crops lay directly in the storm’s path. The well-organized storm was on a path for the Rio Grande and Weather Bureau observers expected her to curve on a trek up the coastline after hitting land. The landfall was expected sometime late tonight. DEATH OF SURFER One death in Texas was Jamed on Beulah even as she was some 190 miles from this tip-of-Texas city. A giant wave toppled Bridgette Laverne Anthony from her surfboard'as she rode massive waves off Freeport, Tex. GM Prices Compared DETROIT UR — Here are some comparative prices of 1967 and 1960 General Motors models. Prices listed are manufacturer’s suggested list price, which includes federal taxes and dealer handling charges but not stopping or local taxes: CHEVROLET 2-dr. Bel Air sedan 6...................$2,542 4-dr. Caprice Sta. Wgn. 2-seat 8......«/ 3,301 4-dr. Chevy H Nova sedan 6............. 2,182 BUICK 4-dr. Skylark Custom hardtop 8...........2,950 2-dr. Wildcat hardtop 8..................3,382 Convertible Electra 225 Custom 8.........4,421 % CADILLAC 4-dr. de Ville sedan .....................5,025 4-dr. ^Special sedan .....................8,423 4-dr. Cutlass hardtop 8~ 4-dr. Cost. Vista Cruiser Sta. Wag. 3-seat PONTIAC Convertible Le Mans ......................2,881 2-dr. Executive hardtop ..................3,277 1917 1988 $2,542 $2,658 , 3,301 3,435 .2,182 2,291 .. 2,958 3,084 ... 3,382 3,498 .. 4,421 4,541 .. 5,825 5,754 .. 6,423 6,552 .. 3,369 3,485 .. 2,881 3,915 .. 3,227 3,348 of shells on U. S. Marine outposts below the demilitarized Throughout South Vietnam ground .fection was scattered, FEMALE TERRORIST A female terrorist pumped two shots Into the chest of Col. Charles % Chung, jtotef intelligence officer of the Nationalist Chinese, Embassy, shortly after the embassy bombing. Liter police arrested 20-yeai>okl Phting Ngoc Anh, a Chinese girl. They found her with • 45-caliber pistol. Chung was in critical condition. Monday night, several terrorists went to the home of a prominent Chinese professor In Cho-lon, Saigon’s Chinese qua called him outside and shot him to death. They escaped. Carrier-baaed Navy (dines Misted Haiphong’s 1 bridges and rail yard and tot at least four sites for Soviet-built County OKs Study Programs (Continued From Page One) "Among ttosp vefotag their support el fee study- wen Orton Township Supervisor John Lessiter and Victor Wood, she of Pontiac’s repre- “A fow minutes ago this board approved 840JW0 for a garbage Vi" said Lessiter. “I don’t ■fee why they can’t afford for people.” rW One critic who argued against toe study by noting that the county didn't have sufficient funds for * highway Improve-mate was told by Wofld, “History won’t remember us for our roads, but bow we dealt with our social ills.” OBJECTED TO FUNDING Royal Oak Supervisor Harry ' objected to the financial assistance “because tine pro- 84, 000 Horton grams start opt very' timidly! and grow very fast.” . * a . faced with the Child Guidance program,” said Horton. “All they wanted then waar small quarters. A fow yean later wha they couldn’t raise public fends, they cams to us fo# a budget is $180,000. REMINGTON | ELECTRIC SHAVER | TUNE UP - Special ONE DAY ONLY TUNE IIP ■ Cleaned and lubricated— 10 AJVL toS P.M. COMPLETE OVERHAUL ■ Now shaver heads ■ Motor party reptoced —if Matted ? ■ Anydameaedorwom ■ N|W— hair stoppers and ■ Now—ntolHateor toataltod ■ Complete overhaul includes cord models and *22? *82? FREE •bottle of AFTER SHAVE LOTION with Tune-up or Overhaul — $1.00 value SIMMSJ! .ll,wll*N*Mfe own factory representative will be here to assure you of expert service.'. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 J^-73 Mrs. Wilson, Founder of OU, Dies in Europe| (Continued From Page One) | “She was loved and respected| She was reputed to have .knowledge of fanning ear’y won'Walkerton, Ont., in 1883, she one daughter, Mrs. Frances; Another gala birthday cele- by 'all 0! us who,had the priv-1 outworked any man on her 'her statewide acclaim. ,was a member on the State,Frederick L. VanLennep of Lex-| bration was being planned lor |itege of knowing her and work-1 estate * Bellas being artico- IN,epirrTTVr Board of Agriculture from 1932 ington, Ky„ one of three chillier 84th birthday on Oct. 19. inp.,wjth hw never retired ,ate 0,1 architecture, engineer- [ rAKM to 1938 besides her brief reign dren from her marriage to John1 The college homecopting 1 . . . .' . • tag, masonry, plumbing, live- I Mrs. Wilson, an ardent horse as lieutenant governor. ;Dodge. Two others died, Dan- weekend near her birthday is if" “J* s„ .®, 8tocjt) sterling silver roses, ilover, was in Belgium inspect- • * ★ * iel in 1938 and Anna Margaret called Mrs. Wilson’s weekend. J™*?* m their affairs. | ft,,e arts and history. ling her Belgian horse farm as Her first mmriage to Dodge b> 1924. Oakland University Chancel-; fn . gh.*.**1 ”f“8*d Her Meadow Brook Faritls es- part of a tour of Europe. - » rugged, individual and one lor Durward B. Varner had this ° do p#8flb e *° heI? 'tate was used for raisin* Bel to say of Mrs Wilson- I to the development of the uni- itate was use<1 for ra,sin8 BeI- Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St r in White £ Prices £ 1 versity. gian draft horses, ponies and ■Wta S he ^Start's' tta tand entire Oakland University com ”ever 8tated °r ™-|was donated to the university, munity while her great gift|p,ied-a criticj®m °f wJ?at was * * .* which made possible the estab-i000!?"18 ?r she offer sug-| Her business abiUty and her lishment of the university S °f af‘ well known. *airs ^ere at Oakland. * * * I * * * * 1 “It is a great personal loss to “What is not so well known is both Mrs. Varner and me,” the very close personal relation- Mrs. Wilson entered farming ship between every member of and the business world when the this university community and role was completely n e w to Mrs. Wilson. I women. Replace Old Sweaty Steel and Aleminem Windows In Teur Nome With INSULATKD VINYL WINDOWS ffi 7,680 Him, man officiant ting. Both lido, of gfaia claon from inside. Mado to any ctylo. All labor included In low, low price. Thlt it one improvement, Shot will completely change and beautify the look, of your haute or Ofeedon Construction 0a 1032 West Huron Street FE 4-2597 NIGHTS i SUNDAYS PHOHE: 682-0848 MA 4-1091 ST3-2I42 EM 3-2385 ItaytMig it JfademiMiion gy 8-1311 of the giants of the early auto-1 She leaves two adopted chil-She might be called a self- jmobile industry, was In 1907. |dren from her second taarriage.j made woman. She never at- Richard S. Wilson of Bloomfield tended college find was prl- |SECRETARY TO DODGE 1 Hills and Mrs. Thomas (Bar- vately tutored at elementary i At the time Mrs. Wilson bara Jean) Eccles of Scottsdale,1 and secondary levels. married him,'she, was working Ariz. as his secretary. Dodge died of ---------------------- influenza 13 years later. , .. , j. In 1924, she met Wilson, All for 0/1© DUt j who at the time owned a _ _ . .. } I lumber business in Detroit. | 0/16 TdKQS All /j They were married a year I ,ater* i BRISTOL, Va. Wl - A man Mrs. Wilson still found time,received a prison term on Born Matilda Rausch in Fashions for Women at SIMMS Lomv Assorted Styles - First Quality ^ Ladies’ Uniforms > • Dacron Polyester V • Wash 'n Wear Cotton P • Arnel Triacetate P • Skimmers • Button Fronts - Dacron Polyester Uniforms QUESTION: How do newspapers get the news? ANSWER: News interests everybody, because it teUs us about what is going on in our world. The word “neyr1 is the key—the newspaper specializes in the up-to-date, bringing recent events sharply into focus for the reader’s benefit. To do this, a newspaper must be a marvel of organization, for the news must be on the newsstands only a short time after having been edited in the newspaper city room. • Damon handkerchief and lie set: designed for the man with af» sense of history and a "deep feeling for tradition ... and inspired by some of the world's greatest , accolades: the medal of the Legion of Honor, the‘Order of the SWord, and the Order Pour Le Merite. This collection is woven of pure Italian . ^ silk in a wide range of colorings ... and designed to coordinate with every shade in your new fall wardrobe. ThQ set is 7.50. . 1 / & J Our Pontiac Mall Stora Open Tuat. and f, Wad. to 5:80 309 N. Telegraph Rd., PPntiaa Our Birmingham Story Open Tuat. and Wad. to 5;30 300 Piatca St.. Birmingham up until her death to devote to a multitude of organizations, among them the Salvation Army, First Presbyterian Church of Detroit, Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association and the Village' Women’s Club of Bloomfield Hills. Mrs. Wilson is survive*!by charges of breaking and entering the Euclid Avenue Baptist i church here. It was noted by officials that Cardwell had been baptized into the church only a few hours/ before his break-in. 6" There are about 500,000 dairy fanhs in the United States. I Styles include thort sleeve gripper front skirt of ( Dacron, Polyester pucker, convertible collar, si •leave slim skirt of Docron polyester ihdntung, I cotton poplin with tucked front collor. Not at pictured. Sizes 10 to 20 and 14'A to I 24V4 but not in oil stylet. —Main Floor I Simms, 98 N. Saginaw Si. ENTER A NEW WOULD OF HEALTH FUN, AND RECREATION... 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ONLY There are Absolutely No "Extras" Beginning Courses Storting -Daily e poll the "SPA" Nearest You Now or Drop By Today IOC.” ' NEW LOCATION | MV BEGINNING COURSES 1 to better serve yen! 1 ml STARTING 7 DAILY L Ph. 334-1591 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Mon. thru fri. 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 pm. Sunday 1 p.m. to 6 p.m. COMMENDED AND APPROVED BY U.G.A. OVER 250 STUDIOS COAST TO COAST AND WORLD WIDE QMiqay HEALTH SPA 3432 W. HURON «. 334-1591 A—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY; SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 1 Bloomfield Hills Teachers, Board Debate BLOOMFIELD HILLS — School board and teacher representatives squared off in a verbal battle last night before more than 1,500 residents who lammed the Andover High School gymnasium to hear about the contract dispute. Meantime, the districts’ schools remain closed and an estimated 8,000 students remain on' Summer vacation. Court action to compel teachers to go back to work, as happened yesterday In neighboring Birmingham, has been ruled out by Hie school board. Also rejected by the board is a teacher proposal to submit the dispute to arbitration. \ The board called this morning for negotiations at 2 p.m. this afternoon. REFINED TO GO ALONG A board spokesman early in the four-hour session stated that the board bad refused to go along with a hinrijng arbitration request which the teachers had agreed to and proposed earlier in the afternoon. ' After charging that the Bloomfield Hills Bdneaflim hssoda-tion changed its original contract proposal five times, each time countermanding any progress made, a board spokesman •aid: “The board cannot go along with this because of the inconsistency demonstrated by the BHEA. We feel this is not the honorable solution — the association has so ter received many concessions on our part thus far; now they want It all.’’ In support of,the BHEA arbitration proposal, a teachers’ representative replied: “This course of action seems the most reasonable and honorable. It would give both parties what they really want — the schools to reopen with our children back in class.” ’ t* A miilage hike of 5 to 10 mills was forecast by a school board spokesman. * * ■ ■ ! - , “Our present package klone which is $847,810 mere than paid last, year Would necessitate a 5-mill Increase in taxes,” said board president Richard H. McGraw. “Ah election will undoubtedly be necessary within two years.” is the only honorable way to settle the dispute within our own Both sides admitted that progress had been made In recent HEATED CONFLICT Walter Zahrt, a BHEA negotiator, said that the association appreciated the board’s refusal to ask for an Injunction. Heated conflict Was obvious later when die BHEA cited the total package offered them was less than yesterday’s Detroit seling. Salaries and binge benefits stil). hold the two sides apart. Along with the board’s refusal to accept arbitration it also refused to ask for a court injunction. On"this McGraw said: “We have complete faith in collective bargaining- We feel this McGraw replied that teachers could go to the-Detroit system if they wanted to. - Another dispute developed when the BHEA claimed it could get the same insurance package offered by the board at a cheaper rate. Hie board maintained their figures came from the fact finder’s report. Water pitchers empty, the meeting was adjourned. Objecting Petitions Slow Clarkston Annexation P CLARKSTON — Objecting petitions carrying some 540 names slowed, but did not stop, the Village Council on its proposed plan of extending the village boundaries. A public information meeting last tight in the senior high school drew better than 300 persons, concerned mainly, it seemed, with the lack of any official say on the proposed plan, it The Clarkston Village Council proposes, according to a planning report made public Aug. 28, to seek Oakland County Board of Supervisor approval. to add land north to 1-78, south and west to the Dixie Highway, and east to Perry Lake Road, excluding the Clarkston Community School property and the commercial area at the foot of M15. Since Clarkston still operates under | the general law statutes of 1895, no I referendum is necessary to annex. The I assertion was made that an advisory vote in such a case would have no legal N9RWfAL—Students of Birmingham Seaholm reported yesterday afternoon under acourt order signed yes-Ifigb School return to classes this morning after an eight-day terday morning by Circuit Judge William J. Beer delay due to a district-wide teachers’ strike. The teachers . Walled Lake Eyes Group to Study Annexation Plan WALLED LAKE — City Council tonight will discuss forming a committee of 100 persons to study the city's annexation proposal. The council meets at 8 p.m. at the City Hall. Mayor Wendd G. Kellogg Jr. is proposing that the committee comprise civic, social and church leaders, said City Manager Royce Downey. Walled Lake’s annexation proposal includes Wolverine Luke Village and three areas of Commerce Township - additions wjrich would more than triple land area of the city. The annexation petitions from the village have been approved by the boundaries committee of the Oakland County Board of Supervisors, which also set Oct. 12 for a public hearing on the issue and Jan. 18 as a tentative election date. WWW the committee will reconsider petitions from the township Sept. 29. It tabled them for an opinion from corporation cwmsel regarding an alleged precedent the committee may be mating if it accepts the petitions, said committee chairman Philip Mastin Jr. Final determination of the annexation election, however, is up to the board of supervisors. Petitions Are Prepared for Highland Police Force HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP - “Our own police department would insure 24-hour protection with additional men on call within the township,” said the chairman of‘the township police committee promoting a home department. The township now has 16-hour coverage of one man and one car from the Oakland County Sheriff’s Department. Petitions necessary to pat the issue to a vote are being prepared by Township Attorney Harold Dudley. He said be expect! to have the petitions ready lor circulation by early next week. “If the petitions Will be ready then, «e will begin circulating them next week,” said Chester Burton, police committee chairman. * * * ' Signatures of 4 per cent of the 7,tm? registered township voters are necessary for a special miilage election. “The general opinion is that we will vote within three months,” Burton said. 3 MILL? RECOMMENDED His committee has recommended a levy of 3 mills for a 10-year period. This would bring in about $50,000 to provide for 24-hour protection by a chief, three patrolmen, and one auxiliary. The funds would also finance two sary uniforms and equipment, Burton said. The proposed location of the police department is the township hall which does have the space for the office,.the committee chairman said. The township is spending about $18,-000 for sheriff’s department coverage, Burton estimated. “We are a rapidly growing community and need added protection,” he asserted. Among the considerations of the committee in reaching its proposal was that several hours of protection are lost because the sheriff’s department is based in Pontiac, and time is required for the shifts to change, Burton said. Also, if a police car is called out of the township for help someplace else, the township is left without a car, said Burton. “The most important benefit will be that citizens know help is just minutes away and every complaint will be investigated,” the chairman said. “There Will be. prevention as well as cure.” A majority of residents appearing at the committee’s two public iruwtinga in August favored a township police department, Burton said. Permit Ordered in Highland Twp. Appeal Eyed on Trailer Park HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP - The Town-ship Board' has 19 days to take further court action against the creation of a mobile home park in the township. The board is expected to meet soon tj$' decide whether or not to make the appeal, said a township official. The township appeal, declared Circuit Court Judge William J. Beer at a rehearing yesterday, must be to the State Court of Appeals. Beer had ordered the township to issue a building permit after hearing the appeal of trailer park developer Mfw-n* Shacket about three weeks ago. Shacket was appealing the July 18 da-dslon of the Township Zoning Boprd rejecting his rezoning request for the mobll home park. REASONS FOR DENIAL Shacket is planning to put 800 trailers on 150 acres north of the Northwest Elementary School under construction on North Milford near Wardlow, north of M59. The zoning board denied Shacket’* request because It felt that the present manufacturing zoning i* the best use of the land, explained Board Secretary Charles Toy. “Mr. Shacket didn’t present anything to show that the land wasn’t good for manufacturing and would be batter for ' mobil homes," Toy vid * * . w.. “Other areas In the township would be more suitable for mobll homes,” he added. MORE HAZARDS - Other reasons for denial, Toy wild, were that the trailer park would create more traffic hazards than manufacturing firms and would be too close to the school. The board also objected to the open sewage . i ': ■ said Toy. The township has a hew ordinance regulating trailer parka, lingoes into dffect in about one month if no petitions are turned in objecting to iL ♦ ★ The ordinance, approved recently by the Township Board, sets up sizes and locations for mobil homes with regard for the entire area, Toy said. The ordinance focuses on “health and beauty considerations,” he «ddfd ONE TRAILER PARK He said that he believes the restrictions are “normal and average.” The township qow has ooe trailer park «f 89 trailers., on 25 acres on South Hickory. Ridge Road, reported township Clerk Normageaa Waters. Trailers are not included In the property tax, said Township Supervisor LoulT F. Oldenburg. However mobil homo residents pay a $3 tax per month. A *,’■ f\ Of this, $2 goes to Huron VaUey schools, 50 cento to the county and 10 cents to the township, said Oldenburg. binding, though. Councilman Donald Cooper stated a preference for such an election to learn the wishes of residents, * * * Some of the impact of me numerous petitions presented during last night’s meeting Was discounted by councilmen who felt they should not have been circulated until after both sides of the issue had I Report Set in Keego KEEGO HARBOR — A report on the city’s first total reappraisal of property wifi, be made to the City .Council at its meetng tonight at 7:38 at the City Hall. .. , *’* ,1 : ... W. M. Meier, a former Southfield city assessor wMtoe company la doing the reappraising, began the project in early July and is nearing completion. reasons for seeking village status for the property was to escape the road grade restrictions imposed by the county pn township developments, NATURAL BEAUTY PERILED . “We may have to take off mom trees and destroy some of the natural beauty around Deer Lake, but we can meet the requirements,” he said. Kirby admitted it would have been more economical to the developers If they did not have to meet the stricter grading requirements. Despite an impassioned pica from John Ronk, a village resident, that for the good of the area the people could not ask “How much will I get?” Councilman David Leak, one of the planning committee, laid out an estimated financial picture for those present. TAX REBATES Said he, “Garkston’s share this year of the rebate from the state gas and weight tax was $7,500. By tripling the amount of roads in the village, this figure could be raised to $23,000 next year. If the private roads involved were to be made public, the amount would further increase by $2,500 and if the Deer Lake area were to be developed we would get another $8,700.” “While construction costs must be Leak, a financial planner with a major auto company continued, “TMa year’s entire village- budget amounted to $27,-000. Had me annexation already taken pldce, our income would have more than doubled to $60,000.” ★ *. * He based his figures on state sales tax returns as well as the gas and weight tax and on property tax income which he figured vrould have doubled from tho present $9,000 annual returns. FORD PROPERTY CITED “With the Ford property developed, we could gain another $00,000 a year,” he * man i of the money can be used for mainto- Leak said the money skould imroe-for a lulltime and a fulltime police chief, plus parttime help. The village presently has all parttime employes. Leak and Robert Wertman, village president, ifrere emphatic in their statements that no extension of boundaries would take place until after a new zoning ordinance and building code are adopted. WWW They said they expected preliminary drafts of the two to be complete by Oct. IS. A new road construstion code, they said, is already prepared. ‘MISSING OPPORTUNITY: “We feel that by this outright disapproval, you are missing a good bet,” said Leak. His opinion was echoed by several other councilmen. SIGNERS’ OBJECTIONS . George Gary, 7960 Dixie, said the signers based their objections on the planning report which had been given public airing. He had reference to the planned residential development of $24 acres of the old Ford property northwest of town, which had originally been asked for Inclusion within the village. Lloyd Kirby, one of the developers, Countered, “If the village does not want us, we will still develop within the township.” He admitted ^hat one of the major Ortonville Rotary Marks 20th Year ORTONVILLE — The Ortonville Rotary Gub will celebrate Its 20th anniversary tonight with a special dinner at 6:30 at the Roto-Jay Hall. Guests and speakers,! who will make up the installation team for six new members, Include Jack McCall, son of the club’s first president; Wyeth Allen of Ann Arbor, pint district Rotary governor; Richard W. Brown, past president of the Downtown Detroit Gab; and Howard Burt, a retired past president of the Ortonville Rotary Gub; lw Gub President A. G. Brown said that the chib’s ambitious program for 1007-68 would be mainly in the area of promoting Ortonville to attract business and'industry. * w w New officers since July besides President Brown Include Vice President Raymond Harris, Secretary James Radford and Treasurer John Wudarcti. 3-Mill Increase for Schools to Be Asked in Walled Lake WALLED LAKE - Hie board of education decided last night to seek voter approval of 10 mills — an increase of 3 — Nov. 8. A major share of the operational levy will be to renew for five years the 7 mills which expire this year. The board is asking fur 3 additional mills for five years. The 10 mills are expected to bring in over $1 million, said Schools SupL George Garver. “It is Important to keep in mind that this miilage is to meet the increased costs of school operation,” Garver stressed. The miilage, he explained, would maintain current programs, not finance The district, levying 27.2 mills now, has one of the lowest school tax rates in the county, Garver claimed. travel the same roads as the trucks carrying the refuse, said Garver. “The board’s concern is not over the land-fill because it is out of the board’s jurisdiction,” the superintendent said, “but over the refiue trucks on the poor back roads.” -—' REPORT HEARD The board’s action was taken after It heard a report from Commerce Township Planning Commission member Edward Oldenkamp on the problems that may exist if the' laud-fill The Oakland County Road Commission plans to operate the land-fill on 24 of the 85 acres it owns in file township. The pending request before the appeals board is for 10 acres. The board Is expected to consider the road commission’s request at its Sept. 25 meeting. AWAITING DETAILS ,, £T, TT . The board of education decided last Use °* School week to hold the millsge election and Firr,Tt«rl Lw k|.., i had been awaiting details to decide on expected Py NOV. I, the amount of'the levy. Also at last night’s meeting, the board derided to send a tetter to tha Commerce Township Board of Appeals Rochester Board Told east corner of Benstrin and Sleetk roads. ■fb the letter, the board will express its concern about the safety of school children riding'"the buses which will Alnrtont Hospital Board Names New Member ALMONT — The Community Hospital Board of Trustees has appointed Robert ■■■_______■___________ ■ , „ I^ang of Waatinjgton to fill the unexpired^-H^ said the increase is between a 7 term of board member Thomas K. and 8 per cent gain Richards of Almont. , ■ • * ' * 1 . ' — Long Meadow Elementary School students should be installed in their new building by Nov. 1, the beard of education was told last night. The contractor still expects to complete the 20-room building by Oct. 17, according to a report by William Burch, plant engineer. . Students are presently attending *es-skms at Meadow Brook Elementary Sriwol on a shared basis. Supt. of Schools Douglas Lund reported over-all enrollment up 560 students from last year to a total of 7,550. Lang, a graduate electrical «ngiin»<»r Of Lawrence Tech, presently holds the position of post engineer at the U.S. Army Tank Automotive Command. bang is also the Chairman of the Board of Commissioners of fire Community Youth and Otic. Center, and he waa i past president of the Washing, ton Lions Gub. All classroom teaching positions have been filled, he said, but the district is still looking for a speech correctionist, a visiting teacher and an orchestra director. The total Jast night ratified a cow- , tract with some 60 cafeteria employes granting them a 10 cent an hour jn-' crease, plus full medical coverage,' extended sick leave days and paid holidays. THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 House Unit, LBJ Aides Mull Tax Plan WASHINGTON (AP) — Pri-.Means Committee, the budget| vate discussions beginning to-j director and the secretary of the day among the House Ways and Slogan Eyed for Licenses LANSING (AP) ■— A new slogan has been proposed for Michigan’s auto license plate — “Courteous Driver State.” ' the proposed new slogan, to start with the 1969 plates, is advocated by F.R. MacLean of Detroit, a safety consultant and immediate past president of the Greater Detroit Safety Council. * * * Michigan first used the slogan “Water Wonderland.” It was changed to “Water-Winter Wonderland” and the next year will be “Great Lakes State”. Treasury may decide the fate of President Johnson's tax- tor crease proposal. ' • * .] A majority of committee members say they would not now vote for the 19 per cent income tax surcharge sought to help finance the Vietnam war and domestic spending and hold down the Treasury deficit. Bid most of the objectors indicate they might vote for an increase if spending is sharply cut or the tax structure is revised or both. * * * Budget Director Charles L. Schultze and Treasury Secretary Henry H. Fowler unquestionably will be asked' by " committee today whether the administration will go further than its public statements so far have indicated on spending cuts and deficit control. , BEADY FOR FOOTBALL?—Cindy, the 3-month-old pet Chihuahua of Mr. and Mrs. Jimmy O. Evans of Houston, Tex., looks like she’s got her own end zone for the football season. Mrs. Evans rigged Cindy’s ears like a goalpost on doctors’ orders, to strengthen the ear cartilage so her ears would not flop down. Strike Threat at Airline Tied to Interunion Battle WASHINGTON (AP) - A battle over union representation appeared to be an underlying is. sue in a strike threat by 7,000 workers against Pan American World Airways, biggest U.S. overseas air passenger and freight carrier. . • The strike call was set for 12:01 a.m., Wednesday by the AFLrCIO Brotherhood of Railway and Airiines Clerks. The Clerks Union is fighting the Teamsters Union for the right to represent the workers. * * • ★ Clerks Union President1 C. L. Dennis said Monday Pan Am refused to, negotiate a new con-] tract. He said a 5 per cent; pay hike unilaterally granted by the company last week was “completely inadequate.” The workers, whose old contract expired in March, average between $110 and $120 weekly. NEW ELECTION ORDERED Labor sources speculated the Clerks-Teamsters fight was connected to the strike. The Teamsters won an election to oust the Clerks but the results were ordered thrown out by the National Mediation Board, which cited its own errors in the election. The board ordered a new election. * Referring to this dispute, Dennis said negotiations stalled because “Pan Am took the position that because the issue of employe representation seemed in doubt it was reluctant to work out a new agreement.” Dennis said that “with its past history,” he wouldn’t be surprised to see the Mediation Board “conduct a fourth, fifth or even sixth election of this dispute.” He said the workers “cannot be made to wait forever” for a new contract. A Teamsters Union spokesman said recently the workers who want Teamsters represen- tation were angry enough to strike over the representation PONTIAC VOTERS, make your choice now V6!e Todoy! Oily Income Tax or Prcimty Tax Increase Paid for by Citinns Finance Study Committee Scbultze has talked of spending reductions in the range of $2 billion. Committee objectors demand instead cuts more nearly matching the estimated yield of the tax increases^-$7.4 billion. taxrevisionV Fowler has promised to send J legislation to correct Tax Code provisions that have been criticized as inequitable and too favorable to some individuals or groups. Fowler has insisted Congress should dispose of the tax increase before taking up these complicated questions. Many members, however, want tax revision instead of, or at least in a package with, any tax increase." * * it Some members of the ways and means committee are exploring the possibility of writing a tax increase bill that would also include a mandatory spending ceiling. * * it The committee is expected to spend the rest of this week in general discussions with the officials, and then to take its time discussing what it may do with the bill. ' ♦ ’ * The pressure is on the administration, which says tax action is needed quickly to head off inflation and a credit crisis, to make the first move. * -ft, * * ■' Under toe Constitution and House rules, a tax bill cannot move until toe ways and means committee gives toe word. Tax legislation must originate in the House and toe committee decides whether the toll House votes on it. mankind can behold the face, hear the voice of the proryHeed i The call of God hath been rafsed, the I dht of His countenance been lifted up upon men. 335-4449 Baha'i Faith ABOUT QUALITY Hartunnh CUSTOM TAILORS - UNIFORMS CLOTHIERS- TUXEDO RENTALS 90S W. HURON AT TELEGRAPH , PONTIAC. MICH. Whether it's "Ready-Made" or "Custom-Tailored", Harwood stands alone In assuring customer satisfaction — guaranteeing superior fitting by our master tailors! 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Luscious Cortlonnet wool in wonderful forest tones* Ours (done, $90 OTHERSflAGM(k)R COATS . ,. . . ...... 983-195 ■ /’ i-T■ ■ 'Coot Salon .. . Third Floor INTRODUCING at Waite's . . . a new line of Nationally Advertised women's • shoes! California a A COBBERSW California x A. COBBERS’It1 NET *14 Black or Brown California COBBERS All Shoes 5/2 to 10 S-N-M PLAIT *14 Black or Truffle qalifomia a COBBERS*^ Designed of DuPont washable nylon jersey iri a stained glass geometric print. Needs little or no ironing. Convertible-collar and pleated skirt. Blue, Green and Red in sizes 10-to 18 and 12Vit to 22Vk.Charge It. *15 Women's, Shoes ... Street Floor THE PONTIAC PRESS .—- -a * \jt£ x jWW* 48 West Huron Street Jatai W. Vmtntu Xncuttvi Viol and Editor Pontiac, Michigan 48056 SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 Bowrao H. FithiMM, n uttro Vloo Pioldent John A. : Secretary _ Director Hicham M. Tmant.it ’reasurer Officer Secretary odd Advertiainf Treasurer and Finance Local Advertlalni Idle School Reflects Millage Vote Troy School District voters have spoken. * Or, possibly it would be more accurate to say they have underscored a verdict they already handed down to school officials earlier this summer. Voters in the Troy district don’t want to pay more school taxes. They don’t want a new junior high school staffed for their children. They’d rather see it stand empty and unused. They don’t want 22 additional teachers this year. They don’t want the school district to pay wage hikes already in effect. They don’t want art programs for elementary and junior high school students. They don’t want thfe same kids to have any music courses. ★ ★ ★ They don’t want elementary and junior high sports programs. These are some of the things a proposed one-year, 7-mill tax hike would have produced. The tax hike was defeated in June by a 2V&-1 margin. The same proposal was again defeated last week by a 2-1 margin. School officials have indicated they will try again for the needed millage in a third election later this year. ★ ★ ★ Following last week’s defeat, educators announced flatly that the city’s new $ 1-million Smith Junior High School will not open this fall as scheduled. Operational funds lor the new school hinged on passage of the tax proposal. . True, the upsurge of taxes on the state and national level is hurting local tax proposals. If this is the case it is a shame because residents of Troy and other municipalities will never receive much in return for state and national tax outlays as they will from local tax billings. Nonetheless, could it be that the new Troy school stands idle as mute evidence of taxpayers’ disaffection with local tax demands (over which their v o i c e is , decisive) and an implied warning to educational establishments to live within sound, realistic budgets without periodic recourse to emergency tax measures to meet deficits in capital and operating funds? - MM afe Unoccupied Troy School David Lawrence Says: Peace Bid Fuss Is Exaggerated 'Constitution Week’ a Time for Re-Evaluation This is Constitution Week. Proclaimed annually by the President of the tlnited States, the theme of this yearV observance is moit appropriately to “Protect Your Liberty Under Law Know Yoiir U.S. Constitution.’’ It is a timely admonition. With the Nation torn by dissident, militant groups, society threatened by the shocking spread of lawlessness and an un-American philosophy of “Dog Eat Dog’’ insinuating itself into the national consciousness, no thoughtful person would deny that the moment is at hand for an earnest soul searching on our individual way of life. The immortal documents we know as the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution with its idealistic Bill of Rights give to mankind the basic tools for tiie orderly possession and enjoyment of liberty, prop- erty and security, and “the pursuit of happiness.’’ These inalienable American rights were signed into law on September 17, 1787, and the Constitution then born stands as ,the wisest and most humane document ever written for the democratic self government of a people. If today, cracks appear in the American social structure—a structure that scientifically and materially is an example for all the world—the fault lies not with the written tenets of the Founding Fathers but with the prostitution of them by succeeding generations of the citizenry. "Never before have justice, domestic tranquility and concern for the general welfare been of greater significance,’’ declares, the chairman of the State's Constitution Week committee. We add a fervent "amen,", and urge all Americans to give heed to his words not only during this commemorative week but throughout all the weeks and years to WASHINGTON - President Johnson has plenty of problems, but he must have been surprised to read a big headline in a morning n e w 8 p aper y e s t e r day which sgid: Duplicity on Peace Bid is Charged to Harry Ash- i^wRENCE more, formerly an Arkansas editor and now executive vice president Of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, located in California, had written in article to that effect which WM released to the press. Pf The story is that Ashmore and William C. Baggs, editor of the Miami, Fla., News, had gone to Hanoi last January to confer with Ho Chi Minh, head of the North Vietnam government, in an effort to transmit some kind of “peace •feeler.” The two men, on their return to Washington, prepared a letter to the North Women Eye Breakthroughs in £ir, on Land - At first blush, this sounded like the most impressive advance in the cause of female equality since Phil Spitalny’s all-girl orchestra. Aeroflot, Russia’s state airline, has announced it is training its first all-female flight crew for regularly Scheduled service. The Crew will consist of pilot, copilot, navigator, flight mechanic and radio operator. So equal is sexual equality in the Soviet Union that the pilot holds tiie title of “Hero of Socialist Labor." Then came the report that a promoter in Cleveland, Ohio, is trying to organize an all-girl professional foot- ball team to play... all-male football teams. He is sure that in this vast country (here must be a lot of 6-footy 200-. pound, muscled Amazons who would be eager to take on a seasonal outdoor job mauling men. Half a dozen girls have, in fact, already applied. This we think, is going a little too far. We have, no objections to taking the aerobus and leaving the flying to a Hero of Socialist Labor, even if he’s a heroine. But pro football is a rough enough game as is without getting the deadlier of the species involved in it. Devils Down Deacons in Grid Well, contestants, for once the script went haywire, and the good guys failed to take the bad guys. If you have trouble relating this to the first game of The Pfess Annual Football Contest with its winner’s award of a 8500 U.S. Savings bond, there is light ahead. You see, Duke’s Blue Devils overcame the Deacons of Wake Forest in Saturday’s scuffle, 31 to 13. If It bore heavily on the souls of the Deacons, the score was also a sharp reverse for a sizable number of entrants who had backed them — not to mention the sorrow suffered by the 48 who had predicted a tie. So, what’s ahead for next week? Well, game No. 2 pits the Bears of Baylor against the Orangemen of Syracuse. With 1,729 contestants picking the latter against 698 for the former (24 foresee a tie) you wouldn’t hare to be an Orange fancier to get the idea that The Boys From Syracuse — remember the old musical? — are something of a favorite to pull the rufc from under the beat’s. • An oddity of our yearly grid games is that a tie hasn’t occurred in the contest schedule for’ three years. Needless, to say, such ah outcome cuts the field of survivors but fast, and sets at naught a lot of painstaking handicapping on the part of contestants. The last deadlock was the 1963 Michigan-Michigap State facas. ’Bye now, A week hence, we’JU give yoa the bitter-sweet news on the upcoming tilt. consulting witii some State Department officials. It was id on Feb. 5 a Hanoi dlplt In Cambodia on Feb. U. Ashmore charges that President Johnson’s letter was • actually sent on Feb. 2 and canceled out the informal effort of the two editors. it it it But it turns out now that the United States government ' did not tell Ashmore and Baggs that coincidentally there were some “peace feelers" being handled in Moscow with representatives of the North Vietnamese government. ‘OFFICIAL’ EFFORTS These parleys were considered to be “official” and direct, whereas the Ashmore-Baggs communication was regarded as an incidental effort to advance the cause of peace! The officials did not deem it desirable to tell the two would-be peacemakers all that was going on behind the scenes. So the whole affair looks like a tempest in a teapot, since It turns oat that the dated Feb. 8, according to the State Department. An examination of the Johnson letter reveals the big stumbling block —. whether the United States would stop bombing before there was any pledge that the enemy would take reciprocal action. ★ ★ ★ In the February letter, for example, President Johnson said to the president of Communist North Vietnam: i “I am prepared to order a cessation of bombing against your country and the stopping of further augmentation of United States forces In South Vietnam as soon as I am assured that infiltration into South Vietnam by land and by sea has stopped. “These acts of restraint on both sides would, I believe, make it possible for us to conduct serious and private discussions leading toward an early peace.” ASHMORE LETTER In Ashmore’s letter to Ho, which he says was prepared with the assistance of State Department officials, there are the following paragraphs: “They (the State Department) expressed particular interest in your suggestion to ns that private talks could begin provided the U.S. stopped bombing your country, and ceased introducing additional U.S. “They expressed the opinion that some reciprocal restraint to indicate that neither side intended to use the occasion of the talks, for military advantage would provide tan-, gible evidence of the good faith of ail parties in the prospects for a negotiated settle- “Speaking now wholly for ourselves, we believe the essential .condition for productive talks is an arrangement under which neither side stands to fain military advantage dining the period of negotiation.” So instead of “duplicity,” it seems to.be a matter of duplication. For the actual position of the American government As contained in the Ashmore letter is the same as in Mr. Johnson’s communication to Ho. Indeed, the incident serves only to prove that the United States has, directly and indirectly, made’ every effort to start peace negotiations with the North Vietnamese. (C*#yrl»M, INI, PuMUlwra-Hill Bob Considine Says: Voice of the People: Urge Citizens to Worfy to Preserve Freedoms the Tuling of the U.S. Court of Appeals forbidding the child’s verse of thanks gives a decided feeling that we are slipping behind the Iron Curtain. It is necessary to awake from our lethargy. We- have freedom of worship because our forefathers had vision and courage to come to America to get it. We have independence because our fathers fought for it. Our country is great because of God’s blessing on their efforts. Are We willing to work to keep that freedom? Communism is sparing no effort to take it away. We do have a voice. Our Congressmen welcome letters ^telling them what we believe and giving them more force of opinion to act. Let us write and'help mem. Thanks to The Pontiac Press for giving us a list of our lawmakers at intervals. MRS. ELEANOR W. CRESSWELL 61 SUMMIT In response to the invitation of “I Object" to speak out, sex education and prayer are vital. It seems we all need one as much as the other. We have fine school boards in the Pon-tiac-Waterford area and l am certain they khow better than I what is good for our children. ★ ★ ★ There is too much rebellion and objection and not enough support and cooperation. Teachers have always been underpaid and I am surprised they keep trying to teach and baby-sit. I’LL SUPPORT Reader States Opinions on Teacher Strikes School teachers have always tried to place themselves on a professional level with doctors and lawyers without making the educational investment to do so. If teachers want more money they should join the “rat race” of private industry. Don’t worry about teacher shortages because there will always be people looking for the “easy buck.” A former school teacher once told me “those who can, do, and those who can’t, teach.” FED UP ‘We Need Laws to Stop Troublemakers' I think Mary Ellen Riordan, Walter Reuther and H. Rap Brown are close friends. If Stokely Carmichael is- brought back to the U.S. he can join them in their fight to m a k e trouble and disrupt the whole country. These troublemakers do such a good job that they make workers believe work stoppages and riots are for their own good. ★ ★ ★ If there are no laws to stop this trouble that is ruining our country, it is time to make new laws that can stop It. It is too bad we can’t count on our part-time governor to help but we can’t for he admits that he has been brainwashed. So was I when I voted for him. MRS. JAMES SCOTT 2119 STOUT, KEEGO HARBOR Marines in Viet Refuse to Give Night to Enemy was not really saying tacts anything different the The letter which President Johnson wrote to Ho was Verbal Orchids Charles Crowe of Utica; ' 94th birthday. Charles Winegar of Lapeer; 81kt birthday. Mr. mid Mrs. Bert Frank vWRochester; 67th wedding anniversary. NEW YORK - A proposal by a group of young officers serving in Vietnam, to the effect that we should fight the enemy at night and sleep by day, led me to write that it would be hard for us to l switch as it] would be for a [ rheumatic sal- CONSIDINE moirto swim upstream. Not necessarily so, writes Lt. Gen. Louis W. Walt, who commanded the nearly 70,000 Marines in Vietnam and now is the Corps’ deploy chief of staff (manpower). “I though I might mention to you some of the things our Marines out there in Corps are doing in regard to night operations,” Gen. Walt writes from Washington. “Our County Fair operation starts LLY- I am answering Lucy wLo w»-‘d to repaint her metal kitchen cabinets. Remr* s the 6ld paint with paint remover,* a square spaMa sr1 a wire brush. Follow directions on the remover can very carefully. I wore an old pair of nylon gloves to keep the remover from burning my skin. Apply a thin coat of rust preventative. (POLLY’S NOTE - Do not put this on top of any paint or sealer, only on bare metal). I find new pain4 will chip and peer very easily if the old is not removed. It is a lot of hard work but well worth it. — PAT DEAR POLLY - My metal kitchen cabinets had yellowed and I tried painting them with a brush but they were streaky and messy. I then tried using a roller and it worked. Remove the cabinet handles and Just roll. on the enamel. A brash can be used for the hard-to-reach areas. -Also, I a;ply cold cream to my hands and face since I always seem to get splattered when I p-int. To remove the stains after pointing I add another coat of die cream and tissue my skin dean. Either salad df cooking oils are aiso good and gen*’s paint te-movers. —. P; '!. DEAR GIRLS — Just yesterday a friend told me that she always used rubbing alcohol to remove paint from the skin. She finds it is particularly good to use on children who might stick a finger ;with turpentine on It In Hie mouth. MTs. P. Q. also uses a roller and points out the fact that the result is slightly stippled. Try a small inconspicuous place first to see if yon like the stippled effect. - POLLY DEAR POLLY -* When I washed the winter’s grime At bf my windows my fingers and {fingernails were spved from ch wear and tear. I used small.vegetable brush for scrubbing out all the corners of my many parted windows. darning eggs. They have round edges and are Just the right size to hold in the hand. I also use small plastic bottles for watering small my stream iron. K. S. MRS. E. Information t**J*cny*w>d Open House Afternoon Rite for Couple at YWCA Open House at the YWCA Thursday from 1 to 9 p.m. will acquaint localites with the new program Of classes for this season. Class instructors will be available during the time to answer questions on the fall Two new classes are being offered this year: party skills and ballroom dancing (for men and women). Other classes include: china painting, furniture refinishing, art of , self defense, exercise fun, upholstery, yoga and cake decorating. More are: art, adults hair styling, powder puff mechanics, decoupage, holiday workshop and charm and poise. Additional Information may be obtained, by contacting the “Y” on West Huron Street, j A Bottle Holder Make the children a tip-proof bottle holder to use when they are pasting, glueing, or polishing shoes. Drill a hole in the lid of a cigar box large enough for the bottle to fit in it. Then set the bottle in the box, closing the lid over the bottle top. This keeps the bottle anchored and prevents spills. MRS. DA BEZDECNY Deans Observe fOth Anniversary A family dinner tonight Will honor the 50th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Dean of Close Street. Hosts for the occasion are the couple’s children: Mrs. Mary Ellen Liqdgren, Glendale Calif.; Eugene; Ralph; Mrs. Clarimond Lawrence; MTs. Ralph K. Smith; L. H. Dean Jr.; Mrs. Harold Clason; Mrs. Joan, Lambert; James and Lawrence, all of Pontiac. The couple has 33 grandchildren and 6 great-grandchildren. DEAR POLLY - Due serious illness my hair has nearly all fallen out. I have a wig but do not know how to care for it. I find it is too expensive to send it out(as I am elderly and living on a small income. I do hope some of the kind ladies can help me — PEARL Hamburgers Never Go Out of Style as Treat By JANET ODELL Pontiac Press Food Editor Great big juicy hamburgers are a treat at any time. Done on fee outdoor grill, they're superb. Mrs. Lloyd Langmaid of Waterford has a special recipe she wants to share with Press readers. Our cook of fee day has three children. BAR B BURGERS 1. By Mrs. Lloyd Langmaid % cupfft small can) evaporated milk 1 1% pounds ground beef % cup dine-cracker crumbs 1% teaspoons salt t 1 teaspoonpepper $ .v ( 1 teaspoon dry mustard % cup finely chopped onions % cup finely chopped green- pepper Mix all ingredients together and form into 6 patties. Broil to desired degree of doneness. BLOOMFIELD HILLS 4080 TELEGRAPH- Rl). At Long Lake Rd — <,44-7370 Mon., Thura.-'A Fri* tfe 9 China, Crystal, Gifts A Complete. Furniture ROYAL WORCESTER the finest and whitest English bone china in rare and beautiful patterns to grace the tables , ' of America’s hostesses. Bridal Lace is platinum edged to accentuate the pink, gray and turquoiae center cobweb design. 5 pc. setting: dlnnerplate, salad, bread/butter A cup A saucer, $21.75. Lavinia has muted tones of green, lavender and deep purple with gold edged fluted rim. 5 nc. setting: dinnerplate, salad, bread/butter, cup A saucer, $24.75. Silver Chantilly has silvtr scrolls framed with a platinum band. Gold Chantilly, gold scrolls banded with rich gold. 5 piece setting. Silver Chantilly............$23,75 Gold Chantilly,............-$35.75 Regency ia an aristocratic de- : sign in deep blue coloring enhanced with gold. 5 piece setting. Blue Regency..........„.....,...$44.75 Engagement’s fluted rim, platinum banded coupe shape complements every decor. 5 piSce place setting! a dinnerplate, salad, , hmadjflnitfer, enp A saucer, PONTIAC 24 WEST HURON ST. In Downtown Pontiac---FE 4-1234 Daily TIB. $190. , China, Crystal, Gifts lr . . / Ethan Allen Furniture / Davisburg Methodist Church was the ^setting Saturday for afternoon vows of Marie Esther Wright, d&ighter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward M. Wright of Davisburg, and David Joseph Bezdecny, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Bezdecny Of Holly. The bride wore a white satin gown with-* portrait neckline and long tapered sleeves. The bodice of English net featured Alencon lace appliques. To complete her ensemble, she chose a bouffant illusion veil held by a matching lace headpiece. She carried a cascade of white Sweetheart roses and carnations. ■k k k The bride’s sister, Mrs. Harold Daria, was matron of honor, wife bridesmaids Mrs. Richard Canfield arid Mrs. Martin Everett. Ushers were Lynn E. Wright and John Clark with the bridegroom’s . brother, Richard, as best man. Following a reception in fee church parlors, the couple left for a honeymoon in the south. They will reside in Seattle, Wash. Help Patients Socialize to Speed Recovery The emotionally ill are not hopelessly ill. They were well once, and can be well again wife proper care and understanding. More important than any other kind of treatment is contact and friendship with other normal, happy people. As a social activities aide in mental hospitals the volunteer can offer a warmth and understanding more beneficial than any psychiatry. By joining in social activities with the patients, such as music, games and dance, and by acting as group discussion leader on pre-selected topics, fee volunteer aide is invaluable. This position, open dally or evenings from 'Monday through Sunday, is available for a man or woman over 20. Volunteers should call the Oakland County Volunteer Bureau in Birmingham. MRS. JACK LANGLOIS Newlyweds Tour East Mr. and Mrs. Jack Langiois left for a honeymoon in Niagara Falls and New York City following a reception a), the Champion building hi Rochester Saturday evening. ★ * Sr Parents of feq couple are Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Manns of Joy Road and Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Langiois of Ken 11-worth Street. ★ ★ ★ For the ceremony in St. Phillip’s Episcopal Church, Rochester* the former Carol Anp Manns wore a white silk organza gown wife Alencon lace appliques and a chapel length, train. A shoulder length illusion veil was secured with a petal crown accented wife sped pearls and crystals. She carried abouquetof white glamellias and Stepha-notis. ★ * * Matron of honor for «t h e ceremonv was Mrs. Ronald Carr with Larry Cushist as best man. Bridesmaids were Terri La France, Barbara Deacon, and Mrs. Larry Cushist. Ronald Carr, Richard King, and Gary .Manns ush- Slate Fall Vows An October wedding for Susan Marie Tiltman and William G. McMorrian has been announced. Parents of the couple are the Thomas H. Tiltmans of Daffodil Drive and the Gerald McMorrians of Romeo, Yard Goods Tradition On dry goods counters, wool cloth* is usually folded with the right side inside, and cottons, silks and linens with the right side out. - Calendar ®AY Wonrfn’s World Series, The Pontiac ’Mail. Mrs. Robert Anderson, member of Pontiac Area United Fund, will speak. Beverly-Fnuiklin Republican Women’s Clnb, 12:30 p.m., Beverly Hills home of* Mrs. John Farrar. Luncheon, with Mrs. George Huebner as speaker. Any area interested woman may attend. tion for Retarded Children, 8 p.m., Community Services Building. Film, “The Helping Hand.” First general membership meeting. EVERYDAY IS SPECIAL... TO SOMEONE YOU KNOW: SEND Rineharts Speak Vow| in Evening Ceremony Catherine Mary Froeber, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph A. Froeber of East Mansfield Street, became the bride of John W. Rinehart Jr., son of John W. Rinehart of Ramona Terrace and fee late Mrs. Rinehart, in an evening ceremony Friday. * k Following the exchange of vows in St. Michael’s Catholic Church, the newlyweds greeted guests at a reception in fee Italian American Hall. CHAPEL TRAIN The bride wore a lace covered peau de sole gown wife a chapel train. The A-line dress featured a high wrist wife long sleeves. . ' W ' it i k Her fingertip veil was fastened with a rose petal shaped headpiece. k:. k k The bridal bouquet was a cascading arrangement of Sweetheart roses with car-, nations and Stephanotis. * ★ ★ Mrs. Edward Merritt, sister of the bride, was matron of honor wife Susait Pruett as bridesmaid. Steven Merritt was ring bearer and Tyanne Spathe was flower girl. ★ k k Best man was Robert Thomas with ushers Robert Sprout and Thomas Roberts. ★ k k The newlyweds are honeymooning in New York City. MRS. J. RINEHART JR. WNFGA Unit Hold? Luncheon , ^ o4v ' >' Pontiac branch of Woman’s National Farm and Garden Association met Monday for luncheon in the South Shore Road home of Mrs. Gelston Mrs. P. N. Askounes presented a program entitled “Holiday Happenings.” V k k k Members discussed the annual Holiday Tea and Country Store which will take place at the YWCA on Nov. 28. k k k Social chairman for the day was Mrs. Frederick Poole. She was assisted by Mes-dames Wiliam Rogers, Robert Alton, William Cashin, Arnold Jerome, Harold How-lett, Leamon Hunt, Harry Pearce, Harold Kendrick, Percy Hunt and William Hart- Curling Iron Usej If you have an old-fashioned curling iron around the house, don’t throw it .away, for it comes in handy when dyeing clothes or cumins. It makes a goqd gripping tool for turning articles in the .dye bath, and its handles don’t get hot. A Definite Difference Chocolate milk is whole milk wife chocolate syrup added; chocolate drink is partly skimmed’ milk with cocoa powder added. Experts Set to Discuss Food in '67 DETROIT — More than 3,-000 Detroit-area homemakers will learn how to stretch their family’s food dollars at a special Ford Auditorium event Monday at 7:45 p.m. The program — “An Evening With The Experts” — is ‘the highlight of Food Information Week, Sept. 24-30. It will be open to the public. Hungarian born chef and restaurateur Louis Szathmary will give a lively illustrated talk entitled, “Food is the Show.” He will tell homemakers how to prepare gourmet meals using convenience foods. Chef Szafemary’s Chicago restaurant, The B a k e r y, recently won a place on Holiday Magazine’s list of top 100 American Restaurants. He and his wife, Sadako, own and operate another dining spot in Chicago’s Old Town .area. A second part of the program Will feature Laurence Taylor, a nationally - known conference leader. He will lead a humorous and informative question-and-answer period between the audience and a panel of food experts. The session will test consumer knowledge of trends affecting food and the food industry. Taylor was recentlyas-sociated with Hillsdale College as vice president of leadership development until his retirement in 1985 at which time he went into the fulltime work of conference planning and consultation. NOW OPEN! EDM’S iss BEAUTY SERVICES designed for YOU Edna fowling, Phone for appointment 332-6228 * 823 W. Huron Street (over Hampton Electric)** 6 SHtATSTOHESl Charge account service—Pay all utility bills at any Perry Pharmacy PONTIAC-819 East Blvrt. at Parry, FE S-11S2 PONTIAC-1281 Baldwin Near Columbia, FE 1-7967 BIRMINGHAM—8(7 S. Mint Next to kbP, Ml T«44YI WATERFORD—1417 Elix.Lk.Rd. at Mil, PC M24I TROY—2170 W. .Maple—Somerset Plaza, Ml Mill l-ICfl HigM M ONCE IN A LIFETIME SPECIAL! AH 100% HUMAN HAIR wigs 2950 ONE PRICE ONLY! ah Caatasm at $125.00_ Shades NONE HIGHER HUMAN HAIR FALLS $49 30 Days Layaway World’s Finest Human Hair ’ WIGLETS Rrgulnr $49.00 Wonderful color runge! You’ve •eeh them at thrice the price for thU Am quality. THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 B-3 Pair,Greets Guests at Club Dinner MRS. THOMAS BAXTER TEAGUE 90s May Queen Recalls Glories FORT WORTH, Tex. (AP)~ Mrs. Elizabeth Bunch, who celebrated her 89th birthday recently, was May Queen at Fort Worth in 1895. In 1986, the Fort Worth newspaper reprinted pictures of her receiv-ing the honors and gifts 41 years earlier. Mrs. Bunch was born in Kentucky, and while still an infant she traveled with her Dust Plants With Aloesf Parents 011 % long wagon trip to Texas. She was married about a month after being May Queen and set out with her husband on a honeymoon trip to Duncan, Okla. Due to floods, the trip took seven days. Powdered aloes dusted yery lightly upon plants will keep rabbits away, tipis preventing damage. However, the dusting must take place after each Helen Louise Wheeler and LeRoy Duane Mjovig are planning to wed Dec. 23. She is a graduate of Spring Arbor College and her fiance is d graduate of Ferris State College. Their parents are Mrs. Charles E. Wheeler of East Auburn Road, Avon Township and the late Mr. Wheeler and Mrs. Lawrence Mjovig Of Muskegon and the late Mr. Mjovig. A reception in the church parlors and dinner , at the Rochester Elk’s Lodge Saturday night followed the wed-ding/of Andrea Kay Martin, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dale Martin of Rochester and /fttomas Baxter Teague, son of Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Teague of L1 v e r n o i s Road, Avon Township. ★ * * The afternoon ceremony was held uTst. Paul’s Methodist Church. PEAUDESOIE , The former Miss Martin wore a white peaii de soie gown with a sleeveless full length coat. Chantilly lace covered the bodice and hem of her gown and made the Kabuki sleeves. A headpiece of seed pearls, I crystal drops, and lilies of the valley secured hqr shoulder ] length veil. A white orchid I centered Stephanotis and ivy 1 for the bridal bouquet. ,* * * 'l Maid of honor was Betty | Hogan. Joanne Smith, Nancy Alexander, Mrs. Paul Martin ! and Deborah Teague were bridesmaids. ■ * * V Thomas Werth was best man, with ushers James Williams, Paul Martin, Arthur Tank, Leo Renault Jr., Lawrence Myers, Kenneth Pur-dom and aJmes Morasky. ★ * * The newlyweds who are honeymooning in Florida will live in Rochester upon their return. He was 13 when his fatherihis child? So he remained un-lpst a status fight in his cor-J informed of his parents’ brave, poration and had to take a cut!patient struggles to overcome Reason Our Youth Alienated Today By MURIEL LAWRENCE i confesses himself insufficient to induced his father, to seek psy- of the western world are flying child" " ’ ’ * .............. .. Was the boy informed of this parental defeat? Don’t be silly. What American parent ever the failure. He was kept in his “nice” private school utterly unaware of the disciplined economies that kept him there. When insomnia chiatric treatment, that, too, j home to roost on this country’s was kept the darkest secrets, ichickenhouse. Yet submission to such treat- If I don’t take off for space ment calls Upon all 'one’s re-1 travel via LSD it’s not because sources of humility and cour- I so delight in this uncontrolla-age. ' vbie external world. It’s because “TRIPPING” I don’t cop out on the human. * , Sl race merely because its going! Accordingly, upon flunking gets tough xhafg why you| two college courses last mid-1 stick with it tod. term, the boy has. been “trip- NEW AUTUMN HAIR STYLES PERMANENTS $ 10.50 and up Coloring - Toning Riker Bldg., FE 3-7186 frw rmUmt wCwWwm let ping” via LSD — tripping away as far as he can get from his own shamefully failing and insufficient self. “The alienated student’s use of LSD represents a frustration with reality, a sense of the fu-l Unlike Dr. Timothy Leary, we’re no renegades. We’ve accepted our membership in a species whose destiny has been■ struggle ever since it was hatched. What frustrates the kids are tility of efforts to alter the ex- the lies we tell them about real-temal world,” says Dr. Sey- ity. Our television commercials mour L. Halleck, director of alone are enough to frustrate student psychiatry at the Uni-1 anyone with their disparities be-versity of Wisconsin. | tween reality and fairy tale fic- i . _ „ „ . . tion. You never get dirty clean- I 1 ^2aL,eCk- |>ng your house If you use the kids frush-ated by reality ,g mouthwash' ,re or by what their never- assured of success and a happy failing, never-struggling par- sex life ents tell them is reality? _ 1 • ,, -You can “come on down to As to this “external world,” j sunny Florida any time you feel I feel pretty “alien” to myself. | like it with the help of your It’s not exactly the kind of j credit card. No, sir. If the kids world any person of sensibility j are rejecting membership jn can delight in. Forit is moving!their struggling species, it’s be-through Pay-Off Time — a time!cause their elders feel obliged when eVery historical mistake! to pretend they don’t belong to I made by the white-man heroes! it, either. , ; WE’VE GOT THE MGB/GT! THE FIRST AUTHENTIC GT FOR THE PRICE OF THE AVERAGE CAR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY Tyronia S. Tellish Weds Kenneth R. Lenigan i _ 31 The Howard Dicks of Novi have announced the engagement of their daughter, Gloria Lynn to Harry P. Jock Jr., son of the senior Jocks of New York. Miss Dicks has attended Schoolcraft College and her finance', whor attended Adirondack Community College is currently *serving in the United States Navy. An early November wedding is planned. Melvin Wong and Richard Van Trease ushered. WWW Following a reception at the home of the Melvin Wongs, the newlyweds left for a honeymoon in-Northern Michigan. Inn Reception ! for Couple A reception at the Norwood Inn followed the recent wedding of Gail Dianne Girard and Wayne J. Zilka. Parents of the couple are Ceil Chapman’s name is famous in the designing world not only for dressy styles, but tailored suits. Here is a typical example of hers in this three-piece suit. w w w Adaptable in any. fa brie even heavily ribbed ones, make it and stand out in your crowd. Other fabric suggestions are linens, plain or printed silks or cottons. Spadea’s | exclusive ready-to-wear sizes produce a better fit. See chart for size bq^t for you. SIZES BUST WEIGHT HIPS -LENGTH The former Tyronia Susan Tellish, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter Tellish, Rockwood," and Kenneth R. Lenigan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard E. Lenigan of First Avenue, exchanged vows recently in Saint Paul’s Methodist Church in Monroe. WWW For the evening ceremony j the bride chose a full length j white linen gown with Em-! pire waist. Her elbow length j illusion veil was secured with i a linen bow. w w w { Sweetheart roses and lilies ! of the valley made up her | bridal bouquet. w w w . Mrs. Melvin Wong was ma- > «wui*«= T nrrf„r PaHprn «jn • tron of honor for her sister I the Edward Girards of Troy -HP. order “^ 5," , „ and Air Force Capt. Ray- ! and the Henry Zilkas of South ®tate s,ze- send ^.OO .plus D10f Roslyn Street. 18’ 40 30 41 17V* ■ 30 43 33 43 lTk -From NOM of Neck to Waist Misses Size 12 requires 2% yards of 54” fabric for Jacket and Skirt and 1% yards of 42” fabric for Blouse. Mr. and Mrs. Billy B. Brazel of Onagon Trail announce the engagement of their daughter, Deborah Jane to Phitlip G. Lawson. He is the son of the Gordon W. Lawsons of Flint. The bridegroom-to-be is a student at Lawrence Institute of Technology. A Nov. 11 wedding is planned. mond Trance was best man. Fake Blooms in Lily Bed PITTSBURG, Kan. (AP) -Mrs. Dolores Myers hired a (nan to help her plant some lilies in her yard. Called inside on an errand, she told him to go ahead with the planting. Later, she returned and noticed a bright begonia in among the lilies. She found it was an artificial plant which had been on the patio near the lilies. The man-had “planted” it along with the other flowers. for postage and handling. Pattern Books No. 29, No. 30, No.| 31 and Booklets 1, 2, 3, and 4,! Sewing Tips by World Famous j Designers, are available for 50 cents each plus 10 cents postage j per book. Duchess of Windsor Pattern Book is available for $1.00. Include your name, address and zip code and mail to! Kent Girard and David Goff | SPADEA, Box 323, Dept. PX-6 ushered. M i 1 f o r d. New Jersey, 08848. Following the reception (Make checks payable to the couple left for a hone$- SPADEA). moon in New England. --------------- The bride wore a candlelight raw silk gown. Her veil I was accented with a double | Dior bow and she carried gardenias. * * * Honor attendants were Mrfc. Kent Girard and Ron Si]ka. Clothespin Uses Daughter Arrives Keep a few extra spring-type clothespins in the kitchen and use them to close the opened packages such as bread, cookies, dried beans, rice, and the like. This keeps ------------------ * ; them from drying out and los- One British household in two ing their flavor, and also has a pet. keeps them free of dust. M/Sgt. and Mrs. S. F. Turner (nee Rita Emmerth) of Biloxi, Miss., recently became the parents of a daughter, Linda Marie. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. J. Emmerth of Menominee. Street and the Louis Turners of Paddock Street. Coiffure par Anne-rDrayton Wig Distributors Beauty and Vj( Salon 4666 W. Walton Blvd. Drayton Plain* 313-673-0712 - 313-673-3408 PONTIAC MALL So petite, so sweet, so right for that extra milady needs to change a casual * hairdo into a fashion coiffure. The Perfect Gift for the College Miss Choose from 40 fashion shades over crown $ petite pastidue. All colors only 9.95. 100% human hair. Watch for Our Grand Opening of Our Livernoi* * j Salon in Detroit . , ; f Invites You and Your Family To Be Wednesday Nighters Enjoy Tender, Golden, Deep-Fried COMPLETE CHICKEN DINNERS 95c 120 Children I Under 10 .CHOICE OF POTATOES Oft VEGETABLE DINNER SALAD OR DESSERT ROLLS AND BUTTER COFFEE, TEA OR MILK SERVED EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT PONTIAC MALL CAFETERIA ONLY 4:30 to 8 P.M. Aim Pure Corners Hair Coats '■'VJ ■ \ Soft-as-butter ccfmel. The kind you'd walk miles for, before you found coats'to compare. A double-breasted classic with deep lapels. Masterful seaming . . . hand-picked detailing. 6 to 16. Camel. *75 from the 1 cuimci Collection . .. Gadabouts This js ITI The walk-about to talk aboutl Bold and high-rising . . soft and casual. Versatile gadabouts for pantt, shorts' and country clothes. Black or Brown Calf. Sizes 5 to 10. AAA ' to B widths. I PONTIAC DORIS NAYKS <1968) 1 I TELEGRAPH at HURON ROCHESTER OAKLAND MALL 1 ■ . '• *P 'Vl * TUB PONTIAC PUKSS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, Extra $20 Million to Fight Rats Seen WASHINGTON (AP) - The House, criticized for jokingly rejecting a $40-mjllion rat extermination bill in July, is expect- j ed to approve an extra $20 million to fight rats in city slums. ★ * , Sr;___ ,! j But an economy mood on Capitol Hill threatens proposed emergency allocation of $58 million to 143'critically overcrowded hospitals. The rat extermination and hospital proposals are included in a bill up for House debate today which would provide $950 million through'1971 for various federal-state health programs. * ■'8 __ 8 - 1 The hospital aid ameildment was added by the commerce committee on a party-line vote. But Republicans plan an all-out drive against the amendment, whose chief sponsor is Rep. Richard L. Ottinger, D-N.Y. • Ottinger told the rules committee last week that while, his proposal is backed by the Department of Healthl Education and Welfare; the Bridget Bureau hqs not given its approval. The proposal would be for one year. Rep. William L. Springer of IUinoft, senior GOP member of the committee, said “It would be dangerous to adopt the GARAGE BUILDING SUBURBAN GARAGE BUILDERS 1598 E. AUBURN RD., ROCHESTER Prisoner Flees on Horseback PARCHMAN, Miss. (UP!) -Billy Preston Phillips, serving a 10-year sentence for staging a shoot-out with police, escaped from the Mississippi State Penitentiary on horseback yesterday. * ★ ★ The horse later was found wandering around the Delta countryside, but Phillips was still at large. '*. ♦ 8 Authorities said Phillips,. 29, of Vicksburg clirpbed on the horse during sunrise work assignments and rode out of the penitentiary farm camp. He was a trustee. His remarks were prepared for floor delivery. Strong bipartisan support is expected, however, for another unbudgeted proposal, an amendment by Reps. Henry S. Reuss, D-Wis., and Charles Mathias, “The fund* would quickly be R-Md„ to increase the *870 mil-taken up by a few hospitals with Mon allocated for project grants plans already formed, principal- to the states by $20 milUon. ly in New York,” he said. “This! * * • * is a New York amendment, and The amendment doesn’t specially congressman, who has been I fy how this money is to be used, sold on the idea that he may get but its sponsors make clear it is a chunk of it for a hospital in his for, states to establish rat con-district is being taken in." !trol programs. PONTIAC VOTERS, make your choice now Vote Today? City Income Tax Property Tax Increase Paid for by Citizens Finance Study Committee Oakliii Coniiiity College OFFERS THE FOLLOWING SHORT COURSES; SECRETS OF MAN AS REVEALED BELOW THE EARTH AND ABOVE THE SKY (Co-Sftoutorod byCrunbrouk fiultlule ofScimutr) ' . I , Thun., Sept. 2 1-Oct. 12, Fri.. Oct. 20-7:20-9:30 P.M. Cranbrook Iswiitule of Science Auditorium — Fee $10 ' Two outstanding Archaeologists and an Astronomer will help itisc Arcnaeoiogisu ana an Astronomer win neip you search for clues to the secrets pfman.providing background knowledge for the lecture on the Stonehenge by Dr. Gerald S. Hawkins of Harvard. . SEX, MORALS AND SOCIETY Fee $12 8 Birmingham—Mon., Sept. 25—Oct. SO, 8:00-10:00 P.M., Seahofm High School * Hazel Park-Tues., Oet. 3-Nov. 7, 7:00-9:00 P.M., Jardon Vocational Center 8 Pontiac—Wed.. Sept. 20-Oct. 25, 7:00-9:00 P.M., Northern High School A Psychologist, a Sociologist and It Doctor of Medicine will examine Socio-Cultural factors, Psycho-Secual Development, Sex and Society, Issues in Conflict, and Adolescence and Sexual Conflict.* ■ WRITING FOR A MARKET ’ , Fee $15 , * Birmingham-Mon., Sept. 25-Oct. 29.8:00-10:00 P.M. Seaholm High Schoolol ★Oak Park-Wed., Sept. 20-Oct. 25, 7:00-9:00 P.M., Oak Park High School Melba Marlett, a successful author, will conduct a real writing workshop with critical evaluation of your manuscripts to make them saleable. •Co-SfiaitMortd by Adult t'duculiou DivUioni of Kotpoctfoo Sekwii- BUY! SELL! TRADE! ... USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! IMOMFIEID MIRACLE enneus ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY 9 Time to knit for fall and winter! Skeins of savings at Periney's! FOUR QZ. 100% VIRGIN KNITTING WORSTED When you're first in Color TV. there's got In be a reason! LIKE THE NEW RCA COLOR TUBE WITH 38% BRIGHTER HIGHLIGHTS RCA’s new Super Bright Hi-Lite Tube produces colors with 38 percent brighter highlights this year for the most vivid color ever. Perma-Chrome assures locked-in color fidelity during tube warm-up. RCAVICniR (sminnv In Graceful French Provincial A brighter picture this yaar Is a good raason for choosing RCA Victor Color TV. But thort art lots of othsra too. 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The visiting president will spend two days in Washington for talks with Johnson. s he walks with President Johnson dur- HONG KONG (AP) - Two ragtag armies, each led by uni-formed militiamen, battled for six hours with mortars, rifles and machine-guns in a town | near Canton, a Hong Kong Chinese said today. He claimed 20 or more died in the street lighting. Kwok Hing, 45. told of witnessing the bloodletting in the' most detailed report so far of near-anarchy in the area around the southern Chinese metropolis ' of 1.8 million. * ★ . w Most of the accounts to datej have come second- and third-' hand from travelers to the mainland. It was not possible, however, to check Kwok’s story. ' He told of crouching under a bus for six hours while the armies of men and youths in peasant clothing clashed Saturday at Sun Tong, about 30 miles east of i Canton in Kwangtung Province.! The street-to-streety fighting involved about 600 people with •uniformed militiamen leading the two groups, he said. Kwok estimated there were about 60 or 70 wounded, but said 'he could not tell which, if either unit was Maoist or opposed to Chinese Communist party leader Mao Tse-tung. Kwok said he and about a dozen other people were on a bus to Canton when it ran head-on into the skirmish area. “Most of the others ran or took cover in side streets,” he said, “but I dove under the bus and stayed crouched under it until the fight ended.” ’ “There were mortar shell ex-1 plosions and rifle and machine gun fire with patrols edging along streets and shooting at one another. It was like watching a war movie.” Kwok said the two opposing groups made no attempt to collect their dead and wounded, “they juSt left them dying there in the street.” A Japanese newsman, expelled from China, described Canton as a deserted city where foreigners are cautioned not to leave their hotels after dark and barricades are up at major intersections. 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Where some gargles kill some germs ISODINE GARGLE kills all types . . . even virus and It's concentrated for i 1 quart, s germs I ■ Ask the Cunning- mond, the Township Board last night approved a .recommendation by Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson that the estimated 3.6-mill levy figure be conveyed to the county. Richmond indicated he was against taking any action until be was presented with a proposed budget to review. Richmond criticized Johnson for not presenting his budget recommendations to board members on time. * * * He said the Charter Township j Act clearly specifies that supervisors should prepare and pre- sent proposed budgets to town-! his recommended budget was ship boards by Sept. 1. not completed. PUBLIC HEARING | He said he felt no miUage A public hearing and final ap-jtocrease would be necessary proval of the budget must be I because the township is expect-negotiated by Nov. 1. Unguent water and sewer bills declared Oakland County Coun-be assessed against the involved [ selors’ Week in the township, properties. j Some 350 school counselors its Approved was a supervisor’s the county reportedly serve proclamation that next week be I approximately 120,006 students. The board, which was given some material pertaining tt the budget last night, will meet at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the Township Hall for preliminary discussion id the budget. Johnson cited a work load and new personnel as reasons ed to gain about $114,000 in re ceipts from the new state in-cnme tax next year. DELINQUENT ACCOUNTS In other business last night, the board approved a motion that delinquent special assessment payments totaling $4,642 be placed on the next assessment roll and that $181 in de- As U. N, Delegate isith the p *p"‘Vo* Every word clearly heard RPVXNGT bpstrpm Broomfield Given Tasks A complete /Kith volume sound system in o single case • Provide* professional quality sound to audiences as large as 1000 o Works on flashlight batteries O Weighs only 22 lbs. for easy * * * Arrests last month numbered: 67—52 involving adults and 15' juveniles. Farming Confab | LANSING (AP) - The Sep-j tember meeting of 'the State1 Agriculture Commission is set for Friday at Benton Harbor. Agenda topics include grape and winery inspections, the cereal leaf beetle, West Michigan milk prices, the status of the Grand Rapids meat violation cases and proposed legislation for 1968. New 1968 Frigidaire Clothes Dryer gives you the right drying time automatically! I OF EXelllENCI.. ■ Automatic Dry Cycle. No guesswork! Dryer stops itself when clothes are dry. ■ Durable Press Care. Proper temperature plus and-of-cycle cool-down bring Durable Press items out of the dryer ready to put on or put away without ironing. m ■ Cycle-end signal tells you when to take clothes out. ■ Gentle Flowing Heat pampers fabrics. ■ No-stoop, fins mash Dacron lint screen on door. Choose From GAS or ELECTRIC “Aik Vi Today” CLAYTON'S 2133 ORCHARD LAKE ROAD Phone: 333-7052 PERSONAL CHECKING ACCOUNT If you maintain a minimum balance of $300 or if vour monthly avnragns $500 or more. You can write all checks FREE, make all FREE and rnceive a monthly statement FREE. 50 PEHS0NALIZE0 IMPRINTED CHECKS When you open your Personal Checking Account at Pontiac State Bank. TIME TO DO THE THINGS YOU WANT TO DO You'll save considerable time and trouble when you Pay-By-Check.. . When it comes to paying bills nothing savos time like a checking account. The Bank on the “GROW"’ 12 Convenient Offices Pontiac tote— Bank 1to SI 3,000 by F.D.I.C. THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 B—7 New Dorm Hours for Coeds in Effect Most Oakland University coeds who live on campus can now set their own hours of coming home under new dormitory regulations which place curfews only on freshmen under 21. The new liberalized hours for women went into effect last night as the result of dissatisfaction with last year’s hours. “I certainly feel that, our women Students are mature and -wise enough to make intelligent decisions concerning their own hours,” said Dean of Women Patricia Houtz. Oakland thus joins the growing ranks of colleges and universities who have minimized curfews for residence hall girls. ★ . ★ w “It is amazing the number of schools moving injhis direction,” reports Mrs. Houtz, who slid she has taken a survey of regulations at other colleges. Under a successful experimental program last year, senior coeds and those 21 years ctfage and over' were given keys for > admittance to dormitories after ?losiijig hours. ' juniors under'-jl were normally required to be to dorms by midnight Sunday through Thursday and 2 a.m. Friday and Saturday last year. About 300 freshman women are now required to return to their hall by these same times this year while some 350 up-perclass women ‘ are not required to observe any particular closing hour — except good judgm/eht. ' ’ ★ * Freshman coeds may have 10 special late permissions for weekdays during the semester as well as approved overnight is, Mrs. Houtz explained Tax Injunction Court Hearing Is Postponed An Oakland County Circuit Court hearing for an Injunction against the new state income ■tax was post* Iponed yester-Iday for one I week. Pontiac attorney Richard ■Kuhn is chal-llenging the tax ise voters , given no |voice when the KUHN Legislature approved the act in July. ★ it it He is seeking a court order restraining the' state from putting the new tax into effect Oct. 1. The hearing has been rescheduled for Sept. 25 before Judge William R. Beasley. City commissioners will have relatively short agenda tonight. Oiffy 11 items are scheduled for discussion, including an offer of Argonaut Rpajlty Division of General Motors to purchase cityfowned land in Aaron Ferry Park for construction of an electrical power substation. The substation would provide Pontiac Motor Division UNIVERSITY PHILOSOPHY The new policies are based on the university’s philosophy to encourage students to achieve high standards of achdemic and personal development and to grow in maturity and responsibility. * * * OU’s new Commission on Student life — made up of students, faculty and administration — proposed the changes last spring after, student hearings and approval of Chancellor Durward Varner. Agent for GM to Seek Site for Substation Church Leader Backed on Rights Fund The commissioners will also: • Receive a recommendation i readvertise for bids for new ■ sewage plant equipment. Consider a change in the zoning ordinance which allows for street dedication in multiple dwelling subdivisions before site plan approval. ★ ★ W" Pass a resolution honoring Nelse S. Knudsen, a former city commissioner, who died last week. • Hear a report on the activity of a youth group which worked with the Pontiac Police Department this summer. i * * „ * .* Receive the bus report for August. • Discuss results of the tax advisory election. SEATTLE (API - A swelling lineup of religious leaders across the nation today backed an Episcopal leader’s appeal that all faiths divert money to Negro-led groups working t improve the lot of their race. Messages of support poured in from various Protestant, Roman Catholic and Jewish officials. Hailing the plan, Dr. Arthur S. Flemming, president of the National Council of Churches, said the interdenominational organization favored reallocation of church funds to help “victims of discrimination” win justice. The president of the.American Jewish Committee, Morris Abrams of New York, said it also stood behind the call for “a major cooperative undertaking” to aid the poor in their struggle for “basic human rights.” SENDS ENDORSEMENT Catholic Bishop James Shannon of St. Paul-Minneapolis sent his endorsement of the plan “for broader ecumenical response’ ’to the crisis in slums of American cities. Numerous others messaged their approval. ★ * ★ The reaction came in sponse to a plea by Episcopal Presiding Bishop John E. Hines full-scale mobilization’ The number of passengers killed during flights made the scheduled air services of the world rose from 684 in 1965 to 908 in 1966. He Was'In/Mate, in Striped T-Shirt PENSACOLA, Fla. (AP) -Bill Rentschler decked himself out in one of the convict-striped T-shirts that are the rage among teen-agers in his home town and went riding through nearby Milton. Two police officers pegged him for an escaped convict. “But I bought this shirt,’’ protested the 17-year-old from Pace, Fla. The police took him to jail. • Rentschler telephoned h i grandmother whose explanation was enough to free him. of religious resources to underwrite efforts of Negro community-action groups. To start the process, his own church’s governing convention here is considering a proposal for shifting $3 million annually from usual church programs to back urban projects for Negroes. Wake Up Your PERISTALSIS And Be Your SMILING BEST Peristalsis Is tbs muscular action of your digestive system. When peristaltic action slows down, waste materials can build up In the lower tract. You can become Irregular, uncomfortable, stuffed. The unique laxative formula of today's Carter's Pills gives effective, temporary relief of the Irregularity by activating the slowed-down muscles of the lower tract and stimulating peristalsis. 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Zenith Premiere Days ora konnoninrr rtAnr ^ are happening now. * 3 Are Rescued Adrift in Lake MUSKEGON (UPI) - Three men stranded in Lake Michigan when their 35-cabin cruiser ran out of gas were rescued and brought ashore here by the Coast Guard yesterday. Erwin Raphael of Holland and two companions, were aboard the “Infinity R” on the way from Chicago to Saugatuck and were running in a dense fog when their fuel supply was exhausted. * ★ '* Raphael radioed a distress call and when the fog cleared, the disabled boat was spotted by a Coast Guard search plane from Traverse City. A Coast Guard boat from Muskegon located the craft off the Muskegon shore line and towed it to shore. Mon for Defense WASHINGTON (AP) - President Johnson Monday asked the Senate to confirm the nomination of Alfred B. Fitt of Michigan to be an assistant secretary of defense. Iftesjo you hear again! Ym. an of Pnsto slips into ymur snr so beautifully it’s practically un-DOtiosahU. 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That’s where Kemper Health Care income protection can help you. Tako stopt today to protect your Income in case of accident or elcknass. Maximum, $1,000 par month, depending on your income. For full datallt call... Hempstead, Barrett and Attoor “« If you want to know what a difference a GMC Truck makes, just ask. We’ll tell you about our quick new pickups that have an independent front suspension end leaf springs in back. And about our Toro-Flow diesels that turn a handsome profit for medium-duty haulers. Jintmi* Butcher- Owner And about our vans that have a 108-inch wheelbase, the longest of any van going. The gbod features GMCs offer convinced us that there's a big difference in trucks. We bet they can convince you. Stop in. Tour our place. Visit*our service department and meet the crew (the experts) who will keep your truck In prime shape. Drop by the sales department and talk to us about the edge GMC’-s have over their competition. After all, if wa didn’t think GMC Trucks were better, wa wouldn't bo in tha business of selling them. If yon think trucks are pretty much alike, ask us why we picked GMC Trucks to sell. MERRY OLDSMOBILE-GMC, Inc. 528 N. MAIN ST. ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN 48063 Phong: 651-9761 B-a ONE COLOR THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 3067 House Whips: Big Legislative Force WASHINGTON (AP) - House Republican Whip Leslie C. Ar-ends sat alongside the center aisle, counting his troops and makirfg a mental note of the absentees. On the Democratic side, Whip Hale Boggs stood at the rear of the chamber with two aides, making a list of Democrats present and voting. ★ * * The vote on an amendment to the foreign aid bill complete, Arends and Boggs disappeared Into their respective cloakrooms to telephone absent members and urge them to come to the floor. A similar scene takes place in the House during most majAr legislative battles. Arends and Boggs, as whips of their parties, have the jobs of getting enough members to the floor to uphold their parties’ positions. TURN OF CENTURY There have been whips in Congress since the turn of the century, and the British Parliament has had them since 1770. The term stems from the “whip-per in” who was the man in a fox hunt responsible for the hounds from leaving the pack. Arends, 71, sliver-maned Illinoisan who is the senior GOP member of the House, lias been his party’s whip since 1943, longer than any man in history. An effort to) replace him in 1965 failed and. he is considered solidly entrenched now. ★ * * Boggs, 53, holds his position by appointment of the speaker and the majority leader, unlike Arends who is elected by the GOP membership. The youngest member of the House when first elected at 26, the Louisiana Democrat has held his post nee 1932. * * * Each operates through deputy and assistant whips. Arends has three deputies—Reps. William H. Bates of Massachusetts, Jackson E. Betts of Ohio and Burt L. Talcott of Califomia-while Boggs has a single deputy, John E. Moss of California Under them are assistant whips serving states or regions, 14 for the Republicans and 19 for the Democrats. NO LOAFERS? Arends picks his deputy and assistant whips. “They’re loyal,” he said in an interview. “1 don’t think I’ve got a loafer in the bunch.” | The assistant Democratic whips are picked by the state or region they serve, and usually by the senior Democrat from the area. In some southern regions, it is difficult to get an assistant whip who favors the party position or who can do much to line up votes. While Arends has to contend with up to 30 potentially balky members on most issues, Democrats have 704(0 Southerners plus some conservative border staters who frequently line up with the Republicans to oppose administration proposals. Twice this year, on a measure to increase the national -debt limit, Republicans were solidly opposed, so Democrats had to rely on Southerners to .get the bill through. The first time they failed, but the second time they succeeded. ALLGUT EFFORT Republican policy positions—which signal an all-out whip effort—are taken by the party’s policy committee. Headed by Rep. Jolln J. Rhodes Jr,, a conservative from Arizona, it meets every Tuesday. About once a month, Republicans hold a conference of the entire membership under Chairman Melvin R. Laird of Wisconsin, often to discuss controversial issues on which the party 16 split Democratic policy, like that of any party in power, follows the lead of the White House. . On major issues, both pqrty whips poll their memberships, through, the assistant whips, to see where the votes lie. Then they can use what Arends calls | “persuasion” on the doubtful members. When crucial amendments come up on the flow, the whips put in “whip calls” their members. Arends and Boggs estimate they can get their troops to the floor in about 15 minutes. So far this year, however, Republicans have apparently had more success at this than Democrats. ★ ' ★ ★ “The underdog tries border,’ Arends said. “We’re out to make a record, particularly the freshmen. They’re a little more determined,” ★ * Boggs put it differently. “The Republicans do a better job because they’re the minority. There’s a natural cohesiveness in the minority. You’re not responsible for a program.” On a number of important is- sues this year, most notably the President’s anticrime bill, the -Democratic whip organization did almost no work, since it appeared extremely, doubtful toe bill could be passed in the form the administration wanted. ★ ★ ★ By picking its spots, the Democratic leadership and whip system has loooked good, when it was passing the debt limit creases, funds for model cities and the D.C. reorganization bill, and bad when it did little on the crime bill and on the ill-fated rat .extermination measure whicu was voted down. The electric eel can release its current in machine gun-like bursts of about 400 shocks PONTIAC VOTERS, make your choice now Vote Todoy? City Income Tax (with 3 mill property (of $4 pm $1,000 of Property Tax Increase Paid for by Citizens Pinanea Study Committee You can buy a color TV lor what it costs to convert from oil heat togas. Call Hot Line for the facts. 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OPEN SUNDAY 10-6 P.M. —Daily 8-8 P.M. Now-low, low prices on -wt PATIOS • POUCHES 26400 W. Eight MH« Rd. IK Mile West of Telegraph *“**<*• | Detroit ) Downriver iBIrndnghomdouthOOldl Toledo | Pstoskoy PR. 1-S810|444.i2|2 | AY. 5-15951 Royal Oak |L.7-270o| CH. M26113474462 We Design « We Manufacture • We Install • We Guarantee mm XN! THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 C—1 Champ St. Louis Now Must Wait for AL Opponent Cardinal Pilot foresaw Flag Last Spring PHILADELPHIA (AP) — Manager Red Schoendienst said in the spring that the St. Louis Cardinals would win the 1967 National League pennant. The Cardinals made him a prophet in September. "I told only one guy in the spring that we were going to win,” disclosed Schoendienst as he stood in the middle of the St. Louis messing room watching his players use champage bottles for fire hoses, dousing everyone in sight. ★ * ★ v ■ ‘‘It was in Fort Myers,” Schoendienst related. “We were playing the Pirates and I told Danny Murtaugh, ‘don’t tell anybody, but we’re going to win the pennant.’ If you don’t believe it, ask Danny.” Schoendienst should have told his old roomie, Stan Musial, who now is his boss as Cardinal general manager. Mu-sial, his suit wet with the bubbly stuff, shaving cream across the back, confessed he felt the Red Birds were a first division team, no more. The Cardinals clinched the flag Monday night with a 5-1 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies as Bob Gibson pitched a three-hitter. A four-run sixth Inning after being held hitless for five by lefty Dick Elsworth did the trick. Julian Javier singled home what turned out to be the winning run. Schoendienst said the secret to the Cardinals’ 11th pennant was the ability to pick each other up when it was necessary. The club lost pitcher Ray Wash-bum with a broken thumb, outfielder Curt Flood with a tom shoulder muscle and Gibson with a broken leg. “Bobby Tolan picked up for Flood and even helped at first base for a while when Orlando Cepeda was hurt,” Schoendienst said. “Nelson Briles came out of the bullpen to help when Gibson was injured. Our young pitchers made up for the loss\)f Washburn.” CLUB WAS DOWN Schoendienst recalled that when Gibson was felled by a line drive off the bat of Roberto Clemente July 15 “the club was down. I said, ‘why can’t we pick up for Gibspn,’ and Briles came out of the bullpen and did the job.” „ The trade for Roger Maris, acquired from the New York Yankees, also came In for comment from the manager. “It enabled us to move Mike Shannon to third base where he did a great job. He worked hard at it. And Maris got some big hits for us and did well defensively." Schoendienst had special praise for Dick Hughes, the 29-year-old rookie pitcher. “I felt all along that Hughes would be one of our best pitchers.” Musial, who roomed with Schoendienst in 1946 when the Cardinals won the pennant, complimented his manager on a great job. “He stuck in there with our young pitchers” said Musial. “He didn’t try to overmanage, you know what I mean. He was perfect for this group.” ST. LOUIS PHILADRLFHIA ab r h bl ab r h M Brock If S 2 2 I TToytor 3b 4 0 0 0 4000 10 0 1 Callii i Goni White lb 1b 2 10 0 Gonzaltz If MCarvor c 4 0 0 0 GOIIve> A Johnson rf 2 0 0 0 Rojas 2b 2 0 0 0 Tolan rf 2 0 10 Wine ts 3 0 10 Maxvlll ss 4 12 0 Ellsworth p 0 0 0 0 Gibson p 2 0 0 0 Millar ph 10 0 0 Wise P 0 0 0 0 - Clamant ph 1 0 0 0 • It 004 0 1 1—9 ...____r.„_ III III 1 00—1 Catcher's Interference charged to Oliver. E—G.Oliver, Roles# CaTiison. DP— Philadelphia 1. LOB-St.Louis 6# Philadelphia 4. 2b—Brock, Shannon, White. SB—Brock. § mm fitt Javier. SF—Flood. -Brock. S—Ellsworth, Gibson, R ER BB SO ... I..........» 3 1114 Ellsworth d.,6-7) A 4 4 3 1 5 Wise ...... 2 2 1 1 1 1 G. Jackson (W,134) -Gibson. T—2; A—10,433. Tigers Cant Rid Selves of Two Boston 'Thorns' AP Wir.pholo CHAMPAGNE BATH - Orlando Ce-peda’s celebration of the St. Louis Cardinals’ 11th National League pennant Tuesday night (with a 5-1 triumph at Philadelphia) includes a champagne shower from an unidentified teammate. By BRUNO L. KEARNS Sports Editor, Pontiac Press Yastrezemski, Jones and Santiago! Sounds like a Notre Dame backfield, but they couldn’t be because they didn’t play for any ties last 'night, as they helped the Boston Red Sox to a 6-5 victory in 10 innings before 42,674 fans at Tiger Stadium. The Detroit defeat threw the American League race into a three-way tie with Boston and Minnesota while the White Sox were still a half game behind after losing 3-2 to the California Angels. Carl Yastrzemski, the triple crown leader of the American League,' and Dalton Jones, both of whom have feasted on Tiger pitching this year, delivered the seat dusters in the 9th and 10th innings, respectively, helping to beat Detroit for the 10th time in 17 games this season. Yastrzemski, who has eight homers Joe Don Looney Plays Out Option WASHINGTON (AP) - Running back Joe Don Looney is playing out the option year on his contract with the Washington Redskins of the National Football League, Redskins’ Coach Otto Graham said Monday. Looney has not signed a new contract for the current season and has received his last offer, Graham said. Looney was the No. 1 draft choice of the New York Giants in 19(4 and played with the Baltimore Colts and Detroit Lions before joining the Redskins last Re was reported to be earning.about 125,000 a year, but under.NFL regulations will be subject to a 10 per cent cut if he plays out his option this year. If hp does not sign with the Redskins before May 1, he will tie free to negotiate with other teams. * STRAIGHT AHEAD — Milford unleashed a potent air game last week in its season-opening grid game, but the Redskins expect to utilize the ground offense more Friday night at Livonia Clarenceville in their Wayne-Qakland loop kickoff. Providing the blocking along oqe side of the line likely will be 6-2 junior end Mark Giegler (left), plus seniors Robin Andrews (center), a 210-pound tackle and 170- TAKE LEAD pound guard Rick Falardeau. against the Tigers, more than any other team, drove his 40tb of the year into the second deck off reliefer Fred Lasher with one out In the 9th to tie the score at 5-5. It was the first home run given up by Lasher, who has been superb in relief for the Tigers this year. Then there’s the Jones boy from Baton Rouge, La., who uses his bat like Clyde Beattie uses a whip for taming Tigers. THIRD HOMER Jones, a 6-1 and 180 pound third base-man, hit only his third homer of the season, but it was enough to beat the Tigers. To add a little icing to his feat, he speared a line drive in the bottom of the 10th off the bat of Bill Freehan to end the game. Jones was also the Tiger tamer on May 24 when his home run defeated Denny McLain, 14), in Detroit. McLain started last night and'was hit hard, giving up three runs in the top of the first. Jones also helped in the scoring with a single. He was on base all five times during the night, four on hits and once via a two-base error by Dick McAuliffe. * * * The Tigers came back in the second to tie it 3-3 with a homer by Norm Cash, double by Freehan, walks to Don Wert and McAuliffe and a big two-run single by Jerry Lumpe. McLain again started the third by walking Mike Andrews. Yastrzemski’s second hit and a sacrifice fly to Reggie Smith gave the Sox the lead, 4-3, as Fred • Gladding finished the inning. Cash answered the boos of the big throng with his second homer in the 6th ining to tie it.,.The Tiger reliefers looked as if they had things under control fo the next five innings. McAuliffe made the best defensive play of the night in the 8th when — Jones on third and Rico Petrocelli in first — he snared a fast bounding ball, tagged Petrocelli and touched first to get catcher Russ Gibson. Lasher got out of the jam as Jose Tartabull flied out to leave Jones stranded on third. Houston Ripped Florida State MSU Wary of Foe EAST LANSING to — Coach Duffy Daugherty says his mood of “cautious hopefulness” has been shaken by the scouting report on Houston, the Michigan State opponent in the Spartan opener this Saturday. “Dave Smith, who scouted them for us, reports they .are an outstanding team,” said Daugherty. “They had Florida State 33-0 before they started to put in the reserves,” Houston won its opener last Friday night 33-13. * * ★ “We haven’t been a good opening team when the opponent has had one game under its. belt,” said Daugherty. “You make more glaring mistakes in an opening game than any other time.” -Houston, coached by former Spartan assistant Bill Yeoman, topped the nation in total offense" last fall. Daugherty said the game had been scheduled before Houston became a football power. “If we had known they Were going to be this tough, maybe we wouldn’t have scheduled them," Daugherty quipped. "That shows what happens when you try to help someone out. “We’re not saving anything for Southern California,” Daugherty added, referring to the second opponent. “We r Lions, Packers May Move Rematch Game GREEN BAY, Wis. (UPI) - The owner of the Detroit, Lions says the second game with the Green Bay Packers Oct. 8 may be shifted to Milwaukee, or played gn Monday if the Detroit Tigers get into an American League playoff. “It takes some pretty complicated figuring,” said William Clay Ford, the Lions’ president. “But if the Tigers get in a playoff and especially if there should be a rain delay in there, we might not be able to get in our stadium. “Then we’d dq one of two things-— we might, play in Detroit Monday night/ or we might play in Milwaukee,” Ford said. want to win this game as much as any on the schedule.” Daugherty said he has not received a game film of the Houston opener, a usual courtesy. “We understarid Florida State asked that there ‘be no exchange,” he said. “They play Alabama next. I’d probably make the same decision,’’ he added. “Houston would be foolish to hurt themselves.” Meanwhile, he said, Yeoman wired Daugherty asking what half he would use in the game—meaning the brand name. “An oblique spheroid,” Daugherty wired back, referring to the shape. John Wyatt was on the’ mound in the 8th when A1 Kaline started with a single. Horton sacrificed and Northrup sent a 2-2 pitch to left field for a 5-4 lead as Kaline scored. Cash was walked intentionally, and the strategy worked as Freehan struck out and Don Wert popped to short center. Ystrmskl If 4 2 3 2 Lasher p 0 0 0 0 R Smith cf 3 111 Mathews ph 10 0 0 Scott ib 3 0 0 1 Marshall p 0 o 0 o DJones 3b. 5 14 2 Kalina rf Gibson Stephnsi Siebern Wyatt p 0 0 0 0 Wart 3b 10 10 McLain p Aflwi GBr rown ph 10 0 0 E—McAuliffe. DP-Boston X, Detroit 1. LOB—Boston 10, Detroit I. 2B—Yastrzemski, Freehan, Northrup. HR—Cash 2 (21), Yastrzemski (40), D. Jones (3). SB -R. Smith. S—McLain, Scott, R. Smith. M R ER BB SO Intrepid Earns America's Cup NEWPORT, R. I. (AP) - Amercia yet retains her grip on some prized possessions, such as the gold in Ft. Knox, the Liberty Bell — and the America’s Cup. Yachting’s Holy Grail, which has nfev-er left these shores in the 113 years of its existance, will remain on the shelf of the New- York Yacht Club for at least another three yearn. Intrepid, the American cup defender, saw to that Monday by giving the Australian challenger, Dame Pattie, her fourth and final defeat. The winless Dame put up a game fig^L* in moderate winds which she was designed for but, as Jock Sturrock, her skipper said after the race: “We didn’t’ go faattaoj^gh.” Undaunted by America’s decisive 20th straight defense of the cup, the British challenged for the trophy minutes after Commodore Percy Chubb of the New York Yacht Club stepped ashore. The challenge, for 1970, came from the Royal Dorset Yacht Club of Weymouth, England. Another challenge is expected from Baron Marcel Bich, a Frenchman. France never has challenged before. Pennant Race at Glance American League Be- To Won Lost Pet. hind Play DETROIT .......... 85 <6 .563 — 11 Boston ........... 85 66 .563 «-• 11 Minnesota ........ 85 06 .503 — 11 Chicago 85 17 .559 % 10 Detroit — At home (6), Boston 1, Sept. I,; New York 1, Sept. 20; Celifornla 4, Sept. 28, 2», 30, Oct. I; A*ay(4), Weihipgton 3, Sept. 33 (2). 24; New York 2. sept. 2$, 24, ' Boston — At horn, (4), Cleveland,2, Sapt. 24, 27; Minnesota 1. Sept. 30, Oct. I. Away (7), Detroit l. Sept. 19; Cleveland 3, Sapt. 20. 21; Baltimore 4, Sept. 22 (2). 33.- 34. Minnesota — at homt (I), Kansas City 2. Sapt. JO. 21; Now York 3, Sept. 22. 23, 24; Celllornlo 3, t«Pl. *5. 3*. 37. Away (3), Kansas City 1, Sept, iff Boston 3, Sept. 30, Oct. 1. Chicago — At homo (3). Washington 3, Sept. 3*. 'elllomli 2, Sept. 10, 20; 24; Kansas City 2, Sept. Angels Defeat White Sox as Race Tightens From Our Wire .Services , Minnesota’s Ted Uhlaender and California’s Rick Reichardt delivered the big late inning hits in their respective games to keep the American League pennant race at a torrid pace. Uhlaender’s single in the 10th inning driving in pinch-runner Pat Kelly, and the six-hit pitching of Jim Kaat helped Minnesota a 2-0 triumph over Kansas City. * - * * On the West Coast, after the White Sox tied it 2-2 in the 8th, Reichart’s two-out single in the 9th off reliefer Bob Locker scored Roger Repoz with the winning run in the California 3-2 victory. 9 In the other game, three Baltimore pitchers combined to shut out New York, 24). The White Sox started the game in a four-way deadlock for the lead with Minnesota, Boston and Detroit and conld have taken a one-half game lead with a victory. But Reichardt’s clutch hit snapped the Sox’ five-game winning streak and left them trailing the Twins, Red Sox and Tigers. With one out in the ninth, Don Mincher singled to right, then gave way to pinch runner Repoz. WINNING RUN Repoz tagged up and took second on Jimmie Hall’s fly to deep center, then scored the winning run on Reichardt’s single to center. The victory was the fourth in a row for the fifth-place Angels. Ricky Clark, the Angels’ starter, had a one-hitter going and had retired 17 batters .in a row when the White Sox > struck for two unearned runs in the eighth inning and tied the game 2-2. 1 Ken Boyer led off with a grounder to short and was safe as Jim Fregosi fumbled the ball for an error.' With one out, Ron Hansen beat out,an Infield hit to advance pinch runner Tommie Agee to second. Agee stole third and scored as Rocky Colavito bounced a single off the glove of'third baseman Leo Rodriguez, with pinch runner Buddy Bradford racing to third on the hit. After Curt Simmons replaced Clark on the mound, Bradford scored the tying run as second baseman Bobby Knoop tossed out pinch hitter Smoky Burgess. The Angels clipped Cisco Carlos for an unearned run in the second inning and knocked out the Chicago starter in the sixth while increasing their lead to 2-0. BOBBLES BALL Reichardt singled with two out in the second, took third on Bob Rogers’ single and continued home when center fielder Ken Berry hobbled the ball. In the sixth, Rodriguez singled, was bunted to second and scored on a single by Fregosi. Don McMahon then relieved Carlos, pitched out of further trouble and checked the Angels until the eighth, when he went out for a pinch hitter. Jim Hunter, 11-16, gave up only three hits for Kansas City until the 10th, when Bob Allison started the Twins’ twoout rally with a single to left. , After Rod Carew walked, Pat Kelly ran for Allison and Uhlander snapped to center, scoring Kelly, and Carew also scored when Joe Nossek hobbled the ball for an error. MINNESOTA h KANSAS CITY £!!“br?»' 1 • * » sowjtfcjb 4 0 2 4 3 0 Webster lb Oliva Allison if 4 ( Ktlly pr o 1. wi Volgsplnp if 0 0 0 0 RudMb ' 0 0 0 0 _ 3 10 0 Jackson rf 3 0 0 0 Uhlaentfr cf 4 0 1 1 Nossek cf 4 0 10 zimrmo" c 4 0 0 0 Roof c 3000 Kaot p 3 0 0 0 Duncan ph 10 0 0 Hunter p 3 0 0 0 Kublak ph 10 0 0 34 2 5 1 Total 35 0 6 0 000000000 2-2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 £-0 PSBB K.v:»; ,.NKSi SfisE B2uK,-n-“‘-c"* L 4 0 0 0 12 *4Bp—keel (Jackson). T—2:0 CHICAGO CALIFORNIA 4 0 0 0 LRodrger 36 4 1 1 0 4 0 0 0 Johnstone cf 3 0 0 0 * 5 9 0 Fregosi ss 4 0 11 3 0 10 Mincher lb 4 0 10 1 1 0 0 Repoz pr 0 10 0 3 0 0 0 Hell rf 4 0 0 0 3 0 10 Reichardt If 4 1 2 1 .... 0 10 0 Rodgers c 3 0 10 Mortln c 0 0 0 0 Knoop 2b 3 0 0 0 Colovito rf 3 0 11 RCIork p 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Simmons p 0 0 0 0 2 04 0 Rolas p 100 0 10 0 1 0 0 0 0 Ward If Bradford Voss Morale ______ Carlos P 2 0 0 ( McMahon p 0 0 0 0 Williams ph OOO'O UNUSUAL CLUTCH PLAY BY TIGER — Detroit’s Dick base runner Rico Petrocelli (6) who was retreating to first McAuliffe (with glove on) skids into foul territory at first and beat Gibson to the bag while' holding Dalton Jones bn base in the eighth, inning Mondpy nighf lifter making rare third base in the none-out situation, Umpire Ed Runge makes unassisted double play. The Tigers’ second sacker fielded a the call at the left and first baseman Norm Cash is behind sharp grounder by Russ Gibson (falling at right), tagged out McAuliffe. v cOU* California €—Berry, 30 2 3 2 Total *hon winning run scon ilng run scortd. 01 000 02 0-2 . 910001 001—1 McCraw. Fregosi. DP— LOG—Chicago 2, California Carlos ............51-3 * 2 McMahon .......... 12-3 0 0 Simmons ........... 1-3 0 0 Rota (W.11-0) .11-3 0 0 T—2:14. A—11.073. C—S THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1907 Cardinals Led From June 18 emmntMtMndM* with |Bj[ elfir at lOo tr 2/26*^ 60 KING EDWARD AmtriM'« Urgnt Selling Clgtr ST. LOUIS (AP)-The St Louis Cardinals moved into the National League lead June Vi fought off two challenges from the Chicago Cubs In July and then roared to their second pennant in four years. Manager Red Schoendinst’s Cardinals battled with Cincinnati in the early months of the When In Doubt See Hanoute HH| And Ask for George Harold ll» Mindly MM Manager at Al Hanoute't. Guorgu hat baan wtth A) lor 16 •uccattful yoan tat" littldo and out And hi know* haw to put you In tho but car for your illdi and your pockatbook. For a groat buy on a groat oar ga to Hanouto's and atk for Oootgo. Al Hanoute's Chevrolet-Buick, Inc. 209 N. Park Blvd., Lake Orion MY 2-241T UMVERSM GENEVE le couturier de la montre ■man ircoDcam® National League race, but injuries to key players put the Reds into a tailspin and St. Louis jumped to a 3# game lead at the mid-season All-Star Game break. * ★ * A torrid first 44 games by left-fielder Lou Brock, the Cards' leadoff Utter, enabled St. Louis to start the season at the top of pack. During, the span, Brock cracked 13 home runs, drove in 37 runs, stole 22 bases and Ut .348. But over the long haul, first baseman Orlando Cepeda was the Cardinals’ most consistent offensive threat. Cepeda battled for the batting champion-ship much of the season and had driven in more than 100 runs by the end of August. HURLER SIDELINED Most Carinal boosters thought championship hopes were shattered July 15 when a line drive off the bat of Roberto Clemente of Pittsburgh broke a bone in pitcher Bob Gibson’s right leg. But St. Louis’ young pitching staff quickly filled the gap left by the loss of a 20-game winner for seven weeks. Gibson’s injury was just , a other example of what the Cardinals did all season. ■■ Gibson was injured, St. Louis had a four-game lead. When foe big right-hander returned Sept. 7 his teammates owned comfortable U#-game margin. ★ ★ ★ A 24-year-old right-hander, Nelson Briles was one big reason for the Cardinals’ post All-Star Game surge. Briles came out of the bullpen to replace Gibson in the starting rotation and responded with an eight-game winning streak and a 13-5 ark. Possibly the most unexpected pitching help came from Dick Hughes, who had spent nine years In the minor leagues, led the Cardinals with 14 victories. Even the little things are important in a football game. Take those little white stripes on a football. Now, would you think anyone would care if they were there or not? A lot of folks card and among them is Id Wichert, recreation director at Bloomfield HUlSf-wno was pressed into service as coach of the HUHr Andover High School football team because of tjhe teacher, contract dispute which sidelined the regular coach, mm Tho Tri-Compax Chronograph simplifies, calculations and timing problems. This superbly accurate watch has a stop watch mechanism with minute and hour recorder, It also indicates the date, day of week, month and moon phases. It is waterproof*, shockproof and has a tachymetric division measuring spoedi above 60 km, on a basis of 1,000 meters, one mile. Site. In fourtuun karat fold $480. Chippewas Lose QB Bob Miles MOUNT PLEASANT (UPI) Bob Mites, quarterback for Central Michigan University’s football team, has broken Ms teg and will be out for the rest of the season. ,* * * The university said Monday that Mites, from Royal Oak, the first-string quarterback, broke a bone in his left leg during Cental’s 23-21 defeat of Bradley Saturday. FINAL FLOORING OF FOE-Grand Rapids’ 239-pound heavyweight hopeful Buster Mathis (right) stands over Kansan Ron Marsh for the fifth and final time Monday night in their Madison Square Garden bout. Referee Herbie Kronowitz moves in from the left to halt the fight in the fourth round. It was the eighth knockout victory in a row for the unbeaten Mathis. »W> 2 Only oamu Kh*dul«d. Today', Oamof Chicago (Horlen 17-6) al California (Mc-Glothlln 114), night Mlnniaafa (Boswall 13-11) at Kansas City (Nashll-Vi), twilight Seaton (Stango 8-10 or Morohoad 3-4) at Detroit (Lolich 11-12 or Sparma 1M>. Buster Busts Foe; Wants Joe Frazier Wichert Was on the job Friday as Andover entertained Oak Park and he had a bad afternoon. Hills lost the game, 26-20, a good reason for Wichert to be in less than a jolly mood, but adding to Ms discomfort was Oak Park’s use of a football without white rings. ★ ★ ★ "We use a rubber ball, and they used a leather one,’’'Wichert was saying Monday. “Ours had the wMte rings according to the rides, but their leather ball didn’t. PASSING BALL or* loaruer it a-uJ&L^ Chicago at CallhMnla, night' Kansas City at Mlnnasota Naw York at Ddiwi iilgM NEW YORK (AP) — Unde- Johansson in Stockholm or Go-feated Buster Mathis and Joe Frazier, amateur rivals In the Olympic Trials three yean ago, appear to be heading on a collision course in the pro ranks today. “I want Frazier,’’ bellowed Buster, trimmed down to a svelte 239# pounds, after hel dropped 186-pound Ron Marsh one of a syndicate of wealthy five times in stopping the fitting Kansas schoolteacher in 1:13 of file fourth round at Madison Square Garden Monday night. November. Johansson, with Jimmy Iselin. SIMILAR BACKING 88 bid thick-necked giant from Grand Rapids. Frazier has similar syndicate behind Mm PhiladelpMa The Garden mentioned Dante The onetime 300-pound blimp Cam, > tall, 229-pound Italian may get Frazier but not of^jziMfitewdtfit away. Frazier, 17-0, ranked first by Ring Magazine and eighth by the World Boxing Association, has an Oct 17 date with Tony Dohle in Philadelphia. He saw Buster’s debut as Garden main even ter. Switch'Farm Leaguers NEW YORK (UPI)—The New York Yankees Monday flounced the acquisition of infielder Len Boehmer from Cincinnati’s Buffalo farm club while the Reds claimed pitcher Bill Henry from the Yankees' Syracuse farm club in the International League. No price increase and still 90 Proof. Fleisdunannfc Preferred is as fine a whiskey as money can buy. •w York ...... 56 *3 x—Clinched pennant Monday-, Rnulti St. Louis 5. Philadelphia 1 Today-, Loo Angola, (Dry, _ _ i PPM 124) at Now York (Rohr 0-0), night , St. Louis (Hughes 144) ot Philadelphia (BunnlM 14-13). night Son Francisco (Parry 14-15) at Chicago CJinklM 13-12) Cincinnati (Nolan 12-7) at i (Nlekro 114), night Pittsburgh (Moose 04) at Housto Hoff 04), night Wednesday's Gamas Los Angeles at New York, night ft. Louis at AiiMatiMa, night San Francisco at Chicago CBcIllMtl at Atlanta, nTght Pittsburgh at Houston, night OLSM Defeated by St. Anthony Jerry Sinkel toured the two-mile course at Rouge Park yesterday in 10:16 to lead Detroit St. Antbonytoa 1942 cross country victory over Orchard Lake St. Mary. Andy Jugan placed third to lead OLSM. It was a nonleague meet and the first of the season for the Orchard Lake squad. "And theirs was a red ball and a good passing one,” Wfi-! chert added. “We complained to the head i *''V 'hf ff WHITE STRIPE champion Nino Benvenuti. Cane made an impressive debut here by stopping Jerry Tomaaetti, 199, of Scranton, Pa., fit 2:19 of the first round of another 16 rounder on the card. . To this suggestion, Buster Buster, now 21-0 with 15 repeated “I want Frazier.” knockouts but unrahked, may take on faded Brian London of Britain for promoter Ingemar Flint Golfers Win Best-Ball Tourney A Flint twosome of Steve Braun and Larry Cunningham bested a couple of Pontiac teams in a playoff over the weekend in taking the Waterford Hill Country Club best-ball championship. Braun and Cunningham turned in a 66 to share the top spot with the teams of Clyde Skinner-Truman Hammltt and Paul Bada-Goerge Hammltt. In the playoff, Braun and Cunningham carded a birdie on the first hole to win the event Skinner and Truman Hammltt birdted the fourth hole to claim second place. Mathis beat Frazier In the Olympic Trials in 1964 and that beat the Philadelphian again shortly afterwards in a workout In California. But Buster broke thumb and Frazier replaced him on the team. Marsh, 6foot and 53# pounds lighter than the 63 Mathis, was Buster’s eighth straight knock-victim. Marsh, 22-2, said It was the first time he was floored or stopped. nffidal about the If xit he said it was chert said. back to Kefgen this week if the teachers and board of education settle their contract differences. "I was looking forward to the Clarkston game,” said Wichert, I told the other coaches I didn’t want to go out as a loser.” / Pacers Ready for Jug Spots DELAWARE, Ohio (AP) -The nation’s finest 6year-old pacers were tff draw for post ons today for Thursday’s renewal of the rich Little Brown Jug/ Fabulous Romulus Hanover, shooting/for the second teg In pacing’s triple crown, is favored to tatyethe big pot in the $80,000 Jug, rnulus, son of Dancer er-Romola Hanover, al-holds a victory In the essenger Stake, the first teg of the triple. Trainer-driver Billy Haugh-ton, who will guide Romulus, is after his third Jug triumph. Haughton won with Quick Chief in 1955 and Vicar Hanover in 1964. The pacing classic will be contested at the Delaware County Fairgrounds, one of the nation’s fastest one-haU mile tracks. to some other type, s• they probably cotdd (day with a watermelon if both okay/it. Whether It would have made any difference if Oak Park used a red ball/with white stripes or one without stripes or a white one with/red stripes is difficult to say. / •k ★ Hr Wichert made the point that Oak Park had red uniforms and the red ball blended well. And the Oak Park passing game worked well as the team came up with four TD passes and 244 yanls In the air. Wichert will turn the reigns Half a Stride Good Enough Dave Galloway edged teammate Butch Fenton by half a stride for first place yesterday as Waterford TownsMp took the measure of Oxford, 21-38, in cross country. Both runners were timed on the Waterford course in 10:28. Dennis Clack and Doug Bass finished third and fourth for Oxford wMch lost Its first meet in three outings. DeWayne Russell was fifth and Bill Martin sixth for Waterford. How did Mathis look to Mm? "Looking from where I was looking most of the night, he looked very good,” quipped Marsh. "He’s surprisingly fast and 1$ very strong. He’s got lots of power. He could give Frazier a lot of trouMe.” The near-sighted Marsh deljtb-eratedly butted Mathis In a corner in the final seconds cfj the second round. "I lost my head,” admitted Marsh. It almost cost him Ms And quite a value. ODDS & ENDS CARPET Over 200 Pieces Priotd $0 From Am ATTENTION nSHENBI-HUSIEIIS Cabin-Camper-Trailer Special! Indoor-Outdoor Carpet 6 Colors 79 Only lq. Yjd. 3750 DIXIE HWY. FE 2-2234 DMnONfUMS, MICHIGAN OR 3-2100 00 3-3311 J 1 : — Pontiac Press,Hole-in-One Club Admits yTt't’N. . /• a « % % v *\ /< t t i « v\ 0 FRANCIS GREEN /’ » » « t t * ’ ’ I* • » t «1 » ♦ *.* 1 for acing the 190-yard t t » • v * % . I No. 3 hole at Morey’s \ % § J % / ' Golf Course. He carded a 41 for the round. Is That Enough Money to Pay 5 Off All YourBills? MffeWNER’s'utU MAE Gets You Complutely Out of Dubtl Borrow AR Tho Way top$5,000 On Your Homo Equity U*I ■ $MM - $158 Par Month ■ $MM - $97.23 Par Month ■ $1,M$ - $49:50 Par Month jg LaMar Payment* Omp a Xangrr Period stho Available | ■ ■ ..■ ..... ...........m' III 1 ■ No Closing Costs... No Application Fans... " 5 I No Cost for Complete Insurance Loon Protection g S FAMILY ACCEPTANCE CORPORATION S * ■ Oil NatMni BuMiag - 1 FE 8-4022 ! ■UUUUUUUUUUUUUUB. 1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 C—8 No Bone to Pick-^Duffy I Pros Bite Wrong Han By DUFFY DAUGHERTY Head Football Grach Michigan State University Pro football is biting the hand that feeds it —Ahe college football player. / It used tooe’an honor for a college seiuor to play in ah All-Star game but now the pros frownydn games not of their own choosing. The pros would iove it if the College All-Star game at Chica-/go and the American Football Coaches Association game in Atlanta were called off. Chances are they’d use the sites and dates. Hie Chicago game once signified the kickoff of the pro football season. Now, if a College graduate plays in if, he risjjs being cut by his new pro team because it has already started practice. Time was when the pros didn’t work out until after the All-Star Game. NO FARM SYSTEM We have no bone to pick with pro football but with a merger of the National and American Football Leagues in the works it’s about time the pro promoters began leaning over backwards to cooperate with the colleges and the stars they produce. Colleges are not farm system for pro football. ReciWingsAx Two Players, Sign More Last June an Aimed Forces game between college stars of 1966 was set for Frankfurt, Germany. It was called off because NFL Commissioner Pete Ro-zelle refused to give the game his blessing. One team was to represent the Artny, the other the Air Force. Pro football fumbled a goodwill opportunity.] The pros inferred that some individuals would profit by the Armed Forces game. Actually, nobody was to get any more than expenses. Some college coaches are up in arms that this game was torpedoed hy fellows they helped in the past. ★ ★ ★ The pros asserted some of their upcoming stars, who cost them nothing more than a year’s salary, would be exposed to injury- in Germany. Injury? My left flanker. exhibition' games. Now they play five and six. They seem to switch franchises or create a new one wherever a new municipal stadium or baseball park is built. They want a finger in! every pie. LOST POWER Maybe pro football’s moguls j forget that two years ago somei colleges permitted stars to sign) contracts right between the goal | posts at bowl game. This is no' longer necessary because the leagues no longer fight over a player. No team has to pay bonuses up to $400,000 for one man. The college stars have lost their bargaining power. Promoters are getting all the benefits of calling their game a sport rather than a business. If they’re not careful they may lose their claim to exemption Impressive Victories [SiSSS] Earn State Ratings ! DEAD-ALIVE i Pro teams used to play twolfrom antitrust laws. TALL TASK — Big Willie Washington, 6-7 and 240 pound defensive end of the Pontiac Firebirds, will have a task as big as he is Saturday night when the F-Birds meet the Mt. Clemens Arrows at Wisner Stadium in what should be the big grudge game of the MFL. Mt. Clemens Next Foe Big Willie Firebird Long Arm The long arm of Willie Wash-i of the defensive stars in the ington has been a big factor in Pontiac 7-« triumph over Ypsi- the surprising play of the Pontiac Firebirds in the Midwest I Football League this season. Saturday night Bjg Willie and the F-Birds will get their tough-, .... est assignment when they meetl Wlllle made key P,ays the Mt. Clemens Arrows at Wis- a,on« w,th micld'e linebacker lanti almost two weeks ago. Pontiac was idle last Saturday and head coach Tom Tracy made special praises for Big movies of the victory. Mt. Clemens has former Hillsdale College quarterback Pat Brown, former Toronto Argonaut Steve Rogin and ex-All County star Ron Bishop as the signal calling crew. Impressive victories over Midland and Femdale last Friday earned Pontiac Central and Royal Oak Dondero rankings jamong the top 10 Class A high schools in the season’s first Associated Press state football poll. ! Central’s Chiefs dumped Midland, 21-0, and drew 41 votes, 'only four less than Dondero who routed Femdale, 25-7, and took up residence right where it left off last fall, in the fifth spot. ! Hazel Park and Birming-! ham Seaholm drew berths in the second 10 while Walled j Lake and Pontiac Northern are among the 20-30 grouping. No other county school was rated in Class B, C or D, although Dry den (north of Rochester) is tied for sixth I in “D‘\ Battle Creek Central,, Saginaw j Buena Vista and Galesburg-Au-j jgusta, as might be expected, 'grabbed the top sjiots in Classes i A, B and C. / ; Sports writers and sportscast-ers at -AP rhember newspapers and broadcast stations across I the stajte picked Adrian Catholic | Central as the top team in Class I D. CLASS A | (Team, Record I 1. Baffle Creek Central (1-0) l 2. Kalamazoo Central (1-0) tiac surpassing the 5,600 which ,?r'.c°c.n°rlo.o) cla?h last year. / ! o-o, Tickets in advance are avail-| ,J; JU~X KtV-J)” able at Osmun’s, (jiff’s, Bob-,,,^,^0^?^ HH ’r% * gaaa 1 “ Lansing Sexton, ' Birmingham Seaholm; Harper Woods Notre Dame, Mount Pleas- SPORTING a •hums Classes C and D were sepa-j: •mmimi rated for the first time in the ! DDI poll this year.* ! IIKIIlllw Battle Creek Central topped J For Bunt, iiawnm. Satisfaction I Class A last year. Saginaw j ■ 682-0820 Buena Vista was the top school j * ,2)1 orchard Lake Rd., Ksofoi g in Class B and GalesbmfcAu-, ■ -spal ! gusta led Class C-D in Hast ■ w*u. ih™ s*.» ajk. t.»rja. • year’s final, poll. » ■» ■ ■■ • m m m m m m-Jt Pontiac Brass Photo Kpnc VFW Pnct 1370 a nr) thp Lansing Sexton, > Birmingham Seaholm, ivens, vr w rust aiiu uiefHarper Woods Nofre 0Bme, i,*... Firebirds downtown office.;*"*-. Grand Rapids Ottawa . , . • . .. East Lansing. Taylor Kennedy. n)RF Firebird officials note that the Northwestern,Livonia Bentley, Walled _ _ , " ........i, , , , .... Lake, Ann Arbor Pioneer, Ann Arbor, Tony Odneal, a favorite with i advance sale has been the big-l Southgate. Flint central. Pontiac North-Pontiac fans last year, J1 m Igest of any game in three years. *r iner Stadium in the bin erudee,Jon Izer- i*~the final minutes] Johnson, Bob Micheau and Kickoff,is 7:30 p.m. Saturday1 Team, Record I came of the MFL of the game when the Vikings an°ther ex-Canadian League night. : i FrenkenmutK o-o> (game of the MFL , ^ the f}ve-yard-lim! runner Jim Wills spearhead- ---------------- ed the offensive attack for Mt. Top U.S. Horses Under Scrutiny _ . land many ot me lormer stars: aa-m in Miosiocmni hut had to u,,“1 “,c pu"c“u1 Thursday against the Toronto familiar „ Pontiac fans „ stiU^h^ LAUREL, Md. (AP) - under contract to mn„ j whipped the Arrows 34-7 last, expected, Buckpasser, Damas- DETOOIT (UPI)-The Detroit] Mt. Clemens under coach Lislei «»ree times. Red Wings have sipied two Wel, is the franchise which MISSISSIPPI SCHOOL piayers and reduced their roster Las located in Pontiac for two . an emolove at to 40 as they prepare for their years under a lend-lease basis pontiac Motor attended Alcorn first exhibition hockey game and many f the former stars * in Mississippi but had to Thursday against the Toronto! famllilip * Pnntia„ fano „M1I A&M in Mississippi, but had to Maple Leafs. —« to support his family. ,lr.nv . .. Big Willie, not to be con- On a couple occasions against'aaiuroay mgni fused with Willie Lee Washington, 6-2 tight end with the Firebirds, was praised as one Clemens. Mt. Clemens was unbeaten: and unscored upon in two games1 until the powerful Dayton Colts; CLASS B Buena Visit (1-0) 3. Fenton 4. Willow Run (M 5. Buchanan (1-0) 6. Dowagiac (1-0) r. Nfgaunee (2-0) Left winger Gary Jarrett and spare goalie George Gardner signed contracts for the upcoming season, Wings General Manager-Coach Sid Abel announced Monday. Gardner, 24, finished last season with Detroit, after tending goal with Memphis and Pittsburgh. He allowed 36 goals in 11 games with Detroit 10. Dundee 0-0) CLASS C ! Team, Record Poll 1. Galesbura-Augusta (1-0) • 2. Middlevifie (1-0) Ac i 3.*4>etrolt St. Ambrose (1*0) 4 It. Ignace (3-0) (tie) Battle C. St. (Philip (1-0) Ypsilanti, Willie reached over the pass protection to jar quarterback Steve Juday. ignace (3-0) ) Battle C. S 5. (tie) New Haven (1-0) 7. Onsted 0-0) 8. (tie) Bay City, St. James (1-0) CLASS D Adrian Catholic Central 0-0) Unlonville (1-T Lawton (1-0) In’iTeam, Recoi I i. Adrian <________ Unionville (1-0) Race Results, Entries Hazel Park Entries Jarrett, 25, racked up 71 points with 29 goals and 42 as-|))t )( sists last season with Pittsburgh sandy in the American H o c k e yj iuv.'i League. tJughVRoUcroft ei'bors'jenko Among those cut were former] *l£«(£.v&|1„0gv p,„,TMiie: Red Wing Alex Faulkner and'l1^.,0^ ex-Michigan Tech defenseman 1§5£K' onCRu»h Dennis Huculak. DuT/prTOi1'' Detroit meets defending Stan-j sni^Moo; cammianad Fact, ley Cup Champion Toronto at! H«!?spUngiai Olympia Thursday. DRC Entries Dixanna Patch Dee's Rocket Chief Grattan __________ Kinq Echo Wild Talet Dimension The Devil's Dream I Remand Ace's Baby Keystone Mope's I Meadow WEDNESDAY'S ENTRIES 1st—S2000 Claiming, 4 Yrs., 4 Fui Joe Jolly 117 Bei Al's Rab 114 Jet___I___ Duke's Luck 1)7 Expressivo Kinq Echo Wild Tales tension Sub Ji land 2nd—J2700 Claiming, 3 Yrs., 4 Mello Joe 115 Mrs. J. Sashaver 112 Ole Hub Lady Beth 112 Champa'i Mr. Particular 110 News Jecinta Express 117 New Deck 117 Espada 1)7 Mardigras Beau 114 117 j*ntsis 117 Pleasui Cus and Dr. Fager head the list] J- SragTira * * [of horses being considered as (tie) Richmond" o-o> The defeat for Mt. Clemens American representatives in the1 *® *. i^i p.ui (i-o> really scrambled the MFL race $150,000 Washington, D.C as all teams have now tasted ternationalonNov.il. at least one loss. The preliminary list, released The Firebirds are back on the Monday by the American Selec-; practice field tonight at Wisner I tion Board, also included Pre-] Field and coach Tracy is hop-! tdise. In Reality, Handsome ing to perk up the offensive at- Boy, Assagai and Fusilier Boy. tack. Normally consistent Bill Har-n rington was off thrget in his m passing against Ypsilanti, b u t i{7 Tracy said, “Bill didn’t have ir much practice with us and he’s m just getting his timing.’’ Fowler (1.0) North Adams (1-0) (He) Portland St. Patrick (t-0) (He) Mendon (t-0) (tie) Dryden (1-0) Sault Ste. Marie Loretto (3-0) (tie) Owosso St. Paul (1-0) 10* SNO-CAPS 4 FULL PLY 2fo?15*rr. FREE MOUNTING t2J17* •Eichang t-Whittwall» $1 .If mra Rtfrtatf F«4. T#i .If «• .01 Saftty Itudt Availabto Oaaa Daily M, lat. M UNITED TIRE SERVICE 1007 Baldwin Ave. I Milt. From Downtown Pontiac Rita I 4th—J Charlia Horse Betty B. Dean Lady's Worthy Gin Never Blow Uncle i 5th—$91 Pastime Fat Man. Proud Winnia Lou's Battle Ima Jarvis Grand Cruise Red Garter Ruby ood Mi Mayme Grattan Day 112 Tiger's Tune i Claiming, 4 Yrs. a-Dominquin Ace Rule I Broad Creek 112 Hamlet ‘14 Bio Prize 13 Lucky Jewel 19 E ge o the Road 112 a-WIII Dance Bluewater Goldy 5th—$900; Conditioned Pace, Colby water ( Good Pal's Lad Pace, I Mir Rose Dust I Princess Binie 114 Petition Lady i-Mrs. F. Lenawee Song Rambler Byrd The game could bring about !?; a record MFL crowd for Pon- West Coast 11s Better Rankings With Victories Pact, 1 i Terri Gay Shadows Son Sionilli Merldala Rain Time Norfhco Scotty ' Pace* 1 Mila: la Royal i Cred ra Track Hawk Uncle Gordie Roger Abbe Starlight Jerry Wayne Trilby Adios I Don Dogwood I Bye Bye Beezei Marlin Sofa Beau jimmy 10th—41,000; Conditioned Pace, 1 Mila: FoHow Moe Pastime Johnny' Franciscan KNiamey Lass I Rerun Con Man Compass Point Volcanic Gaorga Batsto I Watch My Dust 114 iSXr. Polly anna 114 Make" | — ■ .Flyer 'Land Boy I Watch My Make Your Own 113 a-T. A. A J. E. Grissom enl 4 Yrs., 4 Purl 109 Shyboob 109 Patrick J. By the Associated Press Victories by Southern Califor-jnia and UCLA during college m football’s initial big weekend Jot have moved the West Coast teams into solid positions in the' (Associated Press poll. Red Blue Weese Rusty Johnston No Dream Pilot Up Beau Jlmi Count Warbler Paulsklan Tufty Twist Dopy 114 Bio Doge 118 Bold Copy n: 3 M J 00| against California, Alabama gjSj’JWj* • against Florida State and the iS^cSimin^*! M^‘% yol: I Spartans against Houston. ' Lady 1,00 4.10 2.“ mm 4.40 3..., _______ ____________ ____ 3.00 entheses, season records and total points longs: , on a 10-9 ^7-6-5-4-3-2-1 basis IEDELlS 2395 Woodward at Sq. Lk. Rd. 334-4561 Notre Oomo (221 .60 2.M| The voting with first-place voln In (Imim Claiming l Land Singer ............ Miss Mlche 3.00 2.60 2. Alabama (71 T, Shorter 3.00 3. Michigan Stated SIR—13000 claiming! 6 Furlongs: 6. Southern C.... The Word Go ' 3.00 2.60 2.60 S. Toxai (2) Tow Motor .1.60 6.60 6. UCLA (3) Prince Amber 6.00 7. Georgia Claiming, 6 Furlongs: 0. Miami, Fla. IV 7.00 3.60 2.60 *. Colo i Oral 12.20 * 2.20 10. Nebi Bronze CUP Tonga Base Burn ’Em NuVaka C Refected 32.60 12.2d 5.60 Nobraika m i o •• Others receiving voles, listed alphabetically; Arkansas. Army. California, Clam-son, Duke. Georgia Tech, Houston, Illinois, Minnesota, Mississippi, North Carolina state, Ohio State, Oregon Stole, Pennsylvania, Penn State, Purdue, South 44-7-7 Paid 1104.40 Tartly Piston Reports Detroit (upi)1 fe Eddie Miles, given until Tuesday to report to camp before being fined, Monday reported to the Detroit Pistons. Miss Whitwprth Leads CINGINATI (UPI) - Kathy Whitworth, bidding for a third consecutive . money winning championship, increased her earnings . to $24,487 or, $4,000 more than runnerup Carol Mann, according to- figures released today by the Ladibs Professional Golf Association. Firm Offers Rust Warranty No motter what model '68 car you buy, you'll be getting the best bargain on warranties ever offered. Indeed, General. Motors has extended its warranties to include “everything except tires which are warranted by the tire manufacturers.'' But is "everything" .except tires on cars getting factory backing for longer-periods? Not necessarily. Still unwarranted is the actual car body, exekpt for defects in workmanship or paint. Ziebart. Process Corp., 821 Oakland Ave., Pontiac, Is offering a five-year, or 50,000 miles, warranty on cars treated by its rustproofing process. The warranty will protect against "any rust through" over the prescribed period, The process involves spraying a petroleum-baked chemical coating "inside" door panels, headlamp fixtures and other areas susceptik^leTo rusting. The average "treatment" costs about $55. Under the 50/50 warranty, motorists whose cars have been Ziebarted are called .in each two years or 20,000 miles for a free inspection and "an extra shot" of Chemical if it's needed. # Ziebart Process Corp., 821 Oakland; Ave., Pontiac, will be happy to discuss their’Guaranteed Protection program, just call FE 4-0502. ■ THE MGB/GT IS BACK IN STOCK! THE FIRST AUTHENTIC GT FOR THE PRICE OFTHEAVERAGE CAR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY *# MO* Salas'B * arvfca PONTIAC SPORTS CAR, INC. . 667 Auburn Avanui—Fantiac 335-1511 PHONC 335-1138 STOP.r Will Your Car Paso INSPECTION? litina 'til you're caugt icolTy safe car is not r ana it's our pledge t oint in waitin-. . . A mochanicall required by law keep your car safe all-ways. If you're in doubt, make an appointment new AO’S NUMBER ONE AUTO SAFETY CENTER NEW FULL 4-PLY NARROW WHITEWALLS 7.35 x 14 - $20.50 1.15 x 14 # $21.50 0.25 x 14 - $24.50 8.55 x 14 - $25.50 Priceb Include Federal Tax GUARANTEED A 4-ply tire for less thar\ the price of a 2-ply RETREAD TIRES Grade 1 Premium Custom e COMPARE OUR PRICES FIRST! FROM WHEEL ALIGNMENT • Scientifically measured and correct caster and camber • Correct toe-in and toe-out (the chief cause of tire wear) f 24** nr Best grade, high quality lining. 1,000 mile adjustment free. .At low at $1.25 a weak. ) ynar -20,000 mil# guaran- M0ST CARS For the SMOOTHEST RIDE Yeu'v* Ever Had, LET US TRUE BALANCE and TRACTION IZE YOUR TIRES trGLEN HIGHT Tire Department /■ Manager. New's the time to consider the busy driving tnason aheod . wnnknnd trips . . vacotien, etc. Remember, you're only as sofa as your tiros and wn cany a compfntn line of the finest quality plus every modern sciontific facility from truo balance and traction--Vising to whool alignment 30 DAY CHARGE MOTOR MART SAFETY CENTER 12$ East Montcalm FE 3-7848 C—4 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1967 rwawasssma m wmmmm Jacoby on Q—The bidding has been: I Wert North Urt SoutM 14k Pass 1* |. Pass Irt Pub W Pass 4* Pub t You, South, hold: I ♦K» VAJ54 4AQ4I+QS2 What do you do nowT | A—Bid tour no-trump. Yoflr ROBIN MALONE " 1 ....*1 Hog” and an unfortunate dub just discarded NORTH is called the "Rueful Rabbit." After . this remarkable coup §%«£ I The rabbit does everything declarer sew sw !**[ ^ ¥ 7 8 _ . . . . , than to take the heart finesse. wrong. The hog tries to play ,,... jag. „„„ mm. .... «• m»?es wwm a • , / n lost and he was down one. slans sad rn headed tar every dummy,1 usually at no? „ g K . ' . ... ?—*** w . ... .. . ./ Had the rabbit made a bril- "* « oowu. trump, and continual^ brings liant pUly? Not at He had TODAY'S question off most absurd swindles. / thought the contract was three Your partner hmq five hoarta Today’s band shows the no-trump and was delighted to show two acu, What do you rueful rabbit bringing off a that his failure to ruff the dia- do now? defensive swindle of his own. >nond hadn’t cost him anything. Answer Tomorrow ♦ K104 A109876 WEST EASY AQ3 A J 6 5 ¥ K J54 ¥ 100832 ♦ A 7 6 3 2 ♦QJ + J3 +542 SOUTH (D) A A K 9 8 7 ¥AQ ♦ 985 + AKQ Neither vulnerable Wert North Kart South 2* Pass 2N.T. Pan 3N.T. Pass 4+ Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—43 By Bob Lubbers R70IN MALONG —AN exomsire importation, but UNFopruNATety NOT CUT TO Fir TIME PATTERN OP OUR PE5K5N. THEREFORE, WE SHALL PLACE HBt ON CORSBOOPT list marked* THE BERRYS By Carl Grubert West’s opening lebd of a low diamond was rnotit unusual but he had no deceit lead and anyway we are/interested in the rabbit, sitting East. Declarer played Ipw from dummy. The rabbit played his jack and was surprised when he held the tri^k Then he returned the Ween to his partner’s dee. The /partner led a third diamond anyone but the rabbit would have ruffed. THE BETTER HALF In that case declarer would By OSWALD AND JAMES JACOBY Victor Mollo, one of England’s greatest players and Writers, has produced a humorous _____________hook on play n t rt le d have hod no trouble making his Bridge in the contract. He would simply have |M«ugerie.” won the next trick, played his .The two prin- two top trumps and three top _ . _...__ ________ .ipaijCharac- club8; entered dummy with the BERRy,g WORLD—By Jim Berry ■menagerie are ‘f of *gj| ®nd discardod Ian obnoxious his1‘»ueen i hearts on 8 Z00* 'expert called 0 . the "Hideous; The rabbit did not ruff. He THE BORN LOSER By Art Sansom JACOBY You know what I should have studied in high school —Advanced Laundry Management!” •y SYDNEY OMARR ivour elms may bo obscurod. Family or Far waBnaaday Ico-workere tend to lack confidence. Moke "Tha wlM man canlrali hit destiny... necessary edlustmenls without relinquish-Astrology points the way." , Ihd prlndplaa. Emphasis on health, homo ARIES (Mar. 21-Apr. If): Dialogue and work, necessary between you end one venri SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 23-Dec. 21): Be clou. Don't taka persons, situations forlraMy (0r changes—especially where chif-orented.' Find out whet opposition Is dren are involved. There is switch of thinking, saying. Than clarity your own attitude. Tonight discuss needs with one "fSftu. (APT. *M.y , dV* Cl«FM^(I^htjin! Be pause# breather, chance to Ttoaln!career. Tendency is te lean on one with’ ■iranaih On* vnu oldod mav come hack! ...ilk Iwt tui «>iUu v„n 21-June 20): Nfw xJiie oif “ sAr lots include decisions, rasolutlon. Time o make up your mind. PISCES (Fob. 10-Mar. 20): Bo sure ' money's worth. " ——1 IF TOMORROW IS GEMINI ____... ring ball at success. Old methods apt tack necessary pur " -'|w»r o( Ideas today proi Moot people, to Mr. , CANCER (Juno 21-July 22) .. ___________ ________ _________ . require old_ of one with experience to chock tacts. It may bo that you are S depends upon, wtmngnois tollstimf'c^ «rrec8ons. *StuJy* AQU a!r I US * rrwssegs* -permit conflict between domestic and * * * * pMiikng gmM. , 1 ----------"• - -■*------umaffi LEO (July 2»%ug. 22): Welt lor all tods. Promoturo pocleloni cause needless setback. Rddlm this and tel accordingly. . nap communication linos agon. Impoooet rniiiMp Is due. Bel' ~ ♦ ♦ ♦ rrtdvtg frtdIVd 0. . _ GENERAL TENDENCIES: Cycle hlphl VlRGO IAug. 22-Sept. 12): Fine lor for ARIES, TAURUS, GEMINI. Special! Inaugurating tdhnjw*•. ■ program. Avoid 1,— • ------- waste. Look to tutur* ■*“ ■*'- aarTi.iE-sr KHK it V&ur birthday! Bn will amarga with positiva pro-1 Recant events have tended to* age you. But cyda changes—to By V. T. Hamlin TO. CAPTAIN EASY RAKOTA DLAWDS SAGITTARIUS: .mancO Is concar T-M, 1M2. Gen. 23-Oct. 21): Ttfflplatlon .... lault, orguo. Overcome It., nw intelligent concessions. Applies os-, ptctallV to dealings with mat*, partner, close esaoctato. Maka meanings crystal! KORFIO (Od. 23-Nov. 21): Some Of! © IN7 by NEA, lac “Isn’t it groovy—we’re all tuned to different stations and > all listening to *Ode to BiBy Joe.’ ” OUT OUR WAY irths The following is a list of recent Pontiac area births recorded at the Oakland County Clerk’s Office (by name of father): &V|&VsKM?.r?,or James'L. irtknpr Drayton Plains STlOT&hm Robert J. Latter, Brlmlngham . John M. McCormick, Hlrfnlnenom Houston E. Taylar, Blrmfngbom Dennis ML Rlemar, Birmingham John A. Bvgrharduc Birmingham Martin J. CrugarT 7S Charles Caltn ML StafSrd. Birmingham Willard jT Buchanan, junci^^ ( Jamar J. A^awtanSroM^ost1 Boulevard South Wllllom E. Bales Jr„ Troy Stanley C. Bolttorl. West Blooi . Arthur F. Headley, Union Lake William +;HMar, isso vonico Qian W. McCalvIn, 31 Fanaly Richard R KidM, Birmingham ciaranca L. Stac Utica william J. Marktay. Birmingham Lynn Powell. 27 Florence Clrata.. v SwUh**’ Cr*w*Dnl' w* E<>* B< v*0ary G. Good, M Edward Arthur C. Harrison. 27SS Aquorlno John B. Heeld, Clarkslon Theodore A. Johnson, Auburn Haight Frodar dl W. Keenan, Farmington Harry L. McCullough. 212 Ferry Merwan BVTiMtdiiilL Watartord Walter L. Smitn, Oatord Robert C. Walton, Clarketon Donald E. Wanta, Birmingham . Jamas f. Young, tin. Carey Orville W. Baldwin, ft Ypaliantl Lauronca D. Braden, ts Banner Robert C. Burns, Birmingham Richard V-OWlon. 40*5 Lawlay Raymond D. Haerr, Bloomfleid Hills Wayne K. Johnson, Union Lake Daniel L. Millar, Ortonvlllt Robert J. Murphy, Union toko Anthony F. SIM. US Draper Ralph T. Ztlosny, RodWSIor -Attnio D. Btrtoncln. BtaomtlPId Mills Robert D. Lay, 24M Fllntrldpe Rlchord F. Zappa, Farmington Lenny P. ttllmora, 3*95 Grafton Samioth L. Humphrey, *24 ...olroso Clarence W. Nat?. 2*74 Dutton Garald A Halmark, 30 Clwmborloin Elton G. MocKty. 353* Watkins I (Twins) Grant H. Morinock, Orchard Loko Willard Mullins, Walldd Lake Thomas N. Horn*, 42* Lynch -i - -=|"w^,t Rutgers i Emerson «, Milford . oimux no vwmi jbw i,nt»™rtiEiu ^A’.gSKln«v„N tirhsVrdGW.»n,,Wa,l*.s. Qgrald J. Kovallc# Milford Guonthtr A. Poostit, union Ltko VA^Kihllworth i Larry (___ Frank Gljaa, 24 I. Andrew Hortwtulk, I* Fork Place Brian L. Lauar. 502 Whlttmore Grant L. Thompson. 32 Edna Gary L. Ulmer, tit Auburn Harolg w. wood, 243 Radmin Roy K. Clifton, 4*2 Granada _ Jamaa E. Jackson jr„ Lake Orion JemerEiSOtatartord Gary D. Lull, t* Seneca 4. ■ gSSl'ffii'Tu Andrew J. NgtllJr.# 23» Clayburn williiMrn C fiddy# 437 B«ibo« By Leslie Turner Ml»* VOUr A LB55 ANP EXOTIC PRMCS )L8&\ OU i ZOLHAUSi CAM?J5H0ULDWT TIM® EEK & MEEK DR. BRITEBITE. HOUJ COME SOUR BIU IS SO HIGH ? EV/ERVTHIfJG IS GOIMG UR MV BOV! THE COST OF LIVJAJG IS SKVROCKETIKJ&! J By Howie Schneider EV/EW BUCK-TEETH HAVE GOME UP TO A BUCK AMD A HALF! nancy BOARDING HOUSE By Ernie Buahmiller TIGER By Bud Blake DONALD DUCK By %alt Disney C-r5 V THE IfONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, .SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 to Be Kinder to Rent Bills Pfesi-cities and are expected tiie Senate com-the way the House *20 million from the bill for thejcontrol program, or to a dozenihave been drastically reduced.”ithe committee, at Johnson’s re-Defense Administration., or more other vitally needed Sen. John J. Williams, R-Del., quest, in the authorization to He suggested the money I programs which have not been said M would try to get the'Sen- [dell participation certificates in ‘could well be applied to a rat I funded or wtiose appropriations late to reject increases made by I government loans. VOYAGER AND FAMILY—Robert Manry, Cleveland newsman-turned-sailor, is getting ready to leave St. Louis on a trip around the eastern half of the" country. Manry made headlines in 1965 by sailing the Atlantic alone in his 13-foot “Tinkerbell.” With him are his wife, Virginia; son, Douglas; daughter, Rob-bin; and the family dog. The Manry’s were heading for the Gulf of Mexico on their first leg of their year-long* voyage. Viet Charge Loads GOP Guns By JACK BELL |ty gap” charges against the ad-AP Political Writer j ministration. WASHINGTON - A liberal Harry S' Ashmo,'e' former Democrat’s claim that Presi-,^3"^ .... . T , - . . :partment officials dealt with dent Johnson torpedoed a him and Editor William C. hopeful Vietnam peace move last February gives new ammunition fQr Republican “credibili- (AdvartyMmint) DENTURES HURT? [«M the bast flttln* dentures cm hurt. Ki ora-l«l*d handy (or fast, lani-lastlns lief from peln.Mikei dentures (t*T more Cl lortsblt...soothes core j spots...helps prevent ; •dor slid Infection. Ask • Baggs of the Miami, Fla., News with “an almost total absence of f ^ 7* *, I News Analysis aggros candor" in the affair. This _ PI_________ ___ __________ ^ I matched GOP descriptions of popr"pit«rins^ci^tjo^r Xw-T"*""—|the administration’s general performance in Vietnam state-! rnents. Fret Installation ot all Frigidaire Electric Dryers on Detroit Edison Linos. KEASEY ELECTRIC 4120 Dixie Nwy. OR 3-2(01 ! But most politicians seemed I to regard Ashmore's charge 'that Johnson "effectively and brutally canceled” a promising I attempt to start peace talks as 'likely to leave only a minor You can still have a Fish Fry every Wednesday and Friday. All you can Eat for Only $1.19, but You'll eat in a newly Redecorated Dinjng Room with a new Owner and Manager to Serve you better. HOWARD JOHNSON’S 3650 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains Open Sun.-Thurs. 7 to 1 l/Fri. and Sat. 7 to 12 abrasion on the image Johnson has labored to build as a man willing to negotiate at the drop of a hat to end the war. Senate Republican leader Everett M. Dirksen, defending the President, made it difficult for even the Republican doves to suggest Johnson doesn’t really want peace unless Hanoi surrenders. ‘INCONCEIVABLE’ Dirksen told newsmen he could not conceive of any circumstances under which the President wouldn't make “every possible effort to stop the killing” in Vietnam. He suggested that ‘shmor* s charge bore the “taint” of those who seek a peace candidate for President. ★ ★ * Ashmore classified himself among the vigorous war policy critics when he identified Min-self with “the. eclipsed' Adlai Stevenson wing of the Democratic party” and as a confidante of Chairman J. W. Ful-bright, D-Ark., of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee. Consequently politicians filtered the former editor’s charges against the President in that light, eveh if they didn’t agree his account' of the preparation of a “conciliatory” letter to Hanoi with administration help was as "misleading" as the State Department said it was. Ashmore said Ms letter to Hp CM Minh had been overtaken by an uncompromising message from Johnson. ★ * * William P. Bundy, assistant secretary of state, who conferred with Ashmore and Baggs, said the two mistakenly, felt their channel of communi-| cation with Hanoi was at the center of the peace stage. , Bundy said that “by far the! m«st important” was a direct! exchange then going on between the United States and North j Vietnam through Moscow. | Bundy said the administration; operation was extremely secret! and it was unttonkable to inform Ashmore and Baggs about it. dt> Rent subsidies would pom* pay for their housing; the model cities program would help cities build model neighborhoods as a step toward eventual overhaul of slums on a! j widespread basis. ; ■ , ' * * * The Senate Appropriations i Committee voted to restore the full! 640-million authority request for rent subsidies and $537 million for model cities—$300 million more than was approved by the House. Senate approval on the committee recommendations was i expected today. DOUBTS SUCCESS ; Sen. Gordon Allott, R-Colo., senior Republican on the subcommittee which handled the bill, said he did not know of any oyes to reduce the committee figures in the floor debate. He doubted any would suc-coed if attempted. Some Senate supporters of the rent subsidy program voiced un-, happiness oyer language put i into the committee’s report on the bill wMch they said could limit its effectiveness. * 4 4 The report states that if nonprofit sponsors of rent subsidy projects find they must seek government loans, they shall be required to put up a 5 per cent equity investment. The bill’s managers said that it was necessary to include this in *o ?**t'the committee-to vote for the full $40 million.' The rjwrt does not have the forge of law. The Senate was slated to vote first on a proposal by Sen. Stephen M. Young, D-Ohio, to cut ®ee YOUR MIND Forget one* and (or til about Ironing tha family wash I With today's new durable praaa (abrlca and a new aaa dryer you get perfect resulta-llke-new praaa r •a It by maglcl You can't get thaae perfect raau old-fashioned drying methoda. No matter how you pat, amooth and fuse, you're back at the old I for touch-upa. TAK^* Bo modern all the way. See your gat appliance deal lor a new gaa dryer and let tt do your Ironing for you. Illllll Cl GET A \WORk-SAViNG GAS DRYER AT A SPECIAL INSTALLED PRICE,DURING YOUR DEALER’S BIG SALE Your book of money for back to school. Are you a student, or a parent of one? Start at the head of the class In "money management" with a Community National Pay-by-Check Account Buying clothes, books, equipment? Paying tuition? Do it the easy way... by Community National check. Need spending money at school? Get it the "today" way, from your own Community National account How much for this smart idea? Pay-by-Check costs only lCAcents a check plus 50 cents a month: No minimum balance is ever required. Get your book of money... now! NATIONAL l BANK Offices ia OaHand and Macomb Counties. They’re Here! The New 1968 FIIIIMIIE DRYERS ^ THIS FRIGIDAIRE GAS DRYER HAS DURABLE PRESS CARE > Sotting. For airing Ond fluffing. • No-Stoop, fino mash Dacron scroon. It's right | on tho door for oasy claan- < *168 Frigidaire Jat Action Washer Even this lowest priced jet action washer has DPC for no>$4| fA iron fabrics. T I fn e Free installation on Consumers Power lines including labor and inetallatlon e Open nitely 'til 9 e No money down. F(igidaire factory service! No Down Payment-36 Mos. to Pay TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER SS fE 3-7879 ’ 1550 UNON LAKE ROAD-IMIOH LAKE 363-6286 G—6 THE PONTIAC PKESy, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1067 Guard Sets Riot I JACKSON (AP) gasi National hold the exercise in Lansing and Guard troops from the Jackson transferred it to Ft. Custer near area Will conduct a “reconnais- Battle Creek. < sance in force” exercise in the The Jackson Human Rela-city next Sunday as part of tions Commission also adopted Pentagon-ordered riot control a resolution opposing any kind training. jof “mock riot” training. | * * * j In Sunday’s exercise, troops A Guard spokesman said the I will be transported to 15 road* exercise would not simulate riot block locations around the city conditions, however, and no and tp public buildings which vcontact with the general public they might be assigned to prowill take place. !tect. Plans to hold riot- control '* * * / j training in Lansing recently Purpose of the exercise, a triggered opposition from the sookesman said, would be to Lansing Human Relations Com- familiarize guardsmen with lo-| mission. The National Guard cations where they would be eventually abandoned plans to sent during a civil disorder. Nixbn Tops Gov. for GOP in N.J. Survey US “DON’T MAKE WAMM" “GLASS BOTTOM MAT" all color ! Starts WEDNESDAY! Working Man’s Buffet Every Tues. thru Fri. 25 Choice of Two Moat* ] , EVENING BUFFET Thurs. and Fri. 5:30 to 7:30 P.M. $169 Breakfast Menu Daily Till 11 A.M. AIRPORT SKYROOM Open Daily 7-2 P.M. 6500 Highland Rd. in Airport Terminal Building Jayson’s FINE FOOD and COCKTAILS WEDNESDAY SPECIAL SPAGHETTI & BANJO MUSIC Coming Tues., Sept. 26th also Thurs., Fri. and Sat. The Incomparable and Dynamic Jerry and Janette Jamison Location! 4195 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plains 673-7900 *Mi mmiijjptel l *k k FULL HOUSE - With an audience completely filling its new house at the Lincoln Center in New York, the Metropolitan Opera Company opened its 83rd season last night. Verdi’s “La Traviata” was presented with Montserrat Caballe starring. Conductor Fausto Cleva is in center foreground/ The opening was earlier than usual to accommodate a longer-than-usual season. TRENTON, N. J. (UPI) -Eleven per cent of New Jersey’s voters favor Michigan Gov. George Romney as the nations next president, according to a survey conducted by a professional pollster for the Republican State Central Committee. * *. *,/■ Romney Was, topped by former Vice President Richard Nixon, but, President Johnson outpoHed all six Republican and Democratic presidential choices in toe survey. Jphnson was selected by 28 per cent of the 800 voters interviewed in the state’s 21 counties. His nearest rival was • Sen. Robert F. Kennedy, D-N.Y., toe only other Democrat in the survey, who drew 19 per cent of the vote. NiXon drew 17 per cent; Gov. Nelson Rockefeller of New York, 11 per cent; Gov, Ronald Reagan of California, 7 per cent, and Sen. Charles Percy, R-DL, 4 per cent. The remaining 5 per cent either favored some not on the list or h ad no favorite. The poll, taken by E. John Bucci of Public Opinion Surveys, Swarthmore, Pa., also indicated that 52 per cent of toe New Jfersey voters are Demo-; crats, 30 pier cent Republicans and 18 per cent independents. XMMNVNT PICTURE NDw Star Highlights Convids r. ... . la Run Amok at First Night at Met j Saginaw Jail 181 Security Arrests Reported in Egypt PONTIAC VOTERS, make your choice now Vote Today! Oily Income Tax . tax reduction! or Property Tax Increase immd valuation! Paid for by CMsans Finance Study Committee CAIRO (AP) - Egypt has made 181 security arrests since r • ; the beginning of the Arab- , By MARY CAMPBELL | But this season, 83rd in Met, SAGINAW (A*P) - About 48 israeli war in June, a semioffi-NEW YORK (AP) — The history, will also be its longest, prisoners at the Saginaw County Cjaj Cairo newspaper said today news at the opening of the Me-131 weeks, and the opening nightj Jail went on a rampage Mon-|in repiy to a u.s. press report tropolitan Opera Monday nighttook place so early that many day tearing out plumbing, that 70,000 Egyptians had been was soprano Montserrat Ca- habitual opera first-night box-1 smashing windows, burning arrested in crushing a plot to balle. Miss Caballe, singing Vi-[holders were still on vaca-mattresses and ripping up te- overthrow President Gamal Ab-oletta in Verdi’s “La Traviata,” tions. Not one Whitney, Vander*- bles. del Nasser, has the figure of the robust di- or Morgan was se«i in ttie j sheriff Robert Loubert said 10 A1 Ahram, the newspaper that vas of past generations but her audience and the only Rockefel- city. policemen, 10 Saginaw generally reflects Nasser’s voice is a glory now and would lers were Mr. and Mrs John D. Township officers, six State thinking, issued toe arrest fig-be in any generation. Rockefeller III. He is chairman Troopers aided county deputies ure. Miss Caballe, from Barcelona,^the k°ard °* L*"001" Center, 'in quelling toe trouble. ★ ★ ★ Spain, sang at the Met once, in 23rd SEASON j * * * The New York Daily News re- “Faust,” two seasons ago. Last j Tenor Richard Tucker, start- Loubert said toe uprising ported Friday in. a copyright season she sang only a few1 ing his 23rd season with the Met started right after lunch with a story from Beirut by Fred times. This Violetta, her first land singing nn hi. «(vth nponing protest of poor food. He beiittied Sparks that agents arrested with the company, firmly es- night, sang Alfredo, opposite! the charge, saying that 60 otherimore than 70,000 men, shot hun-tablishes her for the first time'Miss Caballe. Tucker’s voice is | prisoners took no part and said dreds and were jailing about at the Met as a star. istill clear and distinctive. The they had no complaints. |1,000 people a day. The News Often the news at Met openings is not on the stage. Last season, it was the opening of the new opera house in Lincoln Center. Many seasons it has been toe society people in the audience. RHIMES DELICATESSEN AT NYE DAIRY SB* Oakland ftoo Parking FI 9*4061 Wheels •F on wheels. years have only added a desirable authority and weight to his tones. Cornell MacNeil was nearly perfect as toe elder Germont. His voice is large and warm and for this part of toe stern father, he makes it sound mature, self-righteous and self-condident, never evil. ♦ ★ * Fausto Cleva conducted at de-| liberate, perhaps a shade too deliberate, speed, always maintaining consistency and a sense of cohesiveness. Miss Cabafie negotiates toe coloratura in Act One apparently effortlessly. Her voice is j not toe silver of Joan Sutherland's, who sings Violetta even more effortlessly, but many colors of toe rainbow. Therefore, she sounds different when she is being romantic, vivad-lous, self-sacrificing and drama-’ j tic. Her most successful mood on opening night was that of tenderness, especially the first and fourth act love arias. It wais the latter at which she received her greatest applause. Miss Caballe also can hit high notes with a clear, beautiful pianissimo, a remarkable accomplishment. The production, by Alfred Lunt, with sets and costumes'by Cecil Beaton, was new last season. The trouble started, he said,;story also said Egyptian army in one unit housing 28 men and engineers were building desert spread to another cellblockjprison compounds hundreds of housing about 20 men. jmiles from the nearest oasis. A Grand Trunk specialty. Get aboard our new Piggyback facilities. Load or unload at Detroit Flint Battle Creek. Pontiac. Saginaw. Grand Rapids. Milwaukee. Greenville. Chicago. Our year-round car ferry between Milwaukee and Muskegon ensures overnight piggyback deliveries to and from booming mid-western markets. GT Piggyback eliminates extra handling. Bypasses costly warehousing. Offers you lower freight costs. Hook up with GT-CN, the largest railway system in North America. In Pontiac, call Mr. W. W. bimpson, Agent, 332-8671. GTCfSJ ORAND TRUNK WKSTIRN • CANADIAN- NATIONAL NAILWAVS Monday News From Lansing THS LIEUTENANT GOVERNOR Asked board, of oducotkm In Bloom-Otarbom, Oak Park anil John Maxwell and John Peril, Prominent Detroit Restaurateurs, are the New Owners of the Bonanxa Sirloin Pit. They Look Forward to Serving Their Old, and Making Many New, Friends in the Pohtiae Area. TAKE A W TO MOW WEST I ITS AS CLOSE AS ‘Little Joe Special? The MboyoMoak 89* Salad, Baked Potafo, Texas Toast........... Tuesday - Wednesday - Thursday Sept. 19-20-21 Served in Our Friendly Western Style — So Jump In YouiFSaddle and Join Us At Bonanza for Little Joe's Special BONANZA SIRLOIN FIT. KMART Glenwood Plaza North Perry I treat, Cornor Qlanwood Cany Out Available 338-9433 Oyao 1 Soy* 0 Wook It AN. -1., Fri. and Sol. til II HURON TONIGHT AT 8 P.M. ONLY The Most Popular Picture Of Curtime! WINNER OF 5 ACADEMY AWARDS * Including "Best Picture"!, 2o> P ADULTS 2.00 Children 1.00 * COLOR otDiUoi PLUMMER WED., SAT., SUN, at 1:30~4s46—8sOD MON., TUES., THURS., FRI. at 8 P.M. Only 44I’m a stock broker. One reason listed stocks generally are so popular is their profit record “Less than 1% of U.S. corporations, they make 70% of the profits.” Just how many stocks are listed on the New York Stock Exchange? “Something over 1,200 common stocks. That represents less than 1% of the corporations in the country.” And those few make about 70% of the profits? “That’s tight. Generally, they’re the big companies, the leaders. You ure their products and services practically every hour of the Jay.” Is a company’s profit the main consideration when th* Exchaug* ilt? “That’s important, of course. At the time of its original listing, a company has to demonstrate that it has been able to earn at least SI,200,000 a year after taxes, normally for three yean.” For just three years? "That’s just a guideline. Every company is considered on its own merits. The Exchange wants to be satisfied that the company has a good position in its industry and prospects for maintaining that position." FREE INVESTMENT GUIDE ON LISTED STOCKS—SEND COUPON TODAY. To an investor, isn’t a company’s profit the whole story? “No. Another big factor is that there is usually more informa-, tion available about listed stocks, because the Exchange expects prompt disclosure of important facts. Smart investors see another advantage in the fact that about 12,000,000 people own listed stocks. That means you can usually find a buyer or seller when you need one quickly and easily, and at a price dose to the last sale on the floor.” When a company gets listed, does it automatically stay listed? “There’s nothing automatic about it. There are criteria for listing, and criteria for de-listing, too.”. Does all this mean listed stocks are r||rt for any investor? “Not necessarily. The best advice is to discuss your situation with a member firm broker—the amount you can invest after regular expenses and emergencies; and your goal of growth, dividends, or the safety of principal that bonds might offer. Ask the broker for facts and his own opinion, then exercise your judgment. Whatever you buy, securities or anything else, carries a certain risk. But I think every investor should remember the advantages that listed stocks can offer.” Own your share of American business Members New York Stock Exchange Send for Free Booklet: “stock* on th* bio board," S2-p*c* guide croup, more than 1,000 common rtock* by induatriaa tor may compsriioni. Valuable to both naw and .xperienred invreton. Mail to a member Arm ot the Now York Stock Exchang* In your community, or to N*w York Stock Exehang*, Dept. 7-FE, P.O. Box 1070, Now York, N.Y. 10001. 512 cation tor reaching a contract i Kellogg Director BATTLE CREEK (AP) -j George Champion, 63, chairman of the board of Chase Manhattan Bahk, has been named to the board of directors of the ! Kellogg Co., a producer of j cereals. O § i v E v1 H n 2-iooo | DR (VS - 1 M - II 1 : re s-asoo O R 1 V £ • 1 N 932.3200 1 U O R 1 V C - I N, | MIRACLE MILE || mm\M 1 IBLUE SKYI [Waterford:- SO. TUtORAPH AT IQ. LAME 00. 1 1 Milt*. W000WARD I CHILOiON MNDI0 12 till I »» DIXIE HIGHWAY (U. S. 10) II 1 i hock n. mtoiwrti no. w II | CHiiaaiu umiB t2 rets (| OPDYKC RD. AT WALTON BLVD. cuiiMcp moil it mi ■ WMS. LAKE 00. AT AIRPORT RD. 1 MIU«£re«£ £!*!*•*•*»- WO. 10) | . CNHRRM WHMR It mi POfTlER‘ STEIGER {n9|^]|^ INmKRTQF TC NIGHT" > uilWI ^ THE MOST A ■RBI i g TERRIFYING HB»—. 3 PICTURE OF Fittf 3 ALLTIMEI %»/ mb ! Rm Rnm f i^Tttit-jlje j IBS IfHgpuiSni pROFONMff^ immiiftiiiiuiititiim uMwiij THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 C—7 The following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold bj them in wholesale package lots Quotations Ore furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Produce Graham Spy, bu. ........ Graining, bu.............. McIntosh, Early ............3.50 Wealthy, bu. ................ £2 Wolf River, bu............ •rlai, ll-pf. erf.............3.75 Cauliflower, dz.................... Calory, Pascal, 1 to 5 dz. ert Calory, Pascal, dz. stalks ........ Celery, Pascal Hearts, dz bags . Calory, While, 2 to 5 dz. crt. Com, Sweet, 54z. Active Market NEW YORK (AP)—The stock market held a gain in active trading early this afternoon but the margin of gains over losses was narrowing. The Dow Jones industrial average at noon , was up 1.74 at 940.48. ★ * ★ Some of the missile and electronic issues were active and higher in further response to the Government’s approval of the Nike-X antimissile program. A shift was apparent, how- ever, from some of the recent high flyers into blue chips. A degree of consolidation of the recent advance was in progress, analysts said. The top steel makers edged higher following the fourth straight weekly rise in steel production. The rise in housing starts also was encouraging. Auto stocks were very narrowly mixed. The Associated Press average of 80 stocks at noon was up .7 at 343.1 with industrials up 1.4, rails up .4 and utilities off .3. " Prices advanced on the American Stock Exchange. Royal American Industries was very active as it edged higher. Syn-tex rebounded a couple of points. Duro-test sank nearly 2 as profits were taken On its recent upsurge. Supermarkets Genertil, Electronic Assistance, Allied Paper and Microwave Associates advanced a point or more. United Asbestos mid Rus-co Industries were active fractional gainers .. Teacher Strike Still On in NY Some Issues Soften; Talks Resume Today NEW YORK (AP) tors for both sides i old strike by New York City teachers against the 1.1 million-pupil public school system recessed today without agreement, dimming earlier op-sions of planes, railroads, ships timism for a possible break. |and trucks, cargo handlers be-“It is 3 a.m.” said Mayor’Uevethey can change (his staid John V. Lindsay as-the talks at|«M industry. Grade Mansion broke off. “No The New York Stock Exchange NEW YORK (AP) - New York Stock (htfi.) High Low Loot Chg. I Lob I 25 52 MM 52 — M Con .10 1* 23 27>* 27'* — H mm CP 1.40 X14 34M 34(4 34V, ...... ACF. Ind 2.20 14 31M SIM SIM.......... iiiHM 1* TOW 7744 78M — M 11 4410 63 V, 4344 — V, 35 144k 244k 244k — 4k 47 ink 174k 31 — ’jf ?3M mfa t* 20 73M 73M 734k — V, J 2J4k OK 235k + 4b 43 445k 444k 444k - 4k Mi 74M -544k am. 245* 245* . 334k 334k fit S3 58Vj 58 58 W . F tT 71% n + % 34 10% 18% 199k + % 59 m 23% 23’/* 1 17 551 55% 55% + % 30? 15% 15% 15% .... 13 39% 39% 39% ,. ia% 11% 39% 39% 39% 6 26% 26% M% 9% 9% 9% . 72% 72% 72% 4* % mo i /i 29% W‘ TliT 2.20 511 52% 52 52% — TpB„ 1J~ fi — Mnc^.36 44 27% 26% 86% SO 51 50% 90% 07 15% 14% 14% 9% 9% \mm 72% I I 52% 0 32% 32% 32% 35 30% 37% 30 3 % 50 ;30% 37% 30% + % I 44 PUgMiAfl SO 51 87 15 5 56% 56% 56% — % 24 56% 56% 56T 255 39 30% 39 12 56% 56 19 32% 32 12 7* 34 30% 12 56% 56 19 32% 32 p 32 — % 12 70 72% 72% — % 30% 30%4-r % 99% 100% +1% 5% 5% ... 55% 95% + % 45% .45% -tl 59 110% 116% 110% +2% 61% 62% * rchf. ■ IM ■______j + % x»3 115% 114% 114% + % 10 79% 70% 70% — % 10 69% 68% 60%—% 136 07% 06% 07% — 399 67 65% 66%r- % 12 6% 6% 6%W% 30 29% 29% 29% + % 124 45% 45% 49% — % 62 31% 31% 31% + % 16 64k 6% 64%.. 7 36% 36% 36% 4* % 47 95% 95% 95% + % Ing Co 1 . I/Ch .40b RepubStl 7.50 Revlon 1.30 10V4 38V, — l Reyn Tob 7 ■ 1.40 14* 411* JO 8M M4 Mb ..... 37 TOW 204k 204k — Vk 3 374k 374k 37Vk — V* 108 43V* 2M 42M RoanSel Rohr Cp ST RoyCCola .72 .i" Hollylug" Hamestk 3 SS PiS 56 33% 33% iS% + % 06^% 70% 71% + % 10 6*1% 01% 61% — % 7 60% 60 60 — % 10 50% 49% 50 + % 42 49% 48% 49% + %. 1 10% 00% |Q% + % 7 12% .11% 12 1 117 41% 44% 45% 4- % 17 35% 35% 35% 4* % 3 47% 47% 47% 196 02‘ 52 43 25 33’. ■......... 11 44 43% 43% — % juntFds .50b 75 40% DETROIT POULTRY DETROIT (AP)-(U*DA>— C.H j | OH* 1 llvt poultry: 19-20; roattert Iimv pound * for No. Htavy typa ban*, 1 type, 27-28; broilers 20-21; turkeys heavy I . DETROIT COOS DETROIT (AP)—(USDA)— Egg prlcn Cal Pjnanl dozen by first receivers (Indud- CalumN i ft i CampRL 52% 52% — % 36 30% 30% 80% 4* % 61% om —% 15% 15% /. 75% 7Pk — % 5 40% 40% 40% — % fi fit 01% ff% Ml T3% 02% 6% 6% • 17% 267 91% 90% 90%e 11 42% 42% 42% « rsasIt* 3 40% 60% 60% — 13 01% 00% 01 + % p 11% 11% + % 25 36% 36% 36% 4- % 32 17% 17% 17% .., 8 35’/4 35 M J3 30% ___ 14 38% 30% 30% j&rv Imp Cp Am MMrRend 7 Inland Stl 7 ■ NoAm 7.40 erlkSf 1.80 W Minor T Nick 7.10 Pecker, Pep US ITEJOct lb® Co 1.10 an 7.70 Kamoaift 7 KaraCLd 7.80 Kerr Me 1.J0 ....... KlmbClk 7.70 107 441* 63V, 578 3»v. 171* 1714 —lVk 23 lOVk 30’k 30’k — Vk . jj. .. lJTVk 158 +IM ad* A I umbo, 18.41; extra, Camp Soup I large, ]4Vk-MVki medium, Canteen .80 ill, Ijft-ll. CaroPLt 1.14 Whitt 0-T1 CHICAGO BUTTER CHICAGO (API - Chicago Mecrantlle Exchange—Butter etaedyj wholesale ‘ Ing prim, unchanged; 83 score AA M A 3l*i to B 65*4; 18 C »(*; ears 90 I 66%; 09 C 60%. Egge Heady; wholesale buying prlCM unchanged; 75 per cent or better Grade A white* Ml medium* 77Vk; itandard* 7*. CHICAGO POULTRY V CHICAGO (AP) - (USDA) — Live poultry; wholewl* buying prka* u* changed; roarter* 7* - 28; 8B0OM MO Sgw.- ColantMCp 7 Cenco In, .10 Cent SW 1.80 Cerro 1.40b Cert-teed .80 CMsniA 1.40 CfTSil .00 Che* Ohio 4 ChIMII StP 1 ChPneu 1.00b ChritCraft lb Livestock Cltiertvc Colg Palm i CotnnRad .80 ColoIntO 1.40 CBS 1.40b DETROIT ixrh-iv»un;- Steer, fairly active, kteady, not enouoh heller, tor price test. Cow, eteady to WCuli slaughter »t**r»-Chote* *50-IISO. -------- — E pounds. 26.w-27.50; mixed wod end cholciCemwEd 7.70 Xl6 26 00-26.50; good, 24.7546.00. iComsat 58 Cow-UtllltyT 18.00-10.00. „ Icon idle 1 JO Hog, 200. Borrowi and SlR*> W contt.ConElecInd 1 lower, U.S. 1-1 210-240 pound,, l*.7S».gl iConPood 1.40 SSs- i,js-’,J5i M n&fL Voetori’ 180. Active, Heodv to »tronQ,iCont Can f high choice and prime 37.00-40.08; choice* Cont Ini 3 32 00-37.00. ^ . 'S™. Qil-9.60 Sheep 400. Slaughter lambs Steady, choice 05-100 pound spring lambs# 29.50-24.50. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK CHICAGO (AP)—(USDA)— butchers mostly 25Joajar; Jo W 20.75-21.00; 1-2 200-225 lbs 20.2M0.50; V3 190-250 lbs 2-3 238-200 lbs 19.00-19.75; 2-3 280420 lbs 18.5019.00; 1-2 320-400 lb sows 117.7»-f0.65; 14 400490 lbs 17.25-17.75. __ Cattle 1,500; calve* none; choice 34 43% 43% 43% + % 3 19% 19% 19% — % 346 33 31% 32% +1% 19 26% 26% 26% .. 9 30% 30% 30% — % 4 64% 64% 64% f % 145 17% 17 17% 4- % 23- 23% 23% 23% 04 49% 49% 49% -I- % 63 60% 67 60 +1% 15 12% 51% 52% .. 24 43% 42% 42% — % 00 44% 43% 44% + % 16 19% 19% 19% , 4 48% 40% 40% - % 16 20% 20 28% — % 1 60% 60% 68% ...... 23 51% 50% 51 % 15 44% 44% 44% 4- % 6 36% 36% 36% 4* % 165 54 59% m* ... 134 38% 33% 33% + % 59 51% 51% 51% — % 38% 30% 30% ...... 15 117% 116% 117% ... 30 43% 43% 43% — % 77 09% 09 0H0 — % 10 43% 43 43% — % 43 39 30% 39 17.25-17.75. l,»Ti75«g S3 and choice 750400 lb, 74.50- CrownZe 7.70 Cruc Stl 1.70 Cudahy Co xed good heifer, xed good Day PL 1.40 Deere 1.80a pel MnteT.10 Delta Air 1.70 PonROW 1,10 potadi* ■■ Stocks of Local Interest Figures attar decimal polnte are eighth OVER TNI COUNTER STOCK* Quotation, from tho NASD era rjpr* afrii^ESfuralff sss* Pat staal .60 136 19% 19% 19% PniftiAlk 1.20 21 34% 34% 34% ---- 19 102 101%. 101% — % 4 36% 96% 36% f % 16 42% 41% 4 % fi 50% 79% N% 20 97% 37% 37% iis-ur Duka Pw 1,70 0 141* Bill not Includo retail markup, Truck AMT Curb. Associate Iraun EnglnaeHngn Detrex Chemleel .. Diamond Crystal 4.2 4.5 .tA lu 13.2 14J .74.4 77.0 .10.0 18.0 Mi 17. Mdnawk Rubber Co. .. ......... M O 14.0 MjBirae Auto Eaulwnent _...... ?J-0 North Central Airlines Unite ..JU 11.7 Seiran Printing ............ ScrInto ... ........ Wyandotte 30.0 38.4 11.4 11.7 15.0 16.0 TiQ 7.3 35^ 36.4 Affiliated Fund me Income K-i .. me Growth K-2 -Investors Growth .Investors^ Trust j^Etectronlcs • • 9.50 18.27 .19.10 28.97 .11.64 12.72 auijl 16.77 9.36 10.22 ...17.41 18.05 ■lOfl 15J4 ...11.18 12.20 ...11J* 15.07 . 70.54 77.M T^elrt Dhrtd^^l.^ Uhl# 11-1 9-29 10-15 34 94% I “ 38% „ , „ 49% 4-1% ■ ■ mm 60 4* 82 34% 94 94% 4- 70 44% 43% 44% 4-24 53% »% 53% 4-40 30% 29% 29% — 17 42 41% 42 03 31% 90% 31 — % 190 29% 20*" 13 55% 55 15 86 05' jz 7i fp n 209 127% 125 127% +2% 10 55% fi 55 -39 45V* 45 45% • 4 353% 353 353 - 0 15% 15% 15 • x6 56% 56% 56% 9 3m 37% 37% • II 53% 5) 53 • 49 65% 6% 65% 10 4Hfc 4 40% - 6 25% 24% 24% 6 11% 11% 11% 57 27% 27’/d —D— 18 25% 25V* 15 40% 42 4 29% 29% _ . „ 29 62 61% 61%- 4 35% aft — 32 111% 110 n 19% m 14 29 27% ;w i + Vk 14V* 4 Vb East Air .50 ■Kodak idio EatonYa 1.75 EG&G JO ElBondS 1.77 IhyKdrd JA vans Pd .600 Eversharp H M- _ 52 101% 99% 100 —1% + % 4-2% PairCHII m3 113 23Vk 72V* 22V* 5 20 27V* 70 IS 8Vk 8Vk 8Vk H 44V* 44Vk 44 4 14 15V* Ml. 11 22Vk 22(4 22Vk 4 V* —F— 51 14(k MVk 83Vk ParroCp 1.20 » 26% 26% 26% — % 15; 62% 61% 61% —J 61 3Hi 33% 39%- + x4 69% 69 69% — 8 37 36% 37 — 8! Fllntkote 1 47 i PI* Pow l.34 10 < pi* PLt i.44 n ' PMC Cj»f .75 48 : PerdMof 2.3 1*8 KMeSiVk 52'/k 4 '* S;{| |rr osh FruehCp 1.70 70 MVk 328k MVk 4 Vk p>! Gen Clg 1.70, . 8 MVk 24(4 Mb 4 8b 21 31 (* 11 11 — V* 41 10 .TOM 2Mb 4 Vk 1 7ivk nv* nik 4 (* 40 18k SM JM —Vk 19- 51 Vk Sl(*. 51V* ..... 44 37 348k 161k 4 36Vk 4 ' South Co 1.02 259 25Vk 25V. 25M 4 SouNGas 1.30 30 42 41V* 41V* — SouthPac 1.50 24 32 31M 31M — f 2.80 11 55M 55 55 + Ind 20 18 V* 1IM 11M ! ,10b 312 42V* 43M 41V* . _ D .20 65 27 26(k 26Vk — (A 8 SS St SS = a 1 88: r ri*M 34^MM MV* 38*4 - 17 56M 54 56Vk 31M MVk 31M 4 Vk T M 4 M Kroger 1.10 38 Leh Val Ind Lehman 2.oig LOFGIs 2.00* LjtWMctr .341 te Living,In Oil LockhdA 2.20 Loews Theat moru LongftLt 1.14 Lorfllerd 2.50 LudiyStr .90 Meek* Co .30 1.60 r& Morafhn 2.40 Mar Mid 1.40 Merouar J5g MertlnMar T MayDStr 1.60 ».ii^ Re MOM ifc, MldSoUtil .76 1.30 MS iT5o Mohatco 1 ssaKt'fs MontPow 1.J6 30 66V* 65V* 66V* 41 60 n+ 4* 40 30'* 29V* 30 ^ '* M 44'* 63M 43V* —I'* SlIL 115M IB™ 55 40V* 394* MM .... 9 77'* 74M 76V* '17 MM 31V* MM % .......if H W7M Xerox Cp YngitSht ZanHlir or semiannual Ktiiii 2 16% 36% 36% — 44% + % 16 01% 80% 01 " 27% 27% 27' . . i 38% 30 38 — % I 49% 49% 49% .:. 33 61% 61% 61% — 83 47% 47’...... 126 92% 92 39 62% 61% 61% - % —V— • 73 35% 34% 34% — % 40 .31% 31 15 44% 44 —w— 76 49% 40% 49% 0 23% 23% 23% 0? 46 45 45% — % Assdb'Tl& G 83 31% 30% 30% — % AtlasCorp ‘ 31 37% 37 37 - % Barnes li 64 74 73% 73% — % Q ------ 35 45% 44% 45 + % 10 48% 48% 48% — % 17 55% 55% 55% . . 25 30% 30’/4 30% + % 40 31 30% 30% + % 18 65% 64% 64% _1% X—Y—z— *4 2501* 240'* 249VS +1M . RPI - if 35V* MM MM —M Zenith R 1.20 177 71V* 71 71M — M Copyrighted V The Aaaocleted Prut 1847 SelU figures ar* unofficial. Unless otherwise noted, rales of dlvF ......... . tlb)e ar( #nnuB| tho last quarterly News in Brief The theft of a radio valued at $7Q from Schoolcraft School 6400 Maceday, Waterford Township, was reported to township police yesterday. Carol Short of 111 Gladstone told Pontiac police yesterday that someone stole $270 from a box in a room of her apartment. Mom’s Rummage: Thursday, to 12, Indianwood and Baldwin Roads. —Adv. NEW YORK (AP) Exchange selected noon price*: Seel * (hds). High Lew La* eroleG .510* 82 33M 32’* MM AalxMag 111 I 1)11 Hlf AmPetro -35a ArkLOas 1.40 .. ............ Ql I 31 5 M 5 -76 1 JM+1-14 ■ted as regular illowlng footnotes, a—Also extra i ■to plus stock divide; dock dividend, c—Liquidating I—Declared dr paid In 1867 dividend. *—Paid last year. I* In stock during 1847, esti - i value on tx-dlvldend or ex utlen date, g—Declared or paid *i Is year. h_D*clared or paid attei dMdend or spltt up. k-Declerpd erpelO tills year, an accumulative lieu* with dividend! In arrears, n—New Issue. P-PeW thl* year, dividend omitted, deterred or no action taken at last dividend meting. r-Decldred or paid In 184* plut »t«k dividend. t-Peld In stock during 180*. tsllmsted cash yelu* on ex-dividend - exKtistrJbutlon dele s-z—Seles In full.. cW—Celled. x-Ex dividend, y—Ex dlvl-*d and soles In full, x-dls—Ex dl**-'*"-—Ex right*. xw-WIthout ----- the Bankruptcy “eurltl** assumed ^such^e— Treasury Position American Stock Exch. -v! 15% 15% 15%+% . _ 3% 3% 75 3% 3% 3% — % 4 6 32% 32% 32%+ % BrazILItPw’l 288 13% 13% 13% Brit P«t .49p -3 8 5164 51-68 5-16 Campbl Chib 22 715-16 7%715-16+1-16 Can So Pat^ Cdn Javelin 82 . , 2% 2% 10 36 100 19% Craol* 2.60a Data fi j Equity Ftlmoni un Gan Plywood fitYil .40 I 2 3-16 2% 2% 16 9 1% 9 82 9% 9 9% — % yCp^.li > Dlls Giant GoldfM c<5. HoarnarW .82 Nyeon Mta Hydrometal Impar Oil 2a laram Corp Kaiser Ind McCrory wt MaadJonn .48 Molybdan Monog Ind NawPark Mn .Pancoast Pat RIC Group Scurry Rain Signal OIIA 1 16 IHb 12% 12% — % 4 26% 25% 25% — % 9 +% 9% +% .... 917-16 8% S 7-16+3-16 239 f% 9% 9% + % 36 4% 4% 4% — % 75 8% 8% 0% 67 3Mb 35% 36 19 18% 18% 18% + % 44 21% 20% 21% + % 5 60% '60% 60% — % 7 9% 9% 9% + 42 17% 17% 17% — .. _. . -t 44 MM 34M 36'* 54 50V* 50M 5DM It 12IM 121 111 25 I'* IM IM 385 IM IM IM 41 3M 2M IM 18 34M 33M 33V* 154 39M 38V* 38 — V* 5 55 54M 55 + M 261 OOV* 78V* IB'* +2M 58 28’* 27M 27M —M 18 MM MM 38M + M The Associated Press 1847 BOND AVERAGES Compiled by The Associated Press it 1* 11 tl 1 Rails Ind. Util. Pgn. L. Yd. t change on Tuts. 69 0 91 Jb 80.9 9,1.2 82.9 WnNuclr .20 69.2 90.5 80.9 91.2 UJ Prov. Day 69.0 91.0 80.9 * * a 69.2 90J 69.7 91J 72.6 09J 73.0 95.6 04.9 92^ 48.8 88.3 88.5 80* *z.e 79.5 101.4 K.1 83.1 88.7 ‘ " 78.2 80.4 13.7 WASHINGTON (AP)-Th* the Treesury compered spending .date a year age. Balance—****' M' • ^ ,4' ,M4 _ I 3,608,283.011.54 8 3.713477,253.78 Deposits Fiscal Year July 1— ....27.525,488,(134.41 24484,785.47045 Withdrawals Fiscal (tear— . JM884344IJ.fi 37,014,613,882.20 324498478,404.18 13,258,077,615.54 The North American Air Defense Command agreement was ai^ed by the United States and Canada May 12,1958. Year Ago 1967 High . 1967 Low .. 1966 High . 1966 Low . DOW-JONES AVERAGES STOCKS 30 Industrial .... 20 Rails ............. 15 Utilitias ......... ■ ar do,” Goldwater said in a National Educational Televirion network interview Monday night. •PERFECTLY FAIR* Tt is perfectly fair in love and war. “We had all kinds of things planned. We even had a plan once to try to keep Hubert Humphrey’s crew of bis plane locked up in their rooms so they I I will not reveal the names of people responsible, but we had every cable of every television company and every radio coiqpany marked up in the loft of the Cow Palace” in San Fran cisco, Goldwater said. “If anybody got a little too obnoxious, he said, “they could always have cable trouble. “And you might recall Sen. Hugh Scott got up once with the bullhorn and it didn’t work. The batteries weren’t in it.” Scott was backing fellow Pennsylvanian, Gov. William W. Scranton, for the nomination. These are the things that you Auto Output Most for Week Since July never have been opened at any time during shipment. In other words, shippers still must develop skill in packing. PACKING PROBLEMS If a container is not packed tightly, goods within will inevitably smash about. In other instances, poor weight distribution within the container has caused it to buckle and even rip when lifted. Shippers also are learning that packing for different transportation modes presents special problems. Cargo packed for an ocean voyage, for instance, must withstand much rolling and pitching. their rooms so cpuldn’t get out and fly some place.” The interviewer asked what happened. “They got out the window,” Goldwater reported. Whoever wins the GOP nomination ' next year', assuming President Johnson runs again, will be facing what Goldwater calls “probably the cutest, smartest, throat-cuttingest political operator I have ever run into. But Oregon Democratic party officials said Republican Gov Nelson A. Rockefeller could beat Johnson, at least in Oregon, as things stand now. STRONG CANDIDATE They also maintain GOP Gov. Ronald Reagan of California also would be a strong candidate but that Rockefeller is the only Republican who could actually win. Reagan ruled out today setting up any Reagan-for-President campaign organization before the GOP convention, reiterating he isn't a candidate. However, he said he will set up an organization in California to handle the June presidential primary campaign for the, favorite-son delegation he intends to lead to the convention. Rockefeller, continuing his efforts to halt ahy speculation about his candidacy, turned down Reagan’s invitation to visit California for a conference of governors on state medical care programs. He said such a meeting might have “presidential implications.” a Gov. George Romney o( Midf igan, another top GOP preriden- Those involved in air shipping are facing a serious problem of weight. In order to take ftiU advantage of the jumbo jets all aircraft manufacturers now are trying to cut container weight while still keeping strength. Regardless of the problems, and even regardless of the industry’s inability to correct them, most companies now in the business foresee a tremendous expansion ahead of them. DETROIT (AP) - Even with strike-bound Ford Motor Co. at standstill, U.S. automakers turned in their best car production figures since July this week, the trade; publication Au tomotive News said Monday. The Industry assembled 133,-217 cars last week compared with 116,874 in tile holiday-shortened previous week and 153,622 in the same week a year ago. . I - | The jump over the Labor Day prwprot, plans to attend week ended Sept. 9 was 14 per P"’ °f Reagan’s session. cent. I ~~~ - 4 Eye Problems 1!S Meanwhile, Ford dropped 13 per cent in both passenger car and truck production. Ford made 13,942 cars during the Labor Day week and dealers have a month’s supply of 1968 models —86,965 new cars. General Motors, with 93,546 car assemblies, led the fiqld with 70 per'cent of the total output planned to put 12 of its plants on six-day work weeks this week, Ward’s said. OUTPUT BOOSTED Chrysler Corp. turned out 32,-m M4 I#.? 8i-j £4 750 new cars and American Mo-" tors, with new interest being shown in its Javelin and Rambler American models, said it would operate its Kenosha, Wis plant this Saturday. AMC turned out 6,810 cars tills week, up from the 4,618 during Labor Day week. Ward’s said the industry was to build its five-millionth passenger Car of calendar 1967 Monday — but it said p. production to date Is 14.2 per cent behind that of a year ago with tiie chasm continuing to widen as the Ford strike contin- of Farm Labor LANSING (AP) - Four house members were in West Michigan Monday for a two-day study of farm labor problems. They Stopped In Oceana, Manistee and Mason counties. *' * * The four were Reps. Philip Pittenger, R-Lansing; James Bradley; D-Detroit; Dennis Cathorne, R-Manistee; and Raymond Kehres, D-Monroe Net Ceng. ........HV^J* Noon Tut*. ......481.2 3094 1484 Prey. o»y 4MJ km .hi.i. Weak Ago .......478.8 3014 147.3 Manth Ago .. .73.4 300.1 147.1 Year Ago ........4M4 1544 148.1 !!w$ 2®4 1704 SH 388.0 143.1 130.2 2484 Deputy's Father Killed in Crash ALLEGAN (AP)-William F Miller, 78, of Allegan was killed Monday when his car and tank truck collided on M89 a mile east of Allegan. The truck driver, Frank Rothermil of Spring Lake, escaped injury. Miller was the father of Allegan County sheriff’s deputy William Miller who dispatched other deputies to , the accident scene, not aware his father was the victim. 3 Engineers Promoted at Pontiac Div. Three organizational changes within Pontiac Motor Division’s t engineering department were announced today by Stephen P. > Malone, chief engineer. They are: • Clifford L. Barkell, who for the past three years has been Pontiac’s resident manager at the General Motors Proving Ground, becomes assistant superintendent of engineering shops. * * * Walter E. Greene, who for the past year has been supervisor of laboratory and test engineering, suqpeeds Barkell. Richard T. Hartzell, who for the past year has been a senior experimental project engineer, succeeds Green. All appointments are effective immediately. Barkell joined Pontiac in 1948 is a laboratory technician and he also served as a dynamometer operator before being assigned to engineering research in 1953. * In 1966 he was named an experimental project engineer before becoming foreman and later general foreman of the model sheet metal shim. HXe ACCE sheet metal shop. He accepted his Proving Ground assignment tq 1964. * ★ Barkell, who attended Highland Park Junior College, lives with his wife and five children at 39i9 Baybrook, Waterford Township. JOINED DIVISION Greene, 3240 Angelus, Waterford Township, joined the divi-1961 as a project engineer. He was named supervisor of laboratory and test engineering in 1966. A 1957, graduate of D u k e University, be is married and has two children. Hartzell came to Pontiac in 1955 as a college student trainee while attending Purdue University. He was graduated from Purdue in 1957 and after receiving his master’s degree from the University of Michigan in and serving in the U.S. Air Force, he returned to Pontiac in 1962 as an experimental engineer. * * * The following year he became a designer and in 1965 he wa« named experimental project engineer and hi 1966 he became senior project engineer. Hartzell7!* married, has two sons and lives at 2557 Warwick, Bloomfield Township. C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 186Y Close-Up of a Hippie: 'tLoneliness MILWAUKEE, WiS. (AP) — She wears her hair long and her skirts >short and7 her eyes are wise,'1 sad, glazed but still innocent. She is a seeker after simplicity but her life is an endless complication. Her creed is to hull no one but she constantly hurts herself.' Life, she says, is pain; and suicide w discount pnc«. ---»...Y - SERV'CE r.0WTBAcT- 32 Servicemen Killed in Viet Are Identified WASHINGTON (AP)-The Department of Defense has identified 32 servicemen killed in fighting the war in Vietnam. Killed in action: ARMY FLORIDA — Spec. 4 Wayne A. Watts, Jacksonville. ILLINOIS - Pic. Sltphcn R. Ford. LIN*. WISCONSIN - Pfc. Cherlei A. John- CALIFORNIA - 2nd Lt. Dennis 0 ’••arson, Los Aneolosi Lanes CpI. Staph m L. Grant, Pain Varda; Fie,. Dannli Fisher, Alta Lama; Pic. ‘Any E _ , ... Lanca Cpi. Ttrranca l. Priest, Fart Wayna. KENTUCKY - Lanca Cpi. Martin W. Prather, Louisville. MASSACHUSETTS — Lanca Cpi. Jet-fray F. Myers, Msttepsn; Lsncs Cpi. Gsorpa A. Nash Jr., Quincy; Lanca Cpi. Alban W. Santos, Fall River. MICHIGAN - Lanca CM: Richard L. Oita, Traverse City; Ftc. Dtvar L. Lockhart, Datryit. MINNESOTA - 2nd Lt. Charles E. Rybsre, Jackson; Sgt. Bruce H. Kraga, Minnesota City. NEW HAMPSHIRE - Lanca Cpi. Dannie H. Marshall, Lisbon; ,Pfc. Joseph A. Durllna III, Carry. . NEW YORK - 1st Lt. John F. Moral, Mlllbrook; Sgt. Lawnnca • D. Patars, Binghamton; Lanca Cpi, Stavan T. Cornell, Brooklyn; Lanca Cpi. Fernando V. Foots, Bronx. . , NORTH CAROLINA - Cpi. John D. Crisp III, Fintfip*. - CM. Prater B. sm PHEW - COM- Albert Savor Jr., Warran. TEXAS — Technical Sgt. Charles A. ■aradlse, Tyler. Died of wounds: , MARINE CORPS _ MICHIGAN - sgt. Jamas R. Liu-die Me. Union Lake. Missing to dead—hostile: army FLORIDA - 1st Lt. OShnls 0.* Lett-telm, Largo. ILLINOIS - SlaH Sgt. Olatar H. Bur-gar, Lombard. Missouri - CM. Larry L. Barker. Tampa. MASSACHUSETTS — 1st Lt. k. Baruba, Malison. Missing to captured: air force . 1st Lt. Robert A. Abbott. Died, not in action: ARMY OKLAHOMA - Master Sgt. W lease, Lawton. ", .TEXAS - Spec S Bril F. L SAVE ON THIS VERSATILE HOTPOINT AUTOAAATIC WASHER Now from Hotpoint... ami specially priced from Highland. Custom craftod with all-porcelain finish sutslds and Inilde . . . durablo, dependable, oconomical, too. You can wash from 2 la 12-pound loads wHhaut spocial attachments. Ooti clothes really clean. Simply adjuat for “Heavy** or "Regular-■all foods, select from hat or cold water wash temperatures and Hotpoint duos the rest... automatical- PHILCO AUTOMATIC WASHER WITH 2-YEAR SERVICE PROTECTION Now! Worry-fraa 2-yoar warranty an oil part* and sanrteo with thi* now washar from Philco-Ford. Exclusive Blades-of-woter action, 2 tpaadt for .all fobrics. 3 Cycles — tot It and forgot It. Soak cycla. Automatic flltar-dispaniar. Reversible lid. Variable water •over. An exceptional buy at Highland's low pricel Whirlpool 2-SPEED AUTOMATIC WASHER AT NEW LOW PRICE! Jgfgk - Ftc. Jamas 0. Lawson., Missing to dead—nonhostile: ARMY CALIFORNIA — WO Rogsr C. Rosa, laMo Monica. I NEW jiftSIY — WO Don It. Merger, Brick Township. PENNSYLVANIA Spec. 4 Dalton T. Goff, Now Castle. 3 WASHINGTON — Pfc. Ronald J. Johnson, North Band. Missing, not in action: ARMY Cent. Kurt L. Kuhnt. WO OavM Weetbav. Spec. A Russell G. Garrison, spec. 4 Larry 0. Lanca. Law Talks Set I LANSING (AP) - A new law governing licensing of residen-j tial builders and maintenance j and alteration contracts will be. discussed at a statewide meeting of local building officials Oct. IS in Lansing, the Department of Licensing and Regulation has announced. Some Filipino tribes still' practice head-hunting. j 1 in the Relaxing ■ ■ Atmosphere of' ^ ^ .the ^ I Liberty * (Cocktail Lounge ■ Right in the y: Heart of £ I Downtown I R| Pontiac . 85 N. Saginaw d Fret delivery, installation $ V Jt and service. Full warranty. ■ Mp Free delivery, installation arid 2-year contract for service and parts. *159 Free delivery, service and installation. *159 HOTPOINT AUTOAAATIC GAS DRYER INCLUDES INSTALLATION “Ibt Your Hotpoint Cos Dryor Do Your Ironing"! Now versatile speed-flow drying . . . coaler, solar, more thorough and more gentle. It loaves dollies fluffy dry and wrinkle-frisol Two automatic temperature selections and variable timing diaL Porcelain finish. An e»ee phono! buy at Highland's low price. Free installation par you. Gas Co. program. t&NJATOK WlttlHO oyl SAVE $41.50 , IHSTALLAT10H wimwocosu PHILCO AUTOAAATIC DRYER With FREE INSTALLATION and SERVICE .tolled and Mtvkad floe by the Edison Co. psr their program. WHIRLPOOL AUTOMATIC DRYER INSTALLED and SERVICED FREE! Mtaporatoo selection. Mat screen. Satin smooth dram. Sofa for all fabrics. tnOoflod aad Free delivery, installation and service. Full warranty. *118 Free delivery, installation end service. *99 Free delivary, installation an CldO Ht® QUCStiOn. All avnonta rnnnai Proparty on either ydrain connections. aii connections of house lem of "the0? Workhi W,I5 shall be made * T""*hl“ M ol to Michigan, bejn^ Act. No !»« same ■ Lews iCTION 3. No person, Hrm or the Mansions ol this Resolution Houehig Code of Michigan, being Ad 167 ot the Public Acts of 1717. and as ' alterations of any —tcted with pr designed to be connected with the sanitary -----------— until, a permit hoe boon tho Township of Pontiac nreln. Any person doing hout such permit shall he at a mlsde •boil bo subloct ' SECTION 4. Any parson desiring to Speech to Follow Annual Dinner of Pontiac Masons, Mrs Donald W Ericksonora- Richard with the Air Force X. a L r , ...... 1 * at Topeka, Kan., and Lynn with I A 34-year-old PontiSc^Tpwn-' fipt There Be Light, a Edward Fitzgibbon, 80, of 8151 PONTIAC TOWNSHIP^Serv- the Air Force at Cambridge, ship woman, injured in an he-] *?eech hy. 8 public relations ad‘ Madison died this morning, ice for Mrs. Donald W. (Ruth England; three daughters, Kar- cident in indpnpndpnrp Tnwn.mbj\trative assistant of Con-obstructions shoii Sfllis body is at the Sparks-Grif-M.) Erickson, 44, of 2708 Au- enof Chicago, 111., and Gretchen.. .. . ....JT. „„„i1„„1„„H8um®i’a^°wer Co., will follow yLng fin EunorM Home. , iburn will be2ptn. tomorrow at and Kathleen, both at home ; Smp wmctl kU ed her c?mpanioni the annuaT'Jigg’s dinner spon- section 17 Ns h , | Mr. Fitzgibbon, a retired utica- Burial grandchild. an be laid] WALLED LAKE -unieuVheifor Mrs. Willard C. (Marguerite) Bell, 71, of 923 E. Walled Lake will be-7 p.m. Thursday at Richardson-B 1 r d Funeral Home. Burial will be In Millcreek Cemetery, Hooks-town, Penn. Mrs. Bell died yesterday. She was a member of the ’VFW Auxiliary,, the Farm Bureau, the 1. | \4i~‘ ' Undergoing treatment In the >p&ny’s genera] office in Jackson, transportation service, service /virs. Leon weiSS hospital’s intensive care unit isjwill speak at the 6:30 p.m. din- to miUtaiyfihniHes and for of-TROY — Requiem Mass for Virginia Lee Thomas of 3768 Au-lner at the Roosevelt Temple, 22 fice volunteer woVk For addi-§ I iState. Dinner tickets are |2. |tional information con^the Six members will receive life I regional office. X memberships by grand officers ________________________ Mrs. Leon (Lottie S.) Weiss, 58, burn. Edward D. Forsythe . WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Edward D. Forsythe, 75, of 2463 Chata will be 2 p.m. Thursday at First Free Methodist Church, Pontiac. Burial will be in Drayton Plains Mrs- Hqlqn Brozozowski of War-four brothers; and three will be in St. Lawrence Cemetery, Utica. A rosary will be said at 8:30 tonight at the Milli-ken Funeral Home, Utica. Mrs. Weiss died Sunday. Surviving besides her husband are a son, Leon Jr. of Troy; a daughter, Mrs. Helen DeNeen of Lake Orion; her mother, XX . . . Cemetery by Sparks-Griffin Fu- ren; tour Drc Womens Society of Christian . „ ponttac grandchildren. Service of Walled Lake Metho- ne.r.al ™me' ™ntiac- - , dist Church and the Walled Lake'Fwsy^' 8 5*“*? to° Garden Club. and, brhider for General Surviving besides her husband Mo ora Truck and Coach D.-are two children, Willard p I ™ion, died yesterday. Surviving are hi$ wife, Jean; _ and tolof Urging; Two 7stm;°Hve ibree daugbt*rf’ fe, “**1 ,™i»riei ',om grandchildren; and *> orea*. vansky and Mrs. Albert Tholl, "HeThe pub! grandchild. the trench. Clare and Mrs. Maxine Shaw lasting must tp ^ |0|8 ^ ttlMf and to-1 -----*‘*o< ",v w,i ®rea^ | both of Birmingham, and Mrs. John Looper of Bloomfield Hills New Officers Are Elected by Alano Center She was injured when the car in which she and Mrs. Donald W. Erickson, 44, of 2788 Auburn, Pontiac, Township, were riding went out of control on 1-75 near Clinton-ville Road about 2 a.m. Mrs. Erickson died in the hospital emergency roopi shortly after themishap. ★ ★' * Oakland County sheriff's deputies said yesterday they could not determine which of the women was driving the car at the time of the accident. of the state. jx ' * ! TotaF area of the National Additional information may be park System reached a new obtained from Leland Dennis of high in 1966 of 27,16ft,688 acres 1388 Edgeorge, Waterford Town-|of which the Federal govem-ship. Iment now owns 97.7 per cent. Y branch ever the skies of not stand, perpendicular John T. Chadwick |a sor!' PONTIAC TOWNSHIP - will tunneling be permitted, except upon I Spr-vir* for Tnhn T Pharlwinlr written permlssMh ol the Township En- oerv,ce Ior Jonn *■ L,naaWlCK, “■near. •** mi—■-----1,1 ■* “ SECTION 23. All mingham; and a brother. Artificial kidneys have been developed to the point that some Iscientists predict that within Ly*1'| three years they will be on Forsythe of Bir- sue, Waterford Township, is the the market at a price which Howard N. Owen of! the Three Hundred . _______1 Dollars for each Incident and Twenty Thousand (220.600.-00) Dollars tor property damage,- sold Shall further dls- certlllcela ol prescribed toy ra the Town-M — end charges by the Township Board mil herein provldtd for, wr not herein prescribed In writing by exact locations . mad* on blanks lur- Ponttac harmless tor any loss or damage •bet may In my way result or bo occasioned by the making of such connection. Provided, further, such permit shall be tiled In the.office at the Township Clark within five days after tho completion of Hit work and shall ba accompanied by • correct return, signed by the licensed sewer builder and the Township ot Pontiac Sewer Inspector showing a comp tale record ot too work on prescribed by lha Township Board. SECTION 7. Y branches or slubi bo placed at frequent Intervals, < more for ovary lot. A record ol lh< lion ol such Y bronchos or stubs st kept at tho office of the " Clerk M surnisneo to me licensed at the risk of licensed sower o the accuracy ot the some, with tho sewer of the son-lam must be made at such Y 1 stubs or In the event that It Is to maka such connections with ir at • point whore a Y or stub bam provided, the connections mode by Inserting o Y or stub In Lawai lateral but no such made except with the approval ot the Township Sower Inspector In the presence of the Town,hip %CTION S, n writing mus _ Clark hours notice In writing must bo given at continued unless tor inspection 59, of 3778 Tienken will be 16:36 ttmswin'my**itriiet,Tme!'"o7"Mto™mu5 a.m. tomorrow at Price Funeral KXsTnd'duMV Xh, r.r£:H°ma. Troy- Bar‘a» will be in r^h.w.^irv^^rywhs;u?ion 2^kryi^!f- ■yard the public against accidents, and! Mr. Chadwick, a machine real all Hmes the workjhm^TO(don. « buH(|er {m Q and M Tool Co., itoSTdreinTSw. • Sterling Township, died yester- point three (3) feet outside of the house Hnv. be of A-1 standard i Mrs. Charles Hancock to curb lines shell be of A-1 standard u7‘ . . . . .. I glazed vitrified earthenware Surviving are hlS Wife, Alex Smth.^in1*!? Umii"* TcJU’ orandra; a son, Thomas E. at service 1 for- Mrs. Charles 8 daferVElizabeth A.'(Lorene) Hancock, 78, of 4485 Interior dlamolor shall ba six Inches, at home; and a sister. EnolnnH Rparh wan tn ht> 9 Tho conractlm between tour and six Inch BnglBnQ 06801 was 10 De l pipe shall b« of tiw bast quality of hard ss ■ r, ei 'p.m. today at Price Funeral --------------HI U majtoj Mark D. Elcar Home, Troy. Burial was to fol- provad by the Township Engineer « white LAKE TOWNSHIP -,low *n Oakvlew Cemetery, Service for Mark D. Elcar, 19, R°yal 9?k newly elected president of the everyone can afford. Oakland County Alano Center,' Inc. Also in office after the recent election are Tom Williams of 813 Woodland, vice president; Mrs. Hdward Owen, secretary; ar.d Mrs. Tom Williams, treasurer. Mrs. Owen is also representing the center on the Oakland County Comprehensive Alcohol-WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP — ism Program Planning Committee. Rev. William E. Hall TROY — Former resident Rev. William E. Hall, 71, 6f St, Clair Shores died this morning. His body is at Price Funeral Home. Due to the Death of Our Dear Brother Harry Fortino, We Will Be Closed All Day Wednesday, September 20 FORTINO’S Fine Foods end Liquors Wide Track ot W. Huron make end the Townihlp Engineer. SECTION 25. The cover 61 the Y branch or elub on the sewer shall be carefully removed so as not to ln|ure lha socktt. Tha first langth ol plpa attached to lha Y branch or stub on the sewar to lha Y branch shall ba of 451- Elkinford will be 16 a.m. tomorrow at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will be in Highland Cemetery. Mark, the son of Mr: and Mrs. Mrs. Hancock died yesterday. Survivifigkare four daughters, Mrs. Raym&nd Peterson of White Lake Township, Mrs. Joseph Behrendt of Redwood City, The goals of the center are to offer assistance to the alco-; holic and his or her family seeking relief and recovery from alcoholism. Future activities include a potluck supper, Sept. 38; Rummage Sale and Bake Sale, Oct. 14; and a Halloween party Oct. of not less then from the house to.the sewer unless by special permission ot tho .Township En-glnsor. In which case provision must lx made tor regular end efficient flushing.] Curvsd pipe shell be used tor every deflection from a straight lino of more •hen three Inches In two feet. Unless otherwise specified In writlnc Sr Tnmoe wir-on Ihua Calif., Mrs. Leon McCartney of ------------------------------------ to tha *in Vn^ir and Mr8' Albert Rocken-! The number of Americans 65 i neveidentally Friday^ in New York tine of Troy; two sons, Floyd and over has increased sixfold City wmle on leave -from the g 0f Millington and Charles N.j— from three million to more Marine Corps. He was a veteran 0f Metamora; three brothers; 19 than eighteen million — since of the Vietnam war. I grandchildren; and 11 great- 1988. Surviving besides his parents grandchildren. ---------------Z-----—--------- are three sisters, Mrs. Keith Our entire organization is dedicated to serve those who call us as we would want to be served ourselves. SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME 46 Williams St. Phone FE 8-9288 tying the pipe The lolnts of making the joints by the Township Engineer, Hewitt and Mrs. Gordon Thompson, both of Highland Township, and Janet of Milford; two brothers, Dana of New York City and J times Jr. of Owosso be subloct to Ihe i ithlp Engineer, taken lo remove 4. After • suitable healed compound poured, from In caso of controversy ownshlp Board ahall act may procead to do tha sama to Ihe property owner. SECTION 31. This Ordinance shall take I effect ton (10) days alter Ihe passage one halt (ivy) Inches. properly caulked, {thereof by tho Pontiac Township 1 end the and suparcedas Ordinance No. 74. one side This Ordinance enected by the Town- I mar n snan ron arouno inn pipe and ship Board ol Pontiac Township. Oakland II lha spaca, making a complete loint. County, Michigan. September lltti, 1767. 5. Runners shall not ba removed until GRETA V. BLOCK to “J has thoroughly sat. ■ Clerk *• *he Sept. 17, 1767 length__________________________________________ 6. Alternate lolnts may 7. The compound shell be heated in a suitable retainer until It reaches the fluidity ol water, stirring continuously to] |ng Sandra prevent carbonising. (. No pouring shall be done until Ihe entire mass In lha heating kettle shall have attained Ihe proper consistency, end the contents of tho xottlo shall be kept | “ point ol pouring to prevent bate Court for Juvtnllt Division. In tho Matter ot tho Petition ing Sandra Bruso eke Hale. M TO Alice Bruseeu chilling. pouring vessel large enough lo pouring snail bt used. pouring any lolnl the bottom out so that the barrel ol lha plpa ivenly and firmly on a substantial true grodo and ollgnmont. I outlets ol septic tanks lour Inches In thickness, i shall be determined nglneer. The replac-paving shall be done Hire alter the laying r sewer and must be Ihe surface at least •tore being disturbed i Oakland sponsible lor any convenient lor examination until Inspected and approved. Such Inspection shall In tha ground or pavement, bo mode within Iwonty-tour (24) hours iplpoa must bo protected to H attar such notification. Tho licensed i Hon of the Township Engine sewer builder shall remove and replace! gas pipes mutt be protected I all rejeetbd work end shall make all faction ol Iht company ownln, ’ fully meet the requirements ol this urine, the necessary water closet paper. — slops, ^and eellai SECTION II. Callers end cistern over- such a menner-thet the water *#el net be broken. SECTION 12. ie Township. \ • SECTION 11 No open Sutler, street catch construction ol Ihs house drain, or sub-soquont settling ol tho oorth than be made good by The licensed sowar bulkier. SECTION 27. House drains end sewer laid within Township limits In end tor houses on straots whore no public sewers are yet laid, shall be done according to the regulation of this resolution In every particular, end Ihe owner or agent ot tho property must secure a permit to connect the same with the public sewtr as toon ot tho tamo It built- past the property from which sold drain le laid. SECTION 27. be made excepting ea herein pro tor. Any person who ohall make, oi mil, or cause to be mode, ■ connection with such sewer In a manner contrary to remove any private drain connected the sanitary sewers of the Townth Pontiac, which It constructed contrary to the provisions of Blit SECTION 27. Any. •Ion shall, upo Justice Churl I thaty ien (iio.lL,___________________________ ing.- one hundred (0100.00) dollars at the discretion ot the court, and may be — fined In too Oakland County Jail « jtortod net exceeding ninety (701 day*, or ■ Brlebolt. mother Iliad In Ihle Court comet within toe provisions of Chapter 712A of the Corn- toe Court Houto, Oakland County Ihe City of Ponttac in eatotob day of Septem- SiW County. Witness, Ihe Honorable Norman Barnard, Judge of sold Court. In City ol Pontiac In sold County, this day ol September A.O. 1767. ‘ true copy. (Seel) NORMAN R. BARNARD Judge ol Probate ELIZABETH A. BALLARD Deputy Probate Reglsle Juvenile Division City Schools, Oakland County, Mlch- NOTICE •oration c of too I District. Oakland County, Mlchl on. by dotechlng too following de« indt. to-wlt: — TIN, RIOS, Section II, South! Township, Cranbrook Village Su vision No. I. Lots 707, 710, 774 City School District, District nlngham County, Notified tool • public Ruth H. Hodges BIRMINGHAM - Memorial service for Ruth H. Hodges, )8, of 1834 Fairview was to be 11 a.m. today at St. James Episcopal Church. Her body was donated to Wayne State Medical School for cancer research. The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Shields Hodges, Miss Hodges graduated last June from Ernest W. Seaholm High School. She had been a Youth for Understanding student exchange program visitor to Rotterdam, Holland, in the summer of 1966. Surviving besides her parents are a sister, Mrs. Katherine H. Ditsche; a brother, J. Shields Hodges HI; and her grandparents, Mrs. George M. Dwelley of Orlando, Fla., Mrs. Ruth H. Hodges of Knoxville, Tenn., and James S. Hodges of Houston, Tex. Memorials may be made to the Ruth Hale Hodges scholarship IQrid at Seaholm High School, Birmingham. Mrs. Lee Moore .WIXOM — Service for Mrs. Lee (Doris) Moore, 56, of 2444 Potter will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at First Baptist Church, Novi. Burial will be in Wixom Cemetery by Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Mrs. Moore died Sunday. Mrs. Harold Schneider NOVI TOWNSHIP - Requiem Mass for Mrs. Harold (Alvina B.) Schneider,- 53, of 46988 W 12 Mile will be 19 a.m. tomorrow at St. Williams Catholic Church, Walled Lake. Burial will be at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield. A Rosary will be said at 8 tonight at Casterline Funeral Home, Northville. Mrs. Schneider died Sunday. She was a member of St. -William’s Rosary Altar Society, Walled Lake. Surviving besides her husband are three sons, Robert of Wlx- C0MPLETE HEARING EVALUATIONS 2. Tho Oftedlvo dele if the Irene- personal or' Ironetorrod ■ cmeldore- opportunlty to bt hoard BOARD OP EDUCATION OP OAKLAND SCHOOLS r: WILLIAM J.'EMERSON , Secretary Thos. Certified by the National Hearing Aid Society Main Floor, Riker Bldg. 35 W. Hurt* 352-3032 Fttl FAMING M tfce PHI NTNUIE LI Remember, You Need More Than One Kind Of Fire Insurance And This One Is Sure Fire! It's probably not the kind of fire insurance you're thinking of. It's even better. For instance; when ypu have an H. H. Smith heatingj’oil contract 1. You are insured against ever running out of oil with oi^r automatic, "KEEP FULL" Service. | 2. You are insured against short measure because all of our deliveries are accurately metered to the last drop. 3. You are insured against high heating bills because your payments can be spread out over a 12 month period instead of just six or seven months. 4. You're insured against paying any fuel oil bills while the family's no. 1 breadwinner is laid up due to illness or accident. How's that for sure-fire fire insurance? We can promise you, "IT'S GREAT"! KEEP YOUR HOME FIRE BURNING WITH DEPENDABLE FUEL OIL SERVICE BY YOUR MODERN OIL HEAT DISTRIBUTOR (the Man who tuppliet the »uteU,*afe»t, aavingett fuel of all) OIL Company, 590 S. Paddock St., FE 2-8343 Member of the Oakland Heating Council / 24 Hour Burner And KE|P FULL SERVICE D—2 'Evaluate/ Reagan Tells News Execs SAN FRANCISCO OJPD -Gov. Ronald Reagan today urged tiie nation’s newspapers to remain vigilaht in the people’s right to know conduct of public business. But in a speech prepared for the eighth annual Conference of United Press International Editors and Publishers, attended by John W. Fitzgerald, editor of The Pontiac Press, the California governor sounded a note of caution. "I would hope there would be a continuing evaluation not on|y of news gathering and , news gatherers but also of the place of Interpretive reporting in news writing and the value, if any, of the political THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER i», 1967 monger,” he said. Reagan, who plans a three-day speaking tour late this month to Illinois, South Carolina and Wisconsin, noted he had Tracome the subject of increasing presidential speculation recently. Although he plans to run as a favorite son presidential candidate in California, the Republican governor repeatedly has denied that he is or expects to be a candidate for president. He flatly denied two recent stories — one that reported he met with Gov. Paul Johnson of Mississippi to discuss making a bid for Southern delegates to next year’s GOP National Convention and another that his top aide quit in a dispute over whether Reagan should increase national speechmaking activities. ‘Tve never met Governor Johnson,” he paid, “but what is even more significant, I have a wire In which Governs he never Turning to the duties of newspapers in reporting public affairs, Reagan said he shared Romney Visits Anticrime Talks INDIANAPOLIS, Ind. (AP) Gov. George Romney of Michigan sat in on an anticrime discussion and visited a Negro settlement house here Monday in the second week of his tour of American cities. Romney, mentioned as a candidate for the Republican preri-dential nomination, shrugged oft mention that there was no official Republican welcoming committee. He said his trip is nonpolitical. He told newsmen that he will go to Europe and Southeast Asia after his present tour. .as “custodians, of the public 'trust.” He said newspapers had a responsibility to keep the public informed when their officials fail to meet their responsibilities. , “I think by and large down through the years, you have done just that,” he said.' “But someplace along the line there has been a loosening. Agencies of government at every level are seeking to perform their services more and more with less and less attention to the ‘right of the people to know.” Hay-Filled Silo Tips and Tumbles to $Hfj000 Ruin PROMISE CITY, Iowa (AP)—Bob Lockridge’s leaning tower of silage has toppled. “I’ve got bricks and hay all over,” says Lockridge, who watched his brand-new, seven-story silo tip more and more each day since Sept. 12. The stio, one of the largest in the area, contained 800 tons of hay when it finally tumbled into $10,000 ruin. “The contractor told me even before it fell that he would build me another one,” Lockridge said. The old one lasted four months.^ Death Notices- H WOSsT^DtUA sTT^SepUmfi M. Nelson, Mrs. C land, and Raymond •unrtvad tar seven ora and .four great-orendchlL....... naral tarvka will ba halt) Wadnaa- - Chaoal nouraS to l’ and 7 to f o. m.) WLljAftl, bQboVHSA W.V 'tan-♦ember 17, 1W; aw watklw Laka Road, Watorfn-d Townihlp; ap* E/,„daar mother of Stephan K. Wllllamai- alao turvlvad by one grandchild. Rectttfjan at the Roa-ary «ylU be tonight at I p.m. at the Lewis E. Wlnt Funeral Home. Funeral service wm he held Weefteadav, September W at It a.m. at St. Amfa Catholic Church, Ortonvllle. Interment W Holy |*» Williams ViTO 8% Death Notices ANDERSON, FRANK E.l Seplemt 17, 1947; 31 Tacoma Court) aoa < beloved hutbano of Bnola M. / derson; dear ah ‘ Robert Norberoi ' Mri, George Rol old klddar, Mrs. Anthony Petarion, Emeet, Arthur and Floyd Andar-aen; alao survived by live qrand-childran. Funeral service will be held Wednesday, September 20 at 1:10 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment In Perry MU #arfc cemetery. Mr. Anderson will lie In state at tha funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and Two a. m.)________ ANGLETON, ELIZABETH A.; Sep-tamber 17, IM7i 1*70 Emily Court) ago 74; beloved wife of Laurel M. Angleton; dear mother of Mrs. Alice Furlong and Oaorga Angto-ton; also survived by S grandchildren. Funeral service wHlM held wadnsaday, September jo lit 1:10 p.m. at tha Sparks-Grlffln Funeral Horn*. Interment In whlto Chapel Camatary. Mrs. Angleton wnflto In stats at the tuneral homa. Memorials to the Pei ra Tribute to » P.tn.1 .TBs' Hearing Set hr City Man in Shooting A Pontiac man accused of seriously wounding another man with two pistol shots late Sunday will face preliminary examination in city Municipal Court Oct. 11 on a charge of attempted murder. In Oakland County Jail in lieu of $8,000 bond set at his arraignment yesterday before Municipal Judge CecflJ. McCallum is Artis Mestin, OoT of 480 Bloomfield. a Officers said Mestin was placed under arrest when he appeared at police headquarters shortly after George Major, 51, -of 409 Highland had been shol in his home about ? p.m. Major is reported in satisfactory condition in Pontiac General Hospital. He had been list ed In serious condition prior to undergoing surgery Sunday night for wounds of the thighs and chest. Erickson, ruth m.i II, 7*47; am Auburn, Auburn Htighlf) age 44; beloved wife of Donald W. Erickson; , beloved daughter of Mre. Edna Cook; dear mother of Mrs. Sandra VanKuran, Candice, Tent, add Roy Erickson; ................ bp_________HI HP t IK in, at tha Harold It.. Davis Funeral Homa* Auburn Haights* with .Rev. F. William Palmar 7 , Delating. Informant In \ Lake; age it; bemad son of and Mrs. iA me a, IT car; d brother of «fs. XaNh Hewitt. Mrs, Gordon Thompson, Mias Janet El-1 this avenhia at the Richer/---- Funaral mint, Milford, servlet will ba hold Wa September to at 10 a. m, land Camatary. - Mr. Elcar will lit In state at lha tunarai home. FITZGIBBON, COWARD; September H .. I fir*. Oaorga Bitov- ■■C Mrs. Lvla Phllp ana Jamas FHtglinan. Funeral arrangements “ pending at the Sparks-Grlftln 1 . Police Action Pontiac police officers and Oakland County sheriff’s deputies investigated 87 reported Incidents the past 34 hours.. A breakdown of causes tor police action: Arrests—9 . Burglaries—12 Larcenies—12 Auto thefts—4 Bicycle thefts—1 Disorderly persons—4 Shopliftings—3 Assaults—7 Armed robberies—1 Rape$-8 Indecent exposures—2 Property damage acci-dents—13 Injury FORSYTHE, EDWARD D.j September is. 1M7; 2443 Chat* Drive; ago 75;. beloved husband of Joan G. Forsythe; dear father of Mrs. HbcrsiSi (Kathleen) Tholl and Edward For-F&plhe, Funeral* sarvtca wiumS UKASE visiting heura 3 to 5 and 7 To *.) FORTINO, MARRY; tatomfirl?, ftl) ..b&vah apn j^Mr^Ttrtae Dominicks r ion Of r father Ham Mondot ■CwnffoPP dear brother a Dr. CharlM mm ■ S0m£38b£Si Fronk (Mary Jane) ---S-v- flfb, 20 at ML JJ&L&M. JP* *o«odlcf#a Catholic Church* Informant In Mt. Hopa whjra Mr*. Handaraon will lit In 1W,si7batoya3n*V Hoyt; dear mother (Lola KT Holiday ST®#® gfEBlKg SsSfflSI' ‘WtSpBESi* gs;**—* asursfUS ...... 1 22 grand* •rvke will ha M cUcll i Wednesday arShfch't*m*UJh* be taken to tha church far. Dial 334-4981 or 332-8181 Pontiqc Press Want Ads TO* f AST action NOTKiro ADVfnTISIkS AOS RICCIVBO IT 3 AM. WIU ■( MISLISHiD THI FOLLOWING DAT. Ut« through tH« „ The deadline far cancellation of traniiant Want Ads it 9 a m. the if publicalian offer Hie first The Pontiac Press FROM » A M. TO S AM. Cerd ef Thenito ' . - 1. WE WISH TO THANK OUR MANY citl thenkt to Mr. and Mre. Vernon McLariy who donated to tha • cancer turn! In Pontiac. Mri. George McDonald amt lomlly. In Mimoriam 2 IN LOVING MEMORY OF CHARLES Slmpeon, who paaaad away Sept. Nothing cani aver taka away The lava a heart helda doer. Fond memoriae llnaor ovary day Remembrance kaapa him naar. gat? Gat new phj aa Ihwlda. Only Fl centa. simm't broa.Oruga. ^JSSMfCINg ®"AND opening-NEW f. F. GOODRICH STORE. 40 S. Telegraph, Sapt. Utb-SOth BOX REPLIES At 19 a.m. todaj then were replies at The Press Office In the following boxes: 1, 2, 28, 29, 31, 87, 81 fnnerel Dlrsctors 4 COATS O.AyTO,.'“SSK ”*“ ^ c. j. ooohar6t fu1iE*al homo Kaago Harbor, Ph. UHm. OONEL52N-JOHNS . Funaral Homa Huntoon H Oahland Ave. ' ffToia V oorhees-Sipl© FUNERAL HOME. 331-1371 Ealahllahad Over 40 Tatra 1 LOTS. CHRj^TIAtj MEMORIAL OAKLAND HlUi”!! « GRAVES. any 3, SIN aa. Ml^t rE CHAPEL, 505 EACH FOR COMPLETE FOOD LI ---- 474-1535. FULL COLOR WU the coat of ANY GIRL OR WOMAN NEEOlNG a .trlandly advlaar, phone Ft MIM batera 5 p.m. ContlditoilaL •E LONG I NOS LET Jor any di of nor than to, SMOekl HAY gDEV ^g^ a^horaa- Kll hay rTde!: i drawn ride Ssrd,s; m-un, UPLAND HILLS FARM ‘IPtOF DK*t 9M ; > ■ (JpOET PROOF INED BUDGET PROGRAM OREO TO vTulMNCOMB M'CWGAN CREDIT COUNSELOR! lost pud Pound « CHARMS ON ERACELRT. KEEP-Sub. 4234)507. LOST. GERMAN POINTER AND Hound. Male, Gray and Stock. Reward. >75. FE 1-1543. t6|»i U|LACk *ILLF(^.P;"VALti-•bl# Mara, vicinity ef I Typawrltor J‘— “---- “nwdleT vlc.Shei 4-a»er Sl'^M_________________ I ton tomato, 5 am. STwc. yC atar A Lone Pina. Reward, m- LolT: MURRAY. TRICYCLE. RED. Grand new, Vtolntty at M, SaMnaw LOST: GERMAN SHEPHERD fB- . male, vicinity M24 and 1-75 exit »JM- Tuaeoay Eva. Reward. 3GS- LOTT: SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER U small Irl color boaolo. laroa Ho potfi _MJf7 4 um of nioney lost JU ViCtH- ity of Kmart or Aubwn Haights, fgssijftasr-,nd Mond,v 3 MEN, FART TIME, MARRIED, guaranteed 1300 par me. Call 3*1-834 bat. 4 and I p.m. 1 FART TIME JOBS OPEN, MAR- J M^FARt tlME, f). MARRIED start. Call 5-7 $400-$600 FEE PAID MANAGEMENT TRAINEES In aftlca, finance, retail, aalaa INTE^ATIohSS^I&s'S'NNEL MO W. Huron______ 334-4*71 S500-S650 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEES In all flalda, ago 31-30, tome college INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL MO W. Huron 334-4*71 _ $750 MONTH If you‘lliai our requirements, will train at qur expanse In a carter position* All i $5200-$! 0,000 TECHNICIANS .-Elec.-Lab..age 20-30 PERSONNEL INTERNATIONAL I $7200-112,000 FEE PAID College Grads-Engineers Managament positions In all fMda. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL irasw.fiuron 334-4*71 $8,000414,000 PROGRAMMERS intefuiait^BaC' pIrsonnel A PART-TIME JOB A married man. 31-14, to wark 4 hours par evening. Call 574-0515, 4 p.m. to S p-m. tonight. $200 PER MONTH AGRESSIVE SALESMEN Experience helpful but not n sary. Let, us show you mau minimum • 31,000 a Call 403-1030, ask for T Cullough Sr. ARRO “ Cass-EHxabath Rd. AGE 30-35. Sr. ARRO REALTY. 5143 "1th Rd. BUSINESS you have lha fallowing: a sincere Interest In people, h.gh personal intagnty, leadership ability, anthu-slasm tor a challenging lag. Mutt have camplatad high school. Soma collage training preferred but not necessary. Salary, frbtoa' banefni, and advanced opportgnlfMa will bg discussed at perianal Interview. For appointment, call Mr. Larry J. Norman. 574-3347. ASSISTANT MANAGER CENTURY HOUSEWARES, INC. Our new retail operation In Pontiac has an Immediate opening tor * Wm type naraan cabable of as sumlnO full btsponalblllfy tor the operation of our branch in Hit absence of the manager. dailra a personable ambitious RTCRbe MECHANIC AND JNIC HELPERS NBEOEDI AUTO MECHANIC TOP FAY AND AUTO MECHANIC Exc. working conditions, full benefits amf rotlrament, contact c«- tSSl iSJ^rA.^ IXKirWM Ilf...8XfbGiGHCe BARTENDER, FULL TIME EVE- nlnga. Call for appolnl Rotunda Ceuidry Inn, . BARTENDER Exparlanca preferred, but essary. Apply In par* bdoV REPAIRMAN. STRAIGHT colilalen work, no piMH*-Town Colllalon, 555 tTUt GUI A6V, FULL f IMi lMf-LbY- Tad's madl sv Bus Boy CAR WASHER PORTER BIRMINGHAM BLOOMFIELD CADILLAC BEALER See Mr. Brnat. Wllaan-Crlsiman Cadillac. 13» N. Woodward. Blr- CARPENTER FOREMAN Ywit Farmington, CARPENTER ba Wdra tork. Call 475 CREW FOR APART- mants, rough, OR 34401 CARPENTERS OVERTIME ___Call «Ktf!Br!afSSw:> CARPENTERS, UNION ORCY, wark all winter In Pontiac area. SIIil'S. *pm- “O®" Chamicoj Production And Maintenance Man aver 31 tor mixing and Mend- dWk — ^HJKtDL^jNbStffl, DlOU- CRjlW. MANAftfeRS GBEOGb FOR i ■ -682-7200 . D&GNERS * special machines mSHHP fok . cstimayino DI3HMACHINE OPERATOR. DAYS, . TakwrffbntMabto6^^)*^ DtSHWASHfcM KITCHEN UTILITY Far avanlng hours, full and part thwa yhlBt ayallaEla. good wages amf banana, must S* to #55 grapS"*?' MaplelRds„ Birmingham. DRAFTING TRAINEES. OPFORTU-i|d Ml qualified applicants to ra--i precision ail fjfV prOjUct ■ 'rafting framing. AppIIcw a Ww> school, graduatas ^'w.hi0dh*^, wm • and Geometry. equal upporrurmy employer. OEOltMfG N'BhDEb' 'iMMibiAti- -1, >01*. TenltriarToSTOTO. ELECTRICAL XGGSFHT! ENGINEER'S ASSISTANT I have basic mathematical . Chemical and/or laboratory would tot tuiSSiPA mynrrwr jwiwiwo vwwik tor yauiw man wlthing to learn aalaa arid marketing. Must have z^a«ag_,"p CARPENTERS Ap" nEGIRi area. 4344306, Halt* , ~ exferienc'eo ''{aRpeR. tars wonted. Can fe 5-2074, attar eXPERIBNCEO ItL central, purchaalne. Inventory .tor email u fc.wjBfaajs; EXPERIENCED MARINE MECHAN-Ic. Full time wark. FE L4402. EXFERIENCBb OuCf lifiTALL-era, aarvica man, tip pay, steady work. O'Brian Heating — FI 3 Experienced Mechanic Chivy Dealership, jwj* Mr. Iru & EXPERIENCED COMAAERCIAL Estimator. BxcaHant 01..... good mail sHgisT EXPERIENCED M, hospital plan , good Income. -Kaat Heating BXigRliNCBO FURNACE ift stellar. Apply to parson between * ajn. to 11 a.m. 100 Tregant. FULL TIME-WORK FOR. MAN writing to Warn marina trade. FE FUkfuUi .iRstaujIrs, experi-•nead only, awn toots. $4.50 par ^s?,yw'r KKi GAS STATION ATfflJbAtit, £X perlencod, mechanically IMathai local rat., full or part time. Gulf, GOOD MAN WANTED Dependable malura man tor light elarfeal, dispatching, telephone contact In personnel type work. Excatlmt potential. Morning houra. Physically handtaappid, early retiree, er ear* lima man will also Call Mr. Marsh - riy and suburban lob opanlngt. taunt Clemens, Utica and Blr-llnghem Included. Bonded Guard arvkws, 441 E. Grand Blvd.. Da. treh-LO 5-4152,15-4 p,m. HELPER FOR SHEET MBfAL *FF*r_MM Gutter Co. 4153 W. Walton,'Drayton Plaint._ HIGH SCHOOL GRADUATE At Land Surveyor's Assistant. Year *,r?un10,050 • Jtr or mera In direct aalaa toaw furnished. No lay, offs or strikes. Call 3355130 tor appolnt- J? yrs- of aga wHh tocal rats. Full time only. Exc. wagna, vaca-flon with pay. Shall StathnT Wood-fTidHMto!^0® *"• ,leom' MOTOR ROUTES DBfftblT FREE fraas. Applications being accepted tor malar route drivers TnPoiv flee area, Single copy delivery, P-m. call PE 5t373T NEW AND USED CAR . SALESMAN HOMER HIGHT Motors Inc. On M34 In Oxofrd / O.D. GRINDER, OPPORTUNITY T9 work in new plant compMoly air condlttoMdand humidified. Ideal asiia gd^^ray. An Equal Opportunity __ LI Waf' ittar'V^B Median it BILL FOX CHBVRO- (Apply In parson PORTER part time. preferred. Apply''to“'manager' Wlntolmans, Pontiac Mali. valid drivers llcarn benefits, steady ci • Mr. Danis, 555 PUBLIC RELATIONS . BIRMmGHAMSAREA . INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 1550 5. Woodward BUtm. 4435345 R B TI R E I, LlUkT DELIVERY wark. Apply 47 w; Huron. SALES TRAINEES $550 PLUS CAR IN^R^TIcSl'^PERSONNEL 1180 S. Woodward B'ham. 442-4245 3AL15A5AN, SHARP EXC- OPPOR-tuntty lor man with Salat ability call Kathy King, 334-2471, Sriattlng * Snaiilng. ____ MANAGER POSITION ■ IB® ............ kStaf SERVICE STATION SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT wanted. (Full flmt.) Exp. preferred. 5115 par wtc. Beverly HUIt Service Cantor, Birmingham, 447- SERVICESTATION MECHANIC-aatoamen, over 35, mod pay, com-m sslon, paid vacaltonTeEa Croat. Wilkins, Orchard _Lato Garaga. 45*3 Orchard Lake Rd, . TAILOR MEN'S CLOTHING FuH time. We ■ new heve an ax-cedent opportunity for an oxpor* tot^d tailor. Enjoy a 45 hour weak. gmOlai uni, health Inauranct, HUDSON PONTIAC MAIL TREE CLIMBERS And ground man. Teg pay, attady employment. IMS Ballnlrt, Royal Oak. E. off Campball Rd., 1 Mk. ■portuntty, past train ■w Rri^iwy^ brtwan!! Interview, call between »:3B a.m. WANTED IMMEDIATELY ttlltod and ynskrilad workers lor day and night shlfta. Factory hands. Apply bat. 5 a.m.5 p.m. to CLAWSON 45 S. Main FggNMLE 3325 Hilton REDFORO 37330 Gr«d Rlvrr ' Employari Temporary Service WE NEED *.. PORTER to clean and pollah new and Used Cara, Days, Guaranteed apiary. Mint have mad driven license. Sea Kan Johnson at Ruse Johnson Pontlac-Ram-^btor. Lake Orton (In parson YOUNG man, steady employ mtM to help in warahouie and Mora. Lewie Furniture Carp. 41 VOUNG MEN, nTgHTS, FULL Hdip WEEteBNrarajg ' 7 2 AUTQrtYPISTS Na*d_ exparltncod operators tor tamporary aetlgnmant-_ ..Fonttoc araa — ttorTng *-35. 4 $2754350 GENERAL OFFICE 1515 W. Huron___________33*4571 „ A PLEASING VOICE??? Your ,Votco can earn you St.55 to 53(50 par hour. 4 hours par day. Call Raton at 4744MKL AAA-1 CORPORATION Wa need 4 young woman to com- eour staff Tn Pontiac ottica. ___,oa ]MI, tingle, and high senaol graduate. Saury at 1135 per wk. Cab Mr. Wayne’ FI hE Damenatrata^ya°imd alfti thru Darambar. No collactl ISSoni: Santa's Toy Farttoh" Avon, Conn. Moot. W1 •v,nl^ ALTERATIONS f^fSIEHCEti FITTERS AND ^|Stl,SKMnaTO JACOBSON'S V. MAPLE BIRMINGHAM tAflblNG OFPbfttUNITY being • SALLY WALLACE^^ndi." Consultant Whh a Bridal Business In ywtr own heme, without Investment and can qualify aa follows: euraasipjsrsst. w • - faulwa Alder FauLtoi’a Bridal House APPLiqAfiow.. Ijmi* YAkin t grHL Light hook wark. MM Drive In. Call FE Miracle ■ bwraafl Assistant to Mandger ATTENTION MOTHERS I Am tree toys and gHls for y, Itoji'nAYNDUBB haul WEBER**** * M-«- WnratgJ m----*- ARE YOU INTERESTED? In svorldng 2 hours, m neant er avuntoSa. 3 W**kiyr*l is baIy SitYeR LIV* lM,'«A*t •ABY BITTBR, S:30 TO 5 F.M.. 4 daya^^317|i Aubum, Apt. t. Up- BABY SITTER NEEOED, LIVE IN ar have own transportation, 315 wk. Unton Ul. Are*. 4:35 p.m. BAB_Y SITTER WANTBb, 3:Ji Tb l;jA. Watkins taka Eatataa Area. OR 4-1515 Pttif(!l?*-:'jl BABY SITTBA WANtEb, PREFER live tn, mera tar homa than wao-soma satory, 473-5*3*. BABY SITTli; LiWW'bA flinL s^!*1t».Tfc' w ,r,Mp- pi B^Y-UVE IN AA OWN Slktran — 1 in actwai. trantp., 3 Children — t light housekeeping. 545 I^BAYS. *)» AM, bAly ■ CURB GIRLS WAITRESSES TELE-TRAY OPERATORS big boy'res'taurant 20 S. Telegraph DRUG GIRL G|r|, over 31, to wark In drug dmarttnwd, day or night, axcai-tont working condHtontT paid va-giJM*-. jMi*ri*m> FraaerleMam. is DRUG STORE CLERK, PREFER mMura woman whh tala* and malMar »xp„ attarnaon ah HI, SSiaSSSsai Hl1 executive secIetarV Yb bii- tingulahad director of iwsmk iram,. 35-hr. expei^enceo Sales ladies, — vnrk- dwatop vs EXPERIENCED- BARMAID-WAIT-rata, 4113 Baldwin Rd. •APERIBMCkD NURSES AIDES. JJjBV Harltog* Nursing Homa, ExpErigneed Cook T?-Ilv» ag.Pramlta*. Catholic Man-t###‘ For MITSM^from 1-3 p. m. Electrologist . ipartonead. Thla Is an axcallant rtsl? Ar7Jlffn. asa discount. Apply In Parson Employment Officra Basement HUDSON'S, PONTIAC MALL ■XFERIENCia MANICURIST wantad. Nino Hair StynM. Ml 7- female FAittTiR, Di full dining room - 100 x 220* parcel. Owner ptay accept offer of $13,MO —Airport—Tubbs. TM. area. WHY RENT? fox bay Model home 8339 FOX BAY DR. — cus- tul home that fH? yourTam-Hy needs—latge family room —fireplace— bullt-lnt — 2 full baths — utility room on main floor — full basement «ma 4 bpdrooms on on. ARE .YOU HAPPY? ^..fW^rnlNtod .^.‘T'^lS^TlSn.^ >ur whole family along to see this fwly decorated 3 bedroom ranch! out west of town. Basement I 1365 Cass Ave., Detroit WE NEED STENOGRAPHERS SECRETARIES — TYPISTS M. C. MFG., CO. Ill Indlsnwood Rd. Lsks Orion.- Mich. 492-2711 An Equal Opportunity Employer WAITRESS. EXPERIENCE. 451-7100 WOMAN TO LIVE IN AND HELP small' children. 2823 week. FE 5-9333. call Ml 4-4431 DESK CLERKS. FULL TIME AND part time. Sea personnel manager. 3 to 11 p.m.. Holiday Inn, 1801 E.7 SriBS Htlp, MgIb-FbiiigIb t-A CAN YOU SELL? It so. we have an opening 2 people Interested m me . money. Real Estate experience within S miles CLARKSTpN ESTATES NO. 2-2 home, $155 par mo. plus _______________________ Sju.?*1- pep' 1 c’,l,o learn tax prepar-R Block will tfain you. Tuition courses start Oct. 23 and 24. Register now. Phone H4R 334-9225 ( LAWYERS REAL ESTATE FE 2-9141 KITCHENETTE APARTMENT ON, entrance, bath. Off Baldwin. *1 Pontiac Lake. No pets, no chll- yen only. FE 5-3549.________, glM HlM RO1; or c*.lT473-^:: S^?v^M°1rei«l?INyG,liaE LARGE LOVfeLY 3 AND BATH. Ict^TV,' totophone! tW^S. ' --- Airport. No children- to. OR HailllHH 8135 Mo. 3-1943. ________single gentleman, inquire in AAASTER BEDROOM, BREAKFAST person, 4701 Dixie Hwy., Drayton.1 "fe *.iM7h“' V,n® r00m' *dU,S'I SLEEPING FOR GENTLEMAN,! r.F .*‘.'537, .......——private entrance, shower. Nb drink- MODERN t-BEDROOM. UTILITIES ers. FE 32414 RH... »«ld' 10003 Dlxl«' “^' SLEEPING ROOM FOR LADY-OR and also PRIVATE ENTRANCE AND BATH,; working girl. S18 wk., call before1 children or, 12 utilities turn., trial preparty. If you "would ^jP***- 338-5474. interested In a short term listing TWO 2 R 0.0 M_ APARTMENTS. SLEEPING ROOM, CLEAN, RE-. lege homes at beautifu _ake. Price from 86,950 t< 830,000. Immediate occupancy -Clarkston schools. Sylvan. 673-3481 or 334-8222. Beauty. Rite Homes. Trod* your used homo on 0 now Beauty-Rite Home from SI 5,550 "Buy direct from Beauty-Rite and Save" 3538 Pontiac Lake, Rd. I 3-BEDROOM HOME, HOhlands. Lh.prlv. FE | BY a OWNER, 3-BEDROOM, WITH APPLICATION 3-BEDROOM HOME GAS HEAT LARGE DINING AREA ACCEPT ALL APPI TIONS FROM GAS HEAT ■■t' oir— ‘ Will accept TIONS FROM ANY WORKERS# WIOOWSOR DIVORCEES. j PEOPLE WITH , CREDIT PROBLEMS AND 4ETIREES ARE I OKAY WITH US. OPEN DAILY AND SAT. AND SUN. OR COME TO 290 KENNETT NEAR BALDWIN REAL VALUE REALTY I For Immediate Action Call | FE 5-3676 626-9575 j FRAME HOUSG IN NORTHERN High qrea. 3 bedroom, IVk bath. By owner. Coll afternoons, PE ■ I S-'ZH- GAYLORD Property, r rents for : iy 2-2821 FE 1-9493 lly"landscape4924._______Ref Maxine McCawan. FE 4-3H47. Sauth Blvd. 128 Mile space* details. j brick exterior, occupy 30 days, vlthj terms. lot, Frank Marotla A Assoc. 363-7001. ga-I 9 ttll 5 or 363-3197 after 5. 3195 for! union Lk. Rd. Ralph at Bateman Pontiac, J*mB,Yji:'* UN 4-8383. Sarvlc* Quality New ls th* remodel - _ ___ Addition*—recraat an rooms - aluminum storm and trim. M FE 2-1211 _____grading. FE 4-5322. merionHSlue sod, peat, com- plet* landscaping. Tamarack Sod Farm. 740 Lochavan Union Laka CLARKSTON POOL 7170 Dixie Highway Mon. thru Frl., • a.m. to 4 p.m. Sat., 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. A Dlv. of John Voorheis Builder Clarkston, MA 5-2674 Tree Trimming Service Rat. Maxine McCawan. fe 4-3*47. Apoitmpnts, Furnished | DENTAL OR OPTICAL RECEP - ' Henltt, axperlancad. 334-24*3. , BEDROOM. *25 WEEKLY. IN- IRONINGS WANTED dudes utillllas. sac. daposlt. no room upper, stove. 332-7032__________children or pets. FE 2-52*2. 3*3- adults. 425-251).__ Building Sarvicu-Suppliat 13 ^ BEDROOM,~$7S—PER~M6NtH. ditloniSE’apartment^ m0, ! NEW FACE BRICK, *25 PER uaMMMby^Itt'ng-*)*} Seebaldi. only. Call*FE '° Informa- Really Co. FE 8-7141 PIP . 335-5478. RENT OFPICES—S35 AND UP. 4548 — rE 8-0770.________________________ Dixie Hwy. OR 3-1355. „ CHOICE TERRACE APARTMENT, g„, o.«_____... jn uvF mi 37 ref! required. 4*2-2952.____ Business Property 47-A ®0u3i ■■CLARKSTON' 3 ROOM GROUND _ 4713 b| floor, walk to shops. VORF HIITER X V V I Ll\. OWNER SAYS "SELL" — or WE TRADE ooms and garage, 3 2 bed-CARRY OUT FOOD SECTION etc. new liquor store, to sell Minimum investment ________________________TREE SERVICE BY B&L Fret estimates_____________MERION BLUE SOD. FICK UP OR1 .**!*?***: f£ *^**iA7£****’. | FOk GARAGES, _HOME IMPROVE- delivered. 4643 Sherwood. 628-200AiAL'S T R E E TRIMMING, RE MOV- MENT5, ADDITIONS, RESIDEN- MERION OR KENTUCKY SOD TIAL BUILDING. Laid or Del. No money down i DRUMMOND CONSTRUCTION BREECE LANDSCAPING I 02-3302 Eves. 693-6909 Pg 5.3302 or FE 2-4722 YARD GRADING, PLOWING AND Carptntry | dieking. or 3-isit. ______LT thousand, approx. Mirada m FE 4-8952.______ Credit Advisors Call FE 8-2442 PERSON ONLY—NEWLY DECOR- ---- 1 eted — 40 Sanderson, rear apt. 16-A 2 ROOMS WITH GARAGE. PRIV ^ bath. Adults only. No drinkers. Dep. FE 2-5689, FE 2-8756.____ [2 ROOMS AND BATH, AftkACT- A-l Intorlor and axterlor — Family' Call t wiiriwinB1 NEW RAILROAD TIES. ROUGH recreation itooms, kitchens mMtatn ba*«. dock lumber. 1. Slat ■ 5 p.m. porches, recreation foomt, kitcnens — hardwood. I bathrooms. State llconsed. Reae. TALBOTT LUMBER AlTIB_ATIONS, NEW AND REPAIR I Gl urvlcc, Free Estimates. 338-1873 or 473-2114 ! nulutlno ai iARPiNtER, REPAIR; ALSO 1825 Oakland pointing. Free est. 474-041*. ' ' L- carpentry and paintTng New and repair. FE 5-1331_ CARPENTRY. NEW AND hEPAIR. Fret eetlmates. 335-9981.____' INTERIOR F I N I S Ht KITCHENS# fMs40 VWS #xper,#nc# “i ’ S. Jessie. FE 4-486A BAB TREE SERVICE* INSURED. Trimming, rentoval. Free estl-mates. 674-1281 or 724-2695. "DALBY & SONS" STUMP, TREE, REMOVAL . FE 5-3005 Fireplace Wood FE 54025} MICHIGAN SPRAYING SERVICE. * and trimming. Trans- bL*5- No Cost EMBASSY WEST APARTMENTS AND 2-BEDROOM Carpeted, drape*, centre! air ditlonlng, pool, applications aaing accepted. 5347 Highland Rd.. Apt. ■" ------*—■ ----4 mllei EXCEPTIONAL 3 BEDROOM apartment, completely carpeted and draped. Living room 13x25 ' Dorris .Sr. DORRIS 8. SON, Trs* pTTp I LIGHT, CAREFUL, ENCLOSI ing work. Appliance end fur lure, tree estlmetesr4>S-3570. ”1 SMI in VlOVING AND SIORAGE. GET OUT OF DEBT eUimates *473-7i46 er "FE AVOID GARNISHMENTS REPOS- Ively' decorated, estimates. *73 7i*gor fe session$i ba0 CREDIT, HAR- dren or pets. 335-7842. ! LQ"MorTJQPANW?Uh^MY-A"° 1 BEDROOMS. CALL FE *5-0171 BE- with ciSlSJi tween 3 and 6 p.m. only._______| problems by providing a planned 2 ROOMS, LOWER, PRIVATE BATHi managed, organized program. LETi and entrance, dep. 391-2502._ US CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBTS i BOOMS PkiVATB BATH AND WITH ONE LOW .PAYMENT YOU M entrance. Couple or man. 620 West-j CAN AFFORD. NO limit as Ip1 brook. ! toT,OUFor°,1h^n2hpU resize01 "YOU J ROD«S' BATH AND ,1 CAN'T BORROW YOURSELF OUT «"trance,JM-8554.------------------- OF DEBT . . i2 ROOMS AND PRIVATE BATH. LICENSED AND BONDED 1 Adult couple. 72 Norton. Appointment Giedty Arranged , ROOMS AND BATH. UPPER. Obligation for Interviews private entrancen no children or equipped kitchen i pets. FE 8-4442. laundry room, prlvi ... 2 ROOMS. PRIVATE. 2 MEN. NO g9™1 -JKSJI' i.c„*rp!!!!rS' ,lr*pl"c*' Trucl'ina 71l Rikar Bldg. FE 2-mil drinkers. Rat. FE-2-9434. | ?Lr...co™i'ionir?' JK’K,,' ----------- ------- - DRESSMAKING AND - ALTERA 2 ADULTS, 1 CHILD WELCOME v' LIGHT MCfVING, TRAA*-* tlons. 482-8401. ' . ,__________ ! $20 week. Inquire 238 S. Jessie. I n.tricraninn 1R.A 1 ROOMS, BATH-, ADULTS, UTIL- Laiinscaptng »i... ,!>■». fe 9.49*1. DOWNTOWN PARKING N Sears, S3 me: 22 Cerlton Cl. Sale Houses BEDROOM HOME, OFF BALD- WRIGHT REALTY 3*2 Oakland FE 2-9141 Cash tor all types of property Crestbrook wmmqj 111 '500' terms. Drayfon Plains north SIDE -gas furnace, 900. Tti'ms. BUILD — : ranchers with oak floor ade for. in bath, full basements, see the model call B. C. TER. REALTOR, 3792 Eliza-i Lake Rd., FE 2-0179, after COMMERCIAL 100' frontaga on Orchard I 5-room modern bungalow with 3-car $12,200 oarage — Owner has reduced price ranchei for quick action. 6-room brick, new ull basement, 812,- X NEW HOMES BEING COMPLETED MUoLL La U4XS 9198W.I g*ry* oniy„ SISW) plus I**!* ^r^j'ITrths.. iXm. terms. OA I- ware supplies. . ________ FE '4-4595 TREE TRIMMING AND REMOV- HOURS 9-7 P.M.-SAT. 9-5 Storage | «i- Re.sati.bie. 3ti-t44*. , DEBT AID OR 44)324 ar J Bedrooms LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS MODEL OPEN 579 COLORADO baht t time. FE 8-0095. Cement Work drinkers. Ret. FE-2-9434. ALTERA 2 ADULTJS, 1 CltlLD WELCOME ; JiJi'' *' LAKE ORION itles, clean, decereted, FE 2-499). | 3-room lurnishad apartment neei LARGE CLEAN ROOMS, S28 bwnlown and lake. S25 per wk week, older lady prelarred, FE 5- MY 2-3MI.______________-_____ SIM. ______________ MODERN 2-BEDROOM APART- AIL TYPES ( ANDY FOR PATIOS, DRIVES, slab*. Bessments. UL 2-42t3J___ ILOtk AND«M1NT WORK. FQfl-tlac, 391-1173. Cement and Block Work i PAPER , .LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENTS »«i., ■"d ?•“**•* 0°rLCM47ENT W°RK 5 MW?TO 8^8WOAT' »-C0ATi LIGHT AMD HEAVY HAULING. [, "wtog!"*' Fg } R°°^S$2J- ^SSO 55.“/ fT* MOSIW^ B E DR OOM-.' STOVE ---------• . .---- ---------------------FEJH9a.------, ..4 BwwlltM 231 S*4* * as* op, atr conditionino. bal- LIGHT HAULING, TRUCKING AND ru,n,,n9 ■"» UOCUIHIU13 | cany overlooking lake, _______ 4*8384 mevlng. Limited. FE 5-8329. _, ,mtpr,or nFCORATOR 2 .Ta-k S APARTMENT. M1J ,au]t, on„ i PAINTING WORK OUARAN 'LIGHT HAULING, BASEMENTS. * n^°X.-INJIRi!S'RaDEC0RAT0B' fT>' 625 8451_______________ teed. Free estimates 482-0428 , 1 garages cleaned. 674-T242. t l>p*, -- ! 2 ROOMS, S20 W_EjEK, ADULTS modern 1 BEDROOM APART >Ayrlg?^'irr--'N"A- , rooms and*bath. chiu> a„zr Guinn'S ConstrucNon Co -, BSrages clean. OR^4)^^i^«/ pA|NT|N<- AN0 PAPERING, welcome. S25 per wk., with S75 lake, on U.S. 18 near M15. No FE 4-7677 ___ Eve$. 391 2671 CHARLES DECORATING. E8TI-1 LIGHT _AND HEAVY TRUCKING. y0M ra n9xt. Crval Gidcumb, 613- dap., inquirt tt 273 Baldwjn Ave. pets, adults only. 625-2451. LICENSED SIDEWALK . BUILDER, i^n*? FE ?-*!!l RENT jtkuibEir^UTlilfilSj After 7:_______________ 3-BEDROOM RANCHES, FAMILY rooms, 2-car garages, full basements. IVa baths. Colonials available. 818.900, $22,900 and 827,900. Nelson Bldg. Co. OR 3-8191. 3 MODELS OPtN DAILY AND SUNDAY Drive out M-59 just west ot Cass Lake Rd. to Candeisticx. Directly Center DAN MATTINGL Located I itreets. curb, gutter, sutewei ind city water. Drive out id o Crescent Lake koed turn -is to Crestbrook street end model. DON GIROUX DRAYTON AREA 3 bedrooms, carpet and paneling In this large „!4 x 19 ft. living TOM REAGAN REAL ESTATE Opdyke irage, zv* Dams. io% 'RUSTIC SPANISH j CONTEMPORARY" 11988 sq. It. spllt-Mval, 3 bedf open beam ceilings. S28.950. 5242 While Lake Road - Clarkston Vs Mile South of Dixit Highway OPEN Sat. Sun. I to 8 p.m. "TIMBERLINE HOMES" 841-7459 "Will Duplicot#" IN ROCHESTER Sparkling 3-bcdroom brick ranch with family room. On large lot near West Junior High and naw hospital. Newly nlo, 824,500. SHEPARD REAL ESTATE 651-8503 US.-10 behind the uan Mattingly Business Drive By KENT 4-H REAL ESTATE „L US i a. s OR 4-8324 DORRIS 8. SON, REALTOR (E PRIVILEGES mates. 332-897), 9-3 p.r drlv«s7oatlos, etc. FE 5-3349. EXFcRT PAINTING AND PAPER «].and trantjend.loadlng.J multi-coCoRED paiios.vloors. . nengmg. Cali HarWa, *7M7«o. Truck Rental J driveways, Ted Elwood Enter- PAINTING. PAPERING, W»IL ------------------------------------------ residential. 29 yrs. QUALITY PAINTING, _________. 423-1372. ______V. _ price, Mart o» exp.. Irib PATiorDRIvls7GARAGES SLABS, - FE 2-4587. Buck's Painting Serv A^H^v^rn-TY Trucks ‘fo-Rom Upholstering AGED FURNITURE TRUCKS - TRACTORS Dressmaking, Tailoring ALTERATIONS. ALL TYPES, KNIT to* Ton Pickups •RUCK! AND EQUIPMENT Dump Trucks — Semi-Trailers Pomioc Form and Industrial Tractor Co. . 121 S. WOODWARD FR 4-0441 FE 4-1 Pally Including Sunday ____ only,J23 Dwlght._ _ 2to ROOMS, PRIVATE BATH, kN- V«rd trance, lit University. FE 5-8466. *— I new at 3 ROOMS AND BATH. NO CftlL ngs also dren or pets, 830 week. $30 deposit Call 335-! 682-5646. And carports. Large 2-bed-COUl ‘ No chi AMERICAN HERITAGE APTS t12 Acre Utopia vacy — enjoy lovely 3-bedroom home beautiful court _ _ _ Immlnt or pets. "RICAN 3365 Watkins Lk. Rd. ving now in -r knowing investment can only INCREASE in 79 LINDA VISTA. 3 bedroom brick ranch home situated on sweeping corner lot lust across the street * from Mark Twain —afiBSBfi home to appreciate 1700 for FREE estimate in your 3 rooms LOWER, PRIVATE BATH I entrance. 430 N. Saginaw. HOME-OWNERS POLICIES AT. SAV ings up to 15 par cant, stead, Barrett and Assoc* 4724-185 Elizabeth Lk. Ad. ■ •anted Children to hoard 28 2& 3 ROOMS AND BATH, CLEAN. private, couple, ISO deposit, 483-7294 ... J RObMS AND BATH. COUPLE „ mall RftWTdB- 49 Cl,rlt-___________________ Associates.’3&3 ROOMS AND BATH, IN LAKEiyake Rochester Rd. to Rochester, >. mm Orlan, all turnlihad, child w-i™— ' - -■ —->•- -- ______premises. Ph. 673:5I6B. SYLVAN ON THE LAKES 1 AND 2 bedrooms tram *152 482-4488. Valley Place APARTMENTS IN ROCHESTER . 2 bedrooms — 2 baths $169 mo. 45M DAY CARE FOR 2 TO 4 YEAR •Ms, ‘ 5-7844 Wanted Household Good* 29 5 rooms 3 CLEAN ROOMS, PR IVATE BAtH,! utilities furn. working couple oni No children or pets. FE 2-2416. home. FE|3 0R 2 LARGE CLEAN ROOffiS.| Adults, ---------------------- VALUE. $|R 12 «ecre site LIKE THIS left in the Heart of Waterford. Great shopping center site. Price S2/,000. aub- OR 3-0455 OR 4-2004____OR 3-2391 4 B#6R00MS, 1' j BATHS. $10,990 on your lot anywhere in Michigan. Art Daniels, 22177 Michigan. CR 4-9250, KE 7-7500. ROOMS AND BATH AUBURN aside rt"ihi's ”*'9^r*^ *’Mfl’-aW'prt ! a ^ Wep^E* ^72! w *sp *ssJun* H‘ ___________ , aaWaq^^^MN| CTTnrur"l,htd’ *"* mo" *** d*p Rent Houses, Furnished 39, WELL. DRILLING, WELL RE- I CALL, THAT'* ALLI CASH FOR 3 LOVELY ROOMS NEAR tIl). built home with gerage. 1 carpeted bedrooms and 2 beautiful - ~ - baths and sand gravel beach. 124,. —. P real bargain tor 988. Terms, the young married* or a retiring1 couple In this little doll house, 3 on UNCROWDED 280 acre spring- ---- ---- wjjj) , attar 1 p.m. P 1st. Dap, required. 343-3828. AIORSI3 ROONIS, WESTTlDE, I CHILD 4 rL*2° Re?°«SdS iKSl(5*2» J A TAYLOR AGENCY Inc 253* D?x?eRMvJy C. Dix- welcome, ,38 piu, d.W FE 2-j .MW, OR 1-oL If F I C ■ /nines, dr OR 3-9767. BEDROOM, lake front, huge furnish, FE 2-3484. $165 I.W. Wa- WANTED: 7732 Highland Pd. (MS9) OR Eves. FE 2-8508 i . 9 Acres-White Lake Twp. ranch home, 4 years baths, 26', ter ford. k l A D U LTs 3 ^ft OOMi FUAfllSHED APAfcT- cijpkiiXHPD HOUSE FOft RENT ! old, full Mndltlan. Fi 4- mjn|t; privet* bMh|(«|d dntrdnce./W^^P^US^FOR RENT(| ||v^room horst |A |iaft--------fjf 3 ROOM APARTMENT. ALL UTILI- Wanted tt mint JZI ties paid. Furnished. $150 por mo.i n^Orn Herior, no pets.j ^--------------------------1 room opt. Furnished. UtllitJ*s| 547-7W5;_______________ i MOTHER OF'4 NEEDS HOUSE.OR| wijh bewment..Relrlg. end ^*|SMALL HOUSE. UTMLITjES.FUAn-| K. 1. TEMPLETON, Realtor ; FE 2-1209, : I 5:30, * *27-3300 or 627-3172. ' ' 2339 Orchard Lo^o Rd. 682-09001 - Only 831.! blacktop road V to mortgage. kitchen,' full base-nent drive and 2 car down payment. SON. REALTOR 674-0324 LISTING SERVICE DUCK LAKE Axford Acres, lake-front living in exclusive are*. 3-bedroom brick with fuU basement, fireplace, 2-car garage. $24,000. LH 3743. . HOWELL f Town & Country, Inc., almost new. 3 bedroom* and garage. 818,900.. A SUMMER PLACE. A place to enioy winter or summer. Furnished and with 2 bedrooms (third possible), boat and motor Indud-. ed, 811,000. 82,000 down, C. PANGUS INC., Reoltors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 638 M-15 Ortonvlll* CALL COLLECT NA 7-2815 I LAKE FROHy txicDYivf HOMt-3 bedrobm. VN baths. Recrsetkm ream. 2 car attached garage. 224.-teWood Village. Bateman Reglty. EM 3-4171. D—4 THE FONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 Sob Houses Lauinger LAUINGER SPECIAL 3 bedrooms. Huge I OFFICE OPEN f-f, SUN. 1-5 49 i Sale Houses 674-0319 674-2168 LAZENBY $600J>OWN ROCHESTER -5 ACRES. S CEO- WATTS REALTY gom ome. Mb baths. Basement.[ 1156 M-)S at I ReX^l-raHksn?' "V -- Rhodes 1 Wiaeman CLARKSTON, colonial *ropm ' ' targe tlvtag _____ ■tural fireplace, full baae-lwlth I 9-room sat .heat, 105‘xl32' corner *l» *10,000 down, balance! __ _________ HSR #9 (Ms Houses ,27-3447 ‘{TIZZY CLARK ARQMtAOl WALTERS LAKE. ' Beautiful cut-stone homo, largo living room wth &jsr Les Brown, Realtor jtiful rolling land. S if deal. At low as *13 per r WRIGHT REALTY 312 Oakland FB 1-9141 CtibtoriHlyS — ... ■■■I Lk. Rd. (Across from the Moll) PBiaiOor Ft53544 ■. Land Can't B© Manufactured you an a thing, clost to schools and’weft- Call Ston Hlsolm established area. It's pricod for y#u ,n' ^ »riwert> B. F. CHAMBERLAIN CO. ' 30x125* LOT, CLEARED, WITH 14' B.......... — A-frame shad, The humors, flshormont , delight. “I hear Gladys has a whole new'fall wardrobe pop over and borrow something!” POLLEN COUNTER? Stop, counting pollen# be comfort-HH this beautiful fully air- room. Just $10,900 with *W BUD costs, quick 3 BEDROOMS Nlco 3-bedroom bungalow I TO 9 clous lot off Baldwin Ai ■; - — living room, convoniantlv / / kitchen with plenty of #11 spacious 4- Alter 4 P.BI. B jSPrtSKSSJ' a 1 '*SLecT!6n 6# i _ VXjrSSrfK. BUILD(NO. SITES _* cortaltlon. FHA terms avail- ■sjiH I dot. full 345 Oakland Ava._■. Open 9 tot r TtSi T? VACANT BRICK ....m and MillU DLJL . I car garage. Priced at 117,900. Full basement. Two A real dandy, tot in show you Fenced back yard. _ fmtayl INCOME hoot. FHA tarms available. HERRINGTON HILLS 5bedroom brick rancher near Pontiac on corner lot. 2-car garage. Only II yaara old. 2 porches. Paved street, walks and curbs. It you era thinking of buying or! building — too us on your new home — check our trade-in We trodt—call now! 628-2548 123 fl, Lapeer Rd. (M24) Oxford brick from, frame sides, . basement, automatic heat end ' hot water, tile bath, plastered self-storing i Otllco Hours. 9 to 9 i SACRIFICE SALE ^ EDROOM, GAS HtAT 3-bedroom renchtr, brick front, ad eonfrom. Smell dowm large tot chain link fenced. Slld-Raeny. 427-2325 too patio doors, finished basement. BMMH|MMMM All this tor only $3,950 (town, S103 monthly payments. Possession In 2 weeks. Moving to ths UPI o^T^m^r'iXwSSrr^; STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE payment you make Is like putting 3441 S. Lopoor Rd.. Lake Orton NEW HOMES FOR EVERYONE NEWLYWEDS: ROCHESTER AREA 1 Two (1) tip-top callent location n tendon Hospital. . v* aero each, paved road. Priced st *5,500 each, call NQWI NICHOLIE-HUDSON ASSOCIATES INC. 49 Mt. Clemens SI. FE 5-1201 offer 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 ARRO profit- C?II.L tumlsSd apt. (___ _______ . - " F Approx., 1135 a mo. covers pen so. Priced at *40,000 with ctllgnt return on I IN WASHINGTON PARK: Bxcop- CEDAR ISLAND LAKE 4y tionally sharp brick bungalow on Claared M nicely landscaped corner lot. Choice -city location convenient to all shopping areas, lots ol extra features Including air conditioner, recreation room with bar and stools, gat heat and Incinerator, _ plus |alouay-w;ln- Beautiful largo l«kt Ml Ting only one toil hovo tho terms toiuiC ' ~ "Buy direct from Beauty- ■v>>, ,w,w on the outskirts or Pen- n:*. „„ j floe, with o beautiful comer Tot NO. 45 - OnO iove nahon^capa Sd^lsiXd tSSliy DREAMERS ONLY! BEAUTY-RITE HOMES home with 3 larger-than-average SPLIT-ROCK RANCHER: In baaufl- 353* Pontiac Lake Rd... bedrooms, dining room. 2 tiro-lul wooded *rdt, winding blacktop 473-1717_________ 473-37 placet, !4'xl4W basement, racrea- streets and lake prlvilegas. BUHt In . LAKE LIVING ......... end breezaway. al 194S wt# over lift aq. ft. of living Vou can bat your fi ... 25 boms, oil happier - and wh ™J55f It home Is almost now W?. polnlmwi't tftw? "" **\ CALL CTLLECT NA.7-M15 J idlnlna IlAKE FRONT LOTS. EXCELLENT l'xU', 34ix24''attached ga-i MODEL HOMES i W,®* Oakland Coumy's FOUR BEDROOM Vlcon^nd.•-*« oKo shores: cm*1 aTWn-8rSSw.hK»wnUVF,Sfl "<'"<>"■ ' g«s_ ha w: eJitWt HafgWi. ‘SS-nSiiS1 McCULLOUGH REALTY C. PANGUS INC., Rtoltors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 632 M-15 Orionvlllo CALL COLLECT NA 7-2115 HR. BUILDER—WE HAVE 5 LOTS on Falrtedge St. in Orion, can bo thS-AiiNS NEAR NORTHERN HIGH 1 Three-bedroom lV*-story • low. Corgotod living and * area. Kitchen and utHlf rage. Large corner . lot | - terms available. ■ 1 bunoa-i *>£\ M NO. *5 ;P“" ,! 2 ti re-1 sment, tached 2-cer garage. ■■ _ frigeratar. 'M0iiy~dttiir right — this lot la numerous to mah||pn,.lnc :tiy round and cov- lly ---- - of n ten of | In this vtry Jy l we nave • 6-bed room tint sided rgndi hi t of some r« iv at S1»,7Sd. pith double wan living not7 This era approximately % of Ivaoed tor a now home. Just buy the loti, house Is In-ciuded. Gos and water at the street. Can he__jjouqtit on lend HV* W tached garage. Terms. Evas, call MR. ALTON 473*130 Nicholie & Harger Co. FAMILIES WITH CHILDREN. ~ %■ and 4-bedroom Capo Cod low at $14,390. 634-4035. 391-3000 OME. WORKING MAN •II down payment. $75 por Straits Lake araa. Ted McCullough, Realtor WE BUILO—WE TRADE MIDDLE AGE: Children grown up? Married? Off ‘ Attractive 3- or 3-bedroo STARTER HOMES Your plans or ours* your lot or ours. Reas* down payment $75 month. SPRINGFIELD BUILDING' CQ. 63S-313I. , the Pleasure is yours i The quiet atmosphere of village living. EVErilTIUC. i Heat 7-bedroom home, (3rd pot-1 CACLUI IVt: i tlble) ei the outaklrts of Ortonvllte Custom built—Vour plans or our*- Complete with basement, garage Each home expertly planned, end large remlly room, wltn fir*, dselgnod end bull! to your spoClllce- place. Homo In oxeollont condition lions. end available tor Immediate oc- 0'NE.L REALTY, INC.' ‘7®** 'NC%AL«.„. OHIce Open dally 9 to * ».m. 427 2*15 Call Collect “oTi-5^" TTOi------------------------------------i lUSl 3-BEDROOM home iFi, TRADE ■■ ........ ‘ TRADE! ! contract. CALL TODA’ MILO STRUBLE REALTOR AFTER 9 P.M. FE 5-7461 67 s JOHNSON « all the on your lot iv OPEN SAT. and S la Mwy. to Sashafe Mb» right to Big baseman models. NEW MODEL Frushour PINE LAKE AREA BEAUTIFUL CASS LAKE FRONT- ■ full land contract. Cell I and 2-bedrooms, full recnation room with .tools, patio, garage, fenced. Can tor d* 3 - BEDROOM country subdivision, how cor IDS, largo Idt, nice neighbors. Truwood, Rochoetor, 15*2479. . NO MONEY DOWN VRTS — ACT NOWI Ba a hi owner, sue hove several ho available to qualified veterans WILL BUILD marble tills, PHONE: 6S2-2211 5143 CasS-Elizabath Road »______OPEN DAILY 9-9 IRWIN nch-lull bssemant water sotlner — illt-ln oven end i ting In living room oms — large lot 35 x *J«I i at O'Noll Realty FE 3-7088 NORTHSIDE . erp 3-bedroom wHh IV, cor garage large corner IM with plenty ol ede trees. 0 down—Battery hurry' YORK Wl BUY WE TRADE OR 4B363 4713 Dial# Hwy. r garaga. included Is a fireplai irbie sills and formica top cabin th bullt-lns plus many othsr ft ras. call now. YORK Wl BUY OR MM2 4713 Witte Hwy. RAMBLING RANCH VACANT Immediate possession on thin 3 Lx sliding gloss door, ft. of Dvina area. ho monoy oown on your lot, $1,(00 down on our tot, or your equity In Irada. C. SCHUETT MA 3-0288 TUCKER REALTY CO, 13*154*1 LAKE PR IVII DRAYTON AREA extra largt J tot. Her 1- ^BXd landscaped OFF SASHABAW Large 2-bedroom bungs lov gas neat, carpeted living rot besemenl, extra large 2-car garage and located close to St. Mlkoa. Ideal tor e young couple or rotlfoe. Price *10,9(0 with *350 Plus FHA doting costs. 145. Hurry STOP LOOKING I -........ For that 3-bedroom ranch with. ! A real DOLL house 3-hed. 1W baths# Idtchan. bullt-lns# ce- In OTCeltot coitoilflS: «m|c bath with double btsln.1 — lull basement with all heat marble sills and double sealed - screened Mtlo - lVi-csr oa-l windows. WE HAVE IT! I And rage ^ell cHy convt'nlence' *-! • JuJ .Scar I 612-0282 Anw ‘ jU Jo"'' m^arj*^. [SiortSPS jjT a- J0Hs&r‘ *°N* i ;?pi«,^r^rd5srp.«,rco:..,r*^-- >u!1-.-^ and a 2-car garage. $11,950 with JSh > "SJJE1*" *ln0?*5 S1S00 down on End controct. c^tr^Xmlnlm WEST SIDE BEAUTY. One of the flffig- 'Pr!c^. »t JM?1 ^*17^7” j®* largest 3-bedroom homos wo have ever had In our off let. l3Vix17Vk living room with fireplace# 13x13 ?ffWanrt YiTh* i A m ASLr*!} dining room# 2 bedrooms up and full bath#‘sxtra lavatory dovm# full §*?tt L*kf Rd- and Watkins Laka YOU CAN TRADE wffl dtacount tor cosh. BAtEMAN DORRIS> SON, realtors^ REALTOR-MLS FE 8-7161 377 S. Telegraph Rd. ROCHESTER Br. UNION LAKE OL 1-0S1D EM 3- 730 S. Rochas tar (175 Commerce IMMEDIATE POSSESSION This baautlful 3 -is fully careetsd redecorated. ;W land Rd. (M-59) offered et i_ GREEN ACRES 1469 9s Lapeer Rd. Uke Orion MY 3>fM2 Afltr I P.m. call MY 3-1544 NEAR EXPRESSWAY HILL VILLAGE THIS DC rolling pavoo i 350 — $ LADD'S OF PONTIAC 3(77 LAPEER ' RD. 391-3300 OVER 4( AC*El - SOME WOODS — barn — 1 mile from 1-75 — Holly (TOO par sera. IS ACRES — Soma woods -‘North ol Clarkston —17,950. Dlxto Hwy. Lots (995, (10 mo. Priv. os on largt tokos. Open Sunday. Bloch Bros. FE *4509 423-1333. PONTIAC LAKE , SS'x 150'. (2*7 i So. Of I COMMERCE LAKE MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Mattingly Rd.. *4,000. Ttrma. COMMBRCI 50'x200', Ideal tor walk-out FLATTLEY REALTY 630 Commerce Rd.______343*901. ______ tWo FINE lakefront homes Salt Farms AND CHOICE BUILDING SITES - ■“ LAKELAND ESTATES, WHERE I FROM (f|«t to m ""iTerforB _ Mi UIBi ..ORTH OFl WALTON BLVD. OPEN 1-( P.M. PHONE 0234470. ROSS HOMES UNDERWOOD HEAL ESTATE . SMS Dlxto Hwy., CtorkMsn 42*3415 425-3125 EVES. WANT TO LIVE IN THE COUNTRY? 13.4 acres near Milford and Davl* burg roads, txc. tor family who wants to live In wall restricted area and still. en|oy privacy and qulat of country living. Ideal bull* ing alto. Lata than MOO por acre Property cannot be spilt), 363-700) 9 till 5 or 343-3197 ovm. Frank HOMES RANGE 840,000. HEART C ON USI0 1-3 MILE NORTH OF ACRES: 7-ROOM HOME: IDEAL EM *4171 Open DaMyfc I completely ceramic Iliad bath, family kitchen, full basement, ell aluminum aiding end part brick. Just a quarter of. mile from schools and shopp' and pricod at only 113,500. V toko your homo In trade. LAKE FRONT, $23,900 This beautiful 3-bedroom heme located on Lake Oakland, hat a TIMES Northarn Proparty S1-A 2-BEDROOM CABIN — SOUTH OF Gladwin — near Tlttebawessee River. Furnished. 33000. FE 2-757*. MULTIPLE DWELLING Zoning on this 3-acre parcel In the Rochester area with * ANNETT Let (",: West Side-3 Bedrooms SULATED. tamlh YOUNG-BILT HOMES REALLY means eetter-eilt Russell Young. 33*3130 __ 53VS w. Huron St. TYRONE HILLS Golf Club adlscont to M acres, wooded, soma pints, a bedroom ranch homo. EDpi. carrigan Quality homes. INC.. 232-4912 or 429-44H VON SOUTH EAST SIDE •btdroom bungalow# full bat lent, gas haaf# and paraga. H lumlnum siding and fenced yai HA tarms to qualified buySr. GEORGE IRWIN. REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE W. Walton__FE 3-71 GILES V00RHEIS 5-room bungalow ment, recreation lte-cor garage, i - end MratMTIb privileges on Sy clean noma. rage. *14,900, terms. Immediate possession. Herrington Hills 3-bedroom brick ranch, ivy baths, lull basement, finished toe. room. Ctoae to school. *15,950, FHA terms. [Waterford Schdols 3-bedroom brick with full basement and gaa hast. Corner let and 2-car garaga. Conventont to city but lino and Tal-Huren shopping. Po* session on doting. Raducod i STOUTS Best Buys 1 Today BLOOMFIELD TRI-LEVEL— Charming torgo.. cqnjetod^ living i IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Wo have 9 beautiful now Weinberger hornet available tor lmm*j ditto occupancy, located In Waterford Twp. in very' desirable locations. Priced from 124,000 to< i including tot. wiligMamam ( an excellent opportu n|oy this properly wh ryv rs apecutotlng. Only (39,9 Cell for your appointment. WATER FRONT Lot uttered with this 6-room, ivy-story home. Close-In to shopping and schools. Has 3 bedrooms, plestortd wails. Cyclone lanced yard, accessibility to othar tokos. Only (10.950. And wa'll arrange Bloch Bros. 623-1333. PE *45(9. Lots—Acrsogt 54 kES IN' I ec Motors __________ i Pontiac Prara Box 45. Clark Real Estate. 1341 W. ran SI., PE 3-71(3. "Michigan!" Farm Rsal Estate Headquarters - Dun Realty Co.. Coldwator, Michigan. Dolt A. Dean Form Broker and Auctlonur. Write or call 51M7*a77-dayt or 517- toT*4£*B& frontage i oh this k high-limits. 5 ACRE* ON PAVCD ROAD, NEAR *> Leks Orton, wHh M«,aov incioaing an. win nw m' ai nrn - home at down payment or trodt ULUcK on any of those. Farm-type home on ivy JUDS0N PARK This beautiful ranch hat 3 ba* 10 ACRE | property . 2-car aluminum home built In 1944 and 'it condition throughout. Con-I rooms and 2V4 baths, 3 uhl ba 1rx24' family room wnn fireplace. Many many extras throughout. 2W-car attached garage. Beautiful yard with sprinkling system. 2 patios. bedroom* plus study i used at tha 4th bed > *15,9(0, I Ilium storms .. , . . _ yard, joke Macedoy Lake Front ♦ ' ‘,Um‘ Pontiac LOVELY ASBESTOS SIDED RANCH wHh 15'xl4* living rot os hoot. car garage. Screened front porch and fireplace. Beautiful town and shade on lOO’xlSO’ tat, your own at only NR. OUR LADY OF LAKES This beautiful ranch ha* 3 he* rooms, ivy baths, lull carpet, toun- , ^ * Mr®*1* I" Springfield Twp., I high rolling land, torn* partly! idMk zoned egrlcuHural - S7M0 ing area |ust weal of Car oaraoo and! ~ *'-5P® down. .comas out to Mil. 147,000 So? ThNi... RRAL ESTATE hjlf (Old jn 19M. 105* but I ha A..,- 425-54(5 92*2 Dixie Hwy. 415-50151 aHotmant. $75,000. Terms, it cendltion 1*50 ACRE5. WOODED »iucp!r»*t»u.r*nt' llv'n( RijOrtors lose-ln loc* Ironlage Mr. Fowiar, EM 34531,! n ,m•,, •ow’ 950 5pn ,!SL rth2^L,°nlL % '«“ACRE* FOR ; RTvACY, PLiA* IfLi? w*.. 'nvottmor*. fe 24144. l. i landscaped yard# 2Wcar ’age# on a qulat daad-and street. I take trade. Priced at $31 #350. EAST SIDE, $15,500 lc balh, carpeted living room, gas hoot, fenced yard, corner lot and1 a baautlful yard. Don't wait on WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU ''JOIN THE MARCH TO TIMES" Times Realty «RHiarK oem, O'NEIL 160 ACRES M-24 north of Oxford. Just | —1 Tl hilly n find. laundry room, ceramic ■R I »ng and tV (some colored) located on S acres st comer ~ two main highways. Comas com- xrwzzQxr',reu- ” wgo many other terms, etc Cell 517-473-2032. 521 N. State St. (Mdl Cord. Celke Root Estate, SeIe BusIbbss Pngarty 57 57*4 MAYBEE ROAD AT SASHA-I I ttonr bid Bing, LAKE FRONT Lovely 5 scaped land-1 Upper Middle Straits Lake tfWisZ'S ss» rx hrJsi.NLre & nST! ;TVS' ^ ft today — You'll Md clean. (14,950, Stotrfcf ^corooiino ELIZABETH ACRES and hallway. *Ba«u! Complstoly rsbultt In 19M, 5 polio with barbecue. room ranch homo, ivy-ear da- Built In 1944, Only (12,9(0. riga, two lots, now kHchon cabl- nefs. new gat furnace, now alu-IdTno, now garaga. Let retl this one. Warden Realty ; 1434 w. Huron# ROSS Sovb at prestnt prices! VON REALTY GEORGE VONDERHARR, Re, n the Moll MLS - Rooi 6*2-5402 It busy M*5(00 W. Bloomfield Schools bedroom. Full basement, Oil fur-Oaod Ketigo Harbor location. 3 & 4 BEDROOM LAKEFRONT RAN $; |P|Jt-ij NCLUDING FRO $29,900 Lakefront, toko privilege lots evall-abto. n OPEN DAILY - SUN. 14 P.M. Lakeland Estates IS Miles fishing, boating, golf course, tennis court, merino. City conveniences' Dixie Hwy. 4/10 mil*' N. ol Walton Blvd. West Bloomfield 4^bedroom_>_ _ _2 baths - split level Quick possassloh* Pull prkq 4(0. Reasonable down paymei JACK LOVELAND 2100 Con Lakt Rd. ________442-1255 Waterford Claude McGruder Realtor 331 Baldwin Ava. FE MuTtlpTa Listing Sarvlca - Opi jvXRT^iC SCHRAM NORTHERN HIGH »r,,P.k.M,My S’$600 DOWN- terms. Plus coats on FHA to qi buyors. Abedroom brick I WE WILL TRADE with fireplace, lull bottmti REALTORS 28 E. HURON ST. 'XX* Office Open Evenings 4, Sunday 1-4 lull aluminum storms and sc CLOSE TO PONTIAC NORTHERN- Brand now offering locate oft Joslyn this attractive tow is ctoae to Pontiac Ni end Madison Jr. High. CM rooms and both with lull ment, GAS hot Hr hoot. I LAKE ORION. $19,400 why hinr tbahcd ■it 3-badroom ranch at Laka WHY, NUT TRADE? iaVSJP tarmiw ANOTHER BEAUTY IN THE ana rolling ton Will spin Into ill _ii|Vq cola. Musi aw to appreciate. C. A. WEBSTER, Realtor 4W-W1 61*2511 CLARKSTON-MAIN ST. A CHOICE SBL1CTION OF LAKE; Good building, com^ttaly Warren Stout, Realtor I N. Opdyka Rd. FC 54145 MuHIplaLlstlng Sarvlca Dally Wt Hals tor tamlly appointment, the price I ~ $550 DOWN V *< FHA ! KAMPSEN ELIZABETH LK. PRIV. 3-bed room wHh gleaming oak Itaors. Living room, dining room, ceramic ilir bam, and Kitchen. Enclosed front and rear porches, expansion attic with room tor. family room. )( per cent down. 114,500. CLARKSTON AREA |> 3-bed room with 2-cer attached ge-rag* on large lot with Mg big trees end also hug* utility roam, immaculate with now thldi. thick carpet. Beautiful Interior. 10 oar! cant down. S15<9M. garage, fruit, inwtrs and garden. >r let d to sail. OPEN Evas. AND SUNJ»r List With Schram And Call The Van 1 JOSLYN AYE. PE 5-9471 KINZLER 40 NEW H0MESITES I IN A NEW restricted development. Underground wiring and pork Matt furnished. Lew taxes. Acreage size 100 x150'. Sot our ranches, colonials and trllevels now unitor construction. Only toMt and tok* front iM. *5,5(0. Twins. NORTHERN HI AREA DtllgMtuI 5-room bungalow full basement. Nawly docoratod JS-.Ti.SUtnT- rrst 3S' "IT'S TRADING TIME" , Kr,ntop,Si A VERY NICE HOME larad. nestled In among th* trees — with privilege* on Williams Lake — Featuring * large carpeted! ..—------ -------“ dlnlnd Irooms on* bedroom I ■ HP ___ _____ HVBHH _.r throughout. par week. (1t,(5( on Full basement, 2W4er oarage. ■HUiHS.". ■ Priced at *15,950. EASY TERM. JOHN KINZLER, Rgoltor 6234335 Multiple Llstlr# Service bpenr*4:30 rTLnfcid** p,iioww j;, wxjt * a# E DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY STbirotSo. ------ IS. iFE 3-9497 — OR *3Sa — OL 14222 Ing owtollt you #s you literally (Ink Li™.J!*. F™hV W*IL 1° rod SECLUDED, HIGH, LEVEL ■|| J*«lr» jnd , lot. Wooded wfth pirn tree nTljy room. No. 7J4. lLUo ISsiM Trading THIS HOME IS NICE AND SO IS THE PRICE Attractive thrw bedroom ranch located in the Silver Lake Rd. and Dixie are*. Carpotod living room, modern Utahan with built in oven St SrSS?. CLARKSTON AREA UDED, HI __wooded w privileges. Dn price. *4,500. mil* northwest of ’ road front ago. 3UT vsllabto. Full prist CHURCH & HOME 2M' frontage on mein hlgh-wuy. lTtr on tide street, Drayton Plaint orda. 30'x46' rarrant Mock building plus ‘ room homo, gat heat, suitable lor many uses. Immediate possession. *4*500 _ terms. 8000 SQ. FT. BLDG. BRENDEL LAKE FRONT WOODED LOT wHh 45' take I IN' roed frontsgi ~ perk tost. Puir •1300 down. IRWIN 1 HALL MB SERVICE IS OUR BUSINESS WATERFORD REALTY j 4540 Dlxto Hwy. • 473-12731 Mulflpto Llstlno Strvlce j (TORO AREA {SOUTH' MARSHALL: jxrsh 4>to Oftk IW-car garage -n 2 tot*. *500 RETIREMENT) IN VESTMENT: Uk* Iran* v bate down ai ranfol up — __. I I. ‘ town. Call lor WATERFORD AREA - custom taillt 2-bedroom elum. ranch. With (Vicar attached garage. ■ privacy and a nlco CarveNd living room,_ i^down. ^ po'rSu,'^ jclud*^.'"^onw'^toraTflM tAKE LIVING opih,. carpotod living roam, com-i Spacious to P**™|Y ®u',,',n kltalwn. This homo two-story hon to 0 beauty. h> I araa ran. exdeelle >m will I wn with room, eleo. Two bedrodmt, which can uetlly b* con-, _ Info two rooms tor lbs kids. Dad and - >rlvlk MOVE IN TOMORROW ding — place your dopi i on this 3-bedroom calm ' itemont, garage, ton excaltonfarea and F.H.A. TERMS deep, o M3M « Clarkston Raal Estate •In ’ HOWARD T. KEATING I brick ranch located on the Best 44*1334 yard. In an oxcdltotn araa end you and fan can move In tomorrow. Full price: No. 3-33 *19,900. 10 per cent down or tors' __ •■■•d*- (CLARKSTON JAYN0 HEIGHTS I on Sllvgr m with firm 1SS taJ^dtaing 1 end^netd yerdTprlcwl Ctr KiSs. SASHABAW ROAD AT SHERWOOD keeling plant, adaptable to many other use*. Contract forms with *13305 down. Annett Inc. Realtors US', eversl tokefront tots tor you M*o tram. Call new while ■re at a minimum. EXECUTIVES iyo a (bedroom brick ranch large living raMT Ninny WHh flreptoce, full bts* IbXnXX tached oarage, exceltenf com tx&esn 900. No. *37 PRICE C0NCI0US? Priced at only Ilir IF A LITTLE GEM TOWNSHIP, WfflI ■ b line site join or hdKi|i si WANT: ■ REAL ESTATE PROS-HAVE: . . Ability to telv* them Tom Botemon, Realtor FE 8-716) Businsss OppsrtinlttM S9 DOUBLE YOUR YORK I M iDYAl OAK 1 V^l LI\- BUYIN , ROYAL OAK By owner, 3 bad ream M family roam, 2-cer garage. FOUR BEDROOM ilg 7-roem home on Southeast CLARKSTON DARDENS -l He* Side. All painted aiid cleened room brick ranch, carpeted llv- 0MB na CM to Mil with early D» [stoles away tram fawn, yet Tcnrc r-nnsirn clean. Oaod alerter ham*. Well to TED 5 CORNER will carpet In flip living ream, a* 1 felllna yaur home* First Wnera* ?■?*■»» %**"■ M F*™raem.i fx-| the tokeprlvl topes on MMNhtt*| teri'or insuru'^'vlslt tTlffl'fjg' tend contrsc°or wlfl take tot* model i IN DRAYTON WOODS Located In a tint st WSII built older cMMlal living ream, tornwl dlnln kitchen, 3 bedrooms, contract. Ap- THINKIN6 OF SILLING Only $400 down plus Clot- WE BUY' Kimball OR 4-0363 4713 Olxlt Hwy. ING OR SELLING CALL/ 1 trade! JOHN K. IRWIN ft SONS OR 44363 313 Wtst Huron — Sine# 192S1 ion Plains' FE S4446. ARr-------UNST1 3Wear /drlvt. I_ M.1*1 B. HALL RRALTY ( SERVICE. F« 5-9446. After 5 p.m. FE 54413 1*549 Dtato"Mw7"M"W<» HS^Mi'A^ER' $Mp3S, CAlx' .....Hi. g ^^55!^ "list WITH O'NEIL REALTY ourT?stimateHefore ?2u; HE ' RcotOtll DEAL - Call Bob Herratl, Dev*! SlMBP.Jg JfiSBPtllXSS--hE2f 1 our sene* et »alu*a- BaffisaSw RAY 03IEIL REALTY Gnurman Witt,' Stanley De* ■mall biirn, hardtop read, west* River ndrih boun listed at 05400, » per down, 4 per cent lend centra BEAUTIFUL CORNER LOT - Drayton Wwfe.'MalMigk to Ufa now. (and Mifiand « dress, plus SI to caver cost at toffing - M70 Sashabew Road. JE DRY CLEANING PLANT ""Tat time of farad I Pontiac araa. Large dry cleaning end shirt laundry. A very prof Habit business, now and hat capacity to doubts present volume. Includes 4.100 M. It. masonry building, equipment end business, $35,0M SUMMER RESORT i Northern Mkh., beat known tithing I ratori1 In state. Hat bar, tgZ I teurent, hotel, rental beats, 1* cottagsi, and Mg' of water front-t trade" 0,h*r • I SEPTIC INSTALLATION, LA K t VrOF « ^TI *I°AVAIUV ( L t I your home FASTI McCULLOUGH. REALTY nets, *11 A-l equipment, terrlfl opportunity. HR' Attar 5, aft 33*(iot IwliuM Opportunities 59 Swops 1HE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 43 Sole HoosekoM Goods APARTMENT HOUSE SITE Zoned for U units, excellent ma, near ' terms. DON fo'0".CAMPING TENT - FULLY HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL *N A MONTH BUYS 3 BOOMS OF Bpr Sofa Mhcdliww 671CARNIVAL BERRY OVERHEAD GARAGE ' By Dick Turner WYMAN Lfof foSNfouat. pr.eJg w".^ to,' 'VrttoSr'FURNITURE CO. &.e«>rJS?i?$ VlT2ZUg'7Slr 7? In’ttade' 'Lgl-WW* . N N» Income. Call .. | asocial*!, Inc.______ Ichl^an Ave„ Lansing Mich. M-ooo. bow and"arr6ws for guns. BANKS' ARCHERY SALES f’ORtf tractor withFEfroNT!Supply Co. Earn Income 'rustmTj in Spare Time FULL GUARANTEE Service MIT DIXIE HWY. 674-2234 • • ■ r■ FUMfe-v1**. J'We*., COKE MACHINE, (M BOTTLE CA- S peclty, reasonable. 31*5)75. DAVENPORT. SOLID CONSTRUC-tion; 66" double sink win Fer-I/, mica ^ and faucets. FE MSUf/ DEEP FREEZER. CHEST-TYFE — *h U "T* r MCDONALD MOBILE HOMES complete Una of ir MM, 2 or 3 bedrooms as low as f lip Featuring Travel*, Schu" laid Vlndole and Tipper. Neve ?HallJLT_. «"lfo _ arriving new*Cranberni Lake Si HonSl 363751 L*,Houra*'wXdiya‘* 1 *'*<» » p.m., Sunday 13 to ipjn. Offers Fall Clearance Sale more tractor (MEN I. WOMEN) excellent monthly ______ weekly refilling Earn 4 to cell acting mone; coin-operated dl area. NO SELLI SWAP: 1*6 HONDA 1M SCRAM-1 bier for clean GM dtafl Call OR 4-3035 after 4:30 I" — *-plece antique suite. OR 354P*. . SINGER ______ DIAL-A-STITCH LINOLEUM.RUGS,. MOST SIZES»| Automatic djk^Rjv waonn.l E. Pika SI., FE 4-7S01, IS fre Ispense ING. N SETTER NORGE ELECTRIC DRYER. S50 674-3433 5300. Must collect SOS cash 56JO a month. Guarani *243, Household Appliance. month. Guaranteed. X experience invest. To arrange “’lew, (Include nhOM P. 0. BOX 46__ PITTSBURGH. PA 15306 _______________________________ PLASTIC WALL TILE---------------- DITCH-WITCH TRENCHER yyyf TRADE YOUR OLD TIRES in FOR B A g Tile Outlet 107S W. Huronj rent, will deliver, pickup. ; •scratched refrioer goofo 33.100,cavil cterd GStMU&snS.' °L ITTI £"y■,^R,^;,°n^bl• ..... ,lm. 74» Orchard__________ W^JB.£jr 9!;®ER MSED FURNI-irepp|ftPRATOP “tai m errair DRAFTING BOARDS AND TABLES. «*•! ELECT*,C. £ wd 7'^ .Forbes. 4500 Dixie. i DOG HOUSES. INSULATED, MOST i?67-i2'x60/ Bahama 1M7—12'x60' S 1967-12'x6(r ALSO FEATURING THE 12'x50' HOMECRAFT AT $3,995 DELIVERED AND SET UP TELEGRAPH AT DIXIE HIGHWAY 1-2267. F. Clark. FOR SALE housatrallar. FE 2-5454 for 2-bMroom REPOSSESSED ITEMS Sale ClOthlM M Refrigerator* NewJI unit apartment house, fire- "v————r— — Drvers etc .*Sr*.trt»i»r., CL0THIW° AND MISCELLANOUS. ' Many *xtre (..for., for werw doth... 294 Baldwin. Goodyeor Service Store L . „ I ' 1 J 1370 Wide Track Dr., Watt Sale Household Goods 65 * _ fontiac ^ GIROUX REAL ESTATE 4511 HlBhlend Road (MSI), 673-71 ' INVESTMENT PROPERTY MS7 near airport, 3 bedroom horn*, comer buslntss ill*. 514,500. OR 3-1761. I LIQUOR BAR A high profit, low overhead straight par doing 56,000 month gross. S3?Wdtmn°*°r Fenners. Asking' Warden Realty| YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY 3 ROOMS BRAND NEW FURNITURE $277 32:50 Mfr w«ak LITTLE JOE'$ Bargain House Buldwlr - - Acrat SEPTEMBER SPECIALS Maytag Wi ■ Frigldair PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" MIS TAVERN i. Real Estate and Sillily STOOP down. Ask for itlon on Tip No. 14-4751.0. ___iTHERN CLASS "C" Only ter In town, with extra wall ----------nd|vT.R Clap including Zip No. 144752.*. ASK FOR NEW ILLUSTRATED CATALOG PARTRIDGE REALTORS 1080 W. HURON, FE 4-3511 OPEN WK. NITES ‘TIL ♦ ss tot couple* on Houghl w, ter. largo dim FE 2 6442 t Fra* Parking Sot. TU4 EZ Terms I CHAIR,. S10) COUCH, S30; Dl-notto. $19: Stove, 435; refrigerator. 54*; living room sol, 175; bod-sot, 145; chest, 320; dresser. 1 reconditioned semi-auto softener Floor model dishwasher CRUMP ELECTRIC 3445 Auburn Rd. | Auburn Heights Sales. 625-1501» OA ”8-3966. —4— qMpn'--------------GARAGE DOORS OINbtK j Factory clearance on No. DELUXE MODEL-PORTABLE ! g|wSSi J£ Zlg-Zagger, In sturdy carrying' ham. case. Repossessed. Fay oft te||j $38 CASH Or Poyments Of $5 Per Mo. I S-yaar guarantee & Universal Sewing Center FE 4-0905 end table ; dryer, $33 j, $42; new L_ . C. Llppard, 55f I desk; dryera $35; new round dinette, $42; new bedroom set, $102. * ■ •---* “ Ferry. 1-A REDUCED - WE ARE MOV-•ng — 6 pc., matching white bedroom set, formica tops $135. Deacon bench, > black, hand decorated with pad $35. Desk antique gray K5. Oval I x 12 area rug with pad $15. 2x12* wool band woven rug $20. Wicker fertoery $6. Combination sewing cabinet and night stand $7.50. ^Queen size quilted spread $7.50. Complete movie camera outfit $100 -- or sail sep-l arately. Lika new English saddle. , OL 1-6633. regular sewing. 2 PIECE CONTEMPORARY SEC- or $7.06 a month. ________ _3355243. HerngheMI Appliance.-IgARAGESTlE THURS. SEPT. 21. SINGER | Furnishings lor AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG I Sfo'vT SS.ey#Mb«f. chairs, kltcher Sewing machine - sews single or tftfote, school desks. 2 bikes 06“ double needle, designs, overcasts, jqdjao1.1) Bunk _beds; spring buttonholes, etc. — Modem cabinet. Take over peymnets. of i P,BA,*’ OAS HEAT - FREE ESTIMATES OR $56 CASH BAL. licensed and insured Rings. 8EDR< Still I ROOM SUITE, Aner / p.m. or before 7 363-7742. _________________ J 4-PI6CE BEDROOM SET, Owners for $$9.00 Universal Sewing Center - FE 4-0905 6742611 ■Pfoyter. OR 3-9767, ELECTRIC RANGE; HOOVER UP-" right vacuum with attachments, both exc. condition. Alta new met _ *1 shower. 6741*33 or 673-3413. FLOOR MODEL BATH TUB, Carry with. 425. G. ,A ■ 7005 M-37 W, For The Finest In Top-Quality Merchandise Shop At Montgomery Word Pontiac Mall GARAGE SALE Wed.. Thurs., Frl. Boy's bike. misc. Items. _________ GARAGE SALE, 5905 MARY SUE, ““ Clarkston. HU . . ...ms. Wad., Thuta., Fri., Sat. 2 till sold. GARAGE SALE. MOVING, THURS. rl to Sat., 21 to 23, 104 p.m. Take • Hill Rd. off M52 to 5536 Grass M Lake Rd. Trash to Treasures — J Clothes, 16-11, 42-41; antiques; 1-5574 -Boy tral MA $-2161._________________ ADJUSTABLE TABLE SAW. $65~ GI FTS—GAGS-JOKES AND NOV- _________________________________elties. Liberal Bill . STOVE, NEW TABLE, TABLES^ Dixie Hwy. OR 3*474. GIRL'S BALLET $2 misc. furniture. Nol SLSO^Waakiy1 used 4-mtlj ^74 < ♦op_ Outpost. 3265 CUSTOM ENGINE REBUILDING, cylinder boring, pin fitting, auto-1 ~ANt>—TOE i machine shop service, hy- ___l._____ j. snows, ** iwa now, slzo 4; child's j -JS? ‘ REFRIGERATOR largo rod metal wagon, axe. con-1 W?1*:. Pon,la^. Motqr„Parts?^l016 $75. Call 623-1 dition, $5. Call 625-41144 aft. 6 I TRAVEL TRAILER5 Ynur dealer for -LAYTONr CORSAIR ROBINHOOD, TALLY HO oei. HobbiBS t Sucpliet area. SAW Truck. 3*4-0062 or --------H ~u*3-___________“__________CANADIAN COIN COLLECTION. 730 Veiiert Tn~*toCT GRAVEL AND Oakland Ave. FE 2-6230. ALSO CORSAIR PICK-UP Mte-------------------------------------------NEW SERVICE DEI "RETIREMENT SPECIAL 3 Rooms Furniture , I BRAND NEW . I$288 $2.50 Weekly PEARSON'S FURNITURE I ind tIO E. Plkd FE 4740’16»________________ trailers, all e««w»*ft P fddeck ena Clly Hell VACUUM CLEANER. WASHER AND — dryer parts. Alee good used *p- 10 acrat, over 100' on U.S. 2 way. completely equlppe 40' building, real iharp out. Also 2 house trail . goo() fishing;.-—w —* —J- "■ - state; your|*-PIECE _ DINING ROOM SUITE, ,, , - 3242 Dixie Hwy, Mm i WANTED TO BUY USED TVs $12.25 COLOR TVs $150 Repo. Free of frost freezer IS cu. SWEETS Ktdrm 334.5^77 HOT WATER BASEBOARD RADI COLOR TVs $150 _ rm $142.25. RADIO AND APPLIANCE, INC. MECHANICS TOOLS AND KEN-I nedy toolbox. 1 1073. 673-2114. S125. 33S-; 4-1731. GOCART - $125 _____________FE 5-2520 HAMMOND CHORD ORGAN, EX-.aAi.n TAsiripu r.nnn ercycle, frost. free refrigerator, {0RA^ R:I washer, dryer end m 1ALL . ANYTIME C. & Ing tor tend and grev peel, end block dirt. unregistered Cheviot i CAMPEI Ellsworth Trailer Sales gSTiw. fi? p»«»- Hwy,. IMS TRIUMPH I 332*500____________ *66 HONDA 305 StKAMBLiiT"^-tteI!erfOWC3HttlOO.C'J>*0f" P,m iff HONDA SUPER HAWK. LOW miles. 5525. 642-0630: _________ 1*66 HONDA ibg’ bREAM. 4500 Extras. 3343632. FE 2-6155: 2 MARES. 1 BRED, Musical ioods 7y | "CROWN” SAND. GRAVEL. TOP ’toff' M-59 W. $150. FE 5-322$. MICHIGAN APPLIANCE CO. HOT WATER HEATER, 30 GALLON gas. Consumer's approved, 002.5C 673-8011 vft'ue. $39.95 .and $49.95, marred. 6 YEAR OLD MARE. GENTLE, Must sail. 363-2357. > S "yards APPALOOSAS, QUARTER HORSES. *•9.50 F£ 6*4235. WE CARRY THE FAMOUS Franklins—Cress Fans—Monitor ThunderBird, Ritz-Craft Trove! Trailer: ASK FOR N1W ILLUSTRATED CATALOG PARTRIDGE REALTORS ISO W. HURON FE 43541 OPEN WK. NITES *TIL *:00 SERVICE STATION Vlny TIN 7c ee. Leaded gl ANTIQUE VICTORIAN PUMP OR- 334-9756. 3346*64. ---■ ___ gen. over 200 yr. old. 6.3-1560. r... E FTuL ^.RT, YOU LOAO AND DOU*LB P^P^O^iTABLB HAS Skamper and PleaSUreMat* mps or loaded ; glass lamp shades. FE 4-9026. iWASHfi AND DR7ER COMBINA-: CABLE NELSON PIANO. REASON- '* CONSOLE. BEAUTIFUL MA-hogany cabinet. Exc. picture. I Sfopr • ■ ________ ^ WROUGHT IRON KITCHEN SET, machine! $15* SI $25. Refrigerator, $30. FE 8-6498. Priced from 4170 and 4222 wit circulator and expansion tank pact ages. Priced until gone or Sep GALLAGHER'S MUSIC CKgo. Ray Karr, J2 CUBIC FOOT DELUXE COLD- HOUSEHOLD ITEMS INTO I t>i $25. Refrigerator, $30. FE 8-6498. HOUSEHOLD"SALE FURNITURE Sava from $100 to $300 - Lowary THOSE UNNEED- ctehlng. e.^rfo.1 ffiS"?,JOLT* p m. Clawson.! spot treater. $75. SPARE TIME INCOME tfllllng and collecting money om NEW TYPE high quality .in operated dispensers In this;: ■ea. No eelllng. To quality you,-references, S600 * ELECTRIC STOVE. ADJUST- 33S-7M2 HI rummage. Sot. Sept. 23“—. 9rH*n* *7om $6*5 Up 3425 S. Rochester Rd., be-South Blvd. and Auburn Rd. abte Hollywood frame and bookcase headboard, boy's sun sport suit, size 16. 651-3070 6S-A FLEA MARKET, OCT. 1 | IF CARPETS LOOK DULL AND the spots as they Blue Lustre. Rent Used Pianos Used Sr drear, remove appear electric LAVATORIES net excellent] port full time. I $2,900 cash. n~ interview iTRIBUTINl .............KLPH AVE. BURGH, PA. 15202. Include phone i windSor^distRieufiNG COM-PANY. 4 N. BALPH AVE.. PITTS- 5-piece parlor MODERN ORANGE DAV1N- ■ Bleck wool loyiylng jNsswereT'and ntec-'diS ANTIQUE LOVE StEAT, NEWLY Orctei . . _ -------- upholstered. FE 5-3*06. ______________ 1967 SINGER brass doll bed. french lim 124.50 oilets. stalls. Irregulars, terrific Michigan Fluoresci Lake. FE 4-8462 - Lustre call us for information 1710 S. Telegraph '/4 mile south Dally Saturday 9:30 to 1:30 GIBSON 12 STRING GUITAR case and condition. PONTIAC LAKE BUILDERS SUP- no welting. Also | Open 7 days, 8 to 8. 673-7657, | ’ifirsVlesson free. klentiHer Riding Academy, 363-000*.__________ Campers—7 & 8 Sleepers Send, gravel. OR'FOR RENT: STABLE ROOM FOR|' k-1534. 1 i' horses, 030 me., 625-4435. I j ~ j**" *0,I*OV* ~ SCREENED TOP SOIL. WHOLE- GENTLE SPIRITED HORSE. SAD-1"9-K.V^I?1!!IF-. T.?UC^ -.... end.rptell. Lading 4 deys . d| MM* end ten. .teller. .300, ZZJZ1 -------I------ ~6 »S B trTtifA40NABLEr~/rrL i ''"•’copnB' 634-8531. ladda Saits, 4 Lake. EM • USf American Stone Products. ’ good manners, i Like Phone UL 2 3672. .of for $52.0 cups and saucers, _________ etc. No •Hu**’ tell case, copper scuttle. *s2 j0,|yn dispose wash-stands. 363-6614. __________- - ...... * month. CUSTOM ANTIQUE REFINISHING IVERS POND WALNUT CONSOLE NEVER USED ANYTHING LIKEi piano. 1*64 model. Like new tor I , only 4575. *^tr c! MORRIS MUSIC FE 2-0567 ______Across from Tel-Huron _ 9471 Pontiac Lake Rd. I NEW CONSOLE PIANO, WALNUT Pets-Hu itiM? Dogs l-A DACHSHUND PUPS, A PSTfclHEIM KENNELS. 32M REGISTERED QUARTER HORSE' filly, good 4-H prospect, very good blood lines, S500. 30342 W.i 12 Mile, Farmington. 626-0273. MOBILE SERVICE, WINTER- 2-BEDROOM 2ND CUTTING ALFALFA, BROME, 24 S- Telegraph BY "ARLEEN" - A DACHSHUND PUPS, AKC, $10 tnrm Prnrfiira down. JAHEIM'S KENNELS. FE “orm 45c bale. Conditioned. ME 4-6552. [ Ing machine. 1965 model In ex I cel lent condition. Call now and ws can arrange for you to keep this lake-front site on which It is situ- OIL SPACE HEATER SPARE TIME INCOME Refilling and collecting mo I ............................ tram (NEW TYPE) high auelllv1 Cell 335-*343. Household Appliance. Specialising In tin* antique .. _. ____ coin operated dlspensert In this r~ a BIG SAVINGS finishing, lurnlfure repair ot *11 PAPERWEIGHTS must tev***c*f? -iforScT im fe^l^T XSS'7JSr,,^Si' ^rd'^^^^Frr*'01*, ^AUTIFUL ^Ett^HANOMADE, $2,200 cash. Sevan to twelve; suj, you Sav# alt0 ^ rtyp. TOO MUCH STOCK-NOT ENOUGH | ^Winding?* ‘ ^2?7542 holstering and carpet. Call 335-1700 space, 20 percent off on every-]prriAAinVift aTb7Tiwc “TTFt fo!LPRE6 y;rnate in your home. , M BIG SAVINGS l Hwy., 3 miles north of i-75 ^ater. 849 95; lotted bflh »ts* i draperies (over 1,000 choose from). Terms to ~Tjjb CANNING PEACHES. bring conta I Walton Blvd containars. Adams mixed. 7 mos. old. Both . EAR CORN, BY THE * 797-4446, Hadley Me CULL0UGH REALTY D Highland Rd. (M52) f in 9-9 674-2239 8X32' LANOOLA, monthly income. Mora tuii time For parsonal Interview write WINDSOR DISTRIBUTING COMPANY 4 N. BALPH AVEw, PITTSBURGH, IPORTING EQUIPMENT STORE On custom suit you. Save stering anT for FREE i, TV A Radios 333-7562 Standing toilet, SI4.*5; jO-genon heeler. S4**5; '-niece both sets. S5*.*5; laundry ray. trim. tl*.*5i shower stall* with ?bowl sink. S3.*4; levs . *2 *5. lor $35. Call alter 332-3674.(MACINTOSH APPLES. PICK YOUR| leges. Exc. si PONTIAC' SYMPHONY. AUOTTIOR.2 M^EJ^BRADOR^RETRIEVERS BfiaSSTS. j sections. Phone 338-9313. $39 95; REYNOLDS CORONET, EXCEL- “Ion. --- — cost $150, PIFER REALTY. you In business. ANNOUNCING GRAND OPENING .Phone area 313,1 NEW B. F. GOODRICH STORE Sola Load Contracts I BARTON WASHER. S3*; USED LIV B" USED TV Veltan TV. FE 2-2257 0*11 Open *-4 Jeslyn i FE 4-1516. tor |*5. 642-6570 or 642-2176. I STUDENT CONN TRUMPET, GOOD I Ch*>U» 14 MONTHS. MINIATURE FEMALE I dachshund, all stM .1 623-6351. | gz-j - ABERDEEN TERRIER PAfcTI- cier olor cockers. St. Bernards, Scot- daV ties, poodles. Tropical Fish, petU-------- supplies and grooming. Uncle r.ii MCINTOSH APPLES. PICK YOUR; Calient can __ „ ^ pick them. Shelton’s pancy. ’246 Perry Lake Rd.. j. Miller Reel Estate. MU oft Orion Rd. No Sun- )MJ GENERAL UOUT. LIVING condition, incy. Price: ! S, APPLES. PICK YOUR room, !2*xl6'. extras, 2 helmets and lacfcdt. Also treltar. FE 2-6244 after 4._________ N7 HONDA, 6i»CC, BEST OF mileage. $1354. 336dW7. BIG SAVINGS FALL CLEARANCE Atl Trail Bikes Free helmet wtttt each purchase MG SALES & SERVICE 4667 Dixie Hwy. Drayton Plain* CLEARANCE PRICES ON SUZUKI’ cycles 54CC-254CC. Rupp from 4144.45, cycle M-5* to W. Hjghl, Hickory RIQge Rc Rd., left and tollew signs DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSICO LAKE. Phone 434-317*. FREt HELMET WITH THE PUR-chas* of each new Suzuki cycle 54CC-750CC. Rupp mlnl-bikes as low as S144.45. Complete line of cycle accessorlet. Take MIS* to W. Highland. Right on Hickory Ridge M. to Demode Rd, left and follow Signs to DAWSON SALES AT TIP-SICO LAKE. Phene: 6343174. access. Take Tight en Demode I LAPEER I O N OP I l> small tow____ personnel. 664,473. SALE! SALE III us Buy now and save. Easy terms. ANDERSON SALES 0 SERVICE 1645 S. Telegraph_FE S-7143 A-l BIKES. 335-6755 333-4515. LITTIEI after . PRINTING PRESSES-OFFSET ------------- __ 5433 Dixie! Waterford 6334)3401 condition. FE 5-2434.____________ . . relaxacisor. 4125. kelvinator upright piano., reasonable. Afuhon Hounds. FE 4-B793 farm lauinnoat 34" tlec. stove. $75. Ladles pra-1 FE 5-2S46. ...;rMrm 7. case. 115. 334-3754 own. 4000 Owotso Cram. Apple I dinette. Bronze refrlgeretor ------ -----^ ------ —ten- ,10V,. 440-3052. ---- 1*66 RICHARDSON. 6-BEDROOM, |7; I2'x50'. already, located. Take over : 1 TO 50 I turnltura*«i?' *lT~kindt"eTteigelni —UP.*1—• (RUMMAGE AND FURNltuRE LAND CONTRACTS prlc“- LITTLE JOE'STrad®*nsCONSOLE, AM AND FM RADIO; WovInOjSep*., 20, 21. 22. LAnil LUniRHLlS | Baldwin at vvaften. FE 2-4*42 i end stereo, 624-44*3 after 5 p.m. | only. 100*tadliMiNltotated '***■ *“ “* b*laf*j BLOND DUNCAN FHYFE TABLE, LIKE NEW ADMIRAL~~STEREO,. bov^Lake. USED PIANO, CHOOSE FROM UP-.^L. ESSStf. htt, grand*, a*. Uprights balance. 674-1120. color*. FE 4-2747.1 CLARK'S TRACTORS AND AKC, FEMALE, 1 YEAR OLD APRI-! chlmry. 100 UMdlrtetori, cof poodle — 321-217$. ST»* #*•**/ .beckhoe* end h Elizabeth Lk. Rd., Ox- AKC MINIATURE 8CHNAUZER ATTENTION Fall stock reduced price* iSSny1 WARREN STOUT, Realtor S £ 450 N. Opdyke Rd. F§ 5-8165 FE ***■ Opon ivaa. *tll I p. chairs, china Woiitad Cootracls-Mtg. 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACT: tablet. 45.45 2-6*42. ________________ BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE Ml*. BRAND NEW. Large end small size (round, drep-leaf, rectangular) tables In S-, *■ me Tpc. sals. 434.45 up. PEARSON'S FURNITURE 210 B Pike_________________PE 4-7411 BUNK BEDS Choice of 15 styles, trundle beds, CHEST OF DRAWERS (NEW) 811.95 up Meple, welnut end white PEARSON'S FUJKNlYURE Old. OR 3-0631. RCA COLORED FM, $150. 330-1073. 673-j RUMMAGE: 15th ANNUAL YOU- NAME-1 T» We-Mave-lt. Thurs., Frl. - tlgtal AAsTrsiTiftM mb and Sat., 21. 22, 23. 10 to 5. 3565 VIOLIN^ NEW CONWTION^WO^ Ormond Rd. AKC GERMAN SHEPHERD PUP, FORD TRACTOR ^ GOOD CONDI- I TV—FE 0-4569 SEASON' ! typaw dteftii clearance si - USED STUDIO upright piano In 335^484. REPOSSESSED STEREO 1967 walnut^ wgyN Dixie, Crayton, long. 4 . AM-FM-FM staraoplax id state AFC. 6-spai and record storage. Sold new radio. Sol- AFC. 6-spaakar system | ||____________ Oi must colltcf $164.52 cash or; 54 per month. Cell 335-42*3. House-1 g£nm? J5KJ ES.I.E $100,000 1214 E. Pike —l,w..ita« te2 C0L0N'AL H0TCH REPOSSESSED COLOR TV Takt over payments tel. owing 431*. *12 mo. 1. F. Goodrich, 44 ( wukli i ,tK mu nunnies. 625-4343 THOMAS ORGANS AND PIANOS I INSTRUCTIONS AND r7>D \ INSTRUMENTS I 0R JACK HAGAN MUSIC AKC GERMAN SHORT HAIRED F'ur™y« c......— —lyss? pups, exc. hunting slock, 625-3*40.1 JOHN DEERE AND HEW 'OKA, AKC REGISTERED PEKINGESE! JJw’deStal* DAV^s”MACH*NERY! Across from Pontiac : r MAHOGANY RUNABOUT, IS *17* ,nd con,ro1** i2tv alum.nOm »oat Alib m6- FUTE. e .... reel lest. 5754. 6*5^466.J CHRIS-CRAFT KIT BOAT, 72" •am. 10 h.p. motor. Rea*. 642-3426 ftar 4, 164* Lakevlew Dr., Sylvan AKC TOY POODLE. BROWN. SPECIAL SALE ON 1467 Bolen Tractors. Model No. 750 (7 tip. with recoil). ACCORDIAN, GUITAR LESSONS Selts-Ssrvlco. Puleneckl OR 3-55*6. PIANO LESSONS. POPULAR. CL AS-1 ' theory. 674-1634. BEST MOBILE HOME SALES OPEN DAILY 12 A.M. TO 9 P.M. EE THE ALL NEW MARLETTE D CHAMPIONS, nerout floor plan. _ utflng 2 and 3 bedroom EX-NDOS. 19' SKEE CRAFT Cruiser complete with 32" rotary mower. MJgHlghleteLBjfc (MJ*. 2 miles Flying bridge, cabin. Only 1555. I '*'•»* •* «()lllams Lk., Rd.) bunks, new bilge i 4124. TELEVISION. (Ibl* discount. Call 6*2-1*20. for Ted McCullbugh, Sr. ARBO REALTY 5)63 CdM-Ellz. Rd, 430. Chrome, Formica to chain, 164. Attar 5:34 p.n ^ ..........H I COUCH. CHAIR: itALIAN TABLE CASH POE LAND^ CONTRAc TS with 4 chain ...................... ■bjj M... nursery _ furnjti For Sola Miscellaneous 67 1 RIDING MOWER, 1 STEREO. 7 TALBOTT LUMBER WBft 0l 4" Slack and Decker drill. $2.291 682-7134. kppllan------ Bfifi A — !---------- i'x8*x2k" .^85T board? m.75 n.|Store Equipment v xlxto" particle board. M*5 ea — ^ —-----J------ ^ 1425 Oakland__________1 *• TYLER DAIRY CASE WITH CHIHUAHUAS: STANDARD SCHNAlJ- 4 and ■tetete||Hto|totf ___I zers. Selling out. KenLo. 617-3742. | Throwi 74 CUTE KITTENS TO GOOO HOME, ___ Everything to meet your needt | -r ■■ - ---------- > FE 1-531*. ItolLekewInd Dr.___ pw*idc tni IIPMFNT E66ALE BIRTTANY 4 MONTHS tVANi CUUiriVICNI old, papers, ilket children, house t 6547 Dixit t pet. Partially heuiebroken. perm-ament shots. 445. FE 2-5361 .tier 3:30 p.m._____________________ . cutter. FE 5-7*40. - ... - after 5:14 p.m. l BLOND MALI PEKINGESE — -== Loves children, 550. 363-4013.___ '** BRITtAtiY PUPPIES 14 WEEKS Old. *25. 363-2207. KING BROS. * FE 4-0734] >c Rd. at Oadyke Rd. I e bile Home. 343-5600 < angina, tandem axle trailer, ipiete ... Very raasonobla. SAVE $$$ TODAY! THE EARLY BUYER GETS THE WORM 626-4654. OR 1-1355. NEED LAND CONTRACTS'. S6AALL 1 DINING ROOM SET <•> discounts. Earl Carrels. MA 4-5400 j table, bench and 2 Captains chairs; __ MA 4 5400 SMpfra 2-4ti*._________^__________| electric stove; Copper hood tan 1UICK CASH FOR LAND CON-| large Money to Loon (Licensed Money Lender) LOANS HARVEST Ins I IP hpo mirror, other 7. All in good conot-nlngs. DINING ROOM SET. RCA tv. END UL 1 SEGALL KEY MACHINE, stack bins with stack racks. OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES 326 Orchard Lake Ava. copamatic unit, $150., 321-1202. Throwers JLAWRENCE ST 118 WPLAV Everything to moor your ntwu Clothing, Furnituro. Appliance* look at our .1968 Snow Mobile; prices. I TO WJ 30 8. UWWi^B H ft 84M21 COMMUNITY LOAN CO A1 tables. All good wnnniwn. wb bp, oi 3688. 544 Nichols. | , , ; DRYER, $35. wASHiE. $2S. APT. size refrigerator, $32. TV tot, $35. G. Harris, FE 5-2766.______________ ELECTRIC STOVE. S25, GAS STOVE ,535. Refrigerator with top freezer 54*. wringer Wether 140, G. Harris. 5=E S-2766.___________________ LOANS TO $1;000 FE 2-9206 oaklandToan^co. 102 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. 4-5 - Frioey 4-7 See. LOANS 135 to II JO* _ BAXTER A UVmOSTbNt Finance Co. ' «1 PontlK State Bank Buiidin FE 4-1538-9 FREE LOCHINVAR 34 GALLON OIL hot water heater. Worke good. 14 years old. 5165 Durnham. oil Cess- 1-A ALUMINUM-VINYL SIDING Awnines. storm windows. For i Meed lob, Call Jo M Peliebie Pioneer' n. OL 1-4533. 873-3278. guar 'The rxrz linoleum rugs $3.9» each Pinttic well t>i« Ic ee. Ceiling til* - wall paneling, cheap. MO Tile. FE 6-4*57. 147S W. Huron 36" G. E. PUSHBUTTON ELEC-trie range. Frigidalra ref rig;, 5x8 wood picture window frame. 338-2433. Iioo L>. capaciTV tnisT ^Rlskz-er, like new. 4)14 alio 14*2 Pon- , FREIGHT OAMAGE6 BEDROOMS' i end living rooms. Save almost half - LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE. Baldwin *• Walton. FE 2- condition, 332-2241. FRIGIDAIRE, JENNY LIND BED, 2 rugs, ll'xl*', FE 2-774*. .."umgr mo., 416*. ANCHOR FENCES NO MONEY DOWN PB 5-7471 Announcing grand opening NEW B. P. GOODRICH STORB 6. s. W^yij mm DETROITER—KROPF Vacation Homes wide with large expanding bad-toms and larga expanding living •pm only 82995.88. Free da-^arv In Michigan. Also 8 ft.. H 12 ft. wldoi THIS OLD HOUSE E 1-7007. dawn, many ittms-tenlsters. Ilreplacei FE 1-S3I4, 1*61 Lekewlnd Dr. m GUNS—720 W. HURON. 336 7451. FEMALE BIRtTANY 4 MONTHS I Exc. selection d ueod guns. ailMMmMM 6-TOED WHITE KITTENS. FREE . BIG DISC6UNT AT TONY'S MA. n RINB. 31 YRS. REPAIR EXPERIENCE. 26*5 ORCHARD LK. RD„ SYLVAN LAKE.______ Clarkston I rovel Trailers TUB ENCLOSURES, GLASS ONLY UNCLAIMED LAY AWAY 1*66 Zlg Zegger sewing machine, makes button teles, fancy stitches. USED LUMBER-LIKE NEW Suitable for shooting, sldtno, flow ing, fencing, making skids, ate Call $$7-4121. ________ FOR SALE OR TRADE, AKC k. 418 Bow Hunter's Special Complete line of Archery Suppl Some bows as low at 50 par $$$$$ Aug. Clearance Sale Phoenix convertible campers, < BOB HUTCHINSON. INC- 6341 Dixie Hwy. (U.S. 14) Drayton Plains OR 3-1 FREE, EXCELkEN* FAMILY DOG. (smelt mongrel. 451-5547 tel. 4-13 GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPPY, 5)5.| ric'kH'c^'c'n1^ V*C>,I#" ^ .. ..... .. REESITAND DRAW-TITE HITCHES ED PUPS, 4 Sold end Installed 634-417* after 4, HOWLAND SALES AND RENTALS IRISH SETTER PUP*. FEMALlt. 3255 Dixie Hwy. OR 1-1456 , 5 mos., AKC regTttartd. *11 Shota (t<( UNt end warmed. 7SIJM6K________________ ____________ [ 3-1471-'KITTENS HOU5EBROKEN FRiellO* CABOyBR PICKUP CAMPER, good heme. 643-5514. IllVem. BIG DISCOUNTS n all marine supplies. 60 per ,nt off on all marine patois.' OWENS MARINE SUPPLIES 3*6 Orchard Lake Ave. _________FE 2JMD BOAT - FISHERMAN’S SPECIAL. I h.p. meter. Used ir top carrier, accei *175. 3565454 otter CASH FOR ANY TYPE-OP Gl HALL'S AUCTION-SALES, MY ! OUCK BOAT AND PUNT POLE FOR ___________________ tajgul. er lump shooting, S54. 665- POODLE. SILVER MINIATURE, CRUISER'S LEFT OVER NEW 1*67 Owen's 31 Express. 4 sleeper hardtop. Full* equipped .. SS.44S 1467 Chrle Craft 27 fltergla* i 25th-30th. mos., tlSf» 1*66 REFRIGERATOR; LAI trtmenl 2 door *. 4265761. Mteigag#Laaas MATTINGLY Leans over 45M40, no any purpose. Call Ray 156*7/Mattingly iusln 62 9B REFRIGERATOR. ELECTRIC! ~ stove. 676-3246. | MONRITE IRONER. GOOO, <25.! * ncl Sir>*y Flavin. FE I new S» wMgr^g*. *14, 'top' HOUGHTEN BARGAIN CbMMiRClAL r 84” RIDING REEL lower, 4W h.p., ready to gol WILL DELIVER $490 Uaad riding mowers, $158 and up HOUGHTEN POWER CENTER DOWNTOWN 80CHJE STB 8-^4S!>781 cants par lb. 25 lb; boxes I Clark fork lift truck, 4088 lb. Drill bits and cutting fdolt. EVINRUDE SNOWMOBILE, tUDE trade. $175. Fi 2-6122. out. Custom made USBD ARCHERY Big discount. SeUing r POODLES AK(. Black. Atothar i Rea«onabla. 217 Auburn, FOQDLt BEAUTY IkLON axe condition, 5 that auto., cuHt1 POODLE CLIPPING AND compensator, duck plug, esse, pooing, by appointmant. FE 5-4025. cleaning equipment, MIS. *73-54*4, PUPPIES, SHORT HAIR-BASSETT *5. OR 45333. Sat How Much Battar A SNOWMOBILE CAN BE 1968 SN0-SP0RT ON. DISPLAY AT— , MG SALES 4 SERVICE 67 Dixit Hwy. Drayton Plelnal plti G -E. Montcalm Pontiac' jty, UL 2-1M3. REGISTERED MALE SPRINGER 5 get a demenetrn-i MARLETTES ; Warner frelleg Setae. 30*4 **'53' tang, 13*. to It* wide. Early W. Huron (plan to^loln one of; American, Traditional " llateay Welly Byam'i exciting caravan.). I AIRSTREAM., 1*66, „ extra erteg*. Aim *** the i J light weight Winnebago Trail ' OXFORD TRAILER SAI Drpyton Plain*. OR 35: SALES OPEN *5, CLOSED SUNDAYS -------1 of Lake O *-- MY 25711 DRAG BOAT I* loot Hondo, 626 Heml, cuatem trailer. 6*3-3644. FACTORY BUILT HOUSEBOAT, •leaps 4. Refrigerator, mU* touth of Lake Orlen en M14 « D—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS. TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 10, 1067 >—h - tttwiriii W|0Brti< C«n • TtWb ^ GLASSPAR _ STEURY -Craft — Grumman — K« HELP! Pliora 43M179.___________ INSIDE WINTER STORAGE ICAR’S BOATS & MOTORS 405 W. CLARKSTON RD. LAKE ORION 300 sharp Cadillacs, Pan- - ' MY S-1M0I tlacs. Olds and stats market. Top dollar > MANSFtiLD AUTO SALES 4-DAY TOP $ PAID (Downtown store ohly) {for dll sharp PONTiAqS, | AND CADILLACS. We are Q’PMl'T A T prepared to make you a •Q* [better offer!) Ask for [ Bob Burns. WILSON CRISSMAN CADILLAC Nrel|B Cwi Ihmjmt Used Cm 101 IMS TRIUMPH T-R-4. NEW TIRES, . CLOSE 0UT0N ALL '67 MODELS NO FAIR OFFER REFUSED ON ANY OF OUR: Triumphs, MG's, Fiats Sunbeam or Austin Healeys NOW IS THE TIME TO BUY ’ Financing arranged with Low down payment. DEAL NOW AND SAVE 1}RIMAIDJ CAR CO. KX) Oakland FE 5-9421 Wed.-Sat. 9 to 6 SHORT SUMMER BUT LONG INVENTORY WE MUST REDUCE OUR 1967 BOAT & MOTOR STOCK To Make Room for the new 20-50 Pet.. Discount on Entire Stock (EXCEPT GUNS AND JOHNSON SNOWMOBILES) INSULATED BOOTS KEG. 116.50, now 112.95 $19.95, now $19.95 30 pet. off W alum, prama, $52.50 Flbarglas canoa, 5230. USED OUTFITS At give away prices SUCH AS ± IS’ elumacraft Quaan Marla, NO TRADE-INS AT THEM PRICES, SORRY PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. Marino 4030 Dixie Hwy., on Loon Lok OPEN SUNDAY, 10 TO 4 .MAKE RESERVATIONS FOR winter storage and motor tune-ups. Evlnrud* Do.lor HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS 1899 S. Telegraph FE 2-B033 Used Aet^Treck Pert* 102 FORD MOTOR AND TRANS-1 1003 QUICK HARDTOP, POWER EQUIPPED. AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION. RADIO, HEAT “R, _ WHITEWALLS, FULL RICE: 1005. ABSOLUTE MONEY DOWN. Assume payments ot *7.05. CALL CRED-CAR TRAILER TANDEM WHEELS,I IT.MBs Mr. Parks at HAROLD! ass.br,k,>- *”• l,k* ■■l COMPLETE CLUTCH AND MANY other parts tor 300 Pontiac tn-ulna, raao. 073-363*.___ ! convert you* engine to hi Now 1001 Galstrons now on display: A taw 1N7 modals left at bargain prlcas. GRAND RIVER BOAT SALES Bt» Brand Rlvtr OR 4-7370 ' 4 blocks oast of Middle Bolt Rd. MEMBER OF MMDA NEW tl' TANDEM TRAILER. PINTER'S "Your BOAT-MOTOR STORAGE Double "AA" Motor Repair Rating . 170 OPDYKE , 0-4. FE 4-0024 (1-75 at Oakland UnlyaroWy Exit) SEA RAY*B0ATS Factory to you prlcot LAKE ORION MARINA M34 NORTH ol Pontiac SPECIAL It' Carver boat with top-ski bar-cover and gagas. 75 h.p. Johnson Motor with IS gal. tank. Hoavy duty trailer with opaca wheel and tiro. Only (IMS. CRUISE-OUT, INC. S3 E. Walton Open M FE 0-4402 :ury outboards ■ ■ ... ... .... Mtrc-Crulser authorized dealer. Cypress Gordons ' skis (all tfylas) GRUMMAN CANOES DEALER Plbarglaa canoe, .............*140 Cliff Drover's j Gun and Sports Center tuts Holly Rd. MB 4-4771 Open Pally and Sundays “TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S rop S FOR CLEAN CARS OR trucks. Ec»n«my Cars. 3335 Dixit We would like to buy late model GM Cars or will accept trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 WE BUY ANY GOOD LATE MODEL USED CAR! "TOP DOllAR" tool HASKINS Junk Cars-Track* 101-A VW CENTER 85 To Choose From -All Models— —All Colors-—All Reconditioned— Autobahn Authorize* VW Dealer ‘ ----- |g jy FE 6-4531 Vi mile North of Miracle Mile New nnd Used Cert 106 BANKRUPT’ CREDIT PROBLEMS’ We Con Finorce You— FE Mtot MIL0SCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Small Ad—di-i Lot SO CARS TO CHOOSE FROM wt buy or win adlur your pi 1965 CADILLAC Sedan DoVllle, this one hes all the ceetbrlet the rartary could find ‘ conditioning. Only *34175 Spartan Dodge MY 2-2411 NOW Is The TIME To, Save On A New Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 $130, 1953 CUSTOM CHEVY new parte, muff sell, going seas, best offer. FE 4-4013. 1955 CHEVY WITH '56 CADILLAC motor, 4 speed hydro, no ruet, good tires, etc., $175 offer 4 MARMADUKE By Anderson and Leeming 1957 CORVETTE 4-SPEED, 320 LOW — 327 engine, 2 15" chrome wheels. <52-4648. 19*9 CHEVY, BIG V-l, *45. Seva CHEVROLET t-DOOR. 4 CYL-iar, auto., exc. condition. Sacrl- :e $250. 474-3301. ________ CHEVY 4 HARDTOP, REAL Park, Clarkoton. OR 341*12. 1941 CHEVY CONVERTIBLE, NEW rear window, generator, duel ox-hauets, regulator, starter, *3*0 — 1941 CHEVY 4, *295. 1942 CHEVY HARDTOP, AUT6-matlc, vs, runs tike new, full i price only *39*. No money down, *4.17 weekly. . Standard Auto ,! 109 East Blvd. IS) PE 8-4033 Very Reasonable-Finance 1957 to 194* Car models Prices from S5 to S1.07S Including V-t cars, few trucke Economy Care - 2334 Dixie Hwy. YOU GOT THE CAR? we Buy 'em «- we s.ii -»m OPD YKE_ ~H AR DW AR E leaf condition 54000 40 BUICK real sharp. attar 4 p.n e, Billy? This is why I don’t like hint— to go fishing with us!” * * NewtndUsed Cars 106 1945 CORVAIR LIKE NEW IN AND out. *102*. RONEY’S AUTO. PE 1944 CHEVY CAPRICE 4 ( hardtop, 394 Hydro, full p vinyl lop. 424-7503. IMPALA 2-DOOR HARDTOP 1944 MALIBU 327 4 BARREL door- hardtop, standard shift «... full' Slncro, posl-tractlon, 074-3793 3 JUNK CARS-TRUCKS, FREE ow anytime, FE 2-2444. ALWA scrap® we'hm, FE*MeM *' wwww c5^« R,*"' bTusST f RaSha tOM, [ FISCHERWBUICK 545 $. Woodward 647-5600 Birminghom________ •tartars and ton, OB CARS AND TRUCKS, FREB TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1962 CHEVY Station Wagon, V-8, automatic radio, heator, rad finish, in top condition. On US 10 at. M15, Clarkston, 5-5071. SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birming- 1962 CHEVY 2 CONVERTIBLE, good top, tiros, 6, auto., good car. $595. Must sail. 646-1367. dan, V8, w«th 11966 CAPRICE 4-DOOR HARDTOP, solid I automatic, with powOr. $2,195 at mi? MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735.________ CAMERO, DELUXE HARDTOP V8, extras. Wbw oinI UBBd Cart 106 1959 FORD, COUNTRY SQUIRE station wagon, a very clean A-r condition car. Beet offer takea. GRIMALDI CAR CO. 988 Oakland_______ FE 5-9421 1940 FORD. GOOD TRANSPORTA 1941 FORD, STATION, WAGON, dean and rest. 332-8790. WOULD YOU BELIEVE NO GIMMICKS-NO GIVEAWAYS JUST RIGHT CARS AT RIGHT PRICES *9 '42 Chavy 2-door 119 '44 Monza Coupe *$1099 '41 Pontiac Catalina Cpe. AUTOMafir *!2 wagon AUTOMATIC un -4i Buick convertible ’44 Moriza Coupe ^r.SbWLUTELY NO.**” ’41 Comet Cpe. HALF-DOZEN CARS AT *99 EA. TURNER FORD, 4-7*80. OPDYKE MOTORS 2230 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyka FE 8-923$ aouDie power, auto, many ext unmarked, owner. MY 3-1880. 1967 CHEVROLET IMPALA. T A » $2795 BILL FOX CHEVROLET On S. I ROCHESTER and black interior, 1961 FORD CONVERTIBLE WITH black finish, leather Interior. Full price: $129. Buy. Here — Pay Herat Marvel Motors 2S1 Oakland Ave. FE 8-4079____ 1962 Ford Country Squire wagon with VB, automatic, ful power, windows, seats included Only — $895 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie in Wate at the double stoi 623-0900 New and Used Can 106 Pretty Ponies 1965 & 1966 MUSTANGS SEVERAL USED MUSTANGS TO CHOOSE PROM CONVERTIBLES , HARDT0PS i PLUS 2's FULL EQUIPMEN1 . Priced From $1295 As Low As $39 Down And $39 Per Month HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. I 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM . Ml 4-7*80 New end Used Cars 10$ iiSr'piS'SMSWff^ new top end upholstery, good diiinlciii condition, 334-taUT NO MONEY-DOWN 1942 PLYMOUTH 0, Auto .... *25 1940 CHRYSLER. Imperial ... $25 1942 PONTIAC 2-door . $55 1943 DODGE Dart ... pi 1957-CADILLAC Convertible . $15 ItaO OLDS Autp ..... $15 1948 CHEVY Auto ..... $5 1942 MERCURY, Sharp . SS97 $797 1944 TEMPEST 2-door WE FINANCE NO MONEY DOWN cREDir problems BANKRUPT Call Mr, Dan at FE 84071 No Credit Application Reft Capital Auto »3 W. Montcalm PUBLIC SALE Tha tollwing car will bt dtara I 9 a.m., and may be no money down. PLYMOUTH NEED A CART GOT A PROBLEM? newinW. area? White at PE 8-4880. 194* PONTIAC WAGON. AIR :ed? 1965 PONTIAC toT'S4f *wn and waakly paymanll ot $14.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 4$4 *. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM_ Ml 4-7*80 1944 BONNEVILLE 2 DOOR HARD-top, extras, bronze ■teteMMra Call i 18,000 n r 4 P.M. let "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 438 Oeklend Aye. ____PE *4101 PONTIAC 2-DOOR, RED. (JOU-ble power. Warranty. Malta offer. After 4 P.m. and Saturday, 334- 1944 PONTIAC LEMAN* CUSTOM elation wagon, full power, ell leather-type Interior, tinted glass and almost like new. SAVE $$$ TODAY! GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland_______FE 5-9421 1944 TEMPEST CUSTOM 2 DOOR sports cour 1965 Ford Galoxie 500 4-door 1966 PLYMOUTH FURY Ml, REAL luxury with real economy In this low mileage new car trade. $1,695 Hillside Lincoin-Mercury. 1250 Oakland, $33-7863. ___________________________ $1995. FE 1959 PONTIAC 4-DOOR HARDTOP, M375. _ ■ ..............■ ■ | 1966 TEMFEST 326, AUTOMATIC, power steering and brakes. $1450. 960 BONNE VILLI Exc. tires, bucket i !-5383t tl CONVE ana.., FE $4161 before 4 p.m. P°Wer1961 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, eaae. omv — a ■ 334.5M7> BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie In Waterford at the double stoplight 623-0900 Ml dean, *79*. COOPER'S ! Extra Clean Used Cars 4274 Dixie Drayton Plains] New Foces-New Policies KEEGO , MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, SIR ; MINGHAM, Ml 4-2735. 1963 TEMPEST CUSTOM STATION merits of $10.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM Ml 4-7*00 1944 T-BIRD, EXCELLENT CON- , *349*. 473-7312. > T-BIRD, LOW MILEAGE. FULL 1944 T-BIRD. LOW MILEAGE. FULL ally claan, lull i LET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2731. 3 cyl., 7300 ml. 4, USED ENGINES, TRANSMISSION, rear axle, trl powers, ball housing. bodj parts, etc. HAH Autnl 1943 BUICK LESABRB 4-DOOR TOMATIC, power, air conditioning, FE 1-9237 _ SAVOIE CHEVRO- 1942- CHEW IMPALA 4DOOR, VO — auto, radio, extra sharp! I7zs. ______ RONEY'S AUTO. FE 4-4909. I la ’^S^^^IMIKE SAVOIE '1942 FORD CONVERTIBLE, AUTO., beige, good MA 4-1153. 12*0 Oeklend Ave. FE 3-7*43. 1943 TEMPEST SPORT COUPE new tires, v-8 engine, exc. condition, 442-0541.______________ 1943 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE 1947 PONTIAC VENTURA, ALL black, many extras, 423-1344._ PONTIAC 1947 RED FIREBIRD. 1947 LeMANS V-8, RED, BLACK- car, *2,39*. MY 4-3201. 1947 LeMANS 2-DOOR, LIKE NEW, cherry red, black Interior, bucket seats, consols shift, .all power, econo v-o engine, *200 or good old car and toko over payments, 52 E.Now York, Pontiac after 5 p.m. SHELTON P0NTIAC-BUICK 055 S. ROCHESTER RD. 451-5500 1947 BONNEVILLE 2-DOOR HARD-top, double powers loft of extras, low mileage. OR 34)25$. 1963 CATALINA 6-DOOR, DOUBLE power, elr coi dfflOW, 625-1769. 1967 6M EXECUTIVE CAR. CA- maro white. Black toi ________________________________ Air. Conditioner, exception-;)w FORD STATION WAGON, AU-I -------------radio, bucket (o^tic, rKll0. h,ator. 637-1302.att.l weekly payments of Nay E nd Bud Tracks 103 :HEVY PICKUP, NEEDS MO make ottar, FE 4-5403. 1963 BUICK Skylark convertible, red, automatic,! tdlo, heater, power Hearing. $1088 FISCHER BUICK 545 S. Woodward 644.5600! Birmingham 1942 FORD GALAX IE. T-BIRD EN-glne, body good, best offer. 33*-] 4451 after 9 p.m. 1943 BUIC ELECTRA 4-DOOR tor public . _ may be purchaied with no mon-ey down. 1942 CHEVROLET IMPALA -passenger wagon, power steering md brakes, whitewalls, $593.27 with wymants of SS.II par week. Birminanam's New Chevrolet Dealer 1104 s. Woodward Ml 4-2735 1962-T-BIRD HAROLD TURNER 1963 TEMPEST, STICK SHIFT, RA-DIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS, FULL PRICE: $595. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Af-I «ume weekly payments ot $4.92. CALL CREDIT MOR. Mr. Perks at HAROLD TURNER FORD, |__Ml 4.7500._______________ i 1963 TEMPEST CONVERTIBLE -I New tires. Make offer. 644-547$. 2-door Hardtop I ' “ .SPECIAL FOR BIRMINGHAM' THREE DAYS ONLY THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC NOW SERVING I’ngham Area m Berr Alroor 13275 W. Huron King Auto Sales FE 8-48*0 EM 3-8081, dealer. TON PICKUP. 1942 CHEVY real good. _______ 5-3271. 1943. FORD I TON STAKE $405 NEWEST DEALER IN PONTIAC Vandeputte | SAVOIE CHEVROLET, BUICK-OPEL Ur 194-210 Orchard Lake nee ________PE rtiat _____I 2S47 eves.__________ 1943 BUICK 2-DOOR HARDTOP. I 1943 IMPALA CONVERtlBLE. 1963 IMPERIAL 4-door hardtop, black, full power! Unfed glees. $995 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth Ml 7-3214 Kessler-Hahn CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ;ker, mission, Betf offer. 391-2879. CHlvfcOLiT. W-TQN PICK-UP,] | " MlKE SAVOIE CHEVRO-1 $wS- «r, law mileage — FE 4-OOtS 1965 Dodge quolte with white lop, *1,19* an MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET. Bir-1 mlngham. Ml 4-2735. BUICK SKYLARK WAGON, la rate — — j -radii, brakae, soua white wnn all vinyl Interior. $15*4 Ml down. *St.M par month. "It only takes a mlnuto" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffa Ford 438 Oakland Ave. PE 5-4101 LET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735, 1955 CHRYSLER. RUNS, $50.' 42S- 482-5518. aHar ______________________ 1963 DODGE 11943 CHEVY. RUNS BEAUTIFULLY!Polara convertible. Thle black beau-- -- - --- eeri ly has the 383 4-barrel. Bucket $595 HOMER HIGHT Motors Inc. Chevrolet-BU ICK-Pontlac On M24 In Oxford, Mich. i 1966 FORD QALAXIE top. With V-8, eutOl_____, I heater, power steering, brakes, with black Interior. $2,06$ j price, $88 down, and $67.01 I BY OWNER, x 1964 PONTIAC BON 1967 PONTIAC FIREBIRD 6, DOU-a bit powor, vinyl top, lots of ox-tras, $750 off list. Will toko clean tin. r ‘ “ trade In. 336-1727. 1967 PONTIAC 4DOOR. POWER 1967 TEMPEST CUSTOM. V$, AU-to., radio, powor steering, brakes, warranty. 6665812. 1967 CATALINA 4-DOOR HARDTOP, radio, heator, double power, auto. 8,80$ miles. $2,575. FE 5-4035. 1967 PONTIAC LeMANS HARDTOP, f door, with vi, automatic 326, radio, heator, power steering, brakes, 13,000 miles. Crocus You fs, power steering, low mile- ■P 5- - HR mm PR PR $1,300. OR 3-2429. month. S-year or 50,000 milt new;--------t7\m PAt>cssTrucp—““ Car warranty available. TOM RADEMACHER "If only rakes ■ mlnuto" to CHEVY-OLDS 0®'. lA B.^TTe?.,9CAJ-" ] 1944 PONTIAC Catalina Coupe, pu- John McAuliffe Ford tomatlc, radio, heater, whitewalls. , .... Ideal family car at only 81395. FE 5*4181 gn us ,0 M15_ cf„ little bumping and painting. Mechanic Spacial Only SISM. Full Price, $81 dawn $50.24 par month. "It only fakee • mlnuto" to Gat "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 438 Oakland Ava. - FE 5-4181 1943 RAMBLER, CLASSIC StATION automatic transmission, heater, whitewall tires, uel reclining seats. Real ROSE RAM- 1966 Ford 11964 TEMPEST LaMANS CONVE RT- Galaxie 500 hardtop with V8, automatic, power steer* jng balane. el new car warranty.! Umi'Ji'r»h! y ~ tonne •"H takes _ $2095 ] Gat "A BETTER DEAL' John McAuliffe Ford power steering, brakes, beau mador red with black nylon $118$ full price, — * ‘ HI$1 per month. "It only takes a minute" BLER, Union Lake. EM 3-41SS. PUBLIC SALE Tbo following cor will bo cl public solo ot 9 a.m. and purchased i 1963 RAMBLER > payments of 1 Car being si $402.36 Marvel Motors 351 Oakland Ava. i i many axtrae $895*"* » BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 1942 T-BIRO HARDTOP, POWER EQUIPPED, AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEAT-1 ER, WHITEWALLS. FULL! PRICE: 1895. ABSOLUTELY NO 11944 BUICK «KY1 APK a. AIITfll FE 8-4079_________ power steering, radio, dean, pri- 1943 CHEVROLET WAGON V-l AU- 448 S. Woodward ' _ veto owner, $119*. 4*1-1377._ tomatlc, extra dean $495.------------------- Custom Sport Von isu buick special deluxe wa- COOPER'S automatic, io.p..Mng.r C chmmlltSw.^T ^ Extra Clean Used Cors nnnrs •st In town, $1,795. HlllMdb Lin- 427$ Dixie Drevtan Plains 4JUUUC t-Mercury, 1250 Oakland, 339- Open 9 to 9 daily 674-2257 CARS AND TRUCK8 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Sine, 1930" On Dixie In Waterford al tha double stoplight 623-0900 1630 Oakland Ava. 11944 CATALINA 4-OOOR HARDTOP, i Power steering, brakes. I owner. Clean, excellent condition. 451 0607. 1944 PONT I AC BONN E VILLE CON-1 vertlbte, bright red cyl. as i Only - Parks at HAROLD KESSLER'S , $675. FE 2-4267. Spartan Dodge 1944 TEMPEST'LeMANS CONVERT- r ' $1595 7843. BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1938 On Dixie In Water lord at tha double stoplight 623-0900 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, >139). RONEY-* AUTO. FE 44909. »47 FORD Vk-TON FltkilP, r bad, 18,880 mil under warranty. S1.S9S. Call 423-1)18 Or FE 2-1457. JACK LONG FORD Michigan's Fatted Growing Truck Dealer Va-lon, 14-Ion, pick-ups: "decamps r specials. Gat tha L-O-N-G Deal. Call Jim Smith at OL 1-9711, 215 Main St., Rochoder. DOOR 1943 BELAIR 4-DOOR S AUTO-Oxford MATIC S79* at MIKE SAVOIE ■X,#r-___________JT, 4-2735. Llncoln-Marcury, CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 6 BUICK RIVIERA, FULL POW- MATIC, s:c,Wir aa?fcx.,#«sl AUTO-beauty it 4AND AT ALL TIMES IEROME 1943 BELAIR WAGON ... ------------- M||(g javoie cylinder BIRMINGHAM Chryslsr-Plymouth ham. Ml 4-2735. * j*48 S. Woodward_______Ml 7-3214 CHEVELLE MALIBU, 4-DOOR,Il944 DODGE DART CONVERTIBLE, 1C9045NVoTO^1 SffSgfeTSil 5.4®. 30 0TO, 1963 Ford-" Ml I automatic Intorlor, real naw liras. ' ivertiblc. _______ $1595. Clarkston priced to tell. ROSE RAMBLER, Union Like# jM>4)55. 1965 AMBASSADOR 996. ' 4-D<5dR mileage, auto., 682-145$. at MIKE 6-2735. 1946 CADILLAC CONVERTIBLE *395 1944, IMPALA 4-pOOR HAfeotOP, Save Auto.____________FE 5-3271! AUTOMATIC, wHh power, elr coni 1941 COUPE DeVILLE, GOOD RUN 8ltloned, *1,295 at MIKE SAVOIE CADILLAC FLEETWOOD. CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 2735. AUTO- leather, 4-way pew- 1944 IMPALA WAGON. .— -----r -ur matic. Power steering 11191 at . MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET. Blr-■,l mlngham. Ml 4-273*. atuematlc, "Big er, real savings on nut one. S49S. Hillside Uncoln-Mercury, 1250 Oakland, 333-7143. 1965 DODGE Coronet 2-door with 4-cyl. automatic, power steering, ora owner, 11 jjaST actual miles. This one dillTn factory warranty. Only — *1395 ♦ Spartan Dodge ONLY i 1947 JsW s^ ^. 444-45,r^*r“l* P,,,r‘ Special 1963 GMC 6’/2-ff. fenderside 1964 GMC 6'/2-ft. fenderside GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 F.A.A. APPROVED SCHOOL.- LET!’cperiAl time tini nni>V our Indructore leech you to fly.I SPECIAL 51875 FULL PRICE g>l Inc., Pontiac Airport. OR *■ N#w 1967 J#,p Unjver$0| Wonted Cft-Tnwfcs 101 EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Pa d FOB THAT EXTRA Sharp Car ‘"Check the t then get the bast" at Averill AUTO SALES . PE 2-9878 2M8 Dixie F« 4h Gale ' eppt. Mr, Wood. 349-SS08._ QUALITY USED CARS 1961 CHEVY Wagon 4 door with V$, automatic, medium green, naw tires, only — . $495 1966 VALIANT Signal 2 door hardtop, with 273 4 barrel with 4 speed, power TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1944 CHEVY Impale 2-door hardtop 4- cyl. automatic, power Hearing, radio, heater, whltowellt, $1895. On US 10 at MIS Clarkston, MA 5- S071. GO!! 1964 CORVAIR MONZA tONViRTl-l H I I M I bie, maroon with whlt^ lop, aufo.,j ** * >«/ X X » 1 PONTIAC 1964 CORVAIR 2-DOOR, |M AT MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, mlngham. Ml 4-273S._________ i 1944 CHEVY IMPALA 9-PASSEif- 1965 DODGE 4-door, radio, heator. gar wagon, all power, vary good Only SI95. $1250, FE 5-9454, - 1944 CHEVROLET IMPALA' thu. '*f3 FORD Country laden, automat. VERTIBLE°* automatic, rawer’ i^-p0**r *f9erlng, brakes. Only ftojrlng *1195 et MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4- Country Sedan 4-passenger wagon, within 232 VS, automatic. Only •— $995 BEATTIE "Your FORD DEALER Since 1930" On Dixie In Watertord » at tha double stoplight 623-0900 14 MERCURY HARDTOP, POWER EQUIPPED - AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, RADIO, HEAT- IT MGR. Mr. Parke at HAROLD TURNER FORD. Ml 4-7S88. A FINE .SELECTION OP MERCURY SORT __ radon. 327 V-8~aute. Doubt*'power. 1W5 LeMANS CONVERTIBLE. WITH! RST sTzSTSil.^Pte mSTmm' WA Interior, ^ « —— » *«* ^ «S: ^^BLlRr,CLASSIC] M>OOP 157 ao Mr month With White flnltl "It only takas a mlnuto" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: -T«*L»h«rl John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ay. FE 5-4181. 1965 PONTIAC CATALINA HARD- 1963 FORD CONVERTIBLE, tomatlc tranemlsslen. •tearing, rad weekly paym_______ .. price: $895. Abeo- ] 1944 MERCURY COLONY RARKTo Of 84.95. Call passengar tomatlc, | _L8 mlnuto'' BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford wagon, V-4 au- 438 Oakland Ava. lutely no i credit mgr. OLD TURNER FORD, Ml 4-7S081 1964 FORD GALAXIE CONVERTI-bta. Spotless. Very good running condition. SI 195. 887-5436/ owner, H.3.5 * Mercury, 1250 Oakland. 333-7143.! 1946 MERCURY-PARKLAHE~C0N-| TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1944 T-BIRD Automatic, with full «r trade. MA 5-5871 **2395*' V,1250 1947 MERCURY MONTCLAIR HARD top. V-8 automatic, power steering and brakes, new cer war-1 On U* 10 at Ml'j, Oarkalonil Me!' Llncoln°MercuL.*JlM0 Oak-1 land, 333-7843. $1695 TRUCK, MSPOROr 332-0530 alter 4. Auto Insurance Marina 104 Mini-Cost . Auto. Ine. tor good drivers Homa owners Ins. tor quality hornet | tires, redio, $862! ■______ MM? EXECUTIVE WAGON, automat- *-|'lF51|7Egi7SB! ss®as^'^af ! LET, Birmingham, Ml 4-27M. IMS CHEVY IMPALA, 2 T565R SB- ,w3 CATALINA Convartlbla, . vinyl IMarlor. vlb- steering, brakes, two to ________>1488, 485-1831. ' j ,r®m' to55- ■ TOM RADEMACHER I'hm, ford PWk-uo, v«, stk 1964 FORD Galaxle 508 44oor hardtop, air con-dltloned, 352 I cylinder angina, cruls*-o-matlc, power steering and brakes. Ilka new. $1295 -• PONTIAC RETAIL STORE 4S Mount Clemens Ft 37954 j 1965 GTO »or steering and brakes, condition, full price $1495 only $49 down and wt~‘'a of $13.44. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 444 S. WOODWARD AVE. 1967 Ambassador 2-Door Sports Coupe, V-8, aufomatic, power steering. $2288 VILLAGE RAMBLER 666 S. Woodward Ave. BIRMINGHAM 6463900 49 New and Factory Official mF' 4-73001 Cors at Comparable Savings. den, 317 portatlon, 818. 425-4748. SUBURBAN OLDS HOME OF Quality One-Owner Birmingham Trades AT LOWEST PRICES 447-Slit 635 $. Woodward choose '**4 PORD GALAXIE 500 __ hardtop, 4-speed, 1895 at MIKE I ; SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blrmlng-. 1962 OLDS $597’ STAR AUTO SALES CHEVY-OLDS (Budget) ] BRUMMETT AGENCY iMiracle Mila fe 4-8549 McAnndlly's AUTO SALES Oklahoma, parti west. Top dollar pakl I Shop m* last and gal tha bast doal haralll 1384 BALDWIN FE 8-4525 Acrosa tram Pontiac State Bank 343-4955. Ask M» VW. RELIABLE TRANSPOR-•••ton-. Body In very good shape. ^g.TKfor*' h" la,* waikxit Ann . 1945 CHEVELLE wiaiiou z-ooor nerd-j 1963 VALIANT 200 , 1 top, v-8, automatic, power steer- j Wagon, with 4 cyl. automatic, ra- "8- radio, era otraer, new cer] Onlyr“ *"h lr"*rto''i u!d*ion« 'I*#, Clerksto?,5 Ma‘ i ry71- _________ y733 | IMS CORVETTE STINORAY, A >n, r m.u.,HARDTOP AND a convertible top] 1965 CHRYSLER Newport W®!* &L i vf •Mtomgfjc,| coln-Mercury, 125$ Oakland, 333- box, Only I c-up, 6 cyl. stick, big STOP HERE LAST M & M 1941 VW SEDAN. EXCEPTIONAL, reconditioned engine, and I r a n t system, radio, reas.. 1480. Ml 4- 11961 ENGLISH FORO CONSUL,! grad transportation, *135. OR 4-1525. ' 1944 RENAULT. 6XCELLENT“C0N-1 dltton. Must sacrifice *350. 343-: TOM RADEMACHER- 1 > CHEVY-OLOS .1944 VW BUS, 3 sealer, In vary j top condition. OntogiefS. On US, 1 18 at M15, Clarkston, MA 5-5>71.i I IMS FIAT 1508 SPYDER, ftlW WltH -] Black Interior, 18,800 miles, good I disc brakae, raw clutch X tires, must ring, brakes, onto - $1752 1965 PLYMOUTH Fury II 4 door with 4 cyl. automatic, whit walls, radio, must drive to a per data. Only — $1386 1962 PONTIAC Hardtop .4 door with VI, ra|- er stoarlng, wh Factory air. amdlltonlng, Only $790 1963 IMPALA WAGON with V$ powar steering, \ topl°Only^— wT,h •*.* $1095 Oakland Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oakland Ava. FET5-9436 1945 CORSA 2-DOOR HARDTOP. 4-Wf?u;*1145 at. MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. 1M8 CHEVROLfeV BIKAVnE WAO-ON, automatic, power steering ' SI495 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVRO-LET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. IMS CHEVY WAGON. V-4 AUTO., power steering, radio, heator. Exc. condition. Low mllaaga. I and driver. 51,375. lT t-_ 1965 MONZA CONVERTIBLE. AU ! TOMATIC, rMto, heater, $1,295 *t I MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Blr- I mlngham. Ml 4-2735. ________ 194$ MONZA CONVERTIBLE SPY-dar. 4-speed, radio,' heator, and . the big angina, $981 lull price, •88 down. $32.52 par month. "It only takas a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" *t : John McAuliffe Ford ** OMlIbnd AV1.! - PE 5-4181. |IWALA Vdoor hardYSp, $1595 at MIKEJtA^I? CHEvJtSl I LET, Birmingham, Ml 4-2735. HAUPT PONTIAC 1966 CHARGER with VI, automatic, daub •r, yellow finish, black Spartan Dodge good. 333-7542, Rtog^l!SL*eAL 1964 FALCON ildnloht greei ilna interior, •attr, powor $995 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth **•“ Ml 7-3214 mltoe. v», *r, unmart j MY 3-38*8. IMS FALCON 4-DOOR, 4 CYLINDER Stick,, radia, heator, whitewalls, beautiful metallic champagne tln-Ish, with matching Interior. 51,8*8 full price. 888 down, and onto $34.13 per month. 58,800 jnlle or 5-yaar naw car warranty available. "It only talte b mliiuto" to ' Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 438 Oakland Ave.______ FE 5-4181 1965 Mustang 2-door Hardtop’ with V$p stick shift* radio, hoator Only —. - $1595 BEATTIE : ford Dealer sim* 1*38" On Dixie In l__ •I Hie double stopUght 623-0900 oldsmobileTsuPER 88 4-loor hardtop, automatic trait* nlssion, toll power. Reel nice, •asonable, financing arranged. GRIMALDI CAR CO. Oakland_______ F* 5-1421 164 OLDS CUTLASS CONveRT-Ibto, buckets. Mg V-8, auto., new tine, sharp. First *1,188. Call attar 4 Am, 1965 OLDS -vista Cruiser 9-passanger, VI, automatic, powar etoarbig, brakae, gold finish, matching Interior, era owner. Only — 52,815 Spartan Dodge 1W5 OLDS, 9$ 4 DOOR HOLIDAY Sadan, 7«c$r“ --- ' Starao r Ml 7-1 MERRY OLDS M0 0EAL MERRY 0LDSM0BILE R0CHES?ERi MICHIGAN 1947 OLDS 442, AUTOMATIC, ROW tr steering, brakes, windows. Black vinyl toF.W,7WUM»w48r (MINB - IN WRVICC, 1944 PLY-moulh Fury csnvertlbld, 3*3 ' Pdteri- tliitod Blae*. 334-93*5. BBT ciii - through Frl, iM i mrnm 1962 FORD Galaxia 2-Door Hardtop, with v-8, automatic, power staarino, whitewalls, radio, haotor, leather Intorlor. Only-— $695 1962 CHIVY + Bel Air 4-passenger Wagon, V-8, automatic, radio, Bgator, whitewalls. New only— ‘ $795 1967 Grand Prix Hardtop 1963 BUICK Hardtop 1966 CATALINA 4-door 1964 BUICK LeSabrs 1964 GRAND PRIX 1964 CATALINA Sedan 1966 GTO Hardtop 1962 GALAXIE Hardtop 1961 RAMBLER 4-door 1960 PONTIAC Wagon 1965 GRAND PRIX. J956 CHEVY 4-door-Air 1967 Bonnevilles Grand Prixs and Tempest Fantastic Savings Fabulous Discounts! * iMimm PONTIAC-RAMBLER Ask for Chuck Nloriarty, Joe Flumerfeldt _. y. ' J Open Daily 'Til 9/P.M. - On M24 In Orion 6934266 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1907 f -“Television Programs— Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without notice •>«f (2) (4) News (C) (7) Movie: “Ride ’etn Cowboy” (1942) Bud Ab-bott, Lou Costello. (R) (9) Rawhide (R) (50) Flintstones (R) (C) ’ r (56) Misterogers 6:30 (2) News — Cronkite (C) (4) News — Huntley, Brinkley (C) (50) McHale’s Navy (R) (56) What’s New 7:00 (2) Truth or Consequences (C) (4) Weekend (C) (9) F Troop (R) (C) (50) I Love Lucy (R) (56) German Choral Music ‘ * 7:30 (2) Daktari — Judy leads the compound apimals in a plot to help Hedley keep his post. (C) (4) I Dream of Jeannie — Jeannie’s aggressive sister takes her place to catch Tony. (C) (7) Garrison’s Gorillas — Assigned to smuggle a defecting scientist’s baby ogt of Germany, the GoriUas end. up with a trio of screaming infants on their hands. (C) (9) Time Tunnel — (R) (C) (50) Perry Mason (R) (56) Eric Hoffer - Hoffer discusses his philosophy and study techniques. 6:00 (4) Jerry Lewis — Martha Raye, Jack Webb and Harry Morgan are guests. (C) (56) Synod ’68 6:30 (2) Red Skelton - Stanley Holloway and Sergio Mendes and Brasil 66 are guests. (C) *> (7) Invaders ~ David tries to thwart an alien plot focusing on an electronics genius. (C)., !, (9) Monroes — (R) (C) (50) Honeymooners (9) Monroes — (R) (C) Flowers” (1964) A hypochondriac, thinking he has only a short time to live, hunts for, a husband for his wife. Rbck Hudson, Doris Day. (C) (50) Combat! — A medic; and his charges get lost behind enemy lines. (R) I (56) Conversation 9:30 (2) Good Morning, World — Dave and Larry get out of doing a charity show, but change their minds when they see some of the headliners scheduled. (C) (7) N.Y.P.D. - Detective Corso visits a young housewife who suddenly starts screaming and accusing Corso of attacking her. (C) (9) Cariboo Country — In “Sarah’s Copper” 7V Features RED SKELTON, 8:30 p.m. (1) t ‘SEND MENO FLOWERS’ 9 p.m. (4) N.Y.P.D., 9:30 p.m. (7) '____ CBS SPECIAL, 10 p.m. (2) •1:30 (2) Naked City (R) (4) News (C) TOMORROW MORNING 6:11 (2) On the Farm Scene 6:20 (2) News (C) > 6:30 (2) Spectrum (4) Classroom (7) Vagabond (C) 7:00 (2) Woodrow the Woods-mani(C) (4) Today (O (?) Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry Go-Round 8:00 (2) Captain Kangaroo (9) People in Conflict 8:30 (7) Mlovie: “Interlude” (1957) June Allyson, Ros-sano Brazzi. (R) (C) (9) Take 30 9:00 (2) Merv Griffin (C) (4) Living (C) (9) Romper Room 10:00 (4) Snap Judgment (C) ■■ (7) Girl Talk (9) Hawkeye (50) Yoga for Health 10:25 (4) News '(C) 10:30 (2) Beverly Hillbillies (R) (4) Concentration (C) (7) Dateline (9) Hercules (50) Carlton Fredericks (C) 11:00 (2) Andy of Mayberry (R) (4) Personality (C) (7) Honeymoon Race (C) (9) Luncheon Date (50) Dickory Doc (C) 11:30 (2) Dick Van Dyke (R) (4) Hollywood Squares (C) (7) Family Game TOMORROW AFTERNOON 12:00 (2)' News (C) (4) Jeopardy (C) E (7) Everybody’s Talking (9) Communicate (50) Dialing for Dollars 12:25 (2) Tops in Fashion (C) 12:30 (2) Search for Tomorrow (C) (4) Eye Guess (C) (7) Donna Reed (R) 12:45 (2) Guiding Light (C) 12:55 (4) News (C) 1:09 (2) Love of Life (C) (4), Match Game (C) (7) Fugitive (R) 1:25 (2) News (C) (4) Carol Duvall (C) 1:30 (2) As the World Turns (C) (4) Let’s Make a Deal (C) 1:55 (4) News (C) 2:00 (2) Password (C) (4) Days of Our Lives (C) (7) Newlywed Game (C) 2:30 (2) House Party (C) (4) Doctors (C) (7) Dream Girl (C) (50) Topper (R) 2:45 (56) Spanish Lesson 2:55 (7) News (C) (9) News 3:00 (2) Divorce Court (C) (4) Another World (C) (7) General Hospital (9) Matches and Mates (C) (50) Make Room for Daddy (R) 3:30 (2) Edge of Night (4) You Don’t Say! (C) (7) Dark Shadows (50) Alvin (C) 4:00 (2) Secret Storm (4) Juggles the Clown (C) (7) Dating Game (C) 4:30 (2) Mike Douglas (C) (7) Dating Game (C) (9) Fun House (C) (50) Three Stooges (R) 4:55 (4) Eliot’s Almanac (C) 5:00 (4) George Pierrot — “In-“New Zeeland — North Island” (C) (9) William Tell (R) (50) Little Rascals (R) 5:30 (7) News (C) (9) Dennis the Menace 4 5:45 (56) Friendly Giant 5:55 (4) Feature Story (C) Anewer to Previous Putzlo 20 Leases dlSaul’i undo 22 Goddess of discord i „ 24T»leofherole S5 Pitch up S Passage in tiiebnin SPithier 7 Worm BDov* shelters 8 Chief god 61 28 Inflammatory disuse (suffix) 29 Number (pL) 31 Opposite at 28 Feminine ___ 10 Exuviste (tool.) n me fond U Greek foder 41 Withers um*fB0* war 42 Humbug DOWN 17 Gets up 43Upright 1 West Indian 19 DarUngs standard , islets' . 23 Sped 44 Foretoken 2 Soviet stream 24 Song for one 46 Hindu queei 3 Very small pet 25 Asseverate 47 Notion dog 28 Shipworm.for 48 Tilt 4 The Oangu Is example 50 Oriental porgy ST. LOUIS, Mo. (AP) - Alger F. Malo, Detroit, was presented Monday with the Theodore M. Matson Memorial Award for outstanding contributions to the advancement of traffic engineering. * * ★ Male, director of the Detroit Department of Streets and Traffic, was honored at the 37th meeting of the ihstitute of traffic engineers at St. Louis. 1 2 T~ 4 5 6 7 1 8 9 16 IT 12 13 [14 16 16 If- , IS 20 21 L 24 k ■ r H n 36 33 JT R J ■ 3^ r r 42 43 44 47 48 49 51 52 b3 54 5tf 56 57 I9 Hearing Set Today on Sliding-Scale Tuition Detroit Engineer Receives Traffic Honor! D—7 Pit Mishap Fafo/';! HASTINGS (AP)—William H. Newman, 38, of rural Hastings, was killed Monday m a gravel pit accident on the south side of Jordan Lake. Newman was inside a gravel hopper when a piece of the heavy machinery moved, crushing him. [ Now Is the i Time to Buy mm TIRES The award is named for the former director of the Yale Bureau of Highway Traffic. An ITE spokesman said the award is the outstanding honor in thejBUY> SELL, TRADE traffic engineering profession. [PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! SWEETS RADIO A APPLIANCE 422 West Huron FE 4-6611 I “let’s Talk SIDING!” SAVE 40%—CLEARANCE ON 1967 STOCK! (WHITE ONLY!) LANSING (AP)—A number of top Michigan State University officials, *4ncltjding President John Hannah/wefe invited to testify today at a legislative hearing on Oakland University's and MSU’s controversial sliding-scale tuition plan. Disagreements With Kids Causes No Worry for Actor By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — “My children often disagree with me—thank God!” Peter Ustinov said. The brilliant actor-director-writer brought a note of cheer to parent8 who have been staring into their cock-, tails worrying about their kids being disobedient. “I’ve no objection at all to them being disobedient,” Ustinov said. “Parents should remem- f her that besides being parents, they’re also the * bone on which the puppy can shape its teeth. | Ustinov, father of four, including a daughter ' their tractor impounded j of 22, says his offspring not only disagree with young farming couple have him but with each other, and he finds that after an accident. (R) healthy, too. What do his; children disagree with 10:68 (2) CBS News Special - him about? “Pretty near anything. But I’d rather they WILSON disagreed with me than agreed with me on everything.-Filial piety—I don’t believe in that.” Ustinov in a lighter vein said he could even picture himself as. a type of father who could become angry at a child for obeying and slap the child for not being disobedient. only take a pill An eight-member House subcommittee scheduled the hearing and invited Hannah, University Secretary Jack Breslin and members of the MSU Board of Trustees. need to boost tuition charges at OU and MSU. ★ ★ * Under the plan, the schools’ per-student annual tuition for Michigan residents would range from $354 to $501, depending on [the income of the student’s parents. $-A-V-l-N-6-$ Take the Pledge END PAINTINO FOREVER! You Can Trust ALCOA ALUMINUM SIDING UyPUdgm to You • Bast pita* and quality • Will treat you and yuur not* with impact at I would wan bank financing. No mo nay dawn, S yarn to pay tonal FE 5-4715 local—I Syoma you can trust PERMANENT ROOFING A SIDING CO. 262 South Telegraph Road-PONTIAC Majority Democrats MSU board, by a 5-3 party If his family earned $11,800 a year or less, a student Would pay the minimum $354. If its income Was $16,700 or more, he would pay the $501. Nonresident Istudehts would pay a flat $i,200 ilHfre each. y lira ★ ★ * vote, approved the so called ability-to-pay tuition plan earlier this year when faced with the Last year’s tuition rates at MSU were $354 for residents i $1,020 for nonresidents. ‘Eric Hoffer: The Passionate State of Mind an intervie# probing the philosophy of a writer, college professor and retired San Francisco longshoreman. (C) (7) Hollywood Palace — Milton Berie presents Lena Horne, Donovan and Spanky and Our Gang. (C) (9) Newsmagazine (50) Movie: “My Reputation” (1946) A romance between a widow and a handsome army engineer shocks a narrow-minded town. Barbara Stanwyck, George Brent. (R) • (56) Art and Man 16:36 (9) Public Eye 11:90 (2) (4) (7) News (C) (9) News 11:30 (2) Movie: “Treasure of the Golden Condor” (1953) Cornel Wilde, Constance Smith. (R) (C) (4) Johnny Carson (C) (7) Joey Bishop (C) ' (9) Movie: “Waltz of the Toreadors” (English, 1962) Peter Sellers, Margaret Leighton. (C)-1:06 (4) Beat the Champ (7) Untouchables (R) (9) Window on the World Ustinov hai great scorn for LSD. when I’m feverish,” he said. ★ ★ ■ As for hippiedom, “The real time to become a hippie id when you’re old and ready to retire, and discover how empty life can be.” ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . Rock ’N’ Roll Singer Brute Force will marry Cynthia Blair Oct. 22 on the beach in Deal, NJ. The bride’ll wear a white pants outfit, the groom an Indian coat'.. . Veteran cafe producer Lou Walters is leaving the Latin Quarter to open his own production firm ... Bobby Rydell was due to replace Mickey Gallan in “That Certain Feeling” in Las Vegas, but he’s ailing. With Buddy Hackett heckling from the audience, Red Buttons had a big Latin Vi premiere. Red displayed a huge photo of his young dtr. Amy, “and now a picture of my wife”—showing Mona Lisa. ... Veteran song-and-dance man John Bubbles will fly to'L.A. to convalesce from his stroke; he’s tsill at Roosevelt Hospital . . . Charles Evans squired Charlotte Ford Niarchos to El Morocco. ★ ★ ★ A popular young singer has been collecting his salary from one major film company, (without making a movie for them) and getting rich by investing it in another film company Former child star Patty McCormick (“Bad Seed”) wedrh stylist Bob Catania. . . . David Wayne, working in “H a p f Time,” tells interviewers he once worked as statistician for a company; “I was a tea-totaller.” V — Radio Programs- WJR(760) WXYZ(1270) CKIW(000) WW-K950) WCARQ130) WRONG460) WJBK(1500) WHR-FM(84.7) WEDNESDAY AFTERNOOh WJR# News, Sports CKLW, News# Tom Shannon WPON, News, Sports WMF I, Uncie Jay Show WJBK, Nows# Toler St4fc-WWJ# Nows, Emphasis 7:0O-WWJ, Naws, Carlson WPON, Naws, Music vyjiK, Nawi. Music wcar. Rod j Millar, Naws, SfMrts# Musk CKLW, Nows, DOke Windsor WHFI, Dinner Concort TilS—WXYZ. Nows, Davt 0:0*-- WPON, POfitlaC City Commission WXYZ, News, Dave Lockhart Show WJR, Tlgers/Red Sox 9t0#—WHFI, Jack Fuller 7:0*-WJR, Newt, Music WHFI. News. Almenec W-ON, New*, Music lita-WJR, Newt, SunnytM* WJR, New* Harris 10:30—WJR, Naws, MUflC 11:00—WWJ, News, Sports. Overnight. WPON—Arizona Weston WJR, Tleers/Orioles CKLW, Jo* Veil WCAR, Newt, Jim Devi* Whfi, unci* Joy 4:0#—WJR, Music Hall WWJ, News, Borders I wcar. News. B»I pattaif , ' WPON, News, Music CKLW News, Sud Defies WJftK, Naws Music, Avery AilS—WJBK# Bob Lea, Musk WWJ, Ntyn, Ask Your l*:**-WXYz!#rBreekteil Club * WHFI, Bin eovle WJBK, Mwe. tat/lck - WJR, News, Mata WPON, N*ws, TM»lc 11:**-WJR. NewtTGwMrey WXYZ, Denny Taylor Mew WJR, ___i ..like She 2-.JO-WJR, Musk Noll 7 Why Put Up With Old, Worn-Out House Windows Another Nu-Sash gives a clean, modern appearance while giving superior insulation; keeps out dirt, dust, and noise; snap-out for easy insids-the-house cleaning; increase property value; raise easily -never stick or bind. Nu-Sash is a window specifically designed to replace old, drafty, out-of-date house windows at amazing new low cost. Old, loose fitting, rattling, out-of-date house windows — the major cause of cold, drafty, breezy rooms and sooty inside window sills—are a thing of the past since Nu-Sash. Homeowners everywhere are finding that by converting to Nu-Sash aluminum replacement windows, complete and maximum comfort is gained without major remodeling and other unnecessary and costly home improvement projects. Nu-Sash Is a window specifically designed to replace old, out-of-date windows. Furthermore, the Nu-Sash window is fully tested and proved by one of the greatest testing laboratories in the building products field. Ond of the greatest features of Nu-Sash is that the window is installed without touching inside plaster and woodwork. This means no dusty and dirty installation work. Expert workmen remove the old sash and track, insert new aluminum jamb liners and tracks, then custom fit Nu-Sash securely into place. Complete installation, which is included in the new low cost of Nu-Sash, is' done fast, safely and expertly. Savings in heating bills will pay for a Nu-Sash conversion. Many more time and money saving features in Nu-Sash are gained since the anodized alufninum unit never needs paint, putty, caulking and other yearly household work and maintenance. Nu-Sash qualify for low-interest home improvement loans. The window is ratad superior to standards set up by FHA for new construction requirements. The Nu-Sash window recently appeared in issues of the Better Homes & Gardens magazine. It was awarded the guarantee seal of that publication. For additional fraa literature on Nu-Sash, mail tha coupon below. Price samples are also availabla upon request NO DOWN PAYMENT • MAKE YOUR MONTHLY I PAYMENTS WITH YOUR FUEL SAVINGS/ (TO: NU-SASH PF-8-19 NU-SASH CALL 338-4036 Member Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce 210 South Telegraph Pontiac, Mich. 48053 | Please $4nd me Free Details and Sample Pricaa | on Nu-Sash. J STREET*. FREE HOME DEMONSTRATION D—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1S67 U.S. Bombing Is a NationalNightmare for People ofN. Viet EDITOR’S NOTE — How effective it the VS. policy of bombing North Vietnam? That question, the source of tntente controversy in this country, is discussed today in the second in a five-part series of firsthand reports assessing the By BOB CONSIDINE SAIGON—The angry dialogue over the bombing of North Vietnam usually lacks a telling in-ingredient: The extent of the damage done to date. At the cost of some 700 planes and a considerably smaller number of pilots we have changed Ho CM M i n h’s dream CONSIDINE of a cheap take-over In South Vietnam into a national nightmare for his people. Though still bound by certain restrictions imposed by President Johnson and his advisers, Air Force and Navy planes have wiped out 85 per cent of North Vietnam’s thermal power generating resources, 30 per cent of its railroad system, 50 per cent of its railroad repair capability, 8,500 trucks, 4,000 boats, and half of its force of Russian-built MIGs. (Most of Ho’s remaining MIGs are believed to & operating from Red Chinese fields, on the rare occasions that they operate at'all). The bombings have brought about what amounts to a na-of the soldier who makes it all the way to his assigned, post in South Vietnam. On the average, he is a younger, poorer-trained and less dedicated soldier than* those who came, and often perished, in 65 and 1966. ★ * * He has been much more affected by the agonies of the long trip to this war front, trip made against and morale-shaking odds: hostile nature, all the diseases that infect jungle and swamp, and the strafing, bombing and napaiming by U.S. planes. He is deserting much more readily than the older comrades who preceded him. If he stays loyal to Ho Chi Mfaih he may find himself called upon to go places and do things never demanded of his predecessors. Hie early waves of North Vietnamese fought mainly in the north of South Vietnam. They fought as they had trained, together, united, completely fa' miliar with their accustomed military tactics, precepts,' communications and philosophy. Now the Nguyen-come-latel> from Hand might well find himself shipped farther and farther sottth in South Vietnam to plug gaps in Vietcong units id the central highlands and in South Vietnam east, just to the north of Saigon. The VC desertion rate has been particularly high in those areas. The reason given at Gen William Westmoreland’s h e a d-quarters is that the big enemy buildup of 1965 in the lower Mekong Delta area, still over- whelmingly VCcontrolled, was drained of much of its manpower. >j§»; These recruits, mostly boys and young men, were sent to live and fight in the jungles to the north. They rebelled in serious numbers. Their recruiters, tough-willed guerrillas, were forced to stop milking the region for fear of losing the support of the people in general, whose sons had sent word "back about the horrors of Hence, gaping holes in VC ranks above Saigon. Hence, the need of filling tijem with North Vietnamese, moat of them much the worse from wear from tT.S. aerial harassment on their weeks-long trip down from the orth. There are many intelligence reports dealing^with disputes between the VC and their allies from the North. The VC considers than martinets and, worse, “foreigners.” . It does not seem likely that we wifi ever accede to hawk- “drop the big bomb and get It over with.” As for destroying the port of Haiphong, which cbtjld be done without'much trouble with conventional bombs, Secretary McNamara recently told the U.S. Senate’s Preparedness subcommittee that such a massive move would (1) violate the nation’s policy of waging limited war and (2) North Vietnam could still get most of the military gear it neisds by way of land and river routes. * McNamara rove al ed ihat American planes had already destroyed most of Haiphong’s petroleum off-loading capability/ Now the resoruceful North Vietnamese float the stuff in by barge from tankers anchored at sea and have more than enough to keep their battered machinery of war running, As with the ground forces, the rule of the Air Force is simply to keep the pressure on, draw the noose a bit tighter each day. The eventual outcome is in,: evitable victory. 500.000 have been diverted into a pick-and-shovel repair work. Some 175,000 are involved in air defense, 100,000 in keeping communication lines open and 20,000 in coastal defense. UJS. fighter pilots have become so adept at evading surface-to-air missiles, supplied by Russia, that the kill rate for this impressive 32-foot-long hypersonic weapon has fallen to one In 70 fired. ; * * * Indeed, Intelligence reports filtering back to Saigon'tell of bad blood between Soviet technicians and their North Vietnam counterparts at SAM sites. WANTON MISUSE The Russians are pictured as enraged by the wanton misuse of the costly weapons system by their comparatively naive allies Hie inexorable result of 13.000 sorties a month over the North, most of them di- of the enemy, is chaos and privation. There is rationing now of rice fish and meat. Large areas must depend on crude oil-lamps instead of electric light. Every movement by day is fraught with hardship and danger. ★ * * But the most galling part of all must be the fact that, for all this sacrifce, North Vietnam show nothing except increasing misery. NOT REWARDED Hie privations have not been rewarded with successes on the battlefields in South Vietnam. The enemy grows stronger each day. The cheers over the downing of an American jet are soon throttled by the appearance of two more to take its place. Despite our absolute control of the air space over North and South Vietnam there is little chance that we can ever completely shut off the flow of men aid goods from North to South. Defense Secretary Robert McNamara has estimated that enemy forces inside South Vietnam need hardly 100 tons of war material a day from the North. Their current level 'of combat being what it is, 100 tons would not be an impossible store to smuggle down the countless trails that constitute the Ho Chi Minh Trail. '• * ★ * As for manpower, Gen. William C. Westmoreland’s, head quarters now put at about 6,000 a month the number of armed and trained infiltrators. It is a figure that is hot much smaller ’ than the number that flowed into South Vietnam before the first bomb was dropped above the demilitarized zone in February 1965. Qritics of the U.S. bombing policy have used .this fact to “prove” their contention that bombing has no chance of shortening the war or bringing Ho to the negotiating table. Actually, the impact of the bombing can be seal on just about every North Vietnamese Zenith qualify, K mart prices. For a few short weeks, during premiere days, K mart’s 1968 Zenith television, stereo, radio will be specially priced. Sixty watt solid state stereo and radio (AM, FM, Multiplex.) Cabinetry: walnut veneers and solid hardwoods. The Weber. *305^rk Zenith, 1968, Color. An 18' picture-perfect measured diagonally. Metal cabinet covered with basic black textured vinyl. The Bingham. *320 \J£k Zenith 8 transistor pocket radio. Custom case, earphone, two penlite batteries. Extra cost mercury batteries: up to 180 hours. The Hand Set. “™nt PRICED FM/AM table radio. Precision vernier tunirfg. 6' oval speaker A sleeper. The Sandman. 7Bsp> A Zenith 1968. Super Screen portable on 1968 Color console by Zenith. 23' a trim little handcrafted Chassis. 1?' picture measured diagonally. No print-picture measured diagonally. Named for ed circuits. No production shortcuts, a super submarine. The Seaview. *2Mw«k The search is over. The Hunt. *46 ^ " _ . i- Zenith Premiere Days at Kmart. Shop Kmart Stores in: Detroit • Garden City • Warren • Southgate • Taylor • Westland * Southfield - Troy • Ann Arbor Battle Creek • Bay City • Flint • Jackson • Monroe • Pontiac • Port Huron • Saginaw1 • Ypsilanti r t. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD is V The Weather W. Weather Bureau Ferecait Mostly Cloudy VOL. 125. jr- No, 193 u* THE PONTIAC PR ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 —82 PAGES UN.nl^TSV£^ ■n fives Tm 10c Detroit Schools Opened as Teachers Win Raise DETROIT UR — School doors swung open today for 300,000 students in Detroit, ending a prolonged summer vacation of almost 13 weeks. teachers returned to their jobs Monday after winning an across-the-board raise Over two years of $1,700 through a 13-day strike. In addition to the salary increase, $850 this year and $850 the nest, the teachers won reduction of the school year from 40 weeks to 39 and limitation of class size to 39 pupils. Ratification yesterday of the proposed contract, hammered out during early morning sessions, lowered to 13 the number of Michigan school districts where agreement on master contracts for teachers has not been reached. Sr ' *' h In five of the unsettled school districts, teachers have been ordered bade to work by court injunctions. In (me of them, Crestwood District in Dearborn Heights, most of the 211 teachers have resigned. In the remaining eight of the 13 districts, some 75,000 students are still out of schodl. Lt. Gov. William G. Milliken Monday asked the school boards in Bloomfield Hills, Oak.-Park, Dearborn and Menominee to git back-to-work orders from the courts. Milliken, acting as governor during the absence of Gov. George Romney said injunctions are being sought in Bridgeport, Highland Park, Hamtramck and North Dearborn Heights. __________________________-....-_____:____ Detroit teachers ratified their new contract by a vote of 3,316 to 378 after union leaders told them “that is the best we can do.” $1,700 OVER 2 YEARS The teachers demanded $1,700 immediately when negotiations opened. They had to settle for having it spread over a two-year contract. Under the old pay scale a beginner with a B.A. started at $5,800. A teacher with a Ph. D. and 12 years service could earn as much as $11,000. FOR SAFETY’S SAKE — Three of the principals in yesterday’s regional traffic safety conference at Oakland University, (from left) Lt. Gov. William Milliken, chairman of the event, Bruce Madsen and Secretary of State James M. Hare, discuss the conference program. Milliken and Hare delivered the main speeches to the gathering, which included many Oakland County traffic officials. Hare, Milliken Urge Traffic Safety Action By MEL NEWMAN “Action” was the key word at the Governor’s Regional Traffic Safety Conference at Oakland University yesterday as both Lt. Gov. William Milliken and Secretary of State James M. Hare called for specific measures to cut down Michigan’s vehicle accident rate. Milliken and Hare delivered the main addresses before the gathering of area traffic officials in the university’s Oakland Center. Both acknowledged that the state’s fatality rate has decreased significantly thus far in 1967, but neither was ready to submit that Michigan’s vehicle safety goals have been reached. Milliken pointed out that although 228 fewer lives have been lost on Michigan highways in 1967 — a decrease of 16 per cent -r- injury accidents have decreased by only 3 per cent. ★ * * Accident costs, he said, will pass the $400 million mark for the second straight year at this rate. 3 KEY PROGRAMS “There are three key measures for any action program in traffic safety, he said. “There are implied consent, a uniform statewide driver licensing law and a periodic inspection law.” Milliken praised Implied consent, already in effect, as a big step toward solving Michigan’s drinking driver problem. He said a uniform driver licensing law would make sure all motorists have an adequate knowledge of state traffic regulations and that compulsory periodic vehicle inspection would assure that cars on state thoroughfares would be more roadworthy. In Today's Press Baseball Cardinals clinch pennant; AL race tightens — PAGE C-l. Clarkston Objecting petitions slow village annexation plans — PAGE A-4. Surtax Proposal Discussions now involve House committee members, LBJ aides — PAGE A-5. Area New's .............A-4 Astrology ..............C-4 Bridge ..................C-4 Crossword Puzzle .......D-7 Comics ................ C-4 Editorials :............A-6 Markets ................c-7 Obituaries ..............D-l Sports ... .........C-l-C-s” Theaters ............... C-6 TV and Radio Programs ...D-7 Wilson, Earl ... .......D-7 Women’s Pages .......B-l—B-3 He asked: (1) that his department be given the authority to revoke the driving licenses of “accident-prone” drivers and (2) — that Gov. Romney include in his call for the state’s fall legislative session consideration of the “Illinois traffic citation system,” making a traffic offender liable to loss of his license if he failed to answer a summons. WWW Hare said his “hands are now tied on the matter of accident-proneness or involvement” and said his department “should be permitted to investigate persons who have been involved in one or more accidents” involving danger to a person or property. He said the Illinois system would make it mandatory that “incorrigibles” who drive with revoked licenses be imprisoned. Thundershowers Possible Tonight The U. S. Weather Bureau forecasts mostly cloudy tonight with a chance Of showers and thundershowers with not much change in temperature. The low is expected to register near 54 to 58 tonight. The mercury will climb into the 80s again tomorrow. WWW Winds variable, mostly southeasterly will continue at five to 15 miles per hour.- The low in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 60. By 1 p.m. the temperature had climbed to 79. Hurricane Perils Coast of Texas BROWNSVILLE, Tex. (AP) — Hurricane Beulah, already a killer, swung toward Brownsville at the mouth of the' Rio Grande and the lower Texas coast today with ominous fury. Unless the massive storm again changed course, Beulah threatened a devastating strike through the citrus groves of Texas’- lower Rio Grande Valley, laden with a, mutimillion-dollar crop, and up the coast past Corpus Chiisti, a busy port, tourist center and site of a big naval air station. At 6 a.m. EDT the Weather Bureau issued emergency hurricane warnings for the Gulf Coast from Brownsville to Port Aransas, a short distance beyond Corpus Christ!, and gale warnings for the lector from Port Aransas to Galveston, more than 360 miles northeast of Brownsville. Late last night, the 11-day-old hurricane, responsible for at least 22 deaths in a vicious sweep through the eastern Caribbean and across Mexico’s Yucatan Peninsula, slowed its advance toward the west northwest and turned erratic, ratic. Once more describing Beulah as a severe and dangerous hurricane, file Weather Bureau urged immediate precautions forthrzderted areas. Independence Nixes Police County Okays Study of OEO By JIM LONG The Oakland County Board of Supervisors yesterday approved a $4,000 allocation for a study that could decide the future of the county’s antipoverty program. Supervisors, by a 60-17 vote, ordered the study so they can measure the effectiveness of the Office of Economic Opportunity (OEO) program before allocating any county funds for its operation. The board approved the study on the recommendation of its ways and means committee which stated that an evaluation of the OEO program is essential before the county made any flnanrl«| The county has been asked by the OEO to provide $25,000 to assure adequate local funding which is required under the federal program. * * ★ In the past the county’s participation in the program has been restricted to free office space for the OEO, equipment and some services. In answer to opponents of the study FATAL CRASH — Police and tow truck drivers work to mnum rrpu mm* free the body of an unidentified man from the wreckage of half, occurred about 0:20 a.m. on Opdyke at Perry. Authorities his car after a collision with a gravel truck in Pontiac Town- are withohlding identification of the victim until notification of ship this morning. The crash, which nearly tore the car in next of kin. Voters Picking Tax Basis Independence Township voters yesterday turned down a 1-mill tax increase which would have provided them with a police department. The proposal was defeated by a margin of more than 3-2. About 10 per cent of the registered voters rejected the formation of such a force, 342 to 212. The millage would have been spread over a period of 10 years, The township last January elected to turn down a $13,000 annual bill which provided two Oakland County Sheriff’s Department patrol cars in tile area. It is still serviced, however, by the Sheriff’s Department and by the Pontiac post of the State Police. Pontiac voters go to the polls today to express their preference for either a city income tax or a four-mill hike' in the present property tax levy. ITie polls are open until 8 p.m. ★ ★ ★ City officials anticipate that about 20 per cent of nearly 30,000 registered voters will turn out. Voter preference will point the way city commissioners will go in attempting to meet financial problems. A ★ A If the city income tax is favored the commission intends to enact an ordinance which, would make the tax effective beginning Jan. 1. The income tax — one per cent for residents, one-half of one per cent for nonresidents — would be accompanied by a three-mill cut in the property tax levy. If voters, however, show a preference for a property tax increase of four mills ($! per $1,000 of assessed valuation) another election is necessary. The commission has scheduled a special election for Oct. 17 in this event., WWW To hike the property levy it is neces- sary tp change the charter which now limits the amount that can be levied for the operating budget to 10 mills. VOTER APPROVAL Voter approval iS necessary for any charter amendment. WWW Not known at this time is how much opposition there will be to any new tax. WWW It’s likely that those who oppose new city taxes will not bother to vote in the advisory election. Mrs. Alfred Wilson, Founder Flash of OU, Dies at 83 in Europe and additional aid, Supervisor Carl F. Ingraham, the chairman of the county OEO program, told the board that without the study it was not in a position to evaluate the program based on newspaper headlines. “We want to know if we’re doing the job and if we can do it better,” explained Ingraham, “but we have no funds in our budget for an impartial study.” The study, which will take about (wo months to complete, will be undertaken by a panel to be appointed by Daniel T. Murphy, chairman of the board of auditors, and James McNeely, executive director of the OEO in Oakland County. White Lake Township Supervisor James Held said he would be opposed to funding the program until he is shown some results. # W W 4 “There an (OEO) substation set up in our township hall two days a week, and there are two other people out beating the bushes, but I know of no one who is being helped," said Reid. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 4) The Village of Novi cannot hold an election on incorporation as a home rule city, according to the decision by Circuit Court Judge William J. Beer this morning. He said that he was upholding the first ruling on the case by Circuit Court Judge Arthur E. Moore in early 1966 declaring that the petitions asking the election were faulty. A Very Special Sale of a Very Special Dog... “We were really amazed at what our Press Want Ad accomplished. First night, first caller — sold.” Mrs. G. T. Pkm Wllva Don't Pi______ . MH Liu C.O., tor personal reasons wo must tint* a happy home and sale of "Kip." Ha was brad tor temperament and show and haa been relied with our young children. PRESS WANT ADS are hustlers in the “marketplace.” They work for you day and night and then results start. Put one to work for quick cash. Dial 332-8181 or 334-4981 Mrs. Alfred (Matilda) Wilson, bene-t factress of Oakland University, died today in Brussels, Belgium, at the age of 83. * * * Mrs. Wilson, and her late husband, Alfred G., founded Oakland University in 1957 when they gave their 1,400-acre Meadow Brook Farm estate to Michigan State University for the creation of a new university. Value of the land gift plus a 2-million endowment was estimated at $10 Oakland University has grown from an initial enrollment of 570 to today’s 3,800 with 30,000 students expected by the The university is hailed by many as having the possibilities of beaming one of the greatest in the United States. ACTIVE IN ORGANIZATIONS MSU President Dr. John Hannah called it “the most generous benefaction ever received by Michigan State.” Mrs. Wilson, reportedly one of the an who was active in many civic organizations until her death. Once an interim lieutenant governor iq Michigan during 1940, Mrs. Wilson was a familiar figure on the Oakland University campus. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 1) s a somewhat shy, unpretentious i MRS. ALFRED WILSON Express Your Choice—Pdlls Open Until 8 Tonight mi OU Founder Dies in. Europe (Continued From Page One) ( College officials say abe took < an interest In meeting every stu-. dent, and evwy year the high-light of college activities was a student-thrown birthday party, for her. Joseph Mercy Hospital learn coronary-pulmonary resuscitation from representatives of the Michigan Heart Association (MHA)'in preparation for die hospital’s opening oi a coronary care unit nest month. The method Board Tables fhe Bee Issue IUE PONTIAC PflES&, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER!^ 1067 Each U.S. Region to WASHINGTON (AP) - The Pentagon’s plan to build Ja ft-billion Nike X antlballistlc ; sile system will provide each region of the United States with at least one battery of far-reaching warhead interceptors. Defense scientists made ibis clear today hi guarded interviews about Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara’s so-calfed “light” defense against nuclear attack, primarily directed to guard against a potential threat from Red China. The decision to proceed with timissile batteries, each with of an mtem was announced by McNamara Monday in a speech to news editors at San Francisco. Although die plan he so nounced is one of the biggrat strategic decisions in U.S. history, It Is not the often-discussed full-blown antimissile system Which would have an estimated cost of up to |M bilUon. McNamara opposes such an outlay. CLOSELY HELP SECRET The exact locations of the an- several missiles, doeby held secret. Pentagon official familiar with die plan said die main line of defense will center on several antimissile complexes stationed Just below the Canadian border. Other antimissile sites will be interspersed along the western and eastern seaboards, in the Midwest and in die Southwest and Deep South. Each site Will be. protected by a battery of Sprint missiles. Government sources also indicated Canada has given the United States permission to establish one of the vital missile-detection radar sites (on Canadian territory near the Great Lakes. Nike X is a technological marvel of the 1960s which, according to Pentagon scientists, is far mote advanced than the only other missile defense hi existence, the Soviet ABM. PRIME PURPOSE i Its prime purpose: to defend against what McNamara termed a possible irrational nu-clear missile attack by Red China in the 1970s. v to fjrtjr *\ % “It would be insane- and suicidal for her to do so, but one can conceive of conditions under which China might miscalculate,” McNamara said. In addition to proriding regionwide defense, some Nike X missiles will be deployed to protect American offensive missile batteries against Soviet attack. Last-Minute Set for Road Taken Home LONDON (AP) - Pate, gaunt and looking like a sleepwalker, Soviet scientist Vladimir Tkachenko, as, was ban aboard a Moscow-bound airliner today after Ida wife accused British offtdaia of inhuman tactics in Mocking his departure - ,W, He 1 She contended the British ae* til left bar husband in“a vary bad state." Hie British they acted out of fear the phyaL cist had bean drugged and was being taken back to Rt against his win. They later ra- ws half-lifted, half-carried up the steps of the plane by two Soviet Embassy budget, but is only earmarked at tide time toward the coo-straction of a new Jail to be Dw board, in other business, a p p r o v a d the nomination of three persons for membership new Metropolitan Transit Authority created by the Legislature this year. •k * * Those nominated are David F. Brack, Birmingham attorney W. Kuthy of Royal Oak; and Durward B. Varner, chancellor of Oakland University. SUBMITTED FOR APPOINTMENT Their names will bo submitted to Gov. George Romney for his consideration for appointment. The nominees were selected by a special committee of the board of supervisors. The Weather FiD U.S. Weather Baraaa Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY--MQSUy cloudy today. Meetly steady toalght aad Wedaisdsy with a chance cf sbowers and thaaterihowors. Net maeh change la today 77 to 83. Low tonight 54 to 58. Winds seataeastorty (tea,la II mllss,-Shawm ending colder by avaaiag. Precipltatloa probabilities: tt per todays 49 per cent tonight; and M per cent Wednesday. ____ _-e Dr. Allan Silver- of St. Joseph, Dr. Eugene ____) and Matthew Maxon of , j wife two training nurses. A J used in the demonstration. proposed bee ordinance, which would restrict the owning, raising and keeping of bees to agricultural anas, was tabled indefinitely last night by the Township Board. Many Hospital learned method of getting oxygen to the lungs and blood circulating in the heart yesterday in prepara- The tabling motion of Trustee E. Fkank Richardson is subject to the cooperation of the Michi-Beekeepers’ Association and locally involved persons in ting toward a solution to the problem. hi tee neighborhood of a Norte Wtodiag beekeeping at a previous Township Board JSZS, o wur fun Nt> nmdn at ms (gjmrasL bpEST'..... msraa fmm m a Tamp* *1 7* Waahlnotan M U mu lx«»l C'-. They contended the bees presented a nuisance to their children. k ■ k k Thomas Stachler, owner of Stachler’s Travel Trailer Sales, 3771 M59, however, was the first to complain. DROPPINGS DEPOSITED Ha said that tee bees inflict damage to his trailers by de-positing droppings on them and that they sting Ids customers. However, results of a survey presented to tee board lari night indicated teat far more residents of the neighborhood are unopposed to the beekeeping operetta!. A petition, bearing the signatures of about 45 residents unopposed to the operation, was given to the board. .* . k ' k Dr. E; A. Martin, an entomology expert from Michiga State University, said his con corn was that tee ordinance did St, Joseph Nurses Learn Heart-Revival Method Some 50 nurses at St. Joseph tion for next month’s opening of the hospital’s coronary cai unit. Big Business Role in Society Cited by Exec UN. Bedeviled by Middle East General Assembly Is in Regular Session UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — The General Assembly opens its regular session today preoccupied trite Middle East problems that few delegates thought they. could quickly solve. For tee first time, a Communist seemed assured of election as assembly president. The Arab-Israefi conflict, un-derscored by a neW taW fiuex Canal fire-fight Motetey, took a ‘high priority" place on fee agenda. But tough advance position statements from bote sides foreshadowed more forensics than movements towards peace. ★ ★ ★ " The man expected to guide debate on the question is Foreign Minister Corneliu Manescu of Romania. Reflecting Ma gov-independent foreign K 51-y ear-old Commu-.._j received wide support as a presidential candidate. WITHDRAWAL DEMANDED Even before the 22nd regular t under way Soviet voices demanded Is-late withdrawal i captured during ne war. Hie Is-was that without Its i by Arab states and i there could Ml„ the problem. ___I________Foreign Secretary George Brown brought with him to the new session. 'ri k k Brown’s plan called for a pullback of Israeli forces from the Suez Canal 25 or 30 miles to a fortified line on the Sinai peninsula as a move to prime eventual settlement, the informants said. ISRAEL CALLS IT RETREAT But Israel considers the proposal equal to retreat without any compensating Arab gesture and believes it would only weaken their own bargaining position. BlRMlNGHAIif - City voters ill be asked la a special election Nov. 7,to approve the sate of general obligation bands for the construction of a new municipal parking structure. The election by the City Commission lari Education meeting tonight will be held in the 8saboim High School Gym instead of at tee Birmingham Area News Bond Vote Set Nqv. 7 for Parking Structure the proposed improvement rated the postponement to give them tens to discuss the merits of the sewer construe- the Birmingham Board of mates to tea comart$sloa. The Birmingham architectural firm of O’Dell; Hewlett St Luckenbach, Inc., was authorized a week ago to begin preparing- plena for fife structure to be built on the present surface parking lot bounded by Merrill, Pierce and Brown. * * k Commissioners directed the firm to return with two proposals, one desipied for 565 cere, tin other with a 701-car capacity, so they can make a final determination once they know the exact status of the city’s financing ability. Hopefully, commissioners intend to retire the bond issue entirely through parking revenue Romney Hies Urban Pennant ST. LOUIS (AP) - Michigan Gov. George Romney, who has ye on the Republican pen- efitted property owners in the business district. Projections of parking income aad expenses can be paid off without tee ise of tax money. The general obligation bonds, however, pledge tee full faith and credit of the city in the event parking revenue is unable to cover payments. k k Preliminary estimates place the cost of the proposed structure at 1.3 million or $1,558,000, depending on which plan to finally chosen by ere. HEARING ADJOURNED A hearing of necessity on the Chrysler Corp. President Vir-gU E. Boyd today told the Birmingham - Bloomfield Chamber of Commerce at a breakfast meeting that there is growing public recognition of the importance and effectiveness of private enterprise in bringing about social change in the public interest kkk In Detroit, for example,” said the auto executive, “the business community has assumed a leading role in healing the physical and psychological wounds suffered here.” - Boyd cited several top liberal political leaden including Sen. Robert Kennedy and Daniel. P. Moynihan, director of tee MXT.-Harvard Center for Representatives of the Michigan Heart Association demonstrated to the nurses coronary-pulmonary resuscitation, a 7-year-old method of reviving the heart of a heart attack victim. It involves putting pressure on tee heart and pumping an air bag before a doctor arrives. The method is used when the heart is not open for surgery. When the doctor arrives, he gives the patient’s heart shock treatments to further revive it. Matthew Maxon of the Heart Association said the method is widely used to keep patients alive before a doctor arrives. “You don’t have to open the chest and expose ft to foreign materials to keep the. patient i,” be said. with his position that the profit motive can be harnessed to efficiently than can public tog overly drastic. DEPENDENT ON BEES He said that at least $100 million worth of crops are dependent on bees, but admitted that bees can sometimes be a ' Jot Howard, a state bee inspector from Detroit, said he is convinced bees do not constitute ahasard. • m *; Supervisor Elmer R. Johnson indicated that bee complaints e been confined to just the “I thtok there is a need for greater reliance upon private enterprise in solving social problems, thereby removing the uncertainties of t he said. k k .Financial incentives to businessmen, including tax deductions, accelerated depreciation and subsidized interest rates, are among the measures being proposed to encourage the opening of job-creating businesses to the slums and fits .construction or rehabilitation of low-rent housing, Boyd noted. NATIONAL an mepseted 1 Rocktes and to the from tin Dakotas tote tea central Mississippi valley west into Soutb-it will be frir to parity cloudy. Income Forecast A college graduate starting to wodt today can etpect to earn an averdfs of $444,008 during his dareer, the Institute of Life InspancerepertSv, General: Don't Halt Bombing SAIGON (AP)—Lt. Gen. William W. Momyer, commander of the U S. Air Faroe In Vietnam, said today that stopping the bombing over North Vietnam would give the enemy tremendous advantage. k k k The U.S. Air Force should “keep up what we are there,” he said. Momyer declined to comment on proposals by President-elect Nguyen Van Thieu that a bombing pause be proposed peace overture to Norte Viet- But he declared at a news conference: "If the bombing was stopped tomorrow would have an entirely different war from tee one you have today.” Romney is on tour of urbeft areas to team about programs that might ease tee racial trou-Chester-Wallace and Lincoln re- cities like Detroit lief sewers was adjourned by Brooke advised Romney that the commission until Oct, 10. communications is the main Property owner* affected by | answer. Nationalists' Viet Embassy Is Blown Up SAIGON (AP) - Communist terrorists blew up the Nationalist Chinese Embassy in Saigon’i busy downtown section today and Red agents gunned down two prominent Chinese elsewhere in tiie capital. South Vietnamese police said the blast that brought down the two'story embassy ariBf*an exchange of gunfire with terrorists killed one person and wounded 27. Fears spread of a new Red terror campaign in Saigon. ★ ’ ★ On other fronts U.S. planes raided Inside North Vietnam’ port of Haiphong for the second straight day Monday and Communist gunners rained a torrent of shells on U.S .Marine outposts below the demilitarized me. Throughout South Vietnam ground action was scattered. FEMALE TERRORIST A female terrorist pumped two shots Into the chest of Col. Charles T. Chung, chief Intelligence officer of the Nationalist Chinese Embassy, shortly after the embassy bombing. Later police arrested 29-year-old Phung Ngoc Anh, a Chinese girl. They found her wife a 45-caliber tol. Chung was in critical tion. Monday night several terrorists went to the home of a prominent Chinese professor to Cho-lon, Saigon’s Chinese quarter, called him outside and shot him to death. They escaped. Carrier-based Navy planes blasted Haiphong’s main bridges and rail yard and Mt at least four sites for SovietimOt missiles around the city. night as fee St Louis Cardinals won the National League penult » • He heard a lot of horn tooting over the Cardinals’ victory. ★ * * date for the Republican presidential nomination, drove from the airport accompanied by a couple of aides. He visited a police precinct to Negro neighborhood and talked about ways of easing racial troubles and preventing violence with a veteran Negro Police Capt T.E. Brooks. DETROIT RIOTING Brooks told Romnty he could hardy believe the rioting broke out as it did to Detroit “I Just didn't believe to all this world it would break out in Detroit..You had good communications,” Brooks said. GM Prices Compared DETROIT UR — Here are some comparative prices of 1967 and 1907 General Motors models. Prices fisted are manufacturer’s suggested list price, which includes federal taxes and dealer handling charges but not shipping or local taxes: . CHEVROLET 1907 2-dr. Bel Air sedan 6... ..........$2,542 4-dr. Caprice Sta. Wgn. 2-oeat 0... 3,301 4-dr. Chevy H Nova sedan 6.........2,182 BUICK 4-dr. Skylark Custom hardtop 8 .. 2-dr. Wildcat hardtop 8............3,382 Convertible Electra 225 Custom 8...4,421 CADILLAC 4-dr. de Vllle sedan ..............8,828 4-dr. 6-Special sedan .............6,423 4-dr. Cutlass hardtop 6 4-dr. Curt. Vista Cruiser Sta. Wag. S-seat. - -PONTIAC Convertible Le Mans ..............:. 2,881 Mr. Executive hardtop ............'.. 3,227 1907 IMS $L542 $2,050 3,301 3,430 . 2JI2 2*1 . 2,900 3,004 . 3,382 3,498 .4,421 4*1 . 5,625 8,784 . 6,423 8*2 .3*0 3,488 .2*1 8*5 . 3*7 8*8 County OKs Study ofOEO Programs (Continued From Page One) Among those voicing tocir support of the study were Orion Township Sapervfaer John Lessltor end Victor Wood, one of Pontiae’e repre- “A few minutes ago this board approved $tt*0 for a garbage survey,” said Lesstter. “I don’t see why they can’t afford $4,000 for people." * One critic who argued against the study by noting that the county dMh*tf have sufficient hinds for h&hway improvements was feld by Wood, “History won’t remember us for our roads, but how wo debit with our aortal fib.” OBJECTED TO FUNDING ; Royal Oak Supervisor Harry Horton Objected to tee financial assistance “because these pro- grams start' out vary timidly and grow very fast" L-a-.j ' k k k laced wife the Child Gudlanco program," said Horton. “All they wanted then was small quarters. A few years ' when they coukto’t raise public funds, they came to us for a few thousand dollars. Now their budget b $100,000. REMINGTON | ELECTRIC SHAVIEt | TUNE UP ONE DAY ONLY II AM. te S ML THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER Drug Penetrates Glove Cancer Research Peril By Science Service WASHINGTON-Scientists using DMSO as a way to get disease-causing chemicals into laboratory animals are in danger of absorbing the substances themselves. Even the rubber gloves they wear won’t protect them. A team of British scientists warn, in a letter in the British journal, Nature, that DMSO not only penetrates skin, carrying deadly chemicals with it, it will penetrate the gloves as well. * * * It is DMSO's capacity to get through skin that makes it increasingly popular as an experi- mental tool. Test compounds in DMSO solution are simply painted on animal's backs. They pass through the skin and are quickly distributed throughout "tg body. > ★ DMSO, widely acclaimed three years ago as a potential cure to a variety of ills from headache to arthritis, was pulled out of circulation in 1965 by tfie Food and Drug Administration when it learned the. solvent causes eye damage in some atiii Sipce then, FDA has lifted its ban somewhat, now permitting its use in animal experiments and in treatment of patients with scleroderma, an incurable skin Reprace OM Sweaty Stool' and Aleetieem Windows In Your Home With INSULATED VMYLWiUOWS FROM STEEL TO Plnyl Windows THIS VINYL ffstffof •***" □DB DfflSB •STICK WOOD ^itllinil * VINYL Bffifll • ROT • SWILL HH (■ CUfeeflon (Tonslrudion 0o. 1032 West Huron Stroot ] EE MO EQ7 NIGHTS ft SUNDAYS RHONE: Ik 1 Wdl SIMMS MA 4-1 St t Mmtorfit.iM.riiw. SIMMS EM S-SIIS tvmrything in Modernimation MY 3-1319 -Junior Editors Quiz on QUESTION: How do newspapers get the news? ANSWER: News interests everybody, because it tells us about what is going on in our world. The word “new” is the key—the newspaper specializes in the up-to-date, bringing recent events sharply into focus for the reader’s benefit. To do this, a newspaper must be a marvel of organization, for the news must be on the newsstands only a short, time after having been edited in the newspaper city room. As our picture suggests, news gathering begins with the reporter (upper left). A fire breaks out. A reporter from a local paper, who is on his daily job of checking police and fire departments, gets ail the information he can and phones it at once to the city editor of his newspaper. The editor may send other reporters and photographers to the scene. A story will appear in the next edition, with more details following later. World news usually comes in from some large newsgathering association such as the Associated. Press. Teletype machines in the local papers constantly relay news from all over the world in this way. VIENTIANE, Laos (AP) -Refugees from a Communist controlled province say the Pathet Lao guerrillas are ordering Buddhist monks to military duty and drafting women to fight in the front lines, reliable sources report. If the reports are true, it would be a major shift in Pathet Lao policy. Communist-leaning Prince Souphanouvong always has made it a point to be lenient with monks, and previously there had been few verified reports of Pathet Lao women rifle carriers. The sources said refugees om Xieng Khouang Province in north-central Laos told them women, as well as men, aged 15 to 40, are liable to be drafted for combat duty. Two 14-year-old girls were quoted as saying they fled when told they would become front line rifle carriers rather than rice and ammunition bearers, Fearful Farmer Still Aloft MANILA (AP):-^ A 48-year-old Filipino farmer climbed a 60-foot coconut tree seven weeks ago, claiming somebody out to kill him. He is still up there. Quirino Berja, a father of 10, is sheltered by a plastic sheet and palm fronds and lives on food provided by friends hauled up by rope. ★ * ★ Relatives have climbed the tree to try to persuade Berja to come down and newsmen tried too Sunday, but Berja shouted “I don’t know you . . . I’m not coming down . . . They’ll kill me.” Neighbors near Binalonan, 100 miles north of Manila, said Berja’s fears stem from the death of his 29-year-old son under mysterious circumstances. Two men were arrested in connection with the case but later were freed on bail. & i mk Damon handkorclllGf and tie sot* designed for the man with a sense of history and a deep feeling for^tradition ... and inspired by some of the world's greatest accolades: the medal of the Legion of Honor, the Order of the Swocd, and the Order Pour Le Merite. This collection is woven of pure Italian silk in a wide range of colorings ... and designed to coordinate with every shade in your new fall wardrobe. The set is7.50. Our Pontiac Mall Stora Open Turn, and Wad. to 5:30 309 N. Telegraph Rd.. Pontiac Wod. to 5:30 300 Pierce St.. Birmingham Monks, Women Said Used by Laos Reds as they had been told when recruited. They also said they had seen one entire company of women soldiers. IN VIET COMBAT A royal Laotian army officer said, however, the girls might have seen North Vietnamese or Vietcong women troops, long used in Vietnam combat, moving down the Ho Chi Minh trail through Laos. Reports from the refugees said that not only do the unwar-like monks face the draft, but they also have been banned from their ancient customs of early morning rice begging and saying morning prayers. One monk was quoted as saying he left Red-held territory because he feared conscription, and! punishment for draft dodging was “very severe.” He said he expected a major recruitment drive would reach its peak by late September. Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. Fashions for Women in White i a! SIMMS Lower Prices * Assorted Styles - First Quality ^ Ladies’ Uniforms ► • Dacron Polyester ^ • Wash ’n Wear Cotton ^ • Arnel Triacetate ^ • Skimmers ^ e Button Fronts ^ Cotton Oaeron k Uniforms Polyester P ft 07 Uniforms ^ 0 to 6.4T g97 k Styles include short sleeve gripper front skirt of ^ Dacron Polyester pucker, convertible' collar, short L sleeve slim Skirt of Dacron polyester shantung, and r cotton poplin with lucked front and convertible . collar. Not as pictured. Sizes 10 lo 20 and 14ft to r 24V4 but not in oil styles. -Malt, Floor . Simms, 98 N. Saginaw St. ENTER A NEW WORLD OF HEALTH FUN, AND RECREATION... Exciting Magnificent NEW Health Facilities, Where Men and Woman Can Lost, Bain, and Re-Proportion Weight FACILITIES: • 15 patontod electrical reducing machines • 12 mechanical body-contouring machines • 6 body building and firming machines • 85 specialized exercising devices • "Swiss" facial contouring machines • Private showers-thermostatically controlled • Heated, crystal-clear swimming pools • Finnish "sauna" steam baths • Swedish hand massage (optional) • Ultra-violet sun ray rooms • Personal supervision by trained instructors • Private dressing booths and locker service d Infra-red heat rooms • Inhalation vapor rooms • Rock steam rooms MEN and WOMEN LOSE EXCESS POUNDS A INCHES THE EASY WAY... REGARDLESS OF YOUR AGE! GRAND OPENING | MOW ACCEPTING MEMBERSHIPS? AVERAGE ONLY There are Absolutely No "Extras" Beginning Courses Starting Daily e Coll the "SPA" Nearest You Now or Drop By Today OPEN T BAYS A WEEK Moil thru fri. 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 pm Sunday 1p.m. to 6 p.m. OCA NEW LOCATION 1 M BEDIMMING COURSES 1 to better serve yw! I ■■ STARTING S daily L PH. 334-1501 OVER 250 ST0DI0S COAST TO COAST AND WORLDWIDE 3432 W. PH.334-1591 A I * TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, l9S7 w Chairman S"vSS»Mrt pSiif'iaSMPublUW g^grsssifct ss^MjsfAdmttai., sssuimu,, ______ ___ Richard M. Rnouu ?/**.• Treasurer' and Finance O. Mnntu Jonur MUor OMIc«r . Local Advertising Manager Idle School Reflects Millage Vote Troy School District voters have spoken. Or, possibly it would be more accurate to say they have underscored a verdict they already handed down to school officials earlier this summer. Voters in the Troy district don’t want to pay more school taxes. They don’t want a new junior high school staffed for their children. They’d rather see it stand empty and unused. They don’t want 22 additional teachers this year. They don’t want the school district to pay wage hikes already in effect. They don’t want art programs for elementary and junior high school students. They don’t want the same kids to have any' music courses. if ★ ★ They don’t want elementary and junior high sports programs. These are some of the things a proposed one-year, 7-raill tax hike would have produced. The tax hike was defeated in June by a 2Vi-1 margin. The same proposal was again defeated last week by a 2-1 margin. ★ ★ ★ School officials have indicated they wiU try again for the needed millage in a third election later this year. Following last, week’s defeat, educators announced flatly that the city’s new $ 1-million Smith Junior High School will not open this fall as scheduled. Operational funds for the new school hinged on passage of the tax proposal. ★ ★ ★ , True, the upsurge of taxes on the state and national level is hurting local tax proposals. If this is the case it is a shame because residents of Troy and other municipalities will never receive so much in return for state and national tax outlays as they will from local tax billings. The time has come to swallow hard and pay the bill. The thought of a new, modern educational facility standing idle and empty makes it hard to swallow at all. Nonetheless, could it be that the new Troy school stands idle as mute evidence of taxpayers’ disaffection with local tax demands (over which their v o i.ce is decisive) and an implied warning to educational establishments to live within sound, realistic budgets; without periodic recourse to emergency tax measures to meet deficits in capital and operating funds? ‘Constitution Week’ a Time for Re-Evaluation This is Constitution Week. Proclaimed annually by the President of the United States, the theme of this year’s observance is most appropriately to “Protect Your Liberty Under Law — Know Your U.S. Constitution.” i It is a timely ad-’ monition. With the Nation tom by dissident, militant groups, society threatened by the shocking spread of lawlessness and an un-American philosophy of “Dog Eat Dog” insinuating itself into the national conscioushess, no thoughtful person would deny that the moment is at hand for an earnest soul searching on our individual way of life. ★ ★ ★ The immortal documents we know as the Declaration of Independence and the U.S. Constitution with its idealistic BUI of Rights give to mankind the basic tools for the orderly possession and enjoyment of liberty, prop- erty and security, and “the pursuit of happiness.” These inalienable American rights were signed into law on September 17, 1787, and the Constitution then bom stands as the wisest and most humane document ever written for the democratic self government of a people. If today, cracks appear in the American social structure—a structure that scientifically and materially is an example for all the world—the fault lies not with the written tenets of the Founding Fathers but with the prostitution of them by succeeding generations of the citizenry. “Never before have justice, domestic tranquility and concern for the generid welfare been of greater significance,’’ declares the chairman of the State’s Constitution Week committee. We add a fervent “amen,” and urge aU Americans fo give heed to his words not only during this commemorative week but throughout aU the weeks and years to come. Women Eye Breakthroughs m Air. on Land At first blush, this sounded! like the most impressive advance in the cause of female equality since Phil Spitalmy’s all-girl orchestra. Aeroflot, Russia’s state airline, has announced it is training its first allfemale flight crew for regularly scheduled service. The crew will consist of pilot, copilot, navigator, flight mechanic and radio operator. So equal is sexual equality in the Soviet Union that the pilot holds the title of “Hero of Socialist Labor.” Then came the report that a promoter in Cleveland, Ohio, is trying to organize an all-girl professional foot- ball team to play... all-male football teams. He is sure that in this vast country there must be a lot of 6-foot, 200-pound, muscled Amazons who would be eager to take on a seasonal outdoor job mauling men. Half a dozen girls have, in fact,’already applied, This we think, is going a little too far. We have no objections to taking the aerobus and leaving the flying to a Hero of Socialist Labor, even if he’s a heroine. But pro football is a r o u g h enough game as is without getting the deadlier of the species involved in it. Devils Down Deacons in Grid Contest Well, contestants, tor once the script went haywire, and the good guys failed to take the bad guys. It you have trouble relating this to the first game of The Press Annual Football Contest with Its winner’s award pf a 1500 U.S. Savings bond, there Is light ahead. You see, Duke’s Blue Devils overcame the Deacons of Wake Forest in Saturday’s scuffle, SI to IS. If It bore heavily on the souls of the Deacons, the score was also a sharp reverse for a .liable number of entrants who bad backed them — not to mention the sorrow suffered by the 4S who had predicted a tie. So, what’s ahead for next week? Well, game No. S pits the Bears of Baylor against the Orangemen of Syracuse. With 1,720 contestants picking the latter against 698 for the former (24 foresee a tie) you wouldn’t have to be an Orange fancier to get the idea that The Boys From Syracuse — remember the old musical? — are something of a favorite to pull the rug from under the bears. An oddity of our yearly grid games is that a tie hasn’t occurred in the contest schedule tor three years. Needless to say, such an outcome cuts the field of survivors but fast, and sets at naught a lot of painstaking handicapping on the part of contestants. The last deadlock was -the 1963 Michigan-Michigan State facas. ’Bye now. A week hence, well give you the bitter-sweet news on the upcoming tilt. Unoccupied Troy School Voice of the People: tJrge Citizens to Work to Preserve Freedoms The ruling of theU.& Court of Appeals forbidding the child’s verse of thanks gives a decided feeling that we are slipping behind the Iron Curtain. It is necessary to awake from our lethargy. , We'have freedom bf worship because our forefathers had vision and Courage to come to America to get it. We have independence because our fathers fought for it. Our country is great because of God’s blessing on their efforts. , Are we willing to work to keep that #ree-dom? Communism is sparing no effort to take it away. We do have a voice. Our Congressmen welcome letters tiling them what we believe and giving them more force of opinion to act. Let us write and help them. Thanks to The Pontiac Press for giving us a list of our lawmakers at intervals. MRS. ELEANOR W. CRESSWELL 61 SUMMIT In response to the invitation of “I Object” to speak out, sex education and prayer are vital. It seems we all need one as much as the other. We have fine school boards in the Pon-tiac-Waterford area and I am certain they know better than I what is good for our children. ★ ★ ★ • There is too much rebellion and objection and not enough support and cooperation. Teachers have always been underpaid and I am surprised they keep trying to teach and baby-sit. I’LL SUPPORT David Lawrence Says: Reader States Opinions on Teacher Strikes Peace Bid Fuss Is Exaggerated WASHINGTON - President Johnson has plenty of problems, but he must have been surprised to - LAWRENCE more, formerly an Arkansas editor and now executive vice president of the Center for the Study of Democratic Institutions, located in California, had written an article to that effect which was released to the (rest. . The story is that Ashmore and William C. Baggs, editor of the Miami, Fla., News, had gone to Hanoi last January to confer with Ho Chi Minh, head of the North Vietnam government, in an effort to transmit some kind of “peace feeler.” The two men, on their return to Washington, prepared a letter to die North Vietnamese chieftain after consuldng with some State Department officials. It was authorised on Feb. 5 and reached a Hanoi diplomat to Cambodia on Feb. 15. Ashmore charges that President Johnson’s letter was actually sent on Feb. 2 and canceled out the informal effort of the two editors. *' * * But it turns out now that the United States government did not tell Ashmore and Baggs that coincidentally there were some “peace feelers” being handled in Moscow with representatives of the North Vietnamese government. ’OFFICIAL’ EFFORTS These parleys were considered to be “official”'and direct, whereas the Ashmore-Baggs communication was regarded as an incidental effort to advance the cause of peace. The officials did not deem it desirable to tell the two would-be peacemakers all that was going on behind the scenes. » So the whole affair looks like a tempest In a teapot, since It turns out that the United States gm was not really saying through Its veyed through Ashmore. Ibe’letter which President Johnson wrote to Ho was Verbal Orchids Charles Crowe of Vtifea; Mth birthday. of Lapeer; / 81st birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Barf Frank of Rochester; 67th wedding anniversary. dated Feb. 8, according to the State Department. An examination of the Johnson letter reveals the big stumbling block — whether the United States would stop bombing before there was any pledge that the enemy would take reciprocal action. ★ ★ ’ ★ In the February letter, for example, President Johnson said to file president of Communist North Vietnam: "I am prepared to order a cessation of bombing against your country and the stopping of further augmentation of United States forces in $outh Vietnam as soon as I am assured that infiltration -into South Vietnam by land and by sea has stopped. “The**,acts of restraint on both sides would, I believe, make it possible for us to conduct serious and private discussions leading toward an early peace.” ASHMORE LETTER In Ashmore’s letter to Ho, which he says was prepared with the assistance of State Department officials, there are the following paragraphs: “They (the State Department) expressed particular interest to your suggestion to us that private talks could begin provided die U.S. stopped bombing your country, and ceased Introducing additional UJS. troops into Vietnam. “They expressed the opinion that some reciprocal restraint to Indicate that neither side intended to use the occasion of the talks for military advantage would provide tangible evidence of the good faith of all parties in the prospects for a negotiated settle- tv wholly for ourselves, we believe the essential condition for productive talks is an arrangement under which neither side stands to gain military advantage during the parted of negotiation." So instead of “duplicity,” it seems to be a matter df duplication. For the actual position of the American government as contained in the Ashmore letter is the same as in Mr. Johnson’s communication to Ho. Indeed, the incident serves only to prove that the United States has, directly and indirectly, ihade every effort to start peace negotiations with the North Vietnamese. (C«»yrtaM, 1M7, PuMMwn-HaH NEW YORK — A proposal by a group of young officers serving in Vietnam, to the effect that we should fight the enemy at night and sleep by day, led me to write that it would be hard for us tol switch asVttl would be for a f Popular Force Combined Action Platoons, which currently provide security for about 75 villages in I Corps, regularly conduct night patrols and ambushes. “to the year ending in June 1687, these Combined mon to swim upstream. Not necessarily so, writes Lt. Gen. Louis W. Wait, who commanded the nearly 70,000 Marines in Vietnam and now is the Corps’ deputy chief of staff (manpower). “I though I mlg to yon some of the things our Marines out there in the I Corps are doing far regard to i Gen. . Wi “Our County Fair operation starts with a night operation. . p .* * “A hamlet is cordoned off by Marines and. South Vietnamese forces under cover of darkness. Then at first light the hamlet dwellers are brought out to an area where they will be safe, and where they can be provided for; and our forces then search out the Vietcong in the hamlet. REGULAR NIGHT ACTIONS “Also, the Marines and "I ilrsa. {TSuT! imn Sa&hiiKH kiuhoiw m MW M t Bail School teachers have always tried to place themselves on a professional level with doctors and lawyers without making the educational investment to do so. If teachers want more money they should join the “rat race” of private industry. Don’t worry about teacher shortages because there will always be people looking for file “easy buck.” A former school teacher once told me “three who can, do, and those who can’t, teach.” FED UP ‘We Need Laws to Stop Troublemakers’ I think Mary Ellen Riordan, Walter Reuther and H. Rap Brown are close friends. If Stokely Carmichael is brought back to the U.S. he can join them in their fight to make trouble and disrupt the whole country. These troublemakers do such a good job that they make workers believe work stoppages and riots are for their own good. ★ ★ ★ If there are no laws to stop this trouble that Is ruining our country, it is time to make new laws that can'’stop it. It is too bad we can’t count on our part-time governor to help but we can’t for he admits that he has been brainwashed. So was I when I voted for him. MRS. JAMES SCOTT 2119 STOUT, KEEGO HARBOR total of nearly 25,666 patrol and ambush actions during hours of darkness. Tb< figure for this put month amounted to 3,561 inch night actions. "From the outset of our operations in I corps, Marines have refused to give the nights to the enemy. ★ ★ ★ • “In addition to (he County Fair operations and the activities of the Combined Action Platoons, Marines in the HI Marine Amphibious" Force average approximately 500 patrols and 250 ambushes each night. “This represents more than 50 per cent of the combat actions conducted by units of company and lesser size.” Bob (^onsidine Says: Marines in Viet Refuse to Give Night to Question and Answer How do those tanning lotiou work if you don’t go out in the sun? INTERESTED REPLY One manufacturer, Sea & Ski, tells us their product (as well as that of their major competitor) contain dihydroxyacetone. According to Mr. Mayo, president, this » a harmless ingredient which causes a reaction on the amino acid or protein in the skin layer. He says the reaction varies mth individuals, but with most people the result is a tanlike effect which doesn’t wash off but fades in a week or two unless more lotion is used. Write Your Representative As a public service to help its readers contact government representatives, The Press will publish the listing below from time to time. U.S. Senators Philip A. Hart, 253 Old Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 Robert P. Griffin 953 Old Senate Office Building Washington, D.C. 20510 U-S. Representatives 18th District William S. Broomfield Suite 2435 Rayburn House Office Building, Washington, D.C. 20515 10th District Jack H. McDonald 1409 Longworth House Office Building Washington, D.C. 20615 Michigan Senate Capitol Building Lansing, Mich. 48901 14th District George W. Kuhn 15th District Sander M. Levin 16th District Robert J. Huber 17th District L. Harvey Lodge Michigan House of Representatives Capitol Building Lansing, Mich. 48901 00th District Clifford H. Smart 61st District Loren D. Anderson 62nd District Arthur J; Law 03rd District Donald E. Bishop «4tii District Raymond L. Baker 65th District William P. Hampton » Governor George W. Romney Secretary of State James M. Hare Attorney General Frank J. Kelley .State Capitol Lansing, Mich. 48918 THE PONTIAC PRESS TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1967 tfps: Big Legislative [force WASHINGTON (AP)- House Republican Whip Leslie G. Ar-* ends sat alongside the center aisle, counting his troops and making a mental note of the ab- On the Democratic aide, Whip Hale Boggs stood at the rear of the chamber with two aides, making a list of Democrats present and voting. a Sr A ‘ The vote on an amendment to the, foreign aid bill complete, Arends and Boggs disappeared into their respective cloakrooms to telephone absent members and urge them to come to the floor. A similar scene takes {dace in the House during most major legislative battles. Arends and Boggs, as whips of their parties, have the jobs of getting enough members to the floor to uphold their parties’ positions. TURN OF CENTURY There have been whips in Congress since the turn of the century, and the British Parliament has had them since 1770. The term stems from the “whip-per in” who was the man in a fox hunt responsible for keeping the hounds from leaving the pack. Arends, 71, silver-maned Illinoisan who is the senior GOP member of the House, has been his party’s whip since 1943, longer than any man in history. effort Urreplace him in 1965 failed indhe is'considered sol-entrenched now. \ " A A A ggs, 53, holds his position by appointment of die speaker and the majority leader, unlike Arends who Is elected by the GOP membership. The youngest member of the House when first elected at 26, the Louisiana Democrat has held Ms post since 1962. * A A 1 Each operates through deputy and assistant whips. Arends has three deputies—Reps. William H. Bates of Massachusetts, Jackson E. Betts of OMo and Burt L. Talcott of Califomia-while Boggs has a single deputy, John E. Moss of California. Under them are assistant whips, serving states or regions, 14 for the Republicans and 19 for the Democrats. NO LOAFERS? Arends picks his deputy and assistant wMps. “They’re loyal,” he said in an interview. “I don’t think I’ve got a loafer in the bunch.” The assistant Democratic wMps are picked by the state or region they serve, and usually by the senior Democrat from the area. In some southern regions, it is difficult to get an assistant wMp who favors the party position or who can do much to line up votes. While Arends has to contend up to 30 potentially balky put members on most issues, Democrats have 70-80 Southerners plus some conservative border staters who frequently line up with the Republicans to oppose administration proposals. Twice this year, on a measure to increase the national debt limit, Republicans were solidly opposed, so Democrats had to rely on Southerners to get the bill through* The first time they failed, but the second timfe they succeeded. ALL-OUT EFFORT Republican policy positions—which signal an all-out wMp effort—are taken by the party’s policy committee. Headed by Rep. John J. Rhodes Jr., a conservative from Arizona, it meets every Tuesday. About once a month, Republicans hold a conference of the entire membership under Chairman Melvin R. Laird of Wisconsin, often to discuss controversial issues on wMch the party is split. Democratic policy, like that of any party in power, follows the lead of the WMte House. On major issues, both party whips poll their memberships through the assistant wMps, to see where the votes lie. Then they can use what Arends calls “persuasion” on the doubtful members. When crucial come up on the flow, the whips in “whip calls” to summon their members- Arends and Boggs estimate they can get their troops to the floOr in about 15 minutes. So for this year, however, Republicans have apparently’had more success at this than Democrats. . ■ A A A “The underdog tries harder,” Arends said. “We’re out to make a record, particularly the freshmen. They’re a little more determined.” Boggs put it differently. “The Republicans do a better job because they’re the minority. There’s a natural cohesiveness in the minority. You’re not responsible for a program.” On a number of important is- sues tins year, most notably the President’s anticrime Mil, the Democratic whip organization did almost no work, since it appeared extremely doubtful the bill could be passed in the form the administration wanted. A A A By picking its spots, the Democratic leadersMp and wMp system has loooked good, when it was passing the debt limit increases,- funds for model cities and the D.C. reorganization bill and bad when it did little on the crime bill and on the ill-fated rat extermination wMch was voted down. The electric eel can release its current in machine gun-like bursts of about 400 shocks second. PONTIAC VOTERS, make your choice now Vote Todoy! Oily Ikmm Tax ” or Property Tax lacraasa Paid for by Citizens Finance Study Committee You can buy a color TV for what it costs to convert from oil heat to gas. Call for the facts. Why swap one kind of heat for another that's no better, just for the sake of change? Wouldn't you rather spend the cost of conversion for something you really want—a color TV, for instance? Gas heat service hasn't changed at all. But oil heat has gone modern, with Hot Line, backed by Standard Oil. You get 24-hour emergency alert. Sta-Ful automatic Delivery. Instant Credit with your Standard Oil Credit Card. 9-month insured budget terms at no additional cost. All backed by Standard Oil. Call Hot Line for the modern oil heat. Oil heat—the clean, safe heat. You ex pact more from Standard and1 you get it.’ 1 IN PONTIAC DIAL FE 4-1584 For Hot Lino Service in other areas see below. Birmingham..Ml 4-5250 Lake Orton.. MY 3-3091 New Hudson GE 8-3411 Rochester.... 65V-4691 South Lyon.. GE 7-7841 Walled Lake MA 4-2131 4 Clarkston...MA5-3656 Milford MU 4-4955 Novi . ..349-1961 Royal Oak... LI 8-4646 ONE COLOR BIG-BIG-BIG Anniversary SALE of in,"?„7JIr7s I Improvement Products... discover Sun Control s U superior design and quality ailow Anniversary prices ■ SAVE BIG, BIG ON 4$525^ GUARANTEED ALUMINUM SIDING aid TRIM There is a difference! Come in, let us show you why custom-fitted Sun Control Siding and Trim is by far your BEST BUY. ROOFING • GUTTERS • STONE, BRICK ANP CEMENT WORK NEW, CAST FIELD STONE Gives your home’e exterior that elegant custom-built ep- full year supply of REYNOLD'S FOIL to visitors BUY NOW . . . SAVE PLENTY! PAY NOTHING 'TIL NEXT YEAR HEEV MORE I00M? Now-special low price on porch conversions Let us convert your open porch into a much needed extra room. We’ll enclose it with Slider, Awning-type or Double Hung Windows. Carpentry, Brick and Stone Work. FREE estimate. No obligation. OPEN SUNDAY 10-6 P.M. —Daily 8-8 P.M. Now-low, low prices on FIDOS t PORCHES i nerrs a sun control ratio — for every budget—you can S 19 9 own one for as little as I P., w»ir COME IN, VISIT OUR MODERN SHOWROOM AND PUNT. SEE HOW OUR PRODUCTS ARE MADE. 0ALL FE 5-9462 OUMITY . MSIINCTIOW 26400 W. Eight MUD Rd. l'A Mile West of Telegraph EastSida I Detroit | Downriver iBirmingham-Southfieldl Toledo I Petoskey PR. 1-Mlt|444.i2i2 | AV. 5-35951 Royal Oak IL.7-2700|£H.M2«1134/4462 We Design * We Manufacture * We Install * We Guarantee THE PONTIAC PRESS, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 19«7 k tfirniitiL;■ uwHit I HWLV The following an top prioM covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and aoM by them in wholesale package lots, Quotations in tarnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as of Friday. Romney's 'Slip' an Asset? Product fjjgm, Crab, bJ*""*....... Apple*, Mclntoiti, early ... Applu, Wealthy, tw. ...... Appltt, Wolf River, bu. Blueberrlee, lS*t, crt. ,, Cent-'---*“ ' ' Graeee. Concord, ek. Met. ..... Reecttee. K»l Haven. 9* bu. .. Reaches, J.- H. Hate, bu.... FaWbea, Odd Skin, 9* bu. .. Rudi**, Hale Ha— " tm LANSING (AP)-Gov. George Romney made a “sfij ‘ he said bo had been Drain-washed about Vietnam, but, “The slip may prove to be one of his greatest assets," U.S. Sen. Robert Griffin, R - Mich., said Monday night. Griffin, in Lansing to address the Slat annual state Kiwanis i, told a news ence that the short range impact of the brainwash comment won't be helpful, “But over the ioo long haul it will be an asset.’’ *“ - * * * The comments followed news reports that Romney, an undeclared candidate for toe 1908 GOP presidential nomination, baa been slipping badly in na- tional popularity since the Detroit riots and the brainwash “In the long run what counts is that Gov. Romney was saying what was on his mind," ““ laid. “He was bring honest and in the long run he’ll come out on top." “Another fellow named Eisenhower wasn’t a polished politician,” Griffin added. “He made a few slips and goofs.’ *• ★ * Asked to comment on rumors that Romney may declare his candidacy within the next lew weeks, the Senator said he thought this would be a “good idea,” adding that “I hope he personally think Gov. Romney should become , a candidate,” he said. “I believe he's carried on the courtship long enough to decide whether he should become a candidate.” Romney, when asked if he will seek the nomination, has frequently replied that he is carrying on a “courtship" with the idea. DECLARATION EFFECT Griffin said he thought adec-by Romney i “Crystalize his candidacy” would bring support from many persons who have been hesitant waiting to see which way Romney will move. The New York Stock Exchange Cofcry.Rotcii, t Colory. Raacbl, Teacher Strike Sin On in NY SomeluuesSofton; Talks Resuma Today NEW YORK (AP) tors for both sides in the old strike by New York City against the Ll million-pupil public school system recessed. today without agreement, dimming earlier optimism for a possible break. ‘It is 3 a.m.,” said Mayor Jriin V. Lindsay as the talks at Grade Mansion broke off. “No agreement b reached, I have recessed the talks until 3 p.m. today.” ★ * ' * Albert Shanker, president of ie striking AFL-CIO United Federation of Teachers, later told newsmen, "The board of education and toe city i come up with more money.’ SOME HEADWAY “A lot of issues were cussed pro and coo but nearly all the issues involved mean more money,” he said. “We made some headway. Some of the previously hard issues are a little softer now.” Earlier toe 1,100-member Assistant Principals which has urged its conduct classes during the strike, reversed itself and called on the board to ck»e all schools tar Wednesday. ★T' ★ Betty Ostroff, president of toe association, said the change in policy resulted from whet she termed “a horrible week, where £rikli&onx In toe schools were nrihafeiand not right^t has Men a charade this past week.” MAY STAY AWAY She said the association would urge its members to stay away from the city’s 900 schools if the board did not comply with the ... CUNNIFF big container measured to fit the dimensions-of planes, refiroeds, ships and trades, cargo handlers believe they can change this staid The containers, most of them metal, range in length from less than 10 feet to about 40 feet. Already shippers claim they are saving millions of dollars tor themselves and customers, (fid ports are adapting their dock-side facilities. And the new jumbo jets soon to be in the air WASHINGTON (AP) dential hopefuls have available Shankar, commenting on the move after the talks broke up, said it “will help speed up nego- by Republican Barry GoMwater but if any of his novel tactics are adopted, it's not likely Vice President Albert H. Humphrey's transportation crew will be the victims. GoMwater, discussing his toeing tad for toe White House in 1(04, told how ids lieutenants silenced the opposition at toe GOP convention in San Francisco where he won the nomination on toe first ballot and of a Keystone Kopo caper involving Humphrey’s plane crew. <* ★ * T will not reveal the names of people responsible, but we had every cable of every televi- Talks at the mayor's residence had been going on rince 0 p.m. American Slock Exch. 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Scranton, tor toe noml-item. “These are the things that you Auto Output MostforWeek Since July DETROIT (AP) -1 strike-bound Ford Motor Co. at a standstill, UK. automakers turned in their beet car production figures since July this week, the trade publication Automotive News said Monday. The industry assembled 131,-217 cars last with 116,874 in in the s Those involved in air shipping are facing a serious problem of writfit. In order to take full advantage of toe jumbo jets all be facing what Goldwater “probably the cutest, smartest, throat-cuttingest political operator r have ever ran ito.” But Oregon Democratic party ofOrials said Republican Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller could beat Johnson, at least Jn Oregon, as things stand now. HUONG CANDIDATE Thiy also maintain GOP Gjy. Ronald Reagan of California alao would be a strong candidate hut that Rockefeller is toe trying to cut container weight while still keeping strength.' Regardless of the problems, nd even regardless of the industry’s inability to correct them, moot companies now in too business foresee a tremendous expansion ahead of them. 3 Engineers Promoted at Pontiac Div. Three organisational changes within Pontiac Motor Division’s engineering department were announced today by Stephen P. Reagan ruled out today Rengan- i week e year ago. ration before the GOP convention, rritenting he isn't a candidate. Howevsr, ha said ho organisation In California to handle the Juno presidential primary campaign tor too favoritoion delegation he intends to lead to toe cooven-on. Rockefeller, continuing Ms efforts to halt any speculation about Mo candidacy, turned) down Reagan’s invitation to visit California tor a conference of state medical can programs. He mid such a lag might have impUcstl''ns.” Gov. t .arge RomiNy of Michigan, another top GOP prsridcn-Jttal------Bri U The jump over the Labor.Day; - - r + .,• week ended Sept. • was I! per P"t« *Magan’s session. Meanwhile, Ford dropped 13 per cent in both passenger car made 13jtt cars during the Labor Bay weak and deakra have a month’s supply of UN models car assemblies, led the field vdto If par cent of toe total out-planned to put 13 of its to on six-day work weeks weak, Wald’s sal OUTPUT BOOHED Chrysler Carp, turned out 33,- 4 Eye Problems of Farm Labor LANSING (AP) - Four bou rambors wore in West Michigan Monday far a two-day ■tody of farm labor problems. TbSy stoppri to Oceans, ii 750 new care and American Mo- tors, will shown |n Us Javelin a would operate its Kenosha, Wis., 4 plant this Saturday. AMC turned ALLROAK (Apv, "out 1310 oars thls-wssk, from the 4,SIS during Labor Day with the chasm conttaring to as tbs Ford strike contin- Bradtey; D-Detroit; Dannie CriSOrne, R-Manistee; a * Raymond Kahns, D-Monroe. Deputy's Father 8 Killed in Crash r,H,ofAUogaa wtokfitod1 Ward’s said toe Industry was to build Us five-millionth pas-car of calendar 1M7 Monday —- but lt sakl pasoengwr production to date Is 113 pariagm County abUtTs deputy cent behind that of SECTION 3. No person, firm or corporation shall lay, alter or repair any house drain or sewer work, or make any connections whatever with any sewer or house or building belonging to the sanl-system or do any kind of i to or alterations of any shall be subject to a fine, as hereinafter provided. SECTION 4. Any parson desiring to make any connection between any sanl- led by private with the Township Clerk an t i for a tap-in permit stating Clerk a surety bond executed by a porqte surety company licensed to State of Michigan In the applicant will promptly place and restore any sidewalk, pavement. or street surface over any opening he may have made to as good a state and condition as found previous to the time of the opening of same and further the conditioned upon the fact that all work done In conjunction with on said sawer shall be kept tained In a good workman-ll and In- good ordar for a period of one (1) year after the completion C In addition to the foregoing eac cant shall submit a certificate i i Insurance'eompany farce ance policy In the ______ _ One Hundred Thousand (f100.000.00l Dollars ter each person the entire period of i work Is In progress on said sanl-Upon compliance i a house drain connection kind of connection with tt ol Pontiac Township shall first by the Town-a manner prest I pay to the ' SECTION 6. Application made In writing by tf property to be drained. Ised agent. Such application shall give the exact locations of the proparty, number of lot, number of feet front, number of buildings to ham casioned by i benefit the connection is casranea oy me making of such connection. Provided, further, such permit shall be filed In the office of the Township Clerk within five days after the compto lion of the work and shall be accompanied by a correct return, signed by laid and fix-Ih such other ulred to make I I the Township Boi SECTION 7. be placed et frequent Intervals, one or more lor every lot. A record of the location of such Y branches or stubs shall be kept at the office of the Township Clerk and shall be furnished to the licensed builder but at the risk of licensed sewer builder as to the accuracy of the same. All connections with the sewer of the sanitary system must be made al such Y branch or stubs or In the event that it Is necessary to make such connections with shall be i the mein connection shall be i i provided, shall be made by Interim the main sewer or lateral but no such er Inspector In the presence of the Township Engineer. SECTION K. At least twenty-four (24) hours notice In writing must be given at the office of the Township Clerk before convenient for examlnetkm until Inspected and approved. Such Inspection shall be made within twenty-four (24) hours aftar such notification. The licensed SECTION 10. No person, firm or corporation shall ln|ure, break or remove any portion of any manhole, lamphole, flush tank or any part of the. .sewer system, or throw or deposit or cause to be thrown or deposited In any sewer system, or throw or cause to be thrown or deposited In any sewer opening or receptacle connecting with the sewer system, any garbage, offal, dead animals, vege- slops, and cellar eater as elsewhere provided for. SECTION 11. Cellars and cistern overlow shall not be connected with any ewar or house drain without the special i of the TdwiitMp can be trapped such a manner that the water seal ca SECTION 13. No •pool, prl shall be conne use dram. Any licensed sewer build-any person making any such canal shall be deemed guilty of a mis-be subject to the penalty hereinafter provided. SECTION 14. No exhaust from steam ! with any.sawer, or private sower that ly sewer or the senl-i blow-off from steam or any house la connected i tpry system. SECTION IS. Any person, firm or cor-Roratlen desiring to lay pipes for wetar, gay, steam, er any other purpose, upon any atreets or allays upon which sawari (24) hours written notice to the Oakland County Road Commission before opening the street, aid the maimer of laying end back filling over such pipes shall be led to the approval of the Oakland C ly Road Cammiseion. All such work i be planned and executed so that nc Township Engineer! In ■» licensed sewer builder be case a water or gas ither obstructions shall of a drain or sewer, under or over or obstructions shall be the' owner qf the drdln, surface gas pipes shall ich with water three (3) feet. Is determined or drain on any willow or the roots, e Within he prescribed limits. t SECTION if. No pipe drain can be the bottom of < ual use o . . _____ to rest ... _ foundation of puddled day drain, ess the substantial disturb a wooden drain In actual use, it ‘ In no case be obstructed without the il permission of the Township En- prevent from dlscherglng Into the any private sewer, or drain which substances are discharged e liable to injure the sewers or obstruct the flow of the sewage. SECTION 21. Before any old private drain or any house drain built before going Into effect of resolution shall be owner of the private drain or house drain full satisfaction of the is entirely alley all matarlals for paving removed with the least must be dug until the Y the pub-of the trench In the glneer. SECTION 23. All openings and obstructions In any street, lane, or alley must be guarded at all times with sufficient necessary to to cause the least Inconvenience to property owners and the general public. SECTION 24. The house drains, from a point three (3) feet outside of the house to curb line, shall be of A-1 standard socket salt .glazed vttrl pipe, unleu laid leu tl Outside the curb line the Interior diameter shall be six Inches. The connection between four and six Inch pipe shall be of the best quality of hard burned vitrified shele pipe, with sockets and of a make and quality to be approved by the Township Engineer. SECTION‘ 25. The cover of the Y branch or stub on the sewer shall be carefully removed so as not to ln|ur« the socket. The first length of pipe attached Inlure the socket. The first pipe attached to the Y branc curved so as to give a — -------- — .|m of pi nearly on a point three (3) The entire line uniform grade from feet outside the wall of the house to the stub. (Such grade shall have a fall of from the house to the special permlulon of the Township En glneer ■ made for regular ar Curved pipe shall deflection from a straight line of more than three Inches In two teet. Unleu otherwlu specified by the Township Engineer, tl of Ibylng the pipe and making the lolnts shall be as follows: 1. The lolnts of vltrlfled-plpe less than i ly the Township Engineer, be furnished by the con- proval of the Township Engineer. 3. Care must be taken to remove all sand and debris from the bell. The lolnts shall be carefully centered and caulked with a gasket of dry oakum or lute, using proper caulking tools, leaving for the |olnt compound a depth of one — half (I'/il Inches. so that It shall run around the pipe and fill the space, making a complete lolnt. 5. Runners shall not be removed until the compound has thoroughly set. 6. Alternate lolnts may be run on the bank of the trench by standing one length of pipe with bell end up, Inurting spigot of second pipe caulking and pouring as herein specified. 7. The compound shall be heated In a suitable retainer until it reaches the fluidity of water, stirring continuously to prevent carbonizing. 3. No pouring shall be done until the entire mau In the heating kettle shall have attained the proper consistency, and 12. All Inlets and outlets of septic tanks shall be bulkheaded. SECTION 26. All back filling over that part of any fiouse drain within the boundaries of any street, alley or public grounds, must be either thoroughly puddled or tamped in layers not exceeding four Inches In thickness, and the question which shall be done shall be determined by the Township Engineer. The replac- plpei must , be prelected, to Ihe satisfaction of the Township Engineer and all gas pipes must be protected to the satls- water or gas pipes, by reason of construction of ttiO house drain, or sequent settling of the earth shall made good by the licensed sewer bull SECTION 27. House drains and sewer laid within Township limits in and for houus on streets where no public sewers are yet laid, shall be done according to the regulation of this resolution In every particular, and the owner or agent of the property must secure a permit to connect the same with the public sewi at the same It built past thi from which aald drain Is laid SECTION 28. No connection with any sawer of the sanitary sewer system shall ba mada excepting for. Any person wh mlt, or cauu to be made, with such uwer In a manner contrary to of this resolution, shall, |n the lustlce courts, be not leu than ten (310.00) who shall make, i the sanitary sewers of the Township of Pontiac,. which Is constructed contrary to tha provisions qf this resolution, wl ' ten (10) days aftar balng notified by forbidden mue. SECTION 29. Any licensed Justice Court be fined any sum not Ins than ten (310.00) dollars and not exceeding one hundred (t)OOiOd) dollars/ at the Deaths in Pontiac,Nearby Areas ■MWHWMlTWfWiilillHTOW Edward Fitzgibbon Edward Fitzgibbon, 80, of 015 E. Madison died this morning. His body is at the Sparks-Grif- 1 Funeral Home. Mr. Fitzgibbon, a retired employe of Consumers Power Co., was a member of St Michael Catholic Church and the Rights of Columbus. ' Surviving are two sisters, including Mrs. Lyle Philp of Pontiac, and a brother. Mrs. Willard C. Bell WALLED LAKE — Service for Mrs. Willard C. (Marguerite) Bell, 71, of 923 E. Walled Lake will be 7 p.m. Thursday at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home. Burial will be in Millcreek Cemetery, Hooks-town, Penn. Mrs. Bell died yesterday. She was a member of the VFW Auxiliary, the Farm Bureau, the Women’s Society of Christian Service of Walled Lake Methodist Church and the Walled Lake Garden Club. Surviving besides her husband are two children, Willard D. of Clare and Mrs. Maxine Shaw of Lansing; two sisters; five grandchildren; and a -greatgrandchild. John T. Chadwick PONTIAC TOWNSHIP -Service for John T. Chadwick, 59, of 3778 Tienken will be 10:30 a.m. tomorrow at Price Funeral e, Troy. Burial will be in Union Corners Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Chadwick, a machine rebuilder for B and M Tool Co., Sterling Township, died yesterday. Surviving are his wife, Alexandra; a son, Thomas E. at home; a daughter, Elizabeth A. at home; and a sister. Mark D. Elcar WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Mark D. Elcar, 19, of 451 Elkinford will be 10 a.m. tomorrow at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Milford. Burial will be in Highland Cemetery- Mark, the son of Mr. and Mrs James Elcar, was killed accidentally Friday in New York City while on leave from the Marine Corps. He was a veteran of the Vietnam war. Surviving besides his parents are three sisters, Mrs. Keith Hewitt and Mrs. Gordon Thompson, both of Highland Township, and Janet of Milford; two brothers, Dana of New York City and James Jr. of Owosso. case of controversy ml' as arbitrator and may work and charge the actual cost of the same to the property owner. SECTION 31. This Ordinance shall effect ten (10) days after the passage thereof by tha Pontiac Township Board, and supercedes Ordinance No. 94. This Ordinance enacted by the Township Board of Pontiac Township, Oakland County, Michigan, September 11th, 1967. GRETA V. BLOCK Cauu No. 23076 STATE OF MICHIGAN — In the Probate Court for the County of Oakland Itlon having been filed in this Court alleging that uld child comas within the provisions of Chapter 712A of the Compiled Laws of 1948 as amended. In 1 the preunt whereabouts of the mothei uld minor child is unknown and i child Is dependent upon the public support, and that Mid child should placed under the jurisdiction of Court. In the Name of the People of the Slate of Michigan, You are hereby not if lac the hearing on Hid petition will be ia Court Houm, Oakland County A. D. 1967, at nine o'clock in the id you are hereby command-personally at said hearing. considered. It being impi service hereof, shall be served by publication of a copy one week previous to said ' Witness, the Barnard, Judge of said Court, In City of Pontiac In Mid County, this ' ‘ • A.D. 1967. NORMAN R. BARNARD of the Southfield Public Schools, Oakland County, Michigan, and of the Birmingham City Schools, Oakland County, Mlclt- boundary lines of the Southfield Public School District, Oakland County, i gan, by detaching the following desi TIN, R10E, Section 11, Southfield Township, Cranbrogk Village Subdivision No. .8, .Lots 709, 710, 774 and You Are Hereby Notified that a public hearing will be held at tha Oakland Schools Office Building, Campus Drive, Oakland County Service Center, Pontiac, Michigan, on the 28th day of * Schools 1. w boundaries Mrs. Donald W. Erickson PONTIAC TOWNSHIP—Service for Mrs. Donald W. (Ruth M.) Erickson, 44, of 2708 Auburn will be 2 p.m, tomorrow at Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, Auburn Heights. Burial will be in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Erickson died yesterday in an auto accident. Surviving are her mother, Mrs. Edna Cook of Union Lake; three daughters, Candace and Toni at home and Mrs. Sandra VanKaren of Clarkston; a son, Roy at home; a sister; and a grandchild. Edward D. Forsythe WEST BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — Service for Edward D. Forsythe, 75, of 2463 Chata will be 2 p.m. Thursday at First Free Methodist Church, Pontiac. Burial will be in Drayton Plains Cemetery by Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home, Pontiac. Mr. Forsythe, a retired tool and gage brinder for General Motors Truck and Coa6h Division, died yesterday. Surviving are his wife, Jean three daughters, Mrs. Robert Slivansky and Mrs. Albert Tholl, both of Birmingham, and Mrs. John Looper of Bloomfield Hills; a son, Edward Forsythe of Birmingham; and a brother. Rev. William E. Hall TROY — Former resident Rev. William E. Hall, 71, of St. Clair Shores died this morning. His body is at Price Funeral Home. Mrs. Charles Hancock WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Charles (Lorene) Hancock, 78, of 4405 England Beach was to be 2 p.m. today at Price Funeral Home, Troy. Burial was to follow in Oakview Cemetery, Royal Oak. Mrs. Hancock died yesterday. Surviving are four daughters, Mrs. Raymond Peterson of White Lake Township, Mrs. Joseph Behrendt of Redwood City Calif., Mrs. Leon McCartney of Reese and Mrs. Albert Rocken-tine of Troy; two sons, Floyd E. Millington and Charles N. of Metamora; three brothers; 19 grandchildren; and 11 greatgrandchildren. Ruth H. Hodges . BIRMINGHAM - Memorial service for , Ruth H. Hodges, 18 of 1834 Fairview was to be 11 a.m. today at St. James Episcopal Church. Her body was donated to Wayne State Medical School for cancer research The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. Shields Hodges, Miss Hodges graduated last June from Ernest W. Seaholm High School. She had been a Youth for Under' standing student exchange program visitor to Rotterdam, Holland, in the summer of 1966. Surviving besides her parents are a sister, Mrs. Katherine H, Ditsche; a brother, J. Shields Hodges III; and her grandparents, Mrs. George M. Dwelley of Orlando, Fla., Mrs. Ruth H. Hodges of Knoxville, Tenn., and James S. Hodges of Houston, Tex. Memorials may be made tc the Ruth Hale Hodges scholarship fund at Seaholm High School, Birmingham. Mrs. Lee Moore WIXOM — Service for Mrs, Lee (Doris) Moore, 56, of 2444 Potter will be 1 p.m. tomorrow at First Baptist Church, Novi Burial will be in Wixom Cemetery by Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Mrs. Moore died Sunday. Mrs. Harold Schneider NOVI TOWNSHIP - Requiem Mass for Mrs. Harold (Alvina B.) Schneider, 53, of 46900 W. 12 Mile will be 10 a.m. tomor-Church, Walled Lake. Burial will be at Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield. A Rosary will be said at 8 tonight at Casterline Funeral Home, Northville. Mrs. Schneider died Sunday. She was a member of St. William’s Rosary Altar Society, Walled Lake. Surviving besides her husband are three sons, Robert of Wixom, Richard with the Air Force at Topeka, Kari., and Lynn with the Air Force at Cambridge, England; three daughters, Karen of Chicago, 111., and Gretchen and Kathleen, both at home; three grandchildren; two sisters and two brothers, including James Hengemuhle of Birmingham. Mrs. Leon Weiss TROY — Requiem Mass for Mrs. Leon (Lottie S) Weiss, 58, of 44191 Dequindre will be 10 .m. tomorrow at St. Lawrence Catholic Church, Utica. Burial will be in St. Lawrence Cemetery, Utica. A rosary will be said at 8:30 tonight at the Milli-ken Funeral Home, Utica. Mrs. Weiss died Sunday. Surviving besides her husband are a son, Leon Jr. of Troy; a daughter, Mrs. Helen DeNeen of Lake Orion; her mother, Mrs. Helen Brozozowski of War-four'brothers; and three grandchildren. Howard N. Owen of 5220 Lyn- le, Waterford Township, is the newly elected1* president of the Oakland County Alano Center, Inc. Also in office after the recent election are Tom Williams I of 813 Woodland, vice president; Mrs. Howard Owens, secretary; and Mrs. Tom Williams, treasurer. Mrs, Owen is also representing the center on the Oakland County Comprehensive Alcoholism Program Planning Committee. Ai * * The goals of the center are to offer assistance to the alcoholic and his or her family seeking relief and recovery from alcoholism. Future activities include a potluck supper, Sept. 30; Rummage Sale and Bake Sale, Oct. 14; and a Halloween party Oct. New Officers Are Elected by Alano Center Hurt Woman Is Still'Serious' A 34-year-old Pontiac Township woman, injured in ap accident in Independence Township which killed her companion early yesterday, remains in serious condition in Pontiac General Hospital. ★ ★ * Undergoing treatment in the hospital’s intensive care unit is Virginia Lee Thomas of 3768 Auburn. * * * She was injured when the car in which she and Mrs. Donald W. Erickson, 44, of 2708 Auburn, Pontiac Township, were riding went out of control on 1-75 near Clinton-ville Road about 2 a.m. Mrs. Erickson died in the hospital emergency room shortly after the mishap. ★ ★ Oakland County sheriff’s deputies said yesterday they could not determine which of the women was driving the car at the time of the accident. Ml iliifW Speech to Follow' Annual Dinner of Pontiac Masons “Let Their Be Light,’’ a speech by a public relations administrative assistant of Consumers Power Go., will follow the annual Jigg’s dinner sponsored by the Pontiac York Rite Masons, Saturday. * it * Earl J. Hill, from die company’s general office in'Jackson, will speak at the 6:30 p,m. dinner at the Roosevelt Temple, 22 State. Dinner tickets are $2. Six members will receive life memberships by grand officers of the state. it * * Additional information may be obtained from Leland Dennis of 1300 Edgeorge, Waterford Township. Red Cross Class Slated in Pontiac A basic training class for Red Cross volunteers will be held at the regional office, 118 Franklin Blvd., from 9:30 a.m. to 2 p.m. Monday. Men, women, and recent retirees are encouraged to attend. * * ★ -Volunteers are needed to serve in the blood program, transportation service, service to military families and for office volunteer work. For additional information contact the regional office. Total area of the National Park System reached a new high in 1966-of 27,168,688 acres of which the Federal government now owns 97.7 per cant. Artificial kidneys have been developed to the point that some! scientists predict that within ttuee years they will be on the market at a price which everyone can afford. Due to the Death of Our Dear Brother Harry Fortino, We Will Be Closed All Day Wednesday, September 20 FORTINO’S Fine Foods and Liquors Wide Track at W. Huron The number of Americans and over has increased sixfold — from three million to more than eighteen million — since 1900. Our entire organization is dedicated to serve those who call us as we would want to be served ourselves. SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HOME 46 Williams St. Phone FE 8-9288 2. The effective 3. Whether or not any pereonal er real property l> to be transferred and, H so, the equitable onslderb-' BOARD,OF EDUCATION OF OAKLAND SCHOOLS WILLIAM J. EMERSON I at Pontiac, Michigan, COMPLETE HEARING EVALUATIONS • BATTERIES and ACCESSORIES Dios. Be Appleton Certified ky the National Hearing Aid Society Main Floor, Hiker Bldg. 35 W. Huron 332-3052 PRES PARKINS ia tltt COOtmtofSC LOT Remember, You Need More Than One Kind Of Fire Insurance And This One Is Sure Fire! £ It's probably not the kind of fire insurance you're thinking of. It's even better. For instance; when you have an H. H. Smith heating oil contract 1. You are insured against ever running out of oil with our automatic, "KEEP FULL" Service. 2. You are insured against short measure because all of our deliveries are. accurately metered to the last drop. 3. You are insured against high heating bills because your payments can be spread out over a 12 month period instead of just six or seven months. 4. You're insured against paying any fuel oil bills while the family's no. 1 breadwinner is laid up due to illness or accident. How's that for sure-fire fire insurance? We can promise you, “IT'S GREAT"! KEEP YOUR HOME FIRE BURNING WITH DEPENDABLE FUEL OIL SERVICE BY YOUR MODERN OIL HEAT DISTRIBUTOR (the Man who supplier the aureat, snfeat, aavingeal fuel of all) OIL Company, 590 S. Paddock St„ FE 2-8343 24 Hour Burner And Member of the Oakland Heating Council KEEP FULL SERVICE ;*