The Weather U. S. WmMmt Bureau Forecast Fair, Cooler Tonight Sunny, Warner Tomorrow ----(Details Pat* 1) . THE Home Edition PONTIAC PRESS VOL. 126 — NO. 187 PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 ' L * -72- Pa6es ' 104 A look at THE OUTSIDE - A small Vietnamese boy looks out from behind the barbed wire fence which surrounds the outpost northwest of Saigon in which lie and his family live. Thefamilyeustomarilylives with the soldier father in the outposts in Vietnam, often growing up knowing little more than the mud walls and barbed wire of the outposts, and suffering through the dame attacks as the father. Enemy Troops Hit Viet City, U S. Camp SAIGON (J) — Fighting raged northwest of Saigon today as the Viet* cong and North Vietnamese drove deep into the city of Tay Ninh, and American forces killed 95 enemy troops in repelling' a night attack, on a unit Of the 25th Infantry Division. ' * '★' ★ Farther northwest along the Cambodian border, North Vietnamese gunners shelled a dozen allied camps, but casualties and damage were reported light. U.S. intelligence officers foresaw no immediate attack on Saigon. Moving under cover of a heavy mortar attack, enemy infantrymen charged the 25th Division camp 14 miles southeast of Tay Ninh. They were driven off after nearly three hours by a massive barrage from armored personnel -c-arTi e r s, helicopter gunships and artillery. Six Americans were reported killed and 22 wounded. Me'anwhile, South Vietnamese paratroopers and militiamen skirmished with hundreds of enemy soldiers who invaded Tay Ninh, a key provincial capital 45 miles northwest of Saigon. - In two other battles 15 and 19 miles south of the capital U.S. infantrymen of the 9th Division reported killing 60 enemy and finding a weapons cache, containing 90 rifles. American losses were two killed and seven wounded. Ap correspondent John T. Wheeler reported, from the U.S. combat center in Tay Ninh that a Communist defector told interrogators there were three regiments — about 7,000 men — in and around the city. Wheeler said that by late afternoon firefights were raging on the northwest, southern and southeastern fringes of the city. Casualties on both sides were mounting, but the main battle lor the city of 200,000 still appeared yet to come. 205 /riteriors in '69 Cadillacs Hope Shattered for Fast Release of PueBo Crew WASHINGTON (AP) - Hopes for quick release of the USS Pueblo, feeding on widespread rumors for a week, haye been shattered by U.S. statements that North Korea is seeking more than just American apologies. “It is my understanding,” said Secretary of State Dean Rusk Tuesday, “they have asked for a good-many-things including commitments about further action. that would involve the high seas in the Sea of Japan.” * ★ ★ Rusk commented on leaving a closed session of the House Foreign _Affairs Committee. At about the same time that the State Department was releasing a carefully worded statement on the U.S. position. Both the Rusk comments and the statement came after, a week of rumors here and in Asia that North Korea might release the captured U.S intelligence ship and its 82 crewmen in connection with North Korea’s celebration of its 20th anniversary as a Communist state. 3 RED DEMANDS North Korea has demanded three actions from jthe United States in return for the ship and its crew, seized Jan. 23. These have been ah admission the vessel violated North Korea’s 12-mile territorial limit, an apology and a promise there would be no violations in the future. *. ★ ★ ' Rusk told the House committee that there is no independent evidence whatsoever that the Pueblo violated its sailing orders, which directed it to remainoutside ^North Korea’s territorial— claims. North Korea has claimed the Pueblo was within seven miles of its coastline when seized by a gunboat. NO RELEASE HINT Secretary of Defense Clark M- Clifford, also testifying behind closed doors on Capitol Hill, told newsmen he had nothing to indicate that the Pueblo release is imminent. Mediterranean Crash Kitts 95 on Jetliner From Our News Wires NICE, France — An Air France Caravelle jet, one engine in flames, crashed today into the Mediterranean on a flight from Corsica to Nice, killing all 95 per-sonsr aboard.... Searchers found pieces of the twin engine plane 12 mile? out to sea near Cap d’Antibes and an Air France spokesman said there were no survivors. The search was hampered by rainy weather. It was. concentrated in an area southwest of Nice. French ships were dispatched from Toulon, and other craft left Cagnes Sur Mer and Antibes to aid in the hunt. Planes came from the Saint Raphael base. 13 CHILDREN ABOARD It is not known if any Americans were aboard but the plane was reported laden with tourists. Authorities said 13 of the 89 passengers, most believed to be French, were children. There were six^ crew members. -—Among-~those aboard was1 Gen. Rerm Cogny, who commanded French troops in North Vietnam at the time Dien Bien Phu fell, the airline said. ★ * * An Air France spokesman said that ' wreckage and one body had been spotted. The plane, the latest model Caravelle, was only recently put into service. The pilot radioed shortly before the crash ' that one of the engines was on fire. Then there was silence. SEVENTH CARAVELLE CRASH It was the seventh fatal Caravelle crash and brought to nearly 400 the number of persons who have died in the crashes. Corsica, birthplace of Napoleon, is a major tourist attraction. Ajaccio, second largest city on the island and the Caravelle’s point of departure, is preparing for the celebration next year of the 200th anniversary of Napoleon's birth. * * * The distance from Corsica to Nice is about 140 miles, a flight of about 30 minutes: The plane was believed to be about 25 miles from Nice when the pilot reported the fire. . The Caravelle left the Corsica airport at !0:05 a.m. (5:05 a m. EDT) and was due to land in Nice 30 minutes later. Nice was the final destination of the flight. HHH: Could GOP Hopeful Stand Strain? N ixon: Dems Muffed in Viet From Our News Wires Richard M. Nixon says the Democrats “had their chance to end the war, and they muffed it" and his running mate, Spiro T. Agnew, says Democrat Hubert TTTffumphreyTs turning “squishyi soft” on the Vietnam issue. Humphrey, in the harshest assault on his Republican presidential opponent yet, questioned yesterday how Nixon would react under the strain of the presidency. Humphrey-Nixon Debate Is Nearer WASHINGTON (AP) - The House Commerce Committee -approved today 'suspension ""of equal-time provisions ■ of communications tow that could clear the way tor televised debates between presidential candidates this year. The vote was 16 to 14.' ★ ★ pL .The committee made only one minor change in the proposal, already passed by the Senate, to suspend the equal-time provision for candidates for president and vice president in the 1968 campaigns. A similar suspension in 1960 cleared the way for televised debates between Richard M. Nixon and John F. Kennedy. In Today's Press Aid to Education State eyes $60-milUon hike next year — PAGE A-8. Czechoslovakia Leaders assure people, Huge refugees to return — PAGE A-5. Holly Schools Board discusses budget, teachers, students, contract — PAGE A-4. Area News ...............:.A-4 Astrology .................F-4 Bridge ....................Ft4 Crossword Puzzle'.........F-13 Comics ...................vF-4 Editorials ................A-6 Food Section ..............F-l Obituaries ............. .. D-9 Picture Page . F-5 Sports'-.,... .. ..... D-l—0-5 “ ‘ ...../,...... Aft TV and Radio Programs . F-13 Wilson, Earl ...... Women’s Pages .... . . .C-l—C-4 —DETROIT (UP!) - CadiHac division of General Motors announced today it will offer 205 different interior trim combinations on its 1969 cars. The new models of GM’s luxury line, unveiled to newsmen today, show some exterior styling changes including new grilles with finer textures but retaining the cross-hatch. Also, following the tor dustry trend, side window vents completely disappear from Cadillac’s 1969 offerings. Flash WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate Judiciary Committee agreed unanimously today to vote next Tuesday on President Johnson’s nomination of Abe Fortas to succeed Chief Justice Earl Warren. — “Wilt the new coating wear off and the old substance come through?” Humphrey .said in Los Angeles. “Or will the thin veneer of the most recent political cosmetic treatment remain?” Humphrey did 'not name Nixon but 1~made it dear he was referring to his opponent. NIXON IN NEW YORK Nixon made his comment on the Democrats’ Vietnam record when he noticed antiwar placards to White Plains, N.Y. Republican vice presidential nominee Agnew said Humphrey seems-to be “trying to cast himself in the role of Neville Chamberlain — peace at any price.” * * * Humphrey’s first swing into Michigan since gaining the Democratic nomination - will be a 3VHrour~affair~iiiiS”~eventog -sandwiched in a day that begins to San Francisco and ends to Washington, D.C. The Vice President and his wife, Muriel, are due at Flint’s Bishop Airport at 6:45 p.m. after which he will head for a rally at Dort Mall Shopping Center. HHH DUE AT SAGINAW A motorcade will take him to the Saginaw County Fair by 8:30 p.m. By 10:15 p.m., he should be airborne on his way to the nation’s capital. ~7f~major innovation ohTReTCadMIics was an automatic unlocking system tor front seat backs to two-door mpdels, permitting easy fold-down tor entry into the! rear seats. Federal safety regulations last year required that fold-down seat backs provide locking mechanisms to make the backs rigid in the event of a crash. .** Cadillac solved it with a mechanism ihatWtomM^ backs When either door is open. Once the doors are closed, the backs automatically lock. . * * * Interior trim offerings on the new Cadillacs included 103 in cloth, 100 in leather and two in vinyl. The instrument panel was redesigned as a so-called “control center” with all instruments clustered directly in (front of the driver, and this section separated from the rest of the panel by a soft-padded divider. Sunshine Expected to Pierce Clouds Sunshine is expected, to filter through the clouds late today with skies clearing - tonight. The weatherman forecasts' fair' and cooler tonight, the.low dipping to 46 and 52. ♦ * ★ Mostly sunny and warmer is the prediction for tomorrow, and sunny and warmer is the.outlook for Friday. This morning’s northwesterly winds at , 10 to 15 miles per hour will be eight to 10 miles tonight. A damp 56 was the low temperature in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. The mercury reading was 67 at 2 p.m. HUBERT HUMPHREY Humphrey's running mate, Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, in St. Louis, said he would favor a North Vietnam bombing halt if there were “some indication” by North Vietnam negotiators in Paris that this would lead to substantive peace talks, and-if U.S. troops would not .be endangered. Meanwhile, who third-party candidate George C. Wallace will name as his i running mate remained a question. ‘NO’ ON CHANDLER A source close to. Wallace said the foriww -Alabama B™“,rnnr ty38 decided —against-namtogonetime^baiebalLcom- missioner and former Kentucky Gov. A. B. Happy Chandler. WASHINGTON (AP) - Sea, Eugene J. McCarthy, D-Mton., said today he ^TinraSyTSFJit MliriW^ipteTinr"’ statement oh whom he will support for president in the November election. Amid- candidates’ 1 crossfire, voters named congressional, and state candidates with Tuesday primaries: • Barry GOldwater’s opponent to his bid to return to the Senate from Arizona is Roy Elson, long-time aide of Sen. Carl, Hayden who is retiring after 56 years in Congress. • Veteran GOP Sen. George D. Aiken, a shoo-in for Republican renomination from Vermont, won not only the GOP nomination but the Democratic nomination with write-in votes. • Wisconsin Atty. Gen. Bronson C. La Eollette won the Democratic nomination to oppose incumbent Republican Gov. Warren P. Knowles. LBJ WARNS MOSCOW President Johnson, speaking to a session of the B’nai B’rith national convention last night to Washington, urged Moscow for the second time in two weeks not to “unleash the dogs of war.” He said the only way to peace to Europe is through no-holds-barred negotiations. Johnson urged the Soviet Union to accept earlier proposals for high-level talks on arms and troop reductions to Europe. He said the United States never wifi tolerate use or threat of force in areas of “common responsibility like Berlin.” ■k * * Earlier in the day Johnson told the American Legion National Convention in New Orleans there would be no surrender to Vietnam “on the installment plan, as some have suggested.”. RICHARD NIXON Report Shows Violent Crimes High Areas S. JEROME BRONSON By JIM LONG - Despite the heaviest concentration of . police,' almost two-thirds of the violent crimes in Pontiac are committed in only two south side .sections of the city, District 1 and District 7, according to a report released today by Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson, \ ♦ * * ,1 • The report rebutted charges made last month by Pontiac’s lone Negro city commissioner, T. Warren Fowler Sr., of District 1, that police are afraid to go' into Mack areas. Bronson said, however, that his study, based on statistics provided By the Pontiac .Police Department following the allegation, does substantiate Fowler’s claim of high crime to District 1. .'■* "• '# * .* Of the 388 violent crimes committed to Pontiac during the period of Jan. 1 through July 31, 249 of them were com- mitted to the two districts in the city’s south end; the prosecutor said. ‘HORRIBLE PICTURE’ “As the county’s chief - law enforcement officer, I agree with Commissioner Fowler that these statistics, which are disgraceful, represent a horrible picture of violent crime concentrated in a comparatively small area,” Bronson said. “However, 1 must take issue with him on his belief, and I know he honestly and sincerely believed he was right, that the police were, or are, afraid to go into these areas.” Fowler was unavailable for comment oh Bronson’s report. ,*.*■'* Bronson said that his extensive study of official reports of the police department / show that tite heaviest concentration of police patrol duty has been in this area “and that in many cases, it was at the expense of patrol duty in other parts of the city."_ Describing them a s “shocking,” Bronson cited statistics compiled during his probe which showed that.-to the two, districts alone four of seven murders in the city were committed; 12 of 18 forcible rapes; 71 of 129 robberies; 58 of 75 aggravateid assaults with a gun; 53 of 86 assaults with a knife; and 51 of 79 assaults using other weapons, ' % BURGLARIES OUT OF PROPORTION “I have touched only on the violent," hostile: and brutal crimes against other people,” said Bronson. “I have not mentioned burglaries, where the number also is way out of proportion by comparison, to other areas of the city.” To combat the crime problem, Bronson said that it is important that “every citizen, every person who wants the streets made safe again, become part, of the war on crime.” *r " ~ “Obviously, we cannot station a policeman on every corner, in every store, in every alley or to every home,” he added. Bronson said that it is no secret that police and his office have been hampered by toe refusal to some citizens to, even report crime, Tor to volunteer as wit- ~ nesses, because they don’t want to get involved; . “It is to the thousands of good,,honest, God-fearing, laW-abjdtog citizens living in these districts, and in other areas of the ' city, that we turn with a plea, just short of a demand, that they join our fight against crime,” he added. The police will do their part—“and I assume you they -are brave enough to increase their intensity against criminals —and my office will contihue to bear down,” said Bronson. A—2 ; THE PDXT1 AG PRESS.WEDNESPAV, SEPTEMBER IT, T068 Harriman Cites N. Viet Defeats PARIS (AP) — Ambassador \V. , Averell Harriman said today allied forces since Aug. 18 have inflicted “crushing defeats" on the North Vietnamese and Vietcong despite Hanoi’s boasts of “great military victories." The American d i p To mat told Ambassador Xuan Thury' at the Paris peace talks that “further defeat, destruction and death" await the Communist command if it persists in pursuing a goal of total military victory. GM Calls Back 300,000 Units DETROIT (AP) — A “very remote" possibility of vehicles speeding nut nf control led General Motors Corp. to ask yesterday that more than 300.000 1968 model cars and pickup trucks be returned to dealers for inspection and, adjustment. The company said faulty throttle parts on six- or four-cylinder engines would he replaced at no-cost to owners. Vehicles involyed include 2 6 7,3 6 5 Chevrolets, Camaros, Chevy 11 s, Cbevelles and El Caminos; 17,643 Buick Specials and Skylarks. 12,890 Pontiac Tempests • and Firebirds with manual transmissions and 12,393 Oldsmobile F-85s. The part, called a throttle rod retaining clip, would cause “a slight in-terfernce condition . which could prevent the lever from returning to idle position and could make the vehicle difficult to stop,” the company said. ★ * ★ '' A company spokesman said only 10 vehicles had been found with defective - throttles but that parts would be mailed to dealers this week along with warning letters to owners. “The possibility of such a throttle return condition is very remote,” the spokesman said. “Hanoi’s spokesmen would have the world believe that your forces ar«\ winning victories," he told Thuy. “This propaganda has concealed from the North Vietnamese people the awful truth that the leadership in Hanoi is prepared to bleed its youth endlessly in an attempt to discredit the government in Saigon and to weaken the resistance of the South Vietnamese people to aggression." It was one of Harriman’s strongest denunciations, of the North Vietnamese Csince the talks began here four months ago. REMAIN DEADLOCKED Thuy Replied by calling again on the United States to halt bombing and “all other acts of war. “Otherwise, these conversations in Paris will always remain at a dead end and the American side will have to assume the entire responsibility for it," Thuy said. The North Vietnamese chief delegate again rejected U.S. demands for reciprocity in return for a bombing halt. “Only yesterday President Johnson again declared that there will be no total cessation of bombing against the North without reciprocity," Thuy continued. “We repeat: There can be no reciprocity.” CHANGE IN PRESIDENTS Thuy spurned suggestions that Hanoi is waiting for a change in U.S. presidents in the hope of achieving concessions., Before opening the talks With Thuy, Harriman said enemy artillery and rocket attacks on Saigon are “an act of escalation” and their cessation could not be considered an 'act of restraint. * * * Therefore, said the American representative at the Paris peace talks, any cessation of attacks on South Vietnam’s , capital cannot qualify as a positive response to President Johnson’s terms for a halt in the bombing of North Vietnam. Johnson demands assurance from Hanoi that some matching act of restraint will follow. Drowned in PSH Tub State Police investigators' said today they have tentatively blamed an epileptic seizure for the drowning death yesterday of a 14-year-old Pontiac State Hospital patient. The victim, Clyde Overholt, son of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry R. Overholt of 3301 Glen Iris, Milford; was found dead in a cleaning tub at the hospital adolescent center about 3:40 p.fn., according to officers. » An autopsy is scheduled today. Hospital officials said that the youth, a patient at Pontiac State since 1961, had been placed in 'the tub by attendants about 3 p.m., after he soiled his clothing. They said that attendants checked the victim at 3:10 and 3:28, according to the ward log book. The Weather ess mhs Full U,S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY—A few sprinkles this forenoon. Partial clearing this afternoon. High 64 to 70. Fair and cooler tonight. Low 46 to 52. Thursday mostly sunny and warmer. Winds northwest to north 10 to 18 miles today and eight to 16 ntiles per hour tonight. Friday outlook: Sunny and warmer. Precipitation probabilities in per cent: Today 30. Lowtst temperature preceding 8 a. At 8 a.m.: Wind Velocity 10 m.p.tt Direction: Northwest $0n sets Wednesday at 7:51 p.m. Sun rise* Thursday at 7:10 a.m. Dewntewn Temperatures Tuesday In Pontiac father; Drizzle early morning, sunny Tuesday's Temperatures i 43 » Duluth70 45- iba 56 42 Fort Worth 85 U - 56-47 -New G S3 55 New V I 52 Omi' 73 4? 60 50 Phoenix 106 79 *1 55 Pittsburgh 71 53 I 54 St. Louis 74 50 I 51 Tampa 88 76 ) 64 S. Lake City 92 63 53 S. Francisco 65 57 This Pate in 9$ Years Oolo From U.S. WCAtHCR BUREAU - ESSA m FORECAST holoud RuctpHotioo Mot Iwdttofd- Cowiult toco I Forocott Figures Show Low Tomporofurev Expired. Until Thursday Morning FIRST OUTING — Japan’s first recipient in a heart-transplant operation, Nobuo Miyazaki,. 18, gets an-outing Jn a wheelchair and a look at the area surrounding Sapporo Medical College Hospital in Hokkaido last week^ about a morilTi after the heart operation. His first outing since the surgery lasted about 10 minutes. His mother, Toni, is in the left background. City Formally Okays Pact Absorbing Bus Line Losses Road Unit Seeks County Funds The Oakland County Hoad Commission — again sought financial aid from the board of supervisors yesterday, but nothing more than a vague promise was forthcoming. The supervisors' ways and means -committee began a three-day study of the $25,864,884 tentative budget for 1969 Monday ana will conclude today. * * The budget is about $4.5 million above the 1968 figure. In .expected expenditures for 1969 under road commission, the recommended allocation is zero. A * ' The road commission again, asked for a direct grant of $248,000 — the amount announced to be left oVffr from the 1967 budget which is to be carried on the 1969 figures. The commissioners also asked that, the ways and means committee recommend a share of other county revenues be given for roads. The same request was made in April. •OPERATING COST The road commission operates on about $9.5 million yearly from its share of state gas and weight taxes. * * * Frazer W. Staman, road commission chairman, explained that, under the formula, Wayne County received twice the amount as Oakland with jusi about half the miles seven''inonths"rof ■tee— year. Totten said the bus cOfnpany has been in the red since it began operating ia Pontiac more than six years ago. W ★ ★ City officials .will begin immediately tinuing bus service when the new contract expires March 31. LONG RANGE PLANNING Warren said Totten has agreed to work with the city and the Pontiac Schools system in attempting to resolve the transit problems on a long-range basis. ★ * * The possibilities include use of school buses for both school children and generaFpublic transportation, use of federal grants for purchase of new bus equipment and incorporation into a transit system to service the entire metropolitan area and operated by a transit authority. ‘NOT ENOUGH DEMAND’ Totten told commissioners there is not enough demand for bus service hr the city to operate a private system. He said this is generally true for municipalities and said there is a growing trend toward city and areawide authorities providing local transportation id place, of private' companies. 5th Recent Bomb Hits Army Car in Detroit DETROIT (UPI) - A bomb blew up an Army recruiting car on the city's Northwest Side last night. It was the fifth bombing incident in the metropolitan area since Aug. 30. * ★ * , Police said the small explosive device also shattered windows in the recruiting station and surrounding buildings. No one was in the recruiting station and there were no injuries. * * ★ The Federal Bureau of Investigation joined the case. • ITiree bombs have exploded near police stations in the past two weeks. No Market Page Today The Press does not contain a market page today due to the closing of the American and New York stock exchanges to permit employes to catch np on paper work. Regular stock listings will be resumed tomorrow. Pipe Band Is Knifeless CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - The Secret Service has told members of the Charlotte Caledonian Pipe Band not 10 wear the traditional knives in their belts today , during Richard M. Nixon’s visit. -* ★ ★ The band of bagpipe players usually wear the knives for decorative purposes. Wafer, Sewer Projects Aired by Area Board BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - Urn Township Board held two public hearings this week and gave preliminary approval to a water main extension and /inal approval for a sanitaFy sewer project, • The board set Oct. 14 at 8:30 p.m. as the date for the final hearing on the water main extension for Hickory Knolls subdivision. The subdivision, near Telegraph and Square Lake roads, is slated for the improvement at an estiniated cost of $22,000. ' _________________- More than 54 per cent oTThe property owners petitioned for the improvement and they will be assessed on a site basis a at $1,048 each. The new main Will provide Detroit water for the residents there. Presently their water comes from private wells. SEWER ROLL In a final hearing, the board confirmed the roll for sanitary sewers for . the Chelmsleigh-Cranbrook Hills area. The estimated cost for the project, in-, eluding contingencies, is $141,900. Petitions for the improvement were signed by 59 per cent of the 43 lot owners. ____ii_____* * * To be assessed on a lot basis, the payment of the $2,935 per lot may be made in 10 installments beginning Jan, 1 according to township officials. The board awarded the contract for the prbject to the Troelson Excavating Co. of Troy. The project is expected to get under way within 30 days with completion expected 90 days later. REZONING REQUESTS In other action, the board denied two rezoning requests and scheduled another decision on a zoning matter for its meeting Sept. 23. In one hearing the board upheld the recommendation of .the township plan- , ning board and denied a request to rezone a small parcel Of acreage .near Maple and Inkster from residential to multiple dwelling. ★ Board members also concurred with the planning commission in voting down a, request to rezone a lot in Birmingham Farms from single family residential to office use. j—In- another move,the board rescheduled for its next meeting a hearing on a request to rezone a 110-acre parcel at Adams and 1-75. A local developer has requested that the land be rezoned from single family residential to multiple family dwellings. The planning commission has recommended that rezoning of the heavily wooded area be denied. Refugees Flee China HONG KONG (AP) - Hong Kong authorities arrested 33 refugees from Red China last night, and some 400 more refugees were reported waiting in fishing junks just outside Hong Kong waters for a chance to sneak into the British Colony. Senate Dockets N-SpreadTreaty WASHINGTON (Ap) — The Senate Foreign Relations Committee has docketed discussion of the treaty to ban the spread of nuclear arms, breathings new. fife ipto a pact that’ suffered a sevTr^hTowT!yTfie^vr(St:Te3"ihvffSSn''8T‘(' Czechoslovakia. * w * Chairman John Sparkman, D-Ala., put ‘ the treaty on today’s agenda after the committee failed to muster a quorum yesterday. ★ - Although mainly a formality, the action represented a step -forward for the 'muIhi4aitofr“Xgffcemeht by FTTjffTTfl'gv speculation-that it would not even be considered in this session and would'be put over until next year. “I feel rather hopeful” there will be Restyled '69 Cadillacs Emphasize Safety Cadillac Motor Car Division officials have announced that 11 models in three . series will go on sale after Sept. 26. The Calais, De Ville and Fleetwood series will be available at the following area . dealerships: Wilson-Crissman Cadillac, 1350 N. Woodward, Bloomfield township; Lee Osborn Sales, 155 E, Liberty , Milfofd;~aiuiJet utile CadiHac; 1980 Wide,Track, Pontiac. Major consideration has been given to safety-related equipment on all Cadillac models. Improvements include head restraints as standard equipment, reinforced steel bars in the doors on all regular models, Strengthened pillars and an energy-absorbing steering column. * * ★ Styling changes include a new grille, horizontally positioned head lamps, the elimination of vent windows and a longer hood. —The Eldorado model will continue to be offered as a six-passenger, two-door model. New wheel discs are exclusive to tijis’ series. ★ Alter, new seats available in four versions, bench, center notched, bucket or 60-40 split have been designed. This year electric d06r locks replace the vacuum type and are moved forward for better accessibility. enough votes for approval, Sparkman said. Only six of the “19 members were on hand for Tuesday’s session. If reported -to the, floor, a two-thirds vote is- needed “ ’to rSfiTyTRe"agreernehfwhich ffieTUnifetT " States already has signed. . Docketing of the treaty followed a ; move by Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., a ^ committee member, to break the im- 5 passe that has existed since Congress « returned last week in m darkened mood ; over Soviet adventures in East Europe. The treaty, already signed by 80 other • notions including the Soviet Union, 1 pledges nations possessing nuclear * weapons not to transfer them to nations * who do not. The hdVe-nots pledge not to » -^eek-sudrarms. - ■ . v 1 y?t4“+rf- . ap wtrepre* NATIONAL WEATHER—Showers and thundershowers are forecast tonight for , the Northeast, Florida, tile Great Plains, and th^ Pacific Northwest. The East Coast will be cooler, and it will be warmer in the eastern Plains and the Upper Mississippi •Valley. . , / NEW FRONT-END DESIGN - Characteristic of the 1969 Cadillac passenger cars* is a newly styled front end. A finely textured grille, dual head lamps’horizontally placed and a longer hood are common to the Calais, De Vine and Fleetwood models. The Fleetwood Brougham, pictured here, illustrates the. elimination of side window vents, increasing side vision. Troy Girl, 2, Dies I in River Mishap j A 2-year-old Troy girl drowned yester- J day in a branch of the Rouge River while * playing with a neighbor boy near her * home, * - * Dead is Kathryn M. Carey, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Carey 2$fil Binbrooke. . Police said she fell into the river..! which runs . north of Btabrooke. Her playmate ran to4ell her baby sitter. When they returned to toe site they found toe girl floating face down to the ■water! ,____ . She was pulled from the water at . about 11:35 a.m. and Whs taken to William Beaumont Hospital in Royal Oak, where she was pronounced dead on arrival. „ n>rr«i‘ THE PCWTJAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, Protest Leader Calls Daley Tale Dishonest] NEW YORK (AP) - Leaders of antiwar demonstrations during the Democratic convention in Chicago have termed “dishonest and incorrect" Mayor Richard J. Daley’s account of police action. David Dellinger, chairman of the National Mobilization Committee to find the War in Vietnam, a coalition of 100 antiwar groups, told newsmen Tuesday: “I think the brutality that took place has not been adequately but partially documented in the press." Mayor Daley issued a 15,000-word report on pie disorders, defending. police action and contending that "terrorists’’ deliberately provoked overreaction. Algiers Motel Hearing Shut “There is no clear evidence that any of these weapons were taken from peace demonstrators,” Davis said. Livonia Pair Faces Trial in Ticket Fraud The case involves the fatal shootings of three Negro youths during the July 1967 riot in Detroit. The order was issued by Judge {Stephen J. Roth, who is to hear the motion Thursday. The motion was made in behalf of four rpen charged by the federal government with conspiring to violate the civil rights of several persons in the motel the night the three youths were shot to death. “This step is being taken to BUBS____________ . Insure that the jury selected to DETROIT (UPI)~A suburban try this case will be able to en-j0UP}e’ a L,von,a. would sway or influence its and Ws wife Hamet Jean, were Judgment, or tend to do so,” f°und ov*r for AarTuesday by said Judge Roth. Livonia Mumcipal Court Judge The accused are three Detroit ^™sKMc9an? *nd released on police officers—Ronald August, |* ^ond eac^' David Senak and Robert Paille | * * * —and a Negro private guard, | ®°th are accused of a con-Melvin Dismukesr jspiracy to obstruct justice, a The three Negro youths killed felony, and Bone also faces In the motel were Aubrey , Pol- [elony charges for allegedly ob-lard, 19; Carl Cooper, 17, and tainini money under false pre-Fred Temple, 18. tenses. A defense motion requesting *®rs. Bone was cited for two that the trial be moved from traffic tickets last Dec. is. Detroit to ’Flint will also bellice *a,id they later received a heard Thursday. fraudulent Nebraska death cer- Norman L. LippiU, attorney MSgjji sta«n« that a Patricia for August, Paille and Dis- Ann Bone d,ed *** 17. . makes, asked for the change, HOME FOR SURETY charging that “local communi- when the couple was arty antagonism” would hinder aligned on the charge of qb-fair trial in Detroit. structing justice, they put their The four defendants were in- home up for surety to the bond-dieted last year , by a federal ing company, which then posted ..jarand... jury, on the coospicagylbond. Bone later-wat acGused charges. |of the second charge when he August is currently free on j sold the house, which he tech-bail awaiting another trial on nically no longer owned. first-degree murder charges in the death of one of .feYouths, .idiarge was scheduled for Sept. A similar indictment against 25 before Dearborn Heights Paille was thrown out for lack Municipal Court Judge John of evidence. iKadela. Court examination on that SCHICK will pay you $3.00* to get the shave of a lifetime when yon bay a purchase. 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Saginaw St.-Downtown Pontiac 1 Dellinger said the committee I had unsuccessfully sought for I two months permission from 1 the Chicago authorities “for I normal and orderly outlets for I protests.’’ PURPOSE IS LOST "One of our chief concerns Is I that our whole purpose in going I to Chicago has dropped out of I the picture,” he said. “It is otir I position that what happened in I Chicago goes on in Saigon all f the time.’’ A characteristic of a police I state, Dellinger said, smear the victims after brutalizing them so it appears justified.’’ Rennie Davis, project director I for the committee, refuted Daley's assertion that only 60 dem- | onstrators were injured. “Those people who were] I treated in our own medical units I numbered nearly 400,” Davis I said. . to Public,Press?™-™™™0. MR I ' I Of the 198 injuries to police I DETROIT (AP)-ThepubliC;liSt?d E Daley’s refrt’ Davis and the news media have been f,d- t near,y tw° ,d°ze" "f6 I barred from a federal court- *™® teargas-self-infhcted.” room for a pretrial hearing onL alsojook excepUomto I a motion to withhold evidence i*® I,st of weapons which Daley from the jury in the Algiers Mo- said his officer Picked UP-tel case. At SIMMS-Tomorrow Only-9 A.M. to 9 P.M.-A Big IBartfain- Gra Clip These COUPON Bargains-They’re at SHIMS Cost and Below Cost Ba a money-saving cdupon clipper — at letist for tomorrow 'cause-for 12 solid hours you can buy needed and, wanted items at Simms cost and some are below our cost... all you need is the coupon and a little money. And while you're in the store, look around for the hundreds of money-saving bargains not being advertised, but all guaranteed to be at a cut price. Because of these low coupon prices, we must reserve the right to limit quantities. 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Officials viewed the plan as an aid in getting citizens to seek office and to prepare for the near future when the .township will need to hire more employes than its present part-time custodian. • ★ ★ * The plan, Which will cost taxpayers about $500 a year, is to be met on a matching-fund basis with individual contributions. Mrs. Lucy Alt, township clerk, said township - officials and employes would contribute one-half of 1 per cent of their salary to the plan. ★ w * Township trustees are currently paid $20 a meeting for 12 regular meetings a year, The clerk draws $4,500; the supervisor $4,000; and the treasurer $3,500. All are employed on a part-time basis. Mrs. Alt Said members must participate at least two years Before becoming eligible for,benefits at age 65. She said it is antici- pated that trustees will receive as little as $5 a month in benefits and that she, as the currently highest-paid official, will get less than $40-per-month benefit. “It’s getting more difficult to get people to run for office. Our salaries'' are low. Also it won’t be long before we need to hire additional employes. The work load is growing,’*' said Mrs. Alt. * * * She noted that planning commission members are not eligible to I -participate in the plan. MMMWMNNNMSSMMNMaMmaiNiaaaNMNiMlMliS Pontioc Pratt Photo GOLDEN AGE PASS — Walter Flickinger, 78, who was a school board member for 21 years, receives the first “Golden Age’’pass from Joseph Rivard (right), director of community education for Utica Community Schools. The passes will allow Utica School District senior citizens to attend all school activities.' Utica Schools Issue Golden Age Passes ' UTICA — The first move to Include senior citizens in community school affaire was made yesterday. The first Golden Age Pass to School events was issued to Walter Flickenger, whd was on t|ie Utica School Bpard for 21 years. The Golden Age Passes, which will be distributed next week, give all district residents 60 years of age. or older free admission to all school functions. This includes athletic contests, social and cultural affairs, adult education and high school completion courses, use of the high school swimming pools. Troy Lets Pacts hr Construction TROY — The City Commission has awarded bids for three paving projects, alterations to the municipal building, and several sanitary server projects. The commission allocated $9,355 for the widening of Big Beaver near the Civic Center, $50,388 for Naughton paving and $114,374 for the Heide project. Oak Construction Co. received the contracts. * ★ * , The contract for alterations to the municipal building was awarded to Se-bold and Kage Inc. for their low bid of $24,413. A bid for eight portable two-way radios for the Troy Police Department was given to Outercom’of Michigan Inc. for $4.836. DRAIN RELOCATION Riedel Construction Co. was the lone bidder for the Lane Drain relocation project. The commission accepted the $9,112 price. -- - \ -‘ -' - Several sanitary sewer projects and —pne water project were-oonsidered by the commission; and one of the projects, John R and Abbottsford sanitary sewer bids, Was rejected. ★ ★ ★ The contract for the Hickory sanitary Sewer was awarded’lbTJak Conilrucfiori Co. for $i3,456. M and T Construction Co. received two contracts for their low bids: Houghten and McKinley sanitary sewer for $55,377, and Crooks Road, north of Wattles, sanitary sewer and water project for $23,522. George Glinke, school district coordinator, announced that a general meeting with senior citizens has been scheduled for Friday, Sept; 27 to consider other ways in which the school district can help senior citizens , plan or conduct group activities. POTENTIAL ACTIVITIES Potential activities might include color tours, pot luck suppers, talent shows and seminars on such topics as Social Security and Medicare. The meeting will be at 2 p.m. in the Eppler Junior High School cafetorium, 45461 Brownell, Utica. * * * The senior citizens program will be conducted ofl a self-supporting basis, as a plus within the entire school system revenue. ★ * * Schools Superintendent PhrHip Runkel said this program is a natural extension of the community school philosophy, which makes all school facilities available to the entire community. SUPPORT CITED “We feel senior citizens deserve to use our schools more because most of them support local education through property taxes without receiving any direct benefits,’’ Runkel said. Senior citizens will be notified by a letter of the “Golden Age” passes. They may apply for them at the district curriculum office, 52080 Van Dyke, Shelby Township. ★ ★ ★ Those residents who are not notified, Oxford Tower May Get Zip OXFORD — The village’s about-to-be painted water tank may advertise the town’s zip code, if Postmaster Truman „ Horton has his way.. In a letter to the Village Council last night he asked that 48051 be painted, in, large letters on the side of the tank. The decision was deferred to a later meeting when a complete council will be present,, Two members were absent last night. ★ * ★ The council did awards a contract in the amount of $4,225 to Kessler Co. of Freemont; - Ohio, for repainting and sandblasting the tower. The company was the low bidder in refurbishment of the 75,000 gallon tank. The council will meet at 10 a.m. Monday for a conference with the State Labor Mediation Board and police department members regarding a request for union representation. Die union, Metropolitan Council 23 AFL-CIO, will be required to furnish proof that a majority of police employes do want representation. Oxford Ponders Class Overloads OXFORD — The problems of fitting students into acceptable class loads and rooms occupied the board of education last night. After certification of Monday’s favorable vote on an additional 2.S mills for operating expenses, the board turned its attention to overcrowded conditions at the high school and Clear Lake Elementary School. * * * Two relocatable classrooms are on order but not yet received. As a result two high school Classes must meet in the gymnasium, according to Schools Supt. Roger Oberg. Heavy class loads in the fourth and fifth grades at Clear Lake Elementary have prompted the board to investigate more rental space nearby. ROOM AT LEONARD While. there .is additional room at Leonard Elementary School, officials noted it would mean long bus rides for the students involved if they were to be transported~there. j Attendance was set unofficially, at For Building Addition Drawings Get Schools OK WALLED LAKE — The board of education__has .approved preliminary., drawings - for an addition to the administration building, located at 695 N. Pontiac Trail. The board requested that the architectural firm of Warren Holmes Associates of Lansing proceed with working drawings. Estimated cost for planning and construction is $137,POO, To-be financed from funds, from the 1967 bond issue, . ★ j* *' ■ Supt. George Garver said the addition will provide offices for personnel currently housed in other buildings, and space for data processing equipment. With the installation of the equipment, the district plans to become part of the tele-data processing network operated by Oakland Schools^ he said. Die board also approved a request to borrow $700,000 in tax anticipation notes to meet operational expenses for the months ofOctoberartdJ'fovember.-----------; In other recent action, the board appointed Joseph Malonis as an assistant principal at Walled Lake Central High School for the 1968-69 school year. ★ 4r Malonis . was a counselor at Walled Lake High School last year and has been employed by the school district since 1954. . , The board'also heard a report for the utilization of a 75-acre site they own on West Maple. It was suggested that the land be used for the building of an elementary school, a junior high and a senior high school. The board is going to inquire about the educational implications of having three such schools so close together, Garver said. THE PONTIAC PRESS Area Hews WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 A—4 Wolverine Lake Gets Request for Liquor Sale WOLVERINE LAKE - The Village Council has received a request for sale of liquor by the glass. Representatives of the Glengarry Inn, -1211 Glengary, made jhe request at a recent council meeting. There now are no establishments in , the village which sell liquor by the glass. In order to do so, a vote of the people is required. * ★ * Clifford K. Cottrell, village administrator, said the license request is subject to ,a general election vote because of a 1964 state law. In order to have the proposition placed on the ballot in April a petition containing approximately 130 signatures must be submitted to the village clerk by the first part of January, Cottrell said. 35 PCT. OF VOTE He explained that this figure represents 35 per cent of the total vote cast for the vilage president in the last e 1 ection._Three-hundred-seventy-thtea votes were cast for the office last April, he added;--- In other recent action, the council unanimously passed an ordinance allowing the village president emergency powers in the event of a civil disturbance.---------- ★ ★ ★ In the event he is not available the village administrator would be delegated the emergency powers. Village council would have full emergency powers in the event the two qould not assume powers. A request from builder Lynn LaFafe to rezone land at McCoy and Wilkshire from residential to business was denied. PLANNER NAMED Council named Mrs. Clyde Johanson to the planning commission to fill the vacancy created by the resignation of Mrs. Lester .Hamilton last month to move to Florida. Mrs. Johanson’s appointment was ef-Tective-immediately. Orion-Oxford Rights Unit Meets Tomorrow Orion-Oxford Human Relations Council will heal- Rev. Douglas Fitch of the Detroit Indistrial Missions discuss “The Changes in Black and White” at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Oxford Methodist Church, 21 E. Burdick, Oxford. The public is invited to attend. Wixom Maps Renewal Area WIXOM—About 70 persons showed up at last night's public hearing at which the City Council adopted tentative boundaries for a central business district urban renewal project. Two Communities to Meet Tomorrow or who need transportation to the curriculum office or the Sept. 27 meeting, may contact Glinke or Joseph Rivard, director of community education. ^-Friday,-up-t Circuit Court Judge to Speak in Romeo ROMEO — -Circuit Court Judge “^dward--S^^4gg»^^ivi^l^-flpea^r^^’"♦het■ Romeo Community Center, tomorrow at 8 p.m. on crime and “The Privilege of Being an American.” Judge Piggins* speech will be sponsored by the Friends of the Romeo Library, students from last year but some 19 short of anticipated enrollment. Oberg noted that the difference could mean $8,000 less in state aid than expected. * jk..: * - Replacement of ovens In the grade school cafeteria at an estimated cost of $1,500 is_being investigated. Purchase of a bus for the transport of special education students is also being investigated,, Oberg said., j ARE NEEDED ■ —■ --SgteS------I The board is still seeking a speech correctionist and a social worker. for the current school year, he rioted. The board approved borrowing of $120,000 against state aid for the mouth of November. CLARKSTON — The Village . Council. “wnTmeeno-jolut Informal sessiuu willr the Independence Township Board at 7:30 p.m. tomorrow to discuss participation in. an internal sewer construction program-to be serviced by; the •~CnfitoH3»IKI3nK^ " • Independence Township is one of the six participating communities engaged in construction of the $28.2-million facility. At their recent meeting, village cotm-cilmen voted to vacate Buffalo, Street from Washington to Park Lake. The 20-'-foot-wldr -strip Tof prm^ity- “ls"tn “tse” divided among the two properties which previously fronted on the street. —Tentative approval was g i v e-n developers for residential construction on that part of the old Ford farm which lies within the village along Holcomb. The boundaries for the proposed project encompass. an area roughly frpm Pontiac Trail west to Manistee, east to Chambers and south to the Grand Trunk Railroad. Planning consultant Leland E. Jolgren of Vilican Leman & Associates Inc. explained that the business district plan is still in the preliminary stages and the project application is awaiting approval for federal funds before working plans can be drawn up. Because of a legislative act passed in June, he. said, Citizens Distrftt Council must be appointed for the project and all plans must be referred to it before the city council can take action. Couricil also approved the method of gele^tinrL nf Jhe Cilizena. JJistrict-Douacil. - Fifteen citizens are to be appointed by the mayor for two-year terms. ~ Dje majority of the people must be residents of the urban renewal area. Others must have a definite business interest in the area. * * . * In other action, the board tabled a request from A. H. Button for rezoning of three lots at Wainstock and Wixom frofn residential to business. Button showed plans for the construction of an automatic car wash and council said it will await further clarification from the planning commission before taking action. ___________ QUORUM IS SET The council also approved an amendment to an ordinance stipulating that -five members- uf -the* board* trf appeals will constitute a quorum for the conduct •of business in the future. Troy to Ask Voters' Opinion on National Election Setup Contract/ Students, Teachers Aired Holly School Board Discusses Budget TROY — City voters will be asked Nov. 5 to indicate* their opinion on the subjects of national presidential conventions and the electoral college. City Commissioners approved tbe ballot proposal submitted by Commissioner John Kokalis by a 5-1 vote at a recent meeting. The vote will be in the form of a public the outcome. opinion poll on whether Troy citizens would prefer to see the Electoral College eliminated and presidential candidates selected by means of a direct national primary. Kokalis is advancing the theory that direct presidential primaries and elections would give the voters more voice in HOLLY — A new budget, a new contract, and new students and teachers-were topics of discussion at the recent board of education meeting. , This year’s revised budget, according to Supt. Russell Haddon, calls for $1,861,509. the new amount represents a sizable increase over last year’s figure of $1,587,414. ★ * The contract, ratified by the board, was with the district's npnteaching employes. Custodians, cafeteria workers and bus drivers were primarily involved in the settlement* which came after nine months of negotiations. Haddon also announced that the district hired 37 new teachers for the coming year after screening 213 applicants. “The district now employes five more teachers than last yeaj," be said, “which will help to handle otir enrollment increase of 175 students,”_____ ‘LEAVE DEFICIT* Haddonsaid that estimated revenues for the Miming year leave a deficit in the budget of $12,665. explained by an unforseeable expense-of $15,000 that was just discovered^ recently,” he said. “The state fire marshal has told us to repaint most of the wooden ceilings in the high school and junior high with a special fire-retarding paint. ★ . * ★ ___“It is a new ruling, and one that was not forseen when the budget was formulated,” he said. Contracts for-the project have already been awarded. BUDGET HEARING The board scheduled a public hearing on the budget for 8 p.m. Sept. 23 at the board of education offices, 805 E. Sherman. „ The new contr^pt will give nonteachirig employes a retroactive raise from, the expiration date of the old contract, Nov. 1,. 1967. It also will give a .raise for the secuao year of the pact, beginning Nov. 1 of .this year. , , • ■ ^ ★ ★ ' Haddon sajd that under the new agreement custodians would get up to a Die deficit can be 47-cent per hour raise for the first year and 20 cents for the second. Bus drivers’ raises amounted to 50 cents per day while cafeteria workers received up to 18 cents more per hour. Their increases for the second year amount to 15 cents per hour, he said. Haddon pointed out that the new figures bring custodian wages up to a minimum of $2.45 per hour while bus divers will receive $3 per hour. ADDITIONAL BENEFITS Cafeteria workers now will start at $1.57 per hour while the minimum for head cooks will be $2.05.. The workers also received additional benefits in the form of extra Holidays, sick days, and a. guaranteed number of working days. ■ : ' * * * i In other action the board approved that application be made for federal funds under the Open Spaces Act for purchase of land for a new school. If approved, the federal government would grant $39,000, to the district. It would be used to. purchase an 82-acre site which the board already lias under option. Haddon said the district is contemplating a school or schools for the site. He said that the rest of the land would be used for recreational and other outdoor purposes. The board also passed a resolution agreeing to place proceeds of arij) land sales by the district into a special fund* designated the Recreational Development Fund. ★ ★ The money is earmarked for special recreation facilities that would be constructed for Holly citizens. The fund was started a year ago with a gift from the Leland Wood family. - It was given as a memorial to their son Larry, a Holly graduate, who died in Vietnam. In a final action, -the board decided . that its meeting of Sept. 23 would be'Tised * specifically to discuss school policies/ as they relate to discipline and suspension of students. Also to be discussed is the community support' of local schools. !**w eo" "’•I* fun Again. Precision amplificatior frem 2 Mifcro-Lithlc* elrpulti. Waigh. only 1/6 owhSa and goJd for m pjd to»»at. Coma in for a demonstration of Zanigs's now Zonottorit may bs Pontiac Mall Optical & Hearing Aid Center 682-1113 THE POyyiAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 A—-fi Czech Leaders Assure People,Urge Refugees Return i^^!^?'ldSVefie8.i0f 8wi* ^P?8 gasi He the “moSt teirib!e|^bfl|tj^(«|jteSE|.^^i?to^^rij4ew8_wMch he said were riveni both publications as counterre-ifire.” But he said the Soviet Un- 22* ff •»i« c«d,—-aiflSi • i ■ - 1 -----------m ---------------------- -----."-----““v iuainage 10 socialism in uzecn- peopie Tuesday col. Communist sources in Mos-l^i ygO resulted f stalinist i process of law cow said those were the chief *2“?! sured their night that due' process of law cow said thbstr were the chief terroPteforeUiD^bcek,’« rise to will be observed' despite the So- subjects of-the talks. It was not She faiS DubJ^rS viet occupation and appealed clear whether Ceriiik discussed for the return of refugees from with the Kremlin leaders the abroad. - - question of aid to overcome eco-‘ There have been rumors of ar- nomic setbacks from the inva-' rests since the Soviet bloc sion. troops invaded Aug. 20, but the! ★ * * leaders’ proclamation ^aidij The Czechoslovak leaders’ We reiterate that we shall nev- proclamation promised to “con-er allow deformations of viola- itinpe on the road on which we tions of our legal code such as embarked in January ” ' we were witness to.” j “We shall continue to * * * 'strengthen Socialist order and to This apparently referred to expand its democratic humanist the nation’s 20 years of character,” they said. , Stalinist-type rule, which ended LIBERALIZATION 5 kJa"uat? whtehn /lexander The January road is the liber-Dubcek became the Communist a 1 i z a t i o n program . which forts by “anti-Sociaiist forces to space in the writers’ weekly Lit-1 volutionary . split at the whole of our party. ion had pledged that occupation deplored.. jerarni Listyandthe “growinglyl Mlynar said “some unpopular troops Wojdd not interfere, right-wing” magazine Student, j lavys” wbuld be adopted because [ Czechoslovakia’s domestic “extremist’’I The Soviet press ha4 denounced “this is no time to play withlfalrt. Makes Eating With FALSE TEETH Up to 35% Easier and lower* more flrmly »Q thef feel more comfortable. FASTEETH u BOt acid—doesn't sour. No gummy, pasty taste. Helps check "dentur* odor . Dentures that fit are essential to health. So see your dentist regularly. Oet fasteetH at all druir counter*. party chief. I prompted the invasion by rajs- Dubcek and other top leaders jng fears among hard-line lead-proclaimed Tuesday night: ers 0{ other Soviet bloc nations Perso11 a 1 immunity is that the liberal ferment might guaranteed.. No one can bejs^reacTTo their countries. ——n taken into custody except in! cases foreseen by law and fol- iq.day free home TRIAL ,n any Color TV so. a. Highland. Eliminate guesswork. Be Z£ you are pleased with your Color TV in your home. In earlier negotiations in Mos-. .. . . . . .. ''icow the Czechoslovak leaders lowing the decision of the court; agreed to ro„ baek some Iibera, or the prosecutor. policies—such as press freedom! TO INTELLECTUALS —and the Russians promised to! The. proclamation also ap- withdraw occupation troops pealed to Czechoslovaks-in- £]«. situation “normal-eluding many intellectuals—who izes ” have sohght political asylum in Austria, Switzerfand and other Zdenek Mlynarra secretary-oL West European countries in the the Czechoslovak Communist last three weeks. party’s central committee, “Staying abroad,” it sald,'wrote in the party newspaper “multiplies distrust and foreign!Rud.e Prav? Tuesday that pro-propaganda and makes impossi- te<*‘on “yH rightsis a prere-ble firsthand information on the' qulslteJ0.thls normalization, state of affairs at home. It increases helplessness and! confusion.... “Your place is here. The republic needs your abilities, yourj knowledge and experience, your creative work. Your fellow citizens are waiting for you and are. resolutely and selflessly continuing to build up their homeland for themselves and their children.” The Czechoslovak government' has been issuing exit permits, and anyone with both fi permit and a visa to a Western country is'still permitted to leave, but! there are signs this will change! soon. Soviet troops near the! Austrian border were said to be turning hack foreigners who had been cleared by Czechoslovak border guards. Diplomatic1 sources said they expected the Czechoslovak, government to close the border Sunday. TRY THE BEST PROCLAMATION The proclamation on civil lib-’ erties was issued by Dubcek, President Ludvik Svoboda, Parliament President Josef Smrkovsky, Slovak Communist party chief Gustav Husak and Premier Oldrich Cernik after Cernik returned from more talks in Moscow. -Cernik received a promise of News Yesterday qt State Capital ^ j GIANT 20" DIA. COLOR TV WOOD CONSOLE Great special savings on this beautiful.RCA console. Vivid color pictures and great RCA features. 227 sq. in. rectangular tube and "New Vista" 25,000 volt chassis. UHF/VHF. Beautiful Contemporary cabinet of genuine wood veneers and solids. 2-year color tube REG. ’469.95 SAVE ’95” Announced plans for a swing access th* stion campaigning for Richard Nixon. - THE ATTORNEY GENERAL * R*(lst*rad Trademarit — Mi ADMIRAL 266 SQ. IN. COLOR Decorator styled cabinet. Automatic color clarifior. Solid *tote tuning syttem. 265 «q. , in. Free delivery ond 90-doy tervice, 3-year color tuba warranty. *397--SS- a hikes mad* by- four i Property theft in New York' City was up some 26 per cent in 1967 over 1966. Olympic loufevard” Los Angeles, California 90064 DOWNTOWN PONTIAC * Offers FREE PARKING ON {HE PONTIAC MUNICIPAL LOT (CORNER SAGINAW and HURON) Furnished by the Following Merchants: ARTHUR'S 48 N. Saginaw St. OSMUN’S MEN'S WEAR 51 N. Saginaw St. B0BETTE SHOP 16 N. Saginaw St. GOOD HOUSEKEEPING SHOP 51 W. Huron St. _ CONN'S CLPYHES 73 N. 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Features new UL-TRAMATIC tuning, and A.F.C. j switch — automatically tunes I from channel t channel. Zenith super 50 high performance handcrafted chassis. Two speakers for full hi-fi —sound range. Beautiful Danish conso|a with Scondia base. .Genuine oil finished walnut weeds. 2-yaar color tube warranty. FREE DELIVERY, SET-UP and 90-DAY SERVICE HIGHLAMD LOW-PRICED TO SELL ON SIGHT! NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER TELEGRAPH RD., Cor. Elizabeth Lake Rd. OPEN DAILY 10 to 9 Phone 682-2330 OAKLAND MALL IN TROY 1-75 at 14 jffile Rd. C?EIWMGW4ltJtL PHONE 585-5743 / <-• * k. mmmBm Voice of the People: THE PONTIAC PRESS 48 West Huron Street * Pontiac, Michigan 48056 '—— WEDNESDAY, iKP'l'EMlitKlT.Tofl# S A. ■HUM, Uic»1 AdvartUlDf Manager how»«» h. rmomu. n Drive With Care in School Areas Motorists would do well to pay special heed to the return of school bells to the local scene. With schools reopening throughout Oakland Coun-ty, it means the man and woman behind the wheel will have to be particularly careful when driving near schools. ★ ★ ★ Those signs by . the roadside that warn motorists of children playing should take on new meaning. There will be more children concentrated near schools and playgrounds now than during the summer months. We urge motorists to drive .cautiously near such areas and remember that the minds of youngsters often forget the rules of safety. Therefore, a greater burden is placed upon the adult driver to watch for the errant child who might dart into the roadway without warning. With children coming and going from classes every weekday, motor-ists must again pay special attention to driving with care at school crossings. ★ ★ ★ Every year, children are prominent in the list of pedestrian fatalities for Oakland County; Let’s slow down and try to decrease that list of needless fatalities this year. OCC Offers Program to Disadvantaged in Pontiac Several weeks ago, we criticized Oakland Community College for enrolling inner city students from Detroit for a special program, before tapping the student supply right here in 0 a k 1 a n d County, particularly Pontiac. Today we offer three cheers to i OCC officials for their recent announcement that the college will pffur a similar program for disadvantaged high school graduates from Pontiac. , College administrators and trustees wasted no time in finding local students and initiating a program which officials at the Auburn Hills camptis in Pontiac Township have been trying to organize since March. ... * ★ ★ Under this program, the students won’t have to pay tuition, which could amount to $300 per year, and each will be given as much as $300 yearly, depending upon need, to pay for such expenses as books, lunches and clothing. ★ ★ * Extremely disadvantaged students may also get a $300 National Defense Student Loan, returnable in small payments. In addition, students can earn $1.50 an hour on a campus job as part of the OCC work-study program, take either vocational courses or those leading to transfer to a four-year college after two years, and will be provided bus transportation to the campus. Potential students for the program were located by the Pontiac School District, Office of Economic Opportunity, Pontiac Area Urban League and the Bureau of Social Services. ★ ★ ★ Such programs as these are of vital importance to the future of this nation, because education represents the one, sure route out of the slum and ghetto for these youngsters. Most programs offering direct aid to the impoverished are stop-gap measures, but education offers a lifetime investment in human better- { ment. This is no giveaway. The students must show they have college potential and maintain at least a “C” average both in high school and at OCC. On the surface, the great contribution of this program for local students is that it offers higher education to many who would otherwise be unable to afford it. The real beauty, however, is that programs such as this should act as a strong incentive to disadvantaged youth seeking an education. Such programs offer youths the opportunity to fight their way out of the ghetto with brains, not brawn. All Wound Up! David Lawrence Says: Promises Hurt Peace Talks Grid Contest Deadline in Countdown Well, boys and girls, the countdown for blast off of The Press Annual Football Contest is in progress. The deadline lor the traditional contest that ushers in the-national pigskin season is but a football’s throw away, and if you fail 'To subnflf a’iPentry ypu could" Fe" throwing away a brack at the winner's award of a $500 U.S. Savings Bond. Every man, woman and child—whether football fkpert or novice — should take advantage of this opportunity to qualify for the windfall that awaits the champ clairvoyant. The sports pages of The Press are full of news op how the majo* grid teams of the Country stack up, and if it’s guidance you need, you’ll find it here. Coupled with feminine intuition or masculine hunch, youll have a combination that will get you off to an even start with the ‘’nest of the contest field. So. the watchword now, like the pM sideshow teaser, is HURRY-HURRY-HURRY. Complete the entry form below (or facsimile), read over the rules to see that everything is copasetic, and get it into our outstretched hands ON TIME. * ★ ★ * Tomorrow, we’ll preview the bond of which you just might find yourself the sole owner and proprietor. ■(, 'contest rules 1. Every man, woman and child is eligible to enter cbntesHexcept Press employes and , close relatives) but are limited to one entry each. All members of families may participate, subject to the same limitation. 2. To enter, you simply check your prediction of the Winner of each of the 16 games below (to indicate- a tie, leave both boxes blank), sign entry fdrm/or /facsimile, and . dispatch. „. ■...; ■ ^ ; •" S. Entries may be deposited in The Press’ Horan Street drop )jwx or mailed. If mailed, they must be enclosed in envelopes (TQE POST OFFICE WILL NOT ACCEPT POSTAL CARDS -WITH ATTACHED ENTRIES) and addressed to: THE PONTIAC PRESS FOOT-nBOTTTONTEST, ‘ T;07 Fox 7777 "FonliaSr Michigan. 4. The contestant -who, starring with the first game, correctly predicts without a miss the outcomes of the most. games will be awarded a $500 U.S. Savings Bond: _ 5. If in the final stage of contest the few remaining contestants should have predicted the same outcome of a game, this game will be scratched and the contest, advanced to the following game. 6: Contest deadline is Friday noon, Sept. 13, and entries must be on hand at The Press by that time. Those arriving later, even though postmarked prior, will not be considered. 7. Judges’ decisions on all questions relating to contest will be final. Sept. 14 □ Tennessee vs. Georgia □ Sept. 21 □ Oklahoma vs. Notre Dame □ Sept.. 28 □ Maryland vs. Syracuse □ Oct. 5 □ Pontiac Firebirds vs. Dayton □ Oct. 12 Michigan vs. Michigan State □ Oct. 19 Texas vs. Oct. 26 Arkansas Q Auburn vs. Miami □ Nov. 2 Washington vs. Nov. 8 California □ Waterford vs. ' Kettering □ Nov, 9 Princeton ys. Harvard □ Nov. 10 Det. Lions vs. Balt. Colts □ Nov. 15 Pont. Central vs. Nov. 16 Pont. Northern □ Colorado vs. Nebraska □ Nov. 23 UCLA vs. Southern Cal. □ Nov..28 Det. Lions vs. Nov. 30 Phil. Eagles □ Army vs. Navy □ Npme ... City ... Address ; WASHINGTON - The next eight weeks will witness an election campaign similar to those whifch have taken place before, and the unde-termine d question is this: Will the candidate win who has adhered to fun-a m e n t a 1 WmWm l truths, or will LAWRENCE his rival triumph by making ambiguous promises that attract the uninformed? Hubert Humphrey made1 the surprising Statement to an audience in Denver Monday that he would have accepted a proposed platform plank -calling for an "unconditional’’ halt to the bombing of North Vietnam. ...★....* *..* .I... He said that the minority report, defeated by a 3-to-2 vote, was “so mildly different than the majority report that I would have had no difficulty in accepting it.” The Hanoi government has been trying for several weeks at Paris to get the United States to accept its demands for an “unconditional” halt of the bombing Without pledging any reciprocal action on the part of the North Vietnamese. fKHSS~FURTHER---------:--- Opening his campaign in . Philadelphia, Humphrey went further. and promised that,-“negotiation or no negotiation/! the UAited States could begin to pull out troops either late this year or early in 1969. This was interpreted by, his aides afterwards as merely a reaffirmation of ...statements ‘Tnaite’rT6iy.G».> 'WfilUaWA /Sri Westmoreland on July 2 on his return from Vietnam-★ ★ ★ The army chief of staff expressed then the hope that the South Vietnamese could take over more of the fighting by the end of 1969 or early in 1970, and that this might permit a “token number” of American troops to be withdrawn. But he. cautioned that “the phase-down might be very small, if at all.” President Johnson, in a significant speech at New Orleans yesterday before the American Legion convention., declined to support Hum- , phrey’s forecast, and declared that “no man can predict” when American troops can Verbal Or^Mds Mr. and MTs. Elmer Linton of Bloomfield Township; 52nd wedding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. William L. Criger of Springfield Township; 53rd wedding anniversary. George W. Murthum of Oxford; 87th birthday. , Mrs. Retta Walls of Davisburg; 85th birthday. Mrs. Ivan J. Richison of Santa Susana, Calif., formerly of Pontiac; t 8Jst birthday. Henry HoDbeck of 103 Mechanic; 85th birthday. come home from Vietnam. Also, he warned that if the bombing were stopped, American casualties would, immediately increase due to heavier attacks by the enemy;/ NORTH VIET VIEW Dispatches from Paris indicate that the North Vietnam1 envoys have been noting the speeches in A m e r ica ’ s political campaign and apparently are being led to believe that the pacifist side of the argument will gain the biggest number of votes and that, as soon as the election is over, the process of America’s capitulation will begin. The Hanoi spokesman in .Paris—--Nguyen-Thanh I* —_ has already started to emphasize new demands eveh if an “unconditional” halt to the bombing is promised by —the United States. He says it is important Simultaneously for “other acts of war,” in-eluding aerial reconnaissance -by United States forces, to be ended. This is an indication of how much encouragement the North Vietnamese are getting from campaign speeches in the United States. ★ '★ .★ It certainly is an almost impossible task for negotiations to be carried on effectively while a presidential candidate is endeavoring to convince the voters that peace is just around the corner. Bob Cdnsidine Says: Delightful Israeli Actor Rates ‘Can't Miss’ Label CONSIDINE MADRID—Topol sounds like some sinister international conspiracy bent on cartelizing the market on Dr. Scholl’s footpads. —Acnraityr Topol is a he. He’s^ a delightful Israeli actor who, naturally, is playing the part of a Mexican bandit named Gen. Molina in Paramount’s “A Talent for Lov- at a Spanish Finca. ' * if 7 * This guy can’t mis6. Whatever his given name is or was, he’s going to bowl the world over as Topol. A biography notes he was born Sept. 9, 1935 in Tel Aviv to a Russian-Polish Jewish couple, left school at 14, became q printer’s devil, joined Israel’s youth movement, took his military training, and lived for,a time in 1956 on a kibbutz — where he worked as a tractor jockey and repairman. SERVED UNDER DAYAN* He served under Gen. Dayan in the aborted march on the Suez in 1956, became a popular figure a year later in Israel’s satirical theater “The Green Onion,” moved to Haifa, helped to found the municipal theater there, played Petruchio in “The Taming of the Shrew,” Jean in Ionesco’s “Rhinoceros” and led bis Haifa company to ’ the Venice Biennale hi 1964 to play Azdak in Brecht’s “The Caucasian Chalk Circle.”. He played the cunning rascal in “Sallah,’’ which had a good run on U.S. movie screens and won a golden globe award in Hollywood and another prize at the San Francisco Film Festival. , ★ ★ ★ ■■ J The biggest break that has come Topol’s way* was, his selection to play Tevye in the London production of “Fid- dled on the Roof.” He gave 430 performances (eight a week, but missed eight shows. He had another assignment: He had to fight in Israel’s six-day triumph over Egypt, JOr--datr-anm-Syria-last-yearr-He-will play Tevye in the film that is about to be made of that classic. ...__ _ Watched Topol in action the other day on a set of “A Talent for Loving.” It was one of those “High Noon” con-frontations, this one involving himself and Richard Wid-mark, a nice guy who always use^t4&spent oM*fjQo4rf^tiSr bed£^Lea#he,s> et£. —_ Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Sport Ultimatums Davenport Times-Democrat The poistion taken by Iowa State University at Ames, Iowa, in response to a presentation of grievances by black athletes deserves public approval. While the athletic council found nb sign of planned or knowing discrimination on the part of the staff, steps were reported to alleviate some situations which prompted complaints. . -A * . ★ Certainly, there should be no quarrel with a statement that while the council anticipates the presence of black coaches on the Iowa State staff in the future, it is not in position to comply with a demand that one be employed “immediately.” There should be 'understanding, too, for the stand taken by the council that it would not discuss or bargain under the threat of a boycott. if i it \ h The best atmosphere for possible reforms or improvements in policy or parctice at Iowa State or anywhere is one free^trf the tension$ created by ultimatums. The best Rope of overcom-ing discrimination or any other defection from fairness and justice lies in a quiet and reasoned approach which assumes goodwill until there is unmistakable evidence to the contrary. ★ ir, ★ [ . V It’s time to-put an end to sport ultimatums at the colleges and universities. No one group should be permitted to dictate the athletic policy at the nation’s educational vin-stitutions. Civil "rights problems should be decided by reasoning, not by ultimatums. Poor Girl Washington D.C. Star Henri Bendel, the fashion tycoon, has predicted* that the fashionable look in the season almost upon us will be that of the “poor girl.” The Poor Girl- of 1968, according to Mr. Bendel, will wear a drab dress, unojnamented, with long sleeves, high neck, plain white collar, plain belt in the oki time place. The favored "Color will be dull black or dingy gray. The outfit faintly recalls the frocks said to have been worn in the 19th century orphanages of the third > class. Fashion is always out to astonish and the Poor Girl Look succeeds in this primary effort, even though it does so in reverse. The dress dazzles by being so undazzling. It reminds us once again how the simple pleasures of the poor- arouse^envyIn iha hearth of the rich. Presumably because the real poor girl dresses would not be authentic enough. Mr. Bendel’s imitation is ‘price-tagged at $259. it it ’ it The high price promises further authenticity by helping the poor girl’s poor dad or poor husband along the road' to poverty. ' THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER li, 1968 Navy: Lost $25 Million in Copters WASHINGTON (AP) The of the DASHes aviation elec-sile which Navy has acknowledged the loss of about $29 million worth of unmanned helicopters once given a significant role in antisubmarine, warfare. In response to persistent inquiries, the Navy acknowledged that 233 of the small; radio controlled drone choppers, called DASH, have been lost for various electronic,mechanicaland human faults over tye past seven years. The major causes for the losses, which came in fleet operations, resulted from the failure trades system, the Navy said. Undqr .consideration now replace the drones isX'Sa new, manned lightweight helicopter. ONCE HAILED Four years ago, the Navy issued a “fact sheet” on antisubmarine warfare in which it list-of the DASH’s aviation elec-cant achievements” in the field. At that time, the fact sheet described the drone helicopter as “a precise, deliberate, long range weapon delivery capability” to complement another antisub weapon, the ASROC. The ASROC is a antisubmarine mis- can be fired from Navy surface craft and uses either ah acoustic homing torpedo or depth charges. * * * Navy antisubmarine experts had high hopes for the DASH, which was designed to be sent out from destroyers after a “fix” was made on an enemy sub. The DA$H would be ordered by radio to drop a pattern of torpedos on the quarry. The helicopter was built to carry 1,000 pounds of payload. REPLACEMENT HUNT When the Navy was asked ^ early this suiqmer whether it was looking for a replacement for the DASH, it Said'no. • But now the Navy has changed its position and says a lightweight manned helicopter is being considered to supplant, 1 DASH. Czechs, Hungary Linked In indicating it expects a Hungarian-type settlement, Pravda did not clarify whether that meant Prague leaders should MOSCOW (AP) - Pravda said today that “the healthy development of socialist democracy” in Czechoslovakia will take ' the same form as it did in Hun-gary after- pressed the 1956 revolt there, j pro-Soviet Hungarian leaders The Soviet Communist party] took against the revolutionaries, newspaper said jt made this,! * * * statement to show how “lin-j These steps included the im-grounded” were the fears of j prisonment of many freedom! “some foreign comrades” that fighters and the execution of' the Soviet-led invasion of Czech- Imre Nagy, the Hungarian lead-! „ w ................... oslovakia would interrupt "the er brought to power by the re- cat is a ready customer for anything edible that 15-year-old process of democratization/^^i-volt. __________________ Chris Brown may puli out of ttre Thames in Kent/ England. The subject is under study and no specifications have been determined, the Navy said. In its latest reply the Nai/y stressed, that the drone helicopter was designed “to be an expendable means of weapons delivery in ASW operation.” NEVER LABELLED None of its past statements about the DASH, hailing its advantages, said anything about it I being expendable. _ ] There are still about 375 of the |||g drone helicopters in the fleet Uli and production will end during! the next four months. The choppers have' been sta-j tioned aboard 130 destroyer type | I vessels. According to the Navy, it will continue to operate the drone from older fleet destroyers until these ships are retired. The manned helicopters, if they are] bought, will be sent to sea pri-j marily aboard new vessels. SR152aed Sept 11 FAIX SIIOWIX. (jou/o 'Vmm& Ja Itymted ffi. 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DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON PLAINS A—8 ^$60-MiJJjoa Aid Eyed THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 for State Schools Next Year L/^ING TSPi—G6v: George ginning nekl July 1 is $812 TWlt-, Romney's budget bureaO is ten- lion, an increase of about $60 tatively considering a $60-mil- m'llion. lion increase in aid to Michigan „The use "’of both ‘‘target tijgk public schools next year, the ures’’ is a new development' by I State Board of Education was Mjchigan’s budget writers, who| told Tuesday night. in the past have merely asked The board discussed a nurri- the various state agencies to es-j ber of proposals for redistribut- timate their financial needs. Ing the states multimillion-dol-lar annual school aid appropri-!1UU“*. ation to funnel more money in-j MeKerr stressed the $812-nr»I-| to more needy districts. "; “on estimate was only a tenta-j * * * jtive one. “I don’t think the gov-j Robert MeKerr, director of emor is firmly tied to this fig-administrative services for the ure> sai*L State Department of Education,! He added the budget bureau said the executive office’s “pre-j also has proposed a preliminary liminary target figure” for appropriation for the Depart-school aid in the fiscal year be-jment of Education of $26.8 mil- For Schools, State Police lion, an increase of $1.1 million over the current fiscal year. Before the board for discussion was a comprehensive, report on school financing prepared by Dr. J. Alan Thomas, director of the University of Chicago's Midwest Organization Center, and reports of school aid formulas used in New York and Wisconsin. On tap at the board’s meeting today were applications for community colleges to serve Shiawassee County and Iron and jlickinson counties and the establishment of a community college distritc covering Alpena,! Alcona, and Montmorency counties. Tapping, of Road Funds Eyed LANSING said Tuesday he would try Ua legislate/1 Ally G/rr Frank Kelley to rule ■■jL nPX!t on whether it is cmstitutidhal S - .. , .... to use high wav money to year to sweeten the.'"^finance schA courses ip traffic; school aid formula by adding safelv some $6 million in earmarked ' ' + A t highway tax‘funds. .. . ^ # # , The State Constitution car-, „ w ■ marks vehicle and gasoline I Rep. George 1*. Montg°rneiy, ,axcs^ wj,jCi, bring in some $350 D-Detroit, a former ^"^’'jmilliona year, exclusively “for teacher, said he had asked highway purposes as defined by law.”_________________________________ Montgomery also ' asked i Off State Board Kelley if the Legislature could V" OTare Doara use part of the earmarked LANSING (AP)-Paul R. Ma- re?e"ue«nance the road-1 hinske of Howell has resigned Pa [°l acl,v,t,es °f the State! ___as a member of the State Work- F,e~ men’s Compensation Appeal ATTEMPT DEFEATED Board, Gov. 'George Romney j Legislative advocates of high-announced Tuesday. Mahinske, er school aid attempted this member of the hoard since 1964, year to take from the highway said he was resigning to devote' funds $6 million for schools and full time to his campaign for the) $114 million for State Police, Livingston County Circuit1 but were defeated. Bench. , I Using earmarked funds for tho.se purposes would free equal amounts of general fund revenues for~ other-slate- spending, j Education receives about half of the general fund expenditure each year.___j . . * ’ ★ * The state is giving its public schools $752.4 million, from both general and restricted funds, in the current fiscal year, Montgomery,—a member of -the House Appropriations Committee, said he would urge the body next year to set up a Stib-" committee on the Highway Department budget — which amounted to $199.8 million in state earmarked funds this year, i HE’LL TRY FOR POST Montgomery said he would: try to become chairman Of the! new subcommittee if Demo-1 crats recapture the House in] November. Money Saver Specials! THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY Broom Special Low Price , 95 Delivery ami Seryive Included! EASY TpRMS —$5 MONTHLY Here’* floor rare the. ea-v yvsv with thi- «wee|>er vac broom. I('» lifclitwrinlit for ea-ier handling with 3-way action cleaning. 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TILL 9t0(l ANNUAL INFANTS' and TODDLERS' SALE JUg. 2.69-2.79 assorted 1st quality knit sleepers Thermal, brushed cotton knits in prints, solids. Sizes 1-4 with snap waist; 3-8 elastic. Vinyl non-skid soles built-in grow features. SALE Regular 3.69 deluxe blanket sleepers keep baby warm safely 2.57 Heavy weight pastel, fleece knit acetate / cotton / rayon, tab neck close, full zipper, knit collar and cuffs, 2-piece back, in sizes S-M-L-XL. Save! SALE Dreamy dresses and smart slack sets for your toddler girls 1.97 Adorable little dresess and slacks sets beguiling as a little girl's smile! Easy care fabrics in pretty colors 1 with dainty lace or •embroidery trim. Sizes 2-4. Shop now! Baby blankets 3.29 to 4.00 if perfect 75c if perfect pastel cotton rec. blankets Regular 2.99 2-pc. cotton crawler sets Regular 89c long sleeve polo shirts 1.99 cotton corduroy juv. boys' slacks 1.44 44c 1.97 21.66 36x50" pastel cot- J tor* jscwb, carriage -blanket, nylon, acetate ribbon bound. "Cotton wrap-around “©r receiviiig *bfank-ets. Pastel, white. 30x40", tiny irreg. Long slv. knit polo •j+rirt, snpp’shoulder. Snap crotch pants, adjustable straps. Tot's open shoulder in assorted prints, 1-3. Toddler's crew neck in sizes 1 to 6. Machine wash., y/i ' 1>6xer' back,’ bock-' ets, tab front, fall colors, in sizes 4-7. DOLL AND BUGGY SAtT Repeated by popular demand! Pip Squeaks or Honey Ball dolls YOUR CHOICE jmm. 2.99 Horsman Thirstee baby' 599 Looks liko real baby, rooted hair, eyes that drinks, wets. Horsman’s 'Pip Squeak’ Four 13" dolls with faces in singing expressions, p u IJy jointed, roofed hair. Idshes. \ Ideal’s ’Honey Sell' 4 big - eyed sweeties. Aims, legs bend. Washable vinyl foejm body, .saran hair. Savel Fink and trey alephent 7.99 Ntwborn baby Treasure 5.99 Big 24" daily walker 5.99 52" Wispy Welker'....... OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. (Sot. 9:10-9) Drayton open Sunday Noon fe 6 p.m. (Downtown closet Tuts., W erf. «< i p.m.) Snten end her stroller ..5.99 U'i Charmer play pee ,4.99 Deli walks her deg ........7.99 1 fl Uneeda '3# Wee dolls Walking doll, Toddler' mm Q Q ond Pee-wee, jointed M * * rooted hair, dressed, m Pink plastic pram 5.99 Molded pink -plastic body, floral., pattern hood, tubular frame and ’ noodle, six-inch plastic wheels. Matching stroller . Deluxe prams ....... 5.99 ....7.99 DOWNTOWN AND DRAYTON tLAINS THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 A—9 rhe 'bro-sHp' newest H«9er'e ♦osWontorto" vou nev«r ,ible» ritts • • • J Ad\u*»oW* if. »" *iw* k ond » ‘UP- todies' wu sleepwear dreams >ntai uav .pontyhose SmlBk Comet and 9,eY' * Wi..d 14 99 199 lo J wrdi """"LaSM » »•“ ,o». Mr »P’ «« 5«e" and ever* - 235^** #^rC^eerho*e SALS 0r~. '*»«-• h„ taW »6‘9 - • these Acriton A. long »’••''•' knrt **£ s,x„ 10-16, £9 I. fAuW-eotor strip* J $6 m. *•* j OPEN 10 A.M. TO 9 P.M. IS«t. 9:30-9) Drayton open Sunday Noon to 6 p.m. \ (Downtown closes Tuet, fed. tt t pjnJ DOWNTOWN ANIV DRAYTON PLAINS /./ A—10 TIIE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 Flint s Home-to-Factory Bus Service Off to Slow Stnrt FLINT (AP)—Flint’s experiment with door-to-door bus jervice for factory workers got off slowly and with few passengers this week, but the project's technical manager said he was enthusiastic it will be a success long before a three-year test is ended. James Stebbins of the American Academy of Transportation said a slow start was planned deliberately “to see mistakes coming and avoid them before they’re made." g * ★ ★ Service started Monday with two 41-passenger buses,, with mostly empty seats, but Stebbins said six buses will be put in service by the end of the! week, and plans call for adding | two a week until 23 are in serv-| ice and blanket the area. / ’ * * ★ A bus running from Flint’s South Side to Fisher Body Plant No. 1, where 6,000 are employed, had only seven pass' engers Tuesday, but Stebbins said “We had only four Monday and we’re enthused that we got that many.’!’ I *. ;> ONLY THREE A run from the North Side to a big General Motors Tern-stedt plant, which also employs 6,000, carried only three Monday and Tuesday. All the riders, Stebbins said, were former car drivers, adding, “we didn't get any regular bus route riders—but we will, I’m sure.’’ * ★ * Th| six buses the Flint Transportation 'Authority expects to have in door-to-door factory gate service by the end of the Week will serve six different General Motors factory complexes. They will be serving areas different' to those which began runs Monday, For a guaranteed plush seat to and from work, stereo music, and an occasional visit by a bus “bunny,” factory workers pay $9 to $18 a month, depending upon distance traveled. REGULAR FARES The fare on Flint’s regular stop-and-go buses is 35 cents! one way or 10 tickets for $3. Most pickups will be made at front doors and discharges at the gate nearest a passengers work, Stebbins said, awing that it was anticipated ail pickups will be made within half a block of a worker’s front door. ★ * * Coffee dispensers and. newspaper racks are scheduled added attractions as the door-to-door bus system gets into high gear. FOR EMERGEMCIES Stebbins said booths will be set up next week in factories to solicit riders for the new system. Plans ip start this earlier got lost in the shuffle. Stebbins also said it is hoped eventually that Ml buses will be making two round-trip runs in the morning to plants and one or two second-shift trips in the afternoon. Three of 26 buses purchased will be held in reserves to meet emergency situations,, such as breakdowns. The experiment is being sponsored and financed by the Mott Foundation ofFUnC $100,000; the City of Flint, $158,000; and the U. S. Department of Transportation, $508,000. The American Academy of Transportation, a nonprofit organization headquartered Ann Arbor, Mich., was employed to coordinate the program, and Stebbins was named project technical manager. MMM ' i . .. REPUTATION FOR PROFESSIONAL I INTEGRITY IS A PRICELESS INGREDIENT ? THAT MATURES WITH AGE . . . ftie6c/Uption,Speaict0cati* Bloomfield Miracle Mile Shopping Center, S. Telegraph Tel-Huron Center, $. Telegraph - Rochester, 1481 N. Main Pontiac Mall Shopping Center, N. Telegraph Waterford Plaza, Corner M-59 and Crescent Lake Rd., Waterford Twp. Drayton Plains Shopping Center, 5050 Dixie Hwy. CUNNINGHAM’S HAS BEEN FILLING PRESCRIPTIONS FOR OVER..*. 78 YEARS Ilf SERVICE • SELECTION • CONVENIENCE ^0 24 x 16 . CORK lap |BULLETIN BOARD 1.99] TRAY [wiLKINSOH I 10‘s - REG. 1.09 1 SWORD i | HADES M * 9*1 SCOR 1 3 0Z.-REG. 89* e ***** 67* |aquaveiva‘S59*I | 10OZ.-REG., MENTHOL OR LIME Imiss BRE( I 13 OZ. - REGULAR or SUPER "I# HAIR SPRAY g* «H Itqni INNOCENT ~ iWM _____ 149 1 REG. 2.25 r“' WEDGEW00D Stationery LI49 ENVELOPES^* M aut C a little blind girl, recently won die Grand Project of the Year award, the top prize bestowed by Jaycees for community projects. To the man chiefly heading up the national Jaycee prison program, Gary Hill of Lincoln, the program is notable not only for what’s done by chapters inside the institutions,' but what it has done for outsiders. * * * ’For the-first time in this country, a great number of outside people have gone inside the prison to converse man-to-men on a common ground,” said inn, national coordinator of correctional planning for the Junior Chamber of Commerce. “All of a sudden they have a new eye on what institutions really are. We eliminated the half rumors. There is an understanding pf the problems,” said Hil], the 28-year-old president of Northwestern Metal Co. of Lincoln. Besides providing Inmate* with useful activity while prison, the Jaycee program assists convicts on their release: Nonprison Jaycees help find jobs for some, befriend others. One inmate was permitted to travel to the Jaycee natiopai convention unescorted, and received a “tremendous welcome.” Hill Said. Jaycees “universally acce'pt the program,” and wardens have welcomed it, too, Hill said. ‘They are coming to us now.’1 Rays Maurice Sigler, Nebraska penal complex warden: “I can’t think of an extra curricular activity which saves a better purpose." The latest related Jaycee program is called “A Piece of the Action1^—conceived by Hill as a means of involving ordinary citizens in efforts to improve correctional facilities in their own communities. Bonds AMI MICA'S lAHGt SI CIOIHKH NEW FALL "MULTI-WARDROBE $140*0 YOU SAVE ’35.20 NO DOWN PAYMENT 13 MONTHS TO PAY n Sears 8EARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. Acttuu^ BONUS OFFER- 6-Pc. HOSTESS SERVING SET (Regularly $7.95) yours at no additional cost with purchase of 50-Pc. Service for 8 -at only $49.95 ONEIDACRAFT* 50-Pc. Service for 8 8 knivoo i 8 naiad fork. 16 tea.poona 8 fork. 8 soup apoon. 2 table .poom * Trade mar kl of Oneida Ltd. Open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9 Turtd.y,W * * Downtown Pontiac * Phone FE 5-4171 Here’s your year-round wardrobe—ready for everything—business, social and leisure activity... and back to college, too. Ehjoy “mixing 'em and matching ’em”—discover for yourself the many possibilities —outfit after outfit. The correct combination for every occasion -AND THIS WEEK ONLY, substantial savings. Sizes 36-46, regular, short, long,extra long. YOU GET ALL THIS select from our entire stock of following: ★. Any $65.00 One-trouser Wool Worsted Suit. . $ 65.00 ★ Any $43.50 "Royal York” Sport Coat. .: . . 43.50 ★ Any$34.50Zip-lined Raincoat. . . . . . 34.50 ★ Any Two Pairs $16.50 Proportioned^ Slacks . 33.00 Total Regularly $176.00 You pay 140.80 Yon save $35.20 — ___ Multi-Wenlrolice Including Sail with 5>- — Higher priced wardrobe combinations (choice ol one-trouaer er two-treuser suit) available at similar great savings , Bond’s, Tho Pontiac Mall THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 ONE COLOR B—3 w kroqer v O yi Nobody But Nobody Beats Kroger For Meats * U.S. Choice Tenderay Beef * Complete Fresh Meat Variety * Extra Value Low, Low Prices * Plus Top Value Stamps Why Settle For Less? CA TOP VALUE EA TOP VALUE 9V STAMPS I 3V STAMPS GORDON’S LINK PORK SAUSAGE __________ J VsfW Thn Sun,, Sept. 15, 19U _J Valid Thru Sun., S.pt. 15, 19t laeSlulaoBSoSl^ ■ K3m mmVl'mm’mmmm m m■ WI TH TtUSC&tifON O N 2-LBS DR MORE KWICK KRISP SLICED BACON mti COUNTRY CLUB POINT CUT NORBEST SERVE N* SAVE Corned Grade 'A’ Sliced Beef Turkeys WITH BUILT-IN THERMOMETER Bacon 69 90 TO, iSU •«65‘ Semi- Boneless Hams WHOLE OR HALT raj HORTON HOUSB PATH? FROZEN Meat Boll Staw......«^&N53* Baaf Tacos HORTON HOUSE SLICED BEEF, PORK OR BUTTERMILK Salisbury Steak..39* Raffia Biscuits....3 Ailus HORTON HOUSE ELEISCHHANN'S LIGHTLY SALTED m-oz cel wtpm -mW\ KEEBLERCO. Swedish Kremes INDEPENDENT CO. ASSORTED 29* London Cremes... ••2-0 ZP NABISCO DELICIOUS SNACK U-DZ WTPKG m W MEDIUM SIZE-MILD Ivory Soap • e e ^vSTo^e** i CONCENTRATED-LOW SUDS ^ 99* Salvo Tablets...... i..M-OZZ'KG LEPAGE'S »,ir fm Sloppy Joes............ 49* Soft Margarine..............™I43* Cheese Tidbits..............45* School Sloe ITALIAN Ok 1890 SUNSHINE HINT’SPECIAL LABEL Malani Dressing..........£& 25* Hydrox Cookies.............. ’fiS 99*Spry Shortening....66* Soft Margarine..........................«5 B-—4/ THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 Stone Age Bushman Faces ixtinction^tnless He Adjusts JOHANNESBURG, South Africa (AP) — The bushmen of ^the Kalahari, a Stone Age people surviving in 20th century Africa, face the prospect of mining to terms with modern society if they are to survive. Once these short-statured aborigines roaoraMredy *11 over southern Africa. Rock paintings bear testimony to the days when game was plentiful and life easier. * * * Then they were ousted by the southward migration of more advanced black tribes who decimated* them and enslaved many. Later white settlers trekked into the interior. Caught between more powerful peoples who regarded cattle-raiding Bushmen as a danger to life and property, _ they retreated Uitoremote deserts and began a constant battle against nature itself. , VIRTUALLY INTACT The Bushmen survive virtually intact. They are a motley collection of self-contained groups with different languages. A strong sense of territory confines them strictly to their own separate areas. -.The Kalahari Desert, home to most of them is a forbidding, windswept area spudded with dusty shrubs and dried water holes. The Bushmen learn from Infancy ^to recognize every possible type of nutritive plant. Birds, lizards, snakes and insects are trapped by women in constant food-gathering forays. Hunting is strictly for the men, who use short hardwood bows strung with animal sinew and poison-tipped arrows. HEALTHY LIFE bef tough but it is healthy, said Cape Town' University doctors working with a Harvard research professor, Irvin de Vore. They found that Bushmen subsisting on a basic diet of locusts and magongo nuts have no coronary dieases, and their blood has the lowest cholesterol level ever recorded. High blood pressure and dental decay are unknown. But the (rid ways are changing and the Bushman today is at o^jds with changing enviran- ‘‘The whole basis of the Bushman’s culture and nutrition has been undermined and will be destroyed,” says Dr. Hans — Joachim Heinz, a Witwaters-rand University parasitologist. Heinz studied Bushmen in Botswana for 10 years. He says their areas are being encroached on by cattle ranchers, game herds are dwindling and the animal’s migratory habits have been upset. Progress has had even more harmful efforts on •ttame^-and -“semitame” Bushmen who have forsaken the old life. ‘DRIFTING POPULATION’ ‘‘This has led to the formation-of a drifting, unemployed and unemployable Bushman population, and crime, alcoholism and prostitution are now common,” says Heinz. Interbreeding between other Africans and Bushmen has taken place on a large scale u and contact with' civilisation has spread tuberculosis, smallpox, influenza and syphilis, Tbllcemen investigating cases of stock theft in Bushman areas have been forced to duck poisoned arrows. “It’s the natural reaction of the trapped animal,” said Heinz, adding, ‘‘There is evidence of an impending renewed clash between two archaic cultures, those of the Bushman and the Bantu African. The more archaic BUshman culture cannot survive this dash.” ONLY AT KROGER WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES. PRICES AND ITEMS EFFECTIVE AT KROGER IN DETROIT AND EASTERN MICHIGAN THRU SUNDAY SEFT. IS. »U. NONE SOLO TO DEALERS. CO-PYRIGHT 1969. THE KROGER CO. FLORIDA SIP BRAND Grapefruit Juice Comp«r# anywhar*-1 ~ r/mtniire any time* BMflvu* a* **v'“ FEATURES-” the EXTRA SAVINGS * JSJStfWBSS®®* NO-COST WAY TO GIFT-SHOP. OF BUYING BEEF. Whv Settle For Ussl V UP TO ■ 500' EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH COUPONS IN THIS ADI 25 Fruit Cocktail 5 1 & beauty /4ccuF^ Listerine U-FL OZBTL 68 Listerine Antiseptic U-FL OZBTL 7-FL IS( OZBTL ST 4-ox In. 99* REGULAR OR HINT Crust Toothpaste»fme 63* FOR YOUR STOMACH Maalox Liquid.... <>2* 99* CHECKS PERSPIRATION-MUM Cream Deodorant Vf;™ 53* GROOMS WITHOUT GREASE Vitalis HAIRDRESSING OZBTL S3* REGULAR, HARD-TO-HOLD OR UNSCENTEb Aqeasette Hair Spray U-M. Aft( OZ CAN __________ RELIEVES UPSET STOMACH l HEADACHE Alka-Seltzer iHii faom om Oaou 13 VARIETIES Kroger Bread 4 1 INCLUDING Vi -LB GIANT LOAF WHITE BREAD, COTTAGE RYE, PUMPERNICKEL OR ITALIAN 10* OFF Kroner Turnovers 49 APPLE, APRICOT OR LEMON REGULAR, STRAWBERRY OR LEMON Kroger Jelly Roll* «s3..«BnT- KROGER BAKED CHERRY GOLD, GOLDEN-SNO OR CHOCOLATE DEVIL’S FOOD Layer Cake 49 1-LB 5-0 Z PKG 204 OFF Supplied SPECIAL LABEL CometCleanser U-OzJMi WT CAN O^i SPECIAL LABEL LIQUID Top Job tleaiei.....«rLSS* ASSORTED COLORS-BATWSIZE Camay Soap....... • ••• BAR 16* BATH SIZE Safsgsard Soap.... • •BAR 21* BATH SIZE-MILD Zest Soap.............bar 21* GETS DIRTY HANDS CLEAN Lava Soap.........OftBlP SPECIAL LABEL PERSONAL SIZE Ivory Soap 4 “«25* THE RIG JOB CLEANER Spic 4 Span.........pkg 27* ALL PURPOSE CLEANER Mr. Clean ......i^btl St* FABRIC SOFTENER Downy...... •••••iJTzbtl 69* CHLORINE BLEACH Stardust.......... uJozIkq 68* CINCH - Spray Cloaaor. • • «-iz In. 66* ASSORTED VARIETIES ' Kroger Jellies 4t| 10-0 z I WT JARS ■ PINK 1 Recipe talmon 1-LB CAN 69 »-Or U-OZ CAN KROGER BRAND Tomato Juke 22 U S NO. 1 CA TOP VALUE 3V STAMPS S r WITH THIS COUPON ON - 5 anyh-gal 1 n KROGER BRAND ■ Ik- ICE CREAM I RVcIU Thru Sun., S »pt. 15. IMB-J I At Kroger Oct. I Eart. Mich. i‘l CA TOP VALUE 3U STAMPS WiTH THIS COUPON ON * | fH QUART KROGER ■ J HALF A HALF__________J • VmlU TtrwMm.. Svt. 15. 1M» E| SPRAY CLEANER WMftl. •••••»• »>I 75* WINDOW CLEANER Wladex. • • 4-ozbtl SH AEROSOL SPRAY CAN UiB$icc,.ccOZ~CAN 59< Gillette Techmatic AUOE BAND CARTRIDGE 10 EDGES *■29 ¥ Jonathan Apples 3 49 SWEET MELLOW Golden Ripe Bananas 2-29 8 SIZE Heneydew Melons S9 am w each 120 SIZE Bartlett Pears . 12-79 All Prices shown here ore EVERYDAY DISCOUNT PRICES! You'll find those same items at these same low prices week after week to help you save more on your food bill when you shop at Kroger regularly. ARM i HAMMER-SPECIAL LABEL Borax....... WATER SOFTENER C0I9OII..........bJizpkg SPECIAL LABEL Gtant Dreft....4-oz®Kc SPECIAL LABEL Joy Liquid...... SPECIAL LABEL Fob With Botox SPECIAL LABEL Choor.......... tJozpKoi SPECIAL LABEL H—GAL > • BTL ' PACKER’S LABEL Sweet Peas CHICKEN BEEP OR TURKEY Betty Crocker Northern Tissue TOP VALUE SPECIAL LABEL CriSCO 3 69 Joy Liquid SPECIAL LABEL LIBBY’S . Pineapple Juice U Of mku KERNEL OR CREAM STYLE Corn Avrcir tbl Mire WM m CAL 1 ICEBERG HEAD Lettuce 22 U S. NO-1 MICHIGAN Potatoes 20 79 * RED FUME TOKAY OR SeeBless Grapes vote • er SWEET PURPLE llalifui Prune Plums ' 3 ”“99 Green er Ce< THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 B—5 Iranian Town to Follow 5,000 Quake Victims to the Grave KAKHK, Iran (AP) — The dome of the moeque of Kakhk, glittering gold and blue and -green above fee rugged east Iranian countryside, stood last, week as a long grave marker for 4,000 earthquake victims awaiting interment by bulldozers amid the rubble of their town. Five brothers, laces masked with handkerchiefs against the smell of death, bore their father’s blanket-wrapped body Thursday to a mass grave at the edge of town for 1,000 more of Kakhk’s 7,000 inhabitants. He was one of the last permitted burial there before the town it-t-aelf, leveled by the quakea weekend, becomes a tomb. dozers in to raze the town to the ground: bodies, ruins and all,” he said. “It will be rebuilt else- "The, bodies under the rubble have become extensively decomposed and we cannot pull them out without dismembering them,” said Col. Razzaghi Hussein, head of army relief for the town. “She religious leaders have said this is against God’s will. ‘So we are going to send bull- survivors trying to recover belongings. gers in the dust,(trying to dig out an Iranian carpet. Awoman sat alone and wept NEARLY UJMWDKAD THRIVING TOWN Kakhk had been, unpretentious but thriving. Its farmers grew corn, fruit and saffron. The town was built around a central square, with a fountain, Not one of its 1,304 houses remained Intact. The town was silent most of the past week except for the mourning of women and the picks and shovels of in front of What used to be her doorstep. Three families were crowded in a’tent at a street There were similar sceneis across the harsh, 7,700-square-roile area of desert and moun- corner and one man invited a|tain chains, extending from 550 newsman inside in a traditional;miles east of Tehran to the Af-gesture of hospitality, thenlghan border, where towns and broke into sobs. mud brick farming villages In the brown rubble, a child in a red polka-dot dress retrieved a golden samovar used for making teaandranofTvrtth-lt.A: woman scrabbled with her fin- were mangled by the quakes. The nation mourned nearly 11,000 dead. In some places grief was punctuated by new terror as after-shocks shuddered through i set up By the Red Lion and Sun, the land. Iranian counterpart pf the Red * * * Cross. It was believed that the The village of Khezri lost ^ government would have to build quarter of its population of at least three new orphanages. 1,800.\tl also is to be leveled 1. ^ ASSiJRANfF / by bulldozers. Shortly before the SHAirS ASSURANCE / Shah of Iran visited there! ^ Shah assured each v,ctlrn Wednesday, a minor tremor!he spoke to that the government sent surviving villages running jwoulcl provide new homes. He from their tents, praying to Al- |pledged that cooperative^ com-lah to save them. panies would be set up to handle The Shah and Empress Farah toured the disaster area by helicopter and sought custody of orphans in rehabilitation caj j local problems. At Dashtibaya, mourning 1,200 of its 3,500 people, the roy- al couple took two orphans into their own household. * * * By midweek the small town of Gonabad had its first landing strip' and the airstrip at Birjand was expanded to receive " big C130 transports carrying relief supplies. The Red Lion bnd Sun moved tons of blankets, tents, food and medicine, some of it dropped by parachute to survivors in isolated areas. RENT, SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! ‘Dainy 'peetfunedf KROGER MEDIUM SIZE Grade (A’ Eggs DOZEN 49 KROGER Cottage Cheese i SALTED BROOKFIELD Swift’s Batter. .. KROGER BRAND Sear Cream...... KROGER BRAND Yogurt ’66* 39* ; 8-02 $a I CTNS I IN QUARTERS-CLOVER VALLEY Margarine t4 KROGER FROZEN Pot Pies RICH’S WHIPPED TOPPING Spoon a’ Serve 2 cm 33* STOUPFERS FROZEN BEEP. CHICKEN OR TURKEY Pet Pies.............'?-,°/c49* FROZEN CHEESE OR SAUSAGE John’s Pizza......’! ”"66* POLAR PAK Ice Cream........... FROZEN 5 VARIETIES Dinners 36 IN BUTTERSAUCE-GREEN GIANT FROZEN Broccoli Spears..39* GREEN GIANT FROZEN SUNSWEET Prune Joke..........ft 39* Ufikl nAIDV Coffee-Mate....^.88* GREEN GIANT PEAS OR 39 Le Sear Peas....HiL, KRAFT SALAD DRESSING Miracle Whip.. AVONDALE BRAND Cut Green Beans..™? 19* 48 JAR COMPLIMENT VARIOUS Cooking Sauces >’f3& 31* Purple Plums.. 25 1-LB 14-QZ CAN SPECIAL LABEL Log Cabin Syrup »?■?£ 27* JlPJ^RAtUL... Peanut Butter....wrf« 39* JIFFY CREAMY Peanut Butter..55* KROGER BRAND Instant Breakfast«rmc49* KELLOGG’S Corn Flakes 25* BABY FORMULA-SIMILAC OR FOR COOKING S FRYING Kraft Oil..........SSjUPf PURE GRANULATED Pioneer Sugar...5»« 49* Til r i ft SPECIAL LABEL DETERGENT ^King Size Ajax - 5-LB 4-0z PKG ALLPURPOSE Kroger Flour.....5 bag 39* SPECIAL LABEL Vets Nuggets. .10 »c*l°* SPECIAL LABEL L Vets Dog Food25>Tc*24f DOW Oven Cleaner.......’jti 79* 7 ASSORTED COLORS Bounty Towels...'1 B—6 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 Compare Kroger’s exclusive TOP VALUE with NO STAMP competitor prices! Nobody in this area beats Kroger for the exclusive savings combination of EVERYDAYD ISC O U NTP RICESA N D TOP VALUE STAMPS. Shown here are Identical items purchased at a competitor’s store on September 4,1968. ’Th^^ directly from thacompetitor'e cash register receipt; the prices In the right column from the Kroger cash registekreceipt. (Both receipts are on file in our office.) Here’s proof that you save more at Kroger where you get Top Value Stamps than you do elsewhere-even at many stores that do not give trading stamps. GET UP TO 300 COMPETITORS PRICE WITH NO STAMPS 55* 65* 75* 20* 61* 75* 21* 24* 49* 34* 27* 27* 33* *8™ NO STAMPS 1-PT 8-0Z BTL KROGER BRAND Cottage Cheese PQLAR PAK Ice Cream ‘cS1 FAMILY SIZE CREST Toothpaste »V\-8.Z. RICH .TOMATO FLAVOR DEL MONTE Catsup LOG CABIN Buttered Syrup SPRAY DEODORANT Right Guard CHOICE OF GRINDS COFFEE Maxwell House can ALL PURPOSE FLOUR Geld Medal 25 #<* DELICIOUS ,_LB Del Monte Peas.™ BABY FORMULA Enfamll Mf KRAFT SALAD DRESSING Miracle Whip TOASTED OAT GOODNESS Cheeries DELICATE FLAVORED TUNA Chicken the Sea BEEF FLAVORED AlpdTIog Food ' WHOLE OR HALF DEL MONTE Peaches 13- TOTAL KROGER DISCOUNT PRICE PLUS TOP VALUE STAMPS 49* 59* 63* 18* 57* 98* 69* 19* 22* 48* 33* 27* 29* $8" PLUS 30 TOP VALUE STAMPS EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS with purchases and coupons below... In addition to tho stamp* you got*i* Indicated on Individual coupon*, you can got additional -stomps- by combining coupons' os.follows... *• , * a- 50 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH PURCHASE OF $5 TO $9.99 COUPON A 1O0 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH PURCHASE OF $10’TO $14.99 COUPONS mmmmmmm WITH THIS.COUPON 150 EXTRA TOP VALUE STAMPS WITH PURCHASE OF. $15 TO $19.99 couponc wm THE-PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER II, 1968 B—7 McCarthy Backers' Future Hazy Whither Children's Crusade? Beforethcy took up ths Mc-i Washington, he veryncariy did|nottoglveUft;“NOver were yW AP Newsfeatures Writer Where will they go, those young, idealistic followers of Sen. Eugene McCarthy, now that their impossible dream, they realistically called it, has been dashed amid the harsher realities of Chicago? ® * it “My friends tell me it’s quixotic,” said Mrs. Martha an alternate delegate from Wisconsin still embittered over the recent Democratic National Convention. “But I*d rather sup-port Don Quixote than the damn windmill.’"* Into the. Streets? “Demonstrations can. be useful provided there’s no violence,” said Parker Donham, who at 23 became, a top McCarthy aide. ’’But after what we’ve done and seen, ttiey seem terribly futile. No, I don’t think many of us will go into the , streets.” Where, then? Oblivion? ♦ ★ ★ “What a w a s t e, what wretched waste that Would be, said Blair Clark, McCarthy’s campaign manager. But on the day the convention in Chicago! ended, a new political lapel button made its appearance in the McCarthy camp. It was blank. In McCarthy’s unsuccessful run for the Democratic nomination, his legions of young follow? ers proved to be an effective new force in American politics, startlingly So to the party’s ok) guard. They challenged hoary traditions, rejected time-hut Carthy banner, many of them were among the impassioned throngs who marched on the Pentagon, marched in Central Park, irihrehed in front of the White House, marched marched, marched. With little faith left in their nation’s pollti pal machinery, they adopted their own dramatic techniques to attack policies they wanted changed. But Eugene ..McCarthy gave them new inspiration. His disdain for the old political cliches matched their own, his one-man challenge to ah incumbent president at the ballot box aroused their youthful idealism and channeled their unrest. They shaved their beards, became “clean for Gene.” And with energy and dedication that earned national respect even among their opponents, they began ringing doorbells and licking stamps ahd kept at it for nine months of tough campaign? ing through 40 states and seven primaries. NO LARK Some old political observers, perhaps deceived by the kids’ gaiety and elan, thought at first they were on a lark. They were not. They were never more serious about anything in their young lives. For many of them the McCarthy campaign* represented the last chance for The Establishment to prove that traditional political methods could ored customs, exposed abuses, and In the end caused a reexamination of America’s entire electoral system. Where they go from' here thus becomes a matter of national interestwif not national concern. NATURAL OUTLET? McCarthy has said he will neither lead nor support a fourth party despite moves in various states to put his name on the Allot. Even so, some McCarthyites view a fourth party as a natural outlet for their frustration—not so much a$ an aimless gesture of contempt for the Democratic party’s nominee and the system that chose him, though contempt they plainly feel, but as a logical expression of their dilemma. ★ ★ * , "A fourth party,” said Alice Krakauer, “would represent a position somewhere between established political processes and street demonstrations.” By now the McCarthy kids know more than they wanted to learn about both established political processes and about street demonstrations, and the fact is many of them don’t seem quite ready to write off as-ineffective either method of political expression. Miss Krakauer, a 23-year-old graduate student in clinical psychology at New York University; is typical trf the thousands of young men and women who made up McCarthy’s campaign army of volunteers that came to be known, at first in derision and later in admiration, as “The Children’s Crusade.”' McCarthy himself feels a deep and genuine concern tor the future of his devoted following. * it * “What will it be like,” he mused sadly aboard his airplane returning from Chicago to Washington, “for those who iave been adults to go back. to jeing children?’' Before leaving Chidhgo he had t>een plainly touched by their reaction in defeat. Dejected over the outcome of the convention, fqrther shaken by a police raid on their headquarters, tjiey nonetheless cheered him liystily when he entered the room to tell them goodby. “If you people keep bn this way,’’ he said, “1 may,; as we say, lose my cool.” lose it. About 100 young people ware there in the darkness to welcome him. When he stepped from the plane they cheered, and many burst into tears. The chant that had followed him throughout the long campaign, want Gene,” now became a heartfelt “Thank you, Gene." One young girl, cheeks tear-, streaked, looked up at him and asked pitifully, “Where shall go?” The senator embraced her gently. “Everything’s fine,” he said. “Everything’s tide.” He turned to enter his car, looked back at the crowd and gave one last V-for-victor/ sign with his. right hand. SYMBOL EXTENDED The sign became a symbol of his campaign and, by extension, of the peace movement itself. It is subtly different from the Cburchillian V, palm up. The McCarthy kids turned it around, palm down, and made it a recognition sign, a shibboleth if hope, a mute message that says lot “we shall win” but rather we shall overcome.’ The sign, thrust upward by hundreds of silent hands, greeted the solemn procession of delegates wHKmarched to Chicago’s Grant Park with torchlights and joined the kids who had gathered there to wait out the night after the convention adjourned. • . * At • Next morning McCarthy went to the park./He came, he told them, to Mdress “the government of the people in exile.” He told thenyhe would endorse neither the Republican nor the Democratic nominee. He reminder them that he had set needed so much,” he said,, departing from his prepared text, ‘never could you do so much.” ★ * * One* member of the Children's Crusade who vows he will not become a political dropout Parker Donham, the young assistant who followed McCarthy from New Hampshire to Chile. 'We haven’t won yet,” said Donham, “but they lost “What you saw this year was the dying gasp of a bunch of bums. Four years from now we’ll be running that party.” He repeated the prediction for emphasis: “We’ll be running that party.” Donham firmly believes the “new politics” of more open expression is on its way to replacing the old, that abolition of the unit rule, as an example, was ah indication. He continued: “We ,went, in nine months, from being considered a lunatic fringe to winning nearly 40 per cent of the vote at a national convention. We are responsible for, President Johnson dropping out and for exposing bosses and ward heelers for what they are. That’s an accomplishment. * ★. ★ “Because of the McCarthy campaign the established processes were weighed by just scales and found wanting. People told us at state convention after state convention that were going to ruin the party and elect Nixon. Those are ultimately ’the people who ruined the party—and elected Nixon. The outcome of the November election is hardly so certain, but Donham’s prediction is shared wt‘y prove"the^workabHity"of |b^,?0St -f*\ • Effective Speaking and Leadership GUIDANCE SEMINARS e Seminar 1370 — "Women Alone" , INTERIOR DESIGN • Design in Interiors (Basic A Advanced) FILMS e 'Classic Movies—The Inventiveness of tha, Film Industry „, i STUDY SKILLS WORKSHOP Music, Philosophy, Political Sciatica, Psychology Per raoixtratton and court# information call 188-1211, axtention 2171 cr OMtetjC 283 ^h FSAVn Hall Manttey thru Friday J ate^ Ip*. Saturday, September 14, § am — 1 pm; Monday thru Thursday, September IMF, 8;oo am to 7s*8 pm; Monday thru Thursday, Scptembar 21-28, 8:00 am to 8:00 pm. HOFFMAN'S POES IT AGAIN! CUT YOUR FOOD BUDGET IN HALF! STOP - SHOP - COMPARE - AND SAVE Swiss Center Cut ROUND STEAK 691 Picnic Cut 4-6 lb. Average BONELESS^^g^ 10lb. DELM0NIC0 STEAKS Cth/tth, 7tti Wff Kieg-0-Roasts STANDING RIB ROAST FREEZER SPECIAL FULL SIDES 'O BEEF Just Say It! 59: I NO 1 DOWN PAYMENT FARM FRESH FRYING CHICKENS LEGS ^ ^ 29 with thighs 49 EIS Giblets Necks WHOLE CUTUP 3& UK 37 lb. Sugar Cured HKK0RY SMOKED PICNICS Sliced Free BUTCHER BOY STEAK Quarantaad Tender Homo FREEZERSpseials 50 C *27” 10 lbs. Balolisr Boy Steaks 10 lbs. Pork Chops If lbs. Check Roast 10 hs. RU Beef Hamburg 10 Hm. Frying Chickens 50 ALL CUT AND FREEZER WRAPPED. PLACEYOUR ORDER OR CALL THE DAY BEFORE PICKUP. NO ORDER TOO SHALL JUST CALL FE 2-1100 HOFFMAN'S 526 N. PERRY ST., PONTIAC PARKING Open Daily 9 A.M.-6 P.M. ■'ir^ B—8 as color PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1988 Alabama Adjusts to Less MONTGOMERY, Ala. (UP!) [functioned at half-speed for —After five years of thunder (months because of the illness of and 1 ightBln’g Wttfi GWrgelMrs. Wallace and the presiden-Wallace, Alabama is adjusting tial campaign of Wallace, her to quieter days under the busi-(husband and “Nq.,1 adviser.” nesslike regime of Gov. Albert (task COMPLICATED P. Brewer. ( Bld y,e task was complicated But Wallace still casts a long by the necessity of avoiding any RH J ... P . . . I shadow over the state and the that might be construed cabl"et wh«h*| Jjeinl „ governor’s office. !as criticism of the W a 11 a c e workin8 full-time in the Wallace has str * * * campaign. adverse but nonetheless appears determined to make his own mark as governor In tlie fetnainlng^twa years of his term, while doing his best not to alienate Wallace supporters. Shortly after* taking office, Brewer replaced several tpp The contrast between the Wallace and Brewer administrations is primarily one of style and tone. {administrations. (campaign. ‘Brewer, a lawyer from! This was in part out of SHOWS ALLEGIANCE Decatur -whose slender build respect for Mrs. Wallace and in However, he has shown his and neatly combed, light brown (part because of the fierce allegiance to the former gover-hair make him look even partisanship of Wallace’s Mow- allegiance to, th eformer gover-younger than his 99 years,' took |ers, whose support Brewer will nor by making fund-raising office May 7 when Gov. Lurleenineed if he is to win election to I speeches and serving as a Wallace died df cancer. : the office in 1970. 'presidential elector on the slate He was immediately faced * „ * * pledged to Wallace in Alabama, with putting back on the rails a Brewer is a close personal j the only state where the ex-gov-■tate government that had 'and political friend of Wallace ernor is running as a Democrat. Brewer raised a few eyebrows Both men believe in school segregation for the Stale, but Brewer’s approach is less strident than Wallace’s. Brewer the possible effect On public support Buford said it is too eariy yet rough - and - tumble polities and to make a firm judgement ef the dislikes administrative detail) hew governor’s appeal to the Negro community. He has made one or'/ two appointments that Brewer admits he likes the office work. . His first major efforts after taking office as governor were 'for education if full integration JD||H Is ordered. He says Alabamians I "V* „ have “learned to live” withLMann reP,ac at-j His legislative program for (pilots to Wallace. He explained llace has done.—----— .tacked during a “freedom ride” j the comingyear includes im- j that as a former governor, The Rev. K. L. Buford, state jin 1961. ' provement of educational stand- (Wallace was entitled to any (field director for the NAACPj * * * |ards, a crackdown on pomogra- [necessary protection. He said looks at Brewer this way: “I Both Brewer and Wallace are phy, legislation to increase high- the pilots were provided be-believe he is nbt going to be, in I tireless workers, but while way safety and possible action | caiise Wallace knew them and our opinion, as bad as former Wallace is happiest when to cut down on air and water j felt safer with them. jGqv. Wallace.” (campaigning or engaging ini pollution. SAVE MONEY ON USED . AUTO PARTS m We're Now Buying Scrap COPPER-BRASS-ALUMINUM (We Also Pick Up Junk Cars) W FE 2-0200 Bralfeh ANSWER: Our young artist in the picture has painted a i tree with all the-limbs growing up right alongside the trunk. It’s a dead-looking tree. Actually, such a tree WOULD be dead, because the branches could not hold tbe leaves out Into the light. The leaves then would, not be able to make the plant food needed by the tree, for light acts as power In the food-making process. There to one kind of tree, the Lombardy poplar, shown in the background of the first picture, which does have iimh« going upward. But these are sufficiently far from the trunk for the leaves to grow and for sunlight to penetrate. Most trees radiate their branches ont as shown In the second picture, getting tae leaven as far Into the sunlight as possible. , v Walk Into the woods and study the situation. You will see that there is not enough room for the branches to radiate out widely, so the trees tend to grow very tall, reaching the clear light with their topmost branches. Hitler Saved His Mail -Including the Insults LONDON (AP) — Adolf Hitler^ kept his fan mall—even when It “ was Insulting. . tl Letters and postcards showing fi this belong fo a former British |BRAVE posTCARD serviceman Les Brown, who There j, one brave fowd them taa roomadjoinmg p mailed through! Hitler’s study to the^ lettered £ parig central offiCe) written1 (^cellery in Berlin at the endi^ a fine hand which says:| <,^,iypH*: r TuThto fo your last MrUripr,'yw*1 ac‘ ed \Mjdwm Squjre Station, wflg utely addreSSed to ?7York,mmitsaldto^-“ j 1chanceller Hit-fully: “For your last Christ-. „ mas.” The card was addressed 1 ' to Adolf Hitler, Berlin, Ger- many. Another postcard, illustrated With a donkey’s head, was post- Lawyer Slaps Traffic Courts ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - An attorney says too many traffic courts seem to be in businesn oily to collect fines “with sublime disregard for the administration of justice. " —Donald D. Dewitt,assistant director of the American Bar BBH There also were messages of adulation, One, from the Sude-tenland, said: “We are free. Our dear good fuehrer, Many cordial thanks that you have fetched us into the German Reich. The good Lord may grant you a very long and happy life. With best regards, family Klaus.” * Another complimentary card from Rio de Janeiro said: “I offer you excellency the best wishes and congratulations of a humble niember of the public unknown to you.” It was signed 'An Admirer.” FORGET ABOUT THEM Brown, now 43 and an assist- gram, told the Southern Regional Traffic Court Conference Tuesday that many courts violate the rights of defendants. “Our staff actually have seen rash registers set up, next to the judge's batch- . he said. “The image of the court should be that of a place where justice is dispensed, not dispensed with.” Post Office Due WASHINGTON (AP) - The Post Office Department reports 4 JKW post office to to be built at Dundee Jo Monroe County. Estimated cost of the building which would be finished next is $112,500. London Council, said he took the mail home as souvenirs, then forgot about it. bt950 and $10S° OUR. FITTERS TALK BABY TALK Come and Listen! PRECISION WATCH REPAIR Crystal# Fitted While You Wait NEISNER'S Watch Repair 42 N. Saginaw FE 8-3593 Id Mane, Manager Wed in Peau de Soie Sandra Chapman, of West Huron Street, chose a Princess style gown of peau de spie for | Make Your Appointment Now! PERMANENT and HAIRSTYLE Tinting — Bleaching Catting IMPERIAL’ BEAUTY SALON 158 Auburn Ave. Paris Free FE 4-2878 Edyth Steneon, Owner RENT. SELL, TRADE - - - USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! MRS. CLIFFORD BROOKS f l her marriage Friday .evening in St. Anne's Catholic Church, OrtonvUie, to Clifford Brooks, son of* Mr. and Mrs. Paul J. Brooks of Neptune Street,] Brandon Township. Seafarings of pearls and! crystals on the bodice and skirt matched the handmade pill box which Secured her Ishoulder-length veil of illusion. * * * She carried a cascade of calla lilies and accented her ensemble with a handmade pearl necklace, a gift of the bridegroom’s mother. *, * a Mr. and Mrs. Leo Mrs. John Empey and Paul Yocum of Rochester ati-Brooks Jr. served as honor at- nounce the betrothal and tendants for the rite. Mr. and forthcoming marriage “ “i ol theater. Karen a I Sue, to Charles M. Ul- A reception in the church' , . . T? .. . , parlors preceded the couple’s' brich.He is^theson of departure for a honeymoon ini The Milton H. Ulbrichs Niagara Falls. I also of Rochester. is a Must , now, instead of correcting failure in law enforcement, daughter is to be banished Such self-to recover A belonging, our* or a child’s, BELONGS to us until we have relinquished it. It is not other people who make this decision for us. We make it. So I don’t blame your daughter for her wrath. I don’t like anarchy either. / 1 Back to school “on time” with | J n ii OMEGA bat separa-em seems the Ugh they have well together, would you think of board-school for our daughter this iau? . - ■ e * * ANSWER: It would be much less expensive to require your son to do one of two things: either to remove those ties from his kite and return them to his sister or to give her money' from his allowance to buy her-1 self a new raincap. For there is | nothing that so efficiently creates hate between children than one’s appropriation of another's W property. f! And this holds true whether If,that property seems to have S' : been discarded or whether it I hasn't. For we don’t know if it f has been discarded unless its i | owner has told us it is. Thus,! 2 the trouble here is the fact that your son did not ASK his sister ,d*Y p««y - Jorjm.'m .frgfejSygS planning ffltnmw trips might ..... ........ — John|—"-----------------—— 8— like my idea for a safety pocket P0LLY’S PROBLEM ★ * * for passports, tickets, travelers’ ^ PoUy _ j do hope some.j In fact, there is only one rule! MAkeSa pocket of good strong one can suggest something to I regard as inflexible for par-d£ 10 Ses dlep^d seven'Put under our chlldren s -?wmg ertts of brothers and jggj-inches wide. Put a zipper across the top. Polly's Pointers Carry Items Safely put tflH set -where the | will not flexible respect for their right won first place in accuracy contests at both Geneva and Neuchatel Observatories In 44 day testa, competing against hundreds of the world’s finest Swiss watches, Omega set an all-time record for wriatwatch accuracy. Such performance by Omega ia not tmuauaL And for good reason. From blueprint to first assembly every. Omega undergoes 1497 quality-checks. Components are machined to micro-millimeter tolerances. Even the. oil used to lubricate an Omega is the world’s costliest, 82000 a gallon... assuring longer life because of reduced friction. See our wide selection of Omega watches today, from SOS to over $1000. Redmond’s JEWELRY 81 N. Saginaw St. Free Parking in Rear of Store [grow. Gravel or stones are too to dispose of their own prop-j“throwable” (we have a two- erty. For property is not prop-j Attach the pocket to the waist- lyear-old), sand will collect in erty to them, band of trdbsers so it hangs be-shoes and pants’cuffs, cement it is the materialization of j hind the left or right side pocket. lor asphalt is too dangerous in (moral right—right to their por-l On a one-year trip around the |Case of falls. Is there a way 4o tion of our respect. When your ] world I had one of these at- avoid the constant mud we now!§on helped himself to that old] |tached to each pair 6f trousers have?—Della raincap, he was appropriating] land was able to carry all art!- j [)ear Polly — Last summer I i his sister’s portion of your re-! cles, such as above, for both discovered a way to keep cool'gard for her. Once this kind of j hiyself and my wife. Our trip whiie driving across the desert, j moral looting is permitted to a was so long and there were guy some jce cubes out of an brother or sister, what we get i many stopovers so our tickets jce machine at the motel or is what you’re getting—endless j wei;e each nearly one-half-inch a|ong (he road. Put the ice in a and vengeful reprisals. thick- plastic pan placed by your cold-! Usually, it is the older child] With all these things in a air vent. When air comes in] we expect to tolerate this loot-] racket there was scarely any through the vent the ice will i ing. And in his refusal to toler-noticeable bulge and the only cool it.—J. K. • ate it, it’s Our custom to see' -------r~i * * * “selfishness”—a failure in fam-1 Dear Polly — We have new;----------—-—---------—:_______________ {carpet in our living room and! ,1 cut a small piece from the {scraps that will fit in my purse.! iNow when I want to buy pillows, drapes, throw rugs or anything :■! for the room I have the swatch if'.1 NEW YORK (AP) — Until along with me—R. I. C. j j Lshe was ltd years old Mrs.’ * * * l Marie Knonowska could boast; Dear Polly Tell Bobby he! ( that she had never been in a can remove alcohol (perfume,j A garden reception at the : hospital in her life. medicine or alcoholic beverage) Highland home of the Airy But recently she slipped in stains from wood furniture by Shelbys followed vows recently i the bathtub and broke her hip rubbing the spot with linseed oil, j by her daughter, Carroll Jane : necessitating a trip to Terrace paste wax, silver polish or I Paige, and Pfc. Robert G. ( Heights Hospital, where she moistened cigar ash. Polish or!Banks U.S.A. A Broken Hip Breaks Record Guests Greeted by Couple in Shelby Ga rden Underwent an operation. rewax .—Frances. STAPP’S-reminding all parents . . DON'T FORGET! Now that the big kids ore off to school, the littlar opes might need sorae'T3fS»nfiojCtor^atI ~as^oe?"^ concerned. Little feet are Constantly growing, and you •know how time flies. Bring them in for a Check up. Their shoes need a report card often, “. Attending the son of Mr. and I Mrs. Robert Banks of Driftwood Drive, Commerce Township, and his bride for, the evening j ceremony in First United] Methodist Church of Milford were maid of honor, Mary ISchulthejs and best man Chris] Banks. ] Bridesmaids were Mrs. Richard Doran, Mrs. Gary; Suzor, Louise and Shirley Paige and-Penny Stafford with Robert LaClair,. Gary Suzor, Edward Cesa, Donald Brown, Michael McKusick and Richard Doran. ] The newlyweds will make their home in Oakland, Calif. :| SPECIAL SELLING! CHAIRS BY IXTCECOCK Renowned design, scrupulously reproduced from the 1826 original Hitchcock chairs. - Both styles are crafted in Black with antiquod cherry color seats and hand-applied floral stencil. Regularly $33 Each SALE $2695to. (Top) "The Country" stylo by Hitchcock is sturdy yet graceful and symmetrical. (Below) "Fantop" chair by Hitchcock with curving back. Both made on the site of the Original Hitchcock factory in Connecticut. 1680 S. Telegraph Rd. S. of Orchard Lake Rd. Free Parking • Open Thurs., Fri., Mon., ’til 9 STAPP'S 931 W. Huron St. 418 N. Mein Pontiac Rochester Evening Hours- Phone 332-3208 - a*1* i THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER II, 1968 C—8 When carrying a heavy pailj or large bucketyou-can prevent ; the pail from cutting into your! hands by slipping on an ohj' piece df gardenhose oVeritiei' wire handle. This makes a. handy grip and protects yours | School of Business Fall term subjects offered include: A101 Principles of Accounting I A102 Principles of Accounting II f A1 03 Principles of Accounting III 1211 Business Law I M l 10 Business Math I Mill Business Math II '' BA220 Salesmanship . A220 Federal Income Tax I BA201 Introduction to Business F330 Credits and Collections El 01 Business English I A201 Intermediate Accounting I Enrollments accepted through this week Approved for veterans Accredited by the Accrediting Commission for Business Schools, Washington, O.C. REGISTRATION INFORMATION: Writ*, visit or telephone far o copy of latest catalog. Woos* indicate interest in olttior or day programs. AMross: V* Wi.Laeranc* Straot. Phone FE 3-T028 18-24 West lawfdnce Street PONTIAC 4*NONE FE 3-7028 Fstenui Approved THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 12 9-JO A.M. TO 4:30 P.M. Jacobsons Open Thurs. &frl. til 9; Originala shapes twill today's way in a double-breasted woolxoat-of soft angles and ~ eased shoulder. Grey, hunter or royal.,” Sizes 8-16. 275.00 336 West Maple ’ ‘ Birmingham Thursday and Friday 'til 9 Small Appliance Preview See No Status in 'Status Quo' By JANET ODELL Women’s Editor, The Pontiac Press, No matter when you buy an appliance, the next ye&r something new and better' is produced. Just after I bought a floor scrubber and polisher sotne years ago, the manufacturers added the automatic dispenser for wax. Almost as soon as we had a bw wall oven installed, the had Teflon coated aide panelrthat slid out for easy cleaning. And so It goes. Last week I went to a preview press showing of new s m a 1 electrical appliances, put on by Detroit Edison Company in Deft ★ * Since I have absolutely no in setting my own hair, the hair dryers left me unim- A late November wedding is planned by Carol Louise Shoemaker and Daniel Edward Dobos, - s t uden t s at Wayne State University. She is the daughter of Mrs. Kenneth Shoemaker of Rochester and the late Mr. Shoemaker. The prospective bridegroom is the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Nichols of Cleveland, Ohio. 3L ower THE ASTER, STAR FLOWER Someone has said that flowers should ail be named by poets. The Aster,! the stately flower of such dignified beauty, is a native of china. Their ham ever, is derived from the Greek word “astra” for star. The attractive flowers range in color from white to dark purple. Because these flowers bloom at the time of the feast of Michaelmas, they are known in England as Michaelmas Daisies. Whatever the flower i* called, it is beautiful, all our flowers are beautiful and we ar-. range them especially for you. FE 2-0127 PEARCE FLORAL CO. 559 Orchard Lake Ave. on the market now or will be next month. ELECTRONIC OVfSN But what really “turned me on’* was the portable 115-volt electronic oven that plugs into any regular socket. It’s the counter type raytheon oven that the Industry has been promising us since the first of these ovens were made. Measuring 22x14 x14 inches and weighing 91 pounds, it can make cooking really instant. f ft ft If I can talk myself into spending a large sum . of money for this “gadget,” I’m going to have one. And if I do get one, you readers will be hearing works. before you lease many on the that sprays the hair before speedy drying cycle. Need coffee to get your eyes lopen In the morning? Even if you don’t have an automatic plug-in unit in your kitchen, you can start this new percolator without going near it. A control In the bottom of the pot allows you to set the timer up to 11 hours ahead. STIR AND BLEND Blenders get faster and mare automatic. But a non-automatic feature on a new model spatula that fits through a slot, in the lid. This allows you to stir the mixture and break any bubbles. It won't go down far enough to interfere with , the blades. Juicers are available tha eject all the pulp into a side container for easy disposal. Another one is combined with s can opener. Another Is a knife sharpened with five knives in a holder at the back. The whole unit fits flat against the wall under a conventional kitchen cabinet. A' -★ ft An iron that you dial for the proper temperature—an electric knife that swivels to cut horizontally—a range with a “warm and thaw” oven for keeping food warm or defrosting frozen food—a rotisserie that folds up to attache case size-ran inexpensive automatic light control for outdoor lights—all these are Pouring Spout Has Duo Purpose When you empty a round salt container with a metal pouring spout, cut off the top and slip it into a jar ring, the kind that is used on self-sealing jars. The result is a lid with a pouring spout that will screw on mason jar. You will find these i jars very handy When filled witq ingredients that pour. Garden Group Begins to Plan for Yule Sale It may seem rushing the season a bit, but members of the Birmingham branch, Woman's National Farm and Garden Association, are planning for the yule days ahead. Mrs. Lester Newbern of Oak-hills Drive will open her home Thursday for a luncheon meeting. Members will discuss plans for the group’s annual Christmas sale, scheduled for Dec. 4-5 in the Birmingham Community Hbuse. . ■, Again, for the 30th year since I, its inception, the group will also 1 make plans for its annual gift! to the City of Birmingham. I Mrs. Chester Wieniewski, president, has announced that this year’s show will be judged oh design, Quality - and originality. TR UBEY-LAMPHIER A honeymoon trip to Florida followed Saturday evening vows in Chr is t Lutheran Church, Milford, for Mr. and Mrs. Russell D. Trubey, (nee Virginia Lee Lamphier.) The bride’s bell-skirted lace gown teas complemented by a fingertip veil of illusion, capped with jeweled petals. She carried a cascade of white roses and carnations. Susan Lamphier was honor maid for her sister. Her parents are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Lam-phiers Jr. of West Livingston Street, Highland Township. David Jedele stood as best man for the son of Mr■ and Mrs. J)orwin Trubey of Arm Arbor, Mrs. Jedele, Crystal and Frank Off, LeRoy D. Paschke, James Toy and Geoffrey Linden completed the wedding party. A church parlors reception followed. row Old ? MEN FIRST In St. Fiacre’s time and for centuries after, knitting was a man’s craft. Women learned knitting from men and eventually, as women won more leisure, time, their numbers Increased far beyond those of the male knitters, ft ft. ★ Men’s interest In knitting is on the upsurge again, however. A neighborhood knitting shop in New York offers instruction in knitting? Tuesday nights are reserved for men only. Knitting is becoming popular among the ranks of men executives especially. They knit at home and on commuter trains, too. Most cDaim that they knit to relax and relieve the day’s tensions. The handsome cardigans shown here may tempt more men to take up the craft or at least to prod their favorite female knitters into making a topper for them. 3 SIZES The man’s cardigan can be knitted in small, medium and large to fit sizes 36 to 46, Use Bernat’s N y 1 o Germantown yam bn circular needles. For the little boy hi your life, knit 4be richly cabled cardigan in Willowspun yam, a Wool and jnylon blend. Instructions are | available to fit children’s sizes 8 to 14. For your copy of a leaflet giving instructions for both the, man’s and boy’s sweaters, send1 50 cents to Stitchin’ Time, care1 of The Pontiac Press, P.O. Boxl 503, Radio City Station, New[ York, N Y. 10019. Be sure to! include your name, address and1 zip code and ask for leaflet! SM6. Designed for Elegance: The Naturalizef pump Sophisticated is the word for this smooth suit shoe. With little heel, gently squared toe and a ' broad buckle trimmed with stripes of gold. Black Calf, Brown Calf and Black Napped Corfam. Sizea to 10;AAAAtoB Mr*. WilmS Garvin, invitea her many frienda to Wait her in her new home. , BLOOMFIELD PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER (Corner Maple & Telegraph) MA 6-2566 Chargw Account,. Of Comm RENT, SELL, TRADE---USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! Bloomfield Art Association 1516 S. Cranbrook Road Telephone 644-0866 FALL ART CLASSES BEGIN SEPT. 30th CHILDREN - KOiUNG PEOPLE - ADULTS 0-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1088 Help Stamp Out Trading Stamps By BETTY CANARY Learning how one can get nothing for something came easily to me. I learned this by carefully inserting several half-dollars into a slot machine. Learning I could never get something' for nothing came1 a bit harder. I mean, there I would be, leading newspaper ac-, counts about little old ladies' caught by con men with a poc-ketbook on a string, and I would say to myself, "poor dupes, poor dupes." And all the while I would be busily sorting my trading stamps and gluing them into the proper books." wee 1 I would scoff when told I was paying for the stamps. “These are a gift!" I would protest, al-i though protesting was difficult, [Ss after licking all those stamps; my teeth tended to stick together So, although I cannot pinpoint the day when I stopped believ- SEW SIMPLE By Eunice Farmer DEAR EUNICE, I can’t tell you how unhappy I am about the new appearance of waistlines in fashions. Perhaps it's because I’m not used to this look, but I can't see how it is going to do anything for anyone’s figure unless she is extremely thin. Since I began sewing when everything was nice and straight, I’m completely In the dark about how to measure for the length of the bodice, and I know that I must decide on that before cutting my dress. Please tell us how to measure correctly.—Mrs. M.M.L. DEAR MRS. M.M.L.: ' Tie a string tightly around your waistline and adjust it so that it is actually resting at your exact waist.1 Carefully measure yourself from the center of your shoulder, straight down over your bust, ending at the waist and mark this measurement down for comparison. You won’t make anything this exact measurement; you will add % inch to 1 inch for ease in th£ bodice front or back. If you wear avbelt, it is a good idea to I allow slightly more and actually put your belt on to see if the' „ bbdicrfeels comfortable. ■k ★ ★ We have become very spoiled, and you’ll find that a fitted bodice with a belt at the waistline doesn’t give you the ease and freedom you have enjoyed with the shift dresses. It is always a good idea to make the bodice slightly longer than youj will need. Attach your skirt and then try your dress on. It can1 always be shortened at the waist but can’t be lengthened if it’s too short. . If you are making a dress'with a waistline for the first time, make it out of inexpensive fabric for a trial run, perhaps this style isn’t for you! TAILOR TRIX WINNER This week’s Tailor Trix pressing board winner is Mrs. W. C- Nunnery, Rock Hill, S.C., for the following sewing hint. I have devised an almost fool-proof method which eliminates the annoyance of having the machine needle run off the edge while making a covered belt. Cut the belt backing and material to the desired size and shape. Carefully fold the material around the backing and press the edges of the material to exactly fit the backing. Unthread your sewing machine needle and stitch close to the edge all around the belt, beginning at the straight end of the backing. Fit die material, edges folded under, to the top of the backing. , ★ ★ ★ place your threaded machine needle in the first hole made by the unthreaded machine needle and stitch through both thicknesses. The needle will follow the holes all the way around and will not* slip off the edges. ing in this particular Santa Claus, I do know 1 was profoundly influenced by one of the| major stamp companies wtien they built a multimillion-dollar1 warehouse (wherein they stored all the free goodies) not too fary from where I lived in Cincinnati, [Now when I shop, I am more interested in the green of myf 'money than the hue of their [stamps. CLEANER CAR [ It isn’t just the money. When! we gaye up trading stamps our] family argument rate plummet-1 ed. Also, when I learned to not iplay games at service stations,' we all had more freedom as [well as a cleaner car, It is abso-i lutely wonderful to drive along! and not be ankle-deep in card-i ■board and perforated papers. | Now I DO remember the day; |we stopped playing gas station! [games. We started out for the] swimming pod (about 20 blocks [from home) and had our usual quarrel. "If we need gasoline,; stop where I’ll have a chance [to win a new car." s "All right," my husband said, ; turning around. “But I only heeded one more square and I’d get a colored TV.” “Go to my station!" our eld-!-jest demanded. "Ten gallons and; 150 cents and I get the posters II [wanted!” * * * ' ' * ) We were halfway there when fhe little kids whined, "But what [about the Dr. Doolittle place-[mats?" Their father turned the car again, but when we were almost there he started in [another direction. "Just remembered! I only need two more old-1 fashioned glasses this station is! giving away to complete my set!" ___________ ‘'AIL right," I agreed. But it, was too late. We ran out of ga^ on the expressway. up to 50% OFF DECORATOR CHAIRS NOW *6910 *89 Golden wedding celebrants, the Roy E. Sheffers of East Boulevard South will be honored Sunday with an open house from 1-4 p.m. at the Clarkston Township Hall. The affair will be hosted by daughters, Mrs. Bernard (Dona) King of North Edith Street, Mrs. Richard (Madeline^ Smith of Northview Road, Independence Township and sons, Robert of Bunker Street, West Bloomfield Township, Melvin of Exmoore Sereet, DeWayne of Feather stone Road and Arley of East Boulevard South: The honorees, who were married Sept. 20,1918, in West Branch, have 16 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. rmnmnnr irmnnm irrrriTnTrnrrrrn CONNOLLY'S Rings Come Off at Wrong Time | FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (£) — Mrs. Ralph Jarrell of [Hamlin, W. Va., told police that she had been unable to remove three diamond rings from her fingers for the last six months. However, when three masked men rushed into their apartment here to rob,Mrs. Jerrell and her husband, the crooks roughly jerked the rings from. her fingers and fled. The rings! were valued at $100,000. OF THE WEEK! Slim, •lagoni matched to par ad boquaWa • radio)* from a fine, ftoiry paor-thopad cantor diamond mountod with simplicity and distinction, delightful ond unforg*i»obl* — tho p*rf*c« gift to lost a hfatiino. $5,000 Credit May Br Arranged JtWHIM £ DEAR JUDYM.. Not knowing just what content your lace consists of, I am hesitant to tell you to wash it. Perhaps you could try a small end of it before you proceed with the entire piece. If it is merely limp and not soiled, try placing a piece of waxed paper under] and over it and press with a warm iron. This does wonders for fabrics that need a little pepping up. '• * ★ * It is almost Impossible to avoid some kind of “gusset detail" In today’s patterns. If you are bothered by this sewing problem, send 10 cents and a stamped, self-addressed envelope with your request for Eunice Farmer's booklet, “The Secret of Gussets”; to Eunice Farmer in care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. El-600, P.O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 4805$. Helps Two Ways When buying a ready-made dress that has to have the hem[ let down; gently unravel the thread the dress is hemmed | with and use this to rehem the' dress.. This assure you of matching thread and generally, there is more than enough to do [ the job. ■—j pulleu< s o4! "When you care enough to send the very best,” you will find famous Hallmark greeting cards, gift wraps, party accessories, notes, stationery, playing cards arid gift items in our new Hallmark Card Center. A special welcome awaits you ... we hope to see you spon! Visit The Thoughtfulness Shop Located inside the VILLAGE PHARMACY INDEPENDENCE COMMONS • t jA Foot Of Waterford Hill 5875 Dixie Highway 623-0245 HI BACK ITALIAN LO CANE BACK *69 LO ATTACHED PILLOW BACK *99 Champagne Costume at a beer price 48911 Marvelous in its simple, shapely lines. The kempt-ynn-perturable Shetland wool blend coat tops its own little . skimmer that matches the coats lining. Gray with pink or green or beige with brown, Sizes 5 to 13.8 to 16, THE PONTIAC MALL Use Elizabeth Lake RdL Entrance Pontiac—ShopMon.,Thnra,,Fri.,Sot.’tfl9 .Vte your convenient Hadley'* “multUchurge” COUNTRY AAANOR This Week at DOBBS you can SAVE up to 50% OFF on Chairs In Stock and get Immediate Delivery. Many one and two-of-a-kind samples in distressed framing, decorative colors. Accents of cane, fully lined kick pleat skirts, Poly Dacron cushioning and Scotchgarded Fabrics. MANY MORE STYLES NOT SHOWN. Terms to SuifYeu Professional Design ond Interior Decorating Service 2600 N. Woodward, Oloomfield Near Square Lake Rd.t LI 8-2200, FE 3-7933 OPEN: Wed., Thun., Fri., Sot. 10 to 9 (Men., Tues. til 5 P.M.) :* &V ** ' 15* ' * * : ' THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 C—8 19.4 Cubic Foot Spacemaster Supermart No Money Dovvn on Sears Easy Payment Plan — No payments Until February 1, 1969 Select-O-Cube Automatic Ice Maker lets you select the size Ice crescent you want and refills the bucket for a constant supply. Spacemaster shelves make space more usable. Large porcelain meat keeper holds 21.2 lbs. and crisper holds 19.2 quarts. 228 lb. full length freezer is completely frost-free. Save over $50 on it now! ' Ice Maker Installation Av*ll*bl. . Double-Oven Electric Range -399** This Kenmore automatic range is packed with features: automatic cooking plus closed-door broiling; Visi-Bake upper oven with French doors; sliding cooktop. In white, coppertone,or avocado, to blend with any decor. m 449®=? Double-Oven Gas Range Reg. 499.95 ai.a cu. ft. Spacemaster Supermart i%.499»" Automatic Ice Maker for a constant supply of Ice cubes. Completely irost-free. Installation of Ico Maker avail-abla Frostlcss 18.5 Cu. Ft. Only RPRPR-P Our most compact Supermart features 16:54)/. meat keeper and 24.5-qugn crisper. 14 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator £5*317 Rugged steel shelves are easy to remove for cleaning. Door shelves for bottles, packages. 11 Cu. Ft. Coldspot Now $17Q\W ON SEAMS EASY PAYMENT PLAN NO MONTHLY .PAYMENTS TILL FEB. 1, 1969 Open Monday; Tkarid*|T' Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to S«30 Sears! Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. C-6 THfe TOimaC TOESS, WEpNESDAY, SEPTEMBER II, 1968 Many Uses Eyed for Crawling Robots ---i---4---------------V—----—. Space Age Is Getting Creepy LOS ANGELES (AP) - In the dead of night a small army of robot crawlers rings an enemy camp and moves forward in an ever-tightening circle. On radioed command, machine guns mounted amid their spidery legs start a lethal cross . fire. Some of the advancing horde move on into key points and detonate their explosive burdens. Result: An wiped out, with not a single hu-j man casualty to the attacking: force. - How? The “creepies” are mechanical monsters, squat, eight-legged and capable of carrying five times their 100-pound weight over rugged ground. ONE BUILT Their Inventor calls them tery-powered and gear-driven, the legs could do something no wheelchair could do: step up on a curb without' assistance. It was stable, because four of the eight footlike pads at the bottom of each leg were on the ground at any given time. The pads, two at each corner, moved forward one after the' other in a slow walk. ■ Aerojet designer A1 Morrison I m Pit^ha'djtwo' flekingfrfietal "egTat!?^? a new chair, with wheels!hot^by radio, sending it over an entire outpostjeach corner of ^ Vehicle. Bat-that can be lowered to carrT thelobstaqle course. The hraln is ex- advanced CRAB has been proposed to carry two astronauts and their gear. OTHER APPLICATIONS During the lull In the lunar walker’s development, designers at Aerojet-General Corp.’s space division found other applications. •The first was a mbbile chair for invalids. In place of wheels, • A cheap, remote-controlled mine detector. ‘TEACHING TOOL’ The crawler has been equipped with controls so sensitive that a government agency is considering using it as a "teaching tool” for an advanced electronic brain. The “brain,” a miniaturized computer, would control the ro- Canada Set to MatchU.S. Stamp Price OTTAWA (AP) - The Yjuk kees who bring their mail to Canada are about to lose the incentive. If Parliament approves, and few doubt it will, the price of mailing a letter is going up to 6 the same as in the United ; invalid as fast as five m.p.h. on pected to remember the suc- The 5-cent rate effective now has made it a bargain for any U.S. vacationer who wanted to bring along his mail and affix Canadian stamps. There’s Wide Selection of Real Estate Courses at OU A wide range of courses for the a level surface, is being developed. * * * Other applications, Morrison says, include: • An “iron mule train." This would consist of a train of four material-carrying walkers, towed by a powered walker guided by a foot soldier. “The cessful path and follow it when story-no one can document it- CRABS, for Crawling Robot At- professional man in real estate tack Beds. One has been built |or jay man interested in join- train could haul up to 2, the order is given to send the robot through the course * * * If it goofs and lets the robot hit an obstacle, the computer 11 an electric shock disturbing Its circuitry. This should teach It to remember the correct path on following tries. .rt.iL — , , - ,Not so far off—or far out—is a and test-fired. Whether more!jng the fieid js available at Oak-P<>unds anywhere a so dier can o a] equlp a walker tefa will be made and used in com-|land University along with a-walk. Morrison said in an in-Lontrols which cKan ^ operated bat awaits the decision of mill- certificate program. terview. by accident and polio victims tary authorities. | The 16 courses are sponsored I • An ocean-bottom crawler, 'paralyzed from the neck down. An intriguing story, of adapta-,by the university’s Division of “One of the obstacles to. sea-j tion of space technology to far- Continuing Education, which is floor construction is the difficul- *D QUADRIPLEGICS flung fields, lies behind the de-’starting its fall schedule of ty of moving heavy equipment One type of control, already in velopment of the CRAB, now classes in the last week of Sep-| on such a soft surface,” Morri- successful use, permits such pa- of a U S. businessman- who comes to Canada frequently and pays all his home town bills under a Toronto postmark. He thereby saves a cent per letter, since mail bound for die United States takes the Canadian domestic rate. * ★ ★ For real penny-pinchers there still is a slight advantage to such a practice. Under current exchange rates, it takes about “ U.S. cents to get a Canadian dollar. That in turn buys 100 Just one of many types of vehi-. tember. Director of real estate cles utilizing its weird mode of education for the division is Ro- locomotian. ★ The Insectlike walker was designed almost a decade remote-control device to move on the surface of the moon, then believed to be hard and rocky. It was shelved when scientists theorized the moon might be , covered with a deep layer of powdery dust, and that a vehicle with fat wheels would be •better than a walker: Since then, soft-landing Surveyor spacecraft with trenchers have shown that lunar surface is!University. -land- D; -Nelson, Detroit real es-iever tate appraiser and counselor. The complete program leads to a special Oakland University certificate in real estate. The program was developed by the division and realtor boards in Oakland and Macomb counties. ★ * ★ More information on the program may be obtained by contacting the Division of Continuing Education, Room 263, South Foundation Hall, Oakland son said. “By adding buoyancy, tients, called quadriplegics, to we can give the crawlers what-operate motorized wheelchairs r—of—traction is de-[with small switches which they (move with their tongues. Protesters' Arsenal Displayed CHICAGO (^-Chicago police, whose club-swinging suppression of antiwar demonstrators during the Democratic National Convention made thjsm the nationwide target of both criticism and praise, say they were also the targets of a diverse and unique homemade armory. Officials earlier this week assembled a sample of the missiles used by peace advocates during the week of disturbances climaxed Aug. 28 by a bloody street clash in front of the Conrad Hilton hotel and replayed for. national audience by4elevl-sion. Capt. Charles Pepp told the Associated Press,v “More than a hundred weapons of every type were assembled in my office, but they represent just a, sampling of the total weapons confiscated by police during the week.” ■ He added that “60 per cent of the weapons used against police will be used as evidence in court.”. CARRIERS ARRESTED “This means that the demonstrators who used these from the Hilton hotel,” Pepp said. “I don’t know If the sword was unsheathed at the time and therefore I don’t include it In the 60 per cent which will be used as evidence. ★ ★ We have more than 307 police helmets which were smashed by bricks, bottles and stones,-” he ‘There is even one black widow spider which was thrown in a bottle into an automobile. The laboratory reported that the spider was definitely poisonous. ‘There are many clubs with neHs and razor blades driven into them and we have several hunks of one-inch cable, obviously meant for use as a blaek-Jack.” HALF A ROLLING PIN Pepp said there were “several golf balls and rubber balls with nails in them and even a half rolling pin which had been reamed and its inside filled witH lead.’ Police confiscated these weapons near the scene of the battle in .front of the Hilton, in Lincoln Park where hippies and other peace -demonstrators camped during the day and early eve- cents’ worth of stamps at anyjons were arrested and the ning and along Michigan Ave-Canadian post office. weapons were confiscated.” nue. Pepp added, “We don’t know! tob balls with the add. Several of these were dropped ln hotels, including the Hilton., “Police fojind clusters of nails taped together which could b« used in a. slingshot to put our tires on police cars,” be said YOUR CHILD MAY HAVE PIN-WORMS 1 OUT OP 3 DORS IlJiutiiit. mm dafctos rininmitinf netal itch m «rftm» toilmljdpi of Pin-Worm*... ugly parantea that medical experts ssy Infeet 1 out of every S persons examined. Entire families mar be victims and not knew It. T6ietrfd6fPffi-W«rn»i,they must be killed in the larfe intestine where they live end multipbr.That seaectly what Jayne's P-W tablets do... and here'a how they dq iil — , Pint—a scientific eoatinf carries the tablets into the bowels before they dissolve. Then —Jayne's modem, nmdimlly-approved ingredient goes rifht to work—kills Pin-Worms quickly, easily. Aik Don’t taka chances with danger- _is, highly contagious Pin-Worme which infect entire famiBee. Gst genuine Jayne’s P-W Vermifuge .., A new high-protein food supplement has been developed from chick peas and wheat. It expensive to make. how many rocks and bottles] “Twenty vials and one-half were merely put in trash cans, gallon of butryic acid were con-'A good example is a cane fiscated,” Pepp said. “These! ls_ said to he easy and _ln-_containing , a 20-inrh sw d r d,were made into stench bombs which police confiscated a block by soaking tissue paper and cot-| ACCUTRON — (By Balova) Sale* & Service 3 Factory-trained repairmen The TIME SHOP 151 S. Bates, Birmingham 646-7877___________ A nickel’s worth of Sno-Bol sanitizes, deodorizes and removes rust stains from your you-know-what. General purpose cleaners are fine for most jobs. But not for cleaning toilet bowls. They don’t deodorize,-sanitize, and remove rust stajrvs like Sno-Bol. Liquid Sno-Bol cleans in seconds While it deodorizes and sanitizes. It's faster and more cffi- . /jcient thacmsrry dr^ijw^^lcan&r^ou chrif*potrr Sno-Bol full strength to remove rust stains and calcium deposits. And it works better and costs less than other leading bowl cleaners. (Tly anickefc worth and see-) Do you know what's going on? . For example, Fa rah slacks are going on. So ar„e Arnold Palmer sweaters, Van Heusen shirts, McGregor sportswear,. Botany suits, Adler socks, Florsheim shoes. Wide ties. Four-button double-breasted suits. Deep-toned shirts. Horse-blanket plaid slacks. Muted Glen plaid &tattersall combination slacks. Neftfti-inspired ski- jackets. In fact, .everything you’ll see on campus can be seen ajt Osmun's now. So drop in. And find out what’s going on. STORES FOR MEN A YOUNQ MEN FREE PARKING AT ALL STORES ■ USE YOUR OSMUN’S CHARGE. SECURITY CHANGE or MICHIGAN BANKARD Tech Piaza Center in Warren (12 Mile & Van Dyke) • Downtown Pontiac • Tet Huron Center in Pontiac Open Every Night ’Til 9 Open Fri.’Til 9 Open Every Night’Til 9 THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER II, 1968 C—7 BUMS IN FOR THESE TREMENDOUS BARGAINS Jr.Miss Nylons,8’/> -10 '/> Our Reg. 48* QQd Limit 6 prsrWhile w wpr. quantity lasts. A Days Only miHtMJMMiiiiiiisimil Kr inkle JiyJon, | 28" Squares | Fall Colors | OnT38* I Our Reg. 58* | Limit 3-While quantity fasts. DOOR BUSTER SPECIA 9111111=1111 = IHmww SS ws*hiiiiti!RE8||iSiliii| -‘SliiiiSSij | Men's Cushion Work Sox E Reg. 3 prs. 1.06 Gpn.TQd E Limit 6 prsrWhile 1# ,or# O *' E quantity lasts. 4 bays Only Crochet Over- | the-Knee Hose E 8-9 Vi and 9-11 | 1 Our Reg. $1 E Limit 2 prsrWhile = quantity lasts, E EQB03HaSQ9iiiiiii=iiii| Boys' No^lron Checked Shirts, | Sizes 3to6x DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL I 17 Our Reg. 1.48 Limit 2-While quantity lasts. DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL Orlon*Acrylic_ Booties Fit Sizes 9toll «7‘38i |! Out Reg. 48* Pr. E jj jL/mff 3 pairs -While g f quantity lasts. E | *Du Pont tradtmark E 1 DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL Bundle of 7 SoKd Color Wash Cloths ■Mux: ■; iff.. . Napped Thermal Blanket Our Reg. 3.56 *%67 Limit 2-While Mm quantity lasts. 4 Days Only IllllllgiiliCXsZa; DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL 1111111=! G-E Clock Radio*C4403 Specially Priced VV67 Limit 3 n While m m quantity lads. 4 Days Only = I 18"x36" DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL | Cotton Flannelette Pcs. E'. Our Reg. 3/97* J8vds-00<£ = Limit 8 yds While *W *wWW E quantity lasts. 4 Days Only iiiiii=iiiiii»i>M:«:iii.i»;m:;nmgfiiiiiiiaiiiiirasPimii.ii4:MJ^Miiiiiiiig| Our Reg. 93* | Limit 2 bdls-While quantity lasts. Assortment of Large, Square Carpet Pieces 4 Days Only Jf Our Reg. 94* Limit 3-While quantity lasts. Feather/Foam Bed Pillow Oyr Reg. 1.94 *44 Limit 2-While m quantity lasts. 4 Days On//> ft "miTm!. ",,j‘ "wr: v 36“x6 Ft. / / '/ /// Room-darkening Shades Our Reg. 1.39 Limit 2-While 88* quantity lasts. 4 Days Only 111111=111111 Copper Metal Dust Pan OurReg.39* OOi” Limit 2-While quantity lasts. 4 Days Only 4 Spools #50 Thread, White, Black 4c64* Our Reg. 78* E Limit 2 pksr-While = quantity lasts. y E gnEasz39miiiiiin 20-Gallon Galvanized —Trash Con ^ 4 Days f/f Only jy .QurHeg.L93 Limit 1-While quantity lasts. 16" Zipper Utility Bag E Limit 1-While 8 = quantity lasts. 4 Days Only S DOOR BUSTER SP 13-oz* Can Mixed Nuts = Our Reg. 69* AtQd £ • Limit 2-While 5 quantity lasts.»mef ^ 4 Days Only ‘ = 1 I HlllllllE DOOR BUSTER SPECIA 32 Ff. Ounces KnHirt*Braiid Mouthwash I 4 Days 1 I Only I Our Reg. 47* i Limit 2-While § quantity lasts. H 5 j One Pound Of E j Hershey-ets, | Bagged,Bulk | 4 Days AM* | j Only HOI.. | ; Our Reg. 73* Lb. | Limit 2 lbs.-While E [ . quantity lasts. E ‘ ■'netwt, — 6.75Net0zr Crest Family Toothpaste Your Choice I Popular 10C Candy Bars Ip&i Our Reg. 10* ea. Limit 12-While quantity lasts. imhi DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL TOunces Net Right Guard* Deodorant 4 Days Only Specially priced Limit 2-While quantity lasts. DOOR BUSTER SPECIAL 78 10 r E - Our Reg. 76*—-~7 J Limit 2 pks:While quantity lasts. 1-Lb* Can of Danish CrowH Lean Bacon 4 Days Only ©©* Our Reg. 68* Limit 3-While quantity lasts.* *net wt. ya"x800-ln. Cello Tope = OurReg^3< 8At= Limit 3-While m"w £ quantity lasts. 4 Days Only E mini DOOR BUSTER SPEC iiuiii: toilet Tissne j 10-Roll Pack j Wkite, Postal j 10x68* Our Reg. 88* : Limit 2 pksr While I quantity Lasts. | Sandwich end Beverage £ Our Reg. 50* 1 Limit 1-While . ' Jmrmr l E quantity-lasts, 4Days Only—.....E- Mill All Styles Of = Sturdy DuPont = Nylon Combs e Your | Choice I Our Reg. 10* s Limit 8-While | quantity lasts, -c PONTIAC MALL DOWNTOWN I PONTIAC TEL-HURON CENTER I "CHARGEIT" - At All KRESGE Stores DRAYtON PLAINS ROCHESTER PLAZA BLOOMFIELD lc^ MIRACLE Ml1 * C=* THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER II. 10gg~ Indio's Moharajas Struggle to Preserve Kingly Privileges NEW DELHI, India (AP) -9 In return, the Indian govern- India’s once fabulous maharajas are seeking to preserve what little is left of their former ‘‘divine right of kings.” The / government is equally determined to curtail their privileges. The controversy is a legacy Inherited from commitments made to the maharajas when India became independent in 1947. The princes agreed then to merge their 562 states with the rest of India, surrendering their rule over lands inhabited by 100 millionv-people. ment of Jawaharlal Nehru agreed to pay them annual privy purses and permit them to keep two of their many palaces, ail their jewelry and ail personal assets. The individual privy purses ranged from 10 million rupees, now worth $1.3 million, for the Nizam of Hyderabad to a pittance of 192 rupees—about $25 —for the Maharaja of Katodia. The rates depended on the size of property, amount of income and population of each princely state. The maharajas pay no income tax and no real estate taxes Pm* their .palaces. They get free electricity and water. They do not need licenses to guns—many are avid hunters— or drive automobiles. They can import their personal'effects from abroad dutyfree. They enjoy freedom from arrest and all other processes of law except under written orders of. the Indian president. * * * The government wants to end these privileges immediately and phase out the privy purses over a 29-year period. The maharajas fear the move will slash away most of their income, by subjecting them to high taxes, and at tt\e same time involve them in litigation. > a * * \The government says it is prepared to meet them halfway on taxation and ban litigation involving their past actions. But the maharajas oppose such compromises. ' DECISION STARTED FUROR The present furor began with a decision last April to end what an official spokesman called "the princely anomalies.’’ The Cabinet assigned the ax to Home Minister Y.B. Chavan, but the maharajas, formed into k concord or union, have re2 fused to meet him. ♦ 'ft h> we refuse to be partners in writing this dark page in India’s history,’’ said the Maharaja of Dhrangadhra, the brain behind the concord. The maharajas feel Prime Minister Indira Gandhi’s government is motivated by politics. Many of the maharajas are in the vanguard of parties in opposition to Jhe ruling Congress party. PEOPLE DIVIDED The shapely Maharani Gaya-tri Devi of Jaipur is a thorn in the side of the Congress government in Rajasthan State. The Rajmata (dowager queen) of Gwalior has toppled the Congress party rule in Madhya Pradesh State. Important people seem divided on the issue. used to buy votes and corrupt Mohan Dharia, a Congress party member, told Parliament. On the other side is India’s elder statesman, Chakravarti Rajagopalachari, 89, a former governor general of India, who says: “It involves a matter of principle — to wipe out In 20 years what has been guaranteed under the constitution.” ‘‘The I to the supreme court or even the International Court of Justice. / The government is going ahead formulating plans amend the constitution and the purses are being1 princes are planning to appeal Divorces Lartnl K. from tarry Rebh. gloria 4rwn David M. Howard, •any j. (ram Roy n. Capno. Lata t. tram Prank siqdlnikl. Batty A. (ram Donald g. Nor Phillip O. 1-----r--------r “ ‘ a M. from Francos M. Ran*. Robart C. Hayat, (. Claona from Pawl S. Ackerlay. Henrietta C. from Paul W. Korte. Susan E. from Burton L, Lutaky. Ken noth R. from Lucy J. Emory. Karan from Prank N. Yauna. Bonn la from Larry SmagMush, Walter L. from Lillian E. Montroy. — c. from Suhll Cotton" K. from JetephY,. Lm I -ram Batty R Raymond V. from i y Ronqultia. we care what & stand for? (Besides The Great Atlantic and Pacific Tea Co., Inc.) Fairness, honesty, c|ependability and quality. Our founder established these business guides for A&P over 100 years ago. It is from this basic foundation that so many of our current-day policies have grown: Our Raincheck policy, for example, which assures you - that you will never miss out on an advertised item. Our policy of packagingjneats, that guarantees that the side you can’t see is equal to or better than the side you can see. Our complete and unconditional guarantee of anything you buy at A&P, no matter who makes it. Our dedication to quality in the production of our own brands. Quality standards so high that we guarantee any product bearing the A&P Seal is equal to or better than the nationally famous brands. • ' ■ 't '; You can probably sum it up in one word, “CARE.” We care about you. When you think abouHtrrrs COPYRIGHT ® 1968, THE GREAT ATLANTIC X PACIFIC TEA CO.. INC. i SENSATIONAL NEW BOOK OFFER Introduce your family to the men who, made America great! THE AMERICAN HERITAGE 12-VOLUME SET OF _ PRESIDENTS AND FAMOUS AMERICANS Volume 1 only Volumes 2-12 "nsss 490* 99c Garden-Fresh Fruits & Vegetables! McIntosh APPLES 3-59' firm. Crisp Head Lettuce ■ ■ Prune Plums w 3 > »• 59s Green Beans a. .ib 29« Sultana Dinners Beef, Ham Chvekr or Turkey BEEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY m A M Sultana Pies 5 ~ 97c BIRDS EYE FROZEN _ _ Peas in Butter Sauce.. . .29‘ BIRDS EYE FROZEN Corn in Butter Sauce .... 29* BIRDS EYE FROZEN FRENCH _ _ Greeft Beans in Butter Sauce ««•' 29* BIRDS EYE FROZEN A A. Tiny Tatars..... 33‘ Green Peppers.... 1w 19« Ann Pnge Spaghetti er Elbow ^ M A Macaroni 3"'-59‘ JANE PARKER MIX OR MATCH BreadSale 3 85c 35* 49* Cracked Wheat, Whole Wheat or Old Fashioned Wheat 1>LB. 3-OZ. SIZE .SAVE Sc . ,,.... . ....... Spanish Bar Cake... 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(AP) — Specialized items like perfectly round ball bearings, precision optical lenses and superstrong materials may one day be manufactured in manned factories orbiting the earth. ,Dr. George E. Mueller, the space agency’s associate, administrator for manned 'space flight, reported that absence of gravity in weightless space could "yield unique improvements in certain products. * * * “Molecular forces which have a negligible role in earth-bound manufacture may become controlling factors in orbital processes,’’’-.Mueller said. “Surface* tension and capillary forces, for example, can be put to work in the weightless environment.” He said that in space, buoyancy effects, disappear, mixing by convection currents does not occur and components of a different density can be readily blended. TAKES SHAPE “Material in the liquid state floating in a weightless environment will finally take the shape of a perfect sphere,” Mueller . said. “Thus, it is conceivable that metal ball bearings can be manufactured in space to tolerances of plus' or minus angstrom units, impossible in our present technology.” An, angstrom unit is one-hun-dred-millionth of a centimeter and is used to measure the length of light waves. ★ * ★ “Ball bearings made to these tolerances could revolutionize our machine-based civilization by reducing friction and noise levels fo the vanishing point, providing new levels of preci-sions,” Mueller said. He said the requirement exists for precision hollow sphere ball bearings to move large radar antennas, rotate large aircraft wings and support loads in ]et engines. CAN DISTORT METAL Mueller said “the application of electrostatic fields could be used to distort molten metal into many different shapes for many design purposes.” In weightlessness, layers of metals and nonmetals could be deposited Inside or outside a solid mold, and multilayer castings could be constructed. . * * * / “Because of the lack of convection currents," Mueller said, “it would be possible to flow liquid materials of higher temperature over surfaces of materials with even lower melting temperatures without disturbing the geometry. Using this technique, precision, nondistortion optical components such as lenses and mirrors of any size could be manufactured in space.” He continued that because the mixing and equal distribution of gas bubbles of any liquid can be stablized in space, materials with drastically different densities like steel and glass could be combined to develop new materials and structures “with a new optimum strength to weight ratio, temperature compatibility and ductility.” it if * it Mueller said that initial engineering experiments to study the feasibility of orbital manufacturing will be conducted on the first' three-man space station plamfed by the United- States for launching in 1971. Tests will Include electron-beam welding, evaluation of thermal control coatings, tube joining » and heat-exchange devices. Marriage Licenses Gary F. King. Blrm J. Canning, Blrmlngha Roger A. Rapelje, ... Carol A. Stacker. Novi. Eugene F.. Pearsall. Brighton, Mich, and Sylvia J. Cash, New Hudson. Billy G. Spence, 30 Wllllami and Joan L. Strlna, 34)3 Elmy. Horace T. Pugh, 71 Mathew and Viola B. Chenault, Drayton Plains. Martin R. Boatman, Farmington and Diane L. Easton, Southfield. __ Dennis B. Dafot. Waterford and Donna— G. Slmonds, OrayBnPlalna. Choose “Super-Right" For More Taste —Less Waste! STEAKS All "Super-Right" Steaks are cut from mature, corn-fed beef to give you more Eat in the Meat. "SUPER-RIGHT" Pork Roast 59 BOSTON STYLE BUTT CUT FROM BOSTOfJ-STYLI BUTTS Pork Steak.. CUT INTO CHOP* V*Pork loin cl . ‘69* , *75* ■CKRICH Smoked Sausage S 89 "SUPER-klGHT" ■U4fc# Sliced Beef Liver. .. .,b 59 "SUPER-RIGHT" FROZEN ■ 39 Hamburger Beef Steaks pkg." I CAP'N JOHN'S IREADED m dB. 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WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER II, 1968 Food Shortage Has Cubans HAVANA (AP) - The most ■erious food shortage in the history of Fidel Castro's govern-ment has stretched queues at reslaurantstq record lengths. > The growingJines represent a paradox as Prime Minister Casi tro pushed the people and the land to raise food production and ease the country's chronic shortages. * * ★ “ft is Well to remember that in this toughest of years for the Cuban consumer, the government may actually be making HH its biggest progress so far," jjj^' pleasure for most Cubans now. ’ At moderate-priced establishments the lines begin forming at midnight foy lunch the npxt day. It is not unusual to wait eight hours for dinner or to have the ey has less'value, since there are few goods to buy. Here are some examples of Cuba’s ration list for eating at home: Meat, weekly, 7 ounces per door shut in one’s face with the person of first-class cuts and 5 explanation that supplies have Jounces of second-class cuts; been exhausted. DROUGHT EFFECTS four ounces per person weekly, not always available in this island nation; coffee, 1% ounces per person weekly; chicken, one a month for persons over 65. Many other food products are not rationed, but amounts are restricted. All are expensive. In Usually, foreigners get muchilion. Of this, 135.2 million is iper, cent of the country’s foreign better treatment than Cubans. A. spent for rice, a Cuban staple, exchange. Thus a 30-40 per cent foreigner can make reserve- Castro says the island will no L,, jn sugar output due to the Hons at selected better restaur- longer have to import rice afterl. .. ^ been reflected in ants and walk by the line, toslrtl971 due to increased produc-1 * otber sec- on predinner cocktails and be tion. 8 , fairly sure of not being refused, * * *' f°rs> since the government-does not ^ government Mys jt als6| t if ant tn nffanrl fnro ffnnrc All ... 8 . ,« • . rpnnrtprilv IS fiOndmfl 12.25 Hill- Lines began growing early this year as effects of the severe drought of last year rose to the surface in the form of less fruit, vegetables, milk, beef, rice, tobacco and coffee in the mar- suggested one diplomat. Still the lines outside the restaurants grow and the menus shrink. Eating out fs seldom a No Primary Totals in One of Precincts WORTHINGTON, Minn. (AP) ■ The primary election vote In mid-March, Castro ordered all state and private bars closed and drinking confined to restaurant bars. The limit: two drinks' before dinner. The lines grew again and moved steadily toward a peak during the long, hot Caribbean summer. Queues on weekends, the traditional eating-out time for Cubans, had not been uncommon in the past, but now every day is like Saturday. was zero Tuesday in Little Rock LUCR 0F EVERYTHING Towrtship in southwest Minneso- _ , ,, , ta The main reason for the long A precinct worker, asked qdiyj *^as’J' the contin- election judges at the precinct Uing food shortage, but lacTof did not vote, replied: “They almost every other type of con-said they didn’t know who was sumer attraction - clothing, en-runijfog •» tertainment, appliances, auto- * ★ ★ mobiles, cosmetics—has played T.vld n Nelson of Moorhead an Important supporting role, defeated Allen L. Freebcrg of(With little or no rent to pay, Minneapolis for the Republican practically nothihgworth while nomination for public service I to buy and little’ reasbn to save, commissioner in the only con- Cubans have few places to tested statewide position on the spend extra pesos except res-ballot. Itaurants. Apart from food, mon- EAR WAX? Don’t usa pointed objects that may puncture eardrums. 'Drops help soften andloosan hard Wax plugs. Put KERID wash earwax out, Ask the Pharmacist ter KERID Drops. , CunuingliamSs: ounces oi second-class cuts; a.c •»» The government says it also 7 « ok -m butter, 2 ounces per person per many cases, a customer can want to offend foreigners. All wlll quadrupia milk production Ireportedly ls sending mu- month; grain cereals, .12 ounces (buy food products only at a restaurants are owned and oper-,to abolish ^ import _ $15.6 JJ* worth meat J® Founder of Program 1% pounds per person a store where he is known. For ated by the government, month, lard, one pound per per- example, he can send his child * * * son monthly; vegetable oil, one to buy two loaves of bread and| The foreigner also has access pound per person monthly; fish, then buy two himself, or in the|to 8pecial unrationed food stores same way come into possession! of several dozen eggs harrying Products Cubans sel‘ The difficulty in buying goods rom see‘ * * * adds pressure on the restaur- _, .' ... . . . .... . ants. They have begun handing I Eve" wlU! rationing, Castro for Tots Is Honored« fc'&rJBrC. TIME TO SHOWER food imports, a total of $232 mll- LtMA, Ohio (AP) — LimaJ “I get to a restaurant at 8 j Jaycees honored Russell Me, a.m. and line up for a turn," Lean Tuesday for his devotion!01* Cuban “At "oon 1 . . > 5 . ., „ get, say, turn No. 70.1 go home, to a project which has brought a£h showerand ^ back to few moments of happiness to ,unch t 5;30 „ thousands of hospitalized chil- , .. .. d The system lessens the tune ‘ 1 SR - in line, but thousands of man- McLean initiated, in 1951 a power ’hours are lost daily ^ queues. import million annually—and raise the output of fish, beef, vegetables, coffee and citrus. EXPORTS ARE UP One factor affecting food supply has been an increase lit food exports to make up for the fall in sugar production this year. Cuba, despite diversification efforts, still has a one-crop economy. Sugar normally earns 80 this year. Last year it sent none. Spain is scheduled to buy $1 million in Cuban beef in 1968. Tofis of grapefruit, limes, coffee and fruits are Europe-bound. Exports have made cigars and rums almost nonexistent to buyers here. “It looks to me like the Cubans are exporting everything possible,” says a Western trade source. Septatnbar WALLPAPER SALE Room Lots .... .from 1,98 Stock Paper... from 19es.r, Paint......from' 1.59 gal. ACME PAINT project to provide a free teddy bear to every child who entered a Lima hospital. Advancing years forced him to enter a convalescent home, and the program was taken over by the Jaycees. Harried. restaurant workers, under Communist party prodding, Work without tips. Complaints about waiting fall on jdeaf ears and it is useless to at- Now 76,"McLean rejoined ttie jgjgffi ffi one's way through project briefly Tuesday. He &C-the diffjcuittes.____________ companied Jaycee officials to > Hotel dining rooms are rest. Rita’s Hospital, where he stricted to serving guests, not presented the 60,000th teddy the public. The government has bear to 2-year-old Britt Talbert.- placed even the less expensive MORE hotel coffee shops off-limits to JK229aed Sept. 11 (the public. Sears .BJSAR& ROEBUCK AND fO. Sal* Ends Saturday, Sept. 14 COLOR TV SALE Lightweight Silvertone Compact Portable TV 249s8 This is a compact portable that is truly lightweight ... weighs only 39 lbs., yet it. gives you sharp, bright color pictures. Also included are two built-in antennas for great reception. 11-in. diagonally measured picture. Feature Packed Portable Big Screen Portable TV Beautiful 15-in. diagonally measured color picture. Big U-Tti. ovalspeakerforatatie-free sound. UHF and VHT antennas for clear reception. 25988 18-in. picture measured diagonally. Built-in VHF and '“UHF antennas assure you vibrant, color pure pictures. Static - free 4 - in. speaker. 32988 Sears Forecast Typewriter M >»«•“ ^^97 Include. W carrying case. • Saers Offtc* SuppliM Giant Consolette TV Use as a table model or with optional legs as a consolette. Giant 295-sq. in. color picture with a bonded; etched tube to eliminate glare. 37988 Sean TV end Radio Dept. ■^BARGAINS! HUGE SAVINGS ON ALL BRAND NEW MERCHANDISE! Genuine Ortho Mattresses Are Sold Only at Ortho Stores! si 12 PIECE KING SIZE SLEEP SET Luxurious, Quilted Button-Free! 7 ft Long-6 ft Wide Mattress and 2 Box Springs! Here’s What You Get: • King Size Mattress! • 2 Box Springs! • King Size Metal Frame with Casters! • King Size Mattress Pad! • 2 King Size Fieldcrest Percale Sheets! • 2 King Size Pillowcases! • 2 King Size Pillows! EASY CREDIT TERMS 178 INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS No Money Down on Scare Easy Payment Plan... No Monthly Payment# Till Feb. 1,1969 on Sean Color TV ORTHO, THE BIGGEST MATTRESS CHAIN IN THE NATION! 12 PC. KING SIZE SLEEP SET HUGE 7 FT. LONG r-6 FT. WIDE MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING! HERE’S WHAT YOU GET: King Size Mattress — King Size Box Spring — King Size Metal Frame with Casters—King Size Mattress Pad—2 King Size Fieldcrest Percale Sheets •*- 2 King Size Pillow-, ' "taseB —2 Krng Siza"Ptttows! —— EASY CREDIT TERMS Buy Direct from the Mattress Specialists and Save! /DOUBLE / BONUS! ■ Kinc or Qimm Sin QUILT ! BEDSPREAD Plus Kinc c . Queen Sin HEADBQAnl \*ia 12 PIECE ffUEEN SIZE SLEEP SET 60. IN. WIDE-80 IN. LONG MATTRESS AND BOX SPRING-. HERE’S WHAT YOU GET; Quean Size Mattress - Queen Size Box Spring — Queen Size Metal Frame with Casters — Queen Size Mattress Pad — 2 Queen Size Fieldcrest Percale Sheets — 2 Queen Size Pillowcases —-2-Queen Size Pillows! EASY CREDIT TERMS *128 INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS FIRM TWIN OR FULL SIZE MATTRESS & BOX SPRING Firm for added support! Deeply cushioned tempered steel coils. Attractive extra heavy cover. Handles and ventilators for easy turning, long lasting comfort. EASY CREDIT TERMS 78 INCLUDES DOUBLE BONUS Copyright © 1968 ORTHO MATTRESS Open Daily 10 a.m.-9 p.m. • Sat 10 a.m.-6 p.m. • Sun. 12-6 p.m. (Livernois Closed Sunday)• Phone Orders Accepted • No Cash Down, Up To 24 Months To Pay* 2211 S. TELEGRAPH, PONTIAC MIRACLE MILE STORE ONLY, OPEN SAT. UNTIL 9 P.M. PHONE: 332-2227 "IF YSU'*C H0< j SLEEPING ON XN ORTHO MATTRESS YOU'RE NOT SLEiNNS" FREE PARKING AT ALL ORTHO STORES Other ORTHO Stereo in Detroit, Livonia, Lincoln Pork, Roseville, Dearborn fir Oak ParkII WE HONOR MICHIGAN BANKARD and SECURITY CHARGE fi THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER n, 1968 C—11 AP Wirephoto WAR FORGOTTEN — A little Vietnamese girl spends a quiet afternoon with her parents at the zoo in Saigpn — away from the turmoil of war. Barring of Private at Big Airports Suggested EVANSTON, m. (AP) - One way of reducing the congestion at major airports would be to bar all private planes, the vice president In charge of operations and engineering for the Air Transport Association of America said today. “While this seems at first to be harsh, it has economic validity in that airlines and their passengers provide virtually all the income at these terminals," said Clifton F. von Harm. ★ # ★ -......... e spoke at the Northwestern University Transportation Center’s annual Airline Management Conference, attended by some J50 major executives of “U.S., Canadian and European airlines. Von Kann continued: ‘further, when an airliner is diverted from its scheduled destination, a penalty is paid in inconvenience to the passengers on the diverted flights and to the many other passengers waiting 'to use the aircraft on subsequent flights.” . ★ fti ■ “Private traffic has much greatel* flexibility and enjoys a good choice of other airports within a 40-mile range of any major terminal,” he added! “In other words, diversion i minor inconvenience to a private aircraft; with an airliner it causes great difficulty not only to the passengers but to the entire air transportation system.” Street, Utilities in Housing Project Get Okay Despite two dissenting votes, the City Commission last night agreed to move ahead on construction of a street and sewer and Aater utilities in the planned 525-unit North Hills Farms rent-supplement housing project West Kennett adjacent to Alcott Elementary School. District 2 Commissioner Robert C. Irwin and District 5 [Commissioner Robert F. Jackson , protested a resolution Relations Unit Adds Member, Loses One City commissioners last night appointed Samuel J. Whiters of 391 Orchard Lake to the Human Relations Commission to fill the unexpired term of James Mathews, who recently resigned. The term runs until December. Commissioners also accepted the resignation of Ronald Covaulf of 125 N. Johnson from the Human Relations Commission. Covault, chief trial attorney for the county prosecutor’s office, cited the press of other obligations. which would allow developer Charles L,. Langs to put up the money for construction, then be paid back part of the cost under the city’s special-assessment formula. « ★ * * Jackson and Irwin said the city was, in effect, subsidizing angs. Irwin said that in the past the city had always required subdivision developers to pay for the entire cost of roads and utilities in a subdivision. CITY COST CITED Irwin estimated that it would cost the city $25,000 to perform the work under the special assessment policy. The street Involved In the proposal would eventually connect West Kennett to an extended Columbia, which is expected to cross the Grand Trunk Railroad line and eventually hook up to Telegraph. jt » ★ Commissioners voting i n favor said the rent-supplement program Is bringing needed housing into the city. They approved of the city picking up part of the costs. Mayor William H. “Taylor Jr. In defending the expense, said the route will connect two jor arteries. 'FILLING A NEED’ District 4 Commissioner Jack Douglas said the r e n t - a u p-plement housing will provide living quarters for many senior citizens who are badly in need of living accommodations they can afford. Taylor said Langs is the only developer in the city who has been able to produce. * * ★ i In other action, the commission: Approved creation of an area from which an urban district citizens council comprised mostly residents of the city’s two urban renewal districts will be chosen. • Approved sale of eight lots on Baldwin south Owen to the Red Bam (restaurant) System, Inc., the lowest oftwo bidders, for $54,000. The only other bidder, a contracting company which proposed ty build warehouse, quoted a $12,000 price. STATE REQUIREMENT The district area and citizens council to represent the district are required under Drain Report Due at Sylvan The Sylvan Lake City Council will meet at 8 tonight at the city hall, 1820 Inverness, to hear an engineer’s report o n improvements for a storm drain at! Avondale and Garland. City Manager Leroy Tractom explained that because of the drain’s proximity to Sylvan Lake and its small size the area has experienced flooding during heavy rains. * * ★ .“‘It’s a temporary problem, but the heavier the rain, the more flooding there is,” said Tractom. terms of a state legislative act passed this summer. The act makes it necessary for the city periodically to consult with and advise the council regarding all aspects of urban renewal plan, including tile development of housing for relocation, Director of Urban Renewal James L. Bates told the commission. ★ h it Approved last night were the area boundaries, which contains both the R20 and R44 urban renewal districts and generally includes the area bounded by Pike, Paddock and West Widetrack. The commlssioh next week will hold a hearing on the establishment of an ordinance creating the council. Members will be selected later! MOST AREA RESIDENTS The council will Include 10 to 25 persons, the majority of, whom must be residents of the district , area.- Persons other than residents may be selected if they have tangible and substantial interests in the urban renewal area. For County Land Rezoning Bids Rejected Petitions of the Oakland County government to rezone several areas of county property were denied by the Pon-lac City Commission last night. On recommendations of the city planning commission, the City Commission denied requests to rezone: to commercial, the county’s 4H prop? erty; to M-l (manufacturing), 1 property west of Stanley and south of the Grand Trunk Railroad marshalling yards; to M-l (manufacturing), several lots east of Telegraph and south of West Walton; and to Commercial-3, a parcel on the south side of West Kennett between the Grand Trunk Belt Line and Sarasota. County agents had indicated the county Wanted the rezonlngs to make the land more salable. 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MEN'S MOCK TURTLE SHIRTS LADIES' TRICOT GOWNS VISCOSE SCATTER RUGS SHOP DAILY 9:30 A.M. TO 10 P.M. SUNDAYS... NOON TILL 6 P.M, FREE PARKING MONEY REFUNDED IF YOU’RE NOT SATISFIED THIS rUiVTlAC FHK88,. WEDNBSDAV, SEPTEMBER11, 1968 Youth Joins Philly Gang for Research PHILADELPHIA lav-Richard Stevens, 18, a clean-cut youth from suburban Newtown Square, Just spent two weeks naming with a gang in Philadelphia’) Manayunk section. “I was scared the first week,’! recalled Stevens. “No one accepted me. Every one of them thought I was a narcotics agent. TTiey think any outsider is a police agent." ★ ★ ★ But Stevens eventually was accepted anif once was even picked up by the police. Stevens said he Joined the gang because of his staff work with a summer program at Denbigh, the Pennsylvania Episcopal Diocesan Conference center. KIDS UNINTERESTED “We had problems with some of the older kids In town. They didn’t seem interested in doing anything and just hung around street corners,” said Stevens. “I Was interested in them, had some ideas on the situation, and wanted to see what motivated the guys in this group —a very influential one among boys in the 17 to 22 age range. “I talked to a social worker about my ideas, but I wasn’t trying to go in to help them. Maybe It was very selfish on my part; I wanted the experience of getting to know these boys because of my own sheltered, isolated background. ★ ★ -“The problem was how to relate to them. It becomes a value Judgment as to whether or not to help them get out of their present situation. I’m not sure they want to get out, and I'm not going to try to change them. But I thought maybe what 1 found out could help someone else help these kids.” Gang leaders agreed to let Stevens run with them as a favor to the social worker, who had helped them. He said the group could be described only loosely as a gang, because it wasn’t organised. wandered about . At first he wandered about the streets at night until be found the other gang members. An average night, he said meant running through the area three or four times. Stevens said the boys didn't commit any crimes. ★ w ★ v Policemen occasionally stopped them, asked them questions and once picked Stevens up on disorderly conduct charges. “We weren’t doing anything, we really weren’t’ said. “There were three of us Just standing around one night when the cops arrived. They pushed us up against a wall and frisked us. Then a paddy wagon came along to pick us up. “I was only in jail two hours. I got my traditional phone call! and caned the social worker who came down right away and fold them what I was doing there.” Next day a magistrate dismissed the charges. He said he managed to make friends with the youths. Stevens kept a diary and is now trying to work out specific proposals to help others hying to work with gangs. Brothers Strive to Save Indians Washington A Stone Age Indian tribe with a reputation for ferocity and witchcraft does not take kindly to efforts to save It from extinction. Two Brazilian brothers, Orlando and Cladio Villas Boas, braved showers of arrows, me-1 laria and trackless jungle to res-j cue Brazil’s Tchjkao tribe. They describe their adventure in the September issue of National' Geographic. * * * The suspicious, warlike Tchi- the Villas Boas brothers searched them out in the 1950s, White invaders, lured by riches to diamonds, gold, pelts and land, spread disease, and at times even machine-gunned many tribes. Today only 53 Tchikao survive of an estimated 400 ten years ago. . ★ * “As the years have passed,” the brothers write, “we have come. to. love and resp^t toe Indians, and we feel now it is (important) to abate the tragedy that i* inevitable when the wavs of civilization -er a*h against the shores of primitive cultures. W« consider purtelves that and foremost protectors of the tribe." „ , - the 'new look' of features exciting, bold and dramatic sofas & chairs OUTFITTING COMPANY removes you from the plain and ordinary. Mediterranean inspired super-size foam padded Sofa with distinctive cut-Out etched baseband built-in slate-top End-Tables. Huge selection of fabrics and colors for immediate delivery. This luxurious sofa is now sale-priced to save you $80! Kirigsize SOFA no money down $20 a month Coordinated Mediterranean Plush VELVET-Tufted PILLOW Back & Seat LOUNGE CHAIR............. Huge selection of colors & fabrics. MARBLE-top COCKTAIL TABLE shown (part of complete table grouping) starts at . . . *5995 nobody has more Mediterranean furniture at lower prices than m Peoples Spanish SALE (if you didn’tknow that,..you don’t know Peoples) just 2 typical values of hundreds morel Free Parking Free Delivery up to 100 miter Telegraph & Sq. Lake Miracle Mile Shopping Center also Ip DETROIT •/ PONTIAC • ANN ARBOR • FLINT Jj PORT HURON Open nite til Romantic Spanish carved bedroom group and never priced so low. Marie by world famous 'Bassett*. Rich, warm Dark Pecan over deep overlays md _ sculptured styling. Indudes: Triple Dresser, Mirror, huge Chest and twin/fuU Headboard and Frame, The look and quality of bedrooms selling for $100 more. Worrying 'Begins;' Tiger Ace Now 29-5 THE PONTIAC PRESS WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER II, 1868 D—1 Felts Among Four Trimmed by Detroit DETROIT (AP) — The Detroit Lions of the National Football League got down to their 40-player limit today by releasing four players. Released were running back Bobby Felts, pass receiver Sims Stokes, defensive end Lew Kamanu, and defensive back Mike Bass. Felts had been with the Lions since 1965 after being acquired from the Baltimore Colts in a trade. He has been used almost exclusively for spot duty. He carried the ball 64 times for 207 yards and a 3.5-yard average during his Lions career. Felts scored two touchdowns. Bass was received on waivers after playing with Green Bay last year. He Olympic Sweep Seen for SOUTH LAKE TAHOE, Calif. . (AP) — • The United States, says Jim Hines, will be 1-2-3 in the 100-meter dash at the Olympics next morith in Mexico City. The United States, says Dave Maggard will be 1-2-3 in the shot put. ★ . Ill ★ Hines, on his 22nd birthday, was buoyed by his victory Tuesday over Charlie Greene in the 100-meter dash at the Olympic track and field trials at the Echo Summet track near hire. He won in 10.0, tying the existing world record.rbut one-tenth off the mark he shares with Greene and Ronnie Ray Smith. Maggard was optimistic because of his 67-4% shot put, enough to give him second place to George Woods, 68% and to beat world record holder Randy Matson, who was third with a put of 67-1%. RELAY RUNNER Hines, Greene and Army Capt. Mel -Pender will make up the U.S. 100-meter Olympic squad, with Smith, who finished Just behind Pender, on the team as an alternate and 400-meter relay runner. . Hines said he felt that the trio would Sweep the medals in Mexico City and areserved the,gold one for himself. The continuing battle between himself and Greene for the title, of world’s fastest human has yet to be totally resolved, but Hines has now won six of their 11 meetings. *■ * '* “Pender was out front at 80 yards,” said Greene who finished at 10.1, one-tenth ahead of the 31-year-old soldier and three other runners. “I thought 1 was out of it I had to be ferocious.” Wood’s winning shot put came on hiis first attempt as did Maggard’s second-place effort. In other activity Tuesday, Geoff Vanderstock of Southern California led the way . into today’s 400-meter ip-termediate hurdles finals, by winning his J senffinal heaf in the world record. Tom Wyatt of Portland, Ore., wpn the other' semi in 49.3. ★ * * . - A1 Oerter topped the discus qualifiers with a toss of 201-6 and seven polie vaulters cleared the qualifying height of 16-0. played his college ball at the University of Michigan. Kaiffenu, a 6-foot4, 250-pound Hawaiian was a rookie with Detroit last year. The product of Weber State in Utah was used primarily oil speciality squads. Stokes, was acquired several weeks ago from the Pallas Cowboys. He is from Northern Arizona. Professional football sang a sad S«p tember song Tuesday for three of ^ all-time greats — Lou Groza, Jimmy Taylor and Tommy McDonald. All three reached the end of the line as active players, leaving behind scores of (1) memories and (2) lines of type in the record books. Groza, the 44-year-old pot-bellied placekicker who holds the pro football scoring record and was an outstanding tackle in his younger days, was removed from the Cleveland Browns' roster and hired as a coach. Taylor, the smashing fullback whose decade of power running made him a legend with the mighty Green Bay Packers, retired after one season with the expansion New Orleans club and took a public relations job with the Saints. The Atlanta Falcons released McDonald, the acrobatic 34-year-old flanker who caught 488 passes in an 11-year career, fourth rest in National-Football League history. YOUNG KICKER “I had said that I didn’t want to be the one who would have to say this is the end of the line for Lou Groza,” said Blanton Collier, Cleveland coach! “He still thinks that he can kick the football, and I do, too, but we have a fine young kicker in Don Cockroft and we want to examine his potential further. We felt that we could Nwt - put Cockroft on waivers and expebt'to keep him.” (Continued on Page D-3, Col. 1) I Chinook Salmon 1^ Luring Fishermen to Muskegon Area MUSKEGON . 101 400001- 0 * 2 1 12 Burqmeler W.Harrelson Kaaley Locke T—2:32. A—22,411.1 .2 2-3 3 1 1 ALL-ROUND PERFORMANCE — Detroit Tiger right- and scattering nine safeties in a 7-2 triumph, the star organisthanded mound ace Denny McLain was a one-man show Tues- athlete cracked a triple (bottom photo) and two singles, good day night as h£ matched the club record for victories in one for two rims batted Jn /and one_rtto scored. The_ win was his. season. In addition to striking out 12 California Angel batters 29th against five defeats. AF Wlrephote OLYMPIC TRIALS CASUALTY — Pole vaulter Jon Vaughn, the 1968 collegiate champion from UCLA, lies in pain Tuesday after landing during a practice session it the UB. Olympic Team trials. Hie injury, believed to be a pulled hamstring muscle, may force Vaughn out of tomorrow’s pole vault finals ip the trials at South Ladke Tahoe, Calif., and thus.deny him. a spot on the US. Olympic team. Still Can't Try DETROIT (AP) — Maybe one of these days Ted Manning will be a professional basketball player, but in the meantime it seems as if all odds are against him. The 6-foot-5 guard was drafted by the Detroit Pistons of . the National Basketball Association hi 1966 from North Carolina college. A week before he was to report to-the Pistons he :was drafted again — by the U.S. Army. 6 ★ k \ After his two years of military .duty Manning notified the Pistons hie was ready for another try. That was two weeks ago. „ Tuesday he walked into the office of piptons’ general manage Ed Coil — with his right hand in a cast. Manning said he broke a finger recently in a pickup basketball game. .., ★ ★ ★ The cast ' will be mi force to four weeks. Goach Donnis Butcher- Said hopefully Manning can' return to foe tew for foe last week of foe training seapon. Draft Machinery for Stocking BOSTON <\JPI) % Officials of the American League’s newest franchises,' Kansas City and Seattle, will play a $10.5 million guessing game Oct. 15 when the expansion clubs are stocked in a massive players. 45 major or minor leaguers. After a player is selected from a team, say from the Red Sox, Boston then will be permitted to protect three additional player draft to be staged in a Boston hotei~ ballroom. The mechanics of the draft, under careful study for months by American League officials, call for foe selection of-' 60 players, 30 by each of the two new dubs, too costjbf$175,006 each., . .. . •' ★ * * -^“TTiat' tneam" the new entries will “be-paying $5.25 million for their playing talent and redistribution of that tidy sum will pay each of the ten existing American League teams $1.05 million for the loss of six players apiece,. The draft, to be conducted by American League President Joe Cronin with the aid of a computer, officially got underway today — the deadline for submission to league headquarters of all the players in the major and minor league organizations and each AL team. FLIP OF COIN The next public step in the process will be tite com flip to deeide which team, Seattle or Kansas City, gets first choice from the players made available to them ; by .their future rivals. All the players go on the list .and each team will be allowed to protect or freeze Season ticket sales for 1969 reached 4,654, it was announced Tuesday by the Royals on only the fifth day of ticket department operations. Michigan Marksmen Pacing Pistol Event PUT NAM V ILL E , Ind. (AP)-Michigan marksmen dominated the first day of shooting Tuesday- in the three-day Indiana State Police pistol matches at the Prison Farm range. “ Elwyn Burnett of the Michigan State Police won two. of .five matches and captured the over-all title in .22. caliber firing. ■' ★ it W Burnett’s teammates, Richard Brantner and Dorr Wiltsey, won one. match each and helped Michigan State Police win the Class A team title. Frank Gentile of the Detroit police won . one match and Grand Rapids police captured the Class B team title. * Horton Helps Indians, but Npt Enough By the Associated Press Tony Horton has hit more home Tuns and driven in more runs than anybody else for Cleveland. Yet he feels he’s not done enough—because foe Indians are out of' the American League pennant race. Horton, acquired by the Indians from Boston lira June T967Trade, drovefoTwo runs with his 13th homer and a triple to pace Cleveland to a 6-2 victory over Minnesota Tuesday night. He has 56 RBI. ★ * ★ He also haiUhe dubious distinction of hitting into the. major leagues’ seventh triple play of the season in his third time at bat, but it didn’t matter much to him because he hit foe ball well. “It couldJiave been better and it could have been worse,” Horton said in assessing his season. “I wish I could have contributed more, and I wish we’d have won the pennant. We^ were to-it until—we went toto Detroit (Aug. 641). We lost four in a row over there. The first one went 17 innings, and it took something out of us to lose it.” Horton grounded into the triple play in the fifth inning after foe Indians had scored one run on Joe Azcue’s single and had runners on first and second. AROUND HORN He grounded sharply to Rich Rollins, who fielded the ball near foe third base bag, stepped on it and fired to second baseman Rod Carew. Carew completed the tripleplay by relaying to Bob Allison at first. Horton was out by more than a step. ~"TRfftito®® Romer,^ a 385-foot shot to left leading off foe second inning for the game’s first run, and his triple, which seored Rich Scheinblum, who had doubled in the third, off loser Jim Kaat 12-12. - „(Continued on Page D-2, Col. 5) Ashe, Pro Netter Beaten in Finals FOREST HILLS, N.Y. (AP) — Arthur Ashe finally lost a tennis match Tuesday but foe United States’ Davis Cup hopes got a boost anyway. I *•- ■ The slender Negro, winner of the first U.S. Open singles championship Monday, went down to defeat in the doubles final after a marathon semifinal match that took three days to complete.— ■k it it Ashe and Spanish pro Andres Gimeno succumbed 11-9, 6-1, 7-5 to Stan Smith and Bob Lutz, a pair of 21-year-olds from the University of Southern- California who figure to be the U-S. doubles team in Davis Cup play. The Americans play the winner of a series involving India, Japan and West Germany for foe , right to oppose Australia in foe® Challenge Round. The dates are Nov. 8-10 with foe site' to be determined. ' . .: ■ * *• ■ *• -__________ ——— Ashe and Gimeno defeated Clark Graebner of New York and Charles Pasarell of Puerto Web Tuesday in a semifinal match that began Sunday and .was halted by darkness Sunday and Monday. Hie scores were 6-4, 3-6, 4-6,20-18, 15-13. Then they bowed to Smith and 'Lutz. ". rk k Si . ' * . Ashe completed foe doubles on legs made rubbery by 162 games of tennis In 24 hours. He beat Tom OkkCr of The Netherlands in five sets. Monday for the singles crown. " MINNqjpTA Schnblum rf 3 1 2 0 Nettlei rf Azcue c 4 011 Alllion lb - THorton lb 4 2 2 2 Roseboro e 4 0 0 0 Rollins 3b Jill 1 0 Kostro If 4010 Total 14.4103 Total 33 2 7 2 Cleveland ...0 1 2 0 1 0 00 0—4 Minnesota—0 00 200 000—2 . E—RonClark. Roseboro, Alvis. TP— Minnesota 1. LOB—Cleveland . 3, > Minnesota 7. 2B—Scheinblum 2. Tovar, Roseboro, Kostro:- 3B—T.Horton. HR— T.Horton (13). SB—Nelson. S-S.WIIIIemo I RERBBSO _ SWttams (W,12-1« t 7 *-2 -ir* 2 1-3 4 3 “ 2 J ... 1 2-3 0- 0 0 t T—2:24. A—13,454. AL Countdown W. L. Pet. GB DETROIT .. 82 54 .630 —-Baltimore ... 83 62 .572 8Mt 11—at Ctlifornlai 13a 14? 15-rQekland;i 17# New York; 20, 21a 22-at Washington; 23, 24, 3 Baltimore; 27, 28, 29—Washington. Boxer Tries Comeback DETROIT (AP) — Gene Gresham, formerly ranked by Ring Magazine as No. 7. among world lightweight boxing contenders, is trying to make a corn-back. Gresham has signed to fight at Olympia Stadium, Sept. 20 against yet un-. named opponent. i D—2 THIS PONTIAC PRKSS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER lU Auto Centers Astros Hill Tempo Has Reds Swinging By The Asiociated Press I “For it's one, two, three strikes you’re out ...hums Don Wilson with his fast bail, and he has the Cincinnati Reds swinging right along. But you can bet the tune is not a hit with the Reds. Brake Job 30,000 mile guarantee HERE'S WHAT WE DO • Install new linings • Install fluid • Check seals, master cylinder —» Bleed-broke* • Adjust and lybrl-cote hand brake • Road test car for safety • Turn all four drums 27». Self-adjusting $4 more Pittsburgh in the other ached-; games and kept the pennant uled contest. |clinching number st fix-pany Wilson had not faded the Reds | combination of St. Louis victo-since he equalled the nine-in- rles or San Francisco losses toning strike but mark set by Bob taling six would give the Cardi-Feller and tied twice by Sandy jn^is the flag. Koufax. I Bill Singer scattered nine hits He had a little trouble getting .and ignited a two-run burst in P . . in tune, giving up John Bench’s) the third inning off Steve Carl- Wilson played it for them al-15th homer ta toe second- and ton, 12-11, with a single to raise most two months ago-July M jftl J<™ a “■ recordJ° V * —and 18 Reds went down swing- d?uW* J*1 Pu* JjJ™ * . ing, giving WUson a share of the!ahead g®vc up San Francisco, still playtog major league record run, 80(1 bad only *®v«n strike far in the background, beat the' a * * outs in six innings. He also Braves on Willie McCovey’s 33rd Wilson had the Reds dancing needed 8 strong throw from left homer with two on in the to his tune strain Tuesday nicht fielder Bob Aspromonte in the, third inning, against Al Spntori-as the Houston right-handerl*™ to catch Vada Pinson atjni, making hi? first major] struck out 16 en route to'a 3-2 the Plate' league start, viotory in the opener of a twi- SIX STRAIGHT | Williams had the Mets holding! night doubleheader. Then he started coming Ini their ears as he blasted homers i I'm w ximsr loud and clear. He fanned two in1 in the first, sixth and seventh in- j the Sfeventh and struck out the nings, giving fiim 29 this sei But with Wilson silent in the] side in the eighth and ninth to] His six runs batted in also gave dugout during the nightcap, the complete a six-hitter for his 13th him the league lead. Tearhmate Reds made a little noise with; victory against 14 losses. I Ernie Banks added his 31st ho-their bats for a 4-3 triumph and] The Dodgers handed the Car- mer as Bill Hands, 16-9, coasted a split, jdinals their sixth loss in seven! with an eight-hitter. The St. Louis Cardinals, who-----------——•—^ have plenty of reason to sing, hit another flat note in their [march to the National League pennant as the Los Angeles 'Dodgers beat them 3-0 for the! second night in a row. ", I * ★ ■* Second-place San Francisco,[ still nursing mini-hopes” of pulling a major miracle, trimmed the Cardinal?’ lead to 10% games by beating Atlanta 4-2. MBWPtHlIlar 7-5) at California (Sru- ‘ leveland"(McDowell 14-13) at. Minnato-' to IPerrv 8-4). night Chicago (Horlen 14-, !„ . ---- (peterun 104). nloht .....oebui 14-14 and Herdin' aTwaahlnpton. (Moor# 3-4 and Pat- Only garnet scheduled. HONOR FOR WRESTLER — Wrestler Bill Green of Pontiac Northern shows the certificate he received after being accorded honorable mention on a high school All-American team. Pontiac Northern officials looking on with approval are (from left) athletic director Here Renda, principal Philip J. Wargelin and wrestling coach Bill Wilson. Green, winner of the 112-pound state championship last season, is a freshman at Indiana University this fall. Two other area wrestlers maldng the honorable mention list were Ray Buffmyer of Walled Lake and Ben Lewis of Fenton. Cincinnati ........ 1* Pittsburgh ........ 70 Front End Alignment 488 Molt car* Air Conditioning S3 extra BRAKE ADJUSTMENT 99* r The Chicago Cubs, behind Billy Williams’ three home runs blasted the New York Mets 8-1 in an afternoon contest, Philadelphia was rained out at 0(8 0)0 000—3 I 0 Slnqor, It-)*. L—Corl- Bolin, McCormick (3) and Hiatt; Santo-..ha, Reed (4), Raymond (I) and Hrf ** W—McCormick, 11-15. L—Santorlna, HR-San Francisco, McCovey (33). Takes Golf Title Switch for HR: King Philadelphia at Pittsburgh, rain radar's oaefta . „rW York (McAndrtw 1-7 or Cardwell 7-13) at Chicago (Janklns 17-13) 1 San Francisco (Marietta! 21-7) at Allan-Sflch 2-7) at St. Loula . pnuaoeipmt >...*# 9-12 and O. ■)•<**«< ■5) at Pittsburgh (Blast 14-5 and sills 3- !3* HouStorT(Remaster 10-12 and Qlustl 8-13) or Ray 2-3) at Cincinnati (Nolan 1-2 and. Culvar T0-15) 2, twi,night __ I t Thursday's Gamas * NO gamer scheduled. Gneral Motors Truck & Coach employe. By FLETCHER SPEARS , A former Babe Ruth of sorts in the minor leagues is swinging at a different ball these days f|| with considerable success. Stan Keyes, who celebrated his 70th birthday Monday, won ' the Pontiac senior citizens golf championship yesterday with a >$fs§ sudden-death verdict over 68-jwas owned at various times by Keyes put #gether a glittering record during 17 years in the minors, a period in which he hit more than 500 home runs. PLAYED OUTFIELD Patrolling the outfield, Keyes i! Major League I: L^Leaders===J l And I led the league in doubles and triples.” He hit over .300 during all of his if“minor |{ league campaigns. BIG DAY »y ThP MlldlW IJJB A highlight of his career BATTIN£Mf$ctf tatf^yUamiki. *, came at Des Moines when heW. .»4^oiiv*. 'g1™;- •»»; clouted five home runs in a’Mijfnft-2i3 * ' £SjSLi£ doubleheader. “I’ll never forget M.y“NJir^dr.HMi«»-. •»"* 0,1 that day,” said Keyes, PwwlA Pontiac Pratt P 3UUUCU-UCBM. V7V. — I was ownea ai various nines uy ' 'loa- F Howard, Wash., year-old Manley Young, owner the st |gj|| cardinals. New About todays major league ei; w.Horton, oet of Art Metal Platers in Pontiac. | York Yankees, St. Louis Browns hitters, or perhaps the lack of ^|f J!c,mp,n,ris. oi»k., 144,-^ It was the first victory in the-and Pittsburgh Pirates. He hitting, Keyes says,- “They’re ^WSStlT.T&V ----- tournament for Keyes, who wasjwent to spring camp each year not concentrating. We used b<^,? an-outstanding baseball pteyer|but it always was back to the!study the pitohers."--------------2! the minors during some of mjnors for Keyes when the big!LONG-BALL HITTER go, 11-8. HR—Cincinnati, Bench (15). Second Gama Houston 001 100 010-3 7 1 'Cincinnati 002 00) 001—4 9 0 Cuellar, Ray (3), Shea (9) and Bale-man; Quean, McGinn (0), Carroll (0) and Cornales, Bench (0). W—Cerroll, 7-7. L— Shea, 3-3. HRs—Houston, Wynn (22), Rader (4), Mltlar (5). SENIOR LEADERS - Stan Keyes (left) and’ Manley Young finished one-two in the Pontiac senior citizens golf tournament at Pontiac Municipal Golf Course yesterday. The two tied for the top spot and Keyes won on the first hole of a playoff. baseball’s glorious years, the 1920s artd ’30s. BREAK NEVER CAME “I just never got the break to rdfelr the majors^' said1 lire smiling six-foot, Keyes, a retired f DOUBLE-WRAP MUFFLERS Most American car* WpAtj • Custom coated steel • Mechanically sealed seams guard against muffler leakage • Installation available 8 88 Lions Trade Home Dates With Vikings MSU Testing Artificial Turf clubs headed north. T TRIPLES—McCraw, Chic., 12; Fnggflmt Calif.. 10; McAuliffe, Def.,10i Stroud^ wash., 9; Camnanerf*. Oak., *. mm “Ufts-F-Howart, wash. Three State Golfers AwaitNational Event I Injuries Leave Gaps in Team's Lineup . Sam McMurray Thre state golfers earned a | Defending champion is RaylFrank^Miiier shot at national honors yester-1Palmer of Lincoln Park, Mich., Robartsjg^ar day by, picking up qualifying!who did not enter this year|A*LaBargern* , berths in a senior amateur golf! because of injuries suffered in 8 Ray"zimmermai (AP) ^!sectional tournament "ht Red,recent accident. I Keyes played in an era supposedly known as the dead ball Keyes’ biggest year came at [period. About today’s lively ball 5iolcw o„ Des Moines, then a member of he says, “If they had today’s cardenai, ciey... ^ the Western.....League. “F -hitrball^then I woui4 have iut--25l4jWw .387,” Keyes recalled, “plus 42 home runs in a season. One S^nam wmh'.,1-ii4; cuip. Bo*t^« homers and I drove in 165 runs, year I had 34 by July '4." «4»» SENHl. CITIZEN* TOURNAMENT Young foisted fe McOowaM, C^ Actual Hdcp Not^ a deadlock for first place with 179. ____. m -Jo 37jo net scores of 37.5 for the nine national league ~ ““ holes and Keyes then won the title on the first hole with bogey. Young three-putted for aljj, Brock, stx.^ double-bogey. i,^SJS?cot«7Ts f chi —Keyes, horn in. Chicago, came lirti, cm., «3; Banks, chic., 90.. ■ to Pontiac in 1940 after leavingt^^},^ “iwirnJmf. chie., baseball. ,,oouBL^^or««k!' st-k:. ' _________ Icin” 35; Slaub, Houst., 35; Bench, Cln., an . 12; Clamant#, Manley Young OeNio -Ison HOME' RUNS-F,Howard, fil-' K.Harrelson, Bost.« 34; W.Horton# DJI.# JJL R.Jackson, Ook., 24; Powall, Bair.. 211 , t year came at (period. About today’s lively balliFrse^LENDBASEs-campanarii. oak., 53; ; *r cievH.# 38,; Tovar- Minn.. 29; IFaul O'Dali ;Elton Losey' 'Art Button * | Barner John Bec?er >rge Betker Brockle 44 4.50 39.50 7.00 49 8.00 321; F Alou, Atl.a >Tlf L.Mayr Cln., chic., 91; Bose* gn«a* 84; B.Williams, Chlc^ EAST LANSING DETROIT UP) — If the Detroit 'Michigan State’s football squad j Run in Royal Oak. football Lions are correct, the1 is schooled to take a trip toi Leading the way was William I mm Detroit baseball Tigers can!Flint Wednesday to try out new,!E. Holt Jr., 57, of Bloomfield l«o t, bawa^Lak* brjon^ stash any worries a b o u t artificial Astroturf. i Hills with a 35-37 72. Arigaio v. Lotti, Birmingham, whether they'll make it into the! One reason for the scrimmage j other QUALIFIERS Emii e. Gai'ias, L^ng ne World Series. ]on the Vm k be-.. The other two making the|g;-r * * * !cause Wisconsin, an - J gra(Jc wefe Edwjn c DaytorLof;S5SU The Lions announced today away - opponent at Madison, j P|ymouth with a 37.38—75 and LH™r;n they are switching their Oct. 6juses .Leo T. Daigle of Lake Orion game against the Minnesota * * * with a 38-38-r76. Vikings from Detroit to On Tuesday the Spartans had ■ ★ * * Metropolitan Stadium at their last two-a-day workout. Angelo Lotti of Birmingham Bloomington, Minn., to avoid There will be only a singlei afeo had a 76, but he declined to anv conflict with the World workout daily; from now until engage in a playoff with Daigle gepjes | the opener Sept. 21 at Eastjforru,e thirjj spot because a STANDARD SHOCKS 2-788 ‘ 'Most American cars. Expert installation available. Save nowt The Lions plgy in Tiger Stadium, "which the baseball dub owns. V . TICKETS HONORED In switching to Minnesota j Lansing against Syracuse! The final hitting session be fore the first game will.be-held Coaches have been busy mov-___ | ing players like chessmen to Oct. 6, the Lions said a Detroit - j fill positions left open by Injur-Minnesota game originally ies. scheduled at Bloomington for nq. 2 SLOT Nov.^7 would be switched to. sop^more Bill Triplett has; Detroit and Oct. 6 tickets hon- moved to second' slot at ored for that encounter. I quarterback behind senior Bill Feraco. Scooter Longmire, an- business committment would prevent him from goiftg io the national event, SPECIALI LIFETIME WHEEL BALANCING The Tilers flow lea^ second -place Baltimore by eight and a half games, with only 16 left in the American League pennant race. ~'^r . Here’s what wa do: jtalanca and rotate fiwa ttrws, than ra- _ : balance, rerotate xi* desired for the life of the tread, at nb extra cost to you. 2 BIG LOCATIONS 1910 Widetrack Dr., Pontiac Open Mon.-Sat. 9 a.m.-8 p.m. 5272 Dixie Hwy., Drayton Open Mon. Fri. 9 9, Sat. 9-6 move to the Atlanta Country Club in Atlanta, Ga., for the national event Sept. 23*28. There’ll be a fidd of 120 on hand' at Atlanta for 18 holes of stroke play the first two days. The low 32 scorers after the 36 holes will then turn to match play- other sophomore, is temporarily out of the running because of a broken bone in his throwing hand. J Jack Zindel, a junior from East Lansing, has been shifted to middle guardTb replace Bill Dawson, starter at the spot. Dawson is sidelined by a broken bone in his foot. Tackles Charles Bailey, Nick Birmingham Brother Rice and ^h a„d U« Brother Rice Spoils Waterford Opener Waterford Township's 1968 cross country debut Tuesday. The host Skippers’ Steve Moifat was the only runner to tour the wet, cool course in less than 11 minutes; but Brother Rice sent eight of the next nine! runners across the finish line for a 24-37 team triumph. Moffat was limed in 10:54 to lead runner-up Kevin Keating Of the Warriors by six seconds. Waterford’s DeWayne Russeh placed third, and the next WTHS entry was 10th. guard position. By Thu AmucMM Fiat* . SAN ANTONIO. Tex.»-jn«e Lula Val-ppi. 1.1*1* aniuiiulafuru. Mexico, out' pointed Katsuro Takahoahl, 119, Tokyo. Japan, 10; Roberto Alvarez, 114, Guadalajara. Mexico, atapped Oxcar Rtyas. 10*. RevnOM. Mexico. 3* tUrmr Aluarxrtn. 144’/,. uvaide! Tex . Green, 141, Oellea, 1. State Prep Dies of Football Injury Golfer Takes Third Verdict Arnold Elveiter Don Moore E. Wilmot V. Denny 35-37-72 Jacob Mayari 37-3*—75 A. Rawlings . 34-40—74; John Shoemaker O. Brown 25-35-55 Torn Clifton V. S~f?rC?Mertirw?ale Southfield . 40-41-81 Al Weber 42-44—Mlaernle Stewart i. Royal Oak 42-44—84Pate Vandarhoak Toledo Drops Playoff Debut ip L.A.! 10; Kaa*lng#r. B.WIilia'ms, Chic., 7; HOME RUNS—McC« Banks, Chic., 31; B.WI R.Allen, BASES-Brock. St.L., 47; W,Davis, L.A., I., 24; C.Jonei, N.Y., Blass, Pitt., 14-5, .737; 51 8.75 42.25 52 9.75 42.25! 53 10.50 42.50 niso 42lsoi season 54 13.25 42.75 54 13.25 42.75 By The Associated Press Ch^R^0E56uTS-jankins. chic, Columbus lost 13 of 21 regular Gib»n, su,., .??«; .sjn?»r-International League M8r c ; svieckl. S.F., 189. Yankees Sweep Chisox to Extend Hot Surge jM (Continued from Page D-l) -j WinHfer i KrnHRatt^bihw«H»rf Tfir“thfee quSimers". nWrTfie"fJevTYork Yankees con-|fjve hits until the ninth, when Ai|‘" Jnued their late surge with a ^ twice and drove 2-1, 5*0 doubleheader |weep over Chicago, Oakland trim&ied Goatee Mighf Help Recruit Young Cagers Boston 5-3 and Washington and Baltimore were rained out. Charlie Smith’s first homer of the season, a two-out blast in the ninth, sent the Yankees past the White Sox in the opener. Right-hander Joe V e r b a n i c tossed a—five-hitter in the nightcap for his first major league shutout as the Yanks soared five games over .500. New York has.jwon. five in a row and 24 of its last 34 starts Mrs. Paul Keller Jr. oflKti10^ fro™ s«vMiti> place into him from the mound. Jack Aker protected the edge by getting the last two outs. McCrxw tb Berry cf Melton 3b' Wagner ph Hansen 3b Oakland Hills fashioned a 41-41-82 yesterday to, win her third! weekly event of the season in the Women’s District Golf Association. Second in the field of 42_,!at Lochmoor Country. Club was Helen Grinnell of Detroit Golf Club with an 84. Emily Gail of Grosse lie was third With an 85. Mrs. Paul Keller Jr., Oakland Hill* , 41.41—82; Helen Gfinnet), Detroit Golf Club 45-39—84; Emily Gall, Groan lie i. Phillip O'Connell 87-9-78; .. ... .. J. Munson, Lochmoor *9*10-79; i. Frank Camptle, Or “ ' “ contention for third. The Athletics kept their first division hopes alive by cuffing Boston’s Gary Bell for four runs in the first inning—two of them on Dick Green’s double—and [jlfieif”staving off the Red Sox’ 1 late comeback. •b r h bl Andrews 2b 3 0 10 Cmpnerlt is , ------- 0 10 Monday c* I 0 2.0 Cater lb W YORK ab r h b 1 0 Clark* 2b 4 0 1 * 0 Tresh as 4 0 1 _ . 1 Mantle ib 4 0 3 4 0 0 0 White If 4 0 1 3 0 0 0 WRobnsn cf 4 0 0 0 0 0 0, Kosco rf-* T r 4 0 3 0 Fernandz c 400 ... 0 c*x 35 games . to the Rochester Red Wings, hut the Jets have taken; a 1-0 lead in their best-of-5 semifinal playoff series. While fee Jets were bombing] the Red Wings 8-3 Tuesday! night, the- Jacksonville^ Mets: were upending the pennant-win-| ning Tpledo Mud Hens 5-4 fort a 1-0 lead in their seftiifinal play-j ___ „ : + * ^ ; vidson College basketball Coach Jacksonville got just two! Lefty Diresell ^as a goatee earned , runs off Toledo pitcher! these days and says it may help Mike Marshall but beat the Mud] h*s recruiting. Hens with two runs in the ninth] “You know how these nodern on Bob Heise’s run-scoring dou-jathletes are. If I could land ble and a throwing error by To- some good players I might wear ledo catcher Arlo Brunsberg, it all season,” Driesell said, who tried to head off Heise The balding coach wantsit going to third after his hit. j made clear that he isn t a hippie, however. 0 0 0 CSmltti 3b 0 0 0 Downing p 00 0 MO •nit! p Nvmai WWlla Total Two out hicaga lawVorlc 0 0 Dot I o o H 0 0 0 x 0 0 8 l 1 0 0 0 -^^0 0 0 10 0 0 34 1 10 1 0). SB—Whitt. Nyman ..... Wilhaim Wood (L,11-10) tot • • • oi 800 00 i mm HR—Dat P HR ER BB $0 4 4 * * * 11-3 2 11-3 1 2-3 9 I * r~-3:13. SECOND BAME 9b r h oo f rootT ** rr-t+i-f-rt-t—t-; . 1 2 1 Ystrmskl If 4 Thomas pr ’ i KHarelsn rf 4 Foy 3b 4 RSmfth cf V T l, 40 0 0 1 10 RJackson rf 2 0 0 0 I Ward 3b 1 2 00 ? 1 t CSmith 3 GRAND RAPIDS (AP)-A 17- mt,_ Fr,nk ■■■■ year-old .Grand Rapids youth I first pt. i a d-a « died early today from heed in-^m^hmw^'-4^;.!lSr*l w. ri. " juries suffered 4n a high schooij*^ Silw football scrimmage last week- ««. ggJM* end. SECONP FLIGHT -» Mrt. E d w a r d Oeklend The victim, Gerald Knight>^ 59 .. . had been in a coma tince Uie,uu n.,: Mr.. Rob*, fnz. Luchnwur r** injury. A student at Catholic ---------- p - ’■ — Central Hi^i School- *la Grand HR _________ I Rapids, he was injured during a scrimmage . against East —^ Grand Rapids High School. ; . a x Burry, cf - . . ..... _ aaa ! Morales 2b 2 01 I Gibbs C S JO OoPuterap o o 8 o Verbenic p 4 SI J wywt* P 8 8 0 0- 4 ? ! 0 Hopkins ph 10 8 0 1 2 R«'h p o--------- 0 0 0 0 wwilams ph 1 IRrwBu • •. a *mi 11 5 7 94-14-80. THIRD FLIGHT-CC of Dbtrolt 48-41 Murray Hentgen, G FOURTH FUGH1 Lochmoor 49-48—97; ---------- -------- — land Hills 58-47—97. Low Hal: Mrs. ©avid —------- -teach Grave 99-22-77; 8*- | Jt. Lochmoor 98-28-78. 8 8 8 8 '• * 8 8 8 8 tT 1 — 1 Total 32 8 5 8 Total .... 4 8 8 1 8 8 8 8 k-I.CMcMW ....... DP—Oakland 1. LOB- Naw York ‘ ' I “ “Oruef*,; E—C.May. A.. ... ___ ____ till (New York 8.. 2B—Tresh. Kasco. .. (Clarke. S—Verbenic. ' - 1F H R ER BB , vrw> fL*12T S • S 2 2 3 Wynn* ...... 1 1 3 V $ 8 Rtfh ....... 2.1 881 2 Frtddy ........, 2 8 8 8 1 8 Ribant ....... 2 1 8 8 8 —| Verbenic (W4-5) .9 8 8 8 1 1 T—2=29. A—18,198. 33 3 3,3 Tutel ''".33 5 14 . f R ER BB SO Two other Jacksonville runs scored on errors by Brunsberg and outfielder Paul Pavelko. Dave Campbell drove in three Toledo runs with a double and a homer. Eastern Skippers Lead Sail Events 377 By Tha VaSTIi h na aai f*Jl ■ilk 77 12 '29 J M *" Horton ........... 475 82135 33 Kalin* . . . . 285 42 81 9 Stanley ....... 525 88 til 11 Northrop.. GROSSE POINTE r you at tho appointed tim*.' ^ NEW FULL 4-PLY WHITEWALLS NARROW 7.35x14 - $21.50 7.75x14 -$22.50 8.25x14-$25.50 8.55x14-$26.50 Prictt include Federal Tom To Scientifically measured and correct castor and camber ye Correct toe-in and tee-out (the chief couse of tire wear) . r.- BRAKE LININGS $095 T E lsit grade, high qualify lining. 1,000 mild adjustment free. II At law as $1.23 a H weak. 1 year — j 20,000 mild guaran- ! MOTOR MART iSS I S11$ lost Montcalm f* MW I ■MMRMMMMIMMMHainiliRRnimiMI gfjfs Jiiia.lHfflPBi.IW Lake Michigan Can Be Angry He Changes Its Name How and Where Key Points in Efforts H * I Stream Drives Angler Batty —Bydonvogel Anyone going to Coholand fori the first time shouldn’t expect instant success. Even the Charter boats don't •core all of the time. In fact, there are many- days, when: these fish-for-pay craft can’t get out of the harbors along the I northwestern Lower Peninsula - shore. Vermont has the Battenkill; the Beaverkill Is famous in New York. Michigan also has a trout stream.of .notoriety. .It received a new name last week.' The Little Manistee is now known' as the Bai-en-Chub and, according to the frustrated angler "who arbitrarily changed its monicker, it Is infamous rather than famous. ' Before map makers panic and the Conservation Department | people start fretting, it should be pointed out that it still will jhe Jcnown-as- the Little Manistee to all except.to Ron Unternahr- Naturally, there is a story to be told and here it is ■ Ron, a photographer for The Press and ardent trout fisher- Kill Lme Michigan can be very angry-at this time of the year. Only two of the last 10 days can be classed as good for fishing, otherwise, it has been rough. Anyone who has spent several! hours bobbing about on rollers four to eight feet high willj quickly say salmon fishing is a lot of work. Some continue to tempt fate. They persist in ignoring Coast Guard warnings — by weather flag or. bull horn — and go on the lake , when its kicking up waves to 12 feet. FIVE DEATHS Five have died within the last: month. Tragedy probably willj strike again. Finding the salmon is the first | prerequisit to catching one. Depth finders and fish locators are a definite asset, but just watching the other boats will do. When they concentrate, salmon have been pinpointed. I man, was making his fifth trip to the Little Manistee, He hadn’t seen a fish in this Stream famous for :big browns future mature salmon runs. ICE BROKEN The ice was broken on excursion No. 5. A chub fell victim to his lure. As night fell, our erstwhile angler was still standing among the bushes hopefully casting to a good hole. Grouse Hunting Starts Sunday It doesn’t seem possibly. A major hunting season will open before the official end of summer. Grouse and woodcock become legal in the northern two-thirds of the state Sunday, seven days before the arrival of fall. Suddenly, his mid-air. Ron held moon and saw reached out to remove gestion ... . . . and the angry bat wrapped its wings around his hand. “It felt like peach fuzz,” said the shaken disciple of Izaak Walton. “I yanked my . back and it fell into the water and started swimming for shore, dragging the line. Then the lure pulled out.” Wings Over the 'Bat-En-Chub' —That ended the fishing. On the way back to Manistee along a woodland gravel road, bats kept crisscrossing in front of the car. “From now on, this stream will be known as the Bat-eri-Chub,” said U n t e r n a h rer. “There are no trout . . . only bats and chubs." FULLY . EQUIPPED — This tackle box is stuffed with lures, swivels, sinkers and other items necessary for salmon fishing. The oblong weights with chain swivels (third row from bottom) are necessary to get the lure near the bottom in deep water. Weights range from one to eight ounces and may be strung together. Not since the days of World War II when waterfowl gunning started Sept. 15 has their been a regular season opener before Sept. 22. There have been some special shoots on teal, snipe and woodcock and a spring hunt for turkeys, but these are minor targets in Michigan. Grouse, pheasants, deer, ducks and rabbits are 'the primary targets. FAIR TO GOOD The outlook is. fair, in the northern Lower Peninsula and I good above the Straits. Southern | Michigan grouse s h o o t i n g | should be above average, BUT| THE SEASON DOESN’T OPEN' UNTIL OCT. 21. ' | Also opening Sunday for a 15-day run will, be a special season j on snipe and rails. The St. Clair Flats and Saginaw Bay (between Sand Point and Poiht Au Gres) are the only open areas in Lower Michigan. The increase in the grouse season comes about because game biologists feel the additional hunting pressure will have no affect on the population. There’s another-factor In the “pats” favor. It’s call foliage. Leaves on trees and bushes will hamper shooters until mid-October in Northern Michigan. SENEY OPEN The Seney National Wildlife Refuge in Schoolcraft County announced that approximately^ QA AAA onros on thA will ^ ,000 acres on the refuge willv be open to upland game hunting beginning Sunday. This will be the first small game hunting allowed-on the refuge since 1946. No waterfowl hunting will be permitted and the goose hunting closure in the area surrounding the refuge remains in effect for the third season. The 30,000 acre area to be opened Sunday lies west of the Walsh Ditch. Access , i s available from Highway M-28 on the north, the Creighton Truck Trail and parts of the Highwater Truck Trail on the west. Salmon cavorting about the surface seldom strike. However, those fish swimming under the surface with the school usually can be enticed with just about any type of spoon. Reddish finishes seem to be the best producers. When the salmon are deep, it is necessary to put on up to a pound of weight. Salt-water boat rods are the ticket for this kind -of fishing. One day last week, reports coming out of Platte Bay indicated fishermen were making a killing. The Conservation Department check of coming into the launching ramp — and over 200 were checked — showed a success rate of slightly, over one salmon for every four craft-., , •» Basic Seamanship Course) Slated by CG Auxiliary The Coast Guard Auxiliary’s!rules of the road, aids to navi-sight-week course in basic sea-|gating, knots and splices, out-nanship will start Thursday at] board handling, charts and pilot-he Naval Reserve Traininging, fueling safety, and legal requirements, both federal and * * * state. The Pontiac Flotilla of thej Thjs year, in addition to the mxiliary will have charge of refto*ar Basic Seamanship Cer-Registration is at 7lWl«>te that is awarded to grad-in the training base at 4e9.;uates of ^e course. a jiew grad- Sast Blvd , South. uate will receive a safe boating eOurse decal for-his boat. Classes will be held from to 9:30 p.m. every Thurs-for the next eight weeks and open to all ages.. Any person 16 yeai%’PFturcleF ” nust be accompanied by a par-' The class will be limited 100 persons. Audubon Club Planning Tout of 'M' Facility A tour through the University The same held true a t Manistee. What looked impressive was one boat would come in with four or five. The next three may have one between thenw———---------------- Krtowing how and where to fish are the keys. Novices seldom score unless they are observant and copy the methods of the successful anglers or are on a charter boat. STRINGER — Two teenagers are dropping a stringer containing a coho into the water. The fish was caught ’ from the breakwall guarding Manistee Harbor. Several salmon have been taken by anglers who prefer fishing from concrete rather than a boat. Dog Training Club in 4-H Organized A , 4-H dog training club is being organized in the Walled Lake area and will get under way with a demonstration Sept. 17 at 7 p.m. in the Walled LSke junior high. has been scheduled by the Pontiac Audubon Club. The tour will start from thej museum entrance at 9 a.m. and. is open to the public. Two films will be shown at tonight’s regular PAC meeting at All Saints Episcopal church. They are “Spring Comes to a Pond” and “Life in a Woodlot.” This meeting starts a{ 7:30 and is also open to the public. Area Dragsters Rule Regatta Several area powerboat dragsters won honors last weekend ,in the Copper Cup Regatta at Oscoda. >Mike Ferguson and Jerold Lamphier of Oxford won the unblown gas class trophy in a three-pointer. The father-son duo of George and Larry Lu-jxear of Union Lake won the blown class, also in a three-point dragster, with a run of 1 111 miles and hour. Another Union LakeY, Roger Russell, won the 80 mph class. [Also picking up trophies were Dick-Bigler and Brad Chase, both of Keego Harbor. Skip Hazelton, in hydroflyte, and Don Champagne, in crack-erbox,, both of Oxford, were triumphant. Jack Watkins’ flatbottom turned in' the top §§ | speed tor its class in the Eastern chapter of the National Drag Boat Association this year with a clocking of 120 mph. Gains Race Edge NEAR LiMfF— Two members of-the New York State Conservation Department hold five coho salmon, one short of the«daily limit for two men. Edmund V. Dorsheid, —(left) Victor,- N.Y. add Gideon Naples, N.Y., were fishing out of Frankfort, but boated several miles north to Potato Betsie before locating the salmon. THORPE BAY, England (AP) - Lady Helmsman, a British boat, defeated Yankee Fiver of the United States, sailed by Greer Eliis and Bill Hooten, Tuesday and took a 2-1 lead in the best-of-7 international catamaran series for the Little America’s Cup. * * * Beverly Schell will be the i ! leader. The class is limited to 15 youngsters and their dogs. To qualify, the youths must either be a 4-H member, or join the club, and have a health certifi- cate for the dog. Fishing Off tfreakwall Can Be Wet Effort Solunar Tables The schedule of Solunar Periods, as printed below, has been taken from John Alden Knight’s SOLUNAR TABLES. Plan your days so that you will be fishing in good territory or hunting ip good cover during these times,, if you wish to find the best sport that each day has to offer. ■ | EastWn Daylight Tim* Coho Fleet Maneuvers for Trolling Position Over Schooling 5almon Off Manistee Harbor Entrance THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 Fishing in Coholand Doesn't Necessarily Guarantee Instant Success THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 D—a Crisis in Michigan Conservation Tighter Restrictions Face Outdoor Users maintenance of acceptable' quality standards," he declared, i MacMullan pointed out, for) example, that restrictions will be increasingly necessary to minimize conflicts among water users, including fishermen, swimmers, water skiers, speedboat operators and skin-divers. “They not only annoy each other when all try to use the (Fifth in a series) By NORRIS INGELLS , The Lansing State Journal Tighter restrictions, greater cost? and more intense management. These are the “prices” Michigan must pay if It is to protect and preserve its vast natural resource base for future generations. Halting water pollution and I obtaining more parkland to accommodate the state's growing i population are high on many conservationists’ lists of I priorities. But coupled with these tangi-l ble needs is a call for Michigan residents who use the outdoors to develop a more realistic attitude towards the state’s natural resources. ★ ★ ★ Charles D. Harris, deputy director for resource management of the Michigan C o n s e r vation Department, believes the state \yiil' have to manage its public lands and natural resources “much more Intensely than in the past" if it Is to meet the demands of the future. He dted, for example, the recent view of a California conservationist who said that the time may come when population pressures will force the government to tell the public that each person is entitled to visit such popular attractions as Yellowstone Park only once every five years. MAY LIMIT TAltE In Michigan, with the demand for deer hunting licenses growing while natural habitat for deer remains about the same, the time may ’ arrive when hunters will be limited to one deer license every two years, Harris stated. Ralph A. MacMullan, Conservation Depart m e n’t director, also agrees that the public will have to accept a considerable degree of regimentation in their use of resources. “Particularly in the area of recreation it almost certainly is going to be necessary to enforce rationing and sharing, both for the welfare of the resources , ™ . themselves and for the JLANSING (AP) — Pheasant - - j - - ----------_ _ i,.-. hunting prospects for this fall same piece of water at the1 same time, they actually 'en-j danger each other’s lives,” he! declared. ; “The public is going to have to recognise the fact that we are just not going to have the game in the future we had 30 yews ago,” said Rep. Raymond L. Baker (R-Farmington),| chairman of. the House Conservation Committee. major problem will be preserving what natural habitat we have today and trying t6 build for the future, new areas where game can exist.” Urbanization of more land and NOT SO WEAK—Fran Powers of Westerly, R.I., displays two giant tuna, 526 and 587 pounds, she caught in less than an hour while fishing off the Nebraska shoals. She boated the 526-pounder in 26 minutes and the larger One in 22 minutes. Bob Murphy, skipper of the boat, looks over the prizes. Lean Hunting Forecast Pheasant Outlook Varies MUCC Shoot Set Sept. 21-22 at Multi-Lakes Michigan United Conservation Clubs holds its 20th annual statewide shoot Sept. 21-22 near Walled Lake, This type of organization -sponsored meet, where shooting is done entirely by teams, i$ one of the largest of its kind in the U.S. It is open only to bona-fide members of MUCC. Skeet, trap archery, rifle, pistol and muzzle loader shooting takes place on the two '‘days at the club grounds of the Multi-Lakes Conservation Association. Information and application Torms are“”!BeingJ mairetr ts all MUCC clubs. Application forms are to be forwarded no later than Sept, 14 to the club manager, A. G. Rahn, — VHP| , m _ Newton Road, Walled Lake,)in Sanilac, St. Clair and Tusco-Micbigan 48088. ..[la counties. The downward Any MUCC affiliate club may I'renVTwas reported from;fluron enter as many teams as it and Bay counties, desires in any of the events. I The largest increase was re- ported from the state’s southwestern counties, where the court! was estimated at 45 per cent above last year. Best gains there were in Berrien and Branch counties, , indicate shooting success will vary according to various areas, reports a Conservation Department expert. “It looks as though many Michigan pheasant hunters are going to have another lean season this fall," said Vic Janson, pheasant specialist. “However, we are encouraged by the moderate pheasant upswing in several counties." ' + * A whitefish die-off at Walnut Summer Brood counts by ¥&£ is being M rural mail carriers indicatedresidents who live along the birds had iof ciscoes’ 8 ing season, close relative of the whitefish, a 85 per cent drop in breeding ^ at CflSg and commerce Whitefjsh Die at Area Lake agricultural expansion is before" and pesticides and “crowding garni into smaller j herbicides are having “a great and smaller areas,” Rep. Baker influence on the loss of our fish,, noted. New roads and freeways)game animals and birds.” are “opening up areas that! * * * have never been touched^acMul|an ^neve's lhat ln light of the prospects for more leisure time and greater crises, stopgaps and tort-little- j departments are /ho too-late," he said. “Planning of|competitive for top Banner Bass Year on County the right kind will avert ecological blunders and the consequent necessity to undertake expensive and usually not entirely satisfactory corrections.” “Good land "and water use won’t just happen; it must be planned for and zoned for,” the conservation director stated. With more intense management of resources -acertaintyr and research needed to find longer quality numbers the previous-spring. The nesting season would have been even better except for two rainy periods, one in late May and the other in late June. lqkes lata in August. WafturjB the only Oakland County lake known to contain whitefish, * ★ . ' * , Conservation Department fish experts attribute the die-offs-to a drop in the oxygen content of was estimated to be up 10 per cent. Moderate gains were reported This has been a banner year lor bass fishing in Oakland County. The same can’t be said for action on northern pike. However, this may change with the coming of fall. Pike bite best this time of year. But it will be too late to enter that lunker in The Pontiac Press Big Fish Derby. The contest ended Sept. 3. It produced the second smallest pike division winner. Mike Muzik, 2811 Benstein, Walled Lake, took the $50 savings bond with an 8-pound, ounce northern caught in Sun Lake. It was the largest fish he has caught in Oakland County during his 43 years, of fishing. The lightest pike division entry in the 32-year contest was a 7%-pound- walleye from Walnut Lake in 1955. SLIGHTLY SMALLER Although bass fishermen have been scoring regularly, this year’s winner was slightly smaller than the average top bass in the contest. Marvin Cagle, 75 Mariva, boated a 6-pound, 5-ounce largeipouth at Wormer Lake. A 6‘4-pounder was the closest challenger. Bass winners have been averaging 6 pounds, , 9 ounces. Roger Hummell, 4641 Circle, Independence— Township,- -took opening day (June 1) bass laurels wjth a 4-pound, 14-ouncer, Hummel and Cagle Will each receive $50 bonds, w ★ ★ Fishing pressure on area lakes has tapered off 'considerably. It usually does after Labor Day. Thoughts turn to hunting and there’s always the coho malady. Bass and bluegills start moving shoreward as the water cools. Pike become more active. Walleyes fishing on the St. Clair River at Port Huron is at its best during fall with a peak coming early in October. Walleyes three pounds and up are common near * the Blue-wat^f Bridge. JUMBO PERCH ' Big schools of perch already are moving shoreward around the Great Lakes. Best fishing in Saginaw Bay will come later this month when the jumbo perch start showing up near Sebewaiing and Bay Port. More than one duck hunter has saved the day by taking a rod along on a trip to the Bay. manpower problem in relation to conservation research, problem common to most month. Simonson Lake in the Holly (™m the M of the big city recreation area was treated “l, ’,,decla, ‘., , . m-omem common io mi vAGterrinv painf prooV from MacMullan also cited a need ProD1*-m common io m i yesterday. Paint creek, irom.L . ninnnino 7n„-ino' departments around the U S. Lake Orion to the Clintofi Riv- for “““ planning,-add zoning, r_. er, will be treated Sept. 19. * Paint Creek will be restocked with trout. Simonson lake’s new fish inhabitants haven’t been announced. SLIGHT INCREASE , ____, , Lower Michigan^*- pheasarrtrjjjg -water-in deep areas of lakes population in the thumb area Vrhqre ciscoes and whitefish are found. The fish quickly move higher to much warmer water to find oxygen apd their systems cannot take the sudden change in temperature. Several het spelis contributed to the depletion of oxygen in deep water, LANSING Ml — The imers who have been fishing j ne particular stream for a umber of years often come up nth some practical - sounding leas in the field of con; One such was Walter Nutter ! Manton, who appeared be-ire the recent meeting of the ate Conservation Commission t Cadillac. “I’ve been fishing the Big [anistee for more than 50 sars,” he told commission tembers. “Now the fishing iere Is getting worse all the me.” * * * As Nutter explained it, logs tat have been in the stream ir a number" of years have sen taken out for their lumber, Slue, The logs used to create tickets for tiie trout and other sh to hide. Remoyal of ttte fogs, he said, Iso has caused considerable] toafau - - i When the ice goes out of that ijstream, I’ve seen it take awajr ijlO feet of bank at a time," he reported. 8IMPLE SOLUTION* Nutter had a simple suggestion for stream improvement. There are a number of Dutch Efm trees along the edge of the stream, he said. Sortie already are hit by-Butch Pm-diaease Weatinr and are sure "to "die. Others -probably will die of the disease later; His suggestion was that the elms be cut down so they would fall into the stream. The logs could be anchored by cables to the stamps- ARMSTRONG THE SAFE TIRE tion for the manpower to, dp the job was that .prison trustees, often used on conservation proj-l ects, could perform the work! under supmision * of department specialists. Nutter, meanwhile, reported] [that there still were some huge, [brown trout lurking in the Manistee. * Iotof] the rainbow trout in there,’.’ he] reported. Dave Bergeson, department; trout spepialist, expressed some! interest, in the idea. Another school at thinking,] Borgeson said, is that trees' along the bank should be cut to allow, in sunlight to encourage growth to prevent the banks from caving in. ‘ Something should be done The newly-cut trees, he said, would once again .provide safety spots for the trout and other fish to find protection and also j for that stream,” Nutter said, w^uld help prevent the growing] “It once was one of the best erosion. ; trout streams in Michigan. I The State Conservation De-jwon’t live to see it, but I would ipartment has dona similar work]like to We if come back for 'in"fdher streams. One sugges-lthe fishermen of the future." 1 Fed. lx. Tlx and eld tire BRAND NEW ALL WEATHER IV Any ona of these Sizes ONE LOW PRICE 1.75x15 7.71x14 $.25x14 Blackwell Tubeless Whitewalls $3 More EASY CREDIT NO MONEY DOWN FREE MOUNTING $1295 disposable income, outdoor recreation must be recognized as a necessity of life, not just a frill to be financed only after such needs as education, health and transportation have been met. I' ,,.r „ . ,, , . . , ways of improving conservation ( Man may be able o exist in {*he ■ /-j? M ^ , PICK-UP, PANEL and CAMPER TRUCK OWNERS ANY SIZE LISTED ONE LOW PRICE NO MONEY DOWN EASY TERMS FREE MOUNTING ♦ Plus tax and recappable tire good/Year “ As k Your Goodyear De ale r for His Competitive Price-Goodyea^Retail Prices Shown Above.” GOODYEAR SERVICE STORE 1370 Widf Track Drive 335^6167 GREENFIELD TIRE & BRAKE SERVICE of Rochester 226 Main, Rochester 651-4007 WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, jg|, wpEtNflSDA?, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 i Hood town sashabaw rd. at maybee rd. opens soon: il «; m '*i**-.M*m. mt». mil BffiS gSi wM tsm iMWiifirim it’s a Pleamret® S Sashabaw Rd. crEHavy."d OPEN SUNDAYS Everyday Low Pricey • Friendly Servic Skimpy West Virginia Semi-Boneless Northern Tissue Wesson M GRAPEFRUIT SECT. Mandarin ORANGES I US DA CHOICE CLEANSER MRflETERGENT ZESTEE Strawberry Preserves 2-lb. jar pOA'iAK FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase FREE GOLD BILL] Stamps WHh Purchase —2 Hoods FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase FREE GOLD BELL Stamps With Purchase FREE GOLD BELL ‘ Stamps With Purchase SLICED BACON PEOPLES FOOD MARKETS SUPER MARKETS Phn Th CM Gold Ball Gift Stoops, Too ? D—8 TH3S PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1988 "SHIVERING AND I ABSORBING” mmm Tim*,) -PROOF IS REQUIRED JAMES ' DEBBIE GARNER REYNOLDS MAURICE RONET ; j ployes take a real pride in their [AT BOMBER PLANT have one son, John, 15, at home, ■ product, he insists. Most assem-l He worked at a Fisher Body land a daughter, Mary Jane, who bly line workers realize thatIplant in Memphis, Tenn., pro-[lives in San Francisco, Calif., ■ IwithO'i* thp pieces they put in. ducing B25 bombers duringjwith her husband and two chil-the car won’t be right, he adds. World War II. The plant was dren. I Dudas knew his old plant well already in operation when Pearl Dudas enjoys spending his Days Lang for Fisher Body Boss By LOIS FRIEDLAND | “Although the jobs are [touch la to see, feel and touch,” “The boss always leaves!similar, no two managers oper-jhe explains, last’' claim. John F Dudas, ate the same. The new man can A graduate of the now defunct the’new manager of the Fisher put a little light Into comers Henry Ford Trade School, ■v Body assembly plant jn Pontiac, that haven’t had any in some Dudas worked with Ford Motor around 7:30 a m. and rarely] He discussed how the change sWHed worlcer. ^ ^ leaves before 6 p.m., said his was good for him also because new Job is very similar to the j one could become too *ns“l®C_resgion whiie ,uin„g were siow SSasr^ 'S"S, K m p>-"> manager oi risner voay iu__ as his father Mil while. wood in Detroit for the last were there. Originally a layout man at the Follow the war, Dudas was assigned to the Norwood plant as a shift superintendent at Fisher and became plant super-, intendent a year later, w ★ * --He was—superintendent—at Fisher Body plants in Lansing, Atlanta and Euclid, Ohio, before joining Fleetwtod in 1954. ' lie was production manager for- five years at Fleetwood before being promoted to plant manager. n“’n.an.g«r call* hi. Leaning toward to hi. ^na^^'K|nNDS Ttt“! appointment a'lateral move. when making a point, Dudas L.. . „ , where he be- Duc*as an<* w^®’ ^a^* His predecessor, Thomas F. convinces the listener live at 756 N' Williamsbury, Wiethorn became manager of own intentness. Fisher Body em-ra IBloomfield Township. They the Fishfr Body assembly plant In Lansing. Wiethom’s predecessor, Kenneth S. Bidwell re-. placed Dudas at Fisher Fleetwood. .the car won’t be Dudas considers the. job- Dudas knew his switching wise because it and is busy learning about hisjHarbor was bombed. Later he [spare weekends^ aboard his 36-ts i trs rrrrrrrrttTmnm* DANCING Thursday - Friday Saturday - Sunday mm brought people into the plants new one first hand. with new viewpoints. | “The only way to stay in |craft as a chief inspector. was transferred to Detroit Air- foot cruiser docked in Lake St. Pair. Love Beads:New Wampum? SALT LAKE CITY, Utph l/ft-i Rats and squirrels grab the,love beads. Ghost necklaces| He went to state welfare offi-Love beads, a hippie fad trans- berries, scurry off to their [with two strings and tassles are cials and proposed haying the planted to high society fashion, nests, drill a hole in one end I akin to traditional Indian jewel- Indians make beads for him to may slash up to $200,000 a year [and eat the soft core. This step i ry. Love beads, a single strand, distribute. The officials agreed from welfare payments to is important, because the ro-jare a concession .to the hippie-[ to a pilot program for SanJuan Navaho Indians in southern dehts have a natural patent on inspired market. Utah. John F. Dudas Spends Many Hours At Fisher Body Plant A COMPLETE , MENU SELECTION Tour Favorite leverages PONTIAC lake: I m INN mNt * 7890 Highland Road its-nii . K_om » o o a o o a gJLBJUUUC Success of the bead project depends (Hi juniper trees, Indians, an enterprising jewelry distributor and unheralded legions of rates and squirrels. .. A * ★ The juniper tree, a squatty resident of arid Western foothills grows berries. The berries drop to the ground. drilling holes in the berries, People haven’t found a way to do it without splitting them. NESTS RAIDED Indians raid the nests for the predrilled bprrjes, take them home and string them on nylon cord along with brightly colored seed beads. The beads bring up to $3 retail and are iiTTune with the latest fashions, which—like hippies—are grooved op the American Indian look. The distributor involved is Richard D. Movitz of Salt Lake City, who was in southern Utah early this summer and saw Na-vahos peddling strings of beads Result: ghost necklaces and: to tourists and traders. In Hit Play, 'Lovers' Carney Rounds Off Comeback (EDITOR’S NOTE — There's, can stay Onstage until Nov. lot more to Art Carney than and perhaps longer. The show moves Sept. 17 from the Beaumont to the Music Box. “Lovers,” by Dublin’s Brian Friel, consists of a pair of small-town Irish vignettes. One concerns a poignantly wistful young couple, with Carney the narrator. In the other he is centrally Involved as a middle-aged romantic trapped after hilariously rowdy interlude into rustic resignation. the character of Ed Norton, Jackie Gleason’s television side-kick. That TV funnyman is a flip extrovert. Not so the offstage Art Carney, who likes to consider himself not a comic, not a dramatic actor, but sirh-ply, an actor.) --— ■; By WILLIAM GLOVER AP Drama Writer: NEW YORK - Art Carney, the man who went away, got talking the other day about Broadway glory. “In this business,’’ he reflected, “you’re either a hot ticket or you’re not working. All of a sudden now I’m in a play that’s very successful. That’s a nice feeling and I enjoy It very much.” * ' * Hr His current click looms larger that Just another pleasant career credit, however. With storybook nicety, It rounds off the Carney comeback. A toboggan of travail started in October 1965, when the man who started in 1937 with Horace Heist’s band, Imitated FDR on radio in tlje ’40’s and reached stardom as Jackie Gleason’s television buddy,“ abruritly left Couple" and took a long hospital rest. FRICTION BACKSTAGE “I wasn’t floating through that play,” he says. There were “At first it bothered me very ■much that during the first play people might think they weren’t going to see me do much. But they stick around and they do. “I get a feeling every night that they’re with me and they’re rooting for this poor guy I’m playing. J think audiences like to see me move around a lot physically.” COMPARISON DRAWN In some details, the role resembles his video incarnation of Ed Norton, and mehtion of that part gets him into a comparison of the Carney everyone looks at and the Carney without makeup. ! “I’m hot actually so much a . . lofter, as some people say, as thrTcwTiedy^ Odd ttiarr dimTenJartalMhK myself. qualities—In my case, I know-are limited to their work, .“When I do a character like Ed Norton I think in a way I’m tipping my mitt and saying 'Gee, this is the kind of guy I’d love to be’—you know snapping fingers-—anythmg goes. FLIP DIFFICULT As soon as I come off cam-era I flip back—and sometimes I have a difficult time in just beihg me. “I hope "this play points up what kind of an actor I think of myself as. Not comic, not dramatic. Just actor, period. . * ie it “When I get in a show for any length of time I find myself missing TV and vice-versa. But I haven’t seemed to be able to crack the motion picture field yet.” ■ He’d also very much like a chance to appear in a musical, which he’s never done. SNIP FROM PAST "Carney,'who'turns 50 in December, recently became a city apartment dweller after living always out in opulent suburbia, another deliberate snip away from things remembered. His eyes often look tap. off as he talks; the moodJspK quillity. "Things dt the present time are very comfortable for me “I’m not on all the tirjne. land I’m very happy and con-think that you find an awful lotjtented. I’m more relaxed than of people in my business who! I was. I f«el better.” reports of intense friction back-|are basically shy and’introvert-! The interview over, he almost stage with costar Walter Mat-jgg jn nature, and their extrovert!laughs, thau. His 2£year marriage was1 breaking up; being In a farce about divorce didn’t “help Gradually, the, public funnyman and private brooder back in shape. There was an happy spell of living alone, other hospital stay. Glei booked him on for a triumphant “Honeymooner" reprise, digestion kicked up chronically; pi> nlrer, hut a hprniated dia-phragm that meant careful diet and no liquor. ♦ m The video return prospered Into more appearances, and in December 1966, he iriarried again. A few months ago, Morton Gottlieb, with whom he was associated in a previous ^Broadway play, “The Rope Dancers,*1 came along with another script, “Lovers.” It was Carney’s chance to complete the circle. After a lot of thought, he said y«s, FALL GLEASON SHOWS • Tlie production was booked for a limited engagement at Lincoln Center’s Beaumont Theater; where it net box-office records. Now Carney's commitment to make at least a half dffloen GlftB^ioii Jbows this fall has been rearranged so that he County in the southeast~corner of -the state. As they become self-supporting, the Indians leave the welfare rolls.; About 95 per cent of San Juan’s ' predominantly Indian population is welfare-dependent. The bill for the county in April of this year was $159,037. The project is costing the state less than $10,000 yearly. An Indian womaiucdn earn up to $15 a day making jewelry—a substantial boost over welfare subsidy, which averages about $185 a month .for a family of four. Forty women are now in training for the bead making. They were turning out about 36 dozen necklaces a week. Movitz wants to boost this to keep pace with his orders which he says already total several thousand dozen. The training gives uniformity to the necklaces, helps the women become more adept at mak- each piece), assures a steadier flQiiY in production and teaches those who didn’t know hpw to make the 'necklaces. Movitz has proposed a similar plan to the Navaho Tribal Council so production could be expanded throughout, the reservation, which takes In parts of Utah, New Mexico, Arizona and Colorado. His arrangement with welfare personnel is similar to t h a t which other companies in Utah have to sell the other crafts produced in Navaho training programs. These include work with silver, leather, wood and weaving. Singer Is Suing Detroit Agency DETROIT (XP) - Motown Records of Detroit is being sued by David Ruffin, a 27-year-old tenor and a member of the Temptations for 4% years. He contends he’s been put on ice, so to speak, and given no bookings. WWW Ruffin asks voidance of his contract, an accounting. of *his earnings, damages and an injunction preventing Motown’s interference With his working elsewhere. Ruffin says he incurred the displeasure of Motown and its subsidiary, International Talent Management Inc. last June 25 by demanding an accounting and asking to be paid immediately after each performance. W * w He says he was replaced as a member of the Temptations group, which- he claims has iBg Jhem—(they—are pajd_j[or pvpr p million Hnii«r« in recent years, and was promised but never given, a promotional campaign as an individual entertainer and< recording singer. PACTS CRITICIZED Ernest Goodman, Ruffin’s attorney, said contracts with Mo-and International give the companies “absolute control’ over economic and professional life and even part of personal life, ,w w w He described them as “appropriate only between a guardian and a child or mental incompetent” . and amount ‘economic peonage.” ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS! Art Camay _____Truman Capote s IN COLD BLOOD Written for the'Screen and Directed by Richard Brooks Music by QUINCY JONES A Columbia Pictures Release In Panavision* NBMSEBB|Sui(geslcd for. Mature .Uidienrts ■ ONEOFTHEYEAR’S 10 BEST! WED. - SAT. - SUN. at 1:10 - 4:00 -6:45 - 9:00 THUDS. - FBI. • MON. - TUIS. at 7:00 and 9:00 ,nTH RTTH Ml 1 *he nat'onS ! ■SnM&SSlkKHB AUtltKV •IKI'IUIIV mmm W.VMJY “TWO In* FOR thk ROAD** BOX OFFICE OPEN 7 GIANT FREE PLAYGROUND DRIVE-IN THEATER • EE 5-4500 2935 DIXIE HIGHWAY (U.S. 10) 1 BLOCK N. TELEGRAPH R0. CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE AND MORE PRAISE! “BEST ACTING TO MIA FARROW”- prpise&ri “SUBERB SUSPENSE” “FIRST RANK”— (*— Paramount Pictures Presents J Mia farrow | /William Castle Production PARAMOUNT PICTURES present. Color £ ROD LEB GEORGE SIBO MX SMI. NO WAY T6 TREAT A LADY 'Mi/iatfo Milt DRIVE-IN THEATER. SOUTH mCWAPH AT SB. LAKE RD.1 MILE W. WOODWARD • CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE i — • w mi\i W8 recommend that Torrid ssssasass / peter Gad White* /Rogervadim voce, / gains Color cow B fat Ski, mwkioh* technics I DRIVE IN THEATER --332 3200 BOX OFFICE OPEN 7 opoyke RO. AT WALTON BLVO.___ BOX OFFICE OPEN 7 THIS IS THE WAY Isti »r Detune ^ Michael Parks • Ava Gardner • Geo. C. Scott'' * ‘ Exciting POWER RIDES RACQUEL WELCH BOX OFFICE OP£N 7 GIANT FREE PLAYGROUNDS DRtVtlN THEATER V 874-1600 tiMS. LAKE RD. AT AIRPORT R0., RULE WEST OF DIXIE NOWY. (U S. 10) - CHILDREN UNDER 12 FREE THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER II, 1968 D—0 Deaths in Pontiac,Nearby Areas Mrt. Judd Almas [J- Godhardt Funeral Home, | arrangements were by I Keego Harbor. Service lor Mrs. Judd (Per-t Mrs. Laehn died yesterday, melia A.) Almas, 67, of 103 Pingree will be 11 a.m. Saturday at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home with burial in West Burlington Cemetery at Silver-wood.1' Mrs. Almas died this morning. Surviving are her husband; a daughter, Mrs. Jack PUkin-ton of Pontiac; two sons, Jack and William, both of Sylvan Lake; a brother, Wilfred Michaels of Commerce Township; a sister, Mrs. Eugene Ritchie of Berkley; and 10 grandchildren. Gertrude J. Balz Service lor Gertrude J. Balz. 64, of. 62 Pingree will be 9:30 a.m. Friday at the St. Nicholas Church “ip Wilkes-Barre,. Pa. Burial will be in St- Nicholas Cemetery, Wilkes-Barre. Rosary Will be $aid at 7:30 tonight at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Miss Balz died yesterday. She was 6 member of St. Michael’ Catholic Church and of the Altar Society there. Surviving are three brothers and one sister. , Mrs. ^ella J. McDade Service for Mrs. Nella J. McDade, 73, of 5901 Dixie, Waterford Township, will be 1 p.m. Friday at Coats Funeral Home, Waterford Township, with burial in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. Mrs. McDade died yesterday. Surviving are three sisters,, including Mrs. Hillary Denton of Waterford Township. Mrs. Everett McIntosh Mrs. Everett (Elizabeth M.) McIntosh, 42, of 1057 LaSalle, Waterford Township, died yesterday. Her body is at her home. Arrangements are by the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. She was a member of St. Benedict Catholic Church. Surviving are her husband; her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Christian J. Herrington of Waterford Township; two childrep, Kevin M. and Kimberly M. both at home; and a sister, Mrs. William Harper of Pontiac. Kaufman Chapel, Southfield. | Mr. Smith, a retired agent for] Metropolitan Life Insurance] Co., died yesterday. He was ia member of Congregaticp B’nai Israel, the B’naf B’rith and the American Legion. _ Surviving are his wife, Jenpt; a son, Col. Charles Smith of California; two daughters, Mrs. Stanford Conn of Orchard Lake and Mrs. Alan Warahaurer of Alexandria, Va.; four grandchildren; two brothers; and three sisters. Alice Taylor Service for Alice Taylor, 85, of 425 Midway will be 1 p.m. Fridky at the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. Miss Taylor died Monday. She was a member of Newman AME Church. Kathryn M. Carey TROY — Prayer service for Kathryn M. Carey, 2-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James Carey of 2691 Binbrooke, will be 9:30 a.m. tomorrow at d„„| PA,knn St. Thomas More Church with Paul ROchon buria, in White chapel Memor-Service for Paul Rochon, 55, ial Cemetery, Troy. Rosary eanmnn LpRov Johnson 311 Going will be 10 a.m. Fri-jservice will be 8 p.m. today at Seaman LeKoy jonnson day a( St Vjncent dePaul cath-!vasu-Lynch Funeral Home. Strike Raises School.Cost by $200,000 Cost of the Pontiac area v&-,§|§§ cational high school has gone ^ from $1.1 million to $1.3 million because of the recent construc-, tion strike. 2 I Oakland Schoo4s Board of Ed-. ,ucation, which is paying for the) school from county taxes and state funds, learned this yes-] terday at a regular meeting.; The board agreed to pay the I additional amount. SCHOOL’S INTEGRATED—A bus load of white children disembarks at a Negro area school yesterday as Berkeley’s plan for. full integration of elementary schools gets under wayr-Some 3,500 youngsters were moved by bus in What Dr. Dan Freudenthal of the Berkeley, Calif., Board of Education termed a “most thorough integration.” The school is to be on Perry | near Madison Junior High [School and is scheduled to be] open next fall. • . | ! In other business, the board [ awarded a contract for $800,000 bonds to pay for library equipment and' furnishings for the new Oakland Schools, Administration Building to Bank] BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) — [city manager could not again; An estimated 175 jammed into 0f the Commonwealth, which William Hanley]declare a “state of civil disas- Berkeley Lifts Ban on Public Gatherings] RAYMOND L. WHELPLEY Orion Twp. Man Killed in Viet Action Service for Seaman LeRoy Johnson, 43, of 82 N. Francis will be from the Naciola Funeral Home in Manila, the Philippines, with burial in the Manila International Cemetery at Nakiatirizal. Seaman Johnson died Friday In Yokasuka, Japan, where he was stationed. He had served with the Navy since enlisting in 1942. olic Church with burial in Mount Hope Cemetery. Rosary will be said at 8 p.m. tomorrow at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Mr. Rochon died today. H was a former Fisher Body Division employe and a member of St, Vincent de Paul Church. Surviving are his wife, Naomi; three daughters, Jacqueline and Mrs. James Miller, both of Pon-; tiac, ajnd Mrs, William Junglas Kathryn drowned yesterday. Surviving are her parents; two brothers, Marie at home and James of Kingspoint, N.Y.; three sisters, Monica, Maureen and Cheryl, all at home; and her grandmother, Mrs. Madeline Peterson of Ontario. City Manager William Hanley declare a ended Berkeley’s week long ban ter.” on loitering and public assembly * ' t )* Tuesday, partly defusing a rally Hanley had proclaimed the of protest from young activists'emergency during the Labor in the university city. (Day weekend after two nights of The rally was held as sched- violence in which ajwUceman Jaw Dlw„1)1B4Ut;i PM uled, however, with .protests was shot and wounded and adependent socialist Club, told against police and demands that]building under^construction was ^ aty Councjl that even; the law be changed so that the,dynamited. __________________I though the ban on gatherings had been lifted, activists demand that the law which makes possible the declaration of a] state of civil disaster be re- the ejty council room and a like j bid 3.76 per cent interest on number listened over loudspeak-| the three-year issue. ers outside as protesters were! —e—>------------- alloted 40 minutes to air their; DEMANDED REPEAL I Jack BloOnv leader of the In- Spec. 4 Raymond L. Whelpley, 21, son of Mr. and Mf'§: G§Sfge FT Whelpley; 3895 “ 1 Mill Lake, Orion Township, has I been listed as killed in action in Cole OutlmeS Department. 4 Challenges to Business Mrs. Allen E. Dyer | Whelpley, who died Friday, was a 1965 graduate of Lake ] Orion High School where he was drum major. He toured Europe { with the All-Student Band, USA. Area Woman Pleads Guilty in 'Pot* Case A Waterford Township woman j Panel May End fortas Logjam WASHINGTON (AP) - The Senate Judiciary Committee j n wdicuuiu ivwuwuK „ „ , _ . _. a pari oi leiegrapn nvenue NEW YQRK - American . . ; business must meet four major ■ * * * challenges in a changing world, ... . , , JI General Motors President Other demands he voicedi^^ N Cole said esterda were disarnung:police, foot pa-| Cole addressed the Sales trols instead of squad cars, re-ExecutiveC]ub bfNew York as moval of plamclothesmen fromth recipient of its 1968 Ap-public meetings and blocking off pj|uSe Award | part of Telegraph Avenue H To meet the summer employe at American Aggregates Corp. of Oxford, Whelpley attended Bay-De-Noc College at Escanaba and Northern Michigan University, Marquette, before entering service. He was a member of the Gingellville I Baptist Church. Surviving besides his parents ‘major pressure are a sister,-Mrs. Ronald Pep—------------ INDEPENDENCE TOWN- ^ac yesterday pleaded guilty to I ^ohnM^^seledio^orA^ nia camPus on a regular or per-points in Arperican business to- ! per of Waterford Township, and HIP-Service for Mrs. Allena misdemeanor charge of ~ 1 ...... j - ....... U& . „M James, both of Pontiac; one E. (Flora E.) Dyer, 43, of 7059 ffion of hypnotic drugs. Just aortas to oe cm ] home; mid I. rth **•,***, G«rge Thp^jrini, 2_p.m. & fcl £ Wh c i t . * . . tiac, apd Mrs. William jungias INDEPENDENCE tuwn- 1—“ , ° : - j„nf johnson’c selection of Abe- points in American business to-,per or waieriora lownsiup, anu Surviving are his wife, Estela f Walted Lake: two sons, Paul SHIP — Service for Mrs. Allen a misdemeanor charge of pos- . ., f justice of the manent basis for use by.youth day *> Cole suggested these re- grandparents Mr. and Mrs. [.; a daughter, Linda M. at , ,___»^*u n—™ ,«________________* rv... « -jom session of hypnotic drugs. Just l.° “ cmei jusuce pi u* a„ri WiviBt ^.1:.-.^- 66 ur wt^intov a*fnrd. l of hypnotic drugs. Just ^nr^JnhJohnson was^mem 1 Township; sisters, Mrs.j^wfe E Wint Funeral Itom^ leave the!^ J ^ vlir nf FoS Larson and Mr®, fimial wiU be in Ukwiew eem- *«*■ ^ . ,,1R ber of Veterans of Foreign R » . T „n - th .f Pontiac jo,„pv -^ffil-Mrs. Alice Henry, 40, of 3518 Wars, Heart of the Lakes Post Mrs Kenneth Cooley of | Mrs Dver died today -Lexington will be sentenced 2706, Keego Harbor. ; ^iv^Mes ^ husband l^.^byJVmerfort Justice i children. I are a son, Spec. 4 Leslie A. wit) Service for Albert R. Joy, 53,‘Mrs. Alexander Schaferu* daughter, Catherin/’ K. at ^ayf*! sentence pending fur-of m OMCMt WatertMl| to, Mrs. AieimdorVme; md Hm brolhets. | “ O. KM Mitchell and activist groups. quirements; ,' ' George W. Whelpley of Oxford. nnrvnnpnfc nf pIpvaS'For i Bloom also ealled for amnesty • The need of business to be Funeral arrangements are to JK associate justice to those arrested during the ^v®" more responsive to the be by Voorhees-Siple Funeral ~ • &------ past week and denounced what ^consumer’s_needs and ex- Nome, Pontiac, he called police brutality. - rpectatioits. ------------— .. I • The need to become even: n . .. j more efficient managers of the rontiac MarH^**»-■ , “New or improved processes,! succeed retiring Earl Warren, ar% reported anxious to settle the matter. y-\ i n • • materials and eauipment are all! Gets Prison in J A^rt R. Joy j*- .£ ^ | g" „ whether the committee, which Service for Mrs. Alexander .home; ana two Drainers. w I meets today, should reopen tes- (Agafia) Schafer, 83, of 4020 n wjx-L.M Mrs. Henry, who taught for timony onthe appolntment. Re- mlMapleleaf will be 2 p.m, Friday Kerm.t Mitchell \ 8^en years at Pon-'lated to that decision is whether Hat the Vasu-Lynch Funeral LAKE ORION - Service for ^.5 wiu Rogers Elementary,Fortas will agree to an inyita- 1/mrn * ^ . HjHome, Royal Oak, with burial O. Kermit Mitchell, 54, of 3361^^, Was arrested July 2 tion to reappear for questioning1 nlT l\Un UGUTn foctiye management of he. , Mr- J°y died yesterday. He rpmeforv m-troit Washington will be 2 p.m. Sat- after township police found « the hearings are reopened great human resources of the Sunday in connection With the urday at AUen’s Funeral Home. marijUana growing in a flower f°r testimony, the members] a Pontiac man charged in the business enterprise. stabbing of a boarder in her Burial wfflbe in East Lawn box jn front of her home. She were discussing I hit-and-run death of a 17-year-1 # The need “to iearn how to]?®™1Ea“® .............„ products ™dS"m«“0naChaW0' important -to this objective,” Cole;said. Even more vital, he Hit-Run Death 15 -^-1'":™' Exam Sept. 26 in City Knifing Rontiac woman arrested member of the Pontiac * Woodlawn, Cemetery Detroit. Elks Lodge 810. He was Mrs. Schafer died yesterday, employed In plant protection at I Surviving are a daughter, GMC Truck and Coach Division. Mrs. Lydia Petit at Jiome; a Surviving are his wife, Anna;]s^s^er> three grandchildren; and one daughter, Mrs. Howard five great-grandchildren. Black of Waterford Township; | n . . - C—-iL one brother, Bud of Pontiac; Ben|amin r. Smith one sister; and one grand- Service for Benjamin daughter. - I Smith, 74, of 6 Rosshire Court » 1/ ,l ■ ki i l i was to be 3 p,m. today at Mrs. Katherine M. Laehn Origins Weinstein & Sons Service for Mrs. Katherine M,| Chapel, Chicago, 111. Burial Laehn, 74, of 173 S. Roslyn will to follow in Memorial Park be 10 a m. tomorrow at the C. ICemetery, Evanston, 111. Local Mr. Mitchell, a maintenance employe at Artco Manufacturing, Orion Township, died yesterday. Surviving are his wife, Betty; three sons, Joseph of Kalamazoo, John with the Air Force at Carswell AFB, Fort Worth, __________{. Tex., and Robert of Bangor, marijuana. Maine, a daughter, Mrs. Lewis, Kiehler of Romeo; three sis-; ters; and eight grandchildren, j A neighbor formed Waterford Township police of the drug law violation. [FEELINGSDEVELOP ing on whether to recommend §rwrjntenced'ro'"}ercranaise „ourt. ^ on vZ attempted munler. reputedly ■- W- *• -BK %‘ ord Townshm firmed. lyesterday by Oakland County (personal appeal can hope $S,Kf-Judee Maurice E Circuit Judge Philip Pratt.. ^ the attention {jRSl the GM Brooks, 38, of 25 Walnut. Despite entering a plea of gull-1 After a day of wrangling Mon-1 * * * {breed of consumer,” ty, Mrs. Henry’s attorney, da sen. Hugh Scott, R-Pa., Gary Gillespie, 28, of 350 president said. Robert Isgrigg, told the court said .. from Fradarlck H. Own. Johney A. horn Diana K. BrldW*. Eleanor A. from Howard Glaiar. Barbara J. from Roy Wabaro. Elsie L. from Frederick C. Patterton. Marlon from Jamoa F. Gonyeau. . Martha L. from Vern W. wlektlne. Barbara M. from Gaoroa H. Karr., BarWa fwh Robert ETciark. News in Brief cratic Rep. George H. Fallon’s fried and has two children, victory was a photo-finish with margin of less titan 1,000 votes. Rhode Island Democratic Rep. FernandS^. Germain won renominatiotfand now faces Republican challenger Lincoln Al-mond, a town administrator. In New Hampshire, incumbent Republican Sen. Norris Cotton crushed an opponent and now takes on Democratic Gov. John W. King. House Speaker Walter R. Peterson won the GOP gubernatorial nomination; the Democrats {ticked Emile R. rassiere, a county attohiey. David C. Hoeh, involved in a row with police at the Democratic National Convention over use of a credential-checking machine, won a spot against incumbent GOT Rep. James Cleveland. Republican Rep, Louis C: Wyihann also wbn re-nomination. the early iher auto, submerged ! South Umpqua River, I Monday. 1 Mrs.- Pennington, who is 17, gave birth to a daughter Tues-day.in Roseburg Hospital to the United States in June, a up, the United States and other The big. June .sale was trig-humiliating act for the govern-Igold pool nations no longer try gered by the French need to returns’, out to have been larg- to keep the free market price in'store the value of the franc and H. Meehler of 5820 Dwight, Waterford Township, told township police yesterday someone stole a toolbox, tackle and outboard boat motor from the trunk of bis car about 12:05 yesterday. He valued tbe goods at $1,185. ■' He revived her with artificial {respiration, and state police took her to the hospital for Havel rescued Mrs. Pennington After he saw her auto skid on a ' rain-wet highway and plunge down a 100-foot embankment into the river. i . er than speculation indicated. The upper limit of guesses as to the size of the sale, necessi-tated to bolster the suddenly wobbly franc, was about $100 million. But the Treasury Department’s quarterly report Rummage sale for Q.B.C-A. At 3805 Dili Rd., Drayton, §at., Sept. %. -Adv. St. James United Methodist Church Rummage, and White Elephant Sale. 451 W. Kennett Rd., Sept. IS, 14, 8:30. to 1 p.m., both days. -A**- MOM’S Rummage: Thursday, 9 to 12, Indianwood and Baldwin,^ —Adv. treatment of a fractured collar bone. Hospital officials said the 6-pound , 9-ounce baby was one week, overdue. Archaeologists have found the remnants-of food dating back to 5000 years B. C. in neolithic settlements excavated recently in Armenia. check, instead letting it find its {make it convertible into other own level. currencies at the rate insisted on by the’ International Mone- tary Fund. The French had to buy francs wherever they could and many who had francs for sale insisted on dollars as payment. ONLY ONE WAY The traditional regulated price of $35 ap ounce is now observed only in transactions between governments. MIPmiUL, I Starting in 1962,.France em- monetary gol£ transactions, re- barked pn an aggressive policy leased Tuesday, showed the ac- of buying U.S. gold, edming tual figure to be $220 miljion. around every month to in VB0UIiaaiItc, ure r_____, ,1T.., The report also showed that change the dollars it held for & one way to obtain them-despite the big purchase from bullion. through the sale of gold to the France the United States expe- SETTLEs INTO PATTERN united States. ri^n<^ a $2!.9 million outflow- ^ eventuaUy settled down Other significant sales to the of gold during the second quar- to a pattern of purchasing at United States in_ the -second *er"..* least $34 minion every modtb, ONLY FRACTION - ;an outflow that seriously hurt After years of having dollars in 'abundance, the French had ' But this was only a tiny frac-tkm of the;$1.4-bijUon^ dram dur- United States was still committed to supporting the price of gold on the London market. the level of U.S. gold holdings. But the French were able to non ot tne ?i.4-DUUon aram uur- oui ure riowu ™ ing the first quarter when the keep up the pace only until Sept. ____ when they stopped baying. From then Until this June the de Gaulle government had no quarter-were by Great Britain, $50 millioh, and the Netherlands, $30 million. Belgium led the buyers with $32.5 million, followed by Ireland $32*million; Iraq $28.1 million: and Italy* Switzerland, and Saudi Arabia, $25 million each. D—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1988 'ave! On "Double Graded” Produce Buys! ... AND TASTI THI DIFFERENCE ,TOO/ IN PARMER JACK PRODUCE - BECAUSE HE ONLY SEUS THI ABSOLUTE BBT! Equally important, when you buy Farmer Jack's "Double Graded" Produce * • is the differcnoe in the money-you.-save, because you never, have any waste! Farmer Jack oh|y buys U.S. Government inspected fresh fruits and vegetables, and in addition to this • • every piece of Produce he buys is always graded twice! Farmer Jack'4 Produce graders examine every shipmient he buys, and place the "Double Graded" label on oqly the finest, full-flavored Produce^ and reject all the rest! Tree* ripened, and growing field fresh, - - and every piece "Double Graded" * - is why Farmer Jack backsupwhateveryou buy with a 200% money-back guarantee! FARMER JACK'S ■ BUTTERNUT PIECES AND STEMS Tender Mushrooms WHOLE KERNEL Niblots Corn TOWN PRIDE Tasty Tomatoes FARMER JACK HALVES OR SLICED YELLOW Cling Ponchos EATIN TIME Tasty Applesauce TOPiCANA Fruit Drinks UBBY HAWAIIAN Pineapple Juko VAN CAMPS Pork & Boons ASSORTED VARIETIES Wylers Dry Soup * tt H> MANZANILLA Mario Olivos TOWN PRIDE Creamy Mayonnalso SPECIAL LABEL Bod Rose Tea Bags™ CAMPFIRE Marshmallows IN NON RETURNABLE BOTTLES Tlco Assorted Pop 12" BEACON Aluminum Foil TOWN PRIDE liquid Potorgont ROMAN BRANO liquid Starch ROMAN BRAND liquid Bloach PLAIN OR IODIZED Morton Salt ASSORTED VARIETIES STRAINED Beechnut Baby food NBC BRAND Oreo Cookies FARM MA)D Evaporated Mile BETTY CROCKER sjCako Mixes 4 0Z. WT. CAN 1 LB. 12 oz; 1 CAN , 1 LB. 13DZ. CAN 1QT. 14 OZ, CAN 1 LB. BOZ. CAN 2 OZ. WT. CAN *£69« x-^9< 1 LB. | 10 OZ. CTN., 4KOZ. WT. JAR 25« CAMPBELLS APPETIZING Mushroom Soup 10% OZ. I WT. CAN ALL PURPOSE COFFEE Chase & Sanborn 2 LB. CAN Peanut Butter MAKES DELICIOUS COCOA Nestles Quick REpULAR OR OUICK Quaker Oats PI LLSBURY SPECIAL LABEL Pancake Mix TIDY HOME lundt Bags QUAKER MAID ASSORTED FLAVORS leu Cream s FRESH FROZEN Birds Eyu AwKko *29^ 8 VARIETIES Ocoma Meat Pius FREEZER QUEEN SLICED BEEF, TURKEY OR Salisbury £ Gravy ;»$]29 PURE REFRESHING Farm Maid Orange Juko C Plain or pimento aSBSB_ Kraft Velveeta ISp Q®' SPECIAL LABEL SOFT ... MU* Chiffon Mnruorine ct“; assorted flavors — Farm Mold Fruit Drinks 4^*100 FARM MAID LARGE OR SMALL CURD 1 LB. mjOi Cottage Chaus# Sft 39* FARM MAID J4 PT. IQt Coffee Cream ctn. FARMER JACK'S PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER • GLENWOOD PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER O MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER O DIXIE HWY. AT WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD • NORTH PERRY AT ARLENE TftE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 D—11 Double Graded" Steaks Are Sale Priced! NOW'S THE TIME TO STOCK UP WITH THESE MARBLED AN? AGED FLAVOR-FILLED STEAKS! THEY'RE DELICIOUS MONEY-SAVERS! l|.s. CHOICE TENDER Sirloin Steak Chuck Steak Rib Steak SEMI BONELESS BOSTON STYLE PerUutts YOUNG TENDER Hen Turkeys RIG ON ' Turkey Breast SKINLESS, GRADE 1 Mr* Pitts Franks SLICED, ASSORTED LUNCHEON MEAT Kckrich Smorgas Pac LARGE REG. OR THICK GRADE 1 Mr. PItts Bologna SHOULDER CUT PONTIAC MALL SHOPPING CENTER • GLENWOOD PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER • MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER • DIXIE HWY. AT WILLIAMS LAKE ROAD • NORTH PERRY AT ARLENI - THE PONTJAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 But Dealer's a Good Guy ‘Detroit Roulette': Auto Is Shot WASHINGTON (UPI) - There are a lot of big trees near the press parking area on the grounds of the U..S. Capitol, and a couple of years ago my 195f pact developed Dutch e ease. I had it sprayed : times with an arsenic solu- J tion, but the fungus kept i spreading. Last week it de- a veloped terminal com plica- L tions. Not e transplant c Mot even a transmission lant could save it. IA T#1 * * * fm M l I felt over the • was mitigated somewhat by I derived from seeing West’s e dynamics upheld once . again.............-...... This law, more commonly known as "Detroit roiilette," states that if you buy two new tires and spend $135 having the brakes repaired on a nine-year-old car, it will break down completely within two weeks. OLD ACQUAINTANCE Another compensating factor stemming from the collapse of the compact was the opportunity it afforded to renew my association with used-car dealers, It had been so long since I had visited a used-car lot, I had almost forgotten what princely fellows the salesmen are. Pearls salesman, who was cheerfully impoverishing himself on my behalf. "You probably have a wife and family to support.” “Dont worry about it,” he said. "I'm actually independently, wealthy and only Work here as my way of serving humanity.” SEVERAL FEATURES The car he had picked out as “expressing the real you” must have been left over from one of those “cars of tomorrow” shows. At any rate, it had several features I didn’t recognize. “What are these platforms along the sides for?” I asked. "We call those ‘running boards,’” he said. “They make it easier for you'to get in and out of the car. And if you are taking a trip, you can set your luggage on them.” “That’s a very clever idea,” I said,. “But why not put the luggage in the trunk?” A RUMBLE SEAT “The beauty of this car is that it doesn’t have a trunk,” he said. “If you raise that lid in the rear, you will find there is another seat back there. We can it a ‘rumble seat.’ That way you get both a convertible and a hardtop in the same car,” I was tempted to buy it, particularly after he pointed out that I could put Water in the radiator without raising the hood. But somehow I-couldn’t bring myself to take advantage of a soft touch. Kellys Setting Clan Reunion Draft Upsets Grad Students WASHNGTON (AP) - CASTLEBAR, Ireland (AP) — ■ ■ ■ The Kellys are coming in uni uate schools and graduate stu-precedented numbers, and the *teady kept in suspense hunt is on for the chief of that mor« £*? a, year- probably celebrated clan. ■ jwon’t know for another six * * {months how hard the draft is Add the O’Kellys, who arej6®W6 to hit them, coming too, and you will have JJ’S 110 use asking the experts, the biggest clan rally ever..^®?^011. authorities indicate Grad- ered pathway out of military service fyr a privileged few, while others had to serve. m the new law, Congress con- 65 per cent cut in the incomingl graduate class, with grad schools catering increasingly to “women, older persons, those who have physical disabilities staged in modem Ireland. * ★ * - . The three-day celebrations start Saturday in Castlebar and Westport, County Mayo’s' proudest towns. The only non-Kellys nvited are Ireland’s President Samon de Valera, Prime Minister Jack Lynch and similar ce-jlebrities. grad students may be drafted this school year, but they won’t swear to it; private experts say 175,000 though they can’t prove it. With such wildly divergent predictions, schools and students can only wonder about their future. Their quandry dates back to 1 Illustrious Kellys on the Ustfc . 1967’ when Congress include Princess Grace of Mon- “r”1 aco, whose ancestors cames from .Mayo. The princess has said she hopes to makeit. tinued graduate deferments in and> ironically enough, foreign medicine and the ministry, but students." left it up to the National Securi- TEACHER LOSS FEARED School men feared that undergraduate education, too, would suffer from the loss of graduate students who doubled as part-time teachers. The fears were translated into numbers by Mrs. Betty Vetter, executive director: of the Scientific Manpower Commission, private organization of scientific ty Council to allow deferments in other “essential” fields. For eight months students and schools wondered which disciplines would be sanctified jas essential” by the council. 7 TO LOSE DEFERMENTS The answer, last February, was: none. Men in their first year or just entering grad school were to societies. Ipse their student deferments , draft ,.. them as the oldest men in it.^ AVOIDED DRAFT And the taw requires drafting 175,000 ffad students- ,ron “ch i &£ L **** and Britain, plus big battalions !also with a wife and children or Wilson, president of the Ameri-of the resident Kellys, a clan an “essential occupation”' and. can Council on E d u c a t i o n, outnumbered only by the Mur- Y®1 another-virtually perma- “means that most college grad-phys in the Dublin phone book. |nent-deferment. juates in 1968 and students end- The Irish Tourist Board is back- Many ofifcials in both Con- tag their first year of graduate tag the rally as part of its un-jgress and the administration [school in 1968 will be drafted in not only student deferments, but ending campaign to get the thought it unfair that talent and the near future.” (also some 327,000 occupational! Irish back to Ireland. {wealth could open an ivy-cov-r- Other educators warned of a deferments for which official! {guidelines had been removed by [the same National Security {Council decision. 7 At the same time, draft calls/ over the sunuper, have been at their lowest in 18 months, further shrinking any early effects ■ of that decision. A ★ ★ Almost all would-be grad students should be able to enroll this fall with little chance the draft would reach them for at least the next few months. Hershey has indicated — although there is no uniform polir cy—that those who get draft notices midway through aschool term may have their induction postponed until the end of the term. DRAFT CALLS LOW Draft boards, meeting monthly, have hardly made a dent so far in the big job Of reviewing, TEETHING PAIN? Millions of mothers rely on Bahy OM-JEL liquid. Put on—pain's gone. Recommended by many pediatricians. Easy to use.Bringsprolonged fMHnHkMh^ rel|of. Carries Per-EBSTJr ents’ Magazine seal. Ask pharmacist for baby ora-Jef Pick Your Savings! Guardsman Rayon Tires Save IO% When You Buy 1 Tire 7 Save 15% When You Buy Two Save 20% When You Buy Three Save 25% When You Buy Four Guardsman Rayon Tires GUARANTEED 30 MONTHS • Extra-wide tread puts a bigger “bite” on the road o Wrap-around, shoulders make steering easier, cornering eater* /J Tires K 85 For OP #P a:* “ 1-^ " m .Each Tire Phis Bid Tiros in Trada 6.50x13 Tubeless Blackwalls Sears Rayon Cord Tubeless Blackwall Guardsman Tires Reg. Price ■flirt with Old Tire Sale Price 1 Tir. with Old Tire Sale Price 2 Tires with Old Tires Sale Price I Tim with Old Tim Sale Price 4 Tires with DM Tires Plus Federal Excise Tex Each Tire 6.50x13 11.05 16.95 30.50 H8.05 5345 1J1 6.35x14 18.95 17.95 32.20 45.45 56.85 1.95 1.36x14 20.95 18.86 35.60 50.25 6245 2.66 1.75x14 22.95 20.65 39.00 58.50 68.85 2.10 8.25x14 25.95 23.35 44.10 60.15 77.66 2.35 8.55x14 28.95 26.15 44.20 73.50 86.85 246 7.75x15 - 22.9S 26.65 39.00 51.60 60.85 2.21 8.15x15 25.95 23.85 44.10 66.18 T7.05 2.36 8.45x15 28.95 26.15 49.20 i 73.00 MU 244 Open Mondiy, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 to 9, Tuesday, Wednesday 9 to 5:30 WHITEWALLS ONLY $3 MORE PER TIRE Sears! Downtown Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 SEARS, ROEBUCK AND CO. NEW STEEL WHEELS 0 Sale Ends Saturday To Fit Most Cars 99 Each 13,14, and 15-in. Sizes WHEN YOU BUY X.S.T. SNOW TIRES X.S.T. 4-Ply Rayon Snow Tires GUARANTEED 36 MONTHS 6.50x13 Tubalaes Blackwall Each* Plus 1.81 Federal Excise Tax 13” Steel Wheel... 99c with purchase X.S.T. Tubeless Snow Tim Tire Price Plus F.E.T. Each Steel Wheel With Purchase 6.50x13 17.95 1.81 99c 7.00x13 20.95 1.92 99c 6.95x14 19.95 1.95 99c 7.35x14 20.95 2.06 99c 7.75x14 Z2.95 2.19 99c 8.25x14 24.95 2.35 99c 8.55x14 26.95 2.56 99c 7.75x16 22.95 2.21 99c 8.15x15 24.95 2.36 99c 8.45x15 26.95 2.54 99c WHITEWALLS QNLY S3 MORE PER TIRE •4-ply rayoh cord resists heat build-up, gives excellent stability and long * mileage •Runs quietly at highway speeds, gives fine road traction for fast starts and stops •Ho trade-in required/ on purchase of winter tires •Free Allstate tire mounting and rotation Wheels Balanced Weights Included ' THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY; SEPTEMBER II, 1#66 DAILY 10 WED., THURS., FR1J SAT. ORLON® BULKIES! NEVER-IrON PJ'S WOMEN'S MESH HOSE COTTON CORDUROY Our Reg. X for 76c JM ffT 4fled rayon and miscellaneous fiber*. Brown, green, gold, beige, red. Limit 1 Per Customer CAULKING -CARTRIDGES Our Reg. 27c ea. 3 66< | While Quantity Lotts 1 For metal, wood also. Limit 4. Reg. 87c eaulk gun..... ITc 4-qt., 3-qt., 2-qt. covered saucepans, 4-qt. Dutch oven, ](H6-incn uncovered chicken fryer. 3-ply stainless ateel. Limit 1 Per Customer 500 yd*. Only Discount Price 5 35” and 36” width cotton flannel in white and aqlid pastels and floral, conventional and juvenile print*. Limit 9 yds. Per Customer Special Buy! Famous-make full-fashioned FALL FASHION KNITS AT FABULOUS SAVING | While Quantity Lasts \ Discount Price, 397 Hand-loomed Orion® acrylic knit* at 3.97! Newest styles, a rainbow of colors; povelty stitching. 8-16. Limit: 2 Per Customer Keep 36 Slides in This AIREQIHPT METAL MAGAZINE Our Reg. 1.57 "RIGHf GUARD" DEODORANT 288 Only 7-ounce* aerotoi can of Gillette “Right Guard” for the family. Limit 1 Per Customer •M.t ....hi Discount Price 77* "JRiBOYS'LlNED PANTS | Our Reg. 1.97 | Warm cotton corduroys, S twills: brown, blue, tan, navy: | 3-7. Limit 4 to customer 2*3 STCERINGTaWET" 2.33 Our Reg. > 2.97 (Cushions wheel! Red, tan. black. Limit 1 Per Customer While Quantities Lust' STF10DSTNGINES 66( Improve performance! 15-os. liquid wt. Limit 3 Per Customer. While Quantities Last! CRESTTeOTI+PASTE 144 Only 6%-ot.* Crest with Fluoristan protects against tooth decay. Limit 2 Per Customer ] Discount Price ;i 38< DRINK 'N WET BABY DOLL | I 60 Only I Our Reg. 3.94 | EARRING GLAMOR Our Reg. 96c I'MISS GINA' SAAARTIESi g Baby Bumpkin, 18” tall . . . ' « drinks and wets. In pretty, ruffly dreas. Limit T Per Customer 2?* j While Quantity Lasts 1 Charmer*! Pierced, piereed-looks. Limit 3 cards per customer § 1 While Quantity lasts [ New wipef-clean shoes, many j:j colors. Girls’ 8V4-4.—■ | Limit 2 prs. per customer. Our Reg. 2,88 ;i 22" POWER MOWER | 288 Only | 3 H.P. Briggs Stratton recoil starter engine. 11-type handle with single engine control. T” wheel*. Limit J per cus- Our Reg. 41.44 “KgfUirting” is a family affair . . . See How Easy GLENWCOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWGOD THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 E—3 OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUN. 11-6 WED., THURS., FRI., SAT*. 5. ICrtsgt Company with Start* throughout th# Unittd Stott*, Canada and Patrla Rico I American Home Discounts! 102 Sq. In., 14" Picture Measured Diagonally COLOR PORTABLE TELEVISION No money down - Pay only 10.27 per month Smart Slimline Cabinet Vinyl Walnut-Grain Finish The distinctive set for family or personal viewing. Features all channel tuning, UHF slide-rule tuning dial; VHF telescoping antenna; advanced circuitry and much more. 27988 MmUI TU-40P Perfect Family Portable SLIMLINE BLACK & WHITE TELEVISION Has All Channel Reception PORTABLE TV WITH 75 SQ. IN.* PICTURE 99&S Discount Price Charge It Decorator styled portable with 184* sq. inches of viewable screen. Outstanding reception, front mounted speaker and- controls. Earphone and jscl. •I*'lMe»»r» »•••««•* *•»•*»** ' 688S Discount Price Charge It Black and white portable with front top mounted controls, superb sound and picture performance, “semi-concealed” carrying handle, trim styling. ‘irSn.iMan- 12-TRANSISTOR RADIO Our Reg. 15.6R B dA A A 4 Days Only 0 9 O Realtone's JADE 12-transistor portable ... power-lniilt for power reception. AM and FM. AC/DC. Charge It. ■ .. ~ Portable, and Easy to Use LADY SCHICK CONSOLETTE DRYER Our Reg. 21.87 4 Day Only 19.68 RIVAL WAFFLER/GR1LL Lady Schick Consolette, by Electric. Dries hair quickly, gently. Features selective temperature control, adjustable hood. Completely portable. Charge It. 16,88 Our Reg. 19.88 4 Daya Only Automatic thermostat eontrol and Teflon®-coated reversible grids. ljBO” grilling area. Signal Glo light. 4-SLICE TOASTER I 13.44 Toasts 1, 2, 3 or 4 slices at a time; reheats cold toast without burning. Adjusts for light, medium or dark. 9-CUP PROCTOR PERCOLATOR Our Reg. " 11.87 4 Days Only ■ PROCTOR-SILEX fully automatic electric percolator iu see-thru clean glass with “lift-out” bowl for easy cleaning. Special flavor selector lets you brew the exact flavor of coffee desired. 9.97 FOUR-QUART CORN POPPER Our Reg. 4.t6 9 4 Days Only w New WEST BEND popper pops family-size servings. Needs no stirring, ahaking, hits,“see.thru” cover knob, insulated plastic legs that protect table.'Use also to heat soup, chili, other foods. OSTER 2-SPEED BLENDER 16.88 Our Reg. 19.97 &DayOnly-2-speed OSTERIZER blender . . . with 4-cup plastic container, graduated for easy measuring, opens at both ends for easy cleaning. Continuous-feed cutting well. Chrome finish. Recipe book included. Our Reg. 19.97, 4 Day Only AUTOMATIC COFFEE-MAKER 5.37 Our Reg. 6.3 7 4 Days Only 1 5 to 9 cup fully automatic coffee maker by West Bend,'. with graceful new Ityling, new easy-pour spout. When coffee's deliciously brewed, it remains, serving hot . . . down to last cup. Your Satisfaction Is Guaranteed Wfen mart!. GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD E—4 THE PONTIAC PBESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 OPEN DAILY, 10-10; SUN., 11-6 WED., THURS., FRL, SAT. Choice of ttylei, white or gold metal band*. 17-JEWEL WATCHES IB88 Westdox ALARM CLOCK 1.88 Nap, keywound clock with ivory colored cate. Electric ALARM CLOCK 2.46 W Our Reg. 2.96—4 Day* Alarm dock ha* *weep tec-vi end hand, ahatterproot § cryataL Fall Checkerboard Colors SQUAW BOOT FRINGE BAG Our Reg. 2.83 4 Days Only Leather-look patch bags feature drawatring doting, fringe trim. In choice of checker-board colors. 13x15’-size. Ideal with aquaw boots. Other sport or casual wear. Charge it! C HILDREN'S HOSE 56* Our Reg. 6Be 4 Day A. Knee-high* .. 6-9Vi. SIZES 9-11_______56c -STRETCHY LACE OVER-KNEE HOSE JR. MISS HOSE Reg. 76ei 56* 54< BOYS'. CRE W SOCKS I 3 PR. 70c 1 FOR ffV Package 2 pair B. Scamlen popular colors. Sites 8Vi-10W. J r Our Reg. 72c 4/Day» Only Picture-pretty Spanish lace it really action stretch nylon. In white, French white and fashion colors. Misses’ sites 8W to 11. Charge It! MEN'S CREW SOCKS 56* Our Reg. 68c 4 Day C. Of Turbo Orion® acrylic. Spandex top. ODaNat T.M. Special Purchase! NEVER-PRESS CASUAL PANTS Our Regular 4.97 Charge It 4 bays Only • Tight Oxford Weavo • Continentals • Slims a Regular Ivy’s • Bottoms Finished Permanently pressed blend of: 50% Fortrel® polyester, 50% cotton. Tightlyvwoven for longer wear, completely finished and ready to wear! Black, olive, brass, rust, dark olive, navy, teal blue, bone, blue. 28 to 42; ■ Flbar lafutfritt T.M. Square Toed9 Block Heel FLATS FOR FALL Oxford and High Top Styles BASKETBALL SHOES ACME LATEX HOUSE PAINT Reg. $7.86 $$37, NOW GAL. LATEX AAASONRY PAINT Our Reg. MI GAL 4 Days Only M: Choose white or colors. Exterior latex masonry paint resists moisture and peeling. Provides good protection at low cost. Gallon.sizes. Save. Out Regular 3.76 4 Days Only Choeie from exciting new flan for echool and dree*. Include* the new He-She look, wing tip perforated ttylei, hardware trim, center buckle*. Grained vinyl upper*. 5-9. 096 gdKtl Charge It Our Reg. 3.48 4 Days Only 096 Charge It Rugged basketball shoe* bout fully cushioned inner •ole* and arch supports, with thick rubber sole*. Machine washable, too! 2Vfc-6; 6Vi-l 2. Shopping at Kmart will save you hundreds 'every year! GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD American Home Discounts! THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 E—5 DAILY 10-10; SUN. 11-6 WED., THURS , FRI., SAT. mpony with Sforei throughout *h» United Si trCanodoondPweftoRfce I STRETCH DENIM SLACKS Our Reg. 3.78 4 Days Only Charge It Assorted plaid* in 759* cotton and 25% nylon ... an eaiy-care blend! Here are the slacks that fit well, look great and don’t cost a lot. Have aeveral pair now. 8-18. The New Marco Polo Look! SLIM DRESSES Our Reg. 8.47 4 Days Only 688 Charge It 100% C^oloray® jersey bonded to acetate tricot! Colored Duco square dot over winter white. White/brown,’ white/gold, white/navy. Split % sleeves,-contrast button trim. Superb fashion buy that flatters. Siaes 5 to 13. WOMEN'S CARDIGANS Our Reg. 5.88 4Days Only Charge It Bulky acrylic knit cardigans in white and a host of high-fashion colors. Cable and pointel detail, wing and no-collar looks. All .ms-chine washable. Sizes 34-40. 466 GIRLS' SWEATER SET Our Reg. 2.97 4 Days Only Twin sweater set: long sleeve cardigan and short sleeve pullover! No-run, non-jg stretch; machine washable acrylic andp rayon blend. White, red, navy, tur-1 quoise. 8-14. ...J| 3.22 2.22 6.88 Fresh Fashion Looks! WOMEN'S FtHfc LOOK TRIM OR 1 NOff-TRIM COA Our Reg. 23.88 4 Days Only 1288 Our Reg. 1.8*7 * 4 Days ■f Junior petite, misses* and junior sizes! Single or . double breasted or Nehru styles. Some trimmed with fur-fabrics including: cheetah, leopard, whites! A-lines, full sweeps, more! Laminated and wool plaids, kurls, solid wool types, ribbed laminated. CHAR0E IT NOW... AT 010 SAVINGS... rLATER! Colotful prints! Dainty Tweeds or Plaids! Dressy or Casual Looks! BRUSHED GOWNS GIRLS' FASHION COATS w-jm LJ[ L_ i 4 Charge 4 Our Regular 15.971 _ 4 Dqys Only 1 :•? Easy-care 80% acetate and 20% nylon blend! Laminated wool blends; vinyl-leather looks, cotton corduroys, poddle Square necks, boat necks, embroidered cloth, acrylics or pile. Fall shade* in smart tweeds and plaids. Some with :£ yokes! Hot pink, wedgewood blue, maize, hoods, some with fake fur collar and trim. Single and double breasted turquoise, gold, blue, -peach, -pink, Siaes—styles. Dressy and casual styles for all. Sizes 4 to 14. :.fS-M-L. You Get So Much for Your Money at Kmart—You Feel Good About Shopping! GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD V 'f Woodgrpin Vinyl, Upholstery On HIGH BACK STYLED DINETTE CHAIRS THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 OPEN DAILY 10-10, SUNDAY 1 Soft, absorbent “Portrait Rose” jacquard pattern towels. Choose Venetian green, yellow, pink, blue, red, old gold. “PORTRAIT, ROSE” JACQUARD WASHCLOTH, REO. 4Te .... S«0 WED., THURS., FRI., SAT. Soft, Absorbent Cotton Terry 22x44” BATH TOWEL Our Reg. 1.73 V 4 Day Only ' ■pmtwi TIQUE SATIN DRAPES it B {HIDE I:JL CHROMED METAL 9-PR. SHOE RACK 68* VINYL PLASTIC WINDOW SHADE |33 Our Reg. 88c-4 Day* Only Shoe rack is welded-construc- OurReg. 1.77—4 Day* ■■ UR _ ■_____________ | S7V*”x6-foot, Insulated. White lion tubular steel. Holds nine . vinyl plastic. Fire-retardant, pairs. TUBULAR STEEL CLOTHES RACK 333 Our Reg. 4.17-4 Day* Only I'*1 heavy tubular steel' with chrome finish. Holds 24 gar-' menu. CHROMED CLOTHES RACK ON CASTERS Our Reg. 617-4 Day* Only Rack is tubular metal with chrome finish. 38” wide. - ‘tfcaixe/l". “Kmartiruz” Means GMarartfeecf Btetouhi and SaErnffs Every' Time You Shop! GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 ‘ E—7 OPEN DAILY 10-10; SUN., 11 to 6 Wed., thurs., fri., $at. %(.%%. Ill §| American Home Discounts! CHOICE OF TINY TONKA TOYS Our Reg. 1.23 4 Days Only jr%0 Choose Tiny Tonka Wrecker, Cement Mixer, Pumper, or Sanitary Service. Exciting replicas of the real thing. Constructed with 2 coat* of chip reaiatant paint, steel part*. PAINT BY NUMBER SET 1.33 Our Reg-1,76 4 Days Only Each set contains 2 pre-aketched 10”xl4” mounted paintinii panels, 18 containers of pre-mlxed artist’* oil colors, art* ist’s brushes and complete instructions. Choice of subjects. BASIC “LEGO" BUILDINGSET Our Reg. 3.93 4 Days Only Fun ... creative ... educational, 205 Lego building toy for boys and girls. Pieces press firmly together to let you build trucks, houses, boats any more. Just say “Charge It.” 2.96 SAVE ON CUTE PLASTIC BANKS 57* Our Reg. 88c-4 Day Only All plastic bank with painted face. Approx. 14Vi” || BIG FOUR PAK ‘Play Doh’ for Kids 56* Our Reg. 77c—4 Dayt Only Easily workable Play Doh is fun, educational. Colors. GIRLS’ BONDED j SLACKS Our Reg. 1.96 j 4 Days Only i 1.43 | Orion and wool bonded : slacks. Elastic waist, j black, brown, red, greCn. • Sizes 2, 3, 4. ! t.96 EXCITING QUIJA BOARD Our Reg. 2.96—4 Days Only . ^4 Weird, mysterious. Loaded with fun, thHltil,, ggSO^m JgS SCRABBLE CROSSWORD GAME Our Reg. 3.66—4 Days Only 4 lW*W I Crossword game increases your word power. JgsO M m POPULAR MONOPOLY GAME Our Reg. 3.66—4 Days Only 4 JL4 1 Ever popular game of Real Estate and finanre. %W UmifaS Qu.nliti.l-SM. ssM t# S.ll.r. FUN-FILLED TWISTER GAME ‘Our Rqfa^.33—4 Days Only A | (.rest party tsatne . . .' ties you up in knots. AIRQUIPT PROJECTOR Our Reg. 74.88 £|| ML ML 4 Days Only Jr 70 BAND-AID PLASTIC STRIPS 4 Dayt Only 1-Lb* Box ‘AYDS’ REDUCING CANDY 4Days Only 2.22 Model 44 OK DREAM FLOWER DUSTING POWDER Dim-aunt Prict KMART BRAND SANITARY NAPKINS 4 Days Only QUALITY PROJECTOR Our Reg. 94.88 09 ££ 4 Days Only QllVQ Has po|>-up editor; sharp F2.8 lens; quiet operation plus electronic focusing system. Charge It. Box of 70 plain pad strips. Tasty chocolate fudge flavor. 5-oa.* size dusting powder. 40 regular, super napkins. • SanS-tUS QaaSacaa, JaSaaaa I JaSaaaa * s.t Wt. |-----M - 1— Tame Cream Rinse 4 Days Only 16-os.* bottle 9 Jm 13 Oz.* WHITE RAIN HAIR SPRAY 4 Days Only 97* Choose regular, extra hold. 14-Oz.’ WHITE RAIN SHAMPOO 4 Days Only 64* Large size.. . gently cleans. ■Flutes.. KMART SHAMPOO 57* Ditcount Price Big 10-os.* size. AQUA VEVA AFTERSHAVE 4 Days Only 78* 11-OZ. PALMOLIVE 11.5-Oz.’ BLUE RAPID SHAVE HALQ 5HAMP00 4 Dayt Only 4 Days Only INSTAVIEW EDITOR 4 Days Only 26.86 ■Baia Dual 8 editor with large 3x4” screen, slip-in loading and die cast aluminum construction. 6%-Oz. KMART TOOTHPASTE 4 Days Only 33* White Foamy or Fluoride. KMART BRAND MOinHWASH . 4 Days Only 36* 2 oz.*, red, amber, blue. KMART PRICED... 12 §l* LUSTER CREAM HAIR SHUT Discount Price ■ Charge 1£~ Reg. or extra hold. Keeps hair neat, won’t dull. » 48 12 oz. Family Size SCOPE Mouthwash 4 Days Only 58* BOTTLE OF 50 ANACIN TABLETS 4 Days Only 62* ELECTRONIC FLASH Our Reg. 19.88 4 Days Only 14.67 Refreshing, pleasant lasting. Gyves fast acting relief. •FfaWat. LimttuS Quaatity — ttuuu sulS ts S,alurt LinituS Quantity - Bam aaW ta Sualara MaSal It-M Solid State flash with varobeam lens for use with telephoto, wide angle or normal lenses. Use AC or DC. Charge It Store Hours: Open Daily 10 :AM. —10 Sunday^ 11 AM.-6 GLENWOOD PLAZA CORNER NORTH PERRY AT GLENWOOD | SATURDAY September 14 at 10:00 .M. ° V mART F*sV TIRE* GUARANm 90 days after purchase, it will be replaced at no chargr. J Road Haaard—Any failure that oecura due to road haaard, will be replaced on a pro-rated a base of extent everyday selling price of the tire, at time of adjustment, according to tread a remaining, with specified number of months guaranteed. a Workmanship and Material—Every tire sold by na la guaranteed against all failures or • defects in workmanship and material for the life of the original tread. If the tire falls due ' to defects in material and workmanship, the tire will be replaced, charging only for the ] Guard your car in coldest temperatures,, .plus gives year round nut protection. YOUR CHOICEI mo. met A«fC *71 I ACM AM • BAYS ONLY! 14-1042, 14-1041 ONE COLOR THE PONTIAC PRESS,. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 PRE-SEASON SPECIAL! YOUR CHOICE: REGULAR or SNOW! SAVE FROM 3.75 TO 5.40 PER TIRE OFF OUR REGULAR SELLING PRICE fisi HEAVY DUTY AUTOMOBILE TUBES REGULAR PRICE $17.95 3 DAYS ONLY) 3 DAI 2 8.50*13 BLACKWALLS, TUBELESS Plus 1.81 F.E.T. on Plus 1.57 F.E.T. on Eskimo BLACKWALLS TUBELESS SIZES REG. PRICE EACH SAM PRICE EACH SAVE PLUSF.E.T. AMBASSADOR PLUS F.E.T, ESKIMO 7.35/7.Q0 x 14* 19.95 1 5.56 22% 2.06 7.75/7.50x14 7.75/6.70x15 21*95 21.95 T 6.46 25% _2.19 2.21 1.89 1.88 j 8.25/8.00 x 14 8.15/7.10x15* 23.95 23.95 19.16 20% 2.35 2.36 2.06 8.55/8.50 X14* 8.45/7.60x15* 24.95 24.95 2120 15% 2.56 2.54 U Plus Federal Excist Tax from 10o to 30c Each All prices plus Federal Excise Tax and trade-in tire. , Whitewalls $3.00 More Each. No trade-in required on snow tiros. 'Available in Ambassador only YOUR CHOICE FISK ANTI-FREEZE 1.47 YOUR CHOICEI RUBBER OR VINYL FLOOR MATS RUBBERt FULL FRONT or FULL REAR a TWIN FRONT or TWIN REAR VINYL t TRANSPARENT-FULL FRONT or FULL REAR a TWIN FRONT or TWIN REAR OPAQUE—FULL FRONT or FULL REAR PRESTONE ANTI-FREEZE IIO. PRIC1 ■ _ >1.77 1 ft "T I DAYS ONLYI IIW f a ZINC COATED SHILLS a THICKER STIIL a RUST RESISTANT DESIGN FISK LIFETIME GUARANTEED MUFFLERS PRESTONE OIL MISER MO. PRICE 77* # ft 3 DAYS ONLYI ifl gj ‘W Battery Charger 9.88 Voltage Regulator EO. PRICE m m m *•*7 3.88 nave okiivo WDWw 3 DAYS ONLYT HEAVY DUTY PITS MOST: 77c 1960-64 FORDS CHEVROLETS 1962-64 PLYM0UTHS ■WWW I no Installed Fraa K MART n«( Mlimn OUARANTII AUTO WAX KIT RIO. PRICE M M mm $1.47 117 3 OAYl ONLYI 83 ■ * YOUR CHOICE • PRN* AMio EACH 37® avi muvi .5MF * Spin-on Type Oil Filters 110. price « rn mm 88-17 1.66 3 BAYS ONLY! ■ *VV 14-1000- 34-1007, 34-1010 THERMOSTAT RIO. PRICE m 81A7 1,44 a DAYS ONLYI ■ ■ ■ w 44-1017, 44-1010, 44-1010, 44-1M1 tiri Lettering Stick RIO. PRICE77f EEC a BAYS ONLYI 9 9 FREE INSTALLATION 36 MONTH GUARANTEE FISK PREMIER BATTERIES YOUR CAR RIO. prim Mil PRICI Dndgn 54-67 17.95 14.11 Ch.vy 54-67 1YSS TiSTI Oldimobil* 54-44 19.95 16.81 nouth 56-47 ' 17.9* •: naiiSiAtiit»tiHitt*iPotop»op»pnQof4u K MART, FISK BATTIRY OUARANTII •w WJwm■ — vpix wwv .. >■ .»■■■ w v ww wm wu n ni «nn4 IF bcttiry PCBVI facHva. After 96 days, wa will replace the Battery If defe< • and charge yea enfy far tl»a parted af awnersMp hasi the regale/ •ailing price af the Mate af retenip pra-rafa fa¥riYT?iTrrrrrrn'< Stereo Tape Flayer STEREO TAPIS RIO. PRICI mm mm jam DISCOUNT m mm an interesting vegetable dish for We use a 9x13 cake pan and dinner.______________ ____________[one-half cup of reserved pulp. Mix thoroughly. - Fill tomato cavities with stuffing. Top with grated cheese. Place in dutcjvoven and bake at 375 degrees for about 25-30 minutes or until heated through.. * ★ * Meanwhile, don’t forget tomatoes for salad. The following one is to be served before the main part of the meal as a separate course.1 TOMATO GARDEN SALAD 4 medium-sized tomatoes 44-eup-ehopped green pepper-144 cups grated carrots 44-44 cup mayonalse 1 teaspoon freshly minced onion 44 teaspoon oregano Remove stem ends from tomatoes. Cut each tomato into wedges. Arrange tomato wedges around sides of sherbet glasses. Combine green pepper and carrots; pile into center of tomato wedges. - Mix remaining ingredients. Top each salad with dressing. Makes 4 servings. TOMATOES IN CORN CUSTARD TOMATO GARDEN SALAD f; F^-2 THE PQNTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11> 1968 MIAMI BAKE SHOPPE ' Mon., TWr»., FrL { THE POITTIAO MALL SAM ft WALTER Delicious Sausagw Carry Olrtt — 6S2-9811 PONTIAC MALL I t/v m 1 lUr . Y‘*> *?* true... at WrigUy y*u'U find onlytbe finest in Freshness! A freshness ym (f*n tH...afresbness you can smetL.a fresbnths f*m*tf#r! tf yenhavmt tmd mr freshness, /Am this week JwW m fir'd pkaiatUitrjfase during 1 WdpiMtgan lSd0 W*g* Frtslntn Sale... an annual event all Home Grown Featuring all those fine fruits and vegetables Michigan is famous for ^ Meedowdole Orange Juice SLICING Finest Quality Extra Loan Meadawdala U. S. Choice Beef Shortribs ik £ Michigan’s Finest*any size pieca_ Chunk Bologna ik A Loan Sliced ijj Boiled Ham nl: ( Fresh Sliced Beef Liver Fresh, crisp solid Home Grown Head Lettuce You save more when you buy the finest... BUYCAMELOT / U.S. No.l Michigan Camelot Coffee Maxwell House Coffee Rea. er Drip t-lb. Can 69 i W Yellow Cling DdM^te I ISfe* ’ » »!i& 29« «5./r I* ______ ' CAMELOT..e Fruit Cocktail MICHIGAN FRESH FANCY BUTTERNUT, BUTTERCUPi Pepper Squash *2fc'29$ MICHIOAH FRESH U-S- MO. 1 YELLOW t ‘ Honqe Grown Onions2&5M Stohely Fruit Cocktail Mk 14-ei. Can 39* ESH FAH6V TEHDER tarots * Chun Kin g 'fir 69c Deodorant a fc* $1.49 Tomato Juice Freeh Fruits A Vegetables Otter ee*4 *w tel. Sepf. 14,. !♦*«. tleiltene. , A ,Aex. Can Frozen Orange Juice Grape Concord Jelly Salad Dressing Peanut Butter Shortening 740 I Liquid Starch Cemelot Iodized Salt Prune Juice 14&ez. Con Evaporated Milk Liquid Bleach Liquid Detergent 1-lh.Cen Pork and Beans 1 * Klrctwn Clwntt> < ‘ vy '**■ •JMCsetoO. PoaAut Sutter Adds Piovor «» M«er '' K ftchqn Bouquet I Instant Breakfast East German Store Prices Tease Low Budgets LEIPZIG, East Germany (AP) — “Konsument” is almost a magic word in East Germany because it means jmoutlet for consumer good. It is the proper name for a string of Mg department stores, p laces where state enterprise (manufacturing everything from radios to tennis shoes) cooperate to sell their wares. The Konsument store Is Leipzig’s newest building, five-story structures h a pe d somewhat like a grand piano and wrapped in aluminum, the store gets more visitors than any display at Leipzig’s fall fair. ★ A A The store opened only a few days before, the fair, and a plaque says the site once was occupied by the house where composer Richard Wagner was born. In a country where consumer goods have traditionally taken a back seat, the big department store must do a lot to sharpen the East German’s hunger for these goods. THERE, BUT EXPENSIVE The consumer goods are there, and some are being ! bought, but they are expensive. Official publications list the monthly gross income for workers and office employes as 646 marks — $154 — at the official rate. A small refrigerator costs 1.350 marks; a man’s shirt 73. ■' But East Germans line up at the doors before opening time and flock through it all day long. Many buy something, even if only a plastic bucket or a brush costing 10 ’or 15 marks.. . A * a” Not many customers can af-ford to live in the style of the beautiful people depicted in a series of 10 pictures in the store’s show windows. One picture shows a boy strumming guitar while a girl records it on | scOoter. There are not many a tape recorder. He even dons an apron to whip up something on a kitchen Mender, They are the kind of people who laze in fields of daisies in thdir sports clothes or around town in raincoats and like them in East Germany. DISPLAY ROOMS The East Germans come look at furniture arranged in display rooms where television set costs 2,110 marks YOUR FAVORITE STORE WANTS YOUR CAT TO St THEIR (HUlTgJ.'J^ Z KITTY, P.0. Box 4107, • Clinton, town 52732 Z Here art 3 KITTY SALMON for CATS | • labels.* Sand Coupon that 1 will ex- B a SALMON 1 ° change at my grocer’s (or 2 FREE A * cans of KITTY SALMON fdr CATS. ” ■ ? w— W kui CATS sunglasses on a white motorland a small sofa sells for 5 Diggers Hunt for Ship Burials English Soil Probed for Pagan Artifacts WASHINGTON — The enormously rich Sutton Hoo royal graveyard in England may yield two more of the strange ship burials that launched pagan kings to eterpity. ------On the eve of World. War II, diggers at Sutton Hoo unearthed a vessel laden with gold coins, bejeweled royal regalia, silver plate, drinking horns, the remains of a six-stringed harp in a beaver-skin bag, and a wealth of other artifacts. | • A • - A - A The British Museum plans to open a dozen more barrows, or grave mounds, at the site in . Suffolk where East Anglian) kings were buried 1,300 years ago. The National Geographic So-, ciety through its Committee for Research and Exploration has made a grant to assist in the scientific excavation of what scholars call the most important archeological site in the British Isles. INTACT REMAINS Dr. R. L. S. Bruce-Mitford, Keeper of British and Medieval Antiquities in the British Museum, is directing the dig-, Though grave robbers often have looted such barrows, Dr. Bruce-Mitford said, “There is reason to hope that two of the mounds may contain intact ship burials.’’ Elizabethan looters sunk shaft from the top of the main Sutton Hoo barrow but gave up a few feet from the . treasure chamber. Modern diggers found a broken jug and beef bones left by the 16th-century treasure - .,^seeker&^,. ■ A A A Sutton Hoo lies amid pleasant heathland oh England’s eastern seaboard. Miles of sandy, bracken-covered wastes run down .to the .sea, and small rivers merge into quiet' tidal In 1939, the largest of several barrows at the site was opened. Excavators found traces of a great open rowing vessel, more than 80 feet long and 14 feet wide amidships. Only stains and impressions of the. planks remained, but hundreds of ir< rivets survived. OTHER-WORLDLY VOYAGE The boat apparently was designed to take its occupant on his journey to another world. Ship burials were common In northern Euiype from about 800 B.C. until conversion of the - north to Christianity by A.D. 1000. Many have been unearthed in Scandinavia. Dead leaders sailed with accouterments befitting their office. A six-foot iron standard topped by a bronze stag and a ceremonial whetstone found at Sutton Hoo are among trappings indicating a royal burial. AAA No traces of a body have been positively identified, leading scholars to. speculate theship was a cenotaph to a powerful king buried elsewhere. It may have honored King Aethelhere, known to have died in A.D. 655 at the battle of Winwaed in Yorkshire. However, Dr. Bruce-Mitford) reports, analysis of/ material | found in 1967 and 1968 may indicate that there was a body in the Sutton Hoo burial after afl. He suggests it may have been Red-wald, High King of all Anglo-Saxon settlements. ' Tr~4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1068 Jacoby on ! Marriage Licenses NORTH 4>KQJ VJII ♦ K 10 8 2 *QT* WEST EAST 410E6S 494 WETS— WQi 4Q078 ♦ A J S 400 4 K 10 8 5 4 3 SOOTH (D) 4A752 VAK1D54 ♦ 4 3 4AJ Neither vulnerable West North Eut Sooth Pass 2 ♦ Pass 24 Pass (SeeTolunm for rest of bids.) Opening lead—4 9 I a heart contract. H» club fi-jnesse works for him also but the diamond ace is behind dum- j ijmy’s king so that he has to lose j j two diamond tricks. 'I The first three bids were the I same at both tables. Minneapolis expert pave Clarren, the old-tidier of the team, chose |three hearts as his rebid over! ! Larry Oakey’s two spades. I Larry continued to four [hearts and there was considerable trepidation among the [home' town crowd while Dave [thought. He thought but he | wisely decided that his hand did not warrant any further bid. contented himself with a bid of| J [five clubs which would purely j [have led to a five heart sign-off | by North, but South jumped tor [six hearts. Five hearts would have been;' a mighty poor contract. There!* is no extra bonus given to a|c pair that stops between game|c [and slam. It would have been v a poor contract but it would « have made. At the other table the Mon-treal North rebid to three ^spades instead of three hearts. Everything would stUl have | been fine if he had chosen to V*CRRD Sente** By OSWALD AND I JAMES JACOBY 1Th'l!SUnr ‘^ipass when South went to three jnonsWps of the American Con- instead. he Wd ^ tract Bridge League have just hearts v .been held in had & values for a ■Minneapolis. As further bid but might well have la pr e liminary ■event a team Ir e p r esenting q—The bidding has been: ■the Twin Cities weet North East South ■played a 72- 14 Pus ■board match Pass 24 Pus ___________Iwith IMP »cor- {} pJ2 ,. nn.v ng' 'The m You, South, hold: JACOBY was an exact, 4J4 *KJ*, 4At *kqi#S4 tie with Montreal after the 72 what do you do now? boards and Minneapolis Won by a—Bid six clubs, four iMPs in an eight-board j t... ,n theaeei but you can’t playoff. afford to bid five no-trump be- Montreal had the better of Tour partner m-y bid Ms pun. and p>rt m hand, toggpte! "* Minneapolis gained enough to; today’s question .mby ter|thl^cytr»cl»J 0, Madto, ,0„ dubt The bidding, rather than tha Lj^ partner bids four dia-. play, io. Important in today’s j monds over your three no-* hand. South has no trouble pick- [ trump. What do you do now? ing up the queen of trumps at j Answer Tomorrow I Astrological 'JFar^ca8t;4 By SYDNEY OMARS findncill taaaww •Ion Is mad* desr. Ybu obtain batter Mm of wbara and whan. .Latar, word Is received concerning relative or neighbor — effect* your decision. TAURUS CAWS »May 20): be receptive. especially to prapwal made by CANCEfc-bom IndtvMva!. .Aocant on 11 handle new contact, ctallenge. GEMINT (May Sl-Jima Sefora day it finlehed you receive grain light I on me lor protect. Tima tor you to •tata needs and to assert your worth. Means be lb* opposite at a shrinking ,„VXANC6* (JUM Tttfvjsr ■ who fs » perform task for slip up. Nothing but honoW 4fRMP WPS PE foreknowledge should prepare you. self-reliant. LEO (July B-Aug. »): Day footuree change, variety. ------v“‘ achieve desires ____ optimism. Sell your 1 travel, friends. ExuM ... ____________u So creative. 1 unique oMIltlee, concepts. You’re a winner. VIRGO (Aug. O-Sapt. 7Z) Be «w In outhortty. Do to wlttm* licking- Implications. Moons bo fair. Fine tor Inviting ►— _ eesoclete inlngful com- "'uBRA (Sept. BOct. jtt):. Avoid eelf-deception. See persons, situations as they actually oklot. Be willing to “~ nmlnd. Don't follow ooy pat lecauso of tradition. Think, analyze. **SCORtrt!?h(’od. BNaMtt )j_,Wort< and health C SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 8-0ec. 11): You ore finishing relationship or proiMt. Something goes out of yo0r. Jifo. ThM can bo replaced by something more constructive. Necessary to be mature. Don’t brood. _ . CAPRICORN (Doe. »Jan. 19 P attention to needs #f one close to you. Promise you made should be fulfilled. Otherwise you ask tor MtstUhV partner bao a right to bo heard — and posh* sex ora 3B|P-------------------— ecrou Maas, sail rntgoetitm rating rr td. You can put Almanac By United Pm* International Today i« Wednesday, Sept. 11, the 225th day of 1968 with 111 to follow. Hie mom is between its full phase and last quarter. Hie morning star is Mars. * * * Hie evening stars are Saturn and Venus. Those horn today are under the sign of Virgo. American short story writer 0. Henry whose real name was William Porter was born Sept. 11,1862. * . * * On this day in history : In 1777, Gen George Washingtons troops were badly defeated by the British at the Battle of Brandywine, In 1841, all members of President John Tyler’s cabinet resigned except Secretary of State Daniel Webster, in -protest ever the veto of a banking bill. * In 1948, Buckingham Palace in London was damaged by German bombers.’ In 1963, ail 18 persons aboard an Italian Airlines Viscount died when it crashed near New Delhi; . When Pittsburgh, Pa., was incorporated as a city in 1818, it was already known as “Smoky Cfty.’' 1 T11E PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, .SEPT-EMBER 11, 1968 F—5 TALLEST LIGHTHOUSE ' The Cape Hatteras Lighthouse at Buxton, N.C., the tallest in the United States, treacherous reefs of have wrecked in this area, it is known as the “graveyard of the Atlantic,” and timbers from the victims dot the magnificent beaches. These same desolate beaches delight shell collectors and driftwood fanciers with their daily harvest. The sense of history is everywhere. There is a distinctive old English accent spoken by the lifelong residents of the Outer Banks. The site of the first English settlement in the New World was at Manteo cm nearby Roanoke Islahd. < k k ★ On Ocracoake Island, accessible only by three ferries, wild ponies, said to be the descendants of horses left by Spanish explorers, can be seen. Once roaming the island, the rugged ponies now are protected by the National Park Service. On Ocracoake, an area called “Teache’s Hole” is thought to be the area where Edward Teache, or Blackbe&rd the pirate, buried treasure. Hatteras Island, ohce connected to Nag’s Head by a ferry system, now is easily reached by a beautiful, curving bridge across Oregon Inlet. In the summer months, the motels and camping areas swarm, but the banks have few of the gaudy trappings of many beach areas. REMAINS OF SHIP—Remnants of timbers from a shipwreck on Hatteras Island Hatteras Island are extremely treacherous, are typical of wrecks visible all along the Outer Banks beaches. Waters around CLOSED FOR SEASON—A vacation home of unusual architec-"ture is cfejsed far~the~seasorr at Salvo -viUage on Hatteras Island on Outer Banks. Private development of the island is increasingly rare sinee most the island is owned by the National Park Service.---------- WILD PONY — One of the wild ponies on released on the island by Spanish .explorers, once Ocracoke Island on the Outer Banks- of North roamed free and were trapped in a wild annual Carolina browses through the pampas grass, roundup by island residents. Now they are fenced The. ponies, believed to be descendants of horses by the National Park Service. I FREE FEED—Flocks of seagulls, follow the Ocracoke Island free ferry and delight tourists as they sweep in to take offered tidbits. Hatteras Island is connected to Nag’s Head by a bridge, but Ocra-“cokrt accesr is-by car-ferry from the southern tip of Hatteras Island. ___’ ' 1 ■ ______ —i---------— Pictorial Visit Outer Banks By CHARLES KELLY Associated Press Photographer Hatteras Island, part of the Outer Banks, exists despite nature’s best shots. It was cut in two sev4ral years ago by heavy winds and tides, but has been rejoined. There is an endless planting process as workers plant grass and build snow fences and dredge the sounds to try . to keep the sea from taking over. Cape Hatteras is based on a thin strip of barrier reef off the mainland of North Carolina. Hatteras, Ocracoake and Nag’s Head form a slender line of islands buffeted by incredible changing ocean currents, tides and winds. On Nag’s Head, the' nation’s highest sand duiies constantly change, shift, but continue to build at Jockey’s Ridge. TOURIST ATTRACTION—A small tourist studies the towering Cape Hatteras lighthouse at. Buxton, N.fe., on the Outer Banks from the stones of the first lighthouse nearby. The first lighthouse was built in 1802. The present light is the tallest in the U.S; BUSY FISHERMEN — A commercial fisherman beads into sell Ms catch from canal to nets in the sound. Canals are cut into the thin island to provide access to Pamlico Sound ^inH Hatteras Island at Buxton as a competitor heads back out the houses all along Hatteras. F—-9 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER II, 1908 52 Hurt as Train Jumps Elevated Indiana Track REMOVE INJURED - Police remove one of 52 persons injured in a derailment of a Penn Central train in Port Wayne, Ind., yesterday. All but five of the injured were AP Wlripkele treated at hospitals and released. Railroad officials were investigating the cause of the wreck. No Solutions, Just Explanations Farm Enigma Upsetting FORT WAYNE, Ind. (AP) A slow-moving Penn Central passenger train derailed on elevated tracks here Tuesday, injuring 52 persons. All but were treated at hospitals and released. / Penn Central officials vestigating the cause of the wreck. One said the train was traveling “very slowly—and we were lucky.” * *■ ★ All 26 derailed cars stayed at the edge of the tracks, which run atop an embankment 12 to 15 feet high along the city’i East Side. * ★ ★ Four of the injured were train crewmen. The others among 124 -passengers in four coaches on the New York-to-Chi-cago Pennsylvania Limited, No. 55. MAIL CARS INVOLVED The derailment also involved 16 mail cars, one baggage car and an unoccupied sleeper. Hie engine units did not derail. Penn Central officials said the derailment started with a mail car but cause of the accident had not been determined. Penn Central officials in Chicago said the right of way was cleared about one-half hour after the accident. •' Charles Cummins, Penn Central assistant superintendent, said four to five cars were destroyed and file rest damaged extensively. He said there was extensive damage also tracks. Marriage Licenses Kenneth A, Johnson, 1246 Orchid em Margaret L Johnson, 1246 Orchid. 2—U | Gilmore. — Gloria J. Garcia, Farmington. Harold M. Torres, 206 N. Case and aula J. Jones, Rochester. Giovanni Casanova, 226 Carriage Clr-■ and June M. McEechern, 624 Merle. Lyle W. Frallc, Drayton Plains and Geneva Bailey, Bsileysvllto, W, Va. bert Musto, Beverly Hftls and Richard K. Cronk Jr., Milford, Mich, nd Leslie J. Thames, Highland. Billy L. Jamerson, 73$Vk W. Huron nd Janet K. Arms, lit Russell; tonna J. Britton, Rochester. John E. Bilger, Farmington end Rote . Gardner, Farmington. Harold C. Caldwell, 6*1 Balboa and orenda J. Graves, 110 Monterey. Chancey M. Hack Jr., Union Lake nd Rosemary A. Brooks, Walled Lake. Robert L. Connelly Jr., 034 Cottage nd Eusart J. Klllan, *4 Glen wood. John E. Westmoreland, Highland osalle A. Coyle,, Hlghle—1 William E. Willett. Viola Looney, Rochester. “—er D. Frances, 130 CUNNIFF By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YQRK — Americans have paid farmers many bit lions of dollars in the past decade to cut back on production, which generally is more thanl the nation needs, but this year’s harvest] now seems like-] ly to be the biggest ever. As a result,1 •till more tax money will be paid to curtail1 production next year. But will production fall in 1969? Very likely it will not. If it follows the trend, production again will be higher. And worried Washington wifi spend even more. It is anomolies such as this that cause Americans to refer to the farm “problem.” And it is a very complex problem. Farmers as well as bureaucrats are upset about the situation but nobody seems to have the answers. Only explanations. American technology, with a support from government agencies, explains in part the failure to curtail production. Subsidies may cut down on acreage planted. But output per acre grows astonishingly. OUTPUT DOUBLED Fifteen years ago corn output ing farmers and sometimes the i Factors such as these distort weather all play« part in abort- the farm income picture. Al- ing the hopes and plans of the production planners. Money seemingly cannot buy a slowdown. though net income per farm continues to rise or remain near record high levels, around $5,000 a year, most family farmers are This year the situation as-caught in a price squeeze. Some sumes new importance. While are bitter. , budget experts writhe in an- inflation cuts deeply into the guish as they try to cut $6 bi}-jsmall farmer’s income, as it lion from government spending,, does into that of the city dwell-another billion dollars or so may er, and many of them feel help-have to be used in purchasing ]]ess ,n dealing with food proces-surplus crops. !sqrs. They feel their output goes Hie anomalies do not and cheaply and that the consumer. here. Price support and crop re- —rather than they, the producer men might-take to get to New York City, duction programs, which many j_{s the chief beneficiary. u“ l>i* l* ”!"u* A" *K“ « people presume aid the family! ..Food was never s0 cheap in farmer, may ui fact be aiding terms of wa^e rates quality so the corporate farmer. It is the hi h and y producers so hard |iP^p/eTnf/ie News \ Patrolman Richard Wright. 25. has made 74 arrests, won five departmental citations and has nine more pending in his 30 months on, the New York police force. Yesterday, Wright added to his laurels by intercepting and arresting three men accused of holding up the Hotel Osborn at New Rochelle, N.Y., in neighboring Westchester County. An undetermined amount of cash was taken. Cruising in the Bronx in his patrol car, Wright heard of the robbery on the- radio and figured out *what route the Army Pact Given DETROIT (AP) - The U. S. Army Tank Automotive Command in Warren has awarded Uniroyal Inc. of Detroit a $2,728,500 contract for modifications for 50,000 pneumatic tires for five and ten-ton trucks. About half the work will be performed in Detroit. Death Notices ALMAS, PERMELIA A. September U, 1968; 103 Pingree; age 67; beloved wife of Judd Almas; dear mother of Mrs. Jack Pilkinton, Jack and William Almas; dear sister of Mrs. Eugene Ritchie and Wilfred Michaels; also survived by 10 grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Saturday, September 14, at 11 a.m. at the Ponelson' - Johns Funeral Home. Interment in West Burlington Cemetery, Silverwood Michigan. Mrs, Almas will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) Death Notices^ Memorial Gardens. Mrs McDade will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) *,' ■ • very large, efficient farmers who are responsible .for boosting production. And it is they who often receive the subsidies. e PATTERN SEEN Hie changing pattern of farm a population is seen easily in sta-j. tistics. Gross farm income con-e tinues to rise—it is about $50 bit-it lion this year — although the j. number of farmers declines. There are 10 million people on _ farms now, with net income of , $13 billion to $15 bil)ion. Even this figure is deceptive, a for much of the farm population today does not receive ite liveli-;s hood from the farm. With mechanization, many members of farm fstmilies now work in factories. The character of farm fami-per acre was in the area of 401 lies also is changing. With the1 bushels. This year it will be rising density of urban popula-more than double that figure. In tion, some businessmen have just one year, wheat production moved out beyond the suburbs has jumped 11 per cent to 28.7 to farm: Gentlemen farmers, bushels an acre. they receive the major part of I lean farm we should at least American industry, the Agri- their livlihood from other activi- know what the subject is. It isn’t] culture Department, enterpris-|ties. I what it .was 10 years ago. . up—1910 prices with 1968 costs,” is the way a Michigan*-farmer puts it. He goes on to refer to “raw, brutal corporate power,” a reference to the processors he must deal with. • "Every year someplace the screws are turned tighter on the producer." And he continues: “Of file last 7-cent advance in a half-gallon carton of milk the producer got % of a cent — the “bigs” 6J6 cents. And the-farmer got all the headlines. Power? Pressure?” Dissatisfaction is widespread with the current relationships of farmer to government and farmer to industry. Attitudes to and analyses of the farm situation obviously need to be reviewed and brought up to date. Not everyone can Tie made happy. Perhaps there is no answer. But in studying (he Amer- He hit it right. As the patrolman arrived at the Major Deegan Expressway entrance to the city, he spotted a caranswering the radio description. Wright captured all three. Dutch Princess's Son Is Christened Prince Maurits, 4‘i.-month-old son of Princess Margriet of the Nethertands and Pieter Van Vollenhoven, was christened yesterday in the Dutch Reformed Church in Apeldoorn, the Netherlands. Most of the royal family and Premier Piet de Jong were' among about 1,500 guests. The godparents included 10 representatives of the Dutch merchant marine, who also were godfathers of Princess Margriet at her christening in Canada during World War II. Ginger Rogers to Do 'Mame' in London Ginger Rogers has signed to star in London in the Broadway musical “Mame” for a record 250,000 pounds, or $600,000, it was announced yesterday. Miss Rogers signed-the contract at her home in Hollywood and will begin rehearsals in London’s West End shortly after Christmas, a spokesman said. Producers Bernard Delfont and Harold Fielding said Miss Rogers’ salary will cover a minimum 54-week contract at the Drury Lane Theater. The show opens Feb. 20. DYER, FLORA E.; September 11; 1968 ; 7059 Tappon Drive, Independence Township; age 43; beloved wife of Allen E. Dyer; dear mother of Spec. 4 Leslie A. and Catherine K. Dyer; dear sister of Wilson and Harold Ivins. Funeral service will be held Friday, September 13, at 2 p.m. at the Lewis E. Wint Funeral Home, Clarkston. Interment in Lakeview Cemetery. Mrs. Dyer will lip in state at the funeral home after 7 p.m. tonight. WATLING, LERCHEN • DETROIT WATLING, LERCHEN • ANNARBOR WATLING, LERCHEN • BIRMINGHAM WAGING, LERCHEN • DEARBORN WATLING, LERCHEN • GRAND RAPIDS WATLING, LERCHEN • JACKSON WATLING, LERCHEN • LANSING WATLING, LERCHEN * MIDLAND WATLING, LERCHEN • PONTIAC WATLING, LERCHEN • PORT HURON WATLING, LERCHEN • WARREN WATLING, LERCHEN • YPSILANTI WATLING, LERCftEN • NEW YORK If you live In Michigan we can offer you the services of any of twelve fully-staffed offices. Having your broker nearby^ means more convenience and better services, less chance of delay with vital information. We have direct lines to our New York office, and Our own man right on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange. If you require prompt action and timely Information, give one of our experienced Registered Representatives a call. He’s right In your neighborhood. Or send for a copy of otiHFInancial Services Brochure. No cost or obligation, of course. DETROIT, ANN ARBOR, BIRMINGHAM, DEARBORN, GRAND RAPIDS, JACKSON, LANSING, MIDLAND, -PONTIAC, PORT HURON, WARREN, YPSILANTI* NEW YORK WATLING LERCHEN & CO k Stock Exchange. 2 North Saginaw Street Pontiac. Michigan. FE 4-2411 N. Z. Prime^ Minister to Visit U. S. Prime Minister Keith J. Holyoake of New Zealand will visit in Washington, D.C., Oct. 9-10 to confer with President Johnson and other top U.S. officials, the White House announced yesterday. Holyoake, who also is minister of external affairs, has visited the United States on numerous other occasions. He and Johnson last met in Canberra, in December 1967, when both attended the funeral of Prime Minister Harold Holt of Australia. Holyoake will be accompanied by his wife. *Successtuhlnvesff^m being channeled into this, area. KDI Corp. is another company tuned to the wavelengths of the future. Among its various areas of operation are air and water ppllution control, environmental testing for defense and aerospace programs and academic, technical and physical education. "'~ ★ * * I am 17 and have $500 to invest. I would like stocks with a good growth rate as I do not need income. Must I buy through toy parents?—P. L--Yes, until you are 21 your ipurchases will come under the Uniform Gift to Minors Act' (or similar acts in three states). Your choice of goals is correct, and to implement your program Wang Laboratories would be a good choice. Earnings for its fiscal year ended June reached $1.05 a share from 52 cents in fiscal 1967. A recently introduced calculator can be programmed to perform problems requiring up to 640 steps. (To order Roger Spear’s 48-page Guide to Successful Investing (recently revised and in its 10th printing), send $1 with name and address to Roger E. Spear, The Pontiac Press, Box 1618, Grand Central Station, New York, N, Y. 11917.) (Copyright, 1968) BALZ, GERTRUDE J.; September 10, 1968 ; 62 Pingree; age 64; dear sister of Mrs. Josephine Huhn, Louis, Berchman and Henry Balz. Recitation of the Rosary will be tonight at 7:30 at the Donelson - Johfts Funeral Home. Funeral service will be] held Friday, September 13, at] 9:30 a.m. at the St. Nicholas Church, Wilkes-Barre, P a Interment in St. Nicholas Cemetery. Miss Balz will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9) HAMILTON, ARTHUR; September 10, 1968; Beulah, Michigan (formerly of Pontiac); age 72; beloved husband of Viola Hamilton; de a r father of—Mrs. Geraldine Montreuil, Alton, Duane, Leland and Ralph Hamilton; dear brother of Mrs. Delia (John) Pence, Mrs. Lucy Milton and Mrs. Pearl Milton; also survived by 24 grandchildren and 12 great-grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Friday, September 13, at 1:30 p.m. at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. .Hamilton will lie in state at the funeral home. TAYLOR, ALICE; September 9, 1968; 425 Midway; age 85; dear aunt of Fred Taylor. Funeral service will be held Friday, September 13, at 1 p.m. at the Davis-Cobb Funeral Home with Rev. Hoover officiating. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Miss Taylor will lie in slate at the funeral home after 3:30 p.m. Thursday. By ROGER E. SPEAR q — For the past 20 years I have owned a corner grocery. Now at 501 want to plan toward retiring. I have small amounts Of Rowan Drilling and Delta Airlines* sizable savings, adequate life insurance and a good income. What stocks should I purchase with $3,000 now available, plus $100 a month thereafter?—P. S. A—Initially, Jet me comment on your present hold!' Rowan, in a joint venture, has begun a seismic survey of 85,000 acres in offshore Alaska, exploring for heavy materials. Shares -should be held on the basis of the general interest now centered on Alaska and its minerals, As a result of the CAB report on Trans Pacific routes, Delta’s long-range outlook is somewhat clouded, but shares are a short-term hold on earnings recovery. Cask now available should be divided among the stocks mentioned below with monthly purchase^ supplementing your initial investment Dillingham Corp., which I have reviewed in more detail in the past, is technically oriented and psychologically attuned to ocean-related activities. In view of this, the company stands to benefit from increasing interest and money JOHNSEN, LE ROY H.; Age 43; 82 N. Francis St., Pontiac, Mich.; died Sept. 6, in Yokosuka, Japan; beloved husband of Estela M. Johpsen; dear father of Linda M. Johnsen; dear son of Mrs. Henry Johnsen. Funeral service will be held at Naciola Funeral Home, Manila, Philippines. Interment in Manila International Cemetery, Nakis-tirizal, Philippine Islands. JOY, ALBERT R.; September J968H7* Crescent‘ Blvd: Waterford Township; age 53; beloved husband of Anna Joy; dear father of Mrs. Howard Black; dear brother of Mrs. William Owens and Bud Joy ; also survived by one granddaughter. Funeral service will . be held Thursday, September 12, at-3 p.m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Interment to Ferry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr, Joy will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) LAEHN, KATHERINE I September 10, 1968; 173 South RoSlyn, Waterford Township; age 74; dear mother of Mrs. Mary V. Mid and Bruce A. Knapp; also survived by two brothers, three sisters, seven grandchildren and 11 greatgrandchildren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, Sept 12, at 10 a.m. at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor. Mrs. Laehn will lie to state at the funeral, home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) McIntosh, Elizabeth m.; September 10, 1968; 1057 LaSalle, Waterford Township; age 42; beloved wife of Everett McIntosh; beloved daughter of Christian J. and Veronica M. Herrington; dear mother of Kevin M. and Kimberly M. McIntosh; dear sister of Mrs. William Harper. Funeral arrangements are . pending at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Mrs. McIntosh will lie in state at her re-sisdence tonight. ROCHON, JPAUL; September 11, 1968 ; 311 Going; age 55; beloved husband of Naomi Rochon; dear father of Mrs. William (Marguerite) J u n g 1 a s , Mrs. ,James (Christine) Miller, Jacqueline H., Paul F. and James M. Rochon; dear brother of Mrs. Eugene Lamberson, Mrs. Kenneth Cooley, Mrs. Robert Landry and George Rochon; also survived by nine grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be Thursday at 8 j£m. at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home. Funeraf service will be held Friday, September 13, at 10 dm. at the St. Vincent de Paul Catholic Church. Interment in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Rochon wjU lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.)J *2 STOUT, LULU M.; September 10, 1968; formerly of 21 S. Genesee; age 80; dear mother of Mrs. Donald (Marguerite) McLario, Mrs. Lloyd (Mary Louise) Wagner and George L. Stout; dear sister of Paul McKee; also survived by six g r a n d c h i ldren. Funeral service will be held Thursday, September 12, at 1 p.m. at the First Baptist Church. Interment in Ottawa Par k Cemetery. Mrs. Stout will lie in state at the Huntoon Funeral Home. Cord of Thunks 1 THE FRANK LENHART family wishes to extend their hearfeit thanks and appreciation for the acts of kindness and messages of sympathy, the beautiful flowers received, from our friends, neighbors, and relatives. Ana the food, the pallbearers. Father Thomas, World War I Veterans, barracks No. 4*. end Donelson-Johns FUnerol Home during our recent bereavement. The family of Frank Lenherf._______________________ ____________ ._ „r many friends, relatives and neighbors, for the many flowers, food, cards end calls received during our recent bereavement. Spatial thanks fa Oakland County Sheriff Dept., and Father Klettner of St. Vincent de Paul Church, alto for the comforting words of father Konopka of St. Michaels Church In the loss of our Roger. Price. IN LOVING MEMORY OF Marian C. Martin who passed away six years ago Sept. 11. Just a token of love's devotion. —That-t --------—■*“ Sadly r» children, Roxsand, Robin and Ray Martin. ACID INDIGESTION? PAINFUL ges?'6et new ,PH5 tabletr. Fast as llquldk. Only Bros. Druos. :ND WORRIE With A Payday Peyir Let Debt-Aid. profeetlor jt the help you've ~t r by taking ell your nil Discussing your problems: DEBT-AID, Inc. 104 Commwdt^N^t'l. Bnk., Bldg. LIcenMd *. Bonded Serving Oakland County HALL FOR RENT. FE *0072 FE 5-<014. ettor HALL FOR ^NT, RECEPTIONS, lodges, Church. OR 2-5202. FE 2- BOX REPLIES V At 19 a.m. today there were replies at The Press Office in the following boxes: -5, C-7, C-8, C-15, C-17, C-20, C-23, C31, C37, C-54, C-64. ; , Funeral Directors COATS FUNERAL HOME DRAYTON PLAINS 4744)461 C. J. GODHARDT FUNERAL HOME Huntoon FUNERAL HOME. - McDADE, NELLA J.; x tember 10,1968; Independence Square, Waterford; age 73;j dear sister of Mrs. Hillary; . • ’(Clara) Denton, Mrs. Heber \JOQrheesSiple (Gladys) McClung and Mrs. ^ William (Abna) Melton. Funeral sendee will be held Friday, September 13, at 1 p.m. at the Coats Funeral Home, Drayton Plains. Interment In Oakland Hi 11s] S LOTS/OAKLAND HILLS M Gardens, eell pert of all, t. • price/on >is jjn mm a ; Cemetery Lets Must Sacrifice „ Six choice lets In beet location at White Chapel Cemetenr. Wev -wrket value. Cell Don space, roesonebU AVOID GARNISHMENTS Get out of debt with our plan Debt Consultants 114 Pontiac State Bank Building FE 8-0333 ANY INFORMATION concerning Carol, please contact- Pet LADIES CAL L ELECTROLYSIS Center for removal of fecial hair. Martha ON AND AFTER this data, Sap-tembar 11, 1*41 I will ndt be responsible for any debts contracted by any other than myself. Charlea L. Chancy, 21 Legrande, Pontiac, Michigan. THERE ARE *3 COUNTY Treasurers In Michigan but none as fine as Oakland County's Jim Seeteriln. Signed Evelyn Seeterlln ^—ONU—<■ Seeteriln children. WIG PARTIES. 1 lost! LARGE BLACK leather purse, Putnam street area, lm- • portent papers, reward. PE 2-7004. LOST: VICINITLY Angeles and Joslyn, cat female, 334-8705, OF LAKE Vicinity of Boulevard Height*. FE 5-7631.__________________________ LOST - 1 YEAR 6lD SABLE AND while male colli*. Vic. Auburn Heights. Reward. 54 Oakmont. 153- 3226. after 4:30._______ ’ , STOLEN 1*61 BSA Mark s cycle Fri. Sept. 6 from the Bloomfield Orchards Apartments. S100 reward for Information or return. 335-4304. Help Wowftd Malt 6 1 MAN PART TIME, Call 674-Q520, 5 p.m A DEPENDABLE MATURE MAN Who Wants Extra Cash For Work 7 A.M. CALL MR. MARSH ant contractor* ARBY'S ROAST BEEP r. Rotctel at 335-5S75. ACCOUNTANTS Opportunities In all areas ■ Financial Management with Notional Firm of Cdrtlflod Public Accounting. Detroit office wishes public accounting with high- semlners for unllmlt* fessional growth In eudlting, rax practice and management services, bachelor or masters degree with s I g n I f I c a n t accounting background and up to 4 ytars Industrial or professional experience. Send resume In strict confidence to Pontiac Praia Bpx C-IO. with diversified Industrial clientele. The partners Invite *“”—to •-discuss with us, Or er public accounting end spdclflcally — „— $*nd return* to: JANZ *> KNIGHT, CPA's AMBULANCE PERSONNEL OVER 21 EXPERIENCED PREFERRED BENEFITS Interviews will be conducted at 7* E. ■' -on, bet. 12 noortl p.m Daniel Miles, Perse el Mgr. ARE YOU ABLE TO ABSORB AN INTENSIVE EXECUTIVE TRAINING PROGRAM? Ambitious, alert end qualified men wanted by one of the country's largest Consumer Finance Co., for ■on executive training program leading to branch manager and other executive posit Ions. Must be ' high school graduafd with good ... pradesi some colleg* helpful. -Must have Jessing personality and desire to work with the public An Intereetlng, helpful and challenging ‘ 1 lob. Good starting salary with employ* benefits with secure future, of course: but what we otter I* spelled O-P-P-O-R-T-U-N-l-T-Y I Contact Mr. Bruce Robinson Dial Flenenc* Co'., Drayton Plains, 473-1221 or Mr. Glam Harter, Dial Finance Co., Flint. CE 2-7172. AUTO PAINTER, 06 Saturday worfc, rringe oanerns, contact Kan Dudley, Body Shop Manager, Jack Haim Pontiac Sa|ea, Inc, Clarkston. 025500. Automatic Tronmission Rebullders first das*, to S4.5* Instellers first class *1.75- Large national organImtiM time and a half over 4t hr*. Paid holidays, vacations. Incentive pro-or»m. excellent onrklng conditions. AAlice Trensmleslons, 15* BROILER COOK AND chef helper. Elks Lodge. Apply In person MO E. University Dr- Rochester. BURNER SERVtCEMAN, TOP wages, ttme end a halt and double time. Blue Cross ovall., guaranteed / year around work/ It ydar old Company. Salary according Is at- . tltude and ability. Far Intorvltw call 263-4154. BETWEEN SSdt FOR ganarat’oftrfc "r“ BUILDING 1 ENGINEER Large national organization has ah opening for a building maintenance engineer. Bailer operators and sir conditioning llcanae a requirement. Excellent opportunity ' fdr experienced man who can supervise eTWSrcrawrwme PontieCPms Box C 20. BUSBOY, II or OVER, 7 e.m. to 3 P.m„ wlll train. Apply Hotlday Inn, H01 ». Telegraph/Pontlac. ius DRIVER — Mechanic, full time, excellent fringe benefits. Prlvste school. 644-1600, 0x1. 223. BUS BOYS FOR cafeteria* tyia restaurant, good pay and tips, evesTdniy. Bottle and Baetot Shop, 106 H. Hunter Blvd. 646 6551. CLERIC ADULT, EVERY . OTHER avaiHM s-io, event third Sun. 16-4. MIBs Fhermecr. lM Ad06C CUSTODIAN NEEDEO M Muran / Irlng* t Milford. 1 salary -gM. Ill IV-411C ■TggMsa* ■ ' w THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNKSDAV, SEPTEMBER II, 19 7 Help Wanted Female 7 Help Wante Business, 67 Men W< Cutting 673-8797. Needed PUNCH' ■ PRESS CROSS 1 OPERATORS . REALTY OR 10 Women j«agartffcg» CURB WAITRESSES j Employers Temp. Service Housewives *r »nd^or Ivtnl ng»* on* cl 11* V *1 * d'V' LA 10 A.M. T6 4 P.M'. | [ c.u%^w«.rP.n service ■: 3S1 'iJ&ZSrSSL'* STATION i.........■ mm® BABY SITTER LIES EXPLOSION j I S§if LINING ROOM Hudson's Pontiac Mall KEYPUNCH OPERATORS KELLY GIRL -Receptionist- 3 c.^%|sr,r Need Part Time Work?. KEYPUNCH OPERATORS ls^ mm GIRL CAFETERIA Buick-Opel -wlir JANET DAVIS DRY CLEANERS FACTORY WORKERS t p«v.mR*port _ S ”aattSS * iSSSSSSSSl S. S. Kresge - ...3§»R FEDERAL DEPT. STORES ENJOY DRIVING MOTOR ROUTE Hr- ■ Witt . American Girii:! TkI : THE PONTIAC "PRESS mmmm ANYONE CLERKS-TYPISTS n(|p is-—*41 ehiif-i tr^n you. Age no barrier if you are over fry. this won't last long. Call MISS LEE at 338-9762 Unbelievable But True' A Job Where You Can: MISS MURPHY Coll me at 338-9706 Analytical Engineer (Turbine experience) Assistant Project Engineer Manufacturing Engineer Master Schedular Personnel Analyst (Experience in recruiting, laboi* reiations„etc.) Quality Control Manager (U> to 20 years experience preferrably in aero . Accounting^ Clerk Lath" Operator "A" Sheet Metal Fabricator "B" Tall or Come In for a Mr, Charles E. Bailey rl WILLIAM ft F—-8 THE PONTIAC PRflSS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 Help WantgJM. or. t. II Help WooM KL *t F. > ALU AROUND DRIVE-IN help COOK EXPERIENCED IN Italian ---— HjUK I g I and American Food*, - experienced Pina man, experienced wallratr*-also Kitchen help, Pa squall Restaurant — 6*3-1421 altar Htlp Wanted M. or F. Assistant \ Branch Managers Porters * »■ Salesladies Dock Man EXCELLENT BENEFITS Equal opportunity employer LAW BRYANT MO W. 8 Milo Ferndato________________ E4D-3 ARE YOU REALLY 'Ivlng? Or I easting? Cai.' Mr. eolev, YO REAL ESTATE 4744363._______ HELP WANTED MALE for bakery, apply---' persdn, 432 Orel Pontiac. 'Chard Lake v:. r f. NO FEE 4500 gill, Lk. H FULL-TIME hquseparentS: Mature, Ul cumbered couple*, ape* 15 to wanted a* nowaeparenti In private school tor boy*. Fly* day' week, pleaiant working condition*. Stertrtp salary $3,300 par vaar lor each perkoiTplus room and board, ni Please writ* Mr. Frank Travllglla. i,1 Jr., Starr Commonwealth lor Boy*, Alvktn, Michigan. 4*214. ___1 JANITOR, AND HOUSE KEENER, I Elk* Lodge, 600 E. UnTvaraltv. Rochester, Apply In pe STM arI you rEadY « can yvw. -oiev, YORK REAL ESTATE, OR 44)63. BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED All RH Positive $7.50 $7.50 PART-TIME ANYTIME JOB WITH A tuturo. Call Mr. Foley. T ctaSowMwi*! ! YORK REAL ESTATE, OR 44363 1 nM^Ml Irr IS YOUR - INCOME Adequate* Calll School District, — May, YOrk REAL ESTATE. SHORT ORDEOOOK, or Holiday*, wage* oi JffttJI'S— ------JOFFICE ‘ OIRL. SUBSTITUTE BUS drivers' now .eager beginner. $300. Sue Ml being Interviewed tor coming school1 336-2471, Spelling and Snelllng. year. Call SS7-4118, Mlltord.-1 PRODUCT ENGINEER: Permanent TAILORS I career as a ff-“--kit | of the fastest growing. In jack Parks, 3 — 1----'‘lie openings Snalllttg. HjMr SALES REP TRAINEES Ing, exc. potential, ...___:n*. huiI —•>*“ Sundays . *,al*ry Pl«» ear, axeoll, benefit*. homes, _ LOTS, ACREAGE ■”lAdams and Adams 647-888D parcels, farms, business; r ^-------A----- PROPERTIES, AND LAND CON- TRACT. WARREN STOUT, Roaltor I 150 N. Opdyke FE 54165 ...... . ..... member!' $12,006! Urgently need toi ' ■ _ _______ Jock Parks, 334-2471. Snelllng r—1 p Michigan, has r—"■ ---- 4—‘“~ tor raliors. *»*. wv,-Salary *n> Hootes 49 irban, large BRAND NEW 4 bedroom split level. «. *i» GI 34>44f3 ■ * ' HAR0LDR. FRANKS, Realty BRICK ON CORNER 3-BEOROOM, tto ett, garage, near | Fisher Body, Sl.^down on land contract. 332-413$ after 5:30. 2 FAMILY, PONTIAC I j Aye., 5 rooms arff bet i and path up. priced ....—BOH _ low (townLjeweit with FHA r terms, cuekterReeity, jjttj " Auburn Rd.. near >Cf | phone $524311 Avonda h positive $12 OR 4.9343. LIMOUSINE DRIVERS WANTED, must be 25 or over, $150 a week. Encyclopedia Brllennlca AlWf^DlRLIEr All shifts. Good working conditions. Experienced and Inexperienced. Apply In person Tuesday and Wednesday from »:301o 11 o.m. Seminole Hills Nurslnp Home, 532 WE WILL PERMIT NO CANVASSING _ . contact Jenkins, $52-44|t.__________ IwanTId bartendeTrs end waitresses, full or pert lime, Blue Cross benefits, paid vacation. Ap-i ply In person, 300 Bowl, 100 S. Com Lake Rd.___________' ___ WOMEN OR MEN WANTED | Distribute samples door to door, no, selling Involved. 11.75 per hr. Apply In person 26 Jefferso- SECRETARIES ' $450 to $550 ! Interesting position with ^top-notch fringe bom INTERNA! Vf'YD v gSrif n w' T\ ) ft IN. 1 Woodrow Wilson phono uN 6-; B N-'X LX N. Presidont Madisor •Crooks Rd. L'll AND 3 BEDROOM HOMES Oh; EM 3-3^6 363-9531. privileges. 7 rooms with ell the features necessary for convenient. modern living. Attached 2VS car garage. Walled Lake ichaole. Priced fight. 127,50 0. Ap-proxlmalely 16.000 down, mortgage Everett Cummings;, Realtor union lake road we buy OR 4436’ 4713 Dixie Hwy. .VE TRADE I ' FE $-7175 1702 S. Telegraph STEN0S ____________ , , cn°mnLv%nChhm«yt^^y%-1 $l?0 Ht>USE WANTED TO rent with C company, ah benefit*, over *iuu tlon t0 wy in Union Lake An 3634110 MICHIGAN COMMUNITY BLOOD CENTER - In Pontiac ‘ FE *-**47 1342 wide Track Dr., w. “ Mon. thru Frl., * a.m.-4 p.m. Wid. 1 p.m.-7 p.m. Caretaker. couple tor apart-, nlbuild Ing,--- u Sp ft dlpnifl This opportunity c i men and woman. For 2307 Dixie Highway H 8 p.m., 334-2136. _________________________ GENERAL UTILITY HELP CosmitologyInstructor -M- WANTED NIGHTS, 18 OR UchSoL* ^Hnol?rb^m*v I OVER, high wages, apply ‘^FyooVn, Fr44**, Sd otter 7.1 jN PERSON MaCHUS RED ■ —-----------------— 1 FOX, 6676 TELEGRAPH, PART TIME 16 to 60, work 2 to 7 days' p week, watch your favorlto movie: FREE with your family on your night o Ushers, cashier, concession, and ziaike',”S42-i053. «■ ” after Seta Help Male-fimiii# 8-A Chauflersiidbnse required. , TYPISTS YOUNG MEN, NATIONAL Corpora- over $100 per week, tlon, accepting applications from; benefits. Advenes men ages 10-26. Interview single secretarial duties. Type working girls, guaranteed salary INTERNATIONAL PEI *"'* IwpawIIua nrnnram rail AAr.lio^Q J Woodward Biff"" 442-4268 LOTS—WANTED IN PONTIAC --------1 ------dtata closing. REAL VALUE REALTY# 642-4220 President Madison APARTMENTS 1-2 BEDROOMS FROM $145 R batwatn 12 and 14 MIN n Haights Mir J. L. f'“J FOR LUNCHES* I BIRMINGHAM. Should You sAAAKE AN EMPLOYMENT CHANGE? NOW IS THE TIME I Michigan Bell Phone: 293*2745 uses. Earn part time. I HP. MMM Realty, 1230 N. Milford Rd. 405-1567 or 7030 Doxtor-Plncknsy Rd. 43646*6._________ REAL ESTATE SALESPEOPLE WANTED Your 0;pn Desk Your Own Phone Large Spacius Office Liberal Commission CALL JOE KIRK 674-0319 674-0310 Instructions-Schools ATTENTION DAY-NIGHT CLASSES STARTING SEPT. SO, FOR' AUTO MECHANICS Enroll now start training on ACETY-ARC WELDING HELI ARC WELDING Body FendOr Collision WOLVERINE SCHOOL Mich. Oldest Trade School Approved Under G.l. Bill Day-NIgM school l. Fort, Dot, HAVE ./ITH START OAKLAf- AGENT . PURCHASER^ CASH FQR A '- £ HOME ‘ OokIand*M*H Sun dack — pool — air conditioning All utllltloa axcapt Elactrldty Models Open 11AM-8PM 588-6300 2 BEDROOM HOME _| ~ SYLVAN 014 THE LAKES immediate occupancy. I and 2 bedrooms. From tin. Children welcome. Phone 642-9031 er 157-,[ 4m__________. ___________ -1 Rout Hoeies, NnMid 39 2 BEDROOM RANCH Nice location, black tap street, large lot, gas hast; 114,200. 2 BEDROOM RANCH l-car garage, S10.000, S1.M0 down. BEAUTY RITE HOMES LAKE ANGELUS , LAKE VIEW ESTATES Now starting aavaraL n aw horn** In fhl* plcturaaqu* ' community of fin* home*. Located one mil* north of Walton on Clintonvllle Rd., 674-0363 I Estate. 6824650. FLATTLEY REALTY COMPLETELY ^ FURNISHED¥ _ 4V 620 Commorco Rd. 343-6M1 fessional people "do* I rod. $2001 tKurtty deposit, $210 per month.1 ______——— 625-2615 orM5-1176.__________' -^hpnr-M n.mr.AI Tuli BY ^NER. OR OTHER, FOR QUICK ACTIO I CALL NOW. Work Want«4 Male EXPERT CARPET INSTALLATION, new end used carpet, day or night. JU 8-0577.__________________ LIGHT HAULING 3 bedroom$,'662-fel LARGE LAKE FRONT, $105 per month, $200 uc. dep.. garage, adults, no pot*, Union Lake. Aft. 12, 363-0134. _______________ ' j WHITE LAKE FRONT, 3 bedrooms,1 fumlshod, $150 per month w“" dtp. $87-4254. WILLIAMS LAKE FRONT, lovely 3-bedroom house, furnished. Adults only. To rent from Sapt. to June 15. PR 1-7620. BEDROOM BUNGALOW, full iomSlote/ Drayton Plains, basamant, gas heat, FHA terms. ^rS?™r ranCh, lV> baths, run $495 down, 'Bloch Bros. 5660 Dlxjs ^mant, attached 2-car garage, Hwy. Fh; 623-1333 or 548-7711. carpeting, dishwasher, drop as, laroe lot. $24,500. Call 674.3706. 3 BEDROOM LAYOUT by owner - walled Lak. down ____f $77 p . it showing. Call RAY REAL ESTATE ---------------------—----- Now has 7 offices to bettor sorve Den* llansns Unfurnished 40 j-our community. For bast results nouses, uniuriiianoH -iv Aluminum Bldg. Items ALUMINUM SIDING, WINDOWS, moling Installed by "Superior" ill FE 6-3177 anytl Dance Instruction Drafting^ Painting and Decorating A-1 PAINTING AND io PAPER HANGING THOMPSON — yH TED O I ANb CONSTRUCTION Cleon up OR S-101* lMtCULLQUGHREALTY.lNL_------------------- PAINTING WORK GUARAN A-t INTERIOR Pointing and Decorating All work guaranteed 6*3-1746 or 547-3326 -----HOUSE PLANS DESIGNED and Asphalt Paving 1 deteiied^aBi-soa* or 682-i7i*._ -1 Drgiimaklng, tailoring id 1-A, Auburn Heights Paying ^.TJl^^johnmSTl*5^ Tennis courts* parking I o t ,s ALTERATIONS, ALL TYPES, KNIT ■ ■ ■ ifv'tA/npV ^ $20 r,|Bant Lak* Cattegas 41 l| FURNISHED LAKE FRONT cottap*' o on beautiful Williams Lake. Electric heat. Available from Sopt. to Juno. 673-6527 after 5. INION LAKE, SLEEPS 4, clean, oil I heat, to Nov. I, EM 34165. bed t, aluminum siaing, in car garage, basement, redwood fence am rear completely landscai ill * Auburn 391*2511 Backhoe. Basements. 674-263*. FE Breakwater Construction Grading. FILL SAND, ROAD GRAVE! *“* " filtered black dirt, top « reasonable. 623-1372 or 62343*6. Boots and AccBssorits^ BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Stslreratt, I46.P. $ I, I v a r I In u Mercury outboards and stem drives. 126S * *' Adorns Rd. ACKER A-t FENCES ARE n Fall prices. 25 yrs. In F ares. Fra* ost. 662-54I2- Building Moderizntion FILL SAND LOADING DAILY 50 cents per yard, 450 Williams Lake Rd., Union Lake, V* ‘ ™' or EM 3-3516. ' INTERLAKE SAND AND GRAVEL CO. SAND, GRAVEL* ■ din 674-263*, or 3304201. E SPECIALIZE IN Bulldozlno, 625- $"P*i« Tank Service COMPLETE SEPTIC TANK, Sfi Tree Trimming Service Business Service^__________ ____$TUMP$ REMOVED FREE------- If wo cut tho tro* down. Trots trimmed, topped and removed. | ______ . Free estlmete 7*1-252* or 74»-5*55. very clean. Dressmaking & Talloring17 3 Beoroom furnished apart- Rent B TTRAC----- Use of kitchen. FE 4 anca and parking. FE CLEAN QUIET ROOMS FOR men, parking, close-in, $12 wk., EM 3- AT ROCHESTER l-BEDROOM BRICK RANCH -family room, fireplace, 1W baths - Interior In excellent condition. 2 car attached garage, country lot Asking $34,500, terms aVallabl*. tET I REM ENT 'RANCH -2 bedrooms. In' CASS LAKE PRIVILEGES BRAND NEW 4-bod room brick. Cap* Cod with full basamant. 2-car attached garage, first floor family room with fireplace, formal dining room, large kitchen -with bullt-injs and breakfast area, -2W ceramic tile this . lovely bedroom ranch situated on largo corner lot. Walled Lake Schools, FHA terms. Immediate possession. A DREAM KITCHEN Car* be youri this lovely ,Anatad on C“ ly ®$21?®». xtra large plus lak* prlvilagts. duties, $2*0. Call Kathy Kino, i _ ALTERATIONS, I mosphara. M Snelllng FOREA6AN: Fast growing firm with; UmdSCapiM golden opportunity. M,300. Jocki-------------r Parks, 334-2471. Snelllng Jack Parka, 334-2471. Snelllng and- INVESTMENT SALES: Top nokh company with Udvancoment plan. 17400. Jack P»rka, 334-2471. Snall- MERION BLUE GRASS sod, to first and second grade. LETE, 517-6354031._____________ MANAGEMENT TRAINEES Unlimited cares high school gra bearr PONTIAC FENCE CO. MODERNIZATION, 15*32 pixie Hsvy.t Waterford 623-1040 . , tre6 SERV|CE BY B & L tjfcablnetsiI Floor Sanding I Frm.ooamaleJAMjft-gga. ”T|nciud'ino new*----------------s- -------1 C 1 F TREE Service. Removed, j 1* 8874445. _ CARL L. BILLS SR., NEW AND old1-Trimmed. Fr^ert^TR *4057— ...| floor sanding. FE 2-578*.__ OVERLAND^TREE SERVICEand R. G SNYDER, FLOOR LAYING, landscaping, free est., sanding and finishing. FE 545*2. 7113 Floor Tiling Good salary s GARAGE 20 X 20' - $875. Cement work, free estimate. Springlielc Bldg., CO. 625-2128._____________ LICENSED BUILDER, alterations and remodeling. Free estimates 335-38*6 dr 338-7515. _______ Carpal Cleaning FE 5- ““ TREE CUTTING AND estimates. 335-3761. Clorkston Floor Covering ?*M4l.*tnHa andto|moltnumllrr°" ’ly^CaH D*V»° 851-228* Rea Carpentry 1A CARPENTRY — new and repa And Rooflno. 3354529, 335,7585. A-1 CARPRNTRY, NEW and tap* 336-142*. ' n.. I TRIMMING, REPAIR, REMOVAL CUSTOM FL06R~CbVERiNGTu. ipr,y.lnflI noleum, formica, tile. Carpeting 741 N. Ferry. FE 240*0. A-1 INTERIOR AND EXTERIOR -r finished. raying, fertilizing free estimates J & E TREE SERVICE ' LAWN DYING* WE DO grub con-U-1 LIGHT HAULING and moving, trot, cell tor free est. 474-3*45, 424-1 0254*72, or 3354607. , porches, recres tlon j '“7 H Spraying. —v A,1 LIGHT MOVING, TRASH hauled 1 sasonabl*. FE 4-1353. _________ ——............ _ . . . ------------------ ...--------------TYPES OF BEACH, fill sand, <*>■<**>■ • V_---!—_—J, . MFRiDN BLUE SOD. pickup er road gravel, lop soil, 6254735. CARPENTRY AND CEMENT free estimates. UL 2-5252. _ HEINRICH, TUISKU, HIBBLIN, INC. looking M3 Aherwood^ 620,2909, I omFlItE lXnO^Capm __stlzinq In broken concru -. . lining wells. Free estimates. J. Flight hauling and trash, phone 3344*41. Nurses Aides ., General office Medical Sec. .-'d. Delivered. 602-1*04._LIGHT HAULING AND ODD lobs. C & D LANDSCAPING. Sodding, fin-. Phone 335-4226.________________ remodeling, no |(* loo iih grading, fill dirt, lawn malm lTghT HAULING,, REASONABLE •man pr^oo^large. tenance, hauling. FE 4-7243.__, RATES. 338-1266. LIGHT HAULING OF any kind. Odd sbri'! lobs. FE-4-2347. _________{ »G. BASEMENTS! I. 674-1242. LANDSCAPING, SEEDING, - i *™» ™i« tilling, tractor « vails. Gilbert 24702, 673-1463. FE 9-4107 LIGHT HAULING. ——— oarao ___ LIGHT HAULING, PANELING, additi MODELING, 6114512 1 -----X'S DEPENDABLE BASEMENT. DRIVEWAYS, Patios, [ ' kLOCk ANO^^^JENT WORlT. ^yiti^^^^^^^fr^llSLe674-2*45! Pontiac. 3*1-1173. ______! 629-1552. C «, H Spraying ___ CEMENT WORK, block and too*-.-------------luitlbOT 235-StQ_________ UL 2-4751 £’• «. CEMENT WORK -Jives’, patios. RAILROAD TIES' R U B BAG Ilso, PE 0631*.____ LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCKING, Personnel Clerk Billing Machine Op AccountifirCtork". Clelms- Clerk .... Secretary, 35 hr. wl Receptionist — ~ etc. Phone Pontiac 3*1-3516 CEMENT WORK, PORCHES chimneys, FE 54983. Custom concrete company. i—A 11 t y pa ci-------- mo Modernization, 334-7677 or 3*1-2671 Lawn Service A price to suit you, I. Ing, anything, anytime 1 tra* trii mlng and removal. 534-904*. _______Track Rental Trucks to Rent Vi-Ton, £jc{'" FEIBLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS Wells cleeneB.. Rees. Satisfaction guaranteed. Insured. FE 2-1631. 1 .. jng Mg*. Trolnoo Shipping Clark . Production '----- Aatios, drives.- g a r a g eT., SLABS. 40 cants sq. t|. FE 4-2874, FRANK VENICE AND ....---------------... days. _____________________. .formerly of radio stations WJ$K id WKMH furnish 3 te S SMITH MOVING CO. Your moving _SH! ‘ 'rtt. FE 44164. | Orckastra Walding__________ ^—■ --------------------^ I Salesmen Wl CHET'S PORTABLE WELDING,[Mall Clark ■ gmjSicI tex^ruck service,ISales_Mgr. . ion Supervisor . „ep. •. ,r. Lab Technician ....... Adlustor .. ..... Accountant .... *g°j| Wantod to Ront 1—HKT2 0R 3 BEDROOM no om TWO OR THREE bedroom apart. Mtei men! or house by mother and two 119 600 children ages 5 years and * $600 months. Call 335-27S7. $72001 WANTED HOUSE OR apt. to rent. $10,0001 one child. Monteith School Dlst. to $5501 673-2760. ROOM FOR RENT. Phone 332-6071 111 W. University CALL: MILTON WEAVER INC., Realtors the Village of Rochester --------------------,x.. 6514141 ROOM'S WITH 2 DOUBLE beds, TV, telephone, carpeted, private 2 persons, payable weekly, ea. a day; 1 bad, 2 parson's, ra. o doy. Seville MotoL 1120 oodward at llVk Mila Rd. SAGAMORE MOTEU SINGLE OC-cupancy, S35 par waak. Maid sorvlca, TV, folaphona. 70* S. Woodward. ______________________ SLEEPING ROOM FOR working Hi ‘idlan Village, «*"■*- ------ after 4:30 p.m. COSWAY REAL ESTATE 681-0760 337* Orchard Lk. (At Commerca Rd.) CLARK Extra ______ . and gardan. i— ... --------- near 1-75. All for $29,500. Elwood Realty, 6*2-2410. AUBURN HEIGHTS — 2 family In-coma. 2 bedrooms each. Garage, wit, shaded lot. SI4,*00. Nix r, 6514221,----------------- Beauty Rite Homes HUNT00N SHORES EAST BLVD. SOUTH. I room brick terrace clean and sharp. Carpeted living and dining room, oak floors, plasterod wails, gas heat, basamant with tiled floor and finished rec. room. Price only *7,950 at *7$ por ~ EAST SIDE 8*50 DOWN: S bedroom modem homa, large utility nxim on first floor, dug-out basamant for extra storage spaed, gat heat, aluminum storms end screws, starter homo for average family, prlca **,*50 contract terms. CLARK REAL ESTATE g v 1362 W. HURON St. 6S24S50 ^ OPEN *4 MLS Township library business fessonal couple ’ available Oct. Call momlnas OR 3-22*4. LARGE AREA. PLENTY of parting,! .^TKShMSKlty, ApartniBntt, Untarnished 38 M largo light, 4lry :aptlonal Kitchens. Ul utilities except Rent Office Space AND 2 BEDROOM large tight,^atry apartments. Excr-"’—1 e«-*— Largs closets. Al.^HRin|^ electric. $148 and $155. No Nortleld Apartments, 115 | s. of First St., Rochester. BEDROOM^ TOWkhTOUSE, month, adults only. 624-1.10. r. Call 651- sour. ’ conditioned, APPROXIMATELY 2,000 sq. ft, ot About jix^ osf'~mb oh this 2 ;■■■ .. °»nce st- "l,h bedroom full 'basement hSma FHA Steart^Sd wSa5 plenty of parking, 4814*08.-approved, owners agent 674-16*8. Crestbrook Strartjnd modal. AVAILABLE IMMEDIATELY, 1,300 BLOOMFIELD SCHOOLS sq. tt. .^ttepsa. Waal ter pro-; Vary sharp three bedroom rhnch fesslonal offices, retail-store, etc.] home LsrBe Hving room, din|„B ^ and paneled library. Taxes ere only S387 par year. Located “■ 2 BEDROOM, MIXED AREA. . children. Must be steadily employed. References required. *75 deposit. $25 week, 33247*0. 2 to I prefer rod, no drinkers. $70 utllltt turn. FE 44641. ___________ . ROOM LOWJER, NO drinkers. No AVAILABLE NOW IN ONE OF Woodward. AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS Accepting—applications—for apartments, 1 Shore Liviof Quarters 3 COLLEGE GRADUATE, Malt, share his lakeside apt with sen W'000! 662-3702. : OTOO MlDDLEAGED lady will share Il^rl knnn. ustHl 8BIM KIUML Credit Advtson IP ITS AT all possible - Mono Tuning ____Waff Prilling ' WELL DRILLING ^ p service, UL 2-li ‘ Office Clerk iMaisager Keypunch criMetaUurglst rj I Seles Trains - new , DOLLY MADISON •- - apartments 1-2 BEDROOMS FROM $145 14 Mile Rd. at 1-75 Madison Heights Nsar J. L. Hudson's-Seara Oakland Mall *—iludesi_,.—(—.-- uri deck — pool — air conditioning All utilities except electricity Models Open It AM4 pm 585-1125 Of beautifully paneled office space for lease. Separate private office attached, WaltomBaWwtn.«*raa. Utilities Included In reasonable rent. CALL MR. TREPECK. 674- BIRMINGHAM AREA, .Immediate occupancy, sate by owner ““ Ul------ “■■■ B I r min i landscaplnng, _ --------- I kitchen — dinette, living risen — dining room, Z________r-- gerege, $3lM0. 6484*6*. BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS l Bedroom Brick Ranch. lVk baths, large- family room, with door to patio, basement, 2 car garage, vY9y1rTlntlh# 1tRiM,4'”t8hcW’ WrS! Corner South Blvd. and Opdyke'. $2B,*50.’ Owner transferred. 705 Hamlett, 334-0277. 3324156 COMMERCE AREA 3 bedroom ranch on large corner lot fenced/ Immediate possession, only 916,900 FHA terms. COSWAY REAL ESTATE 681-0760 Butternut Hill, B Ir m I n g h e m .... . .. , , - ... runnu,,, scboots. Troy texes, l*rg» lor wlth Jaa Orchard Lk^ lAt Commsrce mature _ lonttscaplnng,^ 3 _ bodropm 2:—^^------- Qmstbrook MODEL OPEN DAILY - - - - or By Adpofhtthertt * ' “ 3-bedroom, family room and 2-car garage, priced at only $17,9*0 Plus lot. Located In new sub with paved streets, curb, gutter, sidewalks and LwsuuieiewH^rlve out :M5* to BCnTS RENTINGI Highland Rd. ^lilzeMh Lake ~T' -) 743-5210, Flint. ___ end commercial cento Medical suites, general off! suites and commercial spact Plenty of free parking. Phone 6! -- 721-8400. Lake Road and West l. ty fine extras ere price $35,500. 673-7*37 GORDON WILLIAMSON 1 227 Maple E. Ml 6-UOO BLOOMFIELD HILLS 3 bedrooms brick ranch. Immediate- possession. GIROUX REAL ESTATE DARLING AND IMMACULATE 3 bedroom ranch, patio, off living room overlooking natural wooded area, completely redeco rated. All carpttlng and drapes. 1 year old. Gas heat, central air conditioning. ------ —---------y --.war, 2V» cor Palalan, 3344387 Mob. OFFICE FOR R— . ft: on wist side of h ick Ralph, FE $-7141. 1. CALL PROFESSIONAI______OFFICE .70 R lease. Located north ot Porttlec. Ideal for dental, specialist or M.D. Facilities Include * *— rooms, lab, dark . office and a sharad Convenient to L75^ ex^- Rgnt BosIness Pre|>e»ty 47-A IITH LOTI FE 3-7*6$. r 2nd Shift. 335-5675' MW Wonted Real Estate -.(Press Operator .. JS i Chemist ......... B Electronics Tech, UK | Mwegemenl Trainee Many of these positions are foe paid. Hundreds of other opportunities. r your! ■ welting to us to purchase end essume land Contracts, mortgages or buy homes, lots or acreagt ■gUgll | We will give you cash equity Our appraiser Is youf csll---.■ ■ idK— 674-2286 McCullough realty 640 Highland Rd. (M4*> „ Ml toon' W- ■ 2T4-2I Pontiac Press Want Ads ARE “ FAMOUS FOR "ACTION'; JUSTCALL 332-8181 25,200 SQ. FT. eaiecant bldgs. EM itaopethlc Hosltol---- ------- suit tenant er will provide new dg- with parking on she 120x140. intact Bruce Annett personally. Amwtt, Inc., Realtors 21 e. Huron St. ,, Wj Otflce Ocm EvenlnBS A *— 4615 DIXIE ■___square ft. war. lenufecting bldg. Rent — - tite poset*- “ OFFICE SPACE facilities. Loceh.- ■ ... _______ A**.. Far information cell- Cher l. MA 5-2141. 585 Oakland WALLED LAKE AREA. S acre manufacturing, house, garage, out buildings, S22S month, M A 4-4335. Rent Miscgllomous GARAGE. SUITABLE FOR storage.: North Side of Pontiac Halt ot large ’warehouse tor rent,; arte 1880 sq ft., ettertatintsteli. Own garage door, call FI 046M; otter rinfil 141 Ft **W0*^^ AZ4470RB "ESTABLISHED 1930" scaped a and half .. ,_ne designed tor the comfort end convenience ot ■ largo with a i3xi9Va carpeted living room with fireplace, llVtaltto dining room, 21* long kitchen with pseufitol view ot Ottor _____ 1 bedroom down and 2 up with wardrobe type closets, full basement end heated breezeway attaching the garage. $16,*8)reasy FHA terms or ti WALLEO LAKE SCHOOL DISTRICT and lake privileges1 on Upper Units Lake is the Men location ef this brick and aluminum ralaed ranch houme, situated on a beautiful lot loaded with towering shade trees, uniquely decorated throughout with like new carpeting In the living room and hall. 3 bedrooms, family styled kitchen with sfidipg doorwail leading to the sun deck end flagstone petto, walk-out basa-ment and gas fisal, UO.sqe.---------- ,--------—-------------^—7"—— 17* MECHANIC—Gl opportunity, not only to buy a homo svflh ZERO down but ku wen can buy two homos, tho home on the front hat basement with a 2 car garage. There's a home on the appraise' to STUBBORN HOUSE77 on t|it We make SOLI II exterior trim freshly p II basement, FHA our champion sa iff of STUMORiT: 2536 Dixie Hwy.—Multiple Listing Service—674-0324 Sola How* Cash For Your Equity HACKETT 363-6703 Sale Houses IMMEDIATE POSSESSION Lmm potential tbrnroo bungalow. Pull basement, g_. ItMfud, could bt Incoma. Afant lor " DRAYTON WOODS Vacant Immediate possession, 7 room brick ranch. (Ivina room with natural fireplace, IV* baths, country kitchen with, divider, to d MILFORD. I BEDROOMS, brick a aluminum ranch, m baths, t basement, (2) 2-car garages, : i on Huron giver. By own IMMEDIATE POSSESSION. Cl built 7-room brick west side i home. Slat* lover, famllv room ptus recreation room, 2 fireplaces, 2 baths, beautiful kitchen, attached garage, 2 lots and much M Lana contract. FE 2-1842. rr«S.w .mo ORCHARD LK. RO. *62-9999 DUCK LAKE {NORTH SIDE Salt Houses THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY ale Houses 49 Sale Houses SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 SCHRAM1 ____„je earlyl . c SCHUETT EM 3-7188 moo Commarg EARLY AMERICAN 3 BEDROOM,. BRICK, walk-out basement. Optional bed room -basement, full, ceramic bath, , PMA ternr List With SCHRAM And Call the Van OPEN EVES. AND SUN. lilt JOSLYN AVE. FE 5-0471 REALTOR • MLS Pontiac area tor 20 yeare - MODEL HOME........... OPEN SAT., SUN., 1-5 ANYTIME, BY APPT. bedroom brick trl-lavel with 2 c attached garage. IV* baths, finis., ad family room. Model located bn Williams Lake Rd., l block north of Union Luka vitinue. Also We^ Build * 5 bod room frl-toval with aluminum siding, tvs-cer garage, bedroom contemporary ranch with 11* baths, 2 car garage and fyll THE IMPOSSIBLE DREAM Ltka front — SIS,300 — L.C. In mcilMnt condition, carp# ted throughout, the alum, tiding, 1 Vj &PA.A —OS. N... 1^1 ----lakintf 49 Sals Houses // 491 Sale Houses car iiraga. p 99, . paTIO, DOST OOC .— - ..w of th# features n this home tht impossible c Sea today. BRIAN REALTY Computerised Multiple Listing Service Open weekdays til f p m. Lauinger I "BUD" l GILES KINZLER 61 SPECIAL imlly room, formal and fr 2ft baths, . H---------- _.id Informal ing areas. Basement, 2 car age. : is dispose of your present home s a new one this T c. HAYDEN, Realtor 363-64*4 _„1_0735 HljWand Rd. (M-591 TUCKER FIREPLACE JComes with this 3 bedroom t,_... priced to soil at 012,000 with *50 down. Immediate possession. Fur -basement, ges heat, neat and cleat Inside. On the East side neei ■McConnell school. . . 5 BEDROOMS In this 2 story home, North o Auburn on the Eest side. Ful basement, auto., pll heat, carpeting, large rear yard. Only Nelson Building Co. New 3-bedroom models, II* baths,! 1 4 BEDROOMS “.•rl; East slda near So. down and priced to I .____ now j-oeoroom models, iv ?utfY outside large family room. Covered and screened porch, blacktop sheet. | Many extra bullt-lns. *35,900. CHARNWOOD HILLS.. Exciting 3 bedroom ranch an wall! landscaped wooded lot. Wood burning flraplaca with_raised hearth 5 per cent mortgage assumption evelleblo. *41,500. SNYDER, KINNEY & 'BENNETT only to qualified Gl veteran. Also’ Ideal tor retired couple. 3Ya ACRES 5 room modorn bungalow. High oni ■ hill with miilc view in multi* r-.i for 25 icollont ti - ll duplicate. Lake froi ‘"*bl* OR" 3-8191 NEW HOMES AVAILABLE NOW 0rsmI5ml7mei rn n i. iDESIGNED FOR HAPPY LIVING. JOHN KINZLER, Rooltor You’il find charm and convenience 52)9 Dixie Hwv 623-0335 Plus prestige and plaasurein a home . Across from Packers Store ' bv Pontiac's leading builders. multiple listing service I frushour-angeLl 1 Pleasant famllv noma with small BELAJRE HOMES, INC. I like their models — and 1 WATERFORD, . $22,500 tjrms. Iang’elus lake view estates,! . VACANT 9-room bungalow, full basement gas heat, formal dining room. FH/ approved. Owners agent. OR 4 WARDEN WEST SIDE A-gracious tergs older home on E. Iroquois Street. Has natural fireplace, format' dining room, lounge room, 3 bedrooms plus all year sleeping room, gas heat, garage, well manicured lawn with large shade trees. Quick possession on this most djuaBlB home at iust *22,000, term, WARDEN REALTY Full Basement, siding, V* acre lot. ___, ....Is onol $700 DOWN FHA. Zero down - to Vats. 1 bedrooms. Family room. Large let. Excellent lake BrlvUMes. 90 FT. WIDE RANCH Exclusive area. Golfing. Swimming end boating. Lame It x 24 If! family room, 2 fireplaces. 2 full baths. 2V*-car garage. All brick. On V4 acre oak studded let;— UNION LAKE IdMl retirement home. Largi 16x24 ft. living room. Large HFRRINrTON till ft lN0 D0WN PARENT HtKKINO IHILLb - * To Gl for this 7 room homo 1 3 bedroom brick, good condition, full basement, gas heat, fane full basement, gas heat, electric front and back, fast posset hot watari features targe living full price M400. room with beam celling, dining! — enlent kitchen, tile bath,! landscaped yard, petto siao. paved driveway. 4)- down] S«..a0n'Y el°,,nB > nothing down to i"GI, rall'todM.’ BUSINESS FRONTAGE NOTHING DOWN mb ^Hdi||d| on FHA terms, *• i LAKE FRONT 2-bed room, year around cottage, ,xl2(j' lot, on White Lake, 49[Sab Houses . Excellent ping i id take prlvjle SHINN REALTY NICHOUE-HUDSON Associates, Inc. , 49 Unlveretty Drive FE 5-1201 after 6 p.m. FE 4-8773 FE 5-8183 SOUTH SIDE Two bedroom bungalow, til* TF,|P aA* parcels or um vou? b*,h' decorated, ges heat. Neat I™ -ACRE^PARCELS.^orjise your and cjean and no down payment. , Just tloslng costs fo mova In. |jl Vacant. *' I EAST SIDE Two bod rooms ell an first floor, part basement, gas heat, good! location FHA term- ' frontage. 12 r THREE BEDROOM: Formal dinlngl room-, full basement, gas heat, 2 car garage with cement floor. V.A.,Land| mU^fe^^^-railHERRINGTON HILLS only *16,960. I Throe bedroom brick with atudlo colling In living room, hardwood) floors, til* bath, full basement, | decorated Inside and bedroom, 2-storV home, lull t ment, aluminum storms ana screens, 2 garages, paved street, near Pontiac Northern high school. Possible Income-producing homo. Full price St2,950. Call now tor Claude McGruder Realtor JACK FRUSHOUR REALTOR WE TRADE CUTE-N-COZY NESTLED IN popular Elizabeth Lake Estates. This home has a Val-U-Way SOUTH SIDE 5 room house, alum, siding andj storms. 3 bedrooms, gas heat* full basement# tile bath. A bargain at $12,700. NORTH PERRY ST, • Lera* 2-story home near, the K-i Mart. 2 large bedrooms and bath $600 Will move you Into this oxt sharp 2 bedroom home with ft basement, gat heat, fenced yar roomy kitchen end dining are extra , clean. Total 1 price on *13,500. YOU CAN TRADE FOR ANY HOME WE HAVE FOR SALE Val-U-Way Realty and Building Co. FE 4-3531 345 Oakland Ave. Open 9 tc RANCH, full 1 floors, plastered wall, alum. DRAYTON PLAINS AREA , - 3 BEDROOM reef# CROSS REALTY WE HAVE MORTGAGE .MONEY 674-3105 $10 Deposit &ITH APPLICATION / 3-BEDROOM HOME from any workers, widow; OR DIVORCEES. PEOPLE WITH—CREDtT .PRO-i BLEMS AND RETIREES ARE OKAY WITH US. town charm, walking distance of churches, school and shopping. These models”at WESTRIDGE OfI -----RFORD, toft off the Dixie H „ ____ at Our Lady of the I «ic.«|3634 W. Huron. Pontiac 662-3920, Catholic Church, or LAKE WATERFORD AREA , nr BAUTi.r |ANGELUS LAKE VIEW ESTATES, I9MIWVIW «.I3CH LADDS OF PONTIAC right oft ciintonviii* Rd. onto casts: ah brick 3677 lapfer RD 391-3300 Messfl, and FOX BAY, rltiht oft hardwood floors, full 36// LAFhER_RU.---- i uuiiiiii^i i .i,. t>0«loteo ’PirryT'”1**~2 finished rooms. Bay Drive. You'll fenced ________ —mI hoatod _.DW., „.e«w . , beach privilegs ESM «hool.. 2gga^Mg5|§i ____for that NORTHERN L HOME, Sat our plans, pictui 'inancing progrf- **'“ -- INFORMATION ai * FREE. SOLID cant. !| jWEST SIDE Large four bedroom home v J family dining root — ^ RENTING! LAZENBY Ss $78 Mo. nuw warn uiey'rt built and I h.******„l maintain. You'll ba proud as sldewalki. —--- ----- j own one. Call your O'NEIL !jhools, chu^hes, REALTY representetiv. today. | Immedtote^possessl _ O'NEIL REALTY INC* j WEST SIDE *l!i!!l.lJVl|'1l l U?l! jPon,l*F..L*kJ? rd. OR 4-2222 walk-ln closets, full basement has] Hg--------- u "s fi e d recreallon! attached garage, n acre lot with! s. Priced to sell. CRrvRIf MR CM t » ranch home. 3 bedrooms, Tj __ * floors, full basement A TTO \ ristied-Toomtr-ges beeV-----I | \-\f\f I I ird, landscaped. 2Vj-can Ul V-/ V V X ± \y. irage, paved s t r e a t. PRIVATE BEACH Spacious 7 room brick horn privileges end many i Ottlce Open 9 to 9 R0YCE LAZENBY, Realtor Open dally 9 to (. Sun. 1-5 . 4626 W. WALTON — OR 4-0391 NORTH CITY Only a few block* from Pontla Northern High School - r** — showing! center. Off Pontiac on Hiller Rd. IV* acres. 2 bedroom homo with carpeted living room, stone fireplace, family room, full basement, gas heaL 2V* car garage. i. Cell OPEN DAILY ANO SAT. AND SUN. or come to 290 W. Kennett Near Baldwin REAL VALUE REALTY For Immediate Action Call FE 5-3676 642-4220 j GAYLORD bedrooms REAL ESTATE VILLAGE OP ORION - I room,WE BUY WE T.RADf family home. Garage, ----- Dining room 10x14. $15, on land ee---1 — fed FE 5-9693. 10 ACRES — Ranch home in land contract. Cell MY 2-2S21 or i LAND CONTRACT TERMS . . . _ . ■ . , VACANT J. A. Taylor Agency, Inc. .. , ' ______ 7732 Highland Rd. (M-S9t OR 4-0306 "*"rh |||W 90* Eves. EM 3-7546 ”i.S. paymenls OUR I PROGRAM Is deslpned to save you monty. We: Years of know-how will save you! money. Write for Information to: ALBEE HOMES, INC. • 3513 Elizabeth Lake Rd. _____Pontiac, phone: 602-3050 7—OWNER ANXIOUS 2*bedroom, on South Edith# full basement# ges heat# 2-car garage* 3 FAMILY On the East side Of Pontiac. 5350 per month Income. 515,900 with 20 pet. down. BACKUS REALTY 4560 Elizabeth Lk..Rd. 602-7131 or 330-1695 WALTER'S LAKE^ Designers home unusual 100 Realtors & Builders Since 1939 QUAD LEVEL — Four 2V* beths, family fireplace, large high pressway. Full price *34,900. all' BRICK RANCH — Fireplace, —— living room, full base-largo wooded lot, 3 YORK fireplace, studio celling, -----------, kitchen, plus 3 bedrooms and 2 baths, exterior all redwood. I~ mediate possession. $26,900. LAKE FRONT — 3 t VON WE TRADE INCOME, If ydu can NINE OAKS Yet. at least, and some fruit end various fruit tree* make a beautiful setting for this I bedroom! IV* story home. Levina care can be seen throughout. Full basement end a 21* car garage with a —■ . storage space above. The lot Is ISO vou another X 150. Location Is also excopttonel. HWI Full price only 016,950. PONTIAC EAST SIDE i If you need room for a large! family. Jet us shew you_ this 1V*| I BEGINNERS 1 CALL TODAY on this vory nlco k 3 bedroom ranch home. It has ?! full basement, tiled bath, brick . alum, siding, storms, screens c> and fenced yard, located on ! black top street, with city water and sewer. Full prlco 514,900 Gl | or FHA terms. 3 MLS 674-0819 674-2245 - 5730 WILLIAMS LAKE RD. STRUBLE Mattingly payment moves you Into this deflghM ■ iv* c 2 bedroom ranch. It ir garage, spacious living h decorative paneled wall, price Is $13,500. |—If thw Lint to Busy Keep trying btcaUsa will be wanting to know....... ... delightful 2 bedroom alumlnun tided bungalow located' 11 Waterford Township. Features In elude full bath plus shower, Im Ration flraplaca In living room landscaped. Full O'NEIL WHY NOT TRADE? ARE YOU LOOKING FOR THE UNUSUAL? This small estate, (is acree) Is off too beaten path but still only 2 mil** from to* Ssshsbtw Rd., slid 1-75 In-terchanbe. u mile winding private drive off the highway to the front -oor. High rolling terrain otters * ibulous panoramic view from avOry ilndow. Over 5,000 evergreen trass, master size bedrooms, plus all .jxury features found In estate property, Oftered at *45,900 1 *r below reproduction cost. By appointment only. No,. 12-27. THERE'S MAGIC In this almost brand new 3 bedroom brick hpme with 2 full baths at Twin ■ •'“-‘■■m ap- tamlfy bedrooms, a large llvl family room and a IV* ci extras include a 9' x room, carpeting and drap pear and apricot trees oi No. 3-34. BE SURE TO SEE THIS beautiful brand naw custom rancher. Features' 2 full csramlc tiled baths, 1 ■---- ■—'-noms, family room with separate dining arss. tot. Full HI___*14,900. DAN MATTINGLY AGENCY n MW - -• fHA OPPICE MODEL this S-room spertment, 602-9000 OR 6-3560 msk* your flreplac Built-In ZWIMHIPWIIp apsrtfnsnt ton yourself. Where else can you invest approximately 61000 and live rent free? Each apartment fjij full size dining room, hai--------- floors throughout, plattorod wells SIEASTHAM baths, plastered walls. An uufUjOUIldH a full b s JUST LIKE NEW O1 Including ni This home Is id out. ■HM. .........j new. plumbing, end furnace ■ ■- Ttolng rqom i car garage, ct for you at 602-2300 SYLVAN 673-34*01 e-by OR 4-0363 1702 S. Telegraph 4713 Dixie Hwy. LIKE NEW 110,500 CL 463-5615 or le trees an 100 ft Only *27,775. Terms. Cell M,Y 2-_2*2Lot-EEX9693. I FE 2-2821 or FE 0- V6V1. GAYLORD INC.' . 2 W. Flint St., Lako Orion MY 2-2821___.____FE S-96 GREEN LAKE FRONT 2-bedroom, attached garage, fl sandy beach, must sail, laavi state. $25,500, 363-9605._ HIITER eoxiu the’ Mslf lies been completely| -n inside and repainted I It has an attached I P ige, and ■ big be purchased 21* car heated garage, and a big! 2® J.bedroom home loceteo.neeri ^Kettod^iM' Lorberta l I 1624 Movlnb out of elf PONTIAC 3-bedroom , broad front ranch ‘ Tt2^o':"H7r“i ^»can°r—iMSO^mov* • you in on FHA mortgage — f F sale by owner. B^yjnr find mis 3 Mr. Cohen_________571-01 B^^BMradW°assuma|This has Everything! ,$500 DOWN I This low down payment will buy 4—L-' thls 4-room bungalow on land '*||| | tract, there ere 2 bedrooms end ! basement. Cell today. BiH Eastham, Realtor 5920 Highland Rd. (M-59X MLS AUBURN GARDENS Sharp 5-room ranch. Fireplace end! carpeting. New furnace end hot j* T«jr feml y g^tog lei* water. Large landscapped lot. For /mir house OjWoP *" prlv,to Showing. Cell . why JmTSm US TSKj" YORK venlent to edhools and shopping.- WE BUY Only $14,500. Call today for dtrtalls. | FE 8-7176 ■ — ‘Tee homesite at Orton-; 1702 S. Telepraph ■ 6024000, after 0 p.m. 602-4653. H0LLAWAY REALTY to epprodate toll value. Holloway Realty Co. 112 Milford Rd., Hlghli 1-684-2481 _________ INDIANWOOD Shor lot, lake privileges. ■ terms. 682-7597. MODEL OPEN DAILY 9-V SUNDAY 2-8 P.M. Tasteful ___ ____ __ lomesite todi avagence Frushour-...... ThSt'S why you con JItn nave: nm i __ . nn. ?»r iTfor onTdtlX’wh^’donT1 r MULTIPrFjMSTj^EX^ d'WVcau! QUICK POSSESSION Lake Road today. Sales • WE TRADE FE 8-7176 Pontiac sy ... --- 'E OTHER _ . ■onve’nlences that add up; homesttes to choose from. Select ...pence wlthoUf ex- your homesite today and bv ,nc-'Ange7rnbunt^oma* jKj RHODES, REALTOR I irp r.9.in6 258 W. Walton RB 5-671J ” ------ --!Rvr“ lust closing 338-6952. ZERO DOWN !osts on this 3 oeoi 7lth full basement. LARGE FAMILY HOME large bedrooms. Carpeted living »m and dining room. Ito batha. ill ' basement with recreation 9m. Gas heat. Carafraa iminum siding. 2 car garaga. On y water and sewer. Convenient [SUBURBAN RANCHER Neat and dean tor carefree living. Large family size kitchen, nowlv raroatoq living room, 3 t family room, 2V* garage, *16,900 term- — ALUMIUM TRI-LEVEL Elizabeth Ing room, kttehtn (Waterford Schools). 3 living room (-• ind laundry ached garr-FHA term*. WATERFORD AREA Bungalbw for newly carpel price. $14#90 IRWIN exclusive ,1 RAY O'NEIL REALTY ! 3520 Pontiac Laka Road 'OR 6-2222 , ; ■ . . « this ..loval) ■ — , ,uN . — patio! braezeway _ capadl || lot. Within walking distance ranch type bungalow PHONE: 682-2211 5132 Cass-Elizabeth Road MLS REALTOR open Petty 0-9 IRWIN 4 tSg.P Lake, AVON REALTY I. Lak»^ Call I EXCLUSIVE SALES OF WEINBERGER HOMES OL 1-0222 ■ 3324755 ANNETT to stores, *11,501 UNDERWOOD I attached garaga. it soOO to guellfled Gl. FHA id room homo with full automatic gaa heat. WARD'S ORCHARD FRESHLY DECORATED, a story end a half brick rancher, close to school*, shopping, with a huge, newly carpeted living room, t '1^1_JT. .La* #» ... - 4..II (inkhoH KnwmwAw* **#!••» ftflrf TOC. #26 /* , ,. GRAND AND GRACIOUS SPACIOUS BRICK COLONIAL-Touchod with clwrm and loyaly first; floor arrangement, with mirbte flraplaca In'llvl---n-.i«d kitchen with dishmaster, formal dining room, 4 carpeting, Anderaon window* throughout, — _ ■ “with stt conveni- ___ queen-sized rooms# Vh baths# !? An' M^ctrflve-type” home, custom-buTtt by owner wtth manl ■features. Located In .one of ““ |—*----------- *" d realistically priced v i finest si h excellent terms. #73 EXECUTIVE'S DREAM HOME TEN ROOM DELUXE QUAO-UEVEL with new esrpstlMI Complete dining worn ter mirrored, 3 fireplaces plus Inside .l»r-b**f l- *cr* Ot 'fk-cepflonal landscape properly, -including 2 baths, 2V*car attached LAND CONTRACT S bedrooms up, living room, dining room, kttchon down, full basement, ges‘hfcot. enclosed porch. Can bo bought on land contract with S2500 WEST SIDE eve. Oi more. Must s ner asking *39,90 Real Estate , 731-1010 GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE BWd|jjwHto|j| FE 3-7*83 298 W. Walton SOUTH SIDE - 299 CENTRAL, j rooms and both. 2 bedrooms, 59,750 with $750 down and balance at 580 per month. Walking distance to General Motors Truck Plant. KENNETH G. HEMPSTEAD SMALL FARMS, ROOM tor fiorsas Art Daniels Roetty, 1230 N. Milford Rd. 6*5-1567 or 7030 Dextsr-Plnckney Rd ............ home, on large well planted lot, fruit trees, berries, grapes, etc., plenty of room for garden. This house needs no work. .516,000. terms. Agent. 3*3-6413 or 3639531. SUNNYDALE GARDENS Neat and clean brick ranch, i separate dining room. Plus large kitchen. 2-car attached garage on corner lot. Plus targe kitchen. 2-car attached garage on corner lot. Priced tor quick sale. For .private showing: Call YORK VC BUY WE TRADE! W ‘mil OR 44163 Drayton Pl*lnt| Landscaping INCLUDED! ROSS »m ranch, 2 beths, g snt, extras. $31,900 •^iAKE FRONT RANCH & 2 STORY COLONIAL TV LAKE FRONT QUADS ^ 3 BEDROOM RANCH car gereg< »r quick si jWIROQUOIS: jmlnum sided two story st a large living room 'apises, full size dining kitchen and breakfast bedrooms and full ‘ " ‘JttodJT BUYING OR SELLING CALL JOHN K. IRWIN 8. SONS 313 West Huron — Since 1925 FE 5^446 after S p.m. FE S-8683 HALL Clarkston Schools. Almost 2 tertt. Small bsm. Live stream and a . brick quad level toss than 2 years old featuring: 1M0 sq. ft. of living area, bultt-ln oven and range, custom cupboards, largo family room with flraplaco, formal dining room, 2V* baths and attached talng and >. Fenced yard and 2 car attached garage. All toll for only 124,500 end wo can arrange your financing — so call nowl 3 Family Income with ell city conveniences. 2 units ere completely furnished end to* third has a range and refrigerator. Income Is 5400 e monte. Available on tend contract terms with only 54,000 down so call now for an appointment. Duck lake lylleges are acrosi toe road >m the 2 bedroom ranch w* have the Highland area. Furnished TED'S Trading NORTH SIDE y I story borne with w«.,.r..rt, large living room, alum, sided, fenced yard, 2 car alum, storms end screens, :* 514,900. FHA terms, 1st dishwasher end ( this anytime. WHEN YOU SEEK OUR SERVICE YOU "JOIN THE MARCH OP TIMES" - Times Realty WEST PIKE STREET ----T3~Tttom brick home i family Income, each \ bath. 3 car garage, com* of $465 per r WAffe RFDR*P-4 XO'fS 4 bedroom semi-bungalow with S StH?a“.HKAMPSEN paved frontage on Williams Lake Road. 121,000, terms. BRICK' 2 fAmily OFFICE OPEN SUNDAY 1-5 “IT'S TRADING TIME" garagi toll p time ottereo. PWEETITWAN A lovely brick ranch hem* with large bedrooms, 2 lots overlooking Cess Lake. Well landscaped attach'd garage, 2 full bafhs, petto, refrigerator, range, carpeting an* drapes included- An excellent Ir vestment at *29,900 cash to e> I sting mortgage. Terms or trad* equities. See this horns others In loving color in out now Val-U-Vtelon show of homt PONTIAC KNOLLS 3 bedroom brick .ranch homo, heat, storms and screens, large — — — street and ribbon drive. , Priced at mSOC to* kitchen, f _______car attached garage. In „,, are* of fine homos. Call today for your private showing. No. 6-15. NEW OFFERING ON A BETTER ■Custom ranch, oak floors, ceraml* --------- —m. ~!vtd celling. ■PPBRHIV room with bay window, richly cur-all to wall carpeted, end ........ a natural leg burning fireplace. 3 lovely bedrooms *11 on ont floor, ample closets. Attached 2 car garage. Wonderful, dssp vtoll. jos heat ahd water ^teMtwr. AII ttiin plus much mort at $28#800. We II accept a trade. Let's look today. No. 1-37. AUTUMN SPECIAL11I oom Watkins Lake front, toll mt. Beautiful safe .sandy , Thereto still tots of swimming r toft but hutrv to snatch this nt buy and you'll 'sslte* _____ many ysars of hspr front living. Prlcs^flto-*23,500. NO. Ml. 'qSSHo.Ift WEST SUBURB but Its racSSft carpeting In living room end too bedrooms, 2 car garage. 50x140' lot. vecant, immedleto p o s s e * s I • n. 514,500. We'll trade. No. 3-31. ATTENTION G.l. Rest nest 2 bedroom bungalow In Kongo Harbor. Lsroe lhrtng rowtj, very convontonf kINJ»n, msrn-tenanc. fra* alum, siding, rile* lot and yes — a basement with gat furnace. Closing costs only to qualified G.l. Only *12,500. No. 6-30. JEL WATERFORD, b ot Dixie 1UM0) to Our Lady et toe Lake* Church,-.left on Ledgestonei left on Cotuve Mara. Open dally 24 P-M. RANCH MODEL AT 9052 N. Cass Lake .Rood. OPEN DAILY 104, will dupllctte on MODELS SHOWN AT YOUR CONVENIENCE - CALL TODAY FOR YOUR APPOINTMENT. RAY O'NEIL REALTY 3520 PONTIAC 1>K1 ROAD OR 6-2222______MLS________332-3*66 Income Proparty : 1 BEDROOM, Ing room, klMten, 2 bedroom, dvnM ____________, -tt beto, upstairs, ] blk. off M-24 In Lake Orion. S3M0 down, will handle, Palrlane Realty Inc., 466 Fox Street., Lapeer. 6644121. ________ 3 FAMILY APARTMENT, basement and garaga# In Pontiac. 62S-2013. A. •iv.# .o.Vw# Sandtrs# rap. H. Wilson. included- An excellent m-.Mj and 98 PRALL ST., houses used a* at SM.O00 CaStf tO #hmp UMA Terms or let's ORION TOWNSHIP Lovely 3 bedroom aluminum sided, ranch boms, Isrgs family room. 21 'x22* living room, IV* baths, ‘ kitchen. as dormitories will net over b t 129,500. Details ■ „ v HEMPSTEAD - 165 ELIZ. LAKE RD. FOUR COTTAGE HOMES NOTHING DOWN GI'S^ I down on FHA (arms, room, 2-story home, toll has it, aluminum storms an -tens: 2 garages, paved street, Me1,’0AI1 & shopping area. S ropmi ■to In each apt., separata Hants S, hestln# plants, nts pay all utilities £ will Ing only $19,250 . With 10 per cant down plus closing costs. Call for your appointment. WATERFORD AREA — nt SEEING is BELIEVING This comfortable 3-Badroo. Carpeted living JnTverstty DrD'si2,906. NtHDown SI. .... HAGSTR0M, Realtor MM W. Huron u MU JR 44358 EVES, FE 4-7005 $34,900 Calh 623-0670 Lakeland Estates Models Open Dally, sun., 14 PM- t ROSS WE , WILL . TRADE REALTORS 28 E. Huron St. Office Open Evenings A Sunday 1-4 338-0466 kitchen with —. windows through! 120,900 with 10 P ceramic bath ■L___fttul custom iting area, Thermo tout. Priced at e* par cant down, ihow you this home. NEW ALUM. RANCH — homes your tot, or ours. Featurin' til* bato with vanity, hot water heat, full basements, Priced from $15,300' with as inflates to par aant dowi Call or stop to tor more details. -----! ——LET’S TRADE. —JQ B. HALL REALTY, REALTOR 6in Dixie Hwy. *25-4)16 Open ‘ ‘ Wideman WEST SIDE Gl - 0 DOWN MILLER AARON BAUGHEY REALTOR WEST SIDE 5 BEDROO MS, rang*, refrigerator. Large carpeted living room. Full basement with new *—‘nerator and water heater. Gaa I. New 2 car garaga. *22,900 with Tgaga farms. > _ DOWN JUST CLOSING COSTS. North tide ranch dose to schools and stores. 3 lovely Vf a STOUTS e BEST BUYS TODAY PERRY PARK- —New ottering'on tols 6 room and bath ranch bultt In lfl*. Hardwood floors and oil host. Aluminum storms and screens. .■Carpeting Included. Lot 50x150. Termrto qualified buyers. ROCKWELL STREET- Locatad lust oft Franklin Rd. This tango 0 toom and hath family homo Is In sxcsllsnt condition. Sparkling steal siding that Is almost naw make th* axtortor of the horn* vory attractive. Basement with gaa heat. 2V* ear 8sx.^rF,BAsr,nB AUBURN HEIGHTS— .jrga colonial Slstlng of ■ vary lai|PNMII Located In action eras, which cl tor space? This li University on a on* acre site. OTTAWA HILLS This ttl-laval loo finest west ski* -Sp&<... ( utility , dryer and a Hi bargain at ACCjf FT STARTING OR FINISHING it horn* tor young andd*" n , brick, toll basement, Old. 5-'MEDIATE POSSESSION, i Large anchor ftHIcod back yi 515,500. WEST SIDE I unit Incomi OAKLAND LAKE- TRAOES - CALL TODAY. ' with toll boaomont, two cai garago. Largo landscaped corner lot with laka privileges. Only a hop and a |uqip from Silver Lake Golf . Club. In an area of nlca homes and th* price has bean reduced to 526,000. Call for an appointtnont — tote Is ‘ “— ,you must seel A HEATED POOL IN THE CITY I that can provide year 'round . swimming. This irx36' In-ground pool Is comptoto with dtolng board, filtering system and with m mm —n room# li B«r§gt INCOME 4 bedroom, 2 story horns, basement, 2 car parage, paved street and drive. Northsid* loca- exlstlng, land contract cent..Now ranted. INCOME 2 family East skte ranting for 0435 par month. Excellent .1-------- basement, paved street, -.— ■ schools and shopping. Apprex. (2000 down to too existing la contract at 4 par cant. Rant ”>W' 674-2236 WHAT'S YOURS? A 5-bad room ranch, family roe and basement tor 515,990 plus le A. 3-bad room tri-tev*l with faml room for. $17,990 plus tot? A . bedroom 2-story colonial family room and basement for $19,990 plus tot? What's yours? Call ur heat, newly decorated.. Full price GENEVA LAKE PRIVILEGES-yT.ftfti8,r?h TerW1' • " " 7 large tots Indudad with tote 2 snowing. LatL—. - ' bedroom ranch-home: gas heat, am- room with brick firapfgce, dining room, 2, bedrooms* large kitchen, Ibath, lots ot closatt. Renta tor 5150 brick ranch home with outstanding finished lower level. 2 flreplaraa. IWiifBiluBi" HWteif # , - # . ROCHESTER ' OL 14S1S < _ _ ,pto fruttWMd cabinets In kitchen, T T /^\ T"*\ T / attached linear garage, fruit treat V/ ( VI J 1/ end bsrrlas. A 0«S5 BUY AT Y 1 1 rv IV *17,490, TERMS, CALL FOR/AP-' i WitlV iPOINTMENT. j WE-BUY TRADE 1- 0. WIDEMAN, REALTOR FE 2717* ' i . FBMlS 412 W. HURON ST. 334-4524 11702 S Telegraph Ponttoe'EVr CALL 2324490 month. Up, has llvina room, 2 bedrooms, kitchen, Mlh and lots of closet space. Rates for 0135. month. Full basamate. gas haat. Separata maters. 3 Car garaga. Just S19,9S0. Terms, immediate possession. FE 2-0262 ot* w. Huron ' open 9 m 9 , wito bullt-lns. 214 baths. Attached 2 car garaga. 12x14 ton dedc plus porch. Big shaded tot overlooking Oakland Laka ,/ privileges. , y ■ FE.8~7|6j UNION LAKE , EM >4171 WARREN STOUT, REALTOR 1459 N. Opdyk* Rd. , FE UHU __j—J — Plus many more custom featuras. It's tocatatf on to* ter northald*. a stone’s throw from Northern High and prlcad at only *24,«0. ■ I OUR, GUARANTEED TRADE-IN PLAN IS DESMNEO FOR YDU, MR. YOU MUST SELL BEFORE YOU nuv _ op auv taanac you & ■ Rm MHi ______________ mb tor Eltoan Moyar, Elalna Smith, Than*. witt, L*o Begirt. Dev* b-jw- “zrr- TED'S CORNER NO DEPOSIT, NO RETURN. Income and rental proparttos art an axealtant . kivdalmanf. If you have a fpw extra dollars It tmuld be wls* to Invosflgata these possIMIIftes. Rentals can make y— ah axealtant retirement Incoma a keep you busy yet leave you t time tor traval and hobbies y may anfoy. At the tarn* time v are performing a service to t community. I believe toe sacral rental success is your cholct ranters and a good ■ maintain program. Those 2 Item linpqttor of rant ^gsMaf Nay" 1~at 7 p.m. You are all vltod to attsnd. Without DEPOSIT'on a rental home tod there will be ns RETURN torn! McCullough realty . ^ REALTOR Mt Highland Rd. (M49) Ml feStm 94 574-22 acres. All furniture and applfoncs* Included for 526,900. MAX ' BROOCK . 4139 Orchard Laka Rd. ** ▼►all 444-4890 KENT I UNITS — with lako small acreage. Plenty of FLOYD KENT, INC., Realtor 2200 Dixie'Hwy.at Telegrapher 24123 or FEUOtf-- 4 ACRES, NICELY wdodod In doer area. Electricity Is In. Cash or terms. 332-7332. _____________ SO ACRES WITH natural lake, goad location. *33,000. Edward _ G. Hutching*, Broker 664-6001, Ras.: 466-2162. SIS^SO NICE TWO EEDROOM _hom* living rw..., —. kitchen. Call Basli* mpm* Inc, 0074191 or 363-3741, evenings call 363-2274. ___________ IY OWNER, .tat .ton* ottorad. Wolverine Laka front. Early.-American, 4 bedroom, largo roc. room, lVft batha, gas hot water heat. Prlcad at bank appratoal C*H 624-461«. i mortgage available. DIXIE LAKE Over too- on laka, vary, toepa.lit, 2$ par cant down, balance land ct. Bloch Bros: 5660 Dlxto Ph.: 623-HM or S6B.7711. F—10 THE PONTIAC LAKE PROPERTY THOMPSON LAKE - Sloping let wltfrSTfrpnftgten Ttompson LaR. fdaM baaaiitont. Beautiful trees. New Howell thop-ping eree. VL 4610. HOWELL Town & Country, Inc. Highland Brench Office Phone: 313-6850585 LAKE AND RIVER FRONT 'CbT$, j« min./Pontiac. 15 Mutlrani $3405. S3S mo. Sheldon. 62M557. ' lake front'homes. . I , New and Used. i J. L. Delly Co. EM >7,14[ CHOICE BUILDING LOT,_____,.T Itts-Acrgogo Mg taring** Prggirty 57 CLARKSTON AREA, approximately J acres, OR 3-0148. . clArkston AREA Lerge beeutlful building I Fowler Realty. 363-66)3, 3*3-0531 M-59 Neer Pontiac Lake, 100 tt. tro...... on M-JO, alio fronts on Pontiac Lake Rd., zoned Commercial. JOOOt. CASS LAKE AREA II In groups on Inolvldvolly. for investment. 87 lots 50x150 will toll In Sale land Contracts AVON TOWNSHIP rn Ave., near Crook* Road. 314' 16', $42,000 — land contract CORNER OF MONTCALM And Stanley. 3 Arts, $1400 down. Si ■chllecH drawing for this «lte. HAVE $100,000 AVAILASLE tc land contract*. JOHNSON 1704 S. TELEGRAPH RP. PE 4-203 SOLD FOR $55001 balance S3.m.51 - - per cant, will tell (or $3450. 177. Wantgd Contra cti-Mtg. 60-A pNML^SHI^^LAKE , ESTATES, chinas# 664-3 $4,000. For 1400 tq. ft. noma or larger. Edward Hutchings# BroKtr, Lapeer 664-4081# ,, WAGNER BATEMAN COMMERCIAL—INVESTMENT MATTINGLY LAKE FRONTAGE lutlful sloping wooded lot. I on Bushmen taka, (Prjvs Is 350' deep, full price, $4,800. HIGHLY RESTRICTED 10 ACRES, acre private lake, 2 flowing wal 4f* miles N. I jf - gUflm Mich. " ” “ DEPT. 277 S Telegraph Rd. FE 8-9641 Weekdays after ] 1 T.Q50______ LAND CONTRACTS Urgently needed, tee us before you deal. Warren Stout, Realtor 1450 N. opdykt Rd. _ Fi 51165 II 0 p.m _____________RdTl'eti'lo'Set. t Sun. — CALL FE 4-8109 ____ Id., right to 3460 Allen. COMMERCIAL 400x460'. Sashebawl Spring Lake Estates. By owner. qoad frontage, neat 1-75. Will 4540 Dixie'Hwy. OR 3-1355 NEED LANO CONTRACTS. SMALL DISCOUNTS. EARL GARRELS. 4-5400 OR EM 3-4086. Money to Loan divide 7150 p 412- >________________OR 4-3568, TOWNSEND LAKE 100 ft. lake frontage. 200 tt. deep. 08,200: 10 per cent down. SISL0CK & KENT, INC........j 1302 Pontiac State, Ear' HOWARD T. KEATING 12060 W. 13 Mila Birmingham 46-1234 > 166-7951 338-9294 ______________ 338-9294 WALLED LAKE SCHOOL DUtrlCt -excellent lots, some "rl” beach or— "Before too late Its already yet" ,,-D P9r tl. Sheldon - 625-5557. BOBM Downtown Commercial Building 3 story brick building — pi— * — income approx. $600 per Bargain priced tor quick to WRIGHT REALTY 32$ Oakland Ave. FE 2-9141 -&AtNeS, AAf6H1SANr tt+esr Argen- ----- ' —i Area). All post office LOANS $25 TO $1,000 it ttort COMMUNITY LOAN CO. month. 30 E. LAWRENCE ■ FE ,0-0421 '• j LOAN i ___I______ PM Brandon Twp. -.... pries from *1995. 520 Where prices are rapidly rising mov .OtOf^BrasJMdO, Dixie Hwy. and the time is nowl 10 acts*. PH; 623-1333 or 540-77) 1, Williams lake. Beautitui double terraced canal lot, E-Z terms. Bloch Bros., 5660 Dixie Hwy.. PH: 423-1333 or 548-7711. (ull basement, lot. Commercially Toned. Northorn Property 2 BEDROOM FURNISHED 51-A cabin < S Partridge fViuil "Is the bird to sea" EXPRESSWAY LOCATION PltESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 n Hi-Fi, TV. * Radios MEDITERRANEAN STEREO console, AM-FM Stereo radio, BSR changer, ploys oil stats. 4 sneakers n Lay-A-Way, New. Sold for 1271, :onsole, Bl St. Solid S for S*|e Mlgcolleneeae 67 HRH SWEEPER, I . IP cotta* toblo, 2 sets lampv clothe coats, dresses,, 12-14, tall OR • Lavatories ,coMl*t#fl~10i n Fluorescent# 393 o consol*, AM-FM radio# a gbi.spRc«5Tsri Musical Gaedi FENDER ST RATOC ASTER Guitar and deluxe 3 verb amp ..like new, .. ... -rice, Trombone. .... -•Iglnal . nood condition, 334-1279. • flHblR D'iJAL 'j(HOW MijnTottom ssW.’fM U floor MODEL, iPlNET Plano and Household Appl., 335-9283 Hi" $8.51 par , l w $10.01 per O, A. Thompsor 7705 M-59 GIBSON ELECTRIC 7 pickup guitar with custom case. 11213919 Dtil ■ Rd., Daryton PTalnt. WANTED. RcA tfaebT~fv~kl6Eb.! LENOX FURNACE, 95.000 BTU, new yywol ln2T^|V*CrtpaC|?. 623^24 I -»ct_ wortt._ Bor *troom$,» ,5 ..fflS ------------------ES------! tym? windows*/ like new; 1 PlclurS MEPIUlP window 70" x 78" opening, 1953 condition. Fowl Pick-up. 473-0774. LUXAIRE OIL, FURNACE, nd mattress, good con-1 BTU, Include, extra lalousle window with | PumpMi4^._ - GRINNELL CONSOLE For Sale Miscellaneous 67 i like Tww.^lSi _____2~ etler 5:37 p.m._____ , picture MEDIUM' GRAND, good ..... ...... ...... ..reen, MEYERS 7V4 FT.. SNOW ola 28"x2$", 1 regular window 28"x29", A-frame. 332-5024, 425 E. W, 335-6662.___________■ ■__________I MOVIE SEAtS Tl EACH ■ . mDE-A-BEO 860. FE 5-1705 or FE| padded foldlng^ chalrv^BesI ^offer 200 SELMER MARK 6 ALTO SAX Excellent condition. Uaod fast tonally. FE 4-0537. 2-8 PANE WOOD FRAME Picture' t sept. 15. Good electric s SUMMER SAVINGS . Many modal! fr NEED UP TO $5,000 *‘I don't read the whole thing for my book reports—just the synopsis on the dust jacket!” 2 WHEEL UTILITY TRAILER, 3'/ix7' high sides, sound tires, $39, after 6 call 332-0677., •• NEW 4'x8' UTILITY TRAILER# 33" *2 P«r wk- l r deep*with steel bed, fenders arid! Smiley BlOS.> MUSIC fewB ,rarr>e and under carrlegi, ,,, N. SAQINAW ZW FE 4-4721 1 624,2424. ! -—i mon. Tuts. Thurs. Set. 9:3fk5:3a OFFICE DESK, FILES, chairs,j wed. 9:30-1—FrL, 9:30-9:3*. 12—100 YEAR OLD BARNS# never] 1 painted. 682-2386. 2 DIRT CONVEYORS# cement mix- ctwneie# PoriiiDie mo ® ORGANS 1 er, air compressor*# sump pumps, typewriters# adding mMjWjfWl U5CU URWMRO rnn.t. ee '4- dr*W«ff tables omo choose from Hammonds and ether 2 TON FORD STAKE truck and : brick mason equip, for sale. FE 5-5029. Cell after 5. outfit several officas. uk j-v/or. | weH known brands# pricoa as low 0puns^ i “ ^ GRINNELL'S * bone,Cclarinet,*' accordion, marble «aalnawWnt°Wn S,°rt FE 3-7168 too table tTlr,fc*"1,*h 27 s- ‘Saginaw ,Fe 3-7168 14 inch broken concrete, delivered. J. i H. Wellman Landscape. 338-8314. j 6 FT. SLIDING GLASS patio door. $65. 334-8032. 9'xl2* LINOLEUM RUGS. $3.95 EA. sut and chair, gam# table and USED CLARINET. Good condition, lots mor.e. OR 3-9474. i *35. 7177 Glenburlnle, Clarkston. ouu'rn-nPMDIX-WASHER drV e rl 625-4358. you can add now rooms, repair .. remodel your present home by doing Sal# Household Goods 65 your homo needs si materials. Whatever COPPERTONE DELUXE electric range, and matching refrlger—~ with large freezing compartr Both for 8375- 338-3092 aft) furnished 2'bedroom cabin 12 m S. of Prudanvllle In «-deer hunting area. B - — -"i oil apace .... 7 year* •HO w.. ______ heater and enclosed front porch. On 1 lots. State hwy. $7500 cash, complete. THE ROLFE H. SMITH CO.. 333-7848. Eves. 6I1-B603._ | LARGE LOT ON MUSKEGON River near Clara, tacrlfica sale only, $1,800. Less (or cash. STATEWIDE REAL ESTATE j 391 2000____ 268) 5. Lapeer Ed.1 Price 875,000 - 29 per cent dowr 6 per cent lend contract Not to b paid off In less then 5 years. Groveland Twp. East of Holly. 135 ft. frontage o 965-8759 ■SssSisBt. 334-3267 t, %y owner, 682-1458. schools. Good r *lc t i< Reiort Praparty 52 COTTAGE — GLADWIN COUNTY. Near 20,000 acres state forest. Private Lake beach. 82,995. 10 Lots-Acr»ugB 1 ACRE ON MORGAN RD., $3,90 M mile N. of 1-75, W. of Baldwin; GREEN ACRES ' 1469 S. Lapeer Rd. ' my 3-6262. S ACRES WITH STREAM end cedar bu Ideal business or homo olio. 482- 1, 5, 10 ACRE PARCELS. i ACRES, NORTH Oakland County, U.S. 10. Beautiful building 6ite on edge ' mM M------------------ m with ., _____________ three oerei on ,...h level ground. Across (rom on oxceotlonelly boeytllul country •State on 3915 Bald Eagle Road-East el Wildwood Drive, JW500. Terms, Luclle Knight Reel Eatete, BARGAIN PRICE, of porenos ano garage, i mile 10 I-1. 75 exit. 2 miles to U.S. 10. Our AUtO: RECONDITIONING best buy at $3,750. redlf|j|Wd||W|UU "* * Wait until you hear the rest of this!------------------- Near Davlsburg. 3 fine lots. Now, LASS LAKt SLY.'lt.rSSS LAKE FRONT MARINA ~ ickege of. 3 lots. 120 tl. on hardtop. 0300 ft. deep 1300' frontage — approx. 7 acres 195$ FORD 4-Speed stake t , for ? 363-0001, dealer. - , _ . ... 1961 VW CONVERTIBLE, very c Business Opportunities 59, tor small travel trailer or i ------——5-5^-—-- I mobile. 625-2472. $35, electric water heater $45, 30" »tove, miac. G. Harris, FE 5-2766. DINING ROOM FURNITUR'E 5 pc. maple, 145. 5 pc. dropleaf set, $45, 5 pc. maple dropler' "" a cabine - Ceiling til; BAG Tile, wall paneling, cheap. FE 4-9957. 1075 W $aie Houiohold Goods 65,»lfroG*Lj^t^AFwEK l°,rw!,'b.70rl,rone standing toilet, $16.95;. 30-ga!lon $26-8914. *040 01. 9.nlara Kilth Mh. ----------:---r— J0 BTU HOT Water Furn«ce, oil SELF-CLEANING ELECTRIC itove, ^_____________ H fired# 4130# 33^5657^ after’s! # *WM; 105,000 BTU NEW gat furneci \—ttehed, --------- '**— .. m double oven# 10 nion. old# moved, can't use. New 500# tell $225.. Call 602-4577: Slant Needle Singer Used. Zig Zagger, mak buttonholes, designs, etc. - ------, ..... _ attachments to buy. Late 1967:1963 PLYMOUTH, BEST offer, »Iso .model. First $50 cash or $5 month; Ironer, 673-1536._______ claims. Guaranteed. Cell 335-9283, TORNADO, " makes hems. ........ Installed. Free est. ceramic tile, slate and marble. Rees. ASH Seles. 625-1501 or 623-0339. ......., ...y. trim, $19.95i Music Lessons shower stalls with 1dm# $».?5#v2-owl tlnk, $2.95) lavt.# $2.95; tubt# 120 ar 71-A ACCORDiON, GUITAR. LESSONS, SAVE CO. 1, $15 to $39. i, 115 N. Saginaw. Household APpllant______ *95. SOLID CHERRY BEDROOM M Koylan mattresses _ J ' ■ machine, 22 tr PLUMBING uaiowln, FE 4-1516._______ PLUMBING FIXTURES SPECIAL f' betMuba $39.95 II" Vanity, $9.95 1 Toilets reverse traps, $24.95 Toilets B grade, $19.95 G. A. Thompson, 7005 M-59 ’ Limited number, OR 3-7230. Office Equipment ~72 K PORTABLE SAUNA BATH, 3867. Alsq r wmmmm 3 1967 HONDA 30S Scrambler parking lots, not $12,000 to $16,000.1 condition, - gimmicks, —^|||^6gf|i^dM|MWM mlmeoaraph machine, exc. cond., reasonable, MA 6-2525. ADDiNG“MACHINE electric 'Add0-X, a. 330-2190. ............. hauled, new beck tire, trade last, only $1800. totaU leap. 332-6997,_____... __ DUNPHY BOAT, MOTOR, — ..... Jrae* for spot. Package trnntago on ha______ n....... . $10,000 or $3,500 each. Owner Adloinli right to mmm ,— bv mov 1969. Taxes on package of 3-199.36. Waterford Twp. . For Development Or zoned recreational, but restrlc-, tloni say no pormanont mobile home. Good for camp alto, golf, possibly weekend camper area, but buyer must check, with the township board. Long fr—— ntag* — . ■_________ig State Park a Boat wolis t, Mobil gas on water ixpandab?e table;' tape'lug simplicity LAWN tractor, 12 chair, ped i g r e e d Weimoriener, excellent condition_6125. - ii—.* -—i—11—a—•—_j-----1 recorder, speaker cabinets, fools;' „ "q,. ,r*.11 oetween 1-6, make offer, 2 men s better suits, Coronoa electric typewriter, ■ ye National Uhcknmad 1 '•odds and ends* 1342 Hiller Rd. | 5;®;; C> ■ “e l‘i extra large, 1 lady'* coat, size 10,J old $140. 3M model170 Photo'copi FURNITURE j SAVE UP T0_5b% A NEW METHOD OF connecting ^LgOAD TIES new end used/ $7S Ch^rs.^gofd* upholstered si ^Brend new 4.pl.c. B^room Su'l...! WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE ' ‘ ...............M 45116 Cois mm 73i;;B20a,^n,F^.^pNJi<|ona|mo*>. BID 115fjSM FREE DELIVERY Sole Clothing ST.RUBLE REALTY REALTOR — MLS 5925 Highland Rd. (M-59) 674-3175 ZIP LINED. ______ - ... GOOD CONDITION. S1 O. CALL 625-4044, AFT. < P.M, ELECTRIC STOVE, $25; GAS si 035; Refrigerator with top free $49; Wringer washer. S40. G. I — 5-2764. discontinued models, limited quantities, E-Z terms, available. i KAY FURNITURE Next to Kmart Shnpplng Center SAVE PLENTY TODAY ! On all 196$ floor samples of ranges, refrigerators, wethers and $ MA _P ^ i. 651-958$ a G. A. Thompson# 70Q5 V I PMENT [Sporting Good* 74 TVs. Baldwin at Walton B FE 2-68 FIRST $50 TAKES 6 dining chairs#j SINGER TOUCH AND SEW drive. 600 RESTAURANT I---------- ... _ .. I etc!"on-3546^*1 *lnk* dr>* * **’"||Q» AND 76" SKIS ond blndlnos; 2 BACK TO SCHOOL SALE jR Frlday6and E^.wo^Mi Up to V4 off on used typewriters,L»«fiMrn.-— ■ ■ ■-—-,1 sile g, 52 lb. Grimes bow, 40 lb. chairs# drafting boards and!RUMMAGE SALE: 1395 Airway# off - ^ get of 28" arrows. 651- #,0 -n9w m-59# Thurr Crl ***•■ 1tvi 1 " — iJ fi i i di portable .. discount oo ntw| M-59# Thurs.# FrL# Sat. 10-4. typewrltert, •ddl n 0}RUMMAGE SALE, 1 gas furnace, 1 ., files, etc. Forbes Prin-, buffet, I photo enlarger, clofhmo ml sc-136 Itarr St., Tues-Sat. . Drayton. OR, 3-9767 or Ml[ - _____ Survey shows 07 acre suitable tor development or use. Remainder, lake short ar-1-----11 footage of I—1 -------- d a small MATCHING MAN'S AND LADY'S BROWN LEATHSR-LIKE LONG JACKETS. SIZE 40-42 ANO 16- N E V E R WORN. $25 OR SI2.50 EA. CALL 625-4044 AFt. 6 P.M. winds directly imall balance of $55.10 WNHIWand dryer combination, *65. ___ , _____ ____ Call weekdays attar 5, weekends, cash or $5 month. IMP anytime, 3384334. _______________ dept., 335-9283. Household 7-2444, _____________ BIG RUMMAGE SALE: Wednesd Saturday, ; l block west ovarcasts_.| Sashabaw 0(t waldoh Rd. ^dlt . SuMck, at 6375 GuHc_K In .ClarksI 4125 Baldwin, b# weds.# Thufi.»t Fri. AAA 6GLfH^ End of reason clearance tale, closing for the season. Sept. ““ Largest Inventory Ir — WP. extends into lake by survey. | Over and above the usable hard acreage. Edge of Waterford ndarl Pontiac. 3 miles to 1-75 entrance. '4 miles to M59. 3VS ml. to Clerkslon.! Zoned agricultural ■ CLOTHING MEN'S ANO ladles' McCullough realty REALTOR “ . (M-59) •feet cond. very rees. Also toys. [ FRENCH PROVINCIAL love: sofa, maple hutch and e dining table, 673-2256. BROWNIES'HARDWARE . Unclaimed Lay-A-Ways New Furniture FLOOR SANDERS—POLISHERS WALLPAPER STEAMERS BLUE LUSTRE SHAMPOOERS tl A DAY RUMMAGE SALE: 494 E. Boulevai N. Irom 10 to 5, thurs. and Fr Clothing (all sizefi and mis C, NELSEY. SALES AGENT Davisburg GENUINE SEAL COAT, Size 10-12. Ml s Original price S700 will sacrlllce. '4-2236 Call anytime 332-1816. . I ——[WEDDING DRESS AND veil, 'size 1 10. $50. Worn .once; Contact Lilly d for $69, balance. GAS STOVE, $35; Fl Admiral TV, $25, other Items, 261- Ekt. 5 for personal Interview. JUST 4 LEFT, 2 TO 4 ACRES, SOUTHEAST OF CLARKSTON, 1 IS PER CENT DOWN. AL PAULY 4516 Dixie, rear J OR 3-3800 MHKvE*. 673-9272 | LOT 135x165 ON NEWBERRY off, MAKE MORE $ $ $ Sail amt Sun, only. 3636941. Sale Household Goods 65 - and Mrs. chairs. balance due $239. d chair, told fdr $119, BRIDES announcamer ■jjjjjre, 4500 9767. BUY YOUR WEDDING: ' ‘ ' discount tfom.' r„,nrl„ Droyton, OR 3- JJSrrows, SCAFFOLDING: 8 SECTIONS!5x5, ■ "i-iex,—is mor*u-.sorles . tho city of all brand merchandise a t ■ unnearo of discounts. . You can't beat our deal. Pro-Golf Distributors 903 S. Woodward in Royal Oak at 10Vi Mile. Daily 10-9, Sunday 11-4. BOWS ANC», ARROW$--334-6349 GENE'S ARCIsERY—714 W. HURON HAIG ULTRA USED GOLF sqt, 13 clubs in goqd condition# $49. Pro-GQlf# U 2-4973. "U+r BROKEN CONCRETE, FREE 1(1 hauled away, 363-9605. CAST IRON HEATING STOVf,' 810. I 693-6677, 7-11 p.m. 7-12 a.m._ | .... ____ _____ COLEMEN OIL FURNACE, Ilka (or 1209, balance new, 875. 338-9569._______ [COAL FURNACE, reasonable. FE 2-| i cleaner twin n £1 POLARIS I Vt WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO PAY . $20J itonville Rd. 81,085. $20 C onth. OR 3-8397. 8 ACRES OF NICE » IV ptl. OUWII. UNDERWOOD Eves. 625-1176 ____ .._.e you? m • WILLIS M. BREWER REAL ESTATE 724 Rlker Bldg. FE Eves, and Sunday* 19 ACRES, BLACKTOP frontage, mtr Pine Knob and 1-7J. t 822,900. She prlco S Open Si - 425-5557. ORTONVILLE REC. AREA, 39Vi VACANT ACRES, privet# lake with (lih, secluded location W. of Clarkston, 1320' Rd. frontage, good spot (Or executive home, call now (or details, $700 per acre. Terms. MENZIES REAL ESTATE 9230 Dixie Hwy. OWIce: 425-5485 EVES.: .: 625-5015 A Better Tomorrow I ACRES, running tire; wooded, 86,995, UOO de< - It ACRES, with nice -woo: sites. $9,975. 20 ACRES, scenic land end In- ------------- — ted lust west of r 1980' of road. vestment wise, located Ortonvllle with r— •* $875 per acre. per cent wooded an 291* ACRES, ,75 _________________ possibilities tor creating small pond .$12,950, $2500 dowr C PANGUS, Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK $30 M-15 ---- CALL COLLECT 627-2815 CITY OWNED LAND FOR SALE The City of Pontiac will rfccel . tooled bids (or tho purchatt of tht alia of tho former Incinerator building and former Parks: and Recreation storage apea,. consisting —bf approxlmafelv 6.49 acres ':ef the southwest comer of Feetherstone •nd East Boulevtrd, extendinq ■ River.' The City reserves the rlo to a Water Main Eatemant on fl progorfy. The bids will be fecelvi LOVELAND 40 ACRES Forgei about long, drawn out Q National Unclaimed Arha^^WvT O n'kjo’ivio ! furniture .^with,orbay*Sor wimoTonw*.! BRAND NEW FURNITURE $297 idroom suite#- d o 6984. » re 5. DOG HOUSES ALL sizes* Insul $159^ 768 Orchard Lk. Rd. _ • ELECTRIC ROASTER^ 13 ta§ start ad CALL GUS CAMPBELL, --, WHITE or LARRY IREPECK. 674-3104. ___ MACOMB COUNTY BAR wmm Excellent sandy Post growing $8400. 20 per cent down land gross, aquipr Nylon Sola—$68 7 45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 FREE DELIVERY [a dinette, sold (or $i09, balance, table I Catalina j i bedroom suite, balance due — $1,000 down — $50. mo., — other nice acreage parcels — building lots. Call 4-H Real F------- 823-1400 OR 628-2678. acres, 750' fror I. PH: 623-1333 or 540-7711. WALTER'S L A K ROYER OXFORD OFF.ICE _______ _____ buskitst EMI . room apartment up. r estate Incl. for lust 017,000 down. Roil THUMB AREA BAKERY Specializing in European biking. Hat coffee shop, largo brick building on mein street. Fine .large apartment I. reel estate just .$2.50 „Mli^* LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1461 Baldwin at Walton, FE 2-6042 Acres of Free Parking Eves, 'til 9; Sat, 'til 6. EZ (arms 1 APT. GAS ^T|VE, refrigerator, 837.90. OR 4-3567. STUDIO COUCH AND Chair, *79; set, $40;, chest, $18; dreiier, tit; end fa I, ITS N Warden Realty j Huron, Pontlec . 682-3920 , OWNER RETIRING MUST SELL Ideal location for personal service,. National Unclaimed FURNITURE Brand new Sofa, Mr. & Mrs. Chairs ONLY $158 45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 FREE DELIVERY HOUSEHOLD SPECIAL $20 A MONTH BUYS 3 ROOMS OF FURNITURE — Consists of: 8-piece living room outfit with 2-PC- r, balance $129. 18" color TV with stand, balance $319. BBUBly reconditioned. 334-9055. SIMPLEX CHALLENGER GO carl, ,™- 5 horse, $75. Call 334-7228.____ wagon. SPRED-SATIN PAINTS. WARWICK Supply. 2678 Orchard Lake. 682-. ....... 2820. ____________ _ _________ glass tub int __________________-..... enclosure, aluminum frame, with: red SHIELD STORE ■agre^|B|8«h^||||re iesign, $28.95. ■■■ ■ er M-59 W. SNOWMOBILES luy now and get free trailer or Electric starter. Perry's Lawn & Garden - ,--JS Highland Rd. : ,673-6236 >'5* h*'''J'i°"rn1n1ditlon S75' SAM SNEED_ WILSON USED Golf r®ilr QOpd condition *175. C|0bs# 9 irons and 4 wood* plut ---------------bag# 835. Pro-Golf# 542-54d5. SCORPION SNOW MOBILES The Proven Snow Mobile 15", II" end 23" track Stop |n and Inspect quality, order early and save. $35. Space heat* poi blower 140,000 BTU oil fired electric hoist half-1— 24' tram rall^BM 651-958$ after IWe— SCHWINN DELUXE 3 - S P E Stlngr— bathtub with a b G. A. Thompson, 7005 N , Thur: THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 118 W. LAWRENCE ST. Everything to me— "lur Clothing, Furnltur Bt your needs STACHER TRAILER SALES, INC. .3771 Highland (M-59) 601 E-Z TERMS HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE cocktail table, 2 table lamps and 457 Elizabeth Lk. Rd_ 335-9283 J) 9‘xl2' rug Included. ... . ... USED REFRIGERATORS 7-plece bedroom juit* withdegble a ges gas ■ rsser, chest, full-size bed with —— terspring mattress and matching fittings, dishes, etc. 1342 Hiller IPINU KAU9, 05 IV" I. 25 lb. boxes to 300 lb. « 2 v. 16 h —, — Cooley Lake Rd. Banii saw, exc. eondi.—^* GARAGE SALE: Thursday and Frl-lcoln Changer; Smith Corona elec, day, 9 to 4, 5349 Westvlew. Off | typr— Maybe# Rd. between Cllntonvllle IN -credit It $399. Your 333-7812 I USED GAS .RANGE, $45. 682-4742 Used TV's $19.1 with 91 .„...aarc)al .......... Located near one of Wattrford Twp.’t busiest Intersections. A— and health require sale. Full prif $19,900, $5,000 down. F— ’ formation call — OR 4-0306, SWEETS ' $39.95 X A. Taylor Agency, lnc. 7732 Highland Rd. (M-59) OR 4-0306 Evas. EM 3-7546_______________ Partridge Looking for Future Homesite? Cell ana ef the action people Rovar_ Realty-, W* , hsvf,, jqta “In nq too. seating ’Groveiand J3lonVt; UTacTnc ____Ifa All;1 _________________-an teed. iwiTspriris1 iiid 2 vanity lamps. ~\ CONSUMERS POWER CO. | »*!».. ^’ubi'ViT'for Downl Is good fluNymoh'i wFman FURNITURE CO. CRON > _ FeTi5oi^M^^MilBli^M NT---eXECTRTC RANGE,! RADIO AND APPLIANCE, ______ _____ .......................afor refrigerator, good con- 622 w, Huron - dinette set $25, 338-2428.___j ditlon, both for $75. after 5 call FE WASHER PARTSHI 2 PIECE LIVING ROOM Set, Corel 8-2232. ___,__________________|_______ "3282 Dixie Hwy. ___ Rose, Never used. 332-5643._ KENMORE WASHER and dryer, WAREHOUSE DISCOUNT sale rPIECE BEDROOM SET, $40. Call 840. 852-1040. ■ -. i ....... ....... - — -----------------“ KIRBY SWEEPER EXCELLENT CONDITION-loojpd^nyl^Wlll-to wall rerpet- FULL GUARANTEE inq *with padding. Pric# in- Kirby Service & Supply Co. eludes up tq 360 so. tt# 12 x 15 ni*.r uiaiv 674-223 i, 3 phase air compressor, used steel, angles, channel, j GAkAGE SALE: MISCELLANEOUSi —l;a™ DfeteYolpe. materials of all kinds bv y5eq metal garage doors, Idesl for Scotchgard, drapery,j»nd cottons. _"v„m.;^—" KING BROS. ----------- .iS!I*Frlde?and SaU[ lifln*'BOgC'EVAR,6 SUPPLY. • 540 Casemere Rd., Lake Orion. [« t glvd E.______________ 333-7161 G^RAf,E 1 Judah Hand Tool*—Machinery 68 ■ Lake Subdivision, off Baldwin Rd. [ ------R— ER GARAGE SALE. FRI. and Sat!, 40' CONVEYOR FOR < Sept. 13 and 14, 9 a_,m. 10 5 p.m.,[ work, $225, UL 2-2420._ , 3689 Brookdale, off Cass Lake Rd., ^IR COMPRESSORS; INC. near Elizabeth Lake Rd., behind, equipment, hydraulic |a 334-5677. the—30d- 8ov,l, imported lewstryj cieaners. Welding equil Pontiac Rd. at Opdyke non Sand-Gravel-Dirt l-AAA SAND AND gravel, all i'eat delIvered. 673-5516. Waterford. selling at cost,, leather billfolds, I Pontiac a clothing. • 5-2953 before 6 PM. 3 ROOMS OF CARPETING COMPLETELY INSTALLED 674-2234 room, 10* x 9' bedroom. Only S249 • • , , . , complete, or $14 ^monthly, tree National Unclaimed &9^' HBU,thof< AP1 FURNITURE -Walnut Chest «w« — av.rn.RRI furniture) .• Brand huMiL. ^ $2*9. Cash, terms, Isv-ewav.l Adrqwer — S29.I8 __ _1TS,?ireilir*l",r*' 2,0 E' Pl” 45116 Cass (Utica) 731-0200 —I free'Delivery Several to choose 5591-B. TAVERN—BEER AND WINE buy some for lust “ " "fit,*o Owner has other • interest end on tfmenf. Ac-1 sacrifice this booming Tavern for 19x12 Linoleum RUOS S3.89 ,al estate t only M,ooo down. Doing over $52,000 , v. . th. .. 7c eeJ Gross, A*k for No. 14^20-B. , . ^olld Vln^TIN^ ; ; % WHOLESALE BEER 8. WINE I Plirehath Lake**' Distributorship, lust 2 hours from Floor Shop-22SS Elizabeth Lake Datralt. A .very profitable operation. AcrOSS From the MOH cMoSld* vary T.l|h b,"a Crtnerehlp^l lf FT. F«EZE«, $100 RCA TV, young brothers could really make a *25; GE portable. $35. Living go of this business. All equipment In room: set, S35. Rotisserie, *7.50. excellent conditlnn. Call tor more 334-2036. _______________________.—_ ln»ortjwtlon_pn this one. Ask for No. 123" . MAPLE ZENITH, BLACK AND lion's' our name - ROYER REALTY, INC. PHONE: 628-2548 Oxford Office 823 S. Lapeer Rd% SMALL PLATTED' SUBDIVISION In 'Vest Bloomfield Twp. Some lake •ont. Terms. By owner, 612-1458. SMALL ACREAGE, 2-2? Close " la transportation, *— -----*• - parcels enough for K-,™,. ...... S1995 U| HR Bloch Bros. . 5660 Dixie PH.: 623-1333 er 548 7711. )4-56dS-GB-Z3. ASK FOR FREE CATALOG ditlon WATERFORD HILL t ot the tew beautiful lets left Waterford Hill. $6,000 end Clarkston Real Estate ciu'tai^FuiV’pi'ire''gsjayji 5856 S. Main" MA 5-5821 ventarv. Financing can ba —------------------- ranged for A-l purchaser. Sola Farm* 56 The Rolf* H. Smith Co. PARTY STORE it’ party store with SDM prime high ttatflc loca-.......... “....... dition. '651-5016. tlon. All necessary fixtures until 2:00 lest, Pontlec, Michigan el « time and place all bids wil. I publicly opened and read aloud. Matas and Bounds dasorlptlo Plats and description . ot wal main easement of the property a .'..j.nr-.T -7- office -' * available at this Department of Plant Renewal, Room 206 .... may ba ebtalnad at cost 16 acres, pbrthr i blacktop rood. II divide, farm*. $1100 par acre, WEST BRANCH — 71 acros, near 1 ^ ““O Scafeh p«e Houghton Lake. 35,000 Scotch and spruce. $8,000 farms. , L Hagstrom, Realtor 80 to 800 ACRES In lower Michigan. Dairy, grain, beef or hogs I tfsme vm.r f»rm needs, we have tt "Michigan's'' Farm Reel. Estate Coldwater, Mknlgen. Oele A. Dean Farm Broker end Auctioneer. Write or cell *17-27g-2S77 - dev*. ■■ •-----— — Dnq Realty Co- • 1 nights.__________ Rl lent condition, $65. 333-7614.____ I IN. DANISH STYLE Seamay sectional couch,, black and tan, $200. Mr. and Mrs. chairs, apricot patterned, S35 excellent corf- National Unclaimed FURNITURE . Brand new plush back Racllners- (brand new) 2 pc. I *67.50 up, 4 r.________________ *79.50 $49.50 up, 3 DC. living room sectional $139 up, reclining chairs $39.50 up, range, 179.50, beds, roll away beds, beds and etc. ' Loads w »■ *Up1^S0N7S FURNITURE 210 E.. PIKE _ FE 4-7881 ^ "il 6 p. .# FrT.7^iT 9 P:r w^^cUS-E“ TO l be sold. Every I priced • refuse terms. Sale today and pliance, 2416 I, Hilt Ap- ___________H Mila Rd., between Woodward and Crooks Rd. WILLET 4-POSTER Plus dressar and mirror, fu movie camera, protector an RRL., clothing, drafting table, furniture, lawn tools, toy*. Thurs., Fri., Sat. 12-6 p - GAiRAGE SALE, LIKE no* C ig equipment, i ... ___________________ ________ I ' gravel, top soil. M. Cook. 682^)—. ~Ta BLACK DIRT ? State tested; also topsoil, sand and gravel fill. Builders supplies. Bud ___ Ballard, 623-1410; Lee Beardslee rifely. 651- 623-1331. ______^_________ ____________________■ . ALL TYPES TOP SOIL a NEW DEWALT » IN. radial saw, | 263-2166. never been useH «/ith mitai stand, rumri >110. 334-1344. impounds. SI,000 ( d fill dirt# , ______________________■ ____P .......IP HU 4 yds. si _:__________ ---------g- |sELLING_6uT, Williams tools. All delivered. FE 4-6588. Also loading. GARAGE SALE: FURNITURE, crib, br#nd mw sockets, V." *o J")FILL SAND, ROAD gravel, filter* ......... ------------ chases of $100 - -Hatfield, a«-W«lamat #g*RY SERVICE, 6129 Lake Rd. or Dixie Hwy. 1 i Road .(M-59) HRMMPmilRaiP chisels,' black sets, etc. 25 per cent off. Air off on - «jj-t372 or 6! :hases "??.?■.* ?!L0.n!GRAVEL. SAND, TOP SOIL and black dlrt,_ * dredging ponds ; d GARAGE SALE-:- -Upright piano, I SEMI-TRAILERS, L .gewgr -mewar. W59- Penttee, -ta^r prh^ tB',xeU,Xp household odds end ends. 584S Lit-1 s. Blvd. E. 333-7)61. tie Pine Lane, off Mead Rd. part] e 4. Sheldon,. Rochester. Open Friday MUSICOl WOOaS Sepf. 13, 5^-?, Set. end Si- • • *» 1 " '— -------^------ - Hi? Sand, B7'av*), tUl dirt«.. QR, J-.—, S.A.W. SAND AND GRAVEL i sizes. Tested top- 2563. After 5:30, 394-0042. Saturday after 1 p.m a amp. ChassH, TOP SOIL, FILL, sand and gravel vered. 338-9756. r. OR 3-7193. MAPLE HUTCH, COLONIAL m; loveseat, maple coffee table, table. OR 3-9644. 6S-A M 1 SCELLANEOUS e Antiques J18TH ANNUAL ANTIQUE SHOW ____ Isc. 1235 Jetfwood Dr* GARAGE SALE:"A-l clothing children end adutts, ware drum. Holiday Magic cosmetics, mlsc. Items for s 335-2613. MUST SACRIFICE 100 yards of batter carpeting only $3.95 sq. yard, free estimates call Household Appliance, 335-9283. HEW SURPLUS FUkNITUAfi Sofas, S59, 5-place dinettes, $39, twin beds, $29, full size beds, $39, children Holiday mraiw WL..™ .."•q Wednesdey 10-7, Thurs. 10-7, *0 S. Genesee, off Huron. GARAGE SALE: 332S 11-13. 152-3727. 9-3. ________ GARAGE SALE! DAILY 5686 Evereit, Clarkston, off Maybre AMPEX 860 TAPE Recorder plui Super Ve'etle, $400, )»« Fartlsa, Duo Compact, Organ, $400. Call 332-3900. 1966 VOX ;WE are NOW EXCAVATING ‘ a * =*"«•• I series of basements In th* Airport, Drayton, Waterford area. Wa shall have several hundred yds. of fill dirt end clay available. If you are —sonably priced# m. to 11 pjn. call OR 3-8935# t r s p.m BALDWIN 6RGAN, et»riTWOOd, < Pots-Hunting Dog* 79 i ANTIQUES, estates, ( V. Sheldon B. SMITH. Realtoi 244 S. Telegraph 333-7848 EVaa. 421-0602________ Of RESTAURANT OPERATION — - Needs competent person to assure control. Excellent opportunity for mature Individual or couple. F I ltment can Mr. Schrlbtwr 1957 RCA WHIRL Pool Gas dn perfect condition, $75, FE 0-3919. 1968 PIAl!a-MAT|C Brand new sawing machine. _iklhy-away. Sold for $119. Ba . , ■ only $34.20. Or will accept cent H COUNTRYSIDE LIVING J —j 1084 Oakland J_'___ 334-1509 HRHHIlH-JfLNEW FURNITURE - Living room, $119. Batancoj ---- —.■ : BIG FARM FLEA MARKET, 3625 Baldwin Rd., Oxford area, MU N. of Oakwopd, Sept. 14, IS, [Stainless Steel Sinks, 32x2L $29.50. ASA 6-3434. BALDWIN SPINET organ, built-in Thretre-Tromolo, new model at SI 195. „„ Haoen Music v 332-05001 Vi POODLE PUPS PF. Sable Launa PlVwood, 4xlxV $4.95 par ehaat. _____ TALBOTT LUMBER band instruments f6rrent! ,1 Portia^ Music and Sored 3101 W. Huron .- , 682-3350 BARGAINS IN USED PRACTICE PIANOS 11.25 P Week. Call Auction, 7605 CUSTOM ANTIQUE REFINISHING.j- Uprlgtifl mytlme,' 334-1 Highland Rd. 673*534. i Specializing ________— REFRIGERATORS, flSHWASHERS,' 5j^-E*5?ir' tuned and dalivared. grands, all clean. *• u^i Morris Music Poodles, chocolate and black, Dbxlas. tropical fish. Pet supplies and GROOMING. Dog Groomer wanted. Uncle Cherles Pat Shop, 696 W. Huron, Vj Mlle E.Ief lele-graph, 332-8515. Open Sunday'1-4. 1 AIRDALE. 1 BOSTON Bull, 2 yri. with papers. $75 each. Also hunting Dogs- 625.2330. _ 2 FEMALE AMERICAN gikimo puppies, MY 3-6389.______ 3 AKC REGISTERED Beagle pups, 2 males and 1 tamale, 10 w r517-iM4127 - Farm-6 Acres II ba p' III t air and * Life'.will Clean at fireplace. Good’ "Earn. 'Gereoe and solid modern .wprkshob. Mlmngtqn area. $21,500. Termt. An addltlenai 9 acres avallabla for $3,00“ C. PANGUS, Realtors OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Sale Batinest Property APARTMENTS jolnpar cent occupied. Do you need tax / EVE*. FE 4-7005 Bax C& •Mali jS-711 -yin.; SERVICE STATION newly remodeled, tare, immediate u—~—-............ heip finance. 332-0277 for eppoint- SMALL GROCERY ALL WOOL REVERSIBLE OLSEN rug. Floral pattern. 15 a U *’“* Matching 9 X 12, S25. ditlon. maP|e h* license. East side. FE MU ____________ WANT TO SELL YOUR BUSINESS? Definitely, Rtattor Partridge IS the bird to are. 1050 Huron, Pontiac, Sale Land Contracts earn bottles'] OIFTS, JOKES, GAGS, NOVELTIES j# s. Telegraph II Romeo, 752-3006: 16, 5100. exc. congest table Attention Housewives Highest prices far used turn!! ‘ npllancr" *-■- *— National Unclaimed FURNITURE CURT'S APPLIANCE WILLIAMS LAKE RD. 674-110$ Davlsburg 5 M.W winger Washer $60. 3 SINGER Deluxe Model—Portable tagger. In 'Sturdy cerryln l. Repossessed. Pay aft: $38 CASH . Hi-Fi, TV t Radios LIBERAL BILL'S OUTPOST 3268 DIXIE HWY.. OR 3-0474_ good used tractors SIMPLICITY 9 HP 42" MOWER, SS95 FE 2-0567 3 LOVELY PART SIAMESE kittens 21" MOTOROLA, CABINET model; black and white, 67 Euclid, Pon- HOUGHTEN'S POWER CENTER 112 W'. University Dr. *51-701 DOWNTOWN ROCHESTER Zio Hamilton OAS . DRYER, clean, ,w. i,ecu sv------ . ■ . gjggji nwas minor repair, ere, ere*" Walton TV. FE ^2257," Oren *4 HEAVY WOODEN PICNIC 1 515 E Walton, corner at Jeslyn ^j|||||R|| “ 1 4 Posture Mattress ■ Springs. Regular $139—Our 1 TO 50 LAND CONTRACTS M- Urgently needed- See us bstore vou 45116 COSS (Utica) 73,1-0200 f***1; V-. . -...... I FREE DELIVERY Warren Stout, Realtor 1458 N. Opdyke Rd. , ft 5-II45 baBY FURNITURE. 334-6538. nl*r ' Qpen Eve*. *“ * m 0r p,r ",4' BRAND-NEW JSiT' %’S. ! WMfif»h«« SM. available at Waned 1 1 MILLION Paints has bean mad* avauabia-ut to purchase and assume $•■ contracts, mortgage* er buy ham< let* er acraawoutrtflht- w» wm give youdSimr. yoar equity. Oir epprsissr la awattttWyuur call at McCullough realty , tag Highland «d. (M-wi , ML SINGER AUTOMATIC ZIG ZAG Sawinq machine - 3-speed record changer AM-FM radio Deluxe cabinets $181.88 it M Mile [ Novi Rd. _____________ , HEYWOOD WAKEFIELD F.urnitura, dining room Md EVERYTHING. MUST GO TO MAKE ROOM FOR, OUR 1969 MODELS 5 AKC GERMAN I Hammond was $1195; Grinnall was *895: Wurlltzer was $695; . Lester was S795; . Lowrev was $2345; w $495 now $#7S Lowrey was eioes; Bush and Lana was $1995; now.*”" Gulbransen was *2595; ““ *”•* Starr was 7»$: Wurlltzer wi Nancy Herf S $2495 now $2| s $1295; w $795 i needle, designs, overcasts, i buttonholes, etc, BRONZE OR CHROME blNETTE sale, BRAND NEW, Large and —small -size (round, dreu leal, rae ‘ tangular) tables In », 5- and 7-pc. sgtf, 01.95 UT — ------- PEARSOI 218 E. Pika lO^'S FURNITURE »8<1 jblnet. Take ever payments of: | $7 PER M0. FOR 8 MOS. j OR $56 .CASH BAL. Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wide Track Or., West ! Pontlec Friday ‘tll T p.r HEYWOOD WAKEFIELD furnltur: dining room and living room, _86 I Cooley Lk. Rd. behind 'butty's Ba: HOT WATER HEATER, 30 - Lowrev was $1740; e and brown. $35. 394-000$. k ^OODLE ©ROOMING, popptil. ESTEI HEIM KENNELS, 391-1819 ADORABLE AKC TOY poodle puppies.—Kyeer-old—female,—*"— Silver and Apricot Toy Stud Service. 335-6329 er 332-SS39. AKC .GERMAN SHEPHERD, pups. 5. Call 652-4593. 14 [Lowrey w L *5*1 AKC TOY COLLIE PUPS, " ou»mnteed. terms, studs. 491 38 gal., gas boMmi BUNK BEDS Chelca of 15 style*, trundt# beds,) triple trvndla bads and bunk Bids complete, $49.50 end up. Pearson's 'Furniture, 218 E. Pika. 1 - Want Ads ForAction •lectrlc and bottto hqattrs. These •r« terrific >#«IW r«; pllfiy ' oS Lk^E* P"??r•*0^,' "* mnnths nld. 473J15TS ---4- WCMrp l-K.,. t~C_ No down payment until fell Free delivery Free parking Free lessons GALLAGHER MUSIC CO. 171. $. telegraph “ | Blgham St. Pontiac. FE 4-3S42. AKC FEMALE BEAGLE, hunts, $50 1 338,1881. | Johnson's TV, FE 1-4569 M 45 E. Walton near Baldwin COToS TV BARGAIN UftLi Joe's Bargain House. FE 2-g842. TEST EQUIPMENT for sale-^copa. STS. V.T.VJM., $25. Volt amp tester, $39.50. CB radio. 23 channel, $125. *050 M-15, Clarkston, Mich. draperies and red*, pop machine. wall to wall carpeting. ^PONTIAC OPEN MOW. AND FRI. TILL 9 BALDWIN ORGAN. Ideal tor begln- KEEP YOUR CARPETS beautiful despite constant footsteps —4 electric shampeeer *1. Hudson': AKC POODLE PUPS and stud dogs, Fl 4-8564 etsa stud service. 693-613*. ALASKAN MALAMUTE PUPS, $58, ‘MpWK - ' - ; . LASKAN MALAMUTE PUPPIES, AKC, Show and pet (took. Mack and/ white, grey , and white good condition, *15*, S63-|ALL PET SHOP, » Williams, FE «- 6433. selling out of ilrds. Pgts-HaofN *>» 7» ■asset puppies, t female*, akc, Mil. UN., MS-3974, ftttr •SfeSffWS’iSJra *e «mm. —--------- fLUETICK PUPPY, reasona aopS. before 3:»._ COLLii PUPPIES,. AKC : •ErFe PUPPIES, A week* .£5l. _ , ----- ' SHBPHERD PUPS^ AKC ITM UJRWIR, -LIKE cood condition. UMW iwiTO'‘camper, 423-08M._______ APACHE TRAILER. dwdCAMW ^raajgtjwr 332-44S*.__ n‘™im 1968 Starcraft Campers Insld* display CRUISE OUT, INC. I B. Walton Dally M PE s-mm AIRSTREAM LIGHTWEIGHT TRAVEL TRAILERS Sine* 1*32. Guaranteed for Ufa. fH fcnE'jarar«r. Huron (plan to loin on# of Byam*t ixottlng corovni). COHO SPECIAL ? STc.* than any Coho your motal bll, rU p p | e S. COLLIE-SHEPHERD miaou. . — Tamper mo ” 313 335-7335. __________ EQppTES 2-3 POODLE, 1-3 coc ' spaniel, black and curly, 925 ■ pe 9-2659. _____________ FlTr E B R E 0 . !P,O D.L APACHE-DEL REY Close out price* on all now It Apache camp trailers and teas trailers. Close out prices on i BOB Hutchinson's 21st Anniversary SALE YES, 21 YEARS Bob hoi been in Mobile Home Sales > Bob Hutchinson Invites you to see the all new $22,000 DOUBLE-WIDE KROPF HOME 1400 SQ. FT. FLOOR SEE THE ALL NEW DETROITERS . 942*5 AND UP Fra* delivery up to 3M ml. Open Dally ‘til I p.m. Oaturdey and Sunday ‘til i DRAYTON PLAINS 4301 Dixie Hwy.(US-18)-OR fr-t*02i 'Motorcycles 95CARNIVAL Village, don't rent - different models of truck cemper to choose from. 14' travel trailer $895. Whllo they lest. We will fc ... dbsed August 25 to September 4, One for vacation and inventory. Bill! Collar Va mile £. of Lapeer-City , Limists on M-2T.________________ -T-. BIG '40 CITY TRANSIT, BUS, Rod J_?+ came through—motor Tint BERNARD* MAkti J oms through months, tired from InternafJbnalT (Contential eng.) rhjsmplon. 363-4519. ____J or pull up noh SCOTTIES, ALL THREr ■ j| fij 1 Skc, settles, shots, r-~ ^^624^*__ “M-r a repaired SPSHPVpeeilP R .your Completely self-contained; wall to wall carpeting and tiled bathroom. . - Sleeps 6, over 30' or apadous » camping. $375. 473-0922 near Pon- 2257 Dixie Hwy._ tlac Airport, ..91 12x95, 99200 12x44, 93550 Your car, mobile home, boat ate. New end Used Cera , 104 NEW FINANCE PLAN PROBLEMS, BANKRUPT, OR GARNISHED WAGES, WE CAN GET YOUR CREDIT REESTABLISHED AGAIN. WE HAVE OVER 80 CARS THAT CAN BE PURCHASED. WITH NO DOWN PAYMENT. COME IN AND SEE CREDIT, MGR. MR. IRV. LUCKY AUTO 1940 W. wide Track _____ 31295. FB 4-7993. IMS CHEW 2, 4 i DEALER 2-door, J2' aluminum boats Trallart (120. IS' canoei Big Coho boat*. 14', 02191 Big flbarglaaa runabou* 1,000 tb. boat traitors .mail down S4* 14 "FOOT feOAT, 40 forte motor, HHL JM0*&li?S*Hwy. electric start with trailer, 9450. 923-Ph; 923-1333 or 549-7711. I - MIDLAND TRAILER SALES |”r.u£ * r, canvas. 992-99S9. ’ Park I Vs FOOT BOAT. 25 hors* “Speaking of trouble spots, I ran into a new one—the credit department at Bacey’s department store!" I Wanted Cart-Truck* 1011 New and Used Trucks CHEVY. 1900 W. Maple, Ml 4-2753. 1959 BUICK 995. 335-7023 , 1959 BUICK 4 DOOR, Ilk* new X DEALER 331-91 1992 BUICK SKYLARK, 2 «k hardtop, V.0, automatic, one owr trade in, ready to roll. $695 OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH I 724 Oakland_____FE_5-f434j 1943 BUICK Elactra, 225, 4 door,1 white, t>iv>« top, all power, sharp.' •» $895 OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH | 724 Oakland___FE 5-9434 1962 BUICK Hardtop GRIMALDI 1965 CHEVY itomotlc. radio, heater, green wuh matching Interior. A on* owner beauty. $799 full price, no monty down. Call Mr. Parka, credit manager, Ml 4-7300. HAROLD TURNER FORD 494 9. woodward Birmingham. 1995 CHEVY IMPALA station wagon, , with V-9, automatic radio, heater, 1 power steering, beautiful silver blue and while. Chroma luggage 1 rack, spotless condition. Back to j School Sal* only—*1488, full price, lust 91(9 down and 959.37 par] "JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5*4101 New —d Ueud Cnra III CHRYSLER* 3 fa cheoa* from, 2-door, hardtop, tow .mileage and ry sharp, ni^you^blek. OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Oakland Fi'S-POl* l?9l IMPERIAL CROWN coup*. Loaded with axtraa. Exc. condition. OR 34411.______________ 1965 Chrysler Newport. 2 door, hardtop, V9, automatic, power s t ear I n g , whitewalls. Ivy Often, with can-■--iting Interior, this Is a nlc* on*, $1495' SPARTAN DODGE 955 Oakland__ FB *-9Mj 1949 CHBVY IMPALA hardtop. vacation spatial only 91599 .... price, lust 9199 down and 951.19 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 930 Oakland Ava._FE 5-41 oi I 1966 Chevy j For th* Inconvenience caused by our street being repaved._Attor completion w* will be ready to tarv* you In our usu»> way. B* WHEA?ONUCHRYSLER PLYMOUTH Walled Lake.________434-3192 With 9 cyl. atlek shift, radio, nov “ $1195 FLANNERY TOM RADEMACHER 1964 DODGE Poloro----- I 2-door hardtop, dark groan .1 with matching Interior, V-0 I automatic, radio, h a a t a r, power flatting. $795 So* thla auto at our new location at the TROV MOTOR MALL on Mapl* Rd. (15 Mila) 1 mil* east, of Woodward. .(BIRMINGHAM 'I Chrysler-Plymouth .......-------.d 1994 GMC 39 TON, _____ .1. G. VarWalt. OR 3-1355 SBOO. f| — top pay for nlc* care. 1 Wolverine camper shell. 9300. Alter ■1 stud/mM&BHHI UNITED KflNNfcL LLunJ toy fox terriers, male after 5:30 P-m. Auction and household B“l,i1ML*nn Fndars. auctioneer. 349-2133._ ----B & B AUCTION 1089 Dixie Hwy.____OR 3-2717 SATURDAY- SEPTEMBER 14, CENTURY YELLOWSTONE TRAVEL TRAILERS QUALITY AT ANY BUDGET STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. I 3771 Highland (M-59)’ *92-9440, Standard household and mlsc. Hartford. Latest models, 2 or 3 bedrooms. Early American or modern. Park space available. Phone MY 2-0721. 1 mi. S. of Laka Check our deal on -SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS SKAMPER FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 21 ft. on display at - Jacobson Trailer Sales Lak* Rd. OR 3-5981 GO ROYAL REGAL EXECUTIVE By Active. TOWN & COUNTRY MOBILE HOMES, INC. Telegraph at Dixie Hwy. 334-6694 Open Daily 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Open Saturday. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m Open Sunday 1 p.m. to 4 p.m. Other times by Appt, 1969 BOATS 1968 PRICES OUTBOARDS 9-Trl Hulls IS to IMt. 3-V Hulls IS to 17 ft. - 1999 Correct Craft - Mustangs 115 ■USED OUTFITS Compiat* with 40 I. 70 HP. Loadadl [MERCURY AND CHRYSLER OUT-Alum. Fishing Bosts-CanOas Flberglas Canoes Cliff Prayer's Marine Sport Center 15210 Holly Rd., Holly MB 4-9771 —Open Dally and r TYLER'S’’AUCTION | 7405 Highland Rd. (M-591 973-9534 livestock 1 SHETLAND PONY 3 YEARS, tame. 335-2214, BEAUTIFUL REGISTERED stan- ^rfiS?^yc.2.iV%?33OW' iEm^r.T,Fw^SS^Ltid%ra disposition but spirited, *225. Call OR 3*2733. __________ i HORSES 9135 EA., Including sad-die and bridl*. 719S Pontiac Lk. Rd.. 973-3930.____ ^YEAR-OLD SHETLAND stallion, *100. 14-month-old Shetland Stallion, good child* pet, S35. 391- WINNEBAGO MOTOR HOMES PICK-UP CAMPERS F. E. HpWLAND SALES SQUARE LAKE TRAILER PARK on Rent Trailer Space 3255 Dixie Hwy„ Pontiac. OR 3-1459 NOW ON DISPLAY Travelmate 10 ft. Double Bed, Dinette S139S 12 ft. Double bed. Dinette $1,49! Pleasure Mate America's Custom Hardtop Only $1335 Holly Travel Coach, Inc. 15210 Holly Rd.,. Holly ME *9771 APPALOOSAS. TOP STOCK. ^^^^9 Sarvtee 929-3015. — BOX STALLS FOR,, horses, in-ciudina board for rant. Whita Lka Twp„ 15 min. from Pontiac. 932- Auto Accessories ________ CAR RECORD , PLAYER tor M good, condition. Call FE 9-1731. REPAIR, MOUNT, I Big, w PRflnwiwawf wjrpatinfl......---■ - to dln*» Will sleep 9 or more. Used 1 season. Must se* to apprlciate. $1900. 951-3357. LIKE NEW, 27 FT. TANDEM, contained, call after 9 p.m. OR 3- HORSE, 9-YEAR , OLD Sorral Gelding, good riding, tack In-, eluded, 752-2372.____ PRIVATE OWNER, REGISTERED quarter horses, switle well broke orade horse*. Reas. 925 ^ UARTER TYPE BAY 4 years old. 973-2354. OAKLAND CAMPER steal frama. Tour-i beautiful Squara able.' Telegraph Roed, Pontiac, 339-1 d ATTENTION COHO Fishermen I 25 ■— 1953 Johnson outboard, *50 BIG CLEARANCE EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car specially 4 speeds and corvettes. Check the rest, then get the best Averill's PE 2-997* 3020 Dixie FE 4-4194 LUCKY AUTO! 1940 W. Wide Track . 4-1009 ar —PE 3-7954 . TOM RADEMACHER L ors and traitors. Pontiac's -■cury and Merc-Crulser dealer. CRUISE-OUT INC. Walton PE 1*4402! Daily Me Sat. 9-6 Closed Sundays 1 Mansfield AUTO SALES 300 (harp Cadillacs, Pontiac, Olds and Bulcks tor out-of-state market. Top dollar paid. --- MANSFIELD AUTO SALES 1194 Bald* FE 5-5900 1997 CHEVROLET, Vi ton pick up, automatic transmission, 9 cyl.. powar steering, extras, *1,95#. Ml 9-0952.___________________________ 1997 CHEVY Vt-TON, pickup [leaf side bok, air condition, overload, springs, 327 angina, bucket seats, i lights on the ceb, west eoast mlr-rors, 24,000 miles. Sale or trade for what you nave, can he seen at 705 W. Clerkston Rd. Lake Orion. MY 3-1871.___________________________ T»67 Chevrolet, Vi ton pickup. | FE 3-5025 Tires-Avte-Trvck BOAT TRAILER, HEAVY,, duty, * ^ tires. Mr. Elwood. Eves. 9*2- CLEARANCE PRICES on eli frs-—'nlng 1995 merchandise. Buy Grumman Canoes MlrroCraft Boats Dolphan Pontoons SPIRITED 7-YEAR-OLD Chestn gelding) has new shoes, 5275. 9, 2974, 9-5. _________________ SPIRITED OR GENTLE horses f sale or rent. New and used tec Double D. Ranch. -973-7957. fEAM^ ^ cutter ('stotchTifka W— WANTED: BROKE TENNES^E Walker for pleasure, reasonable, call after 3:30. 3354329. _____ lampers: Swinger, Mackinaw, Travel Queen, Caribou. Barth Covers:Stuti Bearcar, Merit 3091 W. Huron IMMEDIATE SERVICEBUMPING AND PAINTING BUFFING AND WAXING 1 j Satisfaction Guaranteed ECONOMY CARS imoere1 2335 DIXIE FE 4-2131 Bui IMMEDIATE service ON EXPERT MECHANICAL WCWK SATISFACTION IS GUARANTEED ECONOMY CARS 2335 DIXIE FE 4-2131 H, „„ and follow atone DAWSON'S SALES AT TIPSI LAKE. Pbone 929-2179. STOP HERE LAST MOTOR SALES Now at our naw location to pay more for sharp, lata mod car*. Corvette* needed. , 1150 Oakland at Viaduct TOP $ PAID for all sharp Pontiacs land CADILLACS. ■ FE 2 9165 .... $673 338-9238 MILOSCH 3 CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1994 Bulck LeSebre convertible. Auto., double power, radio, white-1 walls, black with Interior r J white top. Sharp car! *1095. 977 24, Like prion, MY 2-2041. 994 W 1 ---------- very g power steering, healer, whitewalls, one ov...... car trade. Maroon finish, *1795. Over 75 other cars to select fromiCoronet, 2 door, *. cylinder, — on U.S 10 at M15, Clerkston automatic, radio, heater, whitewall*, BmA5-5071.' runs forever on a gallon of gas In 1999 CHEVY, IMPALA, automatic, 9 Pariact condition, cylinder, 4 door, radio with rear vCUUS seat speaker, J good tiros, exc. shape. ,*1,150. Cell 9*4-1*95 eftorjj SPARTAN DODGE mb 11944 CHEVROLET. BEL AIR sedan,I *55 Oakland --------------- M-:' automatic, 9 cylinder, r ad I o, 19*2 Dodge, fair shape .......*« _____ heater, power steering, whltewall l9*5 CortTna, ................ F-J DC AT CONVERTIBLE:.! tire*, extra ■ *harp# one owner.! i960 Cadillac i • • • ••• • •• 1 >1:**- HUNTER bODGE . '1',f“ WiSSv OtRJST Fwr Tnjdi." 499 south hunter I ECONOMY CARS H»«----------------Birmingham ^ p|y|> FIL 4-2131 wm ~ 1945 DODGE, 330, CUSTOM Moan, door i omatlc. radio. 1965 Dodge .ronet, 2 door, 4 c y 11 n d t jtomalic. radio, heater, whltewa jns forever on a aallon of oas ertect condition. g but air. Call after 5 CHEVY-OLDS 199* FORD M ton . with equipped! ^%lM5l*ove7'7V other, 1M5 BUICK ^ SKYLARK, »t MIS, Clarkstc ....J—Pay Hei >1 Oakland Ayr 1 F k 8-407 1965 BUI^K 2 DOOR hardtop, gray, black vinyl roof, v-8 automatic, double pov MILOSCH ______|______ HM heater. $1595. Flannery Motors. Inc., 3806 Dixie Hwy., Waterford. Michigan. 1965 BUICK Electro 225 4-door hardtop, beige with saddle 1 $3.130. beige Interior, powar steering, power brakes, power windows, automatic, radio, heater. > custom" ceb!'"bucket* seats, ^redio! I $1795 ■ ,5»^MSuburban 01ds g 1967 FORD 6, VSi Ton Stake, custom , . BIRMINGHAM ,nterj( cab, excellent condition, *1600, 335- 860 3. Woodward Mi 7-51)11 Orion 4352 after 6. ___________— 1965 BUICK 400 LaSabre, 2-di 196$ GMC HALF-TON pickup. V-8, hardtop, exc. condition, 332-1892. ^£2' .md3.iS.r,nfl‘' ,uHy! 1966 BUICK CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1*99 Chevrolet Impala eonyertlbto., V8. Automatic, Power steering Jno Ml< 7^55 brakes. Jade green. Week top. "V^ *1495. 477 M-24. Lake Orion,. MY 2-2041. automatic, I cylinder, heater, whitewall tires, oi. 40,000 •tiual'7nllMjJ*599. CONVERTIBLE I 1966 Dodge Y 3-3021. after . —. , 1 coroner 44u, a aoor, newnw cond t o ' V8, automatic, power steering, radio, - aft#r 6* 'heater, whitewalls, red in color, ont MILQSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH wner,’ factory warranty. $1795 SPARTAN DODGE ^ ™m24 L.k. 1900 Dodge ! Transportation aafcT C0H0 BOATS DTNTTFRRlprapared ta make you a ri . better offer! Ask for Bob -YOUR JOHNSON DEALER" , _ 1370 Opdyk* 9-4, Frl. 94 Bums. 1 WILSON motors factory r $99 specialists. ip. High 19' Thompson cruiser with 75 HP Johnson electric start motor. Boat; has tandem alloy traitor, very good condition. Business FE 4-1577.* TRAVEL TRAILERS 1 Your dealer for — CORSAIR, GEM ROAMER ANO TALLY-HO ALSO Corsair end Gam pickup cemperi end Mecknlaw pickup covers. Ellsworth Trailer Sales 9577 Dixie Hwy. Modern Engines, 537-m 7. Motor Scooters TRAVEL TRAILER, l HARLEY DAVIDSON, iheetor, cell e«er 5 p.m. 421-2044. 19S4 HARLEY CHOPPER. iSHARP. CRISSMAN GLENN'S FOR "CLEAN" USED CAP«, 3 rfraJ^pS^fSVsd We w 0 u I d like to buy late COMPLETE SERVICE ON ..Sfarters.. . .Alternators... ..Generators.. OPEN 24 HOURS Monday thru Friday GMC Factory Branch OAKLAND AT CASS ■,. ' PE 59495 Auto Insurance-Marine 104 $2495 Bob Borst Lincoln-Mercury Sales » W. Maple ; Ml 9-2200 and other extras,, 92,400. Specials- —Special— Two-1968 Comper Cover Bodies. .$249.95 ns* vw hi 'H)MfeaM IOMCHEVY COMPLETE'CAMPER sleeps 4 loaded t.. *”*" 195 CHEVY two ton ttoke, ne relit, like new ..- 1995 CORVAIR Convtrll Ih white Interior. 429-2193. ... AM-FM radio, 33700. 334-4799 or OR 4-0371. 1957 CADILLAC. DOUPE DoV III excellent condltlor $1595 SPARTAN DODGE I Oakland fe B9222 automatic, nlca -1*5 MUSTANG performance, 4-speed, nice 1992 CHEVY Wagon, 9 pa sharp throughout _ 1992 CADILLAC -Sedan DeVllla, power, air cond. ...— •• •--1963 OLDS 4 door tedan, 8 . . ■ 19*3 BUICK Convertible WE HAVE IN STOCK 15 Used Pickups Starling from *295 up S 1967 Charger Li black vinyl Intarlor, this 1$ a nlca andp rlcad right.. $2595 SPARTAN DODGE Oakland _____FE »-92n 1961 CADILLAC, BLACK DeVllle, 14,000 actual ■ ml. tew, can prova It. 363-3346. ; C0H0 SPECIAL 1999 SltoarUne, Rlveria, 19' frl-hull, 190 AAarc., crulaer, power trim, with trailer and brakes, many extras, Complete *4195. KAR'S BOATS & MOTORS Cell today tor quotation ANDERSON & ASSOC., WC. 1 FE 4-3535 ForeignCars 19*1 VW, NEEDS MOTOR. Bost Offer. FE 9-1754. DeVIII* 1962 CADILLAC SEDAN. -vith full power, end ... .... oodles. Vecetlon special only S799 john’’ m°c auliffF ford SaO Dekland Av«._______FE 5-4101 *s Van Camp Chevrolet 1993 CADILLAC SEDAN da Ville, Q095. power, make offer. 335- 19*4 TRIUMPH T-120, Bonnev needs work. $350, MA 5-2054. CANNING PEACHES, 34.50 PER1 bushel, 2001 Ponttsc Rd., lust off of Perry Rd. ________ FOR SALE: AT M .1 d d I eto n' t| Orchards: Graham spys, Mcalntostv ■ -to*, Bdniatt P-------**“*'-' B____ _____ Sato* 3200 Rochester Rd. 052-4550. trailer Parts AND Accessories JOHNSON'S TRAVEL TRAILERS 517 E. WALTON BLVD. ~ 1965 BSA HORNET, 950 CC 334-9920 I 11965 HONDA 350 CHOPPER, extra LIGHTENING, 950 CC, Farm Equipment WHEEL CAMPER. SLEEP? 8. box, stove, hardtop. Exc* iiiiiiiii min ini mu WOLVERINE CAMPER SHELL/ 10 cab over.rf||M||H^Mte^a| t WOLVERINE TRUCK CAMPERS bultaCO. 100 CC, runs ?' AND SLEEPERS. Factory outtot, tm. UL 2-3105. Your" HomelTto and New Idea Dealer—John Deere Parts Galore LARGE SELECTION OF use d mowers end riding tractors, prl'*" to sell. Terme Avell. To v-Hardware, 905 Orchard Lk, Dally 9-9, Sun. 9-2. FE 9-2424. SALE New McCulloch chain saws me IMM i MEriT7 bar i —“tier price *129.95. E PRICE ONLY 19*7 HONDA 305 Scramber, exc condition, SJ25. Call aft. 9:30 pm 333-0575._____________________________ 1947 HONDA 50, VERY GOOD roj dltlon, 3225. Call 393-9541 aft* D hydrapl otter, 332-1_____ CRUISERS AUTHORIZED DEALER TROJANS LEFT OVER SALE — NEW 31'TROJAN Voyager Sedan TS 28' TROJAN Voyager Exp. TS 28' TROJAN Skiff Exp. single 26' TROJAN Sedan Bridge 24' TROJAN Exp. demo CHRIS-CRAFT-NEW 25' SEA SKIFF Sport Cruiser 17' SKI boat 210 hp USED CRUISERS 1965 26' Owens Exp. new pel fully equipped, radio .. *»; 1965 25' Owens Exp, MANY OTHER BWSATN5 COHO BOATS NEW-USED LAKE & SEA MARJNE S. Blvd. at Woodward RESERV/mONS^FOR WINTER STORATE NOWI AT; HARRINGTON BOAT WORKS Larsen Boats . Grummen Canoes PONTOON, 24", YELLOWSTONE TRUCK CAMPERS PRICES SLASHED 1-11' self contained with »hi-- 10" self contained with shower end 4 Sleeper. These 2 campers must ^ “STACHLER TRAILER SALES'INC - 3771 Highland (M-591 » 1947 YAMAHA 250, I Pontiac Rd. et i fe 44734I].a.Beauties to Choose From “,“k‘ WE FINANCE-TERMS 1998 HONDA 90, WON IN MALL contest, *350 or best offer. 4734374. 1998 HONDA...350, FfERFtLI. j RiA FIREBIRD Scrambler, vo. triumph tao e&.ii— bag* and roll bir. 682-1266. 1968 YAMAHA 305 Must sell, good condition, pi Includes two helmatii end leal lecket. Cell 451-1851 after 4 p.m. model GM Cars or will accept,trade-downs. Stop by today. FISCHER BUICK 544 S. WOODWARD 647-5600 1944 KARMANN GHIA, dltlon. <995, MA 5-1739.__________ 19*4 VW, GOOD condition, *799 or be*t offer, 625-5194. ------1945 VW, BEST offer OR. 4-1555 1965 VW, RED sedan, nev. . -motor and naw tlrti, *956. Call 333-7989.__________________________ 1945 VW GOOD CONDITION. Best Otter. 334-5414. n N. Milford Rtf.— Milford 984-1925 CORVETTE, 1949 COUPE, 4-speed, 358 Horse, 3.70 posl, best condition, 451-8454 after 4 p.m. »IUTT TUII pilW/ wm» . Onrheell down. Call Mr. Park*, credit RochesU manager. Ml 4-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD 94 S) Woodwa 1966 CHEVY bel-Air door with V*. automatic only— $1295 BILL FOX CHEVROLET Chargerl968 new VI, vinyl ,top, radio, heetor, wheel covers, whtfeweHe. fully equipped. - $2765 SPARTAN DODGE 55 Oakland . FE MS DODGE R-T, AUTOMATIC console, bucket eeati. heed,. retis. ^?'ovvr.uc.p'i8srm,ir^ e*r ""^tITdooge 499 SOUTH HUNTER w fires, 33150. 335-4993. 1966 CHEVY SS Convertible, ' V*. eutomatlc, ext nice, only 31499. GRIMALDI YOUR.BUICK OPEL DEALER 111 JUNK 0»K«, >AV FOR SOME, ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS end "Your Evlnrude Dealer" . V YEAR- OLD, meon, electric start, new bat-V, gas tank. *1,200. 982-M33. SYLVAN PONTOON iOAT wIth 10 ,J B Evlnrude Motor, *450, also liar Sting-Ray -Sailboat. *450, Man*m&Msm FREE TOWING, 24 hoi service. 473HB23. Dave'* Ti Chrysler 474-0724. terrific Discounts -----AT TONY'S MARINE On all boats and supplies We have a few Johnson Motor* la Aerocraft Canoe* 3995 Orchard Lk. Sylvan L USED BARGAINS 15' Dorset!, 90 h.p, Johnson j *l 19' Alum. Crestliner, top-sldes-ah h.p. Evlnrude ..... .......• •* ,14' Whltehouse, 40 h.p. ale Evlnrude, horns: light*, built-in gel. lank, treller..* 15' Alum. Wolverine, 35 h,p,.^ i Johnson, Tee Nee treller I 14' Glaspar, 30 h.p.- a I e _ 14' Modem, 35 h.p. i USED EQUIPMENT -10 h.p. elec,, start. Wheelho EVAN'S EQUIPMENT 9S07 DIXIE HIGHWAY,---- CLARKSTON 425-1711 n. and Tues., 9 e.rn. fp 9 p.m. -d. through Frl» 9 a.m. to * pjn-Set. 9 ejn/to 5 p.m. Closed Sunday. ' HOMETTE LIBERTt COLONIAL MOBILE HOMES 1 • 423-1319 —130 DIXIE S. of Waterford 18X35~ SINGLE BEDROOM, set-UP I park, Ideal for bachelor -"-*■» i] ■ 334-0719. payments. Ready to Lor ,03' Grovaland Manor. 332-1457 _ , *29-1310 DETROITER 10X46' 1941 DETROITER. * VI automatic, RGH Powergllde. S325. A good car with gor" Owner. 951-4547 after 4 p.m 1993 CHEVY SS, FULL power Incl. windows. 8950. 897-9305. -----1968 CHEVELLE Plotlnum with matching Interior, 4 cyllnder. standard shift, radio, heater, only 37,008 miles. $1495 1993 CHEVROLET, V-l automatic, A-1 mechanically, best offer. 473-0477. | 1945 INTERNATIONAL PICKUP, I 1999 HONDA 358 SCRAMBLER, like . , 300 miles, helmet end In-!. mco. S97S. JBfWI*, I A V ANT I, FOLDING CYCLE OR I bicycle,, folds t»ry sweetly tor .■tv storaoi in frallgrt/ boats, plants/ cars. Mada In Italy* $63-1 3160/ attar 7 p.m. __1___j ANNUAL SUMMER SALE : ALL 1968 MODELS ON SALE! BSA, TRIUMPH,. H g N_D A . **»' CHRYSLER AND JOHNSON BOATS AND MOTORS INSIDE BOAT AND MOTOR STORAGE OPEN DAILY * TQ 4 _ ~ SUNDAYS 10-4 PAUL A. YOUNG, INC. 4830 DIXIE HWY. MARINA on LOON LAKE OR 4-0411 __________ 339-9238 -1998 CHEVY PICKUP V> ton truck. [ *100. cetr *74-1743.“ ^tese^SkLES I service 945 8. Temreph ___EE 3-7102 ISA 1994 9*0 CC, lust repuil CSuzukivcyties 5fcfhofl50tel‘Rupp) to Htekw ST WANTED: STORAGE .SPACE th* er gereei forT* fl. bo*t, c. > May. pEUBOO. ■ _ WINTERIZE AND STORE YOUR OUTBOARD MOTOR, ALSO TwI5p_/ND RE-PAIR. 9984742 OR 928-1928. . „ s, Jttoefric. >2 jra»*Metfe W,‘ «-2M « - volt with afl options and. extras. 7x50'ana ... |------------- ».i0N^r^LM-,£.to WMt’of wiitiSit* Lk. Rd. (NS WARC«OTHHPiH^VV| *xcedent condition, 4>4 (>4|7. 3*3-5299 '***- »• PROLIC..NEW. oo«iitisr;|AUTUMN SALEH! Our 1949' • ■ y extr*S, 92,199. *73-0215. Want Ads_ For Action" BACK TO SCHOOL CLEARANCE . 200cc Scrambler, was $640, j now .. ! $520 HP 250cc Scrambler, was $725, SjZiL now- .................5575 Flue men* mere to choose I960 SKY HAWK. ■ 1398 rr. lic. to araara CH. VOA S, Mark 2 full panel. O.A.T. cyl head temp., carts. *—?. n m «en nli heat, ____ ______ quidc oil drehv --------- post light. 1 down. $129 P 2*4-4484. Pont _________ Wonted Care-Tracks Stomy^ fe-CTeftJ . *C0LW!TRYS1D£ LIVING Motors Inc. Aufhorlzed VW Dealer OP ................— . .—— y, mile north of Miracle Mile good running condition. 8150.§ Telegraph___________________- FE 8-45311 E*nMlaptoP-*naar *Adams_Blrrrni VOLKSWAGEN SPECIAL 11993 CORVAIR SPYDER. Maroon. Ingham. . _ ,w vw 113, like new1 condition, low I Sharp. 4-speed. 947-4860^ location .. MOTOR A9ALL. Rd. (15 Mile) U| of Woodward. tha °TROY 1967 1966 1964 ‘ 1963 MODELS some with Air Cortolttonlng Priced for Quick Sale Cell Mr. Parke, Credit Manager Ml 4-7500 HAROLD TURNER FORD 494 s. Woodward___Birmingham FORD, 1932 STREET ROASTER. professionally built. *709, 931-8934, axle, 22* long, ana, 8W high, ve ---- 9%-lW.----- ■-........ 1991 CHEVROLET 1V4 TON STAk^l with campy. Low mileage. Reel mileage,' royal blue, white I t*£ior, fectory warrenty. ▼ SAVE Dune Buggy Special ■eamaaes gem. $450 1997 vW Fastbeck, red wlto whl 1994 MONZA Convertible, exseHenf condition, 4-spead. S995. RONEY S AUTO, 131 Baldwin Ave.,. FE 4- mruviuNori^iviFORS 2W02, $1795 y $350/ • %-TON PICKUP - -| . RADEMACHER (Bill GollillCJ TOM , CHEVY-OLDS 1963 CHEVY vi ton, m 4 cyl. eltck, — 9595. Over 75 from — On Clarkston, 1094 FQRD, V4. auto. PickuP, long box., * cylinder, standard Troy jojawniistei/ raojo/ ftwttr, wst|^— VW Inc. 1821 Maplelawn-Blvd. Off Maple Road (15 Mile Rd.) ACROSS FROM BERZ AIRPORT Just South of Pontiac. Chrysler-Plymouth 19*4 CORVETTE COUPE, SILVER exterior end Interior, 4 speed transmission, 3*5 h.p., 411 rear end, moderately customized, low mileage. *1950. OR 3-5352, after 4 P-M- __________ 19*4 CHEVY Bel Air station wagon, “V«7—eutometic, radio, hr-*— spotles* condition. Inside end If,you ere looking for fhet ..... nice one. See thla onel Vacation apeclel at only *88* full price ||G *89 down, »9.49 per month. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD GrimaldiBuick-Opel 218 Orchertf Lk, FE 2-91*5 HUNTER DODGE 499 SOUTH HUNTER 1 7-0955 --- Birmingham TPM RADEMACHER . . / , CHEVY-OLDS 1999 CHEVY *4 ton with ( fl, ftoeWd* * «I. rtjck,■ mevy duty equipped, enly S1495. Oyer TS other cere to select from ~ On u.s. i* at mis, ciatktton, ma s, (871. 106 j “ New iad lhad Cara 1964 CHEVY IMPALA, 283 Pot traction, pqwer steering, automat transmission, dual exhaust, a cellenf conditlon7-*?50. 879-9543. AL HAN0UTE Chevrolet -“ Bulck ' , On M24 in Lake Orion MY 2-2411 impala custom,. , power, *lr, hydremetle, 4 < nice car for bu»lnr“ 9791. FE 5-3278. 9ti cxwexu — VI, pofrhr console stick shift, radio. 925-4732. SHELTON ■JOdttlonlng, eura this is-^ c< prestige. Why welt? *1999 wll down, 3* months, bank rate*. -... Mr. perks, credit manager, M^ 4i 1962 CHRYSLER 300 Convertible Black with brown vinyl bucket seats. V-8 automatic, '.radio, heater, power ^tearing, power brakei. «F. $395 See thla auto at our "aw location at the TJOY MOTOR MALL, on Mapto Rd. (IS Milt) mile* Eaet BIRMINGHAM Chrysler-PJymoutb 1943 CHRYSLER 1963 FORD mm-m Jetf^j^erk*,* erai#' ti MHAR0LD TURNER FORD 494 S. V.. 1943* FA IRLAN E 1963 FORD GALAX IE, cylinder, good — Call 993-1541. a FORD GALAXY 3 fker. hanktgp, Ige, 4 cylinder automatic, pawar JmMin *795. Fian- 1963 FORD GAU Clean body, excellent fliw. dependable. transportation, flu. *29- 1 F-~l$ Nw»—d rni Cm 10*[W*w —4 M«M (l" mii FORD COUNTRY Squirt, Iff 19$$ FORD GALAXIE, rtmnntr Soublt powtr? factoryred with a whit# top. all powtr, ex- KggT^Fnb farmT -OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH -flfSt. Pi ____, fen *$sr:Kj*!g|gftiUg< i °'pow«r »P*Hny.lWO. *47-2124. blwT»iSF WM T^SowuWtftY_^.?7~*l ”jOg^ oassenaer* power, air conditlonin g;«3^w5SlS>. USD. 3&1™ ‘ 1964 FALCON , convertible, V* fjctwv,, 106! New and Used On Been ■ Bankrupt? Need a Car? J06| MARMADUKE THE P.ONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, IOCS By Anderson and Leemfng M New ssd Used Csn _ 106 1**7 PONTIAC Firebird, gold. Mack T-BIRD. WHITE with block ■ *-p. Full power. Delure S2.13*. CoR ottor 7 o.m. 1*47 THUNDERBIRb, 4 _____ . dau, fully equipped. 07,WO. 331- or OR 1-0571. _______ 1061 T-BIRD, EXCELLENT con-dlf Parks,. credit manigar/Ml 4-7. .HAROLD TURNER FORD |M S. Weodword______Blrmlngt 1**$ MUSTANG, r*»l sharp. j '’»re«id.”dl»c 'b7okeT," tech,'now tires", tOMllj;-----------—_------1 condition. *1550. Maui *”•'** FALCON. VERY CLEAN, Keeflo Ml 7.3333 Soleo end Service. , ' ~ STANDARD Auto Sales MOO Elite both Lake Road W Block,Watt ot West Huron (MW) 681-0004 $995 j 1966 THUNDERBIRD, 1 0 FM PWW MV « vw- "~nni’.Twr 1 <2,550. FE 4-9024. 55SSf.y- rltkr*u &M r«5. TOM RADEMACHER Flafimry. Motors* .Inc., SS0S Dlxla CHEVY-OLDS Hwy., Waterford* Michigan.-j 1f67 F0RD ©alaxlo 500 2 iqac FORD * I hardtop, with vi, automatic, fl- Country aulwpatjc | fai "ft » » BIRMINGHAM radio, heater, vflfeettli. whlwj root, in warranty. 12095. Over ;5 A-'Ai uvui n tSWwr1"1wrMron*“BrinS] «¥*»',] ffs*rioc\r? Misf'cYaVstT ma °!l " Chrysler-Plymouth ess a.1 of Woodward). to . tat, this ( 5071. credit mansger MI 1-7SO0 j radio, wide oysls. power top,. HAROLD TURNER FORD ! fig? J.o«, Ml 5. Woodward Birmingham attar *■ 671-2313.___- —u T**S FORD GALAXil 500 con-! 19*7 MUSTANG, POWER brakes and (1,750. VI, automatic, , radio,! steering, lo rearer, power steering, brakes, 625-1782.________________________________. beautiful arctic _ white wttht(laek| ,,*7 F0RD COUNTRY SEDAN, 10! pessengar station a matching a >■ school sale, 'Ice lust Site di ionth, S year 0 TOP. ana reeay rar passenger static Vacation special only I13M tuH ,un purst gold -------.... I price. Just M8 down, and *53.071 vVnyl V-l, autom»fl< par month. 5 year or 50,000 mile*, radio, haatar, powar stc "jOHN McAULIFFE FORD jg|M|||| || ”‘“l* “ *30 Oakland Ava. FE S-liot lots FORD FAIRLANE 500 hardtop,! ---------- rkhrar{tr«i john mw ford ; radio, Motor, It you ere looking *30 Ookland FE 5-1101' . tor that extra nice cat, do ypors»(f',W7 t-BIRD Landau with beautiful «’ favor and look at this beauty, champagne finish, with black vinyl Back to' school sale special at. top, (U|T p(lwer, and factory *ir S13M full.price, lust *1M down and conditioning. Vacation Special al ‘ nr. 50,000 only $2008. Full-price, (288 .down *05.25 per month.- 5 year or 50,000 48.*5 per i "john McauIiffe ford 630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-4101 1965 MUSTANG V-8 anoint, automatic transmits! fSj price $69?, 1 1966 Mercury 2 door Hardtop » With V8, automatic, powar steer-' Ing, brakes* radio, haatar, factr--•ir conditioning, $1895 FLANNERY MOTORS, INC. (Formerly Beattie Ford) eterford_______623-09001 1967 Cougar | srdtop, ,V8 engine, radio, heater, ] ,9"^$2095........ ! SPARTAN DODGE Ntw and Used Con 166 19(7 RAMBLER AMBASSADOR Station wagon, elr conditioning, automatic, radio, hooter, luggage1 reck, whitewall tire*, extra -clean, *m' HUNTER DODGE I 1*9 SOUTH HUNTER Ml 7,0955 Birmingham | SALE BUY A NEW 1968 Javelin 2-Door Sedan for $2469 AND HAVE YOUR CHOICE OF Automatic Transmission or Radio for m lutlfut con- 1 lonthly Payments , *7.00, STANDARD Auto Soles 2400 Elizabeth Lake Road H Block West of West Huron (M59) 681-0004 3905 T-BIRD LANDAU with full powtr, and all the goodies. Vaca-1 tIon special at only — *1718. Full price, lust (188 down, and *52.17 per month. 5 year or 58.800 n ' new car warranty. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 438 Oakland Ave. , FE 5-1101 JOHN McAULIFFE FORD .MRHiRMH ....i^Houth huntIr | STANDARD Aito Soles ■PH frfcTChlus?Ml»* T*“ 9lYSrTNM,N-Eyr^Lr^°ori bi.u«U^mH|lk'• .".TmoS ‘55th' CQ1 0004 S85 25 Ser montK This h,ri,l?l> Thl^c, «irea'hbSi' matching Interior, spotless con-i DOi”UUU“t to^’swreSi.-a: aiwa rs-JSiigth-fe-a . • 1...................^ TitfijriWh-i............ MILOSCH I960 Pontiac Catalina domo 19*5 T-Bird conv............ 19*6 Cotallno 1-door ...... 19*5 Chevy Impale conv. ... 19(5 Chevy Impale SS ------- 19*5 Tempest conv........... 19(1 Catalina 4-door 19*3 impel* hardtop — — 19*3 Bel Aire 2-door ....... 19*2 Tempest conv..... mmmmm keego pontiac and '"power steerlngr full j Kacgo Harbor_____________682-3400 J 695 NOW AT Village Rambler 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 SEE HILLSIDE! ; before you decide 1963 FORD . »Mon pickup. Turquoise flnlsh. 30,000 »etwl tjjjjjt Radio, haatar, nearly naw A —1 ““rh- horse. No money down. 1966 RAMBLER “770" Two-door hardtop./v*. Whitewalls. Low mileage. - 1964 FALC0N> Fufura 1 _______ Two-door hardtop. V», otlek f*?.1?' Jj**J*r' whl,*‘ wall*. A llttla black baauty. No money down. 1962 CADILLAC Sedan Platinum finish, black top, full power, factory air. A beautiful boy. No money down. Hurry. 1963 PONTIAC Catalina Two-door hardtop. Factory four-speed, VJ, radio, hearer, whitewalls. A good buy No money down. 1964 MERCURY Marauder Two-door hardtop. Black with X'SlVfwater* Automatic, V8, power steering end brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls. See this one for sure. 1966 Vw 1300 Sunroof, has radio and hooter, whitewall ftr»l and Is a raal gaa saving baauty. 1963 MONTEREY Custom Bresitway sodan. Burgundy » terior. V8, automatic power steering at mileage, one-owner garage kept car. N< Ih matching In-brakes. A low-money down. $895 $1495 $795 $595 $695 $1095 $1395 $795 HILLSIDE LINCOLN-MERCURY . 1250 Oakland 333-7863 _ - (IV1. ' UVUaW° ISblS, SUfOWigtiC# v, wnww r. — —- . 855 Oakland _______________FF-J.™2| heatef1, whitewall tirasy power price $1095* Monthly payments; 1968 VENTURA, 1962 NASH STATlpNi Wayon, fair I ex,ra 5hflrp' one| $11.00. J double power, many e> v it owner. HU^JER DODGE Uii orice lust 8288 19^ 2*LDS'tmN^I; •uervthino I ^autiful metallic salmon with 5 25 ner month TWs hard!?p' ThS-. *ar ««?5 ViiK^ flSl matching Interior, spotless con-C nr^floo miii new vaSaf,°l! Mgfif* dition, V-8, eutometlc, only- 11188. ir or 50,000 mile new, prjce, just $188 down end 845.65 Pu„ pr|Ct ju8t $)88 down and Johii'McAuliffe Ford | ‘“jOHN*McAULIFFE FORD ! ^JOHn"McAULIFFE FORD '___630 Oakland Ave. FE 5-HOt__ *30 Oakland Aye. _____FE 5-11011 *30 Oakland Ave. FE 5-1101 ;I9*7 MUSTANG Hardtop, wlthvs. |96J OLDS LUXURY SEDAN, white 1 ^('PLYMOUTH BELVEDERE ~ beautiful ^refllc^r-i ^^rplue*hct,t5'Bco%i'^'my *2-1 »■ ' I HR .ulth matching interior., 3773 K 8^186 te‘*5SSS'.% Are' Y96S-OLDS 88 . j fNlSpflB HP EVc W *55.75 .per month 5 year i ,.dMr hardt0Cl. ^ st.*rlna.l gig- lardtop, . 331- factory a I r cortdltlonlng, vacation special at only - *1888. Full price, lust till down, and 155.75 per' month. 5 veer or 50, mile hew car warranty. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD «30 oekl burgundy finish ~~ vacation special, only 81688 full price, lust 8188 down and $66.33 per month. Thlt car has a 5 v year 50,000 mile new car war- JOHN McAULIFFE FORD HO Oakland Ava. FE 5-1181 I*** FORD RANCH WAGON. HUNTER DODGE 199 SOUTH HUNTER 19*8 TORINO GT FAIRLANE 508 Ml 7-0955 — ST M °jusi VtS 1965 OLDS 88 . j f»7 VAUAiff; : 50,'odb'mite new'’car warranty. ^ , doQr h k?*°n'ke rSw* ltea ng> ditlon% Make offer. 49 E. Tenny? 'JOHN McAULIFFE FORD i powfrDra j1495 v- a, *38 Oakland Ave._ .FE.5-4'01 -i i (Tsv-j vinyl°*>'topS, power' ei ^heeutlfu^nieteMIc ^njundj'wim Suburban OldS *^*—'"^95... OAKLAND whits uuuw. w... Radio, whitewaMS, low mileage. NIC* clean carl >1395. *77 M-24, Lake Orion, MY 2-2811 ■ 19*5 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE con- 19*8 PONTIAC Catalina Convertible, low mileage. 3*3-2198. 1968 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE. blue With black top, power steering, brakes, auto transmission, power windows. $2700. 332-7161, after 8 w j£tt§iHI ftl BD vunuu■ v- 9 wvi m 287 V-8 engine radio, power steering, new rub-j cSan.°rl?uifl price m$995.0 ROSE1 RAMBLER-JEEP, Union Lake.: EM 3-4155. Ission. Southern i/. $1595. 19*3 RAMBLER CLASSIC station u«onn. * cylinders end It is like, Full price S69S. ROSE ...._____ER "-A' ‘ ' EM 3-4155. RAMBLER-JEEP. black top a BIRMINGHAM black bucket H,MnA engine, aulbmatic, ^ - Woodward HJT 'breT*™*'"^ tTmS fL v:*; power st, yourself, *1,288- on this one. Back. brakes, «uto. *975. *82-l264. to school special at only S2*88, price, lust SIM down. S79.S9 ranty. c I CHRYSLER-RLYMOUTH 1,“riihi*DS'^?erLE«te?HnoTA nn^; 721 Oakland , _____FE 5-913* mitewaili luced to $1799. ___ .......__ .... _______ Blrminghar wth’KLlT'vinyMntar^r,0'” 1*64 112 OLOSMOBILE, - Holida m - _«rbv- condition, back to school special only—511*8 full price, lust $188 down, *51.11 per month, 5 year or 18,888 mile warranty. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD 438 Oakland Ave. FE $-1101 lW( FORD GALAXIE 588 4 door hardtop, beautiful arctic white with black top, end Interior, V-8, automatic, radio, heater, power (tearing, brakes, tsetory elr conditioning, Back to school sale st Only *T5M full price, SI*8 down and *51.27 per month. 5 year or *0.800 mil* new car warranty. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD *430 Oakland Ava. f^E S-H8I 1966 T-BIRD Convertible, v-a automatic, radio, hoator, whitewalls, full power, blue finish with matching Interior. See (Mi — ‘-afore you buy. you may I hundreds of SS* too I lull prlCO, *99 A with I, 390 c.......... .... eutometlc, radio, heats,, t steering, brakes, like new. save a bunch on this one. BIG TRADE Allowance, 8.000 miles. *2*88, only, star Down, mi.97 par month. JOHN McAULIFFE FORD | *38 Oakland Ave. FE S-118) I 19*8 MUSTANG, GT festback. 7500 miles. Crulsomatic. Many options.! *2350. 61M000 or *17-0705 after *. _ NEED A CAR? — New In the nre»-> - Repossessed? - Garnished? — Been Bankrupt? - Dh Got a problem? Cell Mr King Auto, **1-0802. 19*5 JEEP, WAGONEER, drive, V8, all power, will j ditioning, sharp. forced? - this car —J be paying much. *1*99 .... . with 3* months at —.... Mr Parks, credit manager 1-7500. HAROLD TURNER FORD $1695 OAKLAND CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH MERRY 0LDSM0BILE 52* N. Main ROCHESTER, MICHIGAN * 1967 OLDS Delmont 425 2-door hardtop, power steerln power brakes, automatic, turquoi finish with matching interior. $2295 Suburban Olds- '1,1967 Plymouth I Fury ll li 2 direr, here steering, VI, silt transmlssionr +teweilan t black vinyl top, only. $2095 SPARTAN DODGE J35_r>«iri»nit FE 1-9222 PONTIAC: When you buy MARKET TIRE give Jf itaty check. 2(35 Orchai H . V Man Rd.e Ktego. r hardtop, power I Lake HUNTER DODGE 499 SOUTH HUNTER M[ 7-0955 __Birmingham; 1965 TEMPEST, LeMans, 1 door, I Brougham interior, power steering end brakes, good cond. first *1,050 takes. 278* Churchill Road, Auburn! Heights, UL 2-1173^ _ _______ __ i 19*5 PONTIAC CONVERTIBLE, *800.! 642-2573. MiWi __________________| 19*5 PONTIAC TEMPEST con-, vertlble. Radio, heater, »tlck shift, 335-1*81 after 4 p:m 1967 RAMBLER Ambassador 2-door hardtop, champalt gold with black interio tinted glass, v-8 sutomatl radio, heater, power steering $1495 See this auto at our ne location at the T R O MOTOR MALL on Maple Ri (15 MUe) 1V3 miles aast i Woodward. !gConA Tatr.L j Chrysler-Plymouth brakes, auto., radio, *1*00- *26-1129.1 , wTTMpest, excellent dition, no rust, 35,000 miles, owner in service, call after 4 p m. FE 5- bill HAHN-® 1967 CHRYSLER Newport .$3495 4 door hardtop, white with black interior, black top. Car has 6,000 miles, full factory warranty. Like new. 1967 CHRYSLER Newport ..... $2395 Custom 4 door hardtop, new car warranty. Car in top condition, save money. 1967 DODGE Coronet $2095 2 door hardtop, with AIR CONDITIONING, V-8, automatic, power steering, vinyl interior, low mileage. 1965 DODGE Polara .... .. $1495 2 door hardtop, red beauty, one owner car. 1969 trade inF 1967 VALIANT 2-Door $14.9$ Sedan, with 6 cyl. automatic, factory warranty. 1966 CHEVY SS 396 *.$1795 4 speed, mint condition, fire engine red. 1967 JEEP Universal $1995 4 wheel drive, has only 3100 miles, power winch. Clarkston 6673 Dixie Hwy. MA 5-2635 959 PONTIAC GOOD ri dtllon, $75. OR 1-17*8._ 960 PONTIAC CATALINA. MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH . . cond.'I *195. C*Tl FE 5 si*7.l 1965 Bonneville convertible ^ * 1960^T5ntIAC, GOOD running con-! ^Ih„ wh.i,,Lri'°np' nower bre! ...............H M|5^e*1 fu95.r 677,M-21,BLeke°Or!on, MY battery $125. 673-5906 aft< 1961 PONTIAC CATALINA. 2 door fjjMi -unnlna condition: ■w iTarter. flood BIRMINGHAM ! $60 sv Woodward__ • NFfBD A CAR? - New in FE 5-9436 —Repossessed' Call pnginel Lock-out hubs. _67327417._ 1964 — 1965 — 1966 Continental CONVERTIBLES All Priced to Move In Excellent Condition SAVE Bankrupt? — Divorci Got a probem? Call A' King Auto, 681-0602. Ml 7-51U11962 BONNEVILLE COUPS $550 .re,? DEALER__________!_______“i-”38, ied? - 1962 PONTIAC STATtON wagon,. 1967 OLDS F85 ,'nditlonir RUSS 1966 FORD GALAXIE l-door hardtop, V-l automatic. , powar staerlng, power brakes, vinyl root, air conditioning. j $1795 AUDETTE PONTIAC ISO W. Maplf Rd. Ml 1-8600 | Bob Borst Lincaln-Mercury Sales 1*58 W. Maple Ml 4-2288 1963 MERCURY COLONY PARK, * ; passenger wagon, auto.* power ’ steering and brakes, power rear 1 window* roof rack* 311*000 miles* 1 exc. condition* $700. 682-8464 after I ' 5. ' ' ■ ___ 1965 MERCURY? PARK' LANE* 2 door hardtop* automatic* power, 651-53?j* Rfldr 4 p.m. Doc's Motor Mart- THE NATION'S LEADING JEEP DEALER DATSUN . MOTOR HOMES .L. - < tTOALfCi roe A Complete nnAVtl TKaiItKS PICKUP CAMPERS Line of - Winches and • SPORTS CARS Snow Plows for • SEDANS Any Moke • PICKUPS Vehicle Plus a Complete Service Dept. 1104 S. WOODWARD BIRMINGHAM 647-3113 GRIMALDI- YOUR BUICK-OPEL DEALER 210 Orchard Lake ' ' 1 FE 2-9165 1968 OLDS 98 Holiday Sedan A.JL -*•-■*- - c8c|0ry air con-! ,1 top. Priced to aSjOHNSON tell. $3995 PONTIAC-TEMPEST On M-24 In Lake Orion ___MY 3-6266 LOOKING FOR A . BARGAIN? TRY THE PONTIAC RETAIL S STORE FE 3-7951 . i 1*63 PONfiAC CATALINA, 2-door, j S nower sidering and brakes. FE 1-ir *73-8153- GO! HAUPT PONTIAC And Save $ $ $ clarkston_:_i??:5.5?? 19*4 TEMPEST convertible, power ; steering, auto, low mileage, best 1 offer. J91H866. __ 1 •“ifsa^sss^iG Factory Official L*AM,M#r CARS ,3--19s6iAL?uLD^d°ed wiih'TerTBMPEST-TDooRrr-ownyrjAII Models Power Equipped Lr ^ eCouremenl and in- . very_nice^682-9223,_RiggJns, Jlr. ^ ; —Many With Air-ding air conditioning.' PONTIAC GTO convertible, 1961 421 Priced From • c#..,. ti nnn tri-power, i-speed, 1.33 posi. 8,8eo rriceo riuin Save $1,000 . in >nglni rebuilt by Royal. Newj TAYLOR'S CHEVY-OtfiS Walled^ Lake _ __*2l-*3 1968 OLDS final clearance FOR THE BEST SAVINGS AND VALUES BEST 0LDSM0BILE, Inc. . 550 Oakland Avenue FE 2-8101 i9*TPLYMOUTH STATION WAGON I- 19*0 corvelr. 651-0970. 1__ 1 1963 VAtiX*if," 6 "cylinder, 3-speed, looks runs end drives like ■ new, t *198. Cell MA 6-1339. 1964 Pontiac h v8, automatic $1195 “TTA'NNERT" $1895 Village , - Rambler— 666 S. Woodward Birmingham 646-3900 tM CATALINA.HARDTOP, A-door, automatic Irens., air, 1288 Leian. Drayton OR 3-76««. _£ 194* CATALINA STATION Wagon, white, red Interior, excellent, *1850, , payments, S8.92 week. . Parks, Ml 1-7508. Harold Turner Ford. Birmingham. 1964 flEMPEST, $475. II 674-1846. mmmm mm mm B U 9 T963 PONTIAC, 4-door $795 , $8.29 weekly 1962 CHEVY corivettible $595 .:.... , . $5.29 weekly 1962 VW like new $595 .............$5.29 weekly 1963 BUICK special $395 . . . . . : $3.29 weekj^ 1963 OLDS 4-door $795 ..ip". $7.29 weekly 1963 FORD Gaxalie wagon' $595 ......... $5.29 weekly ALL CREDIT APPLICATIONS ACCEPTED , Bankrupt, Garnisheed, New in Town or Just Out of Service FE 8-4033 H E R E' P A Y H E ~R E 1964 CHEVY wagon $795 _ $7.89 weekly- 1963 CHEVY 2-door outo. $495 ................ $5.29 weekly 1962 METRO, 2-door, auto. $495..................$4.29 weekly 1962 BUICK special $391 .............. .$3.29 weekly 1963 PONTIAC convertible $745 . $7.89 weekly 1962 FORD XL convertible $595 $5.29 weekly 109 E. Blvd: South •Corner of Auburn , ' Call or Come In WALK IN—DRIVE OUT With * car FE 8-4033 Flannery Motors, Inc., 580* Dixie! _Hwy ^ Weterford-jMIChlgon. _ 1*64 PONTIAC CATALINA - 1-door, power steering end brakes, $6*S, alter 5 coll FE 84113._________ 1**1 TEMPEST, CUSTOM 32*. *725'. - 6*2-3152. - .. 1*61*PONTIAC GRANO Prlx.'Maroon cordova top, power steering, brekes, _,.^_u windows. Sharp. *1,0*5. FE 1*5*7. -------.n— mijcATAUNA. double power, auto.i 1967 PONTIAC Bonneville 2 door hardtop, extra nlc*' l{,< 1**6 TEMPEST C U STO .. vertlble, Sprint, l-sp*«d, *harp. Less than 20,0M mi. orja. *lr»t spare used once for about 18 m *11*5. 335-221*------ 1*66 PONTIAC VENTURA co, vertlble, double power, AM-FI radio, *25-5573. ____I 1966 Pontiac CONVERTIBLE with V8, automatic, power stee M brakes, radio, heater, no $1895 FLANNERY NTHAC CATALINA, r station waoon, c, with power s -____ akes. Priced ti Ortonv i He, 627-2544.__ 1965 PONTIAC* real Bhi offer. OR 3-6101. 1331 HI rimsn, power equip*. GRIMALDI CLEAN SWEEP BRAND NEW CLEARANCE 1968 Mercurys MONTEREYS-MONTEGOS-COUGARS - Every new 1968 in stock must go to make room for the 1969's arriving. We ^et the room . . you re- ceive important savings. Wide Selection. Before You Decide: See HILLSIDE UNCOIN-MERCURY 1250 OAKLAND 333-7863 13:h ANNUAL RED TAG SALE NOW GOING ON AT Jk 1962 CHEVY' • Impala Sport Sedan ; with v-8, automatic! radio, heater, 1966 CHEVY Biscayne Wf9on 4-passenger, stick shift. *cpnomy 6-cyl. engine, silver blue finish. "““'‘$697 ”” $1497 1967 CHEVY j jmpaig Sport -Cfiupe,. , 1 with vSr^omatlerpovrer sfew- 1966 ' JEEP - 4-wheel drive «-■—r; comes with two tops* turquoisa dalk aqua finish. Only— I $2295 finish, Oply— j $1697 —4967 s 1 CHEVY Bel Air 2-door with V-l, automatic, radio, haatar, whitewalls, factory warranty, ,1 bright red finish. Only— i $1995- 4964 CORVETTE Convertible with 4-spttd, 327 anglne-308 angina, radio, treater, whitewalls, Granada gold finish. Only— $2395 ; 1965i CHEVY f| Caprice Custom L Sport coupe( with V-8* automatic* powar steering* brakes* radio* . '• i nhg—iHll— - “ t9od MUSTANG Sport Coupe whh^*-cyL,^Tt l c k T*hitt, rajllo, heater, whitewalls. Only— $1795, $1395 .1966 FORD Galaxie 500 Convt.. ,lth V-8. automatic, power stee ng. radio, heater, whitewall hesfnut tinlshl Onlta- .$1695 1965 CHEVY | ..9rPosseqger,-Wogoi). _ fh*V5l, automatic, power steeF B, radio, heater, • whltawalls, xedo black finish, Only— ' $1695 —4965 CHEVY Impala LDoor sedan, with VJ, automatic, powar steering, radio, heater, whitewalls, outstanding green finish. Only— $1395 1962 PONTIAC 2-door Hardtop taltna, with radio, heater, tu-ie blut finish and Ivory finish* $595 1968 CHEVY Sport Coupe Ing* brakes, vinyl top* Tripoli turquoisa finish. Only— $2695 1964 OLDS,. Dynamic 88 Sport . Coupon oofomotte; uowtr- steering* brakes* radio* heater* whitewalls* Imperial ivory finish. Only- $1295 1967 ' CAMARO Sport Coupe ■cyl. engine, stick, hi warranty. Tui Only— - $1995 * 1965 • CHEVY Biscayne 2-Door with V-8* automatic* radio, heater* whitewalls, dark aqua finish. $1095 Oakland County's Lapgest Vplume^ChsvroJet Dealer ; FE 4-4547 631 OAKLAND Widest Selection of 'OK' Used Cars in Oakland County i THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1988 F—18 Gift from Florist Aamr to ftwlm Fmto 41 Malarial lever 18 Wine pitcher 45 Seven-dty (Greek) , period* (eb.) 6 Plant part 17 Light touch 48 Great (comb. 7 Nobel prize ACROSS M Willow 1 Brown-eyed *•“*“ SS Richard 6 American Straus*, for Beauty— ancample (pi.) ’ 40 Chatter , 11 Po*itlve (coll.) electrode 41 Deputy (at/.) 12 Harangue 42 Married lady 13 lllinoia state „(•*>.) flower . ” ~’J example 81 Open-shelved cabinet 22 Of celestial structures 28 Sturdy tree 37 Breakfast dish 38 Work units, in terms of 18 Eater heat 18 Manner 39 Russian 21 Heavenly ruler 1 Went by ship body -------44 Roof edge— 2 Not left 24 Greek letter 48 Direction closed (poet.) 28 Adolescent 46 Fail to hit 19M0*l«to 20 Southern general 31 Hindu title of respect 22 Convent worker 23 An addition 26 Painful 27 Dolt 28 Stable min (var.) i- 30 Mid point torn) 47 Tell 48 Garment fitter 81 Rants 62 Ruhr city 83 Rear' 84 Pauses DOWN winner 8 Bag 8 Grain alcohol 10 Fit * 13 Palm of hand (anat.) % Foot part (comb.fopn) 4 Fruit drink 33 Shoshonean 5 Clear Indian financial (coll.) 48 Plain-clothes 26 Footfall man (slang) 29 Let it stand SO Ibsen 30 Perfecto, for character -Television Programs- Programs furnished by stations listed in this column are subject to change without neticel dkoHwolsi 2-*WJIK-TV. 4-WWJ-TV. 7-WXYMV. 9-CKLW-TV, 50-WKBD-TV, 56-WTVS-TV, 62-WXON-TV i 2 3 4 5 6 71 6 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 fe \T to- 20 Bi 22 23 24 st 27 |28~ 29 30 31 32 33 34 Hn |36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 |45 [46 47 45 0 50 51 52 53 54 11 WEDNESDAY NIGHT 6:00 (2) (4) (7) C - News, Weather, Sports (9) R—Dennis the Menhce (50) R C — Flintstones (56) Misterogers j 8:30 (2) 9—News—Cronkite News—Cronkite (4) C — News — Huntley, Brinkley (9) R C — Giiligan’s Island (50) R — McHale’s Navy —(56) What’s New — How to make an electrical transformer 7:98 (2) C — Truth or Consequences (4) C — News, Weather, Sports (7) C — News—Reynolds (9) R — Movie: “Close to My Heart” (1951) Hay Milland, Gene Tierney, Fay Bainter, Edward St. ^John - (50) R— 'I Love Lucy -(56) R — Eric Hoffer .7:30 (2) R C — Lost in Space — Things get hot for Dr. Smith in “A Visit to Hades.” (4) R C — Virginian — Virginian agrees to try to bring white woman out of Shoshone camp. , (7) R C — Avengers — Steed and Tara become involved in auction of top-secret guns. (50) N C — Password (56) Students in Revolt — A report on the 1968 student revolt in Europe 8:09 (50) C gt Pay Cards — Mel Torme is guest. 8:30 (2) R, C —, Beverly Hillbillies — Elly May’s “zoo” gets Granny’s goat. (7) C — Peyton Place (50) R C — Hazel ‘ “ 8:55 (9) C—News 9:00 (2) R C - Green Acres — Arnold the Pig takes on two bank robbers, Barney and Clyde. (4) C — Music Hall — New season opens as hosts Eddy Arnold, Alan King and Don Rickies welcome special guest Bobbie Gentry, plus boxing greats Joe Louis, Sugar^ Ray Robinson and Rocky Graziano. (7) R — Movie: “Love With the Proper TV Features i STUDENTS IN REVOLT1, 7:30 p.m. (56) MUSIC 4HALL, 9 p.m. (4) BLACK JOURNAL, 9 j p.m. (56) FROM CHEKHOV, WITH LOVE, 9:30 p.m. (2) BERTRAND RUSSELL, 9:30 p.m. (0) SQUARE WORLD, 10:30 p.m. (9) ■. Negro in TV Cowboy Role Victim of Strange Mishap By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — the new trend in show business seems to be Negro cowboys — and the first one in a regular TV series, Otis Young, appears to he slightly embarrassed because he had a strange accident on horseback out in Hollywood. His horse went to sleep. And he fell Off of it.f “Oh, sure, these horses fall asleep all the time,” the 6-foot-2, 175-pound, 28-year-old ex-Broadway actor, who used to be so poor around j this town that he slept on subways, told me to Lindy’s. _ i "All the time you hear the wranglers yelling at ’em ‘Wake upf.You have to spin ’em around to keep them awAke.” Otis Young’s appearing with Don Murray ______ In the ABC series “The Outlaws,” but while he WILSON may he the first Negro cowboy on TV, there are plenty of them in the movies. There were, of course, Negro cowboys a century ago. * ★ * (In Kaye Stevens’ big opening at the Americana Royal Box, comedian Timmie Rogers also spoke of Negro cowboys and con-, B CYNTHIA LOWRY fessed that It was the intention of the Negroes "to let the In- ^ Television-Radio Writer dians win for a change.”) - „ _ . .. J NEW YORK (AP) - With a Young, originally from Providence, R. I., but with a bit wu segment of the nation’s experience riding horses at Camp Pendleton, at San Diego, sa*a' rls {fln& al)0Ut to ^ j,it by he broke his wrist when his horse fell asleep and sagged to tts!^ anmJal attack football fe. knees, causing him to plunge off on his hand. jver) egg Tuesday night came '6ut of this came » nice story. Young said that when hel up with a ‘™ely. °f was broke, his friend, young Jonathan Knopf of the publishing college football scholarships, family, explained his difficulties to his father; Edwin Knopf Each year, according to nar-who "stepped up his son’s allowance so there would be food rator Roger Mudd, about 6,000 money in the house for me - he also brought me into the house young athletes receive^ scholar- Stranger” (1963) Natalie Wood, Steve McQueen, Edie Adams, Hersohel Bernardi (9) R — Lock-Up (50) R — Perry Mason — Man. unjustly imprisoned is again suspect 1 n murder case. Barbara Hale is featured. (56) C — Black Journal -Features include a visit to a Louisiana cooperative and a study of the effects of1 black power on the Negro family. 3:30 (2) C — (Special) From Chekhov, With Love — Sir John Gielgud recreates the life of Russian dramatist Anton Chekhov. (9) (Special) Bertrand Russell — Life and times of famed philosopher are examined. 10:00 (4) R C — Run for Your Life —. Paul’s attempt to rekindle romance with French novelist (Claud toe Longet) goes awry when hejr husband appears on the scene. (50) C — News, Weather, Sports (£6) R — Innovations — Topic: Can man be stimulated to create? 10:30 (9) Square World — A belated visit to the National Procrastination party, plus an interview with a washroom at- A Look at TV Grid Recruiting Probed camera as they and their families were sold the advantages offered by the various colleges. to stay.” . ., Rudy Vallee and his wife Eleanbr, back in NY after a 3-year absence, were targets of Kaye Stevens. Hearing Rudy was there, Kaye exclaimed to Bob Tisch, owner of the Americana, "Go out and check the towels! ” Andy Warhol and a black leather jacket retinue went to Ms first party since the shooting with underground superstars Ultty vwri^atoi wniBiy; celebrating completion of the “Midnight Cowboy” film Humphrey HQ is hoping to pull off a Teddy Kennedy public eadorsement any day .. . Jimmie Rodgers, after a skull fracture aad three brafn operations, is here making a brave comeback. THE MIDNIGHT EARL . . Mayor Lindsay took daughter Margaret to "Hello, UwuyJ as a “back-to-school present” . .. .'David Merrick said at Joes Pier 52 that soaring Broadway production costs may result m a top ticket price of |20 next season . . . Secret Stuff: A film producer rages that hem never, never work again with his current leading lady and wouldn’t mind shoving her under ia truck, A billing hassle kept Janet Leigh from doing Bob Hopes next TV special ... Comic Joey Villa didsome ga^abototo dians on George Jes»eI’*“Here Come the Stars Trer-aftorj ships" representing about $20 million worth of tuition, books, room and board plus spending money. Throughout the 60-mimite prp-gram, suggestions were dropped that some' colleges or loyal Blnmnj offer additional and Ule-gal (under National Collegiate Athletic Association niles) financial inducements to star high school football players. The program showed the scope ami pressures of college recruitment programs for football players by following the experiences of two high school seniors. GRADES UNATTRACTIVE One was Jesse Causey, a Mi-mi, Fla., boy whose quarter-backing, but not his grades attracted football.recruiter! from: tendant at U.N. Headquarters. ($0) C — Les Crane — \ Movement to abolish the income tax is discussed. (56) R — On Hearing Music — Development of violin style Is explored. 11:10 (2) (4) (7) (9) C -News, Weather, Sports 11:38 (2) R - M o v 16 : "Flight to Fury” Dewey Martin' (4) C — Johnny Carson (7) C — Joey Bishop (9) R — Movie: "Echo of Diana” (1882) VIncent Ball (50) R — Movie: “They Made Me a Criminal” (1939) John Garfield, Ann Sheridan 1:19 (4) Beat the Champ (7) News (9) Window on the World 1:30 (2) R — Dobie Gillis (A) C - PDQ 2:90 (2) R — Highway Patrol 2:30 (2) C—News, Weather THURSDAY MORNING 5:45 (2) On the Farm Scene 5:50 (2) C - Nows 6:99 (2) U. of M. Television (4) Classroom 1:30 (2) C - Gospel Singing Jubilee (4) C-Ed Alien 7:90 (2) C — Woodrow the Woodsman , (4) C — Today (7) C — Morning Show 7:55 (9) Morgan’s Merry-Go-Round 8:00 <2j C — Captain Kangaroo (9) Tales of the River Bank 8:30 (7) R — Movie: "The Valley of Decision” (1945) Young servant girl falls in love with one of her employer’s i sons. Greer Garson, Gregory Peck, Donald Crisp (Part 1) (9) C — Upside Town 9:09 (2) C—Merv Griffin (4) C — Steve Allen (9) C — Bozo 10:09 (4) C—Snap Judgment (7) C — Virginia Graham (9) R — Hawkeye 10:25 (4) C-News 10:30 (2) R C — Beverly Hillbillies (4) C—Concentration (7) C —DickCavett (9) R — Friendly Giant 10:45 (9) Chez Helene 11:00 (2) R — Andy of Mayberry (4) C— Personality (9) Mr. Dressup (50) C—Jack La Lanne 11:25 (9) Pick of the Week 11:30 (2) R—Dick Van Dyke (4) C — Holly wood Squares (50) R - Kimba 11:55 (0) News THURSDAY AFTERNOON News, New Nixpn Aide LANSING (AP) - Dr. Harry A. Towsley of Ann Arbor has been named chairman of the Doctors for Nixon Committee, was announced Tuesday. Towsley, president of the Michigan Health Council, will attempt to muster support for the GOP presidential ticket from Michigan’s medical community, officials said. Mt-KJoaA’ Laundry Village Self-Service Coin Oporatad 747 N. Perry St. Across From Kroger Super Morfcet, 12:00 (2) (4) C • Weather, Sports (7) R — Bewitched (9) Luncheon Date (50) C - Alvin 12:25 (2) C - Fashions 12:30 (2) C — Search for Tomorrow (4)‘C — Eye Guess (7) C — Treasure Isle (9) R — Movie: "Goodbye, My Fancy” (1951) Woman returns to college which expelled her to receive an honorary degree. Joan Crawford, Robert Young (50) R — Movie: "An Annapolis Story” (1955^ Two brothers fall in love with the same girl. John Derek, Diana Lynn, Kevin McCarthy 12:55 (4) C - News 1:00 (2) C — Love of Life (4) C — Match Game (7) Dream House 1:25 (2) C - News (4) C — Carol Duvall 1:30 (2) C — As the World Turns , (4) C — Let’s Make a Deal (7) C — It’s Happening 1:55 (7) C — Children’s Doctor 2:00 (2) C — Divorce Court. (4) C — Days of Our Lives (7) c — Newlywed Game 2:30 (2) C — Guiding Light (4) C — Doctors (7) C — Dating Game (50) R — Make Room for Daddy 3:00 (2) C — Secret Storm (4) C — Another World (7) C — General Hospital " (9) R —Route 68 (50) R—Topper 3:30 (2) C-Edge of Night „ (4) C — You Don't Say (7) C — One Life to Live (50) C —Captain Detroit 4:00 (2) C — House Party (4) C — Donald O’Connor (7) C — Dark Shadows (9) C — Swingin’ Time 4:25 (4) C - News 4:30 (2) C — Mike Douglas f (7) R — Movie: “The Horse Soldiers” ( 19 5 9) Union soldier is ordered to destroy railroad line at Mississippi station. John Wayne, William Holden, Constance Towers (Part 1) (50) R — Little Rascals 5:00 (9) C — Bozo (50) R — Superman 5:30 (A) C—George Pierrot (9) C — Fun House (50) R—Munsters 5:45 ( 56) Friendly Giant The state flower of Massa-| chusetts is the mayflower. HOWARD DELL . , Is at the % BALDWIN PHARMACY 219 Baldwin*Ave. FE 4-2620 G 8 M CONSTRUCTION 8 ELLIS “gUllPINO IN FONTIAC SIHCIIW mam foam* t 'one stop mam mitr • ADDITIONS • ALUMINUM SIDING • BREKIWAYS • ATTIC CONVERSIONS • AWNIN®WINDOWS * AWNINGS • DENS • PATIOS • GARAGES • RECREATION ROOMS • CONCRETE WORK-MASONRY • KITCHENS* FAMILY_ROOMS • BATHROOMS •---- ‘ • STORM and SCREEN DOORS ond WINDOWS VISIT OUR LAR6E sfccibl rintNCi eun Consolidate *11 Meant Bills Through KITCHEN SH0WB00M ter «reerUerl|t|e Finn 86 North Saginaw - Downtown Pontiac ■ Fraa Estimates Operator on Duty 24 Houra | T^Vto SuV ^PHONE FE 2.1211 AVOID GARNISHMENT Bunch all your bill* ... mo can tat up QNI PAYMENT you can afford. Call 338-0333 or stop in at DEBT Consultants of PONTIAC, INC. B14 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLDG. OPEN *TIL 5 P.M. DAILY—CLOSED SATURDAYS — Radio Programs— WPON, Newt,' Phone Opinion WHFI, Don Bosco «i!L-WWi, Today In Rtvlow, Wj|mPSuiiness Barometer, : ..Time .Traveler j*,--*:«*—WJR, Lowell Thothoo, ^j7N^ir*S^rTeLTne‘ wcar, Now*. Rick Stewart WJBK. Newt, Tom Dean WJR, World Tonight 7:15—WJR, Business, Sport* 7:J0—WXYZ, NOWS, Lockhort WJR. Reesoner. R 0 Choral Cavalcade WPON, Mtftlc Till Mldnlte l:M—WJR, Newt, Dimension sits—WJR, Panorama, Campaign 'A Sill—WJR, Ponoramo, Cioso- • giSS-WJR, Ponoramo f:SS—WHFI, Tom Colemon cklw, Scott Ragan. WJR. Nawr llltf—WJRt Musical Showcase lt:So—WWJ Overnight' _ liifS—WXYZ, News, Jim Davit ~tKLW“Pronlt Brodlo WCAR, Nows. Wayne Phillips WJBK, Nighttime THURSDAY MORNING WJBK, News, MPrc Avery SrJS—WWJ, Morrle Carlton 7iSB—WHFI, Gary Purace WPON, Nows, Chuck Warm Siia-WJR, Nows Bill—WJR, Sunnysld* ' * ftlS^W/R, Dpan House WHFt. Unci* Joy “”€NWWr«Mark-JRIchoedo--« 1S:*S—WJBK, Newt, Conre< WPON, Nows, Jerry Whit- n McNeill 11:00—WJR, News, Keleldo-scopa WHFI, Jim Zlnsar THURSDAY AFTBRNOON 11:10—WWJ, News, Emphatlt WJR, Nows, Pawn CKLW, Jim Edwari Hits—WJR, Focus lltlB-WWJ, Marty men, Nows, r-T:SB—WJR, No Godfrey liSB-WXYZ, Johnny Randall 1:*S—WPON, Newt,- Pet ’ Wh/?,I*B1U Lynch ---- WJR, News, Dimension 8:1f—WJRp Musk Hall l:*-WCAR, News, Ron Rose WJBK. News, Hank O'Neil CKLW, Mike Rivers WXYZ* News, Dick Purtar. 5:15—WPON, Lum 'n* Abner 5s3B—WPON* Pat Appolson ALUMINUM aw MAINTENANCE EXTERIORS SCULPTURED SIDING Slop Blistering, Crocking, Peeling, Giv* Your Housa KAISER ALUMINUM SIDING For As Little As $3.45 A Week No Money Down No Payment ’til November ROUGH SAWN SflRNG Mamba, Pontiac CHombor of Com mere r, . . _ j-,. . j —mipj inev for kidding thG I distsnccs. Thfi second, Chsrles which guest-of-honor Glen# Fort, rappea Joey lor^xiuuug L.. . , Atlanta Ga.. redskins. (Ford’s blast will probably be cut fram he ta^ - Dudish, an Ati«M oa 'uene war 2 S “ SS Z grades. He was of enormous interest to football coaches from the Ivy League schools as well as to colleges and universities I across the nation. The boys and the recruiters seemed quite conscious of the a single 3D still photo, for theater displays of “Star! at SeaFare of the Aegean: Hedy Lamarr and Bob Zarem (of! Avco-Embassy). w w * TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Corbett Monica says his wife recently earned a black belt to karate-and now she wants a completely new wardrobe to match it. L— WISH I’D SAID THAT: Mike Wayne notes his children are growing fest: “In fact, they’re the only kids I know who outgrow StrCEARL’S PEARLS: Justice Felix Frankfurter was asked once why Supreme Court judges don’t said, “I guess it’s because marriage isn t considered a federal M-We^k Head LADING' (AP) ~ Dewey F-Barieh. president of the Detroit Institute of Teclmoiogy, has been named general chairi^an of the 1969 Michigan Week,. May 17-24. He succeeds Win Schuler, Marshall restaurant owner. Mm Paul Wyatt Co. 'We .Spaciolit* irifOiri" earth moving BACKHOE TO 20' DEEP ALL UNDERGROUND * UTILITIES Phone FE 8-4107 ^/tente Sfiart We iHiy, sell eMtf trade PISTOLS, RIFLES »d SHOTGUNS 2924 N. WOODWARD AVE. Botwoon 12’/j an* 1>-Mil« Daily 9, *ub. Til • U 9-9183 PROTECT YOUR HOME “Let’s Talk SIDING!” BEAUTY AND PROTECTION WITHOUT COSTLY UPKEEP Guaranteed Best for the Easy life; KAISER ALUMINUM KAL-SHIELD PLASTIC FINISH • ROOFING • GUTTERS • WINDOWS e AWNINGS • STORM DOORS • SHUTTERS 30 Days Only FREE 5” White Aluminum GUTTER With Evory Siding Job ADD-A-ROOM Lot us bssist you in your plans for a bright now clean and comfortable room for your growing family. Them are new ideas and we use only the finest materials and craftsmanship. Special Prices New! AS LOW AS BATHROOMS • BEDROOMS e REC I e. urates .ernes MDING Service company BETTER Than the BEST! CWeedon ffonslrudionfla NIGHTS ... AND SUNDAYS OAU 1832 West Huron 2 BLOCKS WEST OF TELEGRAPH FE 4-2597 THE PONTIAC PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11. 1968 Move on Czechs Aids Ulbricht But East German Chief May Lose in Long Run By HUBERT J. ERB BERLIN UP! — West Germany has suffered a setback in the Warsaw Pact occupation of Czechoslovakia. The East German regime appears to have solidified its position but in the long run may have isolated itself more than ever. There now are Russian troops in considerable strength, i only along the West German border with East Germany but along the border between Czechoslovakia and the Bavarian state of West Germany. * * ★ The future of the West German trade delegation in Prague is uncertain. Bonn’s hopes for full diplomatic relations with the Czechoslovaks are fading along with what had appeared to be a golden opportunity to expand economic relations in eastern Europe. The entire West German policy of rapprochment with the East bloc has been shaken. To offset the damage to their own image, the Russians have hardened their line toward the West Germans, already their favorite whipping boy on e number of counts, especially on the question of sensitively isolated West Berlin. —WANTEIMfOST East Germany, meanwhile, has accomplished what it wanted most: a shoring up pf,,its southern flank where the Czechoslovaks were giving signs of breaking with the bloc in favor of doing business with the West Germans. For the East German regime of Walter Ulbricht, unrecognized except by other Communists, this amounted to a life and death threat. * * ■ * Had the Czechoslovaks opened the door, the, Hungarians and Bulgarians might have eventually followed—to go along with Romania and Yugoslavia, which already have diplomatic ties with West Germany. Inside East Germany the overrunning of Czechoslovakia brought a wave of sympathy messages to the Prague government’s embassy in East Berlin. Student demonstrations were reported in Leipzig and Erfurt. ★ ★ ★ For the first time recently, the Czech invasion and participation by the East German army brought to the surface a latent opposition to the Ulbricht regime. Events left Ulbricht in an awkward position. Just before the invasion took place he was in Czechoslovakia meeting witji party leader Alexander DubCek, telling Dubcek that each Socialist country could go its own way. as long as it kept its eye on the proper direction. Sduth Africa Tops World in Executions JOHANNESBURG, South Africa ®—Nearly half the world’! legal executions take place in South Africa, a Witwatersrand University law lecturer says. Writing in the Johannesburg school’s annual legaL survey, Dr. B. van Niekerk commented: “Among the strangest of ail] facts surrounding the death pen-] alty is that its desirability is not] at all a question of debate in the! country where it is applied with the greatest frequency in Jthe world.” ★ A : A Van Niekerk said executions by hanging in this country have increased from 16 to 100 a year in the past 25 years. From July 1963 to June 1965, 281 death sentences were imposed in South Africa mid 191 men executed. “During this period, South Africa alone accounted for about 47 per cent of the world’s executions. Figures like these suggest that an inquiry is long overdue. “In the absence of any proof | of its effectiveness as a deter-j tent... it would seem that the .only possible, albeit cynical, arguments which could be raised to justify it are revenge mid the tad of maintenance of prisoners for long periods.” ‘ IB Fabulous Savings on Top Quality Foam and Innerspring Mattresses SAVE *15 Innerspring or Serofoam Mattress 69.95 Full or Twin Mattross or Matohing Posture Mato Box Spring 44s8 Take your choice of a buoyant 5 Vi-inch Serofoam p9lyurethane mattress -or a resilient innerspring mattress with 432 coils in. the full size and 297 coils in the twin size. Both feature cushiony quilted decorator covers. Posture Mate foundation has heavier coils in the center section that supports most of body’s weight. Enjoy firm, restful sleeping comfort at these sale prices. SAVE *20 6” Foam Latex or 920 Coil Innerspring Scientifically designed for firm posture support. Choose the exclusive dimple-top 6-inch foam latex mattress or the deluxe innerspring with 920 coils in the full size and 640 in the twin size. Both have luxurious quilted tops. Reg. 89.95 SAVE $60 on 2-pc. Queen Sire Set: 60x80” mattress 1'7088 and box .pring, Reg. 239.95. A y SAVE $70 on 2-pc. King Size Set: 76x80"mattreaaand 0/1 Q88 2 box >pring>. Reg. 319.95. 6988 Twin or Full Mattress or Matching Posture Mate Box Spring SAVE *20 . Quilt Top Latex Mattress 7088 99.95 Full or Twin Site or Matching Posture Mate Box Spring 6-inch Foam Latex features a firm core with dimpled top that gives the extra support you need, yet cradles you more evenly than other foam mattress. Qttilt rayon damask cover. Enjoy extra firm support plus luxurious ^surface softness......i__: 2-pc. Queen Size Set: 3-pc. King Size Set Mattreu pint matching box 1QQ88 Mattre«» pin* 2 matching 97QS8 spring. Reg. 259.95. box rpring*. Reg. 349.95. .A I • Baby Crib in Handsome Walnut or Maple Finish Folding Straight Wheel Baby Stroller Standard double, dropaide Reg. 2$.$$ model with mnlti-poaition link (pring, plastic teething rails and playball. Mat-treaa with waterproof cover, re*. 12.95 .,....... • 9.98 26s8 6-inch a poke wheels give an attractive touch to thia red and white atriped vinyl itroller. Adjustable wire footrest. Handle 36” high. $eat, 12x9 inches. Fold* flat. Reg. 12.$$ §88 Quilt Design Vinyl High-chair with Tabular Steel Frame Folda tup completely for atorage. Has thickly padded seat and baek. Chrome-plated frame, tapered legs. Safety a trap. Adjustable footrest Seat 22 inches blgh. Reg. 19.9$ 15s* Multi-purpose Hay ’n Feed Baby Table »lT Rsg. 24.M urethane pad* with poodle print. Tabular steel folding iega. Aluminum edge,' chroma plated tubular steel rail helps keep toys, food within baby’s reaeh. 1988 NO MONEY DOWN on Sears Easy Payment Plan Open Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday 9 »o % Tuesday, Wednesday 9 »o 5:30 Sears Downtown HAM. ROtBUCK AND CO. Pontiac • Phone FE 5-4171 Mix or match Penetray light bulbs 40 watt, 60 watt, 76 watt, and 100 watt light bulbs. te\ (limit 8) Cleaning made easy household chemicals Furniture polish, cleaner, spray sizing, disinfectant, ^ Corn and air freshener. (Umtt 4) 4J1 Anchor Hocking piece tumbler set Jubilee pattern. Gold or avocado. 11 h ox. m Imported wicker laundry baskets JjOO (limit I) Open mesh, two handles.' Large capacity, sturdy. Reg. 79< val.lftlb. blanched peanuts I Limit 2 with | this coupon. Expires Sept. _ , I 1ft PM- _TJ 2J1 Gulf Saphire motor oil A heavy duty motor oil. Long lasting. 20 and 30 weights. Avoid breakdowns! automatic trans. fluid Keep your car in shape without Costly' service charges I COUPON Good at Yankees STP gas treatment prolongs engine life Your engine will "j €4 run much better, at I a loyr cost. Comes IsPOl | Twin-pak 9" paint roller & handle MM Reg. 39t val.101/2 oz. Bachman pretzels! Open Nights to 10, Sunday to 7• Uso Michigan Bankard or 100% pure wool ladles scarfs ChoHis, Paisley-ond flora) print* in tri-angles and hat scarf*. Patents & setons vinyl swingers and dutches A val labia in severaJ styles iri latest fall color*. All colors & styles! Nehru blouses Girls Jtrint Nehru man-styled blouses. Assorted colors & styles. Sizes 7 to 14 LIMIT 3, Girls colorful flannel pa|amas Pajamas in classic styles with pocket detail and trim. Sizes 4 to 14. Limit 2. ■A. Jr. boys long sleeve sport shirts Many smart plaids for the little lad. Sizes 3—7. Women & teens feminine slippers Comfortable around-the -house slippers. S-M-L-XL. Huge selection of colors^ S irriCTIV UNTIL SATURDAY. SEPT. ■A. Mi Boys' hl-top basketball shoes Cushioned arch and long-a wearing soles ori these 'machine washable, hirtop canvas shoes. tO PM 14-Mile at Schoenherr Sterling Township Ladies' colorful flannel gowns YANKEE DEPARTMENT STORES Men's famous make shirts Sli g h tim perfe ctTOns- of nationally known brands. Will not affect weor or appearance. Sizes S-M-L-XL. 2 FOR 3S8 ii5i Boys' 2-pc. vinyl raincoat sets Water repellent. Police style helmet. Yellow and gray. Sixes .6-16, Boys’ cotton knit sport shirts Turtle*necks, mock turtle, with long sleeves. Sol id shades and novelty patterns. ' Sizes 6-io. Men’s duck hunting corduroy cap Men's reinforced vinyl raincoats Water repellent with corduroy ear flap. Fully lined fat warmth. Charcoal color. Slash pockets. Button closure arid carrying pouch. SizesS-M-L-XL. PRICKS KFFKCTIVK UI SKPT. 14. fO PM Copyript North gate Advertising Co. OPEN NIGHTS UNTIL 10 r.M. AND SUNDAYS UNTIL 7 P.M. Men's 100% cotton knit turtleneck's Boy's durable cotton knit briefs Full elastic waist. Durable knit for hard wear. Sizes 6—16. . Slight irregulars; f PKG. OF 3 FOR Boys' permanently pVessed corduroy slacks Pol ye s ter/cotton blends with full elastic waist. Wide wale. Sizes 6—12. *1 Cannon bath towels In floral prints Blue, Pink or gold on white ground. 2~100 Cotton dish cloths by Morgan Jones Woffle weaves and open mosh. Many color*. 8~1«° Bathroom showersheets A colorful array of now patterns. 6‘ x 6' Vinyl laced dresser scarfs Vinyl Venetian lac*. Whit* only. 3~F For every room, shortie draperies An array of •mart fabrics. Fall widths. 30" ft 36" lengths joo Non-skid latex-back scatter rugs -|00 High and tow geometric design. Cotton. PRICI ECTIVB UNTIL Si Kitchen towels by Morgan Jones _ ny: bent flat weavo cotton. % SIFT. 14, lO PM Copyright North gate Advertising Co. USE YOUR MICHIGAN BANKARD or SECURITY BANK CHARGE Neat ft orderly shoe bag Print plastic. T waive pockets. Electric pot (it whistles) Else trie con van lance. Safa, easy.* 4-piece snack set Smart design and colors. Stack to store. Sturdy! O-gallon trash can Tight fitri ting lid. Durable. Decorated china mugs Attractive shapes and caterings. Handy, sturdy step stools Always step up safely. Tubular lags. Table fop book rack One shelf. Walnut fin ish. Handy. MtCRSJmcriVI UNTIL SATURDAY, SIFT. 14, fO PU 1125 N. Perry in Pontiac Joy at Greenfield Detroit Fort at King Riverside 14-Mile at Schoenherr Sterling Township Famous Ekco kitchen utensils It folds up for easy storage Easy-folding wine rack Copyright North gate Advertising Co. ’ Patio push brooms Sturdy wood with plaptic bristles. Multi-purpose storage chest Reinforced fiber bo,ard. Wood finish. Ceiling light reflector Decorative. Clip onto fixtures. AUTOMOTIVE & HARDWARE ITEMS AT DOLLAR DAT PRICES! PRICKS KFFKCTIVK UNTIL SATURDAY, SKPT. U, IO LIMIT ONE Copyri^it North gate Advertising Co. Mm OPEN NIGHTS UNTIL 10 P.M. AND SUNDAYS UNTIL 7 P.M. YOUR CHOICK AMY » ITKMS FOR" I MIX OR MATCH TOOLS & HARDWARE ITEMS PVC quality Insulating tape 60 ft. roll. Use tor all wiring needs. 3/4” wide. LIMIT TWO 2-100 8” slip joint pliers 2-100 Mr. Sharp utility knife Form fitted handle. A multitude of home uses. LIMIT TWO 2-1®° tough-durable flash light Holits2l>CeH$ Chrome pla- A tad. Top n 1QQ quality con? /fOll|<,w . struction. *■ • - LIMIT TWO 8 oz. size I ladies hammer Rubber grip. The perfect weight for the ladies . 2~F Masking tapb makes painting easy 3/4" x 60 yds. Good quality. You II never run out of ■ uses for it. LIMIT TWO 2-1® ® Copyright North gate Advertising Co. Clear plastic garment bags With sipper. A I 16 garments. As WO Black rubber welcome mats Sturdy, long* ( lotting # . 4 10 1/2" plastic turntables all purpose traslraan liners Ironing board pad & cover Scorch rtilit-A ont, thick # cushioned . Mm SET! Vacuum cleaner bags Up to 4 A I bags iii a / 1 package. fcPKGS Perfect loxy susonl 10 to a package. 3pc.ptatHc mixing howl te« ' mBWI Si . , a f.l ’Stfag east 2«J1 ■ able plastic. :dbfffr-1 Jumbo folding lap trays Plastic fruit or vegetable bin Stack type, A C 1 •7***°/ clean, mm w* Ice cube crusher Far cold, prefessTohat drinks store. Pastry blender for mixing * Save your wdllfl magnetic hooks Dessert Delight! Save! An Ideal Reminder Memo Holder Iways opt For every cook aluminum baster For a juicy, A tt ssr* xpri Keep It neat ^ drawer dividers I timm Joy at Greenfield Detroit 1125 N. Perry in Pontiac Fort at King Riverside 14-Mile at Schoenherr Sterling Township ; 4 - -v7 -05 - -•?; ■ _ ■ Kitchen and Handy for Chefs Utility shears roast rack Perfect for A M chicken, | vegetables, fts*9* 1 For a per- A C4 feet main # — course 1 mm OW 1 Despite the heaviest concentration of police, almost two-thirds of the violent crimes in Pontiac are committed in only two south side sections of the city, District l and District 7, according to a report released today hy Oakland County Prosecutor S. Jerome Bronson. ‘HORRIBLE PICTURE’ “As the county’s chief Igw enforcement officer, I agree with Commissioner Fowler that these statistics, which are disgraceful, represent a horrible picture of Violent crime concentrated in a comparatively small area,” Bronson said. “However, I must take issue with him oil his belied, and I know he honestly and sincerely believed he was right, that die police were, or are, afraid to go into these areas.” Fowler was unavailable for comment on Bronson’s report The report refuted charges made last month by Pontiac’s lone Negro city commissioner, T. Warren Fowler Sr., of District l, that police are afraid to go into Made areas. Bronson said, however, that his study, based on statistics provided by the POfe. tiac Police Department following die allegation, does substantiate Fowler’s, dalnrof high crime in District 1. Of the 388 violent c Pontiac during 'the trough July 31, 349 Enemy Troops Hit Viet City, U.S. Camp SAIGON MB £5Fighting raged ilorthwest of Saigon today as the Viet-cong and North Vietnamese drove deep * into the city of Tay Ninh, and American forces killed 95 enemy troops in repelling, a night attack on,a unit of the 25th Infantry Division. Meanwhile, South Vietnamese paratroopers and militiamen skirmished with hundreds of enemy soldiers who _ invaded Tay Ninh, a key provincial capital 45 miles northwest of Saigon. SOUTH OF SAIGON In two other battles 15 and 19 miles south of the capital U.S. infantrymen of the 9th Division reported killing 60 enemy and finding a weapons cache containing 90 rifles. American losses were two killed and seven wounded. AP correspondent John T. Wheeler reported from the U.S. combat center in Tay Ntoh that a Communist defector told interrogators there were three regiments — about 7,000 — in and around the city. Wheeler said that by late afternoon firelights were raging on the northwest, southern and southeastern fringes of the city. Casualties on both sides were mounting, but the main battle for the •city of 200,000 still appeared yet to come. Although some U.S. units outside the city were ip blocking positions and U.S. advisers were with the South Vietnamese troops, the ground action was being fought almost entirety by South Viet- In Today's Press Aid to Education State eyes 869-millibn hike next year — PAGE A-8. Czechoslovakia Leaders assure people, urge refugees to return — PAGEl A-5. Holly Schools Board discusses budget, teachers, students, contract — PAGE namese paratroopers, militiamen and police forces. Farther northwest along the Cambodian border, North Vietnamese gunnery shelled a dozen allied camps, but casualties and damage were reported light. U.S. intelligence officers foresaw no immediate attack on Saigon. Moving junder cover of a heavy mortar attack, enemy infantrymen charged the 25th Division camp 14 miles southeast of Tay Ninh, They were driven off after nearly three hours by a massive barrage from armored personnel carriers,; helicopter gunships and artillery. Six . Americans were reported killed and 22 wounded. HAMLET HELD The heaviest battle was on the northwestern edge of the city where an enemy battalion held stubbornly to the hamlet of Thanh An despite South Vietnamese counterattacks supported by armored cars and air strikes. Wheeler said some North Vietnamese troops coming into the city asked directions from local residents, particularly to the big church which is the headquarters of the Cao Dai religious sect. 205 Interiors in '69 Cadillacs DETROIT (UPI) — Cadillac division of General Motors announced today it will offer 205 different interior trim combinations on its 1969 cars. The new models of GM’s luxury line, unveiled to newsmen today, show some exterior styling changes including new grilles with finer textures but retaining the cross-hatch. Also, following the industry trend, side window vents completely disappear from Cadillac’s 1969 offerings. Interior trim offerings on the new Cadillacs included 103 in cloth, 100 in leather and two in vinyl. The instrument panel was redesigned as a so-called “control center” with all instruments clustered directly in front of the driver, and this section separated from the rest of the panel by a soft-padded divider. Hope Shattered for Fast Release of Pueblo Crew WASHINGTON (AP) - Hopes for quick release of the USS Pueblo, feeding on widespread rumors for a week, have been shattered by U.S. statements that North Korea 4s seeking more than jiist American apologies: “It is my understanding,” said Secretary of State Dean Rusk Tuesday, “they have asked for a good many things including commitments about former action that would involve the high seas in the Sea of Japan.” A LOOK AT THE OUTSIDE — A small Vietnamese boy looks out from behind the barbed wire fence which surrounds the outpost northwest of Saigon in which he and his family live. The family customarily lives with the soldier father in the outposts in Vietnam, often growing Up, knowing little more than the mud walls and barbed wire of the outposts, and suffering through the same attacks as the father. A major innovation on the Cadillacs was an atomatic unlocking system for front seat backs in two-door models, permitting easy fold-down for entry into the rear seats. Federal safety regulations last year required that fold-down seat backs provide locking mechanisms to make the backs rigid in the event of a Sunshine Expected to Pierce Clouds Cadillac solved it with a mechanism - that automatically unlocks the front seat backs when either door is open/ Once the doors "are closed, the backs automatically lock. CLEARING Mediterranean Crash Kills 95 on Jetliner Rusk commented on leaving a closed session of the House Foreign Affairs Committee, At about foe same time that foe State Department was releasing a carefully worded statement on foe U.S. From Our News Wires NICE, France — An Air France Caravelle jet, one engine in flames, crashed today ihto the Mediterranean on a flight from Corsica to Nice, killing all 95 persons aboard. Searchers found pieces of foe twin engine plane 12 miles out to sea, near Cap d’Antibes and an Air France spokesman said there were no survivors. The search was hampered by rainy weather. It was concentrated in an area, aboard but the plane was reported laden with tourists. Authorities said 13 of the 89 passengers, most believed to be French, were children. There were six crew members. Among those aboard was Gen. Rene Cogny, who commanded French troops in North Vietnam at foe time Dien Bien Phu fell, foe airline said. Both foe Rusk comments and foe statement came after a week of rumors here and in Asia foa^ North Korea might release,the captured U.S intelligence ship and its 82 crewmen in connection with North Korea’s celebration of its 20th anniversary as a Communist state. French ships were dispatched from Toulon, and other craft left Cagnes Sur Mer and Antibes to aid in the hunt. Planes came from foe Saint Raphael base. a^^ecl «Pp>tt< Ah Air France spokesman said that :kage .and one body had been crash and brought to nearly 400 foe number of persons who have died in the crashes. Corsica, birthplace of Napoleon, is a major tourist attraction. Ajaccio, second largest city on the island and the Caravelle’s point of departure, is preparing for foe celebration next year of the 200fo anniversary of Napoleon’s birth. >tted. The plane, the latest model Caravelle, was only recently put into service. The pilot radioed shortly before the crash that one of foe engines was on fire. Then there was silence. 13 CHILDREN ABOARD It is not known if any Americans were SEVENTH CARAVELLE CRASH It was foe Seventh fatal Caravelle The distance from Corsica to Nice is about 140 miles, a flight of about 30 minutes. The plane was believed to be about 25 milfes from Nice when foe pilot reported the fire. The Caravelle left the Corsica airport at 10:05 a.m. (5:05 a.m. EDT) and was due to land in Nice 30 minutes later.-Nice was foe final destination of foe flight. , 3 RED DEMANDS North Korea has demanded three actions from the United States in return for the ship and its crew, seized Jan. 23. These have been an admission the vessel violated North Korea’s 12-mile territorial limit, an apology and a promise there would be no violations in foe future. - HHH: Could GOP Hopeful Stand Strain? Nixon: Dems Muffed in Viet Rusk told foe House committee that there is no independent evidence whatsoever that the Pueblo violated its sailing orders, which directed it to remain outside North Korea’s territorial claims. North Korea has claimed foe Pueblo was within seven miles of its coastline when seized by a gunboat. From Our News Wires Richard M. Nixon says foe Democrats Neville Chamberlain — peace at any price.” NO RELEASE HINT Secretary of Defense Clark M. Clifford, “had their chance to end the war, and they muffed it1’ and his running mate, Spiro T. Agnew, says Democrat Hubert H. Humphrey is turning “squishy soft” on foe Vietnam issue. Humphrey, in the harshest assault on his Republican presidential opponent yet, questioned yesterday how Nixon would react under the strain of foe presidency. also testifying behind closed doors ort Capitol Hill, told newsmen he had nothing to indicate that the Pueblo release is imminent. Negotiations between foe United States and North Korea have been going on sporadically at Panmunjom. Humphrey’s first swing Into Michigan since gaining foe Democratic nomination will be a 3%-hour affair this evening sandwiched in a day that begins in San Francisco and ends in Washington, D.C. ' The Vice President and his wife, Muriel, are due at Flint’s Bishop Airport at 6:45 p.m. after which he will head for a rally at Dort Mall Shopping Center. Follette won the Democratic nomination to oppose incumbent Republican Gov. Warren P. Knowles. LBJ WARNS MOSCOW A State Department spokesman said, “We have an obligation to keep foe negotiations private” if they are to prove successfol. “Will foe new coating wear off and foe old substance come through?” Humphrey said in Los Angeles. “Or will foe thin veneer of the roost recent political cosmetic treatment remain?” Humphrey did not name Nixon but made it clear he was referring to his opponept. NIXON IN NEW YORK HHH DUE AT SAGINAW A motorcade- will take him to the Saginaw County Fair by 8:30 pro. After his speech at foe fair, Humphrey will tour the livestock barns and return to Flint. By IQ: 15 pro., he should be airborne on his way to foe nation’s capital. President Johnson, speaking to a session of foe B’nai B’rith national convention last night in Washington, urged Moscow for foe second time in two weeks not to, “unleash foe dogs of war.” He said the only way to peace in Europe is through no-holds-barred negotiations. Johnson urged the Soviet Union to accept earlier proposals for high-level talks on arms and troop reductions in Europe. He said the United States never will tolerate use or threat of force in areas of “common responsibility like Berlin." Nixon made his comment on foe Democrats' Vietnam record wheh he noticed antiwar placards in White Plains, N.Y. Republican vice presidential nominee Agnew said Humphrey seems to be “trying to cast himself in foe role of Sunshine is expected to filter through foe clouds late today with skies clearing tonight. The weatherman forecasts fair and cooler tonight, foe low dipping to 46 and Mostly sunny and warmer is fop prediction for tomorrow, and sunny and warmer is foe outlook for Friday. This morning’s northwesterly winds at 10 to 15 miles per hour will be eight to 10 miles, tonight. A damp 56 was the low temperature in downtown Pontiac prior to 8 a.m. The mercury reading was 68 at 12:30 p.m- Humphrey's running mate, Sen. Edmund S. Muskie, in St. Louis, said he would favor a North Vietnam bombing halt if there were “some indication” by North Vietnam negotiators in Paris that this would lead to substantive peace talks, and if U.S. troops would not be endangered. . Meanwhile, who third-party candidate George C. Wallace will name as his running mate remained a question. Earlier in foe day Johnson told foe American Legion National Convention in New Orleatns there would be no surrender in Vietnam “on foe installment plan, as some have suggested.” ( Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller yesterday named Republican * Rep. Charles E. Goodell to fill the U.S. Senate seat vacated by Sen. Robert F. Kennedy’s assassination. HUBERT HUMPHREY ‘NO’ ON CHANDLER A source close to Wallace said the, former Alabama governor has decided against naming onetime baseball commissioner and former Kentucky Gov. A. B. “Happy” Chandler. Amid candidates’ crossfire; voters in nine states named congressional and state ; candidates with Tuesday primaries: • Barry Goldwater’s opponent in his bid to return to foe Senate from Arizona is Roy Elson, long-time aide of Sen. Carl Hayden who is retiring after 56 years in Congress. •Veteran GOP Sen. George D. Aiken, a shoo-in for Republican renomination from Vermont, won not only foe GOP nomination but foe Democratic nomination with write-in votes. •Wisconsin Atty. Gen. Bronson C. La RICHARD NKON Report Shows Violent Crimes High in 2 Areas By JIM LONG mitied in foe two districts to the city’s south end, foe prosecutor said. was at the expense of patrol duty in other parts of foe city,” Describing them a s “shocking,” Bronson cite|d statistics compiled during his probe which showed that in the two districts alone four of seven murders in the city were committal; 12 of 18 forcible rapes; 71 of 129 robberies; 58 of 75 aggravated assaults with a gun ; 53 of 80 assaults wifo a knife; and 51 of 79 assaults using other weapons. BURGLARIES OUT OF PROPORTION streets made safe again, become part of foe war on crime.” imes committed in period of Jan. .1 49 of them.were com- Bronson said that Ms extensive study of official, reports of foe police department show that the heaviest concentration of police patrol duty has been ,|k this ’area “and that in Many cases, it^cltiz e n, every “I have touched only on foe violent, hostile and brutal crfoies against other people,” said Bronson. I have hot mentioned burglaries, where the number also Is way out of proportion by comparison, to other areas of foe city.” To combat the crime problem, Bronson said that it is important that “every pers erson who wants “Obviously, we cannot station a policeman on every corner, in every store, in every alley or in every home,” be added. Bronson said that it is no secret foat police and his office have been hampered by foe refusal of some, citizens to even report, or to volunteer as witnesses, because: they don’t want to get Involved. “It & to foe thousands of good. honest, God-fearing law-abiding citizens living in these districts, and in other areas of foe city, foat we turn with a plea, just short of a demand, foat they join our fight against Crime,” he added. * ★: '* The police will do their part—“and X assure you they are brave enough to increase their intensity againet criminals -ahg nty offit down,” Hr nd my office will continue to hear m,” said Bronson. & * ■ w;- -•....y. —I*- i /qjijay The Weather U. S. WMtrrar •urnii. Fortcatt Fair, Coder Tonight Sonny, Warner Tomorrow (Dalaili Paaa J) THE PONTIAC PRESS PONTIAC, MICHIGAN, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1968 VOL. 126 ■fS NO. 187' ★ ★ ★ ★ it UNITEDSPR6SSTfNTERNATlONAL • ---72 PAGES THE PONTIAC^ PRESS, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, Road Unit Seeks County Funds Birmingham The Oakland County Road Commission / again sought financial aid from the DrAIArfc AtrtirJ board of supervisors yesterday, hut rrO|CV.l5 nilCU nothing more than a vague promise was *%%%****;,M means. by Area Board committee began a three-day study of 1 \ the $25,884,884 Imitative budget for 1969 BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP — The Monday and WiB conclude today. Township Board held two public hear- , / * * * ings this week and gave preliminary ap- The budget is about $4.5 million above prdval to a wafer main extension and the 1968 figure. In expeqted expenditures final approval for a sanitary sewer for 1969 under road commission, the project. recommended allocation is zero. The board set Oct. 14 at 8:30 p.m. * * * as the date for the final hearing on The road commission again asked for the water main extension fer Hickory a direct grant of $248,000 — the amount Knolls subdivision, announced to be left over from the 1967 The subdivision, near Telegraph and budget which is to be carried on the I960 Square Lake roads, is slated for the im- figures. The commissioners also asked iprovement at an estimated cost of that the ways and means committee $22,000. recommend a share of other county More than 54 per cent of the property revalues be given for roads. The same owners petitioned for the improvement request was made in April. and they will be assessed on a site basis npinuTiHr rnsT at $1,048 each. The new main will pro- OPERATING COST vide Detroit water for the residents The road commission operates on there. Presently their water comes from about $9.5 million yearly from its share private wells, of state gas and weight taxes. ” t tram nmi Tutsday's Ttmptralurn Alpena 63 St Duluth 70 45 Etcanaba 5S « Fort Worth (5 53 Flint 47 54 Jackionvllla 17 74 G. Rapid* 41 54 Ktnatt City 77 47 Houghton 54 44 too Angola* to 44 Jackson 41 J4 Miami Such 17 7t Lansing 44 S3 Mllwaukeo 44 S3 Marquette 54 47 NOW Orleans 45 71 Muskegon 43 55 New York , 77 44 Oscocta 44 S3 Omaha • "V7S 47 Follatoh .. 60 54 Phoenix 104 77 Traverse C. 40 55 Ptttafiurgh 71 53 Alboqutrqus 41 54 St. Louis 74 50 Atlanta 03 St Tampa - 08 74 Boston 70 44 S. Lake City 7t 43 Chicago 41 S3 S. Francisco 45 57 Cincinnati 44 58 s. ste. Marie 41 44 Denver 07 St Tucafc. 101 00 Data Freni U.S. WEATHER Highway Toll in ’68 ; NATIONAL WEATHER—Showers and thundershowers are forecast tonight for the Northeast, Florida, the Great Plains, end the Pacific Northwest. The East Coast will be cocder, and it wiU ttewarmer in the eastern Plains and the Upter Mississippi WP"' w** ' ' *’ ■, ■ 4 FORECAST UJ WtlMi iM__ arriman Cites N. Viet Defeats PARIS (AP) — Ambassador W. Averell Harriman said today allied forces since Aug. 18 have inflicted “(rushing defeats” on the North Vietnamese and Vietcong despite Hanoi’s boasts of “great military victories.” Hie American diplomat told Ambassador Xuan Thuy at the Paris peace talks that “further defeat, destruction and death” await the Communist command if it persists in pursuing a goal of total military victory. GM Calls Back 300,000 Units DETROIT (AP) — A ‘‘very remote" possibility of vehicles speeding out of control led General Motors Corp. to ask yesterday that more than 300,000 1968 model cars and pickup trucks be returned to dealers for inspection and adjustment. The company said faulty throttle parts on six- or four-cylinder engines would be replaced at no cost to owner's. Vehicles involved include 267,365 Chevrolets, Camaros, Chevy 11 s, Chevelles and El Caminos; 17,643 Buick Specials and Skylarks, 12,890 Pontiac Tempests and Firebirds with manual transmissions and 12,393 Oldsmobile F-85s. The part, called a throttle rod retaining clip, would cause “a slight interference condition... which could prevent the lever from returning to idle position and could make the vehicle difficult to stop,” the company said. . A .A A A company spokesman said only 10 vehicles had been found with defective throttles but that parts would be mailed to dealers this week along with warning letters to owners. “Hie possibility of such ,a throttle return condition is very remote,” the spokesman said. “Hanoi’s spokesmen would have the world believe that jjgjjgg| ning victories,” i propaganda has North Vietnamese 1 that the leadership ... .. , to bleed its youth endlessly in an to discredit the government in Saigon and to weaken the resistance of the South Vietnamese jpeople to aggression.” It was one of Hardman's strongest denunciations of the North Vietnamese since the talks began here four months ago. REMAIN DEADLOCKED Thuy replied by calling again on the United States to halt bombing and all other acts of war. “Otherwise, these conversations in Paris wiU always remain at a dead end and the American side will have to assume the' entire responsibility for it,” ThUy said, Hie North Vietnamese chief delegate again rejected. U.S, demands for reciprocity in return for a bombing halt. “Only yesterday President Johnson again declared'that there will be np total cessation of bombing against the North without reciprocity,” Thuy continued. “We repeat: There can be no. reciprocity.” CHANGE IN PRESIDENTS Thuy spurned suggestions that Hanoj is waiting for a change in U.S. presidents in the hope of achieving concessions! Before opening the talks with Thuy, Harriman said enelny artillery and rocket attacks on Saigon are “an act- ef escalation” and their Cessation could not be considered, an act of restraint. A A , A ■ * Therefore, said the Amer ican representative at the Paris peace talks, any cessation of attacks on South Vietnam’s capital cannot qualify as *,••• ’a A' Also, new seats available in four versions, bench, center notched, bucket pr 00-40 split have been designed. This year electric door locks replace the . vacuum type and are moved forward for better accessibility. enough votes for approval, Sparkman said. Only six of Jhe 19 members were on hand for Tuesday’s session. If reported to foe floor, a two-thirds vote is needed to ratify the agreement which the United States already hag signed. Docketing of the ; treaty followed a move by Sen. Albert Gore, D-Tenn., a committee member, to break the impasse that has Existed since Congress returned last week in a darkened mood over Soviet adventures in East Europe. Hie treaty, already signed by 80 other nations including the Soviet Union, pledges nations possessing nuclear weapons not to transfer them to nations who do not. The have-nots pledge not io seek such arms. Troy Girl, 2, Dies in River Mishap A 2-y ear-old Troy girl drowned yesterday in a branch of the Rouge River while playing, with a neighbor boy hear ter home. . , Jiff ' Dead is Kathryn M. Carey, daughter of Mr. and’ Mrs! James Cirey, 2691 Binbrooke. Police said she fell into the river, which rims north of Binbrooke. Her playmate ran to tell her /baby sitter. When they 7 returned to the lite they found the girl floating face down hi the '■ water.... # • ■ Site was pulled from the water at NEW FRONT-END DESIGN — Characteristic of the Fleetwood models. The Fleetwood Brougham, pictured here, about 11:38 a.m. and was taken to 1909 CadiUac passenger cars is a newly styled front end. A illustrates the eliminating of aide window vents, increasing William Beaumont Hospital hi Royal Oak, where she was pronounced dead oh ajrivaL • 4 WARRANTY Great special savings on this beautiful RCA console. Vivid color pictures and groat RC^A features. 227 sq. in. rectangular tube and "New Vista" 25,000 volt chassis. UHF/VHF. Beautiful Contemporary cabinet of genuine wood veneers and solids. 2-year color tube warranty. Free delivery, set-up end 90-day Service. LONG 2-YEAR COLOR fe^TUBE WARRANTY WE’VE GOT ’EM FOR IMMEDIATE DELIVERY HIGHLAND PRICE SMASH! ADMIRAL Color TV Combination FREE DELIVERY. SET-UP and 90-DAY SERVICE . mu i i i i himliiiii 'fi'ii NO MONEY DOWN • 3 YEARS TO PAY PONTIAC MALI SHOPPING CENTER ihland. Eliminate guessworl th your Color TV in your h THE PONTIAC PRESS. WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 11, 1908 Czech Leaders Assure People, Urge Return i ill m| FALSE TEETH Up to 38% Easier PRAGUE (AP) Czechoslovakia's' government leaders assured their people Tuesday night that due process of law will he observed despite the Soviet occupation and appealed for the return of refugees from abroad. There.have been rumors of arrests -since the Soviet bloc troops invaded Aug. 20, but the leaders’ proclamation said: “We reiterate that we shall never allow deformations of violations of our legal code sueh as we were witness to.’ ♦ dr This apparently referred to the nation’s 20 years of Stalinist-type rule, which ended - in January when Alexander Dubcek became the Communist party chief. Dubcek and other top leaders proclaimed Tuesday night: “Personal immunity is guaranteed.... No one can be taken into custody except in deliveries of Soviet natural and signed an economic protocol. Communist sources in Moscow said those were the chief Subjects of the talks. It was not clear whether Ceroik discussed with the Kremlin leaders, the question of aid to overcome eco- I nomic setbacks from the inva-. | sion. He said the “most terrible damage” tor socialism to; Czechoslovakia resulted from Stalinist terror before Dubcek*s rise to power. But he said Dubcek’s re- habilitation drive also stirred ef-|vlewj which he said were giveni both publications ai counterre-ifire.” But he said the Soviet Un-lS n^tf^^!5llS.r0^fv^rpaCe the writers’ weekJy Ut-1 volutionary. | ion had pledged that occupation ■ .. . *>aiT ’ erarni Wsty and the “growingly Mlynar said “some unpopular troops would not interfere in rightwing” magazine StudentJlaws” would be adopted because Czechoslovakia’s domestic af-‘extremlst”| ,nte Soviet press has, denounced | “this is no time to play wife I fairs. * The Czechoslovak leaders’ proclamation promised to “continue on the road on which we embarked in January.” “We . shall continue to strengthen Socialist ord^ and to expand its democratic humanist character,” they said. LIBERALIZATION The January road is tee liber-a i i z a t i o n program which prompted tee invasion by raising feaFs among hard-line leaders of other Soviet bloc nations that tee liberal ferment might spread to their countries. In earlier negotiations in Mos- the Czechoslovak Communist party’s central committee, wrote in the party newspaper Rude Pravo Tuesday that protection of civil rights is a prerequisite tothis normalization. TRY THE BEST . . , , am camei neguiia lions in mos- .! foreseen by law and f°Hcow the Czechoslovak leaders lowing the decision of the court Wed to,roll back some liberaI or tee prosecutor. j policies—such as press freedom, TO INTELLECTUALS —and tee Russians promised Jo The proclamation also ap-w*^<*raw occupation troops pealed to Czechosloval*:-in-1 ^hen the situation “normal-cludinjg many intellectuals—who “es-" - have sought political asylum in * * Austria, Switzerland and other . Zdenek Mlynar, a secretary of West European countries in the last three weeks. “Staying abroad," it said, “multiplies distrust and foreign propaganda and makes impossible firsthand information on the state of affairs at home. It increases heIp 1 essness and confusion..:. .'■■A,*- ★ “Your place is here. The republic needs your abilities, your knowledge and experience, your! creative work. Your fellow citizens are waiting for you and are resolutely and selflessly continuing to build up their homeland' for themselves and their chil-! dren.” The Czechoslovak government has been issuing exit permits, and anyone with both a permit and a visa to a Western country; I is still permitted to leave, but there are signs this will change soon. Soviet troops1 near the! Austrian border were said to be' turning back foreigners who had] been cleared by Czechoslovak' border guards. Diplomatic' sources said they expected the' Czechoslovak government to close tee border Sunday. PROCLAMATION The proclamation on civil libJ erties was issued by Dubcek, . President Ludvik Svoboda, Parliament President Josef Smrkovsky, Slovak Communist party chief Gustav Husak and* Premier Oldrich; Cerntk after' Cemik returned from more! talks in Moscow. Cemik received a promise of News Yesterday at State Capital ■y flit Associated Prats THE GOVERNOR Wat In Lansing. Announced plan* for a swing across the nation campaigning for Richard Nir— 1 THE ATTORNEY GENERAL . Said ho will investigate requests loriMllfllli FOOdS I TIC. rata hlkts mad* by four mtior Michigan “ 1 12312 W. Olympic Boulevard Los Angeles, California, 90064 Property theft in New York) ® mL*mrooot,HC- '••• City was up some 26 per cent in 1967 over 1966. j DOWNTOWN PONTIAC Offers FREE PARKING ON THE PONTIAC MUNICIPAL LOT (CORNER SAGINAW and HURON) Furnished by the Following Merchantst 5% me# SALE—Quilted Hudsonian mattress or box spring, full or twin size. Look for these construction features—patented seat-edge construction; pre-built borders with special locked edges; fine cotton felt upholstery; hundreds of steel coils; thick layers of cotton felt, plus Insulo cushioning, plus inner roll borders; weight-balanced construction. No down payment, and only $10 monthly. Hudson's Sleep {Shop. *259 SALE—Modem bedroom in warm walnut finish. Trim flowing lines, light off-the-floor look. A beautifully designed group, and an exceptional value at this low sale pice. Group includes: 62" triple dresses with, 9 Spacious drawers,'mirror, 38" chest with 4 drawers, full size panel bed. Twin or king size beds also available, sale priced. Matching night stand, $49. No down payment. Hudson’s Modem Bedrooms- 107.95. SALE—Mediterranean wall units for wall-to-wall storage. Rugged design finished in rich oak tones. Swing-out doors have magnetic catches. Top and bottom shelves are adjustable to fit your needs. Use them in combinations and convert unused wall space into functional storage space. Each unit measures 30x14x72" high.—Only. 107.95 each in our Great Home Sale; Hudson’s Occasional Tables.. Lees luxurious wool pile carpeting at 3 remarkably low sale prices 9^\ jn SALE A. Heavy wool plush pile carpet-ing, deep and luxurious. 12 most wanted ■ colors. Ideal for your traditional rooms, •q yd. •' V SALE B. Wool twist pile carpeting, Vlw heavy weight, long-wearing* For any type • decor. Choice of 15 solid and tweed colors, •q.yd. ■I ^ SALE c- Wool plush pile carpeting, I heavy textured plush with character. 11 ■L Lj ■ solids 2 multi-tones. All 3 are moth-proofed. Hudson's. In-Home Service. If you can’t come in, we’ll send samples to you. Pontiac, 682-3232, ext. 472; Downtown Detroit, 223-5100, ext. 3743; Northland, 356-1313, ext. 440; Eastland, 371-3232, ext. 402; Westland, 4254242, ext. 504; Oakland, 585-3232, ext. 461. B. Versatile wool twist pile, 11.99 sq. yd. C. Textured wool plush pile, 12.99 sq. yd. V JLN O Use your Hudson's Charge Account with Option Terms or our Extended Payment Man for puchases of $25 or non. No down payment it required on furniture, floor coverings, mattresses or major appliances. WESTLAND CENTER Wsrren end Wayne Reeds EASTLAND CENTS! 8 Mile and KeHy Roads NORTHLAND CENTER 8 Mile and Northwestern DOWNTOWN DETROIT Woodward Ava. end Grand River