Weather THE Home Edition NTIAC PRESS pontiac, Michigan, Friday, august 22, i9«? 127 —- NO. 169 ★ ★ ★ 1e associatsc press w w united press international 56 PAGES 10c in Battle With Thieu From Our News Wires SAIGON — Prime Minister Tran Van Huong resigned today in the climax to a five-week struggle with President Nguyen Van Thieu who sought a premier who could get alqng with the South Vietnamese legislature. Informed government sources, however, said Huong in fact had been fired from his post by Thieu. They recalled Huong’s repeated statements that “I will not resign unless the president asks me to.” ★ ★ ★ A statement issued by Thieu’s office said the ailing 66-year-old Huong “has agreed to let the president make the decision of forming a new cabinet.” A spokesman for Huong said the premier had agreed to the statement and that it would be correct to say he was stepping aside. However, he did not formally resign. The statement issued to newsmen fell short of a formal resignation by the ailing 66-year-old Huong, but a palace official said:’ “It amounts to a form of resignation.” Huong, a former schoolteacher who escaped a Vietcong assassination attempt last March, left after an impasse pver efforts to reshuffle Thieu’s cabinet. The office of President Nguyen Van Related Story, Page A-8 Thieu made the announcement of Huong’s resignation, which political observers said .“ould bring a major crisis in the South Vietnamese government. Huong’s most likely successor is a deputy prime minister, Gen. Tran Thien Khlem. PRESSURE BY U.S. The U.S. Embassy in Saigon had put pressure on Thieu to keep Huong in office, political sources said, on the theory that if Khiem became prime minister, South Vietnam would return to a near military government. It was the second time Huong, had resigned. He also served three months as prime minister in 1964. Huong, a former mayor of Saigon, had been the target of Thieu’s own political alliance, the National Social Democratic Front. The alliance had asked Thieu on Aug. 9 to remove Huong. The appeal from the political group was issued during a period Thieu was reported working on changes in his cabinet. Political sources said at the time the alliance’s call for Hudng’s ouster would never have been made without approval of Thieu. Reports had circulated as early as last June 19 that Thieu was thinking of asking Huong to resign in an effort to 'broaden the political case of the South Vietnamese government. A A A Huong incurred dislike of students who thought him tough when he was prime minister ih 1964. In later times he was criticized because of tax reforms and higher import duties and accused of failure to stamp out corruption among national officials. FLOOD DEVASTATION—The car in the foreground was carried by floodwaters from the driveway of the owner’s home near Roseland, Va., and buried in nearly four feet of mud. The death toll from Hurricane Camille si Sunday now stands at well over 300. : it hit the Gulf Coast River Subsiding in Richmond Waterford Teacher,B C lash By DICK ROBINSON While teachers ore being cut and enrollment is increasing, school administrative positions are increasing, a teacher claimed at the Waterford School Board meeting last nigl|t. BILLIE 8. FARNUM Political Figure Gets School Post A former congressman and longtime political figure who gained a reputation as “the watchdog of the taxpayers’ dollars” Is now on the Waterford Township Board of Education. Billie S. Famum, S3, was named by the board at its regular meeting last night to a vacant school boasd seat until next June. Then, Famum would have to run for election if he wants to serve the remaining unexpired one-year term of Donald Porter. Porter, who resigned for personal reasons, served more than half of his four-year term before resigning Aug. 1. A A , A Famum, a Democrat who lives at'713S Hatchery, last ran for office in 1966 when he was defeated by Republican Jack McDonald in the race for U.S. representative from the 19th Congressional District. RARE APPOINTMENT A« former stale auditor general, Famum breezed into Washington, D.C., • In 1964 as a freshman congressman noted as a liberal Democrat with a reputation for protecting the taxpayers’ dollar. During his first term, he was named to the House Appropriation Committee, a poet rarely given to freshman representatives. ★ ; A Since bis defeat in 1966, Farnum has run a financial consultant business from his home, serving mostly local governments. . A former, deputy chairman id the Democratic National Committee and deputy secretary rf -state, he has already been instrumental in securing federal funds for the Waterford school district’s individualized computer Instruction project. Board members and the district’s acting superintendent denied the claim during a heated discussion with James Matteson, a teacher and acting president of the Waterford Education Association. * * * In refuting Maiteson’s claims of too many administrators, acting Supt. John Pagen said he would ’’get a job somewhere else” if it was found the district had too many administrators for a district of its size. Matteson criticized the board for allegedly creating three central administration positions to replace an administrator who resigned. REFERS TO CASE He was referring to M. Barrett Vorce, associate superintendent of personnel and instruction, who resigned. Richard Higginbotham, principal of Crary Junior High School, was then moved up to director of personnel in charge of all employe relations. . Roy Alexander, assistant superintendent for secondary schools, was made ■ assistant superintendent for instruction and Don Smith, principal at Manley Elementary School, was temporarily moved to central administration to take care of duties of the vacant administrative assistant position.. Pagen ianduot her board members explained tnStnrio administrators have been added but that the administration has undergone an organizational change to make it more efficient. ‘ONLY ADDITION’ The director of personnel is the only new position added this year because the duties of the job were handled by three different administrators last year, said Pagen. One new central administration post was added but two elementary school principalships were cut plus.a position in the IND1COM project, Pagen said. ★ A a ■ Cherokee Hills and Covert Elementary Schools and Adams and Drayton Plains schools will share a principal this year. Matteson was scolded by a trustee and Pagen for making his remarks. Trustee Louis Schimmel Jr. criticized Matteson for making charges without all the facts “in a room with voters." “It’s beyond me how people can come in here and criticize the board and administration when We’ve had n 0 teachers’ strikes or student disturbances in the past few years,” Pagen commented. WWW Meanwhile, teachers and school officials report considerable progress in . teacher negotations on noneconomic issues after a 12-hour mediation session which ended early this morning. But the big issues — salary and fringe benefits, class size, agency shop and multiyear contract — still remain unsettled, Pagen said Mediation is set to contlnue.Monday. RICHMOND, Va. (AP) - The James River, swollen with muddy floodwaters pouring into its basin from the state's mountainous western region, continued its destructive pdvance to the Atlantic today. The river crested at a record level in this capital city at 7 a m., while behind was left a swath of landslides, crushed homes and 46 known dead, and at least 100 missing and feared dead. A A A While floodwaters took their toll in drownings, some rescue workers in mountainous Nelson and Amherst counties — hardest hit of the flood region — speculated that more victims will be found buried under landslides. < The rain that touched off the flooding and landslides was a vestige of Hurricane Camille, which tossed 8 to 12 inches of rain on the area as she passed through Tuesday and Wednesday on her way to her death in the Atlantic. r »=> ‘EARTH PEELED OFF’ “That ground had all the water it could stand before the rain ever started,” a rescue team leader said. “That latest rain just peeled every bit of earth off those mountains, trees and all. It took them right down to the rock.” New fears of disaster came last night. State police reported three 1,000-gallon propane gas tanks and 10 smaller ones, all described as “highly explosive and extremely hazardous,” were missing and “presumed gone down the James River’’ from a plant south of Buena Vista. Richmond used its advance warning of the flood to bolster its defenses against a flood crest which climbed to 28.6 feet, some 19*4 feet above normal flood level but a few feet lower than had been anticipated. a a a The flooding has left hundreds, perhaps thousands, homeless and staying in churches and other emergency shelters. State police said at least 100 persons weta missing, and one rescue worker said, “There are people under those slides we’ll never find.” Meanwhile, the storm-shattered 20-mile stretch of coast west of Gulfport, Miss., was clear of most refugees today while soldiers arid Seabees bulldozed wreckage in the final stages of a search for more victims of Camille. Gov. John Bell Williams said a minimum of 230 were known dead along the Mississippi coast. However, a Mississippi Highway Patrol inspector said-today that some of the bodies recovered yesterday in the Pass Christian area had been washed out of a .cemetery by the hurricane winds and high tide. ■ A * * Dr. Frank Wiygul, state health director, said the potentially hazardous health situation along the coast was under control with no signs of epidemic. ★ * A A survey of damage was far from complete but the Red Cross said its preliminary count showed 4,717 hoEes destroyed in the Gulf Coast area. The stench of death remained heavy in many areas. The remains of animals and fish were being covered up with lime. Clothes Make the Man...Unsafe SAN ANTONIO, Tex. jjjPIl—A patrolman was cruising about suburbia just after sunrise yesterday when he saw a gentleman removing his clothes and stuffing them into the trunk of his car. The curious officer pulled over to the curb" to ask the man what was coming off. AAA "Look officer, I’ve been out all night and the front door is locked. My wife will really raise a fuss if she finds out I’m just getting home,” the husband said. The officer sat in his car and watched in disbelief and the husband strolled casually up the walkway, stopped halfway to pick up the morning paper,-finished the journey to the front doOr and banged on it. A A A "Honey, I’m sorry to wake you up," the husband said when his sleepy wife answered the door. “But I tfent out to get the paper and 1 locked myself out.” That’s the story the officer told headquarters, Navy Will Cut 72,000 Men WASHINGTON (UPI) - The Navy will reduce its strength by \72,000 men. and deactivate two antisubmarine aircraft carriers in the Pentagon's new $3-billion economy program, Secretary John H. Chafee announced today. Chafee, at a news conference, listed 76 of more than 100. ships to be either moth balled or scrapped. They include the battleship New Jersey, the carriers Bennington and Kearsarge and the Cruiser Canberra. , Pleasant Weekend Forecast for Area The weatherman is giving Pontikc-area residents just what they wanted/-a pleasant weekend. Here is the IkS. Weather Bureau’s official day-by-day forecast: TQDAY — Sunny and pleasant with high 76 to 82. Clear and a li‘ tonight, the low 50 to 56. •UNNY AND WARM Winds light and variable five to 12 miles per hour. TOMORROW — Sunny and pleasant, the high 80 to 86. SUNDAY — Little warmer And continued fair. Probabilities of .precipitation in per cent are near 'zero' today, tonight and The Navy secretary said the economy moves, taken under pressure from Congress, will “reduce the Navy's readiness to respond to national emergencies.” He refused to say whether the reduction was “to a dangerous extent." The cut in strength will reduce the Navy from 772,000 to 700,000 men by next Earlier Story, Page A-9 July 1. The number of ships is belnfe reduced from 864 to about 750, The reduction in antisubmarine carriers is front six to four. WA* The move did hot affect the l^targ^--. attack aircraft carriers in operation. Chafee said the Navy expects to save about $1 billion of the $3 billion in savings announced yesterday by Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird. Following Laird’s report, Pentagon sources indicated that a second' big reduction — about 100,000 men from the three services — might be neces-' sary to effect the savings. Laird, acting reluctantly, dealt with only the first half of the cutbacks at his news conference, ordering the military cut by 100,000 men, civilian employes by 50,000 and decommissioning of the ships. Man Is Charged in City Shotting A .companion of the escaped prisoner who allegedly shot a Pontiac, detective Wednesday was in jail today in lieu of a total $53,000 bond on charges connected with the shooting. Elton Rainey, 22, of 260'W. Wilson will face examination Aug. 28 on two charges of attempted murder and one charge of stealing a police car. AAA He Is charged with attempting to murder Lt. John DePauw and Sgt. John Williams when the two plainclothes detectives tried to arrest George McCormick, 26, on an armed robbery charge. The two allegedly fled in a stolen police car. AAA McCormick, a Louisiana transient whose address is unknown, is still sought on two charges of attempted murder, one auto theft charge, and two charges of armed robbery, police say. • SECOND HELD ’ A youth arrested at the scene of the shooting; Clyde* Alexander, 19, of 219 Raeburn, is being held in lieu of $25,000 , bond on an armed robbpry charge. A A A Pontiac detectives sought the robbery warrant as a result of questioning Alexander, Rainey and another youth arrested after the DePauw shoqting. The third suspect, Anthbny C. Williams, 18, of 184 Raeburn, was released. AAA Rainey Is expected to be arraigned to-. day. in connection with the same robbery charged to Alexander, a recent holdup at Western Union offices at 11 S. Perry. . it it ir DePauw will be released from Pontiac General Hospital tomorrow, hospital authorities said. The 53-year-old detective suffered head and arm wounds. A mild 56 was the low thermometer reading in downtown Pontiac before 8 a m. The temperature had warmed up to 88 by 2 p.m. ■ AP Wlr»ph«t* LOCO-MOTIVES OFF TRACK — Three unmanned diesel locomotives ran out of a Penn Central Railroad engine house went around a yard, off the track,, through a fence and onto the Southeast Expressway, Boston’s busiest superhighway yesterday. No one was injured, but traffic was tied up for hours. Cause of the. engines’ strange behavior is being investigated. Storm Debbie Veers MIAMI (UPI) Hurricane Debbie, the “guinea pig” storm, moved perilously close to the resort island of Bermuda, then swerved toward the open seas today, where its 110-mile-an-hour winds posed a threat only to ships. In Today’s Press Big Top Spell Circus is gone, but its magic lingers — PAGE D-l. School Affairs Pontiac principal given sec-, ond school to run—PAGE C-12. Chechoslovakia Tanks,' troops pulled out of restive Prague — PAGE A-8. Area News ............ A4 Astrology ............. C-10 Bridge ....C-10 Crossword Puzzle ....D-ll Comics ............... C-10 Editorials ............. A-6 Farm and Garden . C-7—C-9 Markets ................C-tl Obituaries .............A-11 Picture Page ... ...... D-l Sports ...... C-l—C-6 Theaters B-8, B-9 TV, Radio Programs^ .. .D-ll Vietnam War, News .. A* A.-l .....*, B-lt Women's Pages .... B-l—B-4 Viet Premier Quits' A—a |f|l: rK, ' * - SS tf§ n g .. . . u..,f _________THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AII&UST 22, 1969 Nixon, Joint Pledge Closes Summit Conference as Red Foes By MERRIMAN SMITH SAN FRANCISCO (UPll - President Nixon and President Chung Hee Parked South Korea pledged jointly today that American and Korean forces stationed along the 17th parallel will remain “strong arid alert" to continuing Communist aggression. In addition to stating their determination to meet any armed attack against South Korea, they also recognized the necessity for "long-term efforts to lessen the causes of tension on the Korean Peninsula." * * * The joint statement was Issued as the two chief executives concluded their two-day visit at the St. Francis Hotel in San Francisco. The statement said: "President Park gave an account of continuing acts of aggression committed by the North Korean Communist regime against the Republic of Korea. “The two presidents agreed that Republic of Korea forces and American forces stationed in Korea must remain strong and alert and the two presidents reaffirmed the determination of their governments to meet armed attack against the Republic of Korea in accordance with the mutual defense treaty between South Korea and the United States. HOMELAND FORCE “President Nixon and President Park took note of the newly formed homeland reserve defense force as a contribution to the security and stability of South Korea. They agreed that support for the force should be continued. ★ * ★ "The two presidents recognized- the necessity for long-term effort to lessen the causes of tension on the Korean peninsula." ★ * Other items in the joint statement included: • An invitation from Park to Nixon to visit Korea. Nixon accepted, but the two chief executives said the Nixon visit would take place at a time of . mutual convenience. Diplomatic sources said this would probably be next year! ★ ★ ★ • They agreed that the allies in Vietnam should continue "to work toward securing an honorable and lasting peace" in Southeast Asia. In this connection, Park endorsed the peace proposals expounded by Nixon last May 14, and Nixon, in turn, paid tribute to the contribution in Vietnam by Korean forces. The statement said the twojeaders agreed to consult closely and with their other allies concerning the Vietnam situation. Birmingham Bank to International Credit Cards BIRMINGHAM — Introduction of the internationally accepted Master Charge Astro-Card credit system was announced this week for Birmingham-BIoomfield Bank. ' Some 40,000 area families will receive the cards by mid-October. , * * * According to John E. Thompson, Birmingham-BIoomfield area residents have been without the convenience of a nationally accepted bank credit card. “The greater metropolitan area was the only major U.S. city, and market area not being provided the type of credit card system which is rapidly carrying us into the checkless, • cashless society of the future,” Thompson said. CASH ADVANCES The Master Charge card allows its holder to take cash advances up to $300 per day. This can be raised by application on an individual basis. Small personal loans are available with the Master charge card. Personal checks are guaranteed up to $100. ANTIWAR PROTESTERS — A group of antiwar protesters arrive at San Francisco's St. Francis Hotel on a cable car to Join crowd demonstrating- outside the hotel, where Presidents Nixon arid Chung Hee Park of Korea were meeting AP V/irephoto and participating in a formal dinner last night. There were many demonstrators but few incidents to mar the evening for the visiting dignitaries. Under Study by Milliken Panel Arson Suspect's Bail at $5 School Tax Reform Plan Drafted A city youth is being held in lieu of $5,000 bail on an arson charge today after his arrest in connection with the Wednesday night fire-bombing of a city commissioner's home. Eddie Logan Jr.. 17, of 402 Linda Vista will face examination on the charge Aug. 28 before Pontiac District Court Judge James R. Stelt. He was arraigned yesterday. MB ★ A 16-year-old youth who was also questioned in connection with the bombing was turned over to juvenile authorities, according to city detectives. Minor damage was done to the home of District 5 Commissioner Robert F. Jackson, 1075 Featherstone, when three flaming bottles were thrown at it. it it if Hie. night before the fire bombs were thrown, Jackson had made a plea to all citizens of the city to cooperate in bringing an end to a rash of fire-bombings on the racially mixed lower East Side. LANSING (API- - An end to organizational exemptions from state taxes, a local option to substitute income taxes' for property taxes, and a basic $3,000 homestead property tax exempt lion arc provisions of a plan now under study by Gov. William G. Milliken's Commission to Study Reform of Michigan's Education System. Milliken and his six-member commission met yesterday with representatives of a Citizens Advisory Council to discuss alternatives to pay the more than $l-billion price of public elementary and secondary education in Michigan. * * * Members of the advisory council, largely educators, appeared generally to favor the plan, drafted by eight members of the State Association of Administration. Russell E. Wilson, education professor at the University of Michigan and Stanley Hecker of Michigan State University headed the drafting parte!. Milliken and tl\e commission did not comment on the plan or discuss ,it publicly. They have been meeting privately to draft the' reform recommendations Milliken is expected to make "to the Legislature after it reconvenes Oct. 6. Under the plan, public education would continue to be financed by both state and locally assessed and collected funds. Four basic innovations are provided: • A $3,000 homestead property tax exemption. • Local option to finance school costs from Income taxes rather than property tax revenue. • Elimination of t a x exemptions to organizations. • Local district funds equal to t h e value of state and county real and personal property within the district regardless of whether property is owned privately or by a governmental body. TEACHER-PUPIL RATIO Hecker, one of the authors of the plan, ' said it envisions an average teacher-pupil ratio of one to 25. A A Hie plan also Would change education administration at the county and in- termediate district level. Smaller, often rural, districts without full programs from kindergarten through high school would be eliminated or attached to larger districts. Such centralization, it is said, would increase a district’s taxing base and provide more funds to run it. ★ * * Funds for construction of new buildings or equipment purchase would be based on a state bonding system as would local debt retirement programs. The Weather WASHINGTON (AP) - The ranking, member of the House public health subcommittee today asked Army Secretary Stanley R. Resor to explain why the Army hasn't followed its own recommendations to prevent partial deafness to trainees. Rep. Paul G. Rogers, D-Fla., also asked Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird in another letter to explain why the separate services haven’t joined to prevent ear damage from the noise of weapons during training. “It's unexplainable for one service to be doing one thing, another to be doing nothing and none of them coordinated,” Rogers said. Jn an interview Rogers also said the Fall U.S. Weather Bureau Report /> PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Sunnv and pleasant today and Saturday. Clear and a little warmer tonight. High today 76 to 82. I-nw tonight 50 to 56. High Saturday 60 to M. Sunday outlook: Little warmer and continued fair. Winds light and variable 5 to ,12 miles per hour. Probabilities of precipitation: near zero today, tonight and Saturday. Parents of Mary Jo Win Delay on Autopsy Ruling ThwriMy In ennllnc (•> rtcsrdtd downtown) Direction: Variable Sun uti Friday at 7:24 p m One Year Ata in Fontiac boot and Lowest Temperature* TMt Date In 9? Yean , Weather: Sunny, parlact Thunday i Temperature! . I anting Marauette Mutkegon gelei 92 70 WPWPNNIIIIHnoh )7 79 II 43 Milwaukee 73 45 70 49 New Orleeni 91 74 71 51 Now York 79 $4 74 4) Omaha 79 40 70 39 Phoenix 110 |9 79 IV Plitihurgh 71 40 74 44 SI. Loull 01 54 94 44 Tampa 93 79 09 70 S. toaka city 97 42 45 45 S. Francisco 10 33 74 54 s. ste. Marla 75 41 Seattle 73 -55 71 54 ' 03 55 - 103 00 01 41 LAKE CONDITIONS: St. Clair—Variable winds, mostly northwest, 5 to 12 knots today becoming less than 10 knots tonight. Huron—Northwest to west winds, 8 to 16 knots today, becoming west to southwest, 6 to 12 knots tonight. Erie—North to northwest winds, 10 to 15 knots today, becoming light and variable tonight. WILKES-BARRE, Pa. <(AP) - Mary Jo Kopechne’s parents have won a delay in a court move by Dist. Atty. Edmund ,Dipis of New Bedford, Mass., to have her body exhumed for an autopsy. , Din is had hoped for a final ruling In time for the scheduled Sept. 3 opening of an inquest into the accident a month ago in which the pretty, blonde secretary, 28, drowned after a car driven by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., plunged off a bridge. Instead of hearing the petition Itself "next Monday as planned, Judge Bernard C. Brominski of Common > Pleas Court has decided to set aside that day for arguments for its dismissal. After a 40-mlnute conference yesterday with Dints and lawyers for Mary Jo’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kqpechne, the judge said: "Ttie hearing scheduled for Monday is temporarily postponed. Instead, we will hear arguments at that time on the motions presented to the'eourt.” Brominski said the arguments might be completed in two hours, but that he probably would not hand down a decision until several days later. Dinls declined to say whether the delay would force him to postpone the inquest. The Kopechne’s claim Pennsylvania is “without jurisdiction and authority” to exhume the body. Miss Kopechne is buried in a small cemetery in nearby Larksville. A Dukes County, Mass->- medical examiner reported the cause of her death as drowning,. He did not perform an autopsy. ™ The Kopechnes, who claim an autopsy How would serve no useful purpose, said in their dismissal motion that Dinis’ petition was an attack on the findings of the medical examiner. BIRMINGHAM — A record number of teachers new to the Birmingham schools will be looking for housing within the next two months. Kenneth Nagley, assistant superintendent of schools, said that more than 300 teachers — most with families — represents a new high in teacher population for Birmingham. Especially needed are single-room rentals for young, men or women, and one and two-bedroom apartments. Birmingham residents are urged to contact the board of education office with appropriate housing suggestions. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - James E. Glynn, 4150 Orchard Way, was appointed chairman of Torch Drive Youth Day. (jlyrtn will work with United Foundation officials in planning the new activity for the October fund-raising campaign. Under the program, 25 public and . parochial high school students from Oakland, Wayne and Macomb counties will be selected as youthful counterparts to Torch Drive officials. Glynn is director of public relations for the National Bank of Detroit. Military Is Taken to Task on Peril to Hearing of GIs government has a double standard on prevention of deafness—requiring civilian contractors of the Defense Department to keep decibel levels low while needlessly exposing troops in training to damaging noise. AP REPORT CITED In his letters to Laird and Resor, Rogers cited an Associated Press report that thousands of soldiers in training suffer significant hearing losses because the Army doesn’t provide proper ear protection. ‘We have a stake in assuring that every .man who enters combat is physically fit and qpt in any way hampeVed by such major or minor hearing difficulties which apparently have been resulting from this exposure to noise in boot camp,” Rogers wrote to Resor. “Needless to say, this government Is endangering the well being of every serviceman who enters combat zones with a hearing defect,” Rogers added. Rogers noted that the Walsh-Healy Act requires the Defense Department to refuse contracts to anyone expdsing workers to noise levels above 90 decibels. At the same time, he pointed out, Servicemen are exposed to 164 decibels on rifle ranges, far above the 150-decibel damage point; 135 decibels in tanks, above the pain level; and even noisier situations when artillery and tank cannon are fired. One bit of possible protection, suggested as standard by Dr. Jerry L. Northern, chief audiologist at Walter Reed Army Hospital, is the type of ear-muffs used' by civilian airport crews. Stickup Bags a Roll CHICAGO (UPI) - The bandit who robbed the Ancona Bakery of $75 yesterday got away with the dough all right, but may end up in a jam when he tries to pass the money. Bakery owner Mrs. Henrietta Buonl-contie stuffed the loot into a paper bag with a sweet roll dripping with strawberry jam. Death Claims GM Exec's Son Dennis J. McDonald, 22-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs. F. James McDonald of 1233 Vaughn, Bloomfield Hills, died yesterday. His father is a General Motors vice president and general manager of Pontiac Motor Division. Requiem Mass will be 11:30 a.m., tomorrow at St. Hugo of the Hills Catholic Church, Bloomfield Hills, With burial in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, SOuthfield. ★ ★ ★ A Rosary will be said at 9 tonight at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. McDonald was a premedical student in his senior year, at the University of Detroit. He. was employed as ajn orthopedic orderly at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Surviving are his parents; one sister, Marybeth, at home; two brothers, Timothy, a student at Johp Carroll University, Cleveland and John, a student at Albion College; and grandparents Mrs. F. J. McDonald of Saginaw and Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Dettenthaler of Essex-ville. Memorial tributes may be made to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Waterford Stalls New Sex Ed Classes NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are due tonight over the Gulf Coast from Texas to Florida, extending to Georgia. An isolated shower is also expected over south Florida, with more showers due over the Southwest from the Texas Panhandle north into Nebraska and Wyoming. It will be sunny elsewhere over most of the nation. \ ?v ' f There won’t be any new sex education programs in Waterford'Township Schools this coming school year. That was the decision of the board of education last night acting upon a request of the State Legislature. However, three trustees then Criticized the state lawmakers for butting their noses into the board’s business. , ★ a Trustee Eldon C. Rosegart, a Lansing lobbyist for Oakland Schqols, remarked: “If the Legislature can do this, there is a danger it can call 'a halt to almost anything in any school system. 1 “It is unfortunate that Waterford has to sit back and wait until the people in Lansing make up thier minds.” The Legislature had authorized school districts to offer sex education classes, but then told districts to hold up on the programs, until the State Department of Education could draw up guidelines. ' Rosegart along with Trustee Mrs. Peggy L. Wood said they would reluctantly follow the state mandate. They praised the dedicated efforts of those who had developed sex education guidelines for use in the district and particularly at Silver Lake Elementary School. 6 A proposed pilot program emphasizing sex education at Silver Lake School was scrapped by the board because of a protest from parents and the Legislature’s Board president Philip M. Hampton commented that he didn’t think Sis school system would be dictated to by state guidelines. Later in the meeting! the chairman for the local Parents for Moral Education praised the decision of the board but then Warned the trustees. IDEAS INCLUDED Gerald O. Bowman, 3829 Hazelett, told the board he Wants ideas from his group included to any new sex education programs or else he would make it an issue in the next school election. He has opposed the proposed Waterford program because it would “weaken family relationships, decline morals and cause, physical, mental and emotional impairment in children,” among other reasons. The, policy adopted by the board for 1969-70 says: '• The district won’t develop any new sex edubatlon programs this schotfl year or until state guidelines are ready. • Sex education programs for adults will be expanded in the self-supported community school program. • It is hoped a sprinkling of sex education will still be taught,, in the schools. Parents may ,excusir,7lheir children from such topicC Only specific sex education courses are outlawed, • The board will begin developing its own sex education program. • It encourages parents to do their own reading on sex education so they can help in shaping the Waterford program. ; •• Ml; w m THE PONTIAC PRESS*-FRIDAY; AUGUST 22, A—8 State Fair Opens Today in Detroit DETROIT (AP) - ^eT?^j^serv*ce Sunday morning. In be*! Music, and lots of It, also will .there will things to do besides, For the young-at-heart over hilw «i«~ihro„TI rdte 1^*r~jtween are a high-class horse mark the show. . look. Ponytail contests for girts 65 there will be a few old-tim- tinn-oneno/t^o ‘".u ,na‘!show. special veterans pro- ★ ★ * and football-throwing matcheslers contests—baldest head, most tainment SSrK mSTlf an“'?nd.a horSesHoe'pitching Besides A1 Hlrt, there will be f?r boys; baton twirling compe-l grandchildren, and longest mar-of^r,eSr™”'n'' i numerous Battles of II. .• *» *{«• Floats clowns and inn mar^1FASHI0N SH0W throwing top local rock bands contest; horseshoe pitching con- for the oldpr generation on Mon- Hudson .lU feature .I®. dii^/Wtitton; »• "°“ troit’s main drag, Woodward Avenue, in a nighttime feature Discounts All Over the Store-Simms, 98 N. Saginaw :30 SATURDAY pm 9am to 9pm \of the opening day’s festivities'. * ★ * The fair is booked for an 11-day run at the Michigan State Fairgrounds at Woodward and Eight Mile. It includes the whole gamut of Community Arts Auditorium. Other companies contributing to the fair are Michigan Bell Telephone, with a program on “Apollo-The Eighth Wonder of the World”; Consumers Power Co. with Cues for Barbecueing; shows, from Dixieland trumpet-land Montgomery Ward’s fashion er A1 Hirt to a sunrise religious I show at the Teen Scene Stage. More Liberal Pension for Legislators Vetoed LANSING (UPI) Gov. Instead of the present eight William G. Milliken yesterday vetoed a bill giving liberal retirement benefits to members fashion show and sewing sem- Wilson and his Jamaican Band;!and an eg8 and aP00" race-inar throughout the fair at the dohn Kepley and his Gbod Old M Summertime Orchestra; Nashville-Hawaiian Country Music All Star Jtevye; the Briar-woods and Marta Jackson; and many state high school bands. That’s not all. Beside^ music I the fair will have Patti O’Dae’s Theatrical Studio; the Laur Dancing and Singing Society; I the Jean NucciUi Concert Ballet; tiie P.R.C.U. North Detroit Dancing School; and the Polish American Folk Theatre. ODDS AND ENDS Other odds and ends fit into the program, too. There will be lectures for weight watchers, cake decorating demonstrations; a massive horse show; and the Hurricane Hell Drivers with six death-defying acts. The vodka better ’ without Increasing the amount of money a legislator would ~on the "rural side of the led- have to contribute system, • Reduce the mln imum[sheep, swine, waterfowl and retirement age from 60 to 55. poultry, quarter horses, Colum- the.ger, the fair will have various animal competitions — steer, of the Legislature, calling it “contrary to the public in-1 terest.” Sporflored by Sen. Michaeli • Withdraw f r o m|biaaheep, and Tamworth swintf OBrien, D-Detroit, the measure; participating in the pension plan I and many more. Animals are was originally intended to pro- J and recover the money they had j apt all in that category either, vide benefits to widows oL contributed to it. * though, with floriculture and deceased legislators. ......... ... “Regretfully, this constructive purpose was substantially changed by amendments when the bill was considered by the House,” the governor said in his veto As finally approved by both chambers, the bill would have permitted legislators to: “I know of no retirement system which provides for such a minimum length of service and attained age prior to full participation in benaf its, ’ ’ Milliken said. A terra cotta figureine less) than three inches high,; designated Venus ’68 was found1 • Receive full benefits after j among relics of the Stone Age having served only six years, Inear Verona, Italy, recently. horticulture displays also on tap. ★ * ★ For the more active types, PRESCRIPTIONS AT MY COST PLUS A MAX. 1.50 PROFESSIONAL FEE DELL'S^mh PRESCRIPTION CENTER 219 Baldwin FE 4-2620 AAOIVTGO/WER ARD Saturday ONLY! CAMERA SALE! Special Vivitar lens said! 35mm f/2.8 lens. .*34.99 135mm f/2.8 lens.. *34.99 Save on America's top-selling single lens reflex camera Tfie Most Needed Aoedeeeiy A Vivitar Strobe. 2 Models to Choott From VIVITAR #90 ONLY *21,99 VIVITAR 150 WITH A.O. ADAPTER ;«"* *26*99 Accessory Shoe For Camera Only $3.00 Many Other Acce»»orie$ ► Available BEHIND-THE-LENS METERING Features include Mirro-Matic behind - the -lens exposure mater—both "spot" and “averaging." And you enjoy'hand simplified operation, fully automatic 50mm F/2 lent, shutter spaed of 1 to 1 /500 second. Pontiac Mall Mamiya/Sekor 500 DTL camera 1000 DTL F/1.8 or F/1.4 also avallalilo in Wards oamora dopt. Mamiya/Sekor 500 TL camera 149“ With sensational behind-the-lens "spot" meter. Complete with fast f/2 Seker 50mm OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 10:00 A.M. TO 9:00 P.M. . SATURDAY 9:30 A.M. TO 9 P.M. SUNDAY 12 NOON TO 5 P.M. a 682-1910 k Birmingham Minipark Due Heading Home From Birmingham Lum Man Reportedly Kills Himself Bus Stop Project Set By NED ADAMSON BIRMINGHAM - There will soon be a waiting bench-minipark at the new bus stop on Woodward near Daines. It has been a longtime coming, according to the many black domestics who wait there daily to return to their homes in Detroit. The bench and landscaping around it will cost about $400. The bus stop until recently was located 200 feet up the street in front of Green’s Art Supplies Store at the comer of Daines and Woodward. The bus stop situation became a problem during cold and rainy weather when because of a lack of shelter at the corner, bus passengers were forced to either stand in the doorway of the Green store or go inside. MANAGEMENT PRESURE This resulted in customer traffic problems in the store and resultant pressure by the management of Green’s and other Thomas Dewey Is the Winner store owners to move the stop down the street. According to a letter written by Mary R. Schoen of the Birmingham-Bloomfield Human Relations Council to the City Commission, “The store owners were perhaps overzealous in protecting their property.” ^ ★ ★ ★ She said this “overprotection” reached the extent of making a point of not allowing people to lean against an outside wall of the building Or even stand too close. ♦ ★ ★ When the bus stop was moved from the comer of Daines and Woodward to the new location in front of a vacant building which once occupied a car dealership, most of the day workers, Mrs. Schoen said, interpreted the move as meaning they were not considered good enough to be anywhere near the stores. LONG-STANDING PROBLEM The bus stop situation has reportedly been a problem for many years. Mrs. Schoen asked in her letter why the cityx could not afford more waiting benches and shelters. There are three Shoot-Out Ends in Death ARCADIA TOWNSHIP - A 64-year-old Lum resident shot himself to death early this morning following a shoot-out with Lapeer County sheriff's deputies who were attempting to apprehend, him, according to police reports. The sheriff's office said Floyd Elery, 64, of 1536 Ostrum, a retired tool and die maker shot himself In the neck with a 13-gauge shotgun in the attle of his residence at 3:10 a m. 4t h * Sheriff's deputies were dispatched to the Elery' residence at 1:30 a.m. following a phone call from Elery's wife, who said that her husband had threatened to kill her and their two teen-age sons. They had fled to a neighbor’s house to make the call when Elery made the threats. Eleryh wife told deputies that he woke Motorist Is Killed in 1-75 Accident her at 1 a m., beat her and said he was going to kill her and their two teen-age sons and then burn down the house. FIND HOUSE DARK Upon arrival, deputies found the house dark and the doors locked. * * * Elery was In the bedroom when deputies forced their way through the back door. He then ran to the kitchen, flashed' on the lights and fired two rounds at Deputies, Gary Parks and Perry Arnold. Both shots.missed, striking a door. * * + The' deputies then fled the resiliency and radioed for help. Additional sheriffs deputies, state troopers and policemen from Imlay City, and Romeo, then attempted to reason with Elery over a PA system. ' Tear gas was then used in an attempt Parish in Rochester to flush Elery from the residence. He fled to the attic, presumably to get away from the fumes, deputies said. The sheriff’s office said Elery had a long history of mental problems and had been released' from the psychopathic ward at Flint-Hurley Hospital on Tuesday. The sheriff’s report did not Indicate what incited Elery’s final''mental rage. County Dems Planning Brandon Party Sunday The Oakland County Democratic Committee will sponsor a “fun raiser” party — free admission — Sunday from noon to 8 p.m. at Bald Eagle Lake resorW 2270 Allen, Brandon Township. Organized activities are scheduled, and a lifeguard will be on duty for swimming. Democratic elected officials will greet guests. Refreshments will not be . available at the park. waiting benches at various bus stops but no shelters. One administration official said Birmingham could afford a shelter but said the commission had been reluctant to do anything about it because “experience shown by other communities which erected shelters, said they represented something to write dirty words on." ★ * ★ Dr. John Dorsey, a commissioner, said the city planned to explore the possibilities of erecting three shelters on major bus stops. OBVIOUS APPEARANCE A conversation with some of the passengers waiting at the stop revealed that the lack of a bench or shelter at the but stop presents an obvious appearance of disassociation to the community. A shelter, they said, would give then an opportunity to get in out of the cold and rain as well as alleviate the problem of retreating to a store to keep warm. * ★ * Said one: “It gets mightly cold in the winter out here. We hope something can be done.”" EAST LANSING (AF) - Thomas Dewey wins! For the second consecutive year, the 16-year-old Ada youth showed the champion Hereford heifer at the annual 4-H Youth State Show at Michigan State University. h * ★ Meanwhile, a 12-year-old Perry boy, making his first appearance at the show, won top honors in the junior showman class, and his animal was judged best of its breed. Ron Haarer took home the Angus honors as some 5,000 young people from across the state attended the weeklong • show. * * * Nancy Duible of Ann Arbor won the senior showman class in the Hereford heifer category. An Ingham County girl,'17-year-old Jill Smalley of Williamston, exhibited the champion Suffolk ewe as well as winning champion sheep showmanship honors in the woman — age 14 and over — class. LIVESTOCK JUDGING The Eaton County 4-H livestock-judging teams won both the junior and senior divisions of that contest, and Sue Crissman, 17, of Caledonia was the highest individual not on the first- or second-place team. She will attend the national 4-H livestock-judging contest at Chicago. Eleven young people, meanwhile, won first-place awards for entomology exhibits. * a a They were Gale Happy of Monroe, David Marbry of Howell, Jan Folkersma of Alto, Greg Buell of Tipton, Brent O’Dell of Sanford, Tony Barcroft of Freeport, Steve Nappe of Jackson, Dave Madison of Paw Paw, Maryann Fabry of Fenton, Yvonne Pshea of Fennville and Dale Lesser of Dexter. THE PONTIAC PRESS ha/Hews FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1969 A—4 'No Threat of Firings' Hare Deputy Repudiates Memo LANSING (AP) - Michigan’s deputy secretary of state says workers from , that department need not worry about being fired if they talk about their work outside the office. a ★ a i “We are not goiiig to dismiss anybody for discussing their job or their opinions with anyone — either during working hours or after working hours,” said William Hettiger, top aide to James Hare. “That is not a basis for dismissal." •P * * * Hettiger’s comments discounted a memorandum sent earlier to supervisory personnel of the department’s vehicle and watercraft records division. The memo threatened employes with dismissal if they talked about the department or the division outside the office. Hettiger said the memo was an “error in judgment” by the division officials who Issued it. EMPLOYES OPPOSED Earliet this week Henry C. Newcomb, president of the 18,006-member Michigan State Employes Association, pledged his ' “vehement opposition” to what he said were threats in the directive. a a a The directive had been prompted by complaints that employes had been giving out erroneous information concerning the activities of the division, Hettiger said. * * a “I think It was less than prudent on both supervisors.’ part to send out such a memo, but it was also less than prudent on the employes’ part to downgrade the operation of the division,” he said. At Union Lake Shopping Center Cowboy Stunt Man to Perform in Bloomfield Twp. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP - A Warren resident was killed early this morning when the pickup truck he was driving left the roadway hear the Square Lake Road exit of 1-75 and crashed, township police, reported. Dead is Joseph Carl Dubbeck, 30, of 8088 Racine, Warren. Police said the truck was headed south, on 1-75 when it left the shoulder, struck a bridge pillar and rolled down an embankment. Dubbeck was thrown from the vehicle. Sets Sunday Reunion ROCHESTER - The Belles of St. Andrew's will sponsor a parish reunion picnic Sunday at St. Andrew’s School grounds, 1234 Inglewood, from 2-6 p.m. Centennial dress is advised for present and former parishioners. Guests should bring a lunch. Living Cost Up .5 Pet. WASHINGTON troop through the East. He travels West only to make an occasional television show. , He claims that Hollywood Is not at all , like'it used to be. People there/used to be friendly, walking* down the streets chatting and visiting, he reminisced. Today, he said, few Westerns are made out West because it is too expensive. Ryan said that Western-making has been ruined by the unions — which made production too expensive and the Humane Society — which has limited the use of horses. Once, stunt men would tie a wise to a horse’s foot so that the animal would stop short and fall dramatically when he reached the end of the wire. Today, the Humane Society has outlawed that practice, according to Rykh. 'Drugstore Cowboy' Ryan Appearing In Union Lake / THE PONTIAC PltESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1969 A—5 N. IRISH LASS ARRIVES —Bernadette Devlin, Northern ^Ireland member of Parliament and Roman Catholic civil rights champion, arrives at Kennedy Airport in New York City yesterday on a tour to raise money for homeless and hungry Catholics in her homer land. Mostly Yanks at Confab Novice Bullfighters Gather Sunday Work Refusal Upheld GRAND RAPIDS (AP) - AI 35-year-old Grand Rapids dye maker returns to work at the Reynolds Metal Co. plant Monday after a three-year legal battle to uphold his right to refuse overtime work on Stin- flB. I didn’t think it was right. If you don’t fight for whati freedom you’ve got, then eventually you won’t have any,”i said Robert K. Dewey, who! successfully contended that his refusal to work Sundays was based upon religious beliefs. Dewey was fired Sept. 12,! 1966, because he refused toj work overtime on Sundays or provide a substitute. Thursday, Dewey went back to Reynolds and began the pro-1 cessing necessary before he can I return to his job. ’NO BITTERNESS’ He described his receptiop at the plant as “good, good, real good. There was no bitterness shown.” *■ , . , . \ | ' - ★ - ★ it Dewey, a member of the! Reformed Church of America,! was ordered reinstated June 6 by U.S. District Judge Noel P. Fox, of Grand Rapids. This week, the U.S. 6th Circuit Court! of Appeals in Cincinnati denied) la company motion which would1 jhave barred Dewey from ! returning to work until the I company’s appeal is settled. # , ★ * I The dye. maker c6ntended he was fired because of religious discrimination. I His attorney, Peter Tolley of j facts of his particular Case. The Grand Rapids, said the court attorney said Reynolds insisted order enjoining Reynolds from that Dewey woHc on Sundays forcing Dewey to work on Sun- although it never ordered more days is the first federal court than seven of its 12 dye makers case where religious to work on any given Sunday, discrimination has been forbid-1 , , * * * den under terms of the 1964) He contended the company Civil Rights Act. could have replaced Dewey with jjUST AS WRONG another dye maker since none _ „ .. . . . i of the others had objected to Tolley said Dewey refused toL - . J4 provide a substitute because he y wor j belieVed that doing so was ai|ff»M9 AT 8TAKE |wrong as if he had worked on! Dewey said several persons the Sabbath himself. | have mentioned the ' nearly * * * 1)7,500 Iri wages Reynolds will The attorney said a final owe him if the decision is decision in the case may not upheld but said that was not his come for as much as two years, reason for fighting. ★ w * 1 * ★ . * | Tolley said the decision in “If you take aWay the in-[Dewey’s case is "very narrow” dividual’s religious freedom, :and is based strictly upon the!this is a big tiling,” he insisted. SALE! AUTOMATIC DRYERS SAVE! KSridpool 5 Heat AUTOMATIC GAS DRYER With exclusive moisture minder dryness central, 2 automatic cycles, special cool down care for per* manent press, S heat selection, automatic dryness selector, tumble press control, extra large lint ~ ‘ new 1969 model still In their factory 14 FT. 2-DOOR AUTO. REFRIGERATOR On wheels, true fraexer, no frost refrigerator, porcelain finish crisper. *229 HEAVY DUTY AUTO. WASHER Normal wash or permanent press fabrics, turbo vane agitator, heavy duty transmission for big washes... often! *159 30" DELUXE GAS RAHGE New decorative glass back panel. Lift-off top, lift-off oven deer. *149 TIJUANA, Mexico (AP) -,‘T want to do it again!” exclaimed pretty Terri Fowler after her first experience in the bullring. I She was elated after swirling [the yellow and magenta cape and facing a sluggish 100-pound heifer. | The 25-year-old San Diego State College coed was one of 200 novice bullfighters, most of ! them Americans, at the seventh annual convention this weekend of the National Association of Taurine Clubs. An Awards banquet for those who turned in the best performance—judged by the other members—winds up [ the program Saturday night. * *' i Among the aficionados are men as old as 50 and boys 15. Bill Just, an aircraft engineer, and his wife, Cheri, practice cape work with make-believe bulls at their home in the San Diego suburb of Lemon Grove. WHY THE INTEREST? Why is interest in bullfighting —outlawed in the United States —apparently growing in this country? Says Terri Fowler: “I fell in AMATEUR BULLFIGHTERS — Peter annual convention of the National Associa-love with the sport and simply Rombold and Cheri Just practice bullfighting ■ tion of Taurine Clubs for amateurs at had to try it.” as they and 200 other Americans attend the ‘ Tijuana, Mexico. “Everyone .does it for a different reason,” says Just. “Most started out as fans and went the one small step further- The bullfight is one of the most difficult things to do properly. It’s just like anyone can play baseball, but not everyone can do it well. “There’! a personal satisfaction in doing well.” * * * A Soul Dodge Fever Reliever Is Here in Pontiac vn.m® ~a?d w how,Soul relieves TOUR Dodge Fever. 'Motor City w.m tu md L“ MOTOR CITY DODGE 855 Oakland Ave. 338-9222 A Fiery Bernadette Wows 'em in U.S. FLAGS OUTDOOR • INDOOR ALL TYPES CHRISTIAN LITERATURE SALES 55 Oakland Ave. FE 4-9591 NEW YORK (AP) — Berna-ineWs conference on her arrival; “When these madmen tried to dette Devlin had changed from [at Kennedy Airport. come into Derry,” she said, blue jeans worn in Londonderry, Hours later she was ready for “ ' • - • battle to a petite white mini-ker first speaking engagement dress, but she quickly made it before a capacity crowd in In-clear that her American fund-|wooc|t aa Irish enclave at the raising drive was in the spirit of ................... the barricades. THANK YOU We've Moved to Largei* Headquarters "EVERYWHERE IN MICHIGAN" Feldhauser Associates Inc. U °'V,b ENGINEERS • SURVEYORS • LAN0 PLANNINQ Mobil* Park Specialists * Subdivisions * Sewers * Water, Etc. 5775 DIXIE HIGHWAY, WATERFORD Across from the Post Office Phone 338-9623 “The barricades will stay up in Northern Ireland until the government comes down,” the -year-old Miss Devlin vowed before a cheering audience of i 500 Irish-Americans. Smuggled through the barricades into the Irish Republic and flown to the Uhited States, Miss Devlin^ wmngest member of tbe Britislo’arliament, embarked Thursday night on a tour to raise money for. the homeless and hungry Roman Catholics of Northern Ireland. — *- ★ ★ “We ask that every person interested in humanity and social justice comq to our aid,” Miss Devlin, still clad in* the blue jeans she wore in battle, told a After The Sale, Service — Your Guarantee From Fretter's they came in fast, but went out a damn sight faster after we started on them.^™j[ “Everyone in Northern Ire-northern tip of Manhattan. land that’s worth his salt wants She brought the crowd to itslan Ire,and where everyone infeet again and again, charging | eluding Catholics, Protestants, the Protestant constabulary act- Hindus> Jews ®nd anybody else ed “inhumanely and injustly”ican Nve together,” she told the toward the Catholic minority inlCrowd-her country. „ ! PRAISES TROOPS : She praised the British troops ! for their effort in bringing order Ci i i a n • I , to the land, saying, “They are a Ofafe Man r/Ckea:necessity now because they ihave restored a semblance of LANSING (AP)—GOP State! order. However, we all know Chairman William McLaughlin,they cannot stay forever.”-has been named to the planning! She told her sympathetic audi-committee for the first Midwest |ence, “It’s a struggle * *of ordi-Regional Republican Confer- nary peoole for a decent life, ence set for Nov. 13-15 at Des free of fear and intimidation. Moines, Iowa. The conference, Unless the problem is solved it which includes members of 14 could well become a civil war.” states, will encompass such| Her tour is being sponsored topics as public relations, effec-]by the National Committee for tive political polling and elec- Irish Justice, and the fund-rais-tronic data processing. | ing goal is $1 million. THE PONTIAC PRESS 4* West Huroijr. Street I Pontiac, Michigan 48056 " FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1969 Humt «. rmtlinu Mnw»t H. riTMtMLt, II Richus M FtTi Tr«»tum tnr) I Officer CtrcviUtlBB M»n»(»r Loci AdvtrtUIni Manager Area Lif esavers Lauded Only the resourcefulness of two volunteer lifesavers—one a, visitor in Waterford Township, the other a teenage resident there—stood between five-year-old Julie Carpenter and crtain death by drowning in Otter Lake. The youngster had fallen into five feet of water where she was struggling when the cries of an onlooker brought 15-year-old Diana Lynn Mullica on the run. She pulled the drowning girl to safety. ★ ★ ★ At this point, Mrs. Dorothy Bodner appeared and, though Julie showed no signs of life, proceeded to administer mouth-to-mouth resuscitation for the nearly 30 minutes it took to revive the victim of the,mishap. ★ ★ ★ Civilian citations have been recommended for Mrs. Bodner and Diana, both of whom richly merit the recognition. Their joint act of heroism also underscores how essential it is for young and old to be familiar with the basic principles and practices of first aid, as the effective application of mouth-to-mouth resuscitation in this case abundantly demonstrated. Benefits Seen in Farm Bill You don't have to be a farmer to know that for several decades agriculture has received a great deal of attention from Goverrtment planners. Federal program has been piled on top of Federal program allegedly to help the farmer-—at a cost of billions of dollars. All of the farm programs had two things in common; they have been inordinately costly, and, they have been failures. The Food and Agriculture Act of 1965 has been no exception. The political decisions of Government supply - management efforts have left the farmer with a basic imbalance between prices he receives and the prices he must pay—an imbalance that is growing worse rather than better. According to an article in Nation's Agriculture, a publication of the American Farm Bureau Federation, a bill has now been introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives titled the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1969. ★ ★ * It takes a new approach to the question of Government farm programs. Under the proposed legislation, commercial farmers would be moved as rapidly as possible to the market system; that is, crops would be bought and sold on a supply-demand basis, thus removing from the backs of taxpayers and farmers costly subsidies and oppressive controls. For smaller, marginal farms, the proposed legislation would make available long-range land retirement programs and other forms of assistance to help the small farmer get started in a new business or trade. ★ ★ ★ The measure, supported by the American Farm Bureau Federation, is in keepinjg with the modern agricultural needs of the Nation. It is also in keeping with the U.S. economic system because it recognizes the advantages of a free market, which would eventually save billions of tax dollars. Above all, it promises a way to get politics out of agriculture. Nixon’s Church Services Hit President Nixon’s practice of holding church services each Sunday has come under attack—not from , Madalyn Murray O’Hair, who is busy seeing that NASA keeps God out of space, but from some of the most eminent names in religion. Perhaps most eminent is philosopher and theologian R{inhqld Niebuhr, retired professor at Union Theological Seminary. By inviting representatives of different denominations to hold services at the White House, complains Niebuhr, “The President by a curious combination of innocence and guile has circumvented the Bill of Rights first article,’’ ★ ★ ★ This is somewhat curious criticism, since the First Amendment says only that Congress may not pass any law respecting an . establishment of religion or preventing the free exercise thereof. Mr. Nixon is not a congressman, nor has he established any official religion, nor is there evidence that he is preventing anyone's free exercise thereof. A ★ ★ What really seems to bother Dr. Niebuhr is the noncontroversial nature of the White House services and the fact that visiting clergymen seem so awed by the honor of a presidential invitation that they can only deal with platitudes in their sermons. That is something else again. But it is the clergymen’s problem, and the President’s. It hardly seems to raise a constitutional issue. Youth Not Getting Enough * By DICK WEST WASHINGTON (UPI) - At least once a day someone will ask. "What, is wrong with the youth of in-day? Why doff young people no 1 o n g e i dream the I American dream? Why] are so many of them re-! belling against j society, taking1 ■ drugs and playing guitars?" 1 For the answer to these questions, let us harken back to last year's Republican National Convention. ' " * * ★ In his acceptance speech, you may recall, President Nixon told of a boy of humble origin who uses! to listen to the trains go by at night and dream of far awity places he would like to go. It turned out Nixon was referring to ids own boyhood. Considering what happened to him later, “you cen see why I believe so deeply in the American dreem," he If you examine his remarks closely, you also can see that Nixon pointed up an essential difference between the America of his boyhood and the America of today. The difference is the difference between tr.ain whistles. * * * When Nixon was a lad, all of the locomotives had steam whistles that made a melodic "woo-wooing" sound. Listening to- a train go by at night could start a boy to dreaming—and those dreams could be his first step on the road to the White House. LIKE PRISON BREAK Rut the diesel engines of today, alas,' have whistles that make a raucous “Monk-tag" noise. Every time a train goes by, it sounds like a prison break. I. hardly need point out the effect that replacement of the “woo-wooing" whistle by the "blonking" whistle7 has, had on American youth. " * * Far from being insplrefMty passing trains, kids of today are traumatised by tlpm. Instead of dreaming the American dream, they go out and steal hubcaps. Or take guitar lessons. BITTER FRUITS And so the nation is now reaping < the bitter fruits- of America’s first “/blonked-at" generation. It probably isn't technically feasible to put “woo-woo’ whistles on diesel locomotives, but a friend of mine has a plan tfe believes will work as well. *, ★ * . It is his idea to attach "woo-woo" whistles to telephone poles at fixed intervals all across the country, and to tie them into the air raid alarm Systems in > thd cities. Each night an automatic signal' would cause thq whistles to blow, one after a pother To a kid listening in bed, the sound would be Identical to the one that passing trains used to make. The Worst Kind! Voice of the People: Present Michigan Time I Is Most Suitable System , I am a mother of three children under four years of age. I thoroughly enjoy the time system we are on in Michigan. It is so nice to get up and see the sun shining, and be able to go to sleep at a reasonable hour and have darkness there. I hope we can keep this time because it is as close to suh time as you can get. The farm animals are back on schedule and so am I. MRS. J. DAVID MATHIEU Comments on New OEO Training Program The GED tests (general educational development) were designed to test rather than to establish a person’s educational qualifications. I see now where the OEO is going to spend 15 weeks training ADC women to pass thesfe tests and enable them to claim, however spuriously, an educational standard which is widely accepted as being equivalent to a high school diploma. ★ ★ ★ I have conflicting feelings about this forced upgrading which will improve the financial prospects of these women, ffff though doing little to actually improve their status as educated persons. It will allow them to apply for work where require-y.i'Vj / ments specify high school grads and it will also give them a lever for a claim of discrimination if they are not hired or are dismissed after trial because of inability to perform capably. ★ ★ ★ I am thinking also that the value of real learning is being reduced to the extent that the recipients of such learned-answer training will compete in the labor market on an equal basis. David Lawrence Says: Military Cutbacks Are Big Risk WASHINGTON - Congressional pressure has forced Secretary of Defense Melvin Laind to c (inference y esterday that “it is dear our defense readiness will be weakened." What has happned, o f course, is that Congress has told the Defense Department that its appropriations will be diminished, and the big question is where and how the cuts shall be made. * * ★ Secretary Laird expressed regrets that the curtailment which he reluctantly plans to make "will reduce our capahiUty to meet current commitments." So much emphasis has been mittee, does not see any “apparent end" to the conflict. He says that, while he favors a gradual troop withdrawal as a signal to the enemy that the Unfted States is sincere in its desire to end the war, he is doubtful about the outcome. WWW He adds: “I am not tod encouraged that a quick end is in sight, nor am I persuaded that we should rush out of Vietnam unilaterally in such a way to give the impression of defeat." Meanwhile, the Russians are building up their armed services and seemingly are preparing for a large war. They are, to be sure, concerned about the hostile atti- Perhaps the benefits that will accrue to the women through the Increased dignity of earning their way, and to the public by a reduction in the welfare burden will offset the detractions. CONNIE DEAN ‘Can’t Remember Predictions of Horoscope’ I wonder why you always publish the horoscope for the have deployed some rocket ne*t day? I’d kind of like to figure out the accuracy of the and nuclear forces on the bor- predictions, but, gol darn it, by the time the next day has gone by, I’ve always forgotten what Sidney Omarr saw in his crystal bail for that day. It’s a mite aggravatin’. J UNCERTAIN tude of the Red Chinese and der between the two countries. WOULD AFFECT JAPAN If the Russians and Red Chinese get into a war, this will affect Japan and the smaller countries of Asia. There are signs of ’ Increasing trouble in the Middle East, too, and the Soviet navy in the Mediterranean has recently been substantially enlarged. •** ★ # A In the face of such danger signals, it. is surprising that Congress is reducing the military budget just as if peace were in sight. (CopyrljtM, ‘Southern Strat’ Seen Failing Nixon in the End By BRUCE BIOSSAT “I’m very much concerned placed on the Vietnam war NEA Washington Correspondent that if something big doesn’t that many citizens forget that the defense apparatus of the United States is designed to protect this' country against attack from any side, and that conflicts cart arise in Asia or Europe or the Middle East whlph might involve us. NEED IS THERE There is need not only for a c a n 1 critical large army and air force but voices are also for an adequate navy, yet the budget is forcing more than 100 naval vessels to be put out of commission, including the battleship New Jersey which was recommissioned last year after a costly renovation. Moreover, the Air Force is to be required to limit its training program. „ WASHINGTON - Amid the persistent talk that President Nixon is shaping major domestic policies largely according to a “southern st rategy," some signifi- heard saying this course will fall him in the long BIOSSAT One leading public figure puts it Itljie this: "If he wants to make his scratches high on the wall (of history), he’s going to have to make some forward-looking moves that will not please the Strom Thurmonds of his party.” A top Democrat who thinks Nixon has a strong chance of winning reelectlon in 1972, nevertheless contends that he works within too narrow Ilm- “Nixon is toying to run tbe country as if he were a senator or a congressman. He follows the trend of public opinion. That may put him in tuna with the nation, but I doubt whether that is the way to be a good president." RIGHT-WING TREND The first-cited source says that even if there is an Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. Grogan emerging conservative Repub-of Birmingham; “rt 53rd wedding anniversary. W*** by Kevin PhilUps author and special asaistant Fred Klbbe to Atty. Gen. John Mitchell, of 153 S. Jessie; 85th birthday, the President will notbeal-Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. lo^ to ptoy to it too heavily. Mehlberg ’ TTiere Is a small but artic- , . • .. uiate group of people in the rLWat£ord TQ,wn8hlp; media; the academic world 53rd wedding anniversary. and eIsewhere, this source All this, it Is. admitted, involves risks. Attention has been focused mostly on Vietnam, and the recent announcement that American troops would be gradually withdrawn has given the impression that the United States can sharply cut down its defense forces. NO END IN SIGHT But Sen. John .Stennls, P-Miss., who is chairman of the Senate Armed Services Com- Verbal Orchids happen to change this, the nation could be in very serious trouble in just a few years. We can’t simply go pooping along like we’ve been doing." TOO CALCULATING? . Yet this man wonders whether Richard Nixon, at least as presently revealed, has the leadership capacity and drive to break this national mood of discouragement. , His observation: “I think the President perceives intellectually that the country needs a big lift. But it may be that by character and nature he is too calculating and cautious to supply it.” It is felt that the President’s . recent drop of 18 percentage points in a public opinion poll test of his popularity may be the first strong supportive evidence of these interesting judgments. i ‘Can’t Weather Bureau Improve Forecast?’ You ..had a letter in the Voice of the People saying the weather prediction had, been for a shower and it actually rained several hours without stopping. Your note below said the weather bureau forecast the weather and you merely print it. Well, last Friday night tpeir report said Saturday would be “mostly fair and slightly cooler." Saturday it rained from 1 8:30 to quarter to four without stopping. Can’t they do better than this? CITIZEN Question and Answer A few days ago someone asked for Information on the movie made from Tolkien’s “Lord of the Rings." Coaid yon tell me what company Is making it, where it is to made, etc.? I’m very interested In It. ANTHONY A. MERCHELL BLOOMFIELD HILLS REPLY Our answer to the other reader was that the company handling movie rights could not release any details about the contract until all negotiations are final. However, George Allen & Unwin Ltd., 40 Museum Street, London, Eng., is the publisher handling it. You might mite and ask them to inform you of the details when they can be made public. They gave no indication how long that might be. Question and Answer What must I do to get a spaying refund from the Animal Kescne League? We bought a female dog from them in August last year atid paid a |10 deposit to be returned when the spaying was done. We sent in our receipt and the spaying certificate on May 2, but still have not received the refund despite many calls to them. MRS. EDWARD T. COOK 234 EILEEN DR. BLOOMFIELD HILLS REPLY Mrs. Inman at the Rescue League says there have been some problems because of a change in shelter operators, but they've hired someone to go over the books and get things in order. She said she will see that you get your refund within a week. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages Orville Powers adds, which will not Jet Nixon of 295 Cherokee; 89th birthday. Ignore in any substantial way . what it regards as the crush-' ing problems of the cities— Fred Pevltt Sr. of Romeo; 87th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. James A. With nightly "woo-wooing” to start them dreaming. It shouldn’t take long tor 'the younger generation to get back mi the right I track- of 38 Candlelight; 87th birthday almostfalling apart. ■’ ■ £ 7r ;P ' ' 7 y of Milford; 55th wedding anniversary. Mrs. Marian Doty the racial struggle, poverty, pollution, efc. Says the source: “Wherever you go, you find people discouraged. They have a feeling that things just aren't working, that the country is Drilling Ban Grand Rapid.1 Press Gov. William G. Milliken will be properly representing the state in September when he asks the National Governor’s Conference to consider a ban on oil and gas drilling in bodies of fresh water. Michigan is nearly surrounded by fresh water, and unless steadily-increasing pollution of the igrge lakes Is reversed, much of jthe state’s economic vitality and its desirability will be drained away, to say nothing of the health problems involved for cities like Grand Rapids which draw upon p lake for its water siippiy. A * * Such an outright national ban would be difficult to achieve because oil is a major Industry in a number of states adjacent to large fresh water resources. But the Midwestern Great (Lakes states the governor’s mind when he announced his intentions at a recent' news conference, so if he manages to convince Michigan's neighbors, including Canada, then his effort will be worthwhile. * * * A state surrounded by polluted and “dead” lakes, Huron, Erie, Superior and Michigan, and by lifeless waterways such as Lake St. Clair, Saginaw Bay, the Soo and Grand Traverse Bay, would be difficult to imagine, but neb a situation could exist, easily within the lifetimes of present generations. Fresh water pollution isn’t limited to oil well leaks, of course, but no pollution control (pin be effective without absolutely guaranteeing that no leaks wfil occur, and tup, regardless of the care with which the wells are drilled, cannot be done. A single leak in a lake area not laxity flushed out can cause monstrous damage and can reverse the efforts of lengthy and expensive pollution^ control by private business and public bodies. Bht more important, a ban on fresh water oil wells is an act of prevention, easily t h e cheapest and most effective method of control. Is the whole amount of unclaimed gas and oil under land adjacent to Michigan worth the risk of permanent damage to the state’s prime resource? Gov. Milliken doesn't think so, and he hopes other governors will hold parallel Views. 2 : (|l. | 1\HE rONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAV, AUGUST 22, 1969 'SMB® ■ I M /Q,r pi Luckv Davs ImM wl Vy wiNr Jjp ■B 9 tom* quanMH.t limited., .on idle while they la it Fiberglas®draperies with the “look of wool” 7.88 French provlnciol print in gold or green on white. Fiberglat® glass traverse draperies hang full from deep pinch pleats. Wash, no-iron. 100x14 lMIpr. 16 On 14 31.81 pr. 6wog valance. .3.8* ea. Single width tie becks 1.48 pr. 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(Sat, 9:30-9) Drayton opon Sunday Noon to 6 p.m. (Downtown closes Tmi, red. at 6 pjhJ - PAINT DIPT. AT DRAYTON PLAINS STORI ONLY A—7 Regular 99C paint thinner 77 u I • gallon tblnnar et big savings. Caulking compound 4w»l Rag. 398 oa. Stall wood, plastic. Regular 99C spray paint # 77' i DOWNTOWN and DRAYTON PLAINS THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, > CHUNKS OF COBBLESTONE HURLED—Czech youths throw chunks of cobblestone at riot police during a demonstration yesterday in Prague on the first anniversary of the Restive Czechs Shocked, Angry AS Win-photo Russian invasion. The tear gas clouds in the street were from canisters fired by the police. However, the gas had little effect. . , Tanks, Troops Leave Prague N. Viets Rebu U. S. Efforts Reach Copter SAIGON (AP) - North Vietnamese troops entrenched in bunkers kept up attacks today on- American infantrymen trying to reach the wreckage of a U.S. heljcopter southwest of! Da Nang. A U.S. spokesman estimated that the lead column of 400 men from the 196th Light Infantry ' ade was about 800 yards from the site where the North Vietnamese khot down the helicopter Tuesday. * * ★ "Every time they start moving,* they draw fire,” said one U.S. officer. I’ve never seen the enemy fight so hard,” said another. ‘‘Ordinarily they’U fight for awhile and then pull back, but these guys are standing their ground and fighting.” REPEATED ATTACKS Dive-bombers and helicopter j gunships made attack after attack on the North Vietnamese bunkers. For three days, more than 1,000 North Vietnamese troops have blocked American efforts to reach the crash site in the1 I rolling foothills 31 miles southeast of Da Nang. Outside it could be co|d on the shody side of the house, colder ton the windy side, warmest on the sunny side. But inside-with modern jglectric heat—you can be cozy and comfortable, alJ through the house. That's how it is with electric heat. .Electric heat is the cleanest, quietest, most comfortable heat you can get. - And that's not alj. The operating cost is guaranteed. For full details, just call Edison or an Edison-Approved Electric Heat Contractor. So get electric heat. It's ever-ready, always comfortable. It's the even-tempered heat. EDISON Electric heat... the even-tempered heat PRAGUE (AP) — Tanks and that Husak was a traitor, sang attempt to appear again public-troops pulled out of Prague to- the national anthem and shout-jly, even more drastic steps will Russians go home!” Over be taken and those taking part and over they cried ‘‘Long live in such actions will b& punished Dubcekl”, in tribute to Alexan- severely, der Dubcek, the popular reform- w whom Husak replaced ,nj"jr7aTd‘\he“^jority‘“of thej^^^?lng *** Woc) HOOLIGAN ELEMENTS solute majority of came normally to work and did not permit themselves to be exploited for deeds damaging to the interests of the party, socialism, the republic and our inter- Among the eight men aboard workers t*le helicopter were Associated s Press photographer Oliver Noonan of Norwell, Mass., and Lt. Col. Eli F. Howard Jr. of Wood-bridge, Va., a battalion commander. All eight men are believed dead. day after demonstrations on the first anniversary of the Soviet invasion underlining the deep division between the Czechoslovak people and their Communist *°Communlst party leader Gt|f5was an important occasion'dernonstrators ™re ' ‘‘young |commitments.” The drive to reach the wreck- tav Husak’s regime sent tens of for "Twomansaid Pe°Ple- frequently hooligan ele- Noto ®nd sometimes violent age has become the focus of the thousands of Czechoslovak sol-W, told Jwwmuch ™nts and people with previous ****** demonstrations were hard fignting that has been rag- diers and 60 tanks into down- ab0utThe iKon^Ting taS convictions.” held in a number of foreign cit-4ng in tne area since Sunday Pramm Thnrsrtov nioht in ,. , me invasion oemg jusu , ies protesting the invasion. U.S. spokesmen claim that at 8!urted having doubts. Actions plannfed by enemy Two bombs exploded at the,least 169 North Vietnamese have been slain, many by ai massive rain of bombs, napalm,! rockets and artillery shells. a massive demonstration of mti-jon Thursday we found out that and counterrevolutionary propa- soviet Embassy in Rlode Janel- itarv Strencth. avnn oftor Q uanr ntroruKnrlu nnn/in k., I«h 1 n/tknrl 4k« I i * even after a year everybody ganda by far lacked the expect-r0i shattering windows and agrees it was a terrible ed mass support,” the state-blowing a hole in the garden _;-we found out((We still|ment asserted. “Spontaneous wall. Another bomb exploded at Sgree with each other. .and masg strike actions espe-the Soviet consulate. No Injuries In Bratlaiava, the Slovak capi-1 clally did not come off. The ab-lwere reported. itary strength. It shocked and angered many]thing—we found out we still ment asserted. Czechs, who remembered all ’** too well how Soviet tanks took! over the city and the country on Aug. 20-21 yast year. After five hours of maneuvering in the' streets and spotlighting some apartment house windows, the tanks rolled back across the Vltava River, and all tal, there also were clashes with police. Shots were fired over the heads of demonstrators, and arrests were made. CARRIED OFF | In Brno, Czechoslovakia’s sec-1 ond largest city, witnesses re-j Less than 20 per cent of the land in Iraq is cultivated. I but two left the city. Those two,ported that a young man poured fell into « subway excavation, gasoline on his clothes and set They and their weary crews [himself afire. They said the, were still there this morning,!flames were quickly extin-j guarded by police. gulshed and the man carried iwf Youths there threw cobblestones at police who dispersed about 5,000 demonstrators with tear gas and baton charges. ALSO DEPARTED The other army units also departed. Street cleaners began clearing awey the debris left by the, rioting in which the public showed its frustation at a year j„ praRUPt most of the demon-of occupation and increasing ac- gtrating had ended when the commodatlon to Soviet direc-Uanks arrived, but groups of youths *rled unsuccessfully to Prague Radio said five per- b a r r l o s d e several streets sons had been killed in riots I against them. Some of the tanks two youths 18 and 19 in Prague j0jne(j 0y,er military vehicles: Wednesday night, and three per- ringing Communist party head-! sons in bmo on Thursday. The|qUarlerg where Husak and his broadcast said 12 persons were prpatuium were reported in al-injured in Brno. ' , most continuous session during Thousands of young Czechs ^ past three days of demon-dashed in Prague with the hel-jstrationg meted riot police, but many! jn a statement today, the prethousands more citizens demon-L,dlum warned that “If the strated in more passive fasWon.! counterrevolutionary elements They responded with Obvious ................... .... enthusiasm to underground leaflets urging them to turn the anniversary into a “day of four D0k RonL shame" with boycotts of public1 rour DunK \ transport and stores. Streetcars DETROIT (AP) — Police' were almost empty, and stores 8earched today for four bank] were nearly deserted. banditg who held up lhe Manu.l MASSED IN SQUARE facturer's National Bank in More than 40,000 massed in suburban Taylor Township and WOnceslas Square. Crowds of fled with $23,000. Three of the! youths resisted clouds of tear! four men who robbed the bankj gas and truncheons of the secu-; Wednesday wore beards. One rity forces who finally cleared;of them disarmed a bank guard! the city center. ' and ordered him at gunpoint to | The demonstrators chanted stand aside. BILL PETRUSHA & SON'S OFFICIAL RCA COLOR CLEARANCE FREE HOME TRIAL 2-YEAR picture TUBE WARRANTY OUR OWN 90 DAY ... ’-mu *WiTS WIMjuity > WANTED NON-FERROUS METALS No. 1 COPPER p 50* No. 2 COPPER *• 45* BRASS . . 1 * 25* RADIATORS *25* ALUMINUM *8* Priest Subject t« Change Pontiac Scrap Co. 135 Branch Entrance on Mae* St. 332-0200 MORE THAN 200 COLOR UPS TO CHOOSE FROM NOW-At an All-Time Low Price! Big Sereea 23” COLOR for the Entire Family • Giant 28" Diagonal, 295 Square Inoh Picturo • Automatic Chroma Control Stabilizes Color Intensity • Solid State UHP Tuner • New Vleta VHP Tuner SPECIAL CLEARANCE PRICE Offlelai ClearancD Prtct... oqqo9 UUUaat OTHER COLOR tV MODELS PRICED FROM *259. EASY TERMS RIG 23” COLOR TV CONSOLE SPECIAL CLEARANCE PRICE RCA B|G 16» portable! White Compare the Size Compare the Price! ASM** PRICE CP1P Other Models from TC.C5 PLENTY OF FREE FUSING NO DOWN PAYMENT TEL-HURON SHOPPING CENTER - FE 3-7879 1550 Union Lake Road, Union Laka 363-6296 36 MONTHS TO PAY OPEN EVERY NIGHT TIL 9 Vietnam No. 1 Source for Cuts* But Laird Hedges on Scope of Pullback 1 THE PONTIAQ PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, I960 A—9 Ousted Cuban 'Tried Hire Nixon Spy By BOB HORTON AP Military Writer WASHINGTON - The Fenta-gon’s 100,000-plus cut in military manpower is likely to be viewed as a sign the Nixon administration is thinking big in the way ot future troop with-' drawals from Vietnam. Secretary of Defense Melvin R., Laird, announcing the cut' Thursday, said the military re-' 1 duction over the next 10 months doesn’t necessarily imply a Vietnam cut of that scope. But-he specifically ruled out combat troop withdrawals from West Germany, South Korea and Okinawa—leaving Vietnam! as one of the few remaining! places where large numbers of, Americans are stationed. WASHINGTON (Wife A Cuban diplomat, expelled from hts United Nations post by the United Stfctes, apparently was trying.to recruit a Cuban refugee to spy directly on President Nixon. The State Department announced yesterday that Third Secretary Lazaro Eddy Espinosa Bonet of the Cuban mission to the United Nations in New York was being asked to leave the United States promptly because of activities outside his regular diplomatic functions. ★ ★ ★ A spokesman for the Secret Service, In charge of protecting the President, said his agency had not been involved in the Espinosa case because President Nixon’s life had not been endangered. The State Department announcement of Espinosa’s ouster — as w6U as actions against a second Cuban and a warding to a third one — had raised speculation that in assassination attempt against Nixon was in the making. The State Department spokesman originally would say only that Espinosa was being asked to leave United States because he tried “to recruit a Cuban refugee for a mission • related to the security of the office of the President." But the spokesman several hours later said an, assassination plot was not involved. , ! > \ > The State Department also announced that First Secretary Alberto Boza Hidalgo-Gato, now in Cuba, would not be allowed to return in the United Nations because of activities which abused his diplomatic privileges. Second Secretary Jorge E. Reyes Vaga was warned to confine himself to his regular diplomatic duties. * * ★ The Federal Bureau of Investigation was understood to be worried about continuing abuses perpetrated by the 18-man Cuban mission in the United Nations. - But U.S. authorities were unwilling to describe in detail the nature of Espinosa’s deeds. It was, believed Espinosa was seeking a contact who might obtain employment hi the White Hodse and who would be in a position to spy on Nixon! The Cuban mission in New York had no comment on the affair. A spokesman for the mission-made it clear that any comment would have to come from Havana. The United States informed the Cuban mission of its action through a letter delivered yesterday. The United States was acting under the U.S. “headquarters agreement" with United Nations which permits the United States to bar diplomats who abuse their diplomatic privileges. State Department sources said the United States acted against Boza because he had tried to obtain espionage information on a U.S. military installation. Officials disclosed that earlier this year the United States had barred two other ,Cuban diplomats, Saker Zenni and Jiminez Escobar, from reentering U.S. territory because of intelligence activities.' But Churchmen Reject Reparations Tag Aid to Racially Oppressed Approved CANTERBURY, England « ?*»! (AP) — The leaders of the mul-j "Miracial World Council of Kfowc Ann/vdc i|Churches agreed Thursday l rt,,u7aw night that white churches should [make ‘‘significant’’ financial Pentagon officials admit pri*! contributions to the racially op-vately that Laird considers, po- pressed with no strings at-tential replacement of U.S. tached. But they rejected the retroops by South Vietnamese a parations tag for such pay-factor in his plans to trim the ments. over-all American military To support the stand, the force level.. council, representing more than nominations, voted to give $200,000—a seventh of its reserves—to groups representing the oppressed and to seek another $300,000 from- member churches. Recipient organizations were not named. CLIFFORD TIMEITABLE Furthermore, President Nixon said in June he hoped to be able to more than maitch a suggestion by former Secretary of Defense Clark M. Clifford to get 100,000 combat troops out of Vietnam this year. Some military officers believe the next withdrawal announced by the President will probably amount to no more than 25,000 men. Further pullouts could] take place over coming months, j * * * At Thursday’s news confer- j •nee, Laird would not commit: himself on the administration! decision this month on whether to go beyond the presently authorized 25,000-man troop reduction in Vietnam. The “more-than-100,000 man’’ reduction comes, as part of a congressionally directed Pentagon effort to slash defense spending by another $3 billion for the current fiscal year. AT $77 BILLION Under the new economy drive, due to leave the defense budget at $77 billion, the Navy will lay up 100 ships including the battleship New Jersey, the Air Force will curtail training flights sharply and the Army is supposed save $500 million ip its various operation, maintenance and training activities. Some members of Congress will find Laird closing down military installations in their home states, and that could bring howls of anguish. The manpower reduction Is expected to leave U.S. strength at about 3.3 million men by next July. Milliken Gets Prod on State MigraptWoes LANSING (AP)—Gov. William Milliken has been asked to discuss what were described “the outrageous Ttonditions of migrant workers in the state" with representatives of La Raza Unida, a coalition of Mexican-American groups in Michigan. Ray Cardenas, chairman of the coalition, also outlined several steps the group believes the governor should take, including the discussion with Mexican-Americans Wore his special task force on migrant labor makes any recommendation! Mexlcan-Americans, Cardenas said, “do not want solutions imposed from above—we want to 1m part of the solution." “The voiceless, the powerless, the forgotten people, are calling on you to meet these reasonable requests for action," Cardenas told the governor. "Help us maintain the nonviolent nature of the struggle We have waged for over 20 years to bring justice tyour people." Clock Repair :e Antique Clock Specialists 151 S. Bate*, ttmingham 646.7B77 The fund was the key point of a five-year aid and educational program approved by the council’s 120-member Central Committee at its annual meeting 235 Protestant and Orthodox de-| which ends today. The committee called on I j churches “to move beyond char-jity grants and traditional programming to. relevant and sac-| rificial action leading to new relationships of dignity and justice I among all men.” The group added: “Churches which have bene-, fited from racially exploitative1 economic systems should immediately allocate a significant portion of their total re-i sources; without employing pa- ternalistic mechanisms of con-| trol, to organizations of the racially oppressed on organizations supporting victims of ra-j cial injustice." The committee rejected in principle Black Power leader! James Forman’s demand fpr $500 million in reparations from white churches, saying repara- tions was only an attempt to ‘‘apportion guilt for the past.’’; But one source pointed out that the group had upheld two of Forman’s main contentions: That white churches were guilty j of racism and that the churches should give funds directly to ■victims of discrimination. RENT, SE PONTIAC ill, Trade - - - use PRESS WANT ADS! Rock Festival May Return to Tiny N.Y. Town NEW YORK (AP) - When the great rock festival was under way last weekend, one of the organizers looked out at the ] mass of people and reportedly i said that if he ever did it again he’d hold it in the Grand Canyon. j Now the producers say they want to schedule an even bigger ; festival next summer, Aug. 21-123, and the tentative plan is to (hold it in the same small tdwn, White Lake, N.Y., population 3,000. More Security With FALSETEETH While Eating, Talking _____I, PA8TEETH li alkaline. No gummy, paity taste! Denture* that nt are eeaential to health. See your dentist regularly. Get FASTEKTH. SHOP OAKLAND MALL pe ennetii ALWAYS FIRST QUALITY * Think School. Think Penneys! BOYS’ SLACK SALE! THRU SATURDAY REG. 4.98 NOW 4.25 TAILBACK $LIMS by Town-craft. Two weilorn pockets, slant yoke back. Penn-Presl® Fortrel® polyosior/cott'on fineline gab. SKINNY GRAD slacks by Towncraft. 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The City of Pontiac will pay UP TO $1,000 For Information Leading to the Arrest of Persons Responsible for any of the Following Types of Crimes Committed in the City of Pontiac from January 1,1969 through December 31, 1969: -ARSON (INCLUDES ALL ACTS OF FIREBOMBING) -INTERFERENCE OR ATTACK ON FIREMEN OR THEIR EQUIPMENT -SERIOUS MISUSE OF FIREARMS (INCLUDES ALL ACTS OF SNIPING) -SERIOUS ASSAULT OR ATTACK ON ANY POLICEMAN OR ANY OTHER PERSON -MAJOR THEFT -MAJOR BURGLARY -MURDER -OR ANY PLOTTING OR CONSPIRING TO COMMIT ANY OF THE ABOVE CRIMES The PoBtiac City Commission has begun this reward system in an effort to further combat the increasingly serious threat of crime to every citizen in Pontiac. Use the following instructions to report a crime and collect the cash award: 1. Type or print your information about • crime on a blank sheet of paper. 2. DO NOT SIGN YOUR NAME, but sign with any number of six figures or more. v - 3. Tear off and keep a corner of the sheet of paper containing the information on which is copied the same number.. 4. Moil the sheet of information to P. O. Box 602, Pontiac, Michigan 48056. 5. If your information leads to on arrest, instructions will be published for collecting the reward without revealing your identity. Eligibility for reward will be determined and kept confidential by o three-man citizens committee appointed by the Mayor. Pontiac City Commission A—10 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1969 3 Months After Viet Downing Ace Rescue Pilot Back on Feet , FT. LEWIS, Wash. (AP) -Bill Rairdon. a 20-yrar-dld Army hrUcopter pilot who usrd to plurk wounded Gls from | South Vietnam battle rones, Is • bark on Ins feet for the first time since his chopper was shot down May 18. Already he Is thinking of returning to action; but thts time he would like to fly a Cobra. Cobras are helicopter gun-ships, the chopper equivalent of a fighter plane, and provide a man with a chance to defend himself. * * * "I wouldn’t mind going back," the slender warrant officer said Wednesday in his room at Madigan General Hospital. The enemy, shell that brought down nis medical evacuation helicopter in the bloody battle of Hamburger Hill broke one of his legs, Injured the* other and ended 8'4 months of flying for the 101st Airborne Division. 13 HOURS IN AIR He had been in the air over, around and on the hill 13 hours that day. His chopper had zigzagged through enemy fire and "zero-zero" visibility repeatedly to evacuate wounded soldiers, one and two at a time. Rairdon, who smokes thin cigars and is trying to grow a moustache, Was 19 when he started flying helicopters Vietcong fire last year. ★ * * Originally from Bellingham, Wash., ha holds the Silver Star, a Distinguished Flying Cross, the Air Medal with six oak leaf clusters, the Army Commendation Medal and the Purple Heart. Paper work has been complet-, . , .............. , , I MR ed for a field promotion to lieu- m face» ^ree months of treat-' “We are losing lots of boys tenant ment anc* tneraPy- there, he said, But we are not ' I * .* * getting much for them. We WEEKS IN CAST j Rut he would return to duty In know the minute we move outi He was 2Vi weeks in a body South Vietnam if ordered, even they (the Vietcong and North cast in a Japanese hospital after though he does not like the way [Vietnamese) would move right! his chopper wak shot down.1 He! the war is going. Iback in." AP Wlr.phol. ‘THE SAINT’—Bill Rairdon, 20, who earned the nickname “Saint" for flying his helicopter in “zero-zero" weather to pluck wounded Gls from a South Vietnam battle zone, was hack on his feet Wednesday for the first time since his chopper was downed May 18. Motorboat Pollution Studied at U-M ANN ARBOR (UPI) — Thc more about the problem. The (Foundation's sea grant pro-University of Michigan saidstut^ involves testing outboardjgram." Wednesday outboard engines motors und£r various conditions! “Outboard engines are sus-may become to the great lakes of "use and load" and "how pected of contributing signifi-what automobile engines are to 'their submerged exhaust emis-lcant quantities of unburned hy-big-city air. [slons contribute to pollution will drocarbons, lead and halides to "But no one knows the prob- be determined," the school said, jwater via submerged exhaust lem exactly or fully," the uni- The project, headed by Prof, emissions," Prof. Weber said, versity said. Walter J. Weber Jr. of the The problem Is “a very major ★ ★ * civil engineering department, Is-one,” he said, "but the precise A group of U-M engineers Is (being partially supported by ipoliution contribution of these undertaking a study to learn jfunds from the National Science | engines has not been defined. DO IT YDUBStlF SPECIALS OPEN MONDAY-FRIDAY TIL 9 P.M. KITCHEN CARPET wa specialize in Kitchan Carpet For all of your Needs ,„ AS LOW AS $095 Sq. Yd. FORMICA CABINETS *3995 * 24” with Sink and Rim CEILING TILE 10* 12”x12” Plain CIIKJN6 25c Sq. Ft. Includes All Metal and Tile PANELING CERAMIC TILE 4V4X4'/« 39° VINYL 12”x12” ASBESTOS TILE 12Vko oo. $£49 or Carton 9 CARPET TILE uw ..o49e PORCH A DECK ENAMEL *TMP Gallon $2*B 4x8 sheet, baked on Melamine finish resists scratching. Sealed back side keeps out moisture. SHEET 1075 W. Huron St. Phone .. JEJHH0L_ WOOD PANELING 4x8 Sheet N You Coni Buy From Os, We Both Use Money! TRUCKLOAD PRICES FOR ALL! Web MOV WE NEED ROOM! 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Horo’o on un-bsatable salootion... everything fa furnish your homo. Bo oorlyl All purohosoo subject to prior oolo. OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY 9 AM - 8 PM - OPEN DAILY 0 AM - 8:30 PM Air Condftionad Easy forms Free Delivery Free Parking Deal Direct - Pay at the Stare No finance company involved Phone FE 58114-5 ORCHARD 164 ORCHARD LAKE AVENUE • PONTIAC 1 Block. Wort Of South WM. Track Driv. .<► <►<><>! —WHERE BARGAINS REIGN SUPREME! THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY. AtGIIST !2, 19f»9 A—11 Service for William Walker, 20, of 390 S. Paddock will be 11 a.m. tomorrow in Messiah Missionary Baptist Church with! burial In Oak Hill Cemetery by the Prank Carruthers Funeral Home. Mr, Walker drowned Wednesday. He was a laborer. Surviving are his father; his mother, Mrs. Mattie Lee Powell; and his grandmother, Mrs. Dazerine Walker of Pontiac. Poacher Pays Price in Theft of Potatoes STANTON (AP) — Potato poachers are beginning to irritate farmers in Montcalm County, the sheriff’s office reports, but at least one convicted poacher has found it an expensive proposition. Arthur Wyma, 39, of Grand Rapids was convicted Thursday of stealing potatoes from a farm near Lakeview Aug. 9. Wyma was fined a total of $58 on the larceny charge and ordered to make restitution for the stolen potatoes. The value of the potatoes was not stated. Sheriff's deputies said there Julius Demeester MILFORD — Requiem Mass! for former resident Julius. Demeester, 80, of Fenton will be 10 a.iA. Monday at St. Patrick's Catholic Church, Union Lake,] with burial in Holy Cross Cemetery, Detroit. Rosary will be said 7 p m. Sunday at Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Mr.. Demeester died yesterday. He was a retired machine epairman for Chevrolet Gear. Surviving are two sons, William of Fenton and Robert Illinois, and eight grandchildren. Mrs. Francis J. Nissle HOLLY TOWNSHIP -Service for Mrs. Francis J (Alice) Nissle, 47, of 2527 Grange Dali will be 2 p.m. Sunday at Dryer Funeral Home, Holly, with burial In Lakeside Cemetery, Holly. Mrs. Nissle died this morning. Surviving are her husband; one daughter, Connie at home; one brother,' Guy Gillem of White Lake Township; and one sister, Mrs. Hudson Oliver of Holly. Mrs. Frank W. Prust FRANKLIN - Service for Mrs. Wank W. (Sally) Prust, have been several poachers in 41, of 32023 Mountain View will county potato patches this year, be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Christ . . .. ~h“ Church Cranbrook, Bloomfield Hills, with burial in Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit, by Bell Chapel of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Mrs. Prust died Wednesday in an Ontario drowning accident. She was a member of Christ Church Cranbrook and Sigma Gamma sorority. Surviving are her husband; one daughter Susan at home; two sons, Robert and William, at home; her father, Hamilton H. Paters** of Birmingham; three sisters; and one including some thieves who have been pilfering potatoes by the truckload. Crash Kills Mother, Daughter From Clio FLINT (UPI) - A mother and her daughter from Clio were killed yesterday afternoon and three other persons were injured when two cars collided at an Intersection in nearby Forest Township. ^ 1 I Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas J Mrs. William T. Bowman! Frank M. Barkwill tor Mrs. William TJ AVON TOWNSHIP - Service VrlTin l B1°1wman’,83- of 23rfor Frank M. Barkwill. 79. of. Frank will be 11 a.m^ tomorrow, 714 Mead will be 2 p.m. Monday at Voorhees-Siple Chapel with]at the William R. Potere ORCHARD LAKE - Requiem ■■pin m white Chapel] Funeral Home, Rochester, with j ®*ass f°r Miss Annette Slavsky,1 r,"~" burial in Lakeview Cemetery inr^year*°'^ daughter of Mr. and She was a member of St. James » Episcopal Church. Miss Annette Slavsky j burial Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Bowman, a member of All Saints Episcopal Church, died yesterday. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Otto H. Dahlgren, of Ha7.pl Park; three sons, Ralph, Gerald Cleveland, Ohio. Mr. Barkwill died yesterday. He, was a retieed sales engineer for Conveyor Engineering of Detroit, a life I _ I I - I member of Palestine Masonic »nd Cohn^, all of Pontiac; seven Lodge 357, Detroit, and a j-uiu | member of Rochester Elks Bell Chapel of the William ft! Lodge 2225. ; Hamilton Co,, Birmingham. I Surviving are his wife, Zella; Miss Slavsky died Monday. Service for Mrs. A r m a n one dau8hter* Mrs. David Clark, She was a student at De’Allende (Barjee) Crecor, 69, of 32 N.jof Avon TownshiP; and two1 Art Institute in Mexico. 1 grandchildren and a sister. Mrs. Arman Crecor Mrs. John R: Slavsky of 4730 Dow Ridge, will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Our Lady of Refuge Catholic Church with burial in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield. Rosary will be 8 p.m. today at Ardmore will be 11 a.m. Mon- Rr^children. day at All Saints Episcopal ] Church with burial in Oak Hill] Cemetery. Stanley A. Carter TROY — Service for Stanley Her body m&y be viewed A Carter, 71, of 2019 North after 7 p.m. tomorrow at Dorchester will be 2 p.m. Mon-sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. day at Vasu-Lynch Funeral Mrs. Crecor, a member of All Home, Royal Oak, with burial Saints Church and Guild 4 of Woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit. Surviving are her parents; one sister, Mary Jo at home; three brothers, John R. Jr. of Birmingham, Carl of Grand Blanc and Christopher of the Army; and grandmother Mrs. Valentine Bern of Detroit. Clarence Wolfe KEEGO HARBOR her church, died this morning. Mr. Carter died Wednesday. n B b u u n p Surviving are her husband, a He was the retired president Clarence Wolfe 80 of sister and two brothers. and founder of Stanley Carter; Pridham died yesterday. The - . . . Corp., Detroit, and a member of ^ is c' , riLhflrHt CpI. Harrington R. Fed the Greater Detroit Chamber Funeral Home. ! Service for Cpl. Haitington R- Economic^lub and D^trok Golf ^r' . Wolfe was a retired Fed, 20. of 478 Branch will be 1 ciub He wafpast presTden^o m'J,WMght Wllson W&S Missionary Baptist Church with tractors Association of Detroit Surviving are his wife burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. and *he Michigan Tnrt«, surviving are ms wife. His body may be viewed at the]Association 0f Detroit. Blanche; two daughters, Mrs., Surviving are two daughters and Mrs. Verla Techworth of Mrs. Robert Hawkins s body may Donelson-Johns Funeral Home after 3 p.m. tomorrow'. Cpl; Fed, home on leave prior to going overseas, drowned Wednesday. He was a member of Providence Missionary Baptist Church and a graduate of Pontiac Central High School. Surviving are his wife, Sandra; his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Macon L. Fed of Pontiac; a brother, Macon L. Jr. in the Army; and three sisters, Mrs. _ , , Earl ClavrKendra F. and An- Mass f°r £ ° d on of Dooiio,. Cummins, 62, of 1754 Holl- drea R., all of-Pontiac. inggworth’ ^ be w „ m Mon. Gerald L. Heard day at st- Catholic | Church, Walled Lake, with Service for Gerald L. Heard, I burial in Oakland Hills 13, of 480 Branch will be 1 p.m. | Memorial Gardens, Novi. Monday at Providence Rosary will be said 8 p.m. Lynn Perry of Keego Harbor California and Mrs. Herbert Broughton of Troy; one son, Robert of Orchard Lake; two sisters; one brother; and 14 grandchildren. ___ The body may be viewed after 3 p.m. tomorrow, after 4 p.m. tomorrow. - _ —-------------- Lonnie Cummins COMMERCE TOWNSHIP Pontiac; two sons, Delbert of Coldwater and Chester 0 f Orchard Lake; one sister; one brother; nine grandchildren; and 11 great-grandchildren. The body may be viewed Missionary Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. His body may be viewed tomorrow at Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. The boy drowned Wednesday. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs- Grover Heard; two Sunday at Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake.- ] Mr. Cummins died Wed-j nesday. He was a repairman for ] the Ford Motor Co. and a] member of St. William’s Church. Surviving are two daughters, brothers, Grover Jr. andjMrs. Roger Liberty of Walled Thomas, both at home; and a Lake and Mrs. John McCann of sister, Osie D. at home. Milford; one son, Ronald J. of] |Walled Lake; one brother; and Willidm Walker I five granechildren. Grandmother Pilot Dead; She Learned to Fly at 65 ONE PICTURE'S WORTh SIOO wktN it's on a coMMUNiTy check guarantee carc! ,. Community National Bank • Member FDIC THINK YOU HAVE PROBLEMS? -Then consider the case of Karen, a 6-week-old tiger cub born at Chessington Zoo In Surrey, England. First she was* deserted by her mother. Then she discovered this tasty joint of meat in her keeper's [larder. But Karen is still bottle-fed, and zoo officials say she would probably get nothing but indigestion from such a meal. PAI.MvSPRINGS. Calif 1 AP) — Zaddie R. Bunker was fin when she decided she'd rather sit in the rockpil of a plane than baby-sit her grandchildren. So that’s what she did: -* * * Now this desert community is mourning the death of Mrs. Bunker, a legendary figure among women pilots. Death came Thursday—just a week before her 82nd birthday and preceded by these achievements: Learned to fly at 65; flew solo back and forth across the continent at 66; earned her multiengine license at 68. and flew faster than sound at 73. DESERT PIONEER Mrs. Bunker, known as “the Flying Grandmother," and "the First Lady of Palm Springs," first came to the desert ini 1913—long before it became the winter playground of movie greats and other celebrities. Her first job, at age 26: delivering merchandise to local business houses from the railway station in a freight truck. * * * On winning her multiengine 1 pilot's license at Tetcrboro, N.J., she commented: “Why did If jlflearn to fly at 65? Because it’s * fun,” jjj She maintained that “anyone » can learn anything he wants to n with enough perseverance.” * Of her cross-country jaunt, she ft told a newsman: ‘Tve been “ !driving for 45 years, but if I had:'1 to make this trip by automobile U I don't think I could have done s it. Motoring just isn’t safe t enough.", " In breaking the sound barrier, , Zaddie piloted an Air Force F100 Super Sabre jet with Lt, Col. Robinson Risner as copilot. She confessed to friends recently that 18 months ago she half-heartedly applied to be an astronaut and was rejected. “I could have done- it,” she said, The funeral will be at 9 a m. Monday in . the. Palm Springs Community Church. Hot-Water Burris Fatal to State Girl LAKE ODESSA (APl-Burns caused by scalding water in a bathtub at her home have claimed the life of a 14-month-old Lake Odessa girl, * * * Marcey Jo Phillip died Wednesday in a Grand Rapids: hospital from the burns she suffered Aug. 12. officer, Michigan Everybody’s getting into the card game these days. Department stores. Gasoline companies. Banks, motels, restaurants —you name it. But if you spread all your cards on the table, you won’t find a better one than the Community National Bank Check Guarantee Card. The reason is as plain as the face on the card. No other check guarantee card in the Oakland-Macomb area has the cardholder's color photograph on it. The card tells merchants we guarantee payment of your checks up to $100. And thanks to that photo there’s never any question whether you're the person to whom the guarantee applies. Around here there’s no question what it means to have Community guarantee your checks, either. We're the area's biggest bank, with 21 convenient offices in Oakland and Macomb counties. The CommunityCheckGuarantee Card is one of the benefits provided with CommuniBank 500 — CNB’s do-it-yourself banking plan. Put $500 or more In a CommuniBank 500 time deposit savings account, andthecardisy&urs. But that’s just one part of Com-muniBanking. You also get 5% annual interest compounded daily, provided your mbney’s on deposit 90 days. A free personal checking account with no minimum balance requirement. And an automatic personal line of credit you activate simply by writing checks. - Open a' Communibank 500 account at one of our 21 offices today and you can practically be your own banker. You’ll also be a Sure winner in the old card game. n. Helen Marie Edmundi, and her daughter, Darlene, died in the mishap. Tarn r girls In the car were to-d as was tha driver of the ir auto. rs. Edmunds apparently ran itop sign and waa struck idside hr the other auto, Mrt. Georg* P. Raynale BIRMINGHAM - Service for Mrs. George P. (Edna M.) Raynale, 85, of 423 Tooting Lane will be 11 a.m. Monday at ~ James Episcopal .Churdi with burial in Greenwood Cemetery by Manley-Bailey Funeral Home. Mrs. Raynale died yesterday. ‘REPEAT OF A SELLOUT mk Tok* your choice of luxurious decorator colors In this smartly styled and quality constructed ensemble that will bring new beauty and comfort to your home. Yours now at a $100 saving through bur special purchase from one of America's best furniture makers. COLEMAN'S Pontiac’s Fastest Growing Store of Fine Furniture, Carpet, Appliances 536 North KURT Just Across GLENWOOD from K-MART ^ A—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1969 Cocoa Butter Is Bust as Breast Developer Q—1 read that cocoa huttcr will develop the breasts. Would it be effective for a woman in her 40s? Would a hormone cream be better , A--The best procedure is to improve y o u r posture so as \to project your bpeasts as much 8S possible. Exercises to BRANDSTADT develop the underlying pectoral-muscles should also help. Cocoa butter, hormones and other widely advertised bust developers have been uniformly disappointing. A—How some girls must envy (cover an implant after most (had a breast removed for a you! breast removals. [prgeancertus lesion rather than rhrnn hnit r i ft u f * * * a cancer. The former would . miner, lneiiective tor ,ln proper|y selected cases, I require the removal of less skin enlarging I He breasts, is equally [ how/ever, * this is being done-! than the latter, useless for shrinking them. The only way to reduce the I size of your breasts would be by partial removal of them by1 a plastic, surgeon but it is | better to learn to liv^ with them I as they are. Q—I have heard of a new type of plastic surgery used to en-|. large a woman’ breasts. Doj you advise it? A—Although silicone implants have been used to enhance the! breasts, they are not always! successful. LJunior Editors Quiz on- MOSS As a last resort, if it is all that important to you, buy a a plastic surgeon could tell pair of falsies. you whether such an implant _____ would be indicated in your case. Q—My left breast Is much larger than the right, What can be done about this A -In every woman one breast is larger than the other but in some the difference is1 more noticable than in others. The best treatment is a stubborn refusal to let it worry Q—I have very large breasts How can I reduce them. I’ve! heard that cocoa butter will do| this. Is that true? Small breasts are functionally just as good as large ones and! are nothing to be ashamed of. I Q—My doctor suggested surgi-1 cal inserts when I asked him] i what could be done about being flat-chested. i * # ★ Why can’t they do this for {someone who has had a mastec-| tomy? A—It is not so easy because there Is not enough skin left to THOSE CRAZY TREE TWINGS- ,r'M SCARS v! I NEVER SAW A WOODS LIKE THIS ^ SAVE MONEY ON USED . . . AUTO PARTS COPPER-BRASS-ALUMINUM (Wo Also Pick Up Junk Cars) FE 2-0200 QUESTION: Where does moss come from. Is It con-, sidered a grass? ANSWER: If you will look at a clump of green moss through a low-powered microscope, as the young people in our picture are doing, you will get the funny feeling they had — of looking at a strange forest, unlike any familiar one. You will not find flowers on these moss plants. For that reason, you will understand that moss is not a grass, for all grasses have flowers atssome time, even if very small and almost invisible. v The queer things sticking up are spore cases, which open when ripe, scattering little seed-like particles called spores, from which new mosses can grow. Flowering plants did not appear until the Cretaceous Period, beginning 135 million years ago. But mosses were well established 300 million years ago and may have been among the first plants to move on to land from (he original home of plants, the sea. These sturdy little friends of man can grow almost anywhere, sometimes in dry places, more often in wet ones. They can even grow oh rocks, where their minute rootlets can actually break off bits of rock. As the plants die, others grow. A bit of soil is formed, attracting larger plants. (You can win $10 cash plus AP’s handsome World Yearbook if your question, mailed on a postcard to Junior Editors in care of this newspaper, is selected for a prise.) CITIZENS An incident occured recently in the Pontiac Area which deeply effects the Parochaid issue. On July 28,1969, the North-Oaklaftd (County) Vicariate of the Roman Catholic Church voted on a proposal which would%ve set a policy of accepting, into surrounding Parochial schools, minority-group children from the recently closed St. Frederick Elementary School, in the inner city of Pontiac. DELEGATES TO THIS POLICY-MAKING BODY DEFEATED THIS PROPOSAL. This incident points out the danger of providing public funds for private schools. Proponents of Parochaid have assured the State Legislature that they are sincerely interested in the education of inner city, deprived children, and yet, the first Parochial School to close in the Pontiac Area was St. Fredericks School in the inner city. Proponents of Parochaid have also stated that they would not exclude children because of Race, Religion, or National Origin, but in this recent meeting, the North Oakland Vicariate of the Catholic Church voted against setting the policy of accepting minority-group children in their outlying schools. This is an example of possible problems that are bound to emerge if Public Funds are provided for Parochial Education. WE URGE YOU TO VOICE YOUR OBJECTION TO THE PAROCHAID LEGISLATION WHICH WILL BE PROPOSED AGAIN THIS FALL IN THE LEGISLA-* TURE. (signed) MRS. JAMES HARDEN, chairman CITIZENS AGAINST PAROCHAID t|A ■■ g% m l f mm |% NEW... QUALITY BUILT... DECORATOR STYLED YOU SAVE *100 j* • r* »x ™ 2 “T-- • 4 mi Sofa Suite CHOICE OF COLORS! • Blue • Green • Olive • Rod • Gold • Turquoise • Orange in soft “Leather- 1% Like” Vinyl or ./ 100% NYLON Available With or Without CONVERTIBLE FEATURE TO MAKE SOFA ^ INTO FULL SIZE IN Including SOFA ARMS LIFT TO REVEAL HANDY STORAGE SECONDS: SSm ANn TABLE Yours For Onl COFFEE TABLE HAS CONCEALED STORAGE COMPARTMENT • Toparad Foam Faddad Arm Taps—Makes Dad a perfect pillow for hit tneotM COMPUTE OUTFIT Big 90” SOFA or SOFA BED, Matching LOUNGE CHAIR • Uothar-lika Vinyl Covering—Pollshod and pampered like leather Also Available in 100% Nylon • Double Spring Conatruction — Hand tied tpribgt and tempered ceil* for durability • Thickly Foam Padded Seata-Backa-Arme-Re-ward youraalf with thia extra comfort • Zipperad Foam Chair Cuahlont—Revareible fey dot" • Ball Caater Front Leg* — for re-arranging or cleaning • Bulk In Walnut Flntah Morlite Tape—Perfect place for drinks, snack*, aah troya, etc. • Cencealed Arm Storage Compqrtmenta—Juat r Fashion Designer Identifies With Casualness of Youth At 16, petite Lynn Daly confidently walked into a New York City store and Inquired, “Does anyone need a model?’’ She was hired. TTiat was but the first step in a career which has led her to becoming a fashion designer for the Wendy of London line, an associate of Henry Rosenfeld, Inc. A native of New York, her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Daly and one-year-old sister, Kelly Ann live in upstate New York, while Lynn has her apartment in the city, where she can be close to her work. a school teacher who works in a field comparable to your co-op programs. I do send him swatches of cloth so that he ' can- give them to the students as a visual “By the way,” she inserts, “they (my family) aren’t in the business. My dad is “In designing,” she explains, “It’s a long, hard road but if you want it badly ,enough ahd have the talent, then they’ll find room for you. But any knowledge you can bring with you is to your benefit.” She stresses the Importance of education in her field, although she was an exception. “I didn’t have any additional schooling, but I was just lucky,” Lynn admits. “Today that would not be toe case. A Pontiac Pmi Photo by Rod Winter - “Notice the fine, simple lines. That makes a good dress. You can jazz it up or play it down,” Lynn Daly, fashion designer for the Wendy of London Ijne explains to Ben Alford of Thors Court, assistant manager of Hadley’s in the Pontiac Mall. Lynn will be in the area for another day before returning to New York. Cultural Calendar ART Detroit Symphony Finishes Season college education, majoring in marketing or art, is essential.” With a grin spreading across her -slightly freckled face, Lynn reveals that “art is my worst feat,” Then adds, “Would you believe that?” “My designs are sketches of the roughest shape and form. I depend on the artist to put it down on paper so I can show others.” PERFECTIONIST In all other respects, however, Lynn is a perfectionist in her field, which sometimes leads to frustration. “There you’ll be,” Lynn explains, “and in front of you is your completed design and yet you still don’t feel sure about it. You have this feeling that just something is wrong but you don’t know what. Finally, when it does hit you, you’ll discover it is something like a button or a change in the position of a pocket.” The Wendy of London line is “high fashion brought down to the junior level by modification and then moderately-priced. Changes. She no longer feels that the line between dress and sportswear is as wide as it once was. in fact she sees it somewhat overlapping. “Today, the pants suits are the “thing.” But they usually have a tunic top which can convert to a minidress. This shows the sportswear influence.. - “But the biggest thing I see , is the sudden importance of accessories. That was inevitable, however. With the dress lines becoming simple and basic, accessories were needed to jazz up clothes. “You can take a nothing dress,” Lynn believes, “and with a chain belt or a scarf (two of her favorites) you can make it look WOW!" Declining to give her age, Lynn does consider herself of the younger generation which she describes as “individualistic and casual (I go on a first name basis with everyone),” Wowm Drug Company in Pending 'Pill' Denies Liability Court Action “But we also have to take into consideration the variations in people,” Lynn remarks. “They do all these different and controversial things in Paris and London and you just can’t ignore them. But fashion such as that is not for everyone. It is a matter of application. “You see a dress and you think it has a great collar or cuff, or. perhaps you like the shawl, look, so you take just that one idea and put it inlo your own work. “I don’t think you can really explain it because you just have to fed^tlLis an Mi^jiii|MMMA;’’-Lynn^omfnues, as impression, a talent,1 she seems to grope for words. In toe few years that Lynn has been in the field, she has seen Several important Sex Is a Mystery Even to Cellmate Her days are busy and long. Between designing, modeling, working in the show room and traveling throughout the United States, Canada and Europe she has little free time. But when she does, she enjoys reading “just anything” and taking long walks. Her apartment is 50 blocks from work and if she can, she, Will walk home. “That is a great opportunity for me Just to watch people,” Lynn says. “And who knows what new idea I might come up with as I am always looking, looking, looking.” Lynn will be in our area, which greatly impressed her by its cleanliness, for another day and then it is back to the drawing boards in New York. Her deep blue eyes becoming thoughtful for a moment, Lynn sums up her career by saying, “Fantastic, just fantastic. I love if, think I am doing pretty good and plan on doing this for some years.” KALAMAZOO. (UPJ) - The Upjohn Co. Thursday denied liability in a $4.5 million damage suit brought by a New York woman who claims the company's birth control pill caused her paralysis, loss of speech, a brain clot and coma. But the drug manaufacturer said it has other cases pending against it because of the drug, Provest, both because of alleged physical side effects, and accidental pregnancies. Breaking its usual rule of silence on pending court action, Upjohn said there was “little significance” to the $4.5 million figure in the latest suit. “Based on the limited medical information available to us about the case, we don't believe the company is liable," said an Upjohn spokesman. The suit was filed Wednesday in New York’s Supreme Court by Ira Howard and his wife, Beverly, of Manhattan. Upjohn immediately asked that it be shifted to federal court because the parties involved are from different states. Mrs. Howard accused Upjohn of being “reckless and negligent”, in manufacturing and distributing ‘^disastrously dangerous pill, productive of bizarre and terrible side and after effect.” She charged the pharmaceutical firm with negligence, breach of warranty and violation of the Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act. Mrs. Howard claimed that her right side became paralyzed after she had taken the pill and that other reactions culminated in a coma. She Is asking $2 million actual damages, $2'million in punitive damages and $500,000 for her husband for medical expenses and loss of her services. “We probably don't have a major product in our line that doesn't have some product liability suits against it at some time,” said an Upjohn spokesman. He said there were “less than half a dozen other suits pending involving Provest,” a relative newcomer on the market. He declined to discuss particulars. ATLANTIC CITY, N. J. .(UPI) -Atlantic City Police admitted Thursday they had failed to separate a girl from the boys. They said Charles Albert Nehus, who was tossed in the men's section of the Atlantic City jail Aug. 12 on theft charges, turned out to be 17-year-old Phillis Kachur, a young lady who favors trousers, loafers and shirts. “Well, hell, it’s hard to tell these days,” said Police Capt. Albert Wilson when the sexual revelation was made during an examination of the prisoner in Atlantic City Hospital. The Captain said Miss Kachur had spent eight days with a male cellmate. He said “The cellmate never knew his mate’s secret. Or if he did, he's not admitting it.” Idea Could Kill Chance With Widowei By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN DEAR ABBY: A lady I knew (not well) passed away recently,' leaving a husband and three small children. I want very much id express my sympathy and let this man know that I want to do whatever 1 can to help him, but I do not want to appear forward. I know him. only to say hi to. I am a divorcee, living'alone (I’m new in town) and I’m afraid if I telephone DETROIT (JR — Here is a list of cultural events in Michigan during the period from Friday, Aug. 22, through Friday, Aug. 29. Concert Artist's Life a Lonely One * BLOOMFIELD HlLLS —« Cranbrook Academy of Art Galleries: Annual summer stgdent exhibition, through mid-September Tues.-Sun., 1-5 p.m. ' ANN ARBOR — University of Michigan: “The Square in Painting,” Museum student exhibition, through mid-September. Tues.-Sun., 1-5 p.m. „ DETROIT — Institute of Arts: Rembrandt’s “Titus" featured In display of four of'Dutch master’s works in Great Hall, through Aug. 31; The Art of the Poster frem Toulouse-Lautrec to Peter Max, 40 examples, through Sep). 7; Watercolors by 19tli and 20th Century Artists, print galleries, through Nov. 30; Baby Rattles, 18th add 19th century baby rattles from permanent collection of decorative arts, through August; The Artistry in Basic Research, color photographs of molecular structures, through Sept. 7. Hours: 9:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m., Tues.-Sun. MUSIC DETROIT — Institute of Arts: Music, on the Museqjn Steps, Aug. 26, 7:30 p.m. STAGE ’ SAUGATUCK — Red Barn Theater, “Cactus Flower," Aug. 22-23, 8:30 p.m. TRAVERSE CITY — Cherry County Playhouse: “Never Too Late,” Imogene Cqca, Aug. 22-23-24, 8:30 p.m. Friday, 6 p.m.-9:30 p.m. Sat., .7:30 p.m., Sun. By JEANNE NELSON When Geza Anda, noted concert pianist, ends his first appearance at the Meadow Brook Festival tonight, he will return to Switzerland for the Lucerne Festival. Following this brief home respite, the artist will, in a few days time, be on a South American concert tour. Hungarian-born Anda first began studying “seriously” at 13 under the guidance of Budapest’s Dohnanyi and continued until his first professional appearance at 18. portion of the larger on-public-display collection which belonged to his late father-in-law. His suite at the Kingsley Inn contains a piano where several hours a day are spent praoticing, in addition to the regular Pavilion rehearsals. His touring year consists of about nine months, leaving little time for his family, which he admits is one of the biggest drawbacks in this kind of career. him he might get the wrong idea. Also, this is a small town and everybody knows everybody else’s business, and I* wouldn’t want it known that I called him — or wrote to him, because THEY might get the wrong idea. If I call or write I’d like to say something out of the ordinary. Something witty, or eloquent.’ (Any suggestions along that line?) I want to let him know I am sincere in my desire to help him, without appearing forward. ANONYMOUS DEAR ANONYMOUS: If you knew his wife “not well,” and know himmnly to say hi to, don’t call him. If you want to express your sympathy, send him a note, or card, but don’t try for wit or eloquence. And please try to contain your eagerness to “help him." It's not the “wrong” idqa he may get, but the right one which stands to kill your chances. DEAR ABBY: In response to the person who wanted to know what to say to a friend who drove her to distraction by ending every sentence with, “KNOW WHAT I MEAN?" I used to do that, too, but my mother broke me of the habit by answering each time, “No. I'm dumb. Please explain it to me." After a while I got the hint, and I don’t say that anymore. “CURED” Travels alone ; KALAMAZOO — Dalton Theater: “Three Penny .Opera,” Kalamazoo College' Repertory Company, Aug. 22-23, 8 p.m. ; DETROIT — Wayne State University, Hillberry Summer Theater Festival, “Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp,” Aug. 22, 1:30 p.m.; Studio Theater, “The Spprt of My Mad Mother.” . • Although he has performed under the direction of Sixten Ehrling a number of times during the regular Symphony season in Ford Auditorium, this is his first experience with the Festival which he states is an outstanding facility and embraces an appreciative audience. His home in Zurich, Switzerland, contains more than 160 of the world’s rarest art works, mostly oils and old masters. This priceless private collection is a With his wife expecting a child soon, she is unable to travel this concert route with him and so more and more time is devoted to everyday practice. A touch of the ordinary man’s sentiment escaped this ultra-sophisticate who has performed all over the world and even before roya’ty. We had asked him the name of “that marvelous aftershave lotion” he wore and with a typical' male reaction he tossed off “Oh, something French, I guess, that my wife stowed away in my bags.” DEAR ABBY: My husband of 22 years is giving me the "silent treatment” again. What gets me is that he never tells me what he's mad about, he just clams up and doesn’t say a word. This is much more annoying to me than a good tongue-lashing would be because at least I would know what I did to upset him. Herbert is in his third day of the "silent treatment” and I am about ready to blow my stack. I keep begging him to put m& out of Misery and TELL me what’s wrong but it’s like talking to a wooden Indian. Can you help me? SYLVIA DEAR SYLVIA: Give him a taste of his own medicine. When he realizes that his silence |is not provoking the results he desires, you’ll hear plenty. CONFIDENTIAL TO ' ’ G E T TI N G DESPERATE” IN CHICAGO: So you’re 29 years old, still single, and getting desperate? Your list of “prospectives" is very sad. • A sweet guy who swings both ways. • A married man who will divorce his wife if YOU ask her- for the divorce and agree to pay for it. • A man, old enough to be your father, who wants you to sign a pre-nuptial agreement which will entitle you to nothing should he die first. Stay single, young lady. Better to be MISS Somebody than MRS. Nobody. For Abby’s new booklet, “What Teen-Agers Want to Know,” send $1 to Abby, care of The Pontiac Press, Dept. E-600, P. O. Box 9, Pontiac, Mich. 48056. Late Arrivals Treated Best, Claims Woman pianist Geza Anda, Ehrling at Peak ! By BERNICE ROSENTHAL M[uic for Stringed Instruments percussion and Celesta .......Bartok Concerto for Piano and Orchestra, No. 2 in B Flat Major, Op. 83, Brahfns the last week of regular summer concepts of the Detroit Symphony Orchestra „• at; Meadow Brook opened auspiciously laft evening with guest soloist Geza An-df> at the piano, and Sixten Ehrling back oi^lhe podim. With Brahms, Ehrling lg at the peak of greatness as a conductor. He stresses the force and the depth of the composer. H|„ reinterprets the inner beauty and lyricisjm, and sifts out ahy trace of plwdtng heaviness and mawkish' sen-ttftlmmHty that tend to make the music hqn»i and dated. His fresh dynamic ap-prtach is shared by Anda, who plays toe dilBcult music With ease and coft-summate control. never a hint of stridency or rash pounding. Rather, there is magnificent, mature control, polished artistry and a sense of ease that makes the music soar and take wing. Even in the hectic, turbulent second movement, the beauty, and not the hotel, comes through. Anda is a perfectionist, and each tiny phrase is complete, each difficult run polished off to a turn, each little innuendo carefully and lovingly rounded off to a meticulously finished completion. The slow, third movement, with its lyric song-like texture, is done with sensitivity and gentleness, beautifully enhanced by Italo Babini’s moving ‘cello passages. linhlocf ' alvUn Pvalmni The fourth is'the lightest, airiest Brahms to be heard in many a moon, played with freshness and a touch of scintillating humor. tones. The rhythms are syncopated and uneasy. The general effect Is fascinating and thoroughly absorbing music with the lyric passages brought to the fore, by contrast, with a sense of |ase and tran-1 quility. Mr. Ehrling knows this music from the inside out, and brings to it a wealth of understanding and sympathetic appeal, Irf a most gratifying performance. Saturday and Sunday, the concerts will feature Elizabeth Schwarzkopf, world-renowned lieder singer. Next Thursday will begin a series of four concerts by the New York Philharmonic Orchestra, with Grant Johannessen, pianist, replacing originally scheduled Byron Janis. there was none of the vying for prom-bimtot none of the usual “anything ydu cap play, I can play louder” approach, which so often mars a performance of this work, Anda has grjsat pbwer and depth in his playing. That is apparent from his first notes. Tnarefore, he finds no need to impress his audience constantly with his LESS FAMILIAR • Bartok’s less familiar "Music for Stringed Instruments, Percussion and Celesta” occupied tt)e first half of the program. This is fresh, exciting, charged music, contemporary in approach. The instrumentation, using no winds is unusual and colorful. It is, at times, brittle, acrid, and biting. At others, errie and other-worldly. The strings become absorbed in throbbing pizzicati, in oddly Vatican Eyes Hemlines Strength, virility and virtuosity. There la muted sUdjtqg and deliberately muddled VATICAN CITY (UPI) - Vatican sources said today Pqntlflcal gendarmes have been ordered, starting next Sunday, to bar from the church girls whose miniskirts are too mini. Like aU churches in Italy, St. Peter’e has signs posted warning visitors that they must be dressed decently. “There is no order against miniskirts, but only those that are immodest,” said once source. By ELIZABETH L. POST Of The Emily Post Institute Dear Mrs. Post: I arrived 45 minutes before the service to assure myself of an aisle seat for my son’s first communion. The first communicants march down the center aisle, so this is where I wanted to be.. Since I arrived early enough, I think I’m entitled to this seat. But wouldn't you know that one minute before the children were to come in, the usher made all of us move down to make room for the people who were late and had no seats. I was fit to be tied. Don’t you think that the usher had no business making us give up our seats to make, room for these late-comers? There woula: be less tendency for people to come late if they weren’t always assured ■ of the best seats in the church. Shouldn't there be such a thing as church etiquette? — Mrs. J.L. Mrs. Lyndon B. Johnson wears d blue and green skirt culotte outfit as she visits the Ephrussi de Rothschild Foundation museum at Saint Jean Cap F err at, France. The former first lady wound up a tour of chateaux of the Loire Valley with daily visits to museums of the Riviera, during her vacation. Dpar Mrs. L.: There is such a thing as church etiquette, and one of the rules is that people who arrive early to get an aisle seat for a special occasion should be allowed to remain there. This is not so for a regular Sunday service, when it is simpler (or everyone to move in rather than make late-arrivals climb „ over seated worshipers. 9 Hindsight always seems »easy, but under the circumstances you copld have stepped out of the pew into the aisle, and said to the usher and the late-arrivais, “My son is one of those taking first communion, and I would like to be able to see him. Do you mind if I keep the aisle seat?” _ .>ivd* B—2 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AtTGUST 22, I960 Misses Marshall and Stanker Are Making Wedding Plans MISS MARSHALL MISS STANKER Couple Planning October Vows By Eunice Farmer Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Slellmach announce the Dear Eunice Farmer. engagement and u p c o m I ng I have seen some rather expensive coats made out of wedding of their daughter, printed velveteen and they look so exciting that 1 would like Theresa Lee, and Pvt. Jan to make one. ,My problem is this--I don't have a very large Richard Nelson, USA. The cou-. wardrobe and am afraid that because these prints are so dif-.pl® will wed Oct. 17. ferent and unusual, it would be hard to find one that goes with' The bride-elect attends everything 1 already have. In the end, 1 usually end up wllh oakland Community College, something practical and drab. j Her fiance is stationed at Ft. , MRS. M. T. E. I polk, La. He is the son of Mr. Dear Mrs. M. T. E.: ... land Mrs. Elmer N. Nelson of You have the same problem that lots of women have. They Exmoor Street. see something very exciting and lovely in ready-to-wear and] J____________'________ decide to make one like, it. But, somewhere between the time . . they have seen the ready-made garment and end up In the fabric .T£e cot on g n was turn‘ shop, their courage leaves them and they decide to use a more|c- ^ ttanq’_______ basic polor and fabric. * * The most challenging part of my job. is to try to persuade | women to put more flair in their clothes, especially if they make them. You have no idea how much more fun it is to make them| as well as wear them. I would make the printed velveteen coat and forget about' trying to make it go with everything. A coat is not part of an I ■ ensemble unless you want it to be. A coat can carry itself beau-| tifully, but you must remember to make it with a “covered up" look, not a low-notched collar which would show part of your dress. ★ ★ ★ . Unless you have an ensemble that will be worn open and must be coordinated for the effect, treat your coat and your dress as two completely different units. Did you ever notice how drab most women’s clothes look on dull, rainy days? You’ll make everyone who looks at you feel better if you wear a pretty color or an unexpected print. KINNEY SHOES 1 THE PONTIAC MALL Opon Sunday 12 noon to 5 P.M. An Oct. 11 wedding is planned by Sandra Sue Marshal} and Edwin H. Streit. The bride-elect, a graduate of Michigan State University, is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James J, Marshall of Tanview Drive, Oxford Township. Her fiance, the son of the Leo H. Streits of Tipton, Kan., was graduated from Kansas State University. Stanker-Van ce Albion College graduates, Kathryn Ann Stanker and Douglas Putnam Vance are planning a summer 1970 wedding. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert A. Stanker of Orchard Lake. Parents of the bridegroom are the Elbridge Vances of Oberlin Ohio. Big and Little Sister By BEIDER Pretty; Practical Looking for a bridal shower gift that’s nicet but not too expensive? How about a set of placemats backed with foarm rubber? They wipe clean, protect the table,and will save the newlyweds some laundry bills. To have smoother and well-finished seams, prevent them from puckering when sewing sheer material by placing 9! piece of tipsue -paper under the seam. Tear off after the stitch-1 ing is finished. • EXTRA SUPPORT • LONG COUNTER • LEATHER SOLE • CHAIN or PENNY At Horn ung’s our dedication is to fit, comfort and construction . . . that’s why we’ve been in this business for over 61 years. PRESCRIPTION SHOES OPEN FRIDAY EVENINGS Firemen Honor Alarm Operator WALk£r, N.Y, (AP) — Mrs.iquir«l^her to be on the alert Mildred Seamn, a 72-year-old | day and night so that she could grandmother, has just become geldom jeave foe house', reports an honorary member of the . Ml, •. , , .. . Walker fire department. jit s a relief now tobe able to lie She was honored at a down and rest without in-‘Mildred Seaman Day’’ after terruption. Two women, work- retiring from her 24-hour-a-day, six-days-a-week job as base alarm operator and dispatcher for the fire companies of Walker, Morton and Hamlin and the VFW ambulance of Hamlin. ing every other day, have taken over her job. To make an attractive curtain pull, use an inexpensive plastic thimble, drill a hole in the center of bottom of thimble, Mrs. Seaman, who for 10 j insert a cord and tie a knot on years held the post which re-1 the inside of the thimble. A delightful way^ to enjoy Sunday morning. Breakfast! 1 SUNDAY BREAKFAST BUFFET 9 A.M. to 12 MON SAUSAGES, SCRAMBLED EGGS. SILVER DOLLAR PANCAKES, JUICE, SWEET ROLLS, TOAST, BEVERAGE, ETC. Ml 4-7764 Woodward and Squaro Lake Rd*. BLOOMFIELD HILLS TAILOR TRIX WINNER Jean M. Reasoner, Ithaca, N.Y. is this week’s Tailor |j Trlx pressing board winner for her following suggestion. §1 “I have discovered a new use for the versatile paper fl towel. When altering a pattern in such a way that it must fl be cut apart, use a piece of paper toweling for patching |j the pattern into the correct shape. It is firm, flexible and I when taped into place, lasts almost indefinitely. The pat- I tern can be easily folded without disturbing the alteration f since this material is both soft anS. FRIDAY, AFGlST 22, 1969 B—a| j Etected Auditor Wants Her Job PHOENIX. Ariz. M — Mrs.| She asked lower courts to Jewel Jordan easily won an void the abolition of office election for Arizona State measure and they conceded her (Auditor, recently, but she may point, but the Arizona Supreme not get the job'. On the same Court ruled against her. She j ballot, Arizona voters approved says she wilt appeal her case to ja constitutional amendment the United Slates Supreme doing away with the office of Court. ' state auditor and assigning its -------------------------- functions to a new department Cottons can be made to, look of Finance. like linen, silk, wool. MRS. D. L. RAMPANELLI mrs. t. h. McConnell Ceremonies Join Two Couples The Bloomfield Hills home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James A. Corwin, was the set-; ting for the marriage of Marilla “ Grace Corwin and Don Louis -Rampanelli. Attired in a Bianchi gown ofj silk peau de soie with lace accents, the bride carried a Dutch! “colonial bouquet of Stephanotis,! roses, carnations and daisies, i S * * . Mr. and Mrs. James A. Corwin Jr. were best man and matron of honor, respectively, 1 in the Saturday noon ceremony. Sharon C. Lask was maid of honor . With Susan E. Meier,! bridesmaid. The son of Mrs. Albert Ram-! panelli of Tempe, Ariz. and the late Mr. Rampanelli, and his bride will reside in Tempe. ! McConnell-Manhart j A reception in the parlors of Christ Church Cranbrook 'followed the Saturday wedding of Anita Marie Manhart and Theodore Howard McConnell. 1 Joining the newlyweds as they received guests were their parents, the Lauren E. Manharts of Bloomfield Hills and the Howard B. McConnells of Brooks Street. ★ ★ * Gowned in organza over satin,i i the bride carried Stephanotis 1 and orchids. j Honor attendants were Joyce Scafe and Gary McConnell. The couple is honeymooning in Williamsburg, Va. BUSTER BROWN CLOTHING FOR CHILDREN ‘ BLUE BELL WEARING APPAREL FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY YARD GOODS rt Complete Line of and SIMPLICITY PATTERNS Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Aker celebrated their ffblden wedding anniversary recently at the Lapeer home o/ their daughter, Mrs. Howard (Nancy L Collins. Other children of the couple are Myron of North Branch, Mrs. Robert (Maxine) Tobin of Troy and Mrs. Fred (Lois) Miller | of Webberville. The couple married Aug. 14, 1919, in Pontiac. They have 16 grandchildren \ and eight great-grandchildren. Final We of MIDSUMMER SALE SAVINGS ON Ethan^Allen FINE FURNITURE AND DECORATIVE ACCESSORIES Woman Excited by Law, Hates the Housework j KNOXVILLE, Ky. (AP) — Mrs. Howard Hinds, who admits' she hates homemaking but finds | the law exciting, is one of fourj | women lawyers among the 400“ ! barristers in Knoxville, and the' youngest in private practice. { “The variety of law, thej challenge of service to society, | the broad bases of interesting ;and stimulating work — all this Appealed to me, andi I really, really like it," says the 1967 recipient of a bachelor of laws degree from Vanderbbilt University. Y * * Her husband is a minister at Halls Central United Methodist ! Church and Mrs. Hinds feels the ! two professions go well together, She quotes Martin Luther: “We theologians and lawyers must stand or fall together.” Art E234 — Washable Colors COATS and CLARK’S RED HEART KNITTING WORSTED 00% Virgin Wool - £ Mothproof — Tangle A Proof — Ready to Knit -Pull OutSkoin Vs UHAN’S VARIETY STORE 1475 Baldwin Ave. at Walton FE 4-3348 Open Doily 9 A.M. to 9 P.M., Sunday 10 A.M. to 6 P.M. Choose from formal and Informal fumltura styles In Hslr* loom Nulmag Maplo, Old Tavarn Antiquad Pina, Claaalo Manor Prultwood, and Shafflald Solid Chorry. Sava on lamp#, clocks, pictures, wall dacor, carpeting, baddingl CONVENIENT TERMS, OF COURIEI/ . ^ ^ Michigan’s Largest Ethan Allen Dealer PHONE 422-8770 15700 MIDDLEBELT ROAD • LIVONIA Just North bf Five Mile Road Oett.Starter SrtrtA Mar IMS A.M. la Ml ML taurtar ta MS ML Tots' Raincoat A poncho cut from plastic yardgoods makes a wonderful raincoat for tots. Such raingear! Is easy for very young children! to put on, allows freedom ofj movement, may be folded flat,! and is easy to keep clean. Just I spread it flat and wipe away, mud splashes with a well- ! [lathered sponge. Mack Shoes Yeti Hack Shoot trt at important to a child's loot health at tht 3 R't aro to hit aductUon. Quality construction plus highly experienced shoa fittart aaauro comfort and problom-froo growth. Canturlon Brown with Kiltie Flap. Other Oxfords In rad, navy, gray, ollva. Soma styles to EEEE. Thomas and regular heels. HaCK SHOE COMPANY 235 PIERCE, ST. BIRMINGHAM Medallion tip with monk atrap. Supportive. Black, brown, tan. Other allpona and lace oxfords. AA to EEEE. It’s feck to books the fashion-right way... WITH2ti{iss%$)bm„sHO's Am<$)binflood. SHOES FOR ROYS Start them off skipping smartly to school with nbw, bell-ringing styles, that place school-goers in a class by themselves. Put your child at the head of the class with popular priced fashion and correct fit. iLION’S _uMiNtNL1H LION'S STORE -- MIRACLE MILE Back To School in young fashionables Youngl'and does this bonded Acralan . plaid coordinated with an orlon turtleneck sweat/fr, completely washable. Sizes 3-6x. Go back to school in beautiful wool blend jumpers by Girltown. Subteens will love the fashion blue or wine colors. Accompany with a crisp cotton and rayon blouse, in subteisn tikes. Sizes 6 to 14. Jumper $16 Blouse Jantzen is just one of the fir\e back to school names spoken at The Lion .Store. This sweater comes in 60% Shetland, 25% Dacron polyester, and 15% mohair. Washer and dryer Soft. Boys' 8 to 20. *11 Bloomfield Miracle Mile Telegraph at Square Lake Rd. Open Men. thru Sat. 9:30 to 9 B—-4 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1969 Travel to Montreal MRS. G. F. BUDDEN JR The sister and brother of Carol Lynn Blomberg and Gordon Frederick, Budden Jr. were honor attendants in their recent wedding. Mrs. William Gorham and Donald Budden stood as matron of honor and best man. respectively. * ★ * The candlelight ceremony In Commerce United Methodist Church was followed by a reception in Glen Oaks Golf and Country Club. Joining the couple as they received guests was a bridal party of 12. Parents of the bride are Mr. and Mrs. John F. Merllno of Novi. The bridegroom is the son of the Gordon F. Buddens of Mapledale Boulevard, Commerce Township. The newlyweds are honeymooning in Montreal, Canada. Only Necessities j When traveling, itemize alii the drugs and cosmetics you use, Ruthlessly eliminate anything that's unnecessary, since cosmetics, et al, weigh quiate a bit and excess would weigh you down. Buffalo Their Future Home Stillpond Farm, East Holly Road, Springfield Township, home of the Buel E. Starrs, was the setting for the wedding an which has gone up in file last' two or three years, offers handcraft shops, nightclubs, casinos, even a summer theater. The weather is always sunny, the water1 always warm. Visitors are offered one - and two-day excursions to points as far-flung as Istanbul, Beirut, Odessa, Kiev, and the Danube Xelta. In the illustrated brochures it all sounds like a dream come true. But only with a group. Only If [you don’t mind the crowds, the noise, the jostling and the din. Only if you don’t mind taking your fun by timetable. “Someday,” the waiter! repeated, staring wistfully out to sea. “Someday it may be different. But right now I’m afraid you’ll have to get up. The Neckermann group is coming in and we have 55 meals to serve.” SUNDAY SPECIAL! leafing Up to II Persons SUNDAY LIQUOR NEW PHONE 373-1711 Parry at Pontiac Road \ WE NO W SPECIALIZE IN ITALIAN DISHES Here la A Partial Menu LASAGNE RAVIOLI MOSTACCIOLI PARMESAN ' S Italian Combination Plate WIDE TRACK AT WEST HURON rrmrvminnnnmns fi Alert Taens P Know Whara It’s Happening! 2 We invite you to com* • whara oga it no restriction. “ o All agas Welcome at all ~ help briiiii out ilia * niiliinil flavor. It add, • imo taste io your favorite salad and waken up llie flavor vf vegetable!. It la deliciulii In soda and adds lest tu iced lea. Squeeie it and make your own lemonade. There are hundreds of different ways to use lemons In cooking. Try some of ours; make uti some of your own. You’ll love the new lift it give* to all the food* you eat and all the beverages you drink. We know you’ll love the food you eat at JAYSON'S, 4195 Dixie Highway at Hatchery Rd., Drayton Plains, 673-7900, Excellent Seafood, particularly Shritqp ... Pleasant, Comfortable, Intimate Atmosphere. . . . J. tv. Heard Trio nightly featuring jsn and sweet music ... “Where Dining Pleasure and Hospitality Go Hand in Hand.” Helpful Uinta Lemon juice will remove Mains from your liumls. Just rub «>n then wash You’ll Like Our TOP SIRLOIN AN 8-OZ. FINE QUALITY SIRLOIN OF BEEF DETROIT (AP) - The Automobile Club of Michigan has asked three U.S. legislators from Michigan for help In getting the Coast Guard to restrict boat traffic through the 1-1 drawbridge at Zilwaukee during the Labor Day holiday. Calling the Saginaw River drawbridge the biggest headache in Michigan’s highway system, Auto Club General Manager Fred N. Rehm asked Sens. Philip A, Hart and Robert P. Griffin and Rep. Donald W. Rei-gle Jr. to support his proposal. “Unlike the Coast Guard which stresses the inconveniences a restriction in bridge openings would cause to shippers,! the Auto Club believes the safety of several hundred thousand motorists traveling the bridge this holiday is vital,” Rehm said. He told the legislators that “In the last five years, in jam-ups resulting from bridge openings, 247 vehicle accidents have occurred. Two people were killed and 247 were Injured." LIFTED 20 TIMES On Memorial Day and Fourth] of July holiday weekends this year, Rehm said the bridge lifted 20 times, creating traffic jams of more than 90 miles and delaying travelers for hours. "The present structure carries 6,000 cars an hour during peak periods," he said. "A bridge opening of only five minutes is followed by at least an hour of congestion.” Previous attempts to make the Coast Guard restrict bridge openings during busy weekends and holidays have failed, Rehm said. He urged that all' ships be banned from passing through the bridge from 4 to 11 p.m. Aug. 29, from 8 a.m. until noon Aug. 30 and 2 to 11 p.m. 8ept. 1. :Walker’s \Cue >Club t (Aeioaa From Andersen Cyclaa) UU JUUUJUU S JUUUUUUU OXBOW LAKE PAVILION DANCING FRIDAY AND SATURDAY NIGHT 9 P.M, TIL 2 A.M. COUNTRY WESTERN'MUSIC BY THE COUNTRY IMAGES FEATURING MALCOLM PAUL and BETTE DEE 363-9253 9451 Elizabeth Lake Rd. Union Lake DANCE To a Now Sound At the Famous FRENCH CELLAR at HOWE'S LANES uCA>od Soundw With Bob Rutzon T. J. Skee Norm Trahen Frank Lee MMuslo for Everyone" IU.J m a.t aita_ OPEN 11 A.M. to 9 P.M. THE FAMILY P LACE i ELIZABETH LAKE ROAD OPPOSITE PONTIAC MALL lUngglepStm Serving An English Type BUFFET BRUNCH Every Sunday Between 10 AJI. A1 P.M. Yen will find • variety at thla fabulous buffet that will deli|hl the most fastidious op- Sunday Dinners Served Prom 12 Noon to 1} P.M. ala carta *tll 1 a.m. • Midwest 4-1400 JOrdan 4-5144 DowaTswn PONTIAC’S FREE! GAMES CONTESTS MOVIES Live Entertainment FRIDAY* GAMES AT 12:00 2:00—Arizona Weston—WPON Western Singing Star 7:00—Body Painting Contest GAMES AT 1:00—Don Viano—Hypnotist 2:0Q—Chat. Gregory—playing tho musical bicycle pump, musical vacuum cleaner! Games Consist of: Bubble Gum Blowing Contest • Watermelon Eating Contest (Saturday Only) • Jacks Contest • Marble Tournament • Top Spinning • Hop Scotch Spoctacular Family Fun Festival Now Under Way. See the Wild West Animated Show 6 Free Movies Now at Kresge's (Lower Level) 6 Fun for Everyone. «> THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22. i960 B—9 BIRMINGHAM BLOOMFIELD Rook Hudson Ernest Borgnine "ICE STATION ZEBRA” DD Mon.-Thun! 1:15 Only Fri. & Sat. Evenings, 1:00 ft 9:45 tat. Matinaa—2:00 P.M. Only ^ Sun.-1:00,2:45,0:20,9:00 Beat Picture of the Year Academy Award Winner "OLIVER” OB Shown Monday thru Sat. ovonings 8 P.M. Sunday Evenings TP.M. Matinee Wad., Sat., Sun. 2 P.M. Baa Offiea Open Man., Tuti, Thura., Fri. 4 til I Wad., Sat., tun. 1 till • She Tells of 7 Years on 'Road' fiflHHFRRE DRIVE-IN THEATER WiVIIVI Hull Via union uu at hmoirtt no. OPEN NIGHTLY EM 3-0661 FIRST SHOWING AT DUSK •*■«*.» u*.r» fmi Jack Lemmon and Catherine Deneuve are “The April Fools” !■ Also_ A different kind of role a A different kind of man National General nclures M ELVISH PRESLEY CHARROI LONDON (UPI) - Wendy Myers crossed the Sahara' Desert with a sheep smuggler, met a millionaire in Calcutta and was puzzled in Chile by a bathtub that had seven taps, although only two of' them worked. These were encounters on a journey which most people would never dare to take in a lifetime. Jack Lemmon Catherine Deneuve in “The April Fools” M- | Rock Hudson Claudia Cardinals h A tine Pair It took Wendy-sgven passports | and seven years fronTthejige of 18 when she quit her jobat a I bank and decided to hitchhike around the world. “There were hardships, of course: going without food for three days” in China t o economize, being attacked in the Argentine and robbed in Hong Kong, walking the skin off my feet in New Zealand, crouching beneath a hail of bullets in South Vietnam,” she said. AMAZING HOSPITALITY “But all these difficulties, and! more, were absorbed by the! most amazing and heartening hospitality of the people I met. People have vacated their beds for me to climb into, gone without food sO that I might eat, saved my life, taken me with them while moving house, begged me to stay with them forever.” i; Wendy, now 27 and back in her native England working as a nurse, has just set down her > travels across more than 100 countries,. almost as many as| exist, in a book called “Seven! |League Boots” (published by! Hodder and Stoughton). ! She set off with a change of : clothes in her knapsack and 100 S pounds ($240) sewn Into her bra by her mother. Short of funds she may have {been — once she slept in a dog jkennel on a ship’s deck — but her adventures took her where! I rich tourists could never go. She found herself staying with. Among the more mentionablJ-government ministers in South of the foods she'sampled, were America, talking in Ceylon to j tiger steaks in Cambodia and the-then woman prime minister,!roast ants in Botswana. Mrs. jSirimavo Bandaranaike. She sums up: “If I was prepared to sleep anywhere, fight heat, cold, mosquitoes and eat' local food, then I was accepted and protected by the people with whom I traveled. Trust begets trust, . respect begets respect, was one of the The millionaire in Calcutta loaned her polo ponies to ride and invited her to games of croquet with his family on well-watered lawns. The sheep smuggler gathered her sand roses in the Sahara. In Kuwait she sold her blood to supplement her cash. She . . , 1, darned flags on a ship in thelpr,rrfary lpssons 1 ,earned Red Sea. She picked apples ini . ★ ★ + . New Zealand — while prac-j “But don’t you worry about! ticing Chinese pronunciations'their smell? Their language?, from a teach-yourself book Their color? I was frequently before venturing to Peking. I asked. ‘To be quite honest, I “The first Jime I started this 'never noticed it,’ I would as! ‘Mum caw yu „run: Hao bu j frequently reply. When I look! hao?’ business, the farmer’s back, I tmly cannot remember i wife came tearing a long! the colors of half my foreign through the apple trees at top j friends nor the language in speed. After staring at me for which we conversed. And as for some minutes, she gasped, ‘Oh smell. I’m sure that after miss-it’s you: I thought that one of ing a bath for several days — our cows was in labor.’ ” j as. I often did — I smelled twice On the train in Communist!as bad as some of them were China, she joined her fellow supposed to.” I passengers s i n g 1 n tionary songs until a neighbor said, "Do you know what the words mean? ‘Down with Britain and the U.S.A.’ ” CEDAR POINT ’ MANOUBKY.OHIO NEW RUNAWAY MINE CAR RIDE A Smooth, Hurtling Half-Mllo Adventure From high above Frontier Town, you plunge headlong through tightly-banked turns, twisting down to skim the surface of Cedar Creek and swirl up again above the trees and churning riverboats. It's a gold mind of thrills that cost moro than $1,000,000 to build. Join tho Cedar Crook Gold Rush. It's a unlquoly moving sonsqtion. i THE PERFECT QUADRANGLE ... i ...A MAN AND lit HIS 3 EX-WIVES 2nd Hit "THE TAMING” sow CONFISCATES SAND Christmas Day of 1964 found her traveling on the trans-Siberian railroad. At the Mongolian border, customs officials confiscated a packet of sand she had purloined from the Gobi Desert. On the Siberian side, they confiscated her bag of oranges, but she burst into tears and was given them back, searched her for drugs. The I U.S. Customs officlalsj searched her for drugs. The; North Vietnamese searched her for spy1 equipment. Before! entering South Vietnam, she had to sign a statement for a .British consul saying she accepted entire responsibility if she should be killed or captured. 32nd Police Shoot EAST LANSING (AP) - The 32nd annual Michigan police shoot—sometimes! termed the Governor’s Trophy match—is ■ set for Sept. 4 at the R. V. Gray ■ Ipistol range at Jackson. Some 500 individuals on about 150 I teams are expected to compete in the one-day meet, largest of | its kind in the country. The contestants represent some 90 police departments.- Defending champions are the State Police In Gass AA, Lansing in A, Jackson in B, Taylor, in C and Marysville Ip D. HERE COMES THE MASKED BANDIT. IN A MOMENT Hi COULD Iff DEAD and tho only man a SIMM nctuncs wtsfNiAnaN ROD WUIftOlWTOPI® WDIMER at 12:01 -1.40-3.21 SUNDAY KVKNINGS See complete ehowe etaitlng at 6iS0 A 5iSO he’ll fracture your funnybone and steal your heart forever! • WALT DISI E productions Sterling North's unforgettable 1 tale of a treckle-facea boy, a yellow hound dog, a high stepping horse ascal W TECHNICOLOR steveFORREST billMUMY “'KBTOLL ouLANCHESTER mm JONES.inm ACKERMAN TECHNICOLOR* Screenplay by Based on lha book by Produced by Directed by HAROLD SWANT0N • STERLING NORTH ‘ JAMES AIGAR • NORMAN TOKAR And Another Unforgettable Adventure WALT DISNEY MM: '' MON., TUKS., THURS., FRI. S0HEDULE Q YOUR HAT ON THE WIND at 7:00 • 9:15 - RASCAL at 1 WED., SAT., SUN. SCHEDULE » rascal *t nss • sms - bias - tits - ttiis HANS YOUR HAT OH THE WIHP it Itll - 4tSS «1:05 - Sill new exciting Yankee. COME DISCOUNT SHOPPING AND SAVE Daily 9 AM - 10 PM Sunday 10 AM - 7 PM DETROIT STERLING HEIGHTS DOWNRIVER Corner of Joy Corner of 14 Mile 20800 Fort St. and Greenfield diiif Schoenhon Jt the corner of Kmc PONTIAC 11?b N, Perry At Arlene B—10 THE font; Si IAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1069 CASH-IN ON THE y New The Revok^S 1,864 prices reduced to rock bottom levels as Yankee . declares war on the high cost of living. Cash in on Famous Label? and Nationally Advertised Brands! 100% money back guarantee on every i make at the firiiiMfH*! *mt THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22. 1969 B—11 Daily 9 AM - 10 PM Sunday 10 AM - 7 PM STERLING HEIGHTS DOWNRIVER Corner of 14 Milo 20800 East St, iiod Schoooherr ut the corner of King COME DISCOUNT SHOPPING AND SAVE USE YOUR CREDIT! w Sonny and Cher Are Shaken by the Sharon Tate Atrocity By EARL WILSON NEW YORK — Sonny and Cher, wha used to scare people, have now been scared by people. "Totally horrified" by the Sharon Tate murder case, they bought a big dog—"a pit bull terrier"—to protect them and their little daughter Chaste at their Hollywood home they bought from Tony Curtis. Jerry Lewis, they said, has round-the-clock guards. Having dinner at 21, Cher, who’s celebrated lor her frankness, said, “We don’t run In that set. We went to dinner there and I never liked Sharon. She was always making passes at Sonny. I’ll say this lor her, she was very female.” And she added, "We have a strange feeling the murderer is going to be somebody we know.” Busy promoting their movie "Chaste" which Cher stars In, which he steered all the way, they created a lot of interest at I 21 .where jacketless gents are seldom adfhitjgd. It all came out beautifully when Charlie Berns bowed to them and said gently, "We hope we have given you as much! pleasure as you have given us . . it it it Today’s World: Hermlone (.ingold was one of the many celebrities at the’ CBS Merv Griffin first night party at the Americana. "Do you believe in witches?” I asked her ... "What | do you mean?" she said with pretended Indignation. "I am one.” ★ ★ ★ THE MIDNIGHT EARL ... Merv Griffin was kept so busy shaking hands at the party marking* his first show that he didn't get to eat. "You know who brought a plate of food for me?" he said. "Gov. Hughes of New Jersey!" (CRS-TV prez. Bob Wood underwent minor surgery, and Merv sent him a telegram: "1 see we had our openings the same week"). Diahann Carroll said at the Ginger Man she’s In town for a few days “to soak uf> a little New York”-... Barbra Streisand and Mayor Lindsay’U cut a one-story-high birthday cake on B’way Sept. IS at the "Funny Girl" ann'y . . . The director's billing on a forthcoming B’way show had to be changed—as he wrote it, innocently, it was hilariously unprintable. Sr ★ Sr / TODAY’S BEST LAUGH: Pearl Bailey says, "They claim when I come out on the stage, my eyes swoop the balcony and sweep the orchestra. Sweep nothing! I'm counting the house.” WISH I’D SAID THAT: When Fort Defiance, 0., celebrated it’s 175th anniversary, Mrs. Wild Bill Davison said, “They’re celebrating my husband’s birthday, too. They’re both the same age." REMEMBERED QUOTE: "A woman doesn't need to know arithmetic—she can always charge it.” it if it EARL’S PEARLS: Ask the beys in the back room what they’ll have—chances an, it’ll be the girls in the front room. \ A fed’s philosophy: Why is1 it all these political candidates \ have to tell lies about each other? Isn't the truth bad enough? ... That's eari, Inter. v YouVe on Chevrolet Savings Time. You already know this is the time of year you’re going to save money. You just want to know how much you’ll save, and on what car. Plenty. On a Chevrolet. Take Impala. Even without year-end savings, you’d save. Many models cost less than last year’s, comparably equipped. You save again on your Chevrolet dealer's special year-end price. And you save still a third time. The day you decide to trade Impala in. (Traditionally higher resale value, you know.) Name another car that promises as much (besides Chevelle, Camaro and Nova). You can’t. When you’re on Chevrolet Savings Time, you're onto something big. Putting you first, keeps us first Chevrolet Impala Sport Coi B—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIpAY, AUGUST 22, 1969 After Heart Attack, Reporter Tel Is of Intensive Care NOTE-Much has you ^ weaving through the-That’syour heprt beating. If ittwas there. And even if you hadtracings of heartbeats and oth-|surrounding a single bed. Next reoriented into normal routine, fTJTJT 1y0Ur y0U re. t0?JU !!*0rnething rfea8Surin*' to on Os moni-iday, the ted is empty and you nothing demoralizes your’ self- is srre'is.’s sH HNgg tar * ~ Tr. re z*rSi JlsSr ' by an AP staffer who went five * * * I Afl*r 39 years of marriedlifej Visiting hours last IP minutes. | the withdrawal agonies of op-j8*8” ■*n anotber and I better. dvy* there.) Then suddenly throueh the *^* ^ be,,leftLfor 8 husband T**81’8 your on,y ®°ntact with ium addicts. WeU, shed a little ----- miraculous alchemy ofemer!8? *lfe,to talk about? But here the outside world. For five in-i tear for inveterate cigarette By HARRY W. BALL ,Rencv travel and medical effl-f. eaning 0Ver the high [terminable days, it’s just as HARRISBURG, Pa. nts. (SEARCH members say was] PIECE8 OF WOOD "This is the first really aclen- with a group of Turkish mountaineers. He said he reached spot where he believes the ark to be and found some fossils, but strong winds prevented extensive exploration. Another group was led by Dr. Lawrence Hewitt of Huntsville, [Ala. An Informed source said the [interior Ministry turned down ! dozens of applications. The Turks are aware of the potential for tourism if a scientifically confirmed find were made 1 exhibited. But they are edgy cause Ararat is a-security area [commanding a large segment of the heavily fortified frontier with the Soviet Union. AP Staffer Harry W. Ball Stores lots of frozen foods .. Makes ice jet fast! 'No Frost 18’ Refrigerator-Freezer Giant zero-degree freezer ' holds up to.. 166 lbs. Exclusive Jet Freeze ice compartipent. Sub-zero air is blown over ice trays first for extra-fast freezing. Twin porcelain enamel vegetable bins Total capacity, %. bushel.. Refrigerator rolls out for easy cleaning. G-E Colors or White. TBF-18SE EASY TERMS AVAILABLE TRADE-INS ACCEPTED • REFRIGERATORS • FREEZERS RANGES • WASHERS umd DRYERS Hurry and Gel in on the Savings HAMPTON ELECTRIC 815 W. Huron FE 4-2525 title effort,” saidR.E. Crawford' of Takoma Park, Md., president! of the Scientific Exploration and Archeological Research Foun-; nation, called SEARCH. Us nix-1 man climbing party, led by Crawford's son Harry, 34, of j Denver, Colo., claims to have found pieces of tooled wood or considerable age" above the timberline on Ararat this summer. tested and found to be about 4,000 years old. * * * I Last year Navarra climbed !with Harry Crawford, a six-time Ararat veteran, to the site of the] [find. The organization wasl formed to support this year's expedition, joined by a glaclolo-jgist, arctic logistics expert, photographer and Navarra's | son. It had competition from the dean of Noah’s Ark-Ararat men, John Libl of San Francisco. They say that, supported by 7TH EXPEDITION private contributions, they will Defying his 74 years, the still-spend as much ak >1 million spry Libi made his seventh ex-next summer in an effort to dig'pedition to Ararat, climbing save now. save later. Bouton's Fastball Suits Mickey Stanley Fine SEATTLE (AP) - Mickey Stanley admires Jim Bouton's knuckle ball as the best in the business, but he admires his fast ball more — especially after hitting one into the left field sSeats in the eighth inning Wednesday night to provide Detroit with a 7-6 victory over the-Seattle Pilots. Everybody picks on the poor Pilots. The defeat was the seventh straight for Seattle’s American League expansion team and the 11th they have lost consecutively before home town fans. * * ★ Stanley was the first man to bat against Bouton, the fifith of six pitchers who tried to steer the Pilots out of the doldrums. Bouton throws almost nothing but knuckle balls and Stanley says that says his knuckler is even better than the made Hoyt Wilhelm famous. “But when the count reached three and-two I knew Jini had to come in with the fast ball and I was ready,’’ said Stanley. Brown’s single, a walk and two Infield outs but, the Pilots got that back in the fifth. Steve Hovley doubled and Scored on a Tommy Davis single. * * ★ Touched off by Bill Freehan’s double, a Tiger rampage brought three runs in the sixth. Singles by Freehah and Matchick separated by an infield out and a walk provided another Detroit run in the seventh to make the count 6-4 but the stubborn Pilots wouldn’t give up. DOUBLE STEAL Tommy Harper walked and Wayne Comer singled infield and then the two of them pulled off a double steal that run Harper’s league-leading total to 61 for the season. Both scored when Don Mlncher singled and Tom Tresh drew a throwing error trying to cut down Mincher. That tied the count at 6-6 heading into the eighth. ★ ★ ★ Bouton pounded his fist angrily In his glove as he watched Stanley’s homer soar. Then he made an unassisted putout on Tom Tresh on a ground ball toward first, colliding with, and upsetting his former Yankee x teammate as he made * the tag. He struck out the next two men John Hiller, who took over for starter Earl Wilson in the sixth, was the winning pitcher. The Tigers open a three-game series in Anaheim tonight against the California Angels. Denny McLain of the Tigers will be after his 20th pitching victory. STADIUM TALK—Pontiac's bid to build twin stadia for the Lions and Tigers was discussed Wednesday during the visit of NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle in Detroit. Members of the Pontiac Stadium Authority, the Metropolitan Stadium Committee, the Lions and Rozelle looked at the Pontiac pro- posal and Rozelle gave encouragement to the plans. Left to right are Harold Cousins, chairman of the Pontiac Stadium Authority, Rozelle, Edwin J. Anderson, executive vice president of the Lions; Bud Finley, of the Pontiac Authority and Tom Gardner, of the Metroplitan Stadium Committee. > City Stadium Group Waits for Arrswets Pontiac's Stadium Authority, still waiting for a “yes" or “no” answer from the Tigers and Lions on the stadium proposal for the 1-75 and M-S9 site, expressed added optimism after the closed-door meeting Wednesday with a representative of the Lions and the Commissioner of the National Football League. “It was a most meaningful meeting,” said Harold Cousins, chairman of the Pontiac Stadium Authority which made a twin-stadia proposal to the pro teams and the press media in July. Cousins said that “even though Pete Rozelle, pro football commissioner, did not express a commitment to any one site, he did express the idea that 19 pro teams have new stadia or have them under construction and in most cases the placement of new stadia in downtown areas is proving economically unfeasible."^ DOWNTOWN UNFAVORABLE Cousins also noted that at the Detroit Rotarian luncheon at which Rozelle was guest speaker Wednesday, many of the Rotarians who are 'downtown businessmen “expressed the attitude that a downtown site was almost an impossibility because of the land costs and the parking and road accessibilities.” “We are very encouraged by these recent developments," said Cousins, “and we are hoping for a decision in the very near future.” • * * ★ Anderson, who has visited numerous stadia sites as ambassador for Lions’ owner William Clay Ford, admitted that the pro football dub has been trying to have a meeting with the Tigers and come up with some kind of mutual agreement on a site. Anderson noted Wednesday that the Lions expect to announce their decision within the next two wqpks. NEED COMMITMENT The Pontiac Stadium Authority has indicated concern over the increasing cost factor with each month’s delay on a stadium decision, ahd Cousins indicated that within six months - of a commitment from the pro teams, the first shovel of dirt could be. turned and a target date of Fall 1972 be set for playing the first game in the new stadium. Kansas City builders also developing the twin-stadia plan, noted that costs could increase as much as $100,000 a week during delays and contract nego- THE PONTIAC PRESS C—1 The game had been a seesaw affair up to then, with Don Wert launching Detroit’s ambitions by hitting a solo home rup in the second inning. Seattle replied at once with three runs on a walk and four singles. That was the first time in seven games Seattle had been in front of anybody. Detroit tallied once in the third on Ike FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1909 Council Proposes Recruiting Limits ATLANTIC CITY OB - The policymaking council of the National Collegiate Athletic Association has agreed to put before the membership convention proposals to make recruiting in high schools more difficult. Hie 18-man council, meeting here this week, carries great weight at the convention, which convenes Jan. 12-14 in Washington, D.C. , ★ t * An NCAA spokesman said the most dramatic proposed amendment would end unlimited recruiting by an institution’ athletic representative of a sought-after high school athlete. It would impose a limit of two expense-paid visits of a student to an institution’s campus for recruiting purposes. TWO VISITS In turn, the institution’s representatives would be cut down to two off-campus visits to a prospect and the prospect’s family. An NCAA spokesman said the proposals would change the basic nature of recruiting athletes by making it more difficult and at the same time would saye the institutions money. ★ A ★ The proposals are designed to ease pressure on coaches who take to the road to recruit and on students who are wooed by colleges and universities. Coaches would be prohibited from trying to recruit sophomores and Junior^ UNDUE BURDEN There has been criticism from many quarters that recruiting practices place an undue psychological burden on high school athletes. Other proposals include: • Requiring a prospect when visiting a campus to live and take meals on campus as regular students normally do. • Prohibiting colleges from contacting a prospect at the actual scene of competition, such as a basketball game. • Prohibiting both off-campus contacts and paid visits unjil the student has completed his junior high school or prep school. • Prohibiting any publicity by an institution of the commitment by a prospective student-athlete to attend the in-sitution, or accept a financial aid tender. O.J. Will Get Jersey Dirty Against Colts By the Associated Press This is the night O.J. Simpson taks his i shirt to the cleaners. Whether or not he cleans out the Baltimore Colts, well, that’s another story.* Simpson, Buffalo’s glittering rookie running back, will probably get more dirt on his Jersey this week than last, when, he only played a few minutes, when the Bills take on Baltimore in one of two pro football ekhibition games tonight. He saw limited duty In last week’s loss to Detroit, but figures to see more action against the Colts—even though “Mini Max” Anderson will start in Ms place. Simpson, used mostly as a decoy in his first pro game, nevertheless learned a valuable lesson: “If you don’t Mt the hole, you don’t get another chance. The „ backs come up too fast.” Also on tonight’s card is a game between Chicago of the National Football Lttgue and Houston of the American Football League at the Astrodome. The NFL Colts, who found the Jets too much to handle in last year’s Super 6owl, have taken three straight exhibitions from AFL opponents. . The Bills, who claimed Simpson in the draft after finisMng with pro football’s worst record (M2-1), have won one of three exhibition games this summer. Their victory came over an NFL foe, the Washington Redskins. - * * * Houston, which lost a 83-29 thriller to the Colts last week, will play Chicago for the first time. The Bears are fresh from a convincing victory over Green Bay. Houston Coach Wally Lemm said backup quarterback Don Trull will start against CMcago. However, Pete Beathard, the No. 1 signal caller, also will see action along with quarterbacks Bob Davis and rookie Rob Naponic, Lemm said. ★ * ★ Beathard has completed 20 of 58 passes for US yards and three E Tresh, B —Hovlty. Pr«MRSS (10). SB-T. Devil, Cosh. R ER BB to Indians Edge Beavers PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) — A fielder’s choice by Larry Burchart scored Ken Suarez in the eighth inning and gave the Cleveland Indians a 3-2 victory over the Portland Beavers in exhibition baseball Thursday night. •- AP Wtrenhoto ' -PAST THE TAG — Wayne Comer of the Seattle Pilots slides past the attempted tag of catcher Bill Freehan of the Tigers in their game last night in Seattle. Comer’s run tied the score at 6-6, but the Tigers broke the tie in the 8th inning on Mickey Stanley’s homer to win, 7-6. Waterford Post Must Triumph to Stay Alive Special to The Press -BOWLING GREEN, Ohio — It’s do-or-die time for the Waterford Legion today in the Great Lakes regional American Legion baseball tournament. Waterford was dumped into the losers’ bracket, 5-2, yesterday by Wisconsin. ★ * • * , Today’s opponent is Pennsylvania. The loser will be ousted from the double elimination tourney. Pemberville will take on Illinois in a similar do-or-die competition, both teams having lost one game, with a little more breathing room are the twb undefeated teams, Cincinnati and Wisconsin, which play this afternoon. Sent packing Thursday were Indiana and Minnesota, wMch both absorbed their second losses. Indiana was stopped by Pennsylvania, 1-0, and Pemberville eliminated Minnesota, 5-3. Hie annual American Legion All-Stan game between the Detroit stars and 16th District team will be tonight at 8 in Tiger Stadium. touchdowns in the two games he’s worked. Trull, in one game, completed 5 of 15 for 35 yards and one touchdown. SIGNAL CHANGE Although veteran quarterback Jack Concannon has been doing most of the signal calling for Chicago, Indications were Virgil Carter would start against the Oilers. * ★ ★ Houston also must contend with Gale Sayers, Chicago’s mercury-quick runner. The games touch off a flurry of weekend activity. Saturday night finds Cleveland, NFL, at San Diego, AFL; Kansas City, AFL, at Los Angeles, NFL; and San Francisco, NFL, at Denver, AFL, in inter-league action. In NFL games, it’s Green Bay at Daltys; Washington at Atlanta; Minnesota vs. St,' Louis at Memphis, Torn., and Pittsburgh . vs. New Orleans it Baton Rouge, La. Miami visits Cincinnati in the only AFL pairing- Doriqr Cuts Dodge S? SALE i of the Good Guys Motor City and Lloyd Bridges DICK CANAAN’S MOTOR CITY DODGE 855 OAKLAND AVENUE, PONTIAC, 338-9222 AFTER YOU’VE MADE YOUR DEAL PRESENT THIS COUPON TO YOUR SALESMAN IMMEDIATELY Government SAVINGS BOND New or Uted Car.Purchoie THIS OFFER IS GOOD ONLY FIVE DAYS Lloyd Bridges DODGE 1010 W. MAPLE IN WALLED LAKE 624-1572 0—2 THE POXtlAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST .22, 1969 Face Detroit Cowboys Saturday at Firebirds Hope to Have 'Dropsy' Problem Solved Hampered by "dropsy” of the football by pass receivers in their 24-6 loss to Lackawanna 'and 13-13 tie with Lansing, the jPontiac Firebirds have {strengthened their top two pass receiving positions in time for !the game against the Detroit j Cowboys Saturday night at {Wisner Stadium. ir ★ ★ I Ron Bemis, tight end who was I the No. 2 pass receiver in top total receptions the past two j years, will be back from hisi military reserve duties in time] for the game Saturday. j With No. l receiver flanker] j Mickey Blazitz, out probably fori CITY CHAMPS — Bill Manuel, (left) sponsor, and Bob the season with a leg Injury, the] Richer, the manager, proudly display the trophies they Firebirds will have a local pro-] earned as the city class A baseball champions. M.G. Collision duct, Gene Luppino, at the good moves and a good pair of [Central Division of the Midwest j Next week, the^SicgMrds for the gamd at a package price hands,” said head coach Tom {Football League. Pontiac and travel to Flint’s Astro-turf toof $6. Reservations can be made Tracy, "he,could be our answer]Lansing are tied at 1-1-1 in the! meet the troublesome Wildcats, by calling the Clarkston Lodge ‘ at the flanker spot.” {league, and the Capitol City] A bus is being sponsored'by or by calling the Firebirds ! With Blazitz and Bemis out of {team has a tough home en-; the Eagles Lodge in Clarkston Football office at FE 5-4201. 'the lineup for the two games, counter against 'South w est<-----------------i----------j-------ej----------------------- * * * quarterback Doug Holcomb’s]Michigan of Benton Harbor. "However, he has good speed, passing percentages dropped,! * ★ ★ much of it largely due to many passes dropped in , the twojn games. i Luppino, a veteran of five years with the old Arrows in the Midwest Football League and Continental Football League,! has been a kick return specialist and defensive back. defeated the Clippers in the city playoffs. flanker spot. Pipers Make Losses Known MINNEAPOLIS—ST. PAUL' (AP) — The Minnesota Pipers lost $772,000 for their one-year stay in the Twin Cities. The American Basketball Association team is being sold io an Eastern concern headed by Gabe Rubin and will be located] in Pittsburgh. The Firebirds have been {warned by scouts who saw the {Detroit Cowboys lose 32-22 to ] Former Kettering gridder]^ Flint Wildcats last week, Craig Hanson has developed that the Cowboys-have added into one of the better receivers]speed to their t>ackfield and for the Firebirds and the ex-]defensVe strength on the line, perience he his gained, coupled | ,1Th , a new team still with Bemis, Luppino and addedL . ... T- . • . trying to jell. I hope it,s not depth of big tight end Jom ^ weeksaid coach {Grunder are expected to boost|about the Cowbo I the Firebirds passing game. *** NEED VICTORY 4 Kickoff Saturday at Wisner is The Firebirds need a vlcitory 7:30 p.m. Gates will open at to stay in contention in the I 6: 15 p.m. Pontiac 9 Rallies in Class District M.G. Wins6-5 Over Livonia Winn®rs Play Flint Away Tonight M. G. Collision, Pontiac’s representative in Class A state tournament baseball play, spotted Livonia a 5-0 lead after four innings and then rallied to win the opening game of the district, A 5, last night at Jaycee Field. The winner now travels for a game In Flint tonight and the championship game will be played Sunday evening In Pontiac. WWW The visitors score two runs in the first inning on three hits and and error, added two more] in the third on just one hit. In the 4th frame, a homer by Bill Pelham made It 5-0. Then the local nine came alive in the bottom of the 5th. Ron Kind walked, pitcher Walt Miller singled, Dave MacDonald singled Mike Burklow singled home the third run before Rick1 Trudeau singled home the final run of the frame j. FINAL RUNS In the 7th Inning, MacDonald, Sanchez and Darrel Lovell all: collected hits, coupled with a ] walk to Burklow, and Rn error1 to account for the final two, runs. After the 4th Inning, Miller! allowed Livonia only one hit, and in the game he struck out 11 batters. PONTIAC III LIVONIA III i •Sr S lb r h MacDonald | I j Portnoy 111' Ouiltlow all Rout J I 0 tanchoi 4 j 1 Ardtll la 1 ? Trudeau 4 0} Pock Til . Burtkowltk 4 0 0 Schwalm 100 START STATE TOURNAMENT PLAY - City class A baseball champions M;G. Collision started state tournament play on the local level last night by defeating Livonia, 6-5. Moving out of the dugout for last night's game are left to right: Manager Bob Richer, bat hoy Mark Miller, Ron Kind, McMahon Scores Big Run Walt Miller, Jerry Hill, Rick Trudeau, Mike Burklow, Harry Bartkowiak, Darrell Lovell, Dave McDonald and Santo Sanchez. In the back row are Bill Collins, Bobby Burt, Terry Raffato, Jerry Harkey, Denny McDonald, Mike Vidor, Don Pickmann, Jack MacMahon, A1 Thomas and Harold^Krueger. Ex-Tiger Shows Legs Cards Given 5-3 Blast by Reds' Bench NEW YORK (AP) — Ken game running. I’d never havejderson's triple. The Giants were ST. LOUIS (AP) — Johnny Henderson's bat made contact be®" *hle to make it If I was in front. (Bench’s three-run homer in the and the ball soared towards left! ■MM following that Tiger rou- BACK j sixth inning and .clutch relief center field. And on first baseline.” ,, • .. . „ pitching by A1 Jackson carried an adventure started for elderly |HEADED FOR HOME remembered McMahon. "Back! Sj^e^the ^TVjufa Don McMahon. I h McMahon, his lu^ i» iwn u»mIm> i /UhMui »iri iver St, Louis Cardi- Phillies Dump Dodgers M Richie Allen Scores Go Ahead Run PHILADELPHIA UP) — Jerry Johnson pitched out of a bases-loaded jam in the eighth inning and the Philadelphia Phillies edged the Los Angeles Dodgers 2-1 Thursday night. 1 TWO’S A CROWD—Atlanta Braves’ third baseman Clete With one out in the eighth, !®°y®r» front, and left fielder Rico Carty both go for a pop foul Maury Wills drew a walk and in the 6th inning of their game with the Cubs yesterday ih stole second. Wills was out when Chica8°- Boyer hung on to the, ball and the Braves defeated Manny Mota's grounder toward j4*1® ^U*)S’ short hit the Dodger veteran. Mota then stole second and Willie Davis beat out a high bounder over the mound. Wes Parker walked on four pitches, but Johnson, 6-9, got Bill Sudakis on a fly ball to Larry Hlsle. * GAINED LEAD The Phillies took a one-run lead in the second when Larry Hisle legged out a double on a grounder past Wilis and scored on Dave Watkins’ single to center, then broke a 1-1 tie in the Cubs' Best Season Crowd Sees 3-1 Loss CHICAGO (AP) — Hank (saw the National League East Aaron’s leadoff homer and'Division — leading Cubs drop a Felix Millan’s run-scoring single {second straight to the Braves, in the sixth inning aided Jim ShXn RTchlt AlleTiiSilS *;m Brm°°; tf?1** • " WM wild Ditched to wwond oodiAtl4nt* Bravea ra'lladfor a H unearned run in the fourth when , I Thursday, ; dropped Ron Santo s two-out fly Held In two hits in the first I , * * * ^ter Glenn Beckert doubled five innings, the Dodgers tied] The season’s largest Wrigley Aaron a Wrd homer of the the game in the top of the sixth Field crowd, a Ladies Day.®**®*" ?ndJ^u hjf on three hits. Ted Sizemore {throng of 42,364 - 29,866 paid — B’’ Hand® jled .J*1 started the inning with a single] Atlanta^ Chicago^ J0|j lat8er ^la^Cep^da choice grounder by loser Clause | jta- J J ft TO.-,, 3 i o S base and catcher Ken Rudolphs Osteen, 16- . Wills tied the g^cytv./ MU 2 g ? S throwing error and sewed on norf„rJc*C.r15bJi,,J cf *211]Millan’s twoout single. The loss snapped the Dodgers Miiun lb ton Rudolph c soooi ...___ , , , , , five-game winning streak. I RSIS' « ISIS SS&L L ISSSl Aaron 3 g ,, w . I H ■ .. uv ..................... legs In 1963 at Houston I doubled offL-1, Thlirsfi-V ni’-u* _nH hll„J I I McMahon is the SJyear-old strengthened by the pitchers’ ri-]Bob Purkey and somebody sin- "® fif t ingthe National and took second 0,1 8 fielder’®iR-•>«'>'" u'soVo K.»mq.r .^ooo cied reached third on' a stolon relief pitcher the San Francsco tualistic pre-game running that gled me home.” Lmm wS«f choice grounder by loser Clause'?.«"•)« «t 1 2 8 9 5«'iton u j o o« Perez after a sacrifice. It beat Solution to Settle Golf Ball Dispute Delayed Until 71 MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) -I A compromise between Ameri-] ca’s big golf ball and the small-j er ball used by tiriat Britain] has been sidetracked until 1971.1 Officials of the United States Golf Association and The Royal and Ancient Club of St. Andrews, Scotland, representing 42 nations, held rules and implement discussion here Thursday, prior to the opening of the 22nd walker cup matches. Lynford Lardner Jr., Chairman of the USGA’s rules- com-, mittee, said the talks on rules and a proposed ball weighing 1.65 ounces and measuring 1.62 Inches in diameter were strictly exploratory. He 6aid no deci-, slons are likely to be made until 1971 In St. Andrews, site that year of Walker Cup Play.» 1210 British ball is now 1.62 inches in diameter and weighs 62 ounces. The American ball is 1.68 inches in diameter and also weighs 1.62 ounces. College Mentor Diet COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) H George Tarry, assistant athletic director at the University of Sooth Carolina, Hdied Thursday after a Jong illness. He was 60. ' hit In the pitchers'games.” followed orders and pumped *' looo twSlil&'rf After Don Mason filed out. i their way around third. unjy i 19 j» gw c* Henderson connected, and “You know,’’ Virgil teased! * e»r!«i ab McMahon started running. .......................- ■■ - .....1 i t i i cfnd'tnon' ib 5 i I ojJim Merritt his 14th victory U 2 2 fSSK'.f.'f J.b J.® i J against five losses. Moll.______________________ .. WDavli cf 4 0 10 RAIItn lb Rtrkfr lb 3 0 0 0 DJohnson If 2 0. Sudakl, 3b 4 0 0 0 Srlggi It ■rbwbr p 0 0 0 0 Joseph 3b , Crpwlord rf 4 0 0 0 H»W Cf 2 Haller c 4 0 2 0 Watklnt e f . Sizemore 2b 4 110 Money as 3 0 0 0! COeteen p * * * - - —-— - - - - - Gebrlelen McMahon later, "I didn’t think "At Detroit the pitchers don’t'you were going to make it." run before games,” said Me- But this 39-year-old was ln| Mahon. "With the Giants, we shape. There was no play at the | , do. It’s a good thing I’ve been;plate as McMahon steamed!.^ here awhile and did that pre- across on standing up on Hen-' IAJ0R LEAGUE standings > f | J| The Cardinals threatened In >ooo]the eighth when Urn McCarver cnorin pn n i oi singled and moved to third on Mpr"'* ph ? o i o' Phil Gagliano’s single. After 8u?4*rbpp ooo o Bryon Browne struck out, Jack-_ sr.npool i»2lL?]son took over for Wayne V# mu oiii4ji Grange, who replaced Merritt in nBB iil J.I-s.VFr.'n^ci Jh* “venth. Md ?ot pinch-hitter Newverk0^ ''fB-jiSbode Flpwi,c3s-r c Bavalillo to hit into a double Handtriraiv HR Ab»»Tj3I. Bonds 2 (J4K play. SB C.Jonot. B-Hirrolson, . . j. j. a. ||f R ER BBSOI WWW foil Jackson also singled in an in-® ® j surance run with two out in the J J {ninth. 1. 0 t 'CINCINNATI ST. LOUIS PHILADBLPHIA 3 0 6 61 i 16 o gop-ch ph J o o o|another Atlanta run in the n 1 »J____» >4 •] seventh when Rico Carty’s fly JJJ •« iJtf|wa® dropped for a three-base v.i, 11 ■—uoni4i4t, Rudolph, copwfo. b. wii- error by right fielder Billy 0 0 Olloml. DP—Chlcopo 2. LOB ..-Atlanta «, Williams ’ 01Chicago 4. 2B—DMIor, Coped*. Bockert, ""Hams. 0 Bonks. HR—H. Aaron (33). SB—Copoda. ) S—Britton 2. IM , 0! Ip h r or M- “ son p 2 0 0 0 ^Johnson p 3 0 0 01 Britton (W, 7-4) ... ~ ---• leltn ph I 0 0 0 I Hand* (L, 15-10) . svr* 3b o 0 0 0 I Ragan TO,., jTTTT To.., Lao Anpolai ., 0 a a III a • • — 11 Philadelphia .. 111111 tt>-2 DP—Lot Angolai 1. Philadelphia 1. LOB-Lot Angola! 7. Philadelphia 5. 21— . . Swim Mark by Junior ............. 5. 2B- Rial. 2. SB—lAilllo. Mata. S—Walklna J. ” IP H R ER BB SO C.Oataan tL,10-111 * ' Brower J.JMnaan 8 ® ; Loboy Jb 4 6 0 0 boiton’cf Jiff SilJ&y*!*, ? °» J * Connlzzro e 3 0 0 0 JRobrtin - T 2 ! iv„Tm oo? i-i W lAOB^son Connizzo'ro 2.' o.Br^*iM!!5fijkro. JJflgkro tW.7-711 To 1* JNwSsfl tL>1o{ 10 5 1 T 4 7 w-- isss M0 4 tt Woman Gats 1st Ac® Mrs. Norma Luasier fired her first hole in one yesterday at Silver Lake golf club. She uaed a four-wood1 on ithe 126-yard eighth bole and posted a Si for nine hole*. TUB PONTIAC PRKSS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 22. I960 Floyd Claims PGA Notified of Withdrawalj C—8 Britons Start Walker Cup Bid MILWAUKEE, Wis. (AP) —jup against a U.S. twosome of Rodney Foster and Geoffrey score is made by either side with its statingtati^aryi^Glles and StevefMeltiyfc Marks against America’s Bill The Walker Cup matches are Hyndman and Joe Inman. Th sigles matches, besides Bonallack-Fleisher battle, SAN FRANCISCO (AP) _J*eam 1® years, started its questto start the two-day interna-Ray “Floyd, recently crowned !t(^ay for the Walker Cup tr°-tional matches. PGA champion said Thursday'-’ a g0,f prize that has eludedi 0,1 Saturday, the same format _______________ night he told’a PGA official i,t^.nC0J19^’ I will be followed with foursomes! pitted’ Green against Giles; and the director of the Avco L , ?,ay ? top match Pitted in the morning and singles play j Peter Tupling against Siderowf; Golf Classic that he would not o"8 ??1^ t0Pi arrlate*r' Mlke m the afternoon. Benka vs. Melnyk; Marks vs. play in the tournament Bonallack, against his American Other morning pairings sent Wadkins; Critchley vs. Miller; Floyd, honored at a Dartv C0“nterPart’ Bruce Fleisher. j Peter Benka and Bruce Critch- Michael King vs. John Bohmann staged by owners of ®eP e^!/BoDna^k, playing captain for,iey of England against Fleisheriand Foster vs. Dr. Ed Upde-Nnrth seX,e*11t«te British squad, aiso was first and Allen Miller; Britain’s r " f ‘v UbS’ WlUJbe|off the tee this morning in the Charles Green and Andrew t°' disciplinary^ action two-ball foursomes. He and;Brooks against Jerry (Lanny) D cause of his unauthorized irishman Tom Craddock teamed Wadkins and Dick Siderowf, and withdrawal from the Sutton,--------—-—..... -— - ■ ~ , ’ Mass, tournament, said Jack Tuthill, tournament director for f f *■* ■ tJi Horse Race Results yet," said the 26-year-old Floyd. Tuthill had said no decision u__ai p„ri_ McClain county would be made until he talked! t1aze* K2u£ Kesults with Floyd. Thursday's results "I have missed tournaments SfcWOTS ^ \7TiM d before and been fined. I guess st0e")»'sTDenno 8,48 f; .I’m the bad boy this time b&- p*e,,il.«r{o:jo s.40 cause I was PGA champion. I I was tired, and I also didn’t 1 Qoufcnj <♦-»> row «ji.m have any cldthes for the Ryder Knox Abbe * P,t*11 *»!1» <30 s.« Cup matches in England. They|ThJ*SoS,rt»m.n were stolen in Dayton.” Tro1' Floyd won the PGA jehatnp. ionshlp tournament last Sunday, 8,hr*,88# c®™1' p,e1' ’ *«■•' ;judge Piter in Dayton, Ohio. |o!Te* Linda 3,0 Im |®|I^rpnp®5Sfi One reason he came to the [.it*—swoo cond. Paco; i miio: \ West Coast, Floyd said, was to cwrtPnp’Tim. 5,40 322! SALI"""' replenish his wardrobe. ““ It’s the 22nd version of the Walker Cup and Great Britain has been able to win only once. Another match, in 1965, ended in an 11-11 tie. * * * Victory in a match scores one point. When a match is tied, no held every two years, alternately in the United States and Great Britain. Either the larger U.S ball or the smaller British ball is permissible in an international match. Bonallack captured the British Amateur last month for his second consecutive championship and his fourth victory over-ail. Fleisher is the defending U.S. Amateur champion. In opening ceremonies Thursday, Gerald Micklem, captain of the Royal and Ancient Golf Club of St. Andrews, brought roars of approval from the crowd with his wit. 4.30 3. 8th—*3800 Allowance 8 Furlongs: 34°! Waltzing Baa 19.80 1.20 4.001 Roman Croonar 5.80 3.801 Hlndlya 2. so Twin DOUbla: (5 8-3-7) Paid 88.040.00 3th—82700 Claiming; 1 Mila 70 Yardi: 8 Scott'* Broaza 10.00 5.40 4.00 Oaaratt Balovad 0.40 8.40 Demagogue 7.80 Perfecta: (7-2) Paid 3109.00 H||0M|| " 11,542; total handla 8904,597 DRC Entries „ , SPORTS—DRC ENTRIES—KNAUS 8 40 M2 SATURDAY'* RNTRICS 1>on lilt Mt-8]soo Claiming; 8 Furlong*: . — - Pago Son 8 88 5-f! Abalona Perfecta: (2-4) Paid 875.20 Say Sr Error Ruins. Waterford 9 Go ’ Speed Mila G Arcadia Kid 01 8 Furlonaa: Ooctor I n Road u 8 Furl® Doctor I___ Enola Girl Kingston R--Ola Hub French Guy 8th—82700 Cond. Paco; 1 Mil Mister Margay J 8. High Card Royalten 9th—82700 Claiming Trot; 1 Rhythm Volo o. Chris Darns Pearl's CMp 10th—01700 Claiming Paco; l Gander Song 41. Frontier Marshall Paco On Roman Falla gtMeUlMto Prominence Prince Reaper Bee'* Little M»» Claiming; 8 Furlong*: ’■"i”*—* Pedagog— Thick ai A40 Mr. Mlco 1 ,.. Boronla Star 3.80 3.20 wedgr **— J 0« 2.80 4th^S___________ 3.80 a-Twl>ty Twlchat Hazel Park Entries Scoring on an error in the first inning, LeRoy Parks pro-vided the only run necessary for Owosso State Bank to squeak by Days Sanitary, 1-0, in Class *cl priday'* entries Waterford softball action last kW.®! BCobm,n# p'^i'umoi night. , ffeW ».tDuk, Owosso managed only one hit,'uSy™#*$an v*,,ev Dlreo a first inning single , by Jim Hahn, off of Days pitcher Jerry, Dot Mr. Fairiawi —, *: Chief Oaeeola Marlin Sola Thornes. I Lady Knox Hot Cargo Hurling for the victors, AiIotSLoimo Claiming Paco; 1 Mill Cohoon gave up five hits, butj^SM Qo**n proved to have exceptional j ct^eVarmtn control as he struck out 1,1 and Walked none. ScottyV Red Girl Days left five men stranded MarieneMir on tne bases, including two in shiawoy ahioo the top half of the seventh. 9“|cK. rom: Bio Doge Alberta Sunthlna Mighty Gai a-T. A. A J. 8lh—84200 Clal a-Touch A Go Go a-Countosi Marlon Amber Song moian eame Luka's Senate a-M. H. Van Berg entry 7th—812,500 Handicap; 1 1/18 Mile*: Onlbur Admiral Bong Bee's Little M 8 Furlongs: Pedagogue Thick r-" 1 —Kpllah _______ Rule Breaker entry l 1/18 Mlleti a-Octomar ■•Bill Oenton Court Rule Little Bit Grissom entry I Mike' Alhamore eon Father Zakoor I. R. Flynn entry Guido t; 1 Mllei Mucho Pride Scot! Camp Frivolous Boy Memory Book Unit Wit b-Sir Realist Stormy Will Bobby Isaac Crosses First Kahla's Gratlan I Quick P____ _______________ cheerlul Lady Bueno Tlampo Bitty Boy Cleo'o Dream Slh—31700 Cond. Pace; 1 Mllei Swinging Sltler Tension Prince Averll Hickory Encore Kay Preview Frosty Freight Bright Muncy Wing Flesh 7th—33500 Cond. Trot; 1 Mila: Volcanic Dan Internationalist HOgiel Amboy Affair Lady Missile Rhyihm Duka in ,wii Claiming 1*0001 1 Mile: Home Place Larry Midnight Johnnie Pocket Adam Timely Goose Tatar'* Ouean TheVoyager May Western Eldar Patch Pride mlnfo; t i / Gold) ' Plnla Bluegras* Farmer Knox College Gets! Race Track Gift SOUTH BOSTON, Va. (AP) -Bobby Isaac of Catawba, N.C., drove a 1959 Dodge Charger to )K;50J'0B?e.ze ofa‘£i Eonp CHICAGO (AP) — Mrs. Mm- victory in Thursday night’s 106-And^sJSiorihy jorie Everett, president and mile NASCAR Grand National wid^Adi" MiiV.i owner of Arlington Park race! stock car race at South Boston Demon ciark1’ Tyrone*1 Coun**1 track, said Thursday she has; Speedway. j toyaT ^ck*n,r** Cou,in c*utu* given Knox College in Gales- Isaac, who started from the burg, 111. a donation that has en- pole position after setting a DRC Results abled the college to purchase track record of M.961 miles per lthe Aurora JkniM race track b hour, led all but four laps of the .. _thuriday's rrsults A,,r„0 267-lap event on his way to * Pu,r2?TW« aal, tablishing a track mark of 77 358 ?SL« , 8 f’. ^ 8 *1' m.p.h. for the 1Q0 miles. if1^**88.« ,/u.**«»' . .. ,wa8 her gVa[anle€lUthal the. col‘ Isaac’s 10th Win of the season I M# ilm ^ wouid have the purchase was worth $1,000. | VaiMi1,*., is *, e.i« «7«..2o *3iilprlce mad® available to it from 1 Iri IMH Clalmlnt; I Purlon«n ............ 1 Rtlevant 12,80 6.20 4,WVI ' I'm For Doll 6.10 S.QO — Loop Bowlers Wonted «& 'Fella' Ardklne 17.88 10.80 . Lo KId eHl Auburn Lanes Is looking for SJJTmJ,. AMowonco; s Funeno*: bowlers to tpake up a Wed- jsfn“lng cindy 5,40 - her personal funds and credit. LNf.s.M.3,801 ■—>- Most Happy CHICAGO (AP) - Most Hap-i 4.80! py Fella, driven by Stanley " —jsjiireT'on^^^ IS'Dancer, won the first division of M^ay evening mens le^eatiiftH^cioiming, 4 P«ri^, the g18 750 American National 9:00 p m. and women’s leagues ^"cjr’* 2:.4S | Pace for 2-year-old colts and for Wednesday and Thursday poiiyitti Twini ts^i eeid 379.03 ' geldings at Sportsman’s Park morning and evening play. »«*-»«*•• ri*'"i“. • '«* »*“— i— SPECIAL PURCHASE WE WILL NOT BE UNDERSOLD Toro 5-h.p. Premium 25” Cut TRACTOR MOWERS 5 h.p. of ruggod tractor — built to loot, like all TORO ongirMorad feolure*. Likoi the 25" floating cuttar homing (move It up or down with a convenient life lavor), lifetime lubricated 3-opeod gear tranimlnlon , , . and that'* |uot the beginning. See ui first. Reg. »399M >329 95 LUCITE PICK A PAIR SALE! 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SELECT FROM AN INVENTORY OF OVER 285 UNITS. BIG FORDS (?) T-BIRDS (54) WAGONS GALAXIE, X.L., LTD @’/2- %■ 1-ton PICKUPS and VANS I'wtu.ES BEAT THE PRICE INCREASE! SAVE1 PHONE 623-0900 doubleTstopUght 'N wateTSordW T IWJUUUUVUL- TgU 5806 DIXIE HWY., WATERFORD A 623-0900 v I C—4 JL_ THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1969 W* Hava Your ' NEW PARTS ^ For Briggs, Tecumseh, ■ Reo, Lawn Boy and Clinton MOTORS AUTHORIZED SERVICE CENTER Paris and Strvict Hand, Power, Rida '*Comr in and let ua know your needs” McNABB SAW SERVICE 1345 Baldwin FE 2-6382 Fishermen on Spree for Salmon Rookie Is No 'Angel' lor Orioles Kealey wad surprised- His manager, Lefty Phillips, was surprised. And the Baltimore Orioles were left slightly amazed, By United Press International too. The coho, along with his king- j Kealey, a quiet 22-year-old sized partner — the Chinook - j right-hander from nearby Tor-have returned to Lake Michigan waters after several months of playing hide - and - go - seek with fishermen, meaning the annual late-summer madness is upon us again. Coho fishing off the Ludington shoreline in Lake Michigan has been picking up in the past week. About 100 coho, averag-| ing nearly 10 pounds, were j caught Wednesday 10 to 15; miles off the Ludington shoreline, with the best fishing I In 300 feet of water and 100 feet down. ANAHEIM (AP) - Steve ranee, Calif., had pitched only later, Kealey not only had his eight innings for, the California; first nlajor league victory but Angeles this year when Phillips his first major league shutout— | handed him the ball Thursday a 2-0 conquest of the powerful1 night and pointed him in the dl- Orioles, rection of the mound for his "“I wasn’t quite expecting! first major league start..- that,” said Kealey after he! Two hours and seven minutes | stopped the Birds on seven hits. { '‘Lefty just told me to throw PRE-SEASON SALE Only al Porry't Lawn & Gordon Contor do you got a true discount price. We have marked this machine way down for this pre-season sale. Don't wait, come in today. SKI WHIZ 300S Polaris Charger • 22 H.P. 795 • 15Vfe” rubber track • 5”x41" Track • 298 lbs. Shop This Lose Price *695 On* rld.r'i delight. This scram-Mgr guts 519 »q In. 91 track on the snow. And It has many of the same Ant faaturas os tha larger medals. Perry's LAWN A CARDEN CENTER 7618 Highland Rd. (MSS) 673-6236 Salmon activity also i s beginning to pick up four miles south of Manistee and three to four miles out into the lake. Scattered reports of salmon still being taken in the Muskegon and Whitehall areas have been reported, but only a handful have been netted in the past week. I Traverse City also will be an| in” place for coho this weekend, the Department of Natural Resources reports. EAST ARM The east arm of the Grand Traverse Bay is crowded with hefty coho, the DNR said. Some of the fish have already moved Into Brewery Creek nearl Traverse City. Some nice rainbows have been biting at the mouth of Thompson Creek in Schoolcraft County. A few also have been | taken from the Carp River in Mackinac County. Even if anglers fail to catch the salmon, they have an ex-| BROOKLINE,'Mass. (AP) — cellent alternative — lake trout.(Charlie Pasarell and Clark Good catches of trout are being (Graebner are old U.S. Davis taken off Manistee and Cup buddies headed in different Ludington. (directions at the young tennis Perch fishing remains very i age of 25. CUPS BIRDS—Rookie pitcher Steve Kealey, making his first major league start, will remember it for a long time, Kealey, a 22-year-old right hander, defeated the strong Baltimore Orioles, 2-0, for the California Angels, allowing just seven hits. strikes and that’s what I tried to do. I fought my control in several spots and they hit some pretty good shots, but 1 was fortunate enough to get | support behind me.” “I was hoping he could go five good innings,” Phillips commented. “I told him to just go out snd pitch because we didn’t have anybody in the bullpen. He gave us more than we could have ever expected.” SORE ARM “I haven’t thrown in about j a week because of a sore arm, but our catcher Bob Rodgers spotted a flaw in my delivery and the soreness disappeared two days ago.” Kealey had another reason to be nervous. His wife Karen is several days overdue with their first child. And he still remembers a chilling incident which occured late last month when he had a total of 21 stitches in his forehead and below the right eye when beaten and robbed of a paltry $2 at a Marine reserve base near Twenty Nine Palms, Calif. BALTIMORE CALIFORNIA abrhbl abrhl Buford If 3 0 0 0 Alomar 2b 4 12 Davis Cup Buddies Head in Different Directions Raftanmd cf 4 0 0 0 Ralchardt If 3 0 0 DJohnson 2b 4 0 0 0 Boil rf 2 0 0 DMay rf 4 0 2 0 Cowan rf 2 0 0 Dslrmplo e 3 010 ARodrgoz 3b 4 1 2 Phoobui p 10 10 Aleut c 4 0 3 “■ —iz p 10 10 Ktalty p 4 0 0 Drastic Sell Down Now Going On At MERRY OLISMOBILG-GMC All New Cars Must Move Out Now To Make Room For Our *70 Models. Look At These Great Price Breaks. Top Trade-Ins Too F85 2-DR. CLUB COUPE, Auto. Transmission, Power Steering, Whitewalls. •2585 CUTLASS 2-DR. HARDTOP, VS enable, auto, trans., power steering, power brakes, white-walls, wheel covers# •2866 CUTLASS SPORT COUPE, 2-Dr. Hardtop, auto, transmission, power steering, power brakes, whitewalls, vinyl roof, radio, door guards, tinted glass. •3192 DELTA 88 2-DR. HARDTOP, auto transmission, power steering, power brakes, whitewalls. • •3142 DELTA 4-DR., auto transmission, power steering, power brakes, whitewalls. •3058 DELTA CUSTOM 2-DR. HARDTOP, auto transmission, power steering, power brakes, vinyl roof, tinted glass, whitewalls. •3415 * MERRY 0LDSM0B1LE-GMC, Inc. 528 N. Main St., Rochester, Midi. 651-9761 Klim. . ......... ., California 1. LOB— Baltimore 7. California 10. 2B—Alomar, Belanger. 3B—Johnstone. SB—Buford. DP—Baltimore 1 good in southeastern Michigan, especially in the Thumb regions everything you need for HUNTING - FISHING -CAMPING and ... The *'•,« All Terrain Vehicle MUD PUPPY SNOWMOBILES in stock now ARCTIC CAT. MOTO SKI. HOMEL1TE TIUm TENT CAMPER *189.50 Sting-Ray Mini Craft Boat 20 H.P. Electric Start Outdoorsman SPORT CENTER mi Highland Rd. Pine 673-3600 Dl*. - Toyota of Ponliar Pasarell, a former UCLA star from Puerto Rico, figures his tennis career is back on the beam. Graebner, a one-time Northwestern ace, is ready to concentrate on private business in New York after this year. of Lake Huron. The being taken in 10 to 15 feet of water on minnows and worms. Tlie Charity Island and North Island areas of Saginaw Bay have been good for both perch, smallmouth bass and catfish. Now an enlisted man In the In the Upper Peninsula, good Army on leave to train with the catches of lake trout have been U.S. Davis Cup team, Pasarell reported in Munising and gave his personal hopes a big Shelter Bay in Alger County, boost—and helped Graebner Fishermen are using spoons in move a step closer tq a perma-about 60 feet of water. Bass nent decision—in the 89th U.S. catches have been good In National Tennis Championships Baldy and Thornton lakes and Thursday at Longwood. alev (W, r—2:07. i Phoebus (L.12-5) M.Locwz Court of Australia defeated Joyce Williams of England 6-1, 6-1 and will meet countrywoman Kerry Melville, who ousted Christine Truman Janes 8-6, 7-5. The other semifinal will send Mary Ann Curtis, the top-seeded American from St. Louis, against Virginia Wade, the U.S. Open champ from England. Both moved through the quarter-finals Wednesday. 31-3 12 2 2 AuTrain Basin. Baker Is Short of Speed Mark Pasarell, who slipped from the nation's top-ranking to seventh after a miserable 1968 season. made his big move by ousting Graebner 8-6,3-6,3-6,6-2,6-4 in a stunning quarter-final upset. As doubles partner, the two are ranked second only to Bob Lutz and Stan Smith. TALLADEGA, Ala. (AP) -Buddy Baker, of Charlotte, N.C., came wjthin a fraction of SEMIFINAL ROUND a second Thursday of setting an | The victory on a wind-swept unofficial stock car speed court at dusk sent Pasarell, record despite a drizzling rain, (seeded fifth, two notches below * * * Graebner, into a semifinal Officials at Alabama Interna-1 match with California’s Stan tlonal Motor Speedway said Smith, the No. 2 seeded Ameri-Baker pushed his new Dodge can, who survived a bitter Daytona Charger around the struggle ih defeating Ray Ruf-2.66-mile tri-oval in a one-lap1 fels, Australia's No.-2 player, speed of 195.250 miles per hour, I Smith eliminated Ruffels 3-6, 6-one-fourth of a second slower 3, 6-2, 3-6,12-10. than Lee Roy Yarbrough’s unof- The women’s singles semlfi-jficial mark set on die same nal field was completed. De-' track two weeks ago. I fending champion Margaret Net Champ Defeated BALTIMORE (AP) — Rosemary Casals of San Francisco upset Ann Haydon Jones, the Wimbledon women’s champ from Britain, at the Baltimore Country Club Thursday, 0-6, 6-4, DON’T MISS FIRST ANNUAL $100,000 MICHIGAN GOLF CLASSIC A P.G.A. SPONSORED EVENT SEPT. 4 thru 7, 1969 Shenandoah Golf & Country Club Walnut Lake Rd., West of Orchard Lake Rd. West Bloomfield, Michigan TICKETS f, AVAILABLE* HUDSONS, 6RINNELLS AND LOCAL GOLF COURSES MONEY SAVING BUILDING ITEMS FOR OUTDOOR TIME! STOPS LEAKS WHEN APPLIED DIREOTLY TO STREAN OP WATER WATB0H.UQ, a quick tsthydrologio cement, 12 lb. can,,,,,,, $5.42 THOROSEAL, a heavy cement base tor waterproofing, 60 lbs.. • • 0.22 Colors (66 lbs.)., q. 0.00 QUICK SEAL, a earnest basa paint ovar Thorosaal (I colors) M lbs.................................12.66 TH080B0ND, a bending agent for concrete and plastie 1 gallon...............................................$10.44 THORORATCH, a cement base patching for sidewalks and floors I lb. eaw.............................................. 4.04 DRAINAGE TILE r.......*-16 SKIL SAWS W ONLY *3985 CLOTHESLINE POSTS *6” & *7“ ANOTHER POWERSAW 7" -*14M Prfcai iliw ^raYarW Prim POLYETHYLENE PLASTIC COVER .004 MILL. $598 IIW. & ROOF COATINGS Liquid or Plostic ijug 9 Gallons MR BASEMENT POSTS Adjustable to $J93 Natal PICNIC TABLE FRAMES *169B MB COMPLETE KITS 6^*24" For Coolsr Summers - Warmsr Wintare - INSULATB NOW! HEATHS sad COOLING DIVISION SALES WiWaiMMi SERVICE licensed Contractors, au makes of furnaces, BOILERS AND CONVERSION UNITS INSTALLED AND SERVICED 24-HOUR SIRVI0E HO North UGgtoaw FI 0-1111 BENSON LUMBER CO. Building and Remodeling Supplies and AAateriala 541 North Saginaw Street Ope* 6166 te liN Mea.-Fri. pp a Sat. IiM to IIiM Keen ft TaO*l Give Us a Try Before You Buy! We are in business to sail and service quality automobiles. We’ve “practiced” and “trained” for this purpose, and we’re out to win your confidence. We are a new dealership ... in a new selling season ,.. and we’re ready for it. Come in today and meet our sales and service staff. Let them show you how our team can put you in a brand new Chrysler, Plymouth, or Imperial. Harry Jacobs President , Jim Verhet New Cor Sole* Max Jackson Used Cor Sales Robert Reynolds New Cor Sales • We service what we sell • We are not the biggest dealership in town • But We’re trying WE’Rf GROWING! Ground has been broken and construction begun on our now facilities. 1 Our customers come first OAKLAND Chiysler-Plymoiith 724 Oakland - Between AAontcalm and Telegraph Phone 335-9436 h r:f«g Tiflt PONTIAC PRESS, Elj'IDAY, AUGUST 22, C—5 UNITED TIRE, INC. i 4FULL H.Y! ANY SIZE I ‘iss: 8s:aga SALE WATER SKIS 20% - 25% 30% OFF BOATS S TO 28%OFF COMPLETE USED SKI RIO (LIKE NEW) *995 Y boat^ce 1265 S. WOODWARD at Adams Road >ylvUll|30ol Conn's Bombs Congregation Win's Slowpitch 'A' League Playoff American League champion Conn’s Clothes exploded for 11 runs in the first inning last night ahd went on to rout Congregation, 21-2, for the playoff championship of the evening slowpitch ‘A’ league. The winner now moves into the city championship series I this weekend. * * * ; Morning League w: Gophers will take on evening ‘B’ champ Reliable Transmission at 7 p.m. Saturday with the winner meeting | Conn’s at 8:30. Both games are | at Beaudette Park. I Another twinbill will be played Sunday with the Saturday losers clashing in the first game at 7 p.m. and then playing the winner of Saturday’s nightcap at 8:30. TWO LOSSES This ii a double elimination! tourney and if one more game! is needed, it will be played next week. I CHAMPAIGN, 111. (AP) — All i Both Hoffer and Kratzert will I Hank Thomas and Walt 'three Michigan contenders were go on to quarterfinal play, but I Thomas pounded first inning .knocked out of the competition Gurley was eliminated when he home runs as Conn’s sent Na- Thursday in the first round of lost to Kratzert, 5 and 4. jtion League champ Congrega-lf118^ Pl*y *n the Western Jun-j Also still in the running are, tioh reeling. Cy Green, Larry G°H Tournament. [Bill Schumaker of Fort Wayne, FISHEYE VIEW - With a fisheye lens, the photographer of the Associated Press takes a shot of Earl Foreman, the new owner of the Washington Caps of the ABA. He gives the thumbs up sign after purchasing the Oakland Oaks in an announcement made official at the Washington Armory site yesterday. Chinese Get to Finals of Little League 1 WILLIAMSPORT, Pa. (AP) !— Nationalist China, in its first; year of eligibility for the Little j , League World Series, has made< it to the finals—and the boys did| it with some age-old American! | baseball strategy. | The manager of the Asians! [told his diminutive batters Thursday not to swing at thej pitches of Elyria, Ohio's hurler, but to let their opponents create their own problems with wild) pitches and walks. The strategy , worked to perfection, as Ely-i ria’s reliever, Pierce Burti walked in the winning Chinese j run in the bottom of the final in-j ning to give the Pacific champs a 4-3 victory. China will play Saturday against Santa Clara, Calif., a 4-3 victor against Tampa, Fla., in Thursday’s other semifinal game. i Ernest S. Barnard was president of the American League from 1927 to 1931. ThisIPfiek G.I.S. Fir Plywood, 4x8x14 . . . *275 6.I.S. Fir Plywood, 4x8x5/8 . . *572 Funing Strip, 1”x2”....................3C H,n. Lauan Prefinished Paneling, 4x7 s2'° 3-Ft. Front Doors, 2 Windows s147' 20% Discount on Hardware with Door State Junior Golfers Cuf Flyers in Fold Peet and Cliff Armstrong also produced circuit clouts Conn’s. Archers Knotted After 1st Day ofj U.S. Tournament Eliminated quickly were Rich- Ind., who will face Jim Spark-ard Grigas of Grand Rapids, Ids- man of Seattle today. Schu-ing to Bill Hoffer of Elgin, 111., maker advanced to the quarter-l-up; Jeff Reaume of Ypsilanti, finals by downing defending who lost to Bill Kratzert of Fort champion Don Hawken of Pro-Wayne, Ind., 1-up; ana Chuck vo, Utah, 3 and 2. Schumaker Burnham of Battle Creek, who I fired five birdies in downing! lost to Lee Gurley of'Highland Hawken. Park, 111., 2 and 1. * * * PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Centermen Geery Meehan and Serge Bernier have signed con-; tracts with the Philadelphia; Flyers of the National Hockey1 League. Meehan was acquired by the club late last season,1 Bernier played the last two! seasons with the Quebec Aces. 2 BIG OVENS in a space only SO" wide Little Joe’s Bargain Furniture Corner of Baldwin A Walton 332-6842 Open Daily to 9 P.M. Sat. 9 A.M. to 9 P.M. VALLEY FORGE, Pa. (AP) 3 MllllOil to 1 — Ray Rogers, the former world champion from Musko- OrJrlc fnr /?00/ I gee, Okla., and Mrs. Victoria UaOS TO' JUU Cook the defending national title holder from Minniapolis, took early leads Thursday at the first in WIBC Meet day of the U.S. Archery Championships here. # The event, taking place on the same field where the World Championships were held last week, ends Sunday. Competing are 292 archers. it it Rogers, 32, shot a 504 for the first half of the international round in Thursday’s competition. One point behind him is Arthur Anderson of Brooklyn, N.Y. Third, with 501, is Ed Elia-son, former Green Beret sergeant from Seattle, Wash. TONIGHT thru SUNDAY THE FOUR LADS Will Be at the New FIREBIRD LOUNGE Come Early! HURON BOWL 2525 Elizabeth Lake Rd. 681-2525 Will 1970 be the year when It happens? Witt) 50 WIBC Championship Tournaments in the history book, one special achievement — a 300 game — has so far evaded the nearly half million Women who have competed since the first tournament half century ago. The present odds on a 300 game in a WIBC Championship Tournament are roughly 3,059,919 to 1. That’s how many games have been bowled since the inaugural in St. Louis, Mo., in 1916. Medalist Dennis Walters of Denton, Tex. will go into semifinal play after stopping Steve Williamson of Ladoga, Ind. He beat Williamson with a birdie on the 19th after trailing by three holes with only four to play. Wrestling Meet Set for Midgets A summer Midget Championship Wrestling Meet will be held atx Hazel Park High school Saturday. The meet is for boys 10 and under. The state-wide event will give medals tol the top three boys in each weigh event. Admission is free and boys can enter before 12 noon. The meet is slated for 12:30 p.m. PATIO DOORS In Porma-whito, with a Key Lock, Completely Reversible, Insulated Safety Tempered Glass. Including Screen, 6 ft. Wide, 6'8" High. fcftOUJIfy COMBINATION DOORS PRC-NUNO Aluminun $12750 Kit Form THE CROSS DUCK complstsly hung door including hardware and key look *22u *29” Bill Fox Chevrolet introduces the FOX CHOP Cutting prices at clean-up time is one tiling but the way Bill Fox Chevrolet slashes ’em down deserves a whole new name ... the FOX CHOP!!! Shoot over now and select the Chevy you want at exelneive FOX CHOP PRICES!!! Yea sir,we are open on Saturdays. i Fox Chevrolet will match any legitimate advertised price of say Authorised Chevrolet Dealer in the Detroit Metrto Area.” All around tha homo, ba it sum-mar, fall, winter, or spring. Burke Lumbar it your homo improvement cantor, where you can always buy tha bast for lets! IVEM/ty. CENTER BURKE UMBER jy ALCOA Aetpiuo White ALUMINUM SIDING STYROFOAM AND FOIL BACKED 8“ Horizontal.... $325. 4496 DIXIE HIDNWRY DRAYTON PLAINS DR 3-1211 STORK HOURS Open Weekdays Mon. thru Fri. 8 A.M. to 5:30 P.M. Saturdays from 0 A.M. to 4 P.M. ' C —■ 8 THE PONTIAC PHE,SS, FRIDAY, AUGUST In throes of Despair Chisox Are Grim Lot CHICAGO ★. The Dow Jones industrial' average at noon was up 1.72 at 836.59. It had been up 3.17 at 11 a.m-. The decline in the DJI was attributed by analysts to softness in some blue chip issues. Advances led declines by I Another analyst observed that about 200 issues. the market “held up pretty well ‘The market appears to be ln its\two Previous sessions and marking time,” an analyst said, j*8 ®bilitjM° ^stay above the ‘with a lot of investors still cau-dH *t~ nn .i„ By JOHN CUNNIFF I AP Business Analyst !icism to about 2.5 per cent. | NEW YORK - Roger's OFFICIAL’S QUOTE | Round Table has been called to1 Shortly before the increase |order. its mission being to de- was cut, the Wall Street Journal" quoted a high administration of- under federal pressure and crit- unfair to expect American steel -producers to compete with imports from nations where labor costs are lower. tious and waiting to see if the market will resume a solid drive to the upside.” SOME ENCOURAGED He said the market had run up “some pretty good gains dur-ing its recent rally” and “still appears to be digesting them. level on the DJI apparently encouraged some investors.” Macrodyne Chatillon was the most active issue on the American Stock Exchange, up 1% at 14Vi. Texex Corp. gainecj 2 to 51%. Asamero Oil was up 26Vi. Buttes Gas & Oil gained Vs to 32%. The New York Stock Exchange ficial as saying it could be single biggest, most inflationary event in more than a decade.” The unnamed official added that it was “incredible” that an I industry should attempt to raise A lot of economists and others ' don't accept the argument completely. Instead, they blame poor management, even backwardness. One of the most outspoken criticism was published in the May 1966 issue of the Quarterly prices as much as intended1 ‘ y “Zc Z la whii* £ the cams ,1m. Journal of Economics by W. Ad- while at the same time seeking quotas to protect itself from im-I ported steel. ★ * * “It seems,” he said, that “the ams and J. B. Dirlam, both university professors. It was entitled “Big Steel, Invention and Innovation.” Exchange selected eHen —A— Sales High Low Lnt Chq. * nv* 70 70 v, + *4 tt " 44*6 45 m IT . .. 1544 13*4.— 44 3444 36’* 34H + AbbILob I I 12'/i 1J44 1 +244 AetnaLIf 1.40 AlrRedn ,95g AlconAlu 1.10 AII40 Cp .log AVMLlMl 2.40 AllegPw 1.20 AlllMCh 1.20 GPubUt 1.40 OTtlEI 1.52 G4n Tiro lb Genesco 1.60 Go Ptc .00b (Ml.) High LOW LM, CHg. 54 2444 24Vi 2444 -t- 1* 124 341/4 34V» 3444 M 1140 17 301 45 121/4 1144 19 71 2?'/i 2644 2444 ~ 8 ® !*» ffl* - Goodyear .15 210 20’/* C.raceCo 1.50 151 32Va Granitic. sti 27 16 I, Coytnnt, pk i. Hot, bu. ..7 », Sweat, bu. . .JO, 50-lb. bog Potatoes, 20-lb. beg . Red, dz.bi AmCyan i Turnips, dz. bcil. Turnips, Topper, bu. . LETTUCE and 0 ' cabbage, bu...... ssnxs cJ!bb*»' Escarola. bu. Escarole, Bleeched, bu. .. Kale, bu................. Lettuce, Bibb, pk. bskl. . Lettuce, Boston, dz...... Lettuce, Leaf, bu. Lettuce, Heed, bu. Lettuce, Heed, dz. Lettuce, Remains, bu. ... Mustard, bu. ............ Sorrel, bu. . . . Spinach, bit. . . Swiss Chard, bu. Turnips, bu........ .15 24 2344 24 + li ift fczf 1*7 50 50 50 224 30V4 2044 mb +11/4 44 34V4 34 34Vb + W 1? 50'/4 5010 5014-'/; - 44 *+14 Gt Nor Rv 3 Gt West Flnl GtWnUnlt .90 m ifiswll 47 4SW.44M 43'/* +1 1 3010 30V4 3010 + 1* 104 310 044 *90 191 1210 3114 3110 2t IK0 10'4 1040 73 2944 - 2914 2910 . ■ „ 40 R** 3??4 - 44 I'Sl a$d'£P *•? UJ ll 2410 - M 3.251 Arnpex Com 140 4?** 4044 Jfve + 2.50 Anecond 1.00 219 21 2710 ‘ 744 — 3 25 j AnchHock .50 17 4410 44V0 4444 - 14 2.25| AncorpNSv 1 5 21’/* 21V* 2114 fi 1 /SIArchDan 1.40 7 4540 45* 3.00 ArmstCk .(O 31 4010 40V* 4044 + 10 2.50 AlbldOl 1.20 44 39'A 237k 50 341. ■ . 107 3110 36 7 ll’O list RepubStl 3.50 67 301 Revlon 1.40 37 93 RepnMet .90 105 33 RtyhTob 3.30 147 H RoanSel ,35h 340 Rohr Cp .10 46 ____ __ RoyCCoIt .54 4] 31M 31 RydtrSys .50 Seltway 1.10 itjoeui l .60 StReglsP 1.60 Senders .30 sePeind i.«o SanFelnt .30 i»?f Scott Paper 1 SbCLInd 2.20 SoarlGD 1.30 SearsR 1.20a Shall Oil 2.40 SherwnWm 2 SignalCo 1.20 Sln^arCo.2.40 27 92 91% 92 ilrif 323/4 3234 37% 37V, 19 4% 4% 28% 28% 28*4 21% 21 91% 45% 44% Won't Okay Setup of j fend the nation {against big Joint Firm Till 72 /wage increases ! in the construc-I tion industry, TOKYO (UPI) - Japan will thus holding the, not authorize the establishment ]{ne on inflation' of a joint firm by Chrysler and preserving Motor Corp,. and Mitsubishi; free enterprise. Heavy Industries to produce The round cars in this country until the'table takes its fL* spring of 1972, a key govern-1name from its® - ..............- ment official said yesterday. foundfr, former CUNNIFF Yoshifu Miecumagai, vice u.S. Steel Chairman Roger, minister of the Ministry of Blough. It is a nickname really, American consumer is the one STEELMAKERS LAG International Trade and for this alliance of large corpo- w^° ne®ds protection” from the The authors claimed that U S, Industry said, however, that the nations is called officially the Amer'can stee* industry. steelmakers lagged behind the 1 government may agree if the | Construction Users Anti-Infla- Steelmen have become re- world in adopting new technolo-• two companies want to set up a tion Round Table. signed to such talk and some- gy, that large U.S. firms lagged joint company dealing with ex-! * + * times are bitter about it. They behind small ones, that the | port and import business. 1 ^sjde frnm won(|ering why contenri ,heir Price increases domestic industry added 40 mil-J! * Blough chose this particular usiwliy follow wage increases.!lion tons of “wrong” capacity in I ,uif ..minlstry1s ,0 method of fighting inflation, one Anfl lhey can prove that their the 1950s. v, withhold approval of the joint car canno( help but wonder if such net profits have been unsatisfac- * * * | manufacturing firm in Japan a scheme might not really he tnry- If a new technology, the basic .until 1972 is in line with the antagonistic to free enter- kfy OUFSTION oxygen process, had been sub- v Japanese governments policy prise ivivy wtie.Rimm stituted earlier than it had been .?,of not allowing such business w h question that has dis- for hearfhs, ,he authors J ventures until Japan opens its sharn|v in thl cons^nciion in8 bed tfC?n,T 1"* B°Ver"' said, the industry would have :'4 Honrs for fnrpion mnital in. narP|y ln tne construction -In; ment officials for a long time is r ;; doors for foreign capital in- H j vestment TS (ESI *«w.»4 without a doubt Ihty BSSS® “« BE - v. j manufacturing industry. fre in>*atin8 lhe cost of struc- should be assessed against steel costs 1 —■ .. .. ? .. . : turoe omlraoU 1.. u.. ,1_Lt. . P . ’ investments and operating II Cent 1.50 imp Cp Am INA Cp 1.40 Rand 2 • • -•251A1. g .. 2.00 CM** Cham 1 .. 2.25 Atiaa corp .. 4.50 Avnat Inc .40 2 229 11SV4 113% 115% 4-2% 67 28% 27% 4.50 Avntr me .40 33 14% 14% 14% 4- % 2.251 AVCO CP 1.20 31 26% 26*/4 26%-% 00|A\ Poultry and Eggs __ DETROIT EGGS DETROIT (AP)-(USDA) _ Price. bV , rM r#t,lv,r* I'deluding ,.Srede A lumbo 47-49) extra Ism MM*''**, 4,*44< MM1""", 34VM6Vb> BdbckW 1.36 ----»E 1.70 fit 1 tiling price ore AA 47.1 47.644) 93 A 47.644; | Ices paid delivered to < lo 2 higher' ------------ unchanged lo 3 higher; go pur cent ter grade A white. 42-45; mtdfui extra. 3+37; .tendard. 37-31. Livestock OBTROIT LIVESTOCK tOIT (APi — (USOA)—Hog. 100; • end gilts 25 cgnte lower; U.S. as ftriSi berrowe .. 14 300-235 __________ ■ „„ 37.2M7.75; 3-4 240.27® lb* 34.35-27.5; Hw" ■Taacvy u.s. 1*3 300^100 Ids 40+600 lb. 32.00-33.75. Cattle 200, not enough ol on dffor lor markol te .laughter itr— etoodyi .leu, choice 0r«0e. 23.00) _____ 11.00. Vteleri m Shoo* 101 Prwolool. ■etlmetee for Thuredoy, ceitl, cel vet 25) hogi 25) theup 05. CHICAGO LIVESTOCK ■I enough lor mortal to 31 164 162 164 +2W —B— 58 24% 24% 24% 11 32% 2% |2% 228 34% 34 34 54 55% 53% 54% 21 52% 62 62%. 12 4m 4i 41% 1.40 231 4 1 2m 1 i 21% - .20 140 31 ^ 304b 30H — Vk ■25b 211 66'• 631* 6b7/. + 7. c el 43 up 66 *711 1 I* 1.20 54 27V. 26V. 11 1.25 42 271* 27 27'A 1.20 154 43. 41'A 4144 ■ ; .07g 104 17H 17 17V. vt 7 14 2044 20V. 201b . . 10 1944 194. 194. — VI 40 34V. 34V. 34V. + 41 42 111* 11 11'* + VI I # 18*182 II Ken «■ 1.34 KtnFwL 1.10 kity led KeyterRo .40 KenncoH 2.40 KorrMc 1.5o KlmbClk 2.20 “opport 1.40 Iroitco 1.70 iCrotge OS .40 Krogor 1.10 CompRL .450 CoriMb 1.10 Cep. Cltle. id conn.i CerrlerCp .40 CorlorW .40o CMIIW 1.00 ----0 1.40b -tood .00 ____noAIr .it CRI *11 JO cm* ohhLi ChIMII step -hIFneuT 2 hi Rl Foe „.rl* C« .. 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I louNGaz Vic : 1 50 12V* 121* 12V* + 311* — 1 nIMIner 25p 144 29V* 291. 34 40V* 40** 01 314* 31 I » It « . .. 144 3494* 3404* 3494* + 4l 43 29 M4k 1044 — V 35 ,1} 1444 1444 - V 372 35'* 344* 35 +4 131 404* 394* 404* + V 355 54 53'* 534* + IV 24 35 34'A 341* — 4 21 30 1*4* 20 ...... 14 554* 53V* 55'* + 44 441 Sou Vf Sou SouRy 2.00 Spartan Im SporryR .31 SquareD .4 SI Brand 1 inf5 tenlltm 14 47% 47% 47%....... 89 35% 34% 35% f1% if m w i» M 2 51% #1 4 24% 24 io m% 31% I 23 29% 21% —K— Sid" KofTsman s toe a I 3.80b (tdlTthd 2.30 itOilNj 2.70g StdOilOh 2.70 St Packeging StauffCh 1.80 Sterlftrug .70 |tayinjU 2.40 121 35% 34% 35'/4 + —s—/ 26 25% 25% 21% — 21 34% 34% 34% .... 135 40% 40% 40% — 31 25% 25% 25% .. 129 28% 28 28 23 48% 47% 47%— 1 24% 24% 24% .. 84 51 50% 50%—2% 75 33% 32% 33% -1"% 8 18% 18% 19% 550 29% 29 29% + % 23 37% 37% 37% — % 10 39% 39% 39% - ' 285 71 70 70% -f 26 58 57% 57% »* 28 58% 58 58% — 75 29% 29% 29% 33 70 58% 59% +1% 38 39% 39 V ij| 1 % 617 28Va 28 V 62 32% 32V 73 25% 24V 21 39% 39 140 34% 3.V 26 47 451 $1 22% 2?v 200 44% 43’. 8 21V4 21V 133 45 44< 29 14% 14V 164 62 61' 93 58 57'. 219 73% 72% IP! 405 110% 107% 110% +2% 12 ini 12 | The United States has been tures contracted for by the big management and how much The industry contests the urging Japan to adopt ‘a new | comPanie.s l”al Blough seeks to should be blamed on other fac- findings and it could be right, policy so foreigners can freely :or8anize in a resistance move. !t0rs. [But the mere criticism in a invest their money ln the STEEL UP, TOO j The industry has usually scholarly journal indicates that Japanese automobile Industry. gut steel prices have been ris- blamed wage '"creases for fore- some well-informed people AGREEMENT ing too, and steel is one of the in8 Prlce increases- A"*1 has think steelmen can fight infla- Mitzubishi Heavy Industries, !most basic ingredients not only I argued as strongly that it was I tion a lot closer to home.__ Japan’s largest industrial firm[°f structures but of almost ev-which manuf actures ery automobile dnd every supertank ers, aircraft,!household appliance you can automobiles and other industrial name, products, announced in May[ As recently as July 30 U-S.' a that it had reached agreement Steel initiated an increase in the h with Chrysler to set up a joint price of steel used in refrlgera-,’t j firm in Japan to produce cars tors, and cars, Incurring the an-|*i in Japan. ger of none other than General £‘j The plan had to be approved Motors, which itself was con-£]ln advance by the Japanese cerned about th? prices of its v*| government under domestic 1970 models, law. ll ' State Chief Justice Hit- by Fellow Judge 6)1 )b yFd .00| 33’A IlVh + % I 23'A 23V* 23V* + “ 16 20'* 20 20 .... 3 16 ISM 14 + V* 33 30 29 29M + V* 244 39 30V* 39 42 41 40V* 40V*-J* 79 SOM 5* SO + V* 4S 37 34V* 37 10 20M 2 Leh Vel Ind Letimn J.S4g ____„.jn a 40 Tv* Tv* T;Z Llgg My lit 11 34M 34V4 S4'A -lllon 1.091 Llvlngtln Oil LockndA 1.10 LoewtThe .11 3S4 31 UMlcgm * M LongHLI 1.30 Luckyt 1.40b Luiioni ON 1 LykYng .* ... 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CO .30 49 15'* MoeyRH 1 24 04'* Med Fd 3.540 24 24V* Mognvw 1.28 192 4m bn 1.40 105 44M 33V* 14'* + 'A MertlnM 1.10 54 21 Moybotr i.4o McoonnO .40 MMdCorp ) MoivSho 1.30 Merck l.OOe nun 1.00 ntPw 1.40 r-Nor .00 torole 1 NelAIrlln .30 NeMJIaillVw Net Fuel 1.40 Not Gonl .20 ‘-"lyp* 1.05 .....nd .4tf NatLead Jtti 71 14V* ll'A 31V* 7 24V* 24V* 24Ve 124 25V* 2S'A 25V* 31 24V* 24'A 24V* li 44 41 MV* ,75 97V* 97'A 97V* 53 39V* 377* 30 <30 20 1*1* 19V* B 21'A 21M 21V* 43 109V* 100V* 109 13 20V* 20'* 20 177 MM MV* 59 — M 49 31 V 30 +1 45 44V* 44V* 44* . „ 14 27V* 27V* 27V* + V* 49 129 ,3* .3 17 22V4 22V* 22V4 - I —N— I* 31V* 10V* SIM +1' 35 50 4H* M . + 5 MV* 40V* MV* - < ilflh i f I it* VseiPWW 590 24% 21 23% —W—X—Y—Z— 1 ia 55 54% 54% 54% X69 23% 32% 22% 62 50% 49% 49% 182 59 57% 58% 135 31% 38% 39% xll 57% 55% 56% 23 38 37% 37% 131 22% 21% 22% . ■ 10 33% 33% 33% + % 139 37 36% 35% 438 98% 96 91 f % W 52% 81% (1% 82 39% 38% 39% -I Copyrighted by The Aiiogletid Press Wes Pet 1.28 WnUTel 1.40 WesigEi 1.80 Weyerhsr .80 IHLn Whittaker WlnnOlx 1.62 Woolwth 1.20 xerox Cp .60 ZeleCorp .54 Mthl 1.40^ BoimMin JO Ball duPont" 3.75^ Duct Lt 1.44 Dyn* Am .40 29 14V* 144* 147* .. 20 4*7* 41 44V* + 4* “ BV* 25 25 + V* 33 26V* 20M 24'A + '* 34 19'* 35'* 30’* — V* 23 277* 27V* 27V* + V* 67 31'* 30V* 31V. + Jf- * 19V* lfV* 19V* + VI 74 MV* 21 MM,.+ VI ]04 ]»'* TIM Jf* ifPsm+s 45 W* wv* - v 577 t(, 3M*- 30 V IpM IpVk 125'A -Ilk 35 m" li —E— im i74* io +.v* mm s !i% 15 32V* 32 12 -. . ■ J7 Bv* 44 44Vk + l 14V* 14 + 511 1034* 10074 101M - ; 4 44’* 44 44'* — 25 24'A 24 ’ 2* — { 50 MM 24'A M0 + 1 35 W* 2JV* 27V* K ' *7 ifW 17** 17M — 1 12 S'* ft* fv*+'' ’» «'aI5 KM 34 43V* ^ '• 34V* U i'A 14V* ,34V* . _ 1 "IM 'M* + J* I'A 33V* — V* mi gif lam ; Ginnett ... 70.02—O M OenDynam 1 •••Eitepfc! 1111= ISPS 9 *7V* B .;d^/jPD 9’E'PC£S 99 44V* 44 44M + V* &T |a^-m UJ7H tif » . 71 0 i f JHR 1 34V* 34V* 34M + M 31 2374 z3M 2374 + 117 MM 13V* 04’* + 14 70V* THb^TSM .. 44 MV* 33 .8 W 73M 72V* 73V* + PecGEI 1.00 54 1.1 I WmMi IM .770 J ... WV,T» **23M 24 + ,15 SS MV* + ' 4i m 7. im +i 333 45M 54V* 63M +1' —P— 14'* 33V* 14V* + 1 ■Vk 37V* 3IVk +.U 1,7* 30V* 31V* +JM .. 10V* 20VA 30V* ... IS i gf. in* 3 S,Jfs IS MM MM MV* — irsPi a r ftt P Sm r+ ^,S'Ai4^, 03V* 93V* -14 MV* JO MM + M MM 39'* 39 * T Tv* VV* 9'A + • MM 33'* 33V* - m Sm Mi Mvi PORT HURON (AP) — Mich- tlce's announcement of yester-igan Supreme Court Justice Eu- day shows.” _ . * gene Black said today he would! Black asserted that the court i in* 37'* if’ + '*!_;, - ' j Something like 80 per cent of ^ see |ess talk and more;has too many cases and too a* 427* n _ ^ Stocks of Local Interest steel industry products have|action on judicial problems by; many administrative duties that ll 5|V* 5*!* - v. I figures .tier decimal point* .re eighth*, higher price tags now than at chief Justice Thomas Brennan, are buried “in the works.” * 7 7 7 + v. over-the-counter STOCKS I the beginning of the year. In i«. *oiAm.ni i.mi.4 irnm hii ★ * * 53 24V* 24'* 24'A + 'A Quotations from the NASD are repre- f.„, UI..W 4lJ I« ■ Statement iBSUed. from WS _rp___ | centalive interdeaier prices, interdealer fact, the recent history of the port nuron home, Black said « was the second time in a 17 24V* 23V* 31V* + 4 45 ’5.62 Sxpfor 2156 25.06 Falrtd ft GO 12 0? form Bu 11,13 71.13 EWrJMn 13e65 1.92 Fldi Cip 11+6612.74 11.5514 1 'Srwthr Insur!. f.KT.3 IF Fd 9.?610.01 IP Gth 5.86 6.34 j OmG 5.19 5.64 j Omfn *10,38 It.28 it «hrs 17.99 17 99 lit Trst 2 64 2,69 IA Mut 10.66 10.80 Vangd Var TndP Viking VVL Morg West rnd 7.94 J 68 Whitehll 14.8116 19 Wmdsor 9.5? 10. 710.B7P.711proximately $6.6 million in tax x-3s*,»ii,23).o)3.M 3M/S33.432,iM.t2 jbenefits resulting from Con-§>>io«367o0io.22o.i8 ■ io.366.936.909 isiductron’s 1967 and 1968 deficits. w d*b' no' ,ub I McDonnell’s backing is ——---------------- | reassuring, helping to offset Friday's ist Dividends oeciertd piy ] deficits reported in seven of the * »uie last eight quarters: Penetration 10-13,of the flight simulator market, long dominated by the Link J?) trainer, is also promising. While j;^] rapid lecovery is not an-»-24 ticipated. long-term holdings ! should work out. im i (For Roger Spear’s 46 page il’vd,1 Investment Guide (recently fill j revised and In its 11th printing), i mj send $1 with name and address i vt . to Roger E. Spear. The Pontiac ^o*1 Press, Box 1616, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Yi 10017.) 71.4 (CopyrluM, 1040) REGULAR Apeche Corp Js Q TSD Corp .........13 Ou t Lt (hour .123 inn Textbook .....15 Q Iowa PpwAlt .40 Q Mutual Tr.Kans Cty .04 , C—12 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY. AUGUST 22. 1969 Mothers Win Fight for Bus By MARY StJNDSTROM II was a six-hour verbal tug-of-war between the Pontiac Board of Education and its audience of about 100 persons last night. Each group seemed more and more determined as the evening wore on. The board was determined to complete its 27-Item agenda, and members of the audience quickjy pounced on each item for avid discussion and intense questioning. * * ★ Several black women who said they were from the city's southeast side, a low-income area, won one part of the war — their children will be bused to school next month. • * * * The board voted 5-1 to purchase a fourth new bus to expand the district's limited in city busing program, being Instituted for the first time (hey year. BLACK PRESSURE Last March the Black Student Union began pressuring the school administration to provide transportation for students who live within the city limits but long distances from their schools or who encounter extremely hazardous conditions in walking to schools. Under this pressure, school officials approved the purchase of two buses to be used In vthe predominately black > southeast area for some of the pupils living more than a mile away from elementary. schools or 1(4 miles from Pontiac Central High School. * * * The board later purchased a third bus tq transport black youngsters from the Wilson School attendance area to the new Lincoln Elementary School in an attempt to integrate the new school. ★ * * But last night, mothers of youngsters In the southeast area who were not covered in the two-bus plan Insisted their children also should receive free transportation. In the vote to buy another bus, so a third bus could be used in this area, Mrs. Lucille Marshall voted no. Board President Russell Brown was absent. ALLrCITY PLAN Earlier in the meeting, board member Christopher Brown moved to implement an in-city busing plan for the entire city, but the motion lost by a 4-2 vote with Brown and Dr. Robert R. Turpin voting yes. Board members Mrs. Elsie Mlhalek said the district could not afford it at (his time. Mrs. Marshall and William Anderson echoed her sentiments. In other business, the audience failed to receive definite answers' about when the assistant superintendent would be named. When a reorganization plan for assistant superintendents was approved, administrators said they hoped to have a man in the position by July 1. ★ * * Board Vice President John Irwin said the board has interviewed the remaining candidates and is continuing to study the situation. - PRESSING ITEMS Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. Whitmer said the board has had many pressing items before it this summer and has spent many long study sessions discusing them. WWW Mrs. Jackie Nichols, In the audience, said she and many others in the community feel that the position of assistant superintendent, recommended to be a black man, is important enough for the board to have taken more time on this matter. WWW "Something should be done and done soon,” she said amid applause from the audience. After Three Appearances in Detroit Grand Jury Contempt Charged DETROIT (AP) - A self-styled former Mafia member was cited Thursday for contempt of a federal grand jury investigating charges of cor-j ruption involving Internal Reve-j nue Service (IRS) agents and: Detroit Mayor Jerome P. Cavanagh. The witness, Peter Lazaros, 36, of 2410 Dalesford, TYoy, faces a possible 11 months imprisonment—the term of the grand jury—if a federal judge decides he failed to purge himself of contempt by finally talking to the jury. A hearing on the contempt citation was adjourned until Monday, w w w Lazaros appeared before the grand jury three times Thursday. The first time, he refused to answer all questions, claiming the constitutional protection against self-incrimination. Following the session, Assistant U.S. Atty. Howard O’Leary requested that Lazaros be granted immunity from prosecution on all charges other than perjury wjlich might arise from jhis testimony. The immunity | was granted after an hour long open hearing by U.S. District [Judge Thomas P: Thornton, l who ordered Lazaros to return, to the grand jury. TESTIMONY DISCLOSED Some of the secret'testimony given to the jury was disclosed at the contempt hearings. The second jury session lasted about 35 minutes and centered on p Christmas party given at the Kingsley Inn in Bloomfield Hills Dec. 17, 1967. Lazaros was asked whether Cavanagh or several IRS agents had attended the party. A court stenographer reported that Lazaros did not give direct "yes” or "no” answers to the questions and also sajd he could not swear whether any public officials had been given gifts at the party. w w w He said that to the best of his recollection, Cavanagh did come to the Kingsley Inn later11 that night but after the party had ended. Following this session, O’Leary, asked that Lazaros be cited for contempt on the grounds that he was giving evasive answers. LAZAROS STATEMENT The government produced a statement given by Lazaros to IRS internal security investigator Donald DeBoer in which Lazaros said he gave a Christmas gift of $3,000 to Cavanagh and gifts of $1,000 each to IRS agents Anthony Getto, Ellis Lockwood, John Gardner and Jaihes Lee. if it it Asked about the discrepancies between his testimony before the grand jury and his statements to DeBoer, Lazaros said he was not under oath when he talked to DeBoer. “If I had been under oath, I would have had my attorney present,” Lazaros said. CLOSE-OUT PRESENT AIR CORD. STOCK 5, 6, 10,000 BTU’S Norge, Philco, Fodders, GE CLOSE-OUT PRESENT AIR COMB. STOCK 5, 6,10,000 BTU’s Norge, Philco, Fodders, BE HAMPTON 825 W. Huron ELECTRIC FE 4-2525 2nd School for Principal] Administrative staff could handle the responsibilities! who will receive his master’s reorganization for Jefferson of both schools, and that he! degree in January, was ap- pointed assistant principal for attendance. Junior High and Whittier would not have taken the job if Schools resulted last night inlhe had not been satisfied that the appointment by the Pontiac the parents of youngsters in both School Board of present Jef- schools were in favor of It. ferson Principal Odell Nails as[ Nails, administrators and principal also of Whittier. I several In the audience who Jimmie Keel Jr., 26, of 1166'said they were parents of Neafie was appointed assistant; Whittier School children, principal of Whitter. pressed confidence- in Keel and______ ____ ww* |in the reorganization plan, i this year. This plan of reorganization Combined enrollment of the i ★ * * was called a temporary training schools totals over 900 students. | He said that last year there arrangement by Asst. Supt. Everyone in the audience who were a total of 327.5 vacancies Richard Fell, with the intention [spoke on the matte^ endorsed [for teachers, and that 24 posi-that Keel could become prin-l Nulls and Keel, but some said I tions were still open at this time cipal of the school in 1970-71. [they were concerned about the a year ago. * ★ * i large amount of responsibility L. prT Hl A(,K Keel, who will be working j Involved for Nails and were toward a master’s degree dur- concerned about the amount of Ing the school year, presently attention their children and the has 19 semester hours of parents could receive, graduate credit. Thirty are j SALARIES SET / necessary for a master’s! _ „ J , degree, which Is required forL?! *?!2 ^ Pontiac school principals. w“l ,be 102 PCT ?*" ibwe * maximum teacher’s scale APPOINTED IN APRIL salary, and that Nails would be Nails, 40, of Detroit was ap- given added compensation pointed principal of Jefferson en because of the larger number of April 17. He was previously students and greater number of elementary staff coordinator of hours per week he will work. Detroit Public Schools. A new administrator was also Nalls said at the meeting last [appointed for Jefferson School, night that he felt confident he i last night. Francis L. Mann, 28, In another report concerning personnel, Fell told the board last night that there are only six teaching positions remaining open at this time, and that only 227.5 vacancies had opened up He said that 61.8 per cent of those hired thus far this year pre white; 36.8 per cent are black; 1 per cent Chinese and 1 per cents Spanlsh-Amerlcan. Board member Christopher Brown asked if those who had received master's degrees through the Pontiac Teachers Corps and had applied had been hired. He said he knew of one case that one person in this position had been turned down. Fell said he would return to the next meeting with 9 report. Our story begins where other sedans end. Ai w# go to prats, nobody hot found o uta for the rear deck of a conventional tedan, except of course pigeons. - Well, the .Volkswagen Squareback doesn't end in a rear deck. Instead, os you see, it ends in, a square bock—neatly, grabbing’ on extra 14.5 cubic feet of luggage space out pf thin air. then, for its next trick, the Square-back gives you a 5.5-eubic-foot trunk vp front where most cars hove their engines. And o rear seat that Jbldt down to add another 17.7 cubic (pat of space. With all this you can fit twice os much luggage into the Squoreback at any Other sedan. And, yet you don't need a big space to fit the Squareback into, (t's shorter and nqrrpwet than most other sedans. So you can park It Ht placet that other people didn't even know were places. How's that for a happy ending? Autobahn Motors, Inc. 1765 S. Talagroph Rood OVfRSKAS DELIVERY AVAILAILK ThpRevohrtSg Beck to school end dress up collection! Boys’end girls' oxfords end slip-ons; girls’ streps in e large selection of colors and patterns. Choose from an enormous collection of stunning flats and pumps in the latest styles & colors. COME 1 DISCOUNT SHOPPING AND SAVE DETROIT STERLING HEIGHTS DOWNRIVER PONTIAC Daily 9 AM - 10 PM Sunday 10 AM - 7 PM LOW IN COST! FAST IN ACTION! PONTIAC PRESS CLASSIFIED ADSL... PHONE 332-8181 w PRICE BLAST ON 3 SHOES 3 FAMILY SALE STARTS AUGUST 22 We reserve the right to limit quantities 4 /-y ■ i ■ * \•; r .1. i : .. , v .• •’ i . ,, , v * “,.rirSSSrT' I yt pcjxTi jc pres^ Friday! august 22, weg pr w S'1 D—1 I: Everyone Works W The Elephants And The Roustabouts, The Women And The Children - And The Circus Goes Up Circus Goner but Its Magic Lingers Elephants Work By Morning, Entertain By Night A Stitch In Time For The Old Canvas Wall Coffee Break For Roustabout Edward R. Noble The Wandering Optimist Bill Kelley Lives 'Boy-Dream' normally dull horizon of the huge field adjacent to the Pontiac Mall. * * * Accustomed shoulders lifted, hauled, hammered and dug the circus into place. Bill Kelley, 1$, of 167 Coleman, Waterford Township, lived the boy-dream: he worked right along with the clowns and the elephants and the lady who swings by her hair and the man who balances teacups on his chin. For his help, Bill earned a free pass to the Big Top. . . ... Where the great tall English clown mouthed "I Love “You” to the slender tightrope walker, right in the middle of the act. * ★ ★ . . . Where the snow-cone man Joshed the lady in the reserved seat section who wanted just one: ‘‘Seven? Oh, sorry, I haven’t got any change- Can I mail you, the change?” . . . Where the heads of father and son gaped at the courage of the Mexican high wire artists. ★ * * . . . Where the simple acts of courage of a people estranged from reality is the whole essence of entertainment. Only one day a year. Then it’s some other town's turn, / Pontiac Press Photos The Circus Awakes, The Morning's Dark, The Night Will Burst With Light By T. LARRY ADCOCK Assistant City Editor-Suburban The circus left town Wednesday night much as it arrived — on the young gnarled backs of its animals, men, women and children. A cosmetic world — the big top, the "world’s smallest woman, Mysto and Serpentina the magician and snake-lady, the sword-swallower and the half-wit— sprang from the predawn of the ■ ii >1it D—2 ■r'f m .' w w* * tj ,1-ifr.j, »q THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 191 Lawyers Try to Show Hoffa Data Withheld , CHATTANQOGA, Tenn. (AP)dence collected through illegal L Lawyers for James R. Hoffa, eavesdropping, In Thursday’s testimony)! an employe in the FBI's Las Vegas office admitted listening to telephone conversations between a Las Vegas hotel executive and! successful in showing that his conversations were bugged by federal agents, have begun a e battle to prove that the Justice c Department still is withholding p information that could give the I____ . _____ _________ _______________ Teamsters Union president a I Hoffa. gian insists. Key plank in the] Elmore Leonard, Doubleday. I new trial. , ★ {Gospel party platform: Love $4.95. Hoffa’s attorneys have spent An FBI agent also told of jOtie another. ] This was back in 1931 when I)1A. rlnun in nwAlflnrt 4m TT C Diof I _'_• i . ti . * # I TUnr/,’i rnf THE POLITICS OF THE form of medical belief known as GOSPEL, by J e a n - M a r i e vitalism. Paupert, translated by Gregor Examination of Shaw’s Roy, forward by DaniCl Ber-[mediciei views is interesting, rigan, S.J. (Holt, Rinehart & exhaustive and convincing. Winston, $4.95). if Doug Anderson (UPI) ** Christ’s Gospel is a political ------------ manifesto, this French theolo- THE MOONSHINE WAR, by [2% days in proving to U.S. Dist. I monitoring calls to "and from I There’s room in the Gospel something called Prohibition Court Judge Frank W. Wilson j radio-telephones in the'cars of I government for monarchists, (no legal booze) was more or that the Justice Department Teamster officials in Detroit, jtheocrats, Democrats, less in effect, used eavesdropping extensively Attorneys for the eovemmeht Republicans, Christians, Jews,] Of course, down in the Ken- L.r___ ..j it.. _______ .m............... ° . HlAoUmfl cun wApehinnorfi \p ‘THERE WAS AN OLIKWOMAN WHO . - Mother , Goose had nothing to do with this house although it does remind one of the ‘‘shoe'’ of her famous nursery rhyme. Actually,jit's the home and studio of Christ Roberts, one of the most imaginative houseboat designers in Sausalito, Calif., where hundreds of striking new homes have appeared on the water in recent years. before and during the labor have admitted the eavesdrop-leader’s 1964 jury-tampering!ping, t>ut have said no informa-trial- | tion was obtained that was used * * * in the trial here in 1964. They Still to be resolved are these have accused Hoffa’s lawyers of questions: trying to “rummage through the government’s files’’ in their ef- • Have federal agents turned f0rt to get a new trial. I over all wiretapping files in the I * it * I case to Hoffa’s lawyers? | . . .... 2 * * Judge Wilson said before the I ,■ ?! ... !hearing began Tuesday that the • Did he evidence gained by defense would have J show ^ I wiretapping violate Hoffa s j rights, prejudice his case and ] result in his conviction? Moslems, Nonbelievers representation. State Capital | Happenings I School - Center Bids to Be Called For Soon BEGAN QUESTIONING The defense Thursday began lengthy questioning of government employes to back up the contention that all records have not been made available. At the end of the session, Hoffa’s law-I yers conceded the Supreme Court-ordered hearing could not be concluded this week. worshippers. ] tucky hills there always had have equal been moonshiners making illicit | whisky, just to evade the {federal tax, They’d had plenty We lose freedoms under this of practice dodging revenuers, regime. Some of them:land new they were dodging Freedom of war, violence, I Prohibition agents, social injustice, racism, child! ★ * * abuse, hunger. | There is a real shooting war Of course, this is an over- between the local moonshiners simplified rendering of and the supposed "federals” — Paupert’s thesi?. Deceptively actually a bunch of Louisville ! brief, his work seems to knock’gangsters, formation gained by illegal holy hades out of the theory j This is light summer reading, means was used in the 1964 that politics and religion don’t1 actually. Or maybe you’d rather trial. jmix. wait for the movie they’re Paupert reminds you that you bound to make of it. vote every moment. He makes Miles A. Smith (ffl you think that now might be a] -----------£ very good time to come to the] LAST STOP CAMP 7, by Hans . thb AnoRNiY oaNiRAL j the planned $5.2-million Human maV coXuij Resource Center will be called jHMHRjfor in two or three weeks, Pon- >m a prosecuting THE STATE SUPREME COURT Bids for contractual work on complex will be completed by the upper elementary and lower next fall. elementary wings, in the event * * * the board finds itself short of Bid documents will include funds to complete the entire alternates to pare down parts of project at this time. *—1—-——---------— j This cutback' fcoOld reduce the tiac Schools Supt. Dr. Dana P. . -jnJidait{Whitmer told the school board] ' dlifea of bairolf city! eTarK, la not iast nioht I to a'ballot designation I l«»l niglll. the chief justice | The bids will be opened about; head*aV**ash,aprogr»m afmad °at four Weeks after that, he Said. Jiarar"** b"Wofl whitmer said he expected ’tctisad until oci*IUR* construction to begin im- ---------------------- mediately after bids are] |awarded and projected that the' The defense is trying to prove the convictions of Hoffa and three codefendants was obtained with the help of evi- Mott High Not Quite Finished aid of the party. Joe O’Sullivan (UPI) Locker Room, Gyi Cafeteria Mentioned Waterford Mott High] School won’t be completely ready when school opens next month, but Dunes Park Foes to Meet Marijuana Counfj TRAVERSE CITY (AP) - A meeting to oppose plans for the proposed Sleeping Bear Dunes BATTLE CREEK (AP)-Two Detroit men demanded court | examination Thursday 2 Held in Killing National Lake shore 18 8Ched' capacity of the center, now] scheduled to house about 1,800 pupils, to 1,450-1,500 pupils. ! 1 FEES APPROVED In other action concerning.8 new schools last night, theil board approved architectural I fees for O'Dell, Hewlett and I Lucjcenbach Inc., which wlllj| work on architectural plans for a new high-rise Central High 27 From Camp Oakland Will Attend Derby uled here Saturday. HH ________| ADRIAN (AP)—Two Adrianl The meeting is being spon-|School; and for Charles .'barges of ^possession of mart- men were arraigned today in sore(* **y ^e Lakes Asso- Sherman and Associates, which juana after being stopped by connection with the stabbing of clatl°h and the Glen Lake Asso- will prepare drawings for ad- police on 1-94 near Marshall.|21-year-old Jesse Avila July 20 clat,on. two persistent opponents ditions to NorthernHigh School. Police said when they searched In Adrian. Police arrested 29-]°f the plan. Both firms Were declared in the car of 28-year-old Jamesjyear-old Juan Neito and 20-----------------------------------compliance with non- Brown and 22-year-old Vincent year-old Arthur Neito Thursday.] ^ead poslonlng is most often [discrimination in hiring, a polity] Bryant they found some 65 Avila was killed and three per- caused in small children when of the school district, pounds of freshly-cut marl-sons Injured In a fight which [they eat bits of paint and, * * * j juana. No date was set for the broke out during a wedding plaster that peel and fall from The Luckenbach firm will be! examination. Jreceptlon at the Adrian Armory, walls and ceilings. using the Nathan Johnson black! architectural firm of Detroit as Twenty-seven residents of Camp'Oakland will be the guests of John Z. De-Lorean, a General Motors vice president and general manager of GM Chevrolet Division, at tomorrow’s All-American Soap Box Derby in Akron, Ohio. The group, including 17 boys and 10 girls, from 8 to 17 years of age, will make the trip to root for 1 Oakland County’s Derby I champion, Dennis Brittle, resident of Camp MY ARGUMENT WITH THE GESTAPO by Thomas Merton. Doubleday. $4.95. Now published for the first time, this novel was written in the summer of 1941, shortly before Merton became a Trap-pist monk, and long before his “The Seven Storey Mountain” burst upon the world as a major students Will be moving inlliterary effort in 1948. anyway. - J A relic of the past, this Harte, * * * {autobiographical hovel may be]terrogation officer, and Capt. Assistant Supt. Joseph Giddis .taken as a sign of a writing Frank Keller, camp corn-told the school board last night {talent that was to develop mandant. that the cafeteria, gym and .through the years. This was Hellmut Kirst. (Coward-McCann, $5.95) The author of “The Night of the Generals” is writing about Nazi bigwigs again, this time as .they await their fate hi an !AmeHcan-run internment camp after the German surrender. But they are not the central characters — Innocent .and guilty Mike decaying in ..idle imprisonment and speculation on their fate, they are catalysts for thcs interaction between Ted the camp’s chief in- some labs in the new $4-million facility probably wouldn’t be completed by Sept. 4. In addition, football players won’t be able to shower at the school following preseason practice. They’ll have' to be bused to another school to clean But Giddis was hopeful section of the locker room could i be ready by the opening of school. a consultant in its work for the school district. The two firms' [said they have worked together] | before on several projects. Charles Sherman last night1 [introduced Harold Ward, a black architect who is registered in Michigan and Illinois, who will act in a consulting capacity on the Northern High School project. CONTRACTS APPROVED PAW-SORE POOCH - Marine Pfc. Michael R. Galloway of hloultrle, Ga., soaks an infected paw for Stormy, a Marine scout dog serving in Vietnam. Galloway and his dog are one of the teams used to detect enemy troops, supply caches and bunker-tunnel complexes. | Dennis will be among I the more than 255 local 8 champions from through-I out the United States and I overseas competing for I the $30,000 in college schol-1 arships offered by Chevro-I let to the top nine winners. 1 DeLorean and his wife, I Kelly, will accompany the I youths and five camp staff Contracts for both firms were § members on the trip. The approved by the board on July I bus, chartered by DeLor-22 amid protests from the au- 8 ean for the occasion wilf dience that the Sherman firm 8 leave Camp Oakland at had not had a preaward review f 6:30 a.m. and return at of compliance was not in compliance at that time. He had not yet made the agreement with Ward. . The Sherman-Ward affiliation was called a form of Tokenism by James Dyer pnd others In the audience, since Sherman had stated that Ward would be working with his firm only on the Northern High School project. [CHECK FOR $2,399 ] In a related development, a parent and two football players 'presented the board with Oakland Tor ^the pasUwo l|chfk !,or to W for sod and sprinkling system they and other volunteers‘Installed on the Mott athletic field. Football fans, players parents and school officials all pitched into raise the money while the kids provided all the labor. approximately 8 p.r j AN ESCORT A police escort is slated to meet the bus at the Ohio turnpike for their entry info Akron for the derby. All those aboard will have reserve seats for the races. what he did at the age of 26. It is a story about an imaginary visit of the narrator to England during the blitz of the early part of World War II, and to France in the period of its occupation. The narrator is a poet and journalist, recording in a diary what he sees in the lives of the English and French of the war period. But it is all imagination, and much of it is keyed to what Merton remembered about his year at Cambridge University in 1933. Merton had a lively, uberant style and he made a highly perceptive use o I dialogue. The catch is that the major characters all talk in the same jtyle as the narrator-author, and that is not quite bellevaole. The project began last month when construction contractors told school authorities the job couldn't be completed by the start of the football season. Assistant fcupt. Roy Alexander reported to the board that everything else was pretty much ready for the start of school except for six teaching vacancies. The school board also told a group of parents in Lakeland Estates Subdivision that they don’t qualify to have a school bus go into the area because their children live less than one mile. from Our Lady of hte Lakes school. SHAW AND THE DOCTORS, by Roger Bexill. (Basic, $5.95). • George Bernard Shaw was so consistently critical of t h medical profession that he was widely regarded' To Keller, a Nazi automatically is guilty of war crimes and he doesn’t care how he goes about proving it. Harte wants the guilty punished — but only the guilty. Their differences are spelled out in the case of internee Manfred Hauser, complicated by Keller’s affair with Hauser’s beautiful wife, and f inajl y resolved in a book that is more philosophical than fast-moving, but nevertheless engrossing. Joan Hanauer (UPI) AND REALLY FRAU BLUM WOULD VERY MUCH LIKE TO MEET THE MILKMAN, by Peter Bichsel. Delacorte. $4.75. This odd little book 1 s something that people interested in writing might look into as an experiment in catching nuances of meaning in a very short space. What Bichsel, a Swiss teacher, has attempted, ln'this collection of 21 items, is to catch the essence of a situation in a few swift strokes. His tlscientiflc,” even by a u c h miniatures range from a few eminent commentators a s paragraphs to two or .three Julian Huxley and Earl pages. (Bertratgl) Russell. The themes are rather lonely ones. They express the difficulties of human communication and the bleakneks of old age. Ward told the board and the audience lag night he had been ked to join the firm but sferred not to attach himself one firm, but to act as a nsultant to many firms. Whitmer said that Sherman’s mpllance had deen establish-since the board named the o firms in July. Not so, says Roger Bexill, i whose. “Shaw and the Doctors” I summarizes what the famous n iconoclast said and analyzes his o reasons. * * * * * * Some of these miniatures Shaw considered the real catch a quick flash of humanity causes of disease w e r e in a few lines, and others fall capitalist economics and flat because they are so elllp-mechanl3tic medicine. Thetical they puzzle the reader, cures he envisioned were The experiment has been only socialism In general and impartially successful, but it may particular the Life Force, a interest writing technicians. Shavian adaptation of a general Miles A. gmtthjf> About 100 volunteers are eded for the 1909-70 Pontiac sad Start Program, according Mrs. Mikkl Goetzmann, Head art coordinator for Pontiac :hooll. The volunteers will work with year-olds in either the morn-gs or afternoons. Even those ho can volunteer for only one ission a week will be accepted. ★ * , * < A training session will de held Sept. 17 at 8:30 a.m. at the Lakeside Community Center. Those interested in working in the Head Start Program may contact Mrs. Goetzmann |t the Pontiac Board of Education offices^ DIRT IS DUG—A group of county officials turned token shovels of earth last week to mark the beginning of construction for the new $2-mi)!ion county service building to be located on Watkins Lake Road north of Pontiac'Lake Road. The facility will house the Department of Public Works, Drain Commission and other functions. Breaking ground FmiHrc Frau Flirt* are (from left) Supervisor Harry'W. Horton, R-Royal Oak; Supervisor William L. Mainland, D-Milford; R. J. Alexander, director of public works; Charles B. Edwards Jr., D-Madison Heights, chairman of the County Board of Supervisors; and Drain Commissioner Daniel W. Barry. WHAT DO THE PIGEONS THINK?—Avant-garde sculpture seems to be replacing generals on hQfieback in the decor of U.S. cities. At left is a stainless steel work by Roy Gusaow in Tulsa, Okla. It is about seven feet high and is r f a 5 For Want Ad» Dial 334-4981 il£S®T!1« W PUBL,C HEAPING m wSTtSSi sir • S*' o m Tu|,»d,w„s^t*'!?b,r *' >W, it K'w^SSsxjss N°0r fjMU known as th. Cltv of PontK? tV2' &S' ft §* OLGA 'BARKELEY, City Clerk ..___________________Augutt jj, 19et NnM?.TI|;EK?F J*UB!-,C 'HEARING C tv* n«M „!!*•„, ComiRlMlon Chambers, City Hall on the proposed vacating of JJ*. B Vvfiar*J!*1 to ETYpsilanti street S?dn^;J£? a s,r*«t *rom the alley east or Baldwin Avenue east to Price Street, S«f,cde at w> iw»> «««'«• _ Comm. Douglas, supported by p?ID?In»AJ-*r,h*1,1' Wh“'*»». the city Planning Commission has recommend-5?vi,iiIL.V*c?!in# n, D“P®nt Heights Sub-"'SK*'®"' City of Pontiac, Oakland £?-u_nA’- . Michigan, the 14-tool alley a. described as lying aast of a line .. Jjfwn between the SW corner ot tot » ™d.. *5? NW corner if Lot M, and west of a line drawn between the ,, «rn,C“TLot IM? M ^ ,h# NE, th,.'|N0.W'„.,Ifl*rl.,0r*,' B* W Resolved, ttjat a public hearing notice be given j" *Cy!?ld8r'?* with Section 2, Chap” ■*r XIl_l of the City Charter, at amended of the proposed vacating) Be It Further Resolved, that a Publl9 hearing be held on the prA Hi-Fi, TV & Radios........66 Water Softeners ........ ,66-A For Sale Miscellaneous .... 67 Christmas Treat ........ ,67-A Christmas Gifts...........,67-B Hand Tools—Machinery......68 Do It Yourself.............69 Cameras-Service ...........70 Musical Goods..............71 Music Lessons ............71-A Office Equipment...........72 Store Equipment............73 Sporting Goods.............74 Fishing Supplies—Balts .....75 Sand-Gravel-Dirt ..........76 Wood—Coal—Coke—Fuel .... 77 Pets-Huntlpg Dogs .........79 Pet Supplies—Servlcs......79-A Auction Sales.................80 Nurseries..................81 Plants-Trees-Shrubs .... 81-A Hobbies and Supplies.......82 FARM MERCHANDISE Livestock ........*....... 8s Moot*/................. 83-A Hay-Grain-Feed ............84 Poultry...............85 Farm Produce...............86 Farm Equipment ............87 AUTOMOTIVE Travel Trailers............88 Housetrailer? .............89 Rent Trailer Space.........90 Commercial Trailers .....90-A Auto Accessories-...91 Tires-Auto-Truck .........92 Auto Servlcs Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. De-meester Wilt He in etate at . the funeral home. DOREY, ESTHER N.;' August 20, 1969; 182 Sarasoti Street;, age 60; dear mother of Mrs. rangements are pending at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor where Mr. Wolfe wlU lie in state after 2 p.m. Saturday. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) Motorcycles Bicycles ......... Boats-Accessories Airplanes ..................99 Wanted Cart-Trucks ......101 Junk Cart-Trucks............101-A Used Auto-Truck Parts ...102 New and Used Trucks .....103 Auto-Marine Insuranco .. .104 Foreign Cars ..............105 ll«w and Used Cars.........106 D- THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRI k 6 Help Wanted Malt PAINTER. Experienced for needy SERVICE MANAGER, veer eround work. *27 3041 eft. 6 perience preferred, m p m. __ | strong administrative of*’ pk R TS~AN0 “seWviCV'dtoiftrmnl PAY, AUGUST 22, 1969 For Want Ads Dial 334-4981 6 Help Wanted. Male _____ __ mechanic!.., Apply Breach Enterpr 7100 t. ------ Kilned. Maple' Rd.!* PRODUCTIONWO R KERS ♦rested in a steady job w irt Jim wernig Inc., N. Vandyke, Sales Representative Wholesale Building Materials Local company has outstandinc opportunity for . aggrasslva i Express Inc. 213 < ntiac. Equal Oppoi Wernlg f^L“~AN t> MODiC maker, 6Help Wanted Female _7 Buffeteria Sell conditions. Box C*24._ WELDERS, i apply in pe , Cyber elds, 73 Whitt take Rd . Clarkston, 425-9990, An equal opportunity employer. PRODUCTION SUPERVISOR' tor EXPERIENCED, v WANTED IMMEDIATELY | u FULL TIME AUTO SALESMEN for GM dealership, demo, furnished, .....P ...9..... .. good hours, life Insurance included, REPRESENTATIVE NEEDED must have umlshed. SEWING MACHINE REPAIR AAAI n up to I nan, experienced in cafet Had work. Pull time an a schedules available for STEAM TABLE KITCHEN AIDES BUS GIRLS tale_____7 Help Wanted Female___^7 Help Wanttd Female^ 7 Help Wonted M. or F. 8 Sales Help Male-Female 8-A J EMPLOYMENT COUNSELOR: If iNURSES, R.N. and L.p.N., needed; TOYS AND 0|FT PARTY PLAN COU w havd the ability If Vrlth people -« or puttie coni itact ........................... and L.P.N.. needed, I desire to > for afternoon and mldnlont shifts, il had Increased salary benefits, fringer tenet, benefits. Call Nursing Director. FE ackgroi PERMANENT F building mah L TIME opening; n Equal Opportunity E PORTER NEW OR USED CAR REAL ESTATE OFFICE MGR. WE WILL TRAIN YOU Company offars outstanding pre sharing plan, insurance ptf IF YOU QUALIFY CALL: I David J. Dollmars, 87V 5519 | An Equal Opportunity Employer siRvice "station 'help ’ 2 ti time, young men, preferably wl 1 CONTACT KEN JOHNSON r 693-6266 ' , WANTED AGGRESSIVE I NEAT APPEARING YOUNG * MEN B Who ere Interested in a career and not lust a |ob, paid training for men with potential, call 674-4101, Mr. Bedore. '’WANTED: AUTO PARTS clerk, i, benefits, Interested? €111 FE 5-> 5460 I WELDERS, EXCELLENT wages ai and Snelllno. i CaiMSob Scoff, 334- e X P E RIB N C I~b~dTTp" a r y' sale,parson, good salary, apply. Irving Kqy Drapariaa, 337 N. I R Woodward Av«., 8‘ham. Michigan. part 444-3310■___________________________j FULL TIME Housakaapar, cook and | Nurse Aldas. Call for appointment. I het. 1:30 e.m. end 3_p.m. 4S1 4433. I GENERAL OFFICE -Filing, full Itme, 40 hours, HSG,! . typing. Interview Monday, Aug. 25, 10 AM to 2 PM, Town and Country < 1 Furniture, 4107 Tetegrpah at Long I laki Rb., Birmingham. ______ 'girl TO WOsTk In claaners, full Good benef count ..... APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. I Cleaners, 1005 Vi ludlng Immediate dis-, ^ Telegraph. _ GIRL WANTED f Long Lake, cor. Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL _An equal opportunity employer _ BOOKKEEPER-CAR BILLER New Bulck dealership In Southfield requires Immediately, bookkeeper-car' biller. Auto accounting experience given preference. 353- ■ I Permehent ;.Mull "5 Tape-Tronlcs, Inc. Royol Ook.___ GENERAL OFFICE BEAUTICIAN, meed preferred. 631-4297; 441] Fernlee,, OFFICE HELP WANTED Must be accurate typist Speed Not Esaontloll Cor billing experience helpful 13 to 5 p.m. 5 Day Weekl Call MY 3-6366 _ Ask tor Kanjohnsonl OFFICE General Clerical Office Machine. Operators ip's alterations Telephone 1 (203) 673-3455. , A NTED E X P E R IM N C E I seamstress. Full time. PE 8-8528. WAITRESS#' Full tlmt, nights —bor Bar. 682-0320.________________ WOMEN j PROPERTY DESCRIPTION CLERK OR TITLE-ABSTRACT CLERK (Englnaarlng Alda I Class) $6600 to $8000 Plus: Outstanding frlngt benefits. Excellent working conditions Opportunity for advancement Can You Sell? food Qualifications: One full year of preparing property descriptions and/or conducting title searches. (Two yeara'of high I restaurant Ideated in Fa>mlngton I school math and two drafting area, starting salary $135, increase courses may be substituted), to $135 at tnd of 60 days. Write 1 High School graduate or equivalent Box C-32, Pontiac Pass. I Oakland County resider* WOMEN. Middle-agd to care tor £ Michigan^ Drlyer'r elderly couple, more for home than,. .Itnmodlj wages. Lake Orion area. My 3-1125 I betw. B Pile. WANT TEMPORARY WORK? Call Manpowtr 332*8386 WOMEN WANTED to work days ... small Pontiac factory. Apply Pontiac Press, ' Box C-36, giving ad 1 —— -L--— — family I forr ________| PERMANENT FULL TIME OPEN- | Experienced] sgm A - •* Sjj II1E1VIV Hwnan ivi printing office. . __ Accurate spelling end knowledge off LIBERAL BENEFITS. , , H.. JACOBSON'S Twee Excellent^ wages i $33 a; ntalligi ____ Excell......... benefits; Pontiac Graphics Woodward. 338-6467. GENERAL OFFICE EXPERIENCED, PART TIME, 9-1 ,.,w . 1.........9 P - I EX- WAITRESS WANTED for full-time PERIENCED PERSONNEL. GOOD, employment, apply in person, only, Restaurant, Keeqo Harbor. FOR NIGHTS, will train, Place, 78 Baldwin WANTED: LIVE IN baby aptitude, _ AT LONG LAKE RD. ?k2®.^»eb» n.Kessary^VWonderland lounge, 836*1 *“* *“"'*h ■»*-'g*4L i WANTED: MEN 45 to 55 years old Richardson Rd., Walled Lake.-363 j jpportunity for tell Steinway, Km pm, sdays.” Hj BB MONDAY, AUG^ 25, JO AM-2 PM, *- ** », *. * *. _ G/lnnelV ____ BLOOM- PURCHASING AND INVENTORY | Higher Income fo gogetter. Contact: j irred. Wyman Furniture < 7124. » Centi Inlng ana oonus. Beverly I replies strictly confidential. Ask for Roy Lezenby, 4626 W. Walton, Drayton Plains or phone 674-0301. i hours per week at I2.$0 per hour. An equal opportunity employer. Cell 644-3400, Lt, Schauta. REAL ESTATE Odr bonus plan It designed to. r#ward aggressive talesmen for good production with up to 75 per cent of total commissions plus paid vaca- SHORT ORDER COOK. Nights. Ap ; Plv In person, Country Kitchen, Auburn and Opdyke. FE 2 3495 lor appointment. T SERVICE STATION IS nd»rl»ncMi. Referent 5-1-75, CIS WANTED 7504 Dlxll BARMAID BEAUTY OPERATOR, experienced, salary and commission, Imperial BeautySalon,158Auburr Spanish Wyman . . East Huron, downtown. GENERAL OFFICE EXPERIENCED, MIIRI KNOWLEDGE OF A C C O U NTS RECEIVABLE, BOOKKEEPING MACHINE. INTERVIEWS MONDAY. AUG. 25, 10 A.M.-2 P.M TOWN AND COUNTRY FURNl TUNE!. 4107 TELEGRAPH AT LONG^MIfa— ft-----j--a HILLS. Requir dantly with Birmingham conditions are an equal < Scott 647-1304.__ BOf^KKEEPmG JfA#Vmi:^iJ»i#H£^w RETIREES LON^LAKE RbTr BLOOMFIELD ------------- -----J, full or (Ime. day or tve. Roccoi. 5171 w^4wy._app|y_5to8J ”• ......... ....... than wages. Over ...n. | 18. Coll FE 4-8(09. in to WAITRESS, OPENING for full time, and afternoons,' 5 days, no Sundays. Irea Apply Encora Restaurant, Miracle stlvo! Mila Shopping Cantor. ' „ i !r#'| WAITRESSES. Full or part time. Day work. Good working conditions. Good salary. Chance for advancement. Apply in parson only. Denny’s Restaurant | 191 W. Long Lake Rd., Bloomfield I Twp. Cor. Telegraph 8, Long Lakt Bloomfield Vlllogo Shopping Center. LIVE-IN housekeeper,! Pontiac,' Michigan 4S053 or coll 338-4751, Ext. 495. PROGRAMMER-ANALYST CITY OF PONTIAC WANTED An oxperloncod analyst son R.P.G. programming. To In plement a management I formation system. Salary S11.2( $13,651 with, exc. fringe benefit Apply Personnel Office, 450 Wk —--k Dr. E,, Pontloc. AUTO SALESMAN Experienced m car, Pontloc area preferred. Mol City Dodge Pontiac, 33t-9222, A Sporting Goods Salesman TRUCK MECHANICS fnrt SLl’d r— I Beauty Salon. 15S Auburn. __HOUSEKEEPERS positions available >n, Sunoco gas Or dlESel. Liberal pay, CURB GIRL, dishwasher, grill cook. In modern facilities, cell 477-3000. insurance furnished, retire- SuP,r chief;_m5_n...Telegraph Rd. ment and full benefits. See Active w WANTED: ________ , ,. weekends off, 642-2146._______ ; WOMEN, MOTEL MAID work, fl.40i per hour. 769 S. Woodward,___ | WANTED NURSES AIDES, Will train, Gian Acres Nursing Nome, 1255 W Sllverhell* Rd. . 673- COSMETIC AND DRUG, modern r. Call Mr. Wardi Commercial, Investment, Bus! employee benefits .Opportunities ei training program. Over Two Hundred Million Dollars In listings throughout the state. The only non-residential multiple listing service of Its kind In the U S. Publishtrli of the Michigan Business end Investment Guide. All inquiries! strictly confidential. Ask for Gary or Ward E. Partridge, 1050 W. , _Huron St., Rhone 601-2111. 1 RETIREE FOR PORTER WORK 1 Evening Shift BIG BO^&RIVI IN I 3690 Dixie Hwy. ! kiflREb PERSON FOR (toady , work managing car wath, 335-3423. Monday thru Friday. GMC „ Truck Center | Oakland at Cass FE 5-9485 opportur N OVER H help ______ ______ • protect, 651-0042. , I- YOUNG SALESMAN TO WORKrfln | needed we will train, Depan-dable for full time. THE FLOOR SHOP, 3355 ELIZABETH LAKE pharmacy otteri 40 hour week w good working condltloni and frlni benefits, Mills Pharmacy. Blrt Ingham. Ml 4-5060. ___ BABYSITTER INYMY, HOME, ov transportation, days, D r a y t O Plains. Atter 6 p.m. 674-0SB4._ CASHIER tor custom supermark In Bloomflald Hills. Must hava r cant grocery caihler experlenc • Pull time, no nlghtt, must hot transportation. $3.35 per hr. Cl I Ml 7-7041, ,:r CASHIER tlon open for caahler on I Hudson's Pontiac Mall V. serviceman! Experienced. ! Help Wanted Female $3.00 PER HOUR DEMONSTRATE TOYS, part SI 2.00 lor lust 4 hours wort HOWARD JOHNSON'S NEEDS Waitresses Counter Girls Hostess-Cashier Permanent positions now ovaila on both day and evening shifts, m can tailor your shift to you availability. Above average earn Ings and pleasant working con d T»I o n s. Must have owi transportation and bd wilting t •rain. Apply In parson. Telegraph at Maple Rd. Birmingham 7 HOUSEWIVES" Wanted full or part time for ei day time work, starting rate pay PROM S1.50. For appolntm -io or call Mr. Hunter at Burge ......... -........I. Telagrapl " _6627.________________________ n WAITRESSES WANTED, experience ». i not necessary. Apply Biff's, 575 S. ) I Hunter. Birmingham.______ ' WAITRESS, 17 years and older. Ap- excellent retirement Plan, longevity bonus, unlimited opportunities for personal advancement, and liberal vacation and lick leave allowance, plus social security. REQUIREMENTS': clerical experience os an Intermediate clerk in statistic*! work of figure compilation which Included the use of an adding machine or calculating machine, end graduation from high school; or, completion of two years of college with six semester program . 300 bed hospital ,TN Rasldtnt Training Excellent starting tanarous trlngo benefits Retlramant Program. Personnel Director. Hospital, V447 N. laurant, 21tO Dixie Hwy. Pon-] WAITRESS, LUNCH AND dinner' cash Harrison, Saginaw, .... 11 Phono 753-3411 Ext. 33$. STOP READ THIS TOY CHEST attars oxtr bonuses for August, pH. ■ portunlty to earn a wiglet. SHOW GUARANTEED TOYS. Earn 20 par cent plus, no delivery or collections. Car and phono needed. statistics. amlnatlon to do given on October 4, 1969, PERSONS , WHO TOOK THIS STATISTICS CLERK EXAMINATION ON MAY 10, 1969, NOT ELIGIBLE. For person. Orchard Dobskl's, Union Lake,! Frank's Rt Michigan. WOMEN MACHINE Operators, ST Detroit Office, Michigan Civil Service, 1601 Cadillac Square Building, Detroit, Michigan 46226, phone 322-2717, or your nearest Michigan Employment Security Commission Office, Applications must be received by the Michigan Department of Civil Sorvlea no later than 5 p.m., September 15, 1969. For other lob opportunity Information Ui' *14-4359 day or I oppo rtu for two real estate aales people, Intereated In making money. Experience - —- mnnm.......... Will train, , floor time , mission seh<-cotl Mr. to: EM 3-7546. CHEVROLET SALESMAN If you or* an experienced new car salesman, this Is your big opportunity tor t solid future with a respected deolershlp In' a high potential metropolitan Flint area. You con realize top earnings as a member of a top quality out Intentionally IlmltM-ln-stza sol i s team. Excellent Incentives Bind benoflts. send resume or celt1 vie Canevcr Chevrolet, 305 Leroy, Fenton, 639-3277. _ real ESTATE -SALESPEOPLE Established real estate co. has opening for 3 full time salespeople due to expansion. Real estate experience helpful. Must to selfstarter. Extra benefit! for top lister. We otter ' litoral commissions# profit sharing, vacation pay, bonus, building program and other Incentive plans. For confidential Interview call 333-71130-b Ask for Thurm Witt, •> GEORGE IRWIN, REALTOR MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE, 298 West Walton______FE 3,7883 Oakland and Macomb Counties. ty, PENN. LI O-IBOO. SALESMAN This Is your opportunity to got In on the ground floor. GMC Rail Estate have openings for 3. wnl train beginners. Terrific pay plan, hospitalization, monthly bonuses, ampla floor timo and parking, draw to quollfy. Call Mr. Kln-connom for Interview, 681-0370. Wilcox, 334-2471, Snotling and TED'S 1 Woodward at Square L«i\« Sjffl ■ W >0* • ' ll' sit part-time all shift, paid hos- | “r Bernabl, FE 5-0322 after 12 “'MICHIGAN COMMUNITY | 5lwU“g^olndltKwI 1-131*93109 to 5 PontlacBLOOD cbnterfb 4.^,7 p m. weekdays._’___________ 1342 Wllte Track Dr., W. I WE ARE NOW accepting “ “ ‘ ‘ ‘ plications for - -8-—»* - parlance ifllary and benefits. Call: INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL SALES TO RETAIL: ____bet 9 and 5, 333-0970. WOODWORKING PLANT, da 7 to 3:30 p.m., no axe Call Bob Scott, 334.2471, Snalling and Snalling.__ SECRETARY Wanted experienced, skills typing and shorthand, excollont eatery ond working condlflone. Must to mature, call: INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 001-1100___________1000 W. Huron STENOGRAPHER: Stroke your way to the top with thla fascinating company. Nice boss I Merit ruses. 642-9450! COSMEtlC DEPARTMENT Sales person, preferably with1 pi**] JUNIOR AND SENIOR TYPISTS Experienced 01 Sales M Personnel Post Box 232 Pont lac qual .. ■ _ shill: tape manufacturing plai Tronlcs. Inc. 4413 Fern! , Prl. 9-4 Tu»»„ Wed., Thura, 10;3 COOKS positions available In modern proxjmeteiy 2 w^i^doy S, ^I II It?I 4^2000’. ,xp»rl,nc* pr#,,rr,d' ‘“"isiliT IMMEDIATE OPENINGS Vpi t v Wffir | TVJ_|I \_7iriLi ! Women's Apparel DISHWASHERS, no experience, ap-. Join | Of Kelly ^Services Children's ply Biff's, 575 S. Hunter, Blrm-, profit * 125 N. Soglnow SI. ,i '•niioten s ! Ingham. ......... ponding 330-0330 or 643-9650 Hohte DeCOrOtlVe EXPERIENCED DRAPERY personnel. _____________Pi ■ An Equal Opportunity Employer I salesperson, good salary, apply CHRISTAIN FAMILY NEEDS sitter Livi—IN-HELPV'l-davs-' woek, Men S Irving Kay Draperies, 237 N.l Free Clos in our homo lor 5 yr. old boy. private quarters, older children! EXPERIENCED PREFERRED! Woodward Avt.. Blrm., 644-5200. I2?00 noon** Tuto iThurt O'Tj'em >7> ”**k< f**row«e«. 051-3340._| COnIhtTons ° G00Di BARMAID, part till2‘30Dm or Vdim ‘ ILIGMY 'hoUslKKIPING qnd biby vacancy Male-Female 8-A A CAREER IN REAL ESTATE SALES DECORATOR: , decorating career colorful for you? Learn to aall fix on your Ideas. $309. Ca Bridges, 334-2471, Snalling .m I Mary S Snell- SALESMEN HELP! WE NEED YOU I --------TND TRAI .... m needed We have the lob a____ « need yeu. Guaranteed Incentive program, car and JACOBSON'S NEW SHARE THE program. We are ex- end need reel estafe tup S. Woodward, B‘.. Instructions-Schools INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL i. and Sun, 7 Help Waated Female BEVERLY MANOR CONVALESCENT CENTER ANNOUNCES A JOB OPPORTUNITY FOR . . . NURSES AIDES NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. TWENTY WEEK PAID TRAINING PROGRAM LEADING TO CERTIFJCA1U0N. CALL 477-2000 OR APPLY IN PERSON 10 MILE AND MEADOW BROOK ROADS. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER personnel office Crlttenton HospI tal, Rochester. 651-6000. ATTENTION HOUSEWIVES r 20 per cent bonus —No experlenci In siarto, - W«g!% Tmy.JjL.... ..... ‘ " CASHIER - WAITRESSES TELETRAY OPERATORS Mature restaur part lima, Hoapltalizallon WORKING CONDITIONS. j experienced. 363-9469. i iMPLbYMdNf AvAIlABlB - ao- ....... ply at Seminole Hlllt Nursing , -r-T-'-r, ■——■■■- W. MAPLE^*4” BIRMINGHAM -Jl°JleiJ3?..0rchalrd _. OtoX.0'SECRETARY F0R^S”MALL real j ^DERLY. TAVERNJ- OR_TE_R.| *-- ‘■■,1 — pari time II you are Interested In becoming a belter-lhan-averaga salesperson check with us. We will train you to help you obtain' your IlcohW. If Exclusive terrltor potential on special tonus Incontlvi. ! payroll system. Car required. For personal ln‘-------------- -------------- call 335-0044. t 175 S. Soglnow offlca, _____■ Inlmum bookkeeping, . —,-------------------- pleasant surroundings, ask PULL TIME Custodian, . Smith, 333-7040. _ : references, apply SWITCHBOARD PmrBB RECEPTIONIST needed lor lounge. Troy orta, 879- teteivte!! r*«ppofniment j ^.“J'^rtencto 'LttChbS’rd j ~ ’ • FREE CLASSES sr.knT^-7^rm,nBh*n'' w awwiaii aJrit? mss ha ?.m{! .wh# wn* * Bay workers with own _c.r> -■ ^leg^l secretary _ _ I «X\«&Tg» . MILLER BROS. REALTY J train a on |ob,a ihorthand^ 100,; and Nidi sawing ■»** i ■ JACOBSON'S GHAh typi^i "S7n%oV**Fdr^OT ' t^a’Tm foillnfl AH Salespeople H I . tt!puTt-rtMi ~f'usted'i*n."miiu'h*u* p*?nirlinflDui*"* ilff^rliri with outgoing poraonalltlM, If you moot this description, YOU ARE | WANTED!!! $43. Ret. 626-4356., I I to if j DRILL AND MILL 1 parlance necessary, lortunlty lor quonfla Write Pontloc P Hostess, up to 15 par cant plus SHOP AND COMPARE! CALL BETH WEBER 332-5377 v or 682-1774 ram; *S or over, iwltchboard, jyp|ng 10, tor oppolntmont coll 642- | UYETn BABY sVtTE R. corns iltir 4, It Calvert, _ LPM FOR S p.m. to p.m. shlfL apply In parson Wosl Hickory Havon. 3310 West Commerce, PoroxA35 ^l^afrurate^f^li^naaik^* |>i‘ AAAtujfBwomonte hale TO 35 hrs. accurele typist naal| wlirxina parents with children and Will accept 1 child. portunlty tor ■ Wrlta Pontiaf__ DEPENDABLE LADY, No Ironing. Wad. and . _______ Rtf«r«nc9B. Own car. 62^3247. ____ Igrlaty al "abifis. ~Musi | pJn^r«7^J!!*!a»'-«g^gL__| high school graduate and able! DENTAL ASSISTANTS experienced spall, write legibly dhd rapidly, chair side, Interested In orii nga benefits, rotate Sunday and aurgery, Birmingham area, 647- idavs. Call between 9 a.m. and) 1422. ■_1 ' DENTAL HYGIENIST WANteb lN ic area. US a day. Write Box call FE .___ BIRMINGHAM PERSONNEL' OffIco. 1 personable poraon with drug AND COlME'fTC l„.......... noi ntoHSory. it $ u o i op! g> mil orjoart tlm*. Rusa' Country portunlty, oxc. earning potential. 647-1110. SIS par rntwr 336 JosTyn.' to start , 39J;3252. MATURE LADY TO CARE'fi child during day white loaches, 674-1912._ M A'TU IfE woman mother ~CfWl ___ g background, no’ ...... necessary, wo will train, Interviews dally 9 to 5. • SINGER CO. PONTIAC MALL______ SITTER, age 50 up, Mall ares, $30. *‘-7-'* — it, RoteroMos. 7 o.m. 6M4Mi SHSRY^BRBil cook/ luff “fTma, otterhoon shill, experience helpful but will fraln, ages 30 and up, 363- 333-7156 action team at YORK REAL ESTATE Call Mr. Foley at 474-0363 REGISTER NOW— Poll term item Sapt. I following coursot being offered ACCOUNTING-CLERK TYPIST, BUS. ADM,-RECEPTIONIST SECRETARIAL EXEC LEGAL AND MEDICAL TAXATION-COURT REPORTING STENOGRAPH (MACH. SH.) Also Rotrashor Courses Accounting-Business Math. a Shorlhand-Steneogreph . T axallon-TypIng DAY AND EVENING CLASSES Licensed by Mich-State Board of Iducum MICHIGAN SCHOOL OP BUSINESS ME; Huron SL______________332-5096 ASSOCIATED tax SCHOOL que*lles,PI>,nU*H Assc ' ■ ' $ as Sales Help MalE-FtmolB 8-A Sales H shin, Ideal ter ratlroe or elderly - — «-• :------: .-•i—-.—. —— couple. Paid vocation, closed Sundays. The Bloomflald Canopy. KITCHEN HELP. soTad daporlment, you for omploymont. Income Tax school, W. Walton ilvdn Pon- Male-Ftmale 8-A 0SI1 I ir 1) o,m SECRETARY $500“WS Terrific spof lor experlonced flirt, Reel estefe or rolofod background BABY SITTER. week^4S1-1079. BABY' SITYEET dependable, S day k„ 3 chlldrai Drugs,, 4S0Q Ellz. Lak Decorator d | In draperies. Experlenc* prefer , In star* and house calls. MOLLS INC. •1 1666 s. Ttlqgraph y Pontiac, Michigan 4 FE 4-0516 MEDICAL RECEPTIONIST Radiology clinic, .2 glr some typing, knowledge •nee farms end medical ogy helpful, ago no torrl future ond oil benefits Browing concern. Salary, Mrs. Daniels, 542-5610. TYPIST Tnsu*:! AME B1c*an o*r •mlnol- 642-3055 725 S. Adi portended preferred. Duflys, Union < Lake, 363-9469.______________________I OLDER COUPLE for caretaker, it Ion, 120 unit apart-. Pontiac. Courteous; r posit io irolaci, l management and light lenance. Apartment plus Write Box C-26, Including p Help Wanted Female 7 Help Waatad Female It's a Lady G's WIG PARTY! And You're Invited LADY G's/ A DISTRIBUTOR pF TOP QUALITY, IMPORTED WIGS, WIGLETS AND FALLS IS CURRENTLY OFFERING ENTERPRISING YOUNG WOMEN LIKE YOURSELF THE OPPORTUNITY TO HAVE A LADY G's WIG PARTY. IN RETURN FOR YOUR HOSPITALITY LADY G's WOULD LIKE TO GIVE YOU A GIFT A HAIR PIECE, WHICH IS FREE, EVEN IF-ONLY ONE WIG IS SOLD AT YOUR PARTY. IF YOU'0 LIKE TO HAVE A PARTY -AND GET A FREE WIG, THEN CALL LADY G'S .BETW. I AND 5 P.M., MON, THRU FRI. 623*0267. of school person, 682-8399 BABY 8 ITT Bit WANTS 6“ for child, •tarflng Sapt. 1, In homaJn474-1124. baby mm WANflb lii —. K——---------------------IPPIBBIB—_. homa for young coupla who want DO YOU BNJOY CHILDREN? NOW an occasional weekend out. Union YOU CAN KEEP HOUSE ■■ | Lake too, 36W7L w BABY SITTER, Troy* area, live In preferred, permanent, 689-9098. _) BABY SITTER IN my homa# mature woman prafarrad. 673*7993, aft. 5:30. _______ baby SITTER. Permanent. Dependable. Own transportation or live In. Paid holldoy». 852*9684._ BARMAID, 6 DAYS, mutt be maids. OYER ]6~yaers old Holiday! inn, IS01 S. Telegraph. MATURE BABYSiTTER, days, er llve-ln. 682-0307 anar 4 p.m. • MATURE LADY. KEEGO AAW. 1156! Caoa iaka Rd., sss-lwa._ 1 maintenance manager fa assist manager ol apartment com-plox. Apply 70S Auburn._______ Machine Operator TED'S OF BLOOMFIELD HILLS Hoi Immediate opening for to time bus girls on the day shll Apply In psarson only. TED'S st enos j MATURE SALES PERSONNEL fia'i i Experienced required In telling wo lairii s'ham will train you In the dept. Salary, I mua commission, plus fringe tono- WKC INC. Woodward at Square Lake I I system, good storting ai of I training p—■■ meal fur J #«troirtf¥_ | 7 Help Wanted Female I District;____ TSERYXL ASSISTANT, _ ^. isnctd, excellent salary, day Including Saf. 9U41S4 DAY WORKER 3 TO 4 days par .• Good working condiiiqnt 5 Paid holidays — vacations J Transporfatlon necessary ♦ Janet Davit Cleaners . 067-9009) MATURE RELIABLE Lady lo • baby-sll ttir ieachtr't children. J Waited Lake area. 634-5345, after! ______I rasponslblllty. Write Box c-35 Pontiac Praaa. { BEAUTICIAN, SO. 55. 60"par"CMl! commission, lake over clientele. Phillips Ol Pontloc, 332-9270. J BEELINE STYLIST "EARN profii | ■». ----^ -........ plus werdroto—33S-9071. , EXPESTENCED BEELINE FASHIONS needs' three wages, axe. < (3) stylists In this arae. Qualifi-1 conditions. Harvey' cations; love clothes, drlva cor. _JHouse, 5096 Dixte H\ ._. __ No collecting or dtllvorlng. Coll expeTiENCED CLEANinO-Pi 4-4129. ' with own tronsporiatlan want BOOKKEEPER -- Assistant, port days, Tues„ Thurs., ond ...... time. 20-25 hours, weakly at your orchard and walnut Lak* Rd. option. Typing raqulrdd. talary era*. Some child care, Mulf have 11:90 to 4:30 p.m. $ days a wk. 2 adults, S36, own transpartatlan.i __i Kaaga, Svivan area, ill iwi. EXPERIENCED COOKS hsIper or I MATURE LADY-TO llva-ln eara dif willing, te train rallabte person., y children white pe rants work, 074. N'lL0' oldar, Blue Croes.I baton 4:30. HHiiri: MANAGIR . MANAGER TRAINEE r's Co Ion I of Exper lanes heiptul but not .* nnrattaru 1AJ* toll II train All y pin. L'j Apply I no# Reply In cmtldence to Gordon R. t, call a will fraln, < HighlenAo light shlfl. il _. ..... -HM ipply In person all; 4 mature HIM ray lounge, 4121 commensurate „ (M 59). Interview appe. I Bras., 423-1333. ______ work, call 421- lor Clubhouse. v , b bxpIruncbp il c R~i~t'i~|‘~ia~i • ELIAS BROS. BIG BOY RESTAURANT 10 S. Telegreph No ghona calls. TdilBib Uttar ter. *w»h»! I Blech out. Parry Pirk area. 334.2494. Jitomediat© Employment FOR PATIENT ORIENTED . . . .RN'S,,/ LPN'S / ALL SHIFTS AVAILABLE, SOME PART TIME OPENINGS. LIBERAL BENEFIT PROGRAM, EXCELLENT WORKING CONDITIONS. CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT . . . 477-2000. BEVERLY MANOR CONVALESCENT CENTER TEN MILE AND MEADOW BROOK RDS. An Equal Opportunity Employer ENROLL NOW CAREER OPPORTUNITY IN REAL ESTATE BATEMAN REALTY CO. ANNOUNCES THE ENROLLMENT OF ITS 1969 FALL "TRAINING COURSE FOR THE BEGINNING REAL ESTATE SALESMAN." • Fundamental Salesmanship • Preparation for Board Exams • Real Estate Law S • Appraising THE COURSE WILL RUN FOR A PERIOD OF 4 WEEKS. CLASSES WILL BE- HELD AT BATEMAN REALTY CO., 377 S. TELEGRAPH, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY OF' EACH WEEK FROM 7 TO 9 P.M. APPLICATIONS AVAILABLE AT THE FOLLOWING OFFICESi UNION LAKE 8175 COMMERCE RD. 338-7161 ROCHESTER 730 S. ROCHESTER RD. PONTIAC 377 S. TELEGRAPH CLARKSTOll 6573 DIXIE HWYjr For Want Ads Dial 334-4981 Work Wanted Mala n THE PONTIAC PRESS] FRIDAY, AtJGtJST 22*. ■winoss Sowfc# ♦ lS[Wom»d Housohold Coods 29 Shore Living Quarters | 33 A-lI CARPENTER WORK CUSTOM BATHROOM VANITY SPECIALISTS —| --------■ (j,. frM STEAMWAY OF PONTIAC. Carpet *5 And upholstery cl^*n,r*M cr«'Bi estimates. 682-4433. W^i7?£!^HEST TYPE ,r““r-WILL , SHARE LARGE apartment CeH^MB-MMj_____________ with responsible JadY Of ^ female HIP R ____R end upholstery cleaning. SSJJdOLtrte. Large or email lobe. **""’**" -1-* _____HnHi__________________________ _R~9h, SSbrDFEAl5TiSAT|0NS d°n«' 'w^r^^tNG-siwi A^rirRin^oma MovingTi^ Truckh^ 22 ,or I hgyerepa'r and ma'n,.nance. M3- GHT ./Wanted Money ' COLLEGE ^STUDENTS desire*- work! *nY^in^; M*~1072' Corky Ortwlne. 3354788 ,335-7637 HOME REPAIR, cabinet making and • general Dlodornlyatinn EC *» mm PAINTING, ^mmhlnoifeFE sSsu and DecofrtiBi 2j T35.7..: EXPERT PAINTING, residential end!Wflntod to Rbnt _ 335-8788; commerc al. free estimet.. t„. -----------,------- Years In the yZ** | " commercial"' free ’ eeti . ------- —arrf «•••**'• nlzation, FE 2-9639. kIW 11NG, * “ " easonable right party. Call 625-5485. 11 Wanted Real Estate HH TtO 5gT »> l**4 HOMES, LOTS, ACRE______ Price PARCELS, FARMS, BUSINESS _ _ PROPERTIES, AND LAND CON-31 TRACT. WARREN STOUT, Realtor 1450 N. Opdyke Rd. 373-1111 Urgently need (or Immediate sale! Pontiac Daily 'til • MULTIPLE LISTING SERVICE Wanted foal Estate 36 Apartments, Furnished 37 BEING TRANSFERRED, ri sell Immediately, (or cast hours, call agent, 674-1131. • Ready property. Ask for ed to LARGE 1 ROOMS and bath, S35 In 48 weak, deposit required, 3324839. -----NICE LARGE BASEMENT, t Avoid beds, sober reliable man to sh y 674- with seme, everything furn. _____ wk. Rel. FE 6-6379, REAL NICE > snd bath upper., flat 389 Rent Houses, Unfurnished / 40 Sale Houses NEAR PONTIAC MALL 3 BEDROOM, BRICK, Attractive newlv decorated 2 ' - partly f*A*F'hJ| 49 Sale Houses T£&' g&ssist-irA r 3-1 --------------------Rei rent. Mrs. Casa 338-7106 < 5:30 338-4458. APPRAISALS FREE GUARANTEED SALE 30 DAY LISTING Wa guarantea the sale of your home in 30 days. LAUINGER 674-0319 _________673-2168 BUILDER NEEDS Vacant lots WANTED BUILDING for shop under ~>r month, 8S2-1656. Shorn Living Quarters sewer. Any eree OK. Fast dosing, no commission charged. MR. ARTHUR___________ 398 7902 CASH FOR YOUR HOME I HAVE A PURCHASER WITH CASH FOR A STARTER HOME IN OAKLAND/ COUNTY. CALL AGENT, Will pay all cash. Agent, 681*0374. I Will Bgy Your House 1455. required, LADY, PRIVATE ENTRANCE er — - I _ kitchen. FE 5-3328 or FE 5-8639 Clarkston FE ■ NICE CLEAN SLEEPING rooms tiarxsion, FE 8- prlvate hom, men on,y „350 wk., FE 3-7819. WORKING MOTHER, ............ school age needs 2- or 3-bedroom ■ -------- CASH NOW 'MOVE LATER Miller Bros. Realty S3Va W. Huron 333-7156______ AV°WAREHOUSEPET I B & B AUCTION Gi?OUSE°onSplne,L eke with 2 of the ^ RR®MPT, COURTEOUS SERVICE j sal-0374._ ?• Ag ,. Carpeting Installed-cleaned. 17,000 $089 Dixie Hwy._ OR 8-2717 same. 673-9540, 4-6 p.m._ DDIAM DEAITV LOTS — WANTED IN PONTIAC car*)a* ,n stock. |WAWTdDl^tf6vC^i?^ltw.Td---------------------------------, u Imm^le^doslnfl0 REAl" VALUE •....._____________ Want Something Done Fast? w* l0!^ Ureauty^h?, privileges. FE 8 3190. pgaaim________ Dd room FOR RENT, near T^I ■no OpdykeT' Ponflac, ‘'8150 a Coach' " “ month. MA »6083. $109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR H||P|I »po't"S,iXr^rrSSSSl d/'condll'loe lamlllei with lass than 810.000 In-' ueek. 709_S. Woodward townshouMs, Vdlacent to H * to downtown Detroit. Open ParK,n0 ar* *n,r nW 11 a_____... 0641. 15844 Dixie Hwy 623-1400 | OR 3*0455 _ * _ OR 3-2391 j 4-BEDROOM COLONIAL Clarkston I on 3 acres, by owner, no agents, j 625-5107. 5 BEDROOMS for a large fami- GMC Land Contract. $5000 of 1 spacious 4 bedroom Colonial posed walk-out basement lOOu or beach for subdivision. Full dining in Waterford Twp. ^his8fs a'real buy. Office 9-5 p.m. Ml 6-2300. BY OWNER. 2 "bedroom "aluminum fireplace. Elizabeth- Park Acres. $18,000, $6,000 down. 6'/} per cent BACKUS Rochestar ’ ' ” ..... 353.2444J "a'jf ______ Mtruc^ETcd0^^^^uR.hrrx,C.aUfnr AJORS; truck, colorful, removable. 628*2650. ^ REFRIGERATORS and iuA n. ... m .a a j. lent size stoves, 391*1959. Use Pf OSS Want AuS - daily end Sunday 12 to 8 p cept Thurs. For mora Infor call 335*6171. _ AMERICAN HERITAGE APARTMENTS N clean, private, I inrrled couple or ! privileges, call >r altar 5. FE 8- Weakdays 'III 9 5280 Dixie H Sunday 10-4 623-07021 OFFERING SOUND FINANCIAL ADVICE to the prospective home buyer is an Important qualification of tho Real Estate firm you deal with when listing your homeJ Aluminum Bldg. Items PATTERSON & SONS • f Alum, and roofing specialists AH- types of alum., and roofing work Sidings, awnings, gutters and Mobile Home Skirtings. 335-7844 _________588-3724 SIDING ALUM. VINYL AND ASBESTOS AWNING-PATIOS 8CREBNED-IN OR .,L\SS ENCLOSED EAVES TROUGHING Continued Seamless aavaitroughlng, ' Wa Bring Factory to You. FAST SERVICE — QUALITY WORK — TERMS CALL NOW - DAY O R NIGHT—611-2500—TERMS DEALER—ASK FOR BOB OR RED Antenna Service Carpentry CARPENTRY . INTERIOR FINISH, kitchens panel-< ~rV9»r experience, FE 2-1235. | 5930 M-15, Clarkston, 625-2100, Floor Tiling CUSTOM FLOOR COV Roofing N G j BROWN ROOFING. Wa specialize I SLEEPING ROOM ne. SB Se“T^6tel7 a.r- only, 673-5168._L ; carpeted, TV, teleph BLOOMFIELD MANOR WEST 4 JF«rtence N,'*HVo'iToP|^^ Xclr'fc * aVpjiinces Rooms with Board loroughlyl Included! *" H MILLS you're^ ready to It with the f qualify your Realty, OR 4*2222. open dally 10 a RETIRED ELDERLY Man, q ,... IMMEDIATE OCCUPANCY best Orchard Lake 8. Middlebelt Road meals, lunches packed. 335-1679. 2300 Woodrow Wilson—682-3882 ■ private HOME. 2 elderly lac COLONIAL VILLAGE j renting 1 bedroom opts. inspection Sundi ocated 30 minutes Detroit in Oxford, Rd. Only $59,500 i 5. J-RAND, BACKUS REALTY the Pontiac area, hav wn payment, will tak agent, '6816374?° TRANSFERRED? - wishes to purchase 4 bedroom | Rent Stores to N. SAGINAW STREET, *300 per I oionth, 673-2477. i I WAREHOUSE AVAILABLE one'l2,"l ooo sq. ft. building and one 5,000 | so. It. building with loading docks. Carpeting, bedrooms. Minimum one-yaar lease, no children. 4Vj ml. W. ol D».» mil., c_______________ l-Huron Shopping Cenlar, 5367,1*0111 Uttice space 8500 < ___________■ ■ 673-9669 EMBASSY WEST APARTMENTS Wright Real Estate, 382 Oaklat FE 2-9141.__________ $109 PER MONTH WALTON PARK MANOR IT E D BEAUTIFUL FRAME AND aluminum ranch home In Waterford Township, featuring 2*bedroom, llv-inci mnm with fireplace, basement, heat, only $18,900, F-11, W ^74-4101____ BRIAN REALTY We sold your neighbor's home Multiple Listing Service rvn.vmn — FOP FAMILfES'Wwkdays Mil 9 Sunday 10-4 WITH LESS THAN $10,000 in-1 *280 Dixie Hwy.______j COME. 1, 2 AND 3 BEDROOM BY OWNER. ASSUME HOUSE* • 1 “—*--------- *—*- ONLY „ ........J ___________ ____ ■ ______ ‘—--- ---------- ------- | price $18,500. After UNPRECE PORTUNITY - 623 0702 ------ I.. per cent 3 bedroom house In Caroeting.1 shingles. Free est. 334-57201 I .9.9.JI Y°yR/BLfwhTn-Ajj^! “^^in^^Cooilng00"- >P4^w. guir.llg@B 3919. . Schultz. Between 1 and 8 APPROXIMATELY 775 I - NEWLY DECORATEDrCARPETED, - modern office si -----| « condfhonlnfl1.' gfi IcHA dl.v.W He., Carpeting _____w ^rbfa^leaks-TH^ clean W, Dider 1S> W^s^p® JaTU, "*"«"•"«**■*•** | CARPET INSTALLATION. ALSO1 InSBCt Control \ rMli. Inwinslblw .nytl^ ^-,. prtterr«|-pi s617T_ -W®!:..333^___ ----—>.613*1185. --I 8801. r | 2 LARGE ROOMS | ^SCENIC HILL,VI«W VILLAGE WOMACK ROOFING CO._ ____ ‘ ^ ........... .... ...... ’ ......... ....... $L35" cleaned. For 1< Carpet Cleaning CARPETS I -----________________ Cement Work ALL TYftas of cement w 531S. 1 ALL 1-A, Auburn Heights Paving * Tennlt courts, perking loti, driveways. Guaranteed. FES-6983; FE rYfjfes of TYPES Ol - OF CEMENT WORK 682-9215 A. JAY ASPHALT DRIVEWAY SPECIALISTS, FREE 'ESTIMATES, FE 5-4980. ALL BRICK REPAIRS, chimney, porches, violations corractad, tuckpointing, roof leaks stopped. Reasonable, 335-3433._____________ BASEMENT AND BRICK WORK, fireplaces, commercial and In-dUstrlal repair, 682-1143, 673-3251. BLOCK AND CEMENT work. Pon- tlac. 39) 1173. __________________ CHIMNEYS, porches and cement work, FE 5-8983,___________________ CEMENT' WORK OF all kinds, nothing loo large or small. 25 years experience, free astlmatas. 623-1372. AADC0 ASPHALT Paving Co., licensed and Insured. Free estimation_________332-4631 A. G. Kosiba Asphalt New driveways, parking lots, re-• surfacing worn out qaMaaM^bM asphalt. License, bond COMMERCIAL, INDUSTRIAL i — ' mtlal brick and cement m GUINN'S CONST. CO. _______391-2671___________ I- DRIVEWAYS, basements and col-• ored patio*. General Cement Con- OB 36310 OR 3-3776 u,«au HR 1CK STOMP .lala ASPHALT CURBING tloora,' Nolobtoo imall. 674-inO "EPAIR AND SHARPE NINO , PATIOS, DRIVEJ,jqOA REAO|;r,! Sand-Gravel-Dirt MORE INFORMATION CALL 335-‘ 6i7i._ ^ m 13 w! NEW YORK, «cro»s from “ large corner lot, $1000 down. Coolie b. Referei >. FE 2*9634. it Elizabeth Lake Rd. 4 i | " ‘room apart , from $1i l utilities PES'?W'-Ve*Op. Pickup or 1-A SAND, GRAVEL, D I dal. 4643 Shtrwood. 628-2000. reatonabla, 338*1201 or 674*2639. id | Al DOZING, Top toll, black 30, pickup 620*2000. $180 per j except | _____ ^VoomrFE*jh2424, FE 12 FURNISHED LIGHT bousekaeping: WILL SUBLET 1 BEDROOM-apart-woman pratarrad, 852-4397. mant In Rochestar area from Sept. --------------------------.Inalal 14 to Nov. 30. Lease may be rental Includes ’ell caravel nraduct.' 3 ROOM APARTMENT FOR tingle *» *" 01 P™aue'*- men, SI6 wk. 342 Orchard Lake. renew* Altar 6 p.m. call 682-7227 Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron St. 338-0466 Id Schools. >18.350 with >300 down \ id balance on FHA mortgagei llch we procure for qualified! irchaser. Shown by appointment I . ____ ... city. Sell c. 10,000 equity. 692*0671. CLARKSTON HEIGHTS SUBDIVISION sdroam modern brick ranch only 5 ----- —1 -- lol. Features exhaust hood —m throughout, clth fireplace and kuui id covered patio. Full ched basement with two-door ippolntm bul n kitchen, Intarcc only. KENNETH G. HEMPSTEAD Al'S LAWN MAINTENANCE, Spring and fall dean ups. Culling, fertlllilng and tpraylng. 673-3992. COMPLETE LANDSCAPING Sodding, seeding, shrubs. Licensed Nursery Man. 682-7850, | Rent Houses, Furnished token rent! i BEDROOM i. 2500 sc 4615 Dixie al sq. ft. al 4541 -3500 sq. It. at REALTOR 4033 L0MLEY DRAYTON PLAINS UNIQUE LANDSCAPE i drawn tor the do “ . landscaper 330-1304, yoursell, LAWN SERVICE, TREE trimming WH.LTE?i—1CUSTOM lawn cutting, 602-5657 or lawn anraylng >•••■ w Phone 602-5657 or ■ 724._________________ Lawnmower Service i. Furn. or unfurn. >. OR 3*1355. Toe- Rent Business Property 47-A, , olllce. A-l MERION BLUE dollvortd., Comple.. ------ M Free Oil, 612-7197____________ 662-7197. _________ -1 COMPLETE LANDSCAPING, CHOICE SHREDDED black dirt'3 R0®ffs AND RAr3H- spaclallzlno In retaining waHt. topsoil. Clay topsoil, 6 yds. SIS dal.1 . N J^hnsom_ Fraa ast mates. J. H. Wellman | Also dozing, FE 4-6510. 2 ROOMS AND B Landscaping. 373-0666._________ HEAVY CLAY"LOAM -ToTaoTf ,ln9le man' car*,aXt ____ -1 MERION BLUE SOD, on Peat, "pdlwad by S yard iMds o/ 335 7843 ___________________________________ month. 373-S253. 43^ cents per yd. delivered, 682- larger. Grading available. J. H 2 ?OOMS. PRIVATE entrance. 2 BEDROOMS, GARAGE, oa< Wellman, Larvdtcaplng. 373*0666. fite bath, 426 N. Saginaw. ! no wts or chll^“- “A’ “" D PROCESS, paat loadc/ VIS AND BATH, no petsr334- 2 BEDRC silvered at Auburn a- ___________________ j Lake, f 391-251) or 3*1-2611. _ , jMS, NEWLY DECORATED; cupaiicy. .... Cpntir Tank (.rvlr. furniture, private entrance.I • .Orion. 693-674) or S30-3S72. 115x50' BUILDING,..... '"7^ oath, sound proof, washing 2-BEDROOM, CLEAN, year around __P«rklng W. Huron. FE 3-7960. CCjM>LETE.»EPt.C.WORK. ..war JSS^TS JSU\ %!, t£Ll° CLARKSTON AREA 2 OR 3 ROOM apartmenls beposlt;2 BEDROOM LAKE FRONT-home! ?onwM»mo'^°T»?vinoll'l«?SM?llT7 1 ;*8U -c*"FE *'44,# ,,t,r 4:30 E“rk*fl,.r°T •“4. uy;»g SSo: MTo77opMkh.fl«i.Rii?i'tn 2 ROOMST-NO-CHILDREN or pels I month, lease, tec. dep., ref, J34-iN?w COAAMERCIAL BUILDING, THE BIG RANCHER I 090 Roblnwood, FE S-2754. nl°;____________ _____________3{*J®/ J?7®;?8! *lr S?dl,.lo!!S?.' ■ DALBY S. SONS TREE SERVICE 3 rtc.LEAN ROOMS S». No Chl7- 3 f,®?”0®88_H0'|1IL Lli9i0O G^v!' Orchard lE„ Sylvan°Lake, 647 1743 NOW SCALE SPRAY. FE 5- dren, drinkers or pels. 335-5102. mmne room, SI50. 1940 Grove, u.,— . .. ..... 4 _ laws. . 1_______________31 3 ROOM APARTMENT, 1990~Wl1S>ii1 —Jl!752Jl_“!l,83L MOSQUITO'TONTROL, NO |ob tool_J“chi.Ke*9?L!i*Idor- WHW.' big or tod small. Call tor tree 3 ROOMS AND BATH, utilities etls., answering oerv., 674-4447, eluded, 332-620S. . ^hitna PhJifcWlfC«, HSpraylng, rjToOMS- AFD~rATH-Vnain--troor-,! Inttallaflons. 682-0876.__ Spraying Sirvici Driveways, parking lots. Residential-Commercial FE 4-2176,:- SLABS, 40 canti A, G. Kosiba Construction 1 days^________ F33J3I0_________or_______ 673-3776 SEAWALLS, DRIVEWAYS, porches, ASPHALT PARKING LOTS end block, brick patio, fraa astlmatas. r. Ann Arbor Construction Co. > DOMINO CONST. CO. 674-3955 RELIABLE ASPHALT Contractors. Fra# astlmatas. Specialized in DblChllM and . sealing, driveways, parking lota. 33S-12I4 tr 334-0733. SPECIAL ON oaal coating, patching, ouar,,2c oo, ft, S2S-5761.____ t,;__ Boach Servlets BEACHES CLEANED SANDED, DOCKS INSTALLED. SEA WALLS 11-A ALTERATIONS, SUITS, COATS, Cvtlar Contracting_______6i\mW dratMs, 335-4207. Mrs. Saba oka, I Service j alteratloBs, all, types, .knit Ceramic Tils la • yv"s'‘- DAN'S CERAMIC TILE* elate floors, merblt sills, Install In homes# old or now. Free tit. 674-4341. 615*1501 Construction Equipment DOZERS, BACKHOE, LOADER Salas & Rentals Used Bobcat- Loaders Burton Equipment Co. 3776 E. Auburn Rd._____ 152-3553 1025 Oakland TALBOTT LUMBER •ervlce, wood or aluminum Ing and Hardware supplies. iklarK1 “ - Ml Suspended Ceilings ARMSTRONG SUSPENDED c commercial and ri.. _______a estimates. 62S-2313._ Tret Trimming Service ,3 BEDROOM LAKEFRONT home, Sept, to June. Adults, S1S0 mo. sac. n'i dep. Union Lake. 3634665. - ! T ’RCTr'AIIBl/fTI' couple only. for operation 12 months i irpaled nice, i ir pelt 335-0293." .. . RTVATE ENTRA__________ _____ marking, laundry lacllillet sound proofing and carnetsd, 1 In. fanl welcome, must sea to ap. pradala, from 131.50 to S37.50 I t. 57 Mechanic, FE 5-6642. apply don e. McDonald OR 3-2837 $13,990 ' RANCHER - 3 bedrm , e kitchen, fully insulated, targe umlty room. On your lol. YOUNG-BILT HOMES J REALLY MEANS BETTER BILT * Russell Young, Bldg. rj |__3343830-53'/>_Vy. JHuron St. ,v AVON. NEW 3 bedroom" ranch! utility, Igs. kitchen, birch cabinets, j Rotslawn. ______________ ______ | Kenslnglon. 684 4125 5 iiHUHn STORE FOR LEASE, 2( Telegraph Rd./68I 090I A BEAUTIFUL HOME' lor 3 dr 4 collage gentlemen or teachers. S185 c_i„ u...... per month plus utilities. Can be “OUSe5 teen at 399 Orion Terrace, oil Conklin Rd. end Long Lake Blvd. 0 Down, FHA or VA, YORK OR 4-0363 ____FE 1-7176 CLARKSTON NEAR l*7$# 3 bedroom, garage, end large 111x790 lot# full ! price only $25,000, P-84. RAY CALL RAY TOPAVl_674-4101 COLONIAL 3 BEDROpMS, living room, dining room# kitchen, i car garage. Take over mortgage payments of $11#000 total payments $91 mo. $2400 down. “GMC CLARKSTON SCHOOL AREA ~ WALTER'S LAKE PRIVILEGES WE BUILD from your selection of our 1970 portfolio of U.S. Steel homes plans or Kingsbury Home plans. Several choice view lots to v* OI Beaver Lake, 379*4486. A. SALE IS ONLY 49 AS GOOD AS YOUR FINANCING. Moving, Storioge DIAMOND Moving and storage 1 llam to houseful. Insured. 334-9049 or 3354309._ BILL'S TREE TRIMMING AND Removal, vary low rata. 612-3043. DON JIDAS TREE removal. Free estimates, Insured. MY S-1H6. GARDNER'S TREE SERVIce!-Fra ^MOamipmptejMfPHggp^ eittmatee. Vary rea»„ 335-6744. SAsoedaltlltVFNE°*48*4 V°Ur m°''ln° OAKLAND ^RIMMING^IERVICE specialists. FE 44864.__I T SaiMuftl cavanauoh's trsb lumps removed Iraa. II wa taka 3 ROOMS AND BATH, S3S week, 175 — W.............estimate, fully I deposit. 673-5849. _ bTitaufth " l aira -T h „ i.e jinn ' I. ...... ...^—.— . .. . ELIZABETH LAKE 2 ho Sepl.-June, Clean, draaaes, leather ceete. 682-9533. OSCAR SCHMI&T SWAMPED TO THE GUNWALE . priced. 363-1112, H A H h6MB iMPROVEMlNT. i Aluminum aiding, porch a i, i fireplaces, and addltlona, 682-7809. NAVE YOU BEEN DRY WALL SERVICE, M & S GUTTER C0o LICENSED-BONDED Complete eevestrougnlng service Free eat. 673-6164# iTMUi Electrical Services ADRIAN'S PROMPT elbftHca sarvlca. reasonable ratal, #23-2212, McCORMICK ELlCfffiC Residential wlr Ing-Sarvlca 17 Baldwin_________FE 4-9191 Ixcavatiog ' Tree Trlmlng and Removal *"‘ly Insured-Free esIlmaN 8244465, Walled Lake Trucking Piano Tuning PIANO TUNC ,—REPAIRING Painting and Decorating Fre* 1-A RELIABLE PAINTING, Interior, extirlor. Free «sl, 3344594._ 25-YEAR-OLD Unlvertlty student will I Tap quality work al Inax-a price. 651-8801, anytime. ^'■z.u,aA 1 __ 6:38. A-l LIGHT MOVING, TRASH hai reasonable. FE 4-1353. At LIOifT hAulTnO and oddlol FE 2-52171 Fie 54226______ M LIGHT TRUCKING of any k Odd Jobs, FE 6-2347. '__» LIGHT HAULII MB 649 Leunebury.___________ 3 ROOMS, CLEAN QUIET couple! No children er drinkers. $32 a wk. $25 deposit. 103 Norton. 3 ROOMS AND BATH, _________________ roup is with baby In arms. FE 6 S ROOMSTcqyFLE; NOjjliSrsSlsoI MODERN; SANDY BEACH! bedroom and 3-btidroom, gas heel,I*” $150 per mo. plus sec. dep. 1 to 2 children welcome, 681-1591 or 6B1-. 1590. Call Biter 6 p.r formal dining roorrw lull bas< garage, and enclosed Ironl por —-------... p.|3 d.j LARGE HOME, nice beach, furnish 575 deposit, 67§-7294.______I Kingston Road,- Pontiac Lake,' —----------- |n-------------------------------- E.f!m.Uil.T0M PAI7*TIRQ (AreasonableTrateAwiiMO0’ ’depSm.Lfe ---------__6B2-4635 — Iann/fiTt-u 3 ROOMS AND BATfi, welcome, ,337.50 per week, *iwismall brick house, nice area,1 dap., Inquire at 2W, Baldwin Ava., adults only. 106S5 Dixie. 625-2546. rS^ilimair -----------------; TEACHER'S SPECIAL, new, modern 3 iMSEl,Y p mIIk, D *?.d 2-badroom lake front. Sapt.-Juna, 6%5 Mr mijoj4 °:_ 373-J io«!i/oA,TEa.M'r;dcu'.. *?; Mohawk. 602-7052 or FE 2-666l;_ | p™3 or 3M-M79 I 3 room lowers pir’ woak, .75 Rent Hbuibs. Unfurnished 40 RAY -I CALL RAY TODAY I_67 sj 0 DOWN' K#l $80 MONTH Aaron Mtg. & Invst. Co. ojl A Real Beauty n Rd., 4 blocks n Rd., enter from “ Sylvan Clarkston and inquln. 612*2308 COSWAY I Wolverine Lake Privileges | 3-bedroom ranch, aluminum aTdlng, full basement, gas hast, beautiful kitchen with built-in oven and ilnutes ot Pontiac and Oakland niversity, quality bulltl iroughout, Includes 3 bedrooms, fireplace, lull basement, attached 2 —-—,, |aka privileges, owners1 1 basement? Are you « THOMPSON 373-1121 GEORGE FRERICKS — and uxterler painting, i. Fraa aetlmates, work. ________d,< 27 . yrs. exp, Call anytime. 632-3763.________ QUALITY WORK ASSURED, Palm Ina, Papering, Wall Waihlnq, 6»-2872. ' _ ~ SPRAY PAINTING 153-2940 Kan PlaitBring SorvicB _________________________ FE 2*1 HAULING RUBBAGE AND con-UnfOOMS WITH private bath and , BAAAI1 v # structlon clean-up. 612*3043. | entrance# carpeted hallway# leund* 12 1 WAu>AWl>{to'.nueii>CT*^l ^iinifttihXchi'd SZSZtl par wUjiw ut.i'fmTn.^! 335*2136,______________________________ ROOMS AND BATH# baby welcome# $37.50 per week# $100 wi— -------- 273 Baldwin Ave. . located close ti garages cleaned. 674*1242. ■ LIGHT AND HEAVY TRUCkI^UJ rubbish, fill dirt, grading —' id front-end lo FE 3> sJs-nia! Track Rental Trucks to Rent Call 3364054._____ A VERY LOVELY bachelor apt. Weatalde, everything private. $125 dap. required. Call 335-0293.__ ALL UTILITIES, 3 ROOMS and bath, with private entrance, no children or pall, 5140 a month. EM 3465S._______________“ ALL UTILITIES. Single or couple's. >160 par mo. 5605 Williams Lake Vk-Ton Pickups I Lb-Tor, Stak< Rd. DR 3-1926,_______ TEUCKI - TOACTOR* APARTMENTS AND rooms for rent 79 Parkdale, near Flshar Body. CLEAN, 3 ROOMS, pr ' 5 ROOMS NEAT and ciaan, by Flthar Body, 835 a weak. 731-5129. * BEDROOMS, WITH flrablaca, garage, 1W baths, baeement, gas neat, laroa yard, near DrayTon Plains Shopping canter, S300 par month with security deposit, or 3 2411. I- 4-BEDROOM I LAUINGER 674-8319_____ 674-01..______ 2 STORY" BRICK WITH attachod brick garage. Fenced back yar U|L .. plenty ol shade. 122,500, 61 2~ MODELS Open Daily 5-7 except Fri. Sat. and Sun. 2-6 EVES. EM 3-7546^ Y" OWNER." 3 bedroom, Oaklend_Univers|ty. 651-4508. BEAUTIFUL 3 bedroom 4-BEDROOM Home with lake privilege!. Over 1 acre lol, only $29,900, Lend contract terms. COSWAY REALTOR 681-0760 Clarkston School Area ' MACEDAY LAKE PRIVILEGES NEAT 3-BEDROOM FRAME, lust e ' I walk from prlvato beach, :lubhouse, 3 boat w beautiful home sits on a double lot, Immdedlate occupancy. Located near GM proving grounds and missile site. For ONLY 822,900 EASY Gl TERMS LADD'S OF PONTIAC____________391-3300 COLON I ALTT bE DROOMS, Drayton area, lake privileges. 1L? bath, custom carpeting, drapes. Family room with fireplace, formal dining MUST SEE TO AP- _________ HOUS dltlon near Dixie ........... part of Waterford Township. $175 per mo. and Security Depoelt re-I qulred.S6S-I159. Free rental ^MU^^ggodJ Real north | $31,000 including lot. Take Elizabeth Lake Road basement, alum. PRECIATE. $39,000-110,000 InloretLCALL 6734Ml. ' DRAYTON PLAINS Very, attractive 3 bt cent landlords# SBRViarr Realty# 485*1367, vetting# I NEW 4 BEDROOM frl level# 1V9 i 2-car ett. garegen Pleaiant front $350 mo. plus security HAVE YOUR OWN LOT? i Choose from several home designs priced Irom $17,100. lb prop-lie uecause we do ly only end that lo arly—If oo, try i all our lobs I wa , nia cornet way. ! John Voorhaas, Bldrs. Inc tlTO Dixie Hwy. Clarkston Mon.-Frl. M Sat, 104 625-2674 h0ME MAINTENANCi "BULLDOZING, BACKHOE WORK. .rkASTERINO;. NEW WORK. *------int, grading. 682-2042, FE -"REPAIR. ira, porches, racraall I, kitchens, bathrooms. I #d. itoai. Call aftat | p CLARKSTON Excavating Company specializing In grading, land clearing, stump r a m • v a t, ___________astlmatas. 363-5607. PLASTER REPAIRS, free"estimate, call any time, 32M513. Plumbing & Heating ONDRA PLUMBING t HEATING Sewer, water (Inat - FE S-0643. 0 ft,yBATiNo- *•** I, aik tor Ron. 6T.49I9. i «lii9qtt»i. ai03l>8> -_______________ ADDITIONS AND alteration^ porch 1 repair. FE S-1SS1. Carpentry and cement work floor sanding and ! trot astlmatas. M2-—** *--------— a. AND EQUIPMENT Semi Trellen Pontiac Form and Industrial Troctor Co. Emp^wfrkfnn ^iA^TMM«.h'.r c,f*S , t f35 5- WOODWARD a,J * S L Sn d*»v w 5^«v10 »Jcp d«* Upholstering i «Mj» (LARGE LAKE front, walk in *“ ‘I "VIVII ST ww-TW-----------l/i mil* APT hinu/l basement apartment, all ulllltlee Olllce Open Evenings and Sunday 1-4 :— AL I NUW! Included, 362-7600. 1 2 BEDROOM HOME, Summer sale prlcee on chalre end—i——-- . — ■.. ________________ ellei wt*m«te*!>tlcl>',f*d' 33i^1700, ,fM Apartments, Unfurnished 38 Apartments, Unfurnished 38 UPHOLSTERING BY RICHARD Quality Fabrlce and work, pick T»ke Eiizanem Lake Road 'b mile'—iSLic_________________________________i West from Williams Lake Road to BY OWNER. NEWLY docoreted 21 comBietejy..tuf,n!8nw. inciuo ng 2 Colony Helohlt. bedrooms, living and dining rooms, *!r ■c.0.l”lJ!e.n*r>' Beautiful .1^ Will ei HOUSE PLANS Drawn and designed. BIO BOY DRIVE-lN DIXIE AT Excellent financing availablei481-- V by ow Annett Inc, Realtors ! HAYDEN REALTY [ PobWhl'e lIMv/ li 28 E Huron St 33B-04661 “3 *6»4 10753 Highland Rd. (M-5»i area, block oil Duel '■Ik,.,.'" ir,,..rr° V.0 '/» mile WoslofOxbpw lake i land contract. 623-0202. , BY OWNER — 2 bedroom, 1- SISL0CK & KENT, INC. 1309 Pontiac Stale Bi ' 1, 335-9294 lldg. 338-9295 BEDROOM 423-9339, ____ 2-BEDROOM BRICK FRDN BLOOMFIELD WALL CLEANERS. Wall* cleaned. Rase. Satisfaction guaranteed, inabrad. FE S-lffl. I | 24 tire. Hot tar, ehlnglet, repairs We will not be undersold IS" WELL DRILLING, wall polnti : ----- and pump servlet, ul $ RIDGEMONT TOWNHOUSE APARTMENTS * One, Two and Three Bedrooms * Roper Gas Rangei * Hotpoint Refrigerators * Carpet and Drapes * Swiming Pool and Pool House * All Utilities Except Electric * Air-Conditioning by Hotpoint FROM 1165.08 WITH ONE YEAR LEASE. NO PETS ALLOWED. CHILDREN O.K. Between Eost Boulevord and Madison—2 blocks from main goto of Pontiac Motors. 957 N. Perry St. Phone 332-3322 Open DpIIV 19 AyM. except Wednesday GMC BEDROONV BRICK and all nch In Wait Bloomtlald To Ih lakf privileges, full bai ry large lot. 84580 dowi sume payments Of 9178 per .. eluding laxei end Ineurance, P-77, RAY I'li year young, large lanced lol. Just $4700 lakes over mortgage payment, till mo. 681-0370. GMC | FOR PROFESSiOfftT REAL ESTATE SERVICES. CALL IVAN W. SCHRAM tilt Joslyn FE 5*9471 j Rjt/v~lnBfe Pontiac . ..jor 29 yjJJt* Close lo Cass Lake Beach. 1WI »lHJ_.&yAjrP«f' Story, 3 bedroom, fully carpeted, i utility room, close to beach will lake tac'lltrea, 363-0220. BLOOMFIELD ORCHARDS. Altrac Ilya, 4-bedroom, bl-level, TV: baths, carpeted, drapec dishwasher, disposal. Walk t school and shopping. >29,500. Ca assume 521,000 mortgage, 332-95I0. by Owner, immediate cupancy, Dravlon Plains, brick ranch, family base mant, house across the strei Lake. Two lots wnn i a x a privileges. 88,800, assume present mortgage ol 5'/. per cant. Full price, 818,980. By owntr, no soant. 6734670. _______________ 3-Bedroom Economy noncher, on your lot for only 020,901 E. J. Dunlap Custom Builder 2717 Sllvtrstone. corner Wallen W-ltn er 1304497 014,950. 401-TM7.______________ BY OWNER. 3 bodreom, -2 cer , garage, basement, lanced yard, 819,500. FHA approved. 2 miles ■ tram 1-758*4375 OakVl*ta.J73-5414 4744101 BY OWNER, "SEMINOLE MILLS. 3 Story, bedroom brick, 2'a baths, lull itomonl, | basement, 10x1V screened porch. 2 car brick garage, shown by ‘appt., * Ohly. Evenings F E 2-9576. BY OWNER. TILL October"fair I960. ____ 3 acres RRIPIIIIPmin swimming pond and fishing pond, > ipringfod, lots of groan trots, price1 117,500 with 07,500 down, Call or tog It anyllmt. OA 0-1149. BY dWNeR. OTTER, Hllit, “j bedroom, 1W bath, living, dining, family rooms and don, attached n homo, quick financing, by lana conlract. 338-2679 or 647-0813. FARRELL ORION TWP. C>roiMrT•v«ry room. 7 BeAutifui rtcrMtlon room In botih ment. 2*c#r attachod garaoo wtffi paved drivo Priced b a IO W reproduction cost. Coll today! Pontiac—Eost Side FHA approved 4 rooms end bath. 2 lots, City water and sewer. FUN price 510,200. , FARRELL MALTY garage. Large lol, lake privileges. 2405 N. Opdyke Rd. Cell alter 6 p.m. 652*8451. I 373-655 D—fi THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, r Want Ads Dial 3344981 rentIng . ARENOW ! YORK APPLICATIONS with .« ROCHESTER SNYDER, BROWN SEATING IRWIN 'BUD" y !3W i SPECIAL FE 5-3676 9 642-4220 moving, mu»i ..m, omuiim ..most N0 <,0,lno C0‘"' . ffiSV ton, O^ ^OROOM^Hou^. C*,. ,0 REASONABLE ON TERMS015' * HALLMARK OFF SASHABAW “feSSSSS SSBWS® ** ” SPECIALS .Bar-—* off e n farms. ?rV"V.KS: gggMB LAUINGER flnp HH| MlkB gmc HRS3 In ii M 1 m iHHHurry on i W^*1w3 AVON STERLING HEIGHTS “«S"ST i«*SKS OIF SVSKS «SW SS sSK!?4" J* » J p*rl ijfly* Vriclo5M*"cloi^o ,hnp OPEN Jl P^Mti gwrl mil m DAY - RAYJ A&G mwc after 6 p.m. FE 2-3370 HEARTHSIDE BHHV pistes B&Mftl open w&rSSor ”™i life i iS S3 fBSBflflaigg £Cf=;= SPBI OPEN H »m^'^^EASTHAM' mNtu&TS ■9 pfe MHMaBWe tfgg! Today- ntVhVVm day 'jRpjgw ANNETT i Lin. 1 n* A VT ODD ncccDc m T T?P j y?S3SSSi®5E0S HAGSTROM, REALTOR -nun ,D1«CTI0NS; H d R#,d IM jag*vgsjga t, m, # 5 S« Giitoux UAL estate , ^wtsT'a ff»i Webster-Curtis GAYLORD 363-8303™ L81K8ElMComHm.rce S !£S;js|SlffiVdl-lJ-Wdyj STRUBLE | i|j& if®i|L sattfflViBVsa gBsy»i&w 1-1 ACRE Vol U Wav D.nltv -I»™.' “ *' “^a88" § STARTER HOME CLOSE TO J PANORAMIC VIEW OF LAKEVILLE LAKE PERFECT IN EVERY WAY wffi wllhViHd etlMna/'Sv?' MtMl0hU™nr5r l*-t, -v^ p,l,Ml*r«l ™* jgwgSpgpig 823 S. LAPEER ROAD Kiwnss ROCHESTER AREA #12 S*wfH3s ’• KSssS Sb :*rS SYLVAN VILLAGE #17 A PRIVATE WORLD #34 ATTRACTIVE RANCHER #54 ehsSS UNION LAKE AREA .#69 PONTIAC CLARKSTON ROCHESTER 338-7161 625-2441 651-8518 363-4171 OR SELLING CALL H I CLARK YOU'LL LOVE H££g{ SRflH&lf EXTRA SHARP-SOUTH SIDE ssh« ewftjB-«& REALTORS - MLS 674-2245 5730 s Lake Rd. 674-4161 $109 MONTHLY* JOIN WALTON PARK MANOR . 335-6171 «■* SUSSS2& CRESCENT LAKE ESTATES ISSSSBSW^n* gjgigitris.’tjfTjg ■** DORRIS 8, SON REALTOR A k. % i» v For Want Ads Dial ^34-4981 TtfE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1969 ?aj! j,ou,M _______ 49 SOU Houses 49 Northern Prcpdrty ~~ 51-ALots-Acreogt h^V°^,X’r.r'4« You Can't Miss | off Marietta crossroad, paved, land ' and dry, county ditches. BUYING ACREAGE ASSURES YOU Hmg. ... 0F breathing room. sOlid INVESTMENT AND ENJOYMENT. .<■ m D—7 FE 5-8183 NORTHERN HIGH AREA Two bedroom bungalow. Living & dining araa. Kitchen & utility. Oas HA heat. Newly decorated Vacant. Only 8100.00 down plus costs. FHA TERMS Three bedroom two story older Basement. ____ Possession on doting. CLOSING COSTS g rooms. Kitchen HA YON $25,500 Highland Estates — s bedroom fenced eart ?ara9*' $31,900 #V«lr,«n..0r'5 - 3 bedroom brick. $31,900 T 3 tedroom brick. Hu Fireplace. “ $500 per xacrt, i TWO-40 ACRES on tame zoned, ---------— ---- UROUS carpeted ALSO ----- road, ALSO I.UX-‘ME, n« rith 3 i ACRES - I road and located lect after 4 PM dial Pec 1-378-2380 or write P.O. Marietta* Michigan 48453.________ A NEW 16' X 24' CABIN, fully wired 9 ACRES -Md| insulated, red wood siding,; northeast white shingled roof, good hunting,1 --------------1 fishing or vacationing. All this on Ivlng room. | Sharpl Kltcher. _ -..... HA heat. Carport. Newly ' decorated. Vacant. FHA TERMS Two bedroom ranch bungalow. Eve; call Mr. ALTON. FE 4-53(1 Nicholie & Harger Co. [ 1 S3'A W. Huron St. FE NIB >vs car attached garat $37,900 — 4 bedroom brick a urn quad level. 2 Vi car garage. Fenced Io ul landscaping. r only 13,950 ince on lea | — --------------_e avallablt sired. Call anytime. 425-5355 324,000. i south of I ormatlon 1 ,c«l* 7W ACRES k ffi!Stg perfect toi I box 231, j home, 9 miles N. of Oxford, 34.995. Slightly rolling, 4 miles ____ Df Oxford, for country ivlng and horse lovers, $10,500. 10 ACRES -> Hilly wooded land, where mobile home* n*rmitt*H Otter Lake, exposed basement Busimss Opportunltias Partridge I Af THE BIRD TO SEE" A NORTHERN LIQUOR BAR Located lust North df Gaylord In the center of a thriving community. One of the few bars that grosses approx. 880,000. Priced right at $70,000 for . business and beautiful 5-bedroom apart-| north^ is where you S9 Sal» Hous«hotd foods 65 |SbIe fousahold Goods 45 Sals Hautefoldfooft ^_65 jFor Sal* Miscellaneous 67 » WHAT YOU'D EXPECT TO FAY ELECTRIC STOVE, 325, Get Steve. WESTINGHOuJlT UPRIGHT 3 ROOMS LEHTIN— HI....................... ant to go and a term $1,500 ! down. 391*2908 aft. S.___ FOR RENT MODERN cabin ____________ I Atlanta, Aug. 17 thru Sept. 363-2298 CLEAN AND CUTE, ranch patio, larga lot, 2 bedrooms, Mjggfflg ““ 818,900. I water softener, rith £ j acre lot. j; 1§ «.S fireplaces V room. 2724 ft. living tree. VON REALTY 3401 w. Hurc HARRISON AREA C. PANGUS INC., REALTOR | OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK _____ ,30 M-15 Ortonvllle CALL COLLECT 427-2015 Sale Farms 56 ASK FOR NEW CATALOG PARTRIDGE REAL ESTATE ----Vest Huron St., Pontiac $297 . LITTLE JOE'S BARGAIN HOUSE 1 Baldwin at Walton FE 2 Acres of Free Parking is. 'til 8; Sat. *tll 6. E-Z U G.E. REFRIGERATOR refrigerator. I ___ ____ ___■ spring and mattress sets, $29,951 CSL, 10841 Oakland. 334-1509. _____ | 2 PIECE LIVING room suite; condition, 391-2324._ 2 PROVINCIAL END tables' matching round table, light _(I Danish chair and sofa, matching, couch with matching chair, after 2 FURNITURE d Mrs. Chairs, zipper.. x wring, ti SE UPRIGHT deep BATHTUB end Sink, all flttlnoi, 4x4 .-old. ration.ble. 332- mirror, buggy wh^l IlghtTaraSi i annn ..ii |ug| for panallng or WANTED TO BUY « celling tile, 474-4497, L.ed.d glass l.mpi or leaded I BfitoE.iX?URSLLI •RB. ..... glass shades. 432-4421. 1 1,1*. *lme you use Blue Lustre to WHiRLPOfli refrinerew—sts--------, rugs. Rent •Isctrlc sham- ft;1,11-y™Ol^jolf“-OP?,; J £u-| E^winil; Hu9*cn'* Hardware, | YOUNG MARRIEDS Need I . HUP! (JB| I pet you credit without co-sigm e Household Appliance, 681-2383. ' Antiques ishabaw and Walton). BROKEN CONCRETE _ Pontiac. 391-3514 65-A contract. EM 3-4703. HIGHLAND, 18 monthi old, 2 bedroom ranch, alum, siding, carpet and drapes Incl., dog kennel, beautiful lawn. Call lor terms. EM 1-7700. FURNISHED HOME, Woterford-Unlon Lake area, 2 bedrooms, gas heat, alum, siding, lot 7S‘x300', fireplace. 321.000. terms. Union Lake s gas heat, tS'xSOO', flrei EM 3-5477. oVBEDROOM, full bliamtnl, raised ranch, brick and alum, siding, lake prlvllegea, 2-car garage with elec, door, central air conditioning. ivy baths, 029.000. Call EM 3-7039. WHITE LAKE COTTAGE. 2 bedrooms, partial basement, enclosed porch, 34900. Call 3(3- braezeway, gas heel, 2 possible 3 bedrooms, fireplace, basement, enly 023.000. Call 343-7039. COMMERCE AREA, possible 4 bedrooms, full basement, 2 car garaga, cement driveway, formal dining room, carpeted, and many extras. EM S-4703. TED'S Trading 674-2236 furnished 313.300 on I Large comi knotty pine 80 TO 800 ACRES i Lower Michigan. Dairy, gi Name your f 3150,0001 3289. e to Muskegon River I 279-1 279-9740.________ 140 ACRE FARM near May ' ■ i, smell home, 2 b Michigan •h.: 517- i Sunoco ider floral. MA 6-6314.___ (Brand new furniture) sh. Terms. Ley-ewey. rear sun s Furniture, 640 Auburn *-FE 4-7881. H____ 4-PIECE BEDROOMS, brand new, $97. Little Joe's Bargain House, .HK Baldwin, FE 2-6842. cushions. $949 < balance $192. eyerslble ANTIQUE SIDEBOARD butternu h | wood, pood condition, 682-2877. J ANOTHER LOAD of goodies |u»t~til, .i vi„,nT Davlsburg, ! 1, CO-OP RUMMAGE SALE. Saturday. -Aug. 23, 10 till? Double evacado sink, children's swing set, clothing, ........... books, mlsc. Leota. off 434-8991, closad Sundays. . | Elizabeth Lake_Rd. 1 block from Hatching chair, CUSTOM ANTIQUE REFINISHING. -d' Y-KNOT Antique: unclaimed balance 3115. , 3149 Specializing In furniture refinlshlno COMMODE, LAMPS, walnut dining and repalra of all types. 343-9341, »•*- over 200 places of old dishes Mon .-Set. _________________ and mlsc.. Set. end Sun. only, 4701 JIM BEAM BOTTLE CnllAriS^- Dixie Hwy. 473-5049. _________________ Fastest growing hobby. We buy, COMPLETE USED Stroll-e-Chelr, sell, trade. Send tell addressed baby equipment set, good con-stamped envelope for list andi dlllon, best oiler, 451-9065. 370 LakJSdl! *D? CALORIC ULTRA-MATIC 30" gas 4M55 Pontiac, Mich, range, Frlgldalre built In cook top - ----—-______________end oven, 24" stainless steel sink LARGE ANTIQUE and rummage and 9* swimming pool. 031-2345. vast, CLOTHES, FURNITURE, antiques. C. SCHUETT EM 3-7188 ««»'• ™n>uiwini 8000 Commerce Rd. Union Lake "SSojobo; LOVELY 2 BEOROOM retirement or divide. Falrlene Realty, 444 Fox! lake home. Cedar Lake, Oscoda, ikass . - .--n ,,. am. — ... I Althouse. 425-1501. MODERN, JOINS STATE LAND. 3795 AN ACRE, 240 teres cour ------- causa Wjdoeth. U.P.. JO | gentleman's farms. Stately HURON AND WILLIAMS ! (NEAR WIDE TRACK) ! autlful 3 bay Colonial servlet acres, US-2. ~ Furnished, _ . Mulligan, Gould City, Mich. MOBILE HOME, 40 x 10, 3 bedroom, uprjs * TRAVERSE CITY INVESTMENT - tr THINKING OF BUILDING? and*1 *snowmobHe.’ iVoKaTO'S MCCULLOUGH lolnlno stale ground. Barns, corral,: tt kb 3 bedrooms, indoor arena, house, swill moving *2'/i buildings. barns and well-kept 4 bedroom matching ci._I cushions. $269 ' 6>TECE"UVfN t0 th* . salty* i Call 664-8121 ling pond, 1500' REALTY h< Weekdays Ml 6-6674 Eves., weekends, Mr. Pascoe 391-1817 j j ~~TO-"BUY, SELL, A BUSINESS i ■ _ National Business — FE 3-7841 j ? TEXACO HAS AN excellent business *' opportunity local*J — 1 —i " ? baths, baseme,.., siding, priced from Model open daily pointment. UNION LAKE AREA i Clarks . For further 117,900. j full basement, gat aye, auti-deck, dining room, carpeted, across tha street of lake and easement lot. $31,500. Terms. EM 3-7700. , Resort Property THIS ONE IS RIGHT! I For you with . 3 bedrooms, family room, basement and m baths beautiful lot, only $29,900. i'HAM AREA-CENTRAL AIR NEW COTTAGE AND WOODED LOT on pa' Full price 32995, 52 LARGE: fireplace, modern breakfast nook, f„. ■ end garage ONLY 327,500. basement -..... _ily 3299 wn>. vw.B ,u many lakes. Near) thousands of acres of State lanC for hunting. Low pollen coun climate. Come to our office acros from Wilton State Park on Bus US-37 (1-75). Open 7 days * week Northern Development Ce finish basement, ba drive, an underground anL f.ncid yardT very 'al- I MODEL OPEN tractive heme and landscaped. nA||Y 1 TO A S24,200,.Call EM 3-5477. DtJ....IV.JL LARGE HOMEMAKER'S KITCHEN, 3 bedrooms, 3 baths, 2' i-car garage, rooted-in patio, beautllul landscaping. 326,750. WATERFORD, 3 bedroom alu W | II basement, 2-cer ........k end fl| 1 I. 343-4703. | lote—Acreage k W ACRE WOODED, Sloping I - — J- subdivision, 04,000. 62* Drlnkllnn ' ACRE ON CASS Lk prink lino m-39. 30 aertt, $1,000 ai 54 »7,C500 Icrms. Va^Real^ETtate?^ 6217 or 628-1738 evenings. FARM Wh ACRES Solid 3 bedroom remodeled hor adjoining state land, hardwi trees and fruit trees surround home. Near Ortonvllle, $23,950. i _____c excellf ‘ Bdrot..._. ____ ..... replace, dining room, nice wood. and Weekends, 678-2674. VENDING" SPARE TIME INCOME KEEP YOUR PRESENT JOB 10 CENT CANDY SNACKS Reliable man or woman with car to collect and fill machines. NO SELLING. Exceptionally high 9x12 Linolftum Rugs $4^95 Solid Vinyl Tile .......... 7c ea. Vinyl Asbestos tile ...... 7c ea. Inlaid Tila, 9x9 ......... 7c ea. Floor Shop-2255 Elizabeth Lake “Across From ’the Mall" ' COLOR~TV~CONSOLE,- starto, i 425-3292. ___________| PB COPPERTONE Refrigerator, i used 5 months, 3150. Inquire 14 Lucille. Pontiac.________________ 1969 USED SINGER | TOUCH AND SEW controls for but-! lonholes. zig-zag. lancy designs.1 ate. Smooth, steady state feature lor each touch button oparatioi Deluxe modal comes complete wit price $43.83. Call Midwest A. pliance 9-9 dally,’ 334-3312. 1969 T0UCH-A-MATIC New sawing machine, does fane and box si CYPRESS PRIVACY FENCE, « Market is now open every~Sat and I aec,lons' 5 and height, $7.50 per iam.v eitf. j Sun. Also Labor Day. Phona Frl- 2 ^llrirle hulls In ranna Mm I day only, 627-8641. _______i stainless steel $615 aach° WP iVcash'Nc‘.rr?l c,s,'*nd, TALBOTT LUMBER -p--1 'MS OakJand___________FE 4-4595 CHIPPED BATHROOM flxturu for 4097 S »*'«• G- A. Thompson 1 Son. 7005 f Main, Clarksion: ... 1 1 M-39 w. Payments ea low as 110 per monthi Hj.Fj TV 0nd Radio* 6( 44,HeKH0RL-D APPLIAN4.C,E33.,I > A COLOR'TV SERvYe ' 461 Eliz. Lk. Rd. 681 2383; Johnson's TV FE 8-4569 (10 - 1 3-wa _____id labor guarantee. $43.60 TAX INCLUDED _________ /III take 34.34 down end 9 monthly .........-Idge Is the peyments of 34.34, no Interest. Cell 1050 Huron, Pontlee, Cpeltol Credit Mgr. f o.m. till 9.______________■_____________ p.m. It toll call, call collect.— GREY MARBELIZED FORMICA: Or ------------------- 729-4610 ---- Plip, Bronze, $10......... , floor lamp, bronze, $10. 1 Wrought Iron fern stand* $5. 417 Sixth St., Apt. 2, Rochester, 651-4716.__ GAS REFRIGERATOR «0‘ 1064 Crescent Lk. OR 3-2477. GAS RANGE 36"* good condition.1 391-0606 after 3. 8669._ MANUFACTURER'S "CLOSMUT STEREO WALNUT OR MAPLE CONSOLE Diamond Needles BSR 4-speed changer $89 Tiffany's, __________jom $1.19, 'regulars, samples, jaab” can glva. 393 Orchard lacfory room, 2 fireplaces, 2 full baths, barbeque and beautifully landscaped yard. Lovely executive homt, call 343-7701). LOTS BUILDING SITE ON PAVED ROAD, zoned commercial or residential, $2400. Call 363-5477. 23 ACRES IN WEST BLOOM- h acra, with stream — ano zouu n. road frpntage. • FLATTLEY REALTY imporary 420 COMMERCE RD._____343-4981; Cjtj>__j 1969 USEp SINGER GOLDEN TOUCH AND SEW Automatic buttonhole maker pushbutton bobbins, lancy design) monograms. Comes $153.77. Call Mldwasl • Sola Land Contracts 60 PANGUS INC., REALTOR OPEN DAYS A WEEK CASH F M-5913 CHOICE LOTS, located >/. mllOO I Burch..."’taftSa imT lu •a’SHlf . ail at: north of Oakland Unly. antr.nce,! You A^ht’tuV' ■ *-* d " ' Twin Lake Subdivision, to prop- near new hloh school at Adams i 7.°,*? !n,P”..!!,.r . topped dlnatta table, 4 chroma _ Chairs with gold coverings. Exc. i condition. $30. 4047 Lahsor Rd. South Of IS Mila. 447.2805._____| =---———-------------------- I gibson deep freeze. s6o tor Salt Miscellaneous Kalvinator stovt, S15, Wtstlnghousal--- Lk., FE 4-8442— _____ EARLY AMERICAN COUCH S150. Early American table, 4 chairs snd corner cupboard S 3 0 0, Hamilton gas dryer 3150, axe. rendition■ Phona 373-1245. ELECTRIC ADDING machine $25. Portable typewriter S25. Standard typewriter S20. Electric typewriter 385. IBM axacutlva typewriter 3125. Check protector 339.50. Copy machine 3145. 2 drawer file cabinet 331.50, Bavarly'a 7741 Auburn Rd. __________________________________Utica. 731-5400.________________ NEW COLOR TV's priced from 3249. EXPERT UPHOLSTERING, reason-Doran's Appliance Warehouse. 5471 able prices, freb estimates, yeur - “—*-1, 335-9724._________ I fabric or ours. FE 4-2704, Or 05 ot 2415 Dixie Hwy. Mns Sat, 10:15-4 refrig 035. t In gond eon-1 Vi INCH COPPER1 WATER PIPE, 28 i ,J,NKhl;!N in'^G.EnrfG?ra9i S?i?' cent* A ft And Inrh rnnner I ba?- DeT- 10 *«m And 3 P.m. 851-i SKI I 1550, 26795 Captain* Lane. r you 630 M-15 •fly. i left At | north of HHRI MPPmSPIRIPf *“----- near new high school at Adams j and Tlenken #tds., $7,500 ea. will | discount If sold together, phone owner, 334-9249,___ 4 LOTS In ROCHESTER area to; highest cash otter. 852-3771._ J 5 LOTS IN A ROW# 50 x 150' each.1 McCullough Realty, Inc. 5440 HIGHLAND ROAD 674-2236 624-2400 Pontiac MLS Walled Lake Income Property income on urge' >> M0 bv owner. 4044023, 9:30-i0i30| Sale Business Property hoegenl?" ,r**'1510 ACRl RIVER AND- CALL COLLECT 627-2815______; f TO 50 RS ranch; LAND CONTRACTS ‘lx shelter. Talk to! Urgantly needed. See us batera ____ ■ Partridge, 1050 W. you deal. st-rtPh itr-intf___________| warren Stout, Realtor | r***' 1450 N. Opdyke Rd! 373-11111 1969 SINGER ZIG-ZAG Slightly usad sawing machlna In Stylish cablnt*. All controls built-in lo make buflonholee, saws on but-Inn,, nu.rcasts, blind hems and incy stitches, etc. S yr. d it Ion. 682-1626.__ A0S00OM"R'onEaHTOeRorBsamelel GARAGE SALE. -*---—' pair Girl's roller rink skates, «i,» Lecete eft Scett Lake Rd. 9 te f r pipe, 39 cents a It. G. , laris and labor guarantee. Cash, $67.80 TAX INCLUDED Ward E. Partr _____ft., Ph 681-21T OXFORD 20 ACRES I rangas, washers, dryers and TVs, E-2; farms. JJttle Joe's, 1461 ,! Ba Id wln,_F E 2-6842^_> _ i HOUSEHOLD ARTICLES and gVrden Antiques. 335-5705.________ HOUSEHOLD SPECIALS USE YOUR CREDIT - BUY 3. I ROOMS OF FURNITURE - Con-J slsts of: 9 8 piece llvino room outfit with 2-pc. —n suite, 2 step tables, l FURNACES, gas or oil, fast installation. Terms, 3 38-6966 , Dealer.______ ARAGE ________ S Upright freezer. home! cocktail table, 2, table u II Capitol Credit Mgr. 9. (i> 9'x12' r call 7-piaca bedroom GOOD 2 far corner loti _ _$18,500. 628*1432, Private, no ft In far corner. Cooley Lk. « h traffic. Trees, —koka Park Suh ! I Bogle 1 - ________ house end 2 barns, 1 .......amh numerous out-bultdlngs overlooking------- v"--- ^■'i'----- rolling acres and flowing streams.! . _ _ _ . Only $59,500 land contract terms Wanted ConfractS-Mtg. 60-A available. 1325 W. Drahner Rd,.l^^^ ^ open Sunday 2 to 5. J-RANP 7294610 7.000 YARDS OF carpal' Mill Kltclwn, commarclal » Kedals, nylons, and carpal fi SI .49 par yd, and up. Cash 1 Pair Girl's Bowling shoes, size S. I pair Sidewalk skates. 682-8928._______ 1 KiTCH.N SET, 125. I GE auto, talkies.’ 175.' 1962 Chevy II lot parts^ molor good, 350. 3327046. _ I FULL RED AND while Eval.t «»» canopy and spread, txcallant eon- 2*rr dltlen, $25. 482-0213. Rd._______ ___________ 1 NEwTs'cu, tl. Whirlpool deluxe OARAGE SALE FRIDAY, rtlrlgeralor, truck damaged, S21S. M Doran s Appliance W—---------------- " - I'/z-inch' linings. Lake ett Willow l. 84 E. Columbia, 1G4. and. credit It o 57 197' FEET COAAMERCIAL corn) 7ru~>Vi«iVm ”»b,wZTi#-----1 acreage, wooaea ena roiung.; vacant on Elizabeth Lake SIX FAMILY INCOME Fowler Realty, 363-8322, 685 1404,; reasonable, terms. 682-9524. brick, located In White Lake1 115'xl31.45'* price 82150. EM 3- CHOICE HOME SITE MILFORD, 5 acres, in exclu_____ subdivision $11,500, lend contract torms available. EM 3-7700. LOTS IN WHITE LAKE TWP., Union Lake area, with lake privileges, $2400. For Information ■ AUBURN AVE.—PONTIAC iarclal ” — I horses allowed, cleared, $90 mo!l 147x130 corner P,u* •"•V' ^nfar exchange department.! SHELDON, 625-5557. i ”aw, apartments, shopping center. MCCULLOUGH REALTY, 474-^^CtiOfllinvIli.. by bWnbr! W iu' oHIc." oV any tyw ol cor^i 335-7570 altar 4 p.m. __| mercial business. <30,000. Terms. MILLION Dollars has-been made eve liable to Bargain Hou —rehouse, 567 garage SALE. CAR top carrier, ------- ------ — — ............... ..... 335-9724. _____________ i drum, encyclopedia. Saturday a^m. ‘ llX?Tig!}!2 smjff i!Tr!l!5ih,n01 PttsYlC^wTpIpi and I Wpodhlhi.__________________________ r. 4 Dh 4 Thrnm. ,itt,nQ8' nb "led to thread pipe GARAGE SALE, 4416 Louella off Must 5 1AlYfMWhYm.r a^more, It goes together with Seshebew. 9 a.m.-7:30 p.m. Aug. ‘ chair* and table, am for 8399. Your 0lue, all you need Is a hack-saw 21.30. ¥ " r-- Wvman 1. . and a paint brush. See G. ‘ 1----------------------- WYMAN Thompson A Son., 700$ M-59 W. FURNITURE CO. ' 2$NtA& Rochester bat. John R 17_E. HURON_________________FE 5J501 1149 ta.i olllca desk and chairs! IRONRITE IRONER,' wood cabinet,1 *25; dictaphone *15; Burroughs .... _. ____________ $75,00. Caldnalor Incinerator, usad I bookkaeplng machine An, refrigerators, and 1rada,ln: vary III" . .... ----- bargains. Little Joe's 682-8920. i GARAGE AND PORCH sale, Aug. 21 thru 23, 2 wing tack chairs, household Hams, mlsc. 1349 Stanley U M Walton Blvd. A Daqulndrs. 852-2444. - PLENTY OF USED washers! furnllu'r I Wal- , ?; I GARAGE SALE”AUGUSt 22 and 23. *7SM: CalcinaVor incinerator! used I bookkaeplno machlna M0; L«ta*'Siric*l«J? P-m’ *,1S Alm8nd pry. Illtlo, good condition. *45.00.! 'Vtawrlter, 112.50; paymaster .---. j... >2-8928. check writer, $15; 8*20x20 truck GARAGE SALE; AAovIng to Florida, call EM 3-5477. TO BUY-T0 SELL LIST WITH HACKETT and start to packet. 7750 Cooley Lake Rd. Union Lake. Mich. IN WEST HURON,"BRICK,' ive 141,500 with $10,000 act | Washington. I WANTED: Building-!*'io Phone FE >-124*._______ lake Properly family, 10 ACRES, Dl).............. In* 135 near 1-75. S14*99B-83,fl ________I SHELDON, 625-5557.____________ 10 ACRES. Clarkston school district, | *000 down. OPDYKE ROAD 2 BEDROOM LAKEFRONT Murphy Lake, east of Millin FE 8-8483 between 6 and 10 p.t 3-BEDROOM ALUMINUM, I privileged home, family room rage, FHA terms. 624-1440. 4 BEDROOM, PATIO. 2 r--------- _. -100)f ling lorn ~l, . r. .. | contract terms. ) ACRES, choice parctl, 330* on Sashatew Rd. S1S0O par acra. , RETAIL BUILDING 3.2 ROLLING ACRES, horses mllln .nrn.r on nermltted. Oxford. 85500. I ^4 ^ Lake Orion now' usad as I auto deeltrshlp. Ideal for many ,. Ised at 120,00 ollar, taka. Open hr 90 ACRES, blacktop r 11 WOODED ACRES with approx. 5 acre island, perfect start for your dream home. 38 ACRE CORNER PARCEL, $1000! tercom, custom finished walkout | ;»n SSSrS tcSSB _ . paner. 039,000. Alii i. 9-17 mortgage at 5V,_p«r cant. Tar O’NEL WHY NOT TRADE? | TIRED j'jl .....ot punching a time clock? It you era not afraid at work this could be your opportunity knocking. A home plus Income from U-Hour rental trailers, equipment value *0100. This property In txcallant repair. Separata office Bldg, and storage. It has a vary good net. Owner retiring. . .. pr|c( J33O0Q. _We f ... ,343-403^r_____ LAKE PRIVILEGES . CAN YOU PAINT? This ..tilco 2-lamlly In Rosa Canlar WONDERFUL BUY - on 2 acres liisi Somh of HoUy. Older building. In with lake trantaga. Exterior of this •xeeManf condition. Large _woodad farm 3 bedroom ranch with jh and 2 In tha| braaiawav, attached 2V» car "S9. ** * l?r®* oarage, fireplace, needs painting. H#t ar Only $20,500. ' l,r,No. M4! $5000 DOWN LADD'S OF PONTIAC 3477 SO. LAPEER RD. 391-3300 6£e* LAKE, on walar, 100x200' lot. naar 1-75, blacktop reed, excellent i view, 19,000-190 mo. SHaLDON, 425-4557._ ^Mwissron alm'cSt Immediate. Priced’ ;,-!7 LAKi~FRONT HOMES -'■»!,iL.m,'8 -““‘b,.nJ Ntffi NO MATHEMATICIAN |CI^ v^£TTSTt4t; ftrms* 817*9448, BATEMAN INVESTMENT 5, COMMERCIAL CO. Oxford, $1000 per eci KING-PHIPPS AGENCY, 1097 SO. I 377 Sv«t*!S?rJ LAPEER RD. 62B-2S45. _ i 338-9641 10 LEVEL ACRES On' blacktop After 5 p.m. and Sunday cdll $74-l?47 road, NW at Oxtbrd. OA 0-2389. By OWNER—DEQUlilDRE-Auburn 23 ACRES. 1 mile bit M-15, near! area. UL 2-5214. _ _ > nvilie, 123,000 land contract. I | BLOOMFIELD INDUSTRIAL Park. , lots ... -Ill qlvf equity. Our your call at; 674-2236 McCullough^ realty 40 HlghlawL^dT (M-59) Ml sen 9-9 .__________474-23 to so ''■MOBIBHRIHail LAND CONTRACTS i A HOUSEHOLD BARGAIN you*deal,h**9*9' Sa* ua ^ S S’ottP aUTlftB.'S'Sf Warren Sout, Realtor m 88 ‘ipdvke Rd. 373-1111 bunk tad - 5 plect dlnatta. ■n Evas, ‘til 0 p.m. Any Item Seld Saparataly . ------------ ronfrBct, All for 8398 — 810 Monthly discount. Sable table, gorgeous KIRBY SWEEPER ' CMV SoHd “^VuV^GUARANTK-*45 V!ririg®®tor,*’5*her Kirby Service & Supply Co. folding chairs Bostum seat, larga tool bench, .... ... 1 | ... |5. NAM Salas. I *'*r Craft boat and motor, dishes, 1775 Williams Lk. Rd., 673-2259 ' household Items, follow sign* 4093 ' liques and household Items. EL 6 1 _253l._____ ' ANTIQUE CRADLE, sing 1 beds, colonial chair, a . FE 44)122. Open Frl., Sat. and Sun. I __to 9. ____ {2 CLINTON-ENGINfes, Ilka _____ -id ena 4W hp, suitable r riding —■--*"■ Aayers Rd . Drayton Plains. " I GARAGE SALE, 140 Preston, off GARAGE SALE. Huge, everything. 045. 474- 373 Tllmbr Frl., Sat. 9 to 0, off 1 "--ball, oft Scott Lk. French Prevlnclal, like n ____Open Eves. *9111 p. LARGE OR SMALL land quick closing. Rr--------‘-1' 674-2234 !____________________________________________________ y.uXt fapa^ift* ! ©ARAGE SALE. Gf’riral ItimSTl ! $20l 2 ei LIVING BOOM FURNITURE . | stereo. 40 Mechanic Apt. No. ! after 12 noon to 7 p.m. LINOLEUM RUGS! MOST SIZES. | woman shoes, 'whHV'_Shlrt» arid size refrigerator, eves. S5 each *— r garage ’ixamrar Erii I Sat. I a.m.- i school clothes, livfc aa i. Pearson's Furnlt EM 3-4084.______ Money to Loan MA 4-5400 or ovos. j Next to K Mart In Glen wood Cantor | j| BUNK BEDS j e. Little Joe's* 1461 Baldwins d Hlflhchelr, with stand. All Ir.. Reasonable 338- g excellant porv-1 - GARAGE AND YARD SALK: an- rpeting throughout* larg^ HR .............1 formica kitchen with built-in*, Bloomfield__________________ ■Ml “ J' °'Jal| ALPENA HUNTING — '32 wooded; .. .js fror proved, 3 tO I i Telegraph < Flint. FE 2*2144. P.O. Box 238, Woodward "and 1 . ---j±|ia 1 Industrial Dept., 353-1000. BYRON W. TRERICE Icansed Money lender ) LOANS $25 to $1,000 Insured Payment Plan — LIVINGSTONE Finance Co. I triple trundle tads and bunk bads I comolalt, 849.50 and up. Pearion's S Furnilure. 640 Auburn, FE 4-7001. BEDROOM. DINING AND' LIVING : room furniture. Mlsc. Items. Reasonable. Moving out of stale. | 30 N. Tasmanian, 332-1020. BRONZE OR CHROME DINETTE; Slid7. J WHEEL TRAILER. < __ m ■ dltlen. 335-00 ’ jm 'HOUSEhol’d " Goobs,!3 -V^R, .p1*YeR_run"bout I "Tlques," furniture', and mlscT' Sal., and —ulnment h°*1- IWl AIrporl Rd. | Sun., 443 E. Pika, 9 a.m. til dark. - 2 NEW GAS FURNACES, 40 par GARAGE SALE; August 21-Jt5, 1G1* cash. 444-1144. Bloemf DESIRABLE 120x230, Orchard Lake araa -----E M 3-0018 . lot, 3 ether, or could ne single raoldenee. baseboard heat j garaga. Only 031,901 TIME TO TRADE Need 3 bedrooms and room fei fourth? wa lust listed this 3-bedrc bungblbw ranch acrosa the sir from Watklna Lake. Featuring finished recreation r e 0 f" -fireplaces, larga IOO'xSOO' 481-1133. _ BEAUTIFUL, 120X22* 0314a___________________ I BUILDING SITES 4 loti In this City of Trey. OS' 211' each. Water end gas, ax< | BLOOMFIELD — 0,000 sq. ft. tor ala or lease. New building, ready ir Immediate occupancy. Many (fras. Call Mr. Bennett, 353-1000. BYRON W. TRERICE being euctloned Set., Aug. 23 e.m., 4760 Qubrton Rd., Ingham. NORGE DRYER, $30. 673-9732 PEARSON'S FURNITURE HAS NOW MOVED TO 640 AUBURN, PONTIAC, FE 4-7181 . TrTeT e"r Williams Lake Road, < building. Prime location between STOP YOUR HOUSE FORECLOSURE 440 Auburn ------Fi“4.7001 vour crtdh>lpr?b!amsr —~wa°*have BLONDE DINING t4BLE"end 4 millions of dollara tor mortgages | Ironer, 3 blonde - widows, divorcees, and people; ••vjng room teblei, good condllion, ...w mfgSfM with bad credit ere O.K. with us. 334-3148._____________ Fully guaranteed. Terrific BUNKBEDS: SAVE PLENfYl Lytle1 Terms. 68M574. 4 X 7 UTILITY TRAILER covered. $100, 674-0884 after 6 p.m. ________i 4 HP "WHEEL HORSE TRACTOR with trailer, 32" mower, $125, 391 | Keego Har 0417. ! •- - -■ telephone! bench, Simplicity 7 lawn mower 32" cup, Elr many aefrig. 815 Northfleld. off Glddlngs. GARAGE AND BAKE SALE by tha woman ot Trinity Matlwdlat Church r. Aug. 22 and 23. ■saRrrarn :■ i to the Orient down ... 4 ocrqi In Rochester area. 244' Irorvtil woodad. Prlctd at S11,0N. Wooded, railing Rochastar homasltas CORNER SPOT In Independence Twp. with over 400 fl. on paved road. 3.4 seraa ot land, good .possibility for commercial or i u. Stoney Park'swimming area, 201 multiple. Priced at 014,500, godd I per cent down, 2V8 acres $0,7*0; S torm», . _ acres iiOjMO; * aeras, iis.ooo; io Everett Cummings, Realtor ! iSr.**.'. oSiil W*lL’ ' 2503 UNION LAKE ROAD iB buTldlno1 ?-%P«________________Mfctli' PONTIAC. ^OO IBO. ft.. claar^ >Pan personal interview.) Monjuye Loans FOR THE PAST 42 YEARS Voss & Buckner, Inc. 1400 Pontiac State Bank Bldg. Joe's, 1441 Baldwin. FE 2-4047! CARPET SALE FREE ESTIMATES CALL 681-2700 CLEANING OUT THE' salt, Maorfad h----- and tables, baby rea-laaf, rec-j REFRIGERATOR blnatfon; l—». _____________ T............ „ ________ _______________T„ formica kitchen labia and chair! slave refrigerator, many mlsc. Bay Estate, cantor el ................... sati ping pong tables; roll-away 1*2-1627. _______ Lk. Rd. and Ellz. Lk. Rd., follow bed, 94* Cantabury, FE 8-3244. ' 24Tn. GE~StOVE, signs tram there 8314 Vandan, REFRIGERATORS, DISHWASHERS, _ »' dltC. 451-4124. GARAG^ SALE; 33 E. Falrmount, mrtHiiinn d'vars, washers, ranges, crate 30 HP ROTO SPADWR!-'BTlgos'a’nS ell Baldwin, Refrlgeretor-Preazer, condition, | damaaed and acratchad models. | Stratton angina, axe. condition. $45 ' t«bl«», *tc.< Frl.-Sun., 9-7 PM. HIIHA UiSiUS HjfUtt Block Angus king size rollssarle,’1 GARAGE SALE Aug. 2), 22, 23, 9 835? 852-4546._________________________________________a.m. te 4 p.m. 304* Most, Keego \l figure tha good ttn„_I .... lOcoma. Located In Avon School ___________ Elstrlet It this double unit. na» 2 t /-St rr»T A TV TUN .... LOVELAND LAKE NEVA let 173* on tha water, ! taths, It'* lust x__ ________ , supplement vour Income with a n 'aL Just 823,500 full prl< " " Mta — GGGGRRRAB It teoay. wei win trad#. No. bio . 010,000, tormo. WASHINGTON PARK vi e havo lust listed this real clean 3 1 bedroom, full tasamant brick and WaHiliwen Park, WEIR, MANUEL, SNYDER AND RANKE, INC. 1205 W. University Dr. Rochastar COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT 651-3S25 FUTURE H0MESITES CLARKSTON AREA. DEER LAKE — 4 wooded lets, over , Vi acre each, lake privileges. Leona Lovtland, Realtor 2100 Cast Liko Rd 482-12** WWW - lake" frontTlake PRIVILEGED j «*>■« Contract tarmi available on , loft, Commerce Cadar Island, Mid-this home, priced tor a qulck ssle at! die Straits,-.Big Lakes. Fowler, 3*3- **’ 2-2* 8*22. 4M-14D4, 36S3448. _______ > OWNER - 2,000 sq. ft. brick, all electric lake front heme, fireplace,! ____ ■.........„jntly ? taths, 2 kitchens, 2-csr garage,' daceratM, 3-badroom bungalow: large shaped Jot, 12 miles 3. w. ranch, brick and wet plastoi •Irucflen, 3 tad rooms, full bi— Carpeting * 1 m * Priced at SI with vs down. only 111,1 VILLAGE OF MILFORD ■Jgoittrut- fgrm*i Recently! BOB WHITE pontTac, *500 s building, sultobl gsrsge or comi door, loading d etc. Will lessa 11.10 pi PERSHING Ir DURANT ST. 2 lots, 100x129, zoned manufacturing, water and ------ _»by 0 _____I ends. 832-2942. have been loaning (1000 to *3000 tol^^_ homeowners on 1st and 2nd , mortgages tor repairing, additions, | consolidating bills, ate. Into one small monthly payment. Before you borrow on yeur heme see or phone u$ at: . jarga 'i,________ 334-3267 u,f* value! sale priced' aY ..1-------------------------------- 84.01 sq. yd., fra# estimates. Swans A3 Household Appliances. 401-2303. - 1 ---------------------- CHILD'S BEDROOM-*"15* CARPETING DuPont 90) Nylon, must sacrlflcs lOh's of yards of bettor carpeting, selection of colors, regular iTAINLESS "STEEL built-in oven! and range, S3*. 673-0104. SIMMONS HIDE-A-BBD, mattress. , 34" width. Bloomfisld Hills. 642.' *l 8512. .________ h SUMMER SALE! I ' Chairs and solas reupholsltrtd. I 335-1700. traa eslmsto.__ ! STEEL SINK CABINET »T6" __________CALL.J*2-tJ4«. SINGER * ZIG-ZAG Sawing machlna. Cablnat modal. sq. yd. Hurry — this Is a * lifetime offer while marv. Is avallablol 1*30 B. Aube. (M*9) Rochastar bat. John Dequindre. 1 of Rochester's I: carpet warehouses,’ over 17,0 used, Thurs.-Sel., camping trqller end equipment, chlldren't and adults clothing all sltos, novelties, toys, linens, furniture, VW and other car parte, electric motor, tools, dishes, skating clothes, ikatos, and parts, other sporting goods. 4441 Mens*- *“ tjatk— Like Rd. 1——off Williams PASSENGER PLYMOUTH' <-aka Rd._________________1 _________ * transportation, also GARAGE SALE. Moving to Europoi Angelus, V, 10, terme. OAKLAND AVE. * ft, WML ....... smell plant. Water i V STEEL WORKBENCH. Large heavy duty awlval vlca, swap for riding lawn mower, FE 8-014*. 7.5 H P. OUTBOARD, excellent com dltlen lor huntM§ tajWOWtaWIMi trim,' Ins ST" everything, uoy and Sat. 2*20 Patrick v dudes twin size Eookcese neon 1 - * _ beer#, desk, chair, s drawer chasi or Payments of S5 per mo. •"?. bSok«se, axe. condition, S*0, GUARANTEED 4320 sq. ft. bldg, zoned r 17-FT. LYMAN boat. 76 HP Johnson,! traitor and tarp, MSO or trado tori aqua l value. 627-3300. 1000 WATT AC portebie’ goneretnr I lor outboard motor of equal value. icluded. satalon. r.mx. or w.i. ur wnq contract torms available. No. S-2* CRESCENT LAKE PRIVILEGES *2*401, TAKE OVER PAYMENTSrMUST sail, lake living iltp an Mil overlooking sand bottom spring lad owner, 423-1333. schools, gas furnace only 2 yrs. old. . A reel god buy on P.H.A. or S!l. ’ terms. No. *-22 LINCOLN JR. HIGH Wa have lust noted this nice S-bedroom alum, aided homo near ' wiifiar school. Thto nafna has a full baeamant and gas neat, Priced far a quick sale at only 115,900, with G.‘ or P.H.A. tormo avallobto. Guli_ possession. No, 2-30 NEW MODELS Lake Angaius Lakavtow E steles West on Walton te Cllntonvlilo Road To lom Angolui Road NirtMra Prifarty IP Pontiac Mall. _______________down, mum. . HIGH SCENIC LOT, ill x SOS’ lake ------ W—|ru liogo. 3,4. '» only Sit 1 t. 423-1333. REAL ESTATE *094 S. Main, Clarkston *28-9821 1(0 X 107', d to—1 m ind nncod. End I MPG. PLANT — 4.1 ACRES Over 77,000 iq, ft, ot mlg. araa with 12 i II tt. calling. ““ ___,____—1 siding. 40x80 brick atfleo bit ind water 4400 sq, n. mesonry Holbrook.. bldg, with 17 ft. catling, reasonable terme. *24-1071. CUSTOM DRAPERIES FREE ESTIMATES ___ CAU. 681*2700 “ CARPETING Approximately carpeting end elec, guitars, FE 1-98*9._ 1*942 ford STATION Wagon", whirlpool bath, I MM camera and I lioht tar, Polarlod camera, 220’____________________ model, oil furnaco, free oil tank, I GARAGE SALE, start* 1-21 ft HR or. drapes, IVe width, dog foncoi from 9 til 4, clothes and all kinds metal past- 087-1553. _ of mlseellr (Ml .............. ———————— Emerson. 3930, *** "*** “* ^............ ; i960 sCTZyKl‘120'CC with helmet', 1*1% 1»»ch»f»_ t new. *7*. *73- heete «nd book of Knowing*. 16 "r automatic "Dial Modal" -makes . an° m«'»' *>»'■ eo7-ia*a. of miscellaneous and tires. .. blind hams, designs, buttonholes, 11943 CHEVYPICKUP, 1967 10' reh Emerson.______________________________________ ale, Rtpossossod. pay off. ! ovtr camper, both tor 31*00. *20-1 GARAGE SALE. Table, buffet, $53 CASH 391*. _______________ chairs, maple dask and chair |HR|H^!|PRPaRPR5||l||p . _ ___ . small i22*T'fxT3 iarir,' like new’,’ »7*.”4>ib GUARANTEED _____________ _______ UNIVERSAL SEWING tUTOl'BfftaPjff B66 TONEY FOR your needs, 103 AW ARGUS MOTIGN picture Court Drive. ------------ camore, Super », 673-0234. GIFTS-GAGST TWIN BEW. WTfW |"*''r***J*'JJ1' ANTIQUE FURNITURE, diihii, Ley-a-ways. L- -- .. Pla djesser, night stand, Ilk* new, miscellaneous, F_tL end SI. 71 326* Dixie Hwy. OR 3-9474. in?: Ixceliant!4^a'Ja»iv-e-e,tt-aaaeaaaas ^..*31*15^11' itoreg* 1*0,000, [nr camper, *350 ___. ... .... value. 444 Oaklenp Av*„ Pontlee. £ I960 CHRYSLER end 1961 Dodge, 1 good motor, Irene, and parts, sell INDEPENDENCE TOWNSHIP, 1-7* ana Planting* Lake Rd. area, ap-proxlmatelv 4 acra* zoned commercial, KU.OOO, call Ray todayl *74- 41S1, P-Si. ________ LARGE Vk ACRE LOT woodad ares Annett Inc. Realtors 28 E. Huron St. 338*0466 Office Open Eyeninpe s Sunday 1-4 ict t- lew ---- .......Twp. WRIGHT REALTY 312 Oakland Ava._____Pi 2-9141 SCENIC AREA- Baautltul rolling .parcal that laya lust right tor walkout taqoman* and Indudts soma weeds Perfect location close ti Clarkston. ORION AREA- 2 BEDROOM FURNISHED cabin, Ilka new, 1 acra lot, 84300. Of/ PArtage Lata, new 2 bedroom town haul*, only I unite toft. Excellent Investment. Call tor details. Lake front lot, 10x178', 01000. Wilt-om Lake, terms. HAllRELL REALTY 411-0022 2 CANAL LOTS WITH new cabin in ciara County. S37*o lull price, Ml-0704, ft Wig AtklOhd“mottorh"eibln. Atlanta, lawlston area. Salt or; ! WARREN STOUL REALTOR ***"■ *' Rd9#r* C«V. *12* ear TAki OVER PAYMENTS, acreage Business Opportunities 59 'OR LEASE, MODERN S BAY MOBIL SERVICE STATION located across from NEW IHOP* PINO CENTER# on M24# Laka Orlonr Michigan. (8000 fttabllihM nelBihborhbf --------- or 695*8355. 1965 PONTIAC 9 pai paitangar * for plck*ur OR ^ ANTlquBi, to6ls, cloTHii, Z.._3Z=_ 1^.(1— ■- ----- or r TIQUE umllurt .null ba .. 22-24. at 11 CARPET AND tafpif. tor fanca building, 428*474. GERMAN SHORT HAIR, malar shots end licansod. Will sail tor ut or swap tor 7 OR 4-0304 ava. f trade. Call 421-2*23 than I 2EALY Ptatwaptalc ASs6RfED'-SALEro*Msh-mMi7n and cerpallho. Stem *room*miyiah]a, !,P.6.'b'ox 299, ■'JJTrtabii'TV'or iaM.,'FE bBBI ---- see ad SHTTa to to North* OAKLAND COUNTY acres und* classltlcatlon »1A. BAR-RESTAURANT Sals Clolhing 6 highway. Prtsantly raporllng* ap- ASSORTED STYLES, DRESSES slM ENGLISH-STROLLER, SEWING grox. *150,000 salts par year. 9,jskirt* alia t2, blouses size 32.; machlna, sump oump. PE 4-3395, iTramandous growth potontlal. Ideal: FE 5-0927 after 2. ____. --------CD ftirkAtDE---------- ♦or parlnara. Will aall real astata{AUTUMN HAifc kOLL length mink1 rKIwlUAIKt 11—-------------m --------1 coat, else 14-16, excellent condition. 1 ROOM AIR CONDITIONERS TTXs.A-a l e.ooo BTU Slldowlndow, 6.000 Bl£ Usod I months k.oooTTSj Floor model CRUMP EIECTRIC AUBURN Rb. PE 4-3573 ; 1 , MA 4-1710. GIRLS CLOTHING, lilt 4-iy. 47SG7M I GIRL'S CLOtHINO, Jr. HI. or ir, I HI. ShnoTl, 12, 13, 71c to S5. 452- Daily 10-9 *ugi„ Sat.__________|__ WHITE AUTOMATIC ZIG-ZAG Sawing machine*-'deluxe features, mapla cabin* "Early Amarlcan" design. Tike over payment! of; $5 PER MONTH OR $49 CASH BALANCE '*•** GUARANTEED BAR-TYPE SHUFFLEBOARD, --------------------------- —- - -...... tlqu# dresser, girl* bike, toys, HOBBIEST OAK, CHERRY and dlshai' mlsc., *192 Lodh Loven, walnut lumbar, mostly rough, largo Highland Estates. _______________ quantity, 20c to 11 par toot; 24" * BIG OARAGE SALE.' Built-In stove Ilgsaw, *2S; circle sheet metal end oven. Clolhee. Costumes, cutter, 13*. Many other Items, 135- Dlshtt, toy* and books. Mlsc. old *741. • __ / .. andnew, m Shetlltld.BIpomtleld; lavATORI'ES COMPLETE, *J4.S> Orchards, Thurs. through Sat. 9-.7 | V4|Ut, *14.9*; alsoisthlubs, toilets, BABYCREST CtttB AND mattress, shewtr stalls, IrAguler*. terrific 11*. High chair, SS. Beautiful values. Michigan Fluorescent, 393 I winter maternity clothes, size to-1 Orchard Lk. FE A " — | l 12, Baby clothes tree to one who ---------------SB j i takes crib. Sol* ,*t '1917 1 Chesterlleld, Blrtw,, Sat. Aug, 23, BAsImEiJT"SALTf'vRr'S. LepeerI Rd. August 21 te ? l mile south of. pllances, 3*1* ...m Aug. 23, 0:30 till S p.m., baby and children's clothing, mlec. BRIDES - iUY YOliR WEDDING announcements pt dltcount from, Fortas, 4500 Dixie. Drayton, OR S- fin. Drayton Plains! 40M532. Pontiac. Press Want Ads For Action D—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1968 fur M» Miseelloneou* 67 0 to * ho-» Thompson — ... - ... LlKt NKW WASHER and dryer, avocaod. unde, warranty. MOO. i alacltie stove, UO, Ilka new office desk and chair, ISO, large walnut' drafting table. SfS, 2 power saws.1 eve. condition, 140 each, colonial sofa bed. 120. hIde e bed. $10. tile' _ Cabinet. tlS, 2 colonial oval rue $20, library table. 2 drawers. $1 twin. Lawnmower Clearance ALL MOWERS REDUCED 20% Servlet ______70 Pots-Hunting D091 4XS SPIED GRAPHIC, 135 and 90 4 ADORABLE KITTENS w CANNON PELLIX 35mm a, free. 474-0077. 791 Auction Sain T AUCTION. I SATURDAY, AUOUS1 80 CARNIVAL SALE IT 2Jrd...tO e.rr Musical C *.'. Holly. 434-4325. i. t COLLIB PUPPlIS, $ wn . male, AKC, Vet guarantee* axe. 2?L.m.11* mlll* west of health, all are edoPable. Champion homester, Mtehtoan Two Miles - bloodlines. STS or $100, 444-410$, | "•»} o« me North Hill Shopping ' AIREDALE PUPPIES, AKC. Cham- I - Pj*L**(. I jRaffrlng? (noylng _from the far 71 ALASKAN MALAMUTE Husky. 4 wa have l’lved"”on" for xT-yiei.. mo. old. Mutt toll dud to rtstrlctod i Going to • smaller place. Will Mil aJ?®• E 4-6076. _____________i the following items, many an* AKC DACHSHUNDS ~ ! t,qwes‘ Von Lade_____________§g AKC POODLE PUPS. __ _ 673-9564_ AKC POODLES, sailing !? Maytag v Goodyear Service Store 1370 Wtda Track Pontiac Mich. _____PHONE 335-6169_______ Lawn sprinkling ‘svstams, ’ Inch plastic pipe. $3.65 par 100, 1 I CONN TRUMPET. I Conn Corntt. 1 Reasonable. Call MI-3861. 2 CHANNEL- GUITAR amp. with reverb. 3150. 651-4711. 4 PIECE ROXY Drums/was $450'. pups. 3 grown femeias. S45 1175. M3-3038. | 673*3743.______ 13 STRING ESPANNA guitar and i AKC GERMAN Shapherds, black I ---- ----- —- —|190 with silver, gold or tan markers, 6 iarQfl i weeks, top bloodlines, 338-9309 D.s? end chu. *300.00 AKC ST. BERNARD. 3 yr. female Sideboard EM tor brooding or watcraog, has Tee cert bitten, S55, 423-3247.____________ Linoleum ruge (12x11) — (12x15) AKC BLACK POODLE toy pupplos, P.r“n w001 rug 830, 482-420*.____________’ v w 3«nd p»dBr**n W0° r,v•r*,,,,• rufl ery good condition, 1100, __;* & Stand — $20. 4S2-I024, ‘ AT GALLAGHER'S UD Porcellen double si ■ Iron-Rite Ironer Electric hot wator rk. way Blest " rjiers, 4 Large Oak I Used Lowrey Organs from $425. Severe! used 120 bets accordions n *79. 114 plastic pipe, $10.01 per 100. G. A. GALLAGHER'S AKC~SCHANUZER PUPPY for atit.l] Ttwmoson & Jon, 7005 M.M W._ ;17t0 Telegraph FE 4-0564 good background, \FE 4-4021. I m.pu ...1t . ^ jRoviNG SALE: Saturday. August aV-Sft, «VwiVM™Ur* AKC REGISTERED yellow Labrador 3 burner kerosene cooking stove 23, 1071 Dolliver Dr.. Bedroom set.I _ . 30 10i J . .7), „___ retriever, 5 months old. 2 malos, l Anti-— — 2 pc., sectional, lawn odulp., misc... —open Mon. and^ri. _||| y p.m._—! female, would mako beautiful tr| 651-4400. ACCORDlAN FOR SALE. S125. 312. family pots or hunting dogs, love Ant MOVING; fvinrth.lng'jso>$7 Augwt ^“*12 **crlerblis. BASSET PUPS,. AKC,_ 9 WEEKS, HAROLD ROUNDY, PROPRIETOR DUANE UPTON, AUCTIONEER I. R. Smith ___ 334*1674._ s TRUMPET, CORNET AND cases^ NOW ’OVED TO 640 AUBURN,1 130 Uf; 2-3833. PONTIAC, FE 4-7881. 1 UPRIGHT PIANO, 840. i 1 Moving Co., 10 S. Jessie. FLUMBING BARGAINS, F R E E uSi*D BALDWIN SPINET ORGAN” —— *_.4_a with percussion, 8530. Smiley Bros.-FE 4-4721 USED ORGANS Choose from Hammonds end other well-known brendt. Prices a$ low ei $389. GRINNELL'S DOWNTOWN STORE 17 S. Saginaw ’______ FB 3-7168 VITO CLARINET, Ilka naw, 8100 or trada for a Conn B flat, Coronat director model. 623*1039. WEST GUITAR AMPS. New, exciting. Pontiac Music 8$ Sound, 651-5673 TERMS CASH responsible for accidents < I. SAVE PLUMBING CO., FB 4-1516, ►ATIO SAL! PRI. and Sat. col-(actable dishes, furniture, player piano, lawn mower, books. 1365 Whitney St. OR 3-6395.____ " RAClhldi GO-CART with starter, ____ 647-4621.__ WaTlROAD TIES, NEW and uitd, S7j-)f7l._______________________ Rummage sale, mitci items and some furniture, 619 Lenox, Thurs., Frl., Site RUMMAGE SALE: l$40 T-BIrd, 1943 Ford, dining room tot, clothing, I dlthot, mltc. 734 Parkwood, Frl, Sat. $-4 PM. ..........—....................... Aug. I ACCORDION GUITAR, LESSONS. _____M __________odae, 4494 Dixie Seles-ierylce. Also Bleno tuning. Hwy", Clarkilon, 9-3 PM Friday, P Puleneckl, OR 3-5594. 1 PM Bit.______________________ PIANOARO GUITAR LESSONS RUMMAGE-BARN SALE. Furniture.I__________________SS2-2574_______ Clothing, mltc. of alt kinds, 10 AM POWELL MUSIC Studio Letaonsi . -t. .... ....ii ..u iniirumemal-vocAli piano Tuning 493-4497, 1100 N. Lapeer, Oxford. ___woakt, 424-3145 . BEAUTIFUL FEMALE Boxor, 2 veers old, $52-3$73._ _ BLACK FEMALE Poodle, AKC, toy, 125, 334-7491, ______ BOXER Pups, 4 weeks old, town with flesh, sired by son ol Champ, $200. AKC, 331-3489._________ BEAUTIFUL SIAMESE KITTENS tor sale, 332-0901,___________’ BRIGHT ALERT PUP, } months old, tralnad, shots. 8)0, 4S1-4953. _ BEAUTIFUL BLUE point stomata piackHlamastT $20.' COLLIE' PUPST'7 wai all, 2.__________ CUTE TOY COLLIE MR .... _. 7237._________________ EVERY FRIDAY .. BUS!='5«.Jp2iN2!1..i1PA.N|ELs.:J U,®*v WE BUY - SELL ...---- .irsmuex oi-ANieLS, Eubbv VTiunVG AKC 4 wks. Champ Sired, $51-1742. eVCJ5? J.^DAY ENGLISH SETTER >U>. FDSB.| Ratal!" Days WaaklY Wormad and tholt, 1-74S-5S7S. CONSIGNMENTS WELCOME FORD TRACTbR cultivatorf TtSina .-CAjrl PRIZE EVERY AUCTION to S PM. Sat. and Sun. until told. 5425 Cooiay Laha Rd. Rummage sale, $ a.m. tin dark, Aug. 22-23-24, 5037 Drayton Rd. Satnabaw to Palton._ Rummage sale, tua$, thru taC Office Equipment 57 S. i____ Rummage sale. Ladiaa. ml childrens clothing, mlsc. Sat. Aug, IS. I a.ttw p.m. 781 Portland, oTl Montcalm. SEE STONBY AS-IS Stora, at 7415 W. MSS, Highland Rd., by Pontiac Laka. Open Thurt., Frl., Sat. and Sun. iPRED- l$UfiPlY' lUMP PUMPS, told, raritad and repaired, Cone's, FE 14442. _ SELLING OUT LIVING room and bedroom, Boton tractor and attachments, tools, tome antiques, 415-4227, Special sale-on b a t h r • • m 334-1074, altar s prn. __ Sm “ELECTRIC TYPEWRiTER, legal carrlaga, txc. condition, 1150. fRASft AN 13 TREASURES: 3( Items, back yard and basemen 174$ Banbury, (’Ham. bat. Torr and Eton. Aug. 33, $:S0 to 1 PM. THE SALVATION ARMY RED SHIELD STORE 111 W. LAWRENCE ST. I Sporting Goods $ 32 Winchester. _______ ..... - jblnet. Also f IT price. Cell 473-1411. 4:30 p. ANOTHER SPECIAL FROM EVAN'S The tamous 8 ‘ lURPLUS OFFICE CHAIRS AND Oihar oTflca s Equipment n $ to $ P.M. FRI. NIGHT, AUG. 22 7 P.M. SHARP DON'T MISS THESE G00DIESI SUCH AS: color TV, lata model refrigerator, gat range, 3 bedroom suites, living room suite, 1 stereo, 1 truckloads ol chotto, beds, dressers, many olhtr m I a«. furniture. Auto, washer and drytr, naw Skill saw and drills, motorcycles, riding lawn mower and tractor, and many, many other "oIdrS3-2344150S9 Dixie Hwy. OR 3.3717 isrsiorm; b 6 a auction 7:00 P.M. 2:00 P -1 TRADF. marktdjlgar klltons^ 412-7182. F R E E ADORABLE KITTENS to good homo — 333-9344,______ FISH (Just Arrived) CHARCOAL, 7-OZ, 39c 10 Gallon Tanks, $4.99 _ Flea Collars, (S1.$l), 11.7$ Puppies, Tropical tlih, birds, exotic animals, GROOMING. Uncle Charlies Pel shop, 4$t W. Huron, 332-S5H. Open Sundays. GERMAN SHEPHERD Ma'ls, 8 months, AKC. S7S. 412-434$. GERMAN SHORT HAIR, male, thole and llcenatd, will sail tor U0. OR 4-0304, aval. EM 3-7344. Sat ad under Swaps No. 43. priced. SI7-524$. GERMAN SHEPHEROTpuppies,. AKC bdautlas. Stud servlet. UL 2-llS7. GERMAN SHEPHERD, ^year-old malt, raglstorad, papers available. 173. Also extra largo doghouse 120. Royal Oak, 588-0731__________ GERMAN SHEPHERD PUPS. AKC. North t I. guaranteed. Sea lx quality costs 1 . * ol wator, llec. start, rag., $$95, now oniv tees. I Evans El OPEN » ■....... $25-2514 __Clerktton AES-17111 ANT HON V SWIMMING pools; Bank 1 rates. Call today tor details. RHODES POOLS pe bins______ 251 w. waiton Fraction ol Original cost. COLT 22 BUNfLINErmlni condillon, BOULEVARD SUPPLY 1 Rhone altar 4 >M. 3M?7iM. ’ MO S. Blvd. E.____ 333-71411EVINRUDE SKEETER'S now on WvMk,MOj»7L.W| ..WCT1 rSm* f. W. Highland, right B cart* WsTp moto “ Ui mlsc S2SS1 MTaWBOAll Sporting and household Hems, J«o41 <•!'. *r El It. Lfc. Bd. 481-5830. __ fERRIFlc SAVINGS oil nevPi « v»«R carpet will Install. 43S-S474. UTILITY' TRAiLEsT axlet, springs,' Gun’Shopi i'A mi, N. ol Otii whaals, ale. eompleto. Factory I on M-1S. Phono M1-3$$l. Opln 7 priced In wholtsalo tots. S4t tacht days. *1—ofniminMlon, puy, trade.^ PUPPlBr . «... v,», * *' 1 0 1 Opdyko Hardware_____FE 14404 shepherd, and husky mlxtura, 132- LEFEVIR DOUBLE" 12 gauge." muit _________________ WOOD EXTENSION Ldldar 34. JJS-I sell 49M732,Jft. 3:30 pm.._ REGISTERED BRITTANY pups, 3 —_____________:■ Jj... i—--_ j MARLIN GOLDEN .32 autnmatK I months old, S73-1S7S. ______ WAGON WHEELS, sto and SIS , with scope, $55; Remington .32 RED AND TAN Doberman, good i__________OR 3-1972 _______ automatic, S70i 357 AAagnum Colt guard doge, I vr». old, vary good WICKER and baby furniture/ motor Python, $150. 402-4893. with chlldron, have lost tho papers, boat, toye ond mlsc. I0S) Chereil, NATIONAL POOL TABLE; ilftj call >n»r S. ,MM4U.____ „ ?.** CaMrEItt, _ ' Wilson left-hand golf set. SM, 343- SHEPHERD PUPPlis, $10. WANTED GOOD used traaiar . 41$»._____ ___________ _ PE MIS) POOL TABLE. SLATE, SIM. dosing ST. BERNARD AKC pups, bast ol “**' ■* pedigreed, coma —-ySZT-- - • open dally 8:30 to 7. Sunday* 12 to 7. French Orchards, 1291 Slate Rd. S. aid* ol Fenton, PEACHES, SPECIAL, Tra* rip* Sunhavan, pick your own, $4 a bushel, bring containers, 2 days only, Sat. 8:30 to 7 p.m., Sun. 13-7 p.m., French Orchards, 129S Slat* Rd., south tide ol Fenton._________ SWEET CORN FOR treating. GOLD CUP at S2 a bag. Afternoons at stand, W mile, north of Walton on Adams, Rochester, 451-8427, lamps, dlnatt* set, antiques of ell kinds from Now York Hall's Auctions, 70S W. Clarkston Rd., Laki Orion. SM-lin, • '_____________ GOVERNMENT SURPLUS Auction, Saturday August 23, li a.m., I mil* E. of Lapeer on M-2l Rlkor Surplus, going out o business, everything must go. Bll Reinhart, Auctioneer.__________ MONDAY, AUOUSt 25, 10 A.M. Armltag# Squaw Lake Horn* 134$$ Horrall Rd., Fenton Perkins Sato Servlet, Auctioneers _________Ph. 3I3-43S-S400 SAfuRDAY, AUGUST 23. 10 a.m. Herron Pin* Ranch Ham* 7114 Minor, Swarti Creek HORSES FOR SALE. 1 $ , 12 V hit* socks, must s Groan b r o k i it go. I saddle ai old. 363-2399.__ LONG HAIRED klttans, Ire. to good homo, 424-2444. n LOVABLE REGISTERED Mil a poodle, 5 yrs. old, groomed today. $40. 473-175$.__________ MIXED GERMAN Shepherd-Alghnn - r . . .. — Id rloht to! Puppies 3 females, 1 malt left, BIS. I * YEAR OLD REGISTERED, Apemode Rd I u'-7135' I P*1"*., sfwton,- ..ChMlnut with DAWSON'S [mixed PUPPIES W ANTE I horse’Pejomlrto. 187^549™ year old, 2 4 to appraclal Everything nf... . ___________ leek. Make an oiler. 482-4114. ■ “RIDiNO HORSES Mr Sato.' Fl 2-$43$ all.J._____ YEAR OLD WELSH Pinto geldln ----- --------... 673.5458 or 331 1, sell or trei PSBHI .p, ARABIAN GELDING. 5 y puppies and stud service, 333-432$ 14.3 hands; S-yaar-old j473-$J$4_ Farm, ARABS VI TOi M mare, ^aldlty, WE ARE MOVING Pool Ttblt 1 rtbOMio. 538*750$. Chrlttmai cirdt. 20 r on Artlsti' oil*, convaioi bruthai, 10 par boxtd , Vilot, tabitte bio8 POOL TABLE I loot (net slate top) S 0433. 12 noon to I p.m. TRAIL BOSS •S HEBE Mode by i........ famous Ai Mrants, air* weighs ■ FE S' w had tltolr shola and n pa ran* They': to go. 421-3205. T. BERNARD PUPS AKC SI2S, tomato SI SO. 444^983, I T. BERNARD PUPPIES. mutocturfr of th$ Phono 4S3-SM2._______________ ----- /amp traitor. This I ST. BERNARD'S 0 wks. old.......RR drive, all terrain vehicle, 2 tomato. AKC. Champlonahip >'• Jo otter the family background. *27-3171 or 473-1144. an. Check these leelures. r- ■■ r-V-......................- BAY GELDING USED tor i pleasure, would makt good Mhoraa, gtig >gddl*. SW-4433, CAMP HORSES art back, 30 to choose from, Western camp horar-and English lumpers, 1130 to $M call 3434100$._________ FEEDER PIGS, t WEEKS OLD 797-4M3 FOR SALE OR trad*. 4-year-old -----i mar* and 9-ytar-oM I ■ ' H horaai. 3$1-30M. yrltort sportsman. Check these feeturei • Dual transmissions • 20 h.p. engine • Polyethylene body stAMESi KITTENS, 10 weeks o 1 SIS 0*. 334-55" $ Elect, t p Pull - TOY COLLIE, il e with *1 ONLY $1,495 ,! ■ JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT 0 i Apache Factory Homo Town Dealer 1 Y> ml. E. of Laptar ** ' OPEN SUNDAYS jD WlNO Hunters,' |j_ GENE'S ARCHERY, 714 W ski-Dbo'S Ml iXl-OOO'S 10 H 24 HP ALL LATE MODEL. ... CONDITION. PRICED FROM $495 AND UP. TERMS AVAILABLE. KING BROS. 373-0734 _____Pontiac Rd. tlj}pdyke___ Sand-Graval-DIrl 76 1-A BLACK DIRT, top soil, sand, road gravel. PE 2-4020. _ A SERIES OF EXCAVATIONS , throughout Vlfhlta Lr— Independence, Watorlord Twp. nil dirt, day, gravel. II ygu an need of auch, wo shall deliver to You tor tho cost el hauling. OR 3-8935, 4 a.m.-l) p.m., Sun, kid. must hava children and toKtd WEINARANER-LABRADOR MIXED pup*. 810. 474-01*4 altor t p.m._ WILL GIVE INTELLIGENT black tomato Persian cat to oood horn*. *24-3195. Forbas PRINTING t OFFICI SUPPLIES, 4500 and $431 Dlxi* Hwy. OR 3-9747 er Ml 7-3444. _ WE ALSO BUY SfARD SALE, SI Palmer. Saturd August 23, $ d.m, Vard SALE $AT. Antlgua'tabi* I dishes iwmtrous Hams. 4 Hand Tools—Machinery 61 I VOu^OM^M 22“ GARDEN MARK power trimmer, reel type mower, used lets then 10 hr*., MO. Melnor traveler .sprinkler, slightly used, $20. 18“ diameter, 24" wide lawn roller, 87.50. Call 334-4243 40x80 ALL STEE L Bolled super structure machine shoe, with windows, now being dismantled. Call aft. S, 421-3813. x l$47 CASE. LOADER backhoePExc; condition. Alio 1944 Oliver crawler totder end tingle axle trailer FE 4-1122._______________ f$48“CASE PACK HOLE 580. 464 hr.. 18, 24 and 30 In. buck*!, Extando boom. 434-4491. . AIR COMPRESSORS, lubrication! I,'.. —I—mt, hydraulic lacks, steam i0 i. Welding equipment, etc. -- -------Jto'orhw. Ft? Ml04. ’ I CLARk LIFT, truck, 3500 lb., $425. Clark MH lb., 11500. Clark 7,000 ib., *1071 Yala 4000 lb, xxcei fillet truck, $150. 542-1402 IXCELLE^T >0^ (OIL, black dl P:"ii. IRAVEk. r ._.Ill tend a _ uirt, crushed limestone, A-l lop sell black dirt. P*-— “-**-* lern cage ai lood. S$. 3 _____335-5259 DO MARS Poodto Salon. S33 W weanling'*. Priced to L SIZE FEEDERS. Columblavlllt. 793.4753. Fight Smog by Horses Buck horn sporting goods, now ...J e teck shop, simeo lock end sup- 8V HOLSTEIN COW, froth 1 « celt. $375. 425-2045, NEW TACK STORE now Wing horse, 349-2310. Cl PALOMINO FARMS,-lM Horses boarded, rent PUREBRED ARABIANS, 1 ______________ rebred, 1 weanling (Illy. This (Illy Is outstandlg, entered In futurity, MA S-406*. QUARTER HORSE Golding, I year* eW, pony, saddle and brWIa, Ilk* new, 425-2397. SEOIIT'BRYD QUARTER herae, reeaoneble. 493-1144. ___ REGISTERED QUARTER horse, S-year-old goWIng, exc. disposition, 1350. Saddle end accessories, S75, 423-0107. “According to a Supreme Court ruling I can say what ! !%#”** well please in my own home!" Travel Trailers Open dally $-5 p.m. Sal. and SUn' DIEHLS ORCHARD & CIDER MILL 1479- Ranch Rd., Rota Center, 6 ml. Soufh of Holly. 1969 STARCRAFT TRAVEL TRAILERS INSIDE DISPLAY CRUISE-OUT, INC. Walton Dally $-4 FE 8-4401 _______CLOSED SUNDAYS APACHE TENT CAMPER, shape, 391-1097.________ apache mm APACHE I Richardson on new 194$ cami PEACHES .... Preeie er can. Early MM! Oakland Orchard}, 2205 E. Commerce Rd„ betw. Duck Lk. Rd. and Burnt, Milford, 0:30 to 4 dally. * _______ The Popular Wag-N-Master Easy up and down hardtop camper Styrofoam Installation Auto wafor pump 13" wheels—BEST Tn value at: JOHNSON'S Walton at jotlyn PE 4-5053 ■ dltlen, 5305. 402-4043.______ 1945 TRIUMPfVCUSTOM. 5750. 1945 YAMAHA 50cc, only lWO milts Excellent condition, $175. 343-2941. cellent condition. Call 473-if095 at 3 P.m. _________________________ 14' FIBERGLAS Runabdut, 75 I ' McCullough, auto, bailor 8, shall water drive. 17' HD tilt trail , Extras. 473-7S17-14' LARSON 55 HP Homalltd 4 cy Lit" - lt-FT. WOLVERINE BOAT, 25 h.p. shocks. Cab to camper-boots. LOWRY CAMPER SALES 1325 S. Hospital Rd. Union Lake EM 3-3681 WINNEBA0O Motor Homts—Traitor* Camper Coaches Rests and Draw-THa. Hitches sok I and Installad , F. E. HOWLAND SERVICE OSS Dixie Hwy._ OR 3-1454 1964 HONDA SUPERHAWK, needs: work, $150, FE 4-57)2.__*_______ 1946 XLCH. metal flak# and' chrome. \ after 10 s. C*H a er 117* 7" Chris Craft CaprlT" 120 | 6:30 p.m. 673-8832._______________ refinished, moving, musf 1946 HONDA S90, whits. 5180 or best1 $1050. 493-2903 offer, 335-1717. . ■ j------ 1944 YAMAHA. Big Bear 250 Scrambler, 5300. AH. 3, 673-5039._ 1944 450 TRIUMPH customized, lots of chrome. OR 3-8513.__________ 1944 SUZUKI X-6 Hustler. SS 250 CC with helmet, 8285. 887-5836. sell. YOU fe DEALER FOp - SPORT TRAILER, GEM AND CORSAIR TRAVEL TRAILERS Corsair and Gem pickup campti 1 EACH IN STOCK REDUCED 111 CLEARANCE, ALL 1969s 12' WIDES, LOW AS $3,999 DELIVERED AND SETUPI UP N6RTH BUYERS Ask for Special Prices l S used Homts from S1799I ADD-A-ROOM UNITS AND DOUBLE WIDES NOW AVAILABLE COUNTRYSIDE LIVING 1984. Oakland___ 334-1509 18' COHO OR FAMILY custom built boat, 90 H.P. Johnson motor, full sleeper canvas, custom built traitor, exc. condition, $1400 or best otter, 4234034.___________ IS* ALUMINUM PONTOON BOAT with 35 h.p. Mercury motor. Beth like new. $1450, OR 3--"* 1967 HARLEY SPRINT, best offer. 1967 KAWASAKI, 120 SS, Plato, In surance. $225, 444-4712 after 4 PM. 1947 OSSA, 175 CC, $150 1 New From Holly Park Balcony, kitchen and dining room Your Authorized dealer tor Hall) Park, .Oxford, .Parkwood, - anc Danish King. Fra* Delivery wlthir 300 Mllei. Will trade tor mosi anything of value. Open 9-9 P.M. MIDLAND TRAILER SALES 3257 Dixie Hwy.________3380772 1-A MODERN DECOR Early Amar 1948 HONDA 450. Side Car _________After 4, 473-9346____ 1948 TRIUMPH BONNEVILLE, 1 —ir payments ■*'™ '“*t HONDA 450 __Mfltlon, Inqi.... call aft. 4, 330-0359. ____ 1949 HONDA SCRAMBLER, 125 CC S450 with helmet. 682-3043, aft. 4. _ 1949 SUZUKI X6R, 250 ce, 944 miles, exc. condition. 425-1487. _____ 1969 BENELLI 125, mint condition, - mileage, 8185. 447-4966. 19' CENTURY RESORTER, 225 hp, V-S, Gray marine angina, unitor 500 hrs. Good condition, will accept 9' CHRISCRAFT RUNABOUT, 1940 blu* and white like naw 190 hp, 289 V8 Ford Interceptor, 8)495, 68?- 1949 HONDA TRAIL 90. Hydraulic 1949 SUZUKI, 500, all extras. 079- 1949 SUZUKI X6 S C r cash. 820 Melrose, FE 8-9344 after 5 p.m.___________________ ■ - 28' ALUMINUM PONTOON houseboat, 8.x 14' cabin, sleeps 4, can be used as traval traitor, complete with traitor, $3950. 634-' 4483.______________________________ 40 H.P. ELECTRIC 4TART outboard motor, 1942. 8150. 423-1092. 1944 SAILFISH, $100 or best otter. 1968 16' GLASTRON GT 160, V hp Mercury outboard, i plus skiing ac“-------- plus. 332-2028. ~\ boating accessories. >1800. 626-( iplete -6711. 1949 YAMAHA 350 and accessories, 451-7472. ______________________I 1949 TRIUMPH, T-100 C, 500 CC, fow! cc. condition, $850. Call' all accessories. Liberty Hurry, they won't last_ PICKUP CAMPERS DEL REY FLEETWING TOUR-A-HOME Sava over 8500 on naw flip i__ and 10 ft. model* for Vb ton pickups In stock From $795. PICKUP COVERS STUTZ FLEETWING MOBILE TRAVELER From 8239 JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT Apache Factory Horn# Town Dealer lb ML E, of Lapeer on M-21 OPEN SUNDAYS. 644-9412 , | Monarch Colonial Mobile Homes FE 2-1657 474-4444 25 Opdyk* Rd. 2733 Dixit Hwy. ^^^HaighU 12x60 MOBIL HOME exc. I condition, patio, sat up m (Auburn HdlgMs), 852-4349 o BOOTH CAMPER Pickup cevar* and camptrs custom built. 4267 L a f o r a s t, Waterford. 474-3513._______ N TRACTOR WITH Auburn trencher, naw overhauled angina, 81,800, g52-1880, after 6 p.m. CLEARANCE SALE on all new and used garden tractors — agricultural and industrial tractors. Also good buys on new and used dozers, trenchers, loaders,I m-mt rakes, plows, etc. i Pontiac Farm and Industrial Tractor Co. I $35 S. WOODWARD PE 4-0441 FE 4-1443' ___Open Dally Including Sunday CASE TRACTOR, WITH cycle bar, good shape. $5oo each. BRAND NEW APACHE RAMADA SLEEPS I MESA III FULLY EQUIPPED NEW APACHES AS LOW AS: $896 EVAN'S EQUIPMENT Clarkiton . 4507 Dixie Hwy. Open Mon.-Frl., from 9-9 p.m. Saturday till S p.m. lOxSO MOBIL HOME, 82,900. mileage, exc. condlt after :3 PM, 343-9377. A-l Motorcycle Insurance | FARMERS INSURANCE Agency of Pontiac acroi* from Anderson's Honda. Phone 334-4597. Bodily li»j |ury, property damage tor I months: 0-I25CC *11.00 --------------------------- *14.00 *19.00 jy h ihed. Cell 693-6743, 1969 YAMAHA 90CC. TRAIL Bike, $290. 673*3394. AUGUST Special Sale 15' HOUSE TRAILER. Good Con- 350CC REBEL !.!. dltlon, S775. 682-0330. ______ 250CC SAVAGE .... 944 10 X 35 NEW MOON, 2 ?®gCC INVADER bedroom, custom drapes, carpeted, 25CC STINGER air cond tioned, furnished, on tot. J20CC TRAIL KAT 187-5222. ilOOCC WOLFE ' “ -- -----------------------I 50CC AAAVERICK . 1965 LIBERTY 12x55 exc. condition, carpeted, large kitchen, 2-bpdroom, utility shad, 83950. 33241417. 1967 PARKWOOD 12x54, 2 bedroom, 332-2451. 1948 SKYLINE, 3 bedrooms, bath, 12x60, used 1 year, may be seen at 11 OSS Blaine B t --------- * Brighton or call 3ir 194S MONARCH, S......... I _ balance, also land contract on 2-bedroom horn* and 3 Iota, call attar 5 or weekend*. 373-0455. 194* RITZ CRAFT, 82,600. 335-1445. ill 313-U2-7441. , 12‘x40', to g 949 12 X 40 SETUP ON 4 . $5,500. Lived Tn 3 mot. 334-12*7 BIG SAVINGS Prices slashed on all Nimrod and Silver Eagle traitors, th* di ” you'll sav* will pay for a i Coho, that hunting trip or summer traveling, sea Amerigo and Schoonar "mpar, th* best In town. Treanoi^s Trailers M2-8945 2012 Pontiac Drlvt 1 Blk. NW Tel, and Orch. Lk. Rd. HD3 BULLDOZER 1965, 12,150. Can - 1an at 1375 Indian Laka Rd., Orion, 693»3$0l.____ L. A. JOHN DEERE Tractor/ plow, —'vator, spring tooth and _ drag. $52-5472._________ ' e»■ .. NEW, USED and Rebuilt Mowers',I U1 ,,, "f'J'S* id hay condlttwiara, davis >771 Highland (M-39) TRAVEL TRAILERS QUALITY AT ANYBU DGE1 STACHLER TRAILER Choice! FAMILY SITES . . . IN A SECLUDED AREA ARE NOW WAITING YOUR INSPECTION. MANY MODELS TO CHOOSE FROM, ARE NOW ON DISPLAY. THIS IS A BEAUTIFUL, PEACEFUL AREA TO SETTLE IN YOUR NEW MOBILE OAK HILL ESTATES HOME OP HOLLY MOBILE HOMES . DIXIE HWY. AT OAK HILL RD. 634-4443 Dally 9-9 tabST SELL, 1968 RlCMARbSON I ___________________I I2'x60', 4'X10' tipout, 3 bedroom, BULTACO MATADOR Mar and l’b bath, landscaped, patio,' otter. 424-7474. I0'xi20' awning, fenced, and Plus tax and license months or 12,000 ml. warrant) Many used models In stock MG SUZUKI SALES 4447 Dixie Hwy. 673-44SS ____Drayton Plain*_ Anderson's Best Buys New I 90cc Honda_$339 Newl CB 350 Honda ~ Newl Honda 50 ... Newl Honda Mini .. New! 650cc BSA ... Newl BSA Enduro . New! 650cc Triumph $1195 Newl 750 cc Norton $1195 Newl 250cc Ducatti . .$495 MANY MANY MORE! 300 CYCLES IN STOCK LOW DOWN PAYMENT EZ TERMS (All prices Plus Tax) ANDERSON SALES & SERVICE 1445 S. Telegraph_FE 3-7102 BACK TO SCHOOL on a Yamaha Dtl-B, easy starting and dapand- Boats Are Arriving! Must Move Our Stock! For Outdoor Sports . , . Use It tor Winter toe . . A versatile amphlbloui Drive Your Attox tight Into water-mantuvtr with east. OUTBOARD MOTORS Oakland and Genesee Counties only CORRECT CRAFT DEALER CLIFF DREYER'S , MARINE DIVISION 115210 Holly Rd„ Holly MB 4-6771 I BEARCAT SJ H.P. 4 CYCLE MOTORS NOW AT PINTER'S I BOSTON WHALERS Thompson, Starcraft, M P O', Johnson boats, motors. Sailboats, WE TRADE — WE FINANCE . 1370 Opdyka M $695 $239 $268 $1095 $850 BIRMINGHAM BOAT CENTER Starcrfeft, Sllverllna Flbergla* and aluminum boats. Merc, outboard 61 Mam dr. 1265 S. Woodward at CHRYSLER 17#, 120 HP, Inboard, outboard, loadad with dtlux Items, was usad lass than 15 hri.# Mail for Coho watars and watar sl “ 2, b MACHINERY, ORTONVILLEp NA> 6W-944I . a Chain Saw 7-3292. Yoor " "Daalar," Jofi.. Idaa Parts galore. SUMMER CLEARANCE USED LAWN AMD GARDEN TRACTORS WITH MOWERS -CUB CADETS — WHEEL HORSE — BOLENS — SIMPLICITY -SPRINGFIELD. ALL RECONDITIONED AND READY TO GO. ALL PRICED TO SELL. TERMS AVAILABLE. KING BROS. 3734734 Pontiac Rd. at Opdyka Travel Trailers____________II 2 NEW TEAYCO Campari, atoap 4, can bq seen at Leonard Station In Oxford. 1450. __________ 9' FOLD OUT CAMBER 2 years old, copportoito link, stove, let box and dlnnotte, sleeps 4, must sail. 5550. 4742594. 13' TRAILER-REDUCED, $10957 Walrs-Oeodtll'a, I52-4S54_ i3‘ tRAVIL TRAILER, stif contained, 1704. Dealer______ _____________331 9238 18’ ST. CLAIRE, sleaps 4, excellent. 625-1934 II FT. COMACHE TRAVEL Traitor, self-contained, good cond., 11595, 425-3733.______________________ |0> SELF-CONTAINED FROLIC, steam 6. Sim call 47444S5. I960 OMC SUBURBAN. ALSO Trofwoo'* —aa|Mly 4434749. Check our deal on SWISS COLONY LUXURY TRAILERS FROLIC TRAILERS AND TRUCK CAMPERS. SKAMPiR FOLD-DOWN CAMPERS 13 to 2S on display at - Jacobson Trailer Sales Like Rd. OR 3-5981 SAVINGS DETROITER FOR RENT CAMPING tralteri c 914811. EXPLORER MOTOR HOME 21', 23'. 25'MODELS See thla California built-in unit which Is No. 2 In motor hon sales. Price* start ai 89,995, up. STACHLER TRAILER SALES, INC. 3771 Highland (M-S91____682-94 FORD HOUSE CXR, slaaps 2,1 A WEEK FROM Sat. on Aug. XL i ttouos ooan tor consignmant, ttw Proulx family proprietors af Ox- year-tld, raasonaW*. 797-48S3. GARAGE. EQUIPMENT FOR jale, ' ___-* 1 is'deijvei camper Ranger"Spsicial, 'naw tires" SAND, GRAVEL, AND dirt. Latham | S5M94S. . 7 ___ ( Precast Slone 852 2920 or 152-1953 ■ JOHN DEERE BULLDOZER. S’L^QStkl--------------- ■■ blade. 472-1304, IIWO. IPEdAL - LIME atona, 10-A stona, MikTOXRib'US“^uiprrw"ht; Tool. iSS&eSSf rSW*! I and pert*, call 4434410. After 5; ■ »»"«■: »»*n*Ptw, im : *“ -il day St). 11- f-rluntsna Digs 7? 1943—16V* SELFCONTAINED, llttpa 4,. Attar S p.m. 442-4545._________ 1944 FROLIC KT. Slttpt I. ttm-plct.iy sali-contalnad. Many extra* including Rate* hitch. Exc. con-dittos 343-4333 ewer j p.m. 1945 FROLIC 14* SLfel^S"’/. ii)C. WSStiBtbtw. 1965 NIMROD CAMPER, good con-dltlen, 4824733. ______________ 1988 SWINGER, TRUCK ctmptr ----- 4, IVb'xTtY, 3 burner gts — -nd electric ratrlgara- .... _____ with extras, sharp, $1.893. 435-3318. 1988 STAR CRAFT CAMPING trail-*r sleeps 4, 14' flbarelas boat, 18x10* tent, FR 4-7109, 2205 Allar-ton Rd. IIM APACHE RAMADA sleapt I, lie. Cell before I weLUj^y^y^1""' **■ "*7* PORTER-CABLE electric chain sew with cate, 1 set of Rigid pipe dies,1*-* AKC POODLE IS thru 2*'. 493-3581._ j service, grooming, ] _ A DACHSHUND PUPS. AKC 8 & B AUCTION SAT. NIGHT, AUG. 23 7 P.M. .SHARP DON'T MISS THESE GOODIES Such as: color TV, late mod refrigerator, coppertone 30“ S g„ rang*, 3-bedroom suites, 1 living room suite, hid# - a • way bad, odd ROMEO MEAT CENTER - Horn* dretted meets, a side or e iiice for your, time or Jree$*~ wrapped before you. Give i for prloi. quality and tap to cuf-MlMe. PL 2-2941. dev*« week.*7ii~ MEAT CUTTING, FREEZER wrapped We cure and smoke meats. Cell 3734153, PegHtY li LIVE, STEWING AND layti chickens. 581 Baldwin. 9-12 end 44 Ice i I gat la II I3A3183 cold wator, shower, aqueenagl FROLld truck « compieie, self-contained, IN fret. 8184«• bto SMALL LOW travel frailer, ileept 4,1 dltlon, 6T4-2924. 5ffl. I * “ - • gO CART WITH NEW f h.p. OffiBS,1 *— SIM, 19)44*2. M CC Bentlll n. 125 CC Benelll 250 CC Bentlll CLAYT'S CYCLE CENTER On M-21,1 mile east of Lapeer 664-9261 RIGID TRIUMPH FRAME. 447-4*21.____________ SUZUKI MOTORCYCLES, S0CC. to SCO cc„ oil Inloctlon, 12 ntontha er 12,000 mites warranty. Cycle ac-cessories, Rupp's Minl-blket. TAKE M-S9 to W. Highland, right to “““ Rd. fo Darned* RJ Itfl and follow signs to DAWSON'j SALES, TIPSICO 1 * “■— 429-2179, LAKE. Phene TRIUMPH ! FE 4-0270. WANTED Mpyalw ?«n?.S DRASTIC DISCOUNTS On til remaining naw OLASSPAR and DUO BOATS and JOHNSON and CHRYSLER motors. 14' Shell Lake 75 h.p. Evlnrude. .499*' IS' Sea Ray, 40 h.p. Rvinrud*....M9f 14' CroibV, 40 h.p. Mercury, trailer .................057* ' 15' Grumman aluminum, Little Dudt" traitor ................*350 • 12' aluminum Meyers f I s h I YOUNG'S MARINA Open dally 9 'til 4 Sunday 10 to 4 4030 Dixit HWV. on Loon Lake Drayton Plains________OR 4-0411 FOR THE BEST DEAL ANYWHERE 0N- Star Craft; Olastron; O. W. invader boats. Johnson motors; Crest pontoons. Scrambler; Terr* Cat and Trail Breaker trail blkai. Come To JIM HARRINGTON'S SPORT CRAFT VS Mil* B. oM-ep#er City Limits . Opan 9 to I Mon-Prl. 9 YO 5 SAT, fc SUN. Over 100 1969 Boats NOW ON DISPLAY Glastron, Sea Star North American Aluma Craft, Mirro Sail-fish, Sun-fish Mercury & Merc Cruiser Cruise Out, Inc,., *3 E._Wallon Closed sun. PE 4-4402 A OK REPAIRED BICYCLES. / SeiteOB. BOY'S SCHWINN 10 I good condition; far U BOYS 10 SPEED S ■OYS " OR^. MANS lar SPEGIAL YEAR end prlcas, on ail-remalnlng Glasspar, Steury, Mlrrtx craft boat*, Grumman and Dolphin: coaster tenders, .......... I, roar I i. 402te92t. irg# frame ____ ______ 2P*, wheel- brake,' atalntoaa steel1 generator| Ilk* new' MINI-BIKE, FOR SALE, $100, 411-1 A???-.f^ J*.!*e|’*S?L . ■ t. Mike Jordan 424-1144. SUMMER CLEARANCE I BOA.TS-MOTORS 1 TRAILERS MM-SAV1-ISM { Harrington Boat Works 332-00 Boats-AccEssartos 97 1IT, GW INVADER. SO h.p. tnelm Catfish aallboaf, aaa-laap, a2-373l tr ALUMINUM BOATS ,,,,,.ill •00 Lb. cep. Beit Traitor* ..Si] is* Aluminum Baaft ..........tie Traitor* S120, is canoes $139.93 Big Coho taiti, 14' MI9.1*' $3*9. Sava $$ at Buchanan's TERRIFIC DICOUNTS ell poet*, pontoon* and canoes.' ' AT TONY'S MARINE , mton motor* — 13 y$ar* repair ..JiMOhet,,, SOU Orchard Lk. Rd. Sylvan Like uSed boats CLEARANCE . Outboards, l-O'a, tpeedboata Inboard Cruisers, Outboard ADolors • . . _ ____^CRAFT e luffl... .IH tporfttar, Tatna* traitor, 12 In, temeft. 1350. with 40 h.p. Johnson etocfrlc, $573, 4*2-1021, 14' FnBRoyu^^iMT. IS irbiior end IMS, 40h.p.--------------to $000, 473-5025. nit, 1291, *25-5421. THEY'RE HERE HI-LO TELESCOPING TRAILER UP FOR LIVING DOWN FOR TRAVEL **VILLAGE TRAILER SALES FIBERGLAS, 45 h.p. Mercury, ■ “'■tel traitor, vary good con- I*M,47S-11I2.___________ "*i 1*2' BOAf, ’TRAILER, and extras, ■si S30o. 4I1-1SI1V 95 if*' FiiERGLAS BOAT, trailer, 35 ........... '— I h.p. motor, loadad with txlrat, 373- 44-305 SCRAMBLER, exceltont con- On* bdfora 3 p.ni._____________ J ^ ^ '- S4JO. j U' WOODRN JjOAT, IS hofMpoirar Motorcycles dltlon. Pointed by Finch' 40M347. 1041 TEIUllRl* CUE Scramblof Jib! .— . ...... cc; roppljited and overhauled. 11|' FlUhGLAS. yjm,4B hp Marcyry. f943 iAIUMAh, lTkk lift fc wfi lfotff_________ ATTENTION , Pa*’top dollar for your Cor - brim your car and mi* Far cash to . EXECUTIVE CARS INC 13/ N* M6ln it a Romm ■ M ■ WHM k ™ sa&.afBsr’ For Want Ads Dial 334-4981 Wanted Can-Tracks 101 "TOP DOLLAR PAID" GLENN'S I FOR "CLEAN" UiED CARS Ntw and Used Tracks l»M FORD PICK-UP, real EXTRA Dollars Paid FOR THAT EXTRA Sharp Car Averill's FE 2*9878 2020 Dixit :E 4-689* Mansfield' ■AUTO SALES 300 GMC TRUCK CENTER B:00 to 5:00 Mon.-Frl •^VtO W:°° Saturday 701 Oakland Avenue 335-9731 John McAuliffe Ford -DUMPS- ' 1»61 FORD F-600, with 3-5 -yrd. 1963 FORD F-350 One ton, dual wheels, with 1VS-! yd, dump, excellent nice. BIG VANS New and Used Cars 106 DICK CANAANS MOTOR CITY DODGE 155 OAKLAND AVE. 331-9232 YES! YEAR END SAVINGS Lloyd Bridges Dodge WALLED LAKE i BUICK f~ idlo, heati MANSFIELD " AUTO SALES Baldwin Ave. | 'top $ paidIsmall vans ali j-ii n • ■ L. _ 1955 FORD Haavy Duty All Cadillacs, Buick Electro Eccnovenwlth new paint Nlcol 225s, Olds 98s, Pontiacs and window vFOn™.Hw“Z?n?y anything sharp with air con-1 ditioning. WILSON CRISSMAN . . 1945 GMC 14 Ft. With alum, body, hideway lift gat< anieally, ready to wont. STAKES SI . 1965 FORD F-350 On* tony dual wheels, nice! 1965 CHEVY 2 Ton 16 ft. stake with V8, 2 speed,, a: aSi TRACTORS Power eq 99. Bank 1965 BUICK HARDTOP. radio, her— “-------- Full , price |R available here........._ „....„ delivery. Call Mr. Parks, credit manager for payments schedule at Ml 4-7500. New location of TURNER FORD aplo.MS MIlo Rd.) Troy Mall TIE PONTIAC! PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1969 106 - D—9 New and Used Cars 1955 CHEVY BODY, 409, 4 1959 CHEVROLET, RUNS GOOD, 1 owner, 590, 523-2129._________ 1941 CHEVY WAGON, ParkwooJ Hera—Pay Hare, Marvel Motors, 251 Oakland, FE 3-4079. 1941'CHEVY I, 4 door, good eon- IV Cara. 23i5 Dixie TOP DOLLARS FOR SHARP, LOW MILEAGE AUTOMOBILES. , i ..... ....YL OR 3-1355 H. J, VAN WELT $$—CASH—$$ HUNTER DODGE 499 S, Hunter Blrmli Ml 7-0958 Junk Cart-Tracks 1 1-2-3 JUNK CARS FREE TOW FE 2-2666 ALWAYS BUYING JUNK CARS and _________________3 JUI... acrap, we tow, FE 5-2000.__________ COPPER - BRASS, RADIATORS -etartars and generators, C. Dlxaon, 1945 FORD C-1000 534 VB angina, 2 apeed, 5 speed, straight air, sleeper cab, new tires. PICKUPS Ve’have a good selection of n md used pickups, reduced a eady to go now I Close-Out Deals On All 1969 Models John McAuliffe Ford We Moved . . . Vi Mile N. of Miracle Mile 1942 CHEVY SB, FULL power, cal Iafter 4 p.m, or 3-5355, ■__ 1962 Corvair Monza 1299 DICK CANAANS MOTOR CITY ________IFESHi DODGE unused miles. Only S998 full price. 1855 Oakland fe a-4528 MfC7h!600UlCk lnC,# 515 Woodward' 1962 CORVAfR, BUCKEt stats, good —ff-1. r560a:--------I_________ condition, $125. FE 2-1779. 1 *harmop?C^Power*'^sfieiing brakes? Vinyl top. Only $995. -Aard!?P:__M®*®!*!?_green with, Fischer Buick Inc., 515 Woodward, matching vinyl Interior. Automatic, ........ power steering, radio, heater,; whitewall tires. Full pries, 8195. Call Mr. Al at 483-2051, Dealer. 1943 BLUE CORVAIR Monsa. radio, mm. can 334-5525. Inc., 515 Woodward. Ml 7-5600. -------‘ --------7 1966 BUICK ELECTRA 225. One IV64 CORVAIR ITdVopBwrhlnfurPow.,,rd*.nd2'dn0.w Lots of extras. $275. Good! Eu*ji'T.itlf”j Fiwh*r_____condition. 334-0653. 5600.____|_____________'_ John McAuliffe Ford 1966 BUICK Wildcat Hardtop, with 1966 BUICK HARDTOP. Extra sharp. One oV— By Kata OsanniNew and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars CONVERTIBLE. SAVE MONEY At MIKE 1965 FALCO Automatic, price. $599. Parks Automatic, radio and I ted late delivei lit manaage lule at Ml •7500. I 106 New and Used Cars 106 location ol TURNER FORD * 2400 Maple (15 Mile Rd.) Troy Mall I _ I Mila east of Woodward 1945 MUSTANG CONVERTIBLE, green, while top, all accessories. Good condition. *795. 343-4440. 1965 MUSTANG 2+2 Hardtop, vinyl top, with automat _ $895”* OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oakland ________FE 1965 FORD convertible, goo _ d11ion, $650. 628-1396._| MUSTANG, 1965, hardtop, radio, $94 or best offer, exc. condition. 651 to reestablish your credit? 91988. B„..n , NO MONEY DOWN I Immediate delivery hundreds to choose from. | Parks credit manager for Al (Dwlen 682-20611 Payments schedule at Ml 4-7500. 1966 Mustang "* '“TURNER FORD Convertible | 2600 Maple (IS Mile Rd.) Trey Mall . automatic, power steer-L ___I Mile east of Woodward nd brakes. 1943 FORD 4-DOOR-Galaxle 500, low * aJPJ _«!!!*• 334-0744._ ’ 1949 BUICK ELECTRA 225. Custom I Lotto* W?5!£ymitw!5% *mr.r! 1944 CHBVELLE Malibu, excalltnt body cond„ new shocks. 434-3014. 1944 CHEVY Blscayna, 4 cylinder stick, 0250. FE 5-4042 after 4._______ 1944 IMPALA. V8, good condition, $300, FE 2-1774. 1945 CHEVROLET WAGON. Automatic transmission, p o w a r (leering, radio, haatar. Full prlct 1899. Bank terms available hare, imediata delivery. Call Mr. AL HANOUTE Chevrolet Buick On M24 in Loke Orion 693-8344 equipped, automatic radio and heater, wnnewan Full price $1099. Bank 1 available here. I m m e d I delivery. Call Mr. Parks, < manager, for payments schedi Ml 4-7500. New location of TURNER FORD 2400 Maple (15 Mila Rd.l Troy 44-TON • -! FOR SALE! 1944 MUSTANG "|JnH___ OR 3-9869 tires.; John McAuliffe Ford > I i 1966 FORD Country Sedan, wage red*) hea.^toTp' W"h‘ ££ 1968 FORD TORINO . 2-door, hardtop, this little n ■uty is sharp Inside and out, drl-s one away at only $2095 OAKLAND clearance '^nTcief00*^' Chrysler-Plymouth only'$1,588, full price, ni Ookland^_____________FE 5-4434 11949 TORINO 351 GT. black-Kda. P.S. We've Moved!.: ^ ,9*^|=E-«^TNDOW „,n. $325:| MOTOR CITY | “1965 DODGE J DODGE Ton pickup, this Is a real solid >rk horse, priced at only am nnk $895 OAKLAND NORTHWEST AUTO SALES 3023 Dixie Hwy. FE 0-38 1947 FORD SQUIRE, 10 passena 055 Oakland ■ FE 0-4520 " MUSTANG. Automatlcr'radio |----- M| 'c* *W9- Bank -a. Immediate Parks, 1944 DART CONVERTIBLE with 'brown vinyl Interior, Bucket seats, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Full price, $295. Call Mr. Al at 402-2041. and heater. Full p terms available h onager, tor paymf Ml 4-7500. New location ot TURNER FORD 2600 Maple (15 Mile Rd.) Troy Mall 1 mile east of Woodward___ 1966 FORD WAGON. Automatics power equipped# radio Full price# . Must Sell. $695. flake pal 627-3300. 1964 MG MIDGET $895 GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9421 944 VOLKSWAGEN camper, Cellfor-nle cer end hes no ruef, real clean and extop sharp, priced to sell at i SEDAN, orlglr HAUPT PONTIAC DEMO SALE 1967 TRIUMPH GT6# fl m vw M,T^er-6«-ro GRAND PRIX heeler. Full price $1599, Bank! ^ A location of -iSSr- EXECUTIVE GhI CATALINA Interior. FM radio and many ex- Parks < tlon of ■edit nr TURNER FORD 2400 Mapla (15 Mila Rd.) Troy t Mila past of Woodward_____ 1945 IMPALA SS. 394 CU. IN., 345 ' - ------ i.ti, midnight grf AM-FM, ST.350, i Impale . .. ____natle, r_______ steering and brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls, 51095. LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercurv 1250 Ooklond 338-7863 CORVAIR Monza# 1965 Maroon an black convertible 4 BBL# 14 engine, $400. 674-2345._______ 1965 CHEVY IMPALA# convertible 327# full power# must tall. 682-3522. 1968 CHeveLLK Sport c < Automatic# radio# whitewalls. $1595. LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 338-7863 1948 CHEVY IMPALA, 9 pessengei auto.# full power# whltawolh n#aOO« 692*0603. " _____ . ■ 1968 CHEVY CAMAR0 I 2 door, hardtop, see and’drive this little red beauty only i $1895 OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth 724 Oakland Ava._____FE 5-9434 >43 CAMARO, 450 H.P., vinyl topi vinyl seats# 4 speed transmission. Good condition. $2500. 626-7481. _ 1969 MALIBU# AIR# ALL^power# 350 engine# other extras# MA 6-7937._ 1969 CHEVROLET CUSTOM Coupe#, , 327# power steering and brakes# air ii# p conditioned# 651«6174._____ EXECUTIVES 1949 IMPALA 4 door C*ll3&93to'0rV •"■' *xtr,t' WIS0- good, 0)25, 34»00Si,__ 1940 CHEVROLET IMPALA 4 "door,19J® L?«F«irRlwtj4^00d ,70dV' ,1W $1000. Bank t( credit 1945 CORVAIR EXCELLENT condition, new paint, runs axe., bast ofler ovar $450, 330-1441.__ 1945 CORVAIR CORSA 4-spaad, door hardtop, 0575, 493-0212.__ 1945 CORVAIR 500, 2 doo automatic, 3530, FE 0-1452. ___ $695 BIRMINGHAM CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100'Maple Rd. Troy, Mlch.| _______642-7000 ! FE 8-8825 1966 Dodge F*olara Station Wagon, 9 passenger automatic, power steering, cellent. condition. Choose froi wagons. Priced at only $1350 TOWN & COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER 100) N. Mein St.___451 -4220 j 1949 Catalina Coupe, power, KW^.DODGE POLARIS,__ *“ dtop, full available delivery. ...... manager, for payment schedule _ Ml 4-7500. New location of TURNER FORD 2600 Maple (15 Mile Rd.) Troy Mall ____1 mile east of Woodward_ Mansfield 1104 Baldwin FE 5-5900 OPEN SATURDAY Immediate delh Parks# jjj§§§jj§ illable h< Call t manager, f hood, 12000 miles, power nents schedule a "*W ^TURNER FORD 2600 Maple (15 Mile Rd.) Troy i _____1 mile east of Woodward John McAuliffe Ford 1967 FALCON * autifuI silver I •71|0r|Or matching blue finish# ------Jng Interior# radio# t stick shift, can't be told frorr under new car war. only $1288 rlth *anty. P.S. We've Moved I w Mile N. of Miracle Mile !B45_S. Telegraph Rd.__FE 5-4101 1967 THUNDERBIRD Two "door hardtop# Air conditioned# full, power, vinyl top, wire wheel covers, radio, heater, whitewalls. $2495. LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Oakland 338-78631 ____ring. 424-0020._ John McAuliffe Ford 1949 Ford Country Squire Station Waqon (10 psssenger). 2.000 actual miles. V 8 automatic# radio# heater, power steering and brakes# factory air condition and a chrome lug-gaqe rack. Beautiful metallic In-dlan Fire with all vinyl Interior. Save plenty on this one. P.S. We've Moved! Vi mile N. of Miracle Mile 1045 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4101 MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 149 FORD Falrlane, 2-door, hardtop, 4 automatic, radio, heater, whitewalls, aconomy special, $2095, 477 M-24, Lake Orion, 493-8341, John McAuliffe Ford 1949 Falrlane Cobra Hardtop. 420 engine, automatic trantmlsslon, radio, healer, bower steering and brakes. Black cordovan Top. Clearance special, $3400 full price. P.S. We've Moved I Vi Mile N, ot Miracle AAlle 1845 5. Telegraph____FE S-4101 John McAuliffe Ford 1949 Muitang Fallback. V • S automatic, radio, heater, power steering. Beautiful canary yellow' Specie ilarlor, Cleart.... . $2480 full prlca. P.S. We've Moved I Mi Mila N. of Miracle Mila 1845 S. Telegraph Rd. FE 5-4101 New ond Used Cors 106New and Used Cars 106 1969 Bonnr 1969 Electre hardtop With air.-Reasonable OR S-jW6f 0ldi 1960~FALCON. GOOD Running con- power, air# vinyl top. 1969 LaSabre# 2-door t ------1# powerglide, power ste« Ing# power disc brakes, air ditioning, 3300 miles# 651-5541, 1969 CHEVY WAGON# Klngswood Estate# 2 scat, power steerina and brakes# air# 10,000 miles. 338-4487 aft. 6.________________________ 1962 CHRYSLER HARDTOP all offer# 625-56 corv-11961T-BIRD, V-8, t_______ 8 passenger v atic. 1963 igon. 363- DICK CANAANS MOTOR CITY DODGE 855 OAKLAND AVE. a 2-door hardtop# auto. 1968 ^ Bonnevlli 1968 Grand Pr hardtop# Coupe# >r 373-1441, WANTED, «d tor 1945 Mustang $1895 TEMPEST -BIRMINGHAM WAGONS 1947 CHiVY PICKUP, 0206. Pj 5-0323 __________ l950 .FOkD PICKUP, V-8, good condition, 8150, 4744)042.______________ IPSO FORD IVi ton stake*truck, excellent running, good tires, $250 or best o«tor.53M39». I9V2 CHEVY, 1 Vs ton, 21.00 miles, 0450,152-1131, T it FORD, 30 peseenger bus Ideal for camper, 1350. 444 Oakland Aug,, Pontile. tf54 GMC 1 TON Truck, V-8. flatbed, ratio good 8150. FE 2-1179._________ 1950 CHEVY STAKE automatic transmission, power steering and brakes hydraulic lift gate, $400 cash, 444-4244. IfW CHrivv DUMP Truck,-5 yard BOX. 8400, 343-0905.________________ 1941 CHEVY 3to ton, 4-ipeed. Best otfsr ever $100. 4 tires and wheels, 0 help. 8100, PE 5-0149, 1943 ford to ton pickup, large CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 2100 Maplo Rd. Troy,Mich 642-7000__________ 1969 VOLKSWAGEN $1695 GRIMALDI CAR CO. 900 Ooklond Ave. FE 5-9421 CALL MEL JOHNSON In Lake Orion tor lowest prices on dune bi— equip. Sandshark bodies and < Plate line of accessories. CHs available. 493-8844. Dune Buggy Material 1959 VW convertible, $175. '40 8225, UL 2-2304 DUNE BUGGY CHASSIS, shortened, plus 2Vi VW enema. 444-3512. DUNE BUGGY, FORlSe, eWer 4:30 | p.m, 343-8431, Wfl944, GOOD CONDITION, 1943 FORD Vi TON Pickup, looks . M00. SAVE AUTO FE 5-3278 19*4 CHEVROLET El CaMI'HO ^'8^. ,,ICl<' V*ry C-GASSdR CHRYSLER Heml powsr, •urn In the 11 tec. bracket, set to ran. M 4-2480. 474-9771 er see al Jim'S Shell Corner 12 Ml. end Orchard Lk.___________________ 1945 INTERNATIONAL DUMP truck, S3,500, can be teen at 1375 Indian , Like Rd.. 493-2IOI. 1944 00 VW DUNE BUGGY, blue met; (lake, rear-reverse chromes headers, 482-4307. Volkswagen SALE! 1942 VW Bug, 3595 • --5 M TON” CHEVY PJckUP, 14' tint, 2 extra tires. Oak recks flberaiat cover. 3410 Farmers Crack, Hadlev. itedBt. ROSE EM f 19*4. FORD Vi TON pickup, VS Stick, Sir, AM-FM radio, heeler. 3800 ml. power brakes, ZisMrtod, I' box, built up tor large camper, trailer bitch, meroon~4M-4930._______ 19*7 CHIVY lW-VAN^Vjl^euto,, A- 42 5 4 Andtrtonvllie, BILL GOLLING VW ‘ II Mile Rd. (Maple Rd.) . Across from Berz Airport between Crooks and Coolldgo Rd. Trov MetoeJM New and Usad Curs 10 Been Bankrupt? Need a cer? IMIS' ml., 30MMB I Mm Want Ads rFor Action .cell Mr. Al (Dealer)__ 412-2051 19*7 Vi T6n“PtCKlJP. CUitom ret end Interior, VO, redlo, heater. S159S. AUTOBAHN 1745 i. Telegraph____FB 9-4531 BEEN BANKriUPf? beeTa car7~ Want to reeitablloh your credit? ' > No Money Down. 1 ?!,: Hundred* to chooM from. Cell Mr. Al (dealer)_*02-2041 jejTiuick iieetre, m, full" AUTOBAHN 1741 S. Telegraph Pt — 1945 BUICK LaSabre 2 doer hardtep, gub^pmeer.ttowtWbrat-- ___ brakes# shocks# 35,006 ... mtch, car. 732-7294. 7_______ 1966 CORVETTE txcallent condition# 2 tops# automatic transmission# air con* ditioning. $2995 VAN CAMP CHEVROLET On N. Milford Rd# Milford__________ _ 684-1025 1066 CHEVY IMPALA#' air con* —-------------------- $1195# 623- )966 CORVETTE CONVKRTIELB# $1,050# 673*0405, YES!. YEAR END SAVINGS EXAMPLE 1969 CATALINA door, hardtop, radio, heater; ydrametlc, power steering, power rakes, vinyl trim, whitewalls. $2895 GO! HAUPT PONTIAC - Save—Save—Save WE FINANCE No Money Down 1944 CHEVY, 2 DOOR . 0995 1944 GRAND PRIX .... 1795 1944 PALCON, 2 DOOR .1795 TEMPEST, 2 DOOR .$595 1944 PONTIAC CONVERT .1795 1941 CHEVY IMPALA ...1195 1941 FORD ........... 195 LL FE 5-8939 DEALER Across from Union Hell 1**7 CADILLAC c6uPI t • 0» with fl’ worke, exci FE 4-0039. CADILLAC 19*9 COUFE DeVllle, I ID (Oil MA 4-1449, CADILLAC 19*9 CADILLAC SEDAN DeVllle, light green, bier1’ end top, IfOfOO, Qletti $5495, 343-1 1949 CADILLAC fOUPLE DeVllle, 343^0434iny! ,0P' *lr Candl,lonlnS' 1949 CADILLAC COUPE DeVllle, JEROME, John McAuliffe Ford , 1945 CHRYSLER Imperial 2 door! hardtop, with let black flnloh, with a black cordova top, lull power, I and air conditioning, del special only—11211, full prlct. P.S. We've Moved! Vi milt N. of Mir 1145 $. Tdegraph Ra. 1944 Chrysler Newport, power steering and brakes. Air conditioned, excellent premium tires, j remote control mirror. Light1 package, very clean. One owner WALLED LAKE 424-1572. Renter0 *«.' g A toi ,Mtk' 900d i P ™ 1966 Chrysler 300 I ^962 T-BIRD rdtop# 383, auto.# power $1395 $395 fV; Lloyd Bridges Dodge 1967 Bonneville# 9 passenger wagon. 1967 Bonnevlilo Coupe, power steering brakes# windows# vinyl top# 15,000 mi. 1967 Bonnovllle Coupe# power# vinyl top# air. 1967 Bonn lardtop, r# 2 ton# pai 967 Mustang# V*8 automatic# power vinyl top. MANSFIELD or hardtop. Drives $__________ rmetic,' radio, healer. Priced DICK CANAANS MOTOR CITY DODGE 155 Oeklend ____FE 2-S-4528 MILOSCH CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1966 Chrysler Newport# 4-door# 2 to chooM from# 8 automatic# double power# 81295# 677 M-24# Lake Orion# 693*8341. 1966 Chrysler 300 2-door# hardtop# 383# automatic# powar. 81299 DICK CANAANS MOTOR CITY DODGE 155 Oeklend______FE 1-452$ 1966 CHRYSLER 300 Convertible, this black beauty has t CORVETTE Convertible. Good 1944 CHEVY IMFALA 327, good tires, 7" slick switch, 3 speed Hurst miner, 11,488. OR 3-2897. 1944 CORVAIR CORSA, blue, 140 h.p„ snow tlree, call 482-1170. 1947 CAMARO VI, 3 speed, loaded, *82-25)3, 1947 CHEVY II, V-4, 11297V Good condition, cell 42S-2797. 19*7 CAMERO, 4 cylinder, elenderd shut. 2nd car, very low mileage, Excellent condition. Best offer, 373- 1967 Chevy Super Sport V-8# automatic# powar ttt with a console priced at only $1495 OAKLAND $1695 1967'Rebel Wagon (Creep Country) V-S Automatic, power steering and rakes. $1595 1967 Ambassador $1595 16 Ambassa den. V-l eutom 2 to choose fro $895 Rambler Art 2-door. CLEAN. $1195 VILLAGE RAMBLER TOWN & COUNTRY CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH ROCHESTER .....Ae | .— . -.ID 493-8958.________________ 1943 FORD CONVERTIBLE. 390. speed. Body rough. Mutt sell. 1251 425-3443,«_ 1944 FORD GOOD CONDITION. P.S. We've Moved I Vi Mile N. of Miracle Mile 1845 S. Telegraph______FE 5-4101 1944 FORD STATION WAGON. 338- 10-passenger 3 to choose from red# yellow and whlla finish with air conditioning# all ha> OlMMulf price?** *p*ci* 1 P.S,-We've Moved! Vb Mile N. of Mir nr In Mile Fl S-4101 t YU fWC V-8 1845 S. Telegraph Rd. T966 ford FairlanV door hardtop. power steering uranan# rrtdlo, heater# Whl4“**“ 81495. LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mercury 1250 Ooklond 338-7863 1944 T BIRD hardtop, elr condlt power, automatic transmits radio end heater. Full price 81 Bank terms available here, mediate delivery. Cell Mr. Pai credit manager for paymi schedule at Ml 4-7500. New l< tlon ol TURNER FORD apie (is Mile Rd.) New and Used Cars 1 mile east of Woodward 106 New and Used Cars mbmimei mm ... $2295 1966 Toronado, Air Condi-di tioned ........ 1965 Olds 88. 4 door sedan, Ct*QOC Automatic, power steering, ivPaaD 1967 Olds 8$ 2 door hardtop. 8 automatic .. kPlOyO 1961 Olds 88 2-door hardtop. Power Htrr»r steering, brakes. One owner.. 1968 Olds Luxury Sedan $dV6 Full power, factory air . 1967 Cutlass 2-door hardtop 0NTIAC, BXCBLLBNT con dltlon, $500* 334*7551. 1*957 PONTIAC FOUR DSORV tx-callent tires. Bait offer, 673-8635 1962 PONTIAC 4 door hardtop, dou I Cars 106 dltlon. Mu*t sell. 612-6216. 1f*4 CATALINA WAGON. . I— steering and brakes, air, private --------r. 11700. 026*0030. Ntw and llitd Cart 106 New and U*ed Cars 106 jNtw and Used Cors lO* FM, $3150, 651-1 3 EXECUTIVE CAR, “ ............. Pontie 1948 SSP JAVALIN. _________682J738._________ ___1968 AMBASSADOR dir condition, eutomatlc ______ heater end wt Full price BIRRS. Bank ...Ichalon tires, wire wheels, $1700. Can be seen at Biglers Grocery, 4*1* Williams Lk, Rd„ Waterford. *63 VW Vi ton pickup, Pill price PONTIAC CATALINA 2-door 1*4* 2 DOOR PONTIAC Ventura, hardtop. Air conditioning, power! power steering and brakes, brakes and steering, 4900 ml. 412- _J?p. f“**“ 0*21._______________________________ 1969 Gr 1*4* TEMPEST CUSTOM, still under: 1»»J “ condition, 473-^51 14.000; lull , power, blue with Full price Bins WJys W** ..... 13330, 332-4421.________ available here. Immadl4t4 delivery., AUTOBAHN 1949 CATALINA 2 door, air, rally 2| CalUVir. P»^CF«d»t manager ; );M ; TtltBrtph_______________________FI M531 New location of ■■■mi TURNER FORD top. SHARP. 482-6105. ; j400 Maple (15 Mile Rd.) Troy M s, power, 482-577$, 11947 VALVO, 1943 Lincoln' Continental 1*949 ifONTIAC CATALINA, 2 "door| cJSllMl*PotS°Car' .. .91895 ^ ••lndj.Bu, V *---- „„ Pi______| ______ Till* to r» automatic, full price $1595. AUTOBAHN , ........of Woodward 11745 S. Telegraph . IV* 1949 RAMBLER SHIFT Command, 1949 XR 7, 1 ,.$1295 VI, I M/«t0r’1.hvarAT'!l« n>J?,r' ’,4* GMC Mandl-Bus ... *2400. Firm. 625-2312 after 6 PM. 1944 Galdxla 2-door hardtop ....$ 995 1941 FIREBIRD. AUTOMATIC,11945 Grand Prlx hardtop .... 9 995 radio, heattr, whitewall tires and a 11944 Chevy Bel Air'4-door . 9 895 vinyl roof. Full price ISM Bank 1940 Galaxle 4-door.......9 95 terms available. hare. Immedl.t. KEEG0 PONTIAC SALES KEEOO HARBOR____________ 682-3400 ... 4 Ply ti ... icrlflce, 474-1351. 1 dealers. 132-2741, ■ after 6. 106New and Used Cars Perks credit delivery. Cell I.......... ... manager for payment schedule Ml 4-7500- New location of TURNER FORD 2400 Mopl* (15 Mile Rd.) Troy W 1 mile owl of Woodward 1969 PONTIAC CATALINA, 2 door vinyl hardtop, hydramatic, double power, tinted glass, 4,000 miles, sharp, $2095 after 5:10, 402-4472. OVER 1949 CATALINA STATION wagon, ■WMIMa " double power, “Police!! Help!! I’m trapped in a phone booth at 10th and Emerson! ” New and Ussd Cars 106 Now and Used Cars 106 , 1949 PONTIAC 2 angina, air c____________ _______ staaring and brakas, low mllaagt. 551-1224. iMf PONTIAC SPORt tOUPB, ! loaded, vinyl top, air condltlonlr- 1 674 2712, ________ 1969 PONTIAC CATALINA. FB 1969 FIREBIRD, LOADED. 673*382$. 1969 TEMPEST LtMANS, double 1969 Pdntioc Catalina or hardtop. Yellow with black I roof, automatic, power steer-and brakas, radio, htatar,' •wall tire*. Real sharp. $2795 ijMerryOlds! ' LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Msrcury 1965 CATALINA, 2 DOOR hardtop, M«Pl« Ml 4 2735 ^^^"wEaldw’ln"* ' dltlan. best of far?°FE 2-1 fn* 19**, OLDS. 91 LS 4 door hardtop,; Open SahirdAyt__ _ FB 4-3054 I946 PONTIAC1 ownar.Vpassengar : ,1,1 ,lr' 1506 Oroljt 93900 , ,>4J pontiac BONNEVILLE. Me- j wagon, power brakea and atearlng fifpv.**1 451-7404. _ ____ i i.njc gratn with matching vinyl 2100 miles, heavy duly aquippad, OLDS 194* F IS hardtep, factory air, I Interior. V-I, automatic, radio,! 01400, 330-2420 aft, 4.__ fully equipped, low healer, whitewall llrae, power 1GAA Dinnti-,- Ua — 1 “—•no and brakea. Full orlce. IV0° rORTiaC Cruiser 01445 LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Msrcury ________i. 91.075, 426-5127 iteerlng and braket. Full price. 1250 Oakland 338-78631 0,?-?,^b'fL.“t^!*,’.lrciJ?lIJi^ 0X:V* I .........I f944 tmri EehentT Iwe 'deer: tutome'llc. power 'disc brakes, J*43 PONTIAC STAtlCili wagon, hardtop Factory air. power eteer pewer .tearing. FB 4-3175. _ | auto., p.t. and p.b. A t, 1500. 052- ln|. brakes. V4. suiemstie. redm. f,M oi.DSMOBiLF Torwiado, load- '‘,’- heater. whltawalHfc»i«5 »d, ettekar price 04,900, 4.000 ac ; 1*44 PONTIAC CATALiNA 4 door. I ual mllat. Must tall Immedletaly, olive graan with matching vinyl I4l200,J34-44S4. Irftarlor. V-0 automatic, radio,! IToSONADO i*49 OLDS, graan with heater, power staaring and brakes. 1 ----- ... ...... ... J,ri| Whjteyiir tlree. pull grlea, 1295. ......H *"!», liM 1 BILL FOX CHEVY 75$ S Rochester Rd. 651 7000 i 1 PONTIA? mm COUPE, 1 5ALR. CA*18 m . ... ___ . owner, .xc condition, low mileage. Bonneville Convertible Silver gray finish, black top, V-I, automatic transmission, radio and heeler, power staaring, pewer brakas, sat of premium tlraa Ilka naw, local car I-owner. In mini condlllonl Special $1695 4 GTO, Trl-pc 1250 Oakland 338-7863 fnMff W7 MERCukV t6D<^jQT, m r^-T-Sl«ig?{a 4 door Slim?' hardtop, Cuslam Daita 08. air lJSHS." ! conditioning, power brakes, pbwtr iteermg. axe condition. BS1-01B0.1 673 4824. itiTCUTLASS* S, power^brakes and 1*44 PONTIAC CONVERtiiCI/^^^® staaring, regie, r months, 33*4481. snap#, 9450.429-5421. CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH 1 ’,fL9F*L**®9i!!' ’fj 'MS PONTiXc STAfION Wagon, 4lr. 1844 taMans convarllbla, blue with ,,w* whits top, V-I, 3-ipaad, buckets. 1969 CATALINA, Station \ Mat, air, doubia po«^ illas, $3,500. M7-46S5. 1*4* GTO MANY Extras, attarTwi- >49 TEMPEST Custom S. 2-doer hardlop. V-I, power staarl turbo-hydramatlc, must sail. 1. V4, automatic, .. jno brakas, vinyl' top. Rod 10, heater, wbl*---"- *’ * LARRY SHESHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Msrcury 1250 Oakland 338-7863 1947 £6U*AR two door hardtop. V4, automatic, aewar MrOS and brakas, vinyl tap, am-pm radio, oenialt, haSar, whttawalis. 91991. LARRY SHSRH*N't HILLSIDE Lincoln-Msrcury 1250 Oakland 338-7863! Ha MbkcuRY Dougar; ytliew, black -wheals ana n MILOSCH 11988. 473- •W9. ~~~~ _____> Deelar 1441 PLYMSUTH VELVEDERE 4 l*44 PONTiA'C~Gr 1967 LeMans r hardlop. Automatic, power ng and brakas. Vinyl top, y air condition. Pull price $2095 PONTIAC RETAIL M Uolveralty Dr. FE 2-7994 FifeEBIRD SPRitiT, 1967, whlta'wlth block Intorlor, 91450, 42345)5. John McAuliffe Ford 1967 Pontiac Catalina Hardtop. Automatic, radio, hoator, power itoerlnp and brakes. Beautiful metallic Aqua with matching Interior, Cloaranca special only 114)8 full price. | ' P.S. We've Moved! Vb Mila N. of Miracle Mila 1845 8*jr*,eOLatfL FE 5 4101 ! 1968 PONTIAC BONNEVILLE, 4 door, lull power, automatic air, .... . _______ &T' "k* n,w’ M5'iNsw and Ussd Cars 1968 IXlCUTIVE WAGON, doiihlel........... r. double _____ __________________ OR 4-1998. 1969 PONTIAC VENTURA, posf- *r,6% traction, vinyl top, 82.958 otter. 474-2434.______ 1969 CATALINA 4-door hardtop. OR 3-8489._________________________ New FINANCE PLAN working? Need o car? Wf arrange tor almost anybody with good, bad, or no credit. 75 core to choose from. Call credit mgr. Mr. Irv — Daaltr. __FE 40006 or FE 3-7854.____ 1942' RAMBllER,“station wagon, exc. condition, in oftor 6 p.m.J»608 Peacock, 338-3830. 1963 RAMBLER Station wagon, V-I, automitlc, illoage. Several models to choose . GRIMALDI CAR TO from. Priced right. Many with AIR '____wXHYlMLUl LMI5 LU. conditioning, caii 642-3289. 900 Oakland Ave. FE 5-9421 Audette Pontiac I power brakes and steering, $175. 1850 W. Maple Rd. Troy 1963 RAMBLER" CLASSIC wag good condition, $250. 689-6386. MERRY OLDS ' 1969 COMPANY Car Sale! 1969 Delta 4 Door Sedan . —$3395 Automatic, power steering. and brakes. Air condition, tinted glass, radio, whitewall tires, wheel covers and vinyl roof. 1969 Delta 4 Door Hardtop .. Automatic, pbwer steering, brakes, radio, whitewalls, vinyl root. Two 1969 Delta Custom Hardtop . .........$3495 lr condition, tinted glass, 9 choose from. 1969 Vista Wagon.....................— 9 passenger. Automatic, power stearin glass, radio, whitewalls, power tall gala $4295 1969 Olds 98 Hardtop ......$4395 ' Full power. Air condition, vinyl root, tinted glass, whitewall tires and wheal covers. MERRY OLDS, Inc. 528 N. MAIN ST. Rochester OL 1-9761 106 New and Used Cars 106 New and Used Cars 106New and Used Cara 106 ...sartor* v « -r— heat tr, whitewall tires, power steering and brakes. Full price* $295. Call Mr. Al at 682-2061. Dea If r__________ 1964 Plymouth Wagon l, automatic. Der -------------- prlc*. ___3314231 . ....... ....... Arlx. 2 door hardtop. Midnight bluo with matching vinyl Interior. V • I automatic, buckot Mate, consols, radio, heater, power staaring and brakoa, whitewalls. Full pries, 8295, CPU Mr. Al at 412-2061, Dealer._______. »„ 1445 PONTIAC STATION WOgbn, $495 ££?» '^BIRMINGHAM 'mIrCURYTO- RaisaneaVd^fonv ] CHRYSLER-PLYMOUTH Park statlan wagon Factory air. 2180 Mania Pd Tray, Mich, pawar staaring and brakes, log-1 *49.7000 AM-FM radio, heater, . _ . , OH* 'wu 1944 PLYMOUTH "424", Oxtras, M50. Phony 334-4755. 'll PURY-III, '4-dr. htrdloa, power 1 —irlnj. 313 *100. 425-3393. PLYM'OUTH. BXCiLLiNt condition. 17.000 actual ml. MY }• Jw-FM radio, ymiiawalti, U195. LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Mtrcury ! 1250 Oakland 338-7863 Its) 6l6| k-si, Nb fcuSt.'oxcoliant running condition. USA 334-4342. 1949 OLDS HARDTOP. 442. Aadli • and haatar. 4-ipaad. Good running. Must aatl laaving town. EM MW. ___t _ 1t64 OlBs 442, s-spaed, new 'tires, •torao tape player, 4 chroma ravaraa wheels, beautiful condition. 411-7111. 1944 OLbS P-Ur4TS6bR,'t70i. 42$-4198.8171 Eaahabaw,________ 1947 OLDSMOBILE, 48'luxury tadan, full pawar and air cAndlUpnlna, clean, low mllaaga, wlli’a car, mutt aaa N to appraclata, 19,290, 4*34131. 1*41 olBImobTl# buTiiit, iuii pawar, atarao tape, plus extras, 92,390 Call 424-4*32. 1968 OLDS CUTLASS Mallday Coupa, lull powar, $2695 1968 OLDS DILM0NT Powar itaarlnt, powar ■M* ' Full1 *750, 471-0403. YOUR VW CENTER coniola. *995. 477 1-24, ____ What RRI ... M I month? No opaad, on this tradal SHELTON Pontiac-Buick 158 8. Rochester Rd.____ 481-5881 1944 PONTIAC CATALINA, Moor whlto, exc. condition, full power auto., am-fm, naw liras, weekday: aft. 8 p.m., all day Sat. and Sun 644-8341. 1944 PONT!AC“ BON 1170. _ "1967 PLYMOUTH GTX 7-door, hardtop, sea and drive ti OAKLAND i 6*9436 rw rh « tgtwu rHfPufV I. Aft dltlon. $1145. 1?65 P l YMO Uf H* 8 ATl LI TR, 16 50 _____^Jl25-3654_ 1968jJfymouth Fury III torque fills, DC IK CANAANS OTOR CITY DODGE SHARP! DICK CANAANS MOTOR CITY 70 to Choos* From —All Mod«ls-—All Colors— . —All Raconditioned— Autobahn Motors Inc. Avthorltod VW Daalor 1» Milo North of Mlrodt Milo 1765 5, Taltgraph__ FE 8-4531 1965 PONTIAC CATALINA 4 door wagon with air. Good condition. OR 3 6565.____g_________ John McAuiiffa Ford 1948 PONTIAC Bonntvllla He Ho, ---- — beautiful deal Intlaroi me?al>ie I wt. I only 81388 full P.S. We've Moved! ’4 Mila N. of Mlraclt Mila 1845 _$. telegraph Rd. FE 5*4101 1965 PONTIAC Catalina, ~4 door Air tondltloned. After 4, 673-9366. 1965 LtMANS. 39,000 milas, 3 sv T lalntalned, 363-7503, $950. DODGE $995 OAKLAND Chrysler-Plymouth 724/Oakland Avr_ FB 5-9436 1965 PONTIAC CATALiNA hardlop, double Naw and Used Cara 106 Ntw and Used Can 338-4531' rniiiase, *9507 332 7228OW 106 New and Used Cara Convertible, 33,000, new tires end exhaust system, axe. condition, MY 1-1219. _.______ 1946 BONNEVILLE CONVERTIBLE, gold, whlto top, double power, 508 Firestone tires, low mileage, l owner, 11350, 3833416 otb 4 J».m. itM OTO 4 SPEED. pofl lricHnn, slicks, SI095, FE 5-4842. 1946 CATALINA '.-doior hardtop, block vinyl top, lull power, air conditioning, good shapt, no rust, low mileage. SI400. 335-2003. 194? GRAND PR IX, air condltioiiad, tilt whdel. Aluminum whaais. Starao, Attar 4, 673-9346. _ T*A7 PbNTIAC Ventura, doubli power, vary clean. 4883719, _ T947 TEMPESf C USTDM < automatic, fully equipped. 444-5141. 11)7 CATALINA CONVERTIBLE, gold, auto., powar, naw tl— It,595. 424-28S4. Bean Bankruptl Naad a carl Want to roottapllth your crodlt NQ MONEY DOWN I Hundrods to choose from Call Mr._AI (Daaltr)__4S2-2041 1947 TEMPlST WAGON, 4 cylinder powar staaring and brakes, 23,0(7 miles, >1750. 629-4)48. ' _ SAVE MONET AT MIKE SAVOIE -upuv 1*00 W Maple. »«l 4-2735. DICK CANAAN'S MOTOR CITY ’DODGE III OAKLAND AVE. 3389222 YES! YEAR END SAVINGS Lloyd Bridges Dodge conditioning, 1941 PONTIAC Bonnevlllp hardtop. Factory air, powar .tearing, brakas, windows, vinyl top, radio, hoator, whitewalls. *2895. LARRY SHEEHAN'S HILLSIDE Lincoln-Marcuiy 1250 Oakland 338-7863 J, "iiel __ 334-3212. 168 PONTIAC GTO, automatic, doubia powar, naw liras, going Into strvlco. 3433977. 1968 PONTIAC FIREBIRD convertible. wide ovals, rally whaais, 1968 FIREBIRD, RfD with black interior and black vinyl top, 3S0; VR, auto., powar steering, wood grain dash, rally 2 wheels, 4 naw' Wide ovals, 82,300, ME 4-9239. _ WE BELIEVE The Best Used Cars I Com* From Flannery Ford WATERFORD 1967 Comet Caliente Hardtop * siJarfng!^ UghA b?ua°?lnVsvlrly,i trim, black vinyl top. Only — . $1795 1969 Ford Galaxi* 500 Hardtop l-door with 390 V-I, automitlc, power .tearing, Drakes, vinyl root. $2795 WALLED LAKE t New and Uiad Cara 024-1972 ~ 106 1967 % Ten pick-up, cami automatic, radie, :ampar special, VI, 1963 Corvair Monza 2 door hardtop. Metallic grain with matching vinyl interior. Automatic, powar staaring, radio, haatar, whitaWoll tirss. Full price JS195 , 1964 Pontiac Grand Prix 2 deer hardtop. Midnight blue with matching vinyl ^interior. V-B automatic, bucket teats, consola, radie, haatar, powar steering and brakas, whitt-walls. Full pries $295 1964 Chevy Bel Air 2-door, Sierra gold finish, matching interior, V-l, automatic, power brakes and steering, radio, hftat-. er, whitewall tires. $295 1963 Plymouth Belvedere * 9 passenger station wagon. Robin egg blue with motchjng vinyl interior. V-8 automatic, radio, heater, whitewall tires, power steering and brakes. Full price $195 1964 Buick Electra 4-door hardtop, light blus finish with matching vinyl interior, V-8 engine, automatic transmission, radio, heater, power brakes- j steering-windows, white-wall tirfts. $595 1965 Corvair Monza , 2-door with red finish and black vinyl interior, automatic, radio, heater, whitewall tires, bucket siats. $495 1961 Dodge 4*Door Nice robin's egg blue finish with matching interior, ’ V-8 engine, automatic, power Drakes and power steering, whitewall tires. • $145 • 1964 Chevy 3/4 Ton Custom pickup, V-8 engine and standard shift transmission, this one is a real sharp unit to $AVE, SAVE, SAVe today. $AVE - EB§ MW9 , ' . ^ 3275 West Huron Corner M59 and Elizabeth Lake Road 4 681-0800 681-0800 $1895 1967 Country Sedan Station w a g P n, v-l, automatic, power atearlng, radio, whitewalls. 1967 Ford % Tan alckup, v-l, a u t o m a oversize tlras, heavy duty ipr $1795 1966 Ford 2 Door Hardtop 1966 Ford V* Tan pickup, camper specie custom cab, $1495 1966 Ford Vt Ton pickup, VI, • t a n cl a r transmission, radio, haatar. $1295 Drive the Extra 5 Miles and Save 1969 Ford 10 Possingir Wagon - intry Squire, with *r‘”“ k, 388 V-S, automatic. m Is now in progress (month of August). We now have 2 lots in Pontiac offering you the largest and most fantastic used car bargains in Oakland County. To batter serve our customers our lot locations and some of their RED TAG Sale offerings are located ati MATTHEWS-HARGREAVES Chevyland MAIN LOT... 431 Oakland five. BUDGET LOT... 430 Oakland Ava. 1967 Caprice 4-Door Hardtop V-8 angina, automatic, pt staaring, radio, haatar, m« blua finish. $1797 1966 Rambler American 2-Door $797 1966 Chevy Impala Convertible th v-p angina, automatic, pg staaring, radio, htatar, whl ill., Daytona blue. $1395 1966 Chevy Bel Air 2-Door I atlck ah if*. $1197 1965 Chevy Bel Air 2-Door $995 ■ 1968 Ford Fairlane 4-Door Sedan, stieK shift, radio, haatar. whitewalls, tuxedo black, white ”$1597 1966 Mercury Monterey 2-Door With automatic transmission, radio and heatar, imperial ivory ””$995 1967 Ford Custom 2-Door Sadan, v-l, sutpmitie, pewar 1962 Buick Station Wagon With maroon finish, all ready to staaring, radio, haatar, rad (In- " $1297 go, end priced at only $399 1968 Chevy II Nova 2-Door V«8# automatic transmission, radio, haatar, granada gold finish. $1697 1965 Chevy Suburban Carryall with a maroon and whlta finish, good running. BUDOIT LOT PRICK OP ONLY $995 1966 Chevy Bel Air Wogon * pataanger, V-l, sutomstlc, powar staaring, luggaga rack, radio, haatar, wnltawalla, marina blua '"“$1697 1968 Buick LeSabre Hardtop* 2-door with automatic, powar •taarlng, powar brakaa, radio, haatar, whltawalla. $2397 1966 Chevy Impola Sport Coupe V-8, automatic, powar staaring, radio, heeler, whltewatli, silver- 1967 Chevy Biscoyne 4-Door Sadan with V-S and automatic, blue mill. $1497 radio, haotar, aaaraam graan, ra-ducad to $1297 1967 ,s. Angelia Fora 2-Door Tutone rei 8nd Ivory ft tottlc gat mllaaga, | :ad to $697 1965 Ford Country Sedan Wagon pesiongor model, v-l, auto natlc, powar staaring, radio, eater, Emerald Graan. $797 1967 Plymouth 2-Door Sedan $1297 1967 Camaro Sport Coupe lo and haatar, bucket a: : shift, grsnada gold. $1497 1966 Ford Galaxle 500 Adgar hardtop, V4, automatic,' •ewpr staaring. radio, h—--trdpICal turquoise finish, til $997 $3795 1966 Ford Fqirlope 500 % Door With Vly bumpy career in tele-, j vision production behind him, is the ebullient, creative talent. Friendly, With a solid background os a network executive, is the production brains. "You spend your whole life trying to find a once-in-a-life-j time thing,” Schlatter commented. "I know, as far as I’m! concerned, ’Laugh-In’ is it.'-;'. \ He can now shrug off but will never forget some disastrous! moments in his career, includ-1 ing being fired. * + it I remember when we had struggled through five or six Judy Garland shows I was producing,” he recalled. "I was racing down the hall on the way to rehearsal when Freddie Fields, Judy’s agent, stepped out of an office and called out that he wanted to talk to me. * * ★ 'I said, *1 can’t now. I’ve got to go to work.’ He just said, ‘No you don’t.’ And that was the first I knew there was trouble and I’d been replaced.” McCarthy First W. C. Handy Award to Choral Director The first W. C. Handy award, named for the late, famous Negro composer, has been awarded by the National Association of Negro Musicians to Kenneth Brown Billups of St. Louis. Billups is director of choral music for Sumner High School, choir master at Antioch Baptist church and a member of the board of the Missouri State Arts Council. Producer Ponti Beats Rush Hour While Filming After beating the mosquitos, producer Carlo Ponti has beaten the rash hour. He just cat off the traffic in Vigevano, Italy. ' Ponti has been closely supervising the first film of his wife Sofia Loren since she gave birth to Carlo Jr. last December. To make things comfortable in this swampy area for both Sofia and Carlo Jr., Ponti had the site bombarded earlier this month with gallons of mosquito repellant launched from small planes. Now, to avoid human disturbance, he has persuaded local authorities to stop the traffic across the Northern Ticino River during the evening hours, while most of the filming for "The Sunflowers” is done. Many workers were forced to cross the river ferryboat in the past few days. Unruh 'Leading Candidate' Against Reagan California Assembly Minority Leader Jesse M. Unruh is the leading potential Democratic candidate for governor against Ronald Reagqn’s expected reelection bid in 1970, the copyright California Poll says. Unruh led both San Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto and S. I. Hayakawa, San Francisco State College president, In a sampling of Democratic voters, the 0oll reported yesterday. In a theoretical match between the three for the Democratic nomination in the June primary election, Unruh had 40 per cent, Hayakawa 25 per cent and Alioto 23 per cent. Field noted that Hqyakawa is not considered a likely candidate. MISS LOREN Rivfrs Am Is frtvlene Pxule .ACROSS 43 Fur-bearing I River of Roma mammal 6 River of Egypt 47 Forbidden 10 Greek letter 49 Herb eve II River of Brasil 50 Confine 13 Spanish region 53 River of. 14 Most London. domesticated 50 Depended 15 Hans down 57 Great Lake loosely 58 Profit 16 Greek goddess 59 Praying figure 18 Nut covering ___________ 21 Feminine DOWN Africa me (pL) 1 Law of Moses (3 weeds) 25 River of Spain 2 Picture 19 Lower limb 27 Impede legally 3 Ask for aims 20 Pound (ab.) 28 Fuiwd dross 4 Freudian term 22 Newspaper 31 European mlflMMmM river 33 Japaneas outcast 34 Ship's record 35 Paradise - 36 Government employes (ooll.) 37 Embellish 39 Monster 41 Sour liquid north western 36 Obtain 38 Keep 40 Artificial Model Airplanes Model Rockets Slot Racing Stapleton’s HOBBY SHOP OR l-llll Next to Holladium HI-00 et Poniieo Lk. Rd. QUALITY REPAIRS ON all make HEARING AIDS Loaners Available PONTIAC MALL OPTICAL A HEARING AI0 CENTER Phont 682-1113 HEARING AI0 DEALER D—11 23' 'giant-screen SEE US BEFORE YOU BUY! Space Command*' 600 VHF remote control TV tuning fife Admit color hunir nsion system featuring a lutionary new color ire tube that outoolors rightens outdetails and ■el forms every other t-screen color TV! Ths revolutionary new Chromacolor picture tube, with Zenith's pat* anted black-surround principle, brings ypu s color TV picture more then 100% brighter than any previous giant-screen color TV. Here'S how it works! Every giant-screen color picture tuba is covered with tiny red. green, end blue dote that make up the color TV picture. Previously, they have been placed close together on a gray background. “ ‘ mj............... patented mads the r rounded the Zamtn patented biac acraan—together with electron beam trackln created light-transmt ; in re, tuba. I unallar and e tuba also features a Bonded Non-Reflective Face Plate. • New Chromacolor Picture Tube • New Handcrafted Color Chassla TITAN 90 • New RGB Color Circuitry • New Chromatic Brain • New Color Commander Control • AFC—Automatic Fine-tuning Control— • Exclusive Super Gold Video Guard Tuner Bee Zenith CHROMACOLOR the moat true-to-lifo picture in color TV r§M!TH ^ SERVICE SPECIALISTS HOD’S FE 5-6112 110 ORCHARD LAKE AYE. 5 Hindu queen paragraph 6 Appellation BimtSHN 44"— BILL PROBLEMS? Being pressed to Meet Bills on Limited Funds? Call us for help. Our business is planning your finances tu 'got you out of debt without a loan. „esri". Call 338-0333 I DEBT Consultants M § of PONTIAC, INC. II 814 PONTIAC STATE BANK BLOG. 9 Adjective suffix 11 Solar disk 12 Box to hold 24 Bridge 28 Staff 28 European 29 Napoleonic victory site 30 Conflict in Greek drama 32 Modem 54 Ben language (ab.) 55 Brasilian 35 Betroth • macaw 45 Happening 48 Ethiopian tide 48 Men’* name 50 Unit of energy 51 Educational -group (ab.) IT r" n 5 ■r 8 9 10 TT vr 14 w r If X ' nr 21 2& 23 24 28 29 36 r 34 37 41 rr 45 l r r 50 61 52 S3 u 57 Bl 59 22 DEDICATED TO TOP QUALITY TV SERVICE TESA of OAKLAND COUNTYS Blake Redie A TV ItM W. Keren, Peidiae Ned’s Radio-TV FI 64116 111 Orehard Lain Rd, Pea list Jim’s Radio A TV Ml-1419 TIM Cooley Lake 84., Delta Lake Latimer Radle-TV OR I-2I9I Ryden TV Ft 4-1366 Al Reeding TV FE 4-1616 1199 W. Clarketon Rd., Lake Orion Blafanski Radio I TV 911-1618 1161 Wi Huron, Fantiae Sylvan Stereo ft TV IwMi’s Radio ft TV FE 44617 432 W. Huron, PSitiSO Tech TV Service IM-2468 1419 Watt Auburn. Rochester Trey TV-Rsdio ’ TR 64966 •Ml Uvemels, Trey Velko’s TV 996-1111 III N. Main, MUM Waited Lk. Kleotrenle* 614-2111 till E. West Maple Rd* Welled Lake Walton Radio-TV FE 1-WT 111 W. Walton, WK0. Inc., Sirvtel 674-1111 D—ia THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1969 SALE ENDS AUGUST 30th... DON'T DELAY! stormide mill■ THESE TRADITIONAL, COLONIAL, CONTEMPORARY AND SPANISH SOFAS WOULD DELIGHT YOO AT THEIR REGULAR PRICE OF *249.95! SELECT FROM STOCK READY FOR DELIVERY NOW OB SPECIAL ORDER CUSTOM FABRICS. EITHER WAY, CHOOSE ONE NOW. SALE PRICED AT JUST.... PONTIAC 361 S. SAGINAW-FE3-7901 OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY TIL 9 I iMimt DRAYTON 4945 DIXIE HWY • OR 4*0321 OPEN MONDAY, THURSDAY, FRIDAY TIL 9 convenient credit • decorator services I , A 4 .■f DEPARTMENT STORES iflantii ITEMS ON SALE WHILE QUANTITIES LAST • FIRST IN DISCOUNTING! • FIRST IN FASHIONI • FIRST IN VAIUEI W 10 Solid State Portable Radio 288 Value priced pocket size portable radial Battery earplug. Carry easel Jewelry Dept, and National Brand -Center Girls’14 Bonded Dresses Very newest stylet! Exciting plaids, Heidi dresses, pert lumper dresses and much morel 100% OrlortO acrylic bonded to acetate. K Polaroid Type 108 Color Pack Film We reserve the right to limit quantities. Jewelry Dept, and National Brand Center' SUPPLEMENT TO THE PONTIAC PRESS DIXIE HIGHWAY AT TUiGRAPH RD. - pontiac CHARGE IT! SHOP DAILY 9:30 AM TILL 10 P.M.... OPEN SUNDAYS NOON TILL 6 PM \ MICHIGAN MIDWEST SECURITY •ANKARD RAMKARD CHAROE SAVE ON INFANTS9 NEEDS* * I dollar buys so much for girls! V*\K 2-Pc. Flannel P.J.’s 100% cotton flan- _ (ft ffe nail With f eetl!In '/ for W print. Sin* 2 to 4. ' 9 J . 2-Pc. Knit Diaper Sets 100% cotton knHI Novelty trims! Sixes for W «C 0-3,9-18 mo*.. J No-Iron Dresses Pormantnt prMt short sleeversl Ko (J d.r» polyester/cot- 7, JOT ™ *< ton. 03, 9-18 mot. md 2-Piece Creeper Sets 2 f-*3 3-Piece Bootie Sets s« $ 2 100% acrylic setsl -Matching hat tool Siiot 9 to 18 mot. 100% acrylic total Handmade with novelty ambroid-eryl Sites to 12 months. Girls' Packaged Panties Pkg.«f 100% cottonl Elasticized waist, logsl Double crotch. White. 4 to 14. Girls' Knee-Hi Sox Soft hi-bulk Orion* acrylic and nylon blendtl Solid colon. 6 toll. Girls'4 to 14 Polo Shirts 100% cotton polotl Mock turtle neck, % tleevesl Solids in fancy knital Girls' Boll Bottoms Slacks 100% cottonl Band front, boner backl 4 to 14. Girls' Oxford Shirts 100% cotton oxford thlrtfl But. ton down collan, long tleevesl In white, pink or blue. 7 to 14. orauroy Bell Bottom Pants Boys9 6 to 16 Popular Belted Dress Pants Junior Boys9 Newest Bell Bottom Slack Sets Boys9 6 to 16 No-Iron Flannel Pajamas Boys9 6 to 16 No-Iron Flannel Shirts Boys9 6 to 16 No-Iron Dickey Shirts Boys9 6 to 16 No-Iron Body Shirts 1.99 1.99 CORDUROY BILL BOTTOM SLACKS 100% cotton corduroyl Fast bock; two front pockets. Vinyl belt. Sizes 6 to 16. BELL BOTTOM SLACK SET 3-pocket pants; vinyl belli Long sleeve shirt; 1 QQ 1 pocketl 100% rayon. Xs>r y Sizes 4 to 7. NO-IRON FLANNEL SHIRTS Permanent press poly- -m g\ ester/cotton blendl One I pocket. Sizes 6 to 16. ^ NO-IRON FLANNEL PAJAMAS Permanent press poly-ester/cotton blendl One pocketl Notch, piped cdlarl Snap front, elastic-side pants. 6 to 16. NO-IRON DICKEY SHIRTS Button down collar shirt _ with dickey insertl Per- I UQ manent press . cotton! -*■• -7 Solids, stripesl 6 to 16. NO-IRON BODY SHIRTS Permanent press Kodel® polyester/cotton blendl 7 QQ Chombrayl Long *syy sleeves! Sizes 6 to 16. NO-IRON BELL BOTTOMS Permanent press poly- j g~kd~k ester/cotton blend twllll I WW Two pocketsl 6 to 16. BELTED DRESS PANTS 100% Rayon. In Glen ~S plaids with wide belt. J_9 yy Assorted colors. 6 to 16. Official Size and Weight Football or Basketball 97 Your M ““1 EACH Both with deep pebble groin finish for sure grip and great playingl Terrific for outdoors! Buy several now and save morel Boys' or Girls' 2T HI-RISER BICYCLES 31m 20" hi-rlser with dual rear coaster and front caliper hand brakesl Cutlass style polo seatl Chrome plated lenders and white side wall tires. t »¥*• w & Placket and mock styles) Solids and stripesl 100% Ban-Ion® nylon. Choice of assorted colors. Boy*’ 6 to 16 Plaid, FLANNEL SHIRTS FJ Button down collar. Rayon and cotton flannell I Boys’ 4 to 12 Denim 5 pockets! 100% cotton denied Assorted colon. Jr. Boys* Lined Cotton flannel lined! 100% A | cotton corduroy with boxer ” J waistl 3 to 8. Boys* 3 to 16 Printed FLANNEL PAJAMAS Notch collar! Rayon *n cot- dk -m ton flannel prints! Coat ' I Style! J- Boy*’ 4 to 14 COTTON BRIEFS Cotton broadcloth Pkg./* ip 1 and knit bockl front, of T in| -* Boys’ 6 to 16 Dress or Sport SHIRTS BOYS' GLENOIT• PILE JACKETS OUR EVERY DAY PRICE 10.99 Reversible attached hoodl Glenoit" pile to nylon quiltl Assorted colors. Dress or sport shirts with long sleeves! Polyester/cotton blends. Junior Bays 4-PC. SHIRT SETS long sleeve shirt with tie, handkerchief and hosel Sizes 4 to 7. Wear it as French cuff or regu- iar cuff. Complete. Boys* 6 to 16 Acrilan* CP0 SHHITS Tapered 'n tails! Anchor buttonsl Plaids and solidsl Reprocessed wool, linen and nylon blendl S, M, L. Boys' Turtleneck Placket stylel Long sleeves! 100% Acrilan® acrylic knit. Assorted colors. Choose .from turtleneck, mock, or V-Insert styles! Raglan n' set-in sleeve! Orion® acrylic. Save! Men’s Better Quality Fashion Sweaters 4" Cardigans and slip-overs! Turtlenecks, mock turtlenecks, crew necksl Many button frontsl Solids and novelty stitchesl 100% wool, Orion'1 acrylics, and blends. Sizes S,M,L,XL. Men'* Permanent Pre** Pajamas 259 Long sleeve, long leg polyester and cotton broadcloth! Assorted patternsl A,B,C,D. Men'* One Site Stretch Hose ; 44c.. Dress and. crew socks! Choose from Ban-Lon® nylons, Wear-Dated Acrilan® acrylic, or Orion® octylic and nylon. In assorted colors. Fits 10 to 13. Men’s Permanent Press Dress Slacks Better quality slocks at tremendous savings. Buy a wardrobe nowl Hemmed or cuffed styles! Ivy belt loopsl Sizes 29-40, Men's Newest Knit Shirts 69 1 Fine cotton knits; all ma chine washablel Textured vest effect frontl S,M,L,XL Men's Newest Flare Slacks 2 99 Everybody's wearing it! See and save on these terrific new styles! Rayon and ace tote blends! Fancy patterns in checks, plaids) Hemmed bottoms! Sizes 29 to 36. lit' Pi Ladie•* Matching 2-PC. GOWNI & DUSTER SETl *4*2 Nylon tricot sheer robe over matching acetate tricot gownl Pink, Blue, ‘Maize, Mint. S, M, L. Ladies* No-Iron IHJSTERS *4*2 Permanent press Ko-deT polyester and cot* ton! Multi-color scallop embroidery, applique gripper trimsl Lace trims, too! Sizes S,M,L asat-m I Ladies* Nylon BRA SUP *4*2 Lightly padded! Kodel* polyester covered by soft* nylon tricot) Elastic sides and back. Adjustable straps) White, Pink, Blue, Maize. 32 to 36B. IS BRA SALE! 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YOUR CHOICEI Filled pencil cases with pencils, eraser, / U‘ sharpener and rulerl ■ ■ BINDER & :ioo fount filler PAPER Handy blue canvas binder and 300 sheets of 10V4 x 8" filler paper. Fits official ring bindersl School Supplies BONANZA YOUR CHOICEI Eraser pak, compass, husky pencils, carry-all pouch, colored pencils, school pakl 23: YOUR CHOICEI MB gsy* \imrm ' I WHITE GLUE »r SCHOOL GLUE 2 for 49* Safe and non-toxiel 4 fl. oz. each. 64 CRAYOLA' CRAYONS Built-in sharpener, 64 vivid colors for school or home! _ 48 \ Hi-Intensity LAMP SALE OUR EVERY DAY PRICE 2.99 U.L, Listed! Gooseneck style! 6 ft. cord and plugl A tremendous value! Buy now! TOY BONANZA PHONOGRAPH COMBINATION Operates on batteries or AC house current) Phonograph plays 33}'] or 45 rpm records! AM radio plays with exceptional tonal quality! Complete with carry handle! A fantastic buy! National Brand Center COMBINATION LOCK Rust-proof, permanently lubricated! 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STEREO LP RECORDS •Jackie Oleason •Paul Maurlat •Joel Grey • New Vaudeville Band •Roger Williams • Leslie Gore •Jack Jones • Louie Armstrong •The Smothers Brothers • Many more 111 YOUR CHOICEI OUTSTANDING PURCHASE! ASSORTED TABLE LAMP SHADES Choose fabric-over-parch-ment or vinyl shades to Jfit assorted lamp sizes and typesl 1 29 French Crimped Rayon Thick, bouncy French crimped royonl Deep shag, fringed ends! Tweed colors ... . Blue/ green. Avocado, Topaz / /gold, red. Viscose Rayon puff eVERY DAY \ PRICi 13.88 Smartly fringed; 100% French crimped rayonl Solid color or tweed color rugs! Dense shag pile! Washable, durable, fringed. Non-skid backs! Reg. 7.97 Reg. 19.97 5V& Ft. round ____$7 8 Vi Ft. round ....$16, Handsome loop pile tweed rugsl Foam padded noskid backsl Luxurious decorator colorsl OUR EVERY DAY PRICE 3.97 45"round 200% Viacoae Rayon V iacoae Tweed » Loop and cut pilel Traditional de- r\ sign in a wide color range! 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M 1st Quality Fitted PERCALE SHEETS Type 180 luxuriously silky smooth fine cotton percale sheets) 4 elastic cornersl White. FITTED FULL SHEET PILLOW CASES 42x36"—pkg. of 2 for 78c Durable New Blend BLANKETS OUR EVERY DAY' PRICE 3.44 allergenic, washablel Fits twin or double ' bed. Pink,. gold, flame and avocado. 72x90". >977 \T 23^ Q V* ,Oo Teens’ and Women’s Teens’ and Women’s Teens’ and Women’s SASSY BRASSY SLEEK ’N SIMPLE LOAFABLE NEW STUDDED SUPON 1 ‘Special 1 55 Special 166 «hl 1 Purchase! f Purchase! J L Easy-going casual of antiqued vinyl/ trimmed with shiny brass \ studs! Wheeled extension sole! Brown. Sizes 5 to 10. (imported) Campus favorite! Hardware casual of scuff-resistant vinyl. Combination last. Brown. Sizes 5 to 10. (Imported) Special Purchase! PATENT 288 All-occasion pump or shiny patent vinyl. Graceful midheel! Licorice. Sizes 5 to 10. (Imported) Men’s and Boys* ONTEMPORARYl CLASSICS Boys9 Men5 4“ 5 66 Dress 'n Casual favorites! 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Choose Loafable or T-Strap^in antiqued brown; also he-she slip-on in brown smooth or black patent. 8 Vi to 12, or 12Vi to 3. (Imported) Imported 100% Acrylic Full Fashioned CARDIGAN SWEATERS Finely knit long sleeve cardigans! Detailed pointelle and cable stitch fronts. Finished with ribbed bottom and cuffs. Extra matching yam and buttons! Washable. White, creamy pastels and fashion-right dark solids, sizes 34 to 40. Double Knit 2- Way Stretch 100% Nylon WIDE-LEG SLACKS Fashion's , newest look! Set-in waistband, stitched crease! Flat and ottoman knit stRchl 20-inch wide legsl 8 darts in front and back. Black, brown, navy, loden and turquoise! 10 to 18. am Political Figure Gets School Post A' former congressman and longtime political figure who gained a reputation as "the watchdog Of the taxpayers’ dollars” is now on the Waterford Township Board of Education. Billie 8. Parnum, 53, was named by the board at its regular meeting last night to a vacant school board seat until next June. Famum, a Democrat who lives at 7135 Hatchery, last ran for office in 1906 when he was defeated by Republican Jack McDonald in the race for U.S. representative from the 19th Congressional District. RARE APPOINTMENT \ A former state auditor general, Famum breezed into Washington, D.c., in 1964 as s freshman congressman noted as a liberal Democrat with a reputation for protecting the taxpayers' dollar. During his first term, he Was named to the House imtopriattar Committee, a Big T$p Spell j | Circus is gone, but' Us magic School Affairs Pontiac principal given second school to rm-PAGE ^OU. '.3; Czechoslovakia Tanks, tlroopa pulled out' of resgve .Ptipipie PAGE Aft. Area News '. • • ififc . Creesword Puttie a D-U Comics Edttortab M Pam lid Garden ...C-7-C4 “Needless to say, this government is endangering the well being of every serviceman who enters combat zones with a hearing defect,” Rogers added. Rogers noted that the Walsh-Healy Act requires the Defense Departemnt to refuse contracts to anyone exposing workers to noise levels above 90 decibels. ★ * ★ At the same time, he pointed out, servicemen are exposed to 164 decibels on rifle ranges, far above the 150-decibel damage point; 135 decibels in tanks, above the pain level; and even nolser situations when artillery and tank cannon are fired. One bit of, possible protection, suggested as standard by Dr. Jerry L. Northern, chief audiologist at Water Reed Army Hospital, is the type of ear->muffs used by civilian airport crevj EAR-SHATTERING SOUNDS — A soldier at tank-firing exercises at Ft. Knox, Ity., presses his helmet against his ears. Earmuffs similar to those used by dvtitota airport crews would help prevent ear damage from high-decible noise, but some bass doctors an reluctant to recommend them because of their $6.00 per Viet Premier ’Quits in Battle With Thieu From Our News Wires SAIGON — Prime Minister Tran Van Huong resigned today in the climax to a five-week .struggle with President Nguyen Van Thieu who sought a premier who could get along with the South Vietnamese legislature. Informed government sources, however, said Huong in fact had been fired from his post by Thieu. They recalled Huong’s repeated statements that “I will not resign unless the president asks me to." W a ★' A statement issued by Thieu’s office said tiie ailing 66-year-old Huong “has agreed to let the president make the decision of forming a new cabinet.”. A spokesman for . Huong said- the premier had agreed to the statement and that it would be correct to say he was stepping aside. However, he did not formally resign. The statement issued to newsmen fell short of a formal resignation by the ailing 66-year-old Huong, but a palace official Said: “If amounts to a form of Huong, a former schoolteacher who escaped , a Vietcong assassination attempt last March, left after an impnm* over efforts to reshuffle Thieu’s cabinet. TJie office of President Nguyen Van Related Story, Page A-8 Thieu made the announcement of Huong’s resignation, which political observers said could bring a major crisis in the South Vietnamese government. ★ ★ ★ Huong’s most likely successor is a deputy prime minister, Gen. Tran Thien Khiem. ! PRESSURE BY U.S. The U.S. Embassy in Saigon had put pressure on Thieu to keep Huong in office, political sources said, on the theory that if Khiem became prime minister, South Vietnam would return to a near military government. It was the second time Huong, had resigned. He also served three months as prime minister in 1964. Huong, a former school teacher and mayor of Saigon, had been the target of Thicai’s own political alliance, the National Social Democratic Front. The alliance had asked Thieu on Aug. 9 to remove Huong. . The appeal from the political group was issued during a period Thieu was reported working on changes in his cabinet. Political sources said at the time the alliance’s call for Huong’s ouster would never have been made without approval of Thieu. ★ ★ * Reports had circulated as early as last June 19 thfct Thieu was thinking of asking Huong to resign in an effort to broaden the political case of the South Vietnamese government. Huong incurred dislike of students who thought him tough when he was prime minister in 1964, In later times he was criticized because of tax reforms and higher import duties and accused of failure to stamp out corruption among national officials. FLOOD DEVASTATION—The car in the foreground was carried by floodwaters from the driveway of the owner’s home near Roseland, Va., and buried in nearly four feet of mud. The AP Wirophoto death toll from Hurricane Camille since it hit the Gulf Coast Sunday now stands at well over 300. Flood Crest Nearing Richmond Waterford Teacher, Board Clash By DICK ROBINSON While teachers are being cut and enrollment is increasing, school administrative positions are increasing, a teacher claimed at the Waterford School Board meeting last night. Board members and the district’s acting superintendent denied the claim during a heated discussion with James Matteson, a teacher and acting president of the Waterford Education Association. * h W1 In refuting Matteson’s claims of top many, administrators, acting Supt. John Pagen said he would “get a job somewhere else” if it was found the district had too many administrators for a district of its size. Matteson criticized the board for allegedly creating three central administration poaitions to replace an administrator who resigned. REFERS TO CASE He was referring to M. Barrett Vorce, associate superintencent of personnel and instruction, who resigned. Richard Higginbotham, principal of Crary Junior - High School, was then moved up to director of personnel in charge of all employe relations. Roy Alexander, assistant superin-' tendent for secondary schools, was made assistant superintendent for instruction and Don Smith, principal at Manley Elementary School, was temporarily moved to central administration to take care of duties of the vacant administrative assistant position. Pagen and other board members explained that no administrators have been added but that the administration has undergone an organizational change to make It more efficient. ‘ONLY ADDITION’ The director of personnel is the only new position added this year because the duties of the lob were handled by three different administrators last year, said Pagen. I One new central administration post was added but two elementary school Pleasant Weekend Forecast for Area The weatherman Is giving Pontiac-area residents just what they wanted — a pleasant weekend. Here to the U.S. Weather Bureau’s official day-by-day forecast: TODAY—Sunny and pleasant with high 76 to 63. Clear and a little warmer tonight, the low 50 to 56. principalships were cut plus a position in the INDICOM project, Pagen said. ★ * * Cherokee Hills and Covert Elementary Schools and. Adams and Drayton Plains schools will share a principal this year. Matteson was scolded by a trustee and Pagen for making his remarks. Trustee Louis Schimmel Jr. criticized Matteson for making charges without all the facts “in a room with voters.’I “It’s beyond me how people can come in here and criticize the board and administration when we’ve had no teachers’ strikes or student disturbances in the past few years,” Pagen commented. * * * Meanwhile, teachers^ and school officials report considerable progress in teacher negotations on noneconomic issues after a 12-hour mediation session which ended early this morning. But the big issues — salary and fringe benefits, class size, agency shop and multiyear contract — still remain unsettled, Pagen said. Mediation is set to continue Monday. RICHMfOND, Va, (AP) — The James River, swollen with muddy floodwaters pouring into its basin from the state’s mountainous western region, continued its destructive advance to the Atlantic today. This capital awaited the river’s crest, while behind was left a swath of landslides, crushed homes and 46 known dead, and jat least 100 missing and feared dead. WWW While floodwaters took their toll In drownings, some rescue workers in mountainous Nelson and Amherst coun-ties-hardest hit of -the flood region — speculated that more victims will be found buried under landslides. The rain that touched off the flooding and landslides was a vestige of Hurricane Camille, which tossed 8 to 12 inches of rain on the area as she passed through Tuesday and Wednesday on her way to her death in the Atlantic. ‘EARTH PEELED OFF’ “That ground had all the water it could stand before the rain ever started,” a rescue tyam leader said. “That latest rain just peeled every bit of earth off those mountains, trees and all. It took them right down to the rock.” New fears; of disaster came last night. State police reported three 1,000-gallon propane gas tanks and 10 smaller ones, all described as “highly explosive and extremely hazardous,” were missing and “presumed gone down the James River” from a plant south of Buena Vista. Workmen labored around the clock in Richmond to throw tip earthen dikes. Low-lying industrial and residential areas were evacuated. HUNDREDS HOMELESS The flooding has left hundreds, perhaps thousands, homeless and staying in churches and other emergency shelters. State police said at least 100 persons were missing, and one rescue worker said, “There, are people under those slides we’ll never find.” w w A Meanwhile, the storm-shattered 20-mile stretch of coast west of Gulfport, Miss., was clear of most refugees today while soldiers and Seabees bulldozed wreckage in the final Btages of a search for more victims of Camille. Gov. Johh Bell Williams said a minimum of 230 were known dead along the Mississippi coast. However, a Mississippi Highway Patrol inspector said today that some of | Clothes Make the Man...Unsafe! «BAN ANTONIO, Tex. (DPI)—A patrolman was cruising about suburbia just after sunrise yesterday when he saw a gentleman removing his clothes and stuffing them into the trunk of his caiC The curious officer pulled over to the curb to ask the man what was coming off. , , ★ ★ “Look officer, I’ve been out all night and the front door is locked. My wife will really raise a fuss if she finds out I’m just getting home,” the husband said. The officer sat in his car and watched in disbelief and the husband strolled casually up the walkway, stopped halfway to pick up the morning paper, finished tij© journey to the front door and banged on it. ■ * * * “Honey, I’m sorry to wake you up,” the husband said when his sleepy wife answered the door. “But I went out to get the paper and I locked myself out.” That’s the story the officer told headquarters. Military Hit on Gl Hearing Peril WASHINGTON (AP) - The ranking member of the House public health subcommittee today asked Army Secretary Stanley R. -Resor to explain why the Army hasn’t followed its own recommendations to prevent partial deafness to trainees. Rep. Paid G. Rogers, D-Fla., also asked Secretary of Defense Melvin R. Laird in another letter to explain why the separate services haven’t joined to prevent ear damage from the noise of weapons during training. “It’s unexplainable for one service to the bodies recovered -yesterday in the Pass Christian area had been washed out of a cemetery by the hurricane winds and high tide. ★ ■ ★ , ★ Dr. Frank Wiygul, state health director, said the potentially hazardous health situation along the coast was under control with no signs of epidemic. * ★ ★ A survey of damage was far from complete but the Red Cross said its preliminary count showed 4,717 detroyed in the Gulf Coast area. The stench of death remained heavy in many areas. The remains of animals and fish were being covered up with lime. be doing one thing, another to be doing nothing and none of them coordinated,” Rogers said In an interview Rogers also said the government has a double standard on prevention of deafness-requiring civilian contractors of the Defense Department to keep decibel levels low while needlessly exposing troops in training to damaging noise. AP REPORT CITED In his letters to Laird and Resor, Rogers cited an Associated Press report that thousands of soldiers in .training suffer significant hearing losses because the Army doesn’t proride proper ear protection. ★ ★ * ‘We have a stake in assuring that every man who enters combat to physically fit and not in any way hampered by such major or minor hearing difficulties which apparently have been resulting from this exposure to noise in boot camp,” Rogers wrote to Man Is Charged in City Shooting A companion of the escaped prisoner who allegedly shot a Pontiac detective Wednesday was in jail today in lieu of a total $53,000 bond on charges connected with the shooting. Elton Rainey, 22, of 260 W. Wilson will face examination Aug. 28 on two charges of attempted murder and one charge of stealing a police car. ★ ★ He to charged with attempting to murder Lt. John DePauw and Sgt. John Williams when the, two plainclothes detectives tried to arrest George McCormick, 26, on an armed robbery charge. The two allegedly fled in a stolen police car. * ★ ★ McCormick, a Louisiana transient whose address is unknown, to still sought on two charges of attempted murder, one auto theft charge, and two charges of armed robbery, police say. SECOND HELD A youth arrested at the scene of the shooting, Clyde Alexander, 19, of 219 Raeburn, is being held in lieu of $25,000 bond on an armed robbery charge. .it it ★ Pontiac detectives sought the robbery warrant as a result of questioning Alexander, Rainey and another youth arrested after the DePauw shooting. The third suspect, Anthony C. Williams, 18, of 184 Raeburn, was released. ★ ★ ★ Rainey to expected to be arraigned to- day in connection with the same robbery charged to Alexander, a recent boldop at Western Union offices at 11S. Perry. ★ ★ ★ DePauw will be released from Pontiac General Hospital tomorrow, hospital authorities said. The 53-year-old detective suffered head and arm wounds. / 3viFT , / . THEjfoftTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1969 A—3 " Varns of N. Korean Thredfs lens Nixon Reds Bellicose as Ever SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) - South Korean President Chung Hee Park bellves the North Korean Communists are as “bellicose” as ever, and may be preparing “new disturbances and new threats.” The Korean interjected a blunt warning to President Nixon last night into a series of diplomatic toasts at a state banquet. Park and Nixon wind up a two-day summit conference today, putting the finishing touches to a joint communique expected to serve notice that any settlement in Vietnam will not diminish U.S. support for South Korea. While a small crowd of antiwar demonstrators clashed briefly with police outside the St. Francis Hotel last night, Path and Nixon exchanged toasts pledging mutual cooperation and support. They met for two hours earlier to discuss U.S. aid to South Korea and Korea’s military security. Nixon told the banquet audience that the United States was grateful for the sacrifices being made in Vietnam by 50,000 South Horen troops. “But we also have tremendous respect for the fact -that despite the military burdens that the Republic of Korea must bear,” he added, “Economic progress has moved forward at a dimension no one thought was possible.” * * * Park dealt in much stronger terms. He said that while the Seoul government supported Nixon’s efforts to end the Vietnamese war, “the. very aggressive North Korean Communists' presented a continuing problem. Park stopped short of asking additional U.S. aid. But he said: "Only when the Initiatives and efforts of Asians themselves and the cooperation of the United States are well-coordinated and balanced together so as to meet the needs of Asia is an effective way, Can we expect great effect from the new approach of the United States for the stability and progress of this region. “But should these efforts become Imbalanced for want of positive efforts on the part of either side, new disturbances and threats will inevitable recur in this region.” ANTIWAR PROTESTERS — A group of antiwar protesters . as wirMriMW arrive at San Francisco’s St. Francis Hotel on a cable car and participating in a formal dinner last night. There were to join crowd demonstrating outside the hotel, where Pres- many demonstrators but few incidents to mar the evening idents Nixon and Chung Hee. Park of Korea were meeting for the visiting dignitaries. Birmingham Bank to Offer International _ Credit Cards BIRMINGHAM - Introduction of the internationally accepted Maste'r Charge Astro-Card credit system was announced this week for Birmingham-Bloomfield Bank: Some 40,000 area families will receive the cards by mid-October tu « it . it According to John E. Thompson, Birmingham-Bloomfield area residents have been without the convenience of a nationally accepted bank credit card. “The greater metropolitan area was the-only major U.S, city and market area not being provided the type of credit card system which is rapidly carrying us into the checkless, cashless society of the future,” Thompson said. CASH ADVANCES The Master Charge card allows its holder to take cash advances up to $300 per day, This can be raised by application on an individual basis. / Small personal loans are available with the Master charge card. Personal checks ate guaranteed up to $100. BIRMINGHAM - A record number of teachers new to the Birmingham schools will be looking for housing withip the next two months. '■ Kenneth' Nagley, assistant superin? tendent of schools, said that more than 300 teachers —■ most with families — Arabs Protest Fire at Shrine By United Press International Anti-Israeli demonstrations broke out in Nablus on the Israeli-occupied West Bqnkiof the Jordan River today in the wake of a fire yesterday that swept one of the Arab world's holiest shrines, the El Aqsa Mosque in Jerusalem. Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon and nearly all other Arab nations accused Israeli arsonists of setting the blaze. The Israeli government denied any connection with the incident and named a commission to investigate it. Newmen at Nablus said the Arab demonstrators dispersed after Israeli troops moved in. The Jerusalem Moslem Council called for an inquiry to be conducted by the United Nations. The Moslem council said a young man wearing khaki fatigue clothing was seen running from the mosque a few minutes before the blaze broke out and called it a case of arson. Storm Debbie Veers MIAMI (UPI) - Hurricane Debbie, the “guinea pig” storm, moved perilously close to the resort Island of Bermuda, then swerved toward the open seas today where its UO-mlle-an-hour winds posed a threat only to ships. Under Study by Milliken Panel School Tax Reform Plan Drafted represents a r-ew high in teacher population for Birmingham. Especially needed are single-room rentals for young men or women, and one and two-bedroom apartments. Birmingham residents are urged to contact tile board of education office with appropriate housing suggestions. LANSING (AP) - An end to organizational exemptions from state taxes, a local option to substitute income taxes for property taxes, and a basic $3,000 homestead property 4ax exemption are provisions of a plan now under study by Gov. William 4 Milliken's Commission to Study Refosm of Michigan's Education System. ; Milliken and his six-member commission met yesterday wiih representatives of a Citizens Advisory Council to discuss alternatives to pay the more than 91-tUllion price of public elementary and secondary education in Michigan. * * ★ Members of the advisory council, largely educators, appeared generally to favor the plan, drafted by eight members of the State Association of Administration. Russel E. Wilson, education professor at the University of Michigan and Stanley Hecker of Michigan State University headed the drafting panel. Milliken and the commission did not comment on the plan or discuss it publicly. They have been meeting privately to draft the reform recommendations Milliken is expected to make to the Legislature after it reconvenes Oct. 6. Under the plan, public education would continue to be financed by both state and locally assessed and collected funds. Four basic innovations are provided: • A $3,000 homestead property tax exemption. • Local option to finance school costs from Income taxes rattier than property tax revenue. • Elimination of t a x exemptions to organizations. • Local district funds equal to t h e mmimiismitmm The Weather Full U.S. Weather Bureau Report PONTIAC AND VICINITY-Suiay and pleasant today and Saturday. Clear and a tittle wanner tonight. High today 14 to 82. Low tonight 50 to 54. High Saturday N to M. Sunday outlook: Little warmer and continued fair. Winds light and variable l to IS miles per hour. Probabilities of precipitation: near zero today, tonight and Saturday. Ltwmt ttmptriTur* preceding I * At I g.m.t Wind Velocity 1 m.p.h Direction: Verleble tun let! Frldev df 7:14 p.m. Sun rlete teturdey at 5:47 i.m. Moon gNl Sgtyfiev •* 1fs*4 e tn. Mean rltet Friday at 4:14 p.m. ThurMay It n recorded it a.m. it m. ... It:JO p.m, __ . Eicanaba ft SO Duluth at IS Flint 7* 41 Fort Werlh 07 77 O. Ranidi i* 44 ijmasmHM II » Houghton 74 40 Ken404 City gt 47 HOUdMan U. 74 41 LM Andiiet ft 70 Jackeon ao m Miami loach 07 Laming at at 7“ Marquette » 41 =L___________ Muekeeon 71 si NOW York OOP Year Age In Fanllac Lowell temperature .. Albuquerq Atlanta Higneet and Lawoat Tan...---I Tide note ht et Years I In 1014 as in mi 74 i 71 10 Phoenix 70 *1 Pittsburgh ■ ■ . 74 44 St. Loull ft 54 i 04 44 Tampa f j 71 •o 77 s. Cana City 07 « 01 d (. Francisco 00 5) 74 » S. Ste. Marla 75 41 74 44 iaalile 75 55 71 54 Tucson 101 40 II 55 Washington II 41 value of state and county real and personal property within the district regardless of whether property is owned privately or by a governmental body. TEACHER-PUPIL RATIO Hecker, one of the authors of the plan, said it envisions an average teacher-pupil ratio of one to 25, it it it The plan alsoi would change education administration at the county and In- termediate district level. Smaller, often rural, districts without hill programs from kindergarten through high School would be eliminated or attached to larger districts. Such centralization, it is said, would increase a district’s iaxing base and provide more funds to run It. ' * . * * * Funds' for construction of n e w buildings or equipment purchase would be based on a state bonding system as would local debt retirement programs. BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP -4* James E. Glynn, 4150 Orchard Way, was appointed chairman of Torch Drive Youth Day,, „ Glynn will work with United Foundation officials .in planning the new activity for tiie October fund-raising campaign. Under the program, 25 public and parochial high school students from Oakland, Wayne and Macomb Counties will be selected as youthful counterparts to Torch Drive officials. Glynn is director of public relations for the National Bank of Detroit. Parents of Mary Jo Win Delay on Autopsy Ruling WILKES-BARRE, Pa. (AP) - Mary Jo Kopechne’s parents have won a delay in a court move hvDlst. Atty. Edmund Dinis of New BSRord, Mass., to have her body exhumed for an autopsy. Dinis had hoped for a final ruling in time for the scheduled Sept. 3 opening of an inquest into the accident a month ago in which the pretty, blonde secretary, 28, drowned 'after a car driven by Sen. Edward M. Kennedy, D-Mass., plunged off a bridge. Instead of hearing the petition itself next Monday as planned, Judge Bernard C. Brominskl of Common Heas Court has decided to set aside that day for arguments for its dismissal. After a 40-minute conference yesterday with Dinis and lawyers for Mary Jo’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Kopechne, the judge said: “The hearing scheduled for Monday is temporarily postponed. Instead, we will hear arguments at that time on the motions presented to the court.” . Brominskl said the arguments might be completed in two hours, but that he probably would not hand down a decision until several days later. Dinis declined to say whether the delay would force him to postpone the inquest: The Kopechne’s claim Pennsylvania is “without jurisdiction and authority” to exhume the body. Miss Kopechne is buried in a small cemetery in nearby Larksville. A Dukes County, Mass., medical examiner reported the cause of her death as drowning. He did not perform an autopsy. The Kopechnes, who claim an autopsy now would serve no useful purpose, said in their dismissal motion that Dinis’ petition was an attack on the findings of the medical examiner. Arson Su Bail at $5,000 A city youth is being held in lieu of 95,000 bail on an arson charge today after hjs arrest in connection with the Wednesday night fire-bombing of a city commissioner’s home. Eddie Logan Jr., 17, of 402 Linda Vista will face examination on the charge Aug. 28 before Pontiac District Court Judge James R. Stelt. He was arraigned yesterday. ★ ★ ★ A 16-year-old youth who was also questioned in connection with the bombing was turned over to juvenile authorities, according to city detectives. Minor damage was done to the home of District 5 Commissioner Robert F. Jackson, 1075 Featherstone, when three flaming bottles were thrown at it. ★ it it The night before the fire bombs were thrown, Jackson had made a plea to all citizens of the city to cooperate in bringing an end to a rash'Of fire-bombings on the racially mixed lower East Side. Stickup Bogs a Roll CHICAGO (UPI) - The bandit who robbed -the Ancona Bakery of 915 yesterday got away with the dough all right, but may end up in a jam when he tries to pass the money. Bakery owner Mrs. Henrietta Buoni-contie stuffed the loot-into a paper bag with a sweet roll dripping With strawberry jam. Ulster Reserves Will Yield Arms LAKE CONDITIONS: St. Clair-Variable winds, mostly northwest, 5 to 11 knots today becoming leas than 18 knots tonight. Huron—Northwest to west winds, I to II haste today, becoming west to southwest, 8 to 12 knots tonight. Erie—North to northwest winds, It to 11 knots today, becoming light and variable tonight. BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) -Britain’s military commander i n Northern Ireland ordered the vast majority of the controversial all-Protestant police reserves today to surrender their weapons. The province’s Roman Catholic minority had blamed the police reservists, blown as the B-Specials, for most of the eight dead in last week’s Protestant Catholic riots. The specials number about 8,400. Lt. Gen. Sir Ian Freeland, commander- Story, Pictures Pago A-5 in-chief and newly assigned head of all internal security, said the order means also that no armed specials will be operating on the streets of Belfast, Londonderry and other cities, starting tonight. He said the specials* duties in Belfast would be limited'to guarding docks and other vulnerable points. Elsewhere, they will guard vital installations near the frontier with the Irish Republic but will not man the frontier Itself. The general's action is almost certain to bring a furious, negative response from militant Protestants who regard the force as Northern Ireland’! main bulwark against riots and republican subversion. The Rev. Ian Paisley, one of the leading Protestant militants, gave a hint of this reaction even before the general made his announcement. He told a news conference Protestants “should prepare themselves for the very worst.” Death Claims GM Exec's Son Dennis J. McDonald, 22-year-old son of Mr. and Mrs.. F. James McDonald of 1233 Vaughn, Bloomfield Hills, died yesterday. His father is a General Motors vice president and general manager of Pontiac-Motor Division. Requiem Mass will be 11:30 a.m., tomorrow at St. Hugo of the Hills Catholic Church, Bloomfield Hills, with burial in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery, Southfield. ★ ★ ★ A Rosary will be said at 9 tonight at Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. McDonald'was a premedical student In his senior year at the University of Detroit. He was employed as an orthopedic orderly at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. Surviving are his parents; one sister; Marybeth, at home; two brothers, Timothy; a student at John Carroll University, Cleveland and John, a student at Albion College; and grandparents Mrs. F. J. McDonald of Saginaw and Mr. and Mrs: F. A. Dettenthaler of Essex-ville. Memorial tributes may be made to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital. • Waterford Stalls New Sex Ed Classes There won’t be any new sex education programs in Waterford Township Schools this coming school year. That was the decision of the board of education last night acting upon a request of the State Legislature. However, throe trustees then criticised the state lawmakers for “buttiag their noses” Into * NATIONAL WEATHER — Showers are due tonight over the Gulf Coast from Tnaoto Florida, extending to Georgia. An isolated shower is also expected over sgKmrtao, with men showers due over the Southwest from tho,Texai Panhandle owmbm lfobraaka sag Wyfonin*. It wtll be sCmy elsewhere over most of the nation. Trustee Eldon C. Roaegart, a Lansing lobbyist for Oakland Schools, remarked: “If the Legislature can do this, there is a danger it can call a halt- to almost anything in any school system. tip; M„ “It is unfortunate that Waterford has to alt back and wait until the people hi The Legislature had authorized school districts to offer sex education classes, but then told districts to hold up on tbs programs until the State Department of Education could draw up guidelines. Roaegart along with Trustee Mrs. Peggy L, Wood said they would rehio-tautiy follow theafoto mandate. They praised the dedicated efforts of those who had developed set education guMehnee far use tin the district aad particularly at Silver Lake Elementary School. Board president Philip M. Hampton commented that ho didn’t thitik the school system boulg be dictated to by cause physical, mental and emotional impairment in children,” among other aex education at Silver Idle School *» scrapped by the board because of O protest Bom pstoato Had (he Legislature*! Lata* in the meeting, the chairman for the local Parents for Moral Education praised the decision of the board but than wamad the trustees. IDEAS INCLUDED Geraki O. Bowman, 3829 Hasaleftt, told the beard he wants Ideas from Ms group induded in any new sex utiuesttftn pro-grams or else he trottli make it an issue to the next school election. 1 He; opposed the ptopsesd Wi program bodiiat*' ¥ would "weaken family -relationships, decline more 1^ and The pricy adopted-by the board for 1999*79 says: • Thai district won’t ^develop any new aex education programs this school year or until «tef| guidelines are ready. • Sex education programs for adoits 1 will be expanded In foe self-supported community school program. • It 4i hoped a sprinkling of sax education will "till be taught in tbe schools. Piupda may... excuse their children from such toptefcOntymodfic # adaption neurons are outlawed. , w p? board will begin develieplag tts . ^pSawr ammM 48 West Huron Street PRESS Pontiac, Michigan 48056 FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1968 I. Finoiuu, II AUO MCCULLV . Richard M. Baundm* Area Lifesavers Lauded Only the resourcefulness of two volunteer lifesavers — Oak Park residents visiting in Waterford Township— stood between five-year-old Julie Carpenter and certain death by drowning in Otter Lake. The youngster had fallen into five feet of water where site was struggling when the cries of an onlooker brought 15-year-old Diana Lynn Mullica on the run. She pulled the drowning girl to safety. At this point, Mrs. Dorothy Bodner appeared and, though Julie showed no signs of life, proceeded to administer mouth-to-mouth resuscitation for the , nearly 30 minutes it took to revive the victim of the mishap. ; ★ ★ Civilian citations have been recommended for Mrs. Bodner and Diana, both of whom richly merit the recognition. , Their joint act of heroism also underscores how essential it is for young and old to be familiar with the basic principles and practices of first aid, as the effective application* of mouth-to-mouth resuscitation in this case abundantly demonstrated. Benefits Seen in Farm Bill The \Vorst Kind! You don’t have to be a farmer to know that for several decades agriculture has received a great deal of attention from Government planners. Federal program has been piled on top of Federal program allegedly to help the fanner—at a cost of billions of dollars. All of the farm programs had two things in common: they have been inordinately costly, and they have been failures. The Food and Agriculture Act of 1965 haafbeen no exception. The political decisions of Government supply - management efforts have left the farmer with a basic imbalance between prices he receives and the prices he must pay—an imbalance that is growing worse rather than better. According to an article in Nation’s Agriculture, a publication of the American Farm Bureau Federation, a bill has now been introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives titled the Agricultural Adjustment Act of 1969. ★ ★ ★ It takes a new approach to the question of Government farm programs. Under the proposed legislation, commercial farmers would be moved as rapidly as possible to the market system; that is, crops would be bought and sold on a supply-demand basis, thus removing from the backs of taxpayers and farmers costly subsidies and oppressive controls. For smaller, marginal farms, the proposed legislation would make available long-range land retirement programs and other forms of assistance to help the small farmer get started in a new business or trade. ★ ★ ★ The measure, supported by the American Farm Bureau Federation, is in keeping with the modem agricultural needs of the Nation. It is alsd in keeping with the U.S. economic system because it recognizes the advantages of a free market, which would eventually save billions of tax dollars.* Above all, it promises a way to get politics out of agriculture. David Lawrence Says: Military Cutbacks Are Big Risk , WASHINGTON - Congressional pressure has forced Secretary of Defense Melvin Laird to a n n ounce a reduction in the armed forces as well as in military expenditures. He frankly ■ d ee l ared in a news c onference yesterday that "it is clear our defense readiness will be weakened." What has happned, o f course, is that Congress has told the Defense Department that its appropriations will be diminished, 'and the big question is where and how the cuts shall be made. mittee, does not see any “apparent end” to the conflict. He says that, while he favors a gradual troop withdrawal as a signal to the enemy that the United States is sincere in its desire to end the war, he is doubtful about the outcome. ★ ★ * He adds: "I am not too encouraged that a quick end is in sight, nor am I persuaded that we should rush out of Vietnam unilaterally in such a way to give the impression of defeat." Meanwhile, the Russians are building up their armed services and seemingly are preparing for a large war. They are, to be sure, concerned about the hostile atti- tude of the Red Chinese ands have deployed some rocket and nuclear forces on the border between the two countries. WOULD AFFECT JAPAN If the Russians and Red Chinese get into a war, this will affect Japan and the smaller countries of Asia. There are signs of increasing trouble in the Middle East, too, and the Soviet navy in the Mediterranean has recently been substantially enlarged. ★ ★ ★ In the face of such danger signals, it is surprising that Congress is reducing the military budget just as if peace were in sight. lyriairt. m», Pu_ Hall Syndicate) , Voice of the People: Present Michigan Time Is Most Suitable System I am a mother of three < years of age. I thorpughly enjoy the time system we are on in Michigan. It is so nice to get up' and see the sun shining, and be able to go to sleep at a reasonable hour and have darkness there. I hope we can keep this time because it is as close to sun time as you can get. The farm animals are back on schedule and so am I. MRS. J. DAVID MATHIEU Comments on New OEO Training Program The GED tests (general educational development) were designed to test rather than to establish a person’s educational qualifications. I see now where the OEO is going to spend 15 weeks training ADC women to pass these tests and enable them to claim, however spuriously, an educational standard which is widely accepted as being equivalent to a high school diploma. ★ * * I have conflicting feelings about this forced upgrading which will improve the financial prospects of these women, though doing tittle to actually Improve their status as educated persons. It will allow them to apply for work where requirements specify high school grads and it will also give them a lever for a claim of discrimination if they are not hired or are dismissed after trial because of inability to perform capably. ★ ★ * I am thinking also that the value of real learning is being reduced to the extent that the recipients of such learned-answer training will compete in the labor market on an equal basis. 1 * * ★ Perhaps the benefits that will accrue to the women through the increased dignity of earning their way, and to the public by a reduction in the welfare burden will offset the detractions. CONNIE DEAN ’Can't Remember Predictions of Horoscope’ I wonder why you always, publish the horoscope for the next day? I’d kind of like to figure out the accuracy of the predictions, but, gol darn it, by the time the next day has gone by, I’ve always forgotten what Sidney Omarr saw in his crystal ball for that day. It’s a mite aggravatin’. UNCERTAIN ‘Can’t Weather Bureau Improve Forecast?’ You had a letter in the Voice of the People saying the weather prediction had been for a shower and it actually rained several hours without stopping. Your note below said the weather bureau forecasMhe weather and you merely print it. Well, last Friday night their report said Saturday would be “mostly fair and slightly cooler." Saturday it rained from 8:30 to quarter to four without stopping. Can’t they do better than this? CITIZEN Nixon’s Church Services Hit ‘Southern Strategy’ Seen Failing Nixon in the End President Nixon’s practice of holding church services each Sunday has come under attack—not from Madalyn Murray O’Hair, who is busy seeing that NASA keeps God out of space, but from some of the most eminent names in religion. Perhaps most eminent is philosopher and theologian Reinhold Nib-bur, retired professor at Union Theological Seminary. By inviting representatives of different denominations to hold services at the White House, complains Nie-bur, “The President by a curious combination of innocence and guile has circumvented the Bill of Rights first article.” ★ ★ > This is somewhat curious criticism, since the First Amendment says only that Congress may not pass any law respecting an establishment of religion or preventing the free exercise thereof. Mr. Nixon is not a con-' gressman, nor has he established any official religion, nor is there evidence that he is preventing anyone’s free exercise thereof. ★ • ★ ★ What really seems to bother Dr. Niebur is the noncontroversial nature of the White House services and the fact that visiting clergymen seem so awed by the honor of a presidential invitation that they can only deal with platitudes in their sermons. That is something else again. But it is the clergymen’s problem, and the President’s. It hardly seems to raise a constitutional issue. Youth Not Getting Enough By DICK WEST If you examine his re WASHINGTON (UPI) — At marks closely, you also can least once a day someone will see that Nixon pointed up an ‘, "What is wrong with the essential difference between WEST youth day? Why do young people no 1 o n g e r I dream the American dream? Why are so many] of them belling against ] society, taking drugs and playing guitars?" For the answer to these questions, let, us harken back to last year’s Republican National ' Convention. ’ * * ★ ' In bis acceptance speed), you may recall, President Nixon told of i boy of humble origin who used to listen to the trains go by at night And dream of Far away places , he would like .to go. the America of his boyhood and the America of today. The difference Is the difference between train whistles. ★ ★ ■ ★ ■ , When Nixon was a lad, all of the locomotives had steam whistles that made a melodic “woo-woolng" sound. Listening to a train go by at .night could start a boy to dreaming—and those dreams could be his first stop rn the road to the White Housq. LIKE PRISON BREAK But the diesel engines of today, alas, have whistles that make a raucous ."blanking” noise. Elvery time 'a train goes by, it Sounds like i prison break. I hardly need point out the effect that replacement, of the regrets that the curtailment which he reluctantly plans to make “will reduce our' capability to meet current commitments." So much emphasis has been placed on the Vietnam war that many citizens forget that the defense apparatus of the United States is designed to protect this country against attack from any side, and that conflicts can arise in Asia or Europe or the Middle East which might involve us. NEED IS THERE There is need not only for a large army and air force but also for an adequate navy. Yet the budget is forcing more than 100 naval vessels , to be put out of commission, including the battleship New Jersey which was recommissioned last year after a costly renovation. Moreover, the Air Force is to .be required to limit its training prpgram. A ★ * AH this, it is admitted, involves risks. . Attention has been focused .mostly on Vietnam, and the recent announcement that American troops would be gradually withdrawn has given the impression that the United States can sharply cut down its defense forces. NO END IN SIGHT But Sen. John Stennis, D* Miss., who is chairman of the Senate Armed Services Com- By BRUCE BIOSSAT “I’m very much concerned NEA Washington Correspondent that if something big doesn’t WASHINGTON — Amid the happen to change this, the na- persistent talk that President Nixon is shaping major domestic poli- Instead of dreaming the American dream, they go out and steal hubcaps. Or take guitar lessons. BITTER FRUITS And so the nation Is now reaping the bitter fruits of America’s first "blonked-at" generation. It probably ian’t technically feasible to put "woo-woo’ whistles on diesel locomotives, but a friend of mine work*as wellhe bd eV*8 wU Mr. and Mrs. Carl J. Grogan emerging conservative Repub- Verbal Orchids BIOSSAT One leading public figure puts it like this) “If he wants to make his scratches high on the wall (of history), he’s going to have to make some forward-looking moves that will not please the Strom Thurmonds of his party." A top Democrat who thinks Nixon has a strong chance of winning reelectlon in 1972 nevertheless contends that he works within-too yarrow limits: “Nixon is trying to run the country as if he were « senator or a congressman. He follows the trend of public opinion. That may put him in tune with the nation, but I doubt whether that is the way to be a good president.” RIGHT-WING TREND The first-cited source says that even if there tion could be in very serious trouble ip just a few years. We can’t simply go pooping along like we’ve' been doing." TOO CALCULATING? Yet this man wonders whether Richard Nixon, at least as presently revealed, has the leadership capacity and drive to break this national mood of discouragement. His observation: "I think the President perceives intellectually that the country needs a big lift. But it may be that by character and nature he is too calculating and cautious to supply it." It is felt that the President’s recent drop of 18 percentage points in a public opinion poll test of his popularity may be the first strong supportive evidence of these interesting judgments. Question and Answer A few days ago someone asked for Information on the movie made from Tolkien’s “Lord of the Rings." Could yon tell me what company is making it, where it is to made, etc.? I’m very interested in it. ANTHONY A. MERCHELL BLOOMFIELD HILLS REPLY Our answer to the other reader was that the company handling movie rights could not release any details about the contract until all negotiations? are final. However, George Allen & Unwin Ltd., 40 Museum Street, Lojtdon, Eng., is the publisher handling it. You might write and ask them to inform you of the details when they can be made public. They gave no indication how long that might be. Question and Answer What must I do to get a spaying refund from the Animal Rescue League? We bought a female dog from them in August last year and paid a $10 deposit to be returned when the spaying was done. We sent in our receipt and the spaying cer-tlficate on May 2, but still have not received the refund despite many calls to them. MRS. EDWARD T. COOK 234 EILEEN DR. BLOOMFIELD HILLS REPLY Mrs. Inman at the Rescue League says there have been some problems because of a change in shelter operators, but they’ve hired someone to go over the books and get things in order. She said she will see that you get your refund within'a week. Reviewing Other Editorial Pages It turned out Nixon was re wMatfe tfy the ferring to his own boyhood, “bkmking” whistle has had Considering what happened to him later, “you^pn see why I believe so amply In tiie American dream," he said. on American- youth. . ★ ’ * * ' Far from being inspired by passing trains, kids of toddy are traumatized by them. It Is his idea to attach “woo-woo’’ whistles to telephone poles at fixed intervals all across the country, and to tie them Into the air raid alarm systems in the cities. Each night an automatic signal would cause the •whistles to blow, one after another. To a kid listening In bed, the sound would be identical to the me that passing trains used to make. ‘ ★ * ♦ With rightly “woo-wootng" to start 'them dreaming, it * shouldn’t take long for the younger generation to get tack on the right brack. of Birmingham; 53rd wedding anniversary. Fred Kibbe >f 163 S. Jessie; 86th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. Henry B. Mehlberg of Waterford Township; 53rd wedding anniversary. Orville Powers llcan majority'of the sort projected by Kevin Phillips, author dnd special assistant to Atty. Gen. John Mitchell, the President Will not bp allowed to play to it too heavily. ' There is a small but articulate group of people in the media, the academic world and elsewhere, this source adds, which will not let Nixon of 295 Cherokee; 89th birthday, ignore In any substantial way Fred Pevltt Sr. of Romeo; 87th birthday. Mr. and Mrs. James A. Chenoweth of Milford; , 55th Wedding anniversary. Mrs. Marian Doty what it regards as the crushing problems of the cities— the racial struggle, poverty, pollution, etc. Says the source: “Wherever you go, you find people discouraged. They have a feeling thjkt things just aren’t working, that the pountry is of 36 Candlelight; 87th birthday almost falling apart. Drilling Ban Grand Rapids Press Gov. William G, Milliken will be properly representing the state in September when he asks the National Governor’s Conference t o consider a ban on oil and gas drilling in bodies of fresh water. Michigan is nearly surrounded by fresh water, and unless steadily-increasing poUution of the large lakes is reversed, much of the state’s economic Vitality and its desirability wiU be drained away, to say nothing of the health problems involved for cities tike Grand Rapids which draw, upon a lake for 'its water supply. , w ’ * Such an outright national ban would be difficult to achieve because oil Is a major industry in a number of states adjacent'to large fresh water resources. But the Mid’ western Great Lakes states must have been uppermost in the governor’s mind when he announced his intentions at a recent news conference, so if 7he manages to convince Michigan’s neighbors, including Canada, thep his effort will be worthwhile. ★ ♦ ★ A state surrounded by polluted and “dead" lakes, Huron, Erie, Superior and Michigan, and by lifeless waterways such as Lake St. Clair, Saginaw Bay, the Soo and Grand Traversed Bay, would be difficult to imagine, but such a situation could exist, easily within the lifetimes of present generations. Fresh water pollution isn’t limited to oil well leaks, of course, but no pollution control can be effective without absolutely guaranteeing that no leaks will occur, and this, regardless of the' care with which the wells are drilled, cannot be done. A Single leak in a lake area not easily flushed out can cause monstrous damage and can reverse the efforts of lengthy and expensive pollution control by private business and public bodies. But more important, a ban on fresh water oil wells is an act of prevention, easily the cheapest and most effective method of control. Is the Whole amount of unclaimed gas and oil under land adjacent to Michigan worth the risk of permanent damage to the state’s prime resource? Gqy. M i 1} i k e n doesn’t think so, and tie hopes other governors will hold parallel views. '• - r ~ ■ -- ■ '.. " '5^r"4-!S^ "I1 f> ' ■/■- //.. ff'V? / // . .. /. / * J -'■ ^ ^ A—8 __________________________, ______THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1960 CRUNKS OF COBBLESTONE HURLED-Czech youths throw chunks of cobblestone at riot police during a demonstration yesterday in Prague on the first anniversary of the Restive Czechs Shocked, Angry Russian invasion. - The tear gas clouds in the street were from canisters fired by the police. However, the gas had little effect. Tanks, Troops Leave Prague PRAGUE (AP) - Tanks and troops pulled out of Prague today after demonstrations on the first anniversary of the Soviet Invasion underlining the deep division between the Czechoslovak people and their Communist government. Communist party leader Gustav Htisak's regime sent tens of thousands of Czechoslovak soldiers and 60 tanks,, into downtown Prague Thursday night in a massive demonstration of military strength. It shocked and angered mdpy Czechs, who remembered all too well how Soviet tanks took over the city and the country on Aug. 20-21 yast year. After five hours of maneuvering in the street* and spotlighting some apartment house windows, the tanks rolled back across the Vltava River, and all but two loft the city. Those two foil into | subway They and their weary crews were still there this morning, guarded by police. ALSO DEPARTED The other army units also departed. Street cleaners began clearing awey the debris left by the rioting in which the public showed its frustation at a year of occupation and Increasing accommodation to Soviet direction. Prague Radio said five persons had been killed in riots— two youths 18 and 19 in Prague Wednesday night, and three persons in Brno on Thursday. The broadcast said 12 persons were injured in Brno. Thousands of young Czechs clashed in Prague with the hel-meted riot police, but many thousands more citizens demonstrated in more passive fashion. They responded with obvious that Husak was a traitor, sang the national anthem and shouted “Russians go home!” Over and over they cried “Long live Dubcekr. in tribute to Alexander Dubcek, the popular reform^ er whom Husak replaced in April. I 'It was an important occasion! for the people,” a woman said. ‘We are being told now so much about the invasion being justified we started having doubts. On Thursday we found out that even after a year everybody still agrees it was a terrible thing—we found out we still agree with each other.” In Bratislava, the Slovak capital, there slso were clashes with police. Shots were fired over the of demonstrators, and arrests Wire made. attempt to appear again publicly, even more drastic steps will be taken and those taking part in sutjh actions will be punished severely.” HOOLIGAN ELEMENTS It said the majority of the demonstrators young people, frequently hooligan < ments and people with previous convictions.’ "Actions planned by enemy and counterrevolutionary propaganda by far lacked the expect- Ifow# ‘‘ ment asserted. {’'Spontaneous and mass strike actions especially did hot come off. The ab- CARRIED OFF In Brno, Czechoslovakia’s sec-id largest city, witnesses reported mat a young man poured gasoline on his clothes and set himself afire. They said the flames were quickly extinguished and the man carried off. Youths there threw cobblestones at police who dispersed about 5,990 demonstrators with tear gas and baton charges. it it * In Prague, most of the demonstrating had ended when the tanks arrived, but groups of youths ‘rled unsuccessfully to barricade several streets against them. Some of the tanks joined other military vehicles ringing Communist party headquarters where Husak and his presidium were reported in almost continuous session during the past three days of demonstrations. In a statement today, the presidium warned that “if the counterrevolutionary elements the state- solute majority of workers came normally to work and did not permit themselves to be exploited for deeds damaging to the interests of the party, socialism, the republic and our international (meaning Soviet bloc) commitments.” Noisy and sometimes anti-Soviet demonstrations were , held in a number of foreign cit-‘ ies protesting the invasion. Two bombs exploded at the Soviet Embassy in Rio de Janeiro, shattering windows and blowing a hole in the garden wall. Mother bomb exploded at the Soviet consulate. No injuries were reported. N.Vjets Rebuff U.S. Efforts to Copter Nang. A U.S. spokesman estimated the lead column of 4Q0 men ie 196th Ught Infantry was about 800 yards the site where the North shot down fpe'helicopter Tuesday. ★ it * “Every time they start mov-they draw fire,” said one officer. “I’ve never seen the enemy fight so hard,” said another. “Ordinarily they’ll fight for awhile and then pull back, but these guys are standing their ground and fighting.” . REPEATED ATTACKS Dive-bombers and helicopter gunships made attack after attack on the North Vietnamese bunkers. For three days, more than 1,000 North Vietnamese troops have blocked American efforts to reach the crash site in the rolling foothills 31 miles southeast of Da Nang. it it it ' Among the eight men aboard the helieepter were Associated Press photographer Oliver Noonan of Norwell, Mass., and Lt. Col. Eli P. Howard Jr. of Wood-bridge, Va., a battalion commander. All eight men are believed dead. * * ★ The drive to reach the wreckage has become the focus of the hard fighting that has been raging in the area since Sunday. U.S. spokesmen claim that at ‘69 North Vietnamese have been slain, many by a massive rain of bombs, napalm, rockets and artillery shells. Less than 20 per cent of the land in Iraq is cultivated. Outside it could be cold on the shady side of the house, colder on the windy side, warmest on the sunny side. But inside—with modern electric heat—you can be cozy and comfortable, all through the house. That's how it is with electric heat. Electric heat is the cleanest, quietest, most comfortable heat you can get. And that's not all. The operating cost is guaranteed. For full details, just call Edison or an Edison-Approved Electric Heat Contractor. SO get electric heat. It's ever-ready, always comfortable. It's the even-tempered heat. EDISON Electric heat... the even-tempered heat. OIHGUl & SON'S CLEARANCE WEAR WS WARRANTY enthusiasm to underground leaflets urging them to turn the anniversary into a “day of shame” with boycotts of public transport and stores. Streetcars were almost empty, and stores were nearly deserted. MASSED IN SQUARE More than 40,000 massed in Wenceslas Square. Crowds of youths resisted clouds of tear gas and truncheons of the security forces who finally cleared the city center The demonstrators chanted Four Rob Bank DETROIT (AP) i— Police searched today for four bank bandits who held up the Manufacturer’s National Bank in suburban Taylor Township and fled with 823,000. Three of the fpur men who robbed the bank Wednesday wore beards. One of them disarmed a bank guard and ordered him at gunpoint to stand aside. WANTED NON-FERROUS METALS No. 1 COPPER >b SO* No. 1 COPPER b 45* BRASS . . . * 2S* RADIATORS ‘M* ALUMINUM ib-8* MORE IGH00SE FROM NOW-At an All-Time Low Price! Big Senes 23” 68UM ier Me Eatire Family TheASBURY: Model FL-620E • Qlant 83” Diagonal, 296 Square Inoh Ploture • Automatic Chroma Control Stablllzaa Color tntanaity • Solid State UHF Timor > NowVlataVHFTunar SPECIAL CLEARANCE PRICE Claaranaa Pnoa • 39923 OTHER COLOR TV MODELS PRICED Poacher Pays Price in Theft of Potatoes The Value of the potatoes was not stated. Sheriff’s deputies said there have been several poachers in county potato patches this year, injuring some thieves who have been pilfering potatoes by the truddoad. Crash Kills Mother, Daughter From Clio Mrs. George P. Raynale BIRMINGHAM 4 Service fir lbs. George f. (Kdna M.) Raynale, 85, of IB Toottaf Lane will be 11 ajn. Monday at St. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, Deaths in Pontiac, Nearby Areas Mrs. William T. Bowman Service for Mrs. William T. (Hannah J.) Bowman, 83, of 23 Frank wiil.be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Vobrhees-Siple Chapel With burial in White Chapel Memorial Cemetery, Troy. Mrs. Bowman, a member of All Saints Episcopal Church, died yesterday. Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Otto H. Dahlgren, of Hazel Park; three sons, Ralph, Gerald and Colin, all of Pontiac; seven grandchildren and a sister. Arman Crecor Service for Mrs. Arman (Barjee) Crecor, 69, of 32 N. Ardmore will be 11 a.m. Monday at All Saints Episcopal Church with burial in Oak Mill Cemetery. Her body may be viewed , after 7 p.m. tomorrow at sparks-Griffin Funeral Home. Mrs. Crfcor, a member of All 0 Frank' M. Barkwill AVON TOWNSHIP ~ Service for Frank M. Barkwill, 79, of 114 Mead will be 2 p.m. Monday the William Funeral Home, Rochester, with burial in jLakeview Cemetery in Cleveland, Ohio. Mr. Barkwill died yesterday. He was a retieed sale engineer for Conveyor Engineering of Detroit, a life member of Palestine Masonic Lodge 357, Detroit, and member of Rochester Elks Lodge 2225. Surviving are his wife, Zella; one daughter, Mrs. David Clark of Avon Township; and two grandchildren. Stonily A. Carter TROY — Service for Stanley A Carter, 71, of 2019 North Dorchester will be 2 p.m. Monday at Vasu4.ynch Funeral Home, Royal Oak, with burial Saints Church and Guild 4 of ^ woodlawn Cemetery, Detroit, her church, died this morning. Mr carter died Wednesday. «s2i!7iin?J^hrIltLhsUSband’ 8'He Was P ^ed, pre“d®nt Clarence Wolfe, 80, of 3076 sister and two brothers. and founder of Stanley Carter |pridham died yesterday. The She was a member of Episcopal Church. Miss Annette Slavsky ORCHARD LAKE - Requiem Mass for Miss Annette Slavsky, 19-year-old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John R. Slavsky of 4730 Dow Ridge, will be 11 a.m. tomorrow at Our Lady Refuge Cdtholic Church with burial in Holy Sepulchr Cemetery, Southfield. Rosary will be 8 p.m. today BeQ Chapel of the William Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Miss Slavsky died Monday. She was a .student at De’AUende Art Institute in Mexico. Surviving are her parents: one sister, Mary Jo at hornet three brothers, John R. Jr. of Birmingham, Carl of Grand Blanc and Christopher of the Army; and grandmother Mrs. Valentine Bern of Detroit. Clarence Wolfe KEEGO HARBOR - Broughton of Troy; one son, Robert of Orchard Lake; two sisters; one brother; and 14 grandchildren. The body may be after 4 p.m. tomorrow. Cpl. Harrington R. Fed Service for Cpl. Harrington R. Fed, 20, of 478 Branch will be 1 p.m. Tuesady at Providence Missionary Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. His body may be viewed at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home after 3 p,m. tomorrow. Cpl. Fed, home on leave prior to going overseas, drowned Wednesday. He was a member of Providence Missionary Baptist Church and a graduate of Pontiac Central High School. Surviving are his wife, Sandra; Iris parents, Mr. and Mrs; Macon L. Fed of Pontiac; a brother, Macob L. Jr. in the Army; and three sisters, Mrs. Earl Clay, Kendra F. and Andrea R., all of Pontiac. Gerald L. Heard Service for Gerald L. Heard, 13, of 480 Branch will be 1p.m. Monday at Providence Missionary Baptist Church with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery. His body may be viewed tomorrow at Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. The boy drowned Wednesday. Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Grover Heafd; two brothers, Grover Jr. and Thomas, both at horn*; and a sister, OsieD. at home. William Walker Service for William Walker, 20, of 399 S. Paddock will be H a.m. tomorrow in .Mir Missionary Baptist Church burial ln Oak Hill Cemetery by the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home. Mr. Walker drowned Wednesday. He was a laborer. Surviving are his father; his mother, Mrs. Mattie Lee Powell; and his grandmother, Mrs.. Dazerine Walker of Pontiac. Corp., Detroit, and a member of the Greater Detroit Chamber of Commerce, the Detroit Economic Club and Detroit Golf Club. He was past president of both the Mechanical Contractors Association of Detroit body is St C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home. Mr. Wolfe was a retired millwright of Wilson Foundry and a member, of the Keego Hunt Club. Surviving pro his wife and the Michigan T r a d e ViBIancbe; two daughters, Mrs. Association of Detroit. iLynn 0f Keego Harbor Surviving are two daughters, iand Mrg. Veria Techworth of Mrs. Robert Hawkins ® f. Pontiac; two sons, Delbert ofi California and Mrs. Herbert ColdWateir and Chester o f namofher Pilot Dead: She Learned to Fly at PALM SPRINGS, Calif. (AP)| — Zaddie R. Bunker was 65 when she decided she’d rather] sit in the cockpit of a plane than baby-sit her grandchildren. So that’s what she did.. ★ ★ j Now this desert community is! mourning the death of Mrs. Bunker, a legendary figure among women pilots. Death' came Thursday—just a week before her 82nd birthday and preceded by these achieve-1 ments: Learned to fly at 65; flew solo back and forth across the continent at 66; earned her multiengine license at 68, and flew faster than sound at 73. DESERT PIONEER Mrs. Bunker, known as “theL Flying Grandmother,” and “thei First Lady of Palm Springs,” LAKE ODESSA (AP)—Burns first came to the desert in'caused by scalding water in a 1913—long before it became the bathtub at her home have winter playground of movie claimed the life of a 14-month-greats and other celebrities. old Lake Odessa girl. Her first job, at age 26: deliv- * * * ering merchandise to local busi- Marcey Jo Phillip died Wedness houses from the railway nesday in a Grand Rapids In breaking the sound barrier, Zaddie piloted an Air Force F100 Super Sabre jet with Lt. Col. Robinson Risner as copilot. She confessed to friends re-!cently that 18 months ago she-half-heartedly applied to be an astronaut and was rejected. “I could have done it,” she said. * i-i * The funeral will be at 9 a.m. Monday in the Palm Springs Community Church. Hot-Water Burns J Fatal to State Girl station in a freight truck. hospital from the burns she suffered Aug.. 12. the Michigan Departmtnt of Staff Highways It planning to reconstruct l.t mile, of M-5t from Williams Laka Road | to Airport Road In Oakland County. ColdWateir and Chester Orchard Lake; one sister; one brother; nine grandchildren; and 11 great-grandchildren. • The body may be viewed after 3 p.m. tomorrow. THINK YOU HAVE PROBLEMS? -Then ’consider the case of Karen, a 6-week-old tiger cub born at Chessington Zoo in Surrey, England. Fjrst she was deserted by her mother. Then she discovered this tasty joint of meat in her keeper's larder. But Karen is still bottle-fed, and zoo officials say she would probably get nothing but indigestion from such a meal. On winning her multiengine pilot’s license at Teterboro, N.J., she commented: “Why did I learn to fly at 65? Because it’s She maintained that “anyone can learn anything he wants to fi with enough perseverance.” 'citTiim who'wouid "to'VftocMd'bv nit Of her cross-country jaunt, she te1® told a newsman: “I’ve been ci2^;Sic%!t^tr^\h%nvprr^J.nd*,.d3f'-driving for 45 years, but if I had riT|¥,r fhouk) ^ j to make this trip by automobile ll don’t think I could have done it. Motoring just isn’t safe I enough.” STANTON (AP) - Potato poachers are beginning to irjri-. tate formers in Montcalm County, the sheriff’s office reports, but at 1 east one convicted poacher has found it an expensive proposition. Arthur Wyma, 39, of Grand Lonnie Cummins COMMERCE TOWNSHIP -Requiem Mass for Lonnie Cummins, 62, of 1754 Hollingsworth will be 19 a.m. Monday at St. William’s Catholic Church, Walled Lake, with burial in Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens, Novi. Rosary will be said 8 p.m. Sunday a t Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Mr. Cummins died Wednesday. He was a repairman for the Ford Motor Co. and a of St. William’i Church. Surviving are two daughters, Mrs. Roger Liberty of Walled Lake and Mrs. John McCann of Milford; one son,' Ronald J. of Walled Lake; one brother; and fivegranechildren. Julius Demeester MILFORD — Requiem Mass for former resident Julius Demeester, 80, of Fenton will be 10 a.m.’ Monday at St. Patrick’s rfftiniic Church, Union Lake, burial in Holy Cross Cemetery, Detroit. Rosary will be said 7 p.m. Sunday at Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Mr. Demeester died yesterday. He was a retired machine repairman for Chevrolet Gear. Surviving are two pens William of Fenton and Robert of Illinois, and eight grandchildren. Mrs. Francis J. Nissle Holly townbhip - Service for Mrs. Francis J, (Ad#.,,Nissle, 47, of 2521 Grange Hall will be 2 p m. Sunday at Dryer Funeral Home, Holly, with burial In Lakeside Cemetery, Holly. V* Mrs. Nissle died thismorning. Surviving are bar Husband; one daughter, Connie at home; one brother, Guy Gillem of White Lake Township; and i sister, Mrs. Hudson Oliver of Holly. Mrs. Frank W. Prust FRANKLIN — Service for Mrs. Frank W. (Sally)i Prust, 41, of 32023 Mountain View will be 11a.m. tomorrow at Christ Church Cranbrook, pioomfield wrial in Woodlawn Detroit, by Bell Chapel 'of the William R. Hamilton Co., Birmingham. Mrs. Prust died Wednesday in an Ontario drowning apddent. She was a member of Christ Church /Cranbrook and Sigma Gamma sorority. Surviving are I . , one daughter, Susan at home; two son*, "Robert and William, at pma; ' bar father, 8. Pateteaaof .Binn. Everybody's getting into the card game these dhys. Department stores. Gasoline companies. Banks, motels, restaurants—you name it. , But if you spread ail your cards on the table, you won’t find a better one than the Community National Bank Check Guarantee Card. The reason is as plain as the face on the bard. No other check guarantee card in the Oakland-Macomb area has the cardholders color photograph on it. The card tells merchants we guarantee payment of your checks up to $100. And thanks to that photo there’s never any question whether you’re the person to whom the guarantee applies. Around here there’s no question what it means to have Community guarantee your checks, either. We’re the area's biggest bank; with 21 convenient offices in Oakland and Macomb counties. The Community Check Guarantee Card is one of the benefits provided with CommuniBank 500—CNB’s do-it-yourself banking plan. Put $500 or more in a CommuniBank 500 time deposit savings account, and the card is yours. But that's just one part of Com-muniBanking. You also get 5% annual interest compounded daily, provided your money’s on deposit 90 days. A free personal checking account with no minimum balance requirement. And an automatic personal line of credit you activate simply by writing checks. Open a Communibank 500 account at ohe of our 21 offices today and you can practically be your own banker. You’ll also be a sure winner in the old card game. ONE PICTURE’S WORTh SlOO WllEN IT’S ON A COMMUNITY check GUARANTEE CAftd Community National Bank Member FOIC FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, PHOENIX, Ariz. '(* - Mrs. Jewel Jordan easily won an election for Arizona State Auditor recently, but she may get the job. On the same ballot, Arizona voters approved constitutional amendment doing away with the office of state auditor and assigning its functions to a new department of Finance. MRS. D. L. RAMPANELL1 mrs. t. h. McConnell Ceremonies Join Two Couples The Bloomfield Hills home of j her parents, Mr. and Mrs. James A. Corwin, was the setting for the marriage of Mariila Grace Corwin and Don Louis! Rampaneili. Attired in a Bianchi gown of, silk peau de soie with lace ac-j cents, the bride carried a Dutch colonial bouquet of Stephanotis, roses, carnations and daisies. *, * Mr. and Mrs. James A.| Corwin Jr. were best man and i matron of honor, respectively, in the Saturday noon ceremony. Sharon C. Lask was maid or Meier, | honor with susan E. bridesmaid. The son of Mrs. Albert Ram-j panelli of Tempe, Ariz. and the! late Mr. Rampaneili, and his' bride will reside in tempe. | McConnell-Manhart I A reception in the parlors of Chprist Church Cranbrook followed the Saturday wedding jof Anita Marie Manhart and Theodore Howard McConnell. I Joining the newlyweds as they received guests were their parents, the Lauren E. Manharts of Bloomfield Hills and the Howard B. McConnells of Brooks Street. Gowned In organza over satin, the bride carried Stephanotis and orchids. Honor attendants were Joyce Scafe and Gary McConnell. The couple is honeymooning in Williamsburg, Va. Woman Excited by Law, Hates the Housework Elected Auditor Wants Her Job She asked lower courts to void the abolition of office measure and they conceded her point, but the Arizona Supreme Court ruled against her. She says she will appeal her case to the United States ' Supreme Court. i Cottons can be made to look like linen, silk, wool. Mr. and Mrs. Delbert Aker celebrated their golden wedding anniversary recently at the Lapeer home of their daughter, Mrs. Howard (Nancy) Collins. Other children of the couple are Myron of North Branch, Mrs. Robert (Maxine) Tobin of Troy and Mrs. Fred (Lois) Miller of Webberville. The couple married Aug. 14, 1919, in Pontiac. They have 16 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren. KNOXVILLE, Ky. (AP) Mrs. Howard Hinds, who admits she hates homemUking but finds the law exciting, is one of four women lawyers among the 400 barristers in Knoxville, and the youngest in private practice. “The variety of law, the challenge Of service to society, the broad bases of interesting and stimulating work —all this appealed to me, and I really, really like It," says -the 1967 recipient of a bachelor of laws degree from Vanderbbilt University. Y * * Her husband is a minister at Halls Central United Methodist Church and Mrs. Hinds feels the two professions go well together. She Quotes Martin Luther: “We theologians and lawyers must stand or fall together.” BUSTER BROWN CLOTHING FOR CHILDREN Cheese new for long ----weor and bettor valued ' BLUE BELL WEARING APPAREL FOR THE ENTIRE FAMILY YARD GOODS WV Carry n Complete Lino to Lino of SIMPLICITY PATTERNS Art E2I4 — Washable Colors COATS and DUSK’S REN HEART KNITTING WORSTED 100% Vteiit WmI - Oj, A Mothproof — Tangle dl I J§ Proof - Ready to Knit w “ -Pull Out Skein | UHAN’S VARIETY STORE 1411 Baldwin Avo., at Walton FE 4-3348 Open Dolly 9 A.M. to9 P.M., Sunday 10 A.M. to6 P.M. Final Week of MIDSUMMER SALE SAVINGS ON EthanRAllen FINE FURNITURE AND Tots' Raincoat A poncho cut from plastic yardgoods makes a wonderful 1 raincoat for tots. Such ralngear is easy for very young children! tp put on, allows freedom of| movement/may be folded flat, and Is easy to keep clean. Just spread It flat and wipe away mud splashes with a well-lathered sponge. Hock Shoos Yesl Hock Shoo* are as Important to a child’s foot health aa the 3 R’a art to his“ sducatlon. Quality construction plus highly experienced she# fitters assure Centurion Brown with Klltlo Flap. Other Oxfords In rad, navy, grey, olive. 8omo styles to EEEE. Thomas and regular heels. HACK SHOE COMPANY 235 PIERCE ST. •trap. Supportive. Black, brown, tan. Other sllpons Tf’c Viar»lr frt KaaIto It’s back to books the fashion-right way... Mo^binJ^ood. Start them off skipping smartly to school with now, bell-ringing styles that place school-goars in a class by themselves. Put your child at the head of the data with popular priced fashion and correct fit. Back To School in young fashionables Youngldhd does this bonded Aeralan plaid coordinated with an orlon turtleneck sweater, completely washable. Sizes 3-6x. $1200 W Go back to school in beautiful wool blond jumpers by Girltown. Subteens will love the fashion blue or wine colors. Accompany with a crisp cotton and rayon blouse in subteen sizes. SiseV 6 to. 14. Jumper *16 Blouse Michigan’s Largest Ethan Allen Dealer DECORATIVE ACCESSORIES Jantzen Is just.one of the fine back to school namos spoken of the Lion Store. This sweeter comes in 60% Shetland, 25% Dacron polyester end 15% mohair. Washer- end soft. Boys' 8 to 20. Choose from formal and informal furniture stylet In Hair-loom Nutmeg Maple, Old Tavern Antiquad Pina, Classic Manor Fruitwood, and Sheffield Solid Cherry. Save on lamp*, clocks, pictures, wall daepr, carpeting, bedding! CONVENIENT TBRMt, OF COURSE! ★ PHONE 422-1770 earthside ]57in MIDDLE BELT ROAD • LIPOMA Just North of Five Mils Road rOMi* M*|r.ieMA.«.«*Str.M. Uw., i. Mfrf.l*. the (moo Bloomfield Miracle Mile Telegraph at Square Lake Rd. Opan Monl thru Sot. 9:30 to 9 LION'S STORE m THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1969 I'M WEARING .ACT LENSES NOW! “I never believed It was passible te be si active... even swim... without wearint {lanes!” We have heard this statement time and spin. Si many have discovered the wenders that Contact Lenses can do for your appearance ... and year personality. Find out about Kindy Vision Center contact lonses. You will probably look better than ever... and hi on your way towards a new and brighter life! ■ Thorough, Professional Bye Examination m Contact Lenses Scientifically Fitted Dr. H. Markowitz, Registered Optometrist 43 N. SAGINAW, PONTIAC PHONE 338*7173 AP wiraphoto i DEADLIEST STRETCH—rThis is “the Chute,” a particularly hazardous section of southern California’s Kern River— 'often called the deadliest stretch of running water in the •United States. Since the first of the year, the river has ;averaged one victim a month. The river, which forms on Ithe slopes of 14,000-foot Mt. Whitney, drops at an average Irate of 91 feet per mile. Killer Rivers Peril Ignored in California Bakersfield, cam. i —* Nine times this year the pow-: e£ plants along the Kern River i hive shut down and more than j 1,000 miles of Irrigation canals hive gone dry. JEach time, It meant a search J wps on for a victim who drowned In the turbulent Kern | River. The gates of the Lake Isabella dam are shut to lower1 the water level so searchers look for the body. In one search \ they were shut twice. The clos-' iqg of the gates causes the pow*1 er plants to shut down, j ★ »lr So far this year the,llCliftt, b|nk-full from the melting of a record winter snow in the mountains, has claimed eight lives. Sits deadly score for the past fife years is above SO. IN RECREATION AREA •The curse of the fashflowing Kirn is Its accessibility. It lies i lit the heart of a recreation area and a state highway runs along its banks. Thousands come to cjmp, to fish and, despite warn-irig signs, to swim. 'The Kern forms on the slopes of 14,000-foot Mt. Whitney. It d|ops to the lowlands at an av* efage rate of 91 feet pier mile, 1 Its waters race along at 20 or more miles an hour, the speed o( a top human sprinter. * * ★ * ■Officials say it is the fastest-njnning river near a major population center anywhere ib the country. (Most of the drownings are in a nigged and picturesque 89-mile stfetch where the river races between the 1,000 foot walls of Kern River Canyon east of Bakersfield. deceptively placid Here, on a recent Sunday, five: children floated on rubber mattresses in a deceptively placid pool where a strong swimmer was pulled down not long ago by undercurrents. Nearby a mother splashed her child in front of a neglected sign whidi read, “No swimming.'’ She said she knew about the drownings—“but it is so hot .today." ★ * * Warning signs are posted 1 along the dangerous stretch, but ’ most are weathered or damaged and hardly readable. ’ “You can’t keep people away from the river," says Sheriff Charles Dodge. “It’s a great ; place to go for a vacation, and i safe enough if people obey the , signs. But bow can they obey if ; they can’t read them?" CREW SOCKS Dodge wants to stencil large no swimming signs on the rock walls of the canyon. “I think wfc should take a lesson from the amateurs," he said. “They’ve painted names of girlfriends and hot rod organizations all over the canyon. But before we can do It, I guess, we’H have to get permission from the forest rangers."v Roads and streets in the United States, under the jurisdiction of all levels of government, totaled nearly 3.7 million miles in 1997. $p|CULWi?5*ASE! GIRLS' SIZES 3 TO 14 NEWEST LOOK FOR BACK-TO4CH00L • Fabulous selection of pretty new Pall A-lines and other popular itytesi • Choose solids, prints, or plaidsl e Variety of fabrics, tool e Sizes 3 to 6x and 7 to 14. [Our Every] Day Price I 2.19 1 u 1710 S. TELEGRAPH f 14 Mil* South of Orchard lake Av*. kiots of Fro* Parking FE 4-0566 f Daily *tll 5:30—Mon. and Fri. ’Ilf 9 CHARGE Tfl \SHOPDAILY9.-30AM. TILL H)PM....OPlMSmAYSNOONTU.L6PM.\ DIXIE HIGHWAY AT TELEGRAPH RD. ponriec THE PONTIAC PRESS, FAMOUS HILTON BRADLEY AND CAOACO GAMES FOR AU BOYS’ KNIT GIRLS'STRETCH UNDERWEAR CREW SOCKS tampan sfeMkra at 1J7tsl.lt | Choos* from: "DBitiny**, "Win a Cord", "Chicken Out". "Plot", "Gorem's Bridge", many more. Get an armful, they make great giftsl •tilerMl mm - I I ^Pr* ■ ; ■ ' 100% combed cotton briefs, T-*hirh. Soft.absorbent 70% Orloneacrylics. Reinforced at points of strain, lull 30%stretch nylon.Green,white,royal, cut. 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So fresh and new in pink, green, or gold., Scuff-proof brown vinyl. Siam lit to 12, IZVttod. BOYS' LEATHER STRAPPERS, 10-2 Girls’Flare Slacks In Rugged Denim Men’s “AU Weather” Coats AM-season hits with dp-out pile Sners ^■Ret.5.19 Brown or block uppori, long, wearing* PVC tolas. MEN'S, BOYS’ LEATHER MOCS 566 In. AM What could be more practical than a coat that's wearabTe from season to season under stormy or sunny skies? Cotton shall is stain and water repellent. Zip-out liner of worm Orion* acrylic pilo. Black, tan, olive. Sizes 36 to 46. Western stylo cotton solids, prints with bolt loops, sashes and pockets. Sises 7 to 14.' money ■ back guarantee opps TELEGRAPH AND SQUARE LAKE RDS. PONTIAC. MICHIGAN BLOOMFIELD-MIRACLE MILE SHOPPING CENTER 1909 C—7 TIIK PONTI AC I’llKSS I RIDAV. AUGUST 22. ......;--------- To Insure Fun for Fall Plant Gourd Seeds Garden Flowers Beautify Table Fun tor {all — with gourds of many sizes and shapes, ' in spring, when the seeds are planted. Since gourds are easy to grow, perhaps their culture could be left to the youngsters i in your family. warm, sunny spot to plant gourd seeds, one where them is or can be a support upon which the vinbs can climb. .★ ★ ★ The better the soil in that vines and the greater the crop of gourds. Should the soil be poor, it can be improved by adding organic matter of some sort (granulated peat moss, compost manure, spot, the more vigorous the | spent mushroom soil or what have you?) before seeds are PLANT NOW — The painted rattle, the funny face are among the many objects that can be.made from gourds when they mature in autumn. But seeds must be planted now for gourds in fall. Mowing Properly Aids Weed Control SOAK OVERNIGHT These should be soaked overnight before planting, then set far enough apart to allow the individual vines to develop fully. It takes about 15 days for seeds to sprout. Meanwhile keep the soil moist. After seeds have sprouted, the idea is to keep vines growing rapidly. Deep watering once a week, fertilizer once a month, will help. Vines, once they’re trained by the support, will climb by themselves. . The forms of gourds are many and fascinating. You can plant seeds of a mixture of; fancy, small-fruited kinds or those of separate sorts like! miniature bottle, nest egg,! hedgehog, spoon, .teasel warted gourds. BIG ONES Or you can grow the big fellows — hercules club, powder horn, dipper, turk’s turban. ; i n i m One of the great joys of gardening is being able to pick flowers from the garden for use in the house. The table in the entrance hall, the dining room table, the desk, the manUepiece, all are places that would look better with thej addition of a bouquet. Some people like mixed bouquets—a medley of all the kinds of flowers that happen to be in bloom on a particular day. If the many colors disturb you, consider a bouquet that is a mixture of flowers but only those of a single color or, perhaps, two colors that blend or contrast. Easy to Grow Garden Annuals for Shady Spots YELLOW Thus you could make a bouquet of only yellow flowers (zinnias, marigolds, celosias, snapdragons) or one of yellow and orange flowers (blending colors). For contrast you might pick tall spikes of yellow snapdragons, then add bunches (made up in your hand and inserted that way into the container) of blue cornflowers. Who says that the shaded area around a tree trunk can’t be made attractive and gay with bloom? It’s easy to do if you choose flowers that thrive in subdued light. * ★ * Perhaps the two that grow best under Ihis condition are begonias, the small-flowered, fibrous-rooted sort, and patience plant, also called sultana, im-patiens and by other names. Should you choose the first of these two — the begonia, you should inform yourself of the new hybrids. These have larger flowers, sturdier plants and a greater tolerance for such sunlight as shines under a tree in late afternoon. The coloring of your bouquet; will, of course, blend with the! There are both single and color scheme of the room in!doub e-flowered forms of these Don’t these names intrigue you? The objects you can make from gourds, will too — but in order to make them in fall you’ll have to sow gourd seeds I now. Whether you’re a riding;many weeds that cannot mower enthusiast or a hardier tolerate continual close clipping, lawnmower pusher, you can These weeds usually disappear establish a healthier, more in a year or so with special weed resistant lawn by cutting treatment, the grass regularly to Its cor- * * rect height. | The stubborn weed All grasses grow best, look that can ada^t to being more attractive, and resist must he controlled with weeds more effectively at a one type weed-killing certin height. I Weedone selective herbicide Upright grasses, for example, SprayS are probably the most like Kentucky Blue grass and effective. Fast working and easy Red Fescue should be clipped to to use, they can eradicate 1% or 2 Inches. serious weed inf estation Closer cutting' weakens grass without damaging your significantly and encourages weed invasion. Creeping grasses, including popular Zoysla, Bent and Bermuda form a tighter turf pattern and are strongest at a height of % inch or lower. HEIGHT The mowing height should be -- ~ kept constant throughout the|‘rom sPray- which you wish to place it. Working backwards from this means that the colors of at least some of the flowers you grow should be those that suit your indoor schemes. The world of annual flowers is so vast, the possibilities of color combinations so enormous that you’ll have no trouble at all finding varieties which you can grow from seeds to look well in both garden and house. Weedone sprays may be applied to any height grass, but tt’s practical not to mow before or after spraying. Mowing before reduces the leaf s u r f a c receiving spray particles. Also clippings tend to protect weeks >. Determine your type of grass, then set your mower accordingly. Let the grass growth rate determine the frequency qf , mowing. Most lawn grasses grow rapidly during Spring and may require two mowings a week. ★ * % During the hot, dry summer weather when this growth rate is slower, mowings often two or three weeks apart. Later in the year, it’s smart to mow often enough to prevent accumulation of a thick grass mat before snow comes. Ideally, about one inch or about half the leaf surface should be removed at each Clipping. Upright grasses are ready for mowing when they reach the'3 inch point; creeping grasses when they are about 1% inches high. TOO CLOSE Cutting too close, too often or not often enough favors weed growth and several common lawn diseases. Should you'remove clippings? Generally, it’s not necessary if you mow frequently enough to distribute short clippings evenly over tile lawn surface. ★ :* ★ However, when the ldw is heavily fetrllized or overgrown, clipping removal becomes important. A build-up of clippings on the sod often holds moisture too long and nourishes destructive lawp fungi or develops into an unsightly thatch. Proper mowing and other good lawn care practices, including fertilizing and watering prevent most. weed problems. REGULARITY 'Regular thowipg also destroys AFTER SPRAYING Mowing a day or two spraying, may not give herbicide' time to assert its effect. Grasses vary in color, and growth pattern, as well as in their ability to resist w< If you’re not sure what kind you have, ask ypu local Agricultural Extension Service or garden' supply dealer. * * This year get set to mow the right way. You’ll cut your weed worries and enjoy a. healthier, more attractive' lawn from spring to snow. hybrid begonias. A few names are given for your guidance in buying seeds: White Christmas, Christmas Candle (rose-colored blooms) and Jewelite (scarlet to pink flowers above bronze leaves) are double-flowered. SINGLE FLOWERS . Linda, Matador, Pjnk Pearl, White T a u s e n d s^h o n and Scarletta are singife-flowered. The first named has blossoms of rose color then, In the order given, varieties have scqrlet, rosy-pink, white and scarlet-red flowers. 1r -k k Two new series of sultanas be considered for plant-nderneath your tree — Lady and Elfin. Both are first generation hybrids; both are dwarf, growing 12-15 inches tall. Both are available in mixed colors or in separate ones, in-in the two series, salmon, crimson, rose and scarlet. ' * * ★ You might think that results both Elfin and Shady Lady be identical. Not so. Lady apparently gives better results in the Southern of the country; Elvin in the Try both to see which thrives best in your garden. GARDEN BOUQUET — Bouquets from the garden for use indoors are one of the rewards a gardener receives. There are many places in the house that a bouquet will beautify. SHINY MOUND - Ring ’round a tree with sultanas. The plants will soon form a solid, shiny-leaved mound and the flowers will stud it with color. VARIETY - A bed of small-flowered begonias turns the area under a tree Into a thing of beauty. You can choose varieties with green or bronze leaves; white, pink, scarlet or red flowers. Glad Show Set The 1970 convention of the North American Gladiolus Council is scheduled at St. Petersburg, Fla., next January. Included will be a full-scale glad show, Jan. 17, with open; All-America, recent Introductions, seedling and display divisions. I Pesky Hitchhiker Impure seed mixtures are the least likely source of lawn weeds. Most weeds come from seed lit the soil or from seed blown or washed into your lawn. “When the lands are tm-proverished, people lower their standards, both physically and spiritually.” — Dr. Walter, Lowdermilk. Drift Can Harm When using modem herbicide sprays, stay a few feet away from flower beds. Spray drift may - . damage flower br] vegetable gardens. If you spray flowunr by mistake, the best thing to do la to cut them back quifilajf to keeptiwweed killing chemical from moving through the plant. Washing the leaves doesn’t help. SALT for Water Softeners prices—loaded in your car at store Rock Salt Crystals-80-lb. bag.... $2.10 Morton Salt Pallets- 100-lb. bag .. $2.85 Diamond Salt Nuggots — 100-lb. Bag $2.55 Granulated Salt-100-lb. bag..... $2.20 Min-i-cubes- 50-lb. bag...........$1.50 White Salt Blocks-50 lbs.......... $1.15 Diamond “Rod-Out”-40-lb. bag.... $1.84 Morton’s “Pollens” - 50-lb. bag.... $1.95 Minimum order delivered and carried to you, softener 200 lbs.... For this service add 50c per 100 lbs, of salt. We are authorized distributors of Scotts, Greenfield and other Lawn Caro Products —and wo will deliver thfm to your homo without extra charge. ' / / n • TWENTY VARIETIES BRASS SEED ' , Phone OR 3-2441 OIOAL Feed and Lawn Supply Co. 422IB Dlxlo Highway-Drayton Maine,Mioh. .1 Miles North of Pontiac HOME GROWN THE FIRST AND BEST H0NEYR0CKS FRESH TOMATOES 69c Par Basket Average 2- to 3 Lbs. BLUEBERRIES PINT BOXES Or 29' R. SWEET CORN-FRESH DAILY ICE COLD WATERMELON WHOLE or HALF PICKLE PAOKERS-You Will Find Fresh Dill, Cider Vinegar, Spices and Garlic at RITTER’S! BITTER’S Farm Markets 6684 Dixie Hwy., * Clarkston 3225 W. Huron St. . 681-0144 . iff* 1 Only Demo. Simplicity 28” Mower-5 H.P.-Reg. 454.00 395°° 1 Only Demo Simplicity 24” Mower-5 N.P.~.Reg. 329.00 295°° 1 Only Demo. Magna-TRAC 40” Mower -9 H.P. Rag. 1023.00 Formoll-A Iquipm.nt Included - 795.00 595°° Special Davis 22” Mower- 6950 Reg. 79.50-5 yr. Crankshaft Warranty... Special Mono Chain Saw Reg. 129.95 99” LEE S Lawn ft Garden Center 923 University Dr., Pontiac BUY! SELL! TJ3ADEI USE PONTIAC PRESS WANT ADS! C—8 THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1960 Helpful Hints for Fancier Proper Pruning, Mulching Boosts Roses' Growth I TRADITIONAL, 'contemporary* HUMOROUS & SCENIC DESIGNS. 9.88 VALUE PRICED AT ONLY... Save now op these beautifully bushy, bluegreen specimens. Container-grown perfect pyramids ideal for comer or hedge planting. Charge It! HM bulkd-io-burlap yew* Per Box Frank's Low, Low Price... EACH While Limited Stocks Gfct terrific savings now on beautiful Christmas cards while these pre-season stocks last! Choose from a huge selection in many designs and colors. Basic quality papers and printing methods .. . each boat is marked with die sale price Charge all you need! Choice PATIO BLOCKS Imagination, a weekend's work >hd these cast concrete blocks will create a patio you’ll be proud of. Choice of Grand Rivari Fanshgttn • 6575 Telegraph ot Eopisldi • 14 Mile Rd. at Crooks Rd LANDSCAPE BEAUTY COSTS LESS AT FRANK'S! Roses are red . . .bt old school-boy thyme. But your roses will only be red, and all the other beautiful colors, too, If they receive the proper spring care for the blooming months ahead. Proper care means careful pruning and protective mulching. To begin pruning, examine the rosebush for signs of disease. Cut out canes with canker, serious wounds or split bark. Cut out dead canes at ground level. *' * ■* Also cut out weak spindly canes and branches that cross each other in the interior of the bush. Before pruning the good canes, remember a sharpened shears insures a clean cut which prevents disease or the entrance of pith borers. Cut as close to the good buds as you can without Injuring them. Cut back to sound wood just above the bud and going in the same direction as the bud. WATCH STUBS Wound fungi may get started if you leave a stub more than one-fourth inch. * * ♦ With pruning completed, turn your attention to root pro- Seed Executive Pushes Marigold as Top Flower America may soon have a national flower. Over the years, debate has raged as gardeners, s e e d producers, florists and many others sought to name a national flown. The fact Is, the United States Is one of the few nations that do not have a national flower. Every state has one. Perhaps this year the marigold will be chosen as America’s flower. I WWW On Feb. 4, Senate Joint Resolution 39 designated the American marigold as the national floral emblem of the United States. Ibis bill caps the lifelong crusade by David Burpee 75-year-old seed company ecutlve for national recognition of his favorite flower. PERFECTION. Years of breeding by Burpee Seed:Co., the nation’s largest mail-order seed firm, have brought the marigold to unexcelled perfection,* Burpee believes. k k k Colors range from orange to nearly white. Burpee’s most effective argument for marigold as the American flower is that it can grow In all climates and oils on the continent. “It is native only to America and it stands for friendship,’’ Burpee notes. “The rose is beautiful but it stands for warfare . . the War of the Roses. Besides, many nations have picked the rose as their flower. k k k “The carnation has been suggested, but it is hard to grow. Even the corn tasael received mention, but it is not even a perfect flower." From his years of research on testing farms across the country, Burpee has perfected a variety of marigolds. Each new one outshines the others, it Tall, short; orange, yellow with tiny, button-type blooms or blazes of color six to eight inches across, marigolds have brightened millions of gardens. Will the marigold become the national flower? Could be! tection. Mulching prevents thei An ideal mulch is|ground, guarding plants fromiaround plants, such as sun from drying the rosebush’s horticultural vermiculite. It has!the sun’s hot rays. evergreens, roses, perennials, roots and dehydrating t h e natural insulation qualities that Summer requirements call for I azaleas and rhododendrons, plant. Ikeep summer heat out of thelone to two inches of vermiculite! In addition, spread a layer over the entire bed. This process i best accomplished by ' placing will smother weeds because the mulching rings around the base mineral is sterile. of the plant, and filling the For winter use, mulching is | rings with vermiculite. Rings can be fashioned out of aluminum or tarpaper, or can be obtained at many garden supply dealers. [FRANK’S CHANGE ^ FRANK'S NURSERY SALES ALWAYS GREATER^ at frank’sF * nmm Big Weekend Savings Event! BLACK POLY UNDKRLAY1R 4 Ft. x 35 Ft. Arrangement Tips j for Next Autumn Strawflowers and other! everlastings should be gathered! while they are at their most! colorful. Leaves should be stripped the stems, and small of thd flowers tied the Stem ends and down to dry. ★ * * warm, dry, but1 airy add in 3 will be 3 CU. FT. CHUNK BARK MULCH 4 CU. FT. DELTA PEAT MOSS 25 LBS. CO-CO BEAN MULCH ,177 1.98 3/10 Regular . 3.69 Thru 8*25 Frank's Low Prica ... One 3.95 Place it under stone mulch Organic mulch with a pleas- Canadian sphagnum peat Rich brown mulch made from as a barrier to weeds. Also fog color and texture for use moss that holds many times cocoa beans. Flessant color preserves, roil moisture. in beds, under trees, etc. ‘its ownweight fo moisture. and scent improve with age. Piked to 3.95 No. N i960 © 1069, Frank's Nunary Salat, Inc SAVE VS NOW ON THESE STERN'S PRODUCTS 2. B MIRACLE GRO MIRACID Xoo 67« Miroclt Gro For Roses 1.83 ‘JV-oo 3.34 DOLOMITE AND PEPPERSTONE 67 lv* Iks. I e« Was LW MWW 1.83 Rufl. 2.95 SOLb.Bag 3.34 3.34 13-30-19 formula eoei work almost insist thru lesves and roots. A 30-10-10 plant food soil sddifier and iroi formula for evergreens. Goes to work fast to feed roses with n totally soluble 18-24-16 formuls. Add attractive accents to your landscape by ipmaoing ibis crushed stone mulch On- walks, tround rices, etc. THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1969 HAKE ova PAfiBT Anti-Inflation Firms Hie following are top prices covering sales of locally grown produce by growers and sold by them In wholesale package lots. Quotations are furnished by the Detroit Bureau of Markets as d Tuesday. Product FRUITS Apples, Duchess, bu..... Apples, McIntosh, Eerlv, bu. APPlSI, Red Astrechen, bu......3.so Apples, William's Red, bu......4.75 flueberrles, li-pt. eln........ 3.7s Nectarines, Vt bu. jjo Peaches, Red Heven, u bu.ITS ....cl Sill 5:8 ij m b*0lORT^lLi leans.' Ks^cky^Wonde’r, l H Sk carrots, cello f*|(, mi. Cauliflower, Os. .... ............ Celery, Pascal, ds. stalks ....... Celery, Pascal, J to 5-dz. ctn. Stock Market Pushes Higher NEW YORK (AP) - Hie stock market pushed higher hi moderately active trading early today as it continued Thun, day’s move to the, upside. The Dow Jones industrial average at 10:30 a.m- was up 2.25 at 837.12. Advances led declines about 175 issues. ' it ★ ♦ A 20,300 share block of Virginia Electric & Power traded at 23, unchanged. Other early blocks included: American Telephone & Telegraph, 12,700 shades at 53%, up ,9$; Westinghouse Electric, 12.500 shares at 58, off %; Standard Oil (N.J.), 5,400 shares at 73, pp V4, and Nato-mas, 4,700 shares at 100%, off 1%. POLAROID GAINS Polaroid gained 1% to 127%. Ling-Temco-Vought, rose 1% to 39%. Other opening prices indud- Gillette Co., off % at 46 on 92,100 shares; Benguet, off 1% at 20% on 60,000 shares; Texaco, off % at 33 on 46,500 shares: Chris-Craft Industries, off ¥t at 13 on 17,600 shares and Scott Paper, up % at 29% on 11,000 shares. Trading was at its lowest level in more than a week Thursday as the market moved in a narrow range before steadying to close with a small gain. American Stock 1 Exchange prices were mixed. Japan Thwarts Chrysler Plan Won't Okay Setup of Joint Firm Till '72 The New York Stock Exchange TOKYO (UPI) - Japan will not authorize the establishment i joint firm by Chrysler Motor Corp. and Mitsubishi Heavy Industries to produce cars in this country until the spring of 1972, a key government official said yesterday. Yoshifu Miecumagai, vice minister of the Ministry of International Trade and Industry said, however, that the government may agree if the two companies want to set up a joint company dealing with export and import business. Cyeumbtri, Plckl* six*, Vi t» gill, V*. bell............. Onjont, Graan, Uz. bch..... Onlona, Dry, 5»-lb. bag , Onto* Pickling, IbT^............ ■ ■■ Polatoat, SB-lb. Squaah, ■**•«•«■*. k.. TS sis -NEW RORK (AP) - New York* Slock, The ministry’s position to withhold approval of the joint car manufacturing firm in Japan until 1972 is in line with the Japanese government’s policy of not allowing such business ventures until Japan opens its doors for foreign capital investment in the automobile Could Check Selves By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Business Analyst NEW YORK - Roger’s Round Table has been called to order, its mission being to defend the nation against bigj wage inci'eases! in the construction industry, thiis holding the I line on inflation! and preserving j free enterprise,! The round! table takes its name from its founder, former U.S. Steel Chairman Roger Blough. It is a nickname really, for this alliance of large corporations is called officially the Construction Users Anti-Inflation Round Table. under federal pressure and criticism to about 2.5 per cent. OFFICIAL’S QUOTE Shortly before the increase was cut, the Wall Street Journal quoted a high administration of-ficial as saying it could be “the single biggest, most inflationary event in more than a decade.” The unnamed official added that it was ‘'incredible" that an! industry should attempt to raise cunNiff Japanese automobile industry. AGREEMENT Mitzubishi Heavy Industries, Japan’s largest industrial firm which manufactures supertank ers, aircraft, automobiles and other industrial products, announced in May that it had reached agreement witti Chrysler to set up a joint firm in Japan to produce cars In Japan. The plan had to be approved in advance by the Japanese government under domestic law. most basic ingredients not only of structures but of almost ev-automobile and every household appliance you can name. As recently! as July 30 U.S. Steel initiated an increase in the price of steel used in refrigerators and cars, incurring the anger of none other than General Motors, which itself cemed about the prices of its 1970 models. Something like 80 per cent of steel industry pftxlucts have higher price tags now than the beginning of the year, fact, the recent history of the steel Industry has been one battle after another with government over price increases. Its latest clash was last Au-jgust with President Lyndon B. is * 4m! Johnson, when Bethlehem Steel ?J.® u« | announced Increases of more ■jkgjjithan 4 per cent, later cut back Mutual Stock Quotations prtcBM much «jHSMBlfig while at the same time seeking quotas to protect itself from imported steel. ★ “It seems,” he said, that “the American consumer is the one who needs protection” from the American steel industry. Steelmen have become resigned to such talk and sometimes are bitter about it. They contend their price increases usually follow wage increases. And they can prove that their net profits have been unsatisfactory; KEY QUESTION The question that has disturbed economists and govern- Aside from wondering why Biough chose this particular method of fighting inhation, one cannot help but wonder if such a scheme might not really be antagonistic to free enterprise. Wages have been rising sharply in the construction in- j fj^ent officials for a long time is dUBtry, and without a doubt they how much blame for low profits manufacturing industry. If™ in*lating the cost of struc- should be assessed against steel The United States has beenrures c°ntracted for by the big management and how much urging Japan to adopt a new! comPanles that Blough seeks to should be blamed on other fac-policy so foreigners can freely pr*amze ™ a resistance move. U0rs. invest their money in the:STEEL UP, TOO The industry has usually But steel prices have been rls-blamed wa«e increases for forcing too, and steel is one of the in? Pr!ce increases. And it has unfair to expect American steel producers to compete with imports from nations where labor costs are lower. * * * A lot of economists and others don't accept the argument completely. Instead, they blame poor management, even backwardness. One of the’ most outspoken criticism was published in the Journal of Economics by W. Adams and J. B. Dirlam, both university professors. It was entitled “Big Steel, Invention and Innovation.” STEELMAKERS LAG The authors claimed that U.S. steelmakers lagged behind the World in adopting new technology, that large U.S. firms lagged behind small ones, that the domestic industry added 40 million tons of “wrong” capacity in the 1950s. ir ■ ip ★ If a new technology, the basic oxygen process, had been substituted earlier than it had been for Open hearths, the authors said, the industry would have realized big savings in capital investments and operating costs. The industry contests the findings and it could be right. But the mere criticism in a scholarly journal indicates that some well-informed people think steelmen can fight infla- argued as strongly that it was'tion a lot closer to home. Air Fares May Rise as Early as Sept. 15 WASHINGTON (AP) — The i can, Continental, Eastern, commercial flying fare may be going up soon—the takeoff could be as early as Sept. 15 or as late as Oct. 1—with any exact rate rises to be determined after arguments before the Civil Aeronautics Board. The CAB has indicated to the carriers they may be allowed to increase fares to help counter rising costs and dipping returns. I Oral arguments on proposals from five companies—Ameri- Auto Output Accelerates, in Gear for Northwest and United—will be held Sept. 4. Although Braniff and Trans World Airlines have not filed proposals of their own, Eastern says they back its approach. Suggested increases range from American’s 4.4 per cent to Eastern’s 8 per cent. United wants its increase effective Sept. 14 while Eastern and Continental'want their new rates to d into effect Oct. 1. * * * The board does not act positively on fare proposals. It sus. pends those of which it disapproves and allows other proposals to become effective as pro- ROITV (AP)—The tempo Ffrroductloikin U.S. auto plants fcked up tins week as more i got Into production of i models. \ utput for jthe week was estimated by jthe trade publication Automotive News a: 121,976 car&^almost 50,000 units qr last week’s 72,844 units. Ifi the corresponding week a year ago some 46,003 cars were built. Nine Ford Motor Co. plants and two General Motors facilities started turning out 1970 vehicles this week after being down for model changeover. Calendar-year production >by the end of the week will total 5,178,443 units, compared with 5,558,633 in the same period of 1968. TRUCK OUTPUT Truck output is estimated at 31,985, up from last week’ 30,309 and the year-ago week 30,567 units were built, For the calendar-year , the truck production figure is estimated at 1,228,259 units, down from last year’s 1,235,882. Canadian auto production is scheduled to total 9,570 units i week, up from last week’i 5,777 and last year’s 6,460 for the comparable week. Robert A. Ulvellng, 500 W. News in Brief % Successful«. wmmmmm By ROGER E. SPEAR Q — At one time, Conductron Crop, was a glamorous highflyer. It nai gone down to well below 20 though It once sold for over 90. What has happened; are the shares worth holding; does It have a promising future? — H.C. A — In 1966 — when shares peaked at 94% — Conductron acquired McDonnell Aircraft’s Electronic Equipment Division and Tridea Electronic subsidiary, greatly enlarging its operations. The company is 81 per cent owned by McDonnell Douglas. Losses in 1967 and 1968 resulted from development costs on flight simulators and other products. But these new products have helped i n creating markets for Conductron independent of McDonnell. f In 1967, 66 per cent of sales were to the parent; in 1968, while this percentage had dropped to 43 per cent, dollar volume had declined only 5.3 per cent. McDonnell Douglas elected to file a consolidated tax return and agreed to reimburse Conductron for ap-proximatcly $6-6 million in tax A clerk at the office of Dr. ^‘s resulting frogi. Con-- — - ——ductron s 1967 and 1968 deficits. Huron, told city police yester* McDonnell’s backing day four boys entered the of- Ke®Tlng’ iSMS* „to fice and stole $30 in cash fromlgg^fP^j” ^ ^ ab0Ut the flight simulator market, 3.9U p.m. long dominated by the Link sale Aug. 23, 8 *tll trainer, is also promising. While 12, 206 AuBurn Ave. —Adv. rapid recovery is not an- ticipated, long-term holdings Rummage: August 21, 22, and should work out. 23, 115 No. Sanford, 10 a.tn-*| (For Roger Spear’s 4$ page 4 pm. —Adv. Investment Guide (recently revised and In Its 11th printing), Pontiac JUycee Auxiliary irage Sale. Clothes, toys, misc. items. Highland Estates, 1396 Irwin off M-59, August 23, 10 a.m.-6 p.m. .* send $1 with name and address to Roger E. Spear. The Peatlae Press, Box 161$, Grand Central Station, New York, N.Y. 16917.) “ wriest, M»> W For Want Ads Dial 334-4981 THE PONTIAC PRESS. FRIDAWAUGUST 22, 'JJOTIC* OP PUBLIC HEARING 180flce IS hereby given that a public «ar[ny will be hold by^tht Pontta^CIty g Ordinance No. .Supplementary Regulations, Section 9 e City Commission • NOTICE OP PUBLIC HEARING Notice li hereby given that a public hearing will be held by the Pontiac City Commission, Tuesday, September S3, IMP, at S:00 p.m.. Eastern Standard Time, In the Commission Chambers, City Hall on the proposed vacating of the alley parallel to E. Ypsllant! Street ami E. Yale Street from the alley east of Baldwin Avenue east to Price Street, if Baldwin Avenue In accordance with VMV lutlon adopted by the Pontiac City Commission, August 10, low, being Resolu- ; ,k"By' Comm. Douglas, supported by . Comm, Marshall, Whereas, the City Planning Commission has recommended the vacating in Dupont Heights Subdivision, City of Pontiac, Oakland County, Michigan, the 16-foot described as I drawr ‘ 223 a e SW comer Therefore, B* It Resolvet bearing notice be give with Section 2, Choi the City Charter, a September am Stan- I Time, i ... ...a East- the Commls- ^Chambors^CIty^ Halli_ permanent JHRRIP„ the width of the alley rlghhof-way." By order of the City Commission ’ Dated August 20, 1060 OLGA BARKELEY, City Clerk August 22, 106 Further Resolved, that Harold (Jeqpie) Hay, Arnold, Elmer R. and Leonard G. Dorey; dew sister of Donald W. Gould, George R. , Cook and John Miskin; also survived by six grandchildren. Funeral service will be held Saturday, August 23, at 2 p.m. at the Fir^t Baptist Church with Rev. Robert Shelton officiating. Interment in Drayton Plains Ceirtetery. Mrs. Dorey will lie in state at the Huntoon Funeral Home. PONTIAC MBS CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING INDEX Revised Jana is, lots NOTICES Card of Thanks ........... 1 In Mtmorlam ............. 2 Announcements...............3 Florists ............... 3-A Funeral Directors..........4 Cemetery Lots............4-A Personals .............. 4-B “ | 5 BOX REPLIES At 10 cunt, today there were replies at The Press Office in the following baxest C-5, C-7, C-8, C-12, C-15, C-16, C-l», C-23, C-24, C-27, C-30, C-38, C-40, C-42, C-53, C-55 and C-61. Card of Thaaks FED, CPL. HARRINGTON . R. August 20, 1969 ; 478 Branch Street; age 20; beloved son of Mr. and Mrs. Macon L. Fed; Help Wanted Male.........6 dear brother of Mrs. Earl Heip Wanted Female........7 Clay, Kendra Fi, Andrea R.| Help Wanted M. or F. .... 8 Sales Help, Male-Female...8-A Employment Agencies ...... 9 Lost and Found..... EMPLOYMENT Help Wanted Male . and Macon L. Fed J r. Funeral service will be held Tuesday, August 26, at 1 p.m. at the Providence Missionary Baptist Church. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery. Cpl. Fed will lie in state at the Donelson-Johns Funeral Home after 3 p.m. Saturday. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) whereabouts to ai Signed: PATTERSON A PATTERSON, i BARRETT, WHITFIELD, MANIKOPF, AND WHITE JDecrth Notices BOWMAN, HANNAH J.; August .21,1969; 23 Frank Street; age 83; dear mother of Mrs, Otto H. (Vera) Dahlgren, Ralph, Gerald and Colin Bowman; dear sister of Mrs. Mabel Osborne; also survived by seven grandchildren. Funeral, service will be held Saturday, August 23, at 11 a.m. at the Voorhees-Siple Funeral Home with Rev. Edwin Sisk of-ficiating. Interment in White Chapel Cemetery. Mrs.. ' Bowman will tye in state at the funeral home. (Suggested! visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to! 9.) I HEARD, GERALD LYNN August 20, 1969 ; 480 Branch I Credit Advisors Street j age 13; beloved son of Grover and Katie Lue Heard; dear brother of Osie Dean, Thomas and Grover Heard Jr, Funeral service will be held Monday, August 25, at 1 p.m. at the Providence Missionary Baptist Chufch with Rev. Claude Goodwin officiating. Interment in Oak Hill Cemetery, Gerald will lie state; at the Frank Cqrruthers Funeral Home Saturday. Employment Information ...9-A Instructions—Schools........10 Work Wanted Male............11 Work Wonted Female..........12 Work Wanted Couples ... ,12-A SERVICES OFFERED Building Services-Supplies.. .13 Veterinary................14 Business Service............IS Bookkeeping and Taxes.... .16 lit Advii McDonald, dennis j .; August 21, 1969; 1233 Vaughn Road, Bloomfield Hills; age 22; beloved,son of Mr. and Mrs. F. James McDonald; beloved grandson of Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Dettenthaler and Mrs. F. J. McDonald; dear brother of Marybeth, Timothy and John McDonald. Recitation of the Rosary will be ........16-A Dressmaking and Tailoring..17 Gardening .........18 Landscaping ............,18-A Garden Plowing...........18-B Income Tax'Service........19 Laundry Service ...........20 Convalescent—Nursing .....21 Moving and Trucking........22 Painting and Decorating....23 Television-Radio Service...24 Upholstering ............24-A Transportation ...........25 Insurance.................26 Deer Processing ........ .V WANTED Wanted Children to Board..28 Wanted Household Goods...29 Wanted Miscellaneous.......30 Wanted Money ..............31 Wanted to Rent ............32 Share Living Quarters......33 Wanted Real Estate.. RENTALS OFFERED tonight, at 8 at the| Apartments—Furnished.............37 Sparks-Griffin Funeral Home.I Apartments-Unfurnished ...38 Funeral service prill be held Rent Houses, Furnished ....39 Saturday, August 23, at 11:30 Rent Houses, Unfurnished.. .40 a.m. at the St. Hugo of the Property Management....40-A HH Rent Lake Cottages..................................41 Help WEBted Male__________ AUTOMATIC OPERATOR, 111 o helper tor multiple spindle screw machines, study workers only, good working conditions and frlnga banants. Wo lva r I n e Machine Product* Co., Holly, Michigan. APPLICATIONS ARE BEING ac- AUTO PARTS MAN "AVON CALLING" FOR SERVICE ■N YOUR HOME. FE 4-0439. LOSE WEIGHT s Funeral Directors KOoqo Harbor, PH. 602-0200. SPARKS-GRIFFIN FUNERAL HP“« Thoughtful Service" Huntoon VoorheecSiple FUNERAL HOME. 332-0370 Established Over *5 Yura Cemetery lots 1, 2 GRAVE LOT Includes marker* and vault*. Location Oakland Hills Mamorlal Gardens. S7S0 cash. T. Carlin, P.O. Box 31. Ldzorno, Mich. 33*26. Ttl. 517-826-3667. BILL PROBLEMS!-CALL to for Friday night BROWN, RALPH C. (BROWNIE); August 20,1969; 502 Scott Lake Road, Apt. 5B, Waterford Twp.; age 62; ■ beloved husband of Hurtha Brown; dear father of Debra Lynn and Robert E. Brown; dear brother of Mrs. Doris • Theisen. Funeral service will be held Saturday, August 23, at 11 a.m. at the All Saints Episcopal Church with Rev. C. George Widdlfield of. ficiating. Interment in Perry Mount Park Cemetery. Mr. Brown will lfe in state at the Pursley-Gilbert Funeral Home until 10 a.m. Saturday at which time he will be taken to the church. (Suggested visiting hours 9:30 a.m. to 0:30 p.m.) Hills Catholic Church. Interment in Holy Sepulchre Cemetery. Dennis will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and ,7 to 9.) The family suggests memorial contributions may be made to the St. Joseph Mercy Hospital Fund. CRECOR, BARJEE; Aug I960; 32 North Ardmore Street; age 09; beloved wife of Arman Crecor; dear sister of Mrs. Helen Artiman, Leo and Jack Alexander. Funeral service will be held Monday, August 25, at 11 a m. at the All Saints Episcopal Church, Interment In Oak Hill SMITH, OBERMAIER, GEORGE J.; August 19, 1969; 4 654 5 Coliseum Street, Los Angeles, California, (formerly of Pontiac); age 68; beloved husband of Agnes Obermaier; dear father of Mrs. William (Lois) Merchant, Mrs. Mary Ellen Schlorman and William Chetwood; also survived by 14 grandchildren and one great-grandchild. Recitation of the Rosary will be tonight, at 8:30 at the Sparks - Griffin Funeral Home, Funeral service will be held Saturday, August 23, at 10 a.m. at the St. Hugo Catholic Church. Interment in Mount Hope Cemetery. Mr. Obermaier will lie in state at the funeral home. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 5 and 7 to 9.) Cemetery. Friends may call at the Sparks-Griffin-Funeral Home after 7 p.m. Saturday. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to ' hand 7 to 9.) ' CUMMINS, LONNIE; August 20, 1969; 1754 Hollingsworth, Commerce Township; age 62; beloved husband of Mary K. Cummins; dear father of Mrs. Roger Liberty, Mrs. John McCann and Ronald J. Cummins; dear brother of George Cummins; also survived by five grandchildren. Recitation of the Rosary will be Sunday, at 8 p.m. at the Richardson-Bird Funeral Home, Walled Lake. Funeral service will be held Monday, August 25, at 10 a.m. at the St. William's Catholic Church, Walled Lake. Interment Oakland Hills Memorial Gardens. M r Cummins will lie in state at the funeral home after 7 tonight. DEMEESTER, JULIUS J.; August 21, 1999; 18409 Pellett, Fenton, (lorjnerly of Milford); age 80. Dear father 61 William ai)d Robert De-meester; also survived by eight grandchildren. Recitation of the Parish Rosary will be Sunday, at 7 p.m. at the Elton Black Funeral Home, Union Lake. Funeral service will be held Monday, August SB, at 10 a.m. at the St. Patrick's Catholic Church, Union Lake. Interment in Holy Cross Cemetery, Detroit. Mr. De-meester will |ie in state at the funeral home. DOREY, ESTHER N.; August 20,1909; 852 Sarasota Street; i age 99; deer (Other of Mira. HARRY JAMES; August 20, 1969; 3891 Mill Street, North Branch; age 68; beloved husband of Zella Smith; dear brother of Raymond Sipith; also survived by four children. Funeral service will be held Saturday, August 23, at 1p.m. at the Blackburn Funeral Home, 4216 Huron, North Branch with Rev. John D. Lover officiating. Interment in Mt. P1 e a s a n Cemetery, Dryden. Friends may call at the funeral home. WALKER, WILLIAM; August 20, 1999 ; 309 South Paddock Street; age 20; beloved son of Mattie Lee (Walker) Powell; beloved grandson of Mrs. Dazerine Walker. Funeral service will Tie held Saturday, August 23, at 1 p.m. at the Messiah Missionary Baptist Church iwlth Rev. Roy Cum-mlng officiating. Interment In Oak Hill Cemetery. William will lie In state at the Frank Carruthers Funeral Home day . from 7 to 10 tonight. Hunting Accommodations 41-A Rent Rooms ................42 Rooms With Board...........43 Rent Farm Property.........44 Hotel-Motel Rooms..........45 Rent Stores ...............46 Rent Office Space..........47 Rent Business Property...47-A Rent Miscellaneous.........48 REAL ESTATE vale Houses ...............49 Income Property............50 Lake Property..............51 Northern Property .......51-A Resort Property ...........52 Suburban Property..........53 Lots—Acreage ..............54 Sale Farms ................56 Sale Business Property ....57 Sale or Exchange..........58 FINANCIAL Business Opportunities .....59 Sale Land Contracts.......60 Wanted Contracts-Mtge$...60-A Money to Lend .............61 Mortgage Loans ............62 READ THIS kre you having troubla making indi mitt each month? >0 vou run out ot money before lave vou found out you can't x>rrow yourself out of debt? THEN LET: “DEBT AID INC." HELP YOU WITH THESE PROBLEMS 10 WEST HURON „ Licensed I, Bonded Serving Oakland County / WKL PARTIES- wigs by Cakfarer FE 2-7W2. _____ WEA TEACHERS VOTED NOT t mediation at MERCHANDISE ....63 ....64 ....65 ...65-A ....66 ...66-A .... 67 . .67-A WOLFE, CLARENCE; August 21:, 1969; 3079 Pridham, Keego Harbor; age 80; dear father of Mrs. Lynn (Rachel H.) Perry, Mrs. Verla M. Tech worth, Delbert and Chester P. Wolfe; dear brother of Mrs. Winnie nun-ton and Arnold Wolfe; also survived by. nine grandchildren and 11 greatgrandchildren. Funeral rangements are pending at the C. J. Godhardt Funeral Home, Keego Harbor where Mr. Wolfe will lie In state after 3 p.m. Saturday. (Suggested visiting hours 3 to 9 and 7 to ) f rwaps ............... Sale Clothing ....... Sale Household Goods Antiques..........-,. HI-FI, TV & Radios ... Water Softeners..... For Sale Miscellaneous Christmas Trees............. Christmas Gifts..........67-B Hand Tools-Machlnery......68 Do lt Yourself.............69 Cameras—Service ...........70 Musical Goods.............71 Music Lessons...........71-A Office Equipment..........72 Store Equipment...........73 Sporting Goods............74 Fishing Supplies-Boits .....75 Sand-Gravel-Dirt ..........76 Wood-Coal-Coki-Fuel ....77 Pete-Hunting Doos .........79 Pet Supplies-Servica.....79-A Auction Sales .............80 Nurseries..................81 Plants-Trees-Shrubs ....81-A Hobbies and Supplies.......82 FARM MERCHANDISE Livestock .................83 Meats....................83-A Hay-Grain-Feed ............84 Poultry ................ .85 Farm Produce ..............86 Farm Equipment.............87 AUTOMOTIVE Travel Trailers ............88 Housetrailers..............89 Rent Trailer Spaci ........ 90 Commercial Trailers......90-A Auto.Accessories ..91 Tires-Auto-Truck...........92 Auto Service .»*%>*......>93 Motor Scooters ....94 Motorcycles .............. 95 Bicycles .................96 Boots-Accessories ..,......97 Airplanss .................99 Wantsd Cars-Trucks ......101 Junk Core-Trucks .. .. .101-A Used Ao|o-Truck Parts . ..102 Nsw and Ussd Trucks......103 Auto-Morins Insurance ...104 Foreign Cars .............105 Now and Used Cot* *.......106 WEDDING PICTURES Photography, 647-4621? WITNESS TO ACCIDENT Orchard Lake at T a I a g r a i August 3 at 11:45 a.m. Involi 1961 Gray Plymouth and 1964 a Buick. blacktop, woman pne children, Call Mt-OMO. Lost and Found 1365 Malcolm. 363-5131. LbSt' WHITE FEMALE LOST: GREEN PARAKEET, named ; DOG "PUG" brown i black fact. Lott LOST: ALL WHITE I vicinity ot Baldwin ai reward. 333-9330. LOST: Whlta Husky, big reward. *25-5*2*.________ PLEASE CALL MS-OSIO ai REWARD: Loading to tha recovery ot tomato, uble. Pnmeranlanj vie. University Or. Help Wonted Mole , 2' MEN PART TIME $50 PER WEEK PART TIME 1 man 31-43 to work 3 hour* p*r evening, 474-0330, 3-7 PM tonight only. A TRUCK MECHANIC. Own tool*, good wages. 234-3554._ Advancement to store managers In — ------------- Trjra HRifl Depls. Higher earning! ——*'vo gpoonof, mojito to. Contact: Mr. —i. .Pontiac A Management Trainee ti50'j>er weak while training If you 411001 o'* at 401-1011 AUTO PARTS COUNTER MAN Replacement port* Store No Loy-off*-.Top Pay All Boneflts Apply Novi Auto Port* Novi, Michigan 340-3100 ALL AROUND MACHINIST, lathe, mill and ihopor. steady 1$ hour WOOfc. All trlnpo*. 33*4533._ AGGRESSIVE YOUNG MAtU tor noalllan a. aiarahnusemon and rap, capabIHty, 3 dl huVchh»on'l AUTOMOTIVE MECHANICS (toady work Involvt Fork Truck* and G< ■ Maintenance Aiitim parlance preferred. l - 1375 White Lake Rd. CAn334-0067PCr *"C Foreman- c feeds essential. Steady, . Write Pontiac Press Box riflht man to become^na^neer for small company, mutt have management capability, excellent opportunity. W;lte Box C-31, Pon- MANAGER FOR A i MILITARY obligation - GOLF CAR, gasoline CandtabenefRs? 372°fs! r. FE 4-9585. Apply 450 Wide 1 COOK, Office _____E. Pontiac ill or part time. Apply In Joe's Spaghetti House, 1036 CHECKERS DETAILERS SPECIAL MACHINE-AUTOMATION . Opportunity for advancement, fringe benefits, overtime, steady year round work. An oqual opportunity employer. CLYDE CORPORATION 1400 W. Mapl* _ Troy DISHWASHERS, FOR CAFETERIA style restaurant, lull time only, must be over 18. Call otter 3 p.m. *44-4553. Ask for Mr. Cole. _ DESIGERS-CHECKERS DETAINER'S TRAINEES Mechanical Electrical Hydraulic Exporloncod In ipociol machines, TOOL MAKERS SPECIAL MACHINE BUILDERS MACHINISTS ELECTRICAL HYDRAULIC TECHNICIAN HYDRAULIC PIPE FITTERS Experienced Only Liberal company paid fringe FORMAN FOR e Gulf Telegraph and Maple. GENERAL FOUNDRY LABORERS WANTED STEADY EMPLOYMENT An *Equai i Opportun_ GROUNDS KEEPER perienced or will train. Openings all shifts, chance tor advancement. Marla Detective Agency. 268-0240. GAS STATION ATTENDANT, part MACHINE OPERATORS and trainees for .LATHES • MILLS • GRINDERS Lynd Gear Inc. Phone 651-4377 361 South Street Rochester, Michigan GUNSMITH. MUST I Guards Guard supervisors, lull-part tlm Experienced or will train. Mar _ D«tactJve Agency. 268-0240. _ IMMEDIATE OPENINGS JANITORS Custodial Worker II $2.88-$3.08 HR. .m. Lakewood Lanes, 3121 ' MAINTENANCE , Please send !, 602- PLUS: ly Blue Cross-Blue Shield PakTup Ufa insurai For further, Infornr FENTON MACHINE TOOL, IN 200 Alloy Drive (U.S. 23 and Owen Road Exit “'-"Igan 48430 .......ilgan ___PHONE: 629-2! _ DELIVERY HELP wanted for evenings and waekands. Apply Chicken Delight. 500 N. Perry after 4 p.m, DRIVER AND CLEANUP man, must be 18 or over, Paul's Seat Covers. DRAFTSMAN-WITH experlenct In macMne design, 33B-4095. __ "Besigners DETAILERS SPECIAL MACHINES FIXTURES—TOOLING BUILD SHOP PERMANENT POSITION NEW FACILITIES DOLLAR ELECTRIC CO. 31200 STEPHENSON MAOISON HEIGHTS, MICH, di s p*jsYcTi*eA-foreman. ex- perienced supervisors, exc. benefits and profit shoring program lor cgnfldmtall interview contact, Roadway Express Inc. 312 Oimun SI., Pontiac. Equal Opportunity "DESIGNERS^ Detailers-Checkers Body Fixtures Dies-Toois-Machines OVERTIME BENEFITS LONG PROGRAM Parliament Design, |nc. 1343 Holdi St., Tfoy_639-3638 DESIGNERS SPECIAL MACHINE-AUTOMATION Opportunity to become project 1300 N. Telegraph R6. Pontiac, Michigan 4*053 — or toll 330-4731 Ext. 495 JANITORS WANTED, f nights'per week, downtown Pontiac. Call Detroit. 842-4300._ JANITOR, AGES 4S-5S yeors old. JANITOR ~ Janet Davis Cleaners ____ 447-3009 KITCHEN HELP, i* years or older. Rasta rant BFr**R\ |ej0^ Garden KlTC HlN HELP, EAR LY hours. LATHE AND BORING MILL OPERATORS AND TRAINEES Excellent opportunity for employment In now machine shop In troy. Apply at 1347 Piedmont. (Near 1-75 and Rochostar Rd.) 7:30 LIFE INSURANCE SALESMAN $10,000 to $25,000 parlance. Complete tralrdniHn i Income Of 325,00 3132, between 4 or MECHANIC FOR TRACTORS and jlightjndustrlal equipment. ,334-4623. MAINTENANCE LEADER Requires creative ability for ' general plant maintenance. Must MAINTENANCE HANDYMAN $770a-SS00O IMMEDIATE OPENINGS EXCELLENT FRINGE BENEFITS Michigan Driver's License, make applications contact the: PERSONNEL DIV., 1200 N. Telegraph R i, excellent opporiunlllet tc ciples and practices of drafting qr have knowledge of tho principles and predicts of land surveying. Apply Personnel Office, 430 Wldt Track Dr. «_„ Pontl«c. IxPERIENCED CABINET Maker to work In shop. guTnoo. ____ EXPERIENCED AUTO. SALgSMAN^mud bo U p, ........Jog, it (ALL OR Jl PAULSON J** jrqioi. yi At 1843 8. TELEGRAPH EXPERIENCED LANDSCAPE help • preferred. Good future and pay tor rjjjht man. PE 1-0435 or ova. 434- >H.L SEE EMPLOYMENT COUNSELOR: If you have flit ability and attire to work with people and htva mid wa'Ul TrS'l'n vw'^xdlStiiX high earnings flriS" year. Snolilng EXPEE machlno H FE,i£?: Ine- PULL AND PART •( ikHriilK*, good Suburb, 626-0525. FULL AWPART II. Apply Clark grehird'-*- illendtnta with *y, Northwosl tlmo'help.'Bta'r ; Station. 3911 ., ot Com Lake PURNACI MAN, INSTALLER and laTvica man, axporiencod only,' must hove tools' end own transportation. Apply if' person WOStce Hooting and Supply Co. 337 W. Clerkston Rd., Laks Orion. PULL TIME GAS station mochanta MODERNiZATION_ SALESMAN* jllding Quollficali sxporlence, Dow' COnsrrudTon"‘co! company, Michigan and other states, prestige office facilltli 3060 Orchard Lake Rd.. Ktogo Harbor. MECHANIC'S HELPER tor truck and] trailer garogo. Bold Mt. area, ~~ ^MOONLIGHTERS T. Please ^ apply In mmton.’ Cowboy NIGHT-SANITATION Midnight to 5 a.m. Apply to a.m, to 4 p.m. 1801 S, Telegraph, Ron- Needed Immediately! Man to fill our talas staff to salt tha all naw Pontlacs, Tempests and "GOODWILL" uiad cart! Rioh^man’can'aanTfrom li0,000 to SI7#000 par yaar. Must hava 2 years experience or 2 veers of college. See Ken Johnson al Russ JOHNSON. Ponttac, f ' - NEEDED AT ONCE Collision Men OF CANADA firm In Troy has opening on day and afternoon shifts. Part time work altojivallablt.j:all 501-1137. MAINTAINANCE O p a n I n g i In recently completed facility. Np jo%, benefits and overtime. : ml. north of Ponflac# 1 ■“*“ MANAGEMENT IN FINANCE Rapidly growlhg f I n a n c I a organization Is staking those eage .* Pontiac# 474*2247. dealer fringe benefits. See Mr. Bob Halation# at— Matthews- Hargreaves 431 Ooklond Avo. Ponttac NEW CAR ATTENDANT1, full time, all Irlnga bonaflts. Call Gong Green, Soles Manager, Shelton Pontiec-Buick, Rochester. 431-45110. NEED 10 YOUNG MEN for outside Order Dept., 3163.50 per week to start Qualifications: t. Must bo over 10 years ot ago 2. "Must be neat appearing I a ( able to start immedl- 332-3S2*COR 338-3*3SVm*r‘ _____ BEFORE 2 P.M,______ OUR COLLEGE STUDENTS returning to school, we need permanent twin tor our plo plenl •' a Lk. Rd. Opanlng ___ora. Price Brc* Plant, 635-3623. 3. M For Into! welders. Price Bros. Pressure Pipe Plant, 635-3433. An equal op-portunltv employer, PARTS MAN FOR dealership Chrysler exporloncod, call Mr. Prankland, 424-1372. hei|i Wanted Male ASSISTANT DEPARTMENT MANAGERS We have opportunities for aggressive young men with retoil experience to train for management positions, enabling them to fill future openings for merchandise department managers in high volume departments. SEND C0MPLET RESUME OR APPLY'AT , Personnel Department, 2nd Floor MONTGOMERY IWAlHei PONTIAC MALL . . An Equal Opportunity Employer Ik THE PONTIAC PRESS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 22, 1969 For Wont Ads Dial 334-4981 PAftTS AND SEftVICE deportment. Vust St mechanically Inclined. Apply Breech Enterprises. Inc.. J100 E. Maple Rd., Blrm. Bel. Ml PRODUCTION WbRKERS Steady work el eur Pontiac Pipe Plant In production end other work areas. We ere a qrowing company Apply et Price Brae. Company, '^nftec Sewer Pipe Plant. WS White Lake Rd., Clarkston, 035-5900 "*n equal apportunlty employer PgWrsll week, modem tacllltles In a country settlna, good salary, commission. company car and fringe benefits. Contact James H. wernlfl .tutor, trs a f RRHP Experience ^SfcsmPII Tape-Tronlcs Inc, Mil Fern tee, RO»el Oak. 534-317?. Pharmacist, tun or part time. Excellent salary and working conditions. Modern air-conditioned store, In suburbs. 053-3330. _____ Porter for Auto mo bile Dealership, full time, good working conditions. Manicotti citry sitr-i ' Plymouth, Auburn Rd. at Ryan. Tremt Local company I opportunlt salesman. Apply .... Pontiac. Equal ,—. Employer., TOOL AND MODEL maker, must have lay-out experience, frlnga benefits and excellent working condlttons. Write Pontiac Press Box C-24.______________ w€lDERS, ell around experience, apply In person, Cyber Welds, 71 W. Walton, Pontlec. .{•'•7; i WANTED IMMEDIATELY intmenT'caii Lu! FULL TIME AUTO SALESMEN for GM dealership, demo, furnished, wished. For SEWING MACHj Nt'Rt>A IR REPRESENTATIVE NEEDED _______________ itlonal AAA-1 company has sales axper W or 2 year ____Ml MN__________________________ _____ jp to si5,oo upemi.iHs iwr a man with some! per yaar. thTw'^mSS' etJrtTm. CONTACT KEN JOHNSON madlataty. Starting salary $100 mm ******* must hava a car. Call Capitol Sewing Machine Corn. 729-4610, Mr. Blanco, union, after a. 335-8256. PERMANENT FULL TIME opening Share In Stars Famous benefit PORTER NEW OR USED CAR Must be II yeans or older, and It drivers license, experience pre ■r*-’ OAKLAND Chryslar-Plymouth REAL ESTATE OFFICE MGR. ewlre can make 125,00 693-6266 WANTED AGGRESSIVE NEAT APPEARING YOUNG SERVICE REP. I MEN dous opportunity for young Who are - Interested in a career and .....th not lust e job, paid training for men BELL-HOWELL with potential, cell 674-4101, Mr. Good mechenlcel aptitude required, good electronic aptitude helelul. Experience In servicing electromechanical equipment desired, but net mandatory. WE WILL TRAIN YOU Company otters outstanding profit sharing plan, Insurance plan, company car, with all expenses paid. Sick leave, end other fringe iTftu QUALIFY CALL. David J. Dollmars, 171-1519 An Bquel Opportunity employer SERVICE STATION HELP 2 ~ full time, young men, preferably with previous experience, should have Bedore. WANTED: • AUTO~ PARTS Clerk must be experienced In selling nav and rebuilt parts for ell cars Apply Hollarback Auto Parts, 17: Baldwin Ave. Ph. 330-4054.___ WANTED: MAN CAPABLE 0 learning Marine mechanics trade Over 31 years of eg*. Frlngi benefits. Interested? Call FE S 5000. WELDERS, EXCELLENT w«ges and mediately SHORT 6ROER COOK. Nlghfi. Ap- sheering operators, ep Tank Mtg. Co., >14 , Holly.*' WANTED: MEN 45 to 55 SS yt_______ and evening r a p.m. Big Boy Dixie Hwy. WANTED TRUCK MECHANICS replies strictly confidential. Ask tor| station tor appointment,_______ P*r; SERVICE STATI6n men >"«*' perlenced. Reterence. Pert ilme. MlS-l-75, Clarkston, Sunoco GOS Or diesel. Liberal pay, Buffeteria Help Our Butteterla needs matur women, experienced In cafeteria c related work. Full time and per Ilme schedules available tor: STEAM TABLE KITCHEN AIDES BUS GIRLS Help WDwtBd FuH^t EMPLOYMENT COUNSELOR.: .. ..“sve the ability, end desire to #□£1 .............. EXPERIENCED* drapery --------food salary, apply Draperies, 137 N. ., B'ham, Michigan, FULL TIME Housekeeper, cook and Call for eppolntmen-Tnd 1 p.m, 631-4433. i cleaners. Good _________________ .. ....... benefits Including Immediate discount privileges. ^MMRMAPERlj GIRL TO WORK ... .............. ---- train. West Point W. Long Lake, APPLY PERSONNEL DEPT. Second Floor Montgomery Ward PONTIAC MALL An equal opportunity employer BOOKKEEPER-CAR BILLER New Bulck dealership In Southfield requires immediately, bookkeeper car biller. Auto accounting ex parlance given preference. 35] ,1300. GIRL WANTEO for production GENERAL OFFICE mature women tor printing office. Accurate spelling aqd knowledge of BAR WAITRESS WANTED nights, over 31, no exper necessary. Wonderland lounge, -™ Richardson Rd., Walled Lake, 343- BARMAIOS FULL AND part tlmi days end nights, apply In persor Lion's Den., 7304 Dixie Hwy. ■RUPtl the city at Approximately tan ink at 31.50 par hour, ipportunlty> employer: REAL ESTATE Our bonus plan Is ductlon w i up to 71 p leslgned wn ter go< Sporting Goods Salesman BARMAID Apply In person, Avon Bar, 3903 Auburn Rd., near Adams Rd. BEAUTY OPERATOR, experienced, salary and commission, imperial Beauty Salon, 153 Auburn.____ . , - CURB GIRL, dishwasher, grill cook, insurance furnished, ■'"tird.l Super Chief, tits N.Telegraph Rd. pre.............,. total commissions . .. lions included. We i business opportunities ....... vestment property. Call Mr. Warden et 433-3930 ter personal Interview. REAL ESTATE SALEMEN representatives, preferably licensed now In iwm estate but necessary. We hive eur training program. Over two - dred Million Dollars In III throughout the state. The only residential multiple listing s« of Its kind In the U.S. Publl uf the Michigan fiNMIM ______________ Investment OuMe. All Inqulrlei strictly confidential. Ask for Oery RETIREE FOR PORTER WORK Cvtnlng Shift BIO BO?%RIVE IN 3490 Olxle Hwy. fctflRtfD PERSbN FOR steady work managing car wash, 135-3433. After 4 call. 533-0043. SERVICE tYATIOI Full time opening for men with sporting goods knowledge whose strong Intern! Is In hunting and fishing. Pay commensurate with background and experience. Excellent employee benefits Include: Purchase discount -Paid vacation-holidays Insurance-pension programs Mr. Coe, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. Monday thru Friday. GMC ' Truck Center Oakland at Cais FE 5-9485 BABYSITTER IN "MY' !- YOUNG MAN Ov£r IS to do lawn work and halp around houslno pro|act, 631-0043._____ YOUNG SALESMAN TO WORK In floor covering store, no experience cenf grocery ceihler experience. Pull time, no nights, must have transportation. 33.35 per hr. Call Ml 7-7041. CASHIER Tod’S Of Bloomfield H TED'S i will train you. Exceptionally |h earnings first year. Snelling d Snelling. C4II Bob Scdkt, 334- NURSES, R.N. end L.P.N., neat for afternoon tnd midnight shl Increased salary benefits, fringe benefits. Call Nursing Director. Fi Irving I Woodwari bet. SiSO a.m GENERAL OFFICE Filing, full lima, 40 hours. MHV typing. Intarvlaw Monday, Aug. 35, 10 AM to 3 PM, Town and Country Pummira, 4107 Yotegrpuh — ■ “ taka Rd„ Birmingham, — Capable Permanent fi Tape-Tronics, Royal Oak, or prodi I. Must .... _ e rithmetlc. time position, ic. 441] Fornloa, -j.—.... PH ana knowledge of English grammar/ art essential. Job requires a parson with all around Intelligence and a desire to work. Excellent wages and benefits. Pontiac Graphics Inc., 033,33a yy mqpIo :e helpful IV « pun. U Day Wookl Ctll MY 30344 __Ask lor Ken Johnson I WAITRESS WANTED jnlflht shift. OFFICE General Clerical Office Machine Operators PERMANENT PULL TIME OPENING FOR MATURE, EX PERIENCED PERSONNEL. GOOD LIBERAL BENEFITS. JACOBSON'S EXPERIENCED, PART TIMe, 9-t PM, 5 DAYS. INTERVIEWS MONDAY, AUG. 35, 10 AM-3 PM. ’A“ COUNTRY 107 —BA4MA FIELD'hILLS?™* OlRL FOR OENBRAL « East Hi GENERAL OFFICE EXPERIENCED, PULL KNOWLEDGE OF A C C O U NTS RECEIVABLE, BOOKKEEPING MACHmE. INTERVIEWS MONDAY. AU0- 13 A.M.-3 P.M?, TOWN AND COUNTRY FURNITURE, 4I0T TELEGRAPH AT LONG LAKE RD., BLOOMFIELD PURCHASING AND INVENTORY control clerk. Now positions with modern typing skills nacor--- Requires responsible over-30 ... son, copablo of working Independently with minimum supervision. Birmingham location with pleasant conditions and full benefits. Wo •re an equal opportunity employer. Scott 647-1304. RESTAURANT HELP noodod. full or -art time, day or ova. Roccos, S17I ilxlo Hwy. apply 5 to 0. HOWARD JOHNSON'S NEEDS Waitresses Counter Girls Hostess-Cashier Permanent positions now available on both day and over1-- —- con tailor your 1 availability. Above Ings and pleasant d it Ions. Mgg ..... transportation and bo willing to train, Apply In parson. Telegraph at Maple Rd. Birmingham Oil Co. w$l hivt a __________ paid vacation, a rat Hudson's Pontiac Mall SBRVltiMAN. Export ys • wk, Bonollts. Condi j W. Huron. 334-9734. TIRE MOUNTER, experienced In I mounting and balancing car and truck tiros. Excellent hours, bonollts and pay. Apply to 45 Oakland Avo.. Pontiac. "1 mi S T u b V — industrial engineer. Would you like to got •way from Mg city pressures and problems? Would you like to live closer to goqd hunting and flthlntjT reterence, over 35 veers of ago. Sand resume to Pontiac Prose, Box C-3I.I Pontlec., kTEAbV WORK WiTh o fulu.. ... —ly ,7J | SURFACE grinder HANDS for progrostlvo dies. Stoody 53 hour UNOk. All fringes. 33*4533. ictorv In Boy City, t North. Requires 3 year n.............._______________ irlal engineering experience: de- ?ree desirable but not essential, tartlng salary open depending c training end oxparlanca. Excelln benefit program, including fir profit-shoring plan. Company wl pay relocation expanses. Son resume In confidence to Personm Dept. Kuhlman Corp., P.O. 313, IMH— Ingham, Mich. 4G0li. I Opportunity El | 7H»lp Wanted Femoie Help Wanted Female^ $3.00 PER HOUR . DEMONSTRATE TOYS, port tlmi evenings. Wo guarantee YOI SI3.00 lor lust 4 hours work. -N Investment, cor hocosMry, Write include phono number. THE TOY CHEST ; Van Pykt_Dttroilo Mlcl Assistant Manager Strong experienced In ladles wet. necessary. , Salary commensurate with ibHliy. Liberal frr- bonollts. Opportunity to. vancemenl In our tost growing chain, Apply In parson, oak Mrs, Lone. > ALBERTS MIRACLE MILE I Woodward at Square Lake Rd. 7 CLEANING AND IRONING, Tuts - and Thursdays. SlS day. 1:30 1 4:9q p.m. Must have tranapo. ._ i. (rot- Birm. Call *42-7344 before CASHIERS Day or night poaltlons available. Pleasant working conditions. Exc. soliry. Paid vacations. Apply Shorman Prescriptions. IS Milo and Lahser, Birmingham, Mich. c6ok and waitress, t IK n&AW! HOUSEWIVES Wanted full or part time for easy —> work, starting rate of 1 block S of Pontiac HOSTESS AND WAITRESS, Flrabln Lounge, Huron Bowl, 3 3 2: Elizabeth L»ks_ Rd. Apply lima, "Cl BOOKKEEPER Immediate Opening Full time permanent position for right person in ;«iorth Oakland County area. We will be training. Background in Bookkeeping and cost costing for construction company preferred, but not ntcossary. Call Mr. Deaver from 9<00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. for a personal interview. Richard S. Royer, Inc. Realtor & Builder OXFORD, MICHIGAN Phonei 628-2548 or 628-2574 COUNSBLOR. all you nood I: ability to work with the public. Coll Anglo Rook; 333-9157._____ COMPTOMETER OPERATORS AND SENSAMATIC OPERATORS Immediate asslgmr--• proxlmataly 3 wafts. Up Up and Away With PLAYHOUSE TOY CO. Climb aboard, housewives, tall toys Party plan — July-Dee. FREE — Oemo supplies and Training PRBI — Hostsss gifts and demos KELLY GIRL Of Rally Strvlcts 135 N. Saginaw St. now or 443-9450 An Equal Opportunity nmployar COSMETIC DEPARTMENT Salts parson, preferably w 11 -“irtmont store tr-1-1-- waitress, MY 3-1101. ALBERTS' COIFFURES. AM loci-‘ Beauty operators, shampoo — manicurists. — A MATURE LADY FOR general ol flco work mutt Ilka to work with liaupM. tvuinu required. Write mtlec giving com- ASSEMBLY and qualify ci openings on all Shifts In t tape manufacturing plant. AOMltTINO CLihk idlata opining tor oxptrl admitting clork on day Liberal, talarv and- banallts. personnel o » Wonted Female 7 Help Wanted Female BEVERLY MANOR CONVALESCENT CENTER ANNOUNCES A JOB OPPORTUNITY FOR NURSES AIDES NO EXPERIENCE NECESSARY. TWENTY WEEK PAID TRAINING PROGRAM LEADING TO CERTIFICATION. CALL 477-2000 OR APPLY IN PERSON 10 MILE AND MEADOW BROOK ROADS. AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER Help Wanted Female 7 Help Wanted Female It's a Lady G's WIG PARTY! And You're Invited LADY G's, A DISTRIBUTOR OF TOP QUALITY, IMPORTED WIGS, WIGLETS AND FALLS IS CURRENTLY OFFERING ENTERPRISING YOUNG WOMEN LIKE YOURSELF THE OPPORTUNITY TO HAVE A LADY G's WIG PARTY. IN RETURN FOR YOUR HOSPITALITY LADY 6!l WOULD LIKE TO GIVE YOU A GIFT—A HAIR PIECE, WHICH IS FREE, EVEN IF ONLY ONE WIG IS SOLD AT YOUR PARTY. IF YOU'D LIKE TO HAVE A PARTY -AND GET A FREE W|G, THEN CALL LADY G'S BETW. 1 AND 5 P.M., MON. THRU FRI. 6234)267. ATTENTION HOUSEWIVES Sail toys, gifts, now tor >(SANDRA PARTIES" —Over 70 por coni American mode toys —80 par cent Commission plus bonus —No experience necessary —No cash Investment —Supplies furnished _ Delivery by United Parcel. —Bags Included With ordora. —Hostess, up to IS par cent : SHOP AND COMPARE! CALL BBTH WEBER 133-3177 or 433-1774 LADY. 31 or 'over, switchboard, wo train, variety of shifts. Musi bo high school graduate and obll to spoil, write logibiv and rapidly. Frlnga banallts, rum Sunday an} holidays. Call between 9 a.m. and * ■ — through FrL r — caff FE 4-3541. unusui CURB HOSTESSES Nigh* shin. Pull flmg or part t|| Good weeks, hospitalization " Olhar benefits. Apply: ■LIAS BROS BIG BOY RESTAURANT Telegraph S. H J~ANIT6r* WANTED: S nights woak, downtown Detroit, 143-4300, . lxcoiisi AMILY NEEDS siller • for S yr. old boy. , Prl. StfS a.m. fill COOK'S HELPER WANTED I days, Thunderblrd Lanas, 40t \ Maple, Troy, f CASHIER-WAITRESSES TELETRAY OPERATORS Moturo dependable parson roslouront-dlnlnB room. Pull ^rt lima. Good W OBJ t Telegraph 3. . 3490 BlxlO H ..______ CLEANING L AO I 11? ALSO housekeepers. Birmingham, car allowance, 443-7900. DAY WORKERS wl........ ... ». ride to Franklin, J days I to 1, 348. Rof. 434-4334. * * DRILL ANP MILL dtorofoi parlance nacoosary. excallei porluhlfy tor qualified appl Write Pontlec Press Box C-3C. ETependable' la6y, housework. No Ironing, wed. oigl \ more d— References. Own car. 434-3347, 6ENTAL ASSISTANT, 31 to SB ttox 15 hrt. accurate typist r.„. md dependable Will train right llrl. Drayton Plains, 4334499. INTAL ASSISTANTS expsrlenced :halr side. Intsrested In oral ------ arte, 447- BIRMINGHAM PERSONNEL OftlCO, personable parson With IntOI—M public contact. ■■ not ntcossary. portunlty, exc. 647-SISO.___ BABY SITTER, live In, Iff BABY SITTER, MAIUHII Ml I dependable, S day wk„ 3 children, 134 Joslvn, BAeVsTftBR wahlotl, day i m dt school parson. 483-3399. BABY SITTER WANTED tor One -'-■■d, storting Ser‘ ‘ - — ' --.IS. 474-1134' BABY SITTER WANTED I nsr- DENTAL HYGIENIST WANTED IN Pontiac oroo. sis a Em CM. Pontlec Pross. flhOq AklD £6tMkTiC clork, over 17, full or part Mmo, Russ' Caunfry Drugs, 450Q Bill, Lake Rd. Decorator Homemakers ’our skills os • . • sddsd incomo .......... ... irossntly accepting applications foi ur part time soiling schedules. II Hudsons Pontiac Mall opportunity for the right person to sell Stslnway, Kr-““ UftkaU —l Grlnnall pianos Higher Income for the creative gogattar. Contact: Mr. Brenlser -* Grlnnall'r--------—“ Inc., Avon, _ ~ 1 (303) 47S443S, ANTED EXPERieNCED itamstress. Full tlmt. FE 3-8533. FULL TIME saomitroM to work an our premises. 343-8480. Plus: restaurant located In Farmington area, starting salary 3135, Increase to 3135 at and of 40 days. Write Box C-33. Pontiac Pima.________ couple, more for homo th Qualifications: One full Voar of preparing property descriptions and/or conducting title searches. (Two years of high school .math and two drafting courses may be substltutod). High School graduate or equivalent Oakland County resident Michigan Driver's license Immediate openings In our Equalization Doportmam. or further Information and applications, contact: The Personnel Dlv. Oakland County Court Housa 1300 No. Telegraph Rd. Pontiac, Michigan 4S041 >r call 33M751, Ext. 495. formation, experience, rtferancei. WAITRESS WANTED for full-time employment, -apply In parson, only, - Prank's Restaurant, Koogo Harbor. WANTED: LIVE IN 'boty slttor. More tor home thon wages. OvSr 13. CalPFE 4-SOW._______ WAltRBSS, OPENING for full tlma, afternoons, 5 days, no Sundays. WAITRESSES Pull or part tlmo. Day work._ working conditions. Good salary. Chance for advancement. Apply In parson only. Danny's Restaurant 391 W. Long Lake Rd., Bloomfield Cor. TelagraplTS Long Lakt Bloomfield Village Shopping Canlor, WOMEN, MOTEL MAID work, *1.40 various locations and schools the city, of Birmingham. proxlmataly ten hours par wc_____ 12.50 par hour. An equal opportunity employer. Call “ WANTED NURSES AIDES, Will train, Gian Acres Nursing Home, 1355 W, SHvOrballt Rd,____________ WOMAN FOR Grocery Store. 673- LABOR SECTION, tlma, ail shifts. 300 oeo nospnai has OB-GYN Resident Training Program. Excellent s t a r 11 n g salary. Generous fringe benefits Including Retirement Program. Contact Personnel Director, Soglnaw General Hospital, 1447 N. Harrison, Saginaw, Michigan. Phone 753-3411 Ext. 331,____ waitrBSs, __________ _____ , cocktails, Dobskl's, Union Lake, 343-9113. portunlty to corn a wiglet. SHOW GUARANTEED TOYS. Earn 30 por cent plus, no dsllvery or collections. Car and phone needed. or 343-3131. WAITRESS WANTED FOR full lime employment. Apply In person only. Prank’s Restaurant. Keogo Harbor, Michigan. SUBSTITUTE TEACHER mods baby *“**r 3-3 days , • week ’- —“ WOMEN MACHINE Operators, dlate openings. Apply bolwe i 4, Imperial Moldtd prodi______ il oakley Park Rd. West ol SURGICAL NURSE R.N. Outstanding opportunity in modorn progressive 392 bed hospital 11 p.m.-7t30 a.m. shift Mon.-Frl. Permanent, full time. Salqry range $757-$891 per month. Beginning salary _ commensurate with education, training and experience. Excellent fringe benefits. .Contact Personnel Dept. Pontiac General Hospital, Seminole at W. Huron, Pontiac. 338-4711, ext. 218. SALtlLAbY, part time, salary plut commission, InWrvlows dally, 9-5 p.m- Singer Co., 399 N O . Telegraph. Pontiac Mali, SECRETARY FOfc doctor's office In YOUNG WOMAN FOR department. Apply B Enterprises, lnc„ 2100 E Rd„ Blrmvbot. 9-11 o.m. Ci JUNIOR AND SENIOR TYPISTS Experienced on the mor typewriter, asslgnmont approximately 2 wefts, day shin, pleasant working conditions, high rato, please coma In, KELLY GIRL LIVE IN HELP, 5 days weak, private quarters, oldtr chir-— f>S waak. rafarsneas, 351-3340, LlhHT muiiKlflhlWa and Baby siting, 4 daya a wk. 493-8445. LADIES (2) iu mi vacancy resulting in transfer of local supervisor. 334 W. MAPLE n young gMHrw. payroll system. Car required, Foi personal intarvlaw appointment LADY OR COUPLE or li Mo#.3, LEGAL SECRETARY 1 ' Will train on |ob, shorthand 1i typing so. for appointment call 6 LlVI iN Baby tlttEB. comaHtar 4, II Calvarf, LPM POR 1 P.m. ly In- person «n, 3310 W LIVE IN. MATURE woman working parents with child housework. Will accept 1 cl par weak to start, 391-3351. MATURE LADY t6 CARE for small 'firing r----- 474-1911 ntflHFl WOMAN, transportation. 3^:30 p.m. 5 days plus school holldsys. 43MI45 after S o.m. MlblCAL RECEPTIONIST adlolggy. clinic, i girl. office, rfflMM-salary i draperies. Experience preferred. ful, ago n xirofo » MAIDTjOVEB 10 years old Hunter» Birmingham. Restaurant, 2180 Dlxfa Hwy. Pan* wanted M. or h I $3.00 on hour gold In advance stomping circulars at homo for us. No material to buy or soil. Wo aupply Sand ----- Unlimited, Box AE. 313, Woodbury, APPLE ORCHARD help, < ■ alPflia, 2-3151. ACCOUNTANT, General ledger payroll, accounts payable. A tractive Bloomfield Hills locatlo excellent salary. Call ... The Bloomfield Canopy, 434-1537. BUS DRIVERS PRIVA. NURSERY school Bloomfield Hill must be available 7 a.m. to p.m., chauffeur license • n physical required, 644-5590 bit. SECOND STUDIO Receptionist, i parlance not required, I • a i challenging career, moturo worn,.,.. Mr. Beritobl, FE 5-0122 aftor 12 p.m, ________■ ! Sales Personnel IMMEDIATE OPENINGS FOR PULL TIME PERMANENT POSITION IN FOLLOWING AREAS: Women's Apparel Children's Home Decorative Men's iXPERIENCED PREFERRED LIBERAL BENEFITS AND GOOD WORKING CONDITIONS. JACOBSON'S BLOOD DONORS URGENTLY NEEDED All RH Positive i All RH Ner, with positive i„ Wad., Thura. 10-5 $7.50 M. er r. or tailor, ■hBTpnpM PROPERTY DESCRIPTION CLERK OR TITLE-ABSTRACT CLERK (Englnaarlng Aide i Class) » Salts Help MeIb FeRiMe 66 Can You Sell? .— .Outstanding fringe benefits. Excellent working condltlonft PROGRAMMER-ANALYST CITY OP PONTIAC WANTEO An . axperlancad analyst some R.P.G. programming. To .,— piemen! a management ... formation system. Salary 011,204-313/551 with axe. fringe benefits. Apply Personnel Office, 450 Wide Track Dr. E„ Pontiac. AUTO SALESMAN Experienced now car. Pontiac aria preferred, Motor City Dodge Pontiac, 334-9332, Mr. Butson.________________ STATISTICS CLERK 45 —1 Ta fill currant Detroit area vacancies. Salary 3494 to $597 monthly, All Michigan Civil Service benefits. Including a~ _—8 ooelol securny. REQUIREMENTS: Must have tw> — *• clerical axparlan termedlate dark work of figure which Included tno uso of an adding machine or calculating machine, and graduation from nigh school; or, completion of two years of collogo with six ssmostor hours In mothomotlcs or statistics. Special examination to bo glvon on October 4, 1949; PERSONS WHO TOOK THIS STATISTICS CLERK EXAMINATION ON MAY 10, 1949, NOT ELIGIBLE. For application contact the Detroit Office, Michigan Civil Service, 1401 Cadillac Square Bunding, Dotrm. AAlefiloon 4S326, phone 233-2717, or your Employmeiit Agencies BOOKKEEPER: If yi of Civil Service wnr man 5 p.m., Sep-sor 15, 1959. For other opportunity Information 313-944-4359 day or night. •quol opportunity THE OAKLAND COUNTY MERIT SYSTEM Announces the Following: Open Competitive Examination VISION TECHNICIAN SUPERVISOR SALARY: $4,500 cations Must posm Marked H. . p.m. on Thursday, August 21, 1949 . Pontiac, Mich. WANTED: MIDDLEAGED , couple area, salary ..... .umlihed, no chi call bet 9 and 4, 3530970. WOODWORKING PLANT, dOV ll cooks positions ..VRHMWIRIIRI kitchen, experience preferred, call 477-3000. __________ CARETAKER COUPLE, RETIRED, DISHWASHERS, no oxporlonco, apply BIN's, S75 S. Hunter, Birmingham, _________ _____________ '’XPBR I ( N C E~6 DRAPEhY sslosporson, good solar ----- Irving Koy Draperies, Woodward Ave., Blrm., BIRMINGHAM secretary por smalL root aatato office, must know typing end minimum bookkeeping, s day woak, pleasant surrounding!, f for Mr. Smith,,S33-7S4S. SWITCHBOARD RECEPTIONIST. Now Bulck dealership In Southfli raquirts experienced swltchboc racQPtlonlltVM*-HOP-SALESLADY. Full time to mI| si MBlHMf m rolstsd Its* Homo, 533 Orchard Lake Avo, ELDERLY TAVRRN PORT nights, stsody. sober, troniL.... tlon. Ret, FE 5-3473, 1.2:30 p.n it high SWUM school graduele SITTER, age *•— i& mm p.m, 4C-3755. SHORT oBDER cook, tuff time, afternoon shill, experience helpful but will train, ages 30 and up. 363-0411 afNr 11 a.m. SECRETARY $500 PLUS Terrific spot for experienced i Real estate or related backgro and good skills a must. Unlim future and all bononts wilt. . growing concern. Salary, DOE. Mrs. Donlols, 843-5410, ilagraph. MATUBK, BB'BYllfTER. "Boys MATURE LADY Coss Lake Rd. » MAINTENANCE ■ARN MONEY tOOl Drive B Bloomfield Hill*, school BUS. RE EGO ASiW. 2154 4SHHB. mAnA6BB to lonogor ol apnrtmont com-Btywi Auburn. Machine Operator NO experience necessary Oood working conditions e-»u >u.iiu.M|_vacations ntcossary __________________________447-3009 maYuBB BVLIablB uiu baby-sit lor M|r| V —....................... BARMAID 4 DAYS, Mutt b* Ot-(aP% **•' OXPdfllWiBlCr.J3>B WHO to assume rMPOMMlIty. Writs Box c-25 Pontiac Prooo. BEAUTICIAN, 50? 55, 60 per cenl commission, tfto tWBT QtlMloio. Phillips of lothoa, drive < r donvortm. < BOOKKEEPER Assistant, port Bay worker i to d kayo por waak ifiuin hove own —-—*-tlon and rof. 4344904. EXPERIENCED COOKS stilling to train roiioi must tr “ ** 1 paid vo to 11:31 _ - EXPERIENCED conditions*'" He'rvw's" C o I o n I ol • HOUOO, 5098 BlxlO HWYu WMortord-1 EXPERIENCED CLRAfflW^Si^ rotoroncos. Bis is | 4 o.m. UlMH. . ikpiklHNCVD n Iran sop nothin smntqd.3 uos., Thimiu aMf PrL, **1. iwi ITKIUT'Sk 451-1506. Aik SM? P CHI ELECTRONICS TECH Skill* learned In earvlco or tech school? Employers ore looking tor you. Good pay and location. Hi: INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL 481-1100 1000 W. Huron MANAGER TRAINEE ' 21 and up. No exper la net necessary. S5.400 to Start, Call: INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL NEED A RAISE? Opportunity knocks tor the girl with bookkeeping and typing skffte. INTERNATIONAL PERSONNEL RECEPTIONIST Light typing, a pleasant voice and portanamv naedad for dlvarslllad SALES REP. allont opportunity tor young i. Earn while you loom. Good ry and bonollts. Cull: rERNATIONAL PERSONNEL JR: Stroke efiji ihiPl ___ ___.img o mature. Cum INTERNATIONAL P 11-1100_________ ‘ STENOGRAPHER: : to tno ton » •" company. Nlci____ _____ No weakands. Mil. Call Lynn Anders, 334-2471. Snorting $■ Snoll-Ina. sales aViOBAtORi.......Is a decorating carotr colorful onougn for you7 Loom to soil tho public on your ktoos. S303- Cart Mary Bridges, 334-34/1, Snelling Si Sttell- SALESMEN HELP) WE NEED YOUI EXPERIENCED AND TRAINEES »good lobs nstdod to r , Wo havo the lob order mo 8. Woodward, B'ham 443-32 REGISTER NOW— itarto Sogt. s •a Mng offorp CLERIC TYPIS accouStino-clerkTtypist BUS. ADMuRECEPTIONKT SECRETARIAL / EXEC LEGAL AND MEDICAL TAXATION-COURT R.MPQRTING STENOGRAPH (MACH. SH.) AIM RofrMhir Courses Taxarton-Typmg DAY AND EYRNING CLASSES L lean sad by Mich. State Board of Education MICHIGAN SCHOOL OP BUSINESS ASSOCIATED TAX SCHOOL Siofo approved tax coursp, qualifies you '"-------------»■-. Associated Incoi Writ* 328 W. W g Mala-FamalB B-ASoIbi Htlp Mala-Famala 61 RESTAURANT MANAGER homo stylo and abort ordar e experience. WO tooch yot M system, good storting salary, bonus of 2 training periods, uniform and meal lumishad,. paid vacations, ooportunHy tor adv«ncafnant, apply Ntlsner Bros. 42 N. Saginaw. Help WENte* FbhmiIb 7Ht»g WwttaB FbrioIb 7 i. night Shift, If or ovar, pXPtRlRNCib S R C R I T A R Y , —,-. person att. 4 moturo umphM jMRx^^Mtory ELIAS BROS. ’ 0 BOY RESTAURANT let iwmwii No phono caffo. children, etn paeoblly live m : out. Parry Pork area. 3343MB ■ Immediate Employment FOR PATIENT ORIENTEP . , . * RN'S -LPN'S ALL SHIFTS AVAILABLE, SOME PART TIME OPENINGS. LIBERAL BENEFIT PROGRAM. EXCELLENT WORKING CONDITIONS. CALL FOR AN APPOINTMENT . . . 477-2000. BEVERLY MANOR CONVALESCENT CENTER TEH MILE AND MEADOW BROOK RDS. ENROLL NOW CAREER OPPORTUNITY* IN REAL ESTATE BATEMAN REALTY CO. ANNOUNCES THE ENROLLMENT OF ITS 19*9 FALL “TRAINING COURSE FOR THE BEGINNING REAL ESTATE SALESMAN." Fundamental Salesmanship Preparation for Board Exams Real Estate Law, ■ 7 Appraising THE COURSE WILL RUN FOR A PERIOD OF 4 WEEKS. CLASSES WILL BE HELD itf BATEMAN REALTY C0» 377 S. TELEGRAPH, MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK FROM 7 TO 9 P.M. APPLICATIONS AVAIL* ABLE AT THE FOLLOWING OFFICES. UNION LAKE 8175 COMMERCE RD. 33671*1 ROCHESTER 730 *. ROCHESTER RD. - PONTIAC 377 1 TELEGRAPH CLARKSTON *573 DIXIE HWY. ..4 M MAD im i i. RIDAY, AUGUST 22, For Want Ads Dia|! 334-4981 Sab Houses