The Weather ■ Fa* Overcast, Cool to*}*n» w >>«g« « liiPlHNi ■■ Rim, ■I ; ;j Hi in ONE COLOR **■* .^iiiMi'' bus PRESS ara UN.TeO^'umTERNAmNAl, —— PAGES 10° Ex-Nazi Firebrand Is Held in Rockwell Assassination Patler was arrested 45 minutes later, a half-mile from the scene, Police would not say if a weapon had been found or whether he had made a statement. Rockwell, who idolized Adolf Hitler and claimeid he could recite every word of Hitler’s book “Mein Kampf” (My Battle), advocated “transporting all. Negroes to Africa, stripping Jews of property and sterilizing them.” He was in the Navy in World War II and during the Korean War and attained the rank of , commander before he was released from active duty in 1954. The Navy discharged him from the reserves in 1960 because of his conduct. FfeWER THAN 100 ARLINGTON, Va. UB — Police held the former Nazi firebrand accused of slaying party chief George Lincoln Rockwell under heavy guard today while Rockwell's heir apparent vowed “we will carry on.” Rockwell, 49, founder, of the American Nazi Party, was killed in his car yesterday by two cleanly placed shots as he was leaying the parking lot of a Five hours later, police charged 29- GEORGE L. ROCKWELL party’s propaganda minister and Patler edited the organization’s magazine “Stormtrooper” until early this year. COURT DATE Patler, also of Arlington, was to appear in court. Monday to determine the date of his preliminary hearing. Mrs. Helen Lane, sin Arlington lawyer, was with Patler during his interrogation by police. Rockwell was shot after leaving a coin-operated laundry in the shopping center, one Mock from party headquarters. The shots, fired from a low roof over a barber shop, struck him in the head and chest. be elected president in J972 on a Nazi party ticket. At a recent college appearance he said: “Five minutes after I’m elected President there won’t be any more problem with Red China— because I’m going to push the button to launch hydrogen bonlbs.. Rockwell was married twice and had seven children. He was separated from his second wife. * * * Rockwell had said machinery was set up to replace him if he were assassinated. ACCUSED OF SLAYING - Detectives lead John C. Patler, former No. 4 man in the American Nazi Party, from Arlington, Vi., police headquarters yesterday. Patler, 29, is being held in connection with yesterday’s assassination of party chief and founder George Uncohr Rockwell,<49r * ’ : Rockwell refused to say how many members were in the party, but knowledgeable people said it has fewer than 100 members. The headquarters, in Arlington, is on 23 acres and less than 10 miles from the nation’s capital. Rockwell had told people he would year-old John C- Patler, former No. 4 man in the- small party’s Merarchy, with murder. Bond was set at $50,000. Matthias Koehl, second in command to Rockwell, said Patler was expelled from the party last April because of his “Bolshevik leanings.” He had been a member of the group, which directs its hate toward Negroes and Jews, almost since its founding in 1958. ' - ★ ★ ★ Rockwell once described Patler as the Auto Talks Showdown Nears DETROIT (AP) — Company and union negotiators today mapped strategy behind the scenes for a showdown Tuesday as time runs out if a strike is to be avoided in the auto industry. Tha job before them is to reach a new wage agreement by a week from Wednesday, when current three-year pacts expire. Financial and labor experts at General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. busied themselves putting together, for promised delivery Tuesday, counteroffers to demands (it the United Auto Workers Union. Strike planning was uppermost on the weekend agenda of union executives. They have invited local union leaders to gather today and Sunday in seven cities “to acquaint them with the strike assistance program of the international union.” ★ * ★ lowing Detroit meetings of the union’s General Motors, Ford and Chrysler councils, made up of representatives from 'Big Three plants across the country. Local unions voting this week have been roiling up majorities of 90-plus per cent to authorize negotiators to call a strike, if and when they deem one necessary. Louis G. Seaton, GM vice president-personnel, has estimated it would require at least $4 hourly per worker to meet all the union’s wage and fringe demands, and he said there will be “a very great difference” between that and his company’s offer. ★ * ★ Otherwise none of the companies has given a hint as to the size of the pack-. age it will offer. Both Ford and General Motors, however, have indicated they will not include anything to guarantee equal pSy for Canadian auto workers, who. now average about 40 cents less per hour than their counterparts in U.S. plants. Parity of pay is a major union demand. The UAW says it is needed to protect U.S. jobs. The companies say it isn’t so. Ford has joined General Motors in proposing a change in the cost-of-living clause in current contracts, a clause with which the union says “there can be no tampering.” ★ * * Ford said it wanted a limit to how much can be added over any given time by the cost-of-living escalator. Wet Weekend Is Predicted for the Pontiac Area Leaden skies indicate a soggy weekend . in the Pontiac area. The U.S. Weather Bureau forecasts. TODAY—Partly cloudy with chance of showers. High expected from 80 to 85. TONIGHT—Cloudy with showers and turning cooler with a low of.54 to 60. SUNDAY—Partly cloudy and cooler with chance of showers early in the day. MONDAY—The outlook is fair and cool. Precipitation probability is: today 40 per cent; tonight 50 per cent and Sunday 20 per cent. Low mercury reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 63. By 2 p.m. the gauge went" up to 81. Ntw LMk - Vmyl Tm Car, $».M. » Caters. Malar- Brandi. MM D A Hwv. ' —H Antitrust Case Labor’s position under laws remains clouded — PAGE A-5. Astrology ............. B-0 Bridge ....................B-* Church News . ....... B-4—B-7 Crossword Pnrile .........D-9 Comics ...............— B-8 Editorials ................A-e Home Section ........ €4—C4 Markets ............... • C-7 Sports Theaters TV-Radio Programs Wilson, Earl Women’s Pages Leonard Woodcock, a UAW vice president, said a week ago there will be no contract extension for the target company. The UAW’s international executive board has been summoned to meet Wednesday to pick that company. A final decision, however, is likely to be withheld until Thursday night, fol- In Today's Press Sets Record Pontiac’s Bill Tipton sharp in Jayeee Track Meet — PAGE D-l. Cigarettes Federal panel proposed to evaluate health claims of filters, devices — PAGE A-8. Murder and Kidnaping Two Area Crimes Still Puzzling Police is not yet complete, police said, but they warned he is probably armed and dangerous. The suspect stopped the Brown girl on 1-75 using a guard patrol vehicle, gun and uniform, stolen from a Detroit security firm, where he worked. He pretended to take her into custody for speeding, got the keys of the car from her and drove them both to Bowling Green, Ohio. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 7) By ED BLUNDEN Two crimes wMch' aroused the Oakland County area during the summer remain unsolved today in spite of intensive efforts by local, state and federal Authorities. , . . * ★ ★ nr persons are sought in the killing of Edward Emmett DeConick, 63, napping Aug. 9 of Diane C. Brown, 19, of 1079 Northover, Bloomfield Township. Latest development in either of the cases is additional information on the kidnapping suspect. Bloomfield Township police say suspect Frank Patterson,' about 35, has a record of larceny, forgery and robbery in different states under a number of aliases, A dossier, being collected by the FBI, This Trailer Went “Over die River and Through the Woods” ... “We sold our trailer so fast it took our breath away. Buyer starting trip next day. Plenty of action from our Press Want Ad.” Mr.G.G. I9W PARKWOOO, ir x W. TWO Blffr roomt. Pleasingly Wnlshad, floa ama • lion. Sacrlflca sate, priced accordingly. _ PRESS WANT ADS Thousands of Press readers “shop” the Classified columns every day. Some .are looking for what you don’t want. Put one to work. Dial— 332-8181 or 334-4981 2 Veteran GIs Charged With Spying for Reds WASHINGTON (XI - Two Army sergeants, both veterans of long sendee, are charged with spying for Soviet agents. Staff SgL Leonard J. Saford, 30, originally from Fort Pierce, Fla., and Sgt. 1. C. Ulysses L. Harris, 37. from Sicily Island, La., were arrested last Saturday and Sunday respectively, but the arrests were not announced until yesterday. The two Soviets allegedly involved have left the country and won’t be allowed back In, the Defense Department ■aid. They were identified as Nikolai Fed-orvich Popov and Antoloiy Tikhorovich Kireyev. Popov was with the Soviet Embassy in Washington, Kireyev with the Soviet Union’s mission at the United Nations in New York. ALLEGED INCIDENTS The alleged spying occurred while Saf-ford, a 12-year Army veteran, was administrative. supervisor at the Strategic Communications Command Facility in nearby Suitland, Md., and Harris was with the Signal Corps at Ft. Monmouth, N.J. Both had top-secret clearance. The Army charges that on Dec, 8, 1966, Safford asked a soldier, Robert A. Cook, to photograph military equipment at an Army installation in Roslyn, Va,, ULYSSES HARRIS across the Potomac River from Wash- ' .» ."vL*1':' ington. AT AREA PARTY — The newlywed George Scott Romneys (nee Roona Eileen Stern) greeted some 300 guests last evening in the Bloomfield HtitoCountry Club. It was the first of three receptions honoring the couple following their marriage Wednesday in Salt Lake City’s Mormon Temple. Pink doves and a fountain of bubbling fruit punch were part of the pink decor at the gala affair. (Sea additional pictures, page B-l.) t. . - • • : Safford received a camera from Popov last Junq.3 during a meeting in a Washington restaurant, the charges said, and then delievered unidentified documents to the Soviet diplomat at suburban shopping centers in June and July. ★ ★ ★ In February, the Pentagon charged, Harris requested Willie K. Fletcher, also a soldier, to put him “in contact with an agent of the Soviet intelligence service.” Harris then met Popov at Neptune, N.J., for instructions and met with Kireyev in Freeport, N.Y. May 27, the Army said. Hie charges gaVe no details about Harris’ alleged activities. Tide of Mice Faces River PRIBOJ, Yugoslavia 0B—Yugoslav farmers hope the Lam and Uvac rivers will stop a horde of large, aggressive mice that have I been eating their way across the I country’s croplands. 1 At one village recently the farm-I ers were preparing for their wheat I harvest one day but the next day 1 "there was virtually nothing left to I reap — the mice had destroyed the f wheat overnight. | The mice have chewed up an J estimated 90 per cent of the I wheat, beans and potatoes in the Bosnia area, and farmers com- | 4 plain that even cats won’t chal-| lenge them. * * + I The unusually large propagation 1 of mice this year has been blamed Ion the virtual extermination of martens and foxes, mice eaters. .........I Area Man Faces Miami Charges , MIAMI (UPI) — A sleepy-eyed Keego Harbor man today faced six counts of assault with intent to murder in connection with a wild ride through greater Miami in which four motorists were wounded by gunfire, Bond was set at $30,000 Friday for Candy Michael Hughes, 23, of 2123 Willow Beach. ■ + .* * ' He was arrested when police kicked in the door of Ms Miami Beach motel room only a few hours after the shooting spree. Hughes will be arraigned next week. Four motorists were wounded, one seriously, by a sniper wbo raced from Coral Gables to Hialeah, spraying lad-lets with a .38 caHber pistol. Thomas York, a 48-year-old Negro who was shot from his tractor while working on a road project* to paralyzed from the waist down. w ★ * “I was just having a little target practice,” officers said Hughes told them as they put handcuffs on him at the motel. But he later denied shooting at anyone. DESCRIBED AS HOTRODDER Michigan police described Hughes, who suffered a mental breakdown two years ago, as a “hotrodder” who has been arrested before for traffic offenses. * ★ ★ His mother, Mrs. Mary Hughes, said her son left home last Monday with about $900, saying he was headed for California. She explained his odd first name by saying, the couple had expected a girl. “We always called him Mike,” she said. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 2d, 1867 -*=*- Reds* Blow xUp Bus, Kill 22 Vietnamese Near Campaign Site SAIGON (AP) - Communist saboteurs blew up a bus and killed 22 civilian passengers today 12 miles from a rally where South Vietnam’s presidential candidates were speaking. Six other passengers were injured when a mine demolished the bus' on a main provincial road near the populous Mekong Delta dty of My Tho. It was the third such incident in the past few days. ACTOR DIES Muni, 71, died at his home near Santa Barbara, Calif., yesterday of a heart attack. He won fame with his bio* graphical portrayals such as die title role in “Hie Story of Louis Pasteur,” which won him an' Academy Award in 1936., His rise to fame began with the movie “Scarface” in 1928. At My Tho, campaigners for the Sept. 3 election included the military presidential aspirant, U. Gen. Nguyen Van Hiieu, for the first time. This had been widely publicized in advance. The My Tho area is heavily infested by guerrillas and the roads around it have been a special target of the Viet Cong recently. The timing of today’s [Mast was a reminder of the [Communists’ continuing efforts [[to disrupt the election cam-[paign. HEAVY WEATHER Ground fighting continued in a lull and heavy weather restricted air raids on North Vietnam Friday. ★ * * In the last 24 hours, the Communists have blown up eight bridges near Da Nang, wounded a subdistrict police chief and another policeman with a grenade in Saigon and wounded several members of a combat-youth team in an attack on delta post 56 miles below Sai- $702 Million in Airport Aid WASHINGTON 11 in white; boys’ 2V&-6, youths 11-2 in black or white. 88 Character Keyboard j Smith Corona "ELECTRIC' | Our Reg. 126.74 \ 107.77 Sunday Only Coronet* electric features full length tabulator; key. sots and dean; quick set visible margins; personal touch selector; tabulator bar and more. “Charge 1 FULL-SIZE SLEEPING BAG 7.24 Full-size sleeping bag with heavy cover features heavy. ---" WarmT * 4 ugo It! Our Reg. 8.99 3 Days Only • wAwvpiug jjug wiin neavy co _ _____ fllity upper and snap-off canopy. Warmly filled with 3 pounds of polyester filling. Charg •DuPont Corp. tradtmork easy to park... fun to shop! That’s Kmarting! r GLENWOOD PLAZA NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 Labor Antiimst Role Still Hazy WASHINGTON (AP) - A $1-million federaj court damage judgment against the United Mine Workers union (UMW) leaves organized labor'd position under antitrust laws as clouded as ever. A top labor lawyer said the Impact of the damage aWard-which will be trebled automatically to $3 million under federal antitrust procedures—won’t be known until the Supreme Court reviews it. ★ * ★ The case involves alleged monoply by the UMW in the Tennessee Valley coal market. The union said it ‘‘will exercise all legal remedies open to us to obtain a reversal of this decision,” leaving little doubt it eventually will go to the high court along with a number of similar cases involving the Mine Workers. The key Supreme Court decision so far came two years ago in a three-way split ruling that unnerved most labor leaders by applying antitrust laws to a union for the first time. “There isn’t any question that unions are under antitrust laws’ since the 1965 ruling, the. labor lawyer said, “the question is, how much and under what circumstances." A federal court jury in Chattanooga, Tenn., Thursday ruled that the United Mine Workers conspired to monopolize the Tennessee Valley coal market and drive two small firms out of business. The Chattanooga ruling, awarding $1 million damages to the Tennessee Consolidated Coal Co. and its subsidiary Grundy Mining Co., s$id the union made large loans to the West Kentucky Coal Co. in or^er to help it put the two Tennessee firms out of business. It also said a strike against the Tennessee firms was part of the conspiracy. In the 1965 case, a Supreme Court majority said a labor union is subject to antitrust laws if it conspires with one group qf - employers to set a wage scale designed to drive other companies out, of business. Hut file court, in sending tha| cum back to a lower federaLcourt on a technicality, divided into three groups of .three justices each over -what constitutes torch a conspiracy. Three justices said the setting of an industrywide wage scale too high for some employers to meet is sufficient evidence of a conspiracy. i ★ ★ * ; Three other justices said , there must be some additional evidence, but the labor lawyer, said they left it “extremely , vague" as to what kind of additional evidence. The three-man minority said unions never can be held guilty of violating antitrust laws if their aim simply to to negotiate < a contract through collective bargaining and not deliberately to aid one group of employers at the expense of another group. 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Zig-Zag sawing machine •Develops %-HP, 6.5 amps -- ideal for professional installation jobs. 100% ball and noodle bearing. •'Adjustable cams* set dial and sew sews on buttons Pontiac Mall OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10 AJML TO 9:00 P.M. SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. SUND W 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. • 682-4940 Electric hedge shear 45°° mm RED. 31.50 Electric shear trines bodges neatly. 12-in. double-edge blade removes stubble in seconds. Has Vi-hp motor. II West Huron Street iomw t. >11—nun UtnaglDi Editor THE PONTIAC PRESS The POWER of FAITH By WOODI ISHMAEl SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 Pontiac,'Michigan 48056 . HOW ADD H. Pl*MNAU. II XroildHit and Publtitur Johk A. Riut Secretary and AdvertleiSI Director it Advertising Manager City Resident Has Heavy Tax Load To the city dweller, the tax situation this year to date has been a little one-sided to say the least, yrhen one stops to consider the return'he’s getting for his tax dollar, the Pontiac resident has come up on the short end of the stick. ★ ★ ★ There are four major tax proposals affecting Pontiac taxpayers this’ year: the state income tax; the state gas tax package; the proposed federal income tax surcharge; arid a proposal to revise local taxes, either by a mlllage Increase or enactment of a city income tax. The gas tax package included proposals to hike license plate fees aifd the sales tax on gasoline. It would have , produced about $250,000 annually in much-needed funds for use on Pontiac’s streets. It was defeated by the State legislature: Instead, the legislature approved ,a state income tax which will return considerably less—About $197,000— to the City’s general fund. ★ ' ★ The 10 per cent income tax surcharge recently proposed by Presi- dent Johnson is largely intended to meet our national, defense needs in Vietnam. If approved by Congress, it is unlikely that any of this tax revenue will be used to lighten the increasing burden of providing adequate municipal services in our cities. . About the only action which guarantees adequate revenue for local problems is a local tax hike. That step is yet to be decided. An advisory vote has been set in Pontiac for Sept. 19. At that time, voters will be asked whether they would prefer a mlllage hike or a city income tax. The Press has gone on record as favoring a mi Huge hike, rather than another tax on the incomes of those whb:live and yjfprk here. However, in view of Whit; has already been done at the State level and actiqn proposed at the national level, we fed the decision on a local tax is the most important fiscal item facing Pontiac citizenry this year. Regardless of how the vote goes, the return will be 100 per cent and Will do much to even up a-turrently uneven revenue pattern. . Volpe of the People: ‘Put Forth, Every Effort to Remain Free Before rewriting our Constitution we should start operating iii accord with it—-stop financing our enemies at home arid Abroad and revamp our Supreme Court. We should quit coddling anarchists and revolutionaries and apologizing for being Americans. • ’ ★ to to We should do all in our power to help our free institutions remain free and honor men who have built industry and business from scratch and given jobs to millions and such abundance that we share it with those who discount us. ★ to- to Men have fled the tyranny behind the iron and bamboo curtains at the risk of their lives, and have stepped on land mines and been shot to get over to our side of the fence. Let us beware lest the enemy moves that fence to include us. EWARD L. SORENSON 4011 BAYBROOK ^ DRAYTON PLAINS one of those clergymen quietly and intelligently dedi- Interested Citizens Use Mails to Express Views Is public apathy a growing problem? Not if the bulk of mail to newspapers, government officials and the White House is a guide. While apathy may exist in some quarters, a study by Dr. James N. Rosenau of Rutgers University supports the conclusion that people qre increasingly interested in expressing their views on political issues. The study shows that the White House received an average of 10,041 letters per week in 1958. Last year it was something like 16,000 letters weekly. The New York Times’ letters-to-the-editor desk received some 244 letters a week in 1958, compared to . a weekly average of 541 letters from readers in 1966. ★ ★ ★ The Pontiac Press, too, has experienced a steady increase in recent years in the number of letters to our Voice of the People column ^ ■ #r / % Rosenau sees such an increase in letter-writing activity as one sign of a small but steady expansion in the lumber of citizens who are actively iferested in public affairs. The Rev. James Breeden cated to the dignity of t After graduating from Dartmouth College, he received a Rockefeller scholarship for seminary work and decided to enter the Episcopal ministry. During his training, he worked ill an East Harlem parish and participated in “Project Crossroads Africa.” [ Following ordination, he became adviser on rate tb the bishop and canon" of St. Paul’s Cathedral in Boston. to to to^ After holding a similar position in the National Councilof Churches, Mr. Breeden began his present work—as director of the Commission on Church and Race for the Massachusetts Council. James Breeden’s career reflects his “concern, for things in society, that were left undone.” His participation in civil rights causes began early and continues today— although at times he has been arrested and Jailed for his activities. He links integration to his faith: “Integration is—integrity of a society. Our real integrity,is based on God. Integrity includes the wholeness of the community and the wholeness of our relationship with God.” ?• ' Confident Living: Live at Peaice With Yourself Gives View on Cost of Parking in Pontiac I see where City Manager wants to charge more for parking. Hasn’t he been with the City long enough to know that if he charges more for parking there will be less business. The high price of parking is what is wrong with shopping. If the parking price goes up, I will only come to Pontiac to see my doctor and will park where I can park free and walk to the doctor’s office. ERNEST YOUNG METAMORA Children Should Respect Property of Others It’s too bad that after people have raised their own families they have to put up with other children or put a fence around their property. Some children have no respect for property of others. * , f to,- to 1 • Someone took the keys oat of my boat and it will cost $36 for a new switch. Two aleeplng bags, a gas lantern and gasoline stove were stolen from the tent in my front yard. F. 6. 660 SCOTWOOD ‘Let’s Show Pride, in Keeping Gty Clean’ I have been in Pontiac since 1917 and I have never seen so much trash around. Where is the old-fashioned pride to keep our city cleaner? # CLARENCE HOPP 163 W. LAWRENCE ‘Baseball Teams Show Good Sportmanship’ I congratulate all teams in the tournaments and play-off games at Jaycee Park recently for their competitive spirit and good sportsmanship. One drawback is the high prices of concessions. I hope next baseball season someone looks into it for the fans of Pontiac. NOT CHEAP EITHER 1967 Press Grid Contest Kicked Off What? Something seems to tell you that it’s Pontiac Press Football Contest time again? " . . Well (business of riffling calendar leaves), give your instinct an “A” for Accuracy. to to to It IS time,to kick off pur 1967 grid game — the test Of wits, that, on or before Dec. 2, will make some man, woman or child the sole owner and proprietor of the winner’s award of a $500 U.S. Savings Bond. diction of the winner of each of the 16 games below (to indicate a tie, leave both boxes blank), sign entry form, and dispatch. 3. Entries may be deposited in.Tie Press’ Huron Street drop box or mailed. EE mailed, they must be enclosed in envelopes (THE POST OFFICE WILL NOT ACCEPT POSTAL CARDS WITH ATTACHED ENTRIES) and addressed to: THE PONTIAC PRESS FOOTBALL COjfTEST, P.O. Box 777, Pontiac, Michigan. 4. The contestant who correctly predicts/ achieve and contribute more, the consecutive outcome of the most games and also h a v e more inner will be awarded a $500 U.S. Savings Bond. 5. Contest deadline is Friday noon, Sept. 15, and entries must be on hand at The Press by that time. Those arriving later, even though postmarked prior, will hot be considered. 6. Judges’ decisions on all questions relating to contest will be final NORMAN VINCENT PEALE A great many people suffer from the same miserable condition — not being at peace with themselves.^/ Could be one reason is our current tendency take ourselves seriously. We push and ourselves though what we can aceom- _ *>lish in A day DR. BEALE determines the future wellbeing of family, business and even the whole community. Actually we are likely to peace, if we cultivate the art of easy-does-it. Peace of mind cbmes from not getting, too hipped on yourself. sation between these two men of few words went as follows: “Hi, Cal.” “HI, Hiram.” “Nice day.’’ “Nice day.” And that was all. Subsequently Coolidge was elected lieutenant governor of Massachusetts, then governor, then Vice President of the. United States. Upon the death of Harding he succeeded to toe presidency, and in 1924 was elected President (to serve four years more. 1 At the approach of the 1928 election, when his popularity was at its height, Coolidge made his famous one-aentence announcement: “I do n o t choose to run.” * ** «. _ . _ J.___■____ When he had seen his sue- By DAVE BURGIN cessor to the presidency in- ' WASHINGTON (NEA)—The augurated, he r e t u r n e d ‘ mm Now it is all very well to hear, “Take things more easily. Don’t take yourself so seriously. Be calm.” But it takes practice to develop the qualities that help one to live at peace with oneself. A great remedy for inner unrest is to trust God, Love people, do your best in today’s situations. Handle today okay and tomorrow will come along all right. (PuMlilwra Hall Syndicate) Question and Answer How and what day did Chief Pontiac die? L. S. REPLY While some facts about his death appear to be obscure, it is generally agreed an English trader bribed a Kaskaskia Indian to murder him.'Ht died in 1769, but we found no source that gave the exact day. Washington Notebook: Ball Club Surge Livens Jokes During the past three^ years, contestants have come up with som$ amazing feats of contest clairvoyance. Last year, three peerless predictors finished the 15-game schedule in a deadlock. Hie year before, it took the winner 14 games to wear ont the starting field, and toe year before that 13 games were played before a winner was crowned. Of the six victors who have graced the winner’s circle during the past four years, the distaff division has contributed five. If this jolts the vaunted image of mas: culine supremacy in the sport? savvy department, we can only point to that time-tested truism: “Never underestimate the picking power of women.”' The contest rales and an entry form (a, facsimile is acceptable) f 011 o w. Trim particular note of Role 3 and toe change it embodies from past years. ' to ' to to ■ , May the gridiron' gods be with you! CONTEST RULES 1. Every man, woman and child is eligible to enter contest (except Press employes atofkrtose relatives) but are limited to one 'entry each. All members of families may participate, subject to the stone IMMMdn. ■ ■ > To enter, yon dimply check your pre- □ Wake Forest Sept. 16 vs/ Duke □ □ Baylor Sept. 23 vs. Syracuse □ O Clev. Browns Sept. 24 vs. Det. Lions □ □ Notre Dame Sept. 30 vs. Purdue d □ Mississippi Oct. 7 vs. * Alabama □ □ Dayton oct, 7 ; vs, Pon. Firebirds □ □ Mich. State Oct. 14 vs. Michigan □ □ Harvard Oct. 21 vs Cornell □ d Mich. State Oct. 20 vs. Notre Dame □ □ Stanford Nov. 4 vs. Washington ql □ Waterford NoV. 10 vs. Kettering d □ Georgia Nov, 11 vs. Florida □ □ Pont. Central Nov. 17 vs. Pon, Northern □ d "Southern Cal. Nov. 18 v*. UCLA □ d Ohio Stale Nov. 25 ■vs./ Michigan n B Army Dec. 2 ,vs., ■ Navy o Calvin Coolidge was that kind of man. Coolidge lived In Northampton, Massachusetts. He was a lawyer. He walked to work each morning, passing on his way toe home of a friend, Hiram was always in his front yard. Each morning - the conver- Verbal Orchids Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Verging of Springfield Township; 53rd wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Rider of Almont; 53rd wedding anniversary. Mrs. Philomine Fortin _______ H __________ of 8790 Arlington; 82nd birthday, didn’t take himself too sesr-Mrs. Ha Rnssell iously- of Lake Orion, The serenity, simplicity, formerly of Drayton Plains; down-to-earthness and free- 8lst birthday. Mr. and ltfrs. Edward Stevens of Holly; 59th wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. William N. A vena of Oxford; ' 59th wedding anniversary.1 Efner J. Leeman J ’ of 725 E. Mansfield; 82st birthday. Hairy H. Hall ADDRESS........ —............ .............. of Clarkston; 80th birthday. Washington (Capitol Hill) senators pay little attention to tired old' jqkes linking them to toe Washington baseball Senators, consistent losers in the American League the past 26 years. But this y e a r th e' ® baseball Senators havd improved considerably. , For awhile some locate. even dreamed of a pennant. More realistically, toe Washington clnb could finish with a winning percentage and crack the first division. During the surge the truth came out: The Capitol Hill senators have been rankled all these years by all those bad jokes. Who’s first to make the an-dom from self-importance of alogy between a “progressive, Coolidge were truly remark- hard-fighting baseball team” able. These qualities touched a responsiveness in millions of men and women. Northampton. And one fine morning there he was again, waiting from home to office. Friend Hiram was there too, as usual,. in his front yard. And the customary conversation ensued: “Hi, Cal.” “Hi, Hiram.” “Nice day.’’ “Nice day.” Then the heavens almost fell, for taciturn Hiram ad-ed something: “Ain’t seen you around lately, Cal.’? “Nope,” said Calvin Coolidge, “been away a spell.” And proceeded calmly on his way. The years of holding the highest office in the nation were over. Now he was just Cal Coolidge, a man who NAME : At. his, death one great newspaper: said of him, “Ho was one of toe common people" whom Lincoln sakFGod loved. There was something about him that all of os wanted to be like. We loved Ms humor. We adored Us silences... .** ‘’progressive, hard-fighting” senator? U. S. senators, who else? Meanwhile, in another part of town, a reporter here claims this reply when he asked President Johnson Us thoughts on the Senators’ surge: “All’ll tell ya, if that Bill Fulibright would just shot up, we’d he all rij^it.” Curious quotes: “Mr. Dulski• says he has done nothing wrong. I believe Mr. Dulski. He’s ah honorable and trustworthy gentleman and a highly respected lawmaker.” House Speaker John McCormack, commenting on Rep. Thaddeus J. Dulski, D-N.Y., who conceded he pocketed about $11,000 raised at a Buffalo testimonial dinner in the belief the money was for him but not as any sort of special interest pay- “I can’t see how any of these cases could be construed as conflict Of, interest.’ — Sen. Edward V. Long, D-Mo., upon furnishing the Senate Ethics Committee with a list of “clients” he shared with an attorney for jailed Teamster boss Jimmy Hoffa. ♦ . ★ ★ -Mail is hot a word one casually tosses around in the company - of congressmen right now. A bad ran of nasty letters from i constituents is irksome enough. Bat note there may be two genuine mail t newspaper at wall as ad AH The Pontiac Praia I* delivered by carrlar for JO cents a week; when - scandals (as opposed to “issues” or “controversies”) brewing on toe Hill. The first is the third class or “junk” mail thing . . . whether third-class rates should be raised ,and by how much . . . Abo, which third-class users are getting special handling and who is authorizing it? Second, the Post Office Department apparently is taking a hard look at guidelines for regulating “political mail” under th* frank. Rep. Charles M. Teague, R-Calif., recently got a $5,462.50 lesson on franking rights. The Post Office charged that Teague used his privilege to play politics, which is not quite cricket, although the P.O. won’t disclose its guidelines. Teague owned np to. It, however. “I can see where toe department Is technically correct,” he said. “But toe way I now understand toe roles, any congressman would be unethical in wishing a constituent a Merry Christmas under a franked envelope.” Teague said his infraction was asking 190,000 households (thus the $5,46250 mailing cost) tills question f “Whom would you like to see as our next president?” The responses? TeagUe said they showed that “President ''Johnson is by tto ’means assured of re-election.” -Junior Editors Quiz THE PONTIAC PRKSS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 MICRO-ORGANISM | QUESTION: How does one take photographs of microorganisms? • ★ ★ " ANSWER: A micro-organism is a living thing so small as nof to be visible to the naked eye. We must use a microscope to see it. In our picture, Howard shows the principle of how scientists go about photographing such minute objects. To make a photograph, one must have a camera. But in order to see a microscopic object, one .must have a microscope; Howard is holding one up. Using the human eye, an observer looking through a microscope can see a tiny cell or other minute object very clearly. To fletograph it, all he has to do Is to substitute a camera for his eye. Qf .course, this a very particular job, for which special equipment must be used. i Below, Howard shows special equipment used for photo-micography. The camera is one made for just this purpose. You can tell it’s a camera by the familiar bellows. It is mounted on a stand which holds it above the microscope, the lens of the camera joining the microscope’s eyepiece. To the right of the camera is a special arc lamp which is able to furnish the very brilliant illumination needed. In the circle is an example of the kind of picture one can take with apparatus of this kind. $1,800 Exemption Eyed LANSING (UPI) - The Michigan AFLrdO has countered threatened Republican attempts to cut in half the $1,200 personal exemption from state income taxes with a drive to achieve a constitutional $1,800 exemption minimum The. AFL - CIO’s executive boards said Friday that th union would sponsor a petition drive to ppt the minimum exemption on the ballot in Nov. 1968. ★ * If approved by the voters the amendment would raise the current exemption from $1,200 to $1,800. ★ ★ ★ “The board acted after hearing reports of possible Republican legislative action to cut the present $1,200 per person exemption to only $600,” the AFL-CIO said in a statement. * * * The exemption is a c r e d i against income taxes that Michigan wage earners begin paying Oct. 1. The state’s first income tax was passed by the Legislature July 1 after six months of Hazardous Ride Elevators were hazardous at the turn of the century. In a tingle large city, as many as 30 people a year might be killed in elevator accidents. haggling with the amount of the exemption being one of the major issues. 'Dark Ages' Endfor Lonely N.M. Indians MAGDALENA, NJ*. (AP) An electrical blackout will be lifted today on a remote Indian reservation. Electric power will be ushered into the Alamo Navajo reservation with an air raid siren and two light bulbs gloying on lonely pole. Nearly 1,000 persons are expected to watch the “turn-on’ ceremony for the 848 Alamos. The inaugural of electrical ervice to the poverty-stricken offshoot of dm Navajos includes a scheduled telephone talk from Vice President Hubert H. Humphrey from Minneapolis, Minn. “TUs occasion marking the first of electric service to the Alamo Navajo reservation beginning of a new era,” .Sen. Clinton r. Anderson, D—NJII. said in a^telngram to the Indians in west-central New iftexi-oo. The reservation’s estimated >5 families live scattered throughout the 52,157-acre reservation about 35 miles northwest of this old cattle town. '‘Electricity,” a Bureau of Indian Affairs official said, ‘means modern conveniences seen elsewhere by the Alamos but heretofore unavailable for their use on the reservation. The New Mexico Electrification Cooperative Association lines will bring power into nearly 100 recently constructed homes on the reservation by mid-September. State Capital News in Brief TNB OOVIRNOR Wat at hit Bloomfield Hlllt hoi THE INSURANCE COMMISSIONER Announced preliminary approval of . proposed merger between the Alexander u----------------0 Co. of Amorla quality & economy with Stran-S buildings You get economy with Stnn-Stoel buildings becauoo economy Is literally designed and built Into every steel component It Is the natural result of quality planned, mass production technlquea that are not only batter, but alto economical. The savings ere passed along to you Before you build any building, discover why a Stran-Steel building la a better investment Find out why Stran-Steel Is able to offer hritten guarantees to back-up the performance of the a tael components. Lower heating and cooling bills ate the direct result of exclusive Insulated wall systems. Faster construction, often CO to 90 days, will get you In business sooner. Call ue for a free estimate or e copy of our brochure "10 Costly Mistakes To Avoid Before You Build." We are able to handle youi complete turn-key project Arrangements can be made for ft OAKSTEEL DIVISION SCHURRER CONSTRUCTION COMPANY 2431 Pontiac Road, Pontiac Phone 338-4019 Strejn^feel HOME OF FINEST BRAND NAMES 101 N. SAGINAW—Phone FE 3-7114 NEW ROUND BOBBIN PORTABLE ELECTRIC SEWING MACHINE MONDAYONLY SAVE $1195 SEW FOR BACK TO SCHOOL AND SAVE! • Full Six* Head • Built-In Darner • Forward and Re-vors* Stitch • Hinged Prewar Foot • Automatic Bobbin Winder • Numbered Stitch Regulator • Snap-Out Race for Easy Cleaning • Heavy Duty Motor • Extra Attachmonte • Instruction Manual o Beautiful Dec-. orator Blue Finish. DRAYTON PLAINS STORE ONLY SALE ENDS MONDAY Save on nubby textured fiber glass drapes Special group of better fall suburban coats Entire stock reg. 8.99-9.99 fall dresses 3.99 17“ 6.88 SWx84" pr. Solid color Wash “n hang fiber glass drapes in whits, champagne, geld, pink, grssn. Special Purchase Cotton corduroys, bleached Fox-tail collars, acrylic pile lined cotton suedes. 8 to 18. CHARGE IT Tents, A-iines, 2 pc., jumpers. Acetate stripes, print knits, rayon crepes. All sizes. Men's famous U.S. maker 'knockabouts' 4« 8.99 if perfect Washable uppers, gum crept soles. Brown, beige, green, ton, blue, grey. To 12 in group. Men's 3.99 perm preet dressand sport shirts 244 EACH White, maize, strip**, blue. Sizes 14-16. Solids, plaids and moral Sizes S-M-L-XL Boys' 2.99 sport shirts 1.88 Polyester/cotton. Long sleeves, p I a I d s, ox* fords, moral Sizes 8-18. Rayon/acrylic 72x90" blankets 2*5 2 for the price you expect to pay for one. Rayon satin binding. CLEARANCE 25% to 40% off on outdoor summer needs, famous grands •one of a kind todds and ends •crate marred on scratched •floor samples Also pools, gym sets, pliy equipment eGym sets •Wading pools e Inflatable pools •Feel chemicals •Feel accessories •Entire etoefc eSandboxes e Family pools •Beach toys entente tables •Flay equipment •Limited quantities Extra large • 4x6' area rugs 5.00 Washablo cotton pile. Non-skid back. Many colors to choose from. Reg. $7 to $9 Import bulkies 597 Acrylic cardigans, slipr ons. Whits, pastel^ tones. Sizes 36 to 42. Girls' corduroy slacks, only 1.00 Wide wale, pin walo cotton corduroy; Prints or solids. 3 to 6x. Scrvel Toddler, cotton cord overalls 1.00 Suspenders, bib. 5 colors. Washable cotton corduroy. Sizes 2 to 47 Reg. 2.25-2.89 infants' sleepers 1.77 Famous maker. Solids, prints. Snap waist, 1-4; elastic waist, 4 to 8. OFEM EVERY NIGHT TO 9:30 Drayton Open Sundays Noort to I Ass't. dusters and lingerie 2.00 Reg. 2.99 Nylon tricot pettipanftt gowns. No-irok k Among the churches planning to have study groups using this new curriculum are these Pontiac area Methodist churches; Aldersgate; Central; Covert; First; Four Towns; St. James; St. John’s; St. Luke’s, Rochester; St. Pauls, Bloomfield Hills; Trinity, Keego Harbor; and Trinity, Wateriord Township. Persons interested in joining in toe new studies should contact one of these local churches for details. Bethel Un«* Building CLASSROOMS — Youth fellowship groups to the wall of one of toe new classrooms meet for discussion of modern teen prob- consists of, from left to right. Randy Pike, lems under the direction of youth director' Carolyn McCully, Pam Saddler, and Jim William Ballard %(left). The panel, with backs Heddley. Begin Innovation in Youth Training at Redemption An experiment in the cate-hism program which prepares youth for adult membership in the church was announced by Rev. J. L. Joyce, pastor of Redemption Lutheran Church, Or-chant Lake. The congregation meets for orship and church school in Pine Lake School, 3333 West Long Lake. The major feature of toe experiment is toe absence of the usual weekly class session, Replacing this will be a once-a-month personal and private tutoring session with the instructor. Included in toe catechism training, which covers a three-year period for youth in school grades seven, eight and nine, will be three day-long or overnight retreats each year. The first of these will be in conjunction with Lutheran Church of the Incarnation, Farmington, Sept. 16-16. Readiness examinations to help the teacher give further assistance to each pupil, and cpmprehensive examinations at toe end of each catechetical year, are planned. Parents also will be Involved in three personal sessions with their youngster and the pastor during each of the three years’ instruction. ' The program begins with a meeting of parents and pupils Sept. 10, immediately following the 10:45 a.m. worship Funk, takes advantage of the space and opportunity provided by toe new building to work in some practice sessions on his trombone. Ralph plays for youth fellowship gatherings and for church services. Special Service Breakfast Served New Hope Missionary Baptist Church will observe a special service of appreciation at 11 a.m. tomorrow in honor of the assistant pastor, Rev. George Musky Valley, and associate minister, Rev. Willie Lee Cohen. - Rev. Jesse A. Long will conduct the service. He will speak on “Doing Your Best for toe Lprd.” NEW GYMNASIUM — A sharp shot sends the volley ball young people in the gymnasium of the new educational buildflying over toe net during a game by opposing groups of ing' of First Free Methodist Church. B—5 | United Presbyterian Churches AUBURN HEIGHTS 3456 Primary Street If. Wm. Palmar, Patter Sunday School.....9:30 Morning Worship...,. 11 ;00 DRAYTON Drayton Plaint, Michigan W. J. Toouwitton, Pastor Ass't. Donald Romillard Bible School......9:45 A.M. Mamina Worship.11:00 A.M, Youth Groups.......6:30 P.M. Wednesday Prayer and Study Hour.........7:00 P.M. OAKLAND AVENUE 404 Oakland at Cadillac Theodora R. Alleboch, Pastor Audrey Limkeman, Youth Diroctor Worship 8:30 and 11 A.M. Sunday School . .. .9:45 A.M. Youth Fellowship . .5:45 P.M. Worship........7:00 P.M. Wed. Prayer....7:00 P.M. WATERFORD LAKELAND 7325 Maceday Lake Rd. Roy F. Lambert, Pastor Sunday School 9:30 A.M. Morning Worship 10:45 A.M. CHURCH OF ATONEMENT 3535 Clintonville Rd. Waterford Twp. Church School 9:30 and 10:45 Worship Service 8:15 and 10:45 Crea M. Clark, Pastor I It ig impossible to mentally 'or socially enslave a Bibleread-, ing people. The principles of the Bible are the groundwork of hitman freedom.—Horace Greeley, {American journalist. ASSEMBLY ! of GOD Parry at Wide Track Sunday School 1 9:45 A.M. Everyone Welcome 11:00 A.M. | REV. M. Cook $j| 7:00 P.M. Jf Rev. M. Cook Pastor Charles A. Davenport "THE CHURCH ON THE MARCH" CHURCH OF THE BRETHREN 46 Rosalawn N. of East Pika S.S. 10: Richard Dumbaugh Supt. Worship 11: a.m. and 7: p.m. Bibla Study and Prayar Wad. 7 p.m Council Meeting Sapt. 17th, 7 P.M. Laenard W. Blackwall, Pastor - 332-2412 FIRST PRES8YTERMN CHURCH A Downtown Church Huron at Wayne, Pontiac Summar Schadula WORSHIP & . CHURCH SCHOOL 10:00 A.M. star . . . Rav. Galun I. Hun SILVERCREST BAPTIST CHURCH 2562 Dixie Highway, 2 Blocks N. of Silver Lake Dr. John Hunter, Pastor Rev. Leland Lloyd, Ass't Pastor 9:45 AM. SUNDAY SCHOOL 11 AM. aid 7 P.M. SERVICES —i D FIRST UNITED MISSIONARY CHURCH 149 North East Blvd - FE 4-1811 Rev. Kenneth L. Pennell 1 Sunday School 10 A M. - Warship 11 A.M. Sunday Youth Fellowship — 6:00 P.M. Sunday Evening Worship — 7:00 P.M. First Congregational Church E, Huron and Mill St. Rev. Malcolm K. Burton, Minister SUNDAY MORNING SERVICE 9:30 AM. Church of the Mayflower FI I trim CHURCH OF SPIRITUAL FELLOWSHIP Malta Temple, 2024 Pontiac Road Service 7:30 P.M. Thursday, Aug. 24 — Silvet Tea Aug. 27 — Dorothy Baasley COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 64 W. Columbia Ave. Series of Revival Meetings August 27 - Septemver 3 7:30 P.M. HEAR , HAROLD E. CRANE and the Columbia Avenue Baptist Church Choir Under His Capable Leadership HEAR EVANGELIST WALTER K. AYERS Preaching Dynamic,- Soul-Stirring Gospel Sermons Nursery Open Each Evening VISITORS ARE WELCOME WHERE CHRIST IS DOMINANT <1 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUG I 'U'P Oil BLOOMFIELD HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 3600 Telegraph Rd. 10 A.M. Sunday School 11 A.M. Morning Worship 6 P.M. Evening Service Wednesday, 7:30 P.M. Prayer Meeting PASTOR, ELMO TAHRAN Phono: 647-3851 COME VISIT... WORSHIP You Will Fjnd Here a Cordial Spirit of Friendly Fellowship ... A Reverent .Attitude of Worship. Welcomes You CALVARY ASSEMBLY of GOD ‘PULL THAT ROPE’ — Rev. Eugene L. Roberts (center) pastor of First United Pentecostal Church encourages a group of volunteers from his congregation in the task of raising the tent for the series of revival meetings being held on the property at Emerson- and University Drive. The meetings , continue at 7:30 each evening through next week. 9:45 SUNDAY SCHOOL i Classas for I vary Aga - GUEST SPEAKERS 11:00 A.M. REV. DON TARNO 7:00 P.M. REV. JOHN GUNN You Will Find Our Church Friandly, and Good Place for Tha Wholo Family PASTOR ARNOLD Q. HASHMAN Com Sopt. 17-24 Ivongiliit Frod Brown Sunnyvale CHAPEL 5311 PONTIAC LAKE ROAD iV|LAtortlnjPoi*«r Leads Discussion I Margaret Fleishman, district director of Children’s Work of the Methodist Church, will keynote tomorrow’s discussion meeting for children’s division Superintendents and others concerned with children’s : work in the Methodist Church. ★ * ★ The program planned for 6 p.m. at First Methodist Church i will concern the needs of children and teachers in the church and how to meet them. Church of Christ 87 Lafayatta St. SERVICES: Lord's Day 10:30 A.M. and 7 P.M. Wednesday 7 P.M. LONNIE YORK, of Ardmora, Okla. Speaking Aug. 26 and 27 (Sat. 7:30) "The Saul You Save May Be Your Own" Central Christian Church 347 N. SAGINAW 11 A.M. Morning Worship—9:45 Bible School 6 P.M. Youth Meeting-7 P.M. Gospel Hour Mr. Ralph Sherman, Minister | Course Planned ! Oakland Police Academy of I [Oakland Community College 'will conduct an accident investigation course Sept. 11-15 at OCC’s Auburn Hills campus in Pontiac Township, according to (Ralph W. Moxley, academy coordinator. Registration fee is I $45. :i THE SALVATION ARMY CITADEL 29 W. LAWRENCE SUNDAY SCHOOL 10 A.M. Taen Age Fellowship Hour As Announced MORNING WORSHIP 11:15 A.M. EVANGELICAL MEETING 7 P.M. TUESDAY PRAYER AND PRAISE MEETING 7 P.M. Brigadier and Mrs. John Grindle, Commanding Officers Hood Mu»ic — Sinning — Preaching You Are Invited CHURCH of GOD 623 E. Walton Church Phono 335-3733 .Worship 11 A.M I Evening 7 P.M Yeung People Wodnosday The Pontiac CHURCH OF CHRIST 1180N. PERRY ST. HUGO OF THE HILLS—The two-story building going up near St. Hugo of the Hills Catholic Church and School in Bloomfield Hills is the new convent for teaching sisters. When completed it will house 15 additional rooms for the sisters, a chapel, community room, laundry and infirmary. Nine sisters Pontiac Press phoio by noir wimtr live in the present convent. Many of the services now offered in St. Hugo of the Hills School will be moved to the old convent, including space for speech therapy, teachers’ lounge and meeting room for parish organizations. An American Baptist Church CRESCENT HILLS BAPTIST CHURCH 2274 Crescent Lake Road, Drayton Plains Sunday School 9:45 A.M. Church Sarvica 11:00 A.M. Wad. Prayar Sarvica 7:30 P.M. Rav. Wallaca Lewian, pastor Mourn Loss of 'Friend of Christians' WORSHIP 7:50 and 9:55 A.M. and 6 P.M. Sunday BIBLE CLASS 8:55 and 11:10 A.M. Sun., Wad. 7:30 P.M. ’ Boyd Glovar, Minister HEAR HERALD OF TRUTH Channel 50 Sun. 8:30 A.M. ENROLL IN BIBLE CORRESPONDENCE Box 555, Pontiac, Mich. NEW YORK, N.Y. - The Rt. Rev. Stephen F. Bayne, First | Vice-President of the Episcopal Church today issued a state-ment from New York on the I death of the Rev. John Court-[ney Murray, S.J. ft' A ★ The statement reads: "All Christendom loses one of j the great crusaders for religious | liberty and one who advocated respect for the consciences of men. In this sense, Father Murray was a great humanist in the strongest Christian meaning of the word. His leadership at i the second Vatican Council has| jbeen acknowledged with gratitude by the whole Christian world; his scholarly ability was I similarly acknowledged in t h e | 1 academic community. * ★ *■ (i | “He was a zealous champion { | of Christian renewal, lending his I insight and efforts to denomina-jthe Episcopal Church. We a 11 tions other than his own; his [deeply mourn the loss of one so;;:; counsel and advice to agencies,humble and so great.’’ of the Episcopal Church will j long be gratefully remembered. Public sentiment is every-v Most recently he made a major i thing. With public sentiment contribution to the Study of The-n ° thing can fail. Without it-ological Freedom and Social nothing can succeed.-Abraham :j Sunday School 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship 11:00 A.M. Evening Sarvica 7:00 P.M. WED. MID-WEEK SERVICE 7:30 P.M. ‘METHODIST CHURCH CENTRAL METHODIST 13882 Highland Rd. MILTON H. BANK, Pastor | Responsibility undertaken for Lincoln. COLUMBIA AVENUE BAPTIST CHURCH 64-W. Columbia Ava. Ravival Services, August 27 -Septambar 3 — 7:30 P.M. Evangelist Walter K. Ayers, Preacher E. Clay Polk FIRST NAZARENE 60 STATE ST. "The Church Where All the Family Worships Together" SPECIAL 9:45 A.M. GREAT CLOSING OF VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL Programs, Singing, Arts, Crafts under the Direction of Jerry Ferree and His Staff. See and witness the bays and girls who found Christ the answer for Youth Delinquency. Christ is the answer for young people of today. 11:00 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP , Pastor Speaking 7:00 P.M. GREAT HOUR OF EVANGELISM NURSERY OPfN FOR ALL SERVICES • SUNDAY SCHOOL a MORNING SERVICE • CKLW BROADCAST • CJSP BROADCAST • YOUTH FELLOWSHIP • EVENING SERVICE •MID-WEEK PRAYER SERVICE - Wednesday • WBFG-FM Wed. * 9:30 a.m. 10:45 a.m. 11:00 a.m. 4:00 p.m. 5:45 p.m. 7:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m.-9:00 a.m. OAKLAND and SAGINAW" Rev. Robert Shelton • Pastor MStat fMk It* WtrS sf LHs sins tilt -Miehlfsu’s FlUT Baptist Church I Without Restriction MORNING WORSHIP and CHURCH SCHOOL 9:00 A.M. and 10:45 P.M. K?; "GO AND TELL!" Rev. James H. Mclaurln Broadcast on WPON 1460 K - 11:15 A.M. YOUTH NIGHTS - Wed. 7-9 P.M.. Ample Parking Supervised Nursery Air Conditioned *:■: FIRST METHODIST CHURCH South Saginaw at Judson Clyde E. Smith, Pastor;:-:;: "All Raca* and AH Men Welcome at All Tjma«" |fi-Sunday Sarvica Church School 9:45 a.m. 1 1:00 a.m. "The Eleventh Commandment" Rev. Clyde E. Smith, preaching ?h| WED., 7:30 P.M.-BjBLE STUDY ST. PAUL METHODIST 16S f. Square Lake Rd., Bloomfield Hide — FI 1-8233 and FI 2-2752 Morning Worship 9:30 and 10:45 A.M. Church School 9:30 A.M. Mathoditt Youth Fellowship 6 P.M. Ample Parking—Samuel C._Seizert, Min.-Supy/ised Npwjflcgij ELMWOOD ALDERSGATE METHODIST , 2680 Crooks Rd. Sunday School 9:30 a.m. Worship 10:45 a.m. Evening Worship 7 p.m. . Prayer Wed 7 p.m METHODIST 1536 Baldwin FE 5-7797 Rev. Clean F. Abbott Worship 9:45 a m. Si-Church School 11 a.m.. ' P™- % Prayer Wed. 7:00 p.m. Dudley Mesure, pasto^ 1 t FIRST METHODIST CHURCH 6600 Waldon Road, Clarkston j: CHURCH SCHOOL 9:45 A.M. WORSHIP 10 A.M. p ■ Frank A. Coxadd, Minister i Adele Thomas, Director bf 'Music ST. JAMES METHODIST CHURCH 451 W. KENNETT RD. Oppeiit* th« Ale oft EUm«ntory School : Sunday School.. 9:30 A.M.,’Mr. Troy BaB, Supt. : Worship Sarvica 11 OO A.M. — Nursery Provided J i: Rev. Robert Secrist, preaching B—« THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 Sunday Schpel 11:30 A.M. Wad. Service ... 7:30 P.M. ^Christian Temple “Wham Faith and Friendliness Must" 505 Auburn Ava. Rav. Lola P. Marion, Pastor EVANGELICAL HOLINESS CHURCH 109 Martva at Auburn Still Preaching the Old Fashioned Gotpal 9:45 Bible School 11 A.M. Worship Evangelist 7 P.M. Y. P. Sun., 6:30 P.M., Wad. 7:30 P.M. Goad Mu«k A Singing Welcome to All - Church Pa«tor Rav. J. W. Burgess MARIMONT BAPTIST CHURCH -68 W. WALTON BLVD.- SUNDAY SCHOOL . . . . 9:45 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP . . . .11:00 A.M. EVENING SERVICE ....... 7:30 P.M. REV. ROBERT F. RICHARDSON, PASTOR CHRISTIAN CHURCH of DRAYTON PLAINS Temporary Moating Place: MASON SCHOOL 3835 Walton Blvd. (bat. So.hobow and Silvar lake Rd.) Valvat Vondorgriff, WORSHIP 9:30 A.M. BIBLE SCHOOL 10:45 A.M. Youth Director Merritt H. Baker, Minister ISTOLIC CHURCH OF CHRIST 458 CENTRAL Saturday Yeung People . . 7:30 P.M. Sunday School and Worship 10 A.M. Sunday Evening Service. . 7:30 P.M. Tue*. end Thun. Service. . 7:30 P.M. Church Phone FE 5-8361 Pastor's Phone 852-2382 Friendly General Baptist Church 69 S. Astor St. FE 4-3421 334-7407 (First St. Eo.t el East Blvd. between Auburn and E. Pilw) Mvrcury Opan Each Evening Rev. Robert Gamer, Pastor SUN. SCHOOL. 9:45 A.M.-MORNING WORSHIP, 11 A.M. EVENING SERVICE 7 P.M. WED. PRAYER, 7 P.M. PILGRIM HOLINESS CHURCH Baldwin at Fairmount Sunday School...........10:00 Worship..............^jJLliOO- 77. 777.77. . . 6:15 Evening Family Gospel Hr. . . . 7:00 Wednesday Prayer and Praise.. 7:00 Rev. William Doe, Mini.ter ' CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Subject: CHRIST JESUS Sunday Service and Sunday School... .11:00 A.M. Wednesday Evening Service.....8:00 P.M. Reading Room — 14 W. Huron Open Daily 11:00 A.M. to 5:00 P.M. Monday thru Saturday FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST Lawrence and Williams St.—Pontiac SUNDAY 9:45 WJBK 1500 kc Missionary Alliance Church North Cobb Lake Roadqt MS? PONTIAC UNITY CHURCH Sunday School 10:15 A.M. -Worship Service 11:30 A.M. THE BIBLE-THE SUBCONSCIOUS MIND AND YOU A "Psyche-Religious" Series of Lectures WEDNESDAY EVENING - 8:00 P.M. 8 N. Genesee FE 5-2773 Everett A. Dell, Minister FE 2-5877 FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH, ROCHESTER nuOUBook (G.A.R.B.C.) Walnut at Fourth, Rochester I • The New Birth _ SUNDAY SCHOOL...., .10A.M. MORNING WORSHIP.... T1 A.M _____ EVENING WORSHIP ... .7 P.M. "■"■JgggSSmSp Rev. M. Donald Carrey, Pastor MARTYR’S FAMILY—Mrs. Hector McMillan (second from left) is the widow of a missionary killed by rebels in an attack on Stanleyville in the Congo three years ago. Her two oldest sons, David, 17, and Paul, 16, were wounded in the same attack. Mrs. McMillan will speak at all services tomorrow at Calvary Baptist Church, on Pontiac Lake Road. Mr mother, Mrs. Leone Reed, and her five sons will join her in presenting a musical program at the evening worship service. EVANGELISTIC CRUSADE with Evangelist Preston Griffis Evangelist David Iverson •VBiy night at 7:30 P.M. at the FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH Sashabaw Rd., Drayton Plains • STARTING THIS SUNDAY NIGHT Missionary Family at Calvary Baptist Almost three years ago, Mrs. I Hector McMillan became a martyr’s widow. Her Canadian-born missionary husband was killed by rebels in Stanleyville in the Congo. , The couple had given 23 years of missionary s e r'v i c e in the i Congo, working under t)ie Unevangelized Fields Mission, an iinterdenominational mission board. ★ * ★ Mrs. McMillan will be the i guest speaker tomorrow at Cal-:vary Baptist Church, 3750 Pontiac Lake Road. At 9:45 a.m. jshe will address the Sunday School and at 11 a.m. the adult I congregation, telling the story of the rebel attack in which her husband was killed and her two oldest sons were wounded. At the evening service she will be joined by her mother, Mrs. Leone Reed of Mary Road, and her five sms, all of whom will assist her in the presentation of a musical program. Mrs. McMillan is a graduate Handwritten Bible Displayed at Show GOOD SHEPHERD ASSEMBLY OF GOD Leggett Elementary School on ELYRIA RD. off Pontiac Lako Rd. Watorford Township Sunday School 10:00 A.M. Clem, ter All ASm Morning Worship 11 A.M. •fVSnmg Service 7 P.M. Pastor, Ronald Cooper EM 3-0705 CHRIST of tha LAKES LUTHERAN CHURCH LC.A. 9101 Highland Rd. (M-S9) MORNING WORSHIP 8:00 a.m. 10:30 a.m. 9:15 Church School Pastor Garold Switzer Parish phono 363-3431 FIRST CHRISTIAN CHURCH Disciples of Christ 858 West Huron Street 9:30 A.M. CHURCH SCHOOL \ 10:15 A.M. WORSHIP SERVICE Rov. Lawrence C. Bobbitt Phones: Office 332-1474 Parsonage: 335-9723 Film of Christ on 'Messiah' LONDON lit- A film of the life of Christ, based on Handel’ oratorio, “Messiah,” is being made in County Dorset by an ecumenical team of actors and cameramen. Among the players are Christians of all denominations, Jews, Moslems, Hindus and Buddhists. Director is Madeline Lady Lees, an Anglican. The $28,000 cost of the movie is being met by donations. EASTSIDE CHURCH OF CHRIST 168 Prospect Street GOSPEL MEETINGS starting a SUNDAY, AUGUST 27 11 A.M. and 7:45 P.M. and NIGHTLY 7:45 P.M. (except Saturday) HEAR: EVANGELIST L. R. DURLEY Denver, Colorado v Preaching that is simple, dear, dramatic and serious. FORCEFUL AND DYNAMIC. Bring Your Bibles and Study With Us EVANGELIST L R. DURLEY BIBLE QUESTIONS WILL BE GIVEN BIBLE ANSWERS 3fig#ine now and let us reason together saith the Lord" Isaiah 1:18 A.LCarney,lecel Evangelic __________ NEW YORK — Singers, dancers, combos, baton twirlers, bands and the world’s largest handwritten Bible were displayed at the World Teen-Age; show held at Chicago’s Navy, pier recently. The Chicago Bible Society ar-j ranged the Bible display and distributed copies of the American Bible Society’s selection, ‘The Way He Taught” from Luke 4. ★ ★ A Copies were also available of the American Bible Society’! best selling paperback, “Good! News for Modern Man.” the New Testament in Today’s English Version, which is currently going at about 30,000 copies a day. Baptists Convene VALLEY FORGE, Fa. (UPI). The Division of Program Planning of the American Baptist Convention will meet here Oct. 28-30 for discussions. A 'A 1A Harold E. Stassen, former president of the American Baptist Convention, and General Secretary Edwin H. Tuller will preside over the meeting. of Pontiac Central High School. She received her religious education at Moody Bible Institute, Chicago, and Wheaton College, Wheaton, HI. Mrs. McMillan and sons Paul, John, Steve and Tim, will return to the Congo in September. All Saints Episcopal Church Williams St., at W. Pika St. THE REV. C. GEORGE WIDDIFIELD . Rector THE REV. R. CRAIG BELL, Associate 8:00 A.M. Holy Communion 10:00 AM. Morning Prayer and Sermon by the Rector. Historical Site ST. SIMONS ISLAND, Ga. (UPI) — John and Charles Wesley, f o u n d e r s of Methodism while members of the Church of England, preached in Christ Episcopal Church {isre in 1736. The original structure burned and was replaced in 1875. BETHEL TABERNACLE Fint Penecostal Church of Pontiac Sun.SchoeM0o.ni., Worship It a.m. EVANGELISTIC SERVICE Sun., To». and Thin.-7:30 P.M. Rav. and Mr*. E. Crouch IMSleHhrinRss. EE 5-4317 •AN AMERICAN BAPTIST CHURCH' BETHANY BAPTIST CHURCH West Huron at Mark Sunday, August 27, 1967 Rav. Emil Kontz, D.O.-Factor 9 A.M.—Church School ------A!! Department! 10 A.M.—Morning Worthip Sermon: "Riot and Reconciliation" — Rav. Tattie 7:30 Wednesday Evening "Church-in-the-Home" Meadow Brook Baptist Church 9:45 AM. Bible School 11 A.M. Morning Werthlp Temporarily Meeting: Meadow Brook Elementary School Castlebar and Munster Rds. ROCHESTER Spiritualist Church of the Good Samaritan 4780 HHIcrest Dr. 623-1074 Service 7 P.M. "Keep Thy Foot" Ada Henry Private Consultation Call 623-1074 FIRST SOCIAL BRETHREN CHURCH 316 Baldwin FE 4-7631 Sunday School 10:00 AM. Sun. Worship 11:00 A.M. Evening Worship 7:30 P.M. WedJfrgyer 7:00 PM. Sat. Service TrfaPJW. THE LUTHERAN CHURCH INVITES YOU THE LUTHERAN CHURCH IN AMERICA CHRIST Qsnssss utOlooduls (W. Side). Pontiac, Phono: FE 2-1 St] Sunday Church School 9:00 and 11:00 Sunday Wenhla 9:00 cad MiOO Richard C Tlmtoaiysr, Porto, peace 5S2S Highland Rd. CM-5V), PonHa. MsmtMtlt . lender Chinch tchoofPilS Phono 11UI61 Sunday Wonhip RiM and 11K Sunday Church School «:30 THE AMERICAN LUTHERAN CHURCH ■lAUTtFUL SAVIOR , Maurice G. ShodceH, Sutler Sunday Worship tri g end! 1 riX Sunday Chinch School 9,30 Donald ZiU Parts, Phono: OR 3-6631 Sunday Church School fill Sunday Woahlv MO and I0i30 S. Gain Evanton, Potto, “THE LUTHERAN HOUjT Inch Sunday WPOH 7iOS AM., CKIW 12:30 P.M, Idf.JUIn. Pc SYLVAN LAKE —>9 Plan, PanMat no: 612-0770 Sunday Church School 9:tS EMMANUEL CHMSHAN SCHOOL announces HEAD OF FRENCH DEPARTMENT SYDNEY WINGATE B.S. from Bob Jones University, Meier in secondary education. Minor in French and Social Studies. Call FE 4-0961 for Registration, Grades Kindergarten through 12, Mon. through Fri. 825 Golf Drive, Pontiac, Michigan ■■ ■ Faith Baptist Church 3411 Airport Road DAILY VACATION BOLE SCHOOL Assrrst It thru Ssyt. 1 9:00 t) 11:30 AlM. KEN & MARGE SCHMIDT MABIC and MUSIC WITH A MESSAGE Rev. Joe P. Massie, Pastor Phone 673-5400 EMMANUEL BAPTIST CHURCH . 645 S. Telegraph (Near Orchard Lake Rd.) DR. TOM MALONE, Pastor A Fundamental, Independent, Bible Believing Baptist Church BIBLE SCHOOL 10 AM. Departmentalised Sunday School for All Ages... with NO literature but tho Bible Hear Dr. Malone teach the word of God van# by vorso. in tho largo Auditorium Biblo Class, broadcast on WPON 10:15-10:45 A.M. MORNING WORSHIP SERVICE 11:00 AJVL EVANGELISTIC SERVICE 7:00 P.M. BUS SERVICE CALL FE 2-8328 DEAF CLASS and Nursery at all services JOYCE MALONE OR. TOM MALONE, him PRAYER MEETING-WED., 7:30 P.M. 7 PM. Music To, Bless Tha Heart Gospel Favorites Requested Songs .Choir Under The Direction of Joyce AAafone Organist Rose Anna Roupe THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1967 B—1 ST. BENEDICT OF MONTEFANO - The Benedictine Fathers of Detroit make* their home hi the living quarters at the right of the chapel shown here at 2711 E. Drahner, Oxford. The home and grounds of nearly 300 acres are on one of the highest elevations of Oakland County., DAIRYMAN - It’s milking time at St. Benedict of Montefano monastery near Oxford. When Lay Brother Daniel Homan of Detroit goes out to the pasture with pail in hand, the cows gather round and follow him to the barn. P MI floe Prut Photo, by RoM Wlntor The lay brothers make butter and cheese from the milk as well as whipped cream. Monks to Hold Summer Festival PRINT SHOP-The Rev. Theophilus Greg-ori, known as the Superior or Prior at St. Benedict of Montefano, does all the printing for the priests and lay brothers of the Benedictine family? He has his print shop in one of the former farm buildings. By MARY ANGLEMDER Church Editor, Pontiac Press Balloons, cotton candy, apples, aprons, pillows, stuffed animals, dolls and other handmade articles will be on sale during the annual Summer Festival at St. Benedict of Montefano, 2711 E. Drahner near Oxford tomorrow. Plans call for some 20 booths. ★ * * Open to the public, the festival will begin at noon and continue to 8 p.m. Visitors may join in' games, purchase gifts and wander over the grounds of the more than 240-acre estate. A buffet dinner consisting of roast beef, com on the cob, hot dogs and other items will be served on. the grounds. The festival will be held rain or shine. * ★ ★ St. Benedict of Montefano, Is the home of the Benedictine Fathers of Detroit, also kpown as the Sylvestrine - Benedictine Congregation. The Benedictine Fathers were founded by St Sylvester Guzzolini in the year 1231. They are a congregation or separate group of the larger family known as the Benedictine Order, founded by St. Ben- edict of Mursia, Italy, in the year 847, The Benedictine - Sylvestrine came to the United States in 1919 to administer to the Italian miners in the State of Kansas. The Fathers moved to Detroit 1929 where they built a monastery — St. Sylvester. ★ ★ ★ They helped build the parish of St. Scholastics and Benedictine High School but when the parish work became too absorbent, the priests moved the house of Noviciate and the schol-asticate to the present property in 1960. ★ if ★—I The Rev. Theophilus Gregori, O.S.B., prior of St. Benedict of Montefano, said the new location has proved to be a better spot for the education of monks. WHAT IS A MONK? And what is a monk? “A monk is a person who willingly sets himself away from the noise of the world to dedicate himself to the service of God, in an exclusive manner, for the salvation of his soul under a set of religious principles. “The Benedictine Fathers find these principles in the rule written by St. Benedict. Hie - rule, centuries old, is just as fresh and applicable to our modem society,” Prior Gregori said. ★ ★ ★ Hie motto of the Benedictine monk is “pray and work.” “The purpose of the monastic family is to live the monastic ideal as set by St. Benedict but the more pressing purpose is the active life of preaching, teaching and missionary work. TEACHERS We teach at St. Benedictine High School,; Dominican Academy, Oxford; De Paul University, Chicago; Sacred Heart Seminary, Detroit and St. John’s University, Brooklyn. “We have missionary outposts in India, Ceylon, and Australia. Most of our work is done in Italy, the original place of the Congregation.” ★ * * ‘A candidate is admitted to the monastery after a short probation called the postulancy. During this time he may attend school. He will then be admitted to one year of probation called Noviciate. During this period the monastic family carefully scrutinizes the date, and the candidate tries out the monastic life in its austerity. “The group of priests then pass judgment on the candidate for his qualities for a good monk. Philosophy and theology will follow as preparation for the priesthood. “Members who so desire may request to be sent to special places for studies. “Hiere are twb types of monks in the Benedictine Order, the monk — priest and the lay brother. “The lay brothers are individuals who enter the monastery with the idea of dedicating themselves to the monastic ideals but have no intention of becoming priests. It is their own choice. So their duties in the monastery will vary from being cook to farmer, special trained jobs to' ‘According to St. Benedict, a monk is truly a monk when he lives by the labor of his bands. The monks at Montefano try to live by these words. They constructed buildings on the premises, paneled the chapel, erected the addition to the barn. “Hie monks care for an apple orchard, cider mill, a small dairy operation, printing shop and the grounds. Even though the priests do their own work, they still not completely able to absorb all the expenses, especially the one of the education of young men tp the priesthood. 'When a candidate enters our community we provide for all expenses, so he is relived from depending on his parents said Prior Gregori. “To offset the expenses the monks rely heavily on the charity of people. For this reason the monks hold a summer festival every year. “People from near and far attend this gala occasion have fun, enjoy the beauty of the grounds, and contribute to the education of the monks.” The Sylvestrine Congregation is headed by an Abbot General with jurisdiction over all the monasteries. Each national group leader is known as Major Superior. The Rev. Livius Paoll O.S.B. at St. Sylvester Monastery, Detroit heads America. Each monastery has its own superior called prior. At Montefano, the Rev. Theophilus Gregori O.S.B. is the prior. The monks are appointed to different positions of responsibility. The master of novices trains the new candidates for a year. The master of clerics continues the training of young men from after the noviciate to their ordination to the priesthood. WORK IN ORCHARDS—Priests and lay assists young men in training for the priest- brothers spray, trim, weed and cultivate hood. Gathering apples for sale at the fes- and pick apples as they care for orchards tival are Lay Brother Joseph Friskel (right) of nearby neighbors. The work not only and an Indian worker from Western Canada. help? with expenses of the monastery but , ■ FESTIVAL BOOTH—One of the first booths erected on the grounds for the annual Summer Festival at St. Benedict of Montefano tomorrow is the apron booth. Placed on the soptfi side of the residence on the patio, the booth affords a breath-taking view of the country^de. On a clear day victors are able to see the Fisher Building in Detroit, Prim: Theophilus Gregori, said. Mary Ann (left) and Rosemary Sabanti of Lake Orion help arrange Indian gifts. 1 B—8 Jacoby on Bridge THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 ROBIN MALONE Q—The bidding has been: West North East South Dble Rdble | Pass Pass 14 24 By Bob Lubbers jVB«a3d«?N» 4am ATPRAtoue* *too... AND JVP , peCiPffD T2? CHAMSe NORTH 26 4KJ932 V82 ♦ 865 - . 4X03 2 WEST EAST 4654 4 Q 108 VKJ7 V A108 5 4 ♦ Q J 10 9 3 ♦ A K 7 4 4J7 48 SOUTH (D) < 4A7 V Q 9 3 ♦ 2 4AKQ9654 Both vulnerable North-South 40 on score West North East South 14 Pass 14 Dble 3 4 3 ♦ Pass 4 4 5 4 Dble Pass Pass Pass Opening lead—♦ Q By OSWALD & JAMES JACOBY If you ever get into an ment with your partner and the argument progresses to die point where bet is made will do ve well if you that your pa ner did soi thing wrong. If you make mistake and betl that you were! right then you JACOBY are likely to lose because most argumentative' occasions an impartial referee is likely to nlle that both partners wrong. Of course, if you bet mi degree of guilt the chances are that one partner is more guilty than the other. West opened the queen of diamonds against the contract of five clubs doubled. East played the four. West continued the suit whereupon South ruffed, cashed his ace-king of trumps and acel of spades. * * ★ Theta he led a spade to dummy’s king, ruffed a third spade, went back to dummy with the ten of clubs, discarded two hearts on the good spades and made his contract. and East should have known that diamonds would not go around twice. Therefore he should have won the diamond and led a heart. On the other hand West also should have led a heart at trick two. He could be sure that his partner would hold either the ace or queen of hearts and that a heart shift could not be wrong. Pass 3N.T, Pass You, South, hold: 4K84AJ54 ♦4224K167S What do you do now? • . A—Pass. Your partner has shown a good hand but he has not shown any slam Interest, ■o you should stop right hen. West felt that East should have won that first diamond and led back a heart. East pointed out that he had played his lowest diamond and that West should have shifted to a heart. We were asked to adjudicate and our verdict is that both partners wrong but that East was far more guilty. East had bid brilliantly and succeeded in pushing South one beyond his depth. West had made a free bid of three diamonds and doubled five clubs be turned b RRI donneybrook. Know rraence restraint. Exchange views out becoming incensed. Take It eas',. TAURUS (Aar. 20 - May 20): Obtain hint from ARIES message. Put across viewpoint without being "bossy." Make, ---------edjustments at home. Improve Make concession to family ,you could----------------- TAURUS messages. Some around you are aching for a fight. LEO (July 23 - Aug. 22): Face facts In realistic manner. Work out problem with relative. Don’t feel there Is only one wey. Realize there ere fine alternatives. Study situation. Get advice from one M - Sept. 22): If travel SCORPIO (Oct. 21 - Nov. 21); ■"S (Sept. 21 - Oct. 22): Learn by •uha- AA—.n, share knowledge, ff - -lews convincingly Know this. Act accordingly^ Accent on money, travel. • SCORPIO (Oct. 23 -*Nov. 21): Stress flexibility. Be versatile. Make d|------- les. You ere caught In dilemma ---- —1 Ultra-caution. Make move iwnwH,. It Is favorable. Ci SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 - Dec. 21): eventually, it SAGITTARIUS—,. - S*--You meke connection with pulse of public. Means your efforts are coordinated, appreciated. Be aware of .details. Get basic tasks out of way early. Shake off CM&iCORN (Dec 22 - Jan. If): Friends may act In contrary manner. Don’t compound error. Be reasonable, mature. Get thoughts. Ideas on paper. Tend to have brilliant flash, then forget. "aQUARIUS (Jon. 20 - Feb. II): Perm* logic to rule. Today Impulsive action could creole envy. Loved <** tends to feel neglected. Weigh word especially considerate of sensitive young- *’pijk:ES (Feb. It - Mar. 20):. Ind whose opinions you respect ectie ulus. Listen, loam. Get facts specific organization. Aid appears coming. But you must taka Inltlatl U IF TOMQRI&W jt YOTR BIRTHDAY i are perceptive, would marcher, doctor, nurse.'You also ■Reeled In NM!^ — educational GENERAL $ENM)fclM: Cycle high for TAURUS, GEMINI, CANCER. SpkKlJ word to SCORPIO: Perngf—- ARIES (A^tar. 21. meni of minor dispi five may act as gtK™ sages. Return calls. Don t .offend by appearing to neglect Be friendly. . TAURUS (Apr, 20 - tentlon to monetary affair*. You __ ,heGl^N nr.yr:«V: Cycle Take medal care with personal ance. Be dyti " | H CANCER (June 21 tent to be aware of L.--------JH tlvlty. Excellent day for spreading i_______ ___n-t nut. ai LEO (July 23 • Aug lunar aspect coincides . -- make new friends. Some Of your fondest wishes come cloeer to reellty. Exude tm-fimlsm. inspire others to be happy. You *vimoTSl » Tlrnefo assert yourself. Utilize Intuitive intellect. Follow through on hunch. Important people. Study GEMINI **UBRA «ad. 23 -Oct. 12): Minor J could ' ■ l credo delay communtcatloQS. Counter , this through altemotlve methods. D^^tofce^twirsoM , Live up to trod. Money due, checked. Know this facts at " *-■ Black, Forest Spa Baden-Baden, West Germany’s jewel-like spa on the edge of the Black Forest, htas been a place of healitag for at least 000 years. Passing Roman legions drank the water and bf thed in the hot mineral springs to help cure--their wounds. The Emperor Caracaila gave the Irate town its first name, Aquae ^irelibe — place ofijbegoldsn waters. TgE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 B—0 Further Cuts Seen in Foreign Aid Bill WASHINGTON (IIPD - State Department official?, deeply disturbed by the stiff cuts Congress made in the foreign aid bill, said today they fully expect the program will be trimmed even further. The White House, meadWhile, is making a complete reassessment of the situation following yesterday’s House vote to lop $563 million from the bill for the Agency for International Development (AID). The bill now goes to a Senate-House conference committee, which must iron out differences between the $2.8-billion House version and the $2.6-billion measure passed by the Senate last week. President Johnson had asked for $3.4 billion. Sjtate Department officials said they fully expect the conference committee will further reduce the House version added that when the legislation reaches the appropriation stage, the foreign aid allotment will probably be cut again. Rep. Otto Passman, chairman of the House appropriations subcommittee which reviews foreign aid requests, said he was convinced “there’s still some fat in the bill.” MM DRIVE-IN THEATRE UNION LAKE at NA00ERTY RD. EM 3-Mil - Show Start* at Dusk AS lit* S1.25 — Children Under 12 Fraa NOW SHOWING PUIS... Tony Curtis Vima Lisi George Scott A IN PANAMA PRODUCTION >•••••• •••*M*e*«fe*t<«a| Not with as Mfe. A- State Department ' official disagreed. “There really isn’t much water in the foreign aid bill this year,” he saU. “Bat of jPeop/e in the News] By The Associated Press Mrs. Elizabeth “Liz" Carpenter, press secretary to Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson, has been honored as an “outstanding woman of Texas.” . On hand last night with an estimated 1,000 persons was the First Lady and Mrs. Jobn B. Connally, wife of the Texas governor. Ceremonies at Salado, Tex., included dedication of the Col. Sterling C. Robertson home as a Texas historic landmark. Robertson was Mrs. Carpenter’s great-grandfather. In a short speech, Mrs. Carpenter referred to “the shining marker extolling my virtues,” and added: “If I were writing the marker, it would simply read: ’Here stands a happy woman, blessed by an over-indulgent family and over-enthusiastic friends.’” Coco Chanel Needn't Be Lonely Anymore Coco Chanel, the aging pillar of Paris haute couture, says her fan mall Is overflowing with invitations since an article in which she complained of loneliness. Miss Chanel said in an interview she “found life had become lonely because most of her friends had died.” Miss Chanel recently celebrated a birthday but only admits to being “in the seventies,” while the fashion world considers her estimate to be about 10 years short of the mark. Miss Chanel said that a typical letter among scores pouring in said: My honse and garden are at your entire disposal.” She said she had received birthday messages from all over the world which had given her a great spiritual uplift and sense,of satisfaction. Her latest coflection leaves for the Soviet Union by special invitation on Sept. 7. She hasn’t decided whether she will go herself. Sky's th' Limit, When You're Proposing The' sky was the limit for Steve Musich of San Francisco when it came to proposing to his girl—and the idea worked. Steve, 33, took Merry Lee Gunneson, 24, an airline hostess, on a picnic Thursday. While they munched filet mignon a small plane buzzed them repeatedly, dropping leaflets. Her curiosity aroused, Miss Gunnson climbed a knoll and caught one of the orange-colored papers. On it, in fold lettering, were the words. ‘Merry Lee, I love you. Will you marry me? Steve.” Musich said yesterday she stared at the leaflet for a few seconds then laughed for five minutes. But she said she would marry him, he reported. The unique proposal cost Musich $60 —$30 for the plane and the rest for leaflets. course, we will have to make do with what we get.” What disturbs American diplomatic officials like AID administrator William S. Gaud that the long-term interest of American diplomacy requires continuing assistance to less developed countries. They sympathize with Congress, which is disturbed over urban problems, the far-off, frustrating war in Vietnam, and taxes; but they deplore the deep cuts in foreign aid. Foreign policy-making offi-ials further complain that the ongressional aid cuts frequently undermine promises the President occasionally makes abroad, such as at the, recent inter-American summit conference at Punta del Este. The administration had requested $750 million for the. Alliance for Progress and the House version of the foreign aid bill trimmed this to $578 million. v EDDIE RYDER Start ty norman panama t uuvm frank t| NORMAN PANAMA. lARRVttlBAKT Mi PilBIlAiMCS* eoduCrinKAncMtt NORMAN PANAMA ffi TECHNICOLOR*- FROM WARNER BROS.H ML SUN. A MAN RUNNING - - OUT OF TIME ™ ..A WOMAN RUNNING OUT OF MEN I mr.......... V* COLUMBIA PICTURES Plrwant* ' GLENN FORD f STELLA STEVENS DAVID REYNOSO Kaiser Rife's x in Honolulu and Oakland HONOLULU (AP) — Memorial services are scheduled today for Henry J. Kaiser, whose bold ventures and boundless ambition built him an industrial empire. Kaiser died Thursday at the age of 85 in his Honolulu home. The funeral will be held Monday at Oakland, Calif., where he will be buried. A close friend the Rev Abraham K. Akaka, will officiate at the Honolulu services in the Ka-waiahao church of which he is pastor The minister then will fly to Oakland to assist in the services the First Congregational church where Kaiser and 'his widow, Alyce Amy Chester Kaiser, woe married in 1951. Kaiser’s body was to be flown to Oakland after the memorial service. SHARONVILLE, Ohio (AP)-Ford Motor Co. has laid oft 1,700 workers at its Sharonville, Ohio, facility, for what the company called “adjustments on the assembly line.” wnn«mi Hoffman, president of United Auto Workers Umhn Local 883, said the workers are completely baffled. 1700 Laid Off by fjjrd was naming, some of the fellows could dot do all their tasks before the transmissions moved on,” Hoffman said. “Other fellows at other stations did not have much to do. It seems that they could have dunged some assignments or slowed down the line, or something.” Hoffman said the company had sent out letters to employes, '» ft. -k * Implying some of the workers 'The way the assembly line had not done their Jobs. iiiiii urn Bw> Bnm| i. weBai—iflBjfl |---I 1 ■—,a_ ityMnesdavlz^z-} Powder Culprit in Rifle Jams? Expert Claims Change Causes Ml 6 Trouble WASHINGTON (UPI) - A ongressional small arms expert today blamed' a change in the type of gunpowder used in M16 rifle cartridges for exces sive jamming of the weapon ii Vietnam. p. Richard Ichord, DMo. who has been conducting an investigation of the rifle for the House Armed Services Committee, said it appeared the change in gunpowder had been “made without adequate testing. “In my opinion, we would not have bad the difficulty if extruded old-type powder was still in use,” Ichord said. He called for comparative tests under combat conditions of of the old and new types of powder. Both Marine and Army riflemen have complained the M16, the standard combat infantry weapon, jams too often. ★ ★ ★ The Pentagon has never conceded this to be true, but emphasizes the weapon mutt be kept dean and in good repair. MAJOR CAUSE “As indicated in the hearing, 1 believe the record sustains the conclusion that one of the major causes of excessive malfunctioning of the MCL6 rifle in Vietnam can be directly traced to the type of powder used in fee am-1 munition,” Ichord told UPI. SAVE $595 ^ MONDAY ONLY! 108 N. SAGINAW-FE 3-7114 Now RCA VICTOR SOLID STATE AUTOMATIC STEREO nfOMORAM For th* back-to-school crowd. Solid stat* design - no tubes to bum out. Precision 4-speed studia-matic changer has a new jever control system for easier opera* Regular 39.95$^8dN MONDAY ONLY -EXCLUSIVE PONTIAC SHOWING- WINNER 0F6 ACADEMY AWARDS! BEST PICTURE! AND .. BEST DIRECTOR—Fred Zinnemann BESTACTOR—Paul Scofield BEST SCREENPLAY —Robert Bolt BEST CINEMATOGRAPHY (Color) BEST COSTUME DESIGN (Color) PRICES - For This Engatement Only ■mu to KITES and Sunday $2.00 AUULTo Saturday 1:00 to 0:00, $1.20 CHILDREN under 12 $1.00 Anytime__ COLUMBIA PICTURES,™-!, FRED ZINNEMANN'S FILM OF A MAN FOR AL SEASON From the play by ROBERT BOLT SHOW STARTS WED.-THURS.-FRI.4II0N.-TUES. at 7:00 and 9:05 SATURDAY and SUNDAY at 1:0D*-3:05—5:10—Tt15—9:20~ eo-sUniig ffi-LEOM MUSH II-PAULS COflELD Sows More dHMwmr-JOin flATVTlT TVriYfin if ITT ifarioVf ExecNlive Producer Screenplay by Produced and Directed ay atWMM gkorges delerue-wiluam uxwm Starts WED., Sept. 13th "SOUND OF MUSIC" Exdusivel__________________ Starts WED., Nov- 22nd "HAWAII" Exclusive Pontiac Showing! ' COMING "THE BIBLE" Exclusive Pontiqc SHOWING! COMING "THE TAMING&SHREW" Exclusive 5SS- »—IP THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 88, 19«T Earl^Evening fire Home Fire broke out in a two-story brick home at 370 South Boulevard West Just before 6 p.m. yesterday and caused an mated $3,500 damage. City Bremen estimated damage at $2,500 to the building and $1,000 to the contents of the LeRoy Moore home which is occupied by Moore’s mother. Firemen wete s.'*nmoned at 5:55 p.m. and remained at the scene until 6:38 p.m. . Cause of the blaze which started in an upstairs bedroom , is being investigated. Service for Mrs. Teddy (Rena) E. Sarson, 73, of 748 Cortwright, will be li a.m. Monday at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home with burial at Oak Hill Cemetery. She died yesterday. Mrs. Sarson was a member of All Saints Episcopal Church. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. James Scribner of Birmingham and Mrs. Gordon Truss of Lake City; four brothers, including Harold Parker of Pontiac. Bloomfield Hills Service Station Operator Dies Bloomfield Hills service station operator Victor J. Rowland died yesterday. Service for Mr. Rowland, $0, of 8791 Maplewood, will be at 1 p.m. Monday at die Vasu-Lynch Funeral Home, Royal Oak, with burial in Lakeview Cemetery. Service for Jeffery S. Sawyer, infant son of Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Sawyer of 273 Clifford, will be 10 a.m. Monday at' the Huntopn Funeral Home, with burial in Mt. Hope Cemetery. He died yesterday. Surviving beside his parents are a brother Douglas and a sister Veronica, bothat home. Elks Lodge of Sorrow will be held at 7:90 p.m. tomorrow at the funeral home. Surviving are his wife, Irene, a son James F. of Clarkston, and three grandchildren. Assault-Robbery Blamed on Pair A man told city police he was assaulted and robb«l of $23 yesterday by a married couple to, whom he said he owed rent money. Hairy Thomas, 25, of 503 Midway said the man and his wife attacked him in front .of his home and during the 'scuffle removed the money from his pocket. Roy J. Cahill BIRMINGHAM - Service for Roy J. Cahill, 72, of 325 S. Wil-liamsbury was to be ll a.m. today at BeH Chapel of the William R; Hamilton Co., with burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mr. Cahill died Wednesday. Former president of Esterling Printing Co., he became chairman of the board of the merged corporation, Esterling Tri-craft Press Inc. of Detroit. He was a life member of the Adcraft Club of Detroit. Surviving are his wife, Hazel; a daughter, Bette L. at hope; a son, Junes W. of Bloomfield Hills; two grandchildren and three sisters. Manorial tributes may be sent to die Harper Hospital Building Fund. Thomas told police he had been evicted from his former residence and still owned bis landlord rent money. STATS OP MICHIGAN—In ths Probate Court for the County of Oakland, Juvenile Division. • . In the matter of the petition concerning Susan Sableck, minor TO Frank SablaCk. fathni Is Court .....____MRP_____________> within Via provisions of Chapter 7IIA of the I said child i .... ______,s of Chapter . Compiled Laos of IMS at a that the present whereabouts of the father of said minor child Is unknown and said child hat violated a law of Placed Court. it sew child should 1 I lurlsdlctlon of th of MJdilgen, You jrt hereby notified that the hearing on said petition will be held at the Count House, Oakland County. Service Corner. InThe City ef Pontiac In said County, on toe 7th day of September a.D. 1M7, at nine o'clock rnard. Judge of said Court, _..y of Pontiac In said County...... — day ef August A.D. 1M7. (Seal) NORMAN R, BARNARD (a true .copy) Judge tff Probate ELIZABETH A. BALLARD , Deputy Probate Regtsf" t Juvenile DM* Aug. H, 1M7 In the Matter of the Petition Concerning Roger Perdue, minor, TO Robert Perdue, nttw; of said minor MRP,—,——J of Chapter Compiled Lows of ltd at_ that the present whereabouts of ■mended, hr if the father i has violated a law a MRPMPMRRP- _________,F the State, and that said child should be continued under the lurlsdlctlon of this Court. In the Nome of the People of P“ ef. Michigan, You are hereby that the hearing on said POftmn held at ths Court House, Oakland County Service Cantor, in the City of Pontiac In said County, on the Sth day of Sw-— ir AD. 1947, at nine o'clock In the r notified in tMlf be tember A.C forenoon, j it nine u'clKk i are hereby —, • personally at said hearing. 'll Mag Impri asrvlca hereof, l..______________ shall be served by publication Of a copy one week previous to saM hearing in the Pjuntlac Proas, a newspaper printed and circulated In and County, Witness, the Honorable Norman R. Bernard, Judge of said Court, In the City of Pontiac in said County, this amt day. ef August A.D. 1M7. - (Seal) . NORMAN R. BARNARD (a true copy) 1 . Judge of Probate Juvenile wylsfin Bug. 26, 1967 •let Eng: No. August 31, I Adell St., |. 26, 2S A 29, 1967. s Ordered that on September is, room, Pontiac, MtcMgm# a hearing bo bald on the petltlon of Roberta G. Dickey to change the name ef Susan Ma--~-" Winger to Susan Margaret Dickey. NORMAN R. BARNARD Judge of Prebai-J. 36. Sept. » 9,1967 Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas Mrs. Toddy Sarson Home, Troy, with burial in Rose land Park Cemetery, Berkley. - , ■ Mrs. Krebiehl died Thursday. Survivors are a daughter, Mrs. Robert Robertson and a son, Norman L., both of Troy, and son Herbert of Highland; two sisters, including Mrs, Florence Lamb of Pontiac; one brother; 19 grandchildren and 13 greatgrandchildren. Jeffery $. Sawyer burn Heights, Robert D. of Clarkston and William R. in Indonesia; and one sister, Mrs. Michael Carey of'Auburn Heights: Richard S. Kibler PONTIAC TOWNSHIP—Richard S. Kibler, 54, of 2646 Bing-hampton, died yesterday after accident in Angola, Ind. His body trill be taken to the Harold R, Davis Funeral Home. A department manager with J. L. Hudson Co., he was a of Kirk in the Hills Church. Surviving are his wife, Dorothy, his father, Frank Kibler of Savannah, Ga., two daughters, Mrs. Frank Hulholland of Pontiac and Mrs. Charles Reiten-wal, of Bloomington, Minn., eight grandchildren, and a brother. Earl Myers PONTTAC TOWNSHIP - Earl Myers, 60, of 3085 Simmons, died yesterday. His body is at Donel-son-Johns Funeral Home. Mr. Myers was an electrician at Pontiac Motor Division and was a member of Collier Road Community Church. Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Mary Myers of Podtiac; his wife Frances; four children,; Earl E. of Pontiac Richard E. of An- Missing Boy Found in Pontiac Twp. Steven O. Ratliff WHITE LAKE TOWNSHIP -Service for Steven O. Ratliff, 13, of 301 Rustic Circle, will be 10 a.m. Monday at St. Patricks Catholic Church, with burial in Lakeside Cemetery by the Elton Blade Funeral Home. Rosary will bo said at 8 p.m. Sunday at the funeral home. He died Thursday. He was a member of the Union Lake Athletic Club, the Oxbow Boys Club, and St. Patricks Catholic Church. Surviving beside his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Odell Ratliff, are b r o t h e r s and sisters Susan, Kathy, Paulette, Janet, Marcia, John, and Thomas, all at home, grandparents Mrs. Esther Ratliff of Pontiac and Mr. and Mrs. N. L. Mohs of St. Cloud, Minn. WASHINGTON (API-Seventeen men killed in action in the Vietnam war were .listed by the Defense Department. Another died of wounds. Killed in action: ■ ARMY CALIFORNIA — PIC. Jerry I. Lung Beach. COLORADO — Spec. 4 Rodney L. Hoffman, Denver. * FLORIDA — Stiff Sgt. Eugene Flpps, South Jacksonville. _________________ktym . F. Wallace, Staten Island. OHIO W Pfc. Harvey J. Charles A. Rock TROY — Service for former resident Charles A. Rock, 67, Sage Township, will be at 1 p.m. Monday at the Price Funeral Home. Burial will be In the White Chapel Memorial Cemetery. ‘ 1 Mr. Rock, a retired electrician for the Chrysler Carp., Plymouth Division, Detroit, died Thursday. He was a member of the Gladwin Sportsmen’s Club, Gladwin. Surviving besides his Wife, Helen, are a daughter, Mrs. Arthur Wilson of Clawson; two sons, ftobert R. of Trby and Charles W. of Royal Oak; 13 grandchildren; and three greatgrandchildren. Mrs. Dan H, Smith 17 Americans Killed in War City police are investigating a break-in reported yesterday at Franklin Elementary School, 661 Franklin Road, in which vandalism occurred. It was not determined what was missing. MIHOURI—t«t Lt. Ronald P. Winter*. NEW YORK—Capt. David A. fij fl— L. Li Stutt Sgt. J - Spec. Police said the vandals broke the door glass to enter the building then ransacked drawers and cabinets and scattered frozen meats and foods on the kitchen floor. PENNSYLVANIA—Pvt. Earl W. Long, Ruffs DM*. TENNESSEE — Spec. 4 Patterson, Oliver Springs. MARINE CORPS HAWAII—Staff Sgt. Bugsns INDIANA—Lanca Cpt. Mark R. Black. MISSOURI - Cpt. John A. Campbell, lussellvllle. OHIO T Lanca CpI. Kenneth W. Swafford, Cincinnati. PENNSYLVANI A—Pfc. Alan R. Schultz, ' evl ttown. WISCONSIN — Lanca CpI. Thomas J. Died of wounds: AIR force j ALABAMA — Airman l.C. Jarrt Breaks, KSliyfon. Missing to dead—hostile: ARMY GEORGIA—Capt. Robert A. Thompson, Llncolnton. ILLINOIS — WO Francis A. Rot Pane. INDIANA — Sgt. Ronnls M. S Kokomo. Missing as a result of hostile action: v * ARMY Spec. 4 Joseph W. Cruz. Died not as a result of hostile action: MARINB CORPS SOUTH CAROLINA - Staff Sgt. Erskln D. Livingston, Swansea. Missing to dead—nonhostile: ARMY ARIZONA. J- Spec. 4 Randall L. Me- VIRGINIA — Sgt. Henry B. 65 Tiros Reported Taken in Break-In Mrs. John H. dayman DAVISBURG - Service for Mrs. John H. (Maude O.) dayman, 71, of 3731 Navarra, will be f r o in the Lattin - Dugan & Chambers Funeral Home, Fremont, Neb., with burial fa Fon-tanelle Cemetery, Fontanelle, Nebraska. W\ Her body Is at the Vooriiees Siple Funeral Home. She died May. . Mrs. dayman was a practical Surviving are sons Robert Ochse of Salem, Oregon, Ramon Waterman Of Beliefoun-taine, O., a daughter, Mrs. Mina Book of Davisburg, a sister, and eight grandchildren. Mrs. Pefer Krebiehl TROY — Service for Mrs. Peter (Mary A.) Krebiehl, 73, of 3378 Alpine, will be 3 p.m. Monday at Price Funeral American Weekly NEW YORK (AP) American Stock Exchsngs trading for ths w (hds.) High Lsw Lost Chg. AsrolStG .508 56 29 28 28'A —iZfc AlsxMag .109 70 *146 494k 514k +146 AmPstro .350 (0 ISM 15 MW | ArkLGss 1J0 224 3944 39 3914 Asumors Oil 133 516 411-16 446 AssdOII A G 3046 4*. 31k 3Vk AtlasCdrp wt 729 34h 3Vk 31k Bsrnts Eng 45 324k 364k 314k fmiju& i soo in* low low frit Pot .49g 20 flkIMO sik Csmpbl Chib 729 146 Con So Pot 495 2 5-16 2V62W6 1J6 2 SSeTsS*1 X 171 3046 371k 3716+ 16 Dots Cont ffi ml m 1SH— V- EquItyCp ,16t 666. * 446 446 — Nrgu CHIS 527 4 7-16 3 13-16 34k —1 «,( ,5 ny, ||U ., ■■ fi. 143 2746 3514 2Hk -4l 4061 % 746 0 + • SuHRusrc % HoornorW .13 IE=“ Mfg MB sram Carp Calser Ind MCwy.'Wt' MeadJohn .48 «s.-,#° t 62V6 43 ’ RIC Group Scurry Rain Signal OIIA Sperry R v Stath— ■— HI 144k ■ IWk , . 3 74k .Hi - iw — 46 1416 3514 304k 344k +346 m 714 W Stl 367 S11« 414k 48tk 154 113 1061k 1001k “* » m- 925 4Hk 4046 424k +316 llfl 38 jSS 3446 ^ W 1915 IW 1346 1416 — 46 ______ raBiWr*' Syntax Ce .40 1041 WW ffik JtVJ if ^ § ft I WEEKLY AMRRKAN STOCK SALES Total for weak ............. IKi!'!?? Weak ago ................. 15'ffHJI YMr tOO 10*618,503 ■ M i re dato ............ ffi'iH'Si ■66 to dato .......... •• *4.370,255 WEEKLY AMERICAN BONO SALES Total for weak ............ S'!??# Week ago ................... Year ago .............63.907,00 Total I WRRtaY NY STOCK SALES Sparks-Griffin FUNERAL HOME “Thoughtful Service” M Williams St Phone fB M» MILFORD — Service ter Mrs. Dan H. (Frances) Smith, 90, of A 2-year-old boy reported missing from Detroit was found unharmed yesterday afternoon at the Rochester Town House Apartments In Pontiac Township. Bill Slater of 3093 Elstead told deputies he found tiie boy at about 5 p.m. The boy was taken to the sheriff’s department and later identified as Gabriel Ma-giera. His parents then were notified. Detroit police consider the case a probable kidnaping. Their Investigation is continuing. 804 Atlantic, will be 1 p.m. Monday at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home in Milford with burial at Oakgrove Cemetery, Milford. Mrs. Smith died today. She was a member of the Milford Library Club. Surviving is her husband, Dan; one son,.Robert of Milford; and four grandchildren. The boy was reported missing at 3:16 p.m. yesterday by his mother, Mrs. Patricia Magiera who said she last saw the boy at 1:30 p.m. Thieves Plunder Shelby Twp. Bar Charles Walker, 76, of 4056 Mill will be 1:30 p.m. Monday at Pilgrim Holiness Church. Burial will be In the Novesta Cemetery near Cass (Sty by Muir Brothers Funeral Home, Mr. Walker died today. Surviving are his wife, Edna; son, Lawrence of Lum; a daughter, Mrs. Vemita, Slating Leonard; and a brother, Ray of Marlette. A change box was rifled and a pool table damaged, two cartons of cigarettes and seven cases of beer reported taken from the Broadway Bar, 49440 Ryan, Shelby Tbwnship yesterday morning. Shelby police say entry was gained through a broken window in the building. The theft was reported by Zygmund Perkowski, owner. teacher Contract to Be Discussed The Clarkston Education Association has scheduled a meet- 559 3016 276k _294k + 4k, . „ , _ .14 !ZB 1L. !?,, - jj tag for all teachers at 7:30 p.m„ Tuesday, to discuss the proposed master agreement and,the opening of school, Carolyn Mos-chairman of the CEA negotiating team announced today. The meeting will be held at the Clarkston High School, ■ Middle Lake Road. Sixty - five automobile tires, valued at $975, were reported stolen yesterday in a break-in at the King Tire Co. warehouse at 240 Baldwin. The burglar gained entry by shoving a door with his foH according to police. Vandals Ransack Franklin School Merchants Get CheckWarning Rochester merchants ha vs been warned to ibe on the lookout for forged checks passed on tiie fictitious account of Custom ppofb Finishers, 12922 East Jefferson, Detroit. At least four local merchants have reported to Dei. William Woehl that they have been taken in by the checks. Eash was for $85 and in each instance the checks were used to pay for merchandise purchased from the store. Prisoner May Be Theft Link State Police arrested a Detroit map early this morning who believe Is a suspect in a Detroit robbery. i Carl Praitt, 42, of Detroit, was arrested on 1-75 in Independence Township for carrying a concealed weapon, driving a stolen car and drunken driving. Bail has not been set. State Police said that they believe he is a robbery suspect but could give no further details. 10 Ways to Save Money .. Deal only with firms whose dependability can be established by Intelligent inquiry, n represents the company he claims to represent. 2. Be sure the I News in Brief Charlns Walker DRYDEN — Service for. Irma G. Stovall of 449 Howard McNeil reported to city police yesterday the larcoiy from her home of clothing valued at $171: John A. White HIGHLAND TOWNSHIP Service for John A. White, 73, of 3014 Cloverdale, will be 3 p.m. Monday at Richardson-Bird Fu-sral Home in Milford. Mr. White, a retired Navy officer, died Thursday. Surviving are his wife, Ellen; two sons, Kenneth of Detroit anti Ralph of Roseville; and six grandchildren. Frank S. Witzmqn TROY — Service for Frank C. Witzman, 57, of 1965 Bricb-wood,, will be 1 p.m. Tuesday at Price Funeral Home, Troy, with burial in Oakview Cemetery, Royal Oak. Mr. Witzman, a pressman for Avrill Press in Birmingham, died yesterday. Surviving ^'are his wife, Vera; two daughters, Mrs. George MacKinnon of Troy and Mrz. Harold Campbell of Washington; two sisters; two brothers, including Peter Witzman of Troy ; eight grandchildren; one greatgrandchild. Reflections AS THE TWIG IS BENT Many of us look forward with anticipation to the weekend.#This is a day of _______________ rest, bo alarm to ring, no clock to punch, VOORHEES nothing but sleep, rest and relaxation. This weekend don’t tend your children to church, take them! Hds is tha-fiMat thing yon can do to give your child the moral and spiritual strength that will develop them into upright men and women of tomorrow.' Attend the church of your choke, but do attend. VOORHEES-SIPLE FUNERAL HOME 268 North Perry Street Phone FB2-S378 Kail Rink now barbering at Burt'Hollands, cor. of Pontiac Rd. and Opdyke. —Adv. Don’t sign papers before you understand the terms and conditions of theaale. Before you sign, be sure that the name and address of ths firm la printed on the contract. If promises are made.’verbally, be sore that they are represented in substance in the contract. Retain a copy of the contract. When you ate satisfied that the job is completed, only then should you sign a completion certificate. Pay your bill by cheek or money order made-out to firm. Don’t pay cash { to a salesman unless you get a bonafide receipt bearing the name of the company he represents. Compare price quotations with those of other firms. Beware of inferences that because a loan ia Insured by a Government agency the agency guarantees material and workmanship. BUSINESS ETHICS BOARD! of the Pontiac Area Chamber of Commerce 33 W. Huron 335-6148 j OPEN SUNDAY! $ 80,000°° FLOOR SAMPLE E ($[[ Samples o»& Qtfarefiouse Siock OccasionaC (Pfiatrs*^ecliners ftw§eais'Occastottaf ‘fcahte SampS'tySdti&uAures Semrs'cBarref cFurni^ure S’iatwiRa, i^mtps*S)rtj§tR&5 OifOTtatings cMcLnu^a/^ 4405 Highland Rd. Cornar Pontiac Lake Rd. Open Daily 'til 9 PJW. Phon* 674-2251 tamss ArreugsV-SO Days Cush OPEN SUNDAY 1T06PJA Kansas THE PONTIAC PRESS PMtibc Praii PlwtM by IUM Wlnlar Drop Crystal And Brass Chandelier Lights Formal Dining Area Avocado Green Carpeting And Grecian Green Walls Establish Background Theme In Italian Provincial Uving Room Real Happiness Is Retirement ByJODYHEADLEE Home Editor, The Pontiac Press Retirement doesn’t frighten the Raymond Jacobsons of Coventry Drive, Waterford Township. They’re taking it in their stride, grateful for the extra hours to enjoy their two grandchildren, Stacy, 3, and Jimmy, 1, travel and do the extra hundred and one things that are frequently put off until “we have more time.” One of the major projects tackled, the building of their new' home, is in its final stage with only the finishing of the basement recreation area remaining. Assisted by decorators at Thomas Furniture, the Jacobsons favored a Southern Mediterranean theme throughout the home’s interior with family pieces and antiques providing accents. , The L-shaped living and dining room is painted in Grecian green with the draperies repeating the same color in a muted tone and the carpeting in an avocado green to create a complementary and refreshing background for the rich fruitwood pieces. Across from the gold-on-gold patterned sofa is the ere-, denza grouping including a chair covered in wide-wale gold corduroy and the cherry-topped antiqued white cre-denza. A hanging lamp with avocado glass panels lights the grouping and balances the Italian water scene above the piece. Hie ivory sphere resting on a pedestal on the credenza’s top is actually seven intricately carved bails created from a solid block of ivory. It was sent to the Jacobsons by their son Ken who is stationed in Vietnam. Tom Adams otdflioa Lake created the handsome cherry grandfather’s (crock which dominates the entrance hall. ★ ★ ★ Mrs. Jacobson selected antique white carpeting and walls as d neutral background for the master bedroom. Coordinated draperies and a quilted bedspread of muted orange, gold and green' on pale yellow introduce the room’s color interest. The Victorian walnut framed chair is covered in an avocado crushed velvet. Mrs. Jacobdon Cooks Breakfast For Visitors Jimmy And Stacy Brass-Framed Portrait Of Mrs. Jacobson As A Child With Her Family Displayed On Fruitwood Chest C—2 THE PdQNTIAC. PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1267 Colonials—Ranch Homes—Bi-Levels Under Construction in tlie LAKE ANGELUS, LAKE VIEW ESTATES MODEL OPEN 2 to 5 P.M. Sunday; Daily by Appointment 2850 Costa Mesa Ct. Here ii a beautiful Ranch Home with three large bedrooms, One-and-a-half baths, Full basement, attached plastered garage and has many custom features throughout for easy family liv-lug. *25,950 I^CLtlbifVG BASE LAKE PRIVILEGE LOT DIRECTIONS: Walton Bird, to Clintonrille Road to Angelus Road to Lake Angelus Lakeview Estates. Other homes are now being built and are nearing completion. Trade your old house today. ALL TYPES OF MORTGAGES AND FINANCING AVAILABLE INCLUDING 10% M.G.I.C. “We Trade, Too “Built OiuL-SoUrbij: KAMPSEN REALTY AND BUILDING CO. 334-0921 1071W. HURON 0 PONTIAC' 8 Z-3 STATISTICS , \ Design Z-3, a one-story' Colonial, has a living room, dining room, family room, kitchen, foyer, three baths and a service area, with total habitable space of 1944 square feet. 11100 is an inset porch, i two-car garage and an optional pool. Over-all dimensions, , including the garage and porch, are 85* 6” by 39’ 3”. The bouse has an unusual amount of storage space for a structure in which all the rooms are on one floor. , Association Gives Helpful Reminders Stay on the ball with color! Before you begin to repaint, remember these helpful reminders from the National Paint, Varnish and Lacquer Association. Light colors' add space to a cramped room and dark colors minimize a large le. If your ceiling seems out of reach, bring it closer to you with a color darker than the walls. In a monotonous square room, a deeper color on one wall will appear to change the shape. ★ * ★ Don’t forget that color may look different in natural and artificial light, so study it care-ftiUy before plunging in. Too many colors in one room are bewildering, but using only neutral tones gives a dull effect. So mix and match with a critical eye. Use only non-rusting nails for yard structures. l?9 ON YOUR LOT WE WILL BUILD ANYWHERE IN SOUTH-EASTERN MICHIGAN; LAKE, CANAL AND OTHER LOTS AVAILABLE. ON OUR LOT — "For IAm* «wm who really eon. Haiti leveli thatelmy, tplit-leveU that swing.” Beamed studio ceilings LR Built-ins and Dishwasher 2V2 Baths 2-Car Garage RUSTIC and CALIFORNIA STYLED Ranches, Colonials, Split-Levels Chalets, Contemporaries and Multi-Levels $14,500 to $45,000 Carpeting 13'x30' Activities Room Insulated Windows and Screens Clarkston Schools ‘TIMBERLINE” ON THE LAKES HOMES • CUSTOM DESIGNED TO YOUR NEEDS-HILLSIDE AND SLOPING LOT SPECIALISTS Models Open I to 8 Sot, and Sun. Spanish Split Level.?. 124,500 (complete) Timberline Homes, Inc. OR SEE YOUR REAL ESTATE BROKER 861-7459 HOMEY COLONIAL—Pleasant line* of this one-story Colonial exude friendliness and warmth typical of old-time homes of this type. Inside, modernity takes over, with open planning and other features in demand in this day a age plus an nnmmai rear porch enclosed 'on three sides. Modified Colonial Has Unusual Porch A modified UU” plan permits the rear of this one - story colonial to be used for easy living. By placing a porch 35’ long inside die “U”, so that it is enclosed on three sides, architect Rudolph A. Matem has provided an outdoor relaxing' and dining area with built-in privacy The porch, at the rear of the house, is accessible from the family room through sliding glass doors. A window ia the breakfast section of t h e kitchen and two others over the sink afford an open view ef the other end of the porch. For families that wish to include a swimming pool hi the area, the porch affords an ideal place to view the water play or for the swimmers themselves to rest. In either case, the big plus is the privacy that the location of the porch insures. ★ • * .★ The family room has a fireplace utilizing the same chimney as the fireplace in the living room. The latter room is sunken and offers a view of the street through the housed window at the front of the house. DININGROOM To die left of the living room i9 the dining room, also accessible from the kitchen. It has a built-in dish closet. The front eatraaee is weather-protected by a two-foot recess and the roof that extends beyond. A somewhat formal foyer has splayed corners for an interesting octagon shape. From here, traffic is efficiently split to the three main areas of die home — the formal, informal and bedroom sections. A full bathroom, ia located just around .the guest closet and can serve as a guest powder room. The water closet is recessed out of the way of other facilities. It ★ Down the bedroom hail is the second of three bathrooms in the house, located In die master bedroom. Ail three bedrooms have ample closet space, with the master room having a double set of closets- There is ac- cess from this main bedroom to the rear porch. N o 1 s o Infiltration between the bedroom wing and the rest of the house, always a problem when all the rooms are on one fleer, is held to a minimum by the sound buffers of closets and baths specifically located for this back from the front part of the bouse. While the floor plans show a pool atdhe rear, off the porch, it is an optional feature. Pool or no pool, that long porch, carefully set within the house structure itself on three aides, is ah inviting asset to this house. The service end of the home, at the rear Jdght, is well-equipped, with w space utilized to the utmost. Within a very compact area are the following: outdoor storage, garage storage, hath with shower at rear door (especially good for pool use), hall storage, doors to outdoors, door to garage,' miscellaneous storage, stair to basement, the laundry and the door to the kitchen. ★ ; Or * This service core keeps all facilities out of but very dose at hand to die kitchen. The exterior, generally colonial, combines stone veneer with boards and battens. There is a copper roof over the bow window. The two car garage is set How to Build, Buy or Sell Your Home Full study plan information on this architect-designed House of the Week ia included in a 50-cent baby blueprint. With it in hand you can obtain a contractor’s estimate. You can order also, for 81, a booklet called YOUR HOME—How to Build* Buy or Sell it. Included in it are small reproductions of 13 of the most popular House of the Week issues. Send orders to House Plans, The Pontiac Press, P. 0. Box 8, Pontiac, Michigan 48056 Enclosed is 58 cents for baby blueprint on TA n j Enclosed is fl for YOUR HOME booklet Q Name .................................. Street ....................................... City.......................... Stats ......... ! . • . FLOOR PLANS—There are many extras in this house in the way of design, not the least of which is the manner in which the family room-kitchen combination', 35’ long, and tha inset porch, also 35’, complement each other and provide a maximum of informal living. irs MONEY OUT OF YOUR POCKET SO WHY NOT ASK A SPECIALIST? Manning to REMODEL YOUR HOME . *. build cm addition or panel a den? * Soled your financing carefully • * . the choice is yours to make... insist on reading the contrad... know that you. are paying the lowest possible rate ... know what is best for you in terms you cani clearly understand. ASK A SPECIALIST IN HOME REMODELWfi LOANS ... ASK FIRST FEDERAL SAVINGS of OAKLAND Stop la or Phone FE 3-7071 for quick service without red tape 781 W. HURON STREET Pontiao-Drayton Plains-Rochestar-Clarkston-Milford-Walled Laka-Laka HOW MANY COATS? When painting, don’t make the mistake of ‘overdressing” a surface with too many coats. For the original paint job, most surfaces require a primer plus two finish coats. ★ ★ ★ Although two coats are usually necessary when repainting Don't Overcoat Painted Surfaces over old, very thin paint, one coat is often sufficient when repainting a surface in gdod condition. , - ,,, Be sure to read the manufacturer’s directions and heed his suggestions. Timber growth in the U.S. exceeds timber cut by one third. Don't Move .. v IMPROVE! BUILD NOW-AVOlD THE RUSH Custom Bulk I kitchens! Lews* *4«, P.rWtsk Everything ill Remodeling. . KITCHENS • DORMERS • FAMILY ROOMS RK ROOMS • REMODEL BASIAAENTS ROOFING • EAVESTROUGHING • CEMENT WORK ALL TYPE WINDOW REPLACEMENTS S10RAA WINDOWS • AWNINGS • SCREENED-IN PATIOS POUCH ENCLOSURES • GARAGES • SATHROOMS ALUMINUM AND VINYL SlblNO | FREE ESTIMATES Ofeefion . ffonstrudion 0b. I 1032 W. Huron Stroot „ - NIGHTS 8r SUNDAYS PHONES FE 4-2597 682-0648 HA 4-1091 .JOmlLSSSL qmMSm ttanMee im Me4rn0m*hm MY 3-131S THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 C—8 Perfect for Relaxation, Privacy Tiny Deck Creates Charming Retreat When most people plan anew|space, sensible access to theistop and sit a while in sun or rouse happens to be the din* | come a favorite place at patio or deck, they considergarden from that corner of the shade. lag room, you get a bonus, generous size of prime impor-lhouse—Plus & delightful spot to] If one of the adjoining for the depk will quickly be* tance. And it is grand to have a good, big outdoor living area. Yet, t^ere is a definite place for the small deck, too. It’s often the perfect answer to providing an outdoor annex for one specific room of the house, or it may prove to be just the right way to develop a forlorn corner —one that doesn’t do much for either the house or the yard. * ,* * For example, many older homes have a small, projecting wing that houses a den or li-brary. Outside, the ell formed . where wing and main house join can be a “nothing” nook — not good garden space and not very 'useful or attractive otherwise. ★ ★ ★ But tuck a small, floor.level deck into this nook, install French doors, if there are none, opening to the deck from adjoining rooms, include broad steps connecting deck to garden, and the whole picture changes. PLEASANT RETREAT GOOD MORNING - Tiny deck built into Suddenly, there’s communica- ell of the house is sun trap in early morning, lion between indoors and out- but shady all afternoon. With access from doOrs, a good flow of usable dining room, it’s, a favorite spot for family meals, as well as for lounging and entertaining. Deck boards are weathered Douglas fir 2x4s on edge. Choosing a deck for this type of corner is logical, since it can be easily built to the devel of interior floors. That’s important because people more consistently use a floor-level deck than a patio built just two steps lower, on a level with the yard. ★ ★ ★ Relating the deck to the garden scene is a simple matter, however. First, let Douglas Or deck boards weather naturally. That blends the structure attractively with garden hues and eliminates refinishing, too. A simple railing run along the edge can be stained or painted to match the house. * * * Then plant spring-flowering evergreens at the base of the deck. Try for a feeling of mass here, but choose shrubs with an ultimate height of not more than three feet to prevent on overgrowth look in future years. Combining some ground-hug-gers with 3-foot shrubs is a good plan. ★ * * If there's an existing tree in the corner, just jog the deck around it. One or two trees will add lively interest while keeping the area shaded for summertime enjoyment. Paint Bathroom With Semigloss Surprise your summer guests with new color on your bathroom walls. To add new beauty and protection, try a semigloss enamel or another moisture resistant paint. ★ * * Laundry hampers and wooden bathroom accessories can be painted in a matching shade or accentuated in a contrasting color. Broom Closets It will be easy to keep your broom closet bright and clean if you surface the inside with ceramic tile. Alt you’ll have to do is take a damp cloth to it occasionally. Ladder Safety Tips for the Handpan Before you set up your step-ladder for a top level painting job, consider a few safety tips: • Make sure the stepladder is fully spread and locked into position before you start to climb. * * * Don’t let anyone climb part way up to hand you things — two’s a crowd on a ladder. • Don’t stand any higher on a ladder than you can brace your legs comfortably — and never attempt to stand on the top rung or shelf! Gold-on-white washable Mar-lite murals provide distinctive scenic effects that make any room look “custom decorated.” Traditional Paneling Proves Adaptable Traditional wood paneling which has graced Colonial and Georgian homes for centuries is being used with equal success in the newest contemporary designs, underscoring the fact that it is hard to go wrong with wood paneling regardless of the style or period of furniture that suits you. nut, and oak, says its panelings are being used with every ceivable type of decor and that decorators are now using it in more rooms than ever before. Weyerhaeuser Company, Tacoma, Washington, which manufactures more than 50 styles of paneling ranging from exotic teaks and rosewoods to American woods such as birch, wal- There are colors to suit everyone and perhaps the nicest thing about paneling is that no one else has exactly the same paneling. For one of its great charms is that nature long ago decreed that no two trees would ever be exactly alike. The grain of every piece of paneling is therefore slightly different from every other piece. GOOD INVESTMENT What isn’t often realized when wood paneling is bought is that 11 it is a wise investment, too. m It adds to the value of your house and does away with the need to redecorate the walls when you change your furniture. As anyone knows who has papered and repapered or has had to paint every three or four years, those jobs are not only long and arduous but expensive Paneling needs to be installed only once and it lasts and lasts, actually mellows and becomes more beautiful with age. Growing Parts i of Tree Listed J The growing parts of a tree are the buds, root tips and cambium layer, located directly beneath the protective bark cov-> ering. ★ ★ ★ The tree breathes mainly through its leaves and feeds through its roots. NO DOWN PAYMENT to qualified veterans; just closing costs moves you into this spacious family home. New gas furnace, wall to wall carpeting and priced for quick sale. Just closing costs moves you in. Auburn Ave. to Paddock, left to property. Yoyr host, Jim Parshall. Open Sunday 2 to 5 P.M. OPEN SUNDAY, 2-5 P.M. 6591 OAKRIDGE, lots of room for the children to play on this large 250 ft. wide lot with lake privileges. Lotus Lake. 4 bedrooms, gas hot water heat, aluminum siding and convenient to schools. Wonderful surburban family home already approved by mortgage company, and budget priced with as little as $2850 down plus c6sts. M-59 to Airport Rd., right to Williams Lake Rd., left to Percy King, right to Parker, left to Oakridge. Your host Web Grimes. 90% Mortgages Available ROCHESTER BATEI1ARI BBAITIf UNION LAKE branch BATEMAN REALTY branch OL 1-8518 377 S. TELEGRAPH FE 8-7161 EM 3-4171 Special Tile Units In addition to flat ceramic tiles, domestic manufacturers “trim” units, | with which you can turn corners and round off edges. These “trim” units are available in colors to match or set off your tile installation. VERSATILE — Across the country, wood paneling — designed to fit any decor, any home style — is getting wide attention by decorators and home owners who like the warm, cozy atmosphere only this genuine product from the forests can provide. Weyerhaeuser Company, Tacoma, Wash., manufac- tures more than 50 styles of paneling ranging from exotic t$aks and rosewoods to American birch, walnut and oak. Besides being attractive, paneling has become a wise investment because it adds to the value of a home while eliminating the need to redecorate wails when furniture is changed. CASS LAKE FRONT Lata 12 thru 23 plus approximately 20 acras. High at rear slepas la Can Laka. Wooded. Excellent beach. MAX BROOCK, INC. 300 S. Woodward OPEN SUNDAY 2 TO 5 OPEN DAILY 2 TO 8 NEW BRICK RANCH with 12-ft. slate foyer, large 12%xl9 paneled family room with full Wall brick fireplace. Hotpoint oven \a rid range, 1 % ceramic baths with double bowls in main bath. 3H M-SV (H0B0H) Hornet Start at $15,550 Pfusiat 1Buy Direct from Beauty-Rite and Save” 1- Beauty-Rife homes FOR INFORMATION PRONE 674-3136 THE PONTIAC PRESS- SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 C—5 NOW RENTING on a narrow neck of land connecting two of Michigan’s loveliest inland lakes, where the water is clear and filled with fish, a beautiful new community of luxurious apartments is now accepting a Jimited number of applications for occupancy. Sylvan on the Lakes LUXURY APARTMENTS 1 and 2 bedroom apartments with large living room, separate dining area, extra storage space. Air-conditioning, private beach, and parking area included. . 1 Bedroom Apartments — $152 monthly 2 Bedroom Apartments — $177 monthly Sylvan on the Lakes is on Cass Lake Rd. between Cass & Sylvan Lakes just north of Keego Harbor OPEN FOR INSPECTION: Sat., Sun., Noon to 6 p.m. Daily,*5 p.m. to 8 p.m. Closed Wednesday PHONE: 682-4480 On Ugliness Tiled Cabinets NOW LEASING Retail Stare and Office Spaces TOWl* SHOPPING CINTIR Highland Rd. at Airport Rd. ,XZXL BR 3-1400 LANDSQAPING TOWN S, COUNTRY GARDEN CENTER 5812 Highland (M59) OR 3-7147 ! Lay Barlf Side | Down on Deck ; When laying deck boards flat, | be sure to nail the boards with their bark side up — annular rings turning down, ★ ■ * t Check the curve of the annular rings at the end of each deck board. This prevents cupping. GOLF m£- SWI/vV and FISH right off your doorstep NOW BEFORE SCHOOL STARTS URBAN RENEWAL PLANNERS hope that Boston’s department store area will look like this before long. This is in the same vein of “creative design” as that advocated by Robert L. Durham, new president of the American Institute of Architects. Golf course close-by nearing completion, 8-10 miles of fishing and boating on^ 3 lakes, beach and boat marina, City conveniences in natural rustic beauty of Lakeland Estates. Shop--ping centers, churches and excellent school system. Garage Provides Expansion Room Closets Needed Reveals Survey Extra Closets are the No* 1 for room to expaud?jneed of U.S. households, even to the garagej; that’s! after moving into a new house, flfpi of the work I a nationwide survey revealed. Remember that when you plan or look fix* your new home. KMT CARPttf shampooerYl easy! CLEAN RUIS 1* AF00TI BUY, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! hether it’s a little-used one-garage or a half-empty two-1 gnragp you want to turii a family room, guest room] hobby shop, remember that Hire quality building are used and having experts do the work will in-the value of the remodel-j job. ★ ★ ★ Durable ceramic tile, for ex-! ample, is a high-quality surfac-! material that can be used; the floor and walls of your! no matter! som is to be; And real tile is available' DTS, designs, sizes and which cab be' used in j by decorating scheme. ♦ * V A tile contractor is the best; man to see about putting in a tile installation. He’ll follow the j recommended procedures which! will assure you of a lifetime of! trouble-free wear. ROCHESTER’S MOST LIVEABLE APARTMENTS 2nd SECTION FEATURING li2 BEDROOMS • Swan* Pool t Community Mg. YOUR LOW MONTHLY RBfTAL INCLUDES Shoreline Blvd., Lakeland Estates LAKE RANCH. Ready by Sept. 1 st. Buy now and complete to taste. 740 sq. ft. walkout family room, format dining room, fully carpeted. Potential 5 bedrooms, 21/2 baths. $33,990. $3,400 down plus closing costs. Also 2,015 sq, ft; tri-level, $29,900 inc. lot. $3,000 down including dosing: costs. WATKINS HILLS Unique Tri-level, studio ceilings, I Vi baths, walkout family room, split rock. fireplace, 3 upstairs bedrooms, Mr.-Mrs. closets. Total price $26,800. $2,700 down plus closing costs. Lorena at TernesS. Coll 623,06/851®/ 'I-8 p rajs s^own by flppo iVr’ent-j OSS OPEN Daily and Sunday HOMES INC. Seattle Architect Wages War ROBERT DURHAM '... important to change our attitudes . ..’ nent, essentia! for everyone to be in tile-on the early stages of planning. “The reality of a population explosion is here and it is time! to stop highways from creating chaos in our cities because of a! basic lack of design from the j time a road is thought of until it winds its way out of or around I a city.” Highways are a major bugaboo and Durham says, “We have yet to„do a completely at-! tractive highway through a community.” “We are not interested in jnst planting petunias along a highway or street. A road dictates commercial buildings and housing in a town. That’s why it is important to change our attitudes in city planning.” ' A paradox Durham throws out for the financiers and moneylenders to consider is that Put an end to the kitchen chore of changing the shelf paper in cabinets. Line cabinets— shelves and alL — with perma- easily cleaned ceramic s cannot afford 0 acres a day do- GET TWO ESTIMATES THEN CALL US! • BRICK • BLOCK • FRAME 24 HOUR PHONE SERVICE Buy from owner- no laleimen. Every former Dixie customer will recommend ui very highly. Make ui prove it. Personal owner's supervision on your job from start to completion. No subcontractors, wo have our own crows. Wo build all style garages in Pontiac and suburbs. 5 year guarantee on all jobs. No money down. First payment in Nov. Up to 7 years to pay. DIXIE GARAGE CONSTRUCTION CO. Between Crescent Lake and Airport Rds. -5144 HIGHLAND RD.-LI 1-4476 (Call Collect) By AILEEN SNODDY Newspaper Enterprise Assn. SEATTLE, Wash. - Bob Durham wears conservative suits that the hippy New Yorker equates with Squaresville. ! His neat haircut would make |Ringo Starr smash the mirror of his medicine cabinet. In LSD sugarcube circles Durham couldn't even make the ground crew for a “trip.” Yet his softly spoken ideas of what this country should do about urban ngliness crack louder than any picket line chant. j Robert L. Durham is the new president of the American Institute of Architects. He moves | into the job at a vital time for professionals, since architects suddenly realize it is time to stop talking to each other and explain their jobs to th% pliblic. As a result, the association ... ... ... . . this year is waging its own|beS“1Iung wth l.he thl™ Pa“ chUrCh congregations with! “war on ugliness ” iPupd, to recognize quality and;sma|| building budgets ask for; . tv. l « to spark an interest in good de- < rrPative Hesicrn ” In this vein Durham feels: . creative design. • We are building more ugli-s ,, . ..- . . _ * * ’ * • , | ness now ’than we tear down. *11 ,s sa,d titag w,e Pul1 J*6! StyM ar* aware- J^ham! election machine lever for | says after desigmng hundreds something cheaper, not better, of churches, “of what the In-for the community. terior means to what it can! ★ ★ * produce. Congregations recog-j • The 2,000 architects coming inize that old, moldy rooms don’t ; out of college should be more!produce ideas.” like the old family doctor inj Much of our bad design in | their relationship to the public. {home developments and high-i It is essential for them to relate,ways he says, “is the fault of j to the residential market . . . the lenders who don’t appear to to offer consultation for a rea- care about quality and good de-| sonable fee. [sign. • We must iearn how to make “The lenders have accepted; democracy work. Few in this|modern design but will lend as! country really understand it aft-imuch for poor design as for! er all these hundreds of years.;good design. It is time for ev-U takes a small, militant group eryone to get together against to make democracy work. We [ugliness in our country .” | can’t wait for too many to make up their minds. • One hundred committee women in a community could paralyze it and pressure a city council into anything. FORESIGHTED This Seattle architect’s ideas are far from head-in-the-sand attitudes often associated with those outside the jet stream of! thought. J Home heating began when the j He feels that it is time for [caveman discovered fire and! engineers, sociologists, archi- .brought it into the cave to keep tects and city fathers who |his family warm, control the budget to join in ; A better method was discov-j contributing to a better en- er«l by the Romans when they vironment. .heated water and distributed it! through walls and under floors. I The United to use up 3,1 ing this. • We must train the voter, Caveman First to Heat I Household KITCHENS BUILT-IN APPLIANCES AND FORMICA TOPS Come In And See Our Many Kitchen And Vanity Displays CALL NOW! FE 2-1211 DAY OR NIGHT BATHROOMS 4‘We have crowded 300 years: ^ ..... 1 of evolution into the last 30| In Eur0^ and Un,lted years,” Durham explains. “It is States, the kitchen fireplace __________________________________ was for centuries the major ; source of heat in the home. Then, in the eighteenth cen- j tury, Benjamin Franklin in- , vented his famous stove— now | a prized possession of antique collectors. The first central home heat-ling system, using steam, was [installed in the late- 1800’s. At Ithe (urn of the century, steam {and, lateb hot water, was piped ,to large and ornate radiators, which did a good job of heating' As low as *549 ADD-A- ROOM Free Estimates and Planning—No Money Down-FHA and Bank Terms Residential or Commercial 86 N. Saginaw St. . . Pontiac I &ut the boilers were bulky ‘and had to be hand fed, and' [this meant freqqent trips to the {basement to shovel coal and {haul ashes. 1 The advent oLth? age of technology and research brought dramatic changed, and the result, reports the National Better Heating-Cooling Council, are appliance- styled, compact; boilers that operate efficiently! land automatically. i A FAMILY AFFAIR 47 Mohawk - Open Sun. 2 to 5 FARM SIZE ROOMS ... with all the city conveniences. Water, sewer, paved streets. Large ■ brick colonial, three bedrooms, master bedroom measures 12' by 2 V, Large 12' by 21' living room with fireplace. Formal dining room, loads of closet space. Full basement and garage. FULL PRICE $19,900, 10% down - or, let's trade. DIRECTIONS' Tolto Wo»t Huron Street to 4 UlntL I IUNd< RjflM on Mohowk ^ 47 MoKawk McCullough Realty 5460 674-2238 Nighlaad Rd. 1 674-2239 } C~—D * . . ' - ' J \ ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 iitef Plan JsAvai availam* free plan phpws.Dept. 9205, Dover, Ohio. Ask how to build additional kitchen PI®8 No- 105- cabinet space in existing walls. Home handymen can do the! show^r'area. work, following the detailed instructions in the {dan. Four-foot wide Marlife |ing can be used in To obtain a copy of this kitchen storage plan, write Handyman Plans, Marlite Paneling, Don’t forget to remove loose paint from your house before beginning to paint us new paint wiU not adhere to a poorly prepared surface. SUMMERTIME FUN^ For those who wont the fittest in o fabulous Fiber glass pool. Practical, functional, beautiful, sturdily constructed and soundly engineered to last a lifetime. Stop in and see, our display pool, it's an invitation to healthful, luxurious living, and family togethamess. CLARKSTOH POOL r OPEN 7170 Dixie Highway Clarkston-MA 5-2674 A division of John S. Vodtheet, builder I......v fit., I A.M.-4 P.M. Saturday 9 A.M. tel P.M. Sunday 1 P.M. to 4 P.M. ANCHOR protech children, pets and property SHOPPING CENTER Located in good residential ored on mflin thoroughfare near Osteopathic College. Built in 1955 of block and brick. 5 tenants, separate gas furnaces and port bdtement. Parking front and sides, alley at rear. Alt rented under lease showing good return. $160,000, terms. ANNETT INC. REALTORS 28 E. Huron, Pontiac 338-0466 .Office Open Evenings and Sundays 1 to 4 FAMILY PROJECT — Delightful roofless room was built as family project. After builder constructed framework, mother and kids laid deck boards while dad cut them to length. Raised platform works as “saparate” dining room. Deck boards are weathered cedar. Built-Ins Have Roots in Colonies New FOREST GREEN vinyl-coated PermafusedS e All with Anchor’s square posts and gates. AS LOW AS SS A MONTH rath Anniversary FE 5-7471 Decorators and designers who have done research on the subject say that our modern built-in units stem from the homes built in early Williamsburg and England. 1 * A * 1 These homes multiplied their 'storage facilities by n e s t i n g drawers along the walls in the .dining room, recessing shelves over a living room mantel, and [fitting sliding doors on cabinets. All built-ins aye space-savers, of course, but today’s units yield other dividends. They help upgrade a room, camouflage an unattractive area, keep things where you need them, give a room a new look, or provide a more efficient floor plan. Home handymen have become quite proficient in designing and building units for the house. These range from bookcases hi the living room to basement dividers. ★ ★ Sr Work on built-in$ can be .leeded if a prefinished paneling is used. Woodgrain paneling, for in- Train Plants Along Fence A stunning addition to every garden — and a good way to add oomph hi small space — is No Dowu Payment • 36 Months te Pay • First Payment Oct. 1 to train plants on the vertical, 1 against a fence. , ★ , * * ! Landscape architects recommend rough or resawn wood for the fence garden since plants train most easily over a rough surface. I The wood should be pressure-treated and unfinished to weather naturally so that maintenance is eliminated. OPEN HOUSE Sunday, August 27 From 2 to 5 P.M. The “Line” between Properties is drawn by Values Located on Lake view and compar a huge lot sloping off to the Lake.with a full walkout basement. The home is around 7 years old. There is four bedrooms and 1H baths. The home has all "Electric . Heat.” If you are looking for a true value you can purchase this amasing home for $22,900. Don’t miss this chance. Chuck Perry is your host. Dixie Hwy. to Davisburg Road, right on Davisburg Rd. then left on Susin Lane. LAKE Leaves Tell Tale of Classification Trees are divided into two general classes, the needle-leaves and the broadleaves. Needleleaves are also known as conifers, softwoods and evergreens-. The broadleaves are also called hardwoods. Marble-patterned Marlite paneling provides a distinctive ac-j cent wall. stance, gives them a neat, professional look. This plastic-finished hardboard is used by many furniture manufacturers because of its rich appearance and washable finish. Textured paneling — with the look and feel of wormy chestnut, travertine^ tapestry and leather —provides an exciting finish to a new built-in. Sliding doors can be fashjoned in minutes by cutting a piece of this plastic - finished hardboard to size and attaching a door pull or suitable hardware. No finishing is required. Sawmills Busy U.S. sawmills turn out enough lumber to build more than 3,-600,000 houses a year—but only one-third actually goes into new homes. The best finish for most garden structures is no finish at all/ TRUCK AND FLEET OWNERS SERVICE >TIL MIDNITE General, Specialty and Aluminum Welding Tractor .quipping, .addle tank* and fifth whaal, installed. Tractor and trailnr broka MARBILCAP ENTERPRISES TRAFFIC HELP - Corner lots invite cut-across traffic resulting in a muddy -grass-won’t-grow spot. Cura? This attractive three-rail fence of 1x4s nailed to 4x4 posts does it and makes a show place for a few special plants including a prickly spreading juniper as the final discouragement to cutting across. Move in Today! BLOOMFI ELD ORCHARD APARTMENTS OPEN SAT. & SUNDAY 2 TO 5 P.M. “FOX BAY” 6 TO 8 P.M. ELIZABETH LAKE /»* 6 MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM ' *22,900 Fox Bay is ideally located in the heart of our Beautiful Water Wonderland — offering many picturesque sites for your New Home Elegant Colonials Spacious Ranches Eye-Appealing Tri-Levels • FULL BASEMENT • FAMILY ROOM • FURNITURE-FINISHED CABINETS • ATTACHED GARAGE • MARBLE SILtS • BLACKTOP STREETS SALES EXCLUSIVELY BY: RAY O’NEIL REALTY CO. 3520 Pontiac Lake Rd. Office Open Sunday 1-4 P.M. Oil 4-2222 CUSTOM BUILT HOMES SEVERAL PLANS TO CHOOSE FROM-CUST0M BUILT ON YOUR LOT OR OURS-WILL TRADE... * "Highlander" SiftSjo FEATURES 3 Spacious Bedrooms Carpeted Living Room Carpeted Stairway Large Paneled Family Room 2-Car Attached Garage (*) Custom Built Kitchen 1 Va Baths, Ceramie Tiled (*) Convenient Laundry Room 1 Gas Forced Air Hedt Brick and'Aluminum Siding (*) Up to 1400 sq. ft. of living area (*) Optional, at Extra Co«t ^ Davisburg rd. -■* YORK Real Estate Company 4tt3 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains „ OR 4-0363 f Office. ..rving all of Oakland, Macomb and Wayne Counti.. AVAILABLE FOR IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY Ideally situated in the Bloamfield-Birmingham area; architecturally designed In thu French Provincial motif. Each unit contain, the ultimate in comfort and sound-proofing construction. Located conveniently an South Boulevard (7.0 Mila between Opdyka and 1-75). Spaciousness and Luxury « Hotpoint air conditioning and appliances Large family kitchens 'M Pooland large Sundeck One and two bedrooms Includes Carpeting Includes on site parking Priced from $155 per month Opan Baity and Sunday 3-8 p.m. For Information Call 388-4545 orFE 8-1778 Model Location 7919 HIGHLAND ROAD M-59 HIGHWAY White Lake Township 5 Miles West Of City Airport Open Daily By Appointment Saturday and Sunday-2 to I P.M. Phone: EM MW JAMES A. TAYLOR 7732 Highland Road (M59) OR 4-0306 EM 3-9937 }; j THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 C—7 Record of Transdcfionsfor Week, 6n Stock Markei • MONDAY 1 • TUESDAY ] • WEDNESDAY 1 ALIGNMENT 321 sir conditioned csrt $2 -mart We Reterve Right to Limit Quantities Even at These Low Prices Yon Can Charge It at Kmart! "Thrifty Savings” HOURS: DELIVERY - FE-24211 ~ ONE COLOR THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 Mutt CONVENIENT STUDY AID 31*1’» 3;L,1** BAHMX-FA1RWAY RELIEVES RESTRAIN, SAVES TIME AND SPADE OFFICE SUPPLIES - MAIN FLOOR General Printing & Office Supply '"Xter* Phone 335-9261 FOOD MARKETS 4348 Dixie Highway-Drayton Plains OPEN SUNDAY 9 AM. TO 4 P.M. 1280 North Parly at Madison OPEN SUNDAY IQ AM. to 6 PM. FRETTER APPLIANCE COMPANY nr. mi pal TOM’S HARDWARE 005 Orchard Lake Ave. FE 6-2424 THE BURN-RITE ■noon *5995 KEEGO HOWE. NO. 1 3041 Orohard Lake Rd. 682-2660 Coming AUGUST 28 THRU SEPTEMBER 2 American and Foreign MQTORCYCLI sflj and SPORTS CAR SHOW Sorry< In The PONTIAC Gctwtthth* action Mt and mm thalotMt for tho Back-Ta-School young adult and THE PONTIAC MALL Elizabeth Lakn & Tnlngraph Rdi. kov/e«s for any inconvenience We Are MOVING TNsWMkMMl! Wo Have’Em! 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SATURDAY, ’AtTfclTST 28, 1967 Pontiac Hurdler Tops Prelims Tipton Class of Juniors Special to The Pontiac Press DES MOINES, Iowa—Pontiac hurdler Bill Tipton heads a group of 10 Michigan qualifiers into the finals of the U.S. Jaycee Junior Champ Track and Fiel<) Championships today. * * * The slender Tipton, 18, a 1967 graduate of Pontiac Central, was in a class by himself as he set a record in the 120-yard high hurdles and led the field in the low sticks in starting defense of the two titles he took last season. With Tipton a virtual shoo-in for first (daces In both hurdles events, Michigan looked like a sure bet to capture the team title which California collected last year. Tipton turned in a 13.7-second clocking in the 120-yard preliminaries, and came back with a 13.4 time in the semifinals, a time that chopped three-tenths of a second off the meet standard and it was also a tenth of a second faster than the national inter-scholastic record he shares with Richmond Flowers of Montgomery, Ala. In the 180-yard event, Tipton posted a 18.7 clocking on a curve, which is also expected to find its way into the record books. Flowers set the previous record in the 180 but his per- formance came op a straightaway. Among the other qualifiers from Michigan was Larry Biskner of Waterford, who gained the finals with a leap of 13-feet-O-inches. Herb Washington of Flint ran a 9.8-second clocking to qualify in the 100-yard dash, and William Wallace, also of Flint, qualified in the 220 with . a time of 2L8. Another record-breaking performance came in the shot put where 243-pound Karl Salb of Crossett, Ark.; flipped' the ball 68-feet-ltt-inches. Gary Van Elst of Middleville, Mich., was fourth among the, shot-putters with a heave of 60-2. Dean Chance Flips No-Hitter at Indians BIG RUN—Harmon Killebrew of the Minnesota Twins slides home in the 10th inning of the first game of a twi-night twinbill to pad the Twins’ lead over Cleveland to 6-4. His rim proved decisive when Indians’ catcher Joe Azcue stroked a home run in the bottom of the lOth'to close the gap to 6-5. Twins also took the nightcap, 2-1, to move into first place in the American League Friday. Baltimore Favored Over Lions Atlanta Stuns National Survey of Sports Pages Browns; Bills Fall to Eagles Despite the Detroit Lions’ convincing 38-17 whipping over the San Diego Chargers - last weekend, the Baltimore Colts are still rated 7-point favorites against Detroit in Tiger Stadium tonight. It will be the fourth exhibition game for the Lions who stand 2-1 against AFL foes. Baltimore is 1-1 having beaten Boston of the AFL and lost to St. Louis, 0-5, the past Monday. ★ * * ■ * . ■ Milt Plum is expected to get the starting nod against the Colts, while Baltimore will split the duties between John Unitas and rookie Jim Ward. Unitas has a convincing record of 20 completions in 27 attempts in two halfgame appearances while Ward is II of 27 for his two partial appearances. A crowd of 35,000 is expected tonight for the 8:00 p.m. kickof. Ticket windows will open at 6:00 p.m. In other pro action which started the weekend last night, the Atlanta Falcons stunned the Cleveland Browns, 34-31 and the Philadelphia Eagles of the NFL defeated the Buffalo Bills, 38-30. Five games including the Lions’ were on today's schedule with NFL Washington playing at AFL Boston in an afternoon contest. Night games have New Orleans and San Francisco at Portland, Ore.; Pittsburgh and St. Louis at Nashville, Tenn., and Houston and New York at Charlotte, N.C. SUNDAY SCHEDULE One inter-league game, Los Angeles of the NFL at San Diego of the AFL, will be played Sunday. Also on Sunday’s schedule are Minnesota and New York at New Haven, Conn., and Denver and Oakland at North Platte, Neb. Philadelphia’s victory, which came in the last 45 seconds, increased the NFL’s lead in the exhibition series to 6-3. The Eagles’ last-minute rally wiped out a rally that vaulted the Bills into the lead 30-24. With Buffalo trailing 24-20 and six minutes to play, quarterback Jack Kemp came off the bench and on the first play connected with Elbert Du-benion on a 64-yard touchdown pass. Mike Mercer added the extra point, then kicked a 23-yard field goal, giving Buffalo a six-point lead. But Philadelphia wasn’t about to give ;up. With 45 seconds left, Norm Snead hit Chuck Hughes on • 40-yard sewing toss, and with 11 seconds remaining,' Joe Scarpati scampered 40 yards with an intercepted pass for another touchdown. v Scarpati earlier grabbed a Buffalo pass and raced 60 yards for a TD. Randy Johnson passed for three touchdowns as Atlanta boosted its preseason re'eord to 2-0-1. Frank Ryan countered with a pair for Cleveland, Shows Pro Football in Top Spot Pro football is No. 1. According to the Associated Press Managing Editor’s Association survey of newspapers across the country, 78 per cent of sports page readers rated professional football as their top choice, followed by college football at 77 per cent and major league baseball at 75. In 1959, a similar survey taken showed major league baseball and college football holding the first and second spots with 81 per cent, for baseball and pro football at 78 per cent. Auto racing showed the sharpest rise in interest of a sport in the past 10 years. In 1959 auto racing as a whole rated only 26 per cent, whereas Indianapolis type racing was now rated 54 per cent and stock car racing 37 per cent. Surprising in the poll, although it has dropped since 1959, was college basketball’s lead on some of the more prominent sports as fishing, hunting, boxing, track and field, hockey, ete. 'NOT RATED High school sports, overall, were hot rated; however, it was indicated that This is the AP survey of 1967 and 1959: 1947 1919 Professional football ....... 71 77 College football ............77 II Motor league bateball ....... 75 II Profesalonal golf ...........51 56 Indianapolis type racing .... 54 26 Stock car racing ........... 37 - Sports racing cars ......... 20 — this field in general held the top spot *3 especially in toe smaller “hometown” dailies. ★ ★ h The sports editors were also asked to rate toe sports on which they felt AP carries too much of and too little. The “to much” list showed, boxing, pro baseball, soccer, hockey, yachting, tennis, amateur golf, pro golf and track and field in that order. The “too little” list had fishing, hunting, college football, pro football, auto racing, pro basketball, bowling and college basketball, in order. Tigers Blank Athletics, 3-0 By the Associated Press The scene was so All-American that only the Fourth of July was missing. First place was at stake, there was a call from the vice president and even Dean Chance’s mom was in the crowd. Chance threw a no-hitter at Cleveland in the second game of a twi-night .doubleheader Friday that enabled Minnesota to sweep into first place in the American League. Only the score spoiled it; the Indians got a run without a hit in the first inning, and the Twins won 2-1. They took the opener 33. Chance threw a hitless game earlier this month, but it was rained out after 4tt innings so it won’t go into the record book. This’one', though, was the real thing. PHONE CALL Hubert Humphrey, head of the Washington branch of the Minnesota fan club, was on toe phone just after the game ended and had some nice things to say - to the 26-year-old right-hander. And Dean’s folks had driven up from their home in Wooster, Ohio, some 50 miles south of Cleveland. “I know it sounds kind of corny,” said (Stance, “but my mother has been my greatest fan. I’m glad she was in the crowd.” Elsewhere in a full American League schedule, Boston and Chicago split 7-1 and 1-2, Detroit blanked Kansas City 3-0 and New York took two games from Washington 7-5 and 2-1. The Califomia-Baltimore doubleheader was rained out. -> ★ ■ ★ ★ Chance struck out eight, but gave up five walks and two of those helped toe Indians to their run. Lee Maye and Vic Davalillo led off toe first with walks and an error by Cesar Tovar loaded the bases. Maye then scored on a wild pitch. The Twins scored, In the second off Sonny Siebert when Tony Oliva singled and scored all the way from first on Harmon Killebrew’s single. Tovar scored on a balk with the winning run in toe sixth. 10TH INNING In the first game Oliva scored on Killebrew’s triple in the 10th and Sandy Val-despino drove in Harmon with a sacrifice fly. Joe Azcue homered in toe bottom of the inning for, the Indians. Boston jumped all over Gary Peters in the first game in Chicago and George Scott pounded out four hits. Carl Yas-trzemski and Reggie Smith each had two. Jim Lemberg picked up his 17th victory, ir 4 ♦ ' In the nightcap, Ken Berry drove in the winning run for the White Sox with a single. Berry had homered in the sixth to give Chicago a 1-0 lead, but Smith tied toe game in the eighth With a runscoring single. Each dub is now half a game behind the Twins. Bob Tillman drove in three runs for the Yankees in the first game, and Mel Stottlemyre, 13-10, was toe winner. The Yanks scored on a passed ball and Bill Robinson’s single to win toe nightcap. draw 2b Vi'S Maya If *!•£ Uhlaendr c* 4 0 1 0 Davalillo cf iOOO nil nn Zimrmen e 3 0 0 0 FuW 2b <119, Versalles uOOtt Whitfield ph 1000 Harnandl »l 3 0 0 0 Gonzalez 2b 0 0 9 0 Reese ph 1 0 0 0 Brawn is 3 0 0 0 ..............a ph 1 3 0 0 0 Gonzalez 2b I ___________ tooo Brawn si :... Chance p t 0 0 0 Slobort p ^ 2090 Wagner pb 10 0 0 Culvor p 10 0 0 33 2 7 1 Total 21 1 00 ........... 01 9 0 01 999-4 ...‘...1 00 999 910-1 Total. E—To AL Pennant Chase Won Lost Pet. Behind l. LOB—Minnesota IF HR CUBS SO Chance (W, 17-9) ....... 9 0 1 1 5 1 siebert (L, 9-11) ......i 7 2 2 2 7 Culver ... ...........1 o o 9 11 HBP—Siebert. Chance. BALK—Siebert. T—2:40. A—1M19. Minnesota .. ....71 55 .563 — Chicago .... ...70 55 .560 % Boston ....71 56 .559 Vt Detroit ...70 57 .551 \v» California .. ....64 62 .506 7 Lefty John Hiller Shines in Starting Roles KANSAS ‘CITY OP) — Two starts, two finishes and two shutout victories. That’s the record for John Hiller, a husky left-hander toe Detroit Tigers brought up from Toledo earlier this year as a relief pitcher. Hiller started his second game for toe Tigers Friday night at Kansas City and urina rnz lormuia Drag College basketball Fishing It — 54 ,61 48 49 44 38 came out of it with a six-hit shutout and a 34) victory. Hunting Amateur golf !!!!! 42 44 40 41 40 56 Home runs by Dick McAuliffe, Bill Horae racing Track and field Hockey Bowling College baseball Amateur baseball 35 35 37 37 32 20 32 40 .... 26 24 23 20 M.G. Collision Tennla Skiing Swimming Motor boating Harness racing Wrestling . 25 31 12 15 21 22 21 24 12 15 14 15 Stays Unbeaten Soccer Yachting • Gymnastlca Figure skating Rowing lea spaed akatlng ..... 12 10 12 11 2 7 PSl 2 11 7 5 in State Play Billiards Weight-lifting 7 6 0 5 Special to The Pontiac Press Detroit Nine Captures National Junior Title ■ CINCINNATI OB — The Detroit Brokers held toe National Amateur Baseball ' Federation’s Junior championship today for the ninth time in 10 years after breezing through the 24to annual tournament with five straight victories. The Brokers came from behind Friday to whip Youngstown, 6-3, with., the help of catcher John Zbercot’s two-run single in the second inning. The Youngstown team had scored three times in the fint inning on * single, three walks > and two errors. v Ex-Pontiac Coach Set to 'Pour-lt-On' Mt. Clemens football coach Lisle Wells plans to “pour it on.” * That’s the report received by the Pontiac Firebirds who open the Midwest Football League season tonight against Wells, former Pontiac coach, now head of the Mt. Clemens team. With an all-veteran team, Mt. Clemens is' an 18-point favorite uver the Firebirds, but an F-Bird “spy” told Pontiac coach Tom Tracy that Wells, bitter over his departure from here, reportedly told his piayers, “Pour it on Pontiac and the pay will be doubled.” “That means the players might get two dollars a game instead of one,” said one, of Wells’ former players now on the Pontiac roster. “It'doesn’t frighten me,” said Tracy, “he (Wells) is expected to win and he should be favored, but we’re not going over there with a loping attitude.” Two Detroit Net Stars Take Singles Crowns WILBERFORCE, Ohio UB - Sylvia Hooks of Detroit defeated Bessie Stock-ard of Washington, D.C., 6-3, 6-3 Fri-' day in girls singles of the American Tennis Association’s national champion ships. In senior men’s singles, Louis Graves of Detroit bested Ronal Fieuiletteau of New York 34,34. BATTLE CREEK — Pontiac’s M. G. Collision entry Friday scored one of the most impressive victories ever posted by a city team in toe annual Michigan Amateur Baseball championships. The Pontiac men’s champion routed' Lansing’s Emil Bar, 134, with a 15-hit attack. The winners met Kalamazoo, toe only other unbeaten team in toe tournament, at noon today. * ★ ★ M. G. Collision trailed 3-0 after toe top of the first inning as starter Jack McCloud suffered a rocky first turn on the hill, but toe Pontiac nine broke loose for 10‘runs in its half of toe frame, and added five more in the second. Willie Holliman and Santos Sanchez each had two run-scoring singles and Ron Kind had a two-run single as Pontiac sent 14 men to the plate and eight hit safely in toe opening barrage. The outburst is believed toe biggest inning ever in state play by a city entry. Bruce McDonald cracked a two-run homer to ignite toe five-run second. Sanchez capped it with a sacrifice fly. Kind finished with two singles and a double to account for five rims. Chuck i Barken had three singles', Rick Pankey scored three times and Sanchez drove in three. * A ★ Kalamazoo nipped Dearbom-Redford, 13-11, Jackson eliminated Barton City, 9-7, and Wyandotte ousted Battle Creel^ 3-3. Six teams rerifftin alive. Follow-* ing this afternoon’s- games, a drawing will-- determine today’s 5:30 p.m. and 8:39 p.m. semifinal pairings. Laming Emil's Bar ......100 000 14- 4 7 1 fmhm m.o. cgtuskHi .......ion m «-w is i D-*- Freehan and Ed Mathews provided the punch for the Tigers. Hiller cut his ERA to a nifty 1.25 and ran his record to 34). And look at Mathews. The veteran National League slugger, acquired from Houston when third baseman Don Wert was injured, has hit two home runs, is batting nearly .400 and has driven in five runs. LONG BLAST Mathews cracked one over the high right field wall at Kansas City, driving it about 425 feet from home plate. The blow was his 505th and moved him to within six of Mel Ott, sixth on the all-time homer list. ★ * * The victory left Detroit in fourth place, 1 % games behind first-place Minnesota which took the lead after Chicago and Boston split a doubleheader. Boston and Chicago are in virtual tie for second, both a half-game off the pace. Mathews is only the eighth player to bang one over toe Kansas City wall. McAuliffe hit his 21st homer in the, first inning and it turned out to be all Hiller needed. Freehan cracked his 17th in the second inning and Mathews led off the seventh with his homer. OTHER START Hiller shut out Cleveland Sunday in his first major league start. Friday he beat Chuck Dobson, a 23-year-old righthander whose record fell to 8-8. The Tigers again played without' Willie Horton. Lennie Green took his place in left field. Norm Cash, who broke oat of a slump with a home run in Detroit Thursday, cracked a double in toe sixth, but died on second. Hiller gave up singles to Danny Cater and Jim Gosger in toe second inning, but struck out Phil Roof to end the inning. Roof doubled in toe fifth, but got no further. ★ * ★ Kansas City got two more hits in toe sixth and a man as far as third, but Dick Green popped out to end the tor ning. DETROIT KANSAS CITY Women's Champ After Fifth Victory Mrs. Midge Cova of Novi will bn looking for her fifth title when she tees off Monday morning at Highland Hills in the Women’s Metropolitan Golf Association match play tournament. Facing Mrs. Cova in the first round is Mrs. Peter McAlpine of Southfield. The tourney continues through Thursday. \ WMOA MATCH PLAY \ Green If Stanley cf Cash 1b MAullffe 2b 4 0 0 0 Cmpneris ss 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Donaldsn 2b 4 0 1 0 3 0 10 Hershtar rf 4 0 10 4 12 1 Catar if 4 0 2 0 4 0 10 Webster 1b 4 0 0 0 id 4 111 DGreen 3b 4 0 0 0 :f 4 0 0 0 Gosger cf 3 0 10 4 111 Roof c 3 0 10 3 0 0 0 Dobson p 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 Nossek ph 10 0 0 Llndblatf p 0 0 0 0 33 3 6 3 Total 33 0 M ....... 1 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0—3 Kansas City 6. 2B— § IP H R ER BB SO Dobson (LA4) ... .7 Undblod ........ 2 HBP—Llndblad (Cash). Coaches7 Bid Fails GRAND RAPIDS (AP) -School Supt Jay Pylman said Friday “an illegal contract bid” by some varsity football and cross country coaches will be rejected. The coaches Thursday asked the board for an interim contract which would allow them to report for fall football practice Monday without violating the no contract — no work policy of the Grand Rapids Education Association (GREA). . , Paul Bada Takes Aim at 6th City Golf Title Action opens today at Pontiac Municipal Golf Course in toe first round of toe City Medal Pky Championship. v \ On hand to defend his title and looking for a sixth crown will be Paul Bada. ★ ★ * V Bada tees off at 2:31 pan. along with Avery Burton, Jeff Chambers and former champion Dick Robertson. Other ex-champions in the field are Kip Inman (1929-1045), Fonce Fowler (1930), Ron Rotobarth (1956) and Glenn Haiding (1947, 1948, 1950). The second 18 holes is op top for tomorrow. FAN A^DS TIGERS—An overzealotis Kansas City spectator bjMftfi competing with Detroit Tiger first baseman Norman Cash (25> forCampJf lllfipaneri*’ pop foul in the fifth inning of toe Detroit-Kansas City game in A’s park last night. Tbs Jqn prevented Cash Irommaking the catch, sp umpire Jerry Neudecker ruled interference by toe fan and called Campaneris out Tigers won, 54). D—2 rgg PONTIAC PRESS SATURDAY, AUGUST 20, 1967 Emerson ,* ifr J . S'iwiffit’' j; 'H' Past Hero in Doubles CHESTNUT HILL, (UPI) - The latest saga in the Roy A WINNER—Golfers Cary Middlecoff (left) and Sam Snead scan the murky skies over tbe Westchester Country Club yesterday where heavy rain washed out the second round of the $250,000 Westchester Classic. They’ll try again today. With tbe rainout, the final round is slated for Monday. four national doubles cfaam|)ioO' ships with two other partners, unfurls today. * * ★ The 30-year-old Australian is paired this year with Ronnie Barnes, the Brazilian bad boy, fat the 17th National Doubles flay at Longwood Cricket Chib. The fourth-ranked foreign team, they still must be considered top contenders as long Emerson can play. WWW Today Emerson and Barnes wen set to resume quarterfinal dud with unseeded South African . Davis Cup players Cliff Drysdale and Ray Moon. They wen halted by min and darkness at 64 In Emerson and Barnes had fought] back for a 31-21,84, 6-3 lead. * * * land his partner John Collison In other top action today, top j of Midland wen hoping -for a seeded Mrs. Billie Jean King of L* final round in the Orchard Long Beach, Calif., and Rosemary Casals of San Francisco Marichal Gets Rude Welcome by Braves tf THE A880QATED PRESS League, streaking Philadelphia Joan Marichal nude Us long awaited return, and the Atlanta pier to see him. The Dominican dandy, who has been plagued by a rash of injuries this season, made Us first appearance since Aug. I for San Francisco and the es dimbed all o Friday night Marichal lasted just 42-3 innings, was tagged for 11 hits and four walks. He was charged with tbe loss in Atlanta’s 5-1 victory, and it left his record at a rather unimpressive 14-1*. ♦ * * Elsewhere In the National swept a twi-night doubleheader from Pittsburgh ~34 and M to move into fourth place, Cincinnati ahaded Houston 3-1 and Los with St Louis, winning 2-1 and then losto&M. Chicago’s game at New York was rained i SHUTOUTS Jim Burning hurled his 37th Four Share Lead in Golf Tourney Former champion Pete Green a AVERAGES |y ■ HH a (VI j C ■gH a tc ■ ni d< k w met South Africa’s Annette Van Zyl and Pat Walkdea of Rhodesia In a semi-final match. Harrelson Set for Bosox Duty CHICAGO (UPI) - The pennant-contending Boston Red Sox have made another move to fortify their roster: for the September stretch drive by signing former Kansas City first baseman Ken Harrdsoo. The Red Sox, currently a half game out of first place in die American League, announced Harrelson to an “agreement of Harrelson had been ait loose by Kansas (Sty owner Charles O. Finley last Monday in the wake qfa player feud. Harrelson signed with the Red Sox in Boston and immediately flew borne to Savannah, Ga. He will join the Red Sox Monday in Naw York but Is not expected to be placed on the roster until Sept, l when the will become a contract. burgh to six hits as the Phillies took the first game of the doubleheader. Johnny Briggs’ seventh homer produced one of Philadelphia’s runs. In tbe nightcap, Chris Short won his first game since July 4 as the Phillies completed the sweep. Mel Queen throttled Houston «er, 9-4, won his s ^ M jht in the opener a touched off the Dodgers' win- Lake Blue Coat Invitational this morning, and the two woe} hoping the save would be goodi^j^* enough to bring a title without a playoff. There were four teams sharing tbe top spot as the championship flight headed Into the last 18 holes of the 54-hole round today. There was a slight prebtem for Green aid Collison, however. Green was dated to leave shortly after bach tor Colorado Spriags, Colo., whore hell play la the UB. Amateur next week. With four sharing the top spot at 10-under-par 134 and two otb-tearns only two strokes off the pace, tbe possibility of a playoff late today loomed big. And if there to one, Green and Collison won’t be around for it So they Were hoping for that hot round this morning. suit COAT INVITATIONAL OMMUNfiHrw CfcamptoMMp F light Pato Grecn-John ColliMn .... 66-6*- ---WMIsmsI. t --- ___ (Mnsr-C.JL Carl IMML. EIM Dr. FredJAM AS ■ HMIMM *uf sn ims is SB .?■ 4231 50* M24 10 4M J42 4244 Ot 1023 121 477 J41 4113 441 III N"1" 429 SISMMHS — 42M 432 9t3 54 MS ______ 4333 4S6 1022 111 41*-M* Haw Yarn 4303434 mrmmm Chicago 4137 424 90 It W! JM Washington 4342 441 444 95 425 J22 INDIVIDUAL BATTINO W*rar«-srt8.«..w. F.Robinson Sal 355 66 119 24 73 J3S ■*" JS J| Im % a 32 434 41 131 17 «6lH Tilt, 9"»» , .. — , e— •061 Cam ad. 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UOU ----------------. - -— Walj Clocks, Stack Trucks, Hand Truckl, I hag Sloelt, Wood Mtavtaf, SEWING MACHINES: Singer Itrgtag Machinal Slagdr Modal IdTWSi OFFt|'cprEOUlFMENT: Ramtagtaa Rud lbcWt 19-Kay Adding Macblna-Rogktar; NMtonal Cam Ragtatar; Faymaitar Chock Frftactar; Ram-tagRaad Tygawrltar; «4taerTorgugw FStag CmtaMiVyttani ana Cancrata Vault, O.D. 24"*24"x24"i Waal fata O.D. _32^»*M"Hit2*ft"D; Pedestal Fan, DMks, Chairs, Oa*k Fils*, Lamps, Mb. TRMaitSw»TSimwe*tar FaaM Tnwk. Dagasit at n% (Cam ar Cart Iliad INSPECTION: MareIng at 51 For Fl«d Detailed Circular ■dCkack) Ragulrad 4 Sato Sag Inning al Circular Writa ar O M nut 0 Sato. NORMAN LEVY associates, incorporated 3143 GUARDIAN BLDG. • DETROIT • WO 2-6182 AUCTIONEERS LIQUIDATORS APPRAISERS Trims Whiskers Lakeland Barbershop shaved' the regular season champion! Whiskers to three straight games to capture the Waterford Township blooperball title to a three-of-five series. TOUHG BUSINESSMEN! Fill your incuranco needs for tomorrow at a fate you can afford today, KCNNCTH W. HALL Metropolitan Life * INSURANCE COM rANY NEW YORK. N.Y. FUN-BOAT! FISH-BOAT! SKI-BOAT! GG-BC THE 1968 MODELS ME HERE! See the ’G8 Glastrons and All the Other .1968 (Models Now On Display At: CRUISE-OUT, ING. S3 E. WALTON-FE 8-4402 1-75 to BALDWIN EXIT - OPEN I to 6 NEW .CAR feeling! SERVICE ISIONAL INSTALLATION OPEN 10ATS PER WEEK 7 A.M. til 11P.M. Dealers Welcome Ttnat $1 par week Seva 5e per gallon an gotelina. .Regular 28.9c paitatom ethyl |1,«b Guorongead major brend quality ar IM fimiM your money beck. “Let ut prove thi» ateftmawfl - MAJOR BRANDS, INC. The Claymore Back-To-School-Panel We selected d panel representing the finest schools in the country so that we might review their reaction to our campus collection of clothing and accessories. Enthusiasm i;on high... as a matter of fact they liked everything, but before we could write down tho comments someone discovered the food and drink had disappeared and so had our panel. The cLxymoRe Shop Natural Shoulder Ciothihg and Accessorial 722 N. Woodward,Birmingham Phone 642-7755 THE PONTIAC PRESS. SATURDAY, AUGtIST 26, 1967 ns 'Guard Lacks Policy on Weapons in Riots' By JOHN BECKLER WASHINGTON (AP) - The National Guard apparently has no clear-cut policy on whether Guardsmen assigned to riot duty should carry loaded weap- A House Armed Services sub-cominittee examining the 2 Policemen Slain in 1 Man Hurt Another witness, Maj. Gen. George M. Gelston, Maryland’s adjutant general, said his state’s Guardsmen, who have been extensive duty in riots, have “yet to fire their first round of ammunition.’’ Gelston said Maryland Guardsmen carry ammunition Guard’s ability to deal with civil but cannot load their weapons disorders has received widely!without specific orders. Their differing views from individual orders, he said, are “to fire if jjjoth of Long Beach, were prostate commanders. fired upon-r-if you can see the I nounced dead at Long Beach * * * ; persons who fired upon you.” Communjty Hospital. Guardsmen used in the Ne-1 SIMILAR POLICY wark^and Detroit riots used Maj jfcj Ralph j. oison, oaded guns, although in Detroit Wisconsin adjutant general, the ord1 er was later said bis tate f0u0ws a similar countermanded by the regular u ^ decision t0 Joad and i^my.-fo MUwauhee and Cam- fs left strictly up to the of-bridge, Md., Guardsmen in he said. not permitted to load their j»Maj Gen James F. Cantwell, weapons without specific head'of the New Jersey Guard, authority. > said he felt men going into riot LONG BEACH, Calif* (AP) Two Long Beach police officers were reported shot to death early today in an apartment and a 26-year-old man is in critical condition with nine bullet wounds. w ★ ★ Officers William L. Ishman, and Donald V. Knott, 23. Long Beach Police did not immediately disclose details except to say that the officers had answered a “disturbance call.’' At the subcommittee’s, hear- areas such as in Newark recent- ly ^Chiga" should have loaded ficials bitterly criticized the * * * federal order to unload weapons | Under subcommittee ques- in Detroit. The order wasissued Zoning he said the^e-was in- by Lt. Gen. John L. Throck- discriminate firing by Guards-morton, who arrived with 5,000 :men during the first two or federal troops to take command three days of the Newark riots, in Detroit about 30 hoiirs after1 ~No one knew qUite what the Guard was called in. do» added GantweU. “There ORIGINAL ORDER . jwas a tendency to think in Maj. Gen. Cecil Simmons, the i terms of a military action and Guard commander who was in not realize they were in a charge until Throckmorton tookjcr°wded area with a lot of inno-over, said his original order for|cent bystanders.” dealing with looting was to use as much force as necessary “and if they can’t be stopped any other way, shoot.” Simmons said Throckmorton told him “it'was better to let a man get away with a few dollars worth of equipment than to shoot him. In an earlier appearance before the subcommittee, Throckmorton said he ordered the Guardsmen’s guns unloaded because they were nervous and trigger-happy and he didn’t want innocent people killed. 'Health/ LB J to Celebrate 59th Birthday Sunday WASHINGTON (UPI)-Presi-dent Johnson is in “excellent health” as he approaches his 59th birthday, according to the White House. Johnson will celebrate his, birthday tomorrow. Usually, as the chief executive observes a! A spokesman said Norman Baker, a painter at the Long Beach Naval Shipyard, was shot nine times in the apartment. He is in the prison ward of the Los Angeles County Hospital in Los Angeles. He has not been; charged in the incident. ★ * ★ The shootings took place in tHe Belmont Shores area. Death Notices CLAYMAN. MAUDE O.i August It, 1967; 3731 Navarre, Whit* Lake Township; agt 71; dnr mother of Robert Ochse, Mrs. Mina Book and Ramon Watarman; dear sister of Mrs. Charles Zimmerman; also survived by etght grandchildren. Mrs. dayman will be taken from the Voorhees-SIple Funeral- Home id the Lattln-Dugan & Chambers Funeral Home, Fremont, Nebraska for services and burial In Fenton-elje Cemetery, Fontanelle. Neb. KIBLER, RICHARD S.; August 15, 19(7; 2646 Blnghampton; age 54; beloved husband of Dorothy Klbler; beloved son of Frank Klbler; dnr father el Mrs. Frank 1 and Mrs. Charles Reltai brother of Paul Klbler; Srs. Charles Reltanwal; „.„.,.»r of Paul Klbler; also survived by eight grandchildren. Funeral arrangements are pending at the Harold R. Davis Funeral Home, nin ----------“------------lad visiting jburn Heights. (Suggests airs 3 to 5 and 7 to 9 i ask about SMBE MASON, NORA E.; August 24, 1967; 5919 Tody Road, Goodrich; age >6; beloved wife of Herman Mason; dear mother of Mrs. Dorothy Skinner and Roland Mason; dear sister of Mrs. Myrtle Hugan and Mrs. nFlor*ncn^gw||wgMng|g||||MW^)te tant general Clarence Schnipke expressed strong resentment at Throckmorton's charge, and other criticism by regular Army officers that the Guardsmen were sloppy and unsoldierly. DIRECT FROM MANEUVERS ,, J! his health. indchlldrei and W area F, August 28, e* Press Secretary George Christian was ready for them yesterday. He relayed an Aug. 24 report "ro^simnranTci | from Vice Adm. George Burk-ley, the President’s doctor. It said: at the C. fi. Sherman Funeral », 135 South Street, Ortonville Brother Green officiating. In- re pending at the Donel Funeral Home where *111 lie In stati this evening. (Suggt Schnipke said the Guardsmen .1The president’s health I had been on duty 30 to 36 hours |exceiient. Routine examinations when Throckmorton first saw at no Ume have lndicated any d e v i a t i o n from the norm, jjj Qeneral physical fitness is com- pletely satisfactory.” Asked if the President planned any special birthday first "stageiT of "the "rioting the I observance. Christian said, “I Detroit looting would have been!have heard of no special! hours, 3 to 5 and r. ____ -J________» klwlk^ntt nlane uilintotrop ” RATLIFF. STEVEN from field maneuvers 220 miles away. Both Guard officials said if Throckmorton’s no-shooting order had been in effect in the Mount Morrli, Michigan. Mrs. Mason will II* In stat* at th* funeral bom*. MYERS. EARL; August 25, 1967; ----- ------- -ourt; age 60; be- Gustaf Persson; dear sister of Mrs. Chris Thompson, Carl and Edwin Swan. Funeral service will be held Monday, August 28, r‘ *-------i| the Gloria Del I "id tery. Mrs. Per IbutTons' n Lutheran Churcl Chapel Ceme- at the Sparks-Griffln much more widespread. j birthday plans whatever." Terrorists Switch Tactics in Hong Kong Campaign! . HONG KONG (AP) — Hong when two real bombs were Kong police said today the ter-'hurled at them from rooftops, rorist killing of a radio comedi-lgoMBERS an who ridiculed Communist agi-j seven Chinese hid- tators indicates the Reds are under border brid threw switching rom random bomb-i^ bombs a( the H Kong ings to planned assassination immigration office 0ne blew a campaign. hole jn tbe r00f and border offi- Authorities offered protection jdals said the other hit a bridge to anyone who has been threat- i timber and bounced back, injur-, ened or feels he is in danger jng one 0f tj,e attackers. British from Red terrorists. Gurkhas drove off the bomhl- ★ * * throwers with tear gas and A top-level Hong Kong official;smoke grenades, said earlier the government had, * * * done;ufS ,mUCh Prepar®|j°" ^; A mob charged across from possible for opposing attempts and ^ the office to kill prominent pmons to ti»e -{lfg but the flames British colony on Red China s I were extinguished qulckiy. southern coast. , Gurkhas also used tear gas SPECIAL SQUAD ' against that attack. Police formed a special squad' * * * to ferret out terrorists who have j In Pekjng Ddnald Hopson, marked anti-Communists ^or i British charge d’affaires, was death. I trying to get exit visas for wom- After popular Chinese comedi-|en ami children of the diplomat-an Lam Bun, 37, was turned into ic mission after Chinese mobs a human torch and fatally burned down the legation Tues-bumed, Hong Kong Communist'day in the dispute over Hong newspapers carried the boast of'Kong. Red terrorists that they had ex- ^COOPERATIVE >2 Ior ridlC”"”e ““I H. informed hi, g»emmont Communisms. ^ ^ in London that the Chinese gov- ern. 4*TT«wtAv-9 Oakland, Ave. SPARKS-6R!FFIK FUNERAL HOME . ----- FE 0-9288 Voorhees-Siple FUNERAL HOME. 332-8371 Established Over 40 Years _ Cemetery Lots___ 2 LOTS, CHRISTIAN MEMORIAL t FULL COLOR WEDDING AL» bum at the cost of black and white. Free brochure. 338-9079 any / GIRL OR WOMAN NEEDING 2-5122 before adviser, phone FE dainty maid supplies Wa can help you wi ON AND AFTER THIS DATE, 1-26-67, I will not be responsible tor any debts contracted by any other than myself. Curtis Gena Hlnman, 6401 Crest, Drayton Plains, Michigan,__________________ UPLAND HILLS FARM for the whole family. Sealng milking of cow, children can pet imbs, calves, piglets. Delightful ...pjir.um hay rides, pony ride* d from farm kitche HR_______ _.jd tour 25c. Rides all food extra. FAMILY VISIT SUN- GET OUT OF DEBT DN A PLANNED BUDGET PROGRAM YOU CAN AFFORD TAILORED TO YOUR INCOME r Bell Rds. 335-3064. FOUND: FRENCH POODLE FE 8-4366 FOUND: WOMAN'S WATCH, PAR icing lot at the Mall. Contact Stata Police Post In Pontiac. LOST: PLEASE RETURN MY LOST — ALL BLACK KITTEN, VICINITY OF PEACH AND SNOW- blke, Coppetone color. 623-1174. LOST: IRISH SETTER. CHILD'S MISSING: LARGE MALE DOG -Boxer and Great Dane, Lake Or- Aelp Wanted Male 2 CARPENTERS, WO 9 2-1912 after 7 p.m, 3 YOUNG MEN—19 TO 29 month. Call 674-0520, 9 * $50 GUARANTEE $500-$650 PLUS CAR SALES TRAINEES $5200 UP HIGH SCHOOL GRADS and college men Interested In pi manent employment. Many nr Inc. A PART-TIME JOB Monday 4 p.m. - 8 p.m. „ $200 PER MONTH APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAK-' en for concession stand, apply Miracle Mila Drlvt-ln Theater, 7:30- 155 Oakland Ave. AUTO SALESMAN™ Michigan's fastest growing Chevrt let Miter. Experience helplul — but nc necessary. Must have enthusiast andjdriwe. Call for. appointment Mr. mapletoft - 651-7000. Help Wanted Mala 6 AUTO MECHANIC AND MECHANICS helper, with tools, please apply to Keege Pontiac Saws, In parson Restaurant, Keego Harbor. CARPENTERS ROUGH. WORK IN Roclwstar. Sat Jim .on apt. lob. North sIdo of Tlenken Rd„ M ml. west of Rochester Rd. R. L. Mc-Brlen I ~ CARPENTERS EXPERIENCED ROUGHERS FOR APARTMENT PROJECT Just starting on Auburn Rd., bc- IS.______________________ CONSTRUCTION CLEAN UP MEN, lull time steady employment, must have own car. Troy orea. 353-5355. DELIVERY MAN. NIGHTS, IS DISTRIBUTOR WANTED FOR THE Pontiac area. Preferably men with experience In selling. Call WH ENGINEERS B.S.E. - B.S.M ■ve an aversion to dirty hands. > not apply. This training will Please send ri EXPERIENCED SHORT ORDER cook, frlngo benefits, apply In person,,; Steak and Egg. 5395 Dixie Hwy., Waterford.____*____ EXPERIENCED ACETYL E N E EXPERIENCED MAN FOR FUR-niture delivery and related work. Year round fob — good pay — Little Joe's Borgin House FE 2-6842 EXPERIENCED SERVICE STATION help wanted. 2986 W. Walton, Pon- tloc. Mobile Station. _ EXPERIENCED TRUCK DRIVER FE 5-S14t________ Experienced Mechanic Needed for Pontiac, Buick and Chevy Dealership. Apply in person to Mr. Ernst, Homer Hlght, Oxford, Michigan.__ FISHER BODY Livonia Plant IMMEDIATE OPENINGS. „ FOR Checkers AND Stock Laborers APPLY: Employment Department desirable. 437-20________________ FULL TIME JANITOR AND GEN- good health, wi Mr. Smith at Main, Rochester. Mitzelfelds, 312 local ref., full o ASSISTANT STORE MANAGER PONTIAC Large national'retail womens Lane Bryan, 1520 Woodward Ave., Detroit. An equal opportunity employer AUTO MECHANIC TOP PAY AND benefits for skilled man. Call Mr. Bridges, 624-1572. At Lloyd Bridg-es, Dodge walled Lake._|| Auto ••^Salesmah 1 Commission smother benefits?0 call or see Chprlfe barron at — Spartan Dodge Adams Rd. Birmingham. ___ GAS STATION ATTENDANT, E! perience , necessary, inquire Jerry's Shell. 6495 Orchard L and Maple Rd.______________ GAS STATION ATTENDANTS Must be experienced. Full or pa time. Good pay. Sunoco Statlo Telegraph at Maple Rds. _ GUARDS Full and part time. Immedia City and Suburban job openinc Mt. Clemens, Utica and Birmingham Included, Bonded Guard Services, 441 E. Grand Blvd., Detroit-LQ 8-4152, 10-4 p.m. ________ Harding Operator Sunnen Hone Operator Final Inspector Technician Janitor FE 8-9222 ~NEW AND Halp Wanted'Mala 6 Male Short Order Cook BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph & Huron MAN DRAWING SOCIAL SECURT-ty to collect In parking lot. no driving, 154 N. Ferry. MAM OVE* 40 TO WORK ON 6717. » farm near Union L MAN 30 TO 45 YEARS, ‘HIGH home park. FE 5-9902. MAN WITH GENERAL KNOWL-edge on Installation of awnings jjr^ ornamental Iron. 6497 Highlana MECHANIC FOR AUTOMATIC FIN spotters. No experience necessary. Call FE 5-2513.___________ 4991 for appoint! _ MEN WANTING TO MAKE $10,000 a yr or more in direct sales leads furnished. No lay offs or strikes. Call 335-5130 for appoint- MEN~NEEDED FOR WAREHOUSE, MEN TO WORK IN SERVICE STA-tion, attendants, mechanics, and wrecker drivers. Must be over 25 yrs. of age with local ref. Full time only. Exc. wages, vacation with pay. Shell Station, Woodward and Long Lake Rd., NEW CAR SALESMAN, SALARY, commission, benefits, demo., loaded with Mercurys and Cougars. OL 1-9141._ /; NEW AND USED CAR SALESMAN HOMER HIGHT Motors Inc. On M24 in Oxofrd OPPORTUNITY PLUS V. Call Ll 8-7222 after i ur sales staff. Musi need. Call or apply in person to :en Johnson, Russ Johnson, Pon-iac Rambler^Sales, 89 M24, Lake OFFSET Duplicator Operator in operating an , processing 3M i d working with Zero; photo direct plate THE BENDIX CORPORATION PORTER WANTED FOR PRIVATE school in area, 8 hours, 5 days, working conditions. Call Mrs. REGISTERED PHARMACIST Part time, full time, potential, 8399 hourly. Ideal lupplemantal Income, for retired, pharmacist. Apply in person to the Personnel Division Oakland County Court House. 1200 N. Telegraph, Pontiac. 113 Indlanwood Rd. HIGH PRESSURE OPERATORS Oakland Community Collage opening new campus at Orchard Lk. and 12 Mile roads, needs high with mechanical ability. Fringe fuUy' paldnCBlurCrosrs°-Blue%h'ield apMinimenFplease caN°r?-588-1341 or 1-566-1477 and ask tor Mr.. LOCKE OPERATORS AND TRIM-mars, full time. 2415 Woodward Ave. 332-1237. Machine .,T°o1 Wire Man Part time, must be experienced and be familiar ^ifh JIC standards. Call 349-5211 Novi. _ MAINTENANCE MAN EXPERIENCED MACHINE REPAIR MAN OR MILL RIGHTS, JOURNEYMAN CARD OR 4 YEARS EXPERIENCE REQUIRED. • A L L FRINGE BENEFITS PROVIDED. APPLY AVON TUBE DIVISION, FOURTH AND WATERS ST., ROCHc ‘ ESTER, MICHIGAN. Q SALESMAN, NO EXP. NECES-sary, full benefits, $6,000. Call Al Berg, 334-2471, Snelling & Snelllng. SALESMEN WANTED 'SECURITY MAN lerestlng position for wait groomed, •rt, mature Individual experienced in dealing with people preferred. Paid training period, purchase dis-unt, and many other benefits. Apply In Person Employment Office Basement HUDSON'S SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT, light mechanical knowledge, full or part time, 674-2593, Drayton Experienced Roofers ' RETIREMENT PLAN G'TEED YEAR-AROUND WORK GROUP HOSPITALIZATION IN*. WANTED IMMEDIATELY Skilled and unskilled workers lor day end night ahlftt. Factory hands. Apply bet. 4T*.m.-6 p.m. «o CLAWSON 65 S. Mein FERNOALE 2320 Hilton REDFORO 27320 Grand River Employers Temporary Service WANTED 25 MEN MONDAY 6<30 A.M. SHARP Report to 125 N. Saginaw St. ROAR ENTRANCE WE PAY DAILY KELLY LABOR DIVISION Equal Opportunity employer_ WELDERS AND SHOP FABRICA-tors. Apply Ferro Fab Inc. 1542 N. Leroy. Fenton, Michigan. 429- ty and aggressiveness. Advancement If qualified. Steady work, paid holidays, vacations, hospitalisation plan. $2.00 per hour starling sal-ary. Call 33S-7II)._ YOUNG MEN QUALIFICATIONS: $275 PIUS GENERAL OFFICE « Typ« 50 w INTERNA7 1080 W. Hurt__ ADMINISTRATIVE Ex«H -----h Tyi_ ..„, — -- ulred. Confect Miss Roach, Micmgan Employment Security Commission. FE 2-0191. APPLICATIONS NOW BEING TAK-en for concession stand, apply Miracle Mile Drlve-ln Theater — 7:30 to 10.___________________ hand rc has the ability ip supervise. Good wages plus benefits. Big Boy Restaurant. Telegraph It Huron. For interview call 334-4503 b«t. I , ref. MA 4-4468. BABY SITTER WITH LIGHT housekeeping, >20 weekly, 332-8235. BABY SITTER IN MY HOME, S-5, 5Vj days, Cass-Dodge tree. 682- 5555.___________________________ BABYSITTER WANTED IMMEDI- ately. FE 4-M88._____ BABYSITTER, 5~ DAYS OR GIRL 338-1413 after 6. 1 child welcome. lizabeth Lk. Estate ter 6:30. BABY SITTING IN MY HOME. IN PERSON. Miss Betty — Ml 7-3033 Beauticians STYLISTS Needed for new, beautiful dept, store beauty salon. Excellent salary, commissions, and store benefits. Call Mr. Don Rogers 682-4940 axt. 330. BEELINE FASHIONS—-NEEDS YOU FOR HOSTESS OR STYLIST— . Apply Champs Self-Service CHINA AND GIFTS SALES. Help Wonted Moh CLEANING WOMAN. FOR BAR. clerX. part TiMe, i oayITpeS h Pheynety. WITH* TYPIN CLERK WITH* TYPING EXpIrT ence. Full time, 40 hour week. Apply In perion. Young’* Equlp- CLERK-TYPIST f you quality for School Gradual) i *7-Sol ARTHUR'S _____40 N. Saginaw St. COOK Short order. Experienced. Night*. Ricky's. 819 Woodward. Pontiac. COOKS AND WAITRESSES. RUTHS Coffee Shop, 1280 S. Milford «d. Highland. 684-9175. ,______ CURB GIRLS WAITRESSES TELE-TRAY OPERATORS Apply In pereon BIG SOY RESTAURANT 20 $. Telegraph Tel-Huren Shopping Center EXPERIENCED WAITRESS. Al-ternoon ehlft. Apply In pereon only. 21 or over. Steak and Egg. 5395 Olxle Hwy.. Waterford. EXPERIENCED HOUSEKEEPER EXPERIENCED OPERATOR wanted. Mery Lee'e Beauty Salon. Union Lakt.' Call between 9 and 5. 363-9050. EXPERIENCED GIRL FOR COOK-Ing and general. OlHbrt employed Good wages, ret., live In. Ml 6-18*7.____________ EXPERIENCED GIRL FOR FILING C-33 Pontiac, Mich. FEMALE PAINTERS HELPER, NO exp. necessary, non smoker, non drinker, 35 to 50 yrs. eld. OR >•7061. after 4. GIRL bR WOMAN TO- LIVE IN tor a nice family 5 days, fringe benefits, SSO. 353-1050.________| GO-GO GIRLS WANTED, TO PER- It 3325 W. McNich- ois, ueiroii, GRILL AND PREPARATION COOK for 5 to 12 shift. Reel's Drlve-ln, OR 3-7173._______________ . HOUSEKEEPER, LIVE IN, 5 DAYS - Adult family. Prlv. room. bath. S50. Rochester. OL 1-4734. HOUSEKEEPER, A 6 U L t motherless family, private room, ell Frl. Set. or Sun. HOUSEKEEPER TO LIVE IN FOfc light housekeeping tor single working man. Apply In pereon after 6 at 2432 Wlllleme Dr., Pontiac. HOUSEKEEPER TO 6 p.m. 651-0719.______________ HOUSEKEEPER, RELIABLE MID-dle-age w 8 ‘ n your dallvor Vlllago. 682-4426. , ing A Snelllng. IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR 2 women to do telephone work for beauty shops, must J havt good speaking voice, interesting work, some evening hours available, good salary plus bonus. 338-4244, Help Wanted Male SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT, full time, $110 per wk., Beverly Hills Service Center, Blrming--2124. STATION MEC with tune up end ve repair, $165 p Hills Servlet Center _ 647-2124. SPORTING 1 GOODS HUDSONS Pontiac Mall Apply In Person Employment Office Basement HUDSON'S. i product line. Good WANTED! EXPERIENCED TIRE JOURNEYMEN TOOLMAKERS MILLWRIGHTS MACHINE REPAIR MEN ELECTRICIANS PIPEFITTERS Apply at Employment Office SUNDAY, AUGUST 27,1967 9 A.M. to 3 P.M. HIGHLAND PARK MACHINING PLANT 12340 OAKLAND HIGHLAND PARK CHRYSLER CORPORATION ' An Equal Opportunity Employer THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AtIQUST 26, 1967 INSURANCE CLERKS •MNd. mandatory. ^ ^FRINGE BENEFITS KELLY SERVICES KAWALEKI SAUSAGE COMPA li taking application, for tli new store at TaMl Shopping C tar tar full oitd part time u girl*. Good pay and pH banal Apply In parson at the Kawal Retail store, located at SUM KEY PUNCHERS. EVENING SHIFT — Mini — — “ •——-------'— -Call LADY. GENERAL OFFICE WORK, switchboard exp., mutt be good yplst, pleasant work, exc. salary wd fringes. Apply In p------- :hard Lake Country Club. Wanted Female 7Help Wanted Female INDUSTRIAL NURSE RN for medium sized industrial operation located in North Detroit suburb DAY SHIFT POSITION Opening requires e trained registered nurse with Industrial er related experience background, knowledge of group and corporation Insuranca procedures, compensation, plant saftty end first aid methods art deslreablt. Apply IN PERSON - Write or call PERSONNEL DEPT., DeVLIEG MACHINE COMPANY FAIR ST. (14 Mile at Coolidge) Royal Oak, Michigan (48068) LI 9-1100 (Ext. 262) An Equal Opportunity Employer . For mors 151 WAITRESSES AND BA&- s p.m. Airway Laras, 4*25 Hlgh- MATURB WOMAN TO LIVE Ih tor I school ogo children. 26S-3242 Warren. MOTHERLESS HOME Wlt’H boys, 3 end 5. More for he man wogoa. 473*730. • IEED REAL SHARP OI»L tO fond bar and waltraaa. ' ■ — steady work. For Into Ralp. 11 a.m. - 6 p.m. C 7? N, Saginaw, Pontiac. PAINT ! Salesperson ;Our new paint and Wall covarlr dept, needs an axparlancad matui and wall groomad Individual to st.. jand advise customara regarding paint and wall covtring. Incoma commensurate with experience. En|oy purchase discount, retirement plan, Tlta Insurance, and many other benefits. Apply In person. EMPLOYMENT OFFICE Basement HUDSON'S Pontiac Mall RECEPTIONIST SHARP GAL AS* slst doctor, charming personality fs the key. $260 Call Batty Slack, 334-SnolHng iT sqqIUtw. RECORD DEPARTMENT ,___ ... m....ulng to maintain the most complete record department In this area. Buying, special order f Wanted Female 7|IM» Wwtid Female WOMAN OVER 3S FOR CROCK-— Candles at Pontiac Mall. “— n till to f p.m. Apply REGISTERED NURSE LICENSED * PRACTICAL NURSES Isteied nurses $6004720 per mo. Rogli Shift per Mmo." Shift differential. * 25c hr. Actual beginning salary be on training and experience. Si bonus for S hr. shift on Sat. Sun. Vary generous fringe be fits. Openings on oil shift*. I HelpWented M. w F. 8 AMT—ASCP TECHNICIAN — « bod general hospital and sxlanded — fscillty, located In Ihe cents the Thumb area of Michigan. Mlly located to Detroit. I Saginaw, Boy City, Pontiac — Lake Huron. Pop. 3100 Comprehensive benefit program. Salar-commensurete with qualification •Ml experience. Contact H. B. Pur- _____________ ..JRSE FOR FULL Time position. Doctors offlco. Call FE 5-M07 between t and ~ , Avon Cantor Hos- R.N. s Supervisors and LPN HEAD NURSES NEEDED At m-bad nursing home on all shifts and at SALARIES HIGHER THAN AVERAGE. DIAL 338-7151 Ext. *5 1:30 o.m. to 4 p.m._ ____—>1, Marietta, Mich. _____ BARMAID OR BARVRnBER. FULL ------------ ------------------- 4L00D DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED RH Positive V. RH Nag. with positive ictors V. . ..eg., B-neg., AB-neg. I ^^MICHIOAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER in Pontiac FE 44* 1343 Wide Track Dr* w. on. thru crl., * a.m.-4 p.m. Wad. 1 p jn.-lpjn. SALAD WO pratarred, b Union Lake . *46* or 363-9530. area. Duffy's 363- SALES HELP DAY OR NIGHTS, excellent working conditions, paid vocations. Apply Sherman Proscriptions, IS Milo and u' SECRETARY Typing, tiling, experienced. hove pleasant phono voice. ____ fringe, benefits. Apply et Arteo Inc., 3010 Indianwood Lake Orion. SECRETARY Wayne State University Is renfly accepting applications ... a secretarial posit ton In Its school of Social Work. Requiring that an employee Y'"1' ** in Pontiac . SR ■ ______________ Campus. Good typing required. testing I ext. 7084. d salary An equal opportur SECRETARY FOR LEGAL OFFICE — typing required. Shorthand and Jejiai^ experience not required. FE Warfc Wanted Malt A-l CARPENTER work, of all kinds. 6734516. ________ rl CARPENTER, ROUGH AN ALUMINUM HOUSES CLEANED, window and wall washing, pointing, Intorlor and exterior, garages and basements cleaned. You ' Wit'll do tt. FE 3-7327. CAREER IN Real Estate Instruction class now forming for a class in Real Estate. Openings for several salespeople, both male and female, who are interested in making money. Bonus plan and many advantages in one of the fastest growing companies — main office plus 3 branch offices. Both existing and new homes. BATEMAN REALTY, Call FE 8-7161, ask for Jock Ralph. COUPLE, NIGHT PORTER WOR peWenced only. 15 Mila and Slava BASEMENTS CLEANED, SMALL cement Work, light hauling, —" housepainting. You name It < It. 3X1-516*. Ask ter Carl. CHIMNEYS REPAIRED, SCREEN- MAN aliiritis wSrk, hours i Maxine McGowan. FE 4-3867. Business Service tXPfefclENCED BROILER, STEAKS and sea food. Nights, 4 to 11 p.m. 6 days, no Sundays. Club Roches- __________.___________Saginaw. . 1 ROOMS 111 WEEKLY, 3 ROOM. ALUMINUM STORM GLASS Rg.l Adults. 75 Clerk.________________ pair. Free pickup end delivery, a ROOM STUDIO APARTMENT, Birmingham, Bloomfield Bloomfield area. 4*1-1115, 1-A ALUMINUM—VINYL SIDING ‘ mln^fterm Wjndows^ A ALCOA — toot prices - Aephrit Fnl«| 3-D CONSTRUCTION PARKING LOTS DRIVEWAYS Free estl. - I Open til 9 p.m. EiectricdCentrecting ELECTRICAL CONTRACTING, specialise In wiring of home, «. rage, etc. OR 3*52* or OR 4- ASPHALT AND SEAL-COATING, Frag Estimates. FE 4-1131. f SPECIALIS' s. FE 5-4M0. PONTIAC ASPHALT PAViNG : Post action. Call FE 34*13. FI 1-6511. Also tool coating. Free os- , ttmotes.______■ AUalitVSRaL c6atiMo tor astlmates call 363-7034 ; tag Asphalt paving FEB-1573 Booti and Accessories r CENTER ijsrxsi lhoiriW^.i-M>-IMS S. Woodward at mi j-mn. ___________ Brick & Bleck Service Building Modgrnizotion ! OARAGES, tO'xlO', WS. WE ~ COMPLETE REMODELING Servlet |y work «lnce 1945 LAYING mt CUSTOM FLOOR COVERING. Ll- —' form If- ---- *yry. I ______ Janitorial Service windows — •6 N. Saginaw GAM FE 3-1311 Free estimates ________*wrra •FOR_GAl»®|S. HOME IMPROVE- RY, New A I'll imates. 335-9981. —I NISH, KITCHENS* '0 ytarc axperlenct — lenient \ -1 CEMENT WORK ypes — 20 yrs. experience « Est. 634-6014 Of 4*1-1671 ALL TYPES OF CEMENT WORK. Free Estimate*. 4231144. ALL tVYdS OF CEMENT WORK ;andy for 1 slabs. Basement*. UL 1-4213. 333 BLOCK AND-CEMENT WORK. PON ' tlac, 3*1-1173. CEMENT WORK OF ALL KINDS, petlo specie lists. UL >4731. _ Cement and Block Work Guinn's Construction Co. FE 4-7677 ________Eves. 3*1-3671 L^iifcfeDi'llDEWALK BUILDER, drives, pottos, etc- FE 5-334*. MULTI-COLORED PA1 l6S, rLOORS, — driveways, Ted Etwood Ent"--prlsjt, 6*1-3373 or FE 4-S474. PATIOS, "DRIVES, GARAGE SLABS, 40 cents $g. tt. FE 4-1876, days. Dressmaking, Tailoring ALTERATIONS ALL TYPES. KNIT dresses, leather coots OR 371*3. SETTY JO'S DRESSMAKING Weddings, alterations. 674-3704_ dressmaking aiTd altera- FE 14444. Fra# I Excavating Basement Excavatlon-FE S-2555 Plumbing A Heating CONDRA plumbing a heating STEADY EVENING WORK, POLISH Ing hardware. S to * pan. Mon. through Frl. Apply General Lock. 244 W. Sheffield, Pontiac. * a.m. TEACHER NEEDS HOUSEKEEPER, — 14 M| .JT-u:.---------------- JACKS DRIVE INN Cor. Baldwin A Montcalm FE 4-7112 Frank and Jeanetl----to—- walla, septic fields. Footings. 412- BROWN IES HARDWARE FLOOR SANDERS—POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS RUG CLEANER-POWER SAWS »« Joslyn FE 44105 RENT ROTOTILCdRS. ROtOR rakes, power sod cutler, trencf beckhoes, Jackson's, 331-9271. CLARKSTON ROOFING CO. One of the -Bast." — 67341*7 HOT TAR ROOFING. WALLED LK. and vicinity. For fro* estimate. Cell 851-1458. Hof TiAR ROOFING-SHINGLING, R. Price. FE 4-1024. tr Fence Co., FE $4546 Floor Sunding ’ f WOMACK ROOFING, REROOF. Complete Ins. coverage. Free es-tl metes. 330-4545.__________________ I COMPLETE LANDSCAPING -lalizlng In brokbn concrete, Inlng walls. Fre* estimates. J. Waltman. “* HAULING ANd”SODDING, ALSO finish grading. FE 4-5331._ MERION BLUE SOD, FEAT, COM- . |.. 740 Lochaven Union 632-4500. MERTON BLUE SOD. PICK UP_OR BREECE LANDSCAPING FE 5-3302 or FE 2-4711 YARD GRADING, PLOWINO AND ..... I. OR 3-140*. LAWN SPRINKLING PUMPS AND suppli mgir 3-1111, WAITRESS , WANTED. 7)4 V word.330-1330. _______ WAITRESS WAITED, FULL tlME Franks Restaurant, Koogo Harbor. WAITRESS WANTED FOR UNIQUE t*v«m. West of Pontiac. Frl., and Sun, eves. 4*2-5777 after 7, WAITRESSES, NIGHT AND DAY BLACK DIRT, FILL, TOP Bulldozing — Backhoe Rees. 43440*4, 401-1471 PROCESSED GRAVEL# ANALYZED black dirt and top soli. —" *—I Bulldozing, FE 54M4. _ Swimming Pools CLARKSTON POOL 7170 Dixie Highway Mon. thru Frl., I e.m. to 4 p.m. Sat., * a.m. to 1 p.m. Sun., 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. A Div. of John Voorhols Builder Clarkiton, MA 5-1474 1 Tree Trimming Service TREE TRIMMING BY BAL ■ret estimate. FE 5-444*. 474-3510. AL'S TREE TRIMMING, REMOV-al, fra* estimates. 473-7140 er FE 5-4940._________________________ BAB TREE SERVICE, INSURED. Trimming, removal. Fro* estl-------- 474-1301 or 714-34*5. "DALBY & SONS' STUMP, TREE, REMOVAL FE 5-3005 Firewood FE 5-3015 MICHIGAN SPRAYING* SERVICE. Tree removal and trimming, Trons-plontlng end landscaplng. SH-1345. NEW RAILROAD_ T1ESu^ ROUGH 6267653^ TALBOTT LUMBER , Gloss servlet, wood or aluminum. Bulidlng and Hordwor# supplies. 1015 Oakland MS» Moving and Storagv SMITH MOVING AND STORAGE. 10 Mower Service Painting nod Decorating 1-A PAINTING RESIDENTIAL, COMME R CIAL CUSTOM WORK, GUARANTEED. Ft 2-49S4 or '451-9741. PAINTI.NG AND DKCOlAtlHb Free estimates. UL 2-1398 CHARLES DECORATING. 1 mates. 332-8971, »3 p.r PAINTING, PAPERING. W, cleaning, paper removal. B..T, dusky. FE 4-4541, UL 1-3190.' Piano Tuning Trucking Pi LIGHT MOVING, TRAI heuWd reetoneble. FE 4-1353. geroges clwn:_6ft 34417. 41M04T SHARP FASHION MINDED GAL. GRILL COOK. S DAYS _ -----------------—■— Good working conditions. Good pay. Pled Piper Restaurant. 4370 Hlgn-‘ ’ ~ ' Fontloc. JANITOR WORK, PART TIME. AP-ply In parson. Standard Electric Co., 175 ST sogl High school gradual! with soi business school training doslrf Minimum (1) year typing and g< oral office work. M. C. MFC. CO. lit Indlanwood Rd. Lk. Orion* Mich. 692-2711 Ah gqual Opportunity Employr URGENTLY NEEDED* 2 FULL time beauticians. Apply In person. Coiffure ParAnne Beauty Salon* Drayton Plains. KITCHEN HELP Day or night atiltt. Will train. As** 25 *- '* "—1 * -1"* Cr»dlt Advisors GET OUT OF. DEBT I AVOID GARNISHMENTS, REPOSSESSIONS, BAD CREDIT,: HAR-RASSMENT, BANKRUPTCY AND LOSS OF JOB. Wo hav* helped thousands of people with creditor problems by providing a planned managod, organized program. LET US CONSOLIDATE YOUR DEBTS WITH ONE LOW PAYMENT YOU CAN AFFOJtD. NO limit go to LABORATORY TECHNICIAN, F6R —111 hospital, Mr. Moneher. 451- __________r darson st., or phono Konnoth G. Hempstead, 33443S4. 115 Elizabeth LekeRd. ________________ 3 ROOMS AND BATH, CLEAN, NO -.....____ children, FE 5-1705. LICENSED AND BONDED r—^~SSsJCZiS™ ’clitDsurs ____i Appointment Gladly Arrongod * i522S5’ .flIVi?J£_,ENTRANce' No Conor Obligation for Interviews' bachelor. *1 E. Howard. HOURS *-7 PJWv—SAT. 9-5 p.m. j ROOMS AND BATH, DEBT AID --------£-----------I 71* I WAITRESS. BAR AND BOWLING alloy. Apply In person. » Fr H • Ve Orion. ' ’ holidays. Birch Room, 2 WAITRESSES HUDSON'S PONTIAC RQ0M Hat full lima and part tlmt open Ings with excellent employment ben* flit. Purchase discount, IK* In surance. Blue Croat and man) "‘APPLY IN PERSON EMPLOYMENT OFFICE BASEMENT HUDSON'S PONTIAC MALL WANTED MATURE BABY SITTER. 7:30-5. Mon.-Frl. Lotus Lake area. Call attar 4 p.m. 473-717S. WANTED: LPN FOR NURSING ' o part-time cook, mutt ■I -------meed. Apply ' ----- 1355 W. Sllverbell Rd. WANTED SALESGIRLS. EXPERIENCED PREFERED. FULL OR PART TIME. GOOD PAY AND OPPORTUNITY. BOBETTE *“““ 14 N. SAGINAW. WANTED LADY TO WORK PART " a In shift dept, of quality ‘ thing establishment. P|eas* Telegr a hour martlnlzlng. 2305 __aph Rd **- >r Mr. Bryat WORKING MOTHER DESPERATE-muat have In, 5 days. Avon Bar, 3*12 Auburn Rd., do housework It tatloa Call after 5:30, 343-504*. ROCHESTER COMMUNITY SCHOOLS Dressmaking ft Tailoring 17 LAWN SOD, .KENTUCKY BLUB and mixed. 14*5 Wooley Rd. --ford. 4131436.________ Sick leave allowance Hospitalization Paid vacMIen Paid holidays Pension plan Applications ere being accepted ter Custodial — day and night shlfte Grounds and utility — day ahift Matrons — lull and part time Irlvart — part time Painting and Decorating 23 Apply at Beard at Education Ol-tic* at Fourth and Wilcox or phone 651-6210 Mon. through Frl. 1-4:30 LIMOUSINE DRIVERS, MUST SHOULD YOU Make an employment change? NOW IS THE TIME I Michigan Bell l3*5 Cass Ave., Detroit Phone: 3*33815 TROY'S " NEWEST RESTAURANT Terry's Country Squire. 1474 W. Maple, Trey. Waitresses, ell shifts. Experienced grill short order. Dishwashers. Apply In person tre 2 p.m. - » p.m. Ask tor Ted Terr 443*1*0. E NEED FULL TIME SALESMEN or women. Models to hold open. Alio' resale houses, terms, lake properties, lots and small acreage. You can make good money her*, call Charlta Mills, MY 32*21, FE Saiys Htlp, Mak-Fomale ft-ft CAN YOU SELL? ■- —* »n openlr.. ... In making money. Real Estate experience helpful but net MHM a good bulidlng progra attractive commission •v,w». For Interview egll — Mr. Tayloi OR *41304. eves. EM 37544. YOU ARB A SPECIALIST IN LIFL underwriting or for company field work with 2 plus successful yer— under your ball. You hav* pres ability to train ethers. You ■ u,— .-------------1 and epporti rg* *stabllsf_-____......___ -,—-y serving Oakland and Ganesse County, W* hav* a top management position open with salary and Incentive plan far the right man. Let's gat together. Writ* Pontiac Press Box C-30, Pontiac, Michigan. Help Wanted M. or F. j Wanted M. or F. Truck Rental Trucks to Rent Vi-Ton Pickups 1'/4-Ton SI TRUCKS - TRACTORS AND EQUIPMENT Dump Truck* — Seml-Trelleri Pomiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. S25 S. WOODWARD _ FE 4-0441 PE 4-1441 Open Dally Including ~ | Water Softaners BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS, Wells cleaned. Rees. Sansfaetlen guaranteed. Insured. FE 314*1. THE OAKLAND COUNTY MERIT SYSTEM OPEN COMPETITIVE EXAMINATIONS These examinations are being announced to establish lists to fill present and future vacancies In these classifications. CONTINUOUS EXAMINATIONS ‘ ‘ • may be filed ui CLOSING DATE EXAMINATIONS Applications for those examinations may b* filed no later than 5:00 P.M. on the closing data: TITLE CLOSING DATE Assist. Director Civil Defense Aug. 31, 1*47 Accountant I Accountant Trainee Junior Accountant Appraiser Aide Aula Repairman I Children's Supervisor I Child walfara Worker I Clark I Clark II Construction Inspector SALARY RANGE 6*800- 8*000 6*600— 7,500 4,700+- 5*500 5*700- 6*300 - 6*300 - 6*700 t III Court Reporter l Court Reporter Dental Clinic Assistant I Garage Attendant General Staff Nurse Kay Punch Operator f Kay Punch Operator I* 6*300- 6,900 7*400- 1*300 6*500- 7*400 6*800— 7*700 3*900- 4*200 4*000- 4*300 - 5*200 tonnel Technician I r Personnel Technician » Operator 6*600— 7*500 6*500- 6*700 7*100- 8*300 7*900- 8*800 ' 9*000- 10*500, 11*500- 13J80 6*500- MiO 7,100- %m 6*600— 7*800 •*|00^ VM08 8,500- 9*500 4*300- 4/600 4*900- 5*700 4*500- 5*300 T^lst II „ ^ 4,003- 1 APPLICATIONS MAY BE OBTAINED FROMt THE PERSONNEL DIVISION OAKLAND COUNTY COURTHOUSE 1100 N. Talagraph Rd. Solas Halp Molt‘Ftoiolt B*A Inga and sales. Plenty of fleer time. Expertince helpful gut MR necessary, will train you er* ““ lab. Far Interview call Mr. lar er Mr. Clgrk, REAL ESTATE SALES Wa are expanding our office have openings for several salespeople, both male and feme la, to sdN raw and used hornet. Tap commh-slons paid, including Incentive H profit oh^lng. Experience ‘ NEED CASUAL LABORERS II MANPOWER 333d NTING-RI TH CASH FOR A START-HOME iKTfSwWim, unty. call agent ■ YORK' AT>jS3*Wwt deal. Private party. 4730*0*. 3 ROOM APARTMENT FOI aMmT : 3BEDR00M DUPLEX, PONTIAC area, $125 me. Call after * LAWYERS REAL ESTATE fe are In dire need at acreage w development purpeaet end also i need of commarclal and ‘ ^ ~ ■lal property. If you woi iteraetad In a short farm 'Ith no obllgatlen, please g call. 689-0610 5 ROOMS. VERY GOOD CC tlen. Adults only. 133 W. ranee. REALTY, i dosing. I 436-9575. NOTICE) CLARKSTON AREA HOME, LOT AND ACREAGE OWNERS. Being your local Raal Estate Co. — neve many calls In this area m properties In this area. Please confect us before you llat I Clarkston Real Estate PRIVATE PARTY DESIRES 6-BED-room older heme. $0,000 to 015,000. Will buy equity or full rath tar hem*. Ne realtors. Call FE 5-3115. SMALL FARM OR w60DS WITH Michigan er call 476-5*00. FOR YOUR EQUITY, VA, FHA, OR OTHER. FOR QUICK ACTION CALL NOW. HAOStROM REALTOR, OR 4-0353 OR EVENINQ3 Apart—rt»* Unfnniialiad 11 3 ROOMS PRIVATE - 1335 OlXlf Hwy, FE 4-1)31, Ot 304«. j kiooMk" AND BATH OtJ AAk- Mnt OWcb Spare , dapoalt, PE 5-401 I70k 3337603. FORRENT. BLOOMFIELD ORCHARD APARTMENTS Ideally situated In Blebmflald-BIr-mingham area, luxury 1- and 3 bedroom apartments available for 0FRCE SPACE FOR RENT Approx, ooo on, R, ,000 SQ. FT. INDUSTRIAL BLDG., iio.ooo cement floor, lanced ail around. 4615 Dlxl* Hwy., call own-ar. MA 3116), \ BUILDING WIRED FOR MACHINE Ihop. OR 3507*. industrial buRdlm. E_____ tlac. Naar E-w axpreaaway. Suitable tar manufacturing, Auto-truck repair, salts, shop, etc Ufa main rd. Yard spec*. Immediate occupancy. Priced to move by owner. 674-0134 days, 0234600 or 6731404 «V- F0R LEASE New black building, 2 Approved tor " 2 baths 10 ff. located “ *“ ,risa l-BEDROOM HOME, BY OWNER-, Clarkston schools, lake nrlvllagas, - --- n, 075 me. 4334810._______ ■BEDRC 5-bedroom. 1 story colonial, taclwd 2 car garage. Large tan room with stone fireplace. In n subdivision at Watklna Lk. BEDROOM RANCH, CLARKltOt) schools, axtra elaan. nleahr landscaped, plastered walls with cove ceilings, 013,150. About 02,000 down. BEDROOM RANCH In Springfield, Clarkston schools and phora, raw "i-amiTO large MENZIES REAL ESTATE 4235415 *» pixie Hwy. 4135015 Pontiac, Cell MO-4054. . DOWNTOWN, BACHE- Rant Houses, Unfurnished 40 3 ROOMS, COUPLE ONLY $30 2 BEDROOM, MODERN, CLEAN, week. FE 2-54*4. I No children or pats. 0115 a mo. -------------I----------I OHIO dap. FE 3f0ll~ no children or nets.13 BEDROOMS. WATERFORD TOWN- 3 ROOMS PRIVATE BATH, NICE-1 _ CARPENTER SCHOOL AREA. 3 ------- Vacant. $13*. Will It— •rs. 37 Mechanic. I ing; papering, wall washing. 473 3 FE l-O&Ikr 3 ROOMS AND BATH. 036 WEEK, QUALITY PAINTING, QUALITY prlca, year* of exp., free estimatr~ FE 2-45*7. Buck's Feinting Sei AGED FURNITURE HP the price. Big savings alto on carpet and draperies. Call 333 1700 far FREE estimate In your Wantud Household Goads 29 CASH FOR FURNITURE AND Appliances, 1 plac* or hour‘“b—ira son's. FE 4-7001, 3 ROOMS AND BATH. CHILD WEL- CALL, THAT'S ALL I CASH FOR antiques, quality fumltur* i ' gum. M. H. Sallow, Holly. 437-1 or 334-074Z.______________________ OPPER, BRASS; RADIAT6 ■farters and ganaratora, C I WOULD LIKE TO BORROW 87.000. Will repay $200 monthly. Call between 134. 3*300*4. Wanted tu Rent i. On social aid. PE us* ewnpr's car*. Never rant-ad before, only rata, la "see our houaa." 3433301. COUPLE MiBbS HOUSE OR APT. APARTMENT FOR RENT V Ftortnct* Pontiac APARTMENT* UTILITIES F... • ‘i«d, adults only. 682-6653 or 682- BACHELOR, 1 ROOM CARPETED, erlvalt, north and. PE 34374. rentals In ttw Pontiac MR — lord and Difpylon Plains area. Sislock ft Kent, Inc. __ 1309 Pontiac State Bank Shan Living Quarters 33 GldL WILL SHARE APARtMENt nr. Oantral Hospital with “““ Call bt. 2-8 p,m.* 332-1747$ WOMAN WILLING TO SHARE Wanted Rani Ertute 36 1 TO 50 LOTS. ACREAGL FARMS, BUSINESS PROP- HOMES, LOTS, ACREAGE PAR-CELS, FARMS, BUSINESS PROPERTIES, ANO LAND CONTRACTS WARDEN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. opdyk* Rd. FE 38141 urgently need for immadlaM Salal Pontiac Dally'til I 1 MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE I MINUTES ILL CASH II If behind In ALL CASH >r homes any plac* In Oaklai County, money In 24 hours. YORK CASH 41 Hours id Contracts — t Equities Wright ind Av*. .ENJOY LIVING IN SCENIC ROCHESTER Newly decorated, air conditioned spacious 1-bedroom apartments Completely carpeted ° or'pats, 27 c7ark's»7»l-T7*lL “Re ming pool end free party room. Only $140 a month. Take Roches- 3 ROOMS AND BATH* $30 WEEK. Utilities furn. Deposit required. Cell 693-6613. Week days 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. Fridays 9 to 9. 11 ter Rd. to Romeo Rd. Then Park-dale to 812 Plate. Rochester Manor Apartments. 651-3044. UN 4-6133. 3 ROOMS AND BATH. ADULTS only. 77 Foster. HOUSE FOR RENT 4234*74 3 ROOMS AND BATH) PRIVATE MOBILE HOME FOR RENT. 2-entranc*. FE 3*4*4. . i bedroom. Stove refrigerator, car- 3' ROOMS, NICE AND CLEAN, NO pets, no drinkers, convenient to bus stop, walking distance to Poh-tlac and Fisher Body, 37 E. Beverly. ! per ing ana arapes, *nu per mo. plus security deposit. Located In new park near 1-75 and Lapeer Rd. Call Fraser 268-1448 bet. 8:30 a.m. | end 5 p.m. RENT AI>)D BUY 3-BEDROdM, 2 3 Bedrooms , LOW DOWN PAYMENT NO MORTGAGE COSTS MODEL OPEN 179 COLORADO 1:30 te S p.m. day week WEST0WN REALTY TE 32743 da^l Attar 7:3* p.m. • 34477_ 3- BEDROOM RANCH, Hi BATHS, fireplace, walk-out haaamant, beautifully landscaped canal, $14.-300. 2-bedroom heme, $1,500 an Gl farms, nice starter heme tor young couple. Call, far IMIla* ragjaant-Ina Dan Mattingly Agamy. W*!. 4- BEDROOMS. IVi bathg. »iw*ypn r'Oom brick veneer" bunga- low. Tile bath, porch, basement, garage. $13,000. Immediate oc- JsSgSn/'................ j story home, lull basement, . heet, garage, $400 needed, $105 I per mo. 543844*. Royal Oek. RENTING PROBLdMS? SEE OUR Rent lake Cottages 41 ROOMS AND BATH* CITY—WEST side. FE 2-5605. 10% DOWN NEW HOMES finished 3BEDROOM RANCH merit, 2-cer garage, ing, 015,700 Plus lot. 3BEDR00M BRICK TRILEVEL, IVi baths, 3cer garage, tom* kitchen end dining erea. $10,500 3BEDROOM COLONIAL, 2Vb baths. *15 PLUS. REFERENCE. FURN-Ishad. Us* of kitchen. 3*3 Central. ATTENTION TEACHERS. DOUBLE m ROOMS AND BATH, baby welcome — no pet week, $100 dtp. tnqulr Baldwin, call 3334054. ___ ROOMS, PRIVATE ' BATH -CL.f*N 3J«P'^.ROOM, ^MEN 2-car brick garage, peraita itmlly room, 02*.-200 plus lot. J. C. HAYDEN, Realtor ! vj mile west of Oxbow Lake 1343-4404 10735 Highland Rd. (M59) 3 MODELS OPEN DAILY AND SUNDAY Drive out M-5* Just west of Casa Lake Rd. fe Candalstick. Dlractly behind the Dan Mattingly Businas* Center. oAN mattiNOLY DELUXE BACHELOR APART-mant. Elizabeth lake front, good beach. Attractive and completely furnished 2 bedrooms. TV, beat dock, terrace, utllltkfi turn. Quiet GENTLEMAN, SLEEPING ROOM with living room, private bath, end private entry, near James K. 1*5 Linden. . ________________ LARGE CLEAN SLEEPING ROOM. Close to factories. PE 34251. FE 8-6048._____________■ • LARGE CLEAN ROOM, PLEASANT surroundings, kitchen privileges. Single er caupto. OR 31310. LARGE SLEEPING ROOM, KITCH-*n privileges, <30 wk, FE 31437. BACHELORS ONLY, PRIVATE EN- ----1, both, kitchen. All utilities dtod. $25 waokly, oioo sec. 4333415 or 4133135. BASEMENT APARTMENT. UTILI-lies paid. 333057*. DOWNTOWN 2-ROOM, ROOMS FOR RHNT, WITH OR without TV, near ---- - 3W93-sagamoAe k. 531 d*POoTt~ MY 3277*. SLEEPING ROOM, CLOSE TO FAC-tory, no drinkers. FE 35074, SLEEPING ROOM. WOMAN PRE-i—Id. 120 Mt. Clemens. FE 5-9355. women — SHAhe LivIHH hooA), both, TV. cookina. EM 31534. Rooms With Board 43 NICE, PRIVATE BATH AND EN- NICE CLEAN 3 ROOMS AND BATH -----te entrance, $30 weekly, 030 Including utilities, bo1- ifi Lfterty St. •PARTiALLV > U R N -- —■ ■—*3 |1 chi._ ___ 5-9 p.m. 30 Jeftor- SINGLE AND DOUBLE, 433 AND &^rwh».f............. Apartments, Unfurnished 38 I- l-BEDROOM. New. NEAR MALL Carpeted. Appltoncea. Air and sound condltlonad, heated. Roc room. Adults No pets. FrAm 0135. 2-BEDROOM,' ADULTS. 425-2001 OR 2-BEDRObM, DRAPES AND CAR-' d, adults, no pats, 5135 mo. a,m. and after 7 pjn. MA only, parking, Howard st. FE 3 7341. NICE CLEAN ROOM FOR i RELIABLE ADULT COUPLE OR fady, good —* m call. 3333494. m6tel, SINGLE OC-—14 par weak. Maid aarv-Ice, TV. trl*phora. 7*9 s. Wood- ____mt~ greatly reduced on thls.de-I 3 bedroom ranch home v.- -Jklng Walters Lake, built In lfS7 this good looking home fee- . TIMES Open Sunday 1 TO 4 The Fabulous Admor Model with 1,450 square feat of tin lilted living prea with room toi expansion for the growing tarn lly. we would Ilka to have you see the quality of work ottered, with mis building protect and how Important this should be tor you people who are contemplating building. Everything you sea when you visit our model goei at the price quoted, so stop out and see Kay S vat cos and Shirley Burton, your hostesses for the day. Across from me Sliver Lake Golf Course on Walton Blvd. Watch for me sign. CUSTOM DELUXE Is offered you when you chase this lovely home 1^^. elite area of Clarkston. This 3-bedroom brick home In Hl-Woot" Village has over 1,800 squan feet of living area on me first floor plus a full basement. Fam lly room on tha first floor dont In rich mahogany paneling with tloor-hxelllnq fireplace and built In book cabinet. Kitchen taken from a quean's dream with long Formica counters, built-in -—•« overlooking Weltere ,L«k*,_l tu Fom”'designed* kltctiim,'"breakfast noon, 3 bedrooms and den, 2 porcy. Carpeted throughout. Directum:, Baldwin Avenue to C tor ks-ton-Orion Road, turn left Id ciear-vlew (across from Walters Leke) to, 3130 woodslde. OPEN BUILDERS CLOSEOUTI New exciting 3 bedroom aluminum raa, full basa- Sum A^yff^a^M^d, north Vk mho to Jettwm Street, left to open signs. Will duplicate on your lot or oun. OPEN CLOSE TO PONTIAC N0RTH|RN i fill basement. '. Possession In Sok House* 49 TRADE Your present lot or heme tor e new home et Jayno Heights, ’< lakes tor your ploesuro, paved street, community water system, end excellent area to raise YOUR FAMILY, OPEN 47 MOHAWK 1 INDIAN VILLAGE OPEN SUNDAY 2 to J. See P« ................ 380 square feet of eating space, embossed kitchen cabinet doors made to perfection with colonial brass hardware and cupboard room for any and all of your wares. Large slate foye. ... franca In mis charming home give you mo feeling Immediately of gracious living and mis formal carpeted living ra 2 full ceramic bams, master I room with double closet and presslve Andaman wood win_______ cases to greet your attention you tachad garage and full Insulation - Cell fr- ---- ------£ -- polntment ottering. OAKLAND LAKE Privileges offered with tl level contemporary with ; bedrooms, 12x18 family basement, 1th car attack-. rage. We eleo offer well to well carpeting, ceramic belt), pro fesstonafly landscaped ant ' fenced lot. Blacktop drive am street. A real winner tor onh 817,500 and It'S the first offerliq eo hurry. WHEN YOU (EEK OUR SERVICE YOU "JOIN THE MARCH OP TIMES" Times Realty 5890 DIXIE HIGHWAY 623-0600 REALTOR Optn 9-9 Dally OPEN Sunday, 1 to 5 SMALL ESTATE > WEBSTER SCHOOL - A-l location Included with jjjls attractive home located lust oft Worn Huron Street, 4 rowne end bate] wim 3 bedrooms. Pull basement with recreation room end oil heat. $13,250. Excellent condition ton ^.nTSS^^to rn cer garage. Good terms. Warren Stout, Realtor ten n. Opdyke Rd. FE '^"‘muIUoIo Listing Service DORPJS OPEN ' SUNDAY, 2 TO 5 DUTCH COLONIAL HOME erete dining room, 2 family ra -LUS a convenient close-in Ion. Priced rlghtl Will dl House and i acres. 322,500. olnlng vacant 4 acres, 14500. ... itantlel down. We're not stretching 4-H REAL ESTATE H Dixie Hwy. 623 OR 3-0455 OR 4-2QQ4 OR 3 WATERPRONT LOT AND cottage. Low down wymant. Low mommy payments. Northern Do,, -------» Co., Iterrtoon. ,-.™ —w. Term*. *25-3373. ■ ' ' 5 ACRES FOR SALE BY OWNER. nice building lot. 473-2230. 4 AtRES 374' ROAD FRbfltAoE. lip. Clarkston. _________________colonial priced or 317,700. 220 JOSEPHINE PIONEER HIGHLANDS OPEN SUNDAY 2 to S. Attractive brick bungalow, full boeoment, garage, fenced yard, welt landscaped with large shade trees and far-privileges. Take W. Huron St. teg at Voorhelt to -* 2950 V00RHEIS CHEROKEE HILLS OPEN SUNDAY 2 to 5. Attractive r—Sm tfo, Bill _________________1 Rd. to right at Voorhelt. OPEN McCullough realty » Highland Rd. (M37) Ml ‘EN 7 to 7_____ *74-22 liKotnt Property TIZZY . Fowier, EM s4sb. By Kate Oaann B0'X250< LEVEL, SHADED LOT with Watkins I iji • —----------- Phono OR 3-Ttn luntlna, lo lh $5,000 do 95 ACRES ON DIXIE HWY. vor 2,000' frontage. In Springfield Twp. Ideal tor Mobil Rome Perk or subdividing. 150 ACRES randon Township, beautiful rolll farm land, 34M per .acre. Tern 16 ACRES Near Pontiac Airport, excellent I dustrlal alto on MS7. BATEMAN COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 377 S. Telegraph 338-9641 Sef. alt. 3, Eves. A Sun, cell 3343107 trig let. 100'xll5' deep. Will on contract only. *27,000. In 8145 per mo. JACK LOVELAND 2100 Cass Lake Rd. 5-room apartments wl... . closet space, private baths, oak floors, also one 3-room apartment with bath. Full baaerr—* 4 furnaces and hot water I ere all on eeperete meters, further information call today. Priced at 338,125. Contract terms. Clerk Real Estate, 1362 W. Huron St., FE 3-7838. Multiple List-Ing Service. Lake Property 51 134' LAKE-FRONT LOT. IN LAKE Angwlut Golf Vltw &HH|| f| *“ OR 3-6165. GOOD SELECTION OF LOTS, building sites on Deer Lake Estates with lake prlv. Lake 10 ACRES, perfect fu ——----------------- and growing children. A natural setting for exposed basement home. $5,950, ILOOO down. 10 ACRES# outstanding boauty# s -3.aa.-e. Ola* fr«OSd hi I It# $7,9! 22*'ACRES," ■**tw, ner“ ing 0. ... joins stats . ACRES, Me------------- possibilities, Vi mile < $560 AL PAULY 431* Dixie, rear OR 3-3300 ______Eves. 623-0603 a-i condition, 2 BEbfcooMs yr. Ik. frent horns on Lake Orion, O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? Open Sunday 5864 SOUTHWARD RIGHT THIS WAY • -— W bath off master bedroom. Paved carport. Mealy landscaped veto. Priced to sell fast et 820Joo. North on Airport Road right to 5844 Southward. Dave Clasman your hr ’ OR 3-2818. Open Sunday 2-5 P.M. 3177 HERBELL THIS LOVELY 3-BEDR00M BRICK homo Is located In Lorraine Mai *" 1 conveniences of city lh I| sewer) 1 It toil a 21* mile west In. Follow open signs. As only authentic Cape Cod 2^i£lU?»te« «k IK pi.', tered wall*, truly a wonderful family home surrounded by towering shade tree*, evergreens and mv-erii fruit tree*, practically lmme- OPEN WORKINOMAN'S pREAM HOME •RICK AND FRAME RANCH HOME WITH *0 many sales to turet they ere too numerous mention. Wo werd cpmperlsons. Wt honestly feel tort conHF--'-" construction and design thl* -----cannot be beet on today's market. Elizabeth Lake Read to Fern-berry, turn left to 3177 Herboll. Watch for open signs. Your host, Gil Long, 3324237. Open Sunday 2,5 P.M. 5913 DWIGHT IMMEDIATE POSSESSION! Gl's no money down on this nice 2 bed re— *1—B3jj u—I------ ft has and an attached garage, on a large lot with gard and tool shed. r" rport Rd., turn MPt ttraet. Watch M RPR Your host, Don Relqji, 334457*. LAKE PRIVILEGES ON PLEASANT LAKE Thli lovely homo In Pleasant Lake Woods has had loving care end will provide many years of ptoasanl *"• | *—lly. This ______£ merbte __ is, screens and doors, com-y decorated throughout, com-bath end vanity, I kitchen tor eftt- extra to bath. The and master be*—" gated. Paneled necls the modern >np — and attached 2to-cOr garage, tiled basement. Over 1700 sq. of living area. Price $34,500. 342. DAD - THE BEST YEARS d excellent insula-neve 2 models In this in build oo your tot or to Oxford, left on First n Maple, right on Day-open signs. but 720 square feet of living all rooms spacious and com---------- Me, outstanding living room, 14'x* 17to' with exceptional Picture window, muter bedroom, H'xi2’. rich wall-to-wall carpeting end drapes, also dryer Included. Nice patio, brand new 3-car garage plus large workshop, 14W and trxtd'. Lot Is comptetoly Anchor fenced, very nice dog run, to block 20'x22' DANDY HOME, LAKfe ORION, 24'x-40', on foundation, hot wafer heat, '— garage, situated Op over 1 lot on blacktop reed, nice ' noway, .lOto'xllto', 3 A nice commu- 000. Lake privileges on Long Li -—Hi Located 1 garden, pley-I. West on MS7 * right to ring for a d tot Sip JMR IMH ■ full cdramlc bath « ■H........Nr$ not reward her v ;• modem kitchen wHh snack bar. 16x16 family "Buy direct from Beauty-Rite and Save" BEAUTY-RITE HOMES LAKE LIVING PONTIAC IS MIN-utes, IMS 3775. 310 mo. Prlv. beeches on large lakes. Open Sun. Bloch Bros: 623-1333, FE 44507. ing care. 1 slately carp at space 0 » living n LAKE FRONT HOME Built with loving care. This horns Is almost compw**1" - —■**-plenty of closet bathrooms. Also Ing room and .RRRHI largo garaga. Beech Is solid grav-el. $24,900. Terms. MERRITT LAKE Metamore, 3 bedrooms, living room, 3 baths, geragt. Excellent condition, IMF lake Tram, to miles north of Oxford end on hardtop road. 315,7001 Terms. C. PANGUS INC., REALTORS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 40 M15 Ortonvlllo CALL COLLECT NA 7-3315 A HEAP OF LIVING ACREAGE 3to ACRES, 7 minutes ............-. —... -1--------n of nice country Clarkston. 33.395, id land directly S of state land, » down. __Pm- location. Just 1-75 (Clarkston). Par- recreational. C PANGUS INC., REALTORS OPEN 7 DAY A WEEK 690 M-15 Ortonvllie CALL COLLECT NA 7-1MS AVON TOWNSHIP, 74 ACRES, SUIT-il‘*‘ dpvplopvnpnt, 30 LI 7-9070 or eves BEAUTIFUL, WELL' RESTRICTED 0025 after 6 +m. CLARKSTON'AREA SECLUDED, HIGH, LEVEL 135x264 lot. Wooded with pine trees. Lake privileges. On Oakland Lake. Full 2.7 ACRES. 1 mile _________ Clarkston. 300' road front! deep. Gas available. Fu pork lest. Full prica (4200 v LAKE PRIVILEGE LOT AT flG ' ike W. of Clarkston *700 cash. MENZIES REAL ESTATE 625-5485 7332 Dixie Hwy. *254015 PLEASANT LAKE WOODS 2 Beautiful Leke tots “Buy direct from Beauty-Rite dnd Save" BEAUTY-RITE HOMES 3533 Pi (0 Rd. bedroom, furnished. Immediate oc- TIMBERLINE ESTATES Lake and waterfront lot. T ■ k i Dixit Hwy. to White Lake Rd. turn left 1 ml. to subdivision. WILLIAMS LAKE 2-bedroom, aluminum siding, pari basement, oil boat, carpeted living room, 2 fenced lets, 2 car garage, paved drive, to block tr excellent beach. Only I13J00. K. L. TEMPLETON, Realtor 2337 ORCHARD LAKE RD. 682-0700 Northern Property 51-A 3-BEDROOM HOUSE NEAR CAD- sms, good hunting and i, Sioao. Call 387-4340, E tE Tl jmall cer, guns, 425-5170, 1 acre. Deed deer, pc. _____ ______ hunting. Priced tor quick sale. Call Hartland, Mich. «33-m5. HUNTING CABIN AND 5 ACRES near Grayling, 82500. FE *4471. FOUR BEDROOMS Is what so mahy families are call!: tor. This an* located on Ellzabe .eke Road, has aluminum siding fi »sy maintenance. Large counti (itchen, lto cer garage end almo i small farm wlth lts 75x375 I.. M, ell fenced. 118^00 and we will ate your present home In trade. WASHINGTON PARK Large 3 bedroom i mem with finished ._ ____ ..... completely decorated kinds jut. Yes, ft has lto e*r » .—Ith I ■ n dec a pad'lot. Rei fenced also. Full price 314.750. *40. LAKE PRIVILEGES ON WILLIAMS LAKE West Suburban 3 bedroom ranchoi carpeted living room, all arms and screens., Lars >,ic wnh lanscaped lot. Rei cent down to handle. 3-34 - LIST WITH O'NEIL REALTY ideal far ’young^upte7 Prlce>n|nI| l^®T f 9®®^ reasons — TC®.--------‘-IjrT4^4r*frt.JfIce| *hlnk ou^^ef^vetoes eludes carpetine and d tot, *11 city Anvenler Mt*Md contract ijeith 8 > So day* ponastetto* . DORRIS 5, SOM^JMALTOR* ■Hi 3 nr.l. , lh no, wbnt Our list at WIN make you HAY O'NEIL REALTY ' IC Lake Road MLS ^*234703 LEWISTON, MICHIGAN. 24' R M cabin, 3 years old, hot 3 bedrooms, large living room, large —‘— kitchen, large bath with shower, utility room, lo____ block off East Twin Lake and 2 blocks from the town of Lewls- .. furnished, nice lot, sapflc, win and alectrlclty. A real Inexpensive summer home. Only 34758. Must be seen to br ttu A. J. RHODES. REALTOR. FE 3-230* NEW COTTAGE AND WOODED LOT — Full pric*: 32,7*5 with $777 down. Private sand and beech on large toke. Pishing end boating. Coer and Partridge hunting. Korin-ern Development Co. Harrison. Office on Bus. U.S. 27 (1-75), across from Wilson Slats Perk. Open 1 days a week. ("----- Chamber et Commerce). 2to acres, wooded hilly, see 4 ml. from Dllxe - 1-75. 3 per cent down. 13 acres, rolling partly w ml. from M15 and 1-75. UNDERWOOD REAL'ESTATE Office *254*15 LOT, M^lSl'. GRAPES AND AP- Tm not too sure what a Communist is—but I know it has to be someone who’s given up hope of being a Capitalist!” Seh Beslwass Prepir*y 57 PUBLIC AUCTION 22*0 Oxley Or. PontleC. T. P sold on the premises Saturday September 2, 3 p.m. written Mu are now accswtod. HALL'S AUC-TION SALES 705 W. CLARKSTON RD. LK. ORION. INFORMATION CALL M3-1S71.________ ROYER Richard S. Royer, Realtor 14 MILE AND CROOKS ROAD AREA Zoned light manufacturing wit ltoo .am,, toot building with n« wiring.. 11 wet, cejlln 628-2548 ear Rd. (MM) lira, P to > to SASHABAW ROAD .Comm'l earner 274x2131 paved road, city water, dose to 1% 355,000. terms. CLARKSTON COMM'L loot sq. ft. shew roc 2 lavatories, 400 sq. ... .. storage area 4 modern 2 bedim, apt. Bldg, completely redecorated 4 Immediate possession. Terms. 0 SQ. FT. BLDG. A former auto PHHPH excellent location on corner to 4 ton* draft. C'L~----* water, new gu plant, adaptable to many ether uses. Contract tormr with 3l£9o down, Annett Inc. Realtors 23 E. Huron St. 33*4464 Office Open Evenings B Sunday 1-4 ftURt OIL COMPANY HAS 3ERV- RESTAURANT 22'X<0’ WITH Living quarters above. Full —*~ aiTLsoor”— • ““ “* SERVICE STATION 2 owners. 40 year* of operation. Minimum Investment. For further M||jjjigM| 'I Cltgo, Ray Karr, r * ism. Clawson, SMITTYS MARKET, NEAR OX- walk-in cooler. Only IPMOTI 000 down, balance land contract. 32x80 CABINET SHOP With nice 5 ' modern home, oil baseboard Wtth S acres of land. Only ■T'RHODES, REALTOR FE 3-230* SPORTING SQUIPMENT STORE One of the largest ■“ — area. Shows good down will pur yot ...._____ PIFER REALTY. Phone araa 313, WONDERFUL OPPORTUNITY TO n phone II Snapp Sal* Land Contracts 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed. See us before WARREN STOUT, Realtor 450 N. Opdyke Rd. PE *41*5 Open Eves. *ttl S pjn. ACTION rir lend contract large or call Mr, Hmr, FE Mln. Broker, 3772 Elizabeth Leke Road. Sole or kxchangt HAVE 3 BEDROOM RANCH NEAR Judah Lake. Will take trad* on other property, lot or land con- trod. 1-S8M790.______, WANT:. REAL ESTATE PROB HAVE: . . . Ability to solve them Tom Bateman, Realtor FE 8-7161 $15.00 PER HOUR ABSOLUTELY NO SELLING NM about 8300 monthly for hours work per week. Take oi high volume established company accounts of BAVY WORLD TOYS Si NURSERY Items. “ Baby World, American DM. Pon- BEAUTY SHOP doing a real bushiest, tots of parking, 821,510 cash to new mortgage, Includes beauty shop equipment and supplies. RIDGEWAY eeltor_______MLS_________338-4084 BRICK UPPER AND LOWER DU-plex apt. 4 room* each glut bath. Near Oakland Unlvaratty and US Wanted Contracts-Mtg. 60-A 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS Urgantly needed. See in I $de H»—>h>ld 8fd» AS YEAR OLD GENERAL ELECTRIC 10'xU' cortege tank Neva, tolding tabla and chain* car carrier, 335 3 Rooms Furniture •RAND NEW $288 $2.50 WMkiy PEARSON'S FURNITURE E. Pike FE 4-7M1 ^FrW. 6-PIECE MODERN WALNUT DIN-Ing room eel. Maple tr“- * — Also large house 9x12 Linoleum Rugs.. .$3.89 Solid Vinyl Tile ... .... 7c or Vinyl AsMetaa rile ..... to • Inlaid tile MS' ■,.......k* Floor Shop-2255 Eltefbelh Lake "Across From the Moll" PIECE UPHOLSTERED I 30" KINMORE RANGE LIKE NEW T KENMORE GAS RANGE Broiler, full even, 4 burners. Ssc-rlflca tor >100. 451-5573. ANTIQUE OAK BEDROOM SET — oak commode, white maple dress, tr, plane bench, RuthM's Used Furniture, 408 N. Saginaw. Lapeer. 664-3M2. Open Sun., 1 AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG manta of $5.50 PER MO. FOR 8 M0S. OR $44 CASH BAL. Still under guarantee. UNIVERSAL CO. FE 44)905 IARTON WASHER, 83tl USED LIV .......... .. ... kinds at bargain prices. LITTLE JOE'S Trade7— Baldwin at Walton. FE 2-4*42. BEAUTIFUL ZENITH 23 "TV CON- DIX ELECTRIC CLOTHES f, 820. 682-2884._______ BRANb-NEW END AND COFFil * *n, IMS ee. Little Joe's. FI BRONZE OR CHROME OINETTE sate, BRAND NEW. Large and email size (round, dreg leaf, rr-tangular) tablet In 3, 5 and 7i tats. *24.75 up. PEARSON'S FURNITURE O and up. Pearson's U| Household Quads MODERN, FURNITURE: BED, wttiPOThjfty*-- ^ j. fgtorWSBfiiiL... —— . noroC WaSmer use^ a TisAii wrinoar fypa, 'FB 9^30$._ isSSsS’SSSSi REPOSSESSED Black and wnifs TV's Choice of 3 . . . *50 Goodyear Service Store 1373 Wide Track Dr., Wait Pontiac \ Open Friday Til f p.m.X' SALE OF HOUSEHOLD GOODS Hamilton Gee Dryer , Hudson Gu Dryer 1-40 Inch Electric Range ..327.75 143 Inch Gu Range .........*27.75 I reconditioned Automatic Water Softener. CRUMP ELECTRIC 3485 Auburn Rd. Auburn Hi PB 44OT “ SCRATCHED REFRIGERATORS Any Reasonable Price LITTLE JOES FE 54842 SINGER MODEL 66 Zig-zag equipped. Your tor be lam awed. (Repossessed). 327.30 or :NT MIXER AND MOTOR. 825. CASH REGIS t B ft, NiW, 8150. Electric typewriter *75. Calculator SUM. Adding machine 850. Check prelector S25. Beverly's. 7— | burn Rd., Utica, 731-5480. WlCP, Z COTTAGE FURNITURE ELECTRIC 'iuretor, gas Wr— - *—■ I lamp, 840- Teni SINGER DIAL-A-MATIC Zig-Zag sewing machine. ____ ders, appliques, buttonholes, etc. — late model, school trade Terms of $6 PER M0. OR $59 CASH New machine guarantee. UNIVERSAL CO. FE 4-0905 Botora P a.m., attar f p.m. SSI do6 HoOsfts, iNsyujIBri Singer Dial-o-matk zig-zag Sewing machine. Ilk* MW, built In natures tor fancy stitch**, buttonholes, ate. Wtd. responsible party To.take on payments of 11.70 per me. tor 7 met. FE 04178. HILTON SEWING MACHINE CD. fable. Perfect condition. FE 57837 or 4734201.__________._________ STOVE AND REFRIGERATOR, lto . *17.73 USED TVs .... Color TVs .... Sweet's Radio________________ 9 W. Huron _____________334-5477 WBrriltOHOUSE BUILT-IN elec-trlc oven and range. 3100, 4744543. (RINGER WASHER, $50. AlVIVeL rocker, 810. FE 52M' WARREN STOUT, Rtaltgr ~ N- ■ $100,000 For equltlu end lend contracts don't lose that home. Smallest possible discount. Call 4*3-1030. Ask COLONIAL COUCH. *4 _____________FE 8-0145 __________ CONSOLE STEREO RECORD AND radio wtth ipealnr, player plana, sewing machine, desk and chair, end beekMuT FB 5*774*. DINING ROOM SET, PtCA tv, END tobies. Ail good condition. UL 3-2688 544 Nichols. DRYER, *35. WASHER, S35. -----"^-Itor, 32*. TV S4 QUICK CASH FOR LAND CON-tracts. Clark Real Estate. FE 57333, raa. PE 4-1813, Mr. Clark. LOANS 825 to 11,000 BAXTER Tl^fK’GS^aE LOANS TO $1,000 Jsually on tint visit. Quick, friend-y, helpful. FE 2-9206 Is flit number Ip can. OAKLAND LOAN CO. CLEAN RECONDITIONED REFRIG Steve. 810. Clean. 6134154. ELECTRIC STOVE. GOOD CONDI-tlon. Reas. 35243*2. ELECTRIC yrovBl 825, GAS STOVE (35, Refrigerator wtth top --- ar (47, Wringer Washer a Harris. Fe 5-2746.______^ ENGLANDERS SOFA, HIS aire, exc. condition. FE 5 FREIGHT DAMAGED BEDROOMS FRIGIDAIRE ELECTRIC STOVE, yum eld, SIBIL FE 44*51. DAIRY CREME IN GOOD LOCA- ----... ----- SUBDIVISION. WA- — terford Twp. Black top streets Mul tor ■ and city water. Building urvtoe '* *“— available. 4734172. Richard Edens, street, (1,350. OR 55244. PINE LAKE AREA 100x150' LOT —owner — 3753433._______________ ROCHESTER AREA. 2 ACRES High western view. CauvaM 330,000 home. Plant Included. . blocks to grad* school. PeriTWst. ed. Power an taFstjioo. 3750234. WATERFRONT LOT, 375 DOWN, Pontiac lOO'xSQO'. Lake prlv. only (45 me attar small 4 payment. Open Sun. Bloch I 4251333, FE 54S07.___________________ DA 54377, Oxford. 80 TO 800 ACRES in lower Michigan. oDelry, grain, beef or hogsl Name wur farm needs, w* - have .ft ft on* of "Michigan*" Farm Rul Estate Headquarters — oun Raalty Co., Coidwater, Michigan. Dal* A. Dun Farm Broker and AucMMtr or cell 517-27*4*77—days 2784117—night*. 220 ACRES, GOOD HOME AND hem, 2 live ponds. DA 8-2013. A. Senders, rep. H. Wilson, Broker. tJT OPEN SUN. 1-5 — 7 room house. Comer Lake and Airport d 4 acme S22J0t Vi 4500. 4H Rul Estate Sok Besiaew Prepirty 57 ACRES — brad light manutocturing -ocatod In the heart of Welti s.f-tfftsr'ss.'SW-L..- with torn arrangement. Call Walter Lewis, O'Nell Rutty OR 4-2222. COMMERCIAL rar *of “cilntOTVlIte dRdV 30x50CO|1i excellent apttl. Selling tor S21,-500. Could be used for several types tf business. Frusheur, |mE tor, S730 Williams Lake Rd. 474- PONTIAC 15 m i n u t e s round Lake. No nr'— |fi|fi{fB|S 50'xl5Q' PrtV. ________ ... _____ Open Sun. Bloch Brel. 4251333. FE 4-4507. ’ ' PRIVATE LAKE. CLARKSTON area at 1-75 Expressway, if ir‘~ Pontiac s Fi'*da*8l8p83i« sal* lots lOO'xlto'. Your terms do (45 mb. Blacktop, natural f prlv. batch. Open Sun. Blech Bi 4251331 PE 44507. FOR SALE-2800 SQ. FEET 3 offices. 2 rest room*. Plenty of perking space Exc location for autofnoNv* business. Will also consider teaalng. 4EMB03. NATIONAL Mato COl'iiflWPINe at 72)0 Olxte, Just north of 1-75 Interchange 1400' filer space, Nv- ARRO REALTY Box C-4, GET INTO BUSII---------■_______ • This reatourant la an. a buy w doing iI ftilBh sed (50,000 In Laxanby Realty! 'a.«W uinu, nw won 2 . ..toe ''quartarA giree*. W frontage good jMridng, raer allay antrenca. In Waterford Twp. A jjood buy at 312,750 | 1 ' LARGE^RAGE araa. A good piece « land coi COMMERCIAL CORNER, 142* on Union Lake Rd. south of village. Prica *45 par front foot. v Everett Cummings, Realtor 2933 UNION LAKE ROAD EM 53203 ________3457181 LIQUOR BAR high profit, lew overhead stralgnt bar doing 34,000 month grer-Blg enough tor partners. Aik (2c000 down. Warden Realty PARTRIDGE "IS THE BIRD TO SEE" NIGHT CLUB ONE IN A MILLION. YES SIR .. ^ buy MM, v ~ el one, well min h« ___..janct. 'Jim a tow i highlights: dancing, 2 ba kitchens, apartmanf phis Nc 374447-Er. PARTRIDGE REALTORS IRKtMtWRON, FE 44511 OPEN WK. NITES TIL 7:00 LOANS 5BEDR00M HOUSE, BASEMENT, (moo equity. Fenced rear yard, for large house trailer, or sale for (7,300 unfurnished. Inquire 237 W. Brooklyn. 2-BEDROOM HOME. Will TAK . ____.jETii upright. epMHtal PM_____________ Sell or awap tor car or what teSgr SY) FURNACE DUCT, OIL te heater md Jpftt ___a veil, or ssli. 4274271. VAN PELT FIBERGLAS HYDRO, Sole Clotbing size 8-10. 332-7500. COATS SIZE 1 to WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO FAY 3 ro6ms BRAND NEW FURNITURE $277 USSur weak . LITTLE JOE'S Bargain House 1441 BuldWIn at Walton, FB 2-4443 I vac Turn. five piece chrome •Btt 5 Howell (MM RMBi f console ROreEmiTPK CftrelnOr. ftontlec « 1-BEDROOM SET, 145: CHEST, 320; m Wrawr.yilli end tobla set, ail; living mm .set 3«i seta, 315; "*• 329; stove. ft complete, tl »N. Ferry. M. C. Lippard, GE REFRIGERATOR, 345. RCA TV 345. Portable stereo and (tend, 375. Bedroom set, complete, till All In top condition. OR 57714. Oft 6ftYE'ft, JUST LIKE ftfW HOTPOINT 30" RANGE, DELUXE toeturec reec MA 52231._________ HOTPOINT AUTOMATIC WASHER almost raw, modem grey 5pltc3 bedroom set, triple dresser, Thomas ell transistor organ. Zenith stereo. 3457004. For Salt MiweBcRteai 67 FDRMETRON SHAMPOO BOWL. l swivel styling chair, • 1 - Chair. 42t-4»7 or 473-4477. QUEEN HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL 0 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS ----.a..., _ cbnftrts of; ■ 2 (ton fables, itojfUpsu FURNITURE - Contlsl 8-plece living room outfit ttvttw remyu - * - tSr&S} _ „ dresser, chest, fuK ala bed with Innersprlng mattress end matching box spring and S vanity lamps. Sjriece dinette aft wire 4 chrome chelrs end table. All for 3F~ “— credit 5 good at Wyman's. mMAN FURNITURE CO. 17 E. HURON FE 51501 It W. PIKE FE 5B53 HOUtftHOLD FURNITURE AifD room drapes, 12* — **- Ishes antiques, plal irved black wain.. _. ’ desk. Ilk* new gem floor ^f/^wuheriu 4700 Laurellon, jdBKcGB. EXCELLENT CON- [UBS KENMORE PORTABLE WASHER, ideel for trelfm or cabin. NA 7442*. KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION - *30 FULL GUARANTEE Kirby SarvicE & Supply Co. 8*17 PIXIE HWY. ■ 474-2234 KITCHEN TABLET 4'CHA|RS FOR- WYMAN'S . USED BARGAIN STORE Vt eur IS W. Pike Store Only BARGAINS GALORE Table lamps from 12,75 Occasional chair from 15.75 5pc. living rm. suit* . .$17.75 Hollywood bed, comp $37.75 Guart'd Refrlg. 347.75 ----I'd wringer Washer *47.73 ■ jur Credit Is good at Wyman'-. EASY TERMS___________FEJ* Antiques CUSTOM ANTIQUE REPtNISHING ■ Speclallzlno In Srauitoiewg fWshlna. furniture „ ... LARGE WALNUT BED, in GOOD condition. MA 74411. WANTED TO BUY ded glen lamp* ar is lamp shade*, fe ftp $eIs MbcEBGBeeiM ,. 67 ADDING MACHINES, TVFBWRIT-ere, for rent-leas* or ip|p, tpuer-“-’-“jlE, Utlc*. 721- AIK coNbitibtfBk, of i CLEANl end DEODORIZES bowl EVBRYTIME TOILET IS FLUSHED! OROBl YOURS TO-DAY. CALL FE 51152, . ANCHOR FENCES • bathinKttK Mmt BIG RUMMAGE jALB, iTARTS BLUBk uFstKe Not ONLY RIOS carpets of loll but leevra pile soft end toffy. Rent atoctrlc sham-pooer $1. Brownies Hdw*. 752 Jostyn. BLUE LUSTRE NOV' ONLY RIDS r tl. fi BOLENS TRACTOR 7 H.P. 37" MOWER — SAVE S140. SIMPLICITY TRACTORS REDUCED HOUGHTEN POWER CENTER £ Tent *40. 4255481. ) TABLES, EASY HAUL 'HEAVY DUTY TRAILER HITCH, FITS AUTO OR PICK UP TRUCKS, HANDLE ANY SIZE TRAILER — LARGE OR SMALL. VALUE — 8200 WILL SACRIFICE. FOR *45. ALSO 7 CHEVY WHEEL} AND TIRES, ELECTRONIC TEST EQUIPMENT uh work bench and repair men- 4 chain, I colo- For The Finest In Top-Quality Merchandiss Shop At Montgomery Ward Pontiac Mall VBRED VANII elv* 18" rounc__ .. Thompson, 7005 M . evg. *575 _____________ 424-2537. FURNITURE, CLOTHING :. Rees. 7-4 p.m. 51 N. Ped- GARA6E DOORS Factory clearance on No. 2 doors, all slzu, tow prices. Berrv Door Sotos Co. 2400 E. Lincoln, Bfrmlng- GARAGE SALE, THURSDAY, FRI-day. Sat., 1445 Dollrow, off Ward St. on Square Leke._______ GARAGE SALE, TVi, USED CARS GARM3E SALE: TALL SIZE 9-14, mtoc. N. Josephine raer Mall. GARAGE AND YARD SALE, 4154 GARAGE SALS: 155. 5075 Clarkston Rd. GARAGE SALE - 4403 FORESt Ay*., Watklna Lake. Laundry tubs; washer; mower; hydroplane; mlsc. phonos, 338. FE 54*71,_____ ADIO, TRANSI$t6R PARts, Aft-tor 4:30 p.m. UL S42S4. RCA.nr Ty^JjARLY AMUR KECORb PLAYER NEEDLES hard to find? See us — W* have most all kinds Johnson TV—FE 1-4547. . 45 E. Walton near Baldwin —------montian. fje 5472s. A!R UNE ARCHBOiTOF GljITAR, er with 45 rpm/345040 KENMORE 400 ELECTRIC ORY-. Foam ru"'— ".CBS' ____________ Set* after 4 pjn. FE M404, AIR CONDITIONER, LIKE NEW. GIFTS—GAGS—JOKES AND NOV-elftes. Llborel Bill's OufPUl, 3245 plxlo Hwy. OR 34474.______ mattress tor 1 RS.SSi 14, Iran's clfthu. 335-5144. GRUNDIG A8AJESTIC SHORT WAVE radio, oxc. condition; toy* so-** curtains—ruffled ond Dacron h orso; oil -------- J514718. 1-A ALUMINU1______________ Awnings, storm windows. For . quality guarantood job, Call J01 Valtoly "The Old Rallebto Pioneer' WHEEL UTILITY TRAtUjRTS 15GALL0N F(SH AQUARIUMS, Including eMequtotrani *nd_flsh. " CASTIRON SEWER FIFE. 77 cento per too*. No toad rewired. G. A. Thompson. 7005 M57 W. 4X4% 14 TO 84" LONG FOR FIRE- mini til# — wall paneling, 10 Tile. FE W. ...... cuhic FT. CHEST TYPE CAR-rier dug freeze. Cost 3400 new. 3 yr» old, rail tor 3253. 473-4745. 40" RANGE 325. DINETTE*ftEY Sit. GARAGE SALE, APIECE BLONO bedroom sot, mofaLmasfor break-fait sot, maple crib and mattress. Lorberfs Ls. Tak* E GARAGE SALE — FURNITURE, clothes, camera equipment and -many more poodles, August 25- GARAGE, BACK YARD AND BASE-rrant ult, lots of antlquu and mlsc. Thurs., Frl., Sat., 7 to 4 2444 Pontiac Rd., off Opdyke. SALE, THOU- HOSPITAL BED, VERY REASON-abto. 333-7444, HOT WATER HEATER, 33 GALLON gas, Consumer* approved. 137.50 value. 537.75 and 347.75 marred. Also electric end bottle huters. These are terrific, vaulu In quality heaters. Michigan Fluorescent, 373 Orchard Lake, FE 43442-IN TIME FOR SCHOOL. ENCYCLO-paedla Britannic*. Like new. With Atlas and boofcceu, 8275. 333-4875. LAVATORIES COMPLETE ifijO value 3I4.7S, also bathtubs, toilets, shower stalls. Irregulars, I Orchard Leke, FE 43442, LUXAIRE OIL FURNACE /CBb tank. OR 33711.____________ MAf*LE CRIB AND MATTRESS - tools," other Mtoc! 'items! V*n! stag Dr. Sat. Eva. Sun, ltd. PLUMBING BARGAINS. FREE Standing toilet, S14.7S; SGgalton heeter, 347.75; 3-piece bath sets, 357.75; touhdry .ray, trim, 317.75; shower (falls with trim, 337.75; win. FE 4-1514. ORTABLJ VYMwftlfftR. ~N«V- THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 D—7 For Sob MbcHanaous 67 PROFESilONAL HAIR UKvIK “JiLjVWBn*'* u*,r i=««hi<»> iiT SportingGogdi saTlSoaB SHE new and ran :km OR 31971 BM TYPft PfefcITCTRgjr Q>u SgHCs»™ -*f ^yfeUx-A Bri SEASON4* CLEARANCE SA; ®» »ll urnd and new <*•*»• " typewriters,. eddtog nwcWnra_ dialling Mbits, etc. Forbes, 4500 pixIil Drayton, OR 39747. lUOlHOjLMS pOORSAf SEC-lions H|d__2# S sections. Willi WE BUY. SELL, TRADE GUNS. Browning — Winchester — Remington. Opdyke Hardware. FE A Sand—Grov?l—Dirt Strom brecker set, over w- * qf trade extra accessories. FE J- iws- ------------- -----TALBOTT LUMBER «... alack and Dacker drill 19.99 Appliance rollers. *7.85e pr. Z'xTxte" particle board, *3.75 ea. 4fxSU" article board, *4.95ea. 1025 Oakland__________FE HW • ---the salvation army REDSHJELD store 11* W. LAWRENCE ST. fUB ENCLOSURES. OLASS( Clark Sark tin truck. 4000 lb. *0*5. Drill bits and cutting tools. Save SO to 7S per cent. All site* New and used steel, angles, channel. WdpDINO ANNOUNCEMENTS AT discount prices. Forties Printing end Office Supplies, 4500 Dixie Hwy. OR HMJ. ___________ r---WHITE ELtPHANT SALE Tiros. 9 M— Ml — Christ Child* Rd., *’— I, 31111 Lahser OiHstmas Trtfs CHRISTMAS TREES, 1 Hand Tools—Machinery 68 CASE BACK HOE AND LOADER and 5 yd. dump truck, a— dillon, both 12/000. 087-5207. :ust6m Engine rebuilding, cylinder trorjng, Pjn_ AJSSt.1 FGUN1 AV>10i ION. I MMI30~ifter 4. *«* — Sacrifice tor SOO.'ocCosSo-rles Included. 447-1395. GOLD CUP AUTO-t Milder holster, SKI-DOO'S; Wo got thorn on display GUNS-GUNS Wo hove one of the largest S plays ot new and used guns the Oakland County area I CLIFF DREYERS BALANCE OF SURPLUS STOCK now and used. Must go. To make space for remodeling purposes. AUCTION Sun., Aug. 27, 2:00 SHARP Open 7 days weekly 8 a.m.-7 p.m. For retail. B & B AUCTION 19 Dixie Hwy. OR 3-2717 delivered. 473-5514. Water- 1-A BLACK DIRT State tested; also topsoil, sand and gravel. Hit. Builders supplies. Bud Ballard. 433-1410. HALLS AUCTION SALES, 785 W. CLARKSTON RD. LAKE ORION, MY 3-1871 JACK W. HALL, AUCTIONEER. _______ PlantsTrees-Shrvbs ll-A AAA TOPSOIL AND BLACK MU-mu». FE 541214._________ . SAW Truck. W4-0042 Whlta Lake. RESTAURANT EQUirnntsm _________ 4234584 tH ELVES, ASSEMBLE IN Mil Utl5. 332-7479 after 4 P-m 3v GUNS—720 W. HURON. 334-7451. CAMPER TRAILER *L6lEP3 .4_ KITTENS, FREE TO GOOD HOM* 12 weeks old, shots. 3434094. POODLE AKC APRICOT STAND- ............ ______BEAUTY SALON POODLE i,iipplng*“AK- t____ Pol SuPPHoo 482-4<81 pfiobLE PUPS, AKC REGISTtKto 875. 394-0274._______________ POODLE CLIPPING AND SHAM- Bufls. MOTHER A,8«ra af. Wormed. 55, 4fe-7745. REGISTERED APRICOT TOY POO-dtat, Chihuahua PWIba JJf ri.rs, stud services. FE 2-1497. SCHNAUZER3 STANDARD. CMIHU-.hues. Ken-LO, 427-379Z________ schNau^er, MifliATUkl l*uP. pies, AKC raglstarad, 8 Wks. old. 482-4422.______. " SHELTIES . Toy Collies, 2. tooutlfyl weeks- AKC .Sagi end wormed, S75; S438938. T. BERNARD PUPPY, I WEEKS aid, ESOl FE 33427. ST. BERNARD. AKC REGISTERED. PICKUP CAMPER, 10' DEL RAY, fully equipped, 731-59)5. 44249 Hut- Ing, Utica. ____________________ PICK-UP TRUCK WITH CAMPER. 5480, FE 58484. PICKUP COVERS, $245 UP. 10*6" cabcovers, 11,295 and up. TAR CAMPER MFO. CO. 1188 Auburn Rd. NU PIONEER CAMPER SALES BARTH TRAILERS A CAMPERS TRAVEL QUEEN CAMPERS Inewt FIBERGL*** (t"-27"-35" i - OVER! 3891 W. Huron 4140 Foley Waterford 4238458 i, baekhoes and trucks. FIRST COME FIRST SERVE HP. JACOBSON TRACTOR WITH HP JACOBSON WITH MOWER 4 HP MOTOR-MOWER WIT.. MOWER AND SNOW BLADE, S295. Pilr' BOLENS TRACTOR WITH MOWER AND ELECTRIC START, lean. Traditional SpacT avallabta In 4 St Rent Wag-N-Master Tent Camper—8 Sleeper at low as $55 weekly t Cliff Drover's Holly Travel Coach Inc. 4 Holly Rd.. Holly ME 3i - Open Dolly — TRAILER SUPPLIES AND ACCESSORIES AT JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILERS Your dealer for -LAYTON, CORSAIR ROBINHOOD, TALLY HO 20 new and used tailors In stack NEW SERVICE DEPT. Travel With Quality Line Travel Trailers BOLES-AE RO-TR AV ELMASTE R FROLIC-SKAMPER SALES—SERVICE-RENTALS Complete I.T.S. parts cantor. Jacobson Trailer Sales 5490 Williams Lake Rd. OR 3591 TRUCK-CAMPER SKELETON, COM-----V00rs«lf. MA 31574. Used Units Monitor, 15 ft. Frolic, 14 ft. Croo, 17 ft. , HP WHEELHORSE WITH SNOW BLADE AND ELEC. START. $395. -MANY OTHERS COME IN NOW AND SAVE KING BROS. FE 4-1662 FE 4-0734 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke Rd. FORD TRACTOR ___________UL 2-3782 FORD TRACTOR, 4500 6TSs! lolly me 4-4; id Sondoys— backhoe, 740 .loader, MA 31985. JOHN OEERE AND 'NEW IDEA parts galore. Your Homellto chain saw dialer. DAVIS MACHINERY CO., Ortonvllle. NA 7-3292. SIMPLICITY TRACTOR 714 HORSE POWER With 42" rotary mower, 4-speed transmlsalon, and positractlon axle, can SUMMER CLEARANCE Special discounts on all now and used MP tractors, loaders, back-hoes, and all Implements In our Inventory. Pontiac Form and Industrial Tractor Co. FE Mdl m FE 31442. We CARRY THE FAMOUS Franklins—Crees Fans—Monitor ThunderBird, Ritz-Craft Travel Trailers Skamper and PleasureMate Campers—7 & 8 Sleepers Holly Travel Coach 152)0 Holly Rd. * ' Holly, ME 34771 — Open Dolly end Sundays — WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS ------ -iw and used, $395 Jacks, Intercoms, ipers, ladder1- USED TRACTORS 1942 Bolen's with mower, 1395 1145 Bolen's with 42" mower, *495 1840 Wheel Horse, with mower, 12? 1841 Wheel Horse, with mower, 827. 1845 Estate Keopar, *485 WHEEL HORSE RIDING TRACTOR, with lawn mower and roller, S125. OR 3028$._________ THERE ARE 5 REGISTERED field and show quality Enoi' Springer pups, tor rale^ SH. 14* STARDUST TRAVEL TRAILER. SlOOto 4. >795. 473-5172. r kkLp. CONTAINED, JACK'S Rtoce hitch included, *1,285. OR 1844 apache raven, excel- tont condlttob *375. 8534270. 1845 ir GREAT mike* TRAVEL S. Hi los^toj^l ^ Union Lake. I COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES FE 31457 6231310 flTopdytoi DETROITER—KROPF Vacation Homes ft. wide with largo expanding bedrooms and large expanding ,,“l" room only *2995.00. Free ■ livery In Michigan. Also 8 ft., 10 ft. and 12 ft. wldas at bargain prices. 1964 HONDA 305, DREAM, 5525 till after 3:30 p,m, FE 33178, 1944 HONDA, 305 SUPERHAWK 5340, 3433850 1966 RIVERSIDE 125CC MOTOR cycle. Noods $or----— — otter 3 4*34395. 1944 SUZUKI 111 CC GOOD CON-*358. FE 37173 1944 SUZUKI *0 TRAIL. 1 1944 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE, EX- extra erhage. Also sta the famous light weight Winnebago Traitor. OXFORD TRAILER SALES Town & Country Mobile Homes ‘PROUDLY PRESENTS "The Westchester" Sea It today. ALSO FEATURING THE WxSO HOMECRAFT AT $3,995 DELIVERED AND SET UP TELEGRAPH AT DIXIE HIGHWAY MCDONALD MOBILE HOMES See our complete line of 12* wldes, 2 or 3 bedrooms as low as *4495. Featuring Travelo, Schult a * * Vlndale and Topper, ft quality unite a r r I v I mites wast of Williams ' ° 3437511. Hours: Wooh' » p.m., Sunday 12 to 5 RETIREE SPECIAL 1947 530(12* custom dtluxo Rembrandt. Ey^lavel oven. Gun furnace, and many other special features. Was $6,400, now only *4,895. WATERFORD MOBILE HOMES 4333 Highland Rd. Across From Pontiac Alrp >45 HONDA 150, EXCELLENT condition. FE 4-9488. *175. 4748334, 4731404. 1 Bsots — Acctuoriis 97 O' ALUMINUM BOATS, SNA Trailers *111. t*‘ canoee *159. 1JX to. trailers *l#. Flahartnan** rig, boat, tralter. malor nn. BUCHANAN'S HlflMand 36>?301 a* spEeduNIR, MARiTis-m¥r- SPECIAL ir Center Beat with tepakj bar-cover and gagas. 75 h«. Jotm-eon Mater With tl gaL tank. Haavy duly Ttralltr with apace wheal wid tire. Only CRUISE-OUT, INC. 14* OUTBOARD, MOTOR AND THE NEWEST, ZINGIE3T, Zippiest. apart test, roomiest, tty Ingest, safe, one designed — first and only 14 ft. Aluminum hull lall-bdsif by Grumman 11 Now on display -tow D*mo app» — GRAND RIVER BOAT SALES r FIBEROLA*, 45 ELECTRIC -trailer, convortlbld top. skis, ate. Sacrifice, *m! 3338184. if FIBERGLASS BOAT. 75 H.P. r SPEED QUEEN. 4B HP I rude, 5450. FE 4-4239. ir FlfcfehGLAS, SO HORSEPOWLR, J* FIBERGLAS BOAT, MAR motor, frailer. Moke offer. 4830464. I* ALUMINUM AEROCRAFT CA- and white flberglas runat»ut w front and roar aooto. lights, wt accessories. Like new. 8950. 423 5934. 16* CENTURY outboard, fully equipped, exc. ski bool, take loss. 4933831. after 4 P-m.__________ (* 'CRUlIKR INC., 80 MERCURY Ustd Ante-Track Ports lit 1842 FORD V-4 MOTOR, TRAN3 mission and reonohii 384-83881 USED ENGINBS-i TRANSMISSION, rear axle, trl powers, toll heuo-H rn A«to on Open M 8 ’■“PdNiiXJN I New Mi HNS trades 103 18# PICKUP, *48 mmr____________ 1952 DODGE te-TON, *125. 391- 1959 CHEVROLET, 14 FOOT VAN. <40*. After 4. 3333478.____ 1840 GMC VO TON. RUNS GOOD. 8388. 4231448. motor and traitor, 8473. 473 (Xastron. MFO heals and s. boats. Rlvtera cruiser pontoor Jon tools, alum, fishing hoofs. 13 to 14* In stock. Complete servlet of outboards — Mercury outboards 3.8 Do no thp. and MarcJCrvloar authorized dealer. Cypress Gardens skis (oil anrles) GRUMMAN CANOES DEALER "trglM canoes .......... *'69 Cliff Dreytr's Gun and Sports Canter 15210 Holly Rd. . . MB 34771 Open Dally and Sundays 277 W. Montcalm I860 CHEVROLET 1-TON PANEL, 5385 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEV-OLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-2735. 41 FORD to TON PICKUP. 1943 YEAR END SALE All Floor Models at BIG SAVINGS n.w 1947 14* duo-Flberglas runabout, back-to-back seals, 35 h.p. Chryslar electric, single lever controls, bat- ______j ._17 trails, nr rari it air horns, c extras. ' rings°at only 51,895. Runabout. | Ntw m7 ,5, Chrysler Chargor m motor. Skis 4 1sl> Demo, 7S h.p. Chrysler, c ‘ ‘ 12,194. many oxtrav I Now 1947 Sllrarllno 105 h ____________________________________ - loaded with extras and traitor. 16- WOOD LAPSTRAKE RUN-152.395. 12- aluminum cartop bo.lv 51,458. Ml 31394. 14' CENTURY BOAT AND TRAIL-er, 213 cubic Inch arrolna, 145 hrs. Vary clean. Sean at Oakland County Boat Club Sunday aft*™""' Well 39. Alex Joyce, KB 7-5584. 17* TAFT BOAT AND TRAILER, h.p. jgg^ftoj^te^ag I* CHEiS-CRAPT, SS. 218 H.P. Exc. condition, 4433883. Eves. 31 FT. C. C. CAVALl|h 1^-liS; steeps 6. A-l condition. OL 1-8575. 215 HORSEPOWER .CHRIS. CRAFT. .....* saiL teOVtoq tram. 4733537. Also big savings outboards. FREE WINTER STORAGE on oil boats taught now M0NICATTI Boats ai\d Motors UTICA 731-0020 5250 AUBURN RD. (M59) 10 MERCURY, COMPLETE, ELEC-trlc start, long shaft, 35 hra. total time, moke offer, 492-383! 840 *8* SKIP, r BEAM, LAP-strakt construction, no rot 75 hp. Evlnrode, oteetr^t^L^JJw. use. Convertible top. otectrtc bllM, tandem hrollor, sacrifice. 1875. Cl 8-304. F.A.A. APPROVED SCHOOL — LET our Instructors teach you to f1" ADI Inc., Pontiac Airport. OR «w '• CUTTER FIBERGLAS boot, tilt trailer, skits, 73 hp., Johnson motor, all controls, best otter. 3437212. I ir CABIN CRUISER. WITH tandem trailer^ 51,150. 473 1844 SUZUKI X6 HUSTLER, cc. » HP. Exc. er-*"' -38828 before 4 PM. ir >250, FE 35513. 8. 752-8874 after 5 p.m. 1847 MERCrtRY power, regu1— Kar s Boat* MY 31488, regular 8185, m $138.85. 1847 Chrysler WaRtsd CETS-Tnicks II EXTRA EXTRA Dollars Pa d FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car "‘Check the rest, in get the best" of Averill 1964 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE, LIKE ■##>. 451-0780 after 4 pm BIG DISCOUNT AT TONY'S .... RINE. 31 YRS. REPAIR EXPERP 1847 HONDA TRAIL 90 WITH OHC ■ engine, 140 ■taa#iidte||||te *295. 6934149. 1967 KAWASAKI. S5CC, S27S. 4835247_______ 18*7 NORTON ATLAS ___________OR 32573_________ 1967 YAMAHA 350 CC, 550 MILES, i, make offer. 451-17 Benelli Motorcycles Look at the newest Mini Cycles BOAT CLEARANCE New 1967 b_______________ by hundred* uf dollars. Including outboards and all l-Oi Johnson and Chrysler Motors PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. Mon 'til f p.m. Only 500 ml. Must rail. 334-7349. LIKE-NEW, 1944 TRIUMPH BON- nsvllla, 11,050. Full-------- 0544. SOMETHING NEW OLO ENGLISH DECOR ota our samp late line of 12* wide to S decors. Wa havewly 1 40x12', brand now, far *4895. Demos at a giant ‘ || 'mowlngl1 up to MINI CYCLES; GO-CARTS H0DAKA ACE 90 HELMETS AND ACCESSORIES. MG SALES & SERVICE ^47 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Flail 103 E. AHantCdfm, ““'l’ ' EollSpark 7 days a Rent Trolltr Spues__________« RENT MOBILE LOT HOLLY AREA — 45'xl20' lot *■-* tap, gas avallabte, n x)ls, churches, shopping, ithly. Blech Brea. «b-1333, FE SALE - SALE! All used motorcycles marked down Buy now and save. Easy terms. ANDERSON SALES 3 SERVICE Jtd. Near 1-75 a Auto Accsssorias SUPER CHROME REVERSED wheals, 14" Ilka new, MS. FE • ~ 4 p.m. SEE THE NEW SUZUKI X-5 SCRAMBLER A FULL LINE OP ALL NEW Suzuki Cycles & Accessories MG SALES and SERVICE 4447 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Plains SPORTS CAR TRACES 1947 BSA 450CC, Ilka naw, approximately 1,200 mllas, super deluxe, a big bike at a right price. 1844 Honda 385 specially tunad bike, metal flake paint lob, r****~ Tiros-Auto-Truck 4 4^5X20. $20 EA. OR ALL FOR SIX. MA 4-2804: ______________ mtu Service_________________93 THIS WEEK SPECIAL. CUSTOM paint lab, *85. Fr*a pickup an" delivery ssrvlce, satisfaction guat MINI-BIKE, EXCELLENT CONDI-Ion. FE 32183. irxsr GENERAL, CARPETING, Motorcycles 2 x 40 NEW MOON, FURN-> CAR-paled, glass and serran. awning. On Lake Lai. 4831888, 858 GENERAL, 1(7X44'. GOOD condition. 3331214. 1841 HURON, 18'xSO' 2-BEDROOM, sail (2JIOO cash. 817-5441, faa- 1844 HOMECRAFT, SOW. feXd. condition. Located 2740 i. Hickary Ridge, Milford, lot 72. 4131157. 95 5-SPEED DUCATI Scrambler, X hR., 2# lbs. Ftowtos, S785, easy terms. ...JDERSON SuS*Tb®W«_ 1445 S. Telegraph________FE 37102 1840 BSA, 500CC, TWIN, EXC CON-V... ___. ... eeea see. . You must i (FOR AS LITTLE AS M87. No money Included. 4730878. r ever 818a Helmet 1968 JOHNSON SNOWMOBILES I TON Pick UF, 1960 CHEVY Two-Ton — 3Man Cab Platform. Ideal tor tree trim JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 1 CORVAN - RUNS GOOD, S250 1964 CHEVY Vi-ton $1095 BILL FOX CHEVROLET On S. Rochester Rd. OL 37000 ________ROCHESTER_________ 1844 INTERNATIONAL SEMI. GOOD -ftubhar. Qyarhaulad. 241 4841. New aud Used trucks 103 LUCKY AUTO rack, good condition, $1100, UL 2-2042. _______ 1944 FORD FALCON SEDAN 6d- w'condRSr'wJl'jOHN “mcAu" LIFE FOROp 277 Montcalm/ FE 5-4201. 1964 FORD Econo!In. Camper i bunk bad, sink, lakwote com-itlon storm and screen! heavy t tlrasi 3,000 mites an naw an->. Dark blue. Special at Only— 0085 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD I. Montcalm FE 34101 _ eritvV PkMgai six. lass Chevy Wrecker. 5450. 4035725. 1845 COl^AN CARRYALL SW at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, Ml 32735. IHiCHi^/^^CkUP^* electric Starting AND REVERSE. BOAT CLEARANCE PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. - Lake Drayton Rial OR 30411 Dally 8-4 p.m. Gale McAnnallys cars! New shlP8 California, ImMWNMRi Top dollar pa Id I Shop me last and haralll Across from Pontiac State TOM RADEMACHER 1845 UMeTSfaL PteateMa sa®* Ctertsten, MA 35071._ , --CrtiW VAlL LOW MILEAGE, tra clean and A-l throughout S9J5. JOHN MCAULIFFE PORD. 177 Montcalm St. FE 34101__________ Close out prices on Glasspar and Steury fiberglass boats, Mlrrocraft alum, boats. Ski Barge, Grumman canoes, Kayot pontoons, Pamcq trailers. Taka *359 la W. Htar land. Right on Hickory Ridge Rt to Demode Rd, Lett and folio' signs to DAWSON'S SALES A rrPSICO LAKE. Phene 438-2179. GOING IN SERVICE — WILL SAC- rlflce 1944 14' I HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS 1899 S. Telegraph FE 2-8033 ”We have all of your boating needs." HOUSEBOAT—»W, FULL KITCH-•n, head, twin outboard motor sleaps 5, must sacrifice, privet owner. 354-0485. Southfield. INBOARD 17' FIBERGLAS HULL MAKE RESERVATIONS FOR winter storage and motor tune-ups. Evlnrude Dealer HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS 1899 S. Telegraph FE 2-8033 New MB Scrambler, full price $275. 90CC Vespa, demo, full pried S244. GRIMALDI CAR CO. X Oakland____________FE 39421 1944 Dorset!, tap, --- Evlnrude, traitor complete $1295 MANY MORe BARGAINS LAKP* SEA MARINA AUTHORIZED DEALER CHRIST CRAFT OWEN'S Saalnaw at S. Blvd. FE 4-9587 Complete line el cycle aco Taka M58 to W. Highland. on Hickory Ridge Re. to D----------- Rd. Left and follow signs to DAWSON SALES AT TIPSiCO LAKE. Phone 629-2179 ' i , 9 INCH DRAGSTER, BUNNY saddle, oversized studded rear tire, front hand brake, hl-rlae bars, 525. aim a Super Sonde and 14 i inch bicycle BOYS SCHWINN 13SPEED. PER-WCt condition. 4233419. ILEARANCE SALE ON USED 24", X" boy's blkra. 3334755. HEAVY DUTY 24" NEWSBOYS' Beats — Accessories 14* DURATEX, X MERCURY EN-glnei Hilltop traitor; all accessories. OR 37530 after 13 M0NICATTI Boats and Motors UTICA 731-0020 5250 AUBURN RD. (M59) HELP! flics. Olds and Bulcks for out-of-state market. Top defter paid. MANSFIELD AUTO SALES STOP HERE LAST M 670°8pdyke Open, 3 (1-75 at Oakland University Exit) SAILBOAT 22* 'Sloop with trailer, beat mahogany wood. Ilka new dz sells, ranter board. Easy to -., on targe or email lakes. 474-04)4. SEA RAY BOATS Factory fa you prices LAKE ORION MARINA M24 NORTH af Pontiac WE BUY ANY GOOD LATE MODEL USED CAR! "TOP DOLLAR" tool HASKINS AUTO SALES 1967 GMC MODEL CLEARANCE i-Ton Pickup Heater, defrosters, backup lights, seat belts, 2-speed wipers, washers, padded dash and visor, traffic hazard lights, directional signals, inside rear-view mirror. $1828 including all taxes PONTIAC'S ONLY EXCLUSIVE TRUCK DEALER SAVE NOW BEFORE Price Increases GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 iak Can-Tracks 101-A 2 JUNK CARS—TRUCK*, FREE ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CAR end scrap, wt tow, FE 3884*. Copper, bffXSj—SMSiaTOTsi starters and nsnarators, C ten, OR 35*49. ________ Used Aote-Track Parts 102 1951 PONflAC COM- 1959 MERCURY MOTOR, GOOD condition. SX. Pair rebuilt heads far 1957 Olds. *25. UL 31748. M0 PORD, 4 CYLINDER COM-plete^^iood enginu and trans., $25. m PONTIAC ALL OR PAiTS. 332-7401, Clearance Sale 1844 GMC VMon pickup tteetskte, radio, extra sharp, *1485. 1965 CHEVY V3ton pick-up flesh > side, V8,J radio. West Coast mirrors. tiHene paint, sharp. *1-39*. 1944 FORD one-ton, pick-up, VI — heavy duty tires and springs, clean and A-l mech. $1,295. John McAULIFFE FORD , 277 Montcalm SL FE 341W 1941 PONTIAC, LEU ENOIHE, naw Interior, worth SSOtL Be*' offer. Alee parte. FE 4-1303. CONVERT YOUR ENGINE TO I GLENN'S - Radio, heater, white watte. 952 W. Huron It. L C Williams, Salesman Fa 4-7171 Fa 4-17W Many Mere to Choon From P—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 28, 1967 few mdUsed Tracks 103 New and Used Cara 106 New and otT i-eyii,win st„ naehwtw. • SPECIAL $1075 FULL PRICE New 1967 Jeep Universal ROSE RAMBLER-JEEP MMIM Of BM 3-6156 : i Special *1966 CHEVY 1 TON STAKE V-8 engine, 4 speed, dual rear wheels. GMC Factory Branch Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 Auto Insurance Marine 104 Mini-Cost Auto. Ira. for good driver, no owner, Ira. for quo”' ' Mlnl-peyment plan (Budget) BRUMMETT AGENCY recto Milo_____ FE 4-0519 Foreign Curs I960 MGA, GOOD CONDITION ttsetst iWl MOA, COMPLETELY RECON-dltloned wire wheel,, to bo —'| INI VW, A NEW CAR TRADE. 1963 ALFA ROMEO COUPE, GOOD vw„„HEATER, WHITEWALLS, FULL PRICE S»95, ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Aitume weakly payment, of *7.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Pertts Ot HAROLD TURNER FORD, “■ 6-75*0. ifU VW MICRO fdS. LOW A age, 4911 Baldwin Rd. OS t Matamora. feu corYina 4-speed, sw "pull LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. Wide Track 1966 VW, e L A t K, IkCELLENT IMIdmdfk.WhIt* " dlo, 633-6996. 1*67 OARK BLUE VW, LIKE NEW. 1967 VW BUS owner, a good buyl GRIMALDI CAR CO. WO Oakland ___________FE 5-9421 Alao the all new 134 sedan, 150 coupe, on hand. New Fiat nation wagon demo., 1100 6-door. Full price Included H AUTHORIZED FIAT DEALJBt COMPLETE PARTS AND SERVICE GRIMALDI CAR CO. FE 5*421 TOE MBULOUS W67W MARK III "Spitfire," available for delivery now. Muat aee thli car. Cam-para tojia baet. Financing — ranged. Eaey twtra, COMPLETE PARTS AND SERVICE AUTHORIZEP TRIUMPH DEALER GRIMALDI CAR CO. .900 Oakland , ________FE S-9431 VW ; CENTER 85 To Choose From -All Models-—All Colors-—All Reconditioned— Autobahn I Used Core 106 BANKRUPT? CREDIT PROBLEMS? We Con Finonce You— MIL0SCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Small Ad-3ig Lot 50 CARS TO CHOOSE PROM Wa buy or will odiuot your pa monte to loti expen,Ive car. 677 M-34, Lfc. Orton MY 3-M 1933 B Ul C K COUPE. 3354335, AF- 1*19 BUICK. RUNS GOOb, NO » 6934716 BUICK I DOOR, LITTLE I TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS 1961 BUICK 2 door hardtop, w -----z.,( power ,leering, braki itM15,Oarkiton MA 5-5071. 1963 BUICK LaSABRE $1,150. NO rust. Nil power, 4-dr. hardtop, wa tiree, exhaust. thock,. 363-9668. 1963~»|Blck 4-DOOR HARDTOP, automatic power, ah’ conditioned, *995 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-3735. 1964 eujck RIVIERA. BEST OF- 1964 JUICE WILDCAT CONVERTI- GLENN'S 1965 Wildcat Coupe. Sharp L. C. Williams, Salesman 953 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 ---" re to Chooio From Standard Trera. SPECIAL, 3 rone. <1495, 6! " HAND^AT ALL TIMiTS ' JEROME MOTOR SALES 1962 CADILLAC ^t-DOOR -COUPE DeVilie, tWM. UTS W. Huron, King. , ■ ITT.. . CADILLAC 19*t SEtlAN OoVILLE, condition, ran*. ilka rauu Full price only 3595. No mdMWown, «■« weekly. Standard Auto 1*63 CADILLAC CQUFE DBVILLB 1963 COUPE DEVILLE PAMPERED fUJI BEAUTY FULL roWER. PREMIUM TIRES PRIVATE — 11650 1964 CADILLAC SEDAN DoVIlLE. - 'l power. Tinted gleet. 6 --- . Air. Shown anytime. I On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 NOW Is The -TIME To Save On A Newer Model MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES 631 Oakland Ave. FE 4-4547 1951 C H E V Y 2 - DOOR, NEW Interior, point, tiree end, 54 c---- Beet offer. FE 4-0133. 1957 CHEVY VI, STICK, GOOD "“in, 651-3415. ____________ 1957 CHEVROLET BEL AIR AUTOMATIC, VI, POWER BRAKES, * SOUTHERN CAR, 1395. COOPER'S Extra Clean Used Cars 4371 Dixie Drayton Plains ----* to * dolly r**” 283 Auto <250. MA 5-4954. 1960 CHEVY DOOR. GOOD CON dltlon, 3300. OA 0-1570._________ 1960 CORVAIR. GOOD RUNNING condition. “" ' 1960 CORVETTE, MINT, FE 4-9254 CHEVY IMPALA rdtpp v-L auto eg '5. EM 3-2265. 61,550 DOOR 1961 MONZA 3POOR AUTOMATIC, -• MIKESAVOIE chevro-rmlngham. Ml 6-2735. 1961 CHEVROLET IMPALA SPORT Coupe, 6 CVl, 0375. 635-1053. 1962 CORVAIR 2-DOOR AUTOMAT-IC, 3595 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEV-ROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4-3735-1962 CHEVY II, 4-DOOR, RADIO end heater, 1350. 651-0496. 1962 CORVETTE, NEWTOP, ET mage. 3U95 or bast offer. OR 3-6003. offer 6 ‘ TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS , j, . 1962 CHEVY 4 door, 6 cyl. otlck shift, IT* ii —- —- dal at ily *49$ on US 10 M15, —MA 5.5071. 1063 CHEVY II CONVERTIBLl, Au-tometic, 0695 » MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 3735. 1963 CHEVY IMPALA, 3-oboR. speed, 300 h.p., exc. ------ 11,400. 6354970. 1963 MONZA 2-DOOR AUTOMATIC, -hltewells, cherry Interior. 3795 ot 1963 CHEVROLET 3-DOOR, S495 AT MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 6-3735. 1963* CHlvY II 2-DOOR HARDTOP, 1963 CORVAIR MONZA 4 SPEED, ehoro, SSOO. OR 3-3930. 1963 ML AIR 1-DOOR. 8-AUTO-metlc, radio, heeler, 0095 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham, Ml ' 1963 BEL AIR WAGON • - AUTO- nlnghem. Ml 4-2735. Extra Clean Used Cars 4378 Dixie Drayton Pic * ~ 9 to 9 dolly 474-3357 1963 CHEVY II, 4 DOOR, STICK Id, 337 engine, req wim w ..id Interior. Full prlvo 0995. No money down. 043 per 1963’ CORVAIR MONZA CONVERTI- GLENN'S 1964 Chevy Coup# L. C, Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St, FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 to Choose Fr 1964. CHEVELLB 2-DOOR <895 AT MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, B|-mlnghem. Ml 4-2735. Ww STOiG" RAY convertiblL. New motor, 4-speed, body good condition. 755 Melrose St., Pontiac. 1964 CHEVY IMPALA HARDTOP, with V-l, automatic, radio, heater, -------- steering. Beautiful amtellls "It only takes a minute" to Got "A BETTER DEAL" ot: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Os k lend Ave. FE 5-4101 ■ CHEVY. EXC. CONDITION Call owner after 6. 6334)163. 1964 tifPvY SUPER. SPORT 3-door hardtop, automette,"’" — ^MeSmora2 B,Wwln Rd‘ 1964 CHEVY IMPALA CONVERT-Ibte, >1,000. FE Mitt 1965 CORVAIR CORSA 2-DOOR. A l sharp little cor. 1197 full LUCKY AUTO 1940 W, Wide Track i, 1955 CHEVY NOMAD. 1957 CHEVY 203, buckets, high rise, '***““ OR 602-1334. 1965 CHEVY I MIKE SAVOII______ mlnghem. Ml 4-2735. $195 Down! BILL FOX CHEVROLET SPEED, 01195 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, Birmingham. Ml 4- GLENN'S 1965 11 Corvalr Convertible. Aut mailt. Sharp. L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 Many More to Choose Froth 1965 CHEVELLB MALIBU, 4 SPtfeD J Cars 1M 1065 SUPER SPORT 3-DOOR, EXC. condition. Cell owner offer f wot,__________ i • 1066 MALIBU CONVERTIBLE, AlP TOMATIC, power steering. 82,095 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, CAPRICE 4-DOOR HARDTOP, automatic, with power. >3,295 at MIKe SAVOIE CHEVROLET^ ilT powtrjlke new, 473-8380. I960 IMPALA 4-DOOR 0-CYLINDER, 1*47 IMPALA 4-DOOR HARDTOP, fully equipped, low mileage, 63.575 FE 3-1046 after 4 p.m. 1947 CHEVELLE CONVERTIBLE. 327 cubic Inch 335 -------- . top. 1*67 CAME NO BCYLINDeN' STICK, hardtop, emerald groan, 636-3653. 1*67 CAmARO, V-*AUt6„ RADIO. xc. sharp, 334-6334. 1967 CHEVY C Caprice 4-door hardtop, .V-8, automatic dou-bta war vinyl top, executives Save $9001 MIKE SAVOIE Birmingham's New CHEVROLET DEALER 1104 S. Woodward ___Ml 4-2735 BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-Plymouth 860 S. Woodward Ml 7-3214 Kessler-Hahn CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH RAMBLER-JEEP 6673 Dixit Hwy. larkston_____ MA 3-2635 COME ON OUT TO SEE "CY" OWENS OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oakland Avt._FE 3-9436 at 6* p.m. 673-3721 e KESSLER'S 00DGE CARS AND TRUCKS Seles end Service 1061 DODGE 2-DOOR HARDTOP, va •,*>., power tteerln»**"4 stick, 0140. Good condition, OA 3- steering and brakes, a 964 DART GT CONVERTIBLE. ALL power. Including top, original — or, 3950. 636-1003. 1933 F tor el ir best offer. *7^ 1955 THUNDERBIRD BRIGWT rID “ -tenderd shift, original o—11 01,000 will coraider It 1959 FORD, SHARP 1960 FORD WAMN, MISSOURJ Wagon, transportation, >75. 683-5725, ... FALCON, FLOOR SHIFT, good trorap.. clton. 682-7355. >RD GALA)— ‘ “ LUCKY AUTO 1962 FORD 4-DOOR STATION WAG-«n. Lugdhge carrier. Novo- —■‘1 C lean. EM 34081, dealer. I FORD GALAXIE- SUNLINER. 1962 FORD convertible, V0, (tick, weekend special « only 0405. On US10 at M)5. ciorketon. MA 5-5071 t Lake. toll p___ ______ _ Ing, real tharp. Priced to ROSE RAMBLER, 1 EM 3-4155.______________ 1942 FORD XL 2-DOOR HARDTOP. 5350, 3275 w. Huron, King. 1963 T-BIRD. GOOD CONDITION. Prlv. owner. Reas. For complete details coll FE 2-0503 after I - weekdays. 1963 T-BIRD Landau with full power, excellent condition bronze exterior, matching interior. 01150, spartan Dodge 055 Ookland Ave. FE 0-1133 1963 BLACK FORD GALAXIE 1963 FORD GALAXIE 500 2-DOOR hordtop, g———— Si ■ 1963 FORD XL SPORT COUPE, with V-0, automatic, radio, heator, power steering, brakes, snowshoe white with Mock vinyl top, if you ore looking tor the finest, tee this one I 0981 full price, *08 down, and 839.01 per month. "It only takes a minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 630 Oakland Ave. -, FE 5-4101 963 FAIRLANE 500 HARDTOP, SYNCROMESH TRANSMISSION, BUCKET SEATS, RADIO, HEATER WHITEWALLS, FULL PRICE 8095. ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN. Assume weekly payments of 87.92. CALL CREDIT MGR. Mr. Parks at HAROLD TURNER FORD Ml 4-7500. 1963 THUNDERBIRD LANDAU. L BIRMINGHAM. w mm ---------R AUTOMATIC, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS FULL PRICE 86H *»"'■■>«-LY NO MONEY ( Convertible Sale 1*64 T-BVRD Convert Ibis 1*64 FORD Cl... f 1,281 1963 PONTIAC Convertible 1965 CORVAIR ConvertlM* John McAuliffe FORD 630 Oakland Av*. FE 5-001 1065 COUNTRY SQUIRE, V t_ .. . Sharp, tolly equipped, SI450. 685-3472 »ftor-6or weeltendt. )965 . FoktfFAI.kLAH« sots .VI' n-' euto. 2100 Airport Rd. >65 FORD GALAXIE 500. AUTO, owner. 624-3719. 1965. FORD FAIRLANE ibOOR. with 6966 FORD CUSTOM 500,' 2-DOOR. radio, heater, standard. 451-3267. M6 MUSTANG HARDTOP, V-0, (tick shift, radio, heater. Still under raw car warranty. 11.800 toll price, 888 down, 859.86 per m " 50,ooo-mlle or 5-year new,car ranty available. "It only takes-i minute" to Get "A BETTER DEAL" at: John McAuliffe Ford 1»30 Oakland Ave._FE s-4101 1944 OLDS SUPER M. A REAL sharp car at a right price "Give ... - _— yell buy". Fln- 1966 OLDS 90 DELUXE SEDAN. ' 4BI34. I_____.... auto, transmission, power steering, 3995. EM 3-0069. 1964 VALIANT. 2 DOOR HARDTOP. I 1966 MUSTANG 4 SPEED, HIGH 1966 FALCON WAGON — 6-CYLIN-der stick. One owner, 01450. 333- GLENN'S 1966 Mutting L C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. .Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 1067 FORD GALAXIE 500. 2 DR. GLENN'S 1963 CARRY-ALL 9 PASSENGER. Auto 6. L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Hurnn St. FE 6-7371 FE 6-1797 Many Mora to Choose From 1943 JEEP, 4-WHEEL DRIVE Special tale — $988. 1943 JEEP* UNIVERSAL* A SHARP unR* 4 - wheel ijf|j new-car trade and Absolutely no rust. I960 MERCURY, MONTEREY, . door. 1 owner. Extra dean con-dltlon. MA 6-6966 after 0 p.m. TOM RADEMACHER CHEVY-OLDS IERCURY station wagon, itomotlc, power steering, whitewalls, this weeks spe-I at only *495. On US 10 it 5, Clartafton, MA 5-5071. 1961 MERCURY : V0, automatic, pi 1962 COMET 2 DOOR, STANDARD shift, 0350. PE 5-3523, >64 C6M#T CLUBtebAN. AUTO-MATIC, RADIO, HEATER, WHITEWALLS, imZj&iGE ABSOLUTELY NO MONEY DOWN Assume weekly payments of 87“ CALL'MHMT MGR. Mr. Pa at HAROLD TURNER FORD, ♦7588k • >_______________ 1964 MERCURY CLUB SElDAI ER, WHITEWALLS. FULL PRICE BORfT LINCOLN Sales, 47? $. Woodward. Ml 6-4536. Birmingham: ly payments ot sv.vs. (}HAROLD Y TURNER FORD, INC. 664 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM___ Ml 4-7500 60 OLDS POWER STEERING, brakes, hardtop, a good one. Buy hero pay. here. Iff toll price. Marvel Motors Oakland Avt. * MA 1942 OLOS PW d^viltl’lLI* MARMADUKE By Anderson and Leeming Gala McAnnallys Auto Seln ,1304 Baldwin_______ , 330-45 1965 CATALINA. SPORT COUPE, jjsTiao*. °*m*r HI Can 106 New and Uttd Can 106 MERRY OLDS M0 DEAL MERRY OLDSMOBILE 526 N. Main ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN GLENN'S 1943 Olds 4 door. Hardtop L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 •Many More to Choose From 1*64 oibi CONVERTIBLE, —- _ TOMATIC, powor steering, 01095 at MIKE SAVOIE CHEVROLET, jHi mlnghom. Ml 4-3735. 1964 BONNEVILLE Convertible, porer equipped, automatic transmission, radio, heat-er, whitewalls toll price 01195 with only <49 down and weekr payments of 011.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. BIRMINGHAM___Ml 4-7500 GLENN'S 1945 Old* 4 door sadan. Power FE 4-7371 FE 4-1797 L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. . to Chooio From 1966 OLDS VISTfeCRUISER. 9 PASS. Deluxe. Powor, 32300. 363-3763. SUBURBAN OLDS HOME OF Quality One-Owner Birmingham Trades Best offer. After 6, 430-1597. GLENN'S 1965 Bonntvllle sports coup*. Dou- L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. FE 4-7391 FE 4-T797 Many More to Choose From 1964 PONTIAC CATALINA 2-PLUS-“ radio, whitewalls, — tm 624-4396. 1964 PONTIAC CATALINA CON-vertlble, power steering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls, 3966 Dlkle HWy„ 673-2060. New Faces—New Policies KEEGO PONTIAC-GMC TRUCKS 3010 Orchord Like 602-7300 1965 TEMPEST LeMANS 326 HO. toinlUMMik power. locking iUM. Ml Vl067. 1965 GTO CONVERTIBLE HYORO-motic, power ' down, nine i 330-9911 1965 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, Itrior. UL 3-4924. 1965 PONTIAC plue-l convertible, 431 dtiflnq, tometic transmission, coni Shlftl \ wltti bucket eeots. c 19,000 bctoal miles, must soi ed glass tilt steering wheel, cruise RUSS JOHNSON PONTIAC-RAMBLER On M24 In Lake Orion MY 3-6266 Hew ud Used Cert 106 673-11 BliPW....... ........- .■____ power, 4 stood, po»l-tr»cflon,i power steering, transistor 4 ignition, tachometer, ralley wheels, radio ond ottws extras. 13.100. 642-3100. IMF BONNEVILLE 1DOOR. POW-er steering and brekoe. Extra jh white ♦DOOR TEMPEST, BCYLIN-oer. standard. Whitewalls, radio, IM7L FE 3-7100. itof elANb prix, all' power, equipment, 1,000 mU 82,995. 636-3570 attar 7. 1967 BONNEVILLE, 2-OOOR, HARD-top, power steering and br—— factory air, other extra* axe, 900 Oakland FE RAMBLERVILLE VILLAGE 666 S. Woodward RAMBLER BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 1947 PONTIAC CATALINA, 9-PAS-sanger, auto, warranty, low ml. 391-2160. 1967 BONNEVILLE 4 OR. HARD-top, 2 tone, auto., power steering, brakes, radio, hooter. 7,000 ml. 02.900. FE 34340. r PONTIAC WAGON, 9-PASSEN-hltewells, double pow-10 mills. Call 693-6266 RAMBLERVILLE VILLAGE 666Woodward RAMBLER BIRMINGHAM Ml 6-3900 aenger, 03,100. 2743 Pine Heights I Or., or phone 602-li73. 1 GLENN'S 1944 PONTIAC 4 DOOR HARD-top. Cordova top. Auto. 327. L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. FE 4-7371 - FE 4-1797 Many Mora to Choose- uood cars and ports. 664-4511. RAMBLER, 1963 CLASSIC WAGON, Texas, 1 owntr, A-l, prlvata. FE 3-7309. Now wd Owd Cw* IN 1902 RAMBLER AMERtCANWAG- ‘ on, very goto, frMSp., *175. 633- " MME IN AND BEAT the new price INCREASE BUY « NEW 1967. PONTIAC AND SAVE BIGI HAUPT PONTIAC On M15 at 1-75 Int 1966 TEMPEST Club couplo*' automatic* power steal ing radio* haatar* whitewall** fu price $1795 With only $49 dow and weekly payments of $13.92. HAROLD TURNER FORD, INC. 464 S. WOODWARD AVE. i BIRMINGHAM ._Ml 4-73001 GLENN'S 1966 GTO AUTOMATIC AND DOU-blo power. Low mlltag*. L. C. Williams, Salesman 1 952 W. Huron St. E 4*7371 FE 4-1797 _______________r. FE 2-9341 > BONNEVILLE 4-DOOR* DOU-le power* Hydra.* whitawalls* &50. OA 8^1)1. BEATTIE FORD .1966 FORD’ 1965 Mustang F-250 Pickup* with custom cab* 2-Door Hardtop. Rad will* black V-$* stick* radio* haatar. vinyl Interior. Only— $1795 $1495 1963 T-Bird u '63 Rambler Convertible with power (tearing, brakes; radio, haatar. Rom beige with black top. 990 ♦door etdan, with V-0, automatic, power etoerlng, brakes. Only — $1495 $995 1964 Ford Galaxie 500 -door sedan, with 1962 T-Bird brakes. Only — $1295 eutorn«tlc,J^u?l power!°Only — $1295 - On Dixia Hwy. in Waterford —. Your Ford Dealer Since 1930 623-0900 1959 PONTIAC ♦DOOR HARDTOP, AUTOMATIC, POWER STEERING! AND BRAKES, 5188. COOPER'S Extra Clean Used Cars ! 4378 Dixie Drayton Plel Open 9 tp 9 dally 674-25 BEEN BANKRUPT? BAD CREDIT? NEED A CAR? Call FE 6-40*6 —| isk for Mr. White. King 1959 PONTIAC CATALINA 9-PASSENGER W AG O N, POWER STEERING AND BRAKES, *149. COOPER'S Extra Clean Used Cars 4278 Dixie Drayton Ptolne 9 te 9 dally_______*7' i960 PONTIAC, TRI-POWER. 2 EX-tra tires an wheels. 8300. Pure I Statlto, WOULD YOU BELIEVE NO GIMMICKS-NO GIVEAWAYS JUST RIGHT CARS AT RIGHT PRICES .199,. .'60 Pontiac Catalina 8299!. .'62 Chavy 2-door "99.. .'60 Mercury convertible 199.. .'64 Monza Coupe I99 '41 Cadillac DeVllle 199 . '62 Chevy wagon, loaded HALF-DOZEN CARS AT 099 EA. OPDYKE MOTORS 2230 Ponttec Rd. at Opdyka FE 3-9337 U| .. TEMPEST SHARP, FULL prlca *195. Marvel JV)ptors 351 Oakland Avt.____FE M079 steering, brskei full prlca Marvel Motors 351 Oakland Av*. FE 8-4079 CLEAN 1063 PONTIAC STAR CHIEF power steering, power brakes, whitawalls, good rubber. *38-1295. 1962 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, Automatic, power brakes ahd steering, good condition, no rust, adults car, *675. Ml ♦0673. GLENN'S 1962 Pontiac 4 door. Sadan Catalina. Power ' L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. PE 4-7371 FE ♦1797 GLENN'S 1963 Pontiac Wagon double power —L. C. Williams, Salesman 952 W. Huron St. FE ♦7371 PE 4-1797 Many More to Chooad From 19*3 PONTIAC ♦DOOR HARDTOP. 0097 toll prlca. LUCKY AUTO THE NEW AUDETTE PONTIAC 1 NOW SERVING Troy—Pontiac—Birmingham t 1050 Maple, acrese ffern Berz A 19*4 BONNEVILLE 2-DOOR HARD-top. Clean. Full power, 01,195. 673-6347 after 3:30. 1964 PONTIAC, 3 DOOR HARD-top Catalina, hydriinBffa,, "•—-1 steering and faralMe, 36X1630. GLENN'S 1904 Pantlec C«UP*. Venture L. C.'Wiiliams, Salesman 953,W. Htmn St. : PRE-LABOR DAY RECORD SALE 30-1967 Cars Must SPECIALS as low as $2430 automatic transmission, radio, heater, whitewalls, deluxe wheel covers, deluxe steering wheel. 1967 CLOSE OUT PRICES Be Sold This Week BRAND NEW 1967's Skylarks as low as $2810 V-8 engine, automatic transmission, power steering and brakes, radio, whitewall tires, remote mirror, deluxe wheel covers. LESABHES as low as $2928 outomatic transmission, power steering and brakes, radio, whitewalls, door guards, remote mirror, deluxe wheel covers, custom moulding. 1967 CLOSE OUT PRICES 1967 CLOSE OUT PRICES ELECTRA as low as $3465 automatic transmission, power steering, power brakes, radio, whitewalls, tinted windshield, remote mirror, wheel covers, safety and accessory group. WILDCATS as law as $3208 automatic' transmission, power steering, power brakes, radio, wtyitewalls, tinted windshield, door guards, remote mirror, custom mouldings. 1967 CLOSE OUT PRICES BUICK Prices Start as Low as $2430 14 DEMONSTRATORS AND FACTORY OFFICIAL CARS AT TERRff 1C SAVINGS. ALL CARS PRICED TO SAVE YOU HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS. SHOP EARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS. VANDEPUTTE 210 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE ‘ BUICK OPEL FE 2-9101 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1987 D—0 —Television Programs— Program* furnished by stations I ittod in this column art subject to chango without notice ^QwmwIw 2-WJDK-TV, 4-WWJ-TV, 7~WXYZ-TV, y-CKLW-TV, SO-WK*P-TV. SO-WTvT* 4:99 (I) TV 2 Reports (C) - (9) Robin Seymour (50) Hy Lit (C) (56) (Special) “Tanzania —, Tbe Quiet Revolution’ Inquires into the problems of aid, education and development into this East African nation. Films depict the face of the country while President Julius K. Nyerere discusses his policies. •:M (2) NFL Action (C) (4) New? (C) (7) Michigan Sportsman • (4) Target (C) 2:00 (2)*Vo Be Announced (4) Thin Man (R) 2:15 (2) TlgCr Warmup (C) 2:30 (2) Baseball — Tiger play Kansas City Athletics. (C) - (4) International Zone (50) Wells Fargo (R) 2:55 (7) Outdoor World (C) 3:00 (4) Profile (O ( . (7) ABC Scope — A report on the readiness of the 187th Infantry Brigade and their feelings of a reserve call-up. (C) (50) Movie: “Colorado Territory” (1949) (Joe McCrea, Virginia Mayo. 3:30 (7) Issues and Answers— Rep. Gerald R. Ford (R-Michigan) is interviewed. (C) (9) Movie: “The Quie American” (1058) Audie Murphy, Michael Redgrave. (R) 4:00 (7) Theater Four (7) Richard Boone (R) 4:30 (4) (Special) Westchester Classic — .Closing action in the year’s richest tourney. (C) 4:45 (56) Christopher Prgraom 5:00 (2) Baseball Scoreboard (C) (7) Movie: “State Fair’ (1902) Pat Boone, Anq Margret. (R) (C) (50) Laramie (R) (C;) (56) Living for the Sixties 5:15 (2) Movie: “Raffles” (1940) David Niven, Oliva de Havilland. (R) (9) Rawhide (R) (56) Antiques TOMORROW NIGHT 6:00 (2) 21st Century — A report on attempts to curb the world’s population explosion. (R) (C) (50) Silent Service (R) -(56) What’s in a Word? 6:30 (2) Patty Duke (R) (4) Smithsonian — Hal Holbrook reads excerpts from the journals of George Catlin, the artist who portrayed the wild West. (R) (C) (9) Movie: “Tarzan, the Ape Man” (1982) Johnny Weissmuller, Neil Hamilton. (R) (50) Victory at Sea (R) (56) Gamut 7:00 (2) Lassie (R) (C) (4) Animal Secrets — Films of animals caring for their young. (R) (C) (7) Voyage to the Bottom of the Sea—Alien amphib-ians try to take over the sub to use its nuclear reactor to hatch their eggs. (R) '(C) (50) (Special) Voice of the Desert—Observations of naturalist - philosopher Joseph Wood Krutch are set against the Sonora Desert of Arizona. (C) (56) (Special) “The European Experience” charts the relationship between population explosion and technological development in Western Europe. 7:30 (2) Truth or Consequences (C) (4) Walt Dlsney’8 World — Second of three parts of “The Moon Spinners.’l (R) (C) 8:00 (2) Ed Sullivan — Top circus acts feature the At* las-Sahara acrobatic troupe, the bouncing Titos and contortionist Fatima Zohra, (ft) (C) (7) FBI — A plane crash is rigged to conceal use of defective parts on a war contract. (R) (C) f (50) David Susskind (C) (56) Folk Guitar 9:30 (4) Let’s Make a Deal (C)j I (9) Lowell Thomas — “Where Brides Do tile Choosing.”; (C) (56) Art and Man 0:00 (2) Our Place — Cyril ftitchard is guest. (C) (4) Bonanza—Ben grants an immigrant land for a vineyard but vicious neighbors create trouble for all Involve*. (R) (C) (7) Movie: * The Scorpio 7V Features TONIGHT TANZANIA — THE QUIET REVOLUTION,’ 6 p.m. (56) TIGERS VS. ATHLETICS, 7 p. m. («) 'IGOR STRAVINSKY AT 88,’ 10 p.m. (56) TOMORROW WESTCHESTER CLASSIC, 4:30 p.m. (4) ‘VOICE OF THE DESERT,’ 7 p.m. (50) *THE EUROPEAN EXPERIENCE,’ 7 p.m. (56) Letters” (1907) Two British agencies compete to catch the leader of a blackmailing ring, a man t known only as Scorpio. Alex Cord, Shirley Eaton. (R) (C) { (0) Numerality Singers 9:30 (9) Twelve far Summer (56) NET Playhouse — In “Rent Day” a young farmer and his wife are threatened by eviction. (R) 10:00 (2) Mission: Impossible-Agents infiltrate on age school where germ warfare against the U.S. is studied. (R) (C) (4) The Saint - Saint probes the attempts to murder a woman auto racer. (R) (C) (9) Other Eye (50) Lou Ghrdon 10:39 (9) Struggle for Peace — A report on defense treaties. (R) 11:09 (2) (4) (7) News (C) (9) News 11:16 (9) Movie: “Hie Beast of Budapest” (1958) Gerald Milton, John. Hoyt. (R) 11:30 (2) Movie: “Hie Bad and the Beautiful” (1952) Kirk Douglas, Lana Turner. (R) (4) Beat the Champ (7), Movie: “711 Ocean Drive” (1950) Edmond O’Brien, Joaiine Dni. (R) 12:30 (4) News (C) 1:06 (9) Window on the World kl5 (2) With This Ring (C) 1:30 (2) News (C)' (7) News 1:45 (7) Rebel (ft) Angry Melina, Greek King Nearly Meet UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP) — Actress Melina Mercouri, deprived of her Greek citizenship by Greece’s new military junta, and Greek King Constantine came within 100 feet of each other at the United Nations Friday. But they did not meet. Constantine came to talk to Secretary General U Thant. ★ * ★ ★ Melina came to present the king, through Thant’s office, with a personal letter protesting against the junta. Hie letter also asked Constantine if he was working “to free the thousands of political prisoners” and to restore a free press and constitutional government ★ ★ ★ In the end Melina had to read the letter to newsmen. The United Nations refused to accept the letter, telling her that Thant “is not a post office.” n Hj 32 Hoon Hidden 3 Moderate 34Jiakerofflailing 4Superfluous MnES «Prayer fir 5- 4 r 5" r 5“ n 10 r p j 15 14 1 1 ■ 1 IT r 18 J ' 19 1 I ST 30 U r vr 43 r 4V 48 49 bl 52 55 54 55 55 57 26 Film Festival Features Youth VENICE, Italy (AP) — The 28th Venice Film Festival opens tonight with the accent on youthful directors and not one American, Soviet or Japanese film In the running for the big prize. Three of the 15 Him* competing for the coveted “Golden Lion” are first works. Several other film* by novice directors are being shown in a separate category. ‘Young people are at the foundation of present-day cinema,” Luigi Chlartai, the festival director, said in a magazine article published today. “They are the ones who bring in new ideas, new forms.” Hie three first works in the main cetegory are “Mahlzel-ten” (The Insatiable One) by Edgar Reitz of West Germany, ‘Dutchman” by Anthony Harvey of Britain and “O Salto” (Hie Jump) by Christian de Chalonge of France. Italy has five films entered for the Golden Lion. France has three, Britain two and Hungary, Czechoslovakia, Greece, Yugoslavia and West Germany one each. Johnson, Israelis, Twiggy Top 1967 Laugh Parade By EARL WILSON NEW YORK—Hie summer of ’67 wil be remembered by pnmwHana as the year of the mini and the topless and the riots —and for the giag: “What do you think of LSD?” . he a wonderful President.” Jokes frequently chronicle history more ef-1 fectively than historians. Gov. Ronald Reagan was on every come-1 dian’s lips. Edie Adams brought the Copacabanag audience the regards of ex-Gov. Pat Brown, f whom Reagan defeated. “Pat Brown wants to be remembered,” Edie i said, “. . . by anybody.” Reagan's name had 11 gone from marquees, it was pointed out, to picket || 1 |igns. M— -- * Several comics toyed with the gag that LBJ WILSON and Bobby Kennedy didn’t want to be President—just king. ★ ★ ★ The gag writers had the most fun with the Israelis’ quick vanquishing of the Arabs. We were surprised that some jokes given us by Broadway and Hollywood writers were front-paged in Paris. The gag avalanche started immediately after the Israelis knocked out the Arabs. Larry Gore, the press agent, phoned uS that a United Arab Republic spokesman said: “It’a very unfair. Israel has 2.3 million Jews (Hi their side and we have none.” Travel agencies would soon be running ads, “Visit Israel and see the Pyramids,” sugegsted an editor, Frank Bowers. (Sure enough, El Air Airlines did run such an ad a few days later/) ★ ★ ★ They Came fast after that. Darryl F. Zanuck was going to make a movie about the war titled, “The Shortest Day.” Two i soldiers, only survivors of a company that was wiped out, said, “It was an ambush. There were two of ’em!” TWIGGY A SENSATION ‘The Arab Army is just the Mets with guns . . . The Jews wouldn’t live in Egypt. There l«n’t one decent Chinese Restaurant ...” And so it went. Twiggy was a sensation for a few weeks. “Jnst keep watching her feet/’ Art Paul said. “Hiat’s how you teU which way she’s facing.” Hennjy Youngman pointed out that England sent ns two things this year: George Raft and Twiggy. Twiggy was going to become the first topless waiter . . . Bob Goldstein said the biggest taxi line in the world is in New York, and is called the Off Duty Cab Co.... Mimi Hines slugged Johnny Desmond in “Funny Girl” and this followed battling between Barbra Streisand and Syd Chaplin in the same show. “And they say things are rough in Vietnam!” said a fellow actor. HEARING AIDS Rosamond Williams . MAICO 21E. Corntll Dll Service* & Supplies ADDING AROOM? need supplementary heat?_ Modal GSW 30 TIMED PRE-VENT is America's most beautiful heating unit and it can solve your heating problems! thewal go* fumaoel floor spaoa is at a prsmiuml • Instant warmth with fingertip contrail • Your choie* of lO.OOO, 20.000, 30.000 BTU models. See us or phone today. 30,000 BTU $175 par wei 1 Installs CHANDLER HEATIN8 00. 5400 Highland Rd, OR 3-S622, 6744411 H mh* last tt manat airport George Gobel claimed he saw a Volkswagen being towed down the street by cops racing at 60 miles an hour and wondered if the car owner also got a ticket for speeding. 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D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 Still Pending in 32 Riot Deaths ■>,. mmmd ■ tv . > DETROIT (AP) - A month •ttor rioting claimed 'll lives, Detroit officials have filed no charges and made no rulings in 82 of the deaths. Murder charge? have been filed ha five cases stemming from the worst riot in recent U.S. history. Six other riot kill- ings have been ruled accidental or Justifiable homicides. ■k k k Police or National Guard gun-fire killed 18 victims in the 32 unsettled cases, according to police reports. Besides these, people who claimed to have been witnesses say police or National Guards-1 gunfire involving police and Na-men fatally shot six others, and,tional Guardsmen against another victim, before dying, suspected sniper posts. said police or Guardsmen shot him. The other seven of the unsettled cases break down this way, police said: Two killed in an exchange oi • One killed apparently by a sniper who was not apprehended. • One found shot ‘to death without evidence of who might have done the shooting. • One shot to death by the owner of a market being looted. • One jumped or fell Cut of a window of an apartment police were raiding on suspicion that it housed a sniper. * ★ ★ • One was fatally" shocked by a high-voltage power line which had fallal in the collapse of a burning building set ablase by arsonists. * A- * Detectives have completed investigations in 21 unsettled cases and have filed reports with Prosecutor William Cafaa-lan. In each of these, investigators said they could find no evidence of criminal action and recommended that no charges be filed. Teens Save Tot, Vanish NEW YORK (AP) - A young mother, trapped in her flaming fourth-floor Bronx apartment Friday night, dropped ho* 13-month-old daughter intoihe arms of passing teen-agers who handed the linfant to neighbors and disappeared. Lorna Simmons, 27, had dashed to a window with her child, Tau, and screamed at a group of passing youths. The latter stood In a c(fcla and held out their hands to form a human net. . ★ * A After dropping die child safely, Mrs. Simmons climbed onto the building ledge, where she was rescued by two firemen. Save! Dusters 0L0SE0UT SALE ON PEIGNOIR-STYLE DUSTERS Enchantingly feminine dusters in naaozted pastel shades with detail on necks, collars and sleeves. .Some have belts and pockets. Made of cotton and cotton blends. 'Women’s sixes 8-18. Monday Oi Save! Junior Wool Skirls ALL BRAND NEW STYLES IN JUNIOR SIZES 100% wool skirts for Fall and Winter. .Popular slim line and flattering A-line styles in checks, and solid colors. Junior sizes 5 to 15 in favorite and fashion colors. Coipe early for best selection. Were $5 to $7 2" Special 2" Save! Misses’ Plaid Slacks . SPECIAL PURCHASE-YOU SAVE 2.99 NOW Gorgeous plaids . . . both bright and muted . . . for casual living. Wrinkle resistant polyester and cotton blend for little or no ironing. Ideal for your favorite shirt, knit or sweater. Misses sites 8 to 20; women’s 38-44. Were 4.98 ]99 Charge It Save! Men’s Underwear KNIT T-SHIRTS AND BRIEFS; 18,000 TO SELL Luxurious Royal Egyptian cotton, famous for strength and long wear. Crew neck T-shirts and elastic waist briefs of 2-ply yarns. Soft, absorbent, machine washable and shrinkage controlled. S, M, L, XL. Limit 12 each. Reg. 1.29 97* Automatic Blankets COZY ACRYLIC, SINGLE AND DUAL Electric blankets give yon perfect temperature control. 6-in. binding. Machine wash, shrinkage controlled. • Full, Single Control, Reg. 1T.N... 13.97 FulL Dual Control, Rag. 22.11 .... 17.97 Qoaan, Dual Control, Rag.Tl.ll.... 23.97 King, Dual Control, Rog. 39.99 ... 93.97 Save! Knitting Yarn HUBBY TEXTURE 80% WOOL, 60% HYL0H The designer’s yarn ... perfect for akirU, dresses, sweaters, jackets, etc. Mothproof, hand-washable. • Fatal 4-Ply Si .... Reg. 15.99 II47 Twin Size Single Control Reg. 1.29 97* Wool Yam. 2 Oz. Pull Skein, Rag. 98o 57c Bu9qr Wintuk 3-Ply 0rlon« Acrylic Yom. Washable. 20z. Pull Skoin, Rog. 89c 97c Save! Bonded Knits WOOL AND WOOL BLENDS 50458” wide wool and wool blend knits are perfect for fall. They’re bonded for easy sewing, and are available in a variety of^ fancy stitches, patterns, and plain jerseys. Stop in and see the fabulous colors. Save! Room Size Rug 0x12' SIZE, PLUSH COTTON PILE, BRIGHT COLORS Dense one half ineh pile give* cushiony comfort. Latex coated backing Reg, 37.99 resists dipping. Heavy two-ply yarns tmrn O for longer wear. 7 vivid colors: gold, ^ OO red, medium blue, fern green, white, f Dal medium green,beige. 't 414 is SAVE! Men’s Shoes OF EASY CARE C0RFAM«-$4 BELOW REGULAR Monday Only 193 y4. Charge tt Take your choice of wing tip moc toe or dipon styles in black or cor-do-browii colors. Corfam® never needs-polishing... jnst wipe with a damp cloth to restore the original like-new shine. Sizes 7-11, 12. Reg. 16.99 97 12 Charge It Save! Single-shot BOLT ACTION .22 RIFLE, PERFECT FOR BEGINNERS Fires any standard short, long, or long rifle cartridge one at a time. Walnut-finished hardwood stock. 4x scope, rag. 8.99........... 6.88 22-eal. shorts; box of 80......Sle 22-cal. long rifle; box of 50.... Tic Reg. 21.99 88 15 Save *71 Gas Space Heater COMBUSTION CHAMBER... A.O.A. APPROVED Reg. 26.95 1988 Yon get 15,000 BTU*s of heating com< fort. Porcelain • enameled steel burner. Walnut brown and beige baked-on enameled cabinet. 22xl8x 15”. 30,000 BTU, Reg. 41.95.. .Sale!.34.88 45AM BTU, Reg. 94.98... Salt!.... 74.88 Save! All-weather Oil TOP QUALITY MULTI-GRADE 10W-30 MOTOR OIL Formulated from high quality base • oil*, fortified against sludge and oxidation under adverse conditions. Special additives give more effective lubrication over a wide range of temperatures. Meets API service classifications for MS-DG-DM serv- Reg. 3.79 277 Iron Railing ! Add charm, beauty, safety to yonr home. Railing adjusts to step angle. Black primed coat. Rag. 447, 297 Wrought Iron Column Sale “Marquee** ‘‘Essex” Reg. 8.87 . 491 Conner 11.67 Comer 14.67 . __ 9.95 6.67 Flat 16.9$ 8.67 MONBAY ONLY-from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Save! Boys’ and Girls’ OXFORDS AND SLIP0NS FOR SCHOOL, DRESS Boys’ 4-eyelet moc-toe oxford in sizes 8>/2 to 4; slipons 10 to 4 Both in black. Girls* slipons, 10 to 4, black or cobbler tan. All have leather uppers, long -wearing composition soles and heels. Save over $1. Charge It Perma-Prest No-Iron Dress Slacks For Little Boys Boys' Semi-Dress PERMA- PREST Jeans Were 3.99 2 M $5 77 2.57 Each Limit 4 Pr. Continental styled little boys’ dress slacks of hop. sacking weave polyester and cotton. Machine wash, noironing needed if tumble dried. Sizes 3 to 6X. Sears Children's Apparel 14,724 to Sell Continental style in cotton and polyester blends . . . twills, hopsacks and plain weavs. They stay neat and wrinkle free with no ironing. .. jnst machine wash, tumble dry. Black, bines, greens. 6-12 slims, regulars. Student waist sizes 25 to 30. Boys' Clothing Dept. Save! 30” Footlocker ... FOR HOME STORAGE OR BACK-T0-SCR00L 32-gauge metal cover over sturdy plywood flame. Brass-plated hardware and Corners. Has draw bolt locki. 1.91 Mm's Vinyl 42" Two-Suiter Bag. Full-length zipper.... . .141 1.11 Worm's Vinyl 54” Drsss sad Coat Bag. With hangar slat......... 1.18 Sears Luggage Dept. Rog. 7.9S 577 Heavyweight alnm-inumware has Teflon® coating for nostick cooking and no • scour cleaning. Monday only. Sears Housewares Dept. PERMA-PREST Semi-Dress Men’s Slacks Were 6.99 to 7.99 488 Just machine wash, tumble dry for a fresh-pressed appearance. Fine polyester and rayon oxford weave in ivy, fall cut, or single pleat styles. Choose from olive, charcoal gray, brown, blna or light olive. Size* 30 to 44. Save 2.11 to 3.11. . Sears Men's Clothes Dept. Save! Maker’s Closeout TIER CURTAIN AND VALAliCE SETS High fashion tier assortment never need ironing when tumble dried. All are Of 100% cotton with applique, embroidered eyelet or ruffle trims. Aecent yonr rooms with new tiers at these special savings! Monday Only ll9 Soars Curtain and Drapery Oept. Save! Bunk Bed Set WITH MAPLE BOOKCASE, MATTRESS AND SPRINGS Maple-finished Colonial styled beds have bookcase headboards, 2 mattresses, 2 link springs, guard rail and ladder. Makea a perfect space-saver for children’s bedroom. Select a handsome bunk bed set now at Sears low price. Soars Furniture Dspt. Sale Price 89s® Famous Craftsman Quality SrV©! 25” Lawn Sweeper , WORK 5 TO 7 TIMES FASTER THAN RAKING Rag. 32.99 For cleaning np leaves or grass clippings No-stoop control on handle adjusts brush height from minns Vi-2Vs”. 6V4 bushel capacity. Salt! Craftsman 30” Self-Propelled 3-H.P. Lawn Sweeper, Rog. 109.95.. 88.88 Soars Hardware DspL 2688 Save! Panty Girdles WITH LYCRA® AND NYLON SPANDEX® ELASTIC Two shown from an assortment. Panty girdles fit either 19" or 20” - down, giving firm but light control. Nylon-tricot crotch. 4 hidden, detachable garters. In nude or white. Sizes S-XL. Were $8 and $1 2" Soars Bra and Girdls Dspt. Perma-Prest Print and Solid Shirts 237 Limit 3 50% Avril® rayon and 50% Fortrel® polyester blend. Roll sleeve styling. Sizes 7-14 Girls’ Wool Blend Skirts Limit 3 2" 2,260 to Sail Wool and acrylic and wool and nylon blends in assorted styles. Solids and patterns. Sizes 7-14 Sears Girls* Apparel Dept. GUARANTEE If Pare • Pare White House Paint (1) yellows. (2) stains from rnst or copper, (3) chalk streaks on bricks or (4) fails to cover any color paint with one coat (except on shake shingles) when applied according to directions, we will supply additional paint, or if yon prefer, refund yonr purchase price. SAVE! Sears Best PURE-PURE WHITE OlL BASE HOUSE PAINT Guaranteed one coat, non-chalking, non-staining and non-yellowing! Highly resistant to blistering, peeling, fames and smOg. Flow on smoothly and dries to a hard, glossy 3-ineh Natural Bristle Paint Brash.......................... 3.19 Reg. 8.50 K97 QJP Ballon "Satisfaction guaranteed or your money back" SEARS Downtown Pontiac Phone FE 5-4171 J 7 x 2 VeteM&fc I Charged With Spying for Reds WASUDNGTON (X) -- Two Army sergeant*, both veterans of long service, are charged with spying for Soviet agents. Staff Sgt. Leonard J. Saford, 30, originally from Port Pierce, Fla., and Sgt. 1C. tllysses L. Harris, 37, from Sicily Island, La., were arrested last Saturday and Sunday respectively, but the; arrests were not announced until yesterday. The two Soviets allegedly involved have left the country and won’t be allowed back In, the Defense Department LEONARD SAFFORD This Trailer Went *Over the River and Through the Woods”... “We add our trailer so fast it took our breath away. Buyer starting trip next day.'Plenty of action from our Prass Want Ad.” Mr. Cr. Cfc iM» paokwoop, ir x w. iwo *86- Sacflflo PRESS WANT ADS Thousands of Press readme “shop” the Classified columns every day. Some are looking for what you don’t want Put one to work. Dial— 332-8181 or 334-1981 'ila AT AREA PARTY — The newlywed George Scott Romneys (nee Ronna Eileen Stern) greeted some 300 guests last evening ip, the Bloomfield Hills Country Club. It was the first of three receptions honoring the couple following their marriage Wednesday in Salt Like City’s Mormon Temple. Pink doves and a" fountain Of bubbling fruit punch were part of tim pink debor at the gala affair. (See additional pictures,page B-l.) ■- ■ .■ ■■ y Ex-Nazi Firebrand is in Rockwell Assassination ARLINGTON, Va. Ut) — Police held the former Nazi firebrand accused of slaying party chief George Lincoln Rockwell under heavy guard today while Rochwell’s heir apparent vowed “we will carry on.” Rockwell, 49, founder of the American Nazi Party, was killed in his car yesterday by two cleanly placed shots as he was leaving-the parking lot of a small shopping center. year-old John C. Patter, former No. 4 man in the small party’s hierarchy, with murder. Bond was set at $50,000. Matthias Koehl, second in command to Rockwell, said Patter was expelled from the part^ last April because of his “Bolshevik leanings.” He had been a member of the group, which directs its hate toward Negroes and Jews, almost since its founding in 1958. party’s propaganda minister and Pat-ler edited the organization’s magazine “Stormtrooper” until early this year. COURT DATE Patter, also of Arlington, was to appear in court Monday to determine the date of his preliminary hearing. Mrs. Helen Lane, an Arlington lawyer, was With Patter during his interrogation by police. Five hours later, police charged 29- Rockwell once described Patter as the Rockwell was shot after leaving a coin-operated laundry in the shopping center, one block from party headquarters. The shots, fired from a low roof over a barber shop, struck him in the head and chest. Patler was arrested 45 minutes later, a half-mile from the scene. Police would not say if a weapon had been found .or whether he had made a statement. Rockwell, who idolized Adolf Hitler and claimed he could recite every word of Hitler’s book “Mein Kamp” (My Battle), advocated “transporting all . Negroes to Africa, stripping Jews of property and sterilizing teem.” He was in the Navy in World War H and during the Korean War and attained tee rank of commander before he was released from active duty in 1954. The Navy discharged him from the reserves in 1960 because of his conduct. man day. Patler, chief and founder George Rockwell refused to say how many members were in the party, but knowledgeable people said it has fewer than 100 members. The headquarters, in Aron 23 acres and less than 10 the nation’s capital. Rockwell had told people he would Auto Talks Showdown Nears ***&£ Is Predicted for DETROIT (AP) — Company and union negotiators today mapped strategy behind tee scenes for a showdown Tuesday as time runs out if a strike is to be avoided in the auto industry. The Job before them is to reach a new wage agreement by a week from Wednesday, when current three-year pacts expire. lowing Detroit meetings of the union’s General Motors, Ford and Chrysler councils, made up of representatives from Big Three plants across the country. Local unions voting this week have been rolling up majoritites of 90-plus per cent to authorize negotiators to call a strike, if and when they deem one necessary. Both Ford and General Motors, however, have indicated they will not include anything to guarantee equal pay for Canadian auto workers, who now average about 40 cents less per hour than their counterparts in U.S. plants. the Pontiac Area Financial and labor experts at General Motors Corp., Ford Motor Co. and Chrysler Corp. busied themselves patting together, for promised delivery Tuesday, counteroffers to demands of the Untied Auto Workers Union. Strike planning was uppermost on the weekend agenda of union executives. They have invited local union leaders to gather today and Sunday in sevqp cities “to acquaint them with the strike assistance program of the international union.’* Louis G.- Seaton, GM yice president-personnel, has estimated it would require at least $4 hourly per worker to meet all the union’s wage and fringe, demands, and he said there will be “a very great difference” between that ahd his company’s offer.' Parity of pay is a major union demand. The UAW says it is needed to protect U.S. jobs. The companies say it isn’t so. Ford has joined General Motors in proposing a change in the cost-of-living clause in current contracts, a clause with which the union says “there can be no tampering.” . Otherwise none of. the companies has given a hint as to tee size of the package it will offer. •Ford said it panted a limit to how much can be added'over any given time by the cost-Of-living escaltor. Leaden skies indicate a soggy weekend in tee Pontiac area. The U.S. Weather Bureau forcasts: TODAY—Partly cloudy with chance of showers. High expected from 80 to 85. TONIGHT—Cloudy with showers and turning cooler with a low of 54 to 60. SUNDAY—Partly cloudy and coder with chance of showers early in tee day. MONDAY—The outlook is fair and cool. Precipitation probability is: today 40 per cent,11 tonight 50 per cent and Sunday 20 per cent. Low mercury reading in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. was 63. By 1 p.m. the gauge went up to 76. Leonard Woodcock, a UAW vice president, said a week ago there will he no contract extension for the target com-* pany. The UAW’s international executive board has been summoned to meet Wednesday to pick that company. A final decision, however, is likely to be withheld until Thursday night, fol- Murder and Kidnaping Two Area Crimes Puzzling Police In Today's Press Sets Record Pontiac’S Bill Tipton sharp in Jaycee Track Meet — PAGE D-l. Cigarettes Federal panel proposed to evaluate health claims of filters, devices — PAGE A-8. Antitrust Case Labor's position under lawy remains clouded — PAGE A-S: Astrology ........ ... B-8 Bridge ............... B-8 Church News ...... . B-4-B-7 Crossword Puzzle ....... D-9 Comics ....... ....... B-8 Editorials ...............A4 Home Section ........C-l—C-8 Markets ............... C-7 Obituaries .............B-10 Sports ....... .. .. D-l, D-3 Theaters .............. B-9 TV-Radio Programs .......D-9 Wilson, Earl .....,.....D-9 Woman’s Pages ......B-l, B-2 By E D BLUNDEN Two crimes which aroused tiie Oakland County area during tee summer remain unsolved today in spite of intensive, efforts by local, state and federal authorities. Four persons are sought in tee killing July 3 of Edward Emmett DeConick, 63, of 5847 W. Maple, West Bloomfield Township. One man is wanted in tee kid- napping Aug. 9 of Diane C. Brown, 19, of 1070 Northover, Bloomfield Township. Latest development in either of the cases is additional, information on the kidnapping suspect. Bloomfield Township police say suspect Frank Patterson, about 35, has a record of larceny, forgery and robbery in different states under a number of aliases A dossier, being collected by the FBI, is not yet complete, police said, but they warned he is probably armed and da I The suspect stopped the Brown vg on 1-75 using a guard patrol vehicle, glim and uniform, stolen from a Detroit security firm, where he worked. He pretended to take her into custody for speeding, got tee keys of tee car from her ami drove them both to Bowling Green, Ohio. (Continued on Page A-2, Col. 7) FRANK PATTERSON Kidnaping Suspect MURDER &I8PECT Composite Drawing ivwea oacK in be elected president in 1972 on a Nazi party ticket. At a recent college appearance he said: “Five minutes after I’m elected President there won’t be any more problem with Red China— because I’m going to push the button to launch hydrogen bombs.. They were identified as Nikolai Fed-orvich Popov and Antololy Tikhorovich Kireyev. Popov was with the Soviet Embassy in Washington, Kireyev with the Soviet Union’s mission at the United Nations in New York. Rockwell was married twice and had seven children. He was separated from his second wife. ★ * * Rockwell had said machinery was set up to replace him if he were assassinated. ALLEGED INCIDENTS The alleged spying occurred while Saf-ford, a 12-year Army veteran, was administrative supervisor at the Strategic Communications Command Facility in nearby Suitiand, Mr., and Hurts was with tee Signal Corps at Ft. Monmouth, N.J. Both had top-secret clearance. The Army charges teat on Dec. 8, 1966, Safford asked a soldier, Robert A. Cook, to photograph military equipment at an Army installation in Roslyn, Va., across tee Potomac River from Washington. ULYSSES HARRIS Safford received a camera from Popov last June 3 during a meeting in a Washington restaurant, the charges said, and then delievered unidentified documents to the Soviet diplomat at suburban shopping centers in June and July. Area Man Faces Miami Charges In February, the Pentagon charged, Harris requested Willie K. Fletcher, also a soldier, to put him “in contact with an agent of tiie Soviet intelligence service.” Harris then met Popov at Neptune, N.J., for instructions and met with Kireyev in Freeport, N.Y. May 27, the Army said. The charges gave no details about Hfirts’ alleged activities. MIAMI (UPI) — A sleepy-eyed Keego Harbor man today faced six couots of assault with intent to murder in connection with a wild ride through greater Miami In which four motorists were wounded by gunfire. Bond was set at $30,000 Friday for Candy Michael Hughes, 23, of 2123 Willow Beach. ■if ★ ★ Tide of Mice Faces River He was arrested when police kicked in the door of his Miami Beach motel room only a few hours after the shooting spree. Hughes will be arraigned next week. Four motorists were wounded, one seriously, by a sniper who raced from Coral Gables to HteleSh, spraying bullets with a .31 caliber pistol. PRIBOJ, Yugoslavia UB-Yugo- § slav fanners hope the Um and f Uvac rivers will stop a horde of 1 large, aggressive mice that have S been eating their way across tee | country’s croplands. At one village recently the farm-. | ers were preparing for their wheat | harvest one day but the next day jp there was virtually nothing left to | reap — the mice had destroyed the I wheat overnight. Thomas York, a 48-year-old Negro who was shot from his tractor while working on a road project,, is paralyzed from the waist down. “I was just having a little target practice,” officers said Hughes told them as they put handcuffs on him at the motel. But he later denied shooting at anyone. The mice have chewed up an estimated 90 per cent of tee wheat, beans and potatoes in the Bosnia area, and farmers complain that even cats won’t challenge teem. DESCRIBED AS HOTRODDER Michigan police described Hughes, who suffered a mental breakdbwn two years ago, as a “hotrodder” who has been arrested before for traffic offenses. The unusually large propagation of mice this year has been blamed on the virtual extermination of martens and foxes, mice eaters. His mother, Mrs. Mary Hughes, said her son left home last Monday with about $900, saying he was headed for California. Sh? explained his odd first name by saying tee couple had expected a girl. “We always called him Mike,” she said. THE PONTIAC PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 1967 A—a SfuklH Qm*IJjm 3m/ (fm TtioUiuet md Jim it %mtd in the ring of your choico. Thor* ore many advantages in buying a loot* diamond — but tho big on* is th* satisfaction of having an individual ring — your personal choice of bath diamond and mounting. And h*r*, of cqurse, our Diamond Exports will point out to you, with scientific instruments, th* qualities that your gem possesses. From $100 j Charge * Layaway # Michigan Bankard JEWELERS FE 2-0294 Opens Friday Evenings BIRMINGHAM 162 North Woodward MI 6-4293 NEED HELP? USE PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADS. LOW IN COST. FAST IN ACTION. PHONE 332-8181. COUNTY 4-H’ERS VISIT - Two area political figures (lower right) stand with member;; of Oakland County 4-H Clubs who were in Washington, D.C., recently on a 4-H citizenship course. With them are Pontiac Mayor William H. Taylor Jr. (left) and Congressman Jack McDonald, R-ltth District. Novi Gala Dqys Today, Sunday Novi Gala Days are today add tomorrow. The festivities began this morning with a parade through town and to the Gala Days* grounds at Novi Elementary School on Novi Road. Today’s events include an ox oast, games and contests, § starting at 2 p,m., pony rides, and music of the Loving Souls Band. * Skydivers from the Michigan Club will compete during Gala Days, with die finals on Sunday. The Jaycees will serve a pai cake breakfast Sunday from 8 .m. to noon in thecommunity oom at Novi Elementary School- At 2 p.m. area firemen will have a tug-of-war. Awarding of prizes will be at 7 p.m. The Gala Days are put on by the Novi Board of Commerce and the Novi Jaycees. ^The event has been conducted on and off for about a dozen years. SHOP SUNDAY ________k. ■il V to save... 4 CURRENT ANNUAL RATE COMPOUNDED AND PAID QUARTERLY ... is to use Capitol’s convenient pass-book savings plan ... especially designed for folks who want to save any amount, large or small,.any time,.. and with your funds always conveniently availably. Funds left in your account for 12 full months earn 4.84%. SEVENTY-SIX YEARS OF UNINTERRUPTED DIVIDENDS INCORPORATED 1890 • LANSINS. MICHIGAN •'MEMBER: FEDERAL HOME LOAN BANK SYSTEM CAPITOL SAVINGS & LOAN 75 WIST HURON STREET, PONTIAC GO WESTERN, YOUNG LADY IN CORDUROY JEANS Midwale cotton corduroy... slim-hiRped, tapered-leg “cowpoke” style. Riveted front pockets with more pockets at the back, looped waistband, zip-front.. .and of course in fall’s new colors. Misses' sizes 8 to 18 ►99 GO WESTERN, YOUNG LADY f IN A CORDUROY SHIRT ' Terrific shirt at a terrifically low price! 100S cotton corduroy with long sleeves, button cuffs, slit sides and Western-inspired laced bodice. Great fdr your slack life! New colors. Misses' sizes 30 to 38 1 99 BOTH STORES NOON TO « P. M» CLARKSTON 6460 DIXIE HWY. PONTIAC 200 N. SAGINAW For »h« Big and Tall Man i Bis Man's Shap at 1*051 N&«.$jr * # ***•*■ % H • V * A ^ 0//SUY, SELl/ TRADE . t ■' USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac Shop Twits 'til Sr* BBSS' " ^5aaaaaaaaaaAaaaaaa4 Super Discounts For Saturday and Monday at SIMMS ... of Course Get these super ditcountt at Simm. Saturday or AAonday for »urs. And look around tha dm far all th* unadvartited marchandit* that i* discount pricad to tava you morn. Pork FREE in Simm. lot 'kitty-cornar' from tha County Jail Right, ramtvad to limit quantfMss. Specials for Saturday and Monday-Only af Simms General Electric Automatic Stereo Phono Charge It! Major Credit Cards Honored 10-Qt. Household Galvanized Pail Simms Price m Simms Price Modal T-262 solid dot* stereo phono with twin speakers, 4-speed automatic Flip-Down changer with 9" turntable, holds 6 records and shuts off automatically. Washable scuff-proof vinyl clad case. Dual channel stereo amplifier tor true fidelity. —2nd Floor Set of 4 ‘Baronet’ Tankard Mug Set Simms Price Just Genuine Federal glasswares—Baronet crest on each tankard. Styled as shown. Gift boxed, too. Limit 2 sets. 2nd Floor #25 Double Floating Head Norelco Shaver $20.95 Mfrs. List Hot dipped galvanized pail with bale handle for all household tasks. Handy 10-qt. size. Limit 2 per customer. 2nd Fleer Bernz-O-matic Refills Propane Tanks $1.39 Value 99 Model TX-9 Genuine Bernz-O-matic propane tanks for the propane torch, limit 2 tanks per customer. Ronson 200 Stainless Steal Men’s Electric Shaver $19.95 Mfrs. List 1544 New Norelco speed shaver with double floating head and on/off switch.! i Famous Norelco rotary blddes give gentle, yet close shaves. Sundries—Main Floor K0RATR0N-Stay Pressed SEX Corduroy Pants $6.98 Values Corduroy dress pants, Koratron treated to stay pressed and ivy styled to look neat. Choice of olive in sizes 28-29-30 waist or wheat 28 to 34. — Basement 13%-0z. Western Style Boys’ Dungarees Proportioned Sizes First Quality 2oo $2.98 seller—sanforized blue denim dungarees are American made and first quality. Zipper fly, tapered style and full cut. Regulars, slim and husky sizes 6 to 16. — Basement A New Concept in Shaving GILLETTE Techmatic Razor $2.95 Value The razor with 'Band Cartridge' for dospr, faster shaves and more shaves per blade—stainless steel ypu. know. Limit 1 razor per person. V. | . — Main Fl6or Ronson 260 has stainless steel blades and thinnest shaving serene for closets shows. Unbreakable Lexan body and sideburn trimmer. With carry case. Men’s, Youths’, Roys’ Hi#»r Low Basketball Shoes First Quality ; Simms Just Hi or low cut basketball shoes with insole comfort arch and traction sole. Black or white. Sizes 11-2, 2'/2-6, 6'/2-12. —Basement 100% Cotton American Made Children’s Sleepers Irregulars of $1.49 values, 2-pc. sleepers with gripper waist and plastic dot feet. Choice of yellow, blue, pink or aqua. Sizes 1 to ,4, —Main Floor Generous 2V2-0unce Size BAN Roll-On Deodorant $1.49 Value VITALISHair Groom $1.09 tub* of concentrated VITALIS for neat heir grooming elf day far m*n. Limit 2 tubes. Simms Bros.-98 N. Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac THE PONTI4C PRESS, SATURDAY, AUGUST 26, 19ft7 Polly's Pointers Needs Cleaning Tip ‘DEAR POLLY—We have just bought an old house and even though we are going to repaint the walls they need to be cleaned first. I have been using a sponge and soap with the least possible amount of suds but it does not 'do a good job and the sponge leaves “crumbs" on the walls. Is there a more efficient way of cleaning non-hard surface painted walls? — MALLIE DEAR POLLY — One day our entire family was at home and we decided to wash the living room walls. We struggled with .cloths and sponges only to have bits of both left on the walls Finally I hit on the idea of trying nylon or banlon men’s socks. Two or three were slipped into one for a solider hand* ful and the lightest color on the outside. Yon can’t imagine how well that worked — it removed everything with the greatest of ease. 11 later found this is a terrific idea for cleaning floors. Scuff . marks come off without sives. It is wonderful for cleaning the bathroom soap dish and going over the bathroom sink with such a pad makes the soap scum disappear very quickly. — MRS. W.G.B. DEAR POLLY — My small son has outgrown his training cup, which is the kind with a dome top and spout. I find it is a great gravy maker. Just measure the amount of flour needed, add fin water shake. Be sure to cover the ing. These holes acts as a strainer when die mixture is poured out and lumpless gravy can be made in a flash. ‘-PAULA. DEAR POLLY-1 would like to tell Gwen that I iron a large banquet cloth on my kitchen table, padded with a blanket, in- stead of on the ironing board, place the chairs with the seats facing out to catch the extensions and to prevent the long cloth from dragging on the flow. Never iron a crease in a good cloth. Also, after ironing, roll on. a heavy cardboard tube, even a broomstick, to keep the cloth from creasing and it wiU lay flat on file table when used again.—EILEEN a kiu,t (taitapd? true, but the results will be greater than magic. “39th year in Pontiac!” NEW WAY RUG and CARPET CLEANING CO. Call FE 2-7132 42 Wiener Street MRS. MICHAEL J. TOUSIGNANT Pair Repeat Friday Vows in Ceremony Suzanne Marie Livingston and Michael James Tousig-nant were wed Friday evening in St. Benedict’s Catholic Church. Parents of the bride who wore white Chantilly lace in the traditional wedding gown style are the Richard F. Livingstons of Scott Lake Road. A scalloped neckline and long wrist point sleeves were features of the wedding ensemble along with a Dior bow trim at the waistline. A wat-teau chapel length train was of matching lace. Eucharist lilies, Stephanotis and ivy made the bridal bouquet. A butterfly petal headpiece held her veil of silk Illusion. ;■ A A' * Pamela Livingston was her sister’s maid of honor. Bridesmaids were Debra Livingston, Mary Jo Hagan, Sandra h. Mary Ellen Livingston was junior bridesmaid and Marie Walsh flower girl. Daniel Tousignant of New London, Iowa was bis brother’s best man. They are the sons of Mrs. Arthur Tousignant of Marquette and the late Mr. Tousignant. * * ★ Ushers were Joseph Salvador, Donald Walsh and Donald Black of Philadelphia, Pa. James Livingston was ring bearer. Following a reception in the Waterford CAI Building the couple will leave for a northern Michigan honeymoon. You Play lt Immediately LOWERY PLAYER PIANO The consol* that is a Player Piano. Actually serves the purpose of two pianos, both, a console for regualr play and a fascinating new electric player piano, for every member of the family to onjoy. Mora new features than we can possibly describe. Sea and try it yourself. BENCH AND ROLLS INCLUDED ORLY *1496 m MONEY DOWN BANK TERMS USED ORGANS tJ